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              <text>Guskin's appointed criticized&#13;
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              <text>\&#13;
er&#13;
Wednesday, March 30, 1977&#13;
Vol. 5, No. 23&#13;
~ ~() The inteority of men is to be CVCV&#13;
measured by their conduct, not&#13;
by their professions.&#13;
, G"skin's appointment criticized I&#13;
I&#13;
II&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
J&#13;
Associ~te Professor Carole Vapot, Chairperson of the Affirmative Action Advisory&#13;
rcmmtttee. expresses concern for equal opportunity employment proctices at Porkside.&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
The Affirmative Action Advisory Committee was formed by&#13;
Chancellor Guskin last summer to prepare Parkside's affirmative&#13;
action plan. The committee advises the chancellor on equal&#13;
opportunity employment matters at Parkside.&#13;
Chancellor Guskin's selection for Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
Administration and Fiscal Affairs, Gary Goetz, has drawn sharp&#13;
criticism from the Affirmative Action Advisory Committee.&#13;
The position of Assistant Chancellor for Administration, was left&#13;
vacant by the resignation of Erwin Zuehlke. Chancellor Guskin&#13;
combined the Assistant Chancellor functions with Cary Goetz'&#13;
current position, budget planning. This merger does not open the&#13;
new position to applicants.&#13;
Members of the committee believe this procedure is not in the best&#13;
interest of breaking up the white male leadership structure at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
"This is far more than a promotion based on expanded duties. How&#13;
can we have faith that principles of affirmative action will be&#13;
followed on the classified and assistant professor level when they are&#13;
Committee criticized&#13;
violated on the assistant chancellor level," said Associate Professor&#13;
Carole Vopat, Chairperson, Affirmative Action Advisory Committee&#13;
Chancellor Guskin does not agree with the interpretation of his&#13;
action.&#13;
"It's not an affirmative action issue. The committee has a hard time&#13;
distinguishing between affirmative action and personnel function.&#13;
We are transfering functions from the position of Assistant&#13;
Chancellor for Admisistration to budget planning. I have contacted&#13;
the affirmative action officials for the UW-system and I am satisfied&#13;
my action on this issue is correct," said Guskin.&#13;
Members of the committee pointed out that last September when&#13;
Alan Shucard was appointed Director of the Center for Teaching&#13;
Excellence by Guskin, the committee told Guskin they felt the&#13;
appointment bypassed affirmative action principles. Committee&#13;
members indicated they were assured by Guskin, "it would not&#13;
happen again."&#13;
"It's a slap in the face. He's wasting our time." said Vopat.&#13;
During Guskin's "administrative reorganization," eight&#13;
administrators were eliminated, including Parkside's Affirmative&#13;
Action Officer. The committee was not informed how affirmative&#13;
action at Parkside would progress without someone monitoring&#13;
accountability.&#13;
"We found out about it like everyone else," said Vopat.&#13;
The chancellor is not happy with the progress of the committee&#13;
with regard to their mission of completing the plan for affirmative&#13;
action implementation at Parkside.&#13;
"I set this committee up last summer. They were supposed to&#13;
submit an affirmative action plan for this campus by September of&#13;
last year. They still have not finished it. If they can't finish the plan I'll&#13;
have to have someone else in my office do it," said Guskin.&#13;
The fate of this dispute was not apparent at press-time A meeting&#13;
of the committee and the chancellor was scheduled for Tuesday,&#13;
March 29. Members of the committee said they expected to hear the&#13;
"same old story" from Guskin.&#13;
Some members indicated a despondency toward Parkside's record&#13;
of affirmative action and their work to improve chances for&#13;
minorities and women to get employed in administrative positions at&#13;
Parkside. Members of the committee did not deny they were&#13;
considering resigning to protest the pattern of promotions and hirings&#13;
lately. Guskin remained confident of hrs compliance with affirmative&#13;
action principles.&#13;
"I am proud of our affirmative record at Parkside, and 1'\1stand by&#13;
it, said Guskjn.&#13;
Breadth proposal stirs controversy&#13;
by Bob Hoffman&#13;
The first open hearing on Breadth Requirements&#13;
saw the Breadth Committees preliminary report&#13;
. assailed by Humanities professors. Breadth, under&#13;
the committees preliminary report, would require&#13;
each student to complete at least six credits in each&#13;
of five specified breadth areas outside the area of&#13;
his/her major.&#13;
Robert Canary, chairman of the humanities&#13;
division, led off in the criticism, labeling the&#13;
preliminary report a "rather inadequate product&#13;
with minimal changes. This proposal should've&#13;
been presented in more detail and should've&#13;
presented alternatives. This report is part of&#13;
academic polltlcs. .. it lacks any ideal of what&#13;
Parkstde education ought to mean."&#13;
"The objective of this committee," said Canary,&#13;
"should've been to present alternatives. I would've&#13;
hoped that this committee would've come forward&#13;
with proposals that could've lead to educational&#13;
debate. Instead they layout only one proposal to&#13;
debate. The faculty Senate is a useless place to&#13;
construct alternatives. .The criteria really doesn't&#13;
tell me enough.f t's a very restrictive list in oee area&#13;
but great width in others which brings out further&#13;
the absurdity of the committee's report."&#13;
Richard Rosenberg, a member of the committee,&#13;
disagreed with Canary's analysis of the committee's&#13;
report. .&#13;
"I wouldn't want to serve on a legislative&#13;
committee for a year and then come up-with a list&#13;
of alternatives. There's no way the Faculty Senate&#13;
could handle more than one alternative," stated&#13;
Rosenberg.&#13;
Also critical of the preliminary report was Carole&#13;
Vopat, associate professor of English.&#13;
"This committee missed a chance to create really&#13;
creative classes." said Vopat. Chairman JamesShea&#13;
took exception with that remark.&#13;
"There was no support among the faculty for&#13;
that. You'd be forcing people into an administrative&#13;
structure whose underlying philosophy students&#13;
might not like," said Shea.&#13;
Don Kummings, Associate Professor of English,&#13;
also voiced opposition to the committee's report.&#13;
"The committee always comes back to factors of&#13;
practicality and political considerations. We&#13;
shouldn't do that, we shouldn't let an opportunity&#13;
like this go by. We can do things that are&#13;
potentially exciting instead of this, which is&#13;
uninspired. Maybe we will have to come down to&#13;
something less idealistic. But I'd just urge the&#13;
committee not to rush to any quick conclusions."&#13;
said Kummings.&#13;
A faculty member who wished to remain&#13;
unnamed commented on the charges by the&#13;
Humanities Division. "It's really funny that&#13;
anything that doesn't go along with what the&#13;
Humanities Division wants is politically progmatic.&#13;
They talk about idealism but when you look at what&#13;
that idealism means to them in translates into&#13;
self-interest. They wanted a much stricter breadth&#13;
requirement that would have forced students to&#13;
take specific courses. This is more of a lateral shift."&#13;
Sylvia Debevec-Henntng, French professor, also&#13;
commented against the committee's report.&#13;
"The criteria the committee set up does not&#13;
follow from the objectives. This just keeps the&#13;
status quo. If you don't set objectives you can't do&#13;
anything," said Debevec-Henning.&#13;
A supporter of the committee's report&#13;
Surinder Datta.&#13;
"We have a limited amount of students with&#13;
which to deal. The criticism the report has received&#13;
is calling for resources we don't have. To&#13;
implement one new course major areas would have&#13;
to give up resources and cut back. These&#13;
counterproposals (for creative new courses) are&#13;
highly desirable but impossible. The courses would&#13;
be difficult to coordinate."&#13;
STUDENTS VOICE OPINION&#13;
Phil Livingston, editor of the Ranger, brought up&#13;
the point of how these new requirements compare&#13;
with those of other colleges. "What is this going to&#13;
communicate to the students? We're having&#13;
problems with transfers. Whitewater is making an&#13;
active recruiting push down here and they're doing&#13;
well. How does this breadth proposal compare with&#13;
other schools?" No one on the committee could&#13;
answer the question. Another area that the&#13;
committee did not take into consideration was the&#13;
question of whether a student could transfer to&#13;
another school and have their credits transfer.&#13;
Still another area the committee failed to&#13;
consider was how double majors would be taken&#13;
into account complying with the breadth proposal.&#13;
"A student would probably have to declare a&#13;
primary major and then a secondary major," said&#13;
Rosenberg.&#13;
I .&#13;
er&#13;
Wednesday, March 30, 1977&#13;
Vol. 5, No. 23&#13;
. ~(5 The integrity of men is to be S)S)&#13;
meosured by their conduct, not&#13;
by their professions.&#13;
Guslcin' s appointment criticized&#13;
violated on the assistant chancellor level,'' said Associate Professor&#13;
Carole Vopat, Chairperson, Affirmative Action Advisory Committee.&#13;
Chancellor Guskm does not agree with the interpretation of his&#13;
action.&#13;
"It's not an affirmative action issue The committee has a hard time&#13;
distinguishing between affirmative action and personnel function.&#13;
We are transfering functions from the position of Assistant&#13;
Chancellor for Admisistration to budget planning. I have contacted&#13;
the affirmative action officials for the UW-system and I am satisfied&#13;
my action on this issue is correct,'' said Guskin.&#13;
Members of the committee pointed out that last September when&#13;
Alan Shucard was appointed Director of the Center for Teaching&#13;
Excellence by Guskin, the committee told Guskin they felt the&#13;
appointment bypassed affirmative action principles. Committee&#13;
members indicated they were assured by Guskin, "it would not&#13;
happen again."&#13;
Associ~te Professor Carole Vopot, Chairperson of the Affirmative Action Advisory&#13;
Committee, expresses concern for equal opportunity employment practices ot Parkside.&#13;
" It's a slap in the face. He's wasting our time." said Vopat.&#13;
During Guskin's "administrative reorganization," eight&#13;
administrators were eliminated, including Parkside's Affirmative&#13;
Action Officer. The committee was not informed how affirmative&#13;
action at Parkside would progress without someone monitoring&#13;
accountabi I ity.&#13;
"We found out about it like everyone else,'' said Vopat. by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
The Affirmative Action Advisory Committee was formed by&#13;
Chancellor Guskin last summer to prepare Parkside's affirmative&#13;
action plan. The committee advises the chancellor on equal&#13;
opportunity employment matters at Parkside.&#13;
The chancellor is not happy with the progress of the committee&#13;
with regard to their mission of completing the plan for affirmative&#13;
action implementation at Parkside.&#13;
" I set this committee up last summer. They were supposed to&#13;
submit an affirmative action plan for this campus by September of&#13;
last year. They still have not finished it. If they can't finish the plan I'll&#13;
Chancellor Guskin's selection have to have someone else in my office do 1t," said Guskin for Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
Administration and Fiscal Affairs, Gary Goetz, has drawn sharp&#13;
criticism from the Affirmative Action Advisory Committee.&#13;
The position of Assistant Chancellor for Administration, was left&#13;
vacant by the resignation of Erwin Zuehlke. Chancellor Guskin&#13;
combined the Assistant Chancellor functions with Gary Goetz'&#13;
current position, budget planning. This merger does not open the&#13;
new position to applicants.&#13;
The fate of this dispute was not apparent at press-time A meeting&#13;
of the committee and the chancellor was scheduled for Tuesday,&#13;
March 29. Members of the committee said they expected to hear the&#13;
"same old story" from Guskin.&#13;
Members of the committee believe this procedure is not in the best&#13;
interest of breaking up the white male leadership structure at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Some members indicated a despondency toward Parkside's record&#13;
of affirmative action and their work to improve chances for&#13;
minorities and women to get employed in administrative positions at&#13;
Parkside. Members of the committee did not deny they were&#13;
considering resigning to protest the pattem of promotions and hirings&#13;
lately. Guskm remained confident of his compliance with aff1rmat1ve&#13;
"This is far more than a promotion based on expanded duties How action principles&#13;
can we have faith that principles of affirmative action will be&#13;
followed on the c_lassified and assistant professor level when they are&#13;
" I am proud of our affirmative record at Parkside, and I'll stand by&#13;
it, said Guskin.&#13;
Committee criticized&#13;
Breadth proposal stirs controversy&#13;
by Bob Hoffman&#13;
The first open hearing on Breadth Requirements&#13;
saw the Breadth Committees preliminary report&#13;
· assailed by Humanities professors. Breadth, under&#13;
the committees preliminary report, would require&#13;
each student to complete at least six credits in each&#13;
of five specified breadth areas outside the area of&#13;
his/her major.&#13;
Robert Canary, chairman of the humanities&#13;
division, led off in the criticism, labeling the&#13;
preliminary report a "rather inadequate product&#13;
with minimal changes. This proposal should've&#13;
been presented in more detail and should've&#13;
presented alternatives. This report is part of&#13;
academic politics . .. it lacks any ideal of what&#13;
Parkside education ought to mean."&#13;
"The objective of this committee,'' said Canary,&#13;
"should've been to present alternatives. I would've&#13;
hoped that this committee would've come forward&#13;
with proposals t.hat could've lead to educational&#13;
debate. Instead they lay out only one proposal to&#13;
debate. The faculty Senate is a useless plac~ to&#13;
construct alternatives . . The criteria really doesn't&#13;
tell me enough . It's a very restrictive list in o~e area&#13;
but great width in others which brings out further&#13;
the absurdity of the committee's .report."&#13;
Richard Rosenberg, a member of the committee,&#13;
disagreed with Canary's analysis of the committee's&#13;
report.&#13;
" I wouldn't want to serve on a legislative&#13;
committee for a year and then come up with a list&#13;
of alternatives. There's no way the Faculty Senate&#13;
could handle more than one alternative,'' stated&#13;
Rosenberg.&#13;
Also critical of the preliminary report was Carole&#13;
Vopat, associate professor of English.&#13;
"This committee missed a chance to create really&#13;
creative classes ." said Vopat. Chairman Jam~s Shea&#13;
took exception with that remark .&#13;
"There was no support among the faculty for&#13;
that. You'd be forcing people into an administrative&#13;
structure whose underlying philosophy students&#13;
might not like,'' said Shea.&#13;
Don Kummings, Associate Professor of English,&#13;
also voiced opposition to the committee's report.&#13;
" The committee always comes back to factors of&#13;
practicality and political considerations. We&#13;
shouldn't do that, we shouldn't let an opportunity&#13;
like this go by. We can do things that are&#13;
potentially exciting instead of this, which is&#13;
uninspired. Maybe we will have to come down to&#13;
something less idealistic. But I'd just urge the&#13;
committee not to rush to any quick conclusions."&#13;
said Kummings.&#13;
A faculty member who wished to remain&#13;
unnamed commented on the charges by the&#13;
Humanities Division . "It's really funny that&#13;
anything that doesn't go along with what the&#13;
Humanities Division wants is politically pragmatic.&#13;
They talk about idealism but when you look at what&#13;
that idealism means to them in translates into&#13;
self-interest. They wanted a much stricter breadth&#13;
requirement that would have forced students to&#13;
take specific coyrses. This is more of a lateral shift."&#13;
Sylvia Debevec-Henning, French professor, also&#13;
commented against the committee's report.&#13;
" The criteria the committee set up does&#13;
follow from the objectives This just ke ps the&#13;
status quo. If you don't set objectives you can't do&#13;
anything,'' said Debevec-Henning.&#13;
A supporter of the committee's report&#13;
Surinder Datta.&#13;
"We have a limited amount of students with&#13;
which to deal . The criticism the report has r ceived&#13;
is calling for resources we don't have. To&#13;
implement one new course major areas would have&#13;
to give up resources and cut back . These&#13;
counterproposals (for creative new courses) are&#13;
highly desirable but impossible. The courses would&#13;
be difficult to coordinate ."&#13;
STUDENTS VOICE OPINION&#13;
Phil Livingston, editor of the Ranger, brought up&#13;
the point of how these new requirements compare&#13;
with those of other colleges . " What is this going to&#13;
communicate to the students? We're having&#13;
problems with transfers . Whitewater is making an&#13;
active recruiting push down here and they're doing&#13;
well . How does this breadth proposal compare with&#13;
other schools?" o one on the committee could&#13;
answer the question. Another area that the&#13;
comm ittee did not take into consideration was the&#13;
question of whether a student could transfer to&#13;
another school and have their credits transfer.&#13;
Still another area the committee failed to&#13;
consider was how double majors would be taken&#13;
into account complying with the breadth proposal .&#13;
" A student would probably have to declare a&#13;
primary major and then a secondary major," said&#13;
Rosenberg. &#13;
leditorial&#13;
New Bradford' NOWI&#13;
Last Sunday, Kenosha area high school&#13;
students marched through the streets from three&#13;
locations to Bradford's open house.&#13;
Laid bare before the public eyes were the holes&#13;
in the heating duct that are used for hair dryers in&#13;
the girl's locker room.&#13;
Everyone could see the band trophies caged&#13;
away in a cave in the stuffy basement band room.&#13;
Electronic buffs marvelled at the ancient brass&#13;
relays in the main office that control the bells and&#13;
clocks.&#13;
People were amazed as the librarian pointed&#13;
out the only two electrlcal outlets in the library.&#13;
Bradford High School is an educational&#13;
museum! It is an old facility that most students&#13;
would find depressing even on a nice Spring day,&#13;
as they plodded through dimly lit halls to class.&#13;
The most treasured experience of the day was&#13;
to witness these young people marching in the&#13;
streets shouting, "New Bradford Now!"&#13;
What must they think of a city that puts them in&#13;
buildings like that and suggests they respect their&#13;
community? How do they feel about what is&#13;
provided for them?&#13;
What is their reason for loving the city of&#13;
Kenoshaand staying to work and make it a better&#13;
community?&#13;
Will a city let these young people down by&#13;
voting again to reject a new high school?&#13;
Soon enough, most cities will face the decision&#13;
whether or not to cut secondary education&#13;
expenditures because of declining enrollments.&#13;
Will we cut the budget or spend some money&#13;
on smaller class sizes, more library aquisitions,&#13;
better trained instructors, instructional media&#13;
equipment, and new buildings?&#13;
We have at stake the responsibility of leading&#13;
the young people who will outlive us. How would&#13;
you feel about passing the torch to someone you.&#13;
stuck in a basement without adequate&#13;
ventilation?&#13;
Kenosha voters should vote yes on the new&#13;
high school proposal because it's one problem we&#13;
can lick. Now is the time to examine the issues&#13;
and plan for the future.&#13;
On April 5, vote yes for Kenosha's new high&#13;
school.&#13;
Our Writers&#13;
Bob Holfman, Chris Clausen, Mona Maillet,&#13;
Fred Tenuta. Thomas Nolen. Karen. Putman,&#13;
Timothy J. Zuehlsdorf, Bob Jambois, Jami LaMar&#13;
Linda Lasco, Douglas Edenhauser, Phil Hermann&#13;
Michael Murpl\y Laura Lacock, Mary N. Gehring'&#13;
Cheryl Powalisz&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Editor Philip L. Livingston 553.2295&#13;
Art Director Vanessa Swift&#13;
Copy Editor Bruce Wagner&#13;
News Editor dohn McKloskey&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor Jean Tenuta&#13;
~Circulatiol'\Sue Marquardt&#13;
General Manager Thomas R. Cooper 553-2287&#13;
Advertising Manager John Gabriel 553-2287&#13;
Advertising Sales Kathy Sabbath&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students 01 the&#13;
University of Wis~onsin·Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial polley and content.&#13;
/.&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
,&#13;
!&#13;
\I editorial&#13;
Nevv Bradford-NOW!&#13;
Last Sunday, Kenosha area high school&#13;
students marched through the streets from three&#13;
locations to Bradford's open house.&#13;
Laid bare before the public eyes were the holes&#13;
in the heating duct that are used for hair dryers in&#13;
the girl's locker room.&#13;
Everyone could see the band trophies caged&#13;
away in a cave in the stuffy basement band room.&#13;
Electronic buffs marvelled at the ancient brass&#13;
relays in the main office that control the bells and&#13;
clocks.&#13;
People were amazed as the librarian pointed&#13;
out the only two electrical outlets in the library.&#13;
Bradford High School is an educational&#13;
museum! It is an old facility that most students&#13;
would find depressing even on a nice Spring day,&#13;
as they plodded through dimly lit halls tq class.&#13;
The most treasured experience of the day was&#13;
to witness these young people marching in the&#13;
streets shouting, "New Bradford Now!"&#13;
What must they think of a city that puts them in&#13;
buildings like that and suggests they respect their&#13;
community? How do they feel about what is&#13;
provided for them?&#13;
What is their reason for loving the city of&#13;
Kenosha and staying to work and make it a better&#13;
community?&#13;
Will a city let these young people down by&#13;
voting again -to reject a new high school?&#13;
Soon enough, most cities will face the decision&#13;
whether or not to cut secondary education&#13;
expenditures because of declining enrollments.&#13;
Will we cut the budget or spend some money&#13;
on smaller class sizes, rnore library aquisitions,&#13;
better trained instructors, instructional media&#13;
equipment, and new buildings? .&#13;
We have at stake the responsibility of leading&#13;
the young people who will outlive us. How would&#13;
you feel about passing the torch to someone you&#13;
stuck in a basement without adequate&#13;
ventilation?&#13;
Kenosha voters should vote yes on the new&#13;
high school proposal because it's one problem we&#13;
can lick. Now is the time to examine the issues&#13;
and plan for the future.&#13;
On April 5, vote yes for Kenosha's new high&#13;
school.&#13;
Our Writers&#13;
Bob Hoffman, Chris Clausen, Mona Maillet,&#13;
Fred Tenuta, Thomas Nolen, Karen Putman&#13;
Timothy J. Zuehlsdorf, Bob Jambois, Jami La.Mar&#13;
Linda Lasco, Douglas Edenhauser, Phil Hermann&#13;
Michael Murpl\y Laura Lacock, Mary N. Gehring'&#13;
Cheryl Powalisz&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Editor Philip L. Livingston 553-2295&#13;
Art Dir ctor Vanessa Swift&#13;
Copy Editor Bruce Wagner&#13;
News Editor John McKloskey&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor Jean Tenuta , Circulation Sue Marquardt&#13;
General Manager Thomas R. Cooper 553-2287&#13;
Advertising Manager John Gabriel 553-2287&#13;
Advertising Sales Kathy Sabbath&#13;
Ranger is written and edited b·y students of the&#13;
University of Wis£onsin-Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content.&#13;
I&#13;
/_ &#13;
Organic chemist, Her Gobind Kharono, discussed his research in synthetic&#13;
genes last Friday in Greenquist Hall. Khorana refused to comment on&#13;
recombinant DNA, the controversial tinkering with human genes.&#13;
Nielsen comments onPSGA&#13;
by Christopher Clausen&#13;
After the elections on March 10, there has come&#13;
a series of resignations from the PSGA Senate.&#13;
Among the resignations was that of'Daniel Nielsen&#13;
asSenator of Labor Economics and as the President&#13;
Pro Tempore of. the Senate.&#13;
During the time Nielsen was in charge of the&#13;
Senate as President Pro-Tempe the Senate passed&#13;
quite a few laws especially during the second&#13;
semester regulating the Student Organizational&#13;
Council (SOC) and Segregated University Fees&#13;
Allocations Committee (SUFAC).&#13;
Nielsen agreed to accept the post of President&#13;
Pro-Tempore at the request of President Kiyoko&#13;
Bowden to help reorganize the senate. According&#13;
to Nielsen, "the Senate we have now is 100% better&#13;
than the Senate we had a year ago when I joined. I&#13;
am very proud that we in the Senate got down to&#13;
work."&#13;
Among that work is included not only the SUFAC&#13;
and SOC rules but also the sponsoring of a Spanish&#13;
Speaking Cultural Day, a high school senior visiting&#13;
day, and co-sponsoring the blood-drive. "I didn't&#13;
care as much about those rules (SUFACand SOC),"&#13;
said Nielsen, "as I wanted the Senate to realize it&#13;
could enforce them."&#13;
Yet not all has gone peacefully in the Senate as&#13;
Nielsen readily acknowledges. "You're bound to run&#13;
into personality conflicts. I'm not going to fight a&#13;
never ending battle unless forced to. It's not worth&#13;
my time to get into a situation like that."&#13;
Nielsen claims his resignation was not prompted&#13;
by the election results or by the problems of&#13;
personality but he said this is the first chance he has&#13;
had a chance to resign that someone has not talked&#13;
him out of it. "I have not had the time for the&#13;
Senate and the Senate has not been my primary concern," he said. .&#13;
;====:::===::::::===;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;=~;:;;:;~===~&#13;
newsIf&#13;
Theatre&#13;
revolutionary&#13;
portrayed&#13;
Openings in internship program&#13;
The Public Service Internship Program (PSIP) at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside is seeking&#13;
students to intern in local, state, and national&#13;
governmental agencies during the summer and fall&#13;
semesters.&#13;
Many opportunities exist for practical experience&#13;
in working in political campaigns, helping with&#13;
legal services for the poor, solving constituent&#13;
problems for legislators, assisting local&#13;
administrators in providing community services,&#13;
working with planning agencies, and assisting court&#13;
officers&#13;
In the past year students at Parkside have worked&#13;
for Senator Gaylord Nelson, Congressman Les&#13;
Aspm, the City of Kenosha, Racine Pollee&#13;
Department, Wisconsin Department of Local&#13;
Affairs and Development, and Racine County&#13;
Juvenile Court. Students enrolled in the program&#13;
can receive from 3-12 credits of academic work&#13;
For further information, contact Dr Samuel&#13;
Pernacciaro, 367 Classroom Building, University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha. (Telephone number&#13;
(414) 553-2427 or 553-2316)&#13;
Hey Parkside!&#13;
Miller Lite on Tap'&#13;
at the Union and Rec. Center&#13;
•&#13;
Lire Beer- (rom Miller.&#13;
Ev~ry.hin~ you alway. w.nled&#13;
in a beer. And I~...&#13;
Oi••. by CJ .... Inc. 3637:30th An. Kenoeh.&#13;
KENTUCKY DERBY&#13;
P.A.B. INVITES YOU&#13;
MAY 6 &amp; 7&#13;
$17 includes: 2 nights lodging, infield ticket,&#13;
coffee, donuts&#13;
Deadline to sign up is April 8&#13;
PROVIDE OWN TRANSPORTATION&#13;
FOR MORE INFO&#13;
CONTACT PAiISIDE UNION OFFICE&#13;
Lynn Middleton will perform a one woman show&#13;
entitled Eleonora Duse: The Image of a Creat&#13;
Actress, at Parkside. The performance will be held&#13;
Tuesday, April 5 at 7:30 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre. Admission for her performance will be&#13;
a donation of $1.00 at the door.&#13;
Middleton spent two years in Europe collecting&#13;
information and materials about Eleonora Duse's&#13;
life and accomplishments. From her findings,&#13;
Middleton created and arranged an emotionally&#13;
touching one woman show about the life of&#13;
Eleonora Duse a great Italian actress, director,&#13;
,.......----. /&#13;
feminist and theater revolutionary who lived&#13;
around the turn of the century.&#13;
Middleton has acting and directing credits on&#13;
several of the Minneapolis stages. She received her&#13;
M.A., M.F.A., and Ph. D. at-CaseWestern University&#13;
and has studied in London, England under the&#13;
direction of Robert Palmer from the Royal&#13;
Academy of Dramatic Art. Shehas also studied with&#13;
Malcolm Morrison and Maurice Bannister both of&#13;
London.&#13;
This event is co-sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Players Organization and the dramatic Arts&#13;
Discipline.&#13;
by Cheryl Powalisz&#13;
'111,iwrliUII 'II"'"&#13;
FOR THE RIDER&#13;
WHO DEMANDS&#13;
111(&#13;
ULnIllATI: MOTORCYCLE&#13;
FACTORY AUTHORIZED&#13;
SALES &amp; SERVICE&#13;
COMPLETE IIEPAI~. PAlin&#13;
&amp; CUSTOM ACC£SSOtlIES&#13;
632-5241&#13;
(0IIrI 011 lIS! JIll 6If.lT SftYKf ~&#13;
R&amp;B HUln·DAYfDIOll UIB&#13;
JIl5 DouglasA". [!)[!J"{fj"" l!!ii&#13;
Racine \::, .u u '0'&#13;
Wednesda~5 &amp; Thursda~. after 'IDa&#13;
632-6151&#13;
Spring West of 31 in Greenridge Plaza&#13;
OLYMPIA8_ COMMHY0IJMl'IA. st.-...&#13;
Di.t. by CJ.W. Inc.&#13;
3637 • 30th Avenue, KenOtlha&#13;
~}erbu'3&#13;
~ourt&#13;
PUB &amp; REST AURANT&#13;
Contrnepororu music&#13;
Boss 8&lt; Piano&#13;
by Jimi and. Jerry&#13;
Wed. thru Sot.&#13;
live&#13;
HEY PARKSIDE!!&#13;
Oly Draft is Here&#13;
~i[~&#13;
ENCHILADAS&#13;
3/$195&#13;
NACHOS&#13;
$150 plate&#13;
···:1&#13;
news=I=&#13;
Openings in internship program&#13;
Organic chemist, Hor Gobind Khorana, discussed his research in synthetic&#13;
genes lost Friday in Greenquist Holl. Khorana refused to comment on&#13;
recombinant DNA, the controversial tinkering with human genes.&#13;
The Public Service Internship Program (PSIP) at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside is seeking&#13;
students to intern in local, state, and national&#13;
governmental agencies during the summer and fall&#13;
semesters.&#13;
Many opportunities exist for practical experience&#13;
in working in political campaigns, helping with&#13;
legal services for the poor, solving constituent&#13;
problems for legislators, ass1st1ng local&#13;
administrators in providing community services,&#13;
working with planning agencies, and assisting court&#13;
officers&#13;
In the past year stud nts at Parkside hav work d&#13;
for Senator Gaylord elson, Congr s man L s&#13;
Aspin, the City of Kenosha, Racine Polle&#13;
Department, Wisconsin Department of Local&#13;
Affairs and Development, and Racm Count&#13;
Juvenile Court. Students enrolled in the program&#13;
can receive from 3-12 credits of academic work&#13;
For further information, contact Dr Samu I&#13;
Pernacc1aro, 367 Classroom Building, University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha . (Telephone number.&#13;
(414) 553-2427 or 553-2316).&#13;
Hey Parkside! •&#13;
Miller Lite on Tap&#13;
Nielsen comments on _PSGA at the Union and Rec. Center&#13;
by Christopher Clausen&#13;
After the elections on March 10, there has come&#13;
a series of resignations from the PSCA Senate&#13;
Among the resignations was that of'Daniel Nielse~&#13;
as Senator of Labor Economics and as the President&#13;
Pro Tempore of the Senate.&#13;
During the time Nielsen was in charge of the&#13;
Senate as President Pro-Tempe the Senate passed&#13;
quite a few laws especially during the second&#13;
semester regulating the Student Organizational&#13;
Council (SOC) and Segregated University Fees&#13;
Allocations Committee (SUFAC).&#13;
Nielsen agreed to accept the post of President&#13;
Pro-Tempore at the request of President Kiyoko&#13;
Bowden to help reorganize the senate. According&#13;
to Nielsen, "the Senate we have now is 100% better&#13;
than the Senate we had a year ago when I joined. I&#13;
am very proud that we in the Senate got down to&#13;
work."&#13;
Among that work is included not only the SUFAC&#13;
and SOC rules but also the sponsoring of a Spanish&#13;
Speaking Cultural Day, a high school senior yisiting&#13;
day, and co-sponsoring the blood-drive. "I didn't&#13;
care as much about those rules (SUFAC and SOC),"&#13;
said Nielsen, "as I wanted the Senate to realize it&#13;
could enforce them ."&#13;
Yet not all has gone peacefully in the Senate as&#13;
Nielsen readily acknowledges. "You're bound to run&#13;
into personality conflicts. I'm not going to fight a&#13;
never enaing battle unless forced to. It's not worth&#13;
my time to get into a situation like that."&#13;
Nielsen claims his resignation was not prompted&#13;
by the election results or by the problems of&#13;
personality but he said this is the first chance he has&#13;
had a chance to resign that someone has not talked&#13;
him out of it. "I have not had the time for the&#13;
Senate and the Senate has not been my primary&#13;
concern," he said.&#13;
Theatre&#13;
revolutionary portrayed&#13;
by Cheryl Powalisz __.-- / /&#13;
feminist and theater revolutionary who lived&#13;
Lynn Middleton will perform a one woman show around the turn of the century .&#13;
entitled Eleonora Duse: The Image of a Great Middleton has acting and directing credits on&#13;
Actress, at Parkside. The performance will be held several of the Minneapolis stages . She received her&#13;
Tuesday, April Sat 7:30 p .m . in the Communication M .A., M .F.A., and Ph . D. at Case Western University&#13;
Arts Theatre. Admission for her performance will be and has studied in London, England under the&#13;
a donation of $1.00 at the door. direction of Robert Palmer from the Royal&#13;
Middleton spent two years in Europe collecting Academy of Dramatic Art. She has also studied with&#13;
information and materials about Eleonora Duse's Malcolm Morrison and Maurice Bannister both of&#13;
life and accomplishments. From her findings , London .&#13;
Middleton created and arranged an emotionally This event is co-sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
touching one woman show about the life of Players Organization and the dramatic Arts&#13;
Eleonora Duse a great Italian actress, director, Discipline.&#13;
'"'''" Ollf ltMrliZIII&#13;
FOR THE RIDER&#13;
WHO DEMANDS&#13;
THE&#13;
ULTIMATE MOTORCYCLE&#13;
FACTOIIY AUTHOIIIZE0&#13;
SALES &amp; SERVICE COMPLETE REPAIRS, PAUS&#13;
&amp; CUSTOM ACCESSORIES&#13;
632-5241&#13;
'ierbu~&#13;
·ourt&#13;
PUI &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
Live Contmeporory music&#13;
Boss &amp; Piano&#13;
by Jimi ond Jerry&#13;
Wed. thru Sot. - ENCHILADAS&#13;
3/$195&#13;
NACHOS&#13;
$l5° plate&#13;
Lite Beer from Miller.&#13;
Everythin111 you alway, wanted&#13;
in a beer. And leN.&#13;
Diet. by CJ.W. Inc. 3637:JOth Ave. Kenoeha&#13;
P .A.B. INVITES YOU&#13;
MAY 6 &amp; 7 $17 includes: 2 nights lodging, infield ticket,&#13;
coffee, donuts&#13;
Deadline to sign up is April 8&#13;
PROVIDE OWN TRANSPORTATION I FOR MORE INFO&#13;
CONTACT PARKSIDE UNION OFFICE&#13;
HEY PARKSIDE!!&#13;
Oly Draft is Here&#13;
~i[~~&#13;
~- COUlfl OIi Ill! IHI GIUI IIRYK! !HOP&#13;
R&amp;B Wednesdo~s &amp; Thursdo~. ofter q:OO OU'MPIA BREWING COMPANY OIYMflA •st MIL&#13;
632-6151&#13;
KHIEl-DOIDlotl !All!&#13;
1535 Douglas Ave., [!)(!l]i? ljlral ~-&#13;
Racine ~ruu LI ~&#13;
0 S n prmg · w es t o f 31 · m G ·d Dist. by C.J.W. Inc. ....._. _________________ reen~1 ge .,,,, 3637 - 30th Avenue, Kenosha&#13;
~~~~~~~~_:~~============ ----=- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~J &#13;
::.~' .&#13;
• views&#13;
PSGA Candidates thank students&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
I would like to thank all my&#13;
supporters and campaigners who&#13;
helped me to be elected to the&#13;
office of President of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Asso.&#13;
I would also like to publicly&#13;
promise all students that I will&#13;
work diligently to fulfill all my&#13;
campaign pledges.&#13;
Thanks again,&#13;
Rusty Tutlewski&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
I would like to give my thanks&#13;
to the many students who&#13;
elected me.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
We wish to take this&#13;
opportun ity to thank all, the&#13;
'students who voted in the PSGA&#13;
elections. We were deeply&#13;
touched by all the ladies who&#13;
Glen D. Christensen&#13;
Open your eyes and look over these&#13;
eye catching discounts. You'll see&#13;
bargains on Records. Tapes. Earrings.&#13;
Chokers. Buckles. Belts.&#13;
Pipes, Wallets, Hats. Pictures,&#13;
Decoupage, you name it ... You're&#13;
sure to see some Real Eye Opening&#13;
Bargains. Now, close your eyes and&#13;
visualize the money you can save by&#13;
shopping now during D.S.Do's&#13;
6-Sense Sale.&#13;
One Sweet Dream&#13;
6·senseSale&#13;
ONN&#13;
YOUR NOSE KNOWS.&#13;
SNIFF OUT THE GREAT BUYS!&#13;
You'll find the scent leads to the&#13;
greatest values ever at One Sweet&#13;
Dream, It's the 6-Sense-Sale! Incense&#13;
in both sticks and cones, body oils,&#13;
mist scents, and liquid incense. Just&#13;
follow your nose and get wind of all&#13;
the bargains now being offered at&#13;
both locations. For Your Mind&#13;
and Body.&#13;
NOW HEAR THIS!&#13;
Great sounds. at ear-shaUenng low&#13;
prices. One Sweet Dream offers a&#13;
(ullllne of Records, Tapes, and&#13;
Import Albums for your listening&#13;
pleasure. So, open your ears and&#13;
don't be deaf to the great values at&#13;
One Sweet Dream, Records and&#13;
Tapes.&#13;
TOUCH THE BARGAINS&#13;
DURING OUR SALE!&#13;
get in touch with the money saving&#13;
values youll find 00 almost every-&#13;
-thing in the store. Jewelry, Leather&#13;
Goods, Paraphernalia, Pictures,&#13;
Tapestries, Incense, Records, Tapes,&#13;
and more. Now is the time to pick&#13;
up on these bargains and grab a&#13;
deal. One Sweet Dream 6-Seose Sale.&#13;
~-----~---~-&#13;
I&#13;
TASTE THE VALUES OF&#13;
A 6 SENSE SALE!&#13;
If high prices leave a sour taste in&#13;
your mouth, then why not sample&#13;
the delicious savings now being&#13;
served up at mouth-watering low&#13;
prices. You'll find tasty values on&#13;
records, tapes, leather goods,&#13;
jewelry, pipes and papers, It's&#13;
low-cal prices on everything for your&#13;
mind and body. .&#13;
.9~i}).&#13;
- ' II&#13;
-,&#13;
7&#13;
G, , .4,·t' 4' , /1&#13;
, .' ~ ,&#13;
.- .&#13;
7&#13;
YOUR 6TH SENSE IS HARDNOSED&#13;
COMMON SENSE!&#13;
USE IT.&#13;
You11find value, thrift an4: savings&#13;
when shopping your BIG 6-SENSESALE&#13;
AT ONE SWEEl: DREAM.&#13;
It's everything (or your mind and&#13;
body (or less and that's good 01'&#13;
common sense ... your 6th sense.&#13;
.' al N wOn' 6-SenSe-S eO'&#13;
one\"&#13;
•&#13;
, . ... Your Big&#13;
~\t::.··~ Visit us. We're open 7 days a week, 365 days a year!&#13;
For Your Mind &amp; Body.&#13;
And&#13;
use it herel&#13;
Parkside&#13;
ignores&#13;
women's&#13;
parley&#13;
supported us. Vic would like to&#13;
personally thank each one of&#13;
you. Tad gives his appreciation.&#13;
to the 4500 students who&#13;
supported us but who didn't&#13;
vote. Feel free to call us anytime.&#13;
We extend our sincere congratulations&#13;
to Rusty and Harvey.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Tad 'Ballantyne&#13;
Vic Moreno&#13;
Dear Editor,&#13;
Last weekend, Friday March 18&#13;
and Saturday March 19 U.W.&#13;
Milwaukee hosted "The Women&#13;
_in Science Career Conference."&#13;
This conference was aimed to.&#13;
the interests of Freshman and&#13;
sophomore women in the math&#13;
natural sciences, and social&#13;
sciences, and was founded by&#13;
local major industries and the&#13;
National Foundation of Science.&#13;
Many doctorate women of the&#13;
various science fields and&#13;
professional women in these I&#13;
areas held workshops on their&#13;
specialty and advice to these&#13;
inquiring undergraduates as how&#13;
to cope in a male dominated&#13;
employment area. Family, marriage&#13;
and children in relation to a&#13;
career was also discussed.&#13;
The conference itself was&#13;
quite successful but it was the&#13;
amount of participation by&#13;
Parkside women of the science&#13;
community that was disappointing&#13;
to me. Only nine Parkside&#13;
freshmen an sophomore women&#13;
attended and none of the women&#13;
on the science staff. All of those&#13;
attending from Parkside remarked&#13;
how it was quite by chance&#13;
that they happened to see the&#13;
brochure on the conference. I&#13;
saw one on the 'library board. A&#13;
friend said she saw one on one of&#13;
Greenquist's hallway boards.&#13;
That is pretty poor advertising in&#13;
itself but what makes it worse&#13;
the social science students were&#13;
completely unaware of the&#13;
conference as no brochures ever&#13;
made it as far as Classroom&#13;
building.&#13;
I think it is very sad that the&#13;
professional women at Parkside&#13;
think so little of the undergraduate&#13;
women in the sciences&#13;
that they have actually helped&#13;
reinforce the notion that women&#13;
don't have the stuff to make it by&#13;
their lack of interest and&#13;
involvement in this conference .&#13;
So please, professional women&#13;
of the Parks ide staff ... We the&#13;
undergraduate women in the&#13;
science community sorely need&#13;
your help. As forerunners in the&#13;
field you are the only and too&#13;
few models we have to go by.' I&#13;
can only hope that in the future&#13;
you will en deaver to share&#13;
experiences like the Women in&#13;
Science Career Conference" to&#13;
greater numbers of under&#13;
graduate women.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Linda F. Creenstreet&#13;
• • • .... :views&#13;
PSGA Candidates thank students&#13;
Asso .&#13;
To The Editor: To The Editor: To the Editor:&#13;
I would like to thank all my&#13;
supporters and campaigners who&#13;
helped me to be elected to the&#13;
office of President of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
I would also like to publicly&#13;
promise all students that I will&#13;
work diligently to fulfill all my&#13;
campaign pledges .&#13;
I would like to give my thanks&#13;
to the many students who&#13;
elected me.&#13;
We wish to take this&#13;
opportunity to thank all the&#13;
students who voted in the PSGA&#13;
elections . We were deeply&#13;
touched by all the ladies who&#13;
Thanks again,&#13;
Rusty Tutlewski&#13;
Glen D. Christensen&#13;
one sweet Dream&#13;
&amp;-sense Sale&#13;
YOUR NOSE KNOWS.&#13;
SNIFF OUT THE GREAT BUYS!&#13;
You'll find the scent leads to the&#13;
greatest values ever at One Sweet&#13;
Dream. It's the 6-Sense-Sale! Incense&#13;
in both sticks and cones, body oils,&#13;
mist scents, and liquid incense. Just&#13;
follow your nose and get wind of all&#13;
the bargains now being offered at&#13;
both locations ... For Your Mind&#13;
and Body.&#13;
NOW HEAR THIS!&#13;
Great sounds_ at ear-shattering low&#13;
prices. One Sweet Dream offers a&#13;
full line of Records, Tapes, and&#13;
Import Albums for your listening&#13;
pleasure. So, open your ears and&#13;
don't be deaf to the great values at&#13;
One Sweet Dream, Reeords and&#13;
Tapes.&#13;
TOUCH THE BARGAINS&#13;
DURING OUR SALE!&#13;
9'et in touch with the money saving&#13;
values you1l find on almost everything&#13;
in the store. Jewelry, Leather&#13;
Goods, Paraphernalia, Pictures,&#13;
Tapestries, Incense, Reeords, Tapes,&#13;
and more. Now is the time to pick&#13;
up on these bargains and grab a&#13;
deal. One Sweet Dream 6-Sense Sale.&#13;
TASTE THE VALUES OF&#13;
A 6 SENSE SALE!&#13;
If high prices leave a sour taste in&#13;
your mouth, then why not sample&#13;
the delicious savings now being&#13;
served up at mouth-watering low&#13;
prices. You'll find tasty values on&#13;
records, tapes, leather goods,&#13;
jewelry, pipes and papers. It's&#13;
low-cal prices on everything for your&#13;
mind and body.&#13;
Open your eyes and look over these&#13;
eye catching discounts. You'll see&#13;
bargains on Records, Tapes, Earrings,&#13;
Chokers, Buckles, Belts,&#13;
Pipes, Wallets, Hats, Pictures,&#13;
Decoupage, you name it . .. You're&#13;
sure to see some Real Eye Opening&#13;
Bargains. Now, close your eyes and&#13;
visualize the money you can save by&#13;
shopping now during O.S.D.'s&#13;
6-Sense Sale.&#13;
: ,· w .&#13;
111~&lt; :'l'«&gt;~.I).(~. 7&#13;
IA , ___ ,,,, 7&#13;
YOUR 6TH SENSE IS HARDNOSED&#13;
COMMON SENSE!&#13;
USE IT.&#13;
You1I find value, thrift an~ savings&#13;
when shopping your BIG 6-SENSESALE&#13;
AT ONE SWEET, DREAM . . .&#13;
It's everything for your mind and&#13;
body for less and that's good ol'&#13;
common sense . . . your 6th sense.&#13;
Your Big&#13;
On, 6-Sense-Sale Now .&#13;
And&#13;
use it here!&#13;
~ (\\: '~ ~:r\~:-r ~~:; ~p:~d7y ~ays a week, 365 days a year!&#13;
;&#13;
supported us. Vic would like to&#13;
personally thank each one of&#13;
you. Tad gives his appreciation.&#13;
to the 4500 students who&#13;
supported us but who didn't&#13;
vote. Feel free to call us anytime.&#13;
We extend our sincere congratulations&#13;
to Rusty and Harvey.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Tad ·Ballantyne&#13;
Vic Moreno&#13;
Parkside&#13;
ignores&#13;
women's&#13;
parley&#13;
Dear Editor,&#13;
Last weekend, Friday March 18&#13;
and Saturday March 19 U.W.&#13;
Milwaukee hosted "The Women&#13;
in Science Career Conference."&#13;
This conference was aimed to .&#13;
the interests of Freshman and&#13;
sophomore women in the math&#13;
natural sciences, and social&#13;
sciences, and was founded by&#13;
local major industries and the&#13;
National Foundation of Science.&#13;
Many doctorate women of the&#13;
various science fields and&#13;
professional women in these&#13;
areas held workshops on their&#13;
specialty and advice to these&#13;
inquiring undergraduates as how&#13;
to cope in a male dominated&#13;
employment area. Family, marriage&#13;
and children in relation to a&#13;
career was also discussed.&#13;
The conference itself was&#13;
quite successful but it was the&#13;
amount of participation by&#13;
Parkside women of the science&#13;
community that was disappointing&#13;
to me. Only nine Parkside&#13;
freshmen an sophomore women&#13;
attended and none of the women&#13;
on the sc ience staff. All of those&#13;
attending from Parkside remarked&#13;
how it was quite by chance&#13;
that they happened to see the&#13;
brochure on the conference. I&#13;
saw one on the 'library board. A&#13;
friend said she saw one on one of&#13;
Greenquist' s hallway boards .&#13;
That is pretty poor advertising in&#13;
itself but what makes it worse&#13;
the social science students were&#13;
completely unaware of the&#13;
conference as no brochures ever&#13;
made it as far as Classroom&#13;
building.&#13;
I think it is very sad that the&#13;
professional women at Parkside&#13;
think so little of the undergraduate&#13;
women in the sciences&#13;
that they have actually helped&#13;
reinforce the notion that women&#13;
don't have the stuff to make it by&#13;
their lack of interest and&#13;
involvement in this conference.&#13;
So please, professional women&#13;
of the Parkside staff . .. We the&#13;
undergraduate women in the&#13;
science community sorely need&#13;
your help. As forerunners in the&#13;
field you are the only and too&#13;
few models we have to go b/ I&#13;
can only hope that in the future&#13;
you will endeaver to share&#13;
experiences like the Women in&#13;
Science Career Conference" to&#13;
greater numbers of under&#13;
graduate women .&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Linda F. Greenstreet &#13;
Ranger baseball team&#13;
visits south&#13;
The ParksideTrack Team will&#13;
make the transition from indoors&#13;
to outdoors with no problem,&#13;
according to track coach Bob&#13;
Lawson.&#13;
Personnel will basically be&#13;
unchanged from last season,&#13;
when the Rangers placed fifth in&#13;
-the NAIA National Championships.&#13;
Besides the walkers, Parkside&#13;
should have possible scorers in&#13;
other areas, such as in the high&#13;
jump with Jeff Sitz, the shot put&#13;
with Pat Burns, and pole vaulters&#13;
Bob Meekma and Bob Downs.&#13;
After the marathon last year,&#13;
Parkside's Ray Fredrickson was&#13;
ranked #1 in the NAtA and is&#13;
expected to do as well this&#13;
season.&#13;
Parkside's schedule is as hard lOH H:JIMONVS SdIH:'! N HSI.:I SdIH:J Nb'O:) dV'OI~HSA))&lt;l:lnlfl~7;i:t:; ~:~81~~V1N~gg&#13;
~ke Relays, and others. this season as lasi, with the\~~~~~~~~~~o~.~.~z~z~w~~~,~.~s~.~.~"~.~n9~R~v~H~S~''~Z~"~.~d~'~R~'~W~S~3S~3~'~H;O~S~'~'H~O~O~'~U~O~'~S'~niNi·;~~~Pi·i~~-i·i~i"~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ III -- __&#13;
by BruceWagner&#13;
by BruceWagner&#13;
Parkside's baseball team spent&#13;
its vacation down South playing&#13;
southern baseball powers.&#13;
Against such opposition, you&#13;
would think Parkside would lay&#13;
down and play doormat, right?&#13;
Against teams with much&#13;
tallermen who could hit the ball&#13;
out of the park, with one swing,&#13;
the evidence is much stronger to&#13;
. wonder if' Parks ide's team ever&#13;
came out of its trip whole.&#13;
Well, the above statements are&#13;
basically false. The Rangers&#13;
came out of the trip with a 4~&#13;
record and respectabihtv.&#13;
The Mercer University coach&#13;
was impressed with the speed&#13;
and agressiveness of the Parkside&#13;
team, especially that of Jim&#13;
jenna,'John Gardner, and Andy&#13;
Johnson.&#13;
In their southern trip, the&#13;
Rangers played Western Kentucky&#13;
University four times and&#13;
'beat them twice. In Bowling&#13;
Creen they lost a close game to&#13;
WKU, 4-3 and lost the second&#13;
gamedue to a lot of walks, 18-1.&#13;
The third game found the&#13;
Rangers winning, 6-4.&#13;
The second school Parkside&#13;
faced, Georgia Southwestern,&#13;
won the first two games of the&#13;
series, 3-0. The second 3-0 game&#13;
found the Parkside pitching staff&#13;
at its, toughest, with no-hit&#13;
pitching until the eighth inning.&#13;
In Valdosta,they met Western&#13;
Kentucky University once again,&#13;
and this time, Parkside won&#13;
again, 7-6. Later that day,&#13;
Valdosta College lost to&#13;
Parkside, 4-3.&#13;
Coach Ken 'Red-'Oberbruner&#13;
called the Valdosta team the&#13;
best team Parkside faced during&#13;
the southern tour.&#13;
"'Traveling to Macon on the&#13;
next day, Parkside once again&#13;
beat Western Kentucky, 6-2.&#13;
Oberbruner is enthusiastic&#13;
about this year's team. He lias 13&#13;
lettermen and regulars returning.&#13;
18&#13;
1&#13;
,&#13;
I&#13;
r&#13;
'I&#13;
Tracksters&#13;
move&#13;
outside&#13;
c&#13;
sportsI&#13;
len BaMbliIi Schedu ..&#13;
HNd COIICh KMt Obetbruner&#13;
Millon COllege (2) ParQkte&#13;
April 21, Thurs~y - 1:00 P.M.&#13;
Milwaukee SChool of Eng. (2) Mllw .... k..&#13;
April 23, Saturday - 100 P.M.&#13;
UnlY8rslty-Ghlcago Circle (2) Part\alde&#13;
April 25, Mondlly - 1:00 P.M.&#13;
Mllwauk .. Tech (2) Parblde&#13;
April 29, Friday - 1:00 P,M,&#13;
Waukesha Tech (2) WaukMhl&#13;
May., Wednesday -, 00 P.M.&#13;
St. NOl'bef1 (2) Pairblde&#13;
May 7, Saturday&#13;
W.I.C.A. Playoff - IIrst round o-nMay&#13;
9, Monday&#13;
W.I.C.A. Playolt - second round o-mee&#13;
May 14,15,16&#13;
District l1li14loornament at V.W. Stevens&#13;
PoInt&#13;
Home games are played on campus at&#13;
U.W. Parkside BAseball Diamond Subject&#13;
To Weather.&#13;
The pitching staff has three&#13;
returning along with five new&#13;
pitchers assisting. Tom Forster.&#13;
berg has the best record with the&#13;
eight with a 0.77 ERA (earned run&#13;
average), from the southern trip.&#13;
Returning pitchers are Tom&#13;
Vogt, Tom Rachel, and Randy&#13;
Krehbiel.&#13;
Also returning are catcher Jim&#13;
April 2, saturday - 1200 P.M.&#13;
Waukesha Tech (2) Parkslde&#13;
April 4, Monday - 1:00 P.M.&#13;
Northeastern College (Chicago) 2 at Chicago&#13;
April 7, Thursday - 1:00 P.M.&#13;
Milwaukee Tech (2) at Mllwauk$8&#13;
April 9, saturday - 1:00 P.M.&#13;
UW-Whitewater (2) Parkslde&#13;
April 12, Tuesday - ,:00 P.m.&#13;
UW-oshkosh (2) Parkslde&#13;
April 13, Wednesday - 1;()() P.m.&#13;
Lakeland College (2) lJlkelancl&#13;
April 16, saturday - 12:00 P.M.&#13;
GTI (2) Part.side&#13;
April 16, Monday - 1:00 P.M.&#13;
Rockvalley (ROCkford, III) (2) UWP&#13;
April 19, Tuesday - 1:00 P.M.&#13;
Millon College (2) Parkaide&#13;
April 21, Thursday - 1:00 P.M.&#13;
---&#13;
McKenna, John Gardner (3rd&#13;
base),Glenn Manarik (left Field),&#13;
last year's MVP Jim Jerina (center&#13;
field) Jack Granitz (right field),&#13;
shortshop Arnie Schairch, Andy&#13;
Johnson (second base) Ross&#13;
Donnelly (first basel, Mark&#13;
Jacobson (catcher) and Ken&#13;
Harris (catcher).&#13;
Their schedule follows:&#13;
TOMPKINS RNER FRESH FLOWERS YOU'LL NEVER FORGET AT&#13;
PRICES YOU'LL ALWAYS REMEMBER ~."e'LAWN &amp;GARDEN .,VI and CENTER F1'''I.",,~ CLOSEST FLORIST TO PARKSIDE&#13;
1780 No 22nd Ave. Phone 552·8411&#13;
Home of the Moose Size Meol&#13;
Chicken, Perch, Shrimp,&#13;
Plates or . Barrels&#13;
Eat in or carry out.&#13;
Ice cream treats; and&#13;
Elmwood Plaza East Wing&#13;
554-8300&#13;
Hidden in this diagram are the names of&#13;
twenty foods or snacks that go great with&#13;
a cold Pabst. They may be spelled forwards&#13;
or backwards. vertically or horizontally, even&#13;
diagonally, but are always in a straight line.&#13;
The first one has been circled to get you&#13;
going. Your challenge is to discover and&#13;
circle the other nineteen!&#13;
WVARJX&#13;
BCYPHOTDOG&#13;
MDEPCOUANPLF&#13;
MAKPIZZAMUOUHT&#13;
EROWGONPSVPIDS&#13;
YUJDOMECORNCHI PS&#13;
THNZAKYFTACOSBAB&#13;
XACWCDSIAVERUBGE&#13;
SHRIMPRSTHPNROHI&#13;
TTHGSEEHOQRJPBEK&#13;
OCELNAGNCHEESETM&#13;
ZAYABNRCHXTCWETP&#13;
VEUKUUHI FZTGFI&#13;
H H R· X T B I PTE R A 0 J&#13;
AKPSMPSALAM I&#13;
MLNASMKSNA&#13;
RHFCJO&#13;
When there's a challenge,&#13;
quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope you have some fun with the challenge.&#13;
There's another challenge we'd like to offer you, too.&#13;
The Pabst challenge:&#13;
We welcome the chance to prove the quality of&#13;
our beer. We challenge you to taste and compare&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon to any other premium beer. You'll&#13;
like Pabst better. Blue Ribbon quality means the best&#13;
tasting beer you can get. Since 1844 it always has.&#13;
PABST. Since 1844. The quality has always come through.&#13;
[:1&#13;
~no I&#13;
ijn·t&#13;
e.&#13;
at.&#13;
ey,&#13;
f&#13;
Ranger baseball team&#13;
visits south&#13;
19n BaMball Schedule&#13;
HNd Coach Ken Obetbruner&#13;
April 2, Saturday - 12:00 P.M.&#13;
Waukesha Tech (2) P8/ltalde&#13;
April 4, Monday - 1 :00 P.M.&#13;
MIiton College (2) Parl&lt;alde&#13;
April 21, Thursday - 1 :00 P.M.&#13;
Milwaukee School of Eng. (2) MIiwaukee&#13;
April 23, Saturday - 1 :00 P.M&#13;
University-Chicago Circle (2) Parblde&#13;
April 25, Monday - 1 :00 P.M.&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Parkside's baseball team spent&#13;
its vacation down South playing&#13;
Southern baseball powers.&#13;
Against such opposition, you&#13;
would think Parkside would lay&#13;
down and play doormat, right?&#13;
Against teams with much&#13;
taller men who could hit the ball&#13;
out of the park with one swing,&#13;
the evidence is much stronger to&#13;
· wonder if· Parkside's team ever&#13;
came out of its trip whole.&#13;
Well, the above statements are&#13;
basically false. The Rangers&#13;
came out of the trip with a 4-4&#13;
record and respectability.&#13;
The Mercer University coach&#13;
was impressed with the speed&#13;
and agressiveness of the Parkside&#13;
team, especially that of Jim&#13;
Jerina, John Gardner, pond Andy&#13;
Johnson.&#13;
In their southern trip, the&#13;
Rangers played Western Kentucky&#13;
University four times and&#13;
·beat them twice. In Bowling&#13;
Green they lost a close game to&#13;
WKU, 4-3 and lost the second&#13;
game due to a lot of walks, 18-1.&#13;
The third game found the&#13;
Rangers winning, 6-4.&#13;
The second school Parkside&#13;
faced, Georgia Southwestern,&#13;
won the first two games of the&#13;
series, 3-0. The second 3-0 game&#13;
found the Parkside pitching staff&#13;
at its toughest with no-hit&#13;
pitching until the eighth inning.&#13;
In Valdosta, they met Western&#13;
Kentucky University once again,&#13;
and this time, Parkside won&#13;
again, 7-6. Later that day,&#13;
Valdosta College lost to&#13;
Parkside, 4-3.&#13;
Coach Ken 'Red' Oberbruner&#13;
called the Valdosta team the&#13;
best team Parkside faced during&#13;
the southern tour. .&#13;
4'raveling to Macon on the&#13;
next day, Parkside once again&#13;
beat Western Kentucky, 6-2.&#13;
Oberbruner is enthusiastic&#13;
about this year's team. He has 13&#13;
lettermen and regulars returning.&#13;
Tracksters&#13;
move&#13;
outside&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
The Parkside Track Team will&#13;
make the transition from indoors&#13;
to outdoors with no problem,&#13;
accordi'ng to track coach Bob&#13;
Lawson.&#13;
Personnel will basically be&#13;
unchanged from last season,&#13;
when the Rangers placed fifth in&#13;
·the NAIA National Championships.&#13;
&#13;
Besides the walkers, Parkside&#13;
should have possible scorers in&#13;
other areas, such as in the high&#13;
iump with Jeff Sitz, the shot put&#13;
with Pat Burns, and pole vaulters&#13;
Bob Meekma and Bob Downs.&#13;
After the marathon last year,&#13;
Parkside's Ray Fredrickson was&#13;
ranked #1 in the NAIA and is&#13;
expected to do as well this&#13;
season.&#13;
Parkside's schedule is as hard&#13;
this season as lasi:, with the&#13;
~ke Relays, and others.&#13;
The pitching staff has three&#13;
returning along with five new&#13;
pitchers assisting. Tom Forsterberg&#13;
has the best record with the&#13;
eight with a 0.77 ERA (earned run&#13;
average), from the southern trip.&#13;
Returning pitchers are Tom&#13;
Vogt, Tom Rachel, and Randy&#13;
Krehbiel.&#13;
Also returning are catcher Jim&#13;
McKenna, John Gardner (3rd&#13;
base), Glenn Manarik (left Field),&#13;
last year's MVP Jim Jerina (center&#13;
field) Jack Granitz (right field),&#13;
shortshop Arnie Schairch, Andy&#13;
Johnson (second base) Ross&#13;
Donnel ly (first base), Mark&#13;
Jacobson (catcher) and Ken&#13;
Harris (catcher).&#13;
Their schedule follows:&#13;
Northeastern College (Chicago) 2 at Chicago&#13;
April 7, Thursday - 1 :00 P.M.&#13;
MIiwaukee Tech (2) at MIiwaukee&#13;
April 9, Saturday - 1 :00 P.M.&#13;
UW-Whltewater (2) Parkside&#13;
April 12, Tuesday - 1 :00 P.m.&#13;
UW-Oshkosh (2) Parkside&#13;
April 13, Wednesday - 1 :00 P.m.&#13;
Lakeland College (2) Lakeland&#13;
April 16, Saturday - 12 :00 P. M.&#13;
GTI (2) Par11slde&#13;
April 18, Monday - 1 :00 P.M.&#13;
Rockvalley (Rockford, Ill) (2) UWP&#13;
April 19, Tuesday - 1 :00 P.M.&#13;
MIiton College (2) Par11side&#13;
April 21, Thursday -1 :OO _P_.M_. _ _&#13;
MIiwaukee Tech (2) Parulde&#13;
April 29, Friday - 1 :00 P M&#13;
Waukesha Tech (2) Waukeaha&#13;
May 4 , Wednesday - 1 :00 P.M.&#13;
St. Norbert (2) Par11alde&#13;
May 7, Saturday&#13;
W.I.C.A. Playoff - first round Q8lllN&#13;
May 9, Monday&#13;
W.I.C.A. Playoff - second round oMay&#13;
14, 15, 16&#13;
District #14 tournament at U.W St-ns&#13;
Point&#13;
Home games are played on campus at&#13;
U.W. Par11slde Baseball Diamond Subject&#13;
To Weather.&#13;
· TOMPKINS ANER FRESH FLOWERS YOU'LL NEVER FORGET AT&#13;
PRICES YOU'LL ALWAYS REMEMBER&#13;
Home of the Moose Size&#13;
Chicken, Perch, Shrimp,&#13;
Plates or . Barrels&#13;
~.,.,, LAWN &amp;GARDEN c,ur·i and CENTER Finl.,,,,.~ Eat in or carry out.&#13;
Ice cream treats, and&#13;
Elmwood Plaza East Wing&#13;
55~&#13;
CLOSEST FLORIST TO PARKSIDE&#13;
1780 N; 22nd Ave. Phone 552-8411&#13;
Hidden in this diagram are the names of l:liagonally, but are always in a straight line.&#13;
twenty foods or snacks that go great with The first one has been circled to get you a cold Pabst. They may be spelled forwards going. Your challenge is to discover and&#13;
or backwards, vertically or horizontally, even circle the other nineteen!&#13;
WV AR J X&#13;
BCYPHOTDOG&#13;
MDEPCOUANPLF&#13;
MAKPIZZAMUOUHT&#13;
EROWGONPSVPIDS&#13;
YUJOOMECORNCHIPS&#13;
THNZAKYFTACOSBAB&#13;
XACWCDSIAVERUBGE&#13;
SHA IMPRSTHPNRQH I&#13;
TTHGSEEHOQRJPBEK&#13;
OCELNAGNCHEESETM&#13;
ZAYABNRCHXTCWETP&#13;
VEUKUUHI FZTGFI&#13;
HHRXTB I PTERAQJ&#13;
AKPSMPSALAMI&#13;
MLNASMKSNA&#13;
RHFCJO&#13;
When there's a challenge, quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope you have some fun with the challenge.&#13;
There's another challenge we'd like to offer you, too.&#13;
The Pabst challenge:&#13;
We welcome the chance to prove the quality of&#13;
our beer. We challenge you to taste and compare&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon to any other premium beer. You'll&#13;
like Pabst better. Blue Ribbon quality means the best&#13;
tasting beer you can get. Since 1844 it always has.&#13;
PABST. Since 1844. The quality has always come through. -c: 19/I PABST BRLWING COMPAN'I M1\w-JukPt• Wis PPoflcl Ht••tJhl-. Ill N1•\·1.&lt;.trk NJ l1~ An9d1-s Call! Pabst Gt•t.ugra&#13;
IH]HaVdS V&lt;VH SO:l\11 aoo&#13;
10H H:lJMONVS SdlH:l N Hs,_; SdlH:l NHO:l dV&lt;IHHS A]&gt;1Hn1 N j)l:)IH:l fl38 088 NHO:l ·dOd VZZld &gt;11131S H_;e.JHn8V&lt;VH S13ZUHd IV&lt;V1VS 3S33H:l SdlH:l OiVl Od s1nNV3d :spoo,i U8 PP!H &#13;
Inews&#13;
Members of Porkslds's Jazz Ensemble hit the streets last&#13;
the march for a new high school. in Kenosha.&#13;
_1I0IUlIIINllmIIHNlIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIHHIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIII1111&#13;
DINO'S&#13;
1816 16th St.&#13;
Racine&#13;
634.1991&#13;
3728 Douglas&#13;
Racine&#13;
639.711!&gt;&#13;
TAXES&#13;
WE DELIVER·&#13;
Open 4:00 p.m. till one hour after&#13;
taverns close&#13;
-_IIIIIOIIHNII'· ,.. OII,IIIII&#13;
s,4fe1r, La",/4&#13;
~t!¥edu&#13;
';iIot ~ &amp;led&#13;
Hundredsof Kenoshonsfilled Southport Mall as they marched to Bradford High School's open house last Sunday.&#13;
Students push for new high school&#13;
Since everyone agrees that Bradford is&#13;
inadequate, the big issue of replacement is taxes.&#13;
Kenoshans will decide the future direction of Six referendums have been defeated with the major&#13;
education in Kenosha, on Tuesday, April 5th. They issue in all of them, according to Dave, was taxes.&#13;
will be voting on a referendum that If passedwould This time, however, Dave said. "Its a fact a new&#13;
start construction of a new high school. high school can be built with no increase in taxes.&#13;
PRESENTSITUATION This is because Kenosha's debt service is growing&#13;
Mark Sinnen and' Dave Halbrooks, Parkside smaller and smaller each year and if a new high&#13;
Students, and organizers of the present effort to get school is built it will be financed by refinancing the&#13;
a new high school built in Kenosha, cite debt and stretching the debt payments over say ten&#13;
overcrowding and inadequate conditions as the" to fifteen years. We've been endorsed by the&#13;
primary reasons for the need for a new high school. Kenosha Taxpayers, Inc. in our attempt to get a newBradford&#13;
was built for 1,800 students and now holds high school built."&#13;
1,895. DECLINING ENROLLMENT&#13;
Couldn't the excess students transfer to Ranger asked that why, is a new high school&#13;
Kenosha's other high school, Tremper, Ranger necessary when all trends point to a decline in&#13;
asked? enrollment'&#13;
"No, Tremper built in 1966 for 2,100 students, "The trend over the long term is not going down.&#13;
now has an enrollment of 2,730." "Its also a A recent study by the city planners came up with&#13;
question about facilities. Bradford is divided into the conclusion that by 1980 population will&#13;
two parts the annex and the main building. The increase and that the high schools must plan for the&#13;
annex is a fire trap, way back in 1923 the fire chief long range future and not for the short term&#13;
indicated that if a new school was built he would factors." said Mark Sinnen.&#13;
condemn the annex over night. Furthermore, the IF A NEW HIGH SCHOOL ISN'T BUILT •&#13;
Fire Department has unoffically said that if there According to Dave if a new high school is not&#13;
was a fire in the annex the annex would be built Bradford will have to go on split shifts.&#13;
completely destroyed in a matter of seconds," said Teacher's costs will rise and the cost of building a&#13;
Sinnen, new high school which will have to be build&#13;
Other inadequacies cited by Mark and Dave someday will increa,e $60,000 a month. "The cost&#13;
were: (1) when it snows or rains students in the right now will be $12.6 million dollars, but its going&#13;
annex are aware of it immediately since the annex to increase and someday we'll have to build a new&#13;
leaks. (i) The National Education Association has high school."&#13;
recommended that schools be build on 35 acres If the referendum passes according to Mark a&#13;
with one additional acre for each additional new high school can be built in two years. The&#13;
hundred students: Bradford is built on 3.5 acres.' if $12.6 million budgeted for a new high school&#13;
they were forced to come into accordance with the includes cost overruns, and a new high school can&#13;
NEA's Kenosha would have to level twenty-two city be built with no increase in property taxes.&#13;
blocks. (3) If all the school's 14 typewriters were What can students do to help? According to Mar,k&#13;
used at one time they would blow a fuse. This has and Dave the best thing to do is Tuesday, april 5th&#13;
happened many times. The list goes on and on vote yes on the referendum. "Every vote is&#13;
according to Mark and Dave. According to Dave, essential" said Mark, "our chances are only SO-50&#13;
"No one, argues that Bradford is not inadequate. and I just can't see how Kenosha could possibly&#13;
Everyone agrees that it is totally inadequate." expect to provide decent education to the students&#13;
r&#13;
2S I € '- Of)@:o~ha if the referendum fails."&#13;
C iJS, ~:::: ~&amp;:£:'" ~~_&#13;
~ NEED TO BE PUBLISHED? FOR THE BEST RECORDS IN KENOSHA&#13;
AT PRICES YOU'LL LIKE!&#13;
JAZZ ROCK SOUL&#13;
CONTEMPORARY&#13;
CLASSICAL&#13;
COME TO US AT&#13;
~~&#13;
626 Fifty·Sixth St., Kenosha, Wis, 1&#13;
~~~ ~ _.~~~~.....~~~~&#13;
by Bob Hoffman&#13;
DANISH&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
1841 Douglos Avenul&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53402&#13;
I i&#13;
PHONE: 637·8895&#13;
\'¢"&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington /W.. 634-2373&#13;
Parkside Pleyers and the Dramatic Arts Discipline&#13;
presents ..,&#13;
Lynn Middleton's&#13;
re-creation of the life of&#13;
~~ qj)~:&#13;
PT/r.e ~ 01a rJwaI ~&#13;
Tuesday, April 5, 1977&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre&#13;
7:30 P.M.&#13;
Donation: $1.00 at the door&#13;
N&#13;
\&#13;
&gt; Ranger needs writers!!!&#13;
l=news&#13;
Members of Parkside's Jazz&#13;
the march for a new high school . in&#13;
'&#13;
'&#13;
_ .. IIIUIIIIIIIHHln•mm1111111111111111 .. 111111111111111•11111111 .. 11111111111u111i .. 111111 .... 11&#13;
DINO'S&#13;
1816 16th St.&#13;
Racine&#13;
634-1991&#13;
3728 Douglas&#13;
Racine&#13;
639-711~&#13;
WE ' DELIVER .&#13;
Open 4:00 p.m. till one hour after&#13;
taverns close&#13;
...... 11•••1•111•1•••---n11111-•111111•at1111•11•m111••••&#13;
'&#13;
~a~ £,a41.e1,,~ -&#13;
DANISH ~~fu, BAKERY&#13;
"\. r, " -;iioe~~ I&#13;
1141 Douglas Avenue&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53402 PHONE: 637-8895 I I&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P .M.&#13;
261S Washington /we. 634-2373&#13;
Parkside Players and the Dramatic Arts Discipline&#13;
presents ...&#13;
Lynn Middleton's -&#13;
re-creation of the life of&#13;
&lt;E~ q/Jyoo:&#13;
fTlw ~ of a &lt;/}wa,I ~&#13;
Tuesday, Apri J 5, 1977&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre&#13;
7 :30 P.M.&#13;
Donation: $1 .00 at the door&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
)&#13;
:,&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
Hundreds of Kenoshans filled Southport Mall as they marched to Bradford High School's open house last Sunday.&#13;
Students push for new high school&#13;
TAXES&#13;
by Bob Hoffman Since everyone agrees that Bradford is&#13;
inadequate, the big issue of replacement is taxes.&#13;
Kenoshans will decide the future direction of Six referendums have been defeated with the major&#13;
education in Kenosha, on Tuesday, April 5th . They issue in all of them, according to Dave, was taxes.&#13;
will be voting on a referendum that if passed would This time, however, Dave said. " Its a fact a new&#13;
start construction of a new high school. high school can be built with no increase in taxes.&#13;
PRESENT SITUATION This is because Kenosha's debt service is growing&#13;
Mark Sinnen and ' Dave Halbrooks, Parkside smaller and smaller each year and if a new high&#13;
Students, and organizers of the present effort to get school is built it will be financed by refinancing the&#13;
a new high school built in Kenosha, cite debt and stretching the debt payments over say ten&#13;
overcrowding and inadequate conditions as the · to fifteen years. We've been endorsed by the&#13;
primary reasons for the need for a new high school. Kenosha Taxpayers, Inc . in our attempt to get a new·&#13;
Bradford was built for 1,800 students and now holds high schoo1 built."&#13;
1,895. DECLIN•NG ENROLLMENT&#13;
Couldn't the excess students transfer to Ranger asked that why is a new high school&#13;
Kenosha's other high school, Tremper, Ranger necessary when all trends point to a decline in&#13;
asked? enrollment?&#13;
" No, Tremper built in 1966 for 2,100 students, "The trend over the long term is not going down.&#13;
now has an enrollment of 2,730." " Its also a A recent study by the city planners came up with&#13;
question about facilities. Bradford is divided into the conclusion that by 1980 population will&#13;
two parts the annex and the main building. The increase and that the high schools must plan for the&#13;
annex is a fire trap, way back in 1923 the fire chief long range future and not for the short term&#13;
indicated that if a new school was built he would factors." said Mark Sinnen.&#13;
condemn the annex over night. Furthermore, the •FA NEW H•GH SCHOOL •sN'T BU•L T&#13;
Fire Department has unoffically said that if there According to Dave if a new high school is not&#13;
was a fire in the annex the annex would be built Bradford will have to go on spli_t shifts.&#13;
completely destroyed in a matter of seconds," said Teacher's costs will rise and the cost of building a&#13;
Sinnen. new high school which will have to be build&#13;
Other inadequacies cited by Mark and Dave someday will increa~e $60,000 a month . " The cost&#13;
were: (1) when it snows or rains students in the right now will be $12.6 million dollars, but its going&#13;
annex are aware of it immediately since the annex to increase and someday we' ll have to build a new&#13;
leaks. (2) The National Education Association has high school."&#13;
recommended that schools be build on 35 acres If the referendum passes according to Mark a&#13;
with one additional acre for each additional new high school can be built in two years. The&#13;
hundred students: Bradford is bu'ilt on 3.5 acres, 'if $12.6 million budgeted for a new high school&#13;
they were forced to come into accordance with the includes cost overruns, and a new high school can&#13;
NEA's Kenosha would have to level twenty-two city be built with no increase in property taxes.&#13;
blocks . (3) If all the school's 14 typewriters were What can students do to help? According to Mar-k&#13;
used at one time they would blow a fuse. This has and Dave the best thing to do is Tuesday, april 5th&#13;
happened many times . The list goes on and on vote yes on the referendum . " Eve0&#13;
ry vote is&#13;
according to Mark and Dave. According to Dave, essential" said Mark, "our chances are only 50-50&#13;
" No one, argues that Bradford is not inadequate. and I just can't see how Kenosha could possibly&#13;
Everyone&#13;
~&#13;
agrees that it is totally inadequate." expect to provide decent education to the students&#13;
\ji of~o~a if the referendum fails."&#13;
wt *%;; B~:~ ,-:_"- NEED TO BE PUBLISHED?&#13;
AT PRICES YOU'LL LIKE! Ranger needs writers!!!&#13;
JAZZ ROCK SOUL v&#13;
CONTEMPORARY d.&#13;
CLASSICAL&#13;
COME TO US AT&#13;
626 Fifty-Sixth St., Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
~=&#13;
' &#13;
Milwaukee Sy'mphony&#13;
to perform /&#13;
The Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, under the&#13;
baton of Kenneth Schermerhorn, will appear in&#13;
concert at Parkside with UW-P artist-in-residence&#13;
Stephen Swedish as piano soloist at 8 pm on&#13;
Wednesday, April 6, in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater. The program is part of the Accent on&#13;
Enrichment Series. Tickets are $6 and are available&#13;
at the Union Information Center.&#13;
The orchestra will perform the Overture to&#13;
Wagner's "The Flying Dutchman;" Rachmaninoff's&#13;
Rhapsody on a Theme by Paganini for Piano and&#13;
Orchestra, Op. 43, with Swedish as soloist; and&#13;
Korngold's Symphony in F-sharp, Op. 40, which the&#13;
Milwaukee orchestra gave both its U.S. and New&#13;
York premieres.&#13;
Musical director of the Milwaukee Symphony&#13;
since 1968, Schermerhorn is credited with bringing&#13;
the orchestra to national prominence. The&#13;
orchestra now is considered one of the top ten&#13;
major orchestras in the country with 90 full time&#13;
musicians whose average age is only 35. The&#13;
orchestra has performed to critical acclaim in East&#13;
Coast cities including New York and Washington,&#13;
D.C., and in Chicago and last year made a highlypraised&#13;
West Coast tour.&#13;
Schermerhorn has guest conducted throughout&#13;
the Americas and Europe and enjoys a reputation&#13;
for the mastery and versatility to conduct many&#13;
scores in many styles. In addition to his orchestral&#13;
work, he has considerable operatic experience with&#13;
a mastery of five languages and a broad repertoire&#13;
(He is married to Operatic Soprano Carol Neblitt.)&#13;
For Swedish, this concert is his second&#13;
appearance this spring with the Milwaukee ~&#13;
Symphony. He performed with the ensemble under&#13;
the baton of guest conductor Arthur Fiedler of the&#13;
Boston Pops March 12 and 13 at the Performing&#13;
Arts Center&#13;
In addition to maintainmg a full schedule of solo&#13;
recitals and orchestra appearances, Swedish IS the&#13;
regular recital and recording partner of violinist&#13;
EugeneFodor who also is an artist-in-residence this&#13;
season at Parkside. They have just completed&#13;
recording an al5um of Fritz Kreisler compositions&#13;
to be released this summer on the RCA Red Seal&#13;
label.&#13;
Next August, Swedish will return for the second&#13;
season to Eisenstadt, Austria, where Haydn&#13;
composed and performed most of his major works,&#13;
to act as director of piano studies for a Haydn&#13;
Performance Seminar sponsored by Parkside and&#13;
the University of Iowa in cooperation with the&#13;
Austrian government.&#13;
Forrest, Jansky exhibit&#13;
Parkside art professors Erik Forrest and Rollin reception on March 16.&#13;
Jansky will have a two-man show of their work at The massive scale of Jansky's work makes&#13;
the 'University of Western Ontario's Mcintosh transporting the show a major logistical task. "It's&#13;
Gallery in London, Ontario, Canada, through April something like moving half your household," 1I!~I@l!i[~rug!i1!!IDl!~~~~rng!il!i~~~&#13;
3. Jansky said. ~&#13;
Janskywill show ten of his polyester-impregnated Forrest, an internationally-known art educator ,&#13;
fiberglass modular sculptures and Forrest will and painter, has had one-man shows in major&#13;
exhibit 15 pieces including acrylic and oil paintings English and American cities and has frequently&#13;
'and vacuformed, textured reliefs. served as a juror for exhibitions. He presently is&#13;
The artists were-honored at a dinner and open"ing ~irman of Parkside's Fine Arts Division.&#13;
Philosopher&#13;
to visit&#13;
The political accountability of&#13;
scientists will be the topic of a&#13;
free talk March 31 at Parkside by&#13;
a visiting philosopher&#13;
Prof. Stephen Toulmin of the&#13;
University of Chicago will speak&#13;
Thursday on "political Accountability&#13;
of Scientists" at 7:30 in Cl&#13;
105.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
Enter Parksides&#13;
events'&#13;
Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra&#13;
Free PIZZI Delwery&#13;
Club Hlghvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652·8737&#13;
AIM •.n.ttll, C~I'.'I.Sp •• ~tHI,Rniall, 8"'&#13;
OPEl 4 p.•• It 1 •.•.&#13;
I&#13;
5713· 8th Avenue, Kenosha, Wis, 53140&#13;
Phone 654-0100 I UP'TO 50%&#13;
OFF ON ALL ITEMS,&#13;
•&#13;
YO-YO CONTEST&#13;
All Participants Guaranteed a Prize!!!&#13;
Trick Competition to be held in&#13;
, Unton Sguare on April 7th at 12 noon&#13;
Register at the Recreation Center.&#13;
Milwaukee sy·mphony to perform ,&#13;
The Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, under the&#13;
baton of Kenneth Schermerhorn, will appear in&#13;
concert at Parkside with UW-P artist-in-residence&#13;
Stephen Swedish as piano soloist at 8 p.m . on&#13;
Wednesday, April 6, in the Comm'unication Arts&#13;
Theater. The program is part of the Accent on&#13;
Enrichment Series . Tickets are $6 and are available&#13;
at the Union Information Center.&#13;
The orchestra will perform the Overture to&#13;
Wagner's " The Flying Dutchman;" Rachmaninoff's&#13;
Rhapsody on a Theme by Paganini for Piano and&#13;
Orchestra, Op . 43, with Swedish as soloist; and&#13;
Korngold's Symphony in F-sharp, Op. 40, which the&#13;
Milwaukee orchestra gave both its U.S. and New&#13;
York premieres .&#13;
Musical director of the Milwaukee Symphony&#13;
since 1968, Schermerhorn is credited with bringing&#13;
the orchestra to national prominence. The&#13;
orchestra now is considered one of the top ten&#13;
major orchestras in the country with 90 full time&#13;
musicians whose average age is only 35. The&#13;
orchestra has performed to critical acclaim in East&#13;
Coast cities including New York and Washington,&#13;
D.C., and in Chicago and last year rriaJe a highlypraised&#13;
West Coast tour.&#13;
Schermerhorn has guest conducted throughout&#13;
the Americas and Europe and enjoys a reputation&#13;
for the mastery and versatility to conduct many&#13;
scores in many styles . In addition to his orchestral&#13;
work, he has considerable operatic experience with&#13;
a mastery of five languages and a broad repertoire&#13;
(He is married to Operatic Soprano Carol eblitt.)&#13;
For Swedish, this concert 1s his second&#13;
appearance this spring with the Milwaukee •&#13;
Symphony . He performed with the ensemble under&#13;
the baton of guest conductor Arthur Fiedler of the&#13;
Boston Pops March 12 and 13 at the Performing&#13;
Arts Center.&#13;
In addition to maintaining a full schedule of solo&#13;
recitals and orchestra appearances , Swedish 1s the&#13;
regular recital and recording partner of violinist&#13;
Eugene Fooor, who also is an artist-in-residence this&#13;
season at Parkside. They have just completed&#13;
recording an album of Fritz Kreisler compositions&#13;
to be released this summer on the RCA Red Seal&#13;
label .&#13;
Next August, Swedish will return for the second&#13;
season to Eisenstadt, Austria, where Haydn&#13;
composed and performed most of his major works,&#13;
to act as director of piano studies for a Haydn&#13;
Performance Seminar sponsored by Parkside and&#13;
the University of Iowa in cooperation with the&#13;
Austrian government.&#13;
Forrest, Jansky exhibit&#13;
Parkside art professors Erik Forrest and Rollin reception on ~arch 16.&#13;
Jansky will have a two-man show of their work at The massi"'.e scale of Jansky's work makes&#13;
the ·university of Western Ontario's McIntosh transporting the show a major logistical task. "It's&#13;
Gallery in London, Ontario, Canada, through April something like moving half your household,"&#13;
3. Jansky said. 21&#13;
Jansky will show ten of his polyester-impregnated Forrest, an internationally-known art educator I&#13;
fiberglass · modular sculptures and Forrest will and painter, has had one-man shows in major&#13;
exhibit 15 pieces including acrylic and oil paintings English and American cities and has frequently&#13;
and vacuformed, textured reliefs. served as a juror for exhibitions . He presently is&#13;
The artists were honored at a dinner and opening chairman of Parkside's Fine Arts Division.&#13;
Philosopher&#13;
to visit&#13;
The political accountability of&#13;
scientists will be the tooic of a&#13;
free talk March 31 at Parkside by&#13;
a visiting philosopher&#13;
Pr'of. Stephen Toulmin of the&#13;
University of Ch icago wi ll speak&#13;
Thursday on "political Accountability&#13;
of Scientists" at 7:30 in CL&#13;
105.&#13;
' 11 ~ ' !\I___A_~ ~ /&#13;
• Pure Brewed , From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Enter Parksides&#13;
Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra&#13;
Free Pi~• Delirery&#13;
Club Hlghvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
Alt• ..... .,1., c~, .... , s~ •• ~tftl. R1vl1II, ... ,&#13;
OPEN 4 ~·• · It 1 •·• ·&#13;
5713 - 8th Avenue. Kenosha. Wis. 531 40&#13;
Phone 654-0100&#13;
UP TO 50%&#13;
====O=Ff ON ALL ITEMSl&#13;
•&#13;
YO-YO CONTEST&#13;
All Participants Guaranteed a Prize!!!&#13;
Trick Competition to be held in&#13;
Unton Sguare on April 7th at 12 noon&#13;
Register at the Recreation Center. &#13;
..&#13;
·Ievents&#13;
Wednesday, March 30&#13;
Transcendental Meditation Lecture at 1 p.m. in Cl D 133 and at 7&#13;
p.rn. in CL D 111.&#13;
PAD Coffeehouse presents Tony Roland from 2 to 4 p.m. in Union&#13;
Square.&#13;
Life Science Club meeting and elections at 5:30 p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Shakespeare on Film: Welles' "Chimes at Midnight" or "Falstaff"&#13;
(1966) at 7 p.m at the Golden Rondelle, Racine. Call 554-2154 for&#13;
tickets and information.&#13;
. Thursday, March 31&#13;
Health-Line Highlight (until April 7): Gonorrhea and Syphilis&#13;
lecture: "Latin America - Points of View" at 7 p.m. in WlLC 3rd&#13;
floor Lecture Area.&#13;
Lecture: "The Political Accountability of Scientists" by Prof. Stephen&#13;
Toulmin at 7:30 p.rn. in CL 105. Sponsored by Parkside Philosophical&#13;
Society.&#13;
Friday, April 1&#13;
Paper Drive from 9a.m. to 6 p.m. in the Circle Drive just North of the&#13;
Union. Sponsored by Vet's Club.&#13;
Earth Science Club presents "The South Range of the Sudbury Nickel&#13;
Eruptive, Ontario Canada" by Steven Dutch of UW-Green Bay at 12&#13;
noon in GR 113. Coffee and donuts will be served.&#13;
Chemistry-Life Science Seminar Series: "Early Events in Plant Vi"rus&#13;
Infection" by Dr. G. DeZoeten, Department of Plant Pathology,&#13;
UW-Madison, at 2 p.rn. in GR D 111.&#13;
Mathematics Collpquium: Title to be announced, by Prof. C. Benson,&#13;
department of mathematics, University of Arizona, at 3:30 p.m. in&#13;
CL 107.&#13;
Movie: "Godfather II" at 8 p.rn. in the Union Cinema. Admission $1.&#13;
Concert: Parkside Symphonic Band, Craig Kirchoff, conductor, at 8&#13;
p.rn. in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
Saturday, April 2&#13;
Master Classes: held by Eugene Fodor from 10to 12 noon, and 1 to 3&#13;
_ p.m. in CA D 118. Fee.&#13;
Baseball game vs. Waukesha Tech at 12 noon at the field.&#13;
Tennis Meet vs. St. Norbert at 1 p.rn. at the tennis courts.&#13;
PAS Jazz Festival from 7 p.m. to 12:45 a.m. in Union Square andUnion&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
Sunday, April 3&#13;
Concert: Parkside Percussion Ensemble, Roger Daniels, conductor, at&#13;
3:30 p.rn. in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
Movie: "Godfather II" at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema. Admission&#13;
$1.00.&#13;
Monday, April 4&#13;
Senior Recruiting: Container Corporation during the day at Tallent&#13;
Hall. Call 2452 for more information.&#13;
Tuesday, AprilS&#13;
Recruitment: Wartburg Theological Seminary, Dubuque Iowa, from 9&#13;
a.m. to 12 p.m. in the Classroom Concourse.&#13;
All events must be submitted to RANGER by the Wednesday before&#13;
publication. An events form is now available in the RANGER office'.&#13;
Greek culture day planned&#13;
These culture days will feature&#13;
the culture of one or more of the&#13;
members of the International&#13;
Students group.&#13;
This Greek culture day is&#13;
sponsored with the assistance of&#13;
Kula's Grocery in Kenosha.&#13;
with ancient-style vases and&#13;
pictures of Greece for students&#13;
to peruse.&#13;
According to club members,&#13;
this will be one of a series of&#13;
culture days' to be held,&#13;
depending on student interest.&#13;
The Parkside 1nternational&#13;
Student Organization will sponsor&#13;
a Greek Culture Day in WLLC&#13;
D 174 from 12:00 to 6:00&#13;
tomorrow (Thursday, March 31),&#13;
Food, pastries, and refreshments&#13;
will be available along&#13;
PAB. Film Series Presents&#13;
Sports banquet&#13;
on Friday&#13;
UW-Parkside will hold its&#13;
. winter. sports banquet Friday,&#13;
April 1, at 6:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union.&#13;
Letterwinners, most valuables&#13;
and captains in men's basketball,&#13;
men's and- women's fencing,&#13;
men's swimming and wrestling&#13;
will be honored.&#13;
The public is invited at $5 per&#13;
plate. For tickets contact the&#13;
Athletic Office, 553-2245.&#13;
Fri., April 1.• 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Sun., April 3 • 7:30 p.m~&#13;
UNION CINEMA&#13;
THEA'TRE&#13;
Admission: $1.00&#13;
Pharmacist&#13;
answers&#13;
questions&#13;
BRING A FRIEND'&#13;
On Monday, April 4th, Cary&#13;
Rothman, Regent of Kappa Psi&#13;
Fraternity at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Madison, will be at&#13;
Parkside at 10 a.m. to answer&#13;
questions about pharmacy&#13;
school, possible housing; and&#13;
about the pharmacy fraternity,&#13;
and to answer any questions you&#13;
may have regarding pharmacy.&#13;
He will be located at Alcove 105.&#13;
NOW IN ••• Classified 554·1500&#13;
INCOME TAX&#13;
SERVICE UNION&#13;
SGUARE&#13;
CB rw:tlo. and scanners at rock-bOttom&#13;
pneee. ,6,11 brands. John, ~.&#13;
For S.le: cassette tape deck ~nd several&#13;
cassettes. In goOd condition. S35 or best&#13;
Offer. Call 634-6215 after 6.&#13;
Beginning M.rch I CI ••• llled Ad ~:&#13;
F,..: Student ads. 20 words or under tor&#13;
on&amp;-time run. (25 cents charge for every&#13;
addillooal 10 words or under:&gt;&#13;
.SOC: FOt" each additional running alter the&#13;
lirst time.&#13;
IUIO: Non-student ads, 20 words or under&#13;
per issue. (25 cents charQ£ lor every&#13;
additional 10 wOt"ds or under.)&#13;
To place a classified ad cncr-, 553-2295.&#13;
WILLIAM A. GLASS&#13;
ElmWOOd Plaza&#13;
, Prices Quoted By Phone&#13;
Award: $20.00 lor lost class ring. Blue cut&#13;
atone, as 81. Initials J.F.N. Gall 639-0568.&#13;
Aak for Jim.&#13;
r&#13;
T~ng done in my home. Previous&#13;
secretarial experience. Please call Kenosha,&#13;
894..()479 anytime. PITCHER BEER&#13;
$150&#13;
TypIng done. Reasonable rates. Call Mona&#13;
at 553-2295 or contact the RANGER office. COME ON OUTI&#13;
TO THE&#13;
Volunteers needed KENOSHA ICE ARENA&#13;
att4~&#13;
.RECREATIONAL SKATING&#13;
.FIGURE SKATING&#13;
dROOM BALL&#13;
.YOUTH HOCKEY&#13;
.SEMI·PRO HOCKEY&#13;
Racine's YWCA River Bend&#13;
Nature Center is looking for&#13;
student volunteers to be nature&#13;
guides. According to the Center,&#13;
its outdoor education has been&#13;
run for three years on a volunteer&#13;
basis and serves the area's&#13;
elementary student with a half&#13;
day visit to River Bend.&#13;
1nterested students are asked&#13;
to contact Tom or Judy Mulder,&#13;
at 639.{)930.&#13;
PITCHER SODA&#13;
$120&#13;
·--------------~---------1 I ~ FREE I&#13;
1 \!!M ADMISSION!&#13;
I TO I&#13;
1-' ANY PUBLIC SKATING SESSION I&#13;
I WITH THIS COUPON II I -&#13;
I KENOSHA ICE ARENA I&#13;
L2~22_~Ol~~~E ..P~E~~_~9~~!21.0J&#13;
25· OFF during&#13;
Happy-Hour&#13;
KENOSHA &amp; LOAN Fridays 3-6&#13;
SAYINGS&#13;
5935 seventh Avenue&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
04235 52nd Street&#13;
0410 Broad Sf.. lake Geneva&#13;
$1.00 Deposit on Pitchers&#13;
,l,events&#13;
Wednesday, March 30&#13;
Transcendental Meditation Lecture at 1 p .m. in CL D 133 and at 7&#13;
p.m. in CL D 111. Greek· culture day planned&#13;
PAB Coffeehouse presents Tony Roland from 2 to 4 p .m. in tlnion&#13;
Square.&#13;
Life Science Club meeting and elections at 5:30 p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Shakespeare on _Film: Welles' "Chimes at Midnight" or "Falstaff"&#13;
(1966) at 7 p.m . at the Golden Rondelle, Racine. Call 554-2154 for&#13;
tickets and information.&#13;
· Thursday, March 31&#13;
Health-Line Highlight (until April 7): Gonorrhea and Syphilis&#13;
Lecture: "Latin America - Points of View" at 7 p.m. in WLLC 3rd&#13;
floor Lecture Area.&#13;
Lecture: "The Political Accountability of Scientists" by Prof. Stephen&#13;
Toulmin at 7:30 p .m. in CL 105. Sponsored by Parkside Philosophical&#13;
Society.&#13;
Friday, April 1&#13;
Paper Drive from 9 a.m . to 6 p.m. in the Circle Drive just North of the&#13;
Union . Sponsored by Vet's Club.&#13;
Earth Science Club presents "The South Range of the Sudbury Nickel&#13;
Eruptive, Ontario Canada" by Steven Dutch of UW-Creen Bay at 12&#13;
noon in GR 113. Coffee anq donuts will be served.&#13;
Chemistry-Life Science Seminar Series: "Early Events in Plant Vi.rus&#13;
Infection" by Dr. G. DeZoeten, Department of Plant Pathology,&#13;
UW-Madison, at 2 p.m . in GR D 111.&#13;
Mathematics Colloquium: Title to be announced, by Prof. C. Benson,&#13;
department of mathematics, University of Arizona, at 3:30 p .m . in&#13;
CL 107.&#13;
Movie: "Godfather II" at 8 p.m . in the Union Cinema. Admission $1 .&#13;
Concert: Parkside Symphonic Band, Craig Kirchoff, conductor, at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
Saturday, April 2&#13;
Master Classes: held by Eugene Fodor from 10 to 12 noon, and 1 to 3&#13;
, p.m . in CAD 118. Fee.&#13;
Baseball game vs. Waukesha Tech at 12 noon at the field.&#13;
Tennis Meet vs. St. Norbert at 1 p .m. at the tennis courts .&#13;
PAB Jazz Festival from 7 p .m. to 12:45 a.m. in Union Square and&#13;
Union Cinema.&#13;
Sunday, April 3&#13;
Concert: Parkside Percussion Ensemble, Roger Daniels, conductor, at&#13;
3:30 p .m. in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
Movie: "Godfather II" at 7:30 p.m . in the Union Cinema. Admission&#13;
$1 .00.&#13;
Monday, April 4&#13;
Senior Recruiting: Container Corporation during the day at Tallent&#13;
Hall. Call 2452 for more information.&#13;
Tuesday, April 5&#13;
Recruitment: Wartburg Theological Seminary, Dubuque Iowa, from 9&#13;
a.m . to 12 p .m . in the Classroom Concourse.&#13;
All events must be submitted to RANGER by the Wednesday before&#13;
publication. An events form is now available in the RANGER office·.&#13;
· Classified CB radio• and scanners at rock-bOttom&#13;
prices. All brands. John, 554-6635. Beginning March 9 Claaeltled Ad Charves:&#13;
Free: Student ads. 20 words or under for&#13;
one-time run. (25 cents charge for every&#13;
additional 10 words or under)&#13;
For Sale: cassette tape deck and several&#13;
cassettes. In good condition. $35 or best&#13;
offer. Call 634-6215 after 6.&#13;
R-ard: $20.00 for lost class ring. Blue cut&#13;
atone, BS 81. Initials J.F.N. Call 639-0568.&#13;
Ask for Jim.&#13;
.50c: For each additional running after the&#13;
first time.&#13;
S1.CICI: Non-student ads, 20 words or under&#13;
per issue. (25 cents char~ ,or every&#13;
additional 10 words or under.)&#13;
Typing done In my home. Previous To place a classified ad phot ·., 553-2295.&#13;
secretarial experience. Please call Kenosha,&#13;
694-0479 anytime.&#13;
The Parkside International&#13;
Student Organization will sponsor&#13;
a Greek Culture Day in WLLC&#13;
D 174 from 12:00 to 6:00&#13;
tomorrow (Thursday, March 31).&#13;
Food, pastries, and refreshments&#13;
will be available along&#13;
Sports banquet&#13;
on Friday&#13;
UW-Parkside will hold its&#13;
· winter sports banquet Friday,&#13;
April 1, at 6:30 p.m . in the&#13;
Union .&#13;
Letterwinners, most valuables&#13;
and captains in men's basketball,&#13;
men's and - women's fencing,&#13;
men's swimming and wrestling&#13;
will be honored.&#13;
The public is invited at $5 per&#13;
plate. For tickets contact the&#13;
Athletic Office, 553-2245.&#13;
Pharmacist&#13;
answers&#13;
questions&#13;
I&#13;
On Monday, April 4th, Cary&#13;
Rothman, Regent of Kappa Psi&#13;
Fraternity at ttie University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Madison, will be at&#13;
Parkside at 10 a.m. to answer&#13;
questions about p harmacy&#13;
school, possible housing, and&#13;
about the pharmacy fraternity,&#13;
and to answer any questions you&#13;
may have regarding pharmacy.&#13;
He will be located at Alcove 105.&#13;
r&#13;
"&#13;
554-1500&#13;
INCOME TAX&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
WILLIAM A. GLASS&#13;
Elmwood Plaza&#13;
Prices Quoted By Phone&#13;
Typing done. Reasonable rates. Call Mona&#13;
at 553-2295 or contact the RANGER office. COME ON OUTI '&#13;
TO THE&#13;
Volunteers needed&#13;
Racine's YWCA River Bend&#13;
Nature Center is looking for&#13;
student volunteers to be nature&#13;
guides. According to the Center,&#13;
its outdoor education has been&#13;
run for three years on a volunteer&#13;
basis and serves the area's&#13;
elementary student with a half&#13;
day visit to River Bend.&#13;
Interested students are asked&#13;
to contact Tom or Judy Mulder,&#13;
at 639-0930.&#13;
KENOSHA &amp; LOAN&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
5935 Seventh Avenue&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
410 Brood St. - Lake Geneva&#13;
KENOSHA ICE ARENA&#13;
ad~&#13;
eRECREA TIONAI. SKA TING&#13;
eFIGURE. SKA TING&#13;
eBROOM BA I.I.&#13;
•YOUTH HOCKEY&#13;
eSEMI-PRO HOCKEY&#13;
I~ ·------------------------, FREE I&#13;
I \!!M ADMISSION !&#13;
I TO I I · . ANY PUBLIC SKATING SESSION I&#13;
I WITH THIS COUPON 1&#13;
1 I -&#13;
I KENOSHA ICE ARENA I&#13;
tz:22_~D_;~!~E ___ _P~!?~~-~9~~~!_Dj&#13;
with ancient-style vases and&#13;
pictures of Greece for stud~nts&#13;
to peruse.&#13;
According to club members,&#13;
this will be one of a series of&#13;
culture days · to be held,&#13;
depending on student interest.&#13;
These culture days will feature&#13;
the culture of one or more of the&#13;
members of the International&#13;
Students group.&#13;
This Greek culture day is&#13;
sponsored with the assistance of&#13;
Kula's Grocery in Kenosha.&#13;
P.A.B. Film Series Presents&#13;
Thelilfalher ' . PART II&#13;
WINNER OF&#13;
ACADEMY - AWARDS 1&#13;
;.&#13;
Fri._, April 1 _ · 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Sun., April 3 - 7 :30 p.m~&#13;
UNION CINEMA&#13;
THEA-TRE&#13;
Admission: $1.00&#13;
BRING A FRIEND!&#13;
NOW IN •••&#13;
UNION&#13;
SQUARE&#13;
PITCHER BEER&#13;
$1so&#13;
PITCHER SODA&#13;
$120&#13;
2s~ OFF during&#13;
Happy Hour&#13;
Fridays 3-6&#13;
$1 .00 Deposit on Pitchers </text>
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              <text>UW President Weaver visits Parkside</text>
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              <text>UW President Weaver visits Parkside&#13;
by Rudy Lienau&#13;
The last time the president of&#13;
the Uw System John Weaver&#13;
visited Parkside he was greeted&#13;
by angry students upset about the&#13;
possibility of 27 teacher firings.&#13;
Though the schedule was full at&#13;
last week's visit, it was decidedly&#13;
less heated.&#13;
Weaver met with faculty,&#13;
students, and the press in the four&#13;
hours that were alotted for&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
In the press conference he&#13;
fielded questions about the School&#13;
of Modern Industry (SMI)&#13;
building financial aids, his&#13;
Outreach program, and technical&#13;
school cooperation.&#13;
"I think we still have a fighting&#13;
chance for planning money,"&#13;
Weaver said concerning the SMI&#13;
building. He didn't know if the&#13;
planning money would be forthcoming,&#13;
but said the best could&#13;
be hoped for was that planning&#13;
money would be available in this&#13;
biennium and that construction&#13;
money would be sought in the&#13;
next biennium.&#13;
He said the lack of the building&#13;
would be a "hinderance" and&#13;
would "cripple" Parkside's work&#13;
toward its mission, but felt that&#13;
work would continue.&#13;
"The budgetary intent in&#13;
Washington," is the most serious&#13;
phase of the financial aids&#13;
problem according to Weaver.&#13;
"The budgetary intent in&#13;
Washington," is the most serious&#13;
phase of the financial aids&#13;
problem according to Weaver.&#13;
The ParksideFinancial&#13;
aids&#13;
Student aid funds delayed&#13;
by Kathy Wellner&#13;
The financial aids situation at&#13;
Parkside is no better than&#13;
anywhere else for 1973-74.&#13;
According to Jan Ocker,&#13;
Director of Financial Aids and&#13;
Placement, students in need of&#13;
aid will not know how much&#13;
money they will get for next year,&#13;
or if they will get anything at all.&#13;
The Financial Aids Office&#13;
usually sends out a letter by May&#13;
1st to incoming Freshmen, and&#13;
by June 1st for continuing&#13;
students, telling them how much&#13;
aid they are to receive, and in&#13;
what form it will be.&#13;
This year, due to the proposed&#13;
revamp of the aids programs,&#13;
and the resultant uncertainty&#13;
Women's Day&#13;
about funds, the aids people won't&#13;
know what is available until July&#13;
1st, or later. Therefore, students&#13;
eligible for aid will be getting a&#13;
letter informing them simply as&#13;
to whether or not they are eligible&#13;
for aid, and how much they are&#13;
eligible for. The other thing that&#13;
will not be known is what form&#13;
the aid will be in: grant, loan, job&#13;
or combination.&#13;
Ocker recently received a&#13;
letter from David Obie of the&#13;
Supplemental Appropriations&#13;
Committee in which Obie stated&#13;
his belief that it is likely that the&#13;
current programs will be funded&#13;
for '73-'74, and that the Basic&#13;
Opportunity Grant (BOG) would&#13;
not be implemented.&#13;
In the meantime, because 70-75&#13;
percent of Parkside's financial&#13;
aids funds come from the federal&#13;
aid programs, students might not&#13;
know how they stand financially&#13;
until late this summer. The&#13;
Financial Aids Office is not even&#13;
sure that the money will be&#13;
available in time for registration.&#13;
The only thing that could clear&#13;
any of this up would be if&#13;
Congress fights the implementation&#13;
of the BOG and gets&#13;
appropriations for the current&#13;
programs.&#13;
For students waiting to get the&#13;
word on their '73-'74 aid, crossed&#13;
fingers is the only certainty.&#13;
Traveling with the President&#13;
were: Dallas Peterson, Associate&#13;
Vice President for Academic&#13;
Affairs; Robert Polk, Associate&#13;
Vice President for Academic&#13;
Affairs; Albert Beaver, Program&#13;
Coordinator, Agricultural and&#13;
Life Science; Richard Greiner,&#13;
P r o g r a m C o o r d i n a t o r,&#13;
Engineering and Physical&#13;
Science; Karen Merritt,&#13;
Program Coordinator, Arts and&#13;
Humanities; Robert Doyle,&#13;
Director, University Relations;&#13;
Harold Robinson, UW Central&#13;
Administration and Allan Hershfield,&#13;
Assistant Chancellor, UW&#13;
Center System.&#13;
The High Education Aids&#13;
Board (HEAB) would be appropriated&#13;
$10 million under the&#13;
governor's budgetary plan.&#13;
Weaver has spoken against this.&#13;
If the money were plugged into&#13;
HEAB Weaver felt sure it would&#13;
come back to the university&#13;
system, but the immediate&#13;
jurisdiction would rest with the&#13;
governor and HEAB.&#13;
Weaver has also spoken&#13;
against Lucey's proposed centralized&#13;
financial aids system. He&#13;
does not know what the plan&#13;
would mean, but feels that&#13;
existing funds could best be&#13;
distributed by personnel on&#13;
campus.&#13;
The conference was short, but&#13;
most reporters seemed to have&#13;
had their questions answered.&#13;
Wednesday March 28, 1973&#13;
Vol. 1 No. 23&#13;
Brakhage to speak&#13;
on Brakhage&#13;
Stan Brakhage&#13;
Stan Brakhage, one of the most&#13;
influential and prolific filmmakers&#13;
of the American underground,&#13;
will present a lecturedemonstration&#13;
incorporating&#13;
short films interspersed with&#13;
commentary at 8 p.m. Tuesday&#13;
(Ap. 3) in Greenquist Hall room&#13;
103.&#13;
Titled "Brakhage on&#13;
Brakhage," the projgram is free&#13;
to the public. In addition to the&#13;
public lecture, Brakhage will&#13;
meet informally with students&#13;
and faculty on Wednesday&#13;
morning in room 175 of the&#13;
Learning Center from 10-noon.&#13;
Maker of such major works as&#13;
"Dog Star Man" and "Window&#13;
Water Baby Moving," Brakhage&#13;
directed his first film at 18.&#13;
Continued on page 3&#13;
Caucus to present lectures, and sympsia&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
"Anatomy is destiny," Sigmund Freud once&#13;
said. The Parkside Women's Caucus begs to&#13;
differ with him, and will endeavor to prove their&#13;
point with the second annual Women's Day t&gt;n&#13;
Wednesday, April 4. Taking as its theme&#13;
"Anatomy is NOT Destiny!, "the group have&#13;
planned a number of lectures and sympsia&#13;
throughout the day and evening.&#13;
The rationale behind the idea of a Women's&#13;
Day is to provide an opportunity for people on&#13;
campus as well as in the community, to better&#13;
inform themselves about some of the issues&#13;
involved in women's controversial place in&#13;
society. The women's liberation movement&#13;
denotes different things to different people, but&#13;
the day's program attempts to accommodate a&#13;
variety of interests.&#13;
The keynote address at 9:30 a.m.-entitled&#13;
"Anatomy is Not Destiny"~will be delivered by&#13;
Carole Vopat, assistant professor of English. Her&#13;
talk will deal with what it means to be a woman,&#13;
the difference between what is feminine and&#13;
what is womanly, and the image of the women's&#13;
movement.&#13;
Abortion and Problem&#13;
Pregnancies&#13;
Birth control, abortion and problem&#13;
pregnancies will be discussed at 10:30 a.m. by&#13;
Ms. Helene Dilulio, R.N., and Rev. Donald Ott of&#13;
the Milwaukee Area Clergy Consultation on&#13;
Problem Pregnancies. Ms. Dilulio is with St.&#13;
Luke's Birth Control Clinic; Ott is associate&#13;
minister at Christ United Methodist Church in&#13;
Racine.&#13;
A talk on sexism in education will be given at&#13;
11:30 a.m. by Teresa Harris, assistant professor&#13;
of education. She will deal with the often unobtrusive&#13;
aspects of sexism in schools, both in the&#13;
curriculum and in teacher attitudes and expectations.&#13;
&#13;
Women's Liberation Debate&#13;
A videotape of the Germaine Greer-William&#13;
F. Buckley "Debate on Women's Liberation"&#13;
will be shown at 12 p.m., followed by a&#13;
discussion.&#13;
At 12:30, careers for women in science and&#13;
math will be discussed by Parkside women of the&#13;
science and math faculties. Speakers will include&#13;
Virginia Parsons, assistant professor of&#13;
psychology, Diane Pyper, assistant professor of&#13;
earth science, Virginia Scherr, assistant&#13;
professor of chemistry, and Charlotte Chell,&#13;
assistant professor of mathematics. Anna Maria&#13;
Williams, associate professor of life science, will&#13;
speak on opportunities for women in medicine.&#13;
"Rape: Protection fofor the Victim" is the title&#13;
of a 1:30 talk by Mary Gram, UW-M student and&#13;
coordinator of Community Safeguard in&#13;
Milwaukee. Ms. Gram is also chairperson of the&#13;
women's studies committee at UW-M, and involved&#13;
in Zero Population Growth (ZPG).&#13;
Poetry, Play readings&#13;
Play readings at 2:30 p.m. will include "Three&#13;
Women" by Sylvia Plath, and "But What Have&#13;
You Done For Me Lately?" by Myrna Lamb.&#13;
They will be followed by a session of poetry&#13;
reading at 3:30 p.m. Stella Gray, chairperson f&#13;
the Humanities Division, and Carole Vopat,&#13;
assistant professor of English, will show the&#13;
transition in women poets from the days of Anne&#13;
Bradstreet, Emily Dickenson, and Edna St.&#13;
Vincent Millay to more modern poets like Diane&#13;
Wakoski, Denise Levertov, Anne Sexton, Sylvia&#13;
Plath and Sandra Hochman. Students are encouraged&#13;
to bring their own work and read it or&#13;
have it read by others.&#13;
From 4-5 p.m. a discussion of women in politics&#13;
is scheduled. Participants include Betty Rowley,&#13;
Racine city councilperson, who is active in the&#13;
area of consumer protection, and Lynn Hoff of&#13;
the Racine Women's Political Caucus.&#13;
WOMEN'S DAY SCHEDULE - WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4&#13;
9:30-10 a.m. Keynote address: Dr. Carole Vopat "Anatomy is Not Destiny" 2nd floor library&#13;
lounge '&#13;
10-10:30 a.m. Discussion with Dr. Vopat, LLC D 174&#13;
10:30 12 p.m. Birth Control, Abortion and Problem Pregnancies: Helene Dilulio, R N and&#13;
Rev. Donald Ott, LLC D 173&#13;
11:30-12:30p.m. Sexism in Education: D.R Teresa Harris, LLC D 174&#13;
12-1:30 p.m. Videotape and discussion of Germaine Greer-William F. Buckley "Debate on&#13;
Women's Liberation," Learning Center Red Room&#13;
12:30-1:30 p.m. Careers for women in science, medicine and math: Parkside women science&#13;
and math faculties, LLC D173&#13;
1:30-2:30 p.m. "Rape: Protection for the Victim": Mary Gram, LLC D 174&#13;
2:30-3:30 p.m. Play Readings: "Three Women" by Sylvia Plath, and "But What Have You&#13;
Done for Me Lately?" by Myrna Lamb, LLC D 173&#13;
3:30-4:30 p.m. Poetry Reading: Dr. Stella Gray, Dr. Carole Vopat, LLC D 173. Students may&#13;
read own work also. '&#13;
4 5 p.m. Women in Politics: Betty Rowley, Lynn Hoff, LLC D 174&#13;
7 8 p.m. Women and the Law: Attorney Sandra Edhlund from Milwaukee, LLC D lu4&#13;
7-10 p m,. Assertive Behavior Clinic: D.R Walter McDonald, 2nd floor library lounge (Preregistration&#13;
necessary-call Information Center)&#13;
Continued page 5 &#13;
2 T H E PARKSIDE RANGER Wed. , Mar. 2 8, 1973&#13;
The ParksideRANGER&#13;
&#13;
Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Pay parnad y&#13;
you find a spot&#13;
Presently, all those who work here; taculty, statf and&#13;
civil service workers pay $35 for the "privilege" of&#13;
parking in a parking lot.&#13;
It is clear that the fee presently paid will increase and&#13;
that, next year, students will be paying a premium user&#13;
fee for the same privilege. This seems incongruent for a&#13;
campus which is doing its best to attract the commuter&#13;
student.&#13;
One way of attracting commuter students is to make it&#13;
easier and cheaper for the commuter to attend. The user&#13;
fee is obviously a step in the wrong direction.&#13;
The parking facilities which we presently have are a&#13;
costly venture to maintain and costa lotto build. We will&#13;
very soon need more of the same. Buses are costly too.&#13;
These things must be paid for.&#13;
But a great many people are all too aware of the effect&#13;
of us er fess on their budget. For the student the fee is an&#13;
added tuition cost. Most students drive to school and&#13;
must have a place to park. It is that simple. It is the&#13;
same for faculty, staff and civil service workers. All of&#13;
them must have a place to park, but the university does&#13;
not feel it has the responsibility to provide the space&#13;
without capital outlay of the users.&#13;
Every effort must be made to stop student user fees&#13;
before they start. Fees for those who work here should&#13;
be re-examined so that the fees paid actually buy&#13;
something. Presently, faculty and staff pay $35 to&#13;
receive the space they find open when they get here. A&#13;
student, who has his fee included in his tuition has just&#13;
as much chance for a space.&#13;
We suggest funds be solicited from the legislature to&#13;
help solve our problem.&#13;
We also suggest that a new look b e given at the policy&#13;
of " forced fees" for commuter parking. New ideas are&#13;
needed and should come from those affected as well as&#13;
the administration which will seemingly, very soon, be&#13;
adding more and greater parking fees.&#13;
Cartoonist's Eye View&#13;
TH£US. ISSOOMTO&#13;
BE. CHVIN§ AID&#13;
TO N ORTH VIETNAM.&#13;
IT'S NICE TO KNOU&#13;
THAT AS RmCRfCA&#13;
CONTINUES To&#13;
PROTECT FRE&#13;
NATIONS&#13;
F R OM&#13;
C o m m i t K / I ST&#13;
AGGRESSION j&#13;
T H AT UH L N T H L&#13;
FINILLTARH A ND&#13;
Po l i t i c s f a i l&#13;
uz C A N rlurh's&#13;
FAL L b a c k o n&#13;
T H £ SSCRET NEPFO N&#13;
TH/AT M f tDZ T n i5&#13;
comntrh &amp;mr!&#13;
IF MOU CA-N'T&#13;
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f EDITOR'S ^&#13;
I NOTEBOOK&#13;
^^b^^udy^ieriaa^^&#13;
A great reconstruction period&#13;
is coming up. The Ranger will be&#13;
shut down for the summer but&#13;
will start anew next fall.&#13;
This is being written early&#13;
because it will take a long time&#13;
for all the people who may be&#13;
interested in newspapering to be&#13;
informed that they can be&#13;
helpful.&#13;
In a university like ours, a&#13;
newspaper is just about all that&#13;
can hold the campus together.&#13;
The thing most people don't&#13;
realize is that as long as they&#13;
want to help, even if they have no&#13;
background whatsoever in&#13;
journalism, their assistance can&#13;
be as important as any other staff&#13;
member.&#13;
Having that one extra reporter&#13;
so the news editor may assign a&#13;
story instead of doing it helps&#13;
take the pressure off. That extra&#13;
person who volunteers to drive to&#13;
Zion with copy when we are in a&#13;
pinch helps take the pressure off&#13;
the managing editor. If we need&#13;
plenty of pictures for a picture&#13;
page, it's easier when there are&#13;
plenty of photographers. Even&#13;
helping to get papers circulated&#13;
to on and off-campus drop-off&#13;
spots is one of the details of a&#13;
paper that anyone with some&#13;
interest can help with.&#13;
The Ranger has a long way to&#13;
go to match the journalism excellence&#13;
of some of the college&#13;
papers of this state, but we feel&#13;
we have taken a giant step&#13;
toward the kind of ethics in&#13;
journalism that this campus&#13;
deserves. The Ranger is&#13;
something worth being proud of&#13;
and it will serve as a strong&#13;
foundation for newcomers to be&#13;
proud of in the future.&#13;
The Ranger has proven that a&#13;
Parkside publication can remain&#13;
financially solvent. We are&#13;
solvent and that position makes&#13;
us all the more flexible than&#13;
publications of the past. That&#13;
flexibility should make the paper&#13;
even more attractive to aspiring&#13;
journalists.&#13;
As planning begins for next&#13;
semester, perhaps some serious&#13;
thought should be given the&#13;
newspaper. It is a practical and&#13;
responsible., outlet for one's&#13;
creativity, energy and responsiveness.&#13;
&#13;
THORN&#13;
By Kon kol&#13;
In answer to Wayne Ramirez' fine letter in last weeks issue I can&#13;
only reiterate. If money from the student segregated fee is not spent&#13;
exclusively for students, it is wasted. If the community wishes to put&#13;
on a cultural performance, let them spend their own money to support&#13;
it, not the students.&#13;
In rebuttle to editor Lienau's 'Editors Notebook' I must make the&#13;
statement that neither the Lecture and Fine Arts Committee or the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board has ever put on a fine arts performance that&#13;
did not lose money. Members of each board admit that they can think&#13;
of n o program which could be brought to Parkside that would not lose&#13;
money.&#13;
It makes absolutely no sense in my mind to make the statement,"Once&#13;
the fine arts programming at Parkside is established the&#13;
money losers will be few and far between." The fine arts programs&#13;
have been established for four years already. Parkside will not be able&#13;
to economically support a fine arts program until twice as much interest&#13;
is shown in the performances, or until enrollment doubles&#13;
which is projected for 1990.&#13;
One performance the Activities Office is putting on I support entirely.&#13;
This is the Stanton Friedman performance I have been mentioning&#13;
the past couple weeks.&#13;
There are openings left in Friedman's schedule during the day. He&#13;
does not restrict these informal discussions to queries on UFOs. Other&#13;
topics he could give discourse on include, travel to the stars, scientific&#13;
approach to the unknown, and discussion on man's place in the&#13;
universe.&#13;
Remember the date, April 17, Tuesday,and get your requests in for&#13;
Mr. Friedman's time to the Activities Office.&#13;
Some members of the student senate are concerned with President&#13;
Haack's actions the past week,&#13;
It seems that because of publicity raised by the Indian-Government&#13;
battle at Wounded Knee, Haack decided to send a telegram to&#13;
President Nixon, among others, protesting the government's actions&#13;
in the affair. This is not bad in itself, only he signed Parkside Student&#13;
Senate to the telegrams.&#13;
This, also would not be bad in itself, but he first did not get the ok of&#13;
the Student Senate to take such an action. He made no attempt to even&#13;
contact a majority of the Senate to approve the action. This was a&#13;
clear case of overstepping authority which does not even come under&#13;
President 311 phraSG m the constitution explaining the duties of the&#13;
I am afraid Tom has himself confused with Richard Nixon, who also&#13;
pays no attention to his legislative branch.&#13;
By Gary Huck&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
RAIMGER&#13;
year' by te sSs Vjft&#13;
1 WeeWy «ademic&#13;
Kenosha, Wisetnsta3140oLe^r™&#13;
, Learning center, Telephone (firsts '&#13;
6&#13;
" D"&#13;
194 Llbrary&#13;
"&#13;
Y r e f l e L / i n cl m n T f n d editorii!ldePendent new s P&#13;
a Per. O p i n i o n s&#13;
\.'Tew of The&#13;
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n a n y s u b j e c t o f&#13;
less, typed and double-spacS The °&#13;
nflned to 250 words or&#13;
letters for length and good taste Anionic re&#13;
*&#13;
e&#13;
J&#13;
vethe ri8ht to edit&#13;
address, phone number and studpnt J t s»gned and include&#13;
be withheld upon request The °&#13;
r ty rank&#13;
' Name&#13;
? wiI1&#13;
print any letters q 6dlt&#13;
°&#13;
rS reserve the ri«&#13;
h&#13;
t to refuse to&#13;
Classified and displayed rates will be furnished upon request&#13;
EDITOR IN-GHIEF: Rudy Lienau " ^qUOSt.&#13;
•MANAGIN-GiADiTOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Kathryn Wellner&#13;
S£URE ED IT0R: J^e Schliesman&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Kris Koch&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Jerry MurDhv&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
He,mut Kah&#13;
'&#13;
Bi&#13;
"&#13;
ADVISER: Don Koprlva a w r*nce, Ken Konkol, Rudy L , (. n 8 u .&#13;
^°&#13;
R n&#13;
,&#13;
a7&lt;&gt;&#13;
nal advertising by if&#13;
Naomi Eductt.on.1 Advertising Services, Inc. 9&#13;
360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. 10017 I &#13;
©&#13;
the&#13;
Moveincn 1&#13;
deaHnr^.l&#13;
016&#13;
'' "&#13;
ThC Movement&#13;
" is a regular feature in RANGER&#13;
almg with women s concerns. Guest writers are invited.&#13;
THE WISCONSIN EQUAL RIGHTS AMENDMENT&#13;
by Susan Burns , . " *&#13;
de'n?ed&#13;
Unr&#13;
tJhl=g5&#13;
tS IT' .&#13;
protection ™d&lt;* the law shall not be denied or abridged on the basis of sex."&#13;
Dlav'oH0&#13;
,? '!* W°&#13;
rdS&#13;
"&#13;
equality&#13;
" and&#13;
"j&#13;
us«&#13;
aa&#13;
" have purportedly&#13;
ft,&#13;
6 Pa&#13;
/l&#13;
m&#13;
°&#13;
Ur nation&#13;
'&#13;
s ideals&#13;
' we haye "«ver fully&#13;
consatutionaTm®"&#13;
1&#13;
"&#13;
8&#13;
. ru W°&#13;
rdS" °&#13;
nly reCently have we&#13;
^tended&#13;
and the non gl&#13;
JI&#13;
aranteca of dllman r&#13;
'ghts to the minority race groups&#13;
o&#13;
d&#13;
J!&#13;
P0 f ' r.&#13;
the&#13;
"&#13;
ew Equal RiShts Amendment, we&#13;
propose to offer equality to women.&#13;
™L&#13;
E-K;A. is designed to eliminate the so-called "protective&#13;
protection'' to"Sdetea" W°&#13;
men&#13;
' 38 35 eX'&#13;
end&#13;
"&#13;
meaai&#13;
"g&#13;
f&#13;
"&gt;&#13;
Hpniln6 E ?:&#13;
A,' 1S P388&#13;
*&#13;
1 on APril 3&gt; women will no longer be legally&#13;
omn? 1 loans and mor&#13;
tgages or equal access to educational and&#13;
employment opportunities. Men will no longer be denied a minimum&#13;
wage and overtime, special retirement benefits on the death of their&#13;
ployment&#13;
F pr0tect,on of their health&#13;
- safety and welfare in emThe&#13;
Wisconsin E.R.A. will be effective immediately after passage&#13;
and will enable men and women to seek redress from local courts&#13;
regarding discrimination.&#13;
In other words, the E.R.A. is not just a "women's rights" amendment-it&#13;
proposes to extend the present constitutional rights and open&#13;
the door to other Human Rights amendments. The E.R.A cannot&#13;
insure the lack of discrimination, but it can insure the right of every&#13;
citizen to legal action if they have been discriminated against.&#13;
There have been misunderstandings about just what this amendment&#13;
will do. Opponents of E.R.A. have offered misleading arguments&#13;
concerning the cost of equality.&#13;
Some of the questions these arguments have provoked are as&#13;
follows:&#13;
(1) Will women be drafted?&#13;
Answer: Not because of a Wisconsin E.R.A., since the draft is a&#13;
federal, not a state government procedure.&#13;
(2) Will divorced women be deprived of alimony and child support'&#13;
Answer: Wisconsin law already specifies that alimony, child support&#13;
and child custody be awarded according to the best interests of&#13;
the child and the financial capabilities of both spouses.&#13;
(3) Will restrooms and correctional institutions be integrated?&#13;
Answer: No more than at present. Reasonable separation of the&#13;
sexes is protected by the constitutional right to privacy.&#13;
(4) Will rape laws be repealed?&#13;
Answer: No. In fact, the Wisconsin E.R.A. guarantees equal&#13;
protection to men and boys in cases of rape and child molestation.&#13;
(5) Will women lose protective labor legislation?&#13;
Answer: Federal regulations have already made Wisconsin's&#13;
protective hours laws for women unenforceable. A Wisconsin E.R.A.&#13;
will extend other protections by giving state agencies clear authority&#13;
to protect men as well as women, and to enforce minimum wage and&#13;
overtime for all workers.&#13;
Other questions and more detailed answers are available at the&#13;
Woman's Caucus reserve shelf of the library. Ask at the circulation&#13;
desk if you're interested in more information about this very important&#13;
amendment.&#13;
Brakhage&#13;
Continued from page 1&#13;
Sheldon Renan, historian of&#13;
underground cinema, calls him&#13;
"the major transitional figure in&#13;
the turning away of 'experimental'&#13;
film from literature&#13;
and surrealist psychodrama and&#13;
in its subsequent move toward&#13;
the more purely personal and&#13;
visual."&#13;
Of the 249 films in Jonas&#13;
Mekas' "Anthology Film Archives"&#13;
in 1971, Brakhage made&#13;
24-almost 10 percent-of the films&#13;
termed "essential." Critical&#13;
assessments rank Brakhage and&#13;
Andy Warhol as the poles against&#13;
which and within which the&#13;
"structural cinema" of the last&#13;
six years has developed.&#13;
Marks of the Brakhage style&#13;
include the bobbing hand-held&#13;
camera movement, the transformation&#13;
of object and mood by&#13;
distortion and rapid cutting and&#13;
the titles scratched directly on&#13;
the film.&#13;
Many of his films deal with&#13;
childhood and the behavior of&#13;
very young children. He also has&#13;
filmed a number of landscape&#13;
Applications for the&#13;
position of editor-in-chief&#13;
for the 1973-74 RANGER&#13;
are now being accepted by&#13;
the newspaper's advisory&#13;
board.&#13;
All Parkside students&#13;
who will be carrying at&#13;
least eight hours per&#13;
semester are eligible to&#13;
apply for the position,&#13;
which is made on a September&#13;
to May basis.&#13;
Each candidate is asked&#13;
studies including "The Dead,"&#13;
"White Eye," and "Black&#13;
Vision."&#13;
His appearance is being&#13;
sponsored by Lecture-Fine Arts&#13;
committee.&#13;
to submit details of his&#13;
journalistic experience&#13;
and a statement of his&#13;
plans for the RANGER to&#13;
Don Kopriva, Adviser to&#13;
Student Publications, by&#13;
Friday, April 13, at D-194&#13;
LLC.&#13;
The advisory board will&#13;
interview candidates&#13;
Tuesday, April 17, and&#13;
announce its selection&#13;
before spring break.&#13;
We get letters...&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I would like to bring this letter&#13;
to the attention of Mr. "Thorn"&#13;
(Ken Konkol). In the last two&#13;
issues of the RANGER you&#13;
criticized the Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts Committee and the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board for "immoderately&#13;
spending" the&#13;
Parkside students' money "in an&#13;
endeavor that will profit the large&#13;
majority nothing." You attacked&#13;
the two groups for bringing Jose&#13;
Greco and his company to&#13;
Parkside, saying that there is not&#13;
enough interest in Spanish&#13;
culture or Spanish dance in&#13;
Racine and Kenosha.&#13;
Were you at the performance,&#13;
Mr. "Thorn"? Did you notice that&#13;
the bleachers and the rows of&#13;
chairs lined up in front of the&#13;
bleachers were all filled?&#13;
I guess you put your foot in&#13;
your mouth this time. The performance&#13;
was superb and the&#13;
audience's response was fervent.&#13;
You should have been there~you&#13;
might have enjoyed it!&#13;
S. Mikaelian&#13;
Senior&#13;
P.S. I am soon going to be one of&#13;
the "large majority... nothing,"&#13;
A "nothing" — that hurts, Ken.&#13;
PARKSIDE CAMPUS OFFICE&#13;
219 TALLENT HALL&#13;
553-2150&#13;
%™7/ "Washington Square&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
Raciqe •&#13;
PHONE: 634-6661&#13;
COLLEGIATE NOTES&#13;
Understand all subjects, plays&#13;
and novels faster!&#13;
Thousands of topics available within 48&#13;
hours of mailing&#13;
Complete with bibliography and footnotes&#13;
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Lowest Prices are GUARANTEED.&#13;
SEND $1.90 for our latest descriptive&#13;
Mailorder Catalogue with Postage&#13;
Paid Order Forms too;.&#13;
COLLEGIATE RESEARCH GUIDE&#13;
1 N. 13th St. Bldg. Rrn 706&#13;
Phila., Pa. 19107&#13;
HOT-LINE (215) 563-3758&#13;
Telephone 652-8662&#13;
3315-52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
. To The Editor:&#13;
The editors and staff of&#13;
Parkside's Poetry Book, The&#13;
Broken Horn, would like to give&#13;
our thanks to Rita Petretti,&#13;
Parkside's Coordinator of&#13;
Publications, for the tremendous&#13;
amount of work she put into&#13;
making our publication a reality.&#13;
Our names were in the book and&#13;
the newspapers but without Rita&#13;
we would have never gone to&#13;
press. Thanks Rita!&#13;
We would also like to urge the&#13;
University of continue to support&#13;
a Poetry Book. "The Broken&#13;
Horn" far surpasses, any other&#13;
poetry book put out in this area&#13;
and with some work and better&#13;
contributions, we can equal any&#13;
put out in this state. . ,&#13;
Eric J. Olson&#13;
Fred A. Lott,&#13;
Editors&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Since your RANGER ASKS&#13;
reporter did not come to ask me&#13;
my views on amnesty I give them&#13;
now.&#13;
To insist a deserter do time in&#13;
some type of alternative military&#13;
service is labeling his values and&#13;
moral judgements as something&#13;
worthless. By alternative service&#13;
a deserter would be&#13;
strengthening, thereby supporting,&#13;
the same military&#13;
system which commits the acts&#13;
he so strongly disaproves of.&#13;
It's an absurd proposal to offer&#13;
the 50,000 draft evaders and&#13;
deserters who long ago made&#13;
their own peace of mind. To force&#13;
a person to renig on his own&#13;
conscience or face imprisonment,&#13;
is a far cry from&#13;
American democracy.&#13;
D.S. Friedell&#13;
Kenosha, Sophomore&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Presents&#13;
F00SBAU TOURNAMENT&#13;
APRIL 9 -15&#13;
PRIZES F OR B EST TEAMS&#13;
Entry Fee: *1 for 2 person teem&#13;
Register by April 6&#13;
Register At SAB. or&#13;
Student Activities Office LLC D197&#13;
Sponsored by P.A.B.&#13;
!50&#13;
c Coupon&#13;
1&#13;
GOOD FOR 2 FREE DRY CYCLES WITH ANY&#13;
WASHLOAD AND 1 EXTRA FREE PUNCH ON&#13;
YOUR DRY CLEANING DIVIDEND CARD&#13;
WITH AN 8 LB. L OAD OF DRY CLEANING&#13;
GOOD AT THESE LOCATIONS:&#13;
NORGE VILLAGE 7313-45 AVE., KENOSHA&#13;
WESTGATE POLYCLEAN 1258 OHIO ST., RACINE&#13;
RAPIDS DR. POLYCLEAN 2400 RAPIDS DR., RACINE&#13;
ONE COUPON PER WEEK PER CUSTOMER&#13;
Expires Sept. 5, 1973&#13;
NAME &amp; ADDRESS. &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., M ar. 28, 19 73&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
BYRDS&#13;
(SD 5058)&#13;
, , Parkside shows talent&#13;
Jtiign schoolers&#13;
compete in at recent folk fest&#13;
design contest&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center&#13;
Super Low Prices&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave., Racine&#13;
518-56th St., Kenosha&#13;
Thirty-six individual and team&#13;
entries have been received in the&#13;
First Annual University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Engineering&#13;
Design Contest for High School&#13;
Students.&#13;
Their quest: to build a better&#13;
egg container.&#13;
Judging and awarding of p rizes&#13;
to the two top entries will take&#13;
place on Saturday, May 5, at 1:30&#13;
p.m. following an "Egg Drop" in&#13;
which raw eggs (supplied by&#13;
Parkside) will be placed in the&#13;
student-designed containers and&#13;
subjected to a 15-foot free-fall.&#13;
The competition will be in the&#13;
Library-Learning Center Main&#13;
Place.&#13;
Containers encasing eggs&#13;
which survive the fall intact will&#13;
vie for awards based on size and&#13;
volume-the less of both the&#13;
better.&#13;
Following the competition, the&#13;
students have been invited to tour&#13;
Parkside engineering science&#13;
facilities and to take a dip in the&#13;
pool-possibly to wash the egg off&#13;
their faces.&#13;
High schools with students&#13;
entered in the competition are&#13;
Bradford and Tremper of&#13;
Kenosha; Horlick, Washington&#13;
Park, Case and Prairie of&#13;
Racine; Martin Luther, Bay&#13;
View, Thomas Moore and Pulaski&#13;
of Milwaukee; Whitnall of Hales&#13;
Corners; Hamilton of Greenfield;&#13;
St. Bona venture of Sturtevant;&#13;
and Franklin of Franklin.&#13;
Individual entries also have&#13;
been received from Franksville,&#13;
West Allis and Lake Geneva&#13;
students.&#13;
by Gary Jensen&#13;
Parkside may become a new&#13;
breeding ground for talent. About&#13;
ten different acts were presented&#13;
at the free folk fest Sunday,&#13;
March 18, between 2 and 6 p.m.&#13;
Brandy Wine, Parkside's best&#13;
blues band, began the show and&#13;
performed such classics as&#13;
"Little Red Rooster" and "Casey&#13;
Jones." Dave Rogers played&#13;
well, sang sour, and created a&#13;
humorous and friendly atmosphere.&#13;
The brothers Gregory&#13;
(Marti &amp; Mike), a guitar and&#13;
banjo duo, were likewise a gas.&#13;
Fred Bultman, the barefoot poet,&#13;
recited a medly of his own poetry&#13;
and "21st Century Schizoid&#13;
1701 N. Main Racine 633-9421&#13;
Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
T h u rs day 11-8&#13;
ACROSS FROM HOLIDAY INN&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches.&#13;
Foosball 2 Pool Tables |&#13;
Air Conditioning Pinball Machine &lt;&#13;
Cold Six Packs To Go&#13;
SERVED IN THE ATMOSPHERE&#13;
OF THE&#13;
College Educations Start at&#13;
- BOTH UNDSR SAMS OWNERSHIP —&#13;
In Four Sizes 9" - 12" - 14" - 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
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CNOCCHI • RAVibLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
• SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
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(formerly Shakey's)&#13;
Phone 658-2573 58th St. at 6th Ave&#13;
MAIN OFFICE: CAPITOL COURT MILWAUKEE 6208 Green Bay Road&#13;
Phone 654-0485&#13;
LL LENGTHS&#13;
'S H OTTEST ROCK BAND&#13;
of th e 6 0 s &amp; Now&#13;
A ALL YOU CAN EAT&#13;
10.s • , BUNCH O'FISH&#13;
a FISH, PIZZA. SALAD, MO-JO'S&#13;
jn. Wed.&amp;Fri. t1Qq&#13;
from 5 p.m. ™&#13;
iscountRcCflRDS&#13;
1&#13;
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WA+ERBEDS /Comics \&#13;
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ALL YOU CAN EAT&#13;
PIZZA, CHICKEN, SALAD.&#13;
'1:30-1:30&#13;
30 KINDS SERVED ALL THE TIME&#13;
W MO-JO'S SERVED ALL THE TIME&#13;
Plus Your Favorite Mixed Drinks and Beers &#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
Wed., Mar. 28, 1973 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
There will be a meeting of all&#13;
faculty members interested in&#13;
developing an evaluation form&#13;
for interdivisional use this&#13;
semester, Thursday, March 29, at&#13;
3 p.m. in Greenquist room 103&#13;
(lecture hall). Interested&#13;
students may also attend.&#13;
•&#13;
Yoga classes will be offered by&#13;
a certified yoga instructor, Carol&#13;
Merrick, in the fencing room of&#13;
the Physical Education Building&#13;
beginning Monday, April 2. The&#13;
eight-week, no-credit course will&#13;
be held from noon until 12:30&#13;
starting Monday.&#13;
•&#13;
The Student Activities Board&#13;
will present a free mini-concert,&#13;
featuring Tony, Jumbo and&#13;
Garry. The concert will be in the&#13;
Student Activities Building,&#13;
tonight, at 9 p.m.&#13;
The University of WisconsinExtension&#13;
will offer a workshop&#13;
course in letter and report&#13;
writing. The course is called&#13;
Effective Business Communications",&#13;
and will begin&#13;
Thursday, April 12 from 7 p.m. to&#13;
9 p.m. at Starbuck Junior High&#13;
School, 1516 Ohio Street, Racine.&#13;
The workshop will include&#13;
lectures, films, slides, sample&#13;
letters, aids, and exercises. The&#13;
instructor will be William R.&#13;
Gerler, President, General&#13;
Communications, Racine, an&#13;
advertising, public relations, and&#13;
association management firm.&#13;
There will be six weekly&#13;
meetings for a fee of $25 (including&#13;
materials.) Interested&#13;
persons should register by April&#13;
6. For further information call&#13;
553-2312.&#13;
.Hi i 1H1 W&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Europe&#13;
CHICAGO - LO NDON&#13;
May 28- July 13 $199&#13;
June 13 - July 11 $215&#13;
includes:&#13;
Round Trip 747 Charter Jet&#13;
| Transfer to Downtown London&#13;
Applications available:&#13;
Travel Center LLC D-197&#13;
553-2279&#13;
11 1 M M&#13;
Women's Day&#13;
The Chamber Singers, a select&#13;
14-member vocal group of&#13;
Tf&#13;
3 iqfi n' W!&#13;
U PreSGnt 3 Pr&#13;
°Sram of 19th Century German Lieder&#13;
Pa&#13;
f&#13;
tsong&#13;
s at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Wednesday, March 28, in Room&#13;
103 Greenquist Hall. The concert&#13;
is free and open to the public&#13;
The News Election Service is&#13;
sponsoring scholarships in&#13;
Journalism in the name of the&#13;
Wisconsin County Clerks'&#13;
Association. There are four $500&#13;
scholarships available in the&#13;
state. The award will be based on&#13;
academic ability, financial need,&#13;
and participation in community&#13;
and school activities, especially&#13;
the school newspaper. Parkside&#13;
Communications Majors are&#13;
eligible to apply. For further&#13;
information, contact the&#13;
Financial Aids Office.&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
will present a comparative wine&#13;
tasting experience, made&#13;
available through the California&#13;
Wine Growers Association.&#13;
There will be six California&#13;
wines and four European which&#13;
will be tasted without the taster&#13;
knowing which wine it is. Each&#13;
participant will get eight&#13;
separate glasses of wine to taste,&#13;
and there will be cheese and&#13;
crackers at all the tables.&#13;
"This is not intended to be a&#13;
drunk! It is intended to be an&#13;
informative session," said Anthony&#13;
A. Totero.&#13;
Other campuses around the&#13;
state have had wine tasters, but&#13;
most of them have utilized local&#13;
suppliers.&#13;
Continued from page 1&#13;
Assertive Behavior Clinic&#13;
Two evening sessions are planned, beginning&#13;
at 7 p.m. One, an assertive behavior clinic for&#13;
women, will be conducted by Racine&#13;
psychologist Walter McDonald. He explained in&#13;
an interview that "for years in Western culture&#13;
there have been secret societies, each grouped&#13;
on the basis of some special interest. These&#13;
societies always have cryptic rituals which are&#13;
closely guarded, for to use them conveys power&#13;
and one must be initiated into the group before&#13;
exercising that power. Formal, secret societies&#13;
have nowadays disbanded or degenerated into&#13;
Elks clubs and the like; but there does still exist&#13;
an enormous secret society called MEN, who&#13;
have a set of rituals carefully guarded form&#13;
outsiders (women). One of these powerful rituals&#13;
is assertiveness."&#13;
The few women who have managed to uncover&#13;
this secretand use it have been at the very least&#13;
reprimanded for not knowing "their place".&#13;
"The idea," McDonald commented, "is to be&#13;
assertive without getting ostracized." He was&#13;
careful to distinguish between assertiveness and&#13;
aggressiveness, and remarked that "hatred&#13;
turns people off-learning to be assertive can&#13;
overcome hatred." He cited the Germaine&#13;
Greer-William F. Buckley debate on Women's&#13;
Liberation, saying that Greer was extremely&#13;
aggressive and could have made more converts&#13;
by cutting these techniques at times in favor of&#13;
assertion.&#13;
McDonald plans to deal with specific&#13;
problems, in his session. He believes one should&#13;
start small and experience success at assertion&#13;
in little things, which will be reinforcing and&#13;
facilitate the process in more difficult situations.&#13;
Some suggested problems are: Dealing with&#13;
repairmen who either ignore your call ofr help or&#13;
belittle your intelligence when they get there;&#13;
questioning a speaker without getting hung up&#13;
worrying if your question will come out intelligent&#13;
and well-framed; handling male&#13;
machismo rather than passively submitting to&#13;
it; and discussing women's liberation with&#13;
someone who may not be sympathetic.&#13;
Because too large a group would make it&#13;
impossible to effectively help anyone, participation&#13;
in this session will be limited to 40&#13;
women. Registration is necessary-call the Information&#13;
Center, 553-2345, before 4 p.m. on&#13;
Wednesday, April 4.&#13;
Women and the Law&#13;
The other evening program features a talk by&#13;
Milwaukee attorney Sandra Edhlund concerning&#13;
the legal rights of women. She will discuss how&#13;
the law affects women with respect to family&#13;
relations, employment, credit, consumer rights,&#13;
pensions and property.&#13;
Ms. Edhlund is a member of Women in&#13;
Transition, Women's Law Project, and the&#13;
Wisconsin Civil Liberties Committee on&#13;
Women's Rights. She received her B.A. cum&#13;
laude from Milwaukee Downer College, her M.A.&#13;
in political science from UW-M, and her J.D.&#13;
from UW-Madison.&#13;
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prices. Savings up to 83&#13;
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6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Mar. 28, 197 3&#13;
The Ranger asks What is your opinion&#13;
of the Parkside Student Government Association?&#13;
Lois Wick, Freshmen, Racine&#13;
"I don't think it's very good, I&#13;
don't really have a good opinion&#13;
because I don't think they do&#13;
anything for the students. I don't&#13;
think they really represent the&#13;
students as a whole."&#13;
Joseph Orlowski, Sophomore,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
"I don't know that much about&#13;
it."&#13;
Janet Sabol, Junior, Racine&#13;
"Well, I think the problem with&#13;
the PSGA is the nature of the&#13;
university begin with - you know&#13;
it's a comuter school and the&#13;
students don't care really. You&#13;
know, you ask students what they&#13;
think of student government and&#13;
they say, T didn't know it&#13;
existed.' And so if you have an&#13;
apathetic student body you're not&#13;
going to accomplish anything;&#13;
also students can never get&#13;
enough students united on one&#13;
issue to ever make any kind .of a&#13;
policy change. So it exists but it&#13;
doesn't really accomplish much&#13;
of anything, I don't think, as far&#13;
as doing some good if it's doing&#13;
what it's supposed to do. The&#13;
people on the student government&#13;
are very disorganized themselves,&#13;
they don't show up at&#13;
meetings, some of them, they&#13;
cah't organize their forces&#13;
cohesively and try accomplish&#13;
something for set policy&#13;
whatever it is they want to do.&#13;
And they kind of meander&#13;
around, well the university's&#13;
screwed up we should do&#13;
something about it, well what are&#13;
they going to do? They say we're&#13;
going to do this and then no one&#13;
shows up at the meeting, and&#13;
they're - not presistent enough&#13;
with the administration."&#13;
Tashe Bozinovski, Freshmen,&#13;
Racine&#13;
"I don't even know nothing&#13;
about it."&#13;
Diane Rosenfeldt,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
"I haven't any."&#13;
Senior,&#13;
Editors' Note : These comments&#13;
were also received but no&#13;
pictures were available.&#13;
Thomas Hillmer, Junior,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
"No thoughts."&#13;
Robert Bush, Junior, Kenosha&#13;
"Do I think it's benefitting the&#13;
students? From what I do know, I&#13;
think it's benefitting, and&#13;
sometimes I don't agree with all&#13;
their demands, but basically I&#13;
think it's doing a hell of a lot of&#13;
good for the school."&#13;
Gretchen Goebel, Junior, Racine&#13;
"I really don't know anything&#13;
about it."&#13;
Denise Anastasio, Junior, Racine&#13;
"I think it's doing alot of good,&#13;
but I think that when they're&#13;
having an election there should&#13;
be more issues debated. All they&#13;
say is that they think I'm the best&#13;
representative because I know&#13;
what the people want, and the&#13;
other one says I'm the best&#13;
representative. But they don't&#13;
seem to debate any issues that&#13;
you could really take a stand on.&#13;
And I think Tom Haack is really&#13;
doing a good job."&#13;
Dale Phillips, Sophomore,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Doesn't seem to be doing&#13;
much. I'm not following it, but I&#13;
don't hear of anything they do&#13;
really."&#13;
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/ictdio-'tVc&amp;uat 'levied*&#13;
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Review&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
Could you make a life and death decision?&#13;
Imagine that you are the captain of an oceanliner which has just&#13;
sunk. You and the survivors are in an overburdened lifeboat. Would&#13;
you have the ability to decide which of those people must die to save&#13;
the others?&#13;
"The Right to Live: Who Decides?", a film clip from the movie&#13;
"Abandon Ship", raises this and other questions.&#13;
The clip itself tells the story of how the captain of a sunken&#13;
oceanliner decides that some of the people in his lifeboat must be put&#13;
over the side. It is a difficult choice. His criteria are those of strength&#13;
and endurance: The strong survive, the weak must perish.&#13;
The passengers react with horror to the captain's decision, wnad&#13;
will not comply with his orders unless forced at gunpoint. This leaves&#13;
the captain complete responsibility.&#13;
A day later, after several people had been put over the side so that&#13;
the remaining passengers could row to Africa, a ship is sighted and the&#13;
survivors are rescued.&#13;
The reaction of the remaining passengers is that of washing their&#13;
hands of the affair. It is the captain's responsibility. He alone must&#13;
face the consequences.&#13;
One asks oneself what our own reaction would be under such circumstances.&#13;
Could we accept such an awful responsibility alone?&#13;
Would we have the courage?&#13;
And what about the other life and death decisions which are made?&#13;
Who should decide to have an abortion, or that a person should have&#13;
the right to die instead of b eing kept alive by machines and medicines?&#13;
I believe this film poses some stimulating questions which we can&#13;
not afford not to answer.&#13;
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W.&#13;
The ParksideWed.,&#13;
Mar. 28, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
RAIMGER Martin selected most valuable&#13;
• UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
1973 TENNIS SCHEDULE&#13;
April 7 Carthage. HOME 1:00 p.m.&#13;
April 13 Elmhurst, Wheaton, Carthage and Carroll&#13;
April 17 Milton. HOME 12:00&#13;
April 23 Whitewater Invitational. Whitewater at 12:00&#13;
April 25 Marquette. HOME 1:00 p.m.&#13;
April 28 Green Bay. HOME 12:00&#13;
May 5 St. Norbert. HOME 1:00 p.m.&#13;
May 12 Green Bay - Green Bay at 12:00&#13;
May 14 Milton - Milton at 12:00&#13;
May 18 and 19 District 14 - O shkosh at 9:00 a.m.&#13;
College of Racine to be added later.&#13;
Sports&#13;
Carthage, 10:30 a.m.&#13;
Junior Ken Martin of Coleman,&#13;
the first Parkside athlete to win&#13;
an NAIA individual championship,&#13;
has been selected most&#13;
valuable wrestler at the school by&#13;
a vote of his teammates.&#13;
Martin, who compiled a 22-1-1&#13;
mark enroute to the NAIA 134-lb.&#13;
title at Sioux City, Iowa, recently,&#13;
has never lost to a Wisconsin&#13;
wrestler. His career mark after&#13;
second, third and first places in&#13;
NAIA competition stands at 6 2-6-&#13;
2.&#13;
by amy cundari&#13;
Martin, who also co-captained&#13;
the team with NAIA 126-lb.&#13;
runner-up Bill West of Kenosha,&#13;
led the Rangers to a ninth place&#13;
finish nationally, highest among&#13;
any Wisconsin colleges.&#13;
He's never lost to anyone who&#13;
hadn't already gained NAIA or&#13;
NCAA all-America status.&#13;
P.E. Bldg. Schedule&#13;
RECREATIONAL HOURS&#13;
Pool&#13;
Monday 8. Wednesday 11:30-1:30&#13;
Tuesday &amp; Thursday 11:30 - 2:30&#13;
Friday 11:30-3:30&#13;
Monday,.Tuesday, Wednesday 5:30-10:00&#13;
Thursday 5:30-7:00&#13;
9:00-10:00&#13;
Saturday 10:00-5:00&#13;
Sunday 1:30 • 10:0 0&#13;
Gym&#13;
Monday thru Friday 10:30 -1:30 (2 courts open)&#13;
3:30 - 6:00 (1 caurt open)&#13;
6:00-10:00 (restricted play)&#13;
Handball Courts&#13;
Monday thru Friday ,8:00a.m. - 10:00p.m.,&#13;
except Tuesday 8. Thursday closed fro-n 10:30-12:00 for classes&#13;
Saturday 8:00-5:00&#13;
Sunday 1:00.10:00&#13;
Iff B^ITTTT'TM 1' ii&#13;
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SPECIAL for P arkside students only 3j|&#13;
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Offer good till April 1, 1973 MjP cjj&#13;
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T h at's you. landing mo r e than a million dol lars worth of&#13;
jet aircraft at 150 miles p er hour, within 3 seco n ds and 200 feet&#13;
T h at's you after an i nvalu able educat ion , the finest there is&#13;
complim e nts of tth e Navy.&#13;
T h at's you with your wings of gold, with all the prestig e and&#13;
privil eges of a Naval Officer and aviato r.&#13;
Merrill Lync h c an be pretty exciting in a different way.&#13;
But right n ow y ou'v e got that one ch a n c e in your life to swing wide&#13;
a s the se a , a nd as h igh a s the sky .&#13;
It you're going to be something, why i,u: be something special?&#13;
THE NAVY OFFICER INFORMATION TEAM&#13;
WILL BE ON YOUR CAMPUS:&#13;
*+-5 April 1973&#13;
Sales &amp; Service At&#13;
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will never be like this. &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Mar. 28, 1973&#13;
Speaking&#13;
of Sports&#13;
by Bill Blaha&#13;
In 1971, Paul Williams and Roger Nichols wrote-a song called, "I&#13;
Won't Last A Day Without You." The soft-singing rock group the&#13;
Carpenters recorded the song. After listening to the words, I changed&#13;
the you to mean sports, instead of a lover's boy or girl friend.&#13;
The first part of the song goes, Day after Day I must face a world of&#13;
strangers Where I don't belong I'm not that strong It's nice to know&#13;
that there's someone I can turn to Who will always care You're always&#13;
there...&#13;
Well sports are always there, no matter how irrepressible they get. I&#13;
state my case of not the sport's statistics, but more the words and&#13;
sounds that have probably missed most sports page readers.&#13;
Case 1: The wife of O hio State's football coach Woody, Anne Hayes&#13;
said, "I count my blessings. While he's abosrbed with 80 boys and their&#13;
problems. I don't have to worry about one thin blonde in an apartment&#13;
somewhere."&#13;
Case 2: Brian Piccolo's ending to a happy story. I'm sure most&#13;
people remember Brian. I know I will because of t he good fortune of&#13;
watching the movie "Brian's Song" with a good-sized group of college&#13;
kids in Eau Claire. There were no words or sounds to be heard during&#13;
the movie, but after more than one person's eyes were crying. Brian&#13;
was quite a man. Remember what Gale Sayers said continuously in&#13;
the movie, "Oh Pic." Well, "OH PIC" your worries are over; after&#13;
three years your wife has found someone to take care of your three&#13;
beautiful children. Joy Piccolo was married in a private ceremony two&#13;
weekends ago. Pic would have wanted it that way.&#13;
The author of B rian's story, A Short Season, Jeannie Morris wrote&#13;
last week in the Chicago Today, "You had to know that somewhere --&#13;
perhaps over a golden glass of Gatorade - Italian eyes were smiling."&#13;
Case 3: The story of Bungalow Bill Walton, UCLA's towering redheaded&#13;
basketball star, whose brother was aked if Bill was qualified to&#13;
be drafted as a hardship case by the pros. Bruce put tongue in check&#13;
and said, "I'm hoping to get a job in pro football so we can get off&#13;
welfare." Bruce played football at UCLA and was drafted by the&#13;
Dallas Cowboys.&#13;
Case 4: The continuous story of girl's success in athletics. Sue&#13;
Palmer debuted the first girl to enter a California junior college&#13;
basketball game. The only trouble was Sue's men opponents, had&#13;
longer hair. Denise Long a cute, small 5-11, 38-28-36, was drafted&#13;
several years back by the professional basketball team Golden State.&#13;
Jim Murray, a LA-Times columnist, said, "If arena's had doors in the&#13;
showers she might still be playing, besides she looks a lot better&#13;
running around in her underwear than Wilt Chamberlain." Eileen&#13;
Reilly, girl track star at Parkside, who was asked at last year's prom.&#13;
Was that you I saw running yesterday? Good bet, if you guessed she&#13;
was.&#13;
Case 5: The basketball play least likely to be repeated. It happened a&#13;
couple of weeks back in the Northwestern vs. Minnesota game. NW&#13;
had just sunk two free throws, when after the second one, a NW player&#13;
grabbed the ball and threw it to another NW player. The ball should&#13;
have been in Minnesota's possession, but at the time they were too&#13;
busy playing defense. Well, NW scored after an alert player realized&#13;
they were headed in the wrong direction. Of course, Minnesota won the&#13;
protest and the two points were subtracted from NW's score.&#13;
Case 6: On St. Patrick's day Notre Dame played Southern California&#13;
in the NIT basketball tournament. With the luck of the Irish, or maybe&#13;
of a leprechaun, Steve Honzo and Tom Casey were put in charge as the&#13;
referees. The Irish won 69-65 sinking 23-33 free throws to USC's 1-2.&#13;
Oh, I almost forgot the end of the song went... I won't last a day&#13;
without you...&#13;
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April 4, 1973&#13;
WWAVWVW.V COUPON"&#13;
Henderson heads&#13;
soccer coaches&#13;
Hal Henderson, soccer coach,&#13;
has been elected president of the&#13;
National Assn. of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics (NAIA) Soccer Coaches&#13;
Assn.&#13;
i wmm&#13;
SPORTS SHORTS&#13;
Hal Henderson&#13;
The first year Parkside coach&#13;
was named NAIA soccer chief at&#13;
the association's recent annual&#13;
convention in Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
His responsibilities in the job&#13;
include the chairing of all&#13;
meetings and conventions, the&#13;
supervision of all-America&#13;
selections and the direction of the&#13;
district, area and national&#13;
tournaments.&#13;
Henderson has also served two&#13;
years each as vice president,&#13;
secretary-treasurer and area&#13;
chairman in the soccer&#13;
association. He will be president&#13;
until March, 1975.&#13;
Henderson has coached college&#13;
soccer eight years, including&#13;
tours at Rockford College, the&#13;
University of Colorado and Park&#13;
College, his alma mater.&#13;
The Carthage College co-ed&#13;
tracksters eked out a win over the&#13;
Rangerettes, 40-36 l ast Saturday&#13;
at Carthage.&#13;
The Parkside team received&#13;
some fine individual performances&#13;
from several members.&#13;
Sandy Kingsheld gathered&#13;
in a first place and two seconds,&#13;
those coming in the 220 yard&#13;
dash, the long jump and the 60&#13;
yard dash respectively.&#13;
Maria Breach settled for a&#13;
second in the shot put while&#13;
Teammate Trudy Buehrens took&#13;
first in the shot and a first in the&#13;
60 yard hurdles. Sue Von Behren&#13;
rounded out the Rangerette&#13;
scoring with a first in the high&#13;
jump.&#13;
The womens next meet will be&#13;
on April 7 at the U.S. Track and&#13;
Field Federation Indoor Meet at&#13;
Madison. The mens track team&#13;
will also be competeing in that&#13;
meet.&#13;
The UW-Parkside soccer club&#13;
will hold a team meeting and&#13;
practice at 4 p.m. Wednesday at&#13;
the Physical Education Bldg.&#13;
The Parkside Rugby team lost&#13;
to the Chicago Lions ten to four.&#13;
All scoring was done in the&#13;
second period when the Lions&#13;
made two penalty kicks and a&#13;
lone penalty kick was made for&#13;
Parkside by Mark Barnhill.&#13;
The next game will be played at&#13;
Prudue Northcentral April 1.&#13;
Kevin O'Neil finished third in&#13;
the National association of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics last&#13;
weekend at LaCrosse. O'Neil&#13;
qualified for the finals on the&#13;
rings with a score of 8.60. His&#13;
total combined score was 17.35.&#13;
Bryon Petschow finished 32nd&#13;
and vaulting while Tom Brannon&#13;
finished 37th.&#13;
The whole team qualified with&#13;
132 points. 130 acre necessary.&#13;
Parkside entered two runners&#13;
in the Racine Park High School&#13;
Invitational College Mile.&#13;
Lucien Rosa won with a time of&#13;
4:19.1, and Dennis Biel came in&#13;
third in 4:23.3.&#13;
Rosa and Biel defeated a field&#13;
of runners from Marquette,&#13;
Carthage, and UWM.&#13;
So says t he YA...&#13;
by&#13;
How Rt rids&#13;
I JUST LEARNED&#13;
FROM THE. VA "WAT&#13;
I CAN GET MORE&#13;
BENEFITS UNDER&#13;
THE NEW PENSION&#13;
LAW.'&#13;
Y7 NEWS IS &gt;&#13;
SURE StOW&#13;
IN YOUR&#13;
PART OF&#13;
THE COUNTRY;&#13;
For information, contact the nearest VA office (check&#13;
yoor phone book) or write Veterans Administration.&#13;
232X. 810 Vermont Ave . NW. Washington D C 20420&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
Folding bicycles fully equipped ideal for&#13;
apt., dorm, car trunk, boat, brand new, take&#13;
it everywhere 637-1591.&#13;
European 10-speed bicycle. Brand-new&#13;
means and ladies models 637-5661.&#13;
1969 Camaro economical, 3-speed, Orange,&#13;
black vinyl top. $1295.00, 694-6277.&#13;
For Sale: 1970 Camaro Rally Sport, 21,000&#13;
miles, snow tires included. Call Parkside&#13;
extension 2360.&#13;
Termpapers Typed: contact Kris Wright 632-&#13;
0150 after 5 p.m.&#13;
Will do typing at my home. Call Nancy. 632-&#13;
'667.&#13;
Tough&#13;
club a&#13;
to get W&#13;
into. V&#13;
The Marines&#13;
are looking for&#13;
Apply now for leadership teaming this summer&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
Classified Advertising Rate&#13;
5 cents per word up to 25 words for each insertion.&#13;
Payable in advance by check or cash to:&#13;
The Parkside Ranger&#13;
Business Office&#13;
D-194 LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
NAME&#13;
CHECK ENCT.nfiED FOR $&#13;
DATES(S) TO RUN&#13;
To find your cost, multiply the&#13;
number of words times 5&#13;
cents. Multiply that total by&#13;
the number of issues you want&#13;
it to run.&#13;
APPRFSS °ATE&#13;
riTY PHONE NO.&#13;
On e word per space Do not skip space between words to show spacing&#13;
Ads must be submitted one week before publication. </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 1, issue 23, March 28, 1973</text>
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