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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>"Save the Library Day" set</text>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Soger&#13;
Thursday, April 29, 1982 Vol. 10 - No. 28&#13;
Semester worth of books, parking pe rmit are top pr izes&#13;
Save the Library Day" set&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
Members of student&#13;
organizations — PAB, PSGA,&#13;
Ranger and SOC — are organizing&#13;
"Save the Library Day" on&#13;
Wednesday, May 12 in an effort to&#13;
raise funds for the library, which&#13;
has been seriously hurt by the&#13;
state - mandated budget cuts.&#13;
The library is also receiving&#13;
attention from the PSGA Senate&#13;
and the Science Division Ad Hoc&#13;
Library Crisis Committee. The&#13;
PSGA Senate April 22&#13;
unanimously approved a&#13;
resolution stating "that all&#13;
possible alternatives to maintaining&#13;
our present library should&#13;
be explored" and that "PSGA,&#13;
Inc. supports the establishment of&#13;
a student endowment fund in&#13;
order to further this end."&#13;
The Science Division Ad Hoc&#13;
Library Crisis Committee was&#13;
formed following Chancellor Alan&#13;
Guskin's announcement March 23&#13;
that he would soon act on the&#13;
Library Staff recommendation to&#13;
cut $70,000 from the periodicals&#13;
and serials acquisition budget.&#13;
The committee made two&#13;
conclusions: "1) we should move&#13;
slowly, exploring all our options&#13;
as we proceed; and 2) we must&#13;
begin work immediately to&#13;
dramatically improve our access&#13;
to off - campus sources of library&#13;
materials."&#13;
In its report, the committee&#13;
urged library staff and the administration&#13;
to explore the&#13;
following recommendations: a&#13;
community user fee, a Cartha""&#13;
College student fee, a student fee&#13;
coming somehow from SUFAC,&#13;
faculty donations, alumni&#13;
donations and faculty subscriptions.&#13;
See next week's&#13;
Ranger for a more in - depth look&#13;
at the recommendations the&#13;
committee, and others, have&#13;
made.&#13;
The Save the Library Day&#13;
Committee, an informal gathering&#13;
of student leaders, met on Wednesday,&#13;
April 21 for the first time.&#13;
By the next meeting on Monday,&#13;
April 26, much headway had been&#13;
made for the May 12 event.&#13;
Over 30 donations have been&#13;
donated (at press time) to a raffle&#13;
that will be conducted on the&#13;
"Save the Library Day." The top&#13;
prize, being donated by College&#13;
Stores Associates, is a semester of&#13;
textbooks free of charge next fall.&#13;
Another prize is a white annual&#13;
parking permit for next year.&#13;
(SUFAC Tuesday approved $135&#13;
for the purchase of the permit and&#13;
a couple other items.)&#13;
At press time, plans were made&#13;
to have members of the committee&#13;
go to Madison to get the&#13;
permit to conduct a raffle.&#13;
Other campus - related prizes&#13;
include: a week of free lunches&#13;
from Heritage food service; 10&#13;
lines of free bowling in the Rec&#13;
Center; $10 of beverage / food&#13;
tickets for The End, to be held&#13;
May 22-23; a $5 gift certificate for&#13;
the Sweet Shoppe; one basic two -&#13;
person outdoor rental (tent,&#13;
sleeping bags, cookware, etc.) for&#13;
one weekend.&#13;
Activities planned for the event&#13;
so far include: a dunk tank, a pie -&#13;
in - the - eye, free throw contest&#13;
(teams of four — two male, two&#13;
female), tug-of-war (same team&#13;
requirements), kiss - a - thon, beer&#13;
drinking contest and a bake sale.&#13;
Sign up for the contests at the&#13;
PSGA office (by the Coffee&#13;
Shoppe) or the Rec Center.&#13;
T-shirts with the "Save the&#13;
Library" logo will also be for sale.&#13;
Prize donators from the community&#13;
include: from Kenosha,&#13;
Ray Radigan's, Oage Thomsen's,&#13;
Candlelite Supper Club, Captain's&#13;
Steak Joynt, Greco's, Casino&#13;
Townhouse. Jensen's, Country&#13;
Kitchen, Hungry Head, Bidinger's&#13;
Music House and Carmichael&#13;
Associates movie theaters.&#13;
wososoxccccccccoscocoeocooccocoooocccoccococc&#13;
Support the library —&#13;
attend "Soue the Library Day"&#13;
»coocooocco sccsooscoosecco&#13;
Dump&#13;
site?&#13;
Donators from Racine include:&#13;
Corner House, The Sanctuary,&#13;
Ferraro's, Giovanni DeRango's,&#13;
Infusino's Pizza, Famous Recipe&#13;
Fried Chicken, Obie's, Martha&#13;
Merrill's, Walden Books, and&#13;
Marc Theaters.&#13;
More prizes will be solicited up&#13;
until the day of the event.&#13;
"White Lie" will be playing&#13;
from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. and&#13;
activities will be conducted&#13;
throughout the day. There is no&#13;
admission charge. All proceeds&#13;
will go towards the library endowment&#13;
fund.&#13;
See next week's Ranger for&#13;
more details.&#13;
Activist McAllister's goal:&#13;
"conspire for the sake of life"&#13;
by Edward Beal&#13;
On April 21, the Mobilization for&#13;
Survival sponsored a lecture by&#13;
Elizabeth McAllister. She spoke at&#13;
1 p.m. on civil disobedience, and&#13;
again at 7 p.m. on the arms race —&#13;
national security vs. national&#13;
defense.&#13;
During the afternoon lecture,&#13;
she presented her philosophy&#13;
through the perspective that&#13;
people have a powerful way of&#13;
abolishing certain acts, but the&#13;
risks are very high. "Don't get&#13;
involved if you're not ready for the&#13;
consequence and change it will&#13;
bring on you," she said. Civil&#13;
disobedience is truly a powerful&#13;
way to effect change.&#13;
McAllister, who's been a social&#13;
activist for fifteen years, doesn't&#13;
trust the government. In her&#13;
opinion, "There are no tools left&#13;
for those who are controlling our&#13;
destiny." She says that her faith in&#13;
a non - nuclear war is in the people&#13;
not legislation. Moreover,&#13;
"Congressmen, administrators&#13;
and government in general, will&#13;
not act until they see that their&#13;
(political) survival depends on&#13;
it." Whenever someone's survival&#13;
is at stake, they often retaliate in&#13;
some form. Take the cause of civil&#13;
rights legislation for instance; the&#13;
only reason they exist is because&#13;
the government had to enact&#13;
them. McAllister notes that the&#13;
minute they think they can get&#13;
away with it they try to take them&#13;
back — consider the affirmative&#13;
action per se.&#13;
When asked how her life has&#13;
been affected by her involvement&#13;
in the social activist movement,&#13;
McAllister replied, "It's been the&#13;
envelope of my life." She is forty -&#13;
two years old and the mother of&#13;
three children. She resides in a&#13;
community which consists of&#13;
eleven adults and four children.&#13;
The main goal of the community is&#13;
to "conspire for the sake of life,&#13;
and to act, for the sake of life, and&#13;
to accept the consequences." She&#13;
added that all members of the&#13;
community have, for some form&#13;
of civil disobedience, been jailed.&#13;
Later that evening, she spoke on&#13;
the survival of humanity.&#13;
Specifically speaking, the topic&#13;
was on the arms race between the&#13;
two "superpowers." She hopes to&#13;
make the public realize that the&#13;
time to stop the total destruction&#13;
of the human race is now. She&#13;
discussed the "first strike&#13;
strategy", whereby the U.S. is&#13;
concentrating on building a series&#13;
of accurate weapons. Large&#13;
corporations such as Wisconsin&#13;
Electric contribute capital for&#13;
manufacturing nuclear warheads.&#13;
In addition, 55-65% of income tax&#13;
money is used for military aide.&#13;
The battle between these&#13;
superpowers has got to end&#13;
somewhere, and through local and&#13;
regional chapters throughout&#13;
America, MOBE (Mobilization for&#13;
Survival) can possibly achieve the&#13;
abolishment of the arms race.&#13;
However, it needs the support of&#13;
the public.&#13;
At both lectures, the turnout of&#13;
students can't compare to the size&#13;
of the audience which received G.&#13;
Gordon Liddy, although they were&#13;
free.&#13;
For students who are interested,&#13;
MOBE meets every Wednesday at&#13;
1 p.m. in MOLN D-133. The&#13;
organization has four main goals:&#13;
ban nuclear power, non -&#13;
existance of proliferation, stop tht&#13;
arms race and fund human needs.&#13;
United Council discusses UW budget&#13;
Photo by Masood Shafiq&#13;
DRUMS containing possibly dangerous&#13;
chemicals were found this week off the&#13;
Outer Loop'road by the Union. The DNR&#13;
was called in to investigate how&#13;
dangerous the chemicals may be. The&#13;
labels on the drums said rubber gloves,&#13;
goggles and a rubber apron should be&#13;
used when handling the drums. Ranger&#13;
will investigate the matter further to try&#13;
to find out how the chemicals got there.&#13;
by Edward Beal&#13;
The United Council of UW&#13;
student governments is an&#13;
organization with vital functions.&#13;
Its constitution states that its&#13;
purposes are to defend the quality&#13;
of education, represent students,&#13;
serve as a liaison, and foster&#13;
student interchange. The UC&#13;
consists of six committees;&#13;
presidential, legislative affairs,&#13;
ethnic minority affairs, academic&#13;
affairs, women's affairs, and the&#13;
directors committee.&#13;
Last weekend in Platteville, the&#13;
council took up the issue of the UW&#13;
budget cutbacks. The legislative&#13;
affairs committee feels we will&#13;
probably get an across the board&#13;
cut of 2% instead of 4% because of&#13;
recent lobbying effects. In addition,&#13;
we will probably receive a&#13;
minimum of $80 or a maximum of&#13;
$240 in tuition increase.&#13;
The committee then talked&#13;
about financial aid cutbacks; on&#13;
the national level, Reagan is&#13;
getting a lot of flack from&#13;
representatives who don't want to&#13;
cut financial aid. Therefore, we&#13;
probably won't be hit as hard as&#13;
we previously thought for next&#13;
year. On the state level, the increase&#13;
of $1.6 million to the budget&#13;
should help a bit for next year&#13;
also. The committee also talked&#13;
about the lobbying success with&#13;
landlord - tenant reform, which&#13;
passed the legislature and is&#13;
now awaiting the governor's&#13;
signature. There were no&#13;
resolutions passed because the&#13;
state of the budget repair bill is&#13;
still undecided.&#13;
Another issue that the council is&#13;
taking up is the problem of&#13;
recruitment and retention of&#13;
ethnic minority students. The bulk&#13;
of the problem is with retention;&#13;
there has been a problem with&#13;
retaining junior and senior level&#13;
ethnic minorities. The minority&#13;
affairs committee has discussed&#13;
non - academic factors that may&#13;
affect these students such as&#13;
cultural differences and have&#13;
come up with various solutions to&#13;
the problem. One, tutorial services&#13;
for the advanced standing&#13;
classmen; two, peer counseling;&#13;
and three, a multi - cultural class,&#13;
which could be created and offered&#13;
mainly for ethnic majority&#13;
students.&#13;
In the presidential committee&#13;
the president of UC, Robert&#13;
Kranz, announced that the Boarc&#13;
of Regents, which is comprised ol&#13;
directors of the UW system&#13;
proposed to change the ad&#13;
missions policy for the UW&#13;
schools. According to Kranz, tht&#13;
Regents feel as though it's toe&#13;
easy to get into UW schools.&#13;
All of the issues that weren'i&#13;
resolved will be discucced at the&#13;
June UC meeting in Madison&#13;
Unfortunately, the United Counci&#13;
needs a two year budget base ii&#13;
order to be maintained — con&#13;
trary to what the chancellors fron&#13;
various schools in the UW systen&#13;
think. They seem to pose a threa&#13;
to disband UC. PSGA Presiden&#13;
Jim Kreuser states, "This i;&#13;
because most chancellors fear i&#13;
mandatory funding formula fo;&#13;
United Council. This assure:&#13;
UC a base to constantly advo&#13;
cate for student concerns."&#13;
If, for some reason, student:&#13;
choose not to further support UC&#13;
they may request a refund of 5'&#13;
cents within thirty days after eacl&#13;
academic session has com&#13;
mended. &#13;
2 Thursday, April 29, 1982 RANGER&#13;
Poor coverage of Liddy&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am writing in response to&#13;
editor Ken Meyer's "interpretive"&#13;
account of G. Gordon&#13;
Liddy's appearance at Parkside&#13;
on April 19. As an editor, I believe&#13;
that Mr. Meyer certainly owes it&#13;
to the Ranger's readers to give an&#13;
objective and factual report on&#13;
any event. I do not feel that in this&#13;
case he even approached fulfilling&#13;
his responsibility. Mr. Meyer was&#13;
very obviously biased before he&#13;
heard Mr. Liddy utter a single&#13;
word. It almost seems as if he&#13;
may have written his story the&#13;
night before and added a few&#13;
perfunctory quotations afterwards&#13;
to give it some&#13;
credibility.&#13;
Apparently Ken Meyer should&#13;
also check his dictionary on what&#13;
it means to quote a person: it&#13;
means to repeat EXACTLY what&#13;
another person has said. With his&#13;
illusory remark about Jack Anderson's&#13;
writing a story that&#13;
"endangered a spy's life," Mr.&#13;
Meyer misrepresented Liddy. As I&#13;
recall it, G. Gordon Liddy did not&#13;
say that a spy's life was merely&#13;
"endangered" due to Anderson's&#13;
story; he said that the man was&#13;
tortured to death. Just a slight&#13;
incongruity, wouldn't you say?&#13;
Meyer's manipulative selection of&#13;
his so-called quotations taken out&#13;
of context could make Captain&#13;
Kangaroo seem like a fiend.&#13;
G. Gordon Liddy committed a&#13;
crime; he was put on trial and&#13;
convicted. He served time in&#13;
prison and was released, all according&#13;
to the American judicial&#13;
course of events. I felt he was a&#13;
supremely intelligent and well -&#13;
spoken man and was fascinated&#13;
by him. Although I do not approve&#13;
of his crime, I am glad to say I&#13;
listened with a completely open&#13;
mind and felt enlightened by Mr.&#13;
Liddy's talk.&#13;
Perhaps next time around Mr.&#13;
Meyer should employ one of his&#13;
staff writers who harbors no&#13;
preconceived notions about such a&#13;
controversial subject as was G.&#13;
Gordon Liddy.&#13;
Susan M. Barr&#13;
Editor's reply:&#13;
First of all, interpretive stories&#13;
are not totally objective — that's&#13;
why they're called interpretive. It&#13;
was a legitimate editorial decision&#13;
to write an interpretive story for&#13;
several reasons: also present was&#13;
an equally long Q and A interview&#13;
in which Liddy's comments and&#13;
opinions remained uninterpreted;&#13;
in order to save space in an eight&#13;
page paper, the "news story" and&#13;
"editorial" were combined, and&#13;
the factual report was indeed very&#13;
factual.&#13;
(Concerning Anderson, which&#13;
wasn't a "quote", the phrasing&#13;
could have been better, but the&#13;
main point remains the same — as&#13;
soon as t he story was printed, the&#13;
spy's life was "endangered." Yes,&#13;
the spy was tortured to death, but&#13;
Liddy objected to the fact that the&#13;
spy's life was "endangered" — let&#13;
alone the spy being killed. It was&#13;
the act of endangering — not the&#13;
killing — that Liddy objected to.)&#13;
One last reason for the interpretive&#13;
account of Liddy appearance&#13;
— after entering the&#13;
event professionally objective and&#13;
listening to Liddy evade questions&#13;
and do the other things I mentioned&#13;
in the story, I decided I&#13;
"owed it to the readers" who&#13;
weren't able to attend or didn't&#13;
want to attend (for moral,&#13;
political or personal reasons) the&#13;
one event in the past many years&#13;
that brought some life into this&#13;
habitually lifeless campus.&#13;
Challenge column on Liddy&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
Mr. Ostrowski's impassioned&#13;
plea for the right of Mr. Liddy to&#13;
speak for an exorbitant fee was&#13;
fraught with non sequitur&#13;
passages that deserve to be&#13;
challenged. The most disturbing&#13;
of these to me was his cavalier use&#13;
of the oxymoronic phrase "liberal&#13;
fascism," which he simply&#13;
defined as "opposing to any point&#13;
of view that is far right of their&#13;
own."&#13;
I should love to see the dictionary&#13;
from which Mr. Ostrowski&#13;
drew his definition. My Webster's&#13;
Dictionary defines fascism as a&#13;
"political philosophy, movement&#13;
or regime that exalts nation and&#13;
race above the individual and&#13;
stands for centralized autocratic&#13;
government headed by a dictatorial&#13;
leader, severe economic&#13;
and social regimentation, and&#13;
forcible suppression of opposition."&#13;
The appropriate&#13;
Webster's definition for liberal, as&#13;
Mr. Ostrowski used this modifying&#13;
term, reads "of or pertaining to&#13;
the principles of liberalism,"&#13;
which in turn is defined as a&#13;
••••••••••&#13;
Write a&#13;
Letter to&#13;
Ranger!!!!&#13;
••••••••••&#13;
-982&#13;
THIS SYMBOL STANDS FOR.: a)THE CIVIL DEFENSE&#13;
PROGRAM, b) A CRUEL DECEPTION, c) BOTH.&#13;
Rebuttal entirely misses the point&#13;
"political philosophy based on a&#13;
belief in progress, the essential&#13;
goodness of humanity and the&#13;
autonomy of the individual, and&#13;
standing for the protection of&#13;
political and civil liberties." To&#13;
put it simply for Mr. Ostrowski,&#13;
there can be no such thing as&#13;
"liberal fascism."&#13;
Such sloppiness and inaccuracy&#13;
mars the entire text of Mr.&#13;
Ostrowski's letter. The charge of&#13;
fascistic behavior more properly&#13;
rests upon Mr. Liddy's record of&#13;
deeds than upon the actions of the&#13;
peaceful, law - abiding picketers.&#13;
The concern at paying exorbitant&#13;
speaking fees to an unrepentant&#13;
convicted felon in times of fiscal&#13;
retrenchment is legitimate. The&#13;
fact that Mr. Liddy draws his&#13;
audience as a Watergate figure,&#13;
yet consistantly avoids disclosing&#13;
anything about that incident,&#13;
borders on false advertising.&#13;
Moreover, it is not "good&#13;
finance" to pay nearly $5,000 for a&#13;
speaker who has said all that he&#13;
has to say in his book. Since this&#13;
book and other ones concerning&#13;
every "type of philosophy&#13;
available" for "consumption" are&#13;
themselves available in most local&#13;
libraries for free and bookstores&#13;
for purchase, it is not possible that&#13;
not hiring Liddy to speak here&#13;
infringes upon anyone's access to&#13;
what he has to say.&#13;
A final point, in fact no one was&#13;
denied the right to pay to see this&#13;
felon. It is Mr. Ostrowski who&#13;
wants no dissent as he indulges his&#13;
curiosity about this strange&#13;
person, Mr. Liddy, a man of&#13;
mystery with no secret.&#13;
Angela Howard Zophy&#13;
The Ranger needs staffers:&#13;
photographers •news writers «ad reps&#13;
Call 228 7 or 2295 or Stop in!&#13;
We're in WLLC DI73&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Chuck Ostrowski's rebuttal of&#13;
April 15 — if you can call it a&#13;
rebuttal — misses the point entirely.&#13;
I don't know whether it was&#13;
my letter which he was particularly&#13;
responding to, but if so,&#13;
some clarification is in order.&#13;
First of all, I did not suggest&#13;
that Chuck or any other opinion&#13;
writers sifted through the&#13;
editorial pages of other college&#13;
newspapers before writing their&#13;
own columns, nor do I recall&#13;
anyone else suggesting that. I&#13;
agree that it is not "purposeful"&#13;
that most campus editorials sound&#13;
the same — there's no Master&#13;
Dictator sitting somewhere ordering&#13;
all student editors what to&#13;
print — but this does not mean&#13;
that the lack of diversity is&#13;
"coincidental." Let's fact it,&#13;
everyone; it's due partially to the&#13;
natural tendency of students to be&#13;
"Utopian" as Chuck states, but it's&#13;
also due to peer - group pressure&#13;
and the desire to conform and not&#13;
sway too far from the line. You&#13;
don't have to read any other&#13;
campus newspapers to know what&#13;
the "correct" campus position is&#13;
on most issues, and that if you&#13;
don't agree, you're not quite one of&#13;
the crowd.&#13;
The desire to conform is a&#13;
natural human tendency and&#13;
there's nothing terrible about it in&#13;
general, but I would encourage&#13;
people to be wary of it where the&#13;
expression of ideas is concerned.&#13;
Because for any issue, the&#13;
examination and analysis of all&#13;
sides is crucial. If peer pressure&#13;
results in the formation of dogmas&#13;
on issues, I would encourage&#13;
people to resist it and to come to&#13;
their own conclusions independently&#13;
after careful&#13;
analysis.&#13;
And here we're getting to what&#13;
really amused me about Chuck's&#13;
attempted rebuttal. Because what&#13;
he is really doing is defending his&#13;
own preference for taking&#13;
positions without any careful&#13;
analysis at all! He says we have&#13;
"nothing to lose from viewing&#13;
situations and problems&#13;
idealistically" and that it's more&#13;
"reasonable" to be "utopianish."&#13;
About political issues? About&#13;
solutions to problems? Really,&#13;
Chuck!&#13;
First of all, forget the "liberal&#13;
vs. conservative" classification.&#13;
"Conservatives" are often just as&#13;
"idealistic" as are "liberals";&#13;
witness the large number of them&#13;
who think the world would bloom&#13;
with roses everywhere if we were&#13;
only able to make kids pray in&#13;
school again. Anyway, I find&#13;
Chuck's statements in defense of&#13;
"utopianism" with regard to.&#13;
proposed solutions a bit naive.&#13;
And his statements about adults&#13;
(being "feeble - minded", etc.)&#13;
only serve to bolster the impression&#13;
that campus "idealism"&#13;
is merely a displaced form of&#13;
jealousy toward Daddy carried&#13;
over from the Oedipal years.&#13;
There are plenty of reasons for&#13;
opposing Ronald Reagan, but his&#13;
age is not one of them.&#13;
The defense of utopianism,&#13;
however, is more frightening.&#13;
Doesn't Chuck realize that some&#13;
of mankind's greatest disasters&#13;
have been due to people who&#13;
refused to acknowledge that their&#13;
Utopian ideas were unworkable —&#13;
Joseph Stalin and the Reverend&#13;
Jim Jones, for example?&#13;
Throughout history, refusal to&#13;
recognize the shortcomings of&#13;
Utopian ideas has been a recipe for&#13;
disaster. If for no other reason,&#13;
Chuck should re - examine hr&#13;
statements about utopianism, and&#13;
students should not be swayed by&#13;
them too quickly. It would be far&#13;
better for all of us to closely&#13;
examine all proposed solutions&#13;
that sound a bit too rosy. Caution&#13;
is always preferable to&#13;
carelessness.&#13;
I wish to make a distinction,&#13;
however, between idealism and&#13;
utopianism. Or perhaps, a better&#13;
way to put it, between personal&#13;
idealism and political idealism.&#13;
Political idealism too easily&#13;
degenerates into the Utopian&#13;
disaster of advocating solutions&#13;
without regard to their actual&#13;
effects. Personal idealism is&#13;
something different. It is the&#13;
application of your ideals to your&#13;
own life; to your own ethical&#13;
standards and to your relationships&#13;
with other people. Stretching&#13;
it a bit, personal idealism&#13;
could be defined as the ability to&#13;
be idealistic about life in general&#13;
(rather than excessively&#13;
realistic), to perceive the things in&#13;
life which can't be explained&#13;
rationally. For instance, a personal&#13;
idealist will understand&#13;
when someone associates the&#13;
breaking of the sun through the&#13;
clouds with the idea of freedom; a&#13;
personal reationalist won't know&#13;
what the heck you're talking&#13;
about.&#13;
This quality of personal&#13;
idealism is essential to anyone&#13;
who wishes to be able to create&#13;
anything of artistic and aesthetic&#13;
value. Unfortunately, one of the&#13;
great tragedies of recent times&#13;
has been the inability of many of&#13;
the world's finest artists to&#13;
distinguish between personal&#13;
idealism and political idealism,&#13;
which has often resulted in their&#13;
own disgrace even when their&#13;
artistic ability has been&#13;
unquestionable. One only has to&#13;
recall all of the fine artists who&#13;
made fools of themselves in the&#13;
'30s by embracing Stalinism as a&#13;
"great experiment" only later to&#13;
fall into a (understandable)&#13;
humiliated silence when it&#13;
became obvious what it was really&#13;
all about. I feel that our culture&#13;
has still not recovered.&#13;
It so happens that I prefer the&#13;
company and conversation of&#13;
personal idealists, such as I&#13;
described, even though all too&#13;
often they tend to show the same&#13;
inability to distinguish the personal&#13;
and the political. That is&#13;
their right, but what is especially&#13;
disturbing is that it seems to be&#13;
respected by personal idealists,&#13;
one of the litmus tests that you&#13;
Continued On Page Six&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Steve Myers&#13;
Mark Sanders&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Andy Petersen&#13;
Linda Andersen&#13;
Juli Janovicz&#13;
ganger Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Co-Photo Editor&#13;
Co-Photo Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Asst. Business Manager&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Edward Beal, Greg Bonofiglio, Carol Burns, Eric Elsmo,&#13;
rl?&#13;
ryu a ' Bob Kiesling, Joe Kimm, Rick Luehr, Dick&#13;
Oberbruner, Chuck Ostrowski, Masood Shafiq, Tammy&#13;
Shuemate, Eric Wichmann, Jeff Wicks.&#13;
uw"'&#13;
rkM ,hw &gt;re&#13;
RANGER is prlntedby the Un?o?Siwaffp dUri&#13;
"&#13;
9 brCakS a&#13;
"&#13;
d holidayS'&#13;
Br&amp;sS Ranger&#13;
'&#13;
univers,,y&#13;
°&#13;
f wis consin&#13;
paper with one inch margins^Afu^t " ,ypewrit,en&#13;
' cioublespaced on standard size&#13;
eluded for verification ' letter&#13;
s must be signed and a telephone number inDSnriorTen&#13;
i,hhe&#13;
'&#13;
d&#13;
'°&#13;
r Valid reasons&#13;
-&#13;
reserves all editoria? privileges''in publica,ion or&gt; Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
defamatory content. refusing to print letters which contain false or &#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 29, 1982&#13;
winners announced for ICPS I Ande rson resigns, Parkside loses&#13;
WVinners in the Southeast Shim and advised hv&#13;
Wisconsin - Northeast Illinois&#13;
portion of the International&#13;
Computer Problem Solving&#13;
Contest sponsored by Parkside&#13;
have been announced.&#13;
The contest was held at UW-P&#13;
and about 400 other testing&#13;
stations around the world on&#13;
Saturday, April 17. Fifty teams of&#13;
one to three persons competed in&#13;
three divisions at UW-P.&#13;
The area winners, whose scores&#13;
will be judged along with those&#13;
from the other testing stations to&#13;
determine the top ten world - wide&#13;
winners, are:&#13;
Senior high division (grades 10-&#13;
12): First place, David Nice and&#13;
Robert Goll, an independent team&#13;
from Kenosha and winners in the&#13;
junior high division for two years&#13;
and for a second year in the senior&#13;
division; second place, a Maine&#13;
Senior High School team from&#13;
Park Ridge, 111., composed of&#13;
John Port, Rob Verbrugghe and&#13;
David Kitchell and advised by&#13;
Tom Mahon; and third place, an&#13;
Adlai Stevenson High School team&#13;
from Prairie View, 111., i ncluding&#13;
Steve Gould, Jon Shaw and David&#13;
Shim and advised by Scott Oliver.&#13;
Junior high division (grades 7-&#13;
9): First place, a Prairie School&#13;
team from Racine including&#13;
Stephen Schmidt, Dan Shafer and&#13;
Jonathan Johnson and advised by&#13;
Bruce Campbell; second place, a&#13;
Whitnall High School team from&#13;
Greenfield composed of Scott&#13;
Trent and advised by Mary Kay&#13;
Morgan; and third place, a&#13;
Waukesha area team of Jonathan&#13;
Sadler, Mark Palmer and Mark&#13;
Melendes and advised by Walter&#13;
Sadler of UW-Waukesha.&#13;
The elementary division&#13;
(grades 4-6) was won by a team&#13;
from St. Lucy's School, Racine,&#13;
including Jennifer Leffleman,&#13;
Ann Kozich and Shannon Sack and&#13;
advised by Ken Sack.&#13;
The winning teams in the area&#13;
contest were awarded trophies.&#13;
UW-Parkside Prof. Donald&#13;
Piele, organizer of the international&#13;
competition, said&#13;
results from the 400 testing&#13;
stations will be sent to UW-P&#13;
where the world - wide winners&#13;
will be determined. Last year,&#13;
students on four continents&#13;
competed.&#13;
by Edward Beal&#13;
For the past five years,&#13;
Parkside has had the privilege of&#13;
retaining Mike Anderson, a&#13;
chemistry 101 level instructor.&#13;
There is a phrase that is often&#13;
used, which says "all good things&#13;
must come to an end." Perhaps&#13;
that cliche is most applicable in&#13;
this case.&#13;
Anderson's leaving is not a&#13;
result of tenure denial or an administratively&#13;
denied contract&#13;
renewal. He chose to resign. When&#13;
asked what his reasons for leaving&#13;
Parkside were, he replied, "My&#13;
job here has no chance for advancement."&#13;
He added that there&#13;
were no hard feelings. He explained&#13;
that he knew what the&#13;
conditions were when he accepted&#13;
the job.&#13;
Placed in the category of being&#13;
a "specialist / adjunct instructor,"&#13;
Anderson went up for&#13;
contract renewal every year. He&#13;
obviously just wanted to excel in&#13;
his career. Well, he now has that&#13;
opportunity.&#13;
Anderson has been offered a&#13;
research fellowship in Portland,&#13;
Parkside computer fair held&#13;
The focus will be on small&#13;
business applications, graphics&#13;
and fun and games at the 6th&#13;
Parkside Computer Fair on&#13;
Saturday, May 1, in the Campus&#13;
Union. The event is sponsored by&#13;
the Parkside Computer Club&#13;
(PCC) and all sessions are free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
The program:&#13;
"Computer Graphics on&#13;
Display: Siggraph Video Review"&#13;
by Loren Buchanan of the PCC,&#13;
from 9 a.m. to noon;&#13;
"Wang Laboratories and Office&#13;
Automation" by Donald Benson of&#13;
Wang Laboratories and "The&#13;
Atari Computer: State of Graphic&#13;
Arts" by Steve Hanson of Magic&#13;
Lantern Computers, Madison,&#13;
both at 10 a.m.;&#13;
"I Think It Can Do What They&#13;
Say It Can: Testimonial From a&#13;
First - Time Micro - Computer&#13;
User" by William Todd, director&#13;
of the Kenosha Community Impact&#13;
Program, at 11 a.m.;&#13;
"Software Engineering from&#13;
the User's Perspective" by Ron&#13;
Gatterdam, UW-P professor of&#13;
mathematics and computer&#13;
Jobs available&#13;
The Private Industry Council of&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin, Inc. will&#13;
have a limited number of temporary&#13;
jobs available for current&#13;
post high school students who will&#13;
be returning to school in the fall.&#13;
Most jobs will become available&#13;
over the summer months and will&#13;
involve a variety of occupations in&#13;
the business, communications,&#13;
health services, and hospitality&#13;
fields.&#13;
Students must meet income&#13;
eligibility guidelines before they&#13;
are referred to a job opening.&#13;
Interested students are invited to&#13;
submit their resume to Mr. Mike&#13;
Piatt, U.W.P. Job Service, WLLC&#13;
D-173.&#13;
science, and a Colortron&#13;
presentation, both at noon;&#13;
"Color Computer Graphics&#13;
Slide Show: Examples in Art,&#13;
Science and Business" by&#13;
Buchanan and "The Vanmil&#13;
Concept" by Telcom Industries,&#13;
Milwaukee, both at 1 p.m.;&#13;
"Special Purpose Software for&#13;
the Small Businessman:&#13;
Technology and Terminology" by&#13;
Gatterdam and Tim Fossum, UWP&#13;
professor of applied computer&#13;
science, and "Interactive Games&#13;
Using the Fourth Language" by&#13;
Bruce Langenbach of PCC, both at&#13;
2 p.m.;&#13;
And, "Online Databases:&#13;
Electronic Information at Your&#13;
Fingertips" by Virgil Diodato of&#13;
the UW-Milwaukee School of&#13;
Library and Information Science,&#13;
at 3 p.m.&#13;
Specific room locations for the&#13;
presentations will be available at&#13;
a registration table in the Union.&#13;
The fair also will include&#13;
computer displays by a number of&#13;
vendors.&#13;
SAVE THE&#13;
LIBRARY DAY&#13;
WEDNESDAY, MAY 12&#13;
Union Square - Union Pad&#13;
Free admission&#13;
Featuring:&#13;
WHITE LIE 11 a.m.-2:30 p. m.&#13;
Other Events:&#13;
Dunk tank, tug - of - war, free throw contest, Kiss - a - thon,&#13;
beer drinking relays, and more&#13;
Raffle:&#13;
prizes include: parking permit, 1 we ek of f ree lunches, 4&#13;
season basketball passes, 10 lines of free bowling, $5 Sweet&#13;
Shoppe gift certificate, $10 food/beverage tickets for The&#13;
End, 2 free dinners at a dozen local restaurants, and more&#13;
Coming&#13;
THE END&#13;
May 22 &amp; 23&#13;
Oregon at the Oregon Graduate&#13;
Center as a research assistant.&#13;
The program is closely related to&#13;
that of an internship. After his&#13;
first year, he will spend the&#13;
majority of the time in labs. He&#13;
will also be given the opportunity&#13;
to do some research of his own.&#13;
His response to the question of&#13;
whether or not he would return to&#13;
Parkside, he said, "The pay in the&#13;
chemical industry is significantly&#13;
greater than that of an academic&#13;
staff member."&#13;
On Monday, May 10 at 4 p.m. in&#13;
the Union Square, there will be a&#13;
party in Mike Anderson's honor.&#13;
The party is being organized by&#13;
some students of Mike's, and&#13;
Keith Ward, a chemistry&#13;
professor. The party is open to all&#13;
students.&#13;
In the worcte of Keith Ward,&#13;
"Anderson's been a very, very&#13;
popular teacher — enjoyable&#13;
colleague — he's going to be very&#13;
difficult to replace."&#13;
From a student's perspective,&#13;
Mike Scoon told of his encounters&#13;
with Anderson. Although he hasn't&#13;
had Anderson for an instructor, he&#13;
has received numerous amounts&#13;
of aid with chemistry problems.&#13;
"His concern was for all students,&#13;
not just in his classes," said&#13;
Scoon.&#13;
Concert of Compositions&#13;
A concert of compositions by&#13;
Parkside music students will be&#13;
presented at 8 p.m. on Friday,&#13;
April 30, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. The free public&#13;
program is sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Chapter of the Music&#13;
Educators National Conference.&#13;
. Included will be works by David&#13;
Bremel, Racine Unified School&#13;
District choral director, and&#13;
Donald W. Crouch, Kenosha&#13;
Unified School District choral&#13;
director. Both have done graduate&#13;
work in composition at UW-P.&#13;
Other student composers&#13;
represented are Jeffrey Clementi,&#13;
Debbi Gorecki - Roland, Shirley&#13;
Grothe, Edward Parker and Peter&#13;
Simon, all of Racine; Patricia&#13;
Pedersen and Tom Vignieri,&#13;
Kenosha; and Michael Edgerton,&#13;
Sturtevant.&#13;
Community choral ensembles&#13;
performing in the Gremel, Grothe&#13;
and Crouch works respectively&#13;
are The Racine Chorale, the John&#13;
Bullen Junior High School 7th&#13;
Grade Boys' Choir of Ke nosha and&#13;
the senior choir of the First&#13;
Evangelical Lutheran Church of&#13;
Racine.&#13;
All of the students whose works&#13;
are being performed have studied&#13;
with Prof. August Wegner andsome&#13;
also studied with visiting&#13;
composer Otto Luening during his&#13;
recent stay on campus.&#13;
Wondering what&#13;
to do with your&#13;
books?&#13;
CAMPUS BOOK&#13;
EXCHANGE ^&#13;
accepting and selling books.&#13;
WE'LL GIVE YOU MORE $ $ $ FOR YOUR BOOKS.&#13;
STOP BY FOR DETAILS.&#13;
We're On The WLLC Concourse&#13;
ttuvcrsi^rof "Wisconsin" Farlvside ^&#13;
Communication. Arts Theatre&#13;
April23-24, &amp;&#13;
April 25,2Pm&#13;
April 30-AW1,&#13;
wpm. J.\ \l / /&#13;
HURRER,&#13;
IAKNML&#13;
lichets: Union Info. DcsH &amp; at the DooY"&#13;
553-2345 ©1* &gt;53-2042&#13;
$2.50 Panuidt Stvdmts,Sta», S«i\io**&#13;
$3.5© Public CiUWs &#13;
4 Thursday, April 29,1982 RANGER&#13;
"Personal Best" is story of competition and love&#13;
11 ...L — — n Mn im fU«&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
There is a temptation, when&#13;
talking about a film such as&#13;
"Personal Best," to allow one's&#13;
feelings to get in the way erf t he&#13;
perception of what the movie&#13;
actually is. Anyone can pick up a&#13;
newspaper or magazine and find a&#13;
reviewer saying that the film is or&#13;
is not significant; that it deals&#13;
with the emotional problems of&#13;
athletic competition honestly or&#13;
dishonestly; or whether it is in&#13;
favor of or against homosexual&#13;
relationships. Both sides of these&#13;
questions have been argued pro&#13;
and con by various film critics.&#13;
But that is missing the point.&#13;
The power of this exceptionally&#13;
frank film is that every viewer&#13;
can draw his/her own conclusions&#13;
from the questions at issue.&#13;
Here's a brief summation of the&#13;
plot: Mariel Hemingway plays a&#13;
young athlete, Chris Cahill, who,&#13;
coached by her father, fails to&#13;
place in the 1976 Olympic trials. At&#13;
this meet, she is spotted by&#13;
Patrice Donnelly, a world - class&#13;
pentathlete, who sees through&#13;
Hemingway's athletic reticence&#13;
the potential to become an&#13;
Olympic contender and, not the&#13;
least, a certain amount of p hysical&#13;
attraction.&#13;
Hemingway is therefore invited&#13;
by Donnelly's character Tory to&#13;
practice with her and her coach,&#13;
well played by Scott Glenn. After&#13;
gaining Glenn's approval and&#13;
getting her competitive act&#13;
together, she must, at Glenn's&#13;
insistance, break her emotional&#13;
ties with Donnelly, who he feels is&#13;
hurting Hemingway in her ability&#13;
to compete, especially when&#13;
Glenn places her in the pentathlon,&#13;
pitting Tory and Chris in&#13;
direct competition with each&#13;
other.&#13;
It is the two themes, competition&#13;
and love, that give the&#13;
movie its direction. The, complication&#13;
is that the lover is also&#13;
the competitor.&#13;
The most disturbing aspect of&#13;
the film is also a necessary one. In&#13;
the interest of maintaining the&#13;
film's fast pace, director Robert&#13;
Towne chose rather than to show&#13;
how Chris' personal conflicts are&#13;
resolved he takes for granted the&#13;
fact that they are resolved. The&#13;
audience is shown the what,&#13;
sometimes the how, but never the&#13;
why. Even so, by eliminating what&#13;
Miller times ^ Miller High Life&#13;
Sa-^e old story.&#13;
These college guus&#13;
love you atrniaWt&#13;
and toss ucm out&#13;
in the morningare,&#13;
in effect, the qualifying&#13;
statements in the film, he has&#13;
created, right or wrong, a much&#13;
more direct statement. It is at the&#13;
expense of some detail, with the&#13;
added benefit of allowing the&#13;
audience to draw their conclusions,&#13;
how perceptive filmmakers&#13;
maintain their cinematic&#13;
balance.&#13;
A technically ambitious film,&#13;
the production crew often seems&#13;
to take more risks than the&#13;
athletes themselves. While the&#13;
photography is nothing flashy, it&#13;
never fails to convey the vital&#13;
details of the current event. But&#13;
it's the editing and the soundtrack&#13;
along with it that make the film&#13;
dynamic as it is. Except for two or&#13;
three bad cuts, the montaged&#13;
athletic events, with the&#13;
associated sound effects, show the&#13;
events as intensely, violently,&#13;
emotional, and at the same time,&#13;
curiously graceful.&#13;
The screenplay, casting, and&#13;
acting are right on. Again, nothing&#13;
frilly, just good common sense. In&#13;
particular, Hemingway is perfect&#13;
for her part. She displays the&#13;
same mixture of awkwardness&#13;
and grace found in a newborne&#13;
colt. As her character Chris&#13;
grows, she grows also, until, in the&#13;
final sequences she has matured&#13;
into a full - blown track star and&#13;
women.&#13;
While director Towne has been&#13;
accused of sensationalism in&#13;
filming the movie's lesbian love&#13;
scenes, it is largely a personal&#13;
decision whether or not you would&#13;
be comfortable with them. For&#13;
myself, I found them tastefully&#13;
done and occupying their proper&#13;
plaee in the grand scheme of the&#13;
film. But it is up to the individual&#13;
viewer to find their own meaning&#13;
here. And that is the power of&#13;
"Personal Best." Whether viewed&#13;
in a superficial context, or with a&#13;
deeper interpretation, it has the&#13;
potential to become a personal&#13;
winner.&#13;
Art lecture&#13;
to be held&#13;
"Duchamp's Mysticism:&#13;
Toward a Theory of Modernism&#13;
and Post - Modernism" will be the&#13;
topic of a lecture by Jack Burnham,&#13;
professor of art at Northwestern&#13;
University, at 3:30 on&#13;
Thursday, May 6, at the Univ. of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside in&#13;
Greenquist Hall 101.&#13;
The slide - illustrated lecture&#13;
will explore the significance of&#13;
Marcel Duchamp's esoteric art&#13;
and its importance to the&#13;
development of modern and avant&#13;
- garde aesthetic innovations.&#13;
Duchamp, who died in 1968, was&#13;
one of the most influential and&#13;
controversial artists of. the&#13;
twentieth century and is often&#13;
credited as the originator of p ost -&#13;
formalist or conceptual art. This&#13;
lecture is the final one in the free&#13;
public art history seminar series&#13;
organized by the Art Discipline at&#13;
UW - Parkside, (titled "Art, Style,&#13;
and Society").&#13;
Burnham is a specialist in&#13;
modern and contemporary art,&#13;
and for the last few years has&#13;
focused his theoretical research&#13;
on Duchamp. Originally a&#13;
sculptor, he received his M.F.A.&#13;
from Yale University School of&#13;
Art, and has taught previously at&#13;
Colgate University.&#13;
The art history seminar series&#13;
was funded by UW - Parkside and&#13;
coordinated by the Art Discipline.&#13;
c 1981 Beer Brewed by Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
needs&#13;
writers! &#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 29,1982&#13;
Punkers, Poppers, and New Wavers make mark on music scene&#13;
bvy Joe Kimm _•&#13;
In England, a band called The&#13;
Sex Pistols recorded a song called&#13;
"God Save The Queen." It caused&#13;
a rage in the British press and&#13;
started a whole wave of bands&#13;
called Punk Rock bands. It was&#13;
about to start a new trend in music&#13;
for years to come.&#13;
On the home front, a band called&#13;
The Ramones was churning out&#13;
three chord zip songs for middle&#13;
America. They even made a&#13;
movie called the Rock and Roll&#13;
High School which was to star the&#13;
five piece band. Wendy and the&#13;
Plasmatics were chopping off&#13;
baby's heads and playing with&#13;
pythons on stage to standing room&#13;
only audiences across the vast&#13;
midwest as well as both coasts.&#13;
Other groups resorted to Mohawk&#13;
haircuts and other gimmicks to&#13;
maintain this phenomena called&#13;
Punk Rock.&#13;
What is punk rock? On the&#13;
surface, it seems to be rehashed&#13;
50's music with a lot of stage&#13;
gimmicks. It has its roots in Elvis&#13;
and Bill Haley, who went against&#13;
the social and musical norms of&#13;
the day to create a rebellious style&#13;
of music. It had its counterpart in&#13;
bands like Kiss and Alice Cooper&#13;
who borrowed theatrical gimmicks&#13;
to enhance their shows.&#13;
Thus, the punk rockers used&#13;
safety pins, outrageous makeup,&#13;
far - out hairdo's and wild&#13;
costumes to further intensify what&#13;
was already a pretty intense form&#13;
of music. Imagine four bodies up&#13;
there, jumping around, wheeling&#13;
their guitars around and&#13;
screaming into the microphone&#13;
such obnoxious lyrics as "Pain&#13;
Pain is good, Feel it, Reel it, Pain&#13;
is good . . . ."&#13;
There was a whole generation of&#13;
this punk rock music groups&#13;
which later turned into new wave.&#13;
XTC, Boomtown Rats, Blown&#13;
Volkswagens, and The Dead&#13;
which originated in UK, and later&#13;
filtered down into the Greenwich&#13;
Village scene in the lower west&#13;
side of Manhattan advocated&#13;
violence, drugs, rebellion and&#13;
general chaos. The Clash, which&#13;
was another British band, best&#13;
personified this anger felt in the&#13;
young people against the conventions&#13;
of society and the thin&#13;
fabric of morality which&#13;
civilization is generally made up&#13;
of. They wrote songs on school,&#13;
drugs, the revolution, the militia,&#13;
and the general militarism that&#13;
was going on in the UK between&#13;
the Catholics and the Protestants,&#13;
the Irish and the British, and the&#13;
working class struggle which&#13;
generated resentment against the&#13;
wealthy.&#13;
Burned up&#13;
The New Wave trend was best&#13;
initiated in the States by groups&#13;
like The Cars which combined&#13;
hooks and musical gimmicks to&#13;
introduce the masses into this&#13;
powerful form of music. Groups&#13;
like The Knack eventually gave&#13;
way to Joe Jackson and The&#13;
Pretenders which say great&#13;
popularity in being hip, chic, and&#13;
being aware and in tune with the&#13;
scene. Home - made remedies saw&#13;
in the way of Talking Heads and&#13;
the like which combined sixties&#13;
harmonies with fifties power&#13;
chords of rock and roll to carry&#13;
punk rock into a new realm.&#13;
New Wave was more stylized&#13;
than punk rock, and advocated&#13;
being fashionable as opposed to&#13;
being militant. It led the way in&#13;
clothes, new sayings and trendy&#13;
places to dwell in.&#13;
Power Pop was the next step in&#13;
the evolution of this finer form of&#13;
music. It isn't exactly clear what&#13;
this is, but I gather it is a more&#13;
refined form of New Wave with&#13;
more of a song structure and more&#13;
vocal harmonies borrowed from&#13;
the sixties. More emphasis was&#13;
put on lyrics and the whole format&#13;
was more tightly structured. Song&#13;
form was highly emphasized, as&#13;
were the words that fitted into&#13;
them and there was actually a&#13;
progression being followed in&#13;
Signs of the times are 'picture perfect'&#13;
by Carol Burns&#13;
Here we go again. The parking&#13;
lots at Parkside have long been a&#13;
center of controversy. In fact, so&#13;
much has been said about them&#13;
that almost no one really cares to&#13;
discuss the subject anymore. But&#13;
regardless of their faults, the lots&#13;
have one strong point: the signs&#13;
are in words.&#13;
Just think — the lots could have&#13;
been set up with those strange&#13;
international picture signs. Instead,&#13;
it was taken for granted&#13;
that people using the lots can&#13;
read! This in itself says a lot for&#13;
Parkside students.&#13;
Consider a "No Parking at Any&#13;
Time on This Road" sign. It could&#13;
easily be replaced by a sign which&#13;
has a big black "P" with a&#13;
diagonal red line through it. A sign&#13;
like that could be interpreted&#13;
several ways. Besides "No&#13;
Parking," it might mean "No&#13;
Passing," "No Parkside," "No&#13;
Parties," "No Pets," "No Petting;"&#13;
or it could mean that a&#13;
certain bodily function is not&#13;
allowed.&#13;
There are other simplified signs&#13;
that can be confusing to a driver:&#13;
a truck on a small black triangle;&#13;
stick figures without feet that&#13;
appear to be walking; pictures of&#13;
stoplights. In view of budget cuts,&#13;
is it possible that the last type of&#13;
sign is to serve as a cheap substitute&#13;
for the real thing?&#13;
These new signs are supposedly&#13;
for the benefit of regular drivers,&#13;
foreign drivers, and drivers who&#13;
aren't real sharp in the reading&#13;
department. In other words, there&#13;
are people driving around out&#13;
there who probably cannot read!&#13;
Somehow, that's not a very&#13;
comforting thought.&#13;
The picture signs are not limited&#13;
to drivers, however. In some&#13;
areas, there are wordless signs for&#13;
pedestrians. A white silhouette of&#13;
a person means walk. An orange&#13;
hand means don't walk. An orange&#13;
hand? Come on now!&#13;
What's wrong with words? Is&#13;
this a signal of the falling I.Q. of&#13;
the United States? Does it mean&#13;
that future generations will lose&#13;
the ability to read? Are we being&#13;
cleverly coerced into a world of&#13;
wordless images?&#13;
Will "English 101" be replaced&#13;
by "Fun With Pictures"?&#13;
Member P arkside 2 00&#13;
Mention this a d! &amp;&#13;
SM US for your&#13;
Mother's Day Flowers&#13;
Many Styles — Custom Arrangement&#13;
Jesoph C. Cucu nato&#13;
4433 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
Phone 654-0774&#13;
* All Major Credit Cards Accepted&#13;
' Mother's Day is Sunday, May 9. ^&#13;
« ARNESON'S&#13;
FLOWERS&#13;
QVudX OU£&#13;
Open Mother's Day&#13;
Sunday, May 9&#13;
9-5&#13;
OPEN DAILY&#13;
7509 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha. Wl 53140&#13;
Phone657-1118&#13;
Send flowers to that girl back home.&#13;
This Mother's Day, remember Mom with an FTD* Big&#13;
Hug® Bouquet. A beautiful arrangement of fresh flowers&#13;
in a distinctive Ceramic Pot. Just stop by your nearest&#13;
FTD® Florist before May 9, and send the FTD Big&#13;
Hug Bouquet. It's a special Mother's Day gift the girl&#13;
back home won't ever forget.&#13;
Send your love with special care.&#13;
The FTD Big Hug Bouquet is generally available for less than 518.50.&#13;
As independent retailers. FTD Florists set their own prices. Individual&#13;
prices may vary. Service charges and delivery may be additional.&#13;
&lt; 1982 Florists' Transworld Delivery Association. " Registered&#13;
trademark of Florists' Transworld Delivery Association. "A cooperV^stively&#13;
owned floral wire and membership service.&#13;
' .teafMhtA qe no moriform&#13;
of chordal structures. It was&#13;
nearing the pop songs of the&#13;
sixties in format but with more&#13;
power and zest put into the song&#13;
and performance was definitely&#13;
emphasized.&#13;
Adam and The Ants received a&#13;
lot of media publicity when they&#13;
declared their style of performance,&#13;
the New Romantics. It&#13;
was basically a ritualization and&#13;
glorification of the mating ritual&#13;
accompanied by chanting and&#13;
tribal atmosphere. It gained&#13;
immense popularity and&#13;
momentum in the early eighties&#13;
and won acclaim as the definitive&#13;
new style in the musical scene.&#13;
Well, that didn't last long.&#13;
So what's next? Why the Go&#13;
Go's, of course. Combining New&#13;
Wave with the old, the Power Pop&#13;
with the good old fashioned dance&#13;
rhythms, they paved their way to&#13;
the top with "We've Got The&#13;
Beat." So why not with the Go&#13;
Go's. Why not an all - girl band. So&#13;
let's go with the Go Go's and we've&#13;
all got the beat. . . .&#13;
In The Parkside Union&#13;
announces&#13;
"GOING&#13;
NUTS&#13;
SALE ff&#13;
10 a.m. - 4 p.m.&#13;
Daily&#13;
40% OFF&#13;
ALL N UTS&#13;
INCLUDING&#13;
CASHEWS&#13;
&amp; PISTACHIOS&#13;
WHILE THEY LAST&#13;
WEEK OF&#13;
MAY 3rd THRU 7th&#13;
COMMUNITY&#13;
"Let us therefore love one another as far as we are&#13;
able and by our love draw one another to possess&#13;
God within us — St. Augustine&#13;
the Hu6ustinlans Brothers called to a life&#13;
of community in service to the church.&#13;
the Hu*ustinians&#13;
For further information 20300 Governors Hwy A&#13;
without obligation, write: Olympla Fields. IL 60461 tffi&#13;
312 748-9500 &#13;
6 Thursday, April 29,1982 RANGER&#13;
Scholarship Day honors many&#13;
The annual Scholarship Day at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside on Sunday, April 25,&#13;
resulted in awards and honors for&#13;
more than 70 students.&#13;
The program included an address&#13;
by UW-Parkside history&#13;
professor Thomas C. Reeves,&#13;
author of "The Life and Times of&#13;
Joe McCarthy," a major new&#13;
biography of the Wisconsin&#13;
senator, and music by The Oriana&#13;
Trio, resident chamber ensemble&#13;
at UW-P.&#13;
The event also included&#13;
remarks by Prof. Richard&#13;
Carrington, on behalf of the&#13;
Campus Awards and Ceremonies&#13;
Committee which sponsors the&#13;
program, and Douglas G. Devan,&#13;
M.D., on behalf of the Parkside&#13;
Alumni Association.&#13;
Chancellor Alan E. Guskin&#13;
presented the awards:&#13;
• The Joanne M. Esser&#13;
Scholarship of $400, f or a student&#13;
interested in ecology, went to John&#13;
R. Ertl, Racine.&#13;
• Kenneth L. Greenquist&#13;
Scholarships of $250 each, named&#13;
for the former University regent&#13;
and Racine attorney and civic&#13;
leader, were awarded to Kristine&#13;
Wendt, Kenosha; and Jeffrey A.&#13;
Medin, Kenosha.&#13;
• Irvin G. Wyllie scholarships&#13;
of $250 each, named for UWParksrde's&#13;
founding chancellor,&#13;
went to Donna Marie Felsing,&#13;
Kenosha; and Kim E. Lindquist,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
• Bernard C. Tallent&#13;
Scholarships of $250 e ach, which&#13;
memorialize the former dean of&#13;
the university's Kenosha campus,&#13;
went to Timothy Scott Houden,&#13;
Kenosha; Maria A. Veronico,&#13;
Burlington; Brian J. Passino,&#13;
Kenosha; and Kimberly A.&#13;
McLeod, Racine.&#13;
Premenstrual Syndrome explored&#13;
The National Association of&#13;
Social Workers will sponsor the&#13;
6th Annual NASW Workshop on&#13;
Friday, May 7 from 9 a.m. to noon.&#13;
The issue of Premenstrual Syndrome&#13;
will be addressed. PMS is&#13;
the unhappy complex of symptoms&#13;
affecting a vast number of&#13;
women. The havoc this syndrome&#13;
can wreak upon the personal and&#13;
work lives of its sufferers is obvious.&#13;
The workshop will address&#13;
issues of identification, treatment,&#13;
and prognosis for sufferers and&#13;
for professionals dealing with&#13;
clients who may exhibit various&#13;
symptomology.&#13;
The fee for the workshop is $5,&#13;
and it will be held in Tallent Hall.&#13;
For further information, call Dale&#13;
Landis, Chairman of the Racine -&#13;
Kenosha branch of NASW at 636-&#13;
3272.&#13;
/&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha&#13;
Elmwood Plaza/Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Public forum&#13;
HELPING THE VICTIMS &amp; THEIR FAMILIES&#13;
7:30 p. m., Monday, May 3rd&#13;
Union Cinema Theater&#13;
• Louis Ferman, professor of social work and research&#13;
director, University of Michigan Institute of Labor and&#13;
Industrial Relations; author of "The Economy and&#13;
Mental Health" and "Plant Shutdown and Relocation"&#13;
• Melva Meachem, coordinator, Concentrated Industrial&#13;
Outreach Division, Illinois State AFL-CIOand director&#13;
of a n intervention team for communities experiencing&#13;
large - s cale job loss&#13;
• Rev. Charles Rawlings, officer for church and society,&#13;
The Episcopal Diocese of Ohio; former coordinator,&#13;
ecumenical coalition project on the steel mill shutdowns&#13;
in Youngstown, Ohio; author, "Community and Capital&#13;
in Conflict: Plant Closings and Job Loss"&#13;
• Kenneth Hoover, moderator and Public Forum director;&#13;
professor of political science, UW - Parkside and UWEX&#13;
Department of Governmental Affairs&#13;
FREE AN D OPEN TO THE PU BLIC&#13;
Co-sponsored by the University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
and the UWEX Department of Governmental Affairs&#13;
• Ernst and Whinney&#13;
Scholarships of $250 each in accounting&#13;
went to Paula Denig,&#13;
Racine; and Suzanne Denzine,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
• William W. Petrie Scholarships&#13;
of $250 in labor and industrial&#13;
relations went to John E.&#13;
Arnold, Kenosha; and Margaret&#13;
Lee, Kenosha.&#13;
• The Johnson Wax Award of&#13;
$100 in science went to&#13;
Christopher Robert Sartori,&#13;
Kenosha, and the Sam Poerio&#13;
Award of $100 and a traveling&#13;
trophy for a student in education&#13;
went to Mary Jo Fleming, Racine.&#13;
Club Events&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
. . . . . V P P u b l i c R e l a t i o n s , J a y G r a n t ;&#13;
JVl.b.U. SOC Representative, Kris&#13;
Schaefer. On April 28, at 1 p.m., the&#13;
Minority Student Union will be&#13;
holding their First Annual Awards&#13;
Day, in Union 106.&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
PSE Executive Board election&#13;
results: President, John Funk;&#13;
VP Personnel, Carla Chatterton;&#13;
VP marketing, Mathew Sullivan;&#13;
VP Promotion, Ross Thompson;&#13;
Women's Concourse&#13;
Women's Concourse will meet&#13;
Wednesday, May 5 in Moln. 113 at&#13;
1 p.m. They will be electing new&#13;
officers and discussing activities&#13;
for the Library Fund Raising&#13;
Event. All members are encouraged&#13;
to attend, and take part.&#13;
They will need help to make the&#13;
event a successful one!&#13;
Stevens Point announces overseas study&#13;
UW - Stevens Point has announced&#13;
plans for overseas study&#13;
programs it will sponsor this&#13;
summer and fall.&#13;
The summer offerings are in&#13;
England and Poland and the fall&#13;
semester programs are in Germany,&#13;
Republic of China&#13;
(Taiwan), England and Poland.&#13;
Dr. Pauline Isaacson, director&#13;
of International Programs, said&#13;
students from throughout the UWSystems&#13;
and the state's private&#13;
colleges have traditionally joined&#13;
Stevens Point collegians in&#13;
overseas study travel since UWSP&#13;
offerings were first developed&#13;
in the late 1960's.&#13;
She said UW-SP is noted for&#13;
offering extensive travel at&#13;
inexpensive prices.&#13;
Here's a summary of the&#13;
programs (the price covers&#13;
travel, tuition, food and lodging):&#13;
• Summer in Britain — June 7 -&#13;
July 4 — $1400 approximately with&#13;
two weeks travel northward to&#13;
Scotland and 12 days in London.&#13;
Emphasis will be on theatre and&#13;
psychology.&#13;
• Summer in Poland — July 12 -&#13;
August 8 — $1400 a pproximately&#13;
with two weeks in and around&#13;
Cracow in picturesque Southern&#13;
Poland and 12 days travel northward&#13;
to Warsaw and Gdansk.&#13;
Emphasis will be on art and folk&#13;
art.&#13;
• Semester in Britain — August&#13;
18 - December 10 — $2600 approximately.&#13;
Students may earn&#13;
13-17 semester hours of credit.&#13;
Principal base will be Britain's&#13;
capital, London. The first 28 days&#13;
will focus on Continental Travel&#13;
Study which will include visits to&#13;
Amsterdam, Koln, Munich,&#13;
Salzburg, Florence, Rome, Basel,&#13;
Paris, Bruges. The price stated&#13;
will cover air fare, room and&#13;
board, continental rail travel, side&#13;
excursions, and Wisconsin&#13;
Resident Tuition. Each student&#13;
will be responsible for his own&#13;
personal costs such as sundries.&#13;
• Semester in Poland — August&#13;
18 - December 10 — $2150 approximately.&#13;
13-17 hours of credit.&#13;
Principal base will be&#13;
Jagiellonain University, Cracow,&#13;
Poland. The first 12 days Travel&#13;
Study will feature visits to Germany,&#13;
Yugoslavia, Hungary, and&#13;
Austria. Upon arrival in Poland,&#13;
the group will have Travel Study&#13;
To important points of interest,&#13;
south to the Tatra Mountains, then&#13;
north to cities of special interest,&#13;
and the ports on the Baltic. A final&#13;
10 days of Travel Study in&#13;
December will focus on a five day&#13;
program in Berlin, and visits to&#13;
Amsterday and Bruges in&#13;
Belguim.&#13;
All costs essential to the&#13;
program are included in the&#13;
quoted price. Each student is&#13;
responsible for his own personal&#13;
costs such as sundries.&#13;
• Semester in Germany —&#13;
August 18 - December 18 — $2800&#13;
approximately. 13-17 hours credit.&#13;
This program located in Munich,&#13;
West Germany, is preceded by&#13;
visits to other sites in Germany&#13;
and Austria, including a week's&#13;
study program in Berlin. Students&#13;
are introduced to art, architecture,&#13;
history, and&#13;
economics, of cities and cultural&#13;
areas — Hamburg, Regensburg,&#13;
Augsburg, Koln in Germany and&#13;
COMPUTER&#13;
CENTER&#13;
INFORMATION&#13;
SESSIONS&#13;
The main idea behind the sessions is to make&#13;
available regular times when users can get together&#13;
informally with the Center's Operations Manager&#13;
Academic Consultant and Systems Programmer and&#13;
discuss users' questions, suggestions and concerns.&#13;
The last of this semester's information sessions for&#13;
students, faculty and staff who use U. W. Parkside's&#13;
(PrnTSl""^&#13;
1 thP&#13;
niTRMeSeaHCh Timesha™g System&#13;
wrn te held: academic computing system,&#13;
Monday, May 3;&#13;
4 - 5 P. M.&#13;
MOLN. ill&#13;
(Faculty Lounge)&#13;
Students faculty and staff are encouraged to attend&#13;
any or all of the sessions. auena&#13;
Salzburg, Innsbruck and Lienz in&#13;
Austria. At the close of the study&#13;
program, the group will visit&#13;
Amsterdam.&#13;
• Semester in the Republic of&#13;
China — Au gust 18 - December 10&#13;
— $2900 ap proximately. As in the&#13;
other programs, students may&#13;
earn 13-17 credits. The program is&#13;
based at Soochow University,&#13;
Taipei, Taiwan. Projected Travel&#13;
Study will be to select areas in&#13;
Mainland China, if such can be&#13;
arranged, Hong Kong, and to&#13;
other parts of the island of&#13;
Taiwan. Featured are courses in&#13;
art, Chinese language, and&#13;
Chinese culture and civilization.&#13;
Inquiries about the program&#13;
may be directed to Dr. Pauline&#13;
Isaacson, Director of International&#13;
Programs, Main&#13;
Building, University of Wisconsin&#13;
- Stevens Point, 54481.&#13;
Rebuttal misses&#13;
the point . . .&#13;
Continued From Page Two&#13;
must subscribe to their political&#13;
idealist positions as well. Thus, I&#13;
am continually bombarded with&#13;
the feeling that, if I want any&#13;
respect, I must support handgun&#13;
banning even though I find it&#13;
totalitarian, or that I must support&#13;
ERA even though I find severe&#13;
dangers in it. This is the type of&#13;
subtle censorship which I referred&#13;
to in a previous letter.&#13;
Lastly, I'd like to say a good&#13;
word about Chuck — I'm glad he&#13;
stood up for the right of free&#13;
speech, as much as I don't care for&#13;
Gordon Liddy. I would hope,&#13;
however, that Chuck would&#13;
reconsider his statements in&#13;
defense of coming to political&#13;
conclusions without thorough&#13;
analysis. I would hope the same&#13;
for others, but of concern that they&#13;
will not one day find the true value&#13;
of their works and achievements&#13;
marred by a disaster of any&#13;
Utopian political solution which&#13;
they may have lent support to.&#13;
R.K. Becker&#13;
Treks planned&#13;
Applications are now available&#13;
for the American Lung&#13;
Association Canoe and Bike&#13;
Treks. Treks are a series of four&#13;
and eight day planned and guided&#13;
wilderness adventures. Because&#13;
Trek Bicycle Corporation of&#13;
Waterloo, Wisconsin is sponsoring&#13;
the bike trek, scheduled for June&#13;
3-6 in the Kettle Moraine State&#13;
Forest, all funds raised will be&#13;
used to support Lung Association&#13;
programs for asthmatic children.&#13;
June 10-13 a canoe trek will be&#13;
held through Sylvania Recreation&#13;
Area. Canoes and all equipment&#13;
are furnished.&#13;
All Treks include orientation&#13;
sessions for participants designed&#13;
to lend advice on gear and&#13;
clothing, and promote sound&#13;
wilderness ethics.&#13;
For an application or more&#13;
information call the American&#13;
Lung Association at 463-3232. O ut&#13;
of the metropolitan Milwaukee&#13;
area, call toll - free: 1-800-242-5160. &#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 29, 1982 7&#13;
Reeves to teach McCarthy course | Student ranks&#13;
high in math Prof. Thomas C. Reeves, author&#13;
of "The Life and Times of Joe&#13;
McCarthy," a new biography of&#13;
the Wisconsin senator, will teach a&#13;
special history course with the&#13;
same title during the fall&#13;
semester. The 3 - credit class will&#13;
meet from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. on&#13;
Thursdays.&#13;
Reeves' book is a selection of&#13;
the Book of the Month Club,&#13;
History Book Club and Quality&#13;
Paperback Book Club and has&#13;
been receiving overwhelmingly&#13;
favorable reviews in major U.S.&#13;
newspapers and periodicals.&#13;
Pre - registration for the fall '82&#13;
semester began Tuesday, April 27.&#13;
Bassis co-authors sociology textbook&#13;
A Parkside sociologist is a coauthor&#13;
of a new college - level&#13;
textbook, "Social Problems," just&#13;
published by Harcourt, Brace,&#13;
Jovanovich, Inc.&#13;
The authors are Michael S.&#13;
Bassis, Associate Dean of Faculty&#13;
and Associate Professor of&#13;
Sociology at UW-P, Richard J.&#13;
Gelles of the University of Rhode&#13;
Island and Ann Levine.&#13;
Baseball&#13;
Men finally win&#13;
Continued From Page Eight&#13;
baseman Dan Sykes followed with&#13;
two of his own.&#13;
The men were losing 7-3 until&#13;
the sixth inning when they scored&#13;
five runs. John Hyatt came&#13;
through with a home run for the&#13;
Rangers.&#13;
The second game was considerably&#13;
shorter than the first as&#13;
it was called after four and one -&#13;
half innings due to the ten run&#13;
rule. The final score of the day&#13;
was 14-1, with such incidents as&#13;
Rich Salisbury's and Joe Krisiks&#13;
back - to - back homers. Brian&#13;
Steinhoff, Parkside's starting&#13;
pitcher received the victory as&#13;
Sykes and Salisbury led the attack&#13;
with three hits a piece.&#13;
The Rangers will take on&#13;
George Williams College on home&#13;
turf tomorrow at 1 p.m.&#13;
competition&#13;
A Parkside senior, David&#13;
Vollmer, is among students who&#13;
ranked in the upper one - fourth of&#13;
students participating in the 1981-&#13;
82 William Lowell Putnam&#13;
Mathematical Competition.&#13;
He was among 2,043 students&#13;
from 343 colleges and universities&#13;
in the U.S. and Canada who took&#13;
part in the competition last&#13;
December. Results were announced&#13;
last week. The competition&#13;
is funded by the Putnam&#13;
Fund for the Promotion of&#13;
Scholarship and is held under&#13;
auspices of the Mathematical&#13;
Association of America.&#13;
Vollmer, of 563 Sheridan Road,&#13;
Racine, has a double major in&#13;
physics and mathematics at&#13;
Parkside. Only one other&#13;
Wisconsin student (from Beloit&#13;
College) ranked in the competition.&#13;
&#13;
STUNNING STYLES&#13;
HAPPEN HERE&#13;
Best&#13;
Haircut&#13;
of Your&#13;
Life&#13;
Or&#13;
Money&#13;
Back&#13;
Best&#13;
Haircut&#13;
of Your&#13;
Life&#13;
Or&#13;
Money&#13;
Back&#13;
3519 52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wl&#13;
654-61 54&#13;
3532 Meachem Rd.&#13;
Racine, Wi SHair Studio 554-8600&#13;
$ REDKEN Salon Prescription Center&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
SERVICES OFFERED&#13;
TYPING Professionally done. Reasonable&#13;
rates. Fast service. North Kenosha. Call&#13;
551-7438 o r 658-9229, anytime.&#13;
TYPING for professionals and students. 5&#13;
minutes from Parkside. 552-8293 (after 5&#13;
p.m.)&#13;
Write RANGER&#13;
A Letter!&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
JOIN US FOR THIS SUMMER and earn&#13;
tuition, spending money. Compete for $1,000&#13;
scholarship. No experience needed.&#13;
Company training. Start immediately. Car&#13;
necessary. Interview at Racine Holiday&#13;
inn, Room 233, Monday, May 3 at 5 p.m. and&#13;
6 p.m. sharp!&#13;
WANTED: Students to sell advertising for&#13;
Ranger. 15% commission plus bonus.&#13;
Here's the perfect way 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, Dick O.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
FILM - T HEATRE — Shakespeare book sale&#13;
thru May 5. Quality used and out-of-print&#13;
books at The Old Book Corner at Martha&#13;
Merrell's Bookstore, 312-6th St., Racine.&#13;
Also, to celebrate Shakespeare's Birthday&#13;
on April 23, a selection of prints and&#13;
engravings from the 18th and 19th centuries.&#13;
Over 1200 used books in all areas for&#13;
sale.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
FORMAL DANCE at Marc Plaza. Female&#13;
escort needed. Brendan, 962-8081.&#13;
STILL NEED DATE for Naval Ball on&#13;
4/30/82. Brendan, 962 8081.&#13;
COM' ON GIRLS, use that formal dress in the&#13;
closet. Brendan.&#13;
SOMEONE MUST HAVE a formal dress for&#13;
Naval Ball. Brendan.&#13;
I HAVE TWO DAYS to find a date. Please I! I&#13;
Brendan.&#13;
I'M NOT TRYING TO SOUND FORWARD,&#13;
just benevolently convincing. Brendan.&#13;
PEOPLE — put aside your alienation. Get on&#13;
with the fascination.&#13;
DAVE: when I get my candlestick, you'll get&#13;
your letter.&#13;
BREAD, YEA, YEA! Backseat driving&#13;
without a driver. Merlin.&#13;
MARQUETTE CAMPUS PARTY 5/1/82.&#13;
Any preppy girls interested? Junior, 552&#13;
8770.&#13;
PARKSIDE can be preppier than Marquette!&#13;
Biff, Junior and Buffy.&#13;
HEY PREPPIES: It's time to wear your&#13;
IZOD shirts. Biff.&#13;
COM' ON GIRLS, don't be so shy. Brendan&#13;
needs responses.&#13;
COM' ON ATTRACTIVE GIRLS: Brendan&#13;
isn't a bad guy. He's alright.&#13;
TO MY FAVORITE ZOMBIE: How's life with&#13;
the living?&#13;
JENNY — The Zombie walks. Signed,&#13;
Chipmunk.&#13;
ROBIN: Golf courses and broken tables!&#13;
Where will it all end? Chipmunk.&#13;
THANKS J.R. for your help. Rico.&#13;
LET'S HAVE a new - w ave orgy. Birdman.&#13;
EVERYBODY, let's get boofed . . . Bruno&#13;
THE BIRDMAN has arrived from planet X&#13;
. . . Bruno.&#13;
PUNKS JERK IT back and forth. Rico.&#13;
ED — Those who can't see other's point of&#13;
view have no right to force their opinions on&#13;
others!&#13;
SNOOPY Kiss me you fool!!&#13;
THE PARTY OF GROTHE, PEDERSEN&#13;
AND LETTER: Br»vo ladies, Bravo!&#13;
TO ALL WHO HAVE TAKEN SHOTS at&#13;
CHUCK in the Classifieds: I'm not defending&#13;
him, but it is a shame that all of that&#13;
energy was wasted on such child's play.&#13;
i ^&#13;
Distributed by&#13;
E. F. MADRIGRANO&#13;
1831 - 55th St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wise.&#13;
558-3553&#13;
'if it feels like a weekend,&#13;
it must be Michelob'.'&#13;
Put a little&#13;
weekend&#13;
in your week. &#13;
8 Thursday, April 29, 1982 RANGER&#13;
Softball&#13;
Women have good week, now 11-7&#13;
by Kathleen Pohlman&#13;
The women's Softball team&#13;
played a very busy week last&#13;
week, but started out with a&#13;
victory against Carthage 12-2. The&#13;
winning pitcher was Lynn Barth&#13;
who was also one of the star hitters,&#13;
batting 3 for 5. Cindy Ruffert&#13;
also batted well, 3 for 4. The&#13;
second game started but ended in&#13;
the fifth inning due to cold and&#13;
darkness. Even with the bad luck,&#13;
the women pulled out another win,&#13;
3-2. The star batter was Nancy&#13;
Kivi as she hit a triple with the&#13;
bases loaded. Michele Martino&#13;
was the winning pitcher.&#13;
On Tuesday the women hosted&#13;
Elmhurst College and won the&#13;
Bike for MD&#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 of&#13;
Scarlato, "for softies". There will&#13;
be no support vehicle, and each&#13;
participant is expected to carry&#13;
his or her own equipment. They&#13;
will be camping overnight in state&#13;
parks.&#13;
Anyone interested should call&#13;
Greg Scarlato at 657-5714.&#13;
first game with a score of 13-2.&#13;
Lynn Barth, the winning pitcher,&#13;
along with the other great defense&#13;
on the team, held Elmhurst&#13;
scoreless until the seventh inning.&#13;
Lynn Barth hit a triple and Ann&#13;
Althaus hit a double. Nancy Kivi&#13;
went 2 for 3. Due to unreasonable&#13;
weather the second game was&#13;
cancelled. However, on Wednesday&#13;
the weather cleared but&#13;
the women still had a hard time,&#13;
losing against St. Francis, 1-0. The&#13;
loss went to Michele Martino. The&#13;
game was close but the Rangers&#13;
just could not score. The second&#13;
game was tougher and the women&#13;
lost it, 9-0. Lynn Barth was the&#13;
losing pitcher.&#13;
The weekend had a full schedule&#13;
when the Rangers played in the&#13;
Chicago Circle Tournament. The&#13;
first game of the day (Friday)&#13;
was against North Eastern 111.&#13;
The loss proved to be vital. The&#13;
score ended at 6-1. Lynn Barth got&#13;
the loss. The Rangers had a tough&#13;
time getting the bats to go. The&#13;
second game proved to be better.&#13;
They played St. Xavier for the&#13;
fourth time this season and won&#13;
again, 4-1. Michele Martino was&#13;
winning pitcher. Lynn Barth was&#13;
the leading batter, 2 for 3 with one&#13;
triple. Nancy Kivi and Janet&#13;
Broeren showed great skill and&#13;
teamwork when they pulled&#13;
several double plays on St.&#13;
Xavier. During the game Paula&#13;
Sandahl was injured when a&#13;
player slid into her accidentally&#13;
spiking her in the hand. Coach&#13;
Linda Henderson does not know&#13;
when Paula will return to the line&#13;
up.&#13;
On Saturday the tournament&#13;
continued. The first game was&#13;
against Eastern 111. T he Rangers&#13;
lost 2-0. Michele Martino was the&#13;
losing pitcher. The second game&#13;
was against DePaul and ended&#13;
victoriously, 3-1. Lynn Barth was&#13;
the winning pitcher. Janet&#13;
Broeren went 2 for 2.&#13;
The Rangers are now 11-7. They&#13;
play at home at Petrified Springs&#13;
this Friday against Carthage.&#13;
They also play on Saturday&#13;
against St. Francis at home.&#13;
Baseball&#13;
Finally!! Victory for men! Photo by Bob Kiesling&#13;
by Tammy Shuemate&#13;
Plagued by losses, the Parkside&#13;
men's baseball team finally broke&#13;
their six game losing streak when&#13;
they took on the Carthage Redmen&#13;
and beat them 7-0 on April 20.&#13;
The Rangers then took on the&#13;
Milwaukee School of Engineering&#13;
in Milwaukee. They were victorious&#13;
in the first game of the&#13;
doubleheader 4-1. Brian Steinhoff&#13;
pitched a three hitter and catcher&#13;
Carl Tortensen led the hitting with&#13;
two.&#13;
The second game also proved to&#13;
be a victory for the men as they&#13;
beat Milwaukee once again with a&#13;
score of 4-2. Scott Hartnell kept&#13;
Milwaukee to three hits while his&#13;
teammate Dan Sykes led the&#13;
Rangers with two hits.&#13;
Last Saturday proved to be a&#13;
fruitful day for the baseball team&#13;
as they played against Lakeland&#13;
College for the first and only time&#13;
this year. The first game was a&#13;
close one, but the men stuck it out&#13;
to win 8-7. Rich Salisbury led the&#13;
batting with three hits and second&#13;
Continued On Page Seven&#13;
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THIS ENTIRE PAGE GOOD FOR 10% DISCOUNT ONE&#13;
(1) WEEK AFTER DATE OF ISSUE, SALE ITEMS&#13;
EXCLUDED.&#13;
How to&#13;
do well in&#13;
Economy Class&#13;
Simple. Fly Capitol Air's Economy Class. Our&#13;
fares are the lowest of any scheduled airline so&#13;
you can use the money you save for lots of&#13;
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sun if you're headed for Miami, San Juan or&#13;
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And, if you are flying to Europe this summei;&#13;
make your reservation and buy your ticket&#13;
now. With our guaranteed fare policy you are&#13;
protected against any fare increases from now&#13;
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So if you want to do well in Economy Class,&#13;
fly Capitol's.&#13;
For reservations, call your Travel Agent or&#13;
Capitol at 312-347-0230 in Chicago, 800-572-&#13;
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SCHEDULED AIRLINE SERVICE&#13;
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FREE&#13;
CHECKING!&#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, W&#13;
414-843-2388&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
5%% Interest If Y our Dally&#13;
Balance is $500.00 or Morel&#13;
ISLE&#13;
LENDER&#13;
WE'RE HERE TO HELP YOU GROW </text>
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              <text>Bookstore investigated</text>
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              <text>Jennett heads PSGA&#13;
Tom Jennet photo by o.tJn Friedell&#13;
Tom Jennett, one of last year's&#13;
student government (PSGAl&#13;
members, has been appointed&#13;
President of PSGA by the ninemember&#13;
student senate. He will&#13;
retain that post until new elections&#13;
can be held.&#13;
Jennett will replace Tom&#13;
Haack who was elected president&#13;
last fall but who is attending&#13;
school out of state this year.&#13;
According to the PSGA Constitution,&#13;
elections were to have&#13;
been held during the second week&#13;
of O~toberi however, Jennett&#13;
explained that a steering committee&#13;
has been set up to investigate&#13;
problems that PSGA&#13;
h~s had in the past, and determme&#13;
ways in which to solve&#13;
them. The steering committee&#13;
will be made up 01 representatives&#13;
of interested student&#13;
organizations.&#13;
"PSGA recognizes the problem&#13;
with our student government and&#13;
we hope the steering committee&#13;
will help make us more&#13;
representative of the students,"&#13;
Jennett said. "A lot of people are&#13;
coming in and wanting to nul,"&#13;
he added. He hoped that the&#13;
steering committee would have&#13;
its recommendations fmalized by&#13;
the end 01 October and that new&#13;
elections would follow Immediately.&#13;
The nine-member student&#13;
senate has approved the steering&#13;
committee as an advisory&#13;
committee, Jennett explained,&#13;
but it has yet to be approved by&#13;
the Campus Concerns Committee,&#13;
the Dean 01 Students&#13;
Office, and Chancellor Wyllie.&#13;
Jennett said that the only action&#13;
PSGA is now taking is to&#13;
initiate an interview committee&#13;
to screen students wishing to be&#13;
appointed to student-faculty&#13;
committees. PSG A has also&#13;
organized a student grievance&#13;
committee.&#13;
TheParksidee--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1973 Vol. II No. S&#13;
Where are the books?&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
by Harvey Hedden&#13;
and Stephen F. Gifford .&#13;
During the first few weeks of classes, many students are laced WIth&#13;
the problem of not being able to buy books for some of their classes.&#13;
Two RANGER reporters investigated this problem, the cost of books&#13;
themselves and tbe bookstore operation as a whole, and got cooflicting&#13;
answers while questioning instructors, the bookstore, and&#13;
Administration officials. .&#13;
In ex laining how the books are ordered, .AsslSt"":t Dean of the&#13;
College ~f Science and Society, Chuck Tinder.' first distnbutes =s.to&#13;
all instructors. When completed, the forms list the title of the , I~&#13;
author, publisher, and the number of students. expected to enroll m&#13;
each course. After the forms are collected by Tinder, they ~ssed&#13;
Ted W d manager of the bookstore. The book are&#13;
~~~y~Ofilled 0:: s~veraI books short of ~(:t::i~n~:I:;~0w'::;;&#13;
count for students droppmg tbe course. di&#13;
individual instructors and division heads, should any ~r::::m~&#13;
between the amount of books to be ordered and the projec&#13;
of studen.ts. adS:, books "You have to order books wherever you can&#13;
. In obta~~ng t eWood The bookstore orders from over two hundred&#13;
find them, says .&#13;
individual publishers.: d ot understand why there should&#13;
Most instructors l!1tervlewed co~l a~val "Teachers aggravate the&#13;
be such a problem m prompt ~ said Sheldon Harsel, instructor in&#13;
problem. by .chan.~,ng books, ks ordered as far in advance as they&#13;
communIcationS, but WIth boof&#13;
blem " According to a contract&#13;
h ulOo't be much 0 a pro. .&#13;
are, there so. U' sity May 15is the expiration date for&#13;
the bookstore has Wlt.hthdef m~e: foll~wing fall semester. Harsel went&#13;
all forms to be submltte o.r t si ificant in introductory classes&#13;
on to say that the proble~ ~ m~edul~1l and in which texts are more&#13;
which run on &lt;lwellorgamz ~c f the class" Harsel believes there&#13;
important for "smooth operatIOn ~ emester because there will not be&#13;
will be even more of a prob~em nex t:nds the oooks have from May 15&#13;
as much time to order. As It now ~ r~essed and shipped. However,&#13;
until September for the orders tOIl b~ cut down to a little under th... e&#13;
for the second semester, time WI&#13;
months, " 'abIes" which could affect delivery of&#13;
wood cited a number.of v~rl ke in noting the correct title, author,&#13;
the books. One variable IS.3 mlS~ be made by either the professor or·&#13;
publisher, or amount, which ca kstore itself. From there. a \'ari3~le&#13;
dering the books or by the dtx;"ed but may be found to be out 01 prmt&#13;
exists such that a book \s or e ' ....h must be conducted to locate.3&#13;
or not in stock. In this case, a sear... .&#13;
Paris Township&#13;
fights power plant&#13;
Two persons engaged in the&#13;
resistance movement to a&#13;
possible nuclear power plant in&#13;
Paris Township (in Kenosha&#13;
County), carried their light into&#13;
Racme last week.&#13;
Speaking at Christ Church&#13;
letbodist at a meeting 01 the&#13;
Racine-Kenosha Citizens for the&#13;
Environment (CFE) were&#13;
Regina Goodhall, member of the&#13;
Paris Township Preservation&#13;
Committee and Matthew Quinn, a&#13;
Racine attorney representing the&#13;
committee as well as nuclear&#13;
plant foes in Bunn County, in&#13;
western Wisconsin&#13;
They spoke 01 radioactivity,&#13;
commented on condemnation&#13;
proceedings, and reported a&#13;
gradually growing concern about&#13;
nuclear power plants.&#13;
"We're all guinea pigs lor&#13;
nuclear power," said one participant,&#13;
adding that there are&#13;
alternatives to nuclear power&#13;
that should be probed.&#13;
Goodhall conten&lt;le&lt;lthat the...,&#13;
is no level of safe racliation and&#13;
added that radiation chang es th~&#13;
character 01 body cells&#13;
She went 00 to say that the luel&#13;
plutonium. which would be uaed&#13;
m the fast breeder reacton of a&#13;
nuclear power plant, is the mOlt&#13;
dangerous element knO\ltr"nlO man&#13;
and the wastes would be&#13;
radioacti ve rer hundreds of&#13;
thousands 01 years.&#13;
Quinn reported that he hal&#13;
tarted an acllon challenging th~&#13;
power company's right to """.&#13;
demn property. He would like the&#13;
law changed so that the Public&#13;
Service Commission would have&#13;
to approve condemnation.&#13;
Quinn said that more Ractne&#13;
and Kenosha county people may&#13;
become concerned about th~&#13;
po ibility 01 a Paris nucl.. r&#13;
power plan' when they learn that&#13;
their property may be eyed lor&#13;
right-oC·way for transmission&#13;
lines or installing water pI"""&#13;
between Lake MIchigan and th~&#13;
power plant.&#13;
investigated&#13;
used quantity 01the book through an outsule dealer Other reasons lor&#13;
books not arriving on time would be professors filing thetr lonns alter&#13;
the contract date has exptred, or ineffiCIency on the part of the U.S.&#13;
Postal Service, which is how the books are sent. Also, nght or wrong&#13;
books could be sent to the right or wrong 100001lon.Both Regional&#13;
Manager Ramseth and local manager Wood staled on two different&#13;
occasions that bookstore service was expected to improve for next&#13;
semester.&#13;
CommercillOperltioll&#13;
In order to understand why bookstore costa are as they are, one&#13;
must understand bow the bookstore operates (under a commerCIal&#13;
system), and how the books are resold to the bookstore by IItlIdents,&#13;
The Parkside bookstore is owned by the Follette Corporation, which&#13;
pays rent lor the space the bookstore OCCUPIes,as well as all&#13;
operational costs. In return lor this "give," the Follette Corporatioa&#13;
expects to receive a "take." The bookstore, flJl8Jlced by FoIl~lt., II&#13;
ru1 to achieve a profit. "This IS a profit-malting OI'1lanWotion,"explains&#13;
Wood, "it has to be to operate. Otherwise, somebody's got to&#13;
absorb the loss. When the taxpayers have to, they really getlut hard"&#13;
The only alternative to a commercially-&lt;&gt;peraled bookstore would be&#13;
what is referred to as an "institutional" bookstore, run by the UW·P.&#13;
Soroeof the larger universities operate under such: a system, But then,&#13;
we to size, they can afford to. "I know of one institutional bookstore&#13;
that absorbed a loss of a million dollars lor a single year, and several&#13;
that have been operating at a yearly loss 01over a hundred thousand&#13;
dollars," claimed Wood. Wood clearly mdicated that in Parkside's&#13;
case a commercial system would provide the most efficient operation.&#13;
Despite the faclthat Follette owns the bookstore, they do not control&#13;
the prices of books-in particular, how much a student will realize on a&#13;
return sale. The amount a student "'rill receive is determmed by: 1.&#13;
whether or not the course IS required for a major-thi would influence&#13;
tJle amount Df student enrotlment and thus, the amount of books&#13;
needed; 2. past course ollerings-tlus gIves some Idea 01 how many&#13;
students wIll enroll in a cours~ by looking at its past perfonnance 3.&#13;
potentiality of the course-a lecture course ~ ill draw a much larger&#13;
turnout than the a\'erage 25--32person class; 4 potential. of coune,&#13;
expansion-the possibility of a given course mcreasing from ave-raRe&#13;
cla!'S size to lecture proportions.&#13;
According to Wood. Follette realizes 20 percelll 01 e,ory dollar as&#13;
profit. Ho\\ever, 23 percent 01every dollar s expended IDthe cost 01&#13;
operation. In isolated cases, some books will bring m more than a 2lt&#13;
percent profit margin. However. Wood claims the prOfll is made up by&#13;
continued on page 6&#13;
Jennett heads PSGA&#13;
Tom Jennett, one of last year's&#13;
student government (PSGA)&#13;
members, has been appointed&#13;
President of PSGA by the ninemember&#13;
student senate. He will&#13;
retain that post untH new elections&#13;
can be held.&#13;
Jennett will replace Tom&#13;
Haack who was elected president&#13;
last fall but who is attending&#13;
school out of state this year.&#13;
_Ac~ording to the PSGA constitution,&#13;
elections were to have&#13;
been held during the second week&#13;
of O~tober; however, Jennett&#13;
explained that a steering comm1tt~e&#13;
has been set up to in- vestigate problems that PSGA&#13;
ha_s had in the past, and determine&#13;
ways in which to solve&#13;
them. Th leering committ&#13;
will be made up of repr -&#13;
tative of intere ted tudent&#13;
org tzation .&#13;
_''PSG r niz the prob} m ·1th our tudent gov,emment and&#13;
we pe th t committ&#13;
\\ ill help m e u mor&#13;
representative of the ,tud&#13;
Je~ett ~id "A lot of people ar coming m and wanting to nm "&#13;
he added. He hoped that the&#13;
steering committee \\ould have&#13;
its recommendations finalized b&#13;
the end of October and that ne.:..•&#13;
elections would follow immediatelv.&#13;
&#13;
The ~ine-memb r tudent&#13;
senate _has approved the leering&#13;
comm_1ttee a an advi ory&#13;
committee. Jennett explained&#13;
but it has yet to be approved b):&#13;
the Campus Concern Committee,&#13;
the Dean of tudents&#13;
Office, and Chancellor Wyllie.&#13;
Jennett said that the onlv acti~n.&#13;
PSGA is now taking ·i to&#13;
irut1ate an interview committee&#13;
to screen tudents wishing to be appointed to student-facult,&#13;
committees. PSGA ha al o&#13;
organized a student grievance&#13;
committee.&#13;
The Parksid~e--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1973 Vol. 11 No. s&#13;
Where are the books?&#13;
NOT&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Paris Tovvnship&#13;
fights povver plant&#13;
Bookstore investigated&#13;
by Harvey Hedden&#13;
and Stephen F . Gifford&#13;
During the first few weeks of classes, many students are !aced with ·&#13;
the problem of not being able to buy books for some of their cla es. Two RANGER reporters investigated this problem, the cost of books&#13;
themselves, and the bookstore operation as a whole, and got conflicting&#13;
answers while questioning instructors, the bookstore, and&#13;
Administration officials. In explaining how the books are or~ered, _Ass~tan_t Dean of the&#13;
College of Science and Society, Chuck T1ndei:, first ~stnbutes forms.to&#13;
all instructors. When completed, the forms hst the title of the book, 1~&#13;
author publisher and the number of students expected to enroll m&#13;
each c~urse. Afte; the forms are collected by Tinder. they are passed&#13;
along to Ted Wood, manager of the bookstore. The book orders are&#13;
always filled out several books short c;f expected_ enrollment to account&#13;
for students dropping the course. Wood said he c~nfers with&#13;
individual instructors and division heads, should an~ discrepancy&#13;
between the amount of books to be ordered and the proJected amount&#13;
of students arise. In obtaining the books, "You have to order books wherever you can&#13;
find them," says wood. The bookstore orders from over two hundred&#13;
individual publishers. d&#13;
Most instructors interviewed could not understand why there shoul&#13;
be such a problem in prompt book arrival. "Teachers a~ravate ~e&#13;
roble~ by changing books," said Sheldon H~l. mstructor m p · t· "but wi·th books ordered as farm advance as they commumca ions, ,, di t t&#13;
th h ldn't be much of a problem. Accor ng to a con rac&#13;
are, ere s ou - · · dat f the bookstore has with the University, May 15 1s the exptration e or all forms to be submitted for the following fall _se~ester. Harsel went&#13;
on to say that the problem is most significant_ m introductory classes&#13;
which run on "well organized ~chedfulthes" ~~ ~? ;::i t:~e~: ~~= important for "smooth operation ° e c ru · . be . blem next semester because there will not will be even more of a pro . ds the books have from • fav 15&#13;
as much time to order. As it now stanr~es ed and shipped. Howe~er,&#13;
until September for the ort~ers t?ili:cb~ cut down to a little under three&#13;
for the second semester, 1me v.&#13;
months. . be f "variables" which could affect delivery of&#13;
Wood cited a num r_o . k . noting the correct title, author,&#13;
the books. One variable 15 _a m1sta ~ :ade bv either the profes~or orpublisher,&#13;
or amount, which =kst re its 1{ From there. a ,·anable&#13;
dering the books or by_ the d eel iut may be found to be out of print&#13;
exists such that a boo_k is or er e'ar~h must be conducted to locate.a&#13;
or not in stock. In this case, a s ~&#13;
sesn ter. &#13;
2 THE PARKSIOE RANGER wedll •• dIY. OCt. 3. 1973&#13;
RANGER&#13;
'- __ ----EditoriaI/Opinion&#13;
Power plants vs.&#13;
green plants&#13;
"81g power hurts little people." That is the wording on&#13;
one of many protest signs one sees In driving through&#13;
Paris township In Kenosha County. It Is a double entendre.&#13;
for not only does the power of government and&#13;
big business Infringe on the rights of individual citizens,&#13;
but a specific • ..."ple of this would come in the success&#13;
of a proposal by Wisconsin Electric Power Company to&#13;
build a nuclear power plant In Paris. on 6000 acres of&#13;
farm land now owned by approximately 9S families.&#13;
The fight Is stili going on between the residents of the&#13;
ar a and WE PC. and at a meeting held last week of the&#13;
Racine Kenosha CItizens For Environment. attorney&#13;
Matthew Quinn Indicated that concern over the proposal&#13;
Is growing. He expects more and more area citizens to&#13;
become Involved as they see the potential effects of such&#13;
a f clilty.&#13;
To P rls residents It means over 4Sfarms. located In&#13;
on of the best agricultural areas of the state, would be&#13;
closed down. Nlnety·flve families would have to be&#13;
r located. Health and safety are definite concerns»&#13;
there Is no level at which radiation is harmless and&#13;
scientists and nuclear engineers aCTOSSthe country are&#13;
debating the safety of nuclear power.&#13;
WEPC hints at the possible recreational value of the&#13;
pi nt's cooling pond. but the cooling pond at a plant In&#13;
Dresden. III. Is a dirty. steerny. lnsect-r idden, fog·&#13;
producing mess&#13;
WE PC stresses the power needs of the future. and&#13;
local business and government leaders see the plant as a&#13;
healthy project for Kenosha County in terms of jobs and&#13;
money. But there are alternatives to the Paris site and&#13;
even alternatives to nuclear power until it can be proved&#13;
safe. And sometlmes the economic potential of power&#13;
plants must give way to the humane value of green&#13;
plants.&#13;
Since political clout lies in size and bigness deals in&#13;
terms of expediency, not sympathy, it may be useless to&#13;
argue this question from a humanitarian point of view··&#13;
the uprooting of nearly 100 families from their&#13;
homesteads, some of them the sixth generation on the&#13;
same land. What is needed is a broader base of support.&#13;
Power Is In numbers so all persons interested in&#13;
preventing construction of a nuclear power plant in&#13;
Paris should make themselves visible. Their reasons&#13;
may range anywhere from preventing possible nuclear&#13;
disaster to properly rights to environmental concerns to&#13;
crusading for the little guy. but they have in common the&#13;
same goat and together stand a much better chance of&#13;
achieving it.&#13;
RANGER supports the Racine·Kenosha Citizens For&#13;
Environment, the Paris Preservation Society. and the&#13;
people 01 Paris fighting to keep their community safe&#13;
nd intact. We urge other like-minded persons or groups&#13;
to make themselves heard.&#13;
~&#13;
Communication&#13;
breaking down&#13;
b) ".Gillon!&#13;
aDdHann HHIIlel&#13;
In rft COthe 5tary on the bookstore. there is 00. small&#13;
tonal C1XIU11enlth two reporters ouId like COimpart to their&#13;
.....den ..11cit has no connection ..,th the faet! contained in the ar·&#13;
tlde II merely a reOecbon 01 our ..... experience in researdling&#13;
II m directed n"llnly COcertam mdi"duaJs wjthin the&#13;
:&#13;
~::.:abOn and the Foil Ue CQrllClr1ltionThese persons have &lt;:qUIred th rrustaken belief thaI the article set out wjth the&#13;
ved llItenbOn 01 conduetulg some son 01 attack OIl them.&#13;
nto Cftt810 I..... tonSlSIed 01 ever;1hing ranging&#13;
'.dmlnlstra ' 01 non·information COagile evllS1on. Perl\aps the&#13;
n bon nd an) other persons .. bo might act as sources for&#13;
luture I •need to reminded thai the R.-\l·GER is as Interested&#13;
1ft helpmg them to ooI"e th r problems as it is m helpong the students&#13;
to ,the ,t.nd no problems can be solved or even approached&#13;
n n tmofllhere of plClOnprenils. Suspicion only se.....es&#13;
to (' mot susptClOn \mul there no more communication to be&#13;
I rfl1I of, a commuOlca~on ha brol&lt;en00..'Tl completely. If lJur&#13;
prepara\lOll 01 artI~~ re to " .. as aD)·scale lor measuring&#13;
IJ\lOQlIC cI feer and diItrusl here at Parllside, ...... ould JiI&lt;. to&#13;
Inform our readen that Pa.. .de closer to a communication l:ftak·&#13;
wn than " thl&#13;
Last week RANGER printed a front page stor;: on Affirmative&#13;
Action and hiring practices at Pa r kside. In an editorial RANGER&#13;
charged that UW-P is failing to meet minortty needs In Its hiring of&#13;
faculty and staff. An interesting enncism has ansen at UW-oshkosh&#13;
regarding its recruitment and htrmg efforts.&#13;
An article in the sept. 13, 1973 OSHKOSH ADVANCE·TITAN, UW·&#13;
o's student newspaper. began with the q~estion, lOIs this uni.versi~y&#13;
practicing discrimination against men, 10 ~ene~al, and ~hlteS. ~&#13;
particular?" The qUestion arose when the ~OIverslty advertised to lill&#13;
a non-academic posiuon, listing the criteria for ,the ~ltlOn. and ~e&#13;
statement "in accordance with the State of Wlsconsm Affrrmatlve&#13;
Action Program, only applicants w~o are wo~en or ~embe~ of&#13;
minority groups such as Afro-Am~rlcan. Ar:nencan Indian, !,-~l~:&#13;
American and Spanish Surname, will be consu!ered for the position.&#13;
The sw.:&#13;
y&#13;
goes on to outline UW.o's percentages of minority and&#13;
women faculty: 1.6 percent Afro-American, 1.9 percent Oriental, 0.7&#13;
percent Spanish-American, and 2.6 percent "other" minorities.&#13;
Women coostitute 26.5 percent of the faculty at Oshkosh, compared&#13;
with 8 percent at Parkside. Parkside's statistics on minorities still&#13;
have not been made public so we have no way of knowing for sure at&#13;
this point what percentage of our faculty comes from minority&#13;
backgrounds. We do know Parkside's faculty is 0 percent AfroAmerican.&#13;
UW-OAffirmative Action officer, Roy Heath. said that in order to be&#13;
eligible for lederal lunds, UW-O must meet federal standards for the&#13;
hiring 01 minorities. But he maintained that rarely do more qualified&#13;
applicants get nosed out of a job by a less qualified minority membe r.&#13;
The assistant to the vice-&lt;:hancellor attempted to clarify the&#13;
situation, stating "We are not refusing to hire white males. We are&#13;
interested in securing the most qualified candidates available."&#13;
However, when the University advertises for teachers at graduate&#13;
schools or in professional publications, "We certainly attempt to&#13;
encourage minority people and women," he added.&#13;
The lack 01 minority applicants is what forces the University to&#13;
request only minorities when hiring for some jobs, according to Heath.&#13;
There is also a low number of minority PhD graduates each year.&#13;
It appears UW-O will continue to try and hire minority people exclusively&#13;
for some positions, although if this is not possible a white&#13;
male will be considered. Until the disparity equalizes itself, UW·&#13;
Oshkosh will probably suffer criticism for its hiring practices.&#13;
Oyde DeBerry, assistant to the Chancellor for Multicultural Affairs,&#13;
as well as Affirmative Action Officer for Minorities at UW-o, believes&#13;
such criticism is unfair and commented that "all the institutions in&#13;
this valley are committed by state and federal law to correct historical&#13;
inequities in recruitment. hiring, promotion and retention ... whether&#13;
these institutioos uphold the law is another thing. We are attempting."&#13;
DeBerry was upset by an article in a local paper (the NOR·&#13;
T.H.wESTE~N) th,~t criticized the university's supposedly prejudicial&#13;
hiring practices. Anyone that could make that statement is either&#13;
uninformed, stupid, or racist, or all three, to he concluded.&#13;
The .implications of all this for Parkside? This institution, too, is&#13;
CO~ltted hy state and federal law to correct historical inequities In&#13;
recruitment, hiring, promotion and retention. It is doubtful we can&#13;
honestly claim we are attempting to uphold the law. Our Affirmative&#13;
Actio~ plan is overdue, and in the meantime we are doing no special&#13;
recruiting to encourage minority people and women to apply. Iam not&#13;
advo:cating that we discriminate against white males by refusing to&#13;
consider them when a position is open. But in accordance with federal&#13;
Affirmative ~ction g~delines, we should be making a special effort to&#13;
reach potential candidates from among groups formerly excluded&#13;
from empl~yment and advancement, and when the qualifications of&#13;
these candidates are equaltn the job they should be hired.&#13;
The Parksidc Ranger is publl hed .&#13;
year by the students f T IS ~ee~y throughout the academic&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53l~O ~~fUniversity of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Learning Cenler, Telepho~e (4l14c)~5;~~;ocated at 0-194 LibraryThe&#13;
Parkside Ranger is . d .&#13;
reflected in columns and editor! In ependent newspaper, Opinions&#13;
View of The University of w~tonal~ are no~ necessarily the official&#13;
Letters to the Ed'to Isconsm·Parkslde.&#13;
interest to students I f;c~te encouraged, AllleHers on any subject of&#13;
less, typed Ilnd do~ble-s y or staff m~st be confined to 250 words or&#13;
letters for length and g~~ed.. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
address, phone number ste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
be withheld upon reque:~d;~uden,t status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
print any letters. ,e editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
EDITOR-IN_CHIEF' J&#13;
_MANAGING EDITOR.a~e M. Schliesman&#13;
FEATURE EDIT .' om Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITO . OR. Debra Frledell&#13;
SPORTS ED.T~·R~athryn Wellner&#13;
COPY EDIT " Dan Marry&#13;
PHOTOGRA~~ic R~~~a Ecklund&#13;
WRITERS: StePhenGiff DINATOR: DaVid Daniels&#13;
Jense&lt;'l~Michael OISZYk~r~a~~r~ara Hanson, Harvey Hedden, Gary&#13;
Stapan,an, Carrie Ward, Ken y SchUbert, John Sorensen, Steve&#13;
Bruce Wagner Konkol, Tom Defouw, Neal Saufner&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Ron Antrt '&#13;
J,m Ruffalo, Jay Satvo m, Alle,n Frederickson, Brian Ross,&#13;
CARTOONISTS' Am&#13;
LAYOUT: Ten! Gel:;,~undari, Gary Huck&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGE~~n, Terry Knop, staff&#13;
ADVERTISING M.AN . Ken Pestka&#13;
CIRCULATION MAN:g:R&#13;
: Amy Cundari ~"&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF. F~' Gary Worthington&#13;
ADVISOR: Don KOpl'"iv~ ed Lawrence. Jim Magruder&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RA GER Wednesuy, Oct. 3, 1973&#13;
[ A 2!i!on~&#13;
ower plants vs.&#13;
een plants&#13;
ee•o1 et ylew&#13;
res den s of the&#13;
er.&#13;
recre lonal value o the&#13;
cooling pond at a plan n&#13;
insec • ldden, fog.&#13;
Communication&#13;
brea Ing down&#13;
It Jan~ Schlluman&#13;
Last week RANGER printed a fro!lt page stol")'. o~ Affirmative&#13;
Action and hiring practices at Parksi~. ~ an edito~i~l R~~GER&#13;
charged that uw-P is failing to m~t _mmority n_eeds m its hirmg of&#13;
faculty and staff. An interesting ~iticism has arisen at UW-Oshkosh&#13;
regarding its recruitment and hiring efforts.&#13;
An article in the Sept. 13, 1973 OSHKOSH ADVANCE-TITAN, UW0'&#13;
student newspaper, began _with the q~estion, "Is this uni_versi~y&#13;
iracticing discrimination agamst men, m ~ene:al, and ~hites, ~&#13;
particular?" The question arose when t?e ~mversity adv~:tised to fill&#13;
a non-academic position, listi_ng the criteria for_the ~sition_ and ~e&#13;
tatement "in accordance with the State of Wisconsm Affirmative&#13;
Action Program only applicants who are women or members of&#13;
minority groups' such as Afro-Am~rican, AI_nerican Indian, ~-sianAmerican,&#13;
and Spanish Surname, will be considered for the position."&#13;
The tory goes on to outline UW-O's percentages of minority and&#13;
w men faculty: 1.6 percent Afro-American, 1.9 percent Oriental, 0.7&#13;
percent pani h-American, and 2.6 percent "other" minorities.&#13;
Women con titute 26.5 percent of the faculty at Oshkosh, compared&#13;
"ith percent at Parkside. Parkside's statistics on minorities still&#13;
haH! not been made public owe have no way of knowing for sure at&#13;
thi point what percentage of our faculty comes from minority&#13;
background . We do know Parkside's faculty is O percent AfroAmerican.&#13;
&#13;
UW-0 Affirmative Action officer, Roy Heath, said that in order to be&#13;
eligible for federal funds, UW-0 must meet federal standards for the&#13;
hiring of minorities. But he maintained that rarely do more qualified&#13;
applicants get nosed out of a job by a less qualified minority member.&#13;
The assistant to the vice-chancellor attempted to clarify the&#13;
ituation, stating "We are not refusing to hire white males. We are&#13;
interested in securing the most qualified candidates available."&#13;
However, when the University advertises for teachers at graduate&#13;
chools or in professional publications, "We certainly attempt to&#13;
encourage minority people and women," he added.&#13;
The lack of minority applicants is what forces the University to&#13;
request only minorities when hiring for some jobs, according to Heath.&#13;
There is also a low number of minority PhD graduates each year.&#13;
It appears UW-0 will continue to try and hire minority people exclusively&#13;
for some positions, although if this is not possible a white&#13;
male will be considered. Until the disparity equalizes itself, UWOshkosh&#13;
will probably suffer criticism for its hiring practices.&#13;
Oyde DeBerry, assistant to the Chancellor for Multicultural Affairs,&#13;
a well a Affirmative Action Officer for Minorities at UW-0, believes&#13;
uch criticism is unfair and commented that "all the institutions in&#13;
thi valley are committed by state and federal law to correct historical&#13;
inequitie in recruitment, hiring, promotion and retention ... whether&#13;
these in titutions uphold the law is another thing. We are attempting."&#13;
DeBerry was upset by an article in a local paper (the NOR-&#13;
~ESTE~ ) th,~t criticized the university's supposedly prejudicial&#13;
hirmg practices. Anyone that could make that statement is either&#13;
uninformed, stupid, or racist, or all three," he concluded.&#13;
The implications of all this for Parkside? This institution too is&#13;
comr~itted by Stl_lte and federal law to correct historical ineq~iti~ tn&#13;
recrwtment, hi.nng, promotion and retention. It is doubtful we can&#13;
hon~stly claim we are attempting to uphold the law. Our Affirmative&#13;
Actio~ _plan is overdue, and in the meantime we are doing no special&#13;
recrm~g to encourage minority people and women to apply. I am not&#13;
adv~ting that we disc~in~te against white males by refusing to&#13;
consider ~em "".hen a position is open. But, in accordance with federal&#13;
Affirmative Action guidelines, we should be making a special effort to&#13;
reach potential candidates from among groups formerly excluded&#13;
from empl~yment and advancement, and when the qualifications of&#13;
these candidates are equal to the job they should be hired.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is pub!" hed . . year by the students of T is ~eekly throug~out ~e academic&#13;
Kenosha. Wisconsin 53140 ~;r University of W1sconsm-Parkside,&#13;
Learning Center, Telepho;e ,41~c,e~5:_r~~ocated at D-194 LibraryThe&#13;
Parkside Ranger · . · reflected in columns and is _an . mdependent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
view of The University of ~~torial~ are no~ necessarily the official&#13;
Letters to the Ed ·to isconsm-Parks1de.&#13;
mterest to students 1 ,:c:te encouraged. All letters on any subJect of&#13;
less. typed ,nd do~ble-s Y or staff m~st be confined to 250 words or&#13;
letters for length and g~~ed. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
address. phone number a d ~ted All letters must be signed and include&#13;
be withheld upon r ues~ 5 u en_t status or faculty rank . Names will&#13;
print any letters eq · The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF· MANAGING EDITOR~ane M . Schliesman&#13;
FEATURE EDITO .. Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR· t · Debra Friedel!&#13;
SPORTS EOITO.R · ~:~yn Wellner&#13;
COPY EDITO . . Marry&#13;
PHOTOGRAP~ic ~::,cca Ecklund&#13;
WRITERS : Stephen G~t!ROINATOR: David Daniels JMs.eri M ' 1 Ord, Barbara Ha : ,chael Olszyk, Maril n nson, Harvey Hedden, Gary&#13;
Stapan,an, Carrie Ward, Ken ,: Schubert, John Sorensen, Steve&#13;
Bruce Waoner onkoi, Tom Defouw, Neal Sautner,&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS· Ron A J,m Ruffalo, Jay saivo ntrlm, Allen Frederickson, Brian Ross&#13;
CARTOONISTS · A ' LAYOUT: Terr, G;;Y :=undarl, Gary Huck&#13;
BUSINESS MANAG~~n, Terry Knop, staff&#13;
ADVERTISING MAN · Ken Pestka&#13;
ClltCULATION MAN:g::: Amy Cundari j4&#13;
ADVEltTISING STAFF· F · Gary Worthington&#13;
ADVISOR : Don Kepr,v~ red Lawrence, Jim Magruder &#13;
Armstrong pleads guilty&#13;
An attorney for Karleton Armstrong,&#13;
one of four persons&#13;
charged in a 1970 bombing that&#13;
killed a University of Wisconsin&#13;
researcher. said that his client&#13;
would plead guilty to a reduced&#13;
charge of second degree murder.&#13;
Plea bargaining between the&#13;
defense and the prosecution&#13;
produced an agreement for&#13;
Armstrong to plead guilty to the&#13;
lesser charge in the death of&#13;
Robert Fassnacht. He was&#13;
originally charged with first&#13;
degree murder. Armstrong will&#13;
also plead guilty to four charges&#13;
of arson, according to attorney&#13;
Robert Kellerman.&#13;
Kellerman said the agreement&#13;
would allow Armstrong to&#13;
present his motivations to the&#13;
public at a hearing. "Karl is&#13;
admitting he did these acts and&#13;
he wants the people to understand&#13;
why," Kellerman said.&#13;
The defense attorney called the&#13;
bombing "an act of political&#13;
resistance against the illegal war&#13;
in Indochina." He said the Armstrong&#13;
defense committee hoped&#13;
to "turn this town into a forum for&#13;
renewed anti-war activities and&#13;
demonstrations" when a hearing&#13;
on the guilty pleas is held Oct. 15.&#13;
The guilty plea is the best way&#13;
to bring the issue to the American&#13;
people that its government has&#13;
been shown to be corrupt and&#13;
acting contrary to the wishes of&#13;
the people, Kellerman said.&#13;
State law permits defendants&#13;
who plead guilty .to present&#13;
evidence on the mitigation of&#13;
their guilt. Such evidence could&#13;
not have been presented at a&#13;
trial.&#13;
Kellerman said the evidence&#13;
against Armstrong was substantial&#13;
and that Armstrong&#13;
regretted that Fassnacht had&#13;
died in the early morning bombing&#13;
of the Army Mathematics&#13;
Research Center in Sterling Hall&#13;
on the Madison campus&#13;
We get&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It occurs to me that the Affirmative&#13;
Action Program is a&#13;
form of reverse racism. Though&#13;
liberal sentiments disagree, it is&#13;
impossible to rectify the&#13;
mistakes of the past, to repair the&#13;
dreams that racism-sexism has&#13;
crushed. To think that a WASP&#13;
majority can make reparation&#13;
for past mistakes by giving&#13;
minorities greater opportunities&#13;
than the majority is truly very&#13;
faulty thinking.&#13;
The Affirmative Action&#13;
Program is a repugnant form of&#13;
tokenism, only instead of one&#13;
black, chicano, or woman, you&#13;
employ the current percentages.&#13;
By doing so a company,&#13;
organization, or university can&#13;
chant, "See? We are an equal&#13;
opportunity employer!" Equal&#13;
opportunity for who? (More&#13;
equal for some, perhaps?) A&#13;
system like this does not equalize&#13;
Cartoonist's eye view&#13;
The bombing, on August 24,&#13;
1970. was one of the last major&#13;
acts of violence on the UW·&#13;
Madison campus, scene of dozens&#13;
of violent anti-war protests&#13;
during the course of the Vietnam&#13;
War.&#13;
Armstrong was arrested in&#13;
Canada in February, 1972 and&#13;
extradited in March of this year.&#13;
He has since been held in the&#13;
Dane County jail in lieu of&#13;
$450,000 bail. The other three&#13;
persons charged in the case are&#13;
still being sought.&#13;
letters&#13;
opportunities, but rather gives&#13;
minorities greater opportunities&#13;
than the majority. When this&#13;
occurs, racism-sexism won't be&#13;
eliminated but rather&#13;
propagated.&#13;
1 consider a system like AI·&#13;
firmative Action not only unequal&#13;
but also somewhat degrading. 1&#13;
certainly would be offended if I&#13;
was hired only because of skin&#13;
color, or nationality background,&#13;
or because I'm a Speaker. I am&#13;
proud of the fact that I am hired&#13;
for a job because an employer is&#13;
convinced 1am competent to do it&#13;
well. To be hired for any other&#13;
reason is to be used.&#13;
When considering the implementation&#13;
of Affirmative&#13;
Action one should think of all&#13;
ramifications before we jump in&#13;
over our beads like lemmings in&#13;
the sea.&#13;
Tom Speaker&#13;
UWP Sophomore&#13;
by Gary Huck&#13;
F~ ..H~ T~ ~."" ~&#13;
Coil.,. c.... Ml Dew ..&#13;
l"HL f-Iusn .. TO Gn nCl"~U'&#13;
I ",_Y.1&gt;&lt;t w,,"'o; L""D T ...",,· Nh&gt;E ..&#13;
S,."., To _Li'!&gt;5e'"&#13;
T~" (.O"'f'lCTIT,OIJ&#13;
SIT"'''''''' il"-l"tl"Y',&#13;
BRo o~t.. C; P!o,oF.SSdl:5&#13;
NO'"T"O .,. ...&#13;
t';::~l\~:,.v.~~.~...&#13;
POETRY&#13;
8&lt;rf 500.. l'~G--.""&#13;
.....tI S-~· ..&#13;
0" , F'.~T&lt;. _tI&#13;
,",''''~ t&gt;&lt;lJ;&#13;
.....0 I 0;._ tI ....&#13;
........~ .... l ;n: TY&#13;
0.. '-'~\"',.... ..&#13;
Ra ...... \o.C1l~"&#13;
Ranger classifieds&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
S2.75 per page&#13;
Send for your up-to-date. 160-page,&#13;
mail order catalog Enclose $1.00&#13;
to cover postage (deh'iery lime IS&#13;
I to 2 daysl.&#13;
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC.&#13;
11941 WILSHIRE BLVD.. SUIT[ :2&#13;
L05 ANC£US. CALIF 9002S&#13;
12131477-8474 or 477·5493&#13;
Our resurch "",leri" is sold fat&#13;
rewltch usisunu ani,.&#13;
Income tax preparation, Federal and Sta'e,&#13;
ellperienced. Reasonable. Call 63'·'191.&#13;
Red 1968 Mustang convert. Perfect&#13;
mechlniully, artistically dented, $600. 63'-&#13;
1110(evenings).&#13;
WANTED, Licensed baT"tender who is&#13;
P.rkside student. Call 553-'243'2between 8&#13;
a.m. &amp; 4",30p.m.&#13;
EARN TOP MONEYl p.r~.ti"'.e promofin9&#13;
student travel. call. o~AW~~:~:~IU~J~:&#13;
telephone numbe, rl'lIi 60204. (31'2)3,.-0110.&#13;
Box 5049.Evans on. .&#13;
d peutely need THE&#13;
Some stUdentsGE e~EADER (MusUtine&#13;
BORZO.I ~OLi~itors). If anyone has thil&#13;
and Gnfflth.. . II it leave nlme and&#13;
boOk and is Willing to se, t" n I&lt;iosk.&#13;
phone number at the InlormllO&#13;
Shing.Mei I&lt;ellv·&#13;
.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1973THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Editor's note: "The Movemen.t" is. regular feature In RANGER. It&#13;
deals with women and women's COIlcerns in society. at Parbkte""&#13;
history_ Guest writers are invited,&#13;
by Barb Han.....&#13;
Ti-Grace Atkinson, radical feminist, spoke at UW-MiIwa,*ee on&#13;
Sept. 26 as part of the Women's Week Activities sponsored by !be&#13;
Campus Women's Information Center. AtklOsoo has been lOvol~ In&#13;
the Women's Movement smce it first organized in 1966.She was in !be&#13;
headlines in 1971when ber comments at Catholic University about !be&#13;
V"ll"ginMary incited Patricia Buckley Bozell to strike ber. Bozell is !be&#13;
sister of columnist William F. Buckley Jr. and New York Senator&#13;
James Buckley. At1tinsonhadn't lectured f'll"a long time becausellhe&#13;
"felt it was a trap, a substitute for action. It She fears the same kind of&#13;
trap in the trend toward rap sessions and consciousness raiainll.&#13;
Although she thinks "the first battle is in ourselves and alone,"&#13;
Atkinson stressed the need for women to make stronger bonds between&#13;
themselves. "We don't expect much of each other because we&#13;
doo't think much of each other."&#13;
"The Women's Movement now is a media dream. You look for the&#13;
reality in the change.c.In seven years, the only major adv~cemeDl&#13;
has been abortion." Atkinson stressed the necessity of buin8 any&#13;
liberalized abortion laws on strong Constitutional grounda. She aa1d&#13;
there are two approaches to justify abortion: privacy and the Fourteenth&#13;
Amendment's guarantee that no SlBte shall "deprive any&#13;
person of life liberty or property, without due process of law."&#13;
Atkinson said u.at "All of me belongs to me-sperm is a 'gift' once it"&#13;
in my body." Atkinson mentioned that in countries where the abortion&#13;
laws have been liberalized, the birth rate drops substantially. "You&#13;
Iind that women aren't as crazy about this motherhood bit as you'd&#13;
thought." Eventually the restrictions return. "One thing I think is&#13;
very important is test-tube babies. Test-lUbe babies are the only&#13;
solution to abortion. [f there is no alternate means of reproduction, the&#13;
restrictions will go back on."&#13;
You can't discuss abortion without mentioning the Catholic Church,&#13;
and Atkinson had plenty to say about that. "Their only new members&#13;
come from women's vaginas. If they lose the women, they lose the ball&#13;
game ..As long as tbe Church stands, women won't be free. They&#13;
(those leading the O1urch) must be wiped out totally. Every stick.&#13;
stone. everything."&#13;
Atkinson asked, "can you be Catholic and Ieminist? Can you be&#13;
religious and feminist?" She asked many other thought-provoltlDll&#13;
questions. but perhaps the most imeresnng was thiS "How do you grt&#13;
women to put themselves on the line? How do you get them to bond'"&#13;
When we discover the answer to that, liberation will be more than juat&#13;
a word.&#13;
••• '''flIrtturn_' ...&#13;
or .... "&#13;
FrIday Oct. 5&#13;
I:" p.lD.&#13;
Swtday oe. 7&#13;
7::11 p.lD.&#13;
Student AetlviU..&#13;
BuI1diflll&#13;
uw ...... Wtt&#13;
1.0_ ,...,"-'&#13;
UNION&#13;
Itt. 3, 5, &amp;, 7&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sat. &amp; Sun.&#13;
K.es"'s IIe.est llltes,.,&#13;
2nd National&#13;
{formerly Shak.y',}&#13;
6'101 Groonbay Road Phono 654-0415&#13;
Armstrong pleads guilty&#13;
An attorney for Karleton Armstrong,&#13;
one of four persons&#13;
charged in a 1970 bombing that&#13;
killed a University of Wisconsin&#13;
researcher, said that his client&#13;
would plead guilty to a reduced&#13;
charge of second degree murder.&#13;
their guilt. Such evidence could&#13;
not have been presented at a trial.&#13;
Kellerman said the evidence&#13;
against Armstrong was substantial&#13;
and that Armstrong&#13;
regretted that Fassnacht had&#13;
~ed in the early morning bombing&#13;
of the Army Mathematics&#13;
Research Center in Sterling Hall on the Madison campus.&#13;
The bombing, on Augu t 24,&#13;
1970, was one of the last major&#13;
acts of violence on the '&#13;
ladison campus, scene of dozen&#13;
of violent anti-war protest&#13;
during the course of the \'ietnam&#13;
War.&#13;
Armstrong was arrested in&#13;
Canada in February. 1972 and&#13;
extradited in larch of this year.&#13;
He has since been held in the&#13;
Dane County jail in lieu of&#13;
$450,000 bail. The other three&#13;
persons charged in the case are&#13;
still being sought.&#13;
Plea bargaining between the&#13;
defense and the prosecution&#13;
produced an agreement for&#13;
Armstrong to plead guilty to the&#13;
lesser charge in the death of&#13;
Robert Fassnacht. He was&#13;
originally charged with first&#13;
degree murder. Armstrong will&#13;
also plead guilty to four charges&#13;
of arson, according to attorney&#13;
Robert Kellerman.&#13;
We get letters&#13;
Kellerman said the agreement&#13;
would allow Armstrong to&#13;
present his motivations to the&#13;
public at a hearing. "Karl is&#13;
admitting he did these acts and&#13;
he wants the people to understand&#13;
why, " Kellerman said.&#13;
The defense attorney called the&#13;
bombing "an act of political&#13;
resistance against the illegal war&#13;
in Indochina." He said the Armstrong&#13;
defense committee hoped&#13;
to "turn this town into a forum for&#13;
renewed anti-war activities and&#13;
demonstrations" when a hearing&#13;
on the guilty pleas is held Oct. 15.&#13;
The guilty plea is the best way&#13;
to bring the issue to the American&#13;
people that its government has&#13;
been shown to be corrupt and&#13;
acting contrary to the wishes of&#13;
the people, Kellerman said.&#13;
State law permits defendants&#13;
who plead guilty .to present&#13;
evidence on the mitigation of&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It occurs to me that the Affirmative&#13;
Action Program is a&#13;
form of reverse racism. Though&#13;
liberal sentiments disagree, it is&#13;
impossible to rectify the&#13;
mistakes of the _past, to repair the&#13;
dreams that racism-sexism has&#13;
crushed. To think that a WASP&#13;
majority can make reparation&#13;
for past mistakes by giving&#13;
minorities greater opportunities&#13;
than the majority is truly very&#13;
faulty thinking.&#13;
The Affirmative Action&#13;
Program is a repugnant form of&#13;
tokenism, only instea~ of one&#13;
black, chicano, or woman, you&#13;
employ the current percentages.&#13;
By doing so a company,&#13;
organization, or university can&#13;
chant, "See? We are an equal&#13;
opportunity employer!" Equal&#13;
opportunity for who? (More&#13;
equal for some, perhaps? ) A&#13;
system like this does not equalize&#13;
Cartoonist's eye view&#13;
POETRY&#13;
F~""KL"I' TME. ~9Ll!M.S o, Cotltf!ll C" Mc. Dow.., T'HE. Huni..c To &lt;i-•1' Tl'I&amp; CL,.ssu r "'~T. n-.c. wo«K Lo"'o T.,.;.T' N,v,k Sul-\5 T o .LeSselr&gt;l T~C C. O..,PEi1TtOIJ&#13;
8EiWS.\N SNtitt.iTS,&#13;
BtlowN wos1"'e,. P,.oft.SSdt:5&#13;
NOT TO N'liN"Tlft-.. 'T~1!.&#13;
G~~l1~:,.v.~~-~y&#13;
Sorry I Woke You Up&#13;
Pardon me but I didn't mean to take your dream&#13;
Away. You know, the one in which_ we&#13;
Live in peace and rid our minds of middle class&#13;
Hang-ups. It flourished in Haight-Ashbury.&#13;
Wetunedin turnedon anddroppedout.&#13;
F1owers beads grass love acid sharing groovy&#13;
Vibes. Woodstock our soul nation Be-ins&#13;
Then the Altamont Chicago Now? cynicism&#13;
Smack sexism and pass the next beer. The&#13;
Reality of teen-age gang war, _Charles Manson,&#13;
Gay-baiting and longhairs for Nixon. The women&#13;
Are in thei; communal kitchens making wheat germ&#13;
Sandwiches for their revolutionary brothers&#13;
Out fighting pigs. Hip Capitalism. We sing&#13;
About beauty and we sing about truth at $10,000&#13;
A show. Jesus Freaks Muhammad Speaks&#13;
Rennie Davis reeks . ?&#13;
What happened to the counter-culture? Was it there·&#13;
Yea, we've all been co-opted or diverted. I got&#13;
8111' soc. .. !u.~ ... ~-- ~!'.I) n,,£.N .,,,.,. ew1tt1u, Cf:'~,s A._.JT"I(.- 11\.0&#13;
Wl'-'-1t""t,&#13;
,.,,..0 'IC."""- C'I-'!;,.&#13;
Wn1'1 .,_.l ~aA... Tl 0,. U'F lN ,.,._t:&#13;
RaJ1o1,,.. \..CR"-D&#13;
L1.,.._E.&#13;
Hip. Sorry I woke you up. _ Dave Myer&#13;
Ranger classifieds·&#13;
Income tax preparation, Federal and State,&#13;
experienced. Reasonable . Call 639-9891.&#13;
Red n68 Mustang convert. Perfect&#13;
mechanically, artistically dented, $600. 639·&#13;
1170 (evenings).&#13;
WANTED : Licensed bartender who is&#13;
Parkside student. Call 553-2432 between 8&#13;
a.m. &amp; • , 10 p.m.&#13;
RN TOP MONEY! Part-time promoting&#13;
!:dent travel. Call_ o~:;~~~:~,u~~J:~:&#13;
telephone numbet r\11 60204 (312)328-0110. Box 549, Evans on, · ·&#13;
d rately need THE Some studentsGE e~ADER (Muscatine&#13;
BORZO_I COLL~itorsl If anyone has this and Griffith, . E · 11 .&#13;
1 leave name and book and is willing to se 1 ' fon Kiosk. phone number at the tnforma ,&#13;
Shing-Mei Kelly.&#13;
opportunities, but rather gives&#13;
minorities greater opportunities&#13;
than the majority. When this&#13;
occurs, racism- exism won't be&#13;
eliminated but rather&#13;
propagated.&#13;
I consider a ystem like Affirmative&#13;
Action not onJy unequal&#13;
but also somewhat degrading. I&#13;
certainly would be offended if I&#13;
was hired onJy because of skin&#13;
color, or nationality background,&#13;
or because I'm a Speaker. I am&#13;
proud of the fact that I am hired&#13;
for a job because an employer is&#13;
convinced I am competent to do it&#13;
well. To be hired for any other&#13;
reason is to be used.&#13;
When considering the implementation&#13;
of Affirmative&#13;
Action one should think of all&#13;
ramifications before we jump in&#13;
over our heads like lemmings in&#13;
the sea .&#13;
Tom Speaker&#13;
UWP Sophomore&#13;
by Gary Huck&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
$2. 75 per page&#13;
Send for your up-terdate, ISO.page,&#13;
mail order catalog. Enclose $1.00&#13;
to cover postage (deliiery I e s&#13;
1 to 2 daysl&#13;
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC.&#13;
11941 WILSHIRE BLVD .• SUITE =2&#13;
LOS A GELES. CALIF. 90025&#13;
(213! 477-8474 or 477-~93&#13;
Our resurc lftllteri.il is sold for re~uc~ us,sunce only&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Editor' note: "Th . to,ement'' i a re ular featun ln R&#13;
deal Vlith ¥iomen and" men' COIie in oc t , at ar&#13;
hi tory. Gu . t "riter are in\'lted.&#13;
a Y.ord.&#13;
The&#13;
• nda • ct. 1&#13;
7: p.m.&#13;
tud tActh1t&#13;
Buldi~&#13;
Ion ?Sc&#13;
UWP...iWI&#13;
10,~&#13;
UNION&#13;
1kt. 3, 5, 6, 7&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sat. &amp; Sun.&#13;
Kenoslta's Newest Nites,ot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
( ormerly Sho ey' s)&#13;
6'201 GrHnbay Road Phone 654-0485 &#13;
. I Sister Colette ill a teacher by profession but finds&#13;
that Campus MinistrY is "one ,:"ay of continuing my&#13;
I&#13;
relation with young people ill a less. structured&#13;
way." .' The campus Ministry people will work ill conjunction&#13;
with Parkside counselors. They are also&#13;
setting up a Newman Club for Parkside students.&#13;
Sister Colette explained the Newman Club as a way&#13;
to "get young people together to form a Christian&#13;
type of community:' which they hope will make&#13;
worship more creative and responsive to the needs&#13;
of young people. It is a way "to bridge what is and&#13;
what could be," she added.&#13;
"We have no specific programs outlined," said&#13;
Father Wayne, "but want the students to initiate&#13;
programs and rap centers. In sharing ideas we&#13;
build a better community in which to live:'&#13;
The two have spent the past three weeks getting&#13;
acquainted with administrators, faculty and staff,&#13;
and getting a feel for the workings of the University.&#13;
"I have a deep respect for young people" said&#13;
Father Wayne, "and they have a lot to give. We&#13;
want to help them channel their ideas." Father&#13;
Wayne and Sister Colette are at Parkside to listen,&#13;
to share, to suggest, or to counsel students.&#13;
Sister Colette will be available on campus on&#13;
Tuesdays and both Sister Colette and Father Wayne&#13;
will be here on Thursdays from noon until 4 p.m. in&#13;
LLC 0185.&#13;
On Thursday, Oct. 4, a Campus Ministry kickoff&#13;
rap session has been arranged through which&#13;
Father Wayne and Sister Colette are interested in&#13;
meeting Parkside students. This is an opportunity&#13;
for students to offer suggestions, to talk, or to&#13;
become actively involved in the organization and&#13;
designing of activities for the Newman Club.&#13;
When the campus Ministry people cannot be&#13;
found on campus, students are invited to stop at the&#13;
Newman Center, located on the corner of Highway&#13;
E and JR, or call Sister Colette (552-8526)or Father&#13;
Wayne (657-3408),&#13;
4 THE PARKS IDE RANGER Wednesday. Oct. 3. 1973&#13;
yw-P aHected.&#13;
Canteen increases&#13;
food prices&#13;
canteen cannot change food&#13;
prices whenever it wishes to,&#13;
Niebuhr added. The University&#13;
must approve price decisions and&#13;
increases are agreed upon under&#13;
a contract with Canteen. Cootract&#13;
terms are maintained&#13;
througbout all price changes.&#13;
ReprdIess of the amount of the&#13;
increase, the purchaser will&#13;
receive the same quantity and&#13;
quality 01 a product.&#13;
When comparing Parkside's&#13;
lood prices with thooe of other&#13;
state campuses, Niebuhr&#13;
suggested that the cost of labor&#13;
be considered. Labor is less&#13;
costly in northern Wisconsin than&#13;
in the southeast area of the state,&#13;
be added. Products from our&#13;
vending machines remain equal&#13;
to or lower than those at UWMilwaukee.&#13;
A 25 cent soda tbere&#13;
IS 2Q cents here. Entree meals&#13;
have suffered a 5 to 10 cent increase.&#13;
Pastry items in the&#13;
vending machines have gone up 5&#13;
cents because of the higher cost&#13;
in producing wheat products.&#13;
Because of a "better deal" with&#13;
their supplier, Canteen has&#13;
switched from a half pint of milk&#13;
to a third pint at a cost of 2Q cents.&#13;
Plans have been made which&#13;
will provide vending machines in&#13;
both the Corom Arts building and&#13;
the Classroom Building. ThIS&#13;
sbould ease the crowded conditions&#13;
in the cafeteria area.&#13;
lIy SWpllea S&amp;apoDIaD&#13;
..It'.no lurprile to the school"&#13;
... the comment made by&#13;
William Niebuhr, director of&#13;
Student Life, when asked about&#13;
the rile in lood prices at&#13;
Parltside. Parbide is following&#13;
lUll with other food price inc:na_&#13;
througbout the comllWIlity.&#13;
The prices of dairy. meat and&#13;
peltry .leJDJ were d1acussed by&#13;
the University and Canteen, and&#13;
Canteen recommended price&#13;
alterations. Subs«juent meetings&#13;
bel" n the two and consultation&#13;
with University AdmInistration&#13;
In MadlJon resulted in price&#13;
readjustments. According to&#13;
Niebuhr. the changes were made&#13;
with the understandmg that ,I&#13;
product price go up or down,&#13;
Park .• de will make every attempt&#13;
to hold prices down,&#13;
pM~ bY Mike SwanlftlHn&#13;
Sister Colette and Fatller Wayne'" the aew CamJMls&#13;
Mialstry·&#13;
Campus ministry&#13;
comes to Parlcslde&#13;
by Dellra FrledeU&#13;
"We are in the ministry of presence, that of being&#13;
available to students," said Father Wayne&#13;
Wojciechowski.&#13;
Father Wayne and Sister Colette Zukowski offer&#13;
another dimension to education at Parkside:&#13;
Campus MinistrY.&#13;
Father Wayne is a priest at St. George Church in&#13;
Kenosha. as weIl as working with Sister Colette at&#13;
Parkside, Carthage and Gateway in the field of&#13;
campus Ministry. HOUrconcern is not with 'giving&#13;
the word' but rather with people," he said.&#13;
Passive acceptance is a more&#13;
desirable response to ideas than&#13;
active criticism.&#13;
acquainted with a number of&#13;
basic reference books in political&#13;
science. Many of these are also&#13;
useful to other social science&#13;
disciplines. There is no reading to&#13;
speak of; we work problems out&#13;
by trial and error. Hand-in&#13;
exercises constitute the main&#13;
work. This includes having the&#13;
students themselves make up&#13;
questions in order to perplex&#13;
those who come after them."&#13;
Burnett added: "This course is&#13;
taught in strong collaboration&#13;
with the Library staff. It supplements&#13;
the excellent instruction&#13;
that goes on all the time&#13;
within the Library. Anyone who&#13;
completes the course will know&#13;
things about library use that&#13;
many I many faculty members&#13;
have never found out."&#13;
Political Science 205 may be&#13;
added to your schedule until the&#13;
opening day of the course (Oct&#13;
30).&#13;
AT FIRST ullom&#13;
OF RACIME Library course offered&#13;
from Teaching as a Subversive&#13;
Activity • Mo .ili •••&#13;
hluce re~lired&#13;
• Mo Ii.it to the&#13;
••• ber 01 checks&#13;
yOI write&#13;
Do you sometimes wish the&#13;
Library didn't seem so conIusing?&#13;
Would you like some&#13;
guidance to what's what and&#13;
wbere? Beginning Oct. 30, an 8-&#13;
week course (2 credits) now&#13;
being offered will be offered&#13;
again, if enough people sign up&#13;
for it.&#13;
RESEARCH SOURCES&#13;
(Political Science 205) is required&#13;
for political science majors. But&#13;
it can also be useful to almost&#13;
anyone in the social sciences.&#13;
Meeting time is Tuesday and&#13;
Thursday, 1:30-3:20 p.m., either&#13;
in CL 114or in the Library itself.&#13;
The course ends at the end of the&#13;
semester, on Dec. 13, with the&#13;
final exam (one hour) on that&#13;
day.&#13;
The instructor is Phil Burnett&#13;
professor of Social Sciences wh~&#13;
used to be director of libraries.&#13;
He commented that "We give&#13;
s~ong emphasis to acquiring&#13;
library skills. We also get&#13;
DEADLINE EXTENDED&#13;
TO OCTOBER 12, 1973&#13;
1973-1974&#13;
WPS WISCONSIN PHYSICIANS SERVICE&#13;
AT FIRST MAlIOMAt&#13;
OF RACIME student&#13;
health&#13;
•&#13;
Insurance&#13;
AT FIRST UTIOIAL plan&#13;
OF IACIIE&#13;
.... y •• r Iree cbecki'l&#13;
acc••• t SI•• at&#13;
IF YOU HAVE QUESTIONS OR WANT&#13;
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONTACT:&#13;
HEALTH OFFICE LLC D198&#13;
s&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
aDd Tru8t Compuly of Racine&#13;
send premium and application to&#13;
Wlscomin Physicians service&#13;
I(eonosha District Office&#13;
P.O. 8&lt;1](869&#13;
Kenosha,Wi~ln SJI«l&#13;
Tel:"1"~-577"&#13;
II&#13;
.. _~_-- -'---"-- 5. WiSCIiSil AYe. Racile&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Od. 3, 1973&#13;
UW-P affected&#13;
Sister Colette is a teacher by profession but finds&#13;
that Campus Ministry is "one way of continuing my&#13;
relation with young people in a less structured&#13;
way." . .&#13;
Canteen increases&#13;
The Campus Ministry people will work m conjunction&#13;
with Parkside counselors. They are also&#13;
setting up a Newman Club for Parkside students.&#13;
Sister Colette explained the Newman Club as a way&#13;
to "get young people tog~ther to form a ~hristian&#13;
type of community:· which they ~ope will make&#13;
worship more creative and responsive to the needs&#13;
of young people. It is a way "to bridge what is and&#13;
what could be," she added.&#13;
food prices&#13;
Canteen cannot change food&#13;
JrtCes whenever it wishes to,&#13;
plloto by Mika Swaningson&#13;
ster Colette and Father Wayne of the new Campus&#13;
Ministry.&#13;
"We have no specific programs outlined," said&#13;
Father Wayne, "but want the students to initiate&#13;
programs and rap centers. In sharing ideas we&#13;
build a better community in which to live."&#13;
'iebuhr added. The University&#13;
m t approve price decisions and&#13;
increa are agreed upon \Dlder&#13;
a contract with Canteen. Contract&#13;
terms are maintained&#13;
throughout all price changes.&#13;
com• Regardl oC the amount of the&#13;
increase, the purchaser will&#13;
r he the same quantity and&#13;
quality or a product.&#13;
Campus ministry&#13;
The two have spent the past three weeks getting&#13;
acquainted with administrators, faculty and staff,&#13;
and getting a feel for the workings of the University.&#13;
"I have a deep respect for young people" said&#13;
Father Wayne, "and they have a lot to give. We&#13;
want to help them channel their ideas." Father&#13;
Wayne and Sister Colette are at Parkside to listen,&#13;
to share, to suggest, or to counsel students.&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
• No i1i111a&#13;
balance req1ired&#13;
• No limit to the&#13;
11 ber of checks&#13;
you write&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
ee&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
AT FIRST IA TIOIAL&#13;
Of HCI E&#13;
0,11 y11r free c ecki11&#13;
acce11t s1 at&#13;
First tional Bank&#13;
d Trust&#13;
_&#13;
Company of Racin .............. .._&#13;
-·&#13;
500 Wiscoasi1 Ave. Raciae&#13;
\\'hen comparing Parkside's&#13;
food pri "ith those of other comes to Parkside&#13;
Sister Colette will be available on campus on&#13;
Tuesdays and both Sister Colette and Father Wayne&#13;
will be here on Thursdays from noon until 4 p.m. in&#13;
late campu es, iebuhr U,C D185.&#13;
On Thursday, Oct. 4, a Campus Ministry kickoff ted that the cost of labor&#13;
be considered. Labor i I&#13;
C06tly in northern W1SCOnsin than&#13;
in th southea t area of the late,&#13;
dded. Products from our&#13;
ndmg machin remain equal&#13;
to or lower than tho e at UW1,Jw&#13;
uk . 25 cent oda there&#13;
· 20 c n h re. Entree meal&#13;
uff red a 5 to 10 cent in-&#13;
. P try item in the&#13;
by Debra Frledell&#13;
"We are in the ministry of presence, that of being&#13;
available to students," said Father Wayne&#13;
Wojciedlo,11:ski.&#13;
Father Wayne and Sister Colette Zukowski offer&#13;
another dimension to education at Parkside:&#13;
rap session has been arranged through which&#13;
Father Wayne and Sister Colette are interested in&#13;
meeting Parkside students. This is an opporttmity&#13;
for students to offer suggestions, to talk, or to&#13;
become actively involved in the organization and&#13;
designing of activities for the Newman Club.&#13;
nding ma i hav gone up 5&#13;
becau e r the higher co t&#13;
in produc1 "'heat produ ts.&#13;
Be of " tter deal" with&#13;
Campus , finistry.&#13;
Father Wayne is a priest at St. George Church in&#13;
Kenosha, as well as working with Sister Colette at&#13;
Park ide. Carthage and Gateway in the field of&#13;
Campu , tinistry. "Our concern is not with 'giving&#13;
the word' but rather with people," he said.&#13;
When the Campus Ministry people cannot be&#13;
found on campus, students are invited to stop at the&#13;
Newman Center, located on the corner of Highway&#13;
E and JR, or call Sister Colette (552·8526) or Father&#13;
Wayne (657-3408).&#13;
their upplier, ante n ha&#13;
itched from a half pint or milk&#13;
to a third pint at a co ·t of 20 cents.&#13;
Pl n ha,e been made which&#13;
\\'ill provide vending machines in&#13;
both the omm Art building and&#13;
th Cla room Building. This&#13;
hould ea e the crowded condition&#13;
in the cafeteria area.&#13;
Pa ive acceptance is a more&#13;
desirable response to id€-as than&#13;
active critici m.&#13;
Library course offered&#13;
from Teaching a a ubversive&#13;
ctivit&#13;
Do you sometimes wish the ·&#13;
Library dido 't seem so confusing?&#13;
Would you like some&#13;
guidance to what's what and&#13;
where? Beginning Oct. 30, an 8-&#13;
week course (2 credits) now&#13;
DEADLINE EXTENDED&#13;
TO OCTOBER 12, 1973&#13;
1973-1974&#13;
WlfPS&#13;
•&#13;
WISCO SIN PHYSICIANS SERVICE&#13;
student&#13;
health&#13;
insurance&#13;
plan&#13;
IF YOU HAVE QUESTIONS OR WANT&#13;
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONTACT:&#13;
HEALTH OFFICE LLC D198&#13;
Send premium and a..ppHcation to&#13;
W'sconsin Physicians Sttvico,&#13;
Kmosha Oistrlcl Offico,&#13;
P 0 . Box869&#13;
K"'10Sha, Wiscons,n 531AO&#13;
Tel 414-654 5774&#13;
being offered will be offered&#13;
again, if enough people sign up&#13;
for it.&#13;
RESEARCH SOURCES&#13;
(Political Science 205) is required&#13;
for political science majors. But&#13;
it can also be useful to almost&#13;
anyone in the social sciences.&#13;
Meeting time is Tuesday and&#13;
'.Thursday, 1:30-3:20 p.m ., either&#13;
m CL 114 or in the Library itself.&#13;
The course ends at the end of the&#13;
semester, on Dec. 13, with the&#13;
final exam (one hour) on that&#13;
day.&#13;
The instructor is Phil Burnett&#13;
professor of Social Sciences wh~&#13;
used to be director of libr~ries.&#13;
He commented that "We give&#13;
s_trong emphasis to acquiring&#13;
hbrary skills. we also get&#13;
MR \,Jlll/AMSOpt&#13;
acquainted with a number of&#13;
basic reference books in political&#13;
science. Many of these are also&#13;
useful to other social science&#13;
disciplines. There is no reading to&#13;
speak of; we work problems out&#13;
by trial and error. Hand-in&#13;
exercises constitute the main&#13;
work. This includes having the&#13;
students themselves make up&#13;
questions in order to perplex&#13;
those who come after them."&#13;
Burnett added: "This course is&#13;
taught in strong collaboration&#13;
with the Library staff. It supplements&#13;
the excellent instrtJction&#13;
that goes on all the time&#13;
within the Library: Anyone who&#13;
completes the course will know&#13;
things about library use that&#13;
many, many faculty members&#13;
have never found out."&#13;
Political Science 205 may be&#13;
added to your schedule until the&#13;
opening day of the course (Oct.&#13;
30). . &#13;
by Rodney ,Schroeter .&#13;
synopsis: Havmg stopped Big&#13;
X from bombing a part of the&#13;
United Nations, Jones and the&#13;
Psychic return to the underwater&#13;
complexwhere the Psychic first&#13;
awakened. There, the Psychic&#13;
finds a great number of&#13;
lIIiIluscripts, books and reports.&#13;
The storY continues.&#13;
Chapter Four&#13;
Jones had found nineteen men,&#13;
aD buSY maintaining computers&#13;
er other machinery. He led this&#13;
group to Big X's office, where the&#13;
PsychiC sat studying a pile of&#13;
loiders. .&#13;
The Psychic saw the gathering&#13;
tbroIIgh the hole in the door. He&#13;
.... and stepped through, looking&#13;
1be nineteen over intently.&#13;
1000 any of you know where the&#13;
computer room is?" he asked.&#13;
"Sure," said one. "Most of us&#13;
work down there."&#13;
Thegroup went along a curved&#13;
hall and then down a spiral&#13;
staircase.&#13;
The computer room was large&#13;
and circular. Immense cubes and&#13;
rectangular prisms with tapes&#13;
spinningor crawling within their&#13;
•windowsstood against every part&#13;
01 the rounded wall.' Control&#13;
consoles clustered toward the&#13;
center. Shelves and liling&#13;
cabinetslilled with tapes stood in&#13;
several places.&#13;
The Psychic spent five minutes&#13;
d1eckingthe files. When he found&#13;
me that was locked, he squinted&#13;
his eyes and wrinkled his&#13;
forehead. The little knob beside&#13;
the handle shot off like a bullet&#13;
but hit no one. '&#13;
The Psychic reached inside and&#13;
found twenty computer tapes.&#13;
Each had a name printed on the&#13;
SIde. One name was "Jones."&#13;
"Jones is here. Is there&#13;
someone named Blythe here?"&#13;
'·Yeah."&#13;
"Someone by the name of&#13;
Greunke?"&#13;
"Yep."&#13;
"Grimmins? Satchel? Condie?&#13;
Reuff?'t&#13;
Four affirmative answers.&#13;
"How about Schoettes? Carls?&#13;
Franklin? Besetti? ..&#13;
"No one named Franklin that&#13;
we know of."&#13;
"No Franklin. Hmm. All right.&#13;
Delorme? Watten? Alden?&#13;
Lowell?"&#13;
"Ya. Uh-huh. Right. Here OK."&#13;
"Hohnson? Sacker? Gillis?&#13;
Gorman? Davis?"&#13;
Five affirmative answers.&#13;
"Gentlemen." The Psychic put&#13;
the computer tapes back in the&#13;
drawer. "I have bad news." He&#13;
stared at the floor for a long&#13;
moment and looked up, "You all&#13;
believe-c-or have believed up to&#13;
this point-that you work for the&#13;
Canadian government. This is&#13;
false. You also know something&#13;
of your private lives. At least you&#13;
think you do. It is not an easy&#13;
thing to tell you this; some of you&#13;
will take it badly. Yet teU you I&#13;
must.&#13;
TO BE CONTINUED ....&#13;
FREE DELIVER Y !'t'J.&#13;
1~&lt;, ~&#13;
Member Parkside 200 ?j'J~!1 ~nlt&#13;
National Va"lty Club f1.JV OOif7-&#13;
•&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
The GOLDEN&#13;
HANGER, the&#13;
tashion store tor&#13;
young men is proud to&#13;
announce the addition&#13;
ot&#13;
..TOGETHER" .... A&#13;
JUNIOR SHOP FOR&#13;
GALS.&#13;
• DRESSES&#13;
• LONG&#13;
DRESSES&#13;
• PANTS&#13;
• SWEATERS&#13;
• BLOUSES&#13;
• TOPS&#13;
AND MUCH MORE.&#13;
3086th St.&#13;
632-1138&#13;
.. ~&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Brief news&#13;
.Aproposaf is being considered by the University's&#13;
director of business aflairs Erwin ZUehlke to&#13;
eliminate the weekend shutUe bus service. The&#13;
money saved would be used to provide a third&#13;
shuttle bus during the week, when peak hours find&#13;
many students unable to board a crowded bus and&#13;
get up the hill in time lor their classes.&#13;
ZUehlke justifies the removal of weekend service&#13;
by pointing out that the parking lot across from the&#13;
Classroom Building is available for anyooe to park&#13;
in on Saturdays, Sundays and bolidays. A prublem&#13;
could develop with weekend athletic events lbough,&#13;
he says.&#13;
Since the buses are fmanced with mooey from&#13;
parIting permits, ZUehlke would lilte some Input&#13;
from faculty, staff, and especially students ill this&#13;
matter. Persons with an opinion one way or the&#13;
other are invited to call the Business Office (553-&#13;
)2201, and register their feelings.&#13;
JIAn&#13;
Adult Service Une has been established by the&#13;
Adult Student Program to answer questions of an&#13;
academic or personal nature for evening aod adult&#13;
students. People will he available in Tallent 202,&#13;
telephone 553-2225, 00 Monday and Thursday&#13;
evenings from S:30 to 8:30 p.m.&#13;
*&#13;
There will he a meeting 01 the Parkside Young&#13;
Republicans Wednesday, Oct. 3 from 3:3().5 p.m. in&#13;
0-174 LLC. Leadership Training School, constitutional&#13;
revisions and activities for the year will&#13;
be discussed. Bring ideas!&#13;
*&#13;
Debators! A debate and forensics team is now&#13;
being lormed. If you are interested in joining or&#13;
want more information, see the reference folder in&#13;
the library or call Dick Jones, 8'18-1310 or Maril~ll&#13;
Schubert, 6S8-89S4.&#13;
Now Appearing&#13;
9P.M.toIA.~I.&#13;
THURSDAY -FRIDAY -SATURDAY&#13;
In the&#13;
An exhibition and sale of original graphIc art by&#13;
contemporary and old master artists will be held&#13;
lrom 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Friday, Oct 5, in the&#13;
Library-Learning Center Main Place.&#13;
Co-sponsored by the Parltside Acuvities Board&#13;
and the Racine Art Associatioo, the exhIbotioo will&#13;
include more than 1,000 angInal etchinp.&#13;
lithographs and woodcuts by such artists u&#13;
Picasso, Olagall, MIlO, Dali, Gaya, Renoir.&#13;
Kollwitz and a number of contemporary Amenc:an,&#13;
European and Japanese printm&amp;kera.&#13;
A representative of Ferdinand Roten G&amp;IIerieI 01&#13;
Baltimore, ",ilich llJTanged the abcl.w, wiD be&#13;
present to aDs....er questions OIl grapblc art and&#13;
printmaking.&#13;
Prices 01 work iDcluded ill the exhibiliolllt.n at&#13;
$5 ..ith the majority priced under '100.&#13;
*&#13;
There wiD be an orpaiutionaJ -.. 01 lbe&#13;
Camera Oub on TbundaY. Oct- 4. All iII-.ed&#13;
persons .... encouraged to meet ill tile CaIeuria&#13;
area at 7 p.m.&#13;
*&#13;
Whiteskel1ar CoIJ~ will have audi_ for&#13;
new performers OIlWeck&gt;eoday, Oct. 10 III I p.m. All&#13;
inIerested performers sbouId sign ... III lbe&#13;
Parltside Activities Board Room LLC D1I5. 1be&#13;
auditions will he open to the P'blic.&#13;
It&#13;
In the illterests of getting moreSIUdeDIa for the&#13;
lm-74 Parltside yearbook, organiUtlona1 aWf&#13;
members Jay Salvo, Ken Kookol and BruceW_ ask lor interested students to come to the next&#13;
meetings 01 the yearbook.&#13;
These meetings will be held 10 LLC 0174 00&#13;
Thursday and Friday of next week. Signs ",iU be&#13;
posted advertising the lIme of these meetings.&#13;
COLLEGE. lTE&#13;
Every~y&#13;
Pitcher of&#13;
Beer $1. 00&#13;
oIK...-..&#13;
Sl2:56tt1Ave&#13;
~lf'g the Hal'1:l«l&#13;
MARINA ROOM&#13;
"KIl'nOSha's New Harbor N,t.Club'&#13;
"Five Way Street"&#13;
NIGHTLY ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
In Our Cocktail Lounge&#13;
FHturing&#13;
MIKE scon&#13;
~&#13;
- '- -CD ..CIt 0&#13;
.. CD&#13;
me ~&#13;
rn Q CD&#13;
:::s :lID&#13;
Q.&#13;
-&#13;
--------&#13;
New Books tor Football&#13;
and other sports addicts&#13;
are Now at Martha&#13;
Merrills stop in and&#13;
browse in our long&#13;
Sports Section.&#13;
NEW&#13;
Vince LlIIUdi 00 Foo1IIall.............. 5l9.!15&#13;
By Ray Nitschke&#13;
IeaII III s..tay. .......................... SJ.Ii&#13;
National Football Lottery SJ.SI&#13;
By Larry Merchant&#13;
by Howard Cosell&#13;
~I ~J15&#13;
Pro Football Digest ~.!15&#13;
(}JIi1tIItJ(}JIJ's /3~&#13;
~ ~&#13;
614- 59U,St; 312- E,- ~T, _&#13;
658-3bf;~ 63'2-.&gt;195 __&#13;
------&#13;
---&#13;
---------&#13;
~&#13;
--CIt CD ..&#13;
~ CD&#13;
ale&#13;
Q CD&#13;
:::s&#13;
Q.&#13;
by Rodney _Schroeter .&#13;
Synopsis: Having stopped Big&#13;
from bombing a part of the&#13;
nited Nations, Jones and the&#13;
ychic return to the underwater&#13;
complex where the Psychic first&#13;
awakened. There, the Psychic&#13;
finds a great number of&#13;
manuscripts, books and reports.&#13;
e story continues.&#13;
Chapter Four&#13;
Jones had found nineteen men,&#13;
all busy maintaining compute~s&#13;
ar other machinery. He led this&#13;
group to Big X's off~ce, whe~e the&#13;
Psychic sat studymg a pile of&#13;
folders.&#13;
nie Psychic saw the gathering&#13;
through the hole in the door. He&#13;
rose and stepped through, looking&#13;
e nineteen over intently.&#13;
"Do any of you know where the&#13;
computer room is?" he asked.&#13;
''Sure," said one. "Most of us&#13;
work down there."&#13;
The group went along a curved&#13;
hall and then down a spiral&#13;
taircase.&#13;
The computer room was large&#13;
and circular. Immense cubes and&#13;
rectangular prisms with tapes&#13;
pinning or crawling within their&#13;
windows stood against every part&#13;
of the rounded wall. Control&#13;
con oles clustered toward the&#13;
center. Shelves and filing&#13;
cabinets filled with tapes stood in&#13;
several places.&#13;
The Psychic spent five minutes&#13;
checking the files. When he found&#13;
one that was locked, he squinted&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
his eyes and wrinkled his&#13;
forehead. The little knob beside&#13;
the handle shot off like a bullet&#13;
but hit no one. '&#13;
The Psychic reached inside and&#13;
found twenty computer tapes.&#13;
~ach had a name printed on the&#13;
side. One name was "Jones."&#13;
"Jones is here. Is there&#13;
someone named Blythe here?"&#13;
"Yeah."&#13;
"Someone by the name of&#13;
Greunke?"&#13;
"Yep."&#13;
"Grimmins? Satchel? Condie?&#13;
Reuff?"&#13;
Four affirmative answers.&#13;
"How about Schoettes? Carls?&#13;
Franklin? Besetti?"&#13;
"No one named Franklin that we know of."&#13;
"No Franklin. Hmm. All right.&#13;
Delorme? Watten? Alden?&#13;
Lowell?"&#13;
"Ya. Uh-huh. Right. Here OK."&#13;
"Hohnson? Sacker? Gillis?&#13;
Gorman? Davis?"&#13;
Five affirmative answers.&#13;
"Gentlemen." The Psychic put&#13;
the computer tapes back in the&#13;
drawer. "I have bad news." He&#13;
stared at the floor for a long&#13;
moment and looked up. "You all&#13;
believe-or have believed up to&#13;
this point--that you work for the&#13;
Canadian government. This is&#13;
false. You also know something&#13;
of your private lives. At least you&#13;
think you do. It is not an easy&#13;
thing to tell you this; some of you&#13;
will take it badly. Yet tell you I&#13;
must.&#13;
TO BE CONTINUED ....&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
~&#13;
WE'VE HAO AN ADDITION&#13;
The GOLDEN&#13;
HANGER , the&#13;
fashion store for&#13;
young men is proud to&#13;
announce the addition&#13;
of&#13;
"TOGETHER" .... A&#13;
JUNIOR SHOP FOR&#13;
GALS.&#13;
• DRESSES&#13;
• LONG&#13;
DRESSES&#13;
• PANTS&#13;
• SWEATERS&#13;
• BLOUSES&#13;
• TOPS&#13;
ANO MUCH MORE.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Brief news . A proposal is being con idered by the nh: ity'&#13;
director of business affairs, Erwin ZUehlke, to&#13;
eliminate the weekend shuttle bus service. The&#13;
money saved would be used to provide a third&#13;
shuttle bus during the week, when peak hours find&#13;
many students unable to board a cro ·ded bus and&#13;
get up the hill in time for their classes.&#13;
Zuehlke justifies the removal of ·eeJtend rvice&#13;
by pointing out that the parking lot ac - from the&#13;
~assroom Building is available for anyooe to park&#13;
m on Saturdays, Sunday and holiday . A problem&#13;
could develop with weekend athletic events though,&#13;
he says.&#13;
Since the buses are financed with money from&#13;
parking permits, Zuehlke would like some input&#13;
from faculty, taff, and especially students in this&#13;
matter. Persons with an opinion ooe way or the&#13;
other are invited to call the Business Office (553-&#13;
)2201, and register their feelings.&#13;
•&#13;
*&#13;
Whitest r Coff'ed:aow.e&#13;
new performer on Wear:1esc1a&#13;
interested perf onn should An Adult Service line ha been established by the&#13;
Adult Student Program to answer qu tions of an&#13;
academic or personal nature for evening and adult&#13;
students. People will be available in Tallent 202,&#13;
tele(tlone 553-2225, on onday and Thursday&#13;
evenings from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m.&#13;
Park ide Activiti Board Room LLC D1&#13;
audition will be open to p lie.&#13;
In the int&#13;
*&#13;
There v.ill be a meeting of the Park i Young&#13;
Republicans Wednesday, Oct. 3 from 3:30-5 p.m. in&#13;
D-174 LLC. Leadership Training School, constitutional&#13;
revisions and acthitie for the ye.ar v.ill&#13;
be discussed. Bring ideas!&#13;
* Debators! A debate and forensics team i now&#13;
being formed . ff you are interested in joining or&#13;
want more information, see the reference folder in&#13;
the library or call Dick Jones, 878-1310 or aril:,.n&#13;
Schubert. 658-3954.&#13;
, 'o"' Appearing&#13;
9P. I. to l A.M.&#13;
COLLEGE. TrE&#13;
Ey,eryTbunda&#13;
THURSDAY - FRIDAY - TIJRDA Y Pitcher of&#13;
MARI. Beer $1. 00 'A ROOM&#13;
"Five Way Street"&#13;
'IGHTLY E. 'TERTAI. •• IE. "T&#13;
In Our Cockte,I Lounge&#13;
Feetur·ng&#13;
MIKE SCOTT&#13;
--------&#13;
~ -&#13;
New Books for Football&#13;
and other sports addicts&#13;
are Now at Martha&#13;
Merrills stop in and&#13;
browse In our long&#13;
Sports Section.&#13;
NEW&#13;
Vince L bllli on Football.............. s1s.95&#13;
Mean on Sunday .••.•...................... SJ .95&#13;
By Ray Nitschke&#13;
National Football Lottery ................• SJ .ii&#13;
By Larry Merchant&#13;
Cossel ····································· SS.95&#13;
by Howard Cosell&#13;
Pro Football Digest •..•....••••..•••....•. SS.95&#13;
&lt;HI~ &lt;HIJ's /3~&#13;
Gt4-59~-9:&#13;
~&#13;
6S8-3bf;2-&#13;
f{adnl,&#13;
.312-6~~1'. -&#13;
632.-5195' -·&#13;
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, THE PARKSIDE Rio GER w.dMsd.y. Oct. 3. 1973&#13;
Bookstore ••• Painter police&#13;
patrol Parkside Village&#13;
Steak dinners $1.69 to $3.69&#13;
coot1nur:d 'tolD pag 1&#13;
ucImt purdla 01 non-t lbook Ilems Beer mugs and ParUide TolIirt&#13;
..1IUId rail under th category. but more ..;deIy purct&gt;ased&#13;
IlftllS would paper. noteboo •and wrillJlg supplies. Concenunll the&#13;
~ lboo Wood ales an elUlmple' "Lel·. take a $15 Physics book. 11&#13;
III 111110be IIIed on campus 11·... uth 17.50 11it's nol going to be&#13;
IIIed .1 h nyv.'beft from no value up 10$3 or $3.50 "&#13;
ed hether the as maltmg a profil. Wood stated thaI&#13;
I not 'olin« t'QODt)':' Upon interviewing a Follette regional&#13;
maDal~'r on Clll go. lhe manager stated that the bookstore was&#13;
operatlD&amp; ,ery profItably and effic.ently.&#13;
~ oU t Coflloral'on 'lJell pnmariJ)' a book dlStributorretail&#13;
• nucldl man IaI'1l" publishing concerns. and the&#13;
Park de Folletle p..-;:hases lhe books which a re, in turn.&#13;
purdlaSed by Par de udents ....'hen the student seI\S the book back&#13;
to Ib boobl&lt;n. the book may be lIOIdand relIOIdso long as it is in&#13;
demand F l\ IInan lOIIle 40 booksto res 00 college campuses&#13;
ch Indude Jolw&gt; H lflI mventlY and the niverslty 01 Coocut&#13;
In bon to .......ilinll. the FoUel\e Coflloration also&#13;
merchand mugs. bumper tickers. etc .... -hich .....&#13;
d.... tI boo and other products geared for the&#13;
mark t. Foll 1\ also publishes textbooks ..-hich are used at all&#13;
01eOIC lion from men"'ry school through high school, with&#13;
th ID I 01 me trade nd technical schools, stoppu&gt;g jusl short&#13;
01 pub! at the coI\eg I 'e\&#13;
T mum to the unmed,ale problem for .tudents. it is now the fifth&#13;
01 c • many tudent. will be ..TillJlg SIX-weeksexams next&#13;
• m InstrUctors are al the poIOl.. he.... they a.... rewriling their&#13;
CllIJ .... sfor th ler, oil use there a"" still a lO1IIlber 01books&#13;
h v not &lt;orne '" yet M""I tudents and faotlty members have&#13;
Ollllft_d&#13;
I I concern over thlll Sltuation. yet AssistAnt Dean&#13;
til to y to th reporters thai ". am not awa .... of any&#13;
Half-Price&#13;
Miled Drinks&#13;
6 P.M. - MIDNIGHT&#13;
THURSDAV NICHTS WITH P.U. 1.0.&#13;
10t Beers&#13;
SORIRZI&#13;
SlIU.OIRPlT~&#13;
3315 52nd ST' Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
by carrie Ward&#13;
There is a man who walks alone at night through&#13;
Parkside Village. He carries a badge, a walkie--&#13;
talkie, and a club. He is a security guard who, until&#13;
recently, was one of Village superintendent Art&#13;
Gaulthier's "helpers." These were the same&#13;
helpers wbo, a few weeks ago, were painting&#13;
apartments. This reporter interviewed Gaullbier,&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger, AssislJlnt Dean of Students, and&#13;
students living at Parkside Village, and found a&#13;
great discrepancy of opinions between Gaulthier&#13;
and the students and the school.&#13;
ECHELBARGER: Fintof aU, I think they sbould&#13;
be called security personnel. My concern is Ibat the&#13;
appropriale&#13;
personnel should be cbosen for tbe job.&#13;
By appropriate I mean persons that can communicate&#13;
with students in such a way as to solve the&#13;
problems of disturbing neigbbors with late nigbt&#13;
parties. We'd like to build up respect belween&#13;
residents. The types that might be good for the job&#13;
are veterans and adult students; not leaving out&#13;
YOlDlg students, but this is a group that has obviously&#13;
had dealings with other people and could sit&#13;
down and talk with them. Student guards sbould be&#13;
trained in communication and getting respect from&#13;
othel' students as a security personnel.&#13;
photo by Ron An\rim&#13;
Kevin Allegar, with night stick and walkie-talkie,&#13;
patrols Parkside Village.&#13;
In .a recent interview with Gaulthier about&#13;
secur~ty guard~, he told this reporter that "The&#13;
secunty force IS going to be on every evening&#13;
They'll be getting $2.50 an bour. Eacb guard do~&#13;
not work on his own. He gets his information&#13;
through the walkie-talkies from me-what the next&#13;
step IS that we're going to take. I make the&#13;
decisions, nol the patrol. All they do is patrol and&#13;
see that this place is run in a half·way decent&#13;
m~er. We cannot go on the way we have been&#13;
goJ.Dg.',&#13;
Gaul~ier, commenting on guards' duties said, "A&#13;
guard is one that sees that nothing is going wrong&#13;
around the buildings, takes care of the parking&#13;
Phone 652-8662&#13;
areas, and if there is trouble in the apartm&#13;
notifies the office of what's going on. He show:'t. be&#13;
reporter a cap, badge, patches that said" thts&#13;
guard" on them. He said, "I had "special~lJ&#13;
badges, Ihad to take them back." There also1'01ict"&#13;
long club, Concerning the club, he said "H .... •&#13;
wearing this c1';1bout .in the open wher~ it e'U be&#13;
seen, the only time this club is used is if 00&lt;aIJ bt&#13;
tacked by one or more students," Ill!.&#13;
When questioned as to whether or not the&#13;
guards had to pass some sort of a civil serv~&#13;
or be otherwise qualified, Gaulthier sai d Ice tea&#13;
security guard that was with him added t;";-&gt;' '1llt&#13;
as they did not have a police record any ..&#13;
be a security guard. Later, checking'with °a&#13;
ne&#13;
.....&#13;
security guard company and an ex·FBI a pn,..&#13;
was found to be true. Gaulthier said hediler4&#13;
, thio&#13;
experienced or Irained security guards '::"&#13;
"They (his helpers) know the area and th ..&#13;
what they have to do. You put a stranger OUl~-&#13;
a guard and you'll find him out sleeping' •&#13;
because he wouldn't be out walking this boaIn,~ ..&#13;
reporter asked him about a comment .\;. 1lIiI&#13;
rece~ved from a helper, saying he didn't care -.&#13;
he did as long as Gaulthier paid him. The ......&#13;
guard then said, "You do what you are toldBealrMr&#13;
like this, you don't care either way. YOIllist:&#13;
Il&#13;
!l'&#13;
boss." Gaulthier said, "If I'm right or if l' to ...&#13;
r,ou do it. I am the boss." He also commen~'""""&#13;
If the students thmk they are going to run the ~&#13;
themselves, they are wrong because they .;;-&#13;
gomg to, and the qUicker they get it intoth . ...:&#13;
th~t they are not going to, that's when :'re II&#13;
g?lI1g to be one big happy family."&#13;
The students, for the most part had a I« 10&#13;
about it. This reporter asked th";' if they IIf&#13;
the securIty guard was doing fine as he .. u..::t&#13;
sbould have some training, if th~ ~&#13;
so&#13;
·th tr . . -, ~ II&#13;
meone WI ammg or experience or if ..&#13;
students themselves should pick a pe~ to b..&#13;
SecU~lty guard. Here are some of the .....&#13;
receIved:&#13;
"We should pick our own cop. I think it'ss bi&amp;.&#13;
trIP, so he ,can be the head of Parkside Vou..&#13;
Every man s dream IS to have his little robot_&#13;
controlled by .walki17talkies."&#13;
"11 problems occurred like last year,they'"&#13;
gel someone who knows what they are doiDI. --&#13;
th,s year there doesn't seem to be that mucb......&#13;
on." ~&#13;
"I think that everyone should be able to pick.&#13;
own. Ihope Idon't run into him this weekend."&#13;
"My fiance is a security guard. He hII •&#13;
training. I don't see what good he'd do if SOIll'MI&#13;
happened. I think he should have some trsinullll&#13;
be effective."&#13;
"A professional you could depend on."&#13;
".&amp;l far he seems to be doing a fine job, butsliIdI&#13;
trammg wouldn't hurt:'&#13;
"I think it depends on the budget. Uwecan ~&#13;
one, definitely we should have a trained one."&#13;
"I think he shouldn't have training, and&#13;
shouldn't carry a club. I don't think he needss&#13;
what's he going to do, rap someone onthehead&#13;
makes a lot of noise?"&#13;
6&#13;
15 52nd&#13;
•&#13;
alnter police&#13;
patrol Parkside VIiiage&#13;
DOUAR&#13;
ZALOON&#13;
1 Street&#13;
RACI E&#13;
. .&#13;
P.U. I.D.&#13;
by Carrie Ward&#13;
1bett is a man who walks alone at night through&#13;
Parkside Village. He carries a badge, a walkietalkie,&#13;
and a club. He is a security guard who, until&#13;
recently, was one of Village Superintendent Art&#13;
Gaulthier's "helpers." These were the same&#13;
helpers who, a few weeks ago, were painting&#13;
apartments. This reporter interviewed Gaulthier,&#13;
Jewel Echelberger, Assistant Dean of Students, and&#13;
students living at Parkside Village, and fotmd a&#13;
great discrepancy of opinions between Gaulthier&#13;
and the students and the school.&#13;
ECHELBARGER: First of all, I think they should&#13;
be called security personnel. My concern is that the&#13;
appropriate personnel should be chosen for the job.&#13;
By appropriate I mean persons that can communicate&#13;
with students in such a way as to solve the&#13;
problems of disturbing neighbors with late night&#13;
parties. We'd like to build up respect between&#13;
residents. The types that might be good for the job&#13;
are veterans and adult students; not leaving out&#13;
yoi.mg students, but this is a group that has obviously&#13;
had dealings with other people and could sit&#13;
down and talk with them. Student guards should be&#13;
trained in communication and getting respect from&#13;
other students as a security personnel.&#13;
Kevin AUegar, with night stick and walkie-talkie,&#13;
patrols Parkside Village.&#13;
In _a recent interview with Gaulthier about&#13;
secu1'.tY guard~, he told this reporter that "The&#13;
security force IS going to be on every evening&#13;
They·n be getting $2.50 an hour. Each guard do~&#13;
not work on his own. He gets his information&#13;
through the walkie-talkies from me-what the next&#13;
step is that we're going to take. I make the&#13;
decisions, n?l the pa~ol. All they do is patrol and&#13;
see that this place 1s run in a half-way decent&#13;
m~er. We cannot go on the way we have been&#13;
gomg."&#13;
Gaul~ier, commenting on guards' duties said, "A&#13;
guard 1s one that sees that nothing is going wrong&#13;
around the buildings, takes care of the parking&#13;
Steak dinners s1. &amp;9 to s3_69&#13;
ba, isconsin Phone 652-8662&#13;
areas, and if there is trouble in the apann.-.&#13;
notifies the office of what's going on. He sii;;;, lie&#13;
reporter a cap, badge, patches that said " lti.&#13;
gqard" on them. He said, "I had "speciaj ~ badges, I had to take them back.'' There ._, 'Pdlt::,,fa&#13;
long club. Concerning the club, he said, "He;'•&#13;
wearing this club out in the open where it&#13;
seen, the only time this club is used is if hit~&#13;
tacked by one or more students." 11&#13;
When questioned as to whether or not the&#13;
guards had to pass some sort of a civil servi&#13;
or be otherwise qualified, Gaulthier said ce&#13;
security guard that was with him added that'lO.&#13;
as they did not have a police record anyorre a,&#13;
be a ~urity guard. Later, checking1&#13;
With 8 CDllt&#13;
security guard company and an ex-FBI •Keltllhala&#13;
was fotmd to be true. Gaulthier said he did '&#13;
experienced or trained security guards not&#13;
"They (his helpers) know the area and they&#13;
what they have to do. You put a stranger out bert&#13;
a guard and you'll find him out sleeping ·&#13;
because he wouldn't be out walking this bee~•~&#13;
reporter asked him about a comment lbe&#13;
received from a helper, saying he didn't cut&#13;
he did as long as Gaulthier paid him. 1be&#13;
)&#13;
guikarthid _then said· d, : 'You d~ what you are told-OD""a __ _. e ,, s, you _on t c:aree1ther way. You listen to&#13;
boss. ~aulth1er said, "H I'm right or if I'm&#13;
you do 1t. I am the boss." He also commented&#13;
"H the students think they are going to run lbe&#13;
themselves, they are wrong because they&#13;
going to, and the quicker they get it into ttwir •&#13;
that they are not going to, that's when "''II&#13;
going to be one big happy family."&#13;
The students, for the most part had 8 lot It&#13;
about it. !his reporter asked th~ if they&#13;
the secunty guard was doing fme as he WII, I&#13;
should have some training, if they lbould&#13;
someone with training or experience, or If&#13;
stude!lts themselves should pick a pel'ICJII llt&#13;
security guard. Here are some of the&#13;
received:&#13;
_"We should pick our own cop. I think it'aa 1111&#13;
trip, so he can be the head of Parkside&#13;
Every man's dream is to have his little robat&#13;
controlled by walki&amp;-talkies."&#13;
"H problems occurred like last year, tbeJ&#13;
get someone who knows what they are dailt,&#13;
this year there doesn't seem to be that mucb&#13;
on."&#13;
"I think that everyone should be able to pictown.&#13;
I hope I don't run into him this weekend."&#13;
"My fiance is a security guard. He 1111&#13;
training. I don't see what good he'd do if&#13;
happened. I think he should have some tralaill&#13;
be effective."&#13;
"A professional you could depend on."&#13;
".~ far he seems to be doing a fine job, but a&#13;
trammg wouldn't hurt."&#13;
"I think it depends on the budget. If we cu&#13;
one, definitely we should have a trained ooe.&#13;
"I think he shouldn't have training, ud&#13;
shouldn't carry a club. I don't think heneedu&#13;
what's he going to do, rap someone on the bead&#13;
makes a lot of noise?" &#13;
WEAC organizes&#13;
for faculty&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
'l1le Wisconsin Education Association Council&#13;
(WEAC) is sending professional represenlatives to&#13;
trI campus in the UW system m a three-month&#13;
~tW'ation effort" to organize a union for college&#13;
eduCators.&#13;
John B. Mack, a professional consullantto higher&#13;
education employed by the WEA Council, was at&#13;
Parkside last week. His purpose in being here was&#13;
to meet with individual professors in what he called&#13;
"eyeball-tcH!Yeball"contact, to find out how each&#13;
individualfeels about a teachers' union and to inrorm&#13;
him or her about the WEA. He also hoped to&#13;
inCreasethe size of the orgarnzmg committee that&#13;
noWexists on campus. But Mack's main concern&#13;
was to initiate a movement toward a merger of the&#13;
WEAand TAUWF. The Association of University of&#13;
WisconoinFaculty (TAUWFl represents about 3,000&#13;
collegeeducators in the UW system and has a small&#13;
group at Parkside headed by Dr. William Morrow.&#13;
('l1lelocal TAUWF chapter has not yet discussed or&#13;
taken a formal position on the merger issue.)&#13;
Accordingto Mack, TAUWF doesn't have the kind&#13;
of political machinery t funding or representation&#13;
thatit takes to be a viable bargaining force. "What&#13;
we are saying is that since 1855, the WEA has&#13;
operatedin this slate, building itself into a 45,000-&#13;
member, two-million-dollar operation. We have&#13;
JWOtectedand served the rights and just causes of&#13;
elementary, high school, and vocational-technical&#13;
educators. We have also secured a collective&#13;
bargaining law in the slate of Wisconsin for&#13;
edocators who are not in the realm of higher&#13;
education. Your college professors do not have a&#13;
collectivebargaining law or bill to protect them."&#13;
According to Mack, the passage of a collective&#13;
bargaininglaw for college educators in Wisconsin is&#13;
a major concern of the WEA. "We have a bill&#13;
II"POsedwhich has been refined and worked out,&#13;
and we are ready to promote this cause. But the&#13;
CIlIyway the WEA can promote it is to have a&#13;
Jlzableworking force to represent. Politicians like&#13;
to know who you represent in order to give you an&#13;
interest. "&#13;
The Wisconsin Education Association is a branch&#13;
m the National Education Association. Both&#13;
organizations have become concerned with the&#13;
relative powerlessness of college professors,&#13;
llIpCCiallyin the light of budget decreases and&#13;
termination increases in universities all over the&#13;
llllUIItry.Mack expanded on the goals and&#13;
motivationsof both the WEA and NEA. "We have as&#13;
a loal for this year, to politicize teachers as well as&#13;
educators at the college level for the new&#13;
mational environment that we are in. Because&#13;
there is not a sufficient number of unions at the&#13;
• union&#13;
higher education level, college educators seem to be&#13;
the whipping boys of the present administration.&#13;
Thl~ IS because of past events in the Nixon Ad-&#13;
~lmstratlon: black militants on campus demanding&#13;
black studies departments, young radicals&#13;
refusing to go to th.eVietnamese War. burning draft&#13;
cards and dropping human blood into the administration&#13;
files--eampus unrest. It would seem&#13;
that somebody looked out over the vast area called&#13;
Economic SUpport for Education and decided to do&#13;
a sabotage job in education. And it is faculty that is&#13;
called upon to make the sacrifices which will allow&#13;
the university to exist and to survive during times of&#13;
stress and economic tension."&#13;
"There is some uncertainty on the part of&#13;
professors as to why they should become part of&#13;
WEA, but those professors who are fired fmd out too&#13;
late that they should have."&#13;
Mack listed some of the resources that a Parkside&#13;
branch of the WEA could draw 00 for support:&#13;
lawyers , contract negotiators, professional&#13;
organizers, specialists, political lobbyists, special&#13;
consultants, and a two-million-dollar organization&#13;
with a membership of 45,000 in Wisconsin alone.&#13;
"They would be gaining a national, state, and local&#13;
hookup which would give them an appeal level for&#13;
financing at all levels of government."&#13;
"WEA has the machinery, a political arm-we've&#13;
been dealing in the political arena for a longer time&#13;
than any other group around. We could muster up&#13;
all of this machinery, from specialists to contract&#13;
negotiators to lawyers, to come in and assist in&#13;
salvaging jobs and give professional recognition&#13;
and protection for the good of education."&#13;
Mack urged that students become involved in the&#13;
movement to organize a union for college&#13;
professors. He cited a recent case at UW-Qshkosb&#13;
where a coalition of students was effective in&#13;
reducing the number of faculty terminations "from&#13;
something like 137people to be fired to now about 14&#13;
people to be fired."&#13;
"Your professors are in trouble." concluded&#13;
Mack, Hand your education is in trouble. You are no&#13;
more secure than they are. Administrators ought to&#13;
take note: they are no more secure than the&#13;
students. And if American education at its highest&#13;
level is in jeopardy, then America itself is in&#13;
trouble."&#13;
John Mack can be reached by calling this toll-free&#13;
number: 800-362-8034.WEA Council offices are&#13;
located at 222 West Washington, Madison, 53703_&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.O.I.C.&#13;
Wednesday, OCt. 3, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
WedDesday, OClober 3: Whiteskellar presents Dave Rogers at 1:30&#13;
p.m. No admission charged&#13;
Thursd.y. Oct. 4: Students are welcome to meet Father Wayne and&#13;
isterColelle in LLC Ot85 from noon until 4 p.m.&#13;
Friday, OCL5: PAB movie "TheCandidale" -8 p.m. m SAD.&#13;
Soturd.y, OCL .: PAB outing • Sparta Trail Bite Hike. M&lt;ft Information&#13;
may be obtained at student \ifeoffice, LLC Otfl.&#13;
Sunday. oes. 1: PAB movie "1beCandidate'· ·7:30p.m. In AB.&#13;
Wednesday. Oct. 11: PAB movie "Superman" • 7;30 p.m. 1J\&#13;
klreenquist t03.&#13;
Wednesday. OCL 1': Student music concert - 3:30 p.m. In CA 0118.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 11: Meeting of minority students 10 Greenqwst Hall&#13;
Lecture Room 103at 12:45 p.m.&#13;
3400 SHERIDA ROAD&#13;
A 0&#13;
3mh AVEl UE "&#13;
• .~~P:.liiiiiii:~&#13;
•&#13;
WEAC organizes&#13;
for faculty&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
11ie Wisconsin Education Association Council&#13;
WEAC) is sending professional r~presentatives to&#13;
1 . campus in the UW system m a three-month&#13;
~~~ation effort" to organize a union for college&#13;
educators. . . John B. Mack, a professional consultant to higher&#13;
education employed by the WEA Council, was at&#13;
rkside last week. His purpose in being here was&#13;
~ meet with individual professors in what he called&#13;
.. yeball-to-eyeball" contact, to find out how each&#13;
in&amp;vidual feels about a teachers' union and to inform&#13;
him or her about the ~~- He also_ hoped to&#13;
increase the size of the orgamzmg, com1~11ttee that&#13;
now exists on campus. But Mack s mam concern&#13;
was to initiate a movement toward a merger of the&#13;
WEA and TAUWF. The Association of University of&#13;
Wisconsin Faculty (TAUWF) represents about 3,000&#13;
college educators in the UW system and has a small&#13;
group at Parkside headed by Dr. William Morrow.&#13;
('The local T AUWF chapter has not yet discussed or&#13;
taken a formal position on the merger issue.)&#13;
According to Mack, TAUWF doesn't have the kind&#13;
of political machinery, funding or representation&#13;
that it takes to be a viable bargaining force. "What&#13;
we are saying is that since 1855, the WEA has&#13;
operated in this state, building itself into a 45,000-&#13;
member, two-million-dollar operation. We have&#13;
protected and served the rights and just causes of&#13;
elementary, high school, and vocational-technical&#13;
educators. We have also secured a collective&#13;
bargaining law in the state of Wisconsin for&#13;
educators who are not in the realm of higher&#13;
education. Your college professors do not have a&#13;
collective bargaining law or bill to protect them."&#13;
According to Mack, the passage of a collective&#13;
bargaining law for college educators in Wisconsin is&#13;
a major concern of the WEA. "We have a bill&#13;
iroposed which has been refined and worked out,&#13;
and we are ready to promote this cause. But the&#13;
only way the WEA can promote it is to have a&#13;
sizable working force to represent. Politicians like&#13;
to know who you represent in order to give you an&#13;
interest."&#13;
The Wisconsin Education Association is a branch&#13;
of the National Education Association. Both&#13;
organizations have become concerned with the&#13;
relative powerlessness of college professors,&#13;
especially in the light of budget decreases and&#13;
termination increases in universities all over the&#13;
country. Mack expanded on the goals and&#13;
motivations of both the WEA and NEA. "We have as&#13;
a goal for this year, to politicize teachers as well as&#13;
educators at the college level for the new&#13;
educational environment that we are in. Because&#13;
there is not a sufficient number of unions at the&#13;
• union&#13;
higher education level, college educato seem to be&#13;
th~ w_hipping boys of the present administration.&#13;
nus 1s because of past events in the 'ixon Ad-&#13;
~inistration: black militants on campus demanding&#13;
_black studies departments, young radicals&#13;
refusmg to go to the Vietnamese War, burning draft&#13;
cards and dropping human blood into the administration&#13;
files-campus unrest. It would seem&#13;
that somebody looked out over the vast area called&#13;
Economic Support for Education and decided to do&#13;
a sabotage job in education. And it is faculty that is&#13;
called upon to make the sacrifices which v.ill allow&#13;
the university to exist and to survive during times of&#13;
stress and economic tension."&#13;
"There is some uncertainty on the part of&#13;
professors as to why they should become part of&#13;
WEA, but those professors who are fired find out too&#13;
late that they should have."&#13;
Mack listed some of the resources that a Parkside&#13;
branch of the WEA could draw on for upport:&#13;
lawyers, contract negotiators. profes ional&#13;
organizers, specialists, political lobbyis , pecial&#13;
consultants, and a two-million-dollar organization&#13;
with a membership of 45,000 in Wiscon in alone.&#13;
"They would be gaining a national, state, and local&#13;
hookup which would give them an appeal level foe&#13;
financing at all levels of government."&#13;
"WEA has the machinery, a political arm-we've&#13;
been dealing in the political arena for a longer time&#13;
than any other group around_ We could muster up&#13;
all of this machinery, from specialists to contract&#13;
negotiators to lawyers, to come in and • t m&#13;
salvaging jobs and give professional recognition&#13;
and protection for the good of education."&#13;
Mack urged that students become involved in the&#13;
movement to organize a union for college&#13;
professors. He cited a recent case at UW-Oshk&#13;
where a coalition of students was effective in&#13;
reducing the number of faculty terminations ''from&#13;
something like 137 people to be fired to nov. about 14&#13;
people to be fired."&#13;
"Your professors are in trouble," concluded&#13;
Mack, "and your education is in trouble. You are no&#13;
more secure than they are. Administrators ought to&#13;
take note: they are no more secure than the&#13;
students. And if American education at its highest&#13;
level is in jeopardy, then America itself is in&#13;
trouble."&#13;
John Mack can be reached by calling this toll-free&#13;
number: 800-362~. WEA Council offices are&#13;
located at 222 West Washington, adisoo, 53703.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
\\ t 1:&#13;
Th da,, t.4: ud&#13;
· terColetteinLLCD18Sfromn&#13;
nd&#13;
r da), pm.in&#13;
rda,, t. &amp;: P B outing - rta Trail B H&#13;
formation·m ) be obtained t ud t lifeoffic , l..LC D197.&#13;
. nda , . ,:PABmo - "TheCandid t "-7: p.m. n AB.&#13;
WNln da., ct. It: PAB mO\i " uperman'' • 7: pm. n&#13;
GreenquL t 103.&#13;
Wtdn da), t.l: tudentm ·c&#13;
Th da), t. 11: feeting minorit&#13;
Lecture Room 103 at 12: p .m .&#13;
a 10&#13;
69:.6&#13;
rt -3: pm. in&#13;
SWICieirtts in G&#13;
ROD&#13;
Dll&#13;
Hall&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
CHEAP DRUNK SPECIAL&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F 0 .1.c.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Pnside&#13;
Concourse, Greenquist Hall&#13;
Friday, October 5&#13;
1oa.m. t O 5p.m.&#13;
ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK&#13;
Monday - Beer $2 Mixed Drinks $4&#13;
Oct. 3, 5, 6 &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER wedneSdaY. OCt. 3. 1973&#13;
WEEKEND SPORTS&#13;
__________ RANGERSports _-""&#13;
Cagers aim for&#13;
successful season&#13;
by BMK.\\ po&lt;&#13;
Thirty IhI t l\a" taeted&#13;
son ..,...dllloning for th&#13;
1 7~ ball . \lid ...&#13;
the "alchlul Y ol coach eve&#13;
and tant coach&#13;
Rudy ollum Arnone the :J5 an! IX let-&#13;
~n. ho. ~phtns 0 to&#13;
a lrOIlI nuc:1 us lor thIS&#13;
) • tam&#13;
Jonlor IJW'I et.&gt;ck Ownbl ,&#13;
Iaal y r'a VP hnost 'aluabl.&#13;
playtr) rtt~ lrom lbt 13-&#13;
12 t am, ala WIth &lt;tnler Gary&#13;
Cd 01 whom' oays .....&#13;
wn • to ood etbtude"&#13;
m for mOIl 0/ I ytar. )WUOI"&#13;
guard J HUll r IS upt&lt;:ted 10&#13;
rtbouDd to lop form l/u.a year.&#13;
phomort forward Donnie&#13;
Snow and BIll belllti have both&#13;
n unpr 'v In pre eol&#13;
orkou&#13;
lot 0/ &amp;oad penonnel ha,e&#13;
n r crulled from local&#13;
ools, among them Kenosha&#13;
Tr mper'a lQUmldaung 6'7"&#13;
1...- .. Rade lp_~ Rah·&#13;
day) DUlutrlj 'IC,"ho bnng. III&#13;
a 20.0 searing average and is&#13;
peeted to add to the board&#13;
trength of the Rangers.&#13;
"ewcomers Claude Harris.&#13;
Don Lewis, Rosen Chambers,&#13;
Catvin Denson, Malcolm&#13;
labone, Bob Jacobson, Dean&#13;
OmsUanson, TIm Holland and&#13;
Jeff GolUMed are all ......orking&#13;
hard," and according 10&#13;
ephens, "'ill add depth to the&#13;
squad.&#13;
Ho",,-ev«, ",lith all this out·&#13;
standmg personnel, Parkside&#13;
needs balan~ scoring lor them&#13;
to ,,"in games.&#13;
The 1973-74 schedule will be&#13;
lOtI&amp;her,Slated Coach Stephens,&#13;
with many more small college&#13;
powers to be laced, such as UW·&#13;
Green Bay (Dec, 12 and Feb. 16),&#13;
'Qrthem MIchigan (Feb. 2), and&#13;
Missoun-Rolla (Dec. I).&#13;
Drake, ,'orl!lern Illinois, and&#13;
I'M, some of the Midwest's&#13;
majOr college powers, will play&#13;
Parltside on Dec. 6, Feb, 23 and&#13;
Jan 29. respecti,·e!y.&#13;
Henderson optimistic&#13;
with soccer team&#13;
'" ""at ~ abler&#13;
• I'm hiIbly opliml tic that&#13;
'II et on a ""1On~ track thIS&#13;
:' commented soccer coach&#13;
IIal }lend r on "We should&#13;
to WIll the next three or&#13;
four ee ..&#13;
Th Ran~rs an! till lookmg&#13;
for lbeU" rant WID alter sueve&#13;
~ tbacks to Le\\1S&#13;
CoIl and, 0.-.0 IllinoIS&#13;
and to c o,!&gt;-1 "We only&#13;
trailed 1-0 at the hall a.. UISl&#13;
NclrtMrn," Henderson e&gt;:pIauls,&#13;
"but e"- mlJ8ing two key&#13;
men bee 0/ UlJunes, Sieve&#13;
StndeI ch nd Dieter Kiefer,&#13;
and e .. ...., lo~ to play&#13;
delense the whole second hall."&#13;
When asked aboul the per'&#13;
formances of the new freshmen,&#13;
Hmderson said, Ul was very&#13;
pleased "ith SIeve Sendelbach&#13;
and Stan Stadler, who played an&#13;
ucellent second half againsl&#13;
Oticago."&#13;
Dennis Pippin, a lresbman goal&#13;
tender, ".. s also a key player in&#13;
the Oticago game ,..hen he&#13;
Slopped four breakaway shots.&#13;
Coach }lenderson concluded&#13;
the R NGER inlerview by&#13;
saYing that he was experimenting&#13;
\lI·i.th different&#13;
lineupo and that, "The lreshmen&#13;
are beginning to playas a team."&#13;
PAl • Ragtime Rllgers Present&#13;
Wisconsin /mtio State GCIIle&#13;
$10 Includ 1)~~'a~3~~;p ndel&#13;
19 am lrom Tallen HaU Parking Lot&#13;
mv ba atP r ldeat j OOpm.&#13;
n 10"'" W nIWeOlftce·DI97&#13;
Deadline to sign up - Oct. 8, 1913 12:lII-noon&#13;
****************&#13;
10% OFF ON PURCHASE OF&#13;
J $100&#13;
4 OR MORE WITH PARKSIDE ID.&#13;
~ ENDS&#13;
fj OCTOBER 31&#13;
, AT 'j 3400 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
~ AND "s ~26 7 39tb AVENUE&#13;
...&#13;
Soccer&#13;
captian&#13;
likes it&#13;
at UW-p&#13;
by Neal gautaer&#13;
"Istarted playing soccer when&#13;
1 was eight."&#13;
Unlike other boys, ....ho join.&#13;
major league soccer when&#13;
they're 18,Rick Lechusz joined ar&#13;
the young age of 15.&#13;
In high school he played&#13;
foolball and, like the Green Bay&#13;
Packers' QJester Marcol, was a&#13;
soccer.style kicker.&#13;
During lbe off·season, Rick&#13;
plays lor polonia, a Milwaukee&#13;
area soccer club.&#13;
Some 01 the other guys on that&#13;
team who play with him from&#13;
Parkside are Rick Kilps, Bruno&#13;
Pa....lak and SIan Sladler.&#13;
Since he's been on the team, the&#13;
Poionia team has won three of the&#13;
last seven years that they've&#13;
been in the Slate finals.&#13;
Lechusz was recruited here&#13;
from Milwaukee by former&#13;
soccer coach eeza Marliny on a&#13;
scholarship.&#13;
When asked how he liked il&#13;
here, he stl\led, "I've liked it ever&#13;
since 1 came here. This school&#13;
has goad possibilities, not only in&#13;
soccer."&#13;
}Ie then explained how the two&#13;
soccer coaches dlfIered.&#13;
"eeza Martiny has a European&#13;
background for soccer, and&#13;
played a European game."&#13;
"But in America, they have a&#13;
completely differenlslyle 01 ball,&#13;
and thaI's where Coach Hen·&#13;
derson's experience comes in."&#13;
Not only a fine player and&#13;
captain of the team, Lechusz has&#13;
also had searing honors lor the&#13;
lasltwo years wilh 10 goals, and&#13;
also made most valuable player&#13;
and all-state_&#13;
He then commented about his&#13;
fellow teammates by saying,&#13;
HThis is the first year we've had&#13;
two good goallenders, in Ellioll&#13;
Brieske and Dennis Pippin."&#13;
He also slaled thaI freshmen&#13;
SIeve Sendelbach and Bruno&#13;
Pa ....lak will carry the team in&#13;
later years.&#13;
When asked about Ihe new&#13;
soccer lield, he summed il up by&#13;
saying he was "looking lorward&#13;
to playing on it," and that "It'll&#13;
boost the morale of the whole&#13;
learn."&#13;
Golf team faces&#13;
Fallfest Invitational&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
With the Falllest Invitational&#13;
coming a week from Saturday,&#13;
the golfers' season has had its ups&#13;
and downs, according to coach&#13;
Steve Stephens.&#13;
Many of the ups came in the&#13;
recent match against Marquette&#13;
and UW-Green Bay, with a school&#13;
record for a rive-member team of&#13;
36'7, and with sophomore Dan&#13;
Leissner shooting a four-underpar&#13;
f&gt;1 10 also estahlish a new&#13;
school record.&#13;
The scores for the MarquetteGreen&#13;
Bay match were: Tom&#13;
Bolhe (medalist) 71, Dan&#13;
Leissner 74, Rick Willems 74,&#13;
Randy Driefke 74, and Dave Karr&#13;
74.&#13;
Parkside's golf team is considered&#13;
by many of the NATA&#13;
coaches to be a contender to take&#13;
the districltournament and those&#13;
coaches entering the Falllest&#13;
tournament state that Parkside&#13;
has a very good chance of winning&#13;
it.&#13;
Without defending champion&#13;
Northern Illinois, the linksmen&#13;
will try to bring in 8·10 teams as&#13;
strong competition.&#13;
Among them are in I&#13;
Marquette, Green Ba c Ud"j&#13;
Stevens Point, UW'RiV~' U\I&#13;
UW·Whilewater, UW.Milw[alIs&#13;
Roosevelt University ofOt·Uiot.&#13;
Carthage and, 01 c I~&#13;
Parkside, who will ent OUf1e&#13;
teams. er l&#13;
Stephens concluded thal&#13;
one team has won ou ..&#13;
nament twice and hopes ~ tollRangers&#13;
will be able to br~ IIit&#13;
tradition. IIit&#13;
MEN'S &amp; WOMEN'S T1tA&#13;
FIELD practice is nowin ib(~'&#13;
week of training lor the first ilIIl&#13;
in the middle of DecemberThose&#13;
who are still in&#13;
in this year's program sh::f"d&#13;
Bob Lawson, track coach,or lot&#13;
extension 2245 fight a'li tal&#13;
begin training for the win: ..&#13;
spring schedules. ...&#13;
-=-~.~~&#13;
Oeff!j&#13;
APRIL 1%·%1,11'11&#13;
10days· 8nights&#13;
• Round trip jet&#13;
• 7 nights in Athe~s&#13;
• 8th night in Zurich&#13;
2 meals daily&#13;
• Greek island cruist&#13;
• Athens sightseeing . . S"iU&#13;
• Fondue party In&#13;
• Tour escort t&#13;
• Tips &amp; taxes on llbO'&#13;
J&#13;
For application or inforl1ls&#13;
tJC'l&#13;
Contact. .~rt:JI&#13;
CAMPUS TRAVEL (f.&#13;
iIm!! .,~~&#13;
• LLC D·19; Cal!:»'&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RA GER ednesdaY1 Oct. 3, 1973&#13;
A GER&#13;
___________ Sports _ _.,&#13;
Cag a m for&#13;
u&#13;
H nderso n optimistic&#13;
w th soccer te a m&#13;
********&#13;
d half."&#13;
PAB Ragtime R gers f&gt;resent&#13;
iscons·n / io State Game&#13;
t. 13 1973&#13;
t. 8 1973 12:00 n&#13;
*********&#13;
Soccer&#13;
caption&#13;
likes it&#13;
at UW-P&#13;
H then explained how the two&#13;
er coach differed.&#13;
"Geza . 1artiny has a European&#13;
background for soccer, and&#13;
played a European game."&#13;
• But in America, they have a&#13;
mpletely different style of ball,&#13;
and that's where Coach Hende&#13;
n' experience comes in."&#13;
, ot only a fine player and&#13;
captain of the team. Lechusz has&#13;
also had coring honors for the&#13;
last two years with 10 goals, and&#13;
also made most valuable player&#13;
and all-state.&#13;
He then commented about his&#13;
fellow teammates by saying,&#13;
"Thi i the first year we've had&#13;
t ·o good goaltenders, in Elliott&#13;
Brie ke and Dennis Pippin."&#13;
He also stated that freshmen&#13;
eve endelbach and Bruno&#13;
Pawlak will carry the team in&#13;
later ~ears.&#13;
When asked about the new&#13;
~er field, he summed it up by&#13;
saymg he was "looking forward&#13;
to playing on it," and that "It'll&#13;
boost the morale of the whole&#13;
team."&#13;
~&amp; •&#13;
Golf team faces&#13;
Fallfest Invitational&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
With the Fallfest Invitational&#13;
coming a week from Saturday,&#13;
the golfers' season has had its ups&#13;
and downs, according to coach&#13;
Steve Stephens.&#13;
Many of the ups came in the&#13;
recent match against Marquette&#13;
and UW-Green Bay, with a school&#13;
record for a five-member team of&#13;
367, and with sophomore Dan&#13;
Leissner shooting a four-underpar&#13;
67 to also establish a new&#13;
school record.&#13;
The scores for the MarquetteGreen&#13;
Bay match were: Tom&#13;
Bothe (medalist) 71, Dan&#13;
Leissner 74, Rick Willems 74,&#13;
Randy Driefke 74, and Dave Karr&#13;
74.&#13;
Parkside's golf team is considered&#13;
by many of the NAIA&#13;
coaches to be a contender to take&#13;
the district tournament and those&#13;
coaches entering the Fallfest&#13;
tournament state that Parkside&#13;
has a very good chance of winning&#13;
it.&#13;
Without defending champion&#13;
Northern Illinois, the linksmen&#13;
will try to bring in 8-10 teams as&#13;
strong competition.&#13;
Among them are .&#13;
Marquette, Green B~nclud&#13;
Stevens Point, UW-Rivi· U&#13;
UW-Whitewater, UW-Milwa&#13;
Roosevelt University of Ch&#13;
Carthage and of 1&#13;
Parkside, who ~ill entou&#13;
teams. er t&#13;
Stephens concluded that&#13;
one team . has won our&#13;
nament twice and hopes tha&#13;
Rangers will be able to hr ;&#13;
tradition. ea&#13;
MEN'S &amp; WOMEN• TR&#13;
FIELD practice is now in 1 ~ l&#13;
week of training for the first&#13;
in the middle of December lneet&#13;
. Th~se who are still int&#13;
m this year's program should&#13;
Bob Lawson, track coach&#13;
t . 'or&#13;
ex ens10n 2245 right aw&#13;
begin training for the wini:!&#13;
spring schedules. 11111&#13;
APRIL 12-21, 1974&#13;
10 days -8 nights&#13;
• Round trip jet&#13;
• 7 nights in Athen&#13;
• 8th night in Zurich&#13;
2 meals daily&#13;
• Greek island crui '&#13;
• Athens sight tting&#13;
. wi!J • Fondue party an&#13;
• Tour escort&#13;
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