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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Guidelines on discipline being set</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Univ. to adjudicate&#13;
Severinsen concert pre-cut, packaged&#13;
As a result of a public hearing&#13;
held in Madison over the summer,&#13;
the Board of Regents has&#13;
decided to delay implementation&#13;
of University of Wisconsin&#13;
Chapter 17.&#13;
UWS Chapter 17 is the recently&#13;
proposed Student Disciplinary&#13;
Guidelines, which outline&#13;
procedures to be used in cases of&#13;
student misconduct.&#13;
These guidelines have come&#13;
under fire from the system-wide&#13;
United Council of Student&#13;
Governments (UC), according to&#13;
UC president, Michael Delonay.&#13;
Delonay has said that he and&#13;
the UC feel that a distinction&#13;
must be drawn between criminal&#13;
acts which should be handled&#13;
exclusively by law enforcement&#13;
personnel and academic&#13;
misconduct which should be&#13;
handled by the University. The&#13;
yet to be implemented UWS&#13;
guidelines makes provisions for&#13;
the University to adjudicate both.&#13;
Academic misconduct, as&#13;
PSGA looks at health&#13;
service program&#13;
by Jeanine Sipsma&#13;
An investigation of Parkside's&#13;
Health Service was planned by&#13;
the Health Service Committee of&#13;
Parkside Student Government at&#13;
a Sept. 18 meeting.&#13;
The committee plans to provide&#13;
the student Senate with information&#13;
concerning the present&#13;
set-up and usefulness of the&#13;
Health Service, current problems&#13;
it may face, qualifications of&#13;
personnel, and its present&#13;
financial situation.&#13;
The goal of t he committee is to&#13;
establish a working relationship&#13;
with the Health Service and&#13;
cooperate with them in order to&#13;
increase their effectiveness.&#13;
The meeting was concluded&#13;
with the committee's following&#13;
written statement, "if we find the&#13;
Health Service is inadequate, it is&#13;
our responsibility, according to&#13;
Merger, (U.W. Merger Law), to&#13;
investigate or sponsor alternative&#13;
services."&#13;
defined under the guidelines,&#13;
includes: cheating, plagiarizing,&#13;
and falsifying records.&#13;
Non-academic misconduct is&#13;
defined as intentional conduct&#13;
which could endanger University&#13;
property or personnel, conduct&#13;
which could obstruct "University-run&#13;
or University-authorized&#13;
activities," and unauthorized&#13;
possession of University&#13;
property.&#13;
The final category of nonacademic&#13;
misconduct that is&#13;
covered by Chapter 17 deals with&#13;
a student convicted of a crime or&#13;
violation of a municipal ordinance.&#13;
However, four&#13;
qualifications must be met for the&#13;
student to come under University&#13;
discipline in these cases.&#13;
First, the act must have involved&#13;
"the use of force,&#13;
disruption, or the seizure of&#13;
property under the control of the&#13;
University. "Secondly, there&#13;
must be present the intent to&#13;
prevent employees or students&#13;
from engaging in their duties or&#13;
pursuing their studies. The third&#13;
qualification is that the crime&#13;
must be of a serious nature, and&#13;
last, it must have contributed to&#13;
"a substantial disruption of the&#13;
administration of the University&#13;
community."&#13;
Each campus in the UW system&#13;
would, under the new guidelines,&#13;
establish their own system of&#13;
holding hearings.&#13;
According to vice-chancellor&#13;
Otto Bauer, the campus has three&#13;
options. The chancellor may&#13;
choose to have A) a hearing&#13;
examiner, B) establish a&#13;
disciplinary committee, or C)&#13;
offer the student charged, a&#13;
continued on page 2&#13;
Prize winning poet&#13;
will read her work&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 24, 1975 MSKSIDt RANGER 1$ A STUOINT PUBUCATION 01 THt UNIVERSITY Of WISCONSIN Vol. LV No. 4&#13;
Gwendolyn Brooks, Pulitzer&#13;
Prize-winning black poet from&#13;
Chicago, will present a reading&#13;
from her work with a commentary&#13;
at 8 p.m. on Tuesday,&#13;
Sept 30, in the Comm-Arts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Admission is $1 for students,&#13;
$1.50 for the public. Advance&#13;
tickets are available at the Information&#13;
Kiosk.&#13;
A public reception for Miss&#13;
Brooks sponsored by the chancellor's&#13;
office, the P.A.B. and&#13;
Third World student organization&#13;
will follow her reading.&#13;
Brooks is the author of a&#13;
-number of books of poetry including&#13;
"Annie Allen," "A Street&#13;
in Bronzeville," "Maude Martha,"&#13;
"The Bean Easter,"&#13;
"Riot," and "Family Pictures."&#13;
Her book-length poet "In the&#13;
Mecca," was nominated for a&#13;
National Book Award in 1969.&#13;
"Annie Allen" was the Pulitzer&#13;
Prize for poetry in 1950.&#13;
Born in Topeka, Kans., Brooks&#13;
has spent most of her life in&#13;
Chicago and her poetry deals&#13;
principally with the city and its&#13;
people - particularly the people&#13;
of its Black ghettos. She&#13;
frequently tells audiences, "I&#13;
want to expand your horizons,&#13;
black-wise."&#13;
Her poetry has been called, "a&#13;
bridge between the quiet and the&#13;
vibrant racial protest of today."&#13;
She can be disturbing, as some of&#13;
her poetry demonstrates, but it is&#13;
not malicious or seasoned with&#13;
hatred. She has said, "Many&#13;
people are putting away the&#13;
things that are of life...such as&#13;
compassion, love, wisps of detail&#13;
and rumination."&#13;
"My aim in my next future,"&#13;
she wrote recently, "is to&#13;
write poems that will&#13;
somehow succes sfully&#13;
'call' all black people; black&#13;
people in taverns, black people in&#13;
alleys, black people in gutters,&#13;
schools, offices, factories,&#13;
prisons, the consulate; I wish to&#13;
reach black people in pulpits, in&#13;
mines, on farms, on thrones; not&#13;
always to 'teach' but often to&#13;
entertain, to illumine.&#13;
"My newest voice will not be an&#13;
imitation of the contemporary&#13;
young black voice, which I so&#13;
admire, but an extending&#13;
adaptation of t oday's Gwendolyn&#13;
Brooks' voice."&#13;
Doc rocks oldsters&#13;
by Jim Yorgan&#13;
At 8 p.m. the stage was set for&#13;
the show. The crowd of about&#13;
2,200 w as a mixed bag ranging&#13;
from wide-eyed undergraduates&#13;
of the campfire girls, to the Mrs.&#13;
Olsen coffee set, to the Hersey&#13;
High School band. Most that&#13;
came were curious. Curious to&#13;
see the court jester of t he Carson&#13;
kingdom.&#13;
Severinsen's act was "strictly&#13;
from conimercial," to borrow a&#13;
phrase from Frank Z.; pre-cut,&#13;
packaged, and ready for sale to&#13;
middle-class American consumer&#13;
society. Looking for excellence&#13;
in the concert, was like&#13;
looking for that piece of chicken&#13;
in George Webb's real chicken&#13;
soup I had some four hours after&#13;
the concert. I know it's in there&#13;
somewhere because it tastes like&#13;
chicken.)&#13;
There were few high points in&#13;
the concert. It began with "Let it&#13;
Begin," a rock tune that&#13;
surrounded Doc's opening&#13;
statement to the audience. Next,&#13;
was a rendition of " The Way We&#13;
Were" with another solo by&#13;
Severinsen.&#13;
Make no mistake about it, Doc&#13;
was the star of the show. His&#13;
chameleon like costume changes&#13;
were a real crowd pleaser;&#13;
flashing from a pink satin shirt&#13;
under white coat, and pants&#13;
emblazened with red, silver, blue&#13;
and gold sequins, to a&#13;
multicolored outfit, that looked&#13;
like the menu at Taco Bell on the&#13;
fifth day of a week long paranoid&#13;
speed trip. (Eat your liver,&#13;
Johnny.) Although Doc let it be&#13;
known that he does not subscribe&#13;
to fagdom, his assurances were&#13;
unnecessary. No self-respecting&#13;
homosexual drag-queen would&#13;
appear in one of his get-ups, for&#13;
fear of losing his-her place in the&#13;
gay fashion world.&#13;
The next song, "Won't Last a&#13;
Day Without You" was the&#13;
showcase for kid Severinsen&#13;
(Doc's daughter, Nancy),&#13;
followed by "I Got the Music In&#13;
Me" featuring "Today's&#13;
Children." Doc came out after a&#13;
costume change, and pulled a&#13;
Mar jo Gortner impersonation,&#13;
preaching Jimmy Webb's "150th&#13;
Psalm."&#13;
I got a chance to talk with Doc&#13;
after the show. I told him I enjoyed&#13;
his tribute (who was&#13;
originally contracted for this&#13;
concert) to the late Cannonball&#13;
Adderly which was aired on the&#13;
Tonight Show a few weeks ago.&#13;
Severinsen said that it's unfortunate&#13;
that some truly fine&#13;
musicians never get the&#13;
recognition they deserve and&#13;
expressed slight annoyance with&#13;
people who copy an innovators&#13;
style, exclaiming, "See what I&#13;
did."&#13;
My personal favorite of the&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
photo by_Al Frederickson&#13;
Doc Severinsen hits that final note in front of an almost capacity crowd in the&#13;
Phy Ed Building last Sunday night. Changing his attire four times during the&#13;
performance, Severinsen played and sang for two straight hours without intermission,&#13;
and was accompanied by his "Now Generation Brass" and "Today's&#13;
Children." &#13;
2 T H E PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Sep t. 24, 1975&#13;
PSGA unresponsive&#13;
and unavailable&#13;
It is an injustice to the students at Parkside to be&#13;
unable to contact the members of t heir student government.&#13;
When any group is selected to represent and&#13;
govern policy for over 5,000 individuals, those individuals,&#13;
if the institution is free, should find that group&#13;
accessible to them.&#13;
The PSGA office in WLLC is never staffed, the door is&#13;
always locked, no note has been made as to who our&#13;
senators are or where they may be reached. No student&#13;
should be forced to attend PSGA meetings at 7 p .m. on&#13;
Tuesdays (which don't start until 7:30 or 8 p.m. anyway)&#13;
to meet with elected representatives. We cannot pretend&#13;
that this type of government even resembles the notion&#13;
of responsible representation.&#13;
RANGER suggests, for the well being and protection&#13;
of a ll students, that PSGA direct itself by many of the&#13;
principles which Chancellor Guskin has set for his administration.&#13;
Those involve not just a willingness to&#13;
meet with students, but a means by whicji he is&#13;
available to us; not merely an inclination to explain the&#13;
politics of University operations, but revealing himself&#13;
and policies in t heir totality-under the ideology that if&#13;
we are open and honest we will in turn have nothing to&#13;
hide or fear.&#13;
RANGER urges PSGA to set hours in their offices so&#13;
as to meet with students, show concern, availability,&#13;
openness and encourage participation in government. We&#13;
suggest that PSGA seek out student opinion and demand&#13;
from each other nothing less than an obsession to serve&#13;
their constituency with the highest interest and integrity.&#13;
In turn, we urge the students of Parkside to&#13;
demand from their government those qualities which&#13;
mark true, sincere, representation.&#13;
We did not vote students to our PSGA under the impression&#13;
that they had no obligation to consult, be&#13;
responsive or answerable to us.&#13;
When the citizens of this campus have no means by&#13;
which to be heard or express policy opinion, we are then&#13;
not involved, we are not represented, we are not free.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE&#13;
The PARKSIDE RANGER is written and edited by&#13;
the students of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
and they are solely responsible for its editorial policy&#13;
and content. Offices are located in D194 WLLC, U.W.&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-2295,&#13;
553-2287.&#13;
Acting Editor: Debra Friedell&#13;
Business Manager: Ann Verstegen&#13;
Feature Editor: Michael Palecek&#13;
Writers: Jeff Sweneki, Jeanine Sipsma, Betsy Neu, Ann&#13;
Verstegen, Bruce Wagner, Walt Ulbricht, Bill Robbins,&#13;
Carol Arentz, amy cundari.&#13;
Photographers: Mike Nepper, Al Fredrickson&#13;
Political satirist speaks&#13;
on virginity—patriotism&#13;
by Paul Anderson&#13;
The houselights dimmed,&#13;
isolating the brightly-lit stage.&#13;
"My fellow Americans," the&#13;
speaker said, gripping the&#13;
podium. "The CIA will be closed&#13;
tomorrow. It's Lucky Luciano's&#13;
birthday!"&#13;
The 1,300 people in the audience&#13;
roared, captured by political&#13;
satirist, Art Buchwald.&#13;
Buchwald, whose syndicated&#13;
columns appear in hundreds of&#13;
newspapers, nationally and internationally,&#13;
appeared Thursday&#13;
as a guest lecturer on the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Madison&#13;
campus.&#13;
"I've got nothin' to mention on&#13;
the Patty Hearst thing yet," he&#13;
said. "Heard she was shackin' up&#13;
with Hoffa, but that's just a&#13;
rumor."&#13;
Buchwald's black-framed&#13;
glasses accented his greying,&#13;
close-cropped hair. His bright tie&#13;
overpowered his conservative&#13;
suit.&#13;
The title of Buchwald's hourlong&#13;
monologue was, "The Nixon&#13;
Resignation." However, the&#13;
Pentagon, FBI, and Washington,&#13;
D.C. personalities-including&#13;
himself-fell victim to his wit&#13;
during the first 55 minutes of&#13;
storytelling.&#13;
"Last year at this time we were&#13;
arguing over what kind of a&#13;
President Gerald Ford would&#13;
make, and this year the main&#13;
topic in Washington is whether&#13;
Susan Ford should remain a&#13;
virgin."&#13;
Buchwald, who compares his&#13;
profession to that of the "cruise&#13;
director on the Titanic,"&#13;
described Watergate as his&#13;
"Camelot."&#13;
However, he said his columns&#13;
today are encountering some stiff&#13;
competition. He said front page&#13;
newspaper headlines like "Judge&#13;
Gives Howard Hughes Two&#13;
Weeks To Prove He Isn't Dead"&#13;
are beyond his imaginative&#13;
powers.&#13;
Buchwald spoke on many&#13;
issues:&#13;
- On gun control - "To me, it's&#13;
a personal thing. My neighbor&#13;
has a gun, and he can't even&#13;
water his lawn straight."&#13;
- On pornography - "I've&#13;
always wanted to write a pornographic&#13;
book, but I get so&#13;
excited doing the research that I&#13;
can never get around to the&#13;
book!"&#13;
- On the Mideast oil situation -&#13;
"The real villain is the Harvard&#13;
Business School. If they hadn't&#13;
taught the sons of Arab sheiks&#13;
how to screw us, oil would still be&#13;
$3 a barrel."&#13;
-On the computerized society -&#13;
- "I have always had a great&#13;
interest in computers, ever since&#13;
I once tried to get out of the Bookof-the-Month&#13;
Club."&#13;
He said he tried to terminate&#13;
his membership by sending&#13;
letters and not paying bills. But&#13;
when that didn't work, he&#13;
crumpled up the computer billing&#13;
cards. The next month's printout&#13;
read, "If you do that once more,&#13;
we will send you the entire Encyclopaedia&#13;
Britannica!"&#13;
Seasoning Buchwald's tales of&#13;
humor were elements of&#13;
seriousness and patriotism.&#13;
When asked by a student who&#13;
he considered the man of the&#13;
year, Buchwald replied, "I may&#13;
get some hisses on this, but I&#13;
would have to say Kissinger."&#13;
The crowd listened as Buchwald&#13;
commended Kissinger for his&#13;
efforts to restore peace in the&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am incarcerated in prison,&#13;
and would like to correspond with&#13;
college students. I'll answer all&#13;
letters as quickly as possible;&#13;
write soon please. Thank you.&#13;
Southern Ohio Correctional&#13;
Facility&#13;
Robert Edward Strozier 131-502&#13;
P.O. Box 787&#13;
Lucasville, Ohio 45648&#13;
Discipline—&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
choice of either.&#13;
In defense of the guidelines,&#13;
which he helped develop, Bauer&#13;
said that "the University must&#13;
protect its basic educational&#13;
function."&#13;
Interested persons and groups&#13;
have until November 1 to submit&#13;
proposals for admendments to&#13;
Chapter 17, to Central Administration.&#13;
&#13;
Mideast.&#13;
I think we are all going to&#13;
make it," said Buchwald. "For&#13;
200 years we have muddled&#13;
.through one crisis after another&#13;
without a change of government."&#13;
&#13;
Buchwald said he was at the&#13;
White House the night the former&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I was visiting in Kenosha and&#13;
was among the group that saw&#13;
the Doc Severinsen show. His&#13;
"Today's Children" and the&#13;
"Now Generation Brass" were&#13;
outstanding. I felt that the whole&#13;
show was fantastic.&#13;
My thanks to those who&#13;
arranged for Doc to be here at&#13;
Parkside, my regrets to those&#13;
who missed the wonderful&#13;
showmanship of that fine&#13;
musician and his talented group.&#13;
K. Echelbarger&#13;
Zionsville, Indiana&#13;
The guidelines will come before&#13;
the Board of Regents for passage&#13;
in January. According to Bauer,&#13;
Chapter 17, if passed, will&#13;
probably be implemented in&#13;
September of 1976. Bauer seemed&#13;
quite confident that the&#13;
guidelines will be implemented&#13;
with little change to the current&#13;
proposal.&#13;
President Nixon resigned.&#13;
"I didn't see one tank or one&#13;
helmeted soldier in the street.&#13;
Two-hundred-forty million people&#13;
were able to change Presidents&#13;
overnight without one bayonet&#13;
being unsheathed. I believe any&#13;
country in the world that can still&#13;
do that, can't be all bad." &#13;
Women outline&#13;
action expectations&#13;
by Rita Nicholas&#13;
The Parkside Organization of&#13;
Women met on Sept. 18.&#13;
Mary Lou France, president,&#13;
said that a letter has been sent to&#13;
Joseph Attwell, special assistant&#13;
to the chancellor for affirmative&#13;
action, outlining the expectations&#13;
of th e organization for Parkside's&#13;
compliance with rulings of the&#13;
Office of Civil Rights.&#13;
The Parkside Organization of&#13;
Women (POW) are hopeful for&#13;
progress in three main areas.&#13;
-that "there will soon be an&#13;
Affirmative Action Advisory&#13;
Committee on campus and&#13;
women classified staff members&#13;
will be represented on this&#13;
committee."&#13;
-that "there will soon be a&#13;
concise and definitive progress&#13;
report on Affirmative Action."&#13;
-that "the Parkside Affirmative&#13;
Action Plan will be&#13;
revised to include goals and&#13;
timetables for eliminating underutilizatiOn&#13;
of women and&#13;
minorities, and included with the&#13;
goals and timetables will be&#13;
specific and detailed programs."&#13;
France said suggestions were&#13;
made to Attwell for program&#13;
development.&#13;
The first suggestion was that&#13;
information sessions be&#13;
presented by the Personnel Office&#13;
outlining the proper&#13;
procedures for upgrading&#13;
positions within established&#13;
guidelines.&#13;
The second was that a new&#13;
policy be implemented whereby&#13;
vacancies of administrative&#13;
positions are filled on an acting&#13;
basis by a woman of the&#13;
classified staff. Those individuals&#13;
do a major portion of the work,&#13;
and are most familiar with the&#13;
position in question, POW feels.&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 24, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
fl&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 24 - Parkside Players meeting in the CAT at 4 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 24 - Films in the Skellar at 11:30. Free&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 24 - Botts lecture on "The Future of the Great&#13;
Lakes: Where We've Been and Where We're Going," at 12-30 p m in&#13;
GR D127. '&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 24 - Psychology Club meeting at 1:30 p.m. in WLLC&#13;
D174.&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 24 - Soccer vs. Trinity College at 3 p.m. at the soccer&#13;
field.&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 24- "Hickory Wind" bluegrass concert at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the S.A.B. Tickets on sale at the Info Kiosk for $1.50 and will be $2.00 at&#13;
the door.&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 25-Movie, "Death Wish" at 1:30and 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
CAT. Admission is $1.&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 25 - Assertiveness Training Workshop sponsored by&#13;
the International Women's Year Comm. at 6:30 p.m. at Gateway&#13;
Technical Institute. Free.&#13;
Friday, Sept. 26- Movie, "Death Wish" at 1:30p.m. in CAT and 8p.m.&#13;
in the SAB. Admission is $1. *&#13;
Friday, Sept. 26 - Debate and Forensics Association meeting at 2:30 in&#13;
CA 233. All interested students welcome.&#13;
Friday, Sept. 26- Women's Volleyball scrimmage at 3 p.m. in the Phy.&#13;
Ed. Building.&#13;
Friday, Sept. 26 - Piano recital with Stephen Swedish and&#13;
August Wegner at 7:30 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 27 - Cross country vs. Loyola" at 11 a.m. at Parkside.&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 28 - Music recital with Frances Bedford and Joyce&#13;
Bottje at 3:30 p.m. in GR 103.&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 28 - Movie, "Death Wish" at 7:30 p.m. in the SAB. Admission&#13;
is $1.&#13;
Monday, Sept. 29 - Ben Franklin Exhibition in the CAT Gallery&#13;
through Oct. 11.&#13;
Tuesday, Sept. 30 - Women's volleyball game vs. Milwaukee Area&#13;
Technical College at 4 p .m. in Milwaukee.&#13;
Tuesday, Sept. 30 - Pulitzer Prize winner Gwendolyn Brooks will be&#13;
reciting her poetry at 8 p.m. in the CAT. Tickets on sale at the Info&#13;
Kiosk for $1.&#13;
Watergate is course topic&#13;
Condit sites expression&#13;
in archetecture design&#13;
After the show and a shower, Severinsen stops for a moment to&#13;
smoke a cigar and chat with reporters, photo by A1 Fr ederickson&#13;
Severinsencontinued&#13;
from page 1&#13;
concert was a Joe Farrell latin&#13;
samba that featured solos by&#13;
assistant conductor, Ross&#13;
Tompkins, on piano and Dick&#13;
Spencer on flute. Other tunes&#13;
worth mentioning were Chick&#13;
Corea's, "Celebration," and the&#13;
old standard "Malaguena."&#13;
These two songs afforded the&#13;
"Now Generation Brass" a&#13;
chance to get outside a bit. Colin&#13;
Baily on drums gets the gold star&#13;
of the evening for his solo on&#13;
"Malaguena." The rest of the&#13;
concert was lackluster at best.&#13;
• i,Pa ss the Geritol please.)&#13;
by Leigh Feifer&#13;
The American Experience&#13;
lecture series had its opening&#13;
program Tuesday evening in the&#13;
Comm-Arts Theater. "The&#13;
Midwestern Tradition in Architecture&#13;
and Its Continuing&#13;
Validity" by Professor Carl W.&#13;
Condit, was the slide presentation.&#13;
Condit holds a joint appointment&#13;
as prof, of history, art&#13;
history and urban affairs at&#13;
Northwestern University.&#13;
Delving briefly into literature,&#13;
poetry and music as different&#13;
forms of native expression; this&#13;
program was chiefly a running&#13;
commentary of 85-90 ye ars of the&#13;
building arts in the Midwest. The&#13;
emergence of the Prairie School&#13;
of commercial architecture of the&#13;
1880's and 90's and the Chicago&#13;
Meditation sessions&#13;
to start Wed.&#13;
Beginning Wed. .Sept. 24, and every Mon. and Wed. thereafter,&#13;
students, faculty and staff are invited to participate in meditation&#13;
under the leadership of Yogini Chandra Merrick, from 11:30 to 12-20 in&#13;
WLLC D174.&#13;
At 11:30-12:40 will be the preparation period, 11:40-12:20 sit (absolute&#13;
silence), and 12:20-12:30 an awareness rap for those who care to&#13;
share their experiences or have questions.&#13;
Merrick has been involved with meditation for the past eight years.&#13;
She received her teaching certificate from Swami Kishundevarianda&#13;
and began her professional career in 1972.&#13;
Merrick asks that all continuing students bring their Zafu&#13;
(meditation pillow). '&#13;
Regents accept gifts&#13;
for Parkside&#13;
Gifts and grants totalling $8,452 were accepted for Parkside by the&#13;
UW System Board of Regents Friday, Sept. 12.&#13;
The sum included $6,688 in federal funds for student financial aid:&#13;
$1,037 in a supplemental grant from the Department of Health&#13;
Education and Welfare for educational opportunity grants and.$5,651&#13;
in Justice Department funds for the Law Enforcement Education&#13;
Program (LEEP), which supports studies by law enforcement personnel.&#13;
&#13;
An additional $500 in support of a national student exchange&#13;
program at Parkside was provided by Parkside psychology professor,&#13;
David R. Beach. The sum represents an award for outstanding&#13;
teaching made to Beach last spring.&#13;
The Regents also accepted a gift of an audio-video interconnect&#13;
which will link the organ studio with the Comm Arts theater from Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Glen W. Mossman of Zion, 111.&#13;
Mossman teaches organ students at Parkside.&#13;
A gift of $500 f rom Rexnord Developments, Inc. of Racine was accepted&#13;
in support of instruction and research using the scanning&#13;
electron microscope.&#13;
School of early 1900's residential&#13;
work were highlighted.&#13;
Condit drew a comparison&#13;
between architecture and&#13;
literature, stating that although&#13;
each occupies its own selfcontained&#13;
sphere, the expression&#13;
of "cultural Constance" is&#13;
common to both.&#13;
Impressive works by such&#13;
designers as Louie Sullivan and&#13;
Frank Lloyd Wright were shown.&#13;
Of local significance were the&#13;
S.C.Johnson buildings of Racine&#13;
and the Sears Tower of Chicago.&#13;
However, Condit was critical of&#13;
the $75 million Chicago tower,&#13;
remarking, "It grows less interesting&#13;
the closer you come to&#13;
it." In this structure, "Form is&#13;
technology with a flimsy garment&#13;
thrown over it, eliciting no&#13;
psychological or spiritual&#13;
responses from the individual."&#13;
More favorable comments&#13;
were made of the Johnson&#13;
facility. Rounded corners and&#13;
long horizontal movement as&#13;
called to our attention by Condit&#13;
indicate a design of the&#13;
streamlining era. Here,&#13;
"Structure has been rendered&#13;
into a formal element."&#13;
More is considered in the&#13;
designing of a building than&#13;
merely the architect's spirit of&#13;
self-expression. The primary&#13;
goal is to satisfy the "visual,&#13;
psychological and spiritual&#13;
needs" of the people in a particular&#13;
area. Building design is&#13;
"empirically mathematical in&#13;
character," yet Condit declares&#13;
the ever-accumulating structural&#13;
technology can provide a&#13;
satisfaction for these demands.&#13;
An examination of the effects of Watergate upon the Presidency will&#13;
be made by Samuel Pernacciaro, assistant professor of political&#13;
science at Parkside, in a University Extension course. The consequences&#13;
of Watergate upon the Ford administration will be given&#13;
special attention.&#13;
The class will meet on 4 Tuesdays, beginning September 23 at 7:30&#13;
p.m. Registrants should contact University Extension, phone 553-2312. &#13;
4 T H E PARKSI DE RANGER Wednesday, Sept. 24, 1975&#13;
Guskin finds affirmative&#13;
action and non-traditional&#13;
students as his focus&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin talks about setting the tone of the Univer1&#13;
photo by A1 Fr ederiekson&#13;
by Ann Verstegen&#13;
The new Chancellor, Alan&#13;
Guskin, sees his most important&#13;
job as setting the tone for the&#13;
university.&#13;
"1 hope to be the thrust on key&#13;
issues," he said.&#13;
He does not see his job as&#13;
coercing people but he will make&#13;
his ideas known and persuade&#13;
faculty and staff to followthrough.&#13;
Guskin used the analogy&#13;
of child-rearing techniques he&#13;
tries to use," you reward right&#13;
behavior and try to ignore the&#13;
bad."&#13;
A st rong interest of Guskin is&#13;
Judith Guskin says of the civil rights movement, "It's too soon to forget."&#13;
P.A.B. FILM SERIES&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
Vigilante, city style -&#13;
judge, jury, and&#13;
executioner.&#13;
photo by A1 Fr ederiekson&#13;
A Paramount Release&#13;
Dim) DE LAUBEMTIIS Presents&#13;
CHARLES&#13;
BRONSON&#13;
in a M ICHAEL WINNEH film&#13;
"DEATH WISH"&#13;
TECHNICOLOR ' A Paramount Release&#13;
(Rj&#13;
Sept. 25 -1:30 C.A.T.&#13;
7:30 C.A.T.&#13;
Sept 26 - 1:30 C.A.T.&#13;
8:00 S.A.B.*&#13;
Sept. 28 -7:30 S.A.B.*&#13;
* Wise, and Parkside&#13;
Id's required.&#13;
V' IS&#13;
R1E0RBS ANB TAPES&#13;
WATERBEB5&#13;
PIPES AND PARAPNENALIA&#13;
BEAN B AGS&#13;
LEATHER SOOBS&#13;
ONE SWEET&#13;
BREAM&#13;
SB1Q 7TN AVENUE&#13;
KEN05&lt;HA&#13;
654-3578&#13;
affirmative action. He feels this&#13;
issue, along with many others, is&#13;
past the value judgement stage.&#13;
"We shouldn't be asking ourselves,&#13;
'should we do it?' but&#13;
rather, 'how do we do it!'," he&#13;
said.&#13;
Guskin feels that Parkside ha£&#13;
potential for tremendous growth.&#13;
Racine and Kenosha are major&#13;
growth areas. "This is a heavily&#13;
industrialized and politically&#13;
potent area," he said. He would&#13;
like to make education relevant&#13;
to the quality of life in the modern&#13;
industrial society. There is a&#13;
population of students not now&#13;
being served that might respond&#13;
to innovative approaches.&#13;
"Weekend classes for adult&#13;
students might be a good thing,"&#13;
Guskin said.&#13;
Guskin is impressed with the&#13;
quality of the faculty. "Faculty&#13;
members have approached me&#13;
with creative ideas and I think it&#13;
is great," he said. In the coming&#13;
weeks he and his administrators&#13;
will be looking at all academic&#13;
structures.&#13;
Minority recruitment is one of&#13;
the first items on the agenda.&#13;
"We must have an educational&#13;
climate that reflects equal&#13;
justice. Minorities and women&#13;
need models," Guskin said. He&#13;
favors new approaches to&#13;
recruitment; for instance advertising&#13;
nationally for openings.&#13;
"But," he said, "there should be&#13;
no compromise on competance.&#13;
The final decision must be on&#13;
ability to perform duties."&#13;
When Guskin became acting&#13;
President of Clark University,&#13;
Worcester, Ma., there were no&#13;
black faculty members and only&#13;
six women. After two years, four&#13;
blacks and 14 women were on the&#13;
staff. "I didn't hire them,"&#13;
Guskin said, "but I hope that I did&#13;
set the tone for it to happen."&#13;
Guskin at this time is more&#13;
interested in how many blacks&#13;
graduate from the University and&#13;
their problems, than with specific&#13;
black studies courses.&#13;
Guskin can be found any place&#13;
but his office. He has been&#13;
spending an average of an hour a&#13;
day behind his desk. "I like to&#13;
talk with people. I doubt people&#13;
expect me to be as accessible as I&#13;
am," Guskin said.&#13;
Breathing freshness into the&#13;
institution is an opportunity&#13;
Guskin feels he has as the new&#13;
Chancellor. But he is also&#13;
prepared for problems. "When&#13;
things are difficult, I'm prepared&#13;
to make tough decisions," he&#13;
said.&#13;
But he added,"We've moved&#13;
too much. I'm ready to settle&#13;
down. I hope we'll be at Parkside&#13;
a long time."&#13;
SStlGlAS DE CKE^k&#13;
Recipe #456.78cR&#13;
THE&#13;
TAXCO FLZZ:&#13;
• 2 oz. Jose Cuervo Tequila&#13;
• Juiqe from one lime (or 2 tbsp.)&#13;
• 1 tsp. sugar&#13;
• 2 dashes orange bitters&#13;
• White of one egg&#13;
• A glass is quite helpful, too.&#13;
V&#13;
IMPORTED AND BO^TU^BV ' 80 PRO°F&#13;
LED BY V 1975, HLUBLEIN, INC., HARTFORD. CONN. &#13;
Still is.&#13;
Sharon and Andrea Guskin get to know their family's newest member, Softy, a Shetland sheepdog.&#13;
19 SO •• •• photo by A1 Frederickson&#13;
Lruskin tamily begins to&#13;
make themselves at home&#13;
by Ann Verstegen&#13;
The Drs. Guskin were at home.&#13;
Casually dressed, Alan Guskin&#13;
smiled and drew his wife, Judith,&#13;
beside him on a couch, "we'll sit&#13;
here. We sort of like each other,&#13;
you know."&#13;
The walls are punctuated with&#13;
their past - Thai rubbings arid&#13;
color photographs of Clark&#13;
University. A U-Haul load of&#13;
plants they brought with them&#13;
soften the setting. They have&#13;
chosen nature's warm colors for&#13;
their living room and the windows&#13;
bring in the outside.&#13;
Guskin switched the radio from&#13;
rock to semi-classical for easier&#13;
conversation. His PhD from the&#13;
University of Michigan was in&#13;
Social Psychology. "People&#13;
mistakenly think it is only public&#13;
opinion polls. My interest was in&#13;
the application of knowledge&#13;
while generating change."&#13;
Judith Guskin, PhD in&#13;
Educational Psychology, has a&#13;
chapter due in a week. She will be&#13;
writing this year, probably about&#13;
bi-lingual education, although&#13;
she has two books in mind.&#13;
Their family includes Sharon,&#13;
9, a fifth-grader at Bose School&#13;
and Andrea, 5, a part time&#13;
student at the Parkside Child&#13;
Care Center. Five-day addition is&#13;
Softy, a Shetland sheepdog&#13;
puppy.&#13;
Alan and Judith Guskin met at&#13;
Brooklyn College. "He used to&#13;
give me rides in his car so I&#13;
wouldn't have to take the subway,"&#13;
Judith remembers.&#13;
From 1962-64, th ey taught and&#13;
did research in Thailand. They&#13;
missed important years of the&#13;
civil rights movement. Judith&#13;
said, "we followed the activities&#13;
through the New York Times and&#13;
tried to explain it to our students&#13;
in Thailand." She finds that&#13;
many of today's youth are unfamiliar&#13;
with that struggle. "It's&#13;
too soon to forget."&#13;
Judith enjoys cooking,&#13;
especially Thai food, but finds it&#13;
is not easy when working full&#13;
time. Alan Guskin quickly added,&#13;
"I always do the shopping and the&#13;
clean-up afterwards."&#13;
In 1968, he was Coordinator of&#13;
Students in the State of Michigan,&#13;
for Bobby Kennedy. But, he will&#13;
not be politically involved this&#13;
year.&#13;
Together, the family likes to go&#13;
shopping, take walks, even run&#13;
around the university track.&#13;
Guskin is teaching his tall&#13;
daughter, Sharon, the fundamentals&#13;
of basketball.&#13;
Sharon understands her&#13;
father's new job, "he works, tells&#13;
people stuff and stays up late&#13;
writing speeches."&#13;
New arrivals, the Guskins, are&#13;
at home.&#13;
pays 51/2%&#13;
on passbook,^&#13;
Savingg!&#13;
On-Campus Service. . . Room 235 Tallent Hall&#13;
Phone: 553-2150&#13;
Main Office: 1400 No. Newman Rd. Racine&#13;
Phone 634-6661&#13;
Brewed in 1876 by our original process&#13;
from the choicest bops, rice&#13;
and best barley malt.&#13;
Were making sure, that caring&#13;
is nit just a memory, ylnd.&#13;
every taste, of Beechwood^ Aged&#13;
Buaweiser says so. &gt;L/4rut&#13;
always will.&#13;
"Somebody&#13;
still cares about&#13;
Distributed by E. F. Madrigrano 1831-55th Kenosha, Wl&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 24, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Environmentalist will speak&#13;
I^e Botts, executive director of the Chicago-based Lake Michigan&#13;
Federation, a citizen "watch-dog" organization which monitors environmental&#13;
quality in the Lake Michigan basin, will speak on "The&#13;
Future of the Great Lakes: Where We've Been and Where We're&#13;
Going from 12:30 to 2:15 p.m. on Wednesday, Sept. 24 at Greenquist&#13;
Hall Room D-127.&#13;
A nationally-known environmentalist, Botts was a member of the&#13;
Citizens Advisory Board of the Ford Foundation's Energy Policy&#13;
Project and is now a member of the Consumer Affairs Special Impact&#13;
Advisory Council to the Federal Energy Administration.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
2615 Washington Ave. 634-2573&#13;
ITS NEW. ITS JUST FOR&#13;
Home of t he Submarine&#13;
Sandwieh &#13;
6 T H E PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Sept. 2 4 , 1 9 7 5&#13;
Approximately 75 p ersons showed up despite a damp drizzle, at the Adult Student Association&#13;
picnic at Pet's Sunday. The rain stopped long enough for student families and friends to watch&#13;
magician John Jones make flowers out of a ir, and other amazing tricks. When Jones had his hands&#13;
handcuffed behind his back, pretending he couldn't escape the chains, one boy remarked, "he&#13;
deserves it." At any rate, the show went on, Jones escaped, and sought "someone from the audience&#13;
to volunteer." "Mommy, why can't I ever be someone from the audience," complained another&#13;
student's child.&#13;
Prizes donated from local businesses were distributed after the act. By that time, however, most&#13;
picnickers had been defeated by the weather. Nearly everyone who remained won a gift, from cookbooks&#13;
to shoe polish, including RANGER reporters and advisor to the Adult Student Association,&#13;
Connie Cummings. photo bv A1 Frederickson&#13;
TONIGHT&#13;
HICKORY&#13;
WIND&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
HEl LEMAN S&#13;
m Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
"On tap at the Union"&#13;
&lt;o&#13;
5731 Northwestern Avenue&#13;
(hwy 38)&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
GRACE BAPTIST&#13;
CHURCH&#13;
presents&#13;
"THE GREAT GRACE CHASE II"&#13;
A GIMMICK STYLE RALLYE OF APPROXIMATELY 65 MILES&#13;
Saturday, September 27, 1975&#13;
r&#13;
s,&#13;
'r,&#13;
°r ,,M0,rs&#13;
pSstCaJout 1.00 P.M . Refreshments to F ollow&#13;
One Driver, One Navigotor per car (kids 0:5 yrs. O.K.)&#13;
AWARDS: T op Three Finishers or Top 10 percent&#13;
One Dash Plaque per car (Any type of Detro.t Dynosaur O.K.)&#13;
For More Information or Pre registration, call:&#13;
Larry Brumback or Gary Van Koningsveld&#13;
632-2948 632-7454&#13;
suggested equipment: Compass, Phone Book, Dictionary, Enco map of S.E.&#13;
Wisconsin, Sense of Humor (a must), and a Very Patient and Understanding&#13;
Navigator&#13;
• PAPA B URGER&#13;
• TEEN B URGER&#13;
• MAMA B URGER&#13;
• BABY B URGER&#13;
'OPEN YEAR A ROUND1&#13;
| CARRY-OUTS&#13;
CALL AHEAD -&#13;
YOUR ORDER&#13;
% | WILL BE READY&#13;
Tubs of Chicken -&#13;
W Fish and Shrimp&#13;
' 2 MILE NORTH Of&#13;
MIDCITY THEATER&#13;
ON SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
552-8404&#13;
A &amp; W ROOT BEER DRIVE-IN&#13;
Sheridan Rd. (Hy. 32) North&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Hours Sun Thrs. 11-7&#13;
Fri &amp; Sat. 11 to 11&#13;
%&#13;
o&#13;
They're all going back!&#13;
We'll be shipping out&#13;
all the leftover&#13;
required books in 3 weeks!!&#13;
If you don't have your texts&#13;
get them now.&#13;
UW Parkside&#13;
Bookstore &#13;
Golfers having problems&#13;
in tourney action&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 24, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGFP&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Although the Parkside&#13;
linksmen shot well as a team in&#13;
the UW-Madison sponsored&#13;
Steinauer Invitational held at&#13;
Madison's Cherokee Country&#13;
Club, they placed 10th.&#13;
The tournament was won by&#13;
UW-Madison with a 383. The&#13;
second place team, UWMilwaukee&#13;
led by medalist Bill&#13;
Kokott, was three strokes back&#13;
with a 386. Parkside was another&#13;
twenty-five strokes back with a&#13;
Linksmen&#13;
look to&#13;
spring&#13;
by Thom Aiello&#13;
With two-thirds of the fall golf&#13;
season over, the Rangers have&#13;
been playing what coach Steve&#13;
Stevens calls "spotty golf."&#13;
They beat Marquette&#13;
University in head-to-head&#13;
competition, but have placed in&#13;
the lower half for most of their&#13;
tournament play.&#13;
Stevens characterized the play&#13;
as "good individual performances&#13;
so far, but not real&#13;
well as a team," and hoped that&#13;
before the season is over the&#13;
golfers could all put it together at&#13;
the same time. Stevens also said&#13;
he was pleased with the play of&#13;
sophomore Larry Rothering and&#13;
freshmen Ray Zuzinec and Larry&#13;
Dening, who has been hampered&#13;
lately by a shoulder problem.&#13;
Stevens also liked the "consistency"&#13;
of Jim Webers, as well&#13;
as the play of Stan Postorino, the&#13;
only senior on the squad.&#13;
The spring golf season should&#13;
bring better play, Stevens said,&#13;
because he will have at least&#13;
three more golfers, that are not&#13;
with the team now due to conflicts&#13;
with school and work this&#13;
fall, as well as the expected&#13;
improvement of the present team&#13;
members. Stevens is happy about&#13;
the spring prospects because, to&#13;
him, the spring is "more important,"&#13;
as it marks the time&#13;
when the golfers start qualifying&#13;
for national play.&#13;
K $&#13;
Homestead&#13;
fine food &amp; cocktails&#13;
1845 Racine St.&#13;
Open 11 a.m. 637-9685&#13;
QI8I uers&#13;
Jgg&#13;
Wisconsin's F inest B uffet&#13;
Lunch $ 2.00 11-2 p .m.&#13;
Dinner $ 2.95 4-7:30 p .m&#13;
Beverage a nd D essert&#13;
2005 L athrop Ave.&#13;
411.&#13;
For Parkside, Mark Kuyawa&#13;
had 78; Jim Webers, 80; Stan&#13;
Postorino, 82; Ray Zuzenic, 83-&#13;
and an injured Jim Denig, 88&#13;
In weekend golf action,&#13;
Parkside was on the road,&#13;
placing behind the UWWhitewater&#13;
Warhawks,' in the&#13;
Lawsonia Invitational.&#13;
Held at Green Lake, and called&#13;
by Coach Steve Stephens, "a real&#13;
test of golf," Parkside placed&#13;
ninth as Kuyawa shot 80;&#13;
Zuzenican 83; Denig, 84; Steve&#13;
Christensen, 88; and Larry&#13;
Rothering 89.&#13;
At Green Bay's wet, Royal Scot&#13;
Country Club, the Rangers came&#13;
through Sat. with a fifth place&#13;
showing, as Kuyawa had 80,&#13;
Zuzenic and Denig, 81;&#13;
Christensen, 83; and Rothering,&#13;
89.&#13;
The next Ranger golf action&#13;
will be closer to home as&#13;
Parkside goes to the Carthage&#13;
Invitational at the Bristol Oaks&#13;
Country Club on Friday, and on&#13;
Saturday, the Whitewater Invitational&#13;
at Janesville's&#13;
Riverside Country Club.&#13;
Cantonese &amp; American&#13;
Fine Delicacies&#13;
FAMILY DINNERS&#13;
Dine in or Carry Out&#13;
—CLOSED MONDAYS—&#13;
CH1AM&#13;
RESTAURANT &amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
MJ7 Pureed Ave. • ph 554.1320&#13;
—FREE PARKING—&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
ALL NEW THIS WEEK!&#13;
A TRIPLE HEADER PROMOTION...&#13;
0.V S*" PEPSI GLASS INVASION&#13;
(Wed., Sept. 24 thr u Fri., Oc t. 3)&#13;
Buy a large Pepsi (Regularly 25=) for 39c and keep the specially designed&#13;
Tiffany styled "Real Glass" Pepsi glass. (Additional glasses to finish out a&#13;
set available at the Parkside Bookstore at 30' each)&#13;
"Do it Yourself" SALAD BAR&#13;
NEW FEATU RE IN T H E&#13;
BUFFET ROOM&#13;
GARDEN FRESH MIXED GREENS WITH A MINIMUM OF:&#13;
6 TOPPINGS (SUCH AS CROUTONS, BACOS, SHREDDED CHEESE, ETC.)&#13;
4 DRESSINGS (BLUE CHEESE, 1000 ISLAND, ITALIAN, ETC.)&#13;
TWO SIZES: 55* BOWL 95* PLATTER&#13;
AND IN T R O D U C I NG T H E&#13;
B.A.C.&#13;
WHAT IS IT? HINT: IT'S BIG! ...AND YOU EAT IT FOR DESSERT OR A SNACK&#13;
SPEND 20* AND FIND OUT FOR YOURSELF &#13;
by Thorn Aiello&#13;
The Parkside soccer team got&#13;
off to a good start last Wed. by&#13;
beating Rockford College 4-0 a t&#13;
home. The Rangers gained a 2-0&#13;
lead in the first half on goals by&#13;
sophomore Stan Stadler and&#13;
junior Vince Ruffolo. Parkside, 1-&#13;
0, stretched their lead to 4-0 in the&#13;
second half on a penalty kick goal&#13;
by senior Tashe Bozinovski and&#13;
Ruffolo's second score of the&#13;
game.&#13;
Rockford, 0-3, got their only&#13;
goal late in the game after&#13;
Parkside pulled most of their&#13;
regulars, including starting&#13;
goalie Bernie Hefner, a freshman.&#13;
Parkside head coach, Hal&#13;
Henderson, said his team is&#13;
"always happy to win - especially&#13;
the first game," and that despite&#13;
their record Rockford is a "good&#13;
young team."&#13;
Henderson also said Parkside&#13;
is young "in terms of University&#13;
history (in soccer), but not all are&#13;
young in experience." He noted&#13;
that many of the players participated&#13;
in an amateur league in&#13;
Milwaukee during the year.&#13;
With the tough schedule ahead&#13;
Henderson said he would be&#13;
happy with a .500 season, which&#13;
would mark the first time in the&#13;
six years of soccer at Parkside&#13;
But Henderson would ratherplay&#13;
Runners do well,&#13;
have 2-0 standing&#13;
"one game at a time" than get&#13;
caught looking too far ahead,&#13;
captan Captain Frank Liu, a&#13;
senior, was named by Henderson&#13;
as one of h is top players, though&#13;
he said there is "no one star" on&#13;
the team.&#13;
Parkside's soccer team was&#13;
blanked, 2-0, by Northern Illinois&#13;
University last Saturday, in a&#13;
game played in DeKalb, Illinois.&#13;
The Rangers now hold a 1-1&#13;
record on the season.&#13;
The Rangers next game is at&#13;
home Wed., Sept. 24, against&#13;
Trinity College. Game time is&#13;
3:30 p.m. After that the Rangers&#13;
take to the road, playing Bethel&#13;
College on Saturday and the&#13;
University of Minnesota on,&#13;
Sunday. Both games are in&#13;
Minneapolis.&#13;
by Ellen Bergqulst 9th. Also in the running tor Club baseball&#13;
important in&#13;
fall&#13;
The Parkside cross-country&#13;
team edged the University of&#13;
Illinois-Chicago Circle, 28-29. The&#13;
close victory gives Parkside a 2-0&#13;
record for the season. In the&#13;
meet, run in Oak Brook, Illinois,&#13;
Ray Fredericksen of Parkside&#13;
took the individual championship.&#13;
&#13;
Parkside, now 5-0 a gainst the&#13;
Chikas since they first met,&#13;
gained the victory with the strong&#13;
help of Jeff DeMatthew, 4th;&#13;
Mike Rivers, 6th; Greg Julich,&#13;
8th; and John Van Den Brandt,&#13;
Fencers&#13;
begin practice&#13;
Fencing coach, Loran Hein,&#13;
requests that all students interested&#13;
in participating in the&#13;
varsity fencing program, contact&#13;
him in the Phy. Ed. Building.&#13;
Students may choose to use either&#13;
the foil, sabre or the epee&#13;
weapons.&#13;
Personals&#13;
Lynne. If you want the truth, just ask me.&#13;
Paula.&#13;
Parkside were Jim De Vasquez,&#13;
10th, and Curt Spieker, 11th.&#13;
Coach, Vic Grodfrey, said&#13;
Circle was stronger than he had&#13;
anticipated, but the great help by&#13;
the freshmen, Rivers, Julich, and&#13;
Van Den Brandt, is what made&#13;
the difference in Parkside's first&#13;
duel meet of the season.&#13;
Next on the schedule for the&#13;
young, but talented, Rangers is a&#13;
meet at home this Saturday,&#13;
Sept. 27. They will start at 11 a.m.&#13;
against Loyola University. UWMilwaukee&#13;
will also take part&#13;
in this meet.&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
As a service to students, staff, and faculty,&#13;
RANGER classified ads and personal&#13;
notices are free. We request that advertisers&#13;
limit their ads to 25 words or less. RANGER&#13;
reserves the right to refuse questionable&#13;
material.&#13;
For Sale: Garrad turntable, Wilson T-3000&#13;
tennis racket, short-wave radio, electronic&#13;
calculator (Texas Instruments SR-ll, ACDC&#13;
adapter). Negotiable. Call 637-8917,&#13;
evenings and weekends. Ask for Helmut or&#13;
Kathy.&#13;
Child care available at Parkside Child&#13;
Care Center. $2.50 for a four hour block or 75&#13;
cents an hour. Ages 2-7. Call 553-2227.&#13;
Typing, 30 cents per page, one carbon&#13;
copy, minor corrections. Call Dolores&#13;
Hrouda; 633-9409 or 639-6958, 1919 Taylor&#13;
Ave. Racine.&#13;
ROOMS FOR STUDENTS. One block from&#13;
GTI, Racine. Call RB 637-6129 days, or 633-&#13;
5010 after 6:30 p.m. and weekends.&#13;
FOR SALE: Camaro. 34,000 miles/&#13;
automatic 327, excellent condition. Call 639-&#13;
1388 after 5 p.m.&#13;
PART TIME WORK: Taylor Homeutoring,&#13;
coaching, lifeguard, arts and&#13;
crafts, field trips, etc. Call 554-8511 during&#13;
jusiness hours.&#13;
Coach Kenneth Oberbruner&#13;
announced that fall basebal&#13;
tryouts for club sport basebal&#13;
have begun. Anyone interested ir&#13;
trying out for fall baseball shoulc&#13;
get in touch with Oberbruner ai&#13;
115 Tallent Hall, or call 2219&#13;
Oberbruner said that fall clut&#13;
baseball is important to thos&lt;&#13;
who might wish to try out foi&#13;
Varsity baseball in the spring&#13;
Practice is held daily from 4-5:3(&#13;
on the ball diamond.&#13;
OINOS&#13;
Northside 3728 D ouglas&#13;
639-7115&#13;
Southside 18 16-16th S t.&#13;
634-1991&#13;
PICK UP OR&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS&#13;
DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME&#13;
FINE F OODS&#13;
&amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEAFOOD&#13;
CHOPS&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
LASAGANA&#13;
RAVIOLI&#13;
MOSTACCIOLI&#13;
GNOCCHI&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT DRINKS&#13;
WINES&#13;
WITH THIS E0I3P0N&#13;
Swimmers need members&#13;
The women's varsity swim team as well as the men's club team are&#13;
looking for members. Practice is from 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. Besides a&#13;
season of dual and triangular meets, Parkside annually sponsors the&#13;
Ranger relays, a coed relay event to be held this year on Nov. 22,1975.&#13;
Kayaking will be&#13;
offered as course&#13;
Kayaking will be taught in the&#13;
pool in a University Extension&#13;
course instructed by Robert&#13;
Grueninger, a Parkside Physical&#13;
Education professor. The class is&#13;
sponsored by the Wild Rivers&#13;
Club of Kenosha.&#13;
The class will meet on 4&#13;
Saturdays, 9:30 to noon, beginning&#13;
Sept. 27. Sunday excursions&#13;
in groups of 5 will be arraaged for&#13;
actual experience. Equipment&#13;
selection, safety, skills, and&#13;
techniques will be included.&#13;
Registrants should contact&#13;
University Extension at&#13;
Parkside, phone 553-2312.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board invites you to the&#13;
Sign up in room D-197 WLLC&#13;
ANY NEW RELEASE,&#13;
$6.88 b.P S 87.88 TAPES&#13;
™* S 4 . 2 9 B N b T S 5 . 4 0&#13;
0NE SWEET DREAM&#13;
5010 7TH AVENUE KENBSRA&#13;
BRECKENRIDGE COLO.&#13;
WINTER SKI FESTIVAL&#13;
t a&#13;
*10 OFF if you sign up before October 24&#13;
Includes: • Round Trip Bus Fare&#13;
• Lodging (4 to a room) • Parties&#13;
• Lift Tickets • Dance&#13;
Jan. 2-11&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Sept. 24, 1975&#13;
anger soccer players show winning form as they scored 4 goals to beat Rockford College.&#13;
^ photo by Al F rederickson&#13;
Soccer team has 1-1&#13;
record for season </text>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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