1
10
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https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/30233e99aaecdb4f46095a0eafadd86e.pdf
1d8654e6e59e9d93bca6d6b85fe4ba9c
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of UW-Parkside
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Issue
Volume 22, issue 5
Headline
Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.
chief Ostrowski Resigns
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC124 Ranger News
Text
Any textual data included in the document
PUlTRY
Pam,la 6i1b,rt
by
Nirk Ltwis
Joins Pirksid. Ficulty
.xclusiVt to th.
I1nlj.r
intmitw with UW-P's
~
ntwtst (ntUsh Proftssor
Plj.16
",3
THE
university of wisconsin-parkside • celebrating 25 years
Chief Ostrowski' Resigns
AlanR. Cook
A8BistantNews Editor
Mer nearly five years of
.. rvice, Mr.
David Ostrowski
\eDdered
his resignation as
Universityof Wisconsin-
Parbide Chief of Police.
Beginning
on October 6, he
laiss a position at the
Univsrsityof Wisconsin-
Whitewater, eqjoying the rank
of
Captain,
responsible for all
polios
aemces.
Ostrowski speaks of
"pelSOnal
reasons" as the prime
consideration in
his
decision to
naign.
"My wife
and
I greatly
uVoythe area around
Whitewater,"he eeye. "It
is
my
difFerent
then
our urban
lOlling
here."
"Youtend to be a jack of all
trades
on a
small
campus," he
says,
"and
a master
of nona,"
The
opportunity to specialize,
affordedby a larger, more
reoidential
campus,
is
a
challenge
to which Ostrowski
Ioobforward. "I won't be
missiug
the
parking
complaints,"he jokes. "At
Whitewater,
ru
be focusing on
the management of a slightly
larger police staff .... In
all,
it is
a position thet better matches
and
meshes with my particular
talents, abilities
and
philosophy," he explains.
The decision to resign has
not been an easy one,
Ostrowski
eays.
'Tve been
here since December 1, 1988
and
since that
time
we've seen
a remarkeble transformation
in the University's relationship
to law enforcement." He
speaks of "the
professionalization of the
department"
and
the
development of a more
proactive attitude toward
service
and
crime prevention as
high pointe of
his
tenure at
Parkeide. His greatest regret
is "our inability to retain
highly qualified officers," a
problem that he attributes to a
low pay structure and a
relatively low level of respect in
the community. Reflecting on
his
yeare at Parkeide, he
quietly states, "I have made
many relationships here thet I
will
greatly miss." .
Dr. William Streeter,
Quintero Places In
Beauty
Pageant
Anastasia
Lehman
News Writer
Patricia
Quintero, a
IOJ>hmoreat UW-Parkeide,
.... third
runner-up in
the
Mias Mexicana
~ant.
According to
~ro,
the
pageant is
lUlDUa1lyat the
~":,:"rfest Grounds
F-~
Milwaukee's
t
setiva
Mexicana. ThE
eetivalallows people
'.,0
u:,.raaa
their pride
in,
or
Il:_a~reciation o~'the
~"'pamc culture. NJss
MeXi
cana
is
invite" to
attend
IllaJJy
differ.nt
SOCial
events
as
a
~ntative of the
<:1.-'-.
COmmID
rity..
~ro
entereJ the pageant
bo\hUoe
sbe wa-'intrested in
If,
the
echoluship that was
o
"red
and
tb.
opportunity to
~lllew people. Quintero is
uWprou~ 01her heritage. At
invof
arksid
., she is actively
l!
0
ved ~
<he
secretary of
.i
P.P:~a.n-'Panic Organization
aruide).
Quintero
is
a
Patricia Quintero
communications major
and
is
minoring
in Spanish. S~ is
aleo working at the Leammg
Center, and works with
junior high students for CALC.
Quintero invites everybody ~
participate in H.O.P. events ':"
the hope that other pe?ple
will
experience
and
appreClJlte the
I
Hispanic culture ..
Assistant Chancellor for
Administration and Fiscal
Affairs, Ostrowski's immediate
supervisor
at
Parkside,
commenting on
his
decision,
says "I knew that he had been
looking around at other
positions for a while ... so I
accepted
his
resignation."
Speaking generally, Streeter
remarks,
"The
Chief has been
actively involved in the life of
both the campus and the law
enforcement communities of
which he was apart .... We
wish
him
well in nsxt position."
In more specific detail,
Streeter outlines what he
considers to be Ostrowski's
most significant
accompliahments while at
Parkside. "Dave brought
professional standards
and
demeanor to the police force by
increasing training of staff. He
insured thet training and
proper use of equipment has
been emphasized. He
enhanced
crime
prevention
programming. He put together
an Administrative Directives
Manual
which
will
guide future
Continued on page 2
September
30th,
1993 • Vol. 22 • Issue 5
Chief Ostrowski
UW Vice-President Visits
with Student Leaders
GregoryM. Gauthier
News /Feature Writer
University of Wisconsin
System Vice-President Steven
Portch payed a visit to the
Parkside campus Tuesday,
September 21, while msking
his
annual
campus rounds.
Portch ended
his
visit that
afternoon with a discussion
with Parkside's Student
Leaders - amoug the
participants were Parkeide
Ranger
Editor-in-Chief Steven
Moore,
Ranger
Assistant
Managing Editor Joe Kane,
Ranger
Business Manager
Tanya Dornik, PSGA
President Eric Bovee, and a
representetive of
PABA.
The discussion centered
mostly on the idea of a Student
Bill of Rights and
Responsibilities, which
is
to
include, according to Vice-
President Portch, issues like
the counseling center,
academice, and ways to learn
constructively about the faculty
and ite teaching metlwds.
"Faculty Portfolios" was an
idea presented by Portch as a
possible compromise
to
the
demand from students that
they be allowed to view student
evaluation forms for the UW
Faculty.
The "Faculty Portfolio," as
described by Portch, could
include a wbDle range of
materials regarding teaching
methods, examples of course
material, and syllabi, in order
to give the students a "more
complete picture" of the
classes, and the way each
instructor teaches them.
Another major concern to
the Vice-President, was the
development of a tighter
campus community bond and
ways to
make
thet community
more
"inclusive.
II
• As an example, Portch
talked about a freshman
program at the UW-Eau Claire
campus, where all
incoming
freshman were required to read
a given text, and then attend a
team taught seminar on the
contents and issues contained
within the book. Another term
Portch used to describe this
sort of mingled atmosphere
was a "learning
community,"
adding thet it would emphasize
interdisciplinary study and
teach ways in which the
different forms of knewlege
could interact.
Portch also discussed,
gensral ways
to
make each of
the
campuses more interactive
in order to,
as
he explained it,
create a bond among the
various campuses of
the
entire
university system.
Some
of
the
discussion
centered on planning for the
university from 1995 through
2000, and included a number of
remarks regarding
another
major item on the agenda -- the
Governor's Accountability Task
Force Report.
"The
stete is in a
situation where it cannot give
us any more money, and so we
get criticized a lot," Portch
stated on the issue of funding,
and the quality of the
university system.
Continued on page 2
-
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M.1
'H~U;TO
OATT'Df"'I .....
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
The Ranger News, Volume 22, issue 5, September 30, 1993
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1993-09-30
Subject
The topic of the resource
College student newspapers and periodicals
Student publications
University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Newspaper
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System
beauty pageant
doctors of color
english department
homecoming
student leaders
uw vice-president
wyllie library learning center
-
https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/36b90d4b0da1151233cc383a7d60a666.pdf
08714c79750f609cc77feafcd9e8d0f5
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of UW-Parkside
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Issue
Volume 3, issue 10
Headline
Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.
Regents act on guidelines
Series Number
The series number of the original collection.
UWPAC124 Ranger News
Text
Any textual data included in the document
Regents act on Guidelines
by Paul Anderson
of Ranger staff .
Student leaders expressed
concern Friday Oct. 4 as the UW
Board of Regents adopted a set ofInterim
Guidelines on merger
implementation drafted by
Central Administration instead of
a similar proposal submitted by
student leaders through the
United Council of Student
Governments.
The UW Merger Statute
provides as follows: "The
students of each institution or
campus subject to the responsibilities
and powers of the board,
the president, the chancellor, and
the faculty shall be active parr
ticipants in the immediate
governance of the policy
development for such institutions.
As such, students shall
have primary responsibility for
the formulation and review of
policies concerning student life,
services, and interests. Students
inconsultation with the chancellor
and subject to the final
confirmation of the board shall
have the responsibility for the
disposition of those student fees
which constitute substantial
support for campus student
activities. The students of each
institution or campus shall have
the right to organize themselves
in a manner they determine and
to select their respresentatives to
participate in institutional
governance."
The most common concern and
subject of debate on the part of
students stemmed from a phrase
in the merger law which gives
students "primary responsibility
by Betsy Neu
The Campus Concerns Committee
met Tuesday, Oct. 8, to
hear the Election Committee give
a report on the alleged election
irregularities.
Three student complaints
received by the CCC in formal
letters had been referred last
week to the Election Committee,
chaired by Debra Friedell.
Barb Burke, president of the
Parkside Activities Board,
charged that a pro-constitution
flyer she had found resting faceup
on the counter in one of the
voting booths constituted illegal
canvassing.
Friedell said that the Election
Committee is not convinced that
the flyer was placed in the booth
in an attempt to influence voters,
since there, is a strong possibility
that the flyer was unintentionally
left in the booth.
Friedell stated that "Burke
neither removed the flyer nor did
she inform the poll workers."
When confronted with this, Burke
said she had left the flyer as it
was, hoping it would prompt
other voters to write similar
complaints.
Although the Election Committee
feels that Burke's charge
was an important one, they do not
consider that it warrants rerunning
the referendum as Burke
suggested.
Instead, Friedell said that a
recommendation will be made
that in future elections, each
voter be requested to leave all
printed material pertaining to the
election outside the booths.
The second written complaint
investigated by the Election
Committee, came from Barb
Lienau.
She charged that a poll worker
had commented negatively on
her husband's stand against the
for the formulation and review of
policies concerning student life,
services and interests."
Specifically, student leaders
and chancellors disagreed on the
issue of determining the
allocation of student fees and on
who would designate
representatives to various
university committees.
UW Senior Vice President
Donald K. Smith, in an introductory
statement explaining
the Interim Guidelines as
proposed by Central Administration,
stated that the
Board felt an immediate need to
implement a set of guidelines
explaining section 36.09 (5), to
end the "somewhat chaotic state
which now exists on some
campuses" due to the lack of
proper statute guidelines and
limitations.
He stressed that the guidelines
proposed by United Council had
been taken as a reflection of
University policy on some
campuses but should not have
been taken as such.
Smith also pointed toward
responses to the UC guidelines by
both student groups and chancellors
at various universities in
the system as the reason for
Central Administration's
proposed guidelines.
Prior to the Regents' vote on
the Interim proposal, several
spokesmen were given an opportunity
to air their views on the
interim issue before the Board.
Included among those who
represented various student
groups, faculty committees and
chancellors, was James
Hamilton, United Council
PSGA constitution.
Friedell termed this "a serious
complaint" and spoke with
Lienau and the poll worker involved.
Although both Lienau and
Friedell agree that the complaint
is not serious enough to call for a
re-running of the referendum,
Friedell said that a recommendation
would be made for
future poll workers to be instructed
not to make any election-oriented
comments when
working at the voting booths.
The third charge was submitted
to the CCC by Steve
Gouris, who claimed that he had
been allowed to vote twice.
Friedell said that this was the
most serious charge of all; and
stated in advance of Tuesday's
meeting that it was still being
investigated.
The Electiqn Committee is not
thoroughly convinced of the
validity of Gouris' charge, and
has no plans at this time to re-run
the referendum.
Other matters acted upon by
the CCC in its previous Oct. 1
meeting included the appointment
of four members as a
committee to consider budget
requests of student
organizations.
Serving on the committee are
Barb Burke, of the Parkside
Activities Board; Dennis
Milutinovich, of the Parkside
Student Government Association,
Inc.; Jewel Echelbarger,
associate dean of students; and
Robert Grueninger. assistant
professor of physical education.
The student organizations
which have submitted budget
requests to the CCC are: PSGA.
Pi Sigma Epsilon, thq^Students
for Better Government, and
AWOL (Action Within Our
Lifetimes).
president.
In a half-hour testimony before
the Board, Hamilton expressed
several concerns with Central
Administration's handling of the
United Council's proposals.
Following a brief historic sketch
leading up to the United Council's
proposed guidelines, Hamilton
said:
"I have brought this process to
your attention for several important
reasons. First, so that
you understand that our
document, which you've, had for
two months, was the result of a
laborious and compromising
drafting procedure, which saw
the involvement of not only
student leaders but members of
the ad hoc drafting committee,
the MISC, students, and Central
(College Press Service) - As the
long awaited criminal trial of
several Ohio National Guardsmen
indicted for the 1970
shootings at Kent State
University approaches, their
commanding officer has confirmed
earlier reports that one of
the indicted men actually gave an
order to fire. Until now, National
Guard officials have consistently
maintained that no order to fire
had been given.
Lt. Col. Charles Fassinger
made the disclosure in a sworn
deposition filed recently in a civil
case in which he and more than 50
other persons are being sued for
their roles in the Kent incident
which left four students dead and
nine wounded. Fassinger, who
was the highest uniformed officer
on the scene of the shootings,
testified that an order to fire had
been given by Matthew J. McManus.
It was not clear from
Fassinger's deposition whether
McManus gave the order before
or after the shooting began or
whether McManus told the troops
to fire at or over the students.
A Justice Department summary
of an 8000-page FBI report
on the shootings corroborated
Fassinger's story, but said, "Sgt.
McManus stated that after the
firing began, he gave an order to
'fire over their heads.' " The
Justice Department summary
states, "There was no initial
order to fire."
A source close to the case,
however, emphasized that the
summary was only of information
uncovered in the
months immediately following
the shooting and is by no means
the final word on the matter. It is
expected that the question of an
order to fire will be more closely
pursued as additional witnesses
are interviewed and during
subsequent court proceedings.
McManus is one of eight former
guardsmen indicted by the
federal grand jury which investigated
the shootings last
Administration as well.
"Second, I hope you will agree
that we have made a scrupulous
effort to ensure that the content
of our paper conformed with the
intentions of the framers of the
law.
"And third, so that we can
come to some understanding as
to why the concerns Dr. Smith
raised in the interim guidelines
were not brought up while our
document was being drafted,
especially since this process
involved Central Administration
input."
A series of objections were
raised after Hamilton's
testimony echoing objections
aired by chancellors and administrators
in relation to the
United Council proposed
winter (after then-Attorney
General Elliot Richardson
overruled the decisions of his
predecessors John Mitchell and
Richard Kleindienst forbidding
such a grand jury investigation).
McManus himself has taken the
Fifth Amendment in response to
questions about the shooting.
The criminal trial of McManus
and the seven other indicted
guardsmen is scheduled to open
in Cleveland in mid-October. The
grand jury that indicted them has
not been discharged, and it is
possible, although unlikely, that
there could be more indictments
as more information about the
shootings emerges.
Meanwhile, independently of
the criminal cases, the civil cases
are also proceeding. The civil
cases are brought under the
federal civil rights laws, which
provide money damages for
persons deprived fo their constitutional
rights under color of
law. All nine of the injured
students, plus the parents of all
four of the students killed at
Kent, have such cases pending.
The cases have been consolidated
and will be tried in federal court
in Cleveland in April 1975.
The lengthy process of pre-trial
discovery is now going on, and it
was in the course of. this
discovery process that Fassinger
disclosed his knowledge about
McManus' order.
The discovery process had
been interrupted in 1970 when a
federal judge dismissed the civil
cases. In April of this year,
however, that dismissal was
overturned by the US Supreme
Court.
The most significant feature of
the civil cases is that they name
as defendants not only the
enlisted personnel who fired their
weapons into the students on May
4, but also the National Guard
commanders and officials, who
were responsible for placing the
troops in the situation with loaded
weapons and under orders to
disperse peaceful assemblies.
guidelines.
Nearly all the chancellors
referred directly or indirectly to
the phrase in 36.09 ( 5) "...-subject
to the responsibilities and powers
of the board, the president, the
chancellor and the faculty, shall
be active participants..." Most
expressed the view that UC's
guidelines would expand the
students' role far beyond the
legislative intent.
. Related to the "cosmic" scope
of students' role in institutional
governance was the concern that
UC's guidelines provide student
participation in nearly every
aspect of academic and nonacademic
decision-making. The
sentence that includes the
reference to primary responcontinued
on page 2
re
One of the civil defendants is
Sylvester Del Corso, a war hero
and former prison warden who
became Ohio's Adjutant General
in 1968. It was Del Corso who
implemented the extraordinary
policy of sending Ohio guardsmen
into routine civil disturbance
duty with live ammunition
loaded in their weapons - contrary
to regular Army practice -
and under permissive rules
regarding the use of fire-power.
Prior to the 1970 shootings, Del
Corso had urged Ohio guardsmen
to write letters in support of the
war, and had publicly stated his
belief that Communist conspirators
were behind the
campus protest movement.
Another of the civil defendants
is James A. Rhodes, who was
Governor of Ohio in 1970, and who
had appointed Del Corso. Late in
1969 and in 1970, Rhodes had
made public vows to end
disruptions on Ohio Campuses.
During Rhodes' administration
the Ohio National Guard saw
more duty in civil disorders than
the National Guard of any other
state in the union.
On the day before the Kent
shootings, Rhodes had held a
press conference in the city,
denouncing the groups whom he
presumed responsible for the
disorder and vowing to "drive
them out of Kent."
A former guardsman who was
in charge of the Guard's press
relations at Kent State has
testified in his deposition in the
civil cases that at a closed
meeting preceeding his press
conference Rhodes had given
orders that the Guard should
disperse even peaceful assemblies
on the campus.
Rhodes is currently out of office,
but he is running as the
Republican candidate for
Governor of Ohio again this fall.
More light on the 1970 shootings
is expected to be shed as the
months of depositions and other
discovery in the civil cases
proceed and are made public.
Election probe
The Parkside
Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1974 Vol. Ill No. 10
Kent State trial
O ^ • rt rder given to fi
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1974
RANGER
•Editorial/Opinion.
GuidelinesMass
transit
Now that four weeks of the semester have passede
passed, schedules have settled down, the usual number
of people have dropped class, there are parking places
to be found. What became of the dire warnings of
"parking in the streets"? Could it be that a bit of
"exageration" of the problem occurred in order to carry
accross the supposed need for additional parking
spaces.
A visitor recently commented "you have a beautiful
campus here". He was right-but give it a couple of
years-we'll rectify that oversight. We are progressing
toward a solution rapidly-watch the grader remodel the
earth west of LLC. It's a magnificent display of man's
ultimate goal—if something grows there, black top it.
The myopic vision demonstrated by planners of this
campus is displayed in their absolute inability to
progress beyond the 1950's ideal of shopping center
suburbia.
The rest of the world screams Mass Transit, President
Ford considers higher taxes on gasoline to restrict auto
travel, the nation, states and cities subsidize rail and
bus travel, on and on, Mass Transit.
Parkside? Well, we are going to have a beautiful
student Union-Let's build parking lots. Empty space
west of LLC-let's build parking lots. Busses-let's get
Vets club.
the Editor
To the Editor:
This is in reply to your editorial "Do we need starving artists." I
think that RANGER readers should know that the art discipline has
made numberous efforts over the last three or four years to establish a
Graphic Design major at Parkside. An early proposal reached Central
Administration just before Merger and was frozen along with all other
proposals for new majors. More recently a Visual Communication
major, incorporating work in photography, film and television as well
as graphic design, was proposed and sent forward to Central Administration
with a low priority. It was not turned down but rat neither
did it ecr eive much practical support or encouragement.
Such a major would be quite expensive to initiate but it seems to me
that, considering the unique industrial and commercial character of
this part of Wisconsin, it would not be difficult to justify. No other State
University in Wisconsin has such a major.
Personally I see a degree course in Art as having, in itself, great
educational value quite apart from its vocational uses and I do not, as
your writer appears to do, despise the teaching of art at the elementary,
junior high or senior high level. The present major, too, seeks to
establish a firm foundation in drawing and design, as essential a base
for a future designer as for a future painter, sculptor or teacher of art.
Nevertheless, I think that all members of the art discipline would
welcome support from students for a Graphic Design major of some
kind.
Erik Forrest
Associate Professor of Art
To the Editor:
In a letter to the Sept. 25 Ranger, Keith C. Chambers complained
he received a parking ticket which was upheld by the appeals committee
(Subcommittee on Parking & Transportation). He further
stated that a "student member" of the subcommittee informed him of
various activities of the parking & transportation subcommittee. This
seems somewhat mysterious in that we the undersigned are the only
two student members of the parking & transportation subcommittee
(which hears parking ticket appeals) and neither of us have had any
conversation whatsoever with Mr. Chambers concerning this matter!
Dick Fields
Chet Anderson
To the Editor:
Third World, AWOL, and PSGA, Inc. are co-sponsoring a film on the
Attica state prison incident on Wednesday Oct. 9 at 7 p.m. in
Greenquist lecture hall 103. There will be a donation of $1 asked to go
towards a defense fund for the prisoners. It took alot of work to get this
film, so please attend this informative documentary.
Hayes D. Norman
Pres. of Third World
To The Editor:
I have got something to say to two of the individuals who submitted
letters which appeared in your Sept. 25th issue.
First, to Keith C. Chambers, Kenosha senior: You have told the rest
of us that the whole world is picking on you, have told your mom yet?
Just a friendly piece of advice I would like to give you, is that you had
better watch out for the most fearsome of the fine farm animals you
reffered to. I am talking about the bull. If he gets rift of the fact that
first you were exploiting some of his neighbors, and then you were
patronizing them, he might see to it that you are the recipient of one of
the two things he is most well known for.
And to Arthur Gruhl: Your letters are always enjoyable, but after
Keith C. Chambers, Kenosha senior, they are an absolute necessity!!
Virginia B. Peters
-t-arkside Employee
continued from page 1
sibility begins with the phrase
"as such." This phrase refers
back to "active participants,"
who are limited by the responsibilities
and powers of the board
and the president as well as the
chancellor and faculty of the
local campuses.
The extent and nature of the
students' consultation with the
chancellor is not described with
reference to the "disposition of
student fees."
Several expressed the concern
that the statute 36.09 (3) charges
the chancellor with the responsibility
and accountability for
administering all the funds on the
campus, whatever the source.
Unless the chancellor also has the
final recommending authority,
he does not have authority to
carry out his responsibility (no
chancellor disagreed with the
view that' students should have
primary input to chancellors in
policy recommendations affecting
student life, services and
interests).
Virtually all chancellors
responding felt that it would be
unwise to confer monopoly rights
on student governments as the
sole representative for students
on the campus. The examples of
union boards, intramural
programs, residence halls
councils and others were cited as
areas where other student constituencies
should be consulted
for their input as well as the
student government. The
problems of nominal turnout for
elections were cited; in at least
one case, there is not a student
government elected to student
body offices.
A majority also objected to
United Council as the exclusive
representative of students at the
System level (several campuses
do not belong to United Council).
The role of students in being
consulted about "rules for tenure
and probationary appointments,
for the review of faculty performance
and for the nonretention
and dismissal of faculty
members" was seriously
questioned, since this is the
responsibility of the faculty and
the chancellor to develop such
rules.
Regent Solberg offered an
appropriate conclusion during
the course of the Interim
discussions (after which the
board approved Central Administration's
proposals) saying,
"I think the guidelines are just
something less than guidelines,
maybe. But it's a starting point. I
think that we better start with
this, and I don't think that we
should get into heavy debates as
to a lot of specifics of those
guidelines; those will be debated
on the individual campuses."-
R^PEN—!
•SPORTS
WRITERS
[photographers
JAD ACCOUNT
EXECUTIVES
j contact KEN
I at
RANGER I I
] LLC D-194
WWfflTEESKELLASf Auditions for the Whiteskellar from 1:00 - 3:00
pm in Greenquist Hall, room D201.
umnAY October ll FILM: "Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid"
fibred bv the Parkside Activities Board at 8:00 pm in the Student
EtEX Admission is $1.00. Parkside I D. and proof of age are
required.
SATURDAY October 12 RUGBY: Parkside vs. Northwestern at
1:30 pm on the Wood Road field. Admission is free and open to the
DANCE: Sponsored by the Soccer tearrv 9:00 pm - 1:00 am in the
Student Activities Bldg. Admission is $1.50. Parks.de I.D. and proof of
age are required.
SUNDAY October 13 NEWMAN CENTER: 12:15 pm.Mass celebrated
at the Center located on the corner of E & JR, 3825 - 12th Street,
MUSIC CONCERT: Includes Frances Bedford and David Littrell at
4:00 pm in Greenquist Hall, room 103, Admission is free and open to
FILM: "Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid at 7:30 pm.
SATURDAY October 19 UW-MADISON vs. MICHIGAN FOOTBALL
GAME: $10.00 includes bus trip and tickets to the game. Seats
are near the 20 yard line. Sign up at the Information Center, LLC Main
Place.
SEMESTER BREAK TWO TRIPS: ACAPULCO AND MAMICO
BOTH BETWEEN JANUARY 3 - 10, 1975
ACAPULCO: $244 plus $20 tax and service based on 3 to a room.
Includes round trip transportation. 7 nights at the deluxe El Matador
Hotel & Racquet Club. Yacht cruise of Acapulco Bay with a welcoming
Margarita party. Includes tips and taxes. For further information
contact the Student Life Office LLC D197 or phone 553-2294.
JAMAICA - MONTEGO BAY: $279 plus $20 tax and service based on 3
to a room. Includes round trip transportation. 7 nights at Toby Inn,
only a short walk from famous Doctor's Cave Beach. Tips and taxes
included.
OCHO RIOS: $309 plus $20 tax and service based on 3 to a room. Includes
round trip transportation. 7 nights at Shaw Park located on the
beach on Cutlass Bay. A welcoming Rum Swizzle party and unlimited
free tennis are included as well as reduced golf rates at Upton Country
Club. For further information contact the Student Life Office, LLC
D197 at 553-2294.
There will be an organizational meeting for Men's Gymnastics.
Friday Oct. 11 at 3:00p.m. in the Phy. Ed. Bldg. '
The Pre-Law Club will meet Wednesday, October 9, at 4 p.m. in LLC
D174. All interested students are welcome.
Frank J. Maez of the Lambda Chi Alpha international fraternity,
will visit the Parkside October 7-12, to discuss with interested
students, the establishment of a chapter on campus. Meetings will be
held in the Library Learning Center from 9 - 5 throughout the week.
A public meeting on the conditions of Beebe school, a school for the
mentally retarded in Racine, will be held on Wed. Oct. 9, at 7:30 p.m.
at the Racine County Courthouse.
The Parkside Student Government Association Inc. has a vacancy in
the Vice presidency. The term runs till April. Anyone interested in the
position should submit their name to the president and president protempore
of PSGA at LLC-D193, as soon as possible.
PSGA would like to announce that the following positions are open
for consideration:
ACADEMIC POLICIES COMMITTEE two names to be selected by
Chancellor from list of six.
CAMPUS CONCERNS COMMITTEE, two names to be selected by
Chancellor from list of six.
, ADMISSIONS POLICIES COMMITTEE, two names to be selected
by Chancellor from list of six.
ATHLETIC BOARD, two names to be selected by Chancellor from
list of four.
J
p™E & fLNE ARTS COMMITTEE, four names submitted by
LIBRARY COMMITTEE, four names submitted by PSGA.
l he terms run for a one year period. Students are asked to submit
their names for consideration as soon as possible.
pfrtcS q^ '
i S
°
n e v a c a n c y in the at large division of the
with CQ r U
.
Goverhment Association Inc. Senate. In accordance
Tpmnnr I
1 k ,
new PSGA constitution, the President Pro
O^ m Thf ?
tZ
' WlU make an aPPointment to fill that seat on
Anv ctnHo aPP01ntmcnt is subject to the confirmation of the senate.
Kontf^t thi^r? « m being aPPointed to this seat should contact
Kontz at the PSGA office, LLC D-193, prior to Oct. 16.
OrlanizatTonl Th 3
°
f the United CouncU of Student
°
Ct 10
' at 2 P m- LLC D-174. This
Government aLo t commit
tee of the Parkside Student
10 of the new e J;
iatl0n Inc. as provided for under Article I, Section
are asked to atterid"
110
" Representatives of all student organizations
Ine^Pmf/ r?
eet
.i?^ of the Parkside Student Government Association"
Oct in at I n
UX1 \ RnterPrises Committee will be held Thursday.
attend Anv it.'a '?• D_174
- All interested parties are invited to
deals with t
Ua '"terested in membership in the committee which
rersoni!L K T services
- should contact the committee chairperson,
John Kontz, at the PSGA office, LLC D-193.
C The ParksideRANGER
ssr r™-
Wisconsin 53,40. Pho£ ^
Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM
There is a tl.oo charge lor classified ads.
Jual fill In (his form and srnd it to:
NAME
The i'arlulde Hanger
Business Office
O-IM LU: UWParkside
Kenosha. Wis. 53140
ADDRESS
CITY
Ads will run for one week
only. Renewals can be made
by calling the Friday
preceding the next
publication.
Ads nust be submitted one week before publication
Walter i .
Ulbrichts
Classified
Minolta SLR 35mm $230 Retail Will sell for
$100. Excellent cond. Call 553 2295.
KAY WAHNER •• former students and
current friends may write KAY RAN
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THE GROOVE TUBE
A few years ago, I let my television set get it right between the eyes.
Or, really between Monty Hall's.
He bounced down the aisle, teasing the audience with $3200 worth of
nirvana. The usual gang of idiots slobbered to prostitute themselves
before the golden calf, hiding somewhere behind Door Number One,
Two or Three.
My hammer struck without mercy, smashing Monty's skull and
narrowly missing his stooge, Jay Steward. Unfortunately, I only
cracked the screen and broke a damn good hammer.
Ken Shapiro's act of v iolence against the waste-land of television is*
more successful. Writer, director, star, and producer of "The Groove
Tube", Shapiro slays the hallow idol with first degree satire.
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me upening sequence, a Driuiant parody oi Stanley
confrontation between the ape-man and the mysterious monolith in
"2001", summarizes the form and extent of TV's influence on our
consciousness. Like the apes which caress the TV set during a sunrise,
we mindlessly cling to the Tube as it takes us to a daily no-where-iand
of aimlessness and banality.
Shapiro stylizes his film after the mess of normal TV programming.
For example, the latent sensuality of t he classic Clairol commercialboy
meets girl in a romantic slow-motion romp through fields and
woods-incongruously introduces a morning kids' show, Koko the
Clown. But Shapiro goes one step farther and relates the commercial
and show-Koko reads pornography during "make-believe time".
Even the low-budget limitations of "The Groove Tube" emphasize
that sickening sameness of television. One actor may sell deodorant in
the morning, receive a divorce on a soap opera at noon, or become a
fugitive from police during a prime time drama. In the film, Shapiro
the chameleon changes into a commercial narrator, a newscaster, a
doper in a situational comedy, and a talk show host..
Many of the commercials and vignettes are wickedly devastating.
Shapiro juxtaposes a subject like sex against a conventional format
like ABC's Wide World of Sports and the result is the highly erotic
Sex Olympics". But the film suffers from inconsistent imagination
and perception. Too frequently, Shapiro retreats to hack topics like the
story of two dope dealers and buries himself in underground cliches.
After Shapiro's attack, television resembles a disemboweled corpse.
That reminds me. I like to think that the person who bought my old TV
set turned it into something useful. Like a liquor cabinet.
STUDENT ACTIVITIES
HBUIIDING^H
nu Stofi
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ELCCBUJ
WED., FRI. & S AT.
OCT. 9th, 11th & 12th
The
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WEDNESDAY AFTER 7:00 P.M.
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SUN., OCT. 13th
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at the BRAT SHOP
STYX
4 T H E PARKSIDE RANG ER Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1974
lo©
To investigate PAB
PSGA hears complaints
aDlfesaoo^MtannL
James DuRell Smith Jr.
DON'T WORRY ABOUT IT THEY SAY! -when I get a test back that
doesn't come up to my expectations. I am reminded of a line from my
younger sister's repetoir. "There's no joy in being in dire straits if vou
can't wallow in self pity!" So there smart guys!
OUR OTHER QUOTE FOR THE DAY: What's the difference between
Capitalism and Communism? "Whereas Capitalism involves the
exploitation of man by his fellow man, Communism is vice versa "
Don't think too long about that one.
FEAST OR FAMINE? Rushing to meet the need bf stop signs at bus
stops and cross walks in the record time of two or three years
(depending on how long ago one considers the need to have
developed), whoever got the signs must have bought them at a "buy
three-get one free" sale. How many years will it be until we get a "oneway
only between the hours of..." sign for the mini Sebring circuit we
have to run to get out of here by car?
BELIEVE IT OR NOT: For those of you who doubt your potential to
pursue the prof erred fruits of post graduate education; to those who
picture the publication of their possibly pedantic productions of p aper
improbable, may I assuage your fears and open to you the opportunities
of the higher learning process by quoting only the title of an
actually printed, published and seen-by-yours-truly paper: "The
Hitch-hiking Effect of a Favourable Gene" by John Smith. Grad
school here I come. I can see it now "Probability Parameters on the
Puerile Practice of Public Proscis Picking" by J. Smith.
Jeannine Sipsma
of RANGER Staff
Among the topics discussed at
an Oct. 3 meeting of the Parkside
Student Government Association,
Inc. (PSGA) were voting
irregularities on the constitution
and an investigation of the
Parkside Activities Board
(PAB).
Also, a review was conducted
for a new PSGA advisor and a
report was given by the
Grievance Committee.
Letters were read from various
students claiming voting
irregularities on the constitutional
referendum.
One of the complaints was a
letter from Barbara Burke,
president of the PAB, claiming
that she had found a "vote yes
leaflet" in one of the voting
booths.
Carrie Ward, a senator, said
that the PSGA had not put the
leaflet in the booth and that "it
must have been placed there by a
student voter."
Another letter written by Steve
Gouris, a student, complained
that he was able to vote twice in
the referendum.
Mike Hahner, a senator, said
that this person should be asked
to sign a sworn statement
declaring that he voted twice
under his own name.
Hahner said that if Gouris had
voted under a different name, he
was "defrauding the Election
Committee."
"All complaints are minor as
far as I'm concerned," said
Dennis Milutinovich, PSGA
president.
John Kontz, president protempore,
then read a proposal
made by Milutinovich to conduct
a "full investigation of the PAB,
including a check on their books
for the last three vears."
In the insuing discussion the
question was brought up about
whether the PAB would agree to
an investigation and it was
suggested that they may try to
prevent it.
The motion to investigate PAB
was passed unanimously.
A review followed for a new
PSGA advisor. It was conducted
by Hahner, chairperson of the
Advisor Committee. Jewel
Echelbarger, associate dean of
students, is the present PSGA
advisor.
Sara Sheehan, a visiting
assistant professor of political
science, is the candidate for the
position of advisor.
Milutinovich asked Sheehan a
question regarding the status of
students in comparison with
administrators and faculty.
She responded, "I think
students should govern themselves.
You (PSGA) should make
all decisions pertaining to student
life."
When questioned on her opinion
of the role of an advisor, Sheehan
said, "I don't think the student
advisory role should exist,"
The review, which lasted an
approximate 15 minutes, was
concluded with a motion by Ward
to accept Sheehan as PSGA
advisor designate.
This motion passed the senate
unanimously.
Final study out on Union
The Parkside Office of Planning
and Construction today
announced that a final environmental
impact study on
proposed construction of a $3.5
million Student Union Building,
to be financed by user fees, is
available to the public for review
and comment.
In compliance with the Environmental
Policy Act, a public
hearing on the project will be
held at 7 p.m. on Oct. 28 in UW-P
Classroom Building Room 105.
Written comments on the environmental
impact statement
will be accepted by the Office of
Planning and Construction in
advance of the hearing. Both
written and oral testimony will be
accepted at the hearing.
Copies of the statement are
available to the public at the UWP
Library and at the Racine and
Kenosha city libraries. Additional
copies have been circulated
to the clerks of Racine
and Kenosha city and county and
the Town of Somers, appropriate
state agencies and the
Southeastern Wisconsin Regional
Planning Commission.
The 73,000 squre-foot union
building is to be located just north
of the loop service road which
encircles and academic area of
Big Foot
APPEARING
WED., F RI. S AT. & SUN.
OCT. 9 , 1 1, 1 2, 1 3
OCT. 1 6, 1 8, 1 9 & 20
Kenosha's Newest Nitespot
2nd National
(formerly Shakey's)
6208 Greenhay Road Phone 654-0485
the campus and would be attached
to the Classroom Building
immediately to the south by an
enclosed walkway over the road.
The structure is to house food
service areas, theater, bowling
alleys, lounges, meeting and
game rooms, student
organization headquarters,
lockers, concessions and union
staff offices.
The environmental impact
statement says the structure will
significantly improve the campus
environment
The report adds that physical
impact of the structure on the
environment is minimal since the
one-acre plot selected for
development presently is used as
a temporary parking lot. The
building is designed to conform
with state energy conservation
guidelines and will have a policy
of recycling paper, glass and
waste products generated by the
food service operations. The
building will use existing central
heating and chilling equipment.
Substantial assistance in debt
service on the self-amortizing
project is available through a
grant from the Department of
Housing and Urban Development
in the form of an interest subsidy
amounting to $2.9 million over 30
years. No state tax funds will be
committed to the building.
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Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5 y/endv moves on
Musich to head
GTI Women's Bureau
by Rebecca Ecklund
of RANGER Staff
Wendy Musich has been a
counselor on the Student Services
staff at Parkside since October of
1968. Within those six years, she
has served t he campus in many
capacities; her service has been
both p rofessional and personal,
institutional and individual.
On Friday, Oct. 18, Musich will
leave the Parkside staff and step
into a new phase of her career as
head of the Women's Bureau at
Gateway Technical Institute
(GTI).
The Women's Bureau is a new
program that was proposed by
the Community Services Division
staff of GTI and was granted
funding from federal and voch.-
tech. district sources.
The program is designed to
counsel women who are entering
or re-entering the working world.
Services will include personal
counseling, vocational testing,
assistance in job placement, andor
assistance in setting up an
educational or training course.
For education and training,
women will be referred to
whichever area school best meets
their needs; the program was not
set up simply to recruit students
for GTI.
"It allows me to focus in
counseling, which is really what I
like to do," said Musich of the
Women's Bureau job.
Musich finds herself uniquely
qualified for the position. She
earned a master's degree in
psychiatric social work from the
University of Chicago, then
worked at a mental health clinic
in Madison before joining the
Parkside staff.
"I'm very appreciative of the
experiences I've had here," said
Musich. "They've led me right
into the next thing. I've enjoyed
working in an academic setting."
As a member of the dean of
students staff, Musich served as
coordinator of the Adult Student
Program for a year and a half. In
academic advising, she served as
the liaison counselor to the
science division for beginning
science students. She has done a
lot of personal counseling, served
as advisor to the Women's
Caucus for approximately two
years, and has assisted in
counseling high school students,
among various other duties.
Of the Adult Student Program
experience Musich said, "It's
been very exciting and rewarding
to see older students get to
believe in themselves. As a
population, they are some of our
most exciting students. It's been
good to have been a part of that
program."
Musich's departure will make a
total of three vacancies on the
Student Services counseling
staff. (Wayne Ramirez left in
July of '74 an d Isom Fearn left
last month.)
"There are definite problems
in the Student Services office in
retaining people," said Musich.
"There are not enough opportunities
for professional
advancement, either by salary or
title.
"I am leaving because at this
stage in my career I need solid
evidence of professional advancement,"
she continued, "and
it doesn't seem to be forthcoming
at Parkside, either in. terms of
measurable salary increase or
title change, or both. This job
offered me a handsome salary
increase and a chance to develop
a new program."
Jewel Echelbarger, associate
dean of students and head of the
Student Services staff, agrees
with Musich. "I do think we are
Wendy Musich
slow in rewarding professional
staff who have served this
campus in a counseling capacity.
Past history records that those
dedicated to counseling as a
profession haven't been able to
enjoy the recognition they
deserve."
Echelbarger said that she,
Assistant Chancellor Allen
Dearborn, and Chancellor Irvin
Wyllie are "concerned about it
and are making every effort to
rectify the situation as soon as
possible."
"The Student Services staff is a
superb group of people," said
Musich. "The rest of this campus
doesn't realize the contribution
we make here. We wear many
hats at all times, which is very
tiring but necessary. We take
care of the student's life outside
the classroom. And unless the
staff begins to receive some
rewards, other people may
leave."
It may be December 1 before
any of the vacancies are filled on
the counseling staff. For each
open position, a job description is
written by Echelbarger and sent
to Dearborn for approval, then on
to Vice Chancellor Otto Bauer or
Chancellor Wyllie. If the'
description is not approved at qne
of those offices, it is sent back to
Echelbarger for revision.
The two positions vacated by
Ramirez and Fearn have now
been authorized and are being
advertised on a nation-wide
scale.
After about a month of advertising
the positions in different
publications and at different
universities whose
graduates would qualify,
Echelbarger anticipates having
gathered about 100 ap plications.
An advisory committee made
up of three students, three or four
staff members, one civil service
employee, and Echelbarger, will
narrow those 100 to five or six.
Out of those finalists, Dearborn
and Bauer will make the final
decision.
Echelbarger hopes to fill the
positions left vacant by Fearn
and Musich by January 1.
Remaining on the counseling
staff are John Rogers, Ken
Oberbruner and Echelbarger.
There are plans to hire Rudy
Collum of athletics to assist on a
part-time basis. The Student-toStudent
advisors will be called
upon more frequently and tentative
plans are being made to
hire a Limited Term Employee
(LTE) for the interim.
Said Echelbarger, "I have no
doubt there will be an over-load
on the present staff."
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4.10
5.10
-5.10
1.50
2 10
2 10
2.50
2.SO
The Works
(Anchovy lovors Only) 8.50 6.00 4.70
Cheese, Sausage. Pepperoni, Mushrooms, Onions,
Green Peppers. Anchovies A Black Oliv
5.10 3.50 2.50
6.00 4.20 3.00
6.00 4.20 300
Black Olives
7 20 4 80 360
Anchovies ' 1.00 80c
Block Olives 100 80c
Onions 40c 30c
Green Peppers 50c 40c
Shrimp 1.50 . 1 0 0
One Half Mushrooms 75c 50c
One Half Sausage 75c 50c
One Hall Pepperoni 75c 50c
One Half Onions A Peppers 45c 35c
Extra Cheese 50c 40c
Extra Sausage 50c 40c
60c
60c
20c
30c
1 00
35c
35c
35c
25c
30c
30c
• Spaghetti & Meatballs '
• Family Spaghetti with meatballs (5-7) people •
• Lasagna 1 3
Includes Lettuce Salad & Italian Bread
HENNY PENNY CHICKEN
DINNER: 4 Pieces Chicken ('.• Chlckonl, French Fries, Potato Salad c
garnished with Baton, Cole Slaw & Italian Bread
Sour C ream Potatoes 2.45
6 Pieces
9 Pieces
I 2 Pieces
FAMILY DINNER:
BY THE PIECE (Including French Fries)
3 10 15 Pieces 6 95 24 Pieces
4 45 18 Pieces 7 95 27 Pieces
5 75 21 Pieces. 8 95
9 95
10 95
IS Pieces Chicken One Pml ot Cole Slew, Italian Bread. Choice oi .16 ' rench F r,es ~
One Pint Polato Salad, or One Pml Sour.Cream Potatoes with Bacon u
''
SEAFOOD
PERCH DINNER: Lake Perch 1
SHRIMP DINNER Jumbo Shrimp a
2 45
O.nners include French Fries. Potato Salad or Sour C ream Potatoes garn.shed with Bacon Siaw & Itahaqj Bread
1 lb LAKE PERCH 4 50 1 lb JUMBO SHRIMP 6 95
Cheese Bob -
Big Bob lb
(Ground Beefl
ONION RINGS
4.0.....-,
16-o.
Homomodo Donuls.
SANDWICHES
Hot Roost Boot
5andvrich -95c
Bombots
Moat Ball -
, Italian Sausago
Bool
90c
90c
I 10
45c
1.75
.. > "• do.,
i 00 15 -do..
COID SODA
ALSO
COLE SLAW I Pint)
FRENCH fRIES
16-e.
BEVERAGES
25< DESSERT Of THE DAY
50c
40c
1.35
POTATO SALAD (Pint) 75c
SOUR CREAM POTATOES WITH
BACON (Pint) »Sc
6 THE PARKS IDE RANGER W e dne sday , Oct. 9, 1 9 7 4
Regents move on tuition
A HUW 1U VIUUVU 111 die
by Paul Anderson
of RANGER Staff
The University of Wisconsin
Board of Regents approved
Friday, Oct. 4, a proposed $1.3
billion 1975-77 biennial budget
which moves to de-escalate instruction
fee charges to
Wisconsin resident undergraduate
students. In total,
the biennial budget, excluding
faculty compensation proposals
to be considered in November,
marks an increase in state and
non-state funds of $96,874,700 over
the past 1974-76 b udget.
The major proportion of budget
increases drawn from state funds
($78,417,200 or 66 percent) fall
into the following two categories:
A fee de-escalation schedule
which will halve fee charges to
Wisconsin resident undergraduate
students starting in
the '76-'77 school year. The fee deescalation
proposal is designed to
reduce economic barriers to
resident students who desire a
university education and to
combat the inflationary spiral of
costs to students. Under the deescalation
program, the percentage
of average instructional
cost charged as fees to resident
undergraduates would be
reduced from 25 percent to 12.5
percent ($21.4 million).
Workload and fixed cost inWARNING:
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creases for teaching additional
students, meeting inflationary
cost increases, operating new
buildings, increasing student
wages to meet future minimum
wage requirements, service and
utility increases and other increases
($30.2 million).
The workload considerations
are designed to meet an increase
of 6,881 additional students
enrolled in degree credit
programs and 24,252 enrollees in
continuing education programs.
The remaining 34 percent ($27
million) increase, to be drawn
from state funds, would meet the
following demands:
An allocation of $3.9 million for
improvements in existing
programs for minoritydisadvantaged
students, additional
ethnic studies, women's
studies, and an external degree
program for Wisconsin citizens.
Funds to meet demands for
more primary care physicians,
allied health professionals and
specialized nursing and
cooperative health training
courses.
An allocation of $2.5 million to
facilitate economic, agricultural,
state and urban community
development assistance
programs.
Funds of $2.4 million to increase
teacher effectiveness
through improved course offerings,
utilizing educational
technology, replacing obsolete
equipment and meeting basic
accreditation standards.
Additional capital outflows to
meet new state and federal laws
which require investments in
health and safety protection, in
addition to other building improvements,
expansion of state
hospitals and empty dorm to
classroom conversions.
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is a $2.5 million boost in funds for
Parkside. During the 1975-77
biennium, Parkside would
receive $27,227,700 in state funds
and student fees, representing a
9.5 percent increase over current
levels.
A proposed amendment to the
biennial budget, presented to
Regent Ody Fish, Hartland, and
voted down by the board,
revealed that members of the
board ranked faculty pay raises
over resident reduced fees as the
top priority item. The Fish
amendment called for a slowmotion
de-escalation of resident
undergraduate fees, proposing
that the proportionate costs to
resident students be reduced
from 25 percent to 20 percent,
instead of 12.5 percent.
"I have some reservation about
de-escalation of instruction
fees," said Fish, citing three
areas of concern:
"First, I think the effect of
widening the tuition spread
between public and private institutions
of higher education is
certainly not going to be helpful.
"Secondly this would increase
the burden on all tax payers.
"Thirdly, I think we are excluding
a segment of the
population from the current
inflationary pressures and
problems. We add to that the
practicality of getting it done.
Also, the obviously difficult
program of getting necessary
faculty compensation increasesincreases
that I intend to support."
Fish suggested that an expanded
scholarship program be
instituted to assist those in need,
rather than a flat reduction in
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tuition tor everyone. amount of dollar* fnr tv,^ t
Regent Neshek responded to of pe0ple , T
Fish's suggestion by claiming actuall d somethbin t„ , '
that the purpose oi the de- inflation for The "peoo-e o
Pf
escalation program ,s to "help Wisconsin who Seed °
the largest majority of students education, and who, if?hey get aS
Who are in the middle income education, will be able tf LSd
group. vx~ * "
He stated, "most of our
students-or a good 80 percent of
our students-are students of
middle income parents.
The typical middle income
parent who makes between
$10,000, $11,000 a nd $14,000, has
three children in school, not in
college, and is trying to support a
family, cannot afford to send one
or two children to college.
"I think the effect of what we
have attempted to do here will in
itself be a grant program across
the board, and give relief to the
majority of students that you
really want to help, without
setting up expensive machinery
such as we have now, to affect
grants and aids."
Neshek concluded by adding,
"I think the 12-and-a-half percent
is a minimum goal that we should
attempt to obtain as a first step."
Regent John Lavine also took
issue with Fish:
"Tuition represents 25-30
percent of a student's cost of
going to school; the other twothirds
to three-quarters-room
and board-basically, the student
and-or his family will have
anywhere. Yes, it may be that
students may not be able to go to
the campus they want, but they
will always have the costs of
eating and a roof over their
heads-we can't do much about
that. Here is a way where we can
meaningfully, with a small
[ PARKSibrSOCcTRTLUB"
more to the tax structure. Vice
President Smith yesterday made
the point-and I thought it was
very well taken-that the last
area that any economicallyminded
person ought to attack in
an inflationary time, is
education, because that's the one
thing that can upgrade the
society and its productivity."
Lavine concluded by saying
"I'm not unmindful of the faculty
compensation issue. But I will
state very candidly, as much as I
support this 101 percent, if it
came to an either-or situation,
universities are not made of
bricks and mortar-they are
made by people and a great
faculty. I will certainly support
the faculty compensation above
everything."
Regent DeBardeleben, Park
Falls, supported the Fish
amendment, citing that he was in
favor of eventual free public
higher education, but he too,
believed that the key issue in the
biennium should be faculty pay
raises.
"Clearly, the priority item is to
get adequate faculty compensation
in this biennium. The
UW-system is going to be sorely
hurt unless this is done," he said.
UW Senior Vice President
Donald Percy reminded the
board that the governor and the
Department of Administration
had asked the university to'
submit a salary increase package
separately from the rest of the
budget.
Fish refuted by saying that the
university should look at the
overall picture in preparing its
budget request.
"We're only looking at the
grocery bill today. The rent
doesn't come due until next week,
so we're saying we won't look at
it until then," he said.
The motion was not carried, as
members of the board voted
down the amendment by a 11-3
margin.
£
Just Stop In!
r Restaurant
Open:
Daily 6:00 A.M.-8:00 P.M.
Closed Sundays
County E & Green Bay Rd.
Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7
? MONTHS
AFTER
PARKSIPE
BLACKOUT]
?THERE
M0
{
PCMER
FAILURE
\?"UC£
Wednesday night Oct. 2 and Thursday during the day, Parkside
experienced a power failure resulting from the failure of a section of
the primary transformer circuit.
.After about two hours of darkness on Wednesday and about
seventeen hours of the same on Thursday service was restored at 4:12
a.m. Friday morning.
The failure was in the section of the circuit that maintains steady
voltage under different load conditions. Physical Plant is presently
operating "as near normal as possible" according to Roger Allen
director of Physical Plant.
No further power failures are anticipated, however, Parkside will
not be able to use the main chiller until these circuits are replaced. Its
is expected to take two days to replace the burned out circuits, and this
work should begin in a week or two when the parts are available.
Safety and Security reported no potentially dangerous situations
arising during the power outage and there were no reported injuries.
H E ILE M A N'S
„ow Pure Brewed
From God's Country.
PRESENTS
A 'DANCE
s.
FEATURING
s, 'A£FY
SATURDAY, OCT. 12th
9:00 to 1:00
STUDENT ACT. B!DG.
ADVANCE TICKETS $1.00
(AVAILABLE FROM SOCCER CLUB MEMBER)
AT D OOR $1.50
WIS. — IJW-P I D REQUIRED
"On Tap at the Union"
The Parkside Players Present an evening of
'Theater of the Absurd'
The Bald Soprano by Eugene lonesco
and
The American Dream by Edward Albee
directed by Don Rintz
8 P.M. OCT. 17-18-19-20
COMMUNICATION A RTS T HEATER
ADM. $2 public, $1 UW-P students/staff All seats reserved.
Tickets at information Kiosk a nd at the door
• Round Trip, Jet
• 7 \fghts Lodging
• Rum Punch Welcome
• (u'oimd Transfers
• T ips and Taxes
For application or informationContact:
CAMPUSTRAVEL(ENTER
LLC 1)197 Call: 553-2294
8 THE PARKS IDE RANGER Wed nesd ay, Oct. 9, 1 9 7 4
needs a friend ?
Paris Wohlust demonstrates her abilities on the
balance beam.
Gymnastics
by Bonne Haas
"Super concentration and total" unawareness of
everything except for what I am doing," said Paris
Wohlust as she explained what goes through her
mind during a performance.
Teammate Julie Scherer added, "performing
requires a lot of p syching, I tell myself I know what
I'm doing and that I'm not going to fall. I fool
myself."
Wohlust and Scherer are both members of
Parkside's Womens Gymnastics Team.
Outside of carrying over 12 credits and working
part-time jobs, they practice regularly for iy2 hours
every day. Much of the team does not work-out
together because of job and class conflicts. Wohlust
and Scherer would preferably work out with the rest
of the team than alone.
"Talking and encouragement goes on when the
team works together. We could have much more
team spirit this way," said Wohlust.
The women feel the only way to change this would
be to recruit more members for the team. There
would naturally be more people practicing at the
same time then.
Parkside's Womens Gymnastics team is undefeated.
"As a small team," said Wohlust, "we
display our strength by putting quality in place of
quantity. The girls are very ambitious."
Though the women do not compete at the same
level, much mutual respect for one another and
effective communication is considered to exist in
the team.
Wohlust and Scherer describe their coach, Doug
Davis,as relaxed. They said Davis creates an atmosphere
in which the team feels they have the
right and freedom to express their ideas.
Scherer has participated in gymnastics for three
years, while Wohlust has participated for six years.
Wohlust enjoys gymnastics because there is a
feeling of achievement, yet challenge involved. She
said, "It feels good to do good."
Wohlust and Scherer explain gymnastics as the
ability to develop complete control over the mind
and body. In this way they display manners of s elfconfidence,
style and poise.
THE FACT IS - WE ALL DO.
I am not talking about acquaintances.
We all have plenty of those.
I am talking about real friends—
the do or die kind. We both know
those aren't easy to come by.
In order to establish real friendships,
we have to make ourselves
available to meet other people, we
have to be willing to work with
other people, and if we expect
other people to appreciate our
ideas, we must be willing to listen
to theirs.
If you hear an acquaintance or
an unknown individual making a
statement you don't agree with, it
makes little difference. If that person
were a true friend, you'd make
the time to discuss it with him
thoroughly.
When you have a personal problem
to discuss or something to be
happy about, you don't take it to an
acquaintance—you take it to a true
friend.
I could go on and on relating
the differences between acquaintances
and friends, but you already
know the differences. The thing I
want to tell you about is an organization
which was founded to
promote honest friendships.
When a group of Boston University
law students first gathered together
in 1909, they did so because
they were already friends. But
when they decided to expand their
fraternity to take in new members
on their own campus and on other
campuses, they did so because
they wanted to share their friendship.
Because of their belief in the
concept that honest friendships
promote the best in men, over 120,-
000 individuals have shared their
idea.
A group of acquaintances without
purpose is called a clique, but
that is where a fraternity is different.
We have proven that the more
a man learns about being a good
fraternity brother, the more he
knows about being a good friend
to his associates outside the
fraternity.
Even though you will make lifelong
friendships within the fraternity,
you will find that the real
value of the fraternity is learning
how to be a good friend and a productive
member of society.
A fraternity is then a growth institution.
It is designed to help
your acquaintances grow, your
friendships grow, and most importantly
to help you grow as an
individual.
You make many decisions every
day. Choosing to join a fraternity,
and, if so which one, is. an important
decision. The only individual
capable of telling you about the
fraternal experience is someone
who has experienced it. Talk to a
member of Lambda Chi Alpha
about his experience.
I did and I found the fraternity
experience to be extremely
worthwhile.
Frank Maez of Lambda Chi Alpha
is meeting with interested students
in the Library Learning Center
October 7-11, from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00
p.m.
LAMBDA CHI ALPHA the Fraternity ofHonest Friendship
4437 - 2 2nd Avenue Kenosha,
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774
SvuMstf the. Qineti
Piffci & Otaluut Qoodl
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA-551-7171
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM
i U/
"U w
l'W-P ARKSI.DE
/INTERBREAKTRIP
H O T E L & R A C Q U E T CLL)B
acapulco
PLUS $20.00 TA X
& S ERVICE BASED
ON 3 TO A ROOM
$244
• Round Trip Jet
• 7 Nights Lodging
• Marcarita P arty
Yacht C ruise of B ay
• Ground Transfers
• Tips & Taxes
For application or information
Contact:
CAMPUSTRAVEL CENTER
LLC D-197 Call : 553-2294
Bonanza's
three-point program
to beat inflation.
The Tuesday Night Price Bonanza.
(
#1.49 for a rib eye steak dinner!)
(
#1.29 for a chopped sirloin dinner!)
. uesday night will r\ever he the same again.
•Peed a child in America for 49<,
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® Brink up. The seconds are on us.
At Bonanza, you get free refills on all soft drinks, coffee, and ice tea.
IbuTl love love ft.
AVAILABLE IN KENOSHA ONLY
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
The Parkside Ranger, Volume 3, issue 10, October 9, 1974
Description
An account of the resource
Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1974-10-09
Subject
The topic of the resource
College student newspapers and periodicals
Student publications
University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
Newspaper
Language
A language of the resource
English
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System
board of regents
campus concerns committee
james hamilton
merger
student leaders
united council (UC)