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              <text>"Affirmative Action" delayed</text>
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              <text>"Affirmative Action" delayed&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
The University of Wisconsin·Parkside advertises&#13;
as an equal opportunity employer. Parkside has no&#13;
black faculty member and 8 percent of the faculty&#13;
are women.&#13;
Determining the number of minority civil service&#13;
employees hired by the University was impossible.&#13;
Richard Cummings of the Personnel Office informed&#13;
RANGER that three months ago those&#13;
statistics, as well as racial and sexual breakdowns&#13;
of faculty members, were turned Over to Dean&#13;
Norwood, dean of the College of Science and Society&#13;
and Equal Employment Opportunities Officer at&#13;
Parkside. In a call to Norwood it was learned that&#13;
the statistics were in the hands of Rita Tallent,&#13;
special assistant to the Cbancellor. Tallent informed&#13;
RANGER that the reports were in Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie's possession.&#13;
In a meeting scheduled with Wyllie at which&#13;
TaUent and Norwood turned up, it was learned that&#13;
indeed Wyllie had the reports but they are incomplete,&#13;
so he did not reveal their .£.ontents to&#13;
RANGER. To RANGER's knowledge, of the 189&#13;
civil service workers, two are black, three or the&#13;
other Support staff are black-one counselor, the&#13;
assistant athletic director. and the assistant&#13;
basketbaU coach wbo was also recently named&#13;
Coordinator of Educatiooal Opportunity. Cummings,&#13;
whose office recruits civil service workers.&#13;
said tbat "recruitment depends on supply and&#13;
demand" and that 00 special effort has been made&#13;
to recruit minorities when there is a job opening.&#13;
By law every state university is required to set up&#13;
an Mfirmative Action program Which. according to&#13;
Health, Educalion and Welfare (HEW) guidelines,&#13;
requires the employer to "make additional efforts&#13;
to recruit, employ and promote qualified members&#13;
of groups rormerly excluded."&#13;
February Z3 of this year, Tallent told RAI\GER&#13;
that "Parkside administrators are in the process or&#13;
drawing up an Affirmative Action plan for the&#13;
University." That plan is to set goals which see 10 it&#13;
that "no vacant position can be fiUed until the&#13;
campus Equal Employmenl Opportunity Office&#13;
TheParkside!--- _&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Sept_ 26, 1973 Vol. II No, 4&#13;
UNIVEIlSITY OF WlSC(lfSIlt&#13;
CHANCES IN KlMOR.ITY tN!lOLLHDtr&#13;
1971-72 to 1972-13&#13;
("hich IS made up of Parkside admmlstraton&#13;
- icrwood, Tallent and RIchard Sarto, penClIlllIlI&#13;
admtnistrator] is sati. Iied that a good faith errort&#13;
bas been made to fina qualified "omen and&#13;
mmonties, It TaJJent said&#13;
The Afflrtnali\e Action plan w.. &lt;kIeat Ce1tra1&#13;
AdminIStration In Madison on July 15, howev ....&#13;
Parkside's is ootyet completed and the University&#13;
bas been given an mdefinlte e tension.&#13;
When asked If Parkside is dolllg anyl/ung In the&#13;
meantime to draw eueortnes, Tallent laid that&#13;
Parkside is complYlllg ...ith HEW rul .. in nding a&#13;
policy statement to area organization which ex.&#13;
plains that Parkslde IS an equal _rtunlty .....&#13;
p1oyer. She added that hiring mlnOlity civil service&#13;
employees in this area is difficult because "the total&#13;
population or minorities III this area is not very&#13;
large." There are "minority contacts m Radnea.&#13;
Kenosha that DIck Sarto penodlcally contacts __&#13;
jobs are open," she said&#13;
In so far as f~ulty members were ClJDOt!j ned.&#13;
Tallent said that Parkslde ..... a "new Instilutlaa&#13;
mterested in getting taffed" and that "the&#13;
techniques used in recruiting minorities and wcmea&#13;
were not as effective as we hoped them to be."&#13;
She said that twice adjustments have been made&#13;
when Itwas learned women faculty ....ere not gl!'ttiIW&#13;
paid on an equal basis with therr male counterpar1ll&#13;
of the same rank.&#13;
There is no way. however. (or RA. GER to&#13;
ascertain the official stausucs on these or any other&#13;
minorities ror the Equal Employment Opportulllty&#13;
officers gave their reports to Wyllie incompleted&#13;
Wyllie has assured RAe'GER that when they a",&#13;
complete, they will be made public.&#13;
Editorial&#13;
• • H·Cl'e••• t total 't total Kin. Enroll. !&#13;
S-s N-' g T enro111J1t. •&#13;
S-S N-' g !&#13;
enl"Ollt1t. ! !!.2.:. ;;~.e 158 "&#13;
T7 104 952 2.~~ )3,94;~ 100 ill "&#13;
113 10a6 ." lSI 61 40 1137 5.1 22 271 1110 247 no ~:~5:;.~~ ~:.~~~:&#13;
" oe ISBI 1643 214 .S 144 2089 3.1 56 220 1870 '"&#13;
113 '" 2661 •• S8 159 ~;ll&#13;
... Clalre 10 7&#13;
"&#13;
16 122 l.4( 8,619) .. • ~ .., ))&#13;
30 12 100 1.1{ B.101) 2L) ( :K • 23 0 60 L7( 3,531) "&#13;
•&#13;
61 3 1ll 3.1( 3,625} 15.0 ( 51 42 12 4 6 64 ,9' 1,009) "&#13;
12 •&#13;
~ ... 6 .0 l.2( 6,115} 25.1&gt; ( 16&#13;
115 &lt;tB 11.312) ~(29&#13;
••&#13;
109 11 26 0 146 l.2( 11,811) lJ7 "&#13;
23 0&#13;
.. l1Il1de 82 34 13 •&#13;
131&#13;
~&#13;
4.343) "&#13;
28 9 10 136 .1 4,366) - .1 ( -I ~ttavUla 90 9 3 S 101 . , 4,708) 121 12 S S 109 .'-{ ',345} . (42 1it"1' rdll&#13;
"&#13;
4 24 2 '9 1.6( 4,255) 17 4 15 1 101 2.7( 3,9)3) .H.I ( ).I UYoI .. Point 20 4 32 1 51 .'( 9,154) 44 S&#13;
"&#13;
1&#13;
"&#13;
.... l.0( ',101) 49.1 ( II IS 1 9 10 91 1.7( 5,231) "&#13;
1 15 10 107 2.0( S,2~5} 11.6 ( 16&#13;
~~l'iOI' )) , 13 3 "&#13;
l.~~ 3.0o;~ 49 •&#13;
15 , .. 3.~~ l.I~~ ~!.~~J~~ h_ter 1" 11 9 7 183 2.1 8 861 150 16 10 •&#13;
,.. 3.4 8 410&#13;
58 1091 1.5 70 592 1029 123 '" 0 1'" l.l 68259 "&#13;
S Totll '" 109 '"&#13;
202 3180 2.5(126812) 2899 &lt;'0 419 'OS 41)) 3.3'176 UI .n n ""&#13;
totAL SYSTEH 2382 '" '"&#13;
NOTE:&#13;
(e)&#13;
(b)&#13;
All figure. al'e head cO\Int and includa U.S. clthan. only.&#13;
LeSl!Ild:&#13;
II Black&#13;
S-S Spanhh-Spaakln.&#13;
N-A Native Ame.rican&#13;
o Orlental ~el'ican&#13;
T Total "- i thit tabla&#13;
UWCenter S,st_ ia not Incl4.ad ln t:~~~~;&amp;f.~ic~t" to~ UW-Uvu 'all. u 72'73. chUa an m&#13;
In addition to the Native AMI' c~~e: tn PZI ('aRlIt 'Education '1"CIf,n.). Native Amel'icanadult. errro&#13;
(0)&#13;
(d)&#13;
Minority enrollment&#13;
up this semester&#13;
by Kathryn Wellner&#13;
Minority enrollment is up this&#13;
year. According to the above&#13;
chart, minority enrollment was&#13;
3.2percent of the total enrnllment&#13;
in '71-'72and3.1 percent in '72-'73.&#13;
The figure is 4.4 percent for this&#13;
fall. The breakdown in each&#13;
5pecific minority group shows&#13;
that Spanish-speaking students&#13;
have increased from 25 in 1972to&#13;
45 this semester, blacks from 87&#13;
to 148,native Americans from 10&#13;
to 13,and Orientals from 9 to 11. :"'e total is 217 minority students&#13;
ID a total enrollment of 4,839.&#13;
According to Rudy Collum,&#13;
Coordinator of Educational&#13;
Opportunity, no minority&#13;
~bnentteam or effort exists.&#13;
'lie hfllSed to make any further&#13;
~lIlents.&#13;
Isom Fearn, advisor in the&#13;
student affairs office, stated thaI&#13;
he and counselor Wayne ~mU'ez&#13;
were asked by Parkslde Administration&#13;
to recrwt ~monty&#13;
students. Apparently thIS was&#13;
du to the decrease In mlnonty&#13;
stu~nts from '71-'72 to. '72·'!3,&#13;
d the fact that the Umverslty&#13;
:Uld not receiv~ Central. Ad·&#13;
ministration minOrIty funds If the&#13;
University co~ld. not st;,oll~~&#13;
increase in minorIty e~&#13;
that It was and-or prove '-t&#13;
'd' g services for mmon Y proVl m&#13;
students. dded that the&#13;
However, Fearn a. . efforts&#13;
request for recrwtmg h'gh&#13;
the area I&#13;
came late, as d dl·.missed&#13;
I had alrea y . schoo s He did not think&#13;
for the summer. 'rez's efforts&#13;
that his and RamI .&#13;
made any signilicant difference&#13;
in the total minority enroUmen~.&#13;
Fearn suggested that there&#13;
were other factors to be con·&#13;
sidered in the increase. of&#13;
minorily students at Parkside.&#13;
Among these factors are low&#13;
tuition (p.. kside and Green Bay&#13;
have the lowest tuition of the&#13;
state universities), the open&#13;
admission policy, and the. fact&#13;
that the Division of Vocational&#13;
Rehabilitation sends a number of&#13;
adult minority students to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Fearn also commented on the&#13;
lack of black faculty al Parkside.&#13;
He said that a numbe&lt; of black&#13;
stildents are dissatisfied with&#13;
Parkside because It offers&#13;
nothing relevant to their lifestyle.&#13;
uw-p fails to m t&#13;
minority needs&#13;
Try.ng to get information from the Admlluslration on minority&#13;
group faculty. minority students, or mInority recrwtment flforta ..&#13;
like trying to have a baby when you'", not pregnant One ha to&#13;
assume thaI the UrnverSIty IS ashamed or afraid of the Ill!ormatioo&#13;
RA 'GER mighl uncover,&#13;
The statistics on sexual and racial backgrounds 0( raculty and IIlaff&#13;
"'ere refused to us by Parkside's Equal Employment OpportunlU ..&#13;
Officers, Dean Eugene Norwood, and Special AS&amp;1stantto the 0Iancellor&#13;
RJta Tallent According to the Secretary 0( the Facully's Office,&#13;
thaI data ISindeed available and in the hands 0( Norwood.&#13;
Rudy Collum, Coordmator of Educational Opportulllty, n!fuaed to&#13;
give out aD)' lII!ormation regarding minonty enrollment exceplto say&#13;
thaI Parkside has made 00 effort to recnnt mmOlity studenta In the&#13;
past and has 00 plans to do 00 III the future_&#13;
It is truly something to be ashamed of wh!," Parbide IS 10000ted in ..,&#13;
area "'i!h ooe 0( the highest mlllOnty population percentagea In the&#13;
state yet no effort bas been made to roe""t or employ studenta,&#13;
faculty and staff v.iUl minonty backgrounds. Just .s disgtaceful Is&#13;
the fact that the Urnvers.ty this ....... t... ntfers ooly three coursea&#13;
which deal exclusively with nunonti .. : a lIteralure cLass on women,&#13;
blacks and Jews, and two anthropology courses-Mexican and Chicano&#13;
Cultures and 'ew World egro Cultilres..&#13;
Parkside's minority student populaUon bas Inc.... Sed to 4.4 percent&#13;
of the lotal enrollment, an increase 0( almost 1.5 percenl smce last f.U.&#13;
Nolhlllg is belng done, however, to keep minonty students at Parblde&#13;
to complete their undergraduate education Any .nterest the AdmlOlStration&#13;
has III enrolhng minority students seems to be generated&#13;
by the stale money they can receive when they do so&#13;
Hopefully, when nunority students do graduate, they will be&#13;
seJectiveofwhere they submit their job applications. Institutions such&#13;
as Parkside apparently do )lol look favorably upon women or&#13;
mioorities when they hire. (Although, of one is a faculty wife, the&#13;
chances are good for riDding employment at Parkside.)&#13;
At any rate. Parkside is oot maklllg a genume, encouraging effort to&#13;
satisfy the educational and employment needs 0( a"", minority&#13;
groups. As best as we can detenriine (rom our own statistics, some of&#13;
which are admittedly unofficial since we wete told no olficial ftgUl'eS&#13;
exISt, this Univ'erslty is doing oolhtng to help counterbaIance the racist&#13;
and sexist practices that have so long oppressed Ion many talented&#13;
and inlelligent people of this country.&#13;
We call on the Administration oot only to complete and implement&#13;
Its Afrrrmative Action plan posthaste, nol only to complete and make&#13;
pubhc its records, but also to demonstrate III concrete ways sensitivity&#13;
and genuine concern for ev... y studenl who applies to and attends the&#13;
l:niverslty. In the case of students with minority backgrounclo, this&#13;
will necessarily involve the teaching of courses relevant to their ex.&#13;
perience, !&gt;ypersons who have shared that experience.&#13;
11 Affi_rmative Action" delayed&#13;
by Debra Frieden&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside advertises&#13;
as an equal opportunity employer. Parkside has no&#13;
black faculty member and 8 percent of the faculty&#13;
are women.&#13;
RA "GER. To R . "GER' kno I e, of th l&#13;
civil ervice ·or ers, t\liO ar black, thre of the&#13;
other upport taff are bl c -o cou lor, th&#13;
assistant athl ic director, nd the a • tant&#13;
basketball coach ·ho wa. a recen J named&#13;
Coordinator of Educational Opportunit. . CUmming&#13;
, ·hose office re ruits civil sen i wo ,&#13;
said that "recruitment depen on upply and&#13;
Determining the number of minority civil service&#13;
employees hired by the University was impossible.&#13;
Richard Cummings of the Personnel Office informed&#13;
RANGER that three months ago those&#13;
statistics, as well as racial and sexual breakdowns&#13;
of faculty members, were turned over to Dean&#13;
Norwood, dean of the College of Science and Society&#13;
and Equal Employment Opportunities Officer at&#13;
Parkside. In a call to Norwood it was learned that&#13;
the statistics were in the hands of Rita Tallent,&#13;
special assistant to the Chancellor. Tallent informed&#13;
RANGER that the reports were in Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie's possession.&#13;
demand" and that no pecial effort ha. m d&#13;
to recruit minoriti w n there · a job o&#13;
By law every tale Uni\·e ity · required to t up&#13;
an Affirmative Action program ·hich, according to&#13;
Health, Education and Welfare (HEW&gt; guidelin ,&#13;
requires the employer to "ma e addili al !forts&#13;
to recruit, employ and promote qualified m mbcrs&#13;
of groups formerly e eluded."&#13;
February Z3 of this year, Tallent told RA. 'GER&#13;
In a meeting scheduled with Wyllie at which&#13;
Tallent and Norwood turned up, it was learned that&#13;
indeed Wyllie had the reports but they are incomplete,&#13;
so he did not re_veal their contents to&#13;
that "Parkside admini trators are in the proc of&#13;
drav.ing up an Affirmative Action plan f the&#13;
University." That plan i to et goals which see to it&#13;
that "no vacant position can be filled until the&#13;
campus Equal Employment Opportunity Office&#13;
The Parkside,-------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 26, 1973 Vol. II No. 4&#13;
Nldhon v ulr.ee&#13;
u ota&#13;
B&#13;
758&#13;
885&#13;
1643&#13;
tau Clalre 70&#13;
Green Bey 33&#13;
1..1 Croue 42&#13;
01hkosh 109&#13;
Parkside 82&#13;
Plattevllle 90&#13;
liver Falls 39&#13;
Sttvens Point 20&#13;
Stout 65&#13;
Superior 33&#13;
ltewater 156&#13;
Sub Total 739&#13;
TOTAL SYSTEM 2382&#13;
NOTE:&#13;
(a}&#13;
{b)&#13;
IJIIIVERS ITY OF WlSCOIIS Ill CHANCES IN MINOIUTY PmOLUIDl'r&#13;
1971-72 to 1972-73&#13;
7. total&#13;
s-s N-A .Q T enrollmt. B s-s N-A 63 27 104 9°52 2.8( 33,943} ioo no 63 151 61 40 1137 5.1 22 277 1170 247 l 0 214 88 144 2089 3.7 56 220 1870 391 173&#13;
7 29 16 122 1.4( 8,679} 98 a 30&#13;
4 23 0 60 l. 7( 3,531} 39 a 61&#13;
12 4 6 64 .9( 7,009} 54 12&#13;
11 26 0 146 1.2( 11,811) 137 15 • 23&#13;
34 13 8 137 ~ 4,343) 89 28 9&#13;
9 3 5 107 • ( 4,708) 127 12 5&#13;
4 24 2 69 1.6( 4,255} 77 4 25&#13;
4 32 l 57 .6( 9,154) 44 5 35&#13;
7 9 10 91 1.7( 5,231) 65 7 25&#13;
6 13 3 55 1.8{ 3,004} 49 • 25&#13;
11 9 7 183 2.1 8 867 250 16 10&#13;
109 185 58 1091 1.5 70 592 1029 123 256&#13;
323 273 202 3180 2.5 126 812 2199 520 429&#13;
All f1gureo are head count and lnclude U.S. c1tlzen1 only.&#13;
Legend:&#13;
B Black&#13;
S-S Spanish-Speaking&#13;
N•A Native American O Oriental American&#13;
0 T&#13;
171 IOU S4 lS 1&#13;
227 266&#13;
12&#13;
3&#13;
6&#13;
0&#13;
10&#13;
5&#13;
l&#13;
l&#13;
10&#13;
2&#13;
a&#13;
5a&#13;
215 4111&#13;
(c}&#13;
(d)&#13;
T Total&#13;
UII Center '-" in thil t.oble&#13;
In addition&#13;
System h not included in ~e ~1~':ii.c~ted for UW-Uvcr Falla 111 71/73, di re an 1?6&#13;
to the Native .Americ•1°&#13;
1 Native American _~tui enn; (Parent !dl&gt;catl°" Pn,sru}. adult• en't'o cu n&#13;
Minority enrollment&#13;
up this semester&#13;
by Kathryn Wellner&#13;
Minority enrollment is up this&#13;
year. According to the above&#13;
chart, minority enrollment was&#13;
3.2 percent of the total enrollment&#13;
in '71·'72and 3.1 percentin '72-'73.&#13;
The figure is 4.4 percent for this&#13;
fall. The breakdown in each&#13;
Specific minority group shows&#13;
that Spanish-speaking students&#13;
have increased from 25 in 1972 to&#13;
45 this semester, blacks from 87&#13;
to 148, native Americans from 10&#13;
to 13, and Orientals from 9 to 11.&#13;
'.fhe total is 217 minority students 1n a total enrollment of 4,839.&#13;
According to Rudy Collum,&#13;
Coordinator of Educational&#13;
Opportunity, no minority&#13;
l'ectuibnent team or effort exists.&#13;
He refused to make any further&#13;
COlntnents.&#13;
Isom Fearn. advisor in the&#13;
student affairs office, stated ~at&#13;
he and counselor Wayne ~mir:&#13;
were asked by Par:ks1d_e ~ .&#13;
ministration to recrwt ~monty&#13;
d ts Apparently this was stu en . . · ·t due to the decrease ID rn!noi;i y&#13;
d t from '7l-'72 to 72- 73, stu ens · ·t d the fact that the Univers1 Y&#13;
:uld not receive Central_ Administration&#13;
minority funds if the&#13;
Uru·versity could not shollw ant · ·t enro men increase in mmon Y . that it was and-or prove · rit providing services for mmo Y&#13;
students. dded that the&#13;
However' Fearn ~ting efforts&#13;
request for recr h"gh s the area I came late, a d dismissed Schools had alrea y think He did not for the_ surnmde~mirez's efforts that his an&#13;
made any significant difference&#13;
in the total minority enrollmen~.&#13;
Fearn suggested that ther&#13;
were other factors to be con·&#13;
sidered in the increase . of&#13;
minority students at Parkside. Among these factors are lo&#13;
tuition CP,.rkside and Green Bay&#13;
have the )owe t tuition of the&#13;
state universities). the open&#13;
admission policy, and the . fact&#13;
that the Division of Vocational&#13;
Rehabilitation sends a nwnber of&#13;
adult minority tudents to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Fearn also commented on the&#13;
lack of black faculty at Parkside.&#13;
He said that a number of black&#13;
students are dissati~ied \\1th&#13;
Parkside because 1t offers&#13;
nothing relevant to their lifestyle.&#13;
Editorial&#13;
UW-P fails to ,n&#13;
minority needs&#13;
f &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed.• sept. 26. 1973&#13;
_______A GE&#13;
EditorioI/Opinion&#13;
Investigation&#13;
must continue&#13;
Until lately. Spiro Agnew as Vice President has actually&#13;
been an asset to President Nixon. His presence&#13;
softened the cry of Impeachment directed toward Nixon,&#13;
tor the prospect of Agnew in the White House did not&#13;
thrill too many people in Washington or across the&#13;
country.&#13;
The recent allegations, growing out of a federal grand&#13;
jury probe. that Agnew took political kickbacks have&#13;
made him a liability that Nixon can hardly aHord. There&#13;
have been reports that Agnew is contemplating&#13;
reslgnatlon ..the latest of these indicate that he would&#13;
resign as part of a deal to permit him to plead guilty to a&#13;
lesser charge.&#13;
Agnew. of course, denies he is thinking of any such&#13;
thing. His attorneys say he plans to pursue his full&#13;
defense, beginning with legal maneuvers to halt the&#13;
Investigation. The basis for such a motion has not been&#13;
disclosed. but the investigation must be continued.&#13;
Twice before the Senate committee probing campaign&#13;
activities was convened. attempts to authorize a&#13;
complete Investigation of the Watergate break-in were&#13;
thwarted. To stop the Investigation of Agnew's past&#13;
activities before the truth is ascertained would leave&#13;
doubt In many minds. not only with respect to the VicePresident's&#13;
character but also concerning an already&#13;
frequently denounced system of justice.&#13;
The Constitution seems to support the idea that the&#13;
Vice· President has Immunity against prosecution until&#13;
he Is Impeached. As long as he claims the immunity of&#13;
his office he cannot actively fight the charges against&#13;
him. If he resigns to clear himself, that resignation&#13;
should not be part of a "deal" to reduce the charges. Not&#13;
only would that be a contradiction. but It would be a&#13;
further violation of the trust of public office to use his&#13;
position to barter for leniency.&#13;
Whether Agnew is to resign. be impeached, or be&#13;
cleared of any or all charges, the investigation must run&#13;
Its full course. Like in the Watergate probe, results must&#13;
be made public. The people must continue to exhibit&#13;
Interest and concern in sustaining these and other&#13;
Inquiries. and when the truth is found, we must demand&#13;
appropriate penalties for the guilty. This is our only&#13;
hope for restoring responsibility and helping to alleviate&#13;
corruption in public office.&#13;
--I&#13;
5&#13;
~ TN PiPa.tlta.Ii:':'IIII--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Thor ParkslM Rineer IS publlshed ,,~kJy throughout the academic&#13;
ye r b) the $ludents 01 The Unl\lemty of Wisconsin-Parkslde&#13;
Ktnaah •. V,lSCons,n ~140 orrseee are located .t 0-194 Library:&#13;
~.rnlnc Center. Telephone: (414l w·zas&#13;
The ParulCSe Rancer is an Independent newspaper OPinions&#13;
te'flKttd In colwnns Ind edltorialJ Ire: not ~rily the official&#13;
v...... of Tbe l:rnverllty of W1lConsua·Plrulde&#13;
I".tttrn to lht EdllOl' an encoura.ed AlIletten on .ny subjeCt of&#13;
interest to ,t~ts 'acuity or eurr must be conhned to 2$0 words or&#13;
leu typed ~ double-spaced The editors reserve the nlht to edit&#13;
letten for lencth and aood taste Allletten must be slaned and include&#13;
add,..... phon!! number and student slatus or faculty rank Names will&#13;
be ""lthMld upon f'eQuut The edlton reserve the rilht to refuse to&#13;
pnnl any letten&#13;
IOtTOIIIN CHI.' ..I SdM~&#13;
.... AGING IDITOR , '"~&#13;
.IATU •• IDITO- Dttwa ",..11&#13;
NIWS ID'TOII ... _,. .. w.....&#13;
sf'Oltn 101T0R O" ....rry&#13;
CO,"Y 10iTO. R.-.cO Ee.l ....&#13;
"H01'OORA"HIC COO.OINATOIt 0.'tt4I o.ttieb&#13;
.RITIR' o.v ..I..... Vedll ~. Mk ..... Otuyk. ~rUyft&#13;
~. caff"W,,,, T..., Detww.III.Us.vt-.KeftK ... 04&#13;
"M01oolt."H •• ' Jay Saw.. JIM .vtt.... "'ian ROU... I.... .~.MA C... TOONISTS ..,..y ClMlNfi. ~ry Huck. ......&#13;
LAYOUT T""'~, lefTY K...,. an.c. W ......&#13;
aUSIN!U MAN.. OI •• K.. ~ ...&#13;
ADVaRTI'INO STA". K... "ft Frd l.wrHCe. Jim ~&#13;
AOVISOIt. ~ K.. ''Ia&#13;
Last February I initiated research lor RANGER on Affirmative&#13;
Action, a policy required of all universities and colleges by the&#13;
Department 01Health, Education and Welfare. Its purpose IS not only&#13;
to see that employment neutrality be practiced but "requires the&#13;
employer to make additional efforts to recruit, employ and promote&#13;
qualified members of groups formerly excluded."&#13;
At that time Debbie Friedell, who wrote this week's front page story&#13;
on the lack oi significant minority group representation among the&#13;
faculty and stall 01 Parkside, interviewed Rita Tallent who .coordinates&#13;
Affirmative Action for women here. We both read the existing&#13;
guidelines and were told by Tallent that Parkside's own document on&#13;
an Aflirmative Action plan lor all "groups lormerly excluded" would&#13;
be completed by July 15.&#13;
The first week of school we again started asking questions about&#13;
Affirmative Action, We were told Parkside had been given "an indefinite&#13;
extension" on drawing up a plan.&#13;
Prompted by a question from a student regarding women and&#13;
minorities on the Security force, we found out that the Security office&#13;
employs two women-one a stenographer, the other a dispatcher. The&#13;
Director hastened to point out that there is also an Indian on the force.&#13;
Further investigation revealed that officer Robert Lewis, who normally&#13;
patrols the buildings during the day, is said Indian.&#13;
We started looking at other ollices and at laculty and asked ourselves&#13;
il the University was at least lollowing general HEW guidelines&#13;
even without our own written policy. When we carried this question to&#13;
the Administration, we found the only action, if you can call it that,&#13;
was to send out letters to area agencies such as NAACP, UMOS, WIN&#13;
and the Wis. State Employment Office, stating that Parkside is an&#13;
equal opportunity employer. Perind.&#13;
The student side of the minority issue was brought to our attention&#13;
during registration when we came across the chart reprinted on page&#13;
one. Since that time we had been trying to obtain even preliminary&#13;
enrollment figures. Those figures became available last week. Our&#13;
research on this story involved a number. of phone calls, including&#13;
contact with Rudy Collum, who was appointed Coordinator of&#13;
Educational Opportunity last August. He served last year as Special&#13;
Assistant to Dean Eugene Norwood, as well as being a specialist in&#13;
athletics.&#13;
In a press release announcing Collum's appointment, Vice Chancellor&#13;
Otto Bauer said Collum's principal assignment will be "to observe&#13;
and recommend ways in which UW-Parkside can offer greater&#13;
educational opportunity to its students and area residents. Because&#13;
Parks ide oilers integrated programming and services lor all students,&#13;
including minority students, adults, and others, it is crucial that each&#13;
campus office and activity develop and maintain a sensitivity and&#13;
genuine concern for every student who applies to and attends the&#13;
university."&#13;
As noted in Kathy Wellner's story, no minority recruitment effort&#13;
exists according to Collum. Special, intensive recruitment of adults&#13;
and veterans does exist.&#13;
An interesting thing about Collum-when asked specific questions&#13;
about his new job, he declihed to answer, suggesting we contact Bauer&#13;
or come and see him at some other lime (presumably alter he's had a&#13;
chance to contact Bauer). Along with the few comments he did give us,&#13;
he repeatedly stated that il we quoted him on anything, he would deny&#13;
It.&#13;
Collum several times queried what point we were trying to prove&#13;
and w,hywe wanted to know these things. We are not trying to prove&#13;
anything, one way or another. We started out in quest of some answers&#13;
~o questions w.e and. others. were asking on two separate but related&#13;
Issues-the Aff)rmative Action practices at Parkside and the minority&#13;
enrollme?t. '!ie were given ~n unbelie.vab~e run-around. We gradually&#13;
started piecing together a picture which IS not complimentary bul to&#13;
the best of our knowledge is accurate. We welcome response. from&#13;
s~udents and Administration, but we request that this response be&#13;
direct-no more circularity and non-answers, please.&#13;
*******************************************.&#13;
: Ode to Billie Jean :&#13;
,.&#13;
*&#13;
,.,. : ,. *&#13;
The challenge made, they came to play, ~&#13;
... The woman's name was Court. ~&#13;
.. The fellow's name was Bobby Riggs and tennis was the sport ,.. *&#13;
Bobby played his best 01games or Margaret her worst,' ,.&#13;
: For tn a match of two se.ts straight the name of Riggs was first. !&#13;
Jt The game thus played It proved to him and was for him a symbol-- 1:&#13;
,. She.should not hold a racquet but a needle and a lhimhle ;:&#13;
Jt A pig, a seU·proclaimed one, of the chauvinistic kind . ..&#13;
,.. He soon became a spokesman for the men of such a ~ind ...&#13;
~ And so at last it came to pass he challenged Billie Jean . ~&#13;
,. To a Battle 01tbe Sexes to be played upon the green ;:&#13;
,. Wlthm the Houston Astrodome the best three sets oi five ,.&#13;
~ ~lth one-hundred tbousand dollars to the one who stayed alive ~&#13;
It Iggs was favored 5to 2 by those who seemed t k . .....-&#13;
,. But Billje had a lot 01strength statistics did nO~Shnow, ,.&#13;
: She beat the man In three straight sets 6-4 6-3 6_3&#13;
0w&#13;
. :&#13;
~ The match was won lor women's spor~, a ;"on'Ian;s victory. ~&#13;
,. Kay Zebell ,.&#13;
,. civil service stall ,.&#13;
~ Payroll Office :&#13;
,. ,.&#13;
.******************************************~&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 26, 1973&#13;
E&#13;
Investigation&#13;
111ust continue&#13;
Unt I I tely, Spiro Agnew as Vice President has actu&#13;
lly been n ass t to President Nixon. His presence&#13;
softened th cry of Impeachment directed toward Nixon,&#13;
for th prosp t of Agnew In the White House did not&#13;
thrill too many people in Washington or across the&#13;
country.&#13;
The r c nt allegations, growing out of a federal grand&#13;
jury prob , that Agnew took political kickbacks have&#13;
made him II blllty that Nixon can hardly afford. There&#13;
h ve be n reports that Agnew is contemplating&#13;
resign tlon--the latest of th se Indicate that he would&#13;
r lgn s part of a deal to permit him to plead guilty to a&#13;
lesser charg .&#13;
Agn w, of course, denies he is thinking of any such&#13;
thing. His ttorneys say he plans to pursue his full&#13;
defens , beginning with legal maneuvers to halt the&#13;
Investigation. The basis for such a motion has not been&#13;
dlsclos d, but the investigation must be continued.&#13;
Twice b fore the Senate committee probing campaign&#13;
ctlv ties was convened, attempts to authorize a&#13;
comp! te nvestlgation of the Watergate break-In were&#13;
thwar ed. To stop the Investigation of Agnew's past&#13;
actlv ties before the truth is ascertained would leave&#13;
doubt In many minds, not only with respect to the VicePresident's&#13;
character but also concerning an already&#13;
fr quently denounced system of justice.&#13;
The Constitution seems to support the idea that the&#13;
Vice-President has immunity against prosecution until&#13;
he s lmpe ched. As long as he claims the immunity of&#13;
his office he cannot actively f'ght the charges against&#13;
him. If he resigns to clear himself, that resignation&#13;
should not be part of a "deal" to reduce the charges. Not&#13;
only would that be a contradiction, but it would be a&#13;
further violation of the trust of public office to use his&#13;
position to barter for leniency.&#13;
Whether Agnew is to resign, be Impeached, or be&#13;
cleared of any or all charges, the investigation must run&#13;
Its full course. Like in the Watergate probe, results must&#13;
be made public. The people must continue to exhibit&#13;
interest and concern in sustaining these and other&#13;
Inquiries, and when the truth is found, we must demand&#13;
appropriate penalties for the guilty. This is our only&#13;
hope for restoring responsibility and helping to alleviate&#13;
corruption In public office.&#13;
In Ju" hh.- m•11&#13;
Last February I initiated research for RANGER on Affirmative&#13;
Action, a policy required of all universities and colleg~ by the&#13;
Department of Health, Education and Welfare. Its purpose 1s not only&#13;
to see that employment neutrality be practiced but "requires the&#13;
employer to make additional efforts to recruit, employ and promote&#13;
qualified members of groups formerly excluded."&#13;
At that time, Debbie Frieden, who wrote this week's front page story&#13;
on the lack of significant minority group representation among the&#13;
faculty and staff of Parkside, interviewed Rita Tallent who _co_ordinates&#13;
Affirmative Action for women here. We both read the existing&#13;
guidelines and were told by Tallent that Parkside's own document on&#13;
an Affirmative Action plan for all "groups formerly excluded" would&#13;
be completed by July 15.&#13;
The first week of school we again started asking questions about&#13;
Affirmative Action. We were told Parkside had been given "an indefinite&#13;
extension" on drawing up a plan.&#13;
Prompted by a question from a student regarding women and&#13;
minorities on the Security force, we found out that the Security office&#13;
employs two women-one a stenographer, the other a dispatcher. The&#13;
Director hastened to point out that there is also an Indian on the force.&#13;
Further investigation revealed that officer Robert Lewis, who normally&#13;
patrols the buildings during the day, is said Indian.&#13;
We started looking at other offices and at faculty and asked ourselves&#13;
if the University was at least foIIowing general HEW guidelines&#13;
even without our own written policy. When we carried this question to&#13;
the Administration, we found the only action, if you can call it that,&#13;
was to send out letters to area agencies such as NAACP, UMOS, WIN&#13;
and the Wis. State Employment Office, stating that Parkside is an&#13;
equal opportunity employer. Period.&#13;
The student side of the minority issue was brought to our attention&#13;
during registration when we came across the chart reprinted on page&#13;
one. Since that time we had been trying to obtain even preliminary&#13;
enrollment figures. Those figures became available last week. Our&#13;
research on this story involved a number of phone calls, including&#13;
contact with Rudy Collum, who was appointed Coordinator of&#13;
Educational Opportunity last August. He served last year as Special&#13;
Assistant to Dean Eugene Norwood, as well as being a specialist in&#13;
athletics.&#13;
In a press release announcing Collum's appointment, Vice ChanceIIor&#13;
Otto Bauer said Collum's principal assignment will be "to oberve&#13;
and recommend ways in which UW-Parkside can offer greater&#13;
educational opportunity to its students and area residents. Because&#13;
Parkside offers integrated programming and services for all students,&#13;
including minority students, adults, and others, it is crucial that each&#13;
campus office and activity develop and maintain a sensitivity and&#13;
genuine concern for every student who applies to and attends the&#13;
university."&#13;
As noted in Kathy Wellner's story, no minority recruitment effort&#13;
exists according to Collum. Special, intensive recruitment of adults&#13;
and veterans does exist.&#13;
An interesting thing about Collum-when asked specific questions&#13;
about his new job, he declined to answer, suggesting we contact Bauer&#13;
or come and see him at some other time (presumably after he's had a&#13;
chance to contact Bauer) .. Along with the few comments he did give us,&#13;
~ repeatedly stated that 1f we quoted him on anything, he would deny&#13;
1t.&#13;
Collum several times queried what point we were trying to prove&#13;
and w.hy we wanted to know these things. We are not trying to prove&#13;
anythm~, one way or another. We started out in quest of some answers&#13;
~o questions w_e and_ others were asking on two separate but related&#13;
issues-the Affirmative Action practices at Parkside and the minority&#13;
enrollme~t. ":Ne were given an unbelievable run-around. We gradually&#13;
started p1ecmg together a picture which is not complimentary but to&#13;
the best of our knowledge is accurate. We welcome response. from&#13;
s~udents and Administration, but we request that this response be&#13;
direct-no more circularity and non-answers, please.&#13;
*******************************************'&#13;
! Ode to Billie Jean :&#13;
* ,..&#13;
* ,..&#13;
; i ~ The challenge made, they came to play,&#13;
* The woman's name was Court. ,t&#13;
* The fellow's name was Bobby Riggs and tennis was the sport *&#13;
lf- Bobby played his best of games or Margaret her worst, · lf-&#13;
: Form a match oftwos~tsstraight the name of Riggs was first. !&#13;
* The game thus played it proved to him and was for him a symbol-- l:&#13;
* She_ hould not hold a racquet but a needle and a thimble *&#13;
lf- A pig, a self-proclaimed one, of the chauvinistic kind · ,ti&#13;
He soon becaf!le a SPokesman for the men of such a ~ind *&#13;
* And so at last 1t came to pass he challenged Billie Jean · !&#13;
,t- T~ a ~attle of the Sexes to be played upon the green *&#13;
* W!thm the Houston Astrodome the best three sets of five *&#13;
; :.1th one-hundred thousand dollars to the one who stayed alive ~ ~ iggs was favored 5 to 2 by those who seemed t k . ~&#13;
,t- But Bill_ie had a lo_t of strength statistics did no:sh~:w' ,t&#13;
: She beat the man m three straight sets 6-4 6-3 6-3 . :&#13;
* The match was won for women's spor~. a ~o~an;svictory. * : Kay Zebell l&#13;
* civil service staff ,t&#13;
* Payroll Office Jt&#13;
: :&#13;
*******************************************; &#13;
photo by Allen Fredericks.on&#13;
MILWAUKEE JOURNAL cartoonist Bill Sanders, below, was at&#13;
Parkside last Wednesday evening. Before he left he drew the above&#13;
cartoon in the Whiteskeller.&#13;
phOl0 by Allen Freoericks.on&#13;
"·"4&#13;
{/&#13;
We getletters&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
The United Farm Workers are&#13;
engaged in a critical struggle on&#13;
the West Coast. The Teamsters&#13;
are attempting by a variety of&#13;
devices to muscle cesar Chavez&#13;
out of the migrant labor picture.&#13;
Responsible union leaders across&#13;
the country have been appalled at&#13;
the way in which the growers and&#13;
the Teamsters have worked in&#13;
collusion against the field&#13;
laborers' best interests.&#13;
It would help the United Farm&#13;
Workers cause if pressure could&#13;
be applied to Gallo Wine&#13;
products. This corporation has&#13;
repeatedly rejected the idea of&#13;
free union elections. It is siding&#13;
with the Teamsters against the&#13;
workers Chavez represents.&#13;
I appeal to you and your&#13;
readers to boycott Gallo Wines as&#13;
well as non-union lettuce and&#13;
grapes. We must make the Gallo&#13;
Corporation aware of consumer&#13;
resistance to their labor policies.&#13;
More information is available&#13;
on request. Thank you for giving&#13;
this matter your support.&#13;
ErnestT. campbeU, ChaUinan&#13;
New York Interfaith Committee&#13;
To Aid Migrant Farmworkers&#13;
490 Riverside Drive&#13;
New York, New York l00Z7&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In a world where issues have&#13;
faded, apathy a way of life, and&#13;
the "love" of the sixties a&#13;
memory, there still remain&#13;
important trials in the human&#13;
battle for equality. The family of&#13;
man is stiU divided by its most&#13;
fatal disease, racism. Strong&#13;
voices survive in man's centers&#13;
of learning where their sole&#13;
purpose is to unite us. And now&#13;
one of these voices is being&#13;
destroyed at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin in Madison.&#13;
The University is going to close&#13;
down the Afro-American and&#13;
Native-American centers on the&#13;
Madison campus. It is a decision&#13;
fatal to the cultural growth of the&#13;
campus' minority students. A&#13;
decision that also damages the&#13;
white students' chances of ever&#13;
really learning about his black&#13;
and brown brothers and sisters.&#13;
The centers have offered all&#13;
students a learning opportunity&#13;
new in this country. Black, brown&#13;
and Native-American studies are&#13;
an important part of America&#13;
and should be taught on campus&#13;
and off. The void in America's&#13;
background concerning its understanding&#13;
of its minorities is&#13;
shamefully large. With aids like&#13;
the two Madison centers that void&#13;
is only now beginning to close.&#13;
I want to learn as much as&#13;
possible about the peoples whose&#13;
cultures have been so neglected&#13;
by history. I want to learn from&#13;
the people who took pride in&#13;
studying and researching their&#13;
ethnic backgrounds, from people&#13;
who will be proud to teach it,&#13;
reaching from the past, the&#13;
present and most important,&#13;
looking proudly towards the&#13;
future, There is much to be&#13;
learned from the excited&#13;
minority leaders in their effort to&#13;
build their proper spot in a&#13;
resistant society. I say close not&#13;
the existing center, create new&#13;
ones.&#13;
I hope Parkside students&#13;
sharing this opinion will register&#13;
their disapproval with the&#13;
Regents' decision by writing to&#13;
Regent Edward Hales at 440&#13;
Main Street in Racine. Show your&#13;
support now before there is&#13;
nothing left to support.&#13;
Tom Ford&#13;
Parkside graduate, Racine&#13;
~ " J .. :I&#13;
Wed., Sept. 26, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Editor's note: "The Movement" is a regular rea-hIre in RANGER. It&#13;
deals with women and the status of women at Parkskle, la society aDd&#13;
in history. Guest writers are invited.&#13;
. by Barb Hanson&#13;
Why Bobby Riggs Doesn't Matter&#13;
Due to the Thursday noon deadline for "The Movement" column,&#13;
this article was written prior to the match on Thursday night.&#13;
The tennis match between Billie Jean King and Bobby Riggs has&#13;
attracted an amazing amount of attention from the American public.&#13;
Families have divided allegiances, lovers break up rather than switch&#13;
loyalties, and best friends are friendly no more because of the spectacular&#13;
$100,000 winner-take-all match. What is behind all this commotion?&#13;
What convinced ABC to pay $750,000for the TV rights, and&#13;
why did CBS get so mad that they dragged ABC and the match&#13;
promoters to court in an effort to get the rights for themselves'? Why is&#13;
the country so excited'?&#13;
Much of the interest can probably be attributed to Riggs' reputation&#13;
as the foremost hustler in the U.S. today. Riggs is a consummate&#13;
sbowman and has been exploiting the "Lib vs. Lob: The Battle or the&#13;
Sexes" angle for all that he can. To drum up interest in the match,&#13;
Riggs has been making statements that no sane human being would&#13;
ever make, like "A woman belongs in two places, the bedroom and the&#13;
kitchen, in that order," and "The best way to handle women is to keep&#13;
them barefoot and pregnant," and HI plan to bomb Billie Jean King in&#13;
the match and set back the Women's Lib Movement about another 20&#13;
years." As if this match could slow down the Lib movement in tennis&#13;
or in general!&#13;
Two camps have developed out of Riggs' vulgar noise-making:&#13;
those who see Riggs as an obnoxious ass who needs his ears pinned&#13;
back by the greatest woman player on the circuit, and those poor&#13;
misguided fools who see Riggs as the man of the hour, their hope to set&#13;
all the "uppity women" on their collective cans.&#13;
The primary objection I have about this match is this misguided&#13;
emphasis on it being THE "Battle of the Sexes." King has done more&#13;
for the women's tennis circuit Ulan any other person but she does not&#13;
typify the movement in its entirety. nor does every woman identify&#13;
with her. Riggs has made a lot of noise about his fan clubs but he Is&#13;
hardly every man's hero. The real "BatUe of the Sexes" is being&#13;
fought every day by average people who believe in equality versus&#13;
average people who believe in U1eoppression of women. But neither&#13;
side is being offered $100,000to hassle it out in the real world.&#13;
Even accepting the assumption that a tennis match could prove&#13;
something about the relative status of men and women, this match&#13;
never could. King is a superb athlete who happens to be 26 years&#13;
younger than her duck-tooted opponent. If King wins, Riggs up.&#13;
porters will try to diminish her victory by pointing out Riggs' obvious&#13;
physical disabilities and challenge King to playa top male player near&#13;
her own age. King will do no such thing, of course. as neither she nor&#13;
any of the other top women players claim to have the physical pow r&#13;
to play the top men. If King should lose, no one is going to point to&#13;
Riggs' terrible record in the enior Men's circuit or expect him to play&#13;
Pancho Gonzales, who recently turned enior. King says she is playing&#13;
for the honor of the women's circuit (somebody has to. after Riggs&#13;
creamed Margaret Court in the Mother's Day Iassacre) and that the&#13;
money was secondary. Riggs makes no secret of his primary interest,&#13;
his ego and his wallet. to matter who wins. the women's circuit will&#13;
continue growing, King will keep winning, Riggs will keep hustling,&#13;
and women everywhere will continue fighting for their equal place.&#13;
Ranger classifieds&#13;
ceeattve writers. phologrlph.n. InCS&#13;
olMr ,ntenos.led people &lt;Ireinyilltd 10 loIn the&#13;
P ..rll:s.I!H-yr..r!aook 511ft.&#13;
The "ex1 meeting of 1M s.liU will be&#13;
Fnd".,. mom,n,. 10 I.m •• in Dl1~ LlC.&#13;
ReWlrd of 105.00 tor Imall bla&lt;k p",r... losl&#13;
Sept. 17 on lhe third llOCH" of tbe IIbruy.&#13;
Contlin, keys Ind .Ill.t. call lynn I' U2.&#13;
9771, No questions lihd.&#13;
Men Ind women students, P,lrt-lime in.&#13;
venlory work. Ile.x,ble ~rs. $1.01 per hour&#13;
10s.llrt. C.IlI-1OO-2 .. 2..... 1. Genera. B"sil\fl.S&#13;
Service,_ Milwlukee.&#13;
Wantl'd: SI",den' with CIIr to pick me up .f&#13;
Soldier eu. SI.lion In MII.II"k" .....ry&#13;
TlJudlY lind Thu"~y .t , lI.m. Ind "'1",rn&#13;
1'4 p.m. Conilet Mrs. GrOSKIoI., coiled ... I&#13;
MMlison 401-2.))·7009. Will PlY .ell.&#13;
For .-Ie: Stffeo. Moronll., ImlU bu1&#13;
Idequlte lor Smlll .plrtment. Two&#13;
Splulllrrs 115.0. BSR McOonllld UOO&#13;
IIvtomllic hlrnillblll. SlOO com~er.. P'tKIM&#13;
U4--4159. if 1'0 lInlWer een lI,.in I.t.r.&#13;
Typing of ~II kinds ckIne in my nome.&#13;
Experienced. can NlIncy. '-1,.,,,,.&#13;
FOR SALE: PICKET FENCE ]JI'J fHI long&#13;
In) ~ments. incluchng II gllle; Sl s.ll1ndllrd&#13;
pICkets.. ellch 41" x ,~ .. x).··. pllin1ed&#13;
blllCk. Sli. 4).4':1424.&#13;
P."" notllrind on lhe spol. SMM". _etty&#13;
BroilS. Bliliness ""lInll,emenl mllior.&#13;
eyenlng cl~uu. Uo&amp;.1IN.&#13;
I") Chevr.1 Beillir In very 900d medl.&#13;
EAR.NTOP MONEY! Pll"lime promollnl cond.• phone ..n·t740.&#13;
s.tuoent tr.Yel. C.1l or write (include your&#13;
telepl'tone numberl. VAGABOND TOUR.S,&#13;
Box S-49.EVllns."1on.Ill. ~ (311131-.0110.&#13;
HaVing protHems W,ltI .ccovntln,? e.lI SSl.&#13;
,.., ~lt..,. S. lnvtpenslye tulorin, lIIvlIi'.ble&#13;
photo by Allen Frederickson&#13;
MILWAUKEE JOURNAL cartoonist Bill Sanders, below, was at&#13;
Parkside last Wednesday evening. Before he left he drew the above&#13;
cartoon in the Whiteskeller.&#13;
photo by Allen Frederickson&#13;
We get·&#13;
letters&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
The United Farm Workers are&#13;
engaged in a critical struggle on&#13;
the West Coast. The Team&#13;
are attempting by a variety of&#13;
devices to muscle Cesar Chavez&#13;
out of the migrant labor picture.&#13;
Responsible union leaders across&#13;
the country have been appalled at&#13;
the way in which the growers and&#13;
the Teamsters have worked in&#13;
collusion against the- field&#13;
laborers' best interests.&#13;
It would help the United Farm&#13;
Workers cause if pressure could&#13;
be applied to Gallo Wine&#13;
products. This corporation has&#13;
repeatedly rejected the idea of&#13;
free union elections. It is siding&#13;
with the Teamsters against the&#13;
workers Chavez represents.&#13;
I appeal to you and your&#13;
readers to boycott Gallo Wines as&#13;
well as non-union lettuce and&#13;
grapes. We must make the Gallo&#13;
Corporation aware of consumer&#13;
resistance to their labor policies.&#13;
More information is available&#13;
on request. Thank you for giving&#13;
this matter your support.&#13;
Ernest T. Campbell, Chairman&#13;
ew York Interfaith Committee&#13;
To Aid Migrant Farmworkers&#13;
490 Riverside Drive&#13;
New York, New York 10027&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In a world where issues have&#13;
faded, apathy a way of life, and&#13;
the "love" of the sixties a&#13;
memory, there still remain&#13;
important trials in the human&#13;
battle for equality. The family of&#13;
man is still divided by its most&#13;
fatal disease, racism. Strong&#13;
voices survive in man's centers&#13;
of learning where their sole&#13;
purpose is to unite us. And now&#13;
one of these voices is being&#13;
destroyed at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin in Madison.&#13;
The University is going to close&#13;
down the Afro-American and&#13;
Native-American centers on the&#13;
Madison campus. It is a decision&#13;
fatal to the cultural growth of the&#13;
campus' minority students. A&#13;
decision that also damages the&#13;
white students' chances of ever&#13;
really learning about his black&#13;
and brown brothers and sisters.&#13;
The centers have offered all&#13;
students a learning opportunity&#13;
new in this country. Black, brown&#13;
and ative-American tudies are&#13;
an important part of America&#13;
and should be taught on campus&#13;
and off. The void in America 's&#13;
background concerning its understanding&#13;
of its minorities is&#13;
shamefully large. With aids like&#13;
the two 1adison centers that void&#13;
is only now beginning to close.&#13;
I want to learn as much as&#13;
possible about the peoples whose&#13;
cultures have been so neglected .I&#13;
by history. I want to learn from&#13;
the people who took pride in&#13;
studying and researching their&#13;
ethnic backgrounds, from people&#13;
who will be proud to teach it,&#13;
reaching from the past, the&#13;
present and most important,&#13;
looking proudly towards the&#13;
future . There is much to be&#13;
learned from the excited&#13;
minority leaders in their effort to&#13;
build their proper spot in a&#13;
resistant society. I say close not&#13;
the existing center, create new&#13;
ones. I hope Parkside students&#13;
sharing this opinion \\ill register&#13;
their disapproval with the&#13;
Regents' decision by writing to&#13;
Regent Edward Hales at 440&#13;
Main Street in Racine. Show your&#13;
support now before there is&#13;
nothing left to support.&#13;
Tom Ford&#13;
Parkside graduate. Racine&#13;
Wed., Sept. 26, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Editor's note: "The, lovement" i a regular feat&#13;
deal ith women and the tatu or women at Par&#13;
in hi tory. Gue t writers are in ited.&#13;
• _ by Barb Han on&#13;
Why Bobby Riggs Doesn't Matter&#13;
Du to th Thur dn noon deadline for "The , lovem nt·· column,&#13;
thi article wa wTitt~ prior to the match on Thur da night.&#13;
The tennis match between Billie Jean King and Bobby Rigg. ha&#13;
attracted an amazing amount of attention from the American pu lie.&#13;
Families have divided allegiances, lovers break up rath r than wit h&#13;
loyalties, and best friends are friendly no more beca of the . pectacular&#13;
$100,000 winner-take-all match. What i behind all thi c mmotion?&#13;
What convinced ABC to pay $750 000 for th TV righ , and&#13;
why did CBS get so mad that they dragged ABC and the match&#13;
promoters to court in an effort to get the rights for them elve ? Why i&#13;
the country so excited?&#13;
Much of the interest can probably be attributed to Rig ·' r putallon&#13;
as the foremost hustler in the U S today. Rigg is a c n ummate&#13;
showman and has been exploiting the "Lib v . Lob: T Battle of the&#13;
Sexes" angle for all that he can. To drum up interest in the match,&#13;
Riggs has been making statements that no sane human being would&#13;
ever make, like "A woman belongs in two plac , the bedroom and the&#13;
kitchen, in that order," and "The best way to handle women i to k p&#13;
them barefoot and pregnant," and " I plan to bomb Billie Jean King in&#13;
the match and set back the Women's Lib Movement about another 20&#13;
years." As if this match could slow down the Lib mo ement in tenni&#13;
or in general! -&#13;
Two camps have developed out of Rigg ' vulgar noi making:&#13;
those who see Riggs as an obnoxious ass who needs hi ears pinned&#13;
back by the greatest woman player on the circuit, and those poor&#13;
misguided fools who see Riggs as the man of the hour. their hope to t&#13;
all the "uppity women" on their collective cans.&#13;
The primary objection I have about thi match i thi mi gwded&#13;
emphasis on it being THE "Battle of the Sexes." King has don more&#13;
for the women's tennis circuit than any other pers-0n but he doe nol&#13;
typify the movement in its entirety, nor d ever woman id ntify&#13;
with her. Rigg has made a lot of noi e about his fan clu but he i&#13;
hardly every man's hero. The real "Battle of the Sex " i in&#13;
fought every day by average people who believe in equality ve , u&#13;
average people who believe in the oppre ion of women. But neith r&#13;
ide i being offered $100,000 to ha sle it out in the real world.&#13;
Even accepting the a sumption that a tenni match could pr ·&#13;
omething about the relative tatu of m n and women, thi match&#13;
never could . King i a uperb athlete who happens to be 26 y ars&#13;
younger than her duck-footed opponent. If King in , igg · . up&#13;
porters will try to dimini h her victory by pointing out Ri ' ob iou.&#13;
phy ical di abilitie and challenge King to play a top male play r n r&#13;
her own age King will do no uch thing, of cou e, a n ilh r ·h n r&#13;
any of the oth r top women play r · claim to have th phy ical w r&#13;
to play the top men. If King hould lose, no one i going to point to&#13;
Rigg · terrible record in the mor . Ien' ~ircuit or xpect him to play&#13;
Pancho Gonzales, who recently turned nior. Kin a h i pl )in&#13;
for the honor of the women's circuit &lt; omebody h to, aft r Ri!U(&#13;
creamed :'llargaret Court in the 1 lother' Day !\ta acr &gt; and th t th&#13;
money wa ec ndary. Rigg makes no ecr t of hi primary int r t,&#13;
hi ego and hi wallet. , o matter who wins, the worn n' circuit will&#13;
continue growing, Kmg will k p winning, Rigg will k p h tling,&#13;
and women everywhere will continue fighting fo th 1r equal pla .&#13;
Ranger classifieds&#13;
Creative wr iters, photographer,, and&#13;
other ,ntere-stt'd p,e,ople- u• 1nvititd to 101n the&#13;
Pnks,de yearbook slalf.&#13;
Tht next meetong of !he staff will be&#13;
Friday mom,n • 10 a .m., ,n 0174 LLC.&#13;
Men ,ind -,omen students : P-11rt-time mventory&#13;
work, fle:x,ble hours, S.2.00 per hour&#13;
to start. Call 1--241-4401. General Busineu&#13;
Services. Milwau.ktt.&#13;
Typing of all k,nds done ,n my home.&#13;
E•penenced. Call Nancy, '32-2667.&#13;
FOR SALE : PICKET FENCE 211&gt; fttl long&#13;
,n 3 ~ments including a gale ; 52 slandanl&#13;
p,ckeh, each 42 ' x 2s,•.t x i ,.". pa,nted&#13;
black. Sll. 6~-3'14.&#13;
EARN TOP M0l'iEY! Part lime promol,ng&#13;
sludent travel. Call or wnle ( ,nclude your&#13;
telephone number): VAGAB0N0 TOURS,&#13;
Box 5-49, Evanston, HI. ~CM ( 312):llMllO.&#13;
Reward of ss.oo for small black pur" 10.1&#13;
Sep!. 17 on the third floor of the library.&#13;
Conta,ns keys and wallet Call Lynn at 452·&#13;
9771. No questions asked&#13;
Wanted : Student with car to pick me up al&#13;
llad9tr Bus S!atlon in MilwaukH evuy&#13;
TueS&lt;lay and Thunday at 9 a m. and relum&#13;
ilt 4 p.m . Contact Mrs. Gros•cJos.e, -collttt, at&#13;
-clison 60t-133-7oot. Will pay well.&#13;
For ult: s-. Motorola, small b"1&#13;
adequate for small apartment. Two&#13;
spukus also. BSR Mc0onald HOO&#13;
automatic tumt;able, s1oa complete. Phone&#13;
654...as,. ,f no answer call again later.&#13;
Pa~ not1ri1ed on !he spol. SN Mn. lltlty&#13;
Briggs. llus,ness Management maior,&#13;
even1n51 clauu. 6l4-1'U.&#13;
190 Chevrolet Belair ,n very good mech&#13;
com1 . phone 6ll-t740.&#13;
Havin51 problems w,th accounhng? Call u2. 9462 after s, lnexpensin lutoring ava1l1blt. &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 26, 1973&#13;
Film Society •&#13;
IS&#13;
back •&#13;
In business&#13;
b" Re c:a Ecklund&#13;
The Parks"ie Film Society ;ill&#13;
r ive runcbng for Its first&#13;
tor flIm sen • the result&#13;
01 mpus Conc,,", Committ&#13;
.. m tng on Tuesd.y Sept&#13;
18&#13;
Library plans&#13;
given final approval until •&#13;
telephone ballot was taken of&#13;
missing members.&#13;
nanimous approval was given '0 the proposal by the members&#13;
who "ere present.t the meeting.&#13;
and the telephone voting of&#13;
mi ing f.cuIty proved positive&#13;
also. tece the student members&#13;
could not be located to vote, CCC&#13;
chatrperson Marion Iochon&#13;
con ulted with student government&#13;
members on campus in&#13;
order to get some student input.&#13;
Student government .pproved&#13;
the idea; the S600will be made&#13;
,mmed,.tely available for Film&#13;
ety use.&#13;
second semester films are to be&#13;
funded exclusively from first&#13;
semester revenues, since the&#13;
Committee stated that no further&#13;
money would be allotted to the&#13;
Film Scciery this year.&#13;
research instruction&#13;
b~ K8lhry n \\ enner&#13;
Th I~br.ry is getting mvolved&#13;
,ccordlng to Carl. toffle,&#13;
eerer nee librarian, the library&#13;
tall has pl.nned • 501of goals&#13;
nd ob1&lt;"ti'es, .nd. strategy to&#13;
Impl ment them&#13;
1bC l: 0 major goets are to&#13;
m.ke r.culty. students, staU •• nd&#13;
communIty .... are of .. hat the&#13;
LIbrary ha , and .. hat It can do&#13;
lor them, and to increase skill&#13;
and If·&lt;u!liciency in the use of&#13;
the LIbrary&#13;
Some general obJOCti'es are to&#13;
Increa'te a~ arene s of the&#13;
Ubran" 8 an education {intruCl1~na)).&#13;
~ahonal (nonIn&#13;
trudlonan, and cultural&#13;
facIlity, prepare Llbr.ry patrons&#13;
to find .nd use library materials&#13;
and faclhtH:; reinforce or&#13;
prev Ide upplementary intrueuon&#13;
In research methods;&#13;
nd to brmg .ttent,on to specific&#13;
matenal • n~ items, and new&#13;
seJ"\ I .,,·allabJe In the Library.&#13;
peeinc objeCO"'es are broken&#13;
do .. n f1"'t, 1»' patron category&#13;
and econd. by library&#13;
sop/Ii hcat,on 100'el ithin each&#13;
cat or;&#13;
ObJ clive number one in&#13;
hbrary ""phlSticat,on Level One&#13;
IS to acquaint Inter-ested students&#13;
'" the phy lcal layoot .nd&#13;
r.editi of the LIbrary. so they&#13;
can I te such thtn as the book&#13;
lack. magazines, microfilm&#13;
matenal • gO"'ernment&#13;
pubhcation • card catalog, and&#13;
r t rooms&#13;
The. nd objOctJve IS to&#13;
"quaint students with some of&#13;
lh H1"V1 .,. .. ilable for their&#13;
.... Interhbrary Loan, displ.ys,&#13;
pholoduphcation. Bitch Tickets,&#13;
nd pee,.1 cultural programs&#13;
re a fe"4 x8mpl ,&#13;
AI ~ I Two, students tn&#13;
m.ng I ..el courses learn&#13;
how to develop search trategles&#13;
on thesr Information needs,&#13;
use the card catalog, use the LC&#13;
Sob) I n .. ding LI t. use the&#13;
lonthl at.log to locate&#13;
10\, mm n1 pubbcations, use the&#13;
Rf&gt;ldtr· Guide and similar&#13;
pubhcation, .nd to cIte and&#13;
evaluate sources of inform.tion&#13;
used for. """earch paper.&#13;
U'vel Three is desIgned ror&#13;
tudents enrolled In research or&#13;
bibliography oriented courses on&#13;
an upper drviston level. At this&#13;
level. students learn the types of&#13;
soon:.. : guides to the literature.&#13;
reviews of the literature, abstracts&#13;
and digests,&#13;
bibliographies and indexes.&#13;
dictionaries, encyclopedias,&#13;
directories, government&#13;
publications. atlases, handbooks,&#13;
yearbooks, manuals, and&#13;
penodsca Is.&#13;
Also included on Level Three&#13;
are the principles of a good&#13;
bibliography, specialized&#13;
..&#13;
photo by Jim Ruflalo&#13;
Cyclists celebrate the end or the road. This was the scene at the finish of the Ragtime Rangers-PAB&#13;
Bike Ra1lye last Sunday.&#13;
techniques for locating major&#13;
research materials, search&#13;
techniques for preparing&#13;
bibliographies, speeches, and&#13;
research papers. and the skills&#13;
necessary to use bibliographic&#13;
sources.&#13;
Teaching students in upper&#13;
division courses with library&#13;
related assignments and searcn&#13;
strategy necessary to complete&#13;
the course and the skills&#13;
necessary to use the specific tools&#13;
which apply to the assignment is&#13;
covered in Level Four.&#13;
Half·Price&#13;
Milled Drinks&#13;
6 P,M. - MIDNICHT&#13;
THURSDA~ NICHTS WITH P.U. I.D.&#13;
1~ Beers&#13;
~&#13;
RANGER needs&#13;
SPORTS writers&#13;
+ WATER BEDS&#13;
+RECORDS&#13;
+TAPES&#13;
This Semester&#13;
NtV4 olL-- lle elbt&#13;
~luttt ~boppt&#13;
10 A.M. - 4 P.M. LLC LOWER MAIN&#13;
DAILY PLACE (east)&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RA GER Wed., Sept. 26, 1973&#13;
Film Society is&#13;
c in business&#13;
gwen final app-o\'al until a&#13;
tel phone ballot was taken of&#13;
missmg members.&#13;
nanimous appro\·al wa given&#13;
to th proposal b) the members&#13;
·who \\ re Jr sent at the meeting.&#13;
and the telephon voting of&#13;
mi ing faculty proved po itive&#13;
. ince the student members&#13;
could not be located to vote, CCC&#13;
chairper on Marion !ochon&#13;
con lted \\;th tudent government&#13;
members on campus in&#13;
ord to g t some tudent input.&#13;
udent go, ernment approved&#13;
th id ; the ·u be made&#13;
immediately a,·adable for Film • Y use. d sem ter film are to be&#13;
funded u ivelv from first&#13;
ter revenu · . ince the&#13;
mmitt tated that no further&#13;
money would be allotted to the&#13;
Film ·ety thi year.&#13;
photo by Jim -Ruffalo&#13;
brary p'lans&#13;
esearch instruction&#13;
~·cli t celebrate the end of the road. This was the scene at the finish of the Ragtime Rangers-PAB&#13;
Bike Rallye last Sunday.&#13;
&amp;h n \\elln r bibliography oriented course on&#13;
n upper divi ·ion level. At thi&#13;
level, . tudents learn the types of&#13;
sou : guide· to the literature,&#13;
r ,·i " of the literature. abtract&#13;
and dige ts,&#13;
b1blio raphie and indexes.&#13;
dictionarie , encyclopedia ,&#13;
d ire c tories government&#13;
publication • aUa es, handbook ,&#13;
vearbook , manuals, and&#13;
penodicals.&#13;
Also induded on Level Three&#13;
are the principles of a good&#13;
bibliography, specialized&#13;
techniques for locating major&#13;
re earch materials, search&#13;
techniques for preparing&#13;
bibliographies, speeches, and&#13;
research papers, and the skills&#13;
necessary to use bibliographic&#13;
sources.&#13;
Teaching tudents in upper&#13;
division courses with library&#13;
related assignments and searcn&#13;
strategy necessary to complete&#13;
the course and the skills&#13;
necessary to use the specific tools&#13;
which apply to the assignment is&#13;
covered in Level Four.&#13;
306 Doclge Street&#13;
OLD TOWN RACINE&#13;
1~ Beers Half-Price&#13;
Mixed Drinks&#13;
6 P.M. - MIDNIGHT&#13;
THURSDAY NIGHTS WITH P.U. 1.D.&#13;
.&#13;
RANGER needs&#13;
SPORTS. writers&#13;
t WATER BEDS&#13;
t PIPES, PAPERS&#13;
tRECORDS&#13;
tTAPES &#13;
Review&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
Par~side'~ Learni~g Center, located in LLC D175,is an audio-visual&#13;
paradise of information and entertainment. The material found there&#13;
can serve as an invaluable supplement to research projects or can be a&#13;
primary sO,uTce of ,information in itself. There are also study and&#13;
practice aids available. But besides providing some excellent&#13;
reso~rce ~aterial, the Learnin,g Center offers a great variety of&#13;
movles~ videotapes, cassettes, film strips, records, and so on which&#13;
entertain.&#13;
The Mime of Marcel Marceau is a film both entertaining and in.&#13;
formative. The scenes alternate between Marceau's school of mime&#13;
and one of his live stage. performances. The classroom scenes reveal&#13;
how rigorously and exactly each movement of face, body and hands is&#13;
analysed, practiced, and perfected. Every muscle in the body&#13;
becomes a tool for creating illusion in pantomime.&#13;
Marceau on stage, his face a mask of white accented in black at&#13;
brows, eyes, and mouth, leads his audience into another world where&#13;
illusion becomes reality and reality illusion. Marceau is a white figure&#13;
alone on the stage, surrounded by total darkness: a lonely every-man&#13;
trapped in a hostile world. His mimed characterizations portray the&#13;
technocracized man, battling indifferent machines in a seemingly&#13;
indifferent world. Striving to conquer his environment, every-man&#13;
becomes funny, ridiculous, and sad. Then he discovers beauty in his&#13;
little world: a bird in flight or a flower opening. These moments of&#13;
beauty seem to expand his small piece of darkness into the universe,&#13;
reducing the frustrations of man's machine world to nothing.&#13;
The classroom exercises being practiced by Marceau's students are&#13;
brought to life by the mime master in his portrayal of man the&#13;
machine battler, man the clown, and man the vision of God. Although&#13;
the exercises are highly structured, stylized, and repetitious, they also&#13;
lake on other-world quality, simply because of their style and&#13;
repetition.&#13;
The film is fun, interesting, and very poetic in quality. It's worth&#13;
dropping by the Learning Center to see it sometime.&#13;
L.&amp;FA sponsor mimisf&#13;
Wed,. Sept. 26. 1973THE PARKS/DE RANGER 5&#13;
Harry Chapin&#13;
Chapin in concert here&#13;
Harry Chapin, Grammy&#13;
finalist as best new artist of 1972-&#13;
73, will perform in concert at&#13;
Parkside Sunday, Sept. 30 at 8&#13;
p.m., in the Physical Education&#13;
BUilding.&#13;
Chapin, whose storytelling&#13;
style and poetic lyrics are most&#13;
frequently compared by critics to&#13;
early Bob Dylan, has seen his&#13;
popular appeal begin to catch up&#13;
with his critical acclaim since the&#13;
release of his second album,&#13;
"Sniper and Other Love Songs,"&#13;
about a year ago.&#13;
T. Daniel&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
Mimist-rnagician, T. Daniel, is&#13;
presenting two free public performances&#13;
here Wednesday,&#13;
Sept. 26, under sponsorship of the&#13;
Lecture-Fine Arts Comrmttee.&#13;
Daniel, who studied und~r&#13;
Marcel Marceau at the master s&#13;
Ecole Internationale de Mime in&#13;
Paris, will conduct a workshop at&#13;
2 p.m. in the Communication Arts&#13;
Studio Theater just east oC the&#13;
main theater and also will perform&#13;
at 8 p.m. in the Theater.&#13;
Before turning his attentions to&#13;
Mime, Daniel was a student of all&#13;
phases of theatre, directing and&#13;
acting in numerous plays as well&#13;
as designing for the theatre.&#13;
While attending Illinois State&#13;
University, he broadened his&#13;
knowledge of performing by&#13;
working with the University's&#13;
Gamma Phi Circus as a Juggler,&#13;
Tightwire Artist and solo&#13;
Unicyclist.&#13;
Also skilled in ventriloquy and&#13;
"escapology," Daniel offers a&#13;
unique style, incorporating the&#13;
mystery oC magic and the Cun of a&#13;
Circus Clown with the beauty of&#13;
~is poenc art. Beginning with a&#13;
collage of Mime techniques,&#13;
Daniel and his audience experience&#13;
laughter, sadness, fun,&#13;
excitement, and the use of the&#13;
imagination until the program is&#13;
brought to a very clever and&#13;
unusual end.&#13;
He has appeared at coUeges&#13;
and clubs throughout the country&#13;
and on television, and was a&#13;
member of the Ctucago Masquers&#13;
renaissance theatre group.&#13;
Since then, he has appeared&#13;
several times on the Tonight&#13;
Show, hosted Midnight Special.&#13;
and has been drawing large&#13;
audiences at club and college&#13;
concert dates.&#13;
Earlier this year he was one of&#13;
the five finalists for a Grammy&#13;
Award as Best New Artist and&#13;
received a Billboard 1973&#13;
Trendsetter Award for "devising&#13;
a storyteUing style of songwriting&#13;
with a narrative impact rare to&#13;
popular music."&#13;
Music critics have given&#13;
Chapin generous praise: Variety&#13;
said "Chapin's story songs are&#13;
among the most original of&#13;
contemporary compositions ...his&#13;
performance of them is electrifying"&#13;
RoUing Stone said "He&#13;
takes the audience up, down and&#13;
then suddenly up again, often&#13;
leaving wet. eyes and aching&#13;
hearts throughout the room"&#13;
Cash Box caUed Chapin "a&#13;
completely original, clearsighted&#13;
talent of major proportion."&#13;
a.apin's first album, "Heads&#13;
and Tales," contained the hit&#13;
single "Taxi" and established&#13;
him as an emerging talent. His&#13;
second, "Sniper and Other Love&#13;
Songs," established his validity&#13;
as a potential pop music&#13;
superstar and initiated the&#13;
honors which have come his way&#13;
this year, His third album is&#13;
scheduled for OCtober release.&#13;
Although Chapin uses drums&#13;
and piano on his records, his inperson&#13;
backing consists of three&#13;
musicians who ha ve been with&#13;
him since the group fonned in&#13;
t970: Tim SCott on cello, John&#13;
Wallace on bass, and Ron Palm""&#13;
on lead guitar.&#13;
Chapm has been a music&#13;
performer, on and off, for abc&#13;
15 years, including stints with '&#13;
brothers and father. He has I&#13;
worked in the film-makin,&#13;
dustry, producillll a docum,&#13;
tary, "Legendary Ouunplona&#13;
which won an Academy AW8I&#13;
nomination in addition to fib&#13;
festival awards ID New York an&#13;
Atlanta.&#13;
General admission prices COl&#13;
the concert are $3 in advance and&#13;
$3.50 at the door. Student prices&#13;
are $2.50 in advance and $3 at the&#13;
door. Advance tickets 8rtavailable&#13;
at One Sweet Dreaf!'"&#13;
and J&amp;J Tape in Kenosha, JI&#13;
Tape, Brandt's, and Beauti&#13;
Day in Racine, 1812 Overture&#13;
Milwaukee, and J&amp;J&#13;
WaUkegan. Students can oblE&#13;
tickets at the lnformation ,..~&#13;
ID 'laID Place, LLC&#13;
~~iiIIIo!:~~ 3 ~~&#13;
Chef~'&#13;
10% OFF ON PURCHASE OF&#13;
J $100&#13;
,&#13;
lOR MORE WITH PARKS IDE ID.&#13;
~ ENDS&#13;
Jj OCTOBER 31&#13;
, AT 'j 3400 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
f&#13;
AND&#13;
,! 6926 39th AVENUE&#13;
,.....·s~~toO&#13;
•&#13;
Review&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
Par~side'~ Learni~g Center, located in LLC D175, is an audiirvisual&#13;
paradise of mformation and entertainment. The material found there&#13;
can serve as an invaluable supplement to research projects or can be a&#13;
pnm~ry so.urce of .information in itself. There are also study and&#13;
practice aids available. But besides providing some excellent&#13;
reso1;1rce ~aterial, the Learnin.g Center offers a great variety of&#13;
movies, videotapes, cassettes, film strips, records, and so on which entertain. -&#13;
The Mime of Marcel Marceau is a film both entertaining and informative.&#13;
The scenes alternate between Marceau's school of mime&#13;
and one of his live stage performances. The classroom scenes reveal&#13;
how rigorously and exactly each movement of face, body and hands is&#13;
analysed, practiced, and perfected. Every muscle in the body&#13;
becomes a tool for creating illusion in pantomime.&#13;
Marceau on stage, his face a mask of white accented in black at&#13;
brows, eyes, and mouth, leads his audience into another world where&#13;
illusion becomes reality and reality illusion. Marceau is a white figure alone on the stage, surrounded by total darkness: a lonely every-man&#13;
trapped in a hostile world. His mimed characterizations portray the&#13;
technocracized man, battling indifferent machines in a seemingly&#13;
indifferent world. Striving to conquer his environment, every-man&#13;
becomes funny, ridiculous, and sad. Then he discovers beauty in his&#13;
little world: a bird in flight or a flower opening. These moments of&#13;
beauty seem to expand his small piece of darkness into the universe,&#13;
reducing the frustrations of man's machine world to nothing. The classroom exercises being practiced by Marceau's students are&#13;
brought to life by the mime master in his portrayal of man the&#13;
machine battler, man the clown, and man the vision of God. Although&#13;
the exercises are highly structured, stylized, and repetitious, they also&#13;
take on other-world quality, simply because of their style and&#13;
repetition.&#13;
The film is fun, interesting, and very poetic in quality. It's worth&#13;
dropping by the Learning Center to see it som!ltime.&#13;
Chapin&#13;
Harry Chapin. Grammy&#13;
finalist as best new artist of 1972-&#13;
73. will perform in concert at&#13;
Parkside Sunday, Sept. 30 at 8&#13;
p.m., in the Physical Education&#13;
Building.&#13;
Chapin. whose storytelling&#13;
style and poetic lyrics are most&#13;
frequently compared by critics to&#13;
early Bob Dylan, has seen his&#13;
popular appeal begin to catch up&#13;
with his critical acclaim since the&#13;
release of his second album,&#13;
"Sniper and Other Love Songs," about a year ago.&#13;
Wed., Sept. 26, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
H rr.) Chapin&#13;
in concert here&#13;
Since then. he has appeared&#13;
several times on the Tonight&#13;
Show. ho ted 1idnight Special.&#13;
and ha been drawing large&#13;
audiences at club and colleg&#13;
concert dates. Earlier this year he wa one of&#13;
the five finalists for a Grammy Award as Best • 'ew Artist and&#13;
received a Billboard 1973&#13;
Trendsetter Award for "devising&#13;
a storytelling style of song,wTiting&#13;
with a narrative impact rare to&#13;
popular music.''&#13;
l&amp;FA sponsor ~irnist&#13;
.fosic critics have given&#13;
Chapin generous praise: Variety said "Chapin 's story songs are&#13;
among the most original of&#13;
contemporary compositions ... his&#13;
performance of them is electrifying."&#13;
Rolling Stone said ''He&#13;
takes the audience up. do\\o-n and&#13;
then suddenly up again, often&#13;
lea\ing wet eye and aching&#13;
heart throughout the room"&#13;
Ca h Bo called Chapin "a&#13;
completely original , clearby&#13;
Michael Olszyk&#13;
Mimist-magician, T. Daniel, is&#13;
presenting two free public performances&#13;
here Wednesday,&#13;
Sept. 26, under sponsorship of the&#13;
Lecture-Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
Daniel, who studied und~r&#13;
Marcel Marceau at the master s&#13;
Ecole Internationale de Mime in&#13;
Paris, will conduct a workshop at&#13;
2 p.m. in the CommlD'lication Arts&#13;
Studio Theater just east of the&#13;
main theater and also will per- form at B p.m. in the Theater.&#13;
Before turning his attentions to&#13;
T. Daniel&#13;
Mime, Daniel was a student of all&#13;
phases of theatre, directing and&#13;
acting in nwnerous plays as well&#13;
as designing for the theatre.&#13;
While attending Illinois State&#13;
University, he broadened his&#13;
knowledge of performing by working with the University's Gamma Phi Circus as a Juggler,&#13;
Tightwire Artist and solo&#13;
Unicyclist.&#13;
Also skilled in ventriloquy and&#13;
"escapology," Daniel offers a&#13;
lD'lique style, incorporating the&#13;
mystery of magic and the fun of a&#13;
Circus Clo\\rn with the beauty of&#13;
t,is poetic art. Beginning with a&#13;
collage of • time techniques, Daniel and his audience experience&#13;
laughter, sadness, flD'l,&#13;
excitement, and the use of the&#13;
imagination until the program is&#13;
brought to a very clever and&#13;
unusual end.&#13;
He has appeared at colleges&#13;
and clubs throughout the country and on television, and was a&#13;
member of the Chicago Masquers&#13;
renaissance theatre group.&#13;
ighted talent of major propor·&#13;
tion."&#13;
Cliapin's first album, " H ad&#13;
and Tale ," contained the hit&#13;
ingle ' Taxi' ' and e tablished&#13;
him a an emer m talent. Hi&#13;
nd, " niper and Other Love&#13;
ng ," est bli hed his validity&#13;
a potential pop mu ic&#13;
l % OF&#13;
AT&#13;
3400 SHERIDA ROAD&#13;
AND&#13;
6926 39th AVE1 UE&#13;
?~ &#13;
10 THE PARKS1DE RANGER Wed., Sept. 26, 1973&#13;
PAS presents&#13;
movie IIJoe"&#13;
"Joe" IS ~ me Ii,.,,,&#13;
m_ plctur to deal with the&#13;
unrut and Itlestyle 01 conI&#13;
mporary middle merica,&#13;
Pro&lt;Med by David Gil and&#13;
dlr ed by Jolin Avildsen, the&#13;
mm tello th ollen touching,&#13;
Ir~t1y amusing lOrY 01 two&#13;
Wldel, CClIlIra ung hgur • Joe&#13;
urran (Peter Boyle),&#13;
ho_. bowler, and World&#13;
War D \'deran who eams 1\fIO a&#13;
" nd BIU Compton (DennIS&#13;
PatrICk), a , a·year ad·&#13;
v rl nil ullve. De pole thelT&#13;
ontr lin d grees of&#13;
phlsllcation, they are drawn&#13;
her b)' a common dl lr\lS1&#13;
d vy 01 youth ..... ben Bill's&#13;
d u nter, !elt a rsu an&#13;
randon). becom enmeshed in&#13;
an East Village environment of&#13;
drugs. Bill and Joe lash back with&#13;
a vengeance that is a timely and&#13;
stunning commentary on the&#13;
ceasequences 01 radical violence&#13;
in America.&#13;
PeoPle well may credit the&#13;
makers of "Joe" for having made&#13;
a prophetic liIm. Actually,&#13;
orman Wexler wrote his&#13;
original screenplay nearly two&#13;
years ago. lOtending only to&#13;
e-eate a lanlasy whicb dealt with&#13;
the ramifications of the&#13;
genera'ion and polilical gaps that&#13;
trouble our country·&#13;
Parltside Activi'ies Board is&#13;
ponsoringa showing 01 "Joe" on&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 26 at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
10 GreenqUl , 103. The admission&#13;
charge is 75 cents.&#13;
Regents&#13;
PUBLIC SERVICE MESSAGE&#13;
The Ci,y 01 Racine needs parttime&#13;
crossing guards 10 relieve&#13;
lull-time guards. Tbis is a paid&#13;
position. Interested persons&#13;
should contact Capt. James&#13;
Jerdee a' the safety Bldg.,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
OK new&#13;
physical&#13;
plant&#13;
Illda lor construction 01 a&#13;
physic a' planl building a'&#13;
ParUtda are expeeled to be&#13;
takftJ m ·O\'e.I1lbe.r and contracts&#13;
ign«I in January, it was&#13;
announced la t Tuesday.&#13;
James GalbraIth, director 01&#13;
P\anrung and Construction, said&#13;
that budget and concept lor the&#13;
1521,000 laciltl)'. which wtll&#13;
pro"de lor centralization 01 all&#13;
phy lcal planl operations under&#13;
one rool. has been approved by&#13;
th UW ystern Board 01 Regents&#13;
and IS expected to clear the Stale&#13;
BUIldIng Comml sion soon&#13;
Construellon should begin early&#13;
nelll year, with occupancy in&#13;
early t975.&#13;
The one-storY strUCture, whIch&#13;
,,1lI be located east 01the central&#13;
H ung and Chilling Plant, ...-ilI&#13;
pro"de 19.975gross square leet&#13;
of space for neet maintenance&#13;
and garage laeiliUes, campus&#13;
torege. mainlenance shop areas&#13;
lor groundsk88PlOg. carpentry,&#13;
IOCDIlllth painting. plumblllll.&#13;
electrical and mechanical&#13;
operauon , and staff o/hoes.&#13;
GalbraIth wd the centralized&#13;
latillty ill result in substantial&#13;
vinIJ In electrical energy and&#13;
fu I and increase work ef·&#13;
fiClenc)', sm~ variOUS physical&#13;
plant operations are now scat-&#13;
'ered 10 lormer residences on&#13;
campus "hich are ill-designed&#13;
and lOac!eqUate lor SllCh luneUOOS&#13;
The 1:I2t. project COOlincludes&#13;
buUdlng. Ite developmenl&#13;
and uuhti costs, as well as&#13;
m abl equipment and variOUS&#13;
contingency and architeclural&#13;
f GalbraIth said the "el·&#13;
haeney" 01 the buildlng, a&#13;
panson 01 gro area 10&#13;
... ble area, is lugh, about 90&#13;
percent, and the conslruction&#13;
coat 01 slIghtly less than 117 per&#13;
quare (001. was "very&#13;
eeonomtcal In splle of innationary&#13;
trends" Economical&#13;
pre-engineered modular struclure&#13;
components ;U be used in&#13;
con trUCtlon ArchitectW'al slyle&#13;
oIth bUlhllng ",II be consistenl&#13;
'&lt;lth oth on tbe campus.&#13;
photo by Allen FrederlcklOn&#13;
A RANGER reader! A student takes time to relax and keep informed.&#13;
SAB under student&#13;
management&#13;
by Tom Petersen&#13;
lanagement 01 the Student&#13;
Activities Building is under an&#13;
experimental setup this year with&#13;
students holding posts previously&#13;
occupied by stafl members. The&#13;
change was necessitated due to&#13;
financial cutbacks, but also with&#13;
the realization that students&#13;
should and can handle some 01&#13;
the responsibilities 01 nmning the&#13;
Student Activities Building.&#13;
Four students replace the two&#13;
starr supervisors, that formerly&#13;
ran the building, and are&#13;
responsible lor e"erything that&#13;
goes on to the Activities building,&#13;
Some 01 their duties include:&#13;
security 01 the building,&#13;
managing cash now, scheduling&#13;
in the building. and super.vising&#13;
other student employees. The&#13;
student supervisors also make&#13;
recommendations on purchasing,&#13;
and the hiring of other student&#13;
employees. Itimately they are&#13;
responsible to Dave Bishop,&#13;
Coordinator of Auxillary Services,&#13;
though he would like to see&#13;
everyone working together as a "&#13;
team to run the building.&#13;
Having students in supervisory&#13;
positions is new at Parkside and&#13;
if it succeeds could lead to a&#13;
largely student nUl campus union&#13;
when it's finally completed.&#13;
Through this experiment it is&#13;
hoped that more students would&#13;
be encouraged to get involved in&#13;
some decision making processes&#13;
on campus.&#13;
TAPES&#13;
ORGANS&#13;
RECORDS STEREOS&#13;
PIANOS&#13;
t9t9TAYLORAVE DE&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53403&#13;
MIKE URBAN&#13;
DE rYNELSON&#13;
owners&#13;
PHONE 637-2212&#13;
No" Appearing&#13;
9P l.totA.M.&#13;
URSDAY -FRIDAY - SATIJRDAY&#13;
MARINA ROOM&#13;
'Kerw;lISha"S kfiNi H~rbot N,t. Club"&#13;
"Taurus Rising"&#13;
s.pt 21. 29 &amp; lO&#13;
SIGHTLY E 'TERTAINMENT&#13;
In Our Cockt., LouOOf'&#13;
FNlunng&#13;
COLLEGENITE&#13;
evel'Y Thursday&#13;
Pitcher of&#13;
Beer $1. 00&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
5l2S6IhAve.&#13;
Overlooking the Harbor!&#13;
\\\\ ,etHng III,&#13;
,S\\\RTS 'Ie ,,\ ~"A~&#13;
PARKSIDE 'E,&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE&#13;
- Coming Next:&#13;
RECORD SALE III&#13;
Bigger &amp; Better Than &amp;erl&#13;
. "&#13;
10 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 26, 1973&#13;
PAB presents&#13;
movie 11Joe''&#13;
nts&#13;
ne&#13;
lcal&#13;
an East Village en ironment of&#13;
&lt;rugs Bill and Joe lash back with&#13;
a vengeance that is a timely and&#13;
stunning commentary on the&#13;
consequences ol radical violence&#13;
m America.&#13;
People well may credit the&#13;
makers of •• Joe" for having made&#13;
a prophetic film . Actually,&#13;
orman We ler wrote his&#13;
original screenplay nearly two&#13;
years ago, intending only to&#13;
create a fantasy which dealt with&#13;
the ramification of the&#13;
generation and political gaps that&#13;
trouble our country.&#13;
Par ide Acti\ities Board is&#13;
ponsonng a shoOAing of " Joe" on&#13;
Wednesday. p( . 26 at 7:30 p.m. in Greenquist 103. The admission&#13;
charge i 75 cents.&#13;
P BU VI E~E GE&#13;
The City of Racine needs parttime&#13;
crossmg guards to relieve&#13;
full-time guards, This is a paid&#13;
position. Interested persons&#13;
photo by Allen FreclerlcklOII&#13;
hould contact Capt . James&#13;
Jerdee at the Safety Bldg.,&#13;
Racine. A RANGER reader! A student takes time to relax and keep Informed.&#13;
&#13;
nt&#13;
campu .&#13;
SAB under student&#13;
management&#13;
b Tom Peursen&#13;
fanagement of the Student&#13;
Activities Building is under an&#13;
experimental setup this year with&#13;
tudent holding posts pre\i ously&#13;
occupied by taff members. The&#13;
change wa nece itated due to&#13;
financial cutbacks, but also 'Aith&#13;
the realization that students&#13;
·hould and can handle ome of&#13;
the re ponsibilitie of running the&#13;
tud nt Activitie Building.&#13;
Four tudents replace the two&#13;
taff supervisors, that formerly&#13;
ran the building, and are&#13;
respon ible for everything that&#13;
g on in the Activities building.&#13;
me of their duties include :&#13;
ecunty of the building,&#13;
managing ca h now, scheduling&#13;
10 the building. and uperyi ing&#13;
other student employees. The&#13;
student supervisors also make&#13;
recommendations on purchasing,&#13;
and the hiring of other student&#13;
employees. ltimately they are&#13;
re ponsible to Dave Bishop,&#13;
Coordinator of Auxiliary Ser-&#13;
\ices, though he would like to see&#13;
everyone working together as a .&#13;
team to run the building.&#13;
Having students in supervisory&#13;
positions is new at Parkside and&#13;
if it ucceeds could lead to a&#13;
largely student nm campus union&#13;
when it's finally completed.&#13;
Through this experiment it is&#13;
hoped that more students would&#13;
be encouraged to get involved in&#13;
some decision making processes&#13;
on campus.&#13;
RECORDS STEREOS TAPES&#13;
PIANOS ORGANS&#13;
1919 TAYLOR AVENUE&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53403&#13;
IIKEURBA.·&#13;
DE. iY • ,ELS(),&#13;
owners&#13;
PHONE 637-2212&#13;
. ·ow Appearing&#13;
IP .. lolA.M.&#13;
URSD \' - FRIDAY. 11JRDA y&#13;
In ""&#13;
MARL'AROOM&#13;
··Tauru Ri ing"&#13;
Seo v. 29 &amp; 10&#13;
In O..r Coe I I Lounge&#13;
Ffflur ng&#13;
COLLEGE NITE&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Pitcher of&#13;
Beer $1. 00&#13;
1\oe,&amp;a,\ ~~&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
5125 6th Ave.&#13;
Overlook ing the Harbor!&#13;
\\6 getHng 1111&#13;
1.s\\\RTS D,-e&#13;
,.\ r,4JfJJ&#13;
PARKSIDE ll&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE&#13;
, Coming Next:&#13;
RECORD $ALE Ill&#13;
Bigger &amp; Better Than Eier!&#13;
' .. &#13;
Ex-DJ&#13;
Wed., Sept. 26, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
heads media production&#13;
Dave Campbell doing his thing.&#13;
by Micbael Olszyk&#13;
The amplified banging of an electrician, along&#13;
with the repeated ringing of a phone, interrupted&#13;
Dave Campbell from reading an article entitled,&#13;
"Audio Report by the Editors of Rolling Stone."&#13;
Campbell is the coordinator of Parkside's new&#13;
Media Production Facility, located on the main&#13;
floor of the unfinished Communications Arts&#13;
Building.&#13;
Here, students and faculty will be able to have&#13;
media produced in a form that will hopefully convey&#13;
information to their respective audiences. This&#13;
kaleidoscopic center is designed .to encompass&#13;
almost all areas of media, ranging from general&#13;
audio-visual productions to separate film, television&#13;
and sound creations.&#13;
A staff member, for example, wanting to arrange&#13;
a film strip from separate slides, would find a&#13;
drymount press helpful. Other useful items in the&#13;
AV section of the center include a copystand, 28&#13;
video-tape editors, various recording machines,&#13;
overhead projections. transparencies, and more.&#13;
Sandwiched in between the AV production room&#13;
and television studio is a small TV repair shop, for&#13;
closed-cireuit sets at Parkside. The studio itself will&#13;
house full-color video taping in the near future.&#13;
These facilities presenUy are occupied by cartons&#13;
of TVs and tape-marked floors, designating wbere&#13;
equipment will go once it arrives.&#13;
Poetry Forum&#13;
Iponlorl&#13;
Troubador night&#13;
Troubador Night, the first of a&#13;
series of Parks ide Poetry&#13;
Forums, IS scheduled for&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 'EI at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
The new theatre in the Comm.&#13;
Arts building will be open to all&#13;
students, guitarists and song&#13;
writers. The essence of poetry is&#13;
song and music; this is the theme&#13;
of Troubador Night. It is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Among students tuning up for&#13;
the festivities are classical&#13;
guitarist and bluesman Dave&#13;
Rogers,.and Clark Anderson who&#13;
will play along with Keith Herbrechtsmeier.&#13;
John Sieger, Bob&#13;
Fitzgerald, James Frere and&#13;
Charley will also be there. Bob&#13;
Canary of the Humanities&#13;
Division is preparing his melodic&#13;
tunes and stringing his guitar.&#13;
too.&#13;
Poetry Forum advisor, Andy&#13;
McLean, said that any student&#13;
who wants to play and-or sing will&#13;
be able to do so. Just truck right&#13;
in and join the fun. This is a&#13;
students' night in the theatre with&#13;
music. Come, stay, play or listen.&#13;
The next Poetry Forum will be&#13;
Oct. 4, 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., in&#13;
the back of the third floor of the&#13;
Library. Students wishing to read&#13;
their poems should contact Carl&#13;
Lindner, assistant professor of&#13;
English, in CA218, ext. 2392.Here&#13;
ts a chance to share your poems&#13;
with others.&#13;
"The entire center should be in operation within&#13;
six months to a year," explained Campbell. "Right&#13;
now, however, only the AV portion is open."&#13;
Film production, with editing facilities, will be the&#13;
third area to open, following television. It plans to&#13;
specialize in 16 mm and 8 mm film.&#13;
Last, but not least, to become operational is the&#13;
audio section. Its control room, located between two&#13;
recording studios, hopes to have a 16 microphone&#13;
mixing system, resulting in Brack, quadraphonic&#13;
recording.&#13;
Setting up these facilities is one 01 two major&#13;
concerns of Campbell, who came to Parkside early&#13;
last May, following five years of experience in radio&#13;
and commercial television at Indiana State&#13;
University. When he arrived here, the Media&#13;
Facility had been three-fourths of the way built.&#13;
Unfortunately, several architectural errors had&#13;
been made.&#13;
Perhaps the most serious error is that the installation&#13;
of a lighting console for the (ilm room is in&#13;
one nf the recording studios. Also, the acoustics (or&#13;
audio production were designed to broadcast rather&#13;
than record.&#13;
Campbell mentioned otber flaws, too, such as the&#13;
AV room being without AC current and a badly&#13;
located testing screen in the dark room.&#13;
"Despite various errors in design," commented&#13;
Campbell, "The center is in a good location, acroos&#13;
Earn $$$ selling&#13;
ads for RANGER&#13;
PARKSfDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
PRESENTS IN CONCERT&#13;
Tickets Available:&#13;
INFO. CENTER&#13;
Main etece-t.t,c&#13;
UWP STUDENTS&#13;
52.SO advance&#13;
$3.00 al doOr'&#13;
Sun., Sept. 30,&#13;
8:00&#13;
Phy. Ed. 8ldg. GEN. ADM.&#13;
$l.oo advance&#13;
Sl.SG at dOOr&#13;
(rom the art rooms and music department down the&#13;
hall ....&#13;
"Any well-working production (acUity mlat have&#13;
competentstalf members, whidll leel we have," be&#13;
added.&#13;
One of those five stalf members is Dale ~,&#13;
engineer. Before coming to Parkside, King worIted&#13;
on commercial television in Madison for 17 yean.&#13;
Sandy Thomason, who 15 in charge of AV&#13;
production, comes from Texas ,,'here she received&#13;
her master's in radio and lelevision at SOuthern&#13;
lethodist University. Thomason worked lor a While&#13;
on radio station WFAA io Dallas. She plans to train&#13;
students as assistants in running the AV center,&#13;
In charge of film production will be Mille Reid,&#13;
woo is also experienced in media.&#13;
Phil Quetsehke, assistant director of the Learning&#13;
Center, will help Campbell coordinate the&#13;
Production Center.&#13;
Campbell himself would like to instruct mterested&#13;
students in television work, such as cable nmners,&#13;
lighting, and so forth. .&#13;
Referring to his past, and as to why Campbell&#13;
chose to come to Parkside. he stated, "I have a way&#13;
of droppong into things. While m radio at IndIana I&#13;
was a hoss jock. Jay Anthony was my personaltty&#13;
name. During thal time (at five tauons) 1 found oul&#13;
how the hierarchy in broadcasting constantly mess&#13;
up._.They're really a bunch of neurotic money&#13;
mongers. That's all they're concerned with ."&#13;
"In commercial television it's even worse. One&#13;
weekend Iworked for ABC Wide World of Sports&#13;
They were the most incompetent people l.ver met&#13;
The show we did ran something like three mmut ..&#13;
over schedule, which costs around a quarter of a&#13;
million dollars in television.&#13;
"Fed up with commercialism, I decided 10 try&#13;
something different, more creative. 11m bavl.lNlfun&#13;
bere, which is basically what I strive fer in my life."&#13;
Cable television is one thing that Campbe\l hopes&#13;
to experiment with at Parbide. He would like to&#13;
produce half-hour to an hour programa weekly,&#13;
using a wide spectrum of Ideas from studenta, to IeI1&#13;
to cable stations.&#13;
"The implications of cable television ~ infinite,"&#13;
said Campbell.&#13;
Also, since Parkside was designed to worIr,cIoaeIy&#13;
with southeastern Wisconsin's business and inutry,&#13;
Campbell encourag .. outside organizati ....&#13;
to use the (Un.-making facilities for their ~.&#13;
Looking ahead to the fut ..... of mediae produellcJna,&#13;
especially in education, campbe\l predicted It&#13;
would be possible in our time for studenta to ."""0;""&#13;
lectures by TV through dialing any dea1red program&#13;
and respooding to the lecturer at home.&#13;
"In communicatioDS, lhe leJephone is AI&#13;
primitive as the _," campbell remarked.&#13;
·1&#13;
l'S&#13;
.1&#13;
,&#13;
il&#13;
i&#13;
I CORNER 34th Ave. &amp; 52nd 5t.&#13;
PhOIM652-'662&#13;
OPEM 11 D.,"-. ,.. 2 Q tW.-.... thrv Set&#13;
0&gt;-- --'.- --- -&#13;
c --- -&#13;
Wed., Sept. 26, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Ex-DJ heads media production&#13;
photo by DA ~ DA&#13;
Dave Campbell doing hi thing.&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
The amplified banging of an electrician, along&#13;
with the repeated ringing of a phone, interrupted&#13;
Dave Campbell from reading an article entitled,&#13;
"Audio Report by the Editors of Rolling Stone."&#13;
Campbell is the coordinator of Parkside's new&#13;
Media Production Facility, located on the main&#13;
floor of the unfinished Communications Arts&#13;
Building.&#13;
Here, students and faculty will be able to have&#13;
media produced in a form that will hopefully convey&#13;
information to their respective audiences. This&#13;
kaleidoscopic center is designed to encompass&#13;
almost all areas of media, ranging from general&#13;
audio-visual productions to separate film, television&#13;
and sound creations.&#13;
A staff member, for example, wanting to arrange&#13;
a film strip from separate slides, would find a&#13;
drymount press helpful. Other useful items in the&#13;
AV section of the center include a copystand, 28&#13;
video-tape editors, various recording machines,&#13;
overhead projections, transparencies, and more.&#13;
Sandwiched in between the AV production room&#13;
and television studio is a small TV repair shop, for&#13;
closed-circuit sets at Parkside. The studio itself will&#13;
house full-color video taping in the near future.&#13;
These facilities presently are occupied by cartons&#13;
of TVs and tape-marked floors, designating where&#13;
equipment will go once it arrives.&#13;
"The entire center hould be in operation within&#13;
six months to a year,"' explained Campbell. ' 'Right&#13;
now, however, only the A\' portion i open."&#13;
Film production, with editing facilities, will be the&#13;
third area to open, following television. It plaru to&#13;
specialize in 16 mm and 8 mm film.&#13;
Last, but not least, to become operational is the&#13;
audio section. Its control room, located between tv.'O&#13;
recording studios, hopes to have a 16 microphone&#13;
mixing system, resulting in 4-tra k, quadraphonic&#13;
recording. Setting up these facilities is one of two major&#13;
concerns of Campbell, who came to Parkside early&#13;
last May. following five years or experience in radio&#13;
and commercial television at Indiana State&#13;
University. When he arrived here, the edia&#13;
Facility had been three-fourths of the way built.&#13;
Unfortunately, several architectural errors had&#13;
been made. Perhaps the most serious error i~ that the_ installation&#13;
of a lighting console for the film room IS m&#13;
one of the recording tudios. Also, the acoustics foe&#13;
audio production were designed to troadca t rather&#13;
than record.&#13;
Campbell mentioned other flaws, too such a the&#13;
AV room being without AC current and a badly&#13;
located testing screen in the dark room.&#13;
"Despite various errors in de ign," commented&#13;
Campbell, "The center is in a good location, across&#13;
Poetry Forum&#13;
sponsors&#13;
Troubador night&#13;
Earn $$$ selling&#13;
ads for RANGER&#13;
:&#13;
Troubador Night, the first of a&#13;
series of Parkside Poetry&#13;
Forums, is scheduled for&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 'n at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
The new theatre in the Comm.&#13;
Arts building will be open to all&#13;
students, guitarists and song&#13;
writers. The essence of poetry is&#13;
song and music; this is the theme&#13;
of Troubador Night. It is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Among students tuning up for&#13;
the festivities are classical&#13;
guitarist and bluesman Dave&#13;
Rogers,-and Clark Anderson who&#13;
will play along with Keith Herbrechtsmeier.&#13;
John Sieger, Bob&#13;
Fitzgerald, James Frere and&#13;
Cbarley will also be there. Bob&#13;
Canary of the Humanities&#13;
Division is preparing his melodic&#13;
tunes and stringing his guitar,&#13;
too.&#13;
Poetry Forum advisor, Andy&#13;
McLean, said that any student&#13;
who wants to play and-or sing will&#13;
be able to do so. Just truck right&#13;
m and join the fun . This is a&#13;
students' night in the theatre with&#13;
music. Come, stay, play or listen.&#13;
The next Poetry Forum will ~e&#13;
Oct. 4, 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., m&#13;
the back of the third floor of the&#13;
Library. Students wishing to read&#13;
their poems should contact Carl&#13;
Lindner, assistant professor of&#13;
English, in CA 218, ext. 2392. Here&#13;
is a chance to share your poems&#13;
with others.&#13;
PARKS IDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
PRESENTI3 IN CONCERT&#13;
Tickets Available:&#13;
INFO. CENTER Main Ptace.LLC&#13;
GEN. ADM.&#13;
s3.00 advance&#13;
s3.S0 at door&#13;
UWP STUDENTS&#13;
n .so advanc"&#13;
S3.00 at doOr&#13;
Sun .• Sept. 30,&#13;
8:00&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
from the rt room nd m hall ....&#13;
-&#13;
, THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., sept. 26, 1973&#13;
Brief news&#13;
WbIteoltellar presents the return of Parkside's awn Tony and Jumbo&#13;
wI1ba new piano player, Jimi Holsinger. The show will begin at 1 p.m.&#13;
Inthe Whiteoltrllar, Greenqwst 0201. This will be the grand reopening&#13;
GIllie WbIteoltellar Everyone is invited to bring their lunch and enjoy&#13;
dl8DaeIves on wednesday, Sept. 26.&#13;
P::rk ide's student poetry magaame. The _eD Hara, is preparing&#13;
*&#13;
the flnt of Its three iasues for the 1973-74school year Contributions&#13;
uch a poems and hne drawings are welcome and should be sent to&#13;
Carl LIndner, istant professor of English, 218 Comm Arts. Each&#13;
poem hould be legible and accompanied by a sell·addressed stamped&#13;
envelope lIthe writer wlshe the poem returned. Contributions for this&#13;
lit will be received until October IS, with publication expected by&#13;
ovember 7&#13;
Ire Hockey Oub meetings will&#13;
*&#13;
be beld on Thursdays at the P.E.&#13;
bulIdlna, main gym Workout at 7:00 p.m., business meeting at 8:00&#13;
pm Anyone Interested in playIng, managing. or assistant coaching,&#13;
welcome If unable to attend the meeung. contact Vic Godfrey at ext.&#13;
2310&#13;
*&#13;
Anyone w'ho paid lor a parking ticket at Parkside Village that was&#13;
not I ued oy the Kenosha Sheriff's Department can get the money&#13;
bad by lIOing to supenntendent Art Oaultbelr.&#13;
The Veta invite all men and women vets to bring spouse or friend to&#13;
*&#13;
their meeting of September 30 in the SAB at 6:30 p.m. Beer will be&#13;
served.&#13;
*&#13;
Ally string p1ayen interested in participating in Parkside's or-&#13;
• _a an ,..eIcome to come to practice on Mondays at 3:30 and&#13;
n-day night at 7 :30, in COmm Arts DI1B. For more infcrmatioo&#13;
p1_ call David Littrell at 637·1019or at his office in comm Arts 293.&#13;
On Sept. 30 a man from Dependable Pest Control was working over&#13;
*&#13;
IIone of the Parbide Village buildings. He set a can of deadly poison&#13;
dDwn and left. When be returned, it was gone. Whoever tooIt it is asked&#13;
lDpIeaae dispoee of It quickly and carelulJy, before someone gets burl.&#13;
W\acalain's Kettle Moraine, a prime scenic&#13;
*&#13;
and recreational area of&#13;
Ibe Slate, will be the subject 01 aD Extensioo course. Parts 01 lbe&#13;
....-aiDe are now preserved as the Kettle Moraine State Forest. and&#13;
parts Irt" included in the newly created Ice Age Natiooal Scientific&#13;
Reoerve of the national park system.&#13;
The lormatioo 01 the Moraine. component laDdfonns, bedrock&#13;
(leoIogy, and gJacla1 biatory will be covered, and an all-&lt;1ayfield trip&#13;
can be arranged If desired&#13;
The mstruetor is AIIao SChneider, of Parkside's Earth Science&#13;
viSlOll.Five weekly meetings will begin Wednesday, Sept. 26, 7:30&#13;
,.m. at the wood Road Campus.&#13;
- '" about the Danforth Fellowships, to be awarded by lbe&#13;
*&#13;
..n Foundation of St, LouIS, ltssourl in Marcb 1974,are invited,&#13;
""ding to the local campus representative, Prof. John zarling,&#13;
.;istant to the Vice Chancelor, room 340 Library Learning Center.&#13;
The Fellowships are open to all qualified persons of any race, creed&#13;
_ CItizenship, single or married, who bave serious interest in careers&#13;
If teachiog and-or administration 1D colleges and universities, and&#13;
_"",I,a::o to study lor a PhD in any field 01 study common to the un-&#13;
',#a uate liberal arts curriculum in the Uruted States Applicants&#13;
.. be unde_ lISyears 01 age at the lime application papers are filed,&#13;
and may not have undertaken any graduate or professional study&#13;
beyond the baccalaureate. Persons must be nominated by Liaison&#13;
Ofllcers of their undergraduate IOstitutions by Nov 20, 1974. The&#13;
Danforth Foundation does not accept drrect applications lor the&#13;
P'eIIowships ApproXimately 100Fellowships ,,,ll be awarded.&#13;
~ award is (or one year, and is normally renewable until com·&#13;
plebon of the degree nr for a maximum total of four years of graduate&#13;
!IlUdy Fellollo-ship bpends are based on individual need, but may not&#13;
_ exceed S202Sfor slnRle Fellows and $2200 lor married Fellows lor the&#13;
academic year. plus dependency allowances for children and required&#13;
tioo and lees&#13;
The Danlorth Foundation was created in 19Z1by the late Mr. and&#13;
n Wilham H Danforth of St. Louis as a philanthropy devoted to&#13;
ving aid and encouragement to persons, to emphasize the humane&#13;
ues that com from a religious and democratic heritage, and to&#13;
",gthen the essential quality of education.&#13;
Free music&#13;
performances&#13;
scheduled&#13;
Eleven recitals and concerts by&#13;
faculty and student solo and&#13;
ensemble performers make up&#13;
lbe musical agenda for the lall&#13;
semester at Parkside.&#13;
All 01 the performances are&#13;
free and open to the public and all&#13;
are scheduled for the new&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
They are set for 7:30 p.m. except&#13;
the Orristrnas Carol Concert,&#13;
which is at 3 p.m.&#13;
The series will begin OCt. 14&#13;
with a laculty recital by Frances&#13;
Bedlord, harpsichordist, and&#13;
James Yoghourtjian playing the&#13;
classical guitar and viola da&#13;
gamba.&#13;
The next two recitals will introduce&#13;
two new faculty members,&#13;
David Littrell, violoncello,&#13;
who will perform with his wife,&#13;
Mary Ann Littrell as pianist, on&#13;
OCt. 21, and Stephen Swedisb,&#13;
pianist, who will play Nov. 11.&#13;
"An Evening of Jazz" will be&#13;
presented on Nov. 15 by UW-P's&#13;
Jazz Ensembles I and II under&#13;
the direction of Robert Thomason&#13;
and the Parkside Symphonic&#13;
Band directed by Bernard Sliner&#13;
will appear in concert on Nov. 18.&#13;
The Parkside Piano TrIo, a&#13;
newly formed faculty ensemble&#13;
including Marla Mutschler,&#13;
violinist, Littrell and Swedish will&#13;
debut 00 Nov. 29. The Parkside&#13;
Symphony Orchestra conducted&#13;
by Littrell will perform on Dec. 2&#13;
and the Parkside OIorale and&#13;
Chorus directed by Frank&#13;
Mueller will present" Christmas&#13;
Carol Concert on Dec. 9.&#13;
Three student recitals also are&#13;
sdleduled.&#13;
The Parkside Guitar Ensemble&#13;
and other chamber groups are&#13;
scheduled lor Dec. 6; Lenee&#13;
Stevens, flute, witb Sue Anderegg,&#13;
piano, for Dec. 12; and&#13;
Gertrude Sheridan, voice, with&#13;
Everett Kuiper. piano, and Kurt&#13;
Harlf, guitar, for Dec. 13.&#13;
A series of afternoon student&#13;
concerts at 3:30 p.m. ·in Room&#13;
DIl8 01 the COmmunication Arts&#13;
Building are Scheduled lor OCt. 10&#13;
and 31, Nov. 14 and 18 and Dec. 5.&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
PAT GARRET &amp; BILLY THE KID&#13;
Bob Dylan-50undtrack (Columbia K C 32460)&#13;
The dominating mood is established with the "Main Title Theme,"&#13;
which introduces the audience to an old tale about the sad fate of a&#13;
wayward boy. This is the first of the "Billys" on this record, and its&#13;
essence is six minutes of melancholy instrumentation. It is formed by&#13;
a typical western outdoor assembly of acoustic guitars and tarnbourine.&#13;
Awalking bass joins in the middle, defining the second&#13;
half ...not extremely gripping ...not terribly dull ...not bad.&#13;
"Cantina Theme (Working for the Law)" brings a fairly intriguing&#13;
arrangement of another instrumental. The pulse is strong-weak,&#13;
strong-weak...interest builds slightly.&#13;
Now the stylus arrives at "Billy I" with feelings of uncertainty. This&#13;
is the first in a large series of vocal Billys. Bob and his familiar harmonica&#13;
companion are featured in this one. The harmonica is the&#13;
sharpest edge here, the song and the singing have little positive or&#13;
negative influence. Lyrically, the line "Billy, they don't like you to be&#13;
so free" supports the whole song in high status ...attention drifts.&#13;
As the light, uninspiring waves of "Bunkhouse Theme" roU in, one&#13;
may decide to head for there ...boredom sets in.&#13;
At the last few threads of side I, a brief but definite improvement&#13;
arrives. The instrumental, "River Theme," releases some affection&#13;
...curiosity is again aroused.&#13;
"Turkey Chase" kicks 011 side 2 with bigh spirits in the style 01&#13;
yahoo hillbilly festivities. Byron Berline demonstrates his lively&#13;
fiddling that temporarily cuts up the melancholy iloilo'01 the album&#13;
with moonshine enthusiasm ...great. ..former opinions are discarded!&#13;
"Knocking on Heaven's Door" rolls in as the highest point, and&#13;
shines out as the true gem of the set. This is the story of a weary&#13;
lawman turning in his credentials as his struggle against crime meets&#13;
a desperate end, and be seeks peace. Tbe mood of this excellent tune is&#13;
portrayed by Dylan most convincingly along with pertinent&#13;
background support in tbe cborus ...fantastic!&#13;
Three aces in a row are set up with the laying down of the "Final&#13;
Theme." A flute is featured hovering above the main weight of this&#13;
instrumental theme ...all-right!&#13;
"Billy 4(Recorded in Mexico City)" is anticipated with disappointment&#13;
as one most likely expects useless repetition. However, Mr.&#13;
Dylan's voice is more touching here than in any of the other&#13;
Billys ...OK +•&#13;
The central message is re-emphasized for the last lime by someone&#13;
with a low-pitcbed voice trying to lay it on solemnly. This moderatinn&#13;
of the main theme is not given more than its true worth as "Billy 7" is&#13;
2:01 minutes long, so the inclusion of this version is justifiable and&#13;
effective ...yes, really.&#13;
This soundtrack may have its dull moments, and needless to say I&#13;
unwarranted repetition. The different Billy versions aren't that wittingly&#13;
distinct. Ifthere are 7 versions of Billy besides the instrumental&#13;
version, one should be thankful that Billys 2, 3, 5 and 6 aren't included.&#13;
After close examination one may suspect another exploitation. One&#13;
basic tune seems to be used in "Cantina Theme(Working for the&#13;
Law)," "River Theme," and "Knocking on Heaven's Door." and&#13;
"Final Theme," make this soundtrack worth every penny 01its price.&#13;
(Record courtesy of J &amp; JTape and Record Center) .&#13;
American Can&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sat., &amp; Sun.&#13;
I SEPT. 26, 28, 29, 30 I&#13;
Kenosha's Newes' Ni'espo'&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shakey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 26, 1973&#13;
f news&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
* t at Park id \'illag that wa&#13;
mon y&#13;
ultheir.&#13;
*&#13;
Th Vets im te au men and women ve to bring pouse or friend to&#13;
their m 'n of ep ember 30 in the SAB at 6:30 p.m. Beer will be&#13;
ted * in participating in Parkside's or- ,....., ... ~~tloDme...t.o, com to practice on Mondays at 3:30 and&#13;
Comm Arts 0118. For more information&#13;
l at 637-1019 or at his office in Comm Arts 293.&#13;
On m n from Dependable * Pest Control was working over&#13;
at o of tb Park ide Village buildings. He set a can of deadly poison&#13;
down and efl. Wh h returned, it was gone. Whoever took it is asked&#13;
to pl d of it quickly and carefully, before someone gets hurt.&#13;
ips, to be awarded by the&#13;
· in larch 1974, are invited,&#13;
tative. Prof. John Zarling,&#13;
Free music&#13;
performances&#13;
scheduled&#13;
Ele •en recitals and concerts by&#13;
faculty and tudent solo and&#13;
en emble performers make up&#13;
the musical agenda for the fall&#13;
sem ter at Parkside. All of the performances are&#13;
free and open to the public and all&#13;
are scheduled for the new&#13;
Communication Art Theater.&#13;
The are et for 7:30 p.m. except&#13;
the Chri tma Carol Concert,&#13;
hich is at 3 p.m.&#13;
The eries will begin Oct. 14&#13;
v.ith a faculty recital by Frances&#13;
Bedford, harpsichordist, and&#13;
Jam Yoghourtjian playing the&#13;
cla ical guitar and viola da&#13;
mba.&#13;
The next two recitals will introduce&#13;
rn o nev. faculty member&#13;
, David Littrell. violoncello,&#13;
'ho will perform with his wife,&#13;
. iary Ann Littrell as pianist, on&#13;
t. 21, and Stephen Swedish,&#13;
piani t, who will play Nov. 11.&#13;
"An Evening of Jazz" will be&#13;
pre"ented on • 'ov. 15 by UW-P's&#13;
Jazz En embles I and II under&#13;
the direction of Robert Thomason&#13;
and the Parkside ymphonic&#13;
Band directed by Bernard Stiner&#13;
will appear in concert on Nov. 18.&#13;
The Parkside Piano Trio, a&#13;
newly formed faculty ensemble&#13;
including Marla Mutschler,&#13;
violinist, Littrell and Swedish will&#13;
debut on Nov: 29. The Parkside&#13;
Symphony Orchestra conducted&#13;
by Littrell will perform on Dec. 2&#13;
and the Parkside Chorale and&#13;
Chorus directed by Frank&#13;
Mueller will present ·a Christmas&#13;
Carol Concert on Dec. 9.&#13;
Three student recitals also are&#13;
scheduled&#13;
The Parkside Guitar Ensemble&#13;
and other chamber groups are&#13;
scheduled for Dec. 6; Lenee&#13;
Stevens, flute, with Sue Anderegg,&#13;
piano, for Dec. 12; and&#13;
Gertrude Sheridan, voice, with&#13;
Everett Kuiper, piano, and Kurt&#13;
Harff, guitar, for Dec. 13.&#13;
A series of afternoon student&#13;
concerts at 3:30 p.m. in Room&#13;
DUB of the Commwiication Arts&#13;
Building are scheduled for Oct. 10&#13;
and 31, Nov. 14 and 18 and Dec. 5.&#13;
nd&#13;
The Rauen&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
PAT GARRET &amp; BILLY THE KID&#13;
Bob Dylan-Soundtrack (Columbia KC 32460)&#13;
The dominating mood is established with the "Main Title Theme,"&#13;
which introduces the audience to an old tale about the sad fate of a&#13;
~·ayward boy. This is the first of the "Billys" on this record, and its&#13;
essence is six minutes of melancholy instrumentation. It is formed by&#13;
a typical western outdoor assembly of acoustic guitars and tambourine.&#13;
A walking bass joins in the middle, defining the second&#13;
half ... not extremely gripping ... not terribly dull ... not bad.&#13;
''Cantina Theme (Working for the Law)" brings a fairly intriguing&#13;
arrangement of another instrumental. The pulse is strong-weak,&#13;
strong-weak .. .interest builds slightly.&#13;
Now the stylus arrives at "Billy 1" with feelings of uncertainty. This&#13;
is the first in a large series of vocal Billys. Bob and his familiar harmonica&#13;
companion are featured in this one. The harmonica is the&#13;
sharpest edge here, the song and the singing have little positive or&#13;
negative influence. Lyrically, the line "Billy, they don't like you to be&#13;
so free" supports the whole song in high status ... attention drifts.&#13;
As the light, uninspiring waves of "Bunkhouse Theme" roll in, one&#13;
may decide to head for there ... boredom sets in.&#13;
At the last few threads of side 1, a brief but definite improvement&#13;
arrives. The instrumental, "River Theme," releases some affection&#13;
... curios1ty is again aroused.&#13;
"Turkey Chase" kicks off side 2 with high spirits in the style of&#13;
yahoo hillbilly festivities. Byron Berline demonstrates his lively&#13;
fiddling that temporarily cuts up the melancholy flow of the album&#13;
with moonshine enthusiasm ... great ... former opinions are discarded!&#13;
"Knocking on Heaven's Door" rolls in as the highest point, and&#13;
shines out as the true gem of the set. This is the story of a weary&#13;
lawman turning in his credentials as his struggle against crime meets&#13;
a desperate end, and he seeks peace. The mood of this excellent tune is&#13;
portrayed by Dylan most convincingly along with pertinent&#13;
background support in the chorus .. .fantastic !&#13;
Three aces in a row are set up with the laying down of the "Final&#13;
Theme." A flute is featured hovering above the main weight of this&#13;
instrumental theme ... all-right!&#13;
"Billy 4(Recorded in Mexico City)" is anticipated with disappointment&#13;
as one most likely expects useless repetition. However, Mr.&#13;
Dylan's voice is more touching here than in any of the other&#13;
Billys ... OK+•&#13;
The central message is re-emphasized for the last time by someone&#13;
with a low-pitched voice trying to lay it on solemnly. This moderation&#13;
of the main theme is not given more than its true worth as "Billy 7" is&#13;
2:01 minutes long, so the inclusion of this version is justifiable and&#13;
effective ... yes, really.&#13;
This soundtrack may have its dull moments, and needless to say,&#13;
unwarranted repetition. The different Billy versions aren't that wittingly&#13;
distinct. If there are 7 versions of Billy besides the instrumental&#13;
version, one should be thankful that Billys 2, 3, 5 and 6 aren't included.&#13;
After close examination one may suspect another exploitation. One&#13;
basic tune seems to be used in "Cantina: Theme(Working for the&#13;
Law)," "River Theme," and "Knocking on Heaven's Door." and&#13;
"Final Theme," make this soundtrack worth -every penny of its price.&#13;
(Record courtesy of J &amp; J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
American Can&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sat., &amp; Sun.&#13;
SEPT. 26, 28, 29, 30 I&#13;
Kenoslsa's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shokey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road &#13;
? ~&#13;
SYCHIC&#13;
stopped the timer . itioi by Rodney Schroeter mechanism." m IOn&#13;
Jones felt his scalp tingle.&#13;
"Where'd it come from? Big X?"&#13;
He carefully put the box in his&#13;
back pants pocket.&#13;
"Hehaditinhis shoe ,t said the&#13;
Psychic, looking out' a large&#13;
Window at the East River. He&#13;
tur,ned to Jones. "The way I&#13;
estImate, the place where I first&#13;
awakened is under that river.&#13;
Quite a way out."&#13;
"And I thought it was Canada ..&#13;
said Jones disgustedly. "Tho~e&#13;
dirty liars."&#13;
"Let's go. IT we meet any&#13;
guards, I'll mentally tell them&#13;
that we don't exist, the same&#13;
thing I did to the guide."&#13;
"Big X never even looked at&#13;
us," said Jones as the two entered&#13;
an empty elevator.&#13;
"I tried to probe his mind&#13;
several times. But I could find&#13;
nothing. As if he had no mind. It's&#13;
possible he is only a pawn, and&#13;
not the true leader of this&#13;
organization as you suspected.&#13;
His attempt to blow up that room&#13;
in the United Nations shows some&#13;
kind of plan. What it is, we can't&#13;
tell right now."&#13;
.The elevator door opened. The&#13;
two men walked out through the&#13;
main entrance into the sunlight.&#13;
The wind flapped through the&#13;
flags of nations from around the&#13;
world.&#13;
"We shall now return to the&#13;
base, the place where I&#13;
awakened.. Doubtless we shall&#13;
learn much more there."&#13;
Jones and the Psychic came to&#13;
the sewer grating where they had&#13;
emerged several hours before.&#13;
The Psychic pulled it aside. Jones&#13;
sat down at the edge and jumped.&#13;
The Psychic did the same. He&#13;
looked up at the grating and&#13;
concentrated. It slid into place.&#13;
The pair made its way through&#13;
the long tunnel without difficulty,&#13;
despite the total darkness. At the&#13;
other end was the office of Big X,&#13;
vacant and with its iron door&#13;
partly melted away, justas it was&#13;
when they had left it.&#13;
"Give me the bomb," said the&#13;
Psychic. "See if anyone else is&#13;
around. Find out if they're in this&#13;
knowingly or if they've been&#13;
deceived, like you have been."&#13;
Jones handed the box to the&#13;
Psychic. "Yeah. All right." He&#13;
climbed through the hole in the&#13;
door.&#13;
The Psychic turned his attention&#13;
to the vast assortment of&#13;
books, folders and typed&#13;
manuscripts. Each folder he&#13;
looked at had a single name on it.&#13;
He looked at several names&#13;
without investigating the insides&#13;
until he found one name that&#13;
interested him.&#13;
On one folder was lettered&#13;
"JONES. "&#13;
TO BE CONTINUED ....&#13;
Synopsis: A man has just&#13;
awakened to find he cannot&#13;
remember anything of his past&#13;
life. He finds that he has extraordinary&#13;
mental abilities, and&#13;
names himseif the Psychic. A&#13;
man named Jones tells the&#13;
Psychic that someone named Big&#13;
X is responsible for his amnesia.&#13;
Together the two follow a trail to&#13;
the United Nations building,&#13;
where they find Big X. The story&#13;
continues.&#13;
Cha pter three&#13;
"Those persons holding tickets&#13;
with number forty-two on the&#13;
backs, piease line up at the glass&#13;
doors." -&#13;
"Big X is going on this tour,"&#13;
said Jones in a low voice. "But we&#13;
can't follow him now. We have no&#13;
tickets! II&#13;
Big X had stood up when the&#13;
announcement came. He had a&#13;
large overcoat draped over one&#13;
arm and a newspaper in his hand.&#13;
"Get in line," said the Psychic.&#13;
"Stay close to me and when the&#13;
tour guide approaches, you hold&#13;
out your hand as if you have a&#13;
ticket."&#13;
The guide was a short Chinese&#13;
woman. As she collected tickets&#13;
she said "Thank you" to each&#13;
person. When she came to the&#13;
Psychic, he held out his hand.&#13;
The guide smiled, reached and&#13;
took hold of nothing, and said&#13;
"Thank you." She did the same&#13;
with Jones.&#13;
"what'd you do?" asked Jones&#13;
in a whisper when she had&#13;
passed. "Make her think we had&#13;
tickets?"&#13;
The Psychic nodded slightly.&#13;
The tour had started. The group&#13;
passed through several halls. At&#13;
points the guide would stop to&#13;
explain the origin and&#13;
significance of a painting or&#13;
tapestry.&#13;
"This rug is a donation from&#13;
Iran. Itis largest of its kind in the&#13;
world. The figures on it symbolize...."&#13;
The Psychic looked at Big X.&#13;
This was the man, supposedly,&#13;
who had robbed him of his&#13;
memory. Big X was extremely&#13;
fat, almost round. He faced the&#13;
guide, giving no evidence of&#13;
noticing Jones or the Psychic.&#13;
Jones swallowed nervously. He&#13;
had been watching Big X from&#13;
the start of the tour. He glanced&#13;
at the Psychic frequently, but the&#13;
Psychic's expression told him to&#13;
be patient.&#13;
The guide led the group into a&#13;
large room and told everyone to&#13;
sit down. She began talking about&#13;
the use of the room, and the&#13;
nationality of the architects.&#13;
When the guide finished, the&#13;
group stood up. The Psychic held&#13;
Jones' arm. "Remain&#13;
motionless," he whispered.&#13;
When everyone had left, the&#13;
Psychic walked to the seat where&#13;
Big X had been sitting. He&#13;
reached under the seat and&#13;
brought out a small square box.&#13;
"Huh?" asked Jones. lIWhat's&#13;
that?"&#13;
"A bomb."&#13;
"Uh-yeah? When's it going to&#13;
go off?"&#13;
"Never. I've already deactivated&#13;
it with my mind. It was&#13;
set for forty-eight hours from&#13;
now, at which time an important&#13;
m~ting will be in process, as the&#13;
gUide said."&#13;
"Oh. I wasn't listening."&#13;
The Psychic looked at Jones.&#13;
"Here." He tossed the little box&#13;
to him. "Carry it. It has an antimatter&#13;
nucleus which I want to&#13;
studylater." The Psychic walked&#13;
doWn the steps.&#13;
Jones shook the box. It rattled.&#13;
:'Anti-matter? How strong was&#13;
It?"&#13;
:'Powerful enough to destroy&#13;
thiSroom. And it still is. I only&#13;
Wa1'·'d'" Oa4 21 P'U _u_ O •• -.;.••• c o •• 'e._s&#13;
Wed., Sept. 26, 1973 THE PARKSIOE RANGER 9&#13;
•&#13;
Seated behind a display table at the last Pre-Meds club meeting are Vice-President Rich Eckert&#13;
and Secretary Mike Rizzo. Not pictured is newly elected President O. Brian Smith.&#13;
Pre-Meds plan their year&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
Ever think you might like to go into medicine? Do Jim Wishau, who was a delegate to the ational&#13;
you know what it takes to get into medical school? If Pre-Med Convention September 7-9, told of some of&#13;
you have or if you don't, a visit with the Parkside the topics discussed and relayed back intormatJon&#13;
Pre-Meds might prove enlightening. he had gained. He cited the fact that 45,000 uaThe&#13;
Pre-Med Club was organized three years ago, dergraduates apply to medical schools while only&#13;
largely replacing the now defunct Biology Club. 15,000are accepted. Using this one out or three&#13;
Enthusiastically advised by Anna Marie Williams, ratio, he stated that one of these three probably had&#13;
associate professor of Life Science, the club aids no chance of being admitted, and had no business&#13;
students who plan to apply for admission to medical applying, bot that still left one person Who could&#13;
school by bringing in guest lecturers who are have made it through medical school and have&#13;
usually area physicians in varying fields, arranging become a good physician, but had lost the chance.&#13;
tours of Wisconsin's two medical schools, and Also brought to light was the fact that the average&#13;
providing information as to how to apply and be grade point of those being accepted has been and&#13;
accepted by one of them. Their success in this en- still is rising, from 23 percent with 3.6and up in 1971,&#13;
deavor can be measured by the fact that all who to 24percentin 1972.He also outlined the percentage&#13;
applied to medical school last year were accepted. of different majors who were accepted: 26 percent&#13;
Nine alumni of the club are now in medical school. English majors, 26 percent foreign language. 26&#13;
Five attend the Medical School of Wisconsin in percent religion, 22 percent biology, 28 percent&#13;
Milwaukee as freshmen, while four, one senior, two chemistry, 28 percent physical education, and 17&#13;
sophomores and one freshman, attend UW- percent microbiology, to name a few.&#13;
Madison. Coach Stevens' talk on Sports Anatomy was of&#13;
WiJIiams got the year off in the second week of interest to women, men and non-pre-meds He&#13;
school with her "Facts of Life for Pre-Meds" lee- discussed the differences In anatomy, physiology,&#13;
ture and counseling session for new pre-meds. At kinesiology and environment, explai.rung why men&#13;
this time she explained the medical school excel at sr'"T1esports and women at others.&#13;
requirements, outlined a typical program to be Bone an tnt construction were shown to be the&#13;
followed, and told them in no nonsense terms what reasons wh men could generally throw straighter&#13;
they will have to accomplish if they expect to be and run faster than women, and tissue compo ilion&#13;
admitted to medical school. was offered as a hypctbesrs for the fact that young&#13;
Exactly what pre-meds must do in order to be women are USUallythe best swimmers.&#13;
accepted is probably best revealed by attending one Other activities planned for this semester include&#13;
of their meetings. Their first meeting, held Sep- maintaining their reference box at the library and&#13;
tember 19, featured election of new officers, a bringing in additional guest lecturers. Two&#13;
report on the National Pre-Med Convention and a osteophatic physicians will be appearing October&#13;
talk by Steve Stephens, associate professor of 17,and a discussion between a young M.D. and one&#13;
physical education, on Sports Anatlioiim.y•.•••••• w.ho.islire.ti.red.iiis.Piiila.niinediiiiifior.'iiaiiteriiiiiin.liiheiil.ear •.•&#13;
The nerag. Navy Pilot isn't.&#13;
E_,Iyou' ... __&#13;
t&gt;elono, " J'QU ... g&lt;M lhe dearf •• you •• Pullfw.,_,•.&#13;
r--------------------l '--- 1, .. _. :,&#13;
1- ·......·_- I&#13;
, ,&#13;
,- -_.- -- , , ,&#13;
,--- , lc.. l1li_:&#13;
, ,&#13;
le--~- I&#13;
, ,&#13;
1L Ie • SUC:~ In The ..... Nny. :j&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
presents&#13;
WEEKDAY MOVIES&#13;
VVednesday, Sept. 26&#13;
7:30 P.M.&#13;
103 GR -7Sc&#13;
? ~ Wed., Sept. 26, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 9&#13;
s·YCNIC&#13;
by Rodney Schroeter ~i:~:~~~~eram:H ·g_nition&#13;
Synopsis: A man has just&#13;
awakened to find he cannot&#13;
remember anything of his past&#13;
life. He finds that he has extraordinary&#13;
mental abilities, and&#13;
names himself the Psychic. A&#13;
man named Jones tells the&#13;
Psychic that someone named Big&#13;
Xis responsible for his amnesia.&#13;
Together the two follow a trail to&#13;
the United Nations building,&#13;
where they find Big X. The story&#13;
continues.&#13;
Chapter three&#13;
"Those persons holding tickets&#13;
with number forty-two on the&#13;
backs, please line up at the glass&#13;
doors."&#13;
"Big X is going on this tour,"&#13;
said Jones in a low voice. ''But we&#13;
can't follow him now. We have no&#13;
tickets!"&#13;
Jones felt his scalp tingle. "Where'd it come from? Big X?"&#13;
He carefully put the box in his&#13;
back pants pocket.&#13;
"He had it in his shoe " said the&#13;
P~ychic, looking out' a large&#13;
window at the East River. He&#13;
tur~ed to Jones. "The way I&#13;
estimate, the place where I first&#13;
aw~kened is under that river. Qmte a way out."&#13;
"And I thought it was Canada "&#13;
said Jones disgustedly. "Tho;e dirty liars."&#13;
"Let's go. If we meet any&#13;
guards, I'll mentally tell them&#13;
that we don't exist, the same&#13;
thing I did to the guide."&#13;
"Big X never even looked at&#13;
us," said Jones as the two entered&#13;
an empty elevator.&#13;
Big X had stood up when the&#13;
announcement came. He had a&#13;
large overcoat draped over one&#13;
arm and a newspaper in his hand.&#13;
"I tried to probe his mind&#13;
several times. But I could find&#13;
nothing. As if he had no mind. It's&#13;
possible he is only a pawn, and&#13;
not the true leader of this&#13;
organization as you suspected.&#13;
His attempt to blow up that room&#13;
in the United Nations shows some&#13;
kind of plan. What it is, we can't&#13;
tell right now."&#13;
pl,o •..,. J,m&#13;
"Get in line," said the Psychic.&#13;
"Stay close to me and when the&#13;
tour guide approaches, you hold&#13;
out your hand as if you have a&#13;
ticket."&#13;
The guide was a short Chinese&#13;
woman. As she collected tickets&#13;
she said "Thank you" to each&#13;
person. When she came to the&#13;
Psychic, he held out his hand.&#13;
The guide smiled, reached and&#13;
took hold of nothing, and said&#13;
"Thank you." She did the same&#13;
with Jones.&#13;
"What'd you do?" asked Jones&#13;
in a whisper when she had&#13;
passed. "Make her think we had&#13;
tickets?"&#13;
The Psychic nodded slightly.&#13;
The tour had started. The group&#13;
passed through several halls. At&#13;
points the guide would stop to&#13;
explain the origin and&#13;
significance of a painting or&#13;
tapestry.&#13;
"This rug is a donation from&#13;
Iran. It is largest of its kind in the&#13;
world. The figures on it symbolize&#13;
.... "&#13;
The Psychic looked at Big X.&#13;
This was the man, supposedly,&#13;
who had robbed him of his&#13;
memory. Big X was extremely&#13;
fat, almost round. He faced the&#13;
guide, giving no evidence of&#13;
noticing Jones or the Psychic.&#13;
Jones swallowed nervously. He&#13;
had been watching Big X from&#13;
the start of the tour. He glanced&#13;
at the Psychic frequently, but the&#13;
Psychic's expression told him to&#13;
be patient.&#13;
The guide led the group into a&#13;
large room and told everyone to&#13;
it down. She began talking about&#13;
the use of the room, and the&#13;
nationality of the architects.&#13;
When the guide finished, the&#13;
group stood up. The Psychic held&#13;
Jones' arm. "Remain&#13;
motionless," he whispered.&#13;
When everyone had left, the&#13;
Psychic walked to the seat where&#13;
Big X had been sitting. He&#13;
reached under the seat and&#13;
brought out a small square box.&#13;
"Huh?" asked Jones. "What's&#13;
that?"&#13;
"A bomb."&#13;
"Uh--yeah? When's it going to&#13;
go off?"&#13;
"Never. I've already deactivated&#13;
it with my mind. It was&#13;
set for forty-eight hours from&#13;
now, at which time an important&#13;
meeting will be in process, as the&#13;
guide said."&#13;
"Oh. I wasn't listening."&#13;
The Psychic looked at Jones.&#13;
"Here." He tossed the little box&#13;
to him. "Carry it. It has an antimatter&#13;
nucleus which I want to&#13;
study later.'' The Psychic walked&#13;
down the steps.&#13;
Jones shook the box. It rattled.&#13;
"Anti-matter? How strong was It~"&#13;
'.'Powerful enough to destroy this room. And it still is. I only&#13;
· The elevator door opened. The&#13;
two men walked out through the&#13;
main entrance into the sunlight.&#13;
The wind flapped through the&#13;
flags of nations from around the&#13;
world.&#13;
"We shall now return to the&#13;
base, the place where I&#13;
awakened. Doubtless we shall&#13;
learn much more there."&#13;
Jones and the Psychic came to&#13;
the sewer grating where they had&#13;
emerged several hours before.&#13;
The Psychic pulled it aside. Jones&#13;
sat down at the edge and jumped.&#13;
The Psychic did the same. He&#13;
looked up at the grating and&#13;
concentrated. It slid into place.&#13;
The pair made its way through&#13;
the long tunnel without difficulty, despite the total darkness. At the&#13;
other end was the office of Big X,&#13;
vacant and with its iron door&#13;
partly melted away, just as it was&#13;
when they had left it.&#13;
"Give me the bomb," said the&#13;
Psychic. "See if anyone else is&#13;
around. Find out if they're in this&#13;
knowingly or if they've been&#13;
deceived, like you have been."&#13;
Jones handed the box to the&#13;
Psychic. "Yeah. All right. " He&#13;
climbed through the hole in the&#13;
door.&#13;
The Psychic turned his attention&#13;
to the vast assortment of&#13;
books, folders and typed&#13;
manuscripts. Each folder he&#13;
looked at had a single name on it.&#13;
He looked at several names&#13;
without investigating the insides&#13;
until he found one name that&#13;
interested him.&#13;
On one folder was lettered&#13;
"JONES."&#13;
TO BE CONTINUED ....&#13;
Seated behind a di play table at the last Pre-:\teds club meeting are Vice-Pr id nl Ri h&#13;
and ecretary :\1ike Rizzo . . 'ot pictured is ne~ly elected Pre ident O. Brian mith.&#13;
Pre-Meds pla&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
Ever think you might like to go into medicine? Do&#13;
you know what it takes to get into medical chool? If&#13;
you have or if you don't, a visit with the Parkside Pre-. /!eds might prove enlightening.&#13;
The Pre- ted Club was organized three years ago,&#13;
largely replacing the now defunct Biology Club.&#13;
Enthusiastically advised by Anna /Iarie Williams,&#13;
associate professor of Life Science, the club aids&#13;
students who plan to apply for admission to medical school by bringing in guest lecturers who are&#13;
usually area physicians in varying fields, arranging tours of Wisconsin's two medical schools, and&#13;
providing information as to how to apply and be&#13;
accepted by one of them. Their success in this endeavor&#13;
can be measured by the fact that all who&#13;
applied to medical school last year were accepted .&#13;
'ine alumni of the club are now in medical school.&#13;
Five attend the 1edical School of Wi con in in rnwaukee as freshmen, while four, one enior, two&#13;
ophomores and one freshman, attend •&#13;
tadison. William got the year off in the _econd we k of&#13;
chool with her "Facts of Life for Pre-, feds" lecture&#13;
and counseling ession for new pre-med . At&#13;
this time she explained the medical chool&#13;
requirements. outlined a typical program to be&#13;
followed , and told them in no non en e term what&#13;
they will have to accompli h if they expect to be&#13;
admitted to medical school.&#13;
Exactly what pre-meds mu t do in order to be&#13;
accepted is probably best revealed by attending one&#13;
of their meetings. Their first meeting, held September&#13;
19. featured election of new officers, a&#13;
report on the ational Pre-Med Convention and a&#13;
talk by Steve Stephens, associate professor of&#13;
physical education, on Sports Anatomy.&#13;
their year&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
presents&#13;
WEEKDAY MOVIES&#13;
-~&#13;
The average Navy Pilot isn't. No man who ha.s mut•red tt\e fly,ng&#13;
,lulls II takes to fly and land on• th,p at sea can be called an averaQe pt.lot At\d&#13;
th• sense ot accompl,1timent and sa, sfacl•on&#13;
that he en1oys are aiso above&#13;
average Wtuch ,s Of\ly fight For the rnan&#13;
who would go p1aces as a Naval Aviator&#13;
musl past thrOVQh the most challenO•no&#13;
and demanding uairung program 10 be&#13;
found anywhere&#13;
From AVtal,on Office, Canchdlt•&#13;
Schoot through Fhght Tra,n.ng totneday&#13;
his golden Navy W1~ are awarded, M&#13;
11 tested, dnven. pushed and tested&#13;
again. And tor good ,...'°" TM Navy&#13;
nu learMd that wtthou1 the wtd 10&#13;
suc:cNd, no men c.en be successful Wt11ch tmngs us to you Co you hew&#13;
what ,t tallis1o Uy Navy" Send '" th11&#13;
coupon and find out o, tatk w,th you, local Navy ,ec.ru•ter&#13;
E....,. 1tycM.1.,.,..,.,flowfl&#13;
t,etote . 11 you .e got tM des""•· you re&#13;
h•thw"•ytnet•&#13;
UHDTO: HAYV 0.,,.ffl(.•• l .. il"Oft ....... TfOfo Tl(AW&#13;
11 1 -Ott~ a-a ... ~•Y&#13;
.., 1'-w•..,-• w,.co.,.•• .. ua•&#13;
r--------------------1&#13;
- I I ,.,,._.,...._....,___..,.. I ~ • .,.-. ,...,..oa.c- I&#13;
- I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I c., ______ I .,._ : ~~- _____ ,&#13;
lie a_.. In The New Nny. '&#13;
I L--------------------~&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 26&#13;
7:30 P.M.&#13;
103 GR - 75~&#13;
k. rt&#13;
lalo &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed •• Sept. 26. 1973&#13;
A Passion play&#13;
Jethro lull at Chi. Town&#13;
photo by Cr.,g Roberts&#13;
b,·Patrick 'owak&#13;
Thnt ' eems to be an inherent lateness to a concert review when the&#13;
wrrter and the publication only move once a week. Not that there is&#13;
anythIng wrong with that except that a person might like to hear about&#13;
n concert before it is ancient history. when reading a review you must&#13;
keep one Important thing in mind. and that is that what you are&#13;
reading IS an opinion and not the gospel truth. Unfortunately, many&#13;
enuc take their litles too seriously and often more times than not,&#13;
literally They feel that because they are critics, it is their duty to&#13;
criucrze Ihope to place myseJf above this category by commenting&#13;
where I think necessary and giving credit where it is due. Your&#13;
comments on the review will be gladly accepted and any suggestions&#13;
as to whal you would hke to see written in an article of this type will&#13;
also be gladly accepted.&#13;
As with any concert, the problem in parking looms as the biggest&#13;
obstacle. This is particularly true in the city of Chicago. Although the&#13;
concert SItes are large and can accommodate large volumes of people,&#13;
they have a critical parking shortage within a sbort distance of the&#13;
site. So the Stadium in Chicago was not to escape this malady. After&#13;
walking some six blocks from our ear, we arrived at OUT seats.&#13;
All of this seems to be tolerable when the group is one of the caliber&#13;
of Jethro Tull. TuU has been one of the most popular groups on the&#13;
scene loday and have contributed such works as Aqualung, Thick as a&#13;
Brick, LIving in the Past. and their latest album, "A Passion Play" to&#13;
the world of music. The group consists of five very talented musicians.&#13;
The group's leader and singer is Ian Aoderson who plays acoustic&#13;
guitar and Ilute. He is accompanied by Clive Bunker on electric&#13;
guuar, John Evan on piano and organ, Jeffery Hammond on base, and&#13;
Martin Barre on drums.&#13;
After suffering through the first act of local talent, the crowd of&#13;
some 12,000 settled down while the stage was prepared. The ticket stub&#13;
was entitled" A Passion Play" after the group's latest album. A large&#13;
screen was lowered behiod the stage and it became apparent that the&#13;
show to Iollow was to be a visual as well as audio performance. As the&#13;
lights were dimmed. a large ball appeared on the screen. It pulsated&#13;
for about 10 minutes, accompanied by a human heart beat. As it grew&#13;
louder and larger, a figure of a ballerina appeared to grow out of it. As&#13;
she reoched up and out there was a nash of powder on the stage and&#13;
the concert was on.&#13;
lt W8. several seconds later that Anderson made his appearance. He&#13;
Jumped wildly about. acknowledging the crowd and twirling his flute&#13;
ver his head and under his legs better than most baton twirlers. His&#13;
mastery was not JUst limited to throwing it about, as the crowd Soon&#13;
earned AlthoUl!h we could see the group well. we could not see the&#13;
een, mce we were about 90 degrees from stage center. This took&#13;
away from the first 45 minutes of the concert. Twice during this&#13;
riod, the group left the stage and the attention was on the screen.&#13;
This was unfortunate because, not having heard the "Passion Play"&#13;
before. I was m the dark as to its contents and the idea put forth.&#13;
\Ithough I could not see the screen. I could see the group and hear&#13;
them equally as "ell&#13;
-&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
• •&#13;
: UL PUlsi~r MAT MAIDS :&#13;
: Presents a Dance featuring :&#13;
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i)1I:\ ("'I~It' :\ t~ i&#13;
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: SAlHDAY, SEPT. 29 • 9:00 p .•• - 1:00 a... :&#13;
• •&#13;
: Student Activities Building :&#13;
• •&#13;
: hrtsi.e Stde-Is . ~Ielta ... : 'I" :&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
te;&#13;
On stage Tull provides all the visual action your eyes can handle. If&#13;
Ian Anderson was not jumping about, the base player was. The group&#13;
moved well on stage, with none of the members confining themselves&#13;
to anyone section of the stage as some groups do. A large part of a&#13;
group's concert success lies in its theatrical ability o~ the stage.&#13;
Although TuU is not as elaborate as some (example, Alice Cooper),&#13;
they are every bit as exciting to watch. Also, the fact that the group did&#13;
not stop for a break between every song helped to keep the whole thing&#13;
moving in a fast, driving mode. .&#13;
The "Passion Play" over, the second half of the concert could begin.&#13;
After introducing the rest of the group, Anderson commented on the&#13;
little child who felt it necessary to throw a lit sparkler down onto the&#13;
crowd, burning a guy on the back of the neck. He called for the person&#13;
to come down and apologize if he felt he was man enough. The second&#13;
half of the concert began with the second side of "Thick as a Brick"&#13;
which brought thunderous applause from the crowd. A drum solo and&#13;
guitar jam later. the group went into a few cuts from the Aqualung&#13;
album playing the title cut and the entire second SIde which consisted&#13;
of "My God," "Slip Steam," and "Wind Up," which appropriately&#13;
ended the concert.&#13;
The crowd chanted for more and just about anyone who possessed a&#13;
match lit it and held it as long as possible. It was really an impressive&#13;
sight to look out over the stadium and see all the little fires. It took&#13;
about five minutes but the crowd won out. The group came out and did&#13;
a thir-ty-minute encore which co~isted of HLocomo~iv~.~reath .. and&#13;
"Hymn 43," also from the Aqualung album. The group left the stage&#13;
for the final time. With the crowd cheering in total darkness, a small&#13;
phone that had been on stage all through the concert began ringing.&#13;
Out of darkness Ian Anderson appeared and answered it. He put the&#13;
phone down, telling the crowd it was for them, and walked off stage.&#13;
I do not believe any writer can convey a concert as it really happens;&#13;
the large crowd, the music, the good times, or in the case of a&#13;
poor group, the bad times, Those of you who have seen concerts or this&#13;
one by Tull in Milwaukee, know what it is like, and many of us can only&#13;
say, "you should have been there." With concerts like this one, a&#13;
person cannot help but feel that this group is going to he around for a&#13;
long period of time, much to our good fortunes. It seems that really&#13;
good groups are few and far between, and Jethro Tull rates as one of&#13;
the hest.&#13;
CHEAP DRUNK SPECIAL&#13;
ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK&#13;
Monday - Beer $2 Mixed Drinks $4&#13;
~ne~5 75C&#13;
~,&lt;~G~Admission wilh&#13;
Parkside 1.0.&#13;
RA.R LNE MUSICI&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sat.&#13;
Larry Lynne Group&#13;
SEPT. 26, 28, 29 • 9:30 p.m. - 11:30 a.m.&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 26, 1973&#13;
A Passion play&#13;
• •&#13;
Jethro Tull at Chi. Town&#13;
pl,oto by Cral9 Roberts&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
AIDS&#13;
Pr featuring&#13;
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • · • w11. . • • • : SATURDAY, SEPT. 29 • 9:00 p.m. - 1 :00 a.m. :&#13;
• •&#13;
: tud nt Activities Building :&#13;
• •&#13;
: art i• lde11 Gae Um: '1 51 ;&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
On stage Tull provides all the visual action your eyes can handle. U&#13;
Ian Anderson was not jumping about, the base player was. The group&#13;
moved we11 on stage, with none of the members confining themselves&#13;
to anv one section of the stage as some groups do. A large part of a&#13;
group's concert success lies in its theatrical ability o~ the stage. Although Tull is not as elaborate as some (example, Alice Cooper_),&#13;
they are every bit as exciting to watch. Also, the fact that the group did&#13;
not stop for a break between every song helped to keep the whole thing&#13;
moving in a fast, driving mode. . The "Passion Play" over, the second half of the concert could begm.&#13;
After introducing the rest of the group, Anderson commented on the&#13;
little child who felt it necessary to throw a lit sparkler down onto the&#13;
crowd, burning a guy on the back of the neck. He called for the person&#13;
to come down and apologize if he felt he was man enough. The second&#13;
half of the concert began with the second side of "Thick as a Brick"&#13;
which brought thunderous applause from the crowd. A drum solo and&#13;
guitar jam later, the group went into a few cuts ~rom t~e Aqua_lung&#13;
album, playing the title cut and the entire second s1d_e which con~1sted&#13;
of "My God," "Slip Steam," and "Wind Up," which appropriately&#13;
ended the concert. The crowd chanted for more and just about anyone who possessed a&#13;
match lit it and held it as long as possible. It was really an impressive&#13;
sight to look out over the stadium and see all the little fires. It t~k&#13;
about five minutes but the crowd won out. The group came out and did&#13;
a thirty-minute encore which consisted of "Locomotive_ ~reath" and&#13;
"Hymn 43," also from the Aqualung album. The group left the stage&#13;
for the final time. With the crowd cheering in total darkness, a small&#13;
phone that had been on stage all through the concert began ringing.&#13;
Out of darkness Ian Anderson appeared and answered it. He put the&#13;
phone down, telling the crowd it was for them, and walked off stage.&#13;
I do not believe any writer can convey a concert as it really happens;&#13;
the large crowd, the music, the good times, or in the case of a&#13;
poor group, the bad times. Those of you who have seen concerts or this&#13;
one by Tull in Milwaukee, know what it is like, and many of us can only&#13;
say, "you should have been there." With concerts like this one, a&#13;
person cannot help but feel that this group is going to be around for a&#13;
long period of time, much to our good fortunes. It seems that really&#13;
good groups are few and far between, and Jethro Tull rates as one of&#13;
the best.&#13;
,,&#13;
::r&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
r:r&#13;
-&lt;&#13;
Q&#13;
..&#13;
,;;·&#13;
;,o&#13;
0&#13;
if&#13;
l&#13;
CHEAP DRUNK SPECIAL&#13;
ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK&#13;
Monday - Beer $2 Mixed Drinks $4&#13;
LIVE MUSIC!&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sat.&#13;
Larry Lynne Orou•&#13;
SEPT. 26, 28, 29 • 9:30 p.m. - 11:30 a.m. &#13;
uw- student&#13;
• • racing pigeons&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
When he was five years old,&#13;
TonY Rossi's father brought a&#13;
coupleof pigeons home to him as&#13;
a gift. Today, Rossi, a Parkside&#13;
sophomore owns about 90 racmg&#13;
pigoons a~d has sold his birds&#13;
throughout the United States and&#13;
the world.&#13;
Rossi won his first pigeon&#13;
ra&lt;:ing contest when he was&#13;
seven. That pigeon made the 300-&#13;
mile race back to the Rossi loft In&#13;
Racine in one day.&#13;
It wasn't until 1967, when he&#13;
was older and could be more&#13;
helpful to his father, that pigeon&#13;
racing became serious to Rossi.&#13;
Breeders were purchased which,&#13;
if "top notch racers," cost&#13;
anywhere from $100to $.500,Rossi&#13;
explained. He has Imported&#13;
pigoons directly from England&#13;
and has some which have come&#13;
from Belgium and France.&#13;
February through April the&#13;
pigoons are bred, each female&#13;
laying two eggs which take 18&#13;
days to hatch. A pigeon is considered&#13;
mature in 'l:l days and IS&#13;
then taken from its parents and&#13;
Wed .• sept. 26. 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 11&#13;
•&#13;
raises&#13;
put in a separate loft with other&#13;
young birds. At this time the&#13;
young birds get used to their&#13;
surroundings and start in on their&#13;
training.&#13;
They are fed a high protein diet&#13;
of dried grains and taken out to&#13;
fly as often as possible. Rossi&#13;
starts the young birds one to two&#13;
miles from home, eventually&#13;
building up to 50 miles. The&#13;
pigeons should be taken out to fly&#13;
at least five times per week,&#13;
Rossi said. "No one knows how&#13;
they navigate home," he added,&#13;
"but it is common to lose birds in&#13;
training." They sometimes hit&#13;
wires or are attacked by hawks&#13;
or cats if they ground to drink.&#13;
Races vary from 100 to 600&#13;
miles. An individual is allowed to&#13;
enter 15 birds in each race.&#13;
Competing pigeons are placed&#13;
together in a trailer and driven to&#13;
the liberating point, to be&#13;
released early the following&#13;
morning. Races are held every&#13;
week from May through October.&#13;
A pigeon can race for approxima&#13;
tely eight years and has&#13;
a life span of about 13.&#13;
Rossi has collected 30 first&#13;
Tony Rossi standing in the doorway of his pigeon loft.&#13;
....... ci.1kind of N8vY Flyer.&#13;
.... N.".I FlightOfficer.&#13;
...hl' ,Ita,k", 10be a NI~II HOII!on~:,.&#13;
sene ,n the cOl,lpon.It ...,11 b"ng you&#13;
the lactS 0, lalk ,I O\til, ...,th ro", Navy&#13;
ree,I,I,'e'&#13;
Whl_' I NI~r pia", " linde'&#13;
_!ecuorllc corlllo!. ,1111 pll ... II In Ihe&#13;
llanasotl NI~al Flillhl OthcI'. NIII,lIIlIr.&#13;
.. acandldat.to, N'~II FIIgl'1torneer&#13;
IraonlngYOI,I'IIneed lome _r spectll&#13;
Cl~lIhcatlon, F'fll. yol,lmust leilly ~&#13;
lOlly.... 11I l/ you'~e ne~er 1I0 ... n tJelotl&#13;
VOO'IIalso neec a college o;I'II'H and tile&#13;
k,,,,, 01mInd that wo'ks well ""itll m.III&#13;
and pI'I....,CS.&#13;
WI'"ng alt"" end olrou, I,"n,nll&#13;
"'09l1m ISI Na~y Commlss,on Ind Itle&#13;
GoIG1nWltlgs01a NI~.I Fltgllt OUoce,&#13;
By IlIenyolI'll be an •• pert If' ..... Ilk.&#13;
Ja''4v,oatlon and JI,"bO'n.eConuol ..&#13;
Iqu'~d 10do rou, lOb"".,.~e' you 110&#13;
BUIwhall!'Yefyou' ,pec,allr. "avel&#13;
wJllbepartol}'(l'llll,f. Jl,nd'o ...oI'&#13;
ellaill •. laspon5lb'!ily, achIevement ano"".. ,,,&#13;
1111111 a It.., ~,nd 01ca"er you"re&#13;
Ioo',n; '0'. ano ,tyol,l monkyol,l_e 1I0t&#13;
SEND TO:&#13;
~:=~Eu~;~~~:§~;~~~;~:-l,&#13;
,-&#13;
i :':~~,"'::_ ' , :&#13;
: "' .... ,.... ,. .. ",. .. ,Ott«.. :&#13;
IN.... - 1&#13;
] .....,... t&#13;
1 s'_ l~ 1&#13;
I""' :&#13;
I C."."'C.' .... ··.. I&#13;
ill•• succ." inTIM~~_N!~J&#13;
,-------------&#13;
It's what's&#13;
happening&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 26: Mimist T. Daniel will appear 10 the Comm&#13;
Arts Studio Room at 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday. Sept_ 26: PAB will present the film "Joe" in Greenqui.St&#13;
l03at 7:30 p.rn Admission charge is 75cents.&#13;
wednesdav. Sept. 26: Tony, Jumbo and Jlmi will appear 10 the&#13;
Whiteskeller &lt;GR D20ll at I p.m. No admission charge&#13;
. Saturday, Sept. 29: Cross Country meet between Parkside and&#13;
Eastern Illinois at 11 a.m&#13;
Saturday. Sept. n: Soccer meet between Parkside and Mmnesota at&#13;
1:30 p.m. .&#13;
Saturday. Sept. 29: Mat Maid's will sponsor a dance WIth the band,&#13;
Blackwater Gold, in the SAB. Dance will be from 9 p.m, until I a.m.,&#13;
admission is $1.50.&#13;
Sunday. Sept. 30: Harry Chapin concert will be presented in the Phy&#13;
Ed building at 8 p.m.&#13;
Sunday. Sept. 30: Vet's Club will meet in theSAB at6:30 p.rn,&#13;
Monday, Oct. I: From 7-tOp.m. Adult Student Association will have&#13;
a get-acquainted night in LLC 0173.&#13;
Monday. Oct. I: Women's Caucus will meet at 7:30 p.m. in LLC&#13;
Dt74.&#13;
Tuesday. Oct. Z: Cross country meet between Parkside and&#13;
Milwaukee at 4 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 2: Women's swimming meet between Parkside and&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
Morula)· and Tuesday. Oct. 1 and 2: Orchestra practice in Comm&#13;
Arts 0118. Monday practice at 3:30and Tuesdav at 7:30 D.m.&#13;
All items for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be suhm_ to&#13;
RAlliGER by nnon Wednesday prior to publication of lbe I ue In whicll&#13;
an item is to appear.&#13;
place trophies and many top&#13;
place positions. Sunday. Sept. 9,&#13;
one of Rossi's pigeons won a $220&#13;
200-miJe race from Independence.&#13;
Iowa to Racine. On&#13;
June 29, a pigeon Rossi owns won&#13;
the 1973 Wisconsin State&#13;
Championship (the Midwest&#13;
prestige race) in a 500-mile flight&#13;
from Topeka, Kansas. "This&#13;
pigeon is one of the biggest&#13;
money winners this year in the&#13;
state," said Rossi, "winning&#13;
$1200." It is also nominated for&#13;
the United States Hall of Fame&#13;
(the highest honor in pigeon&#13;
racing), in which the winner will&#13;
be named .on Oct. 15.&#13;
Rossi's pigeons have brought&#13;
borne over $2000 this year with 8&#13;
firsts and 8 seconds which is an&#13;
extremely successful record,&#13;
Rossi explained.&#13;
With a month left in this year's&#13;
racing season, Rossi's pigeons&#13;
are up. up and away.&#13;
THREE CmE\lE~T LOUTIO\S:&#13;
U.W. Parkside -- Room ~19, Tallelt Hall&#13;
•&#13;
180 W. OIestllt s, BlI'lilgtOI&#13;
~200 Washilgtol Ave., Raeile&#13;
tilE&#13;
PACK&#13;
SHOP&#13;
For litht-"e'ghf ~Ielc pleldet ~"P""&#13;
... lelhlre • DOIf .. Jlelcets&#13;
• Sleep'ng Big. • M" .... '. Tellis&#13;
• 'Ieb • CoIllPUIII • CaMp Stwll&#13;
AIID .. WE ARE STIU ADDIIIO TO OUR STOCKI&#13;
Come in end gel ncquointed, We speak fluenl&#13;
rock climbing. bock pocking. mounlaineering.&#13;
canoeing and cross counlry skiing .&#13;
son - 6th ,.,.., lCe... hI (414)6~Jn1&#13;
Slert I..n: ..... to •.•.. , •.•.&#13;
,_.·TIl.,.. 10 •.•. - S •.•.&#13;
FtWay to •.•.. ' •.•.&#13;
......, ...... ·6 •.•.&#13;
---&#13;
CD&#13;
CD&#13;
=-&#13;
CI&#13;
a&#13;
-&#13;
--&#13;
-&#13;
CD&#13;
CD&#13;
=-&#13;
CI&#13;
a&#13;
Wed., Sept. 26, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 11&#13;
uw- studen • raises It's vv at'&#13;
• • racing pigeons&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
When he was five years old,&#13;
Tonv Rossi's father bro~~ht a&#13;
couple of pigeons ho_me tpo 1km "d as a gift. Today, Rossi, a ar s~ e homore owns about 90 racmg&#13;
5?:e&lt;ms an'd has sold his birds&#13;
~roughout the United States and&#13;
the world. . . Rossi won his flfst pigeon&#13;
racing contest when he was&#13;
seven. That pigeon made the 300-&#13;
milerace back to the Rossi loft in&#13;
Racine in one day·&#13;
It wasn't until 1967, when he&#13;
was older and could be more&#13;
helpful to his fa the~, that pigeo~&#13;
racing became serious to Ro_ss1.&#13;
Breeders were purchased which,&#13;
if "top notch racers," cost&#13;
anywhere from $100 to $_500, Rossi&#13;
explained. He has imported&#13;
pigeons directly from England&#13;
and has some which have come&#13;
from Belgium and France.&#13;
February through April the&#13;
pigeons are bred, ~ch female&#13;
laying two eggs w~1ch ~ke 18&#13;
days to hatch. A pigeon 1s coi:i·&#13;
sidered mature in '1:7 days and 1s&#13;
then taken from its parents and&#13;
put in a separate loft with other&#13;
young birds. At this time the&#13;
young birds get used to their&#13;
surroundings and start in on their&#13;
training.&#13;
They are fed a high protein diet&#13;
of dried grains and taken out to&#13;
fly as often as possible. Rossi&#13;
starts the young birds one to two&#13;
miles from home, eventually&#13;
building up to 50 miles. The&#13;
pigeons should be taken out to fly&#13;
at least five times per week,&#13;
Rossi said. "No one knows how&#13;
they navigate home," he added,&#13;
"but it is common to lose birds in&#13;
training." They sometimes hit&#13;
wires or are attacked by hawks&#13;
or cats if they ground to drink.&#13;
Races vary from 100 to 600&#13;
miles. An individual is allowed to&#13;
enter 15 birds in each race.&#13;
Competing pigeons are placed&#13;
together in a trailer and driven to&#13;
the liberating point, to be&#13;
released early the following&#13;
morning. Races are held every&#13;
week from May through October.&#13;
A pigeon can race for approximately&#13;
eight years and has&#13;
a life span of about 13.&#13;
Rossi has collected 30 first&#13;
Tony Rossi standing in the doorway of his pigeon loft.&#13;
Whenever a Navy plane 1s under&#13;
e1ec1ron•c c001rot. lhal plane ,s 1n the&#13;
hands ol a Naval Flight Officer Naturally,&#13;
Ha cand1da1e lor Naval Fhgh1 Officer&#13;
1r11n1ng you·u need some •ery special&#13;
quaht,cahons Fusi. you must really 't!!!2! to Hy. even 11 you·ve never flown be lore&#13;
You·11 also need a college degree and the&#13;
kind ol mind that works well ,,,,1h math&#13;
and physics&#13;
Wa,ting at the end of your training&#13;
program ,s a Navy Commission and the&#13;
Golden Wings ol a Naval Fhghl Officer&#13;
By then you·u be an expert ,n areas hke&#13;
Jet Nav1g111on and Airborne Control&#13;
equ,pped to do your 10b wherever you go&#13;
But whatever your specialty, travel&#13;
""''II be par1 of you, l1le. And $0 will&#13;
th111enge. respons,b,l,ty. achievement&#13;
l'1d re'lll'ard&#13;
tf thats the k•nd ol career you·re&#13;
look,ng lor a"d 1fyou thin!.; you·ve got&#13;
SEND TO :&#13;
MAYY O,.-P'I C &amp;.,_ 1,.~~MATIO ... TICAW&#13;
r-~~~E«E~°:·?~:~:~~~---1&#13;
: ~:;:":,: ..... ,.., _, .... - ... ..... : l a.•et lv M•H--•• f t,O" 'Ott,1:-1 :&#13;
I ... I I"'''"'' l I I I AOO•tn I&#13;
l Colr S••ie ht ;&#13;
i Cs•·•••C••·•,. "~ : I I&#13;
: Be• success in _T~~~~-N--~ J l----------&#13;
place trophies and many top&#13;
place positions. Sunday, ept. 9&#13;
one of Rossi's pigeons won a 220&#13;
200-mile race from Independence.&#13;
Iowa to Racine. On&#13;
June 29, a pigeon Rossi own won&#13;
the 1973 Wisconsin State&#13;
Championship (the • lidwest&#13;
prestige race) in a 500-mile flight&#13;
from Topeka, Kansas. "This&#13;
pigeon is one of the biggest&#13;
money winners this year in the&#13;
state ," said Rossi , "winning&#13;
$1200." It is also nominated for&#13;
the United States Hall of Fame&#13;
(the highest honor in pigeon&#13;
racing), in which the .... ;nner \\;ll&#13;
be named ·on Oct. 15.&#13;
Rossi's pigeons have brought&#13;
home over $2000 this year v,.;th 8&#13;
firsts and 8 seconds which is an&#13;
extremely successful record,&#13;
Rossi explained&#13;
With a month left in this year's&#13;
racing season, Rossi's pigeons&#13;
are up, up and away.&#13;
happening&#13;
\\edne day, rpt. ? : iimi t T. Dani will ap r in th C mm&#13;
Art tudio Room at 8:00 p.m.&#13;
\\edn day, ~ept. _ : PAB will pr t the film " Joe" in Gr&#13;
103at7:30p.m. Adm· ioncharge i 75cent .&#13;
Wedne da,;, p . - : Tony, Jwnbo and J1m1&#13;
Whiteskeller (GR D201) at 1 p.m. 'o admL ion&#13;
. ~aturda), pt. _ : Cro Countr m t t&#13;
Erutern Illinoi at 11 a .m.&#13;
turd a) .. ept. _ : occer mee bet\\ een Par'. id and !inn&#13;
1:30 p.m. •&#13;
Saturda . Sept. _ : . lat iaid' "'ill ponsor a danc 1th th nd,&#13;
Blackwater Gold, in the AB. Dance will be from 9 p.m. until 1 .m., admission is $1.50.&#13;
unda). ept. 3 : Harry Chapin concert will be pr ented nth&#13;
Ed building at 8 p.m.&#13;
unda). ept.3: \'et'sClubwillmeetinthe ABat6:30p.m,&#13;
.\tonda). Oct. 1: From 7-10 p.m. Adult tud nt n.,;,..,._".,.tion will ha\' a get-acquainted night in LLC D173.&#13;
. tonday. Oct. 1: Women· Caucu \\ill mee at 7:30 p.m. in LLC&#13;
D174 .&#13;
Tu day. Oct. ?: Cross country meet between Park id nd&#13;
.rnwaukee at 4 p.m.&#13;
Tue day, Oct. 2: Women's s imming meet between Par id and&#13;
tilwaukee. •&#13;
I nda, and Tu dn. Oct. 1 and 2: Or hestra practic in omm&#13;
Arts D118. fanday practice at 3 30 and Tuesdav at, :30 o.m.&#13;
All item for IT' WH T HAPPE. ·1. .G hould be ubm tt .d to&#13;
RA. "GER b) noon Wedne. da pri r to publication of thr I u in "hich an item i to appear.&#13;
NOW PAYING 5.4%&#13;
(Compounds Annually to 5.51 ,~)&#13;
0. REG ·L. R&#13;
P SSBOO y&#13;
SAVI GS&#13;
THREE ro~,E~IE~T L C \Tl ~ :&#13;
U.U. Park ide -- Room 219. Tallent Hall&#13;
180 W. Chestnut t.. Burlington&#13;
5200 Wasbin~on .t,e .. Racin&#13;
TIIE&#13;
PACI&lt;&#13;
SHOP&#13;
For light-•eight hack packi119 1q1ipmellf&#13;
• feature • D•n Jackets&#13;
• Sleeping Bags • Mountain Tents&#13;
• Packs • Compasses • Camp Stwes&#13;
AND,· WE ARE STILL ADDING TO OUR STOCKI&#13;
Come in and get acquainted. We spec fluent&#13;
rock climbing. bock pocking, mountaineering,&#13;
canoeing and cross country skiing.&#13;
5033 _ 6th /we., Kenosha (414) 654-33S1&#13;
Sttte INrt: .. "." 10 •.•. • 9 p .•.&#13;
TIH.-Um. 10 •·•· · S P·•·&#13;
ffWay 10 •·•· · 9 p.•.&#13;
sm,•" 10 •.•. - , P·•·&#13;
..... c::&#13;
u, :a ---r&#13;
m ~ im&#13;
::c m =- m ::c C, ...... a '"" '"" -a &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANG~R III&lt;wt&#13;
12 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 26, 1"3&#13;
__________ sports-~ RANGER&#13;
~"YSlCAL aOUCATION .LOG ANO ATHLETIC O.~T SCHEDULE FOR OCTOBER&#13;
T ... :a C7gu.COUf\tt"y V$- \JoN M tw."kIM P.rkSode - ... OOp-.m&#13;
'NoIftiIt" .. Sw 1ft ChIO 'n UW M ..... ukM P.rU« -6 00 p_rn&#13;
.., ..&#13;
Harriers compile&#13;
2-0.record&#13;
by Daa Marry&#13;
This Saturday, Sept. 29,&#13;
Park Ide'S doss cowlry team&#13;
wUI compete against Eastern m.&#13;
in a meet wbicb head coach Vic&#13;
Godfrey describes as "our&#13;
toughe.t dual meet o[ the&#13;
see.... •·&#13;
The Parmde Harriers, who&#13;
have compUed a 2-0 dual meet&#13;
record thuslar, c:roued the finisb&#13;
line Iaot ...e.:OJ1d with ao overwhelmiDg&#13;
victory against lbe&#13;
University 0( m.-Circle campus,&#13;
21 10 40.&#13;
Indivldual wiDners for&#13;
ParUide ....ere fin! place, Lucian&#13;
........ JU" .....&#13;
!l&lt;l5a, who broke lbe tape at&#13;
26:20, which is 1:57 better lban&#13;
lbe old record. !l&lt;l5a beat second&#13;
place Wayne Saunders from&#13;
lliinois, who, incidentally, was&#13;
last year's NCAA Steeple Chase&#13;
Champion.&#13;
In another weekend meet, the&#13;
Spring Bank International 12-&#13;
mUe raco held in London, Ontario,&#13;
Rosa took sixth place,&#13;
averaging 4:47 a mile. Winner o[&#13;
lbe meet was Neal Cusak o[&#13;
Ireland. An interesting [act o[ lbe&#13;
meet is that eight o[ !be 10 men&#13;
who competed in it were in lbe&#13;
1972Olympic Games.&#13;
photo by Brian Rou&#13;
Despite Ute effort put forth by Park-side's Women's Tennis Team. the neUers lost to Ripon 4-3 lISt&#13;
Saturday .&#13;
Women netters dump Carthage&#13;
by Dan Marry&#13;
The Parkside Women's Tennis&#13;
Team will venture into its third&#13;
meet of the 1973 season this&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 29, at&#13;
Whitewater .&#13;
The Whitewater Tournament&#13;
will give Parks ide's women&#13;
netters their first real&#13;
test of competition, as&#13;
the meet will include&#13;
UW.LaCrosse ... the 1972 State&#13;
Champs.&#13;
Parkside will, however, enter&#13;
the tourney "well anned" with a&#13;
team that consists of four&#13;
returning letter ladies including&#13;
Pat Kekic, captain of this year's&#13;
squad.&#13;
Last week, on Sept. 19,&#13;
Parkside opened its 1973 campaign&#13;
with an impressive victory&#13;
over Carthage College, 6-1.&#13;
Captain Pat Kekic started&#13;
things oU on the right [oot [or&#13;
Parkside, sweeping two sets from&#13;
Nancy Gillelle o[ Carthage, lHl&#13;
and 6-2. Other singles winners&#13;
were Sue Wanggaard (6-1, lHl),&#13;
Joanne Rallen (lHl, lHl), and&#13;
Marilyn Stellberg (7-5, 6-2).&#13;
Bolb of Parkside's douhles&#13;
teams were victorious. Joan&#13;
Fredricksen and' Sandy&#13;
Kings[ield comhined powers to&#13;
overwhelm their opponents, 6-2&#13;
and lHl. Nicolet DeRose and&#13;
Ue9 SlUe-tat&#13;
"ne Ulmal Plait Shop"&#13;
TERRARIUMS&#13;
EXOTIC ,PLANTS&#13;
MEXICAN POTTERY&#13;
UKUSUALGIFT ITEMS&#13;
S&#13;
all kil~S,&#13;
yape sizes&#13;
H IJIG PLANTS&#13;
lat. WOf'!'ItI'l'sCraucoun'f)o()pen·Paro.de 10:OD.. In&#13;
~'toC""CIlI.I"l''"YOc*'l ".r-.sic» H·OD•. m&#13;
GoW Tourn., PerlU.cW 9 3a am&#13;
s.occ- uw ~ P....... '00p.rn&#13;
P... ~ ~I F.at F_' ".rkSiOI"&#13;
MM.' WOfN"'sT~Svt...UW¥&lt;~" Nt.twaUk .. ·:!·OOp.m&#13;
wOlMf't"'$w~mf'l9rtUl¥""'twau4l.ft Mlw ......" ]cOOpm&#13;
.'1 U &gt;Nort*'toTefW'l 'lIS- U'NSteYfMPOtnl "arlUidIt , OOp.m&#13;
er-sCoun''Y No.,..o._ln",ta"ONlI NOtreo.me , OOp.m&#13;
sat IJ 2NI Anra.&gt;at F.lI Gotf TCIU"\"tor women p.r..,. 9 lOa.",&#13;
o.... a., T«tlI4l"ttoeeer tlel4 P.r~ 1O00. rn&#13;
$oCur "'" UW PI.t~llle PI.~,II. II 00 a m&#13;
WO"'I't"'SC;)'lT\I\MtIUYS. UW Mad son P.rb .. l:00p m.&#13;
,&#13;
... It ~'sTeN\ YS c:.~&amp;.UWWt'l,tew.I'" P.rkstoe :J ClOp,m&#13;
... 17 *(.,\'$ UiuFornl P8;rlU. J OOpm&#13;
Pri It $OCC:'" '" Eastern III.fIOIt Un.~'ty Parbi&lt;MI· 3:ooP ffI&#13;
WOfT*'l'sG'I'tnnntIc:SY'S V'N La CI'OQ4I Parbide ,00p.ffI&#13;
~.s Tennb'YS C.rroll~I.P.rkSoeM 12ClOpm&#13;
llWOl'tI4'ft'S ... mrn no rt UW ~ son Parllside 12,00 P m.&#13;
... 14 $«Cft' ~ ~,,. JlMr~ J ClOP rt'l-&#13;
.tl"M WQrnrIfI', S·.'. Tt'f'lftl, Mftt La Cr1:ltY&#13;
lr.cio.C)eoUfhlon&amp;.OpetlMMI Parks ide n OOp",&#13;
S40t 11 0. .,TKfI ~'"9P'''''t ce.occ.',eId ".rlU~10 JO •. "'&#13;
SOCc ".. (,j", Gr..,.. e.'I' (Or..,.. 841., 2,OOp m&#13;
wo.nen S TennIS S'." MMt La &lt;:roue&#13;
wamen ... Gymnal C1YS W """"0'" Pa,UIOe 1 ClOpm&#13;
Ptr IcMDe(atl\tOtl&amp;.TtaOMHt P.rkSOCM 200pm&#13;
MiIIlI 1t wotM""sSwmlTttl'tgYS UW Mr'wOUk" Nt. .....Vl\.M 6.00p.m&#13;
CACTUS&#13;
large &amp;&#13;
small&#13;
SCTD CANDLES&#13;
DRIED FLOWER&#13;
ARIGEMENTS&#13;
1710 Washington Ave&#13;
(Highway 20 In Racine)&#13;
Phone: 632·4778&#13;
Parkitl t, th East ef tile Blildilg&#13;
EUeen Reilly also won their&#13;
match, 6-3 and 6-2.&#13;
Parkside's Women's Tennis&#13;
Team has 5 meets-3 tournies and&#13;
the stale meet on their schedule.&#13;
With an ample squad and one&#13;
victory behind them so far, head&#13;
coach Dick Frecka can look&#13;
forward to a successful year&#13;
WEEKEND SPORTS RESULTS&#13;
SOCCER: Parkside lost to Northern minois s-o&#13;
Parkside lost to Lewis College 5-0&#13;
CROSS,COUNTRY: Parkside 21, U. of ill. Circle Campus 40&#13;
WOMEN'S TENNIS: Ripon College 4, Parkside 3&#13;
'II&#13;
When you own • condominium, mOfe time for ntll)l.ation and&#13;
entertaining were incllJded in the sales price. Someone elsa&#13;
takes care of the lawn. does the ext.lor maintenance and&#13;
this wlntef. will do the 5!lOW shoveling. Ask the folk. who&#13;
liYtlthere. nothing', e.asilll' than a Birchwood Condominium.&#13;
READY FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY&#13;
Two Bedroom Ranch Style&#13;
Condominium Homes $24,500 to $27,000&#13;
The .first B"irchwDodTownhouses sold quickly and more are under conuroction,&#13;
Now,.B,rch~~od. Ranch Style homes are ready and they Ire great v,lues, too. Sales pritet incl\lllt:&#13;
• Air cO.ndltooRing • luxurious c;arpe1:ing • Color coordiMud tile&#13;
: ~nc range.net Mlf ...... n;ng ovom • FrlKt·fr.. rflrie-ntor&#13;
• Cen........ • Food Waite d;'posa! • Dr_ing room • Molchd tub and ~&#13;
.... ted tral FMlTy antenna • R_ved 51or. arM • Surtae:. p'rItil'lll t lftdoor&#13;
• .... =.,..... an,~ablal • ~a1 balconV Ol' patio • Priute .ntrY&#13;
.... mmlnli pool • Country clubhouw. with&#13;
. .&#13;
"UM .&#13;
MORE BIRCHWOOO HOMES REAOY SHTEMBER 15 "&#13;
2 Bedroom Townhouses $31.000 3 Bedroom Townhouses $32.000 to $34,000 t&#13;
1 Bedroom R.nch Stym $19.500 to $23,000&#13;
i'tfty IlIIlt wMotl YOU elln own 8 110m//!&#13;
for.oovt t!lft _ month/., payment.&#13;
IN KENOSHA&#13;
301h Avenue at Birch·Road&#13;
OE~ORA TO::DAND FURNISHED M'ODELS&#13;
OPEN HOUSE&#13;
Weekdays 10 to 8 Weekends 1 to 5&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANt;J:Q WA.ff&#13;
12 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 26, 1973&#13;
,-&#13;
RANGER&#13;
___________ Sports __ ~&#13;
P VSICAL t!OUCATION llOG A OATHlETIC OEPT. SCHEOUlE FOR OCTOBER&#13;
,rt s&#13;
ht.&#13;
-·&#13;
Ft 12&#13;
Pl P rk,,._ l&gt; OOp&#13;
., .. 17&#13;
,,, It&#13;
photo by Brian Ross&#13;
D~pite the effort put forth by Parkside's Women's Tennis Team, the netters lost to Ripon 4-3 last&#13;
Salurda .&#13;
ilk 300pm&#13;
Women netters dump Carthage&#13;
au" 6 00p m&#13;
CJ Country LOr Col eg Iowa Lor.a, 3 00 p m&#13;
Ha~riers compile&#13;
2-0~record&#13;
Rosa, who broke the tape at&#13;
26 :20, which is 1:57 better than&#13;
the old record. Rosa beat second&#13;
place Wayne Saunders from&#13;
Illinois, who, incidentally, was&#13;
last year's NCAA Steeple Chase&#13;
Champion.&#13;
In another weekend meet, the&#13;
Spring Bank International 12-&#13;
mile race held in London, Ontario,&#13;
Rosa took sixth place,&#13;
averaging 4:47 a mile. Winner of&#13;
the meet was Neal Cusak of&#13;
Ireland. An interesting fact of the&#13;
meet is that eight of the IO men&#13;
who competed in it were in the&#13;
1972 Olympic Games.&#13;
by Dan Marry&#13;
The Parkside Women's Tennis&#13;
Team will venture into its third&#13;
mee of the 1973 season this&#13;
Saturday , Sept. 29 , at&#13;
Whitewater. The Whitewater Tournament&#13;
will give Parkside's women&#13;
netters their first real&#13;
test of competition, as&#13;
the meet will include&#13;
UW-LaCrosse ... the 1972 State&#13;
Champs.&#13;
Parkside will, however, enter&#13;
the tourney "well armed" with a&#13;
team that consists of four&#13;
returning letter ladies including&#13;
Pat Kelcie, captain of this year's&#13;
squad. Last week, on Sept. 19,&#13;
Parkside opened its 1973 campaign&#13;
with an impressive victory&#13;
over Carthage College, &amp;-1.&#13;
Captain Pat Kekic started&#13;
things off on the right foot for&#13;
Parkside, sweeping two sets from&#13;
Nancy Gillette of Carthage, 6-0&#13;
and &amp;-2. Other singles winners&#13;
were .Sue Wanggaard (6-1, 6-0),&#13;
Joanne Hatten (6-0, 6-0), and&#13;
Marilyn Stellberg (7-5, &amp;-2).&#13;
Both of Parkside's doubles&#13;
teams were victorious. Joan&#13;
Fredricksen and · Sandy&#13;
Kingsfield combined powers to&#13;
overwhelm their opponents, &amp;-2&#13;
and 6-0. Nicolet DeRose and&#13;
PLA S&#13;
TERRARIUMS&#13;
EXOTIC _PLANTS&#13;
MEXICAN POTTERY&#13;
CACTUS&#13;
large &amp;&#13;
small&#13;
all kiads,&#13;
sbpe)' sizes&#13;
HtlllG PLANTS&#13;
SCENTED CANDLES&#13;
II&#13;
DRIED FLOWER&#13;
AR,GEMENTS&#13;
1710 Washington Ave&#13;
(Highway 20 In Racine)&#13;
Phone: 632-4778&#13;
Parki11 ta the East of tire Building&#13;
Eileen Reilly also won their&#13;
match, 6-3 and &amp;-2.&#13;
Parkside's Women's Tennis&#13;
Team has 5 meets-3 tournies and&#13;
the state meet on their schedule.&#13;
WEEKEND SPORTS RESULTS&#13;
With an ample squad and on&#13;
victory behind them so far, Ilea&#13;
coach Dick Freclca can I&#13;
forward to a successful year.&#13;
SOCCER: Parkside lost to Northern Illinois 5-0&#13;
Parkside lost to Lewis College 5-0&#13;
CROSS-COUNTRY: Parkside 21, U. of Ill. Circle Campus 40&#13;
WOMEN'S TENNIS: Ripon College 4, Parkside 3&#13;
When you own a condominium, ,nore time for relaxation and&#13;
entertaining were included in the sales price. Someone else&#13;
takes care of the l~n. does the exterior maintenance and&#13;
this winter. will do the snow shoveling. Ask the folks who&#13;
live there, nothing's easier than a Birchwood Condominium.&#13;
READY FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY&#13;
· _Two Bedroom Ranch Style&#13;
Condominium Homes $24,500 to $27,00&#13;
The first S-irchwood Townhouses sold quickly and mora are under construction.&#13;
Now._ Btrch~ood_ Ranch Style homes ar~ raady _antl thay ara great values, too. Sales prices include:&#13;
• Air co.nditeon,ng • Luxurious carpeting • Colo, coordinated tile&#13;
: =ge and Mlf-cleaning o~e~ • Frost-free refrigerator .&#13;
• • food waste dJSPOS;al · • Dressing room • Molded tub and ahowtr&#13;
._:=.:;,"•1 FM/TV antenna • R....-vld storage area • Surface part&lt;i119 ( Indoor&#13;
911..._ .avau~ble J • Persona~ balcony·or patio • Private entry&#13;
• Heated swimming Pool • Country clubhouse with sauna&#13;
MORE s1RcHwooD HOMES READY sEn~MBER 1s ·f:&#13;
2 Bedroom Townhouses $31,000 3 Bedroom Townhouses $32,000 to $34,000 ; · 1 Bedroom Ranch Style $19,500 to $23,000&#13;
'1f&gt;y renr when you can own 8 home&#13;
for •bour lhtt sa~ monthly payment.&#13;
IN KENOSHA&#13;
30th Avenue al Birch -Road&#13;
DE~DRAT~O ANO FURNISHED MODELS&#13;
OPEN HOUSE&#13;
Weekdays 10 to 8 Weekends 1 to$&#13;
Fo~ more information 2 933&#13;
PHONE 1-55 •&#13;
PARK!ilDE REALf ~;_,~ ()tveloped and Built bV U </text>
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              <text>Bookstore investigated</text>
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              <text>Jennett heads PSGA&#13;
Tom Jennet photo by o.tJn Friedell&#13;
Tom Jennett, one of last year's&#13;
student government (PSGAl&#13;
members, has been appointed&#13;
President of PSGA by the ninemember&#13;
student senate. He will&#13;
retain that post until new elections&#13;
can be held.&#13;
Jennett will replace Tom&#13;
Haack who was elected president&#13;
last fall but who is attending&#13;
school out of state this year.&#13;
According to the PSGA Constitution,&#13;
elections were to have&#13;
been held during the second week&#13;
of O~toberi however, Jennett&#13;
explained that a steering committee&#13;
has been set up to investigate&#13;
problems that PSGA&#13;
h~s had in the past, and determme&#13;
ways in which to solve&#13;
them. The steering committee&#13;
will be made up 01 representatives&#13;
of interested student&#13;
organizations.&#13;
"PSGA recognizes the problem&#13;
with our student government and&#13;
we hope the steering committee&#13;
will help make us more&#13;
representative of the students,"&#13;
Jennett said. "A lot of people are&#13;
coming in and wanting to nul,"&#13;
he added. He hoped that the&#13;
steering committee would have&#13;
its recommendations fmalized by&#13;
the end 01 October and that new&#13;
elections would follow Immediately.&#13;
The nine-member student&#13;
senate has approved the steering&#13;
committee as an advisory&#13;
committee, Jennett explained,&#13;
but it has yet to be approved by&#13;
the Campus Concerns Committee,&#13;
the Dean 01 Students&#13;
Office, and Chancellor Wyllie.&#13;
Jennett said that the only action&#13;
PSGA is now taking is to&#13;
initiate an interview committee&#13;
to screen students wishing to be&#13;
appointed to student-faculty&#13;
committees. PSG A has also&#13;
organized a student grievance&#13;
committee.&#13;
TheParksidee--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1973 Vol. II No. S&#13;
Where are the books?&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
by Harvey Hedden&#13;
and Stephen F. Gifford .&#13;
During the first few weeks of classes, many students are laced WIth&#13;
the problem of not being able to buy books for some of their classes.&#13;
Two RANGER reporters investigated this problem, the cost of books&#13;
themselves and tbe bookstore operation as a whole, and got cooflicting&#13;
answers while questioning instructors, the bookstore, and&#13;
Administration officials. .&#13;
In ex laining how the books are ordered, .AsslSt"":t Dean of the&#13;
College ~f Science and Society, Chuck Tinder.' first distnbutes =s.to&#13;
all instructors. When completed, the forms list the title of the , I~&#13;
author, publisher, and the number of students. expected to enroll m&#13;
each course. After the forms are collected by Tinder, they ~ssed&#13;
Ted W d manager of the bookstore. The book are&#13;
~~~y~Ofilled 0:: s~veraI books short of ~(:t::i~n~:I:;~0w'::;;&#13;
count for students droppmg tbe course. di&#13;
individual instructors and division heads, should any ~r::::m~&#13;
between the amount of books to be ordered and the projec&#13;
of studen.ts. adS:, books "You have to order books wherever you can&#13;
. In obta~~ng t eWood The bookstore orders from over two hundred&#13;
find them, says .&#13;
individual publishers.: d ot understand why there should&#13;
Most instructors l!1tervlewed co~l a~val "Teachers aggravate the&#13;
be such a problem m prompt ~ said Sheldon Harsel, instructor in&#13;
problem. by .chan.~,ng books, ks ordered as far in advance as they&#13;
communIcationS, but WIth boof&#13;
blem " According to a contract&#13;
h ulOo't be much 0 a pro. .&#13;
are, there so. U' sity May 15is the expiration date for&#13;
the bookstore has Wlt.hthdef m~e: foll~wing fall semester. Harsel went&#13;
all forms to be submltte o.r t si ificant in introductory classes&#13;
on to say that the proble~ ~ m~edul~1l and in which texts are more&#13;
which run on &lt;lwellorgamz ~c f the class" Harsel believes there&#13;
important for "smooth operatIOn ~ emester because there will not be&#13;
will be even more of a prob~em nex t:nds the oooks have from May 15&#13;
as much time to order. As It now ~ r~essed and shipped. However,&#13;
until September for the orders tOIl b~ cut down to a little under th... e&#13;
for the second semester, time WI&#13;
months, " 'abIes" which could affect delivery of&#13;
wood cited a number.of v~rl ke in noting the correct title, author,&#13;
the books. One variable IS.3 mlS~ be made by either the professor or·&#13;
publisher, or amount, which ca kstore itself. From there. a \'ari3~le&#13;
dering the books or by the dtx;"ed but may be found to be out 01 prmt&#13;
exists such that a book \s or e ' ....h must be conducted to locate.3&#13;
or not in stock. In this case, a sear... .&#13;
Paris Township&#13;
fights power plant&#13;
Two persons engaged in the&#13;
resistance movement to a&#13;
possible nuclear power plant in&#13;
Paris Township (in Kenosha&#13;
County), carried their light into&#13;
Racme last week.&#13;
Speaking at Christ Church&#13;
letbodist at a meeting 01 the&#13;
Racine-Kenosha Citizens for the&#13;
Environment (CFE) were&#13;
Regina Goodhall, member of the&#13;
Paris Township Preservation&#13;
Committee and Matthew Quinn, a&#13;
Racine attorney representing the&#13;
committee as well as nuclear&#13;
plant foes in Bunn County, in&#13;
western Wisconsin&#13;
They spoke 01 radioactivity,&#13;
commented on condemnation&#13;
proceedings, and reported a&#13;
gradually growing concern about&#13;
nuclear power plants.&#13;
"We're all guinea pigs lor&#13;
nuclear power," said one participant,&#13;
adding that there are&#13;
alternatives to nuclear power&#13;
that should be probed.&#13;
Goodhall conten&lt;le&lt;lthat the...,&#13;
is no level of safe racliation and&#13;
added that radiation chang es th~&#13;
character 01 body cells&#13;
She went 00 to say that the luel&#13;
plutonium. which would be uaed&#13;
m the fast breeder reacton of a&#13;
nuclear power plant, is the mOlt&#13;
dangerous element knO\ltr"nlO man&#13;
and the wastes would be&#13;
radioacti ve rer hundreds of&#13;
thousands 01 years.&#13;
Quinn reported that he hal&#13;
tarted an acllon challenging th~&#13;
power company's right to """.&#13;
demn property. He would like the&#13;
law changed so that the Public&#13;
Service Commission would have&#13;
to approve condemnation.&#13;
Quinn said that more Ractne&#13;
and Kenosha county people may&#13;
become concerned about th~&#13;
po ibility 01 a Paris nucl.. r&#13;
power plan' when they learn that&#13;
their property may be eyed lor&#13;
right-oC·way for transmission&#13;
lines or installing water pI"""&#13;
between Lake MIchigan and th~&#13;
power plant.&#13;
investigated&#13;
used quantity 01the book through an outsule dealer Other reasons lor&#13;
books not arriving on time would be professors filing thetr lonns alter&#13;
the contract date has exptred, or ineffiCIency on the part of the U.S.&#13;
Postal Service, which is how the books are sent. Also, nght or wrong&#13;
books could be sent to the right or wrong 100001lon.Both Regional&#13;
Manager Ramseth and local manager Wood staled on two different&#13;
occasions that bookstore service was expected to improve for next&#13;
semester.&#13;
CommercillOperltioll&#13;
In order to understand why bookstore costa are as they are, one&#13;
must understand bow the bookstore operates (under a commerCIal&#13;
system), and how the books are resold to the bookstore by IItlIdents,&#13;
The Parkside bookstore is owned by the Follette Corporation, which&#13;
pays rent lor the space the bookstore OCCUPIes,as well as all&#13;
operational costs. In return lor this "give," the Follette Corporatioa&#13;
expects to receive a "take." The bookstore, flJl8Jlced by FoIl~lt., II&#13;
ru1 to achieve a profit. "This IS a profit-malting OI'1lanWotion,"explains&#13;
Wood, "it has to be to operate. Otherwise, somebody's got to&#13;
absorb the loss. When the taxpayers have to, they really getlut hard"&#13;
The only alternative to a commercially-&lt;&gt;peraled bookstore would be&#13;
what is referred to as an "institutional" bookstore, run by the UW·P.&#13;
Soroeof the larger universities operate under such: a system, But then,&#13;
we to size, they can afford to. "I know of one institutional bookstore&#13;
that absorbed a loss of a million dollars lor a single year, and several&#13;
that have been operating at a yearly loss 01over a hundred thousand&#13;
dollars," claimed Wood. Wood clearly mdicated that in Parkside's&#13;
case a commercial system would provide the most efficient operation.&#13;
Despite the faclthat Follette owns the bookstore, they do not control&#13;
the prices of books-in particular, how much a student will realize on a&#13;
return sale. The amount a student "'rill receive is determmed by: 1.&#13;
whether or not the course IS required for a major-thi would influence&#13;
tJle amount Df student enrotlment and thus, the amount of books&#13;
needed; 2. past course ollerings-tlus gIves some Idea 01 how many&#13;
students wIll enroll in a cours~ by looking at its past perfonnance 3.&#13;
potentiality of the course-a lecture course ~ ill draw a much larger&#13;
turnout than the a\'erage 25--32person class; 4 potential. of coune,&#13;
expansion-the possibility of a given course mcreasing from ave-raRe&#13;
cla!'S size to lecture proportions.&#13;
According to Wood. Follette realizes 20 percelll 01 e,ory dollar as&#13;
profit. Ho\\ever, 23 percent 01every dollar s expended IDthe cost 01&#13;
operation. In isolated cases, some books will bring m more than a 2lt&#13;
percent profit margin. However. Wood claims the prOfll is made up by&#13;
continued on page 6&#13;
Jennett heads PSGA&#13;
Tom Jennett, one of last year's&#13;
student government (PSGA)&#13;
members, has been appointed&#13;
President of PSGA by the ninemember&#13;
student senate. He will&#13;
retain that post untH new elections&#13;
can be held.&#13;
Jennett will replace Tom&#13;
Haack who was elected president&#13;
last fall but who is attending&#13;
school out of state this year.&#13;
_Ac~ording to the PSGA constitution,&#13;
elections were to have&#13;
been held during the second week&#13;
of O~tober; however, Jennett&#13;
explained that a steering comm1tt~e&#13;
has been set up to in- vestigate problems that PSGA&#13;
ha_s had in the past, and determine&#13;
ways in which to solve&#13;
them. Th leering committ&#13;
will be made up of repr -&#13;
tative of intere ted tudent&#13;
org tzation .&#13;
_''PSG r niz the prob} m ·1th our tudent gov,emment and&#13;
we pe th t committ&#13;
\\ ill help m e u mor&#13;
representative of the ,tud&#13;
Je~ett ~id "A lot of people ar coming m and wanting to nm "&#13;
he added. He hoped that the&#13;
steering committee \\ould have&#13;
its recommendations finalized b&#13;
the end of October and that ne.:..•&#13;
elections would follow immediatelv.&#13;
&#13;
The ~ine-memb r tudent&#13;
senate _has approved the leering&#13;
comm_1ttee a an advi ory&#13;
committee. Jennett explained&#13;
but it has yet to be approved b):&#13;
the Campus Concern Committee,&#13;
the Dean of tudents&#13;
Office, and Chancellor Wyllie.&#13;
Jennett said that the onlv acti~n.&#13;
PSGA is now taking ·i to&#13;
irut1ate an interview committee&#13;
to screen tudents wishing to be appointed to student-facult,&#13;
committees. PSGA ha al o&#13;
organized a student grievance&#13;
committee.&#13;
The Parksid~e--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1973 Vol. 11 No. s&#13;
Where are the books?&#13;
NOT&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Paris Tovvnship&#13;
fights povver plant&#13;
Bookstore investigated&#13;
by Harvey Hedden&#13;
and Stephen F . Gifford&#13;
During the first few weeks of classes, many students are !aced with ·&#13;
the problem of not being able to buy books for some of their cla es. Two RANGER reporters investigated this problem, the cost of books&#13;
themselves, and the bookstore operation as a whole, and got conflicting&#13;
answers while questioning instructors, the bookstore, and&#13;
Administration officials. In explaining how the books are or~ered, _Ass~tan_t Dean of the&#13;
College of Science and Society, Chuck T1ndei:, first ~stnbutes forms.to&#13;
all instructors. When completed, the forms hst the title of the book, 1~&#13;
author publisher and the number of students expected to enroll m&#13;
each c~urse. Afte; the forms are collected by Tinder. they are passed&#13;
along to Ted Wood, manager of the bookstore. The book orders are&#13;
always filled out several books short c;f expected_ enrollment to account&#13;
for students dropping the course. Wood said he c~nfers with&#13;
individual instructors and division heads, should an~ discrepancy&#13;
between the amount of books to be ordered and the proJected amount&#13;
of students arise. In obtaining the books, "You have to order books wherever you can&#13;
find them," says wood. The bookstore orders from over two hundred&#13;
individual publishers. d&#13;
Most instructors interviewed could not understand why there shoul&#13;
be such a problem in prompt book arrival. "Teachers a~ravate ~e&#13;
roble~ by changing books," said Sheldon H~l. mstructor m p · t· "but wi·th books ordered as farm advance as they commumca ions, ,, di t t&#13;
th h ldn't be much of a problem. Accor ng to a con rac&#13;
are, ere s ou - · · dat f the bookstore has with the University, May 15 1s the exptration e or all forms to be submitted for the following fall _se~ester. Harsel went&#13;
on to say that the problem is most significant_ m introductory classes&#13;
which run on "well organized ~chedfulthes" ~~ ~? ;::i t:~e~: ~~= important for "smooth operation ° e c ru · . be . blem next semester because there will not will be even more of a pro . ds the books have from • fav 15&#13;
as much time to order. As it now stanr~es ed and shipped. Howe~er,&#13;
until September for the ort~ers t?ili:cb~ cut down to a little under three&#13;
for the second semester, 1me v.&#13;
months. . be f "variables" which could affect delivery of&#13;
Wood cited a num r_o . k . noting the correct title, author,&#13;
the books. One variable 15 _a m1sta ~ :ade bv either the profes~or orpublisher,&#13;
or amount, which =kst re its 1{ From there. a ,·anable&#13;
dering the books or by_ the d eel iut may be found to be out of print&#13;
exists such that a boo_k is or er e'ar~h must be conducted to locate.a&#13;
or not in stock. In this case, a s ~&#13;
sesn ter. &#13;
2 THE PARKSIOE RANGER wedll •• dIY. OCt. 3. 1973&#13;
RANGER&#13;
'- __ ----EditoriaI/Opinion&#13;
Power plants vs.&#13;
green plants&#13;
"81g power hurts little people." That is the wording on&#13;
one of many protest signs one sees In driving through&#13;
Paris township In Kenosha County. It Is a double entendre.&#13;
for not only does the power of government and&#13;
big business Infringe on the rights of individual citizens,&#13;
but a specific • ..."ple of this would come in the success&#13;
of a proposal by Wisconsin Electric Power Company to&#13;
build a nuclear power plant In Paris. on 6000 acres of&#13;
farm land now owned by approximately 9S families.&#13;
The fight Is stili going on between the residents of the&#13;
ar a and WE PC. and at a meeting held last week of the&#13;
Racine Kenosha CItizens For Environment. attorney&#13;
Matthew Quinn Indicated that concern over the proposal&#13;
Is growing. He expects more and more area citizens to&#13;
become Involved as they see the potential effects of such&#13;
a f clilty.&#13;
To P rls residents It means over 4Sfarms. located In&#13;
on of the best agricultural areas of the state, would be&#13;
closed down. Nlnety·flve families would have to be&#13;
r located. Health and safety are definite concerns»&#13;
there Is no level at which radiation is harmless and&#13;
scientists and nuclear engineers aCTOSSthe country are&#13;
debating the safety of nuclear power.&#13;
WEPC hints at the possible recreational value of the&#13;
pi nt's cooling pond. but the cooling pond at a plant In&#13;
Dresden. III. Is a dirty. steerny. lnsect-r idden, fog·&#13;
producing mess&#13;
WE PC stresses the power needs of the future. and&#13;
local business and government leaders see the plant as a&#13;
healthy project for Kenosha County in terms of jobs and&#13;
money. But there are alternatives to the Paris site and&#13;
even alternatives to nuclear power until it can be proved&#13;
safe. And sometlmes the economic potential of power&#13;
plants must give way to the humane value of green&#13;
plants.&#13;
Since political clout lies in size and bigness deals in&#13;
terms of expediency, not sympathy, it may be useless to&#13;
argue this question from a humanitarian point of view··&#13;
the uprooting of nearly 100 families from their&#13;
homesteads, some of them the sixth generation on the&#13;
same land. What is needed is a broader base of support.&#13;
Power Is In numbers so all persons interested in&#13;
preventing construction of a nuclear power plant in&#13;
Paris should make themselves visible. Their reasons&#13;
may range anywhere from preventing possible nuclear&#13;
disaster to properly rights to environmental concerns to&#13;
crusading for the little guy. but they have in common the&#13;
same goat and together stand a much better chance of&#13;
achieving it.&#13;
RANGER supports the Racine·Kenosha Citizens For&#13;
Environment, the Paris Preservation Society. and the&#13;
people 01 Paris fighting to keep their community safe&#13;
nd intact. We urge other like-minded persons or groups&#13;
to make themselves heard.&#13;
~&#13;
Communication&#13;
breaking down&#13;
b) ".Gillon!&#13;
aDdHann HHIIlel&#13;
In rft COthe 5tary on the bookstore. there is 00. small&#13;
tonal C1XIU11enlth two reporters ouId like COimpart to their&#13;
.....den ..11cit has no connection ..,th the faet! contained in the ar·&#13;
tlde II merely a reOecbon 01 our ..... experience in researdling&#13;
II m directed n"llnly COcertam mdi"duaJs wjthin the&#13;
:&#13;
~::.:abOn and the Foil Ue CQrllClr1ltionThese persons have &lt;:qUIred th rrustaken belief thaI the article set out wjth the&#13;
ved llItenbOn 01 conduetulg some son 01 attack OIl them.&#13;
nto Cftt810 I..... tonSlSIed 01 ever;1hing ranging&#13;
'.dmlnlstra ' 01 non·information COagile evllS1on. Perl\aps the&#13;
n bon nd an) other persons .. bo might act as sources for&#13;
luture I •need to reminded thai the R.-\l·GER is as Interested&#13;
1ft helpmg them to ooI"e th r problems as it is m helpong the students&#13;
to ,the ,t.nd no problems can be solved or even approached&#13;
n n tmofllhere of plClOnprenils. Suspicion only se.....es&#13;
to (' mot susptClOn \mul there no more communication to be&#13;
I rfl1I of, a commuOlca~on ha brol&lt;en00..'Tl completely. If lJur&#13;
prepara\lOll 01 artI~~ re to " .. as aD)·scale lor measuring&#13;
IJ\lOQlIC cI feer and diItrusl here at Parllside, ...... ould JiI&lt;. to&#13;
Inform our readen that Pa.. .de closer to a communication l:ftak·&#13;
wn than " thl&#13;
Last week RANGER printed a front page stor;: on Affirmative&#13;
Action and hiring practices at Pa r kside. In an editorial RANGER&#13;
charged that UW-P is failing to meet minortty needs In Its hiring of&#13;
faculty and staff. An interesting enncism has ansen at UW-oshkosh&#13;
regarding its recruitment and htrmg efforts.&#13;
An article in the sept. 13, 1973 OSHKOSH ADVANCE·TITAN, UW·&#13;
o's student newspaper. began with the q~estion, lOIs this uni.versi~y&#13;
practicing discrimination against men, 10 ~ene~al, and ~hlteS. ~&#13;
particular?" The qUestion arose when the ~OIverslty advertised to lill&#13;
a non-academic posiuon, listing the criteria for ,the ~ltlOn. and ~e&#13;
statement "in accordance with the State of Wlsconsm Affrrmatlve&#13;
Action Program, only applicants w~o are wo~en or ~embe~ of&#13;
minority groups such as Afro-Am~rlcan. Ar:nencan Indian, !,-~l~:&#13;
American and Spanish Surname, will be consu!ered for the position.&#13;
The sw.:&#13;
y&#13;
goes on to outline UW.o's percentages of minority and&#13;
women faculty: 1.6 percent Afro-American, 1.9 percent Oriental, 0.7&#13;
percent Spanish-American, and 2.6 percent "other" minorities.&#13;
Women coostitute 26.5 percent of the faculty at Oshkosh, compared&#13;
with 8 percent at Parkside. Parkside's statistics on minorities still&#13;
have not been made public so we have no way of knowing for sure at&#13;
this point what percentage of our faculty comes from minority&#13;
backgrounds. We do know Parkside's faculty is 0 percent AfroAmerican.&#13;
UW-OAffirmative Action officer, Roy Heath. said that in order to be&#13;
eligible for lederal lunds, UW-O must meet federal standards for the&#13;
hiring 01 minorities. But he maintained that rarely do more qualified&#13;
applicants get nosed out of a job by a less qualified minority membe r.&#13;
The assistant to the vice-&lt;:hancellor attempted to clarify the&#13;
situation, stating "We are not refusing to hire white males. We are&#13;
interested in securing the most qualified candidates available."&#13;
However, when the University advertises for teachers at graduate&#13;
schools or in professional publications, "We certainly attempt to&#13;
encourage minority people and women," he added.&#13;
The lack 01 minority applicants is what forces the University to&#13;
request only minorities when hiring for some jobs, according to Heath.&#13;
There is also a low number of minority PhD graduates each year.&#13;
It appears UW-O will continue to try and hire minority people exclusively&#13;
for some positions, although if this is not possible a white&#13;
male will be considered. Until the disparity equalizes itself, UW·&#13;
Oshkosh will probably suffer criticism for its hiring practices.&#13;
Oyde DeBerry, assistant to the Chancellor for Multicultural Affairs,&#13;
as well as Affirmative Action Officer for Minorities at UW-o, believes&#13;
such criticism is unfair and commented that "all the institutions in&#13;
this valley are committed by state and federal law to correct historical&#13;
inequities in recruitment. hiring, promotion and retention ... whether&#13;
these institutioos uphold the law is another thing. We are attempting."&#13;
DeBerry was upset by an article in a local paper (the NOR·&#13;
T.H.wESTE~N) th,~t criticized the university's supposedly prejudicial&#13;
hiring practices. Anyone that could make that statement is either&#13;
uninformed, stupid, or racist, or all three, to he concluded.&#13;
The .implications of all this for Parkside? This institution, too, is&#13;
CO~ltted hy state and federal law to correct historical inequities In&#13;
recruitment, hiring, promotion and retention. It is doubtful we can&#13;
honestly claim we are attempting to uphold the law. Our Affirmative&#13;
Actio~ plan is overdue, and in the meantime we are doing no special&#13;
recruiting to encourage minority people and women to apply. Iam not&#13;
advo:cating that we discriminate against white males by refusing to&#13;
consider them when a position is open. But in accordance with federal&#13;
Affirmative ~ction g~delines, we should be making a special effort to&#13;
reach potential candidates from among groups formerly excluded&#13;
from empl~yment and advancement, and when the qualifications of&#13;
these candidates are equaltn the job they should be hired.&#13;
The Parksidc Ranger is publl hed .&#13;
year by the students f T IS ~ee~y throughout the academic&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53l~O ~~fUniversity of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Learning Cenler, Telepho~e (4l14c)~5;~~;ocated at 0-194 LibraryThe&#13;
Parkside Ranger is . d .&#13;
reflected in columns and editor! In ependent newspaper, Opinions&#13;
View of The University of w~tonal~ are no~ necessarily the official&#13;
Letters to the Ed'to Isconsm·Parkslde.&#13;
interest to students I f;c~te encouraged, AllleHers on any subject of&#13;
less, typed Ilnd do~ble-s y or staff m~st be confined to 250 words or&#13;
letters for length and g~~ed.. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
address, phone number ste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
be withheld upon reque:~d;~uden,t status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
print any letters. ,e editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
EDITOR-IN_CHIEF' J&#13;
_MANAGING EDITOR.a~e M. Schliesman&#13;
FEATURE EDIT .' om Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITO . OR. Debra Frledell&#13;
SPORTS ED.T~·R~athryn Wellner&#13;
COPY EDIT " Dan Marry&#13;
PHOTOGRA~~ic R~~~a Ecklund&#13;
WRITERS: StePhenGiff DINATOR: DaVid Daniels&#13;
Jense&lt;'l~Michael OISZYk~r~a~~r~ara Hanson, Harvey Hedden, Gary&#13;
Stapan,an, Carrie Ward, Ken y SchUbert, John Sorensen, Steve&#13;
Bruce Wagner Konkol, Tom Defouw, Neal Saufner&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Ron Antrt '&#13;
J,m Ruffalo, Jay Satvo m, Alle,n Frederickson, Brian Ross,&#13;
CARTOONISTS' Am&#13;
LAYOUT: Ten! Gel:;,~undari, Gary Huck&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGE~~n, Terry Knop, staff&#13;
ADVERTISING M.AN . Ken Pestka&#13;
CIRCULATION MAN:g:R&#13;
: Amy Cundari ~"&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF. F~' Gary Worthington&#13;
ADVISOR: Don KOpl'"iv~ ed Lawrence. Jim Magruder&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RA GER Wednesuy, Oct. 3, 1973&#13;
[ A 2!i!on~&#13;
ower plants vs.&#13;
een plants&#13;
ee•o1 et ylew&#13;
res den s of the&#13;
er.&#13;
recre lonal value o the&#13;
cooling pond at a plan n&#13;
insec • ldden, fog.&#13;
Communication&#13;
brea Ing down&#13;
It Jan~ Schlluman&#13;
Last week RANGER printed a fro!lt page stol")'. o~ Affirmative&#13;
Action and hiring practices at Parksi~. ~ an edito~i~l R~~GER&#13;
charged that uw-P is failing to m~t _mmority n_eeds m its hirmg of&#13;
faculty and staff. An interesting ~iticism has arisen at UW-Oshkosh&#13;
regarding its recruitment and hiring efforts.&#13;
An article in the Sept. 13, 1973 OSHKOSH ADVANCE-TITAN, UW0'&#13;
student newspaper, began _with the q~estion, "Is this uni_versi~y&#13;
iracticing discrimination agamst men, m ~ene:al, and ~hites, ~&#13;
particular?" The question arose when t?e ~mversity adv~:tised to fill&#13;
a non-academic position, listi_ng the criteria for_the ~sition_ and ~e&#13;
tatement "in accordance with the State of Wisconsm Affirmative&#13;
Action Program only applicants who are women or members of&#13;
minority groups' such as Afro-Am~rican, AI_nerican Indian, ~-sianAmerican,&#13;
and Spanish Surname, will be considered for the position."&#13;
The tory goes on to outline UW-O's percentages of minority and&#13;
w men faculty: 1.6 percent Afro-American, 1.9 percent Oriental, 0.7&#13;
percent pani h-American, and 2.6 percent "other" minorities.&#13;
Women con titute 26.5 percent of the faculty at Oshkosh, compared&#13;
"ith percent at Parkside. Parkside's statistics on minorities still&#13;
haH! not been made public owe have no way of knowing for sure at&#13;
thi point what percentage of our faculty comes from minority&#13;
background . We do know Parkside's faculty is O percent AfroAmerican.&#13;
&#13;
UW-0 Affirmative Action officer, Roy Heath, said that in order to be&#13;
eligible for federal funds, UW-0 must meet federal standards for the&#13;
hiring of minorities. But he maintained that rarely do more qualified&#13;
applicants get nosed out of a job by a less qualified minority member.&#13;
The assistant to the vice-chancellor attempted to clarify the&#13;
ituation, stating "We are not refusing to hire white males. We are&#13;
interested in securing the most qualified candidates available."&#13;
However, when the University advertises for teachers at graduate&#13;
chools or in professional publications, "We certainly attempt to&#13;
encourage minority people and women," he added.&#13;
The lack of minority applicants is what forces the University to&#13;
request only minorities when hiring for some jobs, according to Heath.&#13;
There is also a low number of minority PhD graduates each year.&#13;
It appears UW-0 will continue to try and hire minority people exclusively&#13;
for some positions, although if this is not possible a white&#13;
male will be considered. Until the disparity equalizes itself, UWOshkosh&#13;
will probably suffer criticism for its hiring practices.&#13;
Oyde DeBerry, assistant to the Chancellor for Multicultural Affairs,&#13;
a well a Affirmative Action Officer for Minorities at UW-0, believes&#13;
uch criticism is unfair and commented that "all the institutions in&#13;
thi valley are committed by state and federal law to correct historical&#13;
inequitie in recruitment, hiring, promotion and retention ... whether&#13;
these in titutions uphold the law is another thing. We are attempting."&#13;
DeBerry was upset by an article in a local paper (the NOR-&#13;
~ESTE~ ) th,~t criticized the university's supposedly prejudicial&#13;
hirmg practices. Anyone that could make that statement is either&#13;
uninformed, stupid, or racist, or all three," he concluded.&#13;
The implications of all this for Parkside? This institution too is&#13;
comr~itted by Stl_lte and federal law to correct historical ineq~iti~ tn&#13;
recrwtment, hi.nng, promotion and retention. It is doubtful we can&#13;
hon~stly claim we are attempting to uphold the law. Our Affirmative&#13;
Actio~ _plan is overdue, and in the meantime we are doing no special&#13;
recrm~g to encourage minority people and women to apply. I am not&#13;
adv~ting that we disc~in~te against white males by refusing to&#13;
consider ~em "".hen a position is open. But, in accordance with federal&#13;
Affirmative Action guidelines, we should be making a special effort to&#13;
reach potential candidates from among groups formerly excluded&#13;
from empl~yment and advancement, and when the qualifications of&#13;
these candidates are equal to the job they should be hired.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is pub!" hed . . year by the students of T is ~eekly throug~out ~e academic&#13;
Kenosha. Wisconsin 53140 ~;r University of W1sconsm-Parkside,&#13;
Learning Center, Telepho;e ,41~c,e~5:_r~~ocated at D-194 LibraryThe&#13;
Parkside Ranger · . · reflected in columns and is _an . mdependent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
view of The University of ~~torial~ are no~ necessarily the official&#13;
Letters to the Ed ·to isconsm-Parks1de.&#13;
mterest to students 1 ,:c:te encouraged. All letters on any subJect of&#13;
less. typed ,nd do~ble-s Y or staff m~st be confined to 250 words or&#13;
letters for length and g~~ed. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
address. phone number a d ~ted All letters must be signed and include&#13;
be withheld upon r ues~ 5 u en_t status or faculty rank . Names will&#13;
print any letters eq · The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF· MANAGING EDITOR~ane M . Schliesman&#13;
FEATURE EDITO .. Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR· t · Debra Friedel!&#13;
SPORTS EOITO.R · ~:~yn Wellner&#13;
COPY EDITO . . Marry&#13;
PHOTOGRAP~ic ~::,cca Ecklund&#13;
WRITERS : Stephen G~t!ROINATOR: David Daniels JMs.eri M ' 1 Ord, Barbara Ha : ,chael Olszyk, Maril n nson, Harvey Hedden, Gary&#13;
Stapan,an, Carrie Ward, Ken ,: Schubert, John Sorensen, Steve&#13;
Bruce Waoner onkoi, Tom Defouw, Neal Sautner,&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS· Ron A J,m Ruffalo, Jay saivo ntrlm, Allen Frederickson, Brian Ross&#13;
CARTOONISTS · A ' LAYOUT: Terr, G;;Y :=undarl, Gary Huck&#13;
BUSINESS MANAG~~n, Terry Knop, staff&#13;
ADVERTISING MAN · Ken Pestka&#13;
ClltCULATION MAN:g::: Amy Cundari j4&#13;
ADVEltTISING STAFF· F · Gary Worthington&#13;
ADVISOR : Don Kepr,v~ red Lawrence, Jim Magruder &#13;
Armstrong pleads guilty&#13;
An attorney for Karleton Armstrong,&#13;
one of four persons&#13;
charged in a 1970 bombing that&#13;
killed a University of Wisconsin&#13;
researcher. said that his client&#13;
would plead guilty to a reduced&#13;
charge of second degree murder.&#13;
Plea bargaining between the&#13;
defense and the prosecution&#13;
produced an agreement for&#13;
Armstrong to plead guilty to the&#13;
lesser charge in the death of&#13;
Robert Fassnacht. He was&#13;
originally charged with first&#13;
degree murder. Armstrong will&#13;
also plead guilty to four charges&#13;
of arson, according to attorney&#13;
Robert Kellerman.&#13;
Kellerman said the agreement&#13;
would allow Armstrong to&#13;
present his motivations to the&#13;
public at a hearing. "Karl is&#13;
admitting he did these acts and&#13;
he wants the people to understand&#13;
why," Kellerman said.&#13;
The defense attorney called the&#13;
bombing "an act of political&#13;
resistance against the illegal war&#13;
in Indochina." He said the Armstrong&#13;
defense committee hoped&#13;
to "turn this town into a forum for&#13;
renewed anti-war activities and&#13;
demonstrations" when a hearing&#13;
on the guilty pleas is held Oct. 15.&#13;
The guilty plea is the best way&#13;
to bring the issue to the American&#13;
people that its government has&#13;
been shown to be corrupt and&#13;
acting contrary to the wishes of&#13;
the people, Kellerman said.&#13;
State law permits defendants&#13;
who plead guilty .to present&#13;
evidence on the mitigation of&#13;
their guilt. Such evidence could&#13;
not have been presented at a&#13;
trial.&#13;
Kellerman said the evidence&#13;
against Armstrong was substantial&#13;
and that Armstrong&#13;
regretted that Fassnacht had&#13;
died in the early morning bombing&#13;
of the Army Mathematics&#13;
Research Center in Sterling Hall&#13;
on the Madison campus&#13;
We get&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It occurs to me that the Affirmative&#13;
Action Program is a&#13;
form of reverse racism. Though&#13;
liberal sentiments disagree, it is&#13;
impossible to rectify the&#13;
mistakes of the past, to repair the&#13;
dreams that racism-sexism has&#13;
crushed. To think that a WASP&#13;
majority can make reparation&#13;
for past mistakes by giving&#13;
minorities greater opportunities&#13;
than the majority is truly very&#13;
faulty thinking.&#13;
The Affirmative Action&#13;
Program is a repugnant form of&#13;
tokenism, only instead of one&#13;
black, chicano, or woman, you&#13;
employ the current percentages.&#13;
By doing so a company,&#13;
organization, or university can&#13;
chant, "See? We are an equal&#13;
opportunity employer!" Equal&#13;
opportunity for who? (More&#13;
equal for some, perhaps?) A&#13;
system like this does not equalize&#13;
Cartoonist's eye view&#13;
The bombing, on August 24,&#13;
1970. was one of the last major&#13;
acts of violence on the UW·&#13;
Madison campus, scene of dozens&#13;
of violent anti-war protests&#13;
during the course of the Vietnam&#13;
War.&#13;
Armstrong was arrested in&#13;
Canada in February, 1972 and&#13;
extradited in March of this year.&#13;
He has since been held in the&#13;
Dane County jail in lieu of&#13;
$450,000 bail. The other three&#13;
persons charged in the case are&#13;
still being sought.&#13;
letters&#13;
opportunities, but rather gives&#13;
minorities greater opportunities&#13;
than the majority. When this&#13;
occurs, racism-sexism won't be&#13;
eliminated but rather&#13;
propagated.&#13;
1 consider a system like AI·&#13;
firmative Action not only unequal&#13;
but also somewhat degrading. 1&#13;
certainly would be offended if I&#13;
was hired only because of skin&#13;
color, or nationality background,&#13;
or because I'm a Speaker. I am&#13;
proud of the fact that I am hired&#13;
for a job because an employer is&#13;
convinced 1am competent to do it&#13;
well. To be hired for any other&#13;
reason is to be used.&#13;
When considering the implementation&#13;
of Affirmative&#13;
Action one should think of all&#13;
ramifications before we jump in&#13;
over our beads like lemmings in&#13;
the sea.&#13;
Tom Speaker&#13;
UWP Sophomore&#13;
by Gary Huck&#13;
F~ ..H~ T~ ~."" ~&#13;
Coil.,. c.... Ml Dew ..&#13;
l"HL f-Iusn .. TO Gn nCl"~U'&#13;
I ",_Y.1&gt;&lt;t w,,"'o; L""D T ...",,· Nh&gt;E ..&#13;
S,."., To _Li'!&gt;5e'"&#13;
T~" (.O"'f'lCTIT,OIJ&#13;
SIT"'''''''' il"-l"tl"Y',&#13;
BRo o~t.. C; P!o,oF.SSdl:5&#13;
NO'"T"O .,. ...&#13;
t';::~l\~:,.v.~~.~...&#13;
POETRY&#13;
8&lt;rf 500.. l'~G--.""&#13;
.....tI S-~· ..&#13;
0" , F'.~T&lt;. _tI&#13;
,",''''~ t&gt;&lt;lJ;&#13;
.....0 I 0;._ tI ....&#13;
........~ .... l ;n: TY&#13;
0.. '-'~\"',.... ..&#13;
Ra ...... \o.C1l~"&#13;
Ranger classifieds&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
S2.75 per page&#13;
Send for your up-to-date. 160-page,&#13;
mail order catalog Enclose $1.00&#13;
to cover postage (deh'iery lime IS&#13;
I to 2 daysl.&#13;
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC.&#13;
11941 WILSHIRE BLVD.. SUIT[ :2&#13;
L05 ANC£US. CALIF 9002S&#13;
12131477-8474 or 477·5493&#13;
Our resurch "",leri" is sold fat&#13;
rewltch usisunu ani,.&#13;
Income tax preparation, Federal and Sta'e,&#13;
ellperienced. Reasonable. Call 63'·'191.&#13;
Red 1968 Mustang convert. Perfect&#13;
mechlniully, artistically dented, $600. 63'-&#13;
1110(evenings).&#13;
WANTED, Licensed baT"tender who is&#13;
P.rkside student. Call 553-'243'2between 8&#13;
a.m. &amp; 4",30p.m.&#13;
EARN TOP MONEYl p.r~.ti"'.e promofin9&#13;
student travel. call. o~AW~~:~:~IU~J~:&#13;
telephone numbe, rl'lIi 60204. (31'2)3,.-0110.&#13;
Box 5049.Evans on. .&#13;
d peutely need THE&#13;
Some stUdentsGE e~EADER (MusUtine&#13;
BORZO.I ~OLi~itors). If anyone has thil&#13;
and Gnfflth.. . II it leave nlme and&#13;
boOk and is Willing to se, t" n I&lt;iosk.&#13;
phone number at the InlormllO&#13;
Shing.Mei I&lt;ellv·&#13;
.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1973THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Editor's note: "The Movemen.t" is. regular feature In RANGER. It&#13;
deals with women and women's COIlcerns in society. at Parbkte""&#13;
history_ Guest writers are invited,&#13;
by Barb Han.....&#13;
Ti-Grace Atkinson, radical feminist, spoke at UW-MiIwa,*ee on&#13;
Sept. 26 as part of the Women's Week Activities sponsored by !be&#13;
Campus Women's Information Center. AtklOsoo has been lOvol~ In&#13;
the Women's Movement smce it first organized in 1966.She was in !be&#13;
headlines in 1971when ber comments at Catholic University about !be&#13;
V"ll"ginMary incited Patricia Buckley Bozell to strike ber. Bozell is !be&#13;
sister of columnist William F. Buckley Jr. and New York Senator&#13;
James Buckley. At1tinsonhadn't lectured f'll"a long time becausellhe&#13;
"felt it was a trap, a substitute for action. It She fears the same kind of&#13;
trap in the trend toward rap sessions and consciousness raiainll.&#13;
Although she thinks "the first battle is in ourselves and alone,"&#13;
Atkinson stressed the need for women to make stronger bonds between&#13;
themselves. "We don't expect much of each other because we&#13;
doo't think much of each other."&#13;
"The Women's Movement now is a media dream. You look for the&#13;
reality in the change.c.In seven years, the only major adv~cemeDl&#13;
has been abortion." Atkinson stressed the necessity of buin8 any&#13;
liberalized abortion laws on strong Constitutional grounda. She aa1d&#13;
there are two approaches to justify abortion: privacy and the Fourteenth&#13;
Amendment's guarantee that no SlBte shall "deprive any&#13;
person of life liberty or property, without due process of law."&#13;
Atkinson said u.at "All of me belongs to me-sperm is a 'gift' once it"&#13;
in my body." Atkinson mentioned that in countries where the abortion&#13;
laws have been liberalized, the birth rate drops substantially. "You&#13;
Iind that women aren't as crazy about this motherhood bit as you'd&#13;
thought." Eventually the restrictions return. "One thing I think is&#13;
very important is test-tube babies. Test-lUbe babies are the only&#13;
solution to abortion. [f there is no alternate means of reproduction, the&#13;
restrictions will go back on."&#13;
You can't discuss abortion without mentioning the Catholic Church,&#13;
and Atkinson had plenty to say about that. "Their only new members&#13;
come from women's vaginas. If they lose the women, they lose the ball&#13;
game ..As long as tbe Church stands, women won't be free. They&#13;
(those leading the O1urch) must be wiped out totally. Every stick.&#13;
stone. everything."&#13;
Atkinson asked, "can you be Catholic and Ieminist? Can you be&#13;
religious and feminist?" She asked many other thought-provoltlDll&#13;
questions. but perhaps the most imeresnng was thiS "How do you grt&#13;
women to put themselves on the line? How do you get them to bond'"&#13;
When we discover the answer to that, liberation will be more than juat&#13;
a word.&#13;
••• '''flIrtturn_' ...&#13;
or .... "&#13;
FrIday Oct. 5&#13;
I:" p.lD.&#13;
Swtday oe. 7&#13;
7::11 p.lD.&#13;
Student AetlviU..&#13;
BuI1diflll&#13;
uw ...... Wtt&#13;
1.0_ ,...,"-'&#13;
UNION&#13;
Itt. 3, 5, &amp;, 7&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sat. &amp; Sun.&#13;
K.es"'s IIe.est llltes,.,&#13;
2nd National&#13;
{formerly Shak.y',}&#13;
6'101 Groonbay Road Phono 654-0415&#13;
Armstrong pleads guilty&#13;
An attorney for Karleton Armstrong,&#13;
one of four persons&#13;
charged in a 1970 bombing that&#13;
killed a University of Wisconsin&#13;
researcher, said that his client&#13;
would plead guilty to a reduced&#13;
charge of second degree murder.&#13;
their guilt. Such evidence could&#13;
not have been presented at a trial.&#13;
Kellerman said the evidence&#13;
against Armstrong was substantial&#13;
and that Armstrong&#13;
regretted that Fassnacht had&#13;
~ed in the early morning bombing&#13;
of the Army Mathematics&#13;
Research Center in Sterling Hall on the Madison campus.&#13;
The bombing, on Augu t 24,&#13;
1970, was one of the last major&#13;
acts of violence on the '&#13;
ladison campus, scene of dozen&#13;
of violent anti-war protest&#13;
during the course of the \'ietnam&#13;
War.&#13;
Armstrong was arrested in&#13;
Canada in February. 1972 and&#13;
extradited in larch of this year.&#13;
He has since been held in the&#13;
Dane County jail in lieu of&#13;
$450,000 bail. The other three&#13;
persons charged in the case are&#13;
still being sought.&#13;
Plea bargaining between the&#13;
defense and the prosecution&#13;
produced an agreement for&#13;
Armstrong to plead guilty to the&#13;
lesser charge in the death of&#13;
Robert Fassnacht. He was&#13;
originally charged with first&#13;
degree murder. Armstrong will&#13;
also plead guilty to four charges&#13;
of arson, according to attorney&#13;
Robert Kellerman.&#13;
We get letters&#13;
Kellerman said the agreement&#13;
would allow Armstrong to&#13;
present his motivations to the&#13;
public at a hearing. "Karl is&#13;
admitting he did these acts and&#13;
he wants the people to understand&#13;
why, " Kellerman said.&#13;
The defense attorney called the&#13;
bombing "an act of political&#13;
resistance against the illegal war&#13;
in Indochina." He said the Armstrong&#13;
defense committee hoped&#13;
to "turn this town into a forum for&#13;
renewed anti-war activities and&#13;
demonstrations" when a hearing&#13;
on the guilty pleas is held Oct. 15.&#13;
The guilty plea is the best way&#13;
to bring the issue to the American&#13;
people that its government has&#13;
been shown to be corrupt and&#13;
acting contrary to the wishes of&#13;
the people, Kellerman said.&#13;
State law permits defendants&#13;
who plead guilty .to present&#13;
evidence on the mitigation of&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It occurs to me that the Affirmative&#13;
Action Program is a&#13;
form of reverse racism. Though&#13;
liberal sentiments disagree, it is&#13;
impossible to rectify the&#13;
mistakes of the _past, to repair the&#13;
dreams that racism-sexism has&#13;
crushed. To think that a WASP&#13;
majority can make reparation&#13;
for past mistakes by giving&#13;
minorities greater opportunities&#13;
than the majority is truly very&#13;
faulty thinking.&#13;
The Affirmative Action&#13;
Program is a repugnant form of&#13;
tokenism, only instea~ of one&#13;
black, chicano, or woman, you&#13;
employ the current percentages.&#13;
By doing so a company,&#13;
organization, or university can&#13;
chant, "See? We are an equal&#13;
opportunity employer!" Equal&#13;
opportunity for who? (More&#13;
equal for some, perhaps? ) A&#13;
system like this does not equalize&#13;
Cartoonist's eye view&#13;
POETRY&#13;
F~""KL"I' TME. ~9Ll!M.S o, Cotltf!ll C" Mc. Dow.., T'HE. Huni..c To &lt;i-•1' Tl'I&amp; CL,.ssu r "'~T. n-.c. wo«K Lo"'o T.,.;.T' N,v,k Sul-\5 T o .LeSselr&gt;l T~C C. O..,PEi1TtOIJ&#13;
8EiWS.\N SNtitt.iTS,&#13;
BtlowN wos1"'e,. P,.oft.SSdt:5&#13;
NOT TO N'liN"Tlft-.. 'T~1!.&#13;
G~~l1~:,.v.~~-~y&#13;
Sorry I Woke You Up&#13;
Pardon me but I didn't mean to take your dream&#13;
Away. You know, the one in which_ we&#13;
Live in peace and rid our minds of middle class&#13;
Hang-ups. It flourished in Haight-Ashbury.&#13;
Wetunedin turnedon anddroppedout.&#13;
F1owers beads grass love acid sharing groovy&#13;
Vibes. Woodstock our soul nation Be-ins&#13;
Then the Altamont Chicago Now? cynicism&#13;
Smack sexism and pass the next beer. The&#13;
Reality of teen-age gang war, _Charles Manson,&#13;
Gay-baiting and longhairs for Nixon. The women&#13;
Are in thei; communal kitchens making wheat germ&#13;
Sandwiches for their revolutionary brothers&#13;
Out fighting pigs. Hip Capitalism. We sing&#13;
About beauty and we sing about truth at $10,000&#13;
A show. Jesus Freaks Muhammad Speaks&#13;
Rennie Davis reeks . ?&#13;
What happened to the counter-culture? Was it there·&#13;
Yea, we've all been co-opted or diverted. I got&#13;
8111' soc. .. !u.~ ... ~-- ~!'.I) n,,£.N .,,,.,. ew1tt1u, Cf:'~,s A._.JT"I(.- 11\.0&#13;
Wl'-'-1t""t,&#13;
,.,,..0 'IC."""- C'I-'!;,.&#13;
Wn1'1 .,_.l ~aA... Tl 0,. U'F lN ,.,._t:&#13;
RaJ1o1,,.. \..CR"-D&#13;
L1.,.._E.&#13;
Hip. Sorry I woke you up. _ Dave Myer&#13;
Ranger classifieds·&#13;
Income tax preparation, Federal and State,&#13;
experienced. Reasonable . Call 639-9891.&#13;
Red n68 Mustang convert. Perfect&#13;
mechanically, artistically dented, $600. 639·&#13;
1170 (evenings).&#13;
WANTED : Licensed bartender who is&#13;
Parkside student. Call 553-2432 between 8&#13;
a.m. &amp; • , 10 p.m.&#13;
RN TOP MONEY! Part-time promoting&#13;
!:dent travel. Call_ o~:;~~~:~,u~~J:~:&#13;
telephone numbet r\11 60204 (312)328-0110. Box 549, Evans on, · ·&#13;
d rately need THE Some studentsGE e~ADER (Muscatine&#13;
BORZO_I COLL~itorsl If anyone has this and Griffith, . E · 11 .&#13;
1 leave name and book and is willing to se 1 ' fon Kiosk. phone number at the tnforma ,&#13;
Shing-Mei Kelly.&#13;
opportunities, but rather gives&#13;
minorities greater opportunities&#13;
than the majority. When this&#13;
occurs, racism- exism won't be&#13;
eliminated but rather&#13;
propagated.&#13;
I consider a ystem like Affirmative&#13;
Action not onJy unequal&#13;
but also somewhat degrading. I&#13;
certainly would be offended if I&#13;
was hired onJy because of skin&#13;
color, or nationality background,&#13;
or because I'm a Speaker. I am&#13;
proud of the fact that I am hired&#13;
for a job because an employer is&#13;
convinced I am competent to do it&#13;
well. To be hired for any other&#13;
reason is to be used.&#13;
When considering the implementation&#13;
of Affirmative&#13;
Action one should think of all&#13;
ramifications before we jump in&#13;
over our heads like lemmings in&#13;
the sea .&#13;
Tom Speaker&#13;
UWP Sophomore&#13;
by Gary Huck&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
$2. 75 per page&#13;
Send for your up-terdate, ISO.page,&#13;
mail order catalog. Enclose $1.00&#13;
to cover postage (deliiery I e s&#13;
1 to 2 daysl&#13;
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC.&#13;
11941 WILSHIRE BLVD .• SUITE =2&#13;
LOS A GELES. CALIF. 90025&#13;
(213! 477-8474 or 477-~93&#13;
Our resurc lftllteri.il is sold for re~uc~ us,sunce only&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Editor' note: "Th . to,ement'' i a re ular featun ln R&#13;
deal Vlith ¥iomen and" men' COIie in oc t , at ar&#13;
hi tory. Gu . t "riter are in\'lted.&#13;
a Y.ord.&#13;
The&#13;
• nda • ct. 1&#13;
7: p.m.&#13;
tud tActh1t&#13;
Buldi~&#13;
Ion ?Sc&#13;
UWP...iWI&#13;
10,~&#13;
UNION&#13;
1kt. 3, 5, 6, 7&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sat. &amp; Sun.&#13;
Kenoslta's Newest Nites,ot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
( ormerly Sho ey' s)&#13;
6'201 GrHnbay Road Phone 654-0485 &#13;
. I Sister Colette ill a teacher by profession but finds&#13;
that Campus MinistrY is "one ,:"ay of continuing my&#13;
I&#13;
relation with young people ill a less. structured&#13;
way." .' The campus Ministry people will work ill conjunction&#13;
with Parkside counselors. They are also&#13;
setting up a Newman Club for Parkside students.&#13;
Sister Colette explained the Newman Club as a way&#13;
to "get young people together to form a Christian&#13;
type of community:' which they hope will make&#13;
worship more creative and responsive to the needs&#13;
of young people. It is a way "to bridge what is and&#13;
what could be," she added.&#13;
"We have no specific programs outlined," said&#13;
Father Wayne, "but want the students to initiate&#13;
programs and rap centers. In sharing ideas we&#13;
build a better community in which to live:'&#13;
The two have spent the past three weeks getting&#13;
acquainted with administrators, faculty and staff,&#13;
and getting a feel for the workings of the University.&#13;
"I have a deep respect for young people" said&#13;
Father Wayne, "and they have a lot to give. We&#13;
want to help them channel their ideas." Father&#13;
Wayne and Sister Colette are at Parkside to listen,&#13;
to share, to suggest, or to counsel students.&#13;
Sister Colette will be available on campus on&#13;
Tuesdays and both Sister Colette and Father Wayne&#13;
will be here on Thursdays from noon until 4 p.m. in&#13;
LLC 0185.&#13;
On Thursday, Oct. 4, a Campus Ministry kickoff&#13;
rap session has been arranged through which&#13;
Father Wayne and Sister Colette are interested in&#13;
meeting Parkside students. This is an opportunity&#13;
for students to offer suggestions, to talk, or to&#13;
become actively involved in the organization and&#13;
designing of activities for the Newman Club.&#13;
When the campus Ministry people cannot be&#13;
found on campus, students are invited to stop at the&#13;
Newman Center, located on the corner of Highway&#13;
E and JR, or call Sister Colette (552-8526)or Father&#13;
Wayne (657-3408),&#13;
4 THE PARKS IDE RANGER Wednesday. Oct. 3. 1973&#13;
yw-P aHected.&#13;
Canteen increases&#13;
food prices&#13;
canteen cannot change food&#13;
prices whenever it wishes to,&#13;
Niebuhr added. The University&#13;
must approve price decisions and&#13;
increases are agreed upon under&#13;
a contract with Canteen. Cootract&#13;
terms are maintained&#13;
througbout all price changes.&#13;
ReprdIess of the amount of the&#13;
increase, the purchaser will&#13;
receive the same quantity and&#13;
quality 01 a product.&#13;
When comparing Parkside's&#13;
lood prices with thooe of other&#13;
state campuses, Niebuhr&#13;
suggested that the cost of labor&#13;
be considered. Labor is less&#13;
costly in northern Wisconsin than&#13;
in the southeast area of the state,&#13;
be added. Products from our&#13;
vending machines remain equal&#13;
to or lower than those at UWMilwaukee.&#13;
A 25 cent soda tbere&#13;
IS 2Q cents here. Entree meals&#13;
have suffered a 5 to 10 cent increase.&#13;
Pastry items in the&#13;
vending machines have gone up 5&#13;
cents because of the higher cost&#13;
in producing wheat products.&#13;
Because of a "better deal" with&#13;
their supplier, Canteen has&#13;
switched from a half pint of milk&#13;
to a third pint at a cost of 2Q cents.&#13;
Plans have been made which&#13;
will provide vending machines in&#13;
both the Corom Arts building and&#13;
the Classroom Building. ThIS&#13;
sbould ease the crowded conditions&#13;
in the cafeteria area.&#13;
lIy SWpllea S&amp;apoDIaD&#13;
..It'.no lurprile to the school"&#13;
... the comment made by&#13;
William Niebuhr, director of&#13;
Student Life, when asked about&#13;
the rile in lood prices at&#13;
Parltside. Parbide is following&#13;
lUll with other food price inc:na_&#13;
througbout the comllWIlity.&#13;
The prices of dairy. meat and&#13;
peltry .leJDJ were d1acussed by&#13;
the University and Canteen, and&#13;
Canteen recommended price&#13;
alterations. Subs«juent meetings&#13;
bel" n the two and consultation&#13;
with University AdmInistration&#13;
In MadlJon resulted in price&#13;
readjustments. According to&#13;
Niebuhr. the changes were made&#13;
with the understandmg that ,I&#13;
product price go up or down,&#13;
Park .• de will make every attempt&#13;
to hold prices down,&#13;
pM~ bY Mike SwanlftlHn&#13;
Sister Colette and Fatller Wayne'" the aew CamJMls&#13;
Mialstry·&#13;
Campus ministry&#13;
comes to Parlcslde&#13;
by Dellra FrledeU&#13;
"We are in the ministry of presence, that of being&#13;
available to students," said Father Wayne&#13;
Wojciechowski.&#13;
Father Wayne and Sister Colette Zukowski offer&#13;
another dimension to education at Parkside:&#13;
Campus MinistrY.&#13;
Father Wayne is a priest at St. George Church in&#13;
Kenosha. as weIl as working with Sister Colette at&#13;
Parkside, Carthage and Gateway in the field of&#13;
campus Ministry. HOUrconcern is not with 'giving&#13;
the word' but rather with people," he said.&#13;
Passive acceptance is a more&#13;
desirable response to ideas than&#13;
active criticism.&#13;
acquainted with a number of&#13;
basic reference books in political&#13;
science. Many of these are also&#13;
useful to other social science&#13;
disciplines. There is no reading to&#13;
speak of; we work problems out&#13;
by trial and error. Hand-in&#13;
exercises constitute the main&#13;
work. This includes having the&#13;
students themselves make up&#13;
questions in order to perplex&#13;
those who come after them."&#13;
Burnett added: "This course is&#13;
taught in strong collaboration&#13;
with the Library staff. It supplements&#13;
the excellent instruction&#13;
that goes on all the time&#13;
within the Library. Anyone who&#13;
completes the course will know&#13;
things about library use that&#13;
many I many faculty members&#13;
have never found out."&#13;
Political Science 205 may be&#13;
added to your schedule until the&#13;
opening day of the course (Oct&#13;
30).&#13;
AT FIRST ullom&#13;
OF RACIME Library course offered&#13;
from Teaching as a Subversive&#13;
Activity • Mo .ili •••&#13;
hluce re~lired&#13;
• Mo Ii.it to the&#13;
••• ber 01 checks&#13;
yOI write&#13;
Do you sometimes wish the&#13;
Library didn't seem so conIusing?&#13;
Would you like some&#13;
guidance to what's what and&#13;
wbere? Beginning Oct. 30, an 8-&#13;
week course (2 credits) now&#13;
being offered will be offered&#13;
again, if enough people sign up&#13;
for it.&#13;
RESEARCH SOURCES&#13;
(Political Science 205) is required&#13;
for political science majors. But&#13;
it can also be useful to almost&#13;
anyone in the social sciences.&#13;
Meeting time is Tuesday and&#13;
Thursday, 1:30-3:20 p.m., either&#13;
in CL 114or in the Library itself.&#13;
The course ends at the end of the&#13;
semester, on Dec. 13, with the&#13;
final exam (one hour) on that&#13;
day.&#13;
The instructor is Phil Burnett&#13;
professor of Social Sciences wh~&#13;
used to be director of libraries.&#13;
He commented that "We give&#13;
s~ong emphasis to acquiring&#13;
library skills. We also get&#13;
DEADLINE EXTENDED&#13;
TO OCTOBER 12, 1973&#13;
1973-1974&#13;
WPS WISCONSIN PHYSICIANS SERVICE&#13;
AT FIRST MAlIOMAt&#13;
OF RACIME student&#13;
health&#13;
•&#13;
Insurance&#13;
AT FIRST UTIOIAL plan&#13;
OF IACIIE&#13;
.... y •• r Iree cbecki'l&#13;
acc••• t SI•• at&#13;
IF YOU HAVE QUESTIONS OR WANT&#13;
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONTACT:&#13;
HEALTH OFFICE LLC D198&#13;
s&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
aDd Tru8t Compuly of Racine&#13;
send premium and application to&#13;
Wlscomin Physicians service&#13;
I(eonosha District Office&#13;
P.O. 8&lt;1](869&#13;
Kenosha,Wi~ln SJI«l&#13;
Tel:"1"~-577"&#13;
II&#13;
.. _~_-- -'---"-- 5. WiSCIiSil AYe. Racile&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Od. 3, 1973&#13;
UW-P affected&#13;
Sister Colette is a teacher by profession but finds&#13;
that Campus Ministry is "one way of continuing my&#13;
relation with young people in a less structured&#13;
way." . .&#13;
Canteen increases&#13;
The Campus Ministry people will work m conjunction&#13;
with Parkside counselors. They are also&#13;
setting up a Newman Club for Parkside students.&#13;
Sister Colette explained the Newman Club as a way&#13;
to "get young people tog~ther to form a ~hristian&#13;
type of community:· which they ~ope will make&#13;
worship more creative and responsive to the needs&#13;
of young people. It is a way "to bridge what is and&#13;
what could be," she added.&#13;
food prices&#13;
Canteen cannot change food&#13;
JrtCes whenever it wishes to,&#13;
plloto by Mika Swaningson&#13;
ster Colette and Father Wayne of the new Campus&#13;
Ministry.&#13;
"We have no specific programs outlined," said&#13;
Father Wayne, "but want the students to initiate&#13;
programs and rap centers. In sharing ideas we&#13;
build a better community in which to live."&#13;
'iebuhr added. The University&#13;
m t approve price decisions and&#13;
increa are agreed upon \Dlder&#13;
a contract with Canteen. Contract&#13;
terms are maintained&#13;
throughout all price changes.&#13;
com• Regardl oC the amount of the&#13;
increase, the purchaser will&#13;
r he the same quantity and&#13;
quality or a product.&#13;
Campus ministry&#13;
The two have spent the past three weeks getting&#13;
acquainted with administrators, faculty and staff,&#13;
and getting a feel for the workings of the University.&#13;
"I have a deep respect for young people" said&#13;
Father Wayne, "and they have a lot to give. We&#13;
want to help them channel their ideas." Father&#13;
Wayne and Sister Colette are at Parkside to listen,&#13;
to share, to suggest, or to counsel students.&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
• No i1i111a&#13;
balance req1ired&#13;
• No limit to the&#13;
11 ber of checks&#13;
you write&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
ee&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
AT FIRST IA TIOIAL&#13;
Of HCI E&#13;
0,11 y11r free c ecki11&#13;
acce11t s1 at&#13;
First tional Bank&#13;
d Trust&#13;
_&#13;
Company of Racin .............. .._&#13;
-·&#13;
500 Wiscoasi1 Ave. Raciae&#13;
\\'hen comparing Parkside's&#13;
food pri "ith those of other comes to Parkside&#13;
Sister Colette will be available on campus on&#13;
Tuesdays and both Sister Colette and Father Wayne&#13;
will be here on Thursdays from noon until 4 p.m. in&#13;
late campu es, iebuhr U,C D185.&#13;
On Thursday, Oct. 4, a Campus Ministry kickoff ted that the cost of labor&#13;
be considered. Labor i I&#13;
C06tly in northern W1SCOnsin than&#13;
in th southea t area of the late,&#13;
dded. Products from our&#13;
ndmg machin remain equal&#13;
to or lower than tho e at UW1,Jw&#13;
uk . 25 cent oda there&#13;
· 20 c n h re. Entree meal&#13;
uff red a 5 to 10 cent in-&#13;
. P try item in the&#13;
by Debra Frledell&#13;
"We are in the ministry of presence, that of being&#13;
available to students," said Father Wayne&#13;
Wojciedlo,11:ski.&#13;
Father Wayne and Sister Colette Zukowski offer&#13;
another dimension to education at Parkside:&#13;
rap session has been arranged through which&#13;
Father Wayne and Sister Colette are interested in&#13;
meeting Parkside students. This is an opporttmity&#13;
for students to offer suggestions, to talk, or to&#13;
become actively involved in the organization and&#13;
designing of activities for the Newman Club.&#13;
nding ma i hav gone up 5&#13;
becau e r the higher co t&#13;
in produc1 "'heat produ ts.&#13;
Be of " tter deal" with&#13;
Campus , finistry.&#13;
Father Wayne is a priest at St. George Church in&#13;
Kenosha, as well as working with Sister Colette at&#13;
Park ide. Carthage and Gateway in the field of&#13;
Campu , tinistry. "Our concern is not with 'giving&#13;
the word' but rather with people," he said.&#13;
When the Campus Ministry people cannot be&#13;
found on campus, students are invited to stop at the&#13;
Newman Center, located on the corner of Highway&#13;
E and JR, or call Sister Colette (552·8526) or Father&#13;
Wayne (657-3408).&#13;
their upplier, ante n ha&#13;
itched from a half pint or milk&#13;
to a third pint at a co ·t of 20 cents.&#13;
Pl n ha,e been made which&#13;
\\'ill provide vending machines in&#13;
both the omm Art building and&#13;
th Cla room Building. This&#13;
hould ea e the crowded condition&#13;
in the cafeteria area.&#13;
Pa ive acceptance is a more&#13;
desirable response to id€-as than&#13;
active critici m.&#13;
Library course offered&#13;
from Teaching a a ubversive&#13;
ctivit&#13;
Do you sometimes wish the ·&#13;
Library dido 't seem so confusing?&#13;
Would you like some&#13;
guidance to what's what and&#13;
where? Beginning Oct. 30, an 8-&#13;
week course (2 credits) now&#13;
DEADLINE EXTENDED&#13;
TO OCTOBER 12, 1973&#13;
1973-1974&#13;
WlfPS&#13;
•&#13;
WISCO SIN PHYSICIANS SERVICE&#13;
student&#13;
health&#13;
insurance&#13;
plan&#13;
IF YOU HAVE QUESTIONS OR WANT&#13;
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONTACT:&#13;
HEALTH OFFICE LLC D198&#13;
Send premium and a..ppHcation to&#13;
W'sconsin Physicians Sttvico,&#13;
Kmosha Oistrlcl Offico,&#13;
P 0 . Box869&#13;
K"'10Sha, Wiscons,n 531AO&#13;
Tel 414-654 5774&#13;
being offered will be offered&#13;
again, if enough people sign up&#13;
for it.&#13;
RESEARCH SOURCES&#13;
(Political Science 205) is required&#13;
for political science majors. But&#13;
it can also be useful to almost&#13;
anyone in the social sciences.&#13;
Meeting time is Tuesday and&#13;
'.Thursday, 1:30-3:20 p.m ., either&#13;
m CL 114 or in the Library itself.&#13;
The course ends at the end of the&#13;
semester, on Dec. 13, with the&#13;
final exam (one hour) on that&#13;
day.&#13;
The instructor is Phil Burnett&#13;
professor of Social Sciences wh~&#13;
used to be director of libr~ries.&#13;
He commented that "We give&#13;
s_trong emphasis to acquiring&#13;
hbrary skills. we also get&#13;
MR \,Jlll/AMSOpt&#13;
acquainted with a number of&#13;
basic reference books in political&#13;
science. Many of these are also&#13;
useful to other social science&#13;
disciplines. There is no reading to&#13;
speak of; we work problems out&#13;
by trial and error. Hand-in&#13;
exercises constitute the main&#13;
work. This includes having the&#13;
students themselves make up&#13;
questions in order to perplex&#13;
those who come after them."&#13;
Burnett added: "This course is&#13;
taught in strong collaboration&#13;
with the Library staff. It supplements&#13;
the excellent instrtJction&#13;
that goes on all the time&#13;
within the Library: Anyone who&#13;
completes the course will know&#13;
things about library use that&#13;
many, many faculty members&#13;
have never found out."&#13;
Political Science 205 may be&#13;
added to your schedule until the&#13;
opening day of the course (Oct.&#13;
30). . &#13;
by Rodney ,Schroeter .&#13;
synopsis: Havmg stopped Big&#13;
X from bombing a part of the&#13;
United Nations, Jones and the&#13;
Psychic return to the underwater&#13;
complexwhere the Psychic first&#13;
awakened. There, the Psychic&#13;
finds a great number of&#13;
lIIiIluscripts, books and reports.&#13;
The storY continues.&#13;
Chapter Four&#13;
Jones had found nineteen men,&#13;
aD buSY maintaining computers&#13;
er other machinery. He led this&#13;
group to Big X's office, where the&#13;
PsychiC sat studying a pile of&#13;
loiders. .&#13;
The Psychic saw the gathering&#13;
tbroIIgh the hole in the door. He&#13;
.... and stepped through, looking&#13;
1be nineteen over intently.&#13;
1000 any of you know where the&#13;
computer room is?" he asked.&#13;
"Sure," said one. "Most of us&#13;
work down there."&#13;
Thegroup went along a curved&#13;
hall and then down a spiral&#13;
staircase.&#13;
The computer room was large&#13;
and circular. Immense cubes and&#13;
rectangular prisms with tapes&#13;
spinningor crawling within their&#13;
•windowsstood against every part&#13;
01 the rounded wall.' Control&#13;
consoles clustered toward the&#13;
center. Shelves and liling&#13;
cabinetslilled with tapes stood in&#13;
several places.&#13;
The Psychic spent five minutes&#13;
d1eckingthe files. When he found&#13;
me that was locked, he squinted&#13;
his eyes and wrinkled his&#13;
forehead. The little knob beside&#13;
the handle shot off like a bullet&#13;
but hit no one. '&#13;
The Psychic reached inside and&#13;
found twenty computer tapes.&#13;
Each had a name printed on the&#13;
SIde. One name was "Jones."&#13;
"Jones is here. Is there&#13;
someone named Blythe here?"&#13;
'·Yeah."&#13;
"Someone by the name of&#13;
Greunke?"&#13;
"Yep."&#13;
"Grimmins? Satchel? Condie?&#13;
Reuff?'t&#13;
Four affirmative answers.&#13;
"How about Schoettes? Carls?&#13;
Franklin? Besetti? ..&#13;
"No one named Franklin that&#13;
we know of."&#13;
"No Franklin. Hmm. All right.&#13;
Delorme? Watten? Alden?&#13;
Lowell?"&#13;
"Ya. Uh-huh. Right. Here OK."&#13;
"Hohnson? Sacker? Gillis?&#13;
Gorman? Davis?"&#13;
Five affirmative answers.&#13;
"Gentlemen." The Psychic put&#13;
the computer tapes back in the&#13;
drawer. "I have bad news." He&#13;
stared at the floor for a long&#13;
moment and looked up, "You all&#13;
believe-c-or have believed up to&#13;
this point-that you work for the&#13;
Canadian government. This is&#13;
false. You also know something&#13;
of your private lives. At least you&#13;
think you do. It is not an easy&#13;
thing to tell you this; some of you&#13;
will take it badly. Yet teU you I&#13;
must.&#13;
TO BE CONTINUED ....&#13;
FREE DELIVER Y !'t'J.&#13;
1~&lt;, ~&#13;
Member Parkside 200 ?j'J~!1 ~nlt&#13;
National Va"lty Club f1.JV OOif7-&#13;
•&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
The GOLDEN&#13;
HANGER, the&#13;
tashion store tor&#13;
young men is proud to&#13;
announce the addition&#13;
ot&#13;
..TOGETHER" .... A&#13;
JUNIOR SHOP FOR&#13;
GALS.&#13;
• DRESSES&#13;
• LONG&#13;
DRESSES&#13;
• PANTS&#13;
• SWEATERS&#13;
• BLOUSES&#13;
• TOPS&#13;
AND MUCH MORE.&#13;
3086th St.&#13;
632-1138&#13;
.. ~&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Brief news&#13;
.Aproposaf is being considered by the University's&#13;
director of business aflairs Erwin ZUehlke to&#13;
eliminate the weekend shutUe bus service. The&#13;
money saved would be used to provide a third&#13;
shuttle bus during the week, when peak hours find&#13;
many students unable to board a crowded bus and&#13;
get up the hill in time lor their classes.&#13;
ZUehlke justifies the removal of weekend service&#13;
by pointing out that the parking lot across from the&#13;
Classroom Building is available for anyooe to park&#13;
in on Saturdays, Sundays and bolidays. A prublem&#13;
could develop with weekend athletic events lbough,&#13;
he says.&#13;
Since the buses are fmanced with mooey from&#13;
parIting permits, ZUehlke would lilte some Input&#13;
from faculty, staff, and especially students ill this&#13;
matter. Persons with an opinion one way or the&#13;
other are invited to call the Business Office (553-&#13;
)2201, and register their feelings.&#13;
JIAn&#13;
Adult Service Une has been established by the&#13;
Adult Student Program to answer questions of an&#13;
academic or personal nature for evening aod adult&#13;
students. People will he available in Tallent 202,&#13;
telephone 553-2225, 00 Monday and Thursday&#13;
evenings from S:30 to 8:30 p.m.&#13;
*&#13;
There will he a meeting 01 the Parkside Young&#13;
Republicans Wednesday, Oct. 3 from 3:3().5 p.m. in&#13;
0-174 LLC. Leadership Training School, constitutional&#13;
revisions and activities for the year will&#13;
be discussed. Bring ideas!&#13;
*&#13;
Debators! A debate and forensics team is now&#13;
being lormed. If you are interested in joining or&#13;
want more information, see the reference folder in&#13;
the library or call Dick Jones, 8'18-1310 or Maril~ll&#13;
Schubert, 6S8-89S4.&#13;
Now Appearing&#13;
9P.M.toIA.~I.&#13;
THURSDAY -FRIDAY -SATURDAY&#13;
In the&#13;
An exhibition and sale of original graphIc art by&#13;
contemporary and old master artists will be held&#13;
lrom 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Friday, Oct 5, in the&#13;
Library-Learning Center Main Place.&#13;
Co-sponsored by the Parltside Acuvities Board&#13;
and the Racine Art Associatioo, the exhIbotioo will&#13;
include more than 1,000 angInal etchinp.&#13;
lithographs and woodcuts by such artists u&#13;
Picasso, Olagall, MIlO, Dali, Gaya, Renoir.&#13;
Kollwitz and a number of contemporary Amenc:an,&#13;
European and Japanese printm&amp;kera.&#13;
A representative of Ferdinand Roten G&amp;IIerieI 01&#13;
Baltimore, ",ilich llJTanged the abcl.w, wiD be&#13;
present to aDs....er questions OIl grapblc art and&#13;
printmaking.&#13;
Prices 01 work iDcluded ill the exhibiliolllt.n at&#13;
$5 ..ith the majority priced under '100.&#13;
*&#13;
There wiD be an orpaiutionaJ -.. 01 lbe&#13;
Camera Oub on TbundaY. Oct- 4. All iII-.ed&#13;
persons .... encouraged to meet ill tile CaIeuria&#13;
area at 7 p.m.&#13;
*&#13;
Whiteskel1ar CoIJ~ will have audi_ for&#13;
new performers OIlWeck&gt;eoday, Oct. 10 III I p.m. All&#13;
inIerested performers sbouId sign ... III lbe&#13;
Parltside Activities Board Room LLC D1I5. 1be&#13;
auditions will he open to the P'blic.&#13;
It&#13;
In the illterests of getting moreSIUdeDIa for the&#13;
lm-74 Parltside yearbook, organiUtlona1 aWf&#13;
members Jay Salvo, Ken Kookol and BruceW_ ask lor interested students to come to the next&#13;
meetings 01 the yearbook.&#13;
These meetings will be held 10 LLC 0174 00&#13;
Thursday and Friday of next week. Signs ",iU be&#13;
posted advertising the lIme of these meetings.&#13;
COLLEGE. lTE&#13;
Every~y&#13;
Pitcher of&#13;
Beer $1. 00&#13;
oIK...-..&#13;
Sl2:56tt1Ave&#13;
~lf'g the Hal'1:l«l&#13;
MARINA ROOM&#13;
"KIl'nOSha's New Harbor N,t.Club'&#13;
"Five Way Street"&#13;
NIGHTLY ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
In Our Cocktail Lounge&#13;
FHturing&#13;
MIKE scon&#13;
~&#13;
- '- -CD ..CIt 0&#13;
.. CD&#13;
me ~&#13;
rn Q CD&#13;
:::s :lID&#13;
Q.&#13;
-&#13;
--------&#13;
New Books tor Football&#13;
and other sports addicts&#13;
are Now at Martha&#13;
Merrills stop in and&#13;
browse in our long&#13;
Sports Section.&#13;
NEW&#13;
Vince LlIIUdi 00 Foo1IIall.............. 5l9.!15&#13;
By Ray Nitschke&#13;
IeaII III s..tay. .......................... SJ.Ii&#13;
National Football Lottery SJ.SI&#13;
By Larry Merchant&#13;
by Howard Cosell&#13;
~I ~J15&#13;
Pro Football Digest ~.!15&#13;
(}JIi1tIItJ(}JIJ's /3~&#13;
~ ~&#13;
614- 59U,St; 312- E,- ~T, _&#13;
658-3bf;~ 63'2-.&gt;195 __&#13;
------&#13;
---&#13;
---------&#13;
~&#13;
--CIt CD ..&#13;
~ CD&#13;
ale&#13;
Q CD&#13;
:::s&#13;
Q.&#13;
by Rodney _Schroeter .&#13;
Synopsis: Having stopped Big&#13;
from bombing a part of the&#13;
nited Nations, Jones and the&#13;
ychic return to the underwater&#13;
complex where the Psychic first&#13;
awakened. There, the Psychic&#13;
finds a great number of&#13;
manuscripts, books and reports.&#13;
e story continues.&#13;
Chapter Four&#13;
Jones had found nineteen men,&#13;
all busy maintaining compute~s&#13;
ar other machinery. He led this&#13;
group to Big X's off~ce, whe~e the&#13;
Psychic sat studymg a pile of&#13;
folders.&#13;
nie Psychic saw the gathering&#13;
through the hole in the door. He&#13;
rose and stepped through, looking&#13;
e nineteen over intently.&#13;
"Do any of you know where the&#13;
computer room is?" he asked.&#13;
''Sure," said one. "Most of us&#13;
work down there."&#13;
The group went along a curved&#13;
hall and then down a spiral&#13;
taircase.&#13;
The computer room was large&#13;
and circular. Immense cubes and&#13;
rectangular prisms with tapes&#13;
pinning or crawling within their&#13;
windows stood against every part&#13;
of the rounded wall. Control&#13;
con oles clustered toward the&#13;
center. Shelves and filing&#13;
cabinets filled with tapes stood in&#13;
several places.&#13;
The Psychic spent five minutes&#13;
checking the files. When he found&#13;
one that was locked, he squinted&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
his eyes and wrinkled his&#13;
forehead. The little knob beside&#13;
the handle shot off like a bullet&#13;
but hit no one. '&#13;
The Psychic reached inside and&#13;
found twenty computer tapes.&#13;
~ach had a name printed on the&#13;
side. One name was "Jones."&#13;
"Jones is here. Is there&#13;
someone named Blythe here?"&#13;
"Yeah."&#13;
"Someone by the name of&#13;
Greunke?"&#13;
"Yep."&#13;
"Grimmins? Satchel? Condie?&#13;
Reuff?"&#13;
Four affirmative answers.&#13;
"How about Schoettes? Carls?&#13;
Franklin? Besetti?"&#13;
"No one named Franklin that we know of."&#13;
"No Franklin. Hmm. All right.&#13;
Delorme? Watten? Alden?&#13;
Lowell?"&#13;
"Ya. Uh-huh. Right. Here OK."&#13;
"Hohnson? Sacker? Gillis?&#13;
Gorman? Davis?"&#13;
Five affirmative answers.&#13;
"Gentlemen." The Psychic put&#13;
the computer tapes back in the&#13;
drawer. "I have bad news." He&#13;
stared at the floor for a long&#13;
moment and looked up. "You all&#13;
believe-or have believed up to&#13;
this point--that you work for the&#13;
Canadian government. This is&#13;
false. You also know something&#13;
of your private lives. At least you&#13;
think you do. It is not an easy&#13;
thing to tell you this; some of you&#13;
will take it badly. Yet tell you I&#13;
must.&#13;
TO BE CONTINUED ....&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
~&#13;
WE'VE HAO AN ADDITION&#13;
The GOLDEN&#13;
HANGER , the&#13;
fashion store for&#13;
young men is proud to&#13;
announce the addition&#13;
of&#13;
"TOGETHER" .... A&#13;
JUNIOR SHOP FOR&#13;
GALS.&#13;
• DRESSES&#13;
• LONG&#13;
DRESSES&#13;
• PANTS&#13;
• SWEATERS&#13;
• BLOUSES&#13;
• TOPS&#13;
ANO MUCH MORE.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Brief news . A proposal is being con idered by the nh: ity'&#13;
director of business affairs, Erwin ZUehlke, to&#13;
eliminate the weekend shuttle bus service. The&#13;
money saved would be used to provide a third&#13;
shuttle bus during the week, when peak hours find&#13;
many students unable to board a cro ·ded bus and&#13;
get up the hill in time for their classes.&#13;
Zuehlke justifies the removal of ·eeJtend rvice&#13;
by pointing out that the parking lot ac - from the&#13;
~assroom Building is available for anyooe to park&#13;
m on Saturdays, Sunday and holiday . A problem&#13;
could develop with weekend athletic events though,&#13;
he says.&#13;
Since the buses are financed with money from&#13;
parking permits, Zuehlke would like some input&#13;
from faculty, taff, and especially students in this&#13;
matter. Persons with an opinion ooe way or the&#13;
other are invited to call the Business Office (553-&#13;
)2201, and register their feelings.&#13;
•&#13;
*&#13;
Whitest r Coff'ed:aow.e&#13;
new performer on Wear:1esc1a&#13;
interested perf onn should An Adult Service line ha been established by the&#13;
Adult Student Program to answer qu tions of an&#13;
academic or personal nature for evening and adult&#13;
students. People will be available in Tallent 202,&#13;
tele(tlone 553-2225, on onday and Thursday&#13;
evenings from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m.&#13;
Park ide Activiti Board Room LLC D1&#13;
audition will be open to p lie.&#13;
In the int&#13;
*&#13;
There v.ill be a meeting of the Park i Young&#13;
Republicans Wednesday, Oct. 3 from 3:30-5 p.m. in&#13;
D-174 LLC. Leadership Training School, constitutional&#13;
revisions and acthitie for the ye.ar v.ill&#13;
be discussed. Bring ideas!&#13;
* Debators! A debate and forensics team i now&#13;
being formed . ff you are interested in joining or&#13;
want more information, see the reference folder in&#13;
the library or call Dick Jones, 878-1310 or aril:,.n&#13;
Schubert. 658-3954.&#13;
, 'o"' Appearing&#13;
9P. I. to l A.M.&#13;
COLLEGE. TrE&#13;
Ey,eryTbunda&#13;
THURSDAY - FRIDAY - TIJRDA Y Pitcher of&#13;
MARI. Beer $1. 00 'A ROOM&#13;
"Five Way Street"&#13;
'IGHTLY E. 'TERTAI. •• IE. "T&#13;
In Our Cockte,I Lounge&#13;
Feetur·ng&#13;
MIKE SCOTT&#13;
--------&#13;
~ -&#13;
New Books for Football&#13;
and other sports addicts&#13;
are Now at Martha&#13;
Merrills stop in and&#13;
browse In our long&#13;
Sports Section.&#13;
NEW&#13;
Vince L bllli on Football.............. s1s.95&#13;
Mean on Sunday .••.•...................... SJ .95&#13;
By Ray Nitschke&#13;
National Football Lottery ................• SJ .ii&#13;
By Larry Merchant&#13;
Cossel ····································· SS.95&#13;
by Howard Cosell&#13;
Pro Football Digest •..•....••••..•••....•. SS.95&#13;
&lt;HI~ &lt;HIJ's /3~&#13;
Gt4-59~-9:&#13;
~&#13;
6S8-3bf;2-&#13;
f{adnl,&#13;
.312-6~~1'. -&#13;
632.-5195' -·&#13;
--- -----· ---------&#13;
•&#13;
~&#13;
---&#13;
CD Cit&#13;
,. .,&#13;
m&lt;&#13;
a&#13;
:s&#13;
CL&#13;
..&#13;
~ (0&#13;
~ C.&#13;
GsJ&#13;
JC&#13;
~&#13;
---&#13;
CD Cit&#13;
,. ..&#13;
me&#13;
a&#13;
:s&#13;
CL&#13;
'--&#13;
0&#13;
~&#13;
ffl&#13;
,a&#13;
'--&#13;
0&#13;
~&#13;
"' ,a &#13;
, THE PARKSIDE Rio GER w.dMsd.y. Oct. 3. 1973&#13;
Bookstore ••• Painter police&#13;
patrol Parkside Village&#13;
Steak dinners $1.69 to $3.69&#13;
coot1nur:d 'tolD pag 1&#13;
ucImt purdla 01 non-t lbook Ilems Beer mugs and ParUide TolIirt&#13;
..1IUId rail under th category. but more ..;deIy purct&gt;ased&#13;
IlftllS would paper. noteboo •and wrillJlg supplies. Concenunll the&#13;
~ lboo Wood ales an elUlmple' "Lel·. take a $15 Physics book. 11&#13;
III 111110be IIIed on campus 11·... uth 17.50 11it's nol going to be&#13;
IIIed .1 h nyv.'beft from no value up 10$3 or $3.50 "&#13;
ed hether the as maltmg a profil. Wood stated thaI&#13;
I not 'olin« t'QODt)':' Upon interviewing a Follette regional&#13;
maDal~'r on Clll go. lhe manager stated that the bookstore was&#13;
operatlD&amp; ,ery profItably and effic.ently.&#13;
~ oU t Coflloral'on 'lJell pnmariJ)' a book dlStributorretail&#13;
• nucldl man IaI'1l" publishing concerns. and the&#13;
Park de Folletle p..-;:hases lhe books which a re, in turn.&#13;
purdlaSed by Par de udents ....'hen the student seI\S the book back&#13;
to Ib boobl&lt;n. the book may be lIOIdand relIOIdso long as it is in&#13;
demand F l\ IInan lOIIle 40 booksto res 00 college campuses&#13;
ch Indude Jolw&gt; H lflI mventlY and the niverslty 01 Coocut&#13;
In bon to .......ilinll. the FoUel\e Coflloration also&#13;
merchand mugs. bumper tickers. etc .... -hich .....&#13;
d.... tI boo and other products geared for the&#13;
mark t. Foll 1\ also publishes textbooks ..-hich are used at all&#13;
01eOIC lion from men"'ry school through high school, with&#13;
th ID I 01 me trade nd technical schools, stoppu&gt;g jusl short&#13;
01 pub! at the coI\eg I 'e\&#13;
T mum to the unmed,ale problem for .tudents. it is now the fifth&#13;
01 c • many tudent. will be ..TillJlg SIX-weeksexams next&#13;
• m InstrUctors are al the poIOl.. he.... they a.... rewriling their&#13;
CllIJ .... sfor th ler, oil use there a"" still a lO1IIlber 01books&#13;
h v not &lt;orne '" yet M""I tudents and faotlty members have&#13;
Ollllft_d&#13;
I I concern over thlll Sltuation. yet AssistAnt Dean&#13;
til to y to th reporters thai ". am not awa .... of any&#13;
Half-Price&#13;
Miled Drinks&#13;
6 P.M. - MIDNIGHT&#13;
THURSDAV NICHTS WITH P.U. 1.0.&#13;
10t Beers&#13;
SORIRZI&#13;
SlIU.OIRPlT~&#13;
3315 52nd ST' Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
by carrie Ward&#13;
There is a man who walks alone at night through&#13;
Parkside Village. He carries a badge, a walkie--&#13;
talkie, and a club. He is a security guard who, until&#13;
recently, was one of Village superintendent Art&#13;
Gaulthier's "helpers." These were the same&#13;
helpers wbo, a few weeks ago, were painting&#13;
apartments. This reporter interviewed Gaullbier,&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger, AssislJlnt Dean of Students, and&#13;
students living at Parkside Village, and found a&#13;
great discrepancy of opinions between Gaulthier&#13;
and the students and the school.&#13;
ECHELBARGER: Fintof aU, I think they sbould&#13;
be called security personnel. My concern is Ibat the&#13;
appropriale&#13;
personnel should be cbosen for tbe job.&#13;
By appropriate I mean persons that can communicate&#13;
with students in such a way as to solve the&#13;
problems of disturbing neigbbors with late nigbt&#13;
parties. We'd like to build up respect belween&#13;
residents. The types that might be good for the job&#13;
are veterans and adult students; not leaving out&#13;
YOlDlg students, but this is a group that has obviously&#13;
had dealings with other people and could sit&#13;
down and talk with them. Student guards sbould be&#13;
trained in communication and getting respect from&#13;
othel' students as a security personnel.&#13;
photo by Ron An\rim&#13;
Kevin Allegar, with night stick and walkie-talkie,&#13;
patrols Parkside Village.&#13;
In .a recent interview with Gaulthier about&#13;
secur~ty guard~, he told this reporter that "The&#13;
secunty force IS going to be on every evening&#13;
They'll be getting $2.50 an bour. Eacb guard do~&#13;
not work on his own. He gets his information&#13;
through the walkie-talkies from me-what the next&#13;
step IS that we're going to take. I make the&#13;
decisions, nol the patrol. All they do is patrol and&#13;
see that this place is run in a half·way decent&#13;
m~er. We cannot go on the way we have been&#13;
goJ.Dg.',&#13;
Gaul~ier, commenting on guards' duties said, "A&#13;
guard is one that sees that nothing is going wrong&#13;
around the buildings, takes care of the parking&#13;
Phone 652-8662&#13;
areas, and if there is trouble in the apartm&#13;
notifies the office of what's going on. He show:'t. be&#13;
reporter a cap, badge, patches that said" thts&#13;
guard" on them. He said, "I had "special~lJ&#13;
badges, Ihad to take them back." There also1'01ict"&#13;
long club, Concerning the club, he said "H .... •&#13;
wearing this c1';1bout .in the open wher~ it e'U be&#13;
seen, the only time this club is used is if 00&lt;aIJ bt&#13;
tacked by one or more students," Ill!.&#13;
When questioned as to whether or not the&#13;
guards had to pass some sort of a civil serv~&#13;
or be otherwise qualified, Gaulthier sai d Ice tea&#13;
security guard that was with him added t;";-&gt;' '1llt&#13;
as they did not have a police record any ..&#13;
be a security guard. Later, checking'with °a&#13;
ne&#13;
.....&#13;
security guard company and an ex·FBI a pn,..&#13;
was found to be true. Gaulthier said hediler4&#13;
, thio&#13;
experienced or Irained security guards '::"&#13;
"They (his helpers) know the area and th ..&#13;
what they have to do. You put a stranger OUl~-&#13;
a guard and you'll find him out sleeping' •&#13;
because he wouldn't be out walking this boaIn,~ ..&#13;
reporter asked him about a comment .\;. 1lIiI&#13;
rece~ved from a helper, saying he didn't care -.&#13;
he did as long as Gaulthier paid him. The ......&#13;
guard then said, "You do what you are toldBealrMr&#13;
like this, you don't care either way. YOIllist:&#13;
Il&#13;
!l'&#13;
boss." Gaulthier said, "If I'm right or if l' to ...&#13;
r,ou do it. I am the boss." He also commen~'""""&#13;
If the students thmk they are going to run the ~&#13;
themselves, they are wrong because they .;;-&#13;
gomg to, and the qUicker they get it intoth . ...:&#13;
th~t they are not going to, that's when :'re II&#13;
g?lI1g to be one big happy family."&#13;
The students, for the most part had a I« 10&#13;
about it. This reporter asked th";' if they IIf&#13;
the securIty guard was doing fine as he .. u..::t&#13;
sbould have some training, if th~ ~&#13;
so&#13;
·th tr . . -, ~ II&#13;
meone WI ammg or experience or if ..&#13;
students themselves should pick a pe~ to b..&#13;
SecU~lty guard. Here are some of the .....&#13;
receIved:&#13;
"We should pick our own cop. I think it'ss bi&amp;.&#13;
trIP, so he ,can be the head of Parkside Vou..&#13;
Every man s dream IS to have his little robot_&#13;
controlled by .walki17talkies."&#13;
"11 problems occurred like last year,they'"&#13;
gel someone who knows what they are doiDI. --&#13;
th,s year there doesn't seem to be that mucb......&#13;
on." ~&#13;
"I think that everyone should be able to pick.&#13;
own. Ihope Idon't run into him this weekend."&#13;
"My fiance is a security guard. He hII •&#13;
training. I don't see what good he'd do if SOIll'MI&#13;
happened. I think he should have some trsinullll&#13;
be effective."&#13;
"A professional you could depend on."&#13;
".&amp;l far he seems to be doing a fine job, butsliIdI&#13;
trammg wouldn't hurt:'&#13;
"I think it depends on the budget. Uwecan ~&#13;
one, definitely we should have a trained one."&#13;
"I think he shouldn't have training, and&#13;
shouldn't carry a club. I don't think he needss&#13;
what's he going to do, rap someone onthehead&#13;
makes a lot of noise?"&#13;
6&#13;
15 52nd&#13;
•&#13;
alnter police&#13;
patrol Parkside VIiiage&#13;
DOUAR&#13;
ZALOON&#13;
1 Street&#13;
RACI E&#13;
. .&#13;
P.U. I.D.&#13;
by Carrie Ward&#13;
1bett is a man who walks alone at night through&#13;
Parkside Village. He carries a badge, a walkietalkie,&#13;
and a club. He is a security guard who, until&#13;
recently, was one of Village Superintendent Art&#13;
Gaulthier's "helpers." These were the same&#13;
helpers who, a few weeks ago, were painting&#13;
apartments. This reporter interviewed Gaulthier,&#13;
Jewel Echelberger, Assistant Dean of Students, and&#13;
students living at Parkside Village, and fotmd a&#13;
great discrepancy of opinions between Gaulthier&#13;
and the students and the school.&#13;
ECHELBARGER: First of all, I think they should&#13;
be called security personnel. My concern is that the&#13;
appropriate personnel should be chosen for the job.&#13;
By appropriate I mean persons that can communicate&#13;
with students in such a way as to solve the&#13;
problems of disturbing neighbors with late night&#13;
parties. We'd like to build up respect between&#13;
residents. The types that might be good for the job&#13;
are veterans and adult students; not leaving out&#13;
yoi.mg students, but this is a group that has obviously&#13;
had dealings with other people and could sit&#13;
down and talk with them. Student guards should be&#13;
trained in communication and getting respect from&#13;
other students as a security personnel.&#13;
Kevin AUegar, with night stick and walkie-talkie,&#13;
patrols Parkside Village.&#13;
In _a recent interview with Gaulthier about&#13;
secu1'.tY guard~, he told this reporter that "The&#13;
security force IS going to be on every evening&#13;
They·n be getting $2.50 an hour. Each guard do~&#13;
not work on his own. He gets his information&#13;
through the walkie-talkies from me-what the next&#13;
step is that we're going to take. I make the&#13;
decisions, n?l the pa~ol. All they do is patrol and&#13;
see that this place 1s run in a half-way decent&#13;
m~er. We cannot go on the way we have been&#13;
gomg."&#13;
Gaul~ier, commenting on guards' duties said, "A&#13;
guard 1s one that sees that nothing is going wrong&#13;
around the buildings, takes care of the parking&#13;
Steak dinners s1. &amp;9 to s3_69&#13;
ba, isconsin Phone 652-8662&#13;
areas, and if there is trouble in the apann.-.&#13;
notifies the office of what's going on. He sii;;;, lie&#13;
reporter a cap, badge, patches that said " lti.&#13;
gqard" on them. He said, "I had "speciaj ~ badges, I had to take them back.'' There ._, 'Pdlt::,,fa&#13;
long club. Concerning the club, he said, "He;'•&#13;
wearing this club out in the open where it&#13;
seen, the only time this club is used is if hit~&#13;
tacked by one or more students." 11&#13;
When questioned as to whether or not the&#13;
guards had to pass some sort of a civil servi&#13;
or be otherwise qualified, Gaulthier said ce&#13;
security guard that was with him added that'lO.&#13;
as they did not have a police record anyorre a,&#13;
be a ~urity guard. Later, checking1&#13;
With 8 CDllt&#13;
security guard company and an ex-FBI •Keltllhala&#13;
was fotmd to be true. Gaulthier said he did '&#13;
experienced or trained security guards not&#13;
"They (his helpers) know the area and they&#13;
what they have to do. You put a stranger out bert&#13;
a guard and you'll find him out sleeping ·&#13;
because he wouldn't be out walking this bee~•~&#13;
reporter asked him about a comment lbe&#13;
received from a helper, saying he didn't cut&#13;
he did as long as Gaulthier paid him. 1be&#13;
)&#13;
guikarthid _then said· d, : 'You d~ what you are told-OD""a __ _. e ,, s, you _on t c:aree1ther way. You listen to&#13;
boss. ~aulth1er said, "H I'm right or if I'm&#13;
you do 1t. I am the boss." He also commented&#13;
"H the students think they are going to run lbe&#13;
themselves, they are wrong because they&#13;
going to, and the quicker they get it into ttwir •&#13;
that they are not going to, that's when "''II&#13;
going to be one big happy family."&#13;
The students, for the most part had 8 lot It&#13;
about it. !his reporter asked th~ if they&#13;
the secunty guard was doing fme as he WII, I&#13;
should have some training, if they lbould&#13;
someone with training or experience, or If&#13;
stude!lts themselves should pick a pel'ICJII llt&#13;
security guard. Here are some of the&#13;
received:&#13;
_"We should pick our own cop. I think it'aa 1111&#13;
trip, so he can be the head of Parkside&#13;
Every man's dream is to have his little robat&#13;
controlled by walki&amp;-talkies."&#13;
"H problems occurred like last year, tbeJ&#13;
get someone who knows what they are dailt,&#13;
this year there doesn't seem to be that mucb&#13;
on."&#13;
"I think that everyone should be able to pictown.&#13;
I hope I don't run into him this weekend."&#13;
"My fiance is a security guard. He 1111&#13;
training. I don't see what good he'd do if&#13;
happened. I think he should have some tralaill&#13;
be effective."&#13;
"A professional you could depend on."&#13;
".~ far he seems to be doing a fine job, but a&#13;
trammg wouldn't hurt."&#13;
"I think it depends on the budget. If we cu&#13;
one, definitely we should have a trained ooe.&#13;
"I think he shouldn't have training, ud&#13;
shouldn't carry a club. I don't think heneedu&#13;
what's he going to do, rap someone on the bead&#13;
makes a lot of noise?" &#13;
WEAC organizes&#13;
for faculty&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
'l1le Wisconsin Education Association Council&#13;
(WEAC) is sending professional represenlatives to&#13;
trI campus in the UW system m a three-month&#13;
~tW'ation effort" to organize a union for college&#13;
eduCators.&#13;
John B. Mack, a professional consullantto higher&#13;
education employed by the WEA Council, was at&#13;
Parkside last week. His purpose in being here was&#13;
to meet with individual professors in what he called&#13;
"eyeball-tcH!Yeball"contact, to find out how each&#13;
individualfeels about a teachers' union and to inrorm&#13;
him or her about the WEA. He also hoped to&#13;
inCreasethe size of the orgarnzmg committee that&#13;
noWexists on campus. But Mack's main concern&#13;
was to initiate a movement toward a merger of the&#13;
WEAand TAUWF. The Association of University of&#13;
WisconoinFaculty (TAUWFl represents about 3,000&#13;
collegeeducators in the UW system and has a small&#13;
group at Parkside headed by Dr. William Morrow.&#13;
('l1lelocal TAUWF chapter has not yet discussed or&#13;
taken a formal position on the merger issue.)&#13;
Accordingto Mack, TAUWF doesn't have the kind&#13;
of political machinery t funding or representation&#13;
thatit takes to be a viable bargaining force. "What&#13;
we are saying is that since 1855, the WEA has&#13;
operatedin this slate, building itself into a 45,000-&#13;
member, two-million-dollar operation. We have&#13;
JWOtectedand served the rights and just causes of&#13;
elementary, high school, and vocational-technical&#13;
educators. We have also secured a collective&#13;
bargaining law in the slate of Wisconsin for&#13;
edocators who are not in the realm of higher&#13;
education. Your college professors do not have a&#13;
collectivebargaining law or bill to protect them."&#13;
According to Mack, the passage of a collective&#13;
bargaininglaw for college educators in Wisconsin is&#13;
a major concern of the WEA. "We have a bill&#13;
II"POsedwhich has been refined and worked out,&#13;
and we are ready to promote this cause. But the&#13;
CIlIyway the WEA can promote it is to have a&#13;
Jlzableworking force to represent. Politicians like&#13;
to know who you represent in order to give you an&#13;
interest. "&#13;
The Wisconsin Education Association is a branch&#13;
m the National Education Association. Both&#13;
organizations have become concerned with the&#13;
relative powerlessness of college professors,&#13;
llIpCCiallyin the light of budget decreases and&#13;
termination increases in universities all over the&#13;
llllUIItry.Mack expanded on the goals and&#13;
motivationsof both the WEA and NEA. "We have as&#13;
a loal for this year, to politicize teachers as well as&#13;
educators at the college level for the new&#13;
mational environment that we are in. Because&#13;
there is not a sufficient number of unions at the&#13;
• union&#13;
higher education level, college educators seem to be&#13;
the whipping boys of the present administration.&#13;
Thl~ IS because of past events in the Nixon Ad-&#13;
~lmstratlon: black militants on campus demanding&#13;
black studies departments, young radicals&#13;
refusing to go to th.eVietnamese War. burning draft&#13;
cards and dropping human blood into the administration&#13;
files--eampus unrest. It would seem&#13;
that somebody looked out over the vast area called&#13;
Economic SUpport for Education and decided to do&#13;
a sabotage job in education. And it is faculty that is&#13;
called upon to make the sacrifices which will allow&#13;
the university to exist and to survive during times of&#13;
stress and economic tension."&#13;
"There is some uncertainty on the part of&#13;
professors as to why they should become part of&#13;
WEA, but those professors who are fired fmd out too&#13;
late that they should have."&#13;
Mack listed some of the resources that a Parkside&#13;
branch of the WEA could draw 00 for support:&#13;
lawyers , contract negotiators, professional&#13;
organizers, specialists, political lobbyists, special&#13;
consultants, and a two-million-dollar organization&#13;
with a membership of 45,000 in Wisconsin alone.&#13;
"They would be gaining a national, state, and local&#13;
hookup which would give them an appeal level for&#13;
financing at all levels of government."&#13;
"WEA has the machinery, a political arm-we've&#13;
been dealing in the political arena for a longer time&#13;
than any other group around. We could muster up&#13;
all of this machinery, from specialists to contract&#13;
negotiators to lawyers, to come in and assist in&#13;
salvaging jobs and give professional recognition&#13;
and protection for the good of education."&#13;
Mack urged that students become involved in the&#13;
movement to organize a union for college&#13;
professors. He cited a recent case at UW-Qshkosb&#13;
where a coalition of students was effective in&#13;
reducing the number of faculty terminations "from&#13;
something like 137people to be fired to now about 14&#13;
people to be fired."&#13;
"Your professors are in trouble." concluded&#13;
Mack, Hand your education is in trouble. You are no&#13;
more secure than they are. Administrators ought to&#13;
take note: they are no more secure than the&#13;
students. And if American education at its highest&#13;
level is in jeopardy, then America itself is in&#13;
trouble."&#13;
John Mack can be reached by calling this toll-free&#13;
number: 800-362-8034.WEA Council offices are&#13;
located at 222 West Washington, Madison, 53703_&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.O.I.C.&#13;
Wednesday, OCt. 3, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
WedDesday, OClober 3: Whiteskellar presents Dave Rogers at 1:30&#13;
p.m. No admission charged&#13;
Thursd.y. Oct. 4: Students are welcome to meet Father Wayne and&#13;
isterColelle in LLC Ot85 from noon until 4 p.m.&#13;
Friday, OCL5: PAB movie "TheCandidale" -8 p.m. m SAD.&#13;
Soturd.y, OCL .: PAB outing • Sparta Trail Bite Hike. M&lt;ft Information&#13;
may be obtained at student \ifeoffice, LLC Otfl.&#13;
Sunday. oes. 1: PAB movie "1beCandidate'· ·7:30p.m. In AB.&#13;
Wednesday. Oct. 11: PAB movie "Superman" • 7;30 p.m. 1J\&#13;
klreenquist t03.&#13;
Wednesday. OCL 1': Student music concert - 3:30 p.m. In CA 0118.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 11: Meeting of minority students 10 Greenqwst Hall&#13;
Lecture Room 103at 12:45 p.m.&#13;
3400 SHERIDA ROAD&#13;
A 0&#13;
3mh AVEl UE "&#13;
• .~~P:.liiiiiii:~&#13;
•&#13;
WEAC organizes&#13;
for faculty&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
11ie Wisconsin Education Association Council&#13;
WEAC) is sending professional r~presentatives to&#13;
1 . campus in the UW system m a three-month&#13;
~~~ation effort" to organize a union for college&#13;
educators. . . John B. Mack, a professional consultant to higher&#13;
education employed by the WEA Council, was at&#13;
rkside last week. His purpose in being here was&#13;
~ meet with individual professors in what he called&#13;
.. yeball-to-eyeball" contact, to find out how each&#13;
in&amp;vidual feels about a teachers' union and to inform&#13;
him or her about the ~~- He also_ hoped to&#13;
increase the size of the orgamzmg, com1~11ttee that&#13;
now exists on campus. But Mack s mam concern&#13;
was to initiate a movement toward a merger of the&#13;
WEA and TAUWF. The Association of University of&#13;
Wisconsin Faculty (TAUWF) represents about 3,000&#13;
college educators in the UW system and has a small&#13;
group at Parkside headed by Dr. William Morrow.&#13;
('The local T AUWF chapter has not yet discussed or&#13;
taken a formal position on the merger issue.)&#13;
According to Mack, TAUWF doesn't have the kind&#13;
of political machinery, funding or representation&#13;
that it takes to be a viable bargaining force. "What&#13;
we are saying is that since 1855, the WEA has&#13;
operated in this state, building itself into a 45,000-&#13;
member, two-million-dollar operation. We have&#13;
protected and served the rights and just causes of&#13;
elementary, high school, and vocational-technical&#13;
educators. We have also secured a collective&#13;
bargaining law in the state of Wisconsin for&#13;
educators who are not in the realm of higher&#13;
education. Your college professors do not have a&#13;
collective bargaining law or bill to protect them."&#13;
According to Mack, the passage of a collective&#13;
bargaining law for college educators in Wisconsin is&#13;
a major concern of the WEA. "We have a bill&#13;
iroposed which has been refined and worked out,&#13;
and we are ready to promote this cause. But the&#13;
only way the WEA can promote it is to have a&#13;
sizable working force to represent. Politicians like&#13;
to know who you represent in order to give you an&#13;
interest."&#13;
The Wisconsin Education Association is a branch&#13;
of the National Education Association. Both&#13;
organizations have become concerned with the&#13;
relative powerlessness of college professors,&#13;
especially in the light of budget decreases and&#13;
termination increases in universities all over the&#13;
country. Mack expanded on the goals and&#13;
motivations of both the WEA and NEA. "We have as&#13;
a goal for this year, to politicize teachers as well as&#13;
educators at the college level for the new&#13;
educational environment that we are in. Because&#13;
there is not a sufficient number of unions at the&#13;
• union&#13;
higher education level, college educato seem to be&#13;
th~ w_hipping boys of the present administration.&#13;
nus 1s because of past events in the 'ixon Ad-&#13;
~inistration: black militants on campus demanding&#13;
_black studies departments, young radicals&#13;
refusmg to go to the Vietnamese War, burning draft&#13;
cards and dropping human blood into the administration&#13;
files-campus unrest. It would seem&#13;
that somebody looked out over the vast area called&#13;
Economic Support for Education and decided to do&#13;
a sabotage job in education. And it is faculty that is&#13;
called upon to make the sacrifices which v.ill allow&#13;
the university to exist and to survive during times of&#13;
stress and economic tension."&#13;
"There is some uncertainty on the part of&#13;
professors as to why they should become part of&#13;
WEA, but those professors who are fired find out too&#13;
late that they should have."&#13;
Mack listed some of the resources that a Parkside&#13;
branch of the WEA could draw on for upport:&#13;
lawyers, contract negotiators. profes ional&#13;
organizers, specialists, political lobbyis , pecial&#13;
consultants, and a two-million-dollar organization&#13;
with a membership of 45,000 in Wiscon in alone.&#13;
"They would be gaining a national, state, and local&#13;
hookup which would give them an appeal level foe&#13;
financing at all levels of government."&#13;
"WEA has the machinery, a political arm-we've&#13;
been dealing in the political arena for a longer time&#13;
than any other group around_ We could muster up&#13;
all of this machinery, from specialists to contract&#13;
negotiators to lawyers, to come in and • t m&#13;
salvaging jobs and give professional recognition&#13;
and protection for the good of education."&#13;
Mack urged that students become involved in the&#13;
movement to organize a union for college&#13;
professors. He cited a recent case at UW-Oshk&#13;
where a coalition of students was effective in&#13;
reducing the number of faculty terminations ''from&#13;
something like 137 people to be fired to nov. about 14&#13;
people to be fired."&#13;
"Your professors are in trouble," concluded&#13;
Mack, "and your education is in trouble. You are no&#13;
more secure than they are. Administrators ought to&#13;
take note: they are no more secure than the&#13;
students. And if American education at its highest&#13;
level is in jeopardy, then America itself is in&#13;
trouble."&#13;
John Mack can be reached by calling this toll-free&#13;
number: 800-362~. WEA Council offices are&#13;
located at 222 West Washington, adisoo, 53703.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
\\ t 1:&#13;
Th da,, t.4: ud&#13;
· terColetteinLLCD18Sfromn&#13;
nd&#13;
r da), pm.in&#13;
rda,, t. &amp;: P B outing - rta Trail B H&#13;
formation·m ) be obtained t ud t lifeoffic , l..LC D197.&#13;
. nda , . ,:PABmo - "TheCandid t "-7: p.m. n AB.&#13;
WNln da., ct. It: PAB mO\i " uperman'' • 7: pm. n&#13;
GreenquL t 103.&#13;
Wtdn da), t.l: tudentm ·c&#13;
Th da), t. 11: feeting minorit&#13;
Lecture Room 103 at 12: p .m .&#13;
a 10&#13;
69:.6&#13;
rt -3: pm. in&#13;
SWICieirtts in G&#13;
ROD&#13;
Dll&#13;
Hall&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
CHEAP DRUNK SPECIAL&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F 0 .1.c.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Pnside&#13;
Concourse, Greenquist Hall&#13;
Friday, October 5&#13;
1oa.m. t O 5p.m.&#13;
ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK&#13;
Monday - Beer $2 Mixed Drinks $4&#13;
Oct. 3, 5, 6 &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER wedneSdaY. OCt. 3. 1973&#13;
WEEKEND SPORTS&#13;
__________ RANGERSports _-""&#13;
Cagers aim for&#13;
successful season&#13;
by BMK.\\ po&lt;&#13;
Thirty IhI t l\a" taeted&#13;
son ..,...dllloning for th&#13;
1 7~ ball . \lid ...&#13;
the "alchlul Y ol coach eve&#13;
and tant coach&#13;
Rudy ollum Arnone the :J5 an! IX let-&#13;
~n. ho. ~phtns 0 to&#13;
a lrOIlI nuc:1 us lor thIS&#13;
) • tam&#13;
Jonlor IJW'I et.&gt;ck Ownbl ,&#13;
Iaal y r'a VP hnost 'aluabl.&#13;
playtr) rtt~ lrom lbt 13-&#13;
12 t am, ala WIth &lt;tnler Gary&#13;
Cd 01 whom' oays .....&#13;
wn • to ood etbtude"&#13;
m for mOIl 0/ I ytar. )WUOI"&#13;
guard J HUll r IS upt&lt;:ted 10&#13;
rtbouDd to lop form l/u.a year.&#13;
phomort forward Donnie&#13;
Snow and BIll belllti have both&#13;
n unpr 'v In pre eol&#13;
orkou&#13;
lot 0/ &amp;oad penonnel ha,e&#13;
n r crulled from local&#13;
ools, among them Kenosha&#13;
Tr mper'a lQUmldaung 6'7"&#13;
1...- .. Rade lp_~ Rah·&#13;
day) DUlutrlj 'IC,"ho bnng. III&#13;
a 20.0 searing average and is&#13;
peeted to add to the board&#13;
trength of the Rangers.&#13;
"ewcomers Claude Harris.&#13;
Don Lewis, Rosen Chambers,&#13;
Catvin Denson, Malcolm&#13;
labone, Bob Jacobson, Dean&#13;
OmsUanson, TIm Holland and&#13;
Jeff GolUMed are all ......orking&#13;
hard," and according 10&#13;
ephens, "'ill add depth to the&#13;
squad.&#13;
Ho",,-ev«, ",lith all this out·&#13;
standmg personnel, Parkside&#13;
needs balan~ scoring lor them&#13;
to ,,"in games.&#13;
The 1973-74 schedule will be&#13;
lOtI&amp;her,Slated Coach Stephens,&#13;
with many more small college&#13;
powers to be laced, such as UW·&#13;
Green Bay (Dec, 12 and Feb. 16),&#13;
'Qrthem MIchigan (Feb. 2), and&#13;
Missoun-Rolla (Dec. I).&#13;
Drake, ,'orl!lern Illinois, and&#13;
I'M, some of the Midwest's&#13;
majOr college powers, will play&#13;
Parltside on Dec. 6, Feb, 23 and&#13;
Jan 29. respecti,·e!y.&#13;
Henderson optimistic&#13;
with soccer team&#13;
'" ""at ~ abler&#13;
• I'm hiIbly opliml tic that&#13;
'II et on a ""1On~ track thIS&#13;
:' commented soccer coach&#13;
IIal }lend r on "We should&#13;
to WIll the next three or&#13;
four ee ..&#13;
Th Ran~rs an! till lookmg&#13;
for lbeU" rant WID alter sueve&#13;
~ tbacks to Le\\1S&#13;
CoIl and, 0.-.0 IllinoIS&#13;
and to c o,!&gt;-1 "We only&#13;
trailed 1-0 at the hall a.. UISl&#13;
NclrtMrn," Henderson e&gt;:pIauls,&#13;
"but e"- mlJ8ing two key&#13;
men bee 0/ UlJunes, Sieve&#13;
StndeI ch nd Dieter Kiefer,&#13;
and e .. ...., lo~ to play&#13;
delense the whole second hall."&#13;
When asked aboul the per'&#13;
formances of the new freshmen,&#13;
Hmderson said, Ul was very&#13;
pleased "ith SIeve Sendelbach&#13;
and Stan Stadler, who played an&#13;
ucellent second half againsl&#13;
Oticago."&#13;
Dennis Pippin, a lresbman goal&#13;
tender, ".. s also a key player in&#13;
the Oticago game ,..hen he&#13;
Slopped four breakaway shots.&#13;
Coach }lenderson concluded&#13;
the R NGER inlerview by&#13;
saYing that he was experimenting&#13;
\lI·i.th different&#13;
lineupo and that, "The lreshmen&#13;
are beginning to playas a team."&#13;
PAl • Ragtime Rllgers Present&#13;
Wisconsin /mtio State GCIIle&#13;
$10 Includ 1)~~'a~3~~;p ndel&#13;
19 am lrom Tallen HaU Parking Lot&#13;
mv ba atP r ldeat j OOpm.&#13;
n 10"'" W nIWeOlftce·DI97&#13;
Deadline to sign up - Oct. 8, 1913 12:lII-noon&#13;
****************&#13;
10% OFF ON PURCHASE OF&#13;
J $100&#13;
4 OR MORE WITH PARKSIDE ID.&#13;
~ ENDS&#13;
fj OCTOBER 31&#13;
, AT 'j 3400 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
~ AND "s ~26 7 39tb AVENUE&#13;
...&#13;
Soccer&#13;
captian&#13;
likes it&#13;
at UW-p&#13;
by Neal gautaer&#13;
"Istarted playing soccer when&#13;
1 was eight."&#13;
Unlike other boys, ....ho join.&#13;
major league soccer when&#13;
they're 18,Rick Lechusz joined ar&#13;
the young age of 15.&#13;
In high school he played&#13;
foolball and, like the Green Bay&#13;
Packers' QJester Marcol, was a&#13;
soccer.style kicker.&#13;
During lbe off·season, Rick&#13;
plays lor polonia, a Milwaukee&#13;
area soccer club.&#13;
Some 01 the other guys on that&#13;
team who play with him from&#13;
Parkside are Rick Kilps, Bruno&#13;
Pa....lak and SIan Sladler.&#13;
Since he's been on the team, the&#13;
Poionia team has won three of the&#13;
last seven years that they've&#13;
been in the Slate finals.&#13;
Lechusz was recruited here&#13;
from Milwaukee by former&#13;
soccer coach eeza Marliny on a&#13;
scholarship.&#13;
When asked how he liked il&#13;
here, he stl\led, "I've liked it ever&#13;
since 1 came here. This school&#13;
has goad possibilities, not only in&#13;
soccer."&#13;
}Ie then explained how the two&#13;
soccer coaches dlfIered.&#13;
"eeza Martiny has a European&#13;
background for soccer, and&#13;
played a European game."&#13;
"But in America, they have a&#13;
completely differenlslyle 01 ball,&#13;
and thaI's where Coach Hen·&#13;
derson's experience comes in."&#13;
Not only a fine player and&#13;
captain of the team, Lechusz has&#13;
also had searing honors lor the&#13;
lasltwo years wilh 10 goals, and&#13;
also made most valuable player&#13;
and all-state_&#13;
He then commented about his&#13;
fellow teammates by saying,&#13;
HThis is the first year we've had&#13;
two good goallenders, in Ellioll&#13;
Brieske and Dennis Pippin."&#13;
He also slaled thaI freshmen&#13;
SIeve Sendelbach and Bruno&#13;
Pa ....lak will carry the team in&#13;
later years.&#13;
When asked about Ihe new&#13;
soccer lield, he summed il up by&#13;
saying he was "looking lorward&#13;
to playing on it," and that "It'll&#13;
boost the morale of the whole&#13;
learn."&#13;
Golf team faces&#13;
Fallfest Invitational&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
With the Falllest Invitational&#13;
coming a week from Saturday,&#13;
the golfers' season has had its ups&#13;
and downs, according to coach&#13;
Steve Stephens.&#13;
Many of the ups came in the&#13;
recent match against Marquette&#13;
and UW-Green Bay, with a school&#13;
record for a rive-member team of&#13;
36'7, and with sophomore Dan&#13;
Leissner shooting a four-underpar&#13;
f&gt;1 10 also estahlish a new&#13;
school record.&#13;
The scores for the MarquetteGreen&#13;
Bay match were: Tom&#13;
Bolhe (medalist) 71, Dan&#13;
Leissner 74, Rick Willems 74,&#13;
Randy Driefke 74, and Dave Karr&#13;
74.&#13;
Parkside's golf team is considered&#13;
by many of the NATA&#13;
coaches to be a contender to take&#13;
the districltournament and those&#13;
coaches entering the Falllest&#13;
tournament state that Parkside&#13;
has a very good chance of winning&#13;
it.&#13;
Without defending champion&#13;
Northern Illinois, the linksmen&#13;
will try to bring in 8·10 teams as&#13;
strong competition.&#13;
Among them are in I&#13;
Marquette, Green Ba c Ud"j&#13;
Stevens Point, UW'RiV~' U\I&#13;
UW·Whilewater, UW.Milw[alIs&#13;
Roosevelt University ofOt·Uiot.&#13;
Carthage and, 01 c I~&#13;
Parkside, who will ent OUf1e&#13;
teams. er l&#13;
Stephens concluded thal&#13;
one team has won ou ..&#13;
nament twice and hopes ~ tollRangers&#13;
will be able to br~ IIit&#13;
tradition. IIit&#13;
MEN'S &amp; WOMEN'S T1tA&#13;
FIELD practice is nowin ib(~'&#13;
week of training lor the first ilIIl&#13;
in the middle of DecemberThose&#13;
who are still in&#13;
in this year's program sh::f"d&#13;
Bob Lawson, track coach,or lot&#13;
extension 2245 fight a'li tal&#13;
begin training for the win: ..&#13;
spring schedules. ...&#13;
-=-~.~~&#13;
Oeff!j&#13;
APRIL 1%·%1,11'11&#13;
10days· 8nights&#13;
• Round trip jet&#13;
• 7 nights in Athe~s&#13;
• 8th night in Zurich&#13;
2 meals daily&#13;
• Greek island cruist&#13;
• Athens sightseeing . . S"iU&#13;
• Fondue party In&#13;
• Tour escort t&#13;
• Tips &amp; taxes on llbO'&#13;
J&#13;
For application or inforl1ls&#13;
tJC'l&#13;
Contact. .~rt:JI&#13;
CAMPUS TRAVEL (f.&#13;
iIm!! .,~~&#13;
• LLC D·19; Cal!:»'&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RA GER ednesdaY1 Oct. 3, 1973&#13;
A GER&#13;
___________ Sports _ _.,&#13;
Cag a m for&#13;
u&#13;
H nderso n optimistic&#13;
w th soccer te a m&#13;
********&#13;
d half."&#13;
PAB Ragtime R gers f&gt;resent&#13;
iscons·n / io State Game&#13;
t. 13 1973&#13;
t. 8 1973 12:00 n&#13;
*********&#13;
Soccer&#13;
caption&#13;
likes it&#13;
at UW-P&#13;
H then explained how the two&#13;
er coach differed.&#13;
"Geza . 1artiny has a European&#13;
background for soccer, and&#13;
played a European game."&#13;
• But in America, they have a&#13;
mpletely different style of ball,&#13;
and that's where Coach Hende&#13;
n' experience comes in."&#13;
, ot only a fine player and&#13;
captain of the team. Lechusz has&#13;
also had coring honors for the&#13;
last two years with 10 goals, and&#13;
also made most valuable player&#13;
and all-state.&#13;
He then commented about his&#13;
fellow teammates by saying,&#13;
"Thi i the first year we've had&#13;
t ·o good goaltenders, in Elliott&#13;
Brie ke and Dennis Pippin."&#13;
He also stated that freshmen&#13;
eve endelbach and Bruno&#13;
Pawlak will carry the team in&#13;
later ~ears.&#13;
When asked about the new&#13;
~er field, he summed it up by&#13;
saymg he was "looking forward&#13;
to playing on it," and that "It'll&#13;
boost the morale of the whole&#13;
team."&#13;
~&amp; •&#13;
Golf team faces&#13;
Fallfest Invitational&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
With the Fallfest Invitational&#13;
coming a week from Saturday,&#13;
the golfers' season has had its ups&#13;
and downs, according to coach&#13;
Steve Stephens.&#13;
Many of the ups came in the&#13;
recent match against Marquette&#13;
and UW-Green Bay, with a school&#13;
record for a five-member team of&#13;
367, and with sophomore Dan&#13;
Leissner shooting a four-underpar&#13;
67 to also establish a new&#13;
school record.&#13;
The scores for the MarquetteGreen&#13;
Bay match were: Tom&#13;
Bothe (medalist) 71, Dan&#13;
Leissner 74, Rick Willems 74,&#13;
Randy Driefke 74, and Dave Karr&#13;
74.&#13;
Parkside's golf team is considered&#13;
by many of the NAIA&#13;
coaches to be a contender to take&#13;
the district tournament and those&#13;
coaches entering the Fallfest&#13;
tournament state that Parkside&#13;
has a very good chance of winning&#13;
it.&#13;
Without defending champion&#13;
Northern Illinois, the linksmen&#13;
will try to bring in 8-10 teams as&#13;
strong competition.&#13;
Among them are .&#13;
Marquette, Green B~nclud&#13;
Stevens Point, UW-Rivi· U&#13;
UW-Whitewater, UW-Milwa&#13;
Roosevelt University of Ch&#13;
Carthage and of 1&#13;
Parkside, who ~ill entou&#13;
teams. er t&#13;
Stephens concluded that&#13;
one team . has won our&#13;
nament twice and hopes tha&#13;
Rangers will be able to hr ;&#13;
tradition. ea&#13;
MEN'S &amp; WOMEN• TR&#13;
FIELD practice is now in 1 ~ l&#13;
week of training for the first&#13;
in the middle of December lneet&#13;
. Th~se who are still int&#13;
m this year's program should&#13;
Bob Lawson, track coach&#13;
t . 'or&#13;
ex ens10n 2245 right aw&#13;
begin training for the wini:!&#13;
spring schedules. 11111&#13;
APRIL 12-21, 1974&#13;
10 days -8 nights&#13;
• Round trip jet&#13;
• 7 nights in Athen&#13;
• 8th night in Zurich&#13;
2 meals daily&#13;
• Greek island crui '&#13;
• Athens sight tting&#13;
. wi!J • Fondue party an&#13;
• Tour escort&#13;
</text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 2, issue 5, October 3, 1973</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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                <text>1973-10-03</text>
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              <text>Wyllie named to&#13;
advisory council&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie has&#13;
been named to a five-man advisory&#13;
council that will assist the&#13;
University of the State of New&#13;
York educational system in&#13;
conducting a comprehensive&#13;
review of doctoral programs&#13;
offered by the universities of that&#13;
state. The program review,&#13;
which will concentrate on&#13;
questions of quality, need, cost&#13;
and duplication, will lead to the&#13;
development of a new state plan&#13;
(or doctoral education.&#13;
The University of the State of&#13;
New York, which ranks with&#13;
California as one of the country's&#13;
two largest higher education&#13;
systems, has jurisdiction over all&#13;
plblic and private universities,&#13;
graduate centers and medical&#13;
schools, polytechnic institutes,&#13;
community colleges, and various&#13;
p-ofessional schools, numbering&#13;
mote than 100 institutions in all.&#13;
The program authority of the&#13;
regents who govern the s)'!ltem&#13;
extends to the State University of&#13;
New York System (SUNY). the&#13;
City University of New York&#13;
System (CUNY). and such&#13;
leading private universities as&#13;
Cornell. Cohnnbia, Fordham. the .&#13;
Univ.... ity of Rochester.. RensselllE!"&#13;
Polytechnic Institute. and&#13;
Rockefeller University.&#13;
()ther leading educators named&#13;
to the five-man advisory council&#13;
with Wyllie are J. Boyd Page.&#13;
Iftsident of the U.S. Council of&#13;
Graduate Schools, Washington,&#13;
D.C.; Glenn E. Berchtold,&#13;
professor of chemistry,&#13;
Massachusetts Insti tute of&#13;
TechnologYi Jerome Blum,&#13;
history department chairman,&#13;
Princeton University; and Bryce&#13;
crawford, former dean of the&#13;
Graduate School. University of&#13;
Minnesota.&#13;
. In 1971 the New York Regents&#13;
:'POtoSeda moratoriwn on all new&#13;
oc ral programs pend' tud ,lnga&#13;
S u Y of national and state&#13;
trends, costs and needs Th&#13;
Regents then established ~ blu:&#13;
~bbon . commission on doctoral&#13;
ucatton, headed by Robben&#13;
FJ~mmg.' president of the&#13;
University ?f Michigan. to&#13;
conduct a. WIde-ranging study.&#13;
~e Fleming commission submitted&#13;
its report and recommendations&#13;
in January of Otis&#13;
year. In line with the commission&#13;
~ecommendations the Regents&#13;
~ssued a new statement of policy&#13;
In August, under the title&#13;
"Meeting the Needs of Doctoral&#13;
Educa tion." The next step in the&#13;
pro~ess was the creation of the&#13;
advisory council on which&#13;
.Chancellor Wyllie has been asked&#13;
to serve.&#13;
Wyllie, who has had extensive&#13;
expe~ien~e in heading&#13;
exammation teams for the North&#13;
Central accrediting association&#13;
said the council's first task will&#13;
be.to recommend personnel and&#13;
procedures for various teams of&#13;
outside experts who will review&#13;
12 doctoral programs in history&#13;
and 18 in cbemistry throughout&#13;
the state. History and chemistry&#13;
were smgled out for initial review&#13;
not only because they are major&#13;
programs in New York, but also&#13;
because they are broadly&#13;
representative of the various&#13;
problems likely to be encountered&#13;
in subsequent review&#13;
of other programs in other fields.&#13;
What is learned in these firstphase&#13;
reviews wIll contribute to&#13;
the development of a model for&#13;
all later reviews, and ultimately&#13;
to the revamping of New York's&#13;
doctoral program authorizations&#13;
and offerings.&#13;
Pilot reviews in chemistry \4i1J&#13;
be conducted at 18 universities lD&#13;
the SUNY and CliNY systems. as&#13;
well as at the Rensselaer and&#13;
Brooklyn Polytechnic In nuees&#13;
and various pri vate institutions&#13;
Chancellor Wyll1esaid that the&#13;
advisory council ",,;U not condoct&#13;
individual reviews, but ",'ill&#13;
during the course of the next 12&#13;
months monitor the review&#13;
process and advise the Umversity&#13;
of the State of ew York in&#13;
regard to future procedure. and&#13;
In regard to recommendations&#13;
that may be generated from the&#13;
reviews.&#13;
New cou..... , faculty&#13;
Changes take&#13;
place in SM'&#13;
b~'Ii ba~10' 1_ k&#13;
The Englneenng eienee&#13;
OWl on IS condoC'u a new&#13;
course thi&gt; faU called . lao and&#13;
HIS TechnolOlU I OIl to&#13;
proVIde non-Iechnol . majors&#13;
""th an undtrstanchng of me&#13;
problem'S ithin their envtronment&#13;
TopiCS the course hopes to d I&#13;
,.,th InClude the energy crws.&#13;
mass transportation DeCfSSltl •&#13;
reese pollulJon.,and the etectreeic&#13;
fe\ olutJon LD commurucations&#13;
"The course In to shed light&#13;
on current problems m tndustry&#13;
that clash With SOClet)'s ''lIlues.''&#13;
said Jobn Zarhng, assistant&#13;
professor of EnglDeerlng&#13;
SCience.&#13;
lartlOg. aIo"l Ith proCessors&#13;
w alt.. Feldt .nd •ling Kuo.&#13;
rotate lectures over various&#13;
topiCS ",thon tbe 16 UJUtsIv.eds)&#13;
of class. As they progress, eadl&#13;
specllllius on a certain area for&#13;
.pproximately n.. weeD.&#13;
Recently the course exanuoed&#13;
me's lJlre&lt;&gt;.hour documellUry&#13;
thonl' _&#13;
enrolled. but" hope to&#13;
up m~ e 0 aJon&amp;." com&#13;
menled ZOrl "The &lt;OUIW&#13;
dra"o up In A 10 it&#13;
lISted on the um l.8b1e but not&#13;
d cribed until r I Irallon.&#13;
throu fly tt&#13;
Deen of the&#13;
lnd r)'. William&#13;
t'It\lt course .. .. lrat'· and&#13;
added It ... an ImPJll1anl part In&#13;
I's expandlllg '0.......&#13;
R l&amp;Inu....In the I ...&#13;
SO percent lhiI or. ahowIIII •&#13;
stead g"",111 s""'. lis betI~illIC&#13;
In 1&#13;
·,TIt fall. forUle fonl UlM, an&#13;
I facull' manbon wUI be&#13;
located In the ...... Claaroom&#13;
The Parksidlec-------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 10, 1973 Vol. II No. ,&#13;
Concern growing over power plant&#13;
by Michael OlszyJ&lt;&#13;
"We nuclear people have made a Faustian&#13;
tBrgain with society. On the one hand, we offer - in&#13;
the catalytic burner .- an inexaustible source of&#13;
energy ...&#13;
But the price that we demand of society for this&#13;
magical energy source is both a vigilance and a&#13;
longevity of our social institutions that we are quite&#13;
1Il8ccustomed to. H&#13;
--Dr. Alvin Weinberg. director of the Oak&#13;
Ridge National Laboratory.&#13;
Science (July 7.1972)&#13;
What Weinberg failed to add though. was that&#13;
F.usllost out on his deal with the devil.&#13;
. Henry Cole, assistant professor of earth science,&#13;
lS one of many concerned environmentalists,&#13;
seriously questioning practical uses of ,,-uclear&#13;
energy and the general public's unYleldmg&#13;
demands for more and more power.&#13;
Coleis strongly opposed to a nuclear power plant.&#13;
):I'Oposed by Wisconsin Electric power Company, to&#13;
be built in the Paris Township.&#13;
~ SUch a plan materialized, southea~tern&#13;
Wisconsin would be trading 6,000 acres of highly&#13;
Jl'oductive farmland for cooling ponds to properly&#13;
operate a 2.000 megowatt giant by the year 1982: "&#13;
. Vlewmgthis problem lias objectively as possible&#13;
18 another environmentalist Morris· Firebaugh,&#13;
~ciate professor of phYSic~. He too sees several&#13;
disadvantages in surrendering nine square miles of&#13;
farmland, especially when its inhabitants have been&#13;
embed,dedin a community for Six generations, as&#13;
those In Paris have. But Firebaugh added thaI&#13;
Wher~er a reactor was located, there would be&#13;
conflict with the landowners who were forced to&#13;
sacrifice their properties for the energy needs of the&#13;
SUrroundingpopula tion ..&#13;
Controversy over the 10000ation of future nuclear&#13;
plantsisn't the only problem besieging WEPC and&#13;
the Ato . . f mlC Energy Commission The questIon 0&#13;
nUclea .' ted r POwer and the environment has crup&#13;
In~ a moratorium of critical concern.&#13;
though a major catastrophe has never occured&#13;
W.E P. STANDS FOR&#13;
~tJATCH&#13;
!;vERY THING&#13;
since commercial nuclear power plants started&#13;
operating in 1957, and chances are estim.ted.t only&#13;
one in 1000reactor years. there sWJ remalos that&#13;
remote possibility.&#13;
The most serious accident Cole descrIbes 8S a&#13;
"meltdown." The reactor core, where fi ion takes&#13;
place has a loss of coolant resullmg from ruptured&#13;
pipes: Thus the temperature of the ruel CUranium&#13;
235) begins to rise rapidly and melts through the&#13;
core within 50 to 100 seconds foUowing the rupture&#13;
An Emergency Core Cooling System desIgned to&#13;
spray or nood this escaping nuclear fuel IS the&#13;
essenlial safety feature that would become ef·&#13;
fective. But if this system failed after the prim.ry&#13;
cooling system did, a radioactive steam cloud v..-ould&#13;
be released into the atmosphere by hydrogen and&#13;
steam explosions. Meanwhile. the reactor core&#13;
would continue melting down until a rna Ive&#13;
molten blob of highly radlOacti\'e matter seeped&#13;
into the soil. _ _ .&#13;
A maximum hypothetical accident m a rea~or&#13;
(about one-sixth of the power o! those now beuli&#13;
built) was simulated m a t95' AEC study .1&#13;
Brookhaven National Laboratory on L~ng I land&#13;
As a result. it was esumat~ _that the maXImum&#13;
would be 3400 killed. 43.000 IOJured. and $7 billion&#13;
property damage.&#13;
While the m.lll nolan a=denl rna ....&#13;
f~ble there should be ca_ fer aI nn oy«&#13;
the f t that Em eacy r I ) tema ha&#13;
) t to be properl)' t ed under I dor coneIIl&gt;on1&#13;
A. mall acal model" ed I&amp;rI In&#13;
1971, in Idaho. The ECCS f.iled 'e&lt;)' oflbe&#13;
test •&#13;
Fortun8tely ror sam DiP th l t '"&#13;
to the ml preselll.8tlon of aclual E&#13;
,n'ohed •• lnch d,.meter ,. IWithone&#13;
... o!lnlet and outlet pi , In th tab k lOthe&#13;
mletl"pe ". mulaled and the atl.mpt ." made&#13;
to mJect ".1.. lOto the pr v 110 tool the&#13;
e1eclrlcal heal mUI.1I the c The " let'&#13;
had to enle&lt; .pmsl the Id I I am pr re •&#13;
steam .nd ater " .... be1n xpelled through the&#13;
bre . It did not "ark In contra t, re tor •&#13;
are from 14 to 22 f t n d,.m t... nd _aU h&#13;
101 of mlel d out Pi &lt;h about 2~ f&#13;
eII.meter&#13;
A n full..,a1 model plant CUM'eltly&#13;
butIt to accurately t Ithe Em rg ncy&#13;
)'Slem In Idaho, .1 the ·.lIona!&#13;
SlatlOD&#13;
Anolher concern of Col.'. th tor.ge 0( nud r&#13;
" e, co UlfI of un .... bl. f procluc&#13;
created wnng th operation of LIl...... dor. and&#13;
CU1lammated equipment sud'l as cloltunc from&#13;
routm. JlO"er plant and reproc lIl&amp; operaUOlUI&#13;
lJusually trucked 011 to "'tAnk f.rms" In I d&#13;
s1uPPUlfl c ·s. th rod"""cu.. t.a.nc&#13;
contmue to decal 0' r • penod of 21.&#13;
called half~ife'&#13;
TIte Ideal methnd lO abandonUlfl these .... t&#13;
to dISpose of them to natural geolo cal formaUOlUI&#13;
such .s salt bed&gt;. v. luch chang only o\'er the&#13;
of geological ume, rather lha.n torag. In h .Iv&#13;
guarded vaults, sensll" to I e TIt. probl~&#13;
here though IS ID !In,lon_ de trable features 01 It&#13;
depoSIts for disposal of nuclear a , Salt min&#13;
UlL~on Kansas underconslderauon \4 ere t1&#13;
found to be un. u'tabl. becaus of ex bol lIlld&#13;
~eol ,eal. 1 till lOkI place the £&#13;
md d If ocaUOn 10 d r l m&#13;
mbs.&#13;
Wyllie named to&#13;
advisory council&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie has&#13;
been named to a five-man ad-&#13;
\1sory council that will assist the&#13;
University of the State of New&#13;
York educational system in&#13;
conducting a comprehensive&#13;
review of doctoral programs&#13;
offered by the universities of that&#13;
tate. The program review&#13;
which will concentrate 0 ~&#13;
questions of quality, need, cost&#13;
and duplication, wi)l lead to the&#13;
development of a new state plan&#13;
for doctoral education.&#13;
The University of the State of&#13;
New York, which ranks with&#13;
California as one of the country's&#13;
two largest higher education&#13;
systems, has jurisdiction over all&#13;
public and private universities,&#13;
graduate centers and medical&#13;
schools, polytechnic institutes&#13;
community colleges, and variou~&#13;
professional schools, numbering&#13;
more than 100 institutions in all. The program authority of the&#13;
regents who govern the system&#13;
extends to the State University of&#13;
New York System (SUNY), the&#13;
City University of New York&#13;
System (CUNY), and such&#13;
leading private universities as&#13;
Cornell, Colwnbia, Fordham, the&#13;
University of Rochester, Ren-&#13;
~aer Polytechnic Institute, and&#13;
Rockefeller University.&#13;
Other leading educators named&#13;
to the five-man advisory council&#13;
with Wyllie are J. Boyd Page&#13;
president of the U.S. Council of&#13;
Graduate Schools, Washington,&#13;
D.C.; Glenn E . Berch told&#13;
professor of che~istry:&#13;
Massachusetts Institute of&#13;
Technology ; Jerome Blum&#13;
history department chairman'&#13;
Princeton University; and Brye~&#13;
Crawford, former dean of the&#13;
Graduate School, University of&#13;
Minnesota.&#13;
im In ~971 the ew York Regen&#13;
do:Ore:f a ;i;torium on all ne .&#13;
study of nat i~~:i pending a&#13;
trends, costs and n::f tate&#13;
~gents then establi hed ~ b'{"e&#13;
ribbon commission on d u education, headed b octoral&#13;
Fie · Y Robben U _mm~, president of the&#13;
mvers1ty of Michiga conduct ·d n, to Th Fl a . WI e-ranging study. _e e_mmg commission ubm1tted&#13;
its report and&#13;
me dati. recom- n ons in January of th. year. In line with the com . . is r . ffilSSIOD&#13;
. ecommendatJons the Regents&#13;
~ssued a new statement of policy&#13;
!? A~gust, under the title&#13;
Meeting the Needs of Doct 1· Educati " ora on. The next step in the&#13;
pro&lt;:ess was the creation of the&#13;
advisory council on which . Chancellor Wyllie has been asked&#13;
to serve.&#13;
Wyll_ie, who has had extensive&#13;
expe~ien~e in heading&#13;
exammation teams for the North&#13;
~tral accrediting association&#13;
said the council's first task will&#13;
be to recommend personnel and&#13;
procedures for various teams of&#13;
outside experts who will review&#13;
12 doc~ral programs in history&#13;
and 18 m chemistry throughout&#13;
the st~tE!. History and chemistry&#13;
were smgled out for initial review&#13;
not only because they are major&#13;
programs in New York, but also&#13;
because they are broadly&#13;
representative of the various&#13;
problems likely to be encountered&#13;
in subsequent review&#13;
of other programs in other fields&#13;
What is learned in these fir t.&#13;
phase reviews will contribute to&#13;
the development of a model for&#13;
all later reviews, and ultimatelv&#13;
to the revamping of New York's&#13;
doctoral program authorization&#13;
ew cour , faculty&#13;
Change ta&#13;
place • ,n Ml&#13;
.......&#13;
The Parksidee-------&#13;
RA GE&#13;
Concern growing over power plant&#13;
by Michael Olszy.k&#13;
"We nuclear people have made a Faustian&#13;
bargain with society. On the one hand, we offer - in&#13;
the catalytic burner - an inexaustible source of&#13;
energy ...&#13;
Bu_t the price that we demand of society for this&#13;
magi~! energy source is both a vigilance and a&#13;
longeVIty of our social institutions that we are quite&#13;
maccustomed to."&#13;
--Dr. Alvin Weinberg, director of the Oak&#13;
Ridge National Laboratory, Science (July 7, 1972)&#13;
What Weinberg failed to add though, was that&#13;
Faustlost out on his deal with the devil.&#13;
. Henry Cole, assis~ofessor of earth science,&#13;
15 _one of many concerned environmentalists,&#13;
senously questioning practical uses of nuclear :ergy and the general public's unyielding&#13;
mands for more and more power. Cole is strongly opposed to a nuclear power plant,&#13;
:opo~ed. by Wisconsin Electric Power Company, to&#13;
built m the Paris Township.&#13;
!f such a plan materialized, southeastern&#13;
Wiscon~in would be trading 6,000 acres of highly&#13;
i--oducttve farmland for cooling ponds to properly&#13;
operat~ a 2,0?0 megowatt giant by the year 1982 . . Viewing this problem "as objectively as possible"&#13;
15 an~ther environmentalist, Morris Firebaugh,&#13;
~ciate professor of physics. He too sees several&#13;
f sadvantages in surrendering nine square miles of&#13;
~~and, E:5Pecially when its inhabitants have been&#13;
th _ded m _a community for six generations, as&#13;
w ose 10 Pans have. But Firebaugh added that&#13;
c ~~ver a reactor was located, there would be&#13;
.:'a" .1~t with the landowners who were forced to ;;1hce ~eir properties for the energy needs of the&#13;
Cooundmg population .. pl nt.t:oversy over the location of future nuclear&#13;
:n~t isn't the only problem besieging WEP~ and&#13;
nu I omic Energy Commission. The question of&#13;
c ear Po . ted t wer and the environment has erup&#13;
~t~ moratorium of critical concern. ugh a ma1or catastrophe has never occured&#13;
D5 CR&#13;
ATCH&#13;
ERYTH G&#13;
-&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday. Oct. 10, 1973&#13;
....... RANGER&#13;
Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Tenants union&#13;
needed&#13;
Individuals or groups of people with power do not&#13;
normally see fit to share that power or the decision&#13;
making procedures with those over whom they have&#13;
superiority. In order to achieve reforms it is necessary,&#13;
therefore. for oppressed or unhappy individuals to&#13;
organize and gain strength in numbers.&#13;
It seems as if the tenants of Parkside Village would do&#13;
well to organize a strong tenants union. This union would&#13;
be representative of the renters and see to it that a II&#13;
legitimate gripes and needs of the tenants are dealt with&#13;
by either the superintendent or the owner. The union&#13;
wou Id not onIy be a liason between renter and land lord&#13;
but aIso have the power needed to make sure that&#13;
parties on both sides are ge"ing a fair shake and&#13;
humane treatment.&#13;
Some communities in the United States have set up&#13;
rent control boards which not only have power in&#13;
regulating rent prices but oversee housing conditions.&#13;
Owners are still capable of making a profit under such&#13;
conditions but the renter does not have to suHer at the&#13;
feet of the property owner.&#13;
A strong Parkside Village tenants union would give&#13;
renters a device for gaining bargaining power which&#13;
they do not have now.&#13;
This semester there have aIready been numerous&#13;
hassles between the tenants and superintendent and&#13;
owner. Students are justifiably upset over parking fees,&#13;
ticketing, the strict living conditions imposed on them,&#13;
and the way in which they are received in dialogue by&#13;
the superintendent.&#13;
On the other hand. Village management is justifyably&#13;
upset about the vandalism and stealing that takes place.&#13;
It seems as if a tenants union could help both sides.&#13;
Renters would be able to deal with their frustrations in&#13;
ways other than vandalism. Demands could be&#13;
negotiated in a mature. positive. and fair way.&#13;
Interest in a tenants union has been expressed by&#13;
Village residents and organizing is taking place.&#13;
Students living there would benefit by considering what&#13;
they want out of apartment life -- and what they don't&#13;
want __and organize around those issues.&#13;
Carelessness&#13;
creates problems&#13;
RANGER has commented before on the parking&#13;
problems and attempts have been made to ameliorate&#13;
the aggravating situation. But a new issue is developing&#13;
in the east lot which is inexcusable and should be rectified&#13;
immediately.&#13;
11appears as if some individuals are in such a hur~y&#13;
that they find it necessary to bump or smash into other&#13;
cars in their rush. Most of the time the offending driver&#13;
leaves without notifying the owner of the damaged auto.&#13;
There are too many times lately when a tired student&#13;
will return to his or her car late at night to find the door&#13;
caved in. headlight busted, or the body dented or&#13;
scratched. Is it vandalism or just plain carelessness?&#13;
There are remedies to the problem. A traffic guard or&#13;
two could be hired for the sole purpose of patrolling&#13;
parking areas; however, that would cost a lot of money&#13;
which could be used for something more vitally needed.&#13;
Perhaps the parking lots could be re-marked, making&#13;
stalls and lanes much larger and maneuvering of cars&#13;
easier. But then there would be even fewer stalls to park&#13;
in.&#13;
Maybe the best remedy of all is for people to slow&#13;
down and look around and exhibit some concern and&#13;
care for the property of others. If everyone cooperated&#13;
to apply this solution. not only could students trust that&#13;
their cars would be in one piece when they return to&#13;
them, but it would also show how our common, unselfish&#13;
concern for one another works for the good of&#13;
everybody. If people don't cooperate, we're liable to find&#13;
carelessness is contagious.&#13;
.~.. " " .&#13;
. .. .. ... - ....... .. ." " " "&#13;
by Jane SChliesman&#13;
As reported last week, PSGA finally has a chief executive. again, in&#13;
the person of Tom Jennett. This is an important step, even if only an&#13;
interim move until formal elections are held. The word seems to be&#13;
spreading to other campuses about our difficulties with stu,dent&#13;
govenunent: The Badger Herald. a student newspaper at Madison,&#13;
recently reported that Parkside has no student goverr:unent. And a few&#13;
weeks ago RANGER received a call from a UW-Milwaukee student&#13;
interested in hearing how we had abolished OUT student government.&#13;
We explained that the executive was kaput by default, but that and the&#13;
inability to get together a quorum of the Senate had reduced PSGA to&#13;
nil. Now, however, there is a formal body convened again and considerable&#13;
interest has been expressed in PSGA, so it appears there is&#13;
hope for an effective and profitable year. .&#13;
Our problems with student government are not unique -- campuses&#13;
all over the country have been faced with lack of interest. Mter the&#13;
heavy student involvement of the sixties this change of pace was a nice&#13;
breather for college presidents, but even they are beginning to look&#13;
around and wonder if the nostalgia craze includes a decade like the&#13;
passive, inert fifties.&#13;
The thought is frightening, for part of what that era produced was&#13;
the obedient, unquestioning, blind faith attitudes of people like Jeb&#13;
Magruder of Watergate fame. Hopefully, the college campuses in the&#13;
seventies are not spewing out thousands of followers with too few&#13;
inquisitive, innovative, clear-thinking leader-types.&#13;
Meanwhile, back at UW-P we have a make-shift student government&#13;
struggling to keep itself alive. A problem that exists here that many&#13;
other student governments do not have to surmount is an unworkable&#13;
constition. The power it grants PSGA is. nice on paper, but unfortunately&#13;
the docwnent was not drawn up in consultation and concurrence&#13;
with those on campus who presently hold that power -&#13;
faculty and administration. Hence, trying to work through it is impossible.&#13;
The PSGA steering committee, which will be made up of students&#13;
from various organizations and committees including Jennett and&#13;
members of the existing Student Senate, hopes .N-.Propose a solution to&#13;
that problem as well as others of organization, structure and goals for&#13;
PSGA. The 'lim is a working, effective student government, genuinely&#13;
interested in the students' welfare and involved in campus gover- .&#13;
nance. Any of the committee's proposals will need active students with&#13;
vision and empathy to realize them and indeed make it an effective&#13;
and profitable year, and provide a foundation not only for PSGA to&#13;
build on but for the entire university.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at 0·194 Library:&#13;
Learning Center, Telephone (414) 553·2295.&#13;
The Pa!"kside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
r~flected In col~mns. and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
. Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subject of&#13;
Interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to 250words or&#13;
less, typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
letters for length and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
addr~ss, phone.number and student status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
be. WIthheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
EDITOR.IN·CHIEF: Jane M. scnuesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra wrteceu&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Katl'lryn Wellner&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: oen Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR: David Daniels&#13;
WRITERS: Stephen Gifford, Barbara Hanson, Harvey Hedden, Gary&#13;
Jensen~ MIChael. Olszyk, Marilyn SChubert. John Sorensen, SIeve&#13;
steceoten. Carne Ward, Ken Konkol, Tom oerouw Neal Seutner&#13;
Bruce Wagner "&#13;
P.HOTOGRAPHERS: Ron Antrlm, Allen Frederickson Brian Ross&#13;
Jim RuffalO "&#13;
CARTOONISTS: Amy Cundari, Gary Huck&#13;
LAYOUT: Terri Getenlan, Terry Knop, staff&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Peslka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Amy Cundari&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Gary Worlhington .&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF: Fred Lawrence, Jim Magruder&#13;
. ,&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 10, 1973&#13;
RANGER&#13;
------- Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Tenants union&#13;
needed&#13;
Individuals or groups of people with power do not&#13;
normally see fit to share that power or the decision&#13;
making procedures with those over whom they have&#13;
superiority. In order to achieve reforms it is necessary,&#13;
therefore, for oppressed or unhappy individuals to&#13;
organize and gain strength in numbers.&#13;
It seems as if the tenants of Parkside Village would do&#13;
well to organize a strong tenants union. This union would&#13;
be representative of the renters and see to it that all&#13;
legitimate gripes and needs of the tenants are dealt with&#13;
by either the superintendent or the owner. The union&#13;
would not only be a liason between renter and landlord&#13;
but also have the power needed to make sure that&#13;
parties on both sides are getting a fair shake and&#13;
humane treatment.&#13;
Some communities in the United States have set up&#13;
rent control boards which not only have power in&#13;
regulating rent prices but oversee housing conditions.&#13;
Owners are still capable of making a profit under such&#13;
conditions but the renter does not have to suffer at the&#13;
feet of the property owner.&#13;
A strong Parkside Village tenants union would give&#13;
renters a device for gaining bargaining power which&#13;
they do not have now.&#13;
This semester there have already been numerous&#13;
hassles between the tenants and superintendent and&#13;
owner. Students are justifiably upset over parking fees,&#13;
ticketing, the strict living conditions imposed on them,&#13;
and the way in which they are received in dialogue by&#13;
the superintendent.&#13;
On the other hand, Village management is justifyably&#13;
upset about the vandalism and stealing that takes place.&#13;
It seems as if a tenants union could help both sides.&#13;
Renters would be able to deal with their frustrations in&#13;
ways other than vandalism. Demands could be&#13;
negotiated in a mature, positive, and fair way.&#13;
Interest in a tenants union has been expressed by&#13;
Village residents and organizing is taking place.&#13;
Students living there would benefit by considering what&#13;
they want out of apartment life -- and what they don't&#13;
want ·- and organize around those issues.&#13;
Carelessness&#13;
creates problems&#13;
RANGER has commented before on the parking&#13;
problems and attempts have been made to ameliorate&#13;
the aggravating situation. But a new issue is developing&#13;
in the east lot which is inexcusable and should be rectified&#13;
immediately.&#13;
It appears as if some individuals are in such a hurry&#13;
that they find it necessary to bump or smash into other&#13;
cars in their rush. Most of the time the offending driver&#13;
leaves without notifying the owner of the damaged auto.&#13;
There are too many times lately when a tired student&#13;
will return to his or her car late at night to find the door&#13;
caved in, headlight busted, or the body dented or&#13;
scratched. Is it vandal ism or just plain carelessness?&#13;
There are remedies to the problem. A traffic guard or&#13;
two could be hired for the sole purpose of patrolling&#13;
parking areas ; however, that would cost a lot of money&#13;
which could be us_ed for something more vitally needed.&#13;
Perhaps the parking lots could be re-marked, making&#13;
stalls and lanes much larger and maneuvering of cars&#13;
easier. But then there would be even fewer stalls to park&#13;
in.&#13;
Maybe the best remedy of all is for people to slow&#13;
down and look around and exhibit some concern and&#13;
care for the property of others. If everyone cooperated&#13;
to apply this solution, not only could students trust that&#13;
their cars would be in one piece when they return to&#13;
them , but it would also show how our common, unselfish&#13;
concern for one another works for the good of&#13;
everybody. If people don't cooperate, we're liable to find&#13;
carelessness is contagious.&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
As reported last week, PSGA finally has a chief executive_ again, in&#13;
the person of Tom Jennett. This is an important step, even tf only an&#13;
interim move until formal elections are held. The word seems to be&#13;
spreading to other campuses about our difficulties with stu_dent&#13;
government: The Badger Herald, a student newspaper at Madison,&#13;
recently reported that Parkside has no student goverr_unent. And a few&#13;
weeks ago RANGER received a call from a UW-Mtlwaukee student&#13;
interested in hearing how we had abolished our student government.&#13;
We explained that the executive was kaput by default, but that and the&#13;
inability to get together a quorum of the Senate had reduc~d PSGA to&#13;
nil. Now however there is a formal body convened agam and considerabl~&#13;
interest has been expressed in PSGA, so it appears there is&#13;
hope for an effective and profitable year. . Our problems with student government are not umque -- campuses&#13;
all over the country have been faced with lack of interest. After the&#13;
heavy student involvement of the sixties this change of pace was a nice&#13;
breather for college presidents, but even they are beginning to look&#13;
around and wonder if the nostalgia craze includes a decade like the&#13;
passive, inert fifties.&#13;
The thought is frightening, for part of what that era produced was&#13;
the obedient, unquestioning, blind faith attitudes of people like Jeb&#13;
Magruder of Watergate fame. Hopefully, the college campuses in the&#13;
seventies are not spewing out thousands of followers with too few&#13;
inquisitive, innovative, clear-thinking leader-types.&#13;
Meanwhile, back at UW .p we have a make-shift student government&#13;
struggling to keep itself alive. A problem that exists here that many&#13;
other student governments do not have to surmount is an unworkable&#13;
constition. The power it grants PSGA is . nice on paper, but unfortunately&#13;
the document was not drawn up in consultation and concurrence&#13;
with those on campus who presently hold that power --&#13;
faculty and administration. Hence, trying to work through it is impossible.&#13;
The PSGA steering committee, which will be made up of students&#13;
from various organizations and committees including Jennett and&#13;
members of the existing Student Senate, hopes tQ_propose a solution to&#13;
that problem as well as others of organization, structure and goals for&#13;
PSGA. The 'lim is a working, effective student government, genuinely&#13;
interested in the students' welfare and involved in campus gover- ·&#13;
nance. Any of the committee's proposals will need active students with&#13;
vision and empathy to realize them and indeed make it an effective&#13;
and profitable year, and provide a foundation not only for PSGA to&#13;
build on but for the entire university.&#13;
~ _Uf/ The Psksicie' -- ~,,.. .&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the acaciemi'c&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 Library'.&#13;
Learning Center. Telephone (414 ) 553-2295.&#13;
The Pa_rkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
r~flected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
. Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subJect of&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
less, typed 11nd double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
letters for length and good taste . All letters must be signed and include&#13;
addr~ss, phone number and student status or faculty rank . Names will&#13;
be_ withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF : Jane M . Sehliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR : Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR : Debr a Friedel!&#13;
NEWS EDITOR : Kathryn Wellner&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR : Dan Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR : Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR: David Daniels&#13;
WRITERS : Stephen Gifford, Barbara Hanson, Harvey Hedden, Gary&#13;
Jensen: M ichael_ Olszy k, Mari lyn Schubert, John Sorensen, Steve&#13;
St&#13;
apanian, Carrie Ward, Ken Konkol, Tom Defouw Neal Sautner Bruce Wagner ' '&#13;
PJ_HOTOGRAPHERS : Ron Antrim, Allen Frederickson Brian Ross 1m Ruffalo ' '&#13;
CARTOONISTS : Amy Cundari, Gary Huck&#13;
LAYOUT : Terri Gelenian, Terry Knop, staff&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER : Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER : Amy Cundari&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Gary Worthi ngton ,&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF : Fred Lawrence, Jim Magruder &#13;
We get letters&#13;
I&#13;
To the editors:&#13;
This goddam minority&#13;
recruitment makes college a&#13;
mockery. What makes these lowgrade&#13;
morons so special that they&#13;
will go out of their way to recruit&#13;
thelD and then lower admission&#13;
standards. That's right I should&#13;
have known the government and&#13;
thal money-grubbing administration&#13;
is behind it ail. They&#13;
will slOOPto anything to increase&#13;
enrollment ($). Hoo-haha so all&#13;
men are created equal - baha?&#13;
Well it is a hard act to follow&#13;
whenyou clean up the streets and&#13;
turn these beasts into professors ..&#13;
What have you got up your sleeve&#13;
as a sequal? Since admission&#13;
standards flew out the door and&#13;
offthe floor with your brains why&#13;
not . offer a course in Brain&#13;
Surgery For Fun Or Profit.&#13;
Another killer that gets my gut&#13;
is this bit about these black&#13;
students being dissatisfied&#13;
because Parkside offers as they&#13;
say; "nothing relevant to their&#13;
lifestyle." What do they want a&#13;
course in Head Shrinking Made&#13;
Easy? Madison had courses and&#13;
organizations in Pan-Africansim&#13;
and they went defunct because l.&#13;
lack of student interest 2. it was&#13;
determined that if you cater to&#13;
every whim and whip of one&#13;
ethnic group you are obligated by&#13;
the nature of d&#13;
all other eth ~mocracy to serve&#13;
SUchas G mc groups as well&#13;
erman French J .&#13;
etc.ltisnotthe'Ame" ew~~&#13;
~~~~ocracy ~o.prom~~~:n~r::&#13;
nocentneny Thank God&#13;
fth°rthere are a lot of people unlik~&#13;
e Blacks Mexica J&#13;
who don't 'ba ~, .ews etc. - ve a dlStingu· hi cultural tradiu IS 109 Ion to return to&#13;
When will people realiz~&#13;
Amer,lca has a beautiful tradition&#13;
and histor-y of its own - sometht&#13;
common to one and all '! mg&#13;
Last but not least is this It&#13;
about minority faculty quo':s&#13;
e&#13;
Sure I support Equal Em:&#13;
ployment Opportunities - but not&#13;
at t~e expense of reducing&#13;
requu:ements but rather in increasing&#13;
skills and qUalifications,&#13;
I nope the administration sticks&#13;
to ItS. guns on this policy or&#13;
Par.kSlde won't have a working&#13;
bram cell to its narne!&#13;
. E~cuse me I'm feeling sick and&#13;
the hrst symptom is thinking. .&#13;
Stacy PastIer&#13;
Kenosha Sophomore&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Re your front page article&#13;
'Jennett heads PSGA' in the issue&#13;
of 3 Oct.&#13;
Tom Jennett has not been&#13;
appointed President of PSGA by&#13;
SMIchanges&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
Building (second and third&#13;
levels)" said Moy. He added that&#13;
the first floor would facilitate&#13;
engineering science labs later&#13;
this semester.&#13;
Academic changes&#13;
The biggest ehaI)ges, thqugh,&#13;
have occurred academically. In&#13;
the school's second division,&#13;
Business Management, a new&#13;
cooperative program is being set&#13;
up similar to the one already&#13;
existing in Applied Science and&#13;
Technology.&#13;
"The C&lt;HlP is a planned and&#13;
supervised educational program,&#13;
which consists of alternating&#13;
semesters of classroom in·&#13;
struction with off-campus work&#13;
experience," Moy said.&#13;
"Students become eligible for&#13;
this program after the completion&#13;
of their sophomore year."&#13;
Another new expansion in&#13;
Business Management is "the&#13;
internship program." Its purpose&#13;
is to relate courses to outside&#13;
working conditions, during the&#13;
same semester.&#13;
Due to new facilities at&#13;
Parkside, this program, along&#13;
with others, will utilize more&#13;
space here. The School of Modern&#13;
Industry will have an accounting&#13;
lab available to them, plus&#13;
several small production&#13;
equipment labs.&#13;
With continued building, new&#13;
stall members are needed to fill&#13;
these areas.&#13;
One of three recently recruited&#13;
teachers in Business&#13;
Management is Ron Singer, who&#13;
isteaChing Legal Environment of&#13;
Business. Singer, former at·&#13;
torney general of New York&#13;
state, IS also advisor of&#13;
Parkside's Pre-Law Club.&#13;
The first full-time teacher io&#13;
marketing is Richard Yanzito.&#13;
He has done extensive traveling&#13;
pertaining to his field throughout&#13;
Switzerland, Germany, and&#13;
Europe- in general.&#13;
Jim Polczynski, the third new&#13;
instructor, teaches Principles of&#13;
Management. Polczynski&#13;
graduated last year from&#13;
Madison with a MBA in&#13;
organizational management.&#13;
Both divisions of Engineering&#13;
Science and Business&#13;
Management have made sub--&#13;
stantial changes in graduation&#13;
requirements, as outlined in this&#13;
year's 1973-74catalogue.&#13;
"Generally, requirements have&#13;
broadened, so as to avoid over·&#13;
specialization," said Moy.&#13;
An "Ilkredit elective pack"&#13;
highlights these changes. It is&#13;
designed so that students can sit&#13;
down with an advisor, and try to&#13;
put together a set of courses&#13;
corresponding with that student's&#13;
academic goals.&#13;
Field Experience&#13;
Besides on-campus courses,&#13;
field'experience helps in reaching&#13;
these goals.&#13;
In the Engineering division, a&#13;
Computer Control course is being&#13;
offered at Dynamatic in Kenosha&#13;
this fall. Last year an accounting&#13;
course was taught there.&#13;
Field experience in Small&#13;
Business Management, one of the&#13;
school's nine new courses,&#13;
centers on Racine's business&#13;
community. It is sponsored by&#13;
Racine's Environment Committee&#13;
and the Racine&#13;
Manufacturers' Association.&#13;
~e stullent senate. Tom ba been&#13;
osen as ,interim cbatrman of&#13;
the executive commrttee of the&#13;
student senate,&#13;
The President can only be&#13;
elected by the votes of the entire&#13;
s.tudent body in a general election.&#13;
The senate can make no&#13;
such appointment.&#13;
Since there could be no acbon&#13;
taken by the senate without a&#13;
quorum, and since there can exist&#13;
00 quorum because of absence of&#13;
elect~ members. all senate&#13;
meetmgs must adjourn to&#13;
ex~tive session, TIle executive&#13;
session made the choice.&#13;
Tom Jennett is tbe chief&#13;
executive of the Student senate&#13;
not the President of !'SGA&#13;
Kenneth R Konkol&#13;
Senator&#13;
Editor's :"ote: A tbedr; •.ith&#13;
both Jennett and JeYlel&#13;
Echelbargu, As istant Onn o(&#13;
Students and PSG.\ ad\ i or.&#13;
conHrmed thatla t ....rel!:' lor.&#13;
was corred, Jennett is the ~.&#13;
terim President o( PSG,.\,. appointed&#13;
b) the Senate until ne ..&#13;
elections are held. The d2te (or&#13;
elections is indeHnite until •&#13;
special student steff"ing committee&#13;
can make it recommendation&#13;
for student gO\ern·&#13;
ment at Parkside,&#13;
"The class gives people an&#13;
interest in small business and a&#13;
chance to work \\;lh them:' ~toy&#13;
said. "It's Intended (or the gII).&#13;
who 0\\--n5 a small busmess and&#13;
wants to impro\'e iV'&#13;
George Stinsoo from Johnsoll's&#13;
Wax instructs th.ts course.&#13;
Many of SM!'s classes are&#13;
heing held on evenlOgs and&#13;
Saturday mornIngs this )·ear. for&#13;
the first time also, This was to&#13;
give aU students a chance to&#13;
enroll in some of them. expIamed&#13;
Moy.&#13;
Looking ahead to opporturulles&#13;
in technological employment.&#13;
Moy said chances were excellent&#13;
"A few yean beck. in the late&#13;
sixties. fields i.n indu try ....·ere&#13;
overcrowded. so majors In that&#13;
area started droppmg off """.&#13;
hovre\'er, many po5lhons are&#13;
opening up agaIn, but the number&#13;
of graduates to fill them are&#13;
down."&#13;
AC.TIoI'-LlJ', D"Vf..&#13;
I. PREFER To&#13;
UJ.IEVE ..,.Ol.l',:I£&#13;
A Frc;.l"'Iff'lT OF you.R&#13;
O'-JN IMAGINATION!&#13;
HOFFMAN'S&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
TAPES&#13;
Discount Prices!&#13;
5707 - S~_,&#13;
1C.... h&#13;
Wednesdlly, OCt. 10, "73 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Editor' _.:"ne _eme ....... ~ ,.IIl_" RA: h&#13;
tie... wtlb Gmnu4_n'lcea«rW:.tedn .•,P............&#13;
Ills&amp;«) , G...... Tiltr$ art Ia,_.&#13;
~8anH .. _&#13;
The Women·, UheralJOn !&gt;lo,-ement .n ID~ly.....-J ud&#13;
political effort. Because at thIS personal , are ol1en .....&#13;
fusmg to ~ not actl ·01)' In,·oI,·ed In th !&gt;lO''''' t (and ev Ia&#13;
those in tho ,anguardsl, In R.btr1b 0' Fe mill m by Judith Hole and&#13;
Ellen Levine, there IS an attempt mado to cJanfy UIl whal Ihe&#13;
. lo,ement IS all a It IS ,aluabl. Ia e' ryo .... In or cuI 01 Ihe&#13;
. tovemenl&#13;
··ThISboolt IS a Sludy of the l'OSIU1l&#13;
ates - a ~ and anal) of&#13;
de,elopment. pIulosophical thinkmg.&#13;
omen' mo\'ement'"&#13;
In Pan two, tlOOfi,e. "R stanc:e to th '&gt;'om n'l Movern&lt;Ill&#13;
the authors c:ons.der _. ndicule IS used to dl&#13;
MO\'ement'&#13;
"The label'bra-bum ... ,' an h oncally IDaccurat one ongmaled&#13;
lth med1a cmerage at the . I Am na prot t dtmon&#13;
'tratlon 10 t . The organIUn at that demonstration had up a&#13;
tra can In ",lueh arocl ·mbohall repr.-&gt;tatl 01 fomiJl ty&#13;
ere Iabe dlSC&amp;rded Bf8SS1 ere 00 01 th ed items&#13;
one of se,..,raJ artlcl .. at cIothinll h,ch' lOct • th act at d rdinI&#13;
them wa meant Ia....... • pohtlcal m phor for the rej 101\ 01 aU&#13;
restr1cllons and Impllot 10 lbe tr.dltlonally a~ dtflDltiona of&#13;
'the femlO1Oewoman' ,The phra ·bra·bum ... • wa fIldmUy&#13;
pro''0C8t1,.• Iamak. headlmes, and ",th d) llI&amp; b) the media&#13;
tele\1 ion. ramo. magaZJ.ne'5,. ne"A-spapel"'S - II eo.:en med an&#13;
IuSloncal ..... lIt) In all ca , Its usa e, tfllllbly a a t 1........ 01&#13;
'(act" or descnpIJon. sen·ed Ia ndlcul ..&#13;
Rtbirtb IS a goldmlDe at &lt;locumen and background Informal*!&#13;
,,1uch are essential Ia make any ratJonal )Udgemen .boul Ihe&#13;
l. 'o\'ement There 15a comprehensl\ cllronolog)' of lmporu.- t'Yeata&#13;
Sl1lCet96l. th.-·declaratlon 01 sentiments" from the I" Sentca Falll&#13;
co.wention. the rer:ommendatlollO from Prelldonl Kennedy'l I&#13;
CommlSSlOnon the tatus 01 '&gt;'omen, the BIll of !Ugh compoeed In&#13;
t by the , 'ational OrgaruZ8uon for Women and the maNf Ia of the&#13;
..... Yorl&lt;.radical famlnlSts.&#13;
RtbirtII is a . ·ew Yorl&lt;.TIm.. boolt 10 auooatlon ..,th CBS&#13;
and has a reporter·, Objecl.Vlty Guy, WIth tend« wholhiDlllbe&#13;
basIS for f..",n1S1l11Sa uOlled dlShke for m n." 111 g Uyben&lt;ftl from&#13;
.. en a cursory examl1lauon at the book The element 01 hoWlIly ol1en&#13;
found In femlOlStlIunture ISrereshmgly l.acltlr~ In Re~,&#13;
In Part t"'O, Section fcur. •·...emlOlSt SocIal Cnuque," the .... of&#13;
chi\'aJry is examined&#13;
"Proper behaVIor for • man demands thai ant show 0IIllfClaI&#13;
c'Ou:rtes) and consu:leration to "omen Anu·' muUs parlIcularly&#13;
Irl&lt;.edby lhe femln t re)&lt;Ction 01 the lO&lt;&amp;lIed 'ruc«IeI •&#13;
The) argue that qutStlOlllDg forma of common coun mche&#13;
tts ho.. ununportanl the "OllIttI' mo' menl IS In femlnlat&#13;
anal) • _ .. er. It IS quIte cI r that the .pphcauon 01 a cIaubW&#13;
standard,andch"·aIry I poht Ifonnul.tiOll. bothanelljii ,'on&#13;
0( and remforum ... t for ·roIe tereotypong, th at lam&#13;
Femuusts also oot. tllat f d~m and for othtn ..... Ia be&#13;
""",all -,-.Iued bolll" Ioral pauern • then court Y. I • opt&gt;1 of&#13;
doors, shauld bo .xtended to all ard1 0( . ..&#13;
Hole and Lt ,ne SlK:c:eed ",.th OYlO colon In ther .tl&#13;
untangle th m of shaulln 'C1I of Uber lion U ,cu&#13;
readon.bookaboutth 10' mentln)ourhf .1 t 'th&#13;
at femnuI'" In lilt n led&#13;
the CJI1IIlIS. IIl2aIiooaI&#13;
.nd Ictlvlti of t.hf. new&#13;
New Extension&#13;
course oHered&#13;
Cor\t.tn Kin, Par&#13;
teachllll the coorso&#13;
'I'\Iesda l·. Oc tober 16&#13;
muu rators club p lden. and oth&#13;
the prl1lClpI at group chsc IOn.&#13;
parllamentaf) proce&lt;lure, ",til tmphasl&#13;
,.,og and dtclSlOll malung&#13;
CAROL Y. COLE, 1. w&#13;
announ,os Ihe opening of office&lt; for the practice of&#13;
eLI 'ICAL OCIAL~· ORK&#13;
JnJIl'.duol :110"101. and 1'...,,,ly COll",dm4&#13;
BeI'OI',oro/ Prot'/ems 01 0,,1.1, en&#13;
s~.. , bin Slr~&#13;
Racine&#13;
Houn ~, ~rromtmcnt&#13;
614·771 t&#13;
We get letters&#13;
To the editors: . . This goddam minority&#13;
ruitment makes college a&#13;
~ockery. What makes these lowademorons&#13;
so special that they&#13;
gr th" t . ill go out of err way o recruit&#13;
:em and then lower admission&#13;
standards. That's right I should&#13;
have known the government and&#13;
that mon~y-gr~bb~ng administration&#13;
1s beh_md 1t ~l. They&#13;
will stoop to anythmg to mcrease&#13;
enrollment ($). Hoo-haha so all&#13;
men are created equal - haha?&#13;
Well it is a hard act to follow&#13;
when you clean up_ the streets and .&#13;
turn these beasts mto professors.&#13;
What have you got up your sleeve&#13;
as a sequal? Since admission&#13;
standards flew out the door and&#13;
off the floor with your brains why&#13;
not offer a course in Brain&#13;
Surgery For Fun Or Profit.&#13;
Another killer that gets my gut&#13;
is this bit about these black&#13;
students being dissatisfied&#13;
because Parkside offers as they&#13;
say; "nothing relevant to their&#13;
lifestyle." What do _the_y want a course in Head Shrmkmg Made&#13;
Easy? Madison had cour~es a?d&#13;
organizations in Pan-Africans1m&#13;
and they went defunct because 1.&#13;
lack of student interest 2. it was&#13;
determined that if you cater to&#13;
every whim and whi~ of one&#13;
ethnic group you are obligated by&#13;
the nature of democracy to erve&#13;
all other ethnic group a well&#13;
such a~ German, French, Jewi h&#13;
etc. It is not the American pirit&#13;
of democracy to promote a return&#13;
to ethnocentricity. Thank God _&#13;
for there are a lot of people unlike&#13;
the Blacks, Mexicans, Jews etc. _ who don't have a distinguishing&#13;
cultural tradition to return to.&#13;
Whe_n will people realize&#13;
America has a beautiful tradition&#13;
and history of its own _ something&#13;
common to one and all?&#13;
Last but not least is this line&#13;
about minority faculty quotas. Sure I support Equal Employment&#13;
Opportunities - but not&#13;
at the expense of reducing&#13;
requirements but rather in increasing&#13;
skills and qualifications.&#13;
I hope the administration sticks&#13;
to its guns on this policy or&#13;
Parkside won't have a working&#13;
brain cell to its name!&#13;
. Excuse me I'm feeling sick and&#13;
the first symptom is thinking . ·&#13;
Stacy Postier&#13;
Kenosha Sophomore&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Re your front page article&#13;
'Jennett heads PSGA' in the i ue&#13;
of 3 Oct.&#13;
Tom Jennett has not been&#13;
appointed President of PSGA by&#13;
SMI changes&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
Building (second and third&#13;
levels)" said Moy. He added that&#13;
the first floor would facilitate&#13;
engineering science labs later&#13;
this semester.&#13;
Academic changes&#13;
The biggest changes, though,&#13;
have occurred academically. In&#13;
the school's second division,&#13;
Business Management, a new&#13;
cooperative program is being set&#13;
up similar to the one already&#13;
existing in Applied Science and&#13;
Technology.&#13;
"The C(r()p is a planned and&#13;
supervised educational progra_m,&#13;
which consists of alternatmg&#13;
semesters of classroom instruction&#13;
with off-campus work&#13;
experience," Moy said.&#13;
"Students become eligible for&#13;
this program after the completion&#13;
of their sophomore_year:"&#13;
Another new expansion m&#13;
Business Management is "the&#13;
internship program." Its puri:x:ise&#13;
is to relate courses to outside&#13;
working conditions, during the&#13;
same semester.&#13;
Due to new facilities at&#13;
Parkside, this program, along&#13;
with others will utilize more&#13;
space here. The School of Mod~rn&#13;
Industry will have an accountmg&#13;
lab available to them, plus&#13;
everal small production&#13;
equipment labs.&#13;
With continued building, new&#13;
taff members are needed to fill&#13;
these areas.&#13;
One of three recently recruited&#13;
teachers in Business&#13;
Management is Ron Singer, who&#13;
is teaching Legal Environment of&#13;
Business. Singer, former attorney&#13;
general of New York&#13;
late, is also advisor of&#13;
Parkside's Pre-Law Club.&#13;
The first full-time teacher iri&#13;
marketing is Richard Yanzito.&#13;
He has done extensive traveling&#13;
pertaining to his field throughout&#13;
Switzerland, Germany. and&#13;
Europe in general.&#13;
Jim Polczynski, the third new&#13;
instructor, teaches Principles of&#13;
Management. Polczynski&#13;
graduated last year fro!ll&#13;
Madison with a rnA m&#13;
organizational managem_ent. . Both divisions of Engmeenng&#13;
Science and Business&#13;
Management have made ~bstantial&#13;
changes in graduation&#13;
requirements, as outlined in thi&#13;
year's 1973-74 catalogue.&#13;
"Generally, requirements have&#13;
broadened, so as to avoid overspecialization,"&#13;
said Joy. ., An "18-credit elective pack&#13;
highlights these changes. It i_ designed so that students can it&#13;
down with an advi or, and try to&#13;
put together a set of coursE;S&#13;
corresponding with that tudent&#13;
academic goals. Field Experience&#13;
Besides on-campu . cour . '&#13;
field'experience help m reach,&#13;
these goals. . . . . In the Engineering dm ion: a&#13;
Computer Control course ' bemg&#13;
offered at Dynamatic m Keno _ha&#13;
this fall. Last year an accounting&#13;
course was taught the~e. 11&#13;
Field experience in ma&#13;
Business fanagement, on of the&#13;
hool's nine ne\~ coui_- e&#13;
SC • ' bum&#13;
centers on Ra_cme ed bv&#13;
community. It ' sponsor - Racine's Environment Co_m· d the Racine mittee an .. Manufacturers' A oc1ation.&#13;
nator&#13;
HOFFMAN'S&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
TAPES&#13;
Discount Prices!&#13;
5707 - Sin~ •·&#13;
Ke esh&#13;
Wedn sday, Oct. JO, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RA GER 3&#13;
th&#13;
0 m&#13;
ew Extens·on&#13;
course offered&#13;
. R&#13;
.4 &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, OCt. 10, 1973&#13;
Ranger&#13;
classlfleds&#13;
H ••• ". ,t ••••"', w,,_ .((:."11_,, ,....... "at,.... c.atl U1 M62 ..,.... ,&#13;
• oa SAL. o. ~ rK:et'dM'..... I.e&#13;
......... ,. C6M m·"'" aftw ,&#13;
IdtwtMII ~... U" 'ra". ....&#13;
~ ........ 1 ...... c,1t Qtnll S&#13;
....&#13;
................... ...., ..... .-.::==. .....,... lit ... t. .. , wtw...., ....&#13;
~ ... "... h-. MWfl' •• fill ... ,.tt """••• •· ·., ... It.,.. ua a'aay ... ~I ......&#13;
........... dlI&amp;Mf ,.. ItMiNIt .....,..&#13;
Oftk;t LLC0'_&#13;
•• s... K ......... .., "&#13;
~_~ 21a_ ....&#13;
••&#13;
,. s... It'n ""--"" V •• l c......&#13;
~'*' •...., ,1 ...&#13;
"'*"YoM. ca"'f« .. ..- ~&#13;
rr....,..-t '1 ..... flt'M ,"",n&#13;
......... .,. fiKIl en. ""IC.&#13;
• 'U. ("I"" _ ....,.e ,"I&#13;
......... .,. fill ., ' ..&#13;
W1l'."TER BREAK&#13;
• J . 2·10. $2&amp;9 p""mTalla.$«'Yl&lt;t&#13;
8MH on.3 to • Room&#13;
• ROUND TRIP J."&#13;
• 1 NIGHTS OUTRIGGeR&#13;
wen&#13;
• 0." (tTY TOUR&#13;
• Flowl. La, G•• nING&#13;
• gROUND ' •• "iF,.S&#13;
• Toua ttOS"T s•• vlcas&#13;
• "LL TIP' &amp; TAXIS&#13;
For ~k •• 1On fOrm&#13;
CAM.~ 'UVII. CI"' ••&#13;
I,.LC DIn&#13;
Brief news&#13;
In their meeting of October 7, Parkside gtudent Government&#13;
Association IPSGAJ decided to bring to students a referendum which&#13;
I1lCludesthe following changes in the p,sGA constilution. I. Spring&#13;
elections will be held on the second Tuesday and Wednesday io Aprtl&#13;
and tndlviduals will take office on graduation day. 12. A quorum of&#13;
t,,&lt;Hhirds of those elected must be Parkside students. Individuals not&#13;
receiviog enough votes to be elected will become alternates. U a&#13;
quorum cannot be met at any particular meeting an alternate will fill&#13;
in. 3. Both secretaries will be combined into one non~lective office,&#13;
appointed by the President with the senate's approval. 4. The student&#13;
wuco committee will be stricken from the senate.&#13;
Ten per cent of the student body must sign a petition requesting the&#13;
above named referendum. The petition will be out next week .&#13;
Elections for this year's PSGA will be held on November 13 and 14.&#13;
Anyooe ioterested in running for PSGA offices may pick up a&#13;
nominating petitioo in the PSGA office, LLCD 193.&#13;
*&#13;
U you like good music, ~n reserve 8 p.m. on November 8th.&#13;
Trumpet player Maynard Ferguson will be appearing at the Com'&#13;
munication Arts Theater. Tickets will cost $3 for students and $4 for&#13;
the Public. ThISis expected to be a sell out, but students will be given&#13;
rlf'Stchance at buying tickets. The In/ormation center will be selling&#13;
tlckets for one week, starting Oct. 15.After that the remaioing tickets&#13;
... ill be turned over to public outlets.&#13;
TIle first annual that Parkside has ever had&#13;
'"&#13;
will be organized&#13;
starting this Thursday and Friday io Library Learniog center 0·173.&#13;
Students interested in joining may come to any of the two meetings,&#13;
"luch will be held at 4 p.m. 00 Thursday and 10a.m. on Friday.&#13;
TIle meetings "ill be used to elecl ollicers, inform members about&#13;
thell" jobs on the yearbook, talk about plans and set up deadlines for&#13;
copy, and evaluation of the work of publishers' representatives. who&#13;
...ill be at both meetings.&#13;
Students not able to attend the meetings may contact either Ken&#13;
Konkol at 553-2244 or Bruce Wagner at 552·9462, for further ioformation.&#13;
TIle weekend October 26-28 PAS and Ragtime Rangers are spon-&#13;
*&#13;
sormg an ~bng to Louisville, KenluCky. TIle trip includes lodging,&#13;
hayrtde, rtverboat party, Churchill Downs tour, horse raciog, a&#13;
football game and a party at the stadlum. Car pools will be formed All&#13;
of thIS for $7.00 plus gas. Sign up in the Student Activities Olfice LL'C&#13;
0197. '&#13;
J&amp;J&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center&#13;
Super Low Prices&#13;
2200 Lathrop :he._ Racine&#13;
5!8-5ftth St.. Kenosha&#13;
CHEAP DRUNK SPECIAL&#13;
ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK&#13;
Monday - Beer $2 Mixed Drinks $4&#13;
()\Mle~s 75C&#13;
G,('~ 1~.issi8. willi v Parksi~e1.0,&#13;
BAR LIVE MUSICI&#13;
W"., Fri., Sat.&#13;
BOOGIE MAN&#13;
Oct. 10, 12. 13&#13;
00 the south side of Hwy SO,east of Hwy 31.&#13;
United Migrant opportunity Service (UMOSl will bold their annual&#13;
*&#13;
meeting and banquet on Sahlrday, October 13 at 7 p.m. 10 Union Hall&#13;
at UW_Milwaukee. 'The mam speaker ~ll be U.S. Senator Gaylord&#13;
Nelson. There will be a dance WIth Mar-iachi Azteca and Oscar Ma&#13;
tinez and Orchestra. 'There are a limited number of tickets availabf"&#13;
and they may be obtained from Wayne Ramierz in Tallent Hall 'l:l5&#13;
e&#13;
Tickets are $5. ~ * .&#13;
TIle Ragtime Rangers are planning a ski trip to Steamboat Springs&#13;
Colorado, January 2 thru 7. Anyone who wants to go but needs SOm'&#13;
extra cash is .invit~ to get together WIth us to wash a North Centra~&#13;
Airlioes Jet 10 Milwaukee. We need about 30 people and we will&#13;
automatically make $801),'The m?ney will be applied to your trip. U&#13;
ioterested sign up in the Studenl LIfe OfIice LLC 0197 .&#13;
'!be Federal Services .Entrance Exam, commonly referred&#13;
*&#13;
to as the&#13;
Civil Service Exam, will be offered saturday (Oct. 13) in Room 101&#13;
Greenquist Hall. 'The test is scheduled to start al 8:30 a.m. No advance signup is&#13;
necessary. Other Civil Service Exams will also be given Nov. 10and&#13;
Jan 12, 1974, at the same time and place.&#13;
For further information, contact the Parkside Placement Office at&#13;
(553-2452.&#13;
*&#13;
The iron list of the law is being strengthened in Racioe County.&#13;
Last Tuesday Racine's city council ,rushed .through an ordinance of&#13;
City Attorney Jack Harvey and Racme Pohce Chief Donald Dodge&#13;
that prohibits drinking of alcoholic beverages on that city's streets and&#13;
sidewalks, as well as parked motor vehicles.&#13;
Dodge, did point ~ut, however. that .~e ordinan~e would be ignored&#13;
on certam days durmg the year when It would be Impossible to arrest&#13;
the great number of people" who would be drinking.&#13;
Harvey and Dodge said the ordinance would help the city clam&#13;
down on crime in certain areas of the city: The problem arises, th~&#13;
say, when persons other than patrons of taverns gather around&#13;
taverns for the purpose of causing trouble. Up until now, Racioe Police&#13;
had little they could do to curb the trouble makers.&#13;
In September the Racioe county board approved a county ordinance&#13;
which prohibits the picketing of an individual's home. TIle ordinance&#13;
does not appear to interfere with picketing at a place of employment&#13;
Rationalization for the ordinance was summed up by Superv~&#13;
Dennis Kornwolf when he said the supervisors were concerned with&#13;
family members io the homes being picketed.&#13;
*&#13;
Tickets will go on sale Wednesday, Oct. 10 for the three act play&#13;
"The Virus" by Parkside Professor of English Herbert Kubly. Tickets&#13;
can be purchased at the Information Kiosk for $1.SO(students) and&#13;
will be sold to the general public starting Monday, Oct. 15 for $3. The&#13;
play will be performed Nov. 1,2,3, and 4 in the Comm Arts Tbeater.&#13;
A volunteer is needed to assist a handicapped student&#13;
*&#13;
in getting in&#13;
and out of an automobile. This would. involve only one hour of your&#13;
time as follows: MWF 9:00 a.m. and 10:45 a.m. and on 'ITH 9:30 a.m.&#13;
and 4: 15p.m. U you can help at any or all of these times please coo·&#13;
tact the Student Health Ollice DI98 LLC. '&#13;
Parkside Young Republicans will be meeting Wed. October 17 at&#13;
*&#13;
3:3Otn LLC 0-174. A Constitution Committee meeting will precede it at&#13;
2:30.&#13;
*&#13;
There will ~ a Debate and Forensics meeting today from 3:30-4:1)&#13;
p.m. and tomorrow, Thursday, October 11 from 4'30-5'30 p m in 0-&#13;
liO of the library. All interested should attend one 6f th;"e ~';'tings.&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
presents&#13;
A DANCE&#13;
featuring&#13;
Back by Popular Demand&#13;
DADDY WHISKERS&#13;
Sat., Oct. 13 9:00 -1:00&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wis. J.D.s Required&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Whed;;ne;;sda~;.y ,~OcOcit~. 1110~,119:977331 ______________________________ _&#13;
*&#13;
Ranger&#13;
classlf leds&#13;
ll lTER BREAK&#13;
• J '. 2-10.&#13;
$269&#13;
tt d the m ting may contact either Ken&#13;
Bruce Wagner at 552-9462. for further in-&#13;
*&#13;
J&amp;J&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center&#13;
Super Low Prices&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave .. Racine&#13;
518-56th St .. Kenosha&#13;
CHEAP DRUNK SPECIAL&#13;
ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK&#13;
Monday - Beer s2 Mixed Drinks $4&#13;
LIVE MUSIC!&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sat.&#13;
BOOGIE MAN&#13;
Oet. 10, 12, 13 on th south id ofH y 50, east ofHwy 31.&#13;
United Migrant Opportunity Service (UMOS) will hol~ their annual&#13;
meeting and banquet on Sat_urday, Octob~r 13 at 7 p.m. m Union Hall&#13;
at UW-Milwaukee. The main s~aker ~ll ~e U.S. Senator Gaylord&#13;
Nelson. There will be a dance wit~ ~ar1ach1 Azteca and Oscar Martinez&#13;
and Orchestra. There are a bm1ted number of tickets availabl&#13;
and they may be obtained from Wayne Ramierz in Tallent Hall 235~&#13;
Tickets are $5. ... *&#13;
The Ragtime Rangers are planning a ski trip to Steamboat Springs&#13;
Colorado, January 2 thru 7. Anyone w~o wants to go but needs som'&#13;
extra cash is invited to get together with us to wash a North Centra~&#13;
Airlines Jet in Milwaukee. We need a?out 30 ~ple and we Wi.11&#13;
automatically ma~e $800. The m~ney ":ill be applied to your trip. If&#13;
interested sign up m the Student Life Office LLC D197.&#13;
The Federal Services Entrance Exam, * commonly referred to as the&#13;
Civil Service Exam, will be offered Saturday (Oct. 13) in Room 101&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
The test is scheduled to start at 8:30 a.m. No advance signup is&#13;
necessary. Other Civil Service Exams will also be given Nov. 10 and&#13;
Jan 12, 1974, at the same time and place.&#13;
For further information, contact the Parkside Placement Office at&#13;
(553-2452. *&#13;
The iron fist of the law is being strengthened in Racine County.&#13;
Last Tuesday Racine's city council _rushed .throu~h an ordinance of&#13;
City Attorney Jack Harvey and Racine Pohce Chief Donald Dodge&#13;
that prohibits drinking of alcoholic beverages on that city's streets and&#13;
sidewalks, as well as parked motor vehicles. Dodge did point out, however, that the ordinance would be ignored&#13;
on certain days during the year when "it would be impossible to arrest&#13;
the great number of people" who would be drinking.&#13;
Harvey and Dodge said the ordinance would help the city clamp&#13;
down on crime in certain areas of the city. The problem arises, they&#13;
say, when persons other than patrons of taverns gather around&#13;
taverns for the purpose of causing trouble. Up until now, Racine Police&#13;
had little they could do to curb the trouble makers.&#13;
In September the Racine county board approved a county ordinance&#13;
which prohibits the picketing of an individual's home. The ordinance&#13;
does not appear to interfere with picketing at a place of employment&#13;
Rationalization for the ordinance was summed up by Superviso;&#13;
Dennis Kornwolf when he said the supervisors were concerned with&#13;
family members in the homes being picketed.&#13;
* "Tick~ts ~ go on ~ale Wednesday, Oct. 10 for the three act play&#13;
The Virus by Parkside Professor of English Herbert Kubly. Tickets&#13;
~n be purchased at the Information Kiosk for $1.50 (students) and&#13;
will be .sold to the general public starting Monday, Oct. 15 for $3. The&#13;
play will be performed Nov. 1, 2, 3, and 4 in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
* A volunteer is needed to assist a handicapped student in getting in&#13;
and out of an automobile. This would involve only one hour of your&#13;
time as follows: MWF 9:00 a .m . and 10:45 a.m. and on TI'H 9:30 a.m.&#13;
and 4: 15 p.m. If you can help at any or all of these times, please contact&#13;
the Student Health Office D198 LLC.&#13;
Pa_rkside Young Republicans will * be meeting Wed. October 17 at&#13;
3:30m LLC D-174. A Constitution Committee meeting will precede it at&#13;
2:30.&#13;
* There will~ a Debate and Forensics meeting today from 3:30-4:30&#13;
p.m. and tomorrow, Thursday, October 11 from 4·30-5·30 pm in D&#13;
110 of the library. All interested should attend one ~f th~e ~~tings:&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
presents&#13;
A DANCE&#13;
featuring&#13;
Back by Popular Demand&#13;
DADDY WHISKERS&#13;
Sat., Oct. 13 •150 9:00 -1:00&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wis. I.D.s Required &#13;
Pre-Law Oub advisor Ron Singer ()ef~ith&#13;
Tubbergen. student Wayne Van·&#13;
Pre-law strives to inform&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
n asked for more information about his club.&#13;
~w student Wayne Van Tubbergen's first&#13;
pre- 'onwas that the club had been "dead" for the&#13;
rf.8cbtwO or three semesters and was now re-&#13;
:::anizing. RANGER'S search for club news has&#13;
"", .. led this to be the case with many Parkside&#13;
dUbs. ofthe reason for this may be that it doesn't&#13;
~Uch to beCOmean official organization. All&#13;
t is required are the names of three mterested&#13;
:dents and the signature of an adVIsor. Thus. the&#13;
anization exists on paper even though Its :"berS mayhave graduated or lost interest after&#13;
the fll'Stmeeting" .&#13;
()1ce officially organized, however, keepmg a&#13;
dubaclive requires quite a bit of effort on the part&#13;
ci itsmemberSand advisor. Just getting a meeting&#13;
room requires filling out a form. contacting a&#13;
sometimes illusive advisor for his signature again&#13;
and then finding, as Pre-Law did. that the room is&#13;
lodted anyway.&#13;
Publicity also takes planning and sometimes&#13;
sheer perseverance. Duplication of posters means&#13;
filling out another form and, in some cases, obIainin~the&#13;
signature of Assistant Dean of Students&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger. The posters must then be&#13;
clstributed throughout the campus; in many cases&#13;
10 be torn down the day after by students&#13;
cisagreeingwith the purpose of the club (or maybe&#13;
by those who just have need of a paper airplane!).&#13;
RANGERprovides free publicity if the information&#13;
reaches our office before Thursday.&#13;
Pre-Law, however, seemed to have conquered&#13;
Ihesoproblems as tIl,ey got off to a fresh start at&#13;
Iheirmeeting of OCtober 2. They decided not to elect&#13;
permanent officers, but rather to assign responWednesday,&#13;
OCt. 10. 1973 THE! PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
sibilit~ as their activities required.&#13;
A.dvlsor Ron Singer, a lawyer and fanner&#13;
~:~:stant to the. New York state attorney general,&#13;
ed the meetmg to order. He suggested several&#13;
cour~es the group might pursue, which were widely&#13;
recelv~d. The general direction seemed to be inforrnatfonal,&#13;
with tours of local courts. jails and the&#13;
Wisconsin S.upreme Court being planned, as well as&#13;
the schedulmg of speakers of interest both to club&#13;
members and the student body. Other ideas in·&#13;
cluded maintenance of a scrap book of articles&#13;
relevant ~ pre-law students and observation of the&#13;
small claIms cases being brought by Parkside&#13;
students.&#13;
Although, in many cases there were no definite&#13;
~tatistics available, RANGER was able to get some&#13;
Idea of what being a pre-law student is like. As with&#13;
pre-med there ,is no required undergraduate major,&#13;
but the club Wlll attempt to steer its members into&#13;
courses which may help them on the Law School&#13;
Admission Test or after they have been accepted to&#13;
a law school. The LSAT is unlike the pre-med exam&#13;
m that all information is provided, with the student&#13;
applying his-her knowledge and common sense in&#13;
reaching an answer&#13;
According to Singer. most people with satisfactory&#13;
grades - that is. 3.00 or better and an LSAT&#13;
score of 550 (out of 800) - could be accepted to a law&#13;
school. Some law schools are. of course. considered&#13;
better than others. with the ISO schools accredited&#13;
by the American Bar Association amoog the more&#13;
reputable. "Very few students can pick and choose&#13;
between them - it is competitive," he stated.&#13;
Singer also said that the in-state schools at&#13;
Madison and Marquette were probably tbe best&#13;
chofces since graduation guarantees automatic&#13;
acceptance to the state bar.&#13;
STORE HOURS: MON.-SAT. 10-9&#13;
SUN. 10-6&#13;
Pho... 6~8063&#13;
Itls whatls happening&#13;
"ednuday. Oct. It: The \\o1uteskellar IS ha"na audJUOll5at I pm&#13;
Everyone is 'lli elcome.&#13;
WedMsday. oei. 18: PAB ponsonng the movie ". uperman"&#13;
Creenquist Hall tecrure Room 103 at 7::10 p.m Adm on 7&gt; ct!II&#13;
Thursday. Oct. It: MeetUlll of aU minonly llJden at 12'4$ In&#13;
Greenqwst Hall Lecture Room t03&#13;
Saturday. Oct. 13: PAB sponsonng a dan Wlth"Oadd Wh&#13;
in AB from 9 pm to t am Adm' Ion IS8150 and lO,a requIred&#13;
turday. Oct. 13: PAB·Ragtime Rangers ponJOI" bus trtp to&#13;
Wisconsm vs. OhIO State foocbaU game, Bus ride and pme tid&lt;e\ II&#13;
810. ign up in Student Acuvuies oIfice u.C 0197&#13;
Thursday. Oct. 18: Theatre X 10 Comm Arts Theatre at 8 pm&#13;
Tickets are $1 at the door&#13;
Salurday. Oct. ZlI: gmi PI FraternIty presentinC. dance feolUnng&#13;
"McHenry" atSAB from 9p,m. to 10 m AdmisSion 8150&#13;
Sunday. Oct. %1: Road Railey ponoored by PAB·Ragtlm Rang ....&#13;
Registration at noon l1\ the east 101&#13;
Friday. Salurday. Sunday. Oct. !So!S: Ouung 10 Lou ville. Kentucky,&#13;
For more informabon see BRIEF NEW or conLlet SWclenI&#13;
Activities Ollice u.c D 197.&#13;
All items fOC" IT'S \\HAT' HAPPE~'" 'C boold be .. ballad I.&#13;
RA.'CER by noon "ed. prior'" pubtlcatloa &lt;I tho e In .. 1lIc:~"&#13;
Item i to a~ar_&#13;
Buenker opens&#13;
•&#13;
lecture series&#13;
The CLIO A sociation's&#13;
inaugural lecture series on "The&#13;
Humanities in an Industrial&#13;
Society" will open al Parkside on&#13;
Ocl, 11 "'ilh • ta1It titled&#13;
"Coalition Politics: The Key to&#13;
Progressh'e Era Reform" by&#13;
John Buenker, a odale&#13;
professor of hlStOlj' al '.p The&#13;
7: 30 p_m lecture ","ill be l1\ the&#13;
Library third Door level.&#13;
Buenker. who receved hIS Ph ,-&#13;
D. degree in histor)l £rom&#13;
GeorgetO'M""'D Universit)', i an&#13;
authority on the ProgressIve Era&#13;
and ",as the rectplent of the&#13;
minois LIte Histoncal Society&#13;
award for the most outsl8J1dUlll&#13;
article lltIbllShed l1\ the society's&#13;
JOUrnal dunng 1970,&#13;
The CLIO Association IS an&#13;
international organization&#13;
connected y,.ith 'CLlO: A1110&#13;
terdiscipHnaf}' Journal of&#13;
. ..&#13;
..&#13;
Time ../&#13;
to relax more.&#13;
WhwI '10'1 own a~"IIl. man tt_ tor ~ ..... ~"Inf"'" ~ In fbi pnaI- S-O- ....&#13;
... ~ of tt-.~. doe 1M -~ ...&#13;
a-oS 'lMn ..... at do tbI_ ~ teAl .....&#13;
I.". theft. noth!ftl· • ...., ""'" • e.rcttwood Cundo ..&#13;
RUDY FOR 1••• DlATa OCCUPANCY&#13;
Two Bedroom Ranch Style&#13;
Condominium Homes $24,500 to $27,000&#13;
TtltfIQIBIfd'twoMT................ .... ~&#13;
Now S..,.........- R....-Stytl ...... _rM¥ .. ..,-f"Ul ta&#13;
,...&#13;
• At , L.&gt;t.-_ ...... ~ ........&#13;
• (~r · - • F_ ........ ."._&#13;
~ . , -......, .~-...................&#13;
• e-.lnIFMITV_ • "-",,,,-._ • s.t-~1"""&#13;
...................... , ......-.. ............. ,....~ ....&#13;
• ....... -.-.,... • e-tW'J~ - --&#13;
MORf BIRCHWOOD HOMES READY SEPlE.IER 1S ; ..~&#13;
2 r..--S31. 3...... T_.....m...... S3C.- 4&#13;
1 ~ RaMtl $tytI 11.... t. S2.1._ ....,.._r __ .... ~_. __&#13;
""_rrhe __ ..,,.__ r&#13;
DECORATED AIIlD fURNI$I4£D IIIIOO£U&#13;
OPEN HOUSE&#13;
Weekdays 10 to 8 Weekends 1 to 5&#13;
For ""OA' ",fonNl.J(lIn&#13;
PHONE 1-552·9339&#13;
PlUI'K5CJE_ ..... , eo.-. REALTY we.&#13;
Literature, Hi tor)' and the&#13;
Phdosoph)' of HI tory" "'i&gt;ich ..&#13;
publIShed at Parltside and edlled&#13;
b). Parkslde facully memben&#13;
Robert Canary. Henry K.... clu.&#13;
Andr&lt;!w. IcLean and Oem ..&#13;
Dean&#13;
TMOR AVENUE UQUOR&#13;
t86S TIflor M., Racine •.&#13;
Sunple&#13;
slTo j·forword.&#13;
clossiC -001 of step&#13;
WI IodOv's&#13;
lhrowawov culture&#13;
Rehlo ecortridge.&#13;
be point Of fiber lip&#13;
marker IIIbasic on&#13;
Of rv:wv blue&#13;
5198 rot bod fof 0 pen&#13;
.,.ou may use the&#13;
restof~lfe&#13;
S198&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 10, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER S&#13;
It's what's happen·ng&#13;
Pre-Law Club advisor Ron Singer (left) with&#13;
Tubbergen. student Wayne Vanpre-law&#13;
strives to inforin&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
sked for more information about his club,&#13;
"~: student Wayne Van Tubbergen's first&#13;
pre·. was that the club had been "dead" for the&#13;
reacu: or three semesters and was now reb:i~izing.&#13;
RANGER'S search for club news has&#13;
:-ealed this to be the case with many Parkside&#13;
sibilit~ as their activities required.&#13;
..,&#13;
:r&#13;
0&#13;
;;&#13;
0-&#13;
"' • ..&#13;
•&#13;
:t&#13;
"'&#13;
:&#13;
t Ip m&#13;
~ 11'\ of the reason for this may be that it doesn't&#13;
taktmuch to becQme an official organi~ation. All&#13;
that is required are the names of th_ree mterested&#13;
J\dv1sor Ron Singer, a lav,,yer and former&#13;
assistant to the New York state attorney general&#13;
called the meeting t~ order. He suggested everai&#13;
cour~es the group might pursue, which were widely&#13;
rece1v~d. The general direction seemed to be info~mati~nal,&#13;
with tours of local courts, jail and the&#13;
W1sconsm S_upreme Court being planned, a well a&#13;
the scheduling of speakers of interest both to chili&#13;
members ~d the student body. Other ideas included&#13;
mamtenance of a scrap book of articles&#13;
relevant L&lt;;&gt; pre-law students and ob ervation of the&#13;
small claims cases being brought by Par ide&#13;
students.&#13;
Buenker opens&#13;
dents and the signature of an advisor. Thus, the&#13;
tu . th gh ·ts anization exists on paper even ou 1&#13;
org mbers may have graduated or lost interest after&#13;
• lecture series me . the first meeting. . . Once officially orga?1zed,. however, keepmg a&#13;
club active requires qwte a bit of effort on the part&#13;
of its members and advisor. Just getting a m~ting&#13;
room requires filling _out a fo~m,_ contactmg _a&#13;
metimes illusive advisor for ~1s signature agai_n&#13;
and then finding, as Pre-Law did, that the room 1s&#13;
locked anyway. Publicity also takes planning and sometimes&#13;
sheer perseverance. Duplication of posters means&#13;
filling out another form and, in some cases, obtaining&#13;
the signature of Assistant Dean of Students&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger. The posters must then be&#13;
distributed throughout the campus; in many cases&#13;
IO be torn down the day after by students&#13;
disagreeing with the purpose of the club (or maybe&#13;
by those who just have need of a paper airplane!).&#13;
RA: ·GER provides free publicity if the information&#13;
reaches our office before Thursday.&#13;
Pre-Law, however, seemed to have conquered&#13;
these problems as they got off to a fresh start at&#13;
their meeting of October 2. They decided not to elect&#13;
permanent officers, but rather to assign responAlthough,&#13;
in many cases, there were no definite&#13;
~tatistics available, RA.i'1GER was able to get some&#13;
idea of what being a pre-law student i like. As "ith&#13;
pre-med there_is no required undergraduate major,&#13;
but the club will attempt to steer its members into&#13;
courses which may help them on the Law Schooi&#13;
Admission Test or after they have been accepted to&#13;
~ law school. The LSAT is unlike the pre-med exam&#13;
m that all information is provided, v..ith the tudent&#13;
applying his-her knowledge and common sense in&#13;
reaching an answer&#13;
According to Singer, most people v.ith sati factory&#13;
grades - that is, 3.00 or better and an LSAT&#13;
score of 550 (out of 800) - could be accepted to a law&#13;
school. Some law schools are, of course, con idered&#13;
better than others, with the 150 schools accredited&#13;
by the American Bar Association among the more&#13;
reputable. "Very few student can pick and choo&#13;
between them - it is competitive," he tated.&#13;
Singer also said that the in- tale at&#13;
Madison and farquette were probably the be t&#13;
choices since graduation guarantee u ma ·&#13;
acceptance to the state bar.&#13;
TA1LOR AVENUE UQUOR&#13;
1865 Taylor /wt., Racine Wise.&#13;
STORE HOURS: MON.-SAT. 10-9&#13;
SUN. 10-6&#13;
Phone 634-8063&#13;
dut wuuet •&#13;
.... - ... o&#13;
Time ../&#13;
to relax more.&#13;
READY FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY&#13;
-&#13;
Two Bedroom Ranch Style&#13;
Condominium Homes $2,4,500 to$27,000&#13;
3400 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
AND&#13;
6926 39th AVENUE&#13;
2 a.drNia T-H111•&#13;
1 llecfr-RI&#13;
Mr,.,.,.,..,.. YfNCM __.. ,..,_&#13;
,.,_,,,._ -&#13;
O£COIIAT£0 A O FURJjfSH(O MOOEU&#13;
OPEN HOUSE&#13;
Weekdays 10 to 8 eekends 1 to 5&#13;
$198 &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday. OCt. 10. 1973&#13;
Power plant •••&#13;
e.... ,~~,...I&#13;
It' tso uneresung to note that at the end of a&#13;
nuclear power plants life time of 40 years, it is&#13;
,mply d. mantled and entombed in a block 01&#13;
Cf'Illenl&#13;
nuclear plant at Pans would have the capability&#13;
of producmg plutoruum 239 out of uranium 238&#13;
through the "breeder" acUIIO.Despite the economic&#13;
value of a lreeder creating its 0\\"11 fuel. it has the&#13;
drawback of not lmowing when to stop. Often&#13;
they will produce an excess 01up to 40 to 100 years 01&#13;
fuel m advance.&#13;
Among the other disadvantages of !he liquid&#13;
socbum-&lt;:ooledlast breeder are the lacts that tmlike&#13;
_Ier-cooled reactors, its fuel is about as higbly&#13;
ennched a 11\ bombs. its core is much more cornpact,&#13;
making great demands 011 coolanl properties&#13;
and !low rate, the very large amount 01 liquid&#13;
.o,bum , lughly combustible and would bum&#13;
lierdy in air or "''ater if us internal atmosphere&#13;
should Iail, and breeder reacton emit more&#13;
radiO' live particles in the air then pressurized&#13;
water reactors do.&#13;
Ra,boactl\'e particles m the air are less than ,&#13;
mllh that come direcu) lrom nuclear plants. The&#13;
,ncreased exposure to the average mdhndual is I....s&#13;
than I percent 01 the overall exposure to radia, ~.&#13;
em,tted lrom sol!, water. and cosmic particles,&#13;
medl al d,agnootic . and lallout lrom weapons teslS&#13;
lh t COMtltule an average of 100 La 150 mill1r'em per&#13;
lear It hould also be tated that coal-lire power&#13;
plant5 emil m urable amounts of radiation due to&#13;
the pr nee 01 naturally radioactive materials in&#13;
th coal&#13;
Firebaugh also added that natural Iossil fuel was&#13;
still more harmful than deadly plutonIum since&#13;
miners had no way 01telling where pOIsonouSgases&#13;
were under the surface. Air poUutlOn ~rom coal&#13;
operated power plants has been responsIble for 18&#13;
deaths per million persons per year, according to a&#13;
survey done for 1967 accidental death ~tatis.u~.&#13;
v.ilereas deaths from radiation and radIOactiVIty&#13;
were reported at zero, at that time.&#13;
Cole found little reasurance over the AEC safety&#13;
reports and said that as more and m?re nu~ear&#13;
reactors were built the chances o( a major accident&#13;
occuring became greater. Today there are 31i&#13;
nuclear power p1anlS in the nation and a predicted&#13;
1000 by !he year 2000. . .&#13;
"We must alllea.rn to use energy more effICIently&#13;
and cut down on as much waste as possible" was the&#13;
echoing statement from bol~ eJ:.lvir.onrnen.talists&#13;
Cole and Firebaugh. "This nation IS nded with too&#13;
heavy cars, low mileage from them, ~~ly lr:tsulated&#13;
glass buildings, not properly functionmg air&#13;
conditioners, and over-lighted cities." .&#13;
"Alternative energy through solar, wind, and&#13;
thermonuclear radiation sbould he looked into. U&#13;
we had spent as much on solar radiation as we did&#13;
on nuclear power we would have had half our&#13;
economy operat~ on solar energy by now,"&#13;
Cole. lncidentaly, the world's largest nuclear plant is&#13;
located in Zion,lllinois operating on 3,300 megawatts&#13;
and capable of transmitting power as far north as&#13;
Racine.&#13;
T&#13;
Also Nightly Entertainment&#13;
In Our Cocktail Lounge&#13;
"MIKE SCOTT" ,......,...",....,.&#13;
College ight - Every Thursday&#13;
PItcher 01BEER - $1with J.D.&#13;
of K.notho Sl'U ,t+. Aw&#13;
Theatre X&#13;
to perform&#13;
here&#13;
THEATRE X of Milwaukee will&#13;
be at Parkside Thursday, Oct. 18&#13;
with their production X COMMUNICATION,&#13;
a comic revue of&#13;
satire and experiment.&#13;
THEATRE X is a professional&#13;
touring ensemble now in its (ifth&#13;
season. The company works with&#13;
an unusual combination of&#13;
comedy and modern ex·&#13;
perimental styles, with a goal of&#13;
communicating and sharing&#13;
responses to simple human experiences.&#13;
Many pieces have&#13;
evolved through feedback Irom&#13;
many kinds of audiences, and the&#13;
audience is always invited to stay&#13;
after the show to meet and talk&#13;
with the actors. Another unique&#13;
leature of THEATRE X is its&#13;
communal method of operation.&#13;
Al! members participate jointly&#13;
in performing, directing, writing,&#13;
and administration.&#13;
The THEATRE X tour is jointly&#13;
supported by the Wisconsin Arts&#13;
Council and the National Endowment&#13;
for the Arts.&#13;
Their presentation will be at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Comm. Arts Theater.&#13;
The admission is $1 at the door.&#13;
WHAT'S WRONG PARTNER?&#13;
SHORT ON MONE1?&#13;
C'MON OVER&#13;
TO BONANZA&#13;
The Ral:en&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
GOATS HEAD SOU'P&#13;
The Rolling Stones&#13;
(COC 59101)&#13;
From seeing the title of the album, the. poster, the name ci&#13;
opening song, and from hear-ing the mUSIC, It ~s obvious Uta Ilt&#13;
Rolling Stones are playing with voodoo again. Whether they are t lilt&#13;
so for gimmick or (or belief remams an interesting question AdIirtc&#13;
rate it has helped produce interesting results. . t IDJ&#13;
The first exposure brings a dark jungle scene upon the Iisteoor&#13;
where a strange man is "Dancing With Mr. D." A slow, des&#13;
guitar riflbegins plodding through the denseness and lead gUita,""'!'&#13;
spark ofl 01 peakS. The bass superbly underlies everything ocq,&#13;
Mick's voice evIly.snakes th~ough the who~eSatanic charm. "hiltI&#13;
Just like adjustmg a kale,doscope the Images change lrom .&#13;
impressions and settle down in a calm where the band quieUy~&#13;
tales of "100 Years Ago." Soon the music swells into full in .&#13;
Jagger plays an all-powerful wizard here, at o~ place h~&#13;
vibrantly summons up th~ .wa-wa gwta.r that IS meshed Witbl&#13;
keyboard. They portray VISIons 01 mag'c steam rising lrom lbl&#13;
ground.&#13;
Next we are led into a bluesy field where Keith performs solovOCI!l&#13;
inflecting tones from the downer Side of the mamc-depressive e&#13;
Just the right amou~t ~~ strange horns elaborate certain rearur:&#13;
"Coming Down Agam.&#13;
"Doo Don 000 Don 000. (Heartbreaker)" is a tough city, mil....&#13;
rocker which has Mlck tellIng about a city polIceman whoshOOt.-;:-\&#13;
in a case of mistaken identity. Mick sings, "Heartbreaker 1 ""&#13;
tear your world apart." Here Mick is using his evil powe; for&#13;
ends. It makes one wonder which is which, good or evil. Good and&#13;
are just labels attached to things but things change so no labelCaD&#13;
permanentlY descriptive of anyone thing. Swinging horns&#13;
guitar, and blues guitar help deliver the chorus to great heights'.&#13;
Mick's voice reaches a new kind o( sensitivity in "Angie"-eYenIII&#13;
most rigid 01soft ballad haters will probably find" Angie" touem..&#13;
soft spot in them.&#13;
Hard glitter rock approaches as a "Silver Train," "Silver ram&#13;
falling" and "silver bells" are heard all around. There are ..&#13;
structural reflections from "All Down the Line" but the choruI&#13;
much more developed and elaborated by its several parts.&#13;
"Hide Your Love" is based on old-time rhythm and blues. J&#13;
reacts fanatically to a skin-prickling lead guitar. He sings willi&#13;
grinding jaw as a speed-freak might. In a sense the song's essence&#13;
hyper-sensitive speed·freak orgasm.&#13;
There is even more unreal charm in "Winter," a majestic&#13;
number that has a pleasingly insane quality. Mick's voice is soul&#13;
as he fondles with each word before letting it out and placingit&#13;
suously. He commands a sky of strings punctuated by lead guillr&#13;
needed points. Like an angel in some fairy tale land, he cornel ~&#13;
saying "I just want to wrap my coat around you."&#13;
A clear distant tinkle and a weird flute conjuring Middle~&#13;
images introduce "Can You Here The Music." Then a vibrato rII&#13;
begins the full procession of the music. A croaky voice mock~&#13;
"can you here the music" in a position somewhere beyond.The.&#13;
chorus finds Mick "walking on air."&#13;
•'Star Star," a rocker with Chuck Berry influences, is a a.&#13;
dedicated to groupies. The real title which was changed bec:a.'&#13;
censors, was "Starfucker." The chorus comes out soundingmore"&#13;
"fuck a star, fuck a star, fuck a star." It is a beautifully mekJdiII&#13;
chorus tbat is intended to pay respect to all the quickies thegnqIli&#13;
bad on tours.&#13;
In GOATS HEAD SOUP the Stones are working with m....&#13;
perimental arrangements again, and much SATANIC MAJESTIID&#13;
luster comes through. The Stones are working with the slra,...&#13;
mysterious. Exploration into the unknown is sometimes channiDlsometimes&#13;
ugly. The Rolling Stones seem to have found beillty&#13;
mystery.&#13;
(Record courtesy of J &amp; J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
CORRECTION: in last week's column, due to technical err.-&#13;
some sort, there was a fun-on sentence at the end. 'fbis Ib08W&#13;
been a new paragraph and should have read:&#13;
Even so, in another means of analysis, the bright stretch ~ tilt '"&#13;
three songs on side 2, "Turkey Chase," "Knocking on HeaveD'. ()III'&#13;
and "Final Theme:' make this soundtrack worth every peIUIylf.&#13;
price.&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 10, 1973&#13;
Povver plant ...&#13;
Coll&#13;
Pit&#13;
51lS 61 A••&#13;
T&#13;
Firebaugh also added that natural fossil fuel was&#13;
till more harmful than deadly plutonium since&#13;
miners had no way of telling where poisonous gases&#13;
v.ere under the urface. Air pollution from coal&#13;
operated power plants has been responsibl~ for 18&#13;
deaths per million persons per year, accordin~ ~o a&#13;
urve · done for 1967 accidental death statistics,&#13;
·herea death from radiation and radioactivity&#13;
v.ere reported at 1.ero, at that time. Cole found little reasurance over the AEC safety&#13;
reports and said that as more and more nuclear&#13;
reactors were built the chances of a major accident&#13;
occuring became greater. Today there are 35&#13;
nuclear power plants in the nation and a predicted&#13;
1 by the year 2000. "We must all learn to use energy more efficiently&#13;
and cut down on as much waste as possible" was the&#13;
echoing tatement from both environmentalists&#13;
le and Firebaugh. "This nation is rided with too&#13;
heav) cars low mileage from them, poorly inated&#13;
gla building , not properly functioning air&#13;
cond1ti er and over-lighted cities."&#13;
" ternative energy through solar, wind, and&#13;
th rmonucl r radiation should be looked into. If&#13;
e h d pent a much on solar radiation as we did&#13;
on nu !ear wer, we would have had half our&#13;
m: operating on Jar energy by now,"&#13;
le.&#13;
lncidentaly. th \\Orld' large t nuclear plant is&#13;
locat din Lion, 11linoi operating on 3,300 megawatts&#13;
d c pabl of transmitting power as far north as&#13;
Racine.&#13;
l. II, I:?, 13&#13;
Theatre X&#13;
to perform&#13;
here&#13;
THEATRE X of Milwaukee will&#13;
be at Park ide Thursday, Oct. 18&#13;
with their production X COM-&#13;
• I , 'ICATIO , a comic revue of&#13;
satire and experiment.&#13;
THEATRE X is a professional&#13;
touring ensemble now in its fiftll&#13;
Also Nightly Entertainment&#13;
In Our Cocktail Lounge&#13;
ea n. The company works with&#13;
an unusual combination of&#13;
comedy and modern experimental&#13;
tyles, with a goal of&#13;
communicating and sharing&#13;
responses to simple human experiences.&#13;
fany pieces have&#13;
evolved through feedback from&#13;
many kinds of audiences and the&#13;
audience is always invited to stay&#13;
after the show to meet and talk&#13;
with the actors. Another unique&#13;
feature of THEATRE X is its&#13;
communal method of operation.&#13;
All mem~ participate jointly&#13;
m performing, directing, writing&#13;
and administration. '&#13;
.. •KE SCOTT" ,......, ,_,,.,.&#13;
• igh -E ·ery Thursday&#13;
ofBEER. Sl nth I.D.&#13;
of K•nosho&#13;
The THEATRE X tour is jointly&#13;
supported by the Wisconsin Arts&#13;
Council and tlle National Endo...,ment&#13;
for the Arts.&#13;
Their presentation will be at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Comm. Arts Theater.&#13;
The admission is $1 at the door.&#13;
WHATS WRONG PARTNER?&#13;
SHORT ON MONEY?&#13;
C'MON OVER&#13;
TO BONANZA&#13;
Steaks $129 ,&#13;
The Rai~P.n&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
GOATS HEAD SOUP&#13;
The Rolling Stones&#13;
(COC 59101)&#13;
From seeing the title of the album, the poster, the na&#13;
opening song, and fro~ he~ing the m~ic, it is obviou:~ o{&#13;
Rolling Stones are playmg with voodoo agam. Whether the at so for gimmick or for belief remains an interesting questi are&#13;
rate it has helped produce interesting results. on. At&#13;
The first exposure brings a dark jungle scene upon th r&#13;
where a strange man is "Dancing With Mr. D." A slow ~ 1Slener&#13;
guitar riff begins plodding through the denseness and lead gu·ta&#13;
spark off of peaks. The bass superbly underlies everyth .&#13;
1 r l10tei&#13;
Mick's voice evily snakes through the whole Satanic charm ing&#13;
Just like adjusting a kaleidoscope the images change f~ .&#13;
impressions and settle down in a calm where the band quiet)m J&#13;
tales of "100 Years Ago." Soon the music swells into full . Y&#13;
Jagger plays an all-powerful wizard here, at one place ~nlensi&#13;
vibrantly summons up the wa-wa guitar that is meshed1 '&#13;
keyboard. They portray visions of magic steam rising f WI&#13;
ground. rom&#13;
Next we are led into a bluesy field where Keith performs sol&#13;
inflecting tones from the downer side of the manic-depr . 0 v&#13;
Just the right amount of strange horns elaborate certain f;~&#13;
"Coming Down Again." u&#13;
"Doo D?O Doo D?O Doo_ (Heartbrea~er)" is a tough cit mil&#13;
rocker which has Mick tellmg about a city policeman who ~ 1&#13;
in a case of mistaken identity. Mick sings, "Heartbreaker 1 8&#13;
tear your world apart." Here Mick is using his evil powe; 1 wa&#13;
ends. It makes one wonder which is which, good or evil. Good ~g&#13;
are just labels atta~h~ to things but thin~s change so no la~ c&#13;
permanently descriptive of any one thmg. Swinging horns&#13;
gui~r, ~nd ?lues guitar help del~ver the chorus to great heights'.&#13;
Micks v01ce reaches a new kmd of sensitivity in "Angie"--&lt;!\·&#13;
most rigid of soft ballad haters will probably find "Angie" tou en&#13;
soft spot in them.&#13;
Hard glitter rock approaches as a "Silver Train " "Silver ra&#13;
falling" and "silver bells" are heard all around.' There are In&#13;
structural reflections from "All Down the Line" but the ch&#13;
much more developed and elaborated by its several parts 01'111&#13;
"Hide You_r Love" is ba~ed ~n old-time rhythm and blues. J&#13;
r~c~ f~atically to a skm-pnckling lead guitar. He sing witb&#13;
grmdmg Jaw as a speed-freak might. In a sense the song's essence&#13;
hyper-sensitive speed-freak orgasm. •&#13;
There is even more u~real _charm in "Winter," a majestic&#13;
number that ha~ a pleasmgly msane quality. Mick's voice is sou)&#13;
as he fondles with each word before letting it out and placing it&#13;
suously. H_e com~ands a sky of strings punctuated by lead guitar&#13;
ne~ed J&gt;&lt;&gt;~nts. Like an angel in some fairy tale land, he comes f&#13;
say mg I Just want to wrap my coat around you."&#13;
. A cl~r distant tinkle and a weird flute conjuring Middle&#13;
una_ges mtroduce "Can You Here The Music." Then a vibrato&#13;
begms the full procession of the music. A croaky voice mock&#13;
"can yo~ here the music" in a position somewhere beyond. Tuer&#13;
chorus fmds Mick "walking on air."&#13;
"~tar Star," a ~ocker with Chuck Berry influences, is a&#13;
dedicated to groupies. The real title which was changed becalllt&#13;
censors, was "Starfucker." The chorus comes out sounding more&#13;
"fuck a star, fuck a star, fuck a star." It is a beautifully m&#13;
chorus that is intended to pay respect to all the quickies the~&#13;
had on tours.&#13;
~ GOA TS HEAD SOUP the Stones are working with m&lt;n&#13;
perunental arrangements again, and much SATANIC&#13;
luster ~omes through. The Stones are working with the stra~e&#13;
myste~1ous. Exploration into the unknown is sometimes charming&#13;
sometimes ugly. The Rolling Stones seem to have found beam)'&#13;
mystery.&#13;
&lt;Record courtesy of J &amp; J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
CORRECTION: in last week's column, due to technical ,.,...&#13;
some sort, there was a run-on sentence at the end. This hOIIW&#13;
been a new paragraph and should have read:&#13;
Even so, in another means of analysis, the bright stretch of tllt&#13;
three songs on side 2, "Turkey Chase," "Knocking on Heaven'&#13;
an~ "Final Theme," make this soundtrack worth every ptnDJ • price. &#13;
b) Rodney schroeter&#13;
ts: The psychic,looking&#13;
SynoPSIfiles of folders and&#13;
through tapes has made some&#13;
puter ' com t discoveries. As the&#13;
Im~rtanpens he is about to tell&#13;
~"'" reo' . th&#13;
:tW'J. teen other men In e&#13;
the nlJlChathe has found.&#13;
blse W&#13;
"your present memory-what&#13;
1l\l row think you know about the&#13;
l l' an iUusion-an artificial&#13;
pas -IS&#13;
ry superimposed upon your&#13;
memo&#13;
mJOd· tit I&#13;
"your true ideo I y, your rea&#13;
memory ...has ... been ... erased."&#13;
Oneman crumpled to the floor&#13;
unconscious. Another began&#13;
O)bbing.&#13;
"These tapes," the Psychic&#13;
kiCked the file, "have your artiftcial&#13;
memories on them. I have&#13;
round. as yet, no records of your&#13;
true lives. But I shall attempt to&#13;
nod these records, if they exist.&#13;
"For now, become familiar&#13;
with this base. Learn how e,:,ery&#13;
machine functions. Ihave driven&#13;
calt the evil ones who have done&#13;
Ibis 10 you. They shall return.&#13;
Whenlite time comes, we shall&#13;
lighl litem."&#13;
I The Psychic turned brusquely&#13;
I to a control panel, at the top of&#13;
which was a fourteen-inch&#13;
screen. He had stated the facts;&#13;
he had no intention of offering&#13;
consolence.&#13;
The first picture which came to&#13;
the screen was the interior of the&#13;
room in which he had awakened.&#13;
Oicking a dial brought a view of&#13;
twonat plates, each about seven&#13;
leet square, and held apart&#13;
vertically by a thin column at&#13;
~ each corner. The distance betIl~een&#13;
the upper and lower plate&#13;
rwas more thap st,lfficjent for a&#13;
I man to stand upright between&#13;
II !hem.&#13;
Another click of the dial&#13;
revealed the exterior of the&#13;
Uniled Nations buildings.&#13;
• A third adjustment brought to&#13;
'. Ylew the exterior of a very old&#13;
II nrehouse. The Psychic stif-&#13;
• Ieoed. Several men were stanII&#13;
ding in the doorway. The&#13;
ilgbtlime shadows obscured the&#13;
• features, but the fat, almost If round body was unmistakable. It&#13;
was Big X.&#13;
: The Psychic adjusted several&#13;
,I knobs, hoping for sound. One&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
$2.75 per page&#13;
Stnd for your up-tcrdate 160·page&#13;
lIlIIt order catalog. Ene'lose $1.00&#13;
flOcover postage (deli~ery time is&#13;
fo 2 days).&#13;
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE INC&#13;
11941 WILSHIRE BLVD., SUITE #2&#13;
LOSANGElES, CALIF. 90015&#13;
~lli477·8474 or 477·5493&#13;
Our "'Urch materIal Is sold for&#13;
research assistance onl~.&#13;
knob moved the viewing range&#13;
When he r:noved. it more, he found&#13;
a street SIgn that told him where&#13;
the place was.&#13;
Jones had been looking through&#13;
the tapes on the shelves. "Fi d&#13;
something?" he asked with n a&#13;
catch in his throat. He had suffered&#13;
from shock as much as the&#13;
others had.&#13;
~he P~ychic rose. "1 am going&#13;
~o Investigate something. No one&#13;
IS to accompany me."&#13;
Over the past hours the&#13;
Psychic's mental energy' had&#13;
accumulated. By converting the&#13;
large amount of excess into&#13;
muscular energy, he was able to&#13;
run at a good clip as easily as if&#13;
he were taking a casual stroll. He&#13;
~ntered the tunnel, ran through it&#13;
In a matter of minutes, came out&#13;
at the grating, and ran to the&#13;
warehouse.&#13;
He approached carefully,&#13;
sending out mental probes in all&#13;
directions. The sensation of a&#13;
void appeared above. He glanced&#13;
up in time to see the silhouette of&#13;
a man. The man fell on him. A&#13;
microphone-shaped devi~e&#13;
clattered on the cracked&#13;
pavement: a mind-wave&#13;
deflector.&#13;
The Psychic was hit on the side&#13;
of the head. The blow stunned&#13;
him, but he remained barely&#13;
conscious.&#13;
When his thoughts became&#13;
cleared, he found his legs and&#13;
arms fastened to the wall in some&#13;
manner he could not see. On each&#13;
side of his head was a mind-wave&#13;
deflector--he could not use his&#13;
mental powers to free himself. To&#13;
his chest was taped a box identical&#13;
to the anti-matter bomb Big&#13;
X had tried to use at the United&#13;
Nations.&#13;
Five men stopped running&#13;
when they were two blocks away&#13;
from the warehouse. The fat man&#13;
looked at his wrist, although it&#13;
was too dark to see a watch.&#13;
"Five seconds," he said.&#13;
"Four. Three. Two. One."&#13;
The warehouse erupted in a&#13;
cataclysm of smoke, dirt and&#13;
fire, shattering windows with the&#13;
shock and sending debris flying&#13;
for hundreds of yards.&#13;
TO BE CONTINUED&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 10, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Tripdetails announced&#13;
. The UW-P office of Student LIfe&#13;
IS. sponsoring three trips abroad&#13;
thts year.&#13;
The. first trip, open to an&#13;
;arkslde students, faculty, staff.&#13;
nd .thelr rrnmediate families is&#13;
an eight day Hawaiian Holiday on&#13;
~aikiki Beach. The cost of S239&#13;
mcludes round trip airfare to&#13;
Honolulu from Milwaukee via&#13;
World Airways DC-8 jet, seven&#13;
mghts at the Outrigger West&#13;
Hotel in the beart of Waikiki&#13;
roundtrip transfers between th~&#13;
airport and hotel, a half day&#13;
sightseeing tour of Honolulu aod&#13;
the traditional Hawaiian n~wer&#13;
lei greeting. Tourists v.;11 leave&#13;
Milwaukee on January 2 and&#13;
return on January 10.&#13;
The second trip, open to&#13;
anyone. is a spring flight to&#13;
Greece. Leaving Chicago on&#13;
April 12 and returning Apnl 21,&#13;
the 99 co. I mcludes round mp&#13;
airfare via WlSS8Ir. even&#13;
nights lodging at Omonia Hotel&#13;
In Athen . eenunental breakfast&#13;
and lunch or dinner daily while in&#13;
Athens, full day Greek Islaod&#13;
cruise, a half day Ightseemg&#13;
tour of Athen , and tour escort&#13;
throughout. The la t rught will be&#13;
spent m Zunch. Switzerland and&#13;
there will be a wi fondue party&#13;
at one of Zurich's fondue&#13;
restaurants.&#13;
Another. lower price spring&#13;
trip I being planned Details are&#13;
not complete as yet but Student&#13;
Life Director William . ·iebuhr.&#13;
anticipated a tour to either the&#13;
PAB presents&#13;
Superman film&#13;
Rocketed to earth as an infant&#13;
when the planet Krypton exploded,&#13;
Superman grew up in&#13;
Small town, U.S.A., to find&#13;
himself endowed with amazing&#13;
physical powers. He could move&#13;
faster than a speeding bullet. He&#13;
was more powerful than a&#13;
locomotive. He was able to leap&#13;
over tall buildings in a single&#13;
bound. But in order to utilize his&#13;
amazing powers. he was forced to&#13;
assume an aJias-oark Kent. a&#13;
mlid-mannered, be-spectacled&#13;
reporter on the Metropolis Daily&#13;
Planet newspaper.&#13;
Since his fIrst appearance in a&#13;
comic strip in 1938. the "man or&#13;
steel" has been impressing&#13;
children with his unceasing battle&#13;
against crime and intolerance.&#13;
for truth and justice. 'ow, four&#13;
half-hour episodes from the&#13;
outstanding television series that&#13;
aired during the 1950's have been&#13;
programmed hack-to-back in a&#13;
unique feature film which 'kill be&#13;
shown Wednesday, Oct. \0 at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in Gr. 103. Sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board, the&#13;
admission is 75 cents.&#13;
The four titles featured are&#13;
"The Mysterious Cube,"&#13;
"SUperman's Wi£~" "The Tin&#13;
Hero." and "The Town That&#13;
Wasn't. It Each is a classic&#13;
example of the flamboyant action-adventure&#13;
formula that&#13;
,.&#13;
MIKE URBAN&#13;
DENNY NELSON&#13;
owners&#13;
PHONE 637-2212&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
PIANOS&#13;
STEREOS TAPES&#13;
ORGANS&#13;
t919TAYLOR AVENUE&#13;
Racine. Wisconsin 53403&#13;
made Superman the prototype of&#13;
charismatic super-heroes. And&#13;
each bnngs hack the famliiar&#13;
persooalities of George Reeves&#13;
as Superman: Noell Nelli as Lois&#13;
Lane: Jack Larson as Jlffimy&#13;
Olsen. cub reporter ~ John&#13;
Hamllton as Perry \\11it., edJto&lt;&#13;
of the Daily ptanet: and Robert&#13;
Shayne as Inspecto&lt; Henderson&#13;
cambean or Acapuloco at a coil&#13;
of approximately S275&#13;
Further mformatlon and tnp&#13;
details or appbcatlons can be&#13;
obtamed from th lud&lt;'nt ufo&#13;
Office In U£ DI!17&#13;
~ l\\-P\RK lOt.&#13;
~M~K H¢L1£&gt;AY&#13;
APRIL It-!I. 117.&#13;
\0 day' -8lUghlA&#13;
• Round trip Jel&#13;
• r nights in \.lM&#13;
• fq,h night in Zurich&#13;
! m~als d iJ~&#13;
• Grm LStud cruiw&#13;
• \tht&gt;n Igbl Htng&#13;
• Fondut&gt; pan) In '.'lI.&#13;
• Toul'" n&#13;
• Tip &amp;: tan on _.\t.&#13;
For application or m[onnauon&#13;
Contact&#13;
A.\IPl' T1U VEL ETER&#13;
LLC 0-117 all: $S3-ttN&#13;
THE CARTHAGE ACTIVITIES BOARD PRESE. rrs&#13;
The 1973 Homecoming Concert&#13;
~'::o'::"~:::::;;;;;~-~- 'i 3 r~&#13;
cwfB&#13;
10% OFF O~ Pl'RCHASE OF&#13;
J $100&#13;
I OR ~ORE WITH PARKSIOE 10. ~~&#13;
~ E DS ~&#13;
rj OUTOBER 31 I&#13;
, AT&#13;
lj 3400 SHERIDA&#13;
~&#13;
AD&#13;
r, &amp;926 3 UK ·s~~~ ....&#13;
5aturday, October 20&#13;
8:00 P.M. Fieldhouse&#13;
General Admission&#13;
- 52.50 &amp; $3.50&#13;
Also Appeanng&#13;
TIckets Av.llable At·&#13;
• Bldmger _ fuslc Hou.s.e-•&#13;
Downtov.-n Kenosha&#13;
• J&amp;J Tapes. Kenosha &amp; Ra mo&#13;
• carthage Coli 0 Center Ofh~&#13;
8:30 a m. - . hdnlghl dally&#13;
"The Juke Band"&#13;
ROAD&#13;
b) Rodney Schroeter&#13;
• .5. The Psychic, looking&#13;
yn~ts1 riles of folders and&#13;
rou"", tapes has made some&#13;
Puter • Ill t discoveries. As the&#13;
unportan pens he is about to tell&#13;
tor)" :eoteen 'other men in the&#13;
1h nine d&#13;
·e what he has foun .&#13;
••Your present memory--what&#13;
-ou now think you know abo~~ ~e&#13;
t-is an illusion-an artif1c1al&#13;
:emory superimposed up::m your&#13;
11und. . . 1 •·Your true identity, your rea&#13;
m mory ... has ... been ... erased."&#13;
One man crumpled to the floor&#13;
uncon cious. Another began&#13;
sobbing. . •·Toese tapes," the Psychic&#13;
kicked the file, "have your artificial&#13;
memories on them. I have&#13;
found, as yet, no records of your&#13;
true lives. But I shall attempt to&#13;
find these records, if they e~~st.&#13;
"For now, become fam1har&#13;
v.ith this base. Learn how e~ery&#13;
machine functions. I have driven&#13;
out the evil ones who have done&#13;
this to you. They shall return.&#13;
When the time comes, we shall&#13;
light them."&#13;
Toe Psychic turned brusquely&#13;
to a control panel, at the top of&#13;
which was a fourteen-inch&#13;
screen. He had stated the facts;&#13;
he had no intention of offering&#13;
consolence.&#13;
The first picture which came to&#13;
the creen was the interior of the&#13;
room in which he had awakened.&#13;
Oicking a dial brought a view of&#13;
tv,o flat plates, each about seven&#13;
feet square, and held apart&#13;
mtically by a thin column at&#13;
each corner. The distance bet11een&#13;
the upper and lower plate&#13;
·as more than sufficient for a&#13;
man to stand upright between&#13;
them.&#13;
Another click of the dial&#13;
revealed the exterior of the&#13;
t:nited Nations buildings.&#13;
A third adjustment brought to&#13;
vtew the exterior of a very old&#13;
warehouse. The Psychic stiffened.&#13;
Several men were standmg&#13;
in the doorway. The&#13;
mghttime shadows obscured the&#13;
features, but the fat, almost&#13;
round body was unmistakable. It&#13;
v; Big X.&#13;
The Psychic adjusted several&#13;
knobs, hoping for sound. One&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
$2.75 per page&#13;
Send for your up-to-date, 160-page,&#13;
1 ma I order catalog. Enclose $1.00&#13;
l&#13;
o cover postage (deli~ery time 1s&#13;
to 2 days)&#13;
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE INC&#13;
ll941 WILSHIRE BLVD., SUITE #2&#13;
LOS ANGELES. CALIF. 90025&#13;
12!3) 477-8474 or 477 5493&#13;
Ovr re"arch material Is sold for&#13;
rue.,ch assistance only.&#13;
nd&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 10, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
knob moved the viewing range&#13;
When he 1:1oved it more, he found a street sign that told him where&#13;
the place was.&#13;
Jones had been looking through&#13;
the tapes on the shelves. "Find&#13;
something?" he asked with a&#13;
catch in his throat. He had suffered&#13;
from shock as much as the&#13;
others had.&#13;
~e P~ychic rose. "I am going&#13;
~o investigate something. No one 1s to accompany me."&#13;
Over the past hours the&#13;
Psychic's mental energy' had&#13;
accumulated. By converting the&#13;
large amount of excess into&#13;
muscular energy, he was able to&#13;
run at a good clip as easily as if&#13;
he were taking a casual stroll. He&#13;
~ntered the tunnel, ran through it&#13;
m a matter of minutes, came out&#13;
at the grating, and ran to the&#13;
warehouse.&#13;
HE: approached carefully, sending out mental probes in all&#13;
directions. The sensation of a&#13;
void appeared above. He glanced&#13;
up in time to see the silhouette of&#13;
a man. The man fell on him. A&#13;
microphone-shaped device&#13;
clattered on the cracked&#13;
pavement: a mind-wave&#13;
deflector.&#13;
Trip details announced&#13;
. The W-Pofficeof tudent Llfe&#13;
is_ ponsoring three trip abroad&#13;
this year.&#13;
The fir t trip. open to all&#13;
Park ide stud nt facultv taff&#13;
and . their immedi~te faml!ie i.&#13;
an eight day Hawaiian Holiday on&#13;
~aikiki Beach. The c t or&#13;
mcludes round trip airfar to&#13;
Honolulu from , lilwau ee&#13;
\~orld Airwa)' - D -8 j t, ven&#13;
nights at the Outrigg r We&#13;
Hotel in the heart of Waikiki&#13;
roundtrip tran fe betw n th'&#13;
a~rport and hotel, a half dav&#13;
sightseeing tour of Honolulu and&#13;
the traditional Hawaiian no .... er&#13;
lei greeting. Touri will leave&#13;
1ilwaukee on Januarv 2 and&#13;
return on January 10 •&#13;
The second trip,· open to&#13;
PAB presents&#13;
Superman film&#13;
~ ..&#13;
- -· -&#13;
1 1&#13;
v~~~K H¢Llt&gt;AY&#13;
B&#13;
The Psychic was hit on the side&#13;
of the head. The blow stunned&#13;
him, but he remained barely&#13;
conscious.&#13;
When his thoughts became&#13;
cleared, he found his legs and&#13;
arms fastened to the wall in some&#13;
manner he could not see. On each&#13;
side of his head was a mind-wave&#13;
deflector-he could not use his&#13;
mental powers to free himself. To&#13;
his chest was taped a box identical&#13;
to the anti-matter bomb Big&#13;
X had tried to use at the United&#13;
Nations.&#13;
Rocketed to earth a an infant&#13;
when the planet Krypton&#13;
ploded, Superman grew up in&#13;
s:nau town, u A , to find&#13;
himself endowed \\ith amazing&#13;
physical powers. He could mo\'e&#13;
faster than a peed.ing bullet. He&#13;
was more powerful than a&#13;
locomotive. He was able to leap&#13;
over tall buildings in a ingle&#13;
bound. But in order to utilize hi&#13;
amazing powers, he was forced to&#13;
assume an alia -Clar Kent a&#13;
mild-mannered. be- pectacled&#13;
reporter on the tetropoli Dail}&#13;
Planet new paper.&#13;
The 1973 Homecoming Concert&#13;
Five men stopped running&#13;
when they were two blocks away&#13;
from the warehouse. The fat man&#13;
looked at his wrist, although it&#13;
was too dark to see a watch.&#13;
"Five seconds," he said.&#13;
"Four. Three. Two. One."&#13;
The warehouse erupted in a&#13;
cataclysm of smoke, dirt and&#13;
fire, shattering windows with the&#13;
shock and sending debris flying&#13;
for hundreds of yards.&#13;
TO BE CONTINUED&#13;
ince his first appearance in a&#13;
comic strip in 1938 the ' man of&#13;
steel" ha been impre - in&#13;
children with hi uncea i battle&#13;
against crime and intoler nee,&#13;
for truth and justice .• 'o", four&#13;
half-hour epi ode from the&#13;
outstanding tele\i ion ri that&#13;
aired during the 1950· have been&#13;
programmed back-to-bac m a&#13;
uniqu feature film ·hich :ill be&#13;
shown Wedn da~ Oct. l0at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in Gr. 103. n or d by the&#13;
Parkside ctmt1es Board, the&#13;
admi ion i 75 cents&#13;
The four title featured are&#13;
"The • ty teriou Cub , "&#13;
"Superman' Wife/' "The Tin&#13;
Hero." and '"The To\\n Th t&#13;
Wa n't." Each i a cla ic&#13;
example of the flam yant eti&#13;
on-adventure formula that&#13;
RECORDS STEREOS TAPES&#13;
PIANOS ORGANS&#13;
MIKEURBA'&#13;
DEN Y EL 0&#13;
owners&#13;
1919TAYLORA\'E .. E&#13;
Racine. Wi con in 53403&#13;
PHONE 637-2212&#13;
'TAURUS RISING1&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sat., &amp; Sun.&#13;
I OCT. 10, 12, 13, 14&#13;
Kenoslta's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shokey's)&#13;
Sa urday, October 20&#13;
8:00 P.M. F eldhouse&#13;
General Admission&#13;
· S2.50 &amp; SJ.50&#13;
"The Juke Band"&#13;
ROD &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, OCt. 10, 1973&#13;
Soccer team&#13;
suHers loss&#13;
Par Ide'S soccer team 9;ound&#13;
up on the "TOng s de of a 3-1 score&#13;
agaan t liW·MadJson at the&#13;
or field I t eekend&#13;
1b Rang r: all)" score came&#13;
"'th IS mlOul lell in the contest&#13;
on a oaI by Rick Kilps after&#13;
plalO Rick Lechusz crossed up&#13;
tadlson' ddeose with a pa ,&#13;
There h d bHn a controversy&#13;
on • goa) made eeruee In the&#13;
game Parksld "as kicking a&#13;
penallY shot bul il hit the&#13;
crossbar nd looked as If it was 10&#13;
th nt't but the referee saw il&#13;
dlfferenlly&#13;
ch Hal H ndenon comm&#13;
ted th t tN may have cost&#13;
th pm for th Rangers He&#13;
"""linued that "acc:ordmg to the&#13;
Ilatisucs, th Rangers had more&#13;
sholl on ai, more corner sholl,&#13;
and fewer sav". but these only&#13;
count "hen you're ahead "&#13;
Th hooters' next match IS an&#13;
unponant one ""th Plaueville at&#13;
lhelr school, WIth the WIIlIler one&#13;
ep nearer the AlA D1Slrict 14&#13;
playoff&#13;
ph.to byO.voo.nlels&#13;
Pvksl&lt;le' Ray Ph_nl ... _1pre.-r .. lor _ good Iwift kick during lall&#13;
SaUonlay' socc:er malcb wItb Madison,&#13;
Harriers travel to&#13;
N~!!"!ryDame Friday&#13;
To most people, the University Martin, Jim DeVasquez, Joq,&#13;
f Notre Dame is recogmzed as Ammerman, and Chuck Dett&#13;
one of the most powerful football man. "Dettman has made US .&#13;
lieges in the Mid-West. To man stronger this Year u:&#13;
~oss country coaches, however. last ." Godfrey ~aid.&#13;
Notre Dame is thought of as host . With rrnpressive times t&#13;
lor the most competitive meet of 10 by all Parkside ~&#13;
the season '" The Notre Dame combined With a little "1I'IIIl&#13;
Invitational this Friday. luck., Pa!"'Js\u'e~t napes COUld be&#13;
The meet will consist of 30 realized.&#13;
teams coming from as far west&#13;
as N~rth Dakota, and t?e&#13;
majority will come from OhI~,&#13;
Michigan and Illinois. Coach VIC&#13;
Godfrey ~ommented, "this meet&#13;
will consist of some of the&#13;
strongest teams in the MidAmerica&#13;
Conference and the Big&#13;
Ten conference.".&#13;
Favorites in this year's meet&#13;
include Bowling green, Eastern&#13;
Michigan, Michigan, and&#13;
Wisconsin, and Coach Godfrey&#13;
adds, "Our goal is to finish in the&#13;
top 20 this year,"&#13;
To finish in the top 20, the&#13;
Parkside Harriers will have to&#13;
keep up the impressive pace they&#13;
have set so far this season, with&#13;
Lucian Rosa, Keith Merritt,&#13;
Dennis Biel, Wayne Rhode, Dale&#13;
Ranger gymnasts prepare for season&#13;
~ BMlco Wap ...&#13;
The women', gymnastica team is in a stale of&#13;
rebulIdIng this year, Only 11 people have shown&#13;
mterest in the group&#13;
Returnmg gymnll5tS are Julie Weidner, Paris&#13;
WohIllSt. and Jacltie Levonian, According to new&#13;
coach Doug Davies, lbe leam will he working on&#13;
c:ompuJsanes during the first lew meets, which will&#13;
be held here at ParDide, wilb UW-Madisoo on OCt.&#13;
13 and carroll College on OCtober 20,&#13;
The third meet will be one of the hardest, wilb&#13;
UW."lihttewater where Davies was a coach before&#13;
c:oming to Parkside,&#13;
DaVIes came here wbeo lbe athletic departmeot&#13;
was looking for a replacomeot for former coach&#13;
Geza Martiny,&#13;
Curreotly Davies teaches eCHld class in gymna..!!i&lt;:s.&#13;
along \\-;lh advising a men's gymnastics&#13;
club, which. he slates needs personnel badly, He&#13;
added that the women also need more people, but&#13;
will go ,,;th the following: beginners Julie Sherer&#13;
and Mary Up'ari; intermediates Leslie Thompson&#13;
and Julie Weidner; advanced students Jan and&#13;
Jackie Levonian and Lynn Pope,&#13;
Paris Wohlust will be exercising on all levels on&#13;
different equipment.&#13;
Sue Ceeeoni and Mary Claire Freisma will&#13;
specialize on different equipment.&#13;
As an oflshoot 01 the club, Jackie Levonian has&#13;
been assisting with Racine Horlick's gymnastics&#13;
team.&#13;
G1!nerally, there should be some bright spots on&#13;
this year's team, providing more students try out&#13;
and the expected strong members come through,&#13;
Davies states.&#13;
DEADLINE EXTENDED&#13;
TO OCTOBER 12. 1973&#13;
1973-1974&#13;
WPS&#13;
W'!tCON!tIN PHy!tlCIANS SERVICE&#13;
student&#13;
health&#13;
•&#13;
Insurance&#13;
plan&#13;
IF YOU HAVE QUESTIONSOR WANT&#13;
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONTACT:&#13;
HEALTH OFFICE LLC D198&#13;
~ Pt""- ..,m""'.,.p.l Q'.en to&#13;
w~,..,~ Wvl&lt;.&#13;
Ktf'IOVl,I 0 ,.fr- Offk.&#13;
PO ...&#13;
K~, W KON.n53UO&#13;
T .. ; .au 4Sol m ..&#13;
$100lor each month 01 tile school year&#13;
It's like a $900 annual scholarship, Ii&#13;
you qualify, you can earn it as· a&#13;
member of the Marine Corps' Platoon&#13;
Leaders Class,&#13;
~0IJ'11 also be earning a Marine&#13;
offIcer's commission through PLC&#13;
5~m~.er&#13;
Virginia.&#13;
training at Quantico&#13;
I ~&#13;
I&#13;
your campus.&#13;
Talk to the Ma rine olllcer who Visits C&#13;
Iookingfor~~&#13;
CAPT. L R. ROBILLA.RD will be d ..&#13;
OCT '1] betwt"efl 9 a.m. and .. p ~ m~ms:ering.Officer aptitude test on 15 and 16&#13;
PaU69ttWay between Greenquist Hallll~; t~ctL~blrn at the USMC display in the&#13;
e I rary Learning Center.&#13;
Last weekend, Parkside WCMI&#13;
own cross country meet ItI&#13;
Marquette, UW-Milwaukee ova&#13;
UW-Milwaukee's track c1.b IIId&#13;
LUCIanRosa finished fi~•. 'f2 ._~.&#13;
ttme 0 5:47 over the five RlUe&#13;
course, while teammate. !leamI&#13;
Biel, Wayne Rhody, and CIucIl&#13;
Dettman placed in second thud&#13;
and fifth places, '&#13;
Jim Devasquez, Keith Mernu.&#13;
and Dale Martm fmished 001 01&#13;
the running m 10th, 13th, and 1'IIIl&#13;
places, adding up ParUidt'&#13;
total to 20 points, I&#13;
Marquette came in second ...&#13;
57 points, wbile crosstown Ji1III&#13;
UW-Milwaukee and their troct&#13;
club finished with 81 IIld •&#13;
points, respectively,&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 10, 1973&#13;
Soccer team&#13;
uffers loss&#13;
Harriers travel to&#13;
N'!!!!, Dame Friday&#13;
photo by OavoOani els&#13;
To most people, the Uni_versity&#13;
of Notre Dame is recogruzed as&#13;
one of the most powerful football&#13;
colleges in the Mid-West. To&#13;
cross country coaches, however,&#13;
otre Dame is thought of as host&#13;
for the most competitive meet of&#13;
the season . . . The Notre Dame&#13;
Invitational this Friday.&#13;
The meet will consist of 30&#13;
teams, coming from as far west&#13;
as North Dakota , and t~e&#13;
majority will come from Oh1?,&#13;
Michigan and Illinois. Coach Vic&#13;
Godfrey ~ommented, " this meet&#13;
will consist of some of the&#13;
strongest teams in the Mi?-&#13;
America Conference and the Big&#13;
Ten conference." . Favorites in this year's meet&#13;
include Bowling green, Eastern&#13;
Michigan , Michigan, and&#13;
Wisconsin, and Coach Godfrey&#13;
adds, "Our goal is to finish in the&#13;
top 20 this year."&#13;
· Ra Phanhu-at prepares for a good swift kick during last&#13;
soet:er m t~h with Madison.&#13;
To finish in the top 20, the&#13;
Parkside Harriers will have to&#13;
keep up the impressive pace they&#13;
have set so far this season, with&#13;
Lucian Rosa, Keith Merritt,&#13;
Dennis Biel, Wayne Rhode, Dale&#13;
Ranger gy111nasts prepare for season&#13;
DEAD INE EXTE OED&#13;
TO OCTOBER 12. 1973&#13;
1973-1974·&#13;
WlfPS&#13;
•&#13;
ISCO St PHYSIC IA S SE VICE&#13;
student&#13;
health&#13;
nsurance&#13;
plan&#13;
IF YOU HAVE QUESTIONS OR WANT&#13;
ADOITIO AL I FORMATIO CONTACT:&#13;
HEAL TH OFFICE LC D 198&#13;
Paris Wohlust will be exercising on all levels on&#13;
different equipment.&#13;
Sue Ceceoni and Mary Claire Freisma will&#13;
specialize on different equipment.&#13;
As an offshoot of the club, Jackie Levonian has&#13;
been assisting with Racine Horlick's gymnastics&#13;
team.&#13;
Cknerally, there should be some bright spots on&#13;
this year's team, providing more students try out&#13;
and the expected strong members come through,&#13;
Davies states.&#13;
$l00 for each month of the school year&#13;
I~ 's like~ $900 annual scholarship. If&#13;
;&gt;ou qualify, you can earn it as a&#13;
member of the Marine Corps' Platoon&#13;
Leaders Class .&#13;
~ou·u also be earning a Marine&#13;
officer's commission through PLC&#13;
summer training at Quantico I&#13;
Virginia. '&#13;
Talk to the Marine officer who visits P. C&#13;
your campus.&#13;
TheMarines&#13;
looking fora few good :n.&#13;
CAP": L 1': ROBILLARD w1ll beadrnin' . .&#13;
OCT 13 between 9 a.m . and ' P Coistering _oft,cer aptitude test on 15 and 16 Pa•~- .m . ntact him at th us _,,, .. ay between Greenquist Halt and the L .b e . MC display in the , rary Learning Center.&#13;
Martin, Jim DeVasquez J&#13;
Ammerman , and Chuck ~ man. " Dettman has made u&#13;
man stronger this Year 5&#13;
, • •.&#13;
last. " Godfrey said. ..l&lt;lll&#13;
. With impressive times turn&#13;
m b:( all . Parkside runn&#13;
combined with a little "I&#13;
luck, P ar1&#13;
1S\.dt!"' hopes cou:r&#13;
realized.&#13;
Last weekend, Parkside won&#13;
own cross country meet&#13;
Marquette, UW-Milwaukee ov&#13;
UW-Milwaukee's track cli,b and&#13;
. Lucian Rosa finished first'&#13;
tune of 25 :47 over the five rnlla&#13;
course, while teammates Dennis&#13;
Biel, Wayne Rhody, and ChuQ&#13;
Dettman placed in second third&#13;
and fifth places. '&#13;
Jim Devasquez, Keith Merru.t&#13;
and Dal~ M_artin finished out "&#13;
the runmng m 10th, 13th, and l?!h&#13;
places, adding up Parkside•&#13;
total to 20 points. 1&#13;
Marquette came in second WIiii&#13;
57 points, while crosstown rillk&#13;
UW-Milwaukee and their tract&#13;
club finished with Bl and 11&#13;
points, respectively.</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
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              <elementText elementTextId="64327">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
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        <name>engineering science division</name>
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              <text>"Third World" seeks representation</text>
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              <text>M'nority group formed&#13;
"Third World" seeks&#13;
APproximately 30 Parkside&#13;
minority students were present&#13;
at a "Third World" meeting held&#13;
last Thursday. The meeting was&#13;
called under the premise that "no&#13;
organization on campus addresses&#13;
itself to our needs!'&#13;
In the first Third World&#13;
meeting, chaired by Mustafa&#13;
Abdullah, a Parkside student,&#13;
ways were discussed in which the&#13;
University had been negligent in&#13;
regard to minority needs and how&#13;
minority students might integrate&#13;
into decision and policymaking&#13;
areas of the University.&#13;
Abdullah said. that there was&#13;
little need to separate races for&#13;
organizing purposes because&#13;
"there is no need to have splinter&#13;
groups ' when most of our&#13;
problems are essentially the&#13;
same."&#13;
Students aired complaints over"&#13;
the route the Parkside-Racine&#13;
bus is presently taking, saying&#13;
that it skirts minority communities&#13;
in the city. A group has&#13;
been formed to look into the&#13;
problem. One student complained&#13;
that the $18,000 award by&#13;
the state to Parks ide, which was&#13;
earm~rked to develop programs&#13;
for disadvanta~ed and minority&#13;
students, had Instead gone into&#13;
the library for book purchase.&#13;
She added that the administration&#13;
refused to say where&#13;
the money had gone.&#13;
. In calling for minority student&#13;
Involvement Abdullah said "If&#13;
you don't have anything po~itive&#13;
or constructive to contribute we&#13;
don't need you." Wa'yne&#13;
Ramirez, Parks ide counselor&#13;
added, "You need minority&#13;
students to represent you no one&#13;
will represent you that ';ill help&#13;
you anyway--except maybe&#13;
Student Services." Students&#13;
volunteered to be interviewed by&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
.Association (PSGA) for selection&#13;
to faculty-student committees.&#13;
In considering alternatives to&#13;
what the Univer-sity has to offer&#13;
WEAC representative John Mack (left) talks with Parks ide faculty&#13;
member Ronald Gottesman at the Racine Motor Inn last Friday night.&#13;
Racine Unified&#13;
representation&#13;
photo W, ROf'lArtfnm&#13;
Mustafa Abdullah led the discussion at tbe organna tiona I meeting or&#13;
lbe Third World.&#13;
mmonty tudrnts at the ent&#13;
time, th Idea of uchang&#13;
proaram to Africa Indian&#13;
reserv au • and te co w&#13;
receiv '" "ell by th group .\\&#13;
have to study "here we m&#13;
from and "hal" are all about,&#13;
sard one tudem&#13;
In regard to rae m on th&#13;
campa, Ramu'e:z: commented&#13;
that nol only does it ext t but that&#13;
"tho e feehngs are pres at&#13;
among toden . and all levels of&#13;
Lheadmim tratlee"&#13;
Some of the Immediate goals of&#13;
the Third \\'orld group are to f,nd&#13;
an alternauve 10 pre ent&#13;
edueallon, to create a spea.al&#13;
service department to hear the&#13;
needs of mmortty tude"l f to&#13;
recruit mlOorlll for student&#13;
faculty committees, and to&#13;
edueate tbe lodenl body a to&#13;
~hat minorities are all about&#13;
The next ThIrd World meellng&#13;
will be held on Thursday. Oct 18&#13;
at noon in Greenqurst Hall&#13;
Lecture Room 103.&#13;
TheParksid:ee--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, oet. 17, 1973 Vol. II No, 7&#13;
WEAC asks faculty&#13;
Sargain or beg?&#13;
"The prestige of the college professor IS&#13;
declining." Jim Innis. Executive Director of the&#13;
Racine Education Association CREA) and&#13;
professional negotiator told a group of about 30&#13;
Parkside faculty members last Friday night. "You&#13;
have to decide if you want to collectively bargain or&#13;
collectively beg," he added.&#13;
The Wisconsin Education Association Council&#13;
(WEAC) has been on campus in recent weeks to&#13;
encourage Parkside faculty members in TAUWF&#13;
(The Association of University of Wisconsin&#13;
Faculty) to merge forces with WEA John Mack of&#13;
WEAC said that, "TAlNlF doesn't have the lund of&#13;
political machinery, funding or representation that&#13;
it takes to be a viable bargaining force." The local&#13;
chapter of TAUWF has not taken a formal po ition&#13;
on the merger issue. The problem that IS ansmg.&#13;
accuse certain TAUWF members, is that WEAC&#13;
has come in to organize faculty rather than en·&#13;
courage the merger_&#13;
William ~tor row, Parks Ide- profe sor or&#13;
psychology and local TAUWF chapter pres d t,&#13;
told . lack Friday that he was "WIlling 10 m rge&#13;
with WEA because II ",11 strengthen th faculty&#13;
&amp;t one thtng that will w eaken all of us, at Park ad&#13;
and in the state. I to engage In sphttUlg lactiC'S '&#13;
. 10000w said "that i destructive and ann faculty&#13;
TAUWF," he added. "can be crnlcued at Parkside&#13;
and on the 'tale level for what It hasn't done and&#13;
even some of \10 hat it has done Park ide- would&#13;
autonomy but WIth the larger body' help ,&#13;
•lack accused TAl:WF of "waiting for things 10&#13;
happen. It warts for demands to be delivered Total&#13;
competition," he said, "IS the AmerIcan v.ay··&#13;
.Iorrow replied that "\ think that's fake Corrupt&#13;
union leadership lrles to Wipe other umons out."&#13;
lorrow added thai" lack told me ,n my o(fice that&#13;
\\'EAC would not try to Orgalllte bUl merge ""th&#13;
TAUWF."&#13;
Afler a short break 10 whIch ever'yone filled the"&#13;
ceft"""" Oft .....&#13;
School Board&#13;
adopts minority quota system&#13;
by Tom Petersen&#13;
Racine's Unified School Board&#13;
lastweek agreed to adopt a quota&#13;
syStem for minority students in&#13;
all regular schools during the&#13;
next two years. The proposal,&#13;
auned at desegregating the&#13;
8chool system, was narrowly&#13;
approved by a 5-4 vote. The policy&#13;
Would allow no school to have a&#13;
minority population more than to&#13;
percent above the proportion of&#13;
a~1 minority students in the&#13;
district. The motion made last&#13;
month, calls for ~chool adrninistrators&#13;
to submi t four&#13;
alternative plans to implement&#13;
the quotas by 1975.&#13;
School officials indic,,"ted that&#13;
one plan is likely to be a massive&#13;
reorganization of the elementary&#13;
schools. That plan, which was&#13;
rejected last year, would call for&#13;
a middle school level of fifth and&#13;
sixth graders and maximu~ a.nd&#13;
minimum quotas for mmorlty&#13;
students.&#13;
. The {JToposal is aimed at&#13;
breaking up heavy concentrations&#13;
of minority students&#13;
in some schools. Racine's black&#13;
and chicano students are con·&#13;
centrated in seven of the&#13;
district's 30 elementary schools,&#13;
with proportions ranging from 42&#13;
to 91 pprcent. The current district&#13;
average is 21 percent. If the pla!l&#13;
were to be implemented now. It&#13;
would mean that no school could&#13;
have over 31 percent minority&#13;
enroUment.&#13;
Rev. Lawrence Hunt, who led&#13;
the stiffest opposilion and is the&#13;
only black on the board, feels that&#13;
by approving the plan they are&#13;
merely putting up a smoke&#13;
screen, they're only dealing With&#13;
integration and not looking at the&#13;
greater problems. More is at&#13;
stake than just housing students,&#13;
they're just Ignoring and excusing&#13;
the poor job tbey've been&#13;
doing with minority students.&#13;
Hunt feels other problems are the&#13;
district's low nwnber of minority&#13;
teachers and lack of emphasis on&#13;
minority curriculum The&#13;
proposal would resegregate&#13;
students when the schools are&#13;
desegregat&lt;!d.&#13;
A contrary point of view is that&#13;
of Re\'. Howard Stanton who feels&#13;
that the law says we must&#13;
desegregate and It'S a way of&#13;
desegregation. not just a quota&#13;
By taking tlus action now he&#13;
bopes that other prohlems such&#13;
as curriculum changes and ad&#13;
ministrative attitudes can be&#13;
worked on. but lhat irs just a&#13;
beginning. Tbe School Board&#13;
can't solve all of the problems&#13;
themselves and with the help of&#13;
other organizations thev can be&#13;
worked out. desegregation is the&#13;
first step to sol,ing these other&#13;
problems.&#13;
'ns'de&#13;
Background of ttle Middle&#13;
East war&#13;
page 4&#13;
"The Virus'"&#13;
Parkside&#13;
infects&#13;
page 4&#13;
Super flea -- a look at&#13;
Racine's infamous flea&#13;
market&#13;
page S&#13;
Red man-white man&#13;
page 10&#13;
Minority group formed -&#13;
11Third World" seeks representat· on&#13;
Approximately 30 Parkside&#13;
minority students were present&#13;
at a "'Third World" meeting held&#13;
la ·t Thursday. The meeting was&#13;
called under the premise that " no&#13;
organization on campus addre&#13;
· es itself to our needs."&#13;
In the first Third World&#13;
meeting, chaired by Mustafa&#13;
Abdullah, a Parkside student,&#13;
ways were discussed in which the&#13;
University had been negligent in&#13;
regard to minority needs and how&#13;
minority students might integrate&#13;
into decision and policymaking&#13;
areas of the University.&#13;
Abdullah said. that there was&#13;
little need to separate races for&#13;
organizing purposes because&#13;
"there is no need to have splinter&#13;
groups · when most of our&#13;
problems are essentially the&#13;
same.,.&#13;
Students aired complaints over&#13;
the route the Parkside-Racine&#13;
bus is presently taking, saying&#13;
that it skirts minority communities&#13;
in the city. A group has&#13;
been formed to look into th&#13;
pr~blem, One tudent complained&#13;
that the 1~,000 award by the state to Park ·ide, which wa&#13;
earm~rked to develop program&#13;
for disadvantaged and minority&#13;
stude!lts, had instead gone into&#13;
the library for book purcha e&#13;
S~e. added that the ad:&#13;
m1mstration refused to say where&#13;
the money had gone.&#13;
. In calling for minority student&#13;
mvolvement Abdullah said ·•u&#13;
you don't have anything po 'itive&#13;
or constructive to contribute we&#13;
don't. need you ." w;yne&#13;
Ramirez, Parkside counselor&#13;
added, "You need minority&#13;
students to represent you no one&#13;
will represent you that ~ill help&#13;
you anyway--except maybe&#13;
Student Services." Students&#13;
volunteered to be interviewed by Parkside Student Government&#13;
.Association {PSGA) for selection&#13;
to faculty-student committees.&#13;
In considering alternatives to&#13;
what the liniversity has to offer&#13;
photo by Debra Frie~II&#13;
WEAC representative John Mack {left) talk with Parks~de fa~ulty&#13;
member Ronald Gottesman at the Racine Motor Inn last Friday rught.&#13;
. tu tafa Abdullah led the d" cu ion at t&#13;
the Third W Id.&#13;
The Parksi e, _______ _&#13;
RA GE&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 17, 1973 Vol.&#13;
WEAC asks faculty&#13;
Bargain or beg?&#13;
Racine Unified School Board Inside&#13;
adopts minority quota system&#13;
by Tom Petersen&#13;
Racine's Unified School Board&#13;
last week agreed to adopt a quota&#13;
yStem for minority students in&#13;
all regular schools during the&#13;
~xt two yE&gt;ars. The proposal,&#13;
aimed at desegregating the&#13;
School system, was narrowly&#13;
approved by a 5-4 votf'. The policy&#13;
\\ould allow no school to have a&#13;
minority population more than 10&#13;
percent above the proportion of&#13;
all minority students in the&#13;
di5trict. The motion made last&#13;
month, calls for 'school adnunistrators&#13;
to submit four&#13;
alternative plans to implement the quotas by 1975.&#13;
School officials indica.ted that&#13;
one plan is likely to be a ma sive&#13;
reorganization of the elementary&#13;
schools. That plan, which was&#13;
rejected last year, would call for&#13;
a middle school level of fifth and&#13;
sixth graders and maximu!11 a_nd&#13;
minimum quotas for minority&#13;
students.&#13;
. The ~,roposal is aimed at&#13;
breaking up heavy concentrations&#13;
of minority student&#13;
in some schools. Racine's black&#13;
and chicano students are concentrated&#13;
in seven of the&#13;
district's 30 elementary schools.&#13;
with proportions ranging fr?m_42&#13;
to 91 pPrcent. The current d1str1ct&#13;
average is 21 percent. If the pla!l&#13;
were to be implemented now. it&#13;
\\-'OUld mean that no chool could&#13;
have over 31 percent minority&#13;
enroHment.&#13;
Rev. Lawren e Hunt. who led&#13;
the stiffest opposition and is the&#13;
only black on the board, fecL that&#13;
by ·approving the plan the are&#13;
merely putting up a moke&#13;
creen the_·'re only dealin ·1th&#13;
integration and not looking at the&#13;
greater problem fore i at&#13;
stake than ju ·t housing tuden&#13;
they're Just ignoring and e -&#13;
cu ·ing the poor job they've been&#13;
doing with minority udent' .&#13;
Hunt feel other problem, ar the&#13;
di tric:t's low number of minorit_·&#13;
teachers and lack of empha, 1 on&#13;
minority curriculum. The&#13;
B ckground of the Middl&#13;
Ea t war&#13;
"The Virus"&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Super flea --&#13;
Racine'&#13;
market&#13;
p g 4&#13;
infects&#13;
page 4&#13;
pa 5&#13;
Red man-white man&#13;
page 10 &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER wedllesd'y. Oct. 17. 1m&#13;
RA GER&#13;
'- __ ----EditorioI/Opinion&#13;
One dOVln,&#13;
one to go&#13;
Given his amazing facility fM picking able men to&#13;
assist him In governing our country, President Nixon's&#13;
constltutlonal right to nominate a vice presidential&#13;
replacet'nent should not preclude a thorough scrutiny of&#13;
h s nominee by Congress. His success In the past at&#13;
Judging character, as manifested by his faith In such&#13;
characters as John Milchell, H. R. Haldeman, John&#13;
Erllchman, John Dean and, of course, Spiro T. Agnew,&#13;
exhibit not only lack of care in choosing trustworthy&#13;
people for positions of national trust, but raises further&#13;
questions as to his own character if these are the people&#13;
he associates with and approves of.&#13;
Last Thursday, Presidential Press Secrefary Ronald&#13;
Ziegler said Nixon "wants to move as expeditiously and&#13;
rapidly as possible" In sending a nomination to&#13;
Congress. yet some of the voices raised in defense of&#13;
Nixon's choice back In 1968 excuse his Ignorance of&#13;
Agnew's Impropriety by talking of the haste with which&#13;
such choices are made. This, too, in spite of the fact that&#13;
Nixon had four years to evaluate Agnew before&#13;
renominating him In 1972.The point now Is that far from&#13;
saying he wants a speedy replacement, Nixon should be&#13;
exercising great caution and taking the necessary time&#13;
to ensure his nominee will be morally as well as&#13;
politically acceptable.&#13;
There has been considerable speculation that Nixon&#13;
has had his mind made up for weeks who he wants as&#13;
Vice President, In spite of the show he has made to&#13;
request nominations from other political leaders. The&#13;
White House had an admittedly key role in Agnew's&#13;
resignation, the bargain costing Agnew his job but&#13;
saving him a lot of money, a grueling court scene, and&#13;
probably a lengthy prison sentence.&#13;
The lustltlcatlon for this deal seems to be "national&#13;
Interest:' As Attorney General Elliot Richardson put it,&#13;
"I wish to urge consideration and compassion ...tor the&#13;
Vice President, who has rendered a high service by&#13;
resigning and relieving the nation of a long and potentially&#13;
disastrous period of anguish."&#13;
How much higher a service it would have been for him&#13;
never 0 have entered public service or else never to&#13;
have accepted payments or evaded taxes, was not&#13;
mentioned. Agnew's crime goes beyond the specific&#13;
charges and allegations concerning money··his crime Is&#13;
also that he has further eroded the people's contidence&#13;
Inour governmenf by allowing his corrupted self to hold&#13;
the second highest ollice in the nation.&#13;
Even aller the tide of evidence started turning against&#13;
him last Augusf, he outrlghtedly denied the charges,&#13;
calling them "damned lies." As recently as Sept. 29 he&#13;
100 ed an audience of Replubllcan women straight in the&#13;
eyes and stated that he was "unequivocally Innocent of&#13;
the charges against me:' He declared that he would not&#13;
quit, even If indicted. He then attacked the conduct ot "a&#13;
high Individual" in the Justice departmenf regarding&#13;
press IlNl s. calling such behavior criminal, unjust and&#13;
outrageous.&#13;
What was criminal. unjust and outrageous was'&#13;
Agnew's hypocrisy and damned lies and attempts to&#13;
squirm free and clear and preserve his crooked career.&#13;
What Is criminal, unlust and outrageous Is that in order&#13;
to get him out ot office it was necessary to drop federal&#13;
prosecutIon proceedings. And perhaps most frustrating&#13;
of allis that It's only one down··there's stili one to go.&#13;
by Jane Schllesman&#13;
Co tion in government-a phrase that is becoming well-worn&#13;
I telITU.fhattheme runs through this week's editorial on Spiro Agnew&#13;
a':,d r~also charged in the story of the American Indians' struggle to&#13;
control their own lives.&#13;
The interview with an anonymous Indian student developed out of a&#13;
complaint he wished to register With RANGER ahout the blatant&#13;
prejudice being displayed in the classroom by a P":rti~ular profe~sor.&#13;
He ended up talking with us for tw~ ho~rs about hIS life,.his feelings,&#13;
his perceptions of the Indians' plight 10 American society and the&#13;
problems with government and law e~or~em:nt offi~ia1s: We felt his&#13;
story had validity and interest, for the insight It provided into a broad&#13;
social problem is something worth being co~slder:;ct by all of us. Its&#13;
universality in the midst of such "mlOonty Issues as integration In&#13;
the Racine schools, Mfirmative Action, and the meeting last week of a&#13;
coalition of minority group students organizing the "Third World" on&#13;
campus also points up its relevance.&#13;
The student charged that the federal government not only renigged&#13;
on its Indian treaties, but sold land and grazing and mineral rights out&#13;
from under the Indians. The money which accrued from these sales&#13;
was never seen by the victimized Indians. And when they move from&#13;
their shacks on the reservations to ghettoes in the cities, what they see&#13;
is often the white policeman's bloody club.&#13;
Spiro Agnew was a staunch supporter of those same policemen,&#13;
crusading for "law and order" and fighting "crime in the streets."&#13;
The attorney general's office apparently has overwhelming evidence&#13;
that Agnew's crimes came before the streets existed-when he accepted&#13;
kickhacks on paving and building contracts. Perhaps the&#13;
difference lies in violence-serious crime involves actions such as&#13;
brandishing a weapon, assault, beatings, molesting and other such&#13;
activities frequently involved in arrest. Cheating the Indians out of&#13;
land and money, cheating in awarding government contracts,&#13;
cheating on income tax returns, cheating in campaign activities,&#13;
cheating of the public on the part of the government, is not a violation&#13;
of the law and order government professes to maintain. It is in the&#13;
"national interest" to lie, cheat, steal and deal, and get away with it if&#13;
you are a high- ranking, elected, government official.&#13;
Corruption in government. Everyone says they've known it all&#13;
along, "there's DO such thing as an honest politician," and all that. But&#13;
did we really know its extent, or care, or did Watergate and Agnew&#13;
and the Chicago police indicbnents and the sketchy Bureau of Indian&#13;
Affairs investigation catch us with our naive idealism showing? Some&#13;
still display it, cloaked in red, white and hlue, but others of us have&#13;
covered the ugliness with sarcastic, omniscient humor and a new&#13;
pessimism that cuts deep into our political traditions. That may be&#13;
contrary to "the national interest" by the current Administration's&#13;
definition, but it is in keeping with the interests of the people at the&#13;
grass roots level that government be to serve them, not itself.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the. stud~nts of The University o( wisconsln-Parkside,&#13;
Kenos~a. Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at 0·194 LtbraryLearning&#13;
Center, Telephone (414) 553.2295&#13;
The Pa:kside Ranger is an independ~nt newspaper. Opinions&#13;
r!nected In columns and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
View of The University of wtsconstn-Parkslde&#13;
. Letters to the Editor are encouraged. AU letters on any subject of&#13;
:nterest to students, faculty or staff must be confined. to 250 words or&#13;
l~' typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
~ders for ~ength and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
~ ~~h~donenumber and student status or (acuity rank. Names will&#13;
P&#13;
. t I upon request. The editors reserve the riaht to refuse to&#13;
nn any etters. •&#13;
EDITOR.IN-CHIEF: Jane M. Schllesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR:: Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDnOR: Debl"a Friedell&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR:: Dan Ma rr- y&#13;
COPY EOnOR: Rebecca ECklund&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR: David Daniels&#13;
WRITERS; sandy 8ush. Stt'f)tlen Gifford, 8a ...ba ra Hanson, H.rvey&#13;
HedOen. Ga ...y Jensen, Michael Olsryk, Marilyn Schube ...t, John&#13;
~sen, Steve Stapanlan. Carrie Wa"'d, Tom cesecw. Neal Sautner&#13;
HOTOGRAPt1ERS: Ron Ant"'lm Allen Frede ...l&lt;ko- 8,'.n.au Jim Ruffolo • ....... •&#13;
CARTOONISTS: amy cunda ...i, G....y Huck. Bob Roh.n&#13;
LAYOUT: Terri Gelenian, Ter ...y Knop, staff&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestltoa&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Amy Cund ....i&#13;
;IR&#13;
v&#13;
CULAT10N MANAGER: Gary Worthington&#13;
o ERTlSING STAFF: F...ed law"'ence, Jim Mag ...ude'"&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RA GER Wednesday, Oct. 17, 1973&#13;
A GER&#13;
'--------Edi orial/Opinion&#13;
One down,&#13;
one to go&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
Corruption in government-a phrase that is becoming well-worn&#13;
1 t 1 That theme runs through this week's editorial on Spiro Agnew&#13;
a e y. Am · Ind" ' t and is also charged in the story of the encan 1ans s ruggle to&#13;
control their own lives. . The interview with an anonymous Indian student developed out of a&#13;
complaint he wished to register with RANGER a~out the blatant&#13;
prejudice being displayed in the classroom by a ~rti~ular_ profe~sor.&#13;
He ended up talking with us fo~ tw~ ho~rs about_ his hfe,_his feelmgs,&#13;
his perceptions of the Indians plight m American_ ~oc1ety and ~e&#13;
problems with government and law e~or~em~nt off1~1als: We felt his&#13;
story had validity and interest, for the ~ns1ght 1~ provided mto a broad&#13;
social problem is something worth b~m~ co~s1der~ b)'. all of ~s. I~&#13;
universality in the midst of such "mmor1ty issues as integration m&#13;
the Racine schools, Affirmative Action, and the meeting last week of a&#13;
coalition of minority group students organizing the "Third World" on&#13;
campu also points up its relevance.&#13;
The tudent charged that the federal government not only renigged&#13;
on its Indian treaties, but sold land and grazing and mineral rights out&#13;
from under the Indians. The money which accrued from these sales&#13;
was never seen by the victimized Indians. And when they move from&#13;
their shacks on the reservations to ghettoes in the cities, what they see&#13;
i often the white policeman's bloody club. piro Agnew was a staunch supporter of those same policemen,&#13;
crusading for "law and order" and fighting "crime in the streets. 11&#13;
The attorney general's office apparently has overwhelming evi9ence&#13;
that Agnew's crimes came before the streets existed-when he accepted&#13;
kickbacks on paving and building contracts. Perhaps the&#13;
difference lies in violence-serious crime involves actions such as&#13;
brandishing a weapon, assault, beatings, molesting and other such&#13;
activities frequently involved in arrest. Cheating the Indians out of&#13;
land and money, cheating in awarding government contracts,&#13;
cheating on income tax returns, cheating in campaign activities,&#13;
cheating of the public on the part of the government, is not a violation&#13;
of the law and order government professes to maintain. It is in the&#13;
"national interest" to lie, cheat, steal and deal, and get away with it if&#13;
you are a high-ranking, elected, government official.&#13;
Corruption in government. Everyone says they've known it all&#13;
along, "there's no such thing as an honest politician, 11 and all that. But&#13;
did we really know its extent, or care, or did Watergate and Agnew&#13;
and the Chicago police indictments and the sketchy Bureau of Indian&#13;
Affairs investigation catch us with our naive idealism showing? Some&#13;
still display it, cloaked in red, white and blue, but others of us have&#13;
covered the ugliness with sarcastic, omniscient humor and a new&#13;
pessimism that cuts deep into our political traditions. That may be&#13;
contrary to "the national interest" by the current Administration's&#13;
definition, but it is in keeping with the interests of the people at the&#13;
grass roots level that government be to serve them, not itself .&#13;
. The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
kear by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
enosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 Library- Learning Center, Telephone (414) 553.2295&#13;
Th0 e Parkside Ranger is an independ~nt newspaper Opinions re ected in columns d ed' 1 · . f . . an 1tor als are not necessarily the 0Hic1al&#13;
view O The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Letters to th Ed' · e 1tor are encouraged All letters on any subJect of&#13;
:nterest to students, faculty or staff mu~t be confined to 250 words or&#13;
,:~~~ 11nd double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
add r englh and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
be ;f:h~~one number and student status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
print any 1 tutpon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to e ers.&#13;
EDITOR.IN-CHIEF· Jane M . Schllesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR : Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR : Oebl'a Friedel!&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR · Dan Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR' David Daniels&#13;
WRITERS Sandy Bush, Stephen Gifford, Barbara Hanson, Harvey&#13;
Hedden, Gary Jensen, Michael Olstyk, Marilyn Schubert John&#13;
=Tsen, Steve Stepanian, Carrie Ward, Tom OeFouw, Neal Sautner&#13;
J . ROGRAPHERS Ron Antrim, Allen Frederickson Brian Ross, 1m uttolO '&#13;
CARTOONISTS amy cundari, Gary Huck Bob Rohan&#13;
LAYOUT Terri Gelenian, Terry Knop st~ff&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER. Ken Pestka •&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER : Amy Cundari&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER : Gary Worth' ton ADVERTISING ST ,nc;i AFF· Fred Lawrence, Jim Magruder &#13;
We get letters •••&#13;
Letters to the editor are encouraged.&#13;
All letters on any&#13;
subject of interest to students.&#13;
faculty or staff should be confned&#13;
to 300 words or less, typed&#13;
:nd double-spaced. The editors&#13;
reserve the right to edit letters&#13;
for length and good taste. All&#13;
letterS must be signed and include&#13;
address. phone number,&#13;
and student status or faculty&#13;
rank. Names will be withheld&#13;
upon request. The editors reserve&#13;
the right to refuse to print any&#13;
letters.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
With reference to Stacy&#13;
PastIer, Kenosha Sophomore,&#13;
comments which appeared in the&#13;
OCtober lOth edition, I cannot&#13;
help, despite my better&#13;
judgement, but feel pity and&#13;
sorrow for Ms. Postler, because&#13;
she is obviously a very small and&#13;
lonely individual functioning&#13;
from an eighteen-hundred (800)&#13;
perspective ..&#13;
Ms. Postler is a member of a&#13;
dying breed of White Americans&#13;
that still cannot get it through&#13;
their heads that non-White&#13;
Americans never have had the&#13;
chance of a new beginning and a&#13;
new life when they immigrated to&#13;
this country. That chance which&#13;
European immigrants have&#13;
taken for their right. Likewise,&#13;
this dying breed have failed to&#13;
recognize that the so-called black&#13;
problem is a gross case of&#13;
mislabeling. It is really a White&#13;
problem. It has been a white&#13;
problem all along, a problem of&#13;
white prejudice as harmful to&#13;
Whites as to their Black victims.&#13;
Most Whites have finally been&#13;
forced to confront themselves&#13;
with this terrible inner conflict&#13;
and no one can pretend the&#13;
confrontation did not occur.&#13;
This country and this campus&#13;
will be in much beller shape&#13;
when Ms. Postler and her breed&#13;
dies off. So hurry Stacy, I and&#13;
others are waiting for the day!&#13;
M.Gibson&#13;
Freshman&#13;
To the editors:&#13;
The student government here&#13;
at Parkside has been in a state of&#13;
limbo recently.&#13;
According to sources, the&#13;
PSGAelections are being put off&#13;
\Dltil the steering committee&#13;
(which is not a steering committee&#13;
until CCC does meet)&#13;
givestbem their findings on how&#13;
they should run.&#13;
Well,this is all fine and dandy&#13;
llJt during this time all the&#13;
Parkside student body has is nine&#13;
members of the Student Senate&#13;
who cannot do anything until thev&#13;
firs~ change the constitution by&#13;
getting a referendum before th&#13;
students. If this is done a d ~&#13;
don't. think it will, (n~te n the&#13;
elections held last year and less&#13;
than 10. percent of the student&#13;
POpulatIon voted) student&#13;
government should hold elections&#13;
as SOOnas possible. This will help&#13;
the student government imlement&#13;
~e suggestions made by&#13;
the steering committee.&#13;
Bruce Wagner&#13;
Kenosha sophomore&#13;
To the Editor;&#13;
In response to "goddamn&#13;
minority recruitment" I would&#13;
like to say that minority&#13;
recruitment doesn't make college&#13;
a mockery, but instead a reality&#13;
for those to whom it did not exist.&#13;
Education should not be regarded&#13;
as a privilege extended only to&#13;
the more affluent segment of our&#13;
society, it is a right which should&#13;
be extended to everyone in our&#13;
society regardless of ethnic&#13;
origin, religion, sex, or economic&#13;
background. The fact that admissions&#13;
requirements were&#13;
reduced indicates a concern, by&#13;
the administration, toward&#13;
lessening the discrimination and&#13;
alienation that minority students&#13;
face when entering this&#13;
university.&#13;
I'd also like to add that the&#13;
irrelevencies that minority&#13;
students feel are not only in&#13;
lifestyle, but in curriculum,&#13;
social, and cultural activities as&#13;
well. Instead of a course in "Head&#13;
Shrinking Made Easy," how&#13;
about courses in contemporary&#13;
Black Literature, or the history&#13;
of Mexican-American labor in the&#13;
U.S., or studies in problems of the&#13;
urbanized native-American (the&#13;
list is endless). Also, it's true that&#13;
Uw-Madlsons ethnic centers&#13;
were closed down, but not for&#13;
lack of student interest on the&#13;
part of the minority students.&#13;
Aside from the cultural activities&#13;
they provided, those centers had&#13;
in operation many necessary&#13;
functions, e.g. tutorial and&#13;
counseling services, referral,&#13;
recruitment, and orientational&#13;
services also. Shutting down&#13;
Madison's ethnic centers will not&#13;
only hurt the minority student,&#13;
but also the student community&#13;
as a whole. It's my hope that we&#13;
Parkside students and staff do&#13;
not view UW-Madison as a&#13;
forerunner in minority affairs.&#13;
I'd like to end this leller by&#13;
saying that it's a sad, sad day&#13;
when we as minority students&#13;
have to justify our presence at&#13;
this university.&#13;
Emiliano Contreras&#13;
Racine Sophomore&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In reply to Stacy Postlers&#13;
letter in the OCtober 10 issue of&#13;
the Parkside RANGER:&#13;
Itseems that at least one of my&#13;
fellow students at Parkside has&#13;
been successfully indoctri.nated.&#13;
through Our Great Society, in the&#13;
belief that White is Supreme.&#13;
Apparently Stacy does not&#13;
realize that admission standards&#13;
were lowered for everyone entering&#13;
school; not just minority&#13;
groups. As far as the administration&#13;
is concerned, I think&#13;
their primary reason for wanting&#13;
more students &lt;thus lower&#13;
standards) is that the school&#13;
receives a certain amount of&#13;
money for each student attending&#13;
for use in its budget. I feel our&#13;
time as active students can be&#13;
better utilized. bitching about&#13;
things such as the distribution of&#13;
tickets for the Milwaukee&#13;
Symphony Orchestra concert. As&#13;
I heard the story, Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie distributed the vast&#13;
majority, if not all, tbe tickets to&#13;
his friends. I myseU was here at&#13;
school the night of the performance,&#13;
and the place was&#13;
crawling with elites dressed in&#13;
forma) wear, I was told by a&#13;
student who attended the performance&#13;
that she and her friend&#13;
were the only Parkside students&#13;
in attendance. That's strange&#13;
because I knew several people&#13;
(students) who wanted to attend,&#13;
but weren't able to get tickets.&#13;
Free refreshments were also&#13;
served. A gala affair.&#13;
I have a very strong feeling&#13;
that if I was one of those&#13;
"dissatisfied" blacks, I would be&#13;
more dissatisfied with going to&#13;
the same school with people such&#13;
as Stacy than not having courses&#13;
in Black Culture, History, etc.&#13;
The Black people are a separate&#13;
race, with a different culture, a&#13;
different heritage. but are still&#13;
human beings. supposedly equal&#13;
in the eyes of the God Stacy&#13;
speaks of. As far as our Great&#13;
American (White) Heritage goes,&#13;
Ifeel more ashamed than proud.&#13;
If our government isn't oppressing&#13;
the American Indian, or&#13;
the Blacks or the Vietnamese or&#13;
whoever else they can find, it is&#13;
oppressing we the people. Oppression&#13;
is the one area where&#13;
our government truly does not&#13;
concern itself with racial differences.&#13;
Charles Spurgeon Faris III&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Can it be that there has been a&#13;
deliberate intent to misinterpret&#13;
my letter in last week's&#13;
RANGER? According to your&#13;
addended Editor's note both Tom&#13;
Jennett and Dean Echelberger&#13;
confirmed that the previous&#13;
week's story was correct. Unfortunately&#13;
saying it don't make&#13;
it so.&#13;
Article II. Paragraph F,&#13;
Section 2 of the Student Government&#13;
Constitution states:&#13;
2. In the event beth the&#13;
president and the vice-president&#13;
vacate, the senate shall choose an&#13;
acting president from among its&#13;
members to serve until the next&#13;
scheduled elections.&#13;
Since the Senate is defunct&#13;
because of a lack of quorum, it&#13;
can certainly choose no&#13;
president. Once again. the&#13;
Executive Committee of the&#13;
senate chose Tom Jennett as&#13;
acting chairman. there is no way&#13;
it could appoint him President.&#13;
In the future please confirm&#13;
those stories you print, some&#13;
people are gullible enough to&#13;
believe everything they read. It&#13;
should be your responsibility to&#13;
ensure dissemination of the truth.&#13;
Kenneth R. Konkol&#13;
Senator&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. HI 1973 THE PARI(SJDE R~Gi;R 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Editor's note: "The Mo,"'ement"Is a regular feature In RAl 'GER, II&#13;
deals with ","omen and ","omen's concerns in soc.lel,), at Par ide and in&#13;
history. Guest writers are invited.&#13;
Man-hating and the Movement&#13;
by Barb Hanson&#13;
Among many feminists there 1S an element of manhating.&#13;
Some people who see this become very upset and have some&#13;
picturesque terms with which to label these Iemuusts (dyke, butch.&#13;
castrating bitch. and so on&gt;. These labels are emotionally charged, a&#13;
are the reactions of many people to the concept of man-hating. After&#13;
being brain-washed all their lives with tbe myth of man the protector.&#13;
it is no wonder that women are shakell by the idea of surviving Without&#13;
him, and men are insulted that anyone would consider them less than&#13;
totally perfect. And if women hate men, what happens to love and&#13;
marriage and the propagation of the species'&#13;
These reactions are gut reactions resulting from years 01 sexist&#13;
propaganda. I would like to rationally show that hatred of men as •&#13;
class by women as a class is a logical resuJl of their roles in thlS&#13;
society. The roles are that of women as oppressed and men as Ol"&#13;
pressor. It is an tmdeniable fact that women are oppressed by men and&#13;
that men reap in the advantages of this oppression all their lives_&#13;
Throoghoot history when there has existed a like situation, the Ol"&#13;
pressed class derived much strength and unity from their collective&#13;
hatred for the oppressing class. It is this hatred which has been the&#13;
downfall of the oppressing class.&#13;
Whoever constructed the form for society learned this historical&#13;
lesson well. Our society, with its love-and-serve-men precept for&#13;
women, has effectively precluded the unifying step of hatred whIch&#13;
woold be its ruin. Until now. These days uppity women are rejecting&#13;
many of the myths men are so fond of. Through this rejection, w'omen&#13;
are moving toward the ultimate step of hatred for their oppressor&#13;
which will be followed by revolution. Come this revolution, a new&#13;
society in which all people are created equal will be forged.&#13;
The question of the fate of love and marriage has not been answered.&#13;
I cannot answer it except in a personal way since it is a very pnvate&#13;
and individual matter, Certainly the institutions through which the&#13;
propagation of the species is effected will change, It is up to each individual&#13;
whether or not you can lovea-member 'JC a class or people you&#13;
hate&#13;
Is Parkside&#13;
professional theatre?&#13;
by Tom Petersen&#13;
Parksides first major play production. "The Virus," again bnngs&#13;
up the question of" hether or not the best interests of the students were&#13;
kept in mind. It seems in all the effort and excitement of wanting to&#13;
make a complete success of the play, someone felt It necessary to&#13;
bring in a Broadway actress. a well as the director and his wife&#13;
having lead roles, to heighten the quality of the play. ThIS 10 Itself&#13;
doesn't seem SOhad until you realize that students have only foor of&#13;
the seven parts in the play.&#13;
I feel the main i ue here is not who has the parts but to re-evaluat&#13;
the main purpose 10 having a theatrical program. hoold the ca t for a&#13;
college play be chosen from only the student body, faculty and&#13;
students. or should participation be open to the commuruty a a&#13;
whole? Or is it necessary to bring in professional actors to achieve&#13;
quality theater and also public recogrution1&#13;
In a school like Parkside it is necessary to receive student upport to&#13;
make anything a success But how can you expect students to try out&#13;
for a econd play if they feel they have to compete agamst prof ional&#13;
actors? How are students encouraged to work to make anythmg a&#13;
success if they think the school will solve [be problem by bringmg 10 a&#13;
trouble shooter to do it for them'? Parkside IS a learnmg Institution,&#13;
and a failure IS Just as much a learning experience as a smashing&#13;
success, which is obviously what they're trying to make this play,&#13;
Having ~1i Jeannette here at Parkside can also be a great benefit lo&#13;
those students in "The Virus" and others inlerested in Dramatics, but&#13;
is that the reason she was brought here?&#13;
Imagine this situation, it's the Ranger's first basketball game ever&#13;
In an attempt to make an impressive showmg, and to put Parkside 10&#13;
the spotlight, they bring in a professional basketball player. Of course&#13;
the Rangers win a whopping victory but is It the team's success or 15it&#13;
the pro's, with the team as merely his extras?&#13;
Xaturally. it's not the same situatIon, but where do you draw the&#13;
line?&#13;
Ran er free classifieds t----&#13;
FOA. SALE F1SCI'tH slolperJl.us sJus, lOt&#13;
em "ever mou"led Of used, '120 Of best&#13;
otter. ColIlIun II .... Of' 6031·116'.uk tor On.&#13;
DolIn.els.&#13;
FOR SAl.E: 1"$ C"-vy Imp.l~ J21, 'tlde&#13;
mft. "lOW tim Ind~ t:ueU.m rv,,,"11t&#13;
cond, tOft. Cell 657""'$1, nil: lor Clndv.&#13;
We get letters ...&#13;
Letters to the editor are encouraged.&#13;
All letters on any&#13;
ubject of interest to students,&#13;
faculty or staff should be confned&#13;
to JOO words or less, typed 1&#13;
nd double-spaced. The editors&#13;
:eserve the right to edit letters&#13;
for length and good taste. All&#13;
letters must be signed and include&#13;
address, phone number,&#13;
and student status or faculty&#13;
rank. Names will be withheld&#13;
upon request. The editors reserve&#13;
the right to refuse to print any&#13;
letters.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
With reference to Stacy&#13;
Postier, Kenosha Sophomore,&#13;
comments which appeared in the&#13;
October 10th edition, I cannot&#13;
help, despite my better&#13;
judgement, but feel pity and&#13;
sorrow for Ms. Postier, because&#13;
she is obviously a very small and&#13;
lonely individual functioning&#13;
from an eighteen-hundred 0800)&#13;
perspective. ·&#13;
Ms. Postler is a member of a&#13;
dying breed of White Americans&#13;
that still cannot get it through&#13;
their heads that non-White&#13;
Americans never have had the&#13;
chance of a new beginning and a&#13;
new life when they immigrated to&#13;
this country. That chance which&#13;
European immigrants have&#13;
taken for their right. Likewise,&#13;
this dying breed have failed to&#13;
recognize that the so-called black&#13;
problem is a gross case of&#13;
mislabeling. It is really a White&#13;
problem. It has been a white&#13;
problem all along, a problem of&#13;
white prejudice as harmful to&#13;
Whites as to their Black victims.&#13;
fost Whites have finally been&#13;
forced to confront themselves&#13;
with this terrible inner conflict&#13;
and no one can pretend the&#13;
confrontation did not occur.&#13;
This country and this campus&#13;
will be in much better shape&#13;
when Ms. Postier and her breed&#13;
dies off. So hurry Stacy, I and&#13;
others are waiting for the day!&#13;
M.Gibson&#13;
Freshman&#13;
To the editors:&#13;
The student government here&#13;
at Parkside has been in a state of&#13;
limbo recently.&#13;
According to sources, the&#13;
PSGA elections are being put off&#13;
witil the steering committee&#13;
(which is not a steering committee&#13;
until CCC does meet)&#13;
gives them their findings on how&#13;
they should run.&#13;
Well, this is all fine and dandy&#13;
but during this time all the&#13;
Park ide student body has is nine&#13;
members of the Student Senate&#13;
who cannot do anything until thev&#13;
firs~ change the constitution by getting a referendum before the&#13;
stu~ents .. If ~is is done, and I&#13;
don t_ think it will, (note the&#13;
elections held last year and less&#13;
than 10 . percent of the student&#13;
population voted) student&#13;
government should hold elections&#13;
as soon as possible. This will help&#13;
the student government imlement&#13;
~e suggestions made by the steering committee.&#13;
Bruce Wagner Kenosha sophomore&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In response to "goddamn&#13;
minority recruitment" I would&#13;
like to say that minority&#13;
recruitment doesn't make college&#13;
a mockery, but instead a reality&#13;
for those to whom it did not exist.&#13;
Education should not be regarded&#13;
as a privilege extended only to&#13;
the more affluent segment of our&#13;
society, it is a right which should&#13;
be extended to everyone in our&#13;
society regardless of ethnic&#13;
origin, religion, sex, or economic&#13;
background_. The fact that admissions&#13;
requirements were&#13;
reduced indicates a concern, by&#13;
the administration, toward&#13;
lessening the discrimination and&#13;
alienation that minority students&#13;
face when entering this&#13;
university.&#13;
I'd also like to add that the&#13;
irrelevencies that minority&#13;
students feel are not only in&#13;
lifestyle, but in curriculum,&#13;
social, and cultural activities as&#13;
well. Instead of a course in "Head&#13;
Shrinking Made Easy," how&#13;
about courses in contemporary&#13;
Black Literature, or the history&#13;
of Mexican-American labor in the&#13;
U.S., or studies in problems of the&#13;
urbanized native-American (the&#13;
list is endless). Also, it's true that&#13;
UW-Madison's ethnic centers&#13;
were closed down, but not for&#13;
lack of student interest on the&#13;
part of the minority students.&#13;
Aside from the cultural activities&#13;
they provided, those centers had&#13;
in operation many necessary&#13;
functions, e .g. tutorial and&#13;
counseling services, referral,&#13;
recruitment, and orientational&#13;
services also. Shutting down&#13;
Madison's ethnic centers will not&#13;
only hurt the minority student,&#13;
but also the student community&#13;
as a whole. It's my hope that we&#13;
Parkside students and staff do&#13;
not view UW-Madison as a&#13;
forerunner in minority affairs.&#13;
I'd like to end this letter by&#13;
saying that it's a sad, sad day&#13;
when we as minority students&#13;
have to justify our presence at&#13;
this university. Emiliano Contreras&#13;
Racine Sophomore&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
In reply to tacy Posll r·&#13;
letter in the October 10 i ue of&#13;
the Park id RA. GER:&#13;
It eem that at least one of mv&#13;
felloY. tudent at Parkside ha.&#13;
been succe full) indoctrinated&#13;
through Our Great c1ety, in th&#13;
belief that White i upreme.&#13;
Apparent!) tacy doe not&#13;
realize that adm1 -ion tandard&#13;
were lowered for "en one entering&#13;
chool: not just ·minority&#13;
group . As far as the administration&#13;
is concerned, I thmk&#13;
their primary reason for wantin&#13;
more tudent &lt;thu lower&#13;
tandards) i that th chool&#13;
receive a certain amount of&#13;
money for each tudent attendin&#13;
for u e m its budget. I feel our&#13;
time a active tudents can be&#13;
better utilized bitching about&#13;
things such as the di tr1bulion of&#13;
tickets for the • lilwaukee&#13;
ymphony Orchestra concert. A&#13;
I heard the story, Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie distributed the vast&#13;
majority, if not all, the tickets to&#13;
his friends. I myself was here at&#13;
school the night of the performance,&#13;
and the place was&#13;
crawling with elites dressed in&#13;
formal wear. I was told b a&#13;
student who attended the performance&#13;
that she and her friend&#13;
were the only Parkside tudents&#13;
in attendance. That's strange&#13;
because I knew several people&#13;
(students) who wanted to attend,&#13;
but weren't able to get tic ets.&#13;
Free refreshments were also&#13;
served. A gala affair.&#13;
I have a very strong feeling&#13;
that if I was one of tho e&#13;
"di atisfied" black . I would be&#13;
more dissatisfied with going to&#13;
the same school with people such&#13;
as tacy than not having cours&#13;
in Black Culture, Hi ton·. etc.&#13;
The Black people are a eparate&#13;
race, with a different culture, a&#13;
different heritage, but are tilJ&#13;
human beings, upposed.ly equal&#13;
in the eye of the God tacy&#13;
peak of. far as our Great&#13;
American (White) Heritage o ,&#13;
I feel more a. hamed than proud.&#13;
If our government i n't oppre&#13;
ing the American Indian or&#13;
the Black or the Vietname e or&#13;
whoever el e they can find, it 1&#13;
oppressing we the people. Oppre&#13;
ion i the one area where&#13;
our government truly doe not&#13;
concern it elf with racial differences.&#13;
&#13;
Charle purgeon Fari III&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Can it be that there ha been a&#13;
deliberate intent to mi int rpret&#13;
my letter in la t wee ·&#13;
RA. 'GER? Accordin to vour&#13;
addend d Editor' note both Tom&#13;
Jennett and Dean Echelberger&#13;
confirmed that the previou week· ton· Y.a correct. nfortunateJy&#13;
· aying it don't make&#13;
it so.&#13;
Article II Paragraph F,&#13;
ction 2 of the tud nt Government&#13;
Con titut1on .tat -·&#13;
2. In th event both the&#13;
pre 1der and the ,,,ce-pr ·1d nt&#13;
\'acate, the nate hall choo_e an&#13;
acting pre ident from among i&#13;
member to erve until the ne. t&#13;
cheduled elections.&#13;
ince the enate is d funct&#13;
because of a lac of quorum, 1t&#13;
can certainlv choo e no&#13;
pre 1dent. oice agam, the&#13;
Executive Committee of the&#13;
Senate cho e Tom Jennett a acting chairman, there i no ,ay it could appoint him Pre-1dent.&#13;
In the future please confirm&#13;
tho e stories you print, some&#13;
people are gullible enough to&#13;
believe everything they read. It&#13;
should be your responsibility to&#13;
ensure dissemination of the truth.&#13;
Kenneth R. Konkol&#13;
Senator&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Point of view&#13;
Is Parkside&#13;
professional theatre?&#13;
Ranger free classifieds&#13;
FOR SALE F,sc ..... SU!MrJI IU ~ s, ,_&#13;
cm, never "" M or used, S12t or Mst er C• 11215 1-4, or .:11.1 l, ask r • .,.&#13;
~ &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 1" 1973&#13;
History of Middle East is conflict&#13;
b) Rtbecca Ecklund&#13;
The war In the tiddle East is erupting into a&#13;
major con!liet once again. It has become almost a&#13;
routln~ event to hear about a border skinnish or&#13;
bombing raid talung place in that part of the world.&#13;
(t h become so commoo.1D fact. that one tends to&#13;
[orget J t "hat all that dyIng is about, and how it&#13;
came about The real reasons [or the Arab-[sraeli conIIiet are&#13;
too deeply rooted 10 the political and social&#13;
prejudiees of both races of people to go into here. A&#13;
rather general history of Palestine should serve to&#13;
return to US 8 sense or perspective.&#13;
Ever since .0. 135, when the Jews were driven&#13;
[rom Jerusalem by Roman """que""", the&#13;
"cllildren o[ Israel" have been scattered throughout&#13;
the W tern and 'ear-Eastern worlds. They have&#13;
literally been a people ""thout a eounlry, conidered&#13;
"[oregnen" no matter where they settle.&#13;
Alter the Romans came eenturtes 01 dilIerent&#13;
Invade". ell new horde destroying the previous&#13;
00 • each Illtent upon eOl'ltrol!lllg Palestine.&#13;
In the late ItlOOS, a group was [ormed called the&#13;
World ZIonist ~anization (WZOl. Spurred into&#13;
acllOO by the bloody anti-5ernitie pogroms carried&#13;
out aiain t ghetto Jews In Russia and Poland, the&#13;
WZ plan was to purchase and rebuild the Jewish&#13;
homeland A1mo t tOO, Jew' were living 10 Palestine by&#13;
1914'"hen World War I broke out. and the Jewish&#13;
homel nd coce again became a battlefield.&#13;
Afler that war was o,..er, Great Britain was given&#13;
1&#13;
J&#13;
control of the Middle East and a dispute arose over&#13;
possession o[ Palestine. The area had been&#13;
promised to the Arabs in \9\5 and also to the Jews m&#13;
the Balfour Declaration of 19\8. That mandate of&#13;
\9\8 was formally approved by the newly-[orrned&#13;
League of Nations in 1923.&#13;
The "double.promised" land&#13;
The "doUble-promised" land became a refuge for&#13;
Jews fleeing the European persecutions of the \9305,&#13;
that is, the anti-semitic vendetta inititated by Adolf&#13;
Hitler and his Nazi party. As a result, Jewish immigration&#13;
increased to half a million by \939, onethird&#13;
of Palestine'S total population.&#13;
Arab hostility was not articulated immediately:&#13;
disorganization, lack of concentrated effort, and&#13;
Iack of any real intellectual leader kept the Arabs.&#13;
inactive until 1936. A rebellion broke out at that time&#13;
but was quicl&lt;ly suppressed by British troops.&#13;
The White Paper mandate of \939 put a definite&#13;
ceiling of 75,000 Jews allowed entry into Palestine&#13;
between 1939 and \945. It was meant to appease the&#13;
Arab nations' complaints and it did just that.&#13;
The entire matter was handed baek to the U.N. in&#13;
1947, and the partitioning of Palestine into two&#13;
separate states was recommended. The Jews were&#13;
willing to accept this idea, but the Arabs were not.&#13;
Then. in May o{.l948,David Ben-Gurion, an active&#13;
Jewish nationalist, and leaders of the WZO announced&#13;
to the world the formation of an independent&#13;
state of Israel.&#13;
Arabian troops immediately attacked Israel: this&#13;
war, interrupted twice by UN-arranged cease-fires,&#13;
lasted for about a year. In early \949, armistice&#13;
agreements were signed by Israel and four Arab&#13;
nations. Itwas a decisive victory for the new Jewish&#13;
nation. "Thesecond of the four wars that have plagued and&#13;
are plaguing the Middle East is known as the Suez&#13;
Conflict. After 1949, sporadic but incessant terrorist&#13;
fighting continued with increasing severity until a&#13;
full-scale war broke out in \956. The Suez Conflict&#13;
lasted only a few days but in that time, Israel gained&#13;
some very important ~erritory (for example, the&#13;
Sinai Peninsula), scormg another swift military&#13;
triumph.&#13;
Six Day War&#13;
A steady escalation of attacks and reprisals and&#13;
continuing border skirmishes triggered the war of&#13;
1967, or the Six Day War.&#13;
President Gamal Nassar of the United Arab&#13;
Republic (UAR) made a show of force by demanding&#13;
in May of \967 that the United Nations&#13;
Emergency Force (UNEFl be withdrawn from&#13;
territory that Israel had gained in 1956. UNEF&#13;
troops were withdrawn, UAR troops moved in and&#13;
Isr-ael ,launched an immediate attack.' The&#13;
retaliation attack by the Jews was so swift and so&#13;
devastating that they succeeded in occupying more&#13;
than double the amount of territory they'd held&#13;
previously. Isr-ael could claim ~other total victory.&#13;
The war that IS raging now m the Middle East is&#13;
no different from the Six Day War or the Suez&#13;
ConDict or the battle for independence:. it is a fight&#13;
to the death of one nation, and winner take all.&#13;
N.Y. actress heads "Virus"·cast&#13;
Gertrude Jeannette. the New York based Broadway-movie--TV&#13;
actress ",-hoheads a student-faculty cast currently in rehearsal for the&#13;
pt'e.miere production of Herbert Kubly's "The Virus," discusses the&#13;
sc.npl a~ve with tbe playwrtght (center) and Director-actor Don&#13;
Rmh (ngbtl.&#13;
232'i-sit.keto»e,w,&#13;
-----$~~/. \&#13;
by Carrie Ward&#13;
Playing November 1-4 at the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater will&#13;
be the Herbert Kubly play, "The&#13;
Virus." Kubly is a parkside&#13;
English professor.&#13;
The play is of the conflicts of a&#13;
bi-racial family as the children&#13;
learn of their heritage and&#13;
themselves. To play the part of&#13;
the mother, Delia, a professional&#13;
actress, Gertrude Jeannette, was&#13;
hired from New York. She has&#13;
appeared in several Broadway&#13;
productions. Some of the plays&#13;
she has been in are "Nobody&#13;
Loves an Albatross" with Robert&#13;
Preston, and "The Amen Corner"&#13;
with Bea Richards and&#13;
James Baldwin, which also&#13;
toured the west coast and London.&#13;
One of her off-Broadway&#13;
productions was •'The Little&#13;
Foxes" with Edward G.&#13;
Robinson, Betty Field and Jerry&#13;
Page. Jeanne!.!e has appeared in&#13;
such movies as "Shaft," "Cotton&#13;
Comes to Harlem," and "The&#13;
Legend of Nigger Charlie." On&#13;
;:v she has played in the special,&#13;
To Be Young, Gifted and&#13;
Black," "The Nurses," and "The&#13;
Defenders," to name a few.&#13;
Don Rintz, Parkside assistant&#13;
professor of communications&#13;
and his wife Annabell will hav~&#13;
lead rol~s also. Rintz, who is also&#13;
the director, will portray&#13;
Laurance, Delia's architect son&#13;
In his capacity as a Parksid~&#13;
teacher, Rintz Instructs Persuasion&#13;
and Introduction to&#13;
Dramatic Arts. The last play h&lt;&#13;
appeared in was the lead role 1D&#13;
"The Error of Sexton Jones," m&#13;
the Robert Grand Theater An·&#13;
nabell Rintz will appear as&#13;
Pamela, Laurance's fiancee ID&#13;
the play. She has appeared in&#13;
previous Parkside productioos&#13;
Four Parkside students are&#13;
also appearing in the play. Rick&#13;
Ponzio, from Kenosha, will&#13;
portray Reuben, scientist sonof&#13;
Delia. Some of his previOU$&#13;
performances were in "Thieves&#13;
Carnival" at Carthage, Kenosha&#13;
Jr. Women's Club Follies, and&#13;
"My Fair Lady" at St. Jose~'s&#13;
High School. Judie Smith, [rom&#13;
Kenosha, portrays Rhnda, sister&#13;
of Laurance and Reuben. Someof&#13;
her previous acting experiences&#13;
were Dorothy in the "WizardrJ&#13;
Oz" and Anne O'Sullivan in "'lbe&#13;
Miracle Worker." She is alsoaD&#13;
accomplished puppeteer, and&#13;
was owner, director and&#13;
producer of Peanut Butter and&#13;
- Jelly Ltd., of Kenosha. Denn~&#13;
Geraghty of Racine, plays Dreo&#13;
GiUford, Rhoda's boyfriend.H'&#13;
has appeared in several hig!!&#13;
school plays. Steve Lott, alsoor&#13;
Racine, portrays Ajax, a black&#13;
student activist.&#13;
Tickets are on sale at the In&#13;
formation Kiosk. The price fer&#13;
students is-$1.50, general publIC&#13;
$3.&#13;
johnny got his gUll&#13;
PAB&#13;
FEATURE F\LM SERIES&#13;
Fri. October 19&#13;
8,OOP.M.&#13;
Sun. October 21&#13;
7'30P.M.&#13;
ADMfSSION 15C&#13;
Student Activities Bldg&#13;
UWP a. Wis. I.D ReqUired&#13;
Dalton TrumbO's controversial film of a r:: .&#13;
mutilated veteran who emerges from&#13;
nothing more than a vegetable, As a oe~a:s'~It'If&#13;
indictment of war. "Johnny Got HiS VuJI ,~&#13;
most shOCKing and powefful af9umen1&#13;
jOl" •&#13;
you'll ever see.&#13;
ry of Middle East is conflict&#13;
~wcaiEckhmd&#13;
The in the Middle East is erupting into a&#13;
major conflict once apin. It bu becGme almost a&#13;
routine event to bear about a border akirmi8h •&#13;
bin&amp; raid takin&amp; place in that part ol lbe world.&#13;
ome 10 common, in fact, lhat one tends to&#13;
fcqet what all that dying is about, and how it&#13;
came about&#13;
The rMl reuona for the Arab-laraell ccnflict are&#13;
deeply rooted in tbe polidcal and IOCial&#13;
prejudices ol both races ol people to ID into here. A&#13;
rather aenera) bmory ol Paleltine should serve to&#13;
retum to us a of perspective.&#13;
since A.D. 135, when the Jews were siven&#13;
from Jeruulem by Roman conqueron, the&#13;
"dillchn ol ael" have been acattered throughout&#13;
Wa~-n and ear-Eastern ~ - 1bey have&#13;
y been • people thout • country. con- "foreipen" DO matter where they leCtle.&#13;
Altlr the Romana came centuries ol different&#13;
a , ch new horde destroying tbe previous&#13;
, each iDtenl upon controlling Pai.tine.&#13;
In tbe late 1 • a an,up formed called the&#13;
arid Zioniat Orpniution &lt;WZO&gt;. Spurred into&#13;
action by the bloody anti-8emitic pocroma carried&#13;
out apimt petto Jews in Russia and Poland, the&#13;
plan to purchase and rebuild the Jewish&#13;
homeland. A1moat I , J livlnl in Palestine by&#13;
l9lfwben arid War I broke out, and tbe Jewish&#13;
homeland once apin became a battlefield.&#13;
After lhat war over, Great Britain a given&#13;
control of the Middle East and a dispute arose over&#13;
possession of Palestine. The area bad ~&#13;
promised to the Arabs in 1915 and also to the Jews m&#13;
the Balfo1r Declaration of 1918. That mandate of&#13;
1918 was formally approved by the newly-fom:ied&#13;
League of atioos in 1923.&#13;
TIie "'double-promised" land&#13;
The "double-promised" land became a refuge for&#13;
Jews fleeing the European persecutions ol the 1930s,&#13;
that is, the anti-Semitic vendetta inititated by Adolf&#13;
Hitler and his az.i party. As a result, Jewish immigration&#13;
increased to half a million by 1939, onethird&#13;
of Palestine's total population.&#13;
Arab hostility was not articulated immediately:&#13;
«lsorganization, lack of concentrated effort, and&#13;
lack of any real intellectual leader kept the Arabs&#13;
inactive until 1936. A rebellioo broke out at that time&#13;
but was quickly suppressed by British troop&amp;.&#13;
The White Paper mandate of 1939 put a definite&#13;
ceiling ol 75,000 Jews allowed entry into Palestine&#13;
between 1939 and 1945. It was meant to appease the&#13;
Arab natioos' complaints and it did just that.&#13;
The entire matter was banded back to the U.N. in&#13;
1947, and the partitiooing of Palestine into two&#13;
separate states was recommended. The Jews were&#13;
willing to accept this idea, but the Arabs were not.&#13;
Then, in Mayol_1948, David Ben-Gurion, an active&#13;
Jewish nationalist, and leaden of the WZO annol.llC:ed&#13;
to the world the formation of an independent&#13;
state of Jsr..el.&#13;
Arabian troops immediately attacked Israel: this&#13;
war, interrupted twice by UN-arranged cease-fires,&#13;
lasted for about a year. In early 1949, armistice&#13;
agreements were signed by Israel and four Arab&#13;
nations. It was a decisive victory for the new Jewish&#13;
nation. The second of the four wars that have plagued and&#13;
are plaguing the Middle East is known as the Suez&#13;
Conflict.&#13;
After 1949, sporadic but incessant terrorist&#13;
fighting continued with increasing severity until 1&#13;
full-scale war broke out in 1956. The Suez Conflict&#13;
lasted only a few days but in that time, Israel gained&#13;
some very important territory (for example, the&#13;
Sinai Peninsula), scoring another swift military&#13;
triumph.&#13;
Six Day War&#13;
A steady escalation of attacks and reprisals and&#13;
continuing border skirmishes triggered the war of&#13;
1967, or the Six Day War.&#13;
President Gamal Nassar of the United Arab&#13;
Republic (UAR) made a show of force by demanding&#13;
in May of 1967 that the United Nations&#13;
Emergency Force (UNEF) be withdrawn from&#13;
territory that Israel had gained in 1956. lJNEF&#13;
troops were withdrawn, UAR troops moved in and&#13;
Israel launched an immediate attack. '1be&#13;
retaliation attack by the Jews was so swift and 80&#13;
devastating that they succeeded in occupying more&#13;
than double the amount of territory they'd held&#13;
previously. Israel could claim another total victory&#13;
The war that is raging now in the Middle Eat ~&#13;
no different from the Six Day War or the Sues&#13;
Conflict or the battle for independence~ it ia a fllbt&#13;
to the death of one nation, and winner take all.&#13;
N. Y. actress heads ''Virus'' -cast&#13;
-g&#13;
....&#13;
.g&#13;
....&#13;
-&#13;
Gertrude JeaMette. the . ·ew York based Broadway-movie-TV&#13;
actres who h\"ads a student-facuhy cast CDl"N!lltly in rehearsal for the&#13;
premiere production of Herbert Kubly's "The Virus," discusses the&#13;
script above •itb tbe playwright (center) and Director-actor Don&#13;
Riatz (right&gt;.&#13;
by Carrie Ward&#13;
Playing November 1-4 at the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater will&#13;
be the Herbert Kubly play, "The&#13;
Virus." Kubly is a Parkside&#13;
English professor.&#13;
The play is of the conflicts of a&#13;
bi-racial family as the children&#13;
learn of their heritage and&#13;
themselves. To play the part of&#13;
the mother, Delia, a professional&#13;
actress, Gertrude Jeannette, was&#13;
hired from New York. She has&#13;
appeared in several Broadway&#13;
productions. Some of the plays&#13;
she has been in are "Nobody&#13;
Loves an Albatross" with Robert&#13;
Preston, and "The Amen Corner"&#13;
with Bea Richards and&#13;
James Baldwin, which also&#13;
toured the west coast and London.&#13;
One of her off-Broadway&#13;
productions was " The Little&#13;
Foxes" with Edward G.&#13;
Robinson, Betty Field and Jerry&#13;
Page. Jeannet,te has appeared in&#13;
such movies as "Shaft," "Cotton&#13;
Comes to Harlem," and "The&#13;
Legend of Nigger Charlie." On&#13;
"f:Y she has played in the special,&#13;
To Be Young, Gifted and&#13;
Black," "The Nurses," and "The&#13;
Defenders," to name a few.&#13;
Don Rintz, Parkside assistant&#13;
professor of communications&#13;
and his wife Annabell will hav~&#13;
lead roles also. Rintz, who is also&#13;
the direc tor, will portray&#13;
Laurance, Delia's architect son&#13;
In his capacity as a Parksid~&#13;
teacher, Rintz instrq_cta .,._&#13;
sua sion a nd lntroductioa II&#13;
Dramatic Arts. The last pJay lie&#13;
appea red in was the lead rde II "The Error of Sexton Joia," II&#13;
the Robert Grand Theater. Allnabell&#13;
Rintz will appear •&#13;
Pamela, Laurance's fiancee II&#13;
the play. She has appeued II&#13;
previous Parkside produclila.&#13;
Four Pa rkside students are&#13;
also appearing in the play. Rim&#13;
Ponzio, from Kenosha, wtl&#13;
portray Reuben, scientist son II&#13;
Delia. Some of his pmi.&#13;
performances were in '"lbieftl&#13;
Carnival" at Carthage, KeDIIIIII&#13;
Jr. Women's Club Follies, •&#13;
"My Fair Lady" at St. J_,.'&#13;
High School. Judie Smith, fra&#13;
Kenosha, portrays Rhoda, 111W&#13;
of Laurance and Reuben. Seine.,&#13;
her previous acting 1:;xpek'iele9&#13;
were Dorothy in the "Wizard II&#13;
Oz" and Anne O'Sullivan in '11111&#13;
Miracle Worker." She is allo •&#13;
accomplished puppeteer, ...&#13;
was owner, director ud&#13;
producer of Peanut Butter ,.&#13;
· Jelly Ltd., of Kenosha. Delllll&#13;
Geraghty of Racine, plays Drfl&#13;
Gillford, Rhoda's boyfriend. He&#13;
has appeared in several billl&#13;
school plays. Steve Lott. al!!&#13;
Racine, portrays Ajax, a -&#13;
student activist.&#13;
Tickets are on sale at the Itformation&#13;
Kiosk. The price f•&#13;
students is· $1.50, general publit&#13;
$3.&#13;
johnny got his gun&#13;
Dalton Trumbo's controversial film Ol 1 ~ mutilated veteran who emerges from 11 nothing more than a vegetable. A•" Ot&gt;',. ..,&#13;
indictment of war, "Johnny Got His viii' ,,,_, ~ most shocking and powerful argument tor&#13;
you' ll ever see.&#13;
PAR&#13;
FEATURE FILM SERIES&#13;
Fri. October 19&#13;
8:00P.M.&#13;
Sun. October %1&#13;
7:30P.M.&#13;
ADMISSION 75C&#13;
Student Activities Bldg-&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 17, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Seven Mile&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
You can get there by driving&#13;
out Racine's Highway 38 to the&#13;
Seven Mile Road, going (rom a&#13;
wealthy suburbia with row after&#13;
row of two-story homes to (arm&#13;
fields with row after row of corn&#13;
and cabbage. Go past the town or&#13;
Husher and on by vegetable&#13;
stands nestled in the (allen leaves&#13;
of a farmer's front lawn, where a&#13;
city slicker can buy pumpkins or&#13;
peppers. tomatoes, beans. squash&#13;
and cabbage without checking&#13;
them through a grocery store&#13;
line.&#13;
The Seven-Mile Fair starts&#13;
early every Sunday morning o(&#13;
the year. While most people are&#13;
still warm in bed or at Sunday&#13;
morning church, the Seven-Mile&#13;
sellers and buyers have begun to&#13;
move. Shop has been set up,&#13;
whether it be (rom the trunk or&#13;
the car, tbe back of a pick-up&#13;
truck or on card tables. the&#13;
merchandise is out to be sold.&#13;
Pigeons, paper-backs, hall o( a&#13;
wheelbarrow (or $2, pool cues,&#13;
guns and carpeting-you name it.&#13;
most likely it's there at the&#13;
Seven-Mile Fair.&#13;
And the people? All shapes,&#13;
syndrome&#13;
sizes, colors and backgrounds are&#13;
there. Some wear their best suits&#13;
and ties or a Janey dress with&#13;
jewelry and look down at&#13;
everything but a good bargain.&#13;
Others may have furnished their&#13;
homes (rom items they have&#13;
discovered there.&#13;
And those o( us who go just to&#13;
look around at the people and the&#13;
sales will walk for hours,&#13;
fascinated. Horse saddles, office&#13;
supplies. brand new stereo sets,&#13;
clothes, lash whips, guitars. toilet&#13;
paper. tennis shoes. duck decoys.&#13;
old plastic purses, plates. used&#13;
children's games. and more and&#13;
more and more.&#13;
One man tells a prospective&#13;
buyer. "That's why it's cheap.&#13;
Ain't you hand)' at fixin' things?"&#13;
The Seven. 1iIe Fair even has&#13;
Its own produce department The&#13;
southeast corner of the Iatr'&#13;
grounds is reserved (or farm&#13;
produce, poultry. rabbits.&#13;
flowers, ducks. pigeons, and the&#13;
like.&#13;
And asthe day goes on, hundreds&#13;
and hundreds o( people&#13;
visit and file through the (air&#13;
Fathers hold on to a beer and&#13;
mothers to scores o( litUe, dirty&#13;
children Old men and women&#13;
make their way through the&#13;
crowd.&#13;
And the sellers jump to dump&#13;
their goods. One can bargain a&#13;
price. "You offer me 8 IX'lce."&#13;
they will say_&#13;
"Super sex 10sexly~1 25 value&#13;
(or only $1," a woman tells an&#13;
Interested bypasser. " tandard&#13;
sex to sexty-$1 value. only 7S&#13;
cents," she says. For those who&#13;
haven't been out there to kllO'A',&#13;
these are magazines.&#13;
And then there are cans or&#13;
. pray paint, boxes of tools. pIlotOl&#13;
of other people's relatives.&#13;
lamps, socks, puppie , truck .... •&#13;
. afety wallets. "Who's next.&#13;
please,H someone says.&#13;
It's like this every Sunday o(&#13;
the year, ram, hme, $nOW or&#13;
cold. a long a there are people&#13;
there will be a fa,r&#13;
Aller people have joume~·ed&#13;
past the goods, bought some and&#13;
lett others behind (or SOmeone&#13;
else, lhey return to their car and&#13;
home. Back through Husher and&#13;
(all helds of harve ted com, pa t&#13;
a horseback rider or lWo, and&#13;
fmally home lO examee what&#13;
they've bought and hnd a plac&#13;
(or It.&#13;
photos by RANGER pbcccgrapber BriaD Ross&#13;
Wednesday , Oct. 17, 1973 THE PARKSfDE RANGER 5&#13;
Seven Mile syndrome&#13;
by Debra FriedeU&#13;
You can get there by driving&#13;
out Racine's Highway 38 to the&#13;
Seven me Road, going from a&#13;
wealthy suburbia with row after&#13;
row of two-story homes to farm&#13;
fields with row after row of corn&#13;
and cabbage. Go past the town of&#13;
Husher and on by vegetable&#13;
stands nestled in the fallen leaves&#13;
of a farmer's front lawn, where a&#13;
city slicker can buy pwnpkins or&#13;
peppers. tomatoes. beans, squash&#13;
and cabbage without checking&#13;
them throug}l a grocery tore&#13;
line.&#13;
The Seven-. tile Fair star&#13;
early every Sunday morning of&#13;
the year. While most people are&#13;
still warm in bed or at unday&#13;
morning church, the even-. tile&#13;
sellers and buyers have begun to&#13;
move. hop has been . et up,&#13;
whether it be from the trunk of&#13;
the car, the back of a pick-up&#13;
truck or on card tables, the&#13;
merchandise is out to be sold.&#13;
Pigeons, paper-bac , half of a&#13;
wheelbarrow for $2, pool cues.&#13;
guns and carpeting-you name it,&#13;
most likely it's there at the&#13;
Seven-Mile Fair.&#13;
And the people? All hapes,&#13;
sizes. colors and backgrounds are&#13;
there. Some wear their be ·t uits&#13;
and ties or a fancy dr with&#13;
jewelry and look down at&#13;
everything but a good bargain.&#13;
Others may have furnished their&#13;
homes from item they have&#13;
discovered there.&#13;
And those of us who go just to&#13;
loo around at the people and the&#13;
sale will walk for hour" ,&#13;
fascinated . Ho e ddle , office&#13;
upplies. brand new tereo et: ,&#13;
clothe , la h whip·, guitars, toilet&#13;
p.1per. tenni _ hoes, duck deco~. ,&#13;
old pla tic purs ·, plat , used&#13;
children'. game,. and more and&#13;
more and more.&#13;
e man tell a p&#13;
buyer, "That' ·hy it' cheap.&#13;
in't you hand: at ii in' thi&#13;
The ,en-. Iii Fair · n ha&#13;
its own produce d p.1rtment. Th&#13;
outhea. t com r of th fair&#13;
ground i r rved for farm&#13;
produce, poultry, rabbit .&#13;
flo ·ers, due ~, pi eor1-, nd the&#13;
Ii e.&#13;
\nd a .th day goes on, hun·&#13;
dr and hundr of people&#13;
v1. it and file through th fair.&#13;
Fathers hold on to a be r and&#13;
mothers to cores of little, dirt ·&#13;
children. Old men and v.om n&#13;
thro h th&#13;
mp to dump&#13;
photos b)· RANGER photograph r Bri n Ross &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, oct. 17, 1973&#13;
Bargain or beg ----------&#13;
faculty that the AdDunislration must be able to&#13;
prove that there is no money that could be pared&#13;
elsewhere instead of terminating faculty. Ewers&#13;
explained that otherwise the Administration must&#13;
prove a faculty member is incompetent.&#13;
tnnis said that the 15llOteacbers in'Racinewho are&#13;
....'EA members are not looked at as subprofessionals.&#13;
Unionism is nol non_professional.&#13;
"You need things to perform your job, you have to&#13;
collectively bargain for them or coUectively beg or&#13;
individually beg:' Innis said. Hit is time:' ~e&#13;
...-arned "to consider what you want, what you re&#13;
all a~t. and how to go about getting it. You must&#13;
collectively get together ratber than argue for two&#13;
or three more years. The prestige of !be college&#13;
professor is declining."&#13;
Mack explained that each WEA chapter has total&#13;
autonomy and that no one would control a local&#13;
chapter. Twenty-seven (aculty members are&#13;
needed to make the local organization.&#13;
Ron Gottesman, Parkside professor of English,&#13;
said that "whenever !be Parkside Administration&#13;
gets womed over faculty organizing, and whenever&#13;
y&lt;&gt;ugo to Madison and they ask, 'Are they&#13;
organiung down there yet' then !bere's no way&#13;
organiting can be a bad thing."&#13;
One faculty member reminded his coUeagues that&#13;
joining a union does not mean they would all be&#13;
punching m time cards every morning.&#13;
With the meeting's end, many faculty members&#13;
bad s.gned !beir WEA membershiP card, turning it&#13;
in to Mack and going off to encourage other faculty&#13;
to oome to the fIrS! organizational meeting this&#13;
Friday.&#13;
g1a and \t wa announced that Gerald Ford&#13;
W 'IXon' choice for Vic.,.Presldent. members of&#13;
WEAC e to the faculty&#13;
Ben Ew..... , a Racme hIgh school teacher and a&#13;
WEA counoelor to the state executIve oomrnillee&#13;
told 01 WEA' commItment to higher education.&#13;
"WEA IS an organluuon and vehicle by whIch we&#13;
C8JI e pollticall) active," he said Ewen cited&#13;
amp! 01 WEAC glvmg money tn support of&#13;
... ialall campatgn to get people in office who are&#13;
favorable to educauon WEAC abo has legialative&#13;
&lt;GIISUltanu enty·five percent of the money&#13;
~Ing oGlc:auonal IIllItitUtionscomes throUgh&#13;
Madiaon legislation WEAC LSlobbymg. he said, for&#13;
the pow r for teachers to negotiate. It is also supportln&amp;&#13;
bill ln Coogrt!SS which, if passed, would&#13;
give publIC employ a right to stnke Teecbers&#13;
an not t1lglble for unemployment compensation,&#13;
whleh WE IS backlng I gislation to ebange, Ewers&#13;
added Ewers told faculty thaI they had a lot in common&#13;
with th kIndergarten teacher, citing Iayolf,&#13;
tranaler. job security. aneed for grievance&#13;
procedures and program ,need of legal a . lance,&#13;
and oth E10 called on the faculty to stand up&#13;
and y what they thmk and have the power to do&#13;
lOIn lung about it. "We are upportive 01 higher&#13;
educ lion." h nded, "and are w-il!mg to put&#13;
doll behind It ..&#13;
MenllonlJ\ll th "shortfaU" m Os1&gt;koo/llll which S1&#13;
faculty memben w told of their termination for&#13;
budgetary r no. WEAC representatives told the&#13;
AT fiRST ullom&#13;
Of milE&#13;
• I •• i.i •••&#13;
hlam reqaired&#13;
• 10 Ii.il 10 Ibe&#13;
••• ~.r 01 chcks&#13;
yOI wrile&#13;
CHECKIIC&#13;
IS&#13;
QQ&#13;
AT fiRST IAlIOm&#13;
Of milE&#13;
CHECKIIC&#13;
IS&#13;
~&#13;
AT fiRST ullom&#13;
Of milE&#13;
0,•• y.lr 1m c~.cki.l&#13;
atc.III s... al&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
.-nd Tnttlt Comp&amp;.Oyof Badue&#13;
-- -- -&#13;
511 Wisco.si. Ave. Raci.e&#13;
PBSslates specials&#13;
The Public Broadcasting&#13;
Service (PBS) will be showing&#13;
the following programs next&#13;
"eek that might be of interest to&#13;
student , The true saga of Dougal&#13;
RobertsOn, his family and a&#13;
friend who spent 'n days adrift in&#13;
ocean waters after their schooner&#13;
was sunk by attack.ing whales.&#13;
will be on Book Beat, Monday,&#13;
Oct~ 22 at 8:30 p~m.&#13;
Three doctors will discuss&#13;
myths surrounding sexual&#13;
problems of women on Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 24 at 8:30 p.m. and&#13;
repeated on Sunday, Oct. 28 at 4&#13;
p.m. This program, it is said,&#13;
dispels many myths surrounding&#13;
sexual problems of women.&#13;
Some of the country's top&#13;
bluegrass musicians will join&#13;
forces on "Bluegrass Country, t1&#13;
Saturday, Oct. TI at 7 p.m.&#13;
All programs are on PBS&#13;
channel 10.&#13;
Environmental quality&#13;
index compiled&#13;
A fourth volume of !be environmental quality index compiled by a&#13;
team of Parkside professors bas just been issued and brings to 1,976&#13;
the total number of reference materials indexed in the southeastern&#13;
WisoonSin study to date .&#13;
Beheved to be the fir.;t index of its kind ever assembled for a region&#13;
of Wisconsin. the work is based on a study supported by American&#13;
Motors Corporation and conducted by Morris W. FirebaUgh, Joseph S.&#13;
Balsano, Frank '. Egerton and Eugene M. Goodman of the Parkside&#13;
science faculty and Gregor)' G. Fowlkes, research assistant.&#13;
All four volumes of the index are available for public use in tbe&#13;
Parkslde Library. Copies of the index abo are provided to the libraries&#13;
of other colleges and universities and public libraries in sotheastern&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
ParksJde Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
In Concert&#13;
MAYNARD&#13;
FERGUSON ORCHESTRA&#13;
~-- ~ ?&#13;
7-'ll __'~"'" " 10." - -=:;=. ... .. ,&#13;
THUR.-NOY. B •&#13;
B:lII P.M. 17 /-&#13;
c.. ARTSnlAM&#13;
AIIU3.oo PARISI( STIIDTS*&#13;
"&#13;
$4.00 CEIUAL&#13;
andh"&#13;
*Spe&lt;:laI one week IOct. 15-19) advance student saie on&#13;
r~&#13;
campus Tickets available at Information Center.&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
THE JOKER&#13;
TheS\eve Miller Band(SMAS-1l23S)&#13;
In the beginning, Steve Miller t&gt;E:g~nre~ei~i~g positive .public acclaim&#13;
when he demonstrated his VIVIdartIstIc mterpretation talents&#13;
on records in a carefully controlled manner. He ad.vanced to assembling&#13;
unique and energetic treatments of rock in BRAVE NEW&#13;
WORLD. He also attained many additional .merlts of ~ono~ [rom his&#13;
id treatment of blues in NO.5. The tone III Steve Miller s cool-eat&#13;
aCI . id tity A th ner of singing managed to keep a unique I en I . no er part of&#13;
~:~dentity was the concept of being the hippiest, s~ckest, gangstertype&#13;
hero while still fitting into the realm of the basically good aura.&#13;
This latter concept, of course, comes from the anagram of all rock&#13;
singers. . th h f . Recently, Steve Miller has given up e searc 0 trymg to find&#13;
unknown musical substance. He no longer even attempts to explore&#13;
new means of presenting old m~teria1. ..&#13;
Instead Steve Miller bas decided to do old blues III their oldest&#13;
tradition~ fashion. This is wbat the majority of the tracks on THE&#13;
JOKER are concerned with. Some enjoyment of hiS playlllg standard&#13;
blues does shine through but there is really little energetic feeling.&#13;
He is no longer a "space cowboy" or a "gangster of love" but instead&#13;
proclaims "I'm a joker, I'm a smoker, I'm a midnight taker; I&#13;
sure don't want to hurt no one." Some may be hurt, Steve, by your&#13;
decision to quit tapping [rom the vast well of your creative resources.&#13;
PerhapS he has decided that trying to be u~que is too m:rch of a hectic&#13;
game. This seems to be the only poSSIble assumptlon about his&#13;
change&lt;!attitude that can be inferred from THE JOKER.&#13;
Exceptions of the standard on Steve's latest are the title song and&#13;
HSomething To Believe In.'' "The Joker" is an admirable tune whose&#13;
warmth gradually demands attachment to it. The final peg on the&#13;
board is "Something To Believe In," a smooth, romantic ballad.&#13;
Also included on this disc are two live cuts, "Come On In My Kitchen"&#13;
and "Evil." Both appear to this writer as dull blues With the&#13;
slight exception of some lyrical content.&#13;
If one is fond of blues then THE JOKER isn't a bad grab since Steve&#13;
Miller does them expertly. In the end, final worth depends on your&#13;
angle of viewing. Like all blues albums, if you like it, then it's consistent;&#13;
i[ not, it's monotonous.&#13;
(Record courtesy of J&amp;J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
by Rodney Schroeter&#13;
CHAPTER SIX&#13;
Synopsis: The Psychic has&#13;
gone to a warehouse to fin~ out&#13;
what Big X is doing there. He is&#13;
ambushed and overcome with&#13;
small mind-nullifying machines.&#13;
Big X binds him to a wall and&#13;
tapes a bomb to his chest. Just&#13;
after Big X and his three helpers&#13;
flee the building, the bomb explodes.&#13;
The story continues.&#13;
Big X walked to the edge of the&#13;
smoking rubble. Three men&#13;
followed him. One was smoking a&#13;
cigarette; the tiny spark stood&#13;
out in the darkness.&#13;
"The subject has been&#13;
eliminated," said Big X dryly. "I&#13;
must now put into effect the next&#13;
phase."&#13;
"Wbat's that going to be?"&#13;
asked the man named Branwood.&#13;
"The elimination of my accomplices."&#13;
The cigarette spark dropped to&#13;
the pavement. The man smoking&#13;
it said, "Huh?"&#13;
Before any of the three could&#13;
move, there was a flash of light&#13;
and that was the last they knew~&#13;
Big X stepped over the c1othin~&#13;
of the three men, dropping a&#13;
small glass bulb which burst into&#13;
flames. The clothing caught fire&#13;
and he moved on.&#13;
Someone ran up to the rubble.&#13;
He was breathing so hard it was&#13;
audible a good distance away. It&#13;
was Jones. When the Psychic had&#13;
seen Big X on the television&#13;
screen and left, Jones watched&#13;
what had happened. He had&#13;
watched until they had caught the&#13;
Psychic and put the bomb on his&#13;
chest.&#13;
Jones coughed and spat. His&#13;
ltmgs burned from running the&#13;
long tunnel to the warehouse. He&#13;
had heard the explosion five&#13;
blocks away.&#13;
Jones ran past part of a wall&#13;
which was still standing. He&#13;
tripped over a board in the dark&#13;
and hit his cheek on some bricks.&#13;
He rose, panting and coughing.&#13;
He looked around.&#13;
"Where are you:" he&#13;
screamed. "Tell me where you&#13;
are! I'll find you!" He staggered&#13;
over to a mass of broken boards,&#13;
brick and plaster. "I'll help you!&#13;
Tell me! Where a re you: " He&#13;
grabbed a thick beam and tried to&#13;
move it. It was too firmly buried&#13;
by other debris.&#13;
Jones coughed. Plaster dust got&#13;
in his eyes. He found smaller&#13;
articles, bricks and boards,&#13;
continued on ,.te '&#13;
........ ,&#13;
I&#13;
faculty that the Achoinwration must be able to&#13;
prove that there is DO money that could be pared&#13;
elsewhere instead of terminating faculty. Ewen&#13;
expained that otbenrise the Administration must&#13;
prove a faculty member is incompetent.&#13;
Innis said that the 1580 teachers in 'Racine who are&#13;
WEA members are not looted at as subprofellionals.&#13;
Unionism is not DOD-pl'Ofessional.&#13;
"You need tbinp to perfonn your job, you have to&#13;
collectively bargain for them or collectively beg or&#13;
indivicually beg," Innis said. "It is time," he&#13;
warned, "to comider what you want, what you're&#13;
all about, and bow to go about getting it. You must&#13;
collectively get toptber rather tbao argue for two&#13;
or lbree more years. 'lbe prestige of the college&#13;
profeaaor is declining."&#13;
Mack aplained that each WEA chapter bas total&#13;
autonomy and that DO ane would control a local&#13;
chapter. Twenty-seven faculty members are&#13;
needed to make the locaJ organization.&#13;
Ron Gottesman, Parbide professor of Eogliah,&#13;
said that "whenever the Part.side Administration&#13;
sets worried over faculty organizing, and whenever&#13;
~~toM•~andlbeyuk.'Arethey&#13;
organizing down there yet' then there's no way&#13;
organising can be a bad thina-"&#13;
Qle faculty member reminded bis colleagues that&#13;
Joininc a union does not mean they would all be&#13;
puncbinc in time cards f/!Very morning.&#13;
Wltb the meeting's end, many faculty members&#13;
had signed their WEA membership card, turning it&#13;
in to Mack and going off to encourage other faculty&#13;
to come to the first orp.nizational meeting this&#13;
Friday.&#13;
slates specials&#13;
Tbe Public Broadcasting&#13;
Senice &lt;PBS&gt; will be showing&#13;
the following programs next&#13;
w that might be ol interest to&#13;
myths surrounding sexual&#13;
problems ol women on Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 24 at 8:30 p.m. and&#13;
repeated on Sunday, Oct. 28 at 4&#13;
p.m. This program, it is said,&#13;
dispels many .myths surrounding&#13;
sexual problems of women.&#13;
tudent . The true saga of Dougal&#13;
Robertson, his family and a&#13;
friend who spent Y7 days adrift in&#13;
ocean waten after their schooner&#13;
was sunk by attacking whales,&#13;
will be on Boot Beat, Monday,&#13;
Oct. 22 at 8:30 p.m.&#13;
Three doctors will discus&#13;
Some of the country's top&#13;
bluegrass musicians will join&#13;
forces on "Bluegrass Country,"&#13;
Saturday, Oct. r7 at 7 p.m.&#13;
All programs are on PBS&#13;
channel 10.&#13;
Environmental quality&#13;
index compiled&#13;
A fourth wlume ol the environmental quality index compiled by a&#13;
team of Parkside professon has just been issued and brings to 1,976&#13;
the total number ol reference materials indexed in the southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin study to date.&#13;
Believed to be the fint index ol its kind ever assembled for a region&#13;
ol lsconsin the work is based on a study supported by American&#13;
otors Corporation and concb:ted by Morris W. Firebaugh, Joseph s. Balsano, Frank . F.gerton and Eugene M. Goodman of the Parkside&#13;
science faculty and Gregory G. Fowlkes research assistant.&#13;
All four volumes of the index are available for public use in the&#13;
Parkside Library. Copies of the index also are provided to the libraries&#13;
of other colleges and universities and public libraries in sotheastern&#13;
IICOnSin.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presertts&#13;
In Concert&#13;
MAYNARD&#13;
FERGUSON ORCHESTRA&#13;
All$ 111A11E&#13;
__ ..,.. PIIISI• SIIIBTS*&#13;
'&#13;
*Special one week (Oct. 15-19) advance student sale 011&#13;
campus. Tickets available at Information Center.&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
THEJOKER&#13;
1beSteve Miller Band&lt;SMAS-11235)&#13;
In the beginning, Steve Miller began receiving positive public acclaim&#13;
when he demonstrated his vivid artistic interpretation talents&#13;
on records in a carefully controlled manner. He ad_vanced to asse,n.&#13;
bling unique and energetic treatm~~ts of r&lt;&gt;&lt;:k m BRA VE NEW&#13;
WORLD. He also attained many additional _ments of ~on°!' from his&#13;
·d treatment of blues in NO. 5. The tone m Steve Millers cool-cat&#13;
=.mer of singing managed to keep a unique identity. Another part of&#13;
his identity was the concept of being the hippiest, s~ckest, gangster.&#13;
type hero while still fitting into the realm of the basically good aw-a.&#13;
This latter concept, of course, comes from the anagram of all rock&#13;
singers. · th h f try· · Recently, Steve Miller has given up e searc o mg to find&#13;
unknown musical substance. He no ~onger even attempts to explore&#13;
new means of presenting old matenal.&#13;
Instead, Steve Miller has decided to ~ _old blues in their oldest&#13;
traditional fashion. This is what the ~aJor1ty of ~he tr~cks on THE&#13;
JOKER are concerned with. Some enJoyment of his playmg standard&#13;
blues does shine through but there is really little energetic feeling.&#13;
He is no longer a "space cowboy" or a "gangster of love" but instead&#13;
proclaims "I'm a joker, I'm a smoker, I'm a midnight toker; I&#13;
sure don't want to hurt no one." Some may be hurt, Steve, by your&#13;
decision to quit tapping from the vast well of your creative resources.&#13;
Perhaps he has decided that trying to be unique is too much of a hectic&#13;
game. This seems to be the only possible assumption about his&#13;
changed attitude that can be inferred from THE JOKER.&#13;
Exceptions of the standard on Steve's latest are the title song and&#13;
"Something To Believe In." "The Joker" is an admirable tune whole&#13;
warmth gradually demands attachment to it. The final peg on the&#13;
board is "Something To Believe In," a smooth, romantic ballad.&#13;
Also included on this disc are two live cuts, "Come On In My Kitchen"&#13;
and "Evil." Both appear to this writer as dull blues with the&#13;
slight exception of some lyrical content.&#13;
If one is fond of blues then THE JOKER isn't a bad grab since Steve&#13;
Miller does them expertly. In the end, final worth depends on your&#13;
angle of viewing. Like all blues albums, if you like it, then it's consistent;&#13;
if not, it's monotonous.&#13;
&lt;Record courtesy of J&amp;J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
by Rodney Schroeter&#13;
CHAPTERSIX&#13;
Synopsis: The Psychic has&#13;
gone to a warehouse to finsf out&#13;
what Big X is doing there. He is&#13;
ambushed and overcome with&#13;
small mind-nullifying machines.&#13;
Big X binds him to a wall and&#13;
tapes a bomb to his chest. Just&#13;
after Big X and his three helpers&#13;
flee the building, the bomb explodes.&#13;
The story continues.&#13;
Big X walked to the edge of the&#13;
smoking rubble. Three men&#13;
followed him. One was smoking a&#13;
cigarette ; the tiny spark stood&#13;
out in the darkness.&#13;
"The subject has been&#13;
eliminated," said Big X dryly. "I&#13;
must now put into effect the next&#13;
phase."&#13;
"What's that going to be? "&#13;
asked the man named Branwood.&#13;
"The elimination of my ac- complices.''&#13;
The cigarette spark dropped to&#13;
the pavement. The man smoking&#13;
it said, "Huh?"&#13;
Before any of the three could&#13;
move, there was a flash of light&#13;
and_ that was the last they knew'.&#13;
Big X stepped over the clothini&#13;
of the three men, dropping a&#13;
small glass bulb which burst into&#13;
flames. The clothing caught fire&#13;
and he moved on.&#13;
Someone ran up to the rubble.&#13;
He was breathing so hard it was&#13;
audible a good distance away. It&#13;
was Jones. When the Psychic had&#13;
seen Big X on the television&#13;
screen and left, Jones watched&#13;
what had happened. He had&#13;
watched until they had caught the&#13;
Psychic and put the bomb on his&#13;
chest.&#13;
Jones coughed and spat. His&#13;
lungs burned from running the&#13;
long tunnel to the warehouse. He&#13;
had heard the explosion five&#13;
blocks away.&#13;
Jones ran past part of a wall&#13;
which was still standing. He&#13;
tripped over a board in the dark&#13;
and hit his cheek on some bricks.&#13;
He rose, panting and coughing.&#13;
He looked around.&#13;
" Where are you?" he&#13;
screamed. "Tell me where you&#13;
are! I'll find you!" He staggered&#13;
over to a mass of broken boards,&#13;
brick and plaster. "I'll help you!&#13;
Tell me! Where are you?" He&#13;
grabbed a thick beam and tried to&#13;
move it. It was too firmly buried&#13;
by other debris.&#13;
Jones coughed. Plaster dust got&#13;
in his eyes. He found smaller&#13;
articles, bricks and boards,&#13;
continued OIi ,... ' &#13;
Irief news&#13;
'lb DeParunent of Safety and Security is for the second time thi&#13;
~ter offering the National Safety Council's Defensive Drivi IS&#13;
sem for employees who have not taken the course. ng&#13;
cou~e Defensive Driving Cour~e has. been a prerequisite for the&#13;
ration of all state-owned vehicles SInce December, 1970.Parkside&#13;
:'plOYees who intend to use state:owned vehicles are required to&#13;
lete this course before perrmssmn can be granted to drive statecomp&#13;
I ld d owned vehicles (emp oyees are consi ere to be faculty, staff or&#13;
volunteer drivers), .&#13;
'lbe course will he held at the Library Learning Center, Room DI79&#13;
Friday october 26, 1973, starting at 9 a.m. The Course is apon&#13;
ximatcly five hours in duration and should be completed around 2&#13;
~. Please submit to this department as SOOnas possible the names ~ithoseindividuals that will he taking the course.&#13;
*&#13;
The Ragtime Rangers are sponsoring .a ski trip to Steamboat&#13;
Springs Colorado, Jan. 2 thru 7. The total price of the trip by air is $210&#13;
d by bus $140. The price also includes found-trip transportation five&#13;
:ys lift tickets at Steamboat Springs, and five days lodging. Positions&#13;
onlhe trip are being filled fast. All V.W. campuses are participating.&#13;
Depositof $40 a~d registration must he made by Nov. 21 at the Inrormation&#13;
kiosk 10 MalO Place.&#13;
*&#13;
A new organization, Delta Gamma Phi sorority, is forming on&#13;
campus. One of the organizers is Pat Hill, who describes the group as&#13;
"uniquely Parkside." Further information will be available in next&#13;
week's RANGER, or by calling 552-8472.&#13;
*&#13;
Cellist David Littrell, Parkside assistant professor of music, is&#13;
makinghis first public appearance at Parkside on Sunday, Oct. 21 in&#13;
lheCommArtsTheater at 7:30 p.m. Littrell will be accompanied by his&#13;
wife.The concert is free and open to the pUblic.&#13;
*&#13;
'lbe Parkside Student Senate still has openings for appointments to&#13;
the following committees: honors, campus ceremonies, admissions,&#13;
library and learning, University bookstore, and financial aids.&#13;
Studentsinterested in being considered may appear in person at the&#13;
studentsenate office, LLC 0193 from 9:30 to 11:30, Mon., Wed. and Fri.&#13;
or 11:30-1:00Tues. and Thurs. If these times are inconvenient, call&#13;
2244for an alternate interview time.&#13;
*&#13;
AdultStudent Services is expanding their evening information and&#13;
advising hours. Starting Oct. 17 their hours will he from 5:36-8:30&#13;
Mondaythrough Thursday, in the Information kiosk. Adult students or&#13;
potential students are encouraged to call 553-2345 or drop by dUring&#13;
these hours.&#13;
*&#13;
TheParkside Pre-Med Club will hold a meeting today, Wednesday,&#13;
Ott. 17 at 7:45 p.m. in the faculty-staff lounge in LLC (Library D&#13;
I03A&gt;. Featured will be Dr. Neil Purtell, an osteopath from Racme,&#13;
and Dr. Aprahemian, a radiologist-osteopath from Milwauke~.&#13;
Togetherthey will discuss their practices, radiology and osteopathic&#13;
medicine in general. All persons interest~d are invited to attend. If&#13;
there are any questions I please contact Brian Smith (2448) or Dr. A.&#13;
M.Williams (2389).&#13;
*&#13;
Anyindividual, organization or office holding cafe.teria tr.ays in their&#13;
POSSeSsionis requested to please return them ImmedIately. The&#13;
cafeteria i~missing over 200oftheir food trays at the present time and&#13;
that number is increasing every day.&#13;
~. %~ jJ~&#13;
CheffB&#13;
10% OFF ON PURCHASE OF&#13;
J $100 ~&#13;
lOR MORE WITH PARKS IDE ID. ~~&#13;
~ ENDS&#13;
rJ OCTOBER 31&#13;
, AT&#13;
,~ 3400 SHERIDAN ROAD I AND&#13;
~ 6926 39th AVENUE -.~-.:i_e•~~iiiiii::!! 1JtL::r~&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 17, 1'73 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
FaCUltysong writer Robert Canary, Parkstde associate professor of&#13;
Enghsh, will sing his songs of love. sex and other good tJungs Thursday,&#13;
Oct. 18 at 7:30 p.m on the third floor library, under the sponsorship&#13;
of the Parks ide Poetry Forum. Canary says that most of Ius&#13;
songs were written to be sung late at night, either to a woman or 8&#13;
drunken party. He will also accompany hunself on the guitar, wlllch he&#13;
has been playing for 15 years without, he claims, any improvement.&#13;
No admission will be charged.&#13;
*&#13;
The Lecture and Fine Arts Committee is bnnging Professor Radu&#13;
Florescu, PhD in European and Slavic History at Boston niversity,&#13;
to Parkside on Friday, Oct. 26.&#13;
Florescu will present a film and lecture 00 Ius search for Dracula.&#13;
He has done a scholarly and historic study 00 how much of the legend&#13;
of Count Dracula is true and what is an elebcreuce. There was actually&#13;
a person, Count Dracula, Florescu says, and he lumself claims&#13;
to he a descendent of Dracula's brother.&#13;
Florescu has written a book entiUed I. Search 01 Dracula.&#13;
The film and lecture are free to Parkside students and $1 for the&#13;
general public. The event will he held in Greenquist Ha.U Lecture room&#13;
103 at 8 p.m.&#13;
*&#13;
Harry WaJbruck, Parkside associate professor of German, has&#13;
developed an individual testing program for students wanting to 1&lt;no",&#13;
how large a vocabulary they master in their target language. 'lbe&#13;
program, operating on (our computer levels, can give a student the&#13;
correct picture of his or her stand.ing and points up the areas of&#13;
deficiency. Walbruck was assisted in the program by Jim Wishau of&#13;
the Computer Center.&#13;
*&#13;
Volunteers are needed by the Kenosha COunty Welfare Department&#13;
to assist in three areas. The first of these is the Childreo's Corner,&#13;
where people are needed to act as the caretakers of cbIldren placed&#13;
there by their parents who are in the agency on business. The volunteer&#13;
will guide children througb independent pia)', plan activities for&#13;
the group, assist in maintaining an orderly appearance m the room.&#13;
and clean up at the end of each assignmeot penod.&#13;
"Friendly visitor" volunteers "isit on a regular basis clients who are&#13;
living in a private borne or who are shut-ins or isolated from the&#13;
community. The volunteer "ill talk with and listen to the person and&#13;
establish rapport. He or she may read aloud to Ute client. write leUers.&#13;
shop, or take tbeperson for a drive or to the doctor'somee.&#13;
The third area is the Intake Department volunteer workers, the&#13;
primary function of which is to assist clients m completing a~&#13;
pUcations for assistance at the tIme they contact the agency.&#13;
Interested persons should contact the CoordilUltor of Volunteers at&#13;
654-3591.&#13;
WINTER&#13;
BREAK&#13;
. JAN 2·tO.&#13;
$269 P,~""T.. 'Sm"&#13;
Ba!ord on l to a Room&#13;
• ROUND TRIP JET&#13;
• J NIGHTS OUTRIGGER&#13;
WEST&#13;
• '1 DAY CITY TOUR&#13;
• FLOWER LEI GREETiNG&#13;
• GROUND TRANSFERS&#13;
• TOUR HOST SERVICES&#13;
• ALL TIPS &amp; TAXES&#13;
IIFor appltcar,on form&#13;
C",,",PUS T!iUt,VEl CENTER&#13;
LLC 01"&#13;
PSGAsteering&#13;
committee&#13;
formed&#13;
In order to establish an scuve,&#13;
representative. responsIble and&#13;
recognized tudent Gevernm nt&#13;
Association at Parkslde, a&#13;
steering committee has bHn&#13;
formed Which IS respcesible for&#13;
mvestigaung and reporting boel&lt;&#13;
to students and the eJdatillll&#13;
udent Government The areas&#13;
the committee is concerned .. Ilh&#13;
are:&#13;
1 uggested duu&#13;
responsIbilities of the&#13;
Government AssociatJoo.&#13;
2. Means 1»' ",hlch tudent&#13;
Government could be more truly&#13;
representative of various&#13;
(academic and non-academic)&#13;
groups of students.&#13;
3. Ideal lI'UCture 01 Parkside&#13;
Student Gcvernment Association.&#13;
4 Means to implement any new&#13;
structure of Parkside tudent&#13;
GovernmenL&#13;
5 Means by whIch Constitu~on&#13;
of PSGA ",ouId reflect an)' new&#13;
structure, responsibihties and&#13;
representation of PSGA.&#13;
The committee IS composed of&#13;
students represenl1ng AcademIC&#13;
mterests. faculty commlttees.&#13;
ooe member of each student&#13;
organization Wishing to par~&#13;
ticipaLe, and some members of&#13;
the current P GA including&#13;
president Tom Jennett.&#13;
Ser\o1ng as advisors to the&#13;
committee are Je"'el&#13;
Echelberger, Assistant Dean of&#13;
Students. Tom Remer! of the&#13;
facully, and Anthon)' Totero.&#13;
Coordinator of Student&#13;
Programs.&#13;
Other . tudents intel'CSted 10&#13;
pro\-;dmg mput to the commIttee&#13;
are encouraged to contact Jennett&#13;
in the PSGA oIhce or leave&#13;
suggeslJons WIthR\. 'GER whIch&#13;
"'Ill he forwarded to committee&#13;
members&#13;
and&#13;
ludent&#13;
•&#13;
•0.&#13;
. .,&#13;
Time ../&#13;
to relax more.&#13;
~ 't'OllI OW". ~"'" 1It(lr. tNN: '01 NltJtI on ~&#13;
-1IfUlI\IftI ..... 1Mf\ldld 'ft dw' MMa...- ~ ...&#13;
__ ewe ot 1M lIwft." dw'UW'lOf "~ ....&#13;
M_n w ldodw_ ' ", ....&#13;
...."*- -...........8ofcttwood ConcIo- ",&#13;
READY FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY&#13;
Two Bedroom Ranch Style&#13;
Condominium Homes $24.500 to $27,000&#13;
T .., p". '~~l&#13;
1~1t Stylil ..., .... I'-Y .......... *&amp;.' ,OJ&#13;
• ~ • "' _~ • e....~ ..&#13;
• E__ IIItt.--._ • f.-' ............--&#13;
• ~ _ .......... 0.-._ .--&#13;
• c.....FtNlV _ • ~n •• _ • ~_~l ........&#13;
.... tIW~ 1 .......... ....--,._ ......... __&#13;
• ...... ---.,.... • e:-tov~ _tII __&#13;
MORE IIRCHWOOO HO ES READY SEPTEMIER 15&#13;
2 T""""'-- S31,_ J ...... T........ $31._ t.S)4._&#13;
, R." StylI $1'.SOI tl S23.•&#13;
".,...._r ........,c.-_ .........&#13;
t~ ...... ,. __ "'~I ~&#13;
IN KENOSHA&#13;
JOCt!o A~ .... Idt RCNd&#13;
OECOAAnOAlrotO"V1l SHEOMOOE\.S&#13;
OPEN HOUSE&#13;
Weekdays 10 to 8 Weekends 1 to 5&#13;
For ~ "formIhon&#13;
PHONE 1-552-9339&#13;
AUfKSIOE RE"'-'" - tI'lC&#13;
.... ~_.&#13;
trief news&#13;
Th [)epartment of Safet_y and Security is for the second time th.&#13;
rn;ter offering the National Safety Council's Defensive Drivi~&#13;
e for employees who have not taken the course. cours The Defensive . Dnvmg · · Co h b ur~e as_ een a prerequisite for the&#13;
0 ration of all state-owned vehicles smce December, 1970. Parkside&#13;
!ptoyees who intend to use s~te:-owned vehicles are required to&#13;
complete this course before perm1ss10~ can be granted to drive stateowned&#13;
vehicles (employees are considered to be faculty, staff or&#13;
,·olunteer drivers). . The course will be held at the L1b~ary Learning Center, Room Dl79 on Friday, October 26,_ 1973, s_tartmg at 9 a.m. The course is apoximately&#13;
five ~ours ~ duration and should be completed around 2 ?' m. Please submit to thi~ depar~ent as soon as possible the names&#13;
~f those individuals that will be takmg the course.&#13;
*&#13;
The Ragtime Rangers are sponsoring _a ski trip to Steamboat&#13;
Springs, Colorado, Jan: 2 thru 7: The total price o~ the trip by air is $210&#13;
and by bus $140. The price also m~ludes rou1;1d-tnp transportation, five&#13;
days lift tickets a~ St~mboat Sprmgs, and five days lodging. Positions&#13;
0 the trip are bemg filled fast. All U. W. campuses are participating.&#13;
~posit of $40 a~d reg~stration must be made by Nov. 21 at the Information&#13;
kiosk m Mam Place.&#13;
*&#13;
A new organization, Delta Gamma Phi sorority, is forming on&#13;
campus. One of the organizers is Pat Hill, who describes the group as&#13;
"uniquely Parkside." Further information will be available in next&#13;
week's RANGER, or by calling 552-8472.&#13;
*&#13;
Cellist David Littrell, Parkside assistant professor of music, is&#13;
making his first public appearance at Parkside on Sunday, Oct. 21 in&#13;
the CommArts Theater at 7: 30 p.m. Littrell will be accompanied by his&#13;
wife. The concert is free and open to the public.&#13;
*&#13;
The Parkside Student Senate still has openings for appointments to&#13;
the following committees: honors, campus ceremonies, admissions,&#13;
library and learning, University bookstore, and financial aids.&#13;
tudents interested in being considered may appear in person at the&#13;
tudentsenate office, LLC D193 from 9:30 to 11:30, Mon., Wed. and Fri.&#13;
or 11:30-1:00 Tues. and Thurs. If these times are inconvenient, call&#13;
2244 for an alternate interview time.&#13;
*&#13;
Adult Student Services is expanding their evening information and&#13;
advising hours. Starting Oct. 17 their hours will be from 5:30-a:30&#13;
1onday through Thursday, in the Information kiosk. Adult studen~ or&#13;
potential students are encouraged to call 553-2345 or drop by during&#13;
these hours.&#13;
*&#13;
The Parkside Pre-Med Club will hold a meeting today, Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 17 at 7:45 p.m. in the faculty-staff lounge in LLC (Librar~ D&#13;
103Al. Featured will be Dr. Neil Purtell, an osteopath from Racme,&#13;
and Dr Aprahemian, a radiologist-osteopath from Milwauke~.&#13;
Together they will discuss their practices, radiology and osteopathic&#13;
medicine in general. All persons interested are invited to attend. If&#13;
th re are any questions, please contact Brian Smith (2448) or Dr. A.&#13;
I. Williams (2389).&#13;
*&#13;
ny individual organization or office holding cafeteria tr_ays in their&#13;
ion, is r~quested to please return them immed1at~ly. The&#13;
cafeteria is missing over 200 of their food trays at the present time and&#13;
th t number is increasing every day .&#13;
AT&#13;
3400 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
AND&#13;
6926 39th AVENUE&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 17, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
*&#13;
The Lecture and Fine Arts immittee bnngm Prof&#13;
Florescu, PhD in European and lav1c Hi. tory at Boston&#13;
to Parkside on Friday, Oct. 26&#13;
Florescu \\-ill present a mm and lectur on · ar h for D&#13;
He has done a scholar!) and histonc tudy on how much f&#13;
of Count Dracula i true and what · an eJ boration. There&#13;
tually a person, Count Dracula Florescu y and he hi lf&#13;
to be a descendent of Dracula' brother.&#13;
Florescu ha written a book entitled In rch ol Dracula.&#13;
The film and lecture are free to Par ide ud and l for th&#13;
general public. The event will be held in Greenqu· t Hall Leet room&#13;
103 at 8 p.m.&#13;
*&#13;
Harry Walbruck, Par ide a iate pro&#13;
developed an individual testing program for tuden \lo anting to how large a vocabulary the master ·n their target langua . Th&#13;
program, operating on four computer le\e can i" a tudent&#13;
correct picture of his or her tanding and po up the a , of&#13;
deficiency. Walbruck ,,,a a i ted in the program b:, Jim u of&#13;
the Computer Center.&#13;
*&#13;
PS~A steering&#13;
committee&#13;
formed&#13;
READY FOR I ED ATE OCCUPA CY&#13;
WI. 'TER&#13;
BRE K&#13;
- JA: •. 2-10.&#13;
$269 P IUS , Tax &amp; s.,v C&#13;
BaU&lt;I on l a oom&#13;
• ROUND TRIP JET&#13;
• 7 NIGHTS OUTRIGGER&#13;
WEST&#13;
• , , DAY CITY TOUR&#13;
• FLOWER LEI GREETI G&#13;
e GROUND TRA SFERS&#13;
e TOUR HOST SERVICES&#13;
• ALL TIPS &amp; TAXES&#13;
For a ppl ca' .on form&#13;
CAA.'P\JS. TRA E l Cf T( R&#13;
LLC 01'7&#13;
Two Bedroom Ranch Style&#13;
Condominium Homes $24,500 toS27,000&#13;
Of.CORATEOA OfUfl (OUOOf.l S&#13;
OPE HOUSE&#13;
eekdays 10 to 8 ee ds 1 to 5 &#13;
I&#13;
James McKeown&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. t7 • John and Dennis in the Whiteskellar from 1-3&#13;
p.m. Sponsored by the P.A.B. No admission charge.&#13;
Wednesday, OCt. 17 _Parkside Pre-Meds Club meeting in tbe LLC&#13;
faculty-staff.lounge of LLC at 7:45 p.rn. Open to tbe public.&#13;
Thursday. Oct. 18 _ Meeting of minority" students at noon in&#13;
Greenquist Hall lecture room 103. .&#13;
Thursday, OCt. 18 _Song wr-iter', guitar player, poet and Parkside&#13;
English professor, Robert Canary will read and sing. Sponsored by the&#13;
Poetry Forum, the event will be held ~n the 3rd floor of the library at&#13;
7:30 p.m. It is free and open to thepubhc. .&#13;
Friday. Oct. 19 _P.A.B. movie "Johnny Got His Gun" at 8 p.m. in&#13;
S.A.B. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Saturday. Oct. 20 _ Sigma Pi fraternity is sponsoring a dance with&#13;
"McHenry" at 9 p.m. in S.A.B. Admission is $1.50.&#13;
Sunday. Oct. 21 - Ragtime Rangers sponsoring a road-raIl&#13;
Registration at noon in the east lot. ey.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 21 _Cellist and Parkside music faculty member David&#13;
Littrell will present a concert at 7:30 p.m. 10 the CommArts Theater. It&#13;
is tree and open to the public.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 21 _P .A.B. movie "Johnny Got His Gun" at 8 p.m. in&#13;
S.A.B. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Monday. Oct. 22 _Meeting of the Parkside Women's Caucus at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in LLC D 173.&#13;
Wednesday. OCt. 24 _P .A.B. movie "Fritz the Cat" at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist 103. Admission is 75 cents,&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 18 • Theatre X will perform in the CommArts&#13;
Theater at 8 p.rn., sponsored by PAB. Admission is $1at tbe door.&#13;
Prisoners taught sociology&#13;
Every Tuesday night a&#13;
Parkside sociology professor&#13;
goes to prison-voluntarily. .&#13;
He is Prof. James McKeown,&#13;
who is teaching an introductory&#13;
university·level sociology course&#13;
to t 1 inmates at the Union Grove&#13;
camp of the $late Department of&#13;
Corrections~, a mlntmurn&#13;
secunty. pre-release prison.&#13;
The course is on a purely&#13;
voluntary basis both for the inmate&#13;
students and for McKeown,&#13;
who receives no pay for teaching&#13;
the COUJ'\C.&#13;
Students who successfully&#13;
complete tbe course, which is&#13;
graded on the same standards as&#13;
similar courses offered on&#13;
campus, receive regular&#13;
university credit.&#13;
McKeown has conducted&#13;
similar, lhough smaller, classes&#13;
at the Union Grove facility for the&#13;
past several years and 16 other&#13;
Parkside faculty members have&#13;
volunteered to teach courses,&#13;
somet irnes conducted on a one-toone&#13;
basis.&#13;
Several of the inmate students&#13;
who have been released have&#13;
since become full-time students&#13;
at the Parkside campus--&#13;
including one ex-inmate who&#13;
made the spring honors list with&#13;
an A-minus academic average.&#13;
Of students in his camp&#13;
classroom, McKeown comments&#13;
that "the level of ability is about&#13;
the same as in my regular&#13;
classes. I have some excellent&#13;
students at the camp who can&#13;
make their way in any college."&#13;
Both McKeown and Kim&#13;
Baugrud, coordinator of&#13;
University Extension at Parkside&#13;
and one of the originators and&#13;
major forces in organization and&#13;
liaison for the courses, expressed&#13;
nope that eventually&#13;
arrangements can be made so&#13;
that the inmates can come to the&#13;
campus and be in regular classes&#13;
with other students.&#13;
"Under an arrangemtnt&#13;
similar to the Huber Law (which&#13;
allows prisoners to hold regular&#13;
employment while in prison),&#13;
school could be a legitimate&#13;
reason for daytime leave, II&#13;
McKeown said. "It is also in line&#13;
with (UW System President)&#13;
John Weaver's Task Force's&#13;
recommendation on the role of&#13;
institutions of higher learning in&#13;
the corrections program."&#13;
Baugrud points out that&#13;
transportation is a major&#13;
problem. Two of the students in&#13;
the camp class actually had&#13;
permission from authorities to&#13;
attend on-campus clases this fall,&#13;
but no means could be found of&#13;
getting Ihem here, he added.&#13;
Both Baugrud and McKeown&#13;
say camp officials are extremely&#13;
cooperative. The entire undertaking,&#13;
Baugrud adds,&#13;
requires a great amount of&#13;
coordination between the camp,&#13;
the Department of Vocational&#13;
Rehabilitation, the Social Work&#13;
Department of the State&#13;
Department of Corrections,&#13;
University Extension and&#13;
Parkside Registration and Admissions&#13;
staff members.&#13;
Tuition for the students usually&#13;
is funded through state&#13;
vocational rehabilitation and&#13;
Higher Education Board funds&#13;
and by Extension study grants,&#13;
Baugrud said.&#13;
Baugrud, who has had major&#13;
responsibility for developing the&#13;
service program over the past&#13;
four years, sees the project as&#13;
part of a developing movement to&#13;
use volunteers in prison&#13;
rehabilitation efforts. The classes&#13;
now offered had their beginnings&#13;
in informal rap sessions with&#13;
inmates on education, at which&#13;
opportunities including&#13;
correspondence courses,&#13;
vocational and technical&#13;
education and university level&#13;
training were pointed out, he&#13;
said.&#13;
McKeown capsulizes the attitude&#13;
of Parkside's volunteers&#13;
this way: "As long as it looks like&#13;
one inmate has the interest and&#13;
ability to profit from tutoring,&#13;
counseling or class work, I'll&#13;
continue to go out to the camp."&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
COMINGUP&#13;
Friday. Oct. 26 _Film and lecture on the search for Dracula by&#13;
Professor Radu Florescu of Boston University. Sponsored by Leciure&#13;
and Fine Arts Committee. Greenquist Hall lecture room 103at 8 p.m.&#13;
Free to Parkside students, $1 for the public. \&#13;
Friday, Saturday, Sunday OCt. 26-28 - P.A.B. - Ragtime Rang ...&#13;
outing to Louisville, Kentucky. Contact Student Activities Office LLC&#13;
Dl97. Monday, Oct. 29 • Poet Diane Wakoski, sponsored by tbe Poetry&#13;
Forum, Lecture and Fine Arts, and Women's Caucus at 8 p.m, on the&#13;
third floor of the library. A workshop will be held from 4-5p.m. in Main&#13;
Place lounges D-173 and D-174.&#13;
Nov. 1-4. "The Virus" will be performed in the CommArts Theater&#13;
Tickets are on sale at the Information Kiosk. .&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 8 _Maynard Ferguson sponsored by the PAB. at8&#13;
p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater. Tickets on sale at the Informatioo -&#13;
kiosk for $3. . ;&#13;
January 2-7 _Ragtime Rangers sponsoring a ski trip to Steamboat II· •&#13;
Springs, Colorado. See Information Kiosk. Illo I&#13;
All items for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submltled ..&#13;
RANGER by noon Thursday prior to publication of the issue in whkb '!,~&#13;
an item is to appear. ; i&#13;
(i&#13;
i&#13;
•&#13;
Child behavior&#13;
workshop formed&#13;
A new workshop will be offered&#13;
this month to parents of children&#13;
who throw temper tantrums,&#13;
refuse to do chores, tease, fight,&#13;
bully, or who are generally&#13;
diso~t. The six-week&#13;
FREE DELIVER Y&#13;
Member Parkstde 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
THE CARTHAGE ACTIVITIES BOARD PRESENTS&#13;
The 1973Homecoming Concert&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE PRESENTS&#13;
Gertrude Jeannette, Broadway,&#13;
and The Parkside Players in&#13;
movie, TV actress&#13;
Premiere 8 P.M. Nov. 1,2,3,4&#13;
Communication Arts Theater&#13;
Reserved seats $3, Students with 1051.50 (Nov.&#13;
2-3-4 Groups of 10 or more, 10~discount)&#13;
Tickets available at Bidinger's in Kenosha,&#13;
Cook-Gere in Racine (after Oct. 17) and UW-P&#13;
Information Center on campus. Mail orders at&#13;
Info Center only. send stamped. self-addressed&#13;
envelope with check payable to UW.Parkside to&#13;
"Virus," UW-P Info Center, UW-Parkside.&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53140.&#13;
Saturday, October 20&#13;
8:00 P.M. Fieldhouse&#13;
General Admission&#13;
- $2.50 &amp; $3.50&#13;
Also Appearing&#13;
Tickets Available At:&#13;
• Bidinger Music House -&#13;
Downtown Kenosha&#13;
• J&amp;J Tapes - Kenosha &amp; Racine&#13;
• Carthage College Center Office&#13;
8:30 a.m. - Midnight daily&#13;
"The Juke Band"&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.D.l.e.&#13;
program, "CHANGING YOUR&#13;
CHILD'S BEHAVIOR" is&#13;
especially geared for parents&#13;
who "have tried everything-but&#13;
nothing seems to work." The&#13;
workshop, directed by Carolyn&#13;
Cole, M.S.W., a clinical social&#13;
worker, will train parents of 4-12·&#13;
year-olds to use a practical, stepby-step&#13;
method to improve the&#13;
behavior of their children.&#13;
Cole, outlining the program's&#13;
behavioral approach, stated that&#13;
parents first learn· to identify&#13;
problems very specifically.&#13;
Through a federally funded&#13;
research project at UW·&#13;
Parkside, Cole conducted&#13;
numerous parent training&#13;
courses last year. "Many par",ts&#13;
in the Parkside classes reported&#13;
not only positive changes in their&#13;
children, but better relations&#13;
within the entire family," she&#13;
said.&#13;
Parents may choose either an&#13;
evening or afternoon workshOP'&#13;
sessions begin Tuesday, Oct. 23,&#13;
7-8:30 p.m., and Friday, Oct. 26,&#13;
1-2:30 p.m. For reservations and&#13;
inquiries, parents may contact&#13;
Cole at the Monument Square&#13;
Building, 523Main St., Racine,1$&#13;
phone 634-7711.&#13;
:1&#13;
=&#13;
;:&#13;
=&#13;
.!. :~"&#13;
~&#13;
Thousands of TopiCS&#13;
$2.75perpage&#13;
Send for your up·to·date,160.pa~&#13;
mail order catalog. Enclose $1.&#13;
to cover postage (delivery lime IS&#13;
I to 2 days).&#13;
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC.&#13;
11941WILSHIRE BLVD., SUiTE ~2&#13;
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90025&#13;
(213)477.8474OJ 477-5493&#13;
Our research material is sold lor&#13;
research assistanCe only. ........&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 17, 1973&#13;
It's what's happening - - Wednesday, Oct. 17 - John and Dennis in the Whiteskellar from 1.3&#13;
p.m. Sponsored by the P.A.B. No admission charge.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 17 - Parkside Pre-Meds Club meeting in the LLC&#13;
faculty-stafflounge of LLC at 7 :45 p.m. Open to the public.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 18 - Meeting of minority-students at noon in&#13;
Greenquist Hall lecture room _103. . Thursday, Oct. 18 - Song writer, gwtar player, poet and Parkside&#13;
English professor, Robert Canary will read and sing. Sponsored by the&#13;
Poetry Forum, the event will be held ~n the 3rd floor of the library at&#13;
7:30p.m. Itis free and open to thepubhc.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 19 - P.A.B. movie "Johnny Got His Gun" at 8 p.m. in&#13;
S.A.B. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 20 - Sigma Pi fraternity is sponsoring a dance with&#13;
"McHenry" at9 p.m. in S.A.B. Admission is $1.50.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 21 - Ragtime Rangers sponsoring a road-rail&#13;
Registration at noon in the east lot. ey.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 21 - Cellist and Parkside ~usic faculty member David&#13;
Littrell will present a concert at 7 :30 p.m. m the CommArts Theater. It&#13;
1s free and open to the public.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 21 - P.A.B. movie "Johnny Got His Gun" at 8 p.m. in&#13;
S.A.B. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Prisoners taught sociology&#13;
Monday, Oct. 22 - Meeting of the Parkside Women's Caucus at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in LLC D 173.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 24 - P.A.B. movie "Fritz the Cat" at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist 103. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
night a&#13;
profe _or&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
tional Varsity Chili&#13;
that "the level of ability is about&#13;
the same as in my regular&#13;
cla. . I have sotne excellent&#13;
tudents at the camp who can&#13;
make their way in any college."&#13;
Both 1cKeown and Kim&#13;
Baugrud, coordinator of&#13;
niversity Extension at Parkside&#13;
and one of the originators and&#13;
major forces in organization and&#13;
liai. n for the courses, expressed&#13;
hope that eventually&#13;
arrangements can be made so&#13;
that the inmates can come to the&#13;
campus and be in regular classes&#13;
with other tudents.&#13;
" nder an arrangemtnt&#13;
imilar to the Huber Law (which&#13;
allows prisoners to hold regular&#13;
employment while in prison),&#13;
school could be a legitimate&#13;
reason for daytime leave,"&#13;
McKeown said. "It is also in line&#13;
with (UW System President)&#13;
John Weaver's Task Force's&#13;
recommendation on the role of&#13;
institutions of higher learning in&#13;
the corrections program."&#13;
Baugrud points out that&#13;
tran portation is a major&#13;
problem. Two of the students in&#13;
the camp class actually had&#13;
permission from authorities to&#13;
attend on-campus clases this fall ,&#13;
but no means could be found of&#13;
getting them here, he added.&#13;
Both Baugrud and McKeown&#13;
say camp officials are extremely&#13;
cooperative. The entire un-&#13;
~ 1lvdojeph&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE PRESENTS&#13;
Gertrude Jeannette, Broadway, movie, TV actress&#13;
and The Parkside Players in&#13;
Premiere 8 P.M. Nov. 1,2,3,4&#13;
Communication Arts Theater&#13;
Rcserv d seats SJ, Students with ID Sl .50 (Nov.&#13;
2 3 '* Groups of 10 or more, l0~discount)&#13;
Tick ts ava lablc at Bidinger's in Kenosha&#13;
Cook-G re in Racine (after Oct. 17) and UW-P&#13;
lnformat on Center on campus. Mail orders at&#13;
Info Center only. Send stamped, self addressed&#13;
cnv lop ·ith chec payable to UW-Parkslde to&#13;
" Virus," UW P Info Center, UW-Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53140.&#13;
dertaking, I!augrud adds,&#13;
requires a great amount of&#13;
coordination between the camp,&#13;
the Department of Vocational&#13;
Rehabilitation, the Social Work&#13;
Department of the State&#13;
Department of Corrections,&#13;
University Extension and&#13;
Parkside Registration and Admissions&#13;
staff members.&#13;
Tuition for the students usually&#13;
is funded through state&#13;
vocational rehabilitation and&#13;
Higher Education Board funds&#13;
and by Extension study grants,&#13;
Baugrud said.&#13;
Baugrud, who has had major&#13;
responsibility for developing the&#13;
service program over the past&#13;
four years, sees the project as&#13;
part of a developing movement to&#13;
use volunteers in prison&#13;
rehabilitation efforts. The classes&#13;
now offered had their beginnings&#13;
in informal rap sessions with&#13;
inmates on education, at which&#13;
opportunities including&#13;
correspondence courses,&#13;
vocational and technical&#13;
education and university level&#13;
training were pointed out, he&#13;
said.&#13;
McKeown capsulizes the attitude&#13;
of Parkside's volunteers&#13;
this way : "As long as it looks like&#13;
one inmate has the interest and&#13;
ability to profit from tutoring,&#13;
counseling or class work, I'll&#13;
continue to go out to the camp."&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 18 - Theatre X will perform in the CommArts&#13;
Theater at8 p.m., sponsored by PAB. Admission is $1 at the door.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
Friday, Oct. 26 - Film and lecture on the search for Dracula by&#13;
Professor Radu Florescu of Boston University. Sponsored by Lecture&#13;
and Fine Arts Committee. Greenquist Hall lecture room 103 at 8 p.m.&#13;
Free to Parkside students, $1 for the public.&#13;
Friday, Saturday, Sunday Oct. 26-28 - P.A.B. - Ragtime Rangers&#13;
outing to Louisville, Kentucky. Contact Student Activities Office LLC&#13;
D197.&#13;
Monday, Oct. 29 - Poet Diane Wakoski, sponsored by the Poetry&#13;
Forum, Lecture and Fine Arts, and Women's Caucus at 8 p.m. on the&#13;
third floor of the library. A workshop will be held from 4-5 p.m. in Main&#13;
Place lounges D-173 and D-174.&#13;
Nov. 1-4 - "The Virus" will be performed in the CommArts Theater&#13;
Tickets are on sale at the Information Kiosk. ·&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 8-Maynard Ferguson sponsored by the P.A.B. at8&#13;
p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater. Tickets on sale at the Information&#13;
kiosk for $3.&#13;
January 2-7 - Ragtime Rangers sponsoring a ski trip to Steamboat&#13;
Springs, Colorado. See Information Kiosk.&#13;
All items for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submitted to&#13;
RANGER by noon Thursday prior to publication of the issue in which&#13;
an item is to appear.&#13;
Child behavior&#13;
workshop formed&#13;
A new workshop will be offered&#13;
this month to parents of children&#13;
who throw temper tantrums,&#13;
refuse to do chores, tease, fight,&#13;
bully, or who are generally&#13;
diso~t. The six-week&#13;
THE CARTHAGE ACTIVITIES BOARD PRESENTS&#13;
The 1973 Homecoming Concert&#13;
program, "CHANGING YOUR&#13;
CHILD 'S BEHAVIOR" 1s&#13;
especially geared for parents&#13;
who "have tried everything-but&#13;
nothing seems to work." The&#13;
workshop, directed by Carol)ll&#13;
Cole, M.S.W., a clinical social&#13;
worker, will train parents of 4-12·&#13;
year-olds to use a practical, steJ)-&#13;
by-step method to improve the&#13;
behavior of their children.&#13;
Saturday, October 20&#13;
8: 00 P.M. Fieldhouse&#13;
General Admission&#13;
- $2.50 &amp; $3.50&#13;
Also Appearing&#13;
Tickets Available At:&#13;
• Eidinger Music House _&#13;
Downtown Kenosha&#13;
• J&amp;J Tapes - Kenosha &amp; Racine&#13;
• Carthage College Center Office&#13;
8:30 a .m. - Midnight daily&#13;
"The Juke Band"&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.0.1.C.&#13;
Cole, outlining the program's&#13;
behavioral approach, stated that&#13;
parents first learn to identify&#13;
problems very specifically.&#13;
Through a federally funded&#13;
research project at UW·&#13;
Parkside, Cole conducted&#13;
numerous parent training&#13;
courses last year. "Many parents&#13;
in the Parkside classes reported&#13;
not only positive changes in their&#13;
children, but better relations&#13;
within the entire family," she&#13;
said.&#13;
Parents may choose either an&#13;
evening or afternoon workshop.&#13;
Sessions begin Tuesday, Oct. 23,&#13;
7-8:30 p.m., and Friday, Oct. 26.&#13;
1-2:30 p.m. For reservations and&#13;
inquiries, parents may contact&#13;
Cole at the Monument Square&#13;
Building, 523 Main St., Racine, or&#13;
phone 634-7711.&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
$2. 75 per page&#13;
Send for your up-to-date, 160-pa~&#13;
mail order catalog. Enclose $1.&#13;
to cover postage (delivery time is&#13;
1 to 2 days).&#13;
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC. 11941 WILSHIRE BLVD., SUITE ~2&#13;
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90025&#13;
(213) 477-8474 or 477-5493&#13;
Our research material 1s sold for&#13;
research assistance only,&#13;
f &#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 17. 1973 THI1 PARl&lt;SIDE" RAffGER ,&#13;
It ~ilI not. be long bercre the rul)' morning' "tt&#13;
de" "ill be a frost, lying cold and qulel on lb. era .&#13;
a "arning 01 tht' impending doom of .inlfr Th"&#13;
greeene of Summer i ~IddinR to the brt.pJ.t colon&#13;
or raU: studt. t maples di pia) a hrad of crimWIG&#13;
under full and 10... cold" .. Iber clou . chill rid&#13;
v..itb each breath of the .lad. c.Ultng forl'_1&#13;
animals to prepare a place here they can Ih. tht'&#13;
v. inter oat. comfortably. Early in the moraiDg .• btD&#13;
lb. un is rising and . 'fUeling lIS gold... ray&#13;
lbrouglll'" ml I-shroud'" Ir.... )OU "01 -. a&#13;
change of season ~ldng ".(,f'.&#13;
The Psychic•••&#13;
contlnvecl from page ,&#13;
wttichhe could move. He began to&#13;
pull things out and throw them&#13;
aside.&#13;
Sirens faded in from the&#13;
distance. Jones wiped his eyes&#13;
and looked around. He could see&#13;
red lights flashing along the tops&#13;
of taller buildings before the car&#13;
came around the corner and&#13;
stopped.&#13;
Jones ran toward the car.&#13;
"Hey!" he yelled as a policeman&#13;
stepped out, "you gotta help me&#13;
get my friend out! He's buried&#13;
under that junk! "&#13;
Another police car drove up&#13;
and stopped. Two men got out.&#13;
"Better take him in. Looks like&#13;
he might be hurt. He can tell us&#13;
what happened later. You say&#13;
there's someone buried under&#13;
there, mister?"&#13;
Jones looked at the policeman.&#13;
"Yes. Yes. Come on, we have to&#13;
dig-him out!"&#13;
"You go along with the other&#13;
fellow here. A rescue team's on&#13;
its way now. But I wouldn't expeel&#13;
too much if I were you."&#13;
"No..." Jones said, looking at&#13;
the demolished building. Then he&#13;
choked.&#13;
Above the rubble, the smoke&#13;
had congealed. It formed an oval.&#13;
"What's that?"" said Jones.&#13;
The oval sharpened, with parts&#13;
of a face becoming apparent.&#13;
"What's what?" asked a&#13;
pottceman.&#13;
Tht oval became a bald head.&#13;
The features became distinct. It&#13;
Wasthe face of the Psychic!&#13;
Jones watched in awe. The face&#13;
had an expression of ecstasy. of&#13;
pleasure, of knowledge. The eyes&#13;
beamed at Jones.The lips parted&#13;
and Jones heard it speak.&#13;
"I LIVE AGAIN."&#13;
Then the head faded away.&#13;
Jones screamed as loudly as&#13;
any man could. He stared fixedly&#13;
at the point where the head had&#13;
been. He screamed again and&#13;
again.&#13;
"Take him in," said one&#13;
policeman. "He's just realized&#13;
what's happened to his friend."&#13;
Big X stepped through the door&#13;
from the tunnel to his office. He&#13;
switched on a knob and adjusted&#13;
a dial on his desk.&#13;
"Alternate Plan One has&#13;
failed," said Big X "Subject had&#13;
to be destroyed."&#13;
"It is just as well," said a dry,&#13;
rattling voice from a small&#13;
loudspeaker. "His death will&#13;
simplify matters."&#13;
"I must be told what to do&#13;
next," said Big X.&#13;
A pause. "Do away with all the&#13;
others we have enlisted."&#13;
"It shall be done." Big X&#13;
clicked on a switch and Ilicked up&#13;
a microphone. "All personnel&#13;
report to main computer room.&#13;
All personnel report to main&#13;
computer,computer room.&#13;
"That was Big X," said one.&#13;
"Yeah. What're we going to&#13;
do?"&#13;
"Belter wait 'til the Psychic&#13;
gets back."&#13;
"And Jones, wherever he&#13;
went."&#13;
The only door to the room&#13;
slammed shut. A hissing came&#13;
from the ceiJing.&#13;
"Gas!" shouted someone in&#13;
despair.&#13;
Everyone rushed to the door. It&#13;
was heavy metal, just like Big&#13;
X's door. They had no hope of&#13;
getting it open, but they tried&#13;
nonetheless.&#13;
"Hey! It's giving!"&#13;
Others felt it too, but soon&#13;
realized it had nothing to do with&#13;
their efforts. Everyone stepped&#13;
back. shocked. The door was&#13;
being pushed outwards by an&#13;
invisible force, but the indentation'&#13;
made was a face.&#13;
The face of the Psychic!&#13;
The metal broke in spots.&#13;
Finally it gave-with such suddenness&#13;
and force that the largest&#13;
part of it went through the wall&#13;
across the hall The men ran out&#13;
of the room. A few were gagging&#13;
from the gas.&#13;
The Psychic's head&#13;
materialized in a vacant hallway.&#13;
It opened its eyes and moved&#13;
down the hall. It floated through&#13;
the curved hallways up the&#13;
spiral staircases and to Ute office&#13;
of Big X.&#13;
Big X looked up from a dial he&#13;
was adjusting. He saw the&#13;
luminously white bead but&#13;
remained expressionless. His&#13;
obese body did not move as the&#13;
ectoplasmic head moved through&#13;
it and stopped.&#13;
The Psychic sc reamed-cand&#13;
Big X was ripped apart.&#13;
Some of the men reached the&#13;
door of Big X's office just as the&#13;
head faded away, an expression&#13;
of cosmic ecstasy on its face.&#13;
Then Ihey looked to the&#13;
remains of Big X-the thm layers.&#13;
of £leshtone latex, the insulated&#13;
coils which had maintained a&#13;
body temperature. the glazed&#13;
eyeballs connected to pboton&#13;
receptors. the vessel-like tubes&#13;
through which lubricants had&#13;
flowed. the fiber-glass bones&#13;
which had supported the body.&#13;
the round mass of wires and&#13;
tubes shaped like a small head,&#13;
which kept going click-click.&#13;
cllck-click. c lick-cl ick , clickclick&#13;
....&#13;
TO BE CONTINUED ....&#13;
lakefront Stadium, Kenosha&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 21 1:30 P.M.&#13;
Parkside VS. arqueHe&#13;
Donation 50c&#13;
Proceeds m aid visaally haDd~&#13;
Announcing the Grand Opening of&#13;
~ki nub i'pnrt!i QIqnlrt&#13;
Your Professional Ski and Bike Shop&#13;
Savings&#13;
up to 60% on ski equipment&#13;
and apparel&#13;
Also save on our fall bike specials&#13;
Oct. 19, 20 &amp; 21&#13;
Sole Hours:&#13;
Fri. 6 P.M. - 9 P.M.&#13;
Sot. 9 A.M. - 6 P.M.&#13;
Sun. 9 A.M. 6 P,M.&#13;
5038 - 6th Ave .• Kenosha, Wis. 53140 • 414'{)58-85 15&#13;
The Psychic ... continued from pa9e 6&#13;
wt.ich he could move. He began to&#13;
pull things out and throw them&#13;
aside.&#13;
Sirens faded in from the&#13;
distance. Jones wiped his eyes&#13;
and looked around. He could see&#13;
red lights flashing along the tops&#13;
of taller buildings before the car&#13;
came around the corner and&#13;
stopped.&#13;
Jones ran toward the car.&#13;
"Hey!" he yelled as a policeman&#13;
stepped out, "you gotta help me&#13;
get my friend out! He's buried&#13;
under that junk!"&#13;
Another police car drove up&#13;
and stopped. Two men got out.&#13;
"Better take him in. Looks like&#13;
he might be hurt. He can tell us&#13;
what happened later. You say&#13;
there's someone buried under&#13;
there, mister?"&#13;
Jones looked at the policeman.&#13;
"Yes. Yes. Come on, we have to&#13;
dig·him out!"&#13;
"You go along with the other&#13;
fellow here. A rescue team's on&#13;
its way now. But I wouldn't expect&#13;
too much if I were you."&#13;
"No ... " Jones said, looking at&#13;
the demolished building. Then he&#13;
choked.&#13;
Above the rubble, the smoke&#13;
had congealed. It formed an oval.&#13;
"What's that?" said Jones.&#13;
The oval sharpened, with parts&#13;
of a face becoming apparent.&#13;
"What's what?" asked a policemcln.&#13;
~ oval became a bald head.&#13;
The features became distinct. It&#13;
was the face of the Psychic!&#13;
Jones watched in awe. The face&#13;
had an expression of ecstasy, of&#13;
plea ure, of knowledge. The eyes&#13;
beamed at Jones. The lips parted&#13;
and Jones heard it speak.&#13;
"I LIVE AGAIN."&#13;
Then the head faded away.&#13;
Jones screamed as loudly as&#13;
any man could. He stared fixedly&#13;
at the point where the head had&#13;
be n. He screamed again and&#13;
again.&#13;
''Take him in," said one&#13;
policeman. "He's just realized&#13;
What' happened to his friend. "&#13;
Big X stepped through the door&#13;
from the tunnel to his office. He&#13;
switched on a knob and adjusted a dial on his desk.&#13;
"Alternate Plan One has&#13;
failed," said Big X "Subject had&#13;
to be destroyed."&#13;
"It is just as well," said a dry,&#13;
rattling voice from a small&#13;
loudspeaker. "His death will&#13;
simplify matters."&#13;
" I must be told what to do&#13;
next," said Big X.&#13;
A pause. "Do away with all the&#13;
others we have enlisted."&#13;
"It shall be done." Big X&#13;
clicked on a switch and Qicked up&#13;
a microphone. "All personnel&#13;
report to main computer room.&#13;
All personnel report to main&#13;
computer,computer room.&#13;
"That was Big X." said one.&#13;
"Yeah. What're we going to&#13;
do?"&#13;
"Better wait 'til the Psychic&#13;
gets back."&#13;
"And Jones, wherever he&#13;
went."&#13;
The only door to the room&#13;
slammed shut. A hissing came&#13;
from the ceiling.&#13;
"Gas!" shouted someone in&#13;
despair.&#13;
Everyone rushed to the door. It&#13;
was heavy metal, ju t like Big&#13;
X's door. They had no hope of&#13;
getting it open, but they tried&#13;
nonetheless.&#13;
"Hey! It's giving! "&#13;
Others felt it too, but soon&#13;
realized it had nothing to do with&#13;
their efforts. Everyone tepped&#13;
back, shocked The door was&#13;
being pushed outwards by an&#13;
invisible force, but the indentation·&#13;
made was a face.&#13;
The face of the Psychic!&#13;
The metal broke in pots.&#13;
Finally it gave-with uch uddenness&#13;
and force that the larg t&#13;
part of it went through the wall&#13;
across the hall. The men ran out&#13;
of the room. A few were gagging&#13;
from the gas.&#13;
The Psychic' head&#13;
materialized in a vacant hallway.&#13;
It opened its eye and mo\ ed&#13;
down the hall. It floated through&#13;
the curved hallwa} , up the&#13;
spiral tairca es and to the offic&#13;
of Big X.&#13;
Big X looked up from a dial he&#13;
was adju ting. He av. the&#13;
luminously v. h1te head but&#13;
remained expre ionle . Hi&#13;
obese body did not move a the&#13;
ectoplasmic head mo\ ed throu&#13;
it and stopped.&#13;
The P ychic creamed and&#13;
Big X wa npped apart.&#13;
Some of the men reached th&#13;
door of Big .. , office ju th&#13;
head fad d way, an e. p 10&#13;
of co mic t y on its face.&#13;
Then th · loo ·ed to the&#13;
remains of Big.· -the thin la ers&#13;
of fleshtone l te. , the insulated&#13;
coils which had maintained a&#13;
body temperature th glazed&#13;
eyeball connected to photon&#13;
receptor , the \ 1-h tu&#13;
through v.hich lub 1c n h d&#13;
flowed, the f1ber-gl bon&#13;
which had upported the bod~.&#13;
the round m · o v. ir and&#13;
tube . haped Ii e a mall he d,&#13;
which kept oi chc · 11 •• clic·-chc·, clic·-clic·, clic&#13;
click ....&#13;
TO BE o.m ED ....&#13;
La efr&#13;
Sun y&#13;
V.&#13;
Announcing the Grand Opening of&#13;
@, kt au ~ports 11 let&#13;
Your Professional Ski and Blk Shop&#13;
Savings&#13;
up to 60% on ski equipment&#13;
and apparel&#13;
Also save on our fall bike specials&#13;
Oct. 19, 20 &amp; 21&#13;
Sale Hours:&#13;
Fri. 6 P.M. - 9 P.M.&#13;
Sot. 9 A.M. - 6 P.M.&#13;
Sun. 9 A.M. - 6 P.M.&#13;
5038 - 6th Ave. • Kenosha, Wis. 53140 • 4--658-8515 &#13;
10:THE PARKSlDE RANGER Wed"es4\tY' OCt. 1T, 1973 Red man's life in a&#13;
white man's world&#13;
building was ours, all but about 25 of the original 200&#13;
Indians which had entered.Ieft The 25 were unarmed.&#13;
Then 300 federal troops beat the shit out of us&#13;
They were armed with M-l6s. A pregnant wom~&#13;
was molested by a federal marshall and there was&#13;
nothing we could do-we were in handcuffs.&#13;
The Indians entered the Bureau of Indian Affairs&#13;
(BIA) in Washington because we wanted the Indians&#13;
to be able to fun it. When the Indians learned&#13;
what was in the records, they found that there was a&#13;
hell of a lot of corruption. Grazing and mineral&#13;
rights on reservation property were handed to white&#13;
ranchers. When land on the reservations had been&#13;
sold, the money, instead of going to the Indians, had&#13;
disappeared. We wanted a complete investigation of&#13;
Editor's note: The following is the story or an&#13;
Indian student at Parkside. as told to Feature&#13;
Editor Debra Friedell. In it he tries to explain the&#13;
degeneration of the American Indian at the hands of&#13;
whites and capitalists.&#13;
The Winnebago Indians were first moved by ~e&#13;
federal government in boxcars to White Earth 10&#13;
.rtinnesota. At that time there were 10,000 Win·&#13;
nebagos. Then they were moved to Blue Earth in&#13;
'ebraska. When they finally moved the Winnebagos&#13;
back to Wisconsin, there were only 4,000&#13;
left.I was born a Winnebago Indian on a mission in&#13;
Black River Falls, Wisconsin. My family was poor&#13;
and we stayed there until I was about ten when we&#13;
moved to Racine. We were no better off here.&#13;
As an Indian in the Racine school system, I grew&#13;
up with a lot of whites. In the neighborhood in which&#13;
we Jived there were whites, blacks and Mexicans,&#13;
and they were all poor. They knew they were stuck&#13;
there and they were helpless over their destiny.&#13;
Even within that poor community there was&#13;
discrimination against me as an Indian boy.&#13;
Parents wouldn't let their children play with me or&#13;
any of my brothers or sisters because we were&#13;
Indians. I quit school in the tenth grade at Washington&#13;
Park High School because I've got pride in myself&#13;
------------- Three hundred federal troops beat the&#13;
shit out of us. They were armed with M16S.A&#13;
pregnant woman was molested by&#13;
a federal marshall and there was nothing&#13;
we could do-owe were in handCUffs,&#13;
------------- tribal at'fairs and corruption, we wanted the white&#13;
man off the reservation and a review of the land&#13;
rights. After Washington, we had proof that the government&#13;
continued to cheat the Indians. What were we&#13;
to do? One answer was a second battle at Wounded&#13;
Knee. The first was in 1890 when the federal&#13;
government, in a planned massacre, murdered over&#13;
200 men, women and children, then stacked their&#13;
bodies in a 4O-footlong pit for burial. A reservation&#13;
is really a concentration camp. Today, hundreds of&#13;
Indians are diabetic, alcoholic, living in an isolated&#13;
area; no running water, toilets are outdoors the&#13;
shacks are nothing but a roof over one's head: and&#13;
the sanitation is deplorable.&#13;
When we took over Wounded Knee, we were&#13;
surrounded by the FBI, tribal police, federal&#13;
marshalls, vigilante groups, and the army at Fort&#13;
Bragg was on stand-by alert. They carried M.jj()s,50&#13;
caliber machine guns, M-I6s, and high-powered&#13;
rifles. I&#13;
After millions and millions of rounds had been&#13;
fired, it was impossible for us to keep on. We never&#13;
wanted to give up, even when the odds were against&#13;
us. We were running out of food, some people had&#13;
been shot, and our ammunition was low. On a&#13;
Monday morning, they made it explicit that they&#13;
were going to bombard us. After two Indians had&#13;
been killed and many wounded, they told us if we&#13;
signed 'the treaty they'd give us amnesty and look&#13;
over our grievances. As of now they have arrested&#13;
many Indians involved in Wounded Knee.&#13;
Sympathizers for the lndians--blacks, Chinese,&#13;
Slavs and whites-who were coming into Pine Ridge&#13;
by train from Kyle were arrested. in groups of three&#13;
on the charge of having unorganized meetings.&#13;
After Wounded Knee I came back to Racine. I just&#13;
wanted to be left alone. People are suffering; whell&#13;
-~--~----~---&#13;
The American Indian has suffered and&#13;
is still suffering horrors of oppression&#13;
while white society continues to take&#13;
away the dignity, pride, and and rights of&#13;
the Indian who was at one time rich in&#13;
pride, land, and able to tend to his own&#13;
future.&#13;
College&#13;
affairs go&#13;
better with&#13;
steak.&#13;
-----------_ ..&#13;
and they left me no dignity. I lost my identity as a&#13;
person. My fatber worked at American Motors but&#13;
he quit because of the way they treated him.&#13;
The American Indian has suffered and is still&#13;
suffering borrors of oppression while white society&#13;
continues to take away the dignity, pride, and and&#13;
rights of the Indian who was at one time rich in&#13;
pride, land, and able to tend to his own future.&#13;
I went to Minneapolis after I quit school. I saw&#13;
that the urban Indians were living in the same&#13;
conditions as those in Racine. There was police&#13;
brutality there; you name it, there was&#13;
discrimination of all sorts. I have photos of police&#13;
heating Indians.&#13;
You get to the point where you see all that. I was&#13;
about 19. The Indians in Minneapolis and St. Paul&#13;
started getting together and developing some pride&#13;
and being glad we were Indian. We were being told&#13;
by the government "you gotta get off the reservation,&#13;
you gotta do this and that. U So the Indians in&#13;
Minneapolis started picking up on their own&#13;
traditions and trying to forget the white.&#13;
But, there is an education problem. Indians came&#13;
(rom reservations or missions to the city and could&#13;
fmd only menial jobs because they have no&#13;
t.ee?"0logical training. No one gives them any hope,&#13;
no Jobs, goals, or education. The Indian knows that&#13;
his family is in the same position and is going&#13;
nowhere. There are a lot of suicides and alcoholics&#13;
in an Indian community.&#13;
In May of 1970we tried to take over an abandoned&#13;
Navy building for an Indian community center in&#13;
Minneapolis. According to an 1868treaty signed by&#13;
the 'lOlted States Government, the Indians were to&#13;
be given all federal property no longer being used.&#13;
We k.newwe had to take it with (orce or we wouldn't&#13;
get It. When we thought this abandoned Navy&#13;
Man&#13;
Is what he&#13;
eats.&#13;
~-----------&#13;
Academically the white man teaches&#13;
what he wants the white man to le.arn.&#13;
Steak dinners 11.69to '3.69. _--._--------- no one will listen what are you going to do? I've got&#13;
it good now: three meals a day, hot water, a toilet,&#13;
and I can read.&#13;
I took a General Education Development Test in&#13;
Minneapolis and got my high school diploma.! have&#13;
a great respect for professional people.&#13;
But some people, one professor at parkside in&#13;
particular, perpetuate and encourage racism and&#13;
prejudice. He'll call people "nigger, II "welback~"&#13;
and "spies." He said once that Indians in&#13;
Menominee County would sell their clothes for a&#13;
drink. When the University lets people like him take&#13;
positions, there is something wrong up there&#13;
Academically, the white man teaches what he&#13;
wants the white man to learn There are 2t}30boOkS&#13;
on Custer in tbe library and only one on chief&#13;
J?seph. The Parkside police carry 357 magnum&#13;
pistols. What are they expecting?&#13;
I just want something for my sons and daughters.&#13;
DIHZI&#13;
smLDllPIT&#13;
3315 52nd. 51. KENOSHA,WIS. Phone 652-8662&#13;
ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK&#13;
~\lrne~5 ~~'YP)G~&#13;
BI\R lIVE MUSIC! Wed., Fri., Sat.&#13;
'TAURUS RISINC·&#13;
SURPRISE BAND SUNDAY&#13;
on the south side of Hwy so, eastofHwy 31.&#13;
MONDAY &amp; $1&#13;
TUESDAY&#13;
J&amp;J&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center&#13;
Super Low Prices&#13;
2200Lathrop Ave., Racine&#13;
SIB-56thSt., Kenosha&#13;
'"&#13;
Colle"ge&#13;
affairs go&#13;
better with&#13;
steak.&#13;
Man&#13;
Is what he&#13;
eats.&#13;
St ak dlnn rs • 1.69 to '3.69.&#13;
DIHZI&#13;
SDWJlRFIT&#13;
3315 52nd. ST. KE OSHA, WIS. Phone 652-8662&#13;
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Red man's life in a&#13;
white man's world&#13;
Editor' note: The following i the tory of an&#13;
Indian tudent at Park ide, a told to Feature&#13;
Editor D bra Friedell. In it he tries to explain the&#13;
degeneration of the American Indian at the hands of&#13;
whit and capitali t .&#13;
The Winnebago Indian were first moved by ~e&#13;
federal government in boxcars to White Earth _m&#13;
linnesota. At that time there were 10,000 Wmnebagos.&#13;
Then they were moved to Blue Earth in&#13;
. 'ebra ka . When they finally moved the Winnebag&#13;
· back to Wi consin, there were only 4,000&#13;
left.&#13;
I ·a. born a Winnebago Indian on a mission in&#13;
Black River Fall . Wi consin. My family was poor&#13;
and w • taved there until I was about ten when we&#13;
moved to Racine. We were no better off here. an Indian in the Racine school system, I grew&#13;
up with a lot of whites. In the neighborhood in which&#13;
·e li\'ed there w re whites. blacks and 1exicans, and th v w re all poor. They knew they were stuck&#13;
th re ruid they were helpless over their destiny&#13;
Ev n ·ithm that poor community there was&#13;
di. criminauon against me as an Indian boy.&#13;
Paren wouldn't let their children play with me or&#13;
any of my brothers or sisters because we were&#13;
Indian&#13;
I quit school in the tenth grade at Washington&#13;
Par High School because I've got pride in myself&#13;
The American Indian has suffered and&#13;
is still suffering horrors of oppression&#13;
while white society continues to take&#13;
away the dignity, pride, and and rights of&#13;
the Indian who was at one time rich in&#13;
pride, land, and able to tend to his own&#13;
future.&#13;
and they left me no dignity. I lost my identity as a&#13;
person. ly father worked at American Motors but&#13;
he quit becaus Qf the way they treated him.&#13;
The American Indian has suffered and is still&#13;
uffering horrors of oppression while white society&#13;
continues to take awa the dignity, pride, and and&#13;
rights of the Indian who was at one time rich in&#13;
pride. land, and able to tend to his own future.&#13;
I went to 1inneapolis after I quit school. I saw&#13;
that the urban Indians were living in the same&#13;
condition as those in Racine. There was police&#13;
brutality there ; you name it, there was&#13;
discrimination of all sorts. I have photos of police&#13;
beating Indians.&#13;
You get to the point where you see all that. I was&#13;
about 19. The Indians in Minneapolis and St. Paul&#13;
tarted getting together and developing some pride&#13;
and being glad we were Indian. We were being told&#13;
by the government "you gotta get off the reservation,&#13;
you gotta do this and that." So the Indians in&#13;
tinneapolis tarted picking up on their own&#13;
traditions and trying to forget the white.&#13;
But, there is an education problem. Indians came&#13;
from reservations or missions to the city and could&#13;
fmd only menial jobs because they have no&#13;
tec!mological training. ? one gives them any hope,&#13;
no Job . goals, or education. The Indian knows that&#13;
hi family is in the same position and is going&#13;
nowhere. There are a lot of suicides and alcoholics&#13;
in an Indian community.&#13;
In lay of 1970 we tried to take over an abandoned&#13;
• ·~vy buil~g for 31:1 Indian community center in , hnn,eapohs. According to an 1868 treaty signed by&#13;
the ~mted States Government, the Indians were to&#13;
be given all federal property no longer being used.&#13;
We kne we had to take it with (orce or we wouldn't&#13;
get it. When we thought this abandoned Navy&#13;
building was ours, all but about 25 of the original 200&#13;
Indians which had entered.. left. The 25 were unarmed.&#13;
Then 300 federal troops beat the shit out of us&#13;
They were armed with M-16s. A pregnant worn~&#13;
was molested by a federal marshall and there was&#13;
nothing we could do--we were in handcuffs.&#13;
The Indians entered the Bureau of Indian Affair&#13;
(BIA) in Washington because we wanted the Indians&#13;
to be able to run it. When the Indians learned&#13;
what was in the records, they found that there wa a&#13;
hell of a lot of corruption. Grazing and mineral&#13;
rights on reservation property were handed to white&#13;
ranchers. When land on the reservations had been&#13;
sold, the money, instead of going to the Indians, had&#13;
disappeared. We wanted a complete investigation or&#13;
Three hundred federal troops beat the&#13;
shit out of us. They were armed with M.&#13;
16s. A pregnant woman was molested by&#13;
a federal marshal! and there was nothing&#13;
we could do--we were in handcuffs.&#13;
tribal affairs and corruption, we wanted the white&#13;
man off the reservation and a review of the land&#13;
rights. After Washington, we had proof that the government&#13;
continued to cheat the Indians. What were we&#13;
to do? One answer was a second battle at Wounded&#13;
Knee. The first was in 1890 when the federal&#13;
government, in a planned massacre, murdered over&#13;
200 men, women and children, then stacked their&#13;
bodies in a 40-foot long pit for burial. A reservation&#13;
is really a concentration camp. Today, hundreds of&#13;
Indians are diabetic, alcoholic, living in an isolated&#13;
area; no running water, toilets are outdoors, the&#13;
shacks are nothing but a roof over one's head, and&#13;
the sanitation is deplorable.&#13;
When we took over Wounded Knee, we were&#13;
surrounded by the FBI, tribal police, federal&#13;
marshalls, vigilante groups, and the army at Fort&#13;
Bragg was on stand-by alert. They carried M-60s, 50&#13;
caliber machine guns, M-16s, and high-powered&#13;
rifles.&#13;
After millions and millions of rounds had been&#13;
fired, it was impossible for us to keep on. We never&#13;
wanted to give up, even when the odds were against&#13;
us. We were running out of food, some people had&#13;
been shot, and our ammunition was low. On a&#13;
Monday morning, they made it explicit that they&#13;
were going to bombard us. After two Indians had&#13;
been killed and many wounded, they told us if we&#13;
signed 'the treaty they'd give us amnesty and look&#13;
over our grievances. As of now they have arrested&#13;
many Indians involved in Wounded Knee.&#13;
Sympathizers for the Indians--blacks, Chinese,&#13;
Slavs and whites--who were coming into Pine Ridge&#13;
by train from Kyle were arrested in groups of three&#13;
on the charge of having unorganized meetings.&#13;
After Wounded Knee I came back to Racine. I ju t&#13;
wanted to be left alone. People are suffering; when&#13;
Academically the white man teaches&#13;
what he wants the white man to learn.&#13;
no one will listen what are you going to do? I've got&#13;
it good now: three meals a day, hot water, a toilet.&#13;
and I can read.&#13;
I took a General Education Development Test in&#13;
Minneapolis and got my high school diploma. I have&#13;
a great respect for professional people.&#13;
ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK&#13;
But some people, one professor at Parkside in&#13;
particular, perpetuate and encourage racism and&#13;
prejudice. He'll call people "nigger," "wetback,"&#13;
and "spies." He said once that Indians in&#13;
Menominee County would sell their clothes for a&#13;
drink. When the University lets people like him take&#13;
positions, there is something wrong up there.&#13;
Academically , the white man teaches what he&#13;
wants the white man to learn. Th~e are 20-30 book.&#13;
on Custer in the library and only one on Chief&#13;
J?seph. The Parkside police carry 357 magnum&#13;
pistols. What are they expecting? ()\l--ne~s&#13;
1\(0GX1-\R&#13;
&#13;
MONDAY &amp; $&#13;
TUESDAY 1&#13;
E USIC! ed., Fri., Sat.&#13;
'TAURUS RISIN01&#13;
SU PRISE BAND SU DAY&#13;
on th outh 1de ofHw~ 50, ea tofHwy 31.&#13;
I just want something for my sons and daughters&#13;
J&amp;J&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center&#13;
s·uper Low Prices&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave., Racine&#13;
518-56th St., Kenosha&#13;
;:_ . :..:~-·... k_ ~~~·' &#13;
photo by Oavid Oaniels&#13;
Parkside freshman Leslie Thompson, participating in last week's&#13;
gymoastics meet with UW-Madison, competes at the intermecUate&#13;
level 00 the uneven bars. Parkside won the meet 112--60.&#13;
~RANGER -;- Sports __&#13;
Ski class prepares&#13;
for the slopes&#13;
by Tom DeFouw&#13;
Skiing is offered to Parkside&#13;
students each semester through&#13;
the Physical Education&#13;
kipline. The main objective of&#13;
the class is to get people interested&#13;
in skiing. Free lessons&#13;
will be given by the Wilmot Ski&#13;
School. Asmall fee is required for&#13;
the rental of skies and lift tickets.&#13;
The fan session is aimed at&#13;
Ilreogthening people's bodies so&#13;
theycan be in complete control of&#13;
themselves on the slopes. This&#13;
conditioning helps to prevent&#13;
many serious injuries. A series of&#13;
exercises are set up to help you&#13;
.trengthen your bodies and&#13;
developcoordination.&#13;
The most strenuous of these&#13;
exercises is the warm-up. You&#13;
have III nm a half mile or run in&#13;
place for three minutes. This&#13;
awakens your body and loosens&#13;
the muscles. Tile rest is downhill&#13;
from there. Other exercises are:&#13;
.itupo, pushups, bench presses,&#13;
leg'lIses, body hops, wall leans,&#13;
stall' hops, leg curls and swimrtllDg.&#13;
These exercises are done&#13;
at your own pace, doing as many&#13;
repetitions as you want.&#13;
StudentRon Brower claims, "I&#13;
exercise for 45 minutes and swim&#13;
the rest of the night."&#13;
The fan course will only have&#13;
three ski trips to Wilmot. The&#13;
second semester will have more&#13;
trips since Nature will have&#13;
provided more snow. The spring&#13;
class will end when the snow&#13;
melts.&#13;
Vic Godfrey, the instructor,&#13;
recommends "the class should be&#13;
taken in the spring since there&#13;
will be an ample supply of snow&#13;
to ski on." He adds, "The best&#13;
exercise for skiiers is to run. This&#13;
builds up the lungs and heart. It&#13;
is also good for the legs."&#13;
For those skiers who want to&#13;
start getting into shape, they&#13;
should start running soon.&#13;
Weekend sports&#13;
The Parkside Harriers all&#13;
came across the finish line with&#13;
their best times ever I and as a&#13;
result, captured 19th place in the&#13;
Notre Dame invitational last&#13;
weekend.&#13;
Thirty·nve teams competed in&#13;
the meet, which saw the&#13;
University of Wisconsin· Madison&#13;
take top honors with 8t points.&#13;
Individually. Parkside's&#13;
Lucian Rosa placed 4th in the&#13;
meet with a 23:54 clocking. This&#13;
time beats Parkside's old s-mue&#13;
course record of 24:14, Other&#13;
finishers for Parkside and their&#13;
times:&#13;
Dennis Biel - 7Ist . 24:49&#13;
Chuck Dettman - 79th - 24:59&#13;
Wayne Rhode - 122nd - 25: 58&#13;
Keith Merritt - 172nd - 26:00&#13;
Parkside's next meet will be&#13;
against Marquette. at Marquette,&#13;
: on Saturday, Oct. 20.&#13;
Wednesday, OCt. 17,1973 THE PARK_SIDE RANGER 11&#13;
PHYSICAL EDUCATION BUILDING SCHEDULE&#13;
RECREATIONAL PERIODS&#13;
POOL&#13;
MONDAY 12:00-1:00, 6:00-10:00&#13;
TUESDAY 11:00-1:00,3:00-10:00&#13;
WEDNESDAY 12:00-1:00,6:00-tO:00&#13;
THURSDAY 11:00-1:00&#13;
FRIDAY 11:00-3:00&#13;
SATURDAY 11:(1).4:00&#13;
SUNDAY 2:00-10:00&#13;
GY~I:&gt;ASIUM&#13;
MONDAY _ THURSDAY 12:00-1:20&#13;
(liU ·ov. 26) 6:00-10:00&#13;
FRIDAY 8:36-3:00&#13;
SATURDAY 11:(1).4:00&#13;
SUNDAY 2:00-10:00&#13;
WEIGHT ROOM&#13;
MONDAY - THURSDAY 8:36-tO:15, 12:00-t:2O. 3:_:30&#13;
FRIDAY 8:36-3:00&#13;
SATURDAY 9:(1).4:00&#13;
SUNDAY 2:00-10:00&#13;
HA:'iDBALL COURTS&#13;
MONDAY - THURSDAY 12:00-9:00&#13;
FRIDAY 8:36-3:00&#13;
SATURDAY 11:(1).4:00&#13;
lSUNDAY 2:00-10:00&#13;
Game of Rugby explained&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
American football has a rougher cousin in rugby.&#13;
Originated in England, the game has come to&#13;
Parkside and has been played here for aboot two&#13;
years.&#13;
To refresh your minds about the sport, the difference&#13;
between our game of football and rugby is&#13;
that blocking is illegal and only the ban carrier may&#13;
be tackled. Also no member of the ban cain ... 's&#13;
team may be ahead of the ban carrt ... ; if a teammate&#13;
ahead of the ball carrier an offsides penalty&#13;
will be imposed. The final difference is that no&#13;
forward passing may be done.&#13;
Play is fluid and continuous, with the exceptioo of&#13;
when a penalty is assessed or the ball goes out of&#13;
bounds. If a player is tackled, he must let go of the&#13;
ball, which is immediately in play. and either team&#13;
may play the ball.&#13;
Itis put in play by means of a serum. A serum is a&#13;
group of forwards who try to get ball baelt to the&#13;
other members of the team, by Idclting or dribbling&#13;
the ban through a tunnel formed by these forwards.&#13;
Basically, there are two kinds of serums: the set&#13;
serum, which occurs after an infringement of the&#13;
rules or wben the ban becomes unplayable. The&#13;
second kind is a loose scrwn which occurs after a&#13;
player is tackled or wben aslineout occurs.&#13;
A lineout occurs when the baU is pmted or the ball&#13;
goes out of bounds.&#13;
Scoring for rugby is simple. A player sares 4&#13;
points when he touches the ground with the ball in&#13;
the end zone which is caned a try.&#13;
Other ways to score in rugby are a convenion&#13;
after a try, which would be a dropIdelt through the&#13;
goal posts, a peoalty ltielt, or a drop kielt during the&#13;
game.&#13;
Members of the Parkside rugby squad are: Torn&#13;
Berge, Marty Hogan, Paul Gray, Norman Pietras,&#13;
Rick Pazera, Mark Barnhill, Ernie Uanas, Dietmar&#13;
Schnieder, Tom Beyers, Jim Rea, John B1es1ta,&#13;
~~~ .-.;:~.~~&#13;
CW'J&#13;
Keith Bosman, Torn 011, AI Pevonk.a, Rielt GIov ....&#13;
Dan Mulenberg, Torn Krimmel, Eric Olaen, Daye&#13;
Gregory, Pat Hogan. and Harry Bird.&#13;
This group of roggers has not had a good __&#13;
so far this year, but has made game out of several of&#13;
the matches played so far during the year.&#13;
Three of the four matches played this __&#13;
have been decided by a total oC 8 pomts, acconliJl(l&#13;
to Vic Godfrey, coordinator of club sports. Their&#13;
current reconI is t-3 with a match with bnth&#13;
Marquette and University of MinnesotA corninl up&#13;
ID the future.&#13;
The Marquette match IS sponsored by the&#13;
Kenosha Lions Cub for the second straight year.&#13;
This helps encourage the sport of rugby in Kenosha.&#13;
There was a g~y crowd in attendance last year.&#13;
A Porn Porn squad is going to&#13;
be organi.ed this year at&#13;
Parkside. This group will be&#13;
independent of the Cheerleaders.&#13;
AU women interested in jooninll&#13;
should contact either Barb&#13;
Lawson, instructor in Physical&#13;
EOJcation, at ext. 2251, or student&#13;
Jane Erickson at 312-872-S727.&#13;
within the nen two weeks for&#13;
information regan!.inIl meet~&#13;
and practices. The Urst&#13;
organiutiooal m~ IS ten·&#13;
tatively set for the fll'St wee. of&#13;
November, WIth practices and&#13;
tryOUlll the following week&#13;
'AGE"&#13;
ATTENTION!&#13;
Wrestling practice has started.&#13;
Head coach Jim Koch has announced&#13;
that practices will run&#13;
from 4-1;p.m. every day. All men&#13;
are encouraged to tryout. (The&#13;
team is undermanned at the&#13;
heavier weight classes.)&#13;
nd&#13;
Intramural Bowling. Students&#13;
who are interested in bowling&#13;
should meet at Surf Bowl on&#13;
Friday at 4 p.m. Otherwise,&#13;
contact Jim Koch.&#13;
Wed", Fri., Sat., &amp; SI•.&#13;
I ocr. 17, 19, 20, 21 I&#13;
r...SN'S "ewesf "Ite~&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shokey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road Phone 654-0485 ,&#13;
ROAD&#13;
J&#13;
Weekend sports&#13;
The Park ide Harrier all&#13;
came acros the fini h line with&#13;
their best times ever, and a a&#13;
result, captured 19th place in the&#13;
Notre Dame Invitational la t&#13;
weekend.&#13;
Thirty-five teams competed in&#13;
the meet, which aw the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-. tadi on&#13;
take top honors with 81 points.&#13;
Individually, Park ide's&#13;
Lucian Rosa placed 4th in the&#13;
meet with a 23:54 clocking. This&#13;
time beats Parkside' old 5-mile&#13;
course record of 24: 14. Other&#13;
finishers for Parkside and their&#13;
times:&#13;
Dennis Biel - 71st . 24: 9&#13;
Chuck Dettman - 79th - 24:59&#13;
Wayne Rhode - 122nd - 25:58&#13;
Keith 1erritt - 172nd - 26:00&#13;
Parkside's next meet "'ill be&#13;
against Iarquette, at larquette,&#13;
.on Saturday, Oct. 20.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 17, 1973 THE PARK_SIDE RANGER 11&#13;
PHYSICAL EDUCATION BUILDING SCHEDULE&#13;
RECREATIO AL PERIODS&#13;
Y 12: 1:20&#13;
10:15, 12: 1: , 3:&#13;
photo by o .. vid o.,nlels&#13;
Parkside freshman Leslie Thompson, participating in last week's&#13;
gymnastics meet with UW-Madison, competes at the intermediate&#13;
Jevel on the uneven bars. Parkside won the meet U2~.&#13;
Game of Rugby explained&#13;
b Bruce Wagner&#13;
RANGER American football has a rougher cousin tn rugby. Originated in England, the game ha come to&#13;
Parkside and has been played here for about two&#13;
years.&#13;
To refresh your minds about the sport, the difference&#13;
between our game of football and rugby is&#13;
that blocking is illegal and only the ball carrier ma&#13;
be tackled. Also no member of the ball earner'&#13;
team may be ahead of the ball carrier: if a teammate&#13;
ahead of the ball carrier an off ides penalty&#13;
will be imposed. The final difference is that no&#13;
forward passing may be done.&#13;
'---------::----Sports __&#13;
Ski class prepares&#13;
for the slopes&#13;
Play is fluid and continuous, with the exception of&#13;
when a penalty is assessed or the ball goe out of&#13;
bounds. If a player is tackled, he must let go of the&#13;
ball, which is immediately in play, and either team&#13;
may play the ball.&#13;
by Tom DeFouw&#13;
Skiing is offered to Parkside&#13;
students each semester through the Physical Education&#13;
discipline. The main objective of&#13;
the class is to get people interested&#13;
in skiing. Free lessons&#13;
will be given by the Wilmot Ski&#13;
School. A small fee is required for&#13;
the rental of skies and lift tickets.&#13;
The fall session is aimed at&#13;
strengthening people's bodies so&#13;
they can be in complete control of&#13;
themselves on the slopes. This&#13;
conditioning helps to prevent&#13;
many serious injuries. A series of&#13;
exercises are set up to help you&#13;
strengthen your bodies and&#13;
develop coordination.&#13;
The most strenuous of these&#13;
exercises is the warm-up. You&#13;
have to run a half mile or run in&#13;
place for three minutes. This&#13;
awakens your body and loosens&#13;
the muscles. 'Die rest is downhill&#13;
from there. Other exercises are:&#13;
itups, pushups, bench presses,&#13;
leg_raises, body hops, wall leans,&#13;
~II' hops, leg curls and swimming.&#13;
These exercises are done&#13;
at your own pace, doing as many&#13;
repetitions as you want.&#13;
Student Ron Brower claims, "I&#13;
nd&#13;
exercise for 45 minutes and swim&#13;
the rest of the night."&#13;
The fall course will only have&#13;
three ski trips to Wilmot. The&#13;
second semester will have more&#13;
trips since Nature will have&#13;
provided more snow. The spring&#13;
class will end when the snow&#13;
melts.&#13;
Vic Godfrey, the instructor,&#13;
recommends "the class should be&#13;
taken in the spring since there&#13;
will be an ample supply of snow&#13;
to ski on." He adds, "The best&#13;
exercise for skiiers is to run. This&#13;
builds up the lungs and heart. It&#13;
is also good for the legs."&#13;
For those skiers who want to&#13;
start getting into shape, they&#13;
should start running soon.&#13;
ATTENTION!&#13;
Wrestling practice has started.&#13;
Head coach Jim Koch has announced&#13;
that practices will run&#13;
from 4-6 p.m. every day. All men&#13;
are encouraged to try out. (The&#13;
team is undermanned at the&#13;
heavier weight classes.)&#13;
It is put in play by means of a scrum. A scrum is a&#13;
group of forwards who try to get ball ba to the&#13;
other members of the team, by kicking or dribbling&#13;
the ball through a tunnel formed by these forwards.&#13;
Basically, there are two kinds of scrums: the set&#13;
scrum, which occurs after an infringement of the&#13;
rules or when the ball becomes unplayable. The&#13;
second kind is a loose scrum which occurs after a&#13;
player is tackled or when aslineout occurs. A lineout occurs when the ball is punted or the ball&#13;
goes out of bounds.&#13;
Scoring for rugby is imple. A player scores 4&#13;
points when he touches the ground \\ith the ball in&#13;
the end zone which is called a try.&#13;
Other ways to score in rugby are a conversion&#13;
after a try, which would be a dropkick through the&#13;
goal posts, a penalty kick, or a drop ki during the&#13;
game. iembers of the Park ide rugby squad are: Tom&#13;
Bergo, Marty Hogan, Paul Gray, 'onnan Pietr •&#13;
Rick Pazera, iar Barnhill, Ernie Uana Dietrnar&#13;
Schnieder, Tom Beyers, Jim Rea, John Ble&#13;
Intramural Bo" ling. tudents&#13;
who are inter ted m bowling&#13;
should meet at urf Bowl on&#13;
Friday at 4 p.m. Otherv.ise,&#13;
contact Jim Koch.&#13;
a&#13;
'TAOE"&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sat., &amp; Sun.&#13;
[ OCT. 17, 19, 20, 21 I&#13;
Ke11oslta's Newest Niles,.,&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shokey's}&#13;
a&#13;
A Porn Porn&#13;
be organized&#13;
3400 SHERID RO D ·n&#13;
6926 39th E . E&#13;
•• &#13;
. . .&#13;
. '. . .: :&#13;
. '. .&#13;
__ii" "&#13;
F&#13;
POP&#13;
L&#13;
JAZZ&#13;
5&#13;
A B MS&#13;
o I&#13;
X C&#13;
E&#13;
D&#13;
5&#13;
E&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
BOXED SETS&#13;
VALUES TO $45.00&#13;
Sale Starts&#13;
Wed •• Oct.17&#13;
Sale EndsOct. 26&#13;
r&#13;
F&#13;
POP&#13;
L&#13;
ROCK&#13;
L&#13;
JAZZ&#13;
s&#13;
LBUMS&#13;
0 I&#13;
X C&#13;
E&#13;
SINGLE Al.BUMS&#13;
$ 129 - $ 198&#13;
l~DXED SETS&#13;
$298 - $998&#13;
VALUES TO $45.00&#13;
D&#13;
s&#13;
E&#13;
Sale Starts&#13;
Wed •• Oct.17&#13;
Sale Ends Oct. 26&#13;
PARKSIDE UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOKSTORE </text>
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              <text>PSGA to re-interview ~&#13;
~&#13;
L&amp;FA applicants&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
At their meeting Sunday night&#13;
Parkside's Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGAl decided to&#13;
re-inlerview students who apP.l&lt;d&#13;
to be placed on the studentfaculty&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Committee,to fill the remaining&#13;
vacancy.&#13;
Four PSGA members attended&#13;
the meeting. They were Tom&#13;
Jennett, interim President, and&#13;
senators Ken Konkol, Chuck&#13;
Stephenand Pat McDivitt. Other&#13;
PSGA members who were&#13;
notifiedby both mail and phone&#13;
but did not attend the meeting&#13;
were Dave Otto, Mike Wickware,&#13;
Jan Petzke, Kathy Wellner, Terri&#13;
Appleget, Tom Hughes, Helmut&#13;
Kab, Ernie Llanas, Nancy Lee&#13;
and Rick Ponzio. Wellner. Rah&#13;
and Lee have resigned from&#13;
PSGA but their resignations have&#13;
not yet been accepted.&#13;
Recommendations Approved&#13;
All the student r ecornmendations&#13;
by PSGA to studentfaculty&#13;
committees can hold&#13;
legallyuntil new PSGA elections&#13;
are beld the second week of&#13;
November. However, Konkol&#13;
expressed hope tha t these&#13;
recommendations would stick&#13;
even after the elections, when&#13;
they have to be re-approved by&#13;
the new Senate.&#13;
The PSGASenate has approved&#13;
the recommendations of the&#13;
interviewing and screening&#13;
committee headed by Konkol&#13;
excopt for the Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts Committee in which ten&#13;
people were originally interViewed,&#13;
two recommended&#13;
and one position still open. The&#13;
two Iilled positions are held by&#13;
Greg Klema, chairperson of the&#13;
Parkside Activities .Board&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee,&#13;
and Chuck. Perronne a&#13;
junior and Sigmi Pi fratern'ity&#13;
member.&#13;
Konkol suggested the whole&#13;
senate choose between applicants&#13;
Tom Jones, Dick Jones and Jean&#13;
Kiddney for the third position.&#13;
Tom Jones is a sophomore and a&#13;
member of the Third World&#13;
organization. Dick Jones is a&#13;
sophomore and a member of&#13;
Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity.&#13;
Kiddney is also a sophomore, an&#13;
adult student and involved with&#13;
the Day care Center. McDivitt&#13;
questioned Konkol as to whether&#13;
or not in the interview. Kiddney&#13;
had the point of view that PSGA&#13;
wanted people appointed to have&#13;
regarding Lecture and Fine Arts.&#13;
Konkol replied that he had been&#13;
unable to tell either way.&#13;
It was decided that all students&#13;
who had applied would be reinterviewed&#13;
on Wednesday,&#13;
October 24. "If I call them all in&#13;
again," asked Konkol, "am I&#13;
going to have someone else there&#13;
to help me?" Jennett said, "If&#13;
you let us know when." "I let ~0lI&#13;
know last time," Konkol replied&#13;
sarcastically.&#13;
Interviews to be Taped&#13;
Jennett asked that the interviews&#13;
be taped this time, as&#13;
there was some controversy&#13;
regarding the manner in which&#13;
interviewing was conducted&#13;
before. "Mustafa Abdullah,"&#13;
Jennett said, "had complained to&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger (assistant&#13;
Dean of Students) that he was&#13;
discriminated against because he&#13;
was black." Konkol said that&#13;
continued on page 7&#13;
More vending macbines&#13;
_..... _ ..._------------- ---- ...• _ .._ ....&#13;
The Parkside'-------&#13;
RA&#13;
Wedne.y,&#13;
GER&#13;
Oct. 24, 1973 Vol. II No.•&#13;
Faculty "outraged" over&#13;
withheld information&#13;
Approximately 20 faculty&#13;
members attended the Wisconsm&#13;
Education Association Council&#13;
lWEAC) organizational meeting&#13;
last Friday afternoon.&#13;
The main topic of discuss.ion&#13;
concerned UW-system funds that&#13;
were set aside for undergraduate&#13;
educational improvement grants&#13;
According to several of the&#13;
faculty who were present. the&#13;
annooncement that these funds&#13;
are available was made 00&#13;
August 16, 1973 and received by&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie on August 17&#13;
Parkside faculty members did&#13;
not learn about the available&#13;
funds until October 17, applications&#13;
for the money are due&#13;
on October 31&#13;
Faculty members at the&#13;
meeting agreed to make their&#13;
feelings of "outrage" on II".&#13;
withholding of information&#13;
known to several sources. They&#13;
decided to send a resotuuee. In&#13;
wrating, to the full-facult)&#13;
meeting, the Uruversrty Committee,&#13;
and Central Administration&#13;
(CA) In • tadison&#13;
The protest to CA will be 10 the&#13;
form of a request for an eXlenslon&#13;
Hot food service in SA8&#13;
to be discontinued&#13;
There will no longer be hot food&#13;
service available in the Student&#13;
Activities BuHeling. It is being&#13;
~lOated due to lack of suf-&#13;
~~nt users to justify. main.&#13;
tauung it.&#13;
w~~dent. Life coordinator&#13;
hal J: N,ebuhr said the service&#13;
S n Operating at a 15 per- ""I del· .&#13;
aver ICll this semester. An&#13;
bu age of 30 people per day were not!:: SOmething, but many elid&#13;
y complete meals.&#13;
More vending machines are&#13;
being installed in the S.A.B. to&#13;
provide food for persons still&#13;
wishing to eat lunch there.&#13;
Niebuhr does not anticipate that&#13;
this will have a detrimental C:f&#13;
.&#13;
fect&#13;
on lines and crowded conditions&#13;
, the LLC cafeteria. since very&#13;
}~wstudents were going down ~.~&#13;
hill to eat anyway. and CIV}&#13;
service personnel in Tallent Hall&#13;
can purchase sandwicheS. and so&#13;
th S A B machmes. on from e . ' . .&#13;
Niebuhr added that he .IS&#13;
currently trying to come up With&#13;
a solution to a problem we will&#13;
have next year when the Kenosha&#13;
campus closes The hot food&#13;
service at Kenosha this year lS&#13;
doll'lg very well, he commented&#13;
"When the people using It are on&#13;
the main campus next year we'll&#13;
have to have another area&#13;
besides the existing LLC&#13;
facilities to ser"e them. The&#13;
space is availabJe In S.A.B. and a&#13;
kitchen already there, but&#13;
students won't go there so we've&#13;
got to try and find a suitable area&#13;
up the lull."&#13;
of the apphcauOII deodlme_ It&#13;
least for Parkslde faculty. WEAC&#13;
members .,11 ask that th.&#13;
UroversIty Comrmttee send a&#13;
Similar reque-st tee df'adUot"&#13;
extension to Central Ad·&#13;
mlnlStrahon.&#13;
Alan hucard, as oclate&#13;
professor of Eng! cautioned&#13;
his coIleago es about the at&#13;
hand "{;nW~ ......show a pattern&#13;
of nogli nco, 'OU don't ,..ant to&#13;
.. "" .... te the Import of&#13;
th lDOdenL"&#13;
OlIIer subjec cli5cuued at the&#13;
-.ng ...... 01 oI1ken&#13;
and the formation of a eoerinI&#13;
commit Both acUons&#13;
dela) ed until membonhlp&#13;
rNSed&#13;
DIane Wakoski&#13;
Th. Lecture and Fme Arts Commlllee, the Poetry Forum. and the&#13;
Women's Caucus are sponsonng a poetry worbhop and .... d.m&amp; WIth&#13;
poet Diane Wakoslti \\Cak i IS the author 01 such poetry coli bans&#13;
as Di&gt;&lt;repan&lt;i and \j&gt;parilioa . Greed. 1.0 ide IIoe Blood FaclGry,&#13;
The \tGlore:') de 8e.tra) ...1 Poem • 011 Barba.rolll SbGre. and n~&#13;
PumpkiD Pie or reassu.nK~ are: al •• ) r.he: .ll.bou.gh. e iO\'~&#13;
l/Iem.&#13;
The poetry "T1ling ......-bhop ..i11 be 011Oct 29 from 4 to 5 P m In the&#13;
lam Place lounges Dl;:J and D174 The Wako6lti poetry readlng on&#13;
OCt 29 ""II he at a pm on tho llurd floor of the hl:ral)· Th .\ nl&#13;
all&#13;
PSGA to re-intervievv The Parkside~------&#13;
L&amp;F A applicants&#13;
by Debra Frieden&#13;
At their meeting Sunday night&#13;
Parkside's Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA) decided to&#13;
re-interview students who appl_ied&#13;
to be placed on the studentfaculty&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Committee, to fill the remaining&#13;
vacancy.&#13;
Four PSGA members attended&#13;
the meeting. They were Tom&#13;
JeMett, interim President, and&#13;
enators Ken Konkol, Chuck&#13;
tephen and Pat McDivitt. Other&#13;
PSGA members who were&#13;
notified by both mail and phone&#13;
but did not attend the meeting&#13;
\\ere Dave Otto, Mike Wickware,&#13;
Jan Petzke, Kathy Wellner, Terri&#13;
Appleget, Tom Hughes, Helmut&#13;
Kah, Ernie Llanas, Nancy Lee&#13;
and Rick Ponzio. Wellner, Kah&#13;
and Lee have resigned from&#13;
PSGA but their resignations have&#13;
not yet been accepted.&#13;
Rttommendations Approved&#13;
All the student recommendations&#13;
by PSGA to studentfaculty&#13;
committees can hold&#13;
legally until new PSGA elections&#13;
are held the second week of&#13;
, 'ovember. However, Konkol&#13;
expressed hope that these&#13;
recommendations would stick&#13;
even after the elections, when&#13;
they have to be re-approved by&#13;
the new Senate.&#13;
The PSGA Senate has approved&#13;
the recommendations of the&#13;
nterviewing and screening&#13;
committee headed by Konkol&#13;
except for the Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts Committee in which ten&#13;
people were originally interviewed,&#13;
two recommended&#13;
and one position still open. The&#13;
two filled positions are held by&#13;
Greg Klema, chairperson of the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee,&#13;
and Chuck Perronne, a&#13;
junior and Sigmi Pi fraternity member.&#13;
Konkol suggested the whole&#13;
senate choose between applicants&#13;
Tom Jones, Dick Jones and Jean&#13;
Kiddney for the third position.&#13;
Tom Jones is a sophomore and a&#13;
member of the Third World&#13;
organization. Dick Jones is a&#13;
sophomore and a member of&#13;
Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity.&#13;
Kiddney is also a sophomore, an&#13;
adult student and involved with&#13;
the Day Care Center. McDivitt&#13;
questioned Konkol as to whether&#13;
or not in the interview, Kiddney&#13;
had the point of view that PSGA&#13;
wanted people appointed to have&#13;
regarding Lecture and Fine Arts.&#13;
Konkol replied that he had been&#13;
unable to tell either way.&#13;
It was decided that all students&#13;
who had applied would be reinterviewed&#13;
on Wednesday,&#13;
October 24. "If I call them all in&#13;
again," asked Konkol, "am I&#13;
going to have someone else there&#13;
to help me?" Jennett said, "If&#13;
you let us know when." "I let ~ou&#13;
know last time," Konkol rephed&#13;
sarcastically.&#13;
Interviews to be Taped&#13;
Jennett asked that the interviews&#13;
be taped this time, as&#13;
there was some controversy&#13;
regarding the manner in which&#13;
interviewing was conducted&#13;
before. "Mustafa Abdullah,"&#13;
Jennett said, "had complained to&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger (assistant&#13;
Dean of Students) that he wa&#13;
discriminated against because he&#13;
was black " Konkol said that&#13;
continued on p 1ge 7&#13;
More vending machines&#13;
RANGE&#13;
Wedne&#13;
Faculty "outraged" over&#13;
withheld informa •&#13;
10n&#13;
Hot food service in SAS&#13;
to be discontinued&#13;
Th_ere will no longer be hot food&#13;
service available in the Student&#13;
ctivities Building. It is being&#13;
terminated due to lack of sufr~~nt&#13;
users to justify. main- taining it.&#13;
, l~dent Life coordinator&#13;
hallltam lebuhr said the service&#13;
5 been operating at a 15 per- cent def· · av 1c1t this semester. An&#13;
bu ~age of 30 people per day were&#13;
noi'ng something, but many did&#13;
buy complete meals.&#13;
More vending machines are&#13;
being installed in the S.A.B. ~o&#13;
prov1 'd e food for persons still . h . g to eat lunch there. WIS ID . . th t N. buhr does not anticipate a&#13;
th\: will have a detrimental ~f!ect&#13;
rnes and crowded cond1ttons&#13;
?n ~e LLC cafeteria, since very&#13;
~~w students were going down ~~ hiJI to eat anyway, and c1&#13;
service personnel in Tallent Hall&#13;
can purchase sandwiches_ and so&#13;
on from the S.A.B. machmes . .&#13;
Nl.ebuhr added that he _ is&#13;
P with currently trying to come u&#13;
a solution to a prob! m&#13;
have next ye r wh the • no&#13;
campu cl . The h r&#13;
en•ice at Kenosha th ) r&#13;
doing very ell, he ~~mented. "When the people mg tl&#13;
the main campus next ar 11&#13;
have to ha,·e nother&#13;
be ide- th xLting LLC&#13;
facilitie, to rve them. The&#13;
,pace i available in .A.B. and a&#13;
kitchen already th re , but&#13;
student on't go there so '\e&#13;
got to try and find a suitable rea&#13;
up the htll." &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wedtllliclay. OCt. 24. 1m&#13;
'-&#13;
RANGER&#13;
EditorioI/Opinion&#13;
Committee&#13;
appointments&#13;
handled&#13;
badly&#13;
Ope of the duties of the Parkslde Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA) Is to set up an Interviewing committee&#13;
as the Initial step in the process of appointing&#13;
students to student-faculty committees. The final&#13;
recommendations are to be a lolnt effort of the Student&#13;
senate. the Chancellor and Vice-chancellor, and should&#13;
be made In a careful and unprejudiced manner.&#13;
PSGA has apparently devised a new system though, In&#13;
which Ken Konkol. senator and chairperson of the&#13;
screening committee (also the only active committee&#13;
member .. If anyone else happened to be in the office&#13;
during Interviews they did listen, which seemed to&#13;
validate the process&gt;. refus!!d to release the names of&#13;
&amp;ny Individuals Interviewed except those he wished to&#13;
see serve on the various committees. As appointees to&#13;
these student.faculty committees are to serve the needs&#13;
and Interesfs of the student body. It Is necessary that all&#13;
of the names and accurate summaries of the affitudes of&#13;
these students be available.&#13;
When RANGER requested this information after&#13;
learning of complaints about the selection process,&#13;
Konkol refused to provide it, claiming confidentiality for&#13;
the applicants and himself. This in spite the fact that he&#13;
had previously voluntarily shown us a list containing the&#13;
names. He said that he would only give us the Information&#13;
If the Senate authorized him to at the next&#13;
PSGA meeting.&#13;
At that meeting he willingly read the names of applicants&#13;
In spite of the presence of two RANGER&#13;
reporters and without receiving the "authorization" he&#13;
claimed he needed. His previous ploy was obviously to&#13;
buy time and prevent RANGER from adequately&#13;
researching a story that appeared would reflect adversely&#13;
on himself. Acting PSGA President Tom Jennett&#13;
admitted at the time that Konkol had absolutely no&#13;
authority to w)thhold the names and should suffer some&#13;
consequences. But he said that short of trying physical&#13;
force there appeared to be no way to make Konkol&#13;
behave responsibly In this matter.&#13;
Working from memory and the list of "appointees"&#13;
Konkol recommended, RANGER called a few students&#13;
who had applied and learned that much of the controversy&#13;
centered on the Lecture and Fine Arts committee.&#13;
It was learned Konkol relected nominees with&#13;
whom his opinion differed. Students explained that the&#13;
first step of the Interview Konkol made clear his wish to&#13;
see this committee abollstled as It presently stands.&#13;
When students were unresponsive to Konkol's&#13;
suggestion they ended up missing from his list of&#13;
recommended appointees. One student left off that list&#13;
said, "I went In because I was Interested. I volunteered&#13;
because I was concerned. My Interview didn't last even&#13;
five minutes."&#13;
Of the nine people applying to the L&amp;FA committee,&#13;
two were chosen and one opening stili exists. One of the&#13;
two appointees Is Greg Klema who chairs the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board Fine Arts Committee. While this may&#13;
at first appear a good credential for L&amp;FA, we question&#13;
whether or not his simultaneously serving on both&#13;
committees Is not a conflict of interest? It certainly Is&#13;
unfair to students to be represented on two separate&#13;
committees of similar nature by the same person, for&#13;
this narrows options In programming possibilities.&#13;
Admittedly. there are a limited number of positions&#13;
available on student-faculty committees. However,&#13;
never should Intelligent, sincere and concerned students&#13;
be rejected because their opinions differ with those of&#13;
the person entrusted with the task of interviewing them.&#13;
Student government officers have a responsibility to be&#13;
fair. open,mlnded and mature.&#13;
RANGER calls on PSGA and the student body in&#13;
general to see that tactics such as those employed in&#13;
committee recommendations are never again used.&#13;
There's a madman&#13;
in the White House&#13;
"Whether ours shail continue to be a gov.ernment of&#13;
f n is now for Congress and ultimately the&#13;
laws ~r 0 pemoepleto decide" So spoke special Watergate&#13;
American . . fl&#13;
t&#13;
r Archibald Cox after being Ired by&#13;
prosecuo . . t~&#13;
P&#13;
'dent Nixon for his perserverance In pursuing II~ r-est . ~.. f t' ... d hts refusal to compromise rus rnves Iga Ion. trutn an III t t ·t t·&#13;
N&#13;
. n's compromise in the Waterga e apes Sl ua Ion&#13;
rxo ld t·t t· I&#13;
was supposedly designed !o evoi a cons I u rona&#13;
f ntation' his recent actions have created the most&#13;
con ro, t· C . I&#13;
. crisis of all, with the Execu rve. ongresslona&#13;
serrous I' ·th· th I&#13;
d J d&#13;
iciary branches all batt Ing WI rn nemse ves&#13;
an u . t· d f&#13;
and with each other, and all being ques lone rom&#13;
without by the people themselves, .&#13;
N' n's termination of Cox and Ruckelshaus and the .'X:ation of Attorney General Richardson illustrate a&#13;
reslg I' t . tal ~. d sperate but arrogant man strugg Ing 0 main am ms&#13;
~wer. Once no one could den~ that Nixon was at least&#13;
politically sophisticated. But. hls demand that Cox cease&#13;
ndermining his compromise was a breach of the&#13;
~greement that Cox would be given complete freedom in&#13;
his investigation. It was obvio~s that. Cox wo~l.d not&#13;
comply and Nixon would find hlms?l! In ? posltion of&#13;
questioned authority. This was poll!lCal ineptitude to&#13;
say the least, and Nixon's degeneration to such a level&#13;
that members of his Administration are resigning over&#13;
his policies or getting fired f?r refusin~ t? follow h~m is&#13;
an indication of his increasingly egotistical, maniacal&#13;
view of a questionable reality.&#13;
Grave questions about Mr. Nixon's balance and&#13;
perception must be asked in addition to the .moral ,and&#13;
legal queries that have been abounding since&#13;
Watergate, He is putting himself in the position of a god,&#13;
beyond the reach of law and the people and the&#13;
American government he is a part of, Before too many&#13;
other people are mesmerized into believing that one&#13;
man rule is indeed a good thing for America, Congress&#13;
must depose King Richard.&#13;
Cartoonist's eye view --------.,-----------,&#13;
l:P"iCu LIKE ACT\Gl,&#13;
INT"'IGiJE.. MYSTER'f.&#13;
n\,I.. tJTn.t: [WW.&#13;
l):I'1:X.l LIKE Mf:£l1tG&#13;
NIfW J'\OPU:,INf'\.UI)l:)II;&#13;
TilE tfSnNY Of THE&#13;
WORlJ),ANl::I M()'lE"(&#13;
LOTS /loNb LOTSa:l'oI£'(&#13;
FM AS ~ 4CU lJ'ST.&#13;
WHY WAIT, ALL TIllS&#13;
"...ID MeRE (}.N BE&#13;
vcuns !l~&#13;
Wfl,ITE ""OO~y Ul&#13;
HI.,,'IE '1OU '" GUY uet. ME&#13;
UlO UtO lQIG UIo\T UTn.E&#13;
eAANS \oIf ~,&amp;uT [)O£'5N'T&#13;
....._Jt~ Uo'tIT To l,,)Okl(!!&#13;
Aff"l,ovEO FOR.&#13;
G£~-'N ""WI.&#13;
CRll'IllI~5!!&#13;
i,~ The Pn.Iid..I-----&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha. Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 LibraryLearning&#13;
Center. Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
renected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
. Letters to the Editor are encouraged, All letters on any subject of&#13;
Interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to 250words or&#13;
165. typed "nd double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
letters for lefllth and good taste. All IeHers must be signed and include&#13;
addr~. phone number and student status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
be Withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
EDITOR.IN·CHIEF: Jane M. Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR' Tom Pelersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Friedell&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Diln Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Rebecca EcklUnd&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR: David DanielS&#13;
WRITERS' sandy BUSh,Stephen Gifford, BMbaril Hanson, Harvey&#13;
Headen, Gary Jensen., Michael Olsz:yk, Marilyn Schubert, John&#13;
SOrens.en, Steve Siapanian. CarrieWa.rd, Tom DeFovw, Neal Sautner&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Ron Antrim. Allen Frederickson, Brian RosS,&#13;
Jim RUffolo&#13;
CARTOONISTS: amy cundari, Gary Huck, Bob Rohan&#13;
LAYOUT, Terri Gelenian, Terry Knop, staff&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
AOVERTiSING MANAGER: Amy Cundari&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Gary Worthington&#13;
AOVERTlSING STAFF: Fred Lawrence, Jim Magruder&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed=ne=sda=y~.~Oc=t-.= 24~.~l:97=3~ ---------------~-----------------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
-------Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Committee&#13;
• appointments&#13;
andled&#13;
adly&#13;
().\ of h dut e of the Par side Student Government&#13;
c t on ( PSGA) ls to set up an Interviewing com:&#13;
mitt nt lal 1ep n the process of appointing&#13;
tud nt o tudent-faculty committees. The final&#13;
r omm nd t ons re to be a joint effort of the Student&#13;
n t , Ch ncellor and Vice-chancellor, and should&#13;
m d n c reful and unprefudlced manner.&#13;
PSGA h pp r ntly devised a new system though, in&#13;
hlch K n Kon ol, nator and chairperson of the&#13;
nln comm t (also the only active committee&#13;
m m r - I nyon else happened to be in the office&#13;
during nt rvl they did listen, which seemed to&#13;
v I d t th process), refus'!d to release the names of&#13;
ny lndlvldu I Interviewed except those he wished to&#13;
rv on h various committees. As appointees to&#13;
th tud f.f culty committees are to serve the needs&#13;
nd Int r t of the tudent body, it Is necessary that all&#13;
of th n m nd accurate summaries of the attitudes of&#13;
th e tudents be available.&#13;
n RANGER requested this information after&#13;
I rn n of complaints about the selection process,&#13;
Kon ol refu ed to provide It, claiming confidentiality for&#13;
th ppllcant and himself. This in spite the fact that he&#13;
had previously voluntarily shown us a list containing the&#13;
names. e said that he would only give us the inform&#13;
ton If the Senate authorized him to at the next&#13;
PSGA m ting.&#13;
At ha meeting he wllllngly read the names of applicants&#13;
In plte of the presence of two RANGER&#13;
repor r and lthout receiving the "authorization" he&#13;
cl lmecl he needed. His previous ploy was obviously to&#13;
buy ime and prevent RANGER from adequately&#13;
r earchlng a story that appeared would retied adv&#13;
r ly on himself. Acting PSGA President Tom Jennett&#13;
dmltted at the time that Konkol had absolutely no&#13;
uthorlty to wjthhold the names and should suffer some&#13;
consequences. But he sa d that short of trying physical&#13;
fore th re appeared to be no way to make Konkol&#13;
behave responsibly In this matter.&#13;
Wor Ing from memory and the list of "appointees"&#13;
on ol recommended, RANGER called a few students&#13;
ho ad applied and learned that much of the conrover&#13;
y centered on the Lecture and Fine Arts comml&#13;
I was learned Konkol rejected nominees with&#13;
hom his c,pln on differed. Students explained that the&#13;
first tep of the interview Konkol made clear his wish to&#13;
his committee abol st\ed as U presently stands.&#13;
n students ere unresponsive to Konkol's&#13;
ugg t on they ended up missing from his list of&#13;
recommended appointees. One student left off that list&#13;
d, "I nt In because I was interested. I volunteered&#13;
becau I as cone rned. My lnterv ew didn't last even&#13;
fl e m nu s."&#13;
Of hen n people applying o the L&amp;FA committee&#13;
two re chosen and one opening still exists. One of th;&#13;
o ppoln ees s Greg Klema ho cha rs the Parkside&#13;
Actlvltl s Board Fine Arts Committee. While this may&#13;
t fir t appear a good credential for l&amp;F A, we question&#13;
th r or not his s multaneovsly serving on both&#13;
comml no a conflld of Interest? It certainly Is&#13;
unf r o stude ts to be represented on two separate&#13;
comm of similar nature by the same person, for&#13;
n rr c,ptlons In programming possibilities.&#13;
Adm edly, re are a limited number of positions&#13;
v II bl on tud nt-faculty committees However&#13;
hould lntelllgen , sincere and concer~ed student;&#13;
ed b us their opinions differ with hose of&#13;
rson en rus d I thetas of interv ewing them&#13;
n o rnm nt officers ave a responsibility to ~ r, o n-mlnd nd mature.&#13;
RA GER call on PSGA and the student body n&#13;
r I h t tactics such as those employed in&#13;
r commendations are never again used.&#13;
There's a madman&#13;
in the White House&#13;
"Whether ours shall continue to be a government of&#13;
laws or of men is now for Congress and ultimately the&#13;
American people to decide." So spoke special Watergate&#13;
prosecutor Archibald Cox after being fired by&#13;
President Nixon for his perserverance in pursuing the&#13;
truth and his refusal to compromise his investigation.&#13;
Nixon's compromise in the Watergate tapes situation&#13;
was supposedly designed to avoid a constitutional&#13;
confrontation; his recent actions have created the most&#13;
serious crisis of all, with the Executive, Congressional&#13;
and Judiciary branches all battling within themselves&#13;
and with each other, and all being questioned from&#13;
without by the people themselves.&#13;
Nixon's termination of Cox and Ruckelshaus and the&#13;
resignation of Attorney General Richardson illustrate a&#13;
desperate but arrogant man struggling to maintain his&#13;
power. Once no one could deny that Nixon was at least&#13;
politically sophisticated. But his demand that Cox cease&#13;
undermining his compromise was a breach of the&#13;
agreement that Cox would be given complete freedom in&#13;
his investigation. It was obvious that Cox would not&#13;
comply and Nixon would find himself in a position of&#13;
questioned authority. This was political ineptitude to&#13;
say the least, and Nixon's degeneration to such a level&#13;
that members of his Administration are resigning over&#13;
his policies or getting fired for refusing to follow him is&#13;
an indication of his increasingly egotistical, maniacal&#13;
view of a questionable reality.&#13;
Grave questions about Mr. Nixon's balance and&#13;
perception must be asked in addition to the moral and&#13;
legal queries that have been abounding since&#13;
Watergate. He is putting himself in the position of a god,&#13;
beyond the reach of law and the people and the&#13;
American government he is a part of. Before too many&#13;
other people are mesmerized into believing that one&#13;
man rule is indeed a good thing for America, Congress&#13;
must depose King Richard. I Cartoonist's eye view&#13;
00 '1CJJ LIKE KTlC&gt;J,&#13;
INTI\IGUE. MYSTERY&#13;
)'EV,um.,IIIN,ER&#13;
[)o 'lC&lt;.4 LI KE MfETINr,&#13;
LO'T'3 A&gt;Jtl l.01"3 C1F m&lt;E\'&#13;
FOR AS l..oN&lt;; 40&lt; L&gt;,5T,&#13;
WHY \./AIT, A LL T\11S&#13;
AND MalE UN BE&#13;
4 0 UR~ ![ . WP.IT!: "TOt)I' Y L\ (&#13;
U!lrE :&#13;
CORRUPT RX.lllCIAHS&#13;
'jou Kll::\.lWHO WHl'TE HOU SE&#13;
WASMIN'o-_ l)C&#13;
!-Jr.. The Prko11K11ide11t----&#13;
. RANGER&#13;
. The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
icear ~y t~ stud~ts of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
, ~~os a, Wisconsin S3140. Offices are located at D-194 Libraryi..cormng&#13;
Center, Telephone (414) 553.2295&#13;
TheP ~d . efl teda~ 1 e Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
~e:of ~~ ~rul':1"1ns_tandfed!torial~ are not necessarily the official&#13;
versi Y o Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Letters to the Ed't · interest to stude ls I r :e encouraged. All letters on any sub Jett of&#13;
less typed d ~ •bi3c ty or staff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
lett~rs for le,n th ou e-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
address h ng and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
be withh~d~e n:~ber and studen_t status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
print any lett~ equest. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
EDITOR IN CHIEF Jane M . Schllesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR Debra Friedel!&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR Dan Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR R~ca Ecklund&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR · David Daniels&#13;
::;.,TERS sandy Bush, Stephen Gilford, Barbara Hanson Harvey&#13;
SO&lt; en, Gary Jensen. Michael Olszyk, Marilyn Schube'rt John&#13;
PH~T~:~·;~~t=r~an. Carrie Ward, Tom DeFouw, Neal Sautner&#13;
Jim Ruifolo on Antrim, Allen Frederickson, Brian Ross,&#13;
~~~6~~ 1;TS: ~~Y cundari, Gary Huck, Bob Rohan err, =len,an, Terry Knop staff&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER Ken Pestka '&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER, Amy Cundari&#13;
CIRCULAT ION MANAGER G ADVERTISING STAFF• ary Worthl~ton Fred Lawrence, Jim Magruder &#13;
The first issue of this semester RANGER pn'nted an "&#13;
. OpInIOn con- cerntng the 'promo~~n of good teachers out of the classroom and into&#13;
admInIstrative positions.&#13;
A partial remedy to make this situation more palatable ha bee&#13;
suggested by the re-emergence of Rita Tallent, sP"&lt;'ial assistant to th~&#13;
Chancellor, In an English class as the teacher of an English 010 section.&#13;
A conversation I had with her recently was steered on to the t .&#13;
I d it bee . edi 0PIC of her c ass an I . arne imrn . lately oovious that she enjoys heing&#13;
in the classroom again. She seems to relish her contact with students&#13;
breaking away from the plush penthouse offices to get down where&#13;
things are really at.&#13;
Vice-chancellor Otto Bauer, a professor in Communications also&#13;
came ~own to join the rest ~f~s when he taught a Course last s~ring.&#13;
Most If not all of our admInIstrators, from division heads through&#13;
deans to the Chancellor, had teaching careers prior to "getting kicked&#13;
upstairs." Only the divisional chairpersons keep a foot in the&#13;
classroom, for their administrative positions are by elected term.&#13;
As was mentioned in that article in the first issue, our own Chan.&#13;
cellor Wyllie was "one of the most sought after history professors in&#13;
Madison." A number of Parkside students did not actually know what&#13;
Wyllie looked like until RANGER printed his picture.&#13;
The problem is not only visibility but communication. It could only&#13;
help this university if more students could know the administrators&#13;
and feel free to talk to them as well as about them. Meeting them in the&#13;
classroom and then seeing them in the concourses and cafeteria would&#13;
go far toward that end. Students would learn that "the Administration"&#13;
is made up of human beings, and the people who run this&#13;
university would be reminded of the students' needs, Ieelinas. concerns&#13;
and ideas. Too often someone ina decision-making position finds&#13;
out about student discontent after it has fermented and expanded, and&#13;
can only say, "I didn't know that was a problem."&#13;
The ideal"solution would be for each administrator to teach a course&#13;
in his-her special area. But time, of course, pre-empts ideal soluti9Il\&#13;
But Iwould like to urge that the people who now sit in offices, and n&#13;
with other people who sit in offices, strongly and carefully consi&#13;
priorities and see if they can afford the time to teach a course in th&#13;
old manner and make some friends in the process. At the very lea.&#13;
would they consider periodically guest lecturing in areas they a&#13;
proficient in, to give students and benefit of their knowledge ar.",&#13;
techniques and the opportunity to question them? "&#13;
In conclusion, hats off to Rita Tallent and Otto Bauer for their part-'&#13;
time endeavors as faculty, and a word of praise too for Phil Burnett&#13;
and Charlotte Chell, who as far as I know are the only faculty members&#13;
who also labor as part-time students here. All four of them are&#13;
undoubtedly learning a lot.&#13;
WEP • evasive&#13;
and insulting&#13;
hy Michael Olszyk&#13;
What promised to be an informative press briefing on nuclea: po.wer&#13;
last Wednesday, by the Atomic Industr!~. Forum, r~ulted. In hltle&#13;
more than self-esteem for Wisconsin uhhbes spon~ortng. thiS ~v«:"t.&#13;
The Ramada Inn, Waukesha, gathering -- supplIed WIth brIefmg&#13;
kits, over an inch thick -- sat patiently through four hours of presentations&#13;
from leading men in the field of nuclear energy. ~ professor of&#13;
nuclear engineering, an environmental analyst, the p~esldent of E.~.&#13;
Johnson Associates and an M.D. tackled issues rangIng from atomiC&#13;
, , . t They were power to radiation effects on man and the envlronme.n .&#13;
equipped with graphs, charts, scale modeis, and slIdes of glossy&#13;
detailed information. .. ed b&#13;
Unfortunately though, crucial questIOns raised to ~ answ~ y&#13;
the Forum were suspiciously evaded. An example of thiS OCCW'lngwas&#13;
when Dr Walter Meyer Professor and Chairperson of Nuclear&#13;
. , . . . f ·Ied t me the con- Engineering at the UniverSity of Missouri, al 0 na ., th&#13;
sequences of a "china syndrome" accident, after praising e&#13;
redundancy in safety features on nuclear reactors. 'd.f&#13;
Later a WisconSin ElectrIC offlcal sal a ' .. 'd th t't as sometimes 1- I W ,&#13;
ficult for a scientific-minded person to co~prehend the l~lma~:&#13;
question Perhaps this was the case; however, when one ~Sl. e? nd&#13;
goal of the Forum is to keep the public abreast o~/ nedn;~~~liC&#13;
economic issues one would thmk they would be !D~e a. u the int&#13;
inqUiry. But instead they assume that the public IS ~a;~~rds ~&#13;
where they don't know the difference hetween pote~tia red during the&#13;
by nuclear reactors and atomic bombs, which was Imp 1&#13;
program. h Welcoming Sponsor&#13;
This notion was made further apparent ~ en . Electric Power&#13;
Sol Burstein, Senior Vice President of wJscon~m ental minded&#13;
Company, called the concerns of greater enVlrOnm&#13;
groups "horse shit." . ed States and Arab&#13;
With estranged relations between the Urnt Ttary fuel oil the&#13;
nations plus tapping domestic emergency . :f:el&#13;
fuel source.' The&#13;
urgency grows over the need f?J' an althernt clear power plants,&#13;
question here thoogh, is concerrung a ras 0 nu&#13;
termed "relatively safe."&#13;
We get&#13;
letters&#13;
Letters to the editor are en.&#13;
couraged.. All letters 00 any&#13;
subject of interest t.o students.&#13;
faculty or staff should be coo.&#13;
fined to 300 words or less, typed&#13;
and double-spaced, The editors&#13;
reserve the r:ght to edit letten&#13;
I... length and good taste. AU&#13;
letters must be signed and include&#13;
address, phone number,&#13;
and student status or fa~ulty&#13;
rank. Names will be 'lithheld&#13;
upon request, The editors reserve&#13;
the right to refuse to print any&#13;
letters,&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
The following is an open letter&#13;
to Mr. Bruce R. Burman,&#13;
President - Local 2180, Wisconsin&#13;
State Employees Union.&#13;
Dear Mr. Burman,&#13;
I am a student employed by&#13;
Parkside. Iwish to know whether&#13;
students are eligihle to join your&#13;
union and thereby gain the&#13;
benefits inherent in membership.&#13;
U not, WHY NOT?&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
T. Speaker, student employee&#13;
sophomore&#13;
To the editor,&#13;
In response to the response to&#13;
"goddamn minority recruitment,"&#13;
and with reference to M.&#13;
Gibson, Freshman:&#13;
What this "minority quota"&#13;
jazz bolls down to is this: "Well,&#13;
the Blacks, the Women. the Jews,&#13;
the (fill in the blank)s have had a&#13;
tough deal in the past, SQ,.,lel's&#13;
give em a helping hand nO'W.~·&#13;
Well, well, well. Before&#13;
knocking down the "Ionely individual,"&#13;
consider that tbe&#13;
smallest minority of all is the&#13;
individual. The concept of racial&#13;
quotas in jtself is a depraved&#13;
form of racism. Instead of&#13;
treating "them" bad because of&#13;
race, it's treat "them" good&#13;
because of race. Neither is better&#13;
than the other. ( ote: there is no&#13;
evidence which indica tes skin&#13;
pigmentation biologically affects&#13;
brain function.)&#13;
Education is another thing. If&#13;
the owner of a private school&#13;
says," 0 niggers allowed," that&#13;
should he (but is not, in this&#13;
country) his right. (it is every&#13;
man's God·given right to be a&#13;
creep.&gt; See Yo here it gets him.&#13;
But most schools, like&#13;
Parkside, are socialized. so&#13;
everyone who is a taxpayer or the&#13;
offspring of one should be allo....ed&#13;
to go. I don't think educatIon IS a&#13;
"right" that should he gtven to&#13;
everyone. OfIered, yes. Do you&#13;
think it is my "right" to live In a&#13;
casUe, have 100 handmaidens.&#13;
and own 100 sailboats? ure, if I&#13;
shell out my own money for it II&#13;
not, no. Education is like food,&#13;
clothing and shelter··it ain't&#13;
guaranteed. You have to pay for&#13;
it, Just like any other product&#13;
which is the result of someone&#13;
else's labor.&#13;
..... it's a sad, sad day when we&#13;
as minority students have to&#13;
justify our presence at this&#13;
Wliversity, "&#13;
What in hell makes you think&#13;
that yoo do have to justify your&#13;
presence here'? If you're on&#13;
welfare, I would question your&#13;
presence here; when my dad&#13;
works 120r more hours every day&#13;
of the week on a farm and has to&#13;
pay for some welfare kid's&#13;
schooling, and then my own&#13;
expenses! But oth~ise, your&#13;
being here is )'01U' busmess. and&#13;
don't let anyone else tell you it&#13;
ain't.&#13;
I'll he ready with another I...ter&#13;
if need be, so do your wors~.&#13;
Rodney (the Radical) Schroeter&#13;
Freshman&#13;
Parkside Village 1-102&#13;
PARKS/DE RANGER 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Th. Conoer&#13;
the hush of&#13;
the river&#13;
at 4 a.rn.,&#13;
nsh nipper their bellies across m""",&#13;
trees wallt down to the very shorehne&#13;
thinking nobody IS wa,ching them,&#13;
his paddle darts in and out of&#13;
the water, getting better acquainted&#13;
each lime WIth its own slippery&#13;
texture,&#13;
hands boggle out of the m-er&#13;
offering foam money In the corner of his eye.&#13;
In my own mind&#13;
I change the texture of the river,&#13;
super-imposing on it&#13;
a buffalo. bleeding in the hindquarters,&#13;
not raging but calm and takmg&#13;
the waters. The river dri~ up&#13;
around him, and the skeleton of the buflalo&#13;
....alks down thedried-out bed of an old rtver,&#13;
by DIOM w.o""&#13;
from In Ide til. Blood F.. ...,.&#13;
by Barb Hanson&#13;
Diane \I'akoski will have an anemoon w or hop and evenIng I..,~&#13;
on October 29 Wakoski was born In ~1uttier, Collfonua (juot&#13;
about when Rich3rd Nixon was pracucing law therel he received.&#13;
B.A. from the Universtry of Califorma-Berk.ley in 1960 Alter work~&#13;
as a bookstore clerk for three years, Wakoski got a job t.. cIl~&#13;
English a' .Iurucr High School 22 m zew York CIty. he won 'hr R.obrrt&#13;
Frost Fellowslup m poetry from the Bread Loaf wmees Conference lD&#13;
1966. \I'akoslU's poetry has appeared 10 varices periodicals and been&#13;
published In several t.o::~~t1onS. She proclaims no pohuCI and no&#13;
religion.&#13;
Insid. th. Blood Factor) ....as published 10 1968. R.D. Spector of&#13;
Salurda~ RtvieYl has thiS to say about It·&#13;
.. liss \I'akoski's social comment is ruthless: "All fathrn in&#13;
Western civilization must have a military origin" Her view 01 nabue&#13;
is not kinder than her view of man. she 15 alen to the decaYlnI&#13;
processes of one, 'the ugly processes that make a liVIng body' In the&#13;
other ... To speak of hkIng MISS Wakoski's poetry would....." .... pproprlate;&#13;
to deny it full admlrauon ....ould be dIshonest." .&#13;
Of Th. Motorcycl. Betrayal Poem 119711,Paul Z.....lg of the , no&#13;
York Times Book Rn'iew said:&#13;
"These poems are not declarations of femmlne ondepen~_. Their&#13;
rage is not ideologIcal, as in many Women's Liberation traeu. lllll&#13;
lI'akoski's tractic is different. She dIgs her teeth mto thr sIa riM of&#13;
woman, he cries them aloud "ith such fulmona"ng energy that the&#13;
chains hegin to melt of themselves. Th. rage IS thaI 01 a pruoner&#13;
....hose bitterness is her boodage but also her freedom In many _,&#13;
ho....ever, the anger becomes thon, repetitious. and thIS " perbll,," the&#13;
book's most serious "eakness. All too often, the strIdency doea not&#13;
'urn IOtopoetry; the words are f1Bttened ahn06t on'o helpl_ by&#13;
the very anger the)' express., (Bull at her bes'- and thr beat II&#13;
frequent enough-Diane Wakoski is an Important and movmc poet ..&#13;
Of her style m 01 ropancies and pparitlon, crItic Robert Repn&#13;
said'&#13;
"_.• (Her poetry) IS youthful, paClOUS, unny, .xuberant, exc...t,&#13;
and though nlled ,,,th t""chlng, III free from pedantry, Amona the&#13;
many virtues of her poetry,the rarest and mos, ....onderful •• itl_&#13;
Its grace, .ts naturalness This is not to say that her poetry II.'easy&#13;
Indeed, her surreah tic symbo1J are often .xtremely demand .... bat&#13;
her poems never demand .xertions from the reader ....hom thry do not&#13;
repav WIth ImmedIate and allldlOg JOy."&#13;
obVIOUIy Wako 10 knows her tuff Those who are ontenlltH in&#13;
poetry as an an and prof ,on "ould do ....ell to attend her I t~ CIl&#13;
the 29th. Even .f you don '( like poetry as a rule, Wakoskl may well be&#13;
the exception.&#13;
"1 am not expected to do anythmg&#13;
bu' what I've I""rned;&#13;
and Yo hlch 1 do so well." •&#13;
from "The TIAAtropeWalker" onFaar Young L.dy Poets.&#13;
:J:'-- I ....' ),&#13;
r&#13;
t~Fif:ME D~, .&#13;
~~ff;~~::h1t::'.&#13;
.&#13;
\.~ATER'r~&#13;
- eALL OTHER VITAL .... __~.~ ....&#13;
.J&#13;
,. e&#13;
e&#13;
TAPES/&#13;
RECoRDS i"&#13;
UTE NECESSITIES e PIPES, PAPERS&#13;
"Open 3li5 days a year"&#13;
Phone 654-5032 11lUCK 0 DOWN&#13;
F-::=:=====-'"'l. .-.===.:.==--&#13;
by Jan~ Schllesman&#13;
The first issue of this semester RANGER printed an op· · h ti f ood won con- cern!n~ t e _Promo . ~n o g teachers out of the classroom and into adrmmstrative positions.&#13;
A partial remedy to make this situation more palatable has been&#13;
suggested b~ the re-em~rgence of Rita Tallent, special assistant to the&#13;
Chancellor, man_ English c!ass as the teacher of an English oio sec- tion. A conversation I had with her recently was steered on to the t · 1 d ·t bee . ed" op1c of her c ass an 1 . ame 1mm 1ately obvious that she enjoys being&#13;
in the classroom agam. She seems to relish her contact with students&#13;
breaking away from the plush penthouse offices to get down whe~&#13;
things are really at.&#13;
Vice-chancellor Otto Bauer, a professor in Communications also&#13;
came down to join the rest ~f ~s when he taught a course last spring. Most if not all of our adm1mstrators, from division heads through&#13;
deans to the Chancellor, had teaching careers prior to "getting kicked&#13;
upstairs." Only the divisional chairpersons keep a foot in the&#13;
classroom, for their administrative positions are by elected term.&#13;
As was mentioned in that article in the first issue, our own Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie was "one of the most sought after history professors in&#13;
Madison." A number of Parkside students did not actually know what&#13;
Wyllie looked like until RANGER printed his picture.&#13;
The problem is not only visibility but communication. It could only&#13;
help this university if more students could know the administrators&#13;
and feel free to talk to them as well as about them. Meeting them in the&#13;
classroom and then seeing them in the concourses and cafeteria would&#13;
go far toward that end. Students would learn that "the Administration"&#13;
is made up of human beings, and the people who run this&#13;
university would be reminded of the students' needs. feelim?s. concerns&#13;
and ideas. Too often S!)meone in a decision-making position finds&#13;
out about student discontent after it has fermented and expanded, and can only say, "I didn't know that was a problem."&#13;
The ideal solution would be for each administrator to teach a course&#13;
in his-her special area. But time, of course, pre-empts ideal soluti_QDS.&#13;
But I would like to urge that the people who now sit in offices, and n&#13;
with other people who sit in offices, strongly and carefully consi&#13;
priorities and see if they can afford the time to teach a course in th&#13;
old manner and make some friends in the process. At the very lea.&#13;
would they consider periodically guest lecturing in areas they a&#13;
proficient in, to give students and benefit of their knowledge ar,1:)&#13;
techniques and the opportunity to question them? .,&#13;
In conclusion, hats off to Rita Tallent and Otto Bauer for their part-' .&#13;
time endeavors as faculty, and a word of praise too for Phil Burnett&#13;
and Charlotte Chell, who as far as I know are the only faculty members&#13;
who also labor as part-time students here. All four of them are undoubtedly learning a lot.&#13;
Point of view&#13;
WEP • evasive&#13;
and insulting&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
What promised to be an informative press briefing on nuclea~ po~er&#13;
last Wednesday, by the Atomic In~ustr!~l _Forum, r~ulted. m 1,1ttle&#13;
more than self-esteem for Wisconsm utJhbes sponsoring_ this ~\ ~nt.&#13;
The Ramada Inn, Waukesha, gathering -- supplied with briefing&#13;
kits, over an inch thick - sat patiently through four hours of presentations&#13;
from leading men in the field of nuclear energy. A_ professor of&#13;
nuclear engineering an environmental analyst, the president of E.~ .&#13;
Johnson Associates 'and an M.D., tackled issues ranging from atomic&#13;
power to radiation ' effects on man and th e env1ronme_n · t , The" ., were . equipped with graphs, charts, scale models, and slides of glossy&#13;
detailed information. ed b&#13;
Unfortunately though crucial questions raised to be answ!r Y&#13;
the Forum were suspiciously ' evaded I f th· occunng was . An examp e O is N&#13;
when Dr Walter Meyer Professor and Chairperson of uc 1 ear&#13;
Engineering · at ' · · f ·1ed t ame the con- the University of M1ssour1, a, 0 n . . th&#13;
sequences of a "china syndrome" accident, after prrusmg e&#13;
redundancy in safety features on nucl~r rea~tors. . difLater&#13;
a Wisconsin Electric offical said that it was sometimes , . . . . . t omprehend the layman s ficult for a sc1entif1c-mmded person ° c .d th&#13;
question Perhaps this was the case; however, when one cons,_ e~ ~&#13;
goal of the Forum is to keep the public abreast of techmca abt· . . · k th Id be more attuned to pu 1c economic issues one would thm ey wou . . . to the point inquiry. But instead they assume that the pubhc is ~aIVe ds ed&#13;
where they don't know the diff_erence betw~n pote~:1i::iu:i~i,igthe by nuclear reactors and atomic bombs, which was 1 P&#13;
program. h Welcoming Sponsor This notion was made further_apparent ~ en . Electric Power&#13;
Sol Burstein, Senior Vice President of W1scon~m ental minded&#13;
Company, called the concerns of greater enVIronm&#13;
groups "horse shit." . ed States and Arab&#13;
With estranged relations ~tween the Urut il'ta fuel oil. the&#13;
nations plus tapping domestic emergency - :I1ve' f:;:J source. The&#13;
urgency grows over the need f~r an althernr3 uclear power plants, question here though, is concerrung a ras O n&#13;
termed "relatively safe."&#13;
We get&#13;
letters&#13;
Letters to the edit&#13;
couraged. ll Jette&#13;
ubject of intere t to tud n •&#13;
faculty or tarr h uld be coofinNI&#13;
to 300 words or le , typNI&#13;
and double- pacNI. The edit&#13;
resern the r:ght to Ntit l«ten&#13;
for length and good ta. te. ~ll&#13;
letters mu t be igned and include&#13;
addr , phon number,&#13;
and tudent tatu or facult)&#13;
rank. 'ames will be withheld&#13;
upon requ t. The Nitto re ne&#13;
the right to refuse to print an letters.&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
The follo\\ing is an open letter&#13;
to fr. Bruce R. Burman,&#13;
President - Local 2180 Wisconsin&#13;
State Employees 'nlon.&#13;
Dear tr. Burman,&#13;
I am a student emplo_ ed by&#13;
Parkside. I \\ish to know whether&#13;
students are eligible to join your&#13;
union and thereby gain the&#13;
benefits inherent in membel'!Jlip. If not, WHY • 'OT?&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
T. Speaker, student empJoyee&#13;
sophomore&#13;
To the editor,&#13;
In response to the response to&#13;
" goddamn minority recru itment,"&#13;
and with reference to I.&#13;
Gibson, Freshman:&#13;
\\.bat this "minority quota "&#13;
jazz boils down to is thi : "Well,&#13;
the Blacks. the Women. the J~ ,&#13;
the (fill in the blank)s have had a&#13;
tough deal in the past , let'&#13;
give em a helping hand no . '&#13;
Well, well , well. Before&#13;
knocking down the " lonely individual&#13;
,'. consider that the&#13;
smallest minority of all the&#13;
individual. The concept of racial&#13;
quotas in itself is a d pra\'ed&#13;
form of racism. In tead of&#13;
treating ''them" bad becau e of&#13;
race. it' treat " them" ood&#13;
because of race . . 'either i better&#13;
than the other. (. 'ote: ther i no&#13;
evidence which indicates in&#13;
pigmentation biol~ically affec&#13;
brain function .)&#13;
Education is another thing. If&#13;
the owner of a private hoo1&#13;
says, " 'o nig ers alJo.,,,ed," that&#13;
should be (but i not, in this&#13;
country&gt; hi right. (It i every&#13;
man's God-given right to be a&#13;
creep. ee where it ge him.&#13;
But mo t chool , Ii e&#13;
Parkside, re ocialized o&#13;
everyone who i a ta. payer or the&#13;
off pring of one . hould be all°" ed&#13;
to go. I don't think ed cat.ion a&#13;
"right" that hould be ·ven to&#13;
evervone. Offered, y • Do you&#13;
think it i m~ ''ri ht " to liv in&#13;
ca tie, have 100 handmaid ,&#13;
and own 100 ilboa ? .=ur if I&#13;
hell out my own mon . for it. If&#13;
not. no. Education i Ii e food, clothing and shelter--it a in' t&#13;
guaranteed. You lhav to pay for&#13;
it. JU t like any other product&#13;
wh.ich i the r .::ult of omeon&#13;
el e' labor.&#13;
" ... it's a sad, sad day when \'e&#13;
as minority tudents ha\e to&#13;
justify our pr ence at thi&#13;
universitY."&#13;
What in hell ma e you think&#13;
that you do ha\e to ju tify your&#13;
presence here? If y~u·re o&#13;
welfare, I "ould qu lion your&#13;
presence here: when my dad&#13;
works 12 or more hours e\el') da)&#13;
of the week on a farm and ha to&#13;
pay for some ·elfare kid 's&#13;
schooling. and then my own&#13;
expense ! But oth~ise, yoor&#13;
being here is your business, and&#13;
don't let anyone else tell you 1t&#13;
ain't.&#13;
I'll be ready with another JP'ter&#13;
if need be, so do your wors, .&#13;
Rodney ( the Radical) Schroeter&#13;
· Freshman&#13;
Parkside \'iUage 1-102&#13;
PARKSIDE RANGER&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
the hush of&#13;
the ri\·er&#13;
textur&#13;
hands l)QRgle o of th m r&#13;
offering foam money in th com of h' e) •&#13;
r,&#13;
th buff lo&#13;
nold ri ·&#13;
. r \' ni l dv P t •&#13;
...J • RE&#13;
-·• ALL OTHER \,TAL" _._&#13;
LIFE • "E ITlES • PIP&#13;
··Open 365 day a&#13;
Phone 654-5032 m &#13;
..&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wedne y;-oct. 24, 1973&#13;
t. &amp;0 r , Pat nUl ( Landlng) .l\tarl~ne Wmdt and Marla Breach&#13;
Delta Gamma Phi&#13;
seeks identity&#13;
b) Marlh n . hubert&#13;
Park Ide IS £l'O" U1lI up One of&#13;
the t tHai lithe formation&#13;
of a SOrority, th Della Gam",a&#13;
PIli. which .ts prelldent, Pal Hill&#13;
deserlbe as "uniquely&#13;
Parkslde" Contnbuting to this&#13;
delcrtpllon are the facts tha is&#13;
..a local "'ll'd',zabon W1lh no&#13;
nallonal afffiiations and its goal&#13;
to be a service, as well as social&#13;
oraantzabon.&#13;
Forem .. t among the" goals is&#13;
tile hope to further Parkslde's&#13;
idNI of an ecologically designed&#13;
camplll - tile" colors are sky&#13;
blue and earth green - and to&#13;
fo ter a "ParkSlde feeling"&#13;
8IIIOlW studellU. Some of their&#13;
actJvitJea IIIClude helping with tile&#13;
Vet' Club recycling project,&#13;
flndIng women who will aid&#13;
handicapped students on getting&#13;
on and out of cars, and helping&#13;
with the tutoring program,&#13;
perhapa as a bason belween&#13;
prof.... rs and students who are&#13;
having trouble in class They also&#13;
would like to originate a&#13;
homecoming weekend dunng&#13;
basketball season, since&#13;
Parkaide now does have alumni,&#13;
but this largely depends 00 what&#13;
funds they receive from the&#13;
Campus Concerns Committee.&#13;
Delta Gamma PIli is unIiJr.e&#13;
some ..... nlles at other earn-&#13;
~ in that anyone wbo wants to&#13;
be a member can as long as !be Is&#13;
female and a Parkslde student.&#13;
TreaSUJ"'I' Marlene Wendt also&#13;
deSCribed It as a more serious&#13;
oraanlzatiOll which could still be&#13;
, but wouldn't interfere with&#13;
,tudy habits or the member's&#13;
"'"sonal life.&#13;
"'" sorority does not take a&#13;
land one way or another on&#13;
Woman's Liberation. Said Vice&#13;
Pre rdent larla Breach. "You&#13;
are what you are."&#13;
They also bope to work in&#13;
cooperation with Parkside's two&#13;
fraternities, although they are an&#13;
independent .JIl"8anization, unlike&#13;
thi'--91iptr.CPi Little Sisters.&#13;
Pat Hill summed up her&#13;
feelings about the group by&#13;
saying. "We're battling to find an&#13;
identity as an organiz.ation,&#13;
which is difficult because this is a&#13;
commuter campus and everyone&#13;
IS so independenL For the way&#13;
Parkside is now. we don't need a&#13;
social oraanization - people can&#13;
do that at home or come to a&#13;
dance - but we do need service."&#13;
Those interested in joining&#13;
should contact any of the officers&#13;
at 552-8472 • Parkside Village.&#13;
Par's power plant controversy&#13;
WEPstates its case&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
Last July the Wisconsin&#13;
Electric Power Company and&#13;
three cooperating Wisconsin&#13;
utilities outiined a ten year&#13;
proposal to help abridge the&#13;
energy needs of an annual 6&#13;
percent population increase here&#13;
in the state. Although this report&#13;
sbowed a reduction of ahout 1&#13;
percent in growth, the companies&#13;
still maintained their early 1972&#13;
desire to build a two unit, per 900&#13;
megawatt, nuclear generating&#13;
station for service by 1980 and&#13;
1982.&#13;
Paris is Best Site&#13;
The main site for this project&#13;
which has been rankled over (or&#13;
the past 18 months, is the familiar&#13;
Paris Township location. A good&#13;
geological foundation, suitable to&#13;
atmospheric dispersion, and an&#13;
industrial population close to the&#13;
plant's transmission lines placed&#13;
the Paris site over and above the&#13;
other considered sites&#13;
The three other sites,&#13;
Koshkonong in Jefferson county,&#13;
Rudolph in Wood county, and&#13;
Glen Haven in Grant county. all&#13;
pose problems in that they are an&#13;
inconvenience to a 900 man&#13;
construction crew, working on a&#13;
plant from four to five years.&#13;
Distance would also make&#13;
completed transmission lines&#13;
more costly and susceptible to&#13;
damage.&#13;
"Relocation is always the&#13;
biggest problem in utilizing an&#13;
area," said So) Burstein, Senior&#13;
Vice President of Wisconsin&#13;
Electric. "Especially when its&#13;
community is an ethnic one like&#13;
that in Paris. But then one also&#13;
has to consider the fact that this&#13;
"U my generation doesn't stop&#13;
cringing. )'OW-S will inherit a&#13;
lawless society .,;"&#13;
-SPiro Agnew.&#13;
June 1. 1969 commencement&#13;
address&#13;
DEADLINE FOR&#13;
DROPPING COURSES&#13;
IS FRIDAY, OCT. 26th&#13;
at Student Records Office&#13;
TALLENT HALL&#13;
Hours: 7:45 - 11:45 a.m.&#13;
12:30 - 4:30 p.m.&#13;
MONDAY &amp; $1&#13;
TUESDAY&#13;
--&#13;
..... Fri., SIt~&#13;
SIIPRIS£ BAllI s.y&#13;
OIl the south sideofHwy 50,east of Hwy 31.&#13;
by nuclear generators. Already&#13;
this figure represents a 40 million&#13;
dollar savings in fossil fuels&#13;
claims Burstein. '&#13;
Cost in building a nuclear plant&#13;
at Paris is estimated to be around&#13;
800,000 dollars. Chances though&#13;
of construction are still quit~&#13;
vague to say the least. Burstein&#13;
would like to file a preliminary&#13;
safety analysis report and environmental&#13;
impact report&#13;
(necessary in obtaining a construction&#13;
permit from the Atomic&#13;
Energy Commission) by next&#13;
spring. He contends that it's only&#13;
a matter of when the RacineKenosha&#13;
Citizens for the Environrnent,&#13;
plan to stop "fussing&#13;
around."&#13;
Meanwhile, Wisconsin Electric&#13;
is also interested in using&#13;
Kenosha lake sh.ore property, for&#13;
a coal operating plant. The&#13;
company believes that both a&#13;
fossil plant and nuclear reactor&#13;
are needed to meet the energy&#13;
needs of Southeastern Wisconsin.&#13;
To date, Wisconsin Electric&#13;
and Wisconsin-Michigan Power&#13;
'Company own a two unit, per 497&#13;
megowatt nuclear station at&#13;
Point Beach, and another 550 new&#13;
unit near completion in&#13;
Kewaunee.&#13;
plant would be of service. to&#13;
nearly 3 million people which&#13;
represents 85 percent of&#13;
Wisconsin's population."&#13;
In regards to possible radia lion&#13;
hazards posed by nuclear plants,&#13;
Burstein stated that they were&#13;
"erroneous assumptions based&#13;
on illfounded fears and&#13;
anguishes. "&#13;
As unlikely an event as it would&#13;
be, Wisconsin Electric provides a&#13;
$193-million insurance coverage&#13;
in the case of a nuclear accident.&#13;
Furthermore, according to&#13;
Burstein the "nuclear exclusion"&#13;
clause in homeowner's policies is&#13;
no different from exclusions for&#13;
landslides, mudslides, earthquakes,&#13;
or flood damages.&#13;
Fossil fuel outlook&#13;
Growth in the nation's consumption&#13;
of dwindling fossil fuels&#13;
is the primary concern for power&#13;
companies lunging into nuclear&#13;
energy developments.&#13;
Domestically availahle oil and&#13;
natural gas supplies are shown to&#13;
peak during the next decade and&#13;
begin to decline thereafter. With&#13;
tile exhaustion of premium oil, it&#13;
is expected that fossil solids will&#13;
be converted to provide transportation&#13;
fuels. Coal exploitation&#13;
then, is asswned to&#13;
triple by the year 2000 and&#13;
likewise taper off, due to environmental&#13;
limitations.&#13;
Energy from uranium, on the&#13;
other hand, will rival with coal&#13;
and domestic oil by the late&#13;
1990'S.Presently, 7 percent of the&#13;
total electric capacity is provided&#13;
-----&#13;
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---&#13;
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632·5195 _&#13;
-----&#13;
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Paris power plant controversy&#13;
WEP states its case&#13;
r.P tlhl( rla Bru h&#13;
b) . lichael OJ zyk&#13;
La t Julv the Wisconsin&#13;
Electric Poi..·er Company and&#13;
three cooperating Wisconsin&#13;
utilities outlined a ten year&#13;
proposal to help abridge the&#13;
energ_ · needs of an annual 6&#13;
percent population increase here&#13;
in the tate. Although this report&#13;
howed a reduction of about 1&#13;
percent in growth, the companies&#13;
till maintained their early 1972&#13;
de ire to build a two unit, per 900&#13;
megoy,att, nuclear generating&#13;
·t.ation for ervice by 1980 and&#13;
1982.&#13;
Pari i Best ite&#13;
Delta Garn,na Phi&#13;
The main ite for this project&#13;
which ha been rankled over for&#13;
th pa t 18 month , is the familiar&#13;
Pari Toy, nship location. A good&#13;
eol ical foundation, uitable to&#13;
atm ph ric di persion, and an&#13;
indu trial population close to the&#13;
pant' tran mis ion lines placed&#13;
the Pari ite over and above the&#13;
other considered site . eeks identity The three other sites,&#13;
K ~h onong m Jefferson county,&#13;
Rudolph in Wood county, and&#13;
Glen Ha, n in Grant county, all&#13;
nott ea&#13;
p blem in that they are an&#13;
in onv nience to a 900 man&#13;
con tructton crew, working on a plant from four to five years.&#13;
Di tance would also make&#13;
completed transmission lines&#13;
more costly and su ceptible to&#13;
damage.&#13;
"Relocation is always the&#13;
b1gg ·t problem in uWizing an&#13;
area," said ol Burstein, Senior&#13;
Vice President of Wisconsin&#13;
Electric. ''Especially when its&#13;
community is an ethnic one like&#13;
that in Paris. But then one also&#13;
ha to consider the fact that this&#13;
"U my generation doesn't top&#13;
cringing, yours will inherit a&#13;
lawle society ... "&#13;
-8piro Agnew,&#13;
JtDle 7, 1 9 commencement&#13;
addre-s&#13;
DEADLINE FOR&#13;
DROPPING COURSES&#13;
IS FRIDAY, OCT. 26th&#13;
at Student Records Office&#13;
TALLENT HALL&#13;
Hours: 7 :45 - 11 :45 a.m.&#13;
12:30 - 4:30 p.m.&#13;
ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK&#13;
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SIIPRISE BAIi SNAY&#13;
on the south ide of Hwy 50, east or Hwy 31.&#13;
plant would be of service . to&#13;
nearly 3 million people which&#13;
represents 85 J?er~,ent of&#13;
Wisconsin's population.&#13;
In regards to possible radiation&#13;
hazards posed by nuclear plants,&#13;
Burstein stated that they were&#13;
"erroneous assumptions based&#13;
on illfounded fears and&#13;
anguishes." . As unlikely an event as 1t would&#13;
be, Wisconsin Electric provides a&#13;
$193-million insurance coverage&#13;
in the case of a nuclear accident.&#13;
Furthermore, according to&#13;
Burstein the "nuclear exclusion"&#13;
clause in homeowner's policies is&#13;
no different from exclusions for&#13;
landslides, mudslides, earthquakes,&#13;
or flood dam~ges.&#13;
Fossil fuel outlook&#13;
Growth in the nation's consumption&#13;
of dwindling fossil fuels&#13;
is the primary concern for power&#13;
companies lunging into nuclear&#13;
energy developments.&#13;
Domestically available oil and&#13;
natural gas supplies are shown to&#13;
peak during the next decade and&#13;
begin to decline thereafter. With&#13;
the exhaustion of premium oil, it&#13;
is expected that fossil solids will&#13;
be converted to provide transportation&#13;
fuels. Coal exploitation&#13;
then, is assumed to&#13;
triple by the year 2000 and&#13;
likewise taper off, due to environmental&#13;
limitations.&#13;
Energy from uranium, on the&#13;
other hand, will rival with coal&#13;
and domestic oil by the late&#13;
1990's. Presently, 7 percent of the&#13;
total electric capacity is provided&#13;
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by nuclear generators. Already&#13;
this figure represents a 40 million&#13;
dollar savings in fossil fuels&#13;
claims Burstein. '&#13;
Cost in building a nuclear plant&#13;
at Paris is estimated to be around&#13;
800,000 dollars. Chances though&#13;
of construction are still quit~&#13;
vague to say the least. Burstein&#13;
would like to file a preliminary&#13;
safety analysis report and environmental&#13;
impact report&#13;
(necessary in obtaining a construction&#13;
permit from the Atomic&#13;
Energy Commission) by next&#13;
spring. He contends that it's only&#13;
a matter of when the RacineKenosha&#13;
Citizens for the Environment,&#13;
plan to stop "fussing&#13;
around."&#13;
Meanwhile, Wisconsin Electric&#13;
is also interested in using&#13;
Kenosha lake shore property, for&#13;
a coal operating plant. The&#13;
company believes that both a&#13;
fossil plant and nuclear reactor&#13;
are needed to meet the energy&#13;
needs of Southeastern Wisconsin.&#13;
To date, Wisconsin Electric&#13;
and Wisconsin-Michigan Power&#13;
·company own a two unit, per 497&#13;
megowatt nuclear station at&#13;
Point Beach, and another 550 new&#13;
unit near completion in&#13;
Kewaunee.&#13;
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Merle Hayden Photo by David Da.n.iels&#13;
U of L • a different&#13;
-concept in education&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
For years, alongside a field&#13;
north of Highway K on 1-94, there&#13;
has been a sign reading&#13;
"University of Lawsonomy."&#13;
"What does this mean?" a reader&#13;
asked and a short time later three&#13;
RANGER reporters were&#13;
dispatched to investigate the&#13;
University and answer this&#13;
question.&#13;
Upon arriving at the university,&#13;
the only indications of life&#13;
we saw were a small, one-story&#13;
brick building, a barn, an old&#13;
Cadillac limousine, and a few&#13;
rotted wooden sheds.&#13;
Wehad knocked on the door of&#13;
the building and were waiting for&#13;
an answer when one of my&#13;
colleagues, curious as to the lack&#13;
of response from inside, stood on&#13;
IIer toes and peeked through a&#13;
II1I81I window in the door. At the&#13;
same instant, a small middle-&#13;
.. ed man on the other side of the&#13;
door was doing the same thing.&#13;
When their eyes met, our side&#13;
ocreamed, raced down the stairs&#13;
sod away from the building in a&#13;
manner indicative of a classic&#13;
horror movie. As I stood on the&#13;
Iront steps trying to analyze the&#13;
lltuation, the very man who&#13;
appeared to have driven my coreporter&#13;
to insanity opened the&#13;
door and asked, "What's your&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
$2.75 per page&#13;
Send for your up-tc-date, 150.page.&#13;
l1li11order catalog. Enclose $1.00&#13;
to cover postage (delivery time is&#13;
110 2 day~.&#13;
RESEARCHASSISTANCE, INC.&#13;
11941 WILSHIRE BLVO., SUITE #2&#13;
LOSANGELES,CALIf. 90025&#13;
12131477-8474 or477·5493&#13;
Ovr r.... rc:h materi.l is sold for&#13;
r'''.rc:h 'lSlstince only.&#13;
Wed., Oct. 31&#13;
FREEAdmission&#13;
with Halloween&#13;
osfume&#13;
PRIZE&#13;
for the Bestl&#13;
problem?" I identified my&#13;
companions and myself as&#13;
RANGER reporters and asked if&#13;
we might interview him about the&#13;
University of Lawsonomy. He&#13;
agreed and we went inside.&#13;
The main floor consisted of a&#13;
number of offices, fully carpeted&#13;
and decorated with paintings,&#13;
while the basement appeared to&#13;
be divided into a cafeteriamuseum.&#13;
It was here we sat down&#13;
and began what was to be a twohour&#13;
interview. Unfortunately.&#13;
our host, Merle Hayden, was&#13;
more anxious to tell us about the&#13;
principles of Lawsonomy than&#13;
the University itself. But we were&#13;
able to glean an answer to our&#13;
primary question, "What is the&#13;
University of Lawsonomy?"&#13;
Once a classroom institution in&#13;
Des Moines, Iowa, it teaches the&#13;
beliefs of the late inventorphilosopher&#13;
Alfred Lav.'SOll,who&#13;
also founded and financed the&#13;
university The present location&#13;
was originaUy intended to be an&#13;
athletic-farm school for students&#13;
of Lawsooomy. Today it is a&#13;
correspondence school operating&#13;
from the small building we&#13;
visited. University secretary&#13;
Marjorie Hayden told us, "This&#13;
university entered tbe&#13;
educational field 10 introduce a&#13;
number of needed features in this&#13;
advanced period of learning."&#13;
Lawsonomy involves a life--long&#13;
study in philosophy and the&#13;
natural sciences as interpreted&#13;
by Lawson, a system of beliefs&#13;
"establishing the foundation for&#13;
all natural laws. II&#13;
The University is non-profit,&#13;
non-tax exempt, has no salaried&#13;
employees, and charges no&#13;
tuition to its alleged 12,000&#13;
"UNION"&#13;
Wed.., Fri., Sat., &amp; So.&#13;
[ OCT.24, 26, 27, 28 I&#13;
r..esH·s Newest NIfesIe'&#13;
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Wed I&#13;
E RANGER 5&#13;
This ponroil at A1r~ La ...... h..,g&#13;
dining ball of 1M l.'Di\'e"'5.i',..&#13;
students, The Univer sity tS&#13;
primaril)' linanced by contributioos&#13;
and also seUs COPies of&#13;
La,,'SOll'Sboob&#13;
Lawson was conslClered by&#13;
many people to be ahead &lt;Jl his&#13;
time. He buill and Dew the&#13;
world's first 81rliner, published&#13;
America's first popular aviaboo&#13;
magazme, patented a method of&#13;
evaporating smolte and ...TOte&#13;
many books on topiCS such as&#13;
ballistics, ESP, children, religion&#13;
and econom ICS. to menlJon lull •&#13;
r... · 01 Ius aocompllshmen18 H&#13;
books. UlCIden18.Uy,ore in the&#13;
Par de library, On the other&#13;
hand......, or La' .... """&#13;
have been can dered rmpractical&#13;
and ridJculOU$ EIther&#13;
be&lt;:a_ at, or lD spite at thIS&#13;
_bOO, Lawwoo wrote: "1/&#13;
you have UloWIed8e, atrer it to&#13;
oth ..... 1/ Lbey do DOC a&lt;:ctpt u,&#13;
that 15 char as.If&#13;
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G!ItI ...... RUU.JY N:..&#13;
0.-_ .... .._&#13;
Merle Hayden&#13;
U of L - a different&#13;
concept in education&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
For years, alongside a field&#13;
north of Highway K on I-94, there&#13;
has been a sign reading&#13;
"University of La wsonomy."&#13;
"What does this mean? " a reader&#13;
asked and a short time later three&#13;
RANGER reporters were&#13;
dispatched to investigate the&#13;
University and answer this&#13;
question.&#13;
Upon arriving at the university,&#13;
the only indications of life&#13;
we saw were a small, one-story&#13;
brick building, a barn, an old&#13;
Cadillac limousine, and a few&#13;
rotted wooden sheds.&#13;
We had knocked on the door of&#13;
the building and were waiting for&#13;
an answer when one of my&#13;
colleagues, curious as to the lack&#13;
of response from inside, stood on&#13;
her toes and peeked through a&#13;
small window in the door. At the&#13;
same instant, a small middleaged&#13;
man on the other side of the&#13;
door was doing the same thing.&#13;
When their eyes met, our side&#13;
screamed, raced down the stairs&#13;
and away from the building in a&#13;
manner indicative of a classic&#13;
horror movie. As I stood on the&#13;
front steps trying to analyze the&#13;
ituation, the very man who&#13;
appeared to have driven my coreporter&#13;
to insanity opened the&#13;
door and asked, "What's your&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
$2.75 per page&#13;
Send for your up-to-date, 160-page, ma,I order catalog. Enclose $1.00&#13;
to cover postage (delivery time is&#13;
l to 2 daysl.&#13;
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC. 11941 WILSHIRE BLVD., SUITE #2&#13;
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90025&#13;
1213) 477-8474 or 477-5493&#13;
Our research material Is sold for&#13;
research assistance only.&#13;
proble~?" I identified my&#13;
companions and myself as&#13;
RANGER reporters and asked if&#13;
we might interview him about the&#13;
University of Lawsonomy. He&#13;
agreed and we went inside.&#13;
The main floor consisted of a&#13;
number of offices, fully carpeted&#13;
~d decor ated with paintings,&#13;
while the basement appeared to&#13;
be divided into a cafeteriamuseum.&#13;
It was here we sat down&#13;
and began what was to be a twohour&#13;
interview. Unfortunately,&#13;
our host, Merle Hayden, was&#13;
more anxious to tell us about the&#13;
principles of Lawsonomy than&#13;
the University itself. But we were&#13;
able to glean an answer to our&#13;
primary question, "What is the&#13;
University of Lawsonomy?"&#13;
Once a classroom institution in&#13;
Des Moines, Iowa, it teaches the&#13;
beliefs of the late inventorphilosopher&#13;
Alfred Lav. , 11&#13;
also fol.Dlded and financed lh&#13;
univ er ity. The present location&#13;
was originally intended to be an&#13;
athletic-farm school f uden~&#13;
of Lawsonomy. Today it i a&#13;
correspondence school operating&#13;
from the small building e&#13;
visited. niver ity ecretar&#13;
tarjorie Hayden told u , "Thi&#13;
university entered the&#13;
educational field to introdu a&#13;
number of needed features in lh"&#13;
advanced period of learning."&#13;
Lawsonomy involves a life- ong&#13;
study in philosophy and the&#13;
natural sciences as interpreted&#13;
by Lawson, a s~ tern of belief&#13;
"establishing the foundation for&#13;
all natural lav. . "&#13;
The University is non-profit.&#13;
non-tax exempt, has no salaried&#13;
employees, and charge no&#13;
tuition to its alleged 12,000&#13;
Wed., Oct. 31&#13;
FREE Admission&#13;
with Halloween&#13;
Costume&#13;
11UNION"&#13;
Wed . , Fri., Sat., &amp; Sun.&#13;
PRIZE&#13;
for the Best I&#13;
[ OCT.24,26,27,28&#13;
KenosfJa's Newest Hites,.,&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(forme rly Shokey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road Phone 654-0485&#13;
d.1 s 10 to 8 &#13;
......... -"l":,i"""- ...... r 171~&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
BODACIOUS D.F.&#13;
FealDring Marty Balill (RCA APLH2M)&#13;
Generally speaking, this is music made up of funk-rock and soulrocIt&#13;
components with Marty singing in his pretty but serious style.&#13;
Some of the tunes seem to have the group reaJ)y feeling there while&#13;
otben appear as if they had noIfully thought them oul.&#13;
The core of the creative and interpretive energy in this collection is&#13;
"Good Folks," song two on side one. Marly is singing right from the&#13;
bottom of his heart here. It becomes obvious that this theme is the&#13;
indlvl&amp;la1 expression that concerns him most. Background voice-&#13;
-. from soul/uI sounding sisters are punctuated most effectively.&#13;
Th guitar instrumental towards the end is an extremely useful&#13;
comment that is almost in the country flavor.&#13;
The theme of "Good Folks" is that if the good folks back borne knew&#13;
what he did "they would raise the roof and shoulahout il." They would&#13;
say "he'. bad he's always been that way." He goes on to tell "I made&#13;
my money the easy way, f changed my clothes three times a day."&#13;
Thl no doubt IS a reference to his earlier success with Jefferson&#13;
AIrplane. HISdilemma IS that he "spanks his IUd the way good folks&#13;
do." hoping that he won't tum out in a bad way. But Marly himseU&#13;
caMol tand belllll good. So he continues to drink. smoke- cope, eat&#13;
actd occasionally, and regularly attend orgies. In short, since he can't&#13;
stand being good and he feel. guilty being bad, he doesn't feel right&#13;
anywhere.&#13;
Another center of artistic energy is song two on side two. "Second&#13;
Hand Information" i • both mu ically and lyrically, a splendid&#13;
comphmmt of "Good Fo1l&lt;s."This nwnber builds up intensity nicely&#13;
, after verse and also includes tingling slide guitar work. The&#13;
Iyr,cal . nee 1 Marty's private search for truth.&#13;
Also worthy of generous compliments is "Roberta." "Roberta" is a&#13;
love-song and mu really It swings nicely Withan integrated accordian&#13;
that . urpn. '08ly enough, works well.&#13;
RemamIng to be discussed are "Drifting," "The Witcher." "Driving&#13;
te CraIY," and "Twixt Two Worlds." "Drifting is mediocre funkl'ock,&#13;
"Drivin' Me Crazy" is long, lazy, and dull. "Twixt Two Worlds"&#13;
he an evocative chorus but Its almost exciting instrumental passage&#13;
I underdeveloped and monotonous.&#13;
The Ioser of the record is "The Witcher." This is supposedly&#13;
Ipb ar&#13;
mar"Meric of an animalisr'c. passionate lover but its internal 00 t:: Ult: 1__ .. .&#13;
_ 1 .j. -... .....,0; lJU&gt; })OSeless and many parts seem as if they were&#13;
:J' thrown on to waste time. Despite its sloppiness and cboppiness the&#13;
g i n't even chaouc. A1thougb it may appear that I think it goes&#13;
nowhere it really doesn't gel that far.&#13;
.II is now hme to try to wrap the bundle together and come up&#13;
WIth a final appraisal. Marly has brought together a new band,&#13;
namely BODACIOUS D.F .. who come across with some fairly impre.&#13;
IV'ematerial for their first album. But coosidering that it has&#13;
bet&gt;n about four years smee Marty's departure from the Airplane, he&#13;
really ha n'tcome up with enough for such a long wail. It seems Marly&#13;
needs better song....riting talents and more dexterous accompaniment&#13;
SO his wonderful ,'Qlce can be used more effectively. Henee, artistically&#13;
and successfully, it was a mistake for him to leave the Airplane.&#13;
(Record Courtesy of J&amp;J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
PSGA&#13;
referendum&#13;
explained&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government senate is circulating&#13;
a petition that calls for a constitutional&#13;
refernedum, the&#13;
purpose of which is to co~si~er&#13;
some changes in the Constitution&#13;
of the senate.&#13;
The petition outlines four basic&#13;
changes in the present constitution:&#13;
1. requirements for&#13;
raising a quorum will .be'&#13;
rewritten, 2. the Student UnIOn&#13;
Committee will be abolished, 3.&#13;
the positions of Recording and&#13;
Corresponding Secretaries WIll&#13;
be combined into one, nonelective&#13;
position, and 4. election&#13;
times will be changed to Spring&#13;
term with special replacement&#13;
elections in the fall.&#13;
To assure that a quorum can be&#13;
established for senate meetings,&#13;
absent members will be replaced&#13;
by alternates, according to the&#13;
proposed changes. These&#13;
alternates would be students who&#13;
ran for the ollice but didn't&#13;
receive enough votes to be&#13;
elected. If any senator must be&#13;
replaced by an alternate more&#13;
than 3 times, impeachment&#13;
proceedings may be brought&#13;
against her-him.&#13;
If the changes are approved,&#13;
the Student Union Committee&#13;
would no longer be listed in the&#13;
constitution as a regular standing&#13;
committee of the senate. Since&#13;
the Student Activities Board&#13;
serves the same purpose as that&#13;
committee (and does a&#13;
professional, full-time job), there&#13;
is no need for the senate to be&#13;
involved in union functions.&#13;
The changes propose that the&#13;
duties of tbe Recording and&#13;
Corresponding secretaries be&#13;
combined and that the person&#13;
who £ills that one post be a hired&#13;
employee of the senate rather&#13;
than an elected official. The&#13;
secretary would be cbosen by the&#13;
PSGA President and subject to&#13;
Senate approval.&#13;
The proposed change in&#13;
election times would put regular&#13;
elections in the spring semester&#13;
(Aprill: the people elected at that&#13;
time would take office in June.&#13;
Then, should any vacancies&#13;
appear over the summer (a&#13;
senator might move away, for&#13;
example), there is a provision for&#13;
special replacement elections in&#13;
the fall semester. The summer&#13;
recess would serve as an&#13;
orientation period for the incoming&#13;
senate.&#13;
Ranaer free classifieds&#13;
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FOR SALlE: Ski boors. like new. $25.&#13;
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"WI-IERE 1"tiE COWSOYS EAT"&#13;
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(15~OOooo~o&#13;
cll5.~o ~&#13;
Steak Dinners&#13;
'179 to '369&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
Wednesday. Oct. 24: 1-3 p.m. Terry Eliot will play and sing in th&#13;
Whiteskellar. No admission charged. e&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 24:. PAB will sponsor th~~ovi~ "Fritz the Cat" at&#13;
7 :30 p.m. in GreenqUlst Hall room 103. Admission lS 75 cents,&#13;
Friday, Oct. 26: Lecture by Jack O'Donnell of Arthur Andersen and&#13;
Company on careers in accounting atlO a.m. in Cia Dl07 and at I p.rn&#13;
in Cia 0105. No admission charged. .&#13;
Friday, Oct. 26: Harold Burstyn lecture on Technology and the In.&#13;
dustrial Society at noon in LLC D174. Sponsored by Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts. No admission)lhllrged.&#13;
Friday. Oct, 26: Lecture by Radu Florescu entitled "In Search of&#13;
Dracula" at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theatre. Sponsored by the&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee. Free to students.&#13;
Friday. Saturday. and Sunday Oct. 26-28: PAB-Ragtime Rangers&#13;
outing to Louisville, Kentucky. Contact Student Activities Office. LLC&#13;
DI97.&#13;
saturday, Oct. 27: Alpha Kappa Lambda is sponsoring a Halloween&#13;
dance in SAB at 9 p.m. Band is "Rasputen" and admission is $1.50.&#13;
Costumes are encouraged..&#13;
Monday, Oct. 29: Poet Diane Wakoski sponsored by the Poetry Forum&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts, and Women's .Caucus. Workshop from 4-5 p.rn.&#13;
in LLC DI973 and D174. Poetryreading by wakoski at 8 p.m. on the&#13;
Library third floor. No admission charged.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 30: CLlllle~ture at 8 p.m. by Parkside English professor&#13;
Peter Hoff on "~eacock's Paradoxes: The Illusion of 'Progress' and&#13;
the Fortunate Foible." Third floor of the library. No admission&#13;
charged.&#13;
,&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
Nov. 14: Play "The Virus" will be performed in the Comm Arts&#13;
Theatre. Tickets on sale at Ute Information kiosk.&#13;
saturday, Nov. 3: Turkey Trot at Phy Ed Building. Contact Jim Koch&#13;
or Bob Lawson.&#13;
Sunday. Nov. 4: Adult Student Association "recreation night" for&#13;
adult students and their families from 6 to 9 p.m. in the Phy Ed&#13;
Building.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 8: Maynard Ferguson sponsored by PAB at 8 p.rn. in&#13;
the Comm Arts Theatre. Tickets on sale at the Information Kiosk.&#13;
January, 2-7: Ragtime Rangers sponsoring a ski trip to Steamboat&#13;
~prings, Colorado. See Information kiosk.&#13;
All items for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submitted to&#13;
~ANGER by noon Thursday.prter to publication of the issue in which&#13;
pn item is to appear.&#13;
J&amp;J&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center&#13;
Super Low Prices&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave .. Racine&#13;
•&#13;
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is BRAT STOP&#13;
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presents&#13;
"WINFIELD ROAD"&#13;
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY, ocrOBER 26 &amp; 'll&#13;
ALL REGULAR MIXED DRINKS 50c&#13;
We serve the BEST'in BRATSandwiches&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE PRESENTS&#13;
Gertrude Jeannette, Broadway, movie, TV actress&#13;
Parkside Players in&#13;
OirKted by Don Rintl&#13;
Premiere 8 P.M. Nov. 1,2,3,4&#13;
Communication Arts Theater&#13;
Reserved seats $3, Students with 10 $1.50 (Nov.&#13;
2-3-,4Groups of 10~or more, lO"discount)&#13;
Tickets available at Bidinger's in Kenosha,&#13;
Cook-Gere in Racine Cafter Oct. 17) and UW-P&#13;
Information Center on campus. Mail orders at&#13;
Info Center only. Send stamped, self-addressed&#13;
envelope with check payable to UW-Parkside to&#13;
"Virus," UW-P Info Center, UW-Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha. WI 531.40.&#13;
,.,&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
BODACIOUS D.F.&#13;
eaturin fart. BaliJ:1 IR ,\ APLl&#13;
urt y of J&amp;J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
er free classifieds&#13;
Hav,ng problems w ith account,n;? Tutoring&#13;
aea, .. ble Call 552 9"'62 after S.&#13;
FOR SALE : GE. tall@ recorder with AC&#13;
adap!tr S20. Ca ll 552 9-161 after S.&#13;
FOllt SALE Ski boots, li ke new. $25.&#13;
Oechs•e s ze 10-Men's Call 639 S605 after&#13;
2 r,oon.&#13;
PSGA&#13;
referendum&#13;
explained&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government senate is circulating&#13;
a petition that calls for a con·&#13;
stitutional refernedum, the&#13;
purpose of which is to co~si~er&#13;
some changes in the Constitution&#13;
of the senate.&#13;
The petition outlines four basic&#13;
changes in the present con·&#13;
stitution: 1. requirements for&#13;
raising a quorum will _be '&#13;
rewritten, 2. the Student Umon&#13;
Committee will be abolished, 3·&#13;
the positions of Recor~ a~d&#13;
Corresponding Secretanes will&#13;
be combined into one, nonelective&#13;
position, and 4. election&#13;
times \\-ill be changed to Spring&#13;
term with special replacement&#13;
elections in the fall. To assure that a quorum can be&#13;
established for senate meetings,&#13;
ab ent members will be replaced&#13;
by alternates, according to the&#13;
proposed changes. These&#13;
alternates would be students who&#13;
ran for the office but didn't&#13;
receive enough votes to be&#13;
elected. If any senator must be&#13;
replaced by an alternate more&#13;
than 3 times, impeachment&#13;
proceedings may be brought&#13;
against her-him.&#13;
U the changes are approved,&#13;
the Student Union Committee&#13;
would no longer be listed in the&#13;
constitution as a regular standing&#13;
committee of the senate. Since&#13;
the Student Activities Board&#13;
serves the same purpose as that&#13;
committee (and does a&#13;
professional, full-time job), there&#13;
is no need for the senate to be&#13;
involved in union functions. The changes propose that the&#13;
duties of the Recording and&#13;
Corresponding secretaries be&#13;
combined and that the person&#13;
who fills that one post be a hired&#13;
employee of the senate rather&#13;
than an elected official. The&#13;
secretary would be chosen by the&#13;
PSGA President and subject to&#13;
Senate approval.&#13;
The proposed change in&#13;
election times would put regular&#13;
elections in the spring semester&#13;
(April) : the people elected at that&#13;
time would take office in June.&#13;
Then , should any vacancies&#13;
appear over the summer (a&#13;
senator might move away, for&#13;
example), there is a provision for&#13;
special replacement elections in&#13;
the fall semester. The summer&#13;
recess would serve as an&#13;
orientation period for the incoming&#13;
senate.&#13;
Steak Dinners&#13;
'1 79 to '369&#13;
CORNER 34th Ave. &amp; 52nd St.&#13;
Phon• 652-8662 .&#13;
•wMERE 1HE COWBOYS FAT"&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 24: 1-3 p.m. Terry Eliot will play and sing in th&#13;
Whiteskellar. No admission charged. e&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 24:_ PAB will sponsor th~ ~ovi~ "Fritz the Cat" at&#13;
7 :30 p.m. in Greenqu1st Hall room 103. Adm1ss1on 1s 75 cents.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 26: Lecture by Jack O'Donnell of Arthur Andersen and&#13;
Company on careers in accounting at 10 a.m. in Cla Dl07 and at 1 pm&#13;
in Cla D105. No admission charged. · ·&#13;
Friday, Oct: 26: Harold_ Burstyn lecture on Technology and the Industrial&#13;
Society at noon m LLC D174. Sponsored by Lecture and Fin&#13;
Arts. No admission_,Qlmrged. e&#13;
Friday, Oct. 26: Lecture by Radu Florescu entitled " In Search of&#13;
Dracula" at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theatre. Sponsored by the&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee. Free to students.&#13;
Friday, Saturday, and Sunday Oct. 26-28: PAB-Ragtime Rangers&#13;
outing to Louisville, Kentucky. Contact Student Activities Office, LLC&#13;
D197.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 27: Alpha Kappa Lambda is sponsoring a Hallowee&#13;
dance in SAB at 9 p.m. Band is "Rasputen" and admission is $l ~ Costwnes are encouraged. · ·&#13;
Monday, Oct. 29: Poet Diane Wakoski sponsored by the Poetry Forum&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts, and Women's _Caucus. Workshop from 4.5 p.m'.&#13;
in LLC D1~73 and D174. Poe~y _reading by Wakoslci at 8 p.m. on the&#13;
Library third floor. No adm1ss1on charged.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 30: CLI0,le&lt;;ture at8 p.m. by Parkside English profes or&#13;
Peter Hoff on "Peacock's Paradoxes: The Illusion of 'Progress' and&#13;
the Fortunate Foible." Third floor of the library. No admission&#13;
charged.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
Nov. 1-4: Play "The Virus" will be performed in the Comm Ar&#13;
Theatre. Tickets on sale at the Information kiosk.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 3: Turkey Trot at Phy Ed Building. Contact Jim Koch or Bob Lawson.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 4: Adult Student Association "recreation night" for&#13;
adult students and their families from 6 to 9 p.m. in the Phy Ed&#13;
Building.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 8: Maynard Ferguson sponsored by PAB at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the Comm Arts Theatre. Tickets on sale at the Information KiOl;k .&#13;
January, 2-7: Ragtime Rangers sponsoring a ski trip to Steamboat&#13;
prings, Colorado. See Information kiosk.&#13;
All items for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submitted lo&#13;
ANGER by noon Thursday prior to publication or the I sue in which n item is to appear.&#13;
J&amp;J&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center&#13;
Super Low Prices•&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave .. Racine&#13;
518-56th St., Kenosha&#13;
! BRAT STOP&#13;
1-94 &amp; Hwy. 50, Kenosha&#13;
presents&#13;
"WINFIELD ROAD"&#13;
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY, OOl'OBER 26 &amp; 'll&#13;
ALL REGULAR MIXED DRINKS 50c&#13;
We serve the BEST 'in BRAT Sandwiches&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE PRESENTS&#13;
Gertrude Jeannette, Broadway, movie, TV actress&#13;
and The Parkside Players in&#13;
Directed by Don Rint1&#13;
Premiere 8 P.M. Nov. 1,2,3,4&#13;
Communication Arts Theater&#13;
Reserved seats $3, Students with ID $1.50 (Nov.&#13;
2-3-4 Groups of 10' or more, l0j(,discount)&#13;
Tickets available at Bidinger's in Kenosha,&#13;
Cook-Gere in Racine (after Oct. 17) and UW-P&#13;
Information Center on campus. Mail orders at&#13;
Info Center only. Send stamped, self-addressed&#13;
envelope with check payable to UW-Parkside to&#13;
"Virus," UW-P Info Center, UW-Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53140. &#13;
Jtief news&#13;
Cillbbudgets requested&#13;
--- ide student organizations wishing to receive funds from the&#13;
PafPity St.udentGroup Support account should submit their annual&#13;
U",vers to the Assistant Dean of Students Office 284 Tallent Hall by&#13;
~lS OctOber 30. If you have questions or wish further in-&#13;
'J\I'S'IIIY'ncall 553-2342.The Campus Concerns Committee is eager to&#13;
::~;ai student organization budget decisions as SOOnas possible.&#13;
Tllrkeytrot teams forming&#13;
-&#13;
Men-Womenteams are needed to run for the second Annual Turk&#13;
rrot. Ateam predicts the time in which they both will run and ~~&#13;
lOIImnearest their prediction WInS. The Turkey Trot will be held at _011 Sunday, Nov. 3 In front of the Phy Ed building. It is open to all&#13;
students,staff and spouses or friends, The entrance fee is 50 c ts&#13;
contacteither Jim Koch (2267) or Bob Lawson (2153) of the Ph;nEd /leulty. _&#13;
Phy-Ecicoach injured&#13;
women'S Sports Direc~or Barbara Jo Lawson seriously injur~ her&#13;
bod&lt; in a trampoline accident last Wednesday. No further details are&#13;
Ivailableat this time. -&#13;
HoH to give CLIO lecture&#13;
Pecer Hoff, Assistant Professor of English at UW-Parkside, will&#13;
_at on uPeac~'s Paradoxes: 'I1;IeIllusion of 'Pro~ress' and the&#13;
FortunateFoible" on Tuesday, Oct. 30, at 7:30 p.m. in the Library,&#13;
Ihird floor.&#13;
Hoff'slecture is the second in a series on "The Humanities in an&#13;
lDdustriai Society" sponsored by the CLIO Association, an in-&#13;
_tional organization connected with the Parkside journal CLIO.&#13;
The nextCLIOlecture will be on November 20, when Robert Canary,&#13;
"""",iate Professor of English, will speak on "Science Fiction: Myths&#13;
f« an Iudustrial Age?"&#13;
ASA moves answering service&#13;
The Adult Student Association has moved their evening answering&#13;
servicefrom.Tallent Hall to the Information Kiosk in LLC Main Place.&#13;
The service, geared to adult and evening students who cannot contact&#13;
Parbide offices during regular hours, will now operate Mondays&#13;
1bruugb Thursdays each week when classes are in session from 5:30&#13;
p.m. CD 8:30 p.m.&#13;
Buntyn to lecture here&#13;
bid L.Burstyn, Dean of Graduate and Research Studies at&#13;
Paterson State College Wayne New Jersey will give a free pubhc&#13;
lectare.t t2 p.m. Friw.;y, Oct. 25 in LLC D174. Burstyn's lecture will&#13;
be GIl "The Promethean Paradox Explained, or What the History of&#13;
Tac!moIotIY Can tell us about the Characteristics of Industrial&#13;
Socilty." The lecture is sponsored by the Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Olaunittee, the School of Modern Industry and the History Depart-&#13;
_l&#13;
STEREOS TAPES&#13;
ORGANS&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
PIANOS&#13;
t919TAYLORAVENUE&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53403&#13;
MIKE URBAN&#13;
DENNY NELSON&#13;
owners&#13;
PHONE 637-2212&#13;
PAB FEATURE FILM SERIES,&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
FRITZ THE CAT&#13;
WEDNESDAY,&#13;
OCTOBER 24&#13;
7:30 P.M.&#13;
GR 103&#13;
WeclnesUy, Oct. 24,1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Accounting careers dlscuued&#13;
CoOnFriday, Oct. 26 Jack O'Donnell of Arthur Andersoo and&#13;
a mpany, will meet with interested students to dIscuss careers in&#13;
Bccou.nting. His lecture will be presented at 10 a.m. in the Classroom&#13;
BU&#13;
ildmg room DI07 and will be repeated at I p.m. 10 the Classroorn&#13;
uilding room 0105.&#13;
RR to wash airplane&#13;
The Ragtime Rangers are planning. ski trip to Steamboat Spnngs,&#13;
Colorado, January 2 thru 7. The trip Includes round trip transportation,&#13;
Iive days lift tickets. and five days lodgIng_ Total price IS&#13;
$210by plane or 5140by bus. Sign up is at ~ Worm.tion kiosk 10 Main&#13;
Place. Students interested in washing an airplane at Milw.ukee's&#13;
Mitchell Field to raise some cash for tbeir trip are asked to sign up 10&#13;
the Student Life Office, LLC Ot97.&#13;
Yearbook meeting today&#13;
Students, faculty and any other persons interested with woriting 00&#13;
an annual are invited to attend a meeting on Wednesday. Oct. 24 at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in LLC 0174. At this meeting the pubtisber foe the yearboolt&#13;
will be selected. Poets, phol&lt;Jgraphers, editors and lay-out personnel&#13;
are needed.&#13;
PSGA------&#13;
continued !rom pag e 1&#13;
Abduilah demanded a seat on the&#13;
committee just because he was&#13;
black. "He is anti-white rather&#13;
than pro-student," Konkol said.&#13;
"I don't want to bring any more&#13;
prejudice into it (the selectioo&#13;
procedures) than there is&#13;
already," Jennett added. Konkol&#13;
replied that "prejudice should be&#13;
personal rather than racial."&#13;
It was decided, witb the&#13;
recommendation brought forth&#13;
by Jennett, that the only 0bjective&#13;
Appeals Board for&#13;
students would have to be ooe&#13;
made up of individuals after the&#13;
new electioos are held, because&#13;
now the Appeals Board would&#13;
consist of the same students who&#13;
are on the interviewing and&#13;
screening committee.&#13;
The other topics dIscusse&lt;1 .t&#13;
Sunday's meeting were the&#13;
constitutional referendwn now&#13;
beIng circulated among students&#13;
and an ejections eommtttee for&#13;
'ovember's PSGA electioos&#13;
Konkol suggested that the&#13;
ActivitIes Board take charge of&#13;
the polls and count ballots "so&#13;
that none of the people who are&#13;
against us can accuse us of im~&#13;
proprieties." Jennett said that&#13;
PSGA did oot ha,.e enough mooey&#13;
to pay for the help and McDlVltt&#13;
and Stephen suggested the&#13;
fraternIties. the soronty or p~&#13;
Law Club's help be solicited&#13;
The meeting was adjourned&#13;
and aootherset ioe this Sunday at&#13;
6:30 p.m. in ILC 0174&#13;
Renew&#13;
Moyle Is&#13;
nostalglo trip&#13;
bode to&#13;
greose oge&#13;
"AMERICAN GRAFFITI"&#13;
by R~ca Edll ...&#13;
If you "ere born .round J&#13;
-\me-riaD Gnnkl tI yoar mOV1~&#13;
Get )'Ourself set for the g.... test&#13;
oostallll. tnp badl to the gres&#13;
age ever to hit the screen.&#13;
The movie l.S set III the SUmmer&#13;
of 1962, 00 • "arm night 1ft •&#13;
medium- ited tewn In northe-n&#13;
Cabfoem. What you .re&#13;
10 this mevie, as ~ Tim&#13;
mag&amp;1IDe pul.S It. is the "lut&#13;
gasp aI an er a." The day the&#13;
BeaUes hit the musIC sceee in&#13;
1963w •• the day the lrock-.androll&#13;
I music died&#13;
Remember how guy. used to go&#13;
out cruISing the boulev.rd (oe&#13;
scooping the loop, as It's ~&#13;
around here) 10 tbetr hot roda.&#13;
grease 10 thetr ha ..., tbetr ba bl&#13;
by thetr .des. tbetr pll of&#13;
Camels rolled up 10 tbetr T-alur!.&#13;
sleeve, O1uck 8erT)I 00 the radio,&#13;
and everytlnng was b,tchm" If&#13;
)"ou do remember, meric:'u&#13;
Graffiti will throw you Into fila of&#13;
esctasy If you don't remember.&#13;
you'll have one hell of • good&#13;
time, • lot aI laughs, .nd )ou'lI&#13;
have seen the 1 Amencan&#13;
movie so far this )·ear&#13;
(Starts Wednesday, October 31.&#13;
.t the M.r&lt;: Cinema 10 Racine )&#13;
Things you have wanted&#13;
the •&#13;
In&#13;
e Greeting Cards&#13;
• Wrapping Paper&#13;
• Pocket Combs&#13;
• Record Promotion&#13;
RATED FOR SALE:&#13;
• Kleenex&#13;
• Cough Drops&#13;
• Toothpaste&#13;
• Anaeln&#13;
PARKSIDE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE&#13;
1rief news&#13;
Cl b budgets requested ~&#13;
kside student organizations wishing to receive funds from the&#13;
~r ·ty student Group Support account should submit their annual&#13;
l1!11 \~;\0 the Assistant Dean of Students ~ffice 284 Tallent Hall by&#13;
~ (lg October 30. ff you have questions or wish further in-&#13;
~\ call 553-2342. The Campus Concerns Committee is eager to&#13;
:;: fi~ai student organization budget decisions as soon as possible.&#13;
Turkey trot teams forming&#13;
---fen-Women teams are needed to run for the second Annual Turk&#13;
Trot A team pre_dicts ~e _time _in which they both will run and ~ team nearest their pre?iction wins. The Turkey Trot will be held at&#13;
p)Oll on Sunday, Nov. 3 m front of_ the Phy Ed building. It is open to all&#13;
udents, staff and spouses or friends. The entrance fee is 50 c ts&#13;
eontact either Jim Koch (2267) or Bob Lawson (2153) of the P h;nEd&#13;
t,cuJty.&#13;
~y-Ed coach iniured&#13;
Women's Sports Director Barbara Jo Lawson seriously injured her&#13;
back in a tram~li~e accident last Wednesday. No further details are&#13;
available at this time.&#13;
~off to give CLIO lecture&#13;
Peter Hoff, Assistant Professor of English a t UW-Parkside, will&#13;
speak on "Peacock's Paradoxes: Tl?e Illusion of 'P rogress' a nd the&#13;
Fortunate Foible" on Tuesday, Oct. 30, at 7: 30 p.m . in the Library,&#13;
third floor. Hoff's lecture is the second in a series on "The Humanities in an&#13;
Industrial Society" sponsored by the CLIO Association, a n international&#13;
organization connected with the Parkside journal CLIO.&#13;
Toe next CLIO lecture will be on November 20, when Robert Canary,&#13;
Associate Professor of English, will speak on " Science F iction: Myths&#13;
for an Industrial Age? "&#13;
ASA moves answering service&#13;
The Adult Student Association has moved their evening answering&#13;
service from Tallent Hall to the Information Kiosk in LLC Main Place.&#13;
The service, geared to adult and evening students who cannot contact&#13;
Parkside offices during regular hours, will now operate Mondays&#13;
through Thursdays each week when classes are in session from 5:30&#13;
p.m. to 8:30 p.m.&#13;
Buntyn to lecture here&#13;
Harold L. Burstyn, Dean of Graduate and Research Studies at&#13;
Paterson State College Wayne, New Jersey will give a free public&#13;
lecture at 12 p.m. Fri~y, Oct. 26 in LLC D174. Burstyn's lecture will&#13;
on "The Promethean Paradox Explained, or What the History of&#13;
Technology Can tell us about the Characteristics of Industrial&#13;
·ety." The lecture is sponsored by the Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Committee, the School of Modern Industry and the History Depart- ment .&#13;
.. RECORDS&#13;
PIANOS&#13;
STEREOS&#13;
ORGANS&#13;
TAPES&#13;
1919 TAYLOR AVENUE&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53403&#13;
MIKE URBAN&#13;
DENNY NELSON&#13;
"--- owners PHONE 637-2212&#13;
PAB FEATURE FILM SERIES,&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
FRITZ THE CAT&#13;
WEDNESDAY,&#13;
OCTOBER 24&#13;
7:30 P.M.&#13;
GR 103&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 24, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Accounting careers discussed&#13;
On FridaY: Oct. 26 Ja O'Donnell&#13;
;°mpa~y, wdl meet \\-ith intere ted tuden to&#13;
Bc&lt;;&lt;&gt;u_nting. His lecture ·ill be presented at 10 .m. in&#13;
Bu~ldding~ room D107 and will be repeated at 1 p.m. in&#13;
ui room D105.&#13;
RR to wash airplane&#13;
The Ragtime Rangers are planning a i trip to t m&#13;
Colora~o. January 2 thru 7. The trip includ&#13;
sportation, five da~ lift tickets. and fi ·e da, l&#13;
$210 by plane or $140 by bus. gn up i at !he inform&#13;
Pl_ace. Students interested m ·ashing an airplane&#13;
Mitchell Field to raise some cash for the r trip are&#13;
the Student Life Office, LLC D197.&#13;
Yearbook meeting today&#13;
Students, faculty and any other persons int&#13;
an annual are invited to attend a meeting on&#13;
7:30 p.m. in LLC D174. At this meeti th pu&#13;
will be elected. Poets, photographers, edito are needed.&#13;
Review&#13;
Movl Is&#13;
nostalgia trip&#13;
bade to&#13;
greas age&#13;
"AMER ICAN GRA FFI I"&#13;
PSGA-----&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
Abdullah demanded a seat on the&#13;
committee just because be wa&#13;
black. "He i anti-white rather&#13;
than pro-student," Konkol said.&#13;
"I don't want to bring any more&#13;
prejudice into it (the selection&#13;
procedures) than there i&#13;
already," Jennett added. Konkol&#13;
replied that " prejudice hould be&#13;
personal rather than racial."&#13;
It was decided, with the&#13;
recommendation brought forth&#13;
by Jennett, that the only objec&#13;
ti ve Appeal Board for&#13;
students would have to be one&#13;
made up of individual after the&#13;
new elections are held, becau e&#13;
now the Appeals Board would&#13;
consist of the same tudents ho&#13;
are on the inten·iewing and&#13;
screening committee.&#13;
Things you have wanted&#13;
in the&#13;
• Greeting Cards • Kleenex&#13;
• Wrapping Paper • Cough Drops&#13;
• Pocket Combs • Toothpa te&#13;
• Record Promotion • Anacin&#13;
RATED FOR SALE:&#13;
PARKSIDE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 24, 1973&#13;
Sooters&#13;
to meet&#13;
Marquette,&#13;
Green Say ___ -------sports--&#13;
RANGER&#13;
by Neal sautner&#13;
"We have a good shot at&#13;
beating uiem" replied soccer&#13;
coach Hal Henderson concerning&#13;
lonights game against Marquette&#13;
University. "Last year they&#13;
defeated us 3-1, but reports say&#13;
they're not as good as last year."&#13;
This saturday the Rangers&#13;
lake on their traditional rival&#13;
Green Bay. "We've never beaten&#13;
them on the varsity level, but we&#13;
tied them once." Then he added;&#13;
"Green Bay has been ranked as&#13;
high as 5th in the nation this year,&#13;
and they're the only tearn that&#13;
beat the defending NCAA&#13;
national champs; St. Louis&#13;
University." Green Bay's record&#13;
for the year is 5-1.(). Quincy&#13;
College was the only team to&#13;
defeat them.&#13;
Parkside's record (Of the year is&#13;
2-6-0. "Ironically, we've bad the&#13;
same number of wins as last&#13;
year, but then there were three&#13;
games we shouldn't have lost,"&#13;
Henderson said. "We'll keep&#13;
trying."&#13;
Henderson ended the interview.&#13;
saying, "I've been extremely&#13;
pleased with the performances&#13;
of Rick Lechusz,&#13;
Dennis pippen, and Dieter&#13;
Kiefer," who incidentally will be&#13;
playing against Green Bay, after&#13;
suffering from ankle injuries.&#13;
Weekend sports&#13;
eRO, 0 lJ!'; 111Y&#13;
The Park. Ide harriers defeated Milwaukee Marquette this weekend.&#13;
malung their dual meet record 5-1.&#13;
","'" Par ide runners all broke the tape with the same time&#13;
125:581, ho"e,."r. ChUck Dettman and Lucian Rosa were given the&#13;
fant place tie Wayne Rhode came in second.&#13;
Other fmlsh.... for Parkside were: Jim DeVasquez - 6th place, Keith&#13;
Morntt.7th place. Dale artin· 11th place, John Ammerman - 12th&#13;
place The ham next meet will be tonIght, against Loras College, at&#13;
LorD&#13;
RlI BY P rOlde's Rugby Club gave an Impressive performance against&#13;
Marquette In the second annual Lions Club Rugby Garne Stmday,&#13;
WIIVIlJlg it 10-4 Polllt- uers for Paro.de were Keith Bosman, and Tom Jaebne.&#13;
ER The Par Ide Soccer Team bad two soccer games since RANGER'S&#13;
laat P . deadline."'e fint game was last Wednesday against Lake&#13;
Fo t III wluch Parkside started oIf on the right foot winning the&#13;
pme~. GoaIJ for Parlullde came from Ray Phanturat, Stan Stadler.&#13;
RIck Lec!l_. Dieter Kiefer. and Warren Lewis.&#13;
ParkaJde secood game occurred on Friday. October 19th, agains&#13;
Eastern IllinoiS who mClClentally were National Champions in 1969.&#13;
ParUide 1000tthiS one 1-0. Head Coach Hal Henderson insists that th&#13;
Eaalern game was "the best team effort all year" by his squad. Coach&#13;
Hendersoo alao added, "Even though we made mistakes. we proved t&#13;
""",,,vee that we can play with the tougberteams."&#13;
The soccer squad'S next game will be "a big one" against arch·rival&#13;
UW~reen Bay.&#13;
_-~------------1 : PRODOCTIONS A 50's REVIVEL1&#13;
1 PRESENTS with:&#13;
t&#13;
I&#13;
1&#13;
t&#13;
It&#13;
I&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
I&#13;
t&#13;
·1&#13;
I&#13;
OCTOBER26 - 8:00 P.M. 1&#13;
1&#13;
TICKe:n ...VAIVoILIE S2.SO - advance $.1.00 door t&#13;
IN •• (IN. IN KeNosHA 1 tMullM De., OMS-e1 oe.. m Memorial HaU l J"J T~" RKOnI J"J TaPl" Reeont 7th &amp; Lake Ave. Racine&#13;
_______________ J&#13;
•• .-...&#13;
~:&#13;
"&#13;
•,&#13;
•&#13;
,&#13;
I&#13;
Parltsld Acuvtnes Board ...&#13;
presents&#13;
fnConcert&#13;
~ --~ ?&#13;
MAY~ARDt;- -'\&#13;
FERGUSON ORCHESTRA t; /-&#13;
11IOR.-IIV. 8 8:00 P.M.&#13;
~, am llllllE&#13;
• .$Ul PAllSIIl S1\IOTS'&#13;
$4.111GDWL )tt&#13;
~&#13;
''Mr Hom'·&#13;
An&#13;
"Un" -Common&#13;
Offer!&#13;
A moment's refiection--Sue Wanggaard pauses before&#13;
her tennis match in last weekend's tournament,&#13;
On Sale in the Bookstore&#13;
"Morning Fresh"&#13;
MILWAUKEE SENTINAL&#13;
Enjoy It Daily&#13;
Parkside University Bookstore&#13;
YOU ,&#13;
•&#13;
,&#13;
•&#13;
KEEP&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
• I&#13;
, .,&#13;
,.. , .&#13;
•&#13;
,.&#13;
' '.&#13;
THE&#13;
..&#13;
• .,&#13;
, . •&#13;
" .&#13;
..&#13;
' .'&#13;
,,&#13;
."&#13;
, .&#13;
,• ..•&#13;
'.. " GLASS!&#13;
., ..&#13;
•&#13;
Buy a ...&#13;
Deliciously Satisfying&#13;
• BIG SHEF&#13;
GOLDEN BROWN&#13;
• FRENCH FRIES&#13;
"UN" COMMONLY REFRESHING&#13;
• "UN" COLA&#13;
ALL FOR $130&#13;
YOU KEEP THE GLASS!&#13;
Start Your Set Nowl&#13;
6926 39th Ave. .2.&#13;
LOC.4TlONS 3400 Sheridan Road&#13;
--&#13;
• p SIDE ,. Oct. 24, 1ffl&#13;
GER&#13;
~----------Sports _ __,&#13;
nd sports&#13;
t meet will be tonight, apinlt Loras College, at&#13;
Pla1ftntla' ftuCby Cub pve an impreaive performance against&#13;
IWauelte in the NCGnd annual Uom Cub Rugby Game Sunday,&#13;
willllinll tlM.&#13;
IOC~ X:Nl'Ellt~etten for Pubide Keitb Bolman, and Tom Jaebne.&#13;
Soccer Team bad two soccer pmea since GER&#13;
deacline. 1be ftnt pme w lut Wedneaday apinst Lak&#13;
in Paraide started off an tbe ript foot winnin&amp;&#13;
w. Goals for Partraide came from Ray Pbanturat, Stan Stadler,&#13;
-...t9:..:a .. am. Dieta' Kief•, and Wamm Lewis. .., IICDDd pme occurred OD Friday, October 11th, a&#13;
IIUnall who inddmtally National Champions in 1•.&#13;
Puhl.Ila loll tbll one 1 ... H•d Coac:b Hal Hendenon in1ist1 that&#13;
11:Mtsa.... "the tam effort all year" by bia lqllad. Coe&#13;
Hadenaa allo added, "Ewa lboulh made mistakes, we proved&#13;
aun~•U.t can play tb the t.auper teams."&#13;
1be IOCCel' aquad'1 next same will be "a hie one" apinst an:b-ri&#13;
UW'-Gr- Bay.&#13;
----i11's-lfEiiVEI 1&#13;
p rbide llvtties Board&#13;
presen&#13;
lnCon rt&#13;
FERGUSON ORCHESTRA /:;&#13;
1:11 P.&#13;
S111UTS·&#13;
ith f&#13;
w f&#13;
'&#13;
t&#13;
f&#13;
f&#13;
I&#13;
If&#13;
f&#13;
f&#13;
f&#13;
t&#13;
f&#13;
f&#13;
f&#13;
t&#13;
I&#13;
f&#13;
Booters&#13;
to meet&#13;
Marquette,&#13;
Green Bay&#13;
by eal Sautner&#13;
"We have a good shot at&#13;
beating them" replied soccer&#13;
coach Hal Henderson concerning&#13;
tonights game against Marquette&#13;
University. "Last year they&#13;
defeated us 3-1, but reports say&#13;
they're not as good as last year."&#13;
This Saturday the Rangers&#13;
take on their traditional rival&#13;
Green Bay. "We've never beaten&#13;
them on the varsity level, but we&#13;
tied them once." Then he added;&#13;
"Green Bay has been ranked as&#13;
high as 5th in the nation this year,&#13;
and they're the only team that&#13;
beat the defending NCAA&#13;
national champs; St. Louis&#13;
University." Green Bays record&#13;
for the year is 5-1-0. Quincy&#13;
College was the only team to&#13;
defeat them.&#13;
Parksides record for the year is&#13;
2-&amp;-0. "Ironically, we've bad the&#13;
same nmnber ol wins as last&#13;
year, but then there were three&#13;
pmes we shouldn't have lost,"&#13;
Henderson said "We'll keep&#13;
trying."&#13;
Henderson ended the interview,&#13;
saying, "I've been extremely&#13;
pleased with the performances&#13;
of Rick Lechusz,&#13;
Dennis Pippen, and Dieter&#13;
Kiefer," who incidentally will be&#13;
playing against Green Bay, after&#13;
Qfering from ankle injuries.&#13;
An&#13;
"Un" -Common&#13;
Offer!&#13;
YOU&#13;
KEEP&#13;
THE&#13;
GLASS!&#13;
A moment's reflection--Sue Wanggaard pauses before&#13;
her tennis match in last weekend's tourna.ment.&#13;
On Sale in the Bookstore&#13;
"Morning Fresh"&#13;
MILWAUKEE SENTINAL&#13;
Enjoy It Daily&#13;
Parkside ~iversity Bookstore&#13;
•&#13;
• • i • • • . . • • • • • •&#13;
• .. • . .&#13;
Buy a ... Deliciously Satisfying&#13;
• BIG SHEF&#13;
GOLDEN BROWN&#13;
• FRENCH FRIES&#13;
"UN" COMMONLY REFRESHING&#13;
• "UN" COLA&#13;
ALLFOR $1 lO&#13;
YOU KEEP THE GLASS!&#13;
6926 39th Ave.&#13;
Stent Your Set Nowl&#13;
• 2 •&#13;
LOC4TIONS 3400 Sheridan Rood </text>
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              <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>CCC allocations increase 33%</text>
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              <text>eCC allocations increase 33%&#13;
concerns Committee&#13;
CJI1ll"s'(5 May 14 meeting&#13;
CCCIat dget allocations to&#13;
••d' bu ups for the t974-75&#13;
;;ud"!tgro As with past years&#13;
-..,j term·&#13;
!O""" IS for funds totalled three'&#13;
"""" times the amount of&#13;
• f""'le runds. Overall, CCC&#13;
."dabedrequests by sixty seven&#13;
:unm&#13;
,ercen~ vailable for immediate&#13;
t'UI1 ~ were up thirty three&#13;
iP" t over last year. Walter&#13;
por&lt;fIl Chairman of CCC, stated&#13;
ttkltheincreasewas due to a one&#13;
- diSbursement made&#13;
~e by Cbancelor Wyllie.&#13;
",. majorportion of CCC funds&#13;
f!&lt;Jmthe segregated fee or&#13;
student money" portton of _"y tuition.A total of $88 per&#13;
:;;'t per year constitutes the&#13;
!C"«aledfee, and this is broken&#13;
"'"' to pro vide funding for the&#13;
( Ion building reserve, the ;ture and Fine Arts Com-&#13;
.,ute, Student Health: Busing&#13;
lid Parking, Athle!&gt;cs, Intramurals,&#13;
Student Activities&#13;
and Student Group SUpport Th'&#13;
CCC funds are a part of St~den~&#13;
.Group Support funds.&#13;
Total funds availahle for&#13;
allocation is approximately&#13;
$10,500 of which CCC has committed&#13;
$9,172 with the balance&#13;
held as a reserve fund for future&#13;
allocation.&#13;
. The largest recipients of funds&#13;
include Parks ide Student&#13;
Government Association $1500&#13;
Vets Club $1200, Child Car~&#13;
Center $800and The Ranger $750.&#13;
A comparison with allocations&#13;
for 1973-74 shows that CCC&#13;
allocations increased thirty three&#13;
percent in total with the following&#13;
groups receiving the largest&#13;
percentage increase: PSGA 400&#13;
percent, Debate and Forensics&#13;
317 percent, Chess C1uh 300&#13;
percent, Th,ird World 163percent,&#13;
and Parkstde Players 100 percent.&#13;
The Vets Club received 15&#13;
percent less money in this years&#13;
allocation.&#13;
College of·Racine&#13;
reaches agreement&#13;
with Parkside&#13;
Arrang.ments b"etween the&#13;
IJIiteraily01 Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
-' The College of Racine to&#13;
aimi,e Ihe effects of the&#13;
IIciDe college's closing on its&#13;
.... have been agreed to by&#13;
.... illtitutions.&#13;
In a letter to Barry McCabe,&#13;
lllaltive vice president and&#13;
... of The College of Racine,&#13;
PIIDide Chancellor Irvin G.•&#13;
Mie eonfirmed agreements&#13;
between staffs of the two&#13;
addition to covering&#13;
y" transfer policies&#13;
e of Racine students&#13;
ide, the agreements&#13;
for maintenance by&#13;
01 all College of Racine&#13;
academic records and&#13;
placement files and&#13;
of future transcripts.&#13;
Perkaide archives, which&#13;
'"IionaI repository for the&#13;
Historical Society, will&#13;
olher records of the&#13;
college.&#13;
a letter to Wyllie, McCabe&#13;
.. UW-P chancellor that&#13;
's genuine and unled&#13;
generosity speaks&#13;
01 its mission to the Racine&#13;
." He added that "the&#13;
. student transfer policy,&#13;
ar, will help many&#13;
of Racine students to&#13;
I~~"~:.:·:.their programs without&#13;
~lon or delay,"&#13;
1rJI1iO...... xpressed his regret at&#13;
IJlg to McCabe and said&#13;
I.... both his professional&#13;
~ and private exposure&#13;
_~ graduale of two private&#13;
~es. Westminster and&#13;
~. "1 have long been aware&#13;
u.e unportance of maintaining&#13;
~l:-.""aile... colleges and the adthey&#13;
offer, in some&#13;
_ .• .1 least, over public&#13;
--YWBIbes."&#13;
~ YOU can appreciate,"&#13;
.. continued, "we have in the _lalew months tried to strike a&#13;
~ce between being con-&#13;
!'DIsiblv.lyhelpful, as that was&#13;
....... , and silent and nonlnv.ve&#13;
W~n our comments or IlIhe tted Involvement might&#13;
IJWbeen harmful."&#13;
-p Vice Chancellor Otto&#13;
Bauer called the transfer policy a&#13;
"one-time response to an&#13;
emergency situation in which&#13;
College of Racine students find&#13;
themselves." Under the policy,&#13;
all course credits earned at the&#13;
College of Racine or transferred&#13;
there from accredi ted institutions&#13;
will be accepted at&#13;
Parkside. Further, students who&#13;
have fulfilled general education&#13;
requirements at College of&#13;
Racine will have met them at&#13;
UW-P, and residency&#13;
requirements will be adjusted for&#13;
students who have less Ulan 30&#13;
credits to complete in their&#13;
degree program. At least 15&#13;
credits of advanced work in the&#13;
major mu~t be completed at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Parkside also has been&#13;
authorized to expand its&#13;
education certification programs&#13;
to include learning disabilities,&#13;
which was offered at College of&#13;
Racine and will be taking over&#13;
for th~ Racine school in the&#13;
Career Opportunity Program&#13;
sponsored by Racine Unified&#13;
School District No. 1 for low Ill·&#13;
come teacher aides.&#13;
Intensive academ.ic advising&#13;
and financial aids counseling also&#13;
will be provided each transfer .&#13;
McCabe had special praise for&#13;
the helpfulness of Assistant&#13;
Chancellor for Student Services.&#13;
Allen Dearborn, a key UW-P&#13;
figure in meetings between the&#13;
two schools, .&#13;
"The thing we tried to keep III&#13;
mind was that we were d~li~g&#13;
with a very human situatJon m&#13;
which procedural questions could&#13;
not take priority over our concer~&#13;
for the individual stud.ent,&#13;
Dearborn said. "We're gomg to&#13;
make the transition from College&#13;
of Racine to Parkside as smooth&#13;
as possible,"&#13;
Toward that end, Dearborn and&#13;
his staff are working on 10-&#13;
.tegrating clubs and interest&#13;
groups from the two schools,&#13;
planning special social events for&#13;
later this summer, and e~en&#13;
purchasing Co!Jege of Racme&#13;
emblems, beer mugs a~d other&#13;
trappings for the Parks Ide book&#13;
store.&#13;
GROUP&#13;
B E&#13;
REQUEST ALLOCATlO Ul\ ~:&#13;
Young Democrats 205.00 0 1&#13;
Engineering Students 315.90 150.00&#13;
Judo 359.00 200.&#13;
Chess 1406.00 100&#13;
Ice Hockey 'lO51.00 550.&#13;
Third World 2227.00 500.&#13;
Ranger 1525.00 750.&#13;
PSGA 7825.00 150000&#13;
Concerned Student 726.58 250.00 71&#13;
Coalition&#13;
Sigma Pi m.oo&#13;
Child-Care Center 3750.00 .00 0&#13;
Adult Students 40000 250.00 0&#13;
Debate &amp; Forensics 1715.00 ISO&#13;
Young Republicans 21.00 0 as&#13;
Yearbook 320.00 250 0&#13;
Veterans 236500 I&#13;
Parkside Village S.A. 50.00 0 SO&#13;
Parkside Players 32500 200.00 .cl&#13;
TOTAU; $27861.48 7300. 1m&#13;
Summary: Approximate Amount Available SI ,&#13;
-Allocated 7300.00+ 1871.00 9.172 00&#13;
Remaining SI.328.&#13;
The Parksidlec-------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
________ Wednesday,June 19,1974Vol.III No.1----&#13;
School certification&#13;
program expande&#13;
terrupuon.&#13;
Last semester.... tOOenb out&#13;
of 60 studen Ul educauon. 10·&#13;
dicated their lDt.ereSt In an&#13;
panded program in learning&#13;
disabiliues&#13;
The Colleg. r Raellle. ",'tllm&#13;
closed tins month, had about ~&#13;
students enrolled III Its I mu'C&#13;
drsabtliues program Duri&lt;e the&#13;
program's ~"'O ~'eers of operauan&#13;
at College or Raon • ther ", "'&#13;
50 graduat a of ",b.ch&#13;
graduated th )-ear&#13;
Diane German, ",ho dlrec:ted&#13;
the program al Coli .01 RaCln.,&#13;
,.,11 JOIO the Par Ill. educaUOl1&#13;
faculty in lall to nIlnat 1M&#13;
De,," program&#13;
German sa,d thaI the program&#13;
is directed to ....ard .n un·&#13;
dersUlndmg of the ps)'chologll:al&#13;
processes involved III per&lt;:epoon.&#13;
memory. symbolization and&#13;
higher cogn,tive functions&#13;
The learnlDg d' abllolie&#13;
prol!fam ,,011,""Iud. IX COIl&#13;
Parkside has been authorized&#13;
to expand its elementary and&#13;
secondary school certification&#13;
programs to include certification&#13;
in learning dJsabilities.&#13;
According to Paul Kleine,&#13;
chairperson of the division of&#13;
education, approval bas been&#13;
secured from Central Administration&#13;
and similar ap--&#13;
proval has been assured from the&#13;
state Department of Public instruction.&#13;
Kleine said that the certification&#13;
program on leaming&#13;
disabilities will expand leacher&#13;
education opportunities for&#13;
residents of southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin by enabling current&#13;
freshmen and sophomores to&#13;
remain at Parkside instead of&#13;
having to transfer elsewhere. by&#13;
providing local retrainmg C?,"&#13;
current teachers interested LD&#13;
this field, and by allowing Colleie&#13;
of Racine students to continue&#13;
their education Without inParkside&#13;
student runs&#13;
for state office&#13;
.&#13;
nitl e&#13;
Dlagno II.&#13;
1A rnl"&#13;
p&#13;
ad&#13;
, and&#13;
arnin&#13;
.1&#13;
rk \\ lth&#13;
lll8 under&#13;
Parkside sludent John Siefert&#13;
announced Monday that he "ould&#13;
be a candidate for Stale&#13;
Representative in Racine.&#13;
S.efert, 25, "ill oppose&#13;
Republican Henry Rohner in the&#13;
district made up of the suburban&#13;
areas of the city. The contest will&#13;
be a rematch between the two&#13;
rivals. In 1m. Rohner defeated&#13;
Siefert in the rail elections. 9.208&#13;
to 8.551 after a recount.&#13;
As a member of Common&#13;
Cause. the national citizens'&#13;
lobbv, Sierer~ has been closely&#13;
identified with the issues of&#13;
campaign finance reform and&#13;
ethics legislation. He is also an&#13;
active en\·ironrnentalist.&#13;
.'Rohner was one of six to vote&#13;
a~a,nsl 1M Campalllll Re/orm&#13;
ct He",as one of a tiny handful&#13;
",110 oppooed th .rea~on 01 thc&#13;
EthiCS Board&#13;
"H \\a one 01 . IX to op&#13;
the Equal High Amendment.&#13;
He opposed the pro",s,on in th&#13;
,Ierger Bill to ~,ve tuden&#13;
control over segregated tudent&#13;
fees. The list could go 00 and 00,"&#13;
,efert declared.&#13;
A graduate of lhe Uouv lyof&#13;
W,SCOOSIll Law School ie/erl&#13;
pract,ces w.th the Keno ha flrm&#13;
or . 'orthrup, Kehoe. and&#13;
Bramscher and maintains an&#13;
office in FrankSVille He is&#13;
enrolled at Parkslde ,n •&#13;
program leadlOg to a Bachelor'&#13;
degree in management e~&#13;
,cc allocations •&#13;
increase o/c&#13;
5 concerns Commit~ee&#13;
(atll?l ·ts May 14 meetmg&#13;
"""°) at I • t ~"" dget allocat1ons Q&#13;
de bu oups for the 1974-75&#13;
t gr As with past years&#13;
term. eel .hr&#13;
ts for funds totall t ee,&#13;
times the amount of&#13;
f !~le funds. Ove~all, CCC&#13;
rned requests by sixty seven&#13;
~! available for immediate&#13;
run on were up thirty three&#13;
~ over last year. Walter&#13;
~ Chairman of CCC, stated&#13;
feldl~e increase was due to a one&#13;
disbursement made&#13;
~ble by Chancelor Wyllie.&#13;
flit major portion of CCC funds&#13;
frO the segregated fee or&#13;
tud:nt money" portion of&#13;
ly tuition. A total of $88 per&#13;
jrodtnt per year constitutes the&#13;
iegregated fee, and th~s is broken&#13;
ii,Till to provide fundmg for the&#13;
on building reserve, the&#13;
\ure and Fine Arts Comee&#13;
Student Health, Busing&#13;
ud Parking, Athletics, Intramurals,&#13;
Student Activities&#13;
and Student Group Support. Th~&#13;
CCC funds are a part of Student&#13;
Group Support funds.&#13;
Total funds available for&#13;
allocation is approximately&#13;
$1~,500 of which CCC has committed&#13;
$9,172 with the balance&#13;
held as a reserve fund for future&#13;
allocation.&#13;
The largest recipients of funds&#13;
include Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association $1500&#13;
Vets Club $1200, Child Car~&#13;
Center $800 and The Ranger $750.&#13;
A comparison with allocations&#13;
for 1973-74 shows that CCC&#13;
allocations increased thirty three&#13;
perc~nt i11 total with the following&#13;
groups receiving the largest&#13;
percentage increase: PSGA 400&#13;
percent, Debate and Forensics&#13;
317 percent, Chess Club 300&#13;
percent, Third World 163 percent,&#13;
and Parkside Players 100 percent.&#13;
The Vets Club received 15&#13;
percent less money in this years&#13;
allocation.&#13;
College of Racine&#13;
reaches agree111ent&#13;
with Parkside&#13;
Arrangements b'etween the&#13;
lffll'Sity of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
111d The College of Racine to&#13;
1m1ze the effects of the&#13;
Racine college's closing on its&#13;
lllldents have been agreed to by&#13;
11111titutions.&#13;
In a letter to Barry McCabe,&#13;
aecutive vice president and&#13;
deaa of The College of Racine,&#13;
Parbide Chancellor Irvin G .•&#13;
le confirmed agreements&#13;
between staffs of the two&#13;
Bauer called the transfer policy a&#13;
"one-time response to an&#13;
emergency situation in which&#13;
College of Racine students find&#13;
themselves." Under the policy,&#13;
all course credits earned at the&#13;
College of Racine or transferred&#13;
there from accredited institutions&#13;
will be accepted at&#13;
Parkside. Further, students who&#13;
have fulfilled general education&#13;
requirements at College of&#13;
Racine will have met them at&#13;
UW-P, and residency&#13;
requirements will be adjusted for&#13;
students who have less than 30&#13;
credits to complete m their&#13;
degree program. At least 15&#13;
credits of advanced work in the&#13;
major muM be completed at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Parkside also has been&#13;
authorized to expand its&#13;
education certification programs&#13;
to include learning disabilities,&#13;
which was offered at College of&#13;
Racine and will be taking over&#13;
for th; Racine school in the&#13;
Career Opportunity Prog~~m&#13;
sponsored by Racine Umf1~&#13;
School District No. 1 for low income&#13;
teacher aides. . . Intensive academic adv1smg&#13;
and financial aids counseling also&#13;
will be provided each transfer.&#13;
McCabe had special praise for&#13;
the helpfulness of Assis_tant&#13;
Chancellor for Student Services.&#13;
Allen Dearborn, a key UW-P&#13;
figure in meetings between the&#13;
two schools. . "The thing we tried to keep_ m&#13;
mind was that we were d~ah~g&#13;
with a very human situation m&#13;
which procedural questions could&#13;
not take priority over our concer~&#13;
for the individual stud_ent,&#13;
Dearborn said. "We're gomg to&#13;
make the transition from College&#13;
of Racine to Parkside as smooth&#13;
as possible."&#13;
Toward that end, Dearborn a~&#13;
his staff are working. on mtegra&#13;
ting clubs and mtere t&#13;
groups from the ~wo .school .&#13;
planning special social e~ents for&#13;
later this summer. and e~en&#13;
purchasing Co!lege of Racme&#13;
emblems, beer mugs a~d other&#13;
trappings for the Parkside book&#13;
store.&#13;
RO P&#13;
Young Democrats&#13;
Engineering tud&#13;
Judo&#13;
Chess&#13;
Ice Hocke·&#13;
Third World&#13;
Ranger&#13;
PSG&#13;
Concerned tudent&#13;
Coalition&#13;
·gma Pi&#13;
Child-Care Center&#13;
dult uclents&#13;
Debate Foren i&#13;
Young Republican&#13;
Yearbook&#13;
Veteran&#13;
Park ide Villag .A.&#13;
Parkside Players&#13;
TOTALS&#13;
mmar):&#13;
\Tl&#13;
0&#13;
Remai ·n&#13;
The ParksidP.e-------&#13;
RA G&#13;
--------Wednesday, Jun 19, 1974 Vol. II&#13;
School certification&#13;
program e&#13;
Parkside has been auth nzed&#13;
to expand its elementary nd&#13;
secondary school certification&#13;
programs to includ certifi tion&#13;
in learnin disabiliti .&#13;
According to P ul Klein ,&#13;
chairperson of the dh" i n of&#13;
education, appro 'al&#13;
ecured from Centr l&#13;
mini tration and imil r pproval&#13;
ha n a ured from th&#13;
tale D partm t of Pub 1c lntrucbon&#13;
. Kleine aid th t th c&#13;
tification program in le m&#13;
disabiliti Wlll expand t&#13;
education opportuniti&#13;
re ident of outh&#13;
Wi con in b enabli curre&#13;
freshmen and phom r to&#13;
remain at Park id i te d of&#13;
havmg to tran. fer 1,1;here. by&#13;
providing local retrainm f r&#13;
current teach rs int ted in&#13;
thi field, and b all ·n I~ -&#13;
of Racine uclen o unu&#13;
their education 1thout in·&#13;
Parkside student r&#13;
for state office&#13;
Park 1de&#13;
0.1-----&#13;
s &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, June 19, 1974&#13;
RANGER&#13;
-------Editorial/Opinion&#13;
IRA and SLA&#13;
on PSGA&#13;
agenda&#13;
In the meeting of the PARKSIDE Student Government&#13;
Association on June 2, 1974 the Student Senate&#13;
voted to "express solidarity with the I RA in its quest for&#13;
independence. "&#13;
In the battle against the parking lots the Student&#13;
Senate has condemned the actions of the administration&#13;
of Parks ide for the lack of student representation in the&#13;
planning of construction on this campus. The brunt of&#13;
PSGA argument has been that student rights have been&#13;
usurped and denied. While not opposed to parking lots&#13;
as such the Student Senate feels that the procedures&#13;
used by the administration have ignored the duly&#13;
elected representatives of the student body.&#13;
Since the election of the present student government&#13;
the course of PSGA has been one of seeking recognition&#13;
as a force for student rights on the basis of a&#13;
representative form of student expression. "RANGER&#13;
feels that the goals of PSGA--bulldlng a viable student&#13;
government -- demanding that student rights on campus&#13;
not be ignored--student control of student funds--are&#13;
worthwhile goals and should command the respect and&#13;
the support of the student body. .&#13;
~ Ii!, Sfel&lt;i'lg to;rech thi!s.eogoal", RS~A has genecally&#13;
followed a sensible and mature course of action.&#13;
However "PSGA CONDEMNS THE L.A. POLICE&#13;
SHOOTOUT WITH THE ALLEGED SLA MEMBERS"&#13;
is an action on the part of PSGA which, RANGER'S&#13;
opinion, does nothing to advance the goals of Student&#13;
Govt. and can only label the Student Senate as immature.&#13;
In order for PSGA to form an effective program of&#13;
leadership on campus'they must first gain the respect of&#13;
students, faculty, administration and the general public.&#13;
This respect is not gained through attention grabbing&#13;
"motions" that leaves PSGA open to a multitude of&#13;
charges ranging from ignorance to irresponsibility.&#13;
Ranger does not, at this time, endorse any condemnation&#13;
of the action of Student Senate in this matter,&#13;
rather we suggest that PSGA be more cautious in its&#13;
attempts to gain public recognition.&#13;
Note: At the June 9 meeting of the Student Senate a&#13;
motion passed deleting the last three actions taken at&#13;
the June 2 meeting which include the motions referred&#13;
to in the above editorial.&#13;
Public&#13;
notice&#13;
All meetings of all state and local governing bOdies&#13;
boards, commissions, committees and agencies, in:&#13;
eluding municipal and quasi-municipal corporations&#13;
unless otherwise expressly provided by law, shall ~&#13;
publicly held and open to all citizens at aII times.&#13;
Recent actions on the part of the State Legislature In&#13;
the area of the public's right to know has resulted In&#13;
laws that we feel relate directly to activities on the&#13;
Parks ide campus.&#13;
Just as the RANGER has the obligation of informing&#13;
the students on activities that affect them, the ad.&#13;
ministration, faculty and staff have the obligation of&#13;
making public those committee discussions that affect&#13;
the campus. "&#13;
In the past RANGER has' been ignored by a few&#13;
committees as a legitimate form of public notice to the&#13;
campus on, forthcoming meetings and discussions of&#13;
"publicly open" committees.&#13;
The past practice of notifying the public with a mimeo&#13;
memo on the meeting room door no longer suffices to&#13;
fulfill the requirements of state law.&#13;
The RANGER has and will continue to seek out In.&#13;
formation on campus committee activities. But, as&#13;
expressed in the general intent of recent state laws.&#13;
those committees now have the responsibility to seek&#13;
out means of informing the campus of meeting times&#13;
and places. We feel that the RANGER is the legitimate&#13;
form of public notice on this campus. To those com.&#13;
mittees that have, through either ignorance of the&#13;
RANGER'S availability or through conscious&#13;
secretiveness avoided public exposure, we extend III&#13;
them an invitation to fulfill their public responsibilities&#13;
and the requirements of state law.&#13;
between the gateguards of your impatience&#13;
he lies,&#13;
beauty on the bed&#13;
fever in the beast&#13;
smoothed and supple,&#13;
with drowsy gestures forming dance cycles ~&#13;
in the darkening atmosphere&#13;
you reach out&#13;
a grab for affect&#13;
his body melts and mingles with covers&#13;
and sheets that coil and tighten on his&#13;
thighs&#13;
you lean,&#13;
he quivers from sleep and shudders .&#13;
in heat&#13;
among the breakfast party's remnants&#13;
he lies,&#13;
bread and water in your bowl&#13;
heaven rising&#13;
Editor in Chief Kenneth Pestka&#13;
HumaniUes Editor amy cundari&#13;
Sports Editor Richard Ahlgrimm&#13;
Writers Jane Schliesman,&#13;
Rebecca Ecklund Michael Olszyk&#13;
Advertising Director John Sacket&#13;
Business Manager Steve Johnson&#13;
brutally abandoned&#13;
Ilcatlng&#13;
in the torents of personal whim&#13;
you are lonely&#13;
becaus~ some god took a perverse delight&#13;
In depriving you of reciprocal affections&#13;
and then, made guilty your dream of escape&#13;
the leaves hurl themselves in black passion&#13;
down the gutters&#13;
like small severed hands&#13;
from a beast&#13;
whose many desires have crushed him&#13;
to death, so that their pursuit continues&#13;
Without appointment&#13;
amy 1973&#13;
I&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, June 19, 1974&#13;
IRA and SLA&#13;
on PSGA&#13;
agenda&#13;
In the meeting of the PARKSIDE Student Government&#13;
Association on June 2, 1974 the Student Senate&#13;
voted to "express so Iida rity with the I RA in its quest for&#13;
independence."&#13;
In the battle against the parking lots the Student&#13;
Senate has condemned the actions of the administration&#13;
of Parkside for the lack of student representation in the&#13;
planning of construction on this campus. The brunt of&#13;
PSGA argument has been that student rights have been&#13;
usurped and denied. While not opposed to parking lots&#13;
as such the Student Senate feels that the procedures&#13;
used by the administration have ignored the duly&#13;
elected representatives of the student body.&#13;
Since the election of the present student government&#13;
the course of PSGA has been one of seeking recognition&#13;
as a force for student rights on the basis of a&#13;
representative form of student expression. ·RANGER&#13;
feels that the goals of PSGA--building a viable student&#13;
government·· demanding that student rights on campus&#13;
not be ignored--student control of student funds--are&#13;
worthwhile goals and should command the respect and&#13;
the support of the student body.&#13;
• I· seek:mg to1 reach the!ie,..goall:i PSGA has generally&#13;
followed a sensible and mature course of action.&#13;
However "PSGA CONDEMNS THE L.A. POLICE&#13;
SHOOTOUT WITH THE ALLEGED SLA MEMBERS"&#13;
is an action on the part of PSGA which, RANGER'S&#13;
opinion, does nothing to advance the goals of Student&#13;
Govt. and can only label the Student Senate as immature.&#13;
&#13;
In order for PSGA to form an effective program of&#13;
leadership on campus they must first gain the respect of&#13;
students, faculty, administration and the general public.&#13;
This respect is not gained through attention grabbing&#13;
"motions" that leaves PSGA open to a multitude of&#13;
charges ranging from ignorance to irresponsibility.&#13;
Ranger does not, at this time, endorse any condemnation&#13;
of the action of Student Senate in this matter,&#13;
rather we suggest that PSGA be more cautious in its&#13;
attempts to gain public recognition.&#13;
Note: At the June 9 meeting of the Student Senate a&#13;
motion passed deleting the last three actions taken at&#13;
the June 2 meeting which include the motions referred&#13;
to in the above editorial.&#13;
~ANGER&#13;
Public&#13;
notice&#13;
All meetings of all state and local governing bodies,&#13;
boards, commissions, committees and agencies, in.&#13;
eluding municipal and quasi-municipal corporations&#13;
unless otherwise expressly provi(ted by law, shall ~&#13;
publicly held and open to all citizens at all times.&#13;
Recent actions on the part of the State Legislature in&#13;
the area of the public's right to know has resulted in&#13;
laws that we feel relate directly to activities- on the&#13;
Parkside campus.&#13;
Just as the RANGER has the obligation of informing&#13;
the students on activities that affect them, the administration,&#13;
faculty and staff have the obligation of&#13;
making public those committee discussions that affect&#13;
the campus.&#13;
In the past RANGER has been ignored by a few&#13;
committees as a legitimate form of public notice to the&#13;
campus on forthcoming meetings and discussions of&#13;
"publicly open" committees.&#13;
The past practice of notifying the public with a mimeo&#13;
memo on the meeting room door no longer suffices to&#13;
fulfill the requirements of state law.&#13;
The RANGER has and will continue to seek out Information&#13;
on campus committee activities. But, as&#13;
expressed in the general intent of recent state laws,&#13;
those committees now have the responsibility to seek&#13;
out means of informing the campus of meeting times&#13;
and places. We feel that the RANGER is the legitimate&#13;
form of public notice on this campus. To those committees&#13;
that have, through either ignorance of the&#13;
RANGER'S availability or through conscious&#13;
secretiveness avoided public exposure, we extend to&#13;
them an invitation to fulfill their public responsibilities&#13;
and the requirements of state law.&#13;
between the gateguards of your impatience he lies,&#13;
beauty on the bed&#13;
fever in the beast&#13;
smoothed and supple,&#13;
with drowsy gestures forming dance cycles ...&#13;
in the darkening atmosphere&#13;
you reach out&#13;
a grab for affect&#13;
his body melts and mingles with covers&#13;
and sheets that coil and tighten on his&#13;
thighs&#13;
you lean,&#13;
he quivers from sleep and shudders&#13;
in heat&#13;
among the breakfast party's remnants he lies,&#13;
bread and water in your bowl&#13;
heaven rising&#13;
Editor in Chief Kenneth Pestka&#13;
Humanities Editor amy cundari&#13;
Sport Editor Richard Ahlgrimrn&#13;
brutally abandoned&#13;
floating&#13;
Writer Jane Schliesman,&#13;
Rebecca Ecklund Michael Olszyk&#13;
dvertising Director John Sacket&#13;
Bu ineli Manager Steve Johnson&#13;
in the torents of personal whim&#13;
you are lonely&#13;
~caus~ ~me god took a perverse delight m deprivmg you of reciprocal affections&#13;
and then, made guilty your dream of escape&#13;
the leaves hurl themselves in black passion down the gutters&#13;
like small severed hands&#13;
from a beast&#13;
whose many desires have crushed him&#13;
to. death, so that their pursuit continues without appointment&#13;
amY 1973 _ &#13;
happenings at&#13;
Place&#13;
E&#13;
ditor'SNote: A regular column of opinion and&#13;
t&#13;
. commentaryon&#13;
cam~us even s, ,,:,ntten by past RANGER&#13;
editorJane Schllesman begins, this week, with the&#13;
printingof the text of a speech she delivered at Commencementlast&#13;
month. She was asked to speak on&#13;
bellalf of the student body.&#13;
IWoWdliketo congratulate all of the individuals here this afternoon&#13;
.IV&gt; are graduating··lt IS indeed a~ honor to have worked hard and&#13;
beefi dedicatedenough to now achieve a diploma in your respective&#13;
r&lt;id ofstudy. I would further like to urge all of you to pursue your&#13;
careers andlives 10 an honest, moral, fair and compassionate manner&#13;
{II' theworld is full enough of liars, deceivers and self-serving people&#13;
and institutions. .&#13;
As alumniyouwill be asked by the administration of this University&#13;
~l'Ollfsupportby supplymg additional funds, be it in the way of gifts&#13;
I'by attendance at sports events! theater productions, concerts and&#13;
activitiesin our future campus Union. But what will you request of the&#13;
,,,,ersity'&#13;
forth~ ofyou who have asked pertinent questions during the time&#13;
wu baveattended Parkside, such as "why are some good teachers&#13;
beuc fired?" or, "What is your University's Affirmative Action&#13;
Program?", or, "Why don't students control student money?" or,&#13;
HIM' can access to state budget records, the expenditure of tax&#13;
iI&gt;IJarS in the University, be denied to the public?", or, "Why has the&#13;
.,vironmentalreport on the proposed parking lots caused as much&#13;
(U)C:tm over an environment of mistrust and manipulation on campIlI,asaboutthe&#13;
ecological impact of the lots themselves?" For those&#13;
I.. 01 youwhohave asked such questions, the University is as glad to&#13;
be graduatingyou as you are happy to be accepting that piece of&#13;
piper. This University, like many institutions, thrives on perpetuating&#13;
as little genuinestudent involvement as possible. It prefers you ask no&#13;
sticky questions while you are enrolled and must depend on you&#13;
"'Ping yourmouth shut and wallet open after you graduate.&#13;
The studentside of the University, however, asks support from you&#13;
• tupayers and alumni, because we who are still enrolled at&#13;
ParUide refuse to be used by an expedient administration and the UW&#13;
t:arplX'ltion anymore. They see no education in controversy, and while&#13;
lure hereto learn and are grateful for the opportunity, that does not&#13;
mean that we waive all rights as citizens or should not endeavor to&#13;
IIIdl ourselves also.&#13;
Yet a conglomeration of faculty and administrators has, since the&#13;
bepnning, dented student rights and usurped their powers, and those&#13;
Ibo graduate without knowing the basics of dernoc4acy in their&#13;
ICboola enter a world where they must exercise rights and respontitilities&#13;
with no previous experience in their "education" to draw on.&#13;
OareWcationideally should prepare us not only for jobs, which Ihope&#13;
III 01 youare finding, but for life in a time of future shock. It should&#13;
.. to broaden us, to open our minds to new ideas on which to base&#13;
IOUIXI opinions. The way to make people more knowledgeable and&#13;
_minded is to allow them to be.&#13;
Y~ University, like yourselves, is young, growing, and should be&#13;
ftJlIonng newdirections. But Parkside already appears frozen in the&#13;
put, paralyzed, unable to be the truly innovative, modern campus&#13;
It&gt;ch seemed its destiny when you and 1 first entered the doors of&#13;
G""l&lt;IuistHall. The reasons for this are many-budget limitations,&#13;
tw system traditions and administrators who were born of these&#13;
traditions or even gave birth to them, and fear-fear of failure or&#13;
"Ilnsal or fear of the unknown. But much of the responsibility lies&#13;
~ us also, for not demanding that things be different. The vast&#13;
tnajOMtyof us are, in Ralph Nader's words, "languishing in colossal&#13;
1rIstes or time, developing only a fraction of our potential, and&#13;
oefully underpreparing ourselves for the world we are entering. '.' .&#13;
That worldis one in which the practice of democratic creeds IS mCOOslStentwith&#13;
the theories. To again quote Nader. "power and&#13;
:I~ r~main concentrated, decisions continue to be made by ~e&#13;
.vicums have little representation in thousands of forums which :!tt their rights, livlihoods and futures. Societies like ours, which&#13;
"'e produced much that is good, are developing new dangers,&#13;
~s. and deprivations."&#13;
fhatIS needed from you and your counterparts across the country-&#13;
.., Yfe11 as from those of us you leave behind, is a major commitment to&#13;
~e th~~ommanding institutions in our society--and this inc!udes Ute&#13;
erslhes-respond to needs which they have repudiated or&#13;
Il&lt;glected.&#13;
piThe problems of today and the risks of tomorrow are serious ..Bul&#13;
1o.... don'lIetanyone be able to say that we could not give up so little&#13;
achieve so much. .&#13;
Wednescs.y, June If,1'74 THE PARKSIDE RANGER J&#13;
GAA)sh0f&gt;j&gt;&lt;L&#13;
whqt do IO~ IN&#13;
of dejf&gt;a"at;~?&#13;
~~.7&#13;
Death&#13;
and&#13;
dying&#13;
A course examining "Death&#13;
and Dying" is among urnmer&#13;
humanities offerIng at the&#13;
niver sity of wi ccnsmParkside.&#13;
The three-credit&#13;
course from 5 to 7 p.m on&#13;
Tuesda\'s and Thur. day.&#13;
begmmng June 18 will be taught&#13;
by Prof wayne John""" of the&#13;
phIlosophy faculty&#13;
Among tOPiCS to be examined&#13;
in the course are "hether a&#13;
patient With a terminal dl~.&#13;
should be told of hIS condltioo.&#13;
traditional myths about the&#13;
origins and causes of death.&#13;
psychological stage of a pauent&#13;
with a terminal disease, the&#13;
nature of grief and mournmg&#13;
funeral rites and pracl1ce •&#13;
traditional western and far&#13;
('astern ,·iews of death. que tion&#13;
of suicide and euthanas1a. a&#13;
chlld's under:-;tandmg of death&#13;
and the meanang of life in the&#13;
light of death&#13;
-&#13;
S&#13;
PORTS&#13;
AR .&#13;
CENTER&#13;
1)INO:S 1816 16 Street&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
PHONE 634-1991&#13;
Phone 652-1i667&#13;
kE:; 2728·52ndStreet&#13;
. OSHA. WISCONSIN53140&#13;
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SOFT ORI KS&#13;
..-.,HES&#13;
!t\0JIJh MtlwiJ). ~f-ou,&#13;
~ 1{~&#13;
Eol4-59U,9; 31'2..-c;~St. _&#13;
6S9-3~S'L (;32-$19'" __&#13;
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--.---- --_Iii&gt;.&#13;
WIDEST SELECTION OF BOOKS I TOWN&#13;
PAPER BACKS FOR THE DISCRIMINATING READER&#13;
PROMPT SPECIAL ORDER SERVICE&#13;
BROWSERS WELCOME&#13;
campus&#13;
----&#13;
happenings at&#13;
;&#13;
Place&#13;
Editor's Note: A regular column of opinion and comentarY&#13;
on cam~us events, ~ritten by past RANGER&#13;
editor Jane Schltesman begins, this week, with the&#13;
printing of the text of a speech she delivered at Comencement&#13;
last month. She was asked to speak on&#13;
t,ehalf of the student body.&#13;
1 ould like to congratulate all of the individuals here this afternoon&#13;
are graduating--it is indeed an honor to have worked hard and&#13;
dedicated enough to now achieve a diploma in your respective&#13;
or stud~. I ~ould further like to u:ge all of you to pursue your&#13;
and hves man honest, moral, fair and compassionate manner&#13;
the world is full enough of liars, deceivers and self-serving peopl~&#13;
mstitutions .&#13;
. '\Salumni you will be as~ed by ~~e administration of this University&#13;
frt your support by supplying additional funds, be it in the way of gifts,&#13;
by attendance at sports events! theater productions, concerts and&#13;
actii·ities in our future campus Umon. But what will you request of the&#13;
ersity?&#13;
For those of you who have asked pertinent questions during the time&#13;
have attended Parkside, such as "why are some good teachers&#13;
fired?" or, "What is your University's Affirmative Action&#13;
Program?", or, "Why don't students control student money? " or,&#13;
IJY; can access to state budget records, the expenditure of tax&#13;
liars in the University, be denied to the public?", or, "Why has the&#13;
V1ronmental report on the proposed parking lots caused as much&#13;
coocem over an environment of mistrust and manipulation on cam-&#13;
.as about the ecological impact of the lots themselves? " For those&#13;
of you who have asked such questions, the University is as glad to&#13;
graduating you as you are happy to be accepting that piece of&#13;
per This University, like many institutions, thrives on perpetuating&#13;
little genuine student involvement as possible. It prefers you ask no&#13;
cty questions while you are enrolled and must depend on you&#13;
etpmg your mouth shut and wallet open after you graduate.&#13;
The student side of the University, however, asks support from you&#13;
taxpayers and alumni, because we who are still enrolled at&#13;
Parkside refuse to be used by an expedient administration and the UW&#13;
corporation anymore. They see no education in controversy, and while&#13;
eare here to learn and are grateful for the opportunity, that does not&#13;
n that we waive all rights as citizens or should not endeavor to&#13;
nth ourselves also.&#13;
Yet a conglomeration of faculty and administrators has, since the&#13;
ning, denied student rights and usurped their powers, and those&#13;
graduate without knowing the basics of democ4acy in their&#13;
ls enter a world where they must exercise rights and responiltes&#13;
with no previous experience in their "education" to draw on.&#13;
education ideally should prepare us not only for jobs, which I hope&#13;
of you are finding, but for life in a time of future shock. It should&#13;
to broaden us, to open our minds to new ideas on which to base&#13;
opinions. The way to make people more knowledgeable and&#13;
minded is to allow them to be.&#13;
You~ University, like yourselves, is young, growing, and sh~ld be&#13;
~nng new directions. But Parkside already appears frozen m the&#13;
t, paralyzed, unable to be the truly innovative, modern campus&#13;
h ~med its destiny when you and I first entered the doors of&#13;
C nquist Hall. The reasons for this are many-budget limitations,&#13;
Y tern traditions and administrators who were born of the e&#13;
tion or even gave birth to them, and fear--fear of failure or&#13;
isaJ or fear of the unknown. But much of the responsibility lies&#13;
1h US also, for not demanding that things be different. The vast&#13;
JOnty of us are, in Ralph Nader's words, "languishing in _colossal&#13;
of time, developing only a fraction of our poten~al, .. and&#13;
ully underpreparing ourselves for the world we are_ entermg.. .&#13;
That world is one in which the practice of democratic creeds 1s m1&#13;
tent with the theories. To again quote Nader, "Power and&#13;
th remain concentrated decisions continue to be made by the&#13;
• victim have little repr~sentation in thousands of forums wh!ch&#13;
1 l their rights, livlihoods and futures. Societies like ours, which&#13;
\e produced much that is good, are developing new danger •&#13;
. and deprivations."&#13;
hat i needed from you and your counterparts across the_country.&#13;
ll as from those of us you leave behind, is a major C?~mitment to&#13;
~ lhe ~ommanding institutions in our society-and this mc)udes the&#13;
lhes--respond to needs which they have repudiated or cted.&#13;
Tb problems of today and the risks of tomorrow are serious. _But&#13;
lo don't let anyone be ab)e to say that we could not give up so httle&#13;
aeh1eve so much.&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
c::TER&#13;
Phone 652-6667&#13;
Kti. :728 -52nd Street&#13;
HA, WISCONSI 53140&#13;
Part and Service for All&#13;
Imported Car&#13;
1)1NO:S 1816 16 Street&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
PHONE 634-1991 PICK UP OR&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS&#13;
OELIV-EREO TO YOUR HOME&#13;
Death&#13;
and&#13;
dying&#13;
FINE FOODS&#13;
&amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
edn day, Jun 19, 974 THE p R ID&#13;
-----&#13;
614-59U..5r.&#13;
658-365'2-&#13;
A G R 3 &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday. June 19. 1974&#13;
"The pi Cl"S)oo catch a bus....&#13;
"II h) me on THIS pag.!"&#13;
Parksld&#13;
and .&#13;
sum......&#13;
and the waiting, always the waiting."&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. America&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, June 19, 1974&#13;
Parkside&#13;
sumrne,&#13;
and ..... .&#13;
catch a&#13;
and the waiting, always the waiting."&#13;
•·\\h~ m Ill ge!"&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. America &#13;
"Oh.take Sociological Theory! The prof is Gorgeous!"&#13;
"Why are they all leaving, my Ily isn't open!"&#13;
Wednesday, June It.1'74 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
R~f:D m e quick,,' il: to P jdt!&#13;
o\n) ~mbba«loli\ift~w.no. f'Id&#13;
persons' p,,",l~ IUlUl,",tIolllll&#13;
• EdJIOt'&#13;
The faculty hears the tenure policy announced to them.&#13;
Wednesday, June 19, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RA GER 5&#13;
R en m e&#13;
"Oh, take Sociological Theory! The prof is Gorgeous!"&#13;
"Why are they all leaving, my fly isn't open!"&#13;
The £acuity hears the tenure policy announced to&#13;
them. &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER WednesdAy. June 19. 1974&#13;
__________ sports_-' RANGER&#13;
Prep prospects&#13;
enroll at p.s.&#13;
Par de elbalJ lortunes&#13;
ha v enharl&lt;ed with the&#13;
antlOUDC'fment from COIc:h eve&#13;
..",... lIlal x ou~&#13;
IftP PlUpec14,,"l be enrolling&#13;
next lall&#13;
~ moot prom 01 them&#13;
... 10 tne K.iJC 01&#13;
Cordon Thill Oneago A ~II&#13;
pard. tv a'eraged I'" poults&#13;
am • whist m', "'VP&#13;
.. 0 Il.(;atllol,( lA'ague&#13;
chol H rece'~ all~r nd&#13;
I m uon hon&lt;ln on t&#13;
n PIl~r aU·.t.ar ream in&#13;
add.\&gt;On to named MVP In&#13;
th B n dl lin H,gh ehool&#13;
pltal ty T.,..,..meJllln RJd:Imond.&#13;
\' , over the holidays&#13;
e en lrom Lou w,ll&#13;
be wnh Ilke McKlllney&#13;
Iral High nd Carell Ross&#13;
of Va h n briO Irnprt I,,'e&#13;
c:ndeIlu I w.th them.&#13;
, )'. at 6-5, .n~rII~ 18&#13;
nd 12 re a lame.&#13;
n honorabl meJlUon aUt&#13;
~ and .. a named to&#13;
the 't Louis cIty aU~ team&#13;
pi Ihr rea hooor UN&#13;
R , 6-2 guard con IdeI"ed&#13;
by 'tep/1 an exceUeJlt&#13;
delens"e pla) er&#13;
noth r Chicago product,&#13;
J m Williams 0/ o...bar HIgh.&#13;
though only 5-10, IS a llIle guard&#13;
prospect because 01 hIS quickness&#13;
and peed&#13;
T'O'O local players ..iU also be&#13;
llr'OW'td to lend a ~and. Bob&#13;
Hayes a 6-2 guard II'Ol .. Park&#13;
High and Frank Watkins 01&#13;
Bradford at ... and 220 Ibs.&#13;
hould upply lormidable&#13;
,"",gth In the mIddle,&#13;
WIth the addlbon 01 these six&#13;
players plus the entire team bacl&lt;&#13;
lrom last yeer .... e should expect&#13;
a \ ry eJljoyabie season this&#13;
).....&#13;
Golfers&#13;
named&#13;
T'O'O Parl"ude golfers were&#13;
named recently, 10 the AlA&#13;
DistnCt-I4 All-Tournament team.&#13;
Tom Bothe made the second&#13;
team. while Dan Leissner&#13;
recei ....ed hooora~e mention for&#13;
th..,. oulStandmg play during the&#13;
tourney at Green Lake,&#13;
t:W-PARKSIDE PHYSICAL EDUCATION BUILDING SCHEDULE SUMMER SElIlllo"~_&#13;
. h fi t two (2) weeks 01 the 1974 summer session, June 17-June30 1974&#13;
This schedule Includes t e irs ' .&#13;
Building opens for summer session&#13;
Gyms open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
8:30 a.m.-9:.,.,&#13;
8:30 a.m.-9:30 P....&#13;
lIa.m.-2 p.m.8IId&#13;
6 p.m.-9 p.m,&#13;
8:30 a.m.-9:30 P....&#13;
,\\\\\\ \\\\\'.&#13;
,\~ $t 1~&#13;
•~\\\,\,~~&#13;
Monday, June 17&#13;
through&#13;
Thursday June 20&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Friday June 21&#13;
Gyms open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
8:30 a.m.-4 p.m.&#13;
8:30 a.m.-4 p.1I\.&#13;
11 a.m.-I p.m&#13;
Saturday June 22&#13;
Baseball FieJd-Pro-try-outs&#13;
Gyms open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
Tennis courts (outside) Tennis Camp&#13;
Three (3) courts used&#13;
all day&#13;
8:30 a.m.-4 PJIl&#13;
8:30 a.m.-4 pJll.&#13;
11 a.m.-2 p.m.&#13;
8:30 a.m.-U:.&#13;
1 p.m.-4 p.m.&#13;
Track Meet-Lakeshore Olympians Open&#13;
Building closed on Sundays during swnmer&#13;
alternoon 0UldIlJa&#13;
Sunday June 23&#13;
Monday June 24&#13;
through&#13;
Thursday June 27&#13;
Gyms open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
8:30 a.m.-9:.&#13;
8:30 a.m.-9:.&#13;
11 a.m.-2 pm&#13;
6 p.m. - 9 pJll.&#13;
Frida)' JW1e 28 Gyms open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
8:30 a.m." pJll.&#13;
8:30 a.m ... PII;&#13;
11 a.m.-! p.m&#13;
Saturday June 29&#13;
Tennis courts-Tennis camp (3 cts.)&#13;
Gyms open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
LET US SHARE OUR SUMMER WITH YOU&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, June 19, 1974&#13;
RANGER&#13;
____________ Sports _ _,_&#13;
Pr 1&#13;
ep prospects&#13;
enroll at p.s.&#13;
Golfers&#13;
named&#13;
g Jrers were&#13;
lW-P RKSIDE&#13;
PHYSICAL EDUCATION BUILDING SCHEDULE SUMMER Esslo&#13;
,. . h r· t two (2) weeks of the 1974 summer session, June 17-June 30 1974 This schedule mcludes t e irs ' ·&#13;
• londa:), June 17&#13;
through&#13;
"!bur da; June 20&#13;
Friday June 21&#13;
turda) June 22&#13;
nday June 23&#13;
:'\1onday June 24&#13;
through&#13;
Thur da June 27&#13;
Frida June 28&#13;
turda June 29&#13;
Building opens for summer session&#13;
Gyms open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Gyms open&#13;
Handbal1 courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
Baseball Field-Pro-try-outs&#13;
Gyms open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
Tennis courts (outside) Tennis Camp&#13;
Three (3) courts used&#13;
Track Meet-Lakeshore Olympians Open&#13;
Building closed on Sundays during summer&#13;
Gyms open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
Gyms open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
Tennis courts-Tennis camp (3 cts.)&#13;
Gyms open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
8:30 a.m.-9:30 P-111&#13;
8:30 a.m.-9:30 PIii&#13;
lla.m.-2 p.m. a~&#13;
6 p.m.-9 p.m.&#13;
8:30 a.m.-9:30 P-111&#13;
8:30 a.m.-4 p.m.&#13;
8:30 a.m.-4 P-11\.&#13;
11 a.m.-1 p.m.&#13;
all day&#13;
8:30 a.m.-4 p.m,&#13;
8:30 a.m.-4 P.m.&#13;
11 a.m.-2 p.m.&#13;
8:30 a.m.-11:30 ..._&#13;
1 p.m.-4 p.m.&#13;
afternoon outdoors&#13;
8:30 a.m.-9:30 PJD.&#13;
8:30 a.m.-9:30 PJD.&#13;
11 a.m.-2 p.m. and&#13;
6 p.m. · 9 p.m.&#13;
8:30 a.m.-4 p.m.&#13;
8:30 a.m.-4 p.m&#13;
11 a.m.-1 p.m.&#13;
8:30 a.m.-11:30 am.Ill&#13;
I p.m.-4 p.m.&#13;
8:30 a.m.-4 p.m.&#13;
8:30 a.m.-4 p.m.&#13;
11 a.m.-2 p.m.&#13;
LET US SHARE OUR SUMMER WITH YOU&#13;
~~&#13;
• RECORD SALE&#13;
HELD OVER ·&#13;
• PRINT SALE HELD .OVER </text>
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              <text>Regents act on guidelines</text>
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              <text>Regents act on Guidelines&#13;
by Paul Anderson&#13;
of Ranger staff .&#13;
Student leaders expressed&#13;
concern Friday Oct. 4 as the UW&#13;
Board of Regents adopted a set ofInterim&#13;
Guidelines on merger&#13;
implementation drafted by&#13;
Central Administration instead of&#13;
a similar proposal submitted by&#13;
student leaders through the&#13;
United Council of Student&#13;
Governments.&#13;
The UW Merger Statute&#13;
provides as follows: "The&#13;
students of each institution or&#13;
campus subject to the responsibilities&#13;
and powers of the board,&#13;
the president, the chancellor, and&#13;
the faculty shall be active parr&#13;
ticipants in the immediate&#13;
governance of the policy&#13;
development for such institutions.&#13;
As such, students shall&#13;
have primary responsibility for&#13;
the formulation and review of&#13;
policies concerning student life,&#13;
services, and interests. Students&#13;
inconsultation with the chancellor&#13;
and subject to the final&#13;
confirmation of the board shall&#13;
have the responsibility for the&#13;
disposition of those student fees&#13;
which constitute substantial&#13;
support for campus student&#13;
activities. The students of each&#13;
institution or campus shall have&#13;
the right to organize themselves&#13;
in a manner they determine and&#13;
to select their respresentatives to&#13;
participate in institutional&#13;
governance."&#13;
The most common concern and&#13;
subject of debate on the part of&#13;
students stemmed from a phrase&#13;
in the merger law which gives&#13;
students "primary responsibility&#13;
by Betsy Neu&#13;
The Campus Concerns Committee&#13;
met Tuesday, Oct. 8, to&#13;
hear the Election Committee give&#13;
a report on the alleged election&#13;
irregularities.&#13;
Three student complaints&#13;
received by the CCC in formal&#13;
letters had been referred last&#13;
week to the Election Committee,&#13;
chaired by Debra Friedell.&#13;
Barb Burke, president of the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board,&#13;
charged that a pro-constitution&#13;
flyer she had found resting faceup&#13;
on the counter in one of the&#13;
voting booths constituted illegal&#13;
canvassing.&#13;
Friedell said that the Election&#13;
Committee is not convinced that&#13;
the flyer was placed in the booth&#13;
in an attempt to influence voters,&#13;
since there, is a strong possibility&#13;
that the flyer was unintentionally&#13;
left in the booth.&#13;
Friedell stated that "Burke&#13;
neither removed the flyer nor did&#13;
she inform the poll workers."&#13;
When confronted with this, Burke&#13;
said she had left the flyer as it&#13;
was, hoping it would prompt&#13;
other voters to write similar&#13;
complaints.&#13;
Although the Election Committee&#13;
feels that Burke's charge&#13;
was an important one, they do not&#13;
consider that it warrants rerunning&#13;
the referendum as Burke&#13;
suggested.&#13;
Instead, Friedell said that a&#13;
recommendation will be made&#13;
that in future elections, each&#13;
voter be requested to leave all&#13;
printed material pertaining to the&#13;
election outside the booths.&#13;
The second written complaint&#13;
investigated by the Election&#13;
Committee, came from Barb&#13;
Lienau.&#13;
She charged that a poll worker&#13;
had commented negatively on&#13;
her husband's stand against the&#13;
for the formulation and review of&#13;
policies concerning student life,&#13;
services and interests."&#13;
Specifically, student leaders&#13;
and chancellors disagreed on the&#13;
issue of determining the&#13;
allocation of student fees and on&#13;
who would designate&#13;
representatives to various&#13;
university committees.&#13;
UW Senior Vice President&#13;
Donald K. Smith, in an introductory&#13;
statement explaining&#13;
the Interim Guidelines as&#13;
proposed by Central Administration,&#13;
stated that the&#13;
Board felt an immediate need to&#13;
implement a set of guidelines&#13;
explaining section 36.09 (5), to&#13;
end the "somewhat chaotic state&#13;
which now exists on some&#13;
campuses" due to the lack of&#13;
proper statute guidelines and&#13;
limitations.&#13;
He stressed that the guidelines&#13;
proposed by United Council had&#13;
been taken as a reflection of&#13;
University policy on some&#13;
campuses but should not have&#13;
been taken as such.&#13;
Smith also pointed toward&#13;
responses to the UC guidelines by&#13;
both student groups and chancellors&#13;
at various universities in&#13;
the system as the reason for&#13;
Central Administration's&#13;
proposed guidelines.&#13;
Prior to the Regents' vote on&#13;
the Interim proposal, several&#13;
spokesmen were given an opportunity&#13;
to air their views on the&#13;
interim issue before the Board.&#13;
Included among those who&#13;
represented various student&#13;
groups, faculty committees and&#13;
chancellors, was James&#13;
Hamilton, United Council&#13;
PSGA constitution.&#13;
Friedell termed this "a serious&#13;
complaint" and spoke with&#13;
Lienau and the poll worker involved.&#13;
&#13;
Although both Lienau and&#13;
Friedell agree that the complaint&#13;
is not serious enough to call for a&#13;
re-running of the referendum,&#13;
Friedell said that a recommendation&#13;
would be made for&#13;
future poll workers to be instructed&#13;
not to make any election-oriented&#13;
comments when&#13;
working at the voting booths.&#13;
The third charge was submitted&#13;
to the CCC by Steve&#13;
Gouris, who claimed that he had&#13;
been allowed to vote twice.&#13;
Friedell said that this was the&#13;
most serious charge of all; and&#13;
stated in advance of Tuesday's&#13;
meeting that it was still being&#13;
investigated.&#13;
The Electiqn Committee is not&#13;
thoroughly convinced of the&#13;
validity of Gouris' charge, and&#13;
has no plans at this time to re-run&#13;
the referendum.&#13;
Other matters acted upon by&#13;
the CCC in its previous Oct. 1&#13;
meeting included the appointment&#13;
of four members as a&#13;
committee to consider budget&#13;
requests of student&#13;
organizations.&#13;
Serving on the committee are&#13;
Barb Burke, of the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board; Dennis&#13;
Milutinovich, of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association,&#13;
Inc.; Jewel Echelbarger,&#13;
associate dean of students; and&#13;
Robert Grueninger. assistant&#13;
professor of physical education.&#13;
The student organizations&#13;
which have submitted budget&#13;
requests to the CCC are: PSGA.&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon, thq^Students&#13;
for Better Government, and&#13;
AWOL (Action Within Our&#13;
Lifetimes).&#13;
president.&#13;
In a half-hour testimony before&#13;
the Board, Hamilton expressed&#13;
several concerns with Central&#13;
Administration's handling of the&#13;
United Council's proposals.&#13;
Following a brief historic sketch&#13;
leading up to the United Council's&#13;
proposed guidelines, Hamilton&#13;
said:&#13;
"I have brought this process to&#13;
your attention for several important&#13;
reasons. First, so that&#13;
you understand that our&#13;
document, which you've, had for&#13;
two months, was the result of a&#13;
laborious and compromising&#13;
drafting procedure, which saw&#13;
the involvement of not only&#13;
student leaders but members of&#13;
the ad hoc drafting committee,&#13;
the MISC, students, and Central&#13;
(College Press Service) - As the&#13;
long awaited criminal trial of&#13;
several Ohio National Guardsmen&#13;
indicted for the 1970&#13;
shootings at Kent State&#13;
University approaches, their&#13;
commanding officer has confirmed&#13;
earlier reports that one of&#13;
the indicted men actually gave an&#13;
order to fire. Until now, National&#13;
Guard officials have consistently&#13;
maintained that no order to fire&#13;
had been given.&#13;
Lt. Col. Charles Fassinger&#13;
made the disclosure in a sworn&#13;
deposition filed recently in a civil&#13;
case in which he and more than 50&#13;
other persons are being sued for&#13;
their roles in the Kent incident&#13;
which left four students dead and&#13;
nine wounded. Fassinger, who&#13;
was the highest uniformed officer&#13;
on the scene of the shootings,&#13;
testified that an order to fire had&#13;
been given by Matthew J. McManus.&#13;
&#13;
It was not clear from&#13;
Fassinger's deposition whether&#13;
McManus gave the order before&#13;
or after the shooting began or&#13;
whether McManus told the troops&#13;
to fire at or over the students.&#13;
A Justice Department summary&#13;
of an 8000-page FBI report&#13;
on the shootings corroborated&#13;
Fassinger's story, but said, "Sgt.&#13;
McManus stated that after the&#13;
firing began, he gave an order to&#13;
'fire over their heads.' " The&#13;
Justice Department summary&#13;
states, "There was no initial&#13;
order to fire."&#13;
A source close to the case,&#13;
however, emphasized that the&#13;
summary was only of information&#13;
uncovered in the&#13;
months immediately following&#13;
the shooting and is by no means&#13;
the final word on the matter. It is&#13;
expected that the question of an&#13;
order to fire will be more closely&#13;
pursued as additional witnesses&#13;
are interviewed and during&#13;
subsequent court proceedings.&#13;
McManus is one of eight former&#13;
guardsmen indicted by the&#13;
federal grand jury which investigated&#13;
the shootings last&#13;
Administration as well.&#13;
"Second, I hope you will agree&#13;
that we have made a scrupulous&#13;
effort to ensure that the content&#13;
of our paper conformed with the&#13;
intentions of the framers of the&#13;
law.&#13;
"And third, so that we can&#13;
come to some understanding as&#13;
to why the concerns Dr. Smith&#13;
raised in the interim guidelines&#13;
were not brought up while our&#13;
document was being drafted,&#13;
especially since this process&#13;
involved Central Administration&#13;
input."&#13;
A series of objections were&#13;
raised after Hamilton's&#13;
testimony echoing objections&#13;
aired by chancellors and administrators&#13;
in relation to the&#13;
United Council proposed&#13;
winter (after then-Attorney&#13;
General Elliot Richardson&#13;
overruled the decisions of his&#13;
predecessors John Mitchell and&#13;
Richard Kleindienst forbidding&#13;
such a grand jury investigation).&#13;
McManus himself has taken the&#13;
Fifth Amendment in response to&#13;
questions about the shooting.&#13;
The criminal trial of McManus&#13;
and the seven other indicted&#13;
guardsmen is scheduled to open&#13;
in Cleveland in mid-October. The&#13;
grand jury that indicted them has&#13;
not been discharged, and it is&#13;
possible, although unlikely, that&#13;
there could be more indictments&#13;
as more information about the&#13;
shootings emerges.&#13;
Meanwhile, independently of&#13;
the criminal cases, the civil cases&#13;
are also proceeding. The civil&#13;
cases are brought under the&#13;
federal civil rights laws, which&#13;
provide money damages for&#13;
persons deprived fo their constitutional&#13;
rights under color of&#13;
law. All nine of the injured&#13;
students, plus the parents of all&#13;
four of the students killed at&#13;
Kent, have such cases pending.&#13;
The cases have been consolidated&#13;
and will be tried in federal court&#13;
in Cleveland in April 1975.&#13;
The lengthy process of pre-trial&#13;
discovery is now going on, and it&#13;
was in the course of. this&#13;
discovery process that Fassinger&#13;
disclosed his knowledge about&#13;
McManus' order.&#13;
The discovery process had&#13;
been interrupted in 1970 when a&#13;
federal judge dismissed the civil&#13;
cases. In April of this year,&#13;
however, that dismissal was&#13;
overturned by the US Supreme&#13;
Court.&#13;
The most significant feature of&#13;
the civil cases is that they name&#13;
as defendants not only the&#13;
enlisted personnel who fired their&#13;
weapons into the students on May&#13;
4, but also the National Guard&#13;
commanders and officials, who&#13;
were responsible for placing the&#13;
troops in the situation with loaded&#13;
weapons and under orders to&#13;
disperse peaceful assemblies.&#13;
guidelines.&#13;
Nearly all the chancellors&#13;
referred directly or indirectly to&#13;
the phrase in 36.09 ( 5) "...-subject&#13;
to the responsibilities and powers&#13;
of the board, the president, the&#13;
chancellor and the faculty, shall&#13;
be active participants..." Most&#13;
expressed the view that UC's&#13;
guidelines would expand the&#13;
students' role far beyond the&#13;
legislative intent.&#13;
. Related to the "cosmic" scope&#13;
of students' role in institutional&#13;
governance was the concern that&#13;
UC's guidelines provide student&#13;
participation in nearly every&#13;
aspect of academic and nonacademic&#13;
decision-making. The&#13;
sentence that includes the&#13;
reference to primary responcontinued&#13;
on page 2&#13;
re&#13;
One of the civil defendants is&#13;
Sylvester Del Corso, a war hero&#13;
and former prison warden who&#13;
became Ohio's Adjutant General&#13;
in 1968. It was Del Corso who&#13;
implemented the extraordinary&#13;
policy of sending Ohio guardsmen&#13;
into routine civil disturbance&#13;
duty with live ammunition&#13;
loaded in their weapons - contrary&#13;
to regular Army practice -&#13;
and under permissive rules&#13;
regarding the use of fire-power.&#13;
Prior to the 1970 shootings, Del&#13;
Corso had urged Ohio guardsmen&#13;
to write letters in support of the&#13;
war, and had publicly stated his&#13;
belief that Communist conspirators&#13;
were behind the&#13;
campus protest movement.&#13;
Another of the civil defendants&#13;
is James A. Rhodes, who was&#13;
Governor of Ohio in 1970, and who&#13;
had appointed Del Corso. Late in&#13;
1969 and in 1970, Rhodes had&#13;
made public vows to end&#13;
disruptions on Ohio Campuses.&#13;
During Rhodes' administration&#13;
the Ohio National Guard saw&#13;
more duty in civil disorders than&#13;
the National Guard of any other&#13;
state in the union.&#13;
On the day before the Kent&#13;
shootings, Rhodes had held a&#13;
press conference in the city,&#13;
denouncing the groups whom he&#13;
presumed responsible for the&#13;
disorder and vowing to "drive&#13;
them out of Kent."&#13;
A former guardsman who was&#13;
in charge of the Guard's press&#13;
relations at Kent State has&#13;
testified in his deposition in the&#13;
civil cases that at a closed&#13;
meeting preceeding his press&#13;
conference Rhodes had given&#13;
orders that the Guard should&#13;
disperse even peaceful assemblies&#13;
on the campus.&#13;
Rhodes is currently out of office,&#13;
but he is running as the&#13;
Republican candidate for&#13;
Governor of Ohio again this fall.&#13;
More light on the 1970 shootings&#13;
is expected to be shed as the&#13;
months of depositions and other&#13;
discovery in the civil cases&#13;
proceed and are made public.&#13;
Election probe&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1974 Vol. Ill No. 10&#13;
Kent State trial&#13;
O ^ • rt rder given to fi &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1974&#13;
RANGER&#13;
•Editorial/Opinion.&#13;
GuidelinesMass&#13;
transit&#13;
Now that four weeks of the semester have passede&#13;
passed, schedules have settled down, the usual number&#13;
of people have dropped class, there are parking places&#13;
to be found. What became of the dire warnings of&#13;
"parking in the streets"? Could it be that a bit of&#13;
"exageration" of the problem occurred in order to carry&#13;
accross the supposed need for additional parking&#13;
spaces.&#13;
A visitor recently commented "you have a beautiful&#13;
campus here". He was right-but give it a couple of&#13;
years-we'll rectify that oversight. We are progressing&#13;
toward a solution rapidly-watch the grader remodel the&#13;
earth west of LLC. It's a magnificent display of man's&#13;
ultimate goal—if something grows there, black top it.&#13;
The myopic vision demonstrated by planners of this&#13;
campus is displayed in their absolute inability to&#13;
progress beyond the 1950's ideal of shopping center&#13;
suburbia.&#13;
The rest of the world screams Mass Transit, President&#13;
Ford considers higher taxes on gasoline to restrict auto&#13;
travel, the nation, states and cities subsidize rail and&#13;
bus travel, on and on, Mass Transit.&#13;
Parkside? Well, we are going to have a beautiful&#13;
student Union-Let's build parking lots. Empty space&#13;
west of LLC-let's build parking lots. Busses-let's get&#13;
Vets club.&#13;
the Editor&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This is in reply to your editorial "Do we need starving artists." I&#13;
think that RANGER readers should know that the art discipline has&#13;
made numberous efforts over the last three or four years to establish a&#13;
Graphic Design major at Parkside. An early proposal reached Central&#13;
Administration just before Merger and was frozen along with all other&#13;
proposals for new majors. More recently a Visual Communication&#13;
major, incorporating work in photography, film and television as well&#13;
as graphic design, was proposed and sent forward to Central Administration&#13;
with a low priority. It was not turned down but rat neither&#13;
did it ecr eive much practical support or encouragement.&#13;
Such a major would be quite expensive to initiate but it seems to me&#13;
that, considering the unique industrial and commercial character of&#13;
this part of Wisconsin, it would not be difficult to justify. No other State&#13;
University in Wisconsin has such a major.&#13;
Personally I see a degree course in Art as having, in itself, great&#13;
educational value quite apart from its vocational uses and I do not, as&#13;
your writer appears to do, despise the teaching of art at the elementary,&#13;
junior high or senior high level. The present major, too, seeks to&#13;
establish a firm foundation in drawing and design, as essential a base&#13;
for a future designer as for a future painter, sculptor or teacher of art.&#13;
Nevertheless, I think that all members of the art discipline would&#13;
welcome support from students for a Graphic Design major of some&#13;
kind.&#13;
Erik Forrest&#13;
Associate Professor of Art&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In a letter to the Sept. 25 Ranger, Keith C. Chambers complained&#13;
he received a parking ticket which was upheld by the appeals committee&#13;
(Subcommittee on Parking &amp; Transportation). He further&#13;
stated that a "student member" of the subcommittee informed him of&#13;
various activities of the parking &amp; transportation subcommittee. This&#13;
seems somewhat mysterious in that we the undersigned are the only&#13;
two student members of the parking &amp; transportation subcommittee&#13;
(which hears parking ticket appeals) and neither of us have had any&#13;
conversation whatsoever with Mr. Chambers concerning this matter!&#13;
Dick Fields&#13;
Chet Anderson&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Third World, AWOL, and PSGA, Inc. are co-sponsoring a film on the&#13;
Attica state prison incident on Wednesday Oct. 9 at 7 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist lecture hall 103. There will be a donation of $1 asked to go&#13;
towards a defense fund for the prisoners. It took alot of work to get this&#13;
film, so please attend this informative documentary.&#13;
Hayes D. Norman&#13;
Pres. of Third World&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
I have got something to say to two of the individuals who submitted&#13;
letters which appeared in your Sept. 25th issue.&#13;
First, to Keith C. Chambers, Kenosha senior: You have told the rest&#13;
of us that the whole world is picking on you, have told your mom yet?&#13;
Just a friendly piece of advice I would like to give you, is that you had&#13;
better watch out for the most fearsome of the fine farm animals you&#13;
reffered to. I am talking about the bull. If he gets rift of the fact that&#13;
first you were exploiting some of his neighbors, and then you were&#13;
patronizing them, he might see to it that you are the recipient of one of&#13;
the two things he is most well known for.&#13;
And to Arthur Gruhl: Your letters are always enjoyable, but after&#13;
Keith C. Chambers, Kenosha senior, they are an absolute necessity!!&#13;
Virginia B. Peters&#13;
-t-arkside Employee&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
sibility begins with the phrase&#13;
"as such." This phrase refers&#13;
back to "active participants,"&#13;
who are limited by the responsibilities&#13;
and powers of the board&#13;
and the president as well as the&#13;
chancellor and faculty of the&#13;
local campuses.&#13;
The extent and nature of the&#13;
students' consultation with the&#13;
chancellor is not described with&#13;
reference to the "disposition of&#13;
student fees."&#13;
Several expressed the concern&#13;
that the statute 36.09 (3) charges&#13;
the chancellor with the responsibility&#13;
and accountability for&#13;
administering all the funds on the&#13;
campus, whatever the source.&#13;
Unless the chancellor also has the&#13;
final recommending authority,&#13;
he does not have authority to&#13;
carry out his responsibility (no&#13;
chancellor disagreed with the&#13;
view that' students should have&#13;
primary input to chancellors in&#13;
policy recommendations affecting&#13;
student life, services and&#13;
interests).&#13;
Virtually all chancellors&#13;
responding felt that it would be&#13;
unwise to confer monopoly rights&#13;
on student governments as the&#13;
sole representative for students&#13;
on the campus. The examples of&#13;
union boards, intramural&#13;
programs, residence halls&#13;
councils and others were cited as&#13;
areas where other student constituencies&#13;
should be consulted&#13;
for their input as well as the&#13;
student government. The&#13;
problems of nominal turnout for&#13;
elections were cited; in at least&#13;
one case, there is not a student&#13;
government elected to student&#13;
body offices.&#13;
A majority also objected to&#13;
United Council as the exclusive&#13;
representative of students at the&#13;
System level (several campuses&#13;
do not belong to United Council).&#13;
The role of students in being&#13;
consulted about "rules for tenure&#13;
and probationary appointments,&#13;
for the review of faculty performance&#13;
and for the nonretention&#13;
and dismissal of faculty&#13;
members" was seriously&#13;
questioned, since this is the&#13;
responsibility of the faculty and&#13;
the chancellor to develop such&#13;
rules.&#13;
Regent Solberg offered an&#13;
appropriate conclusion during&#13;
the course of the Interim&#13;
discussions (after which the&#13;
board approved Central Administration's&#13;
proposals) saying,&#13;
"I think the guidelines are just&#13;
something less than guidelines,&#13;
maybe. But it's a starting point. I&#13;
think that we better start with&#13;
this, and I don't think that we&#13;
should get into heavy debates as&#13;
to a lot of specifics of those&#13;
guidelines; those will be debated&#13;
on the individual campuses."-&#13;
R^PEN—!&#13;
•SPORTS&#13;
WRITERS&#13;
[photographers&#13;
JAD ACCOUNT&#13;
EXECUTIVES&#13;
j contact KEN&#13;
I at&#13;
RANGER I I&#13;
] LLC D-194&#13;
WWfflTEESKELLASf Auditions for the Whiteskellar from 1:00 - 3:00&#13;
pm in Greenquist Hall, room D201.&#13;
umnAY October ll FILM: "Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid"&#13;
fibred bv the Parkside Activities Board at 8:00 pm in the Student&#13;
EtEX Admission is $1.00. Parkside I D. and proof of age are&#13;
required.&#13;
SATURDAY October 12 RUGBY: Parkside vs. Northwestern at&#13;
1:30 pm on the Wood Road field. Admission is free and open to the&#13;
DANCE: Sponsored by the Soccer tearrv 9:00 pm - 1:00 am in the&#13;
Student Activities Bldg. Admission is $1.50. Parks.de I.D. and proof of&#13;
age are required.&#13;
SUNDAY October 13 NEWMAN CENTER: 12:15 pm.Mass celebrated&#13;
at the Center located on the corner of E &amp; JR, 3825 - 12th Street,&#13;
MUSIC CONCERT: Includes Frances Bedford and David Littrell at&#13;
4:00 pm in Greenquist Hall, room 103, Admission is free and open to&#13;
FILM: "Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid at 7:30 pm.&#13;
SATURDAY October 19 UW-MADISON vs. MICHIGAN FOOTBALL&#13;
GAME: $10.00 includes bus trip and tickets to the game. Seats&#13;
are near the 20 yard line. Sign up at the Information Center, LLC Main&#13;
Place.&#13;
SEMESTER BREAK TWO TRIPS: ACAPULCO AND MAMICO&#13;
BOTH BETWEEN JANUARY 3 - 10, 1975&#13;
ACAPULCO: $244 plus $20 tax and service based on 3 to a room.&#13;
Includes round trip transportation. 7 nights at the deluxe El Matador&#13;
Hotel &amp; Racquet Club. Yacht cruise of Acapulco Bay with a welcoming&#13;
Margarita party. Includes tips and taxes. For further information&#13;
contact the Student Life Office LLC D197 or phone 553-2294.&#13;
JAMAICA - MONTEGO BAY: $279 plus $20 tax and service based on 3&#13;
to a room. Includes round trip transportation. 7 nights at Toby Inn,&#13;
only a short walk from famous Doctor's Cave Beach. Tips and taxes&#13;
included.&#13;
OCHO RIOS: $309 plus $20 tax and service based on 3 to a room. Includes&#13;
round trip transportation. 7 nights at Shaw Park located on the&#13;
beach on Cutlass Bay. A welcoming Rum Swizzle party and unlimited&#13;
free tennis are included as well as reduced golf rates at Upton Country&#13;
Club. For further information contact the Student Life Office, LLC&#13;
D197 at 553-2294.&#13;
There will be an organizational meeting for Men's Gymnastics.&#13;
Friday Oct. 11 at 3:00p.m. in the Phy. Ed. Bldg. '&#13;
The Pre-Law Club will meet Wednesday, October 9, at 4 p.m. in LLC&#13;
D174. All interested students are welcome.&#13;
Frank J. Maez of the Lambda Chi Alpha international fraternity,&#13;
will visit the Parkside October 7-12, to discuss with interested&#13;
students, the establishment of a chapter on campus. Meetings will be&#13;
held in the Library Learning Center from 9 - 5 throughout the week.&#13;
A public meeting on the conditions of Beebe school, a school for the&#13;
mentally retarded in Racine, will be held on Wed. Oct. 9, at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
at the Racine County Courthouse.&#13;
The Parkside Student Government Association Inc. has a vacancy in&#13;
the Vice presidency. The term runs till April. Anyone interested in the&#13;
position should submit their name to the president and president protempore&#13;
of PSGA at LLC-D193, as soon as possible.&#13;
PSGA would like to announce that the following positions are open&#13;
for consideration:&#13;
ACADEMIC POLICIES COMMITTEE two names to be selected by&#13;
Chancellor from list of six.&#13;
CAMPUS CONCERNS COMMITTEE, two names to be selected by&#13;
Chancellor from list of six.&#13;
, ADMISSIONS POLICIES COMMITTEE, two names to be selected&#13;
by Chancellor from list of six.&#13;
ATHLETIC BOARD, two names to be selected by Chancellor from&#13;
list of four.&#13;
J&#13;
p™E &amp; fLNE ARTS COMMITTEE, four names submitted by&#13;
LIBRARY COMMITTEE, four names submitted by PSGA.&#13;
l he terms run for a one year period. Students are asked to submit&#13;
their names for consideration as soon as possible.&#13;
pfrtcS q^ '&#13;
i S&#13;
°&#13;
n e v a c a n c y in the at large division of the&#13;
with CQ r U&#13;
.&#13;
Goverhment Association Inc. Senate. In accordance&#13;
Tpmnnr I&#13;
1 k ,&#13;
new PSGA constitution, the President Pro&#13;
O^ m Thf ?&#13;
tZ&#13;
' WlU make an aPPointment to fill that seat on&#13;
Anv ctnHo aPP01ntmcnt is subject to the confirmation of the senate.&#13;
Kontf^t thi^r? « m being aPPointed to this seat should contact&#13;
Kontz at the PSGA office, LLC D-193, prior to Oct. 16.&#13;
OrlanizatTonl Th 3&#13;
°&#13;
f the United CouncU of Student&#13;
°&#13;
Ct 10&#13;
' at 2 P m- LLC D-174. This&#13;
Government aLo t commit&#13;
tee of the Parkside Student&#13;
10 of the new e J;&#13;
iatl0n Inc. as provided for under Article I, Section&#13;
are asked to atterid"&#13;
110&#13;
" Representatives of all student organizations&#13;
Ine^Pmf/ r?&#13;
eet&#13;
.i?^ of the Parkside Student Government Association"&#13;
Oct in at I n&#13;
UX1 \ RnterPrises Committee will be held Thursday.&#13;
attend Anv it.'a '?• D_174&#13;
- All interested parties are invited to&#13;
deals with t&#13;
Ua '"terested in membership in the committee which&#13;
rersoni!L K T services&#13;
- should contact the committee chairperson,&#13;
John Kontz, at the PSGA office, LLC D-193.&#13;
C The ParksideRANGER&#13;
&#13;
ssr r™-&#13;
Wisconsin 53,40. Pho£ ^ &#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
There is a tl.oo charge lor classified ads.&#13;
Jual fill In (his form and srnd it to:&#13;
NAME&#13;
The i'arlulde Hanger&#13;
Business Office&#13;
O-IM LU: UWParkside&#13;
Kenosha. Wis. 53140&#13;
ADDRESS&#13;
CITY&#13;
Ads will run for one week&#13;
only. Renewals can be made&#13;
by calling the Friday&#13;
preceding the next&#13;
publication.&#13;
Ads nust be submitted one week before publication&#13;
Walter i .&#13;
Ulbrichts&#13;
Classified&#13;
Minolta SLR 35mm $230 Retail Will sell for&#13;
$100. Excellent cond. Call 553 2295.&#13;
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THE GROOVE TUBE&#13;
A few years ago, I let my television set get it right between the eyes.&#13;
Or, really between Monty Hall's.&#13;
He bounced down the aisle, teasing the audience with $3200 worth of&#13;
nirvana. The usual gang of idiots slobbered to prostitute themselves&#13;
before the golden calf, hiding somewhere behind Door Number One,&#13;
Two or Three.&#13;
My hammer struck without mercy, smashing Monty's skull and&#13;
narrowly missing his stooge, Jay Steward. Unfortunately, I only&#13;
cracked the screen and broke a damn good hammer.&#13;
Ken Shapiro's act of v iolence against the waste-land of television is*&#13;
more successful. Writer, director, star, and producer of "The Groove&#13;
Tube", Shapiro slays the hallow idol with first degree satire.&#13;
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me upening sequence, a Driuiant parody oi Stanley&#13;
confrontation between the ape-man and the mysterious monolith in&#13;
"2001", summarizes the form and extent of TV's influence on our&#13;
consciousness. Like the apes which caress the TV set during a sunrise,&#13;
we mindlessly cling to the Tube as it takes us to a daily no-where-iand&#13;
of aimlessness and banality.&#13;
Shapiro stylizes his film after the mess of normal TV programming.&#13;
For example, the latent sensuality of t he classic Clairol commercialboy&#13;
meets girl in a romantic slow-motion romp through fields and&#13;
woods-incongruously introduces a morning kids' show, Koko the&#13;
Clown. But Shapiro goes one step farther and relates the commercial&#13;
and show-Koko reads pornography during "make-believe time".&#13;
Even the low-budget limitations of "The Groove Tube" emphasize&#13;
that sickening sameness of television. One actor may sell deodorant in&#13;
the morning, receive a divorce on a soap opera at noon, or become a&#13;
fugitive from police during a prime time drama. In the film, Shapiro&#13;
the chameleon changes into a commercial narrator, a newscaster, a&#13;
doper in a situational comedy, and a talk show host..&#13;
Many of the commercials and vignettes are wickedly devastating.&#13;
Shapiro juxtaposes a subject like sex against a conventional format&#13;
like ABC's Wide World of Sports and the result is the highly erotic&#13;
Sex Olympics". But the film suffers from inconsistent imagination&#13;
and perception. Too frequently, Shapiro retreats to hack topics like the&#13;
story of two dope dealers and buries himself in underground cliches.&#13;
After Shapiro's attack, television resembles a disemboweled corpse.&#13;
That reminds me. I like to think that the person who bought my old TV&#13;
set turned it into something useful. Like a liquor cabinet.&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES&#13;
HBUIIDING^H&#13;
nu Stofi&#13;
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WED., FRI. &amp; S AT.&#13;
OCT. 9th, 11th &amp; 12th&#13;
The&#13;
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STUDENT I.D.&#13;
A PITCHER OF BEER ONLY 50*&#13;
WEDNESDAY AFTER 7:00 P.M.&#13;
* APPEARING*&#13;
SUN., OCT. 13th&#13;
at the EDGEWATER&#13;
(TWIN LAKES)&#13;
&amp;&#13;
FRI., OCT. 18th&#13;
at the BRAT SHOP&#13;
STYX &#13;
4 T H E PARKSIDE RANG ER Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1974&#13;
lo©&#13;
To investigate PAB&#13;
PSGA hears complaints&#13;
aDlfesaoo^MtannL&#13;
James DuRell Smith Jr.&#13;
DON'T WORRY ABOUT IT THEY SAY! -when I get a test back that&#13;
doesn't come up to my expectations. I am reminded of a line from my&#13;
younger sister's repetoir. "There's no joy in being in dire straits if vou&#13;
can't wallow in self pity!" So there smart guys!&#13;
OUR OTHER QUOTE FOR THE DAY: What's the difference between&#13;
Capitalism and Communism? "Whereas Capitalism involves the&#13;
exploitation of man by his fellow man, Communism is vice versa "&#13;
Don't think too long about that one.&#13;
FEAST OR FAMINE? Rushing to meet the need bf stop signs at bus&#13;
stops and cross walks in the record time of two or three years&#13;
(depending on how long ago one considers the need to have&#13;
developed), whoever got the signs must have bought them at a "buy&#13;
three-get one free" sale. How many years will it be until we get a "oneway&#13;
only between the hours of..." sign for the mini Sebring circuit we&#13;
have to run to get out of here by car?&#13;
BELIEVE IT OR NOT: For those of you who doubt your potential to&#13;
pursue the prof erred fruits of post graduate education; to those who&#13;
picture the publication of their possibly pedantic productions of p aper&#13;
improbable, may I assuage your fears and open to you the opportunities&#13;
of the higher learning process by quoting only the title of an&#13;
actually printed, published and seen-by-yours-truly paper: "The&#13;
Hitch-hiking Effect of a Favourable Gene" by John Smith. Grad&#13;
school here I come. I can see it now "Probability Parameters on the&#13;
Puerile Practice of Public Proscis Picking" by J. Smith.&#13;
Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
Among the topics discussed at&#13;
an Oct. 3 meeting of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association,&#13;
Inc. (PSGA) were voting&#13;
irregularities on the constitution&#13;
and an investigation of the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
(PAB).&#13;
Also, a review was conducted&#13;
for a new PSGA advisor and a&#13;
report was given by the&#13;
Grievance Committee.&#13;
Letters were read from various&#13;
students claiming voting&#13;
irregularities on the constitutional&#13;
referendum.&#13;
One of the complaints was a&#13;
letter from Barbara Burke,&#13;
president of the PAB, claiming&#13;
that she had found a "vote yes&#13;
leaflet" in one of the voting&#13;
booths.&#13;
Carrie Ward, a senator, said&#13;
that the PSGA had not put the&#13;
leaflet in the booth and that "it&#13;
must have been placed there by a&#13;
student voter."&#13;
Another letter written by Steve&#13;
Gouris, a student, complained&#13;
that he was able to vote twice in&#13;
the referendum.&#13;
Mike Hahner, a senator, said&#13;
that this person should be asked&#13;
to sign a sworn statement&#13;
declaring that he voted twice&#13;
under his own name.&#13;
Hahner said that if Gouris had&#13;
voted under a different name, he&#13;
was "defrauding the Election&#13;
Committee."&#13;
"All complaints are minor as&#13;
far as I'm concerned," said&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich, PSGA&#13;
president.&#13;
John Kontz, president protempore,&#13;
then read a proposal&#13;
made by Milutinovich to conduct&#13;
a "full investigation of the PAB,&#13;
including a check on their books&#13;
for the last three vears."&#13;
In the insuing discussion the&#13;
question was brought up about&#13;
whether the PAB would agree to&#13;
an investigation and it was&#13;
suggested that they may try to&#13;
prevent it.&#13;
The motion to investigate PAB&#13;
was passed unanimously.&#13;
A review followed for a new&#13;
PSGA advisor. It was conducted&#13;
by Hahner, chairperson of the&#13;
Advisor Committee. Jewel&#13;
Echelbarger, associate dean of&#13;
students, is the present PSGA&#13;
advisor.&#13;
Sara Sheehan, a visiting&#13;
assistant professor of political&#13;
science, is the candidate for the&#13;
position of advisor.&#13;
Milutinovich asked Sheehan a&#13;
question regarding the status of&#13;
students in comparison with&#13;
administrators and faculty.&#13;
She responded, "I think&#13;
students should govern themselves.&#13;
You (PSGA) should make&#13;
all decisions pertaining to student&#13;
life."&#13;
When questioned on her opinion&#13;
of the role of an advisor, Sheehan&#13;
said, "I don't think the student&#13;
advisory role should exist,"&#13;
The review, which lasted an&#13;
approximate 15 minutes, was&#13;
concluded with a motion by Ward&#13;
to accept Sheehan as PSGA&#13;
advisor designate.&#13;
This motion passed the senate&#13;
unanimously.&#13;
Final study out on Union&#13;
The Parkside Office of Planning&#13;
and Construction today&#13;
announced that a final environmental&#13;
impact study on&#13;
proposed construction of a $3.5&#13;
million Student Union Building,&#13;
to be financed by user fees, is&#13;
available to the public for review&#13;
and comment.&#13;
In compliance with the Environmental&#13;
Policy Act, a public&#13;
hearing on the project will be&#13;
held at 7 p.m. on Oct. 28 in UW-P&#13;
Classroom Building Room 105.&#13;
Written comments on the environmental&#13;
impact statement&#13;
will be accepted by the Office of&#13;
Planning and Construction in&#13;
advance of the hearing. Both&#13;
written and oral testimony will be&#13;
accepted at the hearing.&#13;
Copies of the statement are&#13;
available to the public at the UWP&#13;
Library and at the Racine and&#13;
Kenosha city libraries. Additional&#13;
copies have been circulated&#13;
to the clerks of Racine&#13;
and Kenosha city and county and&#13;
the Town of Somers, appropriate&#13;
state agencies and the&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin Regional&#13;
Planning Commission.&#13;
The 73,000 squre-foot union&#13;
building is to be located just north&#13;
of the loop service road which&#13;
encircles and academic area of&#13;
Big Foot&#13;
APPEARING&#13;
WED., F RI. S AT. &amp; SUN.&#13;
OCT. 9 , 1 1, 1 2, 1 3&#13;
OCT. 1 6, 1 8, 1 9 &amp; 20&#13;
Kenosha's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shakey's)&#13;
6208 Greenhay Road Phone 654-0485&#13;
the campus and would be attached&#13;
to the Classroom Building&#13;
immediately to the south by an&#13;
enclosed walkway over the road.&#13;
The structure is to house food&#13;
service areas, theater, bowling&#13;
alleys, lounges, meeting and&#13;
game rooms, student&#13;
organization headquarters,&#13;
lockers, concessions and union&#13;
staff offices.&#13;
The environmental impact&#13;
statement says the structure will&#13;
significantly improve the campus&#13;
environment&#13;
The report adds that physical&#13;
impact of the structure on the&#13;
environment is minimal since the&#13;
one-acre plot selected for&#13;
development presently is used as&#13;
a temporary parking lot. The&#13;
building is designed to conform&#13;
with state energy conservation&#13;
guidelines and will have a policy&#13;
of recycling paper, glass and&#13;
waste products generated by the&#13;
food service operations. The&#13;
building will use existing central&#13;
heating and chilling equipment.&#13;
Substantial assistance in debt&#13;
service on the self-amortizing&#13;
project is available through a&#13;
grant from the Department of&#13;
Housing and Urban Development&#13;
in the form of an interest subsidy&#13;
amounting to $2.9 million over 30&#13;
years. No state tax funds will be&#13;
committed to the building.&#13;
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Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5 y/endv moves on&#13;
Musich to head&#13;
GTI Women's Bureau&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
Wendy Musich has been a&#13;
counselor on the Student Services&#13;
staff at Parkside since October of&#13;
1968. Within those six years, she&#13;
has served t he campus in many&#13;
capacities; her service has been&#13;
both p rofessional and personal,&#13;
institutional and individual.&#13;
On Friday, Oct. 18, Musich will&#13;
leave the Parkside staff and step&#13;
into a new phase of her career as&#13;
head of the Women's Bureau at&#13;
Gateway Technical Institute&#13;
(GTI).&#13;
The Women's Bureau is a new&#13;
program that was proposed by&#13;
the Community Services Division&#13;
staff of GTI and was granted&#13;
funding from federal and voch.-&#13;
tech. district sources.&#13;
The program is designed to&#13;
counsel women who are entering&#13;
or re-entering the working world.&#13;
Services will include personal&#13;
counseling, vocational testing,&#13;
assistance in job placement, andor&#13;
assistance in setting up an&#13;
educational or training course.&#13;
For education and training,&#13;
women will be referred to&#13;
whichever area school best meets&#13;
their needs; the program was not&#13;
set up simply to recruit students&#13;
for GTI.&#13;
"It allows me to focus in&#13;
counseling, which is really what I&#13;
like to do," said Musich of the&#13;
Women's Bureau job.&#13;
Musich finds herself uniquely&#13;
qualified for the position. She&#13;
earned a master's degree in&#13;
psychiatric social work from the&#13;
University of Chicago, then&#13;
worked at a mental health clinic&#13;
in Madison before joining the&#13;
Parkside staff.&#13;
"I'm very appreciative of the&#13;
experiences I've had here," said&#13;
Musich. "They've led me right&#13;
into the next thing. I've enjoyed&#13;
working in an academic setting."&#13;
As a member of the dean of&#13;
students staff, Musich served as&#13;
coordinator of the Adult Student&#13;
Program for a year and a half. In&#13;
academic advising, she served as&#13;
the liaison counselor to the&#13;
science division for beginning&#13;
science students. She has done a&#13;
lot of personal counseling, served&#13;
as advisor to the Women's&#13;
Caucus for approximately two&#13;
years, and has assisted in&#13;
counseling high school students,&#13;
among various other duties.&#13;
Of the Adult Student Program&#13;
experience Musich said, "It's&#13;
been very exciting and rewarding&#13;
to see older students get to&#13;
believe in themselves. As a&#13;
population, they are some of our&#13;
most exciting students. It's been&#13;
good to have been a part of that&#13;
program."&#13;
Musich's departure will make a&#13;
total of three vacancies on the&#13;
Student Services counseling&#13;
staff. (Wayne Ramirez left in&#13;
July of '74 an d Isom Fearn left&#13;
last month.)&#13;
"There are definite problems&#13;
in the Student Services office in&#13;
retaining people," said Musich.&#13;
"There are not enough opportunities&#13;
for professional&#13;
advancement, either by salary or&#13;
title.&#13;
"I am leaving because at this&#13;
stage in my career I need solid&#13;
evidence of professional advancement,"&#13;
she continued, "and&#13;
it doesn't seem to be forthcoming&#13;
at Parkside, either in. terms of&#13;
measurable salary increase or&#13;
title change, or both. This job&#13;
offered me a handsome salary&#13;
increase and a chance to develop&#13;
a new program."&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger, associate&#13;
dean of students and head of the&#13;
Student Services staff, agrees&#13;
with Musich. "I do think we are&#13;
Wendy Musich&#13;
slow in rewarding professional&#13;
staff who have served this&#13;
campus in a counseling capacity.&#13;
Past history records that those&#13;
dedicated to counseling as a&#13;
profession haven't been able to&#13;
enjoy the recognition they&#13;
deserve."&#13;
Echelbarger said that she,&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Allen&#13;
Dearborn, and Chancellor Irvin&#13;
Wyllie are "concerned about it&#13;
and are making every effort to&#13;
rectify the situation as soon as&#13;
possible."&#13;
"The Student Services staff is a&#13;
superb group of people," said&#13;
Musich. "The rest of this campus&#13;
doesn't realize the contribution&#13;
we make here. We wear many&#13;
hats at all times, which is very&#13;
tiring but necessary. We take&#13;
care of the student's life outside&#13;
the classroom. And unless the&#13;
staff begins to receive some&#13;
rewards, other people may&#13;
leave."&#13;
It may be December 1 before&#13;
any of the vacancies are filled on&#13;
the counseling staff. For each&#13;
open position, a job description is&#13;
written by Echelbarger and sent&#13;
to Dearborn for approval, then on&#13;
to Vice Chancellor Otto Bauer or&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie. If the'&#13;
description is not approved at qne&#13;
of those offices, it is sent back to&#13;
Echelbarger for revision.&#13;
The two positions vacated by&#13;
Ramirez and Fearn have now&#13;
been authorized and are being&#13;
advertised on a nation-wide&#13;
scale.&#13;
After about a month of advertising&#13;
the positions in different&#13;
publications and at different&#13;
universities whose&#13;
graduates would qualify,&#13;
Echelbarger anticipates having&#13;
gathered about 100 ap plications.&#13;
An advisory committee made&#13;
up of three students, three or four&#13;
staff members, one civil service&#13;
employee, and Echelbarger, will&#13;
narrow those 100 to five or six.&#13;
Out of those finalists, Dearborn&#13;
and Bauer will make the final&#13;
decision.&#13;
Echelbarger hopes to fill the&#13;
positions left vacant by Fearn&#13;
and Musich by January 1.&#13;
Remaining on the counseling&#13;
staff are John Rogers, Ken&#13;
Oberbruner and Echelbarger.&#13;
There are plans to hire Rudy&#13;
Collum of athletics to assist on a&#13;
part-time basis. The Student-toStudent&#13;
advisors will be called&#13;
upon more frequently and tentative&#13;
plans are being made to&#13;
hire a Limited Term Employee&#13;
(LTE) for the interim.&#13;
Said Echelbarger, "I have no&#13;
doubt there will be an over-load&#13;
on the present staff."&#13;
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4.10&#13;
5.10&#13;
-5.10&#13;
1.50&#13;
2 10&#13;
2 10&#13;
2.50&#13;
2.SO&#13;
The Works&#13;
(Anchovy lovors Only) 8.50 6.00 4.70&#13;
Cheese, Sausage. Pepperoni, Mushrooms, Onions,&#13;
Green Peppers. Anchovies A Black Oliv&#13;
5.10 3.50 2.50&#13;
6.00 4.20 3.00&#13;
6.00 4.20 300&#13;
Black Olives&#13;
7 20 4 80 360&#13;
Anchovies ' 1.00 80c&#13;
Block Olives 100 80c&#13;
Onions 40c 30c&#13;
Green Peppers 50c 40c&#13;
Shrimp 1.50 . 1 0 0&#13;
One Half Mushrooms 75c 50c&#13;
One Half Sausage 75c 50c&#13;
One Hall Pepperoni 75c 50c&#13;
One Half Onions A Peppers 45c 35c&#13;
Extra Cheese 50c 40c&#13;
Extra Sausage 50c 40c&#13;
60c&#13;
60c&#13;
20c&#13;
30c&#13;
1 00&#13;
35c&#13;
35c&#13;
35c&#13;
25c&#13;
30c&#13;
30c&#13;
• Spaghetti &amp; Meatballs '&#13;
• Family Spaghetti with meatballs (5-7) people •&#13;
• Lasagna 1 3&#13;
Includes Lettuce Salad &amp; Italian Bread&#13;
HENNY PENNY CHICKEN&#13;
DINNER: 4 Pieces Chicken ('.• Chlckonl, French Fries, Potato Salad c&#13;
garnished with Baton, Cole Slaw &amp; Italian Bread&#13;
Sour C ream Potatoes 2.45&#13;
6 Pieces&#13;
9 Pieces&#13;
I 2 Pieces&#13;
FAMILY DINNER:&#13;
BY THE PIECE (Including French Fries)&#13;
3 10 15 Pieces 6 95 24 Pieces&#13;
4 45 18 Pieces 7 95 27 Pieces&#13;
5 75 21 Pieces. 8 95&#13;
9 95&#13;
10 95&#13;
IS Pieces Chicken One Pml ot Cole Slew, Italian Bread. Choice oi .16 ' rench F r,es ~&#13;
One Pint Polato Salad, or One Pml Sour.Cream Potatoes with Bacon u&#13;
''&#13;
SEAFOOD&#13;
PERCH DINNER: Lake Perch 1&#13;
SHRIMP DINNER Jumbo Shrimp a&#13;
2 45&#13;
O.nners include French Fries. Potato Salad or Sour C ream Potatoes garn.shed with Bacon Siaw &amp; Itahaqj Bread&#13;
1 lb LAKE PERCH 4 50 1 lb JUMBO SHRIMP 6 95&#13;
Cheese Bob -&#13;
Big Bob lb&#13;
(Ground Beefl&#13;
ONION RINGS&#13;
4.0.....-,&#13;
16-o.&#13;
Homomodo Donuls.&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
Hot Roost Boot&#13;
5andvrich -95c&#13;
Bombots&#13;
Moat Ball -&#13;
, Italian Sausago&#13;
Bool&#13;
90c&#13;
90c&#13;
I 10&#13;
45c&#13;
1.75&#13;
.. &gt; "• do.,&#13;
i 00 15 -do..&#13;
COID SODA&#13;
ALSO&#13;
COLE SLAW I Pint)&#13;
FRENCH fRIES&#13;
16-e.&#13;
BEVERAGES&#13;
25&lt; DESSERT Of THE DAY&#13;
50c&#13;
40c&#13;
1.35&#13;
POTATO SALAD (Pint) 75c&#13;
SOUR CREAM POTATOES WITH&#13;
BACON (Pint) »Sc &#13;
6 THE PARKS IDE RANGER W e dne sday , Oct. 9, 1 9 7 4&#13;
Regents move on tuition&#13;
A HUW 1U VIUUVU 111 die&#13;
by Paul Anderson&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
The University of Wisconsin&#13;
Board of Regents approved&#13;
Friday, Oct. 4, a proposed $1.3&#13;
billion 1975-77 biennial budget&#13;
which moves to de-escalate instruction&#13;
fee charges to&#13;
Wisconsin resident undergraduate&#13;
students. In total,&#13;
the biennial budget, excluding&#13;
faculty compensation proposals&#13;
to be considered in November,&#13;
marks an increase in state and&#13;
non-state funds of $96,874,700 over&#13;
the past 1974-76 b udget.&#13;
The major proportion of budget&#13;
increases drawn from state funds&#13;
($78,417,200 or 66 percent) fall&#13;
into the following two categories:&#13;
A fee de-escalation schedule&#13;
which will halve fee charges to&#13;
Wisconsin resident undergraduate&#13;
students starting in&#13;
the '76-'77 school year. The fee deescalation&#13;
proposal is designed to&#13;
reduce economic barriers to&#13;
resident students who desire a&#13;
university education and to&#13;
combat the inflationary spiral of&#13;
costs to students. Under the deescalation&#13;
program, the percentage&#13;
of average instructional&#13;
cost charged as fees to resident&#13;
undergraduates would be&#13;
reduced from 25 percent to 12.5&#13;
percent ($21.4 million).&#13;
Workload and fixed cost inWARNING:&#13;
&#13;
The Ivory Tower&#13;
is about to&#13;
collapse.&#13;
It's your last year of college. Why think&#13;
about life insurance now? Because, the&#13;
older you get the more it costs. And next&#13;
year, it's all up to you. Find out&#13;
about CollegeMaster.&#13;
Call the Fidelity Union CollegeMaster®&#13;
Field Associate in your area:&#13;
552-7970&#13;
2121 21st. S t. S uite 6&#13;
VILLA CAPRI P LAZA&#13;
KENOSHA, W ISCONSIN&#13;
CbllegeMaster.&#13;
creases for teaching additional&#13;
students, meeting inflationary&#13;
cost increases, operating new&#13;
buildings, increasing student&#13;
wages to meet future minimum&#13;
wage requirements, service and&#13;
utility increases and other increases&#13;
($30.2 million).&#13;
The workload considerations&#13;
are designed to meet an increase&#13;
of 6,881 additional students&#13;
enrolled in degree credit&#13;
programs and 24,252 enrollees in&#13;
continuing education programs.&#13;
The remaining 34 percent ($27&#13;
million) increase, to be drawn&#13;
from state funds, would meet the&#13;
following demands:&#13;
An allocation of $3.9 million for&#13;
improvements in existing&#13;
programs for minoritydisadvantaged&#13;
students, additional&#13;
ethnic studies, women's&#13;
studies, and an external degree&#13;
program for Wisconsin citizens.&#13;
Funds to meet demands for&#13;
more primary care physicians,&#13;
allied health professionals and&#13;
specialized nursing and&#13;
cooperative health training&#13;
courses.&#13;
An allocation of $2.5 million to&#13;
facilitate economic, agricultural,&#13;
state and urban community&#13;
development assistance&#13;
programs.&#13;
Funds of $2.4 million to increase&#13;
teacher effectiveness&#13;
through improved course offerings,&#13;
utilizing educational&#13;
technology, replacing obsolete&#13;
equipment and meeting basic&#13;
accreditation standards.&#13;
Additional capital outflows to&#13;
meet new state and federal laws&#13;
which require investments in&#13;
health and safety protection, in&#13;
addition to other building improvements,&#13;
expansion of state&#13;
hospitals and empty dorm to&#13;
classroom conversions.&#13;
MOCKUS TAP&#13;
FOLK MUSIC&#13;
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, S ATURDAY&#13;
NO COVER CHARGE&#13;
15&#13;
e TAPS&#13;
657-9791 4619 E ighth A ve.&#13;
MCW U UUget&#13;
is a $2.5 million boost in funds for&#13;
Parkside. During the 1975-77&#13;
biennium, Parkside would&#13;
receive $27,227,700 in state funds&#13;
and student fees, representing a&#13;
9.5 percent increase over current&#13;
levels.&#13;
A proposed amendment to the&#13;
biennial budget, presented to&#13;
Regent Ody Fish, Hartland, and&#13;
voted down by the board,&#13;
revealed that members of the&#13;
board ranked faculty pay raises&#13;
over resident reduced fees as the&#13;
top priority item. The Fish&#13;
amendment called for a slowmotion&#13;
de-escalation of resident&#13;
undergraduate fees, proposing&#13;
that the proportionate costs to&#13;
resident students be reduced&#13;
from 25 percent to 20 percent,&#13;
instead of 12.5 percent.&#13;
"I have some reservation about&#13;
de-escalation of instruction&#13;
fees," said Fish, citing three&#13;
areas of concern:&#13;
"First, I think the effect of&#13;
widening the tuition spread&#13;
between public and private institutions&#13;
of higher education is&#13;
certainly not going to be helpful.&#13;
"Secondly this would increase&#13;
the burden on all tax payers.&#13;
"Thirdly, I think we are excluding&#13;
a segment of the&#13;
population from the current&#13;
inflationary pressures and&#13;
problems. We add to that the&#13;
practicality of getting it done.&#13;
Also, the obviously difficult&#13;
program of getting necessary&#13;
faculty compensation increasesincreases&#13;
that I intend to support."&#13;
&#13;
Fish suggested that an expanded&#13;
scholarship program be&#13;
instituted to assist those in need,&#13;
rather than a flat reduction in&#13;
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R©CJ©ntS continued from preceeding page&#13;
tuition tor everyone. amount of dollar* fnr tv,^ t&#13;
Regent Neshek responded to of pe0ple , T&#13;
Fish's suggestion by claiming actuall d somethbin t„ , '&#13;
that the purpose oi the de- inflation for The "peoo-e o&#13;
Pf&#13;
escalation program ,s to "help Wisconsin who Seed °&#13;
the largest majority of students education, and who, if?hey get aS&#13;
Who are in the middle income education, will be able tf LSd&#13;
group. vx~ * "&#13;
He stated, "most of our&#13;
students-or a good 80 percent of&#13;
our students-are students of&#13;
middle income parents.&#13;
The typical middle income&#13;
parent who makes between&#13;
$10,000, $11,000 a nd $14,000, has&#13;
three children in school, not in&#13;
college, and is trying to support a&#13;
family, cannot afford to send one&#13;
or two children to college.&#13;
"I think the effect of what we&#13;
have attempted to do here will in&#13;
itself be a grant program across&#13;
the board, and give relief to the&#13;
majority of students that you&#13;
really want to help, without&#13;
setting up expensive machinery&#13;
such as we have now, to affect&#13;
grants and aids."&#13;
Neshek concluded by adding,&#13;
"I think the 12-and-a-half percent&#13;
is a minimum goal that we should&#13;
attempt to obtain as a first step."&#13;
Regent John Lavine also took&#13;
issue with Fish:&#13;
"Tuition represents 25-30&#13;
percent of a student's cost of&#13;
going to school; the other twothirds&#13;
to three-quarters-room&#13;
and board-basically, the student&#13;
and-or his family will have&#13;
anywhere. Yes, it may be that&#13;
students may not be able to go to&#13;
the campus they want, but they&#13;
will always have the costs of&#13;
eating and a roof over their&#13;
heads-we can't do much about&#13;
that. Here is a way where we can&#13;
meaningfully, with a small&#13;
[ PARKSibrSOCcTRTLUB"&#13;
more to the tax structure. Vice&#13;
President Smith yesterday made&#13;
the point-and I thought it was&#13;
very well taken-that the last&#13;
area that any economicallyminded&#13;
person ought to attack in&#13;
an inflationary time, is&#13;
education, because that's the one&#13;
thing that can upgrade the&#13;
society and its productivity."&#13;
Lavine concluded by saying&#13;
"I'm not unmindful of the faculty&#13;
compensation issue. But I will&#13;
state very candidly, as much as I&#13;
support this 101 percent, if it&#13;
came to an either-or situation,&#13;
universities are not made of&#13;
bricks and mortar-they are&#13;
made by people and a great&#13;
faculty. I will certainly support&#13;
the faculty compensation above&#13;
everything."&#13;
Regent DeBardeleben, Park&#13;
Falls, supported the Fish&#13;
amendment, citing that he was in&#13;
favor of eventual free public&#13;
higher education, but he too,&#13;
believed that the key issue in the&#13;
biennium should be faculty pay&#13;
raises.&#13;
"Clearly, the priority item is to&#13;
get adequate faculty compensation&#13;
in this biennium. The&#13;
UW-system is going to be sorely&#13;
hurt unless this is done," he said.&#13;
UW Senior Vice President&#13;
Donald Percy reminded the&#13;
board that the governor and the&#13;
Department of Administration&#13;
had asked the university to'&#13;
submit a salary increase package&#13;
separately from the rest of the&#13;
budget.&#13;
Fish refuted by saying that the&#13;
university should look at the&#13;
overall picture in preparing its&#13;
budget request.&#13;
"We're only looking at the&#13;
grocery bill today. The rent&#13;
doesn't come due until next week,&#13;
so we're saying we won't look at&#13;
it until then," he said.&#13;
The motion was not carried, as&#13;
members of the board voted&#13;
down the amendment by a 11-3&#13;
margin.&#13;
£&#13;
Just Stop In!&#13;
r Restaurant&#13;
Open:&#13;
Daily 6:00 A.M.-8:00 P.M.&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
County E &amp; Green Bay Rd.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
? MONTHS&#13;
AFTER&#13;
PARKSIPE&#13;
BLACKOUT]&#13;
?THERE&#13;
M0&#13;
{&#13;
PCMER&#13;
FAILURE&#13;
\?"UC£&#13;
Wednesday night Oct. 2 and Thursday during the day, Parkside&#13;
experienced a power failure resulting from the failure of a section of&#13;
the primary transformer circuit.&#13;
.After about two hours of darkness on Wednesday and about&#13;
seventeen hours of the same on Thursday service was restored at 4:12&#13;
a.m. Friday morning.&#13;
The failure was in the section of the circuit that maintains steady&#13;
voltage under different load conditions. Physical Plant is presently&#13;
operating "as near normal as possible" according to Roger Allen&#13;
director of Physical Plant.&#13;
No further power failures are anticipated, however, Parkside will&#13;
not be able to use the main chiller until these circuits are replaced. Its&#13;
is expected to take two days to replace the burned out circuits, and this&#13;
work should begin in a week or two when the parts are available.&#13;
Safety and Security reported no potentially dangerous situations&#13;
arising during the power outage and there were no reported injuries.&#13;
H E ILE M A N'S&#13;
„ow Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
A 'DANCE&#13;
s.&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
s, 'A£FY&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT. 12th&#13;
9:00 to 1:00&#13;
STUDENT ACT. B!DG.&#13;
ADVANCE TICKETS $1.00&#13;
(AVAILABLE FROM SOCCER CLUB MEMBER)&#13;
AT D OOR $1.50&#13;
WIS. — IJW-P I D REQUIRED&#13;
"On Tap at the Union"&#13;
The Parkside Players Present an evening of&#13;
'Theater of the Absurd'&#13;
The Bald Soprano by Eugene lonesco&#13;
and&#13;
The American Dream by Edward Albee&#13;
directed by Don Rintz&#13;
8 P.M. OCT. 17-18-19-20&#13;
COMMUNICATION A RTS T HEATER&#13;
ADM. $2 public, $1 UW-P students/staff All seats reserved.&#13;
Tickets at information Kiosk a nd at the door&#13;
• Round Trip, Jet&#13;
• 7 \fghts Lodging&#13;
• Rum Punch Welcome&#13;
• (u'oimd Transfers&#13;
• T ips and Taxes&#13;
For application or informationContact:&#13;
&#13;
CAMPUSTRAVEL(ENTER&#13;
LLC 1)197 Call: 553-2294 &#13;
8 THE PARKS IDE RANGER Wed nesd ay, Oct. 9, 1 9 7 4&#13;
needs a friend ?&#13;
Paris Wohlust demonstrates her abilities on the&#13;
balance beam.&#13;
Gymnastics&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
"Super concentration and total" unawareness of&#13;
everything except for what I am doing," said Paris&#13;
Wohlust as she explained what goes through her&#13;
mind during a performance.&#13;
Teammate Julie Scherer added, "performing&#13;
requires a lot of p syching, I tell myself I know what&#13;
I'm doing and that I'm not going to fall. I fool&#13;
myself."&#13;
Wohlust and Scherer are both members of&#13;
Parkside's Womens Gymnastics Team.&#13;
Outside of carrying over 12 credits and working&#13;
part-time jobs, they practice regularly for iy2 hours&#13;
every day. Much of the team does not work-out&#13;
together because of job and class conflicts. Wohlust&#13;
and Scherer would preferably work out with the rest&#13;
of the team than alone.&#13;
"Talking and encouragement goes on when the&#13;
team works together. We could have much more&#13;
team spirit this way," said Wohlust.&#13;
The women feel the only way to change this would&#13;
be to recruit more members for the team. There&#13;
would naturally be more people practicing at the&#13;
same time then.&#13;
Parkside's Womens Gymnastics team is undefeated.&#13;
"As a small team," said Wohlust, "we&#13;
display our strength by putting quality in place of&#13;
quantity. The girls are very ambitious."&#13;
Though the women do not compete at the same&#13;
level, much mutual respect for one another and&#13;
effective communication is considered to exist in&#13;
the team.&#13;
Wohlust and Scherer describe their coach, Doug&#13;
Davis,as relaxed. They said Davis creates an atmosphere&#13;
in which the team feels they have the&#13;
right and freedom to express their ideas.&#13;
Scherer has participated in gymnastics for three&#13;
years, while Wohlust has participated for six years.&#13;
Wohlust enjoys gymnastics because there is a&#13;
feeling of achievement, yet challenge involved. She&#13;
said, "It feels good to do good."&#13;
Wohlust and Scherer explain gymnastics as the&#13;
ability to develop complete control over the mind&#13;
and body. In this way they display manners of s elfconfidence,&#13;
style and poise.&#13;
THE FACT IS - WE ALL DO.&#13;
I am not talking about acquaintances.&#13;
We all have plenty of those.&#13;
I am talking about real friends—&#13;
the do or die kind. We both know&#13;
those aren't easy to come by.&#13;
In order to establish real friendships,&#13;
we have to make ourselves&#13;
available to meet other people, we&#13;
have to be willing to work with&#13;
other people, and if we expect&#13;
other people to appreciate our&#13;
ideas, we must be willing to listen&#13;
to theirs.&#13;
If you hear an acquaintance or&#13;
an unknown individual making a&#13;
statement you don't agree with, it&#13;
makes little difference. If that person&#13;
were a true friend, you'd make&#13;
the time to discuss it with him&#13;
thoroughly.&#13;
When you have a personal problem&#13;
to discuss or something to be&#13;
happy about, you don't take it to an&#13;
acquaintance—you take it to a true&#13;
friend.&#13;
I could go on and on relating&#13;
the differences between acquaintances&#13;
and friends, but you already&#13;
know the differences. The thing I&#13;
want to tell you about is an organization&#13;
which was founded to&#13;
promote honest friendships.&#13;
When a group of Boston University&#13;
law students first gathered together&#13;
in 1909, they did so because&#13;
they were already friends. But&#13;
when they decided to expand their&#13;
fraternity to take in new members&#13;
on their own campus and on other&#13;
campuses, they did so because&#13;
they wanted to share their friendship.&#13;
Because of their belief in the&#13;
concept that honest friendships&#13;
promote the best in men, over 120,-&#13;
000 individuals have shared their&#13;
idea.&#13;
A group of acquaintances without&#13;
purpose is called a clique, but&#13;
that is where a fraternity is different.&#13;
We have proven that the more&#13;
a man learns about being a good&#13;
fraternity brother, the more he&#13;
knows about being a good friend&#13;
to his associates outside the&#13;
fraternity.&#13;
Even though you will make lifelong&#13;
friendships within the fraternity,&#13;
you will find that the real&#13;
value of the fraternity is learning&#13;
how to be a good friend and a productive&#13;
member of society.&#13;
A fraternity is then a growth institution.&#13;
It is designed to help&#13;
your acquaintances grow, your&#13;
friendships grow, and most importantly&#13;
to help you grow as an&#13;
individual.&#13;
You make many decisions every&#13;
day. Choosing to join a fraternity,&#13;
and, if so which one, is. an important&#13;
decision. The only individual&#13;
capable of telling you about the&#13;
fraternal experience is someone&#13;
who has experienced it. Talk to a&#13;
member of Lambda Chi Alpha&#13;
about his experience.&#13;
I did and I found the fraternity&#13;
experience to be extremely&#13;
worthwhile.&#13;
Frank Maez of Lambda Chi Alpha&#13;
is meeting with interested students&#13;
in the Library Learning Center&#13;
October 7-11, from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00&#13;
p.m.&#13;
LAMBDA CHI ALPHA the Fraternity ofHonest Friendship&#13;
4437 - 2 2nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
SvuMstf the. Qineti&#13;
Piffci &amp; Otaluut Qoodl&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA-551-7171&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
i U/&#13;
"U w&#13;
l'W-P ARKSI.DE&#13;
/INTERBREAKTRIP&#13;
H O T E L &amp; R A C Q U E T CLL)B&#13;
acapulco&#13;
PLUS $20.00 TA X&#13;
&amp; S ERVICE BASED&#13;
ON 3 TO A ROOM&#13;
$244&#13;
• Round Trip Jet&#13;
• 7 Nights Lodging&#13;
• Marcarita P arty&#13;
Yacht C ruise of B ay&#13;
• Ground Transfers&#13;
• Tips &amp; Taxes&#13;
For application or information&#13;
Contact:&#13;
CAMPUSTRAVEL CENTER&#13;
LLC D-197 Call : 553-2294&#13;
Bonanza's&#13;
three-point program&#13;
to beat inflation.&#13;
The Tuesday Night Price Bonanza.&#13;
(&#13;
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•Peed a child in America for 49&lt;,&#13;
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, ° r|ght amount of food to make a kid smile - a hamburger,&#13;
an order of French fries, and a lollipop. And a price - 49c - to make you smile.&#13;
® Brink up. The seconds are on us.&#13;
At Bonanza, you get free refills on all soft drinks, coffee, and ice tea.&#13;
IbuTl love love ft.&#13;
AVAILABLE IN KENOSHA ONLY </text>
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              <text>PSGA files with regents&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
",. Parkside Student Government Association.&#13;
.... (PSGAl. Tuesday. Oct. 8 filed a peution asking&#13;
fer a declaratory ruling on the newly ratified&#13;
student constitution with the Board of Regents.&#13;
John Kontz. President Pro T~mpore. said that the&#13;
petition for a declaratory ruling "would carry it&#13;
(!be constitution) to the end through the adQliJlislrlltivechannels."&#13;
"If the Regents reject this petition." Kontz&#13;
.... tinued. "~e (PSGA) would appeal it to the Dane&#13;
CoW!ty CircuIt Court and. If necessary. to the State&#13;
&amp;apreI1lc Court."&#13;
1bepetition for a declaratory ruling "requires the&#13;
Regents to make a final statement either denying or&#13;
granting specific sections of this statement," said&#13;
Kootz. .&#13;
Thepetition for a declaratory ruling asks that the&#13;
Regentsdetermine the ,?anner in w?i~h stu~en~.&#13;
select their representatives to participate In Institutional&#13;
governance, and formulate and&#13;
recommend to the Chancellor a budget involving&#13;
the disposition of student fees which constitute&#13;
substantial support for campus student activities.&#13;
"At no point in the University of Wisconsin&#13;
requisition process is there a requirement for the&#13;
signature or certification by students, selected by&#13;
the Student Body at the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
to participate in institutional governance,"&#13;
the petition states.&#13;
The petition asks that the "Regents declare that&#13;
all requisitions from the allocable portion of the&#13;
segregated university fee made subsequent to July&#13;
8. 1974, be made only after students selected by the&#13;
Student Body at the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
to participate in institutional governance,&#13;
or their designees, sign or certify that the&#13;
requisition is being made in accordance with the&#13;
policies concerning student life, services, and interests."&#13;
According to the petition, "the Parks ide Student&#13;
Government Association. Inc. had been designated&#13;
by the Student Body at the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
to exercise the powers and responsibilities&#13;
granted 'students', Jl in the merger statute.&#13;
Through the constitutional referendum, which&#13;
was held Sept. 24 and 25, "the Student Body at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside organized&#13;
themselves as the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Incorporated," the petition states.&#13;
In light of this. the petition asks that the "Regents&#13;
declare vacant all students seats on committees&#13;
involved in the process of institutional governance&#13;
which have not been filled according to the&#13;
procedures set forth in the Constitution of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association, Inc., or&#13;
in the By-Laws and resolutIons adopted pursuant to&#13;
that constitution. but instead have been fiUed by&#13;
appointment hy the ChanceUor or the Dean of&#13;
Students ...&#13;
The petition asks further that the "Regenta&#13;
declare that aU committees involved in the for,&#13;
mulation, and review, or policies concernu'l&#13;
student life, services and interests. have a majority&#13;
of student members."&#13;
Also. the petitioo alleges that the "board and its&#13;
several faculties are now in tbe process of adopting&#13;
rules for tenure and probationary appouuments,&#13;
and for the review of faculty performance and for&#13;
the non-retention ani dismissal of faculty members."&#13;
The petition claims that "neither the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association, Inc.. nor i&#13;
appropriate committees have been consulted on&#13;
these rules."&#13;
Therefore, the petition asks that the "Regents&#13;
direct that the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association. Icn .• through its appropriate committees.&#13;
be consulted on the rules before tbey are&#13;
submitted for a public hearing or&#13;
The petition asking for a declaratory ruling on the&#13;
PSGA constitution will be before the Regents at&#13;
their I 'ovember meeting.&#13;
TheParkside,-------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
~------------ ....~.:==::~--- Wednesday,Oct, 16,1974Vol.III No,11---&#13;
GET&#13;
" A&#13;
___~PIN.-&#13;
GET&#13;
1"&#13;
o PIN!&#13;
Tax forum&#13;
Nobel winning economist&#13;
Kenneth Arrow of Harvard and&#13;
former interior Secretary&#13;
Stewart Udall are among six&#13;
national experts who will&#13;
headline a free. public forum on&#13;
"Value JUdgments and&#13;
Taxation" to be held at the&#13;
University of wisconsin-Perkside&#13;
Saturday. Oct. 19.&#13;
The forum will beheld in the&#13;
COmmunication Arts theater&#13;
Saturday morning beginning at 9&#13;
a.m. and is sponsored by&#13;
Parkside through a grant from&#13;
the National Endowment for the&#13;
Humanities.&#13;
ThepUblicforum at Parkside is&#13;
PBrt of a two-day conference on&#13;
~t topic which will convene&#13;
·day. Oct. 18. at an all-day&#13;
Session at Wingspread, the&#13;
~ference center of the Johnson&#13;
OundatlOn in Racine. The&#13;
Wingspreadsession, which is not&#13;
~ to the general public. wili&#13;
rtng together about 60&#13;
J10licYmakersfrom local state ad· ~. national government.&#13;
Iness. industry. labor. the&#13;
mass media and citizen groups.&#13;
Conference co*chairmen&#13;
Ronald Gottesman. English and&#13;
humanities, and RIchard&#13;
Rosenberg, economics, t:M:&gt;thof&#13;
the Parkside faculty; said the&#13;
public forum at Parkside wili&#13;
feature the same panel of experts&#13;
and topics as the Wingspread&#13;
session. Each panelist will&#13;
discuss his topic for about 20&#13;
minutes, then, after a refreshment&#13;
break, the floor wH.Ibe open&#13;
to questions and discuSSIO~S.The&#13;
panel wili consider from different&#13;
perspectives the way. ~oclal&#13;
values relate to tax policies at&#13;
national, state and local levels.&#13;
Arrow, a Harvard professor of&#13;
economics, received the. Nobel&#13;
prize in economic science m ~972.&#13;
Past president of .th~ Amenc~n&#13;
Economics AssocIation .. he 1S&#13;
perhaps best known for hl~ book.&#13;
Social Choice and IndiVidual&#13;
Values (1951). His most recent&#13;
work is The Limits of Qr·&#13;
tanization (974).&#13;
Udall. who was Secretary of the&#13;
Interior from 1961-69 and earher&#13;
served as a Congressman from&#13;
. continl:ed on page 3&#13;
Time of...the sun&#13;
Solar conference slated&#13;
by Colleen Dorsey&#13;
On Friday. October 25,&#13;
Parkside, the University Extension&#13;
and the Racine-Kenosha&#13;
Citizens for the Environment will&#13;
jointly sponsor an all-day conference&#13;
on the •'Time of the Sun ...&#13;
Solar Power."&#13;
It will be the first conference of&#13;
this type ever held in the Midwest&#13;
and will deal with the practical&#13;
application of solar energy.&#13;
Edith Sobel. chairperson of the&#13;
Racine-Kenosha Citizens for the&#13;
Environment said, "This conference&#13;
is geared for the&#13;
businessman and lay person just&#13;
developing an interest in alternative&#13;
sources of energy. Most&#13;
previous conferences, in other&#13;
parts of the country. have been&#13;
structured for scientists and&#13;
highly knowledgeable environmentalists."&#13;
She said it is&#13;
hoped that this conference ",..ill&#13;
get others concerned in the use of&#13;
solar power.&#13;
The conference will feature a&#13;
number of internationally&#13;
recognized authorities in the field&#13;
of solar and wind power.&#13;
Dr. George Lof, Director of the&#13;
Solar Applications Laboratory&#13;
and president of the International&#13;
Solar Energy Society. Dr. J.A.&#13;
Duffie. Director of the Solar&#13;
Energy Laboratory in dadison,&#13;
and John Kopecky. Project&#13;
Engineer of Solar Energy at&#13;
Honeywell. Inc. of Minneapolis,&#13;
Minnesota will speak on the&#13;
subject of solar energy. William&#13;
Heronemus, wind engineering&#13;
systems expert and professor of&#13;
Engineering at the Umversity of&#13;
~Iassachusetts in Boston will&#13;
speak on wind power.&#13;
lorris Firebaugh, associate&#13;
professor of PhYSICS.said of the&#13;
conference. "They've got the&#13;
very top names in solar energy in&#13;
the world. Lor and Duffie. and the&#13;
number one advocate and&#13;
principal spokesman on wind&#13;
power. Heronernus."&#13;
"Lof is principally an expert in&#13;
the field of space heating hy solar&#13;
energy." Firebaugh explained.&#13;
"He has lived in a solar house&#13;
himself for fifteen years and also&#13;
has a solar-beated laboratory."&#13;
Firebaugh has been&#13;
corresponding with Lof for some&#13;
time. In Firebaugh's rorthcoming&#13;
book, Per ptctJVH on Energy&#13;
(eo-authored with Lon Reudisilil.&#13;
there will be a picture of Lof's&#13;
solar-heated bouse. An article on&#13;
the "Power from the off-shore&#13;
winds" by Heronemus will also&#13;
be featured in their book.&#13;
Sobel said Lof was internationally&#13;
known and had just&#13;
returned from 8 meeting in the&#13;
U.s.S.R on heating and cooling&#13;
with solar energy.&#13;
Kopecky IS project engineer of&#13;
solar energy at Honeywell. Inc . of&#13;
Minneapolis. Minnesota&#13;
Honeywell has done trial projee&#13;
on heating and cooling s_ I ms&#13;
for school 10 the Ea r. and ha&#13;
also worked on trailer whIch are&#13;
heated and cooled by .olar&#13;
power.&#13;
Parkside tudents may attend&#13;
the conference free but should&#13;
register by October 18 m Gr. 344&#13;
con"nl:" 01\ IN,1t S&#13;
Amer. lang. to go&#13;
by John Gesquiere&#13;
The American Language&#13;
requirement will be abolished in&#13;
the Fall of 1975 if a proposal now&#13;
being studied is adopted.&#13;
As Donald Kummings. English&#13;
Department Coordinator, said.&#13;
"it's not doing its job; faculty&#13;
members have complained that&#13;
many st,~dents do not write weB&#13;
enough. I..&#13;
The Academic Po 1C1es&#13;
Committee has been working on&#13;
the proposal ror the past year.&#13;
If' approval is given, com~lete&#13;
elimination of the American&#13;
Language requirement would&#13;
become effective in the Fall or&#13;
1975. .&#13;
A new requirement in wntlen&#13;
composition would be&#13;
established, one that for most&#13;
students would be a two-course&#13;
requirement, depending on&#13;
placement and performance,&#13;
with most students being placed&#13;
in either English 100 (Elements&#13;
of English). or English 101&#13;
(Freshman Composition l.&#13;
Freshman Composition is a&#13;
new course that is designed to&#13;
meet the present requirement in&#13;
American Language for students&#13;
entering under previous and&#13;
current catalogues.&#13;
A higher level course would&#13;
also be requirod. Students who&#13;
complete English 100 or 101. or&#13;
score highly on placement tests.&#13;
will take English 102 (presently&#13;
Advanced Composition 201&gt;.&#13;
Placement tests can exempt&#13;
some from the composition&#13;
requirement completely.&#13;
The proposal is part of a review&#13;
of all general degree&#13;
reqwrements being conducted by&#13;
Ihe Academic Policies Committee.&#13;
Although neither the American&#13;
Language Committee nor the&#13;
English discipline has taken a&#13;
formal stand on the issue,&#13;
members from both have been&#13;
involved in its preparation.&#13;
English 100 and 101. both selfpacing,&#13;
pass*fail, three-credit&#13;
courses would increase the&#13;
number of required courses for&#13;
the majority of students.&#13;
The composition requirement&#13;
is, however. a skill requirement&#13;
assuming "that a given level of&#13;
literacy should be achieved by&#13;
com,1'MACf Oft ..... S&#13;
PSGA files with regents by Michael Olszyk&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
'l1!e Parkside Student Gove:nment ~sociation,&#13;
Inc. (PSGA), Tuesday, _Oct. 8 filed a petition asking&#13;
for a declaratory rulmg on the newly ratified&#13;
tudent constitution with the Board of Regents. 5 John Kontz, President Pro Tempore, said that the&#13;
petition for a declaratory ruling "would carry it&#13;
(the co~titution) to ,,the end through the administrative&#13;
channels.&#13;
••If the Regents reject this petition," Kontz&#13;
continued, "~e (PSGA) w~uld appeal it to the Dane&#13;
eounty Circuit Court and, 1f necessary, to the State&#13;
Supreme Court." . The petition for a declaratory rulmg "requires the&#13;
Regents to ma_k~ a fin~l stateme~t either denying or&#13;
granting spec1f1c sections of this statement,'' said&#13;
Kontz. '11ie petition for a declaratory ruling asks that the&#13;
Regents determine the ~anner in w~~h stu~en~,&#13;
select their representatives to participate m mstitutional&#13;
governance, and formulate and&#13;
recommend to the Chancellor a budget involving&#13;
the disposition of student fees which constitute&#13;
ubstantial support for campus student activities.&#13;
"At no point in the University of Wisconsin&#13;
requisition process is there a requirement for the&#13;
ignature or certification by students. selected by&#13;
the St~dent Body at the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
to participate in institutional gover- nance," the petition states.&#13;
The petition asks that the "Regents declare that&#13;
all requisitions from the allocable portion of the&#13;
segregated university fee made subsequent to July&#13;
8, 1974, be made only after students selected b the&#13;
Student Body at the University of Wisco.nsinParkside&#13;
to participate in institutional governance,&#13;
or their designees, sign or certify that the&#13;
requisition is being made in accordance with the&#13;
policies concerning student life, services, and interests."&#13;
•&#13;
According to the petition, "the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association. Inc. had been de ignated&#13;
by the Student Body at the University of Wi consinParkside&#13;
to exercise the powers and responsibilities&#13;
granted 'students'," in the merger statute.&#13;
Through the constitutional referendum, which&#13;
was held Sept. 24 and 25, "the Student Body at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside organized&#13;
themselves as the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Incorporated," the petition states.&#13;
In light of this. the petition asks that the "Regents&#13;
declare vacant all students seats on committees&#13;
involved in the process of institutional governance&#13;
which have not been filled according to the&#13;
procedures set forth in the Constitution of the&#13;
The Parkside,-------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
--------Wednesday,Oct. 16, 1974 Vol. Ill No.11----&#13;
Time of the sun&#13;
Solar conference slated&#13;
.I&#13;
Tax forum&#13;
Nobel winning economist&#13;
Kenneth Arrow of Harvard and&#13;
former interior Secretary&#13;
Stewart Udall are among six&#13;
national experts who will&#13;
headline a free public forum ori&#13;
"Value Judgments and&#13;
Taxation" to be held at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 19.&#13;
The forum will be. held in the&#13;
Communication Arts theater&#13;
Saturday morning beginning at 9&#13;
a.m. and is sponsored by&#13;
Parkside through a grant from&#13;
the National Endowment for the&#13;
Humanities.&#13;
The public forum at Parkside is&#13;
P3rt of a two-day conference on&#13;
that topic which will convene&#13;
Friday, Oct. 18, at an all-day&#13;
session at Wingspread, the&#13;
~feren~e ce~ter of the Johnson&#13;
Woundation m Racine. The&#13;
ingspread session, which is not&#13;
~pen to the general public, will&#13;
ri~g together about 60&#13;
i&gt;Ohcymakers from local state and · ' ~- national government,&#13;
rn iness, _industry, labor, the ass media and citizen groups.&#13;
Conference co-chairmen&#13;
Ronald Gottesman, English and&#13;
humanities, and Richard&#13;
Rosenberg, economics, bc?th of&#13;
the Parkside faculty; said the&#13;
public forum at Parkside will&#13;
feature the same panel of experts&#13;
and topics as the Wingspread&#13;
session . Each panelist will&#13;
discuss :us topic for about 20&#13;
minutes, then, after a refreshment&#13;
break, the floor wil_l be open&#13;
to questions and discuss10?s. The&#13;
panel will consider from d1ffer~nt&#13;
perspectives the way. ~oc1al&#13;
values relate to tax pohc1es at&#13;
national, state and local levels.&#13;
Arrow' a Harvard professor of&#13;
economics, received the_ Nobel&#13;
prize in economic science m ~972.&#13;
Past president of ~h~ Amenc3:n&#13;
Economics Assoc1at10n, . he is&#13;
perhaps best known for h1~ ~ook,&#13;
Social Choice and Individual&#13;
Values (1951). His most recent&#13;
work is The Limits of ()rtanization&#13;
0974) · Udall, who was Secretary of ~e&#13;
Interior from 1961-69 and earlier&#13;
served as a Congressman from&#13;
continced on page 3&#13;
by Colleen Dor ey&#13;
On Friday, October 25,&#13;
Parkside, the University Extension&#13;
and the Racine-Kenosha&#13;
Citizens for the Environment will&#13;
jointly sponsor an all-day conference&#13;
on the "Time of the Sun ...&#13;
Solar Power."&#13;
It will be the first conference of&#13;
this type ever held in the Midwest&#13;
and will deal with the practical&#13;
application of solar energy.&#13;
Edith Sobel, chairperson of the&#13;
Racine-Kenosha Citizens for the&#13;
Environment said, "This conference&#13;
is geared for the&#13;
businessman and lay person ju t&#13;
developing an intere t in alternative&#13;
sources of energy. to. t&#13;
previous conference , in other&#13;
parts of the country, have been&#13;
s.tructur d for cientist and&#13;
highly knowledgeable environmentali&#13;
·ts." She said it i&#13;
hoped that this conference \\ill&#13;
get others concerned in the e of&#13;
solar power. The conference will feature a&#13;
number of internationallv&#13;
recognized authorities in the field&#13;
of solar and rind power.&#13;
Dr. George Lo!, Director of the&#13;
Solar Application Laboratory&#13;
and president of the International&#13;
Solar Energ Society, Dr. J.A.&#13;
Duffie, Director of the Solar&#13;
Energy Laboratory in • ladison,&#13;
and John Kopecky, Project&#13;
Engineer of Solar Energ_ at&#13;
Honeywell, Inc. of , 1inneapoli ,&#13;
linnesota will peak on the&#13;
ubject of solar energy. William&#13;
Heronemus, "ind en ·neermg&#13;
) 'tern ~-pert and prof r of&#13;
Engineering at the 'niv it of&#13;
ta_ chu.ctL in Bo on will&#13;
.peak on ind po .... er. , 1orris Firebau ,&#13;
prof sor of Phy ic , .&#13;
conference. "They'v&#13;
very top nam in. lar energ • in&#13;
the world, Lof and Duffi , and th&#13;
number one advocate and&#13;
principal pok man on \\ind&#13;
powe!". Heronemu ."&#13;
" Lof i principally an pert in&#13;
the field of pace heating by lar&#13;
energy;• Fireba h explained.&#13;
" He ha lived in a solar hou&#13;
Amer. lang. to go&#13;
by John Gesquiere&#13;
The American Language&#13;
requirement \\ill be abolished in&#13;
the Fall of 1975 if a proposal now&#13;
being studied is adopted.&#13;
As Donald Kummings, English&#13;
Department C~rdiJ?ator. said;&#13;
"it's not doing its ]Ob: facult)&#13;
members have complained that&#13;
many st.~dents do not \\Tite well&#13;
enough. . The Academic Policies&#13;
Committee has been working on&#13;
the proposal for the past year.&#13;
If· approval is given. com~lete&#13;
elimination of the American&#13;
Language requirement would&#13;
become effective in the Fall or&#13;
1975. . . A new requirement m written&#13;
composition would be&#13;
established, one that for mo t&#13;
students would be a two-cour e&#13;
requirement, depending on&#13;
placement and performance,&#13;
"ith most tudents being placed&#13;
in either EnglLh 100 (Elem n&#13;
of English &gt;, or Engli h 101&#13;
(Fre hman Composition).&#13;
Freshman Compo ition i a&#13;
new course that is d igned to&#13;
meet the present requirement in&#13;
American Language for tudents&#13;
entering under previou and&#13;
current catalogue .&#13;
A higher level cour e would&#13;
also be required Students who&#13;
complete Engli h 100 or 101, or&#13;
score highly on placement te ts,&#13;
will take English 102 &lt;presently&#13;
Advanced Compo ition 201l.&#13;
Placement tests can exempt&#13;
some from the compo ition&#13;
requir m nt comp! el .&#13;
The pr I' rt of&#13;
or all en rat de r&#13;
reqwremen i conducted by&#13;
the cademic Policl ommitt&#13;
•&#13;
Altho&#13;
Language Committee nor th&#13;
EnglLh dLciplin ha tak n&#13;
formal and on th i u •&#13;
member from both ha\'e&#13;
involved in its pr paration.&#13;
English 100 and 101, both . lf.&#13;
pacing, pa -fail, three-credit&#13;
cour e would increa e the&#13;
number of required cou for&#13;
the majority of tudenL.&#13;
The composition requirement&#13;
i , however, a kill requir ment&#13;
assuming "that a gi en le el of&#13;
literacy should be achie\'ed by&#13;
cont n\:NI °" pa9t s &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RA GER WwcInes.s.y, oct. 16. 1974&#13;
'--&#13;
A GER&#13;
EditorioI/Opinion&#13;
co : something&#13;
or everyone&#13;
To all of au al enjoyed the seplember Issue of ICON&#13;
(RANGER humanlhes magazine) we reilerale our&#13;
In Iallon. conlrlbute&#13;
In n nsliluf on such as Par side. with lhe&#13;
dom nIIl ng Influence of the business and lechnology&#13;
I. IC offen 0IIe of the lew lorms 01 humanlsllc&#13;
pr on to reach many 01 lhose sludents Involved In&#13;
se ences. The conlroversy and commenls over the&#13;
I rsl ICOM shows lhal sludents Ihrooghouf the school&#13;
e I ed al 'and hopefully read) the ICO .&#13;
To hose s uden not dlrec ty Involved In humanlsllc&#13;
tud thaI tool&lt; lime 10 read and com me'll on ICON we&#13;
n you," Too 0 en lhose deeply Involved In Ihe&#13;
s 0 e vas ma iorlly 01 people with IIlfle&#13;
rt sl e ra nlng lhal ma e up lhe major portion 01 Ihe&#13;
r saud nee. The arti •• w lie nol losing hi. lnrlty&#13;
or sunning hIs ba ground. musl bridge Ihe&#13;
pIe sts be een h s perceptions and concep ions&#13;
nd pr I e ces and Ideals 01 his audience.&#13;
raug a lorum soc as leo ear isl exposes Ihe&#13;
r ul 01 hi'll lIect 0 lhe scrut ny 01 menlalitles 01&#13;
I s tur II 01 dl lerng onenlahon. A dialogue&#13;
d,spara e groups ca only increase the&#13;
rt·s 10 his audience and broaden Ihe&#13;
w r neu 0 lhe non.. rt,,!.&#13;
In S conlex RANG ERin es those Involved In Ihe&#13;
humanls c stud'es and others 10 con ribute Iheir orks&#13;
and 0 all 0 hers 0 conlr"bute he" comments.&#13;
OOPSi&#13;
!be IJ"'llI"DI&#13;
I • belief 01. m} DeW&#13;
job nat mellhll..ed 10 lb.&#13;
_ It blhat e-_ though I'U&#13;
_ ....,...... 1 be ..bl. to&#13;
..... "ta.1D &lt;be COCllaCl tb all&#13;
!be a.1 Parblde wha mean&#13;
.. much '" 1M&#13;
ebril)' tbe r..&#13;
the bead 01. c..l........ W&lt;__ ' Bureau ...&#13;
r t&#13;
~n.P.'.'&#13;
RA GER&#13;
e PARI&lt;SIDE RANGER .s a wholly Independent&#13;
publ ca on 01 e s udents 01 the U.W. Parkside. ex&#13;
or s ng n rests. opinions. and concerns 01 Ih£&#13;
tuden s. r porlS ble lor ts conlenls. OIlices are&#13;
loea ed In 019. LLC. U.W. Par s de. Kenosha,&#13;
scons n 53140 Phones ill229S. ill 2281.&#13;
Ed.tw enne Pesl a&#13;
lItIs ..... s M....ver SIeve Johnson&#13;
Adver1.s".. M."..-r John sac el&#13;
ProdlK"'" M.". r TomKennedy&#13;
Copy Edotw Rebecca Ec lund&#13;
Editw ch I OIszy&#13;
Hum." s Ed.1cw amy cundari&#13;
o..artm ... t Paul Anderson.&#13;
pp«, Je nntne S,psma.&#13;
lson&#13;
Huma". o..artm ... t Waller Ulbricht. Fred Bultman&#13;
Pllot.. raplly Edilcw 0.'- Allen&#13;
Pllo,.. •• pfMn 0 ve Keller. Ril.&#13;
rn&#13;
A&#13;
SCHOOL ODYSSEY 2001:&#13;
WHERE/5TH£:&#13;
ART DEPARTMENT?&#13;
"&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
•&#13;
James DuRell Smith Jr.&#13;
THEY'RE NOT REAL! Drs. Quass and Knight are not what yw&#13;
Utink! The two of them, I mean the real ones, were beaten to deathtwo&#13;
years ago wilb a rubber policeman by a crazed quant student fll'&#13;
simply having had the bad fortune to walk into the lab at the very&#13;
moment that .the student discovered after 79 titrations, that some&#13;
practical joker bad exchanged his soluble cWorlde· for a bottleof&#13;
Squirt. The important thing to note is that the student was im·&#13;
mediately torn to bloody pieces by a mob of irate chern. students(«&#13;
having dispatched the two much loved lamas of labs to that biglabin&#13;
the sky. The mourning students worked &lt;lilyand night to replace th&lt;ir&#13;
lamented losses with androids fully programmed to provide the same&#13;
light in lbe black worlds Qf analytical chemistry and inorganic that&#13;
Homer did. This level of programming excellence was only possible&#13;
because the good doctors had given so much of themselves. Thenew&#13;
Homer Knight turns out exams just as hair curling and Quass's&#13;
mystical Imagery Improves with each passing day, like a goodviolin.&#13;
&lt;Had these characteristics not been programmed in, someone mi~t&#13;
have suspected the switch.) Which all simply goes to show that gettiIC&#13;
rtd of good people like the aforementioned is not the kind of thingdone&#13;
easftyor excusably under the noses of those who have benefited inthe&#13;
past and anticipate benefiting in the future from their dedicated&#13;
tutelage.&#13;
MANYWEEKS OF POLITICAL INFIGHTING in the boardrOOmof&#13;
Anaconda Aircar Corp. were brought to a close last week whenthe&#13;
deCISIonwas finally reached to adopt a proposal by the president"&#13;
brother-m·law that the company convert to the world famous Parks,de&#13;
Pe~S?nne) Policy Performance Parameters. In depth analysis of the&#13;
po .C1es as they would apply to the famous producers of anti-gravitY&#13;
l:,XlSrevealed that whereas before the swltchover a good man could&#13;
de fire? for mere ~n~ompetance, now it will be possible to save,the&#13;
,:;,rvmg fellow hIS Job if only he looks good in committee and "gns&#13;
we m the company chorus. While admitting that this might cause an&#13;
o~erall deterioration in the company's ability to fulfill their stated&#13;
O&#13;
°thjeCti~esof performance production by req-liiring the release or&#13;
erwlse well q I·f·ed fl1 those who' .ua 1 I people who are lousy tenors to make room&#13;
milk had smg m tune, a company spokesman said that the priceof&#13;
An d&#13;
goneup to 4.15and that motorcycles had nothing to dowit!llt&#13;
- aCOn a down fift d . . eeDan a third In heavy trading:.--&#13;
CITIZENS OF"E ent&#13;
erypto ra ARTH ARM YOURSELVES! Defense departm&#13;
in theg&#13;
chp~ershave broken the code by which extraterrestial agents ar Itectur I f' . om- municatin wit a. lr~ that designed Parkside have been C&#13;
vieWed frogmor~~elr mm~torr martian mentors. Itseems that w~&#13;
responsible for t~~(authoritative sources claim sky-lab photOS~e&#13;
twists t IS breakthrough) or another planet (I) the sIr ... , urns and see . I' I 'dewP' system takes mmg Y meamngless curves that our 51 'ell&#13;
hold deep an~ctually appears as calligraphic.like characters wh';'~&#13;
revelation puts rsSlbly sm~ster meaning for earth dwellers, . it&#13;
was claimed tha~ ~est preVIOUScontroversial allegations Wh~:ts&#13;
(found stumbl" SCovery had been made by disoriented stu &lt;WI&#13;
a walk from m~ around i~circles and S-cuTves two hours overdUean&#13;
idiogram for ~ t A t~ POlCtB) that the pavement was actual.l~(f1S&#13;
have been conf~e Chmese graffiti. This reporter's own SUSPICIappreciated&#13;
from ~med, that our sidewalk Sebring can only be tht&#13;
ground.) e air, (It certainly isn't appreciated here ort&#13;
T&#13;
A GER&#13;
'--------Edi oriol/Opinion&#13;
I 0&#13;
0 e&#13;
• •&#13;
00 S&#13;
• 0 ,et 1ng&#13;
eryone&#13;
r ch • Fr&#13;
Ria&#13;
A SCHOOL ODYSSEY 2001:&#13;
WHERE'S TH£&#13;
ART t,EPARTMEt-.!T?&#13;
'&#13;
James DuRell Smith Jr.&#13;
THEY'RE NOT REAL! Drs. Quass and Knight are not what yoo&#13;
think! The two of them, I mean the real ones, were beaten to death two&#13;
years ago with a rubber policeman by a crazed quant student for&#13;
simply having had the bad fortune to walk into the lab at the very&#13;
moment that lhe student discovered after 79 titrations, that some&#13;
practical joker had exchanged his soluble chloride-for a bottle of&#13;
Squirt. The important thing to note is that the student was im·&#13;
mediately torn to bloody pieces by a mob of irate chem. students for&#13;
having dispatched the two much loved lamas of labs to that big lab in&#13;
the sky. The mourning students worked day and night to replace their&#13;
lamented losses with androids fully programmed to provide the same&#13;
light in the black worlds Qf analytical chemistry and inorganic that&#13;
Homer did. This level of programming excellence was only possible&#13;
because the good doctors had given so much of themselves. The new&#13;
Hom~ ~ght turns out exams just as hair curling and Q~~·s&#13;
mystical imagery improves with each passing day, like a good v10bn.&#13;
&lt;Had these characteristics not been programmed in, someone m1~I&#13;
~ve suspected the switch.) Which all simply goes to show that getl~&#13;
nd of good people like the aforementioned is not the kind of thing done&#13;
easfty or excusably under the noses of those who have benefited in the&#13;
past and anticipate benefiting in the future from their dedicated&#13;
tutelage.&#13;
MANY WEEKS OF POLITICAL INFIGHTING in the boardroom of&#13;
An~~nda Air~ar Corp. were brought to a close last week when the&#13;
decision. was fmally reached to adopt a proposal by the presid~t&#13;
brother-m-law_ that the company convert to the world famous Parkside&#13;
Per5?nnel Policy Performance Parameters. In depth analysis of the&#13;
po ~cies as they would apply to the famous producers of anti-gravity&#13;
~&gt;OS revealed that whereas before the switchover a good man could&#13;
d fire? for mere incompetance, now it will be possible to save (he&#13;
,tser:,mg fellow his job if only he looks good in committee and sigr.&#13;
ell 10 the co~pany chorus. While admitting that this might cause an 0~~ral~ deterioration in the company's ability to fulfill their stat4&#13;
0 ~ecll~es of performance production by requiring the release 0&#13;
~o e~~e w~l qualified people who are lousy tenors to make rOO!" f~&#13;
milk h O Slng 10 tune, a company spokesman said that the price 0&#13;
An addgone up to 4.15 and that motorcycles had nothing to do wi!h it. - aeon a do fif . . wn teen and a third m heavy trading. --&#13;
~~;!Z!NS OF EARTH ARM YOURSELVES! Defense departrnen~&#13;
in th g ~~ers have broken the code by which extraterrestial agen&#13;
muni~~n 1~ctura~ firi_n that designed Parkside have been c_o:;&#13;
viewed fro~ with !heir minatory martian mentors. It seems that ~h bt&#13;
responsible for~~~ &lt;authoritative sources claim sky-Jab photos toge&#13;
tv/1sts tur or is breakthrough} or another planet ( ! ) , the stranal , ns and s · 'dew ystem takes eemmgly meaningless curves that our si ch&#13;
hold deep an:ctual~y app~rs as calligraphic-like characters w;ii&#13;
revelation P ts r5sibly s1mster meaning for earth dwellers. . it&#13;
was cJaimeduth ~ ~est previous controversial allegations wher~:ts&#13;
&lt;found stumbr a scovery had been made by disoriented SlU&#13;
a Walk from in~ around i~ circles and S-curves two hours overdr an&#13;
idiogram for 1:mt A t~ pomt B) that the pavement was actu~ Y()ll$&#13;
have been conte ~mese graffiti. This reporter's own sus:1 ap·&#13;
Pfeciated from 1t';t . that our si~ewalk Sebring can only t)lt&#13;
ground.I e air. &lt;It certainly isn't appreciated here 00 &#13;
Dilemn~ of the handicapped:&#13;
.the struggle to get through one day&#13;
by J.D. Garoutte&#13;
Editor's note: The following article is the first in a&#13;
tWOpart series on the problems that physically&#13;
handicapped s!udents face attending a university,&#13;
such as parkside.&#13;
As these people walk down the hall many heads&#13;
will turn, some in concern, some in sympathy and&#13;
SOIT!~ in amazement. Most people though will be&#13;
,;king for the same reason: they are looking at a&#13;
~ysically handicapped person struggle through the&#13;
day·&#13;
Being physically handicapped can and often does&#13;
p-esentproblems for these individuals. However, in&#13;
the future, these prohlems may he alleviated due to&#13;
revisions in building codes and new a pproaches to&#13;
education.&#13;
The new approach to educating the physically&#13;
handicapped is in the fact that these individuals are&#13;
now attending "normal" public schools. In the past,&#13;
the physically handicapped person was sent to&#13;
schools specifically created for his-her needs.&#13;
Also, revised building codes have made public&#13;
facilities more accessible to the physically handicapped.&#13;
Under the Wisconsin Administrative Code,&#13;
safeguards for physically handicapped persons&#13;
(Septemher 1973): "Any place of employment or&#13;
public building, the initial construction of which is&#13;
commenced after July I, 1970, shall he so designed&#13;
and constructed as to provide reasonable means of&#13;
ingress and egress by the physically handicapped.&#13;
"The requirements may be accomplished by at&#13;
least one ground or street level entrance and exit&#13;
without steps.&#13;
"Doors having a clear opening of at least 40 inches&#13;
in width.&#13;
"There shall be reasonable means of access from&#13;
a parking lot if any ... to at least one floor on which&#13;
the primary business of such building is located."&#13;
At Parkside, the Department of Safety and&#13;
Security plays a key role in assuring that parking is&#13;
available to the physically handicapped.&#13;
According to William Carter, Jr., police officer, a&#13;
total of six spaces are available to the physically&#13;
handicapped for parking;' three spaces adjacent to&#13;
Tallent Hall and three spaces directly hehind the&#13;
Classroom Building.&#13;
leAstudent who owns a disabled license plate and&#13;
dispiays this on his auto, does not have to pay to&#13;
park. on the university's grounds or any munieapal&#13;
~rkmg lot or meter," said Ronald Brinkmann&#13;
director of Safety and Security. '&#13;
Ot?erwise, Brinkmann said that parking permits&#13;
are ~ssued to disabled students after a letter is&#13;
received from their family doctor stating that it is&#13;
necessary for the individual to have close parking&#13;
or accessable transportation.&#13;
The permits are given for as long as the doctor&#13;
deems necessary, Brinkmann said.&#13;
He said ~urther that a person receiving this kind&#13;
of a permit, only pays the regular parking permit&#13;
cost of $7. At some other universities there is an&#13;
~tra charge, such as at UW-Milwaukee, where the&#13;
disabled student is charged $35 to park.&#13;
H~wever, at. Parkside, there is a shortage in&#13;
available parking for the physically handicapped.&#13;
::"1IS semester there are approximately ten permits&#13;
In use for the six available spaces.&#13;
. Another person at Parkside, who .has a vested&#13;
interest in the. welfare of the physically handicapped,&#13;
IS Edith Isenberg, registered nurse.&#13;
Isenberg said that there are no known provisions&#13;
for transporting a physically- handicapped persoo&#13;
who may need help in getting from one building or&#13;
class, to another.&#13;
Currently, she is assisting physically handicapped&#13;
students on her own with the help of&#13;
students who work in her office.&#13;
Isenherg cited a problem in doing this, in that, if&#13;
she IS out of her office helping a student, she may&#13;
not be readily available when an emergency arises.&#13;
"The handicapped have access to the elevators&#13;
besides, it would he impossible to keep track of all&#13;
the handicapped for some are very mobile and&#13;
could be anywhere on campus," commented Sophie&#13;
Graf, administrative secretary.&#13;
Unfortunately, at this time there is a lack of an&#13;
emergency procedure for the evacuation of&#13;
physically handicapped students from a building in&#13;
the case of a fire.&#13;
These responsibilities will fall under the&#13;
jurisdiction of the new safety coordinator, Atdo&#13;
Adoefo Rodriguez, who's duties include the implementation&#13;
and enforcement of all fIre, health and&#13;
safety codes.&#13;
Next week: The physically handicapped student&#13;
talks.&#13;
Tax-------------&#13;
tontina;ed from page 1&#13;
Arizona for six years, currently is&#13;
chairman of the hoard of Overview&#13;
Corp. and is a leading environmentalist&#13;
who writes a&#13;
syndicated column, "Udall on the&#13;
Environment." His most recent&#13;
book is The Energy BallQOn&#13;
(11174) .&#13;
Other speakers are:&#13;
James Buchanan, general&#13;
director of the Center for Public&#13;
Choice and professor of&#13;
economics at Virginia&#13;
Polytechnic Institute, whose&#13;
most recent book (with G.F.&#13;
Thirlby) is Theory of Public&#13;
Choice 0972l.&#13;
Joseph Pechman. director of&#13;
Economic Studies at Brookings&#13;
Institution, one of the nation's&#13;
leading experts on taxation and&#13;
the author of Federal Tax Policy&#13;
(1971) .&#13;
Lester Thurow, economics and&#13;
management professor at MIT,&#13;
former staffer for the Council of&#13;
Economic Advisers during the&#13;
Johnson administration and, as&#13;
an adivser to George McGovern&#13;
in 1972,. proposed a potent&#13;
inheritance tax and other controversial&#13;
tax programs. His&#13;
most recent rook is The Impact&#13;
of Taxes on the American&#13;
Economy 0970.&#13;
Discussant for the forum will&#13;
he Sidney Ratner, professor of&#13;
history at Rutgers and author&#13;
whose career has combined&#13;
studies of economics, political&#13;
science and philosophy.&#13;
Forum topics will be "National&#13;
Values and Tax Politics: An&#13;
International Comparison"&#13;
(Thurow); "Democratic Values&#13;
and Taxation" (Arrow and&#13;
Buchana); "Value Judgments,&#13;
Tax . Policy and the Environment"&#13;
(Udall); and&#13;
"Changing Values and Future&#13;
Tax Policy: Towards the Year&#13;
2000" (Pechman).&#13;
Prof Gottesman, the project&#13;
director, said he was grateful to&#13;
the Wisconsin Humanities&#13;
Committee, a regranting agency&#13;
for the National Endowment for&#13;
the Humanities, for supporting&#13;
the Parkside forum under the&#13;
committee's state theme Cor 1974,&#13;
which is "Human Values at Stake&#13;
in Public Tax.ing and Spending."&#13;
and to the Johnson Foundation&#13;
for its cooperation in the project.&#13;
The conference will he the&#13;
subject of the Johnson Foundation's&#13;
"Conversations Crom&#13;
Wingspread" heard in Wisconsin&#13;
and nationally, and will be&#13;
videotaped Cor distribution on the&#13;
state educational television&#13;
network and possibly national&#13;
educational television.&#13;
"We're hopeful that large&#13;
numbers oC citizens wiU take&#13;
advantage of this opportunity to&#13;
participate in a public dialogue&#13;
on an issue that direcUy affects&#13;
all of us and that is particularly&#13;
timely now." Gottesman said.&#13;
(fompOIIds Auually 10 5.61%)&#13;
P.A.B. Presents&#13;
A DANCE&#13;
fANCY ,,,,.,16' ~&#13;
DERRINGER&#13;
Sat., Oct.19th 9:00· 1:00 a.m.&#13;
Stu. Act. Bldg. 6 Adm. *1.50.&#13;
ID's R••• ir ••&#13;
NOW PAYING&#13;
5.5%&#13;
('~s 0\ REGILIR&#13;
('~....) PISS8Qllk&#13;
~OIT.u1'l ~ S.\\I\I;S&#13;
THin: 1'8\'t:\lE\r UlfITllI\S:&#13;
I.I\. Parl._~idl' -- Room !;r.i. Tall~11 Hall&#13;
Iii ". IlPll•• ,~.. Burli'~II"&#13;
~!II"i.~il~D. \11'" Raril"&#13;
.Dr- ancy O. Lurie. an an·&#13;
thropologlSt with the liIwaukee&#13;
Public Museum, ",11 d,scu the&#13;
history of Indian-Wlute relations&#13;
from 1-2 p.m. Saturday, Roger&#13;
Tallmadge of Wisconsm Dells&#13;
will then lead an all·lnwan panel&#13;
discussion on the heritage and&#13;
horizons of the American Indian&#13;
in Wisconsin.&#13;
Inwan panel parucipants, lO&#13;
addition to Tallmadge, Include'&#13;
Josephine White Eagle, PI ITO,&#13;
S.D., Director of Indian&#13;
Education: Ed LaPlante.&#13;
Mtlwaukee, Great Lakes Tribal&#13;
Council, Diane Philbrick,&#13;
MadIson, We Indians Program,&#13;
Bernadine Tallmadge, 11'1. consln&#13;
Dells, Wmnebago Pubhc Ind,an&#13;
Museum. John Winn. heik I&#13;
WisconslO Rapids. traditional&#13;
Olief of the Winnebago Ttlhep&#13;
and Lornune Winne helk&#13;
Wlsco,,,in RapIds.&#13;
An Am r,can indIan cultural&#13;
presentation "ill he featured&#13;
aturda~ even 109 Th con.&#13;
f... ence will conclude unda~&#13;
followlOg a boat tour of the t.:pper&#13;
Dells .&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Petitions for the ParksideStudent Government Associat.on, Inc. fall&#13;
election may he obtained hegimung Wednesday, Oct is, In the PSGA&#13;
office, LLC 0.193. Elections will he held III the second" k of&#13;
ovember Cor divisional senators, members to serve on a Segregated&#13;
Fee Allocations Committee and a seat on the Campld Comcems&#13;
Committee. All candidates have until Oct. 25 to me petItions. Also,&#13;
petitions must he filed by Oct 25 for ref er endums to he placed on the&#13;
• 'ovember ballot.&#13;
Parkside Boxing aub. ~here will he an organizational meet'ng for&#13;
all persons interesting m joimng the Parkside Boxing aub au Thursday,&#13;
October 17 at 2:30 in Comm. Arts 128. Expeneneed and&#13;
mexpenenced person are both welcome. For more mformation call&#13;
Dr. PomazaJ at 503-2343.&#13;
There will he an important meeting of Tbe Parblde Play.... on&#13;
Tuesday. October Z2 at 4:38 iD the Green Room of the Tbn\e'r (CA0173&gt;'&#13;
Scri~s for SpooII River Anl.bology, the Theatre's second production,&#13;
are a,.ailable for over-n ightcheck out. C.. tac:l Tom RelDen illCA.ztt.&#13;
Usbers are needed r... l.be pia,.. T1Ie Bald SopraDO aDd l.be Amerle ..&#13;
Dream. You will be able to watch the show free If you vollllDl,eer for&#13;
this service. Register at the Idorm.lion IOosIr. in M..lDpl.~eLLC. or&#13;
see Tom Reinert iD the Theater.&#13;
Auditions Ier Parulde'l secoDd Cbellb"kaJ produdlon. poon RI\lft"&#13;
Anthology, will be beld Monday aud Tuesday, Oclober 21 and Z2 rrom&#13;
2:0&amp;-3:" aDd 7:00.10:00 p.m. ill Ihe Comm.·Arto Theatre, The play, an&#13;
adaptation by Charles Aidman of Edgar Lee Master's pooa River&#13;
Anthology, will he directed by Tom Reinert. Approximately 13 actors&#13;
will portray ov er 80 characters. Also needed are two sqers. one male&#13;
and one female, who play guitar. All those interested are encouraged&#13;
to audition. For further details contact Tom Reinert in CA-240&#13;
Wisconsin Indians&#13;
topic of conference&#13;
"The American Indian of&#13;
Wisconsin: Heritage and&#13;
Horizons" is the theme of the 1974&#13;
fall gathering of the Wisconsin&#13;
Academy of Sciences, Arts aod&#13;
Letters, Oct. 19-20 a\ Camp&#13;
Up/lam Woods, Wisconsin Dells,&#13;
Meeting with the Academy will&#13;
be members of the Wisconsin&#13;
Archeological Survey.&#13;
Persons interested in attending&#13;
the program may receive&#13;
registration materials by writing&#13;
the Wisconsin Academy a\ 1922&#13;
University Ave., Madison, or by&#13;
calling 608-263-1692.&#13;
Early morning environmental&#13;
tours are scheduled for Saturday,&#13;
Oct 19, to he followed at 10:30&#13;
a.m. by a program on the prehistoric&#13;
American Indians of&#13;
Wisconsin. The program will be&#13;
led by Dr David A Baerreis,&#13;
UW-~Iadison professor of anthropology&#13;
and archeology.&#13;
Reports of the latest archeological&#13;
findings in Wisconsm&#13;
will he gIven by anthropolO!!lsts&#13;
Robert Alex, UW·, Iilwaukee.&#13;
James B. Stoltman. t.:\\'.&#13;
• tadison; Clarence Geier. l;W·&#13;
PlaUeville, Alaric Faulkner,&#13;
UW.Qshkosh; and John .100re,&#13;
UW ..."'pvPnc;;, Point&#13;
Ju, t Stop In~&#13;
. ,~~&#13;
9bfC' Restaurant&#13;
Open:&#13;
Dally 6:00 A.M.-S:OO P.M.&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
County E &amp; Green Bay Rd.&#13;
2711- S1nd Street&#13;
KENOSHA, WIS 53140&#13;
Paris aid Service lor&#13;
All I.porled Cars&#13;
dlso&#13;
• QUALITY ROAD SERVICE&#13;
,&#13;
CLASWtm ADVRnIINO OlD" '0'.&#13;
l'Ioowoo •• " ........ ~ .. """",.._--......&#13;
•• Ml.oLoll __ ~-- ----- --.&#13;
c,IV&#13;
-_ ....._- -.._-- .. .-&#13;
- .-. ..-&#13;
- ••&#13;
..... ___ -.. __ do __ ,..... ... _&#13;
Classified&#13;
EARN UP TO $17'00. r.chool 'fur hltng,ng&#13;
Ol)$'~ on cempv$ n 1M)erf'I mf' Sf'fld&#13;
NIIm". .odreu. ~ .1\(1 ,thoot '0&#13;
Coord noa'or Of Cemou' Rf1Jr"'""."Y""&#13;
PO Dox 131-4,AM ArbOr MI 410t&#13;
Oilemn~ of the handicapped:&#13;
the struggle to get through one day&#13;
by J .D. Garoutte&#13;
Editor's note: The following article is the first in a&#13;
two part series on the problems that physically&#13;
handicapped s!udents face attending a university,&#13;
uch as Parkside.&#13;
· As these people walk down the hall many heads&#13;
will turn, some in concern, some in sympathy and ome in amazement. Most people though will be&#13;
j~king for the ~ame reason: they are looking at a&#13;
physically handicapped person struggle through the&#13;
dating physically handicapped can and often does&#13;
present problems for these individuals. However, in&#13;
the future, these problems may be alleviated due to&#13;
revisions in building codes and new approaches to&#13;
education.&#13;
The new approach to educating the physically&#13;
handicapped is in the fact that these individuals are&#13;
now attending "norm'.31" public schools. In the past,&#13;
the physically handicapped person was sent to&#13;
schools specifically created for his-her needs.&#13;
Also, revised building codes have made public&#13;
facilities more accessible to the physically handicapped.&#13;
&#13;
Under the Wisconsin Administrative Code,&#13;
Safeguards for physically handicapped persons&#13;
(September 1973): "Any place of employment or&#13;
public building, the initial construction of which is&#13;
commenced after July 1, 1970, shall be so designed&#13;
and constructed as to provide reasonable means of&#13;
ingress and egress by the physically handicapped.&#13;
"The requirements may be accomplished by at&#13;
least one ground or street level entrance and exit&#13;
without steps.&#13;
"Doors having a clear opening of at least 40 inches&#13;
in width.&#13;
"There shall be reasonable means of access from&#13;
a parking lot if any ... to at least one floor on which&#13;
the primary business of such building is located."&#13;
At Parkside, the Department of Safety and&#13;
Security plays a key role in assuring that parking is&#13;
available to the physically handicapped.&#13;
According to William Carter, Jr., police officer, a&#13;
total of six spaces are available to the physically&#13;
handicapped for parking;· three spaces adjacent to&#13;
Tallent Hall and three spaces directly behind the&#13;
Classroom Building.&#13;
"A student who owns a disabled license plate and&#13;
displays this on his auto, does not have to pay to&#13;
park_on the university's grounds or anv municapal&#13;
~rkmg lot or meter," said Ronald -Brinkmann&#13;
director of Safety and Security. '&#13;
Ot~erwise, Brinkmann said that parking permits&#13;
are ~ssued to disabled students after a letter i&#13;
received from their family doctor stating that it is&#13;
necessary for the individual to have clo e parking or accessable transportation.&#13;
The permits are given for as long as the doctor&#13;
deems necessary, Brinkmann said.&#13;
He said further that a person receiving thi kind&#13;
of a permit, only pays the regular parking permit&#13;
cost of $7. At some other universities there i an&#13;
e~tra charge, such as at mv- Iilwaukee, where the&#13;
disabled student is charged $35 to park.&#13;
H?wever, at Parkside, there is a shorta e in&#13;
av~ilable parking for the physically handicapped .&#13;
'.fh1s semester there are approximately ten permits&#13;
m use for the six available spaces.&#13;
. Another person at Parkside, who .has a ve led&#13;
~terest ~ the. welfare of the phy ically liandicapped,&#13;
1s Edith Isenberg, registered nurse.&#13;
Isenberg said that there are no known provisions&#13;
for transporting a physically- handicapped person&#13;
who may need help in getting from one building or class, to another.&#13;
. Currently, she is assisting physically handicapped&#13;
students on her own with the help of&#13;
students who work in her office.&#13;
Is~nberg cited a problem in doing this, in that, if&#13;
she JS out of her office helping a student, she may&#13;
not be readily available when an emergency arises.&#13;
"The handicapped have access to the elevators&#13;
besides, it would be impossible to keep track of all&#13;
the handicapped for some are very mobile and&#13;
could be anywhere on campus,'' commented Sophie&#13;
Graf, administrative secretary.&#13;
Unfortunately, at this time there is a lack of an emergency procedure for the evacuation of&#13;
physically handicapped students from a building in&#13;
the case of a fire.&#13;
These responsibilities will fall under the&#13;
jurisdiction of the new safety coordinator. Atdo&#13;
Adoefo Rodriguez, who's duties include the implementation&#13;
and enforcement of all fire. health and&#13;
safety codes.&#13;
Next week: The phy ically handicapped tudent&#13;
talks.&#13;
Tax------------&#13;
contin~ed from page 1&#13;
Arizona for six years, currently is&#13;
chairman of the board of Overview&#13;
Corp. and is a leading environmentalist&#13;
who writes a&#13;
yndicated column, "Udall on the&#13;
Environment." His most recent&#13;
book is The Energy BallQOn&#13;
(1974).&#13;
Other speakers are:&#13;
James Buchanan, general&#13;
director of the Center for Public&#13;
Choice and professor of&#13;
economics at Virginia&#13;
Polytechnic Institute, whose&#13;
most recent book (with G.F .&#13;
Thirlbyl is Theory of Public&#13;
Choice &lt;1972).&#13;
Joseph Pechman, director of&#13;
Economic Studies at Brookings&#13;
Institution, one of the nation's&#13;
leading experts on taxation and&#13;
the author of Federal Tax Policy &lt;mu.&#13;
Lester Thurow, economics and&#13;
management professor at MIT,&#13;
former staffer for the Council of&#13;
NOW PAYING&#13;
5.5%&#13;
(fompoands Annually to 5.61 %) (~«r•) 0\ REGI.I.\R&#13;
P\SSBOOI\&#13;
('~~ 0~&#13;
OfT. \]~~ s \\ I\GS&#13;
TIIIU. IU\11.111.\T 111111111\\:&#13;
1.11. Pirl.11dr -- Room ~:r.i. Tillnl Hill&#13;
l~t II. llP\1101 St .. Burlinl!lon&#13;
~:!tie lh,~i1,2to1 hP .. Ra;i,r&#13;
Economic Advisers during the&#13;
Johnson administration and, as&#13;
an adivser to George McGovern&#13;
in 1972, proposed a potent&#13;
inheritance tax and other controversial&#13;
tax programs. His&#13;
most recent book is The Impact&#13;
of Taxes on the American&#13;
Economy (1971).&#13;
Discussant for the forum will&#13;
be Sidney Ratner. professor of&#13;
history at Rutgers and author&#13;
whose career has combined&#13;
studies of economics, political&#13;
science and philosophy.&#13;
Forum topics will be "National&#13;
Values and Tax Politics: An&#13;
International Comparison"&#13;
(Thurow); "Democratic Values&#13;
and Taxation'' (Arrow and&#13;
Buchana); "Value Judgments.&#13;
Tax Policy and the Environment"&#13;
(Udall); and&#13;
"Changing Values and Future&#13;
Tax Policy: Towards the Year&#13;
2000" ( Pechman l.&#13;
Prof. Gottesman, the project&#13;
director. said he ·as grateful to&#13;
the Wi con in Humanitie&#13;
Committee. a regranting agency&#13;
for the National Endowment for&#13;
the Humanitie , for upporting&#13;
the Parkside forum under the&#13;
committee's tale theme for 1974,&#13;
which is ''Human Values at take&#13;
in Public Taxing and pending,"&#13;
and to the John on Foundation&#13;
for it cooperation in th proj t.&#13;
The conference will be th&#13;
subject of the Johnson Foundation'&#13;
"Conver ation from&#13;
Wing pread" h ard in \ ,. consin&#13;
and- nationally , and ·ill b&#13;
• videotaped for di tnbution on th&#13;
state educational televi-ion&#13;
network and ~· -ibly national&#13;
educational televi ion .&#13;
"We're hopeful that larg&#13;
numbers of citize - 111 tak&#13;
advantage of thi opportunity t&#13;
participate in a public dialogue&#13;
on an is ue that directly aff&#13;
all of us and that i particularly&#13;
timely now.'' Gotte man aid.&#13;
,.. P.A.B. Presents&#13;
A DANCE&#13;
'/ANCY.',.,.,,., ~&#13;
DERRINIJER&#13;
Sat., Oct. 19th 9:00 - 1:00 a.&#13;
Stu. Act. Bldg. 6 Adm. $1.SO&#13;
ID's Required&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Brief New,s&#13;
There ill be an important me&#13;
Tu da_ • tob r 2! at : In t Gr&#13;
D173).&#13;
• ript for Rhu Ui I&#13;
are auilabl for over-n ght chec&#13;
uditi&#13;
th lo&#13;
Wisconsin Indians&#13;
topic of conference&#13;
top In:&#13;
. ·~'P~ ')ii* Restaurant&#13;
P. I.&#13;
County E&#13;
2121. S2nd Strut&#13;
KENOSHA , WIS 5314&#13;
Parts and Service for&#13;
All I ported Cars&#13;
I.so&#13;
• UAUT ' R AD SER IC[&#13;
-&#13;
CIN __________ _&#13;
............... _ .......&#13;
lassified &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, OCt. 16, 1974&#13;
~ru.Ld.c.ptJon"&#13;
• o-drop' policy may be dropped&#13;
=&#13;
lCoallDilIft&#13;
ac&gt;&lt;Inlp poIlcy&#13;
fall cI "72 aDd&#13;
1 II&#13;
EuigeM • • • Dean cI the&#13;
01 eace aDd Soc:iety&#13;
lbol II "I cruel deceplJOll&#13;
Slucl&lt;lllS ore not warned&#13;
Illd IlIIllcreed 10 a decwoD poinl&#13;
m.,. m.... cleans and&#13;
..tviMn Aa II II. !be) .. DOone&#13;
Illd JUIl go 10 1 terminal aDd&#13;
'"'IiIIer B stucl&lt;IIlS ore more&#13;
I 10ba f!If acl\'IIOn I... belp&#13;
tbaD D an"'""" really need&#13;
the btIp"&#13;
0110 81 ...... Vioo Cl&gt;aD«1Ior.&#13;
CIted the cue cI a f\UdenI wbo&#13;
had completed lOS credli bourS&#13;
th 1 I la' and was UDdf!If&#13;
the decOPbOll be -ud .....&#13;
IJ'IcIao&#13;
All studoaU ..... plJ'blde 00&#13;
pel IlalICbIIC Parksi&lt;le&#13;
n'l h.a\'1! entraeee&#13;
m thai&#13;
... eDt u&#13;
re iD the boUom&#13;
and&#13;
transff!lf studfnts entering with&#13;
less than a two1'Oini GPA.&#13;
"We've got a group of 8 to 10&#13;
P""""'t of incoming freshman at&#13;
the bottom of their high schoOl&#13;
duo ,.1&gt;0 hive 13 dlances in 100&#13;
01 getting a I~I." Norwood&#13;
said. "We have an obligation to&#13;
them besides just letting thern&#13;
enter and sink at swim."&#13;
"It is basically immoral to&#13;
allow people tc go for two or three&#13;
years and invest 1l1oosands of&#13;
dollars witbout evf!lfbeing able 10&#13;
grlduate and never earn a&#13;
degree:' .&#13;
1be committee also menboned&#13;
IllUdents ,.1&gt;0 consistenUy attain&#13;
I than a lW&lt;&gt;-jlOinlGPA and&#13;
never go (or eounseling,&#13;
academic Idvising or tutoring&#13;
bul still gel their education paid&#13;
for by the university or by 1l1e&#13;
1JO\"ft1'U]'1ent,&#13;
• 'Qnli"OOd explamed that Hone&#13;
(unction of a probation·drop&#13;
syslem would be nOIjust to throw&#13;
dummies or cheaters out. but to&#13;
get the educationally disadvantaged&#13;
student to an academIc&#13;
skills program which is now set&#13;
up." .&#13;
"The educationally disadantaged&#13;
student is least likely to&#13;
;.,., advisors, Built·in mandatory&#13;
requirements for advising would&#13;
at least expose 1l1estudents to the&#13;
system. "&#13;
Johnson emphasized that there&#13;
"should be a better notification&#13;
process" to inform students of&#13;
their progress towards&#13;
graduation. ,&#13;
The committee also discussed&#13;
the difficulty of raising GPA's&#13;
since they are cumulative. .&#13;
Bauer offered one possible&#13;
model to discuss. "Unless a&#13;
student attained a 1.4 GPA by 1l1e&#13;
end of 30 credits attempted, a 1.6&#13;
Johnson appointod&#13;
Feldt, assistant Prof&#13;
Engineering Scienee&#13;
Gray, professor of '&#13;
James Smith, a ~&#13;
Norwood as 1l1e&#13;
members.&#13;
The sulrcommitteo ill.&#13;
back in a month,&#13;
ASP: opportunity to succeed&#13;
...&#13;
AT FI ST UTIO AL&#13;
Of lAC E&#13;
• ,.i, ,&#13;
JIJ CI fe ire&#13;
•&#13;
bert Grace II assigned to&#13;
the Jl"OWII1l • a counselor&#13;
Grace re&lt;:ei"ed hIS I.S. degree in&#13;
udenl personnol services lasl&#13;
spnngfrom t,oW·La Crosse "here&#13;
hi the is topic was "The&#13;
Emf!lfience of Black Students on&#13;
the IIlSCOOSin Slate University&#13;
Campu&gt;e&gt; and an Evaluation of&#13;
the In&gt;titutional Responses." He&#13;
has been a minority student&#13;
adnse:r.t Y·Le and also&#13;
worked Ul its placement office.&#13;
l:W-P Education Division&#13;
QWrman Paul Kleine pointed&#13;
out that students entering&#13;
Parllside.like those at most other&#13;
u. LOStitutions. have a wirle&#13;
range of academic skills.&#13;
"Smce we admit students&#13;
,,1&gt;oseskillsmay not yet be at the&#13;
le~eI needed to perform&#13;
satisfactorily in college classes,&#13;
Yoehave an obligation to those&#13;
students to try to build their skills&#13;
to the point where they will have&#13;
an opportunity to succeed, If Prof.&#13;
Kleine said. The lack of skills&#13;
does not imply a lack of intelligence,&#13;
he added, but merely&#13;
a lack of basic tools for using&#13;
intelligence.&#13;
Prof. Enderle said that&#13;
placement tests in English and&#13;
mathematics, now administered&#13;
routinely to entering freshmen&#13;
give clues to a student's ability to&#13;
handle college level work.&#13;
The Academic Skills Program&#13;
will use various diagnostic&#13;
techniques to identify students&#13;
with serious deficiencies in&#13;
reading, mathematics, writing&#13;
and study skills and devise individualized&#13;
methods of&#13;
upgrading 1l10seskills .&#13;
The program also will coordinate&#13;
a number of existing efBig&#13;
Foot&#13;
APPEARING&#13;
WED., fRI. SAT. &amp; SUN.&#13;
OCT. 16, 18, 19 &amp; 20&#13;
Kellosllo's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shokey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road Phone 654-0485&#13;
The Parkside Players Present an evenin&#13;
'Theater of the Absurd' g&#13;
The Bald Soprano by Eugene lonesco&#13;
and&#13;
The American Dream by Edward Albee&#13;
directed by Don Rintz&#13;
8 P.M. OCT. 17-18-19-20&#13;
CO. MUNICATION ARTS THEATER&#13;
2 pub1tc. 1 UW·p students. stoff All&#13;
Tie ets at information Kiosk and seats reserved.&#13;
at the dOor&#13;
AD&#13;
,&#13;
G&#13;
AT f ST AT At&#13;
Df IACI E&#13;
c&#13;
AT FIIST At At&#13;
Of lAC E&#13;
o,e,&#13;
T&#13;
•&#13;
T&#13;
o-drop' policy may be dropped&#13;
L&#13;
s&#13;
0&#13;
also mentioned&#13;
·ho is ently attain&#13;
a t -o-point GPA and&#13;
0 for coun, eling,&#13;
d\i i or tutoring&#13;
cation paid&#13;
·ty or by the&#13;
function of a probation-drop&#13;
system would be not just to throw&#13;
dummies or cheaters out, ~ut to&#13;
get the educationally d1sa~-&#13;
taged student to an academic&#13;
::lis program which is now set&#13;
up." . "The educationally . d1sadantaged&#13;
student is least likely to&#13;
~ advisors. Built-in mandatory&#13;
requirements for advising would&#13;
at least expose the students to the&#13;
system."&#13;
Johnson emphasized t~a~ th~re&#13;
"should be a better notif1cat1on&#13;
process" to inform students of&#13;
their progress towards&#13;
graduation. . The committee also discussed&#13;
the difficulty of raising GPA's&#13;
since they are cumulative. . Bauer offered one possible&#13;
model to discuss. "Unless a&#13;
tudent attained a 1.4 GP A by the&#13;
end of 30 credits attempted, a 1.6&#13;
by the end of 60 credits&#13;
tempte~, a 1.8 GPA by tilt&#13;
90 credits attempted and&#13;
GPA by the end of 120'credita&#13;
student would be dropped ~&#13;
An a~peal system and&#13;
alternatives were also ·&#13;
Norwood then pro&#13;
motion to set up a sub-co~&#13;
on probation and drop&#13;
which would make&#13;
mendations back ~ Academic_ Policies ComrnJttet was unanunously aoopted&#13;
Johnson appointed 11&#13;
Feldt, assistant profe&#13;
Engineering Science&#13;
Gray, professor of E&#13;
James Smith, a student&#13;
Norwood as the sub-co&#13;
members.&#13;
The sub-committee is lo&#13;
back in a month.&#13;
opportunity to succeed&#13;
to the point where they will have&#13;
an opportunity to succeed," Prof.&#13;
Kleine said. The lack of skills&#13;
does not imply a lack of intelligence,&#13;
he added, but merely&#13;
a lack of basic tools for using&#13;
intelligence.&#13;
Prof. Enderle said that&#13;
placement tests in English and&#13;
mathematics, now administered&#13;
routinely to entering freshmen&#13;
give clues to a student's ability to&#13;
handle college level work.&#13;
The Academic Skills Program&#13;
will use various diagnostic&#13;
techniques to identify students&#13;
with serious deficiencies in&#13;
reading, mathematics, writing&#13;
and study skills and devise individualized&#13;
methods of&#13;
upgrading those skills.&#13;
The program also will coordinate&#13;
a number of existing efBig&#13;
Foot&#13;
APPEARING&#13;
WED., FRI. SAT. &amp; SUN.&#13;
OCT. 16, 18, 19 &amp; 20&#13;
Kenosha's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shokey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road Phone 554_0485&#13;
Bald Soprano by Eugene Ionesco&#13;
and&#13;
erica by Edward Albee&#13;
directed by Don Rintz&#13;
P. • CT. 17-18-19-20 . U · TION ARTS THEATER&#13;
2 ~ubhc, 1 U -P students/staff All&#13;
Tic e s o information Kiosk d .seats reserved.&#13;
an at tne door&#13;
forts in that direction Incl&#13;
basic library skills co&#13;
reading improvement&#13;
"ASP takes a pm·&#13;
proach to successful I&#13;
Enderle said. "We take&#13;
at the level where the)· art&#13;
try ot improve their skills&#13;
they are locked into&#13;
and failure."&#13;
Incorporation of ASP&#13;
education division has a&#13;
off" value for pro&#13;
teachers, she added,&#13;
students involved in te&#13;
training can gain e~&#13;
educational method&#13;
remedial reading workiJI&#13;
other students enroll~&#13;
academic skills programs&#13;
Participation in ASP p&#13;
is voluntary, she said&#13;
program is being de1&#13;
consultation with an&#13;
terdisciplinary advi Ol}&#13;
mittee and is complem&#13;
existing personal cou&#13;
academic advising, be &#13;
Campus calendar&#13;
Wf:DNf:SDAY.OCtober 16&#13;
W!llTf:SKf:LLAR:.Featuring Chuck Brauer. ~OC~1and guitar. from&#13;
-3p.m. in GreenqUlst Hall. room D2Q1.Admlsslqn IS free. He will also&#13;
~ perrorrning Thursday. October 17. .&#13;
FILM: "The Thief Who Came to Dinner:' sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
ACtivitiesBoard at 7:.30p.m: In Greenquist Hall, room 103.Admission&#13;
11$1.parkside I.D. IS required.&#13;
'ft/lIRSDAY. October 17&#13;
''11If: BAW SOPRANO" and "THE AMERICAN DREAM":&#13;
fWSl'l'ted by the Players of UW-Parkside and directed by Professor =Kintz. A theatre of the absurd. at 8 p.m. In the Communication&#13;
Theater. Tickets are $2 for general public and $1 for Parkside&#13;
II\ldeJ1tsfaculty and staff. Tickets are on sale at the Information&#13;
KiGIk. The plays continue through October 18. 19and 20.&#13;
fIllDAY. October 18&#13;
JA'Cl CONCERT: Featuring Jazz pianist Siggy Millonzi. sponsored by&#13;
lbe Parllside Activities Board from 9 p.m.-12 midnite in tbe Student&#13;
ACtivitiesBldg. Tickets are $1.50advance for Parkside students and $2&#13;
lor general and at Ihe door. Parkside LD. and proof of age are&#13;
required.&#13;
SATURDAY.OCtober 19&#13;
LECl'URE: uValue Judgements and Ta:,a~ion:' from 9 a.m-s p.m. in&#13;
the Communication Arts Theatre. Admission IS free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
SUNDAY.OCtober 20&#13;
Nf:WMANCENTER: 12:15 p.m. Mass at the Newman Center located&#13;
00 the corner of JR and E. 3825 12th Street, Kenosha. Everyone&#13;
welcome.&#13;
Sf:MESTERBREAK - TWO TRIPS: ACAPULCO AND JAMAICO&#13;
ACAPULCO:&#13;
$244 Ius$20tax and service based on 3 to a room. Includes round trip&#13;
tra':portation. 7 nights at the deluxe EI Matador Hot~l and Racquet&#13;
CI b Yacht cruise of Acapulco Bay WIth a welcoming Margarita&#13;
pa~.y.Includes tips and taxes. For further information contact the&#13;
StudentLife Office LLC DI97 or phone 553-2294.&#13;
JAMAICA.Montego Bay:&#13;
S279plus$20tax andservice based on 3 to a room. Includes round trip&#13;
transportation. 7 nights at Toby Inn, only a short walk from famous&#13;
Doctor's Cave Beach. Tips and taxes included.&#13;
OCHO RIOS:&#13;
$309 plus $20 tax and service based on 3 to a room. Includes round trip&#13;
·transportation. 7 nights at Shaw Park located o~ the beach on ~t1ass&#13;
Bay.A welcoming Rum Swizzle party and unlimited free tennis are&#13;
includedas well as reduced golf rates at Upton Country Club. For&#13;
furtherinformation contact the Student Life Office. LLC DI97 or phone&#13;
553-2294.&#13;
1)INO:S&#13;
1816 16 Street&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
PHONE 634-1991&#13;
Don't letthe •&#13;
ma~&#13;
education. stop&#13;
you.&#13;
Tbe price of a college educanon&#13;
IS skyrocketing. The Air&#13;
Force has done something&#13;
aboul it. For the first time.&#13;
the Air Force ROTC Scholar- .&#13;
~hip~ include the 2-year&#13;
program. for men and women.&#13;
If YOUqualify, the Air Force&#13;
~lll pay for Ihe remainder of&#13;
your college education. Not&#13;
only do AFROTC 2-year&#13;
~cholar-6hips cover futl tuition.&#13;
tellllbur'iement fot textbooks.&#13;
lab and incidental fees, and&#13;
sroo a monlh, tax-free.&#13;
To cash in on all this apply&#13;
qualify, and enroll in the Air&#13;
Fntce ROTC aL&#13;
.:t:1s./,lacu_ ... ''''~~I.... W~it.,AFROTe_&#13;
i;a",' n~ VIII"."I', A..... M.odilon,Wi,.&#13;
It\ a great way to finish your&#13;
college education in the money.&#13;
;met build a future as an Air&#13;
Furce officer.&#13;
~KE 11lE MOSTOF IT&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEAFOOD&#13;
CHOPS&#13;
PllZA&#13;
LASAGANA&#13;
RAVIOLI&#13;
MOSTACCIOLI&#13;
GNOCCHI&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT DRINKS&#13;
WINES&#13;
FINE FOODS&#13;
&amp; COCKTAilS'&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Faculty art show&#13;
set for Nov-Dec&#13;
by Jeff Kieblbauch&#13;
A meeting of the Art faculty&#13;
was beld on October 9. Those&#13;
faculty members in attendance&#13;
were Robert Cadez, Erik Forrest.&#13;
Rollin Jansky, Jobn Murphy and&#13;
Moishe Smith. Among the&#13;
matters discussed at this meeting&#13;
was the art exhibit scbedule for&#13;
the Parkside Theater Gallery. Of&#13;
particular concern was the&#13;
scheduling 01 the Faculty Art&#13;
Show. The possibility of planning&#13;
the art exhibits to. coincide with&#13;
events in the Theater was&#13;
discussed.&#13;
By scheduling the art exhibits&#13;
to coincide- with events in the&#13;
Theater there would be a greater&#13;
likelihood that more people would&#13;
view the exhibits. However it was&#13;
argued that the scheduling should&#13;
not be totally controlled by&#13;
what's going on in the Theater.&#13;
_ It was decided to schedule the&#13;
Facul ty Art Show -from&#13;
November 21 through December&#13;
15. The opening of the Art show&#13;
will coincide with the opening 01&#13;
the Theater's second production.&#13;
"Spoon River Anthology, OJ&#13;
Forrest proposed a videotape&#13;
series on each of the exhibits&#13;
shown in the Parkside Theatre&#13;
Gallery. The videotape program&#13;
would include a discussion with&#13;
the artist, possible guest comments&#13;
and a camera scan of the&#13;
gallery showing various works&#13;
from the exhibit. Ail agreed it&#13;
sounded like an lDteresting and&#13;
worthwhile proposal.&#13;
Time placement for spring&#13;
semester course offerings was&#13;
discussed, as were possible&#13;
course offerings for the summ ...&#13;
sessioo and 7$-76 school year. A&#13;
faculty member urged that a&#13;
rhythm or pattern be established&#13;
in course offerings so that&#13;
students could project a year in&#13;
advance what courses would be&#13;
offered. thus enabling students to&#13;
plan schedules ahead of time.&#13;
A reference was made to the&#13;
September 2S Ranger editorial&#13;
concerning the practicality of&#13;
Parkside's Art degree. The&#13;
possibility of getting a&#13;
professional artist from industry&#13;
to teach a course was mentioned,&#13;
however nothing defmite was&#13;
decided.&#13;
A request from Parkside&#13;
student Stephen Stapanian that&#13;
two art courses taken at another&#13;
school be recognized for accreditation&#13;
by Parkside was&#13;
discussed and it was agreed that&#13;
"the request was reasonable.&#13;
It was decided that the next Art&#13;
Faculty meeting would be held on&#13;
October 23. A major topic of&#13;
discussion at this meeting will be&#13;
a Sophomore review. This would&#13;
be an advising type of session&#13;
where Art faculty members&#13;
would meet with upcoming&#13;
juniors to see if they're on the&#13;
right course towards getting their&#13;
Art degrees.&#13;
NIGHTCLUB&#13;
P .A.B. PRESENTS A&#13;
riday, Oct. 18, 9:00 p.m.&#13;
, S.A.B.&#13;
Adrnission-! 1.50 Advance&#13;
D \VISCO SlJ !D'S REQUIRED&#13;
featuring&#13;
$olar'-----&#13;
or 10 room 180 In Tall~nt Hall&#13;
Th~ roof ......... becinI at ':80&#13;
a.m. and lasts till 3:00 p.m. From&#13;
8:30 to 9: IS th.... will be ....... al&#13;
reglstratioo and infonnalioo.&#13;
Duffie. Kopecky and&#13;
Heronernus will speak fl'Olllt:15-&#13;
11:50. Lunell is from 12:00-12:45.&#13;
During this time. the solar&#13;
display area can be vlalted. Lof&#13;
will speak from 12 :5().1 : 40 on&#13;
solar energy.&#13;
The ronference will th... break&#13;
into four workIhopo: e&lt;lOnomlc:a&#13;
of solar power. wind \lOwe'. solar&#13;
equipment and prO'!" !It and&#13;
architect ural consideratiooa of&#13;
desilo. aestbetlCII and polillcal&#13;
factors.&#13;
Participants in the conference&#13;
are to eIl000e two worbbopo they&#13;
wish to attend when they preregister.&#13;
LanguagI8.~--&#13;
any college graduate."&#13;
English 100 will be concerned&#13;
with the hasic writing skills including&#13;
nouns and verbs.&#13;
capitalization, punctuation, and&#13;
paragraphs&#13;
English 101is also a course on&#13;
basic writing skills. but expo&#13;
the tudent to more compl x&#13;
problems or tyhstic control&#13;
English 102 will look deeper&#13;
into the art of writing as it covers&#13;
argumentative kills and the&#13;
organization of looRer papers&#13;
incorporating research.&#13;
ANYTIME!&#13;
HQRECRE T E IIf.I· ""If&#13;
6lt Ul» noll 7)).1&#13;
PIZZ \ C'1IlC'KE'&#13;
\ '0 Fl. II('\RRYOl"1'S&#13;
WIDEST SRECTIDN&#13;
OF BOOKS IN TOWN&#13;
•&#13;
PAPER BACKS FOR&#13;
THE DISCRIMINATING&#13;
READER&#13;
•&#13;
PROMPT SPECIAL&#13;
ORDER SERVICE&#13;
BROWSERS WELCOME&#13;
Ma.~MwUiL~ tR"&#13;
tf.-Jl&amp; ~&#13;
G4 SQu..9 -5101'&#13;
6SF ::it.bc;2-&#13;
-------&#13;
----&#13;
-&#13;
campus cal_endar Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
WEDNESDAY, October 16&#13;
winTESKELLAR:_ Featuring Chuck Braue:, ~oc~l and guitar, from&#13;
!-3 p.m. in Greenqmst Hall, room D201. Adm1ss10n 1s free. He will also&#13;
be performing Thursday, October 17.&#13;
Faculty art show&#13;
fJLM: "The Thief ~o Cam~ to Dinner'.' sponsored by the Parkside f ·&#13;
Activities Board at 7 ._30 p.m: m Greenqmst Hall, room 103. Admission set Or NO v-D e C&#13;
is $l. Parkside I.D. 1s reqwred.&#13;
11fl)RSDAY, October 17&#13;
.,THE BALD SOPRANO" and "THE AMERICAN DREAM":&#13;
Presented by the Players of UW-Parkside and directed by Professor&#13;
[)On runtz. A theatre of the absurd, at 8 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
ArtS Theater. Tickets are $2 for general public and $1 for Parkside&#13;
students faculty and staff. Tickets are on sale at the Information&#13;
Kiosk- '!be plays continue through October 18, 19 and 20.&#13;
FRIDA y, Octobe~ 18&#13;
J 73, CONCERT: Featuring Jazz pianist Siggy Millonzi, sponsored by&#13;
Parkside Activities Board from 9 p.m.-12 midnite in the Student&#13;
::ti vi ties Bldg. Tickets are $1.50 advance for Parkside students and $2&#13;
for general and at the door. Parkside I.D. and proof of age are&#13;
required.&#13;
SATURDAY, October 19&#13;
LECTURE: "Value Judgements and Ta~a!ion'.' from 9 a .m.-3 p.m. in&#13;
the Communication Arts Theatre. Adm1ss1on 1s free and open to the&#13;
~blic.&#13;
UNDA y, October 20&#13;
NEWMAN CENTER: 12:15 p.m. Mass at the Newman Center located&#13;
on the corner of JR and E, 3825 12th Street, Kenosha. Everyone&#13;
welcome.&#13;
. El\1ESTER BREAK -TWO TRIPS: ACAPULCO AND JAMAi CO&#13;
CAPULCO:&#13;
$244 plus $20 tax and service based on 3 to a room. Includes round trip&#13;
transportation. 7 nights at the deluxe El _Matador Hot~l and Racq~et&#13;
Cl b Yacht cruise of Acapulco Bay with a welcoming Margarita&#13;
pa~t;. Includes tips and taxes. For further information contact the&#13;
Student Life Office LLC D197 or phone 553-2294.&#13;
JAMAICA, Montego Bay:&#13;
$279 plus $20 tax and service based on 3 to a room. Includes round trip&#13;
transportation. 7 nights at Toby Inn, only a short walk from famous&#13;
Doctor's Cave Beach. Tips and taxes included.&#13;
OCHO RIOS:&#13;
$309 plus $20 tax and service based on 3 to a room. Includes round trip&#13;
transportation. 7 nights at Shaw Park located o~ ~e beach on 01tlass&#13;
Bay. A welcoming Rum Swizzle party and unlimited free tenrus are&#13;
included as well as reduced golf rates at Upton Country Club. For&#13;
further information contact the Student Life Office, LLC D197 or phone&#13;
553-2294.&#13;
1&gt;1NO:S&#13;
1816 16 Street&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
PHONE 634-1991 PICK UP OR&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS&#13;
DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME&#13;
Dontlet the .&#13;
ma~&#13;
education stop&#13;
}OU.&#13;
~ price of a college education&#13;
1s skyrocketing. The Air&#13;
Force has done something&#13;
about ii. For the first time,&#13;
lhe Air Force ROTC Scholar- ·&#13;
\h1p, include the 2-year&#13;
Program. for men and women.&#13;
If. you qualify. the Air Force&#13;
Will pay for the remainder of&#13;
Your college education. Not&#13;
onl~ do AFROTC :!-year&#13;
chotari.hips cover full tuition,&#13;
reimbur,ement for te)(tbooks.&#13;
lab and incidental fees. and&#13;
100 a month. ta)(-free.&#13;
r O ca,h in on all this apply&#13;
qualify. and enroll in the Air&#13;
tnrce ROTC aL&#13;
~~:~1 MN110ft or Superior. Write: AF ROTC.&#13;
u," IIU Uninnlty Ave., M•dlson, Wl1.&#13;
It\ a great way to finish your&#13;
college education in the money.&#13;
and build a future as an Air&#13;
force officer.&#13;
MAKE lllE MOST OF IT&#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;
by Jeff Kiehlbauch&#13;
A meeting of the Art faculty&#13;
was held on October 9. Those&#13;
faculty members in attendance&#13;
were Robert Cadez, Erik Forrest,&#13;
Rollin Jansky, John Murphy and&#13;
Moishe Smith. Among the&#13;
matters discussed at this meeting&#13;
was the art exhibit schedule for&#13;
the Parkside Theater Gallery. Of&#13;
particular concern was the&#13;
scheduling of the Faculty Art&#13;
Show. The possibility of planPing&#13;
the art exhibits to. coincide with&#13;
events in the Theater was discussed.&#13;
By scheduling the art exhibits&#13;
to coincide- with events in the&#13;
Theater there would be a greater&#13;
likelihood that more people would&#13;
view the exhibits. However it wa&#13;
argued that the scheduling should&#13;
not be totally controlled b~:&#13;
what's going on in the Theater.&#13;
It was decided to schedule the&#13;
Faculty Art Show · from&#13;
rovember 21 through December&#13;
15. The opening of the Art show&#13;
will coincide with the opening of&#13;
the Theater's econd production,&#13;
"Spoon River Anthology ...&#13;
Forrest proposed a videotape&#13;
series on each of the exhibits&#13;
shown in the Parkside Theatre&#13;
Gallery. The videotape program&#13;
would include a discussion with&#13;
the artist, possible guest comments&#13;
and a camera scan of the&#13;
gallery showing various works&#13;
from the exhibit. All agreed it&#13;
SOWl&lt;ied like an interesting and&#13;
worthwhile proposal.&#13;
Time placemen for _pring&#13;
semester course offenng&#13;
discu sed, as were po ibl&#13;
course offerings for the mmer&#13;
session and 7S-76 school _ ar. A&#13;
faculty member urged that a&#13;
rhythm or pattern be tabl.ished&#13;
in cour e offerings so that&#13;
tudents could project a year in&#13;
advance what courses "'ould be&#13;
offered, th~ enabling tuders to&#13;
plan schedules ahead of time.&#13;
A reference as made to the&#13;
September 25 Ranger editorial&#13;
concerning the practicality of&#13;
Parkside's Art degree. The&#13;
possibilit of getting a&#13;
professional arti t from indu try&#13;
to teach a course a mentioned,&#13;
ho ·ever nothing definite ·a&#13;
decided .&#13;
A request from Park ide&#13;
student tephen tapanian that&#13;
tv.o art cours taken at noth&#13;
school be rec nized f&#13;
creditation by Park 1de a&#13;
disc and it ·a agr ed that&#13;
lhe reque t ·as rea&#13;
n wa decided that then t Art&#13;
Faculty meeting ould be ld on&#13;
October 23. A major topic of&#13;
di ·ion at thi meeti ill&#13;
a phomore re ri.ew. Thi!. ould&#13;
be an advi ing type of&#13;
where Art faculty memb r&#13;
would meet with upcomin&#13;
juniors to see if they're on th&#13;
right course toward getting th ·r&#13;
Art degree .&#13;
P .A.B. PRESENTS A&#13;
NIGHTCLUB&#13;
featurin&#13;
0 p.m&#13;
Solar-----&#13;
Languagee~--&#13;
ANYTIME!&#13;
WIDEST SELECTION&#13;
OF BOOKS IN TOWN&#13;
•&#13;
PAPER BACKS FOR&#13;
THE DISCRIMINATING&#13;
READER&#13;
•&#13;
PROMPT SPECIAL&#13;
ORDER SERVICE &#13;
6 THE PARI&lt;SIDE RA GER Wedll •• Y. 0C1. 16. In'&#13;
committee adds&#13;
courses to timetable&#13;
·81 tin g ad hoc instructors,&#13;
t\ us I' 'ted The committee, after Im1&#13;
~bate decided to "evaluate all&#13;
..".. ad hoes before making any&#13;
commitments for new" appoiDUTlenlS&#13;
next semester -.&#13;
,d hoc cvaJu:&gt;.tions will be&#13;
based on written student&#13;
&lt;&gt;pillions and through a teacher&#13;
aluation questionnaire to be&#13;
compleled by the instructor and&#13;
res1 ed by lEe. ,&#13;
TIl cornmlltee concluded their&#13;
m Ing by appointing ~l.ingKuo&#13;
a dale professor of&#13;
Engmeering Science, and Al&#13;
Groosberl, prolessor 01 PhYSICS&#13;
and Engineering Science,. to&#13;
erve as Interim Executive&#13;
CuJ'l,mitt.ee representatives to the&#13;
campus Planning Committee,&#13;
Kuo will serve one year,&#13;
G.-berg will serve lor two,&#13;
.10).&#13;
opm&lt;d&#13;
011&#13;
US, week RANGER ran&#13;
a story 'itlecl "Musich to&#13;
head GTI Women's&#13;
Bureau." As much as we&#13;
would like to give Ms,&#13;
Musich a promotion, the&#13;
job of director belongs to&#13;
Anne TImm. Musich will&#13;
be in charge of the&#13;
counseling section of the&#13;
ea .&#13;
t&#13;
Bonanza s&#13;
r e-pornt program&#13;
to at i nation.&#13;
ric Bonanza.&#13;
ak dinner!)&#13;
lI' . Ioiin dinn r :II&#13;
u&#13;
II. 9 {&#13;
Ill. 9 {&#13;
• Feed • cIIBd ba Am ,lea fur 4k&#13;
-a&#13;
The IeCO .. ·... are 011 as. __ ."' ..."......."'0... ee&#13;
\&#13;
MTER AHEAD!&#13;
se bare already placed Ibeir&#13;
-fille~, s -filled weel ia&#13;
p ea _.J'&#13;
SJ3U r a&#13;
'13 ~ II 0 TEGO BAY&#13;
3-10. 1915 FR $264 COMPlm&#13;
I,.......... S:&#13;
~l( let lir'-,&#13;
• First Class 11 111m h~lill&#13;
• ,Itt.' CeekUils&#13;
• Grilid I rusfers&#13;
• lOir Escort&#13;
• Gratuities&#13;
lC&#13;
80TH TRIPS:&#13;
•&#13;
Dance group coming •&#13;
The Fine Arts Dance Theatre, a&#13;
group 01 faculty and students&#13;
lrom uW-Milwaukee's School of&#13;
Fine Arts will perform before a&#13;
Parkside 'audience on Friday,&#13;
OCtober 25. ,&#13;
The dance troupe was formed&#13;
in 1967 and has since won high&#13;
critical acclaim from area&#13;
journalists for its performances.&#13;
Milwaukee Journal's Walter&#13;
Monlried described the program&#13;
as "swiftly moving, diversified&#13;
and enjoyable" while Sentinel&#13;
critic Jay Joslyn called it&#13;
"imaginative and beautiful."&#13;
The Fine Arts Dall~e Theatre&#13;
HUNGRY H&#13;
Submarine S.&#13;
Carry011&#13;
"Where the Ham ,.&#13;
Phone 65z.cl4&#13;
506 - 56th St., K....&#13;
*Presents..*&#13;
STYX&#13;
FRI., OCT. 18th&#13;
------------ -'&#13;
*&#13;
APPEARING&#13;
*&#13;
SAT., OCT. 19th&#13;
, Oc1. l , 1 74&#13;
ee adds&#13;
imetable&#13;
st eek RANGER ran&#13;
s ory titled "Musich to&#13;
d GTI Women's&#13;
ur au." As much as we&#13;
ould like to give Ms.&#13;
usich a promotion, the&#13;
job of director belongs to&#13;
'Timm. Musich will&#13;
of the&#13;
of the&#13;
• Dance group coming&#13;
The Fine Arts Dance Theatre, a&#13;
group of faculty and students&#13;
from UW-Milwaukee's School of&#13;
Fine Arts, will perform before a&#13;
Parkside audience on Friday,&#13;
October 25.&#13;
The dance troupe was formed&#13;
in 1967 and has since won high&#13;
critical acclaim from area&#13;
journalists for its performances.&#13;
Milwaukee Journal's Walter&#13;
Monfried described the program&#13;
as "swiftly moving, diversified&#13;
and enjoyable" while Sentinel&#13;
critic Jay Joslyn called it&#13;
"imaginative and beautiful."&#13;
The Fine Arts Dance Theatre&#13;
combines traditional &amp;Bl&#13;
garde cho.reography wt&#13;
and classical music,&#13;
music is original ~or\&#13;
composers.&#13;
Pianist Richard&#13;
(music director for t&#13;
Department or Dance)&#13;
musical interludes to&#13;
and taped-music poru&#13;
program.&#13;
The Parkside ap&#13;
the Fine Arts Dance&#13;
being sponsored by the ~&#13;
Activities Board. The&#13;
scheduled for 8 p.m io&#13;
Arts Theater on Oct. 25&#13;
are available at the Inf&#13;
kiosk at $1 for studen&#13;
for the general public,&#13;
HUNGRY HU&#13;
Submarine Saa•••&#13;
Carry 011&#13;
"Where the Happy Pet&#13;
Phone 652--0234&#13;
506- 56th St., Ke&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
*Rock*Jazz*Pop*F&#13;
*Classical•&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES Al&#13;
* Presents..*&#13;
STYX&#13;
FRI., OCT. 18th&#13;
*APPEARING*&#13;
SAT., OCT. 19th &#13;
and the labs would be uoed for&#13;
production .&#13;
Due to the rebirth of "'terest In&#13;
audio and radio, Gartley believes&#13;
it would be a good idea 10 occasionally&#13;
offer an advanced&#13;
audio course. Other possibilities&#13;
include courses in Law and&#13;
Ethics of the Media, Media&#13;
HIStory and perhaps oometlung&#13;
in children's programming&#13;
Gartley feels that P.arUide has&#13;
excellent facilities for quality&#13;
pro&lt;klction work and that a&#13;
program 10 mas.. communications&#13;
has real potential,&#13;
as does Parkside.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
has been drawn up. Several&#13;
course proposals have already&#13;
been written and these will be&#13;
discussed in discipline meetings&#13;
within the next couple of weeks.&#13;
Gartley would like to see a core&#13;
of produ&lt;;tion courses in audio&#13;
and television offered at&#13;
Parkside, primarily a beginning&#13;
course and a television directing&#13;
course.&#13;
She hopes to offer an introduction&#13;
10Broadcast Prodcast&#13;
Production. This would include&#13;
radio and television exercises.&#13;
The lectures would prepare the&#13;
students for the lab assignments&#13;
includes Neta D. Owen as&#13;
Mommy; Art Dexter as Daddy;&#13;
Bruce Wagner as Grandma&#13;
(Yes, Grandma-Rintz believes&#13;
the role was written 10 be played&#13;
by a male); Susan Modder as&#13;
Mrs. Barker; and David&#13;
3928 60th St.&#13;
Gartley exploring intern program&#13;
by Jeff Kiehlbauch&#13;
"I .. lly like Parkside. I'm&#13;
~ted with where it is )md 1&#13;
Igood about being here. The&#13;
ree dents here are, very&#13;
:::.mbited they're willing to try&#13;
1bin8S. Th~Y're willing to ask&#13;
_.-lions in class rather than&#13;
or;;,. to themselves that they&#13;
:"'1 Wlderstand. Students ~ere&#13;
ore very interested m learning.&#13;
11teY'veused school as a real&#13;
opportunity and that's&#13;
rOfreshing· ..&#13;
'l1le above comments on&#13;
ParkSide come from its new&#13;
assistant professor of Communication,&#13;
Linda. Gartley.&#13;
Gartley, . who received her&#13;
graduate degree m RadIO,&#13;
Television and ~ from the&#13;
Universityof Michigan, taught at&#13;
EasternMichigan University and&#13;
Seton Hall University in South&#13;
Orange, New Jersey before&#13;
comingto Parkside.&#13;
She has collaborated with her&#13;
husbandon the revision of a book&#13;
entitledThe Television Program:&#13;
It', Direction and Production.&#13;
1bey are currently working on&#13;
another book which should be&#13;
completedaround the end of the&#13;
year.&#13;
This semester Gartley is&#13;
teaching Introduction to Human&#13;
Communicatioll, Mass Media in&#13;
American Society and a special&#13;
topic class-Broadcast .Writing&#13;
and Production, which IS bemg&#13;
offered for the first time this&#13;
semester. Broadcast Writing and&#13;
Production is primarily a writing&#13;
course but is also an exposure to&#13;
the production facilities in Media&#13;
Productions on campus.&#13;
Students will be exposed to a&#13;
variety of writing styles such as&#13;
news writing, writing in teams,&#13;
and comedy writing. They will be&#13;
given the opportunity to write&#13;
and produce a radio commercial&#13;
complete with dialogue and&#13;
sound effects and to produce a&#13;
feature talk show for television.&#13;
The students have already done&#13;
.a lab where they took printed&#13;
material such as pamphlets and&#13;
newspaper ads and rewrote them&#13;
for radio presentation. WGN&#13;
studio in Chicago has offered to&#13;
give the students a tour of their&#13;
facilities.&#13;
Gartley. will be going to some of&#13;
the Milwaukee stations within the&#13;
next month and some guest&#13;
speakers may derive from that.&#13;
She is also exploring the&#13;
possibility of holding some&#13;
writing and producing workshops&#13;
at Parkside utilizing the talent of&#13;
some of the free-lance writers in&#13;
the area.&#13;
Gartley highly approves of a&#13;
mixture of community work with&#13;
academic work. She is actively&#13;
involved in attempting to&#13;
organize an internship program&#13;
in cooperation with professional&#13;
groups and industries in the&#13;
surrounding communities. One&#13;
radio station in the area has&#13;
already approached Parkside&#13;
about an internship and she feels&#13;
there are a lot of opportunities&#13;
and a great deal of potential for&#13;
such a program in this cornmunity.&#13;
Gartley, in explaining the&#13;
advantages of a program of this&#13;
nature, said that "a program&#13;
done in a laboratory situation is a&#13;
marvelous way to learn, but&#13;
there comes a time when a&#13;
student becomes frustrated. about&#13;
the lack of feedback that he gets&#13;
from anyone but the instructor.&#13;
Internship would put students in&#13;
\1 real production situation and_&#13;
give them an opportunity to get a&#13;
lot of feedback from their&#13;
superiors on their work and to :&#13;
actually feel like they're accomplishing&#13;
something. It's a&#13;
different kind of pride than&#13;
getting an A in a, course."&#13;
She also feels an internship&#13;
program could be belpful in&#13;
terms of placing students in jobs&#13;
or at least getting them an interview.&#13;
As for further developments in&#13;
the area of mass communication&#13;
at Parkside, Gartley said thai a&#13;
list of tentative courses to be&#13;
offered. sometime in the future&#13;
An evening of absurdity&#13;
"The Bald Soprano" by Eugene&#13;
Ionesco and "The American&#13;
Dream" by Edward Albee&#13;
comprise "an evening of theatre&#13;
of the absurd" to be presented by&#13;
the Parkside Players Thursday'&#13;
through Sunday (OCt. 17, 18, t9,&#13;
20) in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre. Curtain time is 8 p.m.&#13;
Don Hintz, assistant professor&#13;
of Communication, will direct the&#13;
two comedies. Thomas Reinert is&#13;
technical director and scenic&#13;
designer.&#13;
For "The Bald Soprano," Rintz&#13;
has cast Ric Birch as Mr. Smith;&#13;
Terry Kollman as Mrs. Smith;&#13;
Glen A. Christensen as Mr.&#13;
Martin; Jody Jones as Mrs.&#13;
Martin; Kris Simpson as the&#13;
maid; and Tim seymour as the&#13;
fire chief.&#13;
"The American Dream" cast&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
"On Tap at the Union"&#13;
MOCKUS TAP&#13;
FOLK MUSIC&#13;
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY&#13;
NO COVER CHARGE&#13;
15t TAPS&#13;
4619 Eighth Ave.&#13;
Schroeder as Young Man.&#13;
Tickets are available in advance&#13;
at the lnlormation kiosk m&#13;
Main Place or at the door. All&#13;
seats are reserved. Public ad·&#13;
mission is $2. Parkside studentstaff&#13;
admission is SI&#13;
Phone 658-2582&#13;
651-9191&#13;
AMERICAN&#13;
STATE BANK&#13;
~FOIC&#13;
~ MCDOnald-S. ~&#13;
'Ie ape&#13;
We, the crew people of McDonald's ®&#13;
are guaranteed to ...&#13;
• Serve you food that's hot, or we'll&#13;
replace it.&#13;
• Clean your table, or the meal's&#13;
on us.&#13;
• Give you a courteous "thank you,"&#13;
or there's no charge.&#13;
® .-------- ......&#13;
MeDOnalft e&#13;
MOSt II~&#13;
3116 22IId AVE.&#13;
3926 52Dd ST.&#13;
N,IY' comm. prof. Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Gartley exploring intern program&#13;
by Jeff Kiehlbauch 3!1d comedy writing. They will be&#13;
given the opportunity to write&#13;
and produce a radio commercial&#13;
complete with dialogue and&#13;
sound effects and to produce a&#13;
feature talk show for television.&#13;
"I really like Park_si?e· I'm&#13;
chanted with where 1t 1s ;md I :i good about being here. The&#13;
dents here are very stw»bited, they're ~illing to try&#13;
:ings. They're willmg to ask&#13;
estions in class rather than&#13;
!utter to themselves that_ they&#13;
ck&gt;n't W1derstand. St?dents ~ere&#13;
are very interested m learnmg.&#13;
niey've used school as a real&#13;
portunity and that's op II&#13;
refreshing·&#13;
The above comme_nts on&#13;
Parkside come from its new&#13;
ssistant professor of Com-&#13;
~unication, Linda _ Gartley.&#13;
Gartley, . who rec~1ved h_er&#13;
graduate degre~ m Radio,&#13;
Television and . Film from the&#13;
University of !'fichig3:n, ta?ght at&#13;
Eastern Michigan Uruvers1ty and&#13;
Seton Hall University in South&#13;
Orange, New ~ersey before&#13;
coming to Parkside.&#13;
She has collaborated with her&#13;
husband on the revision of a book&#13;
entitled The Television Program:&#13;
It's Direction and Production.&#13;
They are currently working on&#13;
another book which should be&#13;
completed around the end of the&#13;
year.&#13;
This semester Gartley is&#13;
teaching Introduction to Human&#13;
Communication, Mass Media in&#13;
American Society and a special&#13;
topic class--Broadcast Writing&#13;
and Production, which is being&#13;
offered for the first time this&#13;
semester. Broadcast Writing and&#13;
Production is primarily a writing&#13;
course but is also an exposure to&#13;
the production facilities in Media&#13;
Productions on campus.&#13;
Students will be exposed to a&#13;
variety of writing styles such as&#13;
news writing, writing in teams,&#13;
The students have already done&#13;
.a lab where they took printed&#13;
material such as pamphlets and&#13;
newspaper ads and rewrote them&#13;
for radio presentation. WGN&#13;
studio in Chicago has offered to&#13;
give the students a tour of their&#13;
facilities.&#13;
give them an opportunity to get a&#13;
lot of feedback from their&#13;
superiors on their work and to ·&#13;
actually feel like they're accomplishing&#13;
something. It's a&#13;
different kind of pride than&#13;
getting an A in a,. course."&#13;
She also feels an internship&#13;
program could be helpful in&#13;
terms of placing students in jobs&#13;
or at least getting them an interview.&#13;
&#13;
As for further developments in&#13;
the area of mass communication&#13;
at Parkside, Gartley said that a&#13;
list of tentative courses to be&#13;
offered sometime in the future&#13;
ha been drawn up several&#13;
course proposal have already&#13;
been written and these will be&#13;
discussed in discipline meeting&#13;
\\ithin the next couple of v.edc .&#13;
Gartley would like to see a core&#13;
of produc;tion courses in audio&#13;
and tele i ion offered at&#13;
Parkside, primarily a beginm.ng&#13;
course and a television directing&#13;
course. She hopes to offer an Introduction&#13;
to Broadca t Prodca t&#13;
Production. This would include&#13;
radio and television exerc ·&#13;
The lectures would prepare the&#13;
students for the lab assignments&#13;
Gartley. will be going to some of&#13;
the Milwaukee stations within the&#13;
next month and some guest&#13;
speakers may derive from that.&#13;
She is also exploring the&#13;
possibility of holding some&#13;
writing and producing workshops&#13;
at Parkside utilizing the talent of&#13;
some of the free-lance writers in&#13;
the area.&#13;
Parkside players present&#13;
Gartley highly approves of a&#13;
mixture of community work with&#13;
academic work. She is actively&#13;
involved in attempting to&#13;
organize an internship program&#13;
in cooperation with professional&#13;
groups and industries in the&#13;
surrounding communities. One&#13;
radio station in the area has&#13;
already approached Parkside&#13;
about an internship and she feels&#13;
there are a lot of opportunities&#13;
and a great deal of potential for&#13;
such a program in this community.&#13;
&#13;
An· evening of absurdity&#13;
Gartley, in explaining the&#13;
advantages of a program of this&#13;
nature, said that " a program&#13;
done in a laboratory situation is a&#13;
marvelous way to learn, but&#13;
there comes a time when a&#13;
student becomes frustrated about&#13;
the lack of feedback that he gets&#13;
from anyone but the instructor.&#13;
Internship would put students in&#13;
~ real production situation and&#13;
"The Bald Soprano" by Eugene&#13;
Ionesco and ' 'The American&#13;
Dream" by Edward Albee&#13;
comprise " an evening of theatre&#13;
of the absurd" to be presented by&#13;
the Parkside Players Thursday·&#13;
through Sunday (Oct. 17, 18, 19,&#13;
20) in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre. Curtain time is 8 p.m.&#13;
Don Rintz, assistant professor&#13;
of Communication, will direct the&#13;
two comedies. Thomas Reinert is&#13;
technical director and scenic&#13;
designer.&#13;
For "The Bald Soprano," Rintz&#13;
has cast Ric Birch as Ir. Smith ;&#13;
Terry Kollman as l.\1rs. Smith :&#13;
Glen A. Christensen as Mr.&#13;
Martin ; Jody Jones as :',!rs.&#13;
Martin ; Kris Simpson as the&#13;
maid ; and Tim Seymour as the&#13;
fire chief.&#13;
"The American Dream" cast&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
mcludes , 'eta D. Owen a&#13;
• tommy ; Art Dexter as Daddy;&#13;
Bruce Wagner a Grandma&#13;
(Yes, Grandma-Rintz believes&#13;
the role was written to be played&#13;
by a male . , Susan fodder a&#13;
• lrs. Barker; and Da id&#13;
Schroeder as Young 1 n.&#13;
Tick t are available in d·&#13;
vance at the Informal on lei in&#13;
, lain Place or at lh door. All&#13;
ed. Publtc d·&#13;
d tud lMOCKUS&#13;
TAP&#13;
FOLK MUSIC&#13;
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, S TU DAY&#13;
NO COVER CHARGE&#13;
15c TAPS&#13;
4619 Eighth Ave.&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
'~On Tap at the Union" ~t&gt;«FO I C&#13;
r-A: McDona1d·s /4&#13;
lie••• Guaraitteed&#13;
We, the crew people of McDonald's®&#13;
are guaranteed to ...&#13;
a Serve you food that's hot, or we'll&#13;
replace it.&#13;
a Clean your table, or the meal's&#13;
on us.&#13;
• Give you a courteous "thank you,"&#13;
or there's no charge.&#13;
jj u1v A4 Do~®&#13;
~flop&amp;.&#13;
---------------&#13;
McDOna1crs ®&#13;
1earest to, JOI&#13;
3116 22nd AVE.&#13;
392&amp; 52nd ST. &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER WedMsUy. Oct. 16. 1974&#13;
'- GERSports--&#13;
ers enter&#13;
playoffs&#13;
allowed P te-ill to capl~l1ze&#13;
Ilea to score their&#13;
~l of the aHernoon&#13;
Patbl&lt;lobacll«!.t baIf-time~'&#13;
....... 1iDC to Cold! HenPiau&#13;
.11 ,.. •• very&#13;
I nal be tnilUlI ~;&#13;
':;.2::_~~~ man) ~ sboUId have&#13;
00&#13;
ar&#13;
218 allllCH RI). I&lt;EHOSHA.Sl1·7'f7'1&#13;
LIQUOR STORE. BAR, DINING AOOII&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
THE THIEF&#13;
HO&#13;
C E TO DI ER&#13;
&lt;&#13;
women's siJorts discusse&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
The Parkside Athletic Board&#13;
held its first committee meetUll&#13;
of the semester on October 10.&#13;
TopICS (or disCUSSionwere the&#13;
budget. the Women's Atbletlc&#13;
Program aod in(ormatlon. on&#13;
,,-bat w...s approved last spring·&#13;
Appointed chairp~rson was&#13;
Peter Ellis; Ron Smger was&#13;
appointed secretary. Members o(&#13;
the committee are Wayne&#13;
Dannebl. direCtor o( Albletics,&#13;
Kathr)-n lauer, Laverne Quass,&#13;
Omar Amin, Bob Thomason,&#13;
Teresa Peck and John HaU,&#13;
Thi.s ummer ~"O new wom~'s&#13;
rts were added to the varsity&#13;
athleuc teams. They are&#13;
s....imming and fencing. The&#13;
pre\iOUS ones are track, cr~s&#13;
countrY. gymnastics and tenms.&#13;
Par Ide currently has ten&#13;
men' and six women's sports.&#13;
"€N&lt;' that "omen have started&#13;
programs. the) are seeking&#13;
mone-' This ba become a real&#13;
probiem around the state,&#13;
Tnditlooally, men have been&#13;
granted money (or athletic&#13;
~, not women.&#13;
I tale schools, except (or&#13;
Pan. Ide aod Green Bay, have&#13;
eparate physical education&#13;
department for men and&#13;
_en.&#13;
IIManng just one athletic&#13;
J:I'OI1"&amp;IT' •to sa id Darmehl, "in·&#13;
teed or t\li'O. \lie are in a unique&#13;
bOO AU our segregated (ee&#13;
dollars go to meo and women&#13;
programs."&#13;
·'Parks,de has the potential 10&#13;
expand." said Dannehl, "but not&#13;
tbe staff. I'm trying to explore&#13;
e-'ery possibility tbat we can to&#13;
add a ","'Oman or women to the&#13;
atbletic staff in order to make a&#13;
(u11 complemenl o( sports."&#13;
A question was raised regarding&#13;
the limited number of (re~&#13;
swim hours in the pool. The mam&#13;
roblem is that there are not&#13;
~Ough life guards, ,&#13;
A motion was made by Arnin&#13;
that a letter he drafted to James&#13;
Galbraith, director of Planmng&#13;
and Construction, P.........&#13;
a summer-swirn '-L~&#13;
program be set IIp 'Ibia&#13;
limited to Parksid~&#13;
faculty children, A ~&#13;
be charged per I It&#13;
motion was carried, eooa..&#13;
Cagers open&#13;
practice season&#13;
Parkside basketball coach&#13;
Steve Stephens welcomed back a&#13;
veteran group and several&#13;
promising newcomers as&#13;
basketball practice (or the 1974-75&#13;
season officially began Tuesday&#13;
(Oct. 15),&#13;
The Rangers will have six&#13;
weeks to prepare for their season&#13;
opener here Nov, 30 against UWWhitewater.&#13;
Parkside, 14-15 a&#13;
year ago, should be much improved&#13;
this season with a solid&#13;
blend of veterans and promising&#13;
rookies.&#13;
Tops among the 35 candidates&#13;
for the varsity squad should be&#13;
the four returning starters, Gary&#13;
Cole, Bill Sobanski, Malcolm&#13;
Mahone and Chuck Chambliss,&#13;
Cole, the team's most valuable&#13;
player last year with his 22,0&#13;
point and 12 rebound per game&#13;
averages, is a legitimate allAmerica&#13;
candidate. Cole, a 6-9&#13;
junior from Racine (Park),&#13;
missed seven games last year&#13;
aCt"" breaking his lbumb in preseason&#13;
drills.&#13;
Also back are 1973-74 starters&#13;
Sobanski, a 6-7 junior (rom Oak&#13;
Lawn, Ill, (Chicago Mt. Carmel),&#13;
wbo averaged 15 points and 7,8&#13;
rebounds a conl.est; Mahone, a 6-&#13;
4 guard (rom KenoshaI&#13;
Gordon Tech) who hit"&#13;
per game clip; and I&#13;
6-2 senior from Racine&#13;
who has started nearIJ&#13;
UW-P game since hi!.&#13;
year and last year av......&#13;
ppg,&#13;
Another returnee it&#13;
Hanke, who started II I&#13;
man in 1972-73 and Sli&#13;
school last season. 11It&#13;
sophomore forward&#13;
Milwaukee &lt;Hamill..&#13;
Stephens a strong&#13;
shooter.&#13;
Tops among the&#13;
are two transfers fromSt.&#13;
University who will be&#13;
Jan.'6, Marshall Hilland&#13;
Scott.: Hill, a 6-10&#13;
center, and ScoU, I&#13;
sophomore guard who I&#13;
ouistanding one-on.....&#13;
player, bolb preppedII&#13;
Gordon Tech, ExpectedII&#13;
depth at guard is 5-11&#13;
Stevie King, anOlbtr&#13;
Tech product. Also&#13;
aid in reserve rolea duriI&#13;
season are lettenneD&#13;
Chambers (6-3), CalYit1&#13;
(6-2) and Rade Dimilrijelll:&#13;
NOW OPEN&#13;
WE BUY USED BOOKS AND OFFER&#13;
A 5% COLLEGE REBATE&#13;
EIGHTH AVENUE BOOKSTORE&#13;
4601 - Eighth Avenue&#13;
658-2709 Kenosha&#13;
"ACROSS .FROM UNION PARK"&#13;
,&#13;
5601-24 AVE. KENOSHA :...............................•.........&#13;
: DOUBLE - BUBBLE COCKTAIL HOUR :&#13;
: Monday thru Saturday :&#13;
• •&#13;
: 4:00-9:00 P.M. :&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
: 50·:&#13;
••••••••••••••••••• •&#13;
3 F SlAIl TABlES " •••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
2 TAIlES Best StereQ Sound" *&#13;
OPENING SOON·&#13;
(em e ,s) &amp; ••••• in Kenosha The Smoke 'ouse&#13;
--=:::::::::::::-&#13;
- -&#13;
I&#13;
ER&#13;
'------------Spor s _ _&#13;
er&#13;
offs&#13;
Athlatlcs board meets&#13;
women's sports discusse&#13;
b Bonn~Ha&#13;
A question was raised r egarding&#13;
the limited number of fre~&#13;
swim hours in the pool. The mam&#13;
roblem is that there are not&#13;
~ough life guards. .&#13;
A motion was made by Amm&#13;
that a letter be drafted to J a~es&#13;
Galbraith, director of P lannmg&#13;
and Construction, Pl'ODI.;._&#13;
a summer-swim ·i;, ~ro~am be set up. This&#13;
hm1ted to Parkside sb111... ".&#13;
faculty children. A $"ir"'&#13;
be char ged per I ee motion wa s carried. ~&#13;
Cagers open&#13;
practice season&#13;
Parkside basketball coach&#13;
Steve Stephens welcomed back a&#13;
veteran group and several&#13;
promising newcomers as&#13;
basketball practice for the 1974-75&#13;
season officially began Tuesday&#13;
(Oct. 15).&#13;
The Rangers will have six&#13;
weeks to prepare for their season&#13;
opener here Nov. 30 against UWWhitewater.&#13;
Parkside, 14-15 a&#13;
year ago, should be _much i~-&#13;
proved this season with a sohd&#13;
blend of veterans and promising&#13;
rookies. Tops among the 35 candidates&#13;
for the varsity squad should be&#13;
the four returning starters, Gary&#13;
Cole, Bill Sobanski, Malcolm&#13;
Mahone and Chuck Chambliss.&#13;
Cole, the team's most valuable&#13;
player last year with his 22.0&#13;
point and 12 rebound per game&#13;
averages, is a legitimate allAmerica&#13;
candidate. Cole, a 6-9&#13;
junior from Racine (Park),&#13;
missed seven games last year&#13;
afte breaking his thumb in preseason&#13;
drills.&#13;
Also back are 1973-74 starters&#13;
Sobanski, a 6-7 junior from Oak&#13;
Lawn, Ill. (Chicago Mt. Carmel),&#13;
who averaged 15 points and 7.8&#13;
rebounds a coni.est; Mahone, a 6-&#13;
4 guard from Kenosha (&#13;
Gordon Tech) who hit at&#13;
per game clip; and Cham 1&#13;
6-2 senior from Racine&#13;
who has started neariy&#13;
UW-P game since his 1&#13;
year and last year averace4&#13;
ppg.&#13;
Another returnee I&#13;
Hanke, who started a 1&#13;
man in 1972-73 and sat&#13;
school last season Tht&#13;
sophomore forward&#13;
Milwaukee &lt;Hamilton&#13;
Stephens a strong&#13;
shooter.&#13;
Tops among the n&#13;
are two transfers from&#13;
University who wlll be&#13;
Jan . '6, Marshall Hilland&#13;
Scott. Hill, a 6-10 so&#13;
center, and Scott a&#13;
sophomore guard who 1&#13;
outstanding one-on--Olle&#13;
player, both prepped at&#13;
Gordon Tech. Expected to&#13;
depth at guard is HI&#13;
Stevie King, another&#13;
Tech product. Also&#13;
aid in reserve roles duril season are lettermen&#13;
Chambers (6-3), Calvin&#13;
(6-2) and Rade DimitrijM&#13;
NOW OPEN&#13;
W E BUY USED BOOKS AND 0FFEI&#13;
A 5 % CO LLEGE REBA TE&#13;
EIGHTH A VENUE BOOKSTORE&#13;
4601 - Eighth Avenue&#13;
658-2709 Kenosha&#13;
"ACROSS FROM UNION PARK"&#13;
, </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 3, issue 11, October 16, 1974</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="41">
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            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="64781">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="64782">
                <text>1974-10-16</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="64785">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="64786">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="64787">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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              <text>CCC sub. Debates constitution</text>
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              <text>CCC sub. debates constitution&#13;
by Dan McDonald&#13;
The Campus Concerns Committee&#13;
(CCC( decided to defer&#13;
judgement of policy changes&#13;
provided for under the new PSGA&#13;
Inc. constitution, until the Board&#13;
of Regents answers a petition&#13;
asking for an immediate&#13;
declaratory ruling on the matter.&#13;
The decision was made by a&#13;
CCC subcommittee, consisting of&#13;
representatives for student&#13;
government, faculty, dean of&#13;
students and student activities. A&#13;
fifth member who was to&#13;
represent physical education,&#13;
was absent. Though no&#13;
statements of judgment came&#13;
from the group, there was a good&#13;
deal of debate among most&#13;
members of the subcommittee, in&#13;
regard to the content of the new&#13;
constitution.&#13;
The most opposition came from&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger, Dean of&#13;
Students. "I believe there should&#13;
be a student government, a&#13;
student constitution, and a large&#13;
base of student input into&#13;
university policy-making&#13;
decisions," she said.&#13;
"But student government&#13;
should not be made the sole voice&#13;
on campus, because I don't&#13;
believe one organization can&#13;
represent the student body as a&#13;
whole.&#13;
As an alternative, referendums&#13;
might be held to determine&#13;
certain policies, both in the&#13;
academic and financial areas of&#13;
student life. This would allow&#13;
every student to come directly in&#13;
touch with policy-making&#13;
decisions."&#13;
However, PSGA Inc. President&#13;
Dennis Milutonovich does not&#13;
think the idea of referendums is&#13;
the answer, citing as an example&#13;
the attempt last April to hold a&#13;
referendum to decide university&#13;
policy in regard to new parking&#13;
lots. Said Milutonovich, "When&#13;
we proposed that referendum,&#13;
the chancellor turned us down.&#13;
Now the administration is using&#13;
the same idea we had as an&#13;
alternative to what we as&#13;
students have a right to accomplish&#13;
legally.&#13;
Besides, who is going to hold&#13;
such referendums? Most likely,&#13;
student government would. That&#13;
seems to imply some kind of&#13;
representation of students by&#13;
their governing body."&#13;
In reference to student&#13;
representation, Milutonovich&#13;
said, "PSGA Inc. is not a power&#13;
seeking organization. It's new&#13;
constitution doesn't provide for&#13;
anything that would maneuver&#13;
the student's future into government&#13;
hands.&#13;
For instance, we are asking&#13;
that a new student committee&#13;
appointed through a student&#13;
election, be set up to review&#13;
The Parkside-&#13;
•Wednesday, Oct. 23, 1974 Vol. Ill No. 12-&#13;
Taxpayers hear Udall,&#13;
other economists&#13;
by Betsy Neu&#13;
Gaiming that the economist,&#13;
not the prostitute, belongs to the&#13;
world's oldest profession, Lester&#13;
Thurow opened a tax forum&#13;
Saturday in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
The forum, entitled "Value&#13;
Judgments and Taxation" explored&#13;
tax reform, its possible&#13;
implementation, and its role in a&#13;
democratic society.&#13;
Speaking to a good turnout of&#13;
students, instructors and. interested&#13;
citizens were former&#13;
U.S. Secretary of the Interior&#13;
Stewart Udall; Lester Thurow,&#13;
professor of economics at MIT;&#13;
Nobel Prize recipient Kenneth&#13;
Arrow; and economists James&#13;
Buchanan and Joseph Pechman.&#13;
Sidney Ratner, professor of&#13;
history at Rutgers, summarized&#13;
the main themes and concepts of&#13;
the speakers and set the stage for&#13;
the question-answer period.&#13;
Arrow, a proponent of negative&#13;
income tax, said Nixon's Family&#13;
Assistance Plan was "a step in&#13;
the right direction," but not&#13;
nearly enough.&#13;
Negative income tax would&#13;
replace the current zero-income&#13;
tax concept. Arrow explained&#13;
that with negative income tax,&#13;
families that have less than a&#13;
certain income per year would&#13;
receive a payment rather than&#13;
just being permitted to pay no&#13;
income tax at all.&#13;
Thurow made a presentation on&#13;
tax structures of countries which,&#13;
like the U.S., are highly industrialized&#13;
but do not have&#13;
similar large income&#13;
discrepancies between the upper&#13;
and lower 20 percent of its&#13;
population.&#13;
Thurow specified that the top 20&#13;
percent of U.S. families makes 42&#13;
percent of the total private&#13;
family income, while the lower 20&#13;
percent of the population only&#13;
accounts for 5 percent of this&#13;
income.&#13;
This represents a more than&#13;
eight-to-one ratio between the&#13;
rich and the poor after taxes,&#13;
inar&#13;
while Sweden's ratio is a more&#13;
equitable five-to-one.&#13;
In his presentation, Buchanan&#13;
spoke of the differences "between&#13;
what we want and what we&#13;
can have in a democratic&#13;
society."&#13;
Speaking of the concept of&#13;
income redistribution from the&#13;
rich to the poor, Buchanan said,&#13;
"almost by definition transfer (of&#13;
income) would be discriminatory.&#13;
Some groups would have&#13;
a net loss and other groups a net&#13;
gain."&#13;
Buchanan stressed that any tax&#13;
reform must be made through a&#13;
constitutional amendment, which&#13;
would make the reform "quasipermanent."&#13;
&#13;
Former U.S. Secretary of the&#13;
Interior Stewart Udall started his&#13;
presentation with a reading of&#13;
Robert Frost's "Fire and Ice" in&#13;
honor of Saturday's early--&#13;
morning snowfall.&#13;
Predicting that we are entering&#13;
a permanent age of shortage,&#13;
continued on 5&#13;
Biological clocks&#13;
Northwestern University Prof.&#13;
Frank Brown Jr. will lecture on&#13;
"The Biological Clock&#13;
Phenomenon" at a free public&#13;
seminar sponsored by the Life&#13;
Science discipline at Parkside at&#13;
11:30 a.m. on Friday, Oct. 25 in&#13;
Gassroom Building Room 105.&#13;
Prof. Brown is the author of&#13;
two books on the topic,&#13;
"Biological Clocks" (1962) and&#13;
"The Biological Clock: Two&#13;
Views" (1971) and has done&#13;
extensive research on biological&#13;
rhythms. He was the 1966&#13;
recipient of the Award of M erit of&#13;
the Foundation for the Study of&#13;
Cycles.&#13;
"Biological clock" is the term&#13;
used by scientists to describe an&#13;
inherent biological mechanism&#13;
responsible for the occurrence at&#13;
regular intervals of certain&#13;
classes of behavior in animals&#13;
and plants. It relates, for instance,&#13;
to the ability of some&#13;
persons "to function better in the&#13;
day-time while others function&#13;
better at night.&#13;
Brown's lecture is one in a&#13;
series of Life Science seminars&#13;
this semester. Others will be&#13;
presented by Dr. C.K. Buckner of&#13;
the UW-Madison School of&#13;
Pharmacy, who will lecture on&#13;
" A d r e n e r g i c R e cep tor&#13;
Mechanisms" on Nov. 8, and&#13;
Prof. Omar Amin of the UW-P&#13;
life science iaculty, who will&#13;
lecture on "Identity and Ecology&#13;
of a New Species of Acanthocephalus"&#13;
on Dec. 6. Both&#13;
lectures are at 11:30 a.m. in&#13;
Gassroom Building Room D127.&#13;
Amin discovered the new&#13;
species of the spiney-headed&#13;
worm, Acanthocephalus, native&#13;
to fishes of southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin last year and has since&#13;
reported on his discovery at an&#13;
international meeting of&#13;
parasitologists in Munich,&#13;
Germany, and at Arizona State&#13;
University.&#13;
Previous seminars were&#13;
presented by Eugene Goodman&#13;
and Joseph Balsano, both&#13;
associate professors at UW-P, on&#13;
their research activities.&#13;
proposals or requests regarding&#13;
segregated fees.&#13;
"The allocations committee&#13;
would then bring those requests&#13;
before the chancellor and student&#13;
government, who together would&#13;
review and decide on the fate of&#13;
those requests."&#13;
Milutinovich admits that the&#13;
chancellor has the final word on&#13;
allocations, but argues that in&#13;
spite of its lack of power, student&#13;
government would be in close&#13;
touch with policies directly&#13;
related to student affairs.&#13;
Following the meeting,&#13;
Chairperson Theresa Peck,&#13;
representative of the faculty,&#13;
expressed these views. "I think&#13;
the new constitution and PSGA&#13;
Inc. petition for recognition of it,&#13;
is going to give the Regents an&#13;
idea of how Parkside students see&#13;
their (the Regents), ruling.&#13;
Possibly, this will also |ive&#13;
other university branches in our&#13;
system an idea of how they&#13;
should proceed under the new&#13;
merger bill.&#13;
As for student government, I&#13;
think there is a lot of jockeying&#13;
going on for political power,&#13;
mainly among special interest&#13;
groups. I'd like to see an end to&#13;
that."&#13;
In contrast, Barb Burke,&#13;
director of Parkside Activities&#13;
Board (PAB), said during the&#13;
meeting: "All student&#13;
organizations should be included&#13;
in government because they are&#13;
being affected directly. Interest&#13;
groups are part of student&#13;
government because the&#13;
organizations are accountable to&#13;
the student body."&#13;
The CCC subcommittee will&#13;
meet to decide the issue after the&#13;
Regents answer the petition for a&#13;
declaratory ruling.&#13;
photo by Dave Dretzka&#13;
Stewart Udall (left), former Secretary of the Interior, spoke to a&#13;
cj-owd of 300 last Saturday.&#13;
Earth Science seminar&#13;
Volcanoes present&#13;
health hazards&#13;
by Colleen Dorsey&#13;
Guatemala is among the five or&#13;
six most active and explosive&#13;
volcanic areas in the world.&#13;
Central American volcanoes are&#13;
thought to have existed for 100&#13;
million years.&#13;
"Explosive Volcanism in&#13;
Guatemala" was the topic of an&#13;
Earth Science Colloquim on Oct.&#13;
18. Dr. William Rose, associate&#13;
professor of geology at Michigan&#13;
Technological University, was&#13;
the guest speaker.&#13;
Eugene Smith, assistant&#13;
professor of earth science, introduced&#13;
Rose and gave his&#13;
qualifications. Rose received his&#13;
Ph.D. at Dartmouth in 1970 and&#13;
has done field research on the&#13;
Guatemalan volcanoes.&#13;
Rose's presentation consisted&#13;
of a color slide show of the chain&#13;
of volcanoes, Pacaya, Fuego,&#13;
Santiaguito and Santa Maria, in&#13;
various stages of eruption, from&#13;
emitting gaseous clouds to&#13;
spewing incandescent lava out of&#13;
the cone.&#13;
Guatemalan volcanoes are&#13;
unlike the shield volcanoes seen&#13;
in photos of Hawaii. Guatemalan&#13;
volcanoes have much steeper&#13;
sides leading up to the cone.&#13;
A map of Guatemala shows the&#13;
chain of volcanoes to be parallel&#13;
to a coastal water trench of&#13;
seismographic interest.&#13;
The most dramatically active&#13;
volcano is Fuego. It spews gases&#13;
and ashes over the surrounding&#13;
area creating environmental&#13;
health hazards, especially on the&#13;
downwind side. Gases pollute the&#13;
air and can be smelled for miles&#13;
away. The soluble constituents of&#13;
the ash fallout often leak into the&#13;
ground water supply after&#13;
rainfalls and create a hazard of&#13;
toxicity.&#13;
Hank Cole, associate professor&#13;
of earth science, commented that&#13;
there was "weather modification&#13;
due to rising hot air and nuclei&#13;
particles which would create a&#13;
climate conducive to rainfall."&#13;
Cole noted that the slides showed&#13;
large cumulus clouds. Rose&#13;
agreed that low pressure systems&#13;
were created and triggered&#13;
substantial downward rainfalls.&#13;
Vegetation is also affected by&#13;
the volcanoes. Charred trees in&#13;
the area date back more than&#13;
50,000 years in carbon-14 tests.&#13;
Local fields, such as one corn&#13;
field N shown in a slide, occasionally&#13;
get buried under&#13;
volcanic ash.&#13;
The 1902 eruption of Santa&#13;
Maria buried an entire forest and&#13;
killed 5,000 people when lava&#13;
flows extended into the valley.&#13;
Ash particles spewed into the&#13;
air by an eruption absorb and&#13;
scatter sunlight. The 1902&#13;
eruption created a 5-10 percent&#13;
decrease in solar intensity in the&#13;
Northern Hemisphere. Effects&#13;
continued on page 4 &#13;
2 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 23, 1974&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Must we wait&#13;
for answers?&#13;
According to the 1973-74 Parkside catalog one can be&#13;
counseled on problems of any nattlre: just "drop in" to&#13;
the counseling service at Tallent Hall. But be prepared&#13;
L°&#13;
d&#13;
;°P f&#13;
°&#13;
r a&#13;
,'°&#13;
n9 Wait&#13;
' ln the past six months&#13;
Parksides counseling service has dwindled from five&#13;
counselors to two. Wayne Ramirez, Isom Fern, and&#13;
Wendy Musich have left to take better jobs, leaving John&#13;
Rodgers and Red Oberbruner.&#13;
«,°+&#13;
ne&#13;
.&#13;
n&#13;
!&#13;
ed n0t ,00k close,&#13;
y at this situation to realize&#13;
that student needs are being neglected-not through the&#13;
lack of proficiency of the counseling personnel-through&#13;
a shortage of personnel.&#13;
Ranger can only sympathize with the Dean of&#13;
Students office-bound by red tape-in their efforts to&#13;
replace lost personnel. The counseling service is to be&#13;
commended for their efforts to alleviate this shortage&#13;
through such services as student-to-student advising.&#13;
But these stopgap methods do not begin to cure the basic&#13;
Parkside? ^ ^ exce,lent counse|ors leaving&#13;
A few answers are obvious-lack of recognitionlimited&#13;
salary increases-impossibility of advancement.&#13;
These answers only serve to raise another question.&#13;
What are we going to do? Will we continue to suffer&#13;
through extended periods of counselor vacancies or will&#13;
basic organizational structures be changed so that this&#13;
becomes a one time experience.&#13;
While we wait for answers take a number and wait&#13;
your turn.&#13;
in the interiors of old rooms,&#13;
women open doors&#13;
on small remembered affairs&#13;
they nest their hands on the favored beauty of their laps&#13;
and silent stare&#13;
before themselves&#13;
and out the barriers of decided loneliness&#13;
beyond to the hours&#13;
when they would lie in the arms of lovers&#13;
in the solitude of such places&#13;
striped by sun slitting through the blinds&#13;
on their forgotten breasts&#13;
women ignore time,&#13;
as it lashes them&#13;
and settle for lost kisses&#13;
while the walls peel and brown&#13;
amy 1974&#13;
1 K.&#13;
The ParksideThe&#13;
PARKSIDE RANGER is a wholly independeni&#13;
publication of the students of the U.W. Parkside, ex&#13;
pressing the interests, opinions, and concerns of the&#13;
students, and responsible for its contents. Offices are&#13;
located in D194 LLC, U.W. Parkside, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-2295, 553-2287.&#13;
Editor Kenneth Pestka&#13;
Advertising Manager John Sacket&#13;
Business Manager Steve Johnson&#13;
Managing Editor Greg Hawkins&#13;
News Editor Michael Olszyk&#13;
Humanities Editor amy cundari&#13;
Copy Editor Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
News Department Paul Anderson, Jeannine Sipsma,&#13;
Mike Nepper&#13;
Humanities Department Walter Ulbricht, Fred Bultman&#13;
Photographers Dale Allen, Dave Keller, Rita Ohm&#13;
Dave Dretzka, Mike Nepper&#13;
S *&lt;»(&#13;
James DuRell Smith Jr.&#13;
™AT lY ANYONE MENTIONSthat freshly laid sod that&#13;
was ripped up to make way for the new sidewalk to the P.E building&#13;
wil! come back with some comment about obthiSr&#13;
8&#13;
"&#13;
1&#13;
/ S0 WT 1 T&#13;
entlon il 1 J&#13;
ust wish that when things such as&#13;
of sidewalk thrTeTimL h SUmmer&#13;
"f ™ they laid the same stretch&#13;
or sidewalk three times, because each time they did they found it&#13;
necessary to drive a bulldozer over it?), they'd put a tent over it so mv&#13;
sense of something or other wouldn 't take such a beating.&#13;
fr,^1?&#13;
AT G00D IS A FOREIGN LANGUAGE? What can you use it&#13;
years 7 1 had With a fellow a number of&#13;
^ L H en&#13;
j°&#13;
yed musicals waited for&#13;
vehemam^e thaMt mil ha&#13;
,&#13;
ted UlemAnd&#13;
he did 80 with a&#13;
Latefs thlfl wasl^thToo ™eh of'of ring to " doesn,t it?&#13;
seems to put up with it. Few npnnio 1 ^ s fotter&#13;
. hut the staff&#13;
my part goes into this column that* 26 Ju&#13;
u&#13;
st&#13;
,&#13;
how little real effort on&#13;
weren't for those who go through anHiIf°t?&#13;
y couldn't read it if it&#13;
when my copy is late getting in. "&#13;
P nght spe,ling&#13;
s&#13;
' even&#13;
THEY'RE COMING DOWN THP RIPV C-RN^&#13;
pretty well spread out, stragglers still hith&#13;
R®TCH ™ith the Pack&#13;
students are out in front with the rest nf, i L Smarty pants&#13;
their dust. The far turn is still a mil plodders huffing away in&#13;
has left dozens of bloody corpse^bv tha^f /u&#13;
6 firSt Set of hurdIes&#13;
tune of St. Louis Blues!acho?i of 6&#13;
°&#13;
f&#13;
,&#13;
the track&#13;
" Sun8 to the&#13;
thirrrrrrrrrrteeeeeenth week blu« "T from depths&gt; "&#13;
J got the&#13;
weeeeeeeeeek!" God how I wish a&#13;
"&#13;
d 11&#13;
°&#13;
nly the eig&#13;
hth&#13;
football game and less like a track mPp ?&#13;
eme&#13;
,&#13;
s&#13;
f&#13;
er were more like a&#13;
halftime. "I'm dreaming of a white n C°a realIy use a g&#13;
ood long&#13;
ANYKIND OF CHRISTMAS!" P°&#13;
,kS dot&#13;
-&#13;
striped&#13;
-&#13;
ora&#13;
"ge ..&#13;
e m p h a s i s o n ^ h e ^ h r e e ^ ^ t ^ R E A D ! ! ! ! - wi t h s p e c i a l&#13;
theSweetShop. (And, th^K™ « S°'&#13;
d 3&#13;
' &#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 23, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Dilemma of the handicapped&#13;
by J.D.Garoutte&#13;
Editor's note: The following article is the second&#13;
in a two-part series on the problems that physically&#13;
handicapped students face attending a university&#13;
such as Parkside.&#13;
At Parkside, there is a role which must be played&#13;
and that is the adjustment and well-being of the&#13;
physically handicapped student.&#13;
Tim Petersen is one of these students. He has&#13;
cerebral palsey, a bilaterial nonprogressive&#13;
paralysis resulting from developmental defects in&#13;
the brain.&#13;
A junior Sociology major, Petersen has many,&#13;
thoughts on what is right and wrong with society&#13;
concerning disabled persons.&#13;
"As a whole, society needs a great deal of&#13;
education in the realisation of the many problems&#13;
the handicapped have to face every day, year after&#13;
year, for the rest of their lives.&#13;
"There is a great need for society to rid their&#13;
minds of the stigma attached to a person's&#13;
disabilities and accept us on our individual&#13;
capabilities.&#13;
"I'm tired of the label given me by society ; I want&#13;
to be accepted because I am a person and because&#13;
no matter what my physical problems are I can&#13;
handle myself intellectually.&#13;
"People are afraid of t he handicapped.&#13;
I have the feeling that some people&#13;
wonder if it is catching."&#13;
"I also feel I can and will become an integral part&#13;
of society."&#13;
Petersen is involved with an organization in&#13;
Racine called Societies Assets.&#13;
"In this organization we are concerned with the&#13;
disabled persons within the community," Petersen&#13;
said.&#13;
"We as an organization are concerned with many&#13;
of the problems these people face, but mainly we&#13;
are trying to find meaningful employment where&#13;
they will receive equal pay for equal work.&#13;
"We are also concerned with the housing situation&#13;
for the disabled person. Trying to find adequate&#13;
housing is almost as tough as finding them jobs."&#13;
When asked about the treatment he has received&#13;
at Parkside, Petersen said that "consideration is&#13;
the proper word for the people at Parkside."&#13;
"The faculty is very considerate when taking&#13;
exams and in helping me with the problems I may&#13;
have in their class.&#13;
"The students are also very considerate and if&#13;
they think differently about me than what they&#13;
show, they are at least thoughtful enough to keep&#13;
those feelings within themselves.&#13;
"But there are things wrong at Parkside,"&#13;
Petersen continued.&#13;
,,, mmmmmm w i v. , ^&#13;
"I was here two years before I found&#13;
out there were wheelchairs available."&#13;
"I myself have some trouble getting around&#13;
Parkside and had attended two years before I found&#13;
out there were wheelchairs available for my use.&#13;
"Sometimes the elevators don't work, as was the&#13;
case a week or so ago when there was a power&#13;
failure. I myself could manage the stairs fairly well,&#13;
but what about a wheelchair patient?"&#13;
Concerning his personal future, Petersen&#13;
acknowledges the problems he will encounter in&#13;
fulfilling his ambitions.&#13;
"I, like everyone else, have my own dreams and&#13;
ambitions, hopes that may never come true because&#13;
I am disabled, but I have and will continue to try to&#13;
overcome my disabilities and seek my ambitions&#13;
within my intellectual capabilities.&#13;
"My greatest desire is to finish my degree and go&#13;
into the field of counseling the physically handicapped,&#13;
namely on the high school level.&#13;
"I want to make it a little easier for someone else&#13;
to face the world and use their assets to the best of&#13;
their ability.&#13;
"With my knowledge of the disabled and my&#13;
degree^ I feel I would be of great value to my employer."&#13;
&#13;
Another physically handicapped student enrolled&#13;
at Parkside is Gus Sorenson.&#13;
Almost five years ago Sorenson was involved in&#13;
an auto accident that broke his neck, causing total&#13;
disability from his neck down.&#13;
Although technically Sorenson is a quadriplegic, a&#13;
paralysis affecting all four limbs, he has through&#13;
sheer determination been able to do many things&#13;
other quadriplegics could never do.&#13;
"I ask no favors, but do appreciate the help and&#13;
consideration given me by the instructors, the&#13;
nurse's office and any students who stop to help me&#13;
when I have dumped my books from my lap,"&#13;
Sorenson said.&#13;
"No one can understand until the&#13;
wheelchair becomes a permanent part of&#13;
them."&#13;
"People are afraid of the handicapped. I have the&#13;
feeling that some people wonder if it is catching.&#13;
"In some cases, such as class situations, I can&#13;
almost feel what people are saying when I speak:&#13;
'Wow, he can talk, he is a real person.' "&#13;
Sorenson said that "they need help, they just don't&#13;
know what is going on."&#13;
"It's good for them to ride around in a wheelchair&#13;
for a day, but knowing that they will be able to leave&#13;
the chair soon, they have a tendencv to forget the&#13;
problems they themselves encountered.&#13;
"No one can understand until the wheelchair&#13;
becomes a permanent part of them as it is my&#13;
case."&#13;
Concerning his ability to get out of the building&#13;
complex in the event of an emergency, Sorenson&#13;
said, "I would get out of the building by any means I&#13;
could. It it meant rolling down the stairs to safety, I&#13;
would do it."&#13;
"In referring to the use of elevators during fire, I&#13;
have but one thing to say: most elevators will not&#13;
work in fires anyway because when the smoke&#13;
reaches a certain level, they shut down&#13;
automatically."&#13;
"I want to make it a little easier for&#13;
someone else to face the world."&#13;
Elaborating on his future, Sorenson said, "I am&#13;
still looking for what interests me, but when I find&#13;
what is right for me I will approach it in the same&#13;
manner as a normal student would."&#13;
When talking to both Petersen and Sorenson's&#13;
families, they both indicated that what Tim and Gus&#13;
have accomplished has been done mainly on their&#13;
own.&#13;
In the case of Sorenson, he was told he would&#13;
never be able to walk again, dress himself and&#13;
never be able to do the things that come naturally to&#13;
normal people.&#13;
However, according to Sorenson's brother-in-law,&#13;
Peter Pallesen, "Everything Gus does, he has done&#13;
on his own."&#13;
"His desire to be as normal as possible is an&#13;
example of how strong-willed he is and of the&#13;
determination he has."&#13;
Tim Peterson is a Parkside student. He is also handicapped. He feels he has less trouble getting to&#13;
his classes than a wheelchair patient who must rely on the elevators.&#13;
Parking meters to replace visitor signs&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
Parking signs for visitors will&#13;
ie replaced with parking meters&#13;
ti about a month and a half,&#13;
iccording to Ronald Brinkmann,&#13;
lirector of Safety and Security.&#13;
In a letter addressed to Erwin&#13;
'uehlke, assistant chancellor of&#13;
he Administration, Brinkmann&#13;
tates that "experience has&#13;
hown that these stalls (visitors)&#13;
ire being constantly abused by&#13;
acuity, staff and students."&#13;
"The Campus Security&#13;
department has attempted to&#13;
enforce the regulations relating&#13;
o visitors parking; however, due&#13;
o the limited number of perionnel&#13;
available, there are many&#13;
imes when other duties prevent&#13;
he department from enforcing&#13;
the regulations."&#13;
Brinkmann states further in&#13;
the letter that since Tallent Hall&#13;
has been converted to "an administrative&#13;
type building, it has&#13;
become very obvious of the need&#13;
to provide short-term parking for&#13;
those individuals conducting&#13;
business at Tallent Hall."&#13;
When parking is not available&#13;
close to the building, "these individuals&#13;
then utilize the visitors'&#13;
stalls, handicapped stalls, or&#13;
park on the cross-hatch walkway&#13;
at Tallent Hall, taking a chance&#13;
that they will not receive a&#13;
parking ticket while conducting&#13;
their business," the letter states.&#13;
To alleviate both of these&#13;
problems, the Campus Planning&#13;
Committee at an Oct. 14 m eeting&#13;
adopted the following recommendations&#13;
:&#13;
The installation of 10 one-hour&#13;
parking meters in the visitors'&#13;
stalls at the west Tallent Hall&#13;
parking lot which will be in effect&#13;
from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. excluding&#13;
Saturdays, Sundays and legal&#13;
holidays.&#13;
The installation of 10 one-hour&#13;
parking meters in the visitors'&#13;
stalls at the to-be-completed&#13;
Communication Arts parking lot&#13;
which will be in effect from 7 a.m.&#13;
to 5 p.m. excluding Saturdays,&#13;
Sundays and legal holidays.&#13;
The installation of five one-half&#13;
hour meters in front of Tallent&#13;
Hall next to the walkway.&#13;
The short-term convenience&#13;
parking will have a 10c charge&#13;
per half-hour.&#13;
The parking meters in the&#13;
visitors' stalls will be set so that&#13;
there will be a maximum of&#13;
anywhere from one hour to four&#13;
hours parking at a 20c per hour&#13;
rate.&#13;
Brinkmann said that the reason&#13;
for the 20c per hour rate is to&#13;
"discourage faculty, staff and&#13;
students from utilizing the stalls&#13;
in the visitors' areas."&#13;
The use of parking meters at&#13;
Parkside is an "experimental&#13;
proposition," Brinkmann said.&#13;
Parking meters will be furnished&#13;
to the university on a sixmonth&#13;
trial basis at no charge.&#13;
"All revenue generated by the&#13;
meters during this six-month&#13;
period will be kept by the&#13;
university," Brinkmann said.&#13;
"If, after six months, the&#13;
meters prove to be an unworkable&#13;
alternative, the vendc&#13;
will remove the meters fror&#13;
campus," Brinkmann said. "I:&#13;
however, the meters prove&#13;
workable solution to the problen:&#13;
the university will then be bille&#13;
for the meters at an approximat&#13;
cost of $65 per meter.&#13;
"Meters are not an ultimat&#13;
solution as cities have found out,&#13;
Brinkmann commented. "In&#13;
limited sense though, this woul&#13;
be our solution."&#13;
Brinkmann did not know at thi&#13;
time, whether or not meters wi&#13;
also be installed at the to-bi&#13;
completed Union parking lot.&#13;
He said that the Union lot wi&#13;
have to be "played by ear as 1&#13;
what types of activities ai&#13;
happening there." &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 23, 1974&#13;
The Game Curfqjn&#13;
Medical&#13;
complications&#13;
by Paul Feroe&#13;
(College Press Service) - Each year at Indiana&#13;
University-Bloomington, 800 to 1,000 fre shmen list&#13;
pre-med as a major. By their senior year only 300 to&#13;
400 of these students apply to medical school and&#13;
from these few, only three out of 10 are accepted.&#13;
Nationwide 40,000 st udents will apply for 14,000&#13;
available openings in American medical schools.&#13;
White students with less than an A- average have&#13;
little chance of acceptance, as do minority students&#13;
with less than a B- average, according to one admissions&#13;
committee.&#13;
In the face of this overwhelmingly stiff competition&#13;
about 500 stud ents yearly are leaving the&#13;
country to undertake the dificult task of attending a&#13;
foreign medical school. Getting accepted is not&#13;
much easier at most foreign schools and in addition&#13;
students encounter a raft of obstacles as evidenced&#13;
by a 30 to 50 percent attrition rate during the first&#13;
year, compared to five percent in the United States.&#13;
If the student survives the first year, chances of&#13;
lasting the entire medical course improve considerably.&#13;
But certain medical schools require a six&#13;
to 12 month period of government service and advisors&#13;
recommend that a U.S. citizen's principal&#13;
goal should be to return to the U.S. at the earliest&#13;
possible time via transfer on advanced standing&#13;
into an accredited medical school.&#13;
The transferring procedure, However, requites&#13;
taking a transfer application test, securing letters&#13;
of recommendation and making more admissions&#13;
applications. In 1972 only 31.8 percent of 676&#13;
Americans successfully completed the transfer&#13;
from a foreign to a US medical school.&#13;
As there is almost no chance for students to attend&#13;
an English-speaking medical school (Australia,&#13;
Canada, Great Britain, South Africa) the language&#13;
handicap becomes the biggest stumbling block for&#13;
first year students. Advisors warn that those&#13;
learning the language will need English editions of&#13;
foreign textbooks to assist study and that students&#13;
must be adaptable, self-disciplined, highly&#13;
motivated and prepared to take yearly make-orbreak&#13;
oral examinations covering a lot of ground. In&#13;
addition European professors are typically inaccessible&#13;
and may permit no questions during or&#13;
after class.&#13;
Because the many language and cultural&#13;
problems seem insurmountable, the prospective&#13;
foreign student has been the victim recently of a&#13;
new system ot entrepreneurs who promise students&#13;
intensive courses of language study, orientation and&#13;
a "placement" in a medical school. The Journal of&#13;
Medical Education warns that "while most of the&#13;
'arrangements' appear on the large size of the fee&#13;
levied by the arranger" - anywhere from 400 to&#13;
several thousand dollars.&#13;
Once a student earns a degree at a foreign school&#13;
he-she still must pass the Education Council for&#13;
Foreign Medical Graduates test (ECFMG) before&#13;
being allowed to practice in the US or even take an&#13;
internship of residency in a US hospital. This test is&#13;
given twice-yearly throughout the world and there&#13;
is no limit to the number of times a physician is&#13;
permitted to take it.&#13;
Recently, however, that test has come under fire&#13;
by a task force of the Association of American&#13;
Medical Colleges as being too easy. The AAMC task&#13;
force charged that the present system for accepting&#13;
the foreign medical graduate (FMG) into the US&#13;
has led to the creation of "a category of secondclass&#13;
physicians."&#13;
The report points out that the US medical system&#13;
has become increasingly reliant on FMG's who now&#13;
make up about one fifth of the nation's 356,000&#13;
doctors. (American nationals make up only a small&#13;
percentage of the total FMG's.) In 1972 more&#13;
graduates of foreign medical schools entered the US&#13;
than physicians were graduated within the country.&#13;
In order to stem the flow of FMG's into the US the&#13;
task force recommended: a tougher medical exam&#13;
to replace the ECFMG; limiting the number of&#13;
internships and residencies made available to&#13;
FMG's; the establishment of a pilot project to give&#13;
foreign students remedial undergraduate medical&#13;
education to bring them up to American standards,&#13;
and more funding of US medical schools to provide&#13;
space for more American students.&#13;
The AAMC task force admitted that there might&#13;
be a shortage of house staff at some hospitals during&#13;
an intermediary period if its proposals were&#13;
adopted but said it seems "inappropriate" that the&#13;
US with its existing resources should "depend to&#13;
any significant degree on physicians supplied by&#13;
education systems of other countries."&#13;
The clear message from foreign medical school&#13;
advisors is that unless a student is extremely&#13;
dedicated and willing to endure substantial red tape&#13;
and language problems, he is better off considering&#13;
another occupation.&#13;
Volcanoescan&#13;
usually be measured by&#13;
instruments before being perceived&#13;
by the naked eye.&#13;
However, the area can be&#13;
completely darkened if it is under&#13;
an emitted gaseous cloud (as one&#13;
slide showed).&#13;
Changes in the sun itself, such&#13;
as sun spots, may also affect&#13;
volcanic activity. Climate is&#13;
affected by the way the sun&#13;
varies and affects the volcano&#13;
and also by the volcanic dust&#13;
which reduces sunlight.&#13;
Rose's work in Guatemala&#13;
continued from page&#13;
included trapping volcanic gas&#13;
for eruption forecasting. A quick&#13;
method of determining when&#13;
volcanic activity will cease is&#13;
needed so it can be determined if&#13;
evacuation is necessary.&#13;
Presently, no such method has&#13;
been developed.&#13;
There has been an increased&#13;
amount of volcanic activity in the&#13;
world in recent times, but Rose&#13;
stressed that magnitude of&#13;
eruptions is more important than&#13;
frequency.&#13;
Expressive freedom&#13;
in the Jazz combos&#13;
by Dennis Steinseifer&#13;
Parkside, this year, has two&#13;
jazz bands under the direction of&#13;
Robert Thomason, assistant&#13;
professor of Music. Both are&#13;
rated high in ability and they will&#13;
be playing at the annual fall and&#13;
spring campus concerts. One will&#13;
be touring selected jazz festivals,&#13;
contests and concerts throughout&#13;
the University of Wisconsin&#13;
system and the other will be&#13;
touring area high schools along&#13;
with concerts at UWP.&#13;
The first concert at Parkside&#13;
will be November 3, at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in the Communication Arts&#13;
Building and will also feature two&#13;
combos arranged from the&#13;
groups. Plans are being formulated&#13;
for recording an album&#13;
of ensembles in the spring and&#13;
concerts in the future will feature&#13;
guest soloists from around the&#13;
country including Bobby Herriot&#13;
from Vancover, Canada on&#13;
trumpet and Tim Bell, who is a&#13;
studio musician from Dallas, on&#13;
sax. The bands also hope to play&#13;
every couple of weeks for noon&#13;
concerts in the new student activities&#13;
building.&#13;
The bands are striving to be&#13;
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appealing to their audience as&#13;
well as a challenge to the&#13;
musicians. They are presently&#13;
rehearsing for their concert&#13;
appearances and Thomason is&#13;
encouraging the students to&#13;
arrange some of their own&#13;
material. They will be incorporating&#13;
other forms of music&#13;
into their material such as&#13;
arranging jazz and rock together.&#13;
The combos have formed from&#13;
the members to give even more&#13;
expressive freedom to the&#13;
students.&#13;
Started several years ago as a&#13;
dance and stage band, the emphasis&#13;
was moved to jazz when&#13;
Thomason began direction three&#13;
years ago. He feels we now have&#13;
one of the best jazz ensembles in&#13;
the area. Positions are awarded&#13;
to the most talented and in some&#13;
cases, students are scouted out&#13;
while still in high school.&#13;
Auditions will start again in&#13;
January and are held the&#13;
beginning of every semester.&#13;
Last year the bands drew 1200&#13;
people to the Physical Education&#13;
Building for a concert featuring&#13;
lx)u Marini, who played sax with&#13;
Blood, Sweat and Tears. Two&#13;
soloists from Parkside were also&#13;
honored last year with the Outstanding&#13;
Musician Award from&#13;
the National Association of Jazz&#13;
Educators. The students were&#13;
Brian Ford on drums and Bob&#13;
Borchart on trumpet.&#13;
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contact your local newspaper and your school&#13;
newsjsaper adviser. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
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or the battle always to the strong-but it's a good way to bet.&#13;
There is a $1.00 charge for classified ads&#13;
Just fill in his t form and send it to: Ads will run for one week&#13;
only. Renewals can be made&#13;
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Business Office&#13;
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Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
The ParitstdeADDRESS&#13;
continued Irotn p-ige 1&#13;
CITY PHONE NO&#13;
Ads must be submitted one week before publication&#13;
Udall said, "We're running out of&#13;
resources. We're going to have to&#13;
revamp the whole system. We&#13;
(the U.S.) are the big house on&#13;
the hill, using one-third of the&#13;
world's resources and calling&#13;
down: 'More oil!' to a starving&#13;
world."&#13;
Udall, deploring the waste in&#13;
the U.S., with its practice of&#13;
manufacturing a large variety of&#13;
disposable goods, said, "We have&#13;
been called the 'super consumers'&#13;
and we'll be called worse&#13;
before it's over."&#13;
Economist Joseph Pechman&#13;
offered three basic types of tax&#13;
reform which he feels are&#13;
necessary.&#13;
The first proposal was a&#13;
corrected payroll tax, including&#13;
Social Security, which he feels&#13;
should not be drawn from the pay&#13;
check but from federal income&#13;
tax.&#13;
The second proposal is to levy&#13;
state and local taxes&#13;
progressively, according to total&#13;
family income, and the third is a&#13;
proposal for all "preferential&#13;
deductions" or loopholes to be&#13;
cut.&#13;
For these proposals to become&#13;
reality, Pechman said we need&#13;
good leadership, especially in the&#13;
White House. But, said Pechman,&#13;
"the prospects are poor, we don't&#13;
have the leadership now and&#13;
we're not producing enough&#13;
Stewart Udalls."&#13;
The forum was co-hosted by&#13;
professor of English Ronald&#13;
Gottesman and professor of&#13;
economics Richard Rosenburg. It&#13;
was sponsored by the Johnson&#13;
Foundation and a grant from the&#13;
National Endowment for the&#13;
Humanities. One word per space Do not skip space between words to show spacing&#13;
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6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed nesd ay, Oct. 2 3 , 1 9 7 4&#13;
Review: unto the ground&#13;
Bowie arrives unglittered&#13;
by Brian Nedweski&#13;
Arriving early the people&#13;
looked like your regular blue&#13;
jeaned rock'n'roll crowd&#13;
gathered on your usual rainy&#13;
Sunday night for your usual&#13;
rock'n'roll concert. As the time&#13;
drew near though, the glitter&#13;
started to filter in: sequenced&#13;
tuxedoes, Aladdin Sane hairdos,&#13;
white furs and high heels, drag&#13;
getups, "steppinout" clothes. By&#13;
the time the show began it was&#13;
evident that the glitter people had&#13;
made it to dine on their king,&#13;
David Bowie. Here in the midwest,&#13;
America's heartland, yes&#13;
even here one can find these&#13;
decadent "boppers."&#13;
Bowie appeared in a high&#13;
shouldered blue velvet suit; it&#13;
looked like a modern subdued&#13;
adaptation of Elvis type apparel."&#13;
During the show the most&#13;
he did was to remove his topcoat.&#13;
There were no "far-out" dresses&#13;
or costume changes: the thing&#13;
Bowie is expected to do. Here&#13;
were all the glitter people- all&#13;
glittered up - and there was their&#13;
beloved Bowie without "flash."&#13;
Bowie opened with Space&#13;
Oddity, a Bowie space dream.&#13;
The number was well received.&#13;
However, the crowd was still&#13;
holding back waiting for the&#13;
thrills involved in a Bowie&#13;
production.&#13;
The equipment, and the stage&#13;
were decked out in white with a&#13;
huge white screen hanging&#13;
Switchboard&#13;
24 hours&#13;
FREE&#13;
CONFIDENTIAL&#13;
COUNSELING&#13;
AND GENERAL&#13;
INFORMATION&#13;
1712-57 th street&#13;
658-help&#13;
behind Bowie and his people.&#13;
From glancing at the stage one&#13;
was sure something special was&#13;
planned. But as far as the screen&#13;
was concerned, the big thing was&#13;
a blue and black fibre network&#13;
type of projection during a&#13;
rearranged version of Moon Age&#13;
Daydream. For movement, the&#13;
largest amount of juxtaposition&#13;
occured when the male members&#13;
of the chorus came down to sing&#13;
their "hey man" parts while&#13;
weaving back and forth as Bowie&#13;
strutted up and down the stage in&#13;
Suffragette City, a rocker. The&#13;
lighting was nice and the colors&#13;
^switched well with the steady&#13;
stream of songs but it was not&#13;
extraordinary.&#13;
Bowie has a reputation for&#13;
being one of the top men when it&#13;
comes to rock'n'roll theater, for&#13;
bringing a three dimensional&#13;
show: sight, sound, and story.&#13;
Elaborate stage preparationsglass&#13;
space ships, liquid lighting -&#13;
are parts of a Bowie show, but&#13;
this time it wasn't so.&#13;
He was definitely his excellent&#13;
self though, moving about the&#13;
stage with charisma, eloquence&#13;
Campus calendar&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 23, Whiteskellar presents the Parkside Jazz&#13;
Quartet, a first for this type of music in the coffeehouse. 1 to 3 p.m.,&#13;
Greenquist D-201. Free.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 23, Film: "The Godfather," the uncut version of&#13;
Mario Puzo's novel about the Mafia, 7:30 p.m. in the Comm. Arts&#13;
Theater. Admission is $1.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 25, Milwaukee's Fine Arts Dance Theatre will perform,&#13;
8 p.m. in the Comm. Arts Theater. Admission is $1 for students, $1.50&#13;
for guests and general public.&#13;
Saturday: Oct. 26, t he Vet's Club is sponsoring a dance, featuring&#13;
Crossfire in the Student Activities Building. Liquor, records and other&#13;
door prizes will be awarded throughout the night. Advance tickets can&#13;
be obtained at a table set-up in Main Place LLC; today, Thursday and&#13;
Friday, for $1.50. Tickets at the door will be $1.75. Proof of age and I.D.&#13;
required.&#13;
The Sunday Liturgy (Mass) is celebrated at the Newman Center&#13;
every first and third Sunday of the month at 12:15 p.m. On the second&#13;
and fourth Sunday, Mass is held at the Meditation Chapel on the&#13;
Carthage Campus. Everyone is invited to participate at either place.&#13;
The second in a series of DISCUSSIONS will be held at St. George&#13;
Parish on Monday, October 28. The topic is PRAYER and the question&#13;
is: "How do people pray these days?" Group meets from 8:00-10:00&#13;
p.m. Everyone that is interested in learning the art is invited to join&#13;
us.&#13;
A one-man showing of etchings by Moishe Smith of Kenosha will be&#13;
on exhibit at the Rosenstone Arts Gallery of the Bernard Horwich&#13;
Jewish Community Art Center of Chicago through Oct. 30. Smith is an&#13;
associate professor of art at Parkside.&#13;
Just Stop In!&#13;
r Restaurant&#13;
Open:&#13;
Daily 6:00 A.M.-8:00 P.M.&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
County E &amp; Green Bay Rd.&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
* Rock* Jazz*Pop*Folk*&#13;
•Classical*&#13;
LOWEST PRICES ALWAYS&#13;
and his hip shaking sending heart&#13;
flutters through his more ardent&#13;
fans. His voice demonstrated its&#13;
quality, dexterity, and range with&#13;
more of a low rhythm and blues&#13;
type of sound to it than usual. His&#13;
group opened up with the early&#13;
Memory Of A Free Festival and&#13;
proceeded with Bowie to work&#13;
their way flowingly through Jean&#13;
Genie, Changes (his bi-sexual&#13;
statement), Sorrow, into his&#13;
newer 1984, Diamond Dogs,&#13;
Rebel, Rebel back into a few&#13;
rhythm and blues numbers. He&#13;
ended his performance with some&#13;
Ziggy Stardust tunes (his science&#13;
fiction story): Suffragette City&#13;
and the strange threatening Rock&#13;
'N' Rol Suicide which climaxed&#13;
the show.&#13;
Bowie songs are well written&#13;
and assume a very dynamic, yet&#13;
at the same time personal&#13;
quality. With \\is orangish red&#13;
hair flopping about Sunday in&#13;
Milwaukee, he performed a&#13;
variety of his songs. The lack of&#13;
theater may have disappointed&#13;
some but they should realize that&#13;
Bowie is changing once more,&#13;
and the fans who came to hear&#13;
were satisfied.&#13;
POWERDue&#13;
to a campus-wide electrical power outage expected on Saturday,&#13;
Oct. 26, the library will be closed all day Saturday, Oct. 26.&#13;
The library will open at its normal time (1:30 p.m.) Sunday, Oct. 27.&#13;
It is expected that repairs to the electrical system will be completed&#13;
before this time. However, the library will open at 1:30 p.m. Sundaywith&#13;
or without power. If power has not been restored by 6 p.m.;&#13;
however, the library will close at that time.&#13;
The Place to buy records&#13;
Babe Ruth is a fusion of Rock and Soul music with a twist of classical&#13;
Spanish guitar thrown in. The possibilities of such a mix are unlimited,&#13;
but Babe Ruth has struck out. They lack the creative spark, the energy&#13;
to really cook. Alan Shacklock's guitar and keyboards are exceptional,&#13;
but his composing is bad. His songs are too simple and the riffs too&#13;
repetitive to be outstanding. Janita Hahn sounds like a dozen other&#13;
singers and manages to spoil several songs with her vocal asides.&#13;
Worse, she is not much of a lyricist, and her second-rate verses hurt&#13;
their claims to greatness. The rest of the band is competent.&#13;
On side one "Lady" sounds like an MGM musical. (If you can get&#13;
into that, O.K.) "Baby Pride" and "Broken Cloud" are forgettable, if&#13;
pleasant. (The whole album is pleasant, like Muzak.) "Gimme Some&#13;
Leg" has energy and guts and features some fine, heavy guitar by&#13;
Shacklock which, unfortunately, gets castrated by the vocals.&#13;
Side two opens with three forgotten tunes distinguished by nothing in&#13;
particular. Then comes the title cut, "Amar Caballiro" which is their&#13;
best on the album. The instrumentals are excellent, the words poetic&#13;
and full of energy. Shacklock's classical guitar is fine and spare. The&#13;
song is a good example of what he could write all the time.&#13;
Somewhere in Babe Ruth hides the bright light of promise, not yet&#13;
shining, but about to burst forth. Their next album just may be a home&#13;
run.&#13;
BHCHELOH'SII WORLD&#13;
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and the world your&#13;
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The 1974 UW-Parkside soccer team: (front row&#13;
L-E) Rico Savaglio, Bill Orr, Rick Kilps, Bob&#13;
Petkovich, Tashe Bozinovski, Frank Liu Steve&#13;
Cook; (middle row, L-R) Andy Gutierrez, Mark&#13;
Hagen, Vince Ruffolo, Mike Olesen, Dietmar&#13;
Schneider, Doug Ower, Joe Orr; (back row L-R)&#13;
Steve Sendelbach, Gene DeBartolo, Chris Hansen,&#13;
Frank Szarzynski, Carl Kurtagic, Stan Stadler,&#13;
Mike Ingram, John Lulewicz, Sam Kamau, Coach&#13;
Hal Henderson. Missing from picture: Rick&#13;
Lechusz, Mike Kopczynski, Dick Villaneuva, Ron&#13;
Hansen, Tom Jaehne.&#13;
Booters drop 2&#13;
The Parkside soccer team&#13;
participated in the Eastern&#13;
Illinois University Tournament&#13;
last weekend at Charleston,&#13;
Illinois, and fell victim to two&#13;
highly rated teams in the Midwest.&#13;
On Friday the Rangers&#13;
played Eastern Illinois&#13;
University, ranked No. 6 in the&#13;
Midwest, to a l-l score for 70&#13;
minutes, before losing 3-1. According&#13;
to Coach Henderson, the&#13;
score was only 2-1 for all practical&#13;
purposes, as the EIU&#13;
Panthers scored the third goal&#13;
with only two seconds remaining&#13;
on a free kick which the Rangers&#13;
felt had ended the match. The&#13;
Rangers welcomed back Joe Orr,&#13;
All-Midwest as a freshman three&#13;
years ago, but placed without&#13;
leading scorer Rick Lechusz, and&#13;
forward Rick Kilps and Rico&#13;
Savaglio.&#13;
On Saturday the Rangers were&#13;
forced to play at 10 in the morning&#13;
rather than the scheduled 1&#13;
p.m. against No. 7-ranked Blackburn&#13;
College from Carlinville,&#13;
Illinois. The Rangers took some&#13;
25 minutes to gat the feel of&#13;
playing early in the morning, and&#13;
found themselves behind 3-0.&#13;
They then started putting things&#13;
together, and pressured the&#13;
Beavers of Blackburn, but to no&#13;
avail, as they fell 3-0, being shut&#13;
out for only the second time this&#13;
season.&#13;
The Rangers had Rick Lechusz&#13;
back for this match, but were still&#13;
unable to score. The Rangers still&#13;
played without the services of&#13;
Kilps and Savaglio, who are&#13;
hampered by earlier injuries but&#13;
should see action this week as the&#13;
Rangers play host to the&#13;
Marquette University Warriors&#13;
on the local pitch. The match is&#13;
scheduled for Wednesday,&#13;
beginning at 3 p.m. The Rangers&#13;
are extremely optimistic of&#13;
improving their record of 2-5-2&#13;
against the Warriors.&#13;
$100,000 for eagle preserve&#13;
Eagle Valley Environmentalists, Inc. (EVE) has&#13;
just passed the $100,000 mark in its fund raising&#13;
drive to preserve land for the Bald Eagle, announced&#13;
Terrence N. Ingram, president of the&#13;
organization. Ingram said, "This achievement is a&#13;
great tribute to the American people and their&#13;
willingness to individually help save our National&#13;
Symbol. It indicates the sincere interest Americans&#13;
have in keeping our Bald Eagle flying free over our&#13;
great nation."&#13;
EVE is a tax-exempt non-profit corporation&#13;
formed less than three years ago to promote the&#13;
preservation of land for the enjoyment of future&#13;
generations.&#13;
EVE is presently eyeing other roosting and&#13;
nesting lands that should be preserved for the Bald&#13;
Eagle before they are rendered unsuitable for the&#13;
eagle's use by man's development.&#13;
P.A.B. invites you.&#13;
mmmm&#13;
TIVTEI&#13;
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STEAMBOAT SPRINGS,&#13;
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ANYTIME!&#13;
HOURS Sun Wed &amp; Thurs 11:30 A M&#13;
11 3 0 P AA&#13;
Fri 8, Sf li 11:30 A.M. 12:30 A.M.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 23, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
UW-P action&#13;
Parkside finished 10th among&#13;
14 schools in the Tom Jones Invitational&#13;
cross country meet&#13;
here Saturday with 246 points.&#13;
UW-Madison finished first with&#13;
30.&#13;
The individual winner was&#13;
Garry Bentley of South Dakota&#13;
State who finished the five-mile&#13;
course in 24:04. Parkside's&#13;
Lucien Rosa was third in 24:16.&#13;
Wayne Rhody was 38th for the&#13;
Rangers, Jim DeVasquez 67th,&#13;
Joe Bellanger 72nd, and Gary&#13;
Priem 77th.&#13;
The Parkside women's gymnastics&#13;
team suffered a minor&#13;
defeat in a triangular meet&#13;
Saturday at UW-Whitewater with&#13;
a total of 111 points.&#13;
Host Whitewater took first with&#13;
132. UW-Milwaukee took second&#13;
with 128.&#13;
photo b y Dave Dretzka&#13;
Swimmers place&#13;
The Parkside mermaids&#13;
opened their season Friday,&#13;
challenging Whitewater and&#13;
Oshkosh at a home meet.&#13;
Placing first in every event,&#13;
Oshkosh finished with a total of&#13;
135 points to win the meet.&#13;
Whitewater took second with 52&#13;
points, while Parkside finished in&#13;
third place with 10 points.&#13;
Coach Barb Lawson traveled&#13;
with Iris Gericke and Nadine&#13;
Sheridan to Madison Saturday for&#13;
a triangular meet against&#13;
Madison and UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
Sheridan placed third in the 50&#13;
yd. backstroke and Gericke&#13;
placed fourth in diving.&#13;
This is the first year of varsity&#13;
competition for women. The&#13;
team still needs more swimmers.&#13;
Men swimmers are also&#13;
needed.&#13;
Practices are daily at 3:30 p.m.&#13;
All interested persons should&#13;
contact Coach Barb Lawson in&#13;
the Phy. Ed. Building.&#13;
JON BLON&#13;
APPEARING&#13;
WED., F RI. S AT. &amp; SUN.&#13;
OCT. 2 3, 2 5, 2 6, 2 7&#13;
Kenosha's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shakey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay R oad Phone 654-0485 &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed nesd ay, Oct. 2 3, 1 9 7 4&#13;
Ruffian Ruggers —Jock Shorts&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
On Saturday, October 13, the&#13;
Parkside Rugby Club faced&#13;
fellow Ruggers from Northwestern&#13;
University in what&#13;
appeared to be the Tournament&#13;
of Frostbite.&#13;
The nippy afternoon lead&#13;
Parkside to victory with a score&#13;
of 20-10.&#13;
Currently, the ruggers record&#13;
this season is 4 wins, 3 losses and&#13;
1 tie.&#13;
"Rugby is a ruffians game&#13;
played by gentlemen, soccer is a&#13;
gentlemens game played by&#13;
ruffians and football is a ruffians&#13;
game played by ruffians," said&#13;
Warren Lewis.&#13;
Developing from soccer and&#13;
similar to american foptball, this&#13;
age old cliche has run the gamut&#13;
of rugby more than once.&#13;
The object of the game is for&#13;
two teams of fifteen players each,&#13;
to score as many points as&#13;
possible. The team scoring the&#13;
most points is the winner of the&#13;
match.&#13;
Scores are made in four ways:&#13;
A touchdown, or "try," is made&#13;
m the same way as in American&#13;
football. The only difference&#13;
being that the try is not scored&#13;
until the ball is touched on the&#13;
ground. This is worth four points.&#13;
After a try, a place-kick called&#13;
a goal is made. This is worth two&#13;
points.&#13;
If the ball carrier doesn't think&#13;
he can make the goal line with the&#13;
ball he may attempt a drop-kick&#13;
over the crossbar between the&#13;
goal posts. This is worth three&#13;
points.&#13;
If a successful, a place-kick or&#13;
drop-kick taken as a penalty for&#13;
rule violations counts for three&#13;
points.&#13;
The game consists of two&#13;
halves, each 40 minutes in length.&#13;
Each half begins with a placekick&#13;
from the mid-field line.&#13;
While in play, the ball may be&#13;
carried, kicked or passed; with&#13;
one exception. Passing can only&#13;
take place in backward motion.&#13;
Any offensive man ahead of the&#13;
ball carrier is offsides. He&#13;
remains so and can not partake in&#13;
play until he moves behind the&#13;
ball.&#13;
Similar to a line of scrimmage,&#13;
a set scrum is called to resume&#13;
play after a violation. In a scrum,&#13;
the eight forwards of each team&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
SfUMHf tltA %#mdt&#13;
&amp; 9/aJiOH tf-oodl&#13;
2129 BIRCHDD. KENOSHA-551-7171&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
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three-point program&#13;
to beat inflation.&#13;
The Tuesday Night Price Bonanza.&#13;
(•1.49 for a rib eye steak dinner!)&#13;
(•1.29 for a chopped sirloin dinner!)&#13;
Tjesday night will never be die same again&#13;
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We ve got just the right amount of food to make a kid smile - a hamburger,&#13;
an order of French fries, and a lollipop. And a price - 49« - to make you smile.&#13;
• Drink iap.The seconds are oo us.&#13;
At Bonanza, you get free refills on all soft drinks, coffee, and ice tea.&#13;
huddle together on the scrum&#13;
line. They grunt and shove&#13;
heavily against each other.&#13;
The object is to force the other&#13;
line back so as to gain possession&#13;
of the ball. In the meantime the&#13;
ball has been thrown in between&#13;
the opposing lines at the ruggers&#13;
feet.&#13;
The ball must reach the hooker&#13;
(center man) who heels it back to&#13;
team members outside the&#13;
scrum. They then begin offensive&#13;
play.&#13;
On October 27 the Parkside&#13;
Ruggers will meet with the&#13;
Kenosha Lions at Kenosha's&#13;
Lakefront Stadium in a charity&#13;
match for the blind.&#13;
Tickets are $1.00 and may be&#13;
purchased from any Parkside&#13;
Rugby player or at the stadium.&#13;
The ticket includes admission&#13;
to the post-game activities (third&#13;
half). A party will be held at the&#13;
Brat Stop on Hwy. 50 immediately&#13;
following the game.&#13;
The Parkside Cheerleaders are holding practice this week at 4 n m&#13;
in the P.E. building. Those students interested in joining should a?"&#13;
tend or contact Barb Lawson, instructor in Physical Education at&#13;
(553)-2257.&#13;
The P.E. Building will be closed on Oct. 26, due to an electrical&#13;
power outage.&#13;
1&#13;
The building will resume full scheduled hours on Sunday Oct 27&#13;
Also, until further notice the gym will be closed to all recreational&#13;
activity from 3:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday because of&#13;
the varsity athletic practice sessions.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board (P.A.B.) is sponsoring a ski trip to&#13;
Steamboat Springs, Colorado from January 3-11.&#13;
Total cost of the trip is $155, tax included, if you sign up before&#13;
November 11. Persons signing up after November 11 will be charged&#13;
$10 more.&#13;
The trip includes: round trip bus fare, lodging (4 to a room) lift&#13;
tickets, parties, dances and a sleighride (lessons are not included)'&#13;
Expert freestylist, Billy Kidd will be conducting free ski clinics open&#13;
to interested college students only. The clinics will cover racing&#13;
freestyle techniques, powder skiing and more.&#13;
Take a trip to God's country. Excite your senses with the magnitude&#13;
of the mountains this semester break.&#13;
Sign up in room D197, LLC. Make checks payable to UW-Parkside&#13;
The P.A.B. will also be sponsoring weekend ski treks to the north&#13;
during January, February and March.&#13;
Free checking...Free checks*&#13;
No minimum balance&#13;
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE...EXTRA BANKING HOURS&#13;
Our entire office including lobby and drive-in&#13;
rkU17TVr Monday-Thursday 7:00-5:30&#13;
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At the intersection of Highways 11 and 31&#13;
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_MEMBER OF THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION&#13;
1W11 fcwe HWU love it&#13;
AVAILABLE IN KENOSHA ONLY </text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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        <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
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