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              <text>PSGA plans Winter Carnival</text>
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              <text>Chancellor Wyllie discusses Germany.&#13;
Seestory on page 3.&#13;
Photo by Ken Konkol&#13;
PSGA plans Winter Carnival&#13;
The Parkside tudent&#13;
Government Association will&#13;
Sponsor a Winter Car niva!&#13;
beginning Friday, Feb. 16. and&#13;
running throogh Saturday. Feb.&#13;
24.&#13;
Winter Carni\'aJs are held on&#13;
most college. campuses&#13;
throughout the midwest They&#13;
feature several different contests.&#13;
Ice and snow SCUlpture&#13;
making, cross eeuntrv&#13;
snowmobile racing, skiing and&#13;
skating races, as wen as several&#13;
indoor sports. wiUbe Ieatured at&#13;
the PSGA's carnival&#13;
Jim Rea, chairman of the&#13;
PSGA Carnival committee savs&#13;
"The main purpose of a ~'Jni';&#13;
""nu'·al I IG g 1M udal&#13;
In\"ol\ ed In ea m 8ctl\ tI&#13;
To do lhi a ,,,de number of&#13;
e\ en for both tbe 'ndnidual and&#13;
teams are to of! red&#13;
II Inter Canu, al 1m 10 m&#13;
be wid for $1 .. dllG clelra,' the&#13;
&lt;O&gt;t 01 Ir&lt;lplIies and 10' P&#13;
pubhcrae the ("aron·,. n&#13;
Park Ide tud nt or recun&#13;
member ....111 1"K'e.\ disc'Ount&#13;
pnces for the two cia • I.....&#13;
ba etball gam • an "all ", ..&#13;
can dnn part)'''· and un ~ .&#13;
011 I day 11&gt;0 IOn. ,f used a' aU&#13;
01 1M en~. III \&#13;
tudenl 50.&#13;
Otber "en at C~ml\.l&#13;
wrll lDclu~ a broom U tournament&#13;
dog eel cons.tnK' OIlS&#13;
and raclDR. wrm Irctie&#13;
TheParkside--- _&#13;
RANGE do da Januar 2 , I&#13;
01. I,&#13;
Committee meets&#13;
on segregated fees&#13;
The Parkside Segrega ted Fee&#13;
AllocationsAdvisory Committee&#13;
mel for the first time Tuesday.&#13;
This committee, appointed by&#13;
Cbancellor Wyllie from&#13;
rerommendations submitted by&#13;
Alaiilanl Chancellor for Student&#13;
Smices Allan Dearborn, was&#13;
established"to review requests&#13;
for program support and to&#13;
recommend allocations of the&#13;
allocatable portion of the&#13;
segretatedUniversity Fee."&#13;
Thecommittee. precedent for&#13;
which was established in&#13;
Resolution249 of the University&#13;
of Wisconsin Business and&#13;
FlnanceCommitteedated 7-14-72.&#13;
and later approved by the&#13;
dlancellorsof the UW system. is&#13;
«Ilcerned with the segregated&#13;
fee portion of tuition,&#13;
The committee, advisory to the&#13;
Ouutcellor in the area of the&#13;
allocatable student services&#13;
JlOMiOll of the segregated fee&#13;
CllIlSists of three faculty. three&#13;
administration,and five student&#13;
I1ltlnbers of the Parkside com-&#13;
1II11lity.&#13;
Faculty members of the&#13;
~mmittee are: Professor&#13;
Marion Mochon, Assistant&#13;
!'lQfessorof Anthropology and&#13;
&lt;hairmanof the Campus Con-&#13;
~ Committee; John Zarling.&#13;
$Slslant Professor of&#13;
VEI~gi.ne.ering Science' , and&#13;
Prrgflnta Scherr ' Assistant s;eosor of Chemistry and&#13;
n._'al Assistant to the Vice&#13;
,""""cellor.&#13;
c::m,inistration members are:&#13;
N· IOlttee Chairman William&#13;
Llebufhr, Coordinator of Student&#13;
~Ie' . Duane Neuendorf,&#13;
and Dbo.n SerVice Assistant III' ,&#13;
Pia aVldHOlle.Special Budget&#13;
po;ner and Extramural Sup-&#13;
~~enl Committee members&#13;
't-rUaImlISlst of,. Do· nme Snow, In-&#13;
Carnurals; Jerry Murphy.&#13;
Jampus Concerns Committee;&#13;
Serves CrOXford, Auxiliary&#13;
ICes, S&#13;
Parkside' usan Wesley.&#13;
'1"\q.-J)-asH Activities Board·' .and ""'COIn aack, President PSGA.&#13;
"-'rse demitt.. appointments. of&#13;
iIld th~ pend?n ability to serve&#13;
"'lIe nu.':mmillee might incur&#13;
~. r changes before next&#13;
That portion of the segregated&#13;
fee that the committee will give&#13;
recommendations on is all areas&#13;
of expense excluding debt service,&#13;
facility reserve fees (Union&#13;
Reserve), student health service&#13;
and an allocation to assure&#13;
continued operation of the&#13;
auxiliaries for two months in the&#13;
event of strike or disaster.&#13;
STANLEY CRAIG&#13;
Senior citizens may audit cour es&#13;
at no charge&#13;
A new University of Wisconsin&#13;
policy allowing persons 65 or&#13;
older to audit courses without&#13;
paying a fee will go into eflec.! at&#13;
Parkside immediately, In time&#13;
for second semester classes,&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie announced&#13;
today.&#13;
Audit status which previously&#13;
required full payment of tuition&#13;
regardless of age, is pnm~I1y&#13;
designed for students seeking&#13;
special information or perso~J&#13;
enrichment. Those who audit&#13;
courses do not receive university&#13;
credit and do not have to take&#13;
examinations but are expected to&#13;
attend class regularly and&#13;
participate in class activities.&#13;
The UW System Board. of&#13;
Regents approved th~ ~ew polIcy&#13;
subject to four conditIOns: that&#13;
there is room in the class and that&#13;
attendance by auditors does not&#13;
involve additional expense to the&#13;
institution; that the faculty&#13;
member teaching the class ap·&#13;
prove of attendance by auditors;&#13;
that any special fees, su0 as&#13;
those for art or ~clence&#13;
laboratories, must be paid; and&#13;
that auditing students ~annot&#13;
switch to credit status durmg the&#13;
course of the semester.&#13;
In announcing the new&#13;
program at Parkside ' Chancell.odr&#13;
Wyllie pointed out that Parksl e&#13;
has made a continuing ef~o.rt t~&#13;
serve so·called non.tradlti~~&#13;
students, including many pas e&#13;
usual college age. . ther&#13;
"This new policy WIll fur&#13;
increase opportLUl.lU. es for our&#13;
senior cuuens in southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin to use Parksl&lt;ie and&#13;
become familiar v.. ith the&#13;
resources of their university."&#13;
Wyllie said,&#13;
.14&#13;
Stanley Craig a fineli t&#13;
in Danforth el tion&#13;
, helicopter. Huey UH-18was flying around the campus last FrldllY&#13;
T~e M~:'~:Udents who are in the Marine Corps. flight program a feel of flying,&#13;
tMoagnivyeotf the students who rode had never flown before. The recruiters will be llt&#13;
Parkside again in February.&#13;
Pboto by KeD KClIll&lt;oI&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie discusses Germany.&#13;
ee story on page 3.&#13;
Photo by K en Ko nk ol&#13;
PSGAplan&#13;
The Par ide ud nt&#13;
Government A oc iation m&#13;
spon or a Winter , rni, I&#13;
begi~ni rida:, , Feb I nd&#13;
running through turda F&#13;
2-4 . •&#13;
Winter Carnival are held&#13;
most college . campu&#13;
throughout the midv.&#13;
feature everal diff&#13;
le ts. Ice and now&#13;
making, cro&#13;
snowmobile racm&#13;
kating races, a II a er I&#13;
indoor sports, will be featured at&#13;
the PSGA's carnival.&#13;
Jim Rea . chairman or&#13;
PSGA Carnival committee,&#13;
"The main purpose of a&#13;
The Parkside--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Committee meets&#13;
on segregated fees&#13;
The Parkside Segregated Fee&#13;
Allocations Advisor y Committee&#13;
met for the first time Tuesday.&#13;
This committee , appointed by&#13;
Ch ancellor Wyllie from&#13;
recommendations submittt!d by&#13;
anf Chancellor for Student&#13;
mces Allan Dearborn, was&#13;
tabhshed "to review requests&#13;
for prog ram support and to&#13;
recom mend allocations of the&#13;
allocatable portion of the&#13;
segretated University Fee."&#13;
The comm ittee, precedent for&#13;
h1ch was established in&#13;
Resolution 249 of th e University&#13;
of Wisconsin Bu siness and&#13;
Finance Committee dated 7-14-72,&#13;
and later approved by t he&#13;
chancellors of the UW s ystem , is&#13;
concerned with the segregated&#13;
fee portion of tuition .&#13;
The committee , advisory to the&#13;
Oiancellor in the area of the&#13;
allocatable student services&#13;
PClrti~ of the segregated fee&#13;
CCXlS!s~ of three faculty, three&#13;
administration, and five student&#13;
members of the Parkside comm111ity.&#13;
Faculty members of the&#13;
committee are: Professor&#13;
Marion Mochon, Assistant&#13;
Professor of Anthropology and&#13;
diairman of the Campus Con~&#13;
Committee ; John Zarling ,&#13;
' ssi stant Professor of E . .&#13;
ngmeermg Science · and&#13;
Vi rginia Scherr A~sistant&#13;
Prof es ' Spec· sor ~f Chemistry and&#13;
l'l.._1al Assistant to the Vice&#13;
"'ldllcellor.&#13;
~istration members are:&#13;
mittee Chairman William&#13;
L) ebf 11hr, Coordinator of Student&#13;
1 e· D E~a . uan~ Neuendorf,&#13;
an d D ti~n Service Assistant III ;&#13;
P!a nn!vid Holle, Special Budget&#13;
PQ rt. r and Extramural Supc~!:&#13;
nt ~mmit_tee members&#13;
trarn u of · Donnie Snow , lnCarnP\&#13;
JraJs ; Jerry Murphy ,&#13;
Jam s Concerns Committee·&#13;
es c ' vi ce . roxford , Auxiliary&#13;
Parksi~· _Susan Wesley,&#13;
1\.._ · Activities Board· · and ''I\JlllasH ,&#13;
Allcorn a~ck, President PSGA .&#13;
, de mittee appointments, of&#13;
lll d th' I&gt;end on ability to serve&#13;
s,.,._ e comm·tt _,.,"' llli I ee might incur&#13;
~ - nor changes before next&#13;
That portion of the segregated&#13;
fee that the committee will give&#13;
recommendations on is all areas&#13;
of expense excluding debt service,&#13;
facility reserve fees (Union&#13;
Reserve), student health service&#13;
and an allocation to assure&#13;
continued operation of the&#13;
auxiliaries for two months in the&#13;
event of strike or disaster.&#13;
STA LEY C RAIG&#13;
Senior c itiz ens may audit cour&#13;
at no charge&#13;
A ne w Univers ity of Wisconsin&#13;
policy allowing person s 65 or&#13;
older to audit courses wi thout&#13;
pa ying a fee will go into effect at&#13;
Parkside immediately, in t ime&#13;
for second semester classes,&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie an nounced&#13;
today.&#13;
Audit status, which previously&#13;
required full payment of _ tuiti~n&#13;
regardless of age, is pnmarily&#13;
designed for students seeking&#13;
special information or perso~l&#13;
enrichment. Those who audit&#13;
courses do not receive university&#13;
credit and do not have to take&#13;
examinations but are expected to&#13;
attend class regularly a nd&#13;
participate in class activities .&#13;
The uw System Board of&#13;
Regents approved thE: ~ew po licy&#13;
subject to four conditions : that&#13;
there is room in the cla ss and that&#13;
attendance by auditors does not&#13;
involve additional expense to th e&#13;
institution ; that the facu lty&#13;
member teaching the cl ass approve&#13;
of attenda nce by auditors;&#13;
that any s pecia l fe es, su0 as&#13;
those for a r t or ~c1enc e&#13;
laboratories, must be paid; aod&#13;
th at a uditing students _cannot&#13;
switch t o credit sta tu s durmg the&#13;
course of the se meste r ·&#13;
In . announ cing the new&#13;
program at Parkside , Ch ancel!or&#13;
Wyllie pointed out that Parkside&#13;
has made a continuing ef~o:t t~&#13;
serve so-called non-trad1t1ona&#13;
students , including many paSt the&#13;
usual college age. . r&#13;
"This new policy will furthe&#13;
·t· for our increase opportuni ies&#13;
senior citize in south&#13;
Wisconsin to u Par ·1&#13;
become familiar 11,·ilh&#13;
resource of their uni~ r. t_ ,"&#13;
Wyllie said .&#13;
ta&#13;
•&#13;
Wi r&#13;
n n&#13;
•&#13;
• , . . :&#13;
1 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Jan. 24, 1973 ;,JrRANGER&#13;
Editorial/Opi nion&#13;
Lucey slowing&#13;
Parkside progress&#13;
The recent $3.1 million building budget cut which will&#13;
eradicate construction of the School of Modern Industry&#13;
(SMll here Is an absurd example of Central Administration&#13;
bowing to the wishes of a state go~ernor. It&#13;
Is Central Administration that made the particular cut&#13;
which robs us of needed expansion, but the real problem&#13;
lies In the hands of the Governor who insists that the&#13;
entire system budget is grossly inflated. .&#13;
In some cases the budget may be larger than ,t should&#13;
be. The Parks ide building budget is certainly not too&#13;
large. This campus is just a child trying to grow, but&#13;
becoming anemic for lack of green vegetables.&#13;
The campus will undoubtedly go on a~ it. has in the&#13;
ast with the exception of new construction In the 73-75&#13;
~Udget period that will be the superficial result;; of t~e&#13;
cutback. The larger and more serious results WIll be In&#13;
the event of over-use of present facilities and the&#13;
eventual lowering of academic standards. In some way&#13;
the administrators and department heads of our school&#13;
must work to avoid this. .'&#13;
The effect of the cut will be felt. The Immediate effect&#13;
will be deflated local economy because of the loss of&#13;
building contracts. The next loss will be to those School&#13;
of Modern Industry students who are trying to get a&#13;
decent education. They are already limited by present&#13;
facilities. .&#13;
Let us not forget who we can thank for our mlsfortu~e.&#13;
We can thank Central Administration for their sweeping&#13;
and irrational cut of our young campus and we ca.n&#13;
thank our Governor for his aid in the furtherance of this&#13;
state's educational system. and his foresight in so far as&#13;
it concerns progress.&#13;
Cartoonist's Eye View&#13;
by Gary Huck&#13;
EDITOR'S&#13;
NOTEBOOK&#13;
By Rudy Liena u&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie conducted a&#13;
very informative and informal&#13;
presentation of his trip to Germany&#13;
(or Ranger reporters. I&#13;
would like to extend thanks from&#13;
the paper for his efforts.&#13;
Jane Schliesman was one of the&#13;
reporters and her feature on the&#13;
Chancellor's impressions of&#13;
Germany appears in this issue.&#13;
The Chancellor expressed an&#13;
interest in sharing his slides and&#13;
impressions with other studen~.&#13;
If you think you would be interested&#13;
in sharing ideas and&#13;
attitudes about our campus as&#13;
opposed to campuses in Germany,&#13;
see me. It can be worthwhile.&#13;
The way in which money is&#13;
budgeted for univeraities in&#13;
Germany is an Amen can&#13;
chancellor's dream. In Germany&#13;
if the professors and&#13;
technologists and other people&#13;
who "should know" feel there is a&#13;
need for a great expenditure of&#13;
money for some type of&#13;
university complex, the money is&#13;
granted. There is an attitude of&#13;
trust that seems to have&#13;
government people believe&#13;
university officials.&#13;
That is quite a paradox from&#13;
our own UWSystem which has its&#13;
budget cut from within and&#13;
without. The latest of these cuts&#13;
which affects' Parkside is a $3.1 ..&#13;
million building cut for the 73-75&#13;
budget.&#13;
It seems ironic that it is the&#13;
school of modern industry&#13;
building which has been cut from&#13;
a university whose mission is to&#13;
serve the needs of the local&#13;
modern industry. This rather&#13;
incongruous act is only part of a&#13;
much larger UW budget cut of&#13;
$24.5 million across the state,&#13;
Gov. Lucey applied the screws&#13;
to the central administration&#13;
when he accused it of "pork&#13;
barreling" with its newly&#13;
proposed budget. According to&#13;
UW Vice President Donald&#13;
Percy, the reductions are a result&#13;
of lower enrollment projections.&#13;
Even though the state scene is&#13;
rather interesting, it is time to&#13;
make a last comment about last&#13;
week's shuttle bus editorial. The&#13;
editorial was incomplete in that it&#13;
did not point out that the problem&#13;
occurs during daylight hours and&#13;
that the night shuttle drivers, two&#13;
of which have very high seniority&#13;
rank, accomplish their runs with&#13;
a minimum of delay and a great&#13;
deal of service. My hat is off to&#13;
Burt and Red.&#13;
~Jf:.The Ptwkside&#13;
RANGER&#13;
THORN By Konkol&#13;
You will recall the last time th~s column appeared was shortly after&#13;
the Campus Concerns Committee had allotted money to student&#13;
. tl ns from the segregated fee. It was mentioned that all&#13;
orgamza 10 . t 11 11 tted I&#13;
t d t organizations combtned are ac ua y a 0 ess than the&#13;
sLeuctuenre and Fine Arts Comrmlttee .&#13;
In the following issue of Dec. 13,Ilene Levin, ~ student mer:tber of this&#13;
committee and also a member of our st;aff, said she would like to know&#13;
on what foUndation Ibased the suggestion that the L&amp;FA budget be cut&#13;
to $3000.&#13;
I based that suggesti~n on the fact that there is insufficient inte~estin&#13;
programs this committee prese.nts and cons~uently the committeeis&#13;
a heavy money loser. In fact, It loses all of Its allotment each Year.&#13;
S· a very small percentage of students actually attend the&#13;
p~c;ams put on by this committee, and sin~~ the allotment to this&#13;
committee comes directly from student tuitions, the majority of&#13;
students are being cheated.&#13;
The $3000 was suggested mainly since. if they receive less money,that&#13;
is less money they can lose. If less IS allo.ted, then the committee&#13;
would have to feature entertainment that was cheaper or else have&#13;
programs of broader general interest that would pay for themselves.&#13;
Since receiving Miss Levin's let~er, h~wever, I have re-~valuated the&#13;
situation. On her suggestion I Investigated the committee. I found&#13;
some interesting things.&#13;
The Lecture and Fine Arts Committee has two functions: (a) "To&#13;
arrange and program lectures and fine .arts perforr:na,~cesaM&#13;
exhibitions of general interest to the P~rkslde community and (bl&#13;
"To submit an annual budget to the Vice chancellor for academic&#13;
affairs. "&#13;
Well the committee may be doing the latter, but it is certainly not&#13;
doing the former. To accomplish that, they would h,ave to provide&#13;
programs that are of interest to every person at Parksidel So far they&#13;
have not once exceeded the 20 percent mark.&#13;
I said I have changed my opinion on the amount of money that should&#13;
be allotted to the L&amp;FA Committee. I was a bit hasty in jumping tothe&#13;
$3000figure. I based my reconsideration on two factors. One is the&#13;
actual make-up of the committee.&#13;
The committee is made up of twelve members, eight faculty are appointed&#13;
by the vice chancellor for aca~emic ~ffairs a~d fo~r students&#13;
are appointed by the student senate. Smce this committee IS supposed&#13;
to provide exhibitions of general interest to the Parkslde ~ol!lmllJllty.&#13;
and since the Parkside community consists of 95 percent students and&#13;
5 percent faculty, the committee should consist of the same ratio of&#13;
students to faculty.&#13;
If a committee is supported entirely by student funds, that committee&#13;
must be controlled by students. Any committee which consists or&#13;
mainly faculty should be supported by faculty funds.&#13;
The second factor which influenced my change of mind was the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board. This board, unrepresentative thoughit&#13;
may be and directly responsible to the Student Activities Office, at&#13;
least consists of mostly students.&#13;
One of the standing committees of the PAB is the Fine Arts Committee&#13;
which has as its duties: (a) "advises the board on cultural activities,"&#13;
(b) "is responsible for programming such activities as: pro~o~i~n~&#13;
arts, music, drama, lectures, folk dancing, and related achV1~les,&#13;
and (c) "is responsible for the development of new programs In the&#13;
cultural area,"&#13;
Since the PAB fulfills the same function as the L&amp;FAC in the community,&#13;
it is plain to see we have a duplication of effort whichamounts&#13;
to twice as much money being wasted than is necessary.&#13;
Therefore, after taking into consideration all factors, it is imJ:&gt;OSSi~&#13;
to corne to any other conclusion than that the Lecture and Fl~e~&#13;
Committee does not deserve the money which it is allocated; ~t&#13;
not even deserve the $3000which I suggested earlier - in fact, It doeS&#13;
not deserve one red cent!&#13;
It is recommended that the L&amp;FAC be dissolved as such and comb~~&#13;
with the Fine Arts Committee of the PAB. In this way the ~oney ~Ias&#13;
IS now expended would go to other, worthwhile, actiVIties su&#13;
additional funding for student organizations.&#13;
EDITOR-IN·CHIEF: RudV Lienau&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Geoff Blaesing&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Jane Schliesman&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Kris Koch. Kathrvn Wellner&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Jerrv MurphV&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: xethrvn Wellner&#13;
~:~:ERS: Ken Konkol, Garv Jensen, Marilyn Schubert, Jeannine Sipsma, Helmut Kah, Bill&#13;
CARTOONIST: Gary Huck&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Ken Konkol. AI Craig. Bill Noll, Dennis Dounan. Greg Syston&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF: Fred Lawrence, Ken Konkol. RudV Lienau&#13;
ADVISER: Oon Kopriva&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of wisconsin-Parkaide,&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D·l94 Librar-y-&#13;
Learning Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
reOected in colwnns and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin·Parkside.&#13;
LetteMi to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subject of&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to 250words or&#13;
less, typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
letters for iength and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
address, phone number and student status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
be withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
Classified and display ad rates will be furnished upon request.&#13;
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National Educational Advertising Services, Inc.&#13;
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2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Jan. 24, 1973&#13;
Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Lucey slowing&#13;
arkside pro gress&#13;
The recent SJ. l million building budget cut which will&#13;
r dicate construction of the School of Modern Industry&#13;
(SMI) here is an absurd example of Central Adm&#13;
1nistration bowing to the wishes of a state governor. It&#13;
Is c ntral Administration that made the particular cut&#13;
which robs us of needed expansion, but the real problem&#13;
ti s in the hands of the Governor who insists that the&#13;
ntire system budget is grossly inflated.&#13;
In some cases the budget may be larger than it should&#13;
. Th Park.side building budget is certainly not too&#13;
1 rge . This campus is just a child trying to grow, but&#13;
becoming anemic for lack of green veget~bles ..&#13;
The campus will undoubtedly go on a~ 1t. has in the&#13;
p t with the exception of new constr_u~t,on in the 73-75&#13;
budg t period that will be the superf1c1al result~ of t~e&#13;
cutb ck . The larger and more serious results will be m&#13;
the event of over-use of present facilities and the&#13;
v ntual towering of academic standards. In some way&#13;
the administrators and department heads of our school&#13;
must work to avoid this.&#13;
The effect of the cut will be felt. The immediate effect&#13;
will be deflated local economy because of the loss of&#13;
building contracts. The next loss will be to those School&#13;
of Modern Industry students who are trying to get a&#13;
decent education. They are already limited by present&#13;
facilities .&#13;
Let us not forget who we can thank for our misfortune.&#13;
We can thank Central Administration for their sweeping&#13;
and Irrational cut of our young campus and we ca_n&#13;
thank our Governor for his aid in the furtherance of this&#13;
state's educational system, and his foresight in so far as&#13;
It concerns progress.&#13;
artooni t'&#13;
c&lt;&#13;
1'b.,.JTHAT n-1(&#13;
F£:.,.;lu'f1 0"1 ,s&#13;
Fi~ ~OvlR&#13;
Wt C11~ di I fcrgt+&#13;
Tha.-+ R&lt;teE-, Lc,vl,&#13;
[..4.1.1a l, 'i at-Jo&#13;
ts n:)'H\t ~ \\ ood&#13;
CRApdi-.09tT'&#13;
WN iO L...l'lo.i S&#13;
Rta. 11 'i r "'fO~NT&#13;
I~ L,ft . . . L i ij£ rnoNtY!l~ ,,&#13;
b Gary Huck&#13;
EDITOR'S&#13;
OTEBOOK&#13;
By Rudy Lienau&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie conducted a&#13;
very informative and informal&#13;
pre entation of his trip to German&#13;
for Ranger reporters. I&#13;
would like to extend thanks from&#13;
the paper for his efforts .&#13;
Jane chliesman was one of the&#13;
reporters and her feature on the&#13;
Chancellor ' s impressions of&#13;
Germany appears in this issue.&#13;
The Chancellor expressed an&#13;
interest in haring hi slides and&#13;
impre ion with other studen~.&#13;
If vou think you would be mtere&#13;
led in haring ideas and&#13;
attitudes about our campus as&#13;
oppo eel to campuses in Germany&#13;
, ee me. It can be worth"'&#13;
hile.&#13;
The way in which money is&#13;
budgeted for universitie~ in&#13;
Germany is an American&#13;
chancellor' s dream. In Germany&#13;
if the professors and&#13;
technologists and other people&#13;
who" hould know" feel there is a&#13;
n eel for a great expenditure of&#13;
money for some type of&#13;
uni ersity complex, the money is&#13;
granted . There is an attitude of&#13;
tru t that seems to have&#13;
government people believe&#13;
university officials.&#13;
That is quite a paradox from&#13;
our own U'I ystem which has its&#13;
budget cut from within and&#13;
without. The latest of these cuts&#13;
which affects Parkside is a $3 . l&#13;
million building cut for the 73-75&#13;
budget.&#13;
It seems ironic that it is the&#13;
school o f modern industry&#13;
building which has been cut from&#13;
a uni versity whose mission is to&#13;
serve the needs of the local&#13;
modern industry. This rather&#13;
incongruous act is only part of a&#13;
much larger W budget cut of&#13;
$24 .5 million across the state.&#13;
Go . Lucey applied the screws&#13;
to the central administration&#13;
when he accused it of " pork&#13;
barreling" with its newly&#13;
propo eel budget. According to&#13;
W Vice President Donald&#13;
Percy, the reductions are a result&#13;
of lower enrollment projections.&#13;
Even though the state scene is&#13;
rather interesting, it is time to&#13;
make a last comment about last&#13;
week ' s shuttle bus editorial. The&#13;
editorial was incomplete in that it&#13;
did not point out that the problem&#13;
occurs during daylight hours and&#13;
that the night shuttle drivers, two&#13;
of which have very high seniority&#13;
rank, accomplish their runs with&#13;
a minimum of delay and a great&#13;
deal of service. My hat is off to&#13;
Burt and Red .&#13;
TH OR N By Konkol&#13;
y ill recall the last time this column appeared was shortly after&#13;
thou; pus Concerns Committee had allotted money to student&#13;
or:anf ;:;_1tions from the seg~egated fee. It was mentioned that all&#13;
t d t Organizations combined are actually allotted less than th&#13;
!' u en ·tt&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Comm1 ee.&#13;
In the following issue of Dec. 13, Ilene Levin, ~ student me~ber or this&#13;
committee and also a member of our sl:3ff, said she would hke to know&#13;
on what foundation I based the suggestion that the L&amp;FA budget be cut&#13;
to $3000 .&#13;
1 based that suggestion on the fact that there is insufficient interest in&#13;
programs this committee presents and consequently the committee is&#13;
a heavy money loser. In fact, it loses all of its allotment each year.&#13;
Since a very small percenta~e of stud~nts actually attend th&#13;
programs put on by this committee, and sm~~ the allotment to th.&#13;
committee comes directly from student tuitions, the majority of&#13;
students are being cheated.&#13;
The $3000 was suggested mainly since_ if they receive less money , that&#13;
is less money they can lose. If less 1s alk,..ted, then the commit&#13;
would have to feature entertainment that was cheaper or el e hav&#13;
programs of broader general interest that would pay for themselv .&#13;
Since receiving Miss Levin's letter, however, I have re-evaluated th&#13;
situation . on her suggestion I investigated the committee . I fourd&#13;
some interesting things .&#13;
The Lecture and Fine Arts Committee has two functions: (a l "To&#13;
arrange and program lectures and fine _arts perforr:na.~ces ard&#13;
exhibitions of general interest to the P~rks1de community and &lt;bl&#13;
"To submit an annual budget to the vice chancellor for academic&#13;
affairs."&#13;
Well the committee may be doing the latter, but it is certainly not&#13;
doing the former . To accomplish that, they would h_ave to provid&#13;
programs that are of interest to every person at Parkside! So far lh~·&#13;
have not once exceeded the 20 percent mark.&#13;
I said I have changed my opinion on the amount of money that hould&#13;
be allotted to the L&amp;FA Committee. I was a bit hasty in jumping to lh&#13;
$3000 figure. I based my reconsideration on two factors. One i th&#13;
actual make-up of the committee .&#13;
The committee is made up of twelve members, eight faculty are ai&gt;pointed&#13;
by the vice chancellor for academic affairs and four studen&#13;
are appointed by the student senate. Since this committee is suppos&#13;
to provide exhibitions of general interest to the Parkside commun!t ·•&#13;
and since the Parkside community consists of 95 percent students and&#13;
5 percent faculty, the committee should consist of the same ratio of&#13;
students to faculty .&#13;
If a committee is supported entirely by student funds, that committee&#13;
must be controlled by students. Any committee which consists of&#13;
mainly faculty should be supported by faculty funds.&#13;
The second factor which influenced my change of mind was th&#13;
Parkside Activities Board. This board, unrepresentative though 11&#13;
may be and directly responsible to the Student Activities Office at&#13;
least consists of mostly students.&#13;
One of the standing committees of the P AB is the Fine Arts Committee&#13;
which has as its duties: (a) "advises the board on cultural activities ,"&#13;
(b) " is responsible for programming such ~ctivities as: pro~o~i~n~&#13;
arts, music, drama, lectures, folk dancing , and related actlVl~les ,&#13;
and ( c ) "is responsible for the development of new programs m the&#13;
cultural area."&#13;
Since the PAB fulfills the same function as the L&amp;FAC in the com ·&#13;
munity, it is plain to see we have a duplication of effort which amounts&#13;
to twice as much money being wasted than is necessary.&#13;
Therefore, after taking into consideration all factors , it is impossible&#13;
to come to any other conclusion than that the Lecture and Fin_e ~&#13;
Committee does not deserve the money which it is allocated ; ~t&#13;
not even deserve the $3000 which I suggested earlier - in fact , it doe:i&#13;
not deserve one red cent!&#13;
It_is recon:mended that the L&amp;FAC be dissolved as such and comb:&#13;
~1th the Fme Arts Committee of the p AB. In t h is way th_e ~oney ~ a&#13;
1s now expended would go to other, worthwhile, activ1lles SU •&#13;
additional funding for student organizations.&#13;
EDITOR-IN -CHIEF : Rudy Lienau&#13;
MANAG ING EDITOR : Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR : Geoff Blaesing&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR : Jane Schliesman&#13;
Th Park ide Ranger i published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
y r by the tudents of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
K n ha , Wi con in 53140 . Offices are located at D-194 LibraryLe&#13;
ming enter, Telephone (414) 553-2295 .&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR : Kris Koch. Kathryn Wellner&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER : Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER : Jerry Mur phy&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER : Kathryn Wellner&#13;
: 1:~!ERS: Ken Konkol . Garv Jensen, Marilyn Schubert. Jeannine Sipsma, Helmut Kah , Bill&#13;
CARTOONIST : Gary Huck&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS : Ken Konkol. Al Craig, Bill Noll, Dennis Dounan, Gr eg Syston&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF : Fred Lawrence, Ken Konkol, Rudy Lienau&#13;
Th Par ide Ranger i an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
r n ted in column and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The niv ity of Wi consin-Parkside.&#13;
L tt to th Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subject of&#13;
int r t to tudents, faculty or taff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
I , typed and double- paced . The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
I tte for length and good ta te . All letters must be signed and include&#13;
ddr ·, phone number and tudent talus or faculty rank. ames will&#13;
be withheld upon requ t. Th editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
print any letter .&#13;
a ified and di play ad rate will be furnished upon request.&#13;
ADVISER : Don Kopriva&#13;
- ·· ,J.EPI.ESENTED fOk NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY T Nat10nal Educational Advertising Services, Inc.&#13;
360 Lex ineton Ave., New York, N . l · . 10017&#13;
.,&#13;
i&#13;
Wyllie on Germany ....&#13;
Wed., Jan. 24, 1973 THE PARKS/DE RANGER 3&#13;
German students are apathetic, ineffecti&#13;
By Jane Schliesman&#13;
"gray mice" is a term used&#13;
The 'be a group of students on&#13;
todescr1 mpuses of German&#13;
th~ r~~tiesT.hey are, in fact, a&#13;
unJ~eit of the students - an&#13;
maJ~llc ineffective majority -&#13;
apa ;~i1nev~er participating in&#13;
who, est that troubles these&#13;
the un~es have also done&#13;
cathmp"gto' put down the radical no. In·ty in.i.t'iating th e revaIts . rosmtoundents in Germany "have&#13;
t credibility as senous and&#13;
rleosspo nsible participants " in the&#13;
educational process, . says&#13;
Par kside Chancellor. GIrvin G. W llie who was III ermany&#13;
y ntiy as an official guest of the&#13;
rfeeedeeral Republic. t,0 ViIsSiIt 0Id a~ d&#13;
new UniversIties. WyllIe&#13;
discussed with Ranger so~e&#13;
hi hlights of his lour and his&#13;
i;pressions of German&#13;
iversities as compared and&#13;
:ntrasted with Parkside: .&#13;
When queried on hIS Impressions&#13;
of student unres.t there&#13;
and its possible relation to&#13;
problems on American campuses&#13;
a couple of years ago, he&#13;
acknowledged that they are&#13;
about two years behind our&#13;
trends, and revolt there seems to&#13;
have passed the peak now.&#13;
"There are some legitimate&#13;
internal reasons for unrest -&#13;
problems the administration had&#13;
not been working on. The&#13;
students campaigned for easier&#13;
entrance requirements, easier&#13;
exams, abandonment of the&#13;
le~ture system, smaner classes&#13;
wIth. diSCUSsions and more emphasij,&#13;
on teaching rather than&#13;
research," Wyllie said.&#13;
.German university officials&#13;
WIth whom he diSCUSSed the&#13;
unrest mentioned a link between&#13;
the SDS in Chicago and the first&#13;
SDS ~roup at Bonn, which was&#13;
orgamzed by travelling agents&#13;
from the U.S. They also indicated&#13;
strong Communist influence as a&#13;
cause of much of the Violence.&#13;
The avowed Communists on&#13;
campuses "constitute less than 5&#13;
percent of the stUdent body and&#13;
staff," Wyllie indicated, but they&#13;
are the active ones who keep up a&#13;
steady stream of demands that&#13;
"professors and administrators&#13;
behave in 'new ways' in keeping&#13;
with the 'new times'." They also&#13;
are frequently the ones who&#13;
provoke administrators into&#13;
taking actions which then incense&#13;
the more moderate students and&#13;
drive them into the radical camp.&#13;
As an example Wyllie cited&#13;
Heidelburg, one of the more&#13;
charming of the old universities.&#13;
Shortly before his arrival there&#13;
the State Minister of Education&#13;
had ordered a thousand police in&#13;
to quell a student uprising. The&#13;
disturbance was precipated by&#13;
the minister's refusal to allow a&#13;
professor from Hanover to give a&#13;
speech on the campus. The man&#13;
was alleged to have cOIulections&#13;
with the Baader-Meinhof urban&#13;
guerrila terrorists, whose aim is&#13;
to wake up the people wi~&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
ARTIFICIAL PARADISE&#13;
Guess Who&#13;
RSP-4830&#13;
violence. The students resented&#13;
his being forbidden to speak and&#13;
responded by lhro\l"ing egg at&#13;
conservative profes ors and&#13;
blocking bUildings. When lbe&#13;
police were called in. this further&#13;
upset even the less radical&#13;
students who had 001 been 10-&#13;
volved with inviting the professor&#13;
in the first place. The students&#13;
employed one of their favorite&#13;
weapons - STRElK [strtke},&#13;
Looking at other areas, oae&#13;
thing which struck WyUie was the&#13;
physical similar-ity of the new&#13;
universities such as Bremen and&#13;
the Universit), of the Ruhr, "'-Ith&#13;
Parkside. "They have the same&#13;
kind of compressed campus. "'lab&#13;
inter-connected buildings."&#13;
Wyllie pointed OUl One notices&#13;
also in his slides the evidence of&#13;
A drug survival quiz&#13;
Editor's note: The follo't'ing quiL fro....&#13;
pamphlet that we received from lobe Do It '0-&#13;
Foundation. It i a national. Don-profit orgaJlb.a1Jcar.&#13;
involved with street drug educalioo.&#13;
The test is really a un inl test, In it the)" to&#13;
asked many basic question about treer drugs DOW&#13;
circulating so tbat Jou rna) drecthel~ju e bomuch&#13;
you reall)! knoy,·. The an"~ COl' Ott&#13;
questions are on the folio"," ing page.&#13;
1. The easiest family of drugs to o\'erdose OIl&#13;
a. amphetamines&#13;
b. barbiturates&#13;
c. hallucinogens&#13;
2. What do "reds" refer to!&#13;
a. Tuinals&#13;
b. Seconals&#13;
c. Amobarbital-secooarbltal&#13;
3. Which of the following IS "hallucmogenlc'"&#13;
a. orange sunslune&#13;
b. Deximil&#13;
c. nitrous oxide&#13;
4. Having "been on a run" means&#13;
a. running grass megau)" o\·er the&#13;
border&#13;
b. dropping THC and ascorbic aCId&#13;
c. shooling cry tal for se'-eral day&#13;
5. Which of these looks and mells&#13;
marijuana?&#13;
a. catnip&#13;
b. oregano&#13;
c. green tea&#13;
.Ie can&#13;
most I e&#13;
6. Which of the following has lh greatest 0'&#13;
potential when mixed WIth alcohol'&#13;
a. codeine&#13;
b. crystal&#13;
c. barbiturates&#13;
7 Most wei pIlls conlaln&#13;
. a. PentobarbItal Sodiwn&#13;
b, Amphetamine&#13;
c. Chloral Hydrates&#13;
8. The more damagmg vapor for mhalahon&#13;
a. toluene&#13;
b. nitrous oxide&#13;
c. heliwn&#13;
9. Which of these causes Immec:bate death .f In&#13;
jected?&#13;
a. epsom salts&#13;
b. nat beer&#13;
c. gasoline&#13;
DA in its pure chemical form. ISa&#13;
10.l\lhal1~cinogenjC denvative of nutmeg&#13;
) mbination of mescalme and peed&#13;
c: ~mulant of the central nervous S} ·tern&#13;
11. PS'lloc"•bin is a den\'at1\'e of&#13;
a. poppies&#13;
b peyote cactus c: stropharia cuben5JS mushroom&#13;
12. MOS t THC sold on streets COIltams&#13;
a. low-grade LSD .&#13;
b, animal tranq~~lzers&#13;
c. synthetic manJuana&#13;
IS. Wtuch of lb DOl. ~ lrom&#13;
dlrt need!'&#13;
•b dhe)plh01.."&#13;
C C\l bIc: lft1Il I!IldoaI nIIt&#13;
... • fll I at ."wi..&#13;
•&#13;
•b phlnlnobolood pre_!~&#13;
I" 01 ""e .nd&#13;
IS " more pcUnI lann at m.nju&#13;
• bell doma&#13;
b&#13;
C 10&lt;0 Hd&#13;
16 II Ithelr. .1&#13;
a.. .ma&#13;
m :~&#13;
c drM-nrMi&#13;
19 TrYpUml&#13;
• I IDA&#13;
b STP&#13;
C D.IT&#13;
• •&#13;
.... t 01.&#13;
ba 01&#13;
To sum up the Guess Who, one waul d h. a.ve 10 I'n. ciude Oftitgenht i4n-c4luhdaerdd&#13;
rock SO's rock and insane but often brillIant lyncs. . AU of&#13;
With'the preceding is a background ~f Las Vegas. C~Si~~~~:cafusde&#13;
this is held together by Burton C~mm~ngs, ?~ocal:SB~n love with his&#13;
any emotional being to either Identify WI. ?r a I und the Guess&#13;
singing. With aU this professional and ~OPhI~tICate~ so rt oC good hard&#13;
Who have not forgotten that the guitar IS an mt~t~ra pawa are usually&#13;
rock. Intertwined biting guitar solos often WI waillCluded.&#13;
book of essays on&#13;
ARTlFlCfAL PARADISE is a name slolen from a t f' 'sh&#13;
hashish and wine written by Baude Ial.re aro und. It85f0ihIe hGopueess 0W1hmo's&#13;
reading the book soon. The packagmg mate.rIa 0 ferin a chance&#13;
ARTIFICIAL PARADISE satarizes.a magazme.~~ Ofur sutscription.&#13;
ofwinning millions of bucks a~d prizes alo~g WI II y~one on several&#13;
Integration of various mUSIcal forms I~ we gh several changes&#13;
selections. "These Show Biz Shoes" goes . rO~ring by a melodic&#13;
until it is finally saved from almost becommg&#13;
chorus with lines such as&#13;
"Tbank you for my show biz shoes&#13;
Gon' get to heaven in my show biZ shoes. hoes"&#13;
Don'tyoustepOnmYblUesu~e.shOW?,IZSI "is a lighter and not&#13;
Bu.rt's performing is again magruflce~t. Or y k' in and strangely&#13;
qUitefrivolous rocker with a country fiddle brea l~ hIe" a religious&#13;
enOUghit fits beautifully. "Hamba Gahle-usal:n~n:'s "Give Peace a&#13;
rOCk-Chant,was probably inspired by the Plas I~ines along with faint&#13;
Chance." Burt provokingly returns the chorus&#13;
ra~nchy lead guitar bursts. . a driving hard rocker&#13;
. Bye Bye Babe" begins the plashcware as . verses. A punchy&#13;
WithBurt slurring his enunciation pu.rposel~ d~r~~~ on side 1. On side&#13;
downbeat "Rock and Roller Steam" IS also me ~ with a jazzy piano&#13;
two"All Hashed Out" commences as ~ ha~d roc t er&#13;
f&#13;
"Lost and Found&#13;
passage near the end. A weak beginnmg .IS par 0 'rs this by joining&#13;
!own" with a different singer. Burton ql:"ckliu~e~:~in proves it's the&#13;
l~on the chorus and a good bass comes m. T&#13;
Singer and not the song. . ent vocalist in a softer&#13;
There is what at least appears to be a diff~r 1 0 contains faint&#13;
rOCking "Samantha's Living Room.". Th~~ ~ sSpaniSh style folk&#13;
~c~grOUnd horns and has a slightly erne e ecu· hter Home." "The&#13;
Singing is experimented with in "Follow Your DaO~Y average. .&#13;
WatCher" closes the album and is sadly enough, Who keep theIr&#13;
""- , d ndtheGuess . I&#13;
I fiealbum as a whole is well balance a n well.intended SOCIa&#13;
brand of rock from sounding usual as a Y s that ARTIFICIAL&#13;
SChiZOPhrenicswould do. At this pOlnt l.t seem&#13;
PARADISE "iscom in'?,close to living up to Its ~~~dCenter)&#13;
/tesy of J&amp;J Tape and&#13;
- ..... iiiiiiii__ ii:{ .:'~uv:::'_-.::.'~._A::'Q~.'~.~:-:":'.~,.,:._'~'.:"a"."::::".:..-------&#13;
%2&#13;
Am&#13;
%2 IIhoch 01&#13;
found 10 I&#13;
a b Ie&#13;
trychm&#13;
C real LSD&#13;
... «mmon!&#13;
_" Opium In the \\ tern "arld&#13;
molted&#13;
beaten&#13;
C ground and eel&#13;
2S The mO.t ph) ,colly .ddlcll&#13;
a nutm&#13;
'b tobacco&#13;
c manJuana&#13;
I11CIIt mon!.&#13;
Jfyllie on Germany&#13;
~&#13;
German students are apath&#13;
BY Jane Schl~esman&#13;
11 ray mice" is a term used&#13;
The ~be a group of students on&#13;
t deSCrl&#13;
0 mpuses of German&#13;
the c~t·es They are, in fact, a · ers1 1 ·&#13;
uni~ ·t of the students - an&#13;
rnaJoritr ineffective majority -&#13;
pathe IC, . . t· .&#13;
a while never parbc1pa mg m&#13;
11 ho, est that troubles these&#13;
the unr es have also done&#13;
cam_pug\o 'put down the radical&#13;
noth 10 · · th It . ·t initiatmg e revo s.&#13;
rni~~e~ts in German~ "have&#13;
edibility as senous and&#13;
Jost er . . t . th sible parbc1pan s m e&#13;
respon " ays educational process, . s&#13;
k 'de Chancellor Irvm G . Par s1 .&#13;
W ·llie who was m Germany&#13;
Y tiy as an official guest of the&#13;
recen . ·t Id d deral Republic to VJSI o a~&#13;
Fe universities. Wyllie new&#13;
discussed with Ranger so~e&#13;
exams, abandonment of the&#13;
le~ture_ system, smaller classes&#13;
with. discussions and more emphasis&#13;
on teaching rather than&#13;
research," Wyllie said.&#13;
_German university officials&#13;
with whom he discussed the&#13;
unrest mentioned a link between&#13;
the SDS in Chicago and the first&#13;
. SDS group at Bonn, which was&#13;
organized by travelling agents&#13;
from the U.S. They also indicated&#13;
strong Communist influence as a&#13;
cause of much of the violence.&#13;
The avowed Communists on&#13;
campuses "constitute less than 5&#13;
percent of the student body and&#13;
weapons -&#13;
highlights of his tour and his&#13;
impressions of German&#13;
universities as comp_ared and&#13;
ntrasted with Parkside.&#13;
co h' . When queried on is imstaff,"&#13;
Wyllie indicated, but they&#13;
are the active ones who keep up a&#13;
steady stream of demands that&#13;
"professors and administrators&#13;
behave in 'new ways' in keeping&#13;
with the 'new times' ." They also&#13;
are frequently the ones who&#13;
provoke administrators into&#13;
taking actions which then incense&#13;
the more moderate students and&#13;
drive them into the radical camp.&#13;
As an example Wyllie cited&#13;
Heidelburg, one of the more&#13;
charming of the old universities.&#13;
Shortly before his arrival there&#13;
the State Minister of Education&#13;
had ordered a thousand police in&#13;
to quell a student uprising. The&#13;
disturbance was precipated by&#13;
the minister's refusal to allow a&#13;
professor from Hanover to give a&#13;
speech on the campus. The man&#13;
was alleged to have colulections&#13;
with the Baader-Meinhof urban&#13;
guerrila terrorists, whose aim is&#13;
to wake up the people with&#13;
A drug sur&#13;
essions of student unres_t there&#13;
pr d its possible relation to an .&#13;
problems on Amencan campuses&#13;
a couple of years ago, he&#13;
acknowledged that they are&#13;
about two years behind our&#13;
trends, and revolt there seems to&#13;
have passed the peak now.&#13;
"There are some legitimate&#13;
internal reasons for unrest -&#13;
problems the administration had&#13;
not been working on. The&#13;
tudents campaigned for easier&#13;
entrance requirements, easier&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
ARTIFICIAL PARADISE&#13;
Guess Who&#13;
RSP-4830&#13;
Id h to include tight 4-4 hard&#13;
To sum up the Guess Who, one wou . ave · s Often included&#13;
rock 50's rock and insane but often bnlhant lyric ·. pi·ano All of&#13;
' . d f Las Vegas casmo ·&#13;
with the preceding 1s a backgroun ~ alist who should cause&#13;
this is held togeth~r by Bu~ton C~m~ngs, ~;:r fall in love with his&#13;
any emotional bemg to either identify wi . . sound the Guess&#13;
singing. With all this professional ~ nd ~ophif~~~~:~ part of good hard&#13;
Who have not forgotten that ~he guitar isf~n ·th wa-wa are usually&#13;
rock. Intertwined biting guitar solos o n WI&#13;
included. book of essay on&#13;
ARTIFICIAL PARADISE is a nam~ stoien fr~~~- I hope to finish&#13;
hashish and wine written by Baudel~1re ar~u~ial of the Guess \ ho'&#13;
reading the book soon. The packagmg ma e_ d offering a chance&#13;
ARTIFICIAL PARADISE satarizes_ a magazme.fh your subscription.&#13;
of winning millions of bucks an_d prizes alo~g wiell done on several&#13;
Integration of various n_ms1cal !~rms 1~r:ugb several chang~&#13;
selections. "These Show Biz Shoes goes . boring by a melodic&#13;
until it is finally saved from almost becommg&#13;
chorus with lines such as&#13;
"Thank you for my show biz s_hoes&#13;
Gon' get to heaven in my show biz shoes_ ,,&#13;
Don't you step on my blue su~e-show ?.12 sr~~s a lighter and not&#13;
Burt's performing is again magmflce~t. °t: Y k ·ng in and strangely&#13;
quite frivolous rocker with a country fiddle rt ; Gable " a religiou&#13;
enough it fits beautifully. "Hamba Gahle-Usa :n Ono's "Give Peace a&#13;
rock-chant was probably inspired by the Plas ic1. es along with faint&#13;
"'- ' the chorus m '-nance." Burt provokingly returns&#13;
raunchy lead guitar bursts. . a driving hard rocker&#13;
"Bye Bye Babe" begins t~e _plashcware a~uring verses. A pun~hy&#13;
11,1lh Burt slurring his enunciation purpose!~ 1 ded on side 1. On side&#13;
downbeat "Rock and Roller Steam" is also me u ·th a 1·azzy piano&#13;
h rd rocker w1 d !11,0 "All Hashed Out" commences as a a . t f "Lost and Foun&#13;
pa sage near the end. A weak beginning _is par O irs this by joining&#13;
Town" with a different singer. Burton q':11c~hi~ef;ain proves it's the&#13;
10 on the chorus and a good bass comes m.&#13;
inger and not the song. . f rent vocalist in a sof~er&#13;
Th~re is what at least appears to be~. dif~s also contains famt&#13;
rocking "Samantha's Living Room . . ff t Spanish style folk&#13;
background horns and has a slightly erne e: ·ghter Home." "The&#13;
t~ging is experimented with in "Follow Your aounly average. .&#13;
\', atcher" closes the album and is, sadly en~uf~ Guess Who keep th~rr&#13;
The album as a whole is well balanced an well-intended social&#13;
brand of rock from sounding usual as any that ARTIFICIAL&#13;
sch· · · t ·t seems 1zophrenics would do. At this pom 1.&#13;
PARAD · . · pto1tsname.&#13;
lSE is com in~ close to hvmg u d Record Center)&#13;
,m-tesy of J &amp;J Tape an&#13;
, VV1 ... 10 J&#13;
2. What do "r&#13;
a Tumal,&#13;
b. econal&#13;
c .-\mobarbil&#13;
a oran un&#13;
b . D imil&#13;
c. nitrou o. d&#13;
-1 . Ha\'in "&#13;
a . runnm&#13;
bord r&#13;
b droppin&#13;
C hootin&#13;
5. Which of th&#13;
marijuana?&#13;
a catnip&#13;
b . o no&#13;
c. gr en l&#13;
6 Which of th folio · n&#13;
~t nltal n ml C'd&#13;
a . code1&#13;
b. ry tal&#13;
c. barb1lurat&#13;
8. The mor dam&#13;
. tol ne o. nitrou · o 1&#13;
C. he)iwn&#13;
9 . Which of th&#13;
jected?&#13;
a. ep ·om Its&#13;
b Oat beer&#13;
cau&#13;
c ga hoe&#13;
C&#13;
12 _ Mo t THC old&#13;
o?&#13;
a. lo ,·.grade LSD .&#13;
b. animal tranq~1f1z&#13;
c . ynthelic man1uan&#13;
and&#13;
r f&#13;
mm&#13;
contat&#13;
ed., Jan. '2 , 1973 THE PA SID 3&#13;
• t ic&#13;
•&#13;
l al q •&#13;
s&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Jan. 24, 1973&#13;
Audio-Visuel Review-------"'""&#13;
'Hiroshima' and&#13;
'Future Shock'&#13;
By Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
Hiroshima Nagasaki is a film in the Learning Center which explores&#13;
the effects of those atomic blasts.&#13;
The film showed botb of the actual blasts and then went in to show&#13;
the damage that was done. Statistics were given for the number of&#13;
people dead and injured and the extent of the damage. A survivor of&#13;
the Hiroshima blast gives a first-hand account of the incident.&#13;
.The most powerful and shaking part of the film is seeing what&#13;
happened to the people. Some lay underneath the rubble quietly and&#13;
humbly asking for help. Some were in hospitals, but since half of the&#13;
doctors were killed in the blast and there was such a tremendous&#13;
number oC people injured, the hospitals weren't very effective. Also,&#13;
what can be done for someone with radiation poisoning?&#13;
Small children and babies were shown lying in the hospitals eaten&#13;
away by radiation and their skin literally falling off. One boy's face&#13;
was so horribly burned it seemed remarkable that he was alive.&#13;
Through all of this hell it was remarkable how the people seemed to&#13;
hold up so well. Even the people with the most horrible injuries did not&#13;
show any sign of suflering. They seemed almost as if they didn't&#13;
realize what had happened or they just refused to accept it.&#13;
Bombs are now being tested which are 25times as powerful as those&#13;
that hit Hiroshima and agasaki. After seeing what happened there&#13;
you can't help but to ask yourself. "Why?"&#13;
By Kathryn Wellner&#13;
Are you suffering from "Future Shock"?&#13;
Many people in our society are, according to Alvin Toffler, author of&#13;
the book Future Shock..&#13;
If you have heeo leary 01 tackling the book hecause 01 its considerable&#13;
length, it has been made into a 4f&gt;-minutedocumentary lilm&#13;
which is available in the Learning Center. To those of you who have&#13;
read the book, I strongly recommend the movie.&#13;
The film is narrated by Orson Welles, to me an automatic plus, who&#13;
appears periodically to tie the scenes together and add dramatic&#13;
emphasis. This emphasis is not essential to the lilm, hecause 01 the&#13;
dramatic nature 01 the subject matter, and lortunately is not overdone.&#13;
At first I was worried that it might he, because the opening&#13;
frames are too obviously bard hitting. Happily, Welles walks on with&#13;
his reserved British air and the lilm proceeds in a striking but natural&#13;
direction.&#13;
Rapid, rampant technological change; tbe "premature arrival of&#13;
the future" is the primary concern of the documentary. Change is&#13;
necessary, but perhaps not all change is desirable - especially when&#13;
such change occurs so swiftly that the human response is an inability&#13;
to absorb it. This condition is what Tofner terms "future shock. to&#13;
Hopefully, the author is attempting merely to point out the adverse&#13;
effects 01 hypertechnology. I strongly agree with his warning in&#13;
reference to our present choices regarding certain types of change -&#13;
types of change which, once chosen, preclude all subsequent choice.&#13;
Once one makes the choice of accepting test tube babies and artificial&#13;
intelligence tablets, there is little room for retreat.&#13;
However, at times I received the uncomfortable impression that the&#13;
author, or perhaps the film makers, were attacking change per se.&#13;
One cannot go that lar. Even rapid change is acceptable when no&#13;
change has taken place for too long a period of time. At such a point, it&#13;
is no longer a premature arrival of the future. but a long overdue&#13;
arrival that should he the past.&#13;
•• ~ '." ¥ ,\ "," ,..,&#13;
Wyllie on Germany ..•&#13;
( Continued from page 3)&#13;
chances of a taxpayers' revolt&#13;
much slimmer. The professors&#13;
are no longer regarded as the&#13;
demagogues they once were, b~t&#13;
the universities are s ti ll&#13;
esteemed by the general public.&#13;
Recent student uprisings are&#13;
changing this attitude, ?u~ one&#13;
universily is having no difficulty&#13;
getting another $400,000,000 to&#13;
complete campus buildings after&#13;
exceeding their original budget of&#13;
the same amount (this can be&#13;
compared with $37,000,000 lor&#13;
Parkside, with the taxpayers'&#13;
grumbling heard across. ~he&#13;
state). There is also no tuition&#13;
there, but they still have had to&#13;
launch an all-out campaign to get&#13;
more students of working-class&#13;
background. Since employment&#13;
is high in Germany, many people&#13;
do not consider continuing their&#13;
education. Often it is easier for a&#13;
person to work his way up in a&#13;
company rather than to attend&#13;
university for a number of years&#13;
and then seek higher level employment&#13;
without working experience.&#13;
When asked il he felt there was&#13;
any practice or idea he had seen&#13;
there which he would like implemented&#13;
here, Wyllie replied&#13;
that except in funding we Seemto&#13;
be ahead of them on all counts.&#13;
They are just now looking at Our&#13;
system of accumulating credits&#13;
toward graduation, for example.&#13;
Their practice is to have one all.&#13;
encompassing examination at the&#13;
end 01 a student's study. "Conceivably&#13;
then," said Wyllie "a&#13;
student could be in school the'resl&#13;
of his life, postponing the big&#13;
test. tI&#13;
Wyllie also mentioned that one&#13;
of the most controversial rektors&#13;
(top university administrators)&#13;
whose ideas are regarded a~&#13;
"radical, tI received much of his&#13;
training in the U.S. It would&#13;
seem, at least from Wyllie's point&#13;
of view, that the Germans could&#13;
learn much from visits to&#13;
Parkside and other American&#13;
universities! Certainly they&#13;
would find it interesting to note&#13;
the close similarities and vast&#13;
differences even as Wyllie did.&#13;
~ rJ'I\d~Ojeph&#13;
A4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
• Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
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1fI&lt;YddP4447-~ ()Uft '[)DM4I&#13;
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Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
. . . . . . . . . , .&#13;
FOp M o A I A&#13;
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A A L N&#13;
L N L E&#13;
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All Women Bringing In This Ad Will Get&#13;
ALL Drinks HALF PRICE Mon: thru Thurs.&#13;
Expires Feb. 1, 1973&#13;
!I!!:!!I!!!!!l!!!!:!!!~!!!!!:l!I!!l!I! COUPO NI!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!::!~!!!:!!!&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.O.Le.&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
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Special ~ ... t ..&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
PIZZA KneREN&#13;
Chicke .. &amp; ltali... Slusage 80Illlte,.&#13;
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includes: plUS S20 'ax line! servlc.&#13;
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• All Tips &amp; Transfers&#13;
Travel Center LLC0-197&#13;
553-2279&#13;
Expires Wed. Jan. 31, 1973&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed. , Jan. 24, 1973&#13;
udio-Visual Review&#13;
'Hiroshiina' and&#13;
'Future Shock'&#13;
By Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
Hir him a , 'aga aki i a film in the Learning Center which explores&#13;
the effects of those atomic blasts.&#13;
The film bowed both of the actual blasts and then went in to show&#13;
the d mage that wa done. tatistics were given for the number of&#13;
ople dead and injured and the extent of the damage. A survivor of&#13;
th Hiroshima bla t gives a first-hand account of the incident.&#13;
·The m t powerful and shaking part of the film is seeing what&#13;
hap ned to the people . ome lay underneath the rubble quietly and&#13;
humbl · a ing for help. ome were in hospitals, but since half of the&#13;
do to were killed m the blast and there was such a tremendous&#13;
number of people injured, the ho pitals weren't very effective. Also ,&#13;
what can bed ne f r someone with radiation poisoning?&#13;
m II children and babies were hown lying in the hospitals eaten&#13;
w y by radiation and their kin literally falling off. One boy 's face&#13;
wa horribly burned it eemed remarkable that he was alive.&#13;
Through all of thi hell it was remarkable how the people seemed to&#13;
hold up so well. Even the people with the most horrible injuries did not&#13;
how any ign of uffering. They eemed almost as if they didn ' t&#13;
r lize what had happened or they just refused to accept it.&#13;
Born ar no being te ted which are 25 times as powerful as those&#13;
th t hit Htr hi ma and agasaki. After eeing what happened there&#13;
you c n ' t help but to ask yourself, "Why?"&#13;
By Kathryn Wellner&#13;
Are you uffering from "Future Shock " ?&#13;
f ny people in our society are, according to Alvin Toffler , author of&#13;
the book Future hoclL&#13;
If you have been leary of tackling the book because of its con-&#13;
1derable length , it has been made into a 45-minute documentary film&#13;
which i available in the Leaming Center. To those of you who have&#13;
read the boo , I strongly recommend the movie.&#13;
The film i narrated by Orson Welles , to me an automatic plus, who&#13;
appears periodically to tie the scenes together and add dramatic&#13;
empha is. Thi emphasis is not essential to the film, because of the&#13;
dramatic nature of the subject matter, and fortunately is not overdone&#13;
. At first I was worried that it might be, because the opening&#13;
frames are too obviously bard hitting. Happily , Welles walks on with&#13;
his reserved British air and the film proceeds in a striking but natural&#13;
dire ction.&#13;
R apid, rampant technological change ; the " premature arrival of&#13;
the future" is the primary concern of the documentary . Change is&#13;
necessary, but perhaps not all change is desirable - especially when&#13;
uch change occur o wiftly that the human response is an inability&#13;
to ab orb it. This condition is what Toffler terms " future shock."&#13;
Hopefully, the author is attempting merely to point out the adverse&#13;
effects of hypertechnology . I strongly agree with his warning in&#13;
reference to our present choices regarding certain types of change -&#13;
type of change which , once chosen, preclude all subsequent choice .&#13;
Once one makes the choice of accepting test tube babies and artificial&#13;
intelligence tablets, there is little room for retreat.&#13;
However, at times I received the uncomfortable impression that the&#13;
author , or perhap the film makers , were attacking change per se.&#13;
One cannot go that far . Even rapid change is acceptable when no&#13;
change has taken place for too long a period of time. At such a point, it&#13;
is no longer a premature arrival of the future , but a long overdue&#13;
arrival that should be the past.&#13;
UW-Parkside American State Bank&#13;
E~afla&#13;
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mdud . plus SJO t•• nd service&#13;
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, .1 ' . , , ' , , ,&#13;
Wyllie on Germany ...&#13;
( Continued from page 3)&#13;
chances of a taxpayers' revolt&#13;
much slimmer. The professors&#13;
are no longer regarded as the&#13;
demagogues they once were, b~t&#13;
the universities are still&#13;
esteemed by the general public.&#13;
Recent student uprisings are&#13;
changing this attitude, ?u~ one&#13;
university is having no difficulty&#13;
getting another $400 ,000,000 to&#13;
complete campus buildings after&#13;
exceeding their original budget of&#13;
the same amount (this can be&#13;
compared with $37,000,000 for&#13;
Parkside, with the taxpayers'&#13;
grumbling beard across . ~he&#13;
state&gt;. There is also no tmbon&#13;
there, but they still have bad to&#13;
launch an all-out campaign to get&#13;
more students of working-class&#13;
background. Since employment&#13;
is high in Germany, many people&#13;
do not consider continuing their&#13;
education . Often it is easier for a&#13;
person to work his way up in a&#13;
company rather than to attend&#13;
university for a number of years&#13;
and then seek higher level employment&#13;
without working experience.&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
M ember Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
When asked if be felt there was&#13;
any practice or idea be had seen&#13;
there which be would like implemented&#13;
here, Wyllie replied&#13;
that except in funding we seem to&#13;
be ahead of them on all counts&#13;
They are just now looking at ou;&#13;
system of accumulating credits&#13;
toward graduation, for example.&#13;
Their practice is to have one allencompassing&#13;
examination at the&#13;
end of a student ' s study. " Conceivably&#13;
then," _said Wyllie , "a&#13;
student could be m school the rest&#13;
of his life, postponing the big&#13;
test. "&#13;
Wyllie also mentioned that one&#13;
of the most controversial rektor&#13;
(top university administrators )&#13;
whose ideas are regarded a '&#13;
"radical," received much of his&#13;
training in the U.S. It would&#13;
seem, at least from Wyllie's point&#13;
of view, that the Germans could&#13;
learn much from visits to&#13;
Parkside and other American&#13;
universities! Certainly they&#13;
would find it interesting to note&#13;
the close similarities and vast&#13;
differences even as Wyllie did .&#13;
•&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
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COUPON&#13;
7~ ~ &amp;aetfi#d 1(/fJ.#Wt, "" tk&#13;
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32nd Ave. and 52nd St.&#13;
Tenuta's COUPON&#13;
PORTUGAL&#13;
Portuguese 107 Rose $ with&#13;
coupon&#13;
$1.69 w-out&#13;
r..let·il·Juii·....&#13;
1701 N. Main Racine 633-9421&#13;
Answers to&#13;
drug • qUlZ&#13;
(b rbilurales). Sleeping pills have long been&#13;
I.b ~ suicide medium, even before they were&#13;
used~IY used for getting stoned. Death is usually&#13;
ge~ by respiratory depression or central nerca&#13;
ystern collapse, similar to narcotics. Bar-&#13;
~us Soowithdrawal is often more difficult than&#13;
~lur~awal from heroin. (The probability of grand&#13;
WmIathl 501'zores occurring during withdrawal is much&#13;
. her with downers.)&#13;
big b (Seconals). Clinically known as secobarbital&#13;
soZd.i.um. a sbort·acting member of lbe barbiturate&#13;
family.&lt;orangesunshi.ne). A'bfan d af stree t aciid .&#13;
3.a (shooting crystal). Crystal (a powdered form&#13;
I. &lt;peed) is a slimulant capable of rapidly&#13;
ofte&#13;
S 'orating the body when injected for an extdeenndedlenglb&#13;
0ft. tme. .&#13;
5 (Catnip). It looks and smells like marijuana, bUt;oesn't get anyone the least bit high. It is often&#13;
d to cut grass, along with oregano, and (in ex·&#13;
!urseemeshortages), any lb'mg green.&#13;
6. c (barbiturates&gt;. A~ong ~he most common&#13;
causes of death in the U.S. IS accIdental overdose by&#13;
mixingdowners and alco~o~. . .&#13;
7. b (amphetamine). ThiS IS one cllmcal name for&#13;
Speed, which is often found in sustained-release diet&#13;
andpep pills.&#13;
8. a (toluene) - the substance in glue which&#13;
callSesthe greatest damage. Virtually all vapors of&#13;
this nature can cause damage to. brain functions&#13;
with a relatively snort period of lise. The deadly&#13;
category of vapors includes mainly household&#13;
aerOSOl products, glue and petroleum-based&#13;
JI'Oduets(shellac, Ether, gasoline, carbon tetrachloride,&#13;
etc.).&#13;
9. c (gasoline). This acts in the same way as&#13;
wooldother petroleum substances. Orally, wilb lbe&#13;
exceptionof extremely volatile chemicals, lbe body&#13;
lISuallyhas a chance to reject poisons hy lbe&#13;
naturally built-in safeguard called! vomiting. But&#13;
whenever anything poisonous is injected into the&#13;
vein, the user bypasses all the natural forms of&#13;
rejection.&#13;
10. a (hallucinogenic derivative of nutmeg).&#13;
ClinicalMDA, if it were available, would have&#13;
ballucinogenic properties much like other&#13;
psychedelics. However, much of the MDA going&#13;
aro~ o~.t..he streets l~~ely i~ v~~y unpredicta~le"&#13;
witlti\i'unu ua11ybfgn~rate'1&gt;f bummers"6ccurrmg&#13;
~e to frequent misrepresentation and~or im-&#13;
JlIrities.&#13;
11. c (mushroom&gt;. Psilocybin is the active&#13;
ingredientof the stropharia cubensis, also known as&#13;
themagic mushroom. It is grown mainly in Mexico&#13;
in the Western Hemisphere, sometimes for&#13;
religious-meditative purposes.&#13;
12. b (animal tranquilizers). Most people who&#13;
think they've had THe have actually had&#13;
tranquilizers normally used for horses and other&#13;
largeanimals. Actual tetrahydrocannabinol is rare,&#13;
its synthesizing a costly process, and is generally&#13;
manufactured exclusively for government tests.&#13;
13. b (dysentery). Bolb hepatitis and subacute&#13;
bacterial endocarditis can occur from usmg a dirty&#13;
needle. Hepatitis is the most common disease, and&#13;
the most easily noticeable. .&#13;
14. c (feelings of love and peace). Speed, ~esldes&#13;
causing physical damage, produces paranoia and&#13;
fear in some, depending on dosage and length of&#13;
run. Even on one diet pill, cheerful people often get&#13;
a IitUedepressed. It's certainly not a drug of love.&#13;
15.b (hashish), Many times as potent as grass,&#13;
hashishis usually sold in grams ..It is made from the&#13;
resin of the marijuana plant. In Far Eastern&#13;
Countries hashish is smoked most commonly and&#13;
marijuan~ (bhang) is considered not as desi~able.&#13;
16.b (mescaline). Mescaline is a psychedelic ~nd&#13;
produces no physical addiction necessary for. WI.thdrawal.&#13;
Downers and smack (heroin) are addictIng&#13;
In the classic fashion.&#13;
17. a (hallucinog .&#13;
rated in the PSYCh::;~~!~M~rning Glory seeds are&#13;
~ed several hundred ca egory, and were hrst&#13;
CIVilizations.The y~rs ago by South American&#13;
alkaloid derivali~ec:= lysergic. ac.id.amide, an&#13;
LSD. There are 15 vaneti one-:enth as potent as&#13;
potency. Most s d ~s 0 Seeds, rangmg In&#13;
with . ee compames now coat their seeds&#13;
m. gestIaont.OXICsubstance designed to discow-age&#13;
18. a (stimUlant&gt;. Cocaine is not U&#13;
thOUgh so classified under tbe Hrea. y a nareot.J~.&#13;
Act Its If ts· amson arcollc&#13;
that it e~ev~tesathrelikeoodthaotf other stimulants, m&#13;
. e m suppresses h nd&#13;
~~heves ~atigue for short-term durations,:a:s.e e cocaine trip is so short, repeated d~ rna'&#13;
eve~tuan~ cause toxic poisoning and perfc:ra~&#13;
cartilage 10 the nostrils .&#13;
19. e (~I\~T) - or dimethyltf")'Ptamine. creates&#13;
effects similar- to other lyserglcs but 0( shorter&#13;
duration. In liquid form it is often dropped&#13;
tobacco, dried parsley Or other smokable so: stanc~ (eve~ marijuana). Tryptamine lS the&#13;
chemical family from which LSD, DMT, DET.&#13;
Bufotenin and psilocybin are aU derived.&#13;
20.. b (a secret military weapon). STP (DO~..u.&#13;
chemically related to mescaline and speed "as&#13;
originally developed as a weapon to instill f~ in&#13;
the enemy. Anyone who has ever had a large dose&#13;
Will vouch for the accuracy of the original idea&#13;
21. c (speecl). The base of most amphetamine&#13;
preparations used today was developed during&#13;
World War II to keep soldiers awake and ID a&#13;
fighting mood. Over 250,000 people alone in Japan&#13;
after the war were injecting speed daily.&#13;
22. b (peyote) - is made from the pe)'o!e cactus&#13;
Mescaline is an alkaloid frond in peyote, and us«Ilo&#13;
denote lbe synthetic preparation.&#13;
23. b (strychninel. Even lbough streel acid IS&#13;
seldom pure, it rarely contains str)'chnlne.&#13;
Strychnine, a poison, is still falsely lbooghl to be ID&#13;
many psychedelics. Recent analysis seems to mdicate&#13;
that it is ~s-synthesis of the drug itself&#13;
which is causing many bad reactions.&#13;
24. a (smoked). Opium, a dreamy, sleepy drug. IS&#13;
made from a variety of poppies. (Remember the&#13;
poppy fields in The Wizard of Ot!) II is addicting if&#13;
smoked in sufficient amounts, though it is rarel)'&#13;
found in large quantities in tbe Western World.&#13;
25. b (tobacco). Wilh quite a long list 01&#13;
detrimental factors, smoking tobacco has pro~en to&#13;
be more of a menace than it's worth. ADd it's addicting.&#13;
What more can be said?&#13;
HOW TO SCORE&#13;
This isn't the usual test thOlt can be graded in '\'&#13;
or B's. The drug situation toda)' is a mao)AatetN&#13;
thing, and often a single error in judgmfnl can u\ e&#13;
unpredictable consequences.&#13;
Clinically. there have been fe'" proble ia·&#13;
volving drugs that ha\'e not ~n obsened and&#13;
charted.&#13;
On the street. however. onl)' a \e:ry rnaU p".&#13;
centage or drugs have any sort 01 clinical origin.&#13;
We've noticed, for example. that m t 01 the&#13;
"mescaline" on the streets i nothing but 0 •&#13;
LSD-PCP misrepresented garbage. ADd t t. lot&#13;
more people ha\'e been getling lrun out on liard&#13;
dope. And that ever)' so often, a bad balch ol"red ..&#13;
hits the streets, and a lot of peopJe: 00 r I: t&#13;
poisoned.&#13;
So if you missed any of the basic. qu tioa on the&#13;
test wouldn't it be best to find auClJIe an "en! It&#13;
couid save you a lot of bassle - and it ¥Iou'd~" buri:&#13;
to know the answers before you're ra&lt;:t'"d 'lllilUl lbt&#13;
real questions. Peace.&#13;
For more informaboD. write to:&#13;
Director 01 PuhhcallQflS&#13;
DOlT OWFOU DATlO.'&#13;
P. O. Box 5115&#13;
Phoenix, Arizona 85010&#13;
.........................&#13;
Parkslde&#13;
Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
Thursday 11- 8&#13;
TAP&#13;
BEER 15q:&#13;
»Billiards&#13;
Tournament&#13;
Jan. 29&#13;
thru&#13;
Feb. 2&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches&#13;
Foosball 2 Pool Tables&#13;
Air Conditioning Pinball Machine&#13;
_-~-- Cold Six Packs To Go.•••••••••&#13;
('nCr~ft'f' Sl.~&#13;
..nCtorb~ Jan._&#13;
: "Inner advance to tate&#13;
: college champion Iups&#13;
: Register' Student Act orrlee&#13;
: Room D19; LLC&#13;
---.-.-.._.... iii iiiiiid.-i.i.iiiii-iiii.,i•iillii•.;•;I1..;:-&#13;
: .. .&#13;
Wed., Jan. 24, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER S&#13;
AS&#13;
prof&#13;
of artian land&#13;
grant&#13;
orm•&#13;
upp rt&#13;
tud&#13;
tud! by 0 pIon lar~&#13;
geologist al Par lid aimed&#13;
ultImately at mappong p«t of&#13;
the I.arlIao landsca ..bore&#13;
,"olea-wc adJ ty occurred&#13;
,,;n he SUJlIlOrted b a&#13;
1Dl1lal grant lrom . '000 I&#13;
Aeronautic and pact' Ad.&#13;
Ill1ntSlrallOO&#13;
The granI. co' tllt ponod&#13;
througb ~ • 1m.&#13;
~blltelJ )&#13;
Regents III• 0_&#13;
The udJ are&#13;
G.&gt;cIed b) Eu&amp;- I&#13;
assistant prof r&#13;
SOeDCe. and "i1U&#13;
anal) or pbotogro from&#13;
•Iann~ 9 ~ probe&#13;
Bel""" comlIl&amp; to P de lui&#13;
I..U. SmJIb "'OS ID\ol\ed In Iuno.r&#13;
and p/aneI&amp;r)' ..-.rdl ot lite&#13;
DIversity or •. MeXICO&#13;
deohng "lib pbOlogrophs&#13;
returtl&lt;!d !rom lite Lmo.r OrtJot~&#13;
spocecraft. 'eral Apollo moon&#13;
IDlSSl&lt;lOS .. nd (rom I and&#13;
7 pboIo phs al&#13;
1be current 5lUd ....n ( ...&#13;
development or CriteTla for&#13;
,denurlC8bOn al _ ace&#13;
features. Ideouflcluon and&#13;
classUlC8bOll al YOIcaDlC Io..nd&#13;
forms such as domes. nil . clo.n&#13;
halo craters and cones. deter·&#13;
mlnltlon or dJ lrlbutlon or&#13;
\'OICInlc lcnns (WI &amp;Dd •&#13;
comparl n .lh th Ir&#13;
dlstnbubOO ... eanh and ... lite&#13;
moon; and deu1Ied or&#13;
\ lcame areas min-&#13;
SUdJ areasal ,_c ID&#13;
and "one()' ,,'OUId e&#13;
candidates lar lo.ndul&amp; lor&#13;
e-.·entual \. ng e"",,"bOn 01&#13;
lite p1anel Srmlb saId 1l&gt;e ....&#13;
I1llllU\ed V ng $pllCeCI"aI\&#13;
scheduled lor 0 Io..nd&#13;
l~&#13;
THE RAIICH&#13;
Retia ,111II&#13;
R.. c~ CrtIIM&#13;
SlMwlcMt &amp;&#13;
~Irc I III&#13;
&amp; I'.&#13;
In&#13;
AUTO &amp;&#13;
TRUCK&#13;
PARTS GORDON AUTO ~AIl1TS, INC.&#13;
Complete Machine Shop Service&#13;
Paint &amp; Body Shop Suppll s&#13;
High Performance Work.&#13;
Discount to Parkside Stud nts&#13;
MON ~ rUES&#13;
S ~! I __ HI Y€ Pu8lJC houS€&#13;
Lot ..... 0.... '1., (AI ..... ')&#13;
Answers to&#13;
• drug quiz&#13;
(barbiturates). S~eeping pills have long been&#13;
t. b a suicide medmm, even before they were&#13;
use::~ly used for getting ston~d. Death is usually&#13;
gen d by respiratory depressio1:1 or central nercause&#13;
ystem collapse, similar to narcotics. Barvous&#13;
ste withdrawal is often more difficult than&#13;
bi~:;awal from heroin. (The probability of grand&#13;
; 1al seizures occurring during withdrawal is much&#13;
. her with downer~.).&#13;
hig b (Seconals). Chmcally known as secobarbital&#13;
so!'ium, a short-acting member of the barbiturate&#13;
family. · Ab d f t t · (orange sunshme). ran o s ree acid. !: : (shooting cryst~I). Crystal (a powdered f~rm&#13;
of speed&gt; is a stimulant c_a~able of rapidly&#13;
deteriorating the _body when mJected for an extended&#13;
length of time. . ..&#13;
• 3 (Catnip&gt;. It looks and smells like manJuana,&#13;
bU~· doesn't get anyone the least bit high. It is often&#13;
~ to cut grass, along with oregano, and (in extreme&#13;
shortages), anything green.&#13;
6. c (barbiturates). An:iong ~he most common&#13;
causes of death in the U.S. is accidental overdose by&#13;
mixing downers and alcohol.&#13;
7• b (amphetamine). This is one clinical name for&#13;
Speed, which is often found in sustained-release diet&#13;
and pep pills .&#13;
s. a (toluene) - the substance in glue which&#13;
causes the greatest damage. Virtually all vapors of&#13;
this nature can cause damage to brain functions&#13;
11-ith a relatively short period of use. The deadly&#13;
cate&amp;ory of vapors includes mainly household&#13;
aerosol products, glue and petroleum-based&#13;
products (shellac, Ether, gasoline, carbon tetrachloride,&#13;
etc.).&#13;
9. c (gasoline). This acts in the same way as&#13;
would other petroleum substances. Orally, with the&#13;
exception of extremely volatile chemicals, the body&#13;
usually has a chance to reject poisons by the&#13;
naturally built-in safeguard called vomiting. But&#13;
whenever anything poisonous is injected into the&#13;
vein, the user bypasses all the natural forms of&#13;
rejection.&#13;
10. a (hallucinogenic derivative of nutmeg).&#13;
Clinical MDA, if it were available, would have&#13;
hallucinogenic properties much like other&#13;
~ychedelics. However, much of the MDA going&#13;
around on the streets lately is very unpredictable,&#13;
witfl'lnruilusually high rate of bummers-occurring&#13;
due to frequent misrepresentation and-or impurities.&#13;
HOW TO SCORE&#13;
11. c (mushroom). Psilocybin is the active&#13;
ingredient of the stropharia cubensis, also known as&#13;
the magic mushroom. It is grown mainly in Mexico&#13;
in the Western Hemisphere, sometimes for&#13;
religious-meditative purposes .&#13;
12. b (animal tranquilizers). Most people who&#13;
think they've had THC have actually had&#13;
tranquilizers normally used for horses and other&#13;
large animals. Actual tetrahydrocannabinol is rare,&#13;
its synthesizing a costly process, and is generally&#13;
manufactured exclusively for government tests.&#13;
13. b (dysentery). Both hepatitis and subacute&#13;
bacterial endocarditis can occur from using a dirty&#13;
needle. Hepatitis is the most common disease , and&#13;
the most easily noticeable.&#13;
14. c &lt;reelings of love and peace). Speed, besides&#13;
causing physical damage, produces paranoia and&#13;
fear in some , depending on dosage and length of&#13;
run . Even on one diet pill, cheerful people often get&#13;
a little depressed. It's certainly not a drug of love.&#13;
15. b (hashish&gt;. Many times as potent as grass,&#13;
ha hish is usually sold in grams. It is made from the&#13;
resin of the marijuana plant. In Far Eastern&#13;
countries hashish is smoked most commonly and&#13;
marijuan~ (bhang) is considered not as desi~able.&#13;
l6. b &lt;mescaline). Mescaline is a psychedehc and&#13;
Pl'oduces no physical addiction necessary for . wi_thdrawat.&#13;
Downers and smack (heroin) are addictmg&#13;
in the classic fashion . f .. itC·i .. JUb .....&#13;
•i 1701 N. Main Racine ;:;421&#13;
Special&#13;
Monday thru BEER 1 5 ¢&#13;
t Thursday 11- 8 -&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches&#13;
Foosball&#13;
Air Conditioning&#13;
2 Pool Tables&#13;
Pinball Machine&#13;
...._. Cold Six Packs To Go •• • • • • • • • •••••••••••••••••&#13;
...................... ...... ,. . \ . .&#13;
· Parkside :&#13;
Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
Billiards&#13;
Tournament&#13;
Jan.29&#13;
thru&#13;
Feb.2&#13;
. : ....................... ...... .&#13;
ed ., Jan. 24, 1973 THE PAR SID A G R&#13;
Comp lat C&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Jan. 24, 1973&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
With the starl 01 the second&#13;
mester, students, faculty and&#13;
stall are reminded that parking&#13;
permits must be displayed on&#13;
vehicles thaI are broughl on&#13;
campus. ThO$e individuals not&#13;
havmg a permit or having a&#13;
special paymenl problem should&#13;
contact lhe Bursar's ollice at&#13;
Tallenl Hall lor assistance.&#13;
ParkIng i limited to the east&#13;
and west Tallent lets. The&#13;
Handicap tails are lor tbe use 01&#13;
handicapped persons who must&#13;
obtam a special permit lrom&#13;
Salety nd urtty. The visuer&#13;
all are lor VI ltors' use lrom 7&#13;
a m to 5 p.m&#13;
For the safety 01 all pedestrian&#13;
trallic on campus, laculty. starl&#13;
and tudents are requested 10&#13;
observe the peed Iimil while&#13;
drIVIng vehlcl on campus.&#13;
• sallied by the Library? The&#13;
Park Ide Library tall oflers&#13;
thr minl-courses dealing with&#13;
th hlerature of Humanities.&#13;
ial I nces, and the Sciences.&#13;
Each course will be Independent&#13;
of th otheMl. Each will provide&#13;
an ,n-depth approach to the&#13;
Ilt ralure 01 the subjecl and will&#13;
include practical work problems&#13;
in Its area Participants will be&#13;
expected to compile a subject&#13;
bIbliography. Ample time will be&#13;
allotted 10 accomplish work&#13;
8 ignments.&#13;
Unit l: Humanities: Jan. 30 to&#13;
Feb. 13.&#13;
Unit 2: Social Sciences: Feb. 20&#13;
10 March 6.&#13;
nit 3: Sciences: March 13-27.&#13;
Tuesdays, 7:3lf-9:30 p.m. al the&#13;
Library.Learning Cenler, Room&#13;
0.110.&#13;
There is no(ee {or either course&#13;
Pre.reglstration is requesled for&#13;
al least a week belore the star'&#13;
ting date. Phone 553-2312 lor&#13;
further information. • The resources of the new&#13;
Parkside Learning Center will be&#13;
utilized to examine and plan&#13;
innovative instruction at all&#13;
levels of education. Emphasis&#13;
will be given to organization of&#13;
instruCtion systems as they 8re&#13;
inlluenced by the new views of&#13;
the teacher as a specialist in a&#13;
subject matter area, as a catalyst&#13;
for "learning how to learn," and&#13;
as an organizer of materialS for&#13;
learning.&#13;
Thursdays, beginning January&#13;
25, 7:30-9:30 p.m. 6 weekly&#13;
meetings in the Library·Learning&#13;
Cenler Red Room.&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
AelOSS no~ HOLIDAYINN&#13;
1iiz!J{(I!(/D It fllJ~1tJ1 iJlt1!'&#13;
.u ~f:~~4&#13;
-0'''' II~OUi.oI...u OWHUJHI.-&#13;
Ifio , ... , SI • ., ,.. • IT • lot- • limo&#13;
• t.t" • "AGMITTI • (HICUM&#13;
• G~(HI • 1lA'l'10l1 • LA U.GHII&#13;
• 114 '000 • U,MOWl(Mllo&#13;
eMU -OUTS • OfllVUY&#13;
YOl.I IJH(; WI .~HG'·&#13;
657·9843 or 658-4922&#13;
Harry Lantz, an associate&#13;
professor of music at Parkside,&#13;
was invited to serve as clinician&#13;
and conductor for the Music&#13;
Educators ational Conference&#13;
Eastern Regional meeting on&#13;
Friday (Jan. 19) in Boston.&#13;
Lantz lectured and demonstrated&#13;
rehearsal techniques&#13;
involved in developing secondary&#13;
school symphony orchestras. A&#13;
Bo Ion area symphony was used&#13;
as the demonstration ensemble.&#13;
Lantz also will be clinician and&#13;
conductor for the ew Mexico&#13;
All-State Orchestra at the New&#13;
Mexico Educators Conference&#13;
Jan. 24 through 27 in&#13;
Albuquerque. Lantz was cello&#13;
clinician (or the conference.&#13;
•&#13;
Faculty members which&#13;
parfic ipated in Ihe PSGA&#13;
Academic policies Committee&#13;
"Faculty Evaluation Form" will&#13;
be receiving the results during&#13;
the next two weeks. Results were&#13;
compiled by hand and available&#13;
at registration.&#13;
• From the registrar'S office&#13;
comes the report that enrollmenl&#13;
for the spring semester is 3,912,&#13;
an all·time high second semester&#13;
enrollmenl aller the lirsl week 01&#13;
classes. This compares with an&#13;
enrollmenl 01 3,691 for the same&#13;
time last year where second week&#13;
enrollment jumped to 3,944.&#13;
Comparing with lall enrollment&#13;
of 4,366. this is the smallest midyear&#13;
percentage drop at Parkside&#13;
thus far. •&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
is sponsoring a ski trip to&#13;
Whilecap on the weekend of Feb.&#13;
16. The cost is $39.50 for Parkside&#13;
sludenls, $36.50 lor Rag Time&#13;
Rangers and $44.50 lor non·&#13;
students. The cosl includes the&#13;
bus trip, a party Saturday nighl,&#13;
lill tickel, meals and lodging. A&#13;
$20 downpayment is required al&#13;
sign.up. The balance is due on&#13;
Feb. 2. Sign up at the Information&#13;
Office in Tallent Hall.&#13;
The Time of Man, a film fro&#13;
the American Museum of Natura&#13;
History, will be shown at the&#13;
Horlick High School Little&#13;
Theater in Racine. The film is&#13;
sponsored by Citizens for the&#13;
Environment in cooperation with&#13;
the U\V·Extension. The program,&#13;
on Monday, Feb. 5, al 8 p.m., is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
Preregistration is requested, call&#13;
553·2312. • The Parkside Film Society will&#13;
sponsor a showing of Francois&#13;
Trulla!'s 1962 Iilm "Shoot the&#13;
Piano Player," starring Charles&#13;
Aznavour, Fri., Jan. 26, at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in room 103 Greenquist.&#13;
Open to the public. $.60 ad·&#13;
mission. • A is-member joint education&#13;
corn mrss ron with limited&#13;
responsibilities was recommended&#13;
to Governor Patrick J.&#13;
Lucey by the Board of Regents.&#13;
Federal law requires each&#13;
state to establish a commission to&#13;
make studies and plans relating&#13;
to community colleges and oc·&#13;
cupational education programs&#13;
and to do statewide educational&#13;
planning involving federal&#13;
programs.&#13;
•&#13;
,------, t Sigma Pi t&#13;
t presents t&#13;
t t&#13;
I Geneva I&#13;
I Convention I t t&#13;
I Sat., Jan. 27 t&#13;
18:30 p.m. - 12:30 I&#13;
I Admission '150 t&#13;
: Student Act. Bldg. I&#13;
LParblde &amp; Wisconsin IDs required.Jt&#13;
"psst...&#13;
hey kid!&#13;
L~t me disclose to you a very large&#13;
pIece of buzz.&#13;
Tuition, fees set&#13;
for summer session&#13;
Fees and tuition for students&#13;
attending 1973 summer sessions&#13;
at universities and two-year&#13;
centers in the University of&#13;
Wisconsin System were approved&#13;
by the Board 01 Regents.&#13;
For full-lime undergraduate&#13;
students (those carrying 6 or&#13;
more credits for the eight-week&#13;
sessions) the standard charges&#13;
for Wisconsin residents will be&#13;
$120 at Madison and Milwaukee&#13;
and $102 at other universities and&#13;
centers. For non-resident undergraduates&#13;
the charges will be&#13;
$456 at Madison and Milwauk&#13;
and $270 elsewhere. ee&#13;
For par-t-time Wisconsin&#13;
students the charge will be $20&#13;
per credit for undergraduates&#13;
and $35 for graduate students t&#13;
Madison and Milwaukee and $~7&#13;
and $27 respectively at nth&#13;
campuses. Noonn rreessrid ents will er&#13;
$76 per credit for undergradu:~&#13;
and $143 for graduate students at&#13;
Madison and Milwaukee and $45&#13;
and $67 respectively elsewhere.&#13;
Prairie land accepted by regents&#13;
Ranger Mac's Fen&#13;
Burlington. near&#13;
Other gilts accepted r&#13;
Parkside by the Regents includ~:&#13;
$100 from an anonymous d .&#13;
f hi' onor&#13;
or a sc .0 arship award to the&#13;
outs.tanding senior economlC. S&#13;
major, to be selected by the&#13;
econdoml~sfaculty on the basis of&#13;
aca ermc achievement·&#13;
addition of $211 from va' . an&#13;
d&#13;
nous&#13;
onors .to the Harlow B. M.ills&#13;
Memorial Scholarship lund' $100&#13;
from the Dairyland Th~al&#13;
Orga~ Sociely Chapter 01 ~~&#13;
Amencan Theater Organ Societ&#13;
for :' scholarship award to ~&#13;
musIc studentj and $30 from an&#13;
anonymous donor for short ter&#13;
loans to students. m&#13;
~FREE-FREE-FREE-FREE~&#13;
~ Good for One ~&#13;
I:l::: -_ •. t!j i FREE Glass t··;;" t!j&#13;
~ of Beer ~&#13;
~ ~ Geno 'Rome ~ ~&#13;
~ 1200 52 St. ~ ~&#13;
~e: ~ "This is Where It's Happening-" tt''ll&#13;
I_FREE-FREE-FREE-FREE::J&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Presents&#13;
FEB. 16 - 18&#13;
$3950 - UWP students&#13;
sign up. at the Information Office at Tallent Hall&#13;
1,.&#13;
1 heaf it most feliably hom a pal. Waldo Winchesler, who IS a scribe for a local daily&#13;
shul W~II.Wlldo say1 the!! If!yards of opportunities for IUYs Ind dolls on ra S&#13;
O'llf the country. He say1 there lS.a feal hot future in the newspaper racket-agcha~~ce&#13;
to make some decent sc~tch, whIle maybe puttinl the arm on some 01 th ·11 f&#13;
t,na firma. With I hllh.class monicker like Waldo you can not help ,,,.". aye',', es r0ealolkdnow&#13;
Take a tip from Hot Horse Herbie ... "do not be one· .&#13;
hundred percent a sucker' Check it out."&#13;
TN.- Runy_.1ootofy .. ..,.\tied ...... "" "" ,,_ *'- _ -. .. n. ,'-0 now'O go'&#13;
... 0 &lt;;1 .... _ , _&#13;
Fo&lt; t_ ",, _ "..1....... , ... "and&#13;
~ps. ...... u, Tho Ne..- Fund." 0&#13;
EIo&gt;. 300. ", __ . *'" Je&lt;., D854ll 1lJ..,&#13;
c-ontaety_-lo&lt;al_,_VO"'_ Damon Runyon once wrote, "The race is not alwa st·&#13;
or the battle always to the strong - but it's a good ~ayOt~h~e~~lft&#13;
JOURNAUSM IS A GOOD WAYTO BET&#13;
~~ANGER&#13;
A parcel of land adjoining the&#13;
Chiwaukee Prairie was among&#13;
gilts accepted for Parkside by the&#13;
UW System Board of Regenls&#13;
Friday. .&#13;
The lot is the gift 01 Adeltna&#13;
Rigali of Oak Park, m., and is&#13;
valued at $300.&#13;
The Chiwaukee Prairie tract,&#13;
one of the few remaining natural&#13;
prairie areas in the Midwest, is&#13;
held in trust by Parkside for the&#13;
Wisconsin Nature Conservancy&#13;
for scientific, educational and&#13;
esthetic purposes. It is located in&#13;
the Town of Pleasant Prairie in&#13;
Kenosha County .&#13;
Parkside's off-campus prairie&#13;
holdings also include the Harris&#13;
Tract in Qenosha County and&#13;
Ragtime Rangers&#13;
non-students&#13;
12000 down payment&#13;
Balance due Feb. 2&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Jan. 24, 1973&#13;
IT S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
y , beginning January&#13;
• :3 p.m. 6 ·eekly&#13;
m the Library-Learning&#13;
l r Rd Room.&#13;
ARL'S PIZZA&#13;
"''·"''' - I• f Sun t"' . 12 • 14" • 16"&#13;
4 10&#13;
• U • SPAC)41TTI • (Ml(UH&#13;
CHI • AVJOll • lA SAGHA&#13;
• Sl4 1000 • \A~OwlC"U&#13;
C.UlY OUTS • D£llV£1Y&#13;
OU .,, ttr&#13;
6S7-9843 or 6S8-4922&#13;
Harry Lantz. an a ociate&#13;
prof r of mu ic at Par ide,&#13;
invited to n·e a clinician&#13;
and conductor for the lusic&#13;
Educators ·ational Conference&#13;
E tern Regional meeting on&#13;
Friday (Jan. 19) in Bo ton.&#13;
Lantz lectured and demont&#13;
rated rehear al technique&#13;
involved in developing condary&#13;
chool ymphony orch tras.&#13;
Bo on r a ymphony wa u ed&#13;
the d mon tration ensemble.&#13;
Lantz al will be clinician and&#13;
ndu tor for the , 'ew lexico&#13;
• 11 t le rch tra at the 'ew&#13;
M i o Educ tors Conference&#13;
J n. 24 through 27 in&#13;
, lbuqu rqu . L ntz was cello&#13;
clinician for the conference&#13;
•&#13;
F m mber which&#13;
d in the P GA&#13;
• From the regi trar' office&#13;
come the report that enrollment&#13;
for the pring em ter i 3,912,&#13;
an all-time high second semester&#13;
enrollment after the first week of&#13;
cla . Thi compares with an&#13;
enrollment of 3,691 for the same&#13;
time last year where econd week&#13;
enrollment jumped to 3,944.&#13;
Comparing with fall enrollment&#13;
of 4,366. this is the smallest midyear&#13;
percentage drop at Parkside&#13;
thus far. •&#13;
The Park ide Activities Board&#13;
is ponsoring a ski trip to&#13;
Whitecap on the weekend of Feb.&#13;
16. The cost is $39.50 for Parkside&#13;
tudents, $36.50 for Rag Time&#13;
Rangers and $44.50 for nontudents.&#13;
The cost includes the&#13;
bu trip, a party Saturday night,&#13;
lift ticket, meals and lodging. A&#13;
$20 downpayment is required at&#13;
ign-up. The balance is due on&#13;
Feb. 2. Sign up at the Information&#13;
Office in Tallent Hall.&#13;
The Time of lan, a film fro&#13;
the American 1useum of atura&#13;
History, v.ill be shown at the&#13;
Horlick High School Little&#13;
Theater in Racine. The film is&#13;
ponsored by Citizens for the&#13;
Environment in cooperation with&#13;
the -Extension. The program,&#13;
on fonday, Feb. 5, at 8 p.m., is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
Preregi tration is requested, call&#13;
553-2312. • Toe Park ide Film Society will&#13;
ponsor a showing of Francois&#13;
Truffat' 1962 film "Shoot the&#13;
Piano Pia er, ' starring Charles&#13;
Az.navour, Fri., Jan. 26, at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in room 103 Greenquist.&#13;
Open to the public. .60 admi&#13;
ion. • A 15-member joint education&#13;
commi ion with limited&#13;
re pon ibilitie wa recommend&#13;
d to Governor Patrick J.&#13;
Luc ) by the Board of Regents.&#13;
Fe ral law requires each&#13;
late to establi ha commission to&#13;
make tudies and plans relating&#13;
to communit colleges and occupational&#13;
education programs&#13;
and to do tatewide educational&#13;
planning involving federal&#13;
program .&#13;
•&#13;
r~~~~~~,&#13;
t Sigma Pi t&#13;
f presents t&#13;
' f t Geneva t l Convention l&#13;
t Sat., Jan. 27 t&#13;
t 8: 30 p.m. - 12: 30 f&#13;
t Admission 11 50 t&#13;
: Student Act. Bldg. t&#13;
Parkside &amp; W isconsin IDs required. t&#13;
L~~~~~~4&#13;
'' t pss ...&#13;
hey kid!&#13;
L~t me disclose to you a very large&#13;
piece of buzz.&#13;
I hear rt most rehably from a pal, Waldo Winchester, who ,s a scnbe for a local dail&#13;
shut Wtll, Waldo says there art yards of opportunrt,es for 1uys and dolls on ra Y&#13;
owtr the country. He says there 1s a real hot future in the newspaper racket gs hall&#13;
to ma e some decent scratch. wh1lt maybe puttrn&amp; the arm on some of the -~ a ~ ~~ce&#13;
tarra forma With a hr&amp;h-clau mo nicker hke Waldo you can not help but h t'h s O 0&#13;
ave e real know.&#13;
Take a tip from Hot Horse Herbie ... "do not be onehundred&#13;
percent a sucker! Check it out."&#13;
TM IClolfe Runyone.t_ lootitty t11MS,lecf. means&#13;
._ '""'NI,..... bNn Nntr than now to ttt&#13;
11'1\0 M VIC, b"f C.etf 11"1 ,oumaill:Sffl&#13;
For ,,_ intorrNt.on ~t '°"''*"'" c:a~rs .-Mt&#13;
tcho&amp;anhtpa. -rt• to The~ Fund_ po&#13;
8cu. JOO. PT1n01ton. New__,. 08540 Also&#13;
contxt your locat newspa'* and VO\H school -- Damon Runyon once wrote, "The race is not alwa s t .&#13;
or the battle always to the strong- but it's a good ~ay°t~h~e~~ift&#13;
JOURNALISM IS A GOOD WAY TO BET&#13;
~ANGER&#13;
Tuition, fees set&#13;
for summer session&#13;
Fees and tuition for students&#13;
attending 1973 summer sessions&#13;
at universities and two-year&#13;
centers in the University of&#13;
Wi consin System were approved&#13;
by the Board of Regents.&#13;
For full-time undergraduate&#13;
students (those carrying 6 or&#13;
more credits for the eight-week&#13;
e sions) the standard charges&#13;
for Wi consin residents will be&#13;
120 at ,tadison and Milwaukee&#13;
and 102 at other universities and&#13;
centers. For non-resident undergraduates&#13;
the charges will be&#13;
456 at Madison and Milwauk&#13;
and $270 elsewhere. e&#13;
For part-time Wiscon in&#13;
students the charge will be 20&#13;
per credit for undergraduat&#13;
and $35 for graduate students t&#13;
Madison and Milwaukee and ~7&#13;
and $27 respectively at olh . er&#13;
campuses. on residents will p&#13;
$76 per credit for undergraduaty&#13;
and $143 for graduate tudents l&#13;
Madison and Milwaukee and \&#13;
and $67 respectively elsewher .&#13;
Prairie land accepted by regents&#13;
A parcel of land adjoining the&#13;
Chiwaukee Prairie was among&#13;
gifts accepted for Parkside by the&#13;
UW System Board of Regents&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Toe lot is the gift of Adelina&#13;
Rigali of Oak Park, Ill., and is&#13;
valued at $300.&#13;
Toe Chiwaukee Prairie tract,&#13;
one of the few remaining natural&#13;
prairie areas in the Midwest, is&#13;
held in trust by Parkside for the&#13;
Wisconsin Nature Conservancy&#13;
for scientific, educational and&#13;
esthetic purposes. It is located in&#13;
the Town of Pleasant Prairie in&#13;
Kenosha County .&#13;
Parkside's off-campus prairie&#13;
holdings also include the Harris&#13;
Tract in Qenosha County and&#13;
Ranger Mac's Fen&#13;
Burlington. near&#13;
Oth~r gifts accepted for&#13;
Parkside by the Regents includ .&#13;
$100 from an anonymous d ·&#13;
f h 1 . onor&#13;
or a sc _o arsh1p award to th&#13;
outstandmg senior econ . e · om1c&#13;
maJor, to be selected b th&#13;
economics faculty on the b Y . e&#13;
d . . a I or&#13;
aca em1c achievement.&#13;
addition of $211 from v' . an&#13;
d t h ar10 onors _ o t e Harlow B. Mills&#13;
Memorial Scholarship fund . $IOO&#13;
from the Dairyland Th~at&#13;
Orga~ Society Chapter of ;r&#13;
American Theater Organ Soc· t&#13;
for .a scholarship award ~ !&#13;
music student; and $30 from an&#13;
anonymous donor for short ter&#13;
loans to students. m&#13;
r;FREE-FREE-FREE-FREE~&#13;
: Good for One ~&#13;
f: Glass : ~ FREE of Beer ~&#13;
~ ~ ~ : Geno Rome ~&#13;
I ~ I&#13;
~ 1200 52 St. ~ ~ f "This is Where It's Happening" :&#13;
t'j&#13;
1-FREE-FREE-FREE-FREE::J&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Presents&#13;
FEB. 16 - 18&#13;
$3950 - UWP students&#13;
$3650 - Ragtime Rangers&#13;
$4450 - non-students&#13;
$2000 down payment&#13;
Balance due Feb. 2&#13;
sign up at the Information Office at Tallent Hall&#13;
Speaking of&#13;
Sports&#13;
By Kathryn Wellner'&#13;
With the advent of basketball&#13;
sea, son it hhas b.e.comed "necessary" the t e evemng ju 0&#13;
lasses to practice in the&#13;
\estling room. This situation is&#13;
~rortunate. This is primarily&#13;
because wrestling mats are not&#13;
adequate for the practice of judo.&#13;
As Sports Editor of this paper, I&#13;
am concerned with athletics. As a&#13;
student of judo, I am concerned&#13;
with the welfare of my&#13;
classmates.&#13;
True, it is a common practice&#13;
to hold judo classes and even&#13;
tournaments on the unyielding&#13;
surface of wrestling mats.&#13;
However, a more adequate&#13;
practice area could, with a little&#13;
effort!.be made available. From&#13;
the standpoint of the prevention&#13;
of injuries alone, it would seem&#13;
well worth the effort.&#13;
During past semesters the judo&#13;
classes of Parkside have have&#13;
had to practice on wrestling&#13;
mats, because no other equipment&#13;
was available. Many injuries&#13;
resul ted from the&#13;
inadequacy of the mat surface.&#13;
Several individuals received&#13;
knee injuries severe enough to&#13;
require surgery. Other than that&#13;
lhere were many more minor&#13;
injuries which caused discomfort&#13;
and inconvenience. Even if one&#13;
~ 'nOt incurs- an--injuryt; the&#13;
effects of excessive jarring have&#13;
been shown to be detrimental to&#13;
the body.&#13;
When the new Physical&#13;
Education Building opened last&#13;
fall, the judo classes began&#13;
practice on the free exercise mat&#13;
In the field house. This mat,&#13;
although stitt quite firm, is much&#13;
more adequate. The advanced&#13;
students who had previously •&#13;
Fencers win&#13;
three&#13;
Parkside's fencing team came&#13;
up with three wins and one loss&#13;
last weekend. Final scores were&#13;
Madison 12, Parkside t5; Lake&#13;
Superior State 11 Parkside 16'&#13;
University of Minnesota 6',&#13;
Parkside 2t; and Air Force 17,&#13;
Parkside 10.&#13;
John Tank won his fifth con-&#13;
5eCUtive tournament in the last&#13;
five minutes of the event. There&#13;
were 19 men entered and it took&#13;
Tank ten half hours' to win the&#13;
three weapon (foil, epee, sabre)&#13;
tournament.&#13;
College Men&#13;
PART TIME&#13;
WORK&#13;
Call 552-8355&#13;
practiced on the wrestling mats&#13;
were clearly relieved by the&#13;
~h.an~e. There were no serious&#13;
mjunes to students due to the&#13;
mat surface.&#13;
Unfortunately, a conflict in the&#13;
scheduling of classes and events&#13;
in the field house has made the&#13;
free exercise mat unavailable&#13;
during basketball games.&#13;
This may be the result of&#13;
careless planning. Certainly&#13;
those individuals involved in&#13;
building scheduling were aware&#13;
that there would be baskethatt&#13;
games and classes on the same&#13;
nights. Iwould like to believe that&#13;
everything possible was done to&#13;
insure the best arrangements for&#13;
all classes first and basketball&#13;
games second.&#13;
It is fortunate that there are&#13;
other areas than the field house&#13;
for classes to meet so that it was&#13;
not found necessary to cancel&#13;
classes. However, the safety of&#13;
students should be the primary&#13;
concern, particularly beginning&#13;
students - especially when the&#13;
purpose of such beginning classes&#13;
is to introduce students to a sport,&#13;
and hopefully arouse their interest&#13;
in it. I feel that conducting&#13;
a beginning class under adverse&#13;
conditions defeals this purpose,&#13;
and wastes the time of the&#13;
student and instructors alike.&#13;
Now that we are faced with this&#13;
problem, the persons in authority&#13;
whom I have spoken to seem&#13;
willing only to take the easy way&#13;
out and attempt no solution.&#13;
However, I am sure that there&#13;
are plenty of students who are&#13;
willing to do whatever they can to&#13;
prevent needless injury and&#13;
wasted time. •&#13;
Two Rangers&#13;
are track&#13;
all-Americas&#13;
Parkside has two more all.&#13;
Americas in track.&#13;
Dennis Biel Wausau&#13;
sophomore, a~d Ceylon&#13;
sophomore Lucien IWsa each&#13;
placed Friday and saturday in&#13;
the National Assn. of In.&#13;
tercollegiate Athletics, ( AlA&#13;
track champiOnships at Kansas&#13;
City, Mo.&#13;
Rosa, who grabbed a second in&#13;
the mile and a fourth in the t""&#13;
mlle, becomes the first Park.slde&#13;
athlete to earn all·America m all&#13;
three phases of track cross&#13;
country, indoor and ~utdoor&#13;
track.&#13;
Biel, running in the nationals&#13;
for the first lime, placed UlIrd m&#13;
the t,OOOyard run.&#13;
Parkside totaled 18 points as a&#13;
team and fmished in ninth place&#13;
In the competition. the highest&#13;
ever for the school in national&#13;
track competition.&#13;
Rosa finished second in the&#13;
mile behiod Kenyan like Boll,&#13;
who placed third in the&#13;
meters in the recent lunicb&#13;
Olympics. Boit, who nms for&#13;
Eastern New Mexico. was&#13;
clocked in 4: t2 while the shm&#13;
Rosa was timed in 4:13.&#13;
The Parkside star came hack&#13;
40 minutes later to take a strong&#13;
fourth in 9:02.6 in the two mile.&#13;
The winner was Jeff .Iatth"" of&#13;
Sports International in 8:57 while&#13;
second was claimed by , 'AlA&#13;
cross country champion l. hke&#13;
Nixon of Pittsburgh Kansas&#13;
State and third by sub-four&#13;
minute miler Rex Maddaford of&#13;
Eastern Iew Mexico.&#13;
Previous all-Amer-ica al&#13;
Parkside include • like DeWitt in&#13;
track and Rudy Alvarez. in c&#13;
country. •&#13;
Bowling&#13;
Parkside aloha an intramural&#13;
00\\0 ling learn \n)ooe&#13;
intere ted in jOlnlDg . hould&#13;
contact 1M Director Jim Koch al&#13;
the P. E building There III be&#13;
competition aga1n t ether&#13;
schoots&#13;
1315 - 52ncl St,&#13;
K~, WI,.&#13;
:llIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHllIlIII1mll- RIE-IE!!I I!!FREE-FREE-FREE-F I&#13;
! Arry Mon.ay or T.... ay !&#13;
= f = i 00' FREE. ~"" ~ i IGool \at It the • .,;&#13;
I -~~Train SlIIion I&#13;
I~.;,;.~2703.63 St. I ! ~8A".~~_8AMDS-8AMDS-8AJ1DS-8AJ1.S&#13;
~L.... ,,:S~MI;:;I~;•f•t;W•.;•••k.I • _.·I.III ..&#13;
t&#13;
Wed., Jan. 24. 197J TH E PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Porksides Ranger Bear masc:o , olio, Ray Medina,&#13;
has been entertaining fon, 01 be e sporh venti&#13;
this year,&#13;
wirnm r dr p h art r ak r&#13;
rm lam&#13;
heolrtl&gt;relfur 10 lAke&#13;
turda&#13;
of lite ll1ft1&#13;
5010 E.&#13;
K&#13;
Sp eaking of&#13;
Sports&#13;
Two Rang r&#13;
are track&#13;
all-America&#13;
Parkside ha t\\o m&#13;
America in track.&#13;
all-&#13;
Dennis Biel&#13;
sophomore a~d&#13;
By Ka t hryn Well ne r&#13;
sophomore Lucien R&#13;
placed Friday and ..&#13;
the 'ational A :1 or&#13;
With the advent of basketball&#13;
·eason, it has ~ec~m e&#13;
.. ccessary" the the evenmg Judo&#13;
c~asses to pr ac~ice_ in. t~e&#13;
restling room . This situation 1s&#13;
:nrortunate. This is primarily&#13;
because wrestling mats are not&#13;
adequate for the practice of judo.&#13;
As Sports Editor of this paper, I&#13;
am concerned with athletics. As a&#13;
student of judo, I am concerned&#13;
with the welfare of my&#13;
classmates.&#13;
True, it is a common practice&#13;
to hold judo classes and even&#13;
tournaments on the unyielding&#13;
·urface of wrestling mats.&#13;
However, a more adequate&#13;
practice area could, with a little&#13;
effort, be made available. From&#13;
the standpoint of the prevention&#13;
of injuries alone, it would seem&#13;
well worth the effort.&#13;
During past semesters the judo&#13;
classes of Parkside have have&#13;
had to practice on wrestling&#13;
mats, because no other equipment&#13;
was available. Many injuries&#13;
resulted from the&#13;
inadequacy of the mat surface.&#13;
everal individuals received&#13;
knee injuries severe enough to&#13;
require surgery. Other than that&#13;
there were many more minor&#13;
injuries which caused discomfort&#13;
and inconvenience. Even if one&#13;
does not incu an injury, the&#13;
effects of excessive jarring have&#13;
been shown to be detrimental to&#13;
the body .&#13;
When the new Physical&#13;
Education Building opened last&#13;
fall, the judo classes began&#13;
practice on the free exercise mat&#13;
in the field house. This mat,&#13;
although still quite firm, is much&#13;
more adequate. The advanced&#13;
tudcnts who had previously -&#13;
Fe n cer s win&#13;
th ree&#13;
Parkside's fencing team came&#13;
up with three wins and one loss&#13;
last weekend. Final scores were&#13;
tadison 12, Parkside 15; Lake&#13;
uperior State 11 Parkside 16;&#13;
University of Minnesota 6,&#13;
Parkside 21 ; and Air Force 17,&#13;
Parkside 10.&#13;
John Tank won his fifth con~&#13;
utive tournament in the last&#13;
five minutes of the event. There&#13;
Were 19 men entered and it took&#13;
Tank ten half hours' to win the&#13;
tht ree weapon (foil , epee, sabre)&#13;
0urnament.&#13;
College Men&#13;
PART TIME&#13;
WORK&#13;
Call 552 -8355&#13;
practiced on the wrestling mats&#13;
were clearly relieved by the&#13;
~h_an~e . There were no serious&#13;
mJunes to students due to the&#13;
mat surface.&#13;
Unfortunately , a conflict in the&#13;
scheduling of classes and events&#13;
in the field house has made the&#13;
free exercise mat unavail able&#13;
during basketball games.&#13;
This may be the result of&#13;
ca reless planning. Certainly&#13;
those individuals involved i~&#13;
building scheduling were aware&#13;
that there would be basketball&#13;
games and classes on the same&#13;
nights. I would like to believe that&#13;
everything possible was done to&#13;
insure the best arrangements for&#13;
all classes first and basketball&#13;
games second.&#13;
It is fortunate that there are&#13;
other areas than the field house&#13;
for classes to meet so that it was&#13;
not found necessary to cancel&#13;
classes. However, the safety of&#13;
students should be the primary&#13;
concern, particularly beginning&#13;
s tude nts - especiall y when the&#13;
purpose of s uch beginning classes&#13;
is to introduce students to a sport,&#13;
and hopefully arouse their interest&#13;
in it. I feel that conducting&#13;
a beginning class under adverse&#13;
conditions defeats this purpose,&#13;
and wastes the time of the&#13;
student aRd instructors alike.&#13;
Now that we are faced with this&#13;
problem, the persons in authority&#13;
whom I h ave spoken to seem&#13;
willing only to take the easy way&#13;
out and attempt no solution.&#13;
However, I am sure that there&#13;
are ple nty of s tudents who are&#13;
willing to do whatever they can to&#13;
prevent needless injury and&#13;
wasted time.&#13;
tercollegiate Athleti &lt;&#13;
track championships at K&#13;
City, to.&#13;
Rosa , who grabbed a d n&#13;
the mile and a fourth m the ;'0&#13;
mile, becomes the Ci t Par ·ct&#13;
athlete to earn all-America m all&#13;
three phase or trac c&#13;
country, indoor and ~utdoor&#13;
track.&#13;
Biel, running in the natl&#13;
for the first time, placed rd ·&#13;
the 1,000 yard run .&#13;
Parkside totaled 18 poin&#13;
team and finished in ninth p&#13;
in the competitioo, th h"&#13;
ever for the schoo in natl&#13;
track competition .&#13;
Rosa finished second · n&#13;
mile behind Kenvan • r Boi&#13;
who placed thini in th&#13;
meters in the recent • tati&#13;
Olympics. Boit , who nms for&#13;
Eastern • ·e • lexico,&#13;
clocked in 4 : 12 ·hile the&#13;
Rosa wa timed m 4: 13&#13;
The Par ide _tar cam&#13;
40 minute later to e a&#13;
fourth in 9 : 02 .6 in the two mil •&#13;
The winner wa Jeff . atth of&#13;
Sports International in 8 :S7 il&#13;
second was claimed tr. • LA&#13;
cross country champion&#13;
'ixon of Pittsburgh CK&#13;
State and third by four&#13;
minute miler Re . laddaford or&#13;
Eastern . ·e.,., te. · co.&#13;
Previou IJ. meric&#13;
Park ide includ i De&#13;
track and Rud_ Alva&#13;
country. -&#13;
Tel.,,hohe 652--1662&#13;
3315 • 52nd St.&#13;
Kenoth , Wis.&#13;
=511 111 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111m11111u111 mm I 1 REE If I !!FREE - FREE - FREE-F 1&#13;
•• I Any Monday or T esday&#13;
I FREE' Cl. i ' \ot ao' • ,~ of,.,,&#13;
~ t;oo at the S •&#13;
I ~~:;~ Train talion = ~ 'r ,;A-. _ I ~}~-:~ 2703 63 St.&#13;
j ·- BANDS - 8AMDS - 8AMDS - 8AMD S-8&#13;
i 5 Mi1hts • Wuk!&#13;
I&#13;
"1111 11111 Ill&#13;
s&#13;
I i&#13;
7&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Jan. 24, 1973&#13;
SCHEDULED&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Jan ZI, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Wrestling&#13;
Jan 2~,8 p.m.&#13;
Jan ZI&#13;
Dalh'&#13;
Dally&#13;
Dally&#13;
..... Northern Michigan at Marquette, Mich.&#13;
......... .. at Marquette University .&#13;
......... Eight State Invitational at Western IllinOIs&#13;
Gymnastics&#13;
Jan zr, 3 p.m .. ............ UW-Whitewater &amp; UW-Platteville&#13;
Indoor Track&#13;
Jan. ZI&#13;
.. .. .. .. at Chicagoland Open&#13;
P.E. Bldg. Schedule&#13;
euktfbAll&#13;
TrK"&#13;
$wun Club&#13;
TEAM PRACTICE&#13;
JJO 6:00&#13;
6:00,;1)0&#13;
3:30· '"00&#13;
..., RiECREATlONAL HOURS&#13;
MOftNy" Wecll1~.Y&#13;
lunda)''' Ttlunclay&#13;
Frldn&#13;
~Y. Tl,jlft(lay. we&lt;tntsday&#13;
Tnu~.Y&#13;
HancilNll Covrts&#13;
~y Itlru Frtda.,.&#13;
... ,".. . .. 11:30 .1:30&#13;
...••.......... n:3O·2:30&#13;
••. 11;30·3:30&#13;
.. 5:30·10:00&#13;
S:JO-7:00&#13;
.9:00·10:00&#13;
10;00-5:00&#13;
1:30-10:00&#13;
IO~30 . 1;30 (2 eecrts open)&#13;
3;30 - 6:00 (l court open)&#13;
6:00 10:00 (r~trlct!'dpla'f)&#13;
1S:00a.m.. 10:00 p.m.,&#13;
.Keep' Tuesday a. TtlursdayclOHd from 10:30. 12:ootor classes&#13;
. .' .. . 1:00·5:00&#13;
.. .. _':00· 10:00&#13;
NAJA roses ahead?&#13;
CHUCK CHAMBLISS&#13;
Wrestlers at halfway mark&#13;
By B. D. Rasmussen&#13;
tr there were a post-season&#13;
"Bowl Meet" for collegiate&#13;
wrestling, everything would be&#13;
coming up roses for wrestling&#13;
coach Jim Koch.&#13;
With the wrestling season&#13;
nearing the halfway mark, Koch&#13;
lOOKS at the remainder of the&#13;
team's schedule with great optimism,&#13;
possibly climaxing it&#13;
With a strong finish at the NAJA&#13;
national tournament.&#13;
Koch, now in his third year as&#13;
coach, is hoping to finish in the&#13;
top ten at the alionals in the 400-&#13;
member school AlA. Two years&#13;
ago Parkside finished 21st, and&#13;
last year it was 18th. He also&#13;
thinks that he has a potential&#13;
national champion in Ken&#13;
Martin, and also expects grapplers&#13;
Bill West and Rico Savaglio&#13;
to possihly place for Parkside at&#13;
the ational Tournament.&#13;
When Koch arrived at&#13;
Parkside, he felt that the&#13;
schedule was too easy, and that if&#13;
Parkside was to be respected, it&#13;
had to wrestle schools that were&#13;
bigger. more ~rienced and&#13;
had the advantage of hetter&#13;
developed sports programs.&#13;
Ahout this year's schedule&#13;
Koch said, "It's real tough. As&#13;
good as it has ever been." He&#13;
then added that he felt this would&#13;
help his wrestlers .as ·far. ~s experience&#13;
and their ability to&#13;
handle pressure when the time&#13;
for the Nationals came. The&#13;
toughness of this year's schedule&#13;
can be seen in parkstde's Q..2-1&#13;
record but, said Koch, the team&#13;
as a whole would rather wrestle&#13;
strong tea ms and lose than weak&#13;
ones and win.&#13;
Koch feels that his team, which&#13;
has a few strong individuals&#13;
rather than balance, is a better&#13;
tournament team than dual, and&#13;
the record bears him out. In&#13;
tournaments Parkside has&#13;
finished third out of four teams&#13;
hut also took second in an eightlearn&#13;
field against some tough&#13;
competition.&#13;
Koch is quick to share the&#13;
credit for his success, citing the&#13;
quality of the wrestling programs&#13;
of the high schools in Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin. In particular,&#13;
Kenosha Tremper wrestling&#13;
coach Jerry Barr has contrihuted&#13;
several outstanding wrestlers,&#13;
among them current team&#13;
leaders West and Savaglio. Also&#13;
receiving mention are the Mat&#13;
Maids who lend their vocal&#13;
support to the team as well as&#13;
aiding in publicity.&#13;
With eight more dual meets&#13;
left, Koch thinks that the team&#13;
can easily win five of those,&#13;
which would result in an overall&#13;
record of 5·5-1.&#13;
Parkside takes on Marquette&#13;
University in the first of those&#13;
dual meets today, and travels to&#13;
Western Illinois University to&#13;
Cagers bump Wayne&#13;
69-62, face NMU, Ripon&#13;
By Kris Koch&#13;
The Parkside Rangers, led by&#13;
Chuck Chambliss' 24 pomts,&#13;
defeated Wayne State last&#13;
Saturday night in Detroit, 6!H;2.&#13;
The Rangers started the gam~ in&#13;
a runaway fashion taking a quick&#13;
23-8 lead, but the Tartars put&#13;
together an offense of their .0"":0&#13;
and came roaring back to Within&#13;
three points at half-time.&#13;
The second half was nip and&#13;
tuck as the Rangers maintained a&#13;
slight lead until five minutes&#13;
were left in the game when&#13;
Wayne tied the game for the one&#13;
and only time. Six consecutIve&#13;
points hy Parkside then put the&#13;
game out of reach for the Tartars&#13;
.&#13;
Wayne's Bob Solomon led the&#13;
Tartars with 23 points in a losing&#13;
cause.&#13;
The Rangers are now over the&#13;
.500 mark for the season with a.7-&#13;
6 record. They met St. Xavier&#13;
College in a game here Tuesday&#13;
night and will take on Northern&#13;
Michigan, a team they beat here&#13;
84-77 in December, Saturday&#13;
night at Marquette, Mich.&#13;
Parkside will be home next&#13;
Tuesday against Ripon. Tipol!&#13;
time at the physical Education&#13;
Bldg. is 7:30 p.m.&#13;
The Parkside cagers saved.&#13;
their most devastating display of&#13;
basketball (or Indiana State-&#13;
Evansville on Tuesday, Jan. 16&#13;
when they overwhelmed th~&#13;
Eagles, 98-79. Indiana shot a&#13;
respectable 44 percent from the&#13;
floor. but the Rangers came out&#13;
with an even more torrid 51&#13;
percent.&#13;
The Rangers started quick&#13;
putting eight tal1ies on the board&#13;
before Indiana was able to find&#13;
the hoop. Parkside went into the&#13;
dressing room at halftime with a&#13;
49-27lead behind the shooting of&#13;
Bill Sobanski, who scored 14 first&#13;
hall points and Mike Hanke, who&#13;
picked up 12.&#13;
The Eagles found the hoop in&#13;
the second half, rimming 52&#13;
points to Parkside's 49, but the&#13;
damage was already done and&#13;
Indiana came up on the lowend or&#13;
the final score.&#13;
Top scorers for Parkside were&#13;
Chuck Chambliss with 22 points,&#13;
Mike Hanke contributed 17, Bill&#13;
Sobanski chipped in 16, Tim&#13;
Dolan and Don Snow meshed 13&#13;
and 12 respectively. Top scorer&#13;
for Indiana was Charlie Farmer&#13;
with 18 points.&#13;
Soccer Club&#13;
All men interested in joining&#13;
the Parkside Soccer Club for the&#13;
.spring season are asked to attend&#13;
an organizational meeting al4: 15&#13;
p.m. Thursday in the lounge of&#13;
the Physical Education Bldg.&#13;
J .&amp;.'J,- .,. . .~&#13;
·Tap~&amp;.J~ecor,d.Center&#13;
Srt~e;tL~w' pfices , ' .&#13;
2200Lathrop Ave., Racine '&#13;
518-56thSt., Kenosha: .&#13;
(expires Feb. 1, 1973)&#13;
participate in an eight-state&#13;
tournament on Saturday. Alfredo's ~&#13;
Koch summed up by saying Restaurant &gt;&#13;
that it is a very young team, and&#13;
with more experience it will 2827 63rd St., Kenosha become even better with the&#13;
calibre of athletes he now has. -,,/,.50e OFF ON ANY "But at the end of the season&#13;
the important thing is how you&#13;
(air in the National Tournament. ~~~ PIZZA&#13;
That's all that people remember,"&#13;
Koch stated. •l'_. Italian Food A Specialty&#13;
: spag~violi - Lasa9.~~L&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM ;-&#13;
Classified Advertising Rate&#13;
5 cents per word up to 25 words for each insertion. CHECK ENCLCSED FOR $&#13;
Payable in advance by check or cash to:&#13;
The Parkside Ranger&#13;
DATES(S) TO RUN -&#13;
Business Office To find your cost, multiply the&#13;
D-I94 LLC UW-Parkside number of words times 5&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140 cents. Multiply that total by&#13;
the number of issues you want&#13;
NAME it to run.&#13;
ADDRESS DATE - CITY PHONE NO. - One word per space Do not skip space between words to show spacing -&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
Pv;y.;. c..\&#13;
!JIdIu.K ~&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 551-7171&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM.&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Jan. 24, 1973&#13;
SCHEDULED&#13;
Basketball&#13;
J ...., 1· p.m . .. . ..... . . .. . orthem ~ichigan at 1arquette, ~ich. an ,,, .&#13;
Wrestling&#13;
2 8 . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . at ~arquette niversity&#13;
~ ~: ;; :·m ... .... Eight tate Invitational at Western Illinois&#13;
Gymnastics&#13;
J n r,, 3 p.m ............ . .. . -Whitewater &amp; UW-Platteville&#13;
Indoor Track&#13;
J n r, .. . .................. .... . at Chicagoland Open&#13;
P.E. Bldg. Schedule&#13;
Gym&#13;
H• II COVrtl&#13;
y lhrU Fr Y&#13;
TEAM P•ACTICE&#13;
3 30 ,-oo&#13;
,00 . 100&#13;
3.30 - 6 00&#13;
•Et•EATIONAL HOURS&#13;
oe,1y&#13;
Dedy&#13;
Deily&#13;
• • ..... 11 : 30 - 1: 30&#13;
....... 11:30 -2:30&#13;
...... 11:30 -3 30&#13;
....... 530 - 10:00&#13;
5:30 . 7: 00&#13;
9.00 - 10:00&#13;
. 10:00 - 5 00&#13;
•.• 1: 30 - 10 ;00&#13;
10 30 - 1 . 30(2courtsopenl&#13;
3 . 30 • 6:00 (1 courl open)&#13;
6 00 10:00 (restricted play)&#13;
a ooa .m .- 10 : 00p.m ..&#13;
excepl Tuedav &amp; Thursday clOMd from 10 :30 - 12 :00lor classes&#13;
. . • ........ 8 00 - 5:00&#13;
• •• ...... • 1· 00 - 10:00&#13;
I roe ahead?&#13;
CHUCK CHAMBLISS&#13;
Cagers bump Wayne&#13;
69-62, face NMU, Ripon&#13;
By Kris Koch&#13;
The Parkside Rangers, l~ by&#13;
Chuck Chambliss' 24 points,&#13;
defeated Wayne State last&#13;
Saturday night in Detroit, 69-6~The&#13;
Rangers started the gam~ m&#13;
a runaway fashion taking a qwck&#13;
23-8 lead, but the Tartars put&#13;
together an offense of their _o"".11&#13;
and came roaring back to within&#13;
three points at half-time.&#13;
The second half was nip and&#13;
tuck as the Rangers mainta~ned a&#13;
slight lead until five minutes&#13;
were left in the game when&#13;
Wayne tied the game for the ~ne&#13;
and only time. Six consecutive&#13;
points by Parkside then put the&#13;
game out of reach for the Tartars.&#13;
Wayne's Bob Solom~n led ~e&#13;
Tartars with 23 points m a losmg&#13;
cause.&#13;
The Rangers are now over the&#13;
.500 mark for the season with a_ 7-&#13;
6 record . They met St. Xavier&#13;
College in a game here Tuesday&#13;
night and will take on Northern&#13;
Michigan, a team they beat here&#13;
84-77 in December, Saturday&#13;
night at Marquette, Mich.&#13;
Parkside will be home next&#13;
Tuesday against Ripon. Tipoff&#13;
time at the Physical Education&#13;
Bldg. is 7:30 p.m.&#13;
The Parkside cagers saved&#13;
their most devastating display of&#13;
basketball for Indiana StateEvansville&#13;
on Tuesday, Jan . 16&#13;
when they overwhelmed th~&#13;
Eagles, 98-79. Indiana shot a&#13;
respectable 44 percent from the&#13;
floor, but the Rangers came out&#13;
with an even more torrid 51&#13;
percent.&#13;
The Rangers started quick,&#13;
putting eight tallies on the board&#13;
before Indiana was able to find&#13;
the hoop. Parkside went into the&#13;
dressing room at halftime with a&#13;
49-27 lead behind the shooting of&#13;
Bill Sobanski, who scored 14 first&#13;
half points and Mike Hanke, who&#13;
picked up 12.&#13;
The Eagles found the hoop in&#13;
the second half, rimming 52&#13;
points to Parkside's 49, but the&#13;
damage was already done and&#13;
Indiana came up on the low end of&#13;
the final score.&#13;
Top scorers for Parkside were&#13;
Chuck Chambliss with 22 points,&#13;
Mike Hanke contributed 17, Bill&#13;
Sobanski chipped in 16, Tim&#13;
Dolan and Don Snow meshed 13&#13;
and 12 respectively. Top scorer&#13;
for Indiana was Charlie Farmer&#13;
with 18 points.&#13;
Soccer Club&#13;
Wrestlers at halfway ntark&#13;
All men interested in Jommg&#13;
the Parkside Soccer Club for the&#13;
.spring season are asked to attend&#13;
an organizational meeting at 4:15&#13;
p.m . Thursday in the lounge of&#13;
the Physical Education Bldg.&#13;
By B. D. Rasmussen&#13;
ood a 1t ha ever been." He&#13;
then added that h felt_ this would&#13;
help hi wrestlers as fa~ ~s ex perience&#13;
and their ab1llty to&#13;
handle pr ure when the time&#13;
for the • ·ationals came . The&#13;
toughn of thi year's schedule&#13;
can be een in Parkside's 0-2-1&#13;
record but. said Koch, the team&#13;
a a whole would rather wrestle&#13;
trong teams and lose than weak&#13;
ones and win .&#13;
Koch feels that his team, which&#13;
has a few strong individuals&#13;
rather than balance. is a better&#13;
tournament team than dual, and&#13;
the record bears him out. In&#13;
tournaments Parkside has&#13;
finished third out of four teams&#13;
but also took second in an eightteam&#13;
field against some tough&#13;
competition.&#13;
Koch is quick to share the&#13;
credit for his success, citing the&#13;
quality of the wrestling programs&#13;
of the high schools in Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin. In particular,&#13;
Kenosha Tremper wrestling&#13;
coach Jerry Barr has contributed&#13;
everal outstanding wrestlers,&#13;
among them current team&#13;
leaders V est and Savaglio . Also&#13;
receiving mention are the Mat&#13;
:\Ia1ds who lend their vocal&#13;
upport to the team as well as&#13;
a iding in publicity.&#13;
With eight more dual meets&#13;
left , Koch thinks that the team&#13;
can easily win five of those,&#13;
which would result in an overall&#13;
record of 5-5-1.&#13;
• •&#13;
Parkside takes on Marquette&#13;
University in the first of those&#13;
dual meets today, and travels to&#13;
Western Illinois University to&#13;
participate in an eight-state&#13;
tournament on Saturday.&#13;
Koch summed up by saying&#13;
that it is a very young team , and&#13;
with more experience it will&#13;
become even better with the&#13;
calibre of athletes he now has.&#13;
Alfredo's Restaurant&#13;
2827 63rd St., Kenosha&#13;
" But at the end of the season&#13;
the important thing is how you&#13;
fair in the National Tournament.&#13;
That's all that people remember&#13;
," Koch stated.&#13;
5ge OFF 0 :.::!.y&#13;
Italian Food A Specialty&#13;
Spaghetti - Ravioli - Lasagna&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM - Classified Advertising Rate&#13;
5 cents per word up to 25 words for each insertion. CHECK ENCLalED FOR$-&#13;
Payable in advance by check or cash to: -&#13;
The Parkside Ranger&#13;
DATES(S) TO RUN&#13;
Business Office To find your cost, multiply the&#13;
D-194 LLC UW-Parkside number of words times 5&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140 cents. Multiply that total by&#13;
the number of issues you want&#13;
NAME it to run. ~&#13;
ADDRESS DATE -&#13;
CITY PHONE NO. -&#13;
One word per space Do not skip space between words to show spacing --&#13;
------&#13;
----&#13;
---------</text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 1, issue 14, January 24, 1973</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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        <name>john zarling</name>
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        <name>marion mochon</name>
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