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              <text>PSGA to re-interview ~&#13;
~&#13;
L&amp;FA applicants&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
At their meeting Sunday night&#13;
Parkside's Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGAl decided to&#13;
re-inlerview students who apP.l&lt;d&#13;
to be placed on the studentfaculty&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Committee,to fill the remaining&#13;
vacancy.&#13;
Four PSGA members attended&#13;
the meeting. They were Tom&#13;
Jennett, interim President, and&#13;
senators Ken Konkol, Chuck&#13;
Stephenand Pat McDivitt. Other&#13;
PSGA members who were&#13;
notifiedby both mail and phone&#13;
but did not attend the meeting&#13;
were Dave Otto, Mike Wickware,&#13;
Jan Petzke, Kathy Wellner, Terri&#13;
Appleget, Tom Hughes, Helmut&#13;
Kab, Ernie Llanas, Nancy Lee&#13;
and Rick Ponzio. Wellner. Rah&#13;
and Lee have resigned from&#13;
PSGA but their resignations have&#13;
not yet been accepted.&#13;
Recommendations Approved&#13;
All the student r ecornmendations&#13;
by PSGA to studentfaculty&#13;
committees can hold&#13;
legallyuntil new PSGA elections&#13;
are beld the second week of&#13;
November. However, Konkol&#13;
expressed hope tha t these&#13;
recommendations would stick&#13;
even after the elections, when&#13;
they have to be re-approved by&#13;
the new Senate.&#13;
The PSGASenate has approved&#13;
the recommendations of the&#13;
interviewing and screening&#13;
committee headed by Konkol&#13;
excopt for the Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts Committee in which ten&#13;
people were originally interViewed,&#13;
two recommended&#13;
and one position still open. The&#13;
two Iilled positions are held by&#13;
Greg Klema, chairperson of the&#13;
Parkside Activities .Board&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee,&#13;
and Chuck. Perronne a&#13;
junior and Sigmi Pi fratern'ity&#13;
member.&#13;
Konkol suggested the whole&#13;
senate choose between applicants&#13;
Tom Jones, Dick Jones and Jean&#13;
Kiddney for the third position.&#13;
Tom Jones is a sophomore and a&#13;
member of the Third World&#13;
organization. Dick Jones is a&#13;
sophomore and a member of&#13;
Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity.&#13;
Kiddney is also a sophomore, an&#13;
adult student and involved with&#13;
the Day care Center. McDivitt&#13;
questioned Konkol as to whether&#13;
or not in the interview. Kiddney&#13;
had the point of view that PSGA&#13;
wanted people appointed to have&#13;
regarding Lecture and Fine Arts.&#13;
Konkol replied that he had been&#13;
unable to tell either way.&#13;
It was decided that all students&#13;
who had applied would be reinterviewed&#13;
on Wednesday,&#13;
October 24. "If I call them all in&#13;
again," asked Konkol, "am I&#13;
going to have someone else there&#13;
to help me?" Jennett said, "If&#13;
you let us know when." "I let ~0lI&#13;
know last time," Konkol replied&#13;
sarcastically.&#13;
Interviews to be Taped&#13;
Jennett asked that the interviews&#13;
be taped this time, as&#13;
there was some controversy&#13;
regarding the manner in which&#13;
interviewing was conducted&#13;
before. "Mustafa Abdullah,"&#13;
Jennett said, "had complained to&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger (assistant&#13;
Dean of Students) that he was&#13;
discriminated against because he&#13;
was black." Konkol said that&#13;
continued on page 7&#13;
More vending macbines&#13;
_..... _ ..._------------- ---- ...• _ .._ ....&#13;
The Parkside'-------&#13;
RA&#13;
Wedne.y,&#13;
GER&#13;
Oct. 24, 1973 Vol. II No.•&#13;
Faculty "outraged" over&#13;
withheld information&#13;
Approximately 20 faculty&#13;
members attended the Wisconsm&#13;
Education Association Council&#13;
lWEAC) organizational meeting&#13;
last Friday afternoon.&#13;
The main topic of discuss.ion&#13;
concerned UW-system funds that&#13;
were set aside for undergraduate&#13;
educational improvement grants&#13;
According to several of the&#13;
faculty who were present. the&#13;
annooncement that these funds&#13;
are available was made 00&#13;
August 16, 1973 and received by&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie on August 17&#13;
Parkside faculty members did&#13;
not learn about the available&#13;
funds until October 17, applications&#13;
for the money are due&#13;
on October 31&#13;
Faculty members at the&#13;
meeting agreed to make their&#13;
feelings of "outrage" on II".&#13;
withholding of information&#13;
known to several sources. They&#13;
decided to send a resotuuee. In&#13;
wrating, to the full-facult)&#13;
meeting, the Uruversrty Committee,&#13;
and Central Administration&#13;
(CA) In • tadison&#13;
The protest to CA will be 10 the&#13;
form of a request for an eXlenslon&#13;
Hot food service in SA8&#13;
to be discontinued&#13;
There will no longer be hot food&#13;
service available in the Student&#13;
Activities BuHeling. It is being&#13;
~lOated due to lack of suf-&#13;
~~nt users to justify. main.&#13;
tauung it.&#13;
w~~dent. Life coordinator&#13;
hal J: N,ebuhr said the service&#13;
S n Operating at a 15 per- ""I del· .&#13;
aver ICll this semester. An&#13;
bu age of 30 people per day were not!:: SOmething, but many elid&#13;
y complete meals.&#13;
More vending machines are&#13;
being installed in the S.A.B. to&#13;
provide food for persons still&#13;
wishing to eat lunch there.&#13;
Niebuhr does not anticipate that&#13;
this will have a detrimental C:f&#13;
.&#13;
fect&#13;
on lines and crowded conditions&#13;
, the LLC cafeteria. since very&#13;
}~wstudents were going down ~.~&#13;
hill to eat anyway. and CIV}&#13;
service personnel in Tallent Hall&#13;
can purchase sandwicheS. and so&#13;
th S A B machmes. on from e . ' . .&#13;
Niebuhr added that he .IS&#13;
currently trying to come up With&#13;
a solution to a problem we will&#13;
have next year when the Kenosha&#13;
campus closes The hot food&#13;
service at Kenosha this year lS&#13;
doll'lg very well, he commented&#13;
"When the people using It are on&#13;
the main campus next year we'll&#13;
have to have another area&#13;
besides the existing LLC&#13;
facilities to ser"e them. The&#13;
space is availabJe In S.A.B. and a&#13;
kitchen already there, but&#13;
students won't go there so we've&#13;
got to try and find a suitable area&#13;
up the lull."&#13;
of the apphcauOII deodlme_ It&#13;
least for Parkslde faculty. WEAC&#13;
members .,11 ask that th.&#13;
UroversIty Comrmttee send a&#13;
Similar reque-st tee df'adUot"&#13;
extension to Central Ad·&#13;
mlnlStrahon.&#13;
Alan hucard, as oclate&#13;
professor of Eng! cautioned&#13;
his coIleago es about the at&#13;
hand "{;nW~ ......show a pattern&#13;
of nogli nco, 'OU don't ,..ant to&#13;
.. "" .... te the Import of&#13;
th lDOdenL"&#13;
OlIIer subjec cli5cuued at the&#13;
-.ng ...... 01 oI1ken&#13;
and the formation of a eoerinI&#13;
commit Both acUons&#13;
dela) ed until membonhlp&#13;
rNSed&#13;
DIane Wakoski&#13;
Th. Lecture and Fme Arts Commlllee, the Poetry Forum. and the&#13;
Women's Caucus are sponsonng a poetry worbhop and .... d.m&amp; WIth&#13;
poet Diane Wakoslti \\Cak i IS the author 01 such poetry coli bans&#13;
as Di&gt;&lt;repan&lt;i and \j&gt;parilioa . Greed. 1.0 ide IIoe Blood FaclGry,&#13;
The \tGlore:') de 8e.tra) ...1 Poem • 011 Barba.rolll SbGre. and n~&#13;
PumpkiD Pie or reassu.nK~ are: al •• ) r.he: .ll.bou.gh. e iO\'~&#13;
l/Iem.&#13;
The poetry "T1ling ......-bhop ..i11 be 011Oct 29 from 4 to 5 P m In the&#13;
lam Place lounges Dl;:J and D174 The Wako6lti poetry readlng on&#13;
OCt 29 ""II he at a pm on tho llurd floor of the hl:ral)· Th .\ nl&#13;
all&#13;
PSGA to re-intervievv The Parkside~------&#13;
L&amp;F A applicants&#13;
by Debra Frieden&#13;
At their meeting Sunday night&#13;
Parkside's Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA) decided to&#13;
re-interview students who appl_ied&#13;
to be placed on the studentfaculty&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Committee, to fill the remaining&#13;
vacancy.&#13;
Four PSGA members attended&#13;
the meeting. They were Tom&#13;
JeMett, interim President, and&#13;
enators Ken Konkol, Chuck&#13;
tephen and Pat McDivitt. Other&#13;
PSGA members who were&#13;
notified by both mail and phone&#13;
but did not attend the meeting&#13;
\\ere Dave Otto, Mike Wickware,&#13;
Jan Petzke, Kathy Wellner, Terri&#13;
Appleget, Tom Hughes, Helmut&#13;
Kah, Ernie Llanas, Nancy Lee&#13;
and Rick Ponzio. Wellner, Kah&#13;
and Lee have resigned from&#13;
PSGA but their resignations have&#13;
not yet been accepted.&#13;
Rttommendations Approved&#13;
All the student recommendations&#13;
by PSGA to studentfaculty&#13;
committees can hold&#13;
legally until new PSGA elections&#13;
are held the second week of&#13;
, 'ovember. However, Konkol&#13;
expressed hope that these&#13;
recommendations would stick&#13;
even after the elections, when&#13;
they have to be re-approved by&#13;
the new Senate.&#13;
The PSGA Senate has approved&#13;
the recommendations of the&#13;
nterviewing and screening&#13;
committee headed by Konkol&#13;
except for the Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts Committee in which ten&#13;
people were originally interviewed,&#13;
two recommended&#13;
and one position still open. The&#13;
two filled positions are held by&#13;
Greg Klema, chairperson of the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee,&#13;
and Chuck Perronne, a&#13;
junior and Sigmi Pi fraternity member.&#13;
Konkol suggested the whole&#13;
senate choose between applicants&#13;
Tom Jones, Dick Jones and Jean&#13;
Kiddney for the third position.&#13;
Tom Jones is a sophomore and a&#13;
member of the Third World&#13;
organization. Dick Jones is a&#13;
sophomore and a member of&#13;
Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity.&#13;
Kiddney is also a sophomore, an&#13;
adult student and involved with&#13;
the Day Care Center. McDivitt&#13;
questioned Konkol as to whether&#13;
or not in the interview, Kiddney&#13;
had the point of view that PSGA&#13;
wanted people appointed to have&#13;
regarding Lecture and Fine Arts.&#13;
Konkol replied that he had been&#13;
unable to tell either way.&#13;
It was decided that all students&#13;
who had applied would be reinterviewed&#13;
on Wednesday,&#13;
October 24. "If I call them all in&#13;
again," asked Konkol, "am I&#13;
going to have someone else there&#13;
to help me?" Jennett said, "If&#13;
you let us know when." "I let ~ou&#13;
know last time," Konkol rephed&#13;
sarcastically.&#13;
Interviews to be Taped&#13;
Jennett asked that the interviews&#13;
be taped this time, as&#13;
there was some controversy&#13;
regarding the manner in which&#13;
interviewing was conducted&#13;
before. "Mustafa Abdullah,"&#13;
Jennett said, "had complained to&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger (assistant&#13;
Dean of Students) that he wa&#13;
discriminated against because he&#13;
was black " Konkol said that&#13;
continued on p 1ge 7&#13;
More vending machines&#13;
RANGE&#13;
Wedne&#13;
Faculty "outraged" over&#13;
withheld informa •&#13;
10n&#13;
Hot food service in SAS&#13;
to be discontinued&#13;
Th_ere will no longer be hot food&#13;
service available in the Student&#13;
ctivities Building. It is being&#13;
terminated due to lack of sufr~~nt&#13;
users to justify. main- taining it.&#13;
, l~dent Life coordinator&#13;
hallltam lebuhr said the service&#13;
5 been operating at a 15 per- cent def· · av 1c1t this semester. An&#13;
bu ~age of 30 people per day were&#13;
noi'ng something, but many did&#13;
buy complete meals.&#13;
More vending machines are&#13;
being installed in the S.A.B. ~o&#13;
prov1 'd e food for persons still . h . g to eat lunch there. WIS ID . . th t N. buhr does not anticipate a&#13;
th\: will have a detrimental ~f!ect&#13;
rnes and crowded cond1ttons&#13;
?n ~e LLC cafeteria, since very&#13;
~~w students were going down ~~ hiJI to eat anyway, and c1&#13;
service personnel in Tallent Hall&#13;
can purchase sandwiches_ and so&#13;
on from the S.A.B. machmes . .&#13;
Nl.ebuhr added that he _ is&#13;
P with currently trying to come u&#13;
a solution to a prob! m&#13;
have next ye r wh the • no&#13;
campu cl . The h r&#13;
en•ice at Kenosha th ) r&#13;
doing very ell, he ~~mented. "When the people mg tl&#13;
the main campus next ar 11&#13;
have to ha,·e nother&#13;
be ide- th xLting LLC&#13;
facilitie, to rve them. The&#13;
,pace i available in .A.B. and a&#13;
kitchen already th re , but&#13;
student on't go there so '\e&#13;
got to try and find a suitable rea&#13;
up the htll." &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wedtllliclay. OCt. 24. 1m&#13;
'-&#13;
RANGER&#13;
EditorioI/Opinion&#13;
Committee&#13;
appointments&#13;
handled&#13;
badly&#13;
Ope of the duties of the Parkslde Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA) Is to set up an Interviewing committee&#13;
as the Initial step in the process of appointing&#13;
students to student-faculty committees. The final&#13;
recommendations are to be a lolnt effort of the Student&#13;
senate. the Chancellor and Vice-chancellor, and should&#13;
be made In a careful and unprejudiced manner.&#13;
PSGA has apparently devised a new system though, In&#13;
which Ken Konkol. senator and chairperson of the&#13;
screening committee (also the only active committee&#13;
member .. If anyone else happened to be in the office&#13;
during Interviews they did listen, which seemed to&#13;
validate the process&gt;. refus!!d to release the names of&#13;
&amp;ny Individuals Interviewed except those he wished to&#13;
see serve on the various committees. As appointees to&#13;
these student.faculty committees are to serve the needs&#13;
and Interesfs of the student body. It Is necessary that all&#13;
of the names and accurate summaries of the affitudes of&#13;
these students be available.&#13;
When RANGER requested this information after&#13;
learning of complaints about the selection process,&#13;
Konkol refused to provide it, claiming confidentiality for&#13;
the applicants and himself. This in spite the fact that he&#13;
had previously voluntarily shown us a list containing the&#13;
names. He said that he would only give us the Information&#13;
If the Senate authorized him to at the next&#13;
PSGA meeting.&#13;
At that meeting he willingly read the names of applicants&#13;
In spite of the presence of two RANGER&#13;
reporters and without receiving the "authorization" he&#13;
claimed he needed. His previous ploy was obviously to&#13;
buy time and prevent RANGER from adequately&#13;
researching a story that appeared would reflect adversely&#13;
on himself. Acting PSGA President Tom Jennett&#13;
admitted at the time that Konkol had absolutely no&#13;
authority to w)thhold the names and should suffer some&#13;
consequences. But he said that short of trying physical&#13;
force there appeared to be no way to make Konkol&#13;
behave responsibly In this matter.&#13;
Working from memory and the list of "appointees"&#13;
Konkol recommended, RANGER called a few students&#13;
who had applied and learned that much of the controversy&#13;
centered on the Lecture and Fine Arts committee.&#13;
It was learned Konkol relected nominees with&#13;
whom his opinion differed. Students explained that the&#13;
first step of the Interview Konkol made clear his wish to&#13;
see this committee abollstled as It presently stands.&#13;
When students were unresponsive to Konkol's&#13;
suggestion they ended up missing from his list of&#13;
recommended appointees. One student left off that list&#13;
said, "I went In because I was Interested. I volunteered&#13;
because I was concerned. My Interview didn't last even&#13;
five minutes."&#13;
Of the nine people applying to the L&amp;FA committee,&#13;
two were chosen and one opening stili exists. One of the&#13;
two appointees Is Greg Klema who chairs the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board Fine Arts Committee. While this may&#13;
at first appear a good credential for L&amp;FA, we question&#13;
whether or not his simultaneously serving on both&#13;
committees Is not a conflict of interest? It certainly Is&#13;
unfair to students to be represented on two separate&#13;
committees of similar nature by the same person, for&#13;
this narrows options In programming possibilities.&#13;
Admittedly. there are a limited number of positions&#13;
available on student-faculty committees. However,&#13;
never should Intelligent, sincere and concerned students&#13;
be rejected because their opinions differ with those of&#13;
the person entrusted with the task of interviewing them.&#13;
Student government officers have a responsibility to be&#13;
fair. open,mlnded and mature.&#13;
RANGER calls on PSGA and the student body in&#13;
general to see that tactics such as those employed in&#13;
committee recommendations are never again used.&#13;
There's a madman&#13;
in the White House&#13;
"Whether ours shail continue to be a gov.ernment of&#13;
f n is now for Congress and ultimately the&#13;
laws ~r 0 pemoepleto decide" So spoke special Watergate&#13;
American . . fl&#13;
t&#13;
r Archibald Cox after being Ired by&#13;
prosecuo . . t~&#13;
P&#13;
'dent Nixon for his perserverance In pursuing II~ r-est . ~.. f t' ... d hts refusal to compromise rus rnves Iga Ion. trutn an III t t ·t t·&#13;
N&#13;
. n's compromise in the Waterga e apes Sl ua Ion&#13;
rxo ld t·t t· I&#13;
was supposedly designed !o evoi a cons I u rona&#13;
f ntation' his recent actions have created the most&#13;
con ro, t· C . I&#13;
. crisis of all, with the Execu rve. ongresslona&#13;
serrous I' ·th· th I&#13;
d J d&#13;
iciary branches all batt Ing WI rn nemse ves&#13;
an u . t· d f&#13;
and with each other, and all being ques lone rom&#13;
without by the people themselves, .&#13;
N' n's termination of Cox and Ruckelshaus and the .'X:ation of Attorney General Richardson illustrate a&#13;
reslg I' t . tal ~. d sperate but arrogant man strugg Ing 0 main am ms&#13;
~wer. Once no one could den~ that Nixon was at least&#13;
politically sophisticated. But. hls demand that Cox cease&#13;
ndermining his compromise was a breach of the&#13;
~greement that Cox would be given complete freedom in&#13;
his investigation. It was obvio~s that. Cox wo~l.d not&#13;
comply and Nixon would find hlms?l! In ? posltion of&#13;
questioned authority. This was poll!lCal ineptitude to&#13;
say the least, and Nixon's degeneration to such a level&#13;
that members of his Administration are resigning over&#13;
his policies or getting fired f?r refusin~ t? follow h~m is&#13;
an indication of his increasingly egotistical, maniacal&#13;
view of a questionable reality.&#13;
Grave questions about Mr. Nixon's balance and&#13;
perception must be asked in addition to the .moral ,and&#13;
legal queries that have been abounding since&#13;
Watergate, He is putting himself in the position of a god,&#13;
beyond the reach of law and the people and the&#13;
American government he is a part of, Before too many&#13;
other people are mesmerized into believing that one&#13;
man rule is indeed a good thing for America, Congress&#13;
must depose King Richard.&#13;
Cartoonist's eye view --------.,-----------,&#13;
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WHY WAIT, ALL TIllS&#13;
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i,~ The Pn.Iid..I-----&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha. Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 LibraryLearning&#13;
Center. Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
renected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
. Letters to the Editor are encouraged, All letters on any subject of&#13;
Interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to 250words or&#13;
165. typed "nd double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
letters for lefllth and good taste. All IeHers must be signed and include&#13;
addr~. phone number and student status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
be Withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
EDITOR.IN·CHIEF: Jane M. Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR' Tom Pelersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Friedell&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Diln Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Rebecca EcklUnd&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR: David DanielS&#13;
WRITERS' sandy BUSh,Stephen Gifford, BMbaril Hanson, Harvey&#13;
Headen, Gary Jensen., Michael Olsz:yk, Marilyn Schubert, John&#13;
SOrens.en, Steve Siapanian. CarrieWa.rd, Tom DeFovw, Neal Sautner&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Ron Antrim. Allen Frederickson, Brian RosS,&#13;
Jim RUffolo&#13;
CARTOONISTS: amy cundari, Gary Huck, Bob Rohan&#13;
LAYOUT, Terri Gelenian, Terry Knop, staff&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
AOVERTiSING MANAGER: Amy Cundari&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Gary Worthington&#13;
AOVERTlSING STAFF: Fred Lawrence, Jim Magruder&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed=ne=sda=y~.~Oc=t-.= 24~.~l:97=3~ ---------------~-----------------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
-------Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Committee&#13;
• appointments&#13;
andled&#13;
adly&#13;
().\ of h dut e of the Par side Student Government&#13;
c t on ( PSGA) ls to set up an Interviewing com:&#13;
mitt nt lal 1ep n the process of appointing&#13;
tud nt o tudent-faculty committees. The final&#13;
r omm nd t ons re to be a joint effort of the Student&#13;
n t , Ch ncellor and Vice-chancellor, and should&#13;
m d n c reful and unprefudlced manner.&#13;
PSGA h pp r ntly devised a new system though, in&#13;
hlch K n Kon ol, nator and chairperson of the&#13;
nln comm t (also the only active committee&#13;
m m r - I nyon else happened to be in the office&#13;
during nt rvl they did listen, which seemed to&#13;
v I d t th process), refus'!d to release the names of&#13;
ny lndlvldu I Interviewed except those he wished to&#13;
rv on h various committees. As appointees to&#13;
th tud f.f culty committees are to serve the needs&#13;
nd Int r t of the tudent body, it Is necessary that all&#13;
of th n m nd accurate summaries of the attitudes of&#13;
th e tudents be available.&#13;
n RANGER requested this information after&#13;
I rn n of complaints about the selection process,&#13;
Kon ol refu ed to provide It, claiming confidentiality for&#13;
th ppllcant and himself. This in spite the fact that he&#13;
had previously voluntarily shown us a list containing the&#13;
names. e said that he would only give us the inform&#13;
ton If the Senate authorized him to at the next&#13;
PSGA m ting.&#13;
At ha meeting he wllllngly read the names of applicants&#13;
In plte of the presence of two RANGER&#13;
repor r and lthout receiving the "authorization" he&#13;
cl lmecl he needed. His previous ploy was obviously to&#13;
buy ime and prevent RANGER from adequately&#13;
r earchlng a story that appeared would retied adv&#13;
r ly on himself. Acting PSGA President Tom Jennett&#13;
dmltted at the time that Konkol had absolutely no&#13;
uthorlty to wjthhold the names and should suffer some&#13;
consequences. But he sa d that short of trying physical&#13;
fore th re appeared to be no way to make Konkol&#13;
behave responsibly In this matter.&#13;
Wor Ing from memory and the list of "appointees"&#13;
on ol recommended, RANGER called a few students&#13;
ho ad applied and learned that much of the conrover&#13;
y centered on the Lecture and Fine Arts comml&#13;
I was learned Konkol rejected nominees with&#13;
hom his c,pln on differed. Students explained that the&#13;
first tep of the interview Konkol made clear his wish to&#13;
his committee abol st\ed as U presently stands.&#13;
n students ere unresponsive to Konkol's&#13;
ugg t on they ended up missing from his list of&#13;
recommended appointees. One student left off that list&#13;
d, "I nt In because I was interested. I volunteered&#13;
becau I as cone rned. My lnterv ew didn't last even&#13;
fl e m nu s."&#13;
Of hen n people applying o the L&amp;FA committee&#13;
two re chosen and one opening still exists. One of th;&#13;
o ppoln ees s Greg Klema ho cha rs the Parkside&#13;
Actlvltl s Board Fine Arts Committee. While this may&#13;
t fir t appear a good credential for l&amp;F A, we question&#13;
th r or not his s multaneovsly serving on both&#13;
comml no a conflld of Interest? It certainly Is&#13;
unf r o stude ts to be represented on two separate&#13;
comm of similar nature by the same person, for&#13;
n rr c,ptlons In programming possibilities.&#13;
Adm edly, re are a limited number of positions&#13;
v II bl on tud nt-faculty committees However&#13;
hould lntelllgen , sincere and concer~ed student;&#13;
ed b us their opinions differ with hose of&#13;
rson en rus d I thetas of interv ewing them&#13;
n o rnm nt officers ave a responsibility to ~ r, o n-mlnd nd mature.&#13;
RA GER call on PSGA and the student body n&#13;
r I h t tactics such as those employed in&#13;
r commendations are never again used.&#13;
There's a madman&#13;
in the White House&#13;
"Whether ours shall continue to be a government of&#13;
laws or of men is now for Congress and ultimately the&#13;
American people to decide." So spoke special Watergate&#13;
prosecutor Archibald Cox after being fired by&#13;
President Nixon for his perserverance in pursuing the&#13;
truth and his refusal to compromise his investigation.&#13;
Nixon's compromise in the Watergate tapes situation&#13;
was supposedly designed to avoid a constitutional&#13;
confrontation; his recent actions have created the most&#13;
serious crisis of all, with the Executive, Congressional&#13;
and Judiciary branches all battling within themselves&#13;
and with each other, and all being questioned from&#13;
without by the people themselves.&#13;
Nixon's termination of Cox and Ruckelshaus and the&#13;
resignation of Attorney General Richardson illustrate a&#13;
desperate but arrogant man struggling to maintain his&#13;
power. Once no one could deny that Nixon was at least&#13;
politically sophisticated. But his demand that Cox cease&#13;
undermining his compromise was a breach of the&#13;
agreement that Cox would be given complete freedom in&#13;
his investigation. It was obvious that Cox would not&#13;
comply and Nixon would find himself in a position of&#13;
questioned authority. This was political ineptitude to&#13;
say the least, and Nixon's degeneration to such a level&#13;
that members of his Administration are resigning over&#13;
his policies or getting fired for refusing to follow him is&#13;
an indication of his increasingly egotistical, maniacal&#13;
view of a questionable reality.&#13;
Grave questions about Mr. Nixon's balance and&#13;
perception must be asked in addition to the moral and&#13;
legal queries that have been abounding since&#13;
Watergate. He is putting himself in the position of a god,&#13;
beyond the reach of law and the people and the&#13;
American government he is a part of. Before too many&#13;
other people are mesmerized into believing that one&#13;
man rule is indeed a good thing for America, Congress&#13;
must depose King Richard. I Cartoonist's eye view&#13;
00 '1CJJ LIKE KTlC&gt;J,&#13;
INTI\IGUE. MYSTERY&#13;
)'EV,um.,IIIN,ER&#13;
[)o 'lC&lt;.4 LI KE MfETINr,&#13;
LO'T'3 A&gt;Jtl l.01"3 C1F m&lt;E\'&#13;
FOR AS l..oN&lt;; 40&lt; L&gt;,5T,&#13;
WHY \./AIT, A LL T\11S&#13;
AND MalE UN BE&#13;
4 0 UR~ ![ . WP.IT!: "TOt)I' Y L\ (&#13;
U!lrE :&#13;
CORRUPT RX.lllCIAHS&#13;
'jou Kll::\.lWHO WHl'TE HOU SE&#13;
WASMIN'o-_ l)C&#13;
!-Jr.. The Prko11K11ide11t----&#13;
. RANGER&#13;
. The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
icear ~y t~ stud~ts of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
, ~~os a, Wisconsin S3140. Offices are located at D-194 Libraryi..cormng&#13;
Center, Telephone (414) 553.2295&#13;
TheP ~d . efl teda~ 1 e Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
~e:of ~~ ~rul':1"1ns_tandfed!torial~ are not necessarily the official&#13;
versi Y o Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Letters to the Ed't · interest to stude ls I r :e encouraged. All letters on any sub Jett of&#13;
less typed d ~ •bi3c ty or staff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
lett~rs for le,n th ou e-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
address h ng and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
be withh~d~e n:~ber and studen_t status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
print any lett~ equest. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
EDITOR IN CHIEF Jane M . Schllesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR Debra Friedel!&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR Dan Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR R~ca Ecklund&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR · David Daniels&#13;
::;.,TERS sandy Bush, Stephen Gilford, Barbara Hanson Harvey&#13;
SO&lt; en, Gary Jensen. Michael Olszyk, Marilyn Schube'rt John&#13;
PH~T~:~·;~~t=r~an. Carrie Ward, Tom DeFouw, Neal Sautner&#13;
Jim Ruifolo on Antrim, Allen Frederickson, Brian Ross,&#13;
~~~6~~ 1;TS: ~~Y cundari, Gary Huck, Bob Rohan err, =len,an, Terry Knop staff&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER Ken Pestka '&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER, Amy Cundari&#13;
CIRCULAT ION MANAGER G ADVERTISING STAFF• ary Worthl~ton Fred Lawrence, Jim Magruder &#13;
The first issue of this semester RANGER pn'nted an "&#13;
. OpInIOn con- cerntng the 'promo~~n of good teachers out of the classroom and into&#13;
admInIstrative positions.&#13;
A partial remedy to make this situation more palatable ha bee&#13;
suggested by the re-emergence of Rita Tallent, sP"&lt;'ial assistant to th~&#13;
Chancellor, In an English class as the teacher of an English 010 section.&#13;
A conversation I had with her recently was steered on to the t .&#13;
I d it bee . edi 0PIC of her c ass an I . arne imrn . lately oovious that she enjoys heing&#13;
in the classroom again. She seems to relish her contact with students&#13;
breaking away from the plush penthouse offices to get down where&#13;
things are really at.&#13;
Vice-chancellor Otto Bauer, a professor in Communications also&#13;
came ~own to join the rest ~f~s when he taught a Course last s~ring.&#13;
Most If not all of our admInIstrators, from division heads through&#13;
deans to the Chancellor, had teaching careers prior to "getting kicked&#13;
upstairs." Only the divisional chairpersons keep a foot in the&#13;
classroom, for their administrative positions are by elected term.&#13;
As was mentioned in that article in the first issue, our own Chan.&#13;
cellor Wyllie was "one of the most sought after history professors in&#13;
Madison." A number of Parkside students did not actually know what&#13;
Wyllie looked like until RANGER printed his picture.&#13;
The problem is not only visibility but communication. It could only&#13;
help this university if more students could know the administrators&#13;
and feel free to talk to them as well as about them. Meeting them in the&#13;
classroom and then seeing them in the concourses and cafeteria would&#13;
go far toward that end. Students would learn that "the Administration"&#13;
is made up of human beings, and the people who run this&#13;
university would be reminded of the students' needs, Ieelinas. concerns&#13;
and ideas. Too often someone ina decision-making position finds&#13;
out about student discontent after it has fermented and expanded, and&#13;
can only say, "I didn't know that was a problem."&#13;
The ideal"solution would be for each administrator to teach a course&#13;
in his-her special area. But time, of course, pre-empts ideal soluti9Il\&#13;
But Iwould like to urge that the people who now sit in offices, and n&#13;
with other people who sit in offices, strongly and carefully consi&#13;
priorities and see if they can afford the time to teach a course in th&#13;
old manner and make some friends in the process. At the very lea.&#13;
would they consider periodically guest lecturing in areas they a&#13;
proficient in, to give students and benefit of their knowledge ar.",&#13;
techniques and the opportunity to question them? "&#13;
In conclusion, hats off to Rita Tallent and Otto Bauer for their part-'&#13;
time endeavors as faculty, and a word of praise too for Phil Burnett&#13;
and Charlotte Chell, who as far as I know are the only faculty members&#13;
who also labor as part-time students here. All four of them are&#13;
undoubtedly learning a lot.&#13;
WEP • evasive&#13;
and insulting&#13;
hy Michael Olszyk&#13;
What promised to be an informative press briefing on nuclea: po.wer&#13;
last Wednesday, by the Atomic Industr!~. Forum, r~ulted. In hltle&#13;
more than self-esteem for Wisconsin uhhbes spon~ortng. thiS ~v«:"t.&#13;
The Ramada Inn, Waukesha, gathering -- supplIed WIth brIefmg&#13;
kits, over an inch thick -- sat patiently through four hours of presentations&#13;
from leading men in the field of nuclear energy. ~ professor of&#13;
nuclear engineering, an environmental analyst, the p~esldent of E.~.&#13;
Johnson Associates and an M.D. tackled issues rangIng from atomiC&#13;
, , . t They were power to radiation effects on man and the envlronme.n .&#13;
equipped with graphs, charts, scale modeis, and slIdes of glossy&#13;
detailed information. .. ed b&#13;
Unfortunately though, crucial questIOns raised to ~ answ~ y&#13;
the Forum were suspiciously evaded. An example of thiS OCCW'lngwas&#13;
when Dr Walter Meyer Professor and Chairperson of Nuclear&#13;
. , . . . f ·Ied t me the con- Engineering at the UniverSity of Missouri, al 0 na ., th&#13;
sequences of a "china syndrome" accident, after praising e&#13;
redundancy in safety features on nuclear reactors. 'd.f&#13;
Later a WisconSin ElectrIC offlcal sal a ' .. 'd th t't as sometimes 1- I W ,&#13;
ficult for a scientific-minded person to co~prehend the l~lma~:&#13;
question Perhaps this was the case; however, when one ~Sl. e? nd&#13;
goal of the Forum is to keep the public abreast o~/ nedn;~~~liC&#13;
economic issues one would thmk they would be !D~e a. u the int&#13;
inqUiry. But instead they assume that the public IS ~a;~~rds ~&#13;
where they don't know the difference hetween pote~tia red during the&#13;
by nuclear reactors and atomic bombs, which was Imp 1&#13;
program. h Welcoming Sponsor&#13;
This notion was made further apparent ~ en . Electric Power&#13;
Sol Burstein, Senior Vice President of wJscon~m ental minded&#13;
Company, called the concerns of greater enVlrOnm&#13;
groups "horse shit." . ed States and Arab&#13;
With estranged relations between the Urnt Ttary fuel oil the&#13;
nations plus tapping domestic emergency . :f:el&#13;
fuel source.' The&#13;
urgency grows over the need f?J' an althernt clear power plants,&#13;
question here thoogh, is concerrung a ras 0 nu&#13;
termed "relatively safe."&#13;
We get&#13;
letters&#13;
Letters to the editor are en.&#13;
couraged.. All letters 00 any&#13;
subject of interest t.o students.&#13;
faculty or staff should be coo.&#13;
fined to 300 words or less, typed&#13;
and double-spaced, The editors&#13;
reserve the r:ght to edit letten&#13;
I... length and good taste. AU&#13;
letters must be signed and include&#13;
address, phone number,&#13;
and student status or fa~ulty&#13;
rank. Names will be 'lithheld&#13;
upon request, The editors reserve&#13;
the right to refuse to print any&#13;
letters,&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
The following is an open letter&#13;
to Mr. Bruce R. Burman,&#13;
President - Local 2180, Wisconsin&#13;
State Employees Union.&#13;
Dear Mr. Burman,&#13;
I am a student employed by&#13;
Parkside. Iwish to know whether&#13;
students are eligihle to join your&#13;
union and thereby gain the&#13;
benefits inherent in membership.&#13;
U not, WHY NOT?&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
T. Speaker, student employee&#13;
sophomore&#13;
To the editor,&#13;
In response to the response to&#13;
"goddamn minority recruitment,"&#13;
and with reference to M.&#13;
Gibson, Freshman:&#13;
What this "minority quota"&#13;
jazz bolls down to is this: "Well,&#13;
the Blacks, the Women. the Jews,&#13;
the (fill in the blank)s have had a&#13;
tough deal in the past, SQ,.,lel's&#13;
give em a helping hand nO'W.~·&#13;
Well, well, well. Before&#13;
knocking down the "Ionely individual,"&#13;
consider that tbe&#13;
smallest minority of all is the&#13;
individual. The concept of racial&#13;
quotas in jtself is a depraved&#13;
form of racism. Instead of&#13;
treating "them" bad because of&#13;
race, it's treat "them" good&#13;
because of race. Neither is better&#13;
than the other. ( ote: there is no&#13;
evidence which indica tes skin&#13;
pigmentation biologically affects&#13;
brain function.)&#13;
Education is another thing. If&#13;
the owner of a private school&#13;
says," 0 niggers allowed," that&#13;
should he (but is not, in this&#13;
country) his right. (it is every&#13;
man's God·given right to be a&#13;
creep.&gt; See Yo here it gets him.&#13;
But most schools, like&#13;
Parkside, are socialized. so&#13;
everyone who is a taxpayer or the&#13;
offspring of one should be allo....ed&#13;
to go. I don't think educatIon IS a&#13;
"right" that should he gtven to&#13;
everyone. OfIered, yes. Do you&#13;
think it is my "right" to live In a&#13;
casUe, have 100 handmaidens.&#13;
and own 100 sailboats? ure, if I&#13;
shell out my own money for it II&#13;
not, no. Education is like food,&#13;
clothing and shelter··it ain't&#13;
guaranteed. You have to pay for&#13;
it, Just like any other product&#13;
which is the result of someone&#13;
else's labor.&#13;
..... it's a sad, sad day when we&#13;
as minority students have to&#13;
justify our presence at this&#13;
Wliversity, "&#13;
What in hell makes you think&#13;
that yoo do have to justify your&#13;
presence here'? If you're on&#13;
welfare, I would question your&#13;
presence here; when my dad&#13;
works 120r more hours every day&#13;
of the week on a farm and has to&#13;
pay for some welfare kid's&#13;
schooling, and then my own&#13;
expenses! But oth~ise, your&#13;
being here is )'01U' busmess. and&#13;
don't let anyone else tell you it&#13;
ain't.&#13;
I'll he ready with another I...ter&#13;
if need be, so do your wors~.&#13;
Rodney (the Radical) Schroeter&#13;
Freshman&#13;
Parkside Village 1-102&#13;
PARKS/DE RANGER 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Th. Conoer&#13;
the hush of&#13;
the river&#13;
at 4 a.rn.,&#13;
nsh nipper their bellies across m""",&#13;
trees wallt down to the very shorehne&#13;
thinking nobody IS wa,ching them,&#13;
his paddle darts in and out of&#13;
the water, getting better acquainted&#13;
each lime WIth its own slippery&#13;
texture,&#13;
hands boggle out of the m-er&#13;
offering foam money In the corner of his eye.&#13;
In my own mind&#13;
I change the texture of the river,&#13;
super-imposing on it&#13;
a buffalo. bleeding in the hindquarters,&#13;
not raging but calm and takmg&#13;
the waters. The river dri~ up&#13;
around him, and the skeleton of the buflalo&#13;
....alks down thedried-out bed of an old rtver,&#13;
by DIOM w.o""&#13;
from In Ide til. Blood F.. ...,.&#13;
by Barb Hanson&#13;
Diane \I'akoski will have an anemoon w or hop and evenIng I..,~&#13;
on October 29 Wakoski was born In ~1uttier, Collfonua (juot&#13;
about when Rich3rd Nixon was pracucing law therel he received.&#13;
B.A. from the Universtry of Califorma-Berk.ley in 1960 Alter work~&#13;
as a bookstore clerk for three years, Wakoski got a job t.. cIl~&#13;
English a' .Iurucr High School 22 m zew York CIty. he won 'hr R.obrrt&#13;
Frost Fellowslup m poetry from the Bread Loaf wmees Conference lD&#13;
1966. \I'akoslU's poetry has appeared 10 varices periodicals and been&#13;
published In several t.o::~~t1onS. She proclaims no pohuCI and no&#13;
religion.&#13;
Insid. th. Blood Factor) ....as published 10 1968. R.D. Spector of&#13;
Salurda~ RtvieYl has thiS to say about It·&#13;
.. liss \I'akoski's social comment is ruthless: "All fathrn in&#13;
Western civilization must have a military origin" Her view 01 nabue&#13;
is not kinder than her view of man. she 15 alen to the decaYlnI&#13;
processes of one, 'the ugly processes that make a liVIng body' In the&#13;
other ... To speak of hkIng MISS Wakoski's poetry would....." .... pproprlate;&#13;
to deny it full admlrauon ....ould be dIshonest." .&#13;
Of Th. Motorcycl. Betrayal Poem 119711,Paul Z.....lg of the , no&#13;
York Times Book Rn'iew said:&#13;
"These poems are not declarations of femmlne ondepen~_. Their&#13;
rage is not ideologIcal, as in many Women's Liberation traeu. lllll&#13;
lI'akoski's tractic is different. She dIgs her teeth mto thr sIa riM of&#13;
woman, he cries them aloud "ith such fulmona"ng energy that the&#13;
chains hegin to melt of themselves. Th. rage IS thaI 01 a pruoner&#13;
....hose bitterness is her boodage but also her freedom In many _,&#13;
ho....ever, the anger becomes thon, repetitious. and thIS " perbll,," the&#13;
book's most serious "eakness. All too often, the strIdency doea not&#13;
'urn IOtopoetry; the words are f1Bttened ahn06t on'o helpl_ by&#13;
the very anger the)' express., (Bull at her bes'- and thr beat II&#13;
frequent enough-Diane Wakoski is an Important and movmc poet ..&#13;
Of her style m 01 ropancies and pparitlon, crItic Robert Repn&#13;
said'&#13;
"_.• (Her poetry) IS youthful, paClOUS, unny, .xuberant, exc...t,&#13;
and though nlled ,,,th t""chlng, III free from pedantry, Amona the&#13;
many virtues of her poetry,the rarest and mos, ....onderful •• itl_&#13;
Its grace, .ts naturalness This is not to say that her poetry II.'easy&#13;
Indeed, her surreah tic symbo1J are often .xtremely demand .... bat&#13;
her poems never demand .xertions from the reader ....hom thry do not&#13;
repav WIth ImmedIate and allldlOg JOy."&#13;
obVIOUIy Wako 10 knows her tuff Those who are ontenlltH in&#13;
poetry as an an and prof ,on "ould do ....ell to attend her I t~ CIl&#13;
the 29th. Even .f you don '( like poetry as a rule, Wakoskl may well be&#13;
the exception.&#13;
"1 am not expected to do anythmg&#13;
bu' what I've I""rned;&#13;
and Yo hlch 1 do so well." •&#13;
from "The TIAAtropeWalker" onFaar Young L.dy Poets.&#13;
:J:'-- I ....' ),&#13;
r&#13;
t~Fif:ME D~, .&#13;
~~ff;~~::h1t::'.&#13;
.&#13;
\.~ATER'r~&#13;
- eALL OTHER VITAL .... __~.~ ....&#13;
.J&#13;
,. e&#13;
e&#13;
TAPES/&#13;
RECoRDS i"&#13;
UTE NECESSITIES e PIPES, PAPERS&#13;
"Open 3li5 days a year"&#13;
Phone 654-5032 11lUCK 0 DOWN&#13;
F-::=:=====-'"'l. .-.===.:.==--&#13;
by Jan~ Schllesman&#13;
The first issue of this semester RANGER printed an op· · h ti f ood won con- cern!n~ t e _Promo . ~n o g teachers out of the classroom and into adrmmstrative positions.&#13;
A partial remedy to make this situation more palatable has been&#13;
suggested b~ the re-em~rgence of Rita Tallent, special assistant to the&#13;
Chancellor, man_ English c!ass as the teacher of an English oio sec- tion. A conversation I had with her recently was steered on to the t · 1 d ·t bee . ed" op1c of her c ass an 1 . ame 1mm 1ately obvious that she enjoys being&#13;
in the classroom agam. She seems to relish her contact with students&#13;
breaking away from the plush penthouse offices to get down whe~&#13;
things are really at.&#13;
Vice-chancellor Otto Bauer, a professor in Communications also&#13;
came down to join the rest ~f ~s when he taught a course last spring. Most if not all of our adm1mstrators, from division heads through&#13;
deans to the Chancellor, had teaching careers prior to "getting kicked&#13;
upstairs." Only the divisional chairpersons keep a foot in the&#13;
classroom, for their administrative positions are by elected term.&#13;
As was mentioned in that article in the first issue, our own Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie was "one of the most sought after history professors in&#13;
Madison." A number of Parkside students did not actually know what&#13;
Wyllie looked like until RANGER printed his picture.&#13;
The problem is not only visibility but communication. It could only&#13;
help this university if more students could know the administrators&#13;
and feel free to talk to them as well as about them. Meeting them in the&#13;
classroom and then seeing them in the concourses and cafeteria would&#13;
go far toward that end. Students would learn that "the Administration"&#13;
is made up of human beings, and the people who run this&#13;
university would be reminded of the students' needs. feelim?s. concerns&#13;
and ideas. Too often S!)meone in a decision-making position finds&#13;
out about student discontent after it has fermented and expanded, and can only say, "I didn't know that was a problem."&#13;
The ideal solution would be for each administrator to teach a course&#13;
in his-her special area. But time, of course, pre-empts ideal soluti_QDS.&#13;
But I would like to urge that the people who now sit in offices, and n&#13;
with other people who sit in offices, strongly and carefully consi&#13;
priorities and see if they can afford the time to teach a course in th&#13;
old manner and make some friends in the process. At the very lea.&#13;
would they consider periodically guest lecturing in areas they a&#13;
proficient in, to give students and benefit of their knowledge ar,1:)&#13;
techniques and the opportunity to question them? .,&#13;
In conclusion, hats off to Rita Tallent and Otto Bauer for their part-' .&#13;
time endeavors as faculty, and a word of praise too for Phil Burnett&#13;
and Charlotte Chell, who as far as I know are the only faculty members&#13;
who also labor as part-time students here. All four of them are undoubtedly learning a lot.&#13;
Point of view&#13;
WEP • evasive&#13;
and insulting&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
What promised to be an informative press briefing on nuclea~ po~er&#13;
last Wednesday, by the Atomic In~ustr!~l _Forum, r~ulted. m 1,1ttle&#13;
more than self-esteem for Wisconsm utJhbes sponsoring_ this ~\ ~nt.&#13;
The Ramada Inn, Waukesha, gathering -- supplied with briefing&#13;
kits, over an inch thick - sat patiently through four hours of presentations&#13;
from leading men in the field of nuclear energy. A_ professor of&#13;
nuclear engineering an environmental analyst, the president of E.~ .&#13;
Johnson Associates 'and an M.D., tackled issues ranging from atomic&#13;
power to radiation ' effects on man and th e env1ronme_n · t , The" ., were . equipped with graphs, charts, scale models, and slides of glossy&#13;
detailed information. ed b&#13;
Unfortunately though crucial questions raised to be answ!r Y&#13;
the Forum were suspiciously ' evaded I f th· occunng was . An examp e O is N&#13;
when Dr Walter Meyer Professor and Chairperson of uc 1 ear&#13;
Engineering · at ' · · f ·1ed t ame the con- the University of M1ssour1, a, 0 n . . th&#13;
sequences of a "china syndrome" accident, after prrusmg e&#13;
redundancy in safety features on nucl~r rea~tors. . difLater&#13;
a Wisconsin Electric offical said that it was sometimes , . . . . . t omprehend the layman s ficult for a sc1entif1c-mmded person ° c .d th&#13;
question Perhaps this was the case; however, when one cons,_ e~ ~&#13;
goal of the Forum is to keep the public abreast of techmca abt· . . · k th Id be more attuned to pu 1c economic issues one would thm ey wou . . . to the point inquiry. But instead they assume that the pubhc is ~aIVe ds ed&#13;
where they don't know the diff_erence betw~n pote~:1i::iu:i~i,igthe by nuclear reactors and atomic bombs, which was 1 P&#13;
program. h Welcoming Sponsor This notion was made further_apparent ~ en . Electric Power&#13;
Sol Burstein, Senior Vice President of W1scon~m ental minded&#13;
Company, called the concerns of greater enVIronm&#13;
groups "horse shit." . ed States and Arab&#13;
With estranged relations ~tween the Urut il'ta fuel oil. the&#13;
nations plus tapping domestic emergency - :I1ve' f:;:J source. The&#13;
urgency grows over the need f~r an althernr3 uclear power plants, question here though, is concerrung a ras O n&#13;
termed "relatively safe."&#13;
We get&#13;
letters&#13;
Letters to the edit&#13;
couraged. ll Jette&#13;
ubject of intere t to tud n •&#13;
faculty or tarr h uld be coofinNI&#13;
to 300 words or le , typNI&#13;
and double- pacNI. The edit&#13;
resern the r:ght to Ntit l«ten&#13;
for length and good ta. te. ~ll&#13;
letters mu t be igned and include&#13;
addr , phon number,&#13;
and tudent tatu or facult)&#13;
rank. 'ames will be withheld&#13;
upon requ t. The Nitto re ne&#13;
the right to refuse to print an letters.&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
The follo\\ing is an open letter&#13;
to fr. Bruce R. Burman,&#13;
President - Local 2180 Wisconsin&#13;
State Employees 'nlon.&#13;
Dear tr. Burman,&#13;
I am a student emplo_ ed by&#13;
Parkside. I \\ish to know whether&#13;
students are eligible to join your&#13;
union and thereby gain the&#13;
benefits inherent in membel'!Jlip. If not, WHY • 'OT?&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
T. Speaker, student empJoyee&#13;
sophomore&#13;
To the editor,&#13;
In response to the response to&#13;
" goddamn minority recru itment,"&#13;
and with reference to I.&#13;
Gibson, Freshman:&#13;
\\.bat this "minority quota "&#13;
jazz boils down to is thi : "Well,&#13;
the Blacks. the Women. the J~ ,&#13;
the (fill in the blank)s have had a&#13;
tough deal in the past , let'&#13;
give em a helping hand no . '&#13;
Well, well , well. Before&#13;
knocking down the " lonely individual&#13;
,'. consider that the&#13;
smallest minority of all the&#13;
individual. The concept of racial&#13;
quotas in itself is a d pra\'ed&#13;
form of racism. In tead of&#13;
treating ''them" bad becau e of&#13;
race. it' treat " them" ood&#13;
because of race . . 'either i better&#13;
than the other. (. 'ote: ther i no&#13;
evidence which indicates in&#13;
pigmentation biol~ically affec&#13;
brain function .)&#13;
Education is another thing. If&#13;
the owner of a private hoo1&#13;
says, " 'o nig ers alJo.,,,ed," that&#13;
should be (but i not, in this&#13;
country&gt; hi right. (It i every&#13;
man's God-given right to be a&#13;
creep. ee where it ge him.&#13;
But mo t chool , Ii e&#13;
Parkside, re ocialized o&#13;
everyone who i a ta. payer or the&#13;
off pring of one . hould be all°" ed&#13;
to go. I don't think ed cat.ion a&#13;
"right" that hould be ·ven to&#13;
evervone. Offered, y • Do you&#13;
think it i m~ ''ri ht " to liv in&#13;
ca tie, have 100 handmaid ,&#13;
and own 100 ilboa ? .=ur if I&#13;
hell out my own mon . for it. If&#13;
not. no. Education i Ii e food, clothing and shelter--it a in' t&#13;
guaranteed. You lhav to pay for&#13;
it. JU t like any other product&#13;
wh.ich i the r .::ult of omeon&#13;
el e' labor.&#13;
" ... it's a sad, sad day when \'e&#13;
as minority tudents ha\e to&#13;
justify our pr ence at thi&#13;
universitY."&#13;
What in hell ma e you think&#13;
that you do ha\e to ju tify your&#13;
presence here? If y~u·re o&#13;
welfare, I "ould qu lion your&#13;
presence here: when my dad&#13;
works 12 or more hours e\el') da)&#13;
of the week on a farm and ha to&#13;
pay for some ·elfare kid 's&#13;
schooling. and then my own&#13;
expense ! But oth~ise, yoor&#13;
being here is your business, and&#13;
don't let anyone else tell you 1t&#13;
ain't.&#13;
I'll be ready with another JP'ter&#13;
if need be, so do your wors, .&#13;
Rodney ( the Radical) Schroeter&#13;
· Freshman&#13;
Parkside \'iUage 1-102&#13;
PARKSIDE RANGER&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
the hush of&#13;
the ri\·er&#13;
textur&#13;
hands l)QRgle o of th m r&#13;
offering foam money in th com of h' e) •&#13;
r,&#13;
th buff lo&#13;
nold ri ·&#13;
. r \' ni l dv P t •&#13;
...J • RE&#13;
-·• ALL OTHER \,TAL" _._&#13;
LIFE • "E ITlES • PIP&#13;
··Open 365 day a&#13;
Phone 654-5032 m &#13;
..&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wedne y;-oct. 24, 1973&#13;
t. &amp;0 r , Pat nUl ( Landlng) .l\tarl~ne Wmdt and Marla Breach&#13;
Delta Gamma Phi&#13;
seeks identity&#13;
b) Marlh n . hubert&#13;
Park Ide IS £l'O" U1lI up One of&#13;
the t tHai lithe formation&#13;
of a SOrority, th Della Gam",a&#13;
PIli. which .ts prelldent, Pal Hill&#13;
deserlbe as "uniquely&#13;
Parkslde" Contnbuting to this&#13;
delcrtpllon are the facts tha is&#13;
..a local "'ll'd',zabon W1lh no&#13;
nallonal afffiiations and its goal&#13;
to be a service, as well as social&#13;
oraantzabon.&#13;
Forem .. t among the" goals is&#13;
tile hope to further Parkslde's&#13;
idNI of an ecologically designed&#13;
camplll - tile" colors are sky&#13;
blue and earth green - and to&#13;
fo ter a "ParkSlde feeling"&#13;
8IIIOlW studellU. Some of their&#13;
actJvitJea IIIClude helping with tile&#13;
Vet' Club recycling project,&#13;
flndIng women who will aid&#13;
handicapped students on getting&#13;
on and out of cars, and helping&#13;
with the tutoring program,&#13;
perhapa as a bason belween&#13;
prof.... rs and students who are&#13;
having trouble in class They also&#13;
would like to originate a&#13;
homecoming weekend dunng&#13;
basketball season, since&#13;
Parkaide now does have alumni,&#13;
but this largely depends 00 what&#13;
funds they receive from the&#13;
Campus Concerns Committee.&#13;
Delta Gamma PIli is unIiJr.e&#13;
some ..... nlles at other earn-&#13;
~ in that anyone wbo wants to&#13;
be a member can as long as !be Is&#13;
female and a Parkslde student.&#13;
TreaSUJ"'I' Marlene Wendt also&#13;
deSCribed It as a more serious&#13;
oraanlzatiOll which could still be&#13;
, but wouldn't interfere with&#13;
,tudy habits or the member's&#13;
"'"sonal life.&#13;
"'" sorority does not take a&#13;
land one way or another on&#13;
Woman's Liberation. Said Vice&#13;
Pre rdent larla Breach. "You&#13;
are what you are."&#13;
They also bope to work in&#13;
cooperation with Parkside's two&#13;
fraternities, although they are an&#13;
independent .JIl"8anization, unlike&#13;
thi'--91iptr.CPi Little Sisters.&#13;
Pat Hill summed up her&#13;
feelings about the group by&#13;
saying. "We're battling to find an&#13;
identity as an organiz.ation,&#13;
which is difficult because this is a&#13;
commuter campus and everyone&#13;
IS so independenL For the way&#13;
Parkside is now. we don't need a&#13;
social oraanization - people can&#13;
do that at home or come to a&#13;
dance - but we do need service."&#13;
Those interested in joining&#13;
should contact any of the officers&#13;
at 552-8472 • Parkside Village.&#13;
Par's power plant controversy&#13;
WEPstates its case&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
Last July the Wisconsin&#13;
Electric Power Company and&#13;
three cooperating Wisconsin&#13;
utilities outiined a ten year&#13;
proposal to help abridge the&#13;
energy needs of an annual 6&#13;
percent population increase here&#13;
in the state. Although this report&#13;
sbowed a reduction of ahout 1&#13;
percent in growth, the companies&#13;
still maintained their early 1972&#13;
desire to build a two unit, per 900&#13;
megawatt, nuclear generating&#13;
station for service by 1980 and&#13;
1982.&#13;
Paris is Best Site&#13;
The main site for this project&#13;
which has been rankled over (or&#13;
the past 18 months, is the familiar&#13;
Paris Township location. A good&#13;
geological foundation, suitable to&#13;
atmospheric dispersion, and an&#13;
industrial population close to the&#13;
plant's transmission lines placed&#13;
the Paris site over and above the&#13;
other considered sites&#13;
The three other sites,&#13;
Koshkonong in Jefferson county,&#13;
Rudolph in Wood county, and&#13;
Glen Haven in Grant county. all&#13;
pose problems in that they are an&#13;
inconvenience to a 900 man&#13;
construction crew, working on a&#13;
plant from four to five years.&#13;
Distance would also make&#13;
completed transmission lines&#13;
more costly and susceptible to&#13;
damage.&#13;
"Relocation is always the&#13;
biggest problem in utilizing an&#13;
area," said So) Burstein, Senior&#13;
Vice President of Wisconsin&#13;
Electric. "Especially when its&#13;
community is an ethnic one like&#13;
that in Paris. But then one also&#13;
has to consider the fact that this&#13;
"U my generation doesn't stop&#13;
cringing. )'OW-S will inherit a&#13;
lawless society .,;"&#13;
-SPiro Agnew.&#13;
June 1. 1969 commencement&#13;
address&#13;
DEADLINE FOR&#13;
DROPPING COURSES&#13;
IS FRIDAY, OCT. 26th&#13;
at Student Records Office&#13;
TALLENT HALL&#13;
Hours: 7:45 - 11:45 a.m.&#13;
12:30 - 4:30 p.m.&#13;
MONDAY &amp; $1&#13;
TUESDAY&#13;
--&#13;
..... Fri., SIt~&#13;
SIIPRIS£ BAllI s.y&#13;
OIl the south sideofHwy 50,east of Hwy 31.&#13;
by nuclear generators. Already&#13;
this figure represents a 40 million&#13;
dollar savings in fossil fuels&#13;
claims Burstein. '&#13;
Cost in building a nuclear plant&#13;
at Paris is estimated to be around&#13;
800,000 dollars. Chances though&#13;
of construction are still quit~&#13;
vague to say the least. Burstein&#13;
would like to file a preliminary&#13;
safety analysis report and environmental&#13;
impact report&#13;
(necessary in obtaining a construction&#13;
permit from the Atomic&#13;
Energy Commission) by next&#13;
spring. He contends that it's only&#13;
a matter of when the RacineKenosha&#13;
Citizens for the Environrnent,&#13;
plan to stop "fussing&#13;
around."&#13;
Meanwhile, Wisconsin Electric&#13;
is also interested in using&#13;
Kenosha lake sh.ore property, for&#13;
a coal operating plant. The&#13;
company believes that both a&#13;
fossil plant and nuclear reactor&#13;
are needed to meet the energy&#13;
needs of Southeastern Wisconsin.&#13;
To date, Wisconsin Electric&#13;
and Wisconsin-Michigan Power&#13;
'Company own a two unit, per 497&#13;
megowatt nuclear station at&#13;
Point Beach, and another 550 new&#13;
unit near completion in&#13;
Kewaunee.&#13;
plant would be of service. to&#13;
nearly 3 million people which&#13;
represents 85 percent of&#13;
Wisconsin's population."&#13;
In regards to possible radia lion&#13;
hazards posed by nuclear plants,&#13;
Burstein stated that they were&#13;
"erroneous assumptions based&#13;
on illfounded fears and&#13;
anguishes. "&#13;
As unlikely an event as it would&#13;
be, Wisconsin Electric provides a&#13;
$193-million insurance coverage&#13;
in the case of a nuclear accident.&#13;
Furthermore, according to&#13;
Burstein the "nuclear exclusion"&#13;
clause in homeowner's policies is&#13;
no different from exclusions for&#13;
landslides, mudslides, earthquakes,&#13;
or flood damages.&#13;
Fossil fuel outlook&#13;
Growth in the nation's consumption&#13;
of dwindling fossil fuels&#13;
is the primary concern for power&#13;
companies lunging into nuclear&#13;
energy developments.&#13;
Domestically availahle oil and&#13;
natural gas supplies are shown to&#13;
peak during the next decade and&#13;
begin to decline thereafter. With&#13;
tile exhaustion of premium oil, it&#13;
is expected that fossil solids will&#13;
be converted to provide transportation&#13;
fuels. Coal exploitation&#13;
then, is asswned to&#13;
triple by the year 2000 and&#13;
likewise taper off, due to environmental&#13;
limitations.&#13;
Energy from uranium, on the&#13;
other hand, will rival with coal&#13;
and domestic oil by the late&#13;
1990'S.Presently, 7 percent of the&#13;
total electric capacity is provided&#13;
-----&#13;
--------&#13;
---&#13;
Racine&#13;
312-6th St.&#13;
632·5195 _&#13;
-----&#13;
--&#13;
---------&#13;
ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK&#13;
~~~e~\~&#13;
\\1\\\. lIVE MUSICI&#13;
'TAURUS&#13;
New and Interesting&#13;
Books NOWAt&#13;
MARTHA MERRELL'S&#13;
WATERGATE&#13;
HEARINGS&#13;
by the New York Times&#13;
$2.50&#13;
SECRET LIFE OF&#13;
PLANTS&#13;
$8.95&#13;
WISCONSIN DEATH&#13;
TRIP&#13;
$5.95&#13;
BURIED ALIVE:&#13;
The Biography of&#13;
Janis Joplin&#13;
$7.95&#13;
JOURNEY TO IXTLAN&#13;
$2.95- Paper&#13;
JOHNNY WE HARDLY&#13;
KNEWYE&#13;
$1.95&#13;
SAND COUNTRY&#13;
OF ALDO LEOPOLD&#13;
$14.95&#13;
A new Gift Book Containing&#13;
Photos of The Sand Country of&#13;
WlsconslD&#13;
(}fI1Jf!Ja (}fiJi /3~&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
614·59th St.&#13;
658-3652&#13;
i&#13;
z&#13;
!!!&#13;
=&#13;
:::I ...&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
i&#13;
'"&#13;
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Z&#13;
CD&#13;
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!!!&#13;
...&#13;
i&#13;
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Paris power plant controversy&#13;
WEP states its case&#13;
r.P tlhl( rla Bru h&#13;
b) . lichael OJ zyk&#13;
La t Julv the Wisconsin&#13;
Electric Poi..·er Company and&#13;
three cooperating Wisconsin&#13;
utilities outlined a ten year&#13;
proposal to help abridge the&#13;
energ_ · needs of an annual 6&#13;
percent population increase here&#13;
in the tate. Although this report&#13;
howed a reduction of about 1&#13;
percent in growth, the companies&#13;
till maintained their early 1972&#13;
de ire to build a two unit, per 900&#13;
megoy,att, nuclear generating&#13;
·t.ation for ervice by 1980 and&#13;
1982.&#13;
Pari i Best ite&#13;
Delta Garn,na Phi&#13;
The main ite for this project&#13;
which ha been rankled over for&#13;
th pa t 18 month , is the familiar&#13;
Pari Toy, nship location. A good&#13;
eol ical foundation, uitable to&#13;
atm ph ric di persion, and an&#13;
indu trial population close to the&#13;
pant' tran mis ion lines placed&#13;
the Pari ite over and above the&#13;
other considered site . eeks identity The three other sites,&#13;
K ~h onong m Jefferson county,&#13;
Rudolph in Wood county, and&#13;
Glen Ha, n in Grant county, all&#13;
nott ea&#13;
p blem in that they are an&#13;
in onv nience to a 900 man&#13;
con tructton crew, working on a plant from four to five years.&#13;
Di tance would also make&#13;
completed transmission lines&#13;
more costly and su ceptible to&#13;
damage.&#13;
"Relocation is always the&#13;
b1gg ·t problem in uWizing an&#13;
area," said ol Burstein, Senior&#13;
Vice President of Wisconsin&#13;
Electric. ''Especially when its&#13;
community is an ethnic one like&#13;
that in Paris. But then one also&#13;
ha to consider the fact that this&#13;
"U my generation doesn't top&#13;
cringing, yours will inherit a&#13;
lawle society ... "&#13;
-8piro Agnew,&#13;
JtDle 7, 1 9 commencement&#13;
addre-s&#13;
DEADLINE FOR&#13;
DROPPING COURSES&#13;
IS FRIDAY, OCT. 26th&#13;
at Student Records Office&#13;
TALLENT HALL&#13;
Hours: 7 :45 - 11 :45 a.m.&#13;
12:30 - 4:30 p.m.&#13;
ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK&#13;
()&lt;J,-110~5 MONDAY &amp; $1 ~c}~ TIISDAY&#13;
BAA. LIVE MUSIC! WN., Fri., Sat~&#13;
'TAURUS RISIN01&#13;
SIIPRISE BAIi SNAY&#13;
on the south ide of Hwy 50, east or Hwy 31.&#13;
plant would be of service . to&#13;
nearly 3 million people which&#13;
represents 85 J?er~,ent of&#13;
Wisconsin's population.&#13;
In regards to possible radiation&#13;
hazards posed by nuclear plants,&#13;
Burstein stated that they were&#13;
"erroneous assumptions based&#13;
on illfounded fears and&#13;
anguishes." . As unlikely an event as 1t would&#13;
be, Wisconsin Electric provides a&#13;
$193-million insurance coverage&#13;
in the case of a nuclear accident.&#13;
Furthermore, according to&#13;
Burstein the "nuclear exclusion"&#13;
clause in homeowner's policies is&#13;
no different from exclusions for&#13;
landslides, mudslides, earthquakes,&#13;
or flood dam~ges.&#13;
Fossil fuel outlook&#13;
Growth in the nation's consumption&#13;
of dwindling fossil fuels&#13;
is the primary concern for power&#13;
companies lunging into nuclear&#13;
energy developments.&#13;
Domestically available oil and&#13;
natural gas supplies are shown to&#13;
peak during the next decade and&#13;
begin to decline thereafter. With&#13;
the exhaustion of premium oil, it&#13;
is expected that fossil solids will&#13;
be converted to provide transportation&#13;
fuels. Coal exploitation&#13;
then, is assumed to&#13;
triple by the year 2000 and&#13;
likewise taper off, due to environmental&#13;
limitations.&#13;
Energy from uranium, on the&#13;
other hand, will rival with coal&#13;
and domestic oil by the late&#13;
1990's. Presently, 7 percent of the&#13;
total electric capacity is provided&#13;
New and Interesting&#13;
Books NOW At&#13;
MARTHA MERRELL'S&#13;
WATERGATE&#13;
HEARINGS&#13;
by the New York Times&#13;
$2.50&#13;
SECRET LIFE OF&#13;
PLANTS&#13;
$8.95&#13;
WISCONSIN DEATH&#13;
TRIP&#13;
$5.95&#13;
BURIED ALIVE :&#13;
The Biography of&#13;
Janis Joplin&#13;
$7.95&#13;
JOURNEY TO IXTLAN&#13;
$2.95 - Paper&#13;
JOHNNY WE HARDL y&#13;
KNEW YE&#13;
$1 .95&#13;
SAND COUNTRY&#13;
OF ALDO LEOPOLD&#13;
$14.95&#13;
A new Gift Book Containing&#13;
P~otos ~f The Sand Country of&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
()J/1111/4, ()J/J; /3~&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
614-59th St.&#13;
658-3652&#13;
Racine&#13;
312-6th St.&#13;
632-5195 -&#13;
-----&#13;
--&#13;
--------&#13;
by nuclear generators. Already&#13;
this figure represents a 40 million&#13;
dollar savings in fossil fuels&#13;
claims Burstein. '&#13;
Cost in building a nuclear plant&#13;
at Paris is estimated to be around&#13;
800,000 dollars. Chances though&#13;
of construction are still quit~&#13;
vague to say the least. Burstein&#13;
would like to file a preliminary&#13;
safety analysis report and environmental&#13;
impact report&#13;
(necessary in obtaining a construction&#13;
permit from the Atomic&#13;
Energy Commission) by next&#13;
spring. He contends that it's only&#13;
a matter of when the RacineKenosha&#13;
Citizens for the Environment,&#13;
plan to stop "fussing&#13;
around."&#13;
Meanwhile, Wisconsin Electric&#13;
is also interested in using&#13;
Kenosha lake shore property, for&#13;
a coal operating plant. The&#13;
company believes that both a&#13;
fossil plant and nuclear reactor&#13;
are needed to meet the energy&#13;
needs of Southeastern Wisconsin.&#13;
To date, Wisconsin Electric&#13;
and Wisconsin-Michigan Power&#13;
·company own a two unit, per 497&#13;
megowatt nuclear station at&#13;
Point Beach, and another 550 new&#13;
unit near completion in&#13;
Kewaunee.&#13;
1(111&#13;
i&#13;
m ::I&#13;
• I '" ll&#13;
i&#13;
ffl ::I&#13;
"•&#13;
I"'&#13;
ll&#13;
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.. '"&#13;
-&#13;
g&#13;
z&#13;
CD&#13;
z.&#13;
!!!&#13;
..&#13;
i&#13;
z.&#13;
CD &#13;
Merle Hayden Photo by David Da.n.iels&#13;
U of L • a different&#13;
-concept in education&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
For years, alongside a field&#13;
north of Highway K on 1-94, there&#13;
has been a sign reading&#13;
"University of Lawsonomy."&#13;
"What does this mean?" a reader&#13;
asked and a short time later three&#13;
RANGER reporters were&#13;
dispatched to investigate the&#13;
University and answer this&#13;
question.&#13;
Upon arriving at the university,&#13;
the only indications of life&#13;
we saw were a small, one-story&#13;
brick building, a barn, an old&#13;
Cadillac limousine, and a few&#13;
rotted wooden sheds.&#13;
Wehad knocked on the door of&#13;
the building and were waiting for&#13;
an answer when one of my&#13;
colleagues, curious as to the lack&#13;
of response from inside, stood on&#13;
IIer toes and peeked through a&#13;
II1I81I window in the door. At the&#13;
same instant, a small middle-&#13;
.. ed man on the other side of the&#13;
door was doing the same thing.&#13;
When their eyes met, our side&#13;
ocreamed, raced down the stairs&#13;
sod away from the building in a&#13;
manner indicative of a classic&#13;
horror movie. As I stood on the&#13;
Iront steps trying to analyze the&#13;
lltuation, the very man who&#13;
appeared to have driven my coreporter&#13;
to insanity opened the&#13;
door and asked, "What's your&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
$2.75 per page&#13;
Send for your up-tc-date, 150.page.&#13;
l1li11order catalog. Enclose $1.00&#13;
to cover postage (delivery time is&#13;
110 2 day~.&#13;
RESEARCHASSISTANCE, INC.&#13;
11941 WILSHIRE BLVO., SUITE #2&#13;
LOSANGELES,CALIf. 90025&#13;
12131477-8474 or477·5493&#13;
Ovr r.... rc:h materi.l is sold for&#13;
r'''.rc:h 'lSlstince only.&#13;
Wed., Oct. 31&#13;
FREEAdmission&#13;
with Halloween&#13;
osfume&#13;
PRIZE&#13;
for the Bestl&#13;
problem?" I identified my&#13;
companions and myself as&#13;
RANGER reporters and asked if&#13;
we might interview him about the&#13;
University of Lawsonomy. He&#13;
agreed and we went inside.&#13;
The main floor consisted of a&#13;
number of offices, fully carpeted&#13;
and decorated with paintings,&#13;
while the basement appeared to&#13;
be divided into a cafeteriamuseum.&#13;
It was here we sat down&#13;
and began what was to be a twohour&#13;
interview. Unfortunately.&#13;
our host, Merle Hayden, was&#13;
more anxious to tell us about the&#13;
principles of Lawsonomy than&#13;
the University itself. But we were&#13;
able to glean an answer to our&#13;
primary question, "What is the&#13;
University of Lawsonomy?"&#13;
Once a classroom institution in&#13;
Des Moines, Iowa, it teaches the&#13;
beliefs of the late inventorphilosopher&#13;
Alfred Lav.'SOll,who&#13;
also founded and financed the&#13;
university The present location&#13;
was originaUy intended to be an&#13;
athletic-farm school for students&#13;
of Lawsooomy. Today it is a&#13;
correspondence school operating&#13;
from the small building we&#13;
visited. University secretary&#13;
Marjorie Hayden told us, "This&#13;
university entered tbe&#13;
educational field 10 introduce a&#13;
number of needed features in this&#13;
advanced period of learning."&#13;
Lawsonomy involves a life--long&#13;
study in philosophy and the&#13;
natural sciences as interpreted&#13;
by Lawson, a system of beliefs&#13;
"establishing the foundation for&#13;
all natural laws. II&#13;
The University is non-profit,&#13;
non-tax exempt, has no salaried&#13;
employees, and charges no&#13;
tuition to its alleged 12,000&#13;
"UNION"&#13;
Wed.., Fri., Sat., &amp; So.&#13;
[ OCT.24, 26, 27, 28 I&#13;
r..esH·s Newest NIfesIe'&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shakey',)&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road Phone 654-0485&#13;
Wed I&#13;
E RANGER 5&#13;
This ponroil at A1r~ La ...... h..,g&#13;
dining ball of 1M l.'Di\'e"'5.i',..&#13;
students, The Univer sity tS&#13;
primaril)' linanced by contributioos&#13;
and also seUs COPies of&#13;
La,,'SOll'Sboob&#13;
Lawson was conslClered by&#13;
many people to be ahead &lt;Jl his&#13;
time. He buill and Dew the&#13;
world's first 81rliner, published&#13;
America's first popular aviaboo&#13;
magazme, patented a method of&#13;
evaporating smolte and ...TOte&#13;
many books on topiCS such as&#13;
ballistics, ESP, children, religion&#13;
and econom ICS. to menlJon lull •&#13;
r... · 01 Ius aocompllshmen18 H&#13;
books. UlCIden18.Uy,ore in the&#13;
Par de library, On the other&#13;
hand......, or La' .... """&#13;
have been can dered rmpractical&#13;
and ridJculOU$ EIther&#13;
be&lt;:a_ at, or lD spite at thIS&#13;
_bOO, Lawwoo wrote: "1/&#13;
you have UloWIed8e, atrer it to&#13;
oth ..... 1/ Lbey do DOC a&lt;:ctpt u,&#13;
that 15 char as.If&#13;
III&#13;
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Two Bedroom Ranch Style&#13;
Condominium Homes $24,500 to $21,000&#13;
n. .......~1&#13;
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• o.a....-.. • -..._ 0....._ ......&#13;
• ~IWTV -._ ~t .....&#13;
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110.(II.~OD _ .UDY sun_ ...&#13;
2_I_al'- J_I_m.- ..a..- ,-- ....."......m.-&#13;
IN UNOSHA&#13;
........... -.ar. ....&#13;
.~-&#13;
Dl.COAAT'lO AND ~OMOOf.l$&#13;
OPEN HOUSE&#13;
Weekdays 10 10 8 Weokoncn 1 10 5&#13;
F.,...""CWl'I'MI'-'&#13;
PHONE 1-552-1331&#13;
G!ItI ...... RUU.JY N:..&#13;
0.-_ .... .._&#13;
Merle Hayden&#13;
U of L - a different&#13;
concept in education&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
For years, alongside a field&#13;
north of Highway K on I-94, there&#13;
has been a sign reading&#13;
"University of La wsonomy."&#13;
"What does this mean? " a reader&#13;
asked and a short time later three&#13;
RANGER reporters were&#13;
dispatched to investigate the&#13;
University and answer this&#13;
question.&#13;
Upon arriving at the university,&#13;
the only indications of life&#13;
we saw were a small, one-story&#13;
brick building, a barn, an old&#13;
Cadillac limousine, and a few&#13;
rotted wooden sheds.&#13;
We had knocked on the door of&#13;
the building and were waiting for&#13;
an answer when one of my&#13;
colleagues, curious as to the lack&#13;
of response from inside, stood on&#13;
her toes and peeked through a&#13;
small window in the door. At the&#13;
same instant, a small middleaged&#13;
man on the other side of the&#13;
door was doing the same thing.&#13;
When their eyes met, our side&#13;
screamed, raced down the stairs&#13;
and away from the building in a&#13;
manner indicative of a classic&#13;
horror movie. As I stood on the&#13;
front steps trying to analyze the&#13;
ituation, the very man who&#13;
appeared to have driven my coreporter&#13;
to insanity opened the&#13;
door and asked, "What's your&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
$2.75 per page&#13;
Send for your up-to-date, 160-page, ma,I order catalog. Enclose $1.00&#13;
to cover postage (delivery time is&#13;
l to 2 daysl.&#13;
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC. 11941 WILSHIRE BLVD., SUITE #2&#13;
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90025&#13;
1213) 477-8474 or 477-5493&#13;
Our research material Is sold for&#13;
research assistance only.&#13;
proble~?" I identified my&#13;
companions and myself as&#13;
RANGER reporters and asked if&#13;
we might interview him about the&#13;
University of Lawsonomy. He&#13;
agreed and we went inside.&#13;
The main floor consisted of a&#13;
number of offices, fully carpeted&#13;
~d decor ated with paintings,&#13;
while the basement appeared to&#13;
be divided into a cafeteriamuseum.&#13;
It was here we sat down&#13;
and began what was to be a twohour&#13;
interview. Unfortunately,&#13;
our host, Merle Hayden, was&#13;
more anxious to tell us about the&#13;
principles of Lawsonomy than&#13;
the University itself. But we were&#13;
able to glean an answer to our&#13;
primary question, "What is the&#13;
University of Lawsonomy?"&#13;
Once a classroom institution in&#13;
Des Moines, Iowa, it teaches the&#13;
beliefs of the late inventorphilosopher&#13;
Alfred Lav. , 11&#13;
also fol.Dlded and financed lh&#13;
univ er ity. The present location&#13;
was originally intended to be an&#13;
athletic-farm school f uden~&#13;
of Lawsonomy. Today it i a&#13;
correspondence school operating&#13;
from the small building e&#13;
visited. niver ity ecretar&#13;
tarjorie Hayden told u , "Thi&#13;
university entered the&#13;
educational field to introdu a&#13;
number of needed features in lh"&#13;
advanced period of learning."&#13;
Lawsonomy involves a life- ong&#13;
study in philosophy and the&#13;
natural sciences as interpreted&#13;
by Lawson, a s~ tern of belief&#13;
"establishing the foundation for&#13;
all natural lav. . "&#13;
The University is non-profit.&#13;
non-tax exempt, has no salaried&#13;
employees, and charge no&#13;
tuition to its alleged 12,000&#13;
Wed., Oct. 31&#13;
FREE Admission&#13;
with Halloween&#13;
Costume&#13;
11UNION"&#13;
Wed . , Fri., Sat., &amp; Sun.&#13;
PRIZE&#13;
for the Best I&#13;
[ OCT.24,26,27,28&#13;
KenosfJa's Newest Hites,.,&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(forme rly Shokey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road Phone 654-0485&#13;
d.1 s 10 to 8 &#13;
......... -"l":,i"""- ...... r 171~&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
BODACIOUS D.F.&#13;
FealDring Marty Balill (RCA APLH2M)&#13;
Generally speaking, this is music made up of funk-rock and soulrocIt&#13;
components with Marty singing in his pretty but serious style.&#13;
Some of the tunes seem to have the group reaJ)y feeling there while&#13;
otben appear as if they had noIfully thought them oul.&#13;
The core of the creative and interpretive energy in this collection is&#13;
"Good Folks," song two on side one. Marly is singing right from the&#13;
bottom of his heart here. It becomes obvious that this theme is the&#13;
indlvl&amp;la1 expression that concerns him most. Background voice-&#13;
-. from soul/uI sounding sisters are punctuated most effectively.&#13;
Th guitar instrumental towards the end is an extremely useful&#13;
comment that is almost in the country flavor.&#13;
The theme of "Good Folks" is that if the good folks back borne knew&#13;
what he did "they would raise the roof and shoulahout il." They would&#13;
say "he'. bad he's always been that way." He goes on to tell "I made&#13;
my money the easy way, f changed my clothes three times a day."&#13;
Thl no doubt IS a reference to his earlier success with Jefferson&#13;
AIrplane. HISdilemma IS that he "spanks his IUd the way good folks&#13;
do." hoping that he won't tum out in a bad way. But Marly himseU&#13;
caMol tand belllll good. So he continues to drink. smoke- cope, eat&#13;
actd occasionally, and regularly attend orgies. In short, since he can't&#13;
stand being good and he feel. guilty being bad, he doesn't feel right&#13;
anywhere.&#13;
Another center of artistic energy is song two on side two. "Second&#13;
Hand Information" i • both mu ically and lyrically, a splendid&#13;
comphmmt of "Good Fo1l&lt;s."This nwnber builds up intensity nicely&#13;
, after verse and also includes tingling slide guitar work. The&#13;
Iyr,cal . nee 1 Marty's private search for truth.&#13;
Also worthy of generous compliments is "Roberta." "Roberta" is a&#13;
love-song and mu really It swings nicely Withan integrated accordian&#13;
that . urpn. '08ly enough, works well.&#13;
RemamIng to be discussed are "Drifting," "The Witcher." "Driving&#13;
te CraIY," and "Twixt Two Worlds." "Drifting is mediocre funkl'ock,&#13;
"Drivin' Me Crazy" is long, lazy, and dull. "Twixt Two Worlds"&#13;
he an evocative chorus but Its almost exciting instrumental passage&#13;
I underdeveloped and monotonous.&#13;
The Ioser of the record is "The Witcher." This is supposedly&#13;
Ipb ar&#13;
mar"Meric of an animalisr'c. passionate lover but its internal 00 t:: Ult: 1__ .. .&#13;
_ 1 .j. -... .....,0; lJU&gt; })OSeless and many parts seem as if they were&#13;
:J' thrown on to waste time. Despite its sloppiness and cboppiness the&#13;
g i n't even chaouc. A1thougb it may appear that I think it goes&#13;
nowhere it really doesn't gel that far.&#13;
.II is now hme to try to wrap the bundle together and come up&#13;
WIth a final appraisal. Marly has brought together a new band,&#13;
namely BODACIOUS D.F .. who come across with some fairly impre.&#13;
IV'ematerial for their first album. But coosidering that it has&#13;
bet&gt;n about four years smee Marty's departure from the Airplane, he&#13;
really ha n'tcome up with enough for such a long wail. It seems Marly&#13;
needs better song....riting talents and more dexterous accompaniment&#13;
SO his wonderful ,'Qlce can be used more effectively. Henee, artistically&#13;
and successfully, it was a mistake for him to leave the Airplane.&#13;
(Record Courtesy of J&amp;J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
PSGA&#13;
referendum&#13;
explained&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government senate is circulating&#13;
a petition that calls for a constitutional&#13;
refernedum, the&#13;
purpose of which is to co~si~er&#13;
some changes in the Constitution&#13;
of the senate.&#13;
The petition outlines four basic&#13;
changes in the present constitution:&#13;
1. requirements for&#13;
raising a quorum will .be'&#13;
rewritten, 2. the Student UnIOn&#13;
Committee will be abolished, 3.&#13;
the positions of Recording and&#13;
Corresponding Secretaries WIll&#13;
be combined into one, nonelective&#13;
position, and 4. election&#13;
times will be changed to Spring&#13;
term with special replacement&#13;
elections in the fall.&#13;
To assure that a quorum can be&#13;
established for senate meetings,&#13;
absent members will be replaced&#13;
by alternates, according to the&#13;
proposed changes. These&#13;
alternates would be students who&#13;
ran for the ollice but didn't&#13;
receive enough votes to be&#13;
elected. If any senator must be&#13;
replaced by an alternate more&#13;
than 3 times, impeachment&#13;
proceedings may be brought&#13;
against her-him.&#13;
If the changes are approved,&#13;
the Student Union Committee&#13;
would no longer be listed in the&#13;
constitution as a regular standing&#13;
committee of the senate. Since&#13;
the Student Activities Board&#13;
serves the same purpose as that&#13;
committee (and does a&#13;
professional, full-time job), there&#13;
is no need for the senate to be&#13;
involved in union functions.&#13;
The changes propose that the&#13;
duties of tbe Recording and&#13;
Corresponding secretaries be&#13;
combined and that the person&#13;
who £ills that one post be a hired&#13;
employee of the senate rather&#13;
than an elected official. The&#13;
secretary would be cbosen by the&#13;
PSGA President and subject to&#13;
Senate approval.&#13;
The proposed change in&#13;
election times would put regular&#13;
elections in the spring semester&#13;
(Aprill: the people elected at that&#13;
time would take office in June.&#13;
Then, should any vacancies&#13;
appear over the summer (a&#13;
senator might move away, for&#13;
example), there is a provision for&#13;
special replacement elections in&#13;
the fall semester. The summer&#13;
recess would serve as an&#13;
orientation period for the incoming&#13;
senate.&#13;
Ranaer free classifieds&#13;
':0. SAL. P'OrtIlb'eNoAlc.o '''- rKOf"der&#13;
w It\ ~nwy ,~~ for 11, Wei;tlS n,ne&#13;
IDa H_ motor .....os. II lmt. \IIIlOf'lL C_II&#13;
1M1...,8r~ u... 1MfWftn. II In. ¥Nt&#13;
.. )IIi P I'r'I c.'l '-311611 ftt Jlt&#13;
Having problems with &amp;ccOlJnting? Tutoring&#13;
Il"ilililble. Can 552·9462after S.&#13;
FOR SALE: G E. Illpe rK'Ol"der with AC&#13;
.s.-pter S20. Call 552.9462after S.&#13;
.AHT.O W.., Iu" USotCI bUt In rusonably&#13;
900d concJ.hon... ,te -....0 1m_hum). (all&#13;
lSI .,....&#13;
FOR SALlE: Ski boors. like new. $25.&#13;
o.ch5~ln. size lQ-Men's. Call 639·S60S lifter&#13;
" .-..&#13;
CORNER 34th Ave. &amp; -S2nd St.&#13;
Phone 652·8662 • .&#13;
"WI-IERE 1"tiE COWSOYS EAT"&#13;
o&#13;
o&#13;
~.&#13;
~oo().oo&#13;
@ill~ooooo&#13;
(15~OOooo~o&#13;
cll5.~o ~&#13;
Steak Dinners&#13;
'179 to '369&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
Wednesday. Oct. 24: 1-3 p.m. Terry Eliot will play and sing in th&#13;
Whiteskellar. No admission charged. e&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 24:. PAB will sponsor th~~ovi~ "Fritz the Cat" at&#13;
7 :30 p.m. in GreenqUlst Hall room 103. Admission lS 75 cents,&#13;
Friday, Oct. 26: Lecture by Jack O'Donnell of Arthur Andersen and&#13;
Company on careers in accounting atlO a.m. in Cia Dl07 and at I p.rn&#13;
in Cia 0105. No admission charged. .&#13;
Friday, Oct. 26: Harold Burstyn lecture on Technology and the In.&#13;
dustrial Society at noon in LLC D174. Sponsored by Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts. No admission)lhllrged.&#13;
Friday. Oct, 26: Lecture by Radu Florescu entitled "In Search of&#13;
Dracula" at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theatre. Sponsored by the&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee. Free to students.&#13;
Friday. Saturday. and Sunday Oct. 26-28: PAB-Ragtime Rangers&#13;
outing to Louisville, Kentucky. Contact Student Activities Office. LLC&#13;
DI97.&#13;
saturday, Oct. 27: Alpha Kappa Lambda is sponsoring a Halloween&#13;
dance in SAB at 9 p.m. Band is "Rasputen" and admission is $1.50.&#13;
Costumes are encouraged..&#13;
Monday, Oct. 29: Poet Diane Wakoski sponsored by the Poetry Forum&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts, and Women's .Caucus. Workshop from 4-5 p.rn.&#13;
in LLC DI973 and D174. Poetryreading by wakoski at 8 p.m. on the&#13;
Library third floor. No admission charged.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 30: CLlllle~ture at 8 p.m. by Parkside English professor&#13;
Peter Hoff on "~eacock's Paradoxes: The Illusion of 'Progress' and&#13;
the Fortunate Foible." Third floor of the library. No admission&#13;
charged.&#13;
,&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
Nov. 14: Play "The Virus" will be performed in the Comm Arts&#13;
Theatre. Tickets on sale at Ute Information kiosk.&#13;
saturday, Nov. 3: Turkey Trot at Phy Ed Building. Contact Jim Koch&#13;
or Bob Lawson.&#13;
Sunday. Nov. 4: Adult Student Association "recreation night" for&#13;
adult students and their families from 6 to 9 p.m. in the Phy Ed&#13;
Building.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 8: Maynard Ferguson sponsored by PAB at 8 p.rn. in&#13;
the Comm Arts Theatre. Tickets on sale at the Information Kiosk.&#13;
January, 2-7: Ragtime Rangers sponsoring a ski trip to Steamboat&#13;
~prings, Colorado. See Information kiosk.&#13;
All items for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submitted to&#13;
~ANGER by noon Thursday.prter to publication of the issue in which&#13;
pn item is to appear.&#13;
J&amp;J&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center&#13;
Super Low Prices&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave .. Racine&#13;
•&#13;
518-56thSt., Kenosha&#13;
is BRAT STOP&#13;
1-94 &amp; Hwy. 50, Kenosha&#13;
presents&#13;
"WINFIELD ROAD"&#13;
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY, ocrOBER 26 &amp; 'll&#13;
ALL REGULAR MIXED DRINKS 50c&#13;
We serve the BEST'in BRATSandwiches&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE PRESENTS&#13;
Gertrude Jeannette, Broadway, movie, TV actress&#13;
Parkside Players in&#13;
OirKted by Don Rintl&#13;
Premiere 8 P.M. Nov. 1,2,3,4&#13;
Communication Arts Theater&#13;
Reserved seats $3, Students with 10 $1.50 (Nov.&#13;
2-3-,4Groups of 10~or more, lO"discount)&#13;
Tickets available at Bidinger's in Kenosha,&#13;
Cook-Gere in Racine Cafter Oct. 17) and UW-P&#13;
Information Center on campus. Mail orders at&#13;
Info Center only. Send stamped, self-addressed&#13;
envelope with check payable to UW-Parkside to&#13;
"Virus," UW-P Info Center, UW-Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha. WI 531.40.&#13;
,.,&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
BODACIOUS D.F.&#13;
eaturin fart. BaliJ:1 IR ,\ APLl&#13;
urt y of J&amp;J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
er free classifieds&#13;
Hav,ng problems w ith account,n;? Tutoring&#13;
aea, .. ble Call 552 9"'62 after S.&#13;
FOR SALE : GE. tall@ recorder with AC&#13;
adap!tr S20. Ca ll 552 9-161 after S.&#13;
FOllt SALE Ski boots, li ke new. $25.&#13;
Oechs•e s ze 10-Men's Call 639 S605 after&#13;
2 r,oon.&#13;
PSGA&#13;
referendum&#13;
explained&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government senate is circulating&#13;
a petition that calls for a con·&#13;
stitutional refernedum, the&#13;
purpose of which is to co~si~er&#13;
some changes in the Constitution&#13;
of the senate.&#13;
The petition outlines four basic&#13;
changes in the present con·&#13;
stitution: 1. requirements for&#13;
raising a quorum will _be '&#13;
rewritten, 2. the Student Umon&#13;
Committee will be abolished, 3·&#13;
the positions of Recor~ a~d&#13;
Corresponding Secretanes will&#13;
be combined into one, nonelective&#13;
position, and 4. election&#13;
times \\-ill be changed to Spring&#13;
term with special replacement&#13;
elections in the fall. To assure that a quorum can be&#13;
established for senate meetings,&#13;
ab ent members will be replaced&#13;
by alternates, according to the&#13;
proposed changes. These&#13;
alternates would be students who&#13;
ran for the office but didn't&#13;
receive enough votes to be&#13;
elected. If any senator must be&#13;
replaced by an alternate more&#13;
than 3 times, impeachment&#13;
proceedings may be brought&#13;
against her-him.&#13;
U the changes are approved,&#13;
the Student Union Committee&#13;
would no longer be listed in the&#13;
constitution as a regular standing&#13;
committee of the senate. Since&#13;
the Student Activities Board&#13;
serves the same purpose as that&#13;
committee (and does a&#13;
professional, full-time job), there&#13;
is no need for the senate to be&#13;
involved in union functions. The changes propose that the&#13;
duties of the Recording and&#13;
Corresponding secretaries be&#13;
combined and that the person&#13;
who fills that one post be a hired&#13;
employee of the senate rather&#13;
than an elected official. The&#13;
secretary would be chosen by the&#13;
PSGA President and subject to&#13;
Senate approval.&#13;
The proposed change in&#13;
election times would put regular&#13;
elections in the spring semester&#13;
(April) : the people elected at that&#13;
time would take office in June.&#13;
Then , should any vacancies&#13;
appear over the summer (a&#13;
senator might move away, for&#13;
example), there is a provision for&#13;
special replacement elections in&#13;
the fall semester. The summer&#13;
recess would serve as an&#13;
orientation period for the incoming&#13;
senate.&#13;
Steak Dinners&#13;
'1 79 to '369&#13;
CORNER 34th Ave. &amp; 52nd St.&#13;
Phon• 652-8662 .&#13;
•wMERE 1HE COWBOYS FAT"&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 24: 1-3 p.m. Terry Eliot will play and sing in th&#13;
Whiteskellar. No admission charged. e&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 24:_ PAB will sponsor th~ ~ovi~ "Fritz the Cat" at&#13;
7 :30 p.m. in Greenqu1st Hall room 103. Adm1ss1on 1s 75 cents.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 26: Lecture by Jack O'Donnell of Arthur Andersen and&#13;
Company on careers in accounting at 10 a.m. in Cla Dl07 and at 1 pm&#13;
in Cla D105. No admission charged. · ·&#13;
Friday, Oct: 26: Harold_ Burstyn lecture on Technology and the Industrial&#13;
Society at noon m LLC D174. Sponsored by Lecture and Fin&#13;
Arts. No admission_,Qlmrged. e&#13;
Friday, Oct. 26: Lecture by Radu Florescu entitled " In Search of&#13;
Dracula" at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theatre. Sponsored by the&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee. Free to students.&#13;
Friday, Saturday, and Sunday Oct. 26-28: PAB-Ragtime Rangers&#13;
outing to Louisville, Kentucky. Contact Student Activities Office, LLC&#13;
D197.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 27: Alpha Kappa Lambda is sponsoring a Hallowee&#13;
dance in SAB at 9 p.m. Band is "Rasputen" and admission is $l ~ Costwnes are encouraged. · ·&#13;
Monday, Oct. 29: Poet Diane Wakoski sponsored by the Poetry Forum&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts, and Women's _Caucus. Workshop from 4.5 p.m'.&#13;
in LLC D1~73 and D174. Poe~y _reading by Wakoslci at 8 p.m. on the&#13;
Library third floor. No adm1ss1on charged.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 30: CLI0,le&lt;;ture at8 p.m. by Parkside English profes or&#13;
Peter Hoff on "Peacock's Paradoxes: The Illusion of 'Progress' and&#13;
the Fortunate Foible." Third floor of the library. No admission&#13;
charged.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
Nov. 1-4: Play "The Virus" will be performed in the Comm Ar&#13;
Theatre. Tickets on sale at the Information kiosk.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 3: Turkey Trot at Phy Ed Building. Contact Jim Koch or Bob Lawson.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 4: Adult Student Association "recreation night" for&#13;
adult students and their families from 6 to 9 p.m. in the Phy Ed&#13;
Building.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 8: Maynard Ferguson sponsored by PAB at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the Comm Arts Theatre. Tickets on sale at the Information KiOl;k .&#13;
January, 2-7: Ragtime Rangers sponsoring a ski trip to Steamboat&#13;
prings, Colorado. See Information kiosk.&#13;
All items for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submitted lo&#13;
ANGER by noon Thursday prior to publication or the I sue in which n item is to appear.&#13;
J&amp;J&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center&#13;
Super Low Prices•&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave .. Racine&#13;
518-56th St., Kenosha&#13;
! BRAT STOP&#13;
1-94 &amp; Hwy. 50, Kenosha&#13;
presents&#13;
"WINFIELD ROAD"&#13;
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY, OOl'OBER 26 &amp; 'll&#13;
ALL REGULAR MIXED DRINKS 50c&#13;
We serve the BEST 'in BRAT Sandwiches&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE PRESENTS&#13;
Gertrude Jeannette, Broadway, movie, TV actress&#13;
and The Parkside Players in&#13;
Directed by Don Rint1&#13;
Premiere 8 P.M. Nov. 1,2,3,4&#13;
Communication Arts Theater&#13;
Reserved seats $3, Students with ID $1.50 (Nov.&#13;
2-3-4 Groups of 10' or more, l0j(,discount)&#13;
Tickets available at Bidinger's in Kenosha,&#13;
Cook-Gere in Racine (after Oct. 17) and UW-P&#13;
Information Center on campus. Mail orders at&#13;
Info Center only. Send stamped, self-addressed&#13;
envelope with check payable to UW-Parkside to&#13;
"Virus," UW-P Info Center, UW-Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53140. &#13;
Jtief news&#13;
Cillbbudgets requested&#13;
--- ide student organizations wishing to receive funds from the&#13;
PafPity St.udentGroup Support account should submit their annual&#13;
U",vers to the Assistant Dean of Students Office 284 Tallent Hall by&#13;
~lS OctOber 30. If you have questions or wish further in-&#13;
'J\I'S'IIIY'ncall 553-2342.The Campus Concerns Committee is eager to&#13;
::~;ai student organization budget decisions as SOOnas possible.&#13;
Tllrkeytrot teams forming&#13;
-&#13;
Men-Womenteams are needed to run for the second Annual Turk&#13;
rrot. Ateam predicts the time in which they both will run and ~~&#13;
lOIImnearest their prediction WInS. The Turkey Trot will be held at _011 Sunday, Nov. 3 In front of the Phy Ed building. It is open to all&#13;
students,staff and spouses or friends, The entrance fee is 50 c ts&#13;
contacteither Jim Koch (2267) or Bob Lawson (2153) of the Ph;nEd /leulty. _&#13;
Phy-Ecicoach injured&#13;
women'S Sports Direc~or Barbara Jo Lawson seriously injur~ her&#13;
bod&lt; in a trampoline accident last Wednesday. No further details are&#13;
Ivailableat this time. -&#13;
HoH to give CLIO lecture&#13;
Pecer Hoff, Assistant Professor of English at UW-Parkside, will&#13;
_at on uPeac~'s Paradoxes: 'I1;IeIllusion of 'Pro~ress' and the&#13;
FortunateFoible" on Tuesday, Oct. 30, at 7:30 p.m. in the Library,&#13;
Ihird floor.&#13;
Hoff'slecture is the second in a series on "The Humanities in an&#13;
lDdustriai Society" sponsored by the CLIO Association, an in-&#13;
_tional organization connected with the Parkside journal CLIO.&#13;
The nextCLIOlecture will be on November 20, when Robert Canary,&#13;
"""",iate Professor of English, will speak on "Science Fiction: Myths&#13;
f« an Iudustrial Age?"&#13;
ASA moves answering service&#13;
The Adult Student Association has moved their evening answering&#13;
servicefrom.Tallent Hall to the Information Kiosk in LLC Main Place.&#13;
The service, geared to adult and evening students who cannot contact&#13;
Parbide offices during regular hours, will now operate Mondays&#13;
1bruugb Thursdays each week when classes are in session from 5:30&#13;
p.m. CD 8:30 p.m.&#13;
Buntyn to lecture here&#13;
bid L.Burstyn, Dean of Graduate and Research Studies at&#13;
Paterson State College Wayne New Jersey will give a free pubhc&#13;
lectare.t t2 p.m. Friw.;y, Oct. 25 in LLC D174. Burstyn's lecture will&#13;
be GIl "The Promethean Paradox Explained, or What the History of&#13;
Tac!moIotIY Can tell us about the Characteristics of Industrial&#13;
Socilty." The lecture is sponsored by the Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Olaunittee, the School of Modern Industry and the History Depart-&#13;
_l&#13;
STEREOS TAPES&#13;
ORGANS&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
PIANOS&#13;
t919TAYLORAVENUE&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53403&#13;
MIKE URBAN&#13;
DENNY NELSON&#13;
owners&#13;
PHONE 637-2212&#13;
PAB FEATURE FILM SERIES,&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
FRITZ THE CAT&#13;
WEDNESDAY,&#13;
OCTOBER 24&#13;
7:30 P.M.&#13;
GR 103&#13;
WeclnesUy, Oct. 24,1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Accounting careers dlscuued&#13;
CoOnFriday, Oct. 26 Jack O'Donnell of Arthur Andersoo and&#13;
a mpany, will meet with interested students to dIscuss careers in&#13;
Bccou.nting. His lecture will be presented at 10 a.m. in the Classroom&#13;
BU&#13;
ildmg room DI07 and will be repeated at I p.m. 10 the Classroorn&#13;
uilding room 0105.&#13;
RR to wash airplane&#13;
The Ragtime Rangers are planning. ski trip to Steamboat Spnngs,&#13;
Colorado, January 2 thru 7. The trip Includes round trip transportation,&#13;
Iive days lift tickets. and five days lodgIng_ Total price IS&#13;
$210by plane or 5140by bus. Sign up is at ~ Worm.tion kiosk 10 Main&#13;
Place. Students interested in washing an airplane at Milw.ukee's&#13;
Mitchell Field to raise some cash for tbeir trip are asked to sign up 10&#13;
the Student Life Office, LLC Ot97.&#13;
Yearbook meeting today&#13;
Students, faculty and any other persons interested with woriting 00&#13;
an annual are invited to attend a meeting on Wednesday. Oct. 24 at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in LLC 0174. At this meeting the pubtisber foe the yearboolt&#13;
will be selected. Poets, phol&lt;Jgraphers, editors and lay-out personnel&#13;
are needed.&#13;
PSGA------&#13;
continued !rom pag e 1&#13;
Abduilah demanded a seat on the&#13;
committee just because he was&#13;
black. "He is anti-white rather&#13;
than pro-student," Konkol said.&#13;
"I don't want to bring any more&#13;
prejudice into it (the selectioo&#13;
procedures) than there is&#13;
already," Jennett added. Konkol&#13;
replied that "prejudice should be&#13;
personal rather than racial."&#13;
It was decided, witb the&#13;
recommendation brought forth&#13;
by Jennett, that the only 0bjective&#13;
Appeals Board for&#13;
students would have to be ooe&#13;
made up of individuals after the&#13;
new electioos are held, because&#13;
now the Appeals Board would&#13;
consist of the same students who&#13;
are on the interviewing and&#13;
screening committee.&#13;
The other topics dIscusse&lt;1 .t&#13;
Sunday's meeting were the&#13;
constitutional referendwn now&#13;
beIng circulated among students&#13;
and an ejections eommtttee for&#13;
'ovember's PSGA electioos&#13;
Konkol suggested that the&#13;
ActivitIes Board take charge of&#13;
the polls and count ballots "so&#13;
that none of the people who are&#13;
against us can accuse us of im~&#13;
proprieties." Jennett said that&#13;
PSGA did oot ha,.e enough mooey&#13;
to pay for the help and McDlVltt&#13;
and Stephen suggested the&#13;
fraternIties. the soronty or p~&#13;
Law Club's help be solicited&#13;
The meeting was adjourned&#13;
and aootherset ioe this Sunday at&#13;
6:30 p.m. in ILC 0174&#13;
Renew&#13;
Moyle Is&#13;
nostalglo trip&#13;
bode to&#13;
greose oge&#13;
"AMERICAN GRAFFITI"&#13;
by R~ca Edll ...&#13;
If you "ere born .round J&#13;
-\me-riaD Gnnkl tI yoar mOV1~&#13;
Get )'Ourself set for the g.... test&#13;
oostallll. tnp badl to the gres&#13;
age ever to hit the screen.&#13;
The movie l.S set III the SUmmer&#13;
of 1962, 00 • "arm night 1ft •&#13;
medium- ited tewn In northe-n&#13;
Cabfoem. What you .re&#13;
10 this mevie, as ~ Tim&#13;
mag&amp;1IDe pul.S It. is the "lut&#13;
gasp aI an er a." The day the&#13;
BeaUes hit the musIC sceee in&#13;
1963w •• the day the lrock-.androll&#13;
I music died&#13;
Remember how guy. used to go&#13;
out cruISing the boulev.rd (oe&#13;
scooping the loop, as It's ~&#13;
around here) 10 tbetr hot roda.&#13;
grease 10 thetr ha ..., tbetr ba bl&#13;
by thetr .des. tbetr pll of&#13;
Camels rolled up 10 tbetr T-alur!.&#13;
sleeve, O1uck 8erT)I 00 the radio,&#13;
and everytlnng was b,tchm" If&#13;
)"ou do remember, meric:'u&#13;
Graffiti will throw you Into fila of&#13;
esctasy If you don't remember.&#13;
you'll have one hell of • good&#13;
time, • lot aI laughs, .nd )ou'lI&#13;
have seen the 1 Amencan&#13;
movie so far this )·ear&#13;
(Starts Wednesday, October 31.&#13;
.t the M.r&lt;: Cinema 10 Racine )&#13;
Things you have wanted&#13;
the •&#13;
In&#13;
e Greeting Cards&#13;
• Wrapping Paper&#13;
• Pocket Combs&#13;
• Record Promotion&#13;
RATED FOR SALE:&#13;
• Kleenex&#13;
• Cough Drops&#13;
• Toothpaste&#13;
• Anaeln&#13;
PARKSIDE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE&#13;
1rief news&#13;
Cl b budgets requested ~&#13;
kside student organizations wishing to receive funds from the&#13;
~r ·ty student Group Support account should submit their annual&#13;
l1!11 \~;\0 the Assistant Dean of Students ~ffice 284 Tallent Hall by&#13;
~ (lg October 30. ff you have questions or wish further in-&#13;
~\ call 553-2342. The Campus Concerns Committee is eager to&#13;
:;: fi~ai student organization budget decisions as soon as possible.&#13;
Turkey trot teams forming&#13;
---fen-Women teams are needed to run for the second Annual Turk&#13;
Trot A team pre_dicts ~e _time _in which they both will run and ~ team nearest their pre?iction wins. The Turkey Trot will be held at&#13;
p)Oll on Sunday, Nov. 3 m front of_ the Phy Ed building. It is open to all&#13;
udents, staff and spouses or friends. The entrance fee is 50 c ts&#13;
eontact either Jim Koch (2267) or Bob Lawson (2153) of the P h;nEd&#13;
t,cuJty.&#13;
~y-Ed coach iniured&#13;
Women's Sports Director Barbara Jo Lawson seriously injured her&#13;
back in a tram~li~e accident last Wednesday. No further details are&#13;
available at this time.&#13;
~off to give CLIO lecture&#13;
Peter Hoff, Assistant Professor of English a t UW-Parkside, will&#13;
speak on "Peacock's Paradoxes: Tl?e Illusion of 'P rogress' a nd the&#13;
Fortunate Foible" on Tuesday, Oct. 30, at 7: 30 p.m . in the Library,&#13;
third floor. Hoff's lecture is the second in a series on "The Humanities in an&#13;
Industrial Society" sponsored by the CLIO Association, a n international&#13;
organization connected with the Parkside journal CLIO.&#13;
Toe next CLIO lecture will be on November 20, when Robert Canary,&#13;
Associate Professor of English, will speak on " Science F iction: Myths&#13;
for an Industrial Age? "&#13;
ASA moves answering service&#13;
The Adult Student Association has moved their evening answering&#13;
service from Tallent Hall to the Information Kiosk in LLC Main Place.&#13;
The service, geared to adult and evening students who cannot contact&#13;
Parkside offices during regular hours, will now operate Mondays&#13;
through Thursdays each week when classes are in session from 5:30&#13;
p.m. to 8:30 p.m.&#13;
Buntyn to lecture here&#13;
Harold L. Burstyn, Dean of Graduate and Research Studies at&#13;
Paterson State College Wayne, New Jersey will give a free public&#13;
lecture at 12 p.m. Fri~y, Oct. 26 in LLC D174. Burstyn's lecture will&#13;
on "The Promethean Paradox Explained, or What the History of&#13;
Technology Can tell us about the Characteristics of Industrial&#13;
·ety." The lecture is sponsored by the Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Committee, the School of Modern Industry and the History Depart- ment .&#13;
.. RECORDS&#13;
PIANOS&#13;
STEREOS&#13;
ORGANS&#13;
TAPES&#13;
1919 TAYLOR AVENUE&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53403&#13;
MIKE URBAN&#13;
DENNY NELSON&#13;
"--- owners PHONE 637-2212&#13;
PAB FEATURE FILM SERIES,&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
FRITZ THE CAT&#13;
WEDNESDAY,&#13;
OCTOBER 24&#13;
7:30 P.M.&#13;
GR 103&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 24, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Accounting careers discussed&#13;
On FridaY: Oct. 26 Ja O'Donnell&#13;
;°mpa~y, wdl meet \\-ith intere ted tuden to&#13;
Bc&lt;;&lt;&gt;u_nting. His lecture ·ill be presented at 10 .m. in&#13;
Bu~ldding~ room D107 and will be repeated at 1 p.m. in&#13;
ui room D105.&#13;
RR to wash airplane&#13;
The Ragtime Rangers are planning a i trip to t m&#13;
Colora~o. January 2 thru 7. The trip includ&#13;
sportation, five da~ lift tickets. and fi ·e da, l&#13;
$210 by plane or $140 by bus. gn up i at !he inform&#13;
Pl_ace. Students interested m ·ashing an airplane&#13;
Mitchell Field to raise some cash for the r trip are&#13;
the Student Life Office, LLC D197.&#13;
Yearbook meeting today&#13;
Students, faculty and any other persons int&#13;
an annual are invited to attend a meeting on&#13;
7:30 p.m. in LLC D174. At this meeti th pu&#13;
will be elected. Poets, photographers, edito are needed.&#13;
Review&#13;
Movl Is&#13;
nostalgia trip&#13;
bade to&#13;
greas age&#13;
"AMER ICAN GRA FFI I"&#13;
PSGA-----&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
Abdullah demanded a seat on the&#13;
committee just because be wa&#13;
black. "He i anti-white rather&#13;
than pro-student," Konkol said.&#13;
"I don't want to bring any more&#13;
prejudice into it (the selection&#13;
procedures) than there i&#13;
already," Jennett added. Konkol&#13;
replied that " prejudice hould be&#13;
personal rather than racial."&#13;
It was decided, with the&#13;
recommendation brought forth&#13;
by Jennett, that the only objec&#13;
ti ve Appeal Board for&#13;
students would have to be one&#13;
made up of individual after the&#13;
new elections are held, becau e&#13;
now the Appeals Board would&#13;
consist of the same tudents ho&#13;
are on the inten·iewing and&#13;
screening committee.&#13;
Things you have wanted&#13;
in the&#13;
• Greeting Cards • Kleenex&#13;
• Wrapping Paper • Cough Drops&#13;
• Pocket Combs • Toothpa te&#13;
• Record Promotion • Anacin&#13;
RATED FOR SALE:&#13;
PARKSIDE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 24, 1973&#13;
Sooters&#13;
to meet&#13;
Marquette,&#13;
Green Say ___ -------sports--&#13;
RANGER&#13;
by Neal sautner&#13;
"We have a good shot at&#13;
beating uiem" replied soccer&#13;
coach Hal Henderson concerning&#13;
lonights game against Marquette&#13;
University. "Last year they&#13;
defeated us 3-1, but reports say&#13;
they're not as good as last year."&#13;
This saturday the Rangers&#13;
lake on their traditional rival&#13;
Green Bay. "We've never beaten&#13;
them on the varsity level, but we&#13;
tied them once." Then he added;&#13;
"Green Bay has been ranked as&#13;
high as 5th in the nation this year,&#13;
and they're the only tearn that&#13;
beat the defending NCAA&#13;
national champs; St. Louis&#13;
University." Green Bay's record&#13;
for the year is 5-1.(). Quincy&#13;
College was the only team to&#13;
defeat them.&#13;
Parkside's record (Of the year is&#13;
2-6-0. "Ironically, we've bad the&#13;
same number of wins as last&#13;
year, but then there were three&#13;
games we shouldn't have lost,"&#13;
Henderson said. "We'll keep&#13;
trying."&#13;
Henderson ended the interview.&#13;
saying, "I've been extremely&#13;
pleased with the performances&#13;
of Rick Lechusz,&#13;
Dennis pippen, and Dieter&#13;
Kiefer," who incidentally will be&#13;
playing against Green Bay, after&#13;
suffering from ankle injuries.&#13;
Weekend sports&#13;
eRO, 0 lJ!'; 111Y&#13;
The Park. Ide harriers defeated Milwaukee Marquette this weekend.&#13;
malung their dual meet record 5-1.&#13;
","'" Par ide runners all broke the tape with the same time&#13;
125:581, ho"e,."r. ChUck Dettman and Lucian Rosa were given the&#13;
fant place tie Wayne Rhode came in second.&#13;
Other fmlsh.... for Parkside were: Jim DeVasquez - 6th place, Keith&#13;
Morntt.7th place. Dale artin· 11th place, John Ammerman - 12th&#13;
place The ham next meet will be tonIght, against Loras College, at&#13;
LorD&#13;
RlI BY P rOlde's Rugby Club gave an Impressive performance against&#13;
Marquette In the second annual Lions Club Rugby Garne Stmday,&#13;
WIIVIlJlg it 10-4 Polllt- uers for Paro.de were Keith Bosman, and Tom Jaebne.&#13;
ER The Par Ide Soccer Team bad two soccer games since RANGER'S&#13;
laat P . deadline."'e fint game was last Wednesday against Lake&#13;
Fo t III wluch Parkside started oIf on the right foot winning the&#13;
pme~. GoaIJ for Parlullde came from Ray Phanturat, Stan Stadler.&#13;
RIck Lec!l_. Dieter Kiefer. and Warren Lewis.&#13;
ParkaJde secood game occurred on Friday. October 19th, agains&#13;
Eastern IllinoiS who mClClentally were National Champions in 1969.&#13;
ParUide 1000tthiS one 1-0. Head Coach Hal Henderson insists that th&#13;
Eaalern game was "the best team effort all year" by his squad. Coach&#13;
Hendersoo alao added, "Even though we made mistakes. we proved t&#13;
""",,,vee that we can play with the tougberteams."&#13;
The soccer squad'S next game will be "a big one" against arch·rival&#13;
UW~reen Bay.&#13;
_-~------------1 : PRODOCTIONS A 50's REVIVEL1&#13;
1 PRESENTS with:&#13;
t&#13;
I&#13;
1&#13;
t&#13;
It&#13;
I&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
I&#13;
t&#13;
·1&#13;
I&#13;
OCTOBER26 - 8:00 P.M. 1&#13;
1&#13;
TICKe:n ...VAIVoILIE S2.SO - advance $.1.00 door t&#13;
IN •• (IN. IN KeNosHA 1 tMullM De., OMS-e1 oe.. m Memorial HaU l J"J T~" RKOnI J"J TaPl" Reeont 7th &amp; Lake Ave. Racine&#13;
_______________ J&#13;
•• .-...&#13;
~:&#13;
"&#13;
•,&#13;
•&#13;
,&#13;
I&#13;
Parltsld Acuvtnes Board ...&#13;
presents&#13;
fnConcert&#13;
~ --~ ?&#13;
MAY~ARDt;- -'\&#13;
FERGUSON ORCHESTRA t; /-&#13;
11IOR.-IIV. 8 8:00 P.M.&#13;
~, am llllllE&#13;
• .$Ul PAllSIIl S1\IOTS'&#13;
$4.111GDWL )tt&#13;
~&#13;
''Mr Hom'·&#13;
An&#13;
"Un" -Common&#13;
Offer!&#13;
A moment's refiection--Sue Wanggaard pauses before&#13;
her tennis match in last weekend's tournament,&#13;
On Sale in the Bookstore&#13;
"Morning Fresh"&#13;
MILWAUKEE SENTINAL&#13;
Enjoy It Daily&#13;
Parkside University Bookstore&#13;
YOU ,&#13;
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LOC.4TlONS 3400 Sheridan Road&#13;
--&#13;
• p SIDE ,. Oct. 24, 1ffl&#13;
GER&#13;
~----------Sports _ __,&#13;
nd sports&#13;
t meet will be tonight, apinlt Loras College, at&#13;
Pla1ftntla' ftuCby Cub pve an impreaive performance against&#13;
IWauelte in the NCGnd annual Uom Cub Rugby Game Sunday,&#13;
willllinll tlM.&#13;
IOC~ X:Nl'Ellt~etten for Pubide Keitb Bolman, and Tom Jaebne.&#13;
Soccer Team bad two soccer pmea since GER&#13;
deacline. 1be ftnt pme w lut Wedneaday apinst Lak&#13;
in Paraide started off an tbe ript foot winnin&amp;&#13;
w. Goals for Partraide came from Ray Pbanturat, Stan Stadler,&#13;
-...t9:..:a .. am. Dieta' Kief•, and Wamm Lewis. .., IICDDd pme occurred OD Friday, October 11th, a&#13;
IIUnall who inddmtally National Champions in 1•.&#13;
Puhl.Ila loll tbll one 1 ... H•d Coac:b Hal Hendenon in1ist1 that&#13;
11:Mtsa.... "the tam effort all year" by bia lqllad. Coe&#13;
Hadenaa allo added, "Ewa lboulh made mistakes, we proved&#13;
aun~•U.t can play tb the t.auper teams."&#13;
1be IOCCel' aquad'1 next same will be "a hie one" apinst an:b-ri&#13;
UW'-Gr- Bay.&#13;
----i11's-lfEiiVEI 1&#13;
p rbide llvtties Board&#13;
presen&#13;
lnCon rt&#13;
FERGUSON ORCHESTRA /:;&#13;
1:11 P.&#13;
S111UTS·&#13;
ith f&#13;
w f&#13;
'&#13;
t&#13;
f&#13;
f&#13;
I&#13;
If&#13;
f&#13;
f&#13;
f&#13;
t&#13;
f&#13;
f&#13;
f&#13;
t&#13;
I&#13;
f&#13;
Booters&#13;
to meet&#13;
Marquette,&#13;
Green Bay&#13;
by eal Sautner&#13;
"We have a good shot at&#13;
beating them" replied soccer&#13;
coach Hal Henderson concerning&#13;
tonights game against Marquette&#13;
University. "Last year they&#13;
defeated us 3-1, but reports say&#13;
they're not as good as last year."&#13;
This Saturday the Rangers&#13;
take on their traditional rival&#13;
Green Bay. "We've never beaten&#13;
them on the varsity level, but we&#13;
tied them once." Then he added;&#13;
"Green Bay has been ranked as&#13;
high as 5th in the nation this year,&#13;
and they're the only team that&#13;
beat the defending NCAA&#13;
national champs; St. Louis&#13;
University." Green Bays record&#13;
for the year is 5-1-0. Quincy&#13;
College was the only team to&#13;
defeat them.&#13;
Parksides record for the year is&#13;
2-&amp;-0. "Ironically, we've bad the&#13;
same nmnber ol wins as last&#13;
year, but then there were three&#13;
pmes we shouldn't have lost,"&#13;
Henderson said "We'll keep&#13;
trying."&#13;
Henderson ended the interview,&#13;
saying, "I've been extremely&#13;
pleased with the performances&#13;
of Rick Lechusz,&#13;
Dennis Pippen, and Dieter&#13;
Kiefer," who incidentally will be&#13;
playing against Green Bay, after&#13;
Qfering from ankle injuries.&#13;
An&#13;
"Un" -Common&#13;
Offer!&#13;
YOU&#13;
KEEP&#13;
THE&#13;
GLASS!&#13;
A moment's reflection--Sue Wanggaard pauses before&#13;
her tennis match in last weekend's tourna.ment.&#13;
On Sale in the Bookstore&#13;
"Morning Fresh"&#13;
MILWAUKEE SENTINAL&#13;
Enjoy It Daily&#13;
Parkside ~iversity Bookstore&#13;
•&#13;
• • i • • • . . • • • • • •&#13;
• .. • . .&#13;
Buy a ... Deliciously Satisfying&#13;
• BIG SHEF&#13;
GOLDEN BROWN&#13;
• FRENCH FRIES&#13;
"UN" COMMONLY REFRESHING&#13;
• "UN" COLA&#13;
ALLFOR $1 lO&#13;
YOU KEEP THE GLASS!&#13;
6926 39th Ave.&#13;
Stent Your Set Nowl&#13;
• 2 •&#13;
LOC4TIONS 3400 Sheridan Rood </text>
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              <text>SMI Building revived</text>
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              <text>The Parkside&#13;
$50,000 Appropriated&#13;
SMI Building revived&#13;
The SMI building was revived&#13;
last week in a decision by the&#13;
State Building Commission&#13;
providing $50,000 in advance&#13;
planning money. The vote was 7-1&#13;
with only Senator Milo Knutson&#13;
(R-LaCrosse) opposed.&#13;
The University is required to&#13;
review its space needs before the&#13;
funds are provided, but State&#13;
Representative George Molinaro&#13;
(D-Kenosha) said this would not&#13;
be a major hurdle.&#13;
"We could start digging by&#13;
1975," Molinaro told a group of&#13;
Kenosha County Supervisors.&#13;
The University and the Board&#13;
of Regents had earlier recommended&#13;
$3.1, million be put in the&#13;
1973-74 state budget in order to&#13;
complete the building but later&#13;
changed their minds and&#13;
deferred the project entirely for&#13;
this biennium.&#13;
Parkside Chancellor Irvin G.&#13;
Wyllie said he is "extremely&#13;
pleased" by the action, especially&#13;
so since the initiative came from&#13;
the community rather than the&#13;
campus.&#13;
"This action says something&#13;
important," Wyllie said, "It says&#13;
that the campus has arrived in&#13;
the sense of public understanding&#13;
of its functions and of its importance&#13;
in providing opportunity&#13;
for young people and&#13;
future economic development for&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin."&#13;
If the measure is approved in&#13;
full, the building might be ready&#13;
by the fall of 1977. However, if no&#13;
action is taken until next year, it&#13;
would be 1978 before the building&#13;
could be in use.&#13;
Lake alert&#13;
Lake Michigan Alert, a conference&#13;
on the problems of the&#13;
lake, will take place Saturday at&#13;
Tallent Hall. Three problem&#13;
areas will be discussed: the&#13;
Federal Water Pollution Act '72,&#13;
Nuclear Power Plants, and&#13;
Shoreline Erosion. Preregistration&#13;
has been extended.&#13;
For further information, contact&#13;
the University of WisconsinExtension&#13;
at 553-2312.&#13;
PSGA announces&#13;
election results&#13;
The results of the recently held&#13;
PSGA elections show that 335&#13;
members of the student body&#13;
voted. This is 8.08 percent of the&#13;
voters at Parkside.&#13;
Running unopposed for&#13;
Recording Secretary, Kathryn&#13;
Wellner received 261 votes. The&#13;
seven new Senators are Patrick&#13;
McDevitt, 161; Nancy Lee, 143-&#13;
Helmut Kah, 140; David Otto'&#13;
137; Charles Stephen, 133;&#13;
Thomas Hughes, 121; and Lorri&#13;
Tommerup, 120. Also running,&#13;
but not receiving enough votes&#13;
were, George Kis, 108; and&#13;
Raymond Waldie, 65.&#13;
Wednesday, March 14, 1973&#13;
Vol. 1, No. 21&#13;
Distinguished teaching award&#13;
nomination in progress&#13;
Distinguished Teaching Award&#13;
Nomination Forms have been&#13;
mailed to all students.&#13;
According to Jewel&#13;
Echelbarger, Assistant Dean of&#13;
Students, the money for the&#13;
award is made available to the&#13;
University by the Standard Oil&#13;
Corporation of Indiana.&#13;
Last year there was $1,000&#13;
available for awards, and two&#13;
$500 awards were given. This&#13;
year only $500 was received from&#13;
Standard Oil, so the Teaching&#13;
Awards Committee is trying to&#13;
locate another source of money.&#13;
Hopefully tfiere will be enough&#13;
money to present two awards&#13;
again this year.&#13;
"The award is based purely on&#13;
classroom teaching, not on&#13;
publishing or other scholarly&#13;
pursuits," said Ms. Echelbarger.&#13;
Students needing nomination&#13;
forms may pick them up in the&#13;
Information Office or Ms.&#13;
Echelbarger's office.&#13;
Career counseling available Mini-folk festival&#13;
to be held here Sunday&#13;
The First Parkside Mini-Folk&#13;
Festival will be happening on&#13;
Sunday from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. at&#13;
the Studnet Activities Building.&#13;
The event is FREE and sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board. If the weather is good, the&#13;
concert will be outside on the&#13;
courtyard; otherwise it will be&#13;
held indoors.&#13;
The Hazlewood Tavern Band&#13;
will be here from Milwaukee, as&#13;
will Nancy Price, who has played&#13;
in the Whiteskellar. Other perinclude&#13;
Dave Dufek, Terry Elliot,&#13;
John Graham, Dennis Lindgren,&#13;
Bob Rohan, Charlie Udell and&#13;
Steve Miller.&#13;
Any student attending&#13;
Parkside who has not decided on&#13;
a major or occupation can seek&#13;
help in the Career Counseling and&#13;
Information Office, Tallent Hall,&#13;
room 284.&#13;
Students who want to talk with&#13;
a career counselor should call&#13;
553-2122 for an appointment.&#13;
Those who wish to browse are&#13;
encouraged to stop by Tallent&#13;
Hall and look through material on&#13;
employment trends, salary&#13;
ranges, job descriptions, and&#13;
requirements anytime from 8:30&#13;
a.m. to 4:30p.m. Monday through&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Some students face indecision&#13;
with confidence, optimistic that&#13;
things will work out. Others are&#13;
concerned about their lack of&#13;
specific educational goals; a&#13;
concern so deep for some that&#13;
they ask themselves "Why am I&#13;
in college if I d°n't know what I&#13;
want to Study?''&#13;
Current college trends indicate&#13;
that about half the freshmen who&#13;
enter college are undecided about&#13;
their choice of majors. Of the&#13;
other 50 percent, many change&#13;
their minds about their majors,&#13;
some more than once.&#13;
A new service available to&#13;
students this semester is&#13;
discussion on Mondays from 11&#13;
a.m. to 3 p.m. with a career&#13;
extern.&#13;
Irish writing symposium set for Saturday&#13;
Irish Writing Today, a symposium,&#13;
sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Poetry Forum and the&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee,&#13;
will be presented Friday&#13;
and Saturday.&#13;
The symposium will be a series&#13;
of readings, speeches, lectures&#13;
and workshops, culminated by a&#13;
dance in the Student Activities&#13;
Building at 8 p.m. Saturday.&#13;
Starting off the program,&#13;
William Cotter Murray will read&#13;
prose in the 2nd floor Library&#13;
lounge at 1 p.m. Murray will be&#13;
followed at 1:45 p.m. by Knute&#13;
Skinner's poetry reading.&#13;
Janet Dunleavy will give the&#13;
keynote address "Irish Writing&#13;
Today" at 2:30 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist 103. A panel&#13;
discussion on Irish writing today&#13;
with Dunleavy, Murray, Skinner,&#13;
Tom Churchill and James Liddy&#13;
(moderator) will take place after&#13;
the keynote, starting at 3:15 p.m.&#13;
in Greenquist 103.&#13;
"The Informer," a film, will be&#13;
shown at 7:30 p.m. in Greenquist&#13;
103. There will be no admission&#13;
charge.&#13;
A poetry workshop with&#13;
Skinner and Liddy, at 10 a.m. in&#13;
LLC D-174, will be first on&#13;
Saturday's activity agenda.&#13;
Running concurrently will be a&#13;
prose workshop with Herbert&#13;
Kubly, Murray and Churchill in&#13;
LLC 3314.&#13;
The Big House, a drama studio&#13;
production by Brendan Behan,&#13;
will be presented in Main Place&#13;
at 2 p.m. Also in Main Pla.ce will&#13;
be an Irish poetry reading by&#13;
Liddy, followed with Irish songs&#13;
by James Runnels.&#13;
Herbert Kubly &#13;
2 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Mar. 14, 1973&#13;
The ParksideRAIMGER&#13;
&#13;
Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Community helps&#13;
revive SMI&#13;
A substantial group effort was successfully applied in&#13;
order to acquire $80,000 in planning money for the&#13;
Science and Modern Industry (SMI) building.&#13;
Assemblyman George Molinaro (D-Kenosha), along&#13;
with a host of others, brought Parkside's case to the UW&#13;
system and the system responded. Labor unions,&#13;
political figures, the democratic party of Kenosha,&#13;
school administrators and many other entities of the&#13;
community combined to renew hopes for the on-time&#13;
construction of the SMI building.&#13;
It is a credit to the school that it could muster so much&#13;
allied strength with which it could reach a usually hard&#13;
to reach system.&#13;
The local support which was evidenced in this venture&#13;
will doubtless be of help in the future. But, for now we&#13;
should concern ouselves with the help the community&#13;
has given us this time. We extend our thanks to those&#13;
people who spent time in meetings and hearings to bring&#13;
about the desired outcome.&#13;
Cartoonist's Eye View&#13;
R P£ f£CT EXOTPLE&#13;
OF DCmocRAM&#13;
IN EDUCATION IS&#13;
THE CONCEPT OF&#13;
FREEDOIT] OF&#13;
EXPRESSION.&#13;
IN ALL mq CLASS&#13;
LCCTURCS AND&#13;
EXAms i&#13;
ENCOURAGE.&#13;
STUDENTS TO&#13;
EXPRESS AS rrawq&#13;
DIFFERENT OPINIONS&#13;
ASTHEH UISH&#13;
AS LONG AS THEAte&#13;
m m e t ! ! !&#13;
THORN&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
Jose Greco is here and gone. Whatever money lost on the performance&#13;
is lost forever and cannot be recovered. Once more the&#13;
students of Parkside have seen their money spent, not as it should beon&#13;
the students, but elsewhere in an endevor that will profit the large&#13;
majority nothing. ..&#13;
Student money will continue to be so immoderately spent until&#13;
enough of a voice is raised against such a system, until both the&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee and the Parkside Activities Board&#13;
realise that money received from the segregated fee should be spent&#13;
for one purpose only-for the student.&#13;
It has been stated that programs financed using student money&#13;
should be exclusively oriented towards the student. An exception can&#13;
be made only when a non-student-oriented program is featured to&#13;
make a profit. Such profits then may be used on the students in other&#13;
ways.&#13;
A program which does not going to cost the students a cent, yet may&#13;
very well be of general interest, is being offered Tuesday, April 17.&#13;
The title of the program is 'Flying Saucers ARE Real' and will be&#13;
presented by Stanton T. Friedman, a nuclear physicist and the only&#13;
space scientist devoting full time to the science of "Ufology."&#13;
Friedman, who's educational backround includes a B.S.c. and&#13;
M.S.c. in Physics from the University of Chicago, has a 14 year&#13;
backround dealing with applications of nuclear science from&#13;
powerplants to rockets.&#13;
He is the director of t he California UFO Research Institute and was&#13;
one of t welve scientists contributing to the Scientific Symposium on&#13;
UFO's held by the U.S. Congress in 1968. H e has given hundreds of&#13;
lectures and talks on the subject since 1967.&#13;
This talk, which is not going to cost the students, will be paid for&#13;
entirely by gate receipts, Mr. Friedman receiving a percentage of t he&#13;
gross. Students will be charged $1.00 and general admission will be&#13;
$1.50.&#13;
The method of h aving performers work for a percentageof the gate&#13;
is a good one and should be used much more often at Parkside.&#13;
The quality of student here at Parkside has been decreasing each&#13;
semester as far as general interest goes. During the recent Student&#13;
Senate elections only 335 or 8.1 percent of the student body even&#13;
bothered to vote.&#13;
When 3,808 students out of 4,143 don't even bother to state a&#13;
preference in the people who will be representing them, something is&#13;
very very wrong.&#13;
By Gary Huck&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
KenniS w- stud&#13;
?&#13;
nt&#13;
?0 °&#13;
f The Unive&#13;
rsity of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 Library&#13;
Learning Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295&#13;
JS®* ^&#13;
arksid&#13;
f RanS&#13;
er is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
eflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the officia&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subiect o&#13;
ie ffvne°d&#13;
SanHeHtS,Ki&#13;
aCUlty Staff must be ***** to 250 words a&#13;
ess, typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edi&#13;
add™ °nh&#13;
ength and&#13;
,&#13;
g00d&#13;
i&#13;
aSte&#13;
-&#13;
A11 Otters must be signed Lfd include&#13;
taJTi Pu"&#13;
e nUmber and student status «'MUlty rank Names wU&#13;
print anj^ letters! Tte edit&#13;
°&#13;
rs theVht to™l&#13;
Classified and display ad rates will be furnished upon request&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Rudy Lienau&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Kathryn Wellner&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Jane Schliesman&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Kris Koch&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
^P^.&#13;
ERTISING MANAGER: Jerry Murphy&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
WRITER S: Ken Konkiol, Gary Jensen, Marilvn Srhuhnrt ,&#13;
Blaha, Bruce Rasmussen, Terri Gogola, Geoff Blaesina Sma&#13;
' He lmu t Ka h&#13;
-&#13;
Bil 1&#13;
CARTOONISTS: Gary Huck Roh Pnh.n a ®la es, n 9&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Ken Konkol, Bill Noll Denn^D^nan'c V°&lt;°&#13;
S&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF: Fred Lawrence Ken Kn^f. « Gr&lt; »&#13;
Sv s,o n&#13;
ADVISER: Don Kopriva Konkol, Rudy Lienau&#13;
$ v^SSnB110 NA™°NAL ADVERTISING BY 2&#13;
Y Nation*I Educational Advertising Services, Inc. Q&#13;
' 360 UKinaton Avt„ New York, N. i\ 10017 I &#13;
Wed., Mar. 14, 1973 THE PARKS IDE RANGER 3&#13;
We get letters...&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
BILLION DOLLAR BABIES&#13;
Alice Cooper (BS2685)&#13;
Mice CooDPr"^ """ "1 h3rd r&#13;
°&#13;
Ck gardens can def&#13;
'nitely be proud of&#13;
As thjS 1S Alice Cooper's sixth album, it brings her-him-them to a&#13;
pomt of consistent quality. BILLION DOLLAR BABIES is less fSceful&#13;
TO mKiS &gt;1"^' but&#13;
"&#13;
ot in &lt;&#13;
he same vein !TLOVE,T&#13;
considerable worth fn putdone their previous works, it is of&#13;
noct o j anyone who was moved by Alice CooDer of the&#13;
past. Alice's vocal performance on this record is Lmewhat llss&#13;
histrionic than it has been, while the lyrics still intend to shock The&#13;
music ,s more involved with classical flirtations.&#13;
alhi mewh°iPer CP&#13;
ntm"&#13;
es t0 have a diversified sound from album to&#13;
to th?' tu mak&#13;
l&#13;
ng them a11 seem coherent with certain references&#13;
piece on SCHOO?^OTT^fhT8 appa&#13;
,&#13;
rent with ^ West Side Story piece on SCHOOLS OUT that was also done, although in a less&#13;
fnrmpH manner&#13;
- on their first album. On their latest, lyrical slices&#13;
m y usedare parts of new compositions. "My Stars" and "feeling&#13;
"KILZV?&#13;
111™- M,°r&#13;
^&#13;
1S done with&#13;
"&#13;
babies&#13;
" and the "dead," while&#13;
Reflected is reworked as a new single&#13;
vouwTnnH^fih&#13;
1&#13;
^ lyric&#13;
.&#13;
sheet that is P&#13;
r&#13;
inted on the inside sleeve,&#13;
you will notice that the first song, "Hello Hooray," was written bv a&#13;
non-member named Rolf Kempf. This has a B^dway setting and&#13;
Alice proclaims, "God, I feel so strong." g&#13;
"Raped and Freezin' » is from one of their traditional bags. It was&#13;
inspired by "Be My Baby" which was inspired by "Honky Tonk&#13;
;&#13;
hlC was insP.&#13;
ired by Hank Williams. In some lines lead&#13;
notes and vocal notes are juxtapositioned. A Spanish style shuffle ends&#13;
Next comes ^Elected," a single that was intended to smash the&#13;
charts in time with the national elections. The true Alice Cooper freaks&#13;
PRETOIsFORYOTl°Th&#13;
0fh&#13;
he&#13;
i,&#13;
tUne is&#13;
;:&#13;
Reflected&#13;
" from that cut on&#13;
oivi h 7 background horns are perfectly mixed. He&#13;
gives his campaign speech with his promises about school and&#13;
acknowledges that people all over the country have problems He&#13;
fades off with, "and personally, I don't care."&#13;
Billion Dollar Babies" has a chorus tune that was sung by some&#13;
pop non-rock star from a long time back, whom I can't recall now.&#13;
"Unfinished Sweet" tells about the sad life of a bubble gum and&#13;
effecKm^&#13;
C&#13;
a0 con&#13;
^ms their familiar style of instrumental sound&#13;
notes are on^part® ** g J&#13;
"&#13;
St ** ^ dUrati&#13;
°&#13;
n&#13;
" Spy thriller&#13;
K Ki&#13;
LL^&#13;
ER r&#13;
W£&#13;
S Alice Co&#13;
°P&#13;
er&#13;
'&#13;
s simulation of the Stones, then the&#13;
S&#13;
S1AdeH° BILLION DOLLAR BABIES is their version of the&#13;
a' f' f on Allce&#13;
'&#13;
s P&#13;
38* albums, one can see many&#13;
[muLlfTih !S&#13;
C c 1S t0 be down on any band that can skillfully&#13;
identity Stones and the Beatles&#13;
-&#13;
whiJ&#13;
e retaining their own&#13;
immediately after flipping the disc over, it is apparent that "No&#13;
Beatles1S Wlth Ahce s smoother singing, is similar to the&#13;
tv,'&#13;
GeS&#13;
tl&#13;
°&#13;
n&#13;
l&#13;
L,f&#13;
nd&#13;
?&#13;
i&#13;
!&#13;
e&#13;
" contains a deep message about Alice and&#13;
other billion dollar babies." Long verses of d ialogue are followed by&#13;
a brief chorus. A harmonica followed by a burning guitar concludes it.&#13;
J&#13;
n Sk* Things one can vividly feel the personae from the leader of&#13;
the Blue Meanies." Alice recites, "I eat my things, What love it&#13;
brings, Come here, my things, Don't fear my things." Then there is a&#13;
musical section similar to the one in "Yellow Submarine."&#13;
"Mary Ann" is Alice as the sentimental Paul McCartny and Alice&#13;
says "Mary Ann, I thought you were my man." The tender piano solo&#13;
adds the right effect.&#13;
The concluding number is for vampire lovers, with Alice saying&#13;
"While friends and lovers mourn your silly grave, I have other uses for&#13;
you, Darling. The beautiful chorus will have you singing everwhere&#13;
you go, "I Love The Dead."&#13;
(Record Courtesy of J&amp;J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
Live Notes&#13;
Milwaukee is an exciting place»at least it was Wednesday, Feb. 28&#13;
On the way up to the Auditorium .to see Uriah Heep, our car barely&#13;
escaped total disaster from a sideswiper, and once downtown we were&#13;
able to view a real live street fight. At the concert the crowd was&#13;
stomping and shouting-more for turning the lights off than for the&#13;
arrival of Uriah Heep (so they could smoke dope, of course). The band&#13;
presented an exciting and definitely loud sound with tunes from most&#13;
of their albums. Their arrangements were good except for some&#13;
overly long crescendos. The guitar man was alternately playing&#13;
skillfully and just pounding on it and doing his version of Mark Farner.&#13;
In the end many minds were blown.&#13;
Tony, Jumbo and Garry thrilled the audience at the Activities&#13;
Building to the bone Saturday, March 3rd, with their new dimensions&#13;
provided by a drummer, bassist and keyboard player. They did Jethro&#13;
Tull as well as their usual C,S,N,&amp;Y. Tony, Jumbo and Garry got&#13;
second billing to the Edmunds and Curley comedy team.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
There has been a recent&#13;
development at the P.E. Building&#13;
that deserves some attention. It&#13;
appears that the person in charge&#13;
of setting up time schedules is not&#13;
doing so in the best interest of the&#13;
average Parkside student. If you&#13;
are an early riser, and you have&#13;
some time to kill between 8:30&#13;
a.m. and 11 a.m., you will not be&#13;
able to do it in the P.E. Building.&#13;
This time is allotted to the tennis&#13;
class. But could not a third of the&#13;
Pre-Law Club&#13;
gym be sectioned off for general&#13;
use?&#13;
What is the matter with using&#13;
the gym at 11 a.m.? Nothing,&#13;
except that you have to be out at&#13;
3:30p.m.and stay out until 8p.m.&#13;
Once again the entire gym is&#13;
closed, not for a class, but for&#13;
three varsity sport teams. The&#13;
total number of the teams&#13;
comprises less than 4 percent of&#13;
the Parkside populace. This is&#13;
unfair to all the students at&#13;
Parkside, the majority of the&#13;
students are allowed six and one&#13;
half hours to use this facility,&#13;
while a minority of the students&#13;
have priority for seven hours.&#13;
Come on, Mr. Athletic&#13;
Director, let us not be so biased&#13;
with the use of t he P.E. Building.&#13;
There are more than a few&#13;
hundred "privileged" students&#13;
going to this school. At least&#13;
section off a portion of the gym&#13;
for general us6. Maybe I am an&#13;
untalented athlete, but I am also&#13;
a Parkside student, entitled to as&#13;
much use of the facilities here as&#13;
anyone else.&#13;
Thomas R. Hughes&#13;
Parkside student&#13;
Group discusses abortion&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
'State statutes on abortion&#13;
arose in the mid-19th century and&#13;
were based on three factors:&#13;
Victorian attitudes, lack of&#13;
safety, and protection of unborn&#13;
life." Thus began a round-table&#13;
discussion on abortion with two&#13;
Kenosha attorneys-Robert&#13;
Bramscher and Michael Kehoesponsored&#13;
by the Pre-Law Club&#13;
recently&#13;
The recent Supreme Court&#13;
decision legalizes abortion on&#13;
demand in this country for the&#13;
first six months of pregnancy.&#13;
The Court found that "Victorian&#13;
attitudes" were not a good basis&#13;
to sustain abortion laws. Further,&#13;
medical statistics showed that&#13;
abortion is not unsafe in the first&#13;
three months. Risks are&#13;
somewhat higher during the next&#13;
three months, so the Court said&#13;
states may regulate abortion&#13;
procedures (by requiring a&#13;
physician or a clinical environment,&#13;
for example) for this&#13;
period. Only in the final three&#13;
months could states prohibit&#13;
abortions.&#13;
This latter stipulation, that&#13;
states could pass legislation&#13;
controlling abortions after the&#13;
sixth month, seems to indicate&#13;
that the Supreme Court was not&#13;
prepared to remove states&#13;
completely from this area.&#13;
Legally, the fetus is not a person&#13;
under the Constitution so has no&#13;
rights, but the Court says that&#13;
states do have an interest in&#13;
protecting a viable'fetus. "The&#13;
question is why this state interest&#13;
can supersede the mother's&#13;
right," Bramscher remarked.&#13;
"The constitutional right to&#13;
privacy supersedes states' rights&#13;
to legislate for the health of the&#13;
mother, since abortions are no&#13;
longer unsalfe.&#13;
"The legislative intent of the&#13;
states when the laws were&#13;
originally passed was the health&#13;
and welfare of the mother, rather&#13;
than the imposition of r eligious or&#13;
moral beliefs," Bramscher said.&#13;
"The Court's decision includes&#13;
little discussion of morality&#13;
except to reject the validity of&#13;
Victorian values. Justice&#13;
Rehnquist's dissenting opinion&#13;
never says he is opposed to&#13;
abortion, but only to the theories&#13;
used by the Court in the majority&#13;
decision," he added.&#13;
Kehoe, in commenting on&#13;
Wisconsin's abortion law, said&#13;
that "prior to 1969 abortions&#13;
weren't allowed after quickening&#13;
of the fetus. In 1969 t he law was&#13;
changed so that no abortions&#13;
were allowed from the time of&#13;
conception. The law went backwards."&#13;
&#13;
"The Supreme Courts's&#13;
decision is so broad it wipes out&#13;
existing state laws on abortion,"&#13;
Bramscher concluded. "But it&#13;
doesn't stop states from passing&#13;
new legislation regulating&#13;
abortion from approximately the&#13;
sixth month on."&#13;
He does not feel that this poses&#13;
serious problems though, except&#13;
in the vague wording "approximately&#13;
the sixth month."&#13;
Essentially he believes it is a&#13;
decision capable of la sting a long&#13;
time and later decisions will&#13;
further clarify it. The majority of&#13;
those who lobbyed for legalized&#13;
abortion are not too upset at the&#13;
restrictions after the sixth&#13;
month, he feels. Those opposed to&#13;
the Court's decision will lobby for&#13;
a Constitutional amendment to&#13;
prohibit abortions, but Bramscher&#13;
doubts they will be successful.&#13;
&#13;
Sales &amp; Service At&#13;
KEN SCHIIITZ BUICK-OPEl&#13;
1021 - 60th Street, Kenosha&#13;
654-3514&#13;
*2,373°°&#13;
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LITTLE MONEY&#13;
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Phone 658-2573 58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
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J &amp; J&#13;
Tape &amp; Re cord Center&#13;
Super Low Prices&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave., Racine&#13;
518-56th St., Kenosha &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed. , Mar. 14, 1973&#13;
Naturally, the best thing to do would not be to rely solely on the book,&#13;
but to spend a few weeks studying the book, and listening to the tape.&#13;
The course is set up with the expectstion that the user is a traveler,&#13;
and does not intend to write the language, or speak it extensively.&#13;
Therefore, there is a minimal emphasis on grammar. The basic&#13;
technique of the course is memorization. So, anyone who has difficulty&#13;
memorizing would be well advised to avail themselves of a copy of the&#13;
book to refer to on their trip.&#13;
The book has a comprehensive section on eating out, a shopping&#13;
guide to help one find just about anything one might need and, in case&#13;
of emergency, there are sections on car trouble, doctors, dentists,&#13;
hospitals, and even a place for emergency telephone numbers. One&#13;
never hopes to use such information, but it is always wise to have it&#13;
available.&#13;
Though I don't care much for crash memorization in learning, there&#13;
really is no other answer for the traveler, and I believe the Berlitz&#13;
course is excellent in all other respects.&#13;
Happy travels.&#13;
tNl' HOU WILL flUQ -THE&#13;
S1fl6£TS ARE GUAR- R60ED,&#13;
ey vNrrtQ SWAKE&#13;
* SARDINES// w* --&#13;
{ I'M GONNA TLU. YOU PUNKS&#13;
THIS ONCE, So you BETTER C£R&#13;
\T THE FIPST TIME. IF IT&#13;
WASNV fofi THE UNITED STATES&#13;
MARINE COR PS, YOU wouldn't&#13;
BE HERE tf NOW BEAT IT/,&#13;
OTTO vs.&#13;
THE U.S.&#13;
1 ,&#13;
MARINE C ORPS! Vo you \ THINK HE'S ^ Rl&amp;HT OTTO A/&#13;
7 I O UNNO, ^&#13;
I'LL H AVE TO&#13;
ASK My WOM. rHE.4 LOOK1 \ / WAR ! THEKE'S SOMES,&#13;
LiTS so&#13;
°VeR&#13;
MARINES TRViw' I A N' GIVE 'EM TO DO SOME &lt; Tit R AZZ\! /&#13;
I necRuiTiN'//T^_^&#13;
The Comic Strip By Bob Rohan&#13;
iSTEN CREEPf you MAKE ON E MOR E UH tSUE&#13;
or MY S HAPE AND I'LL KNOCK *&gt;uR HEAD g&#13;
O FAR To THE RIGHT yfou'U Be TAKIN P&#13;
ES WITH YOU R /—- X&#13;
MOUTH!!"" T&#13;
...STILL TRYING lb MAKE&#13;
8ACOM WIT H THAT W OMENS&#13;
_ LIS ACTIVIST , -&#13;
( GeoRGe.7&#13;
!'? J&#13;
GULP?&#13;
1701 N. Main Racine 633-9421&#13;
Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
T h u rs d ay 1 1 - 8&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches,&#13;
Foosball 2 Pool Tabl es&#13;
Air Conditioning Pinball Machine&#13;
Cold Six Packs To Go&#13;
FID E L I T Y U N I O N LIF E&#13;
Your COLLEGEMASTER&#13;
representative&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
TOM KRIMMEL&#13;
4906-7th Ave.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
654-2142&#13;
652-1424&#13;
Kenosha (formerly Shakey's)&#13;
INSURANCE FOR&#13;
AUTOS - CYCLES - SCOOTERS&#13;
£ D ancing Wednesday Night Sguare D ance &amp; PQ&#13;
SANDY &amp; THE WES1HAIRS St. Patrick's PayK Jp&#13;
Special J&#13;
in the S tudent A ctivities B uilding&#13;
Green Beer &amp;'&#13;
ye &amp; Free P opcorn!&#13;
( 2 - 6 p . m . )&#13;
Friday - Saturday, M arch 16 -17&#13;
All Forms Of Insurance&#13;
Professional Service&#13;
With The Better Co's&#13;
Fire - Life - Hospital - Boats&#13;
Package Policies&#13;
A LL Y OU C A N EAT&#13;
P IZ Z A, C H ICK E N , S A L A D, M O -JO 'S&#13;
11:30-1:3 0&#13;
Mon.-Fri. Sat. &amp; Sun.&#13;
FIS H, P IZ Z A. S A L A D, M O -JO 'S&#13;
Wed.&amp;Fri. j.,s&#13;
from 5 p.m. I / "JipfuJfHl&#13;
&gt;**/ Jmm a&#13;
J. R. MULICH&#13;
CARL H. JENSEN&#13;
A LL Y O U C A N EAT Z N LLH&#13;
BUNCH O'SUPPER % 2 0 *'NDS SERVED A LL THE TIM E&#13;
P IZ Z A, C H ICKEN, S A L A D. M O -JO'S A&#13;
Mon.&amp;Tues. $-89 y CHICKEN&#13;
Nites I Q W M O -JO 'S SERV ED A LL T H E TIME&#13;
Plus Your Favorite Mixed Drinks and Beers&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
Rationalities, Irrationalities, &amp; Absurdities&#13;
Math prof to lecture here&#13;
An authority on mathematics&#13;
curriculum development,&#13;
Professor Wade Ellis, dean of the&#13;
Horace H. Rackham School of&#13;
Graduate Studies at the&#13;
University of Michigan, will&#13;
lecture on "Rationalities,&#13;
Irrationalities and Absurdities"&#13;
during a two-day visit to&#13;
Parkside March 22 and 23.&#13;
Mathematics teachers from&#13;
junior and senior high schools&#13;
and colleges throughout&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin have&#13;
been invited to the lecture, at 7:30&#13;
p.m. on March 22 in Room 103,&#13;
Greenquist Hall. During his&#13;
subsequent day on campus, Prof.&#13;
Ellis will meet with Parkside&#13;
math students.&#13;
Ellis has worked extensively&#13;
with School Math Study Group&#13;
(SMSG) and has directed a&#13;
number of National Science&#13;
Foundation summer institutes&#13;
for high school and college math&#13;
teachers.&#13;
He also has worked with the&#13;
Office of Scientific Research and&#13;
Development, the Radiation&#13;
Laboratory at Massachusetts&#13;
Institute of Technology and the&#13;
U.S. Air Force Lab at Cambridge.&#13;
&#13;
He received his B.S. degree at&#13;
Wilberforce College, his M.A. at&#13;
New Mexico and Ph.D. at&#13;
Michigan. He taught at Fisk&#13;
University, Boston University&#13;
and Oberlin College before&#13;
returning to Michigan in 1967. He&#13;
also has been a faculty fellow in&#13;
India and France and a visiting&#13;
professor in Peru.&#13;
His visit is sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside science division and is a&#13;
part of the Mathematics&#13;
Association of America Visiting&#13;
Lecturers Program. Persons&#13;
wishing additional information&#13;
on his lecture should contact&#13;
Donald T. Piele, assistant&#13;
professor of mathematics.&#13;
By Jeff Vukos&#13;
/htdto--1/Uu&lt;zt 'Review&#13;
ftcidia-fVc&lt;uial "tRevcecv&#13;
by Kathryn Wellner&#13;
Are you going to Spain during the Easter break?&#13;
Lucky you, but can you speak Spanish? If not, the Learning Center&#13;
has a Berlitz Spanish course for English-speaking travelers. This&#13;
course is designed to teach you common words and useful phrases&#13;
which will help you in ordinary situations, as well as in emergencies.&#13;
The course is taught with the aid of a small paperback book, and a&#13;
cassette recording. The book is set up with a logical system of&#13;
presentation, and color coded so that one may easily find the word or&#13;
phrase for the situation at hand. I believe the color coding is especially&#13;
handy, because the book contains 2,500 phrases and 3,000 words. If one&#13;
had to search through the entire book trying to find the appropriate&#13;
word, it might take all day. This would be an inconvenience in normal&#13;
situations, and, in an emergency, it could be disastrous. &#13;
Wed, Mar. 14, 197 3 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
0 the&#13;
Movement&#13;
DO WOMEN KNOW WHEN THEY'RE BAD OFF?&#13;
BY Shawn Northrup&#13;
Apparently not, according to syndicated columnist Roscoe&#13;
Drummond, in a recent Racine Journal-Times column He eoes on Z&#13;
say that if "one of the greatest reforms of the century " the Fnn i&#13;
Rights Amendment, is not ratified, then some of the blame is ours&#13;
Results of one opinion poll indicate that 75 percent of American men&#13;
consider the position of women in society to be either "good" or&#13;
"excellent." Seventy-one percent of women agree Therefore the&#13;
majority of women conclude that there is little injustice or&#13;
discrimination against them. The E.R.A. is imperiled by ignorance&#13;
and misinformation.&#13;
J 6&#13;
Drummond points out, for example, that college-educated women&#13;
receive an average annual income of $7,400, while men with the same&#13;
education earn $13,000. Four years ago the median earnings of women&#13;
who worked full time was 42 percent lower than that of men Since then&#13;
the gap has widened. Last year, the ratio of women in the U S Senate&#13;
was 1-99. Now it's 0-100. Conditions aren't getting better&#13;
Some women are content with things the way they are Thev have&#13;
found, or hope to find, their niche in the socially approved role of&#13;
housewife-mother-wife. And even though they need not utilize the&#13;
rights the E.R.A. will give them, some of these women choose to denv&#13;
them to others.&#13;
3&#13;
Because they are content, they will not vote to end discrimination&#13;
against other women in such areas as politics, jobs, property pension&#13;
and divorce. They would continue to deny basic rights to women&#13;
outside the stereotyped role: working mothers, unmarried or childless&#13;
women, and the mother who raises her children alone because she has&#13;
been widowed, divorced or deserted.&#13;
Some of us are bad off and some of us aren't. But the tragic fact is&#13;
that some of us have no compassion for our sisters.&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
The Hoy Nature Club will offer&#13;
"Your Birds" in cooperation with&#13;
the University of WisconsinExtension.&#13;
The course begins&#13;
March 27 from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. in&#13;
the Wadewitz School Auditorium,&#13;
2700 Yout St., Racine. There will&#13;
be five weekly meetings and two&#13;
or three field trips. The fee is $3&#13;
for families, $2 single, and $1 for&#13;
students. Registration is at&#13;
Tallent Hall until March 20. For&#13;
further information call 552-2312.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board will&#13;
present "Play Mistry for Me"&#13;
Friday, March 16 at 8 p.m. and&#13;
Sunday March 18 at 7:30 p m. in&#13;
the Student Activities Building.&#13;
Wisconsin and Parkside I.I.'s&#13;
required. Admission 75 cents.&#13;
The film stars Clint Eastwood&#13;
and Jessica Walter. Eastwood&#13;
makes his directional debut with&#13;
this suspense story of a popular&#13;
disc jockey who brings trouble on&#13;
himself by obliging a fan who&#13;
constantly requests that he "play&#13;
Misty" for her. Thrills mount as&#13;
he becomes involved in a very&#13;
special love-triangle, and&#13;
discovers that someone is a sore&#13;
loser.&#13;
Are you thinking of transfering&#13;
to UW-Madison? If so, you will be&#13;
faced with the problems of being&#13;
one of 40,000 students from all&#13;
over the world.&#13;
If you don't know what to expect,&#13;
but would like to, a group of&#13;
Parkside students are going to be&#13;
sharing their experiences and&#13;
advice about Madison.&#13;
For further information, write&#13;
Greg Klema, 1624 Franklin St.,&#13;
Racine, 53403 or 2209 4 y2 Mile&#13;
Road, Racine, 53402.&#13;
On Wednesday, March 14, the&#13;
Nickelodeon presents "The Great&#13;
McGonical and Champs of the&#13;
Chase," from 1 to 3 p.m. in the&#13;
Whiteskellar. The movie stars&#13;
W.C. Fields and there is no admission&#13;
charge.&#13;
*************&#13;
Parkside Actiy£&#13;
Feature Fit&#13;
Fri.&#13;
Mar. 16&#13;
8:00p.m.&#13;
HOFFMAN'S&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
TAPES&#13;
Discount P rices!&#13;
5707 - Sixth A ve.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Mar. 18&#13;
7:30p.m.&#13;
Student Act. WLi:&#13;
'PARKSIDE I.I&#13;
required&#13;
C O U P O N&#13;
SPECIAL f or P arkside s tudents o nly&#13;
2-Audio Magnetic Corp.&#13;
Cassette Tape Cartridges&#13;
FOR ONLY...&#13;
Offer good fill April t, 1973 #&#13;
BRANDTS' DISTRIBUTORS, INC.&#13;
Monument Square, Downtown Racine&#13;
^w.-.. - -•••.w.w.Bgai3a!guv...w..&gt;%vvv.&#13;
Alfredo's Restaurant&#13;
2827 63rd St., Kenosha&#13;
50« OFF&#13;
ITALIAN FOOD A SPECIALTY&#13;
SPAGHETTI ~ RAV|0LI - LASAGNA&#13;
March 21, 1973 DRINKS AVAILABLE FROM TH E BA R&#13;
w—-—•••••&#13;
E&#13;
^v.v^rw&#13;
GOOD FOR 2 FREE D RY C YCLES W ITH ANY&#13;
WASHLOAD AND 1 EXTRA FREE PUNCH ON&#13;
YOUR D RY CLEANING DIVIDEND CARD&#13;
WITH AN 8 LB. L OAD OF DRY CLEANING&#13;
GOOD AT THESE LOCATIONS:&#13;
NORGE VILLAGE 7313-45 AVE., KENOSHA&#13;
WESTGATE POLYCLEAN 1258 OHIO ST., RACINE&#13;
RAPIDS DR. POLYCLEAN 2400 RAPIDS DR., RACINE&#13;
ONE COUPON PER WEEK PER CUSTOMER&#13;
Expires Sept. 5, 1973&#13;
NAME &amp; ADDRESS &#13;
6 T HE P ARKSI DE R ANGER Wed., Mar. 1 4 , 1973&#13;
Prof publishes music book with text&#13;
"Music for Movement, Music&#13;
for Rest," a book of piano&#13;
compositions by Frances Bedford,&#13;
assistant professor of music&#13;
at Parkside, has been issued by&#13;
Stipes Publishing Company,&#13;
Champaign, 111.&#13;
The book includes 36 compositions&#13;
accompanied by a text&#13;
relating ideas for their use in the&#13;
classroom to stimulate rhythmic&#13;
movement and to enrich storytelling&#13;
through the development&#13;
of "sound pictures."&#13;
Mrs. Bedford teaches keyboard&#13;
musicianship at Parkside and is a&#13;
member of the Parkside Baroque&#13;
Players, a facuty chamber&#13;
group.&#13;
An accomplished harpsichordist,&#13;
she is soloist for the&#13;
harpsichord selections on three&#13;
Pleiades recordings of&#13;
Renaissance music recorded as&#13;
part of the Historical Anthology&#13;
of Music published by the Harvard&#13;
University Press.&#13;
She was harpsichordist with&#13;
the Collegium Musicum at&#13;
Southern Illinois University,&#13;
where she received her graduate&#13;
degree and also taught harpsichord,&#13;
and appeared with the&#13;
Southern Illinois University&#13;
Orchestra.&#13;
She has been a member of the&#13;
Parkside music faculty since&#13;
1970.&#13;
Gottesman publishes two books&#13;
on Upton Sinclair&#13;
Ronald Gottesman, professor&#13;
of English and humanities, is the&#13;
author of two new books on Upton&#13;
Sinclair, the prolific 20th Century&#13;
novelist, reformer, pamphleteer&#13;
and political figure.&#13;
The volumes are "The Literary&#13;
Manuscripts of upton Sinclair,"&#13;
published by Ohio State&#13;
University Press, and "Upton&#13;
Sinclair: An Annotated&#13;
Checklist," published by Kent&#13;
.State University Press.&#13;
The latter work includes a&#13;
chronological listing of Sinclair's&#13;
publications and a list of tapes,&#13;
discs and films featuring Sinclair,&#13;
a list of h is work in foreign&#13;
translation and a section on&#13;
bibliographical sources, selected&#13;
reviews and other criticism and&#13;
unpublished material about&#13;
Sinclair.&#13;
Before coming to Parkside last&#13;
summer, Gottesman was an&#13;
associate professor at Rutgers&#13;
University and Upton Sinclair&#13;
Archivist for the Lilly Library at&#13;
Indiana University, where he&#13;
also has been a faculty member&#13;
and received his Ph. D. degree&#13;
with a dissertation on Sinclair.&#13;
An authority on American&#13;
literature and film, Gottesman's&#13;
work has been widely published&#13;
in professional journals. He also&#13;
has served as consultant on a&#13;
documentary film on Sinclair and&#13;
is general editor of Prentice&#13;
Hall's Spectrum Film Focus&#13;
series. He is general editor of the&#13;
forthcoming multi-volume&#13;
Norton Anthology of American&#13;
Literature, designed as a companion&#13;
to the Norton Anthology of&#13;
English Literature.&#13;
Poetry corner&#13;
WE&#13;
Sterile white people in antiseptic&#13;
Rags make bad vibrations and&#13;
Empty quotations.&#13;
They honor credit cards but&#13;
Not us. All those nobodies who&#13;
Think they are everybody in order&#13;
To be somebody. They smoke their&#13;
Cigarettes and wear Brooks Bros.&#13;
Suits and gowns as banners of&#13;
Imaginary dignity. Their&#13;
Jesus saves S&amp;H green stamps.&#13;
Show off more money one more&#13;
Purchase. It is late too late&#13;
To join the human race. So many&#13;
Family trees are decorated with long&#13;
Haired corposes dangling by Sunday&#13;
School ties. Female skins all painted&#13;
Mascara-ed shaved and rouged shine&#13;
Bright as Nazi lampshades in the light&#13;
Of the silvery moon in June as they&#13;
Swoon. Y Yes brothers and sisters we&#13;
Too are sterile white people in&#13;
Antiseptic rags.&#13;
By Dave Myer&#13;
Carthage College Student Activities Board&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
''It's A Beautiful Day&#13;
1 1&#13;
Sunday, March 18, 1973 Also Introducing&#13;
8:00 P.M. SILVESTER &amp;&#13;
Carthage Fieldhouse THE HOT BAND&#13;
Tickets $3&#13;
50 General Admission&#13;
Available at: Bidingers Music (Kenosha), Cook Gere Music&#13;
Team Electronics(Elmwood Plaza), Carthage College Center Office&#13;
MONDAY NITE&#13;
IS ALWAYS&#13;
A PITCHER&#13;
OF&#13;
LIGHT BEER&#13;
ONLY&#13;
SHAKE9S PI***&#13;
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&lt; i a 1&#13;
IN RAC INE&#13;
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Visit O ur N ew&#13;
Wine &amp; Beer M aking&#13;
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PIECES 1 lb&#13;
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Spanish or Fr ench °&#13;
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• Akadema Plum or Light Red&#13;
•Bla ck or.Col a Be a r&#13;
• Boone s Apple or Str awbe rry&#13;
• T.J. Swann&#13;
• Annie Gr e en Spring &#13;
i,&#13;
The ParksideRANGER&#13;
&#13;
~~ ~ " Sports&#13;
Great Lakes fencing&#13;
championship&#13;
by Bill Blaha&#13;
The weather may have been&#13;
foggy last Saturday afternoon,&#13;
but everything was clear inside&#13;
the P.E. Building as UWParkside&#13;
hosted the 7th annual&#13;
Great Lakes Fencing Championship.&#13;
Detroit, last year's&#13;
NCAA fencing champion, was&#13;
defeated in a surging upset by&#13;
Wayne State, 69-61.&#13;
The meet, a warmup for the&#13;
national collegiate (NCAA) meet&#13;
to be held at John Hancock&#13;
University in Baltimore, had&#13;
most of the top Midwestern&#13;
fencing teams present.&#13;
Coach Loran Hein of Parkside&#13;
said before the meet that he felt&#13;
his squad would finish in the top&#13;
four of the team field, which it&#13;
did, scoring 51 points behind&#13;
Wayne State, Detroit and Notre&#13;
Dame, which had 57 points.&#13;
Wayne State not only dethroned&#13;
Detroit for the day's championship&#13;
with another face off&#13;
next week, but also took all three&#13;
first places in foil, epee and&#13;
sabre.&#13;
Wayne's Greg Benko defeated&#13;
Detroit's Tyrone Simmons in a&#13;
battle of 1972. O lympians 5-3 in a&#13;
fence off for first place in foil.&#13;
Benko was 76-2 on the season to&#13;
Simmons's 38-2. John Tank of&#13;
Parkside lost a heart-breaker to&#13;
Benko 5-4 to take 3rd place and&#13;
close his season with a record of&#13;
Charles Schneider and Steve&#13;
Donosi of Wayne State took the&#13;
pee and sabre championships&#13;
respective. The highest the&#13;
Rangers could place in these&#13;
events were David Baumann 6th&#13;
m epee and Don Koser 7th in&#13;
sabre.&#13;
The day went by but something&#13;
rf&#13;
GXp&#13;
-&#13;
ted Was going on as for&#13;
the first time women competed in&#13;
the Great Lakes events with&#13;
Wayne State winning with 34&#13;
P°&#13;
in&#13;
u&#13;
ts to the University of&#13;
Michigan-Dearborn's 26.&#13;
This ends the fencing season&#13;
here at Parkside, eventhough the&#13;
Rangers will be competing for&#13;
honors in New York on March 23-&#13;
25 and possibly in Tucson, Ariz.&#13;
June 23-30 in the nationals, but as&#13;
Hein stated, "the cost ofr each&#13;
individual could run from $400-&#13;
$500 if you include room, transportation&#13;
and lose of pay from&#13;
work, so we'll decide on that in&#13;
phe future." Each Ranger would&#13;
have to pay his own way to&#13;
Tucson.&#13;
The Rangers won't compete in&#13;
the NCAA fencing tournament&#13;
since the school is a memberof&#13;
the NAIA.&#13;
Extramural&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Competing in the First Annual&#13;
Parkside Extramural Basketball&#13;
ournament last Sunday were&#13;
teams from Carthage, College of&#13;
Racine, and Parkside.&#13;
The tournament was played in&#13;
three rounds for a total of seven&#13;
games. Parkside's Olympians&#13;
won the final game, beating the&#13;
Dons of Carthage 77-63.&#13;
The Olympians had wellbalanced&#13;
scoring in the championship&#13;
game with Ed Vantine&#13;
and Mike Madsen leading the&#13;
way with 14 points each, followed&#13;
by Larry Wade with 10.&#13;
The Dons were leading at the&#13;
half 38-35, but superior rebounding&#13;
pulled it out for the&#13;
Parksiders.&#13;
Fencing&#13;
David Baumann of Racine won&#13;
the saber championship in the&#13;
wider 20 fencing meet for the&#13;
state of Wisconsin last Sunday&#13;
mght. Bill Schaefer also participated&#13;
for the Parkside&#13;
Rangers in the competition.&#13;
These two will now be able to go&#13;
to the Midwest Championship&#13;
meet at Niles, Illinois in May&#13;
They both qualified for the epee&#13;
and the saber. There also is a&#13;
possibility that they may go to the&#13;
Nationals in Tucson, Arizona but&#13;
the cost will determine that.&#13;
The Rangers fencing record&#13;
remains at 10-7 because of a&#13;
cancellation of the meet&#13;
Milwaukee over the weekend.&#13;
in&#13;
Rugby&#13;
00A&#13;
SIRLOIN&#13;
Telephone 652-8662&#13;
3315-52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
Northern Illinois University&#13;
stomped the Ranger Rugby Club&#13;
30-0 in the season opener at&#13;
DeKalb Sunday. The Parksiders&#13;
were no match for the veteran&#13;
Huskies.&#13;
Parkside's next match will be&#13;
Saturday against the University&#13;
of Wisconsin at Madison.&#13;
SC/6 - 7*&#13;
'/AT&#13;
meos&#13;
PIZZA KITCHEN&#13;
Chicken &amp; Italian S ausage B ombers&#13;
Free Delivery to Parkside Village&#13;
5021 30th Anna* Phone 657-5191&#13;
Wed., Mar. 14, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Speaking&#13;
of Sports&#13;
by B.D. Rasmussen&#13;
S",&#13;
W3S r&#13;
J&#13;
ght for once&#13;
' BeIieve " or not&#13;
- once though. A credibility gap does exist in the media. Just in me though so&#13;
£&#13;
S&#13;
!&#13;
do&#13;
.&#13;
n 1 co™* dowi&#13;
\ t0&#13;
° hard on my colleagues Walter Cronkite,&#13;
rom Tiede, and Howard Cosell. And its not so much that politics has&#13;
become sport (although it could be classified as such), but that sport&#13;
has often involved diplomacy.&#13;
I have just returned from staring at the medicine cabinet in the&#13;
bathroom and have decided that an overdose pf Children's Sucrets&#13;
won t solve anything. There comes a time in the life of every budding&#13;
fS ? £ To°&#13;
Wer (&#13;
T th0Se of you who aren&gt;t heP&gt; he&#13;
'&#13;
s&#13;
^e Sports&#13;
v!T ?u&#13;
CT Joumal-Times), when a mistake is made. And&#13;
like John Wayne talking to the suddenly reformed bad guv it takes a&#13;
big man to admit he made a mistake. I made a big mistake In two&#13;
separate parts yet, and over a period of ten days, I made one. (I'm&#13;
npHnH fTm&#13;
^f^acy) • yet I feel that I could hide under the&#13;
period at the end of this sentence. Little Big Man? It is a good day to&#13;
die....of embarrassment. 3&#13;
And because getting rolled by the wrestling team isn't my idea of&#13;
tun, here s my sad story.&#13;
The last time that I talked to wrestling coach Jim Koch, about ten&#13;
Zllriil k lr&#13;
NAf^ Na&#13;
?°&#13;
naI Tournamen&#13;
t, he told me that Rico&#13;
Savagho, Ken Martin, and Bill West all had excellent chances of&#13;
scoring many points, and possibly to bring home a championship at&#13;
mln Iff I?&#13;
6, £&#13;
ep 1 m making a big mis&#13;
take. I interpreted this to&#13;
mean that these three were the only three UW-P wrestlers going I'm&#13;
supposed to be objective and not interpret anything. Broken taboo 2&#13;
I&#13;
e&#13;
I fy&#13;
ft&#13;
aty&#13;
°"&#13;
d0n 1 lnterpret If 1 hadn&gt;t been stricken by a massive&#13;
case of the inefficiencies, I would have called Coach Koch back and&#13;
tbat be would have been more than glad to tell me that&#13;
wrestlers Randy Skarda, Kyle Barnes, Arlyn Fredrick, and Gary&#13;
Peterson also qualified for the trip to Iowa. But I didn't.&#13;
So despite my best efforts, these wrestlers are going to get the&#13;
recognition that they deserve. I'm sure that they practiced just as&#13;
hard and sweated just as much as the next person. And they should be&#13;
congratulated for a fine outstanding season.&#13;
Jrfpfr Kris Koch just informed me that I also get fifty lashes&#13;
with a Ranger dateline. I will receive cold, professional-like stares&#13;
from my Ranger colleagues, and lots of razzing and ridicule from my&#13;
friends. But I'll live. 3&#13;
But this could also prove to be the big break that I have been waiting&#13;
F^IpwJT^ ^ And5&#13;
SOn column on Sen. Thomas Eagleton. Jack could have hidden behind his periods then&#13;
Anyhow congratulations Randy, Kyle, Arlyn, and Gary, on a fine&#13;
season and fine performances at the NAIA National Tournament.&#13;
•ONE SUI EE"fi&#13;
•iscount RccardsI&#13;
iApteSl-AY Y%.\&#13;
'InCEnSC&#13;
JJA+ERBEDS Comics&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
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Brand n'ew tTkeTan™^' Camper&#13;
' boat&#13;
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,ake lf anywhere. $50 . 637-1591. A T TEN TIO N W O M E N WHO W R ITE&#13;
poetry! The Women's Caucus is looking for&#13;
participants for a poetry reading, to be part&#13;
of this year's Women's Day. Contact Jane&#13;
Schliesman, c-o Ranger, LLC D194.&#13;
734*1 anyt?me apar,ment near camP&#13;
us with garage. Utilities paid. Call 654-&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDE R 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;
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Business Office&#13;
D-194 LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
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CHECK ENCLOSED FOR $.&#13;
DATES(S) TO RUN&#13;
To find your cost, multiply the&#13;
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One word per space Do not skip space between words to show spacing&#13;
Ads must be submitted one week before publication. &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., M ar. 14, 197 3&#13;
TTWT 1 3 i Trackmen third&#13;
wrestlers 9th in nation in Midwest relays&#13;
by B.D. Rasmussen&#13;
Junior Ken Martin won the 134-&#13;
pound class title NAIA National&#13;
Tournament at Sioux City, Iowa,&#13;
over the weekend as the Rangers&#13;
took ninth overall at the meet.&#13;
Martin decisioned Tom&#13;
Svendsen of St. John's University-Minnesota&#13;
9-6 to take the title&#13;
and ended with a season record of&#13;
22-1-1. Martin has now finished&#13;
second, third, and first respectively&#13;
over the last three years&#13;
and has been named All-America&#13;
all three times.&#13;
Parkside took ninth with 32.5&#13;
points, which was the highest&#13;
total ever scored by a Wisconsin&#13;
school in the tournament.&#13;
Adams State College of&#13;
Colorado took the team championship&#13;
with 62.5 points. Second&#13;
went to Central Washington&#13;
College with 48.5 and third was&#13;
Huron College of South Dakota&#13;
with 46.&#13;
UW-La Crosse was 14th;&#13;
Carthage, which had an individual&#13;
champ in Tom Adams,&#13;
was 15th. UW-River Falls was&#13;
22nd and UW-Stevens Point 23rd.&#13;
Bill West provided the other&#13;
individual highlight for Parkside&#13;
when he wrestled his way into the&#13;
finals only to lose to Philip&#13;
Gonzalez the defending champ&#13;
from the University of NebraskaOmaha,&#13;
on a 9-6 d ecision. West's&#13;
season record finished at 22-3 and&#13;
he was also named an AllAmerica.&#13;
&#13;
Rico Savaglio lost his first&#13;
match to James Wolfe of York&#13;
College. Randy Skarda won his&#13;
first match, then lost to Randy&#13;
Jirkovich of UW-Superior. Kyle&#13;
Barnes lost in the opening round&#13;
The Parkside Indoor Track&#13;
team placed third in the 34th&#13;
Midwest Relays held at&#13;
Naperville, Illinois on Saturday.&#13;
Loras won the meet with 79&#13;
points. Loyola came in second&#13;
with 66 points and Parkside took&#13;
third with 63.5 points.&#13;
Lucien Rosa won the&#13;
Fredenhagen Award for Individual&#13;
High Scorer with a total&#13;
of 18 points. Rosa set a new meet&#13;
record in the two mile with a time&#13;
of 9:09.6. The old record was 9:14.&#13;
Rose also placed first in the mile,&#13;
third in the 1000 yard run, and&#13;
second in the two mile relay with&#13;
Chuck Dettman, Raul Medina&#13;
and Dennis Biel.&#13;
Other individual Parkside&#13;
winners were Keith Merrit with&#13;
first in the triple jump, second in&#13;
the pole vault, and fourth in the&#13;
long jump; Mike Kopczynski with&#13;
second in the long jump and third&#13;
in the 60 yard dash; Tim Martinson&#13;
tied for third in the pole&#13;
vault; and Dennis Biel took&#13;
fourth in the mile.&#13;
Parkside relay teams took&#13;
second in the two mile relay&#13;
third in the mile relay, the fourth&#13;
in the four by two relay. The two&#13;
mile team was Lucien Rosa,&#13;
Chuck Dettman, Raul Medina&#13;
and Dennis Biel. The mile relay&#13;
team was Keith Merrit, Herb&#13;
Degroot, Dennis Biel, and Cornelius&#13;
Gordon. The four by two&#13;
team was Mike Kopczynski&#13;
Degroot, Tim Martinson, and&#13;
Gordon.&#13;
Cagers end season&#13;
with loss to Lakeland&#13;
FRONT ROW (Left to Right) Ken Martin, Bill West,&#13;
Rico Savaglio&#13;
BACK ROW Randy Skarda , Arlyn Fr edrick, Gary Peterson&#13;
Coach Jim Koch, not pictur ed - Kyle Barnes&#13;
to Gary Billy of Huron College.&#13;
Arlyn Fredrich lost to Tom&#13;
Compenaro of the University of&#13;
Minnesota-Mo rris. Gary&#13;
Peterson was decisioned in the&#13;
first round by Dave Hartman of&#13;
Western Montana.&#13;
Since Coach Jim Koch's arrival&#13;
at Parkside two seasons ago, the&#13;
Rangers have been constantly&#13;
improving in the national competition.&#13;
They have finished 21st,&#13;
17th, and now ninth.&#13;
Koch said that Parkside's&#13;
performance at the NAIA was the&#13;
result of g reat team effort. About&#13;
Martin's individual performance&#13;
he said, "Ken's march to the&#13;
nati ona l cha m p ion shi p&#13;
establishes him as one of the&#13;
great ones to participate in this&#13;
meet."&#13;
With almost all of the team&#13;
returning for next season, he&#13;
couldn't help but add, "I'm really&#13;
looking forward to next year!"&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
cagers lost in the first round of&#13;
WICA tournament play last&#13;
Thursday night to Lakeland&#13;
College by a score of 62-55. This&#13;
turned out to be the last game of&#13;
' he t season for the Rangers, who&#13;
compiled a 13-12 season record&#13;
and a regular season standing of&#13;
13-11.&#13;
The Rangers were tied with&#13;
Lakeland at halftime 32-32, but&#13;
they were outplayed in the second&#13;
half and consequently wound up&#13;
on the low end of the final score.&#13;
The Rangers played desperate in&#13;
the second half as three players&#13;
fouled out of the game.&#13;
Gary Cole led the Ranger&#13;
scoring column with 16 points,&#13;
followed by Chuck Chambliss&#13;
with 14 before fouling out, and&#13;
Bill Sobanski with nine. Mike&#13;
Hanke was held to seven and Ken&#13;
Peyer and Tim Dolan managed&#13;
only nine points between them&#13;
before they both fouled out.&#13;
Chuck Chambliss was named to&#13;
the all Wica team by the Wica&#13;
coaches and Hanke, Cole and&#13;
Sobanski landed in three of the&#13;
five honorable mention spots.&#13;
The loss resulted in the last&#13;
game of the fine season for the&#13;
Rangers as they came off a 4-18&#13;
mark of last years team to&#13;
compile a 13-12 overall mark for&#13;
this year and advanced into the&#13;
playoffs for the first time in&#13;
Parkside's history.&#13;
Hopefully both Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens and his fine squad will&#13;
be back next year for another fine&#13;
season of basketball.&#13;
PRE-INVENTORY SPECIALS&#13;
Art P rints&#13;
Rej.&#13;
'800 SALE *6.49&#13;
Special G roup O f&#13;
Novelty Candles&#13;
Special G roup Of&#13;
*&#13;
SPORTSWEAR SPECIALS&#13;
H ks&#13;
Special G roup Of&#13;
Set m v&#13;
R#j. P ric« Sato Price&#13;
VOUTtf T SHIRTS *1.55 *1.09&#13;
JUVENILE S WEATSHIRTS *2.05 *1.39&#13;
vs *3.80 *2,49&#13;
ADULT SHIRTS *3.90 *2.59&#13;
TRI - C OLOR J ERSEY *4.95 *3.29&#13;
SAtE STARTS WED., M ARCH 14,1973 - ENDS WED., MARCH 21,197</text>
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              <text>PSGA, PAB skirmish over union board, programming</text>
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              <text>The Parkside _&#13;
RANGER edne day Januar 17 1973&#13;
01. I, o. 13&#13;
PSGA, PAB skirmish&#13;
overunion hoard,&#13;
programmI•ng&#13;
time to time by questions and&#13;
refutation from the P AB members&#13;
and administrative personnel.&#13;
The main points of Weiss'&#13;
argument were (J) the SUC is by&#13;
nature more representative than&#13;
the PAB because its members&#13;
are elected rather than voluntary,&#13;
(2) the PAB structurally&#13;
has no power against administrative&#13;
veto and anything&#13;
accomplished is on an individual&#13;
basis, whereas student government&#13;
has the whole student body&#13;
behind them and accomplishments&#13;
and precidential&#13;
and (3) student government is&#13;
ineffectual and needs to have&#13;
enough power to accomplish&#13;
something before students will&#13;
have any faith in it.&#13;
The first argument was answered&#13;
by various PAB members,&#13;
saying all who are on the&#13;
board are strongly encouraged to&#13;
be representative of the student&#13;
body, and that it would be foolish&#13;
for them to schedule programs&#13;
the students did not want. They&#13;
also questioned how representative&#13;
the sue would be as so few&#13;
people actually wrote in names&#13;
and voted for its members.&#13;
Sue Wesley responded to th&#13;
second argument by asking for&#13;
an example of the final program&#13;
decision was made by the administration.&#13;
She said. "PAB&#13;
doesn't ask if it's OK to bring in&#13;
Eden Stone for a dance. It's the&#13;
decision of the committee and the&#13;
administration has never vetoed&#13;
any yet."&#13;
Weiss asked why sue wasn't&#13;
granted the power to schedule&#13;
events. Dearborn replied,&#13;
"Because PAB is more&#13;
representative, more qualified&#13;
and doing a better job than you&#13;
and (Joe) Harris."&#13;
ByMarilyn Schubert&#13;
Skirmishing between the&#13;
PSGA,Student Union Committee&#13;
and the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board was brought to a head in a&#13;
meeting called on Dec. 14 by&#13;
PSGApresident Tom Haack. The&#13;
trOUbleresulted from a misunderstanding&#13;
regarding the functionS&#13;
of each body.&#13;
Haack began the meeting by&#13;
reading the PSGA constitution&#13;
regulating the SUC, which gives&#13;
IIduties similar to that of a Union&#13;
Operating Board, plus other&#13;
interests such as the Lecture and&#13;
Fine Arts Committee, and the&#13;
book store, He then stated that&#13;
the committee is not authorized&#13;
10 be the Union Operating Board&#13;
since the regents have not approvedthe&#13;
constitution, although&#13;
the students have. .&#13;
According to William Niebuhr,&#13;
director of Student Life, a union&#13;
operating board at other&#13;
universities is made up of&#13;
students, union program staff,&#13;
faculty, some community&#13;
members and some alumni. The&#13;
union has to be self supporting&#13;
Iller its only funds come from&#13;
programming fees. The board&#13;
l:iually deals with policy mat-&#13;
I rs. i.e. the hours of the union&#13;
and who can use it, and&#13;
regulation of the food service.&#13;
otht'f campuses, unless they are&#13;
very small. have two boards, one&#13;
elected and one not. The&#13;
operating board can inform the&#13;
programming board if the&#13;
OOildmgis not serving its pur-&#13;
JlOS&lt;&#13;
Tom Weiss stated he felt that&#13;
tbf:. sue was a better vehicle for&#13;
programming events than the&#13;
PAB. He also stated, "We don't&#13;
"ant to replace anybocy," His&#13;
remarks were interrupted from&#13;
Eight University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside music students are recipients of&#13;
this year's Harmony Foundation&#13;
scholarships_ The foundation is a&#13;
charitable and educational trust created&#13;
by the Society for the Preservation and&#13;
Encouragement of Barber Shop Quarfet&#13;
Sing109 in Amenca (SPEBSQSAl, whIch&#13;
has its national headquarters In Kenbsha.&#13;
The scholarship winners are, back row,&#13;
left to right· Michael Swenson,&#13;
Janesville; Kathy Devine. Union Grove;&#13;
Arline Dahlquist. Racine; Thomas&#13;
Rome, Burlington; Floyd Hanson,&#13;
Kenosha; and Lynn CrOS$, KenO$ha&#13;
Front row· Hugh Ingraham of the&#13;
Harmony Foundation; Jean Ta$hotf.&#13;
Racine. Judy Bandor, Somers, and&#13;
Harry Lantz of the muslc faculty This Is&#13;
the second year the found tlon has m d&#13;
scholarship grants avail bl 10 Par d&#13;
music studen s The a ards w r m d&#13;
at a student honors concert&#13;
P Dc....&#13;
In Burlington&#13;
Learning center estab h d •1&#13;
Parkside announced that II ha&#13;
established a satellite learning&#13;
center in the Burlington public&#13;
llbrarv this smester as part of a&#13;
cooperative four-county "open&#13;
education" project for so-called&#13;
"non-traditional" student&#13;
The Parkside-Burhngton pecject&#13;
consists or 1\\0 and po. "lbl~&#13;
more introductory credit coo&#13;
taught by three autotutors.&#13;
sophisticated electronic teachmg&#13;
machines v. hich were set up 10&#13;
the Burlington library&#13;
We are very plea. ed to offer&#13;
two courses for college credit in&#13;
the Burlington Public Library&#13;
The two courses are'&#13;
English 010 Element or&#13;
English, mcluding program. (Of"&#13;
irnprovmg writing , com+&#13;
munieation skill . oral and&#13;
written, and wriling effecti\'e&#13;
reports. 3 credits&#13;
Education 140: tud," Skill.&#13;
including programs (or&#13;
Reference Skills &lt;library.,&#13;
following directions &lt;tests,&#13;
assignments and exercises~.&#13;
reading to know, and readmg (oc&#13;
meaning. 1 credit&#13;
The cost (or these courses ls&#13;
SI9.50 per credit&#13;
The Four-County Open&#13;
Education project in\'ohes L'"W+&#13;
Parkside. VW-Whitewater.&#13;
l"ni\'ersity Extension and the&#13;
two-year UW-Waukesha center&#13;
and includes programs 10&#13;
Kenosha, Racine, Waukesha and&#13;
Walworth countIes.&#13;
Open education. according to&#13;
Vni\'ersity ExtenSIon Vice&#13;
C'1la lIor Grorgt". trothcr. lS an&#13;
attempt bj the L\\ ) t&lt;'tn 10&#13;
meet on a tat "1d ba lh&#13;
edocanooal n &lt; of hard-I ..&#13;
reach' luden thos,.bo&#13;
don't have ta)o geographIC&#13;
ac to 8 lUll'H'f'Slh or can 'I&#13;
Continued on pag e 4&#13;
t Don L. L&#13;
onday&#13;
Poet-lingui&#13;
speak here&#13;
Blac . ~IngwstDon L ,&#13;
exponent of '-l/le lang e of&#13;
familiar experience' and pact ..n&#13;
residence at \I as hI n. 0 C&#13;
Howard OI\erslty .... 111 ak at&#13;
The l"m\-er.;lt\" ol \\ lsconsln~&#13;
Park ·,de at 8· P m on Jan :!2&#13;
(. tonda) 10 Room 103&#13;
GreenqlDst Hall&#13;
H,s tall&lt;, utI"" "Readin' and&#13;
Rapplll' ," t . pon.:.or"" bj lIle&#13;
Parblde Lecture and Fme&#13;
CommIttee and I open f"'" lollle&#13;
public&#13;
Lee's campus \,~it also 'o\.IU&#13;
include informal meoe 101: "lib&#13;
Parkslde students and&#13;
rcpresentaU"es from area hIgh&#13;
school during the aflemoon&#13;
Bef...., a U&gt;lUng hIS present&#13;
post at Howard Lee,.as a lecturer&#13;
10 Afro-American literature&#13;
at lIle I:ru"er"S,ty of minolS&#13;
C1t1cago Circle Campus, Cornell&#13;
CnherSll)' and • 'ortheastern&#13;
Dhnois t.:ni\'ersity.&#13;
He has publish"" four "olumes&#13;
ofpoeU)','·ThU1k Black," "Black&#13;
Recipient of the first scholarship awarded to a&#13;
Parkside music major by the Dairyland Chapter of the&#13;
American Association of Theafer Organ Enthusiasts is&#13;
Mary Heinisch of Kenosha She is shown above with two&#13;
~:itresentalives of the organ society, Robert D_ Leutner.&#13;
r' ' of Racine. treasurer of the group. and Fred Dove.&#13;
~~ht, of Zion, III.. who presented the $150 award. The&#13;
lai,rYland group previously was instrumental In ob-&#13;
Or n'ng tor Parks ide the gift of a Barton Theater P,pe&#13;
in ~n val~ed at almost $50,000. The largest ~uch organ&#13;
feet 'scons'n With 14 sets of pipes ranging In sIZe from 18&#13;
a ~Othesize of a lead pencil. the organ presently IS In&#13;
hou d,son theater where it will remain until su,table&#13;
C4 $'ng is available for the instrument on the Parkslde ~.&#13;
The Parkside--------&#13;
R ANGER&#13;
pSGA, P AB skirmish&#13;
over union hoard,&#13;
• programming&#13;
BV Marilyn Schubert&#13;
kir mis hi ng between the&#13;
pSGA, Student Union Committee&#13;
and the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board was brought to a head in a&#13;
meeting called on Dec. 14 by&#13;
pSGA president Tom Haack. The&#13;
troUble resulted from a misunderstanding&#13;
regarding the funcbOfl&#13;
of each body.&#13;
Haack began the meeting by&#13;
reading the PSGA constitution&#13;
regulating the sue, which gives&#13;
1tduties similar to that of a Union&#13;
Operating Board, plus other&#13;
interests such as the Lecture and&#13;
Fine Arts Committee, and the&#13;
book store. He then stated tha t&#13;
the committee is not authorized&#13;
to be the Union Operating Board&#13;
mce the regents have not approved&#13;
the constitution, although&#13;
the tudents have .&#13;
According to William Niebuhr,&#13;
director of Student Life , a union&#13;
operating board a t other&#13;
universities is made up of&#13;
tudents, union program staff,&#13;
£acuity, some commun ity&#13;
members and some alumni. The&#13;
ion has to be self supporting&#13;
nc its onl y fu nds come from&#13;
programming fees. The board&#13;
ually deals with poli cy matt&#13;
r ,e. the hours of t he union&#13;
d \1ho can use it, and&#13;
ulation of th e food service.&#13;
0t h r campu ·es, unless they are&#13;
rv mall , ha ve two boards, one&#13;
cted and one not. The&#13;
rating board can inform the&#13;
pro ramming board i f t h e&#13;
ldmg is not serving it s pur -&#13;
Torn Wei.s s tated h e felt tha t&#13;
UC was a better vehicl e for&#13;
programming eve nts than the&#13;
P R lie also stated, " We don' t&#13;
nt to replac e anyboc y." His&#13;
remark. were interrupted from&#13;
time to time by questions and&#13;
refutation from the PAB members&#13;
and administrative personnel.&#13;
The main points of Weiss'&#13;
argument were O ) the sue is by&#13;
nature more representative than&#13;
the P AB because its members&#13;
are elected rather than voluntary,&#13;
( 2) the P AB structurally&#13;
has no power against adminis&#13;
trative v eto and anything&#13;
accomplished is on an individual&#13;
basis, whereas student government&#13;
has the whole student body&#13;
b e hind the m and accomplishments&#13;
and precidential&#13;
and (3) s tudent government is&#13;
ineffectua l a nd needs to have&#13;
en ough power to accomplish&#13;
som ethi n g before students will&#13;
ha ve a n y faith in it.&#13;
The first a r gument was answer&#13;
ed by variou s P AB members,&#13;
saying a ll who are on the&#13;
boa rd are s tr ongly encouraged to&#13;
be r epresenta ti ve of the student&#13;
body, a n d that it wo u ld be foolis h&#13;
for them to schedule programs&#13;
th e students did not want. They&#13;
also questioned how repre en tative&#13;
the sue would be as so few&#13;
people actually wrote in names&#13;
and voted for its members.&#13;
Sue \"csley r e s und . to •&#13;
second argument by asking for&#13;
an example of the final program&#13;
decision was made by the administration.&#13;
She said. ''PAB&#13;
doesn' t a k if it's OK to bring in&#13;
Eden Stone for a dance It · the&#13;
decision of the committee and the&#13;
administration has ne\Cr \·etoed&#13;
any yet.··&#13;
Weiss asked why l ' C ,,a. n't&#13;
granted the power to chedule&#13;
events . Dearborn replied ,&#13;
"Because PAB i more&#13;
representa t ive. m ore qualified&#13;
a nd doing a better job than )·ou&#13;
a nd &lt;Joe&gt; Ha rris ."&#13;
Continu ed on page 4&#13;
Recipient of the first scholarship awarded to a&#13;
p rkside music major by the Dairyland Chapter of t~e&#13;
merican Association of Theater Organ EnthusiaSt s i s&#13;
ry Heinisch of Kenosha She is shown above wi th two&#13;
representatives of the organ society, Robert D. Leutner'&#13;
~:ft, of Racine, treasurer of the group, and Fred Dove,&#13;
~Q~t, of Zion, Ill., who presented the $150 awar~ . The&#13;
01 ~Yland group previously was instrumental in ?b·&#13;
~rung for Parkside the gift of a Barton Theat~r Pipe&#13;
n 9~n Valued at almost $50,000 . The larg:st ~uch organ&#13;
e Wisconsin with 14 sets of pipes ranging in size tro,:n ~8&#13;
a et to ~he size of a lead pencil, the organ pres_entl~ is in&#13;
0~dtson theater where it will remain until suita?le&#13;
USing is available for the instrument on the Parkside&#13;
trlPOs.&#13;
Eigh t Un iver ity of isconsin -&#13;
Parkside music studen s are recip en s of&#13;
th i s year's Harmony Foundation&#13;
s cholarships. The foundation Is a&#13;
c har i t able and educa ional trus crea ed&#13;
by the Society for the Preserva I on and&#13;
Encouragement of Barber S op&#13;
mging in menca (SPEBSQS&#13;
has its national headqu r ers in&#13;
The scholarship Inners are,&#13;
left to right: Michael&#13;
Janesville; Kathy D vine, Uni&#13;
In Burlin rton&#13;
nu r~&#13;
I. . 1 ·&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Jan. 17, 1973&#13;
Editorial/Opi n ion&#13;
The Slow-Slow-Slow&#13;
Shuttle Affair&#13;
There is no doubt about it but that the shuttle buses&#13;
wait too long in the east parking lot. It seems a small&#13;
thing to many people who scorn this type ot editorial, but&#13;
it is a very real Irritant to many students, staff and&#13;
taculty. For proof we ask that disbelievers visit the bus&#13;
stop in the upper lot for about an hour and listen to the&#13;
comments.&#13;
It seems as though the shuttle drivers are trying to&#13;
maintain some type of very strie! schedule. A schedule&#13;
too inflexibie and impractical to serve the needs of the&#13;
passengers.&#13;
We call on ali those associated with the shuttle buses&#13;
to move toward a more practical system which would&#13;
keep waiting to a minimum and most importantly would&#13;
get rid of any type of schedule which would hold the bus&#13;
in one place or another.&#13;
We have buses to use and they are a very great expenditure.&#13;
Let's make them run to serve those who use&#13;
and pay for them.&#13;
A dependent press?&#13;
There has been some talk that the student newspapers&#13;
in the UW system are in danger of losing state funding.&#13;
The Board of Regents will be meeting soon to discuss the&#13;
question of "segregated fees" (those fees, paid by&#13;
students, which are set aside for student programming&#13;
and services) and this will naturally involve the funding&#13;
of campus papers. If UW newspapers do not merit state&#13;
expense, then the student press will be forced to go independent.&#13;
In many cases this means they will be forced&#13;
out of existence.&#13;
Even those newspapers capable of publishing without&#13;
state funding would certainly have to sacrifice some of&#13;
the quality of their publications. The real question here&#13;
is not "independence," but "upon whom will the student&#13;
press be dependent?" Denied state funding, student&#13;
newspapers will be forced to expend most of their&#13;
energy and resources selling themselves to advertisers.&#13;
It is the public interest that would suffer from this new&#13;
orientation.&#13;
Within the University of Wisconsin - which has long&#13;
stood as a symbol of free and open inquiry - the student&#13;
press has held a vital position as the critical student&#13;
voice, supported and maintained by the state. It has&#13;
been able to act in the public interest because it is&#13;
supported by, and owes allegiance to, the public and no&#13;
one else. The state should continue to support such a&#13;
truly free press within the University.&#13;
Maintenance of the student press within the&#13;
University should not in any way imply direct or indirect&#13;
control of it by the administration. That could&#13;
only be interpreted as abridgement of freedom of the&#13;
press, and denies the opportunity to learn and foster the&#13;
growth of a free, responsible press.&#13;
Perhaps this does not reflect the nature of the "real&#13;
world" or provide "valuable experience" if student&#13;
newspapers are supported by the state. But if that is&#13;
used as an argument against continuing state funding, it&#13;
is valid only if the University exists to "train" students&#13;
to live in a world that is not what it ought to be.&#13;
Hopefully, the University has a higher and more&#13;
honorable purpose: To serve the end of critical&#13;
scholarship in a world desperately in need of new ideas.&#13;
That end can only be served if the University strives to&#13;
teach its students what is right with the world, what is&#13;
wrong with it, and how it can be changed. Certainly the&#13;
student pr ss has a v·ta, role in this high purpose. It&#13;
" t supported&#13;
EDITOR'S&#13;
NOTEBOOK&#13;
By Rudy Lienau&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
This column will be a weekly&#13;
feature and in it I hope to comment&#13;
on the people, places and&#13;
things in the area which might&#13;
tend to tintilale our minds. First,&#13;
I'd like to talk a little bit about&#13;
this paper.&#13;
The purpose of the paper is to&#13;
serve the students, faculty and&#13;
staff on campus. We must do this&#13;
by informing, entertaining and&#13;
criticizing when criticism is due.&#13;
We will continue to encourage&#13;
individual expression through&#13;
columns and art. Letters to the&#13;
Editor are always helpful and&#13;
welcome.&#13;
The Ranger will broaden its&#13;
scope in the following weeks to&#13;
cover and comment on local,&#13;
state and national affairs. With&#13;
these new news areas we hope to&#13;
increase our audience and add&#13;
the element of a student's interpretive&#13;
reporting to the news.&#13;
Another set of bleachers is&#13;
supposed to be built across from&#13;
the present set in the P .E.&#13;
Building. Many activities have&#13;
been curtailed because of low&#13;
seating capacity, i.e., a possible&#13;
large concert to be sponsored by&#13;
the PAB in the first semester was&#13;
cancelled before it could be&#13;
started. The reason? Rumor had&#13;
it that there was a wood shortage&#13;
because so many bowling alleys&#13;
were being built in Japan. To&#13;
confirm this story I made a call to&#13;
James Galbraith, director of&#13;
Planning and' Construction.&#13;
There was no confirmation of this&#13;
rumor.&#13;
Galbraith said there is a&#13;
shortage of prime lumber, but the&#13;
supplier hopes to get the pieces&#13;
here by February. Galbraith&#13;
hopes they'll be installed by the&#13;
end of that month.&#13;
Lienau named&#13;
Ranger editor&#13;
The Ranger advisory board has&#13;
selected Rudy Lienau as the&#13;
Editor of the Ranger for the&#13;
spring semester.&#13;
Lienau then named the other&#13;
editors. They are: Geoff&#13;
Blaesing, News Editor; Jane&#13;
Schliesman, Feature Editor;&#13;
Tom Petersen, Managing Editor;&#13;
Kathy Wellner and Kris Koch,&#13;
Sports Co-Editors. Ken Pestka&#13;
and Fred Lawrence will remain&#13;
Business Manager and Ad&#13;
Manager, respectively.&#13;
We get letters&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
We at the Information Center&#13;
have a thorn we'd like to get out&#13;
of our sides: People who lose&#13;
things that don't have their&#13;
names on them.&#13;
We have a semester's worth of&#13;
books, notes, hats and gloves,&#13;
glasses, car keys and&#13;
miscellanea in our lost and found.&#13;
We must clear it out to make&#13;
room for this semester's new&#13;
collection. If articles were&#13;
labelled. we would gladly call the&#13;
owners to let them know we have&#13;
their belongings. As it stands, we&#13;
must rely on them to come to us if&#13;
they've lost something.&#13;
II any of you readers lost&#13;
anything on campus last&#13;
semester, you have _il Jan. 19&#13;
to come and claim it. We're in&#13;
Tallent Hall, 201.&#13;
Parkside Information Center&#13;
Cartoonist's Eye View&#13;
L- -by Gary Huck&#13;
~If:.The~e&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout th.eacadem;&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsm·pa~ksl&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at 0-194 Llbran&#13;
Learning Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295. .&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. OPIOI&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the oW&#13;
view of The University of wisccnsin-Parkside- . t&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. Ail ietters on any SUb~.&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to ~ \loO&#13;
less, typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the nghtl'cl""&#13;
letters for length and good taste. Ail letters must be signed and10•&#13;
address, phone number and student status or faculty rank. Na~es I&#13;
be withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to r USl'&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
Classified and display ad rates will be furnished upon request&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Rudy Lienau&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Geoff Blaesing&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Jane Schiiesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
SPORTS EDITORS: Kathryn Wellner, Kris Koch&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Kathryn Weilner&#13;
ADVISOR: Don Kopriva&#13;
'C' REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTlSIN&lt;? BY 10C.&#13;
~ National Educational Advertising ServIces,&#13;
I 360 Lexington Ave., New York. N. y. 10017&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Jan. 17, 1973&#13;
~~ANGER&#13;
Editorial/Opinion&#13;
The Slow-Slow-Slow&#13;
Shuttle Affair&#13;
There is no doubt about it but that the shuttle buses&#13;
wait too long in the east parking lot. It seems a small&#13;
thing to many people who scorn this type of editorial, but&#13;
it is a very real Irritant to many students, staff and&#13;
faculty . For proof we ask that disbelievers visit the bus&#13;
stop in the upper lot for about an hour and listen to the&#13;
comments .&#13;
It seems as though the shuttle drivers are trying to&#13;
maintain some type of very strict schedule. A schedule&#13;
too inflexible and impractical to serve the needs of the&#13;
passengers.&#13;
We call on all those associated with the shuttle buses&#13;
to move toward a more practical system which would&#13;
keep waiting to a minimum and most importantly would&#13;
get rid of any type of schedule which would hold the bus&#13;
in one place or another.&#13;
We have buses to use and they are a very great expenditure.&#13;
Let' s make them run to serve those who use&#13;
and pay for them .&#13;
A dependent press?&#13;
There has been some talk that the student newspapers&#13;
in the UW system are in danger of losing state funding.&#13;
The Board of Regents will be meeting soon to discuss the&#13;
question of "segregated fees" (those fees, paid by&#13;
students, which are set aside for student programming&#13;
and services) and this will naturally involve the funding&#13;
of campus papers. If UW newspapers do not merit state&#13;
expense, then the student press will be forced to go independent.&#13;
In many cases this means they will be forced&#13;
out of existence.&#13;
Even those newspapers capable of publishi ng without&#13;
state fund i ng would certainly have to sacrifice some of&#13;
the quality of their publications. The real question here&#13;
i s not " independence," but "upon whom will the student&#13;
press be dependent? " Denied state funding, student&#13;
newspapers will be forced to expend most of their&#13;
energy and resources selling themselves to advertisers.&#13;
It is the public interest that would suffer from this new&#13;
ori entation .&#13;
W i th i n the Universi ty of Wisconsin - which has long&#13;
stood as a symbol of free and open inquiry - the student&#13;
press has held a vital position as the critical student&#13;
v oi ce , supported and ma intained by the state . It has&#13;
been able to act in the public interest because it is&#13;
su pported by, and owes allegiance to, the public and no&#13;
on e else . The state should continue to support such a&#13;
trul y free press within the University.&#13;
Ma i ntenance of the student press within the&#13;
Uni versi ty shou ld not in any way imply direct or ind&#13;
i r ect control of i t by the administration. That could&#13;
on l y be i nter preted as abridgement of freedom of the&#13;
press, and den ies the opportunity to learn and foster the&#13;
growth of a free, r espons i ble press .&#13;
Perhaps this does not reflect the nature of the "real&#13;
orl d " or pr ovid e "va luabl e experience " if student&#13;
newspapers are supported by the state. But if that is&#13;
used as an argument against co nti nuing sta t e f unding , it&#13;
is valid only i f the University exists t o " t r ain" st udents&#13;
olive in a world that is not what it ou g ht t o be.&#13;
Hopefully, the Un i versity has a higher and more&#13;
honorable purpose : To serve the end of critical&#13;
sch olarship in a worl d desper atel y in need of new ideas.&#13;
Tha end c an only be served if the Un iversi ty stri ves to&#13;
t ch its s ud nts what is right ~ith the world, what is&#13;
rong th I and how i can be changed. Certainly the&#13;
s ud nt pr s has a ital role in this high purpose. It&#13;
pport&#13;
EDITOR'S&#13;
OTEBOOK&#13;
By Rudy Lienau&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Thi column will be a weekly&#13;
feature and in it I hope to com ment&#13;
on the people, places and&#13;
thing in the area which might&#13;
tend to tintilate our minds . First,&#13;
I'd like to talk a little bit about&#13;
this paper.&#13;
The purpo e of the paper is to&#13;
erve the tudents, faculty and&#13;
taff on campus. We must do this&#13;
by informing, entertaining and&#13;
criticizing when criticism is due.&#13;
We will continue to encourage&#13;
individual expression through&#13;
column and art. Letters to the&#13;
Editor are always helpful and&#13;
welcome .&#13;
The Rang r will broaden its&#13;
cope in the following weeks to&#13;
cover and comment on local,&#13;
state and national affairs. With&#13;
these new news areas we hope to&#13;
increase our audience and add&#13;
the element of a student's interpretive&#13;
reporting to the news.&#13;
Another set of bleachers is&#13;
upposed to be built across from&#13;
the present set in the P .E .&#13;
Building . 1any activities have&#13;
been curtailed because of low&#13;
seating capacity, i.e ., a possible&#13;
large concert to be sponsored by&#13;
the PAB in the first semester was&#13;
cancelled before it could be&#13;
started. The reason? Rumor had&#13;
it that there was a wood shortage&#13;
because so many bowling alleys&#13;
were being built in Japan . To&#13;
confirm this story I made a call to&#13;
James Galbraith, director of&#13;
Planning and Construction.&#13;
There was no confirmation of this&#13;
rumor.&#13;
Galbraith said there is a&#13;
shortage of prime lumber, but the&#13;
supplier hopes to get the pieces&#13;
here by February. Galbraith&#13;
hopes they' ll be installed by the&#13;
end of that month .&#13;
Lienau named&#13;
Ranger editor&#13;
The Ranger advisory board has&#13;
selected Rudy Lienau as the&#13;
Editor of the Ranger for the&#13;
spring semester.&#13;
Lienau then named the other&#13;
editor s . They are : Geoff&#13;
Blaesing , ews Editor ; Jane&#13;
Sc hliesman , Feature Editor ;&#13;
Tom Petersen, Managing Editor ;&#13;
Kathy Wellner and Kris Koch ,&#13;
Sports Co-Editors . Ken Pestka&#13;
and Fred Lawrence will remain&#13;
Bus iness Manager and Ad&#13;
Manager, respectively.&#13;
We get letters&#13;
To the Editor :&#13;
We at the Information Center&#13;
have a thorn we 'd like to get out&#13;
of our sides : People who lose&#13;
th ings that don 't have their&#13;
names on them .&#13;
We have a semester 's worth of&#13;
books , notes, hats and gloves ,&#13;
glasses car keys and&#13;
miscellanea in our lost and found .&#13;
We must cl ear it out to make&#13;
room for th is semester 's new&#13;
collection. If a r ticles were&#13;
labelled, we woul d gladly call the&#13;
owners to let them kn ow we have&#13;
their belongings. As it stands, we&#13;
must rely on them to come to us if&#13;
they 've lost something.&#13;
If a ny of you readers lost&#13;
any th i ng on ca mpus last&#13;
semester, you ha\'e • ii J an. 19&#13;
to come and claim it. We're in&#13;
Tallent Hall, 201&#13;
Park ide Information Center&#13;
Cartoonist's Eye View&#13;
_______ by Gary Huck&#13;
~ _/F The Parkside .,,,,rr ..&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout ~e acade dt&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin -Par&#13;
Kenosha , Wi sconsin 53140 . Offices are located at D-194 LJbrln&#13;
Learning Center, Telephone ( 414 ) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper . Opm&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the offi&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside. 1&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any ub:&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to~ 110&#13;
less , typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right 10&#13;
letters for length and good taste. All letters must be signed and 1&#13;
addr~ss, phone number and student status or faculty ~ank . Na:&#13;
be withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to r&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
Classified and display ad rates will be furnished upon request&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Rudy Lienau&#13;
'EWS EDITOR : Geoff Blaesing&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR : Jane Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
SPORTS EDITORS : Ka thryn Wellner , Kris Koch&#13;
BUSI N ESS MANA GER : Ken P estka&#13;
ADVERTI SING MANAG ER : Fred Law re nce&#13;
CIRCU LATIO N MANAGER : Kathryn Wellne r&#13;
ADVISOR : Do n Kopriva&#13;
';.• RE PRESENTED FOR NATION AL ADVERTISINC? BY )OC.&#13;
Q National Educational Ad vertis ing ServJCeS,&#13;
360 Lexingto n Ave., New York, N. Y. 100 17&#13;
Audio-Visual Review&#13;
Sounds of death&#13;
and dissent&#13;
By Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
is a growing numb~r of records, tapes, slides and Hl&#13;
~~:~leforu.sein t~e L~arnm~ Center. This will be a weekly COl~~~&#13;
1l\8&#13;
1&#13;
:ewiD. g these audio-visual aids. .&#13;
re\\ tudents are unaware of the great variety of equipment the&#13;
sam,eg&#13;
s&#13;
Center contains. It would be worth your while to stop in and&#13;
t.earnm&#13;
,.•" around. '.&#13;
KN". .eek two cassette tapes will be reviewed.&#13;
T'dhiS" theheading 0 f Crnime an d Puunmishs men t IiS an excellent cassette t:nc:rled Condemned to ~eath. This deals with the s.ubject of capital&#13;
ta~shment at San ~uentm. . . .&#13;
pin tape begins'.with a witness grvmg a very eerie and detailed&#13;
Th:i tion of an e~ecution. His thought was, "Wait, can't we just talk deSC P . ?" about it first.&#13;
Th rest of the ~pe is about a case where an 18-year-old boy was&#13;
I~ced to death. The boy gives a haunting account of events and&#13;
senr~gSheexperienced from the time he was picked up through the 44&#13;
fee Iths he spent on death row. It was a sensitive and heartbreaking :onription of an unbelievable and terrible event.&#13;
~e boy's sister tells wha.t it's like to know your bro~er is going to&#13;
be killed.The prison chaplain offers a prayer and the assistant warden&#13;
talks of procedure. . '.&#13;
Thistape is really easy to get into b~cause of Its haunting realism.&#13;
It'sa group of individuals telling a tragic story from their own unique&#13;
\iewpoints.&#13;
Thetape was arranged very well as it told the story in its natural&#13;
sequenceof events.&#13;
Condemnedto Death would make worthwhile listening since certain&#13;
governmentofficials want to bring back capital punishment for some&#13;
dfenses.&#13;
Martin Luther King and Integration is a taped press conference with&#13;
Dr Kingwhich was held in 1960. This was during the time in which he&#13;
was lighting to get restaurants and other public places integrated.&#13;
Someof the topics he spoke on were non-violent protest, law, the&#13;
federal government, integration of schools, churches, public places,&#13;
and racial intermarriage.&#13;
When questioned about certain laws that were broken during&#13;
protests, Dr. King responded, "If you're saying, 'Are we breaking&#13;
lawsbecause we feel the end justifies the means,' we feel there are&#13;
morallaws in the universe just as valid and basic as man-made laws.&#13;
Whenevera man-made law is in conflict with what we consider the law&#13;
o(Gocior the moral law of the universe, then we feel we have a moral&#13;
obligationto protest. This is an American tradition from the Boston&#13;
Tea Party on down." . .&#13;
The press asked, "Is it ~orrect to say you don't 0I?Pos~ r~c~al mtermarriage?"&#13;
Dr. King replied, "Properly speaking individuals&#13;
marry not races."&#13;
Even though these words were spoken over 12 years ago, Martin&#13;
LutherKing's ideas are still relevant. Some of his plans ha·ve still not&#13;
been fully carried out, but they're worth rememberin~.&#13;
Last Monday (Jan. 15) was Dr. King's birthday. This would ~ a&#13;
good time to review his ideas and do something toward the completion&#13;
01 his plans.&#13;
Professor plans tutorials&#13;
to aid behavior change&#13;
By Jane Schliesman&#13;
William R. Morrow, professor&#13;
II PSychology, has a new idea in&#13;
.tu&lt;k&gt;nstervices: Tutorials to aid&#13;
!&gt;'&lt;&gt;ple in changing their&#13;
behaVior.Specific areas in which&#13;
assistance will be provided this&#13;
Sf&gt;mester are public speaking&#13;
linXiety,losing weight, cessation&#13;
Of Smoking and (for men only)&#13;
O\'ercorningshyness with women.&#13;
Irs all part of Morrow's "Adlanced&#13;
Behavior Modification"&#13;
(CUrse.in which the members of&#13;
tht class will gain practical&#13;
'''Pl'rience as trainers in the&#13;
Individualized sessions. Volunteersare&#13;
needed to participate in&#13;
~ project. They will meet with&#13;
tramel's, Who are advanced&#13;
PIl}chology stUdents one hour a&#13;
l't'k (or an avera'ge of eight ''''''&#13;
C For each program, carefully&#13;
hotltrolJedexperimental research&#13;
f as. demonstrated the efeCh\"&#13;
eness of the training&#13;
:ethods to be used. The&#13;
10O&lt;:eduresare quite structured 11:he trainer has a clear path to&#13;
t~ 0\1,. but they will be tailored to&#13;
\O~ needs of the individual&#13;
thtunteers Who wish to improve&#13;
III rnselves in One of the ways&#13;
prt'nhoned above. These&#13;
ad~edures will be explained in&#13;
k~.nce to the clients so they will&#13;
ho • hat to expect and why and&#13;
• It 'ill help them. Each&#13;
student volunteer will ~ork .on a&#13;
one-to-one basis with hIS tramer.&#13;
The training program foUows&#13;
straightforward learning principles.&#13;
For example, if a person&#13;
feels excessive fear about&#13;
speaking before a g~oup, the&#13;
assumption is that he has b~n&#13;
conditioned by previous learmDg&#13;
experiences to .react to that&#13;
situation with anxiety. Therefore,&#13;
the procedure is designed to help&#13;
recondition him to react m~re&#13;
calmly and comfortably. It I~·&#13;
valves counter-conditioning III&#13;
which the client is exposed ~o&#13;
gradually more difficult public&#13;
speaking stimuli under conditions&#13;
that help him to stay&#13;
re Iaxe d . The trainer wo.uld&#13;
employ relaxation exerCises&#13;
throughout th e cour Se of the&#13;
I'ogram. These procedures, to&#13;
~lIeviate the public speakmg&#13;
anxle. ty prol.lem are related to a u 'Ited&#13;
proposa I Morro\\' has . subml th&#13;
in a grant applicatIOn to e&#13;
National Advisory Men.tal Heal~&#13;
Council. That project IS to star&#13;
this summer if funded.. ar-&#13;
Anyone interested m p .&#13;
ticipatIDg. I.n one . of. thiS&#13;
semester's programs IS t~eg~Lt~&#13;
ick up a flyer from .&#13;
pInforma t'IOn Desk in .1\lalO Plkaceo. r&#13;
the Library CirculatIOn D~ , .&#13;
the Student Counseling OffIce: In&#13;
Tallent Hall 202 or Kenosha 13,. H&#13;
ou have one of these problems;&#13;
~olunteer to help yourself out.&#13;
Wed., Jan, 17, 1973 THE PARKSIOE RANGER 3&#13;
22 graduates&#13;
awarded degrees&#13;
'with distinction'&#13;
Twenty-two of the 113 can.&#13;
didates for mid-year graduation&#13;
at Parkside were awarded their&#13;
degrees "witb distinction."&#13;
Graduates ho maintain an&#13;
academic gradep,lint average of&#13;
at least 3.25 out of a possible 40&#13;
receive degrees with distinction:&#13;
those with averages of at least 3.5&#13;
receive degrees with high&#13;
distinction; and those with&#13;
averages of at least 3.75 with&#13;
highest distinction.&#13;
Highest distinction was&#13;
achieved by Gary L. Bendix.&#13;
Racine, and Alan J. Rarmas,&#13;
Kenosha. both bachelors of arts.&#13;
and Joseph W. Gauchel, Racine.&#13;
and Thomas J. James. Racine.&#13;
both bachelors of science.&#13;
High distinction was attained&#13;
by Marc Howard Eisen.&#13;
Kenosha: Patricia A Koessl&#13;
Counselors assigned high&#13;
school liaison duties&#13;
A sure sign of Parkside's&#13;
growth and maturity is that some&#13;
staff are becoming concerned&#13;
lest the university become 1m·&#13;
personal in its dealing \\ Ith&#13;
outsiders.&#13;
One such group IS the tudent&#13;
Services staff. and they are doulg&#13;
something about it&#13;
A member of the staff has bf"n&#13;
assigned liaison responslbihtles&#13;
With each of eight Keno.ha and&#13;
Racme high school&#13;
Charles Kugel. dIrector of&#13;
School and Campus Relations.&#13;
explains it this way&#13;
"B\" being assigned to a&#13;
specific high school. the Park~ld~&#13;
staffer .hould be able to dr-elop&#13;
a more pentonaJ relation. hip 'nth&#13;
that .chool. be available for&#13;
meetings with It" studenL~ and&#13;
staff and. 10 general sen.e a. the&#13;
contact person for an~ and all&#13;
concerns or que. tlon~ about&#13;
Parkside ..&#13;
Kugel added, "In tum. lhe&#13;
assigned person \Ii 111 serve as the&#13;
counselor \\ hom ~tudents comlO~&#13;
to Parks ide can seek out b)&#13;
name. and \Ii III be 10 a better&#13;
position to help ~~ studenl&#13;
because of pre\"lou::. knov.ledge&#13;
about his high school"&#13;
Student sen'ices slaff ha\"e&#13;
been assIgned to the follo\\ log&#13;
high schools Kenosha B:adford&#13;
Wend\" ;\1u ich. Kenosha&#13;
TremPer. 150m Fearn; Keno~ha&#13;
S1. Joseph and Raci ne&#13;
Washington Park. Cia)' Barnard.&#13;
Radne Horlick and RacIOe 1.&#13;
Catherine. Ste"e Bangert.&#13;
Racine Case, Kenneth Oberbruner;&#13;
Racine Lutheran.&#13;
Barbara Larson&#13;
Kenosha. Catherine Rohutny,&#13;
Kenosha. William Waldvogel.&#13;
Wausau; Ann Schulz wiersum.&#13;
Polson. . teet. and ~Ianl}'n J.&#13;
Wohlers. nion Grove. all&#13;
bachelors of arts: and Thoma&#13;
Charles Gamer. Racine, and&#13;
John E. I... art. Kenoha, boOl&#13;
bachelors of SCience.&#13;
Distinction went to ISler .Iat")&#13;
Dunstan. ~I,Kenosha, Diane&#13;
.1 Hanel. Kenosha; Jerome R&#13;
Kamin. Racine, \'Iolel Kivela,&#13;
Kenosha LOI J .l~en. en.&#13;
Kenosha, and PeggS Ann RW'I e.&#13;
F'renksvrlle, all bachelor or&#13;
ar-ts and Jo. eph T Dron ,&#13;
Racme. J Thoma Knmmel,&#13;
Keno. ha . tar)' B . tarun,&#13;
Burlmgton: and Lots J Rami as.&#13;
Kenosha, all bachelors of&#13;
science&#13;
L srntn T&#13;
Ilt r ...&#13;
Audio-Visual Review&#13;
Sounds of death&#13;
and dissent&#13;
By Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
here is a growing number of records tapes slid .&#13;
: lable for use in the Learning Center. Th,is will be a Wes k~nd fllms&#13;
813&#13;
'. ·ng these audio-visual aids. ee y column&#13;
re1·1c111 f&#13;
sorne students are u_naware o the great variety of equipment the&#13;
·ng Center contams. It would be worth your while to st . 1,e3rni op m and&#13;
1-00k around.&#13;
This week two _cassett~ tapes will ?e reviewed.&#13;
l'nder the headmg of Crime and P~mshmen~ is an excellent cassette&#13;
tape called Condemned to ~eath. This deals with the s.ubject of capital&#13;
·shment at San Quentm. pun1 .th ·t ..&#13;
The tape begins ·. w1 . a w1. ness g1vmg a very eerie and detailed&#13;
description of an eitecubon. His thought was, "Wait, can't we just talk&#13;
about it first?"&#13;
The rest of the ~pe is about a case where an 18-year-old boy was&#13;
·entence d to dea~h. The boy give~ a haunting account of events and&#13;
feelings he expenenced from the time he was picked up through the 44&#13;
months he spent on death row . It was a sensitive and heartbreaking&#13;
&amp;·cri ption of an unbelievable and terrible event.&#13;
The boy's sist~r tells wha_t it's like to know your brother is going to&#13;
be killed. The pnson chaplam offers a prayer and the assistant warden&#13;
talks of procedure .&#13;
This tape is ~ea~!~ easy to ~et into be_cause of its haunting realism.&#13;
It's a group of mdiv1duals tellmg a tragic story from their own unique&#13;
11ew points.&#13;
The tape was arranged very well as it told the story in its natural&#13;
sequence of events.&#13;
Condemned to Death would make worthwhile listening since certain&#13;
overrunent officials want to bring back capital punishment for some&#13;
offenses.&#13;
\lartin Luther King and Integration is a taped press conference with&#13;
Dr King which was held in 1960. This was during the time in which he&#13;
v.as fighting to get restaurants and other public places integrated.&#13;
Some of the topics h~ spoke_ on were non-violent protest, Jaw, the&#13;
federa l government, mtegrat1on of schools, churches, public places&#13;
and racial intermarriage. '&#13;
When questioned about certain laws that were broken during&#13;
protests, Dr. King responded, "If you're saying, 'Are we breaking&#13;
laws because we feel the end justifies the means,' we feel there are&#13;
moral laws in the universe just as valid and basic as man-made laws.&#13;
Whenever a man-made law is in conflict with what we consider the law&#13;
of God or the moral law of the universe, then we feel we have a moral&#13;
obligation to protest . This is an American tradition from the Boston&#13;
Tea Party on down."&#13;
The press asked, "Is it correct to say you don't oppose racial intermarriage?"&#13;
Dr. King replied, "Properly speaking individuals&#13;
marry not races."&#13;
Even though these words were spoken over 12 years ago, Martin&#13;
Luther King's ideas are still relevant. Some of his plans ha·;e still not&#13;
en fully carried out, but they're worth remembering.&#13;
La t Monday (Jan. 15) was Dr. King's birthday. This would be a&#13;
good time to review his ideas and do something toward the completion&#13;
of his plans.&#13;
Professor plans tutorials&#13;
to aid behavior change&#13;
By Jane Schliesman&#13;
W11liam R. Morrow, professor&#13;
~ychology, has a new idea in&#13;
dent. ervices: Tutorials to aid&#13;
i&gt;eopl~ in changing their&#13;
nor. pecific areas in which&#13;
lance will be provided this&#13;
m ter are public speaking&#13;
of iety, losing weight, cessation&#13;
moking and (for men only)&#13;
1/rcoming shyness with women.&#13;
all part of Morrow's "Adncect&#13;
Behavior Modification"&#13;
COUr • in which the members of&#13;
cla will gain practical&#13;
ri nee as trainers in the&#13;
il!I\idualizt•d sessions . Volun-&#13;
.rsare needed to participate in&#13;
ProJe&lt;:l. Thev will meet with&#13;
trainers, who are advanced&#13;
llS,chology students one hour a&#13;
' for an avera&#13;
0&#13;
ge of eight&#13;
student volunteer will work on a&#13;
one-to-one basis with his trainer.&#13;
The training program follows&#13;
straightforward learning principles.&#13;
For example. if a person&#13;
feels excessive fear about&#13;
speaking before a g~oup. the&#13;
assumption is that he has b~n&#13;
conditioned by previous learnm&#13;
experiences to react to that&#13;
situation with anxiety Therefore,&#13;
the procedure is designed to help&#13;
recondition him to react more&#13;
calmlv and comfortably. It involves&#13;
counter-conditioning in&#13;
which the client is expo.ed to&#13;
gradually more ~ifficult public&#13;
speaking stimuli under con ditions&#13;
that help him to :ta:,&#13;
relaxed The trainer would&#13;
employ relaxation exercises&#13;
throughout the course of the&#13;
program. These procedure.-_ to&#13;
alleviate the public speaking&#13;
anxiety prol,lem are related . to a&#13;
proposal l\lorrO\\ has submitted&#13;
in a grant application to the&#13;
ational Advisory '.\Iental Health&#13;
Council. That project is to start&#13;
this summer if funded . .&#13;
Anvone interested m pa:ticipating&#13;
in one of. th,&#13;
semester's programs is urged to&#13;
pick up a flyer ~rom ~he LLC&#13;
Information Desk m l\Iam Place,&#13;
the Library Circulation D~ k, ~r&#13;
the Student Counseling Office m&#13;
Tallent Hall 202 or Kenosha 135. ff&#13;
vou have one of these problem.'&#13;
~olunteer to help yourself out!&#13;
22 graduate&#13;
awarded degree&#13;
'with distinction'&#13;
Twenty-two of the 113 candidates&#13;
for mid-year graduation&#13;
at Parkside were awarded their&#13;
degrees "wi di tinction . ..&#13;
Graduates mo maintain an&#13;
academic gradepoint avera e of&#13;
at least 3.25 out of a possible 4.0&#13;
receive degrees with di tinction :&#13;
those with averages of at lea.t 3.5&#13;
receive degree with high&#13;
distinction: and tho. e with&#13;
averages of at lea t 3.T ~·ith&#13;
highest distinction .&#13;
Highe t di tinclion wa.&#13;
achieved bv Gan L . Bendi&#13;
Racine. and Alan J . Ramia :&#13;
Kenosha. both bachelors of arn :&#13;
and Joseph W. Gauche!. Racin •&#13;
and Thoma J. James, Racin&#13;
both bachelor· of .cien&#13;
High di tinction \\a.&#13;
by ~Iarc Howard&#13;
Kenosha, Patricia&#13;
attained&#13;
Ei n,&#13;
K&#13;
Counselor&#13;
school 1·ai on&#13;
PAR SID R G 3&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Jan. 17, 1973&#13;
Land accepted&#13;
by Regents&#13;
"adl on - A parcel of land&#13;
dJOlnlng the Chiwaukee Prairie&#13;
w among g,fts accepted for The&#13;
Ijmversuy of wrsconsm-Parkstde&#13;
by the UW System Board of&#13;
Regents FrIday&#13;
The lot 15 the flIft ol Adelma&#13;
Rlgah of Oak Park. m.. and is&#13;
valued at $JOO.&#13;
TtIe Chiw ukee Prairie tract,&#13;
on of the Iew remaimng natural&#13;
prauie areas in the Michl. est. is&#13;
ht.ld In tru. t by Park ide for the&#13;
\ I .10 'alure Coo_ ervency&#13;
(Of" .. iennnc, educational and&#13;
th lie purpose: It ,. located in&#13;
th TO\\l1 of Pie sant Prairie in&#13;
K nosha ('mIDt)&#13;
Par ide. orr-campus prame&#13;
holding also includ the Harri&#13;
Tract on K no ha County and&#13;
lang r '0' Fen ne r&#13;
urhn on&#13;
P'G \, P B&#13;
C nhnu d hom pag 1&#13;
Ih q lion concernIng 5.\B&#13;
HOlm nt 01onl) e.lllht date. for&#13;
club w of the 'tudrnt Ac\l\'tties&#13;
BUlldm "as &lt;Ii '" ed. Ken&#13;
Konkol u~~ ted the _. 'C mi~ht&#13;
pia) a part In coordmatlng the&#13;
date aUoted to the P B and&#13;
lhOM" a lIotl'&lt;l to . peclfic Interest&#13;
club&gt; Thl pro po. I wtll be&#13;
dl u: d at a future meeting.&#13;
WeI . U!tll . ted that the C&#13;
\\Quld act a an operations&#13;
committee. keeping v.atch on&#13;
prohlem .and -endmg them to the&#13;
people who could solve them. the&#13;
P.\B or the fond . emce. The&#13;
PAS ,",ould then program Be·&#13;
b\'llles. fie said he ....ouJd be&#13;
satisfied if "" e can have a seat&#13;
on the PAB to Inform them of&#13;
problems and aCbvely work and&#13;
ha, eo funcllon. W. should have&#13;
\ollng po~er. but If we can't&#13;
that's OK We just want an area&#13;
for Input." he continued.&#13;
f1aack toted the PAB had&#13;
granted a seat without \"oling&#13;
power. unless the UC&#13;
representative put in the same&#13;
amount of work as e,,'eryone else&#13;
on the board. in which case he&#13;
","ouldha\'e a vote. Haack asked.&#13;
"Why- hould thIS person have to&#13;
put In double time - time as a&#13;
Senator and lime as a PAS&#13;
member· .. · lstant Chancellor&#13;
Dearborn suggested a non-&#13;
:enstonal member of sue be the&#13;
representative of PAB. This mel&#13;
With general approvaL&#13;
Haack a ked if the representauve"&#13;
ould be able to jump from&#13;
committee to committee so lhe&#13;
PSGA "ould be Informed about&#13;
all a. peet Sue We ley said all&#13;
commlttee meetings were open&#13;
nd this would be fine. Anthony&#13;
Totero. coordmator of tudent&#13;
Ptogrammlng. said. "We would&#13;
be remi i\'e if we didn't accept&#13;
}our grievance."&#13;
YOUllG DRIVERS WUCOM1&#13;
nolSU.AHC( Foa&#13;
AU10S - CYCUS • SCOOTU.S&#13;
An f."...Of InlluolKe ',.fUi""' S-,...e:c&#13;
'w,th TM I.Hcf C.'J&#13;
,,,,. lIft - Ho,p,lo' - 'o~I'&#13;
'.IId094: 'OIKleJ&#13;
r0-;5;:2;",-Al3600] ~. ~_. ---- J • MULICH&#13;
CARL H JUlSft4&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
Grossberg Coalition formed to retain youth fare&#13;
authors&#13;
physics book,&#13;
manual&#13;
Alan B Grossberg. professor of&#13;
physIcs and chairman of the&#13;
engineering science division at&#13;
Parkside, is the author of a new&#13;
book. "FORTRA. for&#13;
Engineering Physics: Electricity&#13;
•• lagnetism and Light,"&#13;
and an instructors' manual for&#13;
the new volume and an earlier&#13;
book "FORTRA.· for&#13;
Engineering Physics&#13;
Ml"Charucs Data Analysis and&#13;
Heat." puhli. bed In 1972.&#13;
Both book. and the manual&#13;
Vol'n." I s\J("db\' the :\lcGraw+Hill&#13;
Book Co. The' no" book and the&#13;
manual bear a 1973 cop~Tighl&#13;
llu.- publications ck-al \\ llh the&#13;
u, of FORTRA.· l FORmula&#13;
TRA. ·~Iattng y. tern J, a&#13;
langu3RE' \\ hich expresses&#13;
romputer programs by arithmetic&#13;
formulas. in wtiversityle\&#13;
el ph)~ics clas.c;es. tandard&#13;
general physIcs experiments are&#13;
peciall) desIgned in the texts to&#13;
illustrate computer programming&#13;
techniques and numerical&#13;
analysis of experimental data.&#13;
Grossberg, who received his&#13;
PhD degree at UW·.ladison. was&#13;
a\\ arded an "outstanding&#13;
teaching" award by Parkside&#13;
students in 1969.He has taught at&#13;
UW-Milwaukee and Antioch&#13;
College and was a Fulbright&#13;
lecturer at the ~ational&#13;
Engineering niversity in Lima,&#13;
Peru, prior to joining the UW&#13;
faculty at Racine in 1964.&#13;
Through the sponsorship of the&#13;
ational Student Lobby and&#13;
Continental Marketing Corporation,&#13;
the Coalition to Retain&#13;
Air Discount Fares fCRADF) has&#13;
been formed.&#13;
On Dec. 7, t972, the Civil&#13;
Aeronautics Board announced&#13;
the resul ts of their Domestlc&#13;
Passenger-Fare Investigation:&#13;
"that youth standby. youth&#13;
reservation and family fares are&#13;
unjustly discriminatory and u:at&#13;
family and youth reservauen&#13;
fares are also unreasonabl~."&#13;
The board did defer cancellation&#13;
of these fares pending further&#13;
hearing on the question of an&#13;
adjustment to normal fares.&#13;
The purpose of CRADF, in the&#13;
words of Russell Lehrman,&#13;
president of Continental&#13;
.larketing Corporation, a youth&#13;
fare card sales concern "will be&#13;
to alert e"ery traveler affected.&#13;
ad"ise them that they may lose&#13;
from 25 percent to 33 percent aIr&#13;
fare reductions if they don't act&#13;
now and pro\,ide them with a&#13;
\'ehi~le to express their views so&#13;
that the, will be heard."&#13;
:&gt;latlo~alStudent Ulbby leaders&#13;
will visit the members of the&#13;
House and Senate Commerce&#13;
Committees in an effort to get at&#13;
least one Republican and one&#13;
Democratic sponsor for&#13;
necessary legislation from ea,ch&#13;
committee. They will work WIth&#13;
stans of the committees, airline&#13;
representatives, senior citizens&#13;
and other groups interested in&#13;
preserving the discount fares.&#13;
On Feb. 28, a National Student.&#13;
Ulbby Conference will be held,&#13;
with students from an parts of the&#13;
country in attendance, to consider&#13;
this problem. At that time,&#13;
the delegates will visit with their&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
PIZZA KffCHEN&#13;
Chicken &amp; Italian Sausage Bomhers&#13;
Free Del'-ery to 'e,kslde Villege&#13;
SDn lDf" At'"., ,,,,," 6S7-StfJf&#13;
"pSSt...&#13;
heykid!&#13;
Let me disclose to you a very large&#13;
piece of buzz.&#13;
• beu d molt Ich..IIbtyfrom" p"l. W"ldo Wlnchnter. Who II a ICIlbe fOI I local dally&#13;
Ihut. W.ll W"la up ttle'. art yaldi of opportunltles lor cuys .lind dolls on ra~s III&#13;
o".r tbe nUllify. He says tiler. IS a rul hotluture In the newspaper racket-a chance&#13;
1.- mJ It some detent "fJtCI'l. whllt mJybe pUIllnl the arm on some of tile ills of old&#13;
ttna "",a W,ttl" 1'I'11'I.(;lassmanlclrel hkt Walda yOIl CJ" not help but IIJve the real know.&#13;
own legislators to urge .positive&#13;
and final action to retam these&#13;
important fares. .&#13;
In January 1968CAB examiner&#13;
Arthur S. Ptesent ruled that&#13;
discount fares limited to persons&#13;
12 to 21 years old are "unjustly&#13;
discriminatory" beca.us.e ~ge&#13;
alone isn't a valid disttnctlOn&#13;
between passengers .. Shortlr&#13;
thereafter, Present received mall&#13;
from college students by the sack&#13;
load, Their expression of opinion&#13;
was so overwhelming that the&#13;
CABruled that airline youth fare&#13;
OpportunIt•Ie• S&#13;
The newest edition of Graduate&#13;
and Professional School Opportunities&#13;
for Minority Stu.dents,&#13;
a book describing academic and&#13;
special assistance programs&#13;
offered by graduate and&#13;
professional schools for black&#13;
and other minority group&#13;
students, is noW available to&#13;
college guidance counselors and&#13;
other interested groups.&#13;
Graduate and Professional&#13;
School Opportunities for Minority&#13;
Students is published by&#13;
Educational Testing Service&#13;
(ETS), with the support of a&#13;
grant from the Henry Luce&#13;
Foundation of New York for the&#13;
data collection and&#13;
dissemination. The book is endorsed&#13;
by several organizations&#13;
of graduate and professional&#13;
schools.&#13;
Included in the book is information&#13;
provided by some 700&#13;
discounts don't un)'u I&#13;
di . . ••&#13;
scnmmate against aduJts ~&#13;
board put off any decision'&#13;
petition to abolish the disco'::'a !&#13;
until a study of whether the f nl&gt;&#13;
wer e reasona bl'e m relationar es&#13;
carrier costs was completed le&#13;
Originally youth fares v:.e challenged by Nati J't&#13;
Tr ailways Bus System, a :~~&#13;
assocrauon of bus compani&#13;
and by TCO Industries I'"&#13;
formerly Transcontinent~1 ~&#13;
System, Inc.&#13;
schools and graduate dopa&#13;
ments about their programsrt&#13;
arts and sciences, business bI1J&#13;
and medicine. Each ~nt"&#13;
describes the scho?)'s admiS!;I~&#13;
standards, fee waIver policyal&gt;!&#13;
fi.n~ncia.1aid pr?grams. In ad&#13;
ditlOn, InfOrmatIOn is prOvided&#13;
about the percentage of minorlh&#13;
en.roll~ent, the number o·~&#13;
mmorJty faculty and lb&#13;
existence of active minorn;&#13;
recruitment programs.&#13;
About 20,000copies of the boot&#13;
will be distributed free of charg&#13;
to black, Mexlcan·Americln&#13;
Puerto Rican and AmeriCID&#13;
Indian students and stude l&#13;
organizations, as well as&#13;
libraries, colleges and gradual&#13;
student counselors. CopiestM,&#13;
be obtained by- writing: SPl&lt;t&#13;
Services, Educational Testl&#13;
Service, Princeton, New Jent'y&#13;
MAIN OFFICE, CAPITOL COURT MILWAUKEE&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
College Educations Start at&#13;
WEST FEDERAL SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
Take a ttp from Hot Horse Herbie ... "do not be one·&#13;
hundred percent a sucker! Check it out."&#13;
n__ "--&gt;o -.., .. _ _..-.. I-Pt,---..--".....''" ,..,------,---.- -e_..u...ln.I.lO_... ..... """__ -...0F__An.o'O -- Damon Runyon once wrote, "The race is not always to the swift&#13;
or the battle always to the strong - but it's a good way to bet."&#13;
JOURNAUSM IS A GOOD WAYTO BET&#13;
~~ANGER&#13;
•&#13;
ONE SWEET DREAM&#13;
5010 ~AVE.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
4 T H E PrARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Jan. 17, 1973&#13;
l..and a d Gro h rg&#13;
author&#13;
Coalition formed to retain youth fare&#13;
YO 6 DIUVW WllCOME&#13;
phy ic hook&#13;
manual&#13;
VALEO'$&#13;
PIZZA KffCHEN&#13;
Chiclce &amp; Italia Sa sa e B hers&#13;
Fret De111ery to Parkside Village&#13;
son J()IJ, At. ,,., 11,,,,, 6S1-St9t&#13;
'' t pss ...&#13;
hey kid!&#13;
Let me disclose to you a very large&#13;
piece of buzz.&#13;
s re J fra a pal. Waldo W,nche-ster. who ts a scribe for a local daily&#13;
• do UJ' ere art yards of opportun,t,es for IUJ' and dolls on ra&amp;s all&#13;
He UJ' trt Is I rul bot future ,n the newspaper rocket - a chance&#13;
e dtct scu ell. w ilt ma be putt,n&amp; the arm on some of the oils of old&#13;
-class mon,c er h e Wahlo you can not help but have the real know.&#13;
Ta e a 1p from Hot Horse Herbie . . . "do not be onehundred&#13;
percent a sucker! Check ,t out."&#13;
D mon Runyon once wrote, "The race is not always to the swift&#13;
or the battle always to the strong- but it's a good way to bet."&#13;
JOURNALISM IS A GOOD WAY TO BET&#13;
t}r..- ... ----RANGER&#13;
•&#13;
own legislators to urge yositive&#13;
and final action to retam these&#13;
important fares. .&#13;
In January 1968 CAB examiner&#13;
Arthur S . Present ruled that&#13;
discount fares limited to persons&#13;
12 to 21 years old are "unjustly&#13;
discriminatory" beca_us_e ~ge&#13;
alone isn't a valid distinction&#13;
between passengers._ Shortlr&#13;
thereafter, Present received mail&#13;
from college students by the _s~ck&#13;
load. Their expression of op1mon&#13;
was so overwhelming that the&#13;
CAB ruled that airline youth fare&#13;
d~sc~u~ts don 't unju 1&#13;
discnmmate against adults. 1&#13;
board put off any decision on&#13;
petition to abolish the discou 1&#13;
until a study of whether th c n&#13;
bl . ar&#13;
were reasona e m relation&#13;
· to earner costs was completed&#13;
Originally youth fares ~&#13;
challenged by ati ere&#13;
Trail~a~s Bus System, a i: assoc1atton of bus compani&#13;
and by TCO Indu trie 1 '&#13;
f I T . , nc&#13;
ormer y ranscontmental 8 '&#13;
System, Inc.&#13;
• • Opportun1t1es&#13;
The newe t edition of Graduate&#13;
and Professional School Opportunities&#13;
for ~tinority Stu_dents,&#13;
a book describing academic and&#13;
special assistance programs&#13;
offered by graduate and&#13;
professional schools for black&#13;
and other minority group&#13;
students, is now available to&#13;
college guidance counselors and&#13;
other interested groups.&#13;
Graduate and Professional&#13;
hoot Opportunities for Minority&#13;
tudent is published by&#13;
Educational Testing Service&#13;
(ETSl, with the support of a&#13;
grant from the Henry Luce&#13;
Foundation of New York for the&#13;
data collection and&#13;
di semination. The book is endorsed&#13;
by several organizations&#13;
of graduate and professional&#13;
schools.&#13;
Included in the book is information&#13;
provided by some 700&#13;
schools and graduat d&#13;
ments about their program&#13;
arts and sciences, busin&#13;
and medicine Each ' n&#13;
describes the school' adm&#13;
standards, fee waiv&lt;'r pohcy&#13;
financial aid pro ram . Jn&#13;
dition, information i pro&#13;
about the percentage of minor;)&#13;
enrollment , the number f&#13;
minority faculty and lb&#13;
existence of active minor&#13;
recruitment program .&#13;
About 20,000 copies of the&#13;
will be distributed free of&#13;
to black, Mexican-Amer, 1&#13;
Puerto Rican and Am nca&#13;
Indian students and tud&#13;
organizations, as well a&#13;
libraries, colleges and grad&#13;
student counselors. Copi&#13;
be obtained by writing:&#13;
Services, Educational T&#13;
Service, Princeton, ew J&#13;
College Educations Start at&#13;
WEST FEDERAL SAVI NGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573 58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE: CAPITOL COURT MILWAUKEE&#13;
ONE SWEET DREAI\tl&#13;
5010 }AVE ..&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
,I&#13;
Wed., Jan. 11, 1913 THE PARKSIDE RANGER S&#13;
•&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
973 Student-Staff Directories&#13;
I vailable for pickup at the&#13;
ar'beraary circulatIO.n dkes ,Ta IIent&#13;
~l II Information Center and&#13;
K:nosha Campus Main Office.&#13;
There is no. cha~ge for the&#13;
directory which. mcl.ud,es Administrative&#13;
Office listings, a&#13;
mplete roster of faculty and&#13;
c~aff and a listing of students&#13;
:egi~tered during the first&#13;
semester. - The Whiteskellar Coffeehouse&#13;
has its first show of ~he semester&#13;
today at 12:30 until .2:30 p.m.&#13;
Featured is Nancy Pr-ice, a folk&#13;
singer from Milwaukee. She&#13;
playsan acoustic 12-string guitar&#13;
and does folk and folk rock ..&#13;
Nancy is the first of ten shows&#13;
that the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board will he sponsoring in the&#13;
Whiteskellar.- "The Third Man" is the&#13;
Parkside Film Society's offering&#13;
for Wednesday, Jan. 17.&#13;
Screening is at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
Creenquist 103, and admission is&#13;
60cents. The haunting music of a&#13;
zither, Vienna's cobbled streets&#13;
and a ghostly Graham Greene&#13;
story about a man-hunt come&#13;
smoothly and beautifully&#13;
together in this piece of top&#13;
screen artifice. Director Carol&#13;
Reed's mystery·thriller-romance&#13;
concerns a young American&#13;
visitor's attempts to get to the&#13;
bottom of the mystery of a&#13;
friend's dubious "death" in&#13;
Vienna's streets.&#13;
Joseph Cotten is the American&#13;
who blunders upon mystery and&#13;
romance; Italian actress Alida&#13;
Valliplays the girl of the "dead"&#13;
man; Trevor Howard is a British&#13;
police major. Orson Welles&#13;
shapes a drak and treacherous&#13;
shadowas the "third man." The&#13;
zither as the sole musical&#13;
background completes the&#13;
illusionof a swift and intriguing&#13;
romance. -&#13;
The Parkside StUdent&#13;
Government ,",,:ssociation will&#13;
spo~s~r a WInter Carnival&#13;
heglllnlllg Friday, Feb. 16, and&#13;
rUOnlllg through Saturday, Feb.&#13;
24. See future issues of the&#13;
Ranger for more information. - A Course in defensive driving&#13;
. will he held for faculty. staff.&#13;
students and the general public.&#13;
Two sessions of the class will be&#13;
offered - Monday, Jan. 22, and&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 24. Attendance&#13;
will be required for only one of&#13;
the two sessions.&#13;
The course will begin at 5 p.m.&#13;
in room 101 of Greenquist Hall&#13;
and should last no longer than 9&#13;
or 10 p.m. Those who take the&#13;
course will be issued defensive&#13;
driving cards upon completiOn. A&#13;
state car can be driven with this&#13;
card.&#13;
Those who plan to attend are&#13;
urged to pre-register by&#13;
telephone (2455) with Parkside&#13;
Officer William Carter at the&#13;
Department of Safety and&#13;
Security.&#13;
Originated hy the National&#13;
Safety Council, the course covers&#13;
defensive driving techniques to&#13;
avoid the most frequent types of&#13;
automobile accidents. It will&#13;
feature a lecture, slides,&#13;
discussion and eight to-minute&#13;
films. - SIGMA PI is at it again! This&#13;
campus fraternity is again&#13;
volunteering its services to help&#13;
out a needy organization. This&#13;
organization is the Child Day&#13;
Care Center and the members of&#13;
Sigma Pi Fraternity have offered&#13;
to do some constructional cleanup&#13;
at least once a. ~onth at the&#13;
Center. Maybe thIS Idea of l~nding&#13;
a hand will spark an individual&#13;
interest that some of us&#13;
lack.&#13;
"ACINE:&#13;
PARKSIDE CAMPUS OFFICE&#13;
219 TALLENT HALL&#13;
553·2150&#13;
PirF c. \&#13;
!J1t:j~. ;nooJJ. tUf, ..,., I&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 551-~~&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING RO •&#13;
Parkside's Ph) ical Plant and&#13;
Department of afetv and&#13;
S~CUri~ will provide emergency&#13;
al~ to ~Istressed motort 18again&#13;
this winter. The a istance '" In&#13;
he primaril)' the startu~ of&#13;
stalled vehicles or providing a&#13;
"call service' to vour own&#13;
garageman. "&#13;
Since the emergenc\ service t&#13;
pro\'ided \4. ubout charge b ..&#13;
Parkside, anv rno Or! "l&#13;
requesting aid "iii be required to&#13;
sign a waiver of Jiabillt)· pnor to&#13;
the sen' ice being performed&#13;
The emergency . tart _ n.,ce&#13;
will extend to 8 p.m., after that&#13;
time Safety and Security will&#13;
provide aid In calling a serviceman&#13;
of the moron I' choice. - The Sigma Pi Fraterrut)' would&#13;
like to thank aU the students woo&#13;
contributed to the To)' Drive last&#13;
semester, for the children at the&#13;
Day Care center II was an&#13;
outstanding success. and again&#13;
we are deeply grateful for your&#13;
cooperation.-&#13;
U. ou are ured of haul lour&#13;
&lt;oa and raund all d.a ,&#13;
the udenl I.fe om ha a&#13;
. UItIl on&#13;
TIus sen Ice I&#13;
(rom ;0·06 am to 9 pm&#13;
Manda, throuith Frtd.a), for )'OU&#13;
to teeve '''OW'' coat and&#13;
TIll' III·be .... trial&#13;
deternune th~ n«d for I&#13;
And b) 1.ht.' a) those til&#13;
''OU '''''I are probI) al 1.ht.' In&#13;
(ormation Center to I and&#13;
round III Tall",,! UBI) I -&#13;
MON. &amp; TUES. EVENING, S,oo.t:OO&#13;
~,~ J ~_&#13;
.(nd~:olIde~r !-ow much 0( our po=. &lt;hoc en. pocaroa cat.thc poce I Onlj SI 75)&#13;
Chi Idrenunder3Fr",,-Q'lldren 3·9.10Cents a Year SB'A.A YP€lIPIUlBrltCwhaoUSEi&#13;
LGlhrop and 2111 (Alm01I)&#13;
-&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT fiRST UtlOUl&#13;
Of RACI E&#13;
• .ili.&#13;
bla ce n lire&#13;
• Iillit to the&#13;
I .ber of chc S&#13;
yo nte&#13;
CHECK I G&#13;
IS ee r,cACHE.R&#13;
r~~~~;];::J':"waShington Square"&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
Racille&#13;
PHONE: 634-6661&#13;
AIfiRST ullom&#13;
Of RACINE&#13;
AT fIRST NATlOUl&#13;
Of RACINE&#13;
o y ur free Check&#13;
acc ut SOD at&#13;
--_._-,.&#13;
500 WiscOISi Au. lacin&#13;
ed., J n. 7, 73 TH&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPE&#13;
19 73 Student- Staff Directories&#13;
availab le for pickup at the&#13;
arbe ary circulation desk, Tallent&#13;
L1r . Ct d H II Information en er an&#13;
K:nosha campus Main Office.&#13;
There is no charge for the&#13;
d. ectory which includes Ad-&#13;
If f. 1· t· ministrative Of ice 1s mgs, a&#13;
mplete roster of faculty and&#13;
c~aff and a listing of students&#13;
:egi~tered during the first&#13;
semester. - The Whiteskellar Coffeehouse&#13;
has its first show of ~he semester&#13;
today at 12:30 until _2:30 p.m .&#13;
Featured is Nancy Price, a folk&#13;
singer from Milwaukee. She&#13;
plays an acoustic 12-string guitar&#13;
and does folk and folk rock.&#13;
Nancy is the first of ten shows'&#13;
that the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board will be sponsoring in the&#13;
Whi teskellar. - "T he Third Man" is the&#13;
Parkside Film Society's offering&#13;
for Wednesday, Jan. 17.&#13;
Screening is at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
Gree nquist 103, and admission is&#13;
60 cents. The haunting music of a&#13;
zither, Vienna's cobbled streets&#13;
and a ghostly Graham Greene&#13;
sto ry about a man-hunt come&#13;
smoot hly and beautifully&#13;
together in this piece of top&#13;
scree n artifice. Director Carol&#13;
Reed's mystery-thriller-romance&#13;
con cer ns a young American&#13;
visito r's attempts to get to the&#13;
bottom of the mystery of a&#13;
frie nd 's dubious "death" in&#13;
Vie nn a's streets.&#13;
Joseph Cotten is the American&#13;
wh o blunders upon mystery and&#13;
roma nce; Italian actress Alida&#13;
Va lli plays the girl of the "dead"&#13;
ma n; Trevor Howard is a British&#13;
police maj or. Orson Welles&#13;
ha pes a d rak and treacherous&#13;
.hadow as the "third man." The&#13;
zi th er as the sole musical&#13;
bac kgroun d c ompletes the&#13;
illusi on of a swift and intriguing&#13;
roma nce. -&#13;
The Parksid e Student&#13;
Government Association will&#13;
spo?s~r a Winter Carnival&#13;
begmmng Friday Feb 16 d . , . . an&#13;
runmng through Saturday, Feb.&#13;
24. See future issues of the&#13;
Ranger for more information. -&#13;
A course in defensive driYing&#13;
· will be held for faculty, staff&#13;
students and the general public .&#13;
Two sessions of the class will be&#13;
offered - Monday, Jan. 22, and&#13;
Wednesday, Jan . 24. Attendance&#13;
will be required for only one of&#13;
the two sessions.&#13;
The course will begin at 5 p.m .&#13;
in room 101 of Greenquist Hall&#13;
and should last no longer than 9&#13;
or 10 p.m. Those who take the&#13;
course will be issued defensive&#13;
driving cards upon completion . A&#13;
state car can be driven with this&#13;
card.&#13;
Those who plan to attend are&#13;
urged to pre-register by&#13;
telephone (2455) with Parkside&#13;
Officer William Carter at the&#13;
Department of Safety and&#13;
Security.&#13;
Originated by the National&#13;
Safety Council, the course covers&#13;
defensive driving techniques to&#13;
avoid the most frequent types of&#13;
automobile accidents. It will&#13;
feature a lecture , slides,&#13;
discussion and eight 10-minute&#13;
films. - SIGMA PI is at it again! This&#13;
campus fraternity is again&#13;
volunteering its services to help&#13;
out a needy organization . This&#13;
organization is the Child Day&#13;
Care Center and the member of&#13;
Sigma Pi Fraternity ~ave offered&#13;
to do some constructional cleanup&#13;
at least once a_ ~onth at the&#13;
Center. Maybe this idea of 1:nding&#13;
a hand will spark an mdividual&#13;
interest that some of u&#13;
lack.&#13;
PARKSIDE CAMPUS OFFICE&#13;
219 TALLENT HALL&#13;
553-2150&#13;
"Washington Square"&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
Raciqe&#13;
PHONE : 634-6 6 61&#13;
-&#13;
- -&#13;
G s&#13;
l&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Jan. 17, 1973&#13;
uw-p historian edits book&#13;
The Raven on McCarthyism&#13;
By Gary Jensen Daniel Bell.&#13;
The first selection in the book&#13;
by Robert Griffiths, describ~&#13;
McCarthy's Wisconsin boyhood&#13;
education and early career as ~&#13;
pohtician.&#13;
Marquette's Theoharis, in his&#13;
contribution, blames Truman for&#13;
the climate that produced Me-&#13;
Carthyism and the "red scare."&#13;
Nixon is identified in several of&#13;
the selections as an avid supporter&#13;
of McCarthyism.&#13;
What of the "new Me.&#13;
Carthyism?" Editor Reeves says&#13;
he isn't sure there is one. Me-&#13;
Carthyism has become an epithet&#13;
for everything and everyone '"&#13;
The movement transcends the&#13;
man, Reeves explains. Selections&#13;
in his new book provide CIa clash&#13;
of learned and unlearned&#13;
opinion" which leave the reader&#13;
to make his own judgments.&#13;
originating as a political vehicle&#13;
of the Republican party and&#13;
nourishing in the GOP disarray&#13;
which followed Truman's upset&#13;
defeat of Thomas E. Dewey in&#13;
1948.&#13;
The book includes three sections&#13;
of readings: "Joseph R.&#13;
McCarthy: The Man and His&#13;
Methods" including contributions&#13;
by conservative columnist&#13;
William F. Buckley Jr.. Mc~&#13;
Carthy investigation committee&#13;
counsel Roy Cohn and Harvard&#13;
scholar athan Glazer; "Me-&#13;
Carthyism and Partisan&#13;
Politics" including contributions&#13;
by political journalist Richard&#13;
Rever-e and Marquette&#13;
University new-left historian&#13;
Athan Theoharis; and "Me-&#13;
Carthyism and Mass&#13;
Movements" which includes a&#13;
selection by Columbia professor&#13;
"::\lcCarthyism." a new&#13;
"reader" on the Wisconsin&#13;
senator and the movement which&#13;
came to bear his name, has just&#13;
been published by Dryden Press.&#13;
The volume is edited by&#13;
Thomas C. Reeves. a Parks ide&#13;
historian (and the leading&#13;
scholar on the life of President&#13;
Chester A. Arthur), whose&#13;
previously published books inelude&#13;
"Foundations Under Fire"&#13;
and "Freedom and the Foundation:&#13;
The Fund for the&#13;
Republic in the Era of Me-&#13;
Carthyism,"&#13;
Reeves, an associate professor,&#13;
contributes a lengthy introduction&#13;
to the new volume.&#13;
He points out that the&#13;
movement ultimately personified&#13;
by McCarthy grew out of social&#13;
and political frustration which&#13;
followed World War II,&#13;
(Big Hits &amp; Fazed Cookies)&#13;
London 2 PS 62&amp;7&#13;
It u:ed to be necessary for any hip youth to listen to the "now sound"&#13;
In order for him to be con idered by whoever as "with it." Currently a&#13;
no~talgia craze is being popularized to its fullest possible extent. Since&#13;
craz . are part of a now-cult, the doors are opened to every past&#13;
mu.. ..ica) era Hence. anyone can listen to any hunk of gold from old and&#13;
sllll feel a.. ured that he i part of what's happening.&#13;
The Rolling tones are still part of today and yesterday so what&#13;
could be more naturally "together" than Stone nostalgia. The Rolling&#13;
Ston . always were (since my awareness of them, sometime prior to&#13;
Aftermath) my personal favorites, for being the heaviest of the most&#13;
creative bands and vice versa. It does seem strange to think of how&#13;
back then it was something special to be a rolling Stone's fan while&#13;
now, of course, everyone is.&#13;
I must express a bias against greatest hits LPs. The usual procedure&#13;
i to put a group of past chart busters on a record along with one or two&#13;
s tecuons unavailable on any other long-playing disc. To set the&#13;
record traight, UleStones now have 13 studio albums containing all of&#13;
the diff rent songs they've done, about 4 assorted greatest hits&#13;
albums, and 2 live albums released officially. There are scores of&#13;
tone's underground live records.&#13;
This individual was lured and trapped into purchasing MORE HOTS&#13;
ROCK by the ad-slogan, "8 Tilles Never Before Available in&#13;
America." But alas, these are not selections from the Stones in their&#13;
prime, and most are on a far from perfectly audible underground disc&#13;
I own. These are "Iazed cookies" and not so neat treats. They are&#13;
probably from right around the time when the band received their first&#13;
recording contract. Now it would be different if the unpreviously&#13;
released cuts were from the time of BETWEE THE BUTTONS or&#13;
LET IT BLEED. Hope is still ahead. If current trends continue, we&#13;
should be able to receive 10 albums of "never before available"&#13;
material after the Stones' demise. These estimated calculations are&#13;
based on the comparison of previously existing stars.&#13;
"What To Do" starts out the side with the great eight, by being one&#13;
of the most desirable of the "fazed cookies." It combines early rocking&#13;
and Beach Boy-like background harmony. The best sample of&#13;
prehistoric Stone is "Fortune Teller," but that was available before&#13;
and equally performed on GOT LIVE IF YOU WANT IT. In one sense&#13;
these songs are worthwhile when presented as what they are. You get&#13;
to hear Mick use the word "stupid," indicating a beginning of the&#13;
rebellious rockers that were yet to come. Mick's singing was dramatic&#13;
even back then. However, the songs on this album from that period&#13;
and the rest of band aren't that impressive. The real reason for this&#13;
record is best expressed in one of these relics, as "Money .'&#13;
The first three sides of this double LP are mostly old singles, good&#13;
ones, but all available prior to this package. They could be said to&#13;
pre ent another side or the Stones differing from the other HOT&#13;
ROCKS. However, even though I consider these selections worthwhile,&#13;
they were not popularly acclaimed as smashing success like the other&#13;
HOT ROCKS were. This makes the MORE HOT ROCKS even more&#13;
pointless. Perhaps the most valuable aspect ofMORE HOT ROCKS, to&#13;
me, is getting "Child of the Moon" and "We Love You" for the first&#13;
time on a stereo LP.&#13;
Motorists warned of winter dangers&#13;
Bridges and overpasses can be&#13;
extremely hazardous in winter.&#13;
They may be icy when the rest of&#13;
the road is clear and dry.&#13;
To stop on snow or ice, pump&#13;
brakes lightly and rapidly. If you&#13;
allow the brakes to lock your&#13;
wheels, you'll almost certainly go&#13;
into a dangerous skid.&#13;
Drive with extra caution on&#13;
loose gravel. Remember -&#13;
traction is reduced in rain, snow,&#13;
on ice or when wet leaves are on&#13;
the road. Any attempt to stop or&#13;
change direction suddenly can&#13;
lead to skidding.&#13;
If you should find your vehicle&#13;
skidding, turn the front wheels in&#13;
the same direction the vehicle is&#13;
skidding. Don't jam on the&#13;
brakes, or the skid will get worse,&#13;
Skidding can be a "heart-in-thethroat"&#13;
proposition, so by all&#13;
means drive carefully to avoid&#13;
ever getting into a skid.&#13;
You may have only occasional&#13;
need for tire chains during the&#13;
winter season, but they can&#13;
significantly reduce the&#13;
possibility of bad skids on ice, or&#13;
dangerous stalls in deep snow.&#13;
They will provide the best stop on&#13;
icy roadways.&#13;
Editor's Note: Joe Ross,&#13;
Parkside's insurance coordinator,&#13;
sent the Ranger this&#13;
extraction from the State of&#13;
Wisconsin Manual for Motorists.&#13;
Reduced visibility. inadequate&#13;
traction and temperature&#13;
changes are triple threats to your&#13;
safety on the road during the&#13;
winter season.&#13;
You can't change the weather,&#13;
but you can keep your windshield&#13;
wiper blades in good, live condition&#13;
and see that your defroster&#13;
is working properly. After a&#13;
storm, clear all snow and ice&#13;
from your windshield and other&#13;
windows, headlights, taillights&#13;
and turn signals.&#13;
Mrerly brushing off a small&#13;
spot on the windshield in order to&#13;
see out is not only dangerous, but&#13;
unlawful.&#13;
On any icy or snow-covered&#13;
road, get the "feel" of the&#13;
roadway by trying your brakes&#13;
lightly while driving slowly and&#13;
while clear of traffic, then adjust&#13;
speed. Follow other vehicles at a&#13;
safe distance.&#13;
Tfir OUR HOME COOKINC/&#13;
The Best in the County&#13;
"COUNTRY&#13;
'"CHEN" H,me-hllted One Mile North&#13;
of Campus on Hwy. 31 WANTED. A ride from 1538 Arthur Ave.,&#13;
R.c,ne,lo lallenl Hall parking lot Arrilll! by&#13;
78od.,...,. .m. and reeve by'3O p.m. For John nd his guide dog To ~;n March 10&#13;
PoI'IrTWnl to be .rranged Call 553·7J03.&#13;
:ollege Men&#13;
PART TIME&#13;
WORK&#13;
III 552-8355&#13;
Open 7 Days a Week 8 a.m. to 8 p,m,&#13;
SUNDAY'S SPECIAL: Roast Beef &amp; Turkey&#13;
Hwy. 31 - 'I. Mile North of Petrifying Springs&#13;
We ~Whoareiiloiiey:6iiDirYf~~~l&#13;
)&#13;
1&#13;
STOP BY THE PARKS IDE RANGER OFF1CEJ&#13;
0-194 LLC or telephone 553-2295&#13;
~...-......-......-......-......-......-......-......-.../"- .... ,.---. ~----...-......-....-..~ -~,.--&#13;
/&#13;
ARE YOU A SALESPERSON?&#13;
10% commission&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Jan. 17, 1973&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
Big Hit· · Fazed Coo ·ies)&#13;
London!! P 626-7&#13;
It u to n · ary for ny hip youth to Ii ten to the "now ound"&#13;
m rd r for him to be consid red bv who ver a .. with it." Currentlv a&#13;
no t I I r z i ~ing popularized to it fullest possible extent. ince&#13;
r p r now-cult th doors are opened to every past&#13;
I Henc , ny one can h t n to an) hunk of gold from old and&#13;
1 s ured that h 1 part of ·hat' happening.&#13;
Rollin ton re ·till part of today and yesterday o what&#13;
ould be mort• naturally "tog th r" than tone nostalgia. The Rolling&#13;
n I" ~ " re ( ·inc my awar n of them. ometime prior to&#13;
, ft rm th) my r on I favorit • for being the heaviest of the most&#13;
er ,tfr h nd~ and vice v r a. It do eem trange to think of how&#13;
k th n 1t w . omething pccial to be a rolling tone's fan while "°", of ur:e, v ryone is.&#13;
I must . pr .· a bi again t greate t hit LP . The u ual procedur e&#13;
i to put group of pa t chart busters on a record along with one or two&#13;
I tion un ,.. ii ble on any other long-playing di c. To set the&#13;
r ·ord tra1gh t , the ton now have 13 tudio album containing all of&#13;
the diff r nt on th y'v do ne, about 4 a sorted greatest hits&#13;
lbum , nd 2 live !bum relea ed officially. There are scores of&#13;
. t n · und r round liv r cords.&#13;
Thi: mclividual w lured and trapped into purchasing ilORE HOTS&#13;
H K by th ad- lo an, "8 Title Never Before Available in&#13;
m ri a." But la . th e are not elections from the Stones in their&#13;
prim . nd most are on a far from perfectly audible underground disc&#13;
I own. Th ar "fazed cookies" and not o neat treats. They are&#13;
probably from right around the time when the band received their first&#13;
r ording contract. ow it would be different if the unpreviously&#13;
r 1 ·ed cut were from the time of BETWEE THE BUTIO S or&#13;
LET IT BLEED. Hope i still ahead. If current trends continue, we&#13;
jlOuld e able to receive 10 album of "never before available"&#13;
mat rial aft r the tones' demi e. These estimated calculations are&#13;
ba ·ed on the compari on of previously existing stars.&#13;
"What To Do" tart out the side with the great eight, by being one&#13;
of th mo t desirable of the "fazed cookies. ' It combines early rocking&#13;
and Beach Boy-like background harmony . The best sample of&#13;
prehi toric tone i "Fortune Teller," but that was available before&#13;
and qually performed on GOT LIVE IF YOU WANT IT. In one sense&#13;
th ong are worthwhile when presented as what they are. You get&#13;
to h ar lick u e the word "stupid," indicating a beginning of the&#13;
r lliou rockers that were yet to come. Mick's singing was dramatic&#13;
ev n ba k then. However, the songs on this album from that period&#13;
and the rest of band aren't that impressive. The real reason for this&#13;
r ord i b t ex pres ·ed in one of these relics, a " 1oney ."&#13;
The fir t three sides of thi double LP are mostly old singles, good&#13;
one·. but a]] available prior to this package. They could be said to&#13;
pre ·ent another side of the Stones differing from the other HOT&#13;
R K . However, even though I consider these selections worthwhile,&#13;
they were not popularly acclaimed as smashing success like the other&#13;
HOT RO K were. This makes the lORE HOT ROCKS even more&#13;
point! · Perhaps the mo t valuable aspect of MORE HOT ROCKS, to&#13;
m , i. getting "Child of the 1oon" and "\ e Love You' for the first&#13;
tim on a tereo LP .&#13;
WANTED, A r,de from 1538 Arthur Ave.,&#13;
Racine, lo Tallent Hall par in9 lot Arrive by&#13;
1 A5 m nd leave by 4 · 30 p m. Fo,- John&#13;
Boyer his gu,ae dog, To begin March 10.&#13;
P vm I lo be arrangl!d Call 55J.noJ&#13;
Hege Men&#13;
UW-P historian edits book&#13;
on McCarthyism&#13;
":\IcCarthyism." a new&#13;
"reader·' on the Wisconsin&#13;
enator and the movement which&#13;
came to bear his name. has just&#13;
been published by Dryden Press.&#13;
The volume is edited by&#13;
Thomas C. Reeves. a Parkside&#13;
historian ( and the leading&#13;
cholar on the life of President&#13;
Che ter A. Arthur). whose&#13;
previou ly published books include&#13;
"Foundation Under Fire"&#13;
and "Freedom and the Foundation:&#13;
The Fund for the&#13;
Republic in the Era of l\lc·&#13;
Carthyi m,"&#13;
Reeves, an associate professor.&#13;
contributes a lengthy introduction&#13;
to the new volume.&#13;
He points out that the&#13;
movement ultimately personified&#13;
by lcCarthy grew out of social&#13;
and political frustration which&#13;
followed World War II,&#13;
originating as a political vehicle&#13;
of the Republican party and&#13;
flourishing in the GOP disarray&#13;
which followed Truman's upset&#13;
defeat of Thomas E. Dewey in&#13;
1948.&#13;
The book includes three sections&#13;
of readings: "Joseph R.&#13;
:\1cCarthv: The Man and His&#13;
:\Iethods .~ including contributions&#13;
by conservative columnist&#13;
William F. Buckley Jr., Mc·&#13;
earthy investigation committee&#13;
counsel Roy Cohn and Harvard&#13;
scholar athan Glazer; "McCarthyism&#13;
and Partisan&#13;
Politics" including contributions&#13;
by political journalist Richard&#13;
Rovere and Marquette&#13;
University new-left historian&#13;
Athan Theoharis ; and "Mc·&#13;
Carthyism and Mass&#13;
Movements" which includes a&#13;
selection by Columbia professor&#13;
Daniel Bell.&#13;
The first selection in the book&#13;
by Robert Griffiths, describe~&#13;
McCarthy's Wisconsin boyhood&#13;
education and early career as ~&#13;
politician.&#13;
Marquette's Theoharis, in his&#13;
contribution, blames Truman for&#13;
the climate that produced McCarthyism&#13;
and the "red scare."&#13;
Nixon is identified in several of&#13;
the selections as an avid sup.&#13;
porter of McCarthyism.&#13;
What of the " new McCarthyism?"&#13;
Editor Reeves says&#13;
he isn't sure there is one. McCarthyism&#13;
has become an epithet&#13;
for everything and everyone ...&#13;
The movement transcends the&#13;
man, Reeves explains. Selections&#13;
in his new book provide "a clash&#13;
of learned and unlearned&#13;
opinion" which leave the reader&#13;
to make his own judgments.&#13;
Motorists warned of winter dan~ers&#13;
Editor's Note: Joe Ross,&#13;
Parkside's insurance coordinator,&#13;
sent the Ranger this&#13;
extraction from the State of&#13;
Wisconsin Manual for Motorists.&#13;
Reduced visibility, inadequate&#13;
traction and temperature&#13;
changes are triple threats to your&#13;
safety on the road during the&#13;
winter season .&#13;
You can' t change the weather,&#13;
but you can keep your windshield&#13;
wiper blades in good, live con·&#13;
dition and see that your defroster&#13;
is working properly. After a&#13;
storm, clear all snow and ice&#13;
from your windshield and other&#13;
windows headlights, taillights&#13;
and turn signals.&#13;
Mrerly brushing off a small&#13;
spot on the windshield in order to&#13;
see out is not only dangerous, but&#13;
unlawful.&#13;
On any icy or snow-covered&#13;
road, get the "feel" of the&#13;
roadway by trying your brakes&#13;
lightly while driving slowly and&#13;
while clear of traffic, then adjust&#13;
speed. Follow other vehicles at a&#13;
safe distance.&#13;
Bridges and overpasses can be&#13;
extremely hazardous in winter.&#13;
They may be icy when the rest of&#13;
the road is clear and dry.&#13;
To stop on snow or ice, pump&#13;
brakes lightly and rapidly. If you&#13;
allow the brakes to lock your&#13;
wheels, you'll almost certainly go&#13;
into a dangerous skid.&#13;
Drive with extra caution on&#13;
loose gravel. Remember -&#13;
traction is reduced in rain, snow,&#13;
on ice or when wet leaves are on&#13;
the road. Any attempt to stop or&#13;
change direction suddenly can&#13;
lead to skidding.&#13;
If you should find your vehicle&#13;
skidding, turn the front wheels in&#13;
the same direction the vehicle is&#13;
skidding. Don't jam on the&#13;
brakes, or the skid will get worse.&#13;
Ski:'dding can be a "heart-in-the.&#13;
throat" proposition, so by all&#13;
means drive carefully to avoid&#13;
ever getting into a skid.&#13;
You may have only occasional&#13;
need for tire chains during the&#13;
winter season, but they can&#13;
significantly reduce the&#13;
possibility of bad skids on ice , or&#13;
dangerous stalls in deep snow.&#13;
They will provide the best stop on&#13;
icy roadways.&#13;
TRY OUR HOME COOKINIJI&#13;
The Best in the County&#13;
''COUNTRY&#13;
KffCHEN" Home-halted One Mile North&#13;
BREAD of Campus on Hwy. 31&#13;
PART TIME&#13;
WORK&#13;
II 552-8 355&#13;
for the super look Open 7 Days a Week 8 a.m . to 8 p.m.&#13;
SUNDA1'S SPECIAL: Roast Beef &amp; Turkey&#13;
Hwy. 31 - ¼ Mile North of Petrifying Springs&#13;
I w ····------------------·~ ~Dare'inonej:bUllgry!~;::__-:=:;:::~1&#13;
ARE YOU A SALESPERSON? )&#13;
10 % commission&#13;
STOP BY THE PARKSIDE RANGER OFFICE&#13;
- D-194 LLC or telephone 553-2295&#13;
~------------..-........-........-.........--.......-.....--.......-..~~~_,...-...._~&#13;
Parkside's Gary Cole goes up for two points in&#13;
a recent game.&#13;
Club Sports&#13;
The Club Sport Office is located&#13;
in tbe Physical Education&#13;
Building. Phone numher 553-2310&#13;
or 2245. Please stop in or call if&#13;
you are interested in participating&#13;
in any of the following&#13;
sports.&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
Contact Ken Oberbruner, ext.&#13;
2225,Tallent 237, for information.&#13;
The team starts practice shortly&#13;
and will be playing colleges from&#13;
this area.&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
Jim Koch, ext. 2267, is the&#13;
contact for Intramural bowling.&#13;
Those interested in extramural&#13;
bowling (Intercollegiate) should&#13;
call or see Vic Godfrey, ext. 2310.&#13;
There will be several opportunities&#13;
to bowl in tournaments&#13;
against other colleges&#13;
during the semester.&#13;
HOCKEY&#13;
Parkside's hockey team has&#13;
already played one-third of its&#13;
schedule. The team practices and&#13;
plays their home games at the&#13;
Wilson Park--Arena in Milwaukee.&#13;
Please call or see the Club Sports&#13;
Coordinator for additional information&#13;
regarding playing or&#13;
tickets.&#13;
JUDO&#13;
The Parks ide Judo Club meets&#13;
two nights per week. They wiII be&#13;
sponsoring the Wisconsin Intercollegiate&#13;
Judo Tournament&#13;
here on Sunday, Feb. 4. Anyone&#13;
from novice through Black Belt is&#13;
encOuraged to join.&#13;
RUGBY&#13;
Parkside enjoyed its most&#13;
successful season ever last fall.&#13;
PARKS IDE&#13;
ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
Feature Film Series&#13;
presents&#13;
"Billy&#13;
Jackrr&#13;
Fri._ Jan.19- 8:00p.m.&#13;
Sun._Jan.21- 7:30p.m.&#13;
StUdent Activities Bldg.&#13;
n -n IDs pquired&#13;
Th.e spring schedule is currenUy&#13;
being drawn up. Sign up to play&#13;
now! !&#13;
SAILING&#13;
Even though there is ice on the&#13;
lake, it won't be long now before&#13;
the sailing season rolls around.&#13;
The sc~~ol has two new Flying&#13;
Jrs. waiting to be tried out. Plans&#13;
will be made for the summer&#13;
season in a month or so. Even if&#13;
you have never sailed before, you&#13;
are invited to be a part of this&#13;
club.&#13;
SKIING&#13;
The Rag Time Rangers are one&#13;
of the most active clubs on&#13;
campus with lots of good&#13;
fellowship and some good trips&#13;
lined up. See or call Bill Jaeck,&#13;
639-1321, or contact this office for&#13;
more info.&#13;
SKI TEAM&#13;
The Midwest Intercollegiate&#13;
Ski Association has many races&#13;
on tap throughout the Midwest.&#13;
Parkside's racing team (men and&#13;
women) will be competing in&#13;
many of these. If you are a racer&#13;
or have intentions of becoming&#13;
one, please get in contact with&#13;
this office immediately.&#13;
SOCCER&#13;
The soccer team, under the&#13;
guidance of Coach Hal Henderson,&#13;
will be playing a club&#13;
schedule this spring. Call Coach&#13;
Henderson at ext. 2311 about&#13;
playing.&#13;
Cagers 2nd&#13;
in holiday me t&#13;
By Kris Koch&#13;
Th.e Parkside cagers tra\'eled&#13;
to l\1lchi~an's Boyne County over&#13;
the Christmas holiday to participate&#13;
in the Bovne County&#13;
CI.assic. and the)' came awav&#13;
With a one-one split. The Range~&#13;
won their first game 87-80 Oyer&#13;
Lake Superior Slate wllh Garv&#13;
Cole and ~Iike Hankeleading th~&#13;
way for ~e Rangers scoring 2..&#13;
and 21 POI015 respectively Chuck&#13;
Chambliss also clupped In 17.&#13;
while the losers' Larry Owens led&#13;
all Scorers with 31 points.&#13;
On Saturday night it wa a&#13;
different story a the Range&#13;
were Upended 93-73 by Ferris&#13;
State. The game was clo e&#13;
throUghout and the lead changed&#13;
hands during the third period. but&#13;
In the fourth quarter the Rangers&#13;
hit a cold spell Crom the Cree&#13;
throw line and Ferris Stale&#13;
started building the margin.&#13;
Coach Steve tephens com.&#13;
mooted that "it coold bave been a&#13;
6 to 10 point ball game. but \\ e&#13;
wer.e cold from the charity tripe&#13;
during the foorth period aod that&#13;
sunk us."&#13;
The Rangers were again led bv&#13;
Gary Cole with 27. Chuck&#13;
Chambliss with 21 and Mike&#13;
Hanke with 15. Cole and&#13;
Chambliss were ooth named to&#13;
the All-Tournament Team for&#13;
their ootstanding play • S\\'IM~I1;\;G&#13;
Barbara Jo ~Iom ha buU1 a&#13;
women's and a men' team&#13;
competing, ee her immediately&#13;
or call 225i&#13;
TABLE TE'''S&#13;
This team competed in Its hrst&#13;
match before Christrna. and&#13;
several matche are being&#13;
arranged (or thiS emeter&#13;
Thursday night are be,ng set up&#13;
for a regular Table Tennl&#13;
League. If ,nterested. call Dr&#13;
Amin on the Kenosha campo&#13;
ext 32.or contact \"IC Godrre~ at&#13;
the PE Budding&#13;
TeJ.phone 6524662&#13;
1315 .52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wi•.&#13;
Wed., Jan. 17, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
SCHEDULED&#13;
Baskelba II&#13;
Jan. 20&#13;
Jan 23 \\ .)'n&#13;
Fencing&#13;
Jan 19&#13;
Jan 20&#13;
Gymnaslics&#13;
Jan.2lI&#13;
Swimming&#13;
Jan 20 Lak f I Coil at La&#13;
P.E. Bldg. chedul&#13;
'''-'M"."CT•le •u••••&#13;
,,&#13;
, -~T-y-"..o..\...~~.,, Frooa.,&#13;
~.,t ...... ","",........,.., -, So' y s..-,&#13;
n ._&#13;
11 • I&#13;
II • '.".:1 lID'&#13;
• ID&#13;
It&#13;
lID It&#13;
•&#13;
'... y" "'urIu., • .Ift so • ""&#13;
...... IJ .....,e . I It&#13;
\OLLE\B\LL&#13;
Call Gez.a .Ian,n~," _ •. If&#13;
)00 are mrerested In coli at&#13;
compeUlJon Thursda) em&#13;
peacn v. 111resum thf' 18th at&#13;
7 pm&#13;
\H~I('"TIIFTl'G&#13;
Power or Olvmprc IIftln&#13;
Compel'llon, n ". od&#13;
See \"1(: Godrre} (or In(ormauon&#13;
\\01"00 are n hold&#13;
noon and on Sunda) at ~ p m&#13;
HOFFMA 's&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
TAPES&#13;
Discount Prices!&#13;
5707 - S~ Aft.&#13;
Il••••~.&#13;
Alfredo's Restaurant&#13;
2827 63rd St., Kenosha&#13;
50e OFFO~ZAZ~Y ~~,.ItIalian Food A Specialty&#13;
Spaghetti - Ravioli - Lasagna&#13;
•&#13;
Tenuta'. COUPON&#13;
\\lnf' ( UIItr~ I thl "&#13;
GERMANY&#13;
Ru de heim r&#13;
Openheim r $&#13;
ier tein r&#13;
Ira boUl II.&#13;
Parkside's Gary Cole goes up for two points in&#13;
a recent game.&#13;
Club Sports&#13;
The Club Sport Office is located&#13;
in the Physical Education&#13;
Building. Phone number 553-2310&#13;
or 2245. Please stop in or call if&#13;
you are interested in participating&#13;
in any of the following&#13;
sports.&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
Contact Ken Oberbruner, ext.&#13;
2225, Tallent 237, for information.&#13;
The team starts practice shortly&#13;
and will be playing colleges from&#13;
this area.&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
Jim Koch, ext. 2267, is the&#13;
contact for Intramural bowling.&#13;
Those interested in extramural&#13;
bowling (Intercollegiate) should&#13;
call or see Vic Godfrey, ext. 2310 .&#13;
There will be several opportunities&#13;
to bowl in tournaments&#13;
against other colleges&#13;
during the semester.&#13;
HOCKEY&#13;
Parkside's hockey team has&#13;
already played one-third of its&#13;
schedule . The team practices and&#13;
plays their home games at the&#13;
Wilson Par~Arena in Milwaukee.&#13;
Please call or see the Club Sports&#13;
Coordinator for additional information&#13;
regarding playing or&#13;
tickets.&#13;
Jl'DO&#13;
The Parkside Judo Club meets&#13;
two nights per week . They will be&#13;
·pon oring the Wisconsin In tercollegiate&#13;
Judo Tournament&#13;
here on Sunday, Feb. 4. Anyone&#13;
from novice through Black Belt is&#13;
encouraged to join.&#13;
Hl'GBY&#13;
Parkside enjoyed its most&#13;
:uccessful season ever last fall.&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
Feature Film Series&#13;
presents&#13;
11 Billy&#13;
Jack''&#13;
Fri.- Jan.19- 8:00p.m.&#13;
Sun.- Jan.21- 7 :30p.m.&#13;
Adm: 75~&#13;
Stud n t Activities Bldg.&#13;
qu red&#13;
Th_e spring schedule is currently&#13;
bemg drawn up . Sign up to play&#13;
now!!&#13;
SAILING&#13;
Even though there is ice on the&#13;
lake, it won't be long now before&#13;
the sailing season rolls around.&#13;
The sc~~ol has two new Flying&#13;
Jrs. wa1tmg to be tried out. Plans&#13;
will be made for the summer&#13;
season in a month or so. Even if&#13;
you have never sailed before, you&#13;
are invited to be a part of this&#13;
club.&#13;
SKIING&#13;
The Rag Time Rangers are one&#13;
of the most active clubs on&#13;
campus with lots of good&#13;
fellowship and some good trips&#13;
lined up. See or call Bill Jaeck ,&#13;
639-1321, or contact this office for&#13;
more info.&#13;
SKI TEAM&#13;
The Midwest Intercollegiate&#13;
Ski Association has many races&#13;
on tap throughout the Midwe t.&#13;
Parkside's racing team (men and&#13;
women) will be competing in&#13;
many of these. lf you are a racer&#13;
or have intentions of becoming&#13;
one, please get in contact with&#13;
this office immediately.&#13;
SOCCER&#13;
The soccer team , under the&#13;
guidance of Coach Hal Hen derson,&#13;
will be playing a club&#13;
schedule this spring . Call Coach&#13;
Henderson at ext. 2311 about&#13;
playing .&#13;
f&#13;
Cag r 2nd&#13;
in holida in&#13;
By Kris Koch&#13;
-&#13;
Tel4phohe 652-1662&#13;
3315 · 52nd St.&#13;
«enosh•, Wis.&#13;
t&#13;
ed ., J n. 17, H73 THE PARKSIDE RA G R 7&#13;
Basketball&#13;
J n&#13;
J n 23&#13;
Fencing&#13;
J n I&#13;
J n&#13;
Gymnastics&#13;
J&#13;
Swimm1n&#13;
P.E.&#13;
-&#13;
D&#13;
l&#13;
Alfredo's estaura&#13;
2827 63rd S ,&#13;
8 THE PARKSIOE RANGER Wed., Jan. 17, 1973&#13;
Cagers snap loss string&#13;
with win over Aquinas&#13;
Parkside snapped their threegame&#13;
10000gstreak last Saturday&#13;
wllb • 70-&amp;6 win over powerful&#13;
AqUlllllS College.&#13;
Th Rangers. now s-s, bad&#13;
some timely long-range gunnery&#13;
from TIm Dolan. Otucl&lt; Cllam-&#13;
Ilh • and short jumpers contributed&#13;
by Cary Cole. However,&#13;
the hero In th waning seconds 01&#13;
th game turned out to be Ken&#13;
pey r, I' ho sacred lour 0/ his SIX&#13;
po,nt in clutch lree throv.rs that&#13;
proved to be the momentum&#13;
Park Ide needed&#13;
Th Ran ers I' re down by as&#13;
m ny ven III the lirst hall.&#13;
but lou htba k to witjun one on a&#13;
TIm Dolan teal and bucket ith&#13;
1 -43to go But AqulO went into&#13;
th I ker room with a 39-35&#13;
Ilalltlm I ad as the r ult 01 a&#13;
t hmcalloulon Otambh and a&#13;
bu kel by the I . Larry&#13;
Ilaler.&#13;
AqulOa came oul hooting hot&#13;
to open the . nd period 01 play&#13;
and quickly jumped to an eightpoint&#13;
lead. Tile Rangers then&#13;
caught ftre and closed 10 within&#13;
one at 51-50behind the shooting 01&#13;
Peyer, Sobanski and Hanke.&#13;
Parkside took tile lead lor the&#13;
lirst time 52-St on two Peyer Iree&#13;
throw -s with 10:55 remaining and&#13;
two minutes later. the Rangers&#13;
were up by five. Aquinas was not&#13;
through yet, as they came&#13;
roaring Ilacl&lt; to within a point&#13;
l'ith only 4:53 remaining and tied&#13;
once under four minutes. Gary&#13;
Cole finally iced the game with&#13;
two lree throwrs with only three&#13;
seconds on tile clock.&#13;
High point man lor Parkside&#13;
was Chuck Otambliss with 19,&#13;
lollowed . by Cary Cole. who&#13;
played with a broken linger. with&#13;
13. and TIm Dolan with 12.&#13;
Top tally getters lor Aquinas&#13;
were Paul Cnepper with 19. Ray&#13;
lcCahill 16. and Larry Schafer&#13;
who chipped in 10.&#13;
The Parkside basketeers were&#13;
defeated by UW-Plalteville on&#13;
Jan. 6 in an overtime game 82-78.&#13;
The Rangers had lorged ahead to&#13;
a seven-point Ilalftime lead, 33·26,&#13;
but Platteville came charging&#13;
back to tie the score at 72 apiece&#13;
at the end 01 regulation time. The&#13;
big gun lor Platteville was Steve&#13;
Kundert who scored a collegiate&#13;
career high 0135 points, including&#13;
4 of Platteville's 10 overtime&#13;
points, while helping to hold&#13;
Parkside to only six exira period&#13;
tallies.&#13;
One of the main factors in the&#13;
outcome of the game was that&#13;
Cary Cole only scored three&#13;
points and was louled out in tile&#13;
early going. Tile Rangers were&#13;
led by Mike Hanke with 24points,&#13;
Chuck Chambliss with 23&#13;
markers and Tim Dolan who&#13;
rimmed 16.&#13;
'The Rangers were also beaten&#13;
by UW-Creen Bay by a roll-over&#13;
score ol 68-36 at Creen Bay. The&#13;
cagers had a hard time fmding&#13;
the hoop, sinking only 21 percent&#13;
01 their shots, while Green Bay&#13;
shot almost 50 percent Irom the&#13;
floor.&#13;
High point man lor Parkside&#13;
was Mike Hanke with 13 points&#13;
while Chuck Chambliss was held&#13;
to only one point and Cary Cole&#13;
sat out the game with a broken&#13;
finger.&#13;
Ranger wrestlers defeated&#13;
twice on Southern trip&#13;
The Parks Ide matmen&#13;
\\,erestled t \10'0 dual meets in&#13;
Loui. lana thi past weekend. In&#13;
the first. at the University of&#13;
uthwe tern Louisiana,the final&#13;
r. was a 22-19 loss lor&#13;
Parkslde Inw\'iduall)'. both Rich&#13;
Ilaumberg and Ken Martin&#13;
plOned their opponents. Also&#13;
...IMmll: were Joe Landers, at 126,&#13;
Ranger fencers&#13;
beat Purdue,&#13;
10 e to Illinois&#13;
Park de's lencers came up&#13;
"'lth one Yrto and one loss&#13;
aturda)' They lost to the&#13;
Uruvel'5lty 01 Illinois l!1·S and&#13;
beat Purdue 21-6&#13;
Don Koser 01 Parkside Ilad live&#13;
Wins and one loss with his sabre.&#13;
while Jolln Tank (oiled his way&#13;
into four \\ins and two losses.&#13;
Be""e \'ash outwd both 01 them&#13;
w,th 10 epee l'ith a perlect six&#13;
WinS Bill chaefer. Peter&#13;
eman ke. lark BoatwTight&#13;
and Jeff Dougla alllinished with&#13;
a . pht three wins and losses.&#13;
The Ranger lencers next see&#13;
tlOn th. Fnda)' at Parkside&#13;
wben the)' h t Lake Superior&#13;
ate&#13;
who had 7 points to his opponent's&#13;
6. and BIll West. 142. who Ilad a&#13;
12·2 advantage over George&#13;
Dodger. At Louisiana Stale&#13;
Uni\'ersity, Parkside lost again&#13;
2'1-12. Ken Martin pinned his&#13;
man, while Joe Landers won over&#13;
Otarles Cusimano H~5. and Rico&#13;
Sa\'aglio beat TrIStan Junius t2·5.&#13;
Season records lor the top&#13;
matmen are Ken Martin s.-o Bill&#13;
West H. Rico Savaglio IH: Joe&#13;
Landers 2.Q and Kyle Barnes 6-2.&#13;
Skiers 2nd in state&#13;
The Ragtime Ranger Ski Team&#13;
took second in the State at Sunburst&#13;
the 13th. Winning were Rick&#13;
Sereno, Bob Wingate, Jerry&#13;
Ruflolo, Mike Pobar and Andy&#13;
Hewitt. The trophy was&#13;
Parkside lor the trophy case.&#13;
1701 . Main Racine 633-9421&#13;
Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
Thursday 11- 8&#13;
TAP&#13;
BEER 15q:&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches&#13;
Foosball 2 Pool Tables&#13;
Air Conditioning Pinball Machine&#13;
Cold Six Packs To Go&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
Parkside Activities Board presents&#13;
TOURNAMENTS&#13;
BILLIAR CHESS&#13;
entry fee enter by&#13;
enter by Jan. 19 Jan. 26&#13;
Register: Student Activities Office&#13;
Room 0 197 LLC&#13;
Jan. 22&#13;
thru&#13;
Feb. 2&#13;
Jan.&#13;
26,27,28&#13;
5 Round Swiss&#13;
entry fee&#13;
Sl°O&#13;
~~flIU~t~~1QCLA.&#13;
SSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
ClassIfied Advertising Rate - 5 cents per word up to 25 words for each insertion CHECK ENCLCl&gt;EDFOR $&#13;
Payable in advance by check or cash to: .&#13;
The Parkside Ranger DATES(S) TO RUN -&#13;
Business Office To find your cost, multiply the&#13;
D-I94 LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
number of words times 5&#13;
cents. Multiply that total by&#13;
NAME&#13;
the number of issues you want&#13;
it to run.&#13;
ADDRESS DATE - CITY&#13;
One word per space&#13;
PHONE NO. - Do not skip spac e b e tween words to show spacing&#13;
- ~ ~ ,. -.-&#13;
•••••&#13;
!,,,-_.&#13;
RANGERSports&#13;
uw-r cyclist 4th in race&#13;
Dan Werve, a cyclist attending&#13;
Parkside, placed fourth in the&#13;
Mid-Eastern Championship&#13;
Bicycle Race at Ohio State&#13;
University, Jan. 7.&#13;
Taking lourth in both the 1500&#13;
meter time trial and match&#13;
sprints, he competed against 38&#13;
riders from allover tile East and&#13;
Mid-west, with a number 01&#13;
national champions in the 1'\11-&#13;
ning.&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA ACROSS fROM HOLIDAY INN&#13;
Easter Break&#13;
APRil 21-29&#13;
Only $249&#13;
includes: plus S20tax end ~rvlct&#13;
• Round Trip Jet&#13;
• Luxury Apartment&#13;
• Daily Car Rental&#13;
• Sangria Party&#13;
• All Tips &amp; Transfers&#13;
saVED IN THE ATMOSPHERE&#13;
Of THE »e- ~~l~~-;;4'&#13;
..uJ&lt;'::J ""nIL jJ&#13;
_ BOTH UNDER. SAMEOWNUSHrp-&#13;
In Four Sius ". - lr . 14" - 16"&#13;
'''0 • RIBS' Sp.-.CHHTI • CHICKEN&#13;
• GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI' LA SJl.GHA&#13;
• SEA FOOD' SAJ"IDWICHES&#13;
CARlY-OUTS _ DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU RING ... WE BR.ING"&#13;
657·9843 or 658·4922 For information and applicatIons conltel&#13;
Travel Center LLC D-197&#13;
5140 6tk AVE. 553-2279&#13;
Next Week: Jan. 24, 1 - 3 p.m.&#13;
NICKElODEON:&#13;
"Gold Rush" - Charlie Chaplin&#13;
"Tit for Tat" - Laurel &amp; Hardy&#13;
"Golf Specia I" - W. C. Fields&#13;
(South lounge - Greenquist Hall)&#13;
WED.- JAN. 17 1:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.&#13;
.Li&lt;Je ~e4 {eat«"iH.9&#13;
~'Aiu&#13;
...&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Jan. 17, 1973&#13;
t&#13;
rs snap loss string&#13;
win over Aquinas ~,RANGER&#13;
Sports&#13;
r r&#13;
on&#13;
er&#13;
tl rs defeated&#13;
outhern trip&#13;
who d; po nt to hi opponent·_&#13;
• a Bill W t, 142, who had a&#13;
12-2 advantage O\'er George&#13;
Dodger. t Loui iana tate&#13;
niver ·ity, Park ide I ·t a ain&#13;
27-12. Ken fartin pinned hi&#13;
man, v.ilileJoe Lander v.on over&#13;
arl - Cu ·mano 10-5, and Rico&#13;
v lio beat TrUa Jun· 12-5&#13;
• n r ord~ fo the top&#13;
matmen are K n tartin 8-0, Bill&#13;
W t 7-1, Rico avaglio 6-1, Joe&#13;
Lander · 2-0 and Kyle Barnes 6-2.&#13;
The Park ide basketeers were&#13;
defeated by UW-Platteville on&#13;
Jan. 6 in an overtime game 82-78 .&#13;
The Rangers had forged ahead to&#13;
a seven-point halftime lead 33-26,&#13;
but Platteville came charging&#13;
back to tie the score at 72 apiece&#13;
at the end of regulation time. The&#13;
big gun for Platteville was Steve&#13;
Kundert who scored a collegiate&#13;
career high of 35 points, including&#13;
4 of Platteville's 10 overtime&#13;
poin • while helping to bold&#13;
Par ide to only ix extra period&#13;
tallies.&#13;
One of the main factors in the&#13;
outcome of the game wa that&#13;
Gar. Cole only ored three&#13;
point and wa fouled out in the&#13;
early going. The Rangers were&#13;
led by like Hanke with 24 points,&#13;
Chuck Chambli with 23&#13;
markers and Tim Dolan who&#13;
rimmed 16.&#13;
The Ran ers were also beaten&#13;
b) TW-Gr en Ba; by a roll-over&#13;
ore of 68-36 at Green Ba . The&#13;
cag rs had a hard time finding&#13;
the h p, inking only 21 percent&#13;
of their ho , while Green Ba&#13;
hot aJmo t 50 percent from the&#13;
floor .&#13;
Hi¢1 point man for Parkside&#13;
w hke Hanke v.;th 13 poin ,&#13;
·bile Chuck Chambli was held&#13;
to only one point and Gary Cole&#13;
sat out the game with a broken&#13;
finger.&#13;
kier 2nd in state&#13;
The Ragtime Ranger ki Team&#13;
took . econd in the tate at Sunbur&#13;
t the 13th.\ 'inni g ·ere Rick&#13;
ereno, Bob Wingate. Jerry&#13;
Ruffolo, like Pobar and Andv&#13;
Hewitt. The trophv was&#13;
Parkside for the trophy· case.&#13;
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ir Conditionin,g Pinball ;\1achine&#13;
Cold Sllc Pack To Go ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••&#13;
UW-P cyclist 4th in race&#13;
Dan \Verve, a cyclist attending&#13;
Parkside, placed fourth in the&#13;
fid-Eastern Championship&#13;
Bicycle Race at Ohio State&#13;
University, Jan. 7.&#13;
Taking fourth in both the 1500&#13;
meter time triaJ and match&#13;
sprints, he competed against 38&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
ACROSS FROM HOLIDAY INN&#13;
suvro IN TH£ ATMOSPHERE&#13;
Of THE fiaJJ't~,· J. tcci "1 art&#13;
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riders from aJl over the East and&#13;
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national champions in the running.&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
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Special , • • I ,.&#13;
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includes: plus $20 tax and Hrvlct&#13;
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For information and applications cont t&#13;
Travel Center LLC D-197&#13;
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{South lounge - Greenquist Hall)&#13;
WED. - JAN. 17 1 :00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.&#13;
~~ ~ea ~1i"'9&#13;
~ ·Aeu&#13;
Next Week: Jon. 24, 1 - 3 p.m.&#13;
NICKELODEON:&#13;
"Gold Rush" - Charlie Chaplin&#13;
"Tit for Tat" - Laurel &amp; Hardy&#13;
"Golf Special" - W. C. Fields&#13;
.4tue ~ad~&#13;
~&amp;w,1"«'&#13;
Activities Board presents CL~_SSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM TOUR&#13;
BILL AR&#13;
J n.22&#13;
thru&#13;
Feb.2&#13;
ntry ee $po&#13;
enter by Jan. 19&#13;
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CHESS&#13;
Jan.&#13;
26,27,28&#13;
5 Round Swiss&#13;
entry fee&#13;
s100&#13;
enter by&#13;
Jan. 26&#13;
Register: Student Activities Office&#13;
Room O 197 LLC&#13;
Class1f1ed Advertising Rate - 5 cents per word up to 25 words for ea h . .&#13;
p b · c insertion CHECK ENCLalED FOR $ aya le m advance by check or cash to: .&#13;
The Parkside Ranger DATES(S) TO RUN&#13;
Business Office To find your cost, multiply the&#13;
D-lS4 LLC UW-Pa rkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis_ 53140&#13;
number of words times 5&#13;
cents. Multiply that total by&#13;
NAME ~he number of issues you want&#13;
1t to run.&#13;
ADDRESS&#13;
DATE&#13;
CITY&#13;
One word per space PHONE NO. -&#13;
Do not skip spac b t e e ween words to show spacing&#13;
-&#13;
- .&#13;
__.....&#13;
__.....&#13;
~ ____.&#13;
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