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              <text>Phasing Down</text>
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              <text>Phasing down&#13;
by Paul Anderson&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
MADISON — The University of&#13;
Wisconsin Board of Regents,&#13;
Friday, unanimously approved a&#13;
set of "guideline recommendations"&#13;
drafted by central&#13;
administration to meet Gov.&#13;
Patrick J. Lucey's request for&#13;
special plans that might be&#13;
utilized in reducing the scope of&#13;
the UW System over the next&#13;
decade.&#13;
The guidelines were included in&#13;
a 100 page report which UW&#13;
System President John C.&#13;
Weaver presented to the board at&#13;
a special meeting held here.&#13;
The report includes proposed&#13;
criteria for phasing out and&#13;
phasing down two-year centers&#13;
and four-year universities if the&#13;
state decides to reduce the scope&#13;
of the UW system.&#13;
The "phase down" would be&#13;
carried out over a six-year period&#13;
and three campuses, UW&#13;
Richland Center, UW Baraboo,&#13;
and UW Medford would face&#13;
closure under the criteria. The&#13;
criteria specify full-time&#13;
equivalent enrollment of 250 and&#13;
campus operating cost within 20&#13;
percent of the system average&#13;
costs.&#13;
However, the report stresses&#13;
that no substantial savings will&#13;
be realized by closing down&#13;
campuses or centers unless those&#13;
students and faculty affected are&#13;
not reabsorbed by some other&#13;
UW campus.&#13;
The report, representing a&#13;
synthesis of studies and analysis&#13;
conducted by Weaver, UW&#13;
Central Administration and a&#13;
System Advisory Planning Task&#13;
Force, has been submitted to the&#13;
Governor and State Legislation&#13;
for consideration in the 1975-77&#13;
state budget.&#13;
The special task force was&#13;
formed following Gov. Lucey's&#13;
directorate on January 8 which&#13;
requested the UW System "to&#13;
bring to him and the Legislature"&#13;
by April 18 "a plan for phasing&#13;
out, phasing down, or consolidating&#13;
institutions and&#13;
programs, including a statement&#13;
of laneuaee to be inserted into the&#13;
1975-77 biennial budget which&#13;
would authorize implementation&#13;
of the plan."&#13;
Weaver addressed specific&#13;
problems dealt with in the report&#13;
during a half-hour introductory&#13;
speech.&#13;
He said that an attempt to&#13;
educate the forecasted influx of&#13;
6,000 new students in the coming&#13;
biennium without increased state&#13;
support would be "an&#13;
inescapable proscription for&#13;
irreversible mediocraty."&#13;
He added that if t he Governor's&#13;
prediction holds true that the&#13;
UW's "fiscal future" includes no&#13;
increases in state support beyond&#13;
present levels, except for salary&#13;
adjustments and inflation price&#13;
increases, then the University&#13;
"cannot provide educational&#13;
opportunity for all the Wisconsin&#13;
citizens who would, if permitted,&#13;
seek such services."&#13;
If the Legislature does not&#13;
supply the resources necessary to&#13;
educate additional students, he&#13;
said, "then it is clear that the size&#13;
of the system must be reduced,&#13;
and an unequivocal Legislative&#13;
directive must be given to the&#13;
system to take some action."&#13;
, Weaver added that such a&#13;
directorate "would represent a&#13;
most fateful public policy choice&#13;
for the State of Wisconsin."&#13;
The report outlines a dilemma&#13;
faced by Wisconsin: "On the one&#13;
hand," said Weaver, "we have a&#13;
commitment to serve Wisconsin&#13;
citizens and can profit from high&#13;
educational opportunity," Yet, he&#13;
continued, "We cannot serve&#13;
effectively a constantly growing&#13;
demand for our services on tbe&#13;
basis of static real dollar&#13;
resources."&#13;
Weaver said that just to&#13;
replace the $19-million eroded&#13;
from UW supply budgets by inflation&#13;
in the 1973-75 would mean&#13;
the "complete elimination of two&#13;
of our smaller four-year&#13;
universities or the entire fourteen&#13;
campus center system." And this&#13;
would only hold true if "the&#13;
student and faculty of those&#13;
campuses would no longer be a&#13;
responsibility of the system," he&#13;
added.&#13;
The report is also critical of o ne&#13;
of the assumptions underlying&#13;
continued on page 4&#13;
Mark Lukas, five-and-a-half son of Barbara&#13;
Lukas at the jurying of the student art show.&#13;
Pictures on page 6&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wedne sday , April 23, 1975 Vol. Ill No.&#13;
OAntCfS&#13;
'WHY, YES, SENATOR—THERE IS ONE WAY YOU COULD USE YOUR I NFLUENCE&#13;
TO HELP GET US INTERESTED IN SOLA R ENERGY../&#13;
Two part series&#13;
Nuclear survey&#13;
by Geoff Blaesing&#13;
Despite plans for a "Nuclear&#13;
America" by the turn of the&#13;
century, most of those questioned&#13;
in a recent survey here at&#13;
Parkside knew little about&#13;
nuclear. The average score&#13;
among the total of 202 students,&#13;
faculty and staff surveyed was&#13;
40.2 percent.&#13;
Students averaged 38.87 while&#13;
faculty members scored an&#13;
average of 45.73.&#13;
The survey, conducted during&#13;
January by members of Prof.&#13;
Henry Cole's Environmental&#13;
Communications class, was&#13;
based on a similar, but lengthier&#13;
study conducted by the&#13;
University of Wisconsin in&#13;
Kewaunee and Manitowoc&#13;
Counties last year.&#13;
When a power company&#13;
, d ecides to build a nuclear power&#13;
plant on site, many groups of&#13;
government officials and local&#13;
residents usually have much to&#13;
say-pro or con-about the chosen&#13;
site. The decision whether or not&#13;
to build the plant at the site&#13;
chosen is usually a complex and&#13;
involved process involving many&#13;
different groups competing for&#13;
the same limited resources.&#13;
The power company may have&#13;
chosen a site along the shore of an&#13;
inland lake, but environmentalists&#13;
may want to&#13;
preserve this same land against&#13;
such development. Other groups&#13;
of citizens may want to use the&#13;
land for residential use or farming.&#13;
The use or non-use of the&#13;
land for any of these pruposes&#13;
continued on page 7&#13;
33-&#13;
Kenosha jail&#13;
Critical need&#13;
by Susan Shemanske&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
On October 4, .1973 t he Kenosha Labor ran a story on the overcrowded&#13;
conditions at the Kenosha County jail.&#13;
In that same month the County Board hired the Arthur Young&#13;
Association of Milwaukee to conduct a feasibility study of the Sheriff's&#13;
administration-jail facility. The study's conclusion was that the&#13;
"present building is very inadequate for present day use as a law&#13;
enforcement and detention facility."&#13;
Eighteen months later (since the Labor story) the County Board is&#13;
finally taking the first steps toward a new jail facility, although&#13;
Supervisor Angelo Capriotti says it will be at least two years before&#13;
any groundbreaking is done.&#13;
What is holding up the construction of a new Sheriff's administration-jail&#13;
facility? It is most likely due to bureaucratic red tape&#13;
and a reluctance to increase local property taxes.&#13;
Supervisor Capriotti, chairman of the 15-member Jail Study&#13;
Committee (a subcommittee of the County Board) said, "You're just&#13;
not going to run out and spend the taxpayers' money." The Board is&#13;
counting on revenues from the Pleasant Prairie electricity generating&#13;
plant (to be started next year by Wisconsin Electric) to pay for the jail&#13;
without having to increase taxes.&#13;
The County Board authorized the Jail Committee to check into all&#13;
aspects of the feasibility study and to examine the costs and&#13;
requirements forbuilding a new jail.&#13;
The Jail Committee's first step will be to visit a number of other jails&#13;
in similar-size counties. Captain Roger Schoenfeld, head of Research&#13;
and Planning in the Sheriff's Department, presented a list of jails to&#13;
the committee to choose from. Recommendations were made in terms&#13;
of n ewer facilities, joint city-county facilities and possible worthwhile&#13;
correctional programs. Among the facilities recommended were the&#13;
jails in Outagamie County (Appleton, Wis.), Kane County (Geneva,&#13;
111.), Winnebago County (Rockford, 111.), and Kalamazoo County&#13;
(Michigan).&#13;
The Jail Study Committee agreed-along with other city and county&#13;
officials-that the present facilities are grossly inadequate. They feel&#13;
that a new facility-rather than remodeling the present one-would be&#13;
the solution.&#13;
The building itself is over 50 years old. A M ilwaukee architectural&#13;
firm, Brust-Zimmerman Inc., was brought in to analyze the existing&#13;
facility from a structural standpoint. They found numerous violations&#13;
of current requirements governing Places of Detention (Wisconsin&#13;
State Standards); however, corrections are mandatory because&#13;
continued on page 6 &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, April 23, 1975&#13;
Issue*&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
When people run for political&#13;
office they need issues in order to&#13;
get the attention of the voters.&#13;
One ca ndidate for the upcoming&#13;
P.S.G.A. election has discovered&#13;
an old issue. Unfortunately, Tom&#13;
Olson sees fit to only comment on&#13;
it now, when quite obviously he&#13;
needs your attention and, not to&#13;
mention your vote. Mr. Olson was&#13;
no where to be seen during the&#13;
open hearings dealing with the&#13;
new student union at which time&#13;
it was brought to the attention of&#13;
the administration that the HUD&#13;
contract called for an improved&#13;
STUDENT Health Center in the&#13;
new union. I was present at that&#13;
hearing, the only student to speak&#13;
on this issue at that meeting, and&#13;
I contacted the STUDENT nurse&#13;
and tried to work out an alternative&#13;
site i.e. Student Union,&#13;
Classroom building. I have&#13;
discussed this matter with the&#13;
DEAN of Students and Student&#13;
Life Officials and one of the&#13;
proposals that came out of this&#13;
was the possible location in the&#13;
soon to be vacated Buffet Room.&#13;
Letters were sent to the Regents&#13;
and State Officials. Work is still&#13;
going on in trying to find an&#13;
alternative location for the&#13;
HEALTH CENTER. Tom Olson&#13;
still has to contribute anything of&#13;
substance as to the new location&#13;
of the HEALTH CENTER.&#13;
Furthermore, I wish that Mr.&#13;
Olson would have contributed&#13;
some valuable time to the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. in the studying of&#13;
the HUD CONTRACT and the&#13;
subsequent discussions with the&#13;
STUDENT nurse, Open Hearing&#13;
meeting, Campus Concerns&#13;
Comm., Mr. Dearborn, and&#13;
Student Life Official. Political&#13;
Opportunism in any form does&#13;
not belong in Student Government&#13;
let alone to be used as a tool&#13;
to fool the Students on this&#13;
campus. Tom Olson where was&#13;
your concern last semester?&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich&#13;
President, P.S.G.A. Inc&#13;
A failure to communicate&#13;
Togetherness&#13;
To the Students:&#13;
PSGA Inc. needs people willing&#13;
to devote time and energy in&#13;
solving the many problems that&#13;
face this campus. PSGA Inc.&#13;
needs people willing to work,&#13;
representing the students and at&#13;
the same time realizing that&#13;
arguing over personal differences&#13;
cannot solve problems.&#13;
PSGA Inc. needs people willing to&#13;
work together in bringing about&#13;
an effective government, one that&#13;
accomplishes, solves, and yet is&#13;
efficient and cohesive.&#13;
Parkside presently lacks a&#13;
government that is responsive to&#13;
the needs of the students. What&#13;
Parkside presently has is a&#13;
government which does not&#13;
Implementation&#13;
To the Students of Parkside:&#13;
P.S.G.A. in the past has had&#13;
difficulty in the implementation&#13;
of its programs which we believe&#13;
is a result of their lack of&#13;
organization and their lack of&#13;
cooperation With the administration.&#13;
&#13;
We propose the implementation&#13;
of concrete,&#13;
realistic, and practical programs&#13;
that will benefit the commuting&#13;
command the respect of either&#13;
the students, the administration,&#13;
the regents, or the local community.&#13;
This campus needs a&#13;
government that is more vocal in&#13;
stating what it is attempting to do&#13;
and more importantly, what it&#13;
has already accomplished.&#13;
Parkside needs a government&#13;
that presides in a regular place,&#13;
at an established time, so&#13;
students will know where and&#13;
when to go to voice their opinions,&#13;
problems, and to find out what is&#13;
being done about them.&#13;
If elected I will endeavor to&#13;
accomplish the goals that are&#13;
established by the students.&#13;
Cooperating with other Senators&#13;
and branches of government will&#13;
be a challenge. I will meet this&#13;
challenge. Name calling and&#13;
personal differences will not&#13;
intimidate my pursuit of this&#13;
challenge. In brief, if elected I&#13;
will represent you, the student, in&#13;
overcoming the problems that&#13;
face this campus and particularly,&#13;
this student government.&#13;
&#13;
PSGA Inc. can be a very viable&#13;
organization. But only if it has&#13;
members who participate with&#13;
the realization that they&#13;
represent the students. This, I&#13;
will do.&#13;
Thank you,&#13;
Please vote April 23 &amp; 24&#13;
Mainplace&#13;
Ed Bielarczyk&#13;
students and satisfy the administration.&#13;
&#13;
In our platform, our major&#13;
contentions are to develop a more&#13;
flexible add-drop policy and to&#13;
allocate segregated fees to the&#13;
interests of the majority on an&#13;
objective basis.&#13;
We realize that many students&#13;
are at Parkside are not able to&#13;
become involved in the&#13;
organizations and events that are&#13;
supported by their tuition dollars.&#13;
We propose to stimulate involvement&#13;
by supporting&#13;
allocations that can be used by&#13;
the most students.&#13;
Finally, we suggest that all the&#13;
students become involved by&#13;
voting in the coming election-it&#13;
doesn't cost a cent!&#13;
William G. Ferko and&#13;
Gerald E. Ferch&#13;
Political&#13;
promises&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
As the current president of&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc. I feel I have an&#13;
obligation to respond to some of&#13;
the statements made by John&#13;
Kontz in the RANGER issue of&#13;
April 9, 1975.&#13;
The direct cause of P.S.G.A.&#13;
Inc.'s failure to get things accomplished&#13;
is not due to a lack of&#13;
power, as stated by John, rather&#13;
it is due to the fact that the Protern&#13;
of the Senate generates very&#13;
little leadership within the&#13;
Legislative Branch of P.S.G.A.&#13;
Inc. How much power does an&#13;
organization need in order to&#13;
print a MONTHLY SENATE&#13;
JOURNAL. How much power is&#13;
needed to get the Senate Minutes&#13;
to the EXECUTIVE Branch&#13;
within 2 weeks, instead of&#13;
anywhere from 3 weeks to a&#13;
month and even a couple of&#13;
months.&#13;
Because of this inability&#13;
several students (Ms. Scott, Mr.&#13;
Kennedy, Mr. N. Jones) were&#13;
never placed on very important&#13;
Faculty Comm. I have still to&#13;
receive those minutes. I have one&#13;
set of Minutes dated SEP. 26,&#13;
1974, the next set is OCT. 24,1974.&#13;
There are no Minutes dated inbetween.&#13;
&#13;
I can only draw 2 conclusions:&#13;
1) John did not call any meetings&#13;
between the 26th of SEPT. and&#13;
the 24th of Oct. If this is the case,&#13;
John is then in violation of the&#13;
STUDENT CONSTITUTION. 2)&#13;
The minutes are yet to be typed&#13;
and given to the EXECUTIVE&#13;
BRANCH.&#13;
On DEC. 9,19741 appointed Mr.&#13;
N. Jones to head my Minority&#13;
Affairs Dept. John Kontz sent&#13;
that nomination to a SENATE&#13;
Comm. It has been there ever&#13;
since. If you ever get a chance to&#13;
see Student Govt's. Minutes, you&#13;
will see that most motions are&#13;
sent to comm. by John and there&#13;
they promptly die. Much more&#13;
could be stated but the best thing&#13;
to do is to ask John Kontz for&#13;
copies of YOUR STUDENT&#13;
GOVT. MINUTES. As you read&#13;
them you will see what could&#13;
have been accomplished but&#13;
never was, due to ineffective&#13;
leadership within the P.S.G.A.&#13;
Inc. Senate.&#13;
It wasn't any sense of power&#13;
that P.S.G.A. Inc. needed, just&#13;
EFFECTIVE and RESPONSIBLE&#13;
leadership. John's&#13;
campaign issues fine but he has&#13;
had almost an entire year to work&#13;
on them. Look at the minutes and&#13;
you can see t hat he hasn't. So I&#13;
ask you, why should we the&#13;
STUDENT BODY believe that he&#13;
will accomplish these things as&#13;
President of P.S.G.A. Inc. when&#13;
he couldn't do it as President ProTern&#13;
of the Senate.&#13;
As for myself, I have no intentions&#13;
of running for re-election&#13;
for one very important reason: I,&#13;
John Kontz and .several other&#13;
senators have been involved in&#13;
petty personal squabbles that&#13;
accomplished one thing--not&#13;
getting anything done for you the&#13;
students. For this I apologize.&#13;
Student Govt must be a unifying&#13;
force on this campus, for then&#13;
and only then will the students be&#13;
truly represented.&#13;
The time has come for new&#13;
responsible leadership within all&#13;
levels of P.S.G.A. Inc. Most&#13;
important of all, we must have a&#13;
STUDENT GOVT, president that&#13;
hasn't been involved with the&#13;
non-accomplishments and vindictiveness&#13;
of this Govt. We must&#13;
have a unifier as President, and&#13;
in my opinion John Kontz is not&#13;
that person. Hopefully, you will&#13;
be able to question John and the&#13;
other other candidates during the&#13;
CANDIDATE FORUMS April 17&#13;
and 21, MAIN PLACE.&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich&#13;
President, P.S.G.A. Inc.&#13;
Under most circumstances the choice to endorse or&#13;
not to endorse a candidate for an office he is running for&#13;
is a difficult decision. In last week's RANGER a&#13;
decision to endorse Lee Wagner and Kai Nail was announced&#13;
and the reasons were given for the endorsement.&#13;
At that point in time the decision to endorse&#13;
Lee and Kai was an easy one, as they offer the only&#13;
viable slate of candidates for the positions of President&#13;
and Vice-President of PSGA.&#13;
At this point in time the actions of the RANGER in&#13;
endorsing these two are even easier, not because of the&#13;
actions of these two, but because of the actions of their&#13;
opponents. On April 17, 1975 the RANGER Advisory&#13;
Board met to choose an editor for next year's RANGER.&#13;
It was during this meeting that John Kontz and Tom&#13;
Olson presented a list of demands to the Board for their&#13;
consideration. These demands were the result of a&#13;
mistake that appeared in last week's RANGER. Due to&#13;
a typographical error, the names of these two did not&#13;
appear at the bottom of their platforms.&#13;
This was explained to these two and we promised to&#13;
run their platform again this week. The demands that&#13;
were given to the Advisory Board were 1) reprint the&#13;
platform on page one with a headline; 2) apologize&#13;
publicly (on page one) for the error; 3) print and&#13;
distri bute 2 0 0 0 c o pie s o f a public apoloqy a \ -&#13;
RANGER expense.&#13;
In the Kontz-Olson literature that is being distributed&#13;
these two call for a responsible student government and&#13;
for student representation on some faculty committees&#13;
The Merger implementation Law (36.09(5) Wisconsin&#13;
Statutes) delegates the responsibilities and powers of&#13;
self-government to STUDENTS. Despite the insistence&#13;
on the rights of the students on this campus, these two&#13;
made their demands, not to this student newspaper but&#13;
to a FACULTY DOMINATED COMMITTEE If t'hesl&#13;
two are really serious about what they say, why do thev&#13;
forget?their platforms even before the ejections have&#13;
Most politicians at least have the decency to wait until&#13;
the election is over before they forget the promises&#13;
they have made to their voters. We of the RANGER erf&#13;
tired of these tactics. We of the RANGER feel that a&#13;
campaign issue is a promise between the renn;H-»+ i&#13;
thecodont body. VOTE LE (^ WAGNER ANC)S KAI &#13;
Delays&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, April 23, 1975 3&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The P.S.G.A. Inc. elections&#13;
were delayed for one week due to&#13;
the fact that the original election&#13;
rules would have forced the&#13;
students to cast one vote for two&#13;
people (the President and VicePresident&#13;
would have run&#13;
together and been placed on the&#13;
ballot together.) The President of&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc. felt that this would&#13;
have denied the students the right&#13;
of voting for the most qualified&#13;
person for the offices in question.&#13;
The Senate recalled the bill and&#13;
made the necessary changes that&#13;
ensured a fair and open election.&#13;
Because of the time element&#13;
involved, P.S.G.A. Inc. was&#13;
forced to delay the elections by&#13;
one week. Also to be placed on the&#13;
April 23 and 24 ballots were&#13;
numerous amendments to the&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc. Constitution. Many&#13;
dedicated people within Student&#13;
Gov't and non-student Gov't&#13;
people worked very hard during&#13;
the second semester to get these&#13;
amendments before you, the&#13;
students.&#13;
It seems now that you will not&#13;
have that opportunity. John&#13;
Kontz, President Pro-Tempore of&#13;
the Senate, delayed calling a&#13;
Senate meeting until April 11,&#13;
1975. At this meeting he stated&#13;
that the terms of office had expired&#13;
for all of the At-Large&#13;
senators and the president of&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc. Therefore, according&#13;
to John Kontz these&#13;
people would not be able to act on&#13;
any business.&#13;
Because of his irresponsible&#13;
actions he has quite possibly&#13;
denied the students of this&#13;
university the right to vote on the&#13;
proposed amendments. These&#13;
amendments were to have been&#13;
brought up at this meeting.&#13;
The Merger Law and our&#13;
Constitution play a very important&#13;
role on this campus.&#13;
These two documents lay down&#13;
the very foundation of STUDENT&#13;
CONTROL OVER STUDENT&#13;
AREAS OF CONCERN e.e.&#13;
Segregated fees, Student&#13;
Governance. These are all now in&#13;
jeopardy of b eing lost due to Mr.&#13;
Kontz's actions. Because John&#13;
Kontz did not call a meeting&#13;
earlier in the week, and instead&#13;
called an unusual Friday&#13;
meeting, we feel that he has&#13;
played right into the hands of&#13;
CENTRAL ADMINISTRATION.&#13;
Central Administration has&#13;
stated that they feel the Board of&#13;
Regents should not ratify this&#13;
Constitution or any other student&#13;
constitution until Nov. 5, 1975 o r&#13;
Their reasoning was because&#13;
they felt that many of the campuses&#13;
hadn't yet finalized their&#13;
guidelines and Student Constitutions.&#13;
&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc. was ready to&#13;
finalize the Student Constitution&#13;
during the week of April 6, 1975&#13;
and present it to the students for&#13;
ratification or rejection on April&#13;
23 and 24. Because of Kontz's&#13;
actions the STUDENT Body in all&#13;
likelihood will not be able to vote&#13;
on the amendments until Fall&#13;
semester 1975, IF EVER.&#13;
You would have thought that in&#13;
a matter of such importance John&#13;
Kontz would have called a&#13;
meeting earlier in the week&#13;
whereupon the Senate would&#13;
have acted on the amendments&#13;
and placed them on the ballots.&#13;
Calling a meeting earlier in the&#13;
week would have also allowed the&#13;
senate to ask for legal advice&#13;
concerning the question of when&#13;
do the terms of office expire.&#13;
After the April 11 meeting the&#13;
President of P.S.G.A. Inc. and&#13;
Senator Vlach contacted Attorney&#13;
Siefert and were informed&#13;
that the P.S.G.A. Inc. officials in&#13;
question hold office until&#13;
replaced by new officers.&#13;
If the Constitutional Amendments&#13;
do not appear before the&#13;
student body on April 23 and 24,&#13;
which does not seem probable at&#13;
this moment, John Kontz must&#13;
bear the responsibility.&#13;
We condemn his actions as not&#13;
befitting a person elected to&#13;
represent the interests of the&#13;
STUDENT BODY.&#13;
Robert G. Vlach, PSGA Inc&#13;
Senator&#13;
Carrie Ward, PSGA Inc Senator&#13;
Lisa Iwon, PSGA Inc Senator&#13;
Mike Hahner, PSGA Inc Senator&#13;
Eric Bingen, PSGA Inc Senator&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich, Pres.,&#13;
PSGA I n c&#13;
The ParksideThe&#13;
PARKSIDE RANGER is a wholly independeni&#13;
publication of the students of the U.W. Parkside, expressing&#13;
the interests, opinions, and concerns of the&#13;
students, and responsible for its contents. Offices are&#13;
ocated in D194 LLC, U.W. Parkside, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-2295, 553-2 287.&#13;
Editor Kenneth Pestka&#13;
Business Manager Modesto Lopez&#13;
Advertising Manager John Sacket&#13;
Production Manager Kathy Sodomka&#13;
Copy Editor Kathy Bouterse&#13;
Humanities Editor amy cundari&#13;
Jeff Swencki&#13;
da&#13;
^ HE MA&#13;
The book of the Cabala—&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I recall reading, some time&#13;
ago, "Zohar," the book of Cabala,&#13;
an old Hebrew Text of knowledge&#13;
from archaic times. There was a&#13;
phrase with in it that said, "As it&#13;
is above, so it is below." I find&#13;
that particular old saying pertinent&#13;
in relatively all walks of&#13;
our existance.&#13;
The Cabal, for those of u s with&#13;
lack of familiarity, shows itself&#13;
riot to be the unrealistic mystical&#13;
hog-wash that 'one may first&#13;
acquaint with it's name. For with&#13;
serious attention and analytic&#13;
intensions one might find it to&#13;
hold certain truths to be&#13;
evaluated as enevitable and selfevident&#13;
in our present day and&#13;
time.&#13;
Allow me to demonstrate my&#13;
point. According to the Cabala we&#13;
are now existing in the age when&#13;
the sun equinoxes in Aquarious&#13;
and is opposite of Leo. This is the&#13;
time in which it has been said&#13;
that men will equal the feats of&#13;
the gods. The once mystifying&#13;
would become crystal clear with&#13;
knowledge and understanding.&#13;
And man has equaled feats of&#13;
legendary gods who flew in the&#13;
air, threw their voices across the&#13;
world, moved great lengths in the&#13;
depths of the seas, caused great&#13;
geographic catastrophies and&#13;
walked on the moon! Yes, these&#13;
are the feats of gods. But we have&#13;
yet to mature in the pure&#13;
knowledge and understanding of&#13;
true necessity in virtues of&#13;
democratic freedom, humanistic&#13;
justice, opportunity equality and&#13;
nuclear peace. Ironically these&#13;
feats are the true feats of gods.&#13;
These are the undodgable tasks&#13;
of a surviving human race... if i t&#13;
is to survive.&#13;
There are those in strong and&#13;
purposely well sanctioned&#13;
positions of power that market&#13;
ideas to masses of people&#13;
inhibiting them from the&#13;
capabilities of aggressively&#13;
participating in the assurance&#13;
program of their own survival.&#13;
Thr oug h p o lit ica l,&#13;
psychologically communicative&#13;
warfare people are lead to&#13;
believe they have no power. They&#13;
are lead to concede they need no&#13;
power. They are left to submission,&#13;
admitting they deserve&#13;
no power, regarding themselves&#13;
as ignorant. Thus many&#13;
anxiously choose to resign&#13;
themselves from any knowledge&#13;
or siege of authority constitutionally&#13;
guaranteed to "the&#13;
people."&#13;
Of co urse if we are to survive,&#13;
this idea must be abandoned. If&#13;
we are going to live in a&#13;
dem ocra tica lly supe rindustralized&#13;
capitalist nation we&#13;
must all involve ourselves to&#13;
make it work. We must find a&#13;
way to control the international&#13;
super money crimes we pay over&#13;
10 billion of our tax dollars for&#13;
annually. I speak here of the&#13;
embezzlement, price fixing,&#13;
exploitations of in finitely various&#13;
forms, and of course wars. The&#13;
list goes on... We must demand&#13;
humanity be included in the interest&#13;
of our medical and food&#13;
services. Let us market ideas of&#13;
pure dietary habits and not&#13;
hypochondrea. We must&#13;
fashionize education toward&#13;
diplomatic awareness of the&#13;
whole world around us;&#13;
politically, monetarily, and&#13;
socially. We must all mentally&#13;
migrate to accomplish a reality&#13;
of international peace,&#13;
cooperation, and restraint. We&#13;
must seek out these who will&#13;
effectively represent us, and we&#13;
must recognize them as our&#13;
representatives. But firstly we&#13;
must be aware. We must not be&#13;
swade by some expensive and&#13;
clever promotional propaganda.&#13;
If the shoe hasn't given a comfortable&#13;
fit in the last 5 years, it is&#13;
unlikely to give one in this year or&#13;
the next. The masses must learn&#13;
the art o f e v a l u a tin g and&#13;
balancing information into the&#13;
production of beneficial truth. If&#13;
we are to survive past the mere&#13;
dawning of Aquarious. and truly&#13;
perform the feats of gods. And&#13;
know this: "As it is above, so it is&#13;
below!" On all levels of business,&#13;
and government, and society.&#13;
Events happen in relative&#13;
correlation of one another. As&#13;
there is international chaos, so it&#13;
is right here in the midst of this&#13;
educational institution. Be aware&#13;
and involve yourself in determining&#13;
truth for the betterment&#13;
and essential survival of fellow&#13;
mankind and yourself!&#13;
written by: Sandra A. Bray&#13;
sponsoring: WAGNER &amp;NALL&#13;
presidential, vice presiderifial&#13;
ticket for P.S.(3.A&#13;
Don't forget to Vote!&#13;
Platforms&#13;
Students:&#13;
This letter is not intended to&#13;
expose, reiterate, or respond to&#13;
the smear tactics and unfounded&#13;
accusations which are being used&#13;
by some of our opponents.&#13;
Rather, we advocate that the&#13;
students of P arkside should read&#13;
the platform and be concerned&#13;
with the important issues at&#13;
hand.&#13;
We have proposed a specific&#13;
and constructive program that&#13;
calls for fair representation of&#13;
every student.&#13;
On next Wednesday and&#13;
Thursday, April 23rd and 24th.&#13;
You will have the opportunity to&#13;
Vote for a Responsive student&#13;
• oT&#13;
government. REMEMBER!&#13;
EVERY VOTE COUNTS. •;&gt;,&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
John D. Kontz&#13;
Candidate for President&#13;
Thomas J. Olson.&#13;
Candidate for&#13;
Vice President&#13;
WIDEST SELECTION&#13;
OF DOOKS IN TOWN&#13;
•&#13;
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THE DISCRIMINATING&#13;
READER&#13;
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BROWSERS WELCOME&#13;
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Cant you spare a bite&#13;
to save a life?&#13;
The threat&#13;
of severe&#13;
malnutrition or&#13;
even starvation&#13;
faces about 400&#13;
to 500 million&#13;
children living&#13;
in the poorest&#13;
countries of the&#13;
world. The&#13;
situation is so&#13;
grave that the&#13;
United Nations&#13;
Children's Fund, UNICEF, has declared a&#13;
World Child Emergency and must find an&#13;
additional $80 million to help meet it in the&#13;
next 15 months.&#13;
Individual contributions, no matter how&#13;
small, are the children's main hope for&#13;
survival. A contribution of $1.00, the average&#13;
cost of a hamburger, french fries and soda,&#13;
can buy a year's supply of multi-vitamins for&#13;
a child in a crisis country. $15 can bring&#13;
supplementary food and health services to&#13;
five children for a month.&#13;
Can't you spare a bite... to save a life?&#13;
Please send your contribution today. Mail to&#13;
UNICEF World Child Emergency, 331 East&#13;
38th Street, New York, N.Y. 10016.&#13;
UNICEF &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, April 23, 1975&#13;
j&amp;xtmtmmul&#13;
Ecunlutinn-a challenge&#13;
"My fellow Americans, we share tonight a great moment, the&#13;
beginning of the Bicentennial Era...To look at America with clear eyes&#13;
today is to see every reason for gratitude and little for regret, strong&#13;
grounds for hope and none at all for despair. The crucial challenge&#13;
now is to hold the high ground of confidence, courage, and faith that is&#13;
rightly ours, and to avoid the quicksand of fear and doubt."&#13;
President Richard M. Nixon, July 4,1971&#13;
"As wolves will appear in sheep's-cloathing, so superlative knaves&#13;
and parricides will assume the vesture of virtue and patriotism."&#13;
Josiah Quincy, 1774&#13;
The American Revolution is familiar to all of u s as a series of battles,&#13;
dates, and founding fathers. But above all else, the American&#13;
Revolution was a social movement-an uprising of people who launched&#13;
a war for independence to secure for themselves the "inalienable&#13;
rights" of "Life, liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness."&#13;
It was common people-farmers, laborers, artisans-not well-known&#13;
leaders, who died in the Boston Massacre. Common folks, in communities&#13;
from New Hampshire to Georgia, enforced the economic&#13;
boycotts against unfairly taxed British imports. And common men&#13;
and women (one out of every three, by most accounts) read Tom&#13;
Paine's "Common Sense" and called for independence months before&#13;
Jefferson drafted the Declaration of Independence.&#13;
As the 200th anniversary of the American Revolution nears, individuals&#13;
and organizations in every community in the country are&#13;
presented with the opportunity to participate in a new social&#13;
movement aimed at reaffirming our revolutionary past; at reliving&#13;
the ideals of the Spirit of '76.&#13;
In the years leading up to 1976, e very American, in one way or&#13;
another, will take part in the Bicentennial-Nixon and his corporate&#13;
buddies, by pouring literally hundreds of millions of dollars into&#13;
"Bicentennial" programs have made sure of that. (Indeed, one White&#13;
House aide has spoken of the "Bicentennialization" of America.) The&#13;
issue, clearly, is how will over 200,000,000 Americans participate.&#13;
Through the Tory celebration of the White House and big business? Or&#13;
through a program initiated by the people of America, for the people of&#13;
America—in short, a Patriot's Observance.&#13;
Community organizations that wish to think clearly about our 200th&#13;
Anniversary should distinguish between the Bicentennial as a&#13;
- Celebration and the Bicentennial as a set of challenges. The Bicentennial&#13;
as a celebration means Tom Paine post cards, red-white-andblue&#13;
street signs, radio and television programs extolling the virtues&#13;
of America around the clock, Sara Lee Bicentennial Birthday Cake,&#13;
and the rest of i t. The Bicentennial as a set of challenges, however,&#13;
means using the occasion to raise serious questions about whether&#13;
America today lives up to the principles for which the American&#13;
Revolution was fought.&#13;
Nor is the opportunity a frivolous one. Today we are besieged with&#13;
commentators who tell us that we are a middle-class society that&#13;
values property and security over everything else. Such questions as&#13;
the gap between rich and poor, between corporate and social wealth,&#13;
between the majority and ethnic minorities, they say, might interest a&#13;
few fuzzy-headed reformers, but no one else. People are too busy&#13;
holding onto what they have. Therefore, the argument concludes,&#13;
activists should turn the business of politics over to pragmatists in&#13;
both parties who know best how to hold society together&#13;
Bud Drinkers, can&#13;
you figure this out?&#13;
Ralph bought a 6-pak of Rudweiser- and invited four friends over to share It.&#13;
Since he bought, he expected to have two cans to himself, but unfortunately&#13;
when he returned to the refrigerator for his second, he found it missing. So he&#13;
asked who took it. A1 said,"Joe drank it." Joe said, "Dan drank it." Dan said,&#13;
"Joe, that's a lie!" And Rill said, "I didn't drink it." If only one of these&#13;
statements is true, who really drank it?&#13;
SumSae auiR ssa| pun Suisjuup&#13;
auqi ajoui tuads 3A«q p|noo Aoqi "sqed-q 3Ay iqiinoq p«q qd[B&gt;j ji :puop^&#13;
arui aq p|no&lt;w juauiaiLqs s.ubq A/ivo uaqi aauts 'aaqineus -pny aqi sj [|ig&#13;
X|snoiAqo anuj aju siuaiuaiBis s(||j^ put; s.aop uaqi pip ubq quiqi noA ji&#13;
puy '3ti.it are sjuauiaieis s^ubq puB sqy uaqi 'aop s,|i quiqi noA jj arui ajB&#13;
siuauiairis s.wu pue s,ubq 'auo AjjtnS aq) si |y aurtissu noA jj :H3MSNV&#13;
How curious an argument this is coming from otherwise loyal&#13;
citizens. "America is the only nation in the world that is founded on a&#13;
creed," G. K. Chesterton wrote many years ago. "That creed is set&#13;
forth with dogmatic and even theological lucidity in the Declaration of&#13;
Independence; perhaps the only piece of practical politics that is also&#13;
theoretical politics and also great literature. It enunciates that all men&#13;
are equal in their claim to justice, that governments exist to give them&#13;
that justice, and that their authority is for that reason just." Yet there&#13;
are those who, in the name of p atriotism, would undermine this creed&#13;
and the documents that define it. These people surely do need a&#13;
Bicentennial-or some comparable occasion-to refresh their memory&#13;
about what the founding fathers and mothers said this country was&#13;
supposed to represent. Here is where a community-based Peoples&#13;
Bicentennial celebration can perform an enormous service.&#13;
The Bicentennial, in turn, can perform a service to community&#13;
organizations. There is truth to the notion, after all, that people fight&#13;
only for the familiar, not the unfamiliar. Who will take risks for&#13;
something that he or she doesn't even understand? If we wish to encourage&#13;
citizensto fight for high values, then we must articulate them&#13;
in terms that we all understand, in language we all share and respect.&#13;
What do we want, if not a renewed realization that we must take the&#13;
ancient principles of liberty and justice seriously in our everyday&#13;
lives? Why not then borrow precedents from the Declaration of Independence&#13;
and the Constitution and the Bill of Rights-documents we&#13;
were all brought up on-rather than from writers whom few people&#13;
have even read? This is what the Bicentennial enables us to do, with&#13;
devastating effect, if we choose to take the opportunity.&#13;
Consider, for example, a Bicentennial celebration that merely attempted&#13;
to adhere to five central principles of the American&#13;
Revolution: "Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness"; "No&#13;
Taxation Without Representation"; "Don't Tread On Me";&#13;
"Rebellion to Tyrants is Obedience to God"; and "Only Lay Down&#13;
True Principles." It would be a far cry from the Bicentennial&#13;
celebration that our government is presently planning. Let's examine&#13;
the possibilities.&#13;
Hie White House will try to use the Bicentennial to glamorize the&#13;
role of in dividuals in pulling themselves up by their own bootstraps&#13;
without assistance from unions, community organizations, and the&#13;
federal government. It will ignore the cooperation and mutual aid that&#13;
were standard in the colonies and on the frontier.&#13;
Ordinary citizens whould use the Bicentennial to examine the&#13;
quality of life within their communities-to determine whether it&#13;
fulfills the principles for which the Revolution was fought. The&#13;
Declaration of Independence does not say that "life, liberty, and the&#13;
pursuit of happiness" are privileges, to be attained by an individual's&#13;
ability to exploit other people. These are rights; governments are&#13;
created to secure them. The community is the instrument through&#13;
which they are to be realized.&#13;
Therefore, if a community establishes a Bicentennial Commission&#13;
composed entirely of businessmen, reactionary leaders, and&#13;
professional socialites, citizens must create a local Peoples Bicentennial&#13;
Commission, composed of labor leaders, community-control&#13;
advocates, and representatives of both working people and the poor.&#13;
In this case, professional mavericks will not do, and even prominent&#13;
citizens without tangible constituencies should play secondary roles.&#13;
For once, a people's operation should actually represent the people.&#13;
Kentucky Derby&#13;
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE&#13;
Who will win the 101st running&#13;
of the Kentucky Derby? Forty&#13;
Parkside students will get the&#13;
chance to find out, firsthand, at&#13;
the Churchill Downs race track in&#13;
Ivouisville, as the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board sponsors its annual&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
•Rock *Jazz *Pop *Folk&#13;
LOWEST PRICES ALWAYS&#13;
MUSIC HOUSE vy.'j.i&#13;
The Place to buy records&#13;
DON GILL BICYCLE SHOP&#13;
Everything for the Cyclist&#13;
5006 - 7th Avenue&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN 53140&#13;
(414) 652-6468&#13;
.INC . SI IO UIS&#13;
3CHWINN PEIJGEOT&#13;
NISHIKI MONDIA C1NELLI&#13;
trip.&#13;
Besides the trip there, students&#13;
will also experience the many&#13;
and varied activities happening&#13;
during the Derby weekend. An&#13;
outdoor concert featuring Wet&#13;
Willie, Charlie Daniels, and&#13;
Marshall Tucker will be on&#13;
Friday night, plus parades, and&#13;
the annual running of the Derby&#13;
warm-up, the Oaks, at Churchill&#13;
Downs.&#13;
Saturday features the Kentucky&#13;
Derby, the premiere race&#13;
in the Triple Crown, with all of&#13;
the trappings. After the race;&#13;
there will be a party at the Red&#13;
Barn, where the students will be&#13;
staying during the weekend.&#13;
Individuals staying at the Barn&#13;
will be issued a Crash Pass,&#13;
which acts as their identification&#13;
for the stay in Louisville.&#13;
Any students wishing to sign up&#13;
for the trip to Louisville and the&#13;
Kentucky Derby weekend may go&#13;
to the Information Kiosk and sign&#13;
up there. There is no deposit, but&#13;
at the time of sig n up, you must&#13;
have the $39.00, which covers the"&#13;
ride on the "Midnight Special"&#13;
and your stay in Louisville. For&#13;
more information, contact the&#13;
Office of Student Life, LLCdl97&#13;
Ext. (553-)2294.&#13;
Phasing dowi&#13;
continued from page J&#13;
the Governor's request for&#13;
"phasing down" the UW.&#13;
Gov. Lucey assumed that&#13;
enrollments will drop in t he next&#13;
decade because of a forecasted&#13;
drop in Wisconsin's 18-year-old&#13;
population.&#13;
The report points out, however&#13;
that the projections relied upon&#13;
by the Governor were those&#13;
prepared, by the UW Sy stem to&#13;
guide short-term budget&#13;
decisions and longer term faculty&#13;
construction decisions. Their&#13;
projections (until now) were&#13;
based on birthrates and 18-yearold&#13;
age pools, and did not include&#13;
the increasing number of older&#13;
students enrolling in UW&#13;
programs.&#13;
"Our students indicate that the&#13;
current methodologies for&#13;
projecting future enrollment&#13;
levels are not adequate for addressing&#13;
scope reduction&#13;
decisions extending beyond the&#13;
next four years," said Weaver in -&#13;
the prologue of the report. He&#13;
added that "it not only remains&#13;
true that we will face increasing&#13;
enrollments through the end of&#13;
the 1970's but it is altogether&#13;
possible that we will face increases&#13;
(rather than modest&#13;
declines) in the 1980's as well."&#13;
Four alternative approaches to&#13;
the projection of student&#13;
enrollments were outlined in the&#13;
report. Under one of the approaches&#13;
the Age Strata: Trend&#13;
Approach-the projections include&#13;
the proportion of the State&#13;
population in the age group 23&#13;
years of age and older.&#13;
Weaver said that if the&#13;
proportion of older students (age&#13;
18 to 64) continues to increase as&#13;
it now is, "The system will have&#13;
20,000 more students in 1990 than&#13;
at present."&#13;
He said that the UW System&#13;
and Legislature should not&#13;
assume an enrollment decline&#13;
after 1983, as predicted by the&#13;
Governor.&#13;
Specifics on Parkside&#13;
As a whole, the report went into&#13;
little specific detail on each of the&#13;
universities studied. However,&#13;
Parkside is listed as the second&#13;
smallest four-year university&#13;
studied, with UW Superior being&#13;
the smallest.&#13;
A second phase of the task&#13;
force studies will consider the&#13;
economic and social effects of&#13;
phasing out Parkside and five&#13;
other four-year campuses in&#13;
more detail. The Phase II studies&#13;
will be completed by August 31,&#13;
1975.&#13;
All of the Regents commended&#13;
Weaver, the task force and&#13;
central administration for&#13;
meeting the Governor's requests&#13;
within the difficult time constraints&#13;
with a complete and&#13;
consice report.&#13;
UW Vice President Donald.&#13;
Percy said the cost of t he report&#13;
including simulation studies and&#13;
analysis was about $50,000.&#13;
Weaver offered a revision of tha t&#13;
figure, claiming that with additional&#13;
time given to completing&#13;
the studies within the time limits,&#13;
a more likely estimate would be a&#13;
quarter-of-a-million dollars.&#13;
Due to a typographical&#13;
error the names of&#13;
John Kontz and Tom&#13;
Olson did not appear&#13;
with the article&#13;
'Responsible government'&#13;
in the April 16 issue&#13;
of Ranger &#13;
Egg McMuffin&#13;
Juice and Coffee&#13;
Hotcakes &amp; Sausage&#13;
Juice and Coffee&#13;
Toasted English Muffin&#13;
Juice and Coffee&#13;
Two Pastries&#13;
Juice and Coffee&#13;
Two twenty cenf Donuts&#13;
Juice and Coffee&#13;
fgg cheese Canadian Simple bill ologant&#13;
bacon neatly stacked on a&#13;
toasted English Muttip Choose&#13;
a unco arid colteo and you re&#13;
ready to battle trattu:&#13;
Dolicious Pastries Juice and&#13;
cottoe Has container and will&#13;
travel&#13;
A m an sized sausage patty&#13;
surrounded by two light, golden&#13;
hotcakes cooked t® order&#13;
served with butler and syrup&#13;
Yout choice ot tour iuices and&#13;
a cup of great cottee&#13;
We'll pack it to go. but somehow&#13;
it nev er seems to make it&#13;
out the dooi&#13;
KENTUCKY DERBY&#13;
MAY 2, 3,4 Bus leaves May 2 at 12:01 a.m.&#13;
$39.00 includes : Bus Trip, Lodging at the "RED BARN", &amp; In-Field Derby Tickc&#13;
Sign-up starts at NOON APRIL 14* FULL PAYMENT at tign-ui&#13;
40 SEATS AVAILABLE&#13;
PARKSIDE STUDENT ONLY I.D. cards required&#13;
Abisola Helen Gallagher has been named to the student services&#13;
staff at the UW-Parkside. Her responsibilities include personal, social&#13;
and educational counseling, counseling students on academic&#13;
probation, work with the campus tutorial services and with minority&#13;
and disadvantaged students.&#13;
CIMMERON S HOW R EVIEW&#13;
June 21&#13;
COAL K ITCHEN&#13;
June 27-28&#13;
HOT M AMA SILVER&#13;
July 3-4-5&#13;
Students planning on attending Summer Session who are currently&#13;
enrolled for Spring Semester should complete a card indicating intention&#13;
to register in summer courses. This will make available a preprinted&#13;
packet for registration. The cards are at the LLC Information&#13;
Center or in Tallent Hall 115 (Counseling offices) or Tallent Hall 181&#13;
(Student Records). If a student is undecided about summer school, he&#13;
or she is encouraged to complete the card anyway.&#13;
—Brief news—&#13;
On Friday, April 18„ the Vets Club picked nn 4 nnn•&#13;
on the Parkside campus. The trees are fro P ' trees to be planted&#13;
is needed to plant the trees near Tallent H"]\ r Sc&#13;
?&#13;
be1&#13;
' Wiscon&#13;
sin. Hep&#13;
Office, room 104 in Tallent H^ 1 C°&#13;
ntaCt the Vets Service&#13;
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23: WHITESKFi tad&#13;
music by Phil Smith and Tom Ceschin 11-30 a m m ? presents&#13;
D201. Free! ' 11,30 a mto&#13;
1:30 p.m., GR&#13;
April 27; The Parkside Baroque Plavero ^&#13;
flute, Monte Bedford, oboe, David Suetholz&#13;
'&#13;
harpsichord, will present a program at ' n '&#13;
andFran&#13;
c&#13;
e&#13;
s Bedford,&#13;
DEVIL'S LAKE WEEKEND - April 25, 26 &amp; 27. Price of only $5&#13;
campsite fee, use of cooking and camping gear (except steeping&#13;
bags), canoes, rock climbing gear! Instructors will be there to 2&#13;
and help out in all areas. Sign up at the Info KioskTor addi^nal&#13;
information contact Student Life office, WLLC D197, or call 553-2294&#13;
April 30; Student music recital nm n&#13;
Theater. No admission charge P " Commu™*«°n Arts&#13;
KENTUCKY DERBY WEEKEND - Mav 9 * s A d j&#13;
Special" to the Kentucky™&#13;
•&#13;
parkside students&#13;
°&#13;
niy&#13;
'&#13;
m and ^&#13;
by Jeff Swencki&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
As high schools begin to&#13;
prepare for graduation military&#13;
recruiters begin preparing for&#13;
their biggest recruitment&#13;
campaign of the year. Fliers and&#13;
other propaganda pamphlets are&#13;
mailed out to prospective&#13;
graduates, men and women.&#13;
These pamphlets present attractive&#13;
promises of job options,&#13;
good training, training that will&#13;
be useful in civilian life, free&#13;
college education, travel, choice&#13;
of duty stations, high pay, fast&#13;
promotion, and security. To'&#13;
many people faced with high&#13;
tuition fees or an uncertainty of&#13;
any kind of future these promises&#13;
are quite alluring. In reality&#13;
though, no recruiter can keep any&#13;
promise he makes to a recruit.&#13;
T H E P ARKSI DE R AN G ER Wednesday, April 2 3 , 1 9 75 5&#13;
UNION&#13;
July 11-12-18&#13;
CIMMERON S HOW R EVIEW&#13;
July 19&#13;
MOORS CREEK&#13;
July 25&#13;
SHANE T ODD&#13;
July 26&#13;
„AicDonakfs Breakfast Menu&#13;
hl\ 392B-52nd st. Five great ways to start the day siu-su «n. /Y\&#13;
|McDonaid| KENOSHA Served 8:00a.m. until 11:00a. m. dailv-Noon Sundays KENOSHA |»&#13;
c8°"&#13;
a&#13;
i'&#13;
THE END IS COMING!&#13;
The Gamma Beta chapter of Pi Sigma Epsilon of t he University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside was awarded the runner-up Special Events&#13;
trophy at the 1975 na tional convention.&#13;
Receiving the award were Cindy Gray, Bob Petrouske, Bob Unger,&#13;
Pete Fitzgerald, David Brandt and advisor Richard Yanzito.&#13;
The award was presented to Gamma Beta for their efforts in the&#13;
American Cancer Society Promotion of the Wisconsin Intercollegiate&#13;
Hockey Tournament. The drive raised $1,600.00.&#13;
The convention was held this past weekend in St. Louis, Missouri,&#13;
and its theme was "Strides in '75."&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon is a professional marketing, sales and sales&#13;
management fraternity and is affiliated with Sales and Marketing&#13;
Executives of Racine and Kenosha.&#13;
A UW-Parkside history professor, John D. Buenker, is among nine&#13;
Wisconsin scholars named winners of Guggenheim Fellowship awards&#13;
for 1975. Seven of the winners are from UW-Madison and the sixth&#13;
from UW-Eau Claire. They are among 308 national Guggenheim&#13;
winners.&#13;
Prof. Buenker's award is for a 12-month period beginning next&#13;
September. During that time he will be on leave from his teaching&#13;
duties at Parkside and will be researching a forthcoming book on "The&#13;
Dynamics of Reform in the Progressive Era."&#13;
Buenker received his M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from Georgetown&#13;
University. He taught at Georgetown, Eastern Illinois University,&#13;
Indiana State College of Pennsylvania and Prince Georges College&#13;
before coming to Parkside in 1970.&#13;
rip-off&#13;
instructing a company of m en in&#13;
the fine art of riot control or an&#13;
infantry man seated in a supply&#13;
office meandering through a&#13;
stack of clothing requisitions.&#13;
Travel many times is the sum&#13;
total of moving from one duty&#13;
station to another, not&#13;
necessarily the one guaranteed&#13;
you.&#13;
A NORC survey showed that&#13;
only 33 p ercent recruits receive&#13;
training that would be useful in&#13;
civilian employment. In fact&#13;
most MOS training courses last&#13;
fewer than 25 we eks, many last&#13;
under 20 weeks. For example,&#13;
The "elite" of the Marine Corps&#13;
supply system is supposedly the&#13;
MOS 3042, mechanized supply,&#13;
Their training last a whole four&#13;
weeks including an intense typing&#13;
class, three days.&#13;
High pay incentives are false or&#13;
misleading in some cases. In&#13;
Boston Puerto Ricans were led to&#13;
believe that they would be paid&#13;
from $300-$400 pe r month. They&#13;
were, for the first six months.&#13;
After that the pay dropped to $40&#13;
per month for their remaining&#13;
five-and-a-half years. The House&#13;
Armed Service Committee admitted&#13;
that the Navy made&#13;
promises they could not keep.&#13;
U.S. Representative John J.&#13;
Rooney (D-NY) exposed an incident&#13;
where young men were&#13;
told that it was mandatory for&#13;
them to visit a recruiter. In&#13;
Plymouth, Michigan, recruiters&#13;
informed graduates that this visit&#13;
was part of their draft obligation.&#13;
It would be wise of anyone&#13;
planning on enlisting in the U.S.&#13;
military to READ THE FINE&#13;
PRINT, know your selective&#13;
service obligations, and do not&#13;
sign anything.&#13;
Article 83 of the Uniform Code&#13;
of Military Justice (UCMJ)&#13;
states that all terms of the contract&#13;
are binding on the enlistee&#13;
but not on the service. This&#13;
means that if you are guaranteed&#13;
a specific MOS (Military Occupational&#13;
Specialty) there is&#13;
nothing to stop the service from&#13;
changing it, or placing you in&#13;
another position. It is not uncommon&#13;
to find a Supply man&#13;
And on 13 June 1973 the Pentagon&#13;
admitted that, as a result of an&#13;
investigation by its Criminal&#13;
Investigation Division over 37&#13;
states, 107 recruiters were&#13;
reassigned due to false&#13;
recruitment practices.&#13;
Where is our defense money&#13;
going? In 1973 the advertising&#13;
budget for bumper stickers,&#13;
access to high school graduation&#13;
lists, TV. ads, career days to&#13;
show the glamor and security of&#13;
military life was, in the millions&#13;
of d ollars:&#13;
Army $26.7&#13;
Navy $21.5&#13;
Air Force $12.8&#13;
Marine Corps $6.5&#13;
It seems quite obvious that the&#13;
only parts of military life that are&#13;
left unexploited are the UCMJ&#13;
and the small print.&#13;
*76e Stai' Stofi&#13;
194 4 90&#13;
1 PRESENTS*&#13;
Coming Attractions&#13;
BLOOD M ONEY&#13;
April 25&#13;
DR. B OP&#13;
April 26&#13;
EDEN STONE&#13;
May 2-3&#13;
NEW LEGION R OCK&#13;
SPECTACULAR&#13;
May 9&#13;
ROCKET «8&#13;
May 10&#13;
UNION&#13;
May 16-17&#13;
POINT B LANK&#13;
(Formerly Travis)&#13;
May 23&#13;
CIMMERON SHOW R EVIEW&#13;
May 24&#13;
FREE W HEELING&#13;
May 30&#13;
TRUC&#13;
May 31&#13;
PUNCH&#13;
June 6&#13;
SHANE T ODD&#13;
June 7&#13;
UNION&#13;
June 13-14&#13;
PUNCH&#13;
June 20 &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, April 23, 1975&#13;
Critical need continued from page 1&#13;
existing conditions met the standards in effect at the time of construction&#13;
(1924).&#13;
In their inspection Brust-Zimmerman found numerous water closets&#13;
in cell blocks which had been broken and not yet replaced (Dec. 1974).&#13;
They said that there is an inability to match plumbing connections&#13;
with newer fixtures. Some of the core areas of the jail have insufficient&#13;
air quantities. Summertime ventilation does not meet present-day&#13;
standards because of the lack of individual controls in the air conditioning&#13;
system. The fire alarm system is substandard relative to&#13;
code compliance. Lighting is very poor. Brust-Zimmerman concluded&#13;
that if the building continues as a jail, it will be difficult (almost impossible&#13;
in some areas) to bring the building to complete code compliance.&#13;
&#13;
The greatest problem faced by the present facility is overcrowding.&#13;
The present capacity of the jail is 66 in cluding Huber law inmates,&#13;
according to Capt. Schoenfeld. On "busy" days there are 80 or more&#13;
individuals held in cramped quarters. Many of those being held&#13;
haven't been convicted of anything but are merely awaiting trial.&#13;
Juveniles are housed at the jail since Kenosha County presently has no&#13;
maximum security facilities for delinquent juveniles. Because&#13;
Wisconsin state law requires that juveniles be kept separate from&#13;
adults, occasionally entire cell blocks of adults must be cleared out to&#13;
house the juveniles (adding to the already overcrowded conditions).&#13;
Extreme overcrowding could lead to security problems for the inmates&#13;
as well as the staff members.&#13;
The Arthur Young Association outlined the inadequacies of the&#13;
present facility in their final report to the Jail Committee in December&#13;
1974. Included in the report were the following:&#13;
1) Existing cells do not meet Wisconsin State Standards relative to&#13;
size (length and width).&#13;
2) The existing Huber dorm has one shower, two lavatories and two&#13;
toilets. If State standards were applied relative to the shower, six&#13;
inmates could be housed; relative to the lavatories and toilets, twelve&#13;
could be accommodated. In 1973 a daily average Huber population of&#13;
28 inmates were housed in the one dormitory.&#13;
3) A wash-laundry sink is located in each 6-cell block for use by the&#13;
inmates. Prisoners are not issued washable standard jail clothing and&#13;
the tub-laundry is inappropriate in terms of today's fabrics.&#13;
4) The existing kitchen area is not conducive to efficient food&#13;
preparation, with food handling, cooking, and tray filling operatives&#13;
too close together.&#13;
35) Food is prepared by matrons with no prior institutional cooking&#13;
experience or training and is "informally prepared." No standards on&#13;
nutritional content, portion control or food cost accounting presently&#13;
exist.&#13;
6) There are no central dining areas. Food trays are passed to the&#13;
prisoners through slots from the guard corridor.&#13;
7) There are no medical facilities in the jail; nor is a medical&#13;
examination given at any time during incarceration unless&#13;
specifically requested by an inmate.&#13;
8) There is a total lack of space for visiting purposes. The two&#13;
parties must shout at each other through a solid steel door.&#13;
9) There is a total lack of s pace for recreation purposes, inside or&#13;
butside.&#13;
10) There is a total lack of s pace for use in providing educational,&#13;
counseling or vocational programs. There is a total lack of&#13;
rehabilitative or counseling services.&#13;
In addition, the study pointed out the inadequacies of the Sheriff's&#13;
administrative area. They found that almost all administrative office&#13;
space is extremely crowded with a minimum of privacy for each&#13;
employee. The "management area" of the administrative portion is&#13;
essentially inaccessible to the public. The public counter area itself&#13;
has minimal waiting space with no chairs or benches (two benches are&#13;
present in the main public hallway). The study reported that such&#13;
problems contribute to personnel inefficiency, low employee morale,&#13;
poor public relations, and generally ineffective departmental&#13;
operation.&#13;
Capt. Schoenfeld reiterated the problems faced by the existing&#13;
facility, saying that the overcrowding creates inefficiency within the&#13;
department, contributes to low morale and creates poor living conditions&#13;
for the inmates, which leaves them dissatisfied and builds up&#13;
tension and animosity.&#13;
District Attorney Bruce Schroeder called the present jail facility "a&#13;
hole." He said that it has no rehabilitative capacities; all it does is&#13;
keep people locked up behind bars. Schroeder feels that the present&#13;
jail's major shortcoming is in the area of juveniles, saying that there&#13;
is no worse place to keep a juvenile being detained.&#13;
Schroeder said that judges occasionally will be hesitant to place&#13;
offenders in jail because of the poor conditions. There are cases, he&#13;
feels, where persons should be jailed for punishment because of the&#13;
danger of their crime (reckless use of w eapons, drunk driving, etc.)&#13;
but the judges hesitate to send them to jail-especially if they are&#13;
otherwise respectable citizens.&#13;
The Arthur Young Study also investigated the possibility of ho using&#13;
the Sheriff and Police Departments together and consolidating some&#13;
of the Law Enforcement Support functions. The study pointed out that&#13;
this plan would not result in great cost savings but would result in&#13;
increased cooperation, efficiency and service between the two&#13;
agencies as well as within the community.&#13;
The two agencies would remain separate but would combine such&#13;
functions as communications, records, criminalistics and photo&#13;
development, training-assembly, library, polygraph room, property&#13;
storage, firing range-armory, locker rooms, physical fitness, press&#13;
room, conference rooms and public fingerprinting.&#13;
The plan would require less space than if the agencies resided in two&#13;
separate facilities. Fewer people would be required in some functions&#13;
and, most importantly, the study felt higher levels of internal and&#13;
public service could be realized.&#13;
Supervisor Capriotti said the Jail Study Committee would look into&#13;
the possibility of a combined facility but emphasized that the two&#13;
agencies would retain their separate identities.&#13;
Art&#13;
show&#13;
The Heiring Eindecher,&#13;
by Jim Heiring. paintings compared to the number of other works, which included&#13;
painting, jewelry, ceramics, sculpture, textiles, photography,&#13;
drawing and print making.&#13;
According to Kathie Bouterse, coordinator, in opening the fair last&#13;
night, "We are inaugurating what the Sushine Student Art Co-op hopes&#13;
to make a tradition at Parkside."&#13;
This untitled metal sculpture was voted second highest entry in the jurying Friday. It is by Kathie&#13;
Bouterse, president of the Sunshine Art Co-op and coordinator of the fair.&#13;
Wood S culpture, untitled, by John Kruse.&#13;
by Jeff Swenki&#13;
of RANGER staff&#13;
On Friday, April 19, judging for the student art fair took place in CA&#13;
D-155a. The 135 entries were judged by Parkside art students on a&#13;
scale from 1 to 5, with the highest scoring entries being chosen for the&#13;
fair. There were approximately 70 entries chosen.&#13;
Gary Huck, juror, commented that he thought there were too many &#13;
Survey&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, April 23, 1975 7&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
will affect air and water quality&#13;
and the local economy and obviously&#13;
will affect the region's&#13;
power availability.&#13;
The results of the survey show,&#13;
at least among members of the&#13;
Parkside community, that&#13;
decisions are based upon instinct&#13;
or personal feelings, rather than&#13;
knowledge. Similar results have&#13;
been found in other parts of the&#13;
state.&#13;
The knowledge portion of the&#13;
questioneer used by the environmental&#13;
communications&#13;
class consisted of 15 questions,&#13;
some taken or modified from the&#13;
University of Wisconsin survey,&#13;
others were composed by the&#13;
class.&#13;
The survey also showed that&#13;
most of those surveyed received&#13;
most of their information about&#13;
nuclear energy from schools (23&#13;
percent), while 19 percent&#13;
learned from newspapers and the&#13;
same amount from personal&#13;
reading. Eighteen percent used a&#13;
variety of sources other than&#13;
those listed in the questioneer.&#13;
Another 16 percent relied on&#13;
teleivision and six percent got&#13;
their information from radio.&#13;
The most-missed question&#13;
asked what was the current&#13;
method of storing high-level&#13;
radioactive wastes. Eleven&#13;
percent answered correctly, that&#13;
the wastes are stored in boiling&#13;
form as a liquid in metal containers.&#13;
&#13;
Over 80,000,000 gallons of highlevel&#13;
radioactive wastes are&#13;
stored as a liquid in about 20&#13;
concrete encased, steel tanks&#13;
buried at Atomic Energy Commission&#13;
AEC) sites in&#13;
Washington, South Carolina,&#13;
Idaho and New York.&#13;
The tanks are expected to last,&#13;
at most, 20 years before requiring&#13;
replacement. Since radioactive&#13;
fission products are stored in&#13;
strong nitric acid solutions, tanks&#13;
tend to leak.&#13;
At Ha nford, Washington, 15 of&#13;
Jassifiedthe&#13;
15.1 tanks developed leaks&#13;
mm 7&#13;
i(£ of 20 years and&#13;
200,000 of 74 million gallons&#13;
seeped into the ground.&#13;
The AEC (now the Nuclear&#13;
Kegulatory Commission (NRC))&#13;
feels that tank storage is no&#13;
onger a viable approach to&#13;
radioactive waste disposal. The&#13;
new plant is to convert liquid&#13;
wastes into solids and store them&#13;
above ground concrete structures.&#13;
Even this is a temporary&#13;
measure , since the deadly wastes&#13;
must be isolated for thousands of&#13;
years.&#13;
The AEC has studied the&#13;
Possibility of using salt mines as&#13;
a permanent repository for&#13;
solidified wastes. But oil and&#13;
water well holes were found in&#13;
the area and the possibility of&#13;
water leaking into the mines&#13;
became a real problem. The&#13;
Club and the State of Kansas&#13;
attempted to block the plan. The&#13;
AEC announced in May, 1972, the&#13;
temporary abandonment of the&#13;
plan.&#13;
Another frequently missed&#13;
question was "to date, there has&#13;
been no leakage of radioactive&#13;
materials in the transport from&#13;
fuel enrichment centers to&#13;
nuclear power plants."&#13;
Thirteen percent had the&#13;
correct response-that no leaks&#13;
have been discovered. There&#13;
have been accidents involving&#13;
trucks carrying fuel to nuclear&#13;
plants but there has never been&#13;
any release of radioactive&#13;
material as a result. There has&#13;
been release of radioactive&#13;
material in transit, but most of&#13;
the cases involved, sources other&#13;
than radioactive fuel such as&#13;
medical or industrial isotopes.&#13;
ENERGY SURVEY R ESULTS&#13;
Group&#13;
Student&#13;
Number&#13;
157 Per cent ri&#13;
38.87&#13;
Faculty 38 45.73&#13;
Staff 5 46.67&#13;
Others 2&#13;
Education&#13;
—&#13;
High School 8 32.93&#13;
Freshrrian 32 36.00&#13;
Sophomore 31 33.53&#13;
Junior 42 37.00&#13;
Senior 41 42.67&#13;
Higher 52&#13;
Age&#13;
45.21&#13;
20 and uncer 64 34.13&#13;
21-25 68 43.40&#13;
26-35 46 41.47&#13;
36-45 16 41.33&#13;
over 45 12&#13;
Academic Interest&#13;
47.20&#13;
Humanities 32 37.13&#13;
Social Science 47 39.27&#13;
Science 60 47.20&#13;
Education 14 34.67&#13;
Business 19 40.60&#13;
Engineering 3 —&#13;
Undecided 21&#13;
Residency&#13;
28.54&#13;
Kenosha 82 36.47&#13;
Racine 101 45.07&#13;
Other 20 34.35&#13;
Wanted ride between 1538 Arthur&#13;
Avenue, Racine and Parkside. Work&#13;
from 8 a.m to &lt;1:30 p.m. Am deaf blind.&#13;
Have guide dog. Will explain simple&#13;
method of communication Call 632 0702&#13;
or 553 2303&#13;
For Sale, l bicycle, Nishiki 5 speed. 2&#13;
Black &amp; White portable T V s 652 7686.&#13;
Used books for sale 8th Ave. Bookstore,&#13;
•1601 8th Ave., Kenosha.&#13;
For Sale German Shephard Puppies&#13;
'hampionship breed by professional&#13;
breeder. $125 150, contact John in nurses&#13;
office of call I 539 27 73.&#13;
FUTU RE CPA'S learn how to prepare&#13;
•or the CPA Exam Becker CPA Review&#13;
Course Call Colle ct, Milwaukee 413 276&#13;
7271.&#13;
m GECffllJCM&#13;
EIL E M A N '&#13;
.01J Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
The major concern over&#13;
transportation of radioactive&#13;
materials involves the large&#13;
increase in such shipments as the&#13;
nuclear industry grows. Although&#13;
shipments of pure fuel are much&#13;
less radioactive than shipments&#13;
of used fuel, there is some concern&#13;
over the theft or hijacking of&#13;
this fresh fuel for the construction&#13;
of nuclear bombs,&#13;
particularly if plutonium is used&#13;
as a reactor fuel.&#13;
The shipment of high level&#13;
liquid wastes from nuclear plants&#13;
to reprocessing plants poses the&#13;
greatest problem. The possibility&#13;
of a major accident or release of&#13;
radioactive wastes will increase&#13;
with the number of shipments.&#13;
And the number of casks of spent&#13;
fuel shipped annually is expected&#13;
to rise from 30 in 1970 to 9,500 in&#13;
the year 2000.&#13;
About a third of those&#13;
questioned knew that uranium&#13;
tailings containing large quantities&#13;
of radium or other&#13;
radioactive materials have been&#13;
piled near uranium mills where&#13;
they are exposed to erosion by&#13;
wind and rain.&#13;
Uranium waste has been left in&#13;
the area of mines or uranium ore&#13;
mills in Colorado, Utah, New&#13;
Mexico, Arizona and other&#13;
western states. Over 5,000 ac res&#13;
serve as a permanent storage&#13;
place for the tailings and 12,000&#13;
acres from temporary storage&#13;
sites for tailings from uranium&#13;
mines. A study of one such site in&#13;
Utah showed higher levels of&#13;
background radioactivity than&#13;
natural in areas downwind from&#13;
the sites. Ground water samples&#13;
in the area also showed higher&#13;
radioactivity levels than normal.&#13;
About 75 percent were right&#13;
when they said thermal pollution&#13;
may reduce the recreational&#13;
value of water by heating it and&#13;
increasing the growth of algae&#13;
and at the same time recuce the&#13;
waste assimilation capacity of&#13;
the receiving body of water.&#13;
Student debts&#13;
(CPS)-A move to roadblock the growing number of recent&#13;
graduates who have claimed bankruptcy on student loan debts is&#13;
underway in Congress.&#13;
Declaring bankruptcy-where financial liabilities exceed assets-is a&#13;
small but growing part of the national student loan default picture,&#13;
according to student loan specialists. Some of t hese specialists claim&#13;
increasing use of bankruptcy procedures could eventually destroy the&#13;
student loan programs.&#13;
."While it is true that, so far, only a small proportion of student loan&#13;
defaults are attributable to bankruptcy procedures," warned United&#13;
Student Aid Fund President Charles Meares, "this proportion is&#13;
growing rapidly as more and more student loan borrowers become&#13;
aware of the availability of the bankruptcy route."&#13;
Meares, along with representatives from five national higher&#13;
education groups, have supported a proposal before a Senate subcommittee&#13;
to suspend for five years bankruptcy privileges for student&#13;
loans. A bill permanently amending the Bankruptcy Act to provide for&#13;
this change has already been introduced in the House.&#13;
"Practically any student just emerging from college with a burden&#13;
of student loan debts can demonstrate that his or her liabilities exceed&#13;
his or her assets," said Meares.&#13;
Meares argued that "a proper distinction ought to be made between&#13;
student loans and other kinds of l oans" because student loans carry&#13;
especially low interest rates, the lender is a non-profit institution, arid&#13;
the money is loaned without collateral in the belief that the student will&#13;
have high earnings in the future.&#13;
AMERICAN&#13;
STATE BANK&#13;
3928 - 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.D. I .C.&#13;
DINO'S&#13;
1816 16 Street&#13;
Racine, W isconsin&#13;
PHONE 634-1991&#13;
PICK UP OR&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS&#13;
DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME&#13;
FINE FOODS&#13;
&amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
"On Tap at the Union"&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEAFOOD&#13;
CHOPS&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
LASAGANA&#13;
RAVIOLI&#13;
MOST ACCIOLI&#13;
GNOCCHI&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT DRINKS&#13;
WINES&#13;
A Different&#13;
&gt;) type of&#13;
Saturday Night&#13;
RED'S ROLLER RINK&#13;
6220-67 st. Ph. 6 52-8198 Kenosha &#13;
A spirited scene from "The Physician in Spite of Himself" finds, left to right, Michael Clickner.&#13;
Racine; Michael Ward, Racine; and Phil Livingston, Kenosha; in a comic moment.&#13;
Baseball&#13;
season&#13;
at&#13;
UW-P&#13;
UW-Parkside's baseball team&#13;
will try again to open its season,&#13;
this time against the UWMadison&#13;
junior varsity in a&#13;
Saturday doubleheader at&#13;
Horlick Field in Racine. Starting&#13;
time is 12 noon.&#13;
Coach Ken (Red) Oberbruner's&#13;
Rangers haven't even been able&#13;
to get outdoors yet because of t he&#13;
weather and their first five twin&#13;
bills have been cancelled.&#13;
The veteran coach, however,&#13;
thinks his club will rebound from&#13;
last year's 6-16 record in&#13;
Parkside's first year of varsity&#13;
baseball.&#13;
"Good pitching and sound&#13;
defense will be the cornerstone of&#13;
our team," Oberbruner said.&#13;
"I've got only four pitchers but&#13;
they should win their share of&#13;
games and our strongest point is&#13;
our infield.&#13;
"We're anxious to get out and&#13;
play," he added. "One-third of&#13;
our season is over and we haven't&#13;
played a game. An athlete can&#13;
only perform on the field and ours&#13;
are ready to go."&#13;
Oberbruner lists his infield&#13;
starters and back-up men as the&#13;
team's strong suit, along with an&#13;
experienced pitching staff that&#13;
includes three letterwinners.&#13;
The Rangers will also attempt&#13;
to play at Waukesha Tech on&#13;
Monday and at Carroll the&#13;
following Friday (April 18)&#13;
before returning home to meet St.&#13;
Norbert at noon Saturday, April&#13;
19. All dates, both home and&#13;
away, are doubleheaders.&#13;
Complete Food &amp; Vending&#13;
Service&#13;
OPEN:&#13;
MON. T HRU THURS.&#13;
7:30 A.M.-6:30 P.M.&#13;
FRIDAY&#13;
7-.30 A.M.-4:30 P.M.&#13;
Library Learning Center&#13;
BUFFET ROOMS&#13;
11:00 A.M.-1:30 P.M.&#13;
S&amp;uusuf Ute. QineAt&#13;
PiwaJ* Oialiatt Qoodi.&#13;
~&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA-551-7171&#13;
LIQUOR STORE. BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
Sv*if&lt; IiIh ,ik|&#13;
24 hours&#13;
FREE&#13;
CONFIDENTIAL&#13;
COUNSELING&#13;
AND GENERAL&#13;
INFORMATION&#13;
1712 -571h street&#13;
e58-help&#13;
I J&#13;
The Players of UW-Parkside present&#13;
An evening of farces by Moliere&#13;
The Physician in Spite&#13;
of Himself&#13;
and&#13;
The Jealous Husband&#13;
8 P.M. APRIL 24-25-26-27&#13;
Adm. $ 2 public -&#13;
$ 1 students&#13;
Tickets at the door&#13;
Communication Arts Theater UW-Parkside&#13;
(Theater parking in the Comm Arts lot. Enter from&#13;
Wood Rd. or Hy J-R)&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, April 23, 1975&#13;
Summer&#13;
timetable&#13;
Copies of the UW-Parkside's 1975 Summer Session Timetable now&#13;
are available at the Registrar's Office in Tallent Hall and at the Information&#13;
Center in Wyllie Library-Learning Center.&#13;
Registration will be held June 11 through 13 for the eight-week&#13;
session, which runs from June 16 through August 8.&#13;
The timetable lists 135 courses plus a variety of independent study&#13;
options in 27 different academic areas. Sixty-nine of the courses are&#13;
offered in the late afternoon and evening for the convenience of la te&#13;
sleepers and persons with daytime employment.&#13;
The disciplines of earth science, education, life science and physical&#13;
education are offering four-week, one-credit modular courses in addition&#13;
to eight-week courses.&#13;
Last summer, 1854 students enrolled for the Parkside summer&#13;
session. Enrollment for summer '73 was 1614.&#13;
g e ^Ui e&#13;
©luce ^&gt;t)oppe&#13;
OPEN&#13;
Mon. thru Thurs.&#13;
10 A.M. -&#13;
y 4 P.M.&#13;
Fri. 10 A.M.-2:30 P.M.&#13;
Located on Concourse&#13;
between Library&#13;
learning center &amp;&#13;
Greenquist Hall&#13;
We'll help you do&#13;
what's best for you.&#13;
Choose your skill and earn good pay in the&#13;
Air Force. Benefits include: advancement&#13;
opportunity, 30 days' paid vacation, travel,&#13;
job s ecurity, and medical care.&#13;
Contact your Air Force Recruiter&#13;
Sgt. Dan Christoffersen at 419 Main St..Racine&#13;
or call 414-632-6487 collect.&#13;
Look up. Be looked up to.&#13;
Air Force&#13;
Now Have&#13;
Breakfast at&#13;
Bonanza&#13;
•Full Breakfast Menue&#13;
•Beginning at 5:30 A.M.w&#13;
Daily&#13;
love ftTfouTl love ft.&#13;
AVAILABLE IN KENOSHA ONLY </text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Education quality may fail</text>
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              <text>Committee review&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
RANGER&#13;
•Wednesday, March 26, 1975 Vol. Ill No. 30&#13;
Propose change in&#13;
grade policy&#13;
President Weaver&#13;
Ed. quality may fall&#13;
by Paul M. Anderson&#13;
of Ranger Staff&#13;
If University of Wisconsin&#13;
budgetary cutbacks demand a&#13;
tradeoff between quality and&#13;
accessibility of higher education&#13;
in Wisconsin, then maintaining&#13;
quality will take top priority,&#13;
John C. Weaver, president of the&#13;
UW System, told a State&#13;
Legislative joint committee last&#13;
Wednesday in Madison.&#13;
"We have taken very seriously&#13;
in the intent of state government&#13;
for economy and retrenchment,"&#13;
said Weaver. "(But,) the only&#13;
way we're really going to save&#13;
any drastic amounts of money is&#13;
to deny educational opportunity&#13;
to some specific number of&#13;
students."&#13;
Weaver's remarks came&#13;
during a joint session of the&#13;
Senate and Assembly education&#13;
committees. The committees are&#13;
attempting to assess the effects&#13;
of Gov. Patrick J. Lucey's&#13;
proposed UW budget on&#13;
educational policies.&#13;
Weaver told the 20-member&#13;
panel that he doesn't want to see&#13;
"Wisconsin give anybody second&#13;
class education." He also made&#13;
an appeal for the restoration of&#13;
some $24.7-million to the&#13;
Regents' proposed 1975-'77&#13;
budget.&#13;
Late last year, the Regents&#13;
asked the state for $683-million&#13;
for the biennium, exclusive of&#13;
faculty compensation proposals&#13;
being considered on a separate&#13;
budgetary track. Gov. Lucey&#13;
recommended approval of $606.6&#13;
million.&#13;
The 1973-75 UW budget included&#13;
$579.9-million in state&#13;
funds.&#13;
For the upcoming biennium,&#13;
the Regents requested increases&#13;
in 30 budget areas; Gov. Lucey&#13;
disapproved all 30 requests,&#13;
except for automatic increases in&#13;
the sum sufficient accounts for&#13;
utilities.&#13;
Weaver, appearing with other&#13;
key UW administrators, urged&#13;
the restoration of funds in four of&#13;
the thirty areas-a request which&#13;
carries a $24.7-million price tag:&#13;
Restore $9.5 - million in state&#13;
funds to teach an estimated 6,000&#13;
new students that will enter the&#13;
UW system in 1975-77.&#13;
"Enrollments are continueing&#13;
to rise on virtually all university&#13;
campuses," said Weaver.&#13;
He cited that the Governor&#13;
made "sever reference to&#13;
enrollment declines" in the&#13;
future.&#13;
Lucey told the Regents in&#13;
January to begin planning for&#13;
Students demonstrate&#13;
i i Imperialist war / #&#13;
by Paul M. Anderson&#13;
of RANGER staff&#13;
MADISON-About 600 demonstrators marched from the University&#13;
of Wiscon sin campus to the state capitol here Saturday, demanding a&#13;
complete cut-off of A merican supplies, funds and military equipment&#13;
and personnel to South Vietnam and Cambodia.&#13;
Chants of "No more Imperialist war" arose from the group as they&#13;
made the 20-minute march up State Street from the campus to the&#13;
Capitol.&#13;
Early afternoon traffic was tied and backed up for blocks a.t some&#13;
intersections, as the block-long band, escorted front and rear by&#13;
police, made their way to the cascading stairs leading to the top of&#13;
Capitol hill.&#13;
A host of camera-clad photographers and TV newsmen led the&#13;
group, kneeling and retreating until the group reached the Capitol and&#13;
gathered around the west portico.&#13;
I^ong clot h banners and numerous posters rose above the crowd,&#13;
reading "Victory to the Indochinese People," "U.S. Out NowCambodia,&#13;
Vietnam," "No U.S. Arms to Ethopia or Southeast Asia,"&#13;
and "For International Working Class Solidarity."&#13;
Several groups of students and distracted shoppers watched as&#13;
speakers representing various campus affiliations took the podium&#13;
and made an hour-long presentation.&#13;
Ms. Debra Foster, a representative of the United Front in Madison,&#13;
addressed the crowd, calling for "complete independence of Indochina,"&#13;
and making numerous accusations of the U.S. installing&#13;
"puppet governments" in Southeast Asia and in other parts of the&#13;
world.&#13;
She cited that the "National Liberation Forces" are sweeping the&#13;
northwest provinces of South Vietnam, with what she termed "deeply&#13;
rooted people support."&#13;
She added, "Saigon forces are not fighting for their army; they were&#13;
recruited against their own will."&#13;
Ms. Foster claimed that the National Liberation forces are fighting&#13;
for the country in an attempt to restore the "historical unity of North&#13;
"phasing down, phasing out, or&#13;
consolidating university&#13;
programs and campuses" to&#13;
meet projected deadlines. A list&#13;
of "guidelines" for meeting&#13;
future forcasts are to be submitted&#13;
to him by April 15th.&#13;
Weaver however, that "there is&#13;
much public misunderstanding&#13;
as to the magnitude of enrollment&#13;
declines and the time they will&#13;
occur."&#13;
"Our enrollments will increase&#13;
for the next five years," he said,&#13;
"and will not stop until 10 years&#13;
from now."&#13;
He added that in the early&#13;
1990s-the low point in the future&#13;
projected enrollment-the&#13;
number of students attending UW&#13;
will equal the number enrolled in&#13;
1969.&#13;
Weaver also speculated that&#13;
the governor may have&#13;
"ignored" one important aspect&#13;
of education in the future: he said&#13;
that the forecasts consider only&#13;
college age youth, and exclude&#13;
the increasing need of adult&#13;
education in a changing society.&#13;
"We may face growth if we&#13;
meet the services asked for by&#13;
the people of t he state," he said.&#13;
Restore $7.7 million to offset&#13;
the loss of purchasing power for&#13;
essential teaching and library&#13;
continued on page 7&#13;
Among topics under discussion&#13;
at last Wednesday's Academic&#13;
Planning Committee meeting,&#13;
was a proposal that Parkside&#13;
investigate the possibilities of a&#13;
change in grading policy. As&#13;
described by Assoc. Prof. Wayne&#13;
Johnson, chairman of the committee,&#13;
the proposed system is&#13;
now being used at the Madison&#13;
Campus, and would include a&#13;
plus and minus policy.&#13;
Using the standard "A, B, C,&#13;
D" letter grading system has&#13;
been the policy at Parkside, but&#13;
the new proposal would make it&#13;
possible for students to earn a&#13;
plus or minus with the letter&#13;
grade. This change, if adopted&#13;
would be carried into gradepoint&#13;
averages, with each one point&#13;
grade being divided into thirds.&#13;
Disadvantages of the system&#13;
"Pitch In!"&#13;
would be the cost of computerization&#13;
at a time when&#13;
budgets are being cut. It was also&#13;
noted that "migration" might&#13;
still occur, resulting in the&#13;
grading system clustering into&#13;
grade catagories. One advantage&#13;
to the proposed system, according&#13;
to Johnson, is that it&#13;
would give a more accurate indication&#13;
of st udent performance.&#13;
He feels that "our current system&#13;
has a sharp breaking point, and&#13;
at times the decision seems&#13;
unfair."&#13;
Additional research on the&#13;
system is being done by student&#13;
committee member James D.&#13;
Smith. Students wishing to&#13;
submit their opinions concerning&#13;
the proposed change, are encouraged&#13;
to write Wayne&#13;
Johnson.&#13;
UWP award winner&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
has been notified that it&#13;
is among 1974 Merit Award&#13;
winners in the National College'&#13;
"Pitch In!" Week program, an&#13;
annual ecological effort sponsored&#13;
by Budweiser and ABC&#13;
radio. Parkside is the only&#13;
Wisconsin school among the&#13;
winners.&#13;
The award-winning program at&#13;
Parkside involved planting of a&#13;
number of trees and shrubs and a&#13;
general clean-up on the campus.&#13;
The Parkside Veterans Club and&#13;
a number of other student groups&#13;
and individuals participated. The&#13;
program was coordinated by Jan&#13;
related story&#13;
page 7&#13;
Ocker, executive director of&#13;
student services.&#13;
The 1975 "Pitch In!" program&#13;
will be held April 7 through 11.&#13;
Last Saturday's Madison demonstrators&#13;
heard numerous speakers on American&#13;
involvement in the Indochina war.&#13;
and South Vietnam."&#13;
"In Vietnam," she said, "the puppet army is retreating-beyond&#13;
anybody's expectations."&#13;
Meanwhile, Madison newspapers carried wire service reports that&#13;
communist-led North Vietnamese forces now control all of the South&#13;
Vietnam western central highlands stretching from Kontum in the&#13;
north, 200 miles south through Phuoc Long to within 50 miles of Saigon.&#13;
In addition, the reports claimed that two U.S. cargo planes in&#13;
Cambodia were reported hit by rocket fire, forcing a temporary&#13;
suspension of the American airlift there.&#13;
During the rally, leaflets were distributed at street corners by a&#13;
group called "Friends of INPRECOR Co-thinkers of the Fourth International."&#13;
The leaflets called for a "victory to the Liberation&#13;
Forces of S outheast Asia" and "victory to the Liberation Forces of&#13;
Ethopia."&#13;
The final paragraphs of the leaflet read:&#13;
"The Pentagon has ordered the helicopter carrier Okinawa, with a&#13;
battalion of marines aboard, to stand by in the Gulf of Siam off&#13;
Cambodia, and has alerted a marine unit on Okinawa for possible&#13;
'evacuation duty in Cambpdia' ." Washington has already funneled&#13;
some $1.8 billion to its Cambodian clients, and about $5 billion has been&#13;
spent on bombing the countryside.&#13;
"The revulsion of th e American people at the ruthless slaughter in&#13;
continued on page 6&#13;
Career&#13;
center&#13;
explained&#13;
by Gary Nickolai&#13;
of Ranger Staff&#13;
Designed to aid all students,&#13;
ranging from the beginning&#13;
freshman to the alumni career&#13;
changers, the Career Resource&#13;
Center offers a vast wealth of&#13;
information to any individual&#13;
who will take advantage of this&#13;
unique service. Located on the&#13;
first floor of Tallent Hall, the&#13;
Center became an organized&#13;
entity after the creation of the&#13;
Office of Career Planning &amp;&#13;
Placement in July, 1973, but it&#13;
was not until the Spring of 1974&#13;
that the Center's present&#13;
operational nature was realized.&#13;
Mr. John F. Elmore, Director&#13;
of Planning &amp; P lacement stated&#13;
that the Center's purpose is to&#13;
provide University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
students with the&#13;
necessary materials for them to&#13;
explore career opportunities in a&#13;
wide variety of alternatives. He&#13;
further explained that due to the&#13;
wide disparity between the needs&#13;
of different students very general&#13;
information is made available as&#13;
well as specific materials. All&#13;
resources are divided into three&#13;
continued on page 6 &#13;
2 T H E PARKSIDE RANG ER Wednesday, March 2 6 , 1 9 7 5&#13;
Fun loon explain&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In reply to the letter to the&#13;
editor concerning the Fun Loan, I&#13;
would like to make the following&#13;
comments:&#13;
1' The most anyone would have&#13;
to pay for usage is a $.25 service&#13;
charge and a $1.00 fine if paid&#13;
back after 10 school days. No&#13;
additional charges will be&#13;
Surveying the greens&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am shocked at the way the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
has neglected to take care of the&#13;
plants distributed throughout the&#13;
building. I am sure our taxes and&#13;
tuition pays the caretakers of this&#13;
building well enough to keep&#13;
these plants living.&#13;
I am not a Horticulture major,&#13;
nor do I have a green thumb, but I&#13;
do know enough about plants to&#13;
be able to see that 75 percent of&#13;
the once full of life organisms are&#13;
dying. Their green have turned&#13;
brown from lack of water, plant&#13;
food (such as fertilizers) and&#13;
general care. If you will take the&#13;
time to look at them, the roots of&#13;
many of the plants have out&#13;
assessed. The only reason tor the&#13;
$1.00 late payment fine is to&#13;
encourage quick turnover so&#13;
more students could utilize the&#13;
fund. It is not cumulative.&#13;
2) The money in the fund&#13;
belongs to the students and is&#13;
only supervised by UWP for&#13;
convenience. It does not belong to&#13;
any single organization;&#13;
therefore, no organization can&#13;
grown the pots that they were&#13;
planted in. Would you send your&#13;
children to school in a pair of&#13;
shoes that they have out grown&#13;
years ago?&#13;
The care of these plants is&#13;
probably not easy and probably&#13;
very time consuming, but if we&#13;
cannot afford to have them&#13;
properly cared for, they don't&#13;
belong here. They are living just&#13;
as we are, and the pushing&#13;
around they get from the students&#13;
hurts them.&#13;
Take a good look at them. Their&#13;
sick leaves should be pulled off t o&#13;
avoid further infection. Do you&#13;
realize that without plants the&#13;
human being cannot exist? Inpossibly&#13;
make a revenue from it.&#13;
The service charge and late&#13;
payment fine will go back into the&#13;
fund to build it so more loans can&#13;
be given out.&#13;
If the writer of the last letter&#13;
had understood these points, I'm&#13;
sure he would not have needed to&#13;
make his criticisms.&#13;
David J. Brandt&#13;
stead of abusing them, we should&#13;
stop and be thankful for them.&#13;
Please take the time to give&#13;
them proper care. If Parkside&#13;
can keep their floors shining,&#13;
their windows clean, their&#13;
bathrooms sanitary, and yet let&#13;
its plants die, well all I can say is&#13;
I'd be ashamed to bring my&#13;
friends who are Horticulture&#13;
majors on a tour through the&#13;
University that I so highly speak&#13;
of.&#13;
Very Concerned Students&#13;
Gail Allison Lamar&#13;
Randy Hughes&#13;
P.S. Have you thanked a green&#13;
plant today?&#13;
Appointment&#13;
Parkside Senior, Doug Redmond, has been appointed News Editor of&#13;
the RANGER newspaper and as a member of the RANGER Board of&#13;
Directors. His responsibilities will include the assigning of a rticles to&#13;
staff writers, editing of articles, and general layout of the paper.&#13;
Redmond is a past president of the Pi Sigma Epsilon business&#13;
fraternity, holds an associate degree in marketing, and was appointed&#13;
by Acting Chancellor Bauer as a member of the Segregated Fees&#13;
Committee. He is currently conducting an attitudinal survey for the&#13;
School of Modern Industry concerning Parkside's image.&#13;
Rerun&#13;
Editors Note: Due to errors in&#13;
the layout of last weeks paper the&#13;
subsequent letter did not run in&#13;
the correct sequence. RANGER&#13;
extends it's apologies for the&#13;
error. The corrected letter&#13;
follows in its entirety.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I truly appreciate the article&#13;
written on March 5, "A Time Of&#13;
Revolt." Your comparisons were&#13;
drawn beautifully and you gave&#13;
one of the most interesting and&#13;
practical history lessons with&#13;
which I have ever come in contact.&#13;
I am writing this letter to&#13;
first express my gratitude, and&#13;
second, to give a warning to the&#13;
student body, faculty, and staff of&#13;
this university.&#13;
God has given each man a will.&#13;
By will I mean the ability to make&#13;
a choice. Now each choice has a&#13;
result. God has. also made each&#13;
man accountable for his own&#13;
chpice.&#13;
Today there is world-wide&#13;
revolution. But against who or&#13;
wh^J; are these revolts taking&#13;
place. Revolution can be seen in&#13;
business, government and&#13;
schools. Children rebel against&#13;
parent, wives against husbands,&#13;
and husbands against God. The&#13;
obvious result is disorder and a&#13;
great lack of love for each other&#13;
and for God.&#13;
The people of America won&#13;
their freedom through revolution.&#13;
You are presently free to the will&#13;
of God because Jesus Christ&#13;
rebelled against the sin in this&#13;
world by dying for each of you.&#13;
You can accept this freedom or&#13;
reject it. It is your perogative.&#13;
BUT YOU ARE RESPONSIBLE&#13;
FOR YOUR OWN DECISION.&#13;
Remember, whenever you&#13;
revolt, think first of whether you&#13;
are rebelling against God or Evil.&#13;
"For the wrath of God is&#13;
revealed against all ungodliness&#13;
and unrighteousness of men who&#13;
hold the truth in&#13;
unrighteousness." - (Rom. 1:18)&#13;
Anthony Burke, President&#13;
Parkside Christian Fellowship&#13;
A Jfaurth Estate&#13;
Among other engines which have raised the present commotion,&#13;
next to the indecent harangues of the preachers none has had a more&#13;
extensive or stronger influence than the newspapers of the respective&#13;
colonies.&#13;
Ambrose Series&#13;
Tory Publisher&#13;
Were it left for me to decide whether we should have a government&#13;
without newspapers, br newspapers without a government, I should&#13;
not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter.&#13;
Thomas Jefferson&#13;
The free Press was born during the struggle between Great Britain&#13;
and ner thirteen North American colonies. It was in the colonies that&#13;
for the first time in world history, a poeple used the mass media for&#13;
uncensored debate, agitation and political organization. A central&#13;
force in the groundswell of democratic thinking, the Free Press&#13;
rapidly 'became vital to the Revolution itself. Newspapers were&#13;
available throughout the colonies, providing information, ideas and&#13;
leadership. Within seventy-two years of its birth, the mass media had&#13;
become a Fourth Estate - a citizen's voice, free of influence from the&#13;
church, aristocracy or government. Such national power in the hands&#13;
of t he public was unheard of in the conservative societies of Europe.&#13;
This Fourth Estate was small but formidable. A mere 49&#13;
newspapers (44 Whig and 5 Tory) comprised the colonial news&#13;
medium by 1783. The average paper printed at most 3000 c opies of&#13;
each issue, but papers were generally handed around or posted on&#13;
walls and read aloud.&#13;
Despite their immense popularity, most newspapers were not&#13;
profitable businesses. Even prominent publishers such as James&#13;
F ranklin and John Zenger led lives of h ard work, political persecution&#13;
and continual poverty. Advertising was not yet essential to most&#13;
businesses, so newspapers were largely dependent for their survival&#13;
upon donations, subscriptions and whatever commercial printing jobs&#13;
their publishers could perform.&#13;
There was an "outlaw" quality to the colonial press. Even before the&#13;
Stamp Act, the majority of Whig papers published without the&#13;
required government permits. Since newspapers were forums for&#13;
public debate, the most rebellious and outrageous ideas often first&#13;
appeared in newsprint. Boycotts on Toryand British goods were announced&#13;
and sometimes organized by the colonial press. The public&#13;
first met Tom Paine, Ben Franklin, Sam Adams and other leaders&#13;
through the pages of the radical media. The colonists depended on&#13;
newspapers for news about the Declaration of. Independence&#13;
government corruption, and Lexington and Concord. It is little wonder&#13;
that the British tried so hard to suppress the media for the&#13;
newspapers kept issues and ideas burning in the public consciousness&#13;
The new-born Free Press gave a sense of unity to many of its&#13;
readers. At last, the thoughts and actions of one region could be known&#13;
and understood quickly by other people near and far. The onceisolated&#13;
colonists could identify common problems, develop common&#13;
tactics and, in time, revolt together as a people. Without the&#13;
revolutionary printers, the democratic movement would have been&#13;
much slower to mature; and the War for Independence much harder&#13;
to initiate and win.&#13;
Today, the mass media is anything but rebellious. Unlike the young&#13;
upstarts who founded the Free Press, today's publishers and broadcasters&#13;
have deeply-rooted interests in keeping society exactly as it is.&#13;
Two-hundred years ago, the Boston Gazette staff organized the Boston&#13;
lea Party. Our present day news establishment would be more likely&#13;
to own the tea company. News today is big business.&#13;
NBC (owned by RCA) is the wealthiest of the networks. It owns,&#13;
among other things, five major publishing .houses and its parent&#13;
company has extensive links with the military due to RCA's electronics&#13;
and computer production. These links were pointed out by&#13;
RCA s past chairman David Sarnoff in 1965 when he addressed the&#13;
Armed Forces Communications and Electronics Association, of w hich&#13;
no" is a permanent director. AFCEA's charter states the&#13;
organization exists to "serve the industrial military team" and Sarnoff&#13;
had these words for,-its annual convention;&#13;
the working alliance of industrial and military leadership&#13;
represented m this organization...has fashioned a community of ineres&#13;
so c o selv interwoven that whatever affects the progress of one&#13;
partner is reflected in the progress of the other.&#13;
&lt;=ALOQTt"&gt;!'VCrT&#13;
perce nt of RCA'S total income during 1964 was from&#13;
s 0 ( government - this was one year before Sarnoff's&#13;
f!^nT quoted above, and the year in which U.S. troops first arrived in&#13;
force in Viet Nam.&#13;
The romantic image of newspapers in hot competition for a local&#13;
scoop is outdated today. Only 14.4 percent of all U.S. cities are served&#13;
i_ °&#13;
re lan uae newspaper. This shortage of diverse sources of new s&#13;
ZZ 1 W0FSe / thG heayy reliance of most papers on AP and UPI&#13;
N 1 VlCe s ories» syndicated editorials and opinion columns.&#13;
one annth^^ different&#13;
-&#13;
cities often seem to be carbon copies of&#13;
l " W1*&#13;
h&#13;
°&#13;
nly the&gt;rnames giving away the difference.&#13;
Hrori a ar (1 ei ent mass media than the one born here two hunvovprnmpnt&#13;
^5°' S&#13;
f&#13;
eking freedom from a wealthy and powerful&#13;
rehellinn tn th 6 C° sts used the Presses to bring their message of&#13;
was inpvnpn ^ "&#13;
a !?"' The press belong&#13;
ed to the people then, for it&#13;
of n ational S1V6&#13;
°&#13;
Pen f&#13;
°&#13;
r comrflunity input. Today, the channels&#13;
o T dPd C°™C,&#13;
ati&#13;
°&#13;
n closed to most of us. Witti the exception&#13;
Press" he Inn G u&#13;
[ "nancially weak alternative papers, our "Free&#13;
vested Slf ^ C°&#13;
rporations&#13;
-&#13;
11 is voice of wealthy and&#13;
about national change"" '°&#13;
nger 3 t001 by WhiCh people migM bri&#13;
"&#13;
g&#13;
Matt Rat0c ; .&#13;
by Matthew Bates&#13;
s a member of t he Storrs, Connecticut PBC. &#13;
Woodcock in Kenosha&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, March 26, 1975 3&#13;
MWHesor* PNU ct$&#13;
Deep recession&#13;
by Susan Shemanske&#13;
of Ranger Staff&#13;
u™ted Auto Workers International Union President Leonard&#13;
woodcock expects signs of a comeback in the economy around July-if&#13;
necessary actions are taken.&#13;
Woodcock described the current recession - the deepest, longest&#13;
recession since 1937 - as "a crisis in confidence" unlike the 1930's.&#13;
The money is out there," he says, adding, "if Washington takes the&#13;
necessary actions we can turn the economy around."&#13;
The 64-year-old head of the UAW was in Kenosha March 17 to speak&#13;
at the annual meeting of the United Way of Kenosha County.&#13;
A native of Rhode Island, Woodcock took over as head of the UAW in&#13;
1970 after Walter Reuther died. He was elected to a full term in 1972&#13;
and reelected to a 3-year term in 1974. Woodcock has been in&#13;
Washington the past several months, asking Congress to take the&#13;
actions necessary to turn the economy around.&#13;
Woodcock praised the Senate for its proposed $30 billion tax cut, an&#13;
increase from the $21.3 billion proposal which he though was too low.&#13;
The tax cuts should be geared to the low and middle income groups&#13;
who will spend the money and not save it, he said.&#13;
Woodcock believes the tax cut should be followed by a five per cent&#13;
tax credit for new housing and reduced withholding tax starting July 1.&#13;
Wisconsins' Congressman Reuss and Senator Proxmire were&#13;
praised for their relentless pressure on the Federal Reserve Board to&#13;
increase the money supply. "Without it, a tax cut would be ineffective,"&#13;
Woodcock said.&#13;
He stressed the need for an employment plan and the revival of the&#13;
public employment program stating that there was no better project&#13;
than the renovation of the railroads.&#13;
A well funded summer youth program to provide jobs for the 18.4 per&#13;
cent unemployed youth (41 per cent among black youths) should be&#13;
undertaken even though it would cost an estimated $1 billion.&#13;
Woodcock said he was asking Congress to pick up the premiums on&#13;
health insurance for those workers layed-off or unemployed stating&#13;
that "the American worker is among the highest paid and most insecure&#13;
- because health insurance is tied to having a job." Ours is the&#13;
only industrial country in the world without a national health insurance&#13;
program. He added that a federally administered unemployment&#13;
compensation program should be effected.&#13;
Other subjects Woodcock addressed himself to were the enerev&#13;
program and the budget deficit.&#13;
Woodcock said the price of OPEC (Organization of Petroleum Exporting&#13;
Countries) countries is slipping. He said that U.S. should not&#13;
reduce oil imports by either taxes or the quota system - pointing out&#13;
that the world has a surplus of oil and the administration's plan to keep&#13;
prices artificially high to justify costs of developing alternative energv&#13;
sources is unreasonable.&#13;
Woodcock called for the establishment of a National Energy&#13;
Production Board, the regulation of natural gas use, the development&#13;
of the huge underground Eastern coal reserves and the development&#13;
of research on solar energy. "Developing alternative resources (of&#13;
energy) should be regulated and subsidized by the federal government,"&#13;
he says, adding that it is necessary for national defense.&#13;
Although many of Woodcock's proposals would make the budget and&#13;
deficit bigger, he did not feel that this would be a great problem.&#13;
"Large deficits are products of recessions," he asserted.&#13;
"The quickest, most sensible way to balance the budget is to use&#13;
whatever stimulus is necessary (including a large deficit) while&#13;
avoiding military entanglements in Southeast Asia."&#13;
Woodcock cautioned against attempting to cut the deficit too rapidly&#13;
as was done during the Eisenhower years. A large deficit must be&#13;
phased out gradually to avoid those problems (three depressions in&#13;
eight years), he said.&#13;
Woodcock concluded, "We can pull ourselves out of this mess we're&#13;
in and I'm confident we are going to do it."&#13;
Task&#13;
Force&#13;
Candidates announcements&#13;
Lee Wagner and Kai C. Nail announced their candidacy for the office&#13;
of President of P.S.G.A. Inc. and Vice-President of P.S.G.A. Inc.&#13;
respectively, today.&#13;
Lee Wagner presents a variety of experiences having worked as&#13;
Housing Director and Consumer Education Co-ordinator for the Urban&#13;
league of Racine. Wagner is the author of a Consumer Education&#13;
Manual currently being used in the Unified School District in Racine.&#13;
Kai C. Nail is running with Lee Wagner as his Vice-Presidential&#13;
nominee. He is currently president of the Concerned Student Coalition&#13;
and is the chairperson of the Campus Concerns Committee's subcommittee&#13;
dealing with increased recognition and support for student&#13;
organizations on campus. Nail also is a student-to-student counselor&#13;
and served on the Search and Screen Committee that approved the&#13;
hiring of three counselors on campus. Nail is 20 years old and is a&#13;
sophomore.&#13;
Discrimination&#13;
John D. Kontz, president pro tempore of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. senate, announced today that he would&#13;
be a candidate for president of the P.S.G.A. Inc. in the upcoming&#13;
general election. Kontz named Thomas J. Olson as his vicepresidential&#13;
running mate.&#13;
Kontz was elected to the P.S.G.A. Inc. senate as an independent&#13;
candidate in April of 1974. In September of 1974 he was elected by the&#13;
senate to serve as president pro tempore and in November was&#13;
reelected to the same office.&#13;
Olson was a member of the Democratic Party, 1972-74, Democratic&#13;
State Convention and District Convention delegate, 1973 an d 1974,&#13;
member of the Executive Board of Kenosha County Democratic&#13;
Party, 1973, member of the Parkside Chess Club, 1972, member of the&#13;
Democratic Youth Caucus of Wisconsin, 1972-. Olson is also currently&#13;
a member of the Parkside Coalition Political Congress.'&#13;
O&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Since enrolling at Parkside, I&#13;
have subsequently witnessed&#13;
more discrimination than any&#13;
federally and state funded institution&#13;
is legally allowed to get&#13;
away with. The main problem is&#13;
the University administrators&#13;
refusal to accept Black and other&#13;
minorities as a visible part of the&#13;
student's life. Parkside's&#13;
basketball team (congratulations&#13;
to the players) predominantly&#13;
Black, have given Parkside a&#13;
new image. Their victorious&#13;
record was good for the players&#13;
and it also gave the school new&#13;
prestige.&#13;
The refusal of the University&#13;
administrators to accept Black&#13;
students as a visible part of&#13;
student life was reflected in the&#13;
recent Black History Week activities&#13;
when the Third World&#13;
Organization was refused a&#13;
special dinner plate at plate&#13;
prices as was reflected on March&#13;
17, St. Patrick's Day in the&#13;
cafeteria when such a dinner&#13;
existed but Third World&#13;
Organization was told it WAS. IN&#13;
VIOLATION OF THE&#13;
UNIVERSITY CONTRACT.&#13;
Third World Organization had to&#13;
suggest that awareness be made&#13;
of Black History Month but "Irish&#13;
Day" comes along and its a&#13;
"GREAT DAY!!!!!" How did the&#13;
Irish contribute to the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside's&#13;
Basketball Team!! At two of&#13;
Parkside's games, six students&#13;
carried signs voicing their&#13;
opinion about Parkside administration's&#13;
abusive power.&#13;
Did the Ranger even once&#13;
acknowledge these students?&#13;
Yet, Ranger saw fit to&#13;
acknowledge a janitor who gets&#13;
paid a good salary to do a job in&#13;
the Canteen. Not only are&#13;
Ranger's opinions of newsworthy&#13;
events questionable, but also&#13;
their policy for criticisms of&#13;
reporters leaves much to be&#13;
desired. Also, correct me if I'm&#13;
wrong, the Ranger has one Black&#13;
reporter. When does he report&#13;
stories? Don't bring up last&#13;
semester's coverage of a Third&#13;
World Organizational meeting!!&#13;
Another outrageous person at&#13;
Parkside is the Student Government&#13;
president. This young man&#13;
is playing with fire and he is on an&#13;
ego trip so heavy he can't see the&#13;
danger. I am not attacking this&#13;
person but what has student&#13;
government done for the&#13;
students? What has Mr.&#13;
President proposed from the&#13;
minority statement?&#13;
These are only a few facts&#13;
where the administration know&#13;
they are lacking. I personally did&#13;
not come to college to be&#13;
ostracized because of my color;&#13;
however, when negotiations fail&#13;
only those who stand as total men&#13;
and women can exist in a white&#13;
supremacy.&#13;
"All men are the same for&#13;
neither has the power to do that&#13;
which was done first. He cannot&#13;
be the source of himself." Taken&#13;
from the African Testament.&#13;
"The Freed Mind"&#13;
Name Withheld&#13;
on request&#13;
by Cathy Mech&#13;
of Ranger Staff&#13;
The question of whether or not&#13;
students were interested enough&#13;
in expressing their opinions was&#13;
raised by Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Dearborn while waiting for&#13;
students and other concerned&#13;
persons to attend the open&#13;
hearing on the Task Force&#13;
Committee for Merger Implementation&#13;
on March 17.&#13;
Two of the students, John Kontz&#13;
and Ed Arndt, read statements.&#13;
Kontz statement included&#13;
recommendations for the size of&#13;
student government, the amount&#13;
of time after elections before&#13;
assumption of office, and the&#13;
equality of numbers of students&#13;
as compared to faculty on&#13;
various committees. Arndt stated&#13;
his support for the Kontz&#13;
statement and commended the&#13;
committee for the work they&#13;
were performing. Both Kontz and&#13;
Arndt felt the proposed&#13;
representation of students in the&#13;
student senate would be too&#13;
cumbersome to work with and&#13;
make it difficult to hold quorum.&#13;
Statements were also submitted&#13;
by Carol Merrick and the&#13;
executive Council of Parkside&#13;
Activities Board. Merrick felt&#13;
citizens from Racine and&#13;
Kenosha counties should also be&#13;
allowed to sit on committees&#13;
since Parksides "primary function&#13;
is to serve the community."&#13;
PAB stated that enough time&#13;
has not been given to students&#13;
and faculty "to digest and&#13;
comment on your recommendations."&#13;
&#13;
APPLICATIONS FOR EDITOR&#13;
Applications for the position of Editor-in-chief of&#13;
RANGER 1975-76 must be submitted to Don Kopriva&#13;
Ranger advisor by 12 noon Thursday, April 17, 1975,&#13;
at 288 Tallent Hall.&#13;
Applicants must be Parkside students who will Carry 8 !&#13;
or more credits during each semester of the 1975-76 •&#13;
school year.The position carries a salary of $50 per week.&#13;
Applicants must submit a letter stating plans for RANGER!;&#13;
Ranger experience and qualifications. Applicants will be&#13;
interviewed beginning at 4 P M-,&#13;
Thursday, April 17, in D-174 LLC. &#13;
THE P A RK SI DE R A N GER Wednesday, March 2 6 ,&#13;
Walter&#13;
Ulbrichts&#13;
1975&#13;
LfeNNY&#13;
Film review by Walt Ulbricht&#13;
himsdf S&#13;
°&#13;
Clety WhiCh senselessly Persecuted him, and to&#13;
Eight years after his mysterious death of a heroin overdose («m&#13;
spiracy theories of police complicity still linger) the mat • J&#13;
.&#13;
tclub comedian and S&#13;
°&#13;
dal CritiG has turned int0 a&#13;
' Priceless pearl&#13;
Critics who once branded him as "sick" or "subvert &gt;!! • *&#13;
him as a prophet or genius. To some he .worshippTas aTuhhem&#13;
and a poet of America's spiritual condition ™ ' her&#13;
°&#13;
Bruce's popularity climbs to beatification in Lenny Based on thP&#13;
successful play by Julian Barry, director Bob Fosse's^("Cabien&#13;
interpretation of the witty, self-destructive hipster is a c^matic&#13;
u ogy of a martyred, misunderstood saint. From the opening credits&#13;
Ledpy is alienated, confined, and doomed by an oppressive dSness&#13;
Schneider" SUff0Cates ^ gosP&#13;
el according to Leonard Alfred&#13;
We quickly learn who wears the black hat and who rides the&#13;
nrlfpU l' 6 charger 38 (Dustin Hoffman) exposes his&#13;
p ofessional scars under a harsh spotlight. "Talking makes vou thP&#13;
worst person in the community," he says firmlv grinnina w&#13;
microphone, a fragile umbilical cord through the darkness andWafts'&#13;
of smoke to an audience he cannot completely see oTnh""^&#13;
Pointing it all out: Dustin Hoffman as Lenny Bruce.&#13;
But Lenny Bruce doesn't talk-he gives electric shock treatments:&#13;
We a ll want for a wife, a combination $500 a night hooker and a&#13;
Sunday school teacher." Or, about anti-Semitism, "There should be a&#13;
statute of limitations for killing Christ, but we're still paying for it."&#13;
T e motivation of the brilliant iconoclast is never adequately explained&#13;
m Lenny. Mock documentary scenes with Bruce's wife the&#13;
stripper Honey Harlowe (Valerie Perrine), his mother (Jan Miner)&#13;
and business agent, surrealistically blend past and present events in'&#13;
Lenny s life but never touch a clear, honest basis for his evangelism&#13;
Instead of a rational progression of character, Bruce is painted as a&#13;
Kafkaesque hero. He is trapped in a hostile environment and unable to&#13;
comprehend the justice which condemns him. Although Dustin Hoffman&#13;
superbly captures Bruce's onstage electric improvisation, a&#13;
white-water run of verbal barbs building in force and rhythm like a&#13;
sexual climax, Hoffman is locked into a dead-end role He is&#13;
mysteriously deserted by family, friends and audience while he is&#13;
systemically attacked by the monolithic courts and press for obscenity&#13;
charges. Bruce's vitality and wit disintegrate into a lifeless slag heap&#13;
of painful memories and cold shadows.&#13;
The spirit of Bruce's message is absent in Lenny. He saw our society&#13;
as a garbage can of h yprocisy, bigotry and ignorance, but he placed&#13;
his bets on our innate wisdom, unpolluted by contemporary lies and&#13;
b* ""U &gt;&#13;
We are the creators of our environment, he said, the dictators of our&#13;
destiny, ^&#13;
CAMPUS MINISTERS ANNOUNCE HOLY WEEK SCHEDULE&#13;
AND INVITE YOUR PARTICIPATION AT CHI-RHO CENTER&#13;
On Wednesday evening, March 26, at 7:30 p.m. there will be a&#13;
scripture session which will concentrate on taking a deeper look into&#13;
thepass&#13;
10&#13;
" account as recorded by John. Everyone is welcome&#13;
Witt tteZ^y f Seder MeaI is planned in conjunction with the celebration of Jesus' institution of the Eucharist. The seder is&#13;
tte Jewish Passover celebration. This year the Jewish and the Gentile&#13;
calendar dates for the Old and New Testament celebrations coincide&#13;
A potluck supper will complete the evening. Everyone is invited to&#13;
needed f&#13;
°&#13;
r plannin«' Please Phone DD2-«626 or 657-3408 be fore Wednesday noon.&#13;
The Friday service will be held at 1:30 p.m. at the CENTER.&#13;
The celebration of the Paschal Mystery will continue on Saturday at&#13;
6:30 p.m. During the Easter Vigil service, Gretchen and Erica&#13;
Widener will be welcomed into our Christian Community through the&#13;
sacrament of Baptism. The liturgy of the Word and the Eucharist will&#13;
complete that day's service.&#13;
CENTER lU be ^ HtUrgy CGlebrated 0n Easter Sunday at CHI-RHO&#13;
Alibi&#13;
You&#13;
plead self-defense&#13;
in killing the&#13;
creative&#13;
space&#13;
growing&#13;
between us.&#13;
Babe,&#13;
mutilation&#13;
alters&#13;
justification&#13;
and you've shot&#13;
me&#13;
full of holes.&#13;
Mick Andersen&#13;
MIRAGE&#13;
lovely floating&#13;
apparition&#13;
beckoning&#13;
calling&#13;
pleading with me.&#13;
this way lies&#13;
life, happiness&#13;
contentednessso&#13;
following,her image,i stumble&#13;
and&#13;
fall against&#13;
myselfbrick&#13;
wall of&#13;
guilt.&#13;
only looking up&#13;
from underground&#13;
she remains&#13;
far in the distance&#13;
beckoning, calling&#13;
pleading; picking&#13;
myself off&#13;
the ground - out of&#13;
the grave - i begin&#13;
again&#13;
to unquestionable&#13;
trapse&#13;
after her shadow.&#13;
s.l.b.&#13;
April&#13;
exhibit&#13;
On April 22, 1975 the Sunshine&#13;
Student Art Co-op (SSAC) will&#13;
present the Parkside Student Art&#13;
Exhibit in. the gallery of the&#13;
Comm-Arts Theatre. Hours of the&#13;
show are: Monday, Wednesday,&#13;
Friday from 3 to 5 and Tuesday,&#13;
Thursday from 6 to 9.&#13;
In announcing the exhibit&#13;
Kathy Bouterse, president of the&#13;
SSAC, asked that art students&#13;
interested in organizing the&#13;
exhibit attend a meeting on&#13;
Thursday March 27 at 12:30 to be&#13;
held in D140 of Comm-Arts. The&#13;
meeting will be held to discuss&#13;
"the possibilities of a juror and to&#13;
finalize procedures for entrants&#13;
and awards.&#13;
Students interested in&#13;
exhibiting their work are&#13;
requested to fill out the entry&#13;
forms and submit them with their&#13;
works on April 16 and 17. Entries&#13;
will be accepted at D155A,&#13;
Comm-Arts- from 10 a.m. to 5&#13;
p.m. on both dates. Entries are&#13;
limited to five per student.&#13;
Bouterse also announced that&#13;
Acting Chancellor Otto Bauer&#13;
will present the awards on April&#13;
22 at the awards presentation to&#13;
be held in the Gallery from 5 to 6.&#13;
The reception will be held immediately&#13;
following the awards&#13;
presentation and will run from 6&#13;
to 9.&#13;
THE ARTS&#13;
Shakespeare&#13;
One of Shakespeare's earliest comedies, THE TWO GENTLEMEN&#13;
OF VERONA, will be presented at Comm-Arts Theatre on April 10 at&#13;
7:30 p.m. by the National Shakespeare Company under the sponsorship&#13;
of Lecture and Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
This is a play about the young, its attitude and its emphasis are&#13;
youthful, there are no specifically old people in it and no bitterness&#13;
cynicism or talk about the past. The play is about two subjects that&#13;
much concern the young: love and friendship.&#13;
In THE TWO GENTLEMEN OF VERNONA the friendship between&#13;
the two young men, Valentine and Proteus, is established in the&#13;
opening scene but at the same time the difference between them is&#13;
made apparent. Proteus is the less self-sufficient, the weaker of the&#13;
two. He has more need of both friendship and love. Valentine is portrayed&#13;
as a model of youthful magnanimity. He is amused at the&#13;
devastation that love has worked in Proteus and at the same time&#13;
slightly scornful about it. Friendship touched him more deeply that it&#13;
does Proteus, and when he falls in love, he is more deeply moved. Yet&#13;
he has less need than Proteus of the supports of l ove and friendship'&#13;
and can therefore be less selfish about them.&#13;
Moliere&#13;
Two plays by Moliere are to be presented April 24-27. Th e Jealous&#13;
Husband and The Physician In Spite of Himself, farces, are being&#13;
directed by Richard Carrington. The stress of the production has been&#13;
placed on the acting company and not specific character parts, in an&#13;
attempt to resemble Moliere's company. Ticket prices are $1.00 for&#13;
students, $2.00 for general public, and may be purchased from&#13;
members of Pi Sigma Epsilon business fraternity, which is responsible&#13;
for oi. " ampus promotion.&#13;
P.B.S. Programs March 30-April 5&#13;
SUNDAY, MARCH 30&#13;
11:00 A.M. SPECIAL: BACH MASS IN B MINOR. Karl Richter&#13;
conducts the Munich Bach Orchestra and the Munich Bach Choir in an&#13;
awe-inspiring performance of Johann Sebastian Bach's "Mass in B&#13;
Minor." Internationally-acclaimed baritone Hermann Prey, soprano&#13;
Gundula Janowitz, mezzo soprano Hertha Topper and tenor Horst&#13;
Lauoenthal are the feature vocal soloists.&#13;
1:30 P.M. THE JAPANESE FILM: GATE OF HELL. Stunning color&#13;
photography accents Teinosuke Kinugasa's classic film of war torn&#13;
medieval Japan and a Samurai's tragic love for a married woman.&#13;
Cast:&#13;
Moritoh.., Kazuo Hasegawa&#13;
Kesa Machiko Kyo&#13;
3:30 P.M. THE ROMANTIC REBELLION. Kenneth Clark sumhZf"&#13;
t&#13;
dramatlc events which lad to the romantic rebellion and&#13;
introduces the great artists who fought tte battles between classic and&#13;
~„rrhe time °&#13;
f the French Revoiuti°&#13;
n to the&#13;
™ K .'SSZSSSTn&#13;
'tteePpr&#13;
0o«am 79&#13;
' ^ CWCag&#13;
° aCt&#13;
°&#13;
rS ^ ™'e"&#13;
Muriel Bach Nar 1 Tan Pellegrini&#13;
' N°&#13;
rma&#13;
" Gottschalk and iviuriei Bach. Narrator is Marty Robinson.&#13;
Dr° SowT ASCENT&#13;
°&#13;
F MAN' "Generation Upon Generation,"&#13;
Ltonce L thme fte C°&#13;
mpleX COde that g°™rns&#13;
p r fse T t t e T t ' K e n n e th C l a r k&#13;
KST.&#13;
3nd h&#13;
'&#13;
S playad a *-ct -.e in the&#13;
(RepeatT' ™E ASCENT&#13;
°&#13;
F MAN' "Generation Upon Generation"&#13;
8-nn p yi FRIDAY, APRIL4&#13;
narrates a new ^ °1 A DREAM" Actor Ja™s Earl Jones&#13;
King's movement anl"!&#13;
611 *7 sbowing 016 dramatic impact of Dr.&#13;
film festival awards toisTita"^ **** ^ Winn&lt;?r&#13;
°&#13;
f f&#13;
°&#13;
Ur&#13;
from the 50's and rn&gt;' ^ mcorporates stark newsreel footage&#13;
stMrs&#13;
-&#13;
coretta King and&#13;
IN AMEMcl&#13;
P&#13;
"TOe School For Scandal,"&#13;
on iaXZv I&#13;
3&#13;
?'&#13;
8 PerfeCt C°&#13;
medy classic&#13;
' a stylized&#13;
Minn^poHs Minnesota " * The Guth™ " "&#13;
f &#13;
FUTURE CPA'S&#13;
Learn Now About the&#13;
next CPA Exam.&#13;
Becker CPA Review Course&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
414-276-7271&#13;
OUR SUCCESSFUL STUDENTS REPRESENT&#13;
1/4 OF US A&#13;
[COURSES BEGIN JUNE 1st . DEC 1st&#13;
THE U.W. PARKSIDE SEARCH AND SCREEN COMMITTEE&#13;
INVITES YOUR NOMINATIONS FOR&#13;
Chancellor of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Nominations sho uld be mailed to: U.W. Parksid e Se arch and&#13;
Sc reen Committe e, John Campbell, Chairman , P.O. Box 900,&#13;
Kenosh a, Wi. 531 40. Th e University of Wisconsi n is an&#13;
Equal Opportun ity - Affirmati ve Action Emp loy er.&#13;
Brief News&#13;
The Security Department has numberous watches and rings (both&#13;
ladies and mens) which can be called for upon giving a valid&#13;
description of the item&#13;
The department also has some calculators on hand which can be&#13;
claimed upon giving an accurate description of the model and serial&#13;
number.&#13;
The above are in addition to many other items such as notebooks,&#13;
text books, gloves, mittens, scarves, caps and sweaters.&#13;
Please keep the model, name and serial numbers of items such as&#13;
radios, recorders, calculators and watches in case these items are&#13;
stolen or missing. This would enable their return to the proper owner&#13;
when found and turned in to our Department, as it is very difficult to&#13;
return one model of a calculator to six persons claiming the same&#13;
model when none of th em have a serial number,&#13;
This week next to the Sweet Shoppe there will be a table set up where&#13;
you will have a chance to fill UWP's Easter Basket with eggs to build&#13;
the Student Fun Loan Fund through your donations. The money in the&#13;
fund is put into an account under the supervision of UWP for all&#13;
students to use. It does not belong to UWP, Interconnection, or any&#13;
other single organization. It belongs to you, the students.&#13;
Medical technology students are invited to the Racine-Kenosha&#13;
Medical Technology Society's meeting on Tuesday, April 1, at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in the cafeteria of St. Mary's Hospital, 717 - 15th St., Racine.&#13;
Students now interning in Racine and Kenosha hospitals will talk&#13;
about their internships, and there will be a tour of the lab.&#13;
Week of the Young Child is April 6-12&#13;
The Parkside Child Care Center will be having an OPEN HOUSE on&#13;
A pril 6 from 2:00-4:00. The public is invited to come and see our new&#13;
center. Located on Highway E just after Junction JR.&#13;
The Parkside Child Care Center will be open for Capsule College&#13;
April 2nd and 3rd. Advance registration is required, payment in advance;&#13;
you may stop by to register between the hours of 8:00-5:00&#13;
Monday through Friday. Fee will be $5.00 for a full day and $3.00 for a&#13;
half day. Juice, milk and snacks are provided. Bring disposable&#13;
diapers if your child wears diapers.&#13;
Register immediately as we can only accommodate 6 children&#13;
between the ages of 1-2 and 29 of ages 2-7. Our number is 553-2227&#13;
Ixicated on Highway E just after Junction JR.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, March 26, 1 975 5&#13;
"Outstanding"&#13;
Food Co-op&#13;
Classified&#13;
•••••••••••••••••&#13;
FUTURE CPA'S learn how to prepare tor&#13;
the CPA Exam Becker CPA Review Course&#13;
Call Collect, Milwaukee 414 276 7271&#13;
Weekly orderlist WANTED -- Song leader and musical&#13;
talent for church in Racine. Call Bible&#13;
Baptist Church, 554-6149.&#13;
•••••••••&#13;
Curt Hanrahan solos&#13;
Food ordering dates: Wed. 11-2&#13;
and 4-6; Thurs. 11-2. Food pick-up&#13;
the following week: Thurs. 11&#13;
a.m.-8 p.m. Membership: $5&#13;
Students, $7 non-students.&#13;
CANNED GOODS&#13;
.43 SF Fruit Cocktail 16 oz.&#13;
.41 SF Slic YC Peaches 16 oz.&#13;
.44 FK Pear Halves 16 oz.&#13;
.64 Camp Tomato Juice 46 o z.&#13;
.33 SF Cut Gr Beans 16 oz.&#13;
.29 SF Cut Wax Beans 15V2 oz.&#13;
.37 Stokely Golden Wh Kr Corn 17&#13;
oz.&#13;
.36 SF Early June Peas 17 oz.&#13;
.35 FK Tomatoes 16 oz.&#13;
.49 Contadina Tomato Paste 12&#13;
oz.&#13;
.19 SF Tomato Soup 10 % oz.&#13;
.22 Camp Chicken Noodle Soup&#13;
103&#13;
/4 OZ.&#13;
.22 Camp Cream of Mushroom&#13;
103&#13;
/4 OZ.&#13;
.54 B&amp;M Oven Baked Beans 18 oz.&#13;
.81 Lachoy Beef Chow Mein 16 oz.&#13;
.60 Milw Plain Dills 16 oz.&#13;
.60 Milw Kosher Dills 16 oz.&#13;
.51 Milw Sweet Relish 16 oz.&#13;
.44 Milw Hamb Dill Pickles 16 oz.&#13;
1.18 Iccy Sticcy Peanut Butter 28&#13;
oz.&#13;
.13 SF Iodized Salt 26 o z.&#13;
1.71 FK Shortening 3 lbs.&#13;
CHEESE&#13;
1.27 Cheddar, Raw Milk, Aged,&#13;
Yellow 1 lb.&#13;
1.14 Cheddar, Mild, Yellow 1 lb.&#13;
1.13 Colby, Mild Yellow 1 lb.&#13;
1.17 Mozzarella 1 lb.&#13;
1.37 Swiss Cut, Mild 1 lb.&#13;
GRAINS&#13;
1.12 Wheat Flakes 5 lbs.&#13;
.47 Bran Flakes 5 lbs.&#13;
1.63 Rice, Brown 5 lbs.&#13;
1.73 Rice, White, Long 5 lbs.&#13;
BEANS &amp; PEAS&#13;
1.46 Black Eye 5 lbs.&#13;
1.14 Green Split Peas 5 lbs.&#13;
2.19 Kidney Beans 5 lbs.&#13;
1.63 Baby Lima Beans 5 lbs.&#13;
SF equals Sure Fine Brand&#13;
FK equals Food King Brand&#13;
JJerryle ALLen( Left) a nd Ken Gleason(to the right) perform as&#13;
part of the band's fabulous brass line-up during the concert.&#13;
The University of Wisconsinparkside's&#13;
Jazz Band led off the&#13;
final judging session of the MidWest&#13;
College Jazz Festival with a&#13;
performance that won them the&#13;
honor of being named as an&#13;
outstanding band in the invited&#13;
competition. Two members of the&#13;
Parkside group, trumpeter Tim&#13;
Burke and trombonist Nate&#13;
Jones, were selected to lead their&#13;
sections in the festival's "All Star&#13;
Band" which presented a performance&#13;
in the final session on&#13;
the Elmhurst College Campus.&#13;
Under the direction of Bob&#13;
Thomason of U.S.-Parkside's&#13;
music discipline, the nineteen&#13;
member contingent drew high&#13;
praise from each of the festivals&#13;
minutes program which the&#13;
U.W.-Parkside Jazz Band&#13;
presented was extremely enthusiastic.&#13;
&#13;
The 3 day festival began on&#13;
Friday, March 15, 1975, and was&#13;
held on the Campus of Elmhurst&#13;
College in Elmhurst, 111. Participation&#13;
by the seventeen bands&#13;
and eight combo's was by invitation.&#13;
Each group submitted&#13;
an audio recording for&#13;
evaluation.&#13;
In addition to the U.W.-&#13;
Parkside jazz group, bands from&#13;
Chicago State, DePaul, Oakland,&#13;
and Western Michigan Universities&#13;
were cited by the judges as&#13;
presenting outstanding performances.&#13;
.&#13;
MVIjpenter I&#13;
Phone 65 2-6667 I&#13;
2728-52nd Street&#13;
KEN OSH A, WIS. 531 40&#13;
Parts and Service for&#13;
All I mported Cars&#13;
also&#13;
QUALITY ROAD SERVICE &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, March 26, 1975&#13;
Imperialist— — continued from page 1&#13;
Indochina on behalf of the most corrupt and dictatorial regimes&#13;
eventually forced Nixon to withdraw the U.S. combat forces in those&#13;
areas.&#13;
"This resentment must once again be expressed by holding mass&#13;
demonstrations to stop all military aid to Indochina and other outposts&#13;
of U.S. imperialism."&#13;
After marching back to the campus, the crowd dispersed peacefully,&#13;
with many gathering around the campus mall and student union,&#13;
basking in the afternoon sun and enjoying the mid-50s temperatures.&#13;
The rally and march bore only a mild resemblance to those of t he&#13;
late sixties and early seventies, when the voices of rock-hurling activist&#13;
groups and the explosions of tear gas canisters thrown by&#13;
National Guard troops and police echoed on campus.&#13;
Bicentennial pageant&#13;
Directors named&#13;
Career center continued from page 1&#13;
Pageant directors for the more&#13;
than 20 performances planned in&#13;
1975 and 1976 by the Kenosha&#13;
County Bicentennial Commission&#13;
have been announced by Commission&#13;
Chairman Edwin M.&#13;
Andersen.&#13;
They are Thomas Reinert,&#13;
theater manager at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
and Robert Kiser,&#13;
director of student activities at&#13;
Carthage College.&#13;
According to Mrs. Ralph&#13;
(Fran) Jaeschke, chairman of&#13;
the Commission's Festival&#13;
Committee, Reinert and Kiser&#13;
will have joint responsibility for&#13;
scheduling, directing, staging&#13;
and managing 10 weekend performances&#13;
during July and&#13;
August of both 1975 and 1976, i n&#13;
addition to two "main events" on&#13;
July 4, 1976: an ecumenical&#13;
service in the morning and an&#13;
evening performance involving a&#13;
"famous local person" and&#13;
capped by a giant fireworks&#13;
display.&#13;
Mrs. Jaeschke said that the&#13;
events will be free and held in a&#13;
large outdoor area, such as&#13;
Washington Bowl or Carthage&#13;
Field.&#13;
"We are anxious to have as&#13;
broad a representation of area&#13;
groups and entertainment as&#13;
possible," Mrs. Jaeschke said.&#13;
"We'll be considering performing&#13;
organizations of a ll kinds, young&#13;
and old, ethnic, light and heavy.&#13;
Those with specific ideas should&#13;
contact the pageant directors."&#13;
P.A.B. EVEN T S&#13;
W E D N ESD A Y , MAR CH 26: C O F F E E H O U S E: Clark Anderson, "King of the Blues," will be&#13;
performing in the Whiteskellar (GR D201), 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Free and open to the public.&#13;
FILM: Al Pacino in "Serpico," 11:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m., Comm. Arts Theatre. Admission $1.&#13;
Parkside ID required.&#13;
THUR SDA Y, MARCH 27: DAN CE: Annual Easter dance featuring "Diamond Rio," 9 p.m. 1&#13;
a.m., S. A. B. U W-P students $1, guest $1.50. Parkside and state I D's required.&#13;
COMI NG U P:&#13;
WED NES DAY , A P RIL 9: "The Conspiracy That Murdered JFK," an illustrated...&#13;
leaturing theZapruder film by R. F. Ralston, 7:30 p.m., Comm. Arts Theatre. Admission: 50c&#13;
for UW-P students and $1 for general public. Tickets are available at the Info kiosk or at the&#13;
door.&#13;
LIBRARY HOURS&#13;
FOR&#13;
SPR ING VACAT ION&#13;
Friday, March 28 7:45 -12:00 Noon&#13;
Saturday, March 29 CLOSED&#13;
Sunday, March 30 CLOSED&#13;
Monday - Friday, March 31 - April 4 8:00 - 5 • 00&#13;
Saturday, April 5 CLOSED&#13;
Sunday, April 6 RESUME NORMAL HOURS&#13;
INTERESTED IN MUSIC? ^&#13;
S The Bible Baptist Church of Racine&#13;
is looking for singers and any other&#13;
musical personnal.&#13;
SO GET INVOLVED!&#13;
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL 554-6149&#13;
We'll help you do&#13;
what's best for you.&#13;
Choose your skill and earn good pay in the&#13;
Air Force. Benefits include: advancement&#13;
opportunity, 30 days' paid vacation, travel,&#13;
job s ecurity, and medical care.&#13;
Contact your Air Force Recruiter&#13;
Sgt. Dan Christoffersen at 419 Main St.,Racine&#13;
or call 414-632-6487 collect.&#13;
Look up. Be looked up to.&#13;
Air Force&#13;
categories: continuing education&#13;
information, career resources,&#13;
and placement information.&#13;
With regard to continuing&#13;
education, the staff suggests the&#13;
user to start with the general&#13;
materials and work towards&#13;
more specific information,&#13;
General directories such as the&#13;
College Blue Book and Lovejoy's&#13;
College Guide are examples of&#13;
what the student can start with,&#13;
after which evaluations of the&#13;
institutions chosen by the individual&#13;
can be found in the&#13;
College Handbook published by&#13;
the College Entrance&#13;
Examination Board. Some&#13;
preliminary choices having been&#13;
made, the student then can use&#13;
any of 550 graduate- school&#13;
catalogues which answer&#13;
questions about programs, cost&#13;
and deadlines. Catalogues from&#13;
120 law schools and 100 m edical&#13;
and dental schools in the United&#13;
States, as well as information on&#13;
foreign colleges and universities,&#13;
are also provided by the Center.&#13;
The necessary forms for&#13;
registering for graduate or&#13;
professional school admissions&#13;
tests are then available once the&#13;
student has narrowed the choice&#13;
of graduate schools. The Center&#13;
also has test study guides to&#13;
assist the student in preparing for&#13;
the major tests. While students'&#13;
choice of graduate schools are&#13;
most greatly affected by the&#13;
faculty, the function of the&#13;
Resource Center is to provide&#13;
technical and procedural&#13;
assistance in addition to counselling&#13;
when requested.&#13;
The Center views career&#13;
planning, the second major area,&#13;
as a long range identification of&#13;
the direction an individual will&#13;
take in life. The staff feels it their&#13;
responsibility to make known to&#13;
the student the available opportunities&#13;
and to provide the&#13;
resources to answer short term&#13;
questions, as well as examine the&#13;
long term implications of the&#13;
decisions taken.&#13;
In career exploration, the user&#13;
of the Center should begin with&#13;
general occupational resources&#13;
wuch as the Occupational&#13;
Outlook Handbook or OCCUPATIONAL&#13;
Briefs, which&#13;
cover a wide range of occupations&#13;
and give information&#13;
on the nature of the work,&#13;
training required, earning, and&#13;
sources for more detailed information.&#13;
The student is then&#13;
directed to resource information&#13;
on the specific careers chosen.&#13;
This can be found in publications&#13;
such as Health Career Guidebook&#13;
and Career Choices for the 1970's.&#13;
After some general reading is&#13;
done, the student can then go on&#13;
to more detailed material. This&#13;
can be found in two different&#13;
areas of the Center. The first is a&#13;
collection of o ver 200 hard bound&#13;
books on careers which are fairly&#13;
easy reading and relatively&#13;
short. The second area is an&#13;
extensive file system containing&#13;
400 occupational areas&#13;
categorized according to general&#13;
occupational themes.&#13;
Thirdly, placement information&#13;
is available to the user&#13;
of the Resource Center. As it is&#13;
difficult to separate where career&#13;
exploration stops and job search&#13;
begins, updated information on&#13;
the current job market is&#13;
maintained.&#13;
Two types of job search&#13;
methods can be used. The most&#13;
fruitful approach is to apply for&#13;
positions that have been announced.&#13;
The Center has a&#13;
number of sources of current&#13;
openings such as the Wisconsin&#13;
Career Candidate listing,&#13;
newspapers, and openings&#13;
received directly by the&#13;
Placement Office.&#13;
The other method is to directly&#13;
contact specific organizations in&#13;
which the student is interested.&#13;
This, of course, yields a lower&#13;
success rate, but it is necessary&#13;
for those individuals interested in&#13;
specialized careers or&#13;
organizations.&#13;
The Resource Center's function&#13;
is to provide information on a&#13;
wide variety of potential employers.&#13;
&#13;
Dunn and Bradstreet, Standard&#13;
and Poor's, and the College&#13;
Placement Annual are only three&#13;
of several materials available for&#13;
such use.&#13;
Once the student has identified&#13;
a potential employer, an extensive&#13;
collection of corporate&#13;
information is at hand. The&#13;
Center has contacted 1400 of the&#13;
largest corporations in this&#13;
country in addition to all the&#13;
companies in Racine and&#13;
Kenosha Counties, resulting in a&#13;
large store of information which&#13;
fills five five-drawer file&#13;
cabii.ets.&#13;
After identifying a career&#13;
direction and a specific occupation&#13;
with possible employers,&#13;
the student can then&#13;
utilize the Center's resources&#13;
concerning "how to do it"&#13;
materials. These include workbooks&#13;
and hard bound books such&#13;
as Successful Executive Job&#13;
Hunting, How to Get a Better Job&#13;
Quicker, and The Professional&#13;
Student groups support&#13;
applications deadline (CCC)&#13;
Budget requests for funds to be allocated through student group&#13;
support (CCC), are to be submitted by student organizations to the&#13;
Assistant Dean of St udents office by April 8. Forms are available at&#13;
the Information Kiosk, Student Life Office, and the Dean of S tudents&#13;
office. For more information call 533-2342.&#13;
t)lN0'S&#13;
1816 16 S treet&#13;
Racine, W isconsin&#13;
PHONE 634-1991&#13;
PICK UP OR&#13;
PIP ING H OT FOO DS&#13;
D E LIV E R ED TO YOUR H OME&#13;
FINE FOODS&#13;
&amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
CHI CKE N&#13;
STE AKS&#13;
SEA F O OD&#13;
CHO PS&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
LASAG ANA&#13;
RAVIO LI&#13;
MOSTAC CIOLI&#13;
GNOC CHI&#13;
SPA GHE TTI&#13;
SAN DWI CHE S&#13;
B O M B ERS&#13;
H A M B U R G E RS&#13;
B E ER&#13;
S O FT D RIN KS&#13;
W I N E S&#13;
Job Hunting System. These&#13;
materials used together with&#13;
staff assistance help the student&#13;
prepare for effective and efficient&#13;
job hunting.&#13;
It is the Center's intention to&#13;
provide an environment to encourage&#13;
users to find information&#13;
on their own, although minimal&#13;
staff direction makes more effective&#13;
utilization. With a&#13;
Parkside identification card most&#13;
of the materials can be checked&#13;
out for seven days. Mr. Elmore&#13;
called attention to the concourse&#13;
in Greenquist where all preprofessional&#13;
as well as career&#13;
counselling information is posted&#13;
on a bulletin board. There is also&#13;
a bulletin board with placement&#13;
information on it at Room 105 in&#13;
the Classroom Building.&#13;
Barbara Larson, another&#13;
career counselor, works in the&#13;
Resource Center and is&#13;
responsible for pre-professional&#13;
counselling. Besides counselling,&#13;
personality and aptitude tests&#13;
can be given the student. The&#13;
Center is here, Mr. Elmore&#13;
stated, "to help students if they&#13;
want the help."&#13;
Resource centers have not been&#13;
around too long on the college&#13;
scene, with most of them being&#13;
poorly conceived and implemented.&#13;
Parkside's Career&#13;
Resource Center is a unique&#13;
example of the type of center&#13;
other institutions are striving for.&#13;
Local&#13;
elections&#13;
Gordon Mcintosh, Parkside&#13;
student, has been endorsed by the&#13;
Racine Education Association,&#13;
Independent Voters of Racine,&#13;
and The Alliance of Labor, for the&#13;
School Board of Unified School&#13;
District No. 1 of Racine County.&#13;
Danny Trotter has announced&#13;
his candidacy for the office of&#13;
State Senator representing the&#13;
22nd district. Trotter, a Parkside&#13;
graduate, is running as an independent&#13;
in the April 1 election.&#13;
Joseph J. Attwell, Special&#13;
Assistant to the Chancellor for&#13;
Affirmative Action, at Parkside,&#13;
is a candidate for Municipal&#13;
Justice of Sturtevant, Wisconsin.&#13;
Attwell, a member of the&#13;
Wisconsin and Illinois Bar&#13;
Associations, has tried in excess&#13;
of 7000 cases, as a private&#13;
practitioner, and Assistant&#13;
States' Attorney in Chicago.&#13;
SCHWINN PEUGEOT&#13;
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Everything for the Cyclist&#13;
5006 - 7th Avenue&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN 53140&#13;
(414 ) 6 5 2-64 68&#13;
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Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
•Rock -Jazz »Pop -Folk&#13;
•Classical&#13;
LOWEST PRICES ALWAYS&#13;
MUSIC HOUSE&#13;
The Place to buy records &#13;
Ed quality Announcement&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, March 26, 1975 7&#13;
continued from page ]&#13;
materials.&#13;
"In flation has eroded our&#13;
buying power by $19-million in&#13;
the last year," said Weaver.&#13;
"This seriously curtails our&#13;
objective of quality education."&#13;
He cited that price increases&#13;
for laboratory equipment in the&#13;
last two years range from 49 t o&#13;
1919 percent; book prices from 17&#13;
to 49 p ercent; periodicals up 40&#13;
percent; paper and paper&#13;
products up 68 percent.&#13;
Restore $5.9-million to&#13;
eliminate special fee increases&#13;
proposed for graduate and adult&#13;
education students.&#13;
He said that under the&#13;
Governor's budget, graduate fees&#13;
will increase by 25 to 40 percent.&#13;
Undergraduate fees will also&#13;
increase.&#13;
He added that resident and nonresident&#13;
graduate fees are now&#13;
among the highest in the country.&#13;
Weaver asked the committee if&#13;
it is "wise public policy" to&#13;
impose a 40 percent increase,&#13;
adding that "the results are going&#13;
to be disasterous to the internationally&#13;
famous graduate&#13;
school (Madison) you have on the&#13;
hill here."&#13;
Weaver also critized the&#13;
Governor's proposed increases&#13;
fee to adult education students.&#13;
Currently, these students pay&#13;
70 percent of cost for their&#13;
programs. Under the Governor's&#13;
proposal, their average percentage&#13;
of cost would increase to&#13;
85 p ercent.&#13;
"I question that this is a wise&#13;
public policy when the need for&#13;
educational renewal and uplifting&#13;
are demanded," said Weaver.&#13;
According to Weaver, the increased&#13;
costs would have an&#13;
adverse effect on the access of&#13;
educational ppograms to lower&#13;
income groups. He cited that a 15&#13;
percent increase in cost would&#13;
cause a 15 percent decrease in&#13;
access for lower income groups.&#13;
Lower income groups now&#13;
comprise 30 pe rcent of the adult&#13;
education programs.&#13;
The issue of increased fees set&#13;
off a 45-minute debate between&#13;
UW central administration and&#13;
Department of Administration&#13;
(DOa) officials reporting for the&#13;
Governor.&#13;
Budget analyst Marvin&#13;
Goldstein took issue with the fee&#13;
increases for graduate students.&#13;
He said the increases recommended&#13;
by the Governor were&#13;
only $30 t o $40 m ore than those&#13;
recommended by the Regents.&#13;
He added that 50 percent of outof-state&#13;
graduate students&#13;
(comprising 65 percent of th e UW&#13;
graduate school) receive fee&#13;
remissions-that is, they pay instate&#13;
rather than out-of-state&#13;
tuition.&#13;
Uw Vice President Donald&#13;
Percy, in a concluding rebuttal,&#13;
accused Goldstein and the DOA&#13;
of using a "strange sort of logic."&#13;
"The university in its request&#13;
would have raised fees, yes,"&#13;
said Percy, "but you (students)&#13;
would be getting something for&#13;
them."&#13;
He cited that the quality of&#13;
education would have increased&#13;
if the 30 Regent requests had&#13;
been granted, thus making the&#13;
increases justified.&#13;
Rep. Marjorie Miller (DMadison)&#13;
also questioned&#13;
Goldstein and the DOA Proposal.&#13;
She asked Goldstein if it was a&#13;
logical gamble to try and save $4-&#13;
million in state funds by increasing&#13;
graduate student fees&#13;
and losing "good" graduate&#13;
students. She explained that if&#13;
you can't attract students, you&#13;
lose faculty, and possibly some&#13;
$80-million a year in Federal&#13;
research grants awarded to the&#13;
UW.&#13;
"Isn't that a pretty heavy&#13;
gamble'" she asked.&#13;
Goldstein replied, "They (the&#13;
Regents) didn't consider it. I&#13;
don't see why we should be overly&#13;
considerate. They haven't&#13;
suggested that the increases&#13;
would mean a collapse in&#13;
graduate programs."&#13;
Restore $1.5-million in funds&#13;
for retraining permanent employees&#13;
to accommodate&#13;
changing needs and "ease layoff&#13;
potential for future years."&#13;
The committee took no action;&#13;
however, in coming weeks the&#13;
budget proposals will go to both&#13;
houses for approval.&#13;
Rep. R. Michael Ferrall (DRacine),&#13;
co-chairman of the&#13;
committee, asked Weaver if he&#13;
considered Lucey's budget a&#13;
move "to economize" or a move&#13;
to "reduce Wisconsin's commitment&#13;
to quality education."&#13;
Weaver replied, "I'm sure the&#13;
state has a great need to&#13;
economize. But the extent of the&#13;
economizing will go beyond&#13;
economizing and belt-tightening&#13;
to the heart of quality&#13;
education."&#13;
Sen. James C. Devitt (RGreenfield),&#13;
also co-chairman of&#13;
the committee, asked Weaver,&#13;
"Would you be willing to take a&#13;
one year increase that would be&#13;
one-half that request ($24.7-&#13;
million), then come back in&#13;
January of next year for a budget&#13;
review?"&#13;
"I think that is a most&#13;
reasonable suggestion," Weaver&#13;
replied.&#13;
# / Pitch In! # #&#13;
Second Annual National&#13;
College "Pitch in!" week&#13;
scheduled for April 7-11.&#13;
College and universities&#13;
throughout the country are being&#13;
invited to participate in the&#13;
second annual National College&#13;
Pitch In! Week, April 7-11.&#13;
Instituted last year, the event&#13;
will again be co-sponsored by&#13;
Budweiser Beer and the ABC&#13;
Contemporary Radio Network. It&#13;
is based on the nationwide Pitch&#13;
In! anti-litter program. Participation&#13;
may be from the entire&#13;
student body or approved individual&#13;
campus organizations.&#13;
The basic idea is for college&#13;
students to team up in ridding&#13;
their campus and-or surrounding&#13;
community of a litter problem.&#13;
This year, participants are also&#13;
encouraged to consider projects&#13;
such as tree-planting and park&#13;
beautification.&#13;
Grand prizes consisting of $1000&#13;
educational scholarships will be&#13;
awarded in each of five regions&#13;
for the most creative and effective&#13;
Pitch In! efforts.&#13;
Over 300 colleges and&#13;
organizations participated in the&#13;
1974 effort. The Grand Prize&#13;
Winners were University of&#13;
Hawaii, University of Houston,&#13;
Pennsylvania State University,&#13;
Kent State University, and&#13;
Florida A&amp;M U niversity.&#13;
To enter this year's competition,&#13;
colleges or&#13;
organizations should send a letter&#13;
indicating their desire to participate&#13;
to: 1975 College Pitch In!&#13;
Week, ABC Contemporary Radio&#13;
Network, 1330 Avenue of the&#13;
Americas, New York, New York,&#13;
10019.&#13;
To be eligible for this year's&#13;
awards, colleges or organizations&#13;
must submit evidence of their&#13;
participation. Documentation of&#13;
their efforts may be in the&#13;
form of written summary, along&#13;
with photos, newspaper clippings,&#13;
audio tapes, motion picture&#13;
film, official letters of appreciation&#13;
from civic officials.&#13;
A Different&#13;
type of&#13;
Saturday Night&#13;
RED'S R OLLER R INK&#13;
6220-67 st. Ph. 6 52-8198 Kenosha&#13;
H E I L E M A N 'S&#13;
Mi Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
"On Tap at the Union"&#13;
etc. Reports on individual Pitch,&#13;
In! projects must be reported no&#13;
later than May 16, 1975.&#13;
Five Regional winners of $1000&#13;
educational awards, along with&#13;
five runner-up winners of $500&#13;
awards, will be selected by a&#13;
panel of judges in New York. All&#13;
entries become the property of&#13;
ABC Contemporary Radio&#13;
Network.&#13;
The sponsors point out that&#13;
College "Pitch In!" week&#13;
concerned students an opportunity&#13;
to work together on a&#13;
worthwhile project with both&#13;
immediate and lasting benefits to&#13;
their campuses and communities.&#13;
Research shows that&#13;
littered areas attract more litter,&#13;
but clean areas influence people&#13;
to behave more considerately.&#13;
%witc filKtinl&#13;
24 hours&#13;
FREE&#13;
CONFIDENTIAL&#13;
COUNSELING&#13;
AND GENERAL&#13;
INFORMATION&#13;
1712-57 th street&#13;
C*5§~lielp&#13;
EIGHTH AVENUE&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
4601 Eighth A venue&#13;
658-2709 Kenosha&#13;
'ACROSS FROM UNION PARK'&#13;
"THE OLD LAIR IS BACK WITH A NEW FACE'&#13;
OPEN AT 3:00 P.M.&#13;
24th and 25th on 60th S t. KENOSHA, WISCONSIN A G LASS&#13;
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OPEN&#13;
Mon. thru Fri.&#13;
10 A.M. -&#13;
4 P.M.&#13;
Located on Concourse&#13;
between Library&#13;
.learning center &amp;&#13;
Greenquist Hall &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, March 26, 1975&#13;
rebounds &amp; points&#13;
Cole leads&#13;
cagers&#13;
Gary Cole, who led the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
to the quarter-finals of t he NAIA&#13;
national tournament, finished as&#13;
UW-P's leading scorer and&#13;
rebounder for the 1974-75 season&#13;
in final statistics released today.&#13;
Cole, a 6-9 junior forward from&#13;
Racine (Park), scored 767 points&#13;
for a 23.2 season average and&#13;
pulled down 353 rebounds for a&#13;
10.7 average. He started in each&#13;
of the Rangers' 33 contests and&#13;
scored 20 p oints or better on 12&#13;
occasions. His single game high&#13;
of 47 a gainst St. Xavier College&#13;
on Dec. 26, 1974, tied his own&#13;
school scoring mark.&#13;
Finishing second to Cole in the&#13;
scoring derby was 6-4 sophomore&#13;
forward Leartha Scott of&#13;
Chicago, 111., (Gordon Tech).&#13;
Scott, a transfer from St. Louis&#13;
University who became eligible&#13;
firc$tone&#13;
RACINE STORE ONLY&#13;
709 Wisconsin Ave.&#13;
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FISH FRY &gt;&#13;
Delicious golden&#13;
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traditional English&#13;
pub-type batter.&#13;
f Cole Slaw or Salad.&#13;
A French Fries or&#13;
Baked Potato.&#13;
* Bonanza Toast.&#13;
34th 4 52nd St.&#13;
ALL YOO°&#13;
at mid-year, averaged 19.5 ppg&#13;
and had 428 points in his abbreviated&#13;
season.&#13;
Rounding out the top five&#13;
scorers were Bill Sobanski, a 6-7&#13;
junior center from Oak Lawn, 111.&#13;
(Chicago Mt. Carmel), with 11.8&#13;
scoring and 8.5 rebounding&#13;
averages; Kenosha (Chicago&#13;
Gordon Tech) junior guard&#13;
Malcolm Mahone at 6-9 and&#13;
Racine (Park) senior guard&#13;
Chuck Chambliss at 6.7.&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens' team&#13;
finished 24-9 on the season, with a&#13;
10-1 home record and a 14-8 mark&#13;
on unfriendly or neutral courts.&#13;
The 24 win s were the most ever&#13;
by a Parkside team and the NAIA&#13;
quarter-finals marked the furthest&#13;
a Parkside. team had&#13;
ever advanced in the six year&#13;
history of the school.&#13;
Gymnasts&#13;
in NAIA&#13;
action&#13;
The UW-Parkside men's&#13;
gymnastics team traveled to UWOshkosh&#13;
Friday and Saturday,&#13;
March 14 and 15, for the NAIA&#13;
National Gymnastics Meet. Five&#13;
of the six team members&#13;
qualified to compete, although&#13;
they did not compete as a team,&#13;
but as individuals. The performers&#13;
were: Kevin O'Neil,&#13;
Tom Kasprovich, Scott Levandoski,&#13;
Brian Hill and Tim Petro.&#13;
Kevin O'Neil missed being an&#13;
Ail-American and second place&#13;
on rings by two-tenths of a point,&#13;
finishing third on that apparatus,&#13;
and eighth on parallel bars. Tom&#13;
Kasprovich put up a good&#13;
showing placing fourth on the&#13;
Pommelled Horse.&#13;
The gymnasts placed ninth as a&#13;
team.&#13;
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HOURS: Son. Wed. &amp; Thurs. 11:30 A M&#13;
11:30 P.M.&#13;
Fri. &amp; Sat. 11:30 A.M.-12:30 A.M.&#13;
fa&#13;
in&#13;
OPENS AT&#13;
8:00 A.M.&#13;
Letter awards&#13;
winners named&#13;
Wrestling&#13;
UW-Parside wrestling coach Jim Koch has named 12 wrestlers as&#13;
letterwinners for 1974-75.&#13;
Heading the list are seniors Bill West and Randy Skarda. West, from&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper), won his second consecutive NAIA 134-lb. national&#13;
crown and finished his collegiate career with a 58-bout win streak&#13;
Skarda, a national champion in 1974 at 150 lbs., battled injury&#13;
throughout the season and compiled a 24-5 mark. He is from Coleman.&#13;
West's letter was his fourth and Skarda's his third.&#13;
Winning his third letter at 126 lbs, was Kenosha (Tremper) junior&#13;
Rico Savaglio; lettering for the second time were three Kenosha&#13;
(Tremper) juniors, Rich Schaumberg at 118, Joe Landers, the NAIA&#13;
sixth place finisher, at 126, Rich Barron at 158.&#13;
First-time award winners include freshment Dan O'Connell of&#13;
Mazomanie (Wisconsin Heights) at 126, Rick Langer of Ellsworth at&#13;
134, Rick Kubiak of Pulaski at 150, Lo nnie Petersen of G reenfield at&#13;
167; Terry Rysewyk of Coleman at 167 through Hwt.; and Dave&#13;
Wagner of Peshtigo at 177.&#13;
Fencing&#13;
UW-Parskide fencing coach Loran Hein has named five men and three&#13;
women as letterwinners on the 1974-75 U W-P men's and women's&#13;
teams.&#13;
Heading the men's awardwinners are junior David Baumann of&#13;
Racine (Case), who compiled a 33-21 record in epee and earned his&#13;
third letter, and Park Ridge, 111. (Maine South) freshman Jim&#13;
Herring, who won 44 of his 51 matches and also captured the U.S.&#13;
junior Olympic under-20 foil title.&#13;
The three distaff letterwinners, who took the Parkside women's&#13;
squad to a 7-3 dual record and combined for a 74-40 record in foil, are&#13;
freshmen Iris Gericke and Jean Hess of Racine (Case) and junior&#13;
Bridgitta Lindberg of Kenosha.&#13;
Other men winning letters include junior Brett Mandernack of&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford) and Mark Mulkins, a senior from Racine&#13;
(Horlick), each for the third time; and Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
sophomore Gene Renzoni for the first time.&#13;
Gymnastic*&#13;
UW-Parkside gymnastics coach Doug Davis has named seven&#13;
letterwinners for the 1974-75 season.&#13;
Heading the list is four-time award winner Kevin O'Neil of Kenosha&#13;
(Tremper), who place third on the still rings and fourth on the parallel&#13;
bars in the NAIA championships at Oshkosh. O'Neil the first four time&#13;
letterwinner in UW-P gymnastics history, captained the Ranger&#13;
squad, which took ninth nationally.&#13;
Tim Petro, a junior from Racine (Horlick), earned his third letter&#13;
while sophomores Scot Levandoski of Racine (Park) and Brian Hill of&#13;
Racine (Case) won their second letters.&#13;
First-time letterwinners include freshment Tom Kasprovich of&#13;
Racine (Park), who placed fourth in the nationals on the side horse;&#13;
Steve Seitz of Hartland (Arrowhead) and manager John Petro of&#13;
Racine (Horlick).&#13;
Basketball — _&#13;
UW-Parkside basketball coach Steve Stephens has named the ten&#13;
terwinners NAIA Dlstnct 14 champion squad as 1974-75 le tWinning&#13;
his fourth letter, the first athlete in Parkside basketball&#13;
history to do so, was senior Chuck Chambliss of Racine (Park).&#13;
( P a STa n d ^ mS q °h ^&#13;
W ®r® j U n i °&#13;
rS GaFy Cole of Racin e&#13;
Twii? Bll&#13;
l&#13;
Sobanskl of 0ak Lawn, III. (Chicago Mt. Carmel).&#13;
Two-time award winners include senior Calvin Denson of Muskegon,&#13;
Mich., sophomore Rade Dimitrijevic of Kenosha (Tremper)-&#13;
sophomore Mike Hanke of Milwaukee (Hamilton); and junior&#13;
Malcolm Mahone of Kenosha (Chicago Gordon Tech).&#13;
T kf*&#13;
6&#13;
" R)Fthe&#13;
u&#13;
first time were sophomores Marshall Hill and&#13;
Leartha Scott and freshman Stevie King, all of Chicago (Gordon&#13;
S&amp;UM4Uf J/ut Qinedt&#13;
4/¥¥tJL 9ialui4t fyoodd.&#13;
UOUOR QTrTo&#13;
0, K E N 0 S H A-551-7171 LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM </text>
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              <text>UW President Weaver visits Parkside</text>
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              <text>UW President Weaver visits Parkside&#13;
by Rudy Lienau&#13;
The last time the president of&#13;
the Uw System John Weaver&#13;
visited Parkside he was greeted&#13;
by angry students upset about the&#13;
possibility of 27 teacher firings.&#13;
Though the schedule was full at&#13;
last week's visit, it was decidedly&#13;
less heated.&#13;
Weaver met with faculty,&#13;
students, and the press in the four&#13;
hours that were alotted for&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
In the press conference he&#13;
fielded questions about the School&#13;
of Modern Industry (SMI)&#13;
building financial aids, his&#13;
Outreach program, and technical&#13;
school cooperation.&#13;
"I think we still have a fighting&#13;
chance for planning money,"&#13;
Weaver said concerning the SMI&#13;
building. He didn't know if the&#13;
planning money would be forthcoming,&#13;
but said the best could&#13;
be hoped for was that planning&#13;
money would be available in this&#13;
biennium and that construction&#13;
money would be sought in the&#13;
next biennium.&#13;
He said the lack of the building&#13;
would be a "hinderance" and&#13;
would "cripple" Parkside's work&#13;
toward its mission, but felt that&#13;
work would continue.&#13;
"The budgetary intent in&#13;
Washington," is the most serious&#13;
phase of the financial aids&#13;
problem according to Weaver.&#13;
"The budgetary intent in&#13;
Washington," is the most serious&#13;
phase of the financial aids&#13;
problem according to Weaver.&#13;
The ParksideFinancial&#13;
aids&#13;
Student aid funds delayed&#13;
by Kathy Wellner&#13;
The financial aids situation at&#13;
Parkside is no better than&#13;
anywhere else for 1973-74.&#13;
According to Jan Ocker,&#13;
Director of Financial Aids and&#13;
Placement, students in need of&#13;
aid will not know how much&#13;
money they will get for next year,&#13;
or if they will get anything at all.&#13;
The Financial Aids Office&#13;
usually sends out a letter by May&#13;
1st to incoming Freshmen, and&#13;
by June 1st for continuing&#13;
students, telling them how much&#13;
aid they are to receive, and in&#13;
what form it will be.&#13;
This year, due to the proposed&#13;
revamp of the aids programs,&#13;
and the resultant uncertainty&#13;
Women's Day&#13;
about funds, the aids people won't&#13;
know what is available until July&#13;
1st, or later. Therefore, students&#13;
eligible for aid will be getting a&#13;
letter informing them simply as&#13;
to whether or not they are eligible&#13;
for aid, and how much they are&#13;
eligible for. The other thing that&#13;
will not be known is what form&#13;
the aid will be in: grant, loan, job&#13;
or combination.&#13;
Ocker recently received a&#13;
letter from David Obie of the&#13;
Supplemental Appropriations&#13;
Committee in which Obie stated&#13;
his belief that it is likely that the&#13;
current programs will be funded&#13;
for '73-'74, and that the Basic&#13;
Opportunity Grant (BOG) would&#13;
not be implemented.&#13;
In the meantime, because 70-75&#13;
percent of Parkside's financial&#13;
aids funds come from the federal&#13;
aid programs, students might not&#13;
know how they stand financially&#13;
until late this summer. The&#13;
Financial Aids Office is not even&#13;
sure that the money will be&#13;
available in time for registration.&#13;
The only thing that could clear&#13;
any of this up would be if&#13;
Congress fights the implementation&#13;
of the BOG and gets&#13;
appropriations for the current&#13;
programs.&#13;
For students waiting to get the&#13;
word on their '73-'74 aid, crossed&#13;
fingers is the only certainty.&#13;
Traveling with the President&#13;
were: Dallas Peterson, Associate&#13;
Vice President for Academic&#13;
Affairs; Robert Polk, Associate&#13;
Vice President for Academic&#13;
Affairs; Albert Beaver, Program&#13;
Coordinator, Agricultural and&#13;
Life Science; Richard Greiner,&#13;
P r o g r a m C o o r d i n a t o r,&#13;
Engineering and Physical&#13;
Science; Karen Merritt,&#13;
Program Coordinator, Arts and&#13;
Humanities; Robert Doyle,&#13;
Director, University Relations;&#13;
Harold Robinson, UW Central&#13;
Administration and Allan Hershfield,&#13;
Assistant Chancellor, UW&#13;
Center System.&#13;
The High Education Aids&#13;
Board (HEAB) would be appropriated&#13;
$10 million under the&#13;
governor's budgetary plan.&#13;
Weaver has spoken against this.&#13;
If the money were plugged into&#13;
HEAB Weaver felt sure it would&#13;
come back to the university&#13;
system, but the immediate&#13;
jurisdiction would rest with the&#13;
governor and HEAB.&#13;
Weaver has also spoken&#13;
against Lucey's proposed centralized&#13;
financial aids system. He&#13;
does not know what the plan&#13;
would mean, but feels that&#13;
existing funds could best be&#13;
distributed by personnel on&#13;
campus.&#13;
The conference was short, but&#13;
most reporters seemed to have&#13;
had their questions answered.&#13;
Wednesday March 28, 1973&#13;
Vol. 1 No. 23&#13;
Brakhage to speak&#13;
on Brakhage&#13;
Stan Brakhage&#13;
Stan Brakhage, one of the most&#13;
influential and prolific filmmakers&#13;
of the American underground,&#13;
will present a lecturedemonstration&#13;
incorporating&#13;
short films interspersed with&#13;
commentary at 8 p.m. Tuesday&#13;
(Ap. 3) in Greenquist Hall room&#13;
103.&#13;
Titled "Brakhage on&#13;
Brakhage," the projgram is free&#13;
to the public. In addition to the&#13;
public lecture, Brakhage will&#13;
meet informally with students&#13;
and faculty on Wednesday&#13;
morning in room 175 of the&#13;
Learning Center from 10-noon.&#13;
Maker of such major works as&#13;
"Dog Star Man" and "Window&#13;
Water Baby Moving," Brakhage&#13;
directed his first film at 18.&#13;
Continued on page 3&#13;
Caucus to present lectures, and sympsia&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
"Anatomy is destiny," Sigmund Freud once&#13;
said. The Parkside Women's Caucus begs to&#13;
differ with him, and will endeavor to prove their&#13;
point with the second annual Women's Day t&gt;n&#13;
Wednesday, April 4. Taking as its theme&#13;
"Anatomy is NOT Destiny!, "the group have&#13;
planned a number of lectures and sympsia&#13;
throughout the day and evening.&#13;
The rationale behind the idea of a Women's&#13;
Day is to provide an opportunity for people on&#13;
campus as well as in the community, to better&#13;
inform themselves about some of the issues&#13;
involved in women's controversial place in&#13;
society. The women's liberation movement&#13;
denotes different things to different people, but&#13;
the day's program attempts to accommodate a&#13;
variety of interests.&#13;
The keynote address at 9:30 a.m.-entitled&#13;
"Anatomy is Not Destiny"~will be delivered by&#13;
Carole Vopat, assistant professor of English. Her&#13;
talk will deal with what it means to be a woman,&#13;
the difference between what is feminine and&#13;
what is womanly, and the image of the women's&#13;
movement.&#13;
Abortion and Problem&#13;
Pregnancies&#13;
Birth control, abortion and problem&#13;
pregnancies will be discussed at 10:30 a.m. by&#13;
Ms. Helene Dilulio, R.N., and Rev. Donald Ott of&#13;
the Milwaukee Area Clergy Consultation on&#13;
Problem Pregnancies. Ms. Dilulio is with St.&#13;
Luke's Birth Control Clinic; Ott is associate&#13;
minister at Christ United Methodist Church in&#13;
Racine.&#13;
A talk on sexism in education will be given at&#13;
11:30 a.m. by Teresa Harris, assistant professor&#13;
of education. She will deal with the often unobtrusive&#13;
aspects of sexism in schools, both in the&#13;
curriculum and in teacher attitudes and expectations.&#13;
&#13;
Women's Liberation Debate&#13;
A videotape of the Germaine Greer-William&#13;
F. Buckley "Debate on Women's Liberation"&#13;
will be shown at 12 p.m., followed by a&#13;
discussion.&#13;
At 12:30, careers for women in science and&#13;
math will be discussed by Parkside women of the&#13;
science and math faculties. Speakers will include&#13;
Virginia Parsons, assistant professor of&#13;
psychology, Diane Pyper, assistant professor of&#13;
earth science, Virginia Scherr, assistant&#13;
professor of chemistry, and Charlotte Chell,&#13;
assistant professor of mathematics. Anna Maria&#13;
Williams, associate professor of life science, will&#13;
speak on opportunities for women in medicine.&#13;
"Rape: Protection fofor the Victim" is the title&#13;
of a 1:30 talk by Mary Gram, UW-M student and&#13;
coordinator of Community Safeguard in&#13;
Milwaukee. Ms. Gram is also chairperson of the&#13;
women's studies committee at UW-M, and involved&#13;
in Zero Population Growth (ZPG).&#13;
Poetry, Play readings&#13;
Play readings at 2:30 p.m. will include "Three&#13;
Women" by Sylvia Plath, and "But What Have&#13;
You Done For Me Lately?" by Myrna Lamb.&#13;
They will be followed by a session of poetry&#13;
reading at 3:30 p.m. Stella Gray, chairperson f&#13;
the Humanities Division, and Carole Vopat,&#13;
assistant professor of English, will show the&#13;
transition in women poets from the days of Anne&#13;
Bradstreet, Emily Dickenson, and Edna St.&#13;
Vincent Millay to more modern poets like Diane&#13;
Wakoski, Denise Levertov, Anne Sexton, Sylvia&#13;
Plath and Sandra Hochman. Students are encouraged&#13;
to bring their own work and read it or&#13;
have it read by others.&#13;
From 4-5 p.m. a discussion of women in politics&#13;
is scheduled. Participants include Betty Rowley,&#13;
Racine city councilperson, who is active in the&#13;
area of consumer protection, and Lynn Hoff of&#13;
the Racine Women's Political Caucus.&#13;
WOMEN'S DAY SCHEDULE - WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4&#13;
9:30-10 a.m. Keynote address: Dr. Carole Vopat "Anatomy is Not Destiny" 2nd floor library&#13;
lounge '&#13;
10-10:30 a.m. Discussion with Dr. Vopat, LLC D 174&#13;
10:30 12 p.m. Birth Control, Abortion and Problem Pregnancies: Helene Dilulio, R N and&#13;
Rev. Donald Ott, LLC D 173&#13;
11:30-12:30p.m. Sexism in Education: D.R Teresa Harris, LLC D 174&#13;
12-1:30 p.m. Videotape and discussion of Germaine Greer-William F. Buckley "Debate on&#13;
Women's Liberation," Learning Center Red Room&#13;
12:30-1:30 p.m. Careers for women in science, medicine and math: Parkside women science&#13;
and math faculties, LLC D173&#13;
1:30-2:30 p.m. "Rape: Protection for the Victim": Mary Gram, LLC D 174&#13;
2:30-3:30 p.m. Play Readings: "Three Women" by Sylvia Plath, and "But What Have You&#13;
Done for Me Lately?" by Myrna Lamb, LLC D 173&#13;
3:30-4:30 p.m. Poetry Reading: Dr. Stella Gray, Dr. Carole Vopat, LLC D 173. Students may&#13;
read own work also. '&#13;
4 5 p.m. Women in Politics: Betty Rowley, Lynn Hoff, LLC D 174&#13;
7 8 p.m. Women and the Law: Attorney Sandra Edhlund from Milwaukee, LLC D lu4&#13;
7-10 p m,. Assertive Behavior Clinic: D.R Walter McDonald, 2nd floor library lounge (Preregistration&#13;
necessary-call Information Center)&#13;
Continued page 5 &#13;
2 T H E PARKSIDE RANGER Wed. , Mar. 2 8, 1973&#13;
The ParksideRANGER&#13;
&#13;
Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Pay parnad y&#13;
you find a spot&#13;
Presently, all those who work here; taculty, statf and&#13;
civil service workers pay $35 for the "privilege" of&#13;
parking in a parking lot.&#13;
It is clear that the fee presently paid will increase and&#13;
that, next year, students will be paying a premium user&#13;
fee for the same privilege. This seems incongruent for a&#13;
campus which is doing its best to attract the commuter&#13;
student.&#13;
One way of attracting commuter students is to make it&#13;
easier and cheaper for the commuter to attend. The user&#13;
fee is obviously a step in the wrong direction.&#13;
The parking facilities which we presently have are a&#13;
costly venture to maintain and costa lotto build. We will&#13;
very soon need more of the same. Buses are costly too.&#13;
These things must be paid for.&#13;
But a great many people are all too aware of the effect&#13;
of us er fess on their budget. For the student the fee is an&#13;
added tuition cost. Most students drive to school and&#13;
must have a place to park. It is that simple. It is the&#13;
same for faculty, staff and civil service workers. All of&#13;
them must have a place to park, but the university does&#13;
not feel it has the responsibility to provide the space&#13;
without capital outlay of the users.&#13;
Every effort must be made to stop student user fees&#13;
before they start. Fees for those who work here should&#13;
be re-examined so that the fees paid actually buy&#13;
something. Presently, faculty and staff pay $35 to&#13;
receive the space they find open when they get here. A&#13;
student, who has his fee included in his tuition has just&#13;
as much chance for a space.&#13;
We suggest funds be solicited from the legislature to&#13;
help solve our problem.&#13;
We also suggest that a new look b e given at the policy&#13;
of " forced fees" for commuter parking. New ideas are&#13;
needed and should come from those affected as well as&#13;
the administration which will seemingly, very soon, be&#13;
adding more and greater parking fees.&#13;
Cartoonist's Eye View&#13;
TH£US. ISSOOMTO&#13;
BE. CHVIN§ AID&#13;
TO N ORTH VIETNAM.&#13;
IT'S NICE TO KNOU&#13;
THAT AS RmCRfCA&#13;
CONTINUES To&#13;
PROTECT FRE&#13;
NATIONS&#13;
F R OM&#13;
C o m m i t K / I ST&#13;
AGGRESSION j&#13;
T H AT UH L N T H L&#13;
FINILLTARH A ND&#13;
Po l i t i c s f a i l&#13;
uz C A N rlurh's&#13;
FAL L b a c k o n&#13;
T H £ SSCRET NEPFO N&#13;
TH/AT M f tDZ T n i5&#13;
comntrh &amp;mr!&#13;
IF MOU CA-N'T&#13;
B £ A T T H e m . . .&#13;
guj TH € t ri l l!&#13;
f EDITOR'S ^&#13;
I NOTEBOOK&#13;
^^b^^udy^ieriaa^^&#13;
A great reconstruction period&#13;
is coming up. The Ranger will be&#13;
shut down for the summer but&#13;
will start anew next fall.&#13;
This is being written early&#13;
because it will take a long time&#13;
for all the people who may be&#13;
interested in newspapering to be&#13;
informed that they can be&#13;
helpful.&#13;
In a university like ours, a&#13;
newspaper is just about all that&#13;
can hold the campus together.&#13;
The thing most people don't&#13;
realize is that as long as they&#13;
want to help, even if they have no&#13;
background whatsoever in&#13;
journalism, their assistance can&#13;
be as important as any other staff&#13;
member.&#13;
Having that one extra reporter&#13;
so the news editor may assign a&#13;
story instead of doing it helps&#13;
take the pressure off. That extra&#13;
person who volunteers to drive to&#13;
Zion with copy when we are in a&#13;
pinch helps take the pressure off&#13;
the managing editor. If we need&#13;
plenty of pictures for a picture&#13;
page, it's easier when there are&#13;
plenty of photographers. Even&#13;
helping to get papers circulated&#13;
to on and off-campus drop-off&#13;
spots is one of the details of a&#13;
paper that anyone with some&#13;
interest can help with.&#13;
The Ranger has a long way to&#13;
go to match the journalism excellence&#13;
of some of the college&#13;
papers of this state, but we feel&#13;
we have taken a giant step&#13;
toward the kind of ethics in&#13;
journalism that this campus&#13;
deserves. The Ranger is&#13;
something worth being proud of&#13;
and it will serve as a strong&#13;
foundation for newcomers to be&#13;
proud of in the future.&#13;
The Ranger has proven that a&#13;
Parkside publication can remain&#13;
financially solvent. We are&#13;
solvent and that position makes&#13;
us all the more flexible than&#13;
publications of the past. That&#13;
flexibility should make the paper&#13;
even more attractive to aspiring&#13;
journalists.&#13;
As planning begins for next&#13;
semester, perhaps some serious&#13;
thought should be given the&#13;
newspaper. It is a practical and&#13;
responsible., outlet for one's&#13;
creativity, energy and responsiveness.&#13;
&#13;
THORN&#13;
By Kon kol&#13;
In answer to Wayne Ramirez' fine letter in last weeks issue I can&#13;
only reiterate. If money from the student segregated fee is not spent&#13;
exclusively for students, it is wasted. If the community wishes to put&#13;
on a cultural performance, let them spend their own money to support&#13;
it, not the students.&#13;
In rebuttle to editor Lienau's 'Editors Notebook' I must make the&#13;
statement that neither the Lecture and Fine Arts Committee or the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board has ever put on a fine arts performance that&#13;
did not lose money. Members of each board admit that they can think&#13;
of n o program which could be brought to Parkside that would not lose&#13;
money.&#13;
It makes absolutely no sense in my mind to make the statement,"Once&#13;
the fine arts programming at Parkside is established the&#13;
money losers will be few and far between." The fine arts programs&#13;
have been established for four years already. Parkside will not be able&#13;
to economically support a fine arts program until twice as much interest&#13;
is shown in the performances, or until enrollment doubles&#13;
which is projected for 1990.&#13;
One performance the Activities Office is putting on I support entirely.&#13;
This is the Stanton Friedman performance I have been mentioning&#13;
the past couple weeks.&#13;
There are openings left in Friedman's schedule during the day. He&#13;
does not restrict these informal discussions to queries on UFOs. Other&#13;
topics he could give discourse on include, travel to the stars, scientific&#13;
approach to the unknown, and discussion on man's place in the&#13;
universe.&#13;
Remember the date, April 17, Tuesday,and get your requests in for&#13;
Mr. Friedman's time to the Activities Office.&#13;
Some members of the student senate are concerned with President&#13;
Haack's actions the past week,&#13;
It seems that because of publicity raised by the Indian-Government&#13;
battle at Wounded Knee, Haack decided to send a telegram to&#13;
President Nixon, among others, protesting the government's actions&#13;
in the affair. This is not bad in itself, only he signed Parkside Student&#13;
Senate to the telegrams.&#13;
This, also would not be bad in itself, but he first did not get the ok of&#13;
the Student Senate to take such an action. He made no attempt to even&#13;
contact a majority of the Senate to approve the action. This was a&#13;
clear case of overstepping authority which does not even come under&#13;
President 311 phraSG m the constitution explaining the duties of the&#13;
I am afraid Tom has himself confused with Richard Nixon, who also&#13;
pays no attention to his legislative branch.&#13;
By Gary Huck&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
RAIMGER&#13;
year' by te sSs Vjft&#13;
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Kenosha, Wisetnsta3140oLe^r™&#13;
, Learning center, Telephone (firsts '&#13;
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address, phone number and studpnt J t s»gned and include&#13;
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print any letters q 6dlt&#13;
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Classified and displayed rates will be furnished upon request&#13;
EDITOR IN-GHIEF: Rudy Lienau " ^qUOSt.&#13;
•MANAGIN-GiADiTOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Kathryn Wellner&#13;
S£URE ED IT0R: J^e Schliesman&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Kris Koch&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Jerry MurDhv&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
He,mut Kah&#13;
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ADVISER: Don Koprlva a w r*nce, Ken Konkol, Rudy L , (. n 8 u .&#13;
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almg with women s concerns. Guest writers are invited.&#13;
THE WISCONSIN EQUAL RIGHTS AMENDMENT&#13;
by Susan Burns , . " *&#13;
de'n?ed&#13;
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propose to offer equality to women.&#13;
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tgages or equal access to educational and&#13;
employment opportunities. Men will no longer be denied a minimum&#13;
wage and overtime, special retirement benefits on the death of their&#13;
ployment&#13;
F pr0tect,on of their health&#13;
- safety and welfare in emThe&#13;
Wisconsin E.R.A. will be effective immediately after passage&#13;
and will enable men and women to seek redress from local courts&#13;
regarding discrimination.&#13;
In other words, the E.R.A. is not just a "women's rights" amendment-it&#13;
proposes to extend the present constitutional rights and open&#13;
the door to other Human Rights amendments. The E.R.A cannot&#13;
insure the lack of discrimination, but it can insure the right of every&#13;
citizen to legal action if they have been discriminated against.&#13;
There have been misunderstandings about just what this amendment&#13;
will do. Opponents of E.R.A. have offered misleading arguments&#13;
concerning the cost of equality.&#13;
Some of the questions these arguments have provoked are as&#13;
follows:&#13;
(1) Will women be drafted?&#13;
Answer: Not because of a Wisconsin E.R.A., since the draft is a&#13;
federal, not a state government procedure.&#13;
(2) Will divorced women be deprived of alimony and child support'&#13;
Answer: Wisconsin law already specifies that alimony, child support&#13;
and child custody be awarded according to the best interests of&#13;
the child and the financial capabilities of both spouses.&#13;
(3) Will restrooms and correctional institutions be integrated?&#13;
Answer: No more than at present. Reasonable separation of the&#13;
sexes is protected by the constitutional right to privacy.&#13;
(4) Will rape laws be repealed?&#13;
Answer: No. In fact, the Wisconsin E.R.A. guarantees equal&#13;
protection to men and boys in cases of rape and child molestation.&#13;
(5) Will women lose protective labor legislation?&#13;
Answer: Federal regulations have already made Wisconsin's&#13;
protective hours laws for women unenforceable. A Wisconsin E.R.A.&#13;
will extend other protections by giving state agencies clear authority&#13;
to protect men as well as women, and to enforce minimum wage and&#13;
overtime for all workers.&#13;
Other questions and more detailed answers are available at the&#13;
Woman's Caucus reserve shelf of the library. Ask at the circulation&#13;
desk if you're interested in more information about this very important&#13;
amendment.&#13;
Brakhage&#13;
Continued from page 1&#13;
Sheldon Renan, historian of&#13;
underground cinema, calls him&#13;
"the major transitional figure in&#13;
the turning away of 'experimental'&#13;
film from literature&#13;
and surrealist psychodrama and&#13;
in its subsequent move toward&#13;
the more purely personal and&#13;
visual."&#13;
Of the 249 films in Jonas&#13;
Mekas' "Anthology Film Archives"&#13;
in 1971, Brakhage made&#13;
24-almost 10 percent-of the films&#13;
termed "essential." Critical&#13;
assessments rank Brakhage and&#13;
Andy Warhol as the poles against&#13;
which and within which the&#13;
"structural cinema" of the last&#13;
six years has developed.&#13;
Marks of the Brakhage style&#13;
include the bobbing hand-held&#13;
camera movement, the transformation&#13;
of object and mood by&#13;
distortion and rapid cutting and&#13;
the titles scratched directly on&#13;
the film.&#13;
Many of his films deal with&#13;
childhood and the behavior of&#13;
very young children. He also has&#13;
filmed a number of landscape&#13;
Applications for the&#13;
position of editor-in-chief&#13;
for the 1973-74 RANGER&#13;
are now being accepted by&#13;
the newspaper's advisory&#13;
board.&#13;
All Parkside students&#13;
who will be carrying at&#13;
least eight hours per&#13;
semester are eligible to&#13;
apply for the position,&#13;
which is made on a September&#13;
to May basis.&#13;
Each candidate is asked&#13;
studies including "The Dead,"&#13;
"White Eye," and "Black&#13;
Vision."&#13;
His appearance is being&#13;
sponsored by Lecture-Fine Arts&#13;
committee.&#13;
to submit details of his&#13;
journalistic experience&#13;
and a statement of his&#13;
plans for the RANGER to&#13;
Don Kopriva, Adviser to&#13;
Student Publications, by&#13;
Friday, April 13, at D-194&#13;
LLC.&#13;
The advisory board will&#13;
interview candidates&#13;
Tuesday, April 17, and&#13;
announce its selection&#13;
before spring break.&#13;
We get letters...&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I would like to bring this letter&#13;
to the attention of Mr. "Thorn"&#13;
(Ken Konkol). In the last two&#13;
issues of the RANGER you&#13;
criticized the Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts Committee and the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board for "immoderately&#13;
spending" the&#13;
Parkside students' money "in an&#13;
endeavor that will profit the large&#13;
majority nothing." You attacked&#13;
the two groups for bringing Jose&#13;
Greco and his company to&#13;
Parkside, saying that there is not&#13;
enough interest in Spanish&#13;
culture or Spanish dance in&#13;
Racine and Kenosha.&#13;
Were you at the performance,&#13;
Mr. "Thorn"? Did you notice that&#13;
the bleachers and the rows of&#13;
chairs lined up in front of the&#13;
bleachers were all filled?&#13;
I guess you put your foot in&#13;
your mouth this time. The performance&#13;
was superb and the&#13;
audience's response was fervent.&#13;
You should have been there~you&#13;
might have enjoyed it!&#13;
S. Mikaelian&#13;
Senior&#13;
P.S. I am soon going to be one of&#13;
the "large majority... nothing,"&#13;
A "nothing" — that hurts, Ken.&#13;
PARKSIDE CAMPUS OFFICE&#13;
219 TALLENT HALL&#13;
553-2150&#13;
%™7/ "Washington Square&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
Raciqe •&#13;
PHONE: 634-6661&#13;
COLLEGIATE NOTES&#13;
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hours of mailing&#13;
Complete with bibliography and footnotes&#13;
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Lowest Prices are GUARANTEED.&#13;
SEND $1.90 for our latest descriptive&#13;
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COLLEGIATE RESEARCH GUIDE&#13;
1 N. 13th St. Bldg. Rrn 706&#13;
Phila., Pa. 19107&#13;
HOT-LINE (215) 563-3758&#13;
Telephone 652-8662&#13;
3315-52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
. To The Editor:&#13;
The editors and staff of&#13;
Parkside's Poetry Book, The&#13;
Broken Horn, would like to give&#13;
our thanks to Rita Petretti,&#13;
Parkside's Coordinator of&#13;
Publications, for the tremendous&#13;
amount of work she put into&#13;
making our publication a reality.&#13;
Our names were in the book and&#13;
the newspapers but without Rita&#13;
we would have never gone to&#13;
press. Thanks Rita!&#13;
We would also like to urge the&#13;
University of continue to support&#13;
a Poetry Book. "The Broken&#13;
Horn" far surpasses, any other&#13;
poetry book put out in this area&#13;
and with some work and better&#13;
contributions, we can equal any&#13;
put out in this state. . ,&#13;
Eric J. Olson&#13;
Fred A. Lott,&#13;
Editors&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Since your RANGER ASKS&#13;
reporter did not come to ask me&#13;
my views on amnesty I give them&#13;
now.&#13;
To insist a deserter do time in&#13;
some type of alternative military&#13;
service is labeling his values and&#13;
moral judgements as something&#13;
worthless. By alternative service&#13;
a deserter would be&#13;
strengthening, thereby supporting,&#13;
the same military&#13;
system which commits the acts&#13;
he so strongly disaproves of.&#13;
It's an absurd proposal to offer&#13;
the 50,000 draft evaders and&#13;
deserters who long ago made&#13;
their own peace of mind. To force&#13;
a person to renig on his own&#13;
conscience or face imprisonment,&#13;
is a far cry from&#13;
American democracy.&#13;
D.S. Friedell&#13;
Kenosha, Sophomore&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Presents&#13;
F00SBAU TOURNAMENT&#13;
APRIL 9 -15&#13;
PRIZES F OR B EST TEAMS&#13;
Entry Fee: *1 for 2 person teem&#13;
Register by April 6&#13;
Register At SAB. or&#13;
Student Activities Office LLC D197&#13;
Sponsored by P.A.B.&#13;
!50&#13;
c Coupon&#13;
1&#13;
GOOD FOR 2 FREE DRY CYCLES WITH ANY&#13;
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NAME &amp; ADDRESS. &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., M ar. 28, 19 73&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
BYRDS&#13;
(SD 5058)&#13;
, , Parkside shows talent&#13;
Jtiign schoolers&#13;
compete in at recent folk fest&#13;
design contest&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center&#13;
Super Low Prices&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave., Racine&#13;
518-56th St., Kenosha&#13;
Thirty-six individual and team&#13;
entries have been received in the&#13;
First Annual University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Engineering&#13;
Design Contest for High School&#13;
Students.&#13;
Their quest: to build a better&#13;
egg container.&#13;
Judging and awarding of p rizes&#13;
to the two top entries will take&#13;
place on Saturday, May 5, at 1:30&#13;
p.m. following an "Egg Drop" in&#13;
which raw eggs (supplied by&#13;
Parkside) will be placed in the&#13;
student-designed containers and&#13;
subjected to a 15-foot free-fall.&#13;
The competition will be in the&#13;
Library-Learning Center Main&#13;
Place.&#13;
Containers encasing eggs&#13;
which survive the fall intact will&#13;
vie for awards based on size and&#13;
volume-the less of both the&#13;
better.&#13;
Following the competition, the&#13;
students have been invited to tour&#13;
Parkside engineering science&#13;
facilities and to take a dip in the&#13;
pool-possibly to wash the egg off&#13;
their faces.&#13;
High schools with students&#13;
entered in the competition are&#13;
Bradford and Tremper of&#13;
Kenosha; Horlick, Washington&#13;
Park, Case and Prairie of&#13;
Racine; Martin Luther, Bay&#13;
View, Thomas Moore and Pulaski&#13;
of Milwaukee; Whitnall of Hales&#13;
Corners; Hamilton of Greenfield;&#13;
St. Bona venture of Sturtevant;&#13;
and Franklin of Franklin.&#13;
Individual entries also have&#13;
been received from Franksville,&#13;
West Allis and Lake Geneva&#13;
students.&#13;
by Gary Jensen&#13;
Parkside may become a new&#13;
breeding ground for talent. About&#13;
ten different acts were presented&#13;
at the free folk fest Sunday,&#13;
March 18, between 2 and 6 p.m.&#13;
Brandy Wine, Parkside's best&#13;
blues band, began the show and&#13;
performed such classics as&#13;
"Little Red Rooster" and "Casey&#13;
Jones." Dave Rogers played&#13;
well, sang sour, and created a&#13;
humorous and friendly atmosphere.&#13;
The brothers Gregory&#13;
(Marti &amp; Mike), a guitar and&#13;
banjo duo, were likewise a gas.&#13;
Fred Bultman, the barefoot poet,&#13;
recited a medly of his own poetry&#13;
and "21st Century Schizoid&#13;
1701 N. Main Racine 633-9421&#13;
Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
T h u rs day 11-8&#13;
ACROSS FROM HOLIDAY INN&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches.&#13;
Foosball 2 Pool Tables |&#13;
Air Conditioning Pinball Machine &lt;&#13;
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SERVED IN THE ATMOSPHERE&#13;
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(formerly Shakey's)&#13;
Phone 658-2573 58th St. at 6th Ave&#13;
MAIN OFFICE: CAPITOL COURT MILWAUKEE 6208 Green Bay Road&#13;
Phone 654-0485&#13;
LL LENGTHS&#13;
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A ALL YOU CAN EAT&#13;
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Plus Your Favorite Mixed Drinks and Beers &#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
Wed., Mar. 28, 1973 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
There will be a meeting of all&#13;
faculty members interested in&#13;
developing an evaluation form&#13;
for interdivisional use this&#13;
semester, Thursday, March 29, at&#13;
3 p.m. in Greenquist room 103&#13;
(lecture hall). Interested&#13;
students may also attend.&#13;
•&#13;
Yoga classes will be offered by&#13;
a certified yoga instructor, Carol&#13;
Merrick, in the fencing room of&#13;
the Physical Education Building&#13;
beginning Monday, April 2. The&#13;
eight-week, no-credit course will&#13;
be held from noon until 12:30&#13;
starting Monday.&#13;
•&#13;
The Student Activities Board&#13;
will present a free mini-concert,&#13;
featuring Tony, Jumbo and&#13;
Garry. The concert will be in the&#13;
Student Activities Building,&#13;
tonight, at 9 p.m.&#13;
The University of WisconsinExtension&#13;
will offer a workshop&#13;
course in letter and report&#13;
writing. The course is called&#13;
Effective Business Communications",&#13;
and will begin&#13;
Thursday, April 12 from 7 p.m. to&#13;
9 p.m. at Starbuck Junior High&#13;
School, 1516 Ohio Street, Racine.&#13;
The workshop will include&#13;
lectures, films, slides, sample&#13;
letters, aids, and exercises. The&#13;
instructor will be William R.&#13;
Gerler, President, General&#13;
Communications, Racine, an&#13;
advertising, public relations, and&#13;
association management firm.&#13;
There will be six weekly&#13;
meetings for a fee of $25 (including&#13;
materials.) Interested&#13;
persons should register by April&#13;
6. For further information call&#13;
553-2312.&#13;
.Hi i 1H1 W&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Europe&#13;
CHICAGO - LO NDON&#13;
May 28- July 13 $199&#13;
June 13 - July 11 $215&#13;
includes:&#13;
Round Trip 747 Charter Jet&#13;
| Transfer to Downtown London&#13;
Applications available:&#13;
Travel Center LLC D-197&#13;
553-2279&#13;
11 1 M M&#13;
Women's Day&#13;
The Chamber Singers, a select&#13;
14-member vocal group of&#13;
Tf&#13;
3 iqfi n' W!&#13;
U PreSGnt 3 Pr&#13;
°Sram of 19th Century German Lieder&#13;
Pa&#13;
f&#13;
tsong&#13;
s at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Wednesday, March 28, in Room&#13;
103 Greenquist Hall. The concert&#13;
is free and open to the public&#13;
The News Election Service is&#13;
sponsoring scholarships in&#13;
Journalism in the name of the&#13;
Wisconsin County Clerks'&#13;
Association. There are four $500&#13;
scholarships available in the&#13;
state. The award will be based on&#13;
academic ability, financial need,&#13;
and participation in community&#13;
and school activities, especially&#13;
the school newspaper. Parkside&#13;
Communications Majors are&#13;
eligible to apply. For further&#13;
information, contact the&#13;
Financial Aids Office.&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
will present a comparative wine&#13;
tasting experience, made&#13;
available through the California&#13;
Wine Growers Association.&#13;
There will be six California&#13;
wines and four European which&#13;
will be tasted without the taster&#13;
knowing which wine it is. Each&#13;
participant will get eight&#13;
separate glasses of wine to taste,&#13;
and there will be cheese and&#13;
crackers at all the tables.&#13;
"This is not intended to be a&#13;
drunk! It is intended to be an&#13;
informative session," said Anthony&#13;
A. Totero.&#13;
Other campuses around the&#13;
state have had wine tasters, but&#13;
most of them have utilized local&#13;
suppliers.&#13;
Continued from page 1&#13;
Assertive Behavior Clinic&#13;
Two evening sessions are planned, beginning&#13;
at 7 p.m. One, an assertive behavior clinic for&#13;
women, will be conducted by Racine&#13;
psychologist Walter McDonald. He explained in&#13;
an interview that "for years in Western culture&#13;
there have been secret societies, each grouped&#13;
on the basis of some special interest. These&#13;
societies always have cryptic rituals which are&#13;
closely guarded, for to use them conveys power&#13;
and one must be initiated into the group before&#13;
exercising that power. Formal, secret societies&#13;
have nowadays disbanded or degenerated into&#13;
Elks clubs and the like; but there does still exist&#13;
an enormous secret society called MEN, who&#13;
have a set of rituals carefully guarded form&#13;
outsiders (women). One of these powerful rituals&#13;
is assertiveness."&#13;
The few women who have managed to uncover&#13;
this secretand use it have been at the very least&#13;
reprimanded for not knowing "their place".&#13;
"The idea," McDonald commented, "is to be&#13;
assertive without getting ostracized." He was&#13;
careful to distinguish between assertiveness and&#13;
aggressiveness, and remarked that "hatred&#13;
turns people off-learning to be assertive can&#13;
overcome hatred." He cited the Germaine&#13;
Greer-William F. Buckley debate on Women's&#13;
Liberation, saying that Greer was extremely&#13;
aggressive and could have made more converts&#13;
by cutting these techniques at times in favor of&#13;
assertion.&#13;
McDonald plans to deal with specific&#13;
problems, in his session. He believes one should&#13;
start small and experience success at assertion&#13;
in little things, which will be reinforcing and&#13;
facilitate the process in more difficult situations.&#13;
Some suggested problems are: Dealing with&#13;
repairmen who either ignore your call ofr help or&#13;
belittle your intelligence when they get there;&#13;
questioning a speaker without getting hung up&#13;
worrying if your question will come out intelligent&#13;
and well-framed; handling male&#13;
machismo rather than passively submitting to&#13;
it; and discussing women's liberation with&#13;
someone who may not be sympathetic.&#13;
Because too large a group would make it&#13;
impossible to effectively help anyone, participation&#13;
in this session will be limited to 40&#13;
women. Registration is necessary-call the Information&#13;
Center, 553-2345, before 4 p.m. on&#13;
Wednesday, April 4.&#13;
Women and the Law&#13;
The other evening program features a talk by&#13;
Milwaukee attorney Sandra Edhlund concerning&#13;
the legal rights of women. She will discuss how&#13;
the law affects women with respect to family&#13;
relations, employment, credit, consumer rights,&#13;
pensions and property.&#13;
Ms. Edhlund is a member of Women in&#13;
Transition, Women's Law Project, and the&#13;
Wisconsin Civil Liberties Committee on&#13;
Women's Rights. She received her B.A. cum&#13;
laude from Milwaukee Downer College, her M.A.&#13;
in political science from UW-M, and her J.D.&#13;
from UW-Madison.&#13;
PATRONIZE&#13;
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Experience&#13;
(6 California &amp; 4 European Wines)&#13;
Wed., April 4 7:30 P.M.&#13;
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valuable books at a&#13;
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prices. Savings up to 83&#13;
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Hundreds of titles to choose from including&#13;
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6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Mar. 28, 197 3&#13;
The Ranger asks What is your opinion&#13;
of the Parkside Student Government Association?&#13;
Lois Wick, Freshmen, Racine&#13;
"I don't think it's very good, I&#13;
don't really have a good opinion&#13;
because I don't think they do&#13;
anything for the students. I don't&#13;
think they really represent the&#13;
students as a whole."&#13;
Joseph Orlowski, Sophomore,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
"I don't know that much about&#13;
it."&#13;
Janet Sabol, Junior, Racine&#13;
"Well, I think the problem with&#13;
the PSGA is the nature of the&#13;
university begin with - you know&#13;
it's a comuter school and the&#13;
students don't care really. You&#13;
know, you ask students what they&#13;
think of student government and&#13;
they say, T didn't know it&#13;
existed.' And so if you have an&#13;
apathetic student body you're not&#13;
going to accomplish anything;&#13;
also students can never get&#13;
enough students united on one&#13;
issue to ever make any kind .of a&#13;
policy change. So it exists but it&#13;
doesn't really accomplish much&#13;
of anything, I don't think, as far&#13;
as doing some good if it's doing&#13;
what it's supposed to do. The&#13;
people on the student government&#13;
are very disorganized themselves,&#13;
they don't show up at&#13;
meetings, some of them, they&#13;
cah't organize their forces&#13;
cohesively and try accomplish&#13;
something for set policy&#13;
whatever it is they want to do.&#13;
And they kind of meander&#13;
around, well the university's&#13;
screwed up we should do&#13;
something about it, well what are&#13;
they going to do? They say we're&#13;
going to do this and then no one&#13;
shows up at the meeting, and&#13;
they're - not presistent enough&#13;
with the administration."&#13;
Tashe Bozinovski, Freshmen,&#13;
Racine&#13;
"I don't even know nothing&#13;
about it."&#13;
Diane Rosenfeldt,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
"I haven't any."&#13;
Senior,&#13;
Editors' Note : These comments&#13;
were also received but no&#13;
pictures were available.&#13;
Thomas Hillmer, Junior,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
"No thoughts."&#13;
Robert Bush, Junior, Kenosha&#13;
"Do I think it's benefitting the&#13;
students? From what I do know, I&#13;
think it's benefitting, and&#13;
sometimes I don't agree with all&#13;
their demands, but basically I&#13;
think it's doing a hell of a lot of&#13;
good for the school."&#13;
Gretchen Goebel, Junior, Racine&#13;
"I really don't know anything&#13;
about it."&#13;
Denise Anastasio, Junior, Racine&#13;
"I think it's doing alot of good,&#13;
but I think that when they're&#13;
having an election there should&#13;
be more issues debated. All they&#13;
say is that they think I'm the best&#13;
representative because I know&#13;
what the people want, and the&#13;
other one says I'm the best&#13;
representative. But they don't&#13;
seem to debate any issues that&#13;
you could really take a stand on.&#13;
And I think Tom Haack is really&#13;
doing a good job."&#13;
Dale Phillips, Sophomore,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Doesn't seem to be doing&#13;
much. I'm not following it, but I&#13;
don't hear of anything they do&#13;
really."&#13;
8 Lbs.&#13;
Dry&#13;
Cleaned&#13;
only&#13;
$100 2&#13;
Professionally Cleaned and Pressed&#13;
P A N T S . . . 8 9 c&#13;
SPORT COATS 89c&#13;
SKIRTS ... 89c&#13;
SWEATERS . 89c&#13;
DRESSES . . 1.78&#13;
SUITS . . . 1.78&#13;
Lincoln Village Laundromat&#13;
Open 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.&#13;
6814 Fourteenth Avenue Kenosha. Wis&#13;
Fri. - Mar. 30&#13;
8:00 p.m&#13;
Sun . - Apr. 1&#13;
7:30 p.m&#13;
Adm. 75c&#13;
Student Activities Bldg.&#13;
/ictdio-'tVc&amp;uat 'levied*&#13;
/lucUoJVUual&#13;
Review&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
Could you make a life and death decision?&#13;
Imagine that you are the captain of an oceanliner which has just&#13;
sunk. You and the survivors are in an overburdened lifeboat. Would&#13;
you have the ability to decide which of those people must die to save&#13;
the others?&#13;
"The Right to Live: Who Decides?", a film clip from the movie&#13;
"Abandon Ship", raises this and other questions.&#13;
The clip itself tells the story of how the captain of a sunken&#13;
oceanliner decides that some of the people in his lifeboat must be put&#13;
over the side. It is a difficult choice. His criteria are those of strength&#13;
and endurance: The strong survive, the weak must perish.&#13;
The passengers react with horror to the captain's decision, wnad&#13;
will not comply with his orders unless forced at gunpoint. This leaves&#13;
the captain complete responsibility.&#13;
A day later, after several people had been put over the side so that&#13;
the remaining passengers could row to Africa, a ship is sighted and the&#13;
survivors are rescued.&#13;
The reaction of the remaining passengers is that of washing their&#13;
hands of the affair. It is the captain's responsibility. He alone must&#13;
face the consequences.&#13;
One asks oneself what our own reaction would be under such circumstances.&#13;
Could we accept such an awful responsibility alone?&#13;
Would we have the courage?&#13;
And what about the other life and death decisions which are made?&#13;
Who should decide to have an abortion, or that a person should have&#13;
the right to die instead of b eing kept alive by machines and medicines?&#13;
I believe this film poses some stimulating questions which we can&#13;
not afford not to answer.&#13;
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imm'p 1 SAV &gt; ""7 WHAT V 1 SAW&#13;
W.&#13;
The ParksideWed.,&#13;
Mar. 28, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
RAIMGER Martin selected most valuable&#13;
• UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
1973 TENNIS SCHEDULE&#13;
April 7 Carthage. HOME 1:00 p.m.&#13;
April 13 Elmhurst, Wheaton, Carthage and Carroll&#13;
April 17 Milton. HOME 12:00&#13;
April 23 Whitewater Invitational. Whitewater at 12:00&#13;
April 25 Marquette. HOME 1:00 p.m.&#13;
April 28 Green Bay. HOME 12:00&#13;
May 5 St. Norbert. HOME 1:00 p.m.&#13;
May 12 Green Bay - Green Bay at 12:00&#13;
May 14 Milton - Milton at 12:00&#13;
May 18 and 19 District 14 - O shkosh at 9:00 a.m.&#13;
College of Racine to be added later.&#13;
Sports&#13;
Carthage, 10:30 a.m.&#13;
Junior Ken Martin of Coleman,&#13;
the first Parkside athlete to win&#13;
an NAIA individual championship,&#13;
has been selected most&#13;
valuable wrestler at the school by&#13;
a vote of his teammates.&#13;
Martin, who compiled a 22-1-1&#13;
mark enroute to the NAIA 134-lb.&#13;
title at Sioux City, Iowa, recently,&#13;
has never lost to a Wisconsin&#13;
wrestler. His career mark after&#13;
second, third and first places in&#13;
NAIA competition stands at 6 2-6-&#13;
2.&#13;
by amy cundari&#13;
Martin, who also co-captained&#13;
the team with NAIA 126-lb.&#13;
runner-up Bill West of Kenosha,&#13;
led the Rangers to a ninth place&#13;
finish nationally, highest among&#13;
any Wisconsin colleges.&#13;
He's never lost to anyone who&#13;
hadn't already gained NAIA or&#13;
NCAA all-America status.&#13;
P.E. Bldg. Schedule&#13;
RECREATIONAL HOURS&#13;
Pool&#13;
Monday 8. Wednesday 11:30-1:30&#13;
Tuesday &amp; Thursday 11:30 - 2:30&#13;
Friday 11:30-3:30&#13;
Monday,.Tuesday, Wednesday 5:30-10:00&#13;
Thursday 5:30-7:00&#13;
9:00-10:00&#13;
Saturday 10:00-5:00&#13;
Sunday 1:30 • 10:0 0&#13;
Gym&#13;
Monday thru Friday 10:30 -1:30 (2 courts open)&#13;
3:30 - 6:00 (1 caurt open)&#13;
6:00-10:00 (restricted play)&#13;
Handball Courts&#13;
Monday thru Friday ,8:00a.m. - 10:00p.m.,&#13;
except Tuesday 8. Thursday closed fro-n 10:30-12:00 for classes&#13;
Saturday 8:00-5:00&#13;
Sunday 1:00.10:00&#13;
Iff B^ITTTT'TM 1' ii&#13;
1 l»n&#13;
SPECIAL for P arkside students only 3j|&#13;
2-Audio Magneti c Corp. m&#13;
Ca ss e tt e Tape Cartridges fS&#13;
FOR ON LY . ..&#13;
Offer good till April 1, 1973 MjP cjj&#13;
m BRANDTS' D ISTRIBUTORS, INC. S&#13;
Vil Monument Square, Downtown Racine VU&#13;
GO FAR ON A&#13;
LITTLE MONEY&#13;
T h at's you. landing mo r e than a million dol lars worth of&#13;
jet aircraft at 150 miles p er hour, within 3 seco n ds and 200 feet&#13;
T h at's you after an i nvalu able educat ion , the finest there is&#13;
complim e nts of tth e Navy.&#13;
T h at's you with your wings of gold, with all the prestig e and&#13;
privil eges of a Naval Officer and aviato r.&#13;
Merrill Lync h c an be pretty exciting in a different way.&#13;
But right n ow y ou'v e got that one ch a n c e in your life to swing wide&#13;
a s the se a , a nd as h igh a s the sky .&#13;
It you're going to be something, why i,u: be something special?&#13;
THE NAVY OFFICER INFORMATION TEAM&#13;
WILL BE ON YOUR CAMPUS:&#13;
*+-5 April 1973&#13;
Sales &amp; Service At&#13;
: SCHULTZ BUICK-0PEL&#13;
1021 - 60th S treet, K enosha&#13;
654-3514 *2,373°°&#13;
1973 0PEI&#13;
1900&#13;
meos&#13;
PIZZA KtTCHBN&#13;
Chicken &amp; Italian S ausage B ombers&#13;
Free Delivery to Parkside Vi llage&#13;
5021 50th Annus Phone 657-5191&#13;
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and Smith&#13;
will never be like this. &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Mar. 28, 1973&#13;
Speaking&#13;
of Sports&#13;
by Bill Blaha&#13;
In 1971, Paul Williams and Roger Nichols wrote-a song called, "I&#13;
Won't Last A Day Without You." The soft-singing rock group the&#13;
Carpenters recorded the song. After listening to the words, I changed&#13;
the you to mean sports, instead of a lover's boy or girl friend.&#13;
The first part of the song goes, Day after Day I must face a world of&#13;
strangers Where I don't belong I'm not that strong It's nice to know&#13;
that there's someone I can turn to Who will always care You're always&#13;
there...&#13;
Well sports are always there, no matter how irrepressible they get. I&#13;
state my case of not the sport's statistics, but more the words and&#13;
sounds that have probably missed most sports page readers.&#13;
Case 1: The wife of O hio State's football coach Woody, Anne Hayes&#13;
said, "I count my blessings. While he's abosrbed with 80 boys and their&#13;
problems. I don't have to worry about one thin blonde in an apartment&#13;
somewhere."&#13;
Case 2: Brian Piccolo's ending to a happy story. I'm sure most&#13;
people remember Brian. I know I will because of t he good fortune of&#13;
watching the movie "Brian's Song" with a good-sized group of college&#13;
kids in Eau Claire. There were no words or sounds to be heard during&#13;
the movie, but after more than one person's eyes were crying. Brian&#13;
was quite a man. Remember what Gale Sayers said continuously in&#13;
the movie, "Oh Pic." Well, "OH PIC" your worries are over; after&#13;
three years your wife has found someone to take care of your three&#13;
beautiful children. Joy Piccolo was married in a private ceremony two&#13;
weekends ago. Pic would have wanted it that way.&#13;
The author of B rian's story, A Short Season, Jeannie Morris wrote&#13;
last week in the Chicago Today, "You had to know that somewhere --&#13;
perhaps over a golden glass of Gatorade - Italian eyes were smiling."&#13;
Case 3: The story of Bungalow Bill Walton, UCLA's towering redheaded&#13;
basketball star, whose brother was aked if Bill was qualified to&#13;
be drafted as a hardship case by the pros. Bruce put tongue in check&#13;
and said, "I'm hoping to get a job in pro football so we can get off&#13;
welfare." Bruce played football at UCLA and was drafted by the&#13;
Dallas Cowboys.&#13;
Case 4: The continuous story of girl's success in athletics. Sue&#13;
Palmer debuted the first girl to enter a California junior college&#13;
basketball game. The only trouble was Sue's men opponents, had&#13;
longer hair. Denise Long a cute, small 5-11, 38-28-36, was drafted&#13;
several years back by the professional basketball team Golden State.&#13;
Jim Murray, a LA-Times columnist, said, "If arena's had doors in the&#13;
showers she might still be playing, besides she looks a lot better&#13;
running around in her underwear than Wilt Chamberlain." Eileen&#13;
Reilly, girl track star at Parkside, who was asked at last year's prom.&#13;
Was that you I saw running yesterday? Good bet, if you guessed she&#13;
was.&#13;
Case 5: The basketball play least likely to be repeated. It happened a&#13;
couple of weeks back in the Northwestern vs. Minnesota game. NW&#13;
had just sunk two free throws, when after the second one, a NW player&#13;
grabbed the ball and threw it to another NW player. The ball should&#13;
have been in Minnesota's possession, but at the time they were too&#13;
busy playing defense. Well, NW scored after an alert player realized&#13;
they were headed in the wrong direction. Of course, Minnesota won the&#13;
protest and the two points were subtracted from NW's score.&#13;
Case 6: On St. Patrick's day Notre Dame played Southern California&#13;
in the NIT basketball tournament. With the luck of the Irish, or maybe&#13;
of a leprechaun, Steve Honzo and Tom Casey were put in charge as the&#13;
referees. The Irish won 69-65 sinking 23-33 free throws to USC's 1-2.&#13;
Oh, I almost forgot the end of the song went... I won't last a day&#13;
without you...&#13;
C O U P ON Nwwwwwvwvw.&#13;
Alfredo's Restaurant&#13;
2827 63rd St., Kenosha&#13;
50* OFF °P'!i&#13;
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ITALIAN FOOD A SPECIALTY&#13;
SPAGHETTI - RAVIOLI - LASAGNA&#13;
DRINKS AVAILABLE F ROM THE BAR Expires&#13;
April 4, 1973&#13;
WWAVWVW.V COUPON"&#13;
Henderson heads&#13;
soccer coaches&#13;
Hal Henderson, soccer coach,&#13;
has been elected president of the&#13;
National Assn. of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics (NAIA) Soccer Coaches&#13;
Assn.&#13;
i wmm&#13;
SPORTS SHORTS&#13;
Hal Henderson&#13;
The first year Parkside coach&#13;
was named NAIA soccer chief at&#13;
the association's recent annual&#13;
convention in Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
His responsibilities in the job&#13;
include the chairing of all&#13;
meetings and conventions, the&#13;
supervision of all-America&#13;
selections and the direction of the&#13;
district, area and national&#13;
tournaments.&#13;
Henderson has also served two&#13;
years each as vice president,&#13;
secretary-treasurer and area&#13;
chairman in the soccer&#13;
association. He will be president&#13;
until March, 1975.&#13;
Henderson has coached college&#13;
soccer eight years, including&#13;
tours at Rockford College, the&#13;
University of Colorado and Park&#13;
College, his alma mater.&#13;
The Carthage College co-ed&#13;
tracksters eked out a win over the&#13;
Rangerettes, 40-36 l ast Saturday&#13;
at Carthage.&#13;
The Parkside team received&#13;
some fine individual performances&#13;
from several members.&#13;
Sandy Kingsheld gathered&#13;
in a first place and two seconds,&#13;
those coming in the 220 yard&#13;
dash, the long jump and the 60&#13;
yard dash respectively.&#13;
Maria Breach settled for a&#13;
second in the shot put while&#13;
Teammate Trudy Buehrens took&#13;
first in the shot and a first in the&#13;
60 yard hurdles. Sue Von Behren&#13;
rounded out the Rangerette&#13;
scoring with a first in the high&#13;
jump.&#13;
The womens next meet will be&#13;
on April 7 at the U.S. Track and&#13;
Field Federation Indoor Meet at&#13;
Madison. The mens track team&#13;
will also be competeing in that&#13;
meet.&#13;
The UW-Parkside soccer club&#13;
will hold a team meeting and&#13;
practice at 4 p.m. Wednesday at&#13;
the Physical Education Bldg.&#13;
The Parkside Rugby team lost&#13;
to the Chicago Lions ten to four.&#13;
All scoring was done in the&#13;
second period when the Lions&#13;
made two penalty kicks and a&#13;
lone penalty kick was made for&#13;
Parkside by Mark Barnhill.&#13;
The next game will be played at&#13;
Prudue Northcentral April 1.&#13;
Kevin O'Neil finished third in&#13;
the National association of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics last&#13;
weekend at LaCrosse. O'Neil&#13;
qualified for the finals on the&#13;
rings with a score of 8.60. His&#13;
total combined score was 17.35.&#13;
Bryon Petschow finished 32nd&#13;
and vaulting while Tom Brannon&#13;
finished 37th.&#13;
The whole team qualified with&#13;
132 points. 130 acre necessary.&#13;
Parkside entered two runners&#13;
in the Racine Park High School&#13;
Invitational College Mile.&#13;
Lucien Rosa won with a time of&#13;
4:19.1, and Dennis Biel came in&#13;
third in 4:23.3.&#13;
Rosa and Biel defeated a field&#13;
of runners from Marquette,&#13;
Carthage, and UWM.&#13;
So says t he YA...&#13;
by&#13;
How Rt rids&#13;
I JUST LEARNED&#13;
FROM THE. VA "WAT&#13;
I CAN GET MORE&#13;
BENEFITS UNDER&#13;
THE NEW PENSION&#13;
LAW.'&#13;
Y7 NEWS IS &gt;&#13;
SURE StOW&#13;
IN YOUR&#13;
PART OF&#13;
THE COUNTRY;&#13;
For information, contact the nearest VA office (check&#13;
yoor phone book) or write Veterans Administration.&#13;
232X. 810 Vermont Ave . NW. Washington D C 20420&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
Folding bicycles fully equipped ideal for&#13;
apt., dorm, car trunk, boat, brand new, take&#13;
it everywhere 637-1591.&#13;
European 10-speed bicycle. Brand-new&#13;
means and ladies models 637-5661.&#13;
1969 Camaro economical, 3-speed, Orange,&#13;
black vinyl top. $1295.00, 694-6277.&#13;
For Sale: 1970 Camaro Rally Sport, 21,000&#13;
miles, snow tires included. Call Parkside&#13;
extension 2360.&#13;
Termpapers Typed: contact Kris Wright 632-&#13;
0150 after 5 p.m.&#13;
Will do typing at my home. Call Nancy. 632-&#13;
'667.&#13;
Tough&#13;
club a&#13;
to get W&#13;
into. V&#13;
The Marines&#13;
are looking for&#13;
Apply now for leadership teaming this summer&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
Classified Advertising Rate&#13;
5 cents per word up to 25 words for each insertion.&#13;
Payable in advance by check or cash to:&#13;
The Parkside Ranger&#13;
Business Office&#13;
D-194 LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
NAME&#13;
CHECK ENCT.nfiED FOR $&#13;
DATES(S) TO RUN&#13;
To find your cost, multiply the&#13;
number of words times 5&#13;
cents. Multiply that total by&#13;
the number of issues you want&#13;
it to run.&#13;
APPRFSS °ATE&#13;
riTY PHONE NO.&#13;
On e word per space Do not skip space between words to show spacing&#13;
Ads must be submitted one week before publication. </text>
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