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              <text>Students present concert today</text>
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              <text>The Parkside-&#13;
RAIMGER&#13;
Wednesday April 18, 1973 Vol. 1 No. 26&#13;
Parkside music students will&#13;
present a free public concert at 8&#13;
p.m. today at the Kenosha&#13;
Campus Fine Arts Room.&#13;
The program will include&#13;
awarding of the first Lillian&#13;
James Scholarship to an outstanding&#13;
music student. The&#13;
scholarship was established by&#13;
the music faculty last fall to&#13;
honor Mrs. James, who retired at&#13;
the end of the 1971-72 school year.&#13;
Mrs. James, who lives at 2419&#13;
Carmel Ave., Racine, will&#13;
present the award.&#13;
Instrumental soloists will be&#13;
Debbie Peronne, piano, 7938 38th&#13;
Ave., Kenosha, and Phillip Ince,&#13;
violoncello, 3130 Southwood&#13;
Drive, Racine. Vocal soloists will&#13;
be Christine Jenkins, soprano,&#13;
1808 25th St., Kenosha; Ron&#13;
Benedict, baritone, 1809 Ellis&#13;
Ave., Racine; Chris Roland,&#13;
baritone, 1910 Grange Ave.,&#13;
Racine; Trudy Sheridan, alto,&#13;
11727 Washington Ave., Sturtevant;&#13;
Bea Jacobson, soprano,&#13;
614 Washington Circle, Waterford;&#13;
and Fred Luft, tenor,&#13;
Fredonia.&#13;
Soprano Judith Lanning, 2514&#13;
Rosalind Ave., Racine, also will&#13;
sing, accompanied by a cello&#13;
quartet including Mary Manulik,&#13;
7830 38th St., Kenosha; Ince;&#13;
Marty Fettes, 1431 Thurston&#13;
Ave., Racine; and Sue&#13;
Kraschnewski, 3304 Valley&#13;
Forge, Racine.&#13;
Also programmed are a&#13;
saxophone quartet including&#13;
Mailing &amp; Duplicating&#13;
services available&#13;
By Kathryn Wellner&#13;
There are several services&#13;
available to students, staff and&#13;
faculty down in D218 of the&#13;
Library-Learning Center.&#13;
The Central Mailroom is open&#13;
from 7:45 a.m., through the lunch&#13;
hour, until 4:30 p.m. Deliveries&#13;
are made to the post office from&#13;
Parkside at 12:30 p.m. and 3:15&#13;
p.m.&#13;
According to Richard L.&#13;
Flahive, supervisor, the&#13;
mailroom will be a postal substation&#13;
which can sell stamps in&#13;
both row and book form by July.&#13;
Personal mailing may be done&#13;
through the mailroom. Persons&#13;
receiving packages through the&#13;
mail should leave an area where&#13;
they may be reached. A name,&#13;
division and telephone number&#13;
are helpful in notifying persons of&#13;
receipt of their package.&#13;
There is United Parce Service&#13;
available through the mailroom,&#13;
but since there is a fee, use of the&#13;
service must be authorized&#13;
through some department or&#13;
division, said Flahive.&#13;
Also available is the&#13;
duplicating service. In the area of&#13;
self-service, there is a mimeo&#13;
duplicator and a wet copy&#13;
process which will copy books.&#13;
These are not meant to replace&#13;
the vending type copiers, but if a&#13;
student can get authorization&#13;
from a department or division to&#13;
do duplicating related to a&#13;
project or other school related&#13;
activity, he may use the service.&#13;
The Duplicating Shop, not a&#13;
printing shop, is classified by the&#13;
state as class C, which limits the&#13;
tasks which may be performed&#13;
there. For example, Flahive&#13;
explained that they are limited in&#13;
the number of copies they may&#13;
make per master.&#13;
Small programs and posters&#13;
can be done through Duplicating.&#13;
The item to be duplicated must be&#13;
ready for shooting, which means&#13;
it must be in black, because the&#13;
electrostatic master maker only&#13;
picks up black.&#13;
If assistance is needed setting&#13;
up a poster or program, help is&#13;
available at the Duplicating&#13;
Shop. For assistance with&#13;
graphic arts, such things as the&#13;
logo and its use, Rita Petretti&#13;
should be contacted.&#13;
According to Flahive, the turnaround&#13;
rate at Duplicating is&#13;
eight hours. A l arge job, like 55&#13;
masters, 25 copies each, must be&#13;
scheduled. However, one master&#13;
for 25 copies can be taken care of&#13;
quickly.&#13;
Again, this duplicating service&#13;
is available with departmental&#13;
(divisional) authorization.&#13;
The size limitations on items&#13;
which may be done at&#13;
Duplicating are from 3x5 cards to&#13;
13V4X8V2.&#13;
There will be no RANGER next week because of&#13;
spring break. The next RANGER will appear May 2.&#13;
The RANGER staff wishes you a happy spring vacation.&#13;
SusanLasco, Rt. 2, Salem; Mark&#13;
Maney, 20320 Kathrine St., Wind&#13;
Lake; Chris McMahon, 6723 22nd&#13;
Ave., Kenosha; and Jeffery&#13;
Christman, 8064 47th Ct.,&#13;
Kenosha; a flute duet including&#13;
Miss Lasco and Linda Truax, 5815&#13;
Pershing Blvd., Kenosha; and a&#13;
seven-clarinet ensemble including&#13;
Sr. Mary Dunstan, Box&#13;
310, Kenosha; Susan Johnson,&#13;
1726 27th St., Kenosha; Hermina&#13;
Jaeger, 325 Lincoln, Wausau; Pat&#13;
Engal, 2435 S. Chicago, South&#13;
Milwaukee; Susan Friederich,&#13;
1121 Jefferson, St., Racine; Mark&#13;
Redlin, 417 Blaine Ave., Racine;&#13;
and Tom Zager, 6845 Hy. 31,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Bookstore hours&#13;
The following are the&#13;
Bookstore's Spring Break hours:&#13;
Friday, April 20 - 9 a.m. to noon;&#13;
Saturday and Sunday, April 21-22&#13;
- closed; Monday through&#13;
Thursday, April 23-26 - 9 a.m. to&#13;
4:30 p.m.; Friday, April 27 - 9&#13;
a.m. to 1 p.m.; Saturday and&#13;
Sunday, April 28-29 - closed; and&#13;
Monday, April 30 - resume normal&#13;
hours.&#13;
Lake alert&#13;
Professors awarded&#13;
fellowships&#13;
Students present concert today&#13;
Two assistant professors of&#13;
engineering science in the School&#13;
of Modern Industry, Walter Feldt&#13;
and John Zarling, have been&#13;
awarded NASA-ASEE (National&#13;
Aeronautics and Space Administration-&#13;
American Society&#13;
for Electrical Engineering)&#13;
Summer Faculty Fellowships.&#13;
The fellowships will support&#13;
participation by the pair in the&#13;
Stanford-Ames Engineering&#13;
Systems Design Program at&#13;
Stanford University June 18&#13;
through August 31. They will join&#13;
a team of 20 scholars from&#13;
throughout the United States at&#13;
Stanford to develop an advanced&#13;
design for forest-fire fighting in&#13;
cooperation with the U.S. Forest&#13;
Service and the California&#13;
Division of Forestry.&#13;
Both Feldt and Zarling are&#13;
registered professional engineers&#13;
in the state of Wisconsin. Feldt&#13;
earned his Ph.D. degree at&#13;
Northwestern University and&#13;
Zarling at Michigan&#13;
Technological University.&#13;
See Inside&#13;
Photo by Ken Konkol&#13;
Special Travel Feature&#13;
page 7&#13;
Shoreline erosion discussed&#13;
By Kathryn Wellner&#13;
Shoreline erosion, a problem of concern for many&#13;
Racine residents, was last of the three issues to be&#13;
discussed at the Lake Michigan Alert Conference.&#13;
Curt Larsen of the Lake Michigan Federation&#13;
presented a series of slides depicting various things&#13;
associated with erosion.&#13;
Erosion, Larsen explained, is a natural process&#13;
which occurs for many reasons. There are four&#13;
main variables kgown to increase shore erosion:&#13;
lake level fluctuations, denial of sediment to the&#13;
shore by dam construction, frequency of low&#13;
pressure cells which cross the lake, and man-made&#13;
shore structures.&#13;
The first two of these variables can be considered&#13;
negligible in Lake Michigan. No great amount of&#13;
sediment has been furnished to the lake since late&#13;
Pleistocene times, and although the lake levels are&#13;
commonly blamed for erosion, they have actually&#13;
undergone an overall decrease.&#13;
In the Great Lakes, Lake Michigan-Huron offers a&#13;
case where only two of the four variables appear to&#13;
be active.&#13;
Recent studies by Fox and Davis (1970) have&#13;
looked critically at the effects of changes in atmospheric&#13;
pressure. There is a close relationship&#13;
between wave height and wind direction with shore&#13;
erosion. A drop in atmospheric pressure is followed&#13;
by increased wave height and a change in wind&#13;
direction. Rapid erosion may result from a single&#13;
severe storm.&#13;
In a longer period of study, Seibel (1972) has&#13;
shown that the frequency of low pressure cells&#13;
crossing the lake have remained relatively constant&#13;
during the recorded history of the region. Periods of&#13;
intense erosion may be connected with the passage&#13;
of a low pressure cell. This meteorological variable&#13;
is nearly constant, and may be considered&#13;
separately from cultural ones.&#13;
Most of Larsen's discussion of erosion centered&#13;
around the cultural variable of man-made shore&#13;
structures.&#13;
Larsen explained to the conference that if the&#13;
critical distance at which a wave breaks off shore is&#13;
responsible for the magnitude of erosion or&#13;
deposition at the beach, then erosion will continue&#13;
until a beach platform and-or bar system is formed&#13;
at that point. When this happens, the amount of&#13;
sediment supplied to the beach by incoming waves&#13;
is about equal to the amount removed.&#13;
In Lake Michigan, there is a general north to&#13;
south movement of sediment due in part to northeastern&#13;
on-shore winds. To maintain a beach in&#13;
this location, there must be a near constatn volume&#13;
of sediment moving along the shore. If this&#13;
sediment is restricted or diverted, erosion will&#13;
result. This would occur naturally during severe&#13;
continued on page 4&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER W ed. / A pri l 1 8 / 1 973&#13;
The Parkside "RANGER&#13;
Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Safety precautions&#13;
needed for cyclists&#13;
Spring is sprung/&#13;
The grass is riz;&#13;
we wonder where&#13;
The bikers is.&#13;
Vacation necessary now?&#13;
Spring break begins in two days and it is hard to&#13;
fathom why we would have a vacation with only two&#13;
weeks of school left.&#13;
If only one day were allotted for Easter, the rest of the&#13;
time could be chopped off t he end of the year. A longer&#13;
summer break would be very welcome.&#13;
The summer break wouldn't be the only good point. If&#13;
there were no long break for Easter, finals would follow&#13;
with more continuity. That long break gives students the&#13;
tendency to put things off until later.&#13;
Another possibility is to hold a break sometime in&#13;
March. That is approximately midway in the second&#13;
semester.&#13;
But now that we do have a break coming up and the&#13;
Ranger has offered a couple of s uggestions that might&#13;
reform the vacations in the future, we would like to wish&#13;
everyone a happy and healthy vacation.&#13;
Wherever they are, we feel sure that bike riders will&#13;
soon be out en masse, as will motorcyclists and hikers&#13;
And since nothing could be more of a bummer than&#13;
getting knocked off by some hot-shot in a Super-Chevy&#13;
and spending the summer in a body cast, we feel a&#13;
moment's reflection on safety is in order.&#13;
All we're really asking for is common sense from&#13;
everybody. Anyone who has or had a driver's license&#13;
knows how to watch out for others; it's just a matter of&#13;
applying the knowledge. But, too, it involves restraint&#13;
for some who would play juvenile games with human&#13;
lives for the sake of amusement. We refer to those&#13;
cyclists who weave back and forth across the road, or&#13;
ride no hands," or those motorists who get their kicks&#13;
from passing pedestrians or bike riders with a quarter&#13;
of an inch to spare.&#13;
Around Parkside we have some special problems to&#13;
watch out for. We already have an excessive number of&#13;
cars arriving and leaving throughout the day; we can&#13;
expect a large number of b ikes also. Because we are out&#13;
in the county, speed limits on surrounding roads are&#13;
higher than in the city. Wood Road is both narrow and&#13;
winding but very popular with cyclists. These factors&#13;
and others call for increased caution from all. Whatever&#13;
your mode of getting here, we hope you each make it in&#13;
one piece.&#13;
Yoo gotta be&#13;
Wander&#13;
Manic Mage,&#13;
Speed Queen,&#13;
Hot-Ripped)&#13;
Loose-lipp*d)&#13;
Constantly «n&#13;
Heat, and&#13;
) Sexually&#13;
Flexible.&#13;
That's vat ya&#13;
gotta d© ta&#13;
be a&#13;
rock musician!&#13;
Money and jobs seem tighter than ever before on campus. The&#13;
present budget period runs out June 30, a nd department heads are&#13;
hard-pressed to make job commitments without knowing the status of&#13;
the next budget.&#13;
For many readers the upcoming summer will be very frustrating in&#13;
the area of jub-hunting. If i ndications prove to be reliable, this summer's&#13;
job market will be worse than that of last year. That will be&#13;
remarkably bad.&#13;
Those readers who have jobs are rather lucky, especially if they&#13;
aren't phased out of their job in the nar future. Those without jobs will&#13;
have a rough time of it.&#13;
Between the President's slashes in educational grants and Governor&#13;
Lucey's innept view of what value public education has, government&#13;
has all but stilfed the educational ambitions of thousands of students.&#13;
This campus has been hit as hard, if not harder, than any school in&#13;
the system. I don't know of a department that is well off enough to take&#13;
on more student help. There are departments which are waiting for&#13;
people to quit so that their payroll burden decreases. The empty&#13;
position would, most likely, not be filled.&#13;
"Austerity" is a dirty word to people who have to employ students in&#13;
order to keep their operation going. If t he UW system wants to attract&#13;
students to its schools, it had better start playing ball with the&#13;
students. The system must put the kind of money necessary into the&#13;
hands of the people who must hire students. The state just cannot&#13;
quarrel that that would be a return investment.&#13;
The Parkside RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of&#13;
Kenosha, Wis consin 5 3140. Offices are located AT n IQA T H&#13;
Learning Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295 Library-&#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;
MATURE EDITOR: Jane Schliesman&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Kris Koch&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Jerry Murphv&#13;
WPITPP4 ' irl! ! ' Feed Lawrence&#13;
SiPSm3' He,mUt K3h' Bi"&#13;
ADVISER: Don Kopriva wrence, Ken Konkol, Rudy Lienau ?V..'"P:,ESTBD F* NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY&#13;
National Educational Advertising Services, Inc. V&#13;
360 Lexington Avt., New York, N. i\ 10017&#13;
rH-i-H-i&#13;
ev .&#13;
Rudy LiENaq.!&#13;
Wed., April 18, 1973 T HE PARKSIDE KANUtK J&#13;
THORN By Konkol&#13;
THORN has accomplished something. Long ago, maybe as long ago&#13;
as last semester, I mentioned that there were student organizations on&#13;
campus that needed office space and that there were a lot of office&#13;
spaces on the third floor of the library that needed tenants. Finally,&#13;
through the efforts of PSGA, this has been accomplished. Those&#13;
organizations which can justify the need for campus office space may&#13;
apply for some through the president of PSGA.&#13;
There is a clear and present need for a check cashing service on&#13;
campus. The bookstore cannot perform this service since they do not&#13;
keep that kind of money on hand. Maybe the business office would&#13;
have something to suggest.&#13;
Due to an unfortunate run of circumstances, the Archives is short&#13;
one copy of the December 3, 1970, issue of NEWSCOPE. If any of you&#13;
readers happen to have a spare copy lying around that you no longer&#13;
need to hold on to, I and Nicholas Burckel would appreciate you&#13;
dropping it off.&#13;
Being a writer for a newspaper can be frustrating at times. There&#13;
are always deadlines to meet, sources to consult and people to interview.&#13;
And after all that, there is the pouring of the soul into writing&#13;
a piece to appear.&#13;
After it is all done, you have reached a plateau where you rest until&#13;
the next time, a plateau where the rest is sometimes not very long, due&#13;
to what happens when the article is submitted. The editors get hold of&#13;
it.&#13;
It can be frustrating at times to have poured your soul into what you&#13;
think is a very good piece of writing, only to have an editor come along&#13;
and change your whole meaning with a word change he feels is more&#13;
appropriate.&#13;
At times I have had to argue half an hour over a minor change which&#13;
would have changed the whole idea I had spent half a page in&#13;
developing, only to have an editor destroy a good part of the foundation&#13;
with what he feels was a minor correction.&#13;
I have had the most important parts of articles deleted for space by&#13;
editors who are in a hurry, with the result that all the important information&#13;
was nicely cut while all that remained was a lot of&#13;
meaningless drivil, foundation on which rested no structure.&#13;
To avoid a lot of die anguish, I just don't write as much as I used to.&#13;
At times in the past my stories and articles might have taken up 2xk&#13;
pages of an eight-page newspaper. These days, I restrict myself to&#13;
doing the photography for the paper and this column.&#13;
As far as the photography goes, my editor and I are of varying&#13;
philosophies. He feels credit should be given only on certain types of&#13;
photos, while I feel that every picture, no matter what it is of, should&#13;
have the source listed — eve n if that source is only the Public Information&#13;
office. After all, how are you gonna attract more&#13;
photographers if they aren't going to get credit for their work? Also, it&#13;
is a small ego trip to see your name in pri nt.&#13;
I think it makes most people who work for the paper feel good when&#13;
complete strangers come up to them to comment on an article they&#13;
wrote or something else which appears in this paper. It does me, every&#13;
time. Most people like to get credit for things they've worked hard on.&#13;
I for one would like to get credit for every picture of mine that appears,&#13;
including those in "Ranger Asks."&#13;
I have stated that my editor has a philosophy different from mine in&#13;
how a story or article should be written. I tend more to letting a writer&#13;
express himself in his own style in articles which are not strictly of the&#13;
informational type. My editor would like to see the whole paper&#13;
maintain a uniform style.&#13;
Style is something which largely depends on the whim of the person&#13;
in charge. No two papers in the country have styles which are exactly&#13;
alike. At times, this seeming arbitrary way of doing things gets on my&#13;
nerves. In my opinion I feel an article of this type, in which the author&#13;
is personally responsible for every word which appears, should consist&#13;
of entirely the words of the author, without change of content by the&#13;
editor. Such changes interfere with the writer's established style.&#13;
An example of a minor change which happened last week which&#13;
might have changed the inferences drawn in some reader's mind was&#13;
the changing of the term "chairman" to "chairperson."&#13;
In my mind, chairman is the head of a committee. "Chairwoman"&#13;
may be allowed where the committee by its very makeup would&#13;
always have a woman at its head. Using such reasoning, Gloria&#13;
Steinem is chairwoman of a woman's liberation group while Francis&#13;
Bedford is chairman of the Lecture and Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
There is no such thing as "chairperson." By my definition such a&#13;
thing would have to be in charge of a committee, yet be neither male&#13;
nor female. Such a thing does not exist.&#13;
I see no reason for some suffragettes to be offended by the term&#13;
chairman. After all, -man used as a suffix in this instance is a shortened&#13;
form of the word human, and I do not think any woman pictures&#13;
herself as being apart from the human race.&#13;
Gee, I just know what I have said is going to offend a lot of femmlibbers&#13;
who are only going to see the surface of what I wrote and not&#13;
delve into the philosophy behind that statement.&#13;
There is a s logan, "Anatomy is not Destiny," which some women&#13;
hold as sort of the first commandment. I cannot see the point of it. I&#13;
know of no woman who has ever become a father. I rather feel that&#13;
"Each man (or woman) controls his own destiny."&#13;
Course offered to study China&#13;
Madison - An experimental&#13;
course to study education in the&#13;
People's Republic of China will&#13;
be offered for the first time&#13;
during the 1973 sum mer session&#13;
at the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Madison June 11-Aug. 4.&#13;
China specialist Albert H. Yee&#13;
•&#13;
of the department of curriculum&#13;
and instruction and Andreas M.&#13;
Kazamias of educational policy&#13;
studies, an authority on comparative&#13;
and international&#13;
education, will teach the 2-3&#13;
credit course.&#13;
The class is Professor Yee's&#13;
response to the wide public interest&#13;
taken in his recent 16-day&#13;
visit to the PRC. A thirdgeneration&#13;
American whose&#13;
ancestors came from China, he&#13;
was the first American&#13;
psychologist and education&#13;
researcher to visit Mainland&#13;
China after the thaw. He maintains&#13;
that his heritage helps him&#13;
relate professionally and personally&#13;
to both Chinese and&#13;
Americans.&#13;
Professor Kazamias was born&#13;
on Cyprus of Greek parents and&#13;
educated at the University of&#13;
Bristol, England, and at Harvard.&#13;
He offered the first UW&#13;
summer institute in international&#13;
education to study the problems&#13;
in African, Near Eastern, and&#13;
Asian education.&#13;
Professors Yee and Kazamias&#13;
will examine the background and&#13;
development of all levels of&#13;
education in China today,&#13;
devoting some class time to the&#13;
ways elementary and secondary&#13;
teachers can help students learn&#13;
more about China. Films, slides,&#13;
discussions, and readings will be&#13;
included. Students wishing to&#13;
earn three credits will submit a&#13;
written report.&#13;
The course does not require&#13;
prior background in Chinese&#13;
studies, according to Professor&#13;
Yee, who will supply additional&#13;
information at 262-3764.&#13;
We get letters....&#13;
Dear Editors:&#13;
A friend and I traveled to&#13;
Parkside especially to hear the&#13;
"Two Bit Poetry Forum"&#13;
honoring Harlow Mills last week.&#13;
The readings were excellent&#13;
though difficult to hear. The noisy&#13;
food machines and chatting&#13;
snackers were hardly a compatable&#13;
background for the lovely&#13;
word pictures of Tagore, the&#13;
whimsicalities of Emily&#13;
Dickinson, even e.e. cummings!&#13;
Joyce Dana&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Marylene Dosse's Saint-Saens&#13;
Piano Recital on April 8,1973 was&#13;
very exhilerating. I hope such,&#13;
weekend cultural entertainment&#13;
will be continued.&#13;
The recital also made possible&#13;
!an enjoyable encounter with&#13;
three piano students from&#13;
Burlington. The three were a&#13;
woman and her two daughters,&#13;
all with pleasant dispositions,&#13;
who made the day's event more&#13;
satisfying.&#13;
By keeping Parkside's entertainment&#13;
calibre high, many&#13;
good people will be attracted&#13;
here. Quality events will also&#13;
make our mental environment&#13;
less polluted.&#13;
Jerry Jarapko&#13;
Racine&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
To the members and interested&#13;
pledges of Sigma Pi Fraternity.&#13;
The Brothers of the Beta Lambda&#13;
Chapter of Alpha Kappa Lambda&#13;
Fraternity, congratulate you on&#13;
your observation of AKL activities.&#13;
If this is all the Sigma Pi&#13;
colony does for college service&#13;
and promotion of Greek&#13;
Brotherhood, AKL is surprised&#13;
and astonished. We congratulate&#13;
you on your newspaper reporting.&#13;
~ " Jim Gaastra&#13;
AKL Sergeant of Arms&#13;
P.S. Sigma Pi are you watching?&#13;
CONDOMINIUMS&#13;
GRAND&#13;
OPENING DECORATED AND FURNISHED&#13;
MODEL APARTMENTS&#13;
OPEN HOUSE&#13;
Weekdays 1 to 8&#13;
Weekends 1 to 5&#13;
30th Avenue at Birch Road&#13;
THE NEWEST CONDOMINIUM&#13;
HOMES ARE IN KENOSHA&#13;
You're minutes away from a better way of life.&#13;
Birchwood Condominiums. All the advantages of&#13;
home ownership, with the carefree convenience of&#13;
a luxury apartment. A wide selection of home&#13;
styles and sizes, with:&#13;
Air conditioning&#13;
Luxurious carpeting&#13;
Electric range, self cleaning oven&#13;
Frost free refrigerator&#13;
Dishwasher&#13;
Food waste disposal&#13;
Central FM/TV antenna&#13;
Private patio, balcony or townhouse court&#13;
Heated swimming pool&#13;
Country clubhouse, rec center, sauna&#13;
1 and 2 bedroom Ranch Style&#13;
from $19,500 to $27,000&#13;
2 and 3 bedroom Townhouses&#13;
from $28,000 to $34,000&#13;
For a personal appointment or more information&#13;
PHONE 552-9339&#13;
PARK5IDE REALTY INC.&#13;
Developed arid Built by United States General Inc.&#13;
HAVE A HAPPY&#13;
SPRING BREAK!&#13;
• » &gt; V • , M y / V • ' - - . »&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed.. April 18, 1973&#13;
Movemenl*&#13;
Council Of wL .t.0"' comp,le&lt;1 *&gt;y the Wisconsin Coord inating&#13;
haveten adrdLl ^\EdUCa°0n (WCC«™). Ca.l number!&#13;
A co mplete hihlil^ if6 ^ availab,e from the Parkside library,&#13;
women il lvaUaMe luh^w 0nr,"^ary'8 holdings on the status of&#13;
or from the^omen's^ancu's S "S ^^ "*»*&#13;
LIBERATE YOUR BOOKCASE&#13;
AH RO F0R UNDER SIXTY DOLLARS&#13;
*BEeZ2n'Sif k9„&amp;UP Argai°"aSt the Wa"' Mother- GI«coe. $2.95 d e ' T h e s e c o n d s e x- B a n t a m- 9 5 c&#13;
HQH2(i.BC5ar0line' B°rn Female' ReV' 6d- Pocket Books- $1-25.&#13;
El85.86.'cS°n1' 1116 BIaCk Woman: An Anthology. Signet. 95c.&#13;
DDaavviiss,' FEllitzTabheotthH Gro' u^ld, i TlfhWe FWiormste nS-e xE.a Pwecnegttu. i9n5. c$. 1H.4Q51 426.C65&#13;
Ejlerson, Mette, I Accuse. Award. 95c. HQ46. E38&#13;
HD6W5e.E64Cynthia FUChS' Woman's Place- u- °f Cal- Press. $2.45.&#13;
Sf; Eva,™a!riarchal Attitudes. Fawcett. 95c. HQ1 121 F53&#13;
HQ1426.F28' hUlam"h' The Dialectic of Sex. Bantam. $1.25.&#13;
Friedan, Betty, The Feminine Mystique. Dell. $1.25 HQ1420 F7&#13;
Greer Germaine, The Female Eunuch. Bantam $1.95&#13;
Gormck Vivian, Woman in Sexist Society. Signet. $1.95&#13;
Graves Robert, The White Goddess. Rev. ed. Noonday. $2.25&#13;
Hays, Elinor Rice, Lucy Stone. Tower. 95c&#13;
5ayS'^!.' R"1116 Dangerous Sex. Pocket Books. $1.25. HQ21 H37&#13;
HQmiCH4erger' RUth' Adam'S Rib' Harber-Row Books 95c.&#13;
HQUMJ?' EHZabeth' Man'S WorId' Woman's Place. Delta. $2.65.&#13;
KrarHtnr' LAU?y' T New Feminism. Paperback Library. $1.25&#13;
HQH10 K7' Fr°m 1116 PedestaL Quadrangle. $2.95.&#13;
^ G0'de" NOteb°°k' Ballantine-&#13;
Mo~:".aS:sl"5itinBs From the women's Lib"rati»a&#13;
Ludovici, L.J., The Final Inequality. Tower. 95c&#13;
Millet, Kate, Sexual Politics. Equinox. $2.95. HQ 1154.M5&#13;
Morgan, Robin, Sisterhood is Powerful. Vintage. $2.45. HQ1426.M85&#13;
New York City Commission on Human Rights, Women's Role in&#13;
Contemporary Society. Discus. $2.45&#13;
Roszak, Betty and Theodore, Masculine-Feminine. Harper&#13;
Colophon. $2.45 . HQ115 4.R75&#13;
Schneir, Miriam, Feminism: The Essential Historical Writings&#13;
Vintage. $2.45 6 '&#13;
Stambler, Sookie, Women's Liberation; Blueprint for the Future&#13;
Ace. 95c. HQ1426.S78&#13;
Stannard, Una, The New Pamela; or, Virtue Unrewarded&#13;
Ballantine. 95c&#13;
Tanner, Leslie B., Voices From Women's Liberation. Signet. $1.50.&#13;
HQ1426.T3&#13;
Ware, Cellestine, Woman Power. Tower. 95c. HQ1426.W36&#13;
Wasserman, Barbara Alson, The Bold New Women. Fawcett. 95c&#13;
Time utilization&#13;
studied in&#13;
Madison&#13;
Madison - University of&#13;
Wisconsin System faculty&#13;
members spend from 13 to 15&#13;
hours a week in face-to-face&#13;
teaching of students, according to&#13;
the first study made of faculty&#13;
time utilization in the new&#13;
system.&#13;
In addition to face-to-face&#13;
contact, which includes time&#13;
spent both in teaching organized&#13;
credit classes and in individualized&#13;
credit instruction,&#13;
faculty spend an additional 32 to&#13;
35 hours a week in the primary&#13;
activity associated with teaching.&#13;
This includes course preparation,&#13;
student evaluation, academic&#13;
advising, committee and&#13;
departmental work, and&#13;
development of courses. Thus,&#13;
for every hour spent in actual&#13;
teaching, another 2% hours is&#13;
spent in activities supporting that&#13;
teaching, the study indicates.&#13;
The study shows that time&#13;
devoted to teaching occupies by&#13;
far the greatest amount of faculty&#13;
time at all ranks and at all&#13;
campuses-from an average of 85&#13;
percent at the doctoral campuses&#13;
to an average of 95 percent at the&#13;
primarily undergraduate&#13;
campuses. On the doctoral&#13;
campuses, professors devote an&#13;
average of 44 hours a week to&#13;
teaching responsibilities, and&#13;
associate and assistant&#13;
professors both 48. On the&#13;
primarily undergraduate&#13;
campuses, professors devote an&#13;
average of 53 hours a week to&#13;
teaching duties, associate&#13;
professors 52 hours, and assistant&#13;
professors 51 hours. A tht ef reshman&#13;
- s o p homo r e campu s e s ,&#13;
professors report an average of&#13;
48 hours, associate professors 53,&#13;
and assistant professors 54.&#13;
The other activities counted in&#13;
an average faculty work week&#13;
are time spent on sponsored&#13;
research, extension courses and&#13;
public service activities, and&#13;
other scholarly pursuits. When&#13;
these hours are added to the time&#13;
spent related to teaching, the&#13;
faculty work week throughout the&#13;
system averages a total of fro m&#13;
54 to 56 ho urs.&#13;
L&#13;
[[) J f?&#13;
BWCAVOhl CAN&#13;
RAISE THE SAVAGE OfFr olOmhl OTRHAE MPCBEP TFe To&#13;
TTHhEi"o UHE^H/GTHF75U- LO-F&#13;
UNCERTAINTY&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
Restaurants&#13;
Ranch C reated&#13;
Sandwiches &amp;&#13;
Charcoal Steaks&#13;
North &amp; South S heridan Rd.&#13;
ZodiaK&#13;
3931 45th St. OPEN 7 p.m. -1 a.m.&#13;
7 DAYS A WEEK&#13;
Lake alert&#13;
TAURUS&#13;
MONDAY NIGHT&#13;
OLD TIME MOVIES&#13;
CHESS-CHECKERS-CARDS&#13;
REDUCED DRINKS&#13;
|We d. Night - Ladies' N ight&#13;
GERONIMO'S&#13;
CADILLAC&#13;
Next tw o w eeks.-&#13;
SUNDANCE&#13;
Southeastern Wis. Number 1 Nitespot&#13;
storms when sediment is carried to deep water by&#13;
abnormal wave action. A man-made structure such&#13;
as a jetty or groin can leave the same effect.&#13;
Larsen showed several diagrams of how jetties&#13;
and groins can affect erosion. One diagram&#13;
depicted the result of a series of g roins.&#13;
When a structure is built out into the lake, it&#13;
causes sediment to be deposited on t he north side.&#13;
As one progresses southward, the amount of&#13;
sediment available decreased with each jetty or&#13;
groin constructed and the time it takes to fill the&#13;
groin gets longer. At some point downshore there is&#13;
no longer enough sediment to maintain a beach, and&#13;
erosion occurs.&#13;
After Larsen's presentation, the conference&#13;
moved into workshops, one for each of the three&#13;
areas discussed.&#13;
During the workshop on sh oreline erosion, many&#13;
lakefront property owners wanted to k now, "How&#13;
can I save my property, house, etc.?"&#13;
According to Lee Botts, executive secretary of the&#13;
Lake Michigan Federation, the solution must be one&#13;
arrived at by a coalition of lakefront property&#13;
owners, since if each person tries to protect his&#13;
piece of la nd by a jetty, groin or seawall, someone&#13;
farther downshore will have an even greater&#13;
problem.&#13;
\ v *i&gt; -&#13;
I'm getting my shirts&#13;
decorated at the&#13;
BUCKLT&amp;HTS&#13;
V/AT£G&gt;BET&gt;5&#13;
IWc e ws s&#13;
Te WfiLRY&#13;
"Roach CIXPS OHL.&#13;
TAPES jTispfsTTY&#13;
652-8711&#13;
ICAWDLE*&#13;
Tbste 5 "PATCHES&#13;
PAPERS&#13;
Ttpes hH D&#13;
Muc t t MORE&#13;
io:OOSAT.&#13;
10*30 - VOO&#13;
SU&gt;*. woo• cot,&#13;
Wed./ April 18, 1973 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Report on "outside activities&#13;
completed&#13;
Job study underway&#13;
Madison - A preliminary report&#13;
on "outside activities" of&#13;
University of Wisconsin System&#13;
faculty members was announced&#13;
Tuesday by the system's central&#13;
administration. Seven percent of&#13;
the ranked faculty reported such&#13;
outside work.&#13;
Donald E. Percy, a senior vice&#13;
president, said that the report&#13;
had been compiled by the central&#13;
staff and provided to the Board of&#13;
Regents and the Legislature's&#13;
Finance Committee.&#13;
The report defined faculty&#13;
outside activities as "gainful&#13;
activity of an extensive recurring&#13;
or continuing nature apart from a&#13;
faculty member's work&#13;
obligation to the university" and&#13;
stated that such activities are&#13;
beneficial to the community,&#13;
state and nation as well as to&#13;
faculty members and their&#13;
students.&#13;
"The University System encourages&#13;
its faculty members to&#13;
carry their expertise, knowledge&#13;
and research to the public and&#13;
private sectors, and to benefit, in&#13;
turn, through practical experience&#13;
in the work-a-day world&#13;
of their professions," the report&#13;
said.&#13;
It added that reports are kept&#13;
"to guranatee that each faculty&#13;
member who engages in outside&#13;
activities not only avoids conflicts&#13;
of interest but also meets all&#13;
university obligations-student&#13;
advising, preparation for&#13;
teaching, and committee work,&#13;
as well as meeting with classes."&#13;
A tabulation of reports from the&#13;
campuses and UW Extension for&#13;
the calendar year 1972 showed&#13;
that:&#13;
1. A total of 481 or 7 percent of&#13;
the 7,150 full time, ranked faculty&#13;
members reported a variety of&#13;
"outside activities" to which they&#13;
devoted five or more working&#13;
days a year and received more&#13;
than "token" payment in addition&#13;
to their university salaries.&#13;
2. Most of those reporting ~ 60&#13;
percent to 78 percent - reported&#13;
no more than 14 week days spent&#13;
on such outside work during the&#13;
year.&#13;
3. The 481 reporting consisted&#13;
of 169 full professors, 117&#13;
associate professors, 142&#13;
assistant professors and 53 instructors.&#13;
4. More than half (255) of the&#13;
faculty members served as&#13;
consultants, technical advisors&#13;
and expert witnesses, while 63&#13;
engaged in classroom or individual&#13;
instruction or participated&#13;
in workshops, seminars&#13;
and clinics not connected with&#13;
their campuses, and 163 were,&#13;
paid for other activities such as&#13;
professional practice, writing&#13;
and editing, testing, judging and&#13;
officiating, public speaking, and&#13;
music directing, teaching and&#13;
performing.&#13;
Among the examples of outside&#13;
activities reported were the&#13;
following:&#13;
Director of research project for&#13;
county, researcher for U.S.&#13;
Bureau of Mines, local census&#13;
worker, physics teacher at&#13;
vocational school, giving music&#13;
lessons, teaching in a high school,&#13;
conducting clinical psychology&#13;
practice, doing legal work,&#13;
writing children's books, writing&#13;
and editing book on architecture,&#13;
directing a choir, officiating at&#13;
high school and college football,&#13;
basketball and baseball games,&#13;
serving as city alderman, serving&#13;
as pastor of a church.&#13;
J &amp; J&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center&#13;
Super Low Prices&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave., Racine&#13;
518-56th St., Kenosha&#13;
Summer&#13;
Travel Fhogram&#13;
ftpeasiKrGs Sales &amp; Service At&#13;
KEN SCHULTZ BUICK-OPEl&#13;
1021 - 60th Street, Kenosha&#13;
654-3514 *2,373°°&#13;
1973 OPEL&#13;
1900&#13;
Special Charter Prices&#13;
16 Departure Dates&#13;
•for Info COtffact LLC DH 7&#13;
553-2294&#13;
GO FAR ON A&#13;
LITTLE MONEY&#13;
MADISON - Whether a&#13;
disadvantaged man must work as&#13;
a janitor because he inherited&#13;
this lot or whether he received too&#13;
little schooling to qualify for a&#13;
4 better job is the subject of a&#13;
major study by two Madison&#13;
educators.&#13;
David L. Featherman,&#13;
professor of rural sociology, and&#13;
Prof. Robert M. Hauser,&#13;
sociology, will employ a National&#13;
Science Foundation grant of over&#13;
$1 million to study opportunities&#13;
for social mobility in the U.S.&#13;
"When we talk about 'social&#13;
mobility,'" Featherman says,&#13;
"we mean the extent of opportunity&#13;
within the structure of&#13;
society for a man to obtain&#13;
higher-status jobs, income and&#13;
education than was possible fpr&#13;
his father,"&#13;
4437 - 2 2nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
Sy faeph&#13;
Good for 2 Free Dry Cycles&#13;
with any wash load&#13;
IJKyaand an Extra Free Punch On Your Dividend Cardj'&#13;
yjJ with an 8-pound Load of Dry Cleaning&#13;
NORGE VILLAGE 7513 - 45th Ave., Kenosha'&#13;
^-JRwECTGAlE POLYCLEAN 1258 Ohio St., Racine&#13;
V^RAPIDS DR- POLYCLEAN 2400 Rapids Dr., Racinej&#13;
One Coupon Per Week Per Customer&#13;
Expires Sept. 5, 1973&#13;
NAME 8. ADDRESS&#13;
850' COUPON.&#13;
AUT O &amp; TRUCK W liiflft&#13;
PARTS GORDON Mon Fri. 7:30 9:00&#13;
AUTO PARTS, INC. Saturday 7 30 5 30&#13;
Sunday 9:00 l 00&#13;
Complet e Machine Shop Service&#13;
Pain t &amp; B ody Shop Supplies&#13;
High Performance Work.&#13;
1400 Milwaukee Ave.&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
Discount to Parks ide Student s&#13;
3203-5211(1 St.&#13;
Finest i n&#13;
Imported&#13;
and Domestic&#13;
START A NE W HOBBY WINE MAKING&#13;
SEE OUR NEW D EPT&#13;
GROCERIES&#13;
-I WISCONSIN CHEESE&#13;
Old Milwaukee $259&#13;
Brandy $43,?&#13;
Gettlemen Beer&#13;
o depo&#13;
3 no deposit ngc&#13;
quarts Qg&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., April 1 8 , 1 97 3&#13;
More on Learning Center materials&#13;
Photo by Ken Konkol&#13;
Audio Cassettes&#13;
ABSOLOM! ABSOLOM!&#13;
ACROSS THE COLOR LINE&#13;
ACROSS THE COLOR LINE&#13;
ACROSS THE COLOR LINE&#13;
ACROSS THE COLOR LINE&#13;
ACROSS THE COLOR LINE&#13;
ACROSS THE COLOR LINE&#13;
ADVENTURES OF AUGIES MARCH&#13;
THE AFRICAN CONNECTION&#13;
THE AGE OF INNOCENCE&#13;
AGNEW vs. THE PRESS&#13;
ALICIA L. JOHNSON&#13;
ALCOHOL AND CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR&#13;
ALCOHOL AND DEPRESSANT DRUGS&#13;
(BARBITUATES)&#13;
AN ALIEN CONVICT&#13;
ALLEN GINSBERG&#13;
ALLNESS&#13;
AMERICA: ARK OF CIVILIZATION&#13;
AMERICA: SICK OR SOLVENT&#13;
THE AMERICAN DREAM AND THE SANDBOX&#13;
AMERICAN ENLIGHTENMENT&#13;
AMERICAN ENLIGHTENMENT&#13;
THE AMERICAN WILDERNESS&#13;
AMERICAN YOUTH IN REBELLION&#13;
CAMPUS IN CRISIS&#13;
THE CANDIDATE&#13;
CANDIDATES AND THEIR QUALITIES&#13;
CANDIDE&#13;
CANE&#13;
CATCH 22&#13;
CATCHER IN THE RYE&#13;
THE CELESTIAL RAILROAD&#13;
THE CHAIRS&#13;
CHALLENGE OF PRISONS, 1 &amp; 2&#13;
THE CHANGING BLACK CITIZEN&#13;
CHINA WATCHING&#13;
CIVIL LIBERTIES vs. POLICE POWER&#13;
CIVIL RIGHTS DECISIONS&#13;
CLARENCE DARROW FOR THE DEFENSE&#13;
COME BACK, DR. CALIGARI&#13;
THE COMMUNICATIONS CHASM&#13;
COMMUNISM: THE IDEOLOGY OF LENIN&#13;
AND MARX&#13;
CONCEPTS OF THE UNIVERSE&#13;
CONDEMNED TO DEATH&#13;
CONFESSIONS OF NAT TURNER&#13;
CONGRESS: OBSOLETE OR RELEVANT?&#13;
A CONNECTICUT YANKEE IN KING ARTHUR'S&#13;
COURT&#13;
THE CONTAMINATED HUMAN&#13;
A CONVICTED DRUG ADDICT - TALKS&#13;
ABOUT HIS LIFE OF CRIME&#13;
THE COURT AND TOMORROW&#13;
CRIME AND MENTAL DISORDERS&#13;
CRIME AND PUNISHMENT&#13;
CRIME, CALENDARS AND WEATHER&#13;
THE CRIMINAL: A SCIENTIFIC VIEW&#13;
THE CRIMINAL AND SEX DRIVES&#13;
THE CRIMINAL PERSONALITY&#13;
CRIMINAL STEREOTYPES&#13;
THE CRY FOR CONSERVATION&#13;
CULTURE AND CRIMINAL ACTS&#13;
DANGER FROM WITHIN 1&#13;
DANGER FROM WITHIN 3&#13;
THE DARLING&#13;
DARWIN TURNER&#13;
DAY OF THE LOCUST&#13;
DEATH AND DYING&#13;
DEATH OF A S ALESMAN&#13;
DEATH OF OUR BIOSPHERE&#13;
THE DEATH OF OUR CITIES&#13;
DELIVERANCE&#13;
DEMOCRACY AND ARISTOCRACY&#13;
THE DESPAIR OF POVERTY&#13;
DIANE WAKOSKI&#13;
DIRECTIONS IN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL&#13;
SCIENCE&#13;
DIRECTIONS IN SCHOOL ORGANIZATIONS&#13;
DIRECTIONS IN STAFF RELATIONSHIPS&#13;
THE DIRTY WORD "DEMOCRACY"&#13;
DRUGS AND CRIMINAL ACTS&#13;
DWELLERS IN SCIENCE&#13;
THE ECOLOGICAL SPECTRUM&#13;
AN EDITH HAMILTON TREASURY&#13;
EFFECTS OF SCHOOL FAILURE ON THE&#13;
LIFE OF A CHILD&#13;
THE EIGHTH DAY&#13;
THE EISENHOWER ERA&#13;
THE ELECTORAL COLLEGE&#13;
EMOTIONS AND CRIME&#13;
EMPOROR JONES-ENCOUNTER WITH&#13;
CLEMENT ATLEE&#13;
ERIC SOLDMAN DISCUSSES THE TRAGEDY&#13;
OF LYNDON JOHNSON WITH ROBERT&#13;
CROMIE&#13;
THE ESSENTIAL GHANDI&#13;
THE ETHNOLOGICAL CRIMINAL&#13;
THE EXERCISE OF POWER&#13;
EXPLORATION OF URBAN HOUSING&#13;
THE EXPLOSIVE SOCIETY&#13;
EYEWITNESS AT MYLAI&#13;
FACT-INFERENCE CONFUSION&#13;
FALL OF THE HOUSE OF USHER&#13;
FAMINE AND POPULATION CONTROL&#13;
FAREWELL TO ARMS&#13;
THE FEDERAL PEN&#13;
A FEMALE PRISONER&#13;
FERLINGHETTI&#13;
51 nays - 45 ayes&#13;
FIRST NUCLEAR STRIKE&#13;
FIVE METAPHORS OF THE MODERN&#13;
REPERTORY&#13;
FIVE SMOOTH STONES&#13;
FLOYD McKISSICK SPEAKS OUT&#13;
FOCUS ON ARTHUR BURNS&#13;
FOCUS ON BAYARD RUSTIN&#13;
FOCUS ON BEATRAND RUSSELL&#13;
FOCUS ON EUGENE MCCARTHY&#13;
FOCUS ON FRANZ JOSEPH STRAUSS&#13;
FOCUS ON KARL MENNINGER&#13;
FOCUS ON MELVIN LAIRD&#13;
FOCUS ON STUART UDALL&#13;
FOCUS ON VAN WYCK BROOKS&#13;
FOCUS ON WHITNEY YOUNG&#13;
FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS&#13;
A FORMER CONVICT TALKS ABOUT THE&#13;
LIFE OF A PAROLEE&#13;
FREE SPEECH&#13;
FREE SPEECH: THREAT TO LIBERTY?&#13;
FREE LAND AND ABUNDANT RESOURCES&#13;
FROM MARIJUANA TO LSD&#13;
GENERAL SEMANTICS AND THE SELF&#13;
GENERAL SEMANTICS: THEORY AND&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
GEORGE HICKOCK&#13;
GHETTO LAW AND ORDER&#13;
THE GLASS MENAGERIE&#13;
THE GOLDMANN PROPOSALS&#13;
GOVERNING THE METROPOLIS&#13;
GREAT EXPECTATIONS&#13;
THE GREAT GATSBY&#13;
GREETINGS&#13;
GARY OWNES&#13;
HALLUCINOGENS (LSD)&#13;
A HARDENED CRIMINAL TALKS ABOUT&#13;
THE HIGH DRAMA OF A PRISON BREAK&#13;
HEDDA GABLER&#13;
HENRY JAMES&#13;
HEDDA GABLER&#13;
HENRY JAMES&#13;
THE HEREDITARY CRIMINAL&#13;
THE HISTORY OF AMERICAN PURITANISIM&#13;
AN HOUR WITH IVAN ILLICH&#13;
HOUSE OF SEVEN GABLES&#13;
HOW ORGANIZATION CAN MAKE THE&#13;
ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS MORE&#13;
HUMANISTIC&#13;
HOW WE CHOOSE A PRESIDENT&#13;
HUCK FINN&#13;
HUMANISTIC VALUES AND SCIENTIFIC&#13;
LIVING&#13;
HUNGER&#13;
I CAN'T HEAR YOU, I'VE GOT POLLUTION&#13;
IN MY EARS&#13;
THE ICEMAN COMETH&#13;
THE IDENTITY CRISIS&#13;
THE IMPERFECT WORLD&#13;
IMPERIALISM: IT'S CHANGING FACE IN&#13;
HISTORY&#13;
INDIANS&#13;
INDISCRIMINATION&#13;
INSTRUMENTS FOR FREEDOM&#13;
INTERNATIONAL ORIENTATION&#13;
INTOLERANCE&#13;
THE INVISIBLE MAN&#13;
JAMES BALDWIN DISCUSSES TELL ME HOW&#13;
LONG THE TRAINS' GONE&#13;
JAMES DICKEY&#13;
JESSE STUART&#13;
JOHN CIARDI&#13;
JOHN HAINES&#13;
THE JOHNSON RECORD&#13;
JONATHAN KOXOL DISCUSSES DEATH AT&#13;
AN EARLY AGE&#13;
A JUVENILE CONVICT TALKS ABOUT HIS&#13;
ENTRY INTO A LIFE OF CRIME&#13;
THE JUVENILE OFFENDER&#13;
KASPAR&#13;
KATTIE M. CUMBO&#13;
KENNEDY-NIXON: FACE TO FACE, 1,2,3,4&#13;
KILL THE DRAFT&#13;
LSD: PRO AND CON&#13;
LAST OF THE MOHICANS&#13;
LATER PESSISMISTIC WRITINGS OF MARK&#13;
TWAIN&#13;
LEAR&#13;
LEGALIZING MARIJUANA&#13;
LEGENDS OF LINCOLN AND LEE&#13;
LIFE AS A S LAVE&#13;
LIFE ON THE MISSISSIPPI&#13;
LIGEIA&#13;
LIGHT IN AUGUST&#13;
LITERATURE AS A METAPHOR&#13;
LONG DAY'S JOURNEY INTO NIGHT&#13;
LOOK BACK IN ANGER&#13;
LOOK HOMEWARD, ANGEL&#13;
LORD JIM&#13;
LOSING BATTLES&#13;
LOST HORIZONS&#13;
MACBETH&#13;
MADWOMAN OF CHAILLOT&#13;
MAGGIE: CRANE&#13;
THE MAGNA CARTA&#13;
MAIN STREET&#13;
MAJOR MOLINEAUX&#13;
MAJORITY RULE&#13;
MALCOM&#13;
"THE MAN WHO..."&#13;
MAO: AN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE&#13;
MARIJUANA&#13;
MARIJUANA&#13;
MARIJUANA MYTH AND REALITY, PTS. 1&amp; 2&#13;
MARKETING THE CANDIDATE&#13;
MARTIN LUTHER KING AND INTEGRATION&#13;
MASQUE OF THE RED DEATH&#13;
THE MAYOR OF WATTS&#13;
MEANING IN POETRY&#13;
MEASURE FOR MEASURE&#13;
MENTAL DEFECTS AND CRIME&#13;
METAPHOR AND SOCIAL BELIEF&#13;
METAPHOR: A STUDY IN METHOD&#13;
METAPHOR: THE UNDERGROUND&#13;
METAPHOR OF THE WORLD AS AN INSANE&#13;
ASYLUM&#13;
METHODOLOGY IN PRACTICE&#13;
A MID-SUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM&#13;
A MIDDLE-AGED CONVICT TALKS ABOUT&#13;
HIS GOALS AFTER 22 YEARS OF CONFINEMENT&#13;
A MIDDLE-AGED CONVICT TALKS ABOUT&#13;
HIS REPEATED CRIMES AND SOCIAL&#13;
VALUES&#13;
Photo by Ken Konkol&#13;
Wed./ April 18/ 19 73 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Spring and Summer travel on its way&#13;
Getawayitis is ^vowing* dissasG&#13;
By Jane Schliesman&#13;
Taking off? About this time of&#13;
year many students seem to&#13;
become chronically afflicted with&#13;
getawayitis, so the campus&#13;
Travel Center in LLC D197 is&#13;
ready to help minimize the&#13;
hassles of departure. This writer&#13;
stopped by a few days ago, trying&#13;
to decide whether to head east&#13;
towards Boston or north towards&#13;
Canada after turning in that last&#13;
blue book in a couple of weeks.&#13;
The maps, brochures, guidebooks&#13;
and so forth kept me busy for&#13;
quite awhile, and it seemed a&#13;
good idea to share with other&#13;
itinerant students just what the&#13;
Travel Center is all about.&#13;
Most people are probably&#13;
familiar with the fact that group&#13;
charter flights are arranged at&#13;
semester breaks to such places&#13;
as Paris, Hawaii, Rome, the&#13;
Spanish Riviera, Acapulco,&#13;
Zermatt in Switzerland, Courchevel&#13;
and Chamonix in France.&#13;
The past three years have seen&#13;
over 1000 participants in these&#13;
programs.&#13;
But not everyone doing Europe&#13;
or Mexico or anywhere else&#13;
necessarily wants to go the group&#13;
charter route. There is helpful&#13;
information and advice available&#13;
about biking, hiking, flying,&#13;
driving or railroading your way&#13;
through Europe, Mexico, Canada&#13;
and the U.S.&#13;
A myriad of application forms&#13;
— including international&#13;
passport, international certificate&#13;
of vaccination (they can&#13;
tell you which countries require&#13;
this), international driver's&#13;
license, and car lease and car&#13;
rental forms for Europe — can be&#13;
obtained here. It also has forms&#13;
to apply for Eurail and Student&#13;
Rail passes, which provide an&#13;
economical way to see Europe by&#13;
train. The Eurail system&#13;
operates in 13 countries&#13;
throughout continental Europe.&#13;
The Student Railpass provides&#13;
unlimited second-class rail transportation&#13;
for two months for $130.&#13;
Second-class rail travel is a great&#13;
way to meet European students&#13;
who wouldn't consider going any&#13;
other way. Many save on lodging&#13;
expenses by traveling at night&#13;
and sleeping on the trains. The&#13;
regular Eurailpass is available at&#13;
varying costs for varying periods&#13;
of time.&#13;
Our Travel Center is also the&#13;
official issuing office for this area&#13;
of the state for the International&#13;
Student and International&#13;
Scholar IDs ($2) and the&#13;
American Youth Hostel Card&#13;
($10). In addition to Parkside&#13;
students, it serves Gateway,&#13;
Carthage, College of Racine and&#13;
area high schools.&#13;
These cards are a sound investment,&#13;
especially for students&#13;
planning to go to Europe this&#13;
summer. American Youth Hostel&#13;
Association belongs to the International&#13;
Youth Hostel&#13;
Federation. Their hostels are&#13;
located in 47 countries and&#13;
provide clean, inexpensive&#13;
lodging for members.&#13;
The International Student ID&#13;
(for college students) and International&#13;
Scholar ID (for high&#13;
school students) also provide&#13;
access to hostels. In addition,&#13;
they are useful for reduced or&#13;
free admissions to student tourist&#13;
kinds of places — museums, art&#13;
galleries and theaters — a s well&#13;
as for reduced meal costs.&#13;
Discounts vary from country to&#13;
country and place to place,&#13;
Summer jobs available&#13;
in Austria&#13;
Any student wishing a summer&#13;
job in the country of Austria&#13;
should apply now. Paying student&#13;
jobs are available on a first&#13;
come, first served basis to any&#13;
student aged 17 through 27. The&#13;
majority of jobs are in hotels,&#13;
mountain and lakeside resorts,&#13;
and restaurants. Standard wages&#13;
are paid - plus free room and&#13;
board. This means that only a few&#13;
weeks on the job easily earns&#13;
back the cost of the school&#13;
charter flight or youth fare air&#13;
ticket.&#13;
Most jobs do not require&#13;
knowledge of a foreign language,&#13;
and experience counts less than&#13;
willingness to work, ability to&#13;
adapt to foreign life, and the&#13;
maintenance of an open mind.&#13;
Opportunities for this practical,&#13;
inexpensive way to spend time in&#13;
Europe are given out as fast as&#13;
students apply, and the working&#13;
papers are processed. Jobs are&#13;
matched as closely as possible to&#13;
each student's choice. This work&#13;
is done by the SOS - Student&#13;
Overseas Services, a Luxembourg&#13;
student-run organization&#13;
specializing in helping American&#13;
students in Europe for the past 15&#13;
years. SOS also provides a brief&#13;
orientation in Europe to insure&#13;
each student worker a good start&#13;
on the job in Europe.&#13;
Students interested in obtaining&#13;
a summer job in Austria&#13;
may obtain application forms,&#13;
job listings and descriptions, and&#13;
the SOS handbook on earning a&#13;
trip to Europe by sending their&#13;
name, address, educational institution,&#13;
and $1 ( for printing,&#13;
postage, addressing and handling)&#13;
to: Summer Placement,&#13;
SOS, Box 5173, Santa Barbara,&#13;
Calif. 93108.&#13;
Photo by Ken Konkol&#13;
though.&#13;
Reference materials in the&#13;
Travel Center include guides to&#13;
domestic hotel and motel accommodations,&#13;
including rates&#13;
and facilities; student guides to&#13;
New York, London, Amsterdam,&#13;
Paris, Canada and the U.S.; a&#13;
bike touring reference book; a&#13;
guide to study abroad; and camp&#13;
grounds and trailer parks in the&#13;
U.S. There is also a sheet&#13;
covering your rights on domestic&#13;
airlines if you become stranded&#13;
between points because of a late&#13;
flight or a missed connection.&#13;
This summer the center is&#13;
expanding its reference section&#13;
and stocking up with more information&#13;
about travel within the&#13;
U.S. They will have fares and&#13;
schedules for buses, Amtrack,&#13;
and all domestic airlines including&#13;
flights to Mexico and&#13;
Canada. They can advise you&#13;
about stand-by fares for domestic&#13;
flights and low-cost options to&#13;
London and Paris. If they don't&#13;
have the specific information&#13;
you're seeking, they'll check it&#13;
out for you.&#13;
Meanwhile, this writer is still&#13;
trying to decide — Boston or&#13;
Toronto?&#13;
Switzerland has welcome&#13;
mat out for tourists&#13;
Editor's note: This article is&#13;
from the Swiss Student Travel&#13;
Office, a non-profit organization&#13;
which every summer welcomes&#13;
thousands of American college&#13;
students at its Student Reception&#13;
Service in Zurich and Geneva.&#13;
Well, what do you get from&#13;
Switzerland?&#13;
All the comforts and conveniences&#13;
you can want in the&#13;
world are there—inexpensive&#13;
hotels, youth hostels, student&#13;
hotels and dorms, goo i home&#13;
cooking, delicious fondue, great&#13;
wine, pure water, clean&#13;
surroundings, friendly natives,&#13;
straightforward prices and one&#13;
mugging per year in the whole&#13;
country.&#13;
What a dull place. And th&#13;
scenery?&#13;
Oh, y'know, the usualmountains,&#13;
lakes, plains, "(ties,&#13;
rivers, glaciers, the National&#13;
Park. Climate? Chilly on the&#13;
mountain tops (above 10,000&#13;
feet), don't need a sleeping bag in&#13;
high summer in the south, like in&#13;
Ticino, because of the heat.&#13;
What do they speak over there?&#13;
To tell you the truth, you never&#13;
know what language they're&#13;
going to speak to you in, in&#13;
Switzerland. Some kind of&#13;
German dialect is the main&#13;
language, with French in second&#13;
place and Italian a good third. In&#13;
the hotels and diners you can&#13;
often make yourself understood&#13;
in Spanish too (Castillian, not&#13;
Mexican). English? No problem.&#13;
Everyone learns it in school and&#13;
the Swiss will take your arm and&#13;
show you the way to the dorm if&#13;
you don't understand the&#13;
directions.&#13;
How d'you spend your time&#13;
there?&#13;
Well, it's a big country for its&#13;
size. You can just lounge around&#13;
in the sun on a lakeside (they've&#13;
got 1,500 lakes crammed into that&#13;
little country!). Or, if you're the&#13;
energetic type, you can swim or&#13;
mess around in boats. Lake&#13;
Geneva's favorite place: hire a&#13;
boat on the French side, it's&#13;
cheaper, and sail the whole 50&#13;
miles of the lake, camping right&#13;
on the edge of the water.&#13;
Or, you can work off your beer&#13;
fat on some of those mountains&#13;
they have over there. Real&#13;
big'uns, like the Matterhorn or&#13;
the Jungfrau, around 16,000 fe et.&#13;
They're for the experts though. If&#13;
you don't fancy the idea of&#13;
sleeping on a rock face hooked up&#13;
to a couple of pitons, you can put&#13;
on a backpack and start out&#13;
almost anywhere for a day's hike&#13;
down an easier trail. You don't&#13;
have to worry, the tracks are well&#13;
marked. Choose your altitude,&#13;
2,000 feet or 10,000 feet up. If you&#13;
want to, you can pitch your tent&#13;
when you've had enough or make&#13;
it to the next village where you're&#13;
pretty sure of finding a dorm for&#13;
a dollar or so. Lots of fun in the&#13;
evenings too. You make friends&#13;
easily, y'know, they even like&#13;
Americans!&#13;
Look, you can't just climb&#13;
around mountains and swim&#13;
lakes every day. What's the scene&#13;
in the cities?&#13;
Like Zurich and Geneva and&#13;
Basle? Well, they're quite a&#13;
surprise. You leave your billfold&#13;
on a wall somewhere and go back&#13;
to look for it an hour later. Sure,&#13;
it's gone! Cool it, when you get to&#13;
the Lost and Found Office&#13;
someone's handed it in. Beat&#13;
that!&#13;
But that's just by the way. The&#13;
country is simply full of gorgeous&#13;
old towns and villages-like the&#13;
Bernese Oberland where they&#13;
have all those enormous old&#13;
wooden chalets with carved&#13;
balconies and geraniums. Never&#13;
seen so many flowers as in&#13;
Switzerland.&#13;
Or, take a place like Lucerne.&#13;
Fantastic scenery, and the&#13;
houses in the old section are all&#13;
covered with old paintings on the&#13;
outsides, even the pharmacy.&#13;
And then there's that famous&#13;
covered bridge that you must&#13;
have seen pictures of.&#13;
Or Ticino-that's in the south of&#13;
the country where they speak&#13;
Italian. It's just like being in the&#13;
south of France there, only less&#13;
expensive. And from there you&#13;
can go over the San Bernardino&#13;
Pass and get to see all those&#13;
classy ski resorts like St. Moritz.&#13;
Not expensive though. You see,&#13;
the student outfit they have over&#13;
there-some funny long name in&#13;
German-they have a whole chain&#13;
of really inexpensive hotels&#13;
throughout the country. Zermatt,&#13;
Zurich, Geneva, Lucerne, Davos,&#13;
Klosters, Leysin (they run&#13;
French courses there in summer),&#13;
Lugano, San Bernardino,&#13;
Scuol-you name it, they've got a&#13;
student hotel there. All clean,&#13;
inexpensive and friendly.&#13;
In summer they have special&#13;
Student Reception Services in&#13;
Zurich and Geneva. Best place to&#13;
go when you hit the town. They'll&#13;
find you a cheap place to stay and&#13;
give you a program about what's&#13;
on.&#13;
And you get to meet the locals.&#13;
This student organization-SSR&#13;
they call it-holds fondue parties&#13;
every week in Zurich and&#13;
Geneva. You have to have been to&#13;
one of those parties to believe it.&#13;
When you leave it you've made&#13;
some friends for life. This SSR is&#13;
a student-run organization, nonprofit&#13;
making, so you get all the&#13;
best rates on everything.&#13;
They put on special student&#13;
sightseeing trips too, and you'll&#13;
be amazed at the number of&#13;
fantastically cheap charter&#13;
flights they operate throughout&#13;
Europe and the Mediterraneanand&#13;
even as far afield as Bangkok&#13;
and East Africa. You can join one&#13;
of their special tours to places&#13;
like Russia or Japan. No hassle&#13;
about membership requirements&#13;
if you're a student.&#13;
Tell me more, kiddo, tell me&#13;
more!&#13;
Can't, sorry, had my rucksack&#13;
with all my brochures in it stolen&#13;
in Central Park, N.Y. But why&#13;
don't you write to them? I kept&#13;
the address in my left sock. It's&#13;
this:&#13;
S S R - S W I S S S T U D E N T&#13;
TRAVEL OFFICE, Leonhardstrasse&#13;
19, 8001 Zurich, Switzerland,&#13;
or&#13;
SOFA - European Student&#13;
Travel Center Ltd., 136 East 57th&#13;
Street, Suite 1205, New York,&#13;
N.Y. 10022, USA.&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., April 18, 1973&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
Thirty Seconds over Winteriand&#13;
Jefferson Airplane&#13;
( BFL1-0147)&#13;
In one of his most recent interviews Paul Kanter said the new Jefferson&#13;
Airplane album would be half-live, half-studio, but would wnSS-oTAiSJvW-m?,teriaL However- WINTERLAND THIRTY S ECONDS O VER is all-live, nine-tenths old. In spite of this, the only&#13;
bad aspect of the new disc is that it is not all new. Perhaps it is intended&#13;
as a bridge between the old and something new that won't be&#13;
prepared for release for awhile.&#13;
Besides being a flexible rock band, Jefferson Airplane are first-rate&#13;
musicians Four of the seven songs on this live record are written by&#13;
Pau1 Kanter, composer of "Ballad of You and Me Pooniel " "We&#13;
Should Be Together," "War Movie," and many other Airplane&#13;
classics. One could search the earth high and low, and then probably&#13;
still not find a bass player to match Jack Casady. Jorma Kauauken is&#13;
equally competent on guitar. Papa John Creach added a fresh life to&#13;
the Plane when he joined them with his funky violin. He provided them&#13;
with new cosmic criteria besides cooking country sounds for Hot Tuna&#13;
Grace Slick surely deserves the title of best female rock vocalist. If&#13;
you missed LONG JOHN SILVER, then you missed some of Grace's&#13;
most adrenalin-activating singing. Her wailing for the climax of&#13;
"Alexandra" leaves one nothing short of breathless. David Frieberg is&#13;
a new vocalist. Singing is David's only job here but he is not a soloist,&#13;
the only supports Grace and Paul.&#13;
Starting the show is the only new song, "Have You Seen The&#13;
Saucers?" Composed by Paul Kanter, it is done by one of the most&#13;
professional psychedelic bands in the world. It is one of those high&#13;
rising tunes and Grace Slick holds the notes and makes them ascend&#13;
stairways to other galaxies.&#13;
"Feel So Good," being 10 or so minutes long, is Jorma's most&#13;
elaborate number on the disc. Jorma's voice sensuously touches the&#13;
word "I" and then pretty soon he goes on to several minutes of jamming&#13;
with Papa John and Jack. Jack gets a solo spot on his bass and&#13;
then Jorma returns at the most precise moment followed by Papa&#13;
John. All together they form a most superior version of a locomotive&#13;
train with wings.&#13;
"Crown of Creation" keeps up the pace and when the line "they&#13;
cannot tolerate our minds" comes along, Grace add-libs "I can't&#13;
either." This creates a humorous side to their radical politics. The&#13;
final ah... settles like dew reflecting every color in the spectrum.&#13;
On side 2 th e majestic "When the Earth Moves Again" excels the&#13;
BARK version, preparing the way for "Milk Train" which is Grace's&#13;
erotic anthem. Her voice fades some, like normal live vocals, but is&#13;
tense and moving.&#13;
Jorma's "Trail by Fire" is almost equal to the studio version and&#13;
following it comes the splendid "Twilight Double Leader."&#13;
"...Leader" starts off like a bullet and is another Kanter song. Intead&#13;
of swelling with "feel it in the street time" like the studio version,&#13;
Grace exchanges the lines with Paul and David. Towards the end, way&#13;
deep in the background (which is a reason why loud volume is needed&#13;
for total enchancing of listening pleasure) Grace is yelling like a&#13;
maniac "rock and roll everybody," or something to that effect. The&#13;
guitar and bass dance around each other and one of the most efficiently&#13;
focused, masterpieces of caos comes to an end. It brings with&#13;
it a vote for Jefferson Airplane as best contemporary American hardrock&#13;
band. (Record Courtesy of J&amp;J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
Dry $&#13;
8- - Cleaned&#13;
Lbs. °niY 2 00&#13;
Free Pre-Spotting&#13;
Drop Off Service&#13;
WE&#13;
Wash - Dry - Fold&#13;
20 i «1 5 0&#13;
Lb. MINIMUM&#13;
Vets club plans&#13;
dance for&#13;
Thursday&#13;
The Parkside Vets Club will&#13;
sponsor a dance in the Student&#13;
Activities Building Thursday&#13;
from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Blood&#13;
Money will provide the music.&#13;
Admission is $1.50 all proceeds&#13;
will go to the Racine-Parkside&#13;
bus service. Wisconsin and&#13;
Parkside I.D.'s required.&#13;
Film Society to&#13;
show 'Nothing&#13;
but a Man'&#13;
Parkside Film Society will&#13;
show NOTHING BUT A MAN, a&#13;
1964 film starring Abby Lincoln&#13;
.and Ivan Dixon, Wednesday,&#13;
April 18 at 7:30 in Greenquist 103.&#13;
Admission is 60 c ents.&#13;
Independent film-makers&#13;
Michael Roemer and Robert&#13;
Young made this moving drama&#13;
of the personal struggle of a&#13;
Southern black man and his wife&#13;
in a society hostile to them. A&#13;
young railway worker gives up a&#13;
good job to settle down and&#13;
marry the preacher's daughter, a&#13;
schoolteacher. Essentially it is a&#13;
drama of the emotional adjustment&#13;
of a man to the age-old&#13;
problems of earning a livlihood,&#13;
supporting a family, and living in&#13;
peace and dignity. In this case&#13;
the problem is intensified&#13;
because the man is a black and&#13;
will not play the expected Negro&#13;
role, despite the warnings of his&#13;
fellow workers, the urgings of his&#13;
father-in-law, and the tensions&#13;
created in his marriage. Free of&#13;
the usual sentimental cliches and&#13;
blatant messages, NOTHING&#13;
BUT AMAN is one of the few&#13;
films which succeed in presenting&#13;
black people as human&#13;
beings instead of as symbols.&#13;
Also to be shown is the Norman&#13;
McClaren short NEIGHBORS,&#13;
about how two neighbors and&#13;
friends become mortal enemies.&#13;
The film effectively comments on&#13;
aggression, the "terrirorial&#13;
imperative" and the nature and&#13;
causes of war and conflict.&#13;
Lincoln Village Laundromat&#13;
Open8 a.m. to8p.m.&#13;
6814 Fourteenth Avenue Kenoshaf Wis.&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA ACROSS FROM HOLIDAY INN&#13;
•u&#13;
- BOTH UNDID SAMF OWNCDSHIP —&#13;
In Four Siies 9" - 12" - 14" - 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN&#13;
• GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
• SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS&#13;
"you DING .&#13;
DELIVERY&#13;
Wf BRING"&#13;
657-9843 or 658-4922&#13;
\ by Fred Bultman&#13;
Space Cadet&#13;
Robert A. Heinlein&#13;
Ace Books&#13;
I don't like "relevant" books very much-especially when you're&#13;
looking for something good to read on the ol' book rack and all you can&#13;
find are collapsed ocean liners and mafia, mafia, mafia. What is so&#13;
important about the mafia anyway? However, there is hope. While our&#13;
bookstore does carry a lot of mafia-type books and other junk, they&#13;
also devote a rack to the irreverant and wacky glories of such authors&#13;
as Bradbury, Heinlein, and Asimov.&#13;
While science fiction is not really the escape literature it used to be&#13;
(too much of it has come true, or is possible) it does provide a release&#13;
from the daily grind and it won't insult your intelligence.&#13;
Robert Heinlein, unfortunately, is little known except for Stranger in&#13;
a Strange Lad, which is a shame as his novels are considered by us&#13;
devotees to be the funniest and most far out of any author. Space Cadet&#13;
is a case in point.&#13;
While it isn't his best book (the bookstore doesn't have Glory Road)&#13;
it is a beautiful example of his writing. Plots are not his strong point;&#13;
they don't have the originality and eerieness of Bradbury. Rather, he&#13;
concentrates on his characters. They are real people and face real&#13;
hassles. Even though the setting is the 21st century, the heroes have no&#13;
miracle solutions and no super powers and must muddle through, just&#13;
like you and me. Best of all is the humor. Most sci-fi book are way too&#13;
serious anf full of unrelieved gloom, which can be a drag these days.&#13;
No so Heinlein; he keeps you chuckling even in the gloomiest of&#13;
scrapes.&#13;
Once you've read Heinlein, you're either hooked or repelled. I'm&#13;
glad to say I'm addicted, and I feel sorry for those who cannot enjoy&#13;
something like Space Cadet.&#13;
(Book courtesy of the Parkside Bookstore)&#13;
EAT IN T HE C OMFORT&#13;
OF Y OUR C AR&#13;
• PAPA B URGER • MAMA B URGER&#13;
• TEEN B URGER • BABY B URGER&#13;
CARRY-OUTS&#13;
CALL AHEAD - YOUR ORDER WILL BE R EADY&#13;
Tubs of Chicken - Fish&#13;
and Shrimp&#13;
FREE G ALLON OF ROOT BEER WITH S5.00 ORDER&#13;
1/2 MIL E NORTH OF&#13;
MIDCITY THEATER&#13;
ON SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
552-8404&#13;
A &amp; W R OOT B EER D RIVE-IN&#13;
Sheridan Rd. (Hy. 32) North&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
HOURS: DAILY 11 A.M. TO 11 P.M.&#13;
2nd National (formerly Shakey's) Cocktail B ar and Restaurant 6208 Green Bay Road Phone 654-0485&#13;
[friday &amp; Saturday&#13;
"RADIO"&#13;
No Cover&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT&#13;
BUNCH O'LUNCH&#13;
PIZZA, CHICKEN, SALAD, MO-JO'S&#13;
11:30 - 1:30&#13;
Mon.-Fri. Sat. &amp; Sun.&#13;
S"|59 $"|89&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
20 KINDS SERVED ALL THE TIME&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT&#13;
BUNCH O'FISH FISH, PIZZA. SALAD, MO-JO'S&#13;
Wed. Si Fri. j.gg&#13;
from 5 p.m. I&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
WMO JO'S SERVED ALL THE TIME&#13;
Plus Your Favorite Mixed Drinks and Beers&#13;
The Ranger Asks...&#13;
What changes would you like to see at Parkside ?&#13;
Wed., April 18, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 9&#13;
Richard Schoene. Freshman,&#13;
Racine&#13;
"I'd like to see more room in&#13;
the cafeteria, a lot more room.&#13;
And another thing, they could&#13;
bring the Union over here, with&#13;
the beer stand and that type of&#13;
thing."&#13;
Cindy Rasmussen, Sophomore,&#13;
Racine&#13;
"They should offer a lot more&#13;
courses. They don't have enough&#13;
courses here, that's my main&#13;
complaint."&#13;
Chuck Myers, Sophomore,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
"I think they need more tables&#13;
in the cafeteria, either that or a&#13;
big, old, hairy cop, or something,&#13;
to kick people out because it's so&#13;
hard to find a table to eat at."&#13;
Kaye Kronholm, Sophomore,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
"More people getting together&#13;
and doing things like those trips&#13;
they've got planned. Just more&#13;
things to do on campus."&#13;
rfutUfr-tf/idual IRevtecv&#13;
/kidia-1/c4ual IReviecv&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
Freshman, Kenosha&#13;
I d like to see a separate room&#13;
for sleeping inbetween class, with&#13;
beds where people can go to&#13;
sleep."&#13;
So That Men Are Free is a film about how the Indians&#13;
living in Vecos, a valley in Peru, became a free people. As the film&#13;
stated, "All sane men are equal including Indians." This was not a&#13;
very widely ^ield view in Peru. Ever since the Spaniards came and&#13;
made them their slaves, the Indians were considered an inferior&#13;
people. Life was so bad for them that a dead child was buried with joy&#13;
because he didn't have to go through the pain of living.&#13;
A group from Cornell University came in to help these people and&#13;
give them a new identity. I thought this was rather disgusting because&#13;
I thought I was actually going to see a group of people from another&#13;
country pulling themselves up without the help of the United States.&#13;
But, there was the "white father" showing the poor little Indians how&#13;
to live. I don't deny that the group from Cornell did some very good&#13;
and very needed work but the film was not what I had expected to see&#13;
with the title So That Men Are Free.&#13;
Cornell spent a total of $5,000 dollars helping the people in Vecos.&#13;
This was not a large sum of money considering that aid is usually&#13;
given to other countries by the millions of d ollars. Medical assistance&#13;
was brought into Vecos. The Indians built a school all by themselves&#13;
except of course that the materials were bought by the people from&#13;
Cornell. The head of the project said that the Indians didn't build the&#13;
school because of their great desire for education as much as to show&#13;
their gratitude for the help they were receiving.&#13;
There is no doubt that the Indians of Vecos are much better off than&#13;
they ever were before. They used to be used for free labor but after the&#13;
landlord's lease ran out they started renting the land themselves.&#13;
They are now working for themselves, and working with the hope that&#13;
they can raise nough money to make the down payment necessary to&#13;
buy the land. They did do it all by themselves. They go aid, but then&#13;
again, they never asked for any help.&#13;
Candy Hess, Junior, Racine&#13;
"I'd like to see a few changes in&#13;
the major requirements for&#13;
certain majors, like Economics."&#13;
Lorretta Hughes, Junior, Sturtevant&#13;
"I'm not really into that right&#13;
now, I was asked to be on a&#13;
committee but I'm not going to be&#13;
here next fall. I think it's a very&#13;
good school."&#13;
If there are any changes you'd&#13;
like to see at Parkside write to:&#13;
The RANGER Asks, LLC D194.&#13;
PATRONIZE&#13;
• OUR *&#13;
ADVERTIZERS&#13;
Dave Willems, Junior, Kenosha&#13;
"The students could get more&#13;
involved in student government.&#13;
They're too apathetic, which I&#13;
probably am too. There could be&#13;
different policies for the Phy-Ed&#13;
building, during the day students&#13;
can't get in too much because&#13;
clubs always have it tied up.&#13;
Students becoming more involved&#13;
at Parkside would be a&#13;
good thing."&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Alfredo's Restaurant&#13;
2827 63rd St., Kenosha&#13;
MITALIAN FO OD A SPECIALTY&#13;
^SPAGHETTI - RAVIOLI - LASAGNA&#13;
DRINKS A VAILABLE F ROM THE B AR&#13;
5 0c OFF ANY 50'&#13;
|Exp&#13;
April 25, 1973&#13;
The Truth About Greece!&#13;
Prof. A ndreas Kazamias&#13;
Greek-Cypriot&#13;
speaks o n&#13;
"THE PHOENIX &amp; THE CROSS:&#13;
MILITARY DICTATORSHIP&#13;
III nonrpc »&#13;
rf&gt;e ,r/P "0n y°u&#13;
3 M«&gt;&#13;
. '&lt;W&#13;
IN GREECE."&#13;
Wed., April 18&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
Greenquist&#13;
Rm. 101&#13;
•' •"J*4 &gt;Wl&#13;
San.&#13;
.. f V, "c h '" //• •5"&gt;w&#13;
"4y . . S ? . s , v i 0 , ' u u , 't i e *&#13;
.jv '°n'b0r f-'aUo ohhe*«&#13;
y'cu..? r*r, ,Vso „- ° v „ "&#13;
&gt;/7/ fr'0ro.&#13;
fr 'Ou. ,f rtl /. «&gt;S0 "'"'I " • fn&gt;/4*?? £&gt;*7*7» ,,*. «, '&gt; lc,u;*' o, *» w '"&gt;n£ frit' n;/?s'°'&gt; , ' s' It :t&lt;&gt; "rV,v/ a,&#13;
J! ** hv'VS % n'" y' *c'&#13;
"Cf? &lt;o "I * •?» ***&#13;
?*;&gt;„0•'"*"/* **-is»?-4» t '-y&#13;
Refreshments &amp; Discussion will follow.&#13;
10 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Apri l 1 8 , 197 3&#13;
Toynbee reviews&#13;
book on self&#13;
KENOSHA - Noted British&#13;
historian Arnold Toynbee&#13;
favorably reviews a book about&#13;
himself and his work written by a&#13;
UW-Milwaukee professor in the&#13;
spring issue of CLIO, a scholarly&#13;
journal published at Parkside.&#13;
Editors of CLIO consider the&#13;
Toynbee on Toynbee" piece an&#13;
indication of the increasing&#13;
stature of the new interdisciplinary&#13;
journal of&#13;
literature, history and philosophy&#13;
of history, which was founded&#13;
last year by Parkside faculty.&#13;
In the piece, Toynbee comments&#13;
on the recent book, "Arnold&#13;
J. Toynbee, Historian for an&#13;
Age of Crisis" by Roland M.&#13;
Stromberg, a professor of history&#13;
at UWM since 1967. (The book&#13;
was published in 1972 in the U.S.&#13;
by Southern Illinois University&#13;
Press and in England by Feffer&#13;
and Simons, Inc., London.)&#13;
Toynbee, whose best-known&#13;
work is the monumental ' Study&#13;
of History," writes that&#13;
"Professor Stromberg's appraisal&#13;
of me and my work has&#13;
been more helpful to me than any&#13;
critique or appreciation that I&#13;
have previously read, and I am&#13;
grateful to him...I can think of&#13;
only one important point that&#13;
Professor Stromberg has hot&#13;
brought out, namely, the enduring&#13;
(and still increasing)&#13;
effect on me of the deaths of my&#13;
contemporaries in World War&#13;
I...these deaths account for the&#13;
change in my attitude towards&#13;
nationalism to which Professor&#13;
Stromberg rightly draws attention."&#13;
Toynbee says that he first&#13;
viewed nationalism as a concept&#13;
of "some positive value" and,&#13;
subsequently, as meriting "my&#13;
militant hostility."&#13;
"Photographs of my friends&#13;
who were killed in 1915-16 are on&#13;
the mantelpiece of the room in&#13;
which I am writing, but the&#13;
deaths, in the same war, of&#13;
French, German, Austrian, and&#13;
American contemporaries,&#13;
whom I did not know personally,&#13;
are also on my mind," Toynbee&#13;
writes.&#13;
In addition to changing his&#13;
attitude toward nationalism, the&#13;
deaths also account in part for&#13;
"my obsessive industriousness as&#13;
a writer," according to Toynbee.&#13;
"Having been spared, by an&#13;
accident, from sharing my&#13;
contemporaries' fate, I have felt,&#13;
ever since, that it has been laid&#13;
upon me to be one of the&#13;
representatives of this decimated&#13;
generation-though I am aware&#13;
that some of my friends would&#13;
have 2 been among my critics if&#13;
they had survived," Toynbee&#13;
writes.&#13;
STEAK&#13;
AT HA MBURGER&#13;
PRICES&#13;
V SIRLOIN STRIP STEAK&#13;
V RIB-EYE STEAK&#13;
V T-BONE STEAK&#13;
V CHOPPED STEAK&#13;
V STEAK SANDWICH&#13;
. FRIED CHICKEN&#13;
* SHRIMP PLATTER&#13;
. FISH PLATTER&#13;
* BONANZA BUHGF.H&#13;
* CHILD'S PLATTER&#13;
* CHEESEBURGER&#13;
* PIES AND QTHER DESSERTS&#13;
CALL AHEAD FOR&#13;
ORDERS TO CO&#13;
652-8662&#13;
3315 52nd St., At 34th Ave.&#13;
CHUCK HUJIK MGR.&#13;
While accepting Stromberg's&#13;
verdict that "I have tended to&#13;
twist the past to fit my prejudices&#13;
and that I have been blind at&#13;
times to the evident state of&#13;
things," Toynbee adds that "I&#13;
have acted in good faith and have&#13;
not been blind wilfully."&#13;
But he takes issue when&#13;
Stromberg votes for "abandoning&#13;
the holisitic vision as an impossible&#13;
dream."&#13;
"All religions present precepts&#13;
for the conduct of human life, and&#13;
this practical service is the&#13;
raison d'etre for their holistic&#13;
panorama," Toynbee maintains.&#13;
Toynbee holds that the holistic&#13;
vision, which ' emphasizes the&#13;
organic and functional relation&#13;
between parts and wholes, "Is&#13;
the necessary setting for the&#13;
passage from birth to death that&#13;
every human being has to make.&#13;
No human being understands the&#13;
mysterious Universe more than&#13;
partially; yet every human being&#13;
has to find his way about in the&#13;
Universe as best he may. He can&#13;
fare better with a chart than&#13;
without one.&#13;
"Human beings will continue to&#13;
have holistic visions so long as&#13;
mankind survives. We may&#13;
recognize that the best of these&#13;
visions are no more than partial&#13;
glimpses, but I do not believe that&#13;
we can, or should, eschew them,"&#13;
Toynbee concludes.&#13;
Review&#13;
Changes&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
Changes, a versatile folk trio, performed at the&#13;
Student Activities Building Tuesday, April 10, at&#13;
12:30 p.m. The group played for free to a scattered&#13;
audience of 22 persons for 2 hours.&#13;
The group is from Chicago and consists of one&#13;
female, Robin Farrell (vocals, guitar), and two&#13;
men, Robert Taylor (vocals, percussion) and&#13;
Nicholas Tesluk (Vocals, guitar and flute).&#13;
Most of the material Changes performed was&#13;
their own and was skillfully executed. Guitar&#13;
changes were needed between most of the songs to&#13;
adapt the sound to particular styles. Their music&#13;
encompassed a great deal of the Folk spectrum as&#13;
they did contemporary folk, Spanish Flamenco and&#13;
Greek bouzoukia music. Some of the songs&#13;
developed from these different blends displayed a&#13;
form of classical rock.&#13;
The only thing lacking from this competent band&#13;
was a little emotion or character. Naturally, it must&#13;
have been arduous for Changes to get fired up when&#13;
only about 5 members of the scant audience observed&#13;
them with any amount of concentration.&#13;
However, it seems that a fresh approach or some&#13;
kind of unique personae would have helped considerably.&#13;
"Legends That We Know" is a half hour-long&#13;
madrigal song containing 210 l ines of poetry, that&#13;
the band did in two parts. Changes unsuccessfully&#13;
tried to generate interest with its many references&#13;
to literature in this song that college students should&#13;
have read. No matter how great they may be, lyrics&#13;
alone will not suffice on the entertainment level.&#13;
Vivid changes of mood or tone are needed to accent&#13;
dynamic phrases.&#13;
The one nice thing about folk singers is that they&#13;
always play for free. As a general rule this is&#13;
because folk singers are such good-natured,&#13;
generous people and because nobody listens to them&#13;
otherwise.&#13;
MONDAY NITE&#13;
IS ALWAYS&#13;
A0*&#13;
A PITCHER&#13;
OF&#13;
LIGHT BEER&#13;
ONLY&#13;
SHBK6SS&#13;
IN RACINE&#13;
LATHROP AND 21st ( ALMOST)&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
Wed., April 18, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 11&#13;
RANGER Tracksters prove good performers&#13;
Sports&#13;
Baseball schedule jammed&#13;
The Rangers baseball team&#13;
will attempt to pen their season&#13;
today with a game against&#13;
Dominican and possibly on&#13;
Thursday with a doubleheader&#13;
against Northland.&#13;
After two weeks of rain and&#13;
snow which made the baseball&#13;
diamond too wet to play on, the&#13;
Parkside team had to cancel six&#13;
games. This will result in a heavy&#13;
schedule for the last four weeks&#13;
of classes, including the spring&#13;
break.&#13;
It was reported earlier that last&#13;
year's team had 14 games&#13;
washed out.&#13;
While Rip Van Winkle may&#13;
have slept for twenty years in the&#13;
Catskill Mountains, from the&#13;
fictitious story by the same name&#13;
written by Washington Irving,&#13;
the Rangers have continued their&#13;
daily practices under the watchful&#13;
eyes of coashes Red&#13;
Oberbruner and Morley&#13;
Torgenson.&#13;
Girls place second&#13;
The team practiced for the two&#13;
weeks in the confines of the P.E.&#13;
building which had much to be&#13;
desired for baseball.&#13;
For example, last Friday the&#13;
team had the privilege of practicing&#13;
while the Parkside band&#13;
was getting ready for its Sunday&#13;
performance. It resulted in&#13;
mishaps that resembled the&#13;
opening of the old television&#13;
show, F-Troop. Baseballs were&#13;
dropped, directions were not&#13;
heard, and it turned out to be&#13;
almost a total wasted day for the&#13;
Rangers.&#13;
There was some question from&#13;
the opening article on the&#13;
baseball team as to where the&#13;
batting averages came from, as&#13;
several were said to be in error.&#13;
Coach Oberbruner pasted on&#13;
those figures and they were not&#13;
made up by the reporter.&#13;
Once again if mother nature&#13;
permits the opener will start at 1&#13;
p.m. today on the Parkside&#13;
baseball field.&#13;
The Parkside Rangerette track&#13;
team traveled to Carroll College&#13;
last Saturday and wound up in the&#13;
middle of a triangle. They placed&#13;
second in a triangular meet,&#13;
racking up 38 points to Carroll's&#13;
52 and UW-Waukesha's 11.&#13;
Sue Von Buehren was top point&#13;
winner for Parkside taking first&#13;
in the long jump, first in the high&#13;
jump and second in the 50 yard&#13;
hurdles.&#13;
Trudy Behrens was first in the&#13;
shot put and also took a third&#13;
place in the 50 yard hurdles.&#13;
The 440 yard run was captured&#13;
by Maria Breach, who also putted&#13;
the shot well enough for a fourth&#13;
place.&#13;
Eilleen Reilly dominated the&#13;
880 yard run and was second in&#13;
the mile.&#13;
The four women mentioned&#13;
above also made up the&#13;
Rangerettes four-lap relay which&#13;
placed second.&#13;
On Saturday, April 7, the&#13;
Rangerettes traveled to Madison&#13;
with the men's team to compete&#13;
in the U.S. Track and Field Meet&#13;
and had four women gain individual&#13;
honors.&#13;
Sandy Kingsfield was second in&#13;
the long jump, second in the 440&#13;
yard run and fourth in the 60 yard&#13;
dash.&#13;
Trudy Behrens took a fourth in&#13;
the 70 yard hurdles.&#13;
Sue Von Buehren captured the&#13;
high jump and the long jump;&#13;
and Eilleen Reilly placed sixth in&#13;
the 880 yard run.&#13;
The 440 relay team of Von&#13;
Buehren, Kingsfield, Breach and&#13;
Reilly was second, giving the tern&#13;
good overall balance.&#13;
valeo's&#13;
PIZZA HITCH EH&#13;
Chicken &amp; Italian S ausage B ombers&#13;
Free Delivery to Parkside Vi llage&#13;
5021 50th Avenue Phone 657-5191 •••••••••»••••••••••••••&#13;
3Ltt$ Sub 1701 N. Main Racine 633-9421&#13;
TAP&#13;
BEER 15&#13;
Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
Thu r s d a y 1 1 - 8&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches]&#13;
Foosball 2 Poo l Tables&#13;
Air Conditioning Pinball Machine&#13;
Col d Six Packs To Go&#13;
by Kris Koch&#13;
The Ranger tracksters&#13;
traveled to Stevens Point last&#13;
Saturday and received some&#13;
outstanding performances from&#13;
seven individuals.&#13;
Lucien Rosa won the six-mile&#13;
event with a time of 30 minutes&#13;
22.3 seconds. Chuck Deltman was&#13;
third in the six mile with a time of&#13;
31:04.6. The outstanding times by&#13;
these two runners ranked them&#13;
third and fifth respectively in the&#13;
national rankings. Lucien Rosa&#13;
also ran to a third place in the&#13;
three mile event.&#13;
Keith Merrit won the triple&#13;
jump with a leap of 45'3" and also&#13;
placed third in the pole vault.&#13;
soaring 13'6", his best collegiate&#13;
jump.&#13;
The relay team of Dennis Biel,&#13;
Mike Kopczynski, Herb Degroot&#13;
and Cornelius Gordon collected&#13;
two second places. They raced to&#13;
a 1:32.2 time in the 880 relay&#13;
setting a school record and also&#13;
took a second in the sprint relay.&#13;
These same runners picked up a&#13;
fourth in the 440 relay and a&#13;
fourth in the mile relay. In the&#13;
mile relay, Raul Medina ran in&#13;
place of Kopczynski.&#13;
Tim Martinson leaped to a fifth&#13;
place in the pole vault and&#13;
Kopczynski was fourth in the long&#13;
jump with a leap of 21'1".&#13;
Dennis Biel was elected team&#13;
captain by his teammates after i I1LU 5 SPORTS SHORTS&#13;
running some outstanding anchor&#13;
legs in the relays. Biel is usually&#13;
a miler.&#13;
Coach Bob Lawson commented&#13;
that the team performed a good&#13;
overall job in their first outdoor&#13;
activity of the year.&#13;
This Friday, the Rangers will&#13;
host their first outdoor track&#13;
meet of the year, dedicating the&#13;
new outdoor track, proclaimed to&#13;
be one of the best in North&#13;
America. Lawson said that he&#13;
hoped that some of his athletes&#13;
would be able to qualify for&#13;
nationals.&#13;
Parkside will also be hosting&#13;
Decathalons this Thursday and&#13;
Friday starting at 2 p.m. on&#13;
Thursday and 10 a.m. on Friday.&#13;
The Parkside bowling team&#13;
will be traveling to the NAIA&#13;
tourney in Kansas City on May 3-&#13;
5. The Rangers fired the second&#13;
highest qualifying score in the&#13;
country to earn the berth.&#13;
The Rangers became one of&#13;
eight teams qualifying for the&#13;
tournament. Parkside was the&#13;
champion of the Madison&#13;
regional this year.&#13;
Mike Peratt of the Rangers&#13;
blasted a 1,269 for six games to&#13;
take first place individual honors.&#13;
Parkside's Mike West was&#13;
second with 1,194 and Dick Kenny&#13;
third with 1,176. Other Ranger&#13;
qualifiers were Jim Mohrbacher&#13;
and Mike Jenrette.&#13;
The Rangers totaled 5,872 pins&#13;
for six games or an average of 193&#13;
per man.&#13;
Chris Andacht waded through a&#13;
field of 18 competitors to win&#13;
Parkside's first one-on-one&#13;
basketball tournament. The oneon-&#13;
one tournament consisted of&#13;
two players playing each other to&#13;
a game of 20.&#13;
All of Andacht's games were&#13;
close, as he beat each opponent&#13;
by 4 points. In the first game he&#13;
defeated John St. Peter 20-16; in&#13;
the second game he defeated&#13;
Greg Veltus 24-20; in the semifinals&#13;
he defeated Tom Hart 20-&#13;
16; and for the championship&#13;
Andacht defeated Ed Van Tine&#13;
20-16. Van Tine was the runner-up&#13;
in this first annual affair.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
AFRO dance classes: YWCA 8th 8. College&#13;
Ave. Racine instructor Betty Briggs call 633&#13;
3503 A. Dowman Starting 4-11-73&#13;
Wanted: Part-time waitresses. Some&#13;
experience preferred, but will train. Work&#13;
for hourly wages. Call hostess at&#13;
Meadowbrook Country Club, 637-7461.&#13;
WANTED • Used 5- or 10-speed men's&#13;
bicycle. 140orsowil! be considered. Call 553-&#13;
2295 and leave message for Jerry.&#13;
1969 OPEL Station Wagon. Excellent condition,&#13;
25-30 miles per gallon. 654-8888.&#13;
1970 Maverick 6-stick, red, Ex. cond.,&#13;
economical, dependable, new tires, must sell&#13;
632-3385.&#13;
632-0150^ PaP6rS COn,act Kris Wri9ht&#13;
Will do typing at my home. Call Nancy. 632-&#13;
,zo67.&#13;
TERM PAPERS papers neatly typed. 50&#13;
cents per page. Call for and deliver. J&#13;
Konke, 694-2776 after 5:30.&#13;
CLUB&#13;
INTRIGUE&#13;
1446 Frederick St., R acine • 634-9280&#13;
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
SAT. &amp; SUN. 9 p.m. - 1 a.m.&#13;
by Milwaukee's&#13;
Billie Soul A&#13;
The Changing Times&#13;
"New Blues" &amp; "Rock" B and&#13;
Unescorted Ladies No Cover&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
Classified Advertising Rate&#13;
5 cents per word up to 25 words for each insertion.&#13;
Payable in advance by check or cash to:&#13;
The Parkside Ranger&#13;
Business Office&#13;
D-194 LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
NAME&#13;
CHECK ENCLOSED FOR $.&#13;
DATES(S) TO RUN&#13;
To find your cost, multiply the&#13;
number of words times 5&#13;
cents. Multiply that total by&#13;
the number of issues you want&#13;
it to run.&#13;
ADDRESS&#13;
CITY&#13;
date.&#13;
_PHONE NO..&#13;
One word per space Do not skip space between words to show" spacing&#13;
Ads must be submitted one week before publication.&#13;
Golf Schedule&#13;
April 17 Northern Illinois University Kenosha -1 p.m.&#13;
UW-Milwaukee&#13;
UW-Oshkosh&#13;
April 19 Loyola University Kenosha - 1 p.m.&#13;
Lake Forest&#13;
April 22 Spring Trip to Gulf Hills - Ocean Springs&#13;
April&#13;
April 22-28 Spring Trip to Gulf Hills - Ocean Springs, Mississippi&#13;
April 30 Carthage College Kenosha - 1 p.m.&#13;
Carroll College&#13;
UW-Green Bay&#13;
May 2 Northern Illinois University Dekalb&#13;
May 5-7 District No. 14 Tournament - Green Lake&#13;
June 4-9 or June 11-16 South Dakota&#13;
P.E. Bldg. Schedule&#13;
RECREATIONAL HOURS&#13;
Pool&#13;
Monday 8. Wednesday 11:30-1:30&#13;
Tuesday 8. Thursday 11:30-2:30&#13;
FridaV 11:30-3:30&#13;
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday 5:30-10:00&#13;
Thursday 5:30-7:00&#13;
9:00-10:00&#13;
10:00-5:00&#13;
Sunday 1:30-10 00&#13;
Gym&#13;
Monday thru Friday 10:30-1:30(2 courts open)&#13;
3:30-6:00 (1 court open)&#13;
6:00-10:00 (restricted play)&#13;
Handball Courts&#13;
Monday thru Friday 8:00a.m.-10:00p.m.&#13;
except Tuesday 8. Thursday closed from 10:30-12:00for classes&#13;
Saturday 8 00-5-00&#13;
Sunday i-00-10-00&#13;
POOL HOURS - EASTER VACATION, APRIL 20-30&#13;
April 20 - Building closes at 12 noon.&#13;
April 21 - 10 a.m.-l p.m., 1-5 p.m.&#13;
April 22 - Building closed.&#13;
April 23 - (Monday) 12 noon-2:30 p.m., 2:30-5:30p.m., 5:30-10 p.m.&#13;
April 24 - (Tuesday) 12 noon-2:30 p.m., 2:30-6 p.m., 6-10 p.m.&#13;
April 25 - (Wednesday) 12 noon-2:30 p.m., 2:30-6p.m., 6-10 p.m.&#13;
April 26 - (Thursday) 12 noon-3 p.m., 3-6p.m., 6-10 p.m.&#13;
April 27- (Friday) 12 noon-2:30 p.m., 2:30-5 p.m.&#13;
April 28 - (Saturday) 10 a.m.-l p.m., 1-5 p.m.&#13;
April 29 - (Sunday) 1:30-5 p.m., 5-10 p.m.&#13;
WED. MAY 2&#13;
Two Shows&#13;
7:00 &amp; 9:30 p.m,&#13;
in Racine Memorial Hall&#13;
BEN SIDRAN&#13;
former accompainist with&#13;
ROLLING STONES&#13;
_ STEVE MILLER B Af&#13;
ERIC CLAPTON&#13;
Gen Tickets Available At:&#13;
Adm All J &amp; J R ECORD ST0F&#13;
BEAUTIFUL DAY RECOR&#13;
THE EARTH WORKS&#13;
DUBEES BAR&#13;
Presented b y&#13;
America Theatre P roductions&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens and his golf troops. (Names not available.)&#13;
Golfers ready for season&#13;
One senior, four juniors, five&#13;
sophomores and three freshmen&#13;
make up Coach Steve Stephens&#13;
golf ranks this spring. One of the&#13;
freshmen, John Lehmen, out of&#13;
Kenosha Tremper, was cocaptain&#13;
and Most Valuable&#13;
Player of his high school team in&#13;
1972. John Aiello is the other&#13;
freshmen prospect. He gained&#13;
MVP at St. Joseph's High School&#13;
and was Independent High School&#13;
State Champion in 1972.&#13;
Returnees for the spring roster&#13;
include sophomores Dave and&#13;
Don Fox, brothers out of Kenosha&#13;
Tremper; Dan Leissner who&#13;
prepped at Racine Case and Pete&#13;
Nevins from Jefferson&#13;
Wisconsin. Stevens also has&#13;
juniors Richard Willems out of&#13;
Kenosha St. Joseph, Jim Vakos&#13;
from Racine Horlick, Tom Bothe&#13;
former MVP at Kenosha&#13;
Tremper and James Dreifke also&#13;
from Tremper returning. The&#13;
lone Senior returning this spring,&#13;
is Mark Schweke from Marshfield,&#13;
Wisconsin. Schweke&#13;
prepped at Marshfield High and&#13;
was elected Most Valuable&#13;
Athlete in 1969.&#13;
Also joining the ranks are Dave&#13;
Karr, a transfer from UWMadison,&#13;
and A1 Pavonka, a&#13;
freshman from Clintonville.&#13;
The Ranger golfers hosted&#13;
their first meet of the season&#13;
yesterday at Petrifying Springs.&#13;
They were up against Northern&#13;
Illinois, UW-Milwaukee and UWOshkosh.&#13;
Their next meet will be&#13;
tomorrow against Loyola&#13;
University and Lake Forest at&#13;
Petrifying Springs at 1 p.m.&#13;
District tournament will be&#13;
held May 5 through 7 and&#13;
Stephens figures that the key to&#13;
the tournament will be putting&#13;
together six good rounds the first&#13;
day and at least five of six on the&#13;
second.&#13;
He also commented that, in&#13;
order for the team to be considered&#13;
contenders, a lot depends&#13;
on the performance of new&#13;
players Leissner, Pevonka and&#13;
Karr.&#13;
The Rangers lost their number&#13;
one stroker in Tom Feiner, who&#13;
turned pro after last season. But,&#13;
they have prospective talent and&#13;
returning lettermen to create&#13;
depth for their smallness in&#13;
number.&#13;
The clubsters have three home&#13;
meets scheduled for the spring&#13;
season (all to be held at&#13;
Petrifying Springs Golf Course)&#13;
and four away meets, one of&#13;
which will take them to Ocean&#13;
Springs, Mississippi.&#13;
The Physical Education&#13;
Department has announced that&#13;
the pool will be closed for a two&#13;
week period, Starting May 11, for&#13;
repairs.</text>
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