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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
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            <text>Volume 4, issue 12</text>
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            <text>Faculty petition for increased participation</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>orts motion cQpsu&#13;
Faculty petition for increased partici ti&#13;
Debra Friedell lClpa 10&#13;
., faculty at large' P"''''''''b ld&#13;
' -t"~ 1 eas hi&#13;
D faculty members and report significant findings of w ch a committment to the&#13;
;:;. \0 the Secretary of the the faculty at large to stimulate process was ~~ "they're not&#13;
lllfice last Thursday to faculty response and COn. saying that we re Ul8pproprjate,&#13;
~ portion of tbis Thur- tributions prior to the submiss but that we will have to do more&#13;
""". ""p roeeting with the of final reports. Ion of ....hat ....e're already doing." he&#13;
'if1(l \N • ti Als S81d .f(l1D81faculty mee mg. 0, the motion urges that .&#13;
.-. ,.queated that before ~OP COP to allow any faculty who&#13;
~ break down mto wish to participate in the work-&#13;
.....-lIICUISi~n groups with gro~S be allowed to do so; the&#13;
...... !acuity. staff. and motion supports BPeciflc efforts&#13;
..... lelIIsIativesession be be made to ensure that non.&#13;
l1li11 wIidI the first agenda academic staff and students have&#13;
~ ".-aJ discussion of input similar to that proposed by&#13;
: ..... appointment, taaks, the faculty in all matters where&#13;
....... and timing of the their needs. interests, and skills&#13;
..xr....llasuJ&gt;:COmmittees... are c~ncerned; and finally, that&#13;
"..... a motion was sub- specific charges given to the&#13;
.... 1117 !acuity members, it wor~-group. be made totally&#13;
...... pnimous support by public and made subject to a&#13;
(6 aD work-group chair- scheduled debate by the faculty.&#13;
and' Is slated to be&#13;
~:-::d\OthelulJ.faculty at the&#13;
,.. meetJng. Among other&#13;
.. lie motion requests that&#13;
• work.groups announce&#13;
...uac limes; urges work-&#13;
.... 10 make positive and&#13;
..... eff(rts to solicit con·&#13;
dIlIoua from all faculty&#13;
....... ; bold open hearings on&#13;
.,.eIIIe problems. programs.&#13;
.. t.Des; make an informal *' 10 maintain dialogue&#13;
.. Wfl'k-groups and the&#13;
starled tho moe . 1» 1i.I.-&#13;
the Merger Law WI 1f'lI to&#13;
.-us of responaibill l llO_e'6.&#13;
he told the .......&#13;
gro~ have the ri&amp;bl to&#13;
8Il)1hing. '\'hey IDa waDI to&#13;
cIIcuos lhnp tha • by law. the&#13;
IaaI1ty ..... te camoc act ."&#13;
lie and OOP~, BiD&#13;
Mario exp1alDed thaI I&#13;
Universily COG11Jllltee hid&#13;
Illf'ftd upon was ~ and&#13;
cbanle. in If lcademtc&#13;
faculty·senate. Guskin pnorities." O....e Bucb,&#13;
Budget committee&#13;
~ce£.~!ehasstudents, ot&#13;
formed a Budget Priorities diredly relIecls - ~ per,&#13;
Advisory Commillee charged needs U • Vital ty repreMn III rtpr&#13;
with the responsibility of flll"- 1ncIud1ng!belle • GIl!be noa-repre Died fl. lid I&#13;
mulating recommendations 10 CommiIl.eegI.... l: l..-.ber of Ule 'tp_ldalaft&#13;
him on major operating budget ~, to ''prOvIde thai cradaI G.-y la, DIrctGr of Ibo&#13;
priorities ~I, he said -.-e&#13;
A1thoUlih technically Guskin Guskin said ~I the COIIIIDlllee&#13;
does not have to include faculty, ..-ill mcIude. ~ ice CI&gt;aDceIIar&#13;
students, academic staff, or 0110 Bauer, AsslStanl Ch D·&#13;
classified staff on a committee ceIIors AlleD Deartlom IDd In;n&#13;
. Zoe e, Deon of the which makes budget recom- of lodem ~ _ DNa&#13;
mendations on those funds, he .~ of the of Sdle,..~&#13;
said that he feels, ·'faculty,:.oo oM ftIl. II will II&gt;-&#13;
meaningful role students and staff should play a&#13;
in lhe c1ude&#13;
eo c&#13;
I ~Ia::i~::':~&#13;
development of a budget that (;D1&lt;er lIy commllt&#13;
Tmhe p:kSideQ&#13;
(] rn[3m S- l~:n::~:"I~ l:IIrr eadem c tafl&#13;
'---;;:;-=~I I; and lwO """I!lben&#13;
~~~.!!:..~ _ ....!.,;~"",-,~~~~~~!.~_~~:..~~,,-- IS. \1U00l1 I'IJIUOllOH Of I,. UIHVIRYTT w.... V_"_'V_._'~' the r·_~ned ~I ~--'f.&#13;
Indianleader arrested&#13;
Law agents maximize harrassment&#13;
OI'I'ressfoo to 1973 la r d to&#13;
I» A.I I of the of pi&#13;
AliI" beldq rters&#13;
WIsblng14n, D.C Lo&#13;
., lllek Andersen&#13;
IIIlbe 1800'sthe federal&#13;
Initiated a policy of&#13;
-.aI of native Americans&#13;
.. ancestral homelands&#13;
... and bleak territories&#13;
lie contemporary white&#13;
.... greed. As the native&#13;
..... berame physically and&#13;
~ uprootedan ecological&#13;
,lragi)e and giving, was =:::. Last Friday the&#13;
'led Police Department&#13;
to ImprOvise on the time ::-ed system of people&#13;
JI'aehon, temporarily&#13;
-.. a gifted leader of&#13;
IIlht Americans, and a troubled&#13;
IIIcber 01the rest of society into&#13;
IocaI jaU ' Her .&#13;
~ POWless, program&#13;
tlomc.;) Of the American Indian&#13;
On Alcoholism and a&#13;
~ known leader of the&#13;
~ Indian Movement, was ""-I on a parking ticket .1 ahortly after appearing&#13;
... ~~ld at .the Milwaukee&#13;
IlttioullllCa! College in sup·&#13;
~Uve American cultural&#13;
~ and political action.&#13;
__ an Onieda Indian had&#13;
.... IIthe request of se~eral&#13;
~ orllanizations and was&#13;
01 alter he Was out of the&#13;
IIlost of the dispersing&#13;
PIrtlcipants.&#13;
~ Harrassmenl&#13;
owless this was but a&#13;
skirmish in a three year&#13;
baWe with law en-&#13;
~locaIandfederal, who&#13;
of non.-.stop sur~&#13;
8Ddharrassmenl. With&#13;
Committment to the pr"" ...&#13;
Before voting on the motion&#13;
Chancellor Guskin told OOP and&#13;
workgroup cbairpersons that the&#13;
"reaching out, which the motion&#13;
suggests, .is consistant with the&#13;
direction we've been trying to&#13;
follow. Because COP is critically&#13;
important to the entire in •&#13;
stitution, the motion reminds us&#13;
that we must reach-out at all&#13;
times." Guskin told the group&#13;
that he found the motion one in&#13;
law enforcement officials constantly&#13;
"dropping by" Powless'&#13;
office at the alcoholism center,&#13;
sowing contempt and fear during&#13;
the course of these&#13;
"fishing expeditions'!&#13;
one might be tempted to&#13;
speculate about the reason the&#13;
Milwaukee police department&#13;
went through the trouble of&#13;
discovering Powless' public&#13;
itinerary and dispatched a&#13;
plainclothesman to watch the&#13;
rally and assist in effecting the&#13;
arrest.&#13;
A person could wonder too. how&#13;
long the warrant sat in police&#13;
chief Harold Brier's desk drawer&#13;
hefore the time was seen as&#13;
opportune for maximizing. the&#13;
harrassment value of this rmnor&#13;
infraction.&#13;
Hours after the arrest was&#13;
made, powless stood before&#13;
municipal judge. Ted&#13;
Wedemeyer.Jr., and pled guilty&#13;
to the charges. Wedemeyer,&#13;
whose dispassionate fairness lI1&#13;
sentencing caused one powless&#13;
supporter to remark "I wish we&#13;
had judges like hun m South&#13;
Dakota" then allowed powless to&#13;
addre'; the court. Citing the&#13;
nearly three years of continual&#13;
surveillance by the F.B.I. and the&#13;
special squad of the Milwaukee&#13;
police department, powle~s&#13;
mirthfully queried as to why this&#13;
matter was called to his attention&#13;
after a public rally of supporters&#13;
and friends. If this. was not an&#13;
attempt to discredit hun ,,:h~&#13;
didn't the arresting officers vlSl&#13;
Powless at his home or office&#13;
since they so obviously knew&#13;
where he was? powless then lefl&#13;
Areas ofre.po1llJbWty&#13;
The cop meeting ended with the&#13;
same topic of discussiGll with&#13;
which il began, exactly whal type&#13;
of recornmendationa the gro~&#13;
could make to OOP _ COP to&#13;
the&#13;
the courtroom with bis wife, lwo&#13;
children, and ever the public&#13;
figure, a group of over thirt).&#13;
supporters.&#13;
Oul to gel Powl&#13;
Outside the courtroom a&#13;
prominenl Milwaukee lawyer.&#13;
with extensive knowledge of the&#13;
invidious nature of tho local&#13;
criminal justice B)'stem, related&#13;
to this reporter a story thaI&#13;
provides corrohorabon to the&#13;
charges Powless l"'eIed before&#13;
the bench. IIseems thaI l...hUe&#13;
back. a rather se!f-aggrandlzln&#13;
federal agenl had mentioned thai&#13;
his office had been "oul 10 el&#13;
Powless" for a number of mooths&#13;
and had been searching Powl •&#13;
luggage al airpOrl 1ernuna&#13;
without Powless' consenl. The&#13;
agent related further thai the&#13;
failure 10 find such mcrurunalmg&#13;
evidence was causing him and his&#13;
fellow agents considerable&#13;
frustration.&#13;
Less than an hour after his&#13;
release from custody, an uncowed&#13;
Powless vowed to fight GIl.&#13;
"I'll continue to speak out until&#13;
I'm too olc to walk, too old to&#13;
speak," he declared. .&#13;
Saying that the revelabons&#13;
made by the attorney were really&#13;
nothing thai he didn'l aJread)'&#13;
know powless, said he wenl to&#13;
. il ':nol because of the tickels. J8 , u&#13;
but because I was tall&lt;ing. .&#13;
Powless then gave a !rief&#13;
overview of a\mOStthree )'ears of&#13;
harrassment and inlimJdallon 1»'&#13;
federal law enforcemen willI the&#13;
cooperation, often zealous, of&#13;
local agencies. -""'- f&#13;
Powless traces the ......~J'&#13;
----.....&#13;
s&#13;
COD'&#13;
or supports motion ~&#13;
Faculty petition for increas d , oebra Friedell e&#13;
by faculty at large; purpose ideas&#13;
Eiel'en faculty members and report significant findings of&#13;
ned to the Secretary of the the faculty at large to stimulate&#13;
ty•sOffice last Thu_rsday to fa_cul~y response and cona&#13;
portion of this Thur- tr1butions prior to the sub ..... ;M:&#13;
COP meeting with the of final reports. ........,.on&#13;
5 formal faculty meeting. Also, the motion urges that&#13;
c~uested that before COP C?P to allow any faculty who&#13;
.groups break down ~to wish _to participate in the work-&#13;
.-1 (ti!cussi~n groups with gro~s be allowed to do so; the&#13;
-- faculty, staff, and motion supports specific efforts&#13;
~· a Jegislativ~ session be be made to ensure that nonill&#13;
which the first agenda academic staff and students have&#13;
be "general discussion of input similar to that proposed by&#13;
which a COmmittrnent to th&#13;
pro~ was shown, "they're not&#13;
saying that we're inappropriate&#13;
but that we will have to do mo '&#13;
of what we're already do" ,.&#13;
said. '&#13;
Areas of re ponsiblllty&#13;
The cop meeting ended with th&#13;
same topic of discussion with&#13;
which it began, eucUy what type&#13;
of recommendations the gro&#13;
could make to COP and COP to&#13;
a&#13;
(S'eltion, appointment, tasks, the faculty in all matters where&#13;
,-res and timing . of th~ their needs, interests, and skills&#13;
the faculty-senate Gus~'n - ti • IU prt . C&#13;
Budget ·committ&#13;
include student&#13;
I'' and its sub-committe~. are concerned; and finally, that&#13;
AJ well, a motion was sub- specific charges given to the&#13;
by 7 faculty members, it wor~-group _ be made totally&#13;
given unanimous support by public and made subject to a&#13;
COP an work-group chair- scheduled debate by the faculty.&#13;
~· and is slated to be&#13;
in,ented to the full faculty at the&#13;
ttzndaY meeting. Among other&#13;
tbe motion requests that&#13;
work-groups announce&#13;
ting times; urges workto&#13;
make positive and&#13;
live efforts to solicit conutlons&#13;
from all faculty&#13;
ambers; hold open hearings on&#13;
cific problems, programs,&#13;
tsrues; make an informal&#13;
rff rt to maintain dialogue&#13;
n work-groups and the&#13;
Committment to the process&#13;
Before voting on the motion&#13;
Chancellor Guskin told COP and&#13;
workgroup chairpersons that the&#13;
"reaching out, which the motion&#13;
suggests, .is consistant with the&#13;
direction we've been trying to&#13;
follow. Because COP is critically&#13;
important to the entire institution,&#13;
the motion reminds us&#13;
that we must reach-out at all&#13;
times." Guskin told the group&#13;
that he found the motion one in&#13;
Chancellor Alan Gu.skin has&#13;
formed a Budget Priorities&#13;
Advisory Committee charged&#13;
with the responsibility of formulating&#13;
recommendati to&#13;
him on major operating bu t&#13;
priorities.&#13;
Although technically G&#13;
does not have to include faculty,&#13;
students, academic staff, or&#13;
classified staff on a comml&#13;
which makes budget recommendations&#13;
on those funds,&#13;
said that he feels, "facul ,&#13;
students and staff ould play&#13;
meaningful role th&#13;
development of&#13;
--.,y, Nov .. 191 1975 l]JaJ IS A STUDlHT ,UIUU.TION&#13;
rn Of 11« UNIV8&#13;
rn&#13;
S,TT Of W8(0ti51111 , ....&#13;
l3 m&#13;
Indian leader arrested&#13;
Law agents maxim· ze h&#13;
by Mick Andersen&#13;
F.arly in the 1800's the federal&#13;
ent initiated a policy of&#13;
removal of native Americans&#13;
their ancestral homelands&#13;
en and bleak territories&#13;
the contemporary white&#13;
'a greed, As the native&#13;
became physically and&#13;
lly uprooted an ecological&#13;
e, fragile and giving, was&#13;
roy d. Last Friday the&#13;
ee Police Department&#13;
lo Improvise on the time&#13;
red ystem of people&#13;
Slruction, temporarily&#13;
a gifted leader of&#13;
Americans, and a troubled&#13;
locaof the rest of society into&#13;
ff I Jail. '&#13;
rb Powless, program&#13;
r or the American Indian&#13;
" on Alcoholism and a&#13;
nally known leader of the&#13;
can Indian Movement was&#13;
ant on a parking ticket&#13;
a ran shortly after appearing&#13;
Y held at the Milwaukee&#13;
Techn; al · r ~.,c College in supnative&#13;
American cultural&#13;
and political action.&#13;
' an 0nieda Indian had&#13;
n at th ' e request of several&#13;
organizations and was&#13;
after he was out of the&#13;
or rnost of the dispersing&#13;
s llarticipants.&#13;
laxhnizing Harrassment&#13;
r Powless this was but a&#13;
skirmish in a three year&#13;
battle with law ent,&#13;
local and federal who&#13;
es of non-stop ' surand&#13;
harrassment. With&#13;
law enforcement officials constantly&#13;
"dropping by" Powless'&#13;
office at the alcoholism center,&#13;
sowing contempt and fear during&#13;
the course of these&#13;
"fishing expeditions' :&#13;
one might be tempted to&#13;
speculate about the reason the&#13;
Milwaukee police department&#13;
went through the trouble of&#13;
discovering Powless' public&#13;
itinerary and dispatched a&#13;
plainclothesman to watch the&#13;
rally and assist in effecting the&#13;
arrest.&#13;
A person could wonder too, how&#13;
long the warrant sat in police&#13;
chief Harold Brier's desk drawer&#13;
before the time was seen as&#13;
opportune for maximizing the&#13;
harrassment value of this minor&#13;
infraction. Hours after the arrest was&#13;
made, Powless stood before&#13;
municipal judge, Ted&#13;
Wedemeyer Jr., and pied guilty&#13;
to the charges. Wedemeyer,&#13;
whose dispassionate fairness in&#13;
sentencing caused one Powless&#13;
supporter to remar~ "I. wish we&#13;
had judges like bun m South&#13;
Dakota " then allowed Powless to&#13;
addre~ the court. Citing the&#13;
nearly three years of continual&#13;
surveillance by the F .BJ. and the&#13;
special squad of the Milwaukee&#13;
police department, Powle~s&#13;
mirthfully queried as to why ~&#13;
matter was called to his attention&#13;
after a public rally of supporters&#13;
and friends. If this was not an&#13;
attempt to discredit _him ~h?'&#13;
didn't the arresting officers v~s1 t&#13;
Powless at his home or office&#13;
since they so obviously knew&#13;
where he was? Powless then left&#13;
the courtroom&#13;
children, and ev r&#13;
figure, a group&#13;
supporters. &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER WedneS4Yy. NoY. It. 1975&#13;
./&#13;
plants out the lact that cornmiuee&#13;
which have been&#13;
l'&lt;I'N!Sefltaliveha,"l! railed due to&#13;
selli hness among diUerent&#13;
&lt;OnSIiluencles&#13;
",.,... .... many reasons given&#13;
.. hy students caranol serve on&#13;
decl.sioo-making bodies ""thoul&#13;
any consicleration given 10 why&#13;
they should.&#13;
The laculty lails or refuses to&#13;
recogniU that students today are&#13;
capable as decision makers,&#13;
many be\Jl8\h.rust into the role at&#13;
an early age.&#13;
MClIIl students are '''l!ry aware&#13;
&lt;&gt;( the vano .. poIillcal changes.&#13;
even those the lacull)' employs 10&#13;
WUl over the new chancellor.&#13;
The I er students are excluded.&#13;
the more dillicull It will&#13;
be to b&lt;tdgethe gap. I can see the&#13;
lime when students will be&#13;
transferring to other institutions&#13;
more than they do now. U the&#13;
adnunislratioo cannol see It is&#13;
lldI-defeating to exclude those&#13;
)'Ou are supposed to be servlng; if&#13;
the laculty is so blind. antique.&#13;
and power conscious as 10&#13;
overlook lhe abundance 01 talent&#13;
Parkside students possess. and if&#13;
together they lorbid students 10&#13;
have thell' righlful say in the&#13;
d1rections and decl.sion ~&#13;
S1~=~:", told thaI they lack&#13;
'le to rYe on C'OI'J}o&#13;
• tradlUon lorbids II on&#13;
and laculty .. "enence&#13;
then I wonder if Parkside will&#13;
ever be more than a place where&#13;
people go to school.&#13;
Everyone is concerned about&#13;
developing relations with the two&#13;
committees. but with studenls&#13;
being alienated. this hardly&#13;
seems possible. U 5600 studenls&#13;
aren't capable 01 selling the&#13;
university, then I don't see how a&#13;
handlul or faculty an? administrators&#13;
can. Parkside IS&#13;
always seeking answers but&#13;
refuses to listen to the best&#13;
source. studenls. I think it is time&#13;
for the faculty to come out of&#13;
their shell and to slop pla~mg&#13;
games with students' education.&#13;
U we are here to learn. then let us&#13;
learn on all levels. U students&#13;
lack expertise. then it can be&#13;
allained by participating.&#13;
TraditiorlS are changing and all&#13;
faculty committees can be&#13;
changed. maybe for the better.&#13;
I hope that those members of&#13;
our faculty who wish to exclude&#13;
all but a privileged few can find it&#13;
in their hearts to relinquish a&#13;
small amount of their power to&#13;
not only students, but all excluded&#13;
groups .&#13;
Lee Wagner&#13;
President PSGA&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I&#13;
ish to refute Bill Barke's&#13;
WlS k' leller to the editor in last wee s&#13;
RANGER. Contrary to popular&#13;
belief there are no 5000 starvmg&#13;
monkeys in Bolivia. and there&#13;
exisls no agency with which to&#13;
aid them. As a mailer of fact. the&#13;
residenls of 32 Baptista RUIs.&#13;
Muncie. Bolivia S.A. happen to be&#13;
my parenls who are rather upset&#13;
d annoyed with all the articles&#13;
:eY've been receiving, While the&#13;
newsprint has been instrumental&#13;
, lining the kitty-boX. enough IS m .&#13;
enough! The cats are having a&#13;
difficult time as is trying to keep&#13;
up and they spend whole afternoons&#13;
squalling in th~ mess.&#13;
. Once again Mr. Barke has&#13;
demonstrated his insipidness and&#13;
insensitivity towards others-the&#13;
ass!&#13;
Glen A. Christensen&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
It .&#13;
tragially embarras was lit&#13;
perience to bave ,Sing&#13;
performances of ;;Wed&#13;
Care," November 7 8er~&#13;
UW-Parkside.1 am~ot and I,&#13;
the players. the set ....~&#13;
who assisted in ;.:;.oran&#13;
production possibl ~&#13;
. 1 lik e. I •&#13;
srmp Y I e to say that'('&#13;
utmost irnportan~e t~t~,tI&#13;
future more perpetual ~&#13;
taken in the selection /8l!&#13;
appropriate SUbjectm:tte"&#13;
seen by. the Racine'K"&#13;
commumty, This issue&#13;
given the highest Priori~&#13;
. the entire demise ofthe Y&#13;
ar~s at uw-P occurs. d '&#13;
critical time in p~&#13;
cultural development&#13;
Robert Kis&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In response to Mr , Ben&#13;
Lowenberg's letter to the editor&#13;
published on November 5. 1975. I&#13;
wish to clarify the intent of my&#13;
presentation on "Women of the&#13;
Third World." ·As the title indicates,&#13;
the discussion was&#13;
directed at the social. political.&#13;
and employment status of women&#13;
in developing countries. This. in&#13;
no way was intended to be a&#13;
comparison between American&#13;
working women and their Third&#13;
World counterparts. There was&#13;
certainly nothing presented to&#13;
"malign" American working&#13;
grade, We're sure that everyone&#13;
can agree. thaI \here are many&#13;
poSItive and negative factors&#13;
which contribute to \be grades&#13;
achie,"l!d by students.&#13;
So we suggest that students.&#13;
facult)' I and administration&#13;
consider the following grading&#13;
S) tern as an alternative to the&#13;
present grading S)'Slem.&#13;
I. For all reguired subjecls&#13;
declared in a major. a student&#13;
would ~ve a leller grade.&#13;
~. For all subjects determined&#13;
as general requirements or&#13;
decti"es. a student would receive&#13;
a pas.s-l ail grade.&#13;
3. All students would have the&#13;
pmil"le of cboosing between a&#13;
leiter grade or a pas.s-lail grade.&#13;
4 If a student is undecided as to&#13;
thaI me&#13;
produc&#13;
what major to declare. each&#13;
professor would be able to con·&#13;
vert a pass-fail grade into a leller&#13;
grade if necessary, once the&#13;
student has decided,&#13;
This of course means, that&#13;
professors must have a record of&#13;
scores to support any grades&#13;
given to students. wbether it is a&#13;
pass-fail grade or a letter grade.&#13;
This also suggesls that. if a&#13;
professor should for any reason&#13;
leave the university permanenUy.&#13;
he or she would be&#13;
required to leave with the ad.&#13;
ministration. a copy of all&#13;
recorded grades given to&#13;
studenls. This requirement would&#13;
enable the administration to&#13;
lefitmately convert grades at the&#13;
student's request. H a ~tudent&#13;
Applications are now being accepted for the position&#13;
of EDITOR.iN,CHIEF of the student newspaper.&#13;
PrMpec1lve candidates must be currently enrolled at&#13;
Parkslde lor a minimum of 8 credits. They should have&#13;
high school and-or college writlng experience and&#13;
pouess $Ome Interest In, and knowledge ot journalism&#13;
The position pays $SO per week lor the Spring Semester'&#13;
Inter ted persons should submit a resume detalli"g&#13;
relevant experience and a statement of broad goals and&#13;
directions for the newspaper to:&#13;
Don Kopriva. RANG E R Advisor&#13;
Tallent 288&#13;
Appllcallons should be entered by ~ p.m. Wednesday&#13;
Dec. 3. 1975. The RANGE R Advisory Board will revle";&#13;
quallflcatlons and schedule brlel personal Infervlews&#13;
with the leading candidates. Selection will be announced&#13;
lit IOliowl/l9 w&#13;
does plan to graduate from the&#13;
university that he enrolls into,'&#13;
this particular grading system&#13;
would not be jeopardizing. If a&#13;
student were to transfer from the&#13;
university to another school there&#13;
would be no complications. Passfail&#13;
grades could easily be converted&#13;
into letter grades or viceversa.&#13;
We are taking for granted.&#13;
that all grades are kept confidential.&#13;
So you see. with this type of&#13;
grading system. those students&#13;
who receive grades of low B. C or&#13;
D in one class. would no longer&#13;
worry about a grade ruining their&#13;
transcript.&#13;
The "A" student may also&#13;
benefit from this particular&#13;
grading system. Often a nonrequired&#13;
course may gift&#13;
"A" student some&#13;
They may chooseto&#13;
B or C letter grade willi I&#13;
grade.&#13;
WE would like to add&#13;
University of Wisconsinis&#13;
also exercising more&#13;
grading techniques,&#13;
If there are any studlDll&#13;
terested in suppo,tinI&#13;
alternative grading&#13;
who ju-e interested in&#13;
information, please lea"&#13;
name and telephonen&#13;
the Student Government&#13;
WLLC D 193,&#13;
THE PARKSIDE&#13;
[iJ(DGJI](]ru&#13;
thThUePARKSIDE RANGER is ~ritten and edited by the&#13;
e n' 'ty , for'ts IV~rsl. of-Wisconsin-Parkside and they are solely 91&#13;
U ~ pedito~ial policy and content. Offices are located in DI&#13;
.. ' arkside, Kenosha. Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-2295.&#13;
MUng EdItor: Debra FrledeU&#13;
Feature EdItor: MIke Palecek&#13;
Sporta DIrector: Thom Aiello&#13;
Events Colama: Jlllly TrIIII .&#13;
Buslu ... u&#13;
g&#13;
• A nmg •&#13;
Ad er. un Ve1'1ltegea _&#13;
Ad mat P:·Dlaae Werwte&#13;
WrI::·: Harry DiDgfelder Donzell Holt Orin Taylor&#13;
Fred : Jeaamtue Slp.ma. Steve Smith, Lelgb Feller,&#13;
y Jobusou, Mlck, AlldenoD, Betsy Neu, JiDI&#13;
Rlorta&#13;
gau•Carol Areatz. CatherlDe Bllse .Bnree W...... •&#13;
Nicholas K"~ La • '&#13;
Pbotog ,un, noa !oIC&#13;
rap~ers: Dave Damels. AI Fredricksen Gordon&#13;
2 p IDE GER n sday, Nov. 19, 1975&#13;
r by" p.m. Wednesday,&#13;
dvl ory Board will review&#13;
brl f P rsonal Interviews&#13;
1 Ion Ill be announced&#13;
then I wonder if Parkside will&#13;
ever be more than a place where&#13;
people go to school.&#13;
E\-eryone is concerned about&#13;
developing relations with the two&#13;
committees, but wi~ students&#13;
being alienated, this hardly&#13;
seems possible. If 5600 students&#13;
aren't capable of selling the&#13;
university, then I don't see how a&#13;
handful of faculty an~ a~-&#13;
ministrators can. Parkside is&#13;
always seeking answers but&#13;
refuses to listen to ~~ ~ st&#13;
source students. I think it is time&#13;
f th~ faculty to come out. of&#13;
their hell and to stop pla}'.mg&#13;
gam with students' education.&#13;
H we are here to learn, then let us&#13;
I m on all levels. If students&#13;
lack expertise, then ~t . can_ be&#13;
attained by participatmg.&#13;
Traditions are changing and all&#13;
faculty committees can be&#13;
changed, maybe for the better.&#13;
I hope that those members of&#13;
our faculty who wish to exclude&#13;
all but a privileged few can find it&#13;
in their hearts to relinquish a&#13;
small amount of their power to&#13;
not only students, but all excluded&#13;
groups. Lee Wagner&#13;
President PSGA&#13;
what major to declare, each&#13;
professor would be able to convert&#13;
a pass-fail grade into a letter&#13;
grade if necessary, once the&#13;
student has decided.&#13;
This of course means, that&#13;
professors must have a record of&#13;
scores to support any grades&#13;
given to students, whether it is a&#13;
pass-fail grade or a letter grade.&#13;
This also suggests that, if a&#13;
professor should for any reason&#13;
leave the university permanently,&#13;
he or she would be&#13;
required to leave with the administration,&#13;
a copy of all&#13;
recorded grades given to&#13;
students. This requirement would&#13;
enable the administration to&#13;
lefitmately convert grades, at the&#13;
student's request. If a student&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
. h to refute Bill Barke's&#13;
I wis '&#13;
letter to the editor in last week s&#13;
RANGER. Contrary to pop~ar&#13;
belief there are no 5000 starvmg&#13;
monkeys in Bolivia, and there&#13;
exists no agency with which to&#13;
aid them. As a matter of fact, the&#13;
'd nts of 32 Baptista Ruts, resi e .. ntobe&#13;
Muncie, Bohvia S.A. happe&#13;
my parents who are rather ~pset&#13;
and annoyed with all the a~ticles&#13;
they've been receiving. While the&#13;
newsprint has been instrumen~l&#13;
. lining the kitty-box, enough is&#13;
m . enough! The cats are havmg a&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
tragially embar It ~as Ill . rass1n perience to have . g tt&#13;
performances of ,;;w~ ~ Care," November 7 8&#13;
erp~t&#13;
UW-Parkside. 1 am~ot a?~ , 11&#13;
the players, the set C!it1~•&#13;
who assisted in , nor ant "' malr;h_. production possibl '""~&#13;
. 1 l'k e. I ll simp y i e to say th t . . u t t . , a It IS of&#13;
u mos importance that . \&#13;
difficult time as is trying to keep&#13;
and they spend whole af-&#13;
:noons squatting in th~ mess.&#13;
· Once again Mr. Barke has&#13;
demonstrated his insipidness and&#13;
insensitivity towards others-the&#13;
future more perpetua1 I!! \&#13;
taken in the selection f care ~&#13;
appropriate subject m:ttelVhat&#13;
seen by the Racine-I{ r to~&#13;
community. This issue hen~&#13;
given the highest pr1&#13;
·&#13;
0 .st oUld 1t . th t' ri y h.,._'&#13;
e en ire demise of the cir ""~&#13;
ass!&#13;
Glen A. Christensen&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In response to Mr. Ben&#13;
Lowenberg's letter to the editor&#13;
published on November 5, 1975, I&#13;
wish to clarify the intent of my&#13;
presentation on "Women of the&#13;
Third World." As the title indicates,&#13;
the discussion was&#13;
directed at the social, political,&#13;
and employment status of women&#13;
in developing countries. This, in&#13;
no way was intended to be a&#13;
comparison between American&#13;
working women and their Third&#13;
World counterparts. There was&#13;
certainly nothing presented to&#13;
"malign" American working&#13;
does plan to graduate from the&#13;
university that he enrolls into, '&#13;
this particular grading system&#13;
would not be jeopardizing. If a&#13;
student were to transfer from the&#13;
university to another school there&#13;
would be no complications. Passfail&#13;
grades could easily be converted&#13;
into letter grades or viceversa.&#13;
We are taking for granted,&#13;
that all grades are kept confidential.&#13;
&#13;
So you see, with this type of&#13;
grading system, those students&#13;
who receive grades of low B, C or&#13;
D in one class, would no longer&#13;
worry about a grade ruining their&#13;
transcript.&#13;
The "A" student may also&#13;
benefit from this particular&#13;
grading system. Often a nonTHE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
arts at UW-P occurs d -~&#13;
critical time in 'p 1g°*&#13;
cultural development. ar 51dt1&#13;
Robert Kis&#13;
women.&#13;
Since Mr. Lowenberg did&#13;
attend the conference an! 11&#13;
parently used the sc:&#13;
~ewspap~r as his only SOUrtt&#13;
information, his criticism lhoiii&#13;
no relationship to the ~&#13;
held at the symposiwn.&#13;
respectfully advised llr&#13;
Lowenberg to refer to 111&#13;
November 3, 1975 issue ci&#13;
"Kenosha News" for a - accurate and less inlerJr*&#13;
account of my statements,&#13;
Respectfully Y'll&#13;
Mrs. Rafiah A. &amp;Jh&#13;
Panel Member,SympcQam1&#13;
"Women of the Third World"&#13;
required course may gire&#13;
"A" student some probllll&#13;
They may choose to substili*&#13;
B or C letter grade with a J11&#13;
grade.&#13;
WE would like to add that&#13;
University of Wisconsin·•&#13;
is also exercising more reaht&#13;
grading techniques.&#13;
If there are any students t&#13;
terested in supporting&#13;
alternative grading systell&#13;
who tire interested in furll&#13;
information, please leave'&#13;
name and telephone numte&#13;
the Student Government 05:&#13;
WLLC D 193.&#13;
m £D rn I] lJ m&#13;
~~,&#13;
th The ~~IDE RANGER is written and edited by the~&#13;
f e _Univ~rSity of Wisconsin-Parkside and they are solely ~ u~ts edito~ial policy and content. Offices are located in Dl9t 55JI · -· Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-2295•&#13;
Acting Editor: Debra Frieden&#13;
Feature Editor: Mite Palecek&#13;
Sports D_irector: Thom Aiello&#13;
Events Column: Judy Trudnmg&#13;
::siness Manager: Ann Ventegen&#13;
make-up:·Dtane Wenvte&#13;
~::es: Harry Dingfelder Donzell Holt Orin Taylor&#13;
Fred rs: Jeannine Slpsma, Steve Smith, Leigh Feller,&#13;
Yor Johnson, Mick. Andenon, Betsy Neu, JiJ!l&#13;
Ritagan, Carol Arentz, Catherine Bllse; Bruce w.agner,&#13;
Phot Nicholas, Kurt Lanon clJ!tt'&#13;
ographers: Dave Daniels, Al Fredricksen Gordon rd &#13;
WedMsct.y. Nov. 1'. 1'75 THE PARKSIDE RA OER 3&#13;
lltional Lampoon Editor talks of&#13;
neW 'humor often based on fear&#13;
b TbODl Aiello&#13;
~ nee expects me to&#13;
'!II' .... ea duck suit," said&#13;
(111 ",t Ulto Executive Editor&#13;
J. 0'JlOUf~n magazine,&#13;
~~ igal"'tte and opened a&#13;
,11 Uti C Budweiser beer.&#13;
~ lecturing last Wedllistorianspeaks&#13;
on the&#13;
gave an elWl"ll*&#13;
eDlptinessof the "Dream"~~~I..&#13;
rlnll!l) pops 1 of tho&#13;
se&amp;r'!$ the )Dd.&#13;
tbeo lIS&#13;
child.O·~&#13;
mmd deddes to&#13;
do~ the _I.e f&#13;
parents expect. The eNId&#13;
to Itsell •• I'm ...... II&#13;
ass oft nat tune tbat&#13;
UP." )sO·~ •&#13;
Althougb ccmtantly d&gt;ar&gt;~&#13;
O'!loIr e&#13;
subjects as: •&#13;
function," 5eI. am&#13;
\1'e are ~ to • liberated&#13;
-t). tb I'fIanIs to&#13;
vie te&#13;
men are premtly .CCD!~ed&#13;
ta to jolte II&#13;
olfendln someoDe&#13;
also&#13;
becune popular&#13;
doesn t care 1«&#13;
O·R.... ke d.&#13;
them. I d ·1....,t&#13;
On onotber of&#13;
O'ROIrle said be did&#13;
L nette "Sque&gt; y" Fr mm&#13;
sbouId ha&gt; e .UDelI .t PresIdent&#13;
Gerald Ford Ford' head&#13;
"she ecuJdD't hi&#13;
there' O'R • t&#13;
Sociology discipline&#13;
career day program&#13;
by BID Robbins&#13;
AID'fic8 has paid a helluva&#13;
.... Ilt prosperity." "iat statement marked the&#13;
.. llldarticulated the them of&#13;
fIOfessor J. Joseph Huth-&#13;
..... ' Bicentennial lecture&#13;
"UIliDi!bedBusiness of the&#13;
...,., Revolution" held last&#13;
,... nightin lbe Corom. Arts&#13;
lloIlrt. _cher, whose collection&#13;
~ IllIes and achievements indIdes&#13;
Richars Professor of&#13;
lIIerican History at The&#13;
1liftnityof Delaware, a Ph.D.&#13;
.... flOOl Harvard, and Harris&#13;
IIr PresIdentCsmpaign Director&#13;
DeIwware, talked about the&#13;
..,mici.l ideology behind'&#13;
Amtrica's Bicentennial&#13;
"*lration."&#13;
Idill' see how anybody can&#13;
lilt ItOWldlbe United states&#13;
.. and say lbe system has&#13;
..ted so terribly well," said&#13;
1IIIIIDadler. As an example, he&#13;
lIIdtile me disappearnace of&#13;
Y , nlal celebrations funds&#13;
.,.'" lite city of Philadelphia. "Belrosultof outlay will be a "'1*ll in lbe back yard of&#13;
.,. Rlno's new $350,000 -," "IIachlIeShoppiDg Center&#13;
"\lin'. a lot to celebrate in&#13;
... 01 malerlaJ aims and&#13;
~" HUlbmacher said.&#13;
"'"' gol the highest medium&#13;
IlIIdanI 01 Uvingin lbe world."&#13;
.. be attributed lbis cultural&#13;
nesday night in Parkside's Cornm&#13;
Arts Theater, claims he and other&#13;
Lampoon editors are "real&#13;
normal." So, that is Why the&#13;
magazme once printed a COver&#13;
showing a gun pointed at a dog's&#13;
head and threatening to kill lbe&#13;
pooch if people did not buy lbe&#13;
affluence to "investing huge&#13;
amounts in instruments of&#13;
death."&#13;
One of the world's foremost&#13;
labor historians, Huthmacher&#13;
claimed that the weapons industries&#13;
operate on planned&#13;
obscelence schedules. "With&#13;
America as the world's largest&#13;
seller of armaments to other&#13;
countries, industries like G.M.&#13;
and Lockheed are assured of&#13;
employment. "&#13;
The Real Revolution&#13;
He espoused and explored the&#13;
gamut of current "progressive"&#13;
liberalistic ideas, commenting on&#13;
subjects ranging from socialized&#13;
medical facilities, a national&#13;
labor force, and the emptiness of&#13;
the "American Dream."&#13;
Huthmacher was especially&#13;
concerned with the "real&#13;
revolution," a societal, or&#13;
cultural revolulion which he said&#13;
slarted in the late 1950's and is liJl&#13;
being fought. He credits minority&#13;
groups, women. students and&#13;
other activists demanding social&#13;
and political reform, with&#13;
bringing about dramatic changes&#13;
over the last ten years. He also&#13;
credits himself. In 1970, Nixon's&#13;
invasion of Cambodia and the&#13;
Kent Slate tragedy succeeded in&#13;
radicalizing Huthmacher. "l&#13;
became a kind of revolutionist, I&#13;
gave up on being a liberal," he&#13;
declared.&#13;
The year he turned&#13;
"revolutionary fervor reached its&#13;
peak and began its decline. Hulb·&#13;
macher is well aware of that. He&#13;
issue?&#13;
The modestlY-dressed&#13;
O'Rourke, a graduate of Miami&#13;
(Ohio) University, began his talk&#13;
by saying he would nol have paid&#13;
lbe $1.25 advance tickel price to&#13;
hear him speak. Especially&#13;
O'Rourke, who has been with&#13;
asked, "Was this just a p3SSIDg&#13;
fad, a phenomenon thallelt a f....&#13;
marks On lhe periphery 01&#13;
American culture like long&#13;
hair?"&#13;
Atlbe beginning 01 his lecture,&#13;
Hutlnnacher set lbe mood by&#13;
piping swaying, soulful rendilions&#13;
of "Heaven Help Us All"&#13;
and "Abraham, Martin and&#13;
John" into the auditorium. He&#13;
played a Paul Simon song, too:&#13;
"An American Tune." Perhaps&#13;
lbe last few lines of that song&#13;
captures the altitude 01&#13;
American in the mid-70's and&#13;
partially answers Hulbmacher's&#13;
Questions as to whether or not the&#13;
notion of revolution in lhe late&#13;
60's has passed:&#13;
"Still, tomorrow's gonna be&#13;
another working day .&#13;
I'm trying to get some rest.&#13;
I'm just trying to gel some&#13;
rest. "&#13;
The sociology disdptine will be&#13;
offering a career day program on&#13;
Wed., Nov. at 1:30 p.m. in CL 219.&#13;
SOciology majors as well ...&#13;
olber interested students have&#13;
been invited to receh-e gen.... i&#13;
infonnation or advise IS to job&#13;
and career opportunities.&#13;
Barbara Larson, of the ear....&#13;
. 'ahonal&#13;
Januaf)·.&#13;
about the •&#13;
his t"Pl&lt;' for the&#13;
Humor" The T&#13;
also apote freel)'.&#13;
wmIs IIlaI once&#13;
Carlin an-esled at&#13;
SUmmerf est.&#13;
Insis1i.ng tba t&#13;
··besed on fflll':'lIle1O'1IIlC&#13;
ill ho&#13;
Powless----------~===_-&#13;
ee.tlllVetl from p .... 1&#13;
8Ioda, paternalistic and&#13;
lIresponslve to a degree&#13;
::::thY even in our&#13;
....._aUe capital, lbe B.I.A.&#13;
.... ellposedin a series of&#13;
~ by weU-knowncolumnist,&#13;
Anderson,as being more&#13;
~ .with anglo business&#13;
.... III and around lbe&#13;
~ti.ns than with the&#13;
~~d welfare of native&#13;
Plalotla delnoded, scrutinized&#13;
~~, lh~,,, Powless said of&#13;
...... , 'weve COme under in-&#13;
'Ille scrutiny by the Feds."&#13;
... ~ally funded A.I.M.&#13;
..,." am leaders have been&#13;
lutizect to lbe utmost." As&#13;
lIrt~t of this federal in-&#13;
"no, ce \VJthin an eighteen&#13;
!"Ilt periOd, four A.I.M.&#13;
lII;;a~~ve been defunded. The&#13;
.... ee·~ased American&#13;
,Council on Alcoholism has&#13;
lbe attention of lbe&#13;
F.B.I., H.E.W., and lbe National&#13;
Institute Alchol Abuse and&#13;
Alcoholism, who have. sent&#13;
represenlatives to audIt. and&#13;
monitor the project, accordmg to&#13;
Powless. powless has com~&#13;
under personal attack, accused 0&#13;
buying guns with agency money.&#13;
Although allegalions suchas&#13;
lbese have never been subslantiated,&#13;
this has prOVIded ~e&#13;
necessary public pretense or&#13;
investigations by the F.B.I., lbe&#13;
Justice Department, and lbe&#13;
Milwaukee Social Development&#13;
Commission. .&#13;
Currently, powless is faclJlll&#13;
federal and state charges&#13;
relating to his parlicipallon :::,lb~&#13;
1973 seige at Wounded Kn '.&#13;
. ted powless could receIVe conVlC , t 1'1 eally&#13;
years of irnprisionrnen. r "&#13;
believe I'm going to beat lbem,&#13;
. lains powless mam. . . t ballles&#13;
Should he wm his cour .&#13;
an urun- Powless still faces hostile&#13;
f dan often '&#13;
orme , .ty A leader&#13;
Milwaukee communt .&#13;
in the light against police&#13;
brutality and lbe resurgence of&#13;
nazism iocally. Powless' house&#13;
bas been fire-bom.bed and his eat&#13;
tires slashed and. of course, lhere&#13;
are crank phooe calls. ..,me&#13;
demanding that Indians, "g~&#13;
hack wh... e !be)' came from,&#13;
Powless noted wilb someUung&#13;
I lban total amusernenL More ':'ersome to Powless i.s the real&#13;
threat of bOdily harm. Refe~&#13;
t lbe number of native&#13;
..::nericans shot,. maimed .. or&#13;
even killed by wtules or ~&#13;
acting on behalf 'dol,,:"~:e:;:;&#13;
terests, powless S8J ,&#13;
'd feeling scm&lt; morDl.lllts&#13;
paranO! wired "&#13;
lbat maybe my eat IS .&#13;
Spreadlag hall-ed&#13;
The establishment response to&#13;
powless' charges ~en':"an::&#13;
curious D1IXed-bag .'&#13;
slow often unwilling, ,·a1idallon .&#13;
R"";nUy a lonner F.B.I. mformant,&#13;
nougins Durham, ha&#13;
National Lampoon Editor&#13;
new humor often based on&#13;
b ·'fhODl Aiello&#13;
&gt; . nee expects me to&#13;
audie d k suit " said&#13;
tin3 UC '&#13;
OU ke Executive Editor&#13;
01tour , . J 1 l,aillpoon magazine,&#13;
uona ·garette and opened a til8 Cl Budweiser beer.&#13;
of lecturing last Wed- ke,&#13;
nesday night in Parkside's Comm&#13;
Arts Theater, claims he and other&#13;
Lampoon editors are "real&#13;
norm~." So, that is why the&#13;
magazine once printed a cover&#13;
showing a gun pointed at a dog's&#13;
head and threatening to kill the&#13;
pooch if people did not buy the&#13;
issue?&#13;
The modestly-dre d&#13;
O'R~urke, a graduate of Uami&#13;
(Ohio) University, began his&#13;
by saying he would not ha\· paid&#13;
the $1.25 advance ticket price to&#13;
hear him speak. E peciall&gt;&#13;
O'Rourke, who has been "th&#13;
llistorian speaks on the&#13;
emptiness of the "Dream"~&#13;
by Bill Robbins&#13;
• rica bas paid a helluva ~ ·ty" ,tf fc.- prospen .&#13;
1 statement marked the&#13;
d articulated the them of&#13;
r or J. Joseph Huth-&#13;
' e r's Bicentennial lecture&#13;
!inished Business of the&#13;
·can Revolution" held last&#13;
. night in the Comm. Arts&#13;
Ire.&#13;
H:;thmacher, whose collection&#13;
ties and achievements inRichars&#13;
Professor of&#13;
rican History at The&#13;
·tv of Delaware, a Ph.D.&#13;
fr~ Harvard, and Harris&#13;
President Campaign Director&#13;
wware, talked about the&#13;
rficial ideology behind&#13;
erica's Bicentennial&#13;
ation."&#13;
I don't see how anybody can&#13;
around the United States&#13;
y and say the system has&#13;
ed so terribly well," said&#13;
cher. As an example, he&#13;
the ironic disappearnace of&#13;
lennia.1 celebrations funds&#13;
to the city of Philadelphia .&#13;
net result of outlay will be a&#13;
party in the back yard of&#13;
r Rizzo's new $350,000&#13;
"&#13;
ar Machine Shopping Center&#13;
e's a lot to celebrate in&#13;
of material aims and&#13;
lives," Huthmacher said.&#13;
got the highest medium&#13;
IWidan! of living in the world."&#13;
he attributed this cultural&#13;
affluence to "investing huge&#13;
amounts in instruments of&#13;
death."&#13;
One of the world's foremost&#13;
labor historians, Huthmacher&#13;
claimed that the weapons industries&#13;
operate on planned&#13;
obscelence schedules. "With&#13;
America as the world's largest&#13;
seller of armaments to other&#13;
countries, industries like G.M.&#13;
and Lockheed are assured of&#13;
employment.''&#13;
The Real Revolution&#13;
He espoused and explored the&#13;
gamut of current "progressive"&#13;
liberalistic ideas, commenting on&#13;
subjects ranging from socialized&#13;
medical facilities, a national&#13;
labor force, and the emptiness of&#13;
the "American Dream."&#13;
Huthmacher was especially&#13;
concerned with the "real&#13;
revolution, " a societal, or&#13;
cultural revolution which he said&#13;
started in the late 1950's and is till&#13;
being fought. He credits minority&#13;
groups, women. students and&#13;
other activists demanding social&#13;
and political reform, with&#13;
bringing about dramatic changes&#13;
over the last ten years. He also&#13;
credits himself. In 1970, Nixon's&#13;
invasion of Cambodia and the&#13;
Kent State tragedy succeeded in&#13;
radicalizing Huthmacher. "I&#13;
became a kind of revolutionist; I&#13;
gave up on being a liberal," he&#13;
declared.&#13;
The year he turned&#13;
"revolutionary fervor reached its&#13;
peak and began its decline. Huthmacher&#13;
is well aware of that. He&#13;
asked, "Was this just a pa&#13;
fad, a phenomenon that left f&#13;
marks on the periphery of&#13;
American culture Ii e Ion&#13;
hair?"&#13;
At the beginning of his lectur ,&#13;
Huthmacher set the mood b,&#13;
piping swaying, oulful renditions&#13;
of "Heaven Help Us All"&#13;
and ''Abraham, iartin nd&#13;
John" into the auditorium. H&#13;
played a Paul Simon&#13;
"An American Tune." P&#13;
the last few lines f that&#13;
captures the attitud&#13;
American in the mid-70 and&#13;
partially answers Huthmach '&#13;
questions as to heth not&#13;
notion of revolution in the late&#13;
60's has passed:&#13;
''Still, tomorr s gonna be&#13;
another working day.&#13;
I'm tr) ing to get m&#13;
I'm just l[1in to g me&#13;
rest."&#13;
Sociology&#13;
career da&#13;
edn 'f, o . 1 , J 7 T G&#13;
Powless-----------~=M~prd,1--=~~- &lt;lff11nutd from page 1&#13;
paternalistic and&#13;
flilonsive to a degree&#13;
worthy even in our&#13;
1 cratic capital, the B.I.A.&#13;
n exposed in a series of&#13;
by well-known columnist,&#13;
Anderson, as being more&#13;
d . with anglo business&#13;
ts in and around the&#13;
,rvat1ons than with the&#13;
e and welfare of native&#13;
rtcans.&#13;
Pt Jee defunded, scrutinized&#13;
1 ce, lhe,n," Powless said of&#13;
·, 'we ve come under inSCrutiny&#13;
by the Feds."&#13;
r:uy funded A.I.M.&#13;
linrr_i leaders have been&#13;
IZed to the utmost." As&#13;
IIJ&gt;shot of this federal inUience&#13;
~thin an eighteen&#13;
Period, four A.I.M.&#13;
au:ave been defunded. The&#13;
"-ee-~ased American&#13;
""Wlcil on Alcoholism has&#13;
d the attention of the&#13;
F.B.I., H.E.W., and the National&#13;
Institute Alchol Abuse and&#13;
Alcoholism, who have_ sent&#13;
representatives to audit_ and&#13;
monitor the project, according to&#13;
Powless. Powless has come&#13;
under personal attack, accused of&#13;
buying guns with agency money.&#13;
Although allegations suchas&#13;
these have never ~n substantiated&#13;
this has provided the&#13;
' te for necessary public pre nse&#13;
investigations by the F.B.I., the&#13;
Justice Department, and the&#13;
Milwaukee Social Development&#13;
Commission. . Currently, Powless is facing&#13;
federal and state _ch~rges&#13;
1 ting to his participation m the&#13;
~;7~ seige at Wounded Knee._ If&#13;
. ted Powless could receive&#13;
conv1c , . . t "I really&#13;
years of impr1S1onmen . "&#13;
believe I'm going to beat them,&#13;
Powless maintains. ttles&#13;
Should he win his court ba . an urun- Powless still faces .&#13;
1 often bosh e,&#13;
formed, an ·ty A leader&#13;
Milwaukee comrnuni · &#13;
Students' leave nest&#13;
keep the bird ·,&#13;
by MlI&lt;e Terry Thanksgiving. She ca1led&#13;
of her friends, who h ~&#13;
20 students that part~,Ule Il.&#13;
the program. ~ II&#13;
This year. she says&#13;
calling her to see if ~~"&#13;
students interesleq ~ ..&#13;
program. If over ~ Ii ~&#13;
register this year. Sc&#13;
says the food may be do&#13;
a group Thanksgiving::: rAny&#13;
student intere t~ •&#13;
having dinner with a I.~~"&#13;
Thanksgiving. or an...... '&#13;
interested in hosting a y&#13;
students; should co~&#13;
merling in Tallent R.lI&#13;
phone 553-2320. •....&#13;
4 THE PARKSID~ RA GER WIich"I~". Nov. 1f. 1mbon'OI' fl]JDs (rom 11:30-1:30 p.rn .&#13;
....... r. .d: steDar. Ij t1·30 p.rn, in WLLC&#13;
....... ,. .II: Psyc:!JololY Qubmee ng a .&#13;
174. val, !lIJoW\ng Humphrey Bogart in&#13;
....... ,. . d: rnm F~ M liD' "at 6·30 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
"African Queen" and "'!be ClilIe u Y .&#13;
Mmw' ...... Ia'~__.... lais. n. ••.• ~~..-......v Oub meeUng at 7:30 p.m. in CL&#13;
all .l"JuaY, Y. p. I'U\UI~&#13;
324. .' ell wsbiP full chapter&#13;
11Iw1da', ... 21: parbide QIrisliaD F 0&#13;
moetin8 at 7:30 p.m. in CA 124.. I Irwin MeZZOsoprano, Frida,. . n: Facully mUSICrecital: earo '&#13;
Stephen Sftdisb, pianOat7: 30 p.m, III the ?AT ..Free. Re\agys at&#13;
llInIay. .... tz: women's and men's swimJIlIIIll. RanIler&#13;
12 p.m. in the P.E. Bldg, . SAB S-_·nr&lt;&gt;&lt;l&#13;
llInIay. OY. tz: Dance frUIl8 p.m. to I a.m. III the . I""~'--&#13;
by the Par\.si~. ~ ~b':"'a concert at 3:30 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Y, O'V. W. rlII~ vru~&#13;
Free. (rom UW.MadisOO on "In- "-y. av. %4: Lecture, ~ter Lange and CIini aI 1mstruetional&#13;
Control of Heart RatA!: Research c cul&#13;
pllcaboos" at 1:30 p.m. in CL 107. SpOrlSOI"'d by Psychology Fa ty&#13;
and Psycholo«.Y Club.&#13;
Any students who are unable to&#13;
j&#13;
' their own families on&#13;
Oln d t&#13;
Thanksgiving Day, ue ~&#13;
distance, finailces t . etc. don t&#13;
have to miss out this year. ,ac·&#13;
cording to Shirley Schmer~.&#13;
Housing coordinator at par.kSlde.&#13;
Schmer&#13;
1ing says she. will .be&#13;
hilpPY to find a family With,Which&#13;
those students can enJoy a&#13;
Thanksgiving dinner.&#13;
Schmerling initiated the&#13;
program last year because&#13;
several students from New&#13;
Orleans were at Parkside.and I~, were unable to go home for&#13;
.p chamber symphony&#13;
will present concert&#13;
MOLBECK'S&#13;
GROCERY&#13;
Comp,.te Line of Qua'lity Grocer'..&#13;
Specializing in ."&#13;
HEALTH FOODS··DIETETICS··IMPORTS&#13;
Aspen Colo. FesIlvai Repertoire&#13;
Orehestra.&#13;
'!be ParUide crchestra's other&#13;
on-campus concerts this seaSOn&#13;
will be Feb. 15 when the soloist&#13;
will be faculty pianist StA!phen&#13;
swedish performing Beethoven'.&#13;
Plano Concerto No.2 and in mid·&#13;
May when they will share a&#13;
program with the Repertory&#13;
BaUet Company of Barrett&#13;
College.&#13;
Olber up&lt;oming appearances&#13;
for the crcheslra are Dec. 13.&#13;
when it will play with the&#13;
Milwaukee Choristers at Alverno&#13;
College. and Apil26. when it will&#13;
participate in dedication&#13;
ceremmIes for the Carthage&#13;
College Chapel with Carthage&#13;
faculty organist Mark Edwards&#13;
as soloist.&#13;
lint vloIinlIl with the Pike River&#13;
cans. the 'I'borbumlin and&#13;
'orlh Sbore SIring QuarIeIa and&#13;
the M.A . Trio. Last 1WIlIIIOI".&#13;
he parIlcipalA!d in the Fish Creek&#13;
MUSlC FlIlItivai.&#13;
In his lint year as cooducto&lt; of&#13;
the Parkslde Symphony.&#13;
npaema also cooducla the&#13;
ordlIstras at Mary D. Bradford&#13;
HJcb SCbool. Kenosha, and is&#13;
aIB,slanl conductor of the&#13;
K!IlOIIba SympbClIly. He is a&#13;
violinist with the Kenosha&#13;
Sympllony and the Pike River&#13;
Musicians.&#13;
He received b1s master of&#13;
music degree from Michigan&#13;
SlBtA! Umvemty and in 1973&#13;
received the diplcma of conoo~&#13;
from the Mcnarteum,&#13;
Sahburg. Austria. under Carl&#13;
Nelles. He has cooduclA!d in&#13;
Berlin, Rome, Florence and&#13;
Sahburg and has been guest&#13;
conductor of the Grand (Mich.)&#13;
Symphony, Michigan State&#13;
University Orchestra and the&#13;
lbe Parkslde Chamber&#13;
SYmIDllOlDY will ~I III fall&#13;
I NO p.m on SomdaY,&#13;
2S, Il1 the C&lt;mm Ar1I&#13;
.. thOllYld ~&#13;
aloductiaI and ccnc-t vioUnlst&#13;
Ithew F. 'a~ as I'IUl&#13;
1304 Grange Ave Phone 633-7769&#13;
Need Work,? Want a· Rewar;.dlng Job?&#13;
No Experience Needed - We Train You GOOD PAY&#13;
MEN-Shift Workers- COLLEGE STUDENTS A.M.~.M. blof&#13;
Women-Ideol hours, Help increose the fomily income-Suythose UIII&#13;
.au htln will perform the&#13;
olin Concerto 0. 5 in&#13;
lbt alIo will pre..,t&#13;
'a SIIIbur Slllfonia o. I&#13;
(K •• ,Cbarlu 'v.' Sympllony&#13;
o 3 and Slrav!Jllky'a SuIte o.&#13;
I '!be procram alIo will Include&#13;
HoImea' te for ar- by the&#13;
ParUIde Bra. Cbolr dlteclA!d by&#13;
.10M HomIt., 'auawn. active both as a&#13;
Ifat~ and perf~ artist In&#13;
area. Iludied at&#13;
Ql'thw tern UnJ erslly with&#13;
FAw'do FloreW and ~Uy is&#13;
working withAlan&#13;
H athutn ton. Re is conc:ertmaa~&#13;
of the Waulteaan&#13;
ymphony and the Liberty·&#13;
Fn:mont Concert Socl ty and is&#13;
• Compensation during the summer • Be home with yol children&#13;
See how eo.sy your hours could work. in with .OUf schedule. A good way II&#13;
beat the increase cost of living.&#13;
Despite road construction, road open to:&#13;
RACINE BUS CO.&#13;
(Come in from Soulh 51.) 1822 South St. 639·7404&#13;
T tile and fabric work&#13;
in theater display&#13;
throughout the u.s. during the&#13;
last 16 years and has had one and&#13;
two per-son shows. Her work is in&#13;
the pennanenl collections of&#13;
wasbingtort Ullh-ersity in St.&#13;
Louis. the l11inois SlatA!Museum,&#13;
Sprtngfield. and many privatA!&#13;
coUections. She is the author of a&#13;
number of arlIc1es on weaving in&#13;
both U.S and fcnign journals.&#13;
Regular gaUery hours are&#13;
Monda)'s, Wednesdays and&#13;
Fndays from 3 to 5 p.m. and&#13;
~)"S and Thursdays from 6&#13;
to 8 p.rn. The gallery will be&#13;
cl.-d ·ov. 27 and 2ll because of&#13;
the TlIanksgiving recess.&#13;
lion of ' Testilea and&#13;
Fabria from them 1l1lncIs&#13;
Unlv Iy" f tun.n&amp; work by&#13;
Prof .' omi T_ and four of&#13;
her 1J1ldualA! alod&lt;nl.S In art will&#13;
on dbpIay III the Cm&gt;-&#13;
munlcaUoa AJ1s Gallery from&#13;
."" 19 througb 5&#13;
vlngs and prlnled&#13;
emp1o)' a wide&#13;
V::~~~~~~~~ all have b nat10nally III JUch&#13;
Conlm1porary Q-afts of&#13;
m rleas, WiSCODSUl&#13;
l\ orth Western ~=~&#13;
od Finl Ann I&#13;
ti tic rt Olmpebllon.&#13;
ha .h,biled&#13;
Cantonese &amp; American&#13;
Fine Deficacies&#13;
[ FAMilY DINNERS I&#13;
Dine in or Carry Out&#13;
-C1OSID AYS&#13;
Rf~ U R T CO T H'~Mu.s&#13;
Ull '.r. 4 A.. • Ph. 564.1320&#13;
-filE! PARlCINGF.&#13;
Madrigrano 1831-55th&#13;
OY. 19, 1975&#13;
. . U: ~eDar,b&lt;Jn'Orfihmfrom ll:30-1:30P~· WILC&#13;
. U: Ps ·ch ogy Oub meeting at 1 :30 p.m. m&#13;
U• Film Festival showing Humphrey Bogart in&#13;
• • Caine ~tiny" at 6:30 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
$1. . · CL • U: AnthropOlogy Oub meeting at 7:30 p.m. m&#13;
: Par · e Otristian Fellowship full chapter&#13;
i: p.m. in CA 1%4. . 0&#13;
• !1: F culty m ·c recital: Carol Irwin, Mezzo sopran '&#13;
Ste1&gt;1M!n ~-url. at i:30 p.m. in the CAT. Free. n and men ·s swiJruning, Ranger Re}agys at&#13;
ture Peter Lan e from UW-Madison on "lnH&#13;
'art Rate: Research and Clinical ImCL&#13;
107. ponsored by Psychology Faculty&#13;
amber symphony&#13;
t concert&#13;
ork&#13;
Aspen Colo. Festival Repertoire&#13;
Orchestra.&#13;
The Parkside orchestra's other&#13;
on&lt;ampus concerts this season&#13;
will be Feb. 15 when the soloist&#13;
will be faculty pianist Stephen&#13;
edish performing Beethoven's&#13;
Piano Concerto No. 2 and in mid1ay&#13;
when they will share a&#13;
program with the Repertory&#13;
Ballet Company of Barrett&#13;
College.&#13;
Other up,&lt;:oming appearances&#13;
for the orchestra are Dec. 13,&#13;
when it will play with the&#13;
· waukee Choristers at Alverno&#13;
College, and AJril 26, when it will&#13;
participate in dedication&#13;
ceremonies for the Carthage&#13;
College Chapel with Carthage&#13;
faculty organist Mark Edwards&#13;
as soloist.&#13;
Students· leave nest&#13;
keep the bird ' '&#13;
by Mike Terry&#13;
Any students who are ~able to&#13;
'oin their own fam1hes on&#13;
i'banksgiving Day• due to&#13;
distance, finances, . etc. don't&#13;
have to miss out this year' . according&#13;
to Shirley Schroer~,&#13;
Housing coordinator at Parkside.&#13;
Schmerling says she will be&#13;
happy to find a family with _which&#13;
those students can enJ0 Y a&#13;
Thanksgiving dinner.&#13;
Schmerling initiated the&#13;
program last year because&#13;
several students from New&#13;
Orleans were at Parkside, and&#13;
were unable to go home for&#13;
Thanksgiving. She called&#13;
of her friends, who hoste(l Bevetai&#13;
20 students that Parti . _the 1$.&#13;
the program. ct~ted in&#13;
This year, she says&#13;
calling her to see if ~PeoPJe ~&#13;
students interested e ~ an,&#13;
program. If over 25 in !ht&#13;
register this year Sc 8~&#13;
says the food may be do hrner~&#13;
a group Thanksgiving ~ r,&#13;
Any student inter t r.&#13;
having dinner with a fes ~ ia&#13;
Thanksgiving, or an anuJy Cl&#13;
interested in hosting a Y f81!lily&#13;
students; should contastudeot,&#13;
lin . ct ~&#13;
mer g m Tallent Hall - phone 553-2320. , IU,&#13;
MOLBECK'S&#13;
GROCERY&#13;
Complete Line of Quality Groceries&#13;
Specializing in ·&#13;
HEAL TH FOODS--DIETETICS--IMP0Rn&#13;
1304 Gronge Ave Phone 633-7769&#13;
Need Work.? Want a · Rewar.ding Job?&#13;
No Experience Needed - We Train You GOOD PAY&#13;
MEN-Shift Workers- C~LLEGE STUDENTS A.M.-P.M. Rel!f&#13;
Women-Ideal hours. Help increase the family income-Buy those ex1rm&#13;
• Compensation during the summer • Be home with yoJ children&#13;
See how ea_sy your hours could work in with .our schedule. A good woy to&#13;
beot the increase cost of living.&#13;
Despite road construction, road open to:&#13;
RACINE BUS CO.&#13;
(Come in from South St.) 1822 South St. 639-7404&#13;
Distributed by E.&#13;
F. Madrigrano 1831-55th &#13;
w.dnesdlly. Nov. It. 1975THE PARKSIDE&#13;
ganization will be student dating&#13;
•&#13;
11 ::::::&#13;
have everything-looks, brains,&#13;
really sharp. But they were&#13;
down, in part, because they didn't&#13;
know how to meet new people."&#13;
Shirley and the students came up&#13;
with the idea for a fun dating&#13;
service.&#13;
"We want to help students get&#13;
involved with one another&#13;
socially, on a more personal&#13;
level. It's a social service for fun;&#13;
not to meet Mr. or Ms. Right,"&#13;
said Gail Havranek, president of&#13;
SEXES.&#13;
Right now SEXES is polling&#13;
students on what they want from&#13;
the new club. Answers from the&#13;
poll will be used to form a&#13;
questionnaire that will be&#13;
available after Thanksgiving.&#13;
The questionnaire is the key to&#13;
the club. It will include basic&#13;
physical preferences but also&#13;
values, goals and interests of&#13;
those applying. A computer will&#13;
not be used to match applicants.&#13;
"We will do an individualized&#13;
study of each person. We will be&#13;
I:::::: HI:: I:::&#13;
matching values, things With a&#13;
deeper meaning. It's 8 lot more&#13;
work but we feel it is needed"&#13;
Gail explained. '&#13;
Gail feels that moot people&#13;
applying will not need a da~&#13;
service but just want to expand&#13;
their horizons. Gail said, "It's&#13;
just fun people looking to meet&#13;
other fun people With new and&#13;
different ideas."&#13;
SEXES has been in contact&#13;
with 8 computerized dating&#13;
service at Indiana University.&#13;
They had 600 applicants in the&#13;
first week. Gail said, "Tbere&#13;
were no life-long love matches&#13;
but everyone enjoyed themselves&#13;
and they are looking forward to&#13;
the next semester."&#13;
This is the way SEXES will&#13;
work; one week men will get&#13;
three names of women and the&#13;
next week women will get three&#13;
names of men. Sometime during&#13;
the week the man or woman will&#13;
informa11y meet his or her three&#13;
selections. After meeting the&#13;
: ::: 57 : ::&#13;
From This Window&#13;
From this window .&#13;
'I1Je thick, black, serpentine-intertwining, up-outward extending&#13;
Umbs&#13;
Of winter-time trees&#13;
People the faded sky .&#13;
In a hastily-discarded disarray&#13;
Indifferently unleafed&#13;
'I1Jey mingle to mingle through thoroughly&#13;
Wondered about dimensions&#13;
And lean on the softly leaded&#13;
Night-time clouds that are&#13;
Uke shoulders for sad, aching bones&#13;
But later&#13;
'1brough shaded lamplight,&#13;
'I1Je lighter part of darkness framed,&#13;
Voluminous, delicate leaves of vined degree&#13;
Balance on breezes of cloudless thoughts&#13;
Of summer-time and&#13;
Wmdowless, dappled trees&#13;
~~~:.--~&#13;
I-.-LP&#13;
Cyndl Jensen&#13;
Gordon's Auto 'arts, ....&#13;
three, &lt;me II c:bc-. far a&#13;
netmd date. wtII be&#13;
b8vq dub I\ulcIiona, .........&#13;
~ meeliQp ... !be. t !&#13;
or tbo c:oapIe CIOIl go ........ ~&#13;
die.&#13;
Ad,aaa"clDd' __&#13;
~ wtII teI1 _ aad&#13;
GER'&#13;
ow&#13;
king&#13;
plicants&#13;
the&#13;
sition of&#13;
Editor&#13;
the&#13;
pring&#13;
Sellleste&#13;
DISCOUNT TO STUDENTS&#13;
Phone 632-8841&#13;
Phone 631-8882&#13;
1214 Lathrop Ave.&#13;
1400 Milw. Ave.&#13;
1657.5158 I&#13;
eEL&#13;
• AUTO&#13;
TRAVELhps&#13;
G'i\4TO&#13;
U~tEXICO&#13;
With vaca ion ime f app&#13;
to , l1exlco. Some of&#13;
coming back. Here re&#13;
hints.&#13;
I.A man on a burro alv 'llY&#13;
right of vay, unle h ap&#13;
a weaklin .&#13;
2. In local can nas pounn a ot&#13;
Cuervo dov rn a man' collar I n&#13;
thou ht to hUmt1IfOIIS&#13;
3. Fal1ing onto a n n&#13;
actual Cu rvo cacrus, can&#13;
a tick. proposiuon .&#13;
•Itt tou h to find h mUU'6~&#13;
roll In th 11 r to&#13;
be to bnn our 0 n,&#13;
the&#13;
to&#13;
Wedne~y. ov. H, 75 T PA 10£ A G&#13;
ganizati.on will he student dat_· __&#13;
have everything-looks, brains,&#13;
really sharp. But they were&#13;
down, in part, because they didn't&#13;
know how to meet new people."&#13;
Shirley and the students came up&#13;
with the idea for a fun dating&#13;
service.&#13;
"We want to help students get&#13;
involved with one another&#13;
sociidly, on a more personal&#13;
level. It's a social service for fun;&#13;
not to meet Mr. or Ms. Right,"&#13;
said Gail Havranek, president of&#13;
SEXES.&#13;
Right now SEXES is polling&#13;
students on what they want from&#13;
the new club. Answers from the&#13;
poll will be used to form a&#13;
questionnaire that will be&#13;
available after Thanksgiving.&#13;
The questionnaire is the key to&#13;
the chm. It will include basic&#13;
physical preferences but also&#13;
values, goals and interests of&#13;
those applying. A computer will&#13;
not be used to match applicants.&#13;
"We will do an individualized&#13;
study of each person. We will be&#13;
matching values, things ·th 8&#13;
deeper meaning. It's a lot more&#13;
work but we feel it is needed ., Gail explained.&#13;
Gail feels that m~ peopl&#13;
applying will not need a dat~&#13;
service but just want to expand&#13;
their horizons. Gail sa d, "It'&#13;
just fun people looking to meet&#13;
other fun people with ne and&#13;
different ideas."&#13;
SEXES has been in contact&#13;
with a computerized dating&#13;
service at Indiana University.&#13;
They had 600 applicants in the&#13;
first week. Gail said, "There&#13;
were no life-long love match&#13;
but everyone enjoyed them.selves&#13;
and they are looking fcrward to&#13;
the next semester."&#13;
This is the way SEXES will&#13;
work; one week men will get&#13;
three names of women and the&#13;
next week women will get ee&#13;
names of men. Sometime during&#13;
the week the man or woman will&#13;
informally meet his or her three&#13;
selections. After meeting th&#13;
•rn From This Window&#13;
From this window .&#13;
The thick, black, serpentine-intertwining, up-0utward extending&#13;
Limbs&#13;
Of winter-time trees&#13;
People the faded sky&#13;
In a hastily-discarded disarray&#13;
Indifferently unleafed&#13;
They mingle to mingle through thoroughly&#13;
Wondered about dimensions&#13;
And lean on the softly leaded&#13;
Night-time clouds that are&#13;
Like shoulders for sad, aching bones&#13;
But later&#13;
Through shaded lamplight,&#13;
The lighter part of darkness fraI?ed,&#13;
Voluminous, delicate leaves of vined degree&#13;
Balance on breezes of cloudless thoughts&#13;
Of summer-time and&#13;
Windowless, dappled trees&#13;
CyndiJensen&#13;
,.&#13;
Gordon's Auto Parts,'&#13;
TE DISCOUNT TO STUDENT$ I&#13;
Phone 632-8841 1214 Lathrop Ave.&#13;
,~ Phone 637-8882 1400 Milw. A e .&#13;
...&#13;
rthe&#13;
Po ition of&#13;
Editor&#13;
rthe&#13;
Pring&#13;
0&#13;
TRAvE&#13;
TO&#13;
E CO &#13;
Women set records,&#13;
look to Ranger relays&#13;
(1:20.36, a personal best), 50 fly contmued t? established&#13;
(32.51) and 200 indo medley new mark m the 100Oy .&#13;
. 855). Coach Barbara Lawson 1:32.61. Ilili&#13;
(2.4 . ltfi th N t was extremely pleased WI e . ex action for the&#13;
. g in the 200 individual will be as a co-ed 1.__&#13;
showm . d thi d """".&#13;
edl Y&#13;
as the new record slice ir annual Rang ~&#13;
m e, N' ~&#13;
. seconds off the old mark. me schools from Wi~&#13;
rune • RI" ....&#13;
Olson also established a new mois will send teams....&#13;
k&#13;
in the 50 free style with a meet, which ends the ~&#13;
mar .&#13;
30.47 timing. Constantine kept up swun season.&#13;
the breaking of old records as she&#13;
'THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wedne.y, Nov. 19, 1975&#13;
Phy Ed Bldg. schedule&#13;
8:30am-9:30pm&#13;
8:3Oam-43Opm.&#13;
s: pm-8:3Opm&#13;
bulJdlng odledule Wlth scree exceptions. Athletic&#13;
ms Prlcti Dy frml 3: 30 to 6 p.rn me pb}'S1cal education&#13;
IIn!be gym. depending on esther. As a malter of policy,&#13;
S lr) to one gym a,.,.ilable for recreational play.&#13;
1l:J6.1:3Opm&#13;
1l:J6.2:3Opm&#13;
6:J6.9:oo pm&#13;
bo&gt; bolld1ng odledule, ex.,.,,1 when cJa.sses in&#13;
I llarhandball rein on. can lor re.oervations.&#13;
.It room !be above bolld1ng sdledule.&#13;
perfOM'llllllCe lab PlIy cal Fitness &amp;. M.... I2-I: 15pm&#13;
erdse prescnpti... Wed.U-2pm&#13;
De\:l81Ilrneot Banquet Evening s:::~hoe !be Ranser Relays 12Noon&#13;
~ Benefil - SCuba DIvers&#13;
ralhon In pool I: 30 pm&#13;
run to first place finish,&#13;
.........ional m et may he at UW·p&#13;
weat he did last year."&#13;
Edinboro Slate (Pa.) went on to&#13;
capture the NAIA Championship.&#13;
AU tolled, 54 full teams participated&#13;
and 99 colleges were&#13;
represented.&#13;
Another Parkside hopeful was&#13;
junior Kim Merrill, who was&#13;
running in the Association of&#13;
Intercollegiate Athletics for&#13;
Women (AIAW) meet, held in&#13;
Ames, Iowa. But Merritt became&#13;
sick during the race and could not&#13;
finish.&#13;
On another front, the NAIA&#13;
coaches in Salina voted to hold&#13;
the National meet in Kenosha&#13;
next year, with Parkside and&#13;
Carthage being ClHlOSts. Next,&#13;
the NAIA Executive Committee&#13;
must agree to the coaches'&#13;
decision, after it sends a committee&#13;
to check""ut Kenosha as a&#13;
probable site. Godfrey feels&#13;
Kenosha has a "good chance" of&#13;
gaining the site. _&#13;
FInally, Parkside will hold its&#13;
"1st Annual Nordic Cross&#13;
Country Race" on November 30&#13;
1975. It costs $1 to enter, and th~&#13;
raee will cover 5 kilometers. For&#13;
more details on thWevent, check&#13;
next week's Ranger.&#13;
olleyball team too&#13;
ch for Ripon&#13;
bJ- ......&#13;
cb Orby volleyball&#13;
t.eam played on 0( 1IleIr meet so1id&#13;
01 !be year to overcome •&#13;
RIpoo am, 1-1&#13;
1M maldl sl&amp;Nd oft with a&#13;
Par win. I~. Ripon then&#13;
came ba lh a 1:.-4 win to tie&#13;
!be match .1 I game tid&gt;. The&#13;
third game lound th Ran«ers&#13;
and RIpon In.tie .1!he end of !be&#13;
mlnulo lime aUotmenI lor&#13;
called game on&#13;
Par • played this&#13;
women came back&#13;
ltob thegame&#13;
In ertime,&#13;
llyn.-&#13;
anqut&#13;
il honor&#13;
ath t&#13;
..... nlly ejected captain 0( the&#13;
Parkslde cross-country squad,&#13;
I\nWled 81 t out 0( about ~&#13;
runners last Satunlay' in the&#13;
Al • ·.U.... l Championships,&#13;
held In Salina. Kansas. Co.ch Vic&#13;
Godfrey ..... not too excited&#13;
about Fredericksen's finish,&#13;
saytng. "He's • better runner&#13;
than e1ghly-first. but be didn't do&#13;
• bod job, Just a lillie below&#13;
average for him though." Godlrey'&#13;
al50 menttcnec that even&#13;
though his lop nmner seemed to&#13;
hive been Olin a slump" lately.&#13;
Fredericksen slill finished&#13;
"about a hundred places over&#13;
bein greatly improved and&#13;
serving well. Carolyn Gilstedl,&#13;
Moos said. "helped with the solid&#13;
effort by !be Parkside learn&#13;
having come back from an injur;&#13;
which had held h..- out for a&#13;
month:·&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Parkside's women swim team&#13;
laced tenth in the WWIAC&#13;
~ampionshiPs. won by UWMadisOn,&#13;
g.thering twelve pomts&#13;
from two unusual sources.&#13;
Those sources were the 200&#13;
medley relay and 200 free style&#13;
relay, whose tenth place finishes&#13;
gained the Parkside pomts. In&#13;
gaining their fmish. the 200&#13;
medley relay team broke a team&#13;
record through the efforts of&#13;
MarY Beth Leitch, Sheila Craig,&#13;
Gail Olson, and Liz Constantine.&#13;
The new record is 2: 21.18. The&#13;
memberS of the free style team&#13;
were: Leitch, Olson, Constantine,&#13;
and Lynn Peterson.&#13;
Leilch broke more records at&#13;
the meet in the 100 back stroke&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Cou&#13;
","""~"''''''''&lt;o""&#13;
On tap at the Skellar&#13;
\ "- \\ \~ ~OR&#13;
RECORDS &amp; TUII&#13;
PIPES&#13;
PARAPHERNALU&#13;
LEATHER G.&#13;
JEWELRY&#13;
. WATBl&#13;
ElNE SWEET BErn&#13;
BREA&#13;
6131137TH A VENDE KENSI&#13;
66"-3678&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SE,RVICE&#13;
wishes everyone a Happy Thanksgiving&#13;
This Friday, Nov. 21&#13;
~URKEY GIVE-AWAY&#13;
Win a f '&#13;
rozen turkey to take home for&#13;
Thanks'" . d giVing inner. Both in the&#13;
Burger Shoppe and Buffet Room&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 26&#13;
-Ie'&#13;
TURKEY DINNER SPECIAL&#13;
Hand carved t k '&#13;
includin d u~ ey with all the trimmings&#13;
g resslng, potato vegetable and$1&#13;
cranb . •&#13;
erry sauce (~1.75 value)&#13;
WLLC BUFFET ROOM _ NE CORNER OF BLDG.&#13;
,_ __ K_ 1_oe __ 1 G_ E _ _ ed_n _sd-'--y_, _ov_. 1_9,_19-751 women set records, .&#13;
look to Ranger relays&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Parkside's women jWll1l team&#13;
placed tenth in the WWIAC&#13;
championships, won by ~Wfadison,&#13;
gathering twelve pomts&#13;
from two unusual sources.&#13;
Those sources were the 200&#13;
medley relay and 200 free style&#13;
el Whose tenth place finishes&#13;
·20 36 a personal best), 50 fly continued to establlshe&#13;
g2 5i) 'and 200 ind. medley new mark in the 100 : a~~ ." 55). Coach Barbara Lawson 1:32.61. Y Iii 1&#13;
(2.4B. ·•k th N t t·&#13;
was extremely pleased w1i.u e ex ac ion for th&#13;
h wing in the 200 individual will be as a co-ed tee&#13;
s edo 1 as the new record sliced third annual Ra atn ~ m ey, . nger Fie . e seconds off the old mark. Nme schools from w· . ~Ison also established a new Illinois will send te ISco¾Ji&#13;
mark in the 50 free style with a meet, which ends t~ I(,&#13;
30.47 timing. Constantine kept up swim season. I\'&#13;
r ay, . In&#13;
in gained the Parkside points.&#13;
gaining their finish, the 200&#13;
medley relay team broke a team&#13;
record through the efforts of&#13;
the breaking of old records as she&#13;
Ev ing&#13;
12 ·oon&#13;
1:30pm&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch, Sheila Cr~g,&#13;
Gail Olson, and Liz Constantine.&#13;
The new record is 2:21.18. The&#13;
members of the free style team&#13;
were: ~itch, Olson, Constantine,&#13;
and Lynn Peterson.&#13;
~itch bcoke more records at&#13;
the meet in the 100 back stroke&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
G, llllLI0,04 ,_U,,..,&#13;
1111 (0&#13;
., ...&#13;
On tap at the Skellar&#13;
ace finish,&#13;
at UW-P&#13;
eant too&#13;
a·pon&#13;
r atly improved and&#13;
ll. Carolyn Gilstedt,&#13;
·d, ' ped ~th the solid&#13;
b) the Par ·de team,&#13;
ba from an mjury&#13;
d held out for a&#13;
nat he did last year."&#13;
Edinboro State (Pa.) went on to&#13;
capture the NAIA Championship.&#13;
All tolled, 54 full teams participated&#13;
and 99 colleges were&#13;
represented.&#13;
Another Parkside hopeful was&#13;
junior Kim Merritt, who was&#13;
running in the Association of&#13;
Intercollegiate Athletics for&#13;
Women (AIAW) meet, held in&#13;
Ames, Iowa. But Merritt became&#13;
sick during the race and could not&#13;
finish.&#13;
On another front, the NAIA&#13;
coaches in Salina voted to hold&#13;
the National meet in Kenosha&#13;
next year, with Parkside and&#13;
Carthage being co-hosts. Next,&#13;
the 'AIA Executive Committee&#13;
must agree to the coaches'&#13;
decision, after it sends a committee&#13;
to check-out Kenosha as a&#13;
probable site. Godfrey feels&#13;
Kenosha has a "good chance" of&#13;
gaining the site.&#13;
Finally, Parkside will hold its&#13;
"1st Annual Nordic Cross&#13;
Country Race" on November 30&#13;
' 1975. It costs $1 to enter, and the&#13;
race will cover 5 kilometers. For&#13;
more details on this-event, check&#13;
next week's Ranger.&#13;
\, \ ~ w '"- \\ \\; FOR&#13;
REUORDS &amp; TAP~&#13;
PIPES&#13;
PARAPHERNALl.t&#13;
LEATHER GOOI&#13;
JEWELRY&#13;
WATER&#13;
BNE SWEET BEANl.tg&#13;
BREAM&#13;
&amp;B1B 7Tff -A \?ENDE RENEii&#13;
&amp;&amp;ll-3678&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SE,RVICE&#13;
wishes everyone a Happy Thanksgiving&#13;
This Friday, Nov. 21&#13;
TURKEY GIVE-AW A Y&#13;
w· f • in a rozen turkey to take home for&#13;
~hanksgiving dinner. Both in the&#13;
urger Shoppe and Buffet Room&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 26&#13;
TURKEY DINNER SPECIAL&#13;
Hand carved t k&#13;
....&#13;
· 1 d· ur ey with all the trimmings&#13;
inc u ing d . d&#13;
ressing, potato, vegetable an s1,&#13;
cranberry sauce Pl.75 value)&#13;
WLLC BUFFET ROOM - NE CORNER OF BLDG· &#13;
Swedish will giv . e recItal&#13;
with choral groups at&#13;
Hamilton College E Penn State,&#13;
Yale ha' ,astman and , sglvenan b&#13;
recitals in the east ur:: er of solo&#13;
and performed e~':., n~rthwest&#13;
Europe and As' nSlvely in&#13;
S&#13;
lao&#13;
wedish cam t&#13;
1973 after tea ':u 0 Parkside in&#13;
~niyersity, Io~a n~~t lnd.iana&#13;
sity and Te e Umver_&#13;
U&#13;
. xas Chr-I ti mversity H' rig Ian&#13;
schedule thi·· IS performance&#13;
s season . I&#13;
appearances with the Milme udes&#13;
and San Diego S waukee&#13;
chestras, a solo rec~p~onr Or·&#13;
Cenler in New York ~,,?In&#13;
of solo recitals on th aWnda serres e est Coast.&#13;
ana carol Irwin pnd&#13;
""'~n swedish will&#13;
facuIty recital at&#13;
~ 7:30 p.m. on Friday,&#13;
. .~ commUnicatIOn&#13;
ft III "~&#13;
~ihe parkside faculty&#13;
!.'"".,ier teaching for four&#13;
~ !;isenhow&lt;r College in&#13;
~ A graduate of Oberlin&#13;
IItY and a doctoral&#13;
at EaStman SChool of&#13;
~ she studied with&#13;
JlOanrright, she has&#13;
in oratorio and lieder&#13;
""EL MILOS&#13;
OIliIl'JeWeIs IIlb bladders destroyed&#13;
tJlllcleerlh pIIbed open a lantern&#13;
....Iidead doors&#13;
,.taasIy accounting&#13;
'" lbe cbange&#13;
.... gates&#13;
.-cmlnds&#13;
.....,mgestra&#13;
iI""" gone.&#13;
Doonan&#13;
NEVER .&#13;
1IiII: III ya later, '''laler.&#13;
...&#13;
IIlIYbe never.&#13;
!lIlIr Isever&#13;
lIIIrls gone&#13;
lIIIr lIlaD ever&#13;
becxImes never&#13;
"'Is evennore.&#13;
Doonan&#13;
"laD&#13;
lllIIertng Upon me and&#13;
lOW 01&#13;
IIIlUng pine needles&#13;
_ - other leaves pointing&#13;
dIneD day&#13;
IlaI edge light might&#13;
*"Idllky in line&#13;
II... W8Vin&#13;
-010 g&#13;
lIllains threatening&#13;
.. OI~g upon me and&#13;
-led candles&#13;
lOlling 88nlen greens&#13;
IIlenlories01 You&#13;
..u. . agll1ll.&#13;
~1Ily "aleb&#13;
-love You&#13;
..... Jeffrey j. "'encki 1975&#13;
.:: :&#13;
Healso is accom .&#13;
Eugene Fodor ~anymg violinisl&#13;
Tchaikovsky , ~er of the 1974&#13;
MOSCoW, on a U ~mpetition in&#13;
The recital .. concert lDur&#13;
elUde WiderstJrogram wi1l Ul&#13;
by Bach weum:: doch der SW1d~&#13;
Boddecker fo chis Ronzert b)'&#13;
rns, Adieu iore':; bso~gS b)' Brah,&#13;
Labelle D y chaikov· .. ·&#13;
Hin&#13;
ame sans M -, ,&#13;
demith Laud erei b)'&#13;
the C mino~ Mass amhy~ te frem&#13;
Trois Ballade d ozart, and by Deb s e Francois VWon&#13;
ussy.&#13;
The program is f&#13;
to the public. ree, and open&#13;
~·YPING, 30 cents er&#13;
c.opy. minor correP t" page, one carbon&#13;
Hrouda, 633.9409 or ~~ons. Call Dolores&#13;
Ave., Racine ·6958 . 1919 ToIlIylor&#13;
N.EEDED: Female to share v .&#13;
mshed apartmenl w'th' ery nIce lurCall&#13;
652.4889. 'flrst·year teacher.&#13;
WANTED: roommate T&#13;
'pper flat at 193556th Street, K;'o bedroon'&#13;
,:"0. plus utilities. Fully fur IS~ha. 562.5-&#13;
&lt;Itchen and living room n ed, larg.&#13;
Cali Steve 652-1436 afte; ~ff-sfreet parking&#13;
p.m. weete.dolllys&#13;
HOY.SE FOR SALE: 2 good·sized bedrooms&#13;
&amp; l,vlng r~":I' large kitchen·dining, garage.&#13;
G~ condition. Mid· Twenties. (Also' oIlIp_&#13;
pl,a~ces, furniture for sale.J 633'.1724&#13;
pvenmgs.&#13;
TIRES: 6.95 x 14, fair tread no&#13;
7.25x14, fair tread, slow leak' leaks, SS,&#13;
repair, FREE. call 552901.' n~s tube or - eye-flings.&#13;
Jl.LBUMS: Return to Fore-v&#13;
Mysferious Traveller, played once e~ an~&#13;
or offer. Call 552-9014 evenings. ' eoilic&#13;
F.OR SALE: PORSCHE 1973 911·T, 5 speed&#13;
:;,;' AM·FM, Stereo, MinI COnd. SERIOUS&#13;
QUIRERS ONLY phone: 69-4-0730.&#13;
P For th~ best selection of Commercloilil and&#13;
rogreSSIVe Rock, Jazz, and dynamite&#13;
~~~~~gr~Und Im~rted Albums and hpes.&#13;
uf Chr IS Chapman in care of&#13;
Freeman's One Stop Record Mart. Call 657&#13;
7212Chapman guarantees LOW prices for all&#13;
new releases. Can you gello Ihat? Dig it!&#13;
PREGN"'NT? ,.,&#13;
Right ...6.SI_36I1 kif'" e,ed help" Ca I t",r.&#13;
rH conIidoWI .. s.er.nc.&#13;
FOR SALE: RCA ''It'reO&#13;
of speak!1"S L~ tha rec-.r .... Pol r&#13;
6. n SSO Cal ill Ill) af,""&#13;
HElp W"'NTEO S&#13;
Houu 634-0161. ALES, CALL ...... I~&#13;
FOR SALE FIAT n... door&#13;
wh~ drive. radi.llir.:s and rad&#13;
MGM&#13;
froM&#13;
SAA8 99E fuel InjKloen,. f 10 also 1911&#13;
radial tires.nc:I more '". rona ~ or we. '1m . _I T,mo.l"T"*v. 6J't&#13;
8USINESS OPPORTUNITIES&#13;
Address envek&gt;pes al home&#13;
possible. Offer det.'ls SlOG Ptr"...,..&#13;
(refundable) to Tr'p'e "'$': :..~ ~ C:-"IS&#13;
138, Pinon Hills. Cal. mn H ,.&#13;
BIRTHDAY " .... TY ' for Dto'Ioocra&#13;
Presidential c:and,c;.le Freel Han- "'"'"&#13;
Nov. 13. 1975 RdreshtMflrs .. II 1MMnrM&#13;
For more InlormaflOO. c:a I 651"'*&#13;
FOR SALE' Nesc.o CO!Jr',.Iop ......&#13;
ri~lH"atUSedprH:e Llke_a~~&#13;
w,fcase, both ~tf proc:e $" iL t. •&#13;
women's dothes very ~ \01 '" ,...,.,&#13;
,Sat. Nov 1.5 ., .. 1161 s&#13;
ALBUMS Relurn 10 Fon"ltt .nelI&#13;
Mystef"lous Tr .....eUet. ptayed orce I~,&#13;
or offer&#13;
GAY IGod llrod You'''' &lt;An NIO Send&#13;
11 and self .tddreued "limped ..,.. to&#13;
GAY Box 70J Somer '" u llUl&#13;
on&#13;
On-Campus Service, . Room 235 Tall.nt Ha I&#13;
Phone 553-2150&#13;
Wednesdlly. Nov. It. 1975 THE r---- ~~~~=.:;:..;. 1)1&#13;
Main Office, 1400 No. Newman Rd Racm.&#13;
~ Phon. 634-6661&#13;
~~ *********"'JifJirjr~~***********;;:'*~*:;*i&#13;
******&#13;
.::., - (.11.. "' n." " pi - :&#13;
,... ",,11: Clilact ll,..in i&#13;
Talltll Z2I :&#13;
-- -... .'.rltter. ~J.ec. 3 1575 :&#13;
*** alias-Editor il CIIiet --* ******************************************&#13;
orthside 372&#13;
639-1115&#13;
Sou SIde 1816 16&#13;
63 1 91 .,&#13;
...&#13;
We're just around&#13;
the corner&#13;
from Par side&#13;
Birch Rd.&#13;
at&#13;
16th Ave.&#13;
55 -7&#13;
Make a deal with mom -&#13;
you'll buy the pizza on&#13;
Wednesday If she'll make&#13;
the turkey on Thursday&#13;
~~~D."~"""""""""'_""""""'."_''--1I:lr. i BRAT 5 OP 194 &amp; My 50 I&#13;
unnio~ ~&#13;
IPit of&#13;
New Legion Rock&#13;
Spectacu r F"'·.My&#13;
.... 1... '1.&#13;
I&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
. Dr. Bop i&#13;
UW, .hNII.1It I.;J&#13;
StIt&#13;
T c&#13;
n·&#13;
(be&#13;
boppr&#13;
e&#13;
~1ur t&#13;
a&#13;
oncI&#13;
old fashiioned&#13;
Cl • P&#13;
(f'\ ,jn Swedish will give recital&#13;
carol Irwin .a~d&#13;
rano Swedish will&#13;
ephen recital at&#13;
a facult~- on Frid~y,&#13;
817:30 ~mmunication&#13;
111 the&#13;
ter. Parkside faculty&#13;
the ching for four&#13;
after te:Wer College ~ ,t Eise1lh duate of Oberlin . A gra d 8 doctoral&#13;
tccY ~tman School . of&#13;
' at she studied with&#13;
re . ht she has soatwrig .' d lieder In oratorio an&#13;
. pertormed as soloist&#13;
A EL MILDS&#13;
r jewels !th bladders destroyed&#13;
earth&#13;
ed open a lantern&#13;
of dead doors .&#13;
ously accounting&#13;
the change&#13;
gates&#13;
ging minds&#13;
extra&#13;
gone.&#13;
Doonan&#13;
NEVER .&#13;
Talk to ya later,&#13;
Yeh, later,&#13;
maybe never.&#13;
Never is ever&#13;
uter is gone&#13;
uter than ever&#13;
becomes never&#13;
'rer is evermore.&#13;
Doonan&#13;
fall&#13;
thering upon me and&#13;
nuw of&#13;
lling pine needles&#13;
and other leaves pointing&#13;
ken day&#13;
t edge light might&#13;
lcli sky in line&#13;
led candles&#13;
rotting garden greens&#13;
ones of You&#13;
~ again-&#13;
' m&gt;" watch&#13;
d love You&#13;
... ieffrey j. swencki 1975 ,,...~-~.. -4&#13;
with choral groups at Penn State,&#13;
Hamilton College, Eastman and&#13;
Yale, has given a number of solo&#13;
recitals in the east and northwest&#13;
and performed extensively in&#13;
Europe and Asia.&#13;
Swedish came to Parkside in&#13;
1973 after teaching at Indiana&#13;
University, Iowa state University&#13;
and Texas Christian&#13;
University. His performance&#13;
schedule this season includes&#13;
appearances with the Milwaukee&#13;
and San Diego Symphony Orchestras,&#13;
a solo recital at Lincoln&#13;
Center in New York and a series&#13;
of solo recitals on the West Coast.&#13;
Healso is accompanying 'iolin&#13;
Eugene Fodor, winner of th 1974&#13;
Tchaikovsky Comp tition in&#13;
Moscow, on a U.S. t tour.&#13;
The recital pr ram will include&#13;
Widerstehe doch der Wld&#13;
by Bach, Weihnachts Ko rt by&#13;
Boddecker, four songs b)• Br&#13;
ms, Adieu forets by Tcha11rn~..,1r,,_,,&#13;
LaBelle Dame sans erci b)· Hindemith, Laudamus te f&#13;
the C minor Mass by 1 and&#13;
Trois Ballades de Francois Vlll&#13;
by Debl!S.5y.&#13;
The program is f~, and&#13;
to the public.&#13;
Classifieds·&#13;
Free REPAIR WORK ·- dishwashers, garbage TYPING N MY HOME co TACT CY disposals, washers, dryers, etc. Call 632 6018.&#13;
el(enings Al. Stendel 886-3865.&#13;
EARN UP TO S 1800 a school year or more Address HELP WANTED envel&lt;&gt;Pfl , MALE at horn. 011 FEMALE oer :&#13;
posting educational literature on campus In possible. Any ·~ or loca - SH Ad spare time. Send name, address. phone. Business OpPOrtun,t,es school and references to : Nationwide&#13;
College Marketing Services, Inc., P.O. Box&#13;
1384, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Call (.''1)61&gt;~ lPO.&#13;
Ave., Racine.&#13;
"YPING, 30 cents per page, one carbon&#13;
copy, minor corrections. Call Dolores PREGNANT? eed elp~ Ca I&#13;
Hrouda, 633-9409 or 639-6958 - 1919 Taylor Right .. 6SI 3611 tortrncon1ident&#13;
NEEOEO: Female to share very nice fur.&#13;
nished apartment with first.year teacher. Call 652-4889.&#13;
FOR SALE: RCA 61tteo reclevtt •&#13;
01 speakers Less twin '50. Call S52 711l 6.&#13;
HELP WANTED SALES CALL&#13;
House U. 0762.&#13;
WANTED : roommate. Two bedroon• Typ;ng done in my home COntact C ,pper flat at 1935 56th Street, KPnosha. S62.S 637 7796 mo. plus utilities. Fully furnished, l~rg&#13;
&lt;itchen and living room, oft-street parking&#13;
Call Steve 652-1436 alter 3 p.m. weekdays&#13;
HOUSE FOR SALE: 2 good-sized bedrooms&#13;
&amp; living room, large kitchen:dm1ng, ga~age.&#13;
Good condition. Mid-Twenties. (Also. ap&#13;
pliances, furniture for sale.) 633-1724&#13;
Pvenings.&#13;
TIRES: 6.95 x 14, fair tread, no leaks, SS,&#13;
7.25xl4, fair tread, slow leak, ne~s tube or&#13;
repair, FREE. call 552-9014 evenings.&#13;
ALBUMS : Return to Forever and&#13;
Mysterious Traveller, play~d once, S5 each&#13;
or offer. Call 552-9014 evenings.&#13;
FOR SALE : PORSCHE 1973 911 -T, 5 speed&#13;
air, AM-FM, Stereo, Mint cond. SERIOUS •&#13;
INQUIRERS ONLY phone 694-0730.&#13;
For the best selection of Commercial and&#13;
Progressive Rock, Jazz, and dynamiteunderground&#13;
Imported Albums -and Tapesi Check out Chris Chapman in care o&#13;
Freeman's One Stop Record Marl. Call 6571&#13;
7212 Chapman guarantees LOW p;ices _f~r al&#13;
new releases. Can you get to thal 019 ,1&#13;
i,1&gt;\)CATOJls)&#13;
( 0~&#13;
ll~DIT-\J~sl 1 /'JOL&#13;
pays u~70&#13;
on p~boo~ . 1, Savings.&#13;
- Room 2.35 Tall t H 'I • us Service .. · On-Camp Phone: 553-2150&#13;
'ewman Rd. R ci Main Office: l400' o. Phon 6.34- 1&#13;
• ******************** ***********************~;.~, If YDI are 1&#13;
1WAR1, WAN I l.j aaske&#13;
{alive and ready to go) •so tar ....&#13;
IE1e11,r10N:&#13;
Jt.,,,u,11 t1terl1nee. '111 Un,&#13;
•• •ittl •&#13;
1t,4,4 tytewrifter. ai,·as-Editor in Chief***~********** ~ ********* ************ *******&#13;
contact Do K in&#13;
Jalle t 228 ,..&#13;
by o c. 3 1975 •&#13;
** *&#13;
ake a deal&#13;
11 bu t&#13;
ith&#13;
BA TOP 19&#13;
.,, ur&#13;
orou&#13;
e.&#13;
ur d&#13;
H &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER w.dnnUy. HoY. 1'. 1975&#13;
cOP--------.:....----&#13;
..... .,....... '&#13;
dJauooloo I.DvolVUll!&#13;
ITOUJII o/lOuId seek&#13;
lIllv m.m _ .. ho are inoheel&#13;
In lh '"'s. He&#13;
lIlal ITOUJII be CtlIl&gt;-&#13;
~ .. I.D lheIt homework. and In&#13;
uv of M,&#13;
r peop~." Guakln&#13;
ddeel lhat I Unl r Iy&#13;
I woaId very canf\lUy&#13;
d "I_U",," 01 rec:otn-&#13;
~uc. ReccmmerdallGns&#13;
lIlel noI dearly deallnc with&#13;
Ia&lt;'W ties. he ~&#13;
wwId "ft"ocIlo olber&#13;
01 '- &lt;: Uan&#13;
The • III olIler Iopict of&#13;
d u 100, lalked aboul lbe&#13;
•• mor abOardtt prlenuUoa&#13;
loWard Beca of tile&#13;
!alloa bal ladhldual&#13;
Ia&lt;'Wty _mbara and dl.tdpu...,&#13;
\III' hlt'e .. be .. I&#13;
.1acuIty ... _eel&#13;
I lila)' wanI to teacb&#13;
IDd ....... lba1 nat to teacb&#13;
-. New nod. Daan of tile&#13;
of and Soc~&#13;
aJliiallMlCI, GIIIIda aald lIlel tile&#13;
aIrf\cuhIm tile .. ay II Is&#13;
boca. II .... doftlapod uncIor a&#13;
I y lam la .. hleh&#13;
dodllloaa ..... made by lhoae&#13;
or IadIviduals -"0 hlld tile&#13;
baJlllll:t of powr wIleD IPOdfIc&#13;
ACCOUNTING AND&#13;
FINANCE MAJORS&#13;
LET US HELP YOU TO&#13;
aECO E A CPA&#13;
g ~ ~o&#13;
CPA&#13;
REVIEW&#13;
....... 'W'O.lS 311 SOl I&#13;
414 71~7271&#13;
t... , a&#13;
1/3 OF USA&#13;
decisions wore being mado.&#13;
GusklD emphasized lbrougbolll&#13;
tile moeling thaI be sa ....the key&#13;
as being, ''!be balanCe betile&#13;
capabilities of the 1""u11yand&#13;
tile needs 01 tile students." As&#13;
well, be ocIdeelthaI the University&#13;
should be dJsljnctive enough to&#13;
....... In sludents lroIIl areaJ&#13;
oulalde 01 tile Rae:m.Keaosba&#13;
....&#13;
The IVO~ abo ~ the&#13;
nepllft and poaltlve paID" 01&#13;
addnaaiaI and eel·....... the&#13;
maID-slream of young&#13;
AlIlerl&lt;8m. wbiIe al the same&#13;
lllIle 10CIIIiDI 00 a sub4InaJD 01&#13;
lbal &amp;J'OUP IDd st.-lDI the&#13;
UIlI.... ty clearIJ tow.-ds a&#13;
IIIiaIiml orIealalloo, the modem&#13;
bIdlaaIrIa1 JOCietY.&#13;
............"'&#13;
.......&#13;
Bec:8_ Pwblde haa sucb a&#13;
tqb G'OIlmeaI of wbal is emsldend.&#13;
specla1 studeala," (i.e.&#13;
Iboae wbo aJrudy haft aD ua-&#13;
..&#13;
industrial society. 'The group&#13;
discussed the idea of offering a&#13;
series of core packages by which&#13;
students woufd fill general&#13;
degree requirements. It. was&#13;
thought that this t&#13;
would not Only I: r{&#13;
work more close!&#13;
would give stUd y bit&#13;
back ground in'~ a&#13;
dergraduate education. those&#13;
over 25, those not. seeking a&#13;
dogree, etc.) much debate was on&#13;
what those students want. some&#13;
suggested that those individuals&#13;
already have a career and go to&#13;
Parkside to add something that is&#13;
meaalnglul and worthwhile in&#13;
other areas of their lifestyle. Bill&#13;
May, Dean of the School of&#13;
Modem Industry said though,&#13;
that it was his experience that&#13;
students were broadening and upgrading&#13;
sIri11s direcUy relating to&#13;
their careers·&#13;
Norwood discussed the&#13;
possibilities 01 educating&#13;
students in ways other than&#13;
classroom leclure techniques.&#13;
Especially for the non-traditional&#13;
student. the University should be&#13;
seeking other academic&#13;
packages and ways to serve non- ANY NEW RE'-&#13;
degree seeking students. he said. . &amp;.:lEAIE&#13;
'!be group generallY agreed 8&amp; 88 b JI 5 8=7 88"&#13;
that the University direct itseH as I 8Mb;' 8 "."2 B I eHbY 8&#13;
to various means by which 1" &amp;&#13;
students could leam problem I SHE SWEET BREAM s&#13;
solving techniques in a modem I &amp;1!I11!1'TH A VEHnE KE&#13;
------------------- "BIIIICIIL ---&#13;
I TH PARKSIDE ANGER ednesdaY, Nov .. 19, 1975&#13;
&amp;emsolvhl&amp;&#13;
"de has such a&#13;
t of what is COD·&#13;
industrial society. The group&#13;
discussed the idea of offering a&#13;
series of core packages by which&#13;
students woula fill general&#13;
degree requirements. It_ was&#13;
dergraduate education, those&#13;
over 25, those not seeking a&#13;
degree, etc.) much debate was on&#13;
what those students want. Some&#13;
suggested that those individuals&#13;
already have a career and go to&#13;
Parkside to add something that is&#13;
meaningful and worthwhile in&#13;
other areas of their lifestyle. Bill&#13;
Moy, Dean of the School of&#13;
Modern Industry said though,&#13;
that it was his experience that I&#13;
students were broadening and up- I&#13;
grading skills directly relating tol I&#13;
their careers.&#13;
Norwood discussed the I&#13;
possibilities of educating I&#13;
students in ways other than I&#13;
classroom lecture techniques. I&#13;
Especially for the non-traditional I&#13;
student, the University should be I&#13;
seeking other academic I&#13;
packages and ways to serve non- I&#13;
degree seeking students, he said. I ANY NEW REbEASE&#13;
th&#13;
Thteth gruo~p generally agreed I 8 &amp; • 8 8 b. JI I!' 8 =7 8 B m.1 a e ruversity direct itself as I ~ I • r11&#13;
to various means by which 1 EJN-bY 62&amp;.28 EINbl 8&amp;&#13;
students could learn problem I EIN solving techniques in a modern I E SWEET BREAM •&#13;
! __ _!~~.!.:.~~!!."!~ KENB 8BII IICIEL ______ _ </text>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 4, issue 12, November 19, 1975</text>
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