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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 4, issue 6</text>
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            <text>CSC working out barriers to open a book exchange</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Will effect budgeting&#13;
Committee will research past&#13;
and set future goals&#13;
by Leigh Feifer&#13;
Chancellor Guskin's convocation&#13;
speech listed several&#13;
immediate goals involving the&#13;
coordinated efforts of the faculty&#13;
and administration. These goals&#13;
join together to form a needed&#13;
review of the organizational&#13;
structure at Parkside. The&#13;
Committee of Principals (COP),&#13;
composed of faculty, administrators&#13;
and students (still to&#13;
be recruited), has been set up to&#13;
do just this.&#13;
A breakdown of the Gommittee&#13;
resulted in the formation of four&#13;
work and two staff groups, each&#13;
pursuing a different aspect of the&#13;
review.&#13;
The basic guidelines of each&#13;
group, as outlined by committee&#13;
chairman William Murin,&#13;
associate professor of Political&#13;
Science, are as follows:&#13;
Instructional Methods and&#13;
Innovations: To survey all facets&#13;
of experimental and existing&#13;
instructional methodologies in&#13;
the light of adding new innovations.&#13;
Michael Marron,&#13;
associate professor of Chemistry&#13;
and a member of the committee,&#13;
insisted that this group's efforts&#13;
"would not just be a catalog of&#13;
what we have now."&#13;
Regional Research: To compile&#13;
a thorough profile of&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin in terms&#13;
of an urban-industrial society. A&#13;
model of illustrate assets and&#13;
liabilities with an 85 percent&#13;
focus on southeastern Wisconsin.&#13;
Of those things going on outside&#13;
this region Ronald Gatterdam,&#13;
associate professor of&#13;
Mathematics, cited, "The&#13;
specifics of the various&#13;
technologies which must be a&#13;
part of our experience."&#13;
Institutional Research: To&#13;
survey and report on e existing&#13;
internal resources. To bring out&#13;
the voices of Parkside's direct&#13;
and indirect populations. Personal&#13;
interviews, which provide a&#13;
higher response rate, will be&#13;
substituted for mail surveys.&#13;
Program Development: This&#13;
group's function is "idea&#13;
generation" followed by prompt&#13;
acquisition of "formal approval,"&#13;
as stated by the group&#13;
chairman Ben Greenebaum,&#13;
associate professor of Physics.&#13;
To assess new and existing&#13;
curriculum and encourage new&#13;
ideas with a cooperative, multidisciplinary&#13;
focus. Eugene&#13;
Norwood, Dean of the College of&#13;
Science and Society, explained&#13;
that this work group "doesn't&#13;
deal with simple ongoing changes&#13;
like those pertaining to the&#13;
university catalog or timetable,&#13;
but deals with academic plan,&#13;
where you'll be in five years."&#13;
Student Population: To&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
examine all facets of "traditional&#13;
and non-traditional" student&#13;
enrollment. To review the role of&#13;
advising and counseling at&#13;
Parkside, as well as the "political&#13;
problems that arise in the conflict&#13;
with technical schools." To&#13;
determine "the desirability,&#13;
likelihood and cost of attracting&#13;
students from the outside area."&#13;
Priority Development: This&#13;
committee will act as an adivsory&#13;
group to COP. Working in close&#13;
association with Program&#13;
Development, this group will&#13;
present goals and objectives to&#13;
COP for discussion. "Integration&#13;
of consequences between and&#13;
among groups" must exist for&#13;
"there is much overlap and interaction"&#13;
between them,&#13;
remarked Paul Kleine, group&#13;
chairman and professor of&#13;
Education.&#13;
Chancellor Guskin stated that&#13;
one "can't define totally what the&#13;
committee is doing, it must&#13;
evolve."&#13;
A monthly COP seminar will&#13;
involve discussion of the data&#13;
received from each of the groups.&#13;
In January, when full group&#13;
reports have been submitted, an&#13;
operational document will bring&#13;
the mass of information into a&#13;
whole.&#13;
Those students interested in&#13;
assisting the committee with the&#13;
review are asked to contact&#13;
Murin at extension 2401 or CL 270.&#13;
Wednesday. Oct. 8, 1975&#13;
THf PARXMDF RANO.fR rt A ttlintNT earn in *.«•&gt;», P'MSIM RAWCfM B «. WUOWT ffouCATHM. Of Wt UKOT8SUV W wscfaui MSKffll&#13;
Vol. IV NO. 4&#13;
CSC working out barriers&#13;
to open a book exchange&#13;
by Harry Dingfelder&#13;
According to Kai Nail,&#13;
president of Concerned Students&#13;
Coalition (CSC), students may&#13;
have an alternative to purchasing&#13;
their books from the bookstore.&#13;
Beginning a week or two before&#13;
final exams, and continuing for&#13;
approximately two weeks after,&#13;
the CSC plans to operate a book&#13;
exchange.&#13;
CSC will have lists of major&#13;
university courses, and all books&#13;
required for such courses.&#13;
Students will pay a token fee to&#13;
Some students eligible&#13;
for Food Stamps&#13;
Students who are attending&#13;
Parkside at least half-time, may&#13;
be eligible for the Food Stamp&#13;
Program.&#13;
Students are eligible if he-she&#13;
has cooking facilities and&#13;
separate food storage facilities or&#13;
lives alone. The student must be&#13;
financially independent (including&#13;
married students who are&#13;
self-supporting) and live in the&#13;
Food Stamp Program area in&#13;
which he-she is applying.&#13;
(Financially independent means&#13;
that the student receives less&#13;
than half of his-her support from&#13;
parents or guardians during the&#13;
calender year in which the application&#13;
is made or parentsguardians&#13;
has not claimed the&#13;
student as a tax dependent for the&#13;
previous year and is not intending&#13;
to claim the student as a&#13;
tax dependent for the year the&#13;
application is made.) A tax&#13;
dependent student is eligible if&#13;
the household of their parents or&#13;
guardians are eligible to receive&#13;
Food Stamp Program benefits.&#13;
When an application shows a&#13;
student who is claimed for tax&#13;
purposes by a household certified&#13;
to participate in the Food Stamp&#13;
Program the Food Stamp Center&#13;
will mail a 'Dependent Income&#13;
Tax Dependency Questionable'&#13;
directly to the taxpayer (parent&#13;
or guardian) household along&#13;
with a cover lett, to be filled out&#13;
and sent back in before the application&#13;
can be considered. The&#13;
parent or guardian household&#13;
must demonstrate that they are&#13;
eligible due to the receipt of grant&#13;
of aid, or meet non-assistance&#13;
income and resource standards.&#13;
($3000 for all households of tw o or&#13;
more members where one or&#13;
more is 60 years of age or older;&#13;
$1500 for all other households.)&#13;
A student is ineligible if he-she&#13;
lives with other students and buy,&#13;
store and cook food jointly. The&#13;
student is also ineligible if he-she&#13;
is a tax dependent of a household&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
become a member of the exchange.&#13;
This fee will be good for&#13;
life membership. CSC will keep&#13;
the book and give the student a&#13;
receipt for it. CSC will set a price&#13;
on the book which they will be&#13;
determined arbitrarily by CSC.&#13;
The price will be determined by&#13;
what the bookstore buys the book&#13;
for and what it sells for. Nail&#13;
emphasized that this will not be&#13;
an exchange for books, but rather&#13;
for money. When CSC finds a&#13;
buyer for the book, they collect&#13;
the money and turn it over to the&#13;
student.&#13;
According to Bill Niebuhr,&#13;
Director of Student Life, there&#13;
are two major problems with the&#13;
CSC plan. "First of all, there&#13;
seems to be a contract conflict&#13;
which we have with the&#13;
bookstore. This contract states&#13;
the bookstore is to own all inventories&#13;
of merchandise and to&#13;
assume complete operation and&#13;
management of the bookstore at&#13;
the University." If, in fact, the&#13;
contract is not in conflict,&#13;
Niebuhr sees difficulty in an&#13;
appropriate storage area being&#13;
available to CSC.&#13;
Nail said that CSC will&#13;
definately go ahead with the book&#13;
exchange, and doesn't expect any&#13;
legal hassles. "If some do occur,&#13;
this is what the membership fee&#13;
is for. We will seek legal advice."&#13;
Nail feels the exchange will&#13;
succeed, "because it is not a&#13;
bookstore, only an exchange." It&#13;
will only succeed, Nail said if the&#13;
majority of students will support&#13;
it.&#13;
Gwendolyn Brooks&#13;
photo by A1 Fredricksen&#13;
We Real Cool&#13;
The Pool Players.&#13;
Seven at the Golden Shovel.&#13;
We real cool. We&#13;
I .eft school. We&#13;
Lurk late. We&#13;
Strike straight. We&#13;
Sing sin. We&#13;
Thin gin. We&#13;
Jazz June. We&#13;
Die soon.&#13;
Brooks tells poets&#13;
Be yourself fearlessly"&#13;
by Fred Johnson&#13;
"When handed a lemon, make&#13;
lemonaide. Do you know what to&#13;
do with trouble children? Make&#13;
lemonaide."&#13;
Gwendolyn Brooks, a Black&#13;
poet laureate from Chicago, a&#13;
black woman who has received&#13;
the Pulitzer Prize for poetry,&#13;
suggests that is how to sum up the&#13;
situation of Blacks in America.&#13;
A black woman who has known&#13;
and seen first hand the turmoil&#13;
and poverty of the ghettos of&#13;
Chicago's Southside and New&#13;
York's Harlem, Brooks is a&#13;
woman who has created out of&#13;
this madness poetic beauty and&#13;
pointblank truth.&#13;
At first sight, Brooks gives one&#13;
the impression of being a favorite&#13;
aunt, or even a grandmother, but&#13;
underneath that gentle exterior&#13;
lies a soul that is in step with&#13;
today, as well as tommorrow.&#13;
For a poet of Gwendolynian&#13;
status to come to the Parkside&#13;
campus is indeed an honor, not&#13;
only for the student body, but also&#13;
so the community can be exposed&#13;
to black culture at its best.&#13;
It is this type of rare occasion&#13;
that provokes people to a higher&#13;
level of consciousness.&#13;
Something that is to be savored&#13;
like fine brandy, you first sniff&#13;
the fragrant aroma of Brooks'&#13;
poetic liquor, then drink deep of&#13;
the Black images she creates for&#13;
personal pleasure.&#13;
According to Brooks, her poetic&#13;
ventures began at the age of&#13;
seven years when she began to&#13;
put rhymes together.&#13;
Brooks states, "At that age it&#13;
was a lot of fun to express my&#13;
feelings, fears, joys, hatreds and&#13;
love in poetry form, so I just kept&#13;
at it."&#13;
Brooks is, as her mother stated&#13;
when she was a young girl, the&#13;
female Paul Lawrence Dunbar.&#13;
In response to her poem "We&#13;
Real Cool", Brooks remarked&#13;
that the poem's title originated at&#13;
a party when a guest jumped up&#13;
and said in a somewhat&#13;
inebriated voice "WE real Cool!"&#13;
The rest of the poem came&#13;
from observations made while&#13;
she stood outside of a Chicago&#13;
Southside pool hall, watching the&#13;
black youth who had dropped out&#13;
of school, shoot pool and ponder&#13;
their bleak futures.&#13;
Contrary to popular belief, the&#13;
poem "We Real Cool" has no&#13;
sexual - overtones, Brooks&#13;
stressed in response to the many&#13;
verbal attacks made by some of&#13;
her puritanical critics.&#13;
Brooks' advice to aspiring&#13;
young Black wirters is to, "write&#13;
about what you know and speak&#13;
with real sincerity about feelings.&#13;
Don't imitate Wordsworth,&#13;
Thomas, Elliot, or E.C. Cummings.&#13;
Be yourself fearlessly." &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 8, 1975&#13;
Material seized&#13;
from political&#13;
organization&#13;
Last Thursday, Oct. 2, security officer Larry&#13;
Augustine seized newspapers being sold by the Young&#13;
Socialist Alliance in the WLLC concourse.&#13;
Administrative codes require groups promoting an&#13;
event or cause receive permission through the Office of&#13;
Student Life to set up equipment. If literature is sold, the&#13;
group must receive a permit from the Bursar's Office.&#13;
Although RANGER agrees that certain requirements&#13;
must be set in order to keep groups or individuals from&#13;
opening up stores within the University, we feel the YSA&#13;
was unjustly picked on by a bored cop.&#13;
YSA did have the sponsorship of the Concerned&#13;
Student Coalition and the approval to be on campus by&#13;
the Office of Student Life on a facilities agreement dated&#13;
Sept. 29, 1975, however, no permit for selling literature&#13;
was obtained until after the group was confronted by&#13;
Augustine.&#13;
In this same light, though, other groups have sold&#13;
books and papers before the Thursday incident, even&#13;
last week, and were not checked by security officers to&#13;
determine if proper forms were filed with various&#13;
University offices.&#13;
Irwin Zuehlke, Assistant Chancellor for Business&#13;
Affairs, said that the taking of materials from groups&#13;
without a permit is not normal procedure. And, in fact&#13;
told Augustine not to take YSA papers, but, if h e wanted&#13;
a paper he could purchase one and later be reimbursed.&#13;
Although the Office of Safety and Security reports to&#13;
Zuehlke, Zuehlke defended Augustine saying,&#13;
"Augustine was attempting to do his Job."&#13;
Augustine refused to speak to RANGER about the&#13;
matter.&#13;
University regulations afford student organizations,&#13;
such as CSC's invitation to the YSA to be on campus, the&#13;
right to "...examine and discuss all questions of interest&#13;
to them, and express opinions publicly as well as&#13;
privately...."&#13;
Whereas students at Parkside have the same constitutional&#13;
rights as do other citizens with regard to free&#13;
inquiry and expression, RANGER feels that the YSA&#13;
was censored in that the Office of Safety and Security&#13;
has set no precedent this year in either checking for&#13;
permits or seizing material.&#13;
We suggest that all groups be given consistent and&#13;
equal treatment by the Office of Safety and Security or,&#13;
security officers should leave organizations alone.&#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;
VL I'LL Li&#13;
LLLl'Lli&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In reference to the Ranger's&#13;
October 1 article dealing with the&#13;
PSGA meeting of September 23,&#13;
1975, w e would like to present a&#13;
more complete account of the&#13;
proceedings than what has appeared&#13;
in the Ranger's supposedly&#13;
representative, supposedly&#13;
factual report.&#13;
Yes, there was a motion to&#13;
censure the Vice President, a&#13;
motion which was voted down&#13;
unanimously. "The Senate," to&#13;
quote the Ranger, "had privately&#13;
decided to vote against the&#13;
motion before it was even introduced."&#13;
Nothing, therefore,&#13;
happened as a result of this predefeated&#13;
motion except that the&#13;
Senate, as a whole, made their&#13;
grievance known to the VicePresident;&#13;
that grievance being&#13;
that the Vice-President was, at&#13;
times, expressing his own personal&#13;
opinion on issues while&#13;
chairing the meetings. The&#13;
grievances were aired, the vote&#13;
was taken, and the meeting&#13;
moved on to other business.&#13;
Now to move on to the other&#13;
material covered in the meeting,&#13;
but first we'd like to ask one&#13;
question.... Why did the reporter&#13;
assigned to cover this meeting&#13;
totally ignore two and one-half&#13;
hours of pertinent Senate minutes&#13;
and instead concentrate her&#13;
article on a 30 minute segment of&#13;
the meeting dealing with the predefeated&#13;
motion to censure? The&#13;
Ranger states that "PSGA spent&#13;
a good part of their meeting"&#13;
with the censuring motion. Is 30&#13;
minutes a good part of a three&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In answer to the article in the&#13;
10-1-75 issue of the Ranger paper,&#13;
"Minority Students Seek Input,&#13;
Programs," I'd like sincerly to&#13;
say to PAB, to use the words of&#13;
Pete Strutynski, "they're full of&#13;
it!"&#13;
After reading that article, if I&#13;
had not known better, I would&#13;
have honestly believed that PAB&#13;
was trying their "gotdarnest" to&#13;
make sure all minority student's&#13;
input was supplied to PAB.&#13;
Perhaps this year this&#13;
organization has decided to try&#13;
and somehow begin to look for&#13;
just enough appealing entertainers&#13;
to pacify minority&#13;
students. Great. But the charges&#13;
in the 10-1-75 a rticle are of last&#13;
year, and last year PAB was&#13;
guilty of every charge minority&#13;
students brought against them.&#13;
I*ist year Third World was told&#13;
by Wayne Dannehl, and I quote,&#13;
"Blacks are a high insurance&#13;
risk." We were told we'd have to&#13;
have separate insurance on any&#13;
building we wanted to use in case&#13;
of damage after the event.&#13;
At the "Harvey Scales" dance&#13;
last semester, two Black women&#13;
students from New Orleans were&#13;
denied admission, even though&#13;
they had Parkside I.D.'s because&#13;
they could not produce I.D.'s to&#13;
prove their ages. This is against&#13;
the rules of the student handbook&#13;
which states, "Parkside students&#13;
who present a Parkside I.D., but&#13;
do not have proof of age or have&#13;
' not reached 18 years of age, may&#13;
be granted entry, but will not be&#13;
permitted to purchase or drink&#13;
beer." (page 36 of the UW&#13;
hour long meeting? Furthermore,&#13;
can an article that&#13;
concentrates on the one negative&#13;
point of anotherwise highly&#13;
productive meeting be considered&#13;
an example of truth in&#13;
reporting? We strongly doubt it.&#13;
Furthermore, we strongly&#13;
doubt that this article was&#13;
written in a manner that&#13;
remotely resembles being objective.&#13;
It was, in fact, quite&#13;
subjective. The Ranger did not&#13;
properly represent the tone and&#13;
subject manner of this year's&#13;
PSGA Senate meetings. If the&#13;
reporter would have opened her&#13;
eyes, she would have noticed that&#13;
the Senate does, in fact, do quite a&#13;
bit more than argue.&#13;
This particular Senate meeting&#13;
lasted approximately three&#13;
hours, in which time your student&#13;
senate accomplished the&#13;
following: discussed and voted on&#13;
five Constitutional amendments,&#13;
appointed Charles Senn (a&#13;
political science student) to the&#13;
position of Chief Justice of the&#13;
PSGA Court System, approved&#13;
the election rules for the October&#13;
22nd and 23rd PSGA elections,&#13;
approved a motion for more time&#13;
spent in the PSGA office by&#13;
Senators, and voted to undertake&#13;
the publicizing of the proposed&#13;
new student disciplinary&#13;
guidelines. As a result of this, a&#13;
meeting was scheduled for&#13;
Thursday, October 2 to make the&#13;
new guidelines public for all&#13;
students interested.&#13;
It is particularly noteworthy&#13;
that the election rules for the&#13;
upcoming PSGA election are&#13;
Parkside student handbook).&#13;
Other students were allowed&#13;
admission to the dance without&#13;
any identification at all. Why&#13;
were these two women denied&#13;
entry?&#13;
Now in answer to "all Blacks&#13;
hot liking soul music (even&#13;
though the percentage is so&#13;
minute, it all most doesn't exist),&#13;
I say so what. Who is talking&#13;
about precentage in the "Black&#13;
part of the budget"? Black&#13;
students, as well as all students&#13;
simply want quality entertainment.&#13;
We could care less&#13;
what the color of the entertainer&#13;
is as long as they are worthwhile.&#13;
Gwendolyn Brooks and Julian&#13;
Bond are for not only Black&#13;
audiences, but for all audiences.&#13;
So why this talk of the "Black&#13;
part of the budget"?&#13;
PAB talks of types of music and&#13;
lists them: Jazz Soul, Folk and&#13;
Rock. Of these four, which is&#13;
most often seen at Parkside? Of&#13;
these four, how many soul groups&#13;
have you seen at Parkside? How&#13;
many Jazz Black, White, Yellow,&#13;
purple or green? I've only seen&#13;
one "soul group," Harvey Scales&#13;
(which is debatable), and one&#13;
"Jazz" musician, Doc&#13;
Severinsen, whose jazz, at least&#13;
ready one month in advance&#13;
Last year the elections were&#13;
delayed because of an inability of&#13;
the Senate to establish a set of&#13;
election rules. Another point of&#13;
importance is that PSGA is&#13;
staffing its Judicial Branch f0r&#13;
the first time in history. More&#13;
important than this, is that a new&#13;
set of disciplinary guidelines&#13;
relating to you, the student, is&#13;
scheduled to go into effect'on&#13;
January 1, 1976. PSGA has accepted&#13;
the responsibility for&#13;
letting the student body of U.S.-&#13;
Parkside know of the&#13;
ramifications of these new&#13;
guidelines. Why didn't the&#13;
Ranger report on any of these&#13;
topics? All were covered at the&#13;
meeting.&#13;
The point that we're making is&#13;
that PSGA is accomplishing quite&#13;
a bit more than the Ranger gives&#13;
it credit for. The facts of the&#13;
September 16 meeting were&#13;
ignored in1 favor of the&#13;
development of a controversial&#13;
sounding story with a not-socontroversial&#13;
meaning. We ask&#13;
the Ranger to report the facts as&#13;
they are in the proper perspective&#13;
and not to resort to petty&#13;
journalistic practices such as&#13;
distortion, ommission, and&#13;
overstatement of facts.&#13;
Respectfully submitted,&#13;
Sen. Gerald E. Ferch&#13;
Sen. Boro D. Bosovich&#13;
Sen. William G. Ferko&#13;
Sen. Robert L.Turner&#13;
Sen. Avis L.J. Weber&#13;
Sen. Edmond J. Bielarczyk Jr.&#13;
Sen. Robert G. Vlach&#13;
what I heard at his concert here&#13;
at Parkside, was stretching the&#13;
meaning of the word.&#13;
PAB had scheduled Cannonball&#13;
Adderly, but, because of his&#13;
death, replaced him with Doc&#13;
Severinsen, their explanation&#13;
being convenience. Yeah well&#13;
fine. But, Doc Severinsen cannot&#13;
replace Cannonball Adderly.&#13;
That's like trying to replace&#13;
Perry Como with Kool and the&#13;
Gang. They attract two different&#13;
types of audiences.&#13;
All right PAB. You say you&#13;
want to be fair, and you don't&#13;
want to segregate your audiences&#13;
or your budget, then find a&#13;
replacement for Cannonball&#13;
Adderly. Find a musician that&#13;
plays that kind of Jazz.&#13;
Suggestions: Gene Harris, Eddie&#13;
Harris, Stanley Turrentine,&#13;
Herbie Mann, and Ramsey&#13;
Lewis. I'm sure not one of these&#13;
musicians will cost the price of&#13;
Doc Severinsen, and, will make&#13;
not most of your money back, but&#13;
all money back. And each will&#13;
attract a crowd as diversified&#13;
racially as you claim you'd like to&#13;
see.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Natasha Foiling&#13;
Debbie Kr-user&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
I would like to point out an&#13;
error in the Commentary of Phil&#13;
Hermann of the October 1st&#13;
Ranger. The "politically elected&#13;
nasco ' Board of Regents Bill&#13;
mentioned in the article was&#13;
proposed by two Kenosha&#13;
Democrats not Republicans. I&#13;
wish they were, but unfortunately&#13;
organized labor's multi-million&#13;
political machine has prevented&#13;
the election of any Republican in&#13;
Kenosha for quite some time.&#13;
Editors Note: Grassell is correct.&#13;
George Molinaro and Eugene&#13;
Dorff and Democrats. Ranger&#13;
apologizes for its error. &#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 8, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 8: Psychology club meeting at 1:30 p.m. in WLLC&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 8: Skeller with Deb Donattfrom 11:30-1 p.m.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 10: Debate and Forensics Assn. meeting at 2:30 p.m. in&#13;
CA233.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 10: Movie, "Bananas" at 8 p.m. in SAB Admission is $1.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 11: Women's swimming meet, Parkside vs. Carthage&#13;
at .1 p.m. in the PE Bldg.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 12: Movie, "Bananas" at 7:30 p.m. in SAB. Admission is&#13;
$1.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 14: Women's Volleyball, Parkside vs. Milwaukee Area&#13;
Tech. at 4 p .m. in the PE Bldg.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 14: West Indian Exhibilition showing through Oct 27 in&#13;
the CAT Gallery.&#13;
PSGA appointing committees&#13;
by Ann Verstegen&#13;
The clock hand clocked noon.&#13;
Seven people waited on Oct. 2 for&#13;
the Young Socialist Alliance&#13;
meeting to begin.&#13;
Ted Shakespeare, Tony Prince&#13;
and Jane Harris, members of a&#13;
YSA traveling team, manned a&#13;
literature table for a week. At one&#13;
point their literature was confiscated&#13;
by a security officer.&#13;
This meeting was the&#13;
culmination of a week's talking, a&#13;
week's work.&#13;
A large red banner with Young&#13;
Socialist Alliance spelled out in&#13;
gold, hung in back of the&#13;
speaker's table.&#13;
Tony Prince, YSA team&#13;
member and a founding member&#13;
of the National Alliance Against&#13;
Racism, spoke on the "Socialist&#13;
Strategy to Fight Racism."&#13;
Prince said the economic&#13;
Food stamps&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
of an ineligible household.&#13;
An ineligible student has an&#13;
opportunity to demonstrate that&#13;
he-she is an improperly claimed&#13;
tax dependent through a fair&#13;
hearing process. If the student&#13;
proves that he-she is not a&#13;
properly claimed tax dependent;&#13;
certification then will be based on&#13;
other criteria (income, rent,&#13;
utilities, tuition, and medical&#13;
expenses over $10-month).&#13;
A student does not have to file a&#13;
work eligibility requirement&#13;
form during semester breaks or&#13;
summer vacation if he-she is&#13;
enrolled in the next school&#13;
session. Nor does a eligible&#13;
parent-guardian household have&#13;
to file a work registration form&#13;
unless otherwise indicated.&#13;
Questions concerning the Food&#13;
Stamp Program can be answered&#13;
by Jan Miescke, Food Stamp&#13;
Outreach Worker, at 637-8377 or&#13;
at the Community action&#13;
Program (CAP) Memorial Hall72&#13;
7th Street, Racine.&#13;
In Racine, the Food Stamp&#13;
Center is located at 100 South&#13;
Main Street. Hours of operation&#13;
are 9 a.m.-3 p.m., Monday&#13;
situation is worsening racism,&#13;
wiping out gains made in the 60's.&#13;
"Unemployment in the black&#13;
community according to the&#13;
Urban League is generally 26&#13;
percent; 65 percent for black&#13;
youths. This is as high as it was&#13;
during the Depression." He also&#13;
talked about bussing for&#13;
desegregation in Boston and&#13;
Louisville.&#13;
According to Prince, the Young&#13;
Socialist Alliance wants a&#13;
democratic-socialistic society&#13;
where, "instead of major industries&#13;
owned by a few families;&#13;
people who produce wealth&#13;
should control and make&#13;
decisions."&#13;
YSA is against racism, supports&#13;
tuition cutbacks, and in&#13;
favor of the elimination of&#13;
capitalism and for women's&#13;
rights. "We're the best organized&#13;
through Friday. They are closed&#13;
the last two working days of e ach&#13;
month. In Burlington, the Food&#13;
Stamp Center operates out of the&#13;
National Guard Armory at 240&#13;
Wisconsin Street, on the 2nd and&#13;
4th Wednesday of each month.&#13;
Hours of operation there are 9:30-&#13;
group on the left," Prince said.&#13;
When asked why attendance&#13;
was not larger, Prince said,&#13;
"These issues are abstract in&#13;
Wisconsin. Wisconsin doesn't&#13;
have a large minority population.&#13;
There's no struggle in the area.&#13;
It's not as concrete to people why&#13;
politics is important."&#13;
Prince was amazed how many&#13;
students told him Parkside was&#13;
apathetic. "If they all got&#13;
together, they'd know it's not so,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
Busses will leave Milwaukee&#13;
Oct. 10 for the 2nd National&#13;
Conference on Racism in Boston.&#13;
The 15th Young Socialist Convention&#13;
will be held Dec. 28-Jan. 1&#13;
at UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
Last week's traveling team is&#13;
now in Oshkosh.&#13;
Carole Ciannoni, 430 Three&#13;
Mile Rd., Apt. C-4, Racine 53402&#13;
may be contacted locally.&#13;
12 and 1-2:30. Only Racine County&#13;
residents may apply at the above&#13;
Food Stamp Centers. Kenosha&#13;
residents may apply for food&#13;
stamps at the Department of&#13;
Social Services, 1714-52nd Street,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association is appointing&#13;
students for PSGA&#13;
senate, judicial branch,&#13;
university committees, PSGA&#13;
committees, executive branch&#13;
dept., and the allocations committee.&#13;
Students interested in&#13;
appointment are asked to contact&#13;
PSGA in WLLC D193, call 553-&#13;
2244, or attend senate meetings.&#13;
System needs money&#13;
to do adequate job&#13;
by Stephen Smith&#13;
Faculty salaries are not high&#13;
enough, and their recent increases&#13;
are well below those&#13;
going to public and vocational&#13;
school teachers in the state, U.W.&#13;
President John Weaver' said&#13;
during his first news conference&#13;
of the semester held Sept. 29.&#13;
"The way the faculty has been&#13;
treated gives them plenty of&#13;
reason to think of collective&#13;
bargaining," he said. "Faculties&#13;
that are organized have received&#13;
better salary considerations than&#13;
unorganized members. That is&#13;
plain wrong."&#13;
There is a bill before the&#13;
legislature to allow collective&#13;
bargaining but the matter won't&#13;
be considered until January.&#13;
Closed classes cause problems&#13;
Suits against the University&#13;
have been proposed by students&#13;
who can not receive their degrees&#13;
because of closed classes,&#13;
Weaver said. This has been a&#13;
porblem becuase of the lack of&#13;
additional money to open more&#13;
sections together with the increased&#13;
enrollment.&#13;
Student population has increased&#13;
by 4,000 more throughout&#13;
the UW system than was expected&#13;
this fall. Tuition for&#13;
residents covers about one-fourth&#13;
of costs of education.&#13;
Weaver said, "If the university&#13;
is not to harm students and not to&#13;
harm the quality of education,&#13;
we've simply got to have funding&#13;
to do the job, we're being asked to&#13;
do."&#13;
Weaver, 60, returned to work&#13;
two weeks ago. He has been&#13;
recuperating from a heart attack&#13;
suffered last July 25, and will&#13;
only work part time, following&#13;
doctors orders.&#13;
Feeling he has much more to&#13;
contribute, he does not plan to&#13;
retire, Weaver noted at the end of&#13;
the news conference.&#13;
YSA sees racism and&#13;
unemployment as major issues&#13;
pays 51/2%&#13;
on passbook&#13;
Saving^&#13;
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4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 8, 1975&#13;
Women learn assertive behavior&#13;
and independence in program&#13;
by Catherine Blise&#13;
Thursday night, Oct. 2 at&#13;
Gateway Technical Institute,&#13;
Ginny Dotson, a counselor at&#13;
Marquette University, held a&#13;
workshop on Assertiveness&#13;
Training for Students. The&#13;
workshop was held to help people&#13;
become more aware of their&#13;
wants and be assertive about&#13;
them.&#13;
The workshop was offered in&#13;
observance of International&#13;
Woman's Year, but it was open to&#13;
the entire public, both male&#13;
and female. Dotson found that&#13;
even though everyone needs to&#13;
become more assertive, she said&#13;
"women have a greater need to&#13;
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become assertive because the&#13;
role they play in society, teaches&#13;
them to take care of everyone&#13;
else's needs, above their own."&#13;
The workshop showed how to&#13;
recognize three types of&#13;
behavior; assertive, nonassertive,&#13;
and aggressive. The&#13;
workshop also explained our&#13;
basic human rights, which are:&#13;
the right to refuse- requests&#13;
without having to feel guilty or&#13;
selfish; the right to feel and&#13;
continued on page 5&#13;
66&#13;
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From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at the Union"&#13;
P.A.B. i&#13;
Film Series&#13;
' Presents:&#13;
7 /&#13;
IBANANASI&#13;
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[Oct. 10-8 p.m.&#13;
^ S.A.B.&#13;
k0ct.l2-7:30 p.m.!&#13;
S.A.B.&#13;
ID'S required&#13;
.Beer will be)&#13;
served&#13;
Jim Carrol.1&#13;
en joys working&#13;
with a&#13;
vicious killer.&#13;
Just three years out of college, laser technologist&#13;
Jim Carroll didn't make senior research&#13;
physicist at Eastman Kodak Company by acting&#13;
timid. So when he had the courage to pit science&#13;
against a dread disease, we backed him. Win or&#13;
lose.&#13;
The medical community enlisted Kodak's&#13;
help in training lasers on the war on cancer. We&#13;
responded with a pair of 500 million watt laser&#13;
systems. And left the rest up to Jim.&#13;
n time, the lasers proved unsuccessful in&#13;
treating cancer, but we'd do it again if we had to&#13;
Because while we're in business to make a profit&#13;
we care what happens to society. It's the same'&#13;
society our business depends on.&#13;
Kodak.&#13;
More than a business. &#13;
Pollution in Lakes increasing&#13;
despite laws and programs&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 8, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
by Kurt Larson&#13;
Pollution in Lake Michigan and&#13;
the other Great Lakes is still&#13;
increasing despite the passage of&#13;
the Clean Water Act of 1972, a law&#13;
aimed at curbing the discharge of&#13;
pollutants into the water, according&#13;
to environmentalist Lee&#13;
Botts at a speech at Parkside&#13;
September 24.&#13;
Botts cited a lack of forsight on&#13;
the part of policy makers as the&#13;
main cause of the dilemma. "We&#13;
cannot afford to continue&#13;
developing the Great Lakes&#13;
without considering the possible&#13;
consequences of our actions," she&#13;
said. In spite of the abundance of&#13;
evidence in support of this&#13;
assertion, Botts said it is still&#13;
difficult to convince policy&#13;
makers to consider the environment&#13;
in their plans for the&#13;
future.&#13;
"It is estimated that by the&#13;
year 2020 we will require 16 times&#13;
as much electricity as we used in&#13;
1970," she explained. Most of this&#13;
additional power will be provided&#13;
by nuclear reactors. The federal&#13;
government is considering&#13;
Michigan's upper penninsula as a&#13;
possible site for a huge nuclear&#13;
plant. The plant itself and the&#13;
power lines connecting it to&#13;
various urban centers would&#13;
cover approximately 225 square&#13;
miles. The environmental consequences,&#13;
Botts stated, could be&#13;
severe. Not only would the plant&#13;
present all of the dangers normally&#13;
associated with nuclear&#13;
power (radiation leakage&#13;
thermal pollution, etc.), there is&#13;
an additional threat of tornadoes&#13;
being created by waste heat.&#13;
Botts said she feels that coal&#13;
plants would probably be a more&#13;
acceptable solution to our&#13;
growing need for electricity&#13;
because nuclear power is not as&#13;
cheap as it was originally thought&#13;
to be, and "coal plants do create&#13;
pollution, but not pollution that&#13;
will last for 200,000 y ears."&#13;
Botts stated the U.S. Army&#13;
Corps of Engineers has begun&#13;
work on new canals to connect&#13;
the Great Lakes in order to open&#13;
Participants in last Sunday's Road Rally are being questioned by&#13;
rally officials at their second the Pub and Grub.&#13;
The Road Rally, which was sponsored by the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board, ran participants around a 60-mile course encompassing both&#13;
Racine and Kenosha counties. Most people, however, tended to take a&#13;
longer route. There were three different checkpoints along the way&#13;
where contestants were given points for answering questions&#13;
correctly. At one point, participants were asked what the Chancellor's&#13;
name was, but apparently Chancellor Guskin is still not very well&#13;
known.&#13;
The object of the contest was to get through the course as quickly as&#13;
possible with the .highest number of points.&#13;
Prizes were given for first, second, third and last place. Charlie&#13;
Offer and Lee Wuerker were each given a trophy and a $15 gift certificate&#13;
for coming in first.&#13;
them up to ocean-going "super&#13;
ships" by the year 2000. She said&#13;
this is, not necessarily a smart&#13;
thing to do, because shipping in&#13;
the Great Lakes was declining,&#13;
even be fore the current&#13;
economic recession. This decline&#13;
may be an indication that industry&#13;
in the Great Lakes region&#13;
could become less important in&#13;
the future.&#13;
It is extremely important,&#13;
according to Botts, that the&#13;
general public know about environmental&#13;
issues. Great Lakes&#13;
Tommorrow, a group she is&#13;
active with, will hold a confernce&#13;
on October 23 and 24 at&#13;
Wingspread to identify the major&#13;
environmental issues in the area.&#13;
Interested students may contact&#13;
Henry Cole associate professor of&#13;
earth science, in GR 303.&#13;
assertive training&#13;
continued from page 4&#13;
express anger; the right to feel&#13;
and express a healthy competitiveness&#13;
and achievement&#13;
drive; the right to strive for selfactualization&#13;
through whatever&#13;
ethical channels one's talents and&#13;
interests find natural; the right to&#13;
use one's judgment in deciding&#13;
which needs are the most important&#13;
for one to meet; the right&#13;
to make mistakes; the right to&#13;
have one's opinions given the&#13;
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capable human adult and not to&#13;
be patronized; the right to have&#13;
one's needs be as important as&#13;
the needs of other people; and the&#13;
right to be independent.&#13;
Everyone who attended the&#13;
workshop participated in exercises&#13;
that were designed to help&#13;
them become more assertive.&#13;
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6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 8, 1975&#13;
Ben Franklin Festival&#13;
features lectures, displays&#13;
Center plans group&#13;
discussions, seminars&#13;
Colonial genius-of-manytrades,&#13;
Benjamin Franklin, will&#13;
be saluted at a Bicenteenial&#13;
Franklin Festival at Parkside&#13;
Wednesday through Friday, Oct.&#13;
8, 9 and 10.&#13;
S c i e n t i s t, d i p l o m a t ,&#13;
philosopher, printer, humorist,&#13;
author, inventor, Franklin has&#13;
been called America's first&#13;
"Renaissance Man" and a oneman&#13;
compendium of t he arts and&#13;
sciences of Colonial America.&#13;
The festival will include a&#13;
series of lectures by nationallyknown&#13;
Franklin scholars,&#13;
demonstrations of some of his&#13;
mechanical and mathematical&#13;
inventions and displays and&#13;
exhibits. All of t he programs are&#13;
free. Lectures will be in the&#13;
Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
The festival will open Oct. 8&#13;
with a lecture on "Benjamin&#13;
Franklin: Revo lutio nary&#13;
Diplomat," at 7:30 p.m. by&#13;
Norman K. Risjord of the UWMadison&#13;
history faculty, and a&#13;
lecture titled "What Kind of a&#13;
Writer was Franklin? at 8:30&#13;
p.m. by James A. Sappenfield of&#13;
the UW-Milwaukee English&#13;
faculty.&#13;
On Oct. 9, the festival will&#13;
feature a lecture demonstration&#13;
on e lectrical apparatus invented&#13;
by Franklin at 7:30 p.m. by two&#13;
Parkside physics students, David&#13;
Prins and Jeffrey Nehr, and a&#13;
lecture demonstration on&#13;
Franklin's "Magic Squares," a&#13;
mathematical game at which he&#13;
acquired such skill that&#13;
mathematicians today are still&#13;
wondering just how he achieved&#13;
some of his construction unaided&#13;
by computer technology, at 8:30&#13;
p.m. by Donald Piele Parkside&#13;
assistant professor of&#13;
mathematics. The second&#13;
demonstration will be followed by&#13;
an opportunity for those attending&#13;
to try their own hands at&#13;
creating magic squares using&#13;
Parkside's computer terminals.&#13;
Speakers on Oct. 10 will be&#13;
James H. Hutson of the Library&#13;
of C ongress, who will lecture on&#13;
"Cheaper by the Dozen: Benjamin&#13;
Franklin, Apostle of&#13;
American Population Growth" at&#13;
7:30 p.m. and Bernard S. Finn of&#13;
the Smithsonian Institution, who&#13;
will lecture on "Benjamin&#13;
Franklin as a Scientist" at 8:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
On alternating Tuesdays,&#13;
beginning October 7 at 7:30 p.m.,&#13;
scripture study and contemporary&#13;
issue discussions are&#13;
scheduled at CHI-RHO CENTER.&#13;
A partner-relationship series of&#13;
4 s eminars is planned for Mondays,&#13;
beginning October 20&#13;
through November 10 beginning&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. The series is&#13;
designed for married couples or&#13;
those intending marriage in the&#13;
near future and will treat the&#13;
psychological, social, spiritual&#13;
and physiolocial and dimensions&#13;
of a relationship. Reservations&#13;
before October 15 may be made&#13;
by phoning 552-8626 or 657-3408.&#13;
Vets oppose repeal&#13;
of G.I. Bill system&#13;
by Jeff Swencki&#13;
On Saturday, September 27, the&#13;
Wisconsin Association of Concerned&#13;
Veterans Organizations&#13;
(WACVO) executive board met in&#13;
Stevens Point. The main topics&#13;
under discussion were the G.I.&#13;
bill, and discharge review&#13;
boards.&#13;
A r equest for more discharge&#13;
review boards has been sent to&#13;
President Ford. At the present&#13;
time the nearest board is located&#13;
in Chicago.&#13;
Veterans are also encouraged&#13;
to protest the movie "Apocalypse&#13;
Now" which depicts Viet Nam&#13;
Era Veterans as psycopathic&#13;
killers.&#13;
It was also brought to the attention&#13;
of the board that, "the&#13;
House Committee on Veteran&#13;
Affairs has voted to repeal the&#13;
G.I. Bill for persons entering the&#13;
armed services after December&#13;
31, 1975. Senator Vance Hartke&#13;
(D-Inidana), Chairman of the&#13;
Senate Committee on Veteran&#13;
Affairs, has strongly opposed&#13;
repeal of the G.I. Bill." The&#13;
American Association of State&#13;
Colleges and Universitites and&#13;
the American Association of&#13;
Community and Junior Colleges&#13;
gave these reasons for the continuation&#13;
of the bill:&#13;
1. The G.I. Bill program since&#13;
WWII has ectended educational&#13;
opportunities to millions who&#13;
otherwise would not have this&#13;
chance, including many from&#13;
lower-income, working-class or&#13;
disadvantaged backgrounds.&#13;
2. The military services would&#13;
prefer to keep the G.I. Bill as an&#13;
incentive for the recruitment of&#13;
qualified people. It has been a&#13;
major incentive in recent years.&#13;
3. Several hundred thousand&#13;
veterans will leave the service&#13;
each year, and a great many&#13;
could not continue their&#13;
education without the G.I. B ill.&#13;
4. The G.I.B ill program has&#13;
paid for itself several times over&#13;
in increased earnings and&#13;
resulting larger tax payments to&#13;
federal, state, and local governments.&#13;
&#13;
The UW-P Vets Club will hold&#13;
its next meeting on Sunday,&#13;
October 12, at 4 p.m. in the SAB.&#13;
All members are urged to attend.&#13;
Veterans interested in joining the&#13;
club are welcome.&#13;
REG0RDS AND TAPES&#13;
WATERBEDS&#13;
PIPES AND PARAPHENALIA&#13;
BEAN BA GS&#13;
LEATHER G00DS&#13;
0NE SWEET&#13;
DREAM&#13;
5010 7TH AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
654-3578&#13;
INTRODUCING&#13;
The Skellar&#13;
(FORMERLY WHITESKELLAR)&#13;
BEER DRINKER'S QUICK QUIZ&#13;
Just to kill a minute or two, why don't you match your own&#13;
beer-drinking habits and preferences against those of the&#13;
Budweiser Brewmaster. While you're taking the test, it might&#13;
be a good idea to cover u p the answers with a cold can or two&#13;
of the King of Beers,.&#13;
1.When you do use a glass, do you ease the beer down&#13;
the side'' Q Or do you pour it down the middle to get&#13;
a nice head of foam9 n&#13;
9&#13;
£*• How much foam do you like on a glass of draught&#13;
beer? None at all • One inch Q One and a half to&#13;
two inches •&#13;
3.Do you like to drink your beer in little sips? n Big&#13;
swallows? • Something in b etween? •&#13;
*1. Which do you like best'&#13;
Canned beer • Bottled beer Q Draught beer •&#13;
•.Which beer is brewed by "exclusive Beechwood Ageing&#13;
with natural carbonation to produce a better taste and&#13;
a smoother, more drinkable beer?" Budweiser n Some&#13;
other brand •&#13;
). When you say "Budweiser." do you sav it often' n&#13;
. . . eagerly? • loudly" Q... gladly? Q '&#13;
HOURS:&#13;
10:00&#13;
10:30 p .m.&#13;
Mon.-Thurs.&#13;
10:00 a .m.-&#13;
5:00 p .m.&#13;
Fridays&#13;
SI&#13;
^ - -- -r-—"&#13;
to,, an,, •*»&lt;'"&#13;
/jMtJ *&#13;
Jb&gt;\&#13;
&lt;&gt;iq»:)&lt;la.».)e&#13;
• UK S JO.YlSUi: ||Y C)&#13;
j.)sio,v\pny a|u () ij&#13;
«"pny s p si:&#13;
3uu| si: Ms.np jo Any {.&#13;
sMopn.Yis 2iy g&#13;
snq.iui Z «,-) ?/, 1 z&#13;
unioi&#13;
J&lt;&gt; piMij Aipp:,»n J&lt;»J&#13;
•»|ppiui ,u p u.wop jq3iy [&#13;
SH&amp;AVSNV&#13;
ANHEUSER-BUSCH I NC . ST IO UIS&#13;
Located a t th e b ottom of th e s tairs&#13;
where G reenquist Hall &amp; The L LC meet Distributed by E. F. Madrigrano 1831-55th Kenosha, Wl &#13;
Highway 31 an d County Trunk E&#13;
MIGOS&#13;
Here at Jose Cuervo, we believe&#13;
an informed consumer is an&#13;
informed consumer.&#13;
Students trip to sites&#13;
and study glacial history&#13;
Organization to get discounts&#13;
by Michael Palacek&#13;
It is next to impossible to&#13;
believe that a professor and a&#13;
group of students would dress in&#13;
grubby clothes and spend a whole&#13;
day in the hot sun digging up and&#13;
looking at rocks and dirt.&#13;
But every spring and fall, that&#13;
is exactly what persons in earth&#13;
and life science classes do. They&#13;
go on field trips.&#13;
Field trips are better than&#13;
classes, some say, because in the&#13;
field one can understand by&#13;
doing, whereas in the classroom,&#13;
learning takes place by listening.&#13;
The Glacial Geology class trip,&#13;
to eastern and central Racine and&#13;
Kenosha counties to view, study,&#13;
and dissect the glacial landforms&#13;
of th e area, started out early on a&#13;
cool, moist fall day. The sun was&#13;
rising like a huge orange ball,&#13;
promising warmer fairer&#13;
weather, which came. It was&#13;
strange, Glacial Geology&#13;
students said, because Alan&#13;
Schneider, associate professor of&#13;
earthscience, never scheduled a&#13;
field trip that really panned out&#13;
as expected. Somehow, the&#13;
weather never seemed in his&#13;
favor.&#13;
But on this day, things looked&#13;
promising. In two university&#13;
cars, equipped with CB radios,&#13;
they headed towards Lake&#13;
Michigan. Along the trip&#13;
Schneider would lecture over the&#13;
air waves, pointing out hills and&#13;
dales in language that often, only&#13;
an earth scientist could decipher.&#13;
One would also find it amazing&#13;
and hard to understand why the&#13;
group would descend on and&#13;
attack the Lake Michigan&#13;
shoreline with shovels, hammers&#13;
and hands as if in search of some&#13;
ancient treasure.&#13;
Their treasure was knowledge&#13;
of the past. Digging through&#13;
layers of sediment, an unknowing&#13;
eye would look through the beach&#13;
sand, clay and mud.&#13;
After the dig, Schneider would&#13;
begin questioning and have&#13;
students interpret what was just&#13;
uncovered. They discovered that&#13;
thousands of years ago, a great&#13;
glacial ice sheet retreated&#13;
eastward into what is now Lake&#13;
Michigan, depositing soil, called&#13;
till, behind its path to the sea. As&#13;
the ice melted, the water level&#13;
rose, covering the spot with deep&#13;
water. There, sediments entrapped&#13;
in the water, finally&#13;
dropped to the bottom. The lake&#13;
STUDENT HELP&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Burger S hoppe&#13;
Wednesday&#13;
2-4 p.m.&#13;
began retreats, and the spot&#13;
eventually became beach&#13;
Through time, the lake level&#13;
would rise and fall, producing&#13;
darker or lighter soils on the spot&#13;
which would set in layers. Now a&#13;
beach, the sea is moving again&#13;
inland, and in the future the point&#13;
will be submerged once again.&#13;
Schneider continued lecturing&#13;
over many more lake border&#13;
moraines, ground moraines, and&#13;
finally paused when the group&#13;
approached an ancient lake, that&#13;
today is only a drainage ditch and&#13;
a basin. Piling out of the autos,&#13;
the students began to shovel&#13;
away at the walls of the ditch.&#13;
When finished, they pieced&#13;
together the history of the land.&#13;
Lunch came at the Harris&#13;
tract, a wildlife refuge given to&#13;
Parkside. After the students took&#13;
a long hike in the woods, exploring&#13;
the countryside,&#13;
Schneider finally gathered them&#13;
together and the group took off&#13;
once again, to their last site of the&#13;
day.&#13;
In the pit, at the corner of Hy. C&#13;
and MB in Kenosha County, it&#13;
was easy to see the different&#13;
stratifications of deposits by&#13;
glaciers. They were neatly piled&#13;
up, a bed at a time, in different&#13;
shades of browns and greys.&#13;
Sitting on a shovel, Schneider&#13;
lectured on the findings to the&#13;
group, who were perched on the&#13;
stone and sand piles above him.&#13;
As soon as Schneider was done&#13;
talking, the group was immediately&#13;
attracted to several&#13;
heaps of football-sized rocks,&#13;
separated from the finer gravel&#13;
by machine. The students, in&#13;
their interest, immediately&#13;
turned the 45 minute tour into a&#13;
three hour treasure hunt.&#13;
Schneider decided it was&#13;
getting on towards sunset, and&#13;
there were still more sites to see.&#13;
A group member said "If he&#13;
gives a flashlight tour, I'll bury&#13;
him in the till," and it looked as if&#13;
the group was all going to the&#13;
funeral.&#13;
Then, one of the cars broke&#13;
down and the group was stranded&#13;
in a lonely farming district. Some&#13;
fortune was with the party,&#13;
though, for they happened to pull&#13;
off in front of the only bar for&#13;
miles around.&#13;
The crew dashed in for some&#13;
liquid refreshments while&#13;
Schneider fiddled with the car,&#13;
trying to convince it to start. With&#13;
the sun setting, the car running&#13;
again, everyone, more relaxed&#13;
and happier from the beer, was&#13;
rounded up and the trip resumed.&#13;
As darkness set in, travelling&#13;
back to Parkside, one student&#13;
said he felt like a lake sediment,&#13;
packed and finely sorted.&#13;
Uncomfortably, the crew&#13;
wondered why Schneider's field&#13;
trips never quite worked out. But&#13;
Schneider seemed content, as he&#13;
lectured about the subject he&#13;
loves all the way to the end.&#13;
A group of students and alumni&#13;
have organized a student&#13;
discount club. The purpose of this&#13;
club is to solicit businesses in&#13;
Kenosha-Racine area that are&#13;
willing to give discounts on their&#13;
various products to students.&#13;
Students will be charged a&#13;
small admission fee and would&#13;
receive a membership car, a&#13;
buyer's guide listing the&#13;
businesses and discounts, and a&#13;
year's subscription to a monthly&#13;
newletter that would list special&#13;
monthly discounts.&#13;
In approaching local&#13;
businesses it was found that there&#13;
is a real interst on their part to&#13;
the formation of this club.&#13;
Interested students may get&#13;
more information in the Foodcoop&#13;
office, WLLC D191.&#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;
2517 D urand A ve. • ph. 554-1320&#13;
—FREE PARKINGBROKEN&#13;
GLASS&#13;
[Broken glass,&#13;
[Shattered dreams,&#13;
[Homeless puppies,&#13;
i Cancelled encounters,&#13;
,Dead men,&#13;
[and above all,&#13;
All UNrelationships,&#13;
that never got started.&#13;
Sue Helfrich&#13;
SATURDAY AGAIN&#13;
Chromed water&#13;
Cold coffee&#13;
Not really sure of what I see.&#13;
Going down&#13;
And coming up to feel&#13;
God's tail upon my throat.&#13;
Doonan&#13;
PAPA B URGER&#13;
TEEN BURGER&#13;
MAMA B URGER&#13;
BABY B URGER&#13;
"OPEN YEAR AROUND"&#13;
CARRY-OUTS&#13;
CAJ^L AHEAD -&#13;
YOUR ORDER&#13;
WILE BE READY&#13;
Tubs of Chicken -&#13;
Fish and Shrimp&#13;
i 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;
Add these words to your basic vocabulary&#13;
now, whether or not'you're planning a trip&#13;
to Mexico soon.&#13;
SPANISH&#13;
chocho&#13;
gargarizando&#13;
sacamuelas&#13;
bulla&#13;
manteca&#13;
pantufla&#13;
ENGLISH&#13;
childish old man&#13;
gargling&#13;
quack dentist&#13;
soft coal&#13;
lard&#13;
bedroom slipper&#13;
JOSF. CUERVO* TEQUILA. 80 PROOF.&#13;
IMPORTED AND BOTTLED BY € 1475. HEUBLEIN. INC.. HARTFORD, CONN.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 8, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7 &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 8, 1975&#13;
Soccer defense is strong&#13;
but Rangers suffer loss&#13;
PaParkrksisidede's soccer foam trie nn*»r nfnndt~i H O 1 T TXIT 1 * n 's soccer team was&#13;
beaten, 2-0, by UW-Milwaukee&#13;
last Saturday at Engelmann&#13;
Field in Milwaukee. The&#13;
Rangers, who had one tie and two&#13;
wins in their last three games,&#13;
now are 3-2-1 on the season.&#13;
Milwaukee, winners of their last&#13;
four contests, outshot Parkside,&#13;
29-9, while scoring both goals in&#13;
the second half. Milwaukee's&#13;
record now stands at 7-2 for the&#13;
season, not counting a loss to an&#13;
international travelling team.&#13;
Soccer coach Hal Henderson&#13;
called Saturday's game against&#13;
UW-Milwaukee "the best game&#13;
Parkside has ever played." They&#13;
lost on two errors by the defense.&#13;
After 70 minutes of excellent&#13;
defense by the Rangers, a&#13;
Parkside player failed to clear a&#13;
pass by UW-M, leaving the ball&#13;
about 6 yards from the goal,&#13;
where they put it in the net past&#13;
goalie Bernie Hefner, who had&#13;
played spotless soccer until then.&#13;
Parkside's boosters play at&#13;
Illinois-Chicago Circle this&#13;
Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. On&#13;
Friday they play a game at UWPlatteville&#13;
at 4 p.m.&#13;
Golfers finish fall games&#13;
with sixth place finish&#13;
by Thom Aiello&#13;
The Parkside golfers closed-out&#13;
their fall season with a respectable&#13;
sixth-place finish in their&#13;
own Parkside Invitational, held&#13;
at Petrifying Springs last&#13;
Saturday morning. Winning the&#13;
12-team tourney was UWOshkosh,&#13;
with a 401 team total.&#13;
Following were: UW-Milwaukee,*&#13;
409; UW-Whitewater, with a 411&#13;
total; and UW-Madison and&#13;
Carthage College tied for fourth&#13;
Women beat Green Bay&#13;
fall to Oshkosh&#13;
The Parkside women's tennis&#13;
team beat Green Bay 5-0, but lost&#13;
to Oshkosh 4-1, in a double dual&#13;
meet held at Oshkosh last&#13;
weekend.&#13;
Peggy Gordon, number one&#13;
PHYSICAL EDUCATION&#13;
BUILDING SCHEDULE&#13;
FOR OCTOBER&#13;
The Milwaukee Bucks&#13;
Basketball Team will be&#13;
holding their training camp .&#13;
at Parkside through Oct. 9.&#13;
These sessions are closed to&#13;
the public at the request of&#13;
the Bucks administration,&#13;
they will however hold an&#13;
open session for all staff,&#13;
students and faculty of&#13;
Parkside sometime near the&#13;
end of this period.&#13;
Your cooperation is&#13;
requested and will be appreciated&#13;
on the above!&#13;
Thank you&#13;
Building Hours Monday-Thursday 8:30a.m.-&#13;
9:30 p.m.; Friday &amp;&#13;
Saturday 8:30 a.m.-4:30&#13;
p.m.; Sunday 6 p.m.-9:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Gymnasiums Same as above schedule&#13;
with the following exceptions:&#13;
Athletic teams&#13;
practice in the gyms from&#13;
3:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. Monday&#13;
through Friday. Special&#13;
note should be given to the&#13;
athletic events listed below&#13;
that may take place in the&#13;
gym on some dates.&#13;
Pool Hours Monday-Thursday 11:30&#13;
a.m.-1:30 p.m.; Monday,&#13;
Tuesday &amp; Wednesday&#13;
evenings 6:30 p.m.-9 p.m.;&#13;
Friday &amp; Saturday 11:30&#13;
a.m.-2:30 p.m.; Sundays&#13;
6:30 p.m.-9 p.m.&#13;
Handball Courts Same as building schedule,&#13;
please call in advance to&#13;
reserve a court.&#13;
Weight-training" Same as building schedule&#13;
above.&#13;
Human * Hours arranged by apPerformance&#13;
pointment only, call S53-2245&#13;
Lab for Dr. Grueninger.&#13;
singles player, was the only&#13;
victor in the Oshkosh games. She&#13;
beat her opponent 6-4, 4-6, 64.&#13;
Gordon has lost only one match&#13;
this year.&#13;
The team is now 14 in conference&#13;
play.&#13;
with a 412. Afte r Parkside, were&#13;
UW-Green Bay, UW-Platteville,&#13;
Purdue University (of Calumet),&#13;
Marquette, Northeastern Illinois,&#13;
and Loyola (of Chicago).&#13;
Parkside golf coach, Steve&#13;
Stephens, summed-up the season&#13;
by saying, "We improved&#13;
generally, from start to finish."&#13;
He also said the fall season gave&#13;
him a good look at some of the&#13;
guys that will be playing in the&#13;
spring, when it becomes important&#13;
as far as tournament play&#13;
goes. Stephens cited Larry&#13;
Rothering, Mark Kuyama, and&#13;
Jim Webers as "improved"&#13;
golfers, and said that freshmen&#13;
Ray Zuzenic and Jim Denig "did&#13;
pretty well," for being so young.&#13;
Swimmers face Carthage&#13;
Craig strokes strong&#13;
Members of the Parkside&#13;
women's swimming team went to&#13;
two meets, at UW-Milwaukee and&#13;
UW-Madison. As the Rangers&#13;
were not there in numbers, they&#13;
failed to place in many of the&#13;
events scheduled.&#13;
However, outstanding for&#13;
Parkside in the UWM meet were&#13;
Sheila Craig with two second&#13;
place finishes, in the 200 yd. individual&#13;
medley and 100 yard&#13;
breast stroke.&#13;
The next meets will be with&#13;
Oshkosh and Lawrence&#13;
University, at Oshkosh on&#13;
Friday. On Saturday, the&#13;
Rangers will take on cross town&#13;
rival, Carthage, at Parkside in an&#13;
11 a.m. meet.&#13;
Cheerleaders selected&#13;
The 1975-76 Parkside&#13;
cheerleaders were named this&#13;
past week. The squad includes&#13;
the following women: Nancy&#13;
Bado, Racine (Case), Freshman;&#13;
Jackie Chones, Racine (St.&#13;
Catherine's), Sophomore; Lynn&#13;
Davis, Racine (Case), Freshman;&#13;
Sirkatherine Goins,&#13;
Milwaukee (St. Joan Antida HS),&#13;
Freshman; Rita Jones,&#13;
Milwaukee (JFK Prep.), Freshman;&#13;
Judy Kingsfield, Racine&#13;
(Case), Freshman; Linda Lenz,&#13;
Racine (Case), Freshman; Pam&#13;
Sorensen, Kenosha (Tremper),&#13;
Freshman; Avis Weber,&#13;
Milwaukee (St. Joan Antida HS),&#13;
Junior; Cheryl Willoughby,&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford), Sophomore.&#13;
The captain is Lynn Davis.&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD PRESENTS:&#13;
'REGNANT? Need help? Call Life&#13;
?ight...658-3681 for free confidential service&#13;
LOST - Gold ring with red stone. Gold in&#13;
scription. Reward. Lost in CL Bldg. women';&#13;
washroom. Call 877-2469 Wed., Fri. and&#13;
weekends.&#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;
WANTED: roommate. Two bedroom&#13;
upper flat at 1935 56th Street, Kenosha. i62.50&#13;
mo. plus utilities. Fully furnished, large&#13;
kitchen and living room, off-street parking.&#13;
Call Steve 652 1436 after 3 p.m. weekdays.&#13;
RANDI&#13;
MAGICIAN - ILLUSIONIST&#13;
Wed., Oct. 15, 8 P.M.&#13;
Comm. Arts Theatre&#13;
Admission-. *1.50 - UWP&#13;
Students *2.00 - General&#13;
Tickets at Info Kiosk&#13;
Runners go to Chicago&#13;
The Parkside cross-country&#13;
team comes back from a two&#13;
week lay-off this Saturday, as it&#13;
travels to Chicago for the&#13;
Lakefront Invitational at 11 a.m.&#13;
The Ranger runners, led by Ray&#13;
Fredericksen, are currently 3-1 in&#13;
dual meets and also won the&#13;
Whitewater meet that involved&#13;
four teams. Parkside was ranked&#13;
13th in last week's NAIA crosscountry&#13;
ratings.&#13;
Team loses twice&#13;
in new volleyball program&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Parkside's women volleyball&#13;
program got off to a bad start last&#13;
Tuesday as a well-established&#13;
MATC team got a few breaks to&#13;
win, 15-10, 15-11.&#13;
According to coach Orby Moss,&#13;
Parkside looked better as a team&#13;
and individual players,&#13;
generally, were better skilled.&#13;
Moss was happy with the play of&#13;
sophomore Diane Kolovos,&#13;
freshmen Karen Oster and&#13;
Ramona Curio.&#13;
Moss stated that Parkside "has&#13;
come a long way in its volleyball&#13;
program." If it weren't for a few&#13;
calls, they might have won that&#13;
match, according to coach Moss.&#13;
The women's volleyball team&#13;
lost to Marquette in a game&#13;
played here last Saturday.&#13;
The Rangers took the first&#13;
game 17-15, but dropped the other&#13;
two, 6-15 and 7-15.&#13;
According to coach Orby Moss,&#13;
"The team played much better&#13;
than in their first game. I'm&#13;
pleased with their progress."&#13;
The Rangers will be involved in&#13;
a triangular with Carthage and&#13;
Carroll this Wednesday, at&#13;
Carthage.&#13;
THE TRACK SHACK&#13;
ITS IttW, ITS JUST FOR&#13;
YOU!&#13;
First 25 * M ichelob F ree w ith P arkside I .D.&#13;
• G ame r oom-pool ta ble-foos b all-pin b all&#13;
and et c.&#13;
• Michelob o n t ap 50 * an d 2 S* a g lass.&#13;
Hot s andwiches&#13;
• Color T V lor fo otball g ames&#13;
HOURS:&#13;
Monday-Saturday 4 P.M.-Closing&#13;
Sunday 11-6 P.M.&#13;
S614 22 nd A ve. 657-9714&#13;
Look at the sky.&#13;
Go into an elevator and press 3.&#13;
Have lunch.&#13;
Ride in a taxicab or bus.&#13;
Ask a person for directions to the nearest&#13;
post office.&#13;
Have breakfast.&#13;
Walk on the sidewalk.&#13;
Chuckle.&#13;
Have a shot of Jose Cuervo.&#13;
Deliver a lecture to the Mexican&#13;
National Assembly on the&#13;
historical significance and potential&#13;
peacetime uses of the nectarine,&#13;
as seen through the eyes of Keats.&#13;
IMPORTED AND B^^TT,,&#13;
Tte|?NP&#13;
S^„K.TP&lt;)Rn. CONN </text>
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          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="65257">
              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 4, issue 6, October 8, 1975</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="65258">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="40">
          <name>Date</name>
          <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="65259">
              <text>1975-10-08</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="65262">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="65263">
              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="65264">
              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="42">
          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="65265">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
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        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="65266">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="38">
          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="65267">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
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              <text>Text</text>
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          <name>Publisher</name>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="65270">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
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  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="787">
      <name>bill niebuhr</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="963">
      <name>chancellor alan guskin</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1366">
      <name>convocation</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4503">
      <name>gwendolyn brooks</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3127">
      <name>poetry readings</name>
    </tag>
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