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              <text>Amin discovers new worm specie</text>
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              <text>12th issue *"*•******"** 12 pages •&#13;
PAB sponsors Derby Day lodging&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
A big bash is coming up soon in&#13;
Kentucky - May 5 is "Derby&#13;
Day," and Parkside Activities&#13;
Board is sponsoring a Kentucky&#13;
Derby Weekend Special.&#13;
For the 98th running of the&#13;
Kentucky Derby last year, over&#13;
130,000 people crowded historic&#13;
Churchill Downs in Louisville.&#13;
Many thousands of them were&#13;
students who saw the Derby as&#13;
the ideal and quite unique climax&#13;
to a fun and care-free weekend&#13;
(sometimes called the "Mardi&#13;
Gras" of Kentucky). Since the&#13;
University of Louisville is located&#13;
only about a quartermile from&#13;
Churchill Downs, out-of-state&#13;
students have traditionally&#13;
sought economical refuge at this&#13;
campus.&#13;
Last May, the University of&#13;
Louisville Union for Student&#13;
Activity realized a need to&#13;
provide something beyond overcrowded&#13;
Greek houses, residence&#13;
halls, lawns, shrubbery, fountains&#13;
and halls of ivy to lodge in&#13;
or upon. It opened the doors of the&#13;
"Red Barn," a university rock&#13;
theater converted from a&#13;
nineteenth century tank factory.&#13;
The Red Barn provided a rather&#13;
unique but quite suitable place&#13;
for several hundred bedrolls.&#13;
Shower facilities were arranged&#13;
with a gymnasium and a&#13;
residence hall close by. Each&#13;
student registering in the Red&#13;
Barn paid a nominal fee of $1 per&#13;
night and received an "Official&#13;
Crash Pass" and information on&#13;
Derby Weekend.&#13;
This year it's all happening&#13;
again. Parkside Activities Board&#13;
has a special package deal for the&#13;
weekend: $5 for infield ticket at&#13;
the Derby, $2.50 advance ticket&#13;
for Derby's Friday night concert&#13;
with Dr. Hook and the Medicine&#13;
Show and the Brownsville Station&#13;
(tickets will be $4 at the door),&#13;
and $1 a night for lodging on the&#13;
Louisville campus. Coffee and&#13;
donuts and a shower are included&#13;
in the $1 fee; students must&#13;
supply their own sleeping bags.&#13;
They will be staying with&#13;
students from many other parts&#13;
of the country.&#13;
It is possible to buy just part of&#13;
the package as well as all of it.&#13;
Students must supply their own&#13;
transportation, but travel information&#13;
is available at Student&#13;
Activities Office, LLC D 197.&#13;
People can sign up for tickets at&#13;
the same place, but should do so&#13;
soon to secure them.&#13;
Aho to speak on&#13;
ESP Friday&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
Wednesday April 4, 1973 Vol. 1 No. 24&#13;
Amin discovers new worm specie&#13;
To the untrained eye, Parksidei&#13;
isn't much to look at.&#13;
But to its discoverer, the small&#13;
parasitic spiney-headed wormits&#13;
proboscis or snout covered by&#13;
neat rows of thorn-like hooks-is a&#13;
thing of beauty and a scholarly&#13;
joy forever: a new biological&#13;
species.&#13;
The organism, formally entered&#13;
in scientific literature as&#13;
"Acanthocephalus parksidei," is&#13;
named Parkside by its&#13;
discoverer, Egyptian-born Omar&#13;
M. Amin, an assistant professor&#13;
of life science.&#13;
Academic tradition gives the&#13;
discoverer of a new species the&#13;
right to name it, Amin said- "for&#13;
anyone or anything he wants to,&#13;
but generally the name chosen&#13;
should add something to the&#13;
descritpion of the organism."&#13;
And since the discovery of a&#13;
new species is a relatively rare&#13;
event, the christening deserves&#13;
some careful deliberation.&#13;
Amin has two reasons for&#13;
naming his find "parksidei."&#13;
"The name reflects both the&#13;
fact that it was discovered at&#13;
Parkside-in fish from the Pike&#13;
River which flows through the&#13;
northwest corner of the campusand&#13;
Parkside's institutional&#13;
commitment to the ecology of the&#13;
area," Amin said.&#13;
Parksidei is the third distinct&#13;
species of the genus Acanthocephalus&#13;
discovered in North&#13;
America. It is distinguished from&#13;
the other two species principally&#13;
by being smaller (parksidei&#13;
females are an average of 4.3&#13;
millimeters long and males an&#13;
average of 1.9 millimeters) and&#13;
by having fewer rows of hooks&#13;
and fewer hooks per row on its&#13;
tubular proboscis.&#13;
Thus far, parksidei has been&#13;
found in the intestines of creek&#13;
chubs and white suckers, both&#13;
fish native to the Pike River and&#13;
other southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
waterways.&#13;
Further studies will be&#13;
necessary to determine the effect&#13;
Omar Amin&#13;
of the parasite's presence on its&#13;
fish-hosts and to document its life&#13;
cycle, which involves an intermediate&#13;
host, probably an&#13;
arthropod, Amin said.&#13;
Amin points out that&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin is virgin&#13;
territory for the study of fish&#13;
parasites-one of his major&#13;
research interests and the subject&#13;
of his Ph. D. dissertation at&#13;
Arizona State University.&#13;
Although Wisconsin's fish have&#13;
been the subject of numerous&#13;
studies-both by academics and&#13;
by anglers-most of the work has&#13;
been done in the North, Amin&#13;
said.&#13;
The Southeast also is prime&#13;
territory for pursuit of Amin's&#13;
other major research interestarthropod-&#13;
borne diseases. Arthropods&#13;
are a broad group of&#13;
organisms with jointed legs and&#13;
segmented bodies including&#13;
spiders, mites, ticks, centipedes,&#13;
crayfish and similar crustaceans&#13;
and insects.&#13;
Amin currently is engaged in&#13;
the first systematic study of such&#13;
organisms in southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
His interest in arthropods and,&#13;
their public health implications&#13;
dates to work in his native Egypt&#13;
with the Department of Medical&#13;
Zoology of the U.S. Naval&#13;
Medical Research Unit and to his&#13;
subsequent studies on ticks as a&#13;
post-doctoral research associate&#13;
at Old Dominion University in&#13;
Virginia and a visiting fellow at&#13;
the National Center for Disease&#13;
Control in Atlanta, Ga.&#13;
Now, his work on both fish&#13;
parasites and arthropod disease&#13;
carriers is centered on the&#13;
woodlands, fields and streams of&#13;
the 700-acre Parkside campus,&#13;
which Amin describes as "a&#13;
natural laboratory" for his&#13;
studies.&#13;
"I can go out the back door and&#13;
start collecting specimens," he&#13;
said.&#13;
Actually, the process is considerably&#13;
more systematic. Amin&#13;
has mapped the northwest area&#13;
of the campus bisected by the&#13;
river into a grid pattern for&#13;
identification of the precise&#13;
source of his specimens.&#13;
fle can sometimes be spottedthrough&#13;
the early-morning mists&#13;
checking his live-traps to collect&#13;
the ticks, mites, insects, etc.,&#13;
which have gathered on small&#13;
mammals such as rabbits and&#13;
chipmunks which are placed in&#13;
the traps.&#13;
Summers find him "giving my&#13;
arms to science" to determine&#13;
which varieties of mosquitoes&#13;
bite humans-and therefore may&#13;
transmit disease from lower&#13;
animals to man. (If you thought&#13;
all mosquitoes bite humans, it&#13;
only seems that way.)&#13;
Specimens are then brought&#13;
back to the laboratory for study.&#13;
Is it worth it?&#13;
Yes, says Amin. There's&#13;
always at least an outside&#13;
chance-especially in a&#13;
geographic area only recently&#13;
subjected to scientific study-that&#13;
another new species may be&#13;
awaiting discovery on the stage&#13;
of the microscope.&#13;
Of no less importance, is the&#13;
exploration of the ecological&#13;
interactions between parasites&#13;
and their hosts including man,&#13;
Amin added.&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
Wayne S. Aho, Founder and&#13;
President of The New Age&#13;
Foundation Inc., which has&#13;
charters nationwide and abroad,&#13;
will appear here Friday, April 6 to&#13;
speak on extrasensory perception.&#13;
"Major," Aho, who prefers the&#13;
title INNERsensory perception,&#13;
has traveled over a million miles&#13;
as a lecturer on ESP and the Age&#13;
of Aquarious, among other&#13;
topics.&#13;
The theme of his talk includes a&#13;
higher understanding for the&#13;
world with principles proven&#13;
through throughout the ages. He&#13;
feels that our nation and the&#13;
world is in great crisis and that&#13;
there must be a blending of true&#13;
science with the best of religion to&#13;
bring forth a golden age upon the&#13;
planet. "Where there is no vision,&#13;
the people perish."&#13;
The Major has been a speaker&#13;
at some forty space conventions&#13;
and has served as Master of&#13;
Ceremonies at many. At the first&#13;
annual Aquarian Age Conference&#13;
held in Hawaii in 1972 he was a&#13;
featured speaker.&#13;
Aho has appeared on television&#13;
and radio programs throughout&#13;
the country and has garnered&#13;
favorable reviews from colleges&#13;
throughout the country, The&#13;
University of Minnesota and&#13;
Hawaii, to name two.&#13;
The tallents he demonstrated&#13;
for a group at the Minnesota&#13;
Scoeity for Parapsychological&#13;
Research excited the students'&#13;
interest because of his conviction&#13;
Lake Alert&#13;
Wayne S. Aho&#13;
that all bf us have these tallents&#13;
in some degree.&#13;
Psychologists have made th&#13;
statement that man uses only 5&#13;
percent of the capacity of his&#13;
mind. Major Aho goes further to&#13;
say that man's capacity could be&#13;
increased 2500 times if he should&#13;
realise his potential.&#13;
The presentation, which is&#13;
being sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association,&#13;
is scheduled for 8 p.m. in Tallent&#13;
Hall. Admission at the door will&#13;
be 75 cents for students with IDs&#13;
and $1 for general admission. The&#13;
reason for the low price being a&#13;
hope to attract a greater&#13;
proportion of students for a fine&#13;
arts-lecture type performance.&#13;
Scientists discuss reactor&#13;
by Kathryn Wellner&#13;
There were three major issues&#13;
discussed at the Lake Michigan&#13;
Alert Conference held recently at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The dominant issue, with two&#13;
speakers devoted to it, was&#13;
nuclear power plants. Henry S.&#13;
CCole, assistant professor of&#13;
earth science at Parkside participated&#13;
in the conference and he&#13;
believes that the problems of&#13;
nuclear power plants are the&#13;
most important.&#13;
This article, the first of a three&#13;
part series, will cover the&#13;
problem of nuclear power plants.&#13;
Power Plant Safety&#13;
Speaking to the conference on&#13;
nuclear power plant safety was&#13;
James J. MacKenzie, who has a&#13;
Ph. D. in nuclear physics and is&#13;
chairman of the Union of Concerned&#13;
Scientists.&#13;
MacKenzie pointed out in his&#13;
speech that the Atomic Energy&#13;
Commission (AEC) has been lax&#13;
in its testing of nuclear power&#13;
plant safety systems, yet has still&#13;
pushed the use of these plants in&#13;
spite of the dangers inherent in&#13;
their operation.&#13;
The dangers being referred to&#13;
are those of accidents which&#13;
release radioactivity into the&#13;
environment. There are a&#13;
number of ways for this to&#13;
happen, but the accident which&#13;
was described in the most detail&#13;
to the conference was a loss of&#13;
coolant accident (LOCAL These&#13;
accidents are the most serious&#13;
which can occur in a nuclear&#13;
reactor according to the AEC.&#13;
Nuclear reactors must constantly&#13;
be cooled in order to keep&#13;
the power producing reaction&#13;
under control. If the coolant&#13;
supply is interrupted for any&#13;
reason, the temperature in the&#13;
reactor begins to rise.&#13;
Emergency Systems&#13;
The fuel which is used in light&#13;
water nuclear reactors is&#13;
uranium. In order for this fuel to&#13;
be usable, it must be encased i n a&#13;
material called Zircaloy, which&#13;
melts at 1850 degrees Centigrade.&#13;
This temperature can be reached&#13;
within about one minute if the&#13;
Emergency Core Cooking System&#13;
(ECCS) does not begin to cool the&#13;
reactor. No full-scale LOCA has&#13;
occurred to date, but the&#13;
possibility of such an accident is&#13;
one in 1,000.&#13;
When an extreme enough&#13;
temperature is reached dueto an&#13;
LOAC, radioactivity can be&#13;
released in a number of ways.&#13;
The pipes and even the reactor&#13;
itself can be ruptured by steam&#13;
and hydrogen explosions. The&#13;
dispersal of radioactivity would&#13;
depend on wind direction and&#13;
velocity, but could be up to 100&#13;
miles. Eventually, the fuel core&#13;
itself would melt down and go&#13;
into the earth in the direction of&#13;
China (This is referred to as a&#13;
"MELTDOWN" OR "China&#13;
accident").&#13;
Continued on page 7&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., April 4, 1973&#13;
THORN&#13;
Editorial/Opinion&#13;
We 've built a strong&#13;
foundation&#13;
There have been comments that in t he course of the&#13;
year the Ranger hasn't taken the firm editorial&#13;
initiative it should have to effectively bring change to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
This is probably a true generalization. We have found&#13;
ourselves so engrossed in producing a strong and&#13;
respectable paper that we seldom had the time to get&#13;
into str1 ng editorial writing. But we have attained one&#13;
goal.&#13;
The goal we have reached is that of reasonable&#13;
believability and strong financial positioning. We know&#13;
we are well read because of the substantial increase in&#13;
business of our advertisers. Most organizations on&#13;
campus use the Ranger to reach the Parkside populace&#13;
and most have found it effective. Our reporting has been&#13;
as objective as possible and we feel our readership&#13;
recognizes that.&#13;
Financially we are also doing well. We have managed&#13;
to buy some equipment, pay our printing bills and allot&#13;
meager salaries to the editorial staff. Our outstanding&#13;
debt is the old Newscope Corporation's debt which we&#13;
took over. We will be paying that debt off in installments&#13;
for a number of years.&#13;
Most importantly, we will be in the black at the end of&#13;
the year and this 12-page issue of t he Ranger marks an&#13;
all-time high in ad sales in the community and service to&#13;
the school. *o".W;A.; .... ...... ... . {:&#13;
We have built a strong foundation for journalists of the&#13;
future. We only hope the success which we achieved this&#13;
year will be continued by more new staff members and&#13;
their contributions.&#13;
EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
First to get rid of old business concerning the Jose Greco performance,&#13;
I must reply to Miss S. Mikaelian's letter in last week's&#13;
issue:&#13;
I am certain that if I had been at the performance, I would have&#13;
enjoyed it. For the $4,500 it cost, it should have been good. However,&#13;
prior commitments with the Naval Reserve have my Tuesday&#13;
evenings pretty well tied up for the next 23 years.&#13;
I have never stated that any performance put on by the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board was not worthwhile-from a cultural standpoint. I&#13;
must state again, since you seemed to have missed it, that all&#13;
programs put on by the PAB should at least attract enough response to&#13;
break even financially. This one was a very long way from doing that.&#13;
Please read what you are complaining about more carefully. And&#13;
please stop trying to put words in my mouth, the foot is in yours.&#13;
In relation to the Haack-telegram incident mentioned last week, a&#13;
motion was introduced at the last Student Senate meeting which would&#13;
prevent any member of the senate or officer of the senate from signing&#13;
the name of the Parkside Student Government Association or the&#13;
Student Senate to any political correspondence which did not directly&#13;
concern the University of Wisconsin. The motion was defeated by a&#13;
large majority.&#13;
This is the last chance faculty have to reserve Stanton Friedman's&#13;
time for Tuesday, April 17. Interested groups should contact the Activities&#13;
Office. Do it now!&#13;
Tickets are now on sale for the Friedman performance. Cost is $1.00&#13;
for students and $1.50 for general admission. Besides being available&#13;
at the Activities Office, tickets can be found at Cook-Gere in Racine&#13;
and Bidinger's in Kenosha.&#13;
I have mentioned that I totally support bringing in entertainment for&#13;
the students which would not lose money from the student segregated&#13;
fee. I think most students agree with this. Another such program is the&#13;
Wayne S. Sho presentation on extrasensory perception which is being&#13;
presented this Friday.&#13;
Like the Stanton Friedman performance, "Major" Aho is being paid&#13;
through a percentage of the gate, and any profits could be plowed back&#13;
into programs benefiting students at Parkside. If enough participation&#13;
is shown in both the Aho and Friedman programs, this type of&#13;
arrangment might be looked on favorably and agreed to by other&#13;
performers appearing here.&#13;
In case you've missed other notices about the performance, Major&#13;
Aho will be appearing at Tallent Hall this Friday, April 6 at 8 p.m.&#13;
There will be no advance ticket sales. Admission at the door will be 75&#13;
cents for students with I.D. cards and $1 general admission. At those&#13;
prices how can you go wrong?&#13;
At the rate of $1.65 an hour, it would cost $2,376 to keep the lower&#13;
level doors of the library open from 8 to 5 sixteen weeks of each&#13;
semester during both the fall and spring semesters. That's $2,376 total.&#13;
I know it sounds like a lot of money, but experiences so far seem to&#13;
prove it would be worth it.&#13;
A near riot resulted last Wednesday at the Activities Building&#13;
performance of Tony, Jumbo and Gary. It seems that when somebody&#13;
tried to close the performance down at 11 p.m., the enthusiastic crowd&#13;
didn t want to leave until the management agreed to an encore Some&#13;
have blamed poor planning in the affair and others wonder where any&#13;
fault would he. J&#13;
by Rudy Lienau&#13;
The Ranger staff has wanted to go to a 12-page paper for a long time&#13;
because ads were really cramping us for space. This 12-page edition&#13;
was possible because our ad manager has been doing a superior job&#13;
and marks the beginning of a better Ranger-in quality and quantity.&#13;
We hope to have more 12-page editions in these last few weeks and I&#13;
hope they are enjoyed.&#13;
I hadn't allowed a 12-page paper earlier in the year because we&#13;
didn't quite have enough ad revenue to support it. Now we have passed&#13;
the dollar amount needed to pay for a larger paper with all its&#13;
overhead. As long as we continue to pull in the ad revenue necessary to&#13;
pay for 12-page papers, we will continue to produce them. We are&#13;
reasonably certain, judging from the amount of holdover copy each&#13;
week, that we can successfully produce interesting and important&#13;
copy for our readership in the 12-pager.&#13;
We will be able to change our inside format because of increased&#13;
flexibility. I hope the poets, creative writers, artists and other craftsmen&#13;
take advantage of the opportunity to publish their work.&#13;
I feel we will be able to more successfully cover all the events which&#13;
concern our campus with more thoroughness and, I hope, in a manner&#13;
which is pleasing to our readership.&#13;
Applications for the&#13;
position of editor-in-chief&#13;
for the 1973-74 RANGER&#13;
are now being accepted by&#13;
the newspaper's advisory&#13;
board.&#13;
All Parkside students&#13;
who will be carrying at&#13;
least eight hours per&#13;
semester are eligible to&#13;
apply for the position,&#13;
which is made on a September&#13;
to May basis.&#13;
Each candidate is asked&#13;
to submit details of his&#13;
journalistic experience&#13;
and a statement of his&#13;
plans for the RANGER to&#13;
Don Kopriva, Adviser to&#13;
Student Publications, by&#13;
Friday, April 13, at D-194&#13;
LLC.&#13;
The advisory board will&#13;
interview candidates&#13;
Tuesday, April 17, and&#13;
announce its selection&#13;
before spring break.&#13;
ic Th e Parkside-&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 Library-&#13;
Learning Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subiect of&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
ess, typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
letters for length and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
wfthhPiH0nenUm aPd siudent status or tacultyrank' Names will&#13;
prim any letters. rCSerVe the right t0 refuse&#13;
Classified and display ad rates will be furnished upon request.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Rudy Lienau&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Kathryn Wellner&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Jane Schliesman&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Kris Koch&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Jerry Murphy&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
WRITER:,: Ken KonkioL Gary Jensen, Marilyn Schubert, Jeannine Sipsma, Helmut Kah mil&#13;
Blaha, Bruce Rasmussen, Terri Gogola, Geotf Blaesing Helmut Kah, Bill&#13;
CARTOONISTS: Gary Huck, Bob Rohan, Amy Cundarijim Vukos&#13;
R™™RAPHERS: Ken Konkol&lt; Bi" Noll, Dennis Doonan, GraaSyston&#13;
STAFF: Fred Lawrence, Ken Konkol, Rudy Lienau&#13;
ADVISER: Don Kopriva f,, ^REPRESENTED POR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY&#13;
National Educational Advertising Services, Inc. y&#13;
360 Lexington Av«., Ntw York, N. »\ 10017 I&#13;
Wed. , April 4, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Tutorial service growing&#13;
After eight weeks of operation&#13;
the Parkside tutorial service has&#13;
raised the number of students&#13;
being tutored from three per&#13;
week in the first week to 71 per&#13;
week.&#13;
The program offers tutorial&#13;
help to students in all the basic&#13;
academic areas.&#13;
According to Isom Fearn,&#13;
counselor, a goal or limit has not&#13;
been set on the eventual number&#13;
of students tutored. He said the&#13;
facility and number of rooms will&#13;
be the limiting factor. The service&#13;
is presently located in&#13;
Tallent Hall offices.&#13;
"We may extend ourselves to&#13;
evenings and weekends if the&#13;
need warrants, Fearn said.&#13;
He also said faculty have been&#13;
very good in that they have&#13;
referred people to the service.&#13;
For more information contact&#13;
Fearn in room 280 at Tallent Hall.&#13;
Trio ex pands&#13;
Local group proves professionalism&#13;
by Gary Jensen&#13;
All from the Racine are they&#13;
are; Chris. Inloes (Jumbo), 20,&#13;
Tony Bresette, 21, Gary Wolk, 20,&#13;
Michael Harmon, 21, and&#13;
sometimes Tommy Fell, 22.&#13;
Jumbo plays acoustic and&#13;
electric guitar plus harmonica.&#13;
Tony plays acoustic and electric&#13;
guitar and congas. Garry plays&#13;
piano, acoustic and electric&#13;
guitar, flute, and mandolin.&#13;
Michael plays bass and Tommy&#13;
is the occasional drummer.&#13;
Vocals are supplied by Tony,&#13;
Jumbo, and Garry.&#13;
It all began in March of 1972&#13;
when Tony Bresette and Chris&#13;
Inloes (Jumbo) got together for&#13;
the first time. Thanks to encouragement&#13;
from Tony Totero,&#13;
coordinator of Student&#13;
Programming, and Bill Niebuhr,&#13;
coordinator of S tudent Life Tony&#13;
and Jumbo kept playing and&#13;
joined with Gary Wolk in Sept.&#13;
Michael Harmon assimilated&#13;
with the group in Dec., when they&#13;
also added the electric act. About&#13;
a month ago Tommy Fell joined&#13;
as a part time drummer.&#13;
The main influences of the&#13;
Tony, Jumbo, and Garry sound&#13;
are Crosby, Stills, Nash and&#13;
Young. Besides performing the&#13;
songs of their favorites they also&#13;
do a considerable amount of&#13;
Jethro Tull and any occassional&#13;
other song that fits their style.&#13;
The group has perfected a style&#13;
and they choose material acceptable&#13;
it.&#13;
In addition to this, the boys&#13;
have recently began writing their&#13;
own material. Although they&#13;
haven't done it as ofyet, they now&#13;
have cumulated enough original&#13;
substance to sustain a whole&#13;
show. Tony has written "In My&#13;
Dreams," "Waterman," and&#13;
"But Don't I Know You."&#13;
"California" is a composition by&#13;
Garry; and Jumbo wrote the&#13;
lyrics for "Shining Horses" that&#13;
are set to a melody by John&#13;
Dorsey.&#13;
The band concentrates on the&#13;
type of music in which vocals and&#13;
vocal harmonies are the major&#13;
accent. "We try to convey our&#13;
own feelings through music so&#13;
toher people may interpet them&#13;
as we do," said Jumbo.&#13;
"We find it very hard to produce&#13;
polished vocals without constant&#13;
practice"'&#13;
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Tony, Jumbo, and Garry&#13;
usually play at college concerts&#13;
and coffee houses. They are&#13;
available as an alternate&#13;
acoustic-electric set, or as either&#13;
only acoustic or only electric.&#13;
They are usually the featured act&#13;
and prices range from $150 to $500&#13;
a concert. Profits are usually&#13;
higher for them when they are a&#13;
back-up band&#13;
They are happy about the way&#13;
performances are being received&#13;
and are especially pleased with&#13;
Parkside support. Jumbo expressed&#13;
a desire to record with&#13;
the group someday, but felt that&#13;
this is a remote possibility as of&#13;
make some sort of career out of&#13;
music.&#13;
Wednesday, March 28, they put&#13;
on a free concert at 9 p.m. at the&#13;
Student Activities Building. They&#13;
sounded exceptionally fine, as&#13;
usual, and left the audience of&#13;
about 200+ a hair's width from&#13;
ecstasy. There was also "Ohio,"&#13;
which always produces their best&#13;
crowd reaction. For an encore&#13;
they presented three by Jethro&#13;
Tull: "Thick. As a Brick,"&#13;
"Locomotive Breath" and&#13;
"Windup."&#13;
Parkside students should feel&#13;
honored by the free concert&#13;
because Tony, Jumbo, and Garry&#13;
are worth a hell of a lot more.&#13;
the&#13;
Movement&#13;
Editor's note: "The Movement" is a regular feature in RANGER to&#13;
deal with women's concerns at Parkside and in society in general.&#13;
Guest writers are invited. This week's article comes from the&#13;
University News and Publications Service in Madison.&#13;
WOMEN CREATE "DO-IT-YOURSELF," ALTERNATIVE&#13;
FEMINIST MEDIA&#13;
Wohien in communications are "underutilized, underpaid, underrepresented,&#13;
underestimated, undercover, unreported, excluded from&#13;
decision-making, from the significant events, the prestigious old boys'&#13;
clubs, and from the monetary and other rewards of the profession "&#13;
according to Prof. Kathryn F. Clarenbach of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Madison.&#13;
But rather than bemoaning the problems that do exist, women are&#13;
taking stock of solutions already available and those in the offing.&#13;
These solutions, Ms. Clarenbach says, loosely fall into "three&#13;
avenues," or categories media women are utilizing to avoid being "a&#13;
winter rerun of the story of women everywhere else in American&#13;
society."&#13;
"Women everywhere else" is a topic on which she is thoroughly&#13;
knowledgeable through her extensive activities within the women's&#13;
movement. Besides being a professor of political science, she is a&#13;
specialist in women's education within University Extension,&#13;
chairperson of the Governor's Commission on the Status of Women'&#13;
arid a founder of the National Organization of Women (NOW).&#13;
NOW and a multitude of women's groups around the country&#13;
strongly support the alternative feminist press Ms. Clarenbach lists as&#13;
one answer to the exclusion of women from communications, both as&#13;
participants and as subjects. This condition, she says, "deprives 53&#13;
percent of our population from the right to be represented, to speak for&#13;
themselves, and not to be spoken for by others."&#13;
The feminist "do-it-yourself" press, on the other hand, issues its own&#13;
pressreleases, has its own information Clearinghouse (KNOW, Inc.)&#13;
its own publisher (The Feminist Press, Washington D.C.), and its own&#13;
wide range of periodicals and newsletters, national and local, from&#13;
Ms. to Madison's own Whole Woman. This self-sufficiency lends to the&#13;
movement the opportunities to raise the most crucial issues, provides&#13;
• outlets for talent, arid creates the network of information "essential to&#13;
any social movement."&#13;
Within the traditional establishment press-the second avenue of&#13;
women in communications, believes Ms. Clarenbach-the "heroic&#13;
Boswells" of journalism have persuaded their papers to publish&#13;
feminist material and helped to make things happen rather than just&#13;
waited to report them.&#13;
The third avenue lies in the unlimited possibilities of communications&#13;
women's own inventiveness. Among the examples she&#13;
cites are the Feminist Theater in Washington where women handle all&#13;
the technical jobs, from carpentry and set design on up; similar&#13;
examples in film, radio and publishing; and the new presence of&#13;
women in the political sphere. Here politicians like Bella Abzug and&#13;
Shirley Chjsholm are exchanging roles with communicators like&#13;
Gloria Steinem.&#13;
American society may persist in asking what the female of the&#13;
species has to say that anyone wants to hear, says Ms. Clarenbach, but&#13;
women in communications now know their alternatives and are&#13;
pursuing them.&#13;
We get letters • • •&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Ken Konkol asks, in his column&#13;
THORN, issue of Feb. 28, why the&#13;
lower level doors to the Library&#13;
cannot be kept open longer hours-&#13;
-at the very least, he suggests,&#13;
from eight to five.&#13;
The answer is economy. To&#13;
keep a door open, there must be&#13;
someone at the door to function&#13;
as an exit guard. We figure that&#13;
.to staff one station full time&#13;
amounts to $8-9,000 a year: a&#13;
costly operation especially since&#13;
the exit guard cannot do other&#13;
kinds of productive work.&#13;
At the beginning of the year, we&#13;
closed the lower level door&#13;
completely. This, it soon became&#13;
evident, was inconvenient. Then&#13;
we recalculated, found that the&#13;
busy hours were nine to four; and&#13;
so we compromised on these.&#13;
That the lower doors should be&#13;
shut at all is undesirable. But&#13;
we'd rather put exit guard money&#13;
into cataloging staff, so we can&#13;
get the books on the shelves&#13;
quickly; into reference staff, so&#13;
we can have professional help&#13;
available as much as possible for&#13;
the confused patron; and into&#13;
ti rj l instructional staff, so we can give By Gary Huck classes in library use.&#13;
Economics is the allocation of.&#13;
scarce resources. You can never&#13;
do everything. We thought thisallocation&#13;
of funds made sense.&#13;
Philip M. Burnett&#13;
Director of Libraries&#13;
To Parkside Student Body:&#13;
I want to thank you for communicating&#13;
your concern about&#13;
the situation at Wounded Knee&#13;
and about Indian affairs.&#13;
You may be sure that your&#13;
views are appreciated and have&#13;
been carefully noted.&#13;
I am enclosing a statement by&#13;
Secretary of the Interior Rogers&#13;
C B. Morton which I am sure you&#13;
will find of interest.&#13;
Marvin Franklin&#13;
Asst. to the Secretary&#13;
For Indian Affairs&#13;
Editor's Note: PSGA President&#13;
Tom Haack sent a message&#13;
expressing concern about the&#13;
treatment of Indians and the&#13;
situation at Wounded Knee. The&#13;
statement by Secretary oft the&#13;
Interior referred to in the above&#13;
letter is on file in the Student&#13;
Government office and is&#13;
available for scrutiny.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I was sitting down at the&#13;
student government office&#13;
reading a book and a student&#13;
came in with an unusual request.&#13;
He wanted to know if we could put&#13;
the Parkside flag at half mast. I&#13;
asked him why and he told me a&#13;
girl in one of h is classes had died&#13;
of cancer. He further told me that&#13;
he went to see Asst. Chancellor&#13;
Dearborn about the flag.&#13;
The student only knew her&#13;
name and that she died. But&#13;
because he cared he wanted to do&#13;
more to show his concern than&#13;
just a thought. So when you see&#13;
the flag at half-mast stop and&#13;
think about caring. The Student&#13;
Government and the students ol&#13;
Parkside offer our deepest&#13;
sympathy to the family of Mary&#13;
T. Jenn, a freshman from&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Patrick McDevitl&#13;
Senator, PSGA&#13;
4 THE PARKSI DE RANGER Wed./ Ap r i l A , 1 9 7 3&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
New dorm-living concept conceived&#13;
COSMIC WHEELS&#13;
Donavan&#13;
Epic (KE 32156)&#13;
curreTmus^Thpln^ defin*ely established within the realm of&#13;
an esoteric^nahiTp hnf nf mUS1C bandS 3nd their Products are still of&#13;
demand Pink Sn i AT are*l&amp;\8 indicating a growing consumer&#13;
^JfPinJ F1fyd and Amon Duul maintain a steady appeal while&#13;
S"!: :8 NGW f°rCeS SUCh as ui-cnestra are emerging within this scene. Mahavishnu&#13;
he reason that this phenomena exists is quite interesting Once&#13;
upon a time there was a bunch of kids who grew up reading Captain&#13;
in thdrifte^dollarneand °f fiCti°n COmiC b°°ks- Then'&#13;
f ? . Ce'they turned onto Timothy Leary's philosophy&#13;
furtheSitr tab'e quantities 01 **D. Now these minds seek&#13;
fnrlu f in a more natural (?) form. Hence, the blame&#13;
for all of us crazies rests in the hands of the creators of Spider Man.&#13;
^beii°talamaSS °ff?ese mind-expanders are in sharp contrast to the&#13;
Svp ft audience of toe strictly metal music makers. The star seekers&#13;
rtaltt frt teamt ?°nSC!SuS and unconscious. but they still confront&#13;
reality from time to time. The only reality for a downer freak is death&#13;
Aicordmg to Greg Shaw of PRM (Phonograph Record Magazine)&#13;
space music breaks down into two categories-space rock and cosmic&#13;
music Space rock is music left in its original pattern with a new&#13;
element added. This element is usually a synthesiser or a weird&#13;
sounding organ. Against this is cosmic music which is derived from&#13;
various sources. Hawkwind is an example of space rock while Pink&#13;
t&gt;^ u Mahavishnu Orchestra are representative of cosmic music.&#13;
I d have to go along with this breakdown but not with Shaw's appraisal&#13;
of each. He claims space rock is better because it is more&#13;
commercial More commercial it may be but space rock, in his&#13;
definition (which he received from Ohr music), is not superior to&#13;
cosmic music. Cross-breeding always creates healthier offspring I&#13;
ma!"tai" that "sPace Odyssey" by the Byrds is a fantastic composition&#13;
for the very same reasons Shaw says it fails. Hawkwind as of&#13;
yet maintains the power to create imaginative effects and liberate&#13;
minds. This is accomplished by repetitive, simple guitar, bass and&#13;
drum playing that develop into climaxes, all the while submerged in a&#13;
sea of synthesiser effects. Hawkwind is sensational now and I cherish&#13;
their present products. But, in time, if they are held rigidly within&#13;
these limits, they will become boring, suffocating from lack of fresh&#13;
air.&#13;
Donavan should offer additional proof of the superiority of cosmic&#13;
music. He got everyone smoking banana peels a few years back and&#13;
following this he turned many onto meditation. Since everything&#13;
changed, today nothing is as unhip as that passive flower child. He was&#13;
left to thrill the hearts of 14-year-old girls.&#13;
When I first encountered COSMIC WHEELS, I had in mind a strict&#13;
folk singer type. But, being enticed by its cosmic cover and thinking of&#13;
"Hurdy Gurdy Man" at the time, my curiosity got the best of me.&#13;
The package material is black and white but somehow evokes color&#13;
The inside of the open-up jacket contains a sketch of some fantasyland&#13;
with the invitation to get out your crayons and color it.&#13;
The music is ecletic and produces a most unique form of cosmic&#13;
vibrations. "Cosmic Wheels" has Donavan strumming an acoustic&#13;
guitar while singing with a mysterious and appealing voice. This is set&#13;
to a good beat, with a violin added. High-pitched choir voices are like&#13;
ghosts approaching from the background. The total effect is teasingly&#13;
scary.&#13;
"Earth Sign Man" is a blues done in an outer space fashion. It has a&#13;
break with a lead guitar and a sax, that depicts movement in the Milky&#13;
Way. The sax is played by Bobby Keyes.&#13;
Donavan introduces "Sleep" with a high-reaching voice that settles&#13;
into his usual one. Bobby Keyes is in here again, along with some&#13;
metal guitar chords. Donavan trails off a couple lines with his&#13;
quivering voice style that sends chills up your spine.&#13;
The only sore spot on side one is "Maria Magenta," with its accordian&#13;
that makes it sound like the Lawrence Welk rock show.&#13;
Perhaps the most sensational cut is "Wild Witch Lady." Built upon a&#13;
simple go-go guitar riff, it also features more soprano-apparition&#13;
voices. Donavan sing-screams the chorus lines as if he was an affected&#13;
teenage Lucifer. There also is his quivering vocals that follow the end&#13;
of some lines. "...Lady" would be the best bet for a single release from&#13;
the album.&#13;
"The Music Makers" is a rocker that has funky-soul roots. A guitar&#13;
reminiscent of the early Kinks is also a part of it. It develops into a&#13;
rock chant at the end.&#13;
The sensational substance gives way at this point. "The Intergalactic&#13;
Laxative" is a Scottish folk song about the problems of&#13;
human waste in outer space. Humor is the only adhering quality.&#13;
"I Like You" is Donavan as his most sentimental, love-singing&#13;
person. It is either very touching or very irritating, depending on your&#13;
mood.&#13;
The remainder is reserved for "Only the Blues" and "Appearances."&#13;
"Only the Blues" is a country-type number and "Appearances"&#13;
is another super-tender piece.&#13;
COSMIC WHEELS IS Donavan's attempt to get back into the pop&#13;
scene by entering the space race. While a little more than half of the&#13;
material would probably be favored by the general pop audience, this&#13;
larger portion contains some of the most outstanding space music.&#13;
What is needed is a little publicity and the release of a single from this&#13;
disc. When this happens Donavan may again become a guru of modern&#13;
youth.&#13;
(Record courtesy of J&amp;J Tapes and Records)&#13;
MADISON - A new concept in&#13;
dormitory living at UW-Madison&#13;
may go a long way toward&#13;
alleviating study problems as&#13;
well as closing the gap between&#13;
social and academic aspects of&#13;
student life.&#13;
Beginning next August, Gilman&#13;
House, an 80-student unit of&#13;
Kronshage Halls, located on the&#13;
shore of Lake Mendota, will be&#13;
reserved exclusively for&#13;
engineering and nursing&#13;
students.&#13;
"It is unusual in present dor-&#13;
Republican results&#13;
mitory practice to have students&#13;
with a common academic interest&#13;
together," says College of&#13;
Engineering Associate Dean&#13;
Fred 0. Leidel.&#13;
The Gilman House situation, he&#13;
explains, will encourage a concentration&#13;
of nursing and&#13;
engineering students (particularly&#13;
now, since men are now&#13;
entering the nursing field and&#13;
women are going into&#13;
engineering). These students, in&#13;
other housing, have had little&#13;
opportunity for contact with&#13;
those in their own fields.&#13;
With the new concentration,&#13;
Leidel says, "it will be convenient&#13;
for faculty members and&#13;
student groups to make themselves&#13;
available for advising and&#13;
information, and for providing&#13;
tutoring services and guest&#13;
speakers."&#13;
Gilman House, which is being&#13;
co-sponsored by the College of&#13;
Engineering and the UW Division&#13;
of Residence Halls, with the&#13;
cooperation of the School of&#13;
Nursing, joins a variety of other&#13;
coeducational dormitories which&#13;
already exist on the Madison&#13;
campus.&#13;
Convention starts process&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
For the average voter, political&#13;
activity probably begins and ends&#13;
with the election. For those active&#13;
in party politics, however,&#13;
this could not be further from the&#13;
truth. The election is the climax&#13;
of months of campaign activities,&#13;
primaries, fund-raising events,&#13;
and especially at this time of&#13;
year, party conventions.&#13;
Parkside is represented at the&#13;
state conventions of two&#13;
Republican groups this month,&#13;
the Wisconsin College&#13;
Republicans and the Wisconsin&#13;
Federation of Young&#13;
R e p u b l i c a n s . C o l l e g e&#13;
Republicans consists of a number&#13;
of c olleges who broke away from&#13;
Young Republicans several years&#13;
ago. Their convention took place&#13;
March 16-18 in Wausau. Young&#13;
Republicans consists of people&#13;
from the ages 14-35, including&#13;
some colleges who chose not to&#13;
leave the federation. This convention&#13;
was held last weekend in&#13;
Brookfield with the theme&#13;
"MiGovern Down and Lucey to&#13;
Go."&#13;
A typical convention includes&#13;
district caucuses, meetings of&#13;
committees such as resolutions,&#13;
constitution, rules and credentials,&#13;
election of officers, awards&#13;
banquets and, of course, parties!&#13;
The caucuses and most of the&#13;
committee reports deal with&#13;
internal workings of the&#13;
organization. The resolutions,&#13;
however, may be of more&#13;
widespread interest. Young&#13;
Republican resolutions were not&#13;
available at the time of this&#13;
printing. College Republicans&#13;
considered over 50 resolutions,&#13;
the more notable among them&#13;
involved the following:&#13;
Reinstitution of the death&#13;
penalty as outlined by President&#13;
Nixon - Pass&#13;
Opposition to the Equal Rights&#13;
Amendment - Pass&#13;
Legalization of marijuana -&#13;
Defeat&#13;
Recommend immediate&#13;
prosecution of lawbreakers occupying&#13;
Wounded Knee, South&#13;
Dakota, and condemnation of&#13;
Attorney General Kliendienst for&#13;
his poor handling of the situation -&#13;
Pass&#13;
No unconditional amnesty -&#13;
Pass&#13;
Opposition to abortion except in&#13;
cases of harm to mother - Pass&#13;
Open contraceptive policy -&#13;
Pass&#13;
Commendation of President&#13;
Nixon and Henry Kissinger on&#13;
their handling of the war in&#13;
Vietnam - Pass&#13;
Retention of tenure system -&#13;
Defeat&#13;
Among those elected to College&#13;
Republican offices were&#13;
sophomores Ross Workman and&#13;
Caesar Geiger as Southeastern&#13;
Area Coordinator and Deputy&#13;
Coordinator, respectively. Kathj&#13;
Stokley Matz of UW-Superior was&#13;
elected Chairman.&#13;
Parkside delegates to the&#13;
Young Republican convention&#13;
included seniors Ken Axelson and&#13;
Alan Bryner. Official election&#13;
results were not available&#13;
However, Muriel Coleman ol&#13;
Madison was running unopposed&#13;
for Chairman as was freshman&#13;
Marilyn Schubert foi&#13;
Southeastern Area College&#13;
Coordinator.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board presents&#13;
QMiat'. 2&#13;
cA/ew&#13;
Qussycat ?&#13;
Wednesday, April 9&#13;
Gr. 103 - 2:00 &amp; 8:00 p.m.&#13;
50 cents admission&#13;
2nd National (formerly Shakey's) Cocktail Bar and Restaurant&#13;
6208 Green Bay Road Phone 654-0485&#13;
UVE BiTEBTMIK? I BANOING&#13;
River City&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT BUNCH O'LUNCH ZA, CHICKEN, SALAD, MO-Ji&#13;
11:30-1:30&#13;
lon.-Fri. Sat. &amp; Si&#13;
*159 $189&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
20 KINDS SERVED ALL THE TIME&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT BUNCH O'FISH FISH, PIZZA. SALAD, MO-JO'S&#13;
Wed.&amp;Fri. j«gg&#13;
from 5 p.m. I&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
W MO-JO'S SERVED ALL THE TIME&#13;
Plus Your Favorite Mixed Drinks and Beers&#13;
Wed. , Apri l 4, 1973 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER S&#13;
Film Society presents&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENNING 'Woman in the Dunes&#13;
Approximately 200 nomination&#13;
papers have been turned in for&#13;
Parkside's outstanding teacher&#13;
awards. The awards committee&#13;
urges all students who think they&#13;
have an outstanding teacher to&#13;
write a nomination paper and file&#13;
it with that committee. •&#13;
"How Body Language Talks"&#13;
will be offered by the UWExtension&#13;
on the Wood Road&#13;
campus Wednesday, May 2 and 9&#13;
from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.&#13;
Gestures, postures, facial&#13;
expressions and other forms of&#13;
nonverbal communicationusually&#13;
unconscious--can&#13;
enhance or change the meaning&#13;
of what you are saying. This is&#13;
known as body language. The&#13;
course will help you to become&#13;
aware of body language as you&#13;
and others use it to express attitudes&#13;
and emotions.&#13;
The instructor will be Scott&#13;
Baudhuin, assistant professor of&#13;
communication.&#13;
Fees for the course are $4.50, $7&#13;
for a married couple.&#13;
Registration deadline is April 25.&#13;
For further information phone&#13;
553-2312. •&#13;
The Parkside Vets Club will&#13;
sponsor a dance Thursday, April&#13;
19 from 9 p.m. to l a.m in the&#13;
Student Activities Building. The&#13;
band will be Blood Money and&#13;
admission will be $i 50&#13;
Wisconsin and Parkside I D's&#13;
required.&#13;
Applications for the $200&#13;
Scholarship offered by the&#13;
Business and Professional&#13;
Women's Club of Kenosha are&#13;
available in the Kenosha Campus&#13;
Student Services Office (Room&#13;
135). To be considered, applicants&#13;
must be single female&#13;
residents of Kenosha County who&#13;
are in their sophomore or junior&#13;
year of college and plan to continue&#13;
their studies. Students from&#13;
any major field of study are&#13;
eligible to apply. Deadline for&#13;
returning applications is Friday,&#13;
April 13.&#13;
The Parkside Vets Club will&#13;
meet Sunday, April 8 at 7 p.m. in&#13;
the Student Activities Building.&#13;
There will be a nomination of&#13;
officers and Bill Kemp, Outreach&#13;
counselor for the Vets Administration&#13;
Regional Office, will&#13;
speak.&#13;
Beta Lambda chapter of Alpha&#13;
Kappa Lambda fraternity here at&#13;
Parkside is proud to announce&#13;
the acceptance of three new&#13;
members. They are: Jim Filipek,&#13;
Mark Holler and Chuck Stephen.&#13;
A second pledge class this&#13;
semester will begin this week. If&#13;
interested, contact George Kis&#13;
(632-4742) or Jim Gaastra (634-&#13;
6461) or any member at large.&#13;
Extension offers course&#13;
on Latin America&#13;
A look at the complex and&#13;
fascinating continent of Latin&#13;
America will be taken in a class&#13;
offered by the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Extension.&#13;
Prof. Jose Ortega, instructor&#13;
for the class, calls Latin America&#13;
an almost unknown continent,&#13;
where everything is immense.&#13;
Prof. Ortega has traveled, lectured&#13;
and published materials on&#13;
Latin American countries, and is&#13;
a Parkside faculty member. He&#13;
will cover the land and the&#13;
people, the economy; institutions:&#13;
church, army,&#13;
oligarchy; the culture;&#13;
revolutions, coups and&#13;
guerrillas; and Latin America's&#13;
relationship to the world.&#13;
The class will meet on the&#13;
Kenosha Campus, 3700&#13;
Washington Road, on five&#13;
Wednesdays beginning April 4, at&#13;
7:30 p.m. Registrations are being&#13;
taken by University Extension at&#13;
553-2312.&#13;
Telephone 652-8662&#13;
3315-52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
meos&#13;
PIZZA HITCH BN&#13;
Chicken &amp; It alian Sa usage Bombers&#13;
Free Delivery t o P arkside V illage&#13;
SOU SOth Anna* Phone 6S7-S191&#13;
Friday&#13;
Safety and Security will again&#13;
offer a state certified defensive&#13;
driving course Saturday, April 7&#13;
from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist Room 101. To register&#13;
call Safety and Security at Ext&#13;
2455.&#13;
How to get to Europe, how to&#13;
get around when there, and what&#13;
and how to see it will be discussed&#13;
in a University Extension class&#13;
entitled "Prelude to European&#13;
Travel."&#13;
Dennis Dean, an instructor&#13;
from the Parkside faculty, has&#13;
spent some time on the continent&#13;
and is an experienced traveler.&#13;
His emphasis will be thoroughly&#13;
practical, balancing comfort and&#13;
convenience on one hand against&#13;
expense on the other. Class&#13;
participants will learn how to get&#13;
the most for their money and how&#13;
to get the most out of every day.&#13;
The class will meet for six&#13;
Tuesdays beginning April 3, at&#13;
7:30 p.m. on the Wood Road&#13;
Campus. For registration information&#13;
contact University&#13;
Extension, 553-2312.&#13;
What's New Pussycat? will be&#13;
shown by the Activities Board on&#13;
Monday, April 9, at 2 p.m. and 8&#13;
p.m. in Greenquist 103. The film&#13;
stars Peter Sellers, Woody Allen&#13;
and Ursula Andress. Studentfaculty-&#13;
staff admission is 50&#13;
cents.&#13;
Woman in the Dunes, a 1964&#13;
Japanese film about a man and&#13;
woman trapped at the bottom of a&#13;
sand dune, will be shown Friday&#13;
April 6 at 7:30 by the Parkside&#13;
Film Society, in Greenquist 103&#13;
New York Times film critic&#13;
Bosley Crowther describes it as a&#13;
"strangely poetic drama" which&#13;
encompasses "a disturbing&#13;
allegory of the fate of man in the&#13;
world-a strong expression of the&#13;
enslavement of the spirit by all&#13;
the demands of environment."&#13;
Named Best Japanese Film of&#13;
1964, it is also a Cannes Film&#13;
r estival award winner, New&#13;
York Film Festival sellout, and&#13;
Montreal Film Festival award&#13;
winner.&#13;
The short, Gerald McBoing&#13;
Boing, a 1950 Academy Award&#13;
winner narrated in rhyme, will&#13;
also be shown. Admission is 60&#13;
cents.&#13;
Forum benifit planned&#13;
A "Two-Bit Poetry Forum"&#13;
will be staged as a benefit for the&#13;
Harlow B. Mills Scholarship&#13;
Fund from noon to 1:30 p.m. on&#13;
Thursday in the Whiteskellar by&#13;
the Parkside Poetry Forum.&#13;
Minimum donation is two bits&#13;
(what else?).&#13;
Faculty members participating&#13;
in the forum will include&#13;
Stella Gray and Richard&#13;
Carrington presenting an Emily&#13;
Dickinson dialog, John Van&#13;
Willigen reading Tagore, Susan&#13;
Craig reading e.e. cummings,&#13;
Norbert Isenberg reading&#13;
Schiller and Whitman, Carole&#13;
Vopat reading several modern&#13;
woman poets, and Andrew&#13;
McLean reading John Donne and&#13;
Giuseppe Ungaretti.&#13;
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6 T H E P a r k s ,DE RANGER Wed., Ap r i l 4, 1 9 7 3&#13;
Correspondent Childs&#13;
to speak at Madison&#13;
in May&#13;
MADISON - Marquis W.&#13;
Childs, Washington correspondent&#13;
for the St. Louis Post-&#13;
Dispatch, will be the headline&#13;
speaker when the UW-Madison&#13;
School of Journalism and Mass&#13;
Communication dedicates its&#13;
JT_of Vilas Communication&#13;
Hall May 11.&#13;
An all-day program will pay&#13;
tribute to the school's former&#13;
directors, Willard G. Bleyer,&#13;
Grant M. Hyde, and Ralph o!&#13;
Nafziger; offer seminars on&#13;
Government and the Press" and&#13;
"Advertising and Consumerism";&#13;
include dedication&#13;
of a journalism court honoring A.&#13;
Matt Werner, Sheboygan, former&#13;
UW regent; feature presentation&#13;
of special awards to&#13;
distinguished alumni and tours of&#13;
the new facility.&#13;
Friends and alumni of the&#13;
school are invited to attend.&#13;
The array of participants will&#13;
include:&#13;
Madison campus Chancellor&#13;
Edwin Young; Don Davies,&#13;
Madison, president of the&#13;
school's alumni association; Don&#13;
Anderson, former publisher of&#13;
the Wisconsin State Journal,&#13;
Madison; Prof. Harold L. Nelson,&#13;
director of the school; Carl&#13;
Steiger, Oshkosh, former UW&#13;
regent; Helen Matheson Rupp of&#13;
the Wisconsin State Journal;&#13;
Courtland R. Conlee, retired vicepresident&#13;
of the Milwaukee&#13;
Journal; and Robert Wright,&#13;
Montello, vice-president of the&#13;
Wisconsin Press Association.&#13;
A mosaic, "Freedom of&#13;
Communication," by Prof.&#13;
James S. Watrous of the campus&#13;
art history department, will be&#13;
unveiled, and the University&#13;
Singers will present a concert.&#13;
Two years in the building, Vilas&#13;
Communication Hall was opened&#13;
last fall for use by the school,&#13;
communication arts department,&#13;
WHA and WHA-TV, the Compass&#13;
Theatre, and the Daily Cardinal.&#13;
Other dedication programs are&#13;
being planned by these groups.&#13;
The $10.7 million six-story&#13;
structure, located in the heart of&#13;
the campus, contains&#13;
classrooms, research facilities,&#13;
theaters, laboratories, studios,&#13;
seminar rooms, rehearsal areas,&#13;
production units, and maintenance,&#13;
repair and storage&#13;
areas.&#13;
The school is the oldest continuing&#13;
journalism education&#13;
program at an American&#13;
university. It was founded in 1905.&#13;
An authority on&#13;
mathematics curriculum&#13;
development, Prof. Wade&#13;
Ellis, visited UW-Parkside&#13;
Thursday and Friday as a&#13;
part of the Mathematics&#13;
Association of America&#13;
V i s i t i n g L e c t u r e r s&#13;
Program. His schedule&#13;
included a lecture for area&#13;
secondary and college&#13;
level math teachers as&#13;
well as talks in UW-P&#13;
classes . Shown at the&#13;
lecture, above, are left to&#13;
right: Denise Kolmos, a&#13;
senior at St. Joseph's High&#13;
School, Kenosha; Donald&#13;
Piele of the Parkside math&#13;
faculty; Dr. Wade; Sister&#13;
C e c e l i a H u d e c , math&#13;
teacher at St. Joseph's;&#13;
and Esther Klemp, math&#13;
teacher at Washington&#13;
Junior High School,&#13;
Racine. Dr. Wade is dean&#13;
of t he graduate school at&#13;
the University of&#13;
Michigan. He has conducted&#13;
seminars for math&#13;
teachers throughout the&#13;
U.S. an d in India, France&#13;
and Peru.&#13;
Conflict Center sees work ahead&#13;
MADISON — T he Center for&#13;
Conflict Resolution at Madison&#13;
believes peace is a way of living,&#13;
not just the absence of war.&#13;
"Although war in Vietnam is&#13;
over, we still have to study ways&#13;
of living so other wars don't&#13;
break out," explains Robert&#13;
Mishacoff, a conscientious objector&#13;
doing alternative military&#13;
service at the Center.&#13;
The Center conducts&#13;
workshops for church and civic&#13;
groups attempting to resolve&#13;
conflicts ranging from interpersonal&#13;
to international. It&#13;
also operates a research&#13;
program providing background&#13;
in the art of conflict resolutionteaching&#13;
people not to be afraid of&#13;
conflict.&#13;
Founded in 1970 as "a peace&#13;
education project," the Center&#13;
now has 14 active workers.&#13;
"We haven't been particularly&#13;
active in the role of mediator.&#13;
Our role is mostly educational so&#13;
people can more successfully&#13;
resolve their own problems,"&#13;
Mishacoff says.&#13;
A chance for real conflict&#13;
resolution came recently when&#13;
three Center members were sent&#13;
by the National Council of&#13;
Churches to be non-violent observers&#13;
at the confrofitation at&#13;
Wounded Knee, South Dakota.&#13;
A unique opportunity to spend&#13;
four weeks in New York City&#13;
studying the United Nations&#13;
through regular UWM credit&#13;
courses, attendance at U.N.&#13;
sessions and meetings with&#13;
delegation and secretariat&#13;
personnel, is being offered to&#13;
undergraduates of eleven participating&#13;
universities of The&#13;
University of Wisconsin system,&#13;
as part of a six weeks, 6-credit&#13;
course. The first two weeks of the&#13;
course will be held on the UWM&#13;
Mishacoff notes the Dayton,&#13;
Ohio police force now has officers&#13;
trained in non-violent conflict&#13;
resolution. The Center is working&#13;
on making inroads in this area in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
The Center is funded through&#13;
private sources, grants from&#13;
companies and private&#13;
U. N.&#13;
campus in preparatory study.&#13;
Each student will enroll in two&#13;
3-credit courses focusing upon&#13;
the U.N. and international&#13;
organization. While in New York&#13;
City, the participants will live in&#13;
dormitories of the New York&#13;
University Medical Center,&#13;
within walking distance of the&#13;
U.N. Expenses are based upon&#13;
regular UWM summer tuition&#13;
and dormitory costs. Admission&#13;
is open to legal residents of&#13;
Wisconsin who will be&#13;
.sophomores, juniors or seniors by&#13;
donations, with the University&#13;
providing only office space.&#13;
Both the Center and the&#13;
University agree the University&#13;
shouldn't provide financial&#13;
support.&#13;
"Although our funding is very&#13;
inadequate...several people work&#13;
here full time and we are unable&#13;
study&#13;
the summer of 1973 at one of the&#13;
participating institutions.&#13;
Candidates should have a substantial&#13;
number of college credits&#13;
in history and social studies, a&#13;
basic course in political science&#13;
(preferably international&#13;
relations), and a grade point&#13;
average of 2.50 or above (between&#13;
B and C).&#13;
Descriptive booklets and application&#13;
blanks are available&#13;
from the Office of the Dean,&#13;
College of Science and Society^&#13;
Greenouist 345.&#13;
to pay them very much...I don't&#13;
think we would look for&#13;
University funding. We wouldn't&#13;
want to be tied down," Mishacoff&#13;
contends.&#13;
Madison Chancellor Edwin&#13;
Young agrees:&#13;
"The Center for Conflict&#13;
Resolution is better as an&#13;
alternative institution. One of the&#13;
Center's values is that it is not&#13;
associated with the University. It&#13;
has greater credibility because of&#13;
it."&#13;
The Center would like to work&#13;
with the University, however, in&#13;
creating an academic program in&#13;
conflict or "peace" studies. One&#13;
course—Conflict in American&#13;
Society-exists, taught voluntarily&#13;
by sociology Prof. Joseph&#13;
W. Elder. A Center founder,&#13;
James M. Struve, is the volunteer&#13;
teaching assistant.&#13;
Elder is hopeful a major can be&#13;
created in conflict resolution.&#13;
"We see beginnings of careers&#13;
in conflict resolution. Marriage&#13;
counselors are just one example&#13;
of this."&#13;
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308 6th. St. DOWNTOWN RACINE&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
Sauced&#13;
An Illustrated Lecture&#13;
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Wed., April 4, 19 73 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
"Do we really need all that power? y y&#13;
Continued from page 1&#13;
Safety Record&#13;
MacKenzie explained that&#13;
while the safety record of the 30&#13;
currently operating plants&#13;
sounds good, it really isn't. The&#13;
power companies claim no accidents&#13;
in about 150 years of&#13;
reactor experience. This sounds&#13;
nice, but as MacKenzie explained&#13;
it, the meaning changed.&#13;
One year of reactor experience&#13;
is defined as having one reactor&#13;
in operation for one year. Having&#13;
one reactor in operation for two&#13;
years yields two years of reactor&#13;
experience, but so does having&#13;
two reactors in operation for one&#13;
year. With our present number of&#13;
reactors, some of which have&#13;
been operating for several years,&#13;
we have about 150 years of experience&#13;
according to this&#13;
definition.&#13;
If t he AEC has its way and the&#13;
United States has 60 percent of i ts&#13;
energy supplied by nuclear&#13;
reactors, we will have to have at&#13;
least 1,000 reactors by the year&#13;
2000. That means one accident&#13;
per year.&#13;
Safety System Testing&#13;
It seems that all this wouldn't&#13;
be so bad if the AEC was trying to&#13;
test and improve the safety&#13;
systems in our present and future&#13;
reactors. But MacKenzie pointed&#13;
out that very few tests have&#13;
actually been done. There was a&#13;
series of tests using computers&#13;
and theoretical stiuations. When&#13;
Viet Vet&#13;
conference&#13;
slated&#13;
MADISON -- A statewide&#13;
conference for Vietnam-era&#13;
vetera s is slated Thursday on the&#13;
UW-Madison campus.&#13;
Sponsored by the Madison&#13;
campus Vets for Vets group, the&#13;
all-day conference is titled&#13;
"Where to Now?" Focus will be&#13;
on the lack of use of the G.I. Bill&#13;
in Wisconsin, veterans' employment&#13;
problems, and&#13;
psychological disorders of&#13;
veterans, according to coordinator&#13;
Steve Harrison,&#13;
discharged from the U.S.&#13;
Marines this January.&#13;
Harrison emphasized that&#13;
anyone interested in the&#13;
problems of veterans is welcome&#13;
to attend.&#13;
Speakers include UW system&#13;
Executive Vice-President Donald&#13;
E. Percy and Wayne D. Horner,&#13;
active in Vets for Vets. Sessions&#13;
are scheduled for the Wisconsin&#13;
Union beginning at 8 a.m.&#13;
Vets for Vets was founded on&#13;
this campus last fall to aid&#13;
returning Vietnam-era veterans.&#13;
the hypothetical LOAC were run&#13;
through the computer, the ECCS&#13;
all functioned. However, in one&#13;
test the only one of its kind, a&#13;
real LOAC was created in a&#13;
model reactor, the core of which&#13;
was heated by electricity. When&#13;
the primary cooling system&#13;
failed, the ECCS began to work,&#13;
but the extreme temperature in&#13;
the core caused the water to turn&#13;
to steam and immediately force&#13;
its way out. The result was a&#13;
failure of the ECCS.&#13;
Test Failures&#13;
These test failures led to AEC&#13;
hearings on whether ECCS&#13;
design criteria are adequate.&#13;
Although the hearings will not be&#13;
completed until sometime this&#13;
year, the AEC has continued to&#13;
license nuclear plants to operate&#13;
with the old ECCS design, and to&#13;
issue construction pursuits for&#13;
new ones.&#13;
The next speaker, Dr. John W.&#13;
Gofman, who has a Ph. D. in&#13;
Nuclear Physical Chemistry and&#13;
is the former AEC scientist,&#13;
discussed the physiological&#13;
impact of nuclear accidents.&#13;
Gofman also, discussed the fact&#13;
that the nation is being presented&#13;
with an even greater danger with&#13;
the development erf the Breeder&#13;
reactor. This reactor actually&#13;
creates more fuel in its reaction.&#13;
This fuel is Plutonium 239, an&#13;
extremely toxic substance. To&#13;
give an idea of how toxic this&#13;
element is, Gofman quoted some&#13;
statistics on its ability to cause&#13;
lung cancer. Gofman stated that&#13;
one pound of Pu-239 could cause&#13;
nine billion cases of lung cancer.&#13;
The AEC proposes to ship this&#13;
material in trucks on the nation's&#13;
highways&#13;
hi addition to the shipping of&#13;
radioactive materials, there is&#13;
also the problem of storing the&#13;
nuclear waste created by the&#13;
plants.&#13;
Current storage is not perfect,&#13;
as the radioactive waste is placed&#13;
in stainless steel containers&#13;
which must be replaced&#13;
periodically because they leak.&#13;
Moratorium&#13;
Gofman's answer to all this&#13;
was to stop. He asked why the&#13;
U.S. should continue to endanger&#13;
the environment and build cancer&#13;
into the lives of future&#13;
generations. Gofman strongly&#13;
believes that there should be an&#13;
indefinite moratorium on nuclear&#13;
reactors. There are other&#13;
possible sources for power, such&#13;
as the unlimited supply of solar&#13;
Artist Concert Series&#13;
to conclude Sunday&#13;
Pianist Marylene Dosse will&#13;
present the final program in the&#13;
University Artists Concert Series&#13;
at Parkside at 3 p.m. on Sunday,&#13;
April 8, in Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Ms. Dosse will play an all-&#13;
Saint-Saens program. In April,&#13;
she will begin recording the&#13;
complete works of Saint-Saens&#13;
for Vox records in New York.&#13;
Her Saint-Saens program at&#13;
Parkside will consist of Suite, Op.&#13;
90; Souvenir d'ltalie, Op. 80;&#13;
Minuet and Valse, Op. 56; Three&#13;
Etudes, Op. Ill, No. 2, 1, 6; Six&#13;
Bagatelles, Op. 3; Two Valses,&#13;
Op. 104 and 110; and Theme&#13;
Varie, Op. 97.&#13;
Ms. Dosse has in the past few&#13;
years been artist-in-residence for&#13;
UW-Whitewater and the UW&#13;
Center System.&#13;
French-born, she graduated&#13;
from the Paris Conservatory with&#13;
highest awards both in piano and&#13;
chamber music. She won first&#13;
place in the Salzburg, Austria,&#13;
piano contest in 1962 and the&#13;
French Ministry of Culture&#13;
granted her a special scholarship&#13;
to continue her Salzburg studies&#13;
for the following year.&#13;
Participating in the masters&#13;
class of Alfred Brendel, Joerg&#13;
Demus and Paul Badura-Skoda,&#13;
she was unanimously awarded&#13;
their scholarship and subsequently&#13;
engaged to perform at&#13;
the renowned Salzburg Festival.&#13;
She was a winner in the Casella&#13;
International Piano Competition&#13;
of 1965 in Naples and in the 1968&#13;
Vilas Competition in Madison.&#13;
She has performed throughout&#13;
Europe, North Africa and South&#13;
America and was selected to give&#13;
four concert tours in her&#13;
homeland for the Jeunesses&#13;
Musicales de France.&#13;
Tickets for her concert will be&#13;
available at the door. General&#13;
admission is $2; admission for&#13;
Parkside students, staff and&#13;
immediate families is $1;&#13;
children 12 and under are admitted&#13;
free.&#13;
A concert by the Milwaukee&#13;
Symphony at Parkside,&#13;
originally planned for May 10,&#13;
has been rescheduled for Sept. 11.&#13;
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power. Even though such a powei&#13;
source couldn't be utilized immediately,&#13;
Gofman stated that is&#13;
only dueto the fact that so much&#13;
talent, money and time has been&#13;
spent on nuclear power. Switch&#13;
all of that talent and money to&#13;
researching the other possible&#13;
power sources, he said, and&#13;
something could be developed.&#13;
Fuel Comsumption&#13;
Finally, Cole has presented&#13;
some statistics on the fact that&#13;
the AEC is misleading people&#13;
about the percentage of power&#13;
which will be supplied by nuclear&#13;
reactors and fossil fuel by burning&#13;
plants.&#13;
According to the AEC, the total&#13;
energy consumption of the U.S.&#13;
will double by the year 2000. The&#13;
comsumption of electricity will&#13;
go up five times. So even if&#13;
atomic power supplies 60 percent&#13;
of the electric power, 40 percent&#13;
will still be generated by means&#13;
of fossil fuels. According to Cole,&#13;
this will be more than is currently&#13;
being generated by fossil fuel.&#13;
Obviously, with supplies of&#13;
fossil fuels running low, other&#13;
sources of energy must be found.&#13;
Cole thinks people must also&#13;
begin asking questions. The&#13;
burden of proof rests with the&#13;
AEC as to whether or not nuclear&#13;
power is worth the risks. If it&#13;
isn't, then the effort would have&#13;
to be made to find new sources of&#13;
• power.&#13;
What To Do&#13;
Also present in the questions&#13;
are being and will be asked, is&#13;
that of "Do we really need all that&#13;
power?" Must the consumption&#13;
of fuel and electricity be so&#13;
phenomenal, Cole asked. If the&#13;
citizens of this country want to do&#13;
something about this problem, a&#13;
start could be to reduce our&#13;
demands of electricity, Cole said,&#13;
lights burning all day in empty&#13;
rooms and doing small tasks by&#13;
hand instead of using the myriad&#13;
of e lectric gadgets found in most&#13;
homes.&#13;
Next week - The Federal Water&#13;
Pollution Control Act of 1972.&#13;
rassyium&#13;
Sales &amp; Service At&#13;
KEN SCHIHTZ 6UICK-0PEI&#13;
1021 - 60th Street, Kenosha&#13;
654-5514&#13;
*2,373°°&#13;
1973 OREL&#13;
1900&#13;
GO FAR ON A&#13;
LITTLE MONEY&#13;
f T H E , ? , t A P aR A N G E R w e d . / A p r i l 4, 1 9 73&#13;
Essay Qn "Mother Russia"&#13;
Education regimented in Russia&#13;
Editor's note: Parkside history student Arthur&#13;
uhl was in Russia recently and has submitted this&#13;
report of his impressions concerning education&#13;
there.&#13;
By Arthur M. Gruhl&#13;
Several have asked me, "What did you learn&#13;
about education in Russia?" I'll tell you. But I&#13;
haven't time to be less than candid. So here goes&#13;
Like everything else in Russia, education is&#13;
regimented and run by the state. Not counting preschool&#13;
age kids, one-third of the population of&#13;
Russia, 247 million people, is in school one wav or&#13;
another. 3&#13;
The "universities" are for science. The "institutes"&#13;
are the trade and technical schools. When&#13;
you graduate you get a "certificate." A certificate&#13;
trom an institute has the same face value as one&#13;
from a university.&#13;
There are no degrees like B.A. or M.A. There are&#13;
doctoral degrees but they are for M.D.'s, some&#13;
scientists and the super-smart. Incidentally we&#13;
were told that 60 percent of all of the doctors of&#13;
medicine in the world are Russians and 80 percent&#13;
of them are women.&#13;
Education is free in Russia, all along the line.&#13;
College level students are given "stipends" according&#13;
to grades. A student with five A's gets 40&#13;
rubles a month. One with four A's and one B will get&#13;
36. A ruble is worth $1.20. Thre rubles a month goes&#13;
for room and board in a dorm. The rest is for routine&#13;
needs. The lower the grades, the lower the stipend,&#13;
so slow learners have tough going.&#13;
Students needn't concern themselves about&#13;
placement when they graduate. The jobs are all&#13;
categorized and everyone writes a competitive&#13;
exam for the jobs to be filled. Competition to get&#13;
ahead is brutal. A slightly higher grade might mean&#13;
sharing a bathroom in one's apartment with fewer&#13;
people. They will be told where they are to work.&#13;
There is no unemployment in Russia.&#13;
Society is very stratified in the U.S.S.R. One's&#13;
measure of success is determined by his value to the&#13;
state. Parents are held strictly responsible for their&#13;
children's behavior until they are 18 and-or still in&#13;
school. Goof off and parents and child will all be on&#13;
the carpet before a jury of their peers. For a student&#13;
to try to tell the school administrators how to run&#13;
things is unheard of. And the campus paper is a big&#13;
bulletin board for faculty use.&#13;
If a student does poorly on a final exam, he is&#13;
offered the chance to take the last semester all over&#13;
again, and his stipend will be greatly reduced. Then&#13;
he is given one more chance to take the exam and if&#13;
he flunks a second time he is moved down...and&#13;
down...until he reaches an area which is compatible&#13;
with his zeal and intelligence. And that will be his&#13;
niche until he works himself out of it-up or down.&#13;
But he will never be unemployed.&#13;
The Moscow University&#13;
I stood one morning on the wide plaza approach to&#13;
Moscow University in Lenin Hills. What a layout!&#13;
32,000 s tudents...14 faculties...and the top of their&#13;
main building was obscured by clouds the day I was&#13;
there.&#13;
The men going in and out of the building looked&#13;
like young business and professional men. You&#13;
could easily tell the men from the women. The&#13;
women wore skirts, were well-groomed and looked&#13;
sharp. There was no mingling of men and women.&#13;
Evidently there is no time for socializing on campus,&#13;
and the women are tough competitors here.&#13;
Students Are&#13;
Their Own Custodians&#13;
We walked inside. There was a lot of traffic,&#13;
several lounges, and not an empty can or paper cup&#13;
was to be seen. Tanya, our tour guide (a graduate of&#13;
a language institute), told us that the students were&#13;
responsible for the care and condition of "their"&#13;
building. There are no custodians going around&#13;
picking up after them. Anyone seen littering would&#13;
be pointed out on the spot and wind up policing the&#13;
campus for a week.&#13;
"Heroes" are recognized on campus and offnationwide,&#13;
in fact. Who are their heroes? They are&#13;
the students with superior grades, workers who&#13;
exceed high goals, scientists and artists. The&#13;
"Order of Lenin" is their highest accolade.&#13;
Wouldn't Want To&#13;
Live By Their Rules&#13;
I sure wouldn't wlike to live by some of their&#13;
ground rules but Russia is their country" and they&#13;
think that the world is their oyster. They (the dozen&#13;
or so students I met who could speak some English)&#13;
assume without argument that eventually&#13;
everything will be done their way. That is their idea&#13;
of peaceful coexistence. In the meantime anything&#13;
not being done according to their rules is up for&#13;
grabs.&#13;
They are striving for their goals very openly and&#13;
are using all of the sophisticated tools of our free&#13;
enterprise system to make their system of&#13;
socialism work. The draft of warm air you feel&#13;
behind your ears is probably caused by Tanya and&#13;
Boris breathing down your neck. While smiling at&#13;
you they will try to knock your block off&#13;
academically if given half a chance. They covet&#13;
much of what we take for granted. They are out to&#13;
produce what they expect will eventually be the best&#13;
educated society in the world-all dedicated to the&#13;
proposition that their country comes before self. To&#13;
them, no sacrifice is too great to gain that goal.&#13;
Upturn seen&#13;
in journalism&#13;
vocations&#13;
MADISON - Job-seeking UWMadison&#13;
journalism graduates&#13;
this spring are finding prospects&#13;
considerably brighter than did&#13;
last year's class.&#13;
Notices of job openings are up&#13;
10 percent over last year at the&#13;
School of Journalism and Mass&#13;
Communication's placement&#13;
office.&#13;
Radio-TV news, public&#13;
relations and newspapers offer&#13;
the most openings, according to&#13;
Prof. Lester L. Hawkes, the&#13;
school's assistant director. And&#13;
although newspaper hiring isn't&#13;
up as much as hiring in other&#13;
fields of communication, Hawkes&#13;
expects an upturn in the&#13;
availability of newspaper jobs in&#13;
the next six months.&#13;
During periods of recession,&#13;
Hawkes noted, "Newspapers&#13;
delay filling vacant positions.&#13;
Attrition and retirement take a&#13;
number of individuals during this&#13;
period, and the time is coming&#13;
when people will be needed to fill&#13;
the vacancies."&#13;
Fears of scarcity in the job&#13;
market may be driving more&#13;
journalism students into&#13;
graduate school, Hawkes said.&#13;
"People with master's degrees,&#13;
of course, are in much more&#13;
demand."&#13;
Thirty of the 31 students to&#13;
receive a masters degree last&#13;
year from the UW-Madison&#13;
moved directly into jobs in&#13;
communication with no&#13;
problems, Hawkes pointed out.&#13;
Corporate internal publications&#13;
are the largest recruiters at the&#13;
present time. State and federal&#13;
information positions are also&#13;
attracting a lot of our&#13;
graduates," Hawkes added.&#13;
I UJA.riV "?oo "Vo Go "to .. . .&#13;
ONE Suj§£tT&gt;RLArn&#13;
folSCfmnt Rrr r.gfk&#13;
II //&#13;
(2&#13;
,y&#13;
foA #)£ -finest I/? Pipes .. .&#13;
C.Jtps - -fay- •BaLP/iEmRpsS --m Prors-i^KeRrs- —r .a»Rc-&#13;
MGESt&#13;
LI AjjJte* CoWCS X&#13;
The Ranger asks-—&#13;
What is your opinion of Women's Liberation'&#13;
Wed . , April 4, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 9&#13;
Frank Locante, Senior, Kenosha&#13;
"If they want women's lib let&#13;
them have it. I don't think&#13;
everybody wants it; I think it's a&#13;
selected few. I don't know why&#13;
they want it. It's only a selected&#13;
few that want women's lib. Let&#13;
them be liberated if t hey want to&#13;
be."&#13;
S"? ,Lora» Freshman' Kenosha&#13;
"I'm for it to a certain extent,&#13;
and I think that I don't want to&#13;
become an equal to man. But&#13;
women should have equal rights&#13;
as the men, but I don't want&#13;
them. Like I don't want to get&#13;
drafted."&#13;
Rick Barnhart, Junior, Waterford&#13;
"I'm for it to a certain extent,&#13;
like equal pay and equal rights.&#13;
But I'm against strong women's&#13;
lib like, say you open a door for a&#13;
girl and she slams the door back&#13;
in your face or something, I'm&#13;
against that."&#13;
Kathy Cooper, Staff, Computer&#13;
Center "It's OK; just don't go to&#13;
far with it that's all. We need it&#13;
but we still need the men's ability&#13;
for morale boost, I guess."&#13;
College Educations Start at&#13;
WEST FEDERAL SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2 573 58th St . a t 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE: CAPITOL COU RT MILWAUKEE&#13;
P. A.B.&#13;
p r e s entSs PRING FOLK&#13;
'//FESTIVAL Grahm&#13;
Dave Castaneda, Freshman,&#13;
acine&#13;
"I have no opinion on women's&#13;
lib, if they feel they're not&#13;
liberated that's their problem. I&#13;
don't know; just leave them&#13;
alone."&#13;
&lt;S Lindgren&#13;
Mi ke Gregor y&#13;
Tom Rosplock&#13;
Bob Rohan&#13;
Dave Duffeck&#13;
Mone y Price&#13;
SUN.&#13;
APRIL 8&#13;
[m 2-7 p.m.&#13;
Free&#13;
Admi s si on&#13;
"St d . Ac t . Bldg.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board presents&#13;
. &lt;&lt;,&#13;
your $1&#13;
per d ay lodging includes&#13;
• coffee, donuts&#13;
• shower&#13;
THE&#13;
KENTUCKY DERBY&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
MAY 4-6&#13;
$5.00 for Derby Ticket&#13;
$2.50 pre-Derby Concert&#13;
advance sale ticket&#13;
($4.00 at the door)&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger, Assistant&#13;
Dean of S tudents&#13;
"My opinion is that it has some&#13;
value on campus, but that it has&#13;
to be treated justly so that the&#13;
women get fair treatment as well&#13;
as the men."&#13;
bring own sleeping bag&#13;
MUST SUPPLY OWN TRANSPORTATION - TRAVEL&#13;
INFORMATION AND SIGN-UP AT STU. ACT. OFFICE -&#13;
LLC-D-197.&#13;
Candy Bieneman, Freshman,&#13;
Racine&#13;
"I really agree with the idea,&#13;
but I don't agree with a lot of t he&#13;
way they go about doing it. Like I&#13;
don't think they should push it on&#13;
people and I think they're kind of&#13;
going to the other extreme.&#13;
They're trying to push it on&#13;
people, and a lot needs to be&#13;
changed. You're going to have to&#13;
change the way people think,&#13;
you're going to have to change&#13;
society and that's going to take a&#13;
long time. I think it should have&#13;
happened a long time ago."&#13;
Jim Simmons, Junior, Kenosha&#13;
"I really can't say. I like what&#13;
they're doing though."&#13;
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10 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed . , April 4, 1973&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
RANGER Baseball opens today&#13;
' Sports&#13;
Rangers strong in Track&#13;
by Helmut Kali&#13;
Parkside has had "a very good&#13;
year so far in track," according&#13;
to head coach Bob Lawson. The&#13;
quality of our trackmen is high,&#13;
but Lawson would like to see&#13;
more students out for track&#13;
ents out for track. '&#13;
Most meets have been&#13;
multiple-team meets (eight to&#13;
twenty teams) with the Rangers&#13;
placing in the top 25 percent.&#13;
Lucien Rosa and Dennis Biel&#13;
started out theyear as All-&#13;
America and have kept a good&#13;
record. Another outstanding&#13;
performer was Keith Merritt,&#13;
who has been setting records in&#13;
the pole vault and triple jump.&#13;
Merritt "should soon be ready&#13;
for national competition in the&#13;
triple jump and the decathlon,"&#13;
says Lawson. The decathlon&#13;
consists of ten events; the 100&#13;
meter, long jump, high jump,&#13;
shot put, 400 meter, lio meter&#13;
hurdle, discus, pole vault&#13;
javelin, and 1,500 meter.&#13;
Chuck Dettman has had a good&#13;
year running the half mile.&#13;
"Two freshmen with a good&#13;
future at Parkside are Herb&#13;
DeGroot annd Cornelius Gordon,&#13;
both of Racine, and both 440 men.&#13;
Also having good potential is&#13;
Mike Kopczynski, a long jump&#13;
sprinter.&#13;
The next meet for the Ranger&#13;
trackmen will be the United&#13;
States Track and Field&#13;
Federation (USTFF) State Indoor&#13;
Championships April7 at&#13;
Madison. On the same day,&#13;
Merritt and Dom Cooper will be&#13;
competing in the decathlon and&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
Bob Lawson&#13;
A Parkside decathlon, and&#13;
wMh ™S open events&#13;
will be held May 7 and 8. The first&#13;
ou^oorjneet on the new track&#13;
will be held to deticate the track&#13;
•April 19 and 20.&#13;
Lawson's main goal right now&#13;
is to get Rosa ready to defend his&#13;
national marathon record at the&#13;
JS^URelays' which are the&#13;
USTFF National Championships&#13;
held at Drake University in Des&#13;
Moines, Iowa. John Ammerman&#13;
«s also training to run at Drake&#13;
Rosa took top honors in the Drake&#13;
marathon last year, and Gary&#13;
Lance, a former ParksiriW&#13;
student took tenth. de&#13;
The Parkside Rangers baseball&#13;
club opens up its season, today,&#13;
with a single game against the&#13;
College of Racine. Game time is 1&#13;
p.m. at the UW-P baseball field.&#13;
College of Racine, something of&#13;
a fledging in baseball in recent&#13;
years, has yet to beat the&#13;
Rangers since Ken (Red)&#13;
Oberbruner has coached and&#13;
squad.&#13;
"We haven't lost to them yet,&#13;
and I don't plan on starting this&#13;
year," Oberbruner said.&#13;
C of R (Dominican) lost four&#13;
games to Parkside iast year with&#13;
only one game being decided by&#13;
one run. C of R is led by second&#13;
baseman Ed Granitz, last year's&#13;
most valuable player, and third&#13;
baseman Larry Haskins.&#13;
The Rangers are coming off a&#13;
6-4 record. They had 14 games&#13;
washed out a year ago. This&#13;
year's team will attempt to play&#13;
17 games if the weather will&#13;
oblige. Wisconsin - Madison tried&#13;
to get a early start this year but&#13;
was rained out last Saturday.&#13;
Oberbruner indicated his&#13;
pitching is below last year's with&#13;
only two returning lettermen in&#13;
sophomores Dale Phillips and&#13;
lefty Bob Kosters. Phillips will be&#13;
tried more at first base this year.&#13;
He has hopes that several&#13;
promising newcomers, Kim&#13;
Singleton, Jeff Sexton and Nick&#13;
Ziomek, will be able to help carry&#13;
the pitching load. The Rangers&#13;
will play eight doubleheaders this&#13;
year and good pitching is a must&#13;
for success.&#13;
Oberbruner said that this&#13;
year's team has better over-all&#13;
balance than a year ago, which&#13;
should help any shortcomings the&#13;
pitching may have.&#13;
His infield is set with lettermen&#13;
Tom Gedemer at third (he hit .275&#13;
a year ago), Ron Schmidt at&#13;
second (.300), and either Phillips&#13;
(.255) o r Jim Mohrbacher (.225)&#13;
at first. Oberbruner noted the&#13;
team has two good prospects in&#13;
An important announcement to every&#13;
student in the health professions:&#13;
NEW SCHOLARSHIPS&#13;
ARE AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY.&#13;
THEY COVER TUITION AND&#13;
RELATED COSTS AND PROVIDE AN&#13;
ANNUAL INCOME OF $5,300 AS WELL.&#13;
If a,, steady salary of $400 a&#13;
month and paid-up tuition&#13;
will help you continue your&#13;
professional training, the&#13;
scholarships just made poss&#13;
i b l e by t h e U n i fo r m e d&#13;
Services Health Professions&#13;
Revitalization Act of 1972&#13;
deserve your close attention.&#13;
Because if you are now in a&#13;
medical, osteopathic, dental,&#13;
veterinary, podiatry, or optometry&#13;
school, or are working&#13;
toward a PhD in Clinical&#13;
Psychology, you may qualify.&#13;
We make it eakjj tor you to&#13;
complete your xtudie.k. You're&#13;
commissioned as an officer as&#13;
soon as you enter the program,&#13;
but remain in student&#13;
status until graduation. And,&#13;
during each year you will be&#13;
on active duty (with extra&#13;
pay) for 45 days. Naturally,&#13;
if your academic schedule&#13;
requires that you remain on&#13;
campus, you stay on campus&#13;
-and still receive your active&#13;
duty pay.&#13;
Active duty requirements&#13;
are fair. Basically, you serve&#13;
one year as a commissioned&#13;
officer for each year you've&#13;
participated in the program,&#13;
with a two year minimum.&#13;
You may apply for a scholarship&#13;
with either the Army,&#13;
Navy or Air Force, and know&#13;
that upon entering active&#13;
d u t y y o u ' l l h a v e r a n k a n d&#13;
duties in keeping with your&#13;
professional training.&#13;
The life's work you've chosen&#13;
for yourself requires long,&#13;
hard, expensive training.&#13;
Now we are in a position to&#13;
give you some help. Mail in&#13;
the coupon at your earliest&#13;
convenience for more detailed&#13;
information.&#13;
&lt; Scholarship:&#13;
Mux A&#13;
J'niv'vrsal City. Texas 7H14S&#13;
I desire information for&#13;
C-CN-43&#13;
El&#13;
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I&#13;
n« |&#13;
Army n Navy J~| Air K.irce&#13;
MdliralyOstonpathic H Dental&#13;
V.'Urinary • I'o.liatry*&#13;
Other ( I'lease specify )&#13;
N&#13;
S.ic. S.'i* " ,&#13;
i please print 1&#13;
A.I.I.&#13;
file&#13;
T.. itia.h.ate&#13;
ISi-hoiill&#13;
' Month 1 ( Year) (DeimO&#13;
1 Month 1 (Day) (Year)&#13;
* y n,it a v uilahlt' in Ail- K.ircc I'l-onrcm.&#13;
BASEBALL SCHEDULE&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Spring 1973&#13;
April 4, Wed. - Dominican - Away (2) l';00&#13;
April 11, Wed. - D ominican - Home (2) 1:00&#13;
April 14, Sat. • UW-Whitewater - H ome (2) 1$:00&#13;
April 16, Mon. - S t. Norbert - Home (2) 12:00&#13;
April 19, Thurs. • Northland - Home (2) 1:00&#13;
April 30, Mon. - UW-Madison (JV's) - Away (2) 1:00&#13;
May 4, Fri. - Waukesha Tech - Away (2) 1:00&#13;
May 6, Sun. - UW-Madison (JV's) - Home (2) 12:00&#13;
May 8, Tues. - Milw. Tech (MATIC) -Away (2) 1:00&#13;
May 10, Thurs. - Milw. Tech (MATC) - Home (2) 1:00&#13;
All home games will be played at UW-P baseball field located on campus.&#13;
freshmen Dave Marino and Pete&#13;
Putra for the open shortstop&#13;
position.&#13;
In the outfield, where no one&#13;
has hit consistently this spring,&#13;
the battle ranges between lettermen&#13;
Scott Nelson (.260), Jeff&#13;
Koleske (.290) and freshmen Jeff&#13;
Hamon, Bill Blaha, Mike Cook&#13;
and several other players.&#13;
Oberbruner indicated, "The&#13;
name of t he game in college ball&#13;
is hitting and whoever hits will&#13;
play."&#13;
Oberbruner said his strongest&#13;
position, at this moment, would&#13;
have to be at catcher, where Tim&#13;
Elston and freshman Andy Vacca&#13;
are battling for the starting nod.&#13;
Oberbruner explained that he&#13;
felt the last three weeks have&#13;
been the best weather he has had&#13;
for practices since he became the&#13;
coach. He said the club has a&#13;
good chance to win a "goodly&#13;
number of games" with the&#13;
team's better over-all depth.&#13;
The schedule is in the Rangers'&#13;
favor with the first seven games&#13;
to be played here and only six&#13;
games to be played on the road&#13;
all season.&#13;
Oberbruner feels the stiffest&#13;
opposition this year, will come&#13;
from Whitewater in a&#13;
doubleheader Saturday, April 14&#13;
and then from St. Norbert the&#13;
following Monday plus the pair of&#13;
doubleheaders against the UWMadison-&#13;
JV's.&#13;
Ruggers win 1st&#13;
game of the season&#13;
On April l the Parkside ruggers&#13;
traveled to Purdue - North&#13;
Central in Indiana and there&#13;
picked up their first victory of the&#13;
young season by the score of 20-8.&#13;
Scoring honors go to Keith&#13;
Bosman who scored twice including&#13;
picking up a misplayed&#13;
Purdue ball and racing 80 yards&#13;
for the second of his scores. Other&#13;
tries for Parkside came on runs&#13;
by John Ble§hka and John van&#13;
Vleet. Two of the scores were&#13;
converted, one by Keith Bosman&#13;
and the other by Eric Olson. Two&#13;
tries were scored for Purdue. The&#13;
next game will be played April 7&#13;
at Northwestern.&#13;
IVEEAT&#13;
I N T HE C OMFORT&#13;
OF Y OUR C AR&#13;
"""X &gt;&#13;
• PAPA B URGER . MAMA B URGER&#13;
• TEEN B URGER . BABY B URGER&#13;
CARRY-OUTS&#13;
CALL AHEAD - YOUR ORDER WILL BE READY&#13;
Tubs of Chicken - Fish&#13;
and Shrimp&#13;
FREE GALLON OF ROOT BEER WITH $5.00 ORDER&#13;
Vi MILE NORTH OF&#13;
MIDCITY THEATER&#13;
ON SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
552-8404&#13;
A &amp; W ROOT BEER D RIVE-IN&#13;
Sheridan Rd. (Hy. 32) North&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Tennis faces tough schedule&#13;
by B.D. RASMUSSEN&#13;
RECREATION A L HOURS&#13;
Pool&#13;
Monday 8. Wednesday&#13;
Tuesday &amp; Thursday&#13;
Friday&#13;
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday&#13;
Thursday&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Sunday.. All extra-curricular play will&#13;
be restricted to times that the&#13;
varsity tennis and gym classes&#13;
will not be using the courts.&#13;
The rules governing play are:&#13;
two, three, or four players must&#13;
occupy the courts: courts may be&#13;
reserved two days in advance;&#13;
and the reservation must include&#13;
the first and last names of the&#13;
participants. Reservations for&#13;
courts one and six may be made&#13;
in person or by phone, but&#13;
reservations for other courts&#13;
must be made in person, and&#13;
players may reserve the courts&#13;
for only one time per day. A ten&#13;
minute "grace period" will apply&#13;
to each court. Any court not&#13;
reserved is open for free play and&#13;
during "prime time" doubles&#13;
players will receive priority.&#13;
Players are not permitted to&#13;
wear street shoes on the court.&#13;
Reservations are to be made at&#13;
the issue desk in the PE Building.&#13;
Gym&#13;
Monday thru Friday&#13;
30 (2 courts open)&#13;
: 00 (1 court open)&#13;
(restricted play)&#13;
Handball Courts&#13;
Monday thru Friday&#13;
8:00a.m.-10:00&#13;
from 10:30-12:00for cle&#13;
except Tuesday &amp; Thursday closed&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Sunday..&#13;
SPORTS SHORTS&#13;
INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL&#13;
PLAY-OFFS&#13;
Starting Sunday, Spril 8&#13;
6:30 p.m. Olympians vs. Mercury&#13;
Comets&#13;
Herblius Superblius vs. Rebels&#13;
7:30 p.m. Flash vs. Deke's Boys&#13;
Sheeters vs. Bold Ones&#13;
8:30 p.m. Semi-Finals&#13;
Dick Frecka&#13;
With spring sports beginning to&#13;
occupy more of the students time,&#13;
a reservation system has been&#13;
started for the courts just east of&#13;
the PE Building, according to&#13;
tennis coach Dick Frecka. fillip Finals and Consolation Finals&#13;
will be played Wednesday, April&#13;
11. Times will be announced&#13;
later. The&#13;
Mat Maids^ present&#13;
CL Dance&#13;
The Starboys&#13;
SATURDAY APRIL 17&#13;
. 9p.m. -1 a.m.&#13;
$D° ^&#13;
Physical Education Building&#13;
April l&#13;
North Court - volleyball&#13;
reserved Alpha Kappa Lambda&#13;
2:00-4:30. Rest of building open.&#13;
April 8&#13;
CYO Swim Meet 1:00-4:30. Pool&#13;
closed until 5:00; rest of building&#13;
open.&#13;
Joe Biebel and John Tank&#13;
traveled to the Martini-Rossi&#13;
world invitational fencing meet&#13;
in New York City the weekend of&#13;
March 24, and when they came&#13;
back, a few more people knew&#13;
where Parkside was.&#13;
Tank made his way to the&#13;
second round before being&#13;
defeated, but it was Biebel that&#13;
caught the most attention as he&#13;
battled his way to the semi-finals&#13;
before submitting defeat. One of&#13;
Biebel's victims along the way&#13;
was Dr. Jeno Kamuti, of&#13;
Hungary, who was the silver&#13;
medal winner in the Olympics at&#13;
Munich last year.&#13;
Wauwatosa, Wis. where they both&#13;
studied under the same coach&#13;
and many times battled each&#13;
April 14&#13;
Don Jacoby concert at 8:00&#13;
building closes at 5:00.&#13;
3l^^^(Parksideand Wis. I.D.'srequired)&#13;
•w Student Activities Building ^ April 15&#13;
Band concert - UWP concert&#13;
band at 8:00; building closes at&#13;
6:00.&#13;
April 17 CLASSIFIED&#13;
Friedman at 8:00; building closes&#13;
at 5:30.&#13;
Tj—'/ Good for 2 Free Dry Cycles (-&#13;
with any wash load&#13;
T^^aaand an Extra Free Punch On Your Dividend Cardffi&#13;
Sx&gt;w/y with an 8-pound Load of Dry Cleaning \2E5&gt;{&#13;
jfflqffi~NORGE VILLAGE 7513 - 45th Ave., Kenosha^®"^&#13;
9/A®?i$-tWi ESTGATE POLYCLEAN 1258 Ohio St., Racine j&#13;
*4mRAPIDS DR. POLYCLEAN 2400 R apids Dr., Racind&#13;
One Coupon Per Week Per Customer \&#13;
Expires Sept. 5,1973&#13;
FOR RENT: One bedroom furnished&#13;
apartment near Parkside. Utilities and heat&#13;
included, S130. 654-7341&#13;
1972 Kustom 500 Amp. Excellent condition.&#13;
List $1700. $950 or best offer. Call 633-6191&#13;
after 5.&#13;
1701 N. Main Racine 633-9421&#13;
1969 Camaro economical, 3-speed, Orange,&#13;
black vinyl top. $1295.00, 694-6277. Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
Thursday 11-8&#13;
For Sale: 1970 Camaro Rally Sport, 21,000&#13;
miles, snow tires included. Call Parkside&#13;
extension 2360.&#13;
NAME 8. ADDRESS&#13;
Termpapers Typed&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches 0150 after 5 p.m.&#13;
Foosball 2 Pool Tables&#13;
Air Conditioning Pinball Machine&#13;
Cold Six Packs To Go&#13;
contact Kris Wright 632&#13;
MONDAY NITE&#13;
IS ALWAYS&#13;
Will do typing at my home. Call Nancy. 632-&#13;
CLASSIFIED AD VERTISING O RDER FORM&#13;
Classified Advertising Rate&#13;
5 cents per word up to 25 words for each insertion.&#13;
Payable in advance by check or cash to:&#13;
The Parkside Ranger&#13;
Business Office&#13;
D-194 LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
CHECK ENCLOSED FOR $&#13;
DATES(S) TO RUN&#13;
To find your cost, multiply the&#13;
number pf words times 5&#13;
cents. Multiply that total by&#13;
the number of issues you want&#13;
NAME it to run. A PITCHER&#13;
OF&#13;
LIGHT BEER&#13;
ONLY&#13;
ADDRESS&#13;
PHONE NO .&#13;
One word per space Do not skip space between words to show spacing&#13;
— IN RACINE&#13;
LATHROP AND 21st ( ALMOST)&#13;
Ads must be submitted one week before publication,&#13;
P.E. Bldg. Schedule ^ *1,73 ™E PARKS'DE RANGER"&#13;
12 ™E PARKS,DE "ANGER Wed., Apri! 4, ,973&#13;
/&#13;
V *&#13;
&lt;$v&#13;
ABC . Atlantic • MGM . Nonesuch . Cadet . Blue Note . Pacific&#13;
Jan . Reprise . Warner Brothers . Elektra . Columbia . Immediate&#13;
• Angel • Turnabout • Vanguard • Sta* • Atco • Gordy • Mace •&#13;
DISTRIBUTORS OVERSTOCK SALE!&#13;
HUNDREDS O F L ABELS &amp; ARTISTS INCLUDING&#13;
Everest . Blue Note . Music Guild . Westminster . Command .&#13;
RCA . Chess . Verve . World Pacific . Ounhill . Westminster Gold .&#13;
Impulse • and many others.&#13;
Thelonius Monk . Cream . B. J. Thomas . Mamas &amp; Papas . John&#13;
Mayall . Laurindo Almeida . Sabicas . Eric Clapton . Joan Baei .&#13;
Aretha Franklin . Odetto . John Coltrane . Louis Armstrong . Fifth&#13;
Dimension • Bee Gees • Pittsburgh Symphony • Dionne Warwick •&#13;
Ramsey Lewis • London Symphony • Julian Bream • Wes Montgomery&#13;
• New York Pro Musica . Tim Buckley . William Steinberg . Josef&#13;
Krips • Eddie Harris . Tom Paxton • and many others.&#13;
It NOW O NLY I.9o Schwann&#13;
Cat. List&#13;
4.98 to 6.98&#13;
J4ZZ&#13;
QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED! NO DEALERS PLEASE!&#13;
SCORE AGAIN!! CLASSICAL BOX SET VALUES&#13;
WHILE THEY LAST! HURRY IN TODAY FOR BEST SELECTION&#13;
»VSTRAVINSKY&#13;
HIS FINEST MUSIC&#13;
4 Record Set f&#13;
Value to $24.00 Q&#13;
$&#13;
mn i \u&gt;t n\n&#13;
f t&#13;
BRUCKNER —&#13;
SYMPHONY NO. 7&#13;
2 Record Set m ••&#13;
Value to SI 0.00 / '&#13;
THE CLASSICAL GUITAR&#13;
5 Record Set&#13;
Value to S25.00 L *f8&#13;
TCHAIKOVSKY&#13;
HIS FINEST MUSIC&#13;
3 Record Set only • ol&#13;
Value to SI 8.00 5&#13;
JULIAN BREAM&#13;
THE CLASSICAL GUITAR&#13;
3 Record Set&#13;
Value to $15.00 4 TB&#13;
* vS»-X\&amp;.&#13;
&lt; Xv» xv.-X -y&#13;
; VXv\vV&gt;'oo^ &gt;-X- : y,&#13;
: :Uo&gt; »x«w&#13;
VX4 X.-X&#13;
&lt; .\c&lt;vv.&#13;
*mv%&#13;
AN ANTHOLOGY&#13;
FOLK MUSIC&#13;
5 Record Set&#13;
Value to $25.00&#13;
OF&#13;
AaAnthaiotcyttiYt&amp;t Music&#13;
SALE STARTS WED., T ODAY AND ENDS APRIL 18&#13;
BEETHOVEN SYMPHONI&#13;
8 Record Set only _ ,&#13;
Value to $44.50 9&#13;
THE BEST OF THE BLUES&#13;
3 Record Sat&#13;
Value to $18.00 £ .f 8&#13;
JOHANN STRAUSS&#13;
3 Record Set only _&#13;
Value to $18.00 4&#13;
HW1</text>
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              <text>University ofWisconsin .....Parkside&#13;
Kenosha,Wisconsin  Volume 19, Number 12&#13;
Groovin'&#13;
Harf{&#13;
Ranger Photo by Sunni Beeck&#13;
1Iht1Iteidman, on  lead saxophone,  pertorms  with the . UW·&#13;
~Jazz&#13;
Ensemble on November20  to a packed house&#13;
ID&#13;
the&#13;
OallIumlcation Arts Theatre.&#13;
Professor Chen conducting&#13;
intensiveresearch on campus&#13;
by Susan Luedkes&#13;
Chong-mawChen.arespected&#13;
IilOfessorof biological sciences at&#13;
IheUniversity of Wisconsin  •&#13;
Parkside,is conducting an inten-&#13;
ijveresean:h of three dominant&#13;
~nts    inGreenquists lab277.&#13;
Along with Professor Chen,&#13;
tbereare five students aiding this&#13;
resean:h.The group includes three&#13;
8I1Iduatestudents, a full-time re-&#13;
searchassistant and an under-&#13;
8I1Iduatestudent&#13;
The&#13;
first&#13;
experiement is the&#13;
IIlOstJllOminentofChen'sresearch.&#13;
Continued  on Paae 6&#13;
Chong-maw Cben&#13;
Thursday, November 29,1990&#13;
UW-Parkside's  Buenker  named&#13;
1990 Professor of the Year for state&#13;
Latesba N. Jude&#13;
News Writer&#13;
For the first time, the Council&#13;
for Advancement and Support of&#13;
Education  (CASE) chose state&#13;
winners in all 50 states in 1990.&#13;
Since 1981, CASE has been bon-&#13;
oring professors for contributions&#13;
to undergraduates, instirutions of&#13;
higberleaming,andsocietythrough&#13;
theprestigiousProfessorofthe Year&#13;
Award. CASE&#13;
also&#13;
recognizes an&#13;
outstanding Canadian professor,&#13;
and holds competitions in aliSO&#13;
states and the DistrictofColumbia.&#13;
Two expert panels composed&#13;
of deans of nonentrant schools,&#13;
education writers, students, gov-&#13;
ernment corporate, foundation, and&#13;
association representatives assess&#13;
the nominees according to the fol-&#13;
lowing criteria:&#13;
, extraordinary commitment&#13;
to teaching&#13;
, service to the institution and&#13;
the professor&#13;
, balance of achievement in&#13;
leaching, scholarship and service&#13;
to the institution&#13;
, evidence of impact on and&#13;
involvement with students&#13;
, evidence of achievement by&#13;
former students and&#13;
'quality of support materials&#13;
from current and former  s I u -&#13;
dents.&#13;
JohnD. Buenker, Professor of&#13;
History&#13;
and&#13;
chair of the History&#13;
department at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside  was nomi-&#13;
nated by former students, current&#13;
students and faculty for the award.&#13;
Later, Professor  Buenker was&#13;
named&#13;
the&#13;
1990 Wisconsin Pro-&#13;
fessor of the Yearby the Council&#13;
for the Advancement and Support&#13;
of Education.&#13;
Buenker  received his&#13;
bachelor's degree in U.S. History&#13;
from Loras College,  and his&#13;
master's and doctorate degrees in&#13;
U.S.  History from Georgetown&#13;
University. Furthermore. Profes-&#13;
sor Buenker hasbeen a professorat&#13;
UW-Parkside for 25 years and is&#13;
still currently teaching and writing&#13;
books. One of his books include&#13;
lmmigrtuion    and  Elhniciry:&#13;
A&#13;
Guide&#13;
10&#13;
In/o,malion&#13;
Sources,&#13;
wriuen with Nicholas C. Burcke!.&#13;
Jobn D. Ruenker&#13;
Another book&#13;
IS&#13;
titled&#13;
Urban His-&#13;
tory:&#13;
A  Guide&#13;
10&#13;
Information&#13;
Sources,&#13;
co-authored with Gerald&#13;
Michael Greenfield and WilliamJ.&#13;
Murin.&#13;
Professor Buenker received a&#13;
plaque in recognition of his award.&#13;
The plaque states, "For&#13;
exesordi-&#13;
nary contributions to&#13;
the&#13;
lives&#13;
and&#13;
Continued  on Page 6&#13;
New smoking policy shaped&#13;
Smoking Policy Advisory Committee's first meeting&#13;
"t&#13;
by Susan Luepkes&#13;
The newly appointed Smok-&#13;
ing Policy Advisory Committee&#13;
met for the&#13;
first&#13;
time on Wednes-&#13;
day Oct 24 todiscuss&#13;
the&#13;
provisions&#13;
of a new smoking policy for UW-&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The commillee was appointed&#13;
by Chancellor Sheila Kaplan after&#13;
the  Campus   Environment&#13;
Committee's  recommendations&#13;
and concerns last ~pring were di-&#13;
rected at the violations of&#13;
the&#13;
cur-&#13;
rent smoking policy. These viola-&#13;
tions were described as "smoking&#13;
in private corridors and multi-pe~-&#13;
sonomces." Thus,tbecom&#13;
mJltee&#13;
s&#13;
purpose is&#13;
to&#13;
review the factors and&#13;
present a detailed report to the&#13;
Chancellor by Jan. 15.1991.&#13;
The&#13;
Chancellor will then make thefinal&#13;
decision.&#13;
The committee consists of&#13;
twelve members.  They include&#13;
Wayne Johnson, Professor of Phi-&#13;
losophy and the Chair and Secre-&#13;
tary&#13;
oftheCommittee; Gary GOelZ,&#13;
Assistant   Chancellor    for&#13;
Adminstration and Fiscal Affairs;&#13;
VeraKolb,ProfessorofChemislIy;&#13;
Andrew McLean, Professor of&#13;
English; William Niebuhr, Direc-&#13;
tor of&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Union; Ron Singer.&#13;
AssociateProfessorof Accounting;&#13;
L. Meyer, Don Prange and Don&#13;
Continued  on page 4&#13;
Inside    ~&#13;
this week's&#13;
Ranger .••&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Page 2&#13;
PSGA Report.   Page 3&#13;
Devil's Advocate Page 3&#13;
Counselor's&#13;
Page 4&#13;
Gabe's Gab&#13;
Page 6&#13;
Sports&#13;
Page 7&#13;
An&#13;
Page 12&#13;
This&#13;
Week&#13;
.Page 13&#13;
International...  .Page 14&#13;
Oassifieds.&#13;
.Pagc&#13;
16&#13;
~Ra!!!.lDR~"'.L!..'&#13;
Pa!!.ll!Re::..=.2&#13;
L__....:&#13;
E&#13;
=.::d=l:.:·&#13;
t:...:O:...:n::....·_a_l_---}--------'-N=ov=em~be~r22!..9.I~9~&#13;
L~tte~~&#13;
!h~!&#13;
th~re~~!!200~edoor&#13;
Here s your br a&#13;
ddr    yet   of my house and seeing the police&#13;
TIus letter IS to ath ~~hriS    ear in front, and watehing myfalher&#13;
other aspects of rapeD  ak .de"    scream at the officer, "you caleh&#13;
Toliver   and  "DA    ar  sbo&#13;
l&#13;
ut    that Son-of-a-bitch  or I will!" and&#13;
Id • be bothered to care a    .&#13;
,&#13;
cou  n t..&#13;
.  d   his view-    being fearful that it was me hewas&#13;
Yes. Chns ISentItl~ua:  the view-    angry with. You&#13;
see.&#13;
Chris,three&#13;
pomts, but to&#13;
perpe&#13;
bee&#13;
years olds don't understand a&#13;
I&#13;
point that women who have morne   about your perspective on life anOd&#13;
t&#13;
..&#13;
ed by rape are no&#13;
'&#13;
vicurmz&#13;
you didn't  include  them in&#13;
y&#13;
than  gold-digging,   comatose.&#13;
.'&#13;
our&#13;
uh&#13;
tfeeling&#13;
survey. Neither does a I3yearold&#13;
embarrased prudes WI&#13;
OU&#13;
.&#13;
fi&#13;
d&#13;
'&#13;
.    '&#13;
h If'  both uncaring    gal  who&#13;
10&#13;
s&#13;
herself&#13;
10&#13;
an&#13;
Illthelflower   a ,IS&#13;
undefensiblesituationwithah&#13;
r.&#13;
and dangerous.&#13;
al&#13;
bo'&#13;
ype&#13;
You said&#13;
"Gimrne&#13;
a break"    norfm  teenage  "Yhwho s basic&#13;
,&#13;
"b  ak" Chris&#13;
per ormance ISto   old herhands&#13;
well here s your   re·&#13;
"&#13;
~y   flfSt~reak"   was when I   and do what you want.  The&#13;
boy&#13;
wastheIastofl4persons.assaulted-&#13;
who  was never  taught that No&#13;
by a young man II years older than   means' NO_C1\l'enences like&#13;
this&#13;
If I&#13;
t&#13;
OU&#13;
to&#13;
know Chris.    leave scars Chns, ones that often&#13;
myse  .  wan y&#13;
•&#13;
k   led&#13;
ha&#13;
I&#13;
cutely aware  of the'   aren&#13;
t&#13;
seen, ac now&#13;
ged&#13;
Ot&#13;
at·&#13;
t  t   was add&#13;
'I&#13;
h  •&#13;
sensationsbeinginflicteduponme,&#13;
ten e  to&#13;
unu&#13;
t ey ve created&#13;
I&#13;
harassed  but by the fact   dysfunction&#13;
III&#13;
the Victim, They&#13;
wasem.&#13;
ak  ' h  d&#13;
Chri&#13;
hat&#13;
I&#13;
O&#13;
utside my home naked    melt&#13;
ar  to trust    s, harder&#13;
twas&#13;
•&#13;
f&#13;
I'&#13;
hips&#13;
bee&#13;
and feeling that it was me who had   to  orm&#13;
re auons&#13;
IpS&#13;
ause&#13;
lhe&#13;
done something  wrong. The gag   fear lingers.andblockstheposinw&#13;
left cuts at the sides of my mouth    elements of the rel~tlOnshIP.&#13;
and the cloth he tied to my hands&#13;
DId I cry rape.  The&#13;
boy&#13;
who&#13;
with left bruises.&#13;
Continued  on Page&#13;
II&#13;
1HE  ENEMY OF&#13;
MY ENEMY IS&#13;
A CHUMP.&#13;
From the desk of the Editor&#13;
With the arrival of the holiday season and the preparations for fatal&#13;
finals coming very quickly around the corner. the thought of consuming&#13;
a few spirits has probably crossed your mind. This brings up an interesting&#13;
point: What ever happened to "Push I9?"  Is it the fact that we finally&#13;
decided to dedicate our time to something more worthwhile?&#13;
Or&#13;
doesn't&#13;
it bother people. beeause if they want to drink, they will.  Aren't the&#13;
increased fines and strict enforcement  stiff enough?&#13;
If&#13;
people can get&#13;
drafted and vote wben they're&#13;
18.&#13;
why can't they legally&#13;
drink&#13;
when they're 19? The voting issue is a weak point&#13;
because&#13;
statistics show only&#13;
one&#13;
in nine college students registered to vote in 1990, It is just something to fall&#13;
back on. Should we&#13;
sacrifice our&#13;
federal highway fund so 19 year olds can legally drink? Also. would we be&#13;
on the wrong end of lawsuits from parents in Minnesota. Michigan, and lllinois when their son or daughter is&#13;
killed in our state from underage drinking?&#13;
Since we are not really&#13;
located&#13;
in a college town, more students are apt to get away with possessing a falsified&#13;
ill. Maybe the&#13;
bars&#13;
don't mind students carrying fake ill's, because it means an increase in business, and if the&#13;
cops&#13;
raid the place. the bar owner can simply say. "Hey they had an ill."&#13;
Our&#13;
area&#13;
taverns are not as high-tech as taverns in Oshkosh. Whitewater. or Madison.  It takes several&#13;
minutes&#13;
to&#13;
get into most of&#13;
those&#13;
taverns and they can catch the "best of the best" when it comes&#13;
to&#13;
fake ill·s.&#13;
So&#13;
is&#13;
it alright for taverns&#13;
10&#13;
let underaged drinkers loiter on their premises? Maybe.&#13;
It&#13;
would be alright if&#13;
the&#13;
W1deraged&#13;
drinlrers&#13;
and inexperienced&#13;
drinkers&#13;
knew how&#13;
to&#13;
handle themselves after a night of&#13;
consumption.&#13;
When you're&#13;
half&#13;
in&#13;
the bag it&#13;
doesn't&#13;
matter if it takes ~&#13;
fifteen&#13;
minutes or a half-hour&#13;
to&#13;
get home. These&#13;
aren't the Guiness&#13;
Book&#13;
of World&#13;
Records&#13;
days, so&#13;
if&#13;
you're going to&#13;
drink&#13;
and drive. don 't prove 00your buddies&#13;
that you can drive&#13;
90&#13;
miles&#13;
an&#13;
hour&#13;
around&#13;
a curve. but prove&#13;
to&#13;
Ibem that the you can handle your alcohol and&#13;
not drive&#13;
like&#13;
a bat-out-()f·hell.&#13;
The BACCHUS (Boost Alcobol Consciousness Concerning Heallb University Students) Committee on&#13;
campus&#13;
will be sponsoring several evenlS before both Chrisunas and Spring Break.&#13;
The&#13;
committee is trying to&#13;
infonn students of Ibe consequences of drinking&#13;
and&#13;
driving and responsible drinking.  You can still&#13;
pany&#13;
and&#13;
have a good&#13;
time.&#13;
just don't&#13;
drink&#13;
and&#13;
drive.&#13;
by&#13;
Craig&#13;
SiJqlkim&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Member of the AssociatedCollegiatePress&#13;
Subscription  rate for one year is $5.00.&#13;
Please address all correspondence   to:&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parks ide&#13;
Ranger Newspaper&#13;
Post Office BoX2000&#13;
900 Wooq Road&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53141-2000&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Office, (414) 553-2287&#13;
Business Office (414)'553-2295&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Craig&#13;
A.&#13;
Simpkins&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Dan Chiappetta&#13;
International Editor&#13;
Gwen Heller&#13;
Entertainment  Editor&#13;
Dawn Mailand&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Jeff Lemmermann&#13;
Asst. Sports Editors&#13;
Mike McKowen&#13;
Ted McIntyre&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Tad MCCarthy&#13;
Layout Editor&#13;
&amp;:OttSinger&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Sara-Kahi&#13;
Pub.lic Relations  Director&#13;
•GregLebrick&#13;
.Advisors&#13;
Stuart Rubner&#13;
J~nNowak  '&#13;
'Business  Manager&#13;
Kenneth J. Schuh&#13;
Asst. Business  Manager&#13;
Heather McGee&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Terri Fortney&#13;
Distribution  Manager&#13;
Ron&#13;
Hansen&#13;
Circulation Manager&#13;
ElizabethSpail&#13;
a&#13;
Photo&#13;
Editor&#13;
SunniBee&lt;k&#13;
Photographer'&#13;
Todd&#13;
Goers&#13;
Henry&#13;
Corn&#13;
ctl&#13;
Kurt GeilfuS!&#13;
Cartoonists&#13;
Paul&#13;
Berge&#13;
Chris  Ingram&#13;
Glen&#13;
Keily&#13;
CenerillStaff:&#13;
I)(&gt;nald&#13;
Andrewski,&#13;
Gab&lt;!&#13;
Kliikll;jlinN"wcomb,&#13;
Rufus Thome:&#13;
[)a~~&#13;
.D&lt;1he"!Y,Mona Shannon,  LisaV9pal,JohnTayIor,    David WId&lt;.I&#13;
~a)'lkm~i Jea:&#13;
I!rornS!ad,&#13;
Latesh",ju&lt;:I,e"K"lly  McKissick.&#13;
Kimbel&#13;
Y&#13;
fr~~"'\l~'Ghl;1sOegJJl"',§uS;I!ll,\~k~..LenAnhold,p,~f1Il:1a!~&#13;
..&#13;
,&#13;
-.-&#13;
".'&#13;
.,:,'.'&#13;
,&#13;
..&#13;
'.',.",.":&#13;
",&#13;
".&#13;
"'''''.:-&#13;
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