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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>Key to combatting problem is educating public</text>
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              <text>executives&#13;
Alex Pettit (I)-and Corby Anderson' take office March 30 as President and&#13;
Vice-President, respectively;  of PSGA. See stories, page 3.&#13;
combatting  problem&#13;
IIImberUeKranIch&#13;
NewsEdItor&#13;
in&#13;
a tloree'part series&#13;
harassment   as&#13;
It&#13;
00&#13;
the  UW-Parkside&#13;
Is&#13;
very subtle  in&#13;
na-&#13;
d very difficult  to  de.&#13;
deal&#13;
with."&#13;
preceding  was   one   of&#13;
gs&#13;
by  the  Institu-&#13;
Resource   Committee&#13;
~    Status&#13;
oI&#13;
Women in its&#13;
..   t7,&#13;
1980&#13;
report.   Since&#13;
Parts!&#13;
Committee's&#13;
report&#13;
.......  de&#13;
formUlateda Sexuai&#13;
IIlIee&#13;
ment Advisory   Com-&#13;
In&#13;
1981&#13;
which had  been&#13;
I'e&#13;
c!:.P&#13;
untu&#13;
three   years&#13;
rreotly,   Chancellor&#13;
Kaplanplans to formu-&#13;
a new committee&#13;
within&#13;
lib&#13;
DeJtt&#13;
two&#13;
months&#13;
to  deal&#13;
......allegations  of   sexual&#13;
~  ment.&#13;
institutional  Resource&#13;
Committee    found  one  of  the&#13;
biggest'   problems    to  be   the&#13;
uncertainty&#13;
as  to  whether   or&#13;
not  one  has  been  a  victim  of&#13;
sexual   harassment.&#13;
In  addi-&#13;
tion, when sexual  harassment&#13;
is  clearly the  case,  victims&#13;
have been and continue&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
fearful  of coming forward&#13;
. with&#13;
a&#13;
complaint.&#13;
With these  considerations   in&#13;
mind, .when the Sexual Har-&#13;
assment  Advisory&#13;
Committee&#13;
was  active  as&#13;
it&#13;
tried  to de-&#13;
velop  an  educational   program&#13;
to  help  sensitize   the  campus&#13;
to&#13;
the  issue  of harassment.&#13;
Brochures&#13;
explaining    sexual.&#13;
harassment    were  distributed&#13;
in  addition   to  the  showing  of&#13;
films   and   lectures   on  the&#13;
. topic.&#13;
"The area  that  needed the&#13;
most  attention   and  continues&#13;
to  need  It  Is  the  educational&#13;
aspect,"    according   to  Stuart&#13;
expert discusses  Iranscam •••••page 4&#13;
"IOn'&#13;
student controversY=  •.•••page 5&#13;
r doesn't hinder student&#13;
page&#13;
7&#13;
EXhibition held here&#13;
page 8&#13;
continues  tradition&#13;
page 15&#13;
1987 P.S.G.A. ELECTION BALLOT&#13;
P.S.G.A. PRESIDENT&#13;
.&#13;
Winners in&#13;
Bold&#13;
244 Alex PeWt&#13;
176 Kay Rouse&#13;
. 153 Rich Borkowski&#13;
35 Dan Galbraith&#13;
16 Jim Lawell, Jr.&#13;
P.S.G.A. VICE PRESIDENT&#13;
253 Corby Anderson&#13;
183 Fred Monardi&#13;
176&#13;
Dan&#13;
Vogt&#13;
P.S.G.A SENATE&#13;
299 Blake Topel&#13;
271 Jeanne Brandel&#13;
288 Kevin Zirkelbach   237 Jan Kratochvil&#13;
284 Sandra Villareal&#13;
26 Tim Usius&#13;
280 J.J. Masterson&#13;
20 Ken McCray&#13;
SEGREGATED UNIVERSITY FEE&#13;
ALLOCATION COMMITTEE&#13;
S.U.F.A.C. AT LARGE SEAT&#13;
249 Rocky Donovan&#13;
216 Bev Landreman&#13;
61 Sue Bostetter&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION ADVISORY BOARD&#13;
403 Lynn L1por&#13;
is educating public&#13;
Rubner,  member   of the  Corn-&#13;
mittee  since  its inception  and&#13;
director   of  student   counsel-&#13;
ing.&#13;
"1&#13;
don't&#13;
think&#13;
sexual&#13;
har-&#13;
assment  Is as&#13;
well&#13;
understood&#13;
as&#13;
It&#13;
could be.&#13;
"The  next&#13;
step,"&#13;
continued&#13;
Rubner,  "is  to report&#13;
it&#13;
(sex-&#13;
ual harassment).    People  have&#13;
to  come  out  of  the  closet  on&#13;
this  one."&#13;
In&#13;
addition  to educating  the&#13;
campus  community.  about&#13;
sexual  harassment,    the  Com-&#13;
mittee  functioned  "to  provide&#13;
a  means  for  people  to  report&#13;
sexual  harassment&#13;
with&#13;
as&#13;
11t-&#13;
tle  anxiety   and  embarrass-&#13;
ment  as possible,"  according&#13;
to  Stella   Gray,   the  first   to&#13;
chair the Committee back&#13;
in&#13;
1981.&#13;
To this effect. the names of&#13;
the&#13;
Committee&#13;
members&#13;
were    published,&#13;
which   re-&#13;
sulted  in individual  members&#13;
being   contacted    by   persons&#13;
claiming   sexual   harassment.&#13;
The&#13;
Committee&#13;
member&#13;
would  then  gather   informa-&#13;
tion   from    the   parties&#13;
tn-&#13;
volved,  come&#13;
to&#13;
the  Com~lt.&#13;
tee for advice  and  take  the&#13;
ID-&#13;
formation  back&#13;
to&#13;
the  parties&#13;
Invloved  without  ever  having&#13;
disclosed  any names.&#13;
"The  Committee  as a whole&#13;
never&#13;
heard&#13;
any&#13;
cases,"&#13;
stated   Rubner.&#13;
OlIn&#13;
a  way,&#13;
that's   the  way&#13;
It&#13;
should  be.&#13;
The cases  were  resolved  with·&#13;
out going public."&#13;
Sexual&#13;
Harassment&#13;
1&#13;
on&#13;
~ampus:&#13;
It&#13;
happens&#13;
Ja&#13;
here, too.&#13;
...&#13;
1IIIIIUio ..........&#13;
_-ll&#13;
According&#13;
to&#13;
former   com-&#13;
rnlttee   members,&#13;
all&#13;
sexual&#13;
harassment   allegations  were&#13;
resolved&#13;
in&#13;
an  informal   man.&#13;
nero&#13;
In&#13;
some  cases,&#13;
for&#13;
exam-&#13;
ple,  the  harasser   in  question&#13;
would be told by a  commitiee&#13;
member  that  a student,  anon-&#13;
ymous,   had   raised   a   com.&#13;
plaint  and  that  the professor's&#13;
behavior  was  inexcusable   and&#13;
must  stop.&#13;
The  stronger   means   of&#13;
&amp;C-&#13;
tion,  which&#13;
has&#13;
never   been&#13;
taken  at  Parksfde,   would  be&#13;
to&#13;
tile,&#13;
in&#13;
writing,&#13;
an  official&#13;
formal   complaint.   Of&#13;
all&#13;
the&#13;
eases&#13;
former&#13;
Committee&#13;
ChaIr,&#13;
Teresa    Peck-McGov-&#13;
ern,   assoctate&#13;
professor&#13;
of&#13;
education,&#13;
has&#13;
dealt    with,&#13;
none  of  the   victims   wanted&#13;
her  to  take  their   complaints&#13;
any  further&#13;
than&#13;
her  oft1ce.&#13;
sex_page    ,-&#13;
..&#13;
P&#13;
erspectives&#13;
~~~~~=~.Th~Ursda~Y'Ma~?~2'~&#13;
, IF I UNDERSTAND&#13;
't&#13;
I&#13;
WE&#13;
AIlE&#13;
1IIE&#13;
\T&#13;
toIUt£CTlY. WE&#13;
FASTEST.&#13;
BELIEVE1HI\TMAN&#13;
r.-W1"~&#13;
tolmlOLS&#13;
HIS OWN&#13;
"""    "."&#13;
DESnNY...THAT&#13;
RELIGION&#13;
EVOLUTIoN.&#13;
~~DE&#13;
SEXIJAI,.\T't'  Al'tD&#13;
.. """&#13;
HIS1\lRY&#13;
ARE&#13;
TODAy:&#13;
~&#13;
PROCESSES.&#13;
OR SOMETIlING&#13;
UKE 1\lI\T.&#13;
our&#13;
VieW&#13;
'Endorsement   both&#13;
a&#13;
right&#13;
and&#13;
responsibility&#13;
Last week's  edltorla1, In which we endorsed  candldates&#13;
In the PSGA executive  elections,&#13;
has'&#13;
prompted  some stu-&#13;
dents to question  not just who we supported,  but also that&#13;
we supported  anyone at all.&#13;
Our reasons  for backing  Alex Pettit  and Corby Ander-&#13;
son, explained  last week, need no elaboration.  Our deci-&#13;
sion&#13;
to&#13;
endorse  candidates.  however.&#13;
is&#13;
a right and re-&#13;
sponslbllity  which  warrants  clartncatlon,   especially&#13;
in&#13;
light of the absurd  charges  which have been lobbed our&#13;
way.&#13;
As a newspaper  serving  the Parkslde  community,  the&#13;
, Ranger  exists to Inform students,  staff and admlnlstratlon&#13;
of Issues and events relevant  to them. That responsibility,&#13;
In part,  Includes  formulating  a cogent  edltorlal  opinion,&#13;
one&#13;
that&#13;
reflects  a staff consensus  and whose purpose&#13;
is&#13;
to&#13;
logically  lead readers  to a better  understanding  of com.&#13;
plex, slgnlflcant  matters.&#13;
Such a rationale&#13;
has&#13;
been germane&#13;
to&#13;
freedom of the&#13;
press since the Constitution  established  that-fundamental&#13;
right. Yet It&#13;
has&#13;
been suggested  by some protestors  that&#13;
total freedom of the press does not apply to student&#13;
publi-&#13;
cations  like  the  Ranger,   which  are  partially   funded&#13;
through student-generated   segregated  fees.&#13;
We ardently  dlsagree.&#13;
It&#13;
Is&#13;
a specious  claim  that  the Ranger  be prohibited&#13;
from endorsing a&#13;
political&#13;
candidate on the grounds&#13;
that&#13;
doing so Is an infraction  of a&#13;
UW&#13;
-System&#13;
Board&#13;
of&#13;
Re-&#13;
gents policy stating  that segregated  fee monles cannot be&#13;
used&#13;
to support  political  campaigns  and activities.  Such a&#13;
provision  does exist, In the System!! FInancial  Policy and&#13;
Procedure  Paper&#13;
'20&#13;
(FPPP&#13;
20),&#13;
but It pertains  only to&#13;
the "giving of segregated  fees"  to political  organizations,&#13;
accordlng  to James  Albers, the System's  director  of&#13;
auxn-&#13;
lary operations.&#13;
•'The consensus here (among System officials)."  Albers&#13;
told&#13;
the Ranger&#13;
this&#13;
week, "ls&#13;
that&#13;
as long as&#13;
i(&#13;
is&#13;
a nor-&#13;
mal&#13;
part&#13;
of edltorla1 policy, the endorsing  of candldates  Is&#13;
perfectly  In the context of First Amendment  rights.  Since&#13;
the purpose  of your newspaper  Is not political,  but infor-&#13;
mational,  edltorlaIlzlng   • and  endorsing  candldates  • Is&#13;
permissible.  "&#13;
It&#13;
has&#13;
also been intimated  that our endorsement&#13;
Is&#13;
In&#13;
some way&#13;
part&#13;
of a "hidden agenda" our staff&#13;
has&#13;
de-&#13;
vised&#13;
to strengthen  Its already  "slgnlflcant  power to Influ·&#13;
ence public oplnlon on campus."&#13;
It&#13;
Is sad Indeed that&#13;
per-&#13;
sons and organizations&#13;
which&#13;
supposedly have the inter-&#13;
ests of the university at heart see&#13;
fit&#13;
to&#13;
accuse us of collu-&#13;
sion without benefit of anything  other&#13;
than&#13;
a feeling that&#13;
"there  may be a hidden  agenda."&#13;
It&#13;
Is an ugly,&#13;
conten-&#13;
tlous insinuation  and deserves  little serious consideration.&#13;
There&#13;
is&#13;
one&#13;
point,&#13;
however. on which we and our de-&#13;
tractors  agree:  "freedom- of the press&#13;
Is&#13;
not an absolute."&#13;
Instead,  It Is a fragile  package  which must  be handled&#13;
with great  care, since Its contents  are precious.  We view&#13;
our duty as that of the postal Inspector:  to assure that the&#13;
bundle Isn't knocked  about and damaged,  so that what's&#13;
inside can be enjoyed for generations.&#13;
Endorsing  candldates  for office Is just one way we do&#13;
that job.&#13;
Iyour views&#13;
endorse&#13;
Ranger shouldn't&#13;
tween  most  student neWlo&#13;
papers    and   governments,&#13;
PSGA  and  the  Ranger&#13;
are&#13;
friends  and  cooperate&#13;
to&#13;
In·&#13;
form students  of the issue.&#13;
af·&#13;
fectlng  them.&#13;
Because&#13;
PSGA&#13;
controls  the purse strings&#13;
of&#13;
all organizations,  the&#13;
balance&#13;
of power  Is on PSGA'.&#13;
side;&#13;
this Is changing.&#13;
Three  Ranger staff&#13;
pel'lllllll&#13;
constituent   the  majority&#13;
of&#13;
SUF AC   membership&#13;
aad&#13;
hence   carry   conslderabk&#13;
weight   In  making  studeDt&#13;
government   decisions.&#13;
W\1II&#13;
this endorsement,  the&#13;
ba!aDCl&#13;
of power&#13;
Is&#13;
conllnualiy&#13;
sblfto&#13;
Ing. We should be awarel1llt&#13;
there  may be a hidden~&#13;
da.&#13;
How&#13;
dare&#13;
one group of&#13;
sIU-&#13;
dents,  possessing  signifi'"&#13;
power to Influence opinion.&#13;
campus,  claim that they&#13;
hall&#13;
the knowledge to mske a&#13;
vetI&#13;
personal  and subjective&#13;
ded-&#13;
slon  for  students?&#13;
To '::&#13;
your' opinion&#13;
as&#13;
correc~&#13;
somehow  superiOr&#13;
to&#13;
0&#13;
Is not your right.&#13;
.!&gt;II&#13;
I&#13;
abhor&#13;
this&#13;
irre.I""~u;.&#13;
action   and   demand&#13;
ffJ&#13;
Ranger  publicly spolOgiZ'!&#13;
their Ignorance.&#13;
GA&#13;
Vk'&#13;
Sue  Brudvlg,  PS~&#13;
If&#13;
we agree that the ~anger&#13;
has a responsibility  to present&#13;
optntons,  they  also  have  the&#13;
responsibility   to present&#13;
d1f-'&#13;
ferlng vieWs; therefore,  time-&#13;
liness   Is  Important.&#13;
Obvt-&#13;
ously,&#13;
an  endorsement&#13;
pub-&#13;
IIshed In the Issue  before  an&#13;
election  dld not  allow  for  a&#13;
vital  function   of  edltortals&#13;
and letters  to the  editor:&#13;
reo&#13;
sponses&#13;
by&#13;
members  of the&#13;
campus   community.   The&#13;
RaJ\ger  dld  not  fulflll  their&#13;
rewponslblllties    to  the  stu-&#13;
dents.&#13;
One  could  argue  that  this&#13;
endorsement    Is  within   the&#13;
paper's  rights;  however,  free.&#13;
dom of the press  Is not an abo&#13;
solute. Unlike  other  prtvately&#13;
owned  and  financed  news-&#13;
papers, the Ranger receives.&#13;
segregated&#13;
fees    (student&#13;
money).  The Wlsconaln  Board&#13;
of Regents  has&#13;
ruled&#13;
that&#13;
seg-&#13;
regated  fee monies&#13;
cannot&#13;
be&#13;
used to support  political  cam-&#13;
paigns  and activities.&#13;
I&#13;
Inter.&#13;
pret  this  to Include  campus&#13;
_political  campaigns   and  the&#13;
PSGA election.&#13;
I&#13;
encourage  all students  to&#13;
critically  analyze  the new de.&#13;
velopments&#13;
In&#13;
campus   stu.&#13;
dent  politics.  Unlike  the  ad.&#13;
versarial&#13;
relationship&#13;
be •&#13;
To the Edltor:&#13;
It&#13;
Is an understatement   to&#13;
say  that&#13;
I&#13;
am  extremely&#13;
alarmed    and   dlsappolnted&#13;
that   the  Ranger   endorsed&#13;
PSGA  executive  candldates.&#13;
This&#13;
Is&#13;
not a reflection  on any&#13;
individual  candldate  but Is a&#13;
matter  of principle.&#13;
The Ranger serves a vital&#13;
function   at   Parkslde.&#13;
It&#13;
serves&#13;
to&#13;
disseminate  Infor-&#13;
matton&#13;
about activities  and&#13;
issues on&#13;
this&#13;
campus and&#13;
to&#13;
print  the  major  viewpoints&#13;
and&#13;
concerns of students,&#13;
fac-&#13;
ulty and staff. However,&#13;
I&#13;
do&#13;
not agree with your view that&#13;
this    campus'   newspaper&#13;
should  "lead  publlc  oplnlon&#13;
on important issues.&#13;
II&#13;
My&#13;
rea.&#13;
sons are:&#13;
The edltorlaI' does not make&#13;
It known  how&#13;
thls&#13;
decision&#13;
was reached.&#13;
I&#13;
question  that&#13;
thls&#13;
was In any way a group&#13;
decision and whether  a demo.&#13;
crattc&#13;
voting  process   took&#13;
place.    Technically,&#13;
since&#13;
there were five candidates for&#13;
the  presldenttal   office,  one&#13;
candidate. could secure  the&#13;
endorsement&#13;
with&#13;
a  mere&#13;
21%&#13;
of the vote.&#13;
If&#13;
this  was&#13;
the  case.  the  endorsement&#13;
.does not' truly  represent   the&#13;
Wishes of the entire staff.&#13;
•&#13;
Rangeriswritten&#13;
and&#13;
editedbystudentsofUW-Parl&lt;sidewhoare&#13;
solely&#13;
responsible&#13;
tor&#13;
its&#13;
,;;t~&#13;
d:&#13;
cyandcontent.nis publishe&lt;leveryThursdayduringthe&#13;
academic&#13;
year&#13;
exoept_&#13;
breakS&#13;
days.&#13;
_&#13;
.....&#13;
Letterstotheedltorwillbeaccepted&#13;
only&#13;
if&#13;
they&#13;
are&#13;
typed.&#13;
double-sP3COd&#13;
and&#13;
350&#13;
words"&#13;
iii"&#13;
lettersmust&#13;
be&#13;
Slglled.withatelephonenumberInetudedforverificationpurposes._&#13;
wi!&#13;
held&#13;
upon request.&#13;
.&#13;
RangerreseMS&#13;
the&#13;
righttoeditleUersandrefusethose&#13;
whicIl&#13;
arefalseand/or&#13;
de-&#13;
famatory.&#13;
Deadlineforatlletters,andclassified&#13;
ads&#13;
is Monday&#13;
at&#13;
10a m for_&#13;
tion&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
'.&#13;
..&#13;
tJVU......&#13;
Allcorrespondenceshouldbeaddressedto:&#13;
Range&lt;.&#13;
UW-Parl&lt;side.&#13;
Box&#13;
2000.&#13;
Ke-&#13;
noshaWI53141.Telephone414/553-2287(Editorial)or 414/553-2295&#13;
(AdVef\iS-&#13;
Ing)..&#13;
EDITORIAL  STAFF&#13;
~.ry&#13;
L&#13;
.schneeberger&#13;
_Editor&#13;
1mbertle&#13;
Kranich&#13;
:News&#13;
Editor&#13;
Kelty McKissick.,   " •.,.,&#13;
Asst.&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Jenny Carr&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
June&#13;
l.&#13;
Pendleton&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor .&#13;
Jim Neibaur&#13;
Entertainment  Editor&#13;
Tyson&#13;
WiIda ...•...•&#13;
.Asst.&#13;
Enlertainment  Editor&#13;
_   Luehr&#13;
Sports&#13;
Editor&#13;
Mic:haeIJ_Root&#13;
Asst.&#13;
Sports&#13;
Editor&#13;
Amy&#13;
H.&#13;
Ritter&#13;
,&#13;
Copy&#13;
Editor&#13;
Dave McEvoy&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Jack_Bomhuetter&#13;
, PhotoEditor&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Andy&#13;
Buchanan&#13;
'" ..Business  Manager&#13;
Don Harmeyer  ....•...&#13;
Asst.&#13;
BuSiness Manager&#13;
Brenda Buchanan  ...Business Staff Assistant&#13;
Dave R0!?ack ...••..•........ Advertising  Manager&#13;
Steven&#13;
PIC8Z0&#13;
0istribution  Manager&#13;
GENERAL STAFF&#13;
Bernie&#13;
Doll,MichelleEirich,Christina&#13;
Lojeskl,RickLUehr,DougMcEvoy,Michelle&#13;
Petersen,TedPrice,AndyTschumper&#13;
Jennie Tunkieicz.&#13;
•&#13;
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              <text>Task force calls for quality</text>
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              <text>"'b"rcdn"&#13;
"gntemher!j&#13;
]Y/!O&#13;
"&#13;
Tony&#13;
Randall&#13;
discusses acting&#13;
Page&#13;
7&#13;
Kaestner walks&#13;
to success&#13;
Page 11&#13;
Thursday, September  5, 1985&#13;
Task force calls&#13;
for quality&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
Campus News Editor&#13;
meal basis."&#13;
The committee,  which was&#13;
appointed  by former  Chancel,&#13;
lor Alan Guskin  last  fall, was&#13;
composed  of faculty  members&#13;
John  Buenker,   Robert  Cana,&#13;
ry,  Chong-Maw  Chen,  Arthur&#13;
Dudycha., John  Harbeson,&#13;
Peter Hoff, Alexander Licht.&#13;
man, Eugene Norwood, Ron.&#13;
aId Pavalko and Barbara&#13;
Shade. Administrators  on the&#13;
committee  were Acting Chan .&#13;
celror&#13;
Mary  Elizabeth  Shutler&#13;
and  Assistant  Chancellor  for&#13;
Educational   Services  Michael&#13;
Bassis.  Former  faculty  mem-&#13;
ber  Stella  Gray  was also on&#13;
the task force.&#13;
The task  force interviewed&#13;
about 40 students in focus&#13;
groups last spring break,  as&#13;
well as 100graduating   seniors&#13;
and a number of students in&#13;
different years and majors at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
"They  tried  to get a mix of&#13;
traditional   and&#13;
non-tr-adttton,&#13;
al, and they tried  to get a mix&#13;
of programs,"   Canary  said.&#13;
The report  focused  on aca-&#13;
demic    as    well   as    non-&#13;
academic  areas,  Canary  said,&#13;
since  student  life  contributes&#13;
to  a  college  education   even&#13;
though   it  does  not  involve&#13;
going  to classes.  For&#13;
examp-&#13;
Ie,   he   said,   Departmental&#13;
Clubs,  like those in communi-&#13;
cation,   geology  and&#13;
arrthr-o-&#13;
pology  have  helped  get  stu-&#13;
dents  involved in campus  life.&#13;
"It's  not a matter  of pass-&#13;
ing legislation,"   Canary  said,&#13;
"it's  just  a matter  of somebo-&#13;
dy saying  'let's  do&#13;
it.'&#13;
II&#13;
Task force&#13;
see&#13;
Page&#13;
3&#13;
Parkside  needs  to improve&#13;
its  freshman   retention   and&#13;
provide a higher  quality  cam-&#13;
pus life&#13;
if&#13;
it is to grow  in the&#13;
future,  a  report   by  adrnln-&#13;
istrators  and faculty  says.&#13;
The Report  of the  Chancel-&#13;
lor's   Task   Force    on   the&#13;
Freshman-Sophomore&#13;
Years&#13;
brings  together   many  ideas.&#13;
. some  of  which  are  already&#13;
being put  into effect  at Park-&#13;
side,  Robert   Canary,   chair.&#13;
man&#13;
of the task  force  said.&#13;
One  of   Parkside's&#13;
main&#13;
problems,  retention,   is  being&#13;
dealt with  by  the  campus  at&#13;
large as well as in the report,&#13;
which says  that  only&#13;
39&#13;
per-&#13;
cent of the freshmen   who en-&#13;
tered Parkside   in&#13;
1982&#13;
were&#13;
still at school in the Fall&#13;
1984&#13;
semester.  Also,   the   report&#13;
notes that even  though  fresh-&#13;
man enrollment  over  the  pe-&#13;
riod&#13;
1977-83&#13;
had   increased,&#13;
the number  of students  grad-&#13;
uating declined.&#13;
Some of the report's   recom-&#13;
mendations,  like  an  advising&#13;
center,    higher&#13;
admission&#13;
standards  and  a  reorganiza-&#13;
tion of orientation   week,  are&#13;
already  being  implemented,&#13;
Canary said. Other  proposals,&#13;
like freshman  seminars,   still&#13;
need to be planned  if they are&#13;
to be implemented.&#13;
"The task force  is not a col-&#13;
lection of brand  new  ideas,"&#13;
Canary   said.   •'The   report&#13;
puns&#13;
together   a  number   of&#13;
concerns   that   were   being.&#13;
pulled  together   on  a  piece.&#13;
Campus family  planning services get changes&#13;
b&#13;
.  L'&#13;
ht  f eis  that   the&#13;
developing  services  to benefit&#13;
only here are offered regular.&#13;
YLaureen  Wawro&#13;
said,&#13;
ere&#13;
e&#13;
.&#13;
f&#13;
them&#13;
"The   ideal&#13;
II&#13;
says&#13;
lyon  campuses  such as trw-&#13;
t&#13;
·&#13;
ortant   serVIce  0 _.&#13;
.&#13;
mos   Imp&#13;
.&#13;
Leicht   "would  be  for  men    Whitewater.&#13;
fe.red  to  students   th~s&#13;
1::[&#13;
and  w'omen  to  come  in  for&#13;
Edith  Isenberg,  Director  of&#13;
~lll  be  fre\pr~gnanS:rvices&#13;
counseling   and   information&#13;
Student Health Services,  said,&#13;
In~&#13;
r .&#13;
althoug    0&#13;
eJ&#13;
g  refer.&#13;
together."&#13;
"There  are  no specific  guide-&#13;
WIll&#13;
include  couns:&#13;
In,&#13;
tl&#13;
Susan&#13;
Walborn,&#13;
PSGA    lines governing  what must  be&#13;
ral  services   ~nd  Inform: ~~~    Senator   and   Director    for    offered   on  a  campus   this&#13;
on ~ontracephves.   br~aSt.  ns&#13;
Women's  Affairs,  says  these&#13;
small,"  and that  Whitewater-&#13;
testlcular&#13;
self ..exa~na   l~h' '    changes  are steps in the right's&#13;
female  population  is twice&#13;
diet  an~&#13;
exercise.&#13;
ew   n~~   direction.  Walborn  comments&#13;
that  of Parkside's.   The  only&#13;
year   wl~l  be  the  Warne he    that in recent  years.  Parkside&#13;
regulation  governing  student&#13;
Networkmg.   Lun~he~ns,  bt  t    offered  "primitive"   birth con-    health  services  in this respect&#13;
first  of&#13;
WhICh   WIll&#13;
e  a  o.u&#13;
trol and family planning  eerv-    is Title 9. a federal  regulation&#13;
the  disease   of  osteoporosis.&#13;
ices  compared  to other  cam-&#13;
that   says   health   services&#13;
Although  many  of thes~ se::ci    pus~s.  "We're   pretty   Nean-    can't    discriminate&#13;
against&#13;
ices    are&#13;
~eared&#13;
ow he&#13;
derthal   as  a  campus,"   she    women.&#13;
.&#13;
women.&#13;
Leicht    says    S&#13;
said  adding  that  most  ser-v-&#13;
Walborn  mterprets   this&#13;
to&#13;
doesn't  want  men  to feel  ex.,   ices'  which  are  by  referral&#13;
mean  that  gynecological  and&#13;
eluded,'  so she  is' working  on&#13;
'-"--&#13;
~_IIIIIIi· ..··_. .......  __   .....&#13;
1&#13;
photo by Dave McEvoy&#13;
Students  and administrators   gathered  Tuesday  in the Gal-  .&#13;
lery for a reception  held as part  of Welcome Week_&#13;
Look&#13;
for more Welcome Week events today and Friday.&#13;
Warm Reception&#13;
PSGA&#13;
two rallies&#13;
announces&#13;
The Parkside  Student  Gov-&#13;
ernment&#13;
Association·    last&#13;
Thursday    announced   plans'&#13;
for  an  anti-apartheid    rally&#13;
Oct.&#13;
11.&#13;
PSGA  is  also  planning   a&#13;
rally to protect  hunger Oct.&#13;
9.&#13;
The  anti-apartheid   rally  is&#13;
part   of  the  National   Anti.&#13;
Apartheid  Protest  Day, ana.&#13;
tionwide protest  that  is being&#13;
organized    by   the   United&#13;
States   Student   Association&#13;
tUSSAl.&#13;
Adrian  Serrano,   chairman&#13;
of the  Segregated  University&#13;
Fees   Allocation  Committee,&#13;
said that even though&#13;
Parkst-&#13;
de may  have  only&#13;
100&#13;
people&#13;
at  the  rally,  in  contrast   to&#13;
campuses   like&#13;
Uw-Madtson&#13;
and UCLA, students  and staff&#13;
at Parkside  will at least know&#13;
the rally is being held.&#13;
"This  will be a big day for&#13;
PSG&#13;
A&#13;
see Page 4&#13;
Collins'  bid begins&#13;
county race&#13;
by&#13;
Kari  Dixon&#13;
gen,&#13;
who  defeated   former&#13;
state  senator  John Maurer  in&#13;
the  first   County  Executive&#13;
race in&#13;
1982.&#13;
Collins,&#13;
39,&#13;
told the Kenosha&#13;
News. "About  a month  ago&#13;
I&#13;
called   my   people   together&#13;
and made a commitment,"   he&#13;
said.&#13;
"I&#13;
can't  tell people I'm&#13;
not  running   when&#13;
I&#13;
am.&#13;
I&#13;
think it's  tlme  that  my cards&#13;
are on the table."&#13;
Collins mailed a letter  sonc.&#13;
iting support  from&#13;
1200&#13;
coun-&#13;
ty residents  on Friday.&#13;
Dosemagen,&#13;
49,&#13;
said  in the&#13;
Kenosha  County Clerk John&#13;
Collins  announced   his  deci-&#13;
sion  to  seek  the  office  of&#13;
County Executive  in the Sun-&#13;
day Kenosha News.&#13;
Collins  is  running  against&#13;
incumbent   Gilbert&#13;
Doserna-&#13;
COllins&#13;
see Page&#13;
4&#13;
birth  control  services  have to&#13;
be  offered   on  campus   for&#13;
women.   She  is  most   con-&#13;
cerned&#13;
with&#13;
condoms   and&#13;
other methods of birth control&#13;
being  available  for sale.  and&#13;
feels that  with the coming of&#13;
dormitories  to this campus,&#13;
it&#13;
will be imperative  for Student&#13;
Health  Services  to expand  its&#13;
offerings  to  include  gyneco-&#13;
logical  services  at  least  one&#13;
afternoon  a week.&#13;
"It's  for  the  school's  own&#13;
good,"  says  Walborn.  "With.&#13;
out  improved  services   (over&#13;
recent  years),  we're  going to&#13;
lose  more  and  more  of  the&#13;
student POPUlation."&#13;
StUdent   Health&#13;
Services&#13;
will&#13;
not be renewing  its  con.&#13;
tract with Family  Planning  of&#13;
Racine this year,  choosing  in- .&#13;
stead to employ  the  services&#13;
o! Registered   Nurse   Sandy&#13;
Leicht.&#13;
Leicht,  who  is   presently&#13;
empioyed as  an  LTE  (Lim-&#13;
ited Term  Employee),    feels&#13;
that the  services   she  offers&#13;
Will&#13;
be more  comprehensive&#13;
(han those offered  by Family&#13;
Planning.&#13;
"They were only on cam pus&#13;
oneOr two days  a week  for a&#13;
COupleof hours  a  day,"   she&#13;
RANGER&#13;
=&#13;
2  Thursday,&#13;
September&#13;
5,1985&#13;
£JJiJJJJ:iDl&#13;
PSGA rally great idea&#13;
Grab a banner, get a megaphone.  college protests are&#13;
back&#13;
in&#13;
vogue and even PSGA has found some socially&#13;
relevant bandwagons&#13;
to&#13;
jump on. Not only Is the student&#13;
government  jumping on, they're  actively  joining&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
new revived movement by&#13;
planning&#13;
rallies.&#13;
Parkslde&#13;
has&#13;
worked hard&#13;
to&#13;
maintain  a reputation  of&#13;
uninvolvement  and isolationism.  The showing of an X·&#13;
rated   fUm,   "Emmanuelle,&#13;
II&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
Union&#13;
theater   three&#13;
years ago and a "Save the Library Day" fund-raiser were&#13;
the only significant rallies held during Parkslde's  history.&#13;
Even the Peace Movement of the early 70's passed&#13;
by&#13;
rel-&#13;
atively unnoticed at Parkside.&#13;
There certainly has not been a lack of social issues for&#13;
students&#13;
to&#13;
participate&#13;
in.&#13;
but rather  there  has been a&#13;
lack  of  campus  leadership   and  motivation.&#13;
On  Oct.  11 Parkside&#13;
will&#13;
join   hundreds   of  campuses  in&#13;
an on-campus National Antl·Apartheid  Protest  Day rally.&#13;
Apartheid Is an Issue that all humans need to be educated&#13;
about.&#13;
We are encouraged&#13;
to&#13;
see PSGA planning to motivate&#13;
this campus. We do not. however. support protests for the&#13;
sake of protesting, or merely because it's fashionable.  We&#13;
hope that PSGA&#13;
will&#13;
take a close look at many critical&#13;
social and political  issues this year,&#13;
in&#13;
addition  to apart-&#13;
heid. and continue&#13;
in&#13;
a leadership  and educational  role.&#13;
Remember.&#13;
if&#13;
you  don't  take  a  stand,  you  wUl  fall.&#13;
..•..HOWEVER. SANC.TIONS AGAINST SOUTH AFRICA WOULD ONLY HURT&#13;
THE  BLACKS."&#13;
1YJlbmJy~,...11llL..u.&#13;
Athletic teams&#13;
need Parkside support&#13;
turning, Parkside is ready to&#13;
go for its second consecutive&#13;
20&#13;
win season.&#13;
Basketball   was  the  only&#13;
sport that seemed to attract&#13;
any  student  interest  at all.&#13;
Only one game  drew a full&#13;
house  ~ the  game  against&#13;
Stevens Point in January.  An&#13;
overflow   crowd  of  3300 on&#13;
hand.  Unfortunately,    the  ma-&#13;
jority  of the crowd was there&#13;
to see the likes of All-Amerr-&#13;
can   near-Olympian    Terry&#13;
Porter  and Racine Lutheran&#13;
product  Tim Naegeli. both of&#13;
whom    played    for   the&#13;
Pointers. When the next home&#13;
game  came  around,  the at-&#13;
tendance was so low the num-&#13;
ber&#13;
of players  almost&#13;
out-&#13;
numbered the spectators.&#13;
As you can see,&#13;
Parkalde&#13;
has&#13;
a&#13;
lot to offer for sports&#13;
entertainment.   The best thing&#13;
is  that  all  sports,·  except&#13;
men's&#13;
basketball.&#13;
are&#13;
FREE! !! Just take your body&#13;
over to the Physical  Educa-&#13;
tion&#13;
building.&#13;
or the soccer&#13;
field, or the baseball diamond&#13;
and  enjoy   some   Ranger&#13;
sports.  You won't  be disap-&#13;
pointed.&#13;
of Steve Stephens,  the name&#13;
Parkside   was  synonymous&#13;
with  fine  basketball.   The&#13;
Rangers  made  it to the dis-&#13;
trict final almost  every year.&#13;
and had at least one NAIA AI·&#13;
l-Amertcan  at the same  rre-&#13;
quency. After the 1981·82sea·&#13;
son,  Stephens  resigned  and&#13;
Rees Johnson was chosen to&#13;
guide the basketball  fortunes&#13;
at Parkside.  Johnson's  teams&#13;
played near the&#13;
.500&#13;
mark in&#13;
his first two&#13;
seasons,&#13;
as the&#13;
players and assistant  coaches&#13;
took on Johnson's  coaching&#13;
theories  and adjusted  to his&#13;
methods.&#13;
It&#13;
must have work-&#13;
ed. In the 1984-85season, the&#13;
Rangers  racked&#13;
up&#13;
the first&#13;
20-victory regular  season  in&#13;
Parkside&#13;
history.&#13;
The&#13;
Rangers  once again made it&#13;
to the NAIA District 14finals,&#13;
where they were defeated by&#13;
Stevens Point. There are only&#13;
three  players  who won't  be&#13;
back this  year.  among  them&#13;
Erik  Womeldorf,  who  has&#13;
used&#13;
up&#13;
his eligibility. Filling&#13;
his space on the court won't&#13;
be easy, but there are a&#13;
coup-&#13;
Ie&#13;
of players  waiting in the&#13;
wings ready to give it&#13;
a&#13;
try.&#13;
With all but one starter&#13;
re-&#13;
Oberbrunner  has  had  only&#13;
one losing season in 14 years&#13;
at the helm at Parkside,  and&#13;
it&#13;
appears his team this year&#13;
will keep up the high stand-&#13;
ards of the past.&#13;
The most successful  team&#13;
over the past  five years  is&#13;
also a team that most people&#13;
forget  exists.  The  women's&#13;
softball team -has been in the&#13;
NAIA  national  tournament&#13;
for the last years" yet very&#13;
few people have  ever  seen&#13;
them play. The softball team&#13;
has also produced more all-&#13;
Americans  than  any  other&#13;
team  during that same  five&#13;
year  period. To sum it up,&#13;
Linda  Draft's  team  is  the&#13;
most exciting of the spring, if&#13;
not the whole year.&#13;
The  women's   basketball&#13;
team fell on hard times last&#13;
season, with a&#13;
9-19&#13;
record. In&#13;
the last few weeks of the sea:&#13;
son, first year coach Wendy&#13;
Miller  had  only six players&#13;
left. This year, Miller expects&#13;
to  have  a  full  12-woman&#13;
squad,  which  will  maybe&#13;
bring&#13;
the lady Rangers back&#13;
to a competitive level.&#13;
In the mid&#13;
70's&#13;
through the&#13;
early 80's, under the direction&#13;
had only one losing season.&#13;
When Henderson left for Flor-&#13;
ida in the spring of 1983,some&#13;
people thought the soccer pro-&#13;
gram would go into a tailspin.&#13;
However,  new  coach  Rick&#13;
Kllps kept the level of play&#13;
nearly   equal   to  that   of&#13;
Henderson.  Kilps' first year&#13;
record was a respectable 13-9·&#13;
1.&#13;
After the first year coach-&#13;
ing jitters  were  out of the&#13;
way,  Kilps settled  into his&#13;
role as coach. In 1984, the&#13;
Ranger almost made it to the&#13;
top of the  hill. The  soccer&#13;
team compiled a 14-5-3record&#13;
on its way to Us first- ever ap-&#13;
pearance in the NAIA nation-&#13;
al  tournament,   something&#13;
Henderson's teams never ac-&#13;
complished. This year's team&#13;
has the capability  to repeat&#13;
and even surpass its efforts of&#13;
1984.&#13;
Parkside's  baseball  team&#13;
was 12·9this past spring, and&#13;
it&#13;
advanced  to  the  state&#13;
championships.  The baseball&#13;
team also plays in the fall,&#13;
when the weather  is better.&#13;
The  fall  season  is  shorter&#13;
than the spring season. but&#13;
the intensity is equal&#13;
in&#13;
both&#13;
seasons.  Coach Ken  "Red"&#13;
by Robb Luehr&#13;
1I's a sad fact that although&#13;
Parkslde has many outstand-&#13;
ing athletic teams, very few&#13;
students outside of the athle-&#13;
tes themselves know, or care.&#13;
Certainly.  sports  such  as&#13;
tennis, cross-country and golf&#13;
don't lend themselves  easily&#13;
to spectator  viewing.  How-&#13;
ever, the events that do, such&#13;
as&#13;
volleyball, soccer,&#13;
basket,&#13;
ball,  baseball  and  softball,&#13;
which are intended  to draw&#13;
an&#13;
audience,  don't  get  the&#13;
support they deserve.&#13;
The   women's   volleyball&#13;
team has reached the District&#13;
14&#13;
finals for the last several&#13;
years. Terry Paulson's  team&#13;
has compiled a record of&#13;
84·47&#13;
over the past three years,&#13;
in-&#13;
eluding a&#13;
34-8&#13;
mark in 1983.&#13;
The team lost two of&#13;
its&#13;
top&#13;
players&#13;
to&#13;
graduation  after&#13;
that  season,&#13;
and&#13;
last  year&#13;
slipped to a 22·23record. This&#13;
season promises to be excit-&#13;
ing, however, with six retur-&#13;
nees and six new members.&#13;
Tradttionally.   one  of  the&#13;
highest  calibre  teams  at&#13;
Parkside has been the soccer&#13;
team.  Under  former  coach&#13;
Hal Henderson, the Rangers&#13;
WRITERS&#13;
Corby   Anderson,    Dave&#13;
Belottt,  Gretchen  Gayhart.&#13;
Heather  Greening,  Tammy&#13;
Hannah,  Kristy Harrington,&#13;
Kim&#13;
Kranich,&#13;
Carol&#13;
Kortendick,   Rick   Luehr,&#13;
Robb  Luehr,  Ray  Novak.&#13;
Julie  Pendleton,  Bill Serpe,&#13;
Laureen   Wawro,   Missy&#13;
Weaver.&#13;
-PHOTOGRAPHERS&#13;
Darryl  Hahn, Krfs Odegaard.&#13;
Ranger   is written   an~  edited  by  students&#13;
at&#13;
UW·Parkside&#13;
and&#13;
they  ar~&#13;
soleI)!&#13;
responsible   fOT&#13;
its&#13;
editorial   policy   and&#13;
content.&#13;
Ranger  ~s published   every  Thursday   during  the academic   year&#13;
ex-&#13;
cept&#13;
during&#13;
breaks and holidays.&#13;
~II   c?rrespondence'&#13;
should&#13;
be&#13;
addressed&#13;
to:&#13;
Parkside   Ranger&#13;
Lrntversuy&#13;
of Wisconsin·Parkside&#13;
Box&#13;
No 2000&#13;
Kenosha   WI&#13;
53141'&#13;
Telephone  (414)&#13;
553-2295&#13;
or&#13;
(414)  553-2287.  ..&#13;
,&#13;
.&#13;
Letters&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
e.ditor&#13;
will&#13;
be accepted&#13;
if&#13;
typewritten.   double-spac-&#13;
ed&#13;
on standar?   size  pooer.  Letters&#13;
should&#13;
be less  than,350   words&#13;
a.nd must  be&#13;
SIgned.&#13;
With a telephone   number   included  for  verifica-&#13;
tion&#13;
pu~poses.  Names&#13;
will&#13;
be withheld&#13;
upon&#13;
request.   Deadline  for&#13;
letters&#13;
IS TUl!sday&#13;
at 10&#13;
a.m.  for  publication   Thursday   Ranger  re.&#13;
'''dyes   the  right&#13;
to&#13;
edit  letters&#13;
and&#13;
refuse  letters&#13;
containing&#13;
false&#13;
an&#13;
defamatory   content.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
is&#13;
printed  by the Racine  Journal&#13;
Times.&#13;
Jennie  Tunkieicz&#13;
Editor&#13;
BobKi~ling&#13;
Campus News Editor&#13;
Kar-l Dixon ..•............................••&#13;
Community&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Ji.m Neibaur&#13;
Feature&#13;
Editor&#13;
RIch Blay&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Dave McEvoy&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Gary Schneeberger&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
la.n Jack&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
RIck Schultz&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
Brenda Buchanan&#13;
Asst. Business Manager&#13;
</text>
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              <text>Sy/P University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Watergate m astermind&#13;
Liddy creates stir at UW-P&#13;
Editor's note: This story is an&#13;
interpretive account about G.&#13;
Gordon Liddy's current appearance&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
Never have I witnessed the&#13;
commotion and activity&#13;
surrounding a speaker at this&#13;
campus. The occasion: convicted&#13;
felon, and Watergate mastermind,&#13;
G. Gordon Liddy.&#13;
Liddy's three - hour program&#13;
was accompanied by students&#13;
protesting his appearance on&#13;
campus, citing that PAB was&#13;
showing that crime does pay, and&#13;
a press interview that was 4-1/2&#13;
hours after it was scheduled.&#13;
The interview, originally&#13;
scheduled for 7 p.m. (Liddy spoke&#13;
at 8 p.m.) was postponed until&#13;
after his speech because, according&#13;
to Coordinator of S tudent&#13;
Activities Buddy Couvion, Liddy&#13;
didn't want to have to repeat&#13;
himself by being asked the same&#13;
question twice.&#13;
Some people felt that for $4500,&#13;
which was Liddy's fee, he should&#13;
not mind answering the same&#13;
question twice — after all, he's&#13;
been on the lecture circuit for a&#13;
few years now, so he knows how to&#13;
give his programmed answers.&#13;
The one thing I noticed,&#13;
listening to the many questions&#13;
from the politically diverse&#13;
audience, was that Liddy, being&#13;
the astute speaker - on - the -&#13;
circuit that he is, was able to&#13;
"answer" the questions by&#13;
avoiding the point of the question&#13;
and slanting his reply to what he&#13;
wanted to say.&#13;
The crowd was so immense that&#13;
the 683 c apacity in the cafeteria&#13;
did not suffice in holding the&#13;
number of people present. The&#13;
solution to the problem was that&#13;
the late - comers without advance&#13;
tickets had the choice of not attending&#13;
or sitting in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theater where Liddy's&#13;
speech was piped in over the&#13;
sound system. But they still had to&#13;
pay the same price to hear him&#13;
while almost 700 people were able&#13;
to see and hear the fearless exFBI&#13;
agent and government official&#13;
speak about "Government:&#13;
Public Perception vs. Reality."&#13;
Those in the theater were allowed&#13;
to stand in the back of the&#13;
cafeteria after 20 minutes, giving&#13;
ticket - holders the first chance to&#13;
have a seat.&#13;
Photo by Mark Sanders&#13;
LIDDY spoke to approximately 700 people.&#13;
April 23&#13;
"Thurber Carnival" to open&#13;
"A Thurber Carnival," the zany&#13;
comic revue which showcases&#13;
both the visual and verbal wit of&#13;
one of America's favorite&#13;
humorists, is the Parkside&#13;
Dramatic Arts Discipline's spring&#13;
production, on stage for the next&#13;
two weekends in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
Performances are at 8 p.m. on&#13;
April 23, 24 and 30 and May 1 and&#13;
at 2 p.m. on April 25. Admission is&#13;
$2.50 for UW-P students and staff&#13;
and for senior citizens ; $3.50 for&#13;
others. Advance tickets are&#13;
available at the Campus Union&#13;
Information Center and reservations&#13;
may be made by calling&#13;
553-2345 or 553-2042.&#13;
Thurber's special view of homo -&#13;
Americanus first appeared in New&#13;
Yorker magazine cartoons and&#13;
sketches. They gained a new&#13;
dimension in a Broadway stage&#13;
production in 1961 which featured&#13;
Liddy spoke for about one hour&#13;
and fifteen minutes before answering&#13;
questions from the&#13;
audience. His speech consisted of&#13;
such topics as the draft, the U.S. -&#13;
Russia weaponry war, spying,&#13;
government spending, government&#13;
bureaucracy, and his life&#13;
history, including stories about&#13;
the FBI and his trial for his part in&#13;
the Watergate scandal.&#13;
Among the comments he made&#13;
were:&#13;
On the draft, he has told his son,&#13;
"Count on it being a part of your&#13;
life."&#13;
Liddy said that the Soviets have&#13;
a larger military reserve and&#13;
while the United States' armed&#13;
forces consists of 17 divisions,&#13;
Russia's is made up of 180&#13;
divisions.&#13;
Spies, according to Liddy, "are&#13;
the nation's ears and eyes." Spies&#13;
look for two things: what are the&#13;
capabilities of other nations&#13;
(friend or foe) and what are their&#13;
intentions.&#13;
Concerning Ronald Reagan's&#13;
economic policies, Liddy offered&#13;
one of his many analogies: "You&#13;
can burn a house down in a night,&#13;
but you can't rebuilt (it) in a day."&#13;
Liddy said that 77% of the federal&#13;
budget is out of control and&#13;
nothing can be done until&#13;
Congress changes the laws, but it&#13;
won't.&#13;
Aides within a presidential&#13;
administration, said Liddy, are&#13;
not friends and are continually&#13;
jockeying for top position to the&#13;
President. That can be seen by&#13;
looking at the Nixon administration&#13;
in which Liddy was a&#13;
Photo by Mark Sanders&#13;
PROTESTORS were quite evident outside the door of the&#13;
cafeteria, where Liddy spoke.&#13;
part of.&#13;
Liddy summarized his&#13;
autobiography, "Will," saying&#13;
how he went through the FBI as an&#13;
agent for five years, became a&#13;
deputy prosecutor in the ultra -&#13;
conservative Duchess County in&#13;
New York and finally maneuvered&#13;
his way to Washington, D.C. as a&#13;
part of the Treasury Department.&#13;
Liddy took pot shots at many&#13;
others involved in the activities in&#13;
Washington, including John Dean,&#13;
Daniel Ellsberg and Judge John&#13;
Sirica.&#13;
Ellsberg leaked what became&#13;
known in the media as "The&#13;
Pentagon Papers," which gave&#13;
the detailed history of American&#13;
involvement in the Vietnam War.&#13;
In another of his many&#13;
analogies, Liddy compared "The&#13;
Pentagon Papers" to playing a&#13;
poker hand with somebody from&#13;
the opposing side standing behind&#13;
you looking at your carcb.&#13;
Liddy conceded that the editors&#13;
of the New York Times, which ran&#13;
"The Pentagon Papers," did not&#13;
print all of the information leaked&#13;
to them because some of the information&#13;
was a serious threat to&#13;
national security. But, Liddy&#13;
pointed out, somebody gave all the&#13;
information, including the highly&#13;
sensitive material, to the Soviet&#13;
Embassy, ruining the U.S.'s&#13;
"poker hand."&#13;
Sirica, who presided over the&#13;
Watergate hearings, was referred&#13;
to as "his eminence" by Liddy,&#13;
who criticized Sirica to the fullest.&#13;
Liddy said Sirica had two&#13;
problems, the first not being&#13;
Sirica's fault — "he was born&#13;
stupid." Sirica's second problem,&#13;
according to Liddy, was that while&#13;
he gave many pronouncements on&#13;
the law, Sirica wouldn't touch the&#13;
issue of pre - trial publicity. Liddy&#13;
said the pre - trial publicity of the&#13;
Watergate trial was the biggest&#13;
since the Lindbergh kidnapping.&#13;
Liddy facetiously called Sirica&#13;
"Time's Man of the Year" and&#13;
went on to say that one of the&#13;
jurors was found not to be able to&#13;
speak English. The whole episode,&#13;
according to Liddy, was sealed on&#13;
orders from Sirica, who would&#13;
have felt embarrassed if word&#13;
leaked out.&#13;
Liddy was sentenced to 21-1/2&#13;
years in prison for his part in the&#13;
Watergate scandal, which he&#13;
labeled as "political intelligence&#13;
gathering."&#13;
Liddy does not regard the&#13;
Watergate break-in, along with&#13;
breaking into Ellsberg's&#13;
psychiatrist's office, as an illegal&#13;
act because those laws don't apply&#13;
to the President "or somebody&#13;
acting for him" when national&#13;
security is involved.&#13;
When he went to prison, Liddy&#13;
Continued On Page Three&#13;
Committee investigates harassment&#13;
Peggy Cass and Tom Ewell and&#13;
captured a special Tony award.&#13;
The revue includes such&#13;
Thurber classics as "Walter&#13;
Mitty" and "The Night the Bed&#13;
Fell" and "Fables for Our Time"&#13;
like "The Little Girl and the Wolf"&#13;
and "The Unicorn in the Graden."&#13;
All reflect the Thurber theme of&#13;
the little guy battered by a&#13;
bewildering civilization.&#13;
Members of the cast, appearing&#13;
in multiple roles, are Vicki Knapp,&#13;
Racine; Rebecca Julich, Racine;&#13;
Mary Beth Kelleher, Kenosha;&#13;
Patricia Casciaro, Kenosha; John&#13;
Vocino, Kenosha; John Miskulin,&#13;
Racine; Andrew Brhel, Cudahy;&#13;
Scott Reichelsdorf, Kenosha; and&#13;
David Schroeder, Kenosha.&#13;
Leon Van Dyke directs, scenic&#13;
design is by Charles Erven and&#13;
costumes by Barbara Thompson.&#13;
All are members of the dramatic&#13;
arts faculty.&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Sexaual harassment is thought&#13;
to be by many a touchy subject. It&#13;
is difficult to determine what type&#13;
of behavior falls under sexual&#13;
harassment, and what does not.&#13;
On a finer scale, Parkside is&#13;
developing a means of education&#13;
and awareness to sexual&#13;
harassment and is establishing a&#13;
way to informally resolve any&#13;
cases of sexual harassment.&#13;
The definition of sexual&#13;
harassment has been described as&#13;
follows in the policy statment:&#13;
unwelcome sexual advances,&#13;
requests for sexual favors, and&#13;
other physical conduct and ex-&#13;
• pre ssive behavior of a sexual&#13;
nature where: (1) submission to&#13;
such conduct is made either explicitly&#13;
or implicitly a term or&#13;
condition of an individual's employment&#13;
or education; (2)&#13;
submission to or rejection of such&#13;
conduct by an individual is used as&#13;
the basis for academic or employment&#13;
decisions affecting that&#13;
individual; or (3) such conduct&#13;
has the purpose of effect of substantially&#13;
interfering with an&#13;
individual's academic or&#13;
professional performance or&#13;
creating an intimidating, hostile&#13;
or demeaning employment or&#13;
educational environment.&#13;
Sexual harassment is considered&#13;
a form of sex&#13;
discrimination. The situation may&#13;
occur in a number of varieties.&#13;
The common element that all of&#13;
these situations share is some sort&#13;
of inappropriate introduction of&#13;
sexual activities or comments into&#13;
the work or learning experience.&#13;
The relationships involved can be&#13;
of unequal power, in compliance&#13;
with requests for sexual favors as&#13;
a criterion for granting work,&#13;
study or grading benefits, or the&#13;
relationship can be one of equal&#13;
power and repeated sexual advances&#13;
or demeaning verbal&#13;
behavior can have a harmful&#13;
effect on a person's ability to&#13;
study or work in an academic&#13;
setting. A concerted effort is being&#13;
made to protect employees and&#13;
students from sexual harassment.&#13;
The establishment of programs&#13;
to educate members of the&#13;
university community on the&#13;
subject of sexual harassment, and&#13;
to make them more sensitive to its&#13;
forms and damaging consequences,&#13;
is being worked out at&#13;
this time. The main purpose of the&#13;
educational function being to&#13;
make people aware of the&#13;
definition of sexual harassment,&#13;
and to inform them of the&#13;
psychological impact of sexual&#13;
harassment. It is important that&#13;
the university community be&#13;
made aware of the differences&#13;
between legitimate behavior and&#13;
inappropriate behavior. The&#13;
program will be implemented by&#13;
the sexual harassment advisory&#13;
committee.&#13;
The committee will assist those&#13;
people who feel they are victims of&#13;
sexual harassment. The role of the&#13;
committee member will be one of&#13;
a mediator. Committee members&#13;
are individuals to whom the&#13;
victim can go and talk, on an&#13;
informal basis and confidentially.&#13;
The committee member will then&#13;
approach the accused and talk&#13;
with them on an informal basis. In&#13;
this format, everything is informal&#13;
and confidential. Perhaps&#13;
a resolution can be reached, never&#13;
having to put a complaint in&#13;
writing.&#13;
Within the policy statement, the&#13;
functions of the Advisory committee&#13;
are as follows:&#13;
• To advise the Chancellor on&#13;
all matters relating to sexual&#13;
harassment;&#13;
• To advise and assist the&#13;
Chancellor in devising programs&#13;
designed to inform employees and&#13;
students of the nature of sexual&#13;
harassment to increase their&#13;
sensitivity to it, and to publicize&#13;
the procedures, sanctions and&#13;
remedies available against it.&#13;
• To assist in informal&#13;
mediation efforts when so&#13;
requested by the Chancellor or&#13;
Chancellor's delegate;&#13;
• To serve in an ombudsman&#13;
role in matters relating to sexual&#13;
harassment;&#13;
• To give advice, counsel, and&#13;
assistance to members of the&#13;
university.&#13;
Members of the Sexual&#13;
Harassment Advisory Committee&#13;
are Stella Gray and Wayne&#13;
Johnson, representing the&#13;
faculty; Karen Lourigan, Carrie&#13;
Peters and Jackie Willems,&#13;
representing classified staff;&#13;
Linda Piele and Stuart Rubner,&#13;
representing academic staff;&#13;
Carla Thomas and Pat Hensiak,&#13;
representing students. If a&#13;
university member feels&#13;
mistreated, they should contact&#13;
one of the above mentioned. &#13;
2 Thursday, April 22,1982 RANGER&#13;
/'before we settle down to vote&#13;
ON T HE RESOLUTION A GAINST GUN C ONTROL&#13;
I'D L IKE T O T HANK BUCK SC HATZMAN FOR&#13;
HIS BEAUTIFUL PLAQUE OF THE SECOND&#13;
AMENDMENT HERE.&#13;
To the E ditor&#13;
Research does not make a good teacher&#13;
the opposition&#13;
to G. Gordon Liddy?&#13;
by Chuck Ostrowski&#13;
Last Monday, Parkside had the&#13;
good fortune to be exposed to a&#13;
point of view not usually&#13;
presented. I am referring to G.&#13;
Gordon Liddy, the author of&#13;
WILL, his testimonial about the&#13;
Watergate scandal of a decade&#13;
ago.&#13;
A controversy erupted several&#13;
weeks ago when Liddy's appearance&#13;
was announced.&#13;
Petitions were circulated in&#13;
protest of Liddy receiving $4500-&#13;
for his lecture on Monday. More&#13;
useful and needed items could be&#13;
purchased with that kind of&#13;
money, the argument went.&#13;
Paying a criminal to broadcast his&#13;
views and ideas was not in the best&#13;
interests of the students here,&#13;
whose tuition was used to pay for&#13;
Mr. Liddy's lecture.&#13;
However, others argued that G.&#13;
Gordon Liddy is a historical figure&#13;
directly involved in an illegal&#13;
break - in and wire - tapping that&#13;
led to the disclosure of other&#13;
crimes now headlined under the&#13;
common term "Watergate." Mr.&#13;
Liddy is directly part of a scandal&#13;
that forced the President of the&#13;
United States to resign his office.&#13;
That doesn't happen all the time,&#13;
and to be part of anybody connected&#13;
with this historical event&#13;
whose effects are unprecedented&#13;
is something we should all be&#13;
supporting, not challenging.&#13;
But I really don't believe that&#13;
opponents of Mr. Liddy were&#13;
necessarily concerned about&#13;
paying him $4500. Although that is&#13;
a significant amount of money it is&#13;
certainly not a large percentage of&#13;
the overall UW budget. I do&#13;
believe, however, that those opposed&#13;
to his presence here were&#13;
practicing what could be called&#13;
"liberal fascism."&#13;
This amounts to opposing any&#13;
point of view that is to the far right&#13;
of their own. Of course, I'm sure&#13;
these students wouldn't mind&#13;
Liddy appearing here if he paid all&#13;
the expenses, including lights and&#13;
hot water. But we'd certainly be&#13;
unable to have him speak if that&#13;
was the case. So, in order for us to&#13;
hear Mr. Liddy's extraordinary&#13;
views, expenses must be paid by&#13;
us. It's the price we pay to educate&#13;
ourselves with an assortment of&#13;
views.&#13;
I also cannot help but think that&#13;
if a convicted felon from the left,&#13;
like Abbey Hoffman, lectured&#13;
here for the same fee and petitions&#13;
were circulated protesting his&#13;
appearance, the same students&#13;
screaming because of Liddy's&#13;
presence would be screaming&#13;
"fascism" in response to opposition&#13;
of Hoffman.&#13;
This whole atmosphere&#13;
equating money with particular&#13;
points of view is wrong. It really&#13;
shouldn't matter the amount of&#13;
money we have to pay to hear any&#13;
type of view. (Of course, this&#13;
whole system of whoever has the&#13;
money to spend gets what he or&#13;
she wants is wrong, but that's&#13;
another topic.) What should&#13;
concern everybody, though, is&#13;
that any type of philosophy&#13;
available for us to consume should&#13;
be gotten. This is college, where&#13;
exposure to Reaganism and&#13;
Maoism should happen at the&#13;
same level. Decide for yourself.&#13;
That's why I cannot understand&#13;
opposition to Liddy. To deny&#13;
others the chance to hear him&#13;
because you don't agree with him&#13;
is something that regularly&#13;
happens in the USSR. And I'm&#13;
sure Parkside's resident leftists&#13;
would not all like to be accused of&#13;
censorship, since that would&#13;
definitely contradict what they&#13;
should stand for: freedom to&#13;
exposure to all ideas, regardless&#13;
of each's meaning or effects. But&#13;
maybe our residents aren't as&#13;
radical as they regard themselves.&#13;
How else could you explain&#13;
their reaction to an often incoherent&#13;
extremist like G. Gordon&#13;
Liddy?&#13;
Editor:&#13;
As a non - tr aditional student at&#13;
Parkside, I am really concerned&#13;
by the policies regarding teacher&#13;
contracts. I think my years of life&#13;
experiences, including raising&#13;
children, have given me some&#13;
insight into what can be great&#13;
about schools and what can be&#13;
damaging to the students. The&#13;
answer to both is 'teachers'.&#13;
Unfortunately, in the elementary&#13;
and secondary schools, good&#13;
teachers are definitely the exception&#13;
rather than the rule. The&#13;
same situation seems to exist here&#13;
at Parkside, where teachers are&#13;
judged on the basis of their&#13;
research. What are the&#13;
requirements of this research,&#13;
and who is capable of judging?&#13;
The administration seems to&#13;
think students are completely&#13;
incapable of passing judgment on&#13;
a teacher ; I think they are more&#13;
capable than an instructor's&#13;
peers, whose judgment is often&#13;
influenced by petty politics or&#13;
imagined threats to their&#13;
positions. I find it absolutely incredible&#13;
that this condition exists&#13;
here.&#13;
It should not surprise me, I&#13;
suppose. So many people my age&#13;
just accept things as they are,&#13;
without looking beneath the&#13;
surface or asking questions. I&#13;
have seen some really awful&#13;
teachers — both in public and&#13;
private sphools — and could not&#13;
believe that other parents were&#13;
unaware of them. Or perhaps it&#13;
was ignorance, or unconcern.&#13;
These same people, returning to&#13;
school, would probably not care if&#13;
they had mediocre teachers.&#13;
The traditional students, too,&#13;
seem very tolerant of poor&#13;
teaching. This is probably&#13;
because they simply have had so&#13;
many bad ones they don't expect&#13;
anything better. Most of these&#13;
students questions things about&#13;
our society, and are much more&#13;
politically aware than I was at&#13;
their age. Making changes is not&#13;
an easy process, but young adults&#13;
today certainly have the intelligence&#13;
and energy to bring it&#13;
about.&#13;
Good teachers teach their&#13;
students to THINK. But perhaps&#13;
that is not considered desirable by&#13;
everyone. People are much more&#13;
easily controlled, and society&#13;
much less complicated, if no one&#13;
questions anything.&#13;
Kindness and caring are traits&#13;
that are necessary for a good&#13;
teacher. Those that make petty&#13;
rules, with infractions punishable&#13;
by lower grades, must be very&#13;
insecure and resort to trivial&#13;
methods to exert their authority.&#13;
But perhaps the subject matter&#13;
does not lend itself to dedication.&#13;
Even a machine could fill one's&#13;
head with cold, hard facts,&#13;
necessary for technical fields, I&#13;
suppose, and certainly valued —&#13;
money wise — in our society today.&#13;
Behavioral science, on the other&#13;
hand, where one is dealing with&#13;
people and not machines, requires&#13;
special instructors. Jim Bearden&#13;
is one of these. Along with a few&#13;
other really special sociology&#13;
teachers, he is what teaching&#13;
should be about. It's unfortunate&#13;
that more students do not take&#13;
courses with these instructors; it&#13;
is an enlightening experience.&#13;
The world needs people who&#13;
care about other people. Teachers&#13;
certainly should set an example&#13;
by treating students as the intelligent&#13;
people they are, and by&#13;
teaching them to think. Otherwise,&#13;
who will question the actions&#13;
of our government, especially now&#13;
when our country is contributing&#13;
to the slaughter of i nnocent people&#13;
in other countries, while ignoring&#13;
starvation and poverty here at&#13;
home?&#13;
I hate to think that this&#13;
university favors research -&#13;
minded instructors who do not&#13;
have the inclination, or are not&#13;
allowed the time, to be dedicated&#13;
teachers. Somewhere along the&#13;
way the real purpose of schools&#13;
has been lost: namely, to teach&#13;
students. I wonder how many&#13;
taxpayers are aware of this trend,&#13;
and how would they vote if given a&#13;
choice: Should your tax - supported&#13;
university be for teaching&#13;
or research?&#13;
Lorene Wynn&#13;
Views on punk rock were "slanted"&#13;
Dear editor:&#13;
In response to a letter your&#13;
paper printed last week, we feel&#13;
the public has a "right to know"&#13;
the truth in regards to the punk&#13;
rock phenomena. The purpose of&#13;
this short, buf pertinent, letter will&#13;
be to highlight the misconceptions&#13;
in Mr. Kiesling's recent rebuttal.&#13;
We now will turn our attention to&#13;
the issue at hand.&#13;
Mr. Kiesling (or Bob; far be it&#13;
for us to intrude on the "power of&#13;
the individual"):&#13;
Your rebuttal has been&#13;
acknowledged. However, in the&#13;
interest of fairness (so staunchly&#13;
advocated by John Rawls), we&#13;
feel it is our obligation to the&#13;
public to reveal the truth. This&#13;
letter will concern itself with punk&#13;
rock and its underlying concepts.&#13;
Previous to the construction of&#13;
our earlier article we researched&#13;
several areas of the phenomena&#13;
(which we call punk rock) from&#13;
different sociological and&#13;
philosophical perspectives. From&#13;
this information it is plainly&#13;
visible that our statements were&#13;
not the expression of two irate&#13;
individuals, but instead the&#13;
response of society at large. You&#13;
stated you have never met anyone&#13;
who described the "genre" as&#13;
"intolerable and disgusting," and&#13;
hope never to meet anyone who&#13;
Stop opposition to punk rock&#13;
Dear Editor,&#13;
We're writing in reply to the&#13;
letter on stopping punk rock. We&#13;
were very impressed by the&#13;
grammar and usage of the&#13;
English language, however, we&#13;
felt the letter was quite repetitious&#13;
and the point simple enough to&#13;
have been condensed into one&#13;
paragraph, therefore our point&#13;
shall be kept short.&#13;
We felt discouraged by the&#13;
narrow thinking expressed in the&#13;
letter. While it is true that punk&#13;
rock is basically an anarchist&#13;
movement, and that if ignored&#13;
would vanish, letters of this&#13;
negative type keep the punk fires&#13;
burning. Punk rock has flourished&#13;
because of negative media attention.&#13;
Every time the words&#13;
"punk rock" are mentioned,&#13;
another curious person becomes&#13;
interested in finding out what it is&#13;
all about. Thus letters such as the&#13;
one that appeared in the Ranger&#13;
two weeks ago helped the&#13;
movement more than it hurt it.&#13;
What really scares us is the&#13;
flipped - out way in which the&#13;
authors of the letter in question&#13;
regard the first Amendment to the&#13;
Constitution of these United&#13;
States. Sure, they have freedom of&#13;
speech, but why should they&#13;
criticize and infringe on punk -&#13;
rockers' rights on Freedom of&#13;
Expression? They would ban punk&#13;
rock just because they didn't like&#13;
it. What if they didn't like&#13;
organized religion? Should we ban&#13;
it?&#13;
To tell the truth, while punks&#13;
loudly desecrate the American&#13;
way, and expand the ways of&#13;
Anarchy, they actually revere the&#13;
U.S. and Democracy, at least in&#13;
relation to Socialism and Communism.&#13;
Democracy is the only&#13;
system in which punk rock could&#13;
exist. Thus we say that although&#13;
punks and punk rock may express&#13;
the unjustness of today's&#13;
Democratic system, fear not that&#13;
they will ever become an&#13;
organized group vowing to spread&#13;
anarchy ; how can anarchy ever&#13;
become organized?&#13;
Obviously, those authors are&#13;
very close minded in the view of&#13;
people they don't understand. It is&#13;
this kind of view that breeds&#13;
prejudice which therefore induces&#13;
more separation of the people&#13;
which is just the opposite of what&#13;
our society needs today. This kind&#13;
of clear cut good and evil is encouraged&#13;
by Communist countries,&#13;
in which, from what we've&#13;
seen in the letter, "How Can We&#13;
Stop Punk Rock?", the authors&#13;
would have nothing to complain&#13;
about if they lived in one since&#13;
the government would already&#13;
dictate how the people act, dress&#13;
refers to it as "indignant." Obviously&#13;
you have certain social&#13;
boundaries outside of which you&#13;
must rarely venture. In fact, the&#13;
three terms must be used consecutively,&#13;
in one thought, to&#13;
capture the impact concerning&#13;
Middle - America's viewpoints on&#13;
punk rock. I am not speaking of&#13;
the Middle - American offspring of&#13;
the late fifties and early sixties, I&#13;
am speaking of t he mature Middle&#13;
- America: the working man. If&#13;
you still question the truth of such&#13;
assertions, we can give you the&#13;
names and addresses of various&#13;
social establishments, where you&#13;
can encounter a myriad of people&#13;
and ascertain whether our earlier&#13;
statements were objective.&#13;
In reference to your inference&#13;
that capitalistic society advocates&#13;
the rock music industry (in lieu of&#13;
its monetary input), we should&#13;
like to point out that prostitution&#13;
and pornography are also multi -&#13;
billion dollar businesses within the&#13;
capitalistic structure. It is evident&#13;
capitalistic society does not advocate&#13;
these degenerative&#13;
practices, yet they flourish. Why?&#13;
We feel the real problem is the&#13;
ever - increasing, egocentric&#13;
power of the individual and its&#13;
ever - rising consequent: a lack of&#13;
social responsibility. Such a&#13;
dilemma is analogous to a stubborn&#13;
and spoiled child, who&#13;
always wants to receive and never&#13;
replace. In essence, the individual&#13;
has been allowed to roam free&#13;
without regard to the costs society&#13;
has to bear. Thus, individual&#13;
autonomy has become perverse.&#13;
In summary, we see that although&#13;
certain practices exist in a&#13;
capitalistic culture, they are not&#13;
necessarily a benefit to that&#13;
culture — they are a detriment.&#13;
Speaking of individualism, you&#13;
have conveniently disregarded&#13;
(with or without intent) the main&#13;
crux of our first letter. It seems&#13;
you have not comprehended the&#13;
negative aspects of a founand&#13;
think.&#13;
We feel that no one should&#13;
criticize punk rock unless it really&#13;
affects them. No one has to be&#13;
involved in it. So why don't those&#13;
two authors just listen to their own&#13;
advice and ignore it. Just let it&#13;
be!!! . - -&#13;
The Deviants&#13;
dationless individualism as advocated&#13;
by modern arm - chair&#13;
philosophers (i.e. Jean - Paul&#13;
Sartre). This individualism, based&#13;
on moral and personal freedom, is&#13;
closely related to punker ideology.&#13;
Furthermore, it is an individualism&#13;
no one has been able&#13;
to completely live up to. Bob, if&#13;
you cannot grasp philosophical&#13;
jargon, then do not attempt to&#13;
refute philosophically based&#13;
arguments.&#13;
Your letter also contained a&#13;
misconception concerning Neo -&#13;
Darwinism (relating back to&#13;
1935). Perhaps if you had read the&#13;
letter a bit more discriminantly&#13;
you would have realized we did&#13;
not advocate a "right - wing&#13;
totalitarian" government (in fact,&#13;
we claimed it was neither ethical&#13;
or workable). Regardless, in&#13;
theory it would be a way to rid our&#13;
capitalistic society of the punk&#13;
rock menace.&#13;
In closing, you have, like punk&#13;
rock, failed to provide a viable&#13;
and rational alternative to&#13;
capitalism. Punkdom, based on&#13;
anarchy, only reinforces our&#13;
original concept of punk rock as a&#13;
trivial and socially "indignant"&#13;
cult. As you saw in our previous&#13;
article, this warrants society a&#13;
right to extinguish and dismantle&#13;
it. By the way Bob, we view disco&#13;
as socially distasteful and thus,&#13;
extinguishable also. Bob, we do&#13;
appreciate your concern, even&#13;
though your crucial issues were&#13;
expressed from a subjective point&#13;
of view (or what journalists term&#13;
as a "slanted" viewpoint). One&#13;
final suggestion, if you wish to&#13;
broaden your musical scope you&#13;
should try listening to the socially&#13;
and individually redeeming music&#13;
of Bob Wills and The Texas&#13;
Playboys.&#13;
Jack Zurawik&#13;
and Dave Odders &#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 22, 1982 3&#13;
Liddy&#13;
Continued From Page One&#13;
said, he saw fear on the faces of&#13;
the prison guards and prisoners&#13;
after revealing his educational&#13;
background. (He earned a&#13;
bachelor of science degree from&#13;
Fordham College and a doctor of&#13;
law from the Fordham Law&#13;
School.)&#13;
The most powerful weapon one&#13;
could have, said Liddy, is&#13;
education. This statement didn't&#13;
really prove itself to be reliable&#13;
when Liddy later answered&#13;
questions from the audience&#13;
concerning education.&#13;
Liddy first joked about the&#13;
question and answer session, as he&#13;
did with many other topics&#13;
throughout the evening, and&#13;
corrected the English used by the&#13;
first person posing a question.&#13;
Repeatedly throughout the rest of&#13;
the question and answer session&#13;
Liddy evaded the basic issue of&#13;
the questions and answered what&#13;
he wanted to say. Or else, he gave&#13;
one insignificant example to try to&#13;
prove a point that couldn't be&#13;
summed up in one selective&#13;
example.&#13;
The first question dealt with&#13;
how the U.S. and the Soviet Union&#13;
will go about the Cold War — wi ll&#13;
war break out or will there be&#13;
peace?&#13;
Liddy said that when you&#13;
prepare for peace, you also&#13;
prepare for war and that with the&#13;
nature of man, your enemies will&#13;
attack you. He compared it to the&#13;
Law of the Yukon — the weak&#13;
shall perish while the strong will&#13;
thrive.&#13;
Asked how America can get&#13;
strong and maintain a free society&#13;
without major, inhibiting fears,&#13;
Liddy said about Reagan, "He has&#13;
a chance (to do so) as long as you&#13;
the American people have&#13;
patience. Reagan knows what to&#13;
do — all we have to do is let him do&#13;
it." Liddy said that one major&#13;
problem is that the current&#13;
federal economic program is not&#13;
exactly what Reagan asked for, so&#13;
he can't be blamed if t he program&#13;
fails.&#13;
Liddy said that the television&#13;
movie based on his autobiography&#13;
was O.K. but that the original&#13;
three - hour version was edited an&#13;
hour and the story was fictionalized&#13;
a bit.&#13;
One question, from a conservative&#13;
audience member,&#13;
pointed out that some people&#13;
(mainly him) didn't want tax&#13;
money going for social change,&#13;
but would rather have it go&#13;
towards political change. Many&#13;
people in the audience amazedly&#13;
listened to the point of the&#13;
"question" (which was more of a&#13;
statement than a question).&#13;
That shows the diversity of the&#13;
audience — the entire political&#13;
spectrum that exists in the&#13;
American political system (which&#13;
isn't all that much, by the way)&#13;
was represented in the audience&#13;
and heard from the opposing&#13;
viewpoints.&#13;
In response to a question about&#13;
Richard Nixon's drinking while in&#13;
the White House, Liddy said, "I&#13;
never saw him drunk or even the&#13;
slightest bit under the influence of&#13;
alcohol."&#13;
The subject of nuclear war was&#13;
brought up and the point was&#13;
raised that why does American&#13;
have to match Russia in conventional&#13;
warfare weaponry when&#13;
the war will be a nuclear one.&#13;
Liddy said the U.S. needs more&#13;
tanks if we don't want Russia to&#13;
take over Europe. "If we want to&#13;
be isolationists, we don't have to&#13;
worry about tanks until they come&#13;
from north and south," Liddy&#13;
said. He also said that the worry is&#13;
more likely to come from the&#13;
south considering the Soviet influence&#13;
in Central America.&#13;
Liddy said that although he&#13;
recommended it be done, he was&#13;
not ordered to kill Washington&#13;
columnist Jack Anderson, who&#13;
wrote a revealing story that endangered&#13;
a spy's life. Liddy said&#13;
the government was justified to&#13;
have Anderson killed ("All&#13;
governments commit homicides&#13;
from time to time to protect their&#13;
nations.").&#13;
Some students asked Liddy&#13;
whether he approved of cutting&#13;
programs such as education to&#13;
build up the national defense.&#13;
Liddy said, "Yes." Liddy said you&#13;
cannot increase intelligence with&#13;
education — it's the raw material&#13;
that really counts. Liddy said that&#13;
people are trying to "put a price&#13;
on our freedom — a nd that's one&#13;
thing we can't afford to do." He&#13;
said people are still able to receive&#13;
a higher education — " It can be&#13;
done — it just takes a little&#13;
courage."&#13;
Asked what he would be doing&#13;
now if he didn't get caught in&#13;
Watergate, Liddy said, "I'd&#13;
probably be slaving away in the&#13;
Reagan administration." He was&#13;
also quuck to point out that he&#13;
doesn't know Reagan and that&#13;
he's never been offered any type&#13;
of job with the administration.&#13;
Looking back over his speech&#13;
and answers, many people, including&#13;
myself, found Liddy to be&#13;
very condescending toward&#13;
negative questions. "Let me&#13;
explain to you how it works ..." is&#13;
a sample start of on e of his replies&#13;
that eventually would ignore the&#13;
point of the question and consist of&#13;
what he wanted to say about the&#13;
topic at hand. If he didn't ignore it,&#13;
Liddy would touch on the specific&#13;
issue very vaguely and then&#13;
proceed on his merry way to&#13;
wherever he wanted to go.&#13;
Another problem was Liddy&#13;
turning the tables on the people&#13;
asking questions by going for a&#13;
laugh when asked about a touchy&#13;
Photo by Mark Sanders&#13;
LIDDY shows his scarred left hand to person who asked to see it&#13;
during the question - and - answer period.&#13;
issue. After disarming the&#13;
questioners with humor&#13;
(sometimes funny, sometimes&#13;
not) Liddy then answered the&#13;
questions in what I believe are his&#13;
programmed answers that he&#13;
knows so well after being on the&#13;
lecture circuit for a few years.&#13;
A sad point about his jokes —&#13;
the audience laughed and&#13;
acknowledged Liddy when Liddy&#13;
brought up killing John Dean and&#13;
Jack Anderson. I hope that that&#13;
doesn't directly reflect the nature&#13;
of today's society — th at criminal&#13;
government officials are spared&#13;
the application of the law because&#13;
they are who they are, and, after&#13;
serving one - fifth of their prison&#13;
term (if they get one) they are let&#13;
loose on the lecture circuit to&#13;
make a lot of money. And the&#13;
people support them.&#13;
Liddy did not allow taping of t he&#13;
program because, if broadcast, it&#13;
would "lower his market value."&#13;
The no taping rule is a double&#13;
standard considering he was&#13;
addressing about 700 people&#13;
(making it definitely "public" in&#13;
the legal sense of the word) while&#13;
Liddy illegally wire - tapped many&#13;
people throughout his career.&#13;
Concerning his market value,&#13;
the question was raised whether&#13;
or not Liddy's $4500 fee was too&#13;
much. Although I feel people&#13;
received their money's worth for&#13;
two, three or four dollars because&#13;
hearing different viewpoints is&#13;
necessary to become politically&#13;
mature, I feel that the $4500 fee&#13;
was too much to pay. If you can't&#13;
put a price on freedom, education,&#13;
etc., you certainly can't put a&#13;
price (such a high one) on&#13;
becoming politically aware.&#13;
Overall, the evening was very&#13;
stimulating and interesting, but&#13;
the question of whether or not it&#13;
tfas worth the money bringing&#13;
Liddy here has not — and&#13;
probably cannot — be satisfactorily&#13;
answered.&#13;
Q.: How does it feel knowing&#13;
that many people don't like you?&#13;
A.: By definition reputation&#13;
means what other people think of&#13;
you. That's not within your control.&#13;
By contrast, by definition,&#13;
character means what you really&#13;
are. There's no way in the world I&#13;
can affect your character — only&#13;
you can affect your character.&#13;
Character is 100% in your&#13;
control and your reputation is not&#13;
in your control. Wtat I do is not&#13;
really worry or care about&#13;
reputation. I just concentrate on&#13;
character.&#13;
Q.: You had a lot of ways you&#13;
met your fears head on to&#13;
eliminate them. Are there any you&#13;
prepared for, meeting your fears&#13;
in prison?&#13;
A.: By then I didn't have any.&#13;
When I went into prison my attitude&#13;
was not somehow in here I&#13;
must survive. My attitude was the&#13;
way it is whenever I go into any&#13;
situation and that is somehow in&#13;
here I shall prevail and let these&#13;
poor bastards survive me.&#13;
Q.: In your book you said you&#13;
would have had no qualms about&#13;
breaking the law if so ordered by&#13;
your superiors or if it was&#13;
something good for the government.&#13;
Yet you have this very&#13;
negative attitude towards people&#13;
in the '60s who practiced civil&#13;
disobedience as a protest to the&#13;
Vietnam War. Is there a&#13;
discrepency there?&#13;
A.: In the book I made the&#13;
distinction as to what I w ould and&#13;
would not do. Between malum in&#13;
se, evil in and of itself, which I&#13;
have never been asked to do and&#13;
wouldn't do even if I were asked,&#13;
and malum prohibitum, which&#13;
means the abscence of statutes&#13;
prohibiting it, is morally indifferent.&#13;
&#13;
I don't have any quarrel with an&#13;
individual who elects to practice&#13;
civil disobedience providing that&#13;
the individual is willing to do what&#13;
I did. You get caught, you get&#13;
convicted, you go to jail. What&#13;
kind of annoys me about those&#13;
people is that when they get&#13;
caught, get convicted and go to&#13;
jail they start to whine and play&#13;
the violin and snivel, and that does&#13;
not inspire in me either respect or&#13;
confidence.&#13;
An interview with G. Gordon Liddy&#13;
Q.: Do you really believe that if&#13;
John Dean hadn't talked that you&#13;
could have kept a lid on&#13;
Watergate?&#13;
A.: Absolutely. He and (Jeb)&#13;
Magruder. You'd have to add&#13;
Magruder into that.&#13;
Q.: What's your views on El&#13;
Salvador and how should the U.S.&#13;
go about aiding them or not aiding&#13;
them?&#13;
A.: El Salvador is a leftist&#13;
government under attack from&#13;
the right and from the Communists.&#13;
There are perhaps, tops,&#13;
6500 Communist guerrillas which&#13;
are attacking from that side. They&#13;
are, however, being directed by&#13;
very sophisticated directional and&#13;
communicational equipment&#13;
mounted in Nicaragua. They're&#13;
being armed by the Soviets and&#13;
Cuba and Nicaragua.&#13;
What we ought to be doing is&#13;
pretty much what we are doing,&#13;
which is economic aid because&#13;
what these Communists are doing&#13;
are attempting to destroy the&#13;
ability of the peasants to be able to&#13;
raise food. They do that by&#13;
blowing up water conduits and&#13;
blowing up dams so they can't get&#13;
their products to market.&#13;
As for military stuff, primarily&#13;
what we ought to be doing is&#13;
training their people. It doesn't do&#13;
any good to send over 60&#13;
helicopters if they've only got nine&#13;
pilots.&#13;
Q.: Do you see any relation&#13;
between El Salvador and Vietnam?&#13;
&#13;
A.: No, and I'll tell you why. El&#13;
Salvador is closer to Washington&#13;
D.C. than many major cities in the&#13;
U.S. Vietnam is 9 - 10,000 miles&#13;
away. El Salvador, as I said, you&#13;
have 6500 Communists. They&#13;
aren't all that well organized&#13;
amongst themselves nor have&#13;
they been for that long. Whereas&#13;
in Vietnam you had a Viet Cong&#13;
infrastructure that went back all&#13;
the way to . . . post WWII.&#13;
Q.: How do you feel about gun&#13;
control?&#13;
A.: Well, first of all, my position&#13;
in respect to guns is that I was in a&#13;
business in which a gun was as&#13;
much a tool as that pencil is to&#13;
yours . . . When you're in&#13;
something like the FBI a gun is a&#13;
tool and you would be well advised&#13;
to master it. There is also the&#13;
extra added element in the fact&#13;
that the mastery of that gun is the&#13;
best life insurance policy you&#13;
could ever buy in that kind of v ery&#13;
dangerous business.&#13;
Gun control doesn't work, never&#13;
has. We have 22,000 gun control&#13;
laws on the books of this country&#13;
today. Another one isn't going to&#13;
help it any.&#13;
If (I had) a magic wand and I&#13;
could go 1, 2, 3 and every gun —&#13;
shoulder guns, shotguns, handguns&#13;
— i n the U. S. would just&#13;
vanish in a puff of smoke overnight,&#13;
you'd still have 96.4% of a ll&#13;
serious crime ... as defined by&#13;
the FBI.&#13;
Q.: How about guns and&#13;
domestic quarrels, suicides,&#13;
accidents with children?&#13;
A.: There are relatively few&#13;
accidents with children. You do&#13;
have domestic quarrels . . . When&#13;
you get an individual in such a&#13;
rage that he is ready and willing to&#13;
take the life of his wife, if he's got&#13;
a gun he'll use it. If he doesn't&#13;
have a gun, he'll pick up an iron&#13;
and bash her skull in, pick up a&#13;
kitchen knife and cut her liver out.&#13;
That's what that kind of murderous&#13;
rage will do.&#13;
I've been in prisons and the&#13;
professional criminals tell me&#13;
they hope that there is gun control&#13;
because there's absolutely no way&#13;
that anyone is going to stop them&#13;
from having a gun. They would be&#13;
delighted to have the assurance&#13;
that when they go in someplace&#13;
that they're not going to be opposed&#13;
by (someone who) has a gun&#13;
who could possibly blow them&#13;
away.&#13;
Q.: How long have you been on&#13;
the speaking circuit?&#13;
A.: Theoretically, I suppose I&#13;
started in 1978. I got out of prison&#13;
in late 1977. T o the extent that I&#13;
lecture now, which is about 80&#13;
universities and colleges a year&#13;
and about 70 of what we call&#13;
corporate dates, all of which are&#13;
not for corporations.&#13;
Q.: And you get $4500 for each&#13;
speech?&#13;
A.: No, sometimes I get considerably&#13;
more.&#13;
Q.: How long is this going to be&#13;
lucrative?&#13;
A.: I'm told for as long as I want&#13;
to do it, probably for the rest of my&#13;
life.&#13;
Q.: Is that what you'll do? Do&#13;
you have anything else?&#13;
A.: Well, I hope to get some rest.&#13;
For example, I just came from&#13;
Berkeley today. Tomorrow I go to&#13;
North Carolina, then I go to&#13;
Buffalo, Indianapolis, Daytona&#13;
Beach and I hope that at some&#13;
point I'll be able to take it a little&#13;
easier because I have two other&#13;
businesses I have to attend to also.&#13;
I am one of the owners of Gemstone&#13;
Security; we have a full -&#13;
service industrial security corporation.&#13;
&#13;
I also have to spend one week&#13;
out of every four in Florida, where&#13;
I tape, two a day, the syndicated&#13;
television show "Cause and Effect."&#13;
&#13;
I'm going to go right back to&#13;
what I'm doing now. Then I have&#13;
to write an article for Playboy,&#13;
then I gotta write another book.&#13;
I'm negotiating to sell one of my&#13;
other books now for a movie, so I&#13;
really have a lot of things that I&#13;
have to do.&#13;
Q.: What kind of books are you&#13;
writing?&#13;
A.: The first one I wrote was&#13;
fiction and the one they want me&#13;
to write next will be another&#13;
fiction book.&#13;
Q.: Are they about all you know&#13;
about covert operations?&#13;
A.: You know, they say write&#13;
about what you know. I'm not at&#13;
all sure that I could turn out a very&#13;
credible novel about the inside&#13;
story on life in a girls' school.&#13;
Q.: How did your family take&#13;
Watergate?&#13;
A.: Well, adverse circumstances&#13;
are going to do one&#13;
thing or the other. They're either&#13;
going to defeat you or make you&#13;
much, much stronger. (The axiom&#13;
goes) what does not kill me makes&#13;
me stronger. And that's how it&#13;
worked out with my family.&#13;
Q.: Do you want your children to&#13;
follow in your footsteps?&#13;
A.: No, I would want my&#13;
children to follow life as they&#13;
perceive life ought to be . . . What&#13;
I tell my children is you do what&#13;
you want to do and whatever it is&#13;
you be the very best at it possible.&#13;
&#13;
Q.: Do you think that we could&#13;
have a conventional war with the&#13;
U.S.S.R.?&#13;
A.: If you mean, do I think we&#13;
could have a real war with the&#13;
U.S.S.R. with neither side using&#13;
nuclear weapons — n o. Once the&#13;
genie's out of the bottle, it's out of&#13;
the bottle.&#13;
Q.: Do you believe in the&#13;
possibility of a limited nuclear&#13;
war?&#13;
A.: I'm not at all sure that&#13;
there's any such thing as a limited&#13;
nuclear war. Period.&#13;
Q.: Let's say a limited exchange&#13;
— they throw one at us, we throw&#13;
one at them and that's it.&#13;
A.: I don't know. I can you&#13;
know, speculate on a scenario, if&#13;
you will, in which they throw a&#13;
thing at us and we throw one at&#13;
them and both are so horrified out&#13;
of it that no one goes further. I&#13;
don't know. What I know is the&#13;
nature of man.&#13;
Q.: Are you still on parole?&#13;
A.: No, that was a little joke I&#13;
always tell.&#13;
Q.: Do you carry a gun?&#13;
A.: I'm not allowed to carry a&#13;
gun. However, Mrs. Liddy has&#13;
quite a few guns in the house. And&#13;
if somebody were to come through&#13;
the window in my house I would&#13;
not hesitate to blow him right out&#13;
the other side of it.&#13;
Q.: Do you still burn yourself?&#13;
A.: No, the reason for that is&#13;
that just as in weightlifting you&#13;
have to keep increasing the&#13;
weight, otherwise it doesn't do you&#13;
any good. And the last time I did&#13;
it, which was years ago, I was told&#13;
by the surgeons that if I did it any&#13;
more severely I would disable&#13;
myself. At that point you are&#13;
clearly at the point of what they&#13;
Continued On Page Seven &#13;
4 Thursda y, April 22,1982 RANGER&#13;
WOW!&#13;
What A Selection&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
10:00 am - 4:00 pm&#13;
• S PE AR M I NT LEAV ES&#13;
• J UBE J EL LS&#13;
• C AR AM ELS&#13;
• C AR A M EL BULLIES&#13;
• ROYALS&#13;
• T OF FE ES&#13;
• J O TS&#13;
• B RI DGE M IX&#13;
• M A L TED MILK BALLS&#13;
• CHOC. C RE M E D RO P S&#13;
• CHOC. R AISIN S&#13;
• CHOC. P E A NU TS&#13;
• P E A NUT B U T TER C U PS&#13;
• STA RS&#13;
• Y OG U RT P E A NU TS&#13;
• CAROB M A L TED MILK&#13;
BALLS&#13;
• CAR OB P E A NU TS&#13;
• S UN FL OW ER SE EDS&#13;
• CARIBBEAN DELICACY&#13;
• CALIFORNIA MIX&#13;
• S TU D E NT FOO D&#13;
• GIANT CASHEWS&#13;
• NATURA L PISTACHIOS&#13;
• SPA NISH P E A NU TS&#13;
• BLA N C HED P E A NU TS&#13;
• Y OG U RT RAISINS&#13;
• Y O G U RT S E S A M E&#13;
B RITTLE&#13;
• RED SKIN P EA N U TS&#13;
• M INT COO LERS&#13;
• STA R LIGHT MINTS&#13;
• SOUR BALLS&#13;
• CINN AMON DISKS&#13;
• C O F FEE&#13;
• BUTTERSCOTCH DISKS&#13;
• ROO T B EER B A R RE LS&#13;
• P O PS&#13;
• P E A N UT B U T T ER&#13;
KISSES&#13;
• P EP PE RMI N T KISSES&#13;
• LICORICE B UL LIES&#13;
•JELLY BEA NS&#13;
• ASS ORTED P ER KYS&#13;
• O R A NGE S LICES&#13;
Burned u p&#13;
Daylight can't be saved&#13;
by Carol Burns&#13;
As the semester draws to a&#13;
close, Parkside students might be&#13;
asking themselves why it seemed&#13;
to take forever. This spring term&#13;
was three weeks longer than fall's&#13;
term to start with, but that's not&#13;
all that has added to its length.&#13;
No, students, we've been duped.&#13;
We spent the majority of the&#13;
present semester in regular time,&#13;
as opposed to "Daylight Savings&#13;
Time." The switchover happens&#13;
again this weekend. Sometime&#13;
during the night between Saturday&#13;
and Sunday, we will "lose" an&#13;
hour.&#13;
That means that for the next six&#13;
months, the days will only be 23&#13;
hours long, and for the last six&#13;
months they've been 25 hours&#13;
long! Just keep in mind that all&#13;
homosexual.&#13;
Dyan Cannon has always struck&#13;
me as a pretty good actress trying&#13;
to break out of one - dimensional&#13;
roles. Not that the role of Sidney&#13;
Bruhl's airy wife in this film has a&#13;
hell of a lot of depth, but it's not a&#13;
cardboard role either. And&#13;
Cannon plays it to the hilt,&#13;
displaying an acting talent I didn't&#13;
know she had. Or maybe she just&#13;
never got a chance to show it off.&#13;
Continued On Page Five&#13;
these days actually consist of 24&#13;
hours. (Have I lost you yet?)&#13;
Who set this mess up anyways?&#13;
Exactly what are we saving?&#13;
Daylight cannot be saved, except&#13;
on pictures or movies. It can't be&#13;
frozen. And it's all really too bad.&#13;
It sure would be nice to move&#13;
daylight around. Then we could&#13;
use it the way we can use video -&#13;
tape - recorders.&#13;
Daylight Savings Time has one&#13;
major flaw: It should have been&#13;
arranged so that the 25 - hour days&#13;
came in summer, when the&#13;
weather (hopefully) is better.&#13;
Instead, the winter days are&#13;
longer, even though they're&#13;
shorter.&#13;
The present set - up is also&#13;
detrimental to students — just&#13;
when we really need all the extra&#13;
time to catch up on classes, write&#13;
papers, etc., it gets taken away&#13;
from us. Well, maybe it's not all&#13;
that bad: Tuition could have been&#13;
set up by hours in time instead of&#13;
hours per semester.&#13;
Maybe someday it will be the&#13;
same time everywhere, even&#13;
though it has got to be earlier or&#13;
later somewhere else. I now leave&#13;
you, totally confused. If you want&#13;
to know what time it is, ask&#13;
somebody else — I'm planning to&#13;
lose my watch.&#13;
Distributed by&#13;
E. F. MADRIGRAN O&#13;
1831 - 55th St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wise.&#13;
658-3553&#13;
"Deathtrap" is most a lluring&#13;
Put a little&#13;
weekend&#13;
in your week.&#13;
bv Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
The mystery - thriller -&#13;
whodunit genre is one of the most&#13;
fun (for lack of a better word)&#13;
types of film, and it's not often&#13;
that a really interesting whodunit&#13;
is spotted. But Sidney Lumet's&#13;
new film "Deathtrap" has enough&#13;
plot twists to throw any armchair&#13;
detective off the trail, and is&#13;
worthy of investigation.&#13;
Michael Caine stars as Sidney&#13;
Bruhl, a middle - aged, 'written&#13;
out' playwright, who watches his&#13;
latest play royally bomb on&#13;
Broadway in the film's opening.&#13;
Returning home to his wife (Dyan&#13;
Cannon), Bruhl discovers the&#13;
complete script to a play sent to&#13;
him by one of his former students,&#13;
a play so good that, in Bruhl's&#13;
words, "Couldn't be destroyed,&#13;
even by a gifted director." Bruhl&#13;
is so intent on churning out a&#13;
successful play that he decides to&#13;
invite the former student to his&#13;
home, kill him, and then market&#13;
the play as his own. In fact, the&#13;
unwitting author does come to&#13;
Bruhl's abode, and Bruhl does kill&#13;
him. Or so we think. This is where&#13;
the film's numerous plot twists&#13;
begin, and so, instead of revealing&#13;
all of these twists and ruining the&#13;
movie for you, I'll let you see it for&#13;
yourself. One thing I can tell you&#13;
though. The plot is wickedly interesting.&#13;
&#13;
Christopher Reeve co - stars as&#13;
Clifford Anderson, the young&#13;
homosexual playwright. Quite a&#13;
change from playing Superman&#13;
obviously, but Reeve handles the&#13;
transition with ease. This is no&#13;
easy task, because no matter how&#13;
realistically Chris plays a&#13;
character, he still, well, looks like&#13;
Superman. That image of him as&#13;
the man of steel has quickly flown&#13;
into the American psyche, and it's&#13;
hard to forget about that and&#13;
suddenly believe that he is&#13;
playing, of all things, a &#13;
Synthesizers set 'Moog' of the day&#13;
by Joe Kimm&#13;
First came the theremin. It was&#13;
invented by a scientist in the&#13;
depths of the Bell laboratories. It&#13;
was in the sixties that commercial&#13;
groups first began using this&#13;
device to augment their sound in&#13;
search of a new gimmick. Bob&#13;
Moog developed it into the Moog&#13;
synthesizer which was later&#13;
utilized by several rock groups as&#13;
an addition to their array of&#13;
keyboards. Keith Emerson of&#13;
ELP, was one of the first&#13;
customers to use his prototype.&#13;
His stage show consisted of&#13;
alternating between traditional&#13;
church sounds of the Hammond&#13;
m-2 and the new innovative&#13;
sounds that came forth from this&#13;
new Moog synthesizer. Other&#13;
groups soon followed suit, including&#13;
groups like Yes, Genesis,&#13;
Gentle Giant, and the Moody&#13;
Blues. Some even went as far as to&#13;
form a group consisting entirely of&#13;
keyboard synthesizer musicians&#13;
aka Gary Wright and his band.&#13;
This later developed into fancy&#13;
loop effects and other fancy&#13;
computer sounds produced by&#13;
artists like Brian Eno who among&#13;
others were noted for his genius&#13;
with finding new sounds. Pretty&#13;
soon people were catching on to&#13;
this new dimension in sound and it&#13;
became a big fad to color disco&#13;
songs with crazy dittos. Recent&#13;
bands like Gary Neuman hit the&#13;
top 10 with this techno - rock&#13;
clique and it became a common&#13;
place thing. It is an integral part&#13;
of today's music and most bands&#13;
have a keyboard player who&#13;
fiddles with the knobs and cranks&#13;
out computer - like emissions.&#13;
So what does this all mean?&#13;
Well, for one thing, it reflects on&#13;
society's values that relies on&#13;
technology as a workhorse for the&#13;
Vangelis tops in electronic grandeur&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
This is the best synthesizer&#13;
album I've ever heard. I haven't&#13;
heard a hell of a lot of synthesizer&#13;
music, but I have sampled&#13;
Tangerine Dream, Isao Tomita,&#13;
Jean Micheal Jarre, Yes, Orchestral&#13;
Manouveres in the Dark,&#13;
among others. Not much. I've&#13;
always had trouble listening to&#13;
most synthesizer music though.&#13;
Most of it sounds like spacey&#13;
sound effects, synthesizer for the&#13;
sake of synthesizer, rather than&#13;
listenable music. Vangelis' music&#13;
is the exception.&#13;
I first heard Vangelis synthesizer&#13;
music as background&#13;
music for Carl Sagan's famous&#13;
t.v. show, "Cosmos." The music&#13;
was majestic and beautiful, a&#13;
perfect score to help Dr. Sagan&#13;
convey the grandeur of the&#13;
universe. I had to have the music,&#13;
so when the "Cosmos" soundtrack&#13;
came out I snatched it up immediately.&#13;
Reading the album&#13;
credits, I found that a Greek man&#13;
named Vangelis with an unpronounceable&#13;
last name had&#13;
done the excellent music. So I&#13;
started to buy Vangelis albums.&#13;
I've got about eight or ten now. All&#13;
are unique and immensely&#13;
creative, more so than any other&#13;
synthesizer music I've listened to,&#13;
but "Heaven and Hell" is my&#13;
favorite.&#13;
The album, like most Vangelis&#13;
albums, is a concept within itself.&#13;
Entitled "Heaven and Hell," the&#13;
music is about jus that. The&#13;
titletrack consists of two major&#13;
parts, each part about 21 minutes&#13;
in length, and the individual cuts&#13;
are distinguished by their supposed&#13;
place of origin. Some cuts&#13;
sound like people being tortured in&#13;
hell, while others sound like the&#13;
•heavenly hosts having a jam&#13;
session. The best passages include&#13;
the main theme from "Cosmos,"&#13;
several intricate synthesizer&#13;
pieces combined with conventional&#13;
keyboards pnd a&#13;
Bosendorfer piano, and a passage&#13;
that sounds something like a&#13;
Gregorian chant with a female&#13;
"Deathtrap"&#13;
VANGELIS won an Oscar for&#13;
his "Chariots" soundtrack.&#13;
vocal lead. The album also includes&#13;
a song that is separate&#13;
from the titletrack concept, a sort&#13;
of spacey love balland with Jon&#13;
Anderson of Yes doing the vocals.&#13;
In fact, Vangelis and Jon Anderson&#13;
have done several albums&#13;
together, Vangelis always composing&#13;
and performing all the&#13;
music, and Anderson writing and&#13;
singing all lyrics. They seem to&#13;
compliment each other nicely. Not&#13;
all Vangelis albums are totally&#13;
excellent and mind - blowing, but&#13;
"Heaven and Hell" has some of&#13;
the most violent and sporadic&#13;
music I've ever heard, and some&#13;
of the most tranquil and beautiful&#13;
music I've ever heard.&#13;
Recently Vangelis' popularity&#13;
has skyrocketed, having won the&#13;
Academy Award for the soundtrack&#13;
he did for "Chariots of&#13;
Fire." His albums are becoming&#13;
more and more available in&#13;
American stores, and for some&#13;
reason they are often cataloged&#13;
under the Jazz section. Oh well, if&#13;
you're interested in buying a&#13;
Vangelis album, look around,&#13;
you're sure to find some&#13;
somewhere. If you look. What&#13;
follows is a basic analysis of some&#13;
of his better and more popular&#13;
albums.&#13;
"666 - The Number of the Beast"&#13;
This is not a Vangelis solo album,&#13;
but one he did when he was with a&#13;
group called "Aphrodites' Child"&#13;
about 1970. This is more rock&#13;
music than anything else, and is a&#13;
pretty bizarre and creative musical&#13;
tale about the coming of a&#13;
supposed a nti-christ. Interesting,&#13;
but not synthesizer.&#13;
"Earth" An early solo album,&#13;
filled with tribal sounds, gutteral&#13;
chants, and rythmic drumbeats.&#13;
Not a hell of a lot of synthesizer on&#13;
this one either, and not much&#13;
listenable music, but definitely an&#13;
interesting venture on the artist's&#13;
part.&#13;
"Albedo .039" Now this is space&#13;
music, well polished and nice&#13;
sounding. A bit more commercial&#13;
and less creative than H &amp; H, but a&#13;
nice album.&#13;
Tgnacio" This is probably the&#13;
most quiet of all Vangelis albums,&#13;
the most soothing, and certainly&#13;
one of the most graceful. After&#13;
being bombarded by loud rock&#13;
music all day, this album is like a&#13;
cool breeze on a steamy summer&#13;
day. Some material from this&#13;
album was used for "Cosmos."&#13;
"Chariots of Fire" soundtrack.&#13;
This album includes all of the&#13;
music from the film as well as&#13;
some that was not used. Some of&#13;
his best synthesizer work.&#13;
Continued From Page Four&#13;
This film about a play is actually&#13;
based on a play. Got that?&#13;
You can tell that it is based on a&#13;
play — most of the action and&#13;
dialogue takes place in one setting&#13;
throughout the story, and there&#13;
are only a minimal number of&#13;
characters that populate this&#13;
setting. This does not make the&#13;
film boring, merely unique.&#13;
Sparkling performances by all the&#13;
actors within a witty and intriguing&#13;
plot by Ira Levin make&#13;
this film a most appealing trap.&#13;
Student art work exhibited&#13;
A juried show of work by&#13;
Parkside art students will hang in&#13;
the Comm. Arts Gallery through&#13;
May 6.&#13;
Chuck Toman, assistant curator&#13;
of education at the Milwaukee Art&#13;
Museum, will judge the show and&#13;
determine the winners of three&#13;
cash awards, to be presented at a&#13;
reception from 7 to 9 p.m. on&#13;
J • y&#13;
yeJ&amp;tde&#13;
rye&#13;
my&#13;
mOrChuman&#13;
endeavors. Maybe man&#13;
has lost touch with his inner soul&#13;
and has to rely on artificial&#13;
methods and means of producing&#13;
music, which is the most basic of&#13;
all human expressions. It has&#13;
taken the human element out of&#13;
the creativity that must accompany&#13;
the sensitive expression&#13;
of human spirit in forming a&#13;
viable means of aural communication.&#13;
It is no longer in the&#13;
hands of the artist in touch with&#13;
his human pool of feelings. It is&#13;
rather in the inner functions of a&#13;
computer that spews forth every&#13;
imaginable sound known to man&#13;
processed by a few microchips&#13;
smaller than the ordinary mind&#13;
can imagine and these sounds&#13;
have established themselves as&#13;
the future direction in music, the&#13;
definitive color of tomorrow's&#13;
musical spectrum.&#13;
On the other hand, it shows that&#13;
there is an openness, an innovative&#13;
curiosity toward ever -&#13;
expanding the horizon of human&#13;
aural experience. It points to a&#13;
trend that shows no limits in&#13;
generating new sounds with&#13;
countless shades of color and tone&#13;
to further stimulate the human&#13;
plectrum. There is no telling what&#13;
tomorrow holds in attractive new&#13;
looks and gimmicks that will&#13;
catch the listener's ear in expanding&#13;
the horizon for artistic&#13;
endeavors. It shows that&#13;
technology can play a part in the&#13;
arts which can lead to a new&#13;
synthesis of old and the new, the&#13;
sensual and the cerebral, the&#13;
expressive and the programmable.&#13;
It shows new promise in&#13;
the oldest art in human history.&#13;
Shakespeare forum to be held&#13;
opening day of the show. The&#13;
reception is open to the public.&#13;
About 50 students will be&#13;
represented by an estimated 150&#13;
works representing all media. The&#13;
show will include work done by&#13;
Parkside students under&#13;
classroom supervision during the&#13;
last two years and not previously&#13;
exhibited in a student show.&#13;
JM\AAAAAAAAAAAAA#VtAAAA#*AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA/W/&lt;&#13;
A forum on "The Public, the&#13;
Schools and the Performance of&#13;
Shakespeare" will conclude a two&#13;
- day conference of Shakespeare&#13;
scholars and teachers at Parkside&#13;
on April 23 and 24.&#13;
The forum, from 1:30 to 3:30&#13;
p.m. on April 24 in Molinaro Hall,&#13;
Room 105, is free and open to the&#13;
public. The conference on&#13;
"Shakespeare in the Classroom,"&#13;
is sponsored by Parkside and the&#13;
Wisconsin Department of Public&#13;
Instruction and the forum is&#13;
supported by the Wisconsin&#13;
Humanities Committee.&#13;
Forum panelists will include&#13;
John L. Styan, Franklin Bliss&#13;
Snyder Professor of English at&#13;
Northwestern University since&#13;
1977.&#13;
Styan, who also will address a&#13;
general session of the conference&#13;
on April 23, was born in London&#13;
and educated at Cambridge&#13;
University. He has been a&#13;
member of the British Broadcasting&#13;
Corp. and Independent TV&#13;
advisory committees in the United&#13;
Kingdom and is currently&#13;
chairman of the Academic&#13;
Council of the Shakespeare Globe&#13;
Theater Center for North&#13;
America.&#13;
Other panelists will include:&#13;
Susan Willis, associate&#13;
professor of English at Auburn&#13;
University, Montgomery, Ala.,&#13;
who spent the past summer observing&#13;
filming of several&#13;
Shakespearean productions in the&#13;
Graham Parker keeps Rumour's 'Gray Area' sparse&#13;
BBC/TV series which will complete&#13;
filming of all of the bard's&#13;
plays next year;&#13;
Thomas Collins, director of the&#13;
Platteville Shakespeare Festival&#13;
at UW-Platville, a summer troupe&#13;
which presents three plays each&#13;
year;&#13;
Michael W. Bartos, professor of&#13;
English at Harper College and&#13;
director of its Shakespeare&#13;
Festival, which includes performances,&#13;
films, lectures and&#13;
exhibits;&#13;
Ted Swetz, an actor with the&#13;
American Players Theater in&#13;
Spring Green, cast last season in&#13;
"Midsummer Night's Dream;"&#13;
Patrick Nowak, manager of&#13;
Ponderosa, Inc., of Racine, a 1976&#13;
English graduate of UW-P, who&#13;
received a master's degree in&#13;
business from UW-Whitewater.&#13;
Rhoda Gale Pollack, professor&#13;
of dramatic arts at UW-P and&#13;
chairman of the Fine Arts&#13;
Division, will act as moderator.&#13;
Conference keynoter will be&#13;
Gladys Veidemanis, English&#13;
chairperson of North High School,&#13;
Oshkosh, who is nationally known&#13;
for her activities with the National&#13;
Council of Teachers of English&#13;
and serves as NCTE representative&#13;
to the Educational Advisory&#13;
Panel for the BBC/TV series.&#13;
The conference was organized&#13;
by Parkside English professor&#13;
Andrew McLean, the author of a&#13;
number of articles on&#13;
Shakespeare on film and recipient&#13;
of a 198 0 National Endowment for&#13;
the Humanities grant for summer&#13;
study at Stratford - on - Avon.&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
Graham Parker is one of those&#13;
rare musicians who inhabits the&#13;
ground between new wave and&#13;
rock and roll. On his latest album,&#13;
"Another Gray Area", Parker&#13;
plays some high - intensity, but&#13;
not necessarily heavy, rock with&#13;
the anti - slick, anti - commercial&#13;
tinge that often characterizes&#13;
British new wave.&#13;
That is not to say, though, that&#13;
the record is poorly done. It is not.&#13;
Parker and his band do a fine job&#13;
of placing traditional rock idioms&#13;
in a modern context. And, as a&#13;
lyricist, Parker is one of the best&#13;
rock and roll songwriters around.&#13;
Most of the music is devoted to&#13;
Parker's personal anger at the&#13;
world. In the title song, he rages&#13;
against an indifferent girlfriend&#13;
who has left him "in another gray&#13;
area". Parker uses his words&#13;
sparingly, like Bob Dylan, to give&#13;
the music the tension it requires to&#13;
adequately express his feelings.&#13;
Girls aren't the only subject he&#13;
sings about, though. On "Dark&#13;
Side of the Bright Lights", he rails&#13;
against the degradation of the&#13;
rock and roll partying scene, thus:&#13;
"I an not gaining any ground here&#13;
/ You are not listening / You do&#13;
not care."&#13;
The one song on the album that&#13;
is even vaguely upbeat, "You Hit&#13;
the Spot", is also the most&#13;
punkish. The interesting thing&#13;
about Parker is that he is only&#13;
effective lyrically when he's&#13;
angry. It's just too much for him&#13;
to sound nice when he's actually&#13;
trying to be nice. Also interesting&#13;
is the fact that he can't work in a&#13;
straight new wave context either,&#13;
certainly not up to his potential.&#13;
Instrumentally, the album is&#13;
quite good. Parker, of course,&#13;
leads' the band on guitar, both&#13;
electric and acoustic. He doesn't&#13;
go in for fancy lead lines, and&#13;
what solos he does play are short&#13;
and concise. Aside from Parker,&#13;
the outstanding musician here is&#13;
Nicky Hopkins, the Who's session&#13;
pianist.&#13;
Except for an over-emphasis&#13;
on drums, Parker's group acquits&#13;
itself well. Not one of the solos is&#13;
over a minute in length. This can&#13;
be either good or bad, depending.&#13;
Here it works well. No ego trips on&#13;
this album. All in all, Parker is&#13;
one of the least egotistical leaders&#13;
to come along in years, and he has&#13;
polished up his act considerably,&#13;
even taking into account his excellent&#13;
earlier work with the&#13;
Rumour.&#13;
So if you like economy in your&#13;
music, and don't mind some&#13;
vehement lyrics along with it, this&#13;
record could be for you. Compared&#13;
to his last album, "The Up&#13;
Elevator", where he was in a good&#13;
mood, "Another Gray Area" puts&#13;
Parker back on familiar turf,&#13;
where he can sit and observe the&#13;
world while wearing his favorite&#13;
sneer.&#13;
Impressionists to&#13;
perform Monday&#13;
On Mon., April 26 the Union&#13;
Cinema will be the site of a free&#13;
show -entitled, "Men of a&#13;
Thousand Voices," starring Steve&#13;
Krause, Francis Beaumier, and&#13;
Rebecca Julich. The show will be&#13;
in the form of a play and will&#13;
feature American Presidents,&#13;
comedians, detectives, and entertainers,&#13;
including Ronald&#13;
Reagan, Peter Falk, Steve&#13;
Martin, and many others.&#13;
Steve and Francis have been&#13;
performing together for about two&#13;
years and have built up a&#13;
repertoire of about two hundred&#13;
voices. The show will be held at 1&#13;
p. m. &#13;
6 Thursday, April 22,1982 RANGER&#13;
2nd Annual&#13;
Accent on Women production set ^ coiioquim&#13;
Club Events&#13;
A theatrical production titled&#13;
"Ties That Bind" by the&#13;
Wisconsin Women's History&#13;
Ensemble and a keynote speech&#13;
on "How to Get What You Want&#13;
Out of Life" by Dr. Jessie Potter,&#13;
a nationally known authority on&#13;
human relationships, will&#13;
highlight the second annual Accent&#13;
on Women program at&#13;
Parkside. Deadline for&#13;
registration is April 30.&#13;
The performance, which will be&#13;
followed by a reception, will be at&#13;
8 p.m. on Friday, May 7 in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Drawn from documented sources,&#13;
the play weaves together music,,&#13;
drama, poetry, mime and dance&#13;
to portray the lives of real women&#13;
who lived in Wisconsin between&#13;
the 1840s and the 1920s. The&#13;
performance will preface a&#13;
moderated discussion between the&#13;
audience and the performers.&#13;
Potter's talk, also in the theater,&#13;
will begin an all - day program&#13;
including a selection of 35&#13;
workshops and seminars on topics&#13;
of interest to women at 9 a.m. on&#13;
Saturday, May 8.&#13;
Potter is a member of the&#13;
faculties of the - University of&#13;
Illinois Medical School, the Northwestern&#13;
University Medical&#13;
School, the National Sex Forum&#13;
JESSIE POTTER&#13;
and the Institute for the Advanced&#13;
Study of Human Sexuality. She is&#13;
nationally - known as an educator,&#13;
lecturer, writer and counselor on&#13;
marriage, human sexuality, intimacy&#13;
and communication. She&#13;
has been a guest on a number of&#13;
television and radio programs&#13;
including the Phil Donahue and&#13;
David Susskind shows.&#13;
Half - day seminar topics include&#13;
assertive communication,&#13;
choices by design, image makers,&#13;
time management, middle&#13;
essence, close encounter&#13;
relationships and relaxation&#13;
therapy and stress management.&#13;
Workshops, which last 75&#13;
minutes, include on - the - job&#13;
discrimination, confidence,&#13;
futurism, handling stress through&#13;
physical fitness, a Chicana perspective&#13;
on womenhood, marital&#13;
property reform, sex roles in&#13;
transition, managing your own&#13;
business, managing family and&#13;
career, male - female relationships,&#13;
aging families and investments.&#13;
&#13;
Registration forms and complete&#13;
course descriptions are&#13;
available by writing Accent on&#13;
Women, UW-Parkside, P.O. Box&#13;
2000, Kenosha 53141 or phoning 414&#13;
/ 553-2351 between 1 and 5 p.m.&#13;
Fee for the evening performance&#13;
and day - long program is $12.50&#13;
for the general public; $8.50 for&#13;
UW-P students and includes&#13;
luncheon. Tickets for the performance&#13;
only are $3 and will be&#13;
available at the door.&#13;
In conjunction with the&#13;
program, a number of community&#13;
organizations and agencies will&#13;
hold a fair to distribute information&#13;
on their activities and&#13;
services from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on&#13;
the Molinaro Hall Concourse.&#13;
Security tips help you out&#13;
by Vincent Gigliotti&#13;
Crime prevention and&#13;
awareness should be of concern to&#13;
all members of the Parkside&#13;
community. If an opportunity for&#13;
a crime does exist, there is always&#13;
someone available to take advantage&#13;
of the situation.&#13;
You can help stop crimes,&#13;
especially theft, by just being&#13;
aware of the scene of m ost crimes.&#13;
A purse, wallet, books or any&#13;
personal items left unattended in&#13;
the library or lounge areas is open&#13;
invitation for someone to become&#13;
a thief. Eliminate the opportunity&#13;
and you virtually eliminate crime.&#13;
Be aware of your surroundings; if&#13;
you see something that looks&#13;
suspicious, or you believe a crime&#13;
is being committed, notify the&#13;
Security Department immediately.&#13;
&#13;
If y ou are the victim of a crime,&#13;
call the Security Department at&#13;
once. Too many times complaints&#13;
are received hours or even days&#13;
after an event has occurred. When&#13;
Security is notified, an officer can&#13;
be at the scene in a few minutes.&#13;
The sooner a police officer is&#13;
there, the better chances are of&#13;
talking with other people in the&#13;
area who may have additional&#13;
information. The phone number&#13;
for the Campus Security&#13;
Department is on every phone,&#13;
don't hesitate to use it.&#13;
In an effort to help deter crime&#13;
on campus, the Security Department&#13;
in conjunction with the&#13;
Student Life Office, is sponsoring&#13;
a "Reward for Information on&#13;
Crimes on Campus" program.&#13;
Persons who give information on&#13;
crimes that leads to the apprehension&#13;
of the perpetrator may&#13;
be entitled to a reward. A code&#13;
system has been set up so that the&#13;
reporting person may remain&#13;
anonymous if they choose. A call&#13;
to Security with the information is&#13;
all that it takes to initiate the&#13;
program. One reward has already&#13;
been given out.&#13;
Help yourself and help your&#13;
friends, be aware of your&#13;
surroundings. Eliminate opportunity&#13;
for crime. Make the&#13;
campus a better and safer place&#13;
for everyone.&#13;
On Friday, April 23 at 1 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist 113, Dr. Kelvin S.&#13;
Rodolfo, of the department of&#13;
Geology - University of Illinois,&#13;
Chicago Circle, will talk on&#13;
"Sedimentation, Arc Sundering,&#13;
and Back - Arc Spreading in the&#13;
Western Pacific."&#13;
Pre-med&#13;
On Wednesday, April 28 at 8&#13;
p.m., Lt. Lisa Lichter, M.D. will&#13;
give an informal talk on her&#13;
medical experiences. She has&#13;
done a rotating internship in the&#13;
Navy, and plans to specialize in&#13;
dermatology. In addition, Dr.&#13;
Lichter is one of the first two&#13;
women from Parkside to attend&#13;
medical school. Her experiences&#13;
in the Navy include learning to fly&#13;
and deep sea dive.&#13;
Elections for next year's officers&#13;
will take place at 7 p.m. The&#13;
meeting is in the library D-l&#13;
faculty lounge.&#13;
PSE&#13;
The second annual PSE LOOP&#13;
500 bicycle relay race will be held&#13;
on the inner loop road on Wednesday,&#13;
April 28, at 1 p.m. Each&#13;
member will receive a LOOP 500&#13;
T-shirt and a beer in the Union.&#13;
There is a nominal registration&#13;
fee to cover costs. The event is&#13;
expected to be as great a success&#13;
as last year's.&#13;
Computer Club&#13;
Part three of Computer&#13;
Graphics on display will be shown&#13;
on Friday, April 23 in Greenquist&#13;
103. There will be two sessions this&#13;
week from 1-2:30 and from 2:30-4&#13;
p.m. Some of the topics are the&#13;
Evans and Sutherland Flight&#13;
Simulator, Vidsizer — a combination&#13;
of computer graphics and&#13;
synthesizer effects, ZGRASS — a&#13;
graphics system demonstration,&#13;
and the Dubner demo tape. The&#13;
event is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
Accounting Club&#13;
On Wednesday, April 28 at 7&#13;
p.m., the Accounting Club will&#13;
sponsor a regional public accounting&#13;
night. Representatives&#13;
from three area accounting firms&#13;
will speak at the meeting. It will&#13;
be held in Union 104. Refreshments&#13;
will be served.&#13;
Political Science&#13;
On Wednesday, April 28 in&#13;
Union 207 at 3:30 p.m. Tony Earl,&#13;
a Democratic candidate for&#13;
governor will speak on the issues&#13;
that will affect Wisconsin and the&#13;
race for the governorship. There&#13;
will be a time for questions and&#13;
refreshments will be served. All&#13;
students and faculty are welcome.&#13;
Remember, the Political Science&#13;
Club always needs new members.&#13;
All are welcome.&#13;
Pi Mu Epsilon&#13;
The annual initiation ceremony&#13;
for the Math Club is scheduled for&#13;
Wednesday, April 28, at 1 p. m., in&#13;
Grnqst. D127. Any student who is&#13;
in Math 221 or above who is interested&#13;
in joining is cordially&#13;
invited to attend. There will be a&#13;
discussion of mathematics as a&#13;
major or minor, and refreshments&#13;
will be served. A $4 initiation fee is&#13;
charged by the national office to&#13;
cover the expense of a membership&#13;
certificate and a year's&#13;
subscription to the mathematics&#13;
publication that is put out by Pi&#13;
Mu Epsilon.&#13;
Anne Gaylor on abortion&#13;
| Learn about McCarthy&#13;
Parkside history professor&#13;
Thomas C. Reeves, author &lt;5f a&#13;
major new biography, "The Life&#13;
and Times of Joe McCarthy," will&#13;
participate in a program on the&#13;
making of a film about the&#13;
Wisconsin senator from 1 to 3 p.&#13;
m. on Wednesday, April 28, in&#13;
Molinaro Hall, Room 105.&#13;
Reeves served as a consultant&#13;
for the 90 - minute film, "An&#13;
American Ism: Joe McCarthy,"&#13;
which will be shown after his talk.&#13;
The program, sponsored by the&#13;
Library - Learning Center, is free&#13;
and open to the public and will be&#13;
followed by an autographing&#13;
session where Reeves' book will&#13;
be available.&#13;
Concurrently, a display on Joe&#13;
McCarthy, including materials&#13;
Reeves used in researching his&#13;
book, is on display on the Concourse&#13;
Level of the library.&#13;
Anne Gaylor, president of&#13;
Protect Abortion Rights, an advocacy&#13;
group involved in lobbying&#13;
and educational programs, will&#13;
speak on "Women's Reproductive&#13;
Rights and the Hatch Amendment"&#13;
at 7:30 p. m. on Tuesday,&#13;
April 27 in Molinaro Hall, Room&#13;
107.&#13;
The free public program is&#13;
sponsored by Parkside Women's&#13;
Concourse, a student&#13;
organization.&#13;
Gaylor, active in the pro - choice&#13;
abortion movement since 1969, is&#13;
co - founder of the Women's&#13;
Medical Fund, a Madison&#13;
organization which helps women&#13;
fund abortions and is the author of&#13;
TJiuversityof "Wisconsin-fiarfutide —?&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre ——^ —&#13;
April 25,~2(u*. / /&#13;
ApriI30'^Yl,&#13;
"6pm&#13;
is now accepting applications for&#13;
Editor&#13;
HDRSER&#13;
CARNML&#13;
Tickets: Union lnfo.DesK fir at tho Doo/&#13;
553-2345 553-2042&#13;
$2.50 Partuid. Students. -Staff', Smtio**&#13;
$3.5© G«ne(U Public Citizens&#13;
for the 1982-83 academic year.&#13;
Applicants must be registered UWParkside&#13;
students planning to take&#13;
at least 6 credits each semester.&#13;
Deadline for applications:&#13;
Noon, May 7, 1982&#13;
) Send application&#13;
&amp; resume to:&#13;
a book titled "Abortion is a&#13;
Blessing," published in 1975.&#13;
The president of a national state&#13;
- church separation group, she&#13;
was active in the movement to&#13;
recall Madison Judge Archie&#13;
Simonson and worked in behalf of&#13;
battered wife Jennifer Patri. She&#13;
formerly was the editor of an&#13;
award winning weekly&#13;
newspaper and is a graduate of&#13;
UW - Madison.&#13;
Support wanted&#13;
The University of Wis. Marshfield/Wood&#13;
Co. campus is&#13;
looking for former students to join&#13;
a newly organized Alumni&#13;
Association. The purpose of this&#13;
organization is to provide continued&#13;
support to the operations of&#13;
the Marshfield Campus and the&#13;
activities of its students and to&#13;
promote social activities for the&#13;
Alumni.&#13;
Upcoming events include an&#13;
open campus play day followed by&#13;
a pig roast and a dance.&#13;
Membership dues are $5 per&#13;
year. Anyone interested in joining&#13;
or obtaining further information&#13;
should contact Jim Kress c/o U.&#13;
W. - Marshfield, or call 384-3226.&#13;
Hanger&#13;
WLLC D139&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53141&#13;
"A student&#13;
recital"&#13;
Parkside's Fine Arts Divi;&#13;
i, presents a "Student Recital"&#13;
Sunday, April 25, at 7:30 p.m&#13;
St. Mary's Lutheran Church&#13;
Kenosha. Featured at the rec&#13;
will be Shirley Grothe (organ&#13;
piano), Patricia Peder&#13;
(piano), and Judith Lei&#13;
(soprano). They will be assis&#13;
by Tom Turkowski (piano)&#13;
Marjorie Roth (flute). The ]&#13;
formers are students of Carol i&#13;
(piano), Martha Dodds (voi&lt;&#13;
Glenda Mossman (organ), ,&#13;
August Wegner (composition)&#13;
The public is invited to&#13;
recital and to the reception&#13;
fellowship Hall, immediat&#13;
iollowing the recital.&#13;
•'•My- . -&#13;
Thursday, April 22,1982&#13;
Photo by Mark Sanders&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS Intramural&#13;
Serviced Offered&#13;
TYPING— Professionally done. Reasonable&#13;
rates. North Kenosha. Call anytime 551-7438&#13;
or 658-9229.&#13;
Help Wanted&#13;
LAWNSKEEPER AND GARDENER for&#13;
semi - la rge estate. Must have references&#13;
and own transportation. Very North Side of&#13;
Racine. If interested contact Karen in the&#13;
Ranger office. Salary negotiable.&#13;
WANTED: Students to sell advertising for&#13;
Ranger. 15%commission and bonus. Here's&#13;
the perfect chance to make $$$$. Stop in&#13;
Ranger office (next to Coffee Shoppe) if&#13;
interested,&#13;
WANTED: News, feature and sports writers,&#13;
photographers, graphic artists. Stop by&#13;
Ranger office.&#13;
Wanted&#13;
ROOMMATE NEEDED, after graduation.&#13;
Wood Creek, 552 9175 D ick O&#13;
WANTED: Chess players for the chess club.&#13;
Contact Gary at SOC.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
LASER SAILBOAT w/trailer, 14 ft. Olympic&#13;
class, exc. cond. $1400, 639 6635.&#13;
1979 Y AMAHA DT 12S Excellent condition.&#13;
Make offer. 637 5085&#13;
FILM - THEATRE - S HAKESPEARE BOOK&#13;
SALE THRU MAY 5. Quality used and out&#13;
of print books at the Old Book Corner at&#13;
Martha Merrell's Bookstore, 312 - 6th St.&#13;
Racine. Also, to celebrate Shakespeare's&#13;
birthday on April 23, a selection of prints&#13;
and engravings from the 18th and 19th&#13;
centuries. Over 1200 used books in all areas&#13;
for sale.&#13;
Personals&#13;
BIG PARTY — Apt. #107 P arkside Village,&#13;
Saturday the 24, 9 o'clock.&#13;
ANNETTE — Please leave note same place&#13;
this weekend. Jeff.&#13;
HARPO — If you had any brains you'd be in&#13;
science.&#13;
HARPO — feeble - mi nded should not talk of&#13;
the feeble • m inded.&#13;
CHUCK — What's it like to have tunnel •&#13;
vision?&#13;
CHUCK — Are you really as stupid as your&#13;
articles?&#13;
CHUCK — Want to buy some earrings?&#13;
.CHUCK — Are you going to live on Welfare&#13;
like most Humanities Majors?&#13;
CHUCK — Liberal Arts won't get you a iob.&#13;
CHUCK — Please give your hair back to your&#13;
poodle, his teeth chatter at night.&#13;
SUE: Happy #32. Thanks for the friendship&#13;
through the years!&#13;
TO: Participants in A Student Music Recital;&#13;
the recital was nothing less than wonderful.&#13;
TO ALL CHUCK AND HARPO WRITERS:&#13;
ESAD. If you can't argue opinions in&#13;
telligently, shut the -•-• up!&#13;
B-ball&#13;
Photo by Kim Schlater&#13;
KENOSHA VETOSPORT sponsored a bike training race on inner-loop road last Sunday. There&#13;
will be another race this Sunday.&#13;
Interview with G. Gordon Liddy . . .&#13;
Well, excitement filled the&#13;
gymnasium last Sunday when&#13;
Parkside held their annual Intramural&#13;
Basketball Championships.&#13;
The four teams that&#13;
vied for the coveted crown of&#13;
intramural basketball, only two&#13;
made it to the finals, the Parkside&#13;
"Super Cocks", and the "Five&#13;
Neat Guys". This left the two&#13;
other teams (the "Gunners" and&#13;
"The Lords") out in the dust.&#13;
The "Super Cocks" took an&#13;
early lead in the game, and the&#13;
"Five Neat Guys" just couldn't&#13;
seem to cut it, even though there&#13;
were valiant attempts. The&#13;
"Super Cocks" won it 68-59.&#13;
The high scorer for the "Super&#13;
Cocks" was Dan Sykes with 25&#13;
points, closely followed by Paul&#13;
Charapata with 19 points. Other&#13;
players for the Super Cocks were:&#13;
Kevan Bytnar, John Vocino,&#13;
Glenn Lowe, Rich Salisbury, Dick&#13;
Oberbruner and Mike Brinen.&#13;
Congratulations "Super Cocks"!&#13;
Bike for M.D.&#13;
Well, it's time to dig that bicycle&#13;
up and out from the basement and&#13;
get it in working order. Greg&#13;
Scarlato and Chuck Neustifter&#13;
have already done just that, and&#13;
they have even planned their first&#13;
trip of the season.&#13;
The two intend to bike for two&#13;
weeks across Wisconsin for&#13;
Muscular Dystrophy (MD),&#13;
starting on June 1. Although the&#13;
exact route has not yet been&#13;
plotted, they plan to go 60 miles a&#13;
day, traveling on mostly county&#13;
highways through the central part&#13;
of the state.&#13;
Scarlato and Neustifter are&#13;
presently looking for people to join&#13;
their excursion, and they are also&#13;
looking for sponsors. Should they&#13;
raise $500 or more, they will get to&#13;
present a check to Jill Geisler on&#13;
Channel 6 television.&#13;
The trip is not, in the words ofi&#13;
Scarlato, "for softies." There will&#13;
be no support vehicle, and each&#13;
particpant is expected to carry his&#13;
or her own equipment. They will&#13;
be camping overnight in state&#13;
parks.&#13;
Anyone interested should call&#13;
Greg Scarlato at 657-5714.&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
STUNNING STYLES&#13;
HAPPEN HERE&#13;
3519 52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wl&#13;
654-61 54&#13;
3532 Meachem Rd.&#13;
Racine. Wi Iair Studio 554-8600&#13;
i'REDKEN Salon Prescription CenterContinued&#13;
From Page Three&#13;
call diminished returns. And it no&#13;
longer makes sense.&#13;
Q.: How did you manage to go to&#13;
nine different prisons and get out&#13;
after only 4-1/2 years?&#13;
A.: In one prison, where I lasted&#13;
only five months, I was accused&#13;
by the associate warden and the&#13;
press of intimidating 450 convicts&#13;
into a strike which shut the prison&#13;
down. That was an exaggeration.&#13;
Yeah, I did very well in those&#13;
prisons. I was in one prison where&#13;
the murder rate was one every 90&#13;
days. I got thrown out of that&#13;
prison — they believed I was too&#13;
dangerous. They could not cope&#13;
with me.&#13;
I forced them to release me&#13;
(from solitary confinement).&#13;
There was nothing I couldn't do in&#13;
prison that I didn't want to do —&#13;
nothing. You get out of solitary&#13;
confinement by bringing a writ,&#13;
which you write on toilet paper&#13;
because you're smart enough to&#13;
know what to say.&#13;
Q.: Do you have any regrets&#13;
about anything you did — other&#13;
than getting caught?&#13;
A.: I certainly regret ever&#13;
having involved myself in that or&#13;
any other enterprise with the likes&#13;
of Dean and Magruder. Next time&#13;
I would certainly recruit a more&#13;
heartier crew.&#13;
Q.: Is that the only regret you&#13;
have?&#13;
A.: Exactly.&#13;
Q.: Do you shoot guns anymore?&#13;
A.: I'm not supposed to — (but)&#13;
I shoot a lot. I really don't pay&#13;
much attention to those rules. I'm&#13;
just very careful what I'm doing.&#13;
Q.: Do you think your success&#13;
shows that crime does pay?&#13;
A.: Firstly, if crime didn't pay,&#13;
would there by any crime?&#13;
Secondly, if someone does&#13;
something and you disagree with&#13;
it, you consider it a bad example,&#13;
what is the compulsion to emulate&#13;
him? If you don't like it, don't do&#13;
it.&#13;
Q.: Do you ever cry?&#13;
A.: No.&#13;
Q.: Do you have any emotions?&#13;
A.: Yes.&#13;
Q.: Not negative emotions, but&#13;
positive emotions?&#13;
A.: Oh sure. It's tremendously&#13;
thrilling to me to get behind the&#13;
controls of a high performance&#13;
aircraft. I live a very interesting&#13;
and full life, believe me. I have&#13;
lots of joys and happiness.&#13;
Q.: Are the major joys and&#13;
happiness derived from having&#13;
power, such as the aircraft.&#13;
A.: Oh, that's one of them, but&#13;
it's not the power of it — it's&#13;
controlling all that power. I can&#13;
make it do anything I want.&#13;
Q.: Is that what you enjoy the&#13;
most — power?&#13;
A.: What I enjoy pretty much&#13;
the most is being in bed with a&#13;
beautiful woman.&#13;
Q.: Does that mean your wife?&#13;
A.: No comment.&#13;
Q.: What is your annual income?&#13;
&#13;
A.: Very large — I don't even&#13;
know.&#13;
Q.: How many zeroes?&#13;
A.: Lots of them. Before all this&#13;
happened I was working for the&#13;
government. I think anybody will&#13;
tell you you'll never make any&#13;
money for the government. The&#13;
most I ever made with the&#13;
government was 30 (thousand)&#13;
dollars, back in the days it would&#13;
be equivalent to about $50,000&#13;
today.&#13;
You can't make any money&#13;
working for the government and&#13;
you won't make any money&#13;
working for somebody else.&#13;
RACE DATE&#13;
RPRIL 28&#13;
TOO&#13;
REGISTRATIOA&#13;
RPRIL 20 &amp;21&#13;
moLinflRo concouRse&#13;
sponsored bi| SkprnaHpsiiett &#13;
8 Thursday, April 22,1982 RANGER&#13;
TEAM SALES — ALL SPORTS • 'itows&#13;
• MM&#13;
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• PONY&#13;
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• SPOT-SUIT&#13;
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• N£W BALANCE&#13;
MOM-W. 10AO AJH. - S.-00 P.&#13;
•AT 1000 AM. • IOO P M.&#13;
CIOMD KNDAVS A HOLBA&gt;&#13;
The Active AiWetet One Stop&#13;
694-9206&#13;
THIS ENTIRE PAGE GOOD FOR 10% DISCOUNT ONE&#13;
(1) WEEK AFTER DATE OF ISSUE, SALE ITEMS&#13;
EXCLUDED.&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-4861&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-694-1380&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-0120&#13;
8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-657-1340&#13;
410 Broad Street&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wisconsin&#13;
414-248-9141&#13;
24726 - 75th Street - Rt. 50&#13;
(Paddock Lake) Salem, Wis&#13;
414 - 843-2388&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
5Vi% Interest Iff Yo ur D aily&#13;
Balance is $500.00 or Mere! LENDER&#13;
WE'RE HERE TO HELP YOU OROWI&#13;
Baseball&#13;
Men delayed by cancellations, lose to Carthage&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
Parkside's best hitting came&#13;
from third baseman Rich&#13;
Salisbury. In the second inning,&#13;
Salisbury hit a double and then&#13;
scored on a two base error. At this&#13;
point Parkside led 1-0, but Carthage&#13;
tied it up in their half of the&#13;
second.&#13;
In the fourth inning, Parkside&#13;
again took the lead when Rich&#13;
Salisbury led off with a double.&#13;
Mike Carey knocked in Parkside's&#13;
second run due to a shortstop&#13;
error. Other hits made for&#13;
Parkside were by shortstop Kevan&#13;
Bytnar, second baseman Dan&#13;
Sykes and outfielder Dick Sykes.&#13;
Parkside kept a 2-1 lead up until&#13;
the Carthage half of the eighth&#13;
inning. The Redmen scored six&#13;
runs on only five hits in order to&#13;
win the game. Mark Schmitz and&#13;
Scott Hartnell pitched in relief for&#13;
Parkside. Schmitz was the losing&#13;
pitcher.&#13;
It is clear that Parkside played&#13;
a much better game than Carthage&#13;
up until that dreaded eighth&#13;
inning. With a little more power&#13;
hitting, perhaps Parkside could&#13;
have come back to make the score&#13;
a bit more even.&#13;
Last Monday, Parkside hosted&#13;
Milton College for a double -&#13;
header of which the second game&#13;
was called due to rain. The first&#13;
game, though, resulted in more&#13;
bad luck for the Rangers. They&#13;
were defeated 3-0.&#13;
Only seven innings were played&#13;
because it was to be a double -&#13;
header. Pitcher Joe Krisik went&#13;
the distance for the Rangers, but&#13;
unfortunately was not backed up&#13;
by his hitters.&#13;
Second baseman Dan Sykes,&#13;
outfielder John Hyatt and third&#13;
baseman Rich Salisbury provided&#13;
Parkside's only three hits of the&#13;
game.&#13;
Milton College looked real good,&#13;
scoring twice in the third inning&#13;
and once in the sixth. They had a&#13;
total of three stolen bases, one of&#13;
which resulted in a run.&#13;
There is no excuse for&#13;
Parkside's recent defeats except&#13;
poor hitting. Unless they can learn&#13;
to hit and to take advantage of&#13;
their opponents' errors, there are&#13;
going to be many more losses in&#13;
the future.&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING! ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR SUPER SPORTS u FOR ALL SPORTS&#13;
FOOTWEAR, ETC.&#13;
M&#13;
FAST. M-MOUU EMORAVMQ MflVtCS&#13;
"Parkside&#13;
STILL&#13;
Has Style"&#13;
Softball&#13;
Women now 6-3&#13;
by Kathleen Pohlman&#13;
The women's softball team had&#13;
a busy and successful week last&#13;
week. On april 12 they played&#13;
away against Lewis University&#13;
and came home with a double&#13;
victory. The first game ended at 7-&#13;
3 with Lynn Barth as winning&#13;
pitcher. Bonnie Schmelter batted&#13;
2 for 3 including a triple with bases&#13;
loaded. In the second game&#13;
Michele Martino was the winning&#13;
pitcher which ended 2-0. After two&#13;
wins the Rangers played Stevens&#13;
Point and lost. The score was 3-1&#13;
and although all three pitchers&#13;
pitched, Paula Sandahl received&#13;
the loss. The Rangers were&#13;
scoreless until the seventh inning&#13;
when Lynn Barth doubled and was&#13;
brought home on an error. Bonnie&#13;
Schmelter hit another good game&#13;
and ended up 2 for 4.&#13;
On April 15 the Rangers split a&#13;
doubl e hea d e r a g ain st&#13;
Whitewater, losing the first 1-0.&#13;
Barth was the losing pitcher. The&#13;
second game the Rangers got&#13;
their chance to prove their talent,&#13;
winning 3-2. Michele Martino&#13;
pitched a one - hitter, keeing the&#13;
game tied until the fourth inning.&#13;
Nancy Kivi played a mean game&#13;
of defense catching a fast line&#13;
drive and picking off the woman&#13;
on first.&#13;
Friday's game was rained out,&#13;
giving the team a rest before the&#13;
St. Xavier Tournament on&#13;
Saturday. The first game of the&#13;
day was against George Williams&#13;
of Downers Grove. Even with the&#13;
cold and strong winds they came&#13;
out the winners in the 12th inning,&#13;
8-7. Michele Martino was the&#13;
winning pitcher. The Rangers&#13;
were down until the sixth inning,&#13;
but with Nancy Kivi's two triples&#13;
and (Hie single along with Paula&#13;
Sandahl's triple and single the&#13;
women ended victoriously. The&#13;
second game was against St.&#13;
Xavier which also ended in victory;&#13;
l-o. Lynn Barth pitched a one&#13;
- hitter. Janet Broeren played a&#13;
nice game of defense. The winning&#13;
run came when Lynn Barth&#13;
singled and Bonnie Schmelter&#13;
sacrificed to advance Lynn. Kathy&#13;
Tobin's hit resulted in an error on&#13;
St. Xavier's part, driving in Lynn.&#13;
Needless to say the Rangers&#13;
became the winners of the tournament&#13;
for the second year in a&#13;
row.&#13;
The women's record is now 6-3.&#13;
The next game they play is&#13;
another tournament, the Chicago&#13;
Circle Tournament in Chicago on&#13;
the 23rd and 24th.&#13;
by Tammy Shuemate&#13;
After cancelling five games due&#13;
to the recent weather situation,&#13;
the Parkside baseball team finally&#13;
had a chance to play last Thursday.&#13;
Unfortunately, the Rangers&#13;
played Carthage, who somehow&#13;
managed to pull out a 7-2 victory.&#13;
Throughout the first seven innings,&#13;
Parkside held the advantage&#13;
and showed some fine&#13;
pitching by Joe Krisik and Brian&#13;
Steinhoff.&#13;
Krisik, who pitched the first&#13;
three innings, allowed only four&#13;
hits and one run. Steinhoff, who&#13;
had an excellent outing, allowed&#13;
only one hit, no runs and struck&#13;
out five of the nine batters he&#13;
faced. </text>
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          <element elementId="47">
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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      <tag tagId="1528">
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      <tag tagId="837">
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              <text>Subcommittee suggests strict requirements for declaring majors&#13;
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              <text>er&#13;
VVednesday,ApriI13,1977&#13;
Vol. 5, No. 25&#13;
()() Comedy" is the last refuge of ~~&#13;
the non-conformist mind.&#13;
- Gilbert Seide.&#13;
Subcommittee suggests&#13;
strict requirements&#13;
for declaring.·maiors&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
The Subcommittee on Academic Advising of the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee has completed its&#13;
proposal for academic advising which will require&#13;
all degree candidates to declare a major or area of&#13;
interest before they have completed 30 credit hours&#13;
at Pgrkside. In addition, students will have to&#13;
obtain the signature of an advisor in order to&#13;
register, if the subcommittee's report is adopted by&#13;
the full committee.&#13;
The proposal will take current full-time&#13;
counselors off academic advising. The counselors&#13;
will now be responsible for recruiting and&#13;
conducting general advising for new students, plus&#13;
personal and career counseling. The task of&#13;
academic counseling will be given to faculty&#13;
members; each faculty member will counsel&#13;
students with majors or areas of interest in his&#13;
particular field.&#13;
The subcommittee held a public hearing on the&#13;
matter last Thursday and committee members.&#13;
blamed the poor attendance on a RANGER story&#13;
last week, which gave the wrong date of the&#13;
meeting. However, PSGA President-elect Rusty&#13;
Tutlewski was among those present and said "I&#13;
wonder if 30 credits is enough for students to&#13;
decide what they want, because that's only 10&#13;
classes I'm going in an entirely different direction&#13;
(major) than I was at that point."&#13;
However, the subcommittee pointed out that a&#13;
declaration of major is revocable, and said it would&#13;
make an effort to publicize that students can&#13;
change their majors. "The student is not straitjacketed&#13;
for the rest of his life, he can change hts&#13;
mind," said subcommittee chairman Omar Amin&#13;
The proposal would also require that students get&#13;
the signature of their advisor before registration. A&#13;
student could change his advisor if he wished,&#13;
according to subcommittee member Stella Gray,&#13;
faculty members have been complaining about the&#13;
current Quality of advising at Parkside, and would&#13;
prefer faculty to do the advising, "Here's their&#13;
chance to improve the situation:' she said.&#13;
She gave as an example of erroneous advising the&#13;
cases of students who were advised not to take the&#13;
required foreign language because "sooner or later&#13;
the requirement will be eliminated." According to&#13;
Gray, "the students had pretty good evidence that&#13;
this is what the counselor told them," As a result,&#13;
some students have found themselves unable to&#13;
graduate because they hadn't fulfilled the language&#13;
requirement.&#13;
The requirements the subcommittee IS workmg&#13;
on were originally submitted by the administration&#13;
because of the fact that counselors will be&#13;
reassigned to duties other than academic adVISing&#13;
If after 30 credits the student IS stili unsure of a&#13;
major, the student can opt for an "area of mterest&#13;
such as behavioral SCIence, labor econormcs,&#13;
SCiences,and hurnarunes According to Tutlewski.&#13;
30 credits IStoo early for a student to be forced to&#13;
determine a major "I would personallv re ent&#13;
having to declare a major or area of Interest before&#13;
two years at the university," she said&#13;
Tutlewski said that PSGA Will survey students on&#13;
the question and let the subcommittee know how&#13;
the students feel The subcommittee also mvues&#13;
and urges students to comment on the proposals,&#13;
which must now be approved by the full Academic&#13;
Policies Committee&#13;
She also said that "people should be able to&#13;
decide for themselves why they are here but If It&#13;
seems the student body IS In favor of It, I'll let It&#13;
go"&#13;
Students are urged to submit their written&#13;
comments on the subcommittee proposal by&#13;
tonight, Wednesday, April 13, to Ch"irm.n Omu&#13;
Amin, associate professor lifescience, whose office&#13;
is GR 341, extension 2547.&#13;
Education professor&#13;
Happel wins school board seat&#13;
by Christopher Clausen&#13;
Last September, Marvin Happel, Assistant&#13;
Professor of Education, announced his candidacy&#13;
for a seat on the Racine School Board. Happel, a&#13;
former. Park High Unified school teacher, was&#13;
elected last week along with Richard Kreul ,and&#13;
William Jenkins to defeat incumbents Lowell&#13;
McNeill and Howard Stanton.&#13;
"I wasn't too happy. with the decisions being&#13;
made by the -present school board and, being in&#13;
education I felt I had something better to&#13;
contribute. I felt they needed somebody who knew&#13;
something about education on the board, I didn't&#13;
see too much of that. [ felt they needed somebody&#13;
to be able to provide a check and balance to the&#13;
administration."&#13;
Happel feels there were some who voted for him&#13;
because he was a professor of education and not for&#13;
other reasons.&#13;
"It is a political position and you have to run for&#13;
it. You have to convince people that you are there.&#13;
You have to do all the standard kind of things and&#13;
we did a good job of that. . •&#13;
"I think the strike helped me, not so much during&#13;
the strike but after the strike was over. It kind of&#13;
had people settle down and wonder what they&#13;
could do to prevent another one. Apparently,&#13;
looking at the candidates, they felt I was .going to&#13;
be much better preventing another strike than&#13;
McNeill or Stanton.&#13;
"I'm on the board to do what I can to improve&#13;
and- build education so that people can become&#13;
successful in whatever they choose to do, whether&#13;
it is to go on to universities like Parkside, or&#13;
factories or business or whatever. This is the goal of&#13;
primary/secondary education, and even if that&#13;
means moving away from making the students&#13;
more academically oriented than they are or&#13;
moving towards It. I think the students who want to&#13;
become academically oriented should have the&#13;
basic tools and knowledge to be a success In life, I&#13;
think that whatever influence I have will turn out&#13;
better students, more able to cope at Parkside, but&#13;
then Iwould also hope that I would help turn out a&#13;
student more able to cope with life, whatever they&#13;
hope to do"&#13;
What effect will being on the board have on his&#13;
teaching In the class? "It ought to make it better&#13;
because it should give me more insight as to&#13;
schools and school systems and how they work, so&#13;
it should give me a little bro~der perspective; and&#13;
of course, 1deal with t-bat in the classroom, training&#13;
teachers."&#13;
Happel does not mind the fact that Parkside has&#13;
as industrial mission. "I thmk if you're dealing with&#13;
turning-out people for an Industrial society, being&#13;
hurnarustcallv Oriented and making that industrial&#13;
society more humane, IS a bIg part of what thiS&#13;
uruv rsity should be about Training teachers for&#13;
that purpose ISto turn teachers Into people that can&#13;
make the bureaucres, Institutions and the industrial&#13;
society more human personal and more liberal In&#13;
fact, I think Irs essential for humanists to be&#13;
Involved In the Industrial society"&#13;
Racine stokes have been big events for the last&#13;
several years. Happel feels he ISable to understand&#13;
and communicate With the tea hers and avoid&#13;
future conflicts&#13;
I saw It ail the way through that probably the&#13;
biggest stubborness tended to be on "the board's&#13;
Side It's going to be difficult dealing With teachers&#13;
for a while because there has been so much&#13;
bitterness burlt up I think that my election With&#13;
Blue lenkms Signals a change. The teachers are&#13;
going to have to re-evaluate how they deal With&#13;
us. I personally think they Will. 1 have been saYlllg&#13;
that ail the way through and I sul! believe It&#13;
"Now then, If you stili get some real radical&#13;
responses from the teachers, you will have to use&#13;
some other tactics to relate to them and find out&#13;
how you can communicate more effectivelv With&#13;
them&#13;
"You do not have to have strtkes and you don't&#13;
have to have the threat of strikes hanging over your&#13;
head all the time, You are going to have,&#13;
sometimes, the possibihtv that negotiations are&#13;
gorng to break down and the possibihtv of a strike&#13;
exrsts But there is no reason to have the bitterness&#13;
and so on that we have had So I'd like to see&#13;
negotiations get to the POlOt where contracts are&#13;
settled without the constant turmoil that. goes on in&#13;
our negotiations. There is no reason we have to&#13;
have trus climate In Racine "&#13;
:1editorials&#13;
Subcommittee attempts&#13;
to pun a· fast one&#13;
on -matriculant· students&#13;
Out to solvethe problems of the world, the subcommittee&#13;
on academic advising of the academic&#13;
policies committee has come up with some really&#13;
great ideas to add to general confusion.&#13;
One idea is to require all "matriculating"&#13;
students to declare a major or area of interest&#13;
after they have completed thirty credits (two&#13;
semesters of work).&#13;
Another suggestion the committee proposed is&#13;
to require all students to get their advisor's&#13;
signature on their schedule before students could&#13;
participate in the rite of registration. Why not ask&#13;
for a note from mommy? Most students already&#13;
know how to forge that one from high school.&#13;
This campus has plenty of problems,&#13;
committees, and subcommittees. They are&#13;
somewhat related. While it is healthy to let&#13;
faculty, staff, and students participate in campus&#13;
governance and solve problems, somehow it&#13;
doesn't seem proper to convene a subcommittee&#13;
to create additional bureautic bullshit and try to&#13;
pawn it off as some kind of academic standard of&#13;
discipline.&#13;
Presently, Parkside students are strongly&#13;
requested to declare a major after about four&#13;
full-time semesters or .60credits. Registration is&#13;
rather open and the restrictions placed on&#13;
students are low with regard to demanding&#13;
specific courses. So, where is the problem?&#13;
If there is a problem, it is with the current&#13;
quality of advice given students who have&#13;
declared majors by their advisors. Most students&#13;
who know the situation are aware that most&#13;
advisors are pretty much on their own as far as&#13;
what they advise, to whom, when, and how much&#13;
time they spend with advisees. This problem&#13;
doesn't evenhaveto go to committee. All that has&#13;
to be done is to hire professors who can&#13;
communicate effectively with students. There are&#13;
some who already know how. The rest will&#13;
eventually die andlor be replaced.&#13;
In a free society, acquiring a liberal education&#13;
should mean consulting an advisor on the basis&#13;
of the student's need for what should be, quality&#13;
advice. If advice were significant and important&#13;
on its own merit, it shouldn't be necessary to&#13;
legislate its necessity.&#13;
It is doubtful great harm comes to those&#13;
students Who declare a major after they have.&#13;
taken their sweet time trying to decide what in the&#13;
world they are going to become.&#13;
It is speculated that the committee was&#13;
expected to fabricate some plan for faculty to&#13;
assume full academic counseling responsibility&#13;
for the students of this campus. This plan is&#13;
going to take a revolution to implement at&#13;
Parkside. The faculty of this school is relatively&#13;
insulated from this problem and will probably&#13;
fight to the end or unionize before they accept the&#13;
inevitable student! professor relationship of the&#13;
future. In any event, professors who point fingers&#13;
at students for not coming up to some academic&#13;
discipline standard, deserve a few fingers&#13;
themselves.&#13;
The complete text of the subcommittee's&#13;
recommendations is reprinted in the student&#13;
government Contact article on page 3. RANGER&#13;
urges everyone to dash off a quick letter to&#13;
Associate Professor Omar Amin in Greenquist&#13;
341 if you haveviews on this subject. Those who&#13;
can't do it today, (deadline Wednesday) call him&#13;
in his office at 553-2547before you find out no&#13;
one responded and "the subcommittee's follies&#13;
were inacted into law.&#13;
Our \\f riters&#13;
Sob HoHman, Chris Clausen. Michael Murphy,&#13;
Fred Tenuta.. Thomas Nolen. Karen Putman&#13;
T!mothy J. Zuehlsdorf, Sob Jambois, Jam; LaMar&#13;
LInda Lasco. Douglas Edenhauser, Phil Hermann,&#13;
Cheryl Powalisz&#13;
Photographer.&#13;
Leanne Dillingham&#13;
Editor Philip L. Livingston 555.2295.&#13;
Art Oirector&#13;
Copy Editor Bruce Wagner&#13;
News Editor John McKloskey&#13;
Feature Editor' Mona. Maillet&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Circulation Sue Marquardt&#13;
(Jeneral Manager Thomas R. Cooper 553.2287&#13;
Advertising Manager John Gabriel 553.2287&#13;
Advertising Sales .&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin ..Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial pollcy and content.&#13;
.• _.. •• • l, •••&#13;
I&#13;
r-----------------~ __ ~~&#13;
by Terrence E. Zuehlsdorf&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
Committee suggests changes&#13;
for undecided 'matriculants'&#13;
More Parkside Bureaucracy!&#13;
A matriculant student according&#13;
to Webster's New Collegiate&#13;
Dictionary is one who is a&#13;
member of a body particularly a&#13;
college or a university. With this&#13;
definition, advisors would be&#13;
needed for 4,720 students.&#13;
Considering the P1anoed release&#13;
time tor professors based on&#13;
their advising "load, we are at a&#13;
time when the university is trying&#13;
to limit expenditures. Many&#13;
professors do not have the right&#13;
attitude to advise students&#13;
properly nor the knowledge of&#13;
the other disciplines needed to&#13;
help students plan a schedule.&#13;
All the committee requires is a&#13;
professors signature to provide&#13;
members involved.&#13;
(b) Students with declared areasof interest are to&#13;
be generally advised by faculty members; see&#13;
5. below.&#13;
(c) Undecided students are to be advised by the&#13;
Office of Student Services at least during their&#13;
first semester at Parkside.&#13;
(d) Every student should have an assigned&#13;
advisor at all times.&#13;
5. An Ad Hcc Advising Committee established by&#13;
the Adademic Policies Committee will form a&#13;
permanent Advising Office which will be manned&#13;
at all times to advise students particularly&#13;
those with declared areas of interest. Faculty&#13;
members of the Advising Office representing&#13;
academic divisions will be given release time&#13;
appropriate to their advising load. Assignment of&#13;
advisors to students with declared area of interest&#13;
shall be initiated at this office.&#13;
6. (~) The signature of the advisor, divisional chairman&#13;
or designee will be required for registration.&#13;
The signature does not necessarily imply&#13;
approval of the program by the advisor but&#13;
rather that advising has taken place.&#13;
(b) In the case of Education-Certification students&#13;
and multiple majors the signature of all&#13;
involved advisors will be required.&#13;
7. The process of advising (declaring, coding, processing,&#13;
assigning and notification) is to be&#13;
handled through one central office under the&#13;
Vice Chancellor's office.&#13;
proof that counseling has taken&#13;
place, but no student even needs&#13;
to talk to a professor to get&#13;
his/her signature. Another flaw&#13;
in this proposed plan is that it&#13;
will increase the bureaucratic&#13;
structure at Parkside.&#13;
Although the basic plan has its&#13;
good points, there is still much&#13;
work that needs to be done&#13;
before it can be implemented.&#13;
Therefore, all students are urged&#13;
to contact Omar Amin the&#13;
committees' chairman, with&#13;
written comments prefered,&#13;
before Wednesday night. Send&#13;
them to Professor Amin, GR 341,&#13;
or phone 553·2547 if you cannot&#13;
complete comments before&#13;
Wednesday night.&#13;
Hey Parkside!&#13;
Miller Lite on Tap&#13;
at the Union and Rec. Center&#13;
........ I;'~,- --'&#13;
Lire Beer from Millf'r.&#13;
~",erythin~~ you alwaylJ wanted&#13;
in .tI beer. And leu.&#13;
We regretfully announce the&#13;
resignation of the following&#13;
Senators and officers, Daniel&#13;
Nielsen, Richard Folsom, Lance&#13;
Frickensmith, Mona Maillet, and&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden.&#13;
We would like to announce&#13;
the following appointments:&#13;
Mary Braun, Dave Cramer,&#13;
Robert Hansen, and Joseph&#13;
Powers to a Senate At-Large seat.&#13;
Timothy Zuehlsdorf to a Senate&#13;
Engineering Science seat.&#13;
,&#13;
views I&#13;
Ranger prints&#13;
misinformation&#13;
To the editor,&#13;
I need to correct mlsmforrnanon&#13;
appearing on the front page&#13;
of the April 6 Ranger. Reporter&#13;
McKloskey quotes Ms. Johnson&#13;
of DPI as saying, "l'rn appalled&#13;
that would-be English teachers&#13;
don't have to take any literature&#13;
courses." Had McKloskey pard&#13;
attention to his notes, he would&#13;
certainly have realized that the&#13;
alleged statement was essentially&#13;
meaningless, even ridiculous.&#13;
The English major (whether&#13;
aiming for teacher certification&#13;
or not) takes almost exclusively&#13;
literature courses. What DPI&#13;
representatives had apparently&#13;
assumed was that UWP English&#13;
majors are not required to take a&#13;
class in CONTEMPORARY literature.&#13;
That is a misconception on&#13;
their part since one course in&#13;
contemporary literature is a&#13;
requirement in the present&#13;
structure of the English major,&#13;
and other courses in modern&#13;
literature are available as&#13;
electives. Whether more courses&#13;
DANISH&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
In contemporary literature I&#13;
should be required of English&#13;
majors seeking teaching certification&#13;
is probably a matter worth&#13;
discussing, for much literature&#13;
now taught in elementary and&#13;
hrgh school classes is contemporary&#13;
However, we must also&#13;
recognize that not all Enghsh&#13;
majors plan to teach and that not&#13;
all of them are interested&#13;
pnrnarllv (or even secondarily) In&#13;
modern writers, Furthermore. tn&#13;
the minds of at least some&#13;
people, the present tendency In&#13;
pre-college English classes to&#13;
stress contemporary writers to&#13;
the near elimination of all else is&#13;
not necessarily a virtue&#13;
Go talk to any weerv-eved&#13;
English major on the twohundred-fiftieth&#13;
poem, the&#13;
fifteenth novel, the eightv-nmth&#13;
short story of the semester - If&#13;
you think English majors don't&#13;
take literature coursesl&#13;
Sincerely yours,&#13;
SIeila C. Gray&#13;
Professor of English&#13;
lUI DouglasA._&#13;
RlKine, WisIonsin 53402&#13;
I ,&#13;
Ifut~~&#13;
PHONE, 637-8895&#13;
ITALIAN/SCANDINAVIAN FESTIVAL&#13;
~11&#13;
.,&#13;
ETHNIC FOODS&#13;
WINE TASTING&#13;
CHEESE TASTIf'G&#13;
LIVE MUSIC AND DAf'CE&#13;
FILMS AND LECT RES&#13;
FLOWER CART&#13;
GENEALOGICAL DISPLAYS&#13;
ETHNIC SHOPS&#13;
ARTS AND CR;\FTS&#13;
COSl1JME EXHIBITS&#13;
ARTIST-AT-WORK&#13;
VIKINGS&#13;
HEIRLOOMS&#13;
DEMONSTRA TIONS OF&#13;
+PASTA-MAKING&#13;
+WINE-MAKING&#13;
+NEEDLEWORK&#13;
+HANDCRAFTS&#13;
+FOLKARTS&#13;
+BOCCE&#13;
•&#13;
These are the recommendations of the&#13;
Subcommittee on Academic Advising of the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee to the Academic&#13;
Policies Committee regarding the advising of&#13;
UW-Parkside matriculant students:&#13;
1. Three categories of students are recognized:&#13;
(a) Students with declared majors.&#13;
(b) Students with declared area of interest.&#13;
(c) Undecided.&#13;
2. Areas of interest are broad categories' that do not&#13;
correspond with majors and include:&#13;
Behavioral Sciences, Labor Economics, Engineering&#13;
Sciences, Social Sciences, Fine Arts,&#13;
Education, Humanities, Science, Management&#13;
Science (current divisions) as well as Liberal Arts,&#13;
Allied Health and Pre-Professional (ex., preagricu&#13;
lture, pre-dentistry, pre-medicine, prepharmacy&#13;
as well as prelaw, etc.).&#13;
3. In order to provide meaningful advising to the&#13;
largest possible population of matriculant students&#13;
as early as possible in their academic program&#13;
the following is proposed. Declarations of&#13;
major or area of interest would have to be made&#13;
by the end of the first 30 credit hours taken at&#13;
UW-Parkside, preferably earlier.&#13;
4. (a) Students with declared majors are to be&#13;
advised by faculty members in their major.&#13;
It is the responsibility of the divisions (or their&#13;
respective disciplines as may be delegated) to&#13;
decide the format and individual faculty&#13;
No admission cherge&#13;
SUNDAY, APRIL 16 NOON·5:30 PM&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
CAMPUS UNION&#13;
_&#13;
.&gt; .... ~. '&#13;
.&gt; . ::.&#13;
: -. ···\..:::,news&#13;
legal high&#13;
with lettuce&#13;
College Press service&#13;
Now, like salt and sugar, tnere is a hash substitute. The Woodley&#13;
Herber Company in Okemos, Michigan has "introduced an herbal&#13;
smoking mixture called Lettucene Brand Wild Lettuce Hash and&#13;
Opium.&#13;
The hashish substitute is similar in appearance to light Afghani&#13;
hash and, the company says, burns well. The opium substitute is&#13;
black and sticky and the stronger of the two. Both come in large&#13;
three'gra~ packages.&#13;
The Herber Co. studied extracts and concentrates of herbs trorn all&#13;
over the world and selected a variety of Wild Lettuce grown in South&#13;
America and a strain of Damiana from Mexico. A recent review of the&#13;
final product was enthusiastic:&#13;
... both the opium substitute and ·the hashish substitute not only&#13;
look, feel, smell and taste similar to the illegal items, but they really&#13;
do get you stoned as well."&#13;
MacDonald's:&#13;
a place to worship&#13;
the hamburger&#13;
College Press service&#13;
is Here&#13;
In a last ditch attempt to attract the attention of&#13;
Kenosha voters who voted not to build a new high&#13;
school in that- city, 'New Bradford Now'&#13;
campaigners protested on the steps of the&#13;
antiquated Bradford High School. With Parksider,&#13;
Ron Parker, as their leader, this core group led&#13;
hundreds of Kenosha high school students and&#13;
.concerned Kenoshans to the streets in a three&#13;
division march on the city recently, only to have&#13;
by Bruce Wagner and John R. McKloskey&#13;
The Parks ide Union Operating Board (UOB)&#13;
voted last Thursday to begin serving wine in the&#13;
Union, effective as soon as possible.&#13;
The proposal to serve wine began with a request&#13;
to Chancellor Guskin from PSGA President Harvey&#13;
Hedden and President-elect Rustv Tutlewski. The&#13;
chancellor had no substantial objection to the&#13;
proposal, and the UOB voted unanimously to&#13;
permit wine.&#13;
EASTER MORNING BREAKFAST&#13;
LASAGNA TACOS 3/'1.50'&#13;
MON-TUE, '2.95&#13;
w/Salad Bread&#13;
and DINNER WINE ..&#13;
WED.THU&#13;
ENCHILADAS 3/'1.95&#13;
NACHOS '1.50/pla'e&#13;
FRENCH PIZZA ON REGULAR MENU EVERYDAY&#13;
Ia~R~~~bA~,r~&#13;
NEWMAN ROAD&#13;
632·6151&#13;
their hopes and cause turned down by two&#13;
thousand votes. Parker admlts "most student&#13;
workers are dissappointed in their city's concern for&#13;
the future of secondary education. Parker, not&#13;
intimidated by what many feel is a hopeless&#13;
communication problem, says he will fight for the&#13;
issue again as soon as it is clear the high school&#13;
referendum will be on the next election ballot.&#13;
William Niebuhr, Director of Student Life-Union&#13;
said he is in favor of wine for the union. "I have no&#13;
objection philosophically because some people&#13;
don't like beer and would prefer wine instead:' he&#13;
said.&#13;
Three other UW campuses already serve wine,&#13;
apd Niebuhr said he wants to give it a fair chance&#13;
here and hopes "it will not be abused by students."&#13;
Niebuhr said the details of what kind of wines&#13;
will be ser-vedor whether it will be sold in package&#13;
goods or by the glass, have not been worked out.&#13;
Robert S. Tragesser, visiting&#13;
professor of' mathematics at&#13;
Parkside, is the author of a new&#13;
book, "Phenomenology and&#13;
Logic," to be issued April 15 by&#13;
Cornell University Press.&#13;
Wine to be served in Union&#13;
during sections to be held at 9:30, 10:45, 1:30,2:45,&#13;
and 4:00. Executives attending will be John&#13;
Langhaut, Ceneral Plant Manager; Dwight Gause,&#13;
Manufacturing Planner/Manager; Robert Casteel,&#13;
Regional Controller; Dr. David Aldrich; John Henry;&#13;
regional personnel manager; Glenn Stinson,&#13;
personnel supervisor; Bill Hall" environmental&#13;
affairs manager; Pete Langlois, regional public&#13;
affairs manager; Gene Meyer, regional vice&#13;
president; and Lois Petterson, administrative&#13;
secretary - regional labor relations.&#13;
Junior and senior courses, for the most part, will&#13;
be cancelled. Students interested in attending a&#13;
particular session should sign up this week on the&#13;
L1 level of the Classroom building.&#13;
A room will be set aside for students interested in&#13;
finding out about job opportunities with&#13;
Weyerhaeuser, whose regional offices are located&#13;
in Schofield, WI.&#13;
For more information, contact G.raham or the&#13;
BusinessManagement discipline.&#13;
Parkside's Tragesser&#13;
publishes book&#13;
9 • 2 p.m.&#13;
SUNDAYS&#13;
ALL YOU WANT&#13;
Egg., Saulale,&#13;
Potatoes. Toest&#13;
Fresh fruit, Juice&#13;
'2.95 9-1 p.m.&#13;
CHICKENFISHRIMP&#13;
ALL YOU WANT&#13;
'3.25&#13;
554-1500&#13;
INCOME TAX&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
WILLIAM A. GLASS&#13;
Elmwood Plaza&#13;
Prices Quoted By Phone&#13;
A graduate of Franklin and&#13;
Marshall College, Tragesser&#13;
received his Ph. D. degree from&#13;
Rice University. He has taught at&#13;
Idaho State University, Stanford&#13;
University and the University of&#13;
Illinois Chicago Circle Campus.&#13;
outside. Uniform attire is&#13;
worn by. the agents of&#13;
McDonald's behind the counA&#13;
university of Michigan ter. From the rolling hills of&#13;
anthropologist is suggesting that Georgia to the snowy plains of,&#13;
McDonald's, far from being just Minnesota, with only minor&#13;
another greasy burger house, variations, the menu is located in&#13;
may in fact be an edifice where the same place, contains the&#13;
latter-day American agnostics same items, and has the same&#13;
come to worship. prices.&#13;
"When we go in (to a "The neophyte customer who&#13;
McDonald'sl,"Conrad Phillip dares \0 ask 'What kind of&#13;
Kotfak observes, "our surround- hamburgers do you have?' or&#13;
ings tell us that we are in a 'What's a Big Mac t": he&#13;
sequestered place, somehow concludes, "is as out of place&#13;
apart from the variety, messiness and ridiculous as a chimpanzee&#13;
ran.d_va.ri.ab.il.itY_O..f .t.he_w.o.r1d_.i.n.a .Ro.m.a.n.c.at.ho.li.c.M.as.s•."--. Weye rha use r to ta Ik to stu den ts&#13;
Business management students will have a&#13;
chance to talk to Weyerhaeuser Company&#13;
executives about major policies, practices and&#13;
solving of problems faced by modern business&#13;
concerns on April 21st.&#13;
This "Management Day" is the first of a series to&#13;
be held once a semester, according to visiting&#13;
professor of businessmanagement Robert Graham,&#13;
who is coordinating the event.&#13;
The purpose of this dav is to expose company&#13;
executives to Parkside's students and vice versa,&#13;
according to Graham, and he is hopeful that this&#13;
day will "help get students an entry for jobs. That is&#13;
what this day is all about."&#13;
Areas to be covered will be: marketing;&#13;
finance! Accounti ng/data processi ng; personnel/labor&#13;
relations/safety; environmental concerns;&#13;
public affairs/governmental relations' ~~;!~~lrr""::::::::L'-" corporate planning/policy/ethics. '&#13;
'7ii t1uJlJl'irI8ro. These topics will be covered two times April 21,&#13;
FOR THE RIDER&#13;
WHO DEMANDS&#13;
111£&#13;
UlnMATlIIlITUlClClI&#13;
FA.CTORY AUTHOIffZfD&#13;
SALES &amp; SERVICE&#13;
COMPLm REPAIRS,'Aln&#13;
&amp; CUSTOM ACCfSSOlIE$&#13;
632-5241&#13;
CMI 0111151 ill ilEAl saoo "'"&#13;
R&amp;B&#13;
IIlllIf-oaylDSOllW6&#13;
1S3~ Douglas Ave ..&#13;
Racine&#13;
Ray lurevlcius. Kenosha sophomore&#13;
"I don't go the the dances because I've got better&#13;
things to do. I'd rather go to bars where I know&#13;
more people than I know at school or go to&#13;
individual parties."&#13;
••&#13;
+-&#13;
Joe Harrison, Racine Senior&#13;
"I am planning to graduate in May. I have been&#13;
here for four years. The thing I liked most about&#13;
Parkside is the cheap tuition. My favorite classes&#13;
were all the Social Science classes."&#13;
eyesI&#13;
Carol Petges, Wheatland Senior&#13;
"I think the education program should be a major&#13;
instead of certification because of all the classes&#13;
you have to take."&#13;
Bridget Penzkowski, Racine Freshman&#13;
"My favorite class is English because I was going to&#13;
be an English major But now I don't know because&#13;
what can you do wuh an English major but teach&#13;
and I don't want to teach"&#13;
Mary Gehring, Kenosha senior&#13;
"I'm looking to the End I think we had a pretty&#13;
good variety of dances, although we could have&#13;
had more jazz-types and cultural oriented dances&#13;
to reach the majontv of the students"&#13;
Photogro.phs boY Leo.nne Dillingho.m&#13;
Hey Parksid .... How Milch Can 1011 Take1 6" - r' -r 11&#13;
P.,ksl •• FoN Servlc. Annolnctl&#13;
•&#13;
10 F.OOTSUBMARINE SANDWICHES&#13;
FRESH BAKED PAlElU'S BREAD, ASSORTED MEATS &amp; CHEESES, lETTUCE, TOMATO &amp; oUR OWN&#13;
SPECIAl SAUCE&#13;
SOLD B1 THE INCH - 15~ PER INCH&#13;
FRIDA1, APRIL 1S UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
r-:-:-~----------------------------~--------1&#13;
Bnews&#13;
Graduate education corrupt&#13;
Payoffs needed&#13;
to get into&#13;
medical school&#13;
College Press Service&#13;
"It's been common knowledge that you could&#13;
pay to get into medical school tor years. There have&#13;
been payoffs to all types of professional schools;&#13;
medical, veterinary, dental, law. It's nationwide,"&#13;
says FBI agent jim Perry.&#13;
The deals are made with anyone but the common&#13;
person. Many students who have the way to&#13;
graduate school bought and paid for come from&#13;
families where fathers are politicians, businessmen&#13;
or wealthy doctors in the community. And Perry is&#13;
working on one case in Philadelphia where daddy&#13;
happened to know a State Representative. -&#13;
Herbert Fineman, Democratic Speaker of the&#13;
Pennsylvania House of Representatives, was&#13;
indicted last month on charges of blackmail,&#13;
bribery, obstruction of justice, mail fraud and&#13;
conspiracy in connection with alleged payoffs by&#13;
three parents who sought admission for their&#13;
children to the University of Pennsylvania School&#13;
of Veterinary Medicine, Thomas Jefferson&#13;
University and the Philadeiphia School of&#13;
Osteopathic Medicine.&#13;
Fineman, 56, allegedly extorted $41,000 from&#13;
1968 to 1976 from the parents. Named as&#13;
co-conspirator was Martin Abrams who reportedly&#13;
collected the payoffs but was not indicted.&#13;
Fineman's identity was never revealed to the&#13;
parents.&#13;
Fineman is the fourth Philadelphian politician to&#13;
be indicted for soliciting bribes to influence&#13;
professional school admission. David W. Marston,&#13;
U.S. Attorney in Philadelphia, said the indictments&#13;
resulted from a "monster investigation over six&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home 01 the Spbmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington /W.. 6M-2J7J&#13;
months long." The FBI entered the Fineman case on&#13;
a lead from a confidential FBI source, according to&#13;
Perry.&#13;
Based on the indictment, Fineman took $15,000&#13;
through Abrams from Oscar Braunstein, one of the&#13;
parents, in 1972. On April 5, 1973, Fineman sent an&#13;
undisclosed letter to Mark Allam, who was then&#13;
dean of the Veterinary School. He soon received&#13;
the payoff money from Abrams a month later and&#13;
Braunstein'S son, Michael, was admitted to the&#13;
school.&#13;
Later, on August 31,1976, the indictment charges&#13;
that Fineman met with Senior Vice-President for&#13;
one of the University's programs, E. Craig Sweeten,&#13;
and ordered him to destroy all correspondence&#13;
relating to Braunstein's admission located iri the&#13;
student's files. As yet, no school administrators&#13;
involved or parents have been indicted.&#13;
Nobody is happy about the situation at the&#13;
University of Pennsylvania, least of all the students.&#13;
In an editorial in the Daily Pennsylvanian, the&#13;
schooi paper, Sweeten was asked to temporarily&#13;
step down from his position until "all questions&#13;
concerning his role in the affair have been&#13;
answered." President Martin Meyerson issued a&#13;
public statement about the Fineman case but thatdidn't&#13;
seem to be more than a five-paragraph&#13;
document of good will that the students said&#13;
demonstrated "an extreme lack of assertiveness and&#13;
an attempt to gloss over the case's implications."&#13;
And the implications are serious. With medical&#13;
and professional" school admissions getting mere&#13;
limited every year, cases like Fineman's only&#13;
underline the fact that the rich get richer and the&#13;
poor get rejection notices. It also serves to-make&#13;
influence-peddling a serious, if not detrimental,&#13;
objective for other professional school applicants.&#13;
As a result, says FBI mall Perry, the Bureau has&#13;
moved most of its manpower form work o~ smaller&#13;
crimes to white collar crirr e.&#13;
I'nfluence-peddling, whil ~ not a crime, is worth&#13;
more to children of the we rlthv than perfect grade&#13;
point averages, which, ofte 1 enough, many of these&#13;
children never have.&#13;
At the University of Cahfornia-Davis Medical&#13;
School, Dean John Tupper openly admits to&#13;
, interceding on behalf of students seeking admission&#13;
to the school and makes sure that ch iIdren of&#13;
politicians, influential physicians, and wealthy&#13;
businessmen are accorded special treatment.&#13;
"In a fledgling medical school like Davis, which&#13;
only admitted its first class in 1968, money for&#13;
capital construction and facilities is life-blood,"&#13;
said Peter L. Storandt, assistant dean of the medical&#13;
school from 1972to 1975. He cited incidents where&#13;
the sons of California politicians were admitted by&#13;
the dean without ever going through the admissions&#13;
process at all.&#13;
Back in Philadelphia, Representative Fineman&#13;
faces a total of 80 years in prison and a $78,000 fine&#13;
if convicted. But even that ..conviction may not&#13;
discourage the sale of places in graduate schools.&#13;
Perry says that the FBI currently has leads to other&#13;
payoffs schemes in other states. "There's no doubt&#13;
they are going on," he says.&#13;
Extention offers collective bargaining course&#13;
Collective bargaining in the public sector will be&#13;
the topic of a seven week course beginning April 13&#13;
and meeting from 7 to 9:30 p.m. on Wednesdays at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The course will cover practical issues and laws&#13;
governing collective bargaining in the. public&#13;
sector, methods for settling such' disputes and&#13;
current practices, case law and proposed legislation&#13;
from the point of view of the parties and the public&#13;
interest involved.&#13;
The instructor will be Charles E. Carlson, an&#13;
employee relations consultant for a Madison firm&#13;
and chief negotiator for several public employer&#13;
clients with experience in both grievance and&#13;
interest arbitration. A former personnel director for&#13;
the city of Beloit, he holds masters degrees in&#13;
industrial relations and public administration from&#13;
UW-Madison. He authors the labor relations&#13;
newsletter of the Wisconsin institute of Municipal'&#13;
and County Employers, Inc.&#13;
The course is sponsored by Parkside, the&#13;
UW-Milwaukee Division of Urban Outreach and&#13;
University Extension. Registration for the non-credit&#13;
program is being handled by the Extension office at&#13;
Parkside (Telephone 553-2312). Fee for the course is&#13;
$20.&#13;
Summer work offered in Europe&#13;
Hundreds of u.s. students will&#13;
find jobs in France, Ireland and&#13;
I !!~~~~~~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Great Britain th is summer&#13;
Ir through the Work in Europe&#13;
program sponsored by the&#13;
Council on International Educational&#13;
Exchange (CIEE). For the&#13;
past "eight years, this popular&#13;
program has provided students&#13;
with the direct experience of&#13;
living and working in another&#13;
country and, at the same time,&#13;
helped them reduce the cost of&#13;
their trip abroad. The Work in&#13;
Europe program virtually eliminates&#13;
the red tape that students&#13;
faced in the past when they&#13;
wanted to work abroad.&#13;
Participants must find their&#13;
own jobs but will have the help&#13;
of cooperating student travel&#13;
organizations in each country. In&#13;
France and Ireland they may&#13;
work during the summer; in&#13;
Creat Britain they may work at&#13;
any time of the year for up to six&#13;
months.&#13;
The jobs are usually unskilled&#13;
- in factories, department&#13;
stores, hotels, etc. Salaries are&#13;
low, but students generally earn&#13;
'- ~&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE PEOPLE GET&#13;
RED CARPET TREATMENT&#13;
AT&#13;
Bank of Elmwood&#13;
Banking House: 2704 Lathrop Avenue&#13;
Motor Bank: Durand Avenue ,t Kentucky.St.&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53405&#13;
(Of course, so does everyone ersel)&#13;
FOR THE BEST RECORDS IN KENOSHA&#13;
AT PRICES YOU'LL LIKE!&#13;
JAZZ ROCK SOUL V&#13;
CONTEMPORARY &lt;1.&#13;
CLASSICAL&#13;
COME TO US AT&#13;
~~&#13;
enough to pay for their room and&#13;
board while they work. A typical&#13;
job would be that ~f&#13;
chambermaid in a, hotel in&#13;
London's West End. But last&#13;
summer one enterprising student&#13;
found work in Paris as a wine&#13;
steward in a restaurant on the&#13;
Champs-Elvseesl&#13;
To qualify for ClEE's program,&#13;
students must be between the&#13;
ages of 18 and 30 and must be&#13;
able to prove their student&#13;
status. To work in France, they&#13;
must also be able to speak and&#13;
understand French.&#13;
For more information and&#13;
application forms, contact ClEE,&#13;
Dept. PR4, 777 United Nations&#13;
Plaza, New York, New York&#13;
10017; or 236 North Santa Cruz,&#13;
#314, Los Gatos, California&#13;
95030.&#13;
626 Fifty-Sixth SI;, Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
~«~ ~~~~~-~o",-~~~&#13;
-&#13;
, I&#13;
-&#13;
,&#13;
·Isports&#13;
Dannehl opposes&#13;
elimination of&#13;
sport-s scholarships&#13;
Elimination of legislative scholarships for out of&#13;
state students would be a severe blow to the&#13;
Parkside athletic program, athletic director Wayne&#13;
Dannehl said today.&#13;
"The generosity of local legislators in awarding&#13;
their scholarships to Parkside has been a Godsend&#13;
in building our athletic program to its current level&#13;
of success and national recognition," Dannehl said.&#13;
"I think the university as well as the&#13;
Kenosha-Racine area have benefitted from that&#13;
success&#13;
Dannehl was commenting on three current bills&#13;
before the state Legislature to eliminate the&#13;
scholarships, which cover the out of state portion&#13;
of tuition - about $1,600 a year. CQv. Patrick&#13;
Lucey has proposed elimination, and a&#13;
subcommittee of the Joint Finance Committee&#13;
preparing a UW System budget tentatively&#13;
supported his position earlier this week.&#13;
Seven legislators from Kenosha and Racine&#13;
counties currently are giving their scholarships to&#13;
Parkside students. Six of the seven students are&#13;
athletes.&#13;
"That's nearly $10,000 worth of aid that we&#13;
wouldn't otherwise have," Dannehl said. "It's&#13;
crucial to our program."&#13;
Parkside students currently receiving scholarships&#13;
and their legislative sponsors are Marshall Hill&#13;
(Marcel Dandeneau). Stevie King (Eugene Dorff)&#13;
and lester Thompson (joseph Andrea), all&#13;
basketball plevers. Mike Rivers (john Maurer) and&#13;
Joe Perera (Russell Olson), track; James DeVasquez&#13;
(James F. Rooney) tennis and cross country; and&#13;
Steven Bomgaars (R. Michael Ferrall), a political&#13;
science major. Michael Zvbora, a science major,&#13;
was sponsored by Cloyd Porter until recently&#13;
establishing Wisconsin residency. Perera is a&#13;
freshman from \ Sri Lanka, formerly Ceylon, the&#13;
others from Illinois.&#13;
Past recipients of legislative scholarships include&#13;
such well known Parkside athletes as basketball star&#13;
Bill Sobanski, standout distance runner Lucian Rosa&#13;
and nationally-ranked fencer jim Herring.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
, From God's Country.&#13;
On tap, at Union Square&#13;
COME ON OUTI&#13;
TO THE&#13;
KENOSHA ICE ARENA&#13;
a«4&amp;1-~&#13;
• RECREATIONAL SKATING&#13;
.FIGURE SKATING&#13;
dROOM BALL&#13;
.YOUTH "'OCKEY&#13;
,.SEMI·PRO HOCKEY&#13;
.------------------------, I ~ FREE I&#13;
i \!!.I!!J ADMISSION i&#13;
I . TO I&#13;
I ANY PUBLIC SKATING SESSION I&#13;
I WITH THIS COUPON I&#13;
IKENOSHA ICE ARENA I&#13;
I 7727 60th AVE PHONE: 694-8010 I&#13;
L ~-------------~&#13;
Front (l to R) Bob Gruner, Tracyl Faustino, Back, David Bouman, leartho SCott, and Jim Ferraro selected Most Valuable Players&#13;
Wintersports ban~&#13;
Teams. coaches honored&#13;
by Thomas Nolen&#13;
and&#13;
Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside winter sports teams&#13;
and coaches were honored&#13;
Friday night at a banquet in the&#13;
Union cafeteria.&#13;
Wayne Dannehl, athletic&#13;
director, introduced the five&#13;
coaches of the winter sports who&#13;
named most valuable and letter&#13;
winners.&#13;
The cheerleading squad,&#13;
advised by Shirley Schmerling,&#13;
were also cited for their efforts to&#13;
promote school spirit during the&#13;
season. The squad included Terri&#13;
Brown, captain; Debra Catlett,&#13;
Teri Heinl, Judy Iverson, Crystal&#13;
McCoy, Sybil Nichols 'and&#13;
Debbie Thogerson.&#13;
Ranger Bear Bill Morrone and&#13;
alternate Mike Mondragon were&#13;
also acknowledged.&#13;
Teams participating in the&#13;
banquet included:&#13;
Women's Badminton: Lucian&#13;
Rosa, coach. Most valuable:&#13;
Tracy Faustino; Faustino and&#13;
Debbie Drissel, co-captains and&#13;
letter winners. In their first&#13;
season of competition, the team&#13;
showed improvement all season&#13;
in building Parkside's program.&#13;
Wrestling: Jim Koch, coach.&#13;
Most valuable and most pins Bob&#13;
Cruner. Gruner, Dan O'Connell&#13;
(inspirational) and Steve La&#13;
Count, (most improved) cocaptains&#13;
and letterwinners Dave&#13;
Wagner, John Cale, Doug&#13;
Andrewski, Scott ~Hintz~ick&#13;
Langer, John Weiter, Cliff Smith,&#13;
Ron Zmuda, Bill Lynch, Tony&#13;
Apostoli, and Dean Quam.&#13;
The team finished fifth in the&#13;
NAIA National tournament, their&#13;
second highest finish ever.&#13;
Cruner and Gale were awarded&#13;
All-American honors and Gale&#13;
and O'Connell were named to&#13;
first team All-District 14. Gruner,&#13;
Bill Lynch and Dave Wagner&#13;
were listed on the District's&#13;
second team, while Ron Zmuda&#13;
was honorably mentioned.&#13;
Men's swimming: Barbara&#13;
Lawson, coach. Most Valuable&#13;
Jim Ferraro (and bobber). Rich&#13;
Kwas and Dennis Steeves, cocaptains.&#13;
Rick Haas, (sinker)&#13;
Keith Krueger, Rick Lopes,&#13;
(tugboat) Kevin Nelson and Bob&#13;
Wilbershide, other letter winners.&#13;
After competing as a team&#13;
during the past, the men's swim&#13;
team began varsity participation&#13;
with a 6-7 record in dual meets.&#13;
Ferraro was the only member to&#13;
qualify for the nationals where&#13;
he swam to a 35 place in the 50&#13;
free and 43rd place in the 100&#13;
free.&#13;
Men's and Women's Fencing:&#13;
Loran Hein, coach. Most&#13;
valuables David Baumann and&#13;
Theresa Swenson; captain,&#13;
Corbett Christensen. Letter&#13;
winners were Curtis Studey, and&#13;
Peggy Harmel.&#13;
The team finished the season&#13;
with a third place at the 16 team&#13;
Great Lakes meet; their highest&#13;
finish since 1971. The women's&#13;
P.A.B. WANTS TO REMIND YOU&#13;
"CLAUDINE"&#13;
PG lllibyrtlJlllAB. ~&#13;
fi llli Pnnts by DELUXE· L!Il?IJ&#13;
11)l!'J Snrorid&lt; Abrn ~ ()"1U:OOl RElDi'DS &lt;nl oox In:sl&#13;
Wednesday, April 13 ·2:30 7:30&#13;
Thursday, April 14· 2:30 7:30&#13;
UNION CINEMA THEATRE&#13;
ADMISSION '1.00&#13;
team won 10 and lost six while&#13;
the men won 8 and lost 12.&#13;
Swenson had a record of 39-9&#13;
and Baumann went 48-12 for the&#13;
season.&#13;
Basketball: Steve Stephens&#13;
coach Rudy Collum assistant.&#13;
Most valuable, Leartha Scott.&#13;
Rade Dimitrijevic and Stevie&#13;
King, co-eaptains. Most improved,&#13;
Lester Thompson,&#13;
Marvin Chones. Hustle award:&#13;
Rade Dimitrijevic. 1977-78 cocaptains&#13;
Stevie King, Marvin&#13;
(hones.&#13;
Letter winners; Dimitrijevic&#13;
and Mike Hanke, fourth year;&#13;
Scott, Marshall Hill and King,&#13;
third year; Laurence Brown,&#13;
Marvin Chones, Joe Foots,&#13;
second year, and lonnie Lewis,&#13;
Mike Mathews, Raymond Nixon&#13;
and Lester Thompson, first year.&#13;
The team compiled a 20-10&#13;
record 'on the season, winning&#13;
the NAIA District championship&#13;
to qual ify for the national&#13;
tournament for the third straight&#13;
year, the third team in Wisconsin&#13;
history to do this. Scott was&#13;
named to the NAIA first team&#13;
with All-American honors and to&#13;
the third team of Basketball&#13;
Weekly and the Associated&#13;
Press. Scott led the Rangers in&#13;
the two games they played at the&#13;
Nationals, defeating Paine Col-"&#13;
lege 112-i&gt;Snut gelling nipped by&#13;
eventual NAIA national champ&#13;
Texas Southern 82-80, the third&#13;
straight time Parkside had been&#13;
beaten be the eventual winner .&#13;
Scott was also named WICA&#13;
player of the year and Stephens&#13;
was named WICA Coach of the&#13;
year. Hill and king were also&#13;
named to the AII-WICA teams&#13;
while Hill was honorably&#13;
\. mentioned the all-district list.&#13;
KENOSHA &amp; LOAN&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
S935 Se ....enth Avenue&#13;
7535 Pershing Bl....d&#13;
4235 52nd Street&#13;
410 Broad St lake Gene ....a&#13;
Bound for Glory&#13;
Guthrie's story told&#13;
,'&#13;
by Michael Murphy&#13;
I have a way of approaching any filmed biography with an&#13;
immediate air of skepticism. Most filmmake-rs, when attacking&#13;
biographies, indeed any literary adaptation, tend to illirninate&#13;
abstractor visually stagnant passages favoring, instead, more active&#13;
and readily objective sequences. Too often the final product fails in&#13;
capturing the essence of its source material, resulting in grossly&#13;
distorted theatrical fabrications such asWilliam Wyler's Buffalo Bill.&#13;
There is an enormous, widespread affection for Woody Cuthrie in&#13;
this country. The man's appeal stems, not only from his songs, but&#13;
from his simple incisive, and deeply personal outlook of America.&#13;
A successful adaptation to film would need to incorporate these&#13;
aspects within its structure. In Bound.For Glory, director Hal Ashby&#13;
seems aJItoo aware of his responsibility and often times manages to&#13;
capture that essence that I spoke of.&#13;
The film disregards backgrounds and origins and immediately&#13;
establishes Woody as a young man, keenly intuitive and estremely&#13;
curious in his environment, but disillusioned; understandable with&#13;
life during the depression. At his home town in Texas, we witness the&#13;
foundation of Woody's basic philosophy, cumulated through the&#13;
people he meets and the situations he encounters. This is effectively&#13;
interpreted, on screen,_in a series of short segmented events. These&#13;
events, though seemingly unrelated, join together in painting a&#13;
realistic picture of Texas in 1936.&#13;
Enroute to California, leaving his wife and children in search of a&#13;
better life, Woody, in essence, becomes a window to America.&#13;
Whether hitchhiking, jumping at train, or just plain walking, both&#13;
Woody and the audience gain a unique perspective of our country.&#13;
Arriving in California, broken both physically and financially, his&#13;
expectations and hopes are immediately shattered. Within the&#13;
Symphony&#13;
'technically excellent'&#13;
by Terry Zuehlsdorf and Mary Braun pieces. Although the piece had its high points, the&#13;
overall effect was rather boring.&#13;
The third piece, Korngold's "Symphony in F&#13;
Sharp," hailed as one of Korngold's greatest works,&#13;
was the most well developed of the three pieces&#13;
played. The first and third movements deserve&#13;
specf al commendation for their excellence.&#13;
Particularly memorable in the first movement were&#13;
the dulcet interludes which featured solo clarinet&#13;
and flute. The third movement was characterized&#13;
by deep emotion highlighted against generally dark&#13;
background music. The contrast between the two&#13;
was excellent.&#13;
Overall the concert was well received by many&#13;
and certainly was a fine example of what a fine&#13;
symphony orchestra can do. They demonstrated&#13;
amazing versitility and a quality of sound that is&#13;
rarely found. The music may have been too&#13;
technical for the audience to appreciate, but it&#13;
provided a fine showcase for the Milwaukee&#13;
Symphony's talents.&#13;
I&#13;
!&#13;
I&#13;
A crowd ofover 550 people listened Wednesday&#13;
night as the Mi Iwaukee Symphony proved why it is&#13;
considered one of the finest orchestras in the&#13;
country. Technically, the concert performance was&#13;
excellent and audience appreciation was apparent,&#13;
with the final piece receiving 4 curtain calls.&#13;
The first piece was Wagner's classic, the Overture&#13;
. to the "Flying Dutchman". The skillful execution of&#13;
this piece made it an exciting, dramatic experience&#13;
even for those who are not ordinarily moved by&#13;
music. It was easy to imagine the Phantom Ship's&#13;
stormy passage through the North Sea and to feel&#13;
the rise and swell of the water.&#13;
The second piece, "Rachmaninoff's "Rhapsody on&#13;
a Theme ofPaganini," was also well performed. The&#13;
pianist, Martha Naset, deserves high praise for her&#13;
performance. The piece inself, however, was rather&#13;
disappointing. This could be due to the fact that it&#13;
was surrounded by two stronger, more popular&#13;
NOW IN THE UNION .. ,&#13;
reviews I&#13;
crowded, detenorattng conditions of the migrant workers camp&#13;
(closelv resemblrng, Ii 1I0t vrsuetlv supenor to the one used In John&#13;
Ford's Crepes of Wrath), Woody finally comes to grips WIth the&#13;
overwhelming effects of the depressron&#13;
In retaliation, he joins forces With a union advocater and&#13;
eventually achieves local fame, on radio, With rabble rousing, anudepression&#13;
songs. His unrelenting urge to continue his travels across&#13;
America, however Interferes with any attempt at settlmg down In the&#13;
end, as may be expected, he again leaves his wife and family and, as&#13;
if spurned by some Insatiable calling, heads north In further&#13;
exploration of his land&#13;
The movie, extremely long and expensivelv produced, has&#13;
pretensions of being a quret little film The Simplicity of life and&#13;
people are Ironically juxtaposed amidst rnegruftctentlv recreated sets&#13;
of depression America. The blending, however, ISlughlv convmcmg,&#13;
a testtmorual to a competent director and crew&#13;
The film, however, has a tendency to be overlong It's uuuel levels&#13;
of energy and vitality become diluted toward the movie's conclusion&#13;
The first half is both fast paced and cinematically exctttng ,&#13;
concentrating less on the character of Woody Cuthne and more on&#13;
his overland adventures&#13;
The second half, however. chrcmclues the man himself, hts affair&#13;
and his subsequent rise In populantv The rhythm ISslowed and some&#13;
of the sequences become tediously soap operauc, dragging and&#13;
seriously damaging the film as a whole&#13;
Despite ItS shortcommgs, Bound For Glory IS undisputablv the&#13;
finest film biography to come out in a long while With ItS honest,&#13;
emotionally affecting approach, coupled with Davrd Carndines&#13;
sensitive portrayal, the film leaves an indelible Imprint of one of&#13;
Amenca's finest balladers&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
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PRICES YDU'LL ALWAYS REMEMBER ~,'.e'LAWN &amp;GARDEN .U'-l and CENTER FIt",.",,-- CLOSEST FLORIST TO PAIISIDE&#13;
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featuring--&#13;
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,&#13;
Micro-computers reviewed , -'&#13;
by Christopher Clausen the cost for micro-computers is relatively low.&#13;
Firebaugh lectured during the summer at Madison&#13;
and he had.to bring micro-computers from P-arkside&#13;
to Madison because of the lack of micro-computers&#13;
at Physics Department in Madison.&#13;
The use of micro-computers is unending, points&#13;
out Firebaugh. Their usage will be expanding, not&#13;
only in their current uses, but in others as well.&#13;
They can be used in dishwashers, washers, dryers,&#13;
and other electrical devices to help save energy and&#13;
ease the energy load.&#13;
Among these and other numerous projects,&#13;
Professor Firebaugh is working on the second&#13;
edition of his book, P.erspective on Energy, with ~&#13;
co-editor and former Parks ide professor Lon&#13;
Ruedisili, an associate professor of geology at the&#13;
University of Toledo, Toledo, Ohio.&#13;
•&#13;
"I think we have the reputation as having one ot&#13;
the best experimental computer programs (in the&#13;
system}," according to Physics professor Morris&#13;
Firebaugh, who explained the recent developments&#13;
in micro-computers and the research he and two&#13;
assistants are conducting here at Park-side.&#13;
Micro-eomputers are becoming more common in&#13;
usage every day and the most common usage of&#13;
this type is in hand-held calculators. Other uses&#13;
include pinball machines, radar ovens, television&#13;
video games, and laboratorv equipment, such as&#13;
osciliscopes. There arf two advantages in using&#13;
micro-eomputers, the first being the amount of&#13;
information that can be stored on the 1Jl inch&#13;
memory blocks that help make up the&#13;
micro-eomputer. The second is the various uses the&#13;
micro-eomputer can fill with the low cost of the&#13;
parts to perform basic operations.&#13;
The research began when professor Firebaugh,&#13;
William Stone, Parks ide electronics technician, and&#13;
physics student Luther Johnson saw the rising use of&#13;
micro-eomputers and wrote up an experiment to&#13;
show students how to use and understand them.&#13;
Stone built the first micro-computer on campus just&#13;
a little over 3 years ago.&#13;
They presented their final results in a paper to the&#13;
winter convention of the American Association of&#13;
Physics Teachers on February 8. Luther Johnson&#13;
presented the paper for the group and the reaction&#13;
was enthusiastic. The report was so well-liked that a&#13;
national magazine for physics teachers called The&#13;
Physics Teacher asked the group to do a review of&#13;
micro-computers for publication in the magazine.&#13;
itA physics teacher reads about this stuff&#13;
(micro-computers) and he knows he should be&#13;
doing something on it, but he doesn't know what&#13;
type of equipment to use," explained Firebaugh.&#13;
"That is why this study is so important."&#13;
The group has sent out over 40 letters to various&#13;
companies telling of their interest In reviewing&#13;
micro-computers and of the results being published&#13;
in The Physics Teacher.&#13;
This work is relatively new despite the fact that&#13;
Free fi'ms&#13;
Als••• 0•.,'1, C~,.lcel.S~~I~ettI. R.... II. 8.. 1&#13;
OPEN4~ .• :to , •.•.&#13;
Free PizzI Deli"e"&#13;
Club Highvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
In recognition of National&#13;
Library Week, a free film&#13;
program Leaturing, "The American&#13;
Woman: Portraits of&#13;
Courage" will be shown at the&#13;
Golden Rondelle Theater on&#13;
April 19 at 7:00 p.rn.&#13;
This film program is cosponsored&#13;
with the Racine&#13;
Public Library Reservations and&#13;
additional information can be&#13;
obtained by calling the Rondelle&#13;
at 554-2154.&#13;
INTRAMURAL BOWLING&#13;
TOURNAMENT&#13;
MENS &amp; WOMENS SCRATCH AND&#13;
HANDICAP DIVISIONS.&#13;
QUALIFICATION THROUGH APRIL 22nd.&#13;
FINALS, APRIL 28th &amp; 29th.&#13;
TROPHIES, TROPHIES, TROPHIESI&#13;
((i Signup in the Union ReeCenter&#13;
or call 553-2695&#13;
for further information. ---======i.&#13;
~~~~~~~&#13;
Morris Firebough, William Stone, and luther Johnson won: micro..(;omputers&#13;
Meet your Senators&#13;
by Terry Zuehlsdorf&#13;
In an effort to familiarize students with their elected&#13;
representatives, RANGER is starting a series of articles featuring&#13;
Senators, justices, and members of various University committees&#13;
This week we are featuring Senator Mary Braun.&#13;
Mary Braun is one of eight students recently elected to the PSGA in&#13;
the spring elections and also one of the five students appointed to the&#13;
Senate on March 30, 1977. When asked why she ran for the Senate&#13;
she responded, "It is important to have a Senate that can co-operate&#13;
and get things done without bickering, and I feel that I can help to&#13;
accomplish this."&#13;
Braun pointed out what she felt was wrong with the Senate: "I&#13;
don't like the fact that Senators don't seem to take their jobs&#13;
seriously. They have an important job to do and they're taking their&#13;
jobs too lightly."&#13;
On the subject of student apathy she said, "I think student apathy&#13;
is pathetic. Students complain that nothing is being done to help&#13;
them, but if they don't make their complaints known, then nothing&#13;
can be expected to be done." She also disliked the poor attendance'&#13;
records of most Senators and the high turnover of Senators in the&#13;
past.&#13;
Braun also had some favorable comments on the Senate. "Many of&#13;
the new Senators are genuinely interested in helping the students and&#13;
there is now a movement towards Senate reform. Senate stability is&#13;
important and if we can get the good, hard-working Senators to stay,&#13;
we will end up with an experienced, progressive Senate."&#13;
Among the many things Mary hopes to accomplish during her term&#13;
are: clearing up the vague areas in the Constitution, working on&#13;
Senate elections procedures, increasing Senate stability, and&#13;
increasing student involvement be actively seeking student opinions&#13;
and making P5GA offices more accessible to students.&#13;
If you have any questions or comments for Braun, her office hours&#13;
are Monday from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and Thursdav from 2 to 3:30 p.m.&#13;
in WLLC D 193, ext. 2244. She is interested in hearing from all&#13;
students.&#13;
P.A.B. Film Series Presents&#13;
FILMS INCORPORATED&#13;
FRIDAY. APJIL 15 -&#13;
SUIIDAY. APRIL 17&#13;
8:00 p.•.&#13;
1:30 p .•.&#13;
UNION CINEMA THEATRE&#13;
Admission $1.00&#13;
Bring a Friend&#13;
r&#13;
Senior&#13;
recital&#13;
held&#13;
Engineering&#13;
contest&#13;
here&#13;
Parkside's Main Place will&#13;
become an airport at noon on&#13;
Saturday, May 7, as students&#13;
from Wisconsin and Illinois high&#13;
schools compete in the fifth&#13;
annual Engineering Science&#13;
Division Design Contest. This&#13;
year's project: construct a paper&#13;
sail plane and launching system&#13;
designed for maximum flight&#13;
distance.&#13;
The planes must be constructed&#13;
of 8 V2 by 11 inch heavy paper&#13;
(card stock) which contest rules&#13;
stipulate, may be spindled,&#13;
folded or mutilated but may&#13;
NOT be altered in physical or&#13;
chemical properties.&#13;
Launching devices must be&#13;
powered by rubber bands as the&#13;
sole energy source and the total&#13;
cost of materials used may not&#13;
exceed $5.&#13;
Entrants will be supplied with&#13;
"regulation" paper and rubber&#13;
bands.&#13;
The contest will be conducted&#13;
and judged by Parks ide&#13;
engineering science faculty and&#13;
students. First and second place&#13;
prizes will be awarded for flight&#13;
distance and another prize will&#13;
be awarded for creative and&#13;
innovative design. Prizes are&#13;
monetary and will be supplied bv&#13;
the Young Radiator Company of&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Pianist Mary Manulik will&#13;
present her senior recital at 3:30&#13;
p.m. on Sunday, April 17, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Miss Manulik is a student of&#13;
Stephen Swedish.&#13;
Shewill play 32 Variations in C&#13;
Minor by Beethoven, Fantaisie in&#13;
F minor by Chopin, Four&#13;
Preludes by Debussy and Sonata&#13;
No.7 by Prokofiev.&#13;
Student&#13;
concert&#13;
slated&#13;
Student members of Music&#13;
Educators National Conference&#13;
(M.E.NC.) will sponsor the&#13;
fourth annual "New Music"&#13;
concert. The concert, which will&#13;
be held on Thursday, April 14 at&#13;
8 pm, performed by Parkside&#13;
students.&#13;
Students who have worked on&#13;
the program are: Eric Weiss-Brass&#13;
Quintet; Peter Hybert-Serial&#13;
Number; Linda Martin-The&#13;
Journey; Geoffrey StantonFantasie;&#13;
Marge Balazs-Three&#13;
Instrumental Sons; Anthony&#13;
Burke-Matrix; and Paula NovackThree&#13;
Pieces for Flute and Piano.&#13;
These are all students of the&#13;
composition seminar a new&#13;
music course on composition at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
In the future, there is a&#13;
possibility of havmg two&#13;
concerts per year due to the&#13;
large number of works being&#13;
written by students.&#13;
All students are urged to&#13;
attend this concert and see&#13;
Parkside students make their&#13;
contribution to the world of&#13;
,.music. _&#13;
Eden Vaninll, (arol Bell, and Harry Strum comprise the Oriana Trio&#13;
Trio to perform&#13;
The Oriana Trio comprised of&#13;
Carol Bell, piano, Eden Vaning,&#13;
violin, and Harry Sturm, cello,&#13;
will present a free public concert&#13;
featuring works by Turina,&#13;
Shostakovich and Dvorak at 8&#13;
p.m. on Wednesday, April 13, in&#13;
the Commu.ucation Arts Theatre&#13;
at Parkslde.&#13;
The trjo was formed last fall&#13;
when the three artist-teachers&#13;
from different areas of the&#13;
country met at Parks ide.&#13;
Dedicating themselves to taking&#13;
music to the community, they&#13;
have presented more than 20&#13;
mini-concerts this season in area&#13;
schools. Enthusiasm generated&#13;
by the concerts has resulted in&#13;
numerous pictures and letters to&#13;
the group from school children,&#13;
which will be on display in the&#13;
theater gallery during the&#13;
concert.&#13;
Italian-Scandinavian&#13;
Free festival&#13;
An Italian-Scandinavian Festival, designed to&#13;
showcase the cultural heritage of two of&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin's largest ethnic groups, will&#13;
be held at Parkstde in the Union on Sunday, April&#13;
17, from noon to 5:30 p.m.&#13;
The festival will feature the foods, wines, folk&#13;
arts, handcrafts, music, dance, costumes and&#13;
cultural contributions of Italy and the Scandinavian&#13;
countries.&#13;
There is no admission charge for the festival,&#13;
which is sponsored by Parkside in cooperation with&#13;
more than 20 area ethnic and religious groups.&#13;
This weekend&#13;
Music festiva I&#13;
A Contemporary Music Festi- Helen Ceci soprano, Roger&#13;
val including three concerts and Daniels, percussion, JamesDean,&#13;
a series of seminars with the double bass, Carol Irwin,&#13;
Contemporary Music Ensemble mezzo-soprano, Eden Vaning,&#13;
of Northwestern University as violin and Swedish and Wegner,&#13;
visiting artists and Barbara piano.&#13;
Froman-Syverud and Stephen A concert by Northwestern's&#13;
Syverud of NU as visiting Contemporary Ensemble at 8&#13;
composers will be held at the p.m. on Saturday, April 16, in the&#13;
University of Wisconsin- theater directed by Svverud and&#13;
Parkside Thursday through M. William Karlins and including&#13;
Saturday, April 14 through 16. "Icicles" by David Stock, an&#13;
Festival highlights include: improvisation with two syntheA&#13;
concert by the Parkside sizers and acoustic instruments.&#13;
Contemporary Players directed Seminars by Syverud and&#13;
by August Wegner at 8 p.m. on Froman-Svverud on electronic&#13;
Friday, April 15, in the theater music at 8, 10 and na.m. and on&#13;
featuring the premieres of works composition at 9 a.m. on&#13;
by Syverud and John White, Thursday, April 14, and on&#13;
visiting professor at Parkside, as notation of 20th Century music&#13;
well as compositions by Froman- at 8, 10 and 11 a.m. on Friday,&#13;
Syverud, Colin Seamarks, John April 15, all in Communication&#13;
Cage and Charles tves. Members Arts Bldg. Room 105.&#13;
of" the ensemble are Carol Bell, All concerts and seminars are&#13;
piano, Timothy Bell, clarinet, f-reeand open to the public.&#13;
UUIIllIllIIUIIIIIIIUnllllnIIIllUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIU .. IIIIIUIIlIlIUUIIMIU&#13;
DINO'S&#13;
1816 16th St. 3728 Douglas&#13;
Racine Racine&#13;
634-1991 639-7115&#13;
WE DELIVER&#13;
Open 4:00 p,m. till one hour after&#13;
taverns close&#13;
UIIIIIIUIUIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIUIUIHMMIIl"IIIIIIIUIIII __ I~~UHtI~_.&#13;
eve nt stt&#13;
Shakespeare seminarscheduled&#13;
Three intemanonallv-known Shakespeare scholars&#13;
and teachers and students of Shakespeare from&#13;
a three-state area will gather at Parkstde Union on&#13;
Saturday, April 23, from 9 a m to 4 30 pm for a&#13;
symposium on "Teaching Shakespeare," The&#13;
registration deadline IStoday&#13;
Principal speaker will be Samuel Schoenbaum,&#13;
distinguished professor of English at the University&#13;
of Maryland, whose books Include "Wilham&#13;
Shakespeare A Documentary Life," "A New&#13;
Companion to Shakespeare Studies," and&#13;
"Shakespeare's lives," for which he received the&#13;
Friends of literature non-ncnon award for 1970 He&#13;
has been a VISIting scholar at a number of US&#13;
institutions and at King's College of the University&#13;
of London and is on the executive boards of&#13;
"Shakespeare Quarterly" and the "Vanorurn&#13;
Shakespeare"&#13;
Other featured speakers Will be Donald Skoller,&#13;
chairman of the film department at&#13;
UW-Milwaukee and author of "Problems of&#13;
Transformation in the Adaption of Shakespeare to&#13;
Cinema," and louis Marder, editor of the&#13;
"Shakespeare Newsletter" and author of "HIS Exits&#13;
and Entrances' The Story of Shakespear's&#13;
Reputation .:&#13;
NOW IN •.•&#13;
UNION&#13;
SQUARE&#13;
PITCHER BEER&#13;
$150&#13;
254; OFF during&#13;
Happy Hour&#13;
Fridays 3-6&#13;
PITCHER SODA&#13;
$120&#13;
$1.00 Deposit on Pitcher.&#13;
'Ilevents&#13;
Typing done. Reasonable rates. Call Mona 1 Wednesday, April 13 at 553-2295 or contact the RANGER office.&#13;
Musica Primavera .from 12 noon to 2 p.rn . in Mid Main Place.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
PAD Coffee house presents Mark Heller from 2 to 4 p-rn. in Union&#13;
Square.&#13;
Movie: "Claudine" at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Student Concert at 3 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
Softball game vs. Milwaukee Tech (2) and 4 p.rn. at Pets.&#13;
Concert: Oriana Trio. Eden Vaning, violin; Harry Sturm, cello; Carol&#13;
Bell, piano; at 8 p.rn. in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
Thursday, April 14&#13;
Softball game vs. Wright). C. (2) at 1 p.m. at Pets.&#13;
Movie: "Claudine" at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Music Educators National Conference (MENC) Annual Concert of&#13;
Student Composition at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
Friday, April 15&#13;
Earth Science Club Colloquium: "Laramide Structures and Basement&#13;
Block Faulting: Two Examples From the Bighorn Mountains,&#13;
Montana" by John Palmquist, Lawrence Col1egeat 12 noon in CR&#13;
113, Coffee and donuts will be served.&#13;
Chemistry..J.ife Science Seminar Series Lecture: "Harvesting the Sun's&#13;
Energy: a Biological Approach" by Dr. Shen-Miller, Division of&#13;
Biology and Biomedical Research, Argonne National Laboratory, at&#13;
2 p.m. in CL 105.&#13;
USTFF State Decathlon Championships at 2 p.m. at the track .... Iso&#13;
April 16.&#13;
Concert: Parkside Contemporary Players, August Wegner, director,&#13;
featuring premiere of work by Stephen Syverud, guest composer,&#13;
at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts. Theater.&#13;
Movie: "The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother" at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema, Admission $1.00.&#13;
Saturday, April 16&#13;
Men's Tennis vs. III. Ben. at 9:30 a.m. at the Tennis Courts.&#13;
Vet's Club Pike River Clean-up at 8 a.m.&#13;
Track Team Invitational at 11 a.m. at the Track.&#13;
Baseball game vs. UW-Stevens Point (2) at 12 noon at the field.&#13;
Young People's Concert featuring Stephen Swedish, piano at 2 p.m .&#13;
in the Comm Arts Theater. Admission $2.00 for.adults. $1.00 for&#13;
students.&#13;
Concert: Northwestern Contemporary Music Croup, Stephen Syverud&#13;
and M. William Karlins, co-directors. at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Classified For 58le: Morbtocn accordion. 120 Bass,&#13;
like new. Under $200.554-7748.&#13;
CB radios, public service monitor scanners,&#13;
TV and stereo equipment, electronics, all at&#13;
rock bottom prices. John. 554-6635.&#13;
Important Study Abroad Announcement:&#13;
APPLICATIONS NOW BEING ACCEPTED&#13;
for Summer 1977 and Academic Year&#13;
1977-78 for MOSCOW, LENINGRAD,&#13;
LONDON, PARiS, DIJON, NICE, SALAMANCA,&#13;
VIENNA, FLORENCE, PERUGIA,&#13;
GENEVA, COPENHAGEN, AMSTERDAM.&#13;
All subjects lor all stcoents in good&#13;
standing. Accredited university courses. 4,&#13;
6, a-week summer terms or quarter,&#13;
semester, full year terms. Summer from&#13;
$710. Year term from $1590. CONTACT:&#13;
CENTER FOR FOREIGN STUDY, SlAY&#13;
Admissions-Dept. M, 216 S, StateIBox606,&#13;
Ann Arbor, Michigan 48107, 313-662-5575.&#13;
Typing done by experienced typist. Just 5&#13;
minutes from Parkside. '-Gall sandy at&#13;
554-6251.&#13;
~ouse for Rent: Summer months, fully&#13;
furnished. $175 a month. Gall 658-2313 or&#13;
654-5882. Ask for Mr. Campbell,&#13;
Need extra cnh? Student keypunch&#13;
operators needed for part-time jobs in a&#13;
keypunch pool at UW-Parkside. One job&#13;
available immediately. Please call Laurlrl&#13;
Gehrig, Comm Arts 120, ext. 2383.&#13;
JOB HUNTING SECRET /111:&#13;
Hiring decisions are not based on&#13;
qualifications, They never have been, and&#13;
they never will be. The major factor in hiring&#13;
is body chemistry - the image the&#13;
candidate projects, the vibrations the&#13;
candidate emits - charisma, not&#13;
qualifications.&#13;
From the book JOB HUNTING SECRETS &amp;&#13;
TACTICS by Kirby Stanat, who has hired&#13;
over 8,000 people. Get the competitive edge&#13;
you need in this economy before you&#13;
graduate. Available from the University&#13;
Bookstore for $4.95. Kirby Stanat will speak&#13;
and answer questions about job hunting on&#13;
Wednesday, April 27, at 800 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema Theater.&#13;
Classified Ad Charges&#13;
Free: Student ads, 20 words or under.tor&#13;
one-lime run. (25 cents charge for&#13;
- every additional 10 words or under.)&#13;
$ .50: For each additional running after the&#13;
first time.&#13;
$1.00: Non-student ads, 20 words or under&#13;
per issue. (25 cents charge for every&#13;
additional 10 words or under.)&#13;
To place a classified ad phone 553-2295.&#13;
Roommate Wanted: Share half of two&#13;
bedroom furnished apartment. Includes&#13;
basement, garden trees. 5 miles away.&#13;
$95.00 plus utilities. Call Jeremiah,&#13;
552-9034.&#13;
~******************~************ iMusica Primavera!&#13;
# Wednesday, April 13 !&#13;
* . * : 12 2 Mam Place #&#13;
I -FREE i&#13;
t******************************~&#13;
Join The&#13;
Celebration&#13;
April 29th, 30th&#13;
May 1st&#13;
Stelte iob&#13;
information&#13;
The Wisconsin Bureau of&#13;
Personnel will be on campus to&#13;
discuss the state's job positions&#13;
to May and August graduates in&#13;
an information session on April&#13;
18 in WLLC D 173. The sessions&#13;
will be held at 11 a.m . and at&#13;
1:15 p.m.&#13;
Sunday, April 17&#13;
Italian-Scandinavian Festival during the day in the Union.&#13;
Student Concert: Mary Manulik, piano, at 3:30 p.m. in the Comm&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
Vet's Club Meeting at 4 p.m. in WLLC D 174.&#13;
Movie: "The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother" at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Monday, April 18&#13;
Student Art Show in the Comm Arts Gallery. Mondays thru&#13;
Thursdays, 12 noon till 5 p.m., Tuesdays and Wednesdays, 7 to 10.&#13;
p.m. Thru May 11.&#13;
April 8. 1977&#13;
TO: ALL ACADEMIC STAFF&#13;
FROM: ACADEMIC STAFF DIST1NGUISHED SERVICE AWARD COMMITTEE&#13;
Carla Stoffle, Chairperson, Larry L. Duetsch, O. Clayton Johnson,&#13;
Walter Shirer, Charles Tinder, President, Student Government 'Association&#13;
Tuesday I April 19&#13;
Baseball game vs. Milton (2) at 1 p.m. at the Field.&#13;
Tennis Meet vs. Carroll at 1 p.m. at the Courts.&#13;
All events are due in to the RANGER by the Wednesday before&#13;
publication. An events form is now available in the RANGER office.&#13;
SUBJECT: NCMINATIONS FOR ACADEMIC STAFF DISTINGUISHED SERVICE AWARD&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin has established four awards of $500 each to be awarded ......is&#13;
Spring: two for faculty teaching excellence, one to a faculty member for Ccmn.um ty&#13;
Outreach, and one to an Academic Staff member for "Exemplary Unlvers1cy serv ..._'E:.1t&#13;
The above named selection committee has been established by the Academic Sta~~ Committee&#13;
and the Chancellor to establish criteria, invite nominations and sele~L d&#13;
recipient. Should a member of the selection committee become a candidate foY th~&#13;
award, he/she will resig~ from the committee.&#13;
ELIGIBIL1TY&#13;
Any Parkside employee or student may nominate any Academic Staff member~&#13;
CRITERIA&#13;
Criteria will be especially distinguished service which demonstrably benefits th~&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parks ide or the Parks ide campus community, anc which exceeds&#13;
the required performance of his/her normal duties or job responsibili~y at the Uhiversity,&#13;
i.e., "above and beyond the call of duty~1I&#13;
Further, it is expected that such distinguished service would be related to his/her&#13;
professional training; could have been ~ significant activity or service or a patt~?n&#13;
of exemplary service over the years at Parkside; and could have been performec or&#13;
ccomplished on and/or off campus~&#13;
April 21,1977&#13;
PROCEDURE FOR NO!llNATING&#13;
(1) Nominations should be sent by letter to Chairperson, Academic Staff Distinguished&#13;
Service Committee, WLLC, Dll5~&#13;
(2) Nominations must include (a) name,' title and occupational unit of the nornLnee (b)&#13;
complete description of the distinguished performance (c) benefit to Parks ide of the&#13;
distingUished performance (d) time period over which the distinguished performan~e&#13;
occurred (e) other persons who could support or elaborate on the distinguish~d performance&#13;
(f) your name, title and relationship, 1f any, to the nominee~ .&#13;
(3) Supporting docum~nts, tangible evidence, etc., would be appropriate.&#13;
(4) Deadline for nominations is Friday. April 22. 4:30 p.m.&#13;
(5) Persons who are nominated will be notified and may be asked for further informatio&#13;
(6) The recipient will be announced and recognized at an appropriate occasion sometime)&#13;
bef6re Ma.~ 23.&#13;
,l~~~~~~~_~":",,,,~==~~~~~~~~&#13;
Film/51"&#13;
Displays&#13;
Discussion&#13;
Literature&#13;
&amp; n&#13;
Admission&#13;
Reservations: 554·2154</text>
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              <text>TheParkside~--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No.6 Wednesday, October 13, 1976&#13;
Faculty : Morale Iow,&#13;
• Guskin unresponsive&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Faculty at the latter of two&#13;
meetings held with UW System&#13;
senior vice presidents Donald&#13;
Smith and Donald Percy expressed&#13;
a problem with general&#13;
morale and communication with&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin.&#13;
Mter Smith and Percy made a&#13;
few opening statements about&#13;
Parkside's future and how&#13;
pleased they were with "the high&#13;
quality of education and the level&#13;
of achievement at Parkside,"&#13;
faculty at the meeting refuted&#13;
this optimistic viewpoint with&#13;
pessimistic statements.&#13;
Surinder Datta, associate&#13;
professor of life science, said that&#13;
morale at Parkside is as bad as it&#13;
was a few years ago when&#13;
Parkside's budget was seriously&#13;
cut and wholesale layoffs occurred.&#13;
Calling it "an abuse of faculty&#13;
governance," Datta said that&#13;
Guskin has made certain&#13;
decisions regarding the&#13;
University's future and if an&#13;
existing committee gives him&#13;
contrary recommendations, he&#13;
would create another committee,&#13;
hoping it would make the correct .&#13;
decision.&#13;
Having asked for concrete&#13;
examples, Percy and Smith&#13;
received the following: the affirmative&#13;
action committee did&#13;
not receive information&#13;
necessary to fulfill their cbarge,&#13;
and an ad hoc committee was&#13;
established to make recom-&#13;
.mendations concerning the&#13;
Master's program while the task&#13;
force on business management&#13;
was in operation.&#13;
The Chancellor's task force,&#13;
according to Datta, did not come&#13;
up with the right decision on the&#13;
Master's program so he created&#13;
another committee to "come up&#13;
with the right decision."&#13;
Vice President Smith said that&#13;
he could "discern if games are&#13;
being played."&#13;
The faculty attending the&#13;
meeting felt tbat Guskin is easily&#13;
accessible, but that he does not&#13;
respond to their needs. The&#13;
Central Administration vice&#13;
presidents felt tbat the campus&#13;
should "do some fine tuning,"&#13;
regarding attitudes and communication.&#13;
Although the faculty's opinion&#13;
of Guskin's actions seemed&#13;
negative, it was the general&#13;
PSGA: video resources illegal&#13;
Joltnson meets with PSGA&#13;
by Douglas Edenhauser&#13;
New assistant chancellor&#13;
Clayton Johnson was a-guest at&#13;
the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association PSGA meeting&#13;
last Wednesday.&#13;
He explained that there is a&#13;
need for the faculty to sit down&#13;
with the students and become&#13;
more personal with them. He&#13;
feels that the faculty could help&#13;
the students with some of their&#13;
problems more than the counselors&#13;
can.&#13;
He also emphasized that his&#13;
office is under a reorganization&#13;
and will subsequently take time&#13;
to be in 100 percent working .&#13;
order. He said there may be some&#13;
changes made.&#13;
There is also a new concept&#13;
being discussed of merging offices&#13;
and creating a director of&#13;
student development position.&#13;
Under this new office a student&#13;
would only have to go to one place&#13;
for all of his or her problems.&#13;
In other action it was mentioned&#13;
that the Ways and Means&#13;
committee is, holding a voter&#13;
registration drive at Parkside&#13;
and tbe registrars should be set&#13;
up next week.&#13;
The Student Services Committee&#13;
proposed a motion to&#13;
allocate not more than 25 dollars&#13;
to buy space in the Rangel' to&#13;
advertise their toy drive. The&#13;
)notion was passed.&#13;
Senate secretary Linda&#13;
photo by P.J. Anolina&#13;
Clayton Johnson&#13;
Knutson mentioned that it was&#13;
recently discovered that a&#13;
number of the library's video&#13;
resources are illegal because&#13;
there was no permission given to&#13;
the library to reproduce some of&#13;
the materials they have.&#13;
The Senate voted to work with&#13;
the Center for Teaching Excellence&#13;
in its efforts to increase&#13;
the library'S hours. PSGA&#13;
President Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
stressed this point and said that&#13;
there is no reason why the library&#13;
couldn't hire a couple of work&#13;
study students to cover the&#13;
library at night to prevent ripoffs.&#13;
The Senate also voted \0 send a&#13;
copy of all the minutes of the&#13;
feeling of the group that a change&#13;
in administration would&#13;
irreparably damage Parkside.&#13;
Stella Gray, associate&#13;
professor of English, said that the&#13;
humanities division was con-&#13;
. cerned about the situation in the&#13;
business management discipline.&#13;
She felt that the discipline right&#13;
now has no true, honest direction.&#13;
Datta confirmed this, saying that&#13;
we have not truly implemented&#13;
our mission.&#13;
Gene Gasiorkiewicz, professor&#13;
of life science, echoed this sentiment&#13;
in that he bad worked on&#13;
three committees dealing with&#13;
the mission statement and none&#13;
of them had dealt with the&#13;
mission to the point where it had&#13;
either been changed or implemented.&#13;
Donald Kummings, associate&#13;
professor of English, cited&#13;
another problem with the current&#13;
Parkside admirdstration, that of&#13;
boondoggling, where people who&#13;
are in good with Chancellor&#13;
Guskin receive rewards.&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz and Datta agreed&#13;
with this statement, saying that&#13;
people who were closer to Guskin&#13;
got the best positions within the&#13;
administration.&#13;
PSGA meetings to all of the other&#13;
United Councll member campuses.&#13;
WSA (Madison) voted on Oct. 1&#13;
to increase Parkside's United&#13;
Council payment from 2,500&#13;
dollars to 5,500dollars. They said&#13;
that it was not as much as they&#13;
should pay but it was all that they&#13;
could afford.&#13;
In the president's report,&#13;
pIKlto by v_" Tho"'ltM"&#13;
Mickey Finn wins a welDer al I1ae Pel Pageaal sponsored by Ibe&#13;
Ouling Commiltee last Thursday aflernoon. CoUeeD Doyle bolds&#13;
Mickey, her pel basset bound, aad Ibe prize be WaDfor being Ibe ""tesl&#13;
pel at the Pageaal. Mickey reportedly eDjoyed lbe frank.&#13;
Committee&#13;
discussed&#13;
by John McKloskey as outlined in Parkside's Faculty&#13;
Laws and Regulations, is to&#13;
continually review faculty&#13;
regulations, procedures and&#13;
committee structures.&#13;
But several University Committee&#13;
members said that the&#13;
number of faculty members&#13;
needed to staff committees was&#13;
becoming too great, and&#13;
suggested that the number of&#13;
faculty committees be&#13;
diminished so as to provide broad&#13;
but clear and non-overlapping&#13;
charges.&#13;
Others sided with Harbeson,&#13;
arguing that despite procedures&#13;
to simplify the committee&#13;
structure, a well-defined role still&#13;
exists for the condification&#13;
committee.&#13;
One example cited of a task the&#13;
Codification Committee could do&#13;
was the making of further&#13;
revisions to the Faculty Laws and&#13;
Regulations.&#13;
The University Committee&#13;
agreed to resume consideration&#13;
of the Issue at a later date.&#13;
As part of an effort to reduce&#13;
the number and size of faculty&#13;
committees, the University&#13;
Committee is considering the&#13;
future of the eight-member&#13;
Codification Committee.&#13;
At a recent meeting of the&#13;
University Committee, former&#13;
codification committee chairperson&#13;
John Harbeson, associate&#13;
professor of political science and&#13;
chairperson of social science&#13;
division, argued that it should&#13;
continue to function.&#13;
The purpose of the committee,&#13;
Kiyoko 'Bowden mentioned that&#13;
she has received several cornplaints&#13;
concerning the Bookstore.&#13;
She said that she would keep a&#13;
file of these complaints and bring&#13;
them before the committee that&#13;
will review the renewal of the&#13;
bookstore contract. She also&#13;
called for input from students at&#13;
the time of the contract renewal.&#13;
Workshop to open&#13;
by Wendy Miller&#13;
There are five new businesses opening in the 300&#13;
block of Main street in Racine; a children's&#13;
bookstore, an adult book store, a new restaurant, a&#13;
frame shop, and the Racine Artists Workshop. The&#13;
Racine Arlists Workshop has been in existence for&#13;
nearly a year, located in the second floor of a&#13;
warehouse in the 200 block of Wisconsin Ave.&#13;
The workshop began as a result of an art fair held&#13;
at Memorial Hall in September of 1975. After the&#13;
fair, area artist began looking for a bullding in&#13;
which to have a group studio.&#13;
In October of 1975, they moved in on Wisconsin&#13;
Ave. Most of their income is from art fairs;&#13;
although Gary Rosen, one of the jewelers in the&#13;
worksbop, does wbolesale work Gary once coowned&#13;
Seeds jewelry store on Sixth street with his&#13;
wife, Sherri.&#13;
The workshop consists of two jewelers-Gary&#13;
Rosen and Judy Olsen, two potters-Gordon Mcintosh&#13;
and Roland Bell, a leather worker-Don Kinn,&#13;
and a weaver-Sue Sheldon. Judy graduated from&#13;
Parkside with an art degree and Gordon is&#13;
currently a Parkside student.&#13;
They had planned on opening a store in their&#13;
studio on Wisconsin Ave.; but Craig Colbitz, who&#13;
purchased a couple buildings on Main Street, made·&#13;
them an offer they could not refuse. They are now in&#13;
the process of moving their studio to 322 Main&#13;
Street. The store should be open by Octoher 15. It&#13;
will hopefully bring in enough money in sales to&#13;
keep the studio in operation.&#13;
People coming into the store will be able to watch&#13;
the artists in action. Pottery classes will be offered&#13;
after Christmas. They also bope to provide live&#13;
models in the near future for thos interested in twodimensional&#13;
work.&#13;
Although they are working on a limited budget,&#13;
they are trying to design an attractive store with&#13;
merchanidse at reasonable prices. They are very&#13;
much involved and interested in downtown&#13;
redevelopment at a personal level. Main Street is&#13;
beginning to take shape and the Racine Art1sIs&#13;
Workshop is contributing to this transformation.&#13;
The Parkside--------&#13;
Vol. V. No. 6 Wednesday, October 13, 1976&#13;
Faculty: _Morale low,&#13;
Guskinl Unresponsive&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Faculty at the latter of two&#13;
meetings held with UW System&#13;
senior vice presidents Donald&#13;
Smith and Donald Percy expressed&#13;
a problem with general&#13;
morale and communication with&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin.&#13;
After Smith and Percy made a&#13;
few opening statements about&#13;
Parkside's future and how&#13;
pleased they were with "the high&#13;
quality of education and the level&#13;
of achievement at Parkside,"&#13;
faculty at the meeting refuted&#13;
this optimistic viewpoint with&#13;
pessimistic statements.&#13;
Surinder Datta, associate&#13;
professor of life science, said that&#13;
morale at Parkside is as bad as it&#13;
was a few years ago when&#13;
Parkside's budget was seriously&#13;
cut and wholesale layoffs occurred.&#13;
&#13;
Calling it "an abuse of faculty&#13;
governance," Datta said that&#13;
Guskin has made certain&#13;
decisions regarding the&#13;
University's future and if an&#13;
existing committee gives him&#13;
contrary recommendations, he&#13;
would create another committee,&#13;
hoping it would make the correct ·&#13;
decision.&#13;
Having asked for concrete&#13;
examples, Percy and Smith&#13;
received the following: the affirmative&#13;
action committee did&#13;
not receive information&#13;
necessary to fulfill their charge,&#13;
and an ad hoc committee was&#13;
established to make recom-&#13;
. mendations concerning the&#13;
Master's program while the task&#13;
force on business management&#13;
was in operation.&#13;
The Chancellor's task force,&#13;
according to Datta, did not come&#13;
up with the right decision on the&#13;
Master's program so he created&#13;
another committee to "come up&#13;
with the right decision."&#13;
Vice President Smith said that&#13;
he could "discern if games are&#13;
being played."&#13;
The faculty attending the&#13;
Il}eeting felt that Guskin is easily&#13;
accessible, but that he does not&#13;
respond to their needs. The&#13;
Central Administration vice&#13;
presidents felt that the campus&#13;
should "do some fine tuning,"&#13;
regarding attitudes and communication.&#13;
&#13;
Although the faculty's opinion&#13;
of Guskin's actions seemed&#13;
negative, it was the general&#13;
PSGA: video resources illegal&#13;
feeling of the group that a change&#13;
in administration would&#13;
irreparably damage Parkside.&#13;
Stella Gray, associate&#13;
professor of English, said that the&#13;
humanities division was con-&#13;
. cerned about the situation in the&#13;
business management discipline.&#13;
She felt that the discipline right&#13;
now has no true, honest direction.&#13;
Datta confirm~ this, saying that&#13;
we have not truly implemented&#13;
our mission.&#13;
· Gene Gasiorkiewicz, professor&#13;
of life science, echoed this sentiment&#13;
in that he had worked on&#13;
three committees dealing with&#13;
the mission statement and none&#13;
of them had dealt with the&#13;
mission ~ the point where it had&#13;
either been changed or implemented.&#13;
&#13;
Donald Kummings, associate&#13;
professor of English, cited&#13;
another problem with the current&#13;
Parkside administration, that of&#13;
boondoggling, where people who&#13;
are in good with Chancellor&#13;
Guskin receive rewards.&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz and Datta agreed&#13;
with this statement, saying that&#13;
people who were closer to Guskin&#13;
got the best positions within the&#13;
administration.&#13;
photo by Van Thompson&#13;
Mickey Finn wins a weiner at the Pet Pageant sponsored by the&#13;
Outing Committee last Thursday afternoon. Colleen Doyle bolds&#13;
Mickey, her pet basset bound, and the prize be won for being the cutest&#13;
pet at the Pageant. Mickey reportedly enjoyed the frank.&#13;
Committee&#13;
discussed&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
As part of an effort to reduce&#13;
the number and size of faculty&#13;
committees, the University&#13;
Committee is considering the&#13;
future of the eight-member&#13;
Codification Committee.&#13;
as outlined in Parkside's Facuity&#13;
Laws and Regulations, is to&#13;
continually review faculty&#13;
regulations, procedures and&#13;
committee structures.&#13;
But several University Committee&#13;
members said that the&#13;
number of faculty members&#13;
needed to staff committees was&#13;
becoming too great, and&#13;
suggested that the number of&#13;
faculty committees be&#13;
diminished so as to provide broad&#13;
but clear and non~&gt;Verlapping&#13;
charges.&#13;
Johnson meets with PSGA&#13;
At a recent meeting of the&#13;
University Committee, former&#13;
codification committee chairperson&#13;
John Harbeson, associate&#13;
professor of political science and&#13;
chairperson of social science&#13;
division, argued that it should&#13;
continue to function.&#13;
The purpose of the committee,&#13;
Others sided with Harbeson,&#13;
arguing that despite procedures&#13;
to simplify the committee&#13;
structure, a well-defined role still&#13;
exists for the condification&#13;
committee.&#13;
by Douglas Edenhauser&#13;
New assistant chancellor&#13;
Clayton Johnson was a guest at&#13;
the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association PSGA meeting&#13;
last Wednesday.&#13;
He explained that there is a&#13;
need for the faculty to sit down&#13;
with the students and become&#13;
more personal with them. He&#13;
feels that the faculty could help&#13;
the students with some of their&#13;
problems more than the counselors&#13;
can.&#13;
He also emphasized that his&#13;
office is under a reorganization&#13;
and will subsequently take time&#13;
to be in 100 percent working .&#13;
order. He said there may be some&#13;
changes made.&#13;
There is also a new concept&#13;
being discussed of merging offices&#13;
and creating a director of&#13;
student development position.&#13;
Under this new office a student&#13;
would only have to go to one place&#13;
for all of his or her problems.&#13;
In other action it was mentioned&#13;
that the Ways and Means&#13;
committee is , holding a voter&#13;
registration drive at Parkside&#13;
and the registrats should be set&#13;
up next week.&#13;
The Student Services Committee&#13;
proposed a motion to&#13;
allocate not more than 25 dollars&#13;
to buy space in the Ranger to&#13;
advertise their toy drive. The&#13;
'motion was passed.&#13;
Senate secretary Linda&#13;
photo by P.J. Anolina&#13;
Clayton Johnson&#13;
Knutson mentioned that it was&#13;
receptly discovered that a&#13;
number of the library's video&#13;
resources are illegal because&#13;
there was no permission given to&#13;
the library to reproduce some of&#13;
the materials they have.&#13;
The Senate voted to work with&#13;
the Center for Teaching Excellence&#13;
in its efforts to increase&#13;
the library's hours. PSGA&#13;
President Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
stressed this point and said that&#13;
there is no reason why the library&#13;
couldn't hire a couple of work&#13;
study students to cover t!1e&#13;
library at night to prevent ripoffs.&#13;
&#13;
The Senate also voted to send a&#13;
copy of all the minutes of the&#13;
PSGA meetings to all of the other&#13;
United Council member campuses.&#13;
&#13;
WSA (Madison) voted on Oct. 1&#13;
to increase Parkside's United&#13;
Council payment from 2,500&#13;
dollars to 5,500 dollars. They said&#13;
that it was not as much as they&#13;
should pay but it was all that they&#13;
could afford.&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden mentioned that&#13;
she has received several complaints&#13;
concerning the Bookstore.&#13;
She said that she would keep a&#13;
file of these complaints and bring&#13;
them before the committee that&#13;
will review the renewal of the&#13;
bookstore contract. She also&#13;
called for input from students at&#13;
the time of the contract renewal.&#13;
One example cited of a task the&#13;
Codification Committee could do&#13;
was the making of further&#13;
revisions to the Faculty Laws and&#13;
Regulations.&#13;
The University Committee&#13;
agreed to re ume consideration&#13;
of the is ue at a later date.&#13;
In the president's report,&#13;
Workshop to open&#13;
by Wendy Miller&#13;
There are five new businesses opening in the 300&#13;
block of Main street in Racine; a children's&#13;
bookstore, an adult book store, a new restaurant, a&#13;
frame shop, and the Racine Artists Workshop. The&#13;
Racine Artists Workshop has been in existence for&#13;
nearly a year, located in the second floor of a&#13;
warehouse in the 200 block of Wisconsin Ave.&#13;
The workshop began as a result of an art fair held&#13;
at Memorial Hall in September of 1975. After the&#13;
fair, area artist began looking for a building in&#13;
which to have a group studio.&#13;
In October of 1975, they moved in on Wisconsin&#13;
Ave. Most of their income is from art fairs;&#13;
although Gary Rosen, one of the jewelers in the&#13;
workshop, does wholesale work Gary once coowned&#13;
Seeds jewelry store on Sixth street with his&#13;
wife, Sherri.&#13;
The workshop consists of two jewelers-Gary&#13;
Rosen and Judy Olsen, two potters-Gordon McIntosh&#13;
and Roland Bell, a leather worker-Don Kinn,&#13;
and a weaver-Sue Sheldon. Judy graduated from&#13;
Parkside with an art l'legree and Gordon is&#13;
currently a Parkside student.&#13;
They had planned on opening a store in their&#13;
studio on Wisconsin Ave.; but Craig Colbitz, who&#13;
purchased a couple buildings on Main Street, made ·&#13;
them an offer they could not refuse. They are now in&#13;
the process of moving their studio to 322 Main&#13;
Street. The store should be open by October 15. It&#13;
will hopefully bring in enough money in sales to&#13;
keep the studio in operation.&#13;
People coming into the store will be able to watch&#13;
the artists in action. Pottery classes will be offered&#13;
after Chrisbnas. They also hope to provide live&#13;
models in the near future for thos mterested in twodimensional&#13;
work.&#13;
Although they are working on a limited budget,&#13;
they are trying to design an attractive store with&#13;
merchanidse at reasonable prices. They are very&#13;
much involved and interested in downtown&#13;
redevelopment at a personal level. Main Street is&#13;
beginning to take shape and the Racine Artists&#13;
Workshop is contributing to this transformation. &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 13, 1976 \&#13;
~~ANGER&#13;
---EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
'Business program threatened?&#13;
Another potential threat to· the develo~~~nt of&#13;
Parkslde's business program is the POSSibility of&#13;
initiating the Master of Adm Inlstrative Science~ degree&#13;
under the "umbrella apprbach" and placing .the&#13;
graduate program under the new office of the Associate&#13;
Dean for Graduate and Professional Programs.&#13;
The umbrella approach would offer dif~erent&#13;
specialities under the MAS deg.ree such es buslnes~,&#13;
education or public administration with a core of baste&#13;
courses taken by all students. , .&#13;
When Parkslde's proposed masters program was&#13;
accepted by Central Administration and the Regent.s,.lts&#13;
Initial area of concentration was to be business •&#13;
management; but now under the first' stages of c~nsideration&#13;
is the possibility of starting the progr~~ with&#13;
more than one concentration. It was also originally&#13;
regarded as part of the School of Modern Industry and&#13;
would probably have been administered almost excluslvely&#13;
by the School.&#13;
Adding additional specialities at its initiation and,&#13;
housing the program under the office of the Associate&#13;
Dean for Graduate. and Professional Programs&#13;
(presently occupied by William Murin, formerly an&#13;
associate professor of political science) would effectively&#13;
take emphasis off of the buslness program.&#13;
Unless additional financial support could be attained,&#13;
the resources which were expected to bolster the&#13;
business program would have to be partially used in&#13;
support of the other speclaltvts).&#13;
It would be great to have a program offering many&#13;
different specialties, but right now the business&#13;
program still requires more assistance if it is to develop&#13;
enough to offer graduate studies. If that consideration is&#13;
ignored and resources are scattered at the beginning of&#13;
the masters program, proper development of the&#13;
business program is going to become increasing less&#13;
likely to occur,&#13;
The advisory task force to the Chancellor on business&#13;
management recommended that "the business&#13;
graduate program be developed on the foundation of an&#13;
excellent undergraduate proqrern and prior to the expenditure&#13;
of resources in areas other than business."&#13;
/ POLITICAL&#13;
Matter of choice . Carter&#13;
•&#13;
by BobJamllois and Robert Hoffman&#13;
•&#13;
Youdo have a choice. Youmay vote for Jimmy Carter, Jerry Ford,&#13;
Eugene McCa~\hY,eight other presidental candidates on the ballot;&#13;
youmay write in your ojVTlpreference, or youmay stay borne. .&#13;
Pollsters predict a record number of eligible voters are going to opt&#13;
forthe easy alternative and not vote onNov.2.&#13;
Editorial pages and syndicated columnists across the country have&#13;
been making excuses for the poor, misbegotten electorate. who are&#13;
disillusionedby Watergate and the recent Congressionalsex scandals.&#13;
Forgive me, I'm not particularly sympathetic tothat line of reasoning.&#13;
I lived through Watergate, Wilbur Mills, Wayne Hays, in 1968my&#13;
candidate was shot, in 1972my choicelost by a landslide, and onNov. 2&#13;
I'm going to vote.&#13;
I'm goingto vote not because it's "my patriotic duty" but because I&#13;
'want to. I want to vote because I know there is a difference between&#13;
the twomajor candidates. I knowthat one of these twomen is going to&#13;
win and I want to dowhat I can to make sure tpe right one gets elected.&#13;
'Jerry Ford is an opposer-not an initiator. During his 28year tenure&#13;
in Congress, Ford opposed medicare, housing subsidies, social&#13;
security benefits, unemployment compensation, veteran's benefits,&#13;
and pension reform. .&#13;
However,)t wouldbe unfair to characterize Ford as being entirely&#13;
devoid of ideas. Mter all it was dependable and trustworthy Jerry'&#13;
J Ford who tried to start inopeachment proceedings against U.S.&#13;
Supreme Court Justice William.O. Douglas-,&#13;
And, don't forget WIN. That was all Jerry's idea too. It was a&#13;
program complete with acronym, buttons, banners, and a flashy&#13;
saying. in short, all the advertising gimmicks normally employed by&#13;
used car dealers. Maybe it moves a lot of used cars, but the inflation&#13;
rate remainedin the double digitrange,and unemployment climbed.&#13;
WhenCarter tookover from Lester Maddox,as Governor of Georgia&#13;
,&#13;
••.. r-&#13;
,&#13;
Consultants to the task. force reinforced their positi.on.&#13;
Kenneth Herrick, former head of collection&#13;
development of the Library-Learning C;:ente~ ~ibra:y,&#13;
indicated that library holdings for adlJ1lnls!rative&#13;
specialiazations other than business may be extremely,&#13;
inadequate. '&#13;
Harold Q: Langenderfer, a ·consultant from the&#13;
Graduate School of Business Administration at the&#13;
University of North Carolina, commented on the umbrella&#13;
approach and administration of the program.&#13;
"One of the problems with this (the UD;Ibrellaapproach) ~s&#13;
tbal'the greatest demand in the school's geographic area IS&#13;
lor those wilh a business administralion emphasis. Unless&#13;
the program is directed by a person trained in business&#13;
administration and unless the major emphasi~ is on caree~s&#13;
in.business administration, it is likely that the program WIll&#13;
get diffused by trying to do too many thtngs and tberefore&#13;
miss its mark.&#13;
"It is my judgmenl that It would be a mistake 10 separate&#13;
the two (undergrad, and grad.) programs administratively&#13;
and-or ia Ibe use 01 faculty resources ... schools that have&#13;
separated their undergraduate and graduate program.s have ""&#13;
paid a severe price in duplicate resources and diffused&#13;
image. In any case, such a masters program should not be&#13;
created until a strong leader is hired ...that leader oughl 10&#13;
have a business administrative orientation."&#13;
/&#13;
As previously mentioned editorially in Ranger,&#13;
Parkside does not have the resources to achieve excellence&#13;
on all fronts; and business related progra ms&#13;
should be given priority in order to fulfill Parkside's&#13;
special mission. Recently it appears that the business&#13;
management program has been hurting; ana with&#13;
tentative consideration being given to initiating the&#13;
masters program under the umbrella approach and&#13;
housing it under the Associate Dean's office, the&#13;
possibility for achieving excellence in this area is not&#13;
looking any more promising.&#13;
Spreading the wealth of the masters program among&#13;
disciplines may be politically advantageous within the&#13;
Parkside community, but extreme caution should be&#13;
taken before in~tiating an approach which might hurt&#13;
the business proqrarn.&#13;
I&#13;
•&#13;
,&#13;
FORUM&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
he inherited a state with virtually no social service programs, an&#13;
antiquated penal system, an extremely conservative legislature, and&#13;
Lester Maddox as 'Lieutenant Governor. Despite these .odds Carter&#13;
succeeded in many; areas .&#13;
•Carter vastly expanded the number of community centers for the&#13;
mentally ill'and retarded. These community centers were partially&#13;
staffed by former iwelfare recipients-thereby reducing the welfare&#13;
rolls while at the siln!Ietime providing inoproved, compassionate care&#13;
for the handicapped:&#13;
Jimmy Carter reformed Georgia's prison system achieving a major&#13;
step towards turning Georgia's prison system lrom the warehouse&#13;
that it was into a rehabilitation center.&#13;
Carter upgraded education, humanized the Georgia welfare system&#13;
and made hoth responsive to the legitimate needs of the Georgian&#13;
people. \&#13;
Carter pushed through judicial reform creating a new machinery&#13;
for screening prospective judges and removing corrupt, inefficient&#13;
judges. ' .&#13;
Jimmy Carter pushed through the Georgia legislature an anti.&#13;
secrecy sunshine law, which opened up the meetings of all the com.&#13;
mittees of the Georgia/legislature to the public.&#13;
Lets contrast this with 'good ole' team player Jerry Ford. Ford's&#13;
solution to,the prison problem is to build more prisons, (create more&#13;
warehouses). Ford favors a 50 percent cutback in the education&#13;
budget, but after all we've all been "victims of mass education."&#13;
Ford's solution to welfare is to cut benefits by one-third to fifty percent.&#13;
Ford has no.judical reforms planned, nor is he going to inoplement&#13;
sunshine laws. Mterall it was Ford who, according to Sam Ervin,&#13;
blocked the Watergate investigation until well after the 1972election.&#13;
Ford puis tbe.interests of special interests ahead of the interests of&#13;
-' continued on pg. 3&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 13, 1976 \&#13;
t~ANGER&#13;
•&#13;
---EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
-&#13;
Business program thre.atened?&#13;
Another potential threat to . the develo~~~nt of&#13;
Parkside's business program is the poss1b1llty of&#13;
initiating the Master of Administrative Science~ degree&#13;
under the "umbrella apprbach~' and placing _the&#13;
graduate program under the new office of the Associate&#13;
Dean for Graduate and Professional Programs.&#13;
The umbrella approach would offer different&#13;
specialities under the M"AS deg_ree such as busines~,&#13;
education or public administration with a core of basic&#13;
courses taken by all students. , ·&#13;
When Parkside's proposed masters program was&#13;
accepted by Central Administration and the Regent_s,. its&#13;
initial area of concentration was to be business&#13;
management; but now under the first· stages of c~nsideration&#13;
is the possibility of starting the progr~~ w1fh&#13;
more than one concentration. It was also originally&#13;
regarded as part of the School of Modern Industry and&#13;
would probably have been administered almost exclusively&#13;
by the School.&#13;
Adding additional specialities at its initiation and ·&#13;
housing the program under the office of the Associate&#13;
Dean for Graduate and Professional Programs&#13;
(presently occupied by William Murin, formerly an&#13;
associate professor of political science) would effectively&#13;
take emphasis off of the business program.&#13;
Unless additional financial support could be attained,&#13;
the resources which were expected to bolster the&#13;
business program would have to be partially used in&#13;
support of the other specialty(s).&#13;
It would be great to have a program offering many&#13;
different specialties, but right now the business&#13;
program still requires more assistance if it is to develop&#13;
enough to offer graduate studies. If that consideration is&#13;
ignored and resources are scattered at the beginning of&#13;
the masters program, proper development of the&#13;
business program is going to become increasing less&#13;
likely to occur.&#13;
The advisory task force to the Chancellor on business&#13;
management recommended that "the business&#13;
graduate program be developed on the !oundation of an&#13;
excellent undergraduate program and prior to the expenditure&#13;
of resources in areas other than business."&#13;
consultants to the task force reinforced their positi_on.&#13;
Kenneth Herrick, former head of collection&#13;
development of the Library-Learning &lt;;enter Library,&#13;
indicated that library holdings for adr;ninisjrative&#13;
specialiazations other than business may be extremely&#13;
inadequate.&#13;
Harold Q.· Langenderfer, a consultant from the&#13;
Graduate School of Business Administration at the&#13;
University of North Carolina, commented on the umbrella&#13;
approach and administration of the program.&#13;
"One of the problems with this (the UIJJbrella approach) is&#13;
that the greatest demand in the school's geographic area is&#13;
for those with a business administration emphasis. Unless&#13;
the program is directed by a person trained in business&#13;
administration and unless the major emphasis is on careers&#13;
in. business administration, it is likely that the program will&#13;
get diffused by trying to do too many things and therefore&#13;
miss its mark.&#13;
''It is my judgment that it would be a mistake to separate&#13;
the two (undergrad. and grad.) programs administratively&#13;
and-or in the use of faculty resources... schools that have&#13;
separated their undergraduate and graduate progr~ms have&#13;
paid a severe price in duplicate resources and diffused&#13;
image. In any case, such a masters program should not be&#13;
created witil a strong leader is hired ... that leader ought to&#13;
have a business administrative orientation."&#13;
As previously mentioned editorially in Ranger,&#13;
Parkside does not have the resources to achieve excellence&#13;
on all fronts; and business related programs&#13;
should be given priority in order to fulfill Parkside's&#13;
special mission. Recently it appears that the business&#13;
management program has been hurting; and with&#13;
tentative consideration being given to initiating the&#13;
masters program under the umbrella approach and&#13;
housing it under the Associate Dean's office, the&#13;
possibility for achieving excellence in this area is not&#13;
looking any more promising.&#13;
Spreading the wealth of the masters program among&#13;
disciplines may be politically advantageous within the&#13;
Parkside community, but extreme caution should be&#13;
taken before ini-tiating an approach which might hurt&#13;
the business pr;ogram.&#13;
I&#13;
/ POLITICAL FORUM&#13;
Matter of choice - Carter .. .. by Bob Jambois and Robert Hoffman&#13;
You do have a choice. You may vote for Jimmy Carter, Jerry Ford,&#13;
Eugene McCarthy, eight other presidental candidates on the ballot;&#13;
you may write in your own preference, or you may stay home. •&#13;
Pollsters predict a record nwnber of eligible voters are going to opt&#13;
for the easy alternative and not vote on Nov. 2.&#13;
Editorial pages and syndicated columnists across the country have&#13;
been making excuses for the poor, misbegotten electorate. who are&#13;
disillusioned by Watergate and the recent Congressional sex scandals.&#13;
Forgive me, I'm not particularly sympathetic to that line of reasoning.&#13;
I lived through Watergate, Wilbur Mills, Wayne Hays, in 1968 my&#13;
candidate was shot, in 1972 my choice lost by a landslide, and on Nov. 2&#13;
I'm going to vote.&#13;
I'm going to vote not because it's "my patriotic duty" but because I&#13;
want to. I want to vote because I know there is a difference between&#13;
the two rnajor candidates. I know that one of these two men is going to&#13;
win and I want to do what I can to make sure the right one gets elected.&#13;
Jerry Ford is an opposer-not an initiator. During his 28 year tenure&#13;
in Congress, Ford opposed medicare, housing subsidies, social&#13;
security benefits, unemployment compensation, veteran's benefits,&#13;
and pension reform.&#13;
However, )t would be unfair to characterize Ford° as being entirely&#13;
devoid of ideas. After all it was dependable and trustworthy Jerry&#13;
1 Ford who tried to start impeachment proceedings against U.S.&#13;
Supreme Court Justice William 0. Douglas ..&#13;
And, don't forget WIN. That was all Jerry's idea too. It was a&#13;
program complete with acronym, buttons, banners, and a flashy&#13;
saying. in short, all the advertising gimmicks normally employed by&#13;
used car dealers. Maybe it moves a lot of used cars, but the inflation&#13;
rate remained in the double digit.range and unemployment climbed.&#13;
When Carter -took over from Lester Maddox, as Governor of Georgia&#13;
he inherited a state with virtually no social service programs, an&#13;
antiquated penal system, an extremely conservative legislature, and&#13;
Lester Maddox as Lieutenant Governor. Despite these .odds Carter succeeded in many: areas .&#13;
• Carter vastly exp~nded the number of community centers for the&#13;
mentally ill 'and r¢tarded. These community centers were partially&#13;
staffed by former :welfare recipients-thereby reducing the welfare&#13;
rolls while at the san;ie time providing improved, compassionate care&#13;
for the handicapped!&#13;
Jimmy Carter reformed Georgia's prison system achieving a major&#13;
step towards turning Georgia's prison system from the warehouse&#13;
that it was into a rehabilitation center.&#13;
Carter upgraded education, hwnanized the Georgia welfare system&#13;
and made both responsive to the legitimate needs of the Georgian people. 1 ,&#13;
Carter pushed th;rough judicial reform creating a new machinery&#13;
for screening prospective judges and removing corrupt, inefficient&#13;
judges.&#13;
Jimmy Carter pushed through the Georgia legislature an antisecrecy&#13;
sunshine law, which opened up the meetings of all the committees&#13;
of the Georgia ;legislature to the public.&#13;
Lets contrast this with 'good ole' team player Jerry Ford. Ford's&#13;
solution to ,the prison problem is to build more prisons, ( create more&#13;
warehouses). Ford favors a 50 percent cutback in the education&#13;
budget, but after all we've all been "victims of mass education."&#13;
Ford's solution to welfare is· to cut benefits by one-third to fifty per- cent.&#13;
Ford has no. judical reforms planned, nor is he going to implement&#13;
sunshine laws. After all it was Ford who, according to Sam Ervin,&#13;
blocked the Watergate investigation until well after the 1972 election.&#13;
Ford puts the.interests of special interests ahead of the interests of&#13;
_, continued on pg. 3&#13;
/&#13;
r&#13;
• &#13;
POLITICAL FORUM CON'T&#13;
,&#13;
Certerc-:»:»: __&#13;
continued from pg. 2&#13;
,&#13;
the general public as evidenced by his opposition in Congr to -&#13;
transit and the Clean, Air Act. ' ess mass&#13;
Fo~d supports ..strong marijuana. laws (Garter wants to&#13;
deCrumnalIZe marijuana) no-knock authority for the poli nd th&#13;
covert operations of the CIA.' ce a e&#13;
Ford wants to have a constit\ltional amendment to ban all aborti&#13;
he opposes national health care, he wants to lax increase for the ;::;&#13;
and a tax decrease for the corporations and the wealthy.&#13;
Ford's views are the result of being isolated in the 'ivory" towers f&#13;
Washington. Ford does not understand the values of the 20th century;&#13;
he doe~ not unders.~nd the hardships of the poor and the&#13;
discrumnation minorities feel (even by people in his own dministration).&#13;
In short, Ford is out of step with the values of ~e&#13;
American people.&#13;
In conclusion, if you are thinking of voting for Gerald Ford and his&#13;
limited view of the Presidency you might as well write in a canteloupe.&#13;
After all a canteloupe WIll do the same thing as Ford has done and&#13;
wants to do; a canteloupe can't demand all the frills of the&#13;
Presidency. and a canteloupe will fulfill all the leadership roles the&#13;
Republican's demand of,a President.&#13;
But if YQuwant a President who will end unemployment, stop inflation,&#13;
restore. tr~t and confidence among the people, someone who&#13;
understands Americans, someone unbeholden to special interests&#13;
then Nov. 2 is your chance to eleel someone who can and will fulfill our&#13;
ideals: Jimmy Carter.&#13;
-&#13;
Carter WIns • •&#13;
hy Phil Hermann&#13;
Wednesday night's second debate between the candidates was much&#13;
hetter then the first. Although the two men were still confirmed&#13;
against real debate, both appeared more ready to do comhat than the&#13;
first time when both were more worried about how they would look.&#13;
Jimmy Carter was vasUy improved in both his speaking manner&#13;
iJOdthe way he stood at the podium; and 1his time he sat down when&#13;
Ford was talking. As a whole he came off much better in appearance&#13;
than his first timeout. How,ever he should really do somethU;g about&#13;
that smile; he looks like a walking Pepsodent commercial.&#13;
As far as content goes there were very few surprises; Carter said&#13;
that Ford had turned the word detente into a joke for the Russian side.&#13;
Carter also hit very hard on the Helsinki Agreement in which he said it&#13;
was an American acceptance of Russia's domination of Eastern&#13;
Europe. Ford angrily replied, "There is. no Soviet domination of&#13;
Eastern Europe, an and there never will be under a Ford Administration."&#13;
Mf. Ford must know something we don't because if the&#13;
Soviets don't control the ,satellite countries, who does? Carter then had&#13;
a weapon to use saying, "I'd like to see Mr. Ford try to convince all the&#13;
Czech, Polish and Romanian Americans of that."&#13;
At best Ford came of as the same robot-like administrator he is. He&#13;
continued saying that his administration has been strong and has&#13;
gollen more than even with the Soviets in the lJetente situation. The&#13;
facts say different. Ford used the same charges of "sparking&#13;
generalities" and "vague programs" on Carter that he used in the&#13;
first debate. Ford had better get different ammunition because he is&#13;
'the clear loser of Debate 2.&#13;
Carter also appeared conservative on the Arab and OPEQUE Oil&#13;
Embargo questions. When asked what he would do if the Arabs used&#13;
this blackmail technique on the U.S. again, Carter replied, "I would&#13;
notjust refuse to sell them arms, but everything; if one of the Arab or&#13;
OPEQUE nations placed an embargo on the U.S. of the magnatitude of&#13;
the past, all trade with them would be cut off."-&#13;
Carter came off a clear winner in this second debate saying&#13;
basically, support our allies, be cautious with our enemies. Carter also&#13;
refused to address Ford as Mr. President or President Ford and this&#13;
reminds me of the psyche technique used by ,Joe Frazier or Cassuis&#13;
Clay (Muhammed Ali). I think it might turn into a real boxing match&#13;
at the next debate, which involves the vice-presidential candidates. In&#13;
this corner, weighing one hundred and seventy pounds, from Minnesota.&#13;
Post Franco&#13;
Spain discussed&#13;
"Post Franco Spain" will be&#13;
the tilie of a talk by Parkside&#13;
Spanish Professor Jose Ortega at&#13;
7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 19, iIi&#13;
the Overlook Lounge of Wyllie&#13;
Library-Learning Center. The&#13;
free public talk will precede a&#13;
question and answer session.&#13;
Ortega, the author of a number&#13;
of books and articles on -Spanish&#13;
literature and politics, has been a&#13;
close observer of the artistic,&#13;
social and political changes&#13;
taking place in Spain since&#13;
Franco's death.&#13;
, He received his bachelors and&#13;
masters degrees from Spanish&#13;
institutions and taught in Spain&#13;
before coming to the U.S., where&#13;
he received his Ph.D. degree at&#13;
Ohio state University. He taught&#13;
at Mercer University and Case&#13;
Wes!ern Reserv,e University&#13;
before joining the Parkside&#13;
faculty in 1970.&#13;
PARKSIDE RANGER OCtober 13. 19763&#13;
\'&#13;
Senator resigns&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The following is a copy of a&#13;
letter submitted at the last&#13;
P.S.G.A. Senate meeting held&#13;
Thursday September 30, 1976.&#13;
Dear P .S.G.A. Senate,&#13;
Due to tbe fact lbat I feel my&#13;
lime will be spent in a mucb more&#13;
productive manner by worlting&#13;
on C.S.C. '5 current projects, I&#13;
hereby tender my resIgnation.&#13;
Though my resignation was not&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
rJ&#13;
accepted, I no longer consider&#13;
myself a senate member.&#13;
The C.S.C. (Concerned Student&#13;
Coalition) projects I referred to&#13;
are: a Book Ce&gt;q&gt;,the Food C&lt;&gt;-&#13;
op, a second student newspaper,&#13;
and a C&lt;Hlp Housing Pro~t. I&#13;
feel that these will all be a direct&#13;
benefit to students and will give&#13;
them my full support.&#13;
, Thank you,&#13;
Rusty TuUewski&#13;
'*'**''*'**''*''*''*'&#13;
Letters to the editor&#13;
**&#13;
are welcome. Contributions&#13;
of up to 250&#13;
worC:s are due by&#13;
Wednesday of each&#13;
week. Names must be&#13;
included on copy, but&#13;
may be withheld upon&#13;
request. The Ranger&#13;
editorial staH shall&#13;
reserve the right to&#13;
edit for length and&#13;
correct spelling.&#13;
The Poirkside Roinger is wrinen 0I1td editltCll&#13;
by. Ihe ~tude",s of Ihe Unhlersily.. of&#13;
Wlsco"sl"-Poirtuide who .Ire sol.ly&#13;
respo"sible for ils edilorioll policy oI"d&#13;
C0tlt ..", Opi"io"s eKpreued .Ire "01&#13;
"ecess.rily repreSe"toilive of those held by&#13;
the sludents, '.culty or i1dml"islroltio" of&#13;
Pilrkside. Editoriill ."d ausi"ess S53·2217;&#13;
Newsroom S5J-229S.&#13;
Woman&#13;
jilted&#13;
(CPS) " Kathy Anderson, a&#13;
Wisconsin student leader, offered&#13;
to drive Senator Proxmire on a&#13;
campaign trip following a&#13;
request· for volunteers from his&#13;
staff. Ms. Anderson was hastily&#13;
jilted and when she wanted to&#13;
know why, she was told by a&#13;
. senatorial aide, "Well, you know·&#13;
-it would look funny."&#13;
Ms. Anderson commented in&#13;
the National On Campus Report:&#13;
"He's just perpetuating the myth&#13;
that a man and a woman couldn't&#13;
he together for p~s of&#13;
business or politics. "&#13;
Fair&#13;
hosted&#13;
Thirty-two organizations from&#13;
Kenosha and Racine are taking&#13;
part in the third annual CarthageCommunity&#13;
Flea Fair in the&#13;
Carthage College Fieldhouse on&#13;
saturday, October 16, from 9 a.m.&#13;
to 4 p.m.&#13;
The groups will oller bargains&#13;
in rummage, baked goods, crafts,&#13;
books, and white elephants. Each&#13;
group will keep its profits for its&#13;
own projects.&#13;
Classified&#13;
CB'S BRAND NEW. Warranty included.&#13;
Cobra 21's $117.00Ray Bougneit 551·7402.&#13;
"WANT TO LEARN PIANO? (Cheap rates!)&#13;
Want 10 teach tap dancing? Call (312) 662·&#13;
6546." Sheila Jeffriese 2501 N. Jackson,&#13;
Waukegan, Ill. 60085 (311) 662-6S46.&#13;
Van l: Thompson FrH lance Photography,&#13;
weddings and candid portraits Phone 6S2&#13;
...,&#13;
WILL DO any ki"d of typ,ng at reasonable&#13;
rat~. For intorma'ion caU 6S2·33JJ&#13;
FOR SALE: Portable S'ereo with Garrar&lt;t&#13;
turntable. ASking SSO Call 6:34SJOS.fter 4&#13;
p.m.&#13;
EOITOR-IN-CHIEF: "''''''11M SI~a&#13;
• IUSiNESS MANAGERS: Ca"', I","', J"'y T...... u... (a .. t.)&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGE.: To'" C r&#13;
NEWS COORDINATO.: .ruce W .,&#13;
OEPARTMENTS:&#13;
AtI",iniltrati_POIicift: .,10M McKIM... y&#13;
. SMI: Dave Irandt&#13;
Stud.nl groups &amp; spoe.ken: Mary Kay Oh"'er&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debbie 100~r&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Jean Tenuta&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS: '.... rey I. swencki, lilt •• r....&#13;
COPY IE DITOR: Ju,.e L.... _&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR, Vol" ThompMOl&#13;
CIRCULATION: Sue MilrqUoirdt&#13;
STAFF: Wendy Miller, Terro GoIyh.rt, Robert Hotlmoln, Chrtl Cl.uMfI, .fl"''' p_lII_s.kI,&#13;
L.rfY Donnelly, Phil Hermol"", R.mO"oI M.ilIef, Allen Irow", Carol Arent., Johft Overman,&#13;
.ob Jilmboil, aev.rly p.nol, •• tsy Neu, Lind. Knuettl.n, K.rln La Fourl." JUidyTrudf'unt,&#13;
5con R-e,"hard, Philip L L,..i".slon&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS P.J. Allolinol, Ric"'y Cooper, R'Ck Flasch&#13;
AO SALE5PERSONS, Joe Loind., Rick Finch&#13;
The quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Performing Friday 8&lt; Saturday&#13;
TRIAD&#13;
Mike Villers 637-2726&#13;
If,,I., to,IM ,&#13;
Ask how you can earn while&#13;
you learn - as a Northwestern Mutual&#13;
college agent. You work part-time,&#13;
attend classes full-time. A limited&#13;
number of internships are still available.&#13;
The Quiet Company&#13;
NORTHWESTER"l MUTUALLIFE' MILWAUKEE~&#13;
SUNDAY&#13;
ALL YOU \\-1'~&#13;
WANT \Sy..v:.&#13;
&lt;.'"\~\ ~~&#13;
C&#13;
~\.\' \\~O&#13;
C&#13;
\..1.'\ \\" ,0&#13;
't"\ \\ I"&#13;
On Spring, West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge Plaza&#13;
632-6151&#13;
WANTED· Sports wrote' lor R"nger 'hat '5&#13;
talented,9OOcI in grammar. and most of ail.&#13;
depefldable SH Jean Tenuf. in the RanglPf&#13;
office. WLLC 0194&#13;
632-2731&#13;
mONo 8&lt; TUES.&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
FEAST SlQ5&#13;
INCLUDES, Salad. Italian&#13;
Bread and a FREE GlAS&#13;
OF WiNE....&#13;
~erbll'8&#13;
~urt _.IUl_&#13;
fug ••• F. So.ns. CLU&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
654-5316&#13;
EARN&#13;
While you&#13;
LEARN&#13;
Donold J. Brink, ClU&#13;
Racine&#13;
•&#13;
POLITICAL FORUM CON'T&#13;
Carter------&#13;
' continued from pg, 2&#13;
the general public as evidenced by his opposition in Congr to · transit and the Clean , Air Act. ess mass&#13;
Fo:d. s~pports . _strong marijuana . laws ( ~arter wants to&#13;
decrunmal1ze. man Juana) no-knock authority for the police and the&#13;
covert operations of the CIA. ·&#13;
Ford wants to have a constitutional amendment to ban all abo ti&#13;
ti 1 h 1th r ons, he opposes na ona ea care, he wants to tax increase for the&#13;
and a tax d_ecrease for the corporations and the wealthy. poor&#13;
Ford's views are the result of being isolated in the 'ivory" towe f&#13;
Washington. Ford does not understand the values of the 20th cent~-&#13;
he ~oe~ n~t un~ers~nd the hardships of the poor and th~&#13;
discnmmatlon minorities feel ( even by people in his own drninistration).&#13;
In short, Ford is out of step with the values of ~e&#13;
American people.&#13;
In conclusion, if you are thinking of voting for Gerald Ford and his&#13;
limited view of the Presi~ency you might as well write in a canteloupe.&#13;
After all a canteloupe w~ll do the same thing as Ford has done and&#13;
wants to do; a canteloupe can't demand all the frills of the&#13;
Presidency; and a canteloupe will fulfill all the leadership roles the&#13;
Republican's demand of a President.&#13;
But if yqu want a President who will end unemployment, stop inflation,&#13;
restore trust and confidence among the people, someone who&#13;
understands Americans, someone unbeholden to special interests&#13;
then Nov. 2 is your chance to elect someone who can and will fulfill ou;&#13;
ideals: Jimmy Carter.&#13;
Carter wins&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
Wednesday night's second debate between the candidates was much&#13;
better then the first. Although the two men were still confirmed&#13;
against real debate, both appeared more ready to do combat than the&#13;
first time when both were more worried about how they would look.&#13;
Jimmy Carter was vastly improved in both his speaking manner&#13;
;pid the way he stood at the podium; and .this time he sat down when&#13;
Ford was talking. As a whole he came off much better in appearance&#13;
than his first time out. How,ever he should really do something about&#13;
that smile; he looks like a walking Pepsodent commercial.&#13;
As far as content goes there were very few surprises; Carter said&#13;
that Ford had turned the word detente into a joke for the Russian side.&#13;
Carter also hit very hard on the Helsinki Agreement in which he said it&#13;
was an American acceptance of Russia's domination of Eastern&#13;
Europe. Ford angrily replied, "There is no Soviet domination of&#13;
Eastern Europe, an and there never will be under a Ford Administration."&#13;
Mr. Ford must know something we don't because if the&#13;
Soviets don't control the satellite countries, who does? Carter then had&#13;
a weapon to use saying, "I'd like to see Mr. For_d try to convince all the&#13;
Czech, Polish and Romanian Americans of that."&#13;
At best Ford came of as the same robot-like administrator he is. He&#13;
continued saying that his administration has been strong and has&#13;
gotten more than even with the Soviets in the detente situation. The&#13;
facts say different. Ford used the same charges of "sparking&#13;
generalities" and "vague programs" on Carter that he used in the&#13;
first debate. Ford had better get different ammunition because he is&#13;
· the clear loser of Debate 2.&#13;
Carter also appeared conservative on the Arab and OPEQUE Oil&#13;
Embargo questions. When asked what he would do if the Arabs used&#13;
this blackmail technique on the U.S. again, Carter replied, "I would&#13;
not just refuse to sell them arms, but everything; if one of the Arab or&#13;
OPEQUE nations placed an embargo on the U.S. of the magnatitude of&#13;
the past, all trade with them would be cut off."-&#13;
Carter came off a clear winner in this second debate saying&#13;
basically, support our allies, be cautious with our enemies. Carter also&#13;
refused to address Ford as Mr. President or President Ford and this&#13;
reminds me of the psyche technique used by Joe Frazier or Cassuis&#13;
Clay (Muhammed Ali). I think it might turn into a real boxing match&#13;
at the next debate, which involves the vice-presidential candidates. In&#13;
this corner, weighing one hundred and seventy pounds, from Minnesota.&#13;
&#13;
Post Franco&#13;
Spain discussed&#13;
"Post Franco Spain" will be&#13;
the title of a talk by Parkside&#13;
Spanish Professor Jose Ortega at&#13;
7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 19, in&#13;
the Overlook Lounge of Wyllie&#13;
Library-Learning Center. The&#13;
free public talk will precede a&#13;
question and answer session.&#13;
Ortega, the author of a number&#13;
of books and articles on .Spanish&#13;
literature and politics, has been a&#13;
close observer of the artistic,&#13;
social and politic al changes&#13;
taking place in Spain since&#13;
Franco's death.&#13;
, He received his bachelors and&#13;
masters degrees from Spanish&#13;
institutions and taught in Spain&#13;
before coming to the U.S., where&#13;
he received his Ph.D. degree at&#13;
Ohio State University. He taught&#13;
at Mercer University and Case&#13;
Western Reserve University&#13;
before joining the Parkside&#13;
faculty in 1970.&#13;
Senator resigns&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The following is a copy of a&#13;
letter submitted at the last&#13;
P.S.G.A. Senate meeting held&#13;
Thursday September 30, 1976.&#13;
Dear P.S.G.A. Senate,&#13;
Due to the fact that I feel my&#13;
time will be spent in a much more&#13;
productive manner by working&#13;
on C.S.C.'s current projects, I&#13;
hereby tender my resignation.&#13;
Though my resignation was not&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is written and edited&#13;
by the students of the University ._ of&#13;
Wisconsin.Parkside who are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
CO(lt•n• Opinions @xpressed are not&#13;
necessanly representative of those held by&#13;
the students. faculty or administration of&#13;
Parkside. Editorial and Business SSl-2217 ;&#13;
Newsroom SSJ-229S.&#13;
Woman&#13;
jilted&#13;
(CPS) - Kathy Anderson, a&#13;
Wisconsin student leader, offered&#13;
to drive Senator Proxmire on a&#13;
campaign trip following a&#13;
request for volunteers from his&#13;
staff. Ms. Anderson was hastily&#13;
jilted and when she wanted to&#13;
know why, she was told by a&#13;
senatorial aide, "Well, you know-&#13;
-it would look funny."&#13;
Ms. Anderson commented in&#13;
the National On Campus Report:&#13;
"He's just perpetuating the myth&#13;
that a man and a woman couldn't&#13;
be together for purposes of&#13;
business or politics."&#13;
Fair&#13;
hosted&#13;
Thirty-two organizations from&#13;
Kenosha and Racine are taking&#13;
part in the third annual CarthageCommunity&#13;
Flea Fair in the&#13;
Carthage College Fieldhouse on&#13;
Saturday, October 16, from 9 a.m.&#13;
to 4 p.m.&#13;
The groups will offer bargains&#13;
in rummage, baked goods, crafts,&#13;
books, and white elephants. Each&#13;
group will keep its profits for its&#13;
own projects.&#13;
Classified&#13;
CB'S BRAND NEW, Warranty included&#13;
Cobra 21's $117 00 Ray Bougneil 551 7402 .&#13;
"WANT TO LEARN PIANO? ( Cheap rates •)&#13;
Want to teach tap dancing? Call (312) 662 -&#13;
6546." Sheila Jeffrie5t 2501 N . Jackson,&#13;
Waukegan, Ill . 60085 (312') 662 .6546.&#13;
Van E: Thompson Frtt lance Photography.&#13;
weddings and candid portra,ts Phone 6S2&#13;
8862&#13;
WILL DO any kind of typ,ng al roasonable&#13;
rates For information call 6S2 -3373&#13;
FOR SALE: Portable Stereo with Garrard&#13;
turntable Asking SSO Call 6_3, 5305 afltr ,&#13;
p .m .&#13;
WANTED : Sports wr,ter for Ranger that ,s&#13;
taltt1ted, good ,n Qrammar. and most of ail .&#13;
dependable See Jean Tenuta in the Ranger&#13;
Office, WLLC 019'&#13;
PARKSIDE RANGER October 13, 1976 3&#13;
i&#13;
I&#13;
)r_)&#13;
accepted, I no longer consider&#13;
myself a senate member.&#13;
The C.S.C. ( Concerned Student&#13;
Coalition) projects I referred to&#13;
are: a Book Co-op, the Food Coop,&#13;
a second student newspaper,&#13;
and a Co-op Housing Project. I&#13;
feel that these will all be a direct&#13;
benefit to students and will give&#13;
them my full support.&#13;
Thank you,&#13;
Rusty Tutlewski&#13;
EOITOR-IN -CHIEF : Junn,ne Sipsma&#13;
'*'*'*'*''*'*''*''*''*''*''*'&#13;
Letters to the editor&#13;
are welcome. Contributions&#13;
of up to 2S0&#13;
wor&lt;.:s are due by&#13;
Wednesday of each&#13;
week. Names must be&#13;
included on copy, but&#13;
may be withheld upon&#13;
request. The Ranger&#13;
editoria I staff sha II&#13;
reserve the right to&#13;
edit for length and ,&#13;
correct spelling.&#13;
• BUSINESS MANAGERS : Catlly Brnall, Judy Trudrunt (HSI.)&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER : Tom C-r&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR : Bruce wa,nar&#13;
DEPARTMENTS,&#13;
Adm,n,strat,on-Polic,es~ John Mcl&lt;loskey&#13;
SMI : D•v• Br•ncff&#13;
Studtnl group• &amp; spaaken , M•ry K1y Ohmar&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR , Dtbb1t B1utr&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR , Joan Ttnuta&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS 1tffrty j . &gt;wtnck,, 8111 Barke&#13;
COPY EDITOR JuJ1t L1n9e&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR · V•n Thomp,on&#13;
CIRCULATION , Sut Muqu•rdt STAFF Wendy Mllle.r. Tern G•yhart. Robert Hoffman , Chr11 Clausen, Brlcttet Pend1ow11u,&#13;
Larry Donnelly, Phil Herm•nn, R1mon1 Maillet. Allen Brown, Carol Ar1nU, John Overm•n,&#13;
Bob J1mbo,s, Beverly Pella, Betsy Neu. Linda Knudtson, Kar,n La Fourier .. Jl,Jdy Tructrunt,&#13;
Scott R-emhiard. Ph,hp L L1v1ng,ton&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS p J Auohna, Ricky Cooptr, Rtck FIHCh&#13;
AD SALESPERSONS Joe Linda. Rick FIHCh&#13;
The quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Mike Villers 637 -2726 ,,,, ,,,,,, lo ,,,.,,,,&#13;
Performing Friday &amp; Saturday&#13;
On Spring, West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge Plaza&#13;
632-6151&#13;
EARN&#13;
While you&#13;
LEARN&#13;
TRIAD&#13;
moN. &amp; TUES.&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
FEAST $1.Q5&#13;
INCLUDES: Solod. ltolion&#13;
6reod ond o FREE GLAS&#13;
OF WINE.. ..&#13;
~erbu'B&#13;
~urt&#13;
,ua &amp; RUTAUR&#13;
Ask how you can arn while&#13;
you learn - a a orthwe tern Mutual&#13;
colleg agent. You work part-tim ,&#13;
attend cla ses full -time. A limit d&#13;
number of intern hips are still a atlable.&#13;
Donald J. Brink, CLU&#13;
Racine&#13;
632-2731&#13;
Eugene F. Soens, CLU&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
654•5316&#13;
The Quiet Company&#13;
ORTH\\ESTEII &gt;,,t TUAL LIFE · MILWAUKEE ~ &#13;
One&#13;
sweet DreulD&#13;
~~~&#13;
.' &lt; , )1&#13;
1:\, &lt; ,~I .•~~ ~ , .&#13;
• •&#13;
• This Coupon is •&#13;
• worth 50c on all •&#13;
• items listed below &lt; •&#13;
• Good thru October •&#13;
• only! One Coupon •&#13;
• per customer per •&#13;
" purchase. Happy •&#13;
• Holidays. Remember ••&#13;
• we never close. •&#13;
,~ ........•,&#13;
Hey, scholars, look at&#13;
these gift selections.&#13;
Everything for Mind &amp;&#13;
Body is right here at&#13;
two stores ... your&#13;
stores with atmosphere.&#13;
• aecerda a Tapel. ALL newreleases&#13;
stacked floor to&#13;
ceiling!&#13;
• Import alb .... We're" the&#13;
one store in town that&#13;
carries foreign releases.&#13;
• Special orden. Hard-to-get&#13;
records and tapes with&#13;
guaranteed one day&#13;
.delivery.&#13;
• Jewelry. Hand craCtad •&#13;
beautiful for style conscious&#13;
guys and gals.&#13;
• Tape:ltrle.. Mobiles. InceDS8&#13;
burners. Stash&#13;
boxes.&#13;
• IDc..... Sticks and cones&#13;
to tickle your 0088.&#13;
• Picture •. Decoupage. Wall&#13;
hangings. Artists: Escher,&#13;
__ Pitre, Roger 0880.&#13;
Rosamond.&#13;
• Upllnl to create any&#13;
atmosphere.&#13;
• Leather Goods, WalletsPcuehes-c-Purses&#13;
c- 881tsHats&#13;
&amp;: accessories in&#13;
abundance. Beautifully&#13;
handcrafted.&#13;
• PSlBphernaU. - Pipes.&#13;
Papers. Smoking Accessories.&#13;
Party necessities&#13;
from around the world.&#13;
• Waterbeds, We're&#13;
everything in Waterbeds.&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
5010 Seventh Avenue&#13;
654·3578&#13;
WEST&#13;
3910 Seventy Fifth Street&#13;
694·2404&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
Columbusmythed Orient&#13;
1--------------- cu &amp; SAVEI ~&lt;&#13;
_ PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES &lt; BOARD UPCOMING EVENTS 1&#13;
_ Concerts. Dances - Sat., Oct. 16 MOVIES (All $1.00 in Cinema) --&#13;
_ DISCO featuring WRKR OJ. MARK WINDSOR ''Touch of Evil'! Wed., Oct, 13 2,30 p.m. 7,30 p.m.-&#13;
_ 9 p.m, Adm, 75' UW·P students Thurs Oct 14 2 - -&#13;
I&#13;
U&#13;
' , .,. ,30 p.m. 7·30 pm_&#13;
ruon Square 1.00 others ------------------. ..&#13;
------------~-------&lt;------------ ----------'--&#13;
~ Sat., Oct. 23 ••THE MOVIES "Nashville" Fri., Oct. 15 7,00 p.m. 904S p.m.-!&#13;
= plus RIO 9 p.m. Union Sun., Oct. 17 7,30 p.m. Q&#13;
.. '2.00 UW-P students advance ------.:...------________ ----------- =iii&#13;
!:: '3.00 llthers s- \:: &lt;_----. "Animal Fri., Oct, 22 700, p.m. 9 ~ ,00 ·p.m. _ I,Fri., Nov. 5 ,. TOM. CHAPIN Crackers" Sun~, Oct, ~4 7,30 p.m. i&#13;
_ 8 p.m, (lnema Theatre &lt; --------------------------------_&#13;
_ '2,50 lJW-P students CaMING SOON, "The Birds" "Psycho" "M ASH" ' " ., , , assenger "The P "_&#13;
__________ •__ ~:~_~~~_____________ "Hearts of the West", "Brewster I\'IcCloud". ' _&#13;
_ &lt; SKI TRIP _ COMING HARRY CHAPIN Park Cily, Utah $205. &lt; COFFEEHOUSE -&#13;
__ SOON.. THURSDAY, 'NOV. 11 "01",,.lift tickets; parties, more 0"""" b". C"'.mi,i,m. Barry Drake -_&#13;
r.._. ...... SIGN UP IN PARKSIDEUNIONOFFICE Nov. 2 &amp; 3 Union Square _ --------------Cl" &amp; SAVE----------- ..&#13;
Contact&#13;
by Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
In P.S.G.A .• Inc.'s continuing efforts to improve services to students&#13;
complaints about the financial aids appeal procedure have been&#13;
discussed with Jan Ocker, director of the department. In the past&#13;
Financial Aids appeals have been reviewed by the full staff of the F.A.&#13;
staff counselors. This meant that your appeal was reviewed by the&#13;
same person who heard your initial request and he-she participated in&#13;
the discussion of your appeal and also voted.&#13;
This practice is a violation of the procedural 'due process which&#13;
gurantees that any individual appealing a decision must get a fair,&#13;
jmpartial review of the petition of appeal by unbiased parties. In other&#13;
words, the first jndge, if you'll forgive the analogy, has made a&#13;
decision andruled on your case. That same judge can not and must&#13;
not participate in hearing and-or ruling when you appeal that first&#13;
decision,&#13;
Mr. Ocker assnres me that the appeal process will be dhanged as&#13;
soon as possible. He said that the Financial Aids Department wants to&#13;
help students all,that it reasonably and' legally can, given the small&#13;
staff and limited financial aidS resourses. .. '&#13;
Another complaint discussed with Mr. Oker was the dehwnanizing&#13;
method of the review of the student appeals. Many students want to be&#13;
present when the appeal is being considered in order to plead their&#13;
cause. It would help the appeal is being cpnsidered in order to plead&#13;
their cause. It would help the appeal process if a student could be&#13;
informed as to when their petition of appeal was being heard so that&#13;
thev could become a human being to the people reviewing their case .&#13;
by Martin Brown&#13;
Pacific News Service&#13;
Editors Note: Martin Brown writes regularly for Paelfic News,&#13;
usually on science and the environment.&#13;
The myth of Christopher Columbus' discovery of America has been&#13;
frequently and convincingly puncturad- and yet it survives. But now,&#13;
anew study of Columbus has appeared that adds insult to injury.&#13;
Columbus, when he arrived introduced to these shores all manner&#13;
of mayhem, murder, and greed,&#13;
In Columbus; His Enterprise (monthly Review Press, 1976)&#13;
Kiningsberger, a novelist turned historian, sets out to take "a cold and&#13;
hard look at what Colwnbus was all about." In the process-involving&#13;
examination of historical studies and the writings of Columbus and his&#13;
contemporaries-not even the most treasured scboolroom tradition&#13;
survives: Columbus, says Kiningsberger, was far from alone in&#13;
believing that the earth was round. Most educated people Of his time&#13;
were convinced of the earth's roundness.&#13;
Columbus-a self-educated merchant seaman-~liff;red only in&#13;
11Ie quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
It is all too easy to refuse a piece of paper-confronting the preson is&#13;
much more difficult. There are human beings with human needs and&#13;
human feelings who ought to be teated with human compassion and&#13;
sensitivity.&#13;
Mr. Ocker again assures me that efforts will be made to inform&#13;
students of the time and place of the appeal hearing so that the student&#13;
may be present if he-she wishes. -&#13;
Student government plans to follow-up the informal agreements to&#13;
ensure tha 'these more equitible and humane procedures are implemented.&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER october 13, 1976&#13;
Mike Villers 637-2726&#13;
11'. 11111' " ,III",;&#13;
Toy Drive Next Week&#13;
Just a reminder that P.S.G.A.'s Toy Drive on behalf of the Child&#13;
Care Center is being held this week. Please bring safe, small toys for&#13;
the little folks at the center.&#13;
• Voter Registration at Parkside&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. is conducting a voter registration drive. It was&#13;
decided that the postcard method of registration would be most effective&#13;
at Parkside since we draw students from several counties.&#13;
Look for the posters that show you how to fill out the card. There will&#13;
also be people on campus who have been deputized to register voters&#13;
on the spot at tables for Kenosha residents only. Racine refused to&#13;
deputize anyone from Parkside. It will also be possible for voters to&#13;
register at the polls. '&#13;
Register to vote. Itdoes matter how you feel about a candidate, and&#13;
YOUR VOTE COUNTS.&#13;
,.&#13;
believing that the earth was much smaller than it is. His mistaken&#13;
belief that Asia, rich with spices and exotics, lay just over the western&#13;
horizon prompted his promotional campaign before the royal courts&#13;
of Europe.&#13;
.Spanish monarchs Ferdinand and Isabella, who finally granted&#13;
Columbus funds for his expedition, knew little about sea exploration&#13;
and considered the effort a shot in the dark-worth the risk only&#13;
because it was not very expensive-says Kiningsberger, They even&#13;
agreed to Columbus' terms: 10 percent of all trade with Asia, admiralty&#13;
over the western ocean and governorship of any newly found&#13;
lands. Landing in the New World, Columbus wrote in his log, "here is a&#13;
people to be converted to our.Holy Faith by love and friendship and not&#13;
by force ...' But in the same log he added, "should your Majesties&#13;
command it, all the inhabitants could be taken away to Castile, or&#13;
made slaves on the island. With 50 men we could subjugate them all&#13;
and make them do whatever we want." &lt;&#13;
. In fact, the natives of Haiti-which Columbus tbought was Asiawould&#13;
never be converted to Christianity, but would be subjugated and&#13;
then exterminated by Columbus as he tried to squeeze the riches of the&#13;
Orient out of the impoverished Arawak Indians.&#13;
Reporting to Ferdinand and Isabella on his first voyage, Columbus&#13;
wrote, "Hispaniola is a miracle, Mountains and hills, plains and&#13;
pastures, are both fertile and beautlfuL.the harbors are unbelievably&#13;
good and there are many wide rivers of which the majority contain&#13;
gold ...Tbere are many spices, and great mines of gold and other&#13;
metals ..." AsKinjngsberger comments, "All of this was fantasy."&#13;
Later an agent of Columbus promisad Ferdinand and Isabella, "00&#13;
the next voyage tbe ships will carry away such quantities of gold that&#13;
anyone wbo hears of it will be dumbfotinded."&#13;
Is it worth spoiling Columbus pay by telling the truth about&#13;
Christopher Columbus?&#13;
Koningsberger obviously thinlcs it is. "Shouldn,t we wind up that&#13;
Enterprise of Columbus," he asks, "and start thinking of a truly New&#13;
World?"&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 13, 1976&#13;
toe&#13;
sweet&#13;
Dream&#13;
Hey, scholars, look at&#13;
these gift selections.&#13;
Everything for Mind &amp;&#13;
Body is right here at&#13;
two stores . . . your&#13;
stores with atmosphere.&#13;
• Records • Tapes. ALL new releases stacked floor to&#13;
ceiling!&#13;
• Import albUtDs, We're the one store in town that&#13;
carries foreign releases.&#13;
• Special orden. Hard-to-get&#13;
records and tapes with&#13;
guaranteed one day&#13;
delivery.&#13;
• Jewelry. Hand crafted a:&#13;
beautiful for style con- scious guys and gals.&#13;
• Tapestries. Mobiles. In- cense burners. Stash&#13;
boxes.&#13;
• Incense. Sticks and cones to ticlcle your nose.&#13;
•Pictures.Decoupage. Wall&#13;
hangings. Artists: Escher,&#13;
Pitre, Roger Dean,&#13;
Rosemond.&#13;
• U11htln11 to create any&#13;
atmosphere.&#13;
• Leather Goods. Wallets - Pou1,hes-Purses-BeltsHa&#13;
ts &amp; accessories in&#13;
abundance. Beautifully&#13;
handcrafted.&#13;
• Paraphernalia - Pipes. Papers. Smoking Accessories.&#13;
Party necessities&#13;
from around the world.&#13;
• Waterbeds. We're&#13;
everything in Waterbeds.&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
5010 Seventh Avenue&#13;
654-3578&#13;
WEST&#13;
3910 Seventy Fifth Street&#13;
694-2404&#13;
Contact weekly by student government&#13;
by Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
In P.S.G.A., Inc.'s continuing efforts to improve services to students&#13;
complaints about the financial aids appeal procedure have been&#13;
discussed with Jan Ocker, director of the department. In the past&#13;
Financial Aids appeals have been reviewed by the full staff of the F .A.&#13;
staff counselors. This meant that your appeal was reviewed by the&#13;
same person who heard your initial request and he-she participated in&#13;
the discussion of your appeal and also voted.&#13;
This practice is a violation of the procedural ·due process which&#13;
gurantees that any individual appealing a decision must. get a fair,&#13;
jmpartial review of the petition of appeal by unbiased parties. In other&#13;
words, the first judge, if you'll forgive the analogy, has made a&#13;
decision and.ruled on your case. That same judge can not and must&#13;
not participate in hearing and-or ruling when you appeal that first&#13;
decision.&#13;
Mr. Ocker assures me that the appeal process will be dhanged as&#13;
soon as possible. He said that the Financial Aids Department wants to&#13;
help students all that it reasonably and legally can, given the small&#13;
staff and limited financial aids resourses.&#13;
Another complaint discussed with Mr. Oker was the dehumanizing&#13;
method of the review of the student appeals. Many students want to be&#13;
present when the appeal is being considered in order to plead their&#13;
cause. It would help the appeal is being c9nsidered in order to plead&#13;
their cause. It would help the appeal process if a student could be&#13;
informed as to when their petition of appeal was being heard so that&#13;
they could become a human being to the people reviewing their case.&#13;
It is all too easy to refuse a piece of paper-confronting the preson is&#13;
much more difficult. There are human beings with human nee'ds and&#13;
human feelings who ought to be teated with human compassion and&#13;
sensitivity.&#13;
Mr. Ocker again assures me that efforts will be made to inform&#13;
students of the time and place of the appeal hearing so that the student&#13;
may be present if he-she wishes. -&#13;
Student government plans to follow-up the informal agreements to&#13;
ensure tha 'these more equitible and humane procedures are implemented.&#13;
Toy Drive Next Week&#13;
Just a reminder that P.S.G.A.'s Toy Drive on behalf of the Child&#13;
Care Center is being held this week. Please bring safe, small toys for&#13;
the little folks at the center. · Voter Registration at Parkside&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. is conducting a voter registration drive. It was&#13;
decided that the postcard method of registration would be most effective&#13;
at Parkside since we draw students from several counties.&#13;
Look for the posters that show you how to fill out the card. There· will&#13;
also be people on campus who have been deputized to register voters&#13;
on the spot at tables for Kenosha residents only. Racine refused to&#13;
deputize anyone from Parkside. It will also be possible for voters to&#13;
register at the polls.&#13;
Register to vote. It does matter how you feel about a candidate, and&#13;
YOUR VOTE COUNTS.&#13;
,_&#13;
Columbus mythed Orient&#13;
by Martin Brown&#13;
Pacific News Service&#13;
Editors Note: Martin Brown writes regularly for Pacific News,&#13;
usually on science and the environment.&#13;
The myth of Christopher Columbus' discovery of America has been&#13;
frequently and convincingly punctured- and yet it survives. But now,&#13;
a new study of Columbus has appeared that adds insult to injury.&#13;
Columbus, when he arrived introduced to these shores all manner&#13;
of mayhem, murder, and greed.&#13;
In Columbus; His Enterprise (monthly Review Press, 1976)&#13;
Kiningsberger, a novelist turned historian, sets out to take "a cold and&#13;
hard look at what Columbus was all about.'' In the process-involving&#13;
examination of historical studies and the writings of Columbus and.his&#13;
contemporaries-not even the most treasured schoolroom tradition&#13;
survives: Columbus, says Kiningsberger, was far from alone in&#13;
believing that the earth was round. Most educated people of his time&#13;
were convinced of the earth's roundness.&#13;
Columbus-a self-educated merchant seaman~;red only in&#13;
The quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Mike Villers 637 -2726&#13;
11'1 1/1111 lo ,,, •• ,,&#13;
believing that the earth was much smaller than it is. His mistaken&#13;
belief that Asia, rich with spices and exotics, lay just over the western&#13;
horizon prompted his promotional campaign before the royal courts&#13;
of Europe.&#13;
.Spanish monarchs Ferdinand and Isabella, who finally granted&#13;
Columbus funds for his expedition, knew little about sea exploration&#13;
and considered the effort a shot in the dark-worth the risk only&#13;
because it was not very expensive-says Kiningsb~rger. They even&#13;
agreed to Columbus' terms: 10 percent of all trade with Asia, admiralty&#13;
over the western ocean and governorship of any newly found&#13;
lands. Landing in the New World, Columbus wrote in his log, "here is a&#13;
people to be converted to our Holy Faith by love and friendship and not&#13;
by force .. .'' But in the same log he added, "should your Majesties&#13;
command it, all the inhabitants could be taken away to Castile, or&#13;
made slaves on the island. With 50 men we could subjugate them all&#13;
and make them do w.hatever we want."&#13;
In fact, the natives of Haiti-which Columbus thought was Asiawould&#13;
never be converted to Christianity, but would be subjugated and&#13;
then exterminated by Columbus as he tried to squeeze the riches of the&#13;
Orient out of the impoverished Arawak Indians.&#13;
Reporting to Ferdinand and Isabella on his first voyage, Columbus&#13;
wrote, "Hispaniola is a miracle. Mountains and hills, plains and&#13;
pastures, are both fertile and beautiful...the harbors are unbelievably&#13;
good and there are many wide rivers of which the majority contain&#13;
gold ... There are many spices, and great mines of gold and other&#13;
metals .. .'' AsKini,ngsberger comments, "All of this was fantasy."&#13;
Later an agent of Columbus promised Ferdinand and Isabella, "On&#13;
the next voyage the ships will carry away such quantities of gold ·that&#13;
anyone who hears of it will be dumbfounded.''&#13;
Is it worth spoiling Columbus pay by telling the truth about&#13;
Christopher Columbus? _&#13;
Koningsberger obviously thinks it is .. "Shouldn't we wind up that&#13;
Enterprise of Columbus," he asks, "and start thinking of a truly New&#13;
World?"&#13;
,--------------- CLIP &amp; SAVE, ______________ _&#13;
1 PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES · aoARD UPCOMING EVENTS 1&#13;
I Concerts - Dances sat., oct. 16 MOVIES (All $1.00 in Cinema) I&#13;
I DISCO featuring WRKR D.J. MARK WINDSOR "Touch of Ev"il" w d O I&#13;
I e ., ct. 13 2,30 p.m. _ 7,30 p.m. I&#13;
9 p.m., Adm. 75c UW-P students Th o&#13;
I . $ - urs., ct. 14 2,30 pm 7.30 pm I&#13;
Union Square 1.00 others ----------------------- · · · · ·&#13;
.-------------------· ----------- --------. ~ Sat., Oct. 23 ·- THE MOVIES "Nashville" Fri., Oct. 15 7:00p.m. 9:45 p.m. - .&#13;
~ plus RIO 9 · p.m. Union Sun., Oct. 17 7,30 p.m. d&#13;
o,a $2.00 UW-P students advance - -------------------- :;; ----------- !:: $3.00 pthers eo ~-------------- ---------,----- "Animal Fri., Oct. 22 7:00 p.m. 9:00 p.m. t:&#13;
I 'Fri., Nov. 5 - TOM . CHAPIN Crackers" Sun'., Oct. 24 1,3() p.m i&#13;
I 8 p.m. Cinema Theatre · -- --------------- - --- --- ----- - - - 1&#13;
I $2.50 lJW-P students COMIN(, SOON, " The Birds" "Psycho" "MA s H .. "Th p .. I , , . . . . , e ossenger ,&#13;
l---------.--~:~-~~e~s ____________&#13;
"Hearts of the West", "Brewster McCloud" . I&#13;
I SKI TRIP&#13;
I COMING HARRY CHAPIN Park City, Utah $205 - · COFFEEHOUSE I&#13;
1 SOON: THURSDAY, Nov. 11 '""""·:;::,::::· ;~: • .'.':.'::'·'&#13;
·· Barry Drake 1&#13;
L__ s1GN up 1N PARKs1oe uN1ON oFF1cE Nov. 2 &amp; 3 Union Square 1&#13;
1 ------------•CLIP &amp; SAVE _______________ __&#13;
- . - -&#13;
i1&#13;
I &#13;
s&#13;
l&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
l&#13;
-~-&lt;Y~I&#13;
~~~ ~-", I _ ON THE BEACH ~~~~F ~Ston~s r~unded and smooth with time,&#13;
.. Feeling like the smooth insides of almonds.&#13;
The moisture in the air,&#13;
The boats silently sailing by,&#13;
Sand blown softly and tenderly with the-wind .&#13;
...and •&#13;
the&#13;
1&#13;
S&#13;
Al'\DRE THE CANNIBAL INVITES ME FOR LUNCH&#13;
It was an expensive restaurant&#13;
the soft hued lights&#13;
hung from the ceiling&#13;
like glowing oranges&#13;
waves&#13;
roll&#13;
. in...&#13;
Those birds flying solitary over the shore&#13;
Unafraid or unknowing of the power of man&#13;
...still '&#13;
the&#13;
My friend and I&#13;
were nearly ejected&#13;
from the place because of Andre's&#13;
attire He was naked&#13;
but. for the strung bones about&#13;
his waist and a carved ivory pin through his nose&#13;
waves&#13;
roll&#13;
in...&#13;
My mind- set in a trance&#13;
Time is relevant,&#13;
Problems just don't seem so bad,&#13;
When the waves roll in&#13;
And lullabye me with the sweet&#13;
Sweet song of tranquility.&#13;
Reservations confirmed&#13;
we were escorted to a table&#13;
which I could lie comfortably upon&#13;
Iwarned Andre&#13;
for the last time&#13;
"Tell them to baste me&#13;
in olive oil&#13;
or something."&#13;
Isaid.&#13;
"I eat a lot of&#13;
peanut butter sandwiches&#13;
and don't want to stick&#13;
to the roof of your mouth."&#13;
I watch and understand,&#13;
And my world is beautiful&#13;
....as&#13;
the&#13;
waves&#13;
roll&#13;
in... I&#13;
t&#13;
s&#13;
Debbie&#13;
Andre asked the waiter . POLITICS&#13;
if be could have me&#13;
well done,&#13;
and we were stiffly told&#13;
to leave the premises&#13;
which embarrassed Andre&#13;
The power plays&#13;
in life relationships&#13;
are attempts to&#13;
conceal&#13;
the unpolished, undiplomatic self&#13;
'under a disappointingly transparent veneer&#13;
of the strategies of sophisticated (?) ettiquette,&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
r:&#13;
"Wait till my diner's club&#13;
hears of this!"&#13;
he growled,&#13;
. and apologized&#13;
for not&#13;
eating me&#13;
as promised Judith Trudrung&#13;
Escape from the game is only&#13;
to the Truth.&#13;
1&#13;
It&#13;
Mike Villers 637·2726&#13;
If, II"" " 'UII"&#13;
'1&#13;
••I&#13;
••&#13;
1•&#13;
I&#13;
•&#13;
"&#13;
e&#13;
"II ',.&#13;
1/1&#13;
=...&#13;
I&#13;
-.&#13;
il&#13;
~&#13;
Hungry myself no'!!'&#13;
we went to a local hamburger&#13;
joint&#13;
Ihad a filet-o-fish&#13;
a coffee and a yen&#13;
for olive oil&#13;
The quiet leader in synth~tic lubrieatiOll&#13;
I~ -&#13;
~ "'l' 'j&#13;
"'-. G~l~ &lt;f\\\""" t&#13;
Andre finished off ~"&#13;
~; .,~, .,&#13;
Ronald McDonald&#13;
three pounds of raw ground beef&#13;
and a full bladder to go.&#13;
William Barke&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER OCtober 13, 19765&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
. THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
Stop Ill!&#13;
shed a new life on shopping!&#13;
REMEMBER THE PSGA ..&#13;
TC:&gt;YDR1VE&#13;
TO BENEFIT THE PARKSIOE CHILO CARE CENTER&#13;
C'ct.18-22&#13;
DROP BOXES WILL BE LOCATED ON CAMPUS AT:&#13;
_ MAIN PLA~E&#13;
_ 0 - 1 LEVEL OF CLASSROOM BUILDING&#13;
_ STUDENT UNION&#13;
TOYS MAY BE DROPPED OFF AT THE CHILD CARE CE..NTER BETWEEN 7:30 a.m. s 5:00 p.m.&#13;
HELP US&#13;
MAKE A LelT&#13;
elf&#13;
KIDS&#13;
HAPPY!&#13;
~ EASY LIVING&#13;
If you got the&#13;
GUTS,&#13;
Lee has the&#13;
PANTS I&#13;
I •&#13;
r&#13;
,.,,,\&#13;
-\ ... ,'..,'&#13;
' ....... x&#13;
.\ ,,' .&#13;
For men who ride&#13;
bulls 'n broncs, or just&#13;
like to watci') the action,&#13;
lOO6l; 'Of ttll$ bfonded lee kJbeI&#13;
$14&#13;
Go West with us.&#13;
USE WARDS&#13;
CHARG·ALL •&#13;
CREDIT&#13;
360052nd Street KENOSHA&#13;
Phone 658-4331&#13;
OPEN DAILY: Moatbru Sat. 10:. A.M. 101:. P.M.&#13;
s.•. 1%10 S P.M.&#13;
s&#13;
d&#13;
d&#13;
s&#13;
I.&#13;
I\&#13;
s&#13;
s&#13;
1&#13;
.1&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
·1&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
n&#13;
,..&#13;
:;&#13;
f10&#13;
~&#13;
:&#13;
"' I&#13;
·I&#13;
I&#13;
I - I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
-'----&#13;
.:z.=~~--.&#13;
--- ;, -&#13;
C&#13;
ANDRE THE CANNIBAL INVITES ME FOR LUNCH&#13;
It was an expensive restaurant waves&#13;
roll the soft hued lights&#13;
hung from the ceiling&#13;
like glowing oranges&#13;
My friend and I&#13;
were nearly ejected&#13;
from the place because of Andre's&#13;
attire He was naked&#13;
but for the strung bones about&#13;
in ...&#13;
Those birds flying solitary over the shore&#13;
Unafraid or unknowing of the power of m'an&#13;
... still '&#13;
the&#13;
waves&#13;
roll&#13;
in ... his waist and a carved ivory pin through his nose My i;nind- set in a trance&#13;
Time is relevant,&#13;
Reservations confirmed&#13;
we were escorted to a table&#13;
which I could lie comfortably upon&#13;
I warned Andre&#13;
for the last time&#13;
"Tell them to baste me&#13;
in olive oil&#13;
or something."&#13;
I said.&#13;
"I eat a lot of&#13;
peanut butter sandwiches&#13;
and don't want to stick&#13;
to· the roof of your mouth."&#13;
Andre asked the waiter&#13;
if he could have me&#13;
well done,&#13;
and we were stiffly told&#13;
to leave the premises&#13;
which embarrassed Andre&#13;
"Wait till my diner's club&#13;
hears of this! "&#13;
he growled,&#13;
· and apologized&#13;
for not&#13;
eating me&#13;
as promised&#13;
Hungry myself no':Y&#13;
we went to a local hamburger&#13;
joint&#13;
I had a filet-o-fish&#13;
a coffee and a yen&#13;
for olive oil&#13;
Andre finished off&#13;
Ronald McDonald&#13;
three pounds of raw ground beef&#13;
and a full bladder to go.&#13;
William Barke&#13;
Problems just don't seem so bad,&#13;
When the waves roll in&#13;
And lullabye me with the sweet&#13;
Sweet song of tranquility.&#13;
I watch and understand,&#13;
And my world is beautiful&#13;
.... as&#13;
the&#13;
waves&#13;
roll&#13;
in ...&#13;
Debbie&#13;
. POLITICS&#13;
The power plays&#13;
in life relationships&#13;
are attempts to&#13;
conceal&#13;
the unpolished, undiplomatic self&#13;
under a disappointingly transparent veneer&#13;
of the strategies of sophisticated ( ?) ettiquette.&#13;
Escape from the game is only&#13;
to the Truth.&#13;
Judith Trudrung&#13;
Mike Villers 637 -2726 ,,,, 111111 lo ,,,.,,,,&#13;
REMEMBER THE PSGA&#13;
TC&gt;Y DR-IVE&#13;
TO BENEFIT THE PARKSIDE CHILD CARE CENTER&#13;
Oct. 18-22&#13;
DROP BOXES WILL BE LOCATED ON CAMPUS AT:&#13;
- MAIN PLACE&#13;
_ D - 1 LEVEL OF CLASSROOM BUILDING&#13;
- STUDENT UNION&#13;
TOYS MAY BE DROPPED OFF AT THE CHILD CARE CE,NTER BETWEEN 7 ·30 a.m . &amp; 5 :00 p.m .&#13;
HELP US&#13;
MAKE A L()T&#13;
()f&#13;
KIDS&#13;
HAPPY!&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 13, 1976 s&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
Stop 111 !&#13;
shed e new Life on shopping I&#13;
EASY LIVING&#13;
If you got the&#13;
GUTS,&#13;
Lee has the&#13;
PANTS!&#13;
'I!: ::c.&#13;
LEE RIDERS&#13;
BOOTOJIS&#13;
For men who ride&#13;
bulls 'n broncs, or just&#13;
like to watch the action.&#13;
look !Of this bronded lee label&#13;
$}4&#13;
Go West with us.&#13;
USE WARDS&#13;
CHARG-ALL&#13;
CREDIT&#13;
3600 52nd Street KENOSHA&#13;
Phone 658-4331&#13;
OPEN DAILY: Mon tbru Sat. 10:00 A.M. to 9: P.M. Sun. 1% to S P.M. &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 13, 1976&#13;
/&#13;
,&#13;
CA Theater to be,haunted&#13;
You caused me grief&#13;
But since you're gone&#13;
I feel a kind Of relief&#13;
of&#13;
sweaty hands&#13;
and that great bug quarry in&#13;
my stomach!&#13;
,You were a rock,&#13;
\ that drained everything inside me&#13;
. from trying to budge you.&#13;
I didn't have.a batapult to ease !.hestrain&#13;
and now that you're not here&#13;
itseems like I ate a hushel of prunes and&#13;
now the going is free, easy, and&#13;
great!&#13;
I'm off and running a new' race!&#13;
Scollie&#13;
by Rohert JUk&#13;
EditOrs Note: On October 22, 23, &amp; 24 the FjlJe Arts Division and&#13;
Dramatic Arts will present "GhOSts", a play by Henrik Ibsen, In tile&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre. We the cast would Uke to present to the&#13;
readers of the Ranger a Ullie background on Henrik Ibsen and tile&#13;
things. that inflnenced his writing Ghosts.&#13;
Norway has a size of 125,000 square miJes which is just about the size&#13;
of the State of New Mexico. It has a terrain which is similar to that of&#13;
the western part of the western part of the State of Wisconsin. Norway&#13;
. is a country of rugged mountains, 'which makes the land poor for&#13;
farming. Although Norway must import some of her foods, she has a&#13;
I8rge export in lumber. Fisheries, and whaling are other chief sources&#13;
of wealth.&#13;
The play Ghosts takes place near the Norwegian city of Bergen .&#13;
. Bergen is a seaport on the western coast of Norway. lill population in&#13;
1900 was 72,179. It has a moist climate with an annual rainfall of approximately&#13;
74 inches. The houses in Bergen are made of wood or&#13;
stucco and are painted in warm reds and yellows. Bergen then, as well&#13;
as today ranks first of the Norwegian ship owning centers. Bergen's&#13;
staple export is fish, but other exports include butter, copper JlCe and&#13;
hides. Bergen has been a tourist center in Norway since the mid 1800s.&#13;
Bergen was founded by King Olaf Kyrre in 1070;1075, and rapidly&#13;
grew to be a trade center. Bergen's port and the surrounding fiords&#13;
have been the scene of many civil wars and sea battles. The town itself&#13;
suffered frequently from fire. Once in 1702 and again in 1855. The city&#13;
now has broad open spaces intended as a safeguard against such&#13;
things happening again.&#13;
Ghosts takes place in a period of Norwegian history that was a time&#13;
of religious puritanism and strict codes of social behavior. When&#13;
Ghosts was first written it was heavily criticized for its attitudes&#13;
WM&#13;
one of us&#13;
(of we ~&#13;
the lonely people&#13;
the one's that cry out in memory&#13;
for no other reason&#13;
than it feels better&#13;
toadrnit&amp;&#13;
i don't know why&#13;
but it doesn't)&#13;
EASYGOIN'&#13;
BANANA&#13;
must remain&#13;
naked &amp; lonely&#13;
in the harsh&#13;
light of Gone&#13;
jeffrey [. swencld&#13;
Are you a guest&#13;
from the heights&#13;
of Partbenon?&#13;
Or&#13;
just another&#13;
Blue eyed devil?&#13;
The dragons know,&#13;
the white rabbit&#13;
told me.&#13;
So&#13;
I sit and wonder •&#13;
about the books&#13;
and whom I&#13;
should ask&#13;
about your&#13;
unforgotten presence.&#13;
HWho are you?" said the caterpillar.&#13;
A.S.M.&#13;
Prunes&#13;
The quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
r\Q .~~ :'f~&#13;
, / Mike Ville~s 637-2726 /(' ,I., " ''''''1'&#13;
toward mo~ality, particularly its treatment of tbe subject of venereal&#13;
disease. I /' J&#13;
Ibsen ~elf wrote of the play Ghosts will norbably cause alrm ip .&#13;
some circles. That can't be helped. And if it didn't, there would have&#13;
been no necessity for me to write it." Ibsen's contemporaries saw the&#13;
.playas primarily dealing with inherited physical i11ness, but this is not&#13;
the theme of the play. Ibsen was talking about social and ethical&#13;
disabilities of his time, not physical disability.&#13;
Towards the end of 1881, Ghosts bad been offered to the Royal&#13;
Theatre in Copenhagen for production. The theatre's censor rejected&#13;
the pla~ saying "The action: ..a- repulsive pathological&#13;
phenomenon ...underrnining the morality wliich forms the foundation&#13;
of our social order." .&#13;
Ghosts did opel! in Chicago in 1882 at the Aurora Theatre, on the&#13;
evening of May 20th. Itwas presented in the original language, Danish&#13;
and later toured other midwestern cities, particularly those with&#13;
Scandinavian Populations. " .&#13;
Ghosts was finally presented in Scandinavia in 1883 . It soon&#13;
travelled at all major cities in Europe, and was quite popular. It was&#13;
still contraversial, and was condemned by most critics. The attitude of&#13;
most of these critics can be summed up in the words of a writer for the&#13;
London Daily Telegraph when he called this play "An open&#13;
drain ...gross... almost putrid in decorum," or as another writer&#13;
in England at the time said," As filthy as concoction ashas ever been&#13;
allowed to disgrace the boards of an English stage." .&#13;
Ghosts was widely read in Europe as well as America, but books&#13;
that contained the script of it did not sell. This was due to the fact that&#13;
people did not want it known that they actually read such "filth". Into&#13;
the twentieth century Ghosts has remained popular. Itis done fairly&#13;
often evennow, because it has a universal appeal. '&#13;
Song For Amott&#13;
Arnott, Why not?&#13;
I've seen' your face before&#13;
On a crowded bus somewhere&#13;
When you couldn't walk&#13;
As all the rest expected.&#13;
Iwondered then why that was,&#13;
But you were so friendly&#13;
I overlooked your non-conformity .&#13;
And noticed the way&#13;
You let the music take you.&#13;
So Arnott, why not&#13;
Walk like all the rest?&#13;
Perhaps you were never meant to.&#13;
Instead you let the music take you&#13;
And take others with your beat.&#13;
Wendy MiIler-8eptemher 23rd&#13;
9-3-76&#13;
Poems are abstract offerings.&#13;
They come to you often&#13;
without any stimulation, except&#13;
the memories of days gone byl.&#13;
They could be fronts for trees,&#13;
. or roots for raindrops&#13;
to discover.&#13;
Daniel 11revlno Ramirez&#13;
s01i10qny305 am.&#13;
/&#13;
quickly- \&#13;
youtel1me&#13;
how Yorick&#13;
krtew me well&#13;
although the world thinks me insane&#13;
it thinks me as an easy-to getalong with&#13;
immediately1:\1epoison-acid&#13;
• BURNS through&#13;
leaving my life underneath&#13;
EXPOSED&#13;
to be attacked&#13;
without defense&#13;
quietly" the voice&#13;
of the co~troller&#13;
has not pushed the off button&#13;
you disdain my past&#13;
ancestor now&#13;
but what of the future&#13;
all now is sadsilent&#13;
and another rocky mountain lullaby&#13;
IS never written to&#13;
soothe the troubled&#13;
shoe.&#13;
, , . Bruce'Wagner&#13;
,&#13;
'l:Iaug. tOcal&#13;
....&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 13, 1976&#13;
~&#13;
CA Theater·to be haunted&#13;
hy Robert Jilk&#13;
Editors Note: On October 22, 23, &amp; 24 the Fine Arts Division and&#13;
Dramatic Arts will present "Ghosts", a play by Henrik Ibsen, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre. We the cast would like to present. to the&#13;
reader~ of the Ranger a little background on Henrik Ibsen and the&#13;
things that influenced his writing Ghosts.&#13;
Norway has a size of 125,000 square miles which is just about the size&#13;
of the State of New Mexico. It has a terrain which is similar to that of&#13;
the western part of the western part of the State of Wisconsin. Norway&#13;
is a country of rugged mountains, which makes the land poor for&#13;
farming. Although Norway must import some of her foods, she has a&#13;
large export in lumber. Fisheries, and whaling are other chief sources&#13;
of wealth.&#13;
The play Ghosts takes place near the Norwegian city of Bergen.&#13;
· Bergen is a seaport on the western coast of Norway. I~ population in&#13;
1900 was 72,179. It has a moist climate with an annual rainfall of approximately&#13;
74 inches. The houses in Bergen are made of wood or&#13;
stucco and are Minted in warm reds and yellows. Bergen then, as well&#13;
as today ranks first of the Norwegian ship pwning centers. Bergen's&#13;
staple export is fish, but other exports include butter, copper _gre and&#13;
hides. Bergen has been a tourist center in Norway since the mid 1800s.&#13;
Bergen was founded by King Olaf Kyrre in 1070,,1075, and rapidly&#13;
grew to be a trade center. Bergen's port and the surrounding fiords&#13;
have been the scene of many civil wars and sea battles. The town itself&#13;
suffered frequently from fire. Once in 1702 and again in 1855. The city&#13;
now has broad open spaces intended as a safeguard against such&#13;
things happening again.&#13;
Ghosts takes place in a period of Norwegian history that was a time&#13;
of religious puritanism and strict codes of social behavior. When&#13;
Ghosts was first written it was heavily criticized for its atµtudes&#13;
EASY GOIN'&#13;
BANANA&#13;
WM&#13;
one of us&#13;
(of we .&#13;
the lonely people&#13;
the one's that cry out in memory&#13;
for no other reason&#13;
must remain&#13;
. than it feels better&#13;
to admit&amp;&#13;
i don't know why&#13;
but it doesn't)&#13;
naked &amp; lonely&#13;
in the harsh&#13;
light of Gone&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
Are you a guest&#13;
from the heights&#13;
of Parthenon?&#13;
Or&#13;
just another&#13;
Blue eyed devil?&#13;
The dragons know,&#13;
the white rabbit&#13;
told me.&#13;
So&#13;
I -sit and wonder /&#13;
about the books&#13;
and whom I&#13;
should ask&#13;
about your&#13;
unforgotten presence.&#13;
"Who are you?" said the caterpillar.&#13;
A.S.M.&#13;
Prunes&#13;
You caused me grief&#13;
But since you're gone&#13;
I feel a kind of relief&#13;
of&#13;
sweaty hands&#13;
- (&#13;
tow{lrd morality, particularly its treatment of the subject of venereal&#13;
disease. ,,.&#13;
Ibsen himself wrote of the play Ghosts will ncrbably cause a1rm iJt&#13;
some circles. That can't be helped. And if it didn't, there would have&#13;
been no necessity for pie to write it." Ibsen's contemporaries saw the&#13;
. play as primarily dealing with inherited physical illness, but this is not&#13;
the theme of the play. Ibsen was talking about social and ethical&#13;
disabilities of his time, not physical disability.&#13;
Towards the end of 1881, Ghosts bad been offered to the Royal&#13;
Theatre in Copenhagen for production. The theatre's censor rejected&#13;
the play saying "The action ... a, repulsiv.e pathological&#13;
phenomerion ... undermining the morality which fonns the foundation&#13;
of our social order."&#13;
Ghosts did open in Chicago in 1882 at the Aurora Theatre, on the&#13;
evening of May 20th. It was presented in the original language, Danish&#13;
and later toured other midwestern cities, particularly those with&#13;
Scandinavian populations. . . · · .&#13;
Ghosts was finally presented in Scandinavia in 1883 . It soon&#13;
travelled at all major cities in Europe, and was quite popular. It was&#13;
still contraversial, and was condemned by most critics. The attitude of&#13;
most of these critics can be summed up in the words of a writer for the&#13;
London Daily Telegraph when he called this play "An open&#13;
drain ... gross ... almost putrid in decorum," or as another writer&#13;
in England at.the time said," As filthy as concoction as 'has ever been&#13;
allowed to disgrace the boards of an English stage." •&#13;
Ghosts was widely read in Europe as well as America, but books&#13;
that contained the script of it did not sell. This was due to the fact that&#13;
people did not want it known that they actually read such "filth". Into&#13;
the twentieth century Ghosts has remained popular. It is done fairly&#13;
often ev~n,.now, because it has a universal appeal.&#13;
;&#13;
Song For Arnott&#13;
Arnott, Why not?&#13;
I've seen your face before&#13;
On a crowded bus somewhere&#13;
When you couldn't walk&#13;
As all the rest expected.&#13;
I wondered then why that was,&#13;
But you were so friendly&#13;
. I overlooked your non-conformity .&#13;
And noticed the way&#13;
You let the music take you.&#13;
So Arnott, why not&#13;
Walk like all the rest?&#13;
Perhaps you were never meant to.&#13;
Instead you let the music take you&#13;
And take others with your beat.&#13;
Wendy Miller-8eptember 23rd&#13;
9-8-76&#13;
Poems are abstract offerings.&#13;
They come to you often&#13;
without any stimulation, except&#13;
the memories of days gone by.&#13;
They could be fronts for trees,&#13;
or roots for raindrops&#13;
to discover.&#13;
quickly- ,&#13;
youtellme&#13;
how Yorick&#13;
knew me well&#13;
Daniel Trevino Ramirez&#13;
soliloquy 305 am.&#13;
although the world thinks me insane&#13;
it thinks me as an easy-to getalong with&#13;
immediatelythe&#13;
poison-acid&#13;
' BURNS through&#13;
and that great bug quarry in&#13;
my stomach!&#13;
leaving my life underneath&#13;
EXPOSED&#13;
to be attacked&#13;
without defense&#13;
The quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
.~t~&#13;
~Q ,,, - ~ '&#13;
~ Mike Villers 637 -2726&#13;
1(1 11., lo ,.,,,,&#13;
You were a rock,&#13;
, qiat drained everything inside me&#13;
from trying to budge you.&#13;
I didn't have a ~atapult to ease the strain&#13;
and now that you're not here&#13;
it s.eems like I ate a bushel of prunes and&#13;
now the going is free, easy, and&#13;
great!&#13;
I'm off and running a new' race!&#13;
Scottie&#13;
,&#13;
quietly,, the voice&#13;
of the controller&#13;
has not pushed the off button&#13;
you disdain my past&#13;
ancestor now&#13;
but what of the future&#13;
all now is sadsilent&#13;
~d another rocky mountain lullaby&#13;
1s never written to&#13;
soothe the troubled&#13;
shoe.&#13;
27 aug. to cal&#13;
Bruce Wagner&#13;
.._ &#13;
~ Petitions for fall elections available at PSGA, Inc. office, WLLC&#13;
IEVENT ~ Wednesday, Oct. 13&#13;
S&#13;
i!Dl93 Chuck Mitchell, artist in residence, holds songwriting workshop&#13;
Ie: from 10a.m. to 12p.m. and a concert at 7 p.m. in Union Square. . i! PSGA, Inc. Executive Council meets with Chancellor Guskin at 1:30 ;tp.m. I&#13;
[! PSGA, Inc. Committee of the Whole and Organizational Council&#13;
~ meets at 2 p.m. in Union 1M. Hearing on the Basic Skills Draft&#13;
~jmembers of the Basic Skills Sul&gt;-Committee will be present to answer, iii questions. Open to all interested students.&#13;
[; Movie, Orson Welles' "Touch of Evil" plays at 2:30 to 7:30 p.m. in'&#13;
~ the Cinema Tbeatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
I.&#13;
'" Physics Club meets at 3:30p.m. in GR 230. All interested faculty and I&#13;
. students welcome.&#13;
TranScendental Meditation lecture at 7:30p.m. in CL 144.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 14 ,&#13;
'I Deadline for applying for Blue Cross-Surgical Care Blue Shield&#13;
Student Health lasurance.' '&#13;
PSGA, Inc. Executive Council meets with Assistant Chancellor O.&#13;
, Clayton Johnson at 10 a.m. '&#13;
;iii Movie, Orson Welles' "Touch of Evil" plays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
~jthe Cinema Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
@ Public Relations and, Student Information Committee meets at 3 •&#13;
m p.m. in WLLC Dl93. Plans for the Nov. 6 Southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
W Student Government and Leadership Conference will be discussed.&#13;
IT Open to all interested students.&#13;
1'; Wargamers Club meets from 6 to 10p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
V Legal Assistance CCHlPmembers meeting at 7 p.m. in CL 325. Tnesday, Oct. 19&#13;
;;8 PSGA, Inc. Senate meets at 4:30 p.m. in Union 104 Open to all in- Christian Leadership training classes each week from 12-1p.m, in&#13;
Ow terested students. Library, 3rd floor. '&#13;
);1 . Friday Oct. 15 ' Wargamers Club meets from 6-10p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
ill Senate Student Services Committee meets at 9:30 a.m. in WLLC Women's volleyball, UW-P, Carthage, North Park at 7:30 p.m. at f; DI174. The Committee is reviewing possible methods of Student Carthage.&#13;
1':Government conducted Faculty and Course Evaluations for students --coming Nov. 11- Harry Chapin in concert, 8 p.m. in the Phy. Ed. ,Ito have access to before selecting courses. Open to all interested :,4";:':~§i;%:.it1&amp;:}"'ttWtw"}@@J&amp;tt.:;iliXiWflliWill%~Hmt.@.LtL ..... ;M"~&#13;
i!1 students. ,w&#13;
M Seante Business and Finance Committee meets at 10:15 a.m. in m El . illWLLC Dl93. Open to all interested students., .. It ections&#13;
b Drawing for fall election ballot positions at 12 p.m. 10 Union Con- IT Student government anmi'&#13;
I I· m course eve I. 't nounced that fall elections will be&#13;
F·:::::t&amp;M'&lt;i'i.:':::::Me::;;tg~{t:rr~wt~:w@tte:.;r=rtt1@:tJrtmtt:ttttiKdMYBWWttW4:tttlmt.&amp;~,:r:n?rn;g?I held Oct. 20 and 21, from 9 a.m.&#13;
till 8 p.m. Students wishing to&#13;
obtain petitions for nomination&#13;
for a Senate Divisional or&#13;
Allocations Committee seat&#13;
should visit the P,.S.G.A. office&#13;
WLLC D193 or contact Mary&#13;
Arnold 553-2244between 11 a.m.&#13;
and 1 p.m.&#13;
Uomplaint Dept.&#13;
hy Linda Knudston and Karin LaFornler&#13;
Complaint Dept:&#13;
I would like to know why Security will not unlock any outside doors on I&#13;
weekends except for those nearest the upper parking lots. I have&#13;
walked up the hill to study in the library and would appreciate an open&#13;
door facing the east in the LLC or Greenquist buildings. T.P.&#13;
Dear T.P.:&#13;
We brought this question to Ronald Brinkman, Director of Security.&#13;
Mr. Brinkman told us that these doors w~re supposed to be open&#13;
during business hours (which are posted at all entrances). He also&#13;
added that not only would the Greenquist Hall door be open but he&#13;
would also have a door' facing south opened so people could enter when&#13;
they come from the Physical Education Building. Mr. Brinkman&#13;
further requested that he be informed if lbese doors were not opened&#13;
during the scheduled hours.&#13;
FOLLOWUP! ,&#13;
1) In regards to D.S.'s complaint about trying to find student interest&#13;
surveys - the information is now in the Student Life Offices in the&#13;
Union. Interested parties should contact the Sjudent Life Offices.&#13;
2) Food Service followup: Mr. Richard Manthy of the saga Food&#13;
Service informed us that some of the equipment ordered was late in&#13;
coming but he expected the new salad bar to be set up by Monday,&#13;
October 11.&#13;
If you have any problems please submit them to tit! Ranger office&#13;
(WLLC Dl94), or drop the~ in Complaint Dept. boxes .&#13;
•&#13;
One of the Mid.est'.&#13;
Moll Complete&#13;
SPORTING GOODS&#13;
DEALERS&#13;
"."" " FIlEE "ttI.,&#13;
TYI1f1~f}1j&#13;
~[FlmJ~i(§ ~~~~~~&#13;
-&#13;
14TH. AVENUE AT 62ND. STREET&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN 53140&#13;
,-&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER OCtober 13. 19767 , .&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4 p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Movie, "Nashville," plays at 7 and 9:45 p.m. in the Union Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $1. •&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 16&#13;
Women's volleyball, UW-P invitational at 10 a.m. in the Phy. Ed.&#13;
Bldg.&#13;
Women's tennis, UW-p'vs Carroll College at 11 a.m. at the tennis&#13;
courts.&#13;
Women's swinuning, UW-P, Carthage College and 'Lawrence&#13;
College at 1 p.rn. in Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Soccer, UW-P vs Marquette University at 2 p.m. at the soccer field.&#13;
Moonlight Bowling by reservation from 8-11p.m. in the Union.&#13;
Recreation&#13;
semester Break&#13;
January&amp;-13, 1m&#13;
$3!1 CII1PLETE&#13;
Triple occupancy&#13;
Soccer, UW-P vs Marquette University at 2 p.m. at the soccer field.&#13;
Moonlight Bowting by reservation from 8-11 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Recreation Center. Sign up in Union or phone ~2695.&#13;
Disco featuring WRKR DJ Mark Windsor at 9 p.rn. in Union Square;&#13;
admission is .75for UW-P students, $1for others.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 17&#13;
Movie, "Nashville" plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Theater; admission&#13;
is $1.&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1-0p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Monday, Oct. 18&#13;
PSGA toy drive to benefit the Parkside Child Care Center; runs&#13;
from Oct. 18-22.&#13;
LIMITED SPACE -&#13;
MAKE YOUR&#13;
RESERVATIONS, NOW!&#13;
• For appboetlOn forms or&#13;
additIOnal nformettOn contact:&#13;
Perkslde UnIOn Office&#13;
lj,53-2200&#13;
The quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Mike Villers 637-2726&#13;
If, H"" ItJ ,I.."&#13;
Why do some people think&#13;
Bude is sort of special?&#13;
Go ahead and find out why'&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make a difference.:&#13;
-&#13;
E.F. Madrigrano&#13;
•&#13;
M Wednesday, Oct.13&#13;
;I/ Petitions for fall elections available at PSGA, Inc. office, WLLC&#13;
ilil D193 Chuck Mitchell, artist in residence, holds songwriting workshop&#13;
fi from lOa .m. to 12p.m. and a concert at 7p.m. in Union Square.&#13;
If PSGA, Inc. Executive Council meets with Chancellor Guskin at 1 :30&#13;
Mp.m.&#13;
ft PSGA, Inc. Committee of the Whole and Organizational Council&#13;
~ii meets at 2 p.m. in Union 104. Hearing on the Basic Skills Draft&#13;
it! members of the Basic Skills Sub-Committee will be present to answer&#13;
t&amp; questions. Open to all interested students.&#13;
11 Movie, Orson Welles' "Touch of Evil" plays at 2:30 to 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
t} the . Cinema Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
@1- Physics Club meets at 3:30 p.m. in GR 230. All interested faculty and 1&#13;
ti students welcome. ti Transcendental Meditation lecture at 7 :30 p.m. in CL 144. ~ @ Thursday, Oct. 14&#13;
ill Deadline for applying for Blue Cross-Surgical Care Blue Shield &amp;'··· @l Student Health Insurance.&#13;
[1 PSGA, Inc. Executive Council meets with Assistant Chancellor 0.&#13;
mi Clayton Johnson at 10 a.m. , I Movie, Orson Welles' "Touch of Evil" plays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
b the Cinema Theatre. Admission is $1. :~);.'1,&#13;
m Public Relations and Student Information Committee meets at 3&#13;
&amp;ffi/ p.m. in WLLC D193. Plans for the Nov. 6 Southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
rn Student Government and Leadership Conference will be discussed.&#13;
@Open to all interested students.&#13;
' Wargamers Club meets from 6 to 10 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
ii Legal Assistance Co-op members meeting at 7 p.m. in CL 325.&#13;
&amp; PSGA, Inc. Senate meets at 4:30 p.m. in Union 104 Open to all in-&#13;
@ terested students.&#13;
. Friday Oct. 15&#13;
§ Senate Student Services Committee meets at 9:30 a.m. in WLLC&#13;
ill D1174. The Committee is reviewing possible methods of Student&#13;
i:I Government conducted Faculty and Course Evaluations for students&#13;
1~ to have access to before selecting courses. Open to all interested&#13;
%students.&#13;
% Seante Business and Finance Committee meets at 10:15 a.m. in&#13;
~j WLLC D193. Open to all interested students. •&#13;
W Drawing for fall election ballot positions at 12 p.m. in Union Con- II course level 1.&#13;
Complaint Dept.&#13;
by Linda Knudston and Karin LaFornier&#13;
Complaint Dept:&#13;
I would like to know why Security will not unlock any outside doors on&#13;
weekends except for those nearest the upper parking lots. I have&#13;
walked up the hill to study in the library and would appreciate an open&#13;
door facing the east in the LLC or Greenquist buildings. T.P.&#13;
Dear T.P. :&#13;
We J;irought this question to Ronald Brinkman, Director of Security.&#13;
Mr. Brinkman told us that these doors were supposed to be open&#13;
during business hours (which are posted at all entrances). He also&#13;
added that not only would the Greenquist Hall door be open but he&#13;
would also have a door facing south opened so people could enter when&#13;
they come from the Physical Education Building. Mr. Brinkman&#13;
further requested that ~e be informed if these doors were not opened&#13;
during the scheduled hours.&#13;
FOLLOWUP!&#13;
1) In regards to D.S.'s complaint about trying to find student interest&#13;
surveys - the information is now in the Student Life Offices in the&#13;
Union. Interested parties should contact the S,tudent Life Offices.&#13;
2) Food Service followup: Mr. Richard Manthy of the Saga F~&#13;
Service informed us that some of the equipment ordered was late m&#13;
coming but he expected the new salad bar to be set up by Monday,&#13;
October 11.&#13;
If you have any problems please submit them to tit! Ranger office&#13;
(WLLC D194), or drop them in Complaint Dept. boxes .&#13;
One of the Midwest's&#13;
Most Complete&#13;
SPORTING GOODS&#13;
DEALERS&#13;
Pll111f ol FREE P1tkln1&#13;
TY~ ffiJ N °11&#13;
~rFJmlFll'§ ~~~~~~&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4 p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Movie, "Nashville," plays at 7 and 9:45 p.m. in the Union Theatre. Admission is $1. ~&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 16&#13;
Women's volleyball, UW-P invitational at 10 a.m. in the Phy. Ed.&#13;
Bldg.&#13;
Women's tennis, UW-P vs Carroll College at 11 a .m. at the tennis&#13;
courts.&#13;
Women's swimming, UW-P, Carthage College and Lawrence&#13;
College at 1 p.m. in Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Soccer, UW-P vs Marquette University at 2 p.m. at the soccer field.&#13;
Moonlight Bowling by reservation from 8-11 p.m. in the Union.&#13;
Recreation&#13;
Soccer, UW-P vs Marquette University at 2 p.m. at the soccer field.&#13;
Moonlight Bowling by reservation from 8-11 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Recreation Center. Sign up in Union or phone 553-2695.&#13;
Disco featuring WRKR DJ Mark Windsor at 9 p.m. in Union Square;&#13;
admission is .75 for UW-P students, $1 for others.&#13;
Sunday, Oct.17&#13;
Movie, "Nashville" plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Theater; admission&#13;
is $1.&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1-6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Monday, Oct.18&#13;
PSGA toy drive to benefit the Parkside Child Care Center; runs&#13;
from Oct. 18-22.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 19&#13;
Christian Leadership training classes each week from 12-1 p.m. in&#13;
Library, 3rd floor.&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 6-10 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Women's volleyball, UW-P, Carthage, North Park at 7:30 p.m. at&#13;
Carthage.&#13;
Nov. 11- Harry Chapin in concert, 8 p.m. in the Phy. Ed.&#13;
,., ..... ,,, ..&#13;
RANGER October 13, 1976 7&#13;
:tr lnYws,tyol.WIIC---&#13;
€1&#13;
Fiesta&#13;
Acapulco&#13;
Semester Break&#13;
January 6-13, 1977&#13;
$339 COMPLETE&#13;
Triple occupancy&#13;
LIMITED SPACE -&#13;
MAKE YOUR&#13;
RESERVATIONS, NOW!&#13;
• For eppllcat10n forms or&#13;
edd1t10nel n formet10n contact :&#13;
Parkside Un10n OfflCe&#13;
53-2200&#13;
Elections The quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Student government announced&#13;
that fall elections will be&#13;
held Oct. 20 and 21, from 9 a.m.&#13;
till 8 p.m. Students wishing to&#13;
obtain petitions for nomination&#13;
for a Senate Divisional or&#13;
Allocations Committee seat&#13;
should visit the P.S.G.A. office&#13;
WLLC D193 or contact Mary&#13;
Arnold 553-2244 between 11 a.m.&#13;
and 1 p.m.&#13;
Mike Villers 637 -2726&#13;
11'1 61111 lo ,,,,.,,&#13;
Why do soine people think&#13;
Bud® is sort of special?&#13;
--&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make a difference.)&#13;
E.F. Madrigrano &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANG,ER October 13. 1976&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Soccer squad hosts Marquette&#13;
finishers.&#13;
There is an entry fee of $2 for&#13;
pre_registration'until November&#13;
16. Checks may be made payable&#13;
to Lincoln Federal Road Run and&#13;
mailed to Lincoln Federal&#13;
savings, 1400 N. Gannon Drive,&#13;
Hoffman Estates, illinois 60196,&#13;
Attn.; Bruce Lind .•&#13;
More information is .available&#13;
from Lind at Lincoln Federal,&#13;
312-885-0700 or Jim Swift at&#13;
Hoffman Estates High Scbool,&#13;
312-il82-il000.The high school, at&#13;
llOOW. Higgins Road, is reached&#13;
Road south from the Northwest&#13;
Tollway to Route 72 and go east&#13;
one mile.&#13;
Lincoln Federal Savings and&#13;
Loan Associatiorr of Hoffman&#13;
Estates, lllinois is sponsoring&#13;
their first Annual Road Run&#13;
November 21 at Hoffman' Estates&#13;
High Schooi at 1 p.m.&#13;
Races include 5,000 and 1000&#13;
meters and a Joggers Mile.&#13;
Categories for both races are&#13;
Fresh-Soph High School, Varsity&#13;
High School, Post High School to&#13;
age 26, ages 27-35,ages 36-46, and&#13;
ages 47 and over.&#13;
, A trophy will be awarded to lbe&#13;
first place overall in lbe 10,000&#13;
meter run, plaques to the first&#13;
place in all divisions, medals to&#13;
second and third place in all&#13;
divisions and free T-shirts to all -&#13;
"It was more 'shocking than&#13;
disappointing," said Henderson&#13;
about the loss. "They scored four&#13;
goals in seven minutes; two were&#13;
deflection· off of our defensive&#13;
players. The rest of lbe game was&#13;
pretty much even up for. bolb&#13;
teams."&#13;
Parkside's two goals were&#13;
scored by' Campbell and Bob&#13;
Stoewe on an assist from Kriz&#13;
Seravin.&#13;
"Campbell is ·our leading&#13;
scorer, picking up lbree goals&#13;
and an assist lbis weekend. We&#13;
haven't had anyone like 'him in&#13;
several ,years, and he's just a&#13;
freshman." •&#13;
Campbell, along wilb Ismiali&#13;
and Sendelbach scored three&#13;
goals to beat Minnesota's one&#13;
Goal October 3. Boyajian was lbe&#13;
only scorer for Parkside when lbe&#13;
Rangers lost to Eastern Illinois,&#13;
9-1, October 2.&#13;
game by putting two good halves&#13;
together."&#13;
~'riday, Parkside beat UWPlatteville&#13;
44 to qualify for the&#13;
finals .Saturday. Goals were&#13;
scored by Deech Ismaili, Steve&#13;
Sendelbach, Mike Boyajian and&#13;
Earl Campbell, with assists by&#13;
Mike Olesen and Campbell.&#13;
"That game meant revenge for&#13;
us because Platteville beat us&#13;
last year in lbe District Championship.&#13;
It's lbe first time&#13;
Parkside has ever beaten Platteville&#13;
at Platteville."&#13;
"1 was not overly pleased,&#13;
lbough, with our performance ..&#13;
We were a stronger team, but we&#13;
played their kind of game, not&#13;
ours."&#13;
Earlier, UW-Green Bay&#13;
defeated UW-Milwaukee and lbe&#13;
Rangers played Green 'Bay for&#13;
the championship Saturday.&#13;
They beat Parkside, 6-2, scoring&#13;
five goals in the first half.&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Things are looking better for&#13;
lbe soccer squad, wilb a 4-5-1&#13;
record, as Coach. Hal Henderson&#13;
expects to win five of lbe team's&#13;
last seven meets.&#13;
Parkside hosts Marquette&#13;
saturday afternoon at 2; which&#13;
Henderson expects to be "a&#13;
pretty good game."&#13;
"1 feel strongly lbat we can&#13;
beat Marquette and we are very&#13;
much in range to finish above .500&#13;
for lbe first time in Parkside's'&#13;
history."&#13;
Henderson's goal was to win 10&#13;
games during lbe season and lbe&#13;
team can get wilbin one should&#13;
lbey win .five of lbe remaining&#13;
meets. "Our only' foul up was&#13;
tying Madison in lbe beginning of&#13;
the season, but otherwise, we're&#13;
on schedule." .&#13;
This past weekend, the&#13;
Rangers wound up second in lbe&#13;
Wisconsin's Chancellor's Cup&#13;
Tournament at UW-Platteville.&#13;
"1 was very encouraged with&#13;
, the results of the tournament,"&#13;
said Henderson. "We're playing&#13;
as good as any team around. Our&#13;
problem is lbat we seem to bave&#13;
only one good half a meet. We&#13;
can't seem to play well the whole&#13;
~\ ~&#13;
rJV(Joieph IG~4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
\~ " Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
~m_~ -&#13;
~ Mention this ad!&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parksfde 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
Leitch sets records&#13;
hack.&#13;
Also gaining first places was&#13;
Gail Olson, whose one meter&#13;
dives were on top of bolb competing&#13;
teams. She also swam the&#13;
50free, finishing second with bolb .&#13;
lbe 100 free wilb second place&#13;
points added to lbe score wilb&#13;
Lawrence and lbird place points&#13;
tallied to lbe team score against&#13;
Carroll.&#13;
sally Francis improved her&#13;
time in the 500 free over lbe time&#13;
in the previous meet by 37&#13;
seconds and placed second In lbe&#13;
event. Francis also scored a third&#13;
against both in the 50 free.&#13;
In the 5q breast, Lili Crnich was&#13;
second against Lawrence and&#13;
lbird against Carroll and was&#13;
also third in lbe 100' free wilb&#13;
Lawrence.&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Coach Barb Lawson's women's&#13;
swim team hosts lbe Carthage&#13;
Redmen saturday in a 1 p.m.&#13;
meet, still looking for lbeir first&#13;
win of the season.&#13;
In their last outing, the&#13;
swimmers were defeated by&#13;
Carroll College, 9~20, and by&#13;
Lawrence University. 63-34,&#13;
Friday. Carroll also defeated&#13;
Lawrence, 88-24.&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch continued to&#13;
break school records, this week&#13;
in lbe 200 free and 500free. Her&#13;
times of 2:36.21 and 7:13.58,&#13;
respectively, gained her firsts in&#13;
bolb events against Lawrence&#13;
and' seconds in both events&#13;
against Carroll. Leitch also took&#13;
a first against Lawrence and a&#13;
second against Carroll in lbe 50&#13;
')_~~~~i,··~·/&#13;
ii' Pure Brewed&#13;
~ J From God's Country.&#13;
Fredericksen&#13;
leads&#13;
Parkside&#13;
by Thomas Nolen&#13;
On tap at Union Square Parkside runners had a full&#13;
weekend, competing in two meets&#13;
in two days. Friday, Parkside&#13;
placed 28th in lbe 40 team Notre&#13;
Dame Invitational at Soulb Bend,&#13;
Indiana and Saturday placed&#13;
fourlb among 12 teams at lbe&#13;
Lakefront Invitational in&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Ray Fredericksen came in first&#13;
for Parkside wilb a lime of 24:49.&#13;
He was 76lb of 280 in lbe meet.&#13;
Running behind were Gary&#13;
Priem, l07th; Mike Rivers,&#13;
164lb; Lee Allinger, 1961b; Jeff&#13;
Miller, 203rd; Greg Julich, 219;&#13;
and Jim Heiring, 228lb.&#13;
According to Coach Vic Godfrey,&#13;
"The meet is as tough as lbe&#13;
nationals, with six of the nation's&#13;
top 20 teams competing."&#13;
Godfrey lbought it was a sub&#13;
par performance, allbough eadh&#13;
runner had his best lime of lbe&#13;
year.&#13;
"Parkside runs best on - a&#13;
course with a rougher terrain,&#13;
unlike lbe fast flat golf course we&#13;
ran on at Soulb Bend. Due to lbe&#13;
abundance of runners, team&#13;
unity was harder to come by."&#13;
Saturday, Fredericksen also&#13;
topped Parkside finishers at the&#13;
12 team Lakefront Invitational.&#13;
He was fourth overall.&#13;
The Rangers were fourth wilb&#13;
Priem 13lb,.Rivers 24lb; Miller,&#13;
28th, Julich, 37lb, Allinger, 46lb&#13;
and Heiring, 61st.&#13;
"The Lakefront is a nat course,&#13;
as is the one at Northern Illinois'&#13;
Huskie Invitational which we&#13;
play lbis saturday. The next&#13;
meet at Carthage will be on rough&#13;
·terrain that is familiar to&#13;
Parkside runners." said Godfrey.&#13;
"Five tight runners have&#13;
evolved in previous meets and&#13;
wilb Julich's improvements, we&#13;
now have six."&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Submarine&#13;
Sandwi~h&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M. uw-p hosts Carthage 2615 WashingtonAtIe. 634-2513&#13;
I&#13;
Eau Claire gave other Ranger&#13;
opponents difficulty in the second&#13;
round of lbe NO.1 singles and No.&#13;
2 doubles matches. Marge&#13;
Balszes was defeated 6-2, 7-5 and&#13;
Pat Munger-Kalby Feichtner lost&#13;
6-1, 6'2. In NO.2 singles, Janine&#13;
Hunter also lost in lbe second&#13;
round to a Carlbage opponent 6-2,&#13;
6-3.&#13;
Better results occurred in an&#13;
October 2meet as UW-Green Bay&#13;
fell to the Rangers, 4.().&#13;
The Rangers have a 2-6 record&#13;
in dual meets, but have lost Jean&#13;
Covelli, a member of lbe No. 1&#13;
doubles team wilb Carins.&#13;
...---Union--- ..&#13;
Recreation Center&#13;
Enter these Tourncments&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
In preparation for the WWIAC&#13;
Championships in LaCrosse&#13;
October 22-23,lbe women's tennis&#13;
squad will host Carthage College&#13;
Saturday for a meet beginning at&#13;
11 a.m.&#13;
The No. 1 doubles team of&#13;
Jennifer Zuehlke-Mary Ann&#13;
Carins made it to the semifinals,&#13;
leading Parkside at lbe UWWhitewater&#13;
Tournament last&#13;
saturday, where lbe Rangers&#13;
placed sevenlb.-&#13;
Zuehlke-Carins lost to a UWEau&#13;
Claire team 6-4 after beating .&#13;
two other teams.&#13;
•&#13;
Pinball Wizard&#13;
man. thru Fri.. Oct. 18-22&#13;
Entry Fee - $1.00&#13;
Chess Tourny&#13;
FrLthru Sun.. Oct. 22-24&#13;
Free PIZZI Delivery Entry Fee - $2.50&#13;
Club Highvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
Alt••• 0."11' Chl.k .. ,· Sp•• h.... , .... ill, 8H'&#13;
OPEN 4 p.•. II t •.•.&#13;
Sorry. The Rec-Center .will be closed&#13;
on Sundays until Further Notice&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 13, 1976&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Soccer squ~d hQsts Marquette&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Things are looking better for&#13;
the soccer squad, with a 4-5-1&#13;
record, as Coach Hal Henderson&#13;
expects to win five of the team's&#13;
last seven meets.&#13;
Parkside hosts Marquette&#13;
Saturday afternoon at 2, which&#13;
Henderson expects to be "a&#13;
pretty good game."&#13;
"I feel strongly that we can&#13;
beat Marquette and we are very&#13;
much in range to finish above .500&#13;
for the first time in Parkside's&#13;
history."&#13;
Henderson's goal was to win 10&#13;
games during the season and the&#13;
team can get within one should&#13;
they win five of the remaining&#13;
meets. "Our only foul up was&#13;
tying Madison in the beginning of&#13;
the season, but otherwise, we're&#13;
on schedule." ·&#13;
This past weekend, the&#13;
Rangers woWld up second in the&#13;
Wisconsin's Chancellor's Cup&#13;
Tournament at UW-Platteville.&#13;
"I was very encouraged with&#13;
the results of the tournament,"&#13;
said Henderson. "We're playing&#13;
as good as any team around. Our&#13;
problem is that we seem to have&#13;
only one good half a meet. We&#13;
can't seem to play well the whole&#13;
Fredericksen&#13;
leads&#13;
Parkside&#13;
by Thomas Nolen&#13;
Parkside runners had a full&#13;
weekend, competing in two meets&#13;
in two days. Friday, Parkside&#13;
placed 28th in the 40 team Notre&#13;
Dame Invitational at South Bend,&#13;
Indiana and Saturday placed&#13;
fourth among 12 teams at the&#13;
Lakefront Invitational in&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Ray Fredericksen came in first&#13;
for Parkside with a time of 24:49.&#13;
He was 76th of 280 in the meet.&#13;
Running behind were Gary&#13;
Priem, 107th; Mike Rivers,&#13;
164th; Lee Allinger, 196th; Jeff&#13;
Miller, 203rd; Greg Julich, 219;&#13;
and Jim Heiring, 228th. ·&#13;
According to Coach Vic Godfrey,&#13;
"The meet is as tough as the&#13;
nationals, with six of the nation's&#13;
top 20 teams competing."&#13;
Godfrey thought it was a sub&#13;
par performance, although eadh&#13;
runner had his best time of the&#13;
year.&#13;
"Parkside runs best on a&#13;
course with a rougher terrain,&#13;
unlike the fast flat golf course we&#13;
ran on at South Bend. Due to the&#13;
abundance of runners, team&#13;
unity was harder to come by."&#13;
Saturday, Fredericksen also&#13;
topped Parkside finishers at tht&#13;
12 team Lakefront Invitational.&#13;
He was fourth overall.&#13;
The Rangers were fourth with&#13;
Priem 13th, Rivers 24th; Miller,&#13;
28th, Julich, 37th, Allinger, 46th&#13;
and Heiring, 61st.&#13;
"The Lakefront is a flat course,&#13;
as is the one at Northern Illinois'&#13;
Huskie Invitational which we&#13;
play this Saturday. The next&#13;
meet at Carthage will be on rough&#13;
·terrain that is familiar to&#13;
Parkside runners." said Godfrey.&#13;
"Five tight runners have&#13;
evolved in previous meets and&#13;
with Julich's improvements, we&#13;
now have six."&#13;
game by putting two good halves&#13;
t_ogether."&#13;
.l&lt;'riday, Parkside beat UWPlatteville&#13;
4-1 to qualify for the&#13;
finals .Saturday. Goals were&#13;
scored by Deech Ismaili, Steve&#13;
Sendelbach, Mike Boyajian and&#13;
Earl Campbell, with assists by&#13;
Mike Olesen and Campbell.&#13;
"That game meant revenge for&#13;
us because Platteville beat us&#13;
last year in the District Championship.&#13;
It's the first time&#13;
Parkside ·has ever beaten Platteville&#13;
at Platteville."&#13;
"I was not overly pleased,&#13;
though, with our performance.&#13;
We were a stronger team, but we&#13;
played their kind of game, not&#13;
ours."&#13;
Earlier, UW-Green Bay&#13;
defeated UW-Milwaukee and the&#13;
Rangers played Green Bay for&#13;
the championship Saturday.&#13;
They beat Parkside, 6-2, scoring&#13;
five goals in the first half.&#13;
"It was more shocking than&#13;
disappointing," said Henderson&#13;
about the loss. "They scored four&#13;
goals in seven minutes; two were&#13;
deflection . off of our defensive&#13;
players. The rest of the game was&#13;
pretty much even up_ for both&#13;
teams."&#13;
Parkside's two goals were&#13;
scored by Campbell and Bob&#13;
Stoewe on an assist from Kriz&#13;
Seravin.&#13;
"Campbell is our le-ading&#13;
scorer, picking up three goals&#13;
and an assist this weekend. We&#13;
haven't had anyone like him in&#13;
several _years, and he's just a&#13;
freshman." •&#13;
Campbell, along with Ismiali&#13;
and Sendelbach scored three&#13;
goals to beat Minnesota's one&#13;
Goal October 3. Boyajian was the&#13;
only scorer for Parkside when the&#13;
Rangers lost to Eastern Illinois,&#13;
9-1, October 2.&#13;
Leitch sets records&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Coach Barb Lawson's women's&#13;
swim team hosts the Carthage&#13;
Redmen Saturday in a 1 p.m.&#13;
meet, still looking for their first&#13;
win of the season.&#13;
In their last outing, the&#13;
swimmers were defeated by&#13;
Carroll College, 93-20, and by&#13;
Lawrence University, 63-34,&#13;
Friday. Carroll also defeated&#13;
Lawrence, 88-24.&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch continued to&#13;
break school records, this week&#13;
in the 200 free and 500 free. Her&#13;
times of 2:36.21 and 7:13.58,&#13;
respectively, gained her firsts in&#13;
both events against Lawrence&#13;
and seconds in both events&#13;
against Carroll. Leitch also took&#13;
a first against Lawrence and a&#13;
second against Carroll in the 50&#13;
back.&#13;
Also gaining first places was&#13;
Gail Olson, whose one meter&#13;
dives were on top of both competing&#13;
teams. She also swam the&#13;
50 free, finishing second with both .&#13;
the 100 free with second place&#13;
points added to the score with&#13;
Lawrence and third place points&#13;
tallied to the team score against&#13;
Carroll.&#13;
Sally Francis improved her&#13;
time in the 500 free over the time&#13;
in the previous meet by 37&#13;
seconds and placed second in the&#13;
event. Francis also scored a third&#13;
against both in the 50 free.&#13;
In the 5Q breast, Lili Crnich was&#13;
second against Lawrence and&#13;
third against Carroll and was&#13;
also thil:d in the 100 free with&#13;
Lawrence.&#13;
UW-P hostsCarth_age&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
In preparation for the WWIAC&#13;
Championships in Lacrosse&#13;
October 22-23, the women's tennis&#13;
squad will host Carthage College&#13;
Saturday for a meet beginnil)g at&#13;
11 a.m.&#13;
The No. 1 doubles team of&#13;
Jennifer Zuehlke-Mary Ann&#13;
Carins made it to the semifinals,&#13;
leading Parkside at the UWWhitewater&#13;
Tournament last&#13;
Saturday, where the Rangers&#13;
placed seventh. -&#13;
Zuehlke-Carins lost to a UWEau&#13;
Claire team 6-4 after beating ,&#13;
two other teams.&#13;
Eau Claire gave other Ranger&#13;
opponents difficulty in the second&#13;
round of the No. 1 singles and No.&#13;
2 doubles matches. Marge&#13;
Balszes was defeated 6-2, 7-5 and&#13;
Pat Munger-Kathy Feichtner lost&#13;
6-1, 6-2. In No. 2 singles, Janine&#13;
Hunter also lost in the second&#13;
round to a Carthage opponent 6-2,&#13;
6-3.&#13;
Better results occurred in an&#13;
October 2 meet as UW-Green Bay&#13;
fell to the Rangers, 4-0.&#13;
The Rangers have a 2-6 record&#13;
in dual meets, but have lost Jean&#13;
CoveJli, a member of the No. 1&#13;
doubles team with Carins.&#13;
Free Pizza Delivery&#13;
Club Highview&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
Alt,_ ••h•erl19 Chlek11, St11httt1, R1•loll, 811f&#13;
OPEN 4 t••· to 1 •·•·&#13;
Lincoln Federal Savings and&#13;
Loan Association of Hoffman&#13;
Estates, Illinois is sponsoring&#13;
their first Annual Road Run&#13;
November 21 at Hoffman· Estates&#13;
High School at 1 p.m.&#13;
Races include 5,000 and 1000&#13;
meters and a Joggers Mile.&#13;
Categories f9r both races are&#13;
Fresh-Soph High School, Varsity&#13;
High School, Post High School to&#13;
age 26, ages 27-35, ages 36-46, and&#13;
ages 47 and over.&#13;
A trophy will be awarded to the&#13;
first place overall in the 10,000&#13;
meter- run, plaques to the first&#13;
place iq all divisions, medals to&#13;
second and third place in all&#13;
divisions and free T-shirts to all ·&#13;
finishers.&#13;
There is an entry fee of $2 for&#13;
pre-registration until November&#13;
16. Checks may be made payable&#13;
to Lincoln Federal Road Run and&#13;
mailed to Lincoln Federal&#13;
Savings, 1400 N. Gannon Drive,&#13;
Hoffman Estates, Illinois 60196,&#13;
, Attn.; Bruce Lind.&#13;
More information is available&#13;
from Lind at Lincoln Federal,&#13;
312-885-0700 or Jim Swift at&#13;
Hoffman Estates High School,&#13;
·312-882-8000. The high school, at&#13;
1100 W. Higgins Road, is reached&#13;
Road south from the Northwest&#13;
Tollway to Route 72 and go east&#13;
one mile.&#13;
FREE&#13;
~:;.o::',&#13;
DELIVERY&#13;
pv":'::,':,' d":&#13;
~&#13;
11v ~ojeph ~ -&#13;
- 4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
~'~m'~,,-' Wisco!}sin Phone 654-0774&#13;
§&#13;
~&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
,H~~A~i_/&#13;
: • · Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington Arie. 634-2373&#13;
Union&#13;
Recreation Center&#13;
Enter these T ournoments&#13;
Pinball Wizard&#13;
mon. thru Fri., Oct. 18-22&#13;
Entr_y Fee - i 1.00&#13;
Chess ·1ourny&#13;
Fri. thru Sun., Oct. 22-24&#13;
Entr_y Fee - $2.50&#13;
Sorry. The Rec-Center .will be closed&#13;
on Sundays until Further Notice&#13;
• </text>
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              <text>Two year drop cut to one</text>
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              <text>PAB removes reporter&#13;
Charges filed&#13;
HZ. The Parkside&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, November 20, 1974 Vol. Ill No. 16&#13;
Two year drop cut to one&#13;
by Colleen Dorsey&#13;
The Academic Policies&#13;
Committee received feedback on&#13;
their probation and drop policy&#13;
draft and made revisions at their&#13;
Nov. 12 meeting.&#13;
Discussion centered around the&#13;
proposed two-year drop period&#13;
which the majority of the committee&#13;
members felt was too&#13;
strict.&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association was&#13;
given a copy of the draft, and&#13;
President Dennis Milutinovich&#13;
also felt two years was too strict.&#13;
Students are initially dropped&#13;
for one semester if, as first&#13;
semester freshmen, their grade&#13;
point average (GPA) for the first&#13;
15 credits is less than 1.0 or if,&#13;
while on probation, any subsequent&#13;
block of 15 credits falls&#13;
below a 2.0.&#13;
Students who are readmitted&#13;
are placed on Final Academic&#13;
Probation and are dropped for&#13;
two years if their GPA for any&#13;
subsequent block of 15 credits&#13;
falls below a 2.0.&#13;
John Zarling, assistant&#13;
professor of Engineering&#13;
Science, commented that the&#13;
chances are slimmer that a&#13;
student would come back after&#13;
two years rather than one,&#13;
because the person would get into&#13;
another mainstream of life.&#13;
John Rodgers, an academic&#13;
advisor, agreed that the job&#13;
market would absorb the student,&#13;
since this is an industrial area,&#13;
and he doubted that the student&#13;
would return after two years.&#13;
Committee members were&#13;
unsure whether a two-year drop&#13;
would give the student time to&#13;
grow up or would just force him&#13;
into the job market. At the end of&#13;
the meeting, the committee voted&#13;
to change the drop period to one&#13;
year.&#13;
The committee also discussed&#13;
whether a student should be&#13;
urged, as the draft now states, or&#13;
required to get assistance from&#13;
the Academic Skills Program,&#13;
university counseling office, or&#13;
an academic advisor.&#13;
Stella Gray, professor of&#13;
English, asked whether the&#13;
Academic Skills Program wants&#13;
those students who are forced to&#13;
seek help.&#13;
Zarling said that at least the&#13;
student would make initial&#13;
contact with the program and be&#13;
aware that it exists.&#13;
James Smith, a" student on the&#13;
committee, said that the student&#13;
is "salvageable early and you&#13;
must get the student in for help&#13;
while on probation."&#13;
Rodgers suggested that the&#13;
Office of Student Affairs could&#13;
act as "a more efficient&#13;
clearinghouse" since the&#13;
student's high school record,&#13;
rank and other facts are&#13;
available. The student could be&#13;
directed for help to the appropriate&#13;
office out of the five or&#13;
six available, such as tutoring or&#13;
Academic Skills. The advice&#13;
from the Student Affairs Office&#13;
could be forwarded to the&#13;
department that the student was&#13;
recommended to see.&#13;
Gray suggested a "registration&#13;
packet insert" which would state&#13;
that a student on probation must&#13;
contact the Office of Student&#13;
Affairs for an appointment before&#13;
completing registration.&#13;
Rodgers said a table could be&#13;
set up at registration with the&#13;
student's records so that the&#13;
appropriate appointments could&#13;
be made. Help would be offered&#13;
on courses and loads a student&#13;
could carry.&#13;
Wayne Johnson, chairperson of&#13;
the committee, suggested&#13;
checking with the academic&#13;
deans before any action is taken.&#13;
The committee has not yet&#13;
approved the draft and will meet&#13;
again on Nov. 21 for further&#13;
discussion. The final draft will be&#13;
brought before the Faculty&#13;
Senate for a vote in December.&#13;
by Gregory Hawkins&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
On October 7, 1974, the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board's&#13;
(PAB's) Executive Board&#13;
removed from their meeting a&#13;
RANGER reporter while he was&#13;
attempting to cover this meeting.&#13;
This reporter was removed&#13;
because a portion of the meeting&#13;
was to be a closed session for the&#13;
purpose of discussing what was&#13;
termed "internal problems."&#13;
After the reporter informed the&#13;
chairperson of the meeting that&#13;
this removal from the meeting&#13;
was a potential violation of the&#13;
anti-secrecy law, the chairperson&#13;
insisted that the reporter remove&#13;
himself from the meeting. He left&#13;
immediately.&#13;
On October 8,1974 the Editor of&#13;
RANGER wrote a letter to&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie, claiming that&#13;
a "serious breach of state&#13;
statutes" had occurred during&#13;
this episode.&#13;
In responding to this complaint&#13;
for the Chancellor, Assistant&#13;
Chancellor for Student Services&#13;
Allen Dearborn stated that it was&#13;
the contention of the PAB's advisor&#13;
that the closed session was&#13;
for personnel matters, and that if&#13;
further follow-up of the situation&#13;
was desired, RANGER should&#13;
put their interpretations of this&#13;
situation in writing.&#13;
A letter explaining the specific&#13;
portions of the anti-secrecy law&#13;
that the RANGER felt were&#13;
violated was written and sent to&#13;
the parties concerned on October&#13;
25.&#13;
In this letter, three possible&#13;
violations of Chapter 297&#13;
Wisconsin Statutes, 66.77, and in&#13;
particular in section five (5),&#13;
were discussed.&#13;
In response to these specific&#13;
complaints, Allen Dearborn&#13;
again contacted RANGER, and&#13;
stated that he had asked the&#13;
advisor of the PAB to initiate a&#13;
meeting of representatives of the&#13;
two organizations involved, "in&#13;
order that collectively you can&#13;
reach a satisfactory resolution to&#13;
your request."&#13;
On November 8, RANGER&#13;
initiated the meeting with PAB's&#13;
advisor and after some time&#13;
arrived at a conclusion to this&#13;
situation that required: (1) a&#13;
statement of admission that there&#13;
was a failure to comply with the&#13;
law, (2) an apology, (3) a&#13;
statement of policy to insure that&#13;
this sort of situation would not, by&#13;
accident, reoccur, and finally, (4)&#13;
a promise to the effect that the&#13;
policy outlined in number three&#13;
would be followed, and that the&#13;
situation would not occur again.&#13;
This statement was to be sent to&#13;
the RANGER office after it was&#13;
drafted.&#13;
On November 14, RANGER&#13;
again initiated contact with PAB&#13;
to find out if the requested&#13;
memorandum was being drafted.&#13;
RANGER at this point was informed&#13;
that PAB would get to&#13;
this matter in "their good time."&#13;
Immediately scheduling another&#13;
conference with PAB's advisor,&#13;
RANGER was informed that the&#13;
agreement reached the week&#13;
before was not going to be&#13;
followed, "as we don't feel that&#13;
we've done anything wrong."&#13;
The next day RANGER&#13;
continued on page 6 rhe story of a well-rounded musician&#13;
Bach, Brubeck and the Beatles&#13;
by Dan McDonald&#13;
Resting on the plywood-surfaced stage is a threewheeled&#13;
object resembling a piano. Unlike other&#13;
three-wheeled pianos, this particular instrument&#13;
has its shortcomings. It might be compared to a&#13;
Cadillac that had been waxed with someone's dirty&#13;
feet. And whoever did the wax job completely&#13;
overlooked the buffing.&#13;
People file into the theater, seating themselves&#13;
largely on the far side of the auditorium in order to&#13;
have the instrument's keys in good view.&#13;
When most are settled, the lights are dimmed.&#13;
Seconds later, a tuxedo-clad man appears on stage.&#13;
Meekly bowing to a light applause, he seats himself&#13;
before the ill-kept piano, creating a contrast that&#13;
would embarrass any good stage manager.&#13;
With great concentration, the musician studies&#13;
the keyboard for a moment. Then, by the touch of a&#13;
finger, he begins a whole new story for the gloomylooking&#13;
instrument. Suddenly, through the hands of&#13;
Stephen Swedish, the mood has been brightened.&#13;
The music of Chopin comes alive.&#13;
Such is the magic of an excellent musician.&#13;
Swedish carried his audience through thoughts of&#13;
passion, sadness, cheerfulness and many other&#13;
emotions in a matter of an hour. As one witness&#13;
commented, "He lets you see how the piano can&#13;
really be played."&#13;
Swedish began improvising on the piano when he&#13;
was six years old. Noticing this, the "stern hand" of&#13;
his father decided it was time for lessons, so the&#13;
young man was sent to a teacher in Milwaukee who&#13;
had previously been Liberace's instructor. .&#13;
The young Swedish enjoyed his new life. In a&#13;
matter of five or six years, he was doing public&#13;
recitals. By the time he graduated from high school,&#13;
he was already an accomplished musician.&#13;
He was offered recording contracts and had been&#13;
doing concert tours for quite some time, but instead&#13;
of continuing along that road, he chose to attend the&#13;
University of Indiana, considered the biggest and&#13;
possibly the best school of music in the country. And&#13;
so on.&#13;
So much for history. Swedish is as bored with it as&#13;
anyone else. He'd rather talk about Bach, Brubeck&#13;
or the Beatles.&#13;
Being a good musician is one great accomplishment.&#13;
Being well-rounded is another.&#13;
Stephen Swedish is both. He can knowledgeablv&#13;
discuss classical, jazz, rock, just about, anything&#13;
Stephen Swedish&#13;
you're into.&#13;
One of his favorite bands is Pink Floyd; he calls&#13;
them "some of the most creative artists in modern&#13;
music. On the other hand, he is currently&#13;
preparing to do a concert at Milwaukee's Performing&#13;
Arts Center featuring the ragtime sounds&#13;
of Scott Joplin. Then, a few days later, he'll do the&#13;
piano work in a Brahms Trio. Who knows what&#13;
follows?&#13;
Swedish is also an instructor at Parkside. In spite&#13;
of his love for public performances, teaching is at&#13;
the top of his list. Formerly, he'd been director of&#13;
chamber music at Texas Tech. a much larger and&#13;
highly-rated school. So why come to Parkside?&#13;
There are a number of reasons. Says Swedish,&#13;
"the money is good, I love the area, and I was told&#13;
I'd have the flexibility and freedom to do what I&#13;
thought best for the music department here. I'm&#13;
also allowed to do public performances. Many&#13;
universities look down on the idea of faculty&#13;
members doing concerts during semester periods."&#13;
Whenever possible, Swedish combines his&#13;
teaching with his public tours. "I like to perform&#13;
works that I'm currently teaching to my students. It&#13;
allows them to better identify with the piece by&#13;
watching and listening to it at a live performance."&#13;
Considering teaching the most important part of&#13;
his Parkside life, Swedish says, "If I can make&#13;
someone curious enough to listen to and learn to&#13;
enjoy some kind of music, I feel great satisfaction. I&#13;
also would like to do something to raise the standard&#13;
of artistic performance at Parkside."&#13;
One of the classes Swedish teaches is Music&#13;
Appreciation. A survey course, it covers all types of&#13;
music starting from the year 900 and ending with&#13;
the present. Though his favorite period is the 19th&#13;
Century (Beethoven, Chopin, Haydn, and so on), he&#13;
has great respect for the 20th Century eras of jazz&#13;
and rock.&#13;
Swedish predicts: "One of the most important&#13;
periods of 20th Century music will be the rock era. I&#13;
think jazz, classical and rock are coming together.&#13;
For that, the Beatles may take responsibility. When&#13;
they came out of England, many people thought&#13;
they were just four scrawny kids who couldn't carry&#13;
a tune, but they have written some music that is&#13;
unbelieveably good."&#13;
Whichever way the musical trend moves, Swedish&#13;
encourages people to move with it and become&#13;
interested and active. When asked it if was&#13;
necessary to start at an early age to become a good&#13;
musician, Swedish replied, "There's a lot of talent&#13;
around that isn't being used. If you're 22 or over 50,&#13;
you're at a good age to start playing music. If&#13;
someone 22 years old thought it was too late to&#13;
learn, I'd tell them they were crazy. We have introductory&#13;
courses at Parkside that offer the opportunity&#13;
to learn any instrument desired. I'd encourage&#13;
anyone with any interest at all to give it a&#13;
try."&#13;
While it's never too late, it's never too early for&#13;
some people, either. Swedish has a one-year-old&#13;
daughter who already insists on "banging on the&#13;
keys whenever she can." Who knows what she'll&#13;
achieve by the time she graduates from high.school.&#13;
And, to avoid a humiliating thought, if a one-yearold&#13;
kid can do it. so can we, right? &#13;
2 THE PAR K SIDE R ANGER W e dn e s da y , N o vem b e r 2 0 , 1974&#13;
•Editorial/OpinionNo&#13;
one&#13;
is above&#13;
the law&#13;
Chapter 297 Wisconsin Statutes 66.77 section (1) states&#13;
that:&#13;
''In recognition of the fact that a representative&#13;
government of the American type is&#13;
dependent upon an informed electorate, it is&#13;
declared to be the policy of this state that the&#13;
public is entitled to the fullest and most complete&#13;
information regarding the affairs of government&#13;
as is compatible with the conduct of governmental&#13;
affairs and the transaction of aovernmental&#13;
business."&#13;
The Open Meeting Law affects not only the State&#13;
Government, but County and Village Boards, City&#13;
Councils, and the University. This law applies directly&#13;
to any agency which receives funds from the state&#13;
treasury.&#13;
There are eight reasons that are considered cause for&#13;
an organization to convene in closed session under this&#13;
law, and no other reasons legally warrant a closed&#13;
meeting. Meetings that are held in violation of this law&#13;
are voidable, and there are specified punishments, not&#13;
only to the organization, but to the individual participants&#13;
involved in the violation, provided by this&#13;
statute.&#13;
At Parkside there have been potentially illegal&#13;
situations that have arisen as a result of this law and&#13;
there have been violations. One problem which has&#13;
arisen is the form of the announcement used to publicize&#13;
meetings of the executive committees in the Division of&#13;
Science. These meetings are closed sessions, which is&#13;
normal procedure.&#13;
Any committee dealing with personnel matters, under&#13;
sub-sections (b) or (e) of section (4) of t his law, has the&#13;
prerogative of c onvening in closed session. All th at has&#13;
to be done is to announce the "general nature of the&#13;
material to be discussed" in the meeting announcement.&#13;
The problem arises when one considers the violation&#13;
of a person's right to keep any potentially damaging&#13;
information from being disclosed about his or her&#13;
situation in the University, and yet follow the guidelines&#13;
set forth in the law. It is to the credit of this administration&#13;
that the situation in the Science Division&#13;
was, when questioned, corrected without discord and&#13;
with due haste.&#13;
On the other hand, there are organizations on campus&#13;
that feel they may be immune from the effects of this&#13;
law, and it may come as a surprise to them when they&#13;
discover that it is the policy of this newspaper to&#13;
this law, and to report any and all violations that cannot&#13;
be handled from within the University. This law may or&#13;
may not have been intended to affect this University,&#13;
but at this time the question is moot. The law is in effect&#13;
and will be followed.&#13;
Editor's Note: On Friday, November 15, RANGER filed&#13;
a formal complaint with the Kenosha County District&#13;
Attorney. The action concerns certain events which&#13;
took place on October 7, 1974, at a Parkside Activities&#13;
Board Meeting.&#13;
Letters to the Editor&#13;
Arthur will b e back...God willing&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On the chance that I still have&#13;
some friends at Parkside who&#13;
might be interested in knowing&#13;
where I am and what I am doing,&#13;
I'll write and tell you about my&#13;
plans for the immediate future.&#13;
Shortly after Thanksgiving my&#13;
dear wife Ruth and I will leave&#13;
for Rhodesia. Our plans are to be&#13;
in that part of the world for about&#13;
three months ... God willing.&#13;
Why Rhodesia? Well, because&#13;
we have a life-long friend named&#13;
Lawrence Hautz living near&#13;
Salisbury. Larry and I grew up in&#13;
the same neighborhood on the&#13;
south side of Milwaukee over 60&#13;
years ago. We went to the same&#13;
high school (Bay View High) and&#13;
went through Scouting together.&#13;
After fumbling attempts at&#13;
college I went into Scouting&#13;
professionally and Larry had a&#13;
successful business career in&#13;
Milwaukee. About 20 years ago&#13;
Larry and his wife Carol decided&#13;
to serve God by becoming&#13;
Pioneers for the Baha'i World&#13;
Faith. They sold their prospering&#13;
insurance agency and their&#13;
beautiful home on North Lake&#13;
Drive in Milwaukee and moved to&#13;
Rhodesia. (We Methodists call&#13;
sucfypeople "Missionaries".)&#13;
Larry and Carol (she died in&#13;
1971) used their resources to&#13;
begin a new life in Rhodesia.&#13;
They bought some acreage about&#13;
14 kilometers outside of&#13;
Salisbury. There they built the&#13;
first American-type motel on the&#13;
long road to Victoria Falls. And&#13;
they started a school for black&#13;
children. It's called The&#13;
Salisbury Motel School because&#13;
the motel supports the school.&#13;
Ruth and I will spend part of our&#13;
time helping there. What does a&#13;
history major teach children who&#13;
are only a few steps away from a&#13;
tribal environment? Love will&#13;
point the way.&#13;
As young men Larry and I&#13;
started out to change the world.&#13;
But that's easier said than done.&#13;
Experience insisted that we scale&#13;
our goals down to a manageable&#13;
size by working to the best of our&#13;
ability on the problems nearest at&#13;
hand... beginning with ourselves.&#13;
Larry has succeeded in that&#13;
respect far better than I. With&#13;
unstinting dedication he has&#13;
planted orchards, made a lake by&#13;
darning up a meandering stream,&#13;
established a snake "farm" from&#13;
which venom for medicinal use is&#13;
sent to many parts of the world,&#13;
developed a nursery which grows&#13;
beautiful hybrid roses, founded a&#13;
school which helps hundreds of&#13;
families and he has made a&#13;
beauty spot out of what was once&#13;
African bushland. Some day a&#13;
beautiful Baha'i House of Worship&#13;
will be built on the land he&#13;
has prepared.&#13;
Parenthetically, in my opinion,&#13;
Baha'is are a special kind of&#13;
people. As I understand it, they&#13;
consider the Baha'i Faith as&#13;
further revelations of Christ's&#13;
teaching. They believe that "The&#13;
World is one country and&#13;
Mankind its citizens." Also, that&#13;
people should (and will eventually)&#13;
live together, "not with&#13;
uniformity but with unity through&#13;
diversity."&#13;
To me that sounds like a&#13;
paradoxical arrangement but&#13;
there are no "impossible"&#13;
dreams for people like Larry&#13;
Hautz. Suggestion: For those of&#13;
you who are still searching for&#13;
soil in which to root your Credo,&#13;
check up on what The Baha'i&#13;
World Faith has to offer. A visit&#13;
to the Baha'i House of Worship in&#13;
Wilmette, Illinois would be most&#13;
enlightening. End of parenthesis&#13;
and back to Larry and the upcoming&#13;
trip.&#13;
In our intermittent exchanges&#13;
of letters, Ruth and I got the&#13;
feeling that Larry was impatient&#13;
and possibly discouraged as he&#13;
waited for his better world to&#13;
materialize. In a letter written a&#13;
few months after Carol had died&#13;
he wrote, "I am now facing the&#13;
fact that I am approaching the&#13;
twilight of my life. When I was&#13;
young, I always thought that I&#13;
had plenty of time to accomplish&#13;
the things I wanted to do but now,&#13;
as I look back, I realize that I&#13;
have just scratched the surface."&#13;
And then he added this postscript:&#13;
"As I read what I have&#13;
just typed, I could not hold back a&#13;
flow of tears." Such a postscript&#13;
did not sound like the Larry we&#13;
knew whose out-going personality&#13;
always seemed to overflow&#13;
with energy and selfconfidence.&#13;
But I could understand&#13;
his frustrations. As I&#13;
thought about his letter I realized&#13;
that the Four Horsemen of the&#13;
Apocalypse are still plaguing the&#13;
world - war, pestilence, famine&#13;
and death. And two more riders&#13;
have joined the terrorists - greed&#13;
and inflation. It was after the&#13;
arrival of Larry's "postscript&#13;
letter" that Ruth and I began&#13;
thinking seriously of going to&#13;
• Rhodesia. After all,, he'd been&#13;
inviting us for years.&#13;
We learned in another letter&#13;
that Larry had been ill and a few&#13;
months ago he fell out of a tree&#13;
with a live chain saw in his hands&#13;
Of all things! Fortunately he&#13;
wasn't badly hurt but it helped us&#13;
make up our minds that maybe&#13;
Larry and I ought to get together&#13;
... that maybe he could use a little&#13;
help at the school or in some&#13;
other ways ... But no tree climbing!&#13;
So we have bought our&#13;
plane tickets and will go to the&#13;
Salisbury Motel School and share&#13;
our ecumenical spirit in our own&#13;
way ... By helping.&#13;
I must, however, confess to&#13;
some selfish motivation in&#13;
making this trip. Ruth and I&#13;
have been in over 50 countries&#13;
together but never to southern&#13;
Africa. Now, not only will we be&#13;
able to hopefully help a friend&#13;
but I will also be able to visit&#13;
places made famous by two of my&#13;
boyhood heroes - Baden-Powell,&#13;
the Founder of the Boy Scout&#13;
Movement and David Livingston,&#13;
the medical missionary who gave&#13;
his life in Christian service to the&#13;
natives of central Africa. Many&#13;
times, as we move about&#13;
Rhodesia and South Africa, we&#13;
will cross the paths once trod by&#13;
Baden-Powell and Livingston. At&#13;
times it will be like a pilgrimage.&#13;
So now you know why you won't&#13;
see me around for a few months.&#13;
We will begin our long flight to&#13;
Rhodesia on December 3rd. We&#13;
will arrive in Salisbury on the 9th&#13;
after a four day rest stop in&#13;
Johannesburg. For me Parkside&#13;
will be 8,000 miles away ... but&#13;
seldom out of mind. But don't&#13;
forget me! And while I'm away&#13;
continue to build good Traditions&#13;
for our Alma Mater ... Like good&#13;
class attendance ... and having a&#13;
litter-free campus ... And always&#13;
doing your best... and being kind&#13;
to one another.&#13;
I'll see you sometime in March&#13;
... God willing.&#13;
Arthur Gruhl&#13;
Alumnus, Class of '74.&#13;
PSGA says Regents play dirty&#13;
ME The ParksideRANGER&#13;
&#13;
The PARKSIDE RANGER is a wholly independenl&#13;
publication of the students of the U.W. Parkside, ex&#13;
pressing the interests, opinions, and concerns of the&#13;
students, and responsible for its contents. Offices are&#13;
located in D194 LLC, U.W. Parkside, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53140 . Phones 553-2295, 55 3-2287.&#13;
'OSt&#13;
£ JTCROIRO&#13;
0 A* (v NEMO&#13;
Editor Kenneth Pestka&#13;
Advertising Manager John Sacket&#13;
Business Manager Steve Johnson&#13;
Managing Editor Greg Hawkins&#13;
News Editor Michael Olszyk&#13;
Humanities Editor amy cundari&#13;
Copy Editor Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
News Department Paul Anderson, Jeannine Sipsma,&#13;
Mike Nepper&#13;
Humanities Department Walter Ulbricht, Fred Bultman&#13;
Photographers Dale Allen, Dave Keller, Rita Ohm,&#13;
Dave Dretzka, Mike Nepper&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government, P.S.G.A. Inc., had a&#13;
declaratory petition brought&#13;
before the Board of Regents of&#13;
the University of Wisconsin&#13;
System. This declaratory petition&#13;
was issued by the Parkside&#13;
Student Government after an&#13;
overwhelming majority of the&#13;
students, in a record-breaking&#13;
voter turnout, ratified the new&#13;
student constitution in a&#13;
University referendum. The&#13;
purpose of the declaratory&#13;
petition was to make the Board of&#13;
Regents decide whether or not to&#13;
accept the voice of the Parkside&#13;
students. In its worst, but most&#13;
accurate, connotation the actions&#13;
of the Board of Regents have&#13;
prostituted the ideals of&#13;
American democracy and&#13;
justice The Board of Regents not&#13;
only did not inform the Student&#13;
S°™™me,,t here at Parkside&#13;
that this would be on the agenda&#13;
but also Frank Pelisek, President&#13;
of the Board of Regents, claimed&#13;
that he had informed John&#13;
Siefert, attorney for the Student&#13;
Government, that he should&#13;
appear at the meeting. However,&#13;
John Siefert was not informed to&#13;
appear until five hours after the&#13;
Board had handed down its&#13;
decision. The Board of Regents&#13;
then voted down the petition for a&#13;
declaratory ruling when some of&#13;
'ts members did not even have a&#13;
copy of the declaratory petition&#13;
Pelisek, after verbally noting this&#13;
condition, proceeded with the&#13;
meeting anyway.&#13;
The Board of Regents&#13;
viously knows ihat^he'stldem"&#13;
Government does not have the&#13;
money necessary for legal&#13;
counsel or action. It is interesting&#13;
to note that the quality and&#13;
measure of justice one receives is&#13;
directly related to the financial&#13;
resources a party has at its&#13;
disposal. When P.S.G.A. Inc. has&#13;
no money and was deliberately&#13;
obstructed by the Board of&#13;
Regents, how can we, as the sole&#13;
governing authority of the&#13;
students, uphold and protect the&#13;
rights of the students? It was&#13;
indeed unfortunate that the&#13;
Board of Regents had to play&#13;
administrative politics at the&#13;
expense of the students at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
&#13;
Senate,&#13;
P.S.G.A, Inc. &#13;
Wednesday, November 20, 19 74 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Spoon River"— Preview&#13;
ThreeJ-'Spoon River" inhabitants strike the attitudes they'll assume in the Nov. 21-24 production bv&#13;
the Parkside Players: left to right are Jody Jones. Keith Gayhart and Michael Ward.&#13;
&lt;M,Uct,on by&#13;
by amy&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
It is difficult, very difficult, to&#13;
do justice to the work that moves&#13;
in and out of the psychological&#13;
social dimensions of a person]&#13;
and even more trying to present&#13;
this sensitive and raw side of the&#13;
whole generation that has passed&#13;
through a town. The problems&#13;
develop in the translation of such&#13;
a piece. One must be presented&#13;
with honest sentiment, real pain,&#13;
and robust anger. Otherwise, the&#13;
dramatization becomes so much&#13;
corn, surface pettiness and soap&#13;
opera affectation, that it is impossible&#13;
for any human quality to&#13;
be detected in the character&#13;
portrayed. The Parkside&#13;
production of Edgar Lee&#13;
Masters' "Spoon River Anthology"&#13;
has achieved in its&#13;
translation a rare melancholy,&#13;
sincerity, and truthfulness.&#13;
In the preview performance on&#13;
Thursday, November 15, the 12-&#13;
member cast delivered more&#13;
than 70 characters with sensitivity&#13;
and insight. The setting is&#13;
stark-like the bare wires of&#13;
nerves and minds in the now&#13;
dead, tormented inhabitants of&#13;
Spoon River. The characters&#13;
stand, silent and silhouetted,&#13;
separated by light and empty&#13;
space. They stand frozen between&#13;
their speeches like statues in a&#13;
garden, or perhaps a museum;&#13;
like the unspeaking stone they&#13;
were while alive. There was no&#13;
vocal communication among&#13;
them then, and so the confessions&#13;
and admissions go on now as&#13;
their stifled souls rage and weep&#13;
from the grave.&#13;
Someone once said, "truth will&#13;
out," and one could suppose if not&#13;
in life, then in death. It is this&#13;
truth, the stuff in the core of a&#13;
soul, that lays itself open in this&#13;
penetrating production of Spoon&#13;
River.&#13;
Music, emotion and silence&#13;
weave together in a tapestry of&#13;
strangled reality that will not&#13;
rest. Virginia King and Glen&#13;
Christiansen do an extraordinary&#13;
job of translating the honest&#13;
sentiment of Midwestern folk&#13;
songs in contrast to the&#13;
frustrated, deceiving characters&#13;
that lived in the midst of such&#13;
music, and now, have been lost to&#13;
their personal solitary.&#13;
Michael Ward is subtle, but&#13;
exploding beneath the calm is&#13;
hungry love, great longing. Jeff&#13;
Kiehlbach is sensual, insane as&#13;
a pyromaniac, and equally excellent&#13;
in all his roles. Michael&#13;
Clickner's Fiddler Jones has a&#13;
compelling rural brilliance.&#13;
Keith Gayhart is raw, seething&#13;
energy, while Charles Johnson&#13;
sensitively brings the regret and&#13;
loneliness of his characters to&#13;
life.&#13;
The women of Spoon River,&#13;
whore and bleed and scream&#13;
their existences to reality. They&#13;
are reality. They motivated the&#13;
children, seduced the men,&#13;
embraced the love of others&#13;
deeply. Susan Zietz becomes the&#13;
most holy and the most immoral&#13;
of women interchangeably, and&#13;
to perfection. Carrie Ward proves&#13;
she can play more than the&#13;
society ladies of her former roles,&#13;
achieving the poignant beauty of&#13;
women full of life, robbed of this&#13;
secret gift. Jody Jones is catty,&#13;
tender, crushing the things that&#13;
simultaneously attract and&#13;
repulse her lovers and the&#13;
audience. Kathy Kah lures you,&#13;
runs from your admirations and&#13;
then begs for them again in the&#13;
realization of some ever-present&#13;
emptiness which threatens to&#13;
engulf her characters. Nancy&#13;
Johnson presents women filled&#13;
with eternal visions and women&#13;
of biting self-ihterest.&#13;
The reason I have described&#13;
the actors as possessing certain&#13;
qualities instead of the characters&#13;
themselves is because these&#13;
actors are the characters.&#13;
The kiss just now out of reach&#13;
because of death, the factual&#13;
commitment of one spirit to&#13;
another: all things supremely&#13;
human are rendered in this&#13;
production. If they 'gift- ydirwith&#13;
what I had the pleasure of&#13;
viewing, you will have one of the&#13;
finest translations of Masters'&#13;
work you are likely to see.&#13;
Parkside no-shows&#13;
Milwaukee shows for Jackson Browne&#13;
johi ana jams rius&#13;
Finally, at 8:25, Wendy Waldman and her bass&#13;
player started out. Wendy has a good voice and at&#13;
times sounded like Joni Mitchell's high and floaty&#13;
at others like Janis Joplin's low and raspy. She kind&#13;
of made up for the long delays. Her music was good,&#13;
as was her conversation between songs. She played&#13;
guitar, then a dulcimer, and piano. Some of the&#13;
notable songs included "Train Song," "Your&#13;
Constant Companion" and "Turn a Cold Back on&#13;
Me. After she finished, I was surprised that an&#13;
impatient crowd appreciated her enough to call her&#13;
back for another song. She also seemed surprised&#13;
and flattered.&#13;
Bomb Threat Not Announced&#13;
Then came the longest delay, almost another&#13;
hour The reason for it was later discovered to be a&#13;
bomb threat. I was told about it the next day. To&#13;
leave 1300 people in the dark about this is horrible.&#13;
We are adults and could have made the decision to&#13;
stay or leave as we saw fit. We should not have to&#13;
take that kind of bullshit from someone who decided&#13;
that we were not in danger. No excuse-not even one&#13;
oi potential panic-warranted not telling the crowd&#13;
The alleged bomb was to go off at 10 p.m.&#13;
At 10:10, Jackson Browne appeared and&#13;
apologized for being late. He shouldn't have had to&#13;
apologize for the way the whole thing was handled&#13;
He opened with "Redneck Friend" and went in to&#13;
Ready or Not." during which there was a lot of&#13;
static coming from the right-hand set of speakers&#13;
By the third song. "The Road*and the Skv." the&#13;
problem was corrected, and the sound in the gvm&#13;
was so good that even Jackson Browne himself&#13;
commented on the sound quality.&#13;
Plays Most pf New Album&#13;
Browne switched back and forth from guitar to&#13;
piano. He did "Fountain of Sorrow" next: 'Tor&#13;
Everyman from his second album sounded reallv&#13;
nice. Browne spoke of a dead'friend for whom "For&#13;
by Cliff Chambers&#13;
With the appearance of Jackson Browne on&#13;
November 12, Parkside opened the door to the&#13;
formerly untapped resource of Milwaukee area&#13;
concert-goers. WQFM radio of Milwaukee cosponsored&#13;
the concert, and through its efforts,&#13;
provided most of the crowd of 1300. I am told that&#13;
less than 400 students at Parkside took advantage of&#13;
having this concert in their own "back yard." It is&#13;
too bad because we don't often get musicians of&#13;
Jackson Browne's caliber to play here at Parkside.&#13;
The music flowed smoothly, the show did not. At&#13;
7:30, a half-hour before the scheduled start, a lot of&#13;
people had to stand outside the P.E. building in the&#13;
cold. When finally admitted, there were manycomplaints&#13;
about having to pay $5 to sit on the gym&#13;
floor. After the delay to get in, the delay before the&#13;
show started did not set well with many in attendance.&#13;
&#13;
a Dancer" was written, the song he performed next. ,&#13;
Upon learning that Lake Michigan was nearby (it is&#13;
not as polluted as Browne thinks it is), he sang&#13;
"Rock Me on the Water." From his latest album he&#13;
played "Walking Slow," "Late for the Sky" (the&#13;
title cut), and "Before the Deluge." He finished the&#13;
set with his AM standard, "Doctor My Eyes " After&#13;
enthusiastic applause (for 1300) he encored with&#13;
"Take It Easy" and slid into "Your Love Keeps&#13;
Lifting Me Higher." Out of eight songs on his new&#13;
album he played six.&#13;
The music for the night was good and the sound&#13;
was good. The poor judgment of the person who&#13;
decided the bomb threat was not to be announced&#13;
shouldn't detract from the music. What was also&#13;
distressing was the fact .that Milwaukee provided&#13;
three-fourths of the crowd. Parkside has a ways to&#13;
go before it can successfully put on a concert by&#13;
itself. Let's hope we don't abandon the idea of good&#13;
music being performed here. &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesda y/ November 20, 1974&#13;
Brief News&#13;
Wednesday, November 20; Whiteskellar presents Barry Patton from&#13;
Milwaukee playing original folk and blues from 1-3 p.m. in the coffeehouse&#13;
(GR D-201). No admission charge.&#13;
Student music recital begins at 3:30 p.m. in the Comm. Arts&#13;
Theater. Admission is free and open to the public.&#13;
Film: "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich," based on the Nobel&#13;
Prize-winning novel by Alexander Solzhenitsyn, will begin at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in GR 103. Admission is $1. Parkside I.D. required.&#13;
^&#13;
Ur&#13;
day&#13;
;,&#13;
November 2I: People for a N°n-Sexist Society will meet at&#13;
12:30 in Classroom D-128.&#13;
Attention Pre-Pharmacy Students: Pam Palmer from the Madison&#13;
School of Pharmacy will be on campus on Thursday, Nov. 21 from 9&#13;
a.m. to noon in Tallent Hall room 121. Call Placement Office, 553-2452&#13;
for an appointment.&#13;
Film: "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich" at 7:30 p.m. in GR&#13;
103. Admission is $1 and UW-P I.D. is required.&#13;
"Spoon River Anthology" will begin at 8 p.m. in the Comm. Arts&#13;
Theater. Admission is $1 for UW-P students and staff and $2 for the&#13;
general public. Tickets are available at the Information kiosk or at the&#13;
door. The play continues through Sunday, November 24.&#13;
FAST FOR A WORLD HARVEST sponsored by the Newman Club in&#13;
conjunction with Americans across the nation.&#13;
Friday, November 22; Film: "Twelve Chairs," a Mel Brooks creation&#13;
will begin at 8 p.m. in the Student Activities Building. Admission is $1*&#13;
UW-P and state I.D's required.&#13;
Sunday, November 24; Vets Club meeting at 4 p.m. in the SAB.&#13;
Ragtime Rangers Ski Show from 12 noon to 6 p.m. in the Phy. Ed.&#13;
Building. Admission is $1 and is open to the public. Includes fashion&#13;
show, booths set up for ski resorts, ski patrol, orienting, movies, and&#13;
ski swap.&#13;
Mass at Newman Center beginning at 12: 15 p.m. at the Carthage&#13;
College Meditation Chapel. Everyone welcome.&#13;
Film: "Twelve Chairs," at 7:30 p.m. in the SAB. UW-P and state&#13;
I.D.'s required.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 26&#13;
"The Church Today" - a discussion at St. George School at 8 p.m. by&#13;
Fr. Richard Schlenker. Everyone interested is most welcome.&#13;
December 8: The Vets Club will sponsor a paper drive from 8 a.m. -&#13;
3:30 p.m. in the Tallent Hall parking lot. The drive is to help support&#13;
the operation of the Racine Vets Bus&#13;
VOTE&#13;
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AVAILABLE IN KENOSHA ONLY&#13;
Bogus bomb threat&#13;
delays Browne concert&#13;
According to Tony Totero,&#13;
coordinator of Student&#13;
Programming, a bomb threat&#13;
delayed for about 20 minutes the&#13;
Jackson Browne concert which&#13;
was held in Parkside's Physical&#13;
Education Building, on Tuesday,&#13;
Nov. 12.&#13;
He said that the estimated 1300&#13;
to 1500 people attending the&#13;
concert were not informed of the&#13;
bomb threat.&#13;
Deputy Dale Crichton of the&#13;
Kenosha Sheriff's Dept. said that&#13;
the threat was called in to the&#13;
Kenosha Police Dept. by a young&#13;
male who said the bomb was to go&#13;
off at 10 p.m.&#13;
At 8:59 p.m. the Kenosha Police&#13;
Dept. contacted the Sheriff's&#13;
Dept. which sent out four&#13;
deputies and two detectives.&#13;
They searched the building,&#13;
along with Parkside's Safety and&#13;
Security force, from 9:15 until 10&#13;
p.m. but failed to find a bomb.&#13;
Crichton said that the decision&#13;
not to inform the audience about&#13;
the bomb scare was made by&#13;
Erwin Zuehlke, Assistant&#13;
Chancellor of Administration.&#13;
Crichton also said that he was&#13;
informed that there had been at&#13;
least four bomb scares in the last&#13;
two months at Parkside.&#13;
Zuelke commented that there&#13;
have been three bomb scares&#13;
since Labor Day and it was his&#13;
decision not to announce any of&#13;
them.&#13;
He said that Parkside has been&#13;
getting bomb scares ever since&#13;
the buildings were opened, but&#13;
that this is not a unique situation&#13;
since many institutions receive&#13;
threats.&#13;
When a bomb threat is received&#13;
at Parkside, the procedure is not&#13;
to inform faculty or students of&#13;
the threat, but to make a&#13;
thorough search of the building&#13;
and then decide whether or not to&#13;
evacuate, Zuelke said.&#13;
He mentioned that the&#13;
evacuation measure has never&#13;
been taken and that to his&#13;
knowledge, a bomb scare has&#13;
never been announced to the&#13;
students at Parkside.&#13;
"We try to be as inconspicuous&#13;
as possible when something like&#13;
this happens," Zuelke said. "The&#13;
caller wants to disrupt things and&#13;
we don't want to give him the&#13;
satisfaction of doing so. The less&#13;
that is said, the better off we&#13;
are."&#13;
UW p roposes SSC make-up&#13;
Minorities left out&#13;
Donald Smith, senior vice&#13;
president of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin System, sent a letter to&#13;
the presidents of the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board (PAB), the&#13;
Adult Student Association (ASA),&#13;
the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. (PSGA)&#13;
and the Vet's Club concerning,&#13;
among other things, the process&#13;
whereby students will be&#13;
nominated to the Search and&#13;
Screen Committee (SSC).&#13;
The SSC is responsible for&#13;
screening applications for&#13;
chancellor and will consist of&#13;
students, faculty, and administrators.&#13;
&#13;
In this letter, Smith requested&#13;
that each of the above&#13;
organizations submit at least two&#13;
nominations for each of the two&#13;
student positions on the committee.&#13;
He also mentioned that&#13;
attention was to be given "to the&#13;
inclusion of women and-or&#13;
minorities among the nominees."&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich, president&#13;
of PSGA, said that Smith ignored&#13;
feminist groups and minority&#13;
groups such as Third World.&#13;
He said, "I think it's wrong for&#13;
any single organization to send&#13;
potential nominees for the SSC,&#13;
the reason being that some&#13;
organizations were ignored.&#13;
What I want is for all&#13;
organizations to pick the&#13;
nominees together."&#13;
Milutinovich has sent a letter&#13;
which should reach every student&#13;
organization on campus,&#13;
requesting that a meeting take&#13;
place to discuss student nominees&#13;
to the SSC.&#13;
According to Milutinovich, he&#13;
is requesting that the presidents&#13;
of all interested organizations&#13;
come to the meeting with a list of&#13;
nominees which will be screened&#13;
by this council and sent to Smith.&#13;
He said that those&#13;
organizations which were&#13;
mentioned in Smith's letter would&#13;
still have the prerogative of&#13;
sending Smith their own&#13;
nominations in addition to those&#13;
sent by the council of presidents.&#13;
Milutinovich said, "Instead of&#13;
relying on input from separate&#13;
organizations, this would insure&#13;
greater student input."&#13;
Christmas spirit&#13;
hits Sigma Pi&#13;
Christmastime is just around&#13;
the corner and Sigma Pi&#13;
Fraternity is once again donning&#13;
its Santa suit in order to conduct&#13;
its 3rd annual TOY DRIVE. The&#13;
proceeds collected from this&#13;
year's drive will be donated to&#13;
various charity organizations in&#13;
the Kenosha - Racine area including&#13;
the Parkside Day Care&#13;
Center.&#13;
The TOY DRIVE will run from&#13;
November 20 to December 13&#13;
with collection stations placed at&#13;
the following locations: the Information&#13;
Kiosk in the Library&#13;
Learning Center, the corridor&#13;
between LLC and Greenquist&#13;
Hall, inside the main entrance to&#13;
the Classroom Building, the main&#13;
corridor of the Comm. Arts&#13;
Building, and inside the main&#13;
entrance of Tallent Hall. Sigma&#13;
Pi brothers will be out making&#13;
door-to-door collections and&#13;
soliciting local merchants for&#13;
donations throughout the period.&#13;
Last year's TOY DRIVE was&#13;
an overwhelming success, according&#13;
to Jerry Ferch, this&#13;
year's social-publicity chairperson,&#13;
and a repeat performance&#13;
is expected.&#13;
FREE DEL IVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
?&lt;&#13;
SHO REC RES T&#13;
639 5305&#13;
GEOR GETOW N&#13;
554 7334&#13;
PIZZA CHICKEN&#13;
AND FISH CARRYOUTS&#13;
ANYTIME!&#13;
HOURS: Sun. Wed. &amp; Thurs. 11:30 A.M.&#13;
11:30 P.M.&#13;
Fr i. &amp; Sat. 11:30 A.M.-12:30 A.M.&#13;
""UNION&#13;
APPEARING&#13;
WED., FRI. SAT. &amp; SUN.&#13;
NOV. 20, 22, 23, 24&#13;
Kenosha's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shakey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay R oad Phone 654-0485 &#13;
Wednesday, November 20, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
"Walter&#13;
Ulbrichts&#13;
Art faculty to bare all&#13;
Art profs show stuff&#13;
^ , w f THE TRIAL OF BILLY JACK&#13;
There s a ot of truth in the old saying that "the guilty cry the loudest&#13;
for justice. Remember John Mitchell's witch-hiL for nattona&#13;
subversives or Richard Nixon's pledges to eet to thl JSfl I&#13;
Watergate? I get that uncomfortable feeline with th bott&#13;
°™ of&#13;
Laughlin-Delores Taylor epic agS ^s^'L'Sfy Stf IZ&#13;
Released from prison, Billy Jack returns to the Arizona Indim&#13;
reservation and picks up the truth crusade (any similarity to B1W&#13;
Graham is purely intentional). During his absence, Our Miss BrS&#13;
Jean Roberts, at the progressive Freedom School has made a few&#13;
changes. The students aren't the drop-outs one step away from crime&#13;
or jail as portrayed he first flick, but left-overs from Cleara™&#13;
commercials, turned self-styled Nader Raiders&#13;
Through government grants and in the "spirit of love" the kids have&#13;
the ultimate toybox: a TV station, a recording studio, Yoga Sport, an&#13;
international center for the study of human rights, and of course a&#13;
Peter Pan retreat from warped adult society.&#13;
But this paradise is threatened by the lecherous, blood-thirsty&#13;
townfolk. And why not? These hip kids have expensive ski outfits&#13;
belly-dancei classes, an olympic-size swimming pool, and wall-to-wall&#13;
color TV sets, the essence of the American Dream. The outside world&#13;
naturally wants an equal share of that wealth plus that envious&#13;
freedom from taxation, work, and responsibility.&#13;
Billy Jack pretends to defend the helpless students (they already&#13;
imported a Korean Karate instructor) and the oppressed minority&#13;
(the Indian brothers are never seen swimming in the integrated pool),&#13;
but Billy s bravado and Jean's saccharine philosophy of love and&#13;
brotherhood are cleverly distinguished hypes.&#13;
It's the old shell game. Keep the Indians happy with colored beads&#13;
and never worry about rent. Espouse virtue and collect federal funds.&#13;
Their "heroics" are selfish, exploitative impulses. Marjoe the&#13;
hustling evangelist, resembles a canonized saint against this deceitful&#13;
duo.&#13;
We've been Billy-Clubbed!&#13;
"Fast for a World Harvest&#13;
Members of the UW-Parkside&#13;
art faculty will hold their first&#13;
joint show in the Communication&#13;
Arts Gallery Nov. 21 through&#13;
Dec. 13. An opening reception will&#13;
be held Thursday, Nov 21, from 6&#13;
to 8 p.m. Regular gallery hours&#13;
are 3 to 5 p.m. Mondays, Wednesdays&#13;
and Fridays and 6 to 8&#13;
p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays.&#13;
Robert Cadez and Erik Forrest&#13;
will be represented by paintings&#13;
and prints, Moishe Smith by&#13;
etchings, Rollin Jansky by&#13;
sculpture in fiber glass reinforced&#13;
resin and John Murphy by&#13;
ceramic pieces and ceramic&#13;
sculpture. Also included are&#13;
paintings by David Zaig, who was&#13;
a visiting faculty member at&#13;
Parkside in 1972-73 and has&#13;
continued to teach on a part-time&#13;
basis. The show is made up of&#13;
recent work by the various artists.&#13;
&#13;
Cadez has recently had shows&#13;
of his paintings at the Bradley&#13;
Galleries in Milwaukee, at the&#13;
Parkside Gallery and at the&#13;
Rockford (111.) Art Association's&#13;
Burpee Gallery. He works&#13;
principally in water color and&#13;
acrylics. A native of Michigan, he&#13;
received his master of fine arts&#13;
degree from UW-Madison. His&#13;
work has been included in a&#13;
number of juried shows and invitational&#13;
exhibitions and has&#13;
won awards on the local, regional&#13;
and national levels. He is&#13;
represented in the permanent&#13;
ff&#13;
Help the hungry&#13;
A nationwide "Fast for a World&#13;
Harvest" on Thursday,&#13;
November 21, sponsored by the&#13;
Newman Club, will invite wellfed&#13;
Americans to share the&#13;
hunger that is the daily experience&#13;
of one billion of the&#13;
earth's people. The money saved&#13;
by going hungry for one day will&#13;
help small farmers in Asia,&#13;
Africa and Latin America grow&#13;
more food in the areas where&#13;
most of these people live. Kurt&#13;
Waldheim, Secretary General of&#13;
the United Nations, says; " 'Fast&#13;
for a World Harvest', sponsored&#13;
by Oxfam-America, is a welcome&#13;
example of how individuals have&#13;
a chance to join together in&#13;
ACCOUNTING A ND&#13;
FINANCE MAJORS&#13;
Let us help you:&#13;
PLAN AHEAD&#13;
To Become a CPA&#13;
THE BECKER&#13;
CPA REVIEW COURSE&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
414-276-7271&#13;
Our Successful Students Represent&#13;
1/AOFUSA&#13;
creating greater awareness of&#13;
alarming global food shortages&#13;
and in sharing their resources&#13;
with those in greater need."&#13;
"Fast for a World Harvest"&#13;
will be nationally observed by&#13;
colleges, churches, high schools,&#13;
community organizations and&#13;
individuals who feel that a more&#13;
equitable distribution of the&#13;
world's resources is needed.&#13;
Contributions will be used for&#13;
development programs such as&#13;
water storage, better seeds, and&#13;
i m p r o v ed liv e s toc k&#13;
management.&#13;
The Fast will also direct&#13;
national attention to the critical&#13;
global food shortage. Drought,&#13;
floods, and fertilizer shortages&#13;
have reduced farm yields in&#13;
many parts of the world. Increasing&#13;
population in the&#13;
developing countries and dietary&#13;
changes in affluent nations are&#13;
compounding food shortages. The&#13;
average American now requires&#13;
almost a ton of grain a year&#13;
(much of it to feed animals for&#13;
meat), while the average Bengali&#13;
is lucky to receive the equivalent&#13;
of a pound of grain a day. Implications&#13;
for the future are&#13;
particularly grim for children,&#13;
whose growth and mental&#13;
development are seriously and&#13;
permanently impaired by&#13;
malnutrition.&#13;
A SPECIAL THANKSGIVING DINNER&#13;
TUESDAY&#13;
NOV. 2 6, 1 974&#13;
HAM OR TURKEY&#13;
WITH ALL&#13;
THE TRIMINGS&#13;
• NEW HOURS •&#13;
L.L.C. MOD., T HRU THURS. - 7:30 a.m. - 6:30 p.m.&#13;
FRI 7:30 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.&#13;
BUFFET ROOMS&#13;
M0N-THURS 11:00 a.m.-1:30 p.m.&#13;
FRI 11:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m.&#13;
m Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
"On Tap at the Union&#13;
99&#13;
collections of Cotey College (Mo.)&#13;
and the Flint (Mich.) Institute of&#13;
Arts.&#13;
Forrest, an internationallyknown&#13;
art educator and painter,&#13;
has had one-man shows in major&#13;
English and American cities and&#13;
has frequently served as a juror&#13;
for exhibitions. Before coming to&#13;
Parkside in 1969, he was assistant&#13;
head of the school of art&#13;
education at the College of Art in&#13;
Birmingham, England. During&#13;
the 1965-66 academic year, he&#13;
was an artist-in-residence at UWMadison.&#13;
He is a graduate of&#13;
George Hariot's School and the&#13;
College of Art, both in Edinburgh,&#13;
Scotland and also has done postgraduate&#13;
work at a number of&#13;
English institutions.&#13;
Smith, a printmaker, has had&#13;
one-man shows in Italy, Switzerland&#13;
and throughout the U.S.&#13;
and has been represented in&#13;
invitational exhibitions in Germany,&#13;
Spain, Italy, Mexico and&#13;
the U.S. His work is in more than&#13;
70 permanent collections in&#13;
Europe and the U.S. including&#13;
that of the Elvehjem Art Center&#13;
in Madison. He previously taught&#13;
at Southern Illinois University&#13;
and Stout State University (now&#13;
UW-Stout) and has been a&#13;
visiting faculty member at UWMadison,&#13;
Ohio State University,&#13;
Utah State University and the&#13;
University of Iowa. His work has&#13;
won numerous prizes and&#13;
purchase awards. He received&#13;
his masters degree at the&#13;
University of Iowa and also did&#13;
graduate work at the Academia&#13;
of Florence (Italy).&#13;
Jansky, who won second prize&#13;
last year in a national sculpture&#13;
exhibition, "Sculpture'73"&#13;
sponsored by the Southern&#13;
Association of Sculptors, works in&#13;
polyester impregnated fiberglass&#13;
with emphasis on pigmentation of&#13;
resin finishes through a variety of&#13;
experimental methods. He has&#13;
had one-man shows of his&#13;
distinctive modular works at a&#13;
number of Midwestern institutions&#13;
and is represented in&#13;
several permanent collections.&#13;
On the UW System art faculty&#13;
since receiving his graduate&#13;
degree from UW-Madison in 1965,&#13;
he was on leave from Parkside in&#13;
1971-72 as a senior lecturer in&#13;
sculpture at Cheltenham College&#13;
of Art and Design at Gloucester,&#13;
England.&#13;
Ceramist Murphy has&#13;
exhibited his work throughout the&#13;
United States and in Canada and&#13;
is the winner of numerous awards&#13;
on the local, state and national&#13;
levels. Much qf his recent work is&#13;
in stoneware with lustre and&#13;
white earthenware. He received&#13;
his graduate degree at the&#13;
University of Montana and came&#13;
to Parkside in 1969.&#13;
Zaig, who was born in&#13;
Jerusalem and received his art&#13;
training in London, is a painter,&#13;
printmaker and filmmaker.&#13;
Before coming to the U.S., he&#13;
taught at several English institutions.&#13;
His work is in the&#13;
collections of the Victoria and&#13;
Albert Museum and several other&#13;
English collections and he has&#13;
exhibited in the U.S., Portugal&#13;
and London.&#13;
Krekling&#13;
takes&#13;
singing&#13;
finals&#13;
Douglas Krekling, Racine, won&#13;
the finals (upper male division)&#13;
of the National Association&#13;
Teachers of Singing at Lawrence&#13;
University this past weekend. He&#13;
was competing with other singers&#13;
from Madison, Eau Claire and&#13;
Milwaukee. Krekling is a senior&#13;
at Parkside and is a voice student&#13;
of Lee Dougherty.&#13;
A Different&#13;
, ru type of&#13;
Saturday Night&#13;
RED'S R OLLER R INK&#13;
6220 -67th ST. PH. 652-8198 KENOSHA&#13;
SILVER&#13;
BULLET&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT.&#13;
NOVEMBER 22nd &amp; 23rd&#13;
FRIDAY FREE ADMISSIO N WITH&#13;
UW-P STUDENT I.D.&#13;
.THANKSGIVING H OLIDAY&#13;
THE UNION&#13;
Wed., Thurs., Fri. &amp; Sat. Nov. 27th, 28th, 29th, 30th &#13;
6 THE PARK SIDE RANGER W e dnes day, N ovember 2 0 , 1 9 7 4&#13;
More tar less dust&#13;
Com&lt;z,,com&lt;2&gt;&#13;
That'5 no n&#13;
way for a&#13;
I senatorial&#13;
^candidate&#13;
/Vto act.&#13;
Parking lot opens,&#13;
parking lot closes&#13;
PS. 6. A&#13;
offi ce&#13;
Traffic and parking patterns at&#13;
Parkside changed completely&#13;
Monday morning, Nov. 18, when&#13;
the first of two new "close-in"&#13;
parking lots opened, as well as&#13;
the public access road to serve&#13;
them.&#13;
Opening Monday was the&#13;
"Arts-Athletics" lot which holds&#13;
485 vehicles and is convenient to&#13;
the Physical Education building&#13;
and the Communication Arts&#13;
building, which houses the&#13;
theater and the Library-Learning&#13;
Center.&#13;
Opening no later than Sunday,&#13;
Dec. 1, is the Union parking lot,&#13;
with 525 spaces convenient to the&#13;
classroom building, Greenquist&#13;
Hall and the proposed Student&#13;
Union.&#13;
The new public access road&#13;
which opened Monday runs from&#13;
30th Ave., near the HeatingChilling&#13;
plant, to Hy. JR, which&#13;
connects Hy. E and Hy. 31. It is a&#13;
two-way road which must be used&#13;
to reach the new lots.&#13;
The temporary gravel lot on&#13;
the Student Union site closed&#13;
permanently Sunday night.&#13;
There will be no access to&#13;
either new lot from the "BusService"&#13;
road, which encircles&#13;
the academic buildings and&#13;
which is familiar to those who&#13;
have driven the campus or ridden&#13;
shuttle busses from the Tallent&#13;
Hall parking areas. Shuttle&#13;
busses will continue to run from&#13;
the Tallent and East lots around&#13;
the "bus-service" road.&#13;
Parking regulations for the&#13;
public who are not students or&#13;
staff at Parkside remain the&#13;
same. The public may park in&#13;
any space in any campus lot after&#13;
7:30 p.m. Monday through&#13;
Thursday, after 5 p.m. Friday,&#13;
and all day on weekends and&#13;
holidays. Weekdays after 6 a.m.,&#13;
the public must park in visitors&#13;
spaces which are marked in all&#13;
lots or obtain a temporary&#13;
parking permit from the Safety&#13;
and Security Office at the rear of&#13;
Tallent Hall. Parking for handicapped&#13;
is also marked in all&#13;
lots.&#13;
PSGA p roposes referendum&#13;
Elect PAB executives&#13;
Charge by Terrie Caffery&#13;
PSGA has proposed an advisory&#13;
referendum stating that&#13;
the,members of the Executive&#13;
Board on the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board (PAB) should be elected at&#13;
large by the Student body. The&#13;
present structure of PAB is set up&#13;
in such a way that anyone&#13;
wishing to participate would&#13;
apply, be interviewed, and if&#13;
qualified, would serve by&#13;
working on a committee and then&#13;
possibly be elected to the&#13;
Executive Board.&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich, President&#13;
of PSGA said that trying to improve&#13;
that structure by way of an&#13;
advisory referendum is totally&#13;
legal. "It's just to see if the&#13;
majority of the student body&#13;
approves or not. If not, O.K.,&#13;
we'll drop it. But if they do, it's up&#13;
to the Campus Concerns Committee&#13;
(CCC) and other student&#13;
administrative channels to take&#13;
action."&#13;
The reason for an attempt to&#13;
change PAB's structure relates&#13;
to a sideline of the constitution&#13;
that says the entire student body&#13;
should be represented. If the&#13;
members were elected, it would&#13;
give students the opportunity to&#13;
choose members that would&#13;
reflect their desires.&#13;
One function of PAB is to bring&#13;
continued from page 1 in outside entertainment for&#13;
P a r k s i d e 's a c tiv iti es.&#13;
Milutinovich claims that PAB is&#13;
bringing in entertainment that&#13;
does not reflect the students'&#13;
interests.&#13;
He pointed out that less than&#13;
one percent of Parkside's student&#13;
body is represented by PAB&#13;
members, yet they make all the&#13;
decisions for entertainment and&#13;
use of the students' tuition money&#13;
to do so. Milutinovich said,&#13;
MIf&#13;
they are willing to share the&#13;
responsibilities that affect the&#13;
remaining student body, they&#13;
damn well better be elected!"&#13;
However, Bill Niebuhr,&#13;
Director of Student Life, and&#13;
Tony Totero, PAB's advisor,&#13;
argue that present PAB members&#13;
will resent the elected&#13;
students for attaining power and&#13;
position through a popular vote,&#13;
rather than serving on the&#13;
committee before proving to be&#13;
qualified.&#13;
It is known that PSGA and PAB&#13;
aren't on friendly terms, but&#13;
Milutinovich said, "We're not&#13;
doing this to get down on PAB. It&#13;
is reasonable, if you just look at&#13;
the facts."&#13;
representatives met with the&#13;
Kenosha County District Attorney&#13;
to discuss this situation. It&#13;
was at this meeting that it was&#13;
determined that there was a good&#13;
chance that a violation of state&#13;
law had in fact occurred.&#13;
Later that afternoon, the&#13;
RANGER Editorial Board met&#13;
and decided that the next course&#13;
of action would be to file a formal&#13;
complaint against PAB concerning&#13;
this matter. The complaint&#13;
was filed promptly with the&#13;
Kenosha County District Attorney,&#13;
who stated that the&#13;
matter would be investigated to&#13;
see if the situation warranted&#13;
legal action.&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEAFOOD&#13;
CHOPS .&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
LASAGANA&#13;
RAVIOLI&#13;
MOSTACCIOLI&#13;
GNOCCHI&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
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BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT DRINKS&#13;
WINES&#13;
B^ASS&#13;
ALBEY.&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
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EDGEWATER&#13;
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"ACROSS FROM ONION PARK"&#13;
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1 NOVEMBER 20th thru N OV. 26th&#13;
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK&#13;
ALSO APPEARING&#13;
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Wednesday, November 20, 1974 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Muscles!&#13;
Approximately 600 men and boys attended&#13;
Parkside's fifth annual Wrestling Clinic last&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 16.&#13;
Mark Massery, former NCAA champion and now&#13;
assistant coach at Northwestern University,&#13;
demonstrates all-star technique as participants of&#13;
all ages and sizes look on.&#13;
Six different areas of wrestling were offered in&#13;
hour-long workshops. The clinic ran from 8:30 a.m.&#13;
to 4&#13;
PHY. ED. BUILDING SCHEDULE&#13;
November 23: Ranger Invitational Swim Meet, 12 Noon, POOL.&#13;
November 27: Building open regular hours; will close at 9:30 p.m.&#13;
November 28: Thanksgiving. Building will be closed.&#13;
November 29: Building will be closed, but athletes may practice.&#13;
November 30: Building will be closed until 4 p.m. JV basketball at&#13;
5:30 p.m. Rangers face Whitewater in season&#13;
opener at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
December l: Building open as usual: 6 p.m.-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Intramural&#13;
eager league&#13;
The Intramural Department is&#13;
holding a basketball league on&#13;
Wednesday and Sunday&#13;
evenings. Entry blanks may be&#13;
obtained at the Phy. Ed. Building&#13;
office. All entries are due&#13;
November 28. For further information,&#13;
contact Loren Hein,&#13;
P.E. extension 2162.&#13;
Season&#13;
opener&#13;
Parkside's basketball team&#13;
will be holding their annual&#13;
green-white varsity' scrimmage&#13;
on November 21 at 7:30 PM in the&#13;
Physical Education Building.&#13;
Admission is free, and this would&#13;
be a good chance for the Parkside&#13;
community to preview this year's&#13;
team.&#13;
U&#13;
WIDESfSELECTION&#13;
OF BOOKS IN TOWN&#13;
PAPER BACKS FOR&#13;
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•* &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, November 20, 1974&#13;
Ski show Sunday&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
Parkside's Third Annual Ski &amp;&#13;
Outdoor Recreation Show will be&#13;
held in the Physical Education&#13;
Building this Sunday, Nov. 24,&#13;
from noon to 6 p.m. Admission is&#13;
$1, with children under 12 admitted&#13;
free.&#13;
The Rag Time Rangers Ski&#13;
Club has merged with the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board's&#13;
Outing Club to present an afternoon&#13;
of displays and&#13;
demonstrations to acquaint the&#13;
outdoors person with the&#13;
equipment necessary to experience&#13;
and explore the great&#13;
outdoors.&#13;
Scuba diving, canoeing and&#13;
kayaking demonstrations will&#13;
take place in the pool. Rappelling&#13;
from the bleachers and rafters in&#13;
the gym will be Morris&#13;
Firebaugh, demonstrating rock&#13;
climbing maneuvers and knotmaking.&#13;
&#13;
With the main emphasis of the&#13;
show being skiing, the wrestling&#13;
room will offer a chance for the&#13;
showgoers to view a continuous&#13;
series of ski flicks.&#13;
The local ski patrol will be&#13;
demonstrating splinting and&#13;
taping techniques in preparation&#13;
for the upcoming season.&#13;
Cross-country and downhill&#13;
exhibits will appeal to beginning&#13;
and advanced skiers alike, as&#13;
they look over the new lines of&#13;
equipment and talk with the local&#13;
ski shop owners.&#13;
The latest in ski fashions will be&#13;
modeled at 1, 3 and 5 p.m.&#13;
For the dare-devils, a display&#13;
of hang gliders may prove to be&#13;
the most exciting exhibit at the&#13;
show.&#13;
. Information on various ski&#13;
areas and trips will also be&#13;
available.&#13;
An informal ski swap for&#13;
selling off or purchasing usedbut-in-good-condition&#13;
s ki&#13;
equipment will be an dei al way to&#13;
conserve dollars in outfitting the&#13;
new skier for the slopes. Anyone&#13;
interested in selling equipment&#13;
should contact Student Life at&#13;
553-2278 or bring it to the Phy. Ed.&#13;
Building Sunday morning prior to&#13;
the show.&#13;
Skis, poles and assorted door&#13;
prizes will be raffled during the&#13;
show.&#13;
Caaers open Thursday&#13;
Season tickets on sale&#13;
Season tickets for basketball&#13;
and other winter sports are still&#13;
on sale at the Information kiosk&#13;
Main Place and at the Physical&#13;
Education Building. Reserved&#13;
seating in the north bleachers is&#13;
being offered as an option for the&#13;
first time with the basketball&#13;
season passes, priced at $5 for&#13;
students, faculty and staff, and&#13;
are going fast, according to the&#13;
athletic department.&#13;
Unreserved seating is also&#13;
available for season ticket&#13;
purchasers anywhere in he t south&#13;
bleachers or in unreserved seats&#13;
in the north bleachers. The cost&#13;
Just Stop In!&#13;
Restaurant&#13;
of an unreserved pass is also $5.&#13;
Cost to the general public is $10.&#13;
The season pass will admit the&#13;
bearer to nine home basketball&#13;
games and all home contests in&#13;
wrestling, gymnastics and&#13;
fencing. Single game admission&#13;
for basketball is priced at $2 for&#13;
the general public, $1 for&#13;
students, faculty and staff and&#13;
free for children under 12.&#13;
Parkside will go into action for&#13;
the first time at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Thursday in the Green-White&#13;
game, with the varsity team split&#13;
in half and freshmen filling in&#13;
both rosters. Admission is free.&#13;
The first regular season action is&#13;
scheduled for 7:30 p.m., Saturday,&#13;
Nov. 30, at the Physical&#13;
Education Building against UWWhitewater.&#13;
&#13;
A superb performance of grace&#13;
and beauty led Parkside women&#13;
gymnasts to victory in a meet&#13;
Friday with UW-Whitewater.&#13;
Parkside collected a total of 106&#13;
points while Whitewater finished&#13;
with 78.&#13;
Demonstrating their gymnastic&#13;
abilities, Parkside's two&#13;
advanced competitors, Jackie&#13;
Levonian and Paris Wohlust,&#13;
received the highest individual&#13;
scores in all their events.&#13;
=K= =3f=&#13;
Open:&#13;
Daily 6:00 A.M.-8:00 P.M.&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
County E &amp; Green Bay Rd.&#13;
g&amp;uuttf UtB O-ineAt&#13;
PiyyL &amp; Otaluut Qoodd. 63 ~&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA-551-7171&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
THE&#13;
TRUIlIf&#13;
LUGGAGE &amp; LEATHER&#13;
10% DISCOUNT T O&#13;
STUDENTS W ITH T HIS A D.&#13;
1412 WASHINGTON AVE.&#13;
RACINE 634-4672&#13;
PARKSIDE V ARSITY C LUB P RESENTS&#13;
BADGE&#13;
(Formaly Caravan)&#13;
- 1:00&#13;
SAT N OV. 2 3rd&#13;
Student Act. Bldg.&#13;
$1°° Advance Tickets&#13;
$1&#13;
50 At Door&#13;
ID's REQUIRED&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
Desperately need typists to type research&#13;
paper over Thanksgiving Holiday Weekend.&#13;
Approxgnately 25 pages lonq. Call 632 4$34&#13;
evenings.&#13;
For Sxle: Complete set of The Great Books&#13;
of the Western World. It includes a complete&#13;
set of Gateway to the great Books, in&#13;
troduction set and book case. Excellent&#13;
condition. Call 634 6459 this week.&#13;
FUTURE CPA'S learn how to prepare for&#13;
the CPA Exam. Becker CPA Review Course.&#13;
Call Collect, Milwaukee 414 276 7271.&#13;
LOST: one pair black gloves and grey liners&#13;
Comm. Arts boys can 100 l evel. $5 reward,&#13;
633-7814 a sk for Pat or see info desk.&#13;
FIAT 1971, 850 Spider. Excellent condition,&#13;
under 20,000 miles. Perfect for student or&#13;
second car. Best offer. Call 1 312 872 7025.&#13;
BHCHELOH S U&#13;
5601-24 AVE. K ENOSHA&#13;
DOUBLE-BUBBLE COCKTAIL HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Saturday&#13;
4:00-9:00 P.M.&#13;
3 FOOSBALL TABLES&#13;
2 POOL TABLES&#13;
(CITY C HAMPS) Men &amp; W omen&#13;
"Best Stereo S ound"&#13;
in Kenosha&#13;
* OPENING S OON *&#13;
The Smoke 'ouse </text>
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