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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 17</text>
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            <text>MOY RESIGNS</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>TheParkside- _&#13;
IllJiIlD Moy, fonner Dean of&#13;
SdIOO1 of Modern Industry&#13;
) resi&amp;J1ed at the request of&#13;
'Uor Alan Guskin. eflast&#13;
Friday. Guskin said&#13;
... DOimmediate plans to&#13;
Moy and that Vice&#13;
Uor Olio Bauer will&#13;
. assume supervision&#13;
by BelayNeu was reviewed by the Executive&#13;
Committee on January 20. In a&#13;
closed meeting, the Executive&#13;
Committee voted to uphold&#13;
HAC's decision to terminate&#13;
Baudhuin and King. As of yet,&#13;
Baudhuin and King have&#13;
finalized no plans for appeal.&#13;
Two other Communication&#13;
faculty members will leave&#13;
Parkside either following the&#13;
current semester or the upcoming&#13;
~ununer session.&#13;
Assistant Professor Don Rintz:&#13;
was· terminated and denied&#13;
tenure by Eugene Norwood, Dean&#13;
of the college of SCience and&#13;
Society. last year. Norwood acted&#13;
in overturning the Humanities&#13;
Executive Committee's decision&#13;
to recommend tenure to Hintz.&#13;
Sheldon Harsel, filling the post&#13;
of instructor, suffered a similar&#13;
fate when he was recommended&#13;
for contract renewal by the&#13;
Executive eorrunittee, but was&#13;
terminated by Norwood.&#13;
A fifth member of the Communication&#13;
discipline, Lynn&#13;
Gartley. resigned last summer to&#13;
accept a position on the faculty of&#13;
Northwestern University.&#13;
The termination of these four&#13;
faculty members plus the&#13;
resignation ofGar~y.leaves the&#13;
Communication discipline with&#13;
only one full time faculty&#13;
member whose employment at&#13;
Parkside is assured. Associate&#13;
Professor Richard eatrington is&#13;
a tenured faculty member and&#13;
plans to remain at Parkside.&#13;
currently there are four Ad&#13;
Hoc teachers serving on the&#13;
Communication faculty. Ad Hoc&#13;
lecturers are usually part time,&#13;
short-term contract teachers.&#13;
According to OrPheus Johnson.&#13;
Chairperson of the Humamlles&#13;
Division, recruiting to fill the&#13;
positions vacated by Gartley,&#13;
Harsel and Hintz should ha",e&#13;
continued on page 6&#13;
"I bue a I.. " affair wllIo ParbIde. 11 _ me away r.-&#13;
MadisGG ud lIlal ... a very banlllda&amp; 10do_"&#13;
- IIIIua&#13;
Partside, "I lIunlt e·... aoc:omplisbed&#13;
a hedt 0( a lot and&#13;
.....·ve got a bunch 0( really&#13;
beaubJul faculty."&#13;
"I have a love offaU' with&#13;
Partside. 11 seduced me a.ay&#13;
from Madioan and that ... a&#13;
hard thulIl to do"&#13;
MOl' abo lias a poIIbon III a&#13;
tenured faculty member at&#13;
Partside. and at thll poIIIt. plana&#13;
10slay O'&gt;lnthlSc_dty. "I'll be&#13;
orda) I 10. to&#13;
teach; th. only queaUOD Ia&#13;
whelber Istill remember how"&#13;
When asked why the move ...&#13;
so sudden, Guskln said that he&#13;
felt il .as "the healthiest .ay for&#13;
the institution." He abo said thai&#13;
it .. as nol a sudden thulIl in his&#13;
mind and that he had always&#13;
been very blunt and open about&#13;
his feelings co~ _&#13;
"This .... a ,-ery pamfullhq&#13;
lor me to have done. It'. the&#13;
roughest part of a cbancellor'.&#13;
job. "&#13;
Though disappointed that his&#13;
planning of new pnJgI'&amp;mS .1lI&#13;
cut short. _ oy still reels optimJslic&#13;
about the direI:l.ion of&#13;
Master's program delayed&#13;
Chancellor Alan Gu.sIrln announced&#13;
his plans to delay the&#13;
commencement of Parkside's&#13;
first Master's program 10 an allfaculty&#13;
meeting last Thursday.&#13;
He later discounted rumors that&#13;
the decision .. as based on a&#13;
verbal denial of accreditation&#13;
from a review team sent to&#13;
evaluate Parkside's ability 10&#13;
handle a graduate program.&#13;
The Master's degree program&#13;
in Administrative Sciences .. as&#13;
to have started in September of&#13;
1976 bul .. as delayed until a&#13;
tentative date of September, 1m.&#13;
Guskin said. "The presenl&#13;
program is not consistent with&#13;
the quality I demand from a&#13;
Master's program. It&#13;
"Frankly, I lhink there .. as&#13;
general agreement that we were&#13;
rushing the program by beginniog&#13;
the fall. Our limited&#13;
resources 'lIOU!d ha. allowed US&#13;
10 ofter only one course for no&#13;
more than ~undNld part-tune&#13;
students 10 September "&#13;
GusklD sa. as problems - lack&#13;
0( faculty, lack of relationship&#13;
between the undergraduate and&#13;
graduate programs and&#13;
generally "jWlt too many&#13;
unanswered questions. "&#13;
A team from 'orth Central&#13;
Association of Colieg .. and&#13;
SecondarY SChools recently came&#13;
10 Parkside to e, .. luate the&#13;
school's ability to handle a&#13;
graduate program. Their fmal&#13;
report will most likely come out&#13;
in March but there were rumors&#13;
thai the team had gIVenGuskin a&#13;
,.. rhal delU81 0( accreditation.&#13;
GusklD derued these rumors&#13;
saying that the re,-jew team&#13;
could not IV a verbal denlal but&#13;
would later send a lanaI re,-oft&#13;
Admittq that th rm ' ell&lt;.&#13;
ba\&gt;e oert.&amp;ln "C'OnC'tI"Jlt," he .sa1d&#13;
that h dldn't ha, the _r 10&#13;
say whether they old ant&#13;
accreditation 10 P de for&#13;
graduate programs.&#13;
yq that the ~~ he had&#13;
with the rm team not&#13;
public, Guskio refuaed to d&#13;
tbelr $peCIf1c: COmtllellla. H d&#13;
that the on 10 delay the&#13;
graduate prog-ram ... not a&#13;
....wt of their evaluation. "They&#13;
told me hat I air ely ltn ."&#13;
willtam Moy, fomler Dean of&#13;
the School of Modem Industry,&#13;
.. orked exten.lvely on tb&#13;
de elopm nt of Park.ld·,&#13;
M ter'. procram, He laid that&#13;
the onganal s1ar1in&amp; date and&#13;
Drop policy enforced&#13;
by Kurt Larson&#13;
Two hundred and twenty-four&#13;
students have heen dropped from&#13;
the University because of their&#13;
poor academic performances last&#13;
semester, according to Jewel&#13;
Echelbarger, associate dean of&#13;
students. They are the first&#13;
students to be dropped since&#13;
Parkside's academic drop policy&#13;
was reinstated by the faculty&#13;
senate in December of 1974.&#13;
Under the new policy. lilly&#13;
sludenl whose grade point&#13;
average (GPA) lalls belo.. 2.0 in&#13;
any semester will receive an&#13;
academic warnrng. 1.e.&#13;
notification that his academic&#13;
performance must imp"",e if he&#13;
expects to graduale, If the&#13;
student has completed 12 credit&#13;
hours and his GPA fails to improw&#13;
in the semester following&#13;
the academic warning. the&#13;
student will be either placed on&#13;
probation or ck'opped from the&#13;
Umversity, dependmg on hla&#13;
grade level and the quality of hla&#13;
acadenuc performance.&#13;
Those students .ho are&#13;
dropped may appeaI for readmittance&#13;
mto the Uru. fSIty alter&#13;
a SIX month absence, This appeal&#13;
15 exarmned by a faculty comnuttee.&#13;
and, If It 15 accepted, the&#13;
student 15 readmitted on fmal&#13;
academic probation. Continued&#13;
COn!. l'IuM Oft ......&#13;
The Parkside-------&#13;
~&#13;
MOY RESIGNS&#13;
by Jeannine Slpsma&#13;
William Moy, former Dean of&#13;
School of Modern Industry&#13;
1 resigned at the request of&#13;
~ellor Alan Guskin, ef-&#13;
*ti~e last Friday_. Guskin said&#13;
baS no immediate plans to&#13;
tace Moy and that Vic.e&#13;
:ncellor Otto Bauer -~ill&#13;
mopocarily assume supervision&#13;
,SMI.&#13;
When asked why Guskin had&#13;
nqueste&lt;! his resignation, Moy's&#13;
~ reply was: "I tracked snow&#13;
_, the Chancellor's carpet."&#13;
was in reference to&#13;
u: GER'S last editorial which&#13;
crilicfzed practices responsible&#13;
Ir administrative job insecurity.&#13;
specific passage alluded to&#13;
~ Moy stated that this criticism&#13;
,,., way reflected on individuals&#13;
i Parkside since it was doubtful&#13;
Gmkin "would fire someone&#13;
for tracking snow onto his carpet."&#13;
&#13;
In a more serious vein, Moy&#13;
said that Guskin had taken this&#13;
action because he thought it was&#13;
best for the institution.&#13;
Other reasons may involve the&#13;
postponement of Parkside 's&#13;
graduate prqgram and the apparent&#13;
discord between SMI&#13;
and the College of Science and&#13;
Society ( CSS).&#13;
Guskin, unsatisfied with the&#13;
quality of the graduate program,&#13;
postponed it's commencement&#13;
until the fall of 1977. Moy has&#13;
done extensive work in this area.&#13;
Moy said that he's been viewed&#13;
as causing a lot of problems&#13;
between CSS and SMI. "We've&#13;
offended some people in CSS&#13;
substantially. I'm sure some of&#13;
the College faculty will be glad to&#13;
hear about this ( his&#13;
resignation)."&#13;
Con1nt unications&#13;
gap&#13;
by Betsy Neu&#13;
The growth of SMI was apparently&#13;
seen as a threat to c . Also, Moy said that some of the&#13;
faculty didn't like the types of&#13;
programs SMI was de\·elopi.ng.&#13;
There was disapproval of the&#13;
recruitment of teachers without&#13;
PhDs and there were people from&#13;
the Math and Economic&#13;
disciplines who objected to&#13;
changes in the s~n clD'Ticulum&#13;
which effected them.&#13;
Moy attributes some of these&#13;
problems to lack of communication&#13;
between the two&#13;
sections of the University.&#13;
When asked why Guskin chose&#13;
this particular time to request his&#13;
resignation and why the move&#13;
was so sudden, the former Dean&#13;
could offer no explanatioo.&#13;
Guskin said he took this action&#13;
because he wanted a different&#13;
style of leadership. He felt it&#13;
inappropriate at the present time&#13;
to discuss what particular style&#13;
he was looking for.&#13;
"Part of the reason a n&#13;
chancellor is chosen, is to get a&#13;
new administrative perspective."&#13;
&#13;
"The SMI has come a 1&#13;
in four years; no 're ente · another stage, and need n&#13;
people to take care of it.''&#13;
job."&#13;
lbe recent vote to terminate&#13;
assistant professors from the&#13;
wiication discipline, has&#13;
that discipline with only one&#13;
- ·---u" faculty member.&#13;
Humanities Adative&#13;
Committee (HAC)&#13;
In December to deny tenure&#13;
terminate Assistant&#13;
rs Scott Baudhuin and&#13;
King. The termination&#13;
effective June, 1977.&#13;
was reviewed by the Executive&#13;
Committee on January 20. In a&#13;
closed meeting, the Executive&#13;
Committee voted to uphold&#13;
HAC's decision to terminate&#13;
Baudhuin and King. As of yet,&#13;
Baudhuin and King have&#13;
finalized no plans for appeal.&#13;
Two other Communication&#13;
faculty members will leave&#13;
Parkside either following the&#13;
current semester or the upcoming&#13;
summer session.&#13;
Master's program d&#13;
the request of eight&#13;
mbers of the Humanities&#13;
cutive Committee, parent&#13;
ttee to HAC, the decision&#13;
Assistant Professor Don Rintz:&#13;
was · terminated and denied&#13;
tenure by Eugene Norwood, Dean&#13;
of the college of Science and&#13;
Society, last year. Norwood acted&#13;
in overturning the Hwnanities&#13;
Executive Committee's decision&#13;
to recommend tenure to Rintz.&#13;
Sheldon Harsel, filling the post&#13;
of instructor, suffered a similar&#13;
fate when he was recommended&#13;
for contract renewal by the&#13;
Executive Committee, but was&#13;
terminated by Norwood.&#13;
A fifth member of the Communication&#13;
discipline, Lynn&#13;
Gartley' resigned last summer to&#13;
accept a position on the faculty of&#13;
Northwestern University·&#13;
The termination of these four&#13;
faculty members plus the&#13;
resignation of Gar~)'.· l~ves l?e&#13;
Communication discipline with&#13;
only one full time faculty&#13;
member whose employment_ at&#13;
Parkside is assured. ~ssocia~e&#13;
Professor Richard Carrington lS&#13;
a tenured faculty memb~r and&#13;
plans to remain at Parkside.&#13;
Currently there are four Ad&#13;
Hoc teachers serving on the&#13;
Communication faculty. Ad _Hoc&#13;
lecturers are usually part time,&#13;
short-term contract teachers.&#13;
According to Orpheus Jo~s.on.&#13;
Chairperson of the Hum~rotles&#13;
Division, recruiting to fill the&#13;
positions vacated by Gartley,&#13;
Harsel and Rintz should have&#13;
continued on page 6&#13;
Oiancellor Alan Gu.skin announced&#13;
his plans to delay th&#13;
commencement of Park ide's&#13;
first Master's program to an allfaculty&#13;
meeting last Thursda)'.&#13;
He later discounted rumor that&#13;
the decision was based on a&#13;
verbal denial of ac&lt;:reditatioo&#13;
from a review team sent to&#13;
evaluate Parkside's ability to&#13;
handle a graduate program.&#13;
The Master's degree program&#13;
in Administrative Sciences as&#13;
to have started in September of&#13;
1976 but was d layed until a&#13;
tentative date of September, 1m.&#13;
Guskin said, "The pre ent&#13;
program is not consistent aith&#13;
the quality I demand from&#13;
Master's program."&#13;
"Frankly, I think ther&#13;
general agreement that&#13;
rushing the program by&#13;
Drop policy&#13;
by Kurt Larson&#13;
Two hundred and twenty-four&#13;
students have been dropped from&#13;
the University beca of their&#13;
poor academic performances last&#13;
semester, according to Jewel&#13;
Echelbarger, associate d n of&#13;
students. They are the first&#13;
students to be dropped since&#13;
Parkside's academic drop policy&#13;
was reinstated by the faculty&#13;
senate in December of 197-t.&#13;
nfo,&#13;
a&#13;
Cd &#13;
Z THE PARKSIOE RANGER Wednesday. Jan. 28. 1976&#13;
place for&#13;
•&#13;
experrence&#13;
At the risk of sounding frite. RANGER would like to&#13;
urge students to become Involved in the various student&#13;
organizations on campus. This Is not a call for every~&#13;
10 unily Into one big pep club and claim their undying&#13;
support IlK"good old P.U .• but rather a suggestion to do&#13;
-'hlng for your own benellt. .&#13;
ny organizations are Involved in activities which&#13;
oller practical experience and a chance to learn&#13;
-'hlng outside the classroom, FlK" eumple, the&#13;
Concerned Students Coalition (esC) has organized and&#13;
operated a lood co-op. Students Involved with this&#13;
projact obviously gained a tremendous amount of&#13;
nowledge relating to business practices and&#13;
management, something which a tuture employer is not&#13;
I able to overloo .&#13;
There are also opportunitieS to get experience In&#13;
I dersh p and decision ma ing roles. Parkslde Student&#13;
Government Association (PSGA) makes student appolntmen&#13;
10 University committees where students&#13;
along Ith facul y al'd admln stratlK"s deal with&#13;
un vers I a rs&#13;
e fact tha you re h ping to pay for these&#13;
za on m g offer some mo Ivatlon for taking&#13;
ad n IIll 0 y have 0 of er Par Side aids in&#13;
und ng ro use 0 tu on on es and allows the&#13;
us 0 om Un rs lac, I es&#13;
P r s el, I e Board (PAB) received a budget of&#13;
t.Jr';ANGER&#13;
_--EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
548,000 this year which they will. use, among otller&#13;
. t t on events. Students m, PAS have been&#13;
thingS, 0 pu . 1 h big na . I ed w·th the programmmg 0' sue , me en·&#13;
IOVO v I • J k B tertalnment as Harry Chapln, ac son rowne and&#13;
Woody Herman. .&#13;
The Parkside Video Comm,ttee. a grouP from PAB,&#13;
h ccess to Parkside's T.V. studio. These students&#13;
h&#13;
as abeen involved with all phases of video production&#13;
ave f th .', .&#13;
and have learned to use much.o e rmpressrve arr~y 01&#13;
uipmenf found in the sfudlo. Some m,ay, be familiar&#13;
:th their productionS which can. be vl~J:Yed weekly in&#13;
Main Place. s&#13;
Give consideration fa what you'll pyt In a resume'&#13;
about the four years you spent at Parkside. Most people&#13;
do end up with a degree and an acceptable G.P.A., but&#13;
employers are also looking for people witH Initiative.&#13;
enthusiasm, leadership qualities and most of all, experience.&#13;
Participation In studen~ ~rganizations may be&#13;
indicative of some of these qualities. •&#13;
A sign on the office door of PSGA reads: "Getting an&#13;
education af a University requires that you open your&#13;
eyes, look attheworld and becomeenvolved Isle}."&#13;
They may not be able to spell, bot they've got the right&#13;
idea. Classroom learning will never take the place 01&#13;
~etual experience and student organizations offer the&#13;
opportunity for the latter.&#13;
Reagan against 'big' government&#13;
by Jay GrasseD&#13;
enter anOlher praIdeotial eJecUon ~ nearl) aU of the&#13;
&lt;'8lIdido,t.es are pnpanng III their cust4ID8r) fasluon, gram&#13;
~re deal. I • new frontier" or some other inthe&#13;
C&lt;Inlel' Politidans arel'l stupid, They reaIiu&#13;
t Amorians ha, been qwte wi.Ilq: to barter thelr&#13;
return for soductl\" ofl.... of more programs to 8SS1Sltheir&#13;
group, more pononal benefits or mare ..protedl,.... laws and&#13;
.-.guIali&#13;
Editor's notebook&#13;
by Je pnIUI&#13;
\ ATIO an Idea winch may become a &lt;OIumn, depending&#13;
lJllensL&#13;
v I)~) onc:ourages lJltelleclual development&#13;
Ihr.....!ll........-cb. ana!~' of CW'T"l!IlIlalowledge. and comparison 01&#13;
u-y th realil}. It the de ~lopmeDt 01 new 1mowledge; oot&#13;
lMItIClfU8t1cn01 the old. If Uus isso. than wby does it se&lt;!ID that a&#13;
1Il more recogruliOn lor successfully' ··sbootlng.. lo beer than&#13;
f... an riglnaJ,~ or theory.&#13;
U a patticuIar area of stud) ""llLred one student to furth...-&#13;
~ II tlrouih bas-ller own invesligal1Cl11S,lhen I assume it would&#13;
be ol III to others.&#13;
1\ IS difhculllo lot new studies pobIisbed. particularly lor an WI·&#13;
dugrad te student at ParUide This does not mean they are war·&#13;
or I no one else couJd benefit !run them. We can learn Inm&#13;
eacb ClIber.uwtiI as !run _ and prUtSSOrS. 'Ibis is wh .... IN·&#13;
11 QIlmeSlJl&#13;
, 1Ilere should be a medium 1htougll _ell students can leU&#13;
a their rlt. \,A110, couJd be that medium.&#13;
~ ER IS lor summaries 01 or1guJal worlt: experiments,&#13;
phJIcIophIes, U-n etc., ·ch may be printed lJlINNOVA11()!1,'S.&#13;
SwIl'\lTl8Mel should be bnef; about the le~ ol an a'-eng' leature&#13;
story. II may appear difficull to boil 30 P1l8es down to 3. but if you&#13;
sunpIy re te the dl811l I or ~ of your work and then expand&#13;
"""" Ia bll. I'm sure IIwtII be ''er}' acceptable&#13;
The en.tence ol . \' TI . is lefl up to )1lU. RANGER hopes&#13;
you wtII lake advanta ol the oppor1llJlJty to relate your own lJl·&#13;
n,,, liOnS. \ CE&#13;
\ .. the name of RAl'CER's humanities sectlcn. ArranIed&#13;
and ted b)' Jeff erdi.seni .... \'1SACEwtllconlalJlsuellthingsas&#13;
poelr}, "",I , creab .. wn , art and photos; any Iype ol originaJ&#13;
work 0 _ hnes wlncb bas been created b)' Parltside students.&#13;
All conlnbatJorl5 .... me. In ensted parties sbouId conlacl&#13;
Jeff at the 'CER ollice, WLLC 1).194&#13;
\1 CE wtII also feature a c:oIumn b) BiD Barite. junior. entiUed&#13;
BARKE' C .11 ~ rather ,Whcwt to characterize Bill's writing;&#13;
sc:me ha" calJed II SlCIt; some, pe", rse; and oth.... ha.. called It&#13;
poor, al best. If there was a deslgnatlon, "ana! humor". I'm sure he&#13;
would Iall under thaI ca ry.bill bas done ,nens"" worlt with the&#13;
Par de AetmlJeS Board's Video CommIttee. You may remember&#13;
pia) the 10 rol' hosl 01 "P,U. ReVI .... ". a SlJllpe!ing&#13;
n qu n. Se)-more the moron. TaIt, these, add them together and&#13;
I"'e 101 BARKE' G CO.&#13;
The practice of aequmng ornce at the public expense lias become so&#13;
widespread and such a sure thing Ihat il has become the usual method&#13;
of campaigning. Therefore, it is somewhat of a shock and rather&#13;
refreshing to hear a candidate take the risky position 01 actually&#13;
promising less. instead 01 more. government. During a January 13&#13;
appearance in Milwaukee, Ronald Reagan did just that.&#13;
Reagan's campaign strategy is simple. It's based on his belief that&#13;
inflation-recession wracked, post-Watergate Wisconsin, may finally&#13;
be willing to castoff its three decade long myth regarding the banks 01&#13;
the Potomac as the treasury 01 aU knowledge and solutions, Contrary&#13;
to expectations, many 01 our grand social and economic experiments&#13;
have brought us not Camelot but alienation, paternalism and to the&#13;
verge 01 national bankruptcy.&#13;
The fonner Governor spoke in strong terms: "Government at aU&#13;
levels now absorbs more than 44 percent of our personal income. It has&#13;
become more intrusive, more coercive, more meddlesome and less&#13;
effective. We need. a government that is confident not of what it can do&#13;
but of what the people can do."&#13;
Dw.-inga question and answer session, a woman pointed out that he&#13;
was. lJl fact. a politician. How could he prove that be meant what he&#13;
said? Reagan turned to his record as governor 01 California, Under his&#13;
Welfare Reform Program. the number 01 people on the roUs declined&#13;
by 400,000,making possible a 30 percent increase in benefits to the&#13;
truly needy: An inherited $900 million deficit became a $500 million&#13;
surplus. which was returned to the taxpayers. Over an eight year span&#13;
and despite a 35 percent increase in population, the number of state&#13;
employ~ was held constant. Most imIX&gt;rtant, in his opinion, were the ~If::Pa:~:!-P.._.' _&#13;
RANGER&#13;
thThe&#13;
PARKSIDE RANGER is written and edited by the students 01&#13;
e UmverSity 01 Wisco . P ks' ·bl . '. nSln- ar Ide and they are solely responsl e&#13;
~;.;tspedltorlal policy and content. Offices are located in 0194 WILe.&#13;
. , arkSlde. Kenosha. WISConsin 53140. Phones 553-2295. 553-2287,&#13;
EDITOR-IN.cmEF: Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
NEWS AND MANAGING EDITOR: Michael Palecek&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Bill Robbins&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Thom AieUo&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Cathy Brnak&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Gerald Ferch&#13;
PRODUCTION MANAGER: Bruce Wagner&#13;
WRITERS: Judy Trudrung (ev ts) Mil&lt; eu. Carol Arentz J en. e Terry. Kurt Larson. Betsy&#13;
Tom Kennedy. ,erry Pate. Thomas Merriam, Fred Johnson,&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS' M'k&#13;
MiChelle Smith.' I e Nepper. Dave Daniels. Robert Jilk.&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Jan. 28, 1976&#13;
place for&#13;
• per1ence&#13;
) received a b of&#13;
• a n aga ns&#13;
~"RANGER&#13;
--EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
:~fd!J£:&#13;
tertainment as Harry&#13;
~?~r~:a&#13;
Chapif.h Jack&amp;9~\{~(q~ne ~ and&#13;
Woody Herman, . . :·i • fiii&#13;
The Parkside Video Committ~ra. g~g.}&#13;
has access to Parks.ide's T. \/.;. ~f.~~i~f ····&#13;
have been involved wifb .all p~~;S ' ' ···.&#13;
and have learned to use much of&lt; .. equipment tound in th• studio/ s(i .. with their productions which c~v,t&gt;i:&#13;
~~~;~~~::~~y= ;;:!!:~ do end up with a degree and a9 a&lt;!¢•Pt .. ·· ··· ' ···· r .)A., bot&#13;
employers are also lookit}g for;. peop,e ftiative,&#13;
enthusiasm, leadership qualit[,~s ~pq. &lt; an, ex.&#13;
rn;i::~!~ po~r::;:t!~"t~:::~:~ti~-~~il::" ......•........... ·., ..... , ........ ~ ay be&#13;
A sign on the office do&lt;»' of PS9~read.$iJr(tetting an&#13;
education at a University requires that you . ~pen your&#13;
eyes, look at the world and become envolved (sic)."&#13;
They may not be able to spelt, but theyA.te got the right&#13;
idea. Classroom learning will never take t~e place of&#13;
~dual experience and student organizatrons offer the&#13;
opportunity for the latter.&#13;
'h. · 1g ' government&#13;
by Ja} Grassell&#13;
th _The practice of acqumng ott1ce at the public expense h~ become so&#13;
widespre~d ~d such a sure thing that it has become the usual method&#13;
of cam?a1gmng. Therefore, it is somewhat of a shock and rather&#13;
refre~~g to he_ar a candidate take the risky position of actually&#13;
pronusmg l~s, u:15tead of more, government. During a January 13&#13;
appearan~ m M1l~aukee, Ronald Reagan did just that.&#13;
andook&#13;
&#13;
in-&#13;
, R~gan s can:1pa1gn strategy is simple. It's based on his belief that&#13;
infla~1~n-recess1on wracked, post-Watergate Wisconsin, may finally&#13;
, be willmg to cast off its three decade long myth regarding the banks of&#13;
:e Potoma_c as the treasury of all knowledge and solutions. Contrary&#13;
expectations, many of our grand social and economic experiments&#13;
have brough~ us not Camelot but alienation, paternalism and to the&#13;
verge of national bankruptcy.&#13;
The former Governor spoke in strong terms: "Government at all&#13;
:vels now abs~rbs ~ore than 44 percent of our personal income It has&#13;
eff&#13;
comt· e mwore mtrus1ve, more coercive, more meddlesome a~d less&#13;
ec ive. e need a governm t th t . . but of h t th en a is confident not of what it can do . w a e people can do."&#13;
~ur~nf a~tq:esti~n. a·nd answer session, a woman pointed out that he&#13;
said'? Rea ~ turponhttc1an._ How could he prove that he meant what he . g eel to his record as governor of Calif . U d h. Welfare Reform Pro orma. n er 1s&#13;
by 400 ooo male' gr~, the number of people on the rolls declined&#13;
truly ~ed·y. An ~~:~ble a 30 _p~rcent ~~rease in benefits to the&#13;
surplus which $900 million deficit became a $500 million , was returned to the ta 0v and despite a 35 percent . xpayers. er an eight year span&#13;
employees was held cons~~r:se ~ populatio~, 1?e n~ber of state · · OSt llllportant, m his op1mon, were the&#13;
~r- Pa~~:::-pag-e3 --------&#13;
RANGE R&#13;
The PARKSIDE RANGER . . • . the University of Wisco . lS wr_itten and edited by the students of&#13;
for its editorial policy .;~~tarkside ~nd they are solely responsible&#13;
.W. Parkside, Kenosha w·ntent._Offlces are located in D194 WLLC, ' isconSm 53140. Phones 553-2295 553-2287,&#13;
EDITOR-I -CHIEF· Jea . . ' EWS AND MAN . nrune S1psma AGING EDITOR· · FEATURE EDITOR· Bill Ro . · Michael Palecek&#13;
S°"'RTS · bbms ~v EDITOR: Tho Ai 11&#13;
BUSINESS MAN m e&#13;
0&#13;
ADVERTISING ~R: Cathy Brnak&#13;
PRODUCTION MAN AGER: Gerald Ferch&#13;
AGER: Bruce Wagner&#13;
WRITERS· Judy Trudr ' eu, Carol Arentz Jung (events), Mike Terry Kurt Larson Betsy Tom K ' erry Pate Th ' ' ennedy. • omas Merriam, Fred Johnson,&#13;
PHO:ro&lt;,RAPHERS· M1·k N 1cheU e Smith. · e epper D • ave Daniels, Robert Jilk, &#13;
r-~-"""~--~"""~co:n:c:er:t:: F;0:Ik::si:ng:e:rs:s~w~edn~e~Sd~a~y,0J~a:'nua;:':ry~28i8"'':'' ....... __ ..... _ ......" Wednesday, Jan. 2', 1976 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
CAT. Tickets are on saleu~and Richard ThoIlllis at 7'30 .&#13;
door. a e Info. Kiosk for $1 and will ~m. In the&#13;
Whiteskeller: Featuring R' k . $2 at the&#13;
IC Fitzgerald at 11:30 a&#13;
.rn,&#13;
Concert: By the Cont Friday, January 30&#13;
University at 7:30P.~~&amp;:':: cMuSic Ensemble from NOrthwestern&#13;
Dance: featuring "Sonri" AT. Free.&#13;
PSGA and Vet's Club ;~miasstI90p:lilha'in the S.A.B. SPOnsored by th&#13;
. n C rge.. e&#13;
Basketball: UW_parksi:turd~, January 31 .&#13;
Bldg. Tickets are $1in adv~' ~yne State at 7:30 p.m, in the P E&#13;
door. . ce a the Info KiOSk,and will be $2 at the&#13;
, Concert: "The Wolverines" a '.&#13;
Main Place. Admission in~lu .Cla;"'C Jazz orchestra at 9:30 p.m. in&#13;
and $3 for others. There will Jieding °hod IS $2.50for Parkside students&#13;
a cas bar afterwards.&#13;
C . . Sundny, February 1&#13;
oncert. Classical guitar featur'&#13;
Student Recital: Featuring Gle;: i&#13;
ohnKolar at 3:30 p.m, in GR 103.&#13;
p.m, in the CAT. euner and Chris Rolaod at 7:30&#13;
. Mondny, February 2&#13;
Basketball: UW-Parkside vs Milto Coll&#13;
. Bldg. Admission charge . n ege at 7:30 p.rn. in the P.E.&#13;
l-~""""'O"""""'~:»«:»~~&#13;
........"""" ..................&gt;4&#13;
COP's&#13;
report&#13;
to faculty&#13;
Chancellor Guskins an-&#13;
_cement that no course offeringsin&#13;
the Master's program&#13;
in Bu.siness would begin until&#13;
alter the Fall of 1976brought theJanuary&#13;
22 all-faculty meeting to&#13;
a sad and sobering start.&#13;
Soonto followGuskin was Bill&#13;
Murin, co-chairperson of the&#13;
Committee of Principals (COP)&#13;
to update the faculty on COP&#13;
actionand reports.&#13;
lJuring the hour long debate,&#13;
whichone COP member said&#13;
"petered out at the end,"&#13;
professors raised strong&#13;
questions to the mission&#13;
statement,charging that it was&#13;
rather sketchy, difficult to interprete&#13;
and .apply. They also&#13;
wantedto know whether or not&#13;
students wouldbe given a voice in&#13;
deciding cha.nges in the general&#13;
educationrequirements that the&#13;
(X)P is currently discussing.&#13;
Some of the audience believed&#13;
that the academic community&#13;
!Maiddecidewhat is good for the&#13;
students,Whileothers voiced the&#13;
OPinionthat students shOuld have&#13;
a say in their education and&#13;
educationalrequirements.&#13;
Therewas a general feeling of&#13;
CODlusionby the faculty over&#13;
Whatthe COP was really do;na&#13;
~~:- ~~,&#13;
'~uulg to one COP member.&#13;
To that statement, Otto Bauer&#13;
~jeeted, "It is not uncommon&#13;
,., .campuses to go through a&#13;
i:,C10d of self-study when&#13;
. der"!llp is changed in the&#13;
~titution " I&#13;
, Af~CUl~member who asked to&#13;
;:am nameless stated,-"This is&#13;
six anothe~ten-year plan. In the&#13;
\be YearsI ve been here, this is&#13;
reauthird of them. I just don't&#13;
Ibis.:' know what to think of all of&#13;
Education&#13;
program&#13;
Jack .&#13;
Univer~armer, Northwestern&#13;
II.Iaat Sly, M.A.P. program&#13;
be on erg ID Arts &amp; Teaching) will&#13;
:II, 197:""'PUSFriday, January&#13;
Illay b~ talk to students who&#13;
Il'ogr Interested in the Tea.:' .A Masters in Arts &amp;&#13;
ftt Peng IS essentially designed&#13;
Ilegree r~.with a Bachelor's&#13;
PtOgrlUD king for a Graduate&#13;
."tr.1tr WIthc~rtification.&#13;
Ijj,rary ::er will be located in&#13;
103 frOln9-arning Center Alcove&#13;
12.&#13;
Reagan-- __&#13;
continued seom page 2&#13;
thousan.d~ of volunteers from a:ll sectors (labor, business, the&#13;
umversities, etc.) who served on nwnerous advisory committees,&#13;
many of whose recommendations were adopted.&#13;
Philosophically, he is difficult to classify. Cast as a "conservative,"&#13;
he also has common "ground with "liberals" and speaks of fundamental&#13;
reform: "Today it is difficult to find leaders who are independent&#13;
of the forces that have brought us our problems _ the&#13;
Congress, the bureaucracy, the lobbyists, big business and big labor. I&#13;
don't believe for one mement that four more years of business-asusual&#13;
in Washington is the answer to our problems."&#13;
Reagan spoke in length about the institution of a fourth branch of&#13;
government; the bureaucracy. Unelected, inunune to the system of&#13;
checks and balances and hence not responsible to the people, tlie&#13;
President nor even the Congress, the bureaucrats are thought by some&#13;
to be the real, faceless rulers of the U.S. The answer proposed by the&#13;
Californian is a thorough decentralization of authority hack to the&#13;
state and local levels, His much publicized $90 billion Federal budget&#13;
cut is an aspect of this attempt to return "power to the people."&#13;
I suspect Governor Reagan would have agreed with Max Lerner&#13;
when he wrote, "Men have always found it easy to be governed. Whal&#13;
i~hard is for them to govern themselves."&#13;
.UQDilllZil&#13;
Free with this coupon&#13;
a bottle of beer&#13;
with any steak dinner&#13;
3315 52 St., Kenosha&#13;
FREE DELIVER Y&#13;
Member Parks ide 200&#13;
Notional Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd A venue Kenosha&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
We're just around the corner&#13;
from Parks Ide&#13;
Birch Rd.&#13;
at&#13;
16th Ave.&#13;
551-7660&#13;
Delicious Pizza&#13;
and now&#13;
Say~ry Roast Beef Sandwich&#13;
Available at piua Tech North&#13;
TlIP I.CLUDES: -- II&#13;
• RDlId trip traaspDrUtiDI via air CDlditillid &amp;&#13;
restraa e~lipped Gre,hD8ld Charter Cu~&#13;
• 1 lights IDdgilg at tile Dceallrolt Holi.a, 1.1&#13;
"Slrtsi.e"&#13;
• Smices of a tOlr escort thralgbolt pllS H&#13;
DI-sight agmy represtllatiu&#13;
LIMITED SPACE - SIGN UP TODAY!&#13;
CAli PUS TlAVEl CEIlER&#13;
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--&#13;
....&#13;
r&#13;
~~&#13;
7k ~ I4d I- __4IUt .. " ... ~'"&#13;
Smices ilcllde:&#13;
*&#13;
Hair calorill *&#13;
Burd as. IlSlae.e Irils *&#13;
Creative.air stylill *&#13;
ClStOI .air replaclluls&#13;
* Pll1Ia slyles, Clrles or Ims&#13;
For appoilllliit call&#13;
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...........,...&#13;
,,__ t. .~ .&#13;
h' c. __ •••&#13;
king'a Irn&#13;
i-\}\JCAT~S&#13;
( )&#13;
~l)lT _\J~\O&#13;
pays 5V2%&#13;
on p~book,&#13;
~avings!&#13;
On-Campus Service Room 235 Tallent Ha71&#13;
Phone 553-2150&#13;
Main Office: 1400 o. Newman Rd RaCIne&#13;
Phone 634 -1&gt;661&#13;
Concert: Folk singers :ednesday, January 28 .&#13;
CAT. Tickets are on saleu~ a~dnfRich~rd Thomas at 7:30 P .&#13;
door. e o. Kiosk for $l and will .m. m the&#13;
Whiteskeller: Featuring Rick F't be $2 at the&#13;
i zgerald at 11:30 a .m.&#13;
Concert: By the Co t Friday, January 30&#13;
u · · n emporary Music E&#13;
D mversity at 7:30 p.m. in the CAT F nsemble from Northwestern&#13;
ance: featuring "Sonrize" at 9 . . ree.&#13;
PSGA and Vet's Club. Admissio~-~~~e S.A.B. Sponsored by the&#13;
Basketball: UW-Parksi::turd;, January 31&#13;
Bldg. Tickets are $1 in adv::· atyne State at 7:30 p.m. in the PE&#13;
door ce a the Info Kiosk and will be $2 · · . . ' d~&#13;
Concert: "The Wolverines" a 1 . .&#13;
Main Place. Admission in~lud; a;5ic ~azz orchestra at 9:30 p.m. in&#13;
and $3 for others. There will be g oodh bis $2.50 for Parkside students a cas ar afterwards.&#13;
. . Sunday, February 1 Concert. Classical guitar featur·&#13;
Student Recital: Featuring Gl::gi~hn Kolar at 3:~0 p.m. in GR 103.&#13;
p.m. in the CAT. eimer and Chris Roland at 7:30&#13;
.&#13;
Monday,February2 Basketball: UW-Parkside vs. Milton Coll . . ~-_!~~i~n charge. ege at 7.3o p.m. m the P.E. kb~~,t,QK.~""0&gt;~'71·---......._.~~&#13;
'"""'&lt;i'kq,..~~~'11.0d&#13;
COP's&#13;
report&#13;
to faculty&#13;
Chancellor Guskins announcement&#13;
that no course offerings&#13;
in the Master's program&#13;
in Business would begin until&#13;
after the Fall of 1976 brought the ·&#13;
January 22 all-faculty meeting to&#13;
a sad and sobering start.&#13;
Soon to follow Guskin was Bill&#13;
Murin, co-chairperson of the&#13;
Committee of Principals (COP)&#13;
to update the faculty on COP&#13;
action and reports.&#13;
During the hour long debate,&#13;
which one COP member said&#13;
"petered out at the end,"&#13;
professors raised strong&#13;
questions to the mission&#13;
statement, charging that it was&#13;
rather sketchy, difficult to interprete&#13;
and ,apply. They also&#13;
wanted to know whether or not&#13;
students would be given a voice in&#13;
deciding changes in the general&#13;
education requirements that the&#13;
COP is currently discussing.&#13;
Some of the audience believed&#13;
that the academic community&#13;
should decide what is good for the&#13;
students, while others voiced the&#13;
opinion that students should have&#13;
a say in their education . and&#13;
educational requirements.&#13;
There was a general· feeling of&#13;
confusion by the faculty over&#13;
what the COP was really doing&#13;
acco d' ' r ~g to one COP member. !0 that statement, Otto Bauer&#13;
~terjected, "It is not uncommon&#13;
or campuses to go through a&#13;
reriod . of self-study when&#13;
.ea~ership is changed in the&#13;
lllsbtution."&#13;
r A f~culty member who asked to&#13;
. emam nameless stated "This is&#13;
J~t anotber ten-year pl;n. In the&#13;
~~ ye~rs I've been here, this is&#13;
reauthird of them. I just don't&#13;
this.'~ know what to think of all of&#13;
Education&#13;
Program&#13;
Jack K&#13;
lJniversit armer, Northwestern&#13;
(lifast _Y, M.A.P. program&#13;
be on ers in Arts &amp; Teaching) will&#13;
30, 197~ampus Friday, January&#13;
may b: ~lk to students who&#13;
Progr interested in the&#13;
Teach:· _A Masters in Arts &amp;&#13;
for P g is essentially designed eople ·th Ilegree 100 .wi a Bachelor's&#13;
Program ~g for a Graduate&#13;
_Mr. I&lt;rtith c~rtification.&#13;
~brary Le mer. Will be located in&#13;
103 from 9-arnmg Center · Alcove&#13;
12.&#13;
Reagan---- continu~d J.rom page 2&#13;
th~usan_d~ of volunteers from all sectors (labor, business, the&#13;
universities, etc.) who served on numerous advisory committees,&#13;
many of whose recommendations were adopted.&#13;
Philosophically, he is difficult to classify. Cast as a "conservative,"&#13;
he also has common ·ground with "liberals" and speaks of fundamental&#13;
reform: "Today it is difficult to find leaders who are independent&#13;
of the forces that have brought us our problems - the&#13;
Congress, the bureaucracy, the lobbyists, big business and big labor. I&#13;
don't believe for one mement that four more years of business-as--&#13;
usual in Washington is the answer to our problems."&#13;
. Reagan spoke in length about the institution of a fourth branch of&#13;
government; the bureaucracy. Unelected, immune to the system of&#13;
checks and balances and hence not responsible to the people, tlie&#13;
President nor even the Congress, the bureaucrats are thought by some&#13;
to be the real, faceless rulers of the U.S. The answer proposed by the&#13;
Californian is a thorough decentralization of authority back to the&#13;
state and local levels. His much publicized $90 billion Federal budget&#13;
cut is an aspect of this attempt to return ''power to the people.''&#13;
I suspect Governor Reagan would have agreed with Max Lerner&#13;
when he wrote, "Men have always found it easy to be governed What&#13;
is hard is for them to govern themselves."&#13;
. ' BQDilllZil&#13;
Free with this coupon&#13;
a bottle of beer&#13;
with any steak dinner&#13;
3315 52 St., Kenosha&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
· National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 _ 22nd Avenue Kenosha&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
~~~....q,.q,c~v-~&#13;
We're just around the corner&#13;
from Parkside&#13;
Birch Rd.&#13;
at&#13;
16th Ave.&#13;
551 -7660&#13;
Delicious Pizza&#13;
and now&#13;
SavQry Roast Beef Sandwich&#13;
Available at Piua Tech North&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 28, 1976 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCO SI&#13;
AN OU CES&#13;
SP ING BREAK IN&#13;
DAYTONA&#13;
-BEACH&#13;
APRIL 16 - 24&#13;
$J45~~&#13;
• Services of tour scort ro&#13;
oa-sig I age cy represe tali&#13;
LIMITED SPACE - SIGN UP TODAY!&#13;
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COCKTAILS QUIET&#13;
7k "4f.wt.aL&#13;
~~&#13;
tod, /o-'t, ~ dll-4 ""'*"~&#13;
Services incl de: * Hair colori t * Bear a d mustache tri * Creative hair styli * C sto hair repl ce e ts * Puma sty es, Curles or ans&#13;
for ap oi tme I call&#13;
694-4603 .,... .. ~ ••to•&#13;
·::kf1~9::,~~ IDen&#13;
On-Campus eroic . . Room 2J5 Tall nt Ha I&#13;
Plron . 55 -2150&#13;
lam Office: 1400, o. &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, "'n. 21, 1976 Olild Care&#13;
The Parks ide Child&#13;
Cenler is CUfrenU c-.&#13;
applications fromY&#13;
' ~&#13;
parents needing childlIllt&#13;
children hetween the ~&#13;
and 7 years. ....&#13;
The Cenler is opened&#13;
a.m. to 5:15 p.m. p t,.,..&#13;
purchase a ~&#13;
session (morning II&#13;
afternoon session l2.4~&#13;
of $2.50 per session. ..&#13;
session hours may alao&#13;
chased for .75 an hour be&#13;
The present CUlTicuh",.&#13;
a wide range of acUvitiea&#13;
to the individual's in..&#13;
ability level&#13;
cooking and large m1llCle&#13;
The Cenler is locatedGIl&#13;
way E between Wood &amp;ad&#13;
Ave. and Hwy. 31) In&#13;
parents, please call ~&#13;
lDd_y offers sllldmia !he opportunit1to&#13;
c' oem IllIdles by ~ various sllldmi&#13;
C1Ilbs atn.d} In &lt;Xi..",..." &lt;»_ lbt fields 01&#13;
• J. manag.."..,l. and Ia.... Until&#13;
~&#13;
~;§~~ma~J&lt;r~ bjlclto 10 u.,t astudenl organizalioll aad lIn&amp;ed ..-.. 1 would unagiDe it's not&#13;
jeet 1ft . But _ !he past llfly yoan !he&#13;
anaiDed a stature comparable ....tII \bat&#13;
n', apprqlnJte a crouP 01 sllldmia have&#13;
caJled The ParUide A~&#13;
allllnll:imo tely tIIu1)' tnlenSled stude~ and&#13;
a 01 100 b) summer.&#13;
~'ali • but thY II&amp;&gt;re sounds '"trY&#13;
drug findings&#13;
b BIII~&#13;
. c.- RIcllard PQmaaJ pr&lt;Jtesoor of&#13;
aad members of ParDde One Quarters&#13;
... _,,, t raodo as bjel:1a for the saney.&#13;
"en to omure that the samp .&#13;
body. The were guaranteed&#13;
,_ ..... aD bonestIy.&#13;
3 oortIIlnI 0\llI1ImS. _. and&#13;
'""'- rsuJla from&#13;
pm1ned. Here 1n!lDlDe of t.be 6nd.ings.&#13;
rljuJa&#13;
mrver, sllldmls. res t.ed \be amount of&#13;
... lbol by olber nls, e.g. most tbo t lIlat 36 P"f"C"IlI&#13;
:&#13;
:~::~~~= tbei.r IlIOn! 0,", penaoal tha.n once a . 01 marijuana, In lbt _boo oo1y 11&#13;
It more tha.n..,.", a ........&#13;
)orlty of man ill..". amaIten. male and female, repor1ed&#13;
a IIlOIIlh or". FIfty.rour peranl 01 \be females&#13;
IIld• percet of lbt malos said tlley bad nnu tried mariJuana."&#13;
Ao lor manJ a JlIIllflSlngly balaoced l"llIIlbo!" 01&#13;
IlUdo pro and &lt;(1). _er, most people ra,.......s&#13;
y 32 perceot were iL Comment.ed&#13;
• manjuana Is not the Ieared 'kiIler ......... il&#13;
.0.&#13;
In trait to lhe Is' oftt'flllmlatiOo 01 !he amount of grass&#13;
ed 111 olber relP"""'Mts rulIma.t.ed the menl of&#13;
D aod To c'arlfy: The , "In )'0Uf opUJion, wbat pera:nl~&#13;
of so...... s have ...... tned !..S.D.!" bnJugbt a&#13;
i_of 10 pofteJll .. Of tz- SUfVt'Y1ld, • pen:enI inlIIOd&#13;
L. D. Pamaul.&#13;
lIlat 1 of e-r 4 adeIlIS Parkside bas ex·&#13;
a , IJllnd..a)tenII&amp; c:bemicaI:' (1'omaaI&#13;
Idea t tIIia p!&gt;en"'" • is related to lhe ,..,..,t&#13;
lMlde-1llOint nerIi ParbIde lItudonls.) " ot to&#13;
• 0ftIy 2 ~ roported !..S.D • ...-era! tunes a&#13;
_ and to \be -.-e,. 1-3 of LS..D • ..-s ha,.. quit&#13;
, Pm&gt;uaJ a1trt this to a In lbt hfe .... Ies&#13;
fonDer " -~&#13;
Defensive&#13;
driving&#13;
The campus security&#13;
Department ISagain offering the&#13;
i 'ahonal Salety Council's&#13;
DefeRSlve Driving Course for&#13;
lho6e employees or students who&#13;
have not bad the opportunity to&#13;
take the course.&#13;
The Defensive Driving Course&#13;
bas been a P"'H""'Iulsite for any&#13;
lIIlIJvuluai operating Stale-&lt;lwned&#13;
v Iucles since December, 1970.&#13;
University 01 Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
employees wbo contemplate&#13;
dnving State-owned vehicles are&#13;
reqlllfed to take this course&#13;
before permission will he granted&#13;
lhem to drive State-owned&#13;
,...lucles. (Employees are conSIdered&#13;
to he faculty, staff. or-&#13;
\'olunteer dnvers.)&#13;
The &lt;:ollne will be presented at&#13;
the Classroom Building, Room&#13;
, '0. 149, on Saturday, February 7.&#13;
1976, starting at 9 a.m. The class&#13;
should be completed at appro:rimalely&#13;
4 p.m_&#13;
Interested parties should&#13;
contact Office- William Carter&#13;
Campus Security Departmen~&#13;
Room o. 1118, Tallent Han. as&#13;
soon as possible.&#13;
MEC&#13;
to sponsor&#13;
variety show&#13;
On February 20, 1976, the&#13;
Parkside chapter of the Music&#13;
Educator'S ational Conference&#13;
(ME;XC), is sponsoring a Variety&#13;
Show , g accordin to Ron Bayer&#13;
Presidenl. All students staff and&#13;
faculty members are 'eligibie to&#13;
particlpale.&#13;
,nus show is the first of whal&#13;
will become an annual evenl for&#13;
the d1splay of Parkside talent All&#13;
Interested people should l~ve&#13;
lbelr name, telephone number&#13;
IIlda desaiption of the act on th~&#13;
door of Communication Arts 216&#13;
or call the chapter's advisor at&#13;
SoS3-2S2!: The deadline for all&#13;
entries IS February 2, 1976.&#13;
Free concert&#13;
The (;ontemporary M . Ense. USIC&#13;
. mble of Northwestern&#13;
UruvefSlt)' under the dir . "'_ eclion of&#13;
~ben Syverud and M. William&#13;
Kartins will presenl a free public&#13;
concerl fealurlng a .&#13;
~ U" n 1m· ~ .'"lS8 on with two Arp IhesIzers syn- al the Universil&#13;
W,sconsin-Parkside c! of&#13;
mwucatlon Arts """'~-Ier om- . ",.. al 7:30&#13;
p.m. on Friday, Jan. 30.&#13;
---~&#13;
-- --~ ~--=-=-&#13;
Racine's newest nitespot&#13;
Featuring ...&#13;
The NCR Electrobar&#13;
Pool, Foosball &amp; Electronic Games&#13;
for your enjoyment&#13;
3162-Sheridan Road&#13;
(iust south 01 the Durand Underposs)&#13;
Hours: 7 p.m. to 1 a.m. Plio.. , 634-U&#13;
AMERICAN .&#13;
~'!:!! STATE BANK&#13;
sa&#13;
r:I::I:-&#13;
3928 . '60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.Il.Le.&#13;
9-0ad&#13;
The fta/ian co~k respects toad. The spice&#13;
of a sauce th f- '. fr h&#13;
b&#13;
" . e. me texture ot warm, es&#13;
read th' . . . e COllS1stancy ot" a melted cheese&#13;
sauce F h' '. . . or 1m the reward is the pleasure&#13;
a,' .those who enjoy his work. ExperietlCe&#13;
t us pleasure.&#13;
Gua Cap'll&#13;
2129 23i'l.ch cRd.,&#13;
!J(cnoiha, &lt;'Wii.&#13;
ednesday, Jan. 2 , 1976&#13;
E C&#13;
concert&#13;
Racine's newest nitespot&#13;
Featuring •.•&#13;
The NCR Electrobar&#13;
Pool, Foosball &amp; Electronic Games&#13;
for your enjoyment&#13;
3162-Sheridan Road&#13;
(just south of the Durand Underpass)&#13;
AMERICAN&#13;
~---STATE BANK&#13;
SB&#13;
c:.::-=-&#13;
3928 - 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
9-ine 9-aod&#13;
T~e Italian cook respects food. The spice&#13;
o.f a sauce. the .fine texture of wurm, fresh&#13;
bread, the consistancy of a melted cheese&#13;
Suuce. For him the reward is the pleasure&#13;
o.(_those who enjoy his work. Experience&#13;
tlus pleasure.&#13;
Cap,ti&#13;
2129 !Bi'ich c:Rd.,&#13;
.!J&lt;c.no1..ha, &lt;Wi1... &#13;
VISAGE&#13;
~'nJ!les ' L'~~ ,&#13;
jng to find You ... alrY ;'1' .....&#13;
~ biJOkS ther people wear&#13;
~ Ibe laces,~ Christmas is suppose to bring-&#13;
"Ibt ed10ti&#13;
h&#13;
e come cowardly alone • 'I av . .&#13;
1lll,galJl other year'&#13;
• ~ word of gone, ,&#13;
like a shadow&#13;
d1~ lingers on shingles of stars&#13;
;,e.t bYb~~.man thru ti!De-&#13;
~ a lIUU&#13;
, .&#13;
viSOge a.&#13;
aln the visage is dream&#13;
JIll, allsmiJinIl shinning thru me&#13;
JIIjDg sblessas ,shadowlIIl."ethevisage&#13;
is silent&#13;
Il8III seeming to wmk&#13;
a star downin Ice light breaking&#13;
IIIl ~et niilht with speed and mercy&#13;
IflIItel thic rapist&#13;
ia .epa even my sound of al~ne .&#13;
iI(ltCliDgdoesa drowning man s skin-&#13;
• water&#13;
(&#13;
III ebbtide&#13;
come to count winter eveshe&#13;
ebbing tides i walk wet coral dream&#13;
lie fish&#13;
g star -&#13;
seacrabs .&#13;
ear to day in shells echoing&#13;
whatpassed into gone&#13;
You&#13;
me ,&#13;
flamingcloud castle of dusk,&#13;
. to Iizard1ikefish, .&#13;
enating ,&#13;
crabapple&amp; apple tre~s too closely grownprayers&#13;
get answered (sometimes)&#13;
evtIl fora moment peace comes (sometimes) -&#13;
DOW, waiting eternity unconceived dream,&#13;
to taper,&#13;
woOOer -&#13;
woOOer Youin a timeless silent wayvisageis&#13;
You&#13;
Yw are my iconjeffrey&#13;
[. swencki&#13;
•&#13;
r------ =Wed=ne=scI::a~y:...,Jan. 28,1976 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
by 8llI Barke Daily JoUrnal Tuesday, Jan. 13, 1976&#13;
10:30 a.m,&#13;
Woke up at 5:50 a.m.&#13;
ClOUdytoday .&#13;
Morning bowel movement: firm&#13;
. Registr~tion Day. I signed up for a bunch of sleepers this lime again.&#13;
God, but It worked out beautilulIy. Now if I can just wing it this&#13;
semester like I have fa!:,the past three at this tomb, I can rip off my&#13;
B.A. as "-asily as kicking a cripple. I swore that nobody would ever&#13;
make a sap out of me again, ever since I did that lour in the service&#13;
over in that godforsaken stinkhole with that festering disease. U I had&#13;
that slavering little troll in front of me right now, I'd draw a whip&#13;
across her fleshy hack and forearms liIlshe would whine like an 1mpaled&#13;
dog. God for months I could hardlY_I can't! lean't write this!! I&#13;
must be going mad! Every time I lbink of the hurt and all the&#13;
flaking. ,,',Veil, never again! I'll show then;! I will!&#13;
I'll beturning in my first column a little later today. It's about lime I&#13;
was asked to do something like this. They must have known what they&#13;
were missing when they found out what I can do. My stuff is hilarious,&#13;
and they know it. Hell, I don't have to beat any drums. I re-wrote that&#13;
old story I heard from some kid in sixth grade, the one about the queer&#13;
dentist. It's beautiluJ.Those idiots on the news stall get off on that&#13;
garbage anyway. They love it. Yeah, like a butcher loves a cow's&#13;
bladder. They'd enjoy tossing me out on my butt. They're all jealous.&#13;
Wait till the new edilor reads it, tbough. God, the part about the incisors&#13;
will kill her. It comes on as strong as a hippo pooping on a&#13;
chipmunk. I know she '11 love it. Then the other writers will try 10make&#13;
a jerk out of ~e. Just wait. Well, we'll see. Never .again! No.body's&#13;
going to walk over this kid. God, ever since that disgusting little.".&#13;
··NOTE TO PRINTER ..&#13;
WRONG COPY SUBMITTEC.&#13;
DISREGARD DIARY NOTES AND PRINT AUTHOR'S COLUMN "OPEN WIDE"&#13;
A SONG IN THE SNOW&#13;
WIlen wint'ry way. confound the Urne&#13;
and I, an i-clck-&lt;lOlcl&#13;
compoundt&lt;l drawn_ qu.arteredly,&#13;
my mind on you. ..&#13;
J lind no little comfort tbere&#13;
where wann before your fiery eyes our lean&#13;
would melt away ...&#13;
Fire and wine, apptes, m-HUIlSI I'm&#13;
alone tonight&#13;
good 'WOOd to burn&#13;
a book&#13;
but&#13;
me ...&#13;
00 match-es.&#13;
Happilessly rememb'ring whenbefore&#13;
Isaw your&#13;
Sing! urlarity ...&#13;
aware of nothing&#13;
10 be lost&#13;
you&#13;
were just&#13;
another snowflake la1ling on my aoul .&#13;
(Ohilschold!-I'm growing old... )&#13;
but weren't we innocently clean'!&#13;
like new rallen&#13;
'fore the footprints&#13;
of our time&#13;
lost III 10'''''&#13;
And now you re.miJxl me,&#13;
finally,&#13;
of teardrops in the snow.&#13;
Brian Kipp&#13;
zsage&#13;
.........===humanities section&#13;
THREE, OR MORE, OR LESS, KOANS&#13;
The wheat&#13;
is divided into chaff and grain.&#13;
And yet is sold as wheat.&#13;
A novice priest&#13;
weeding his small garden.&#13;
Itbegins to rain. '&#13;
Jack Cody&#13;
'Ibese I have loved: .&#13;
Lush green grasses, ".&#13;
yellowsun and warm blue skies,&#13;
SweetLilac blossoms strawberries&#13;
l'ed and ripe, C:oolbr~ezes of Spring, .&#13;
Violetsgently sweeping and dandelions creepmg.&#13;
Green dewy apples and cherry blossoms,&#13;
I'Uffled leaves of summer's end, robins, sparrows&#13;
andWheelbarrows. .&#13;
Ice cream cotton candy crazy cars, clo ' ,&#13;
IVns and merry-go-rounds.&#13;
tow Fairy tales and starry nights, flowers,&#13;
1'h erg and evening showers.&#13;
A eSIDeliof jaSmine, and wild heather,&#13;
'I'h bird Withmany a colorful feather. "&#13;
ese I have loved:&#13;
and The fresh smell of pine, .&#13;
lire gentle sipping of wine, A warm .cracklmg&#13;
andandthen to retire. A quiet winter rught,&#13;
a Softflicker of Candle light.&#13;
Kathy Anderson ph~O bY Mike HepPer&#13;
VISAGE ________________ W~ed:n~e~s=d=ay~, Jan. 28, 1976 THE PARKSIDE RANGER :S&#13;
shil181es J.&#13;
l)een trY&#13;
1'lf&#13;
ing to find You&#13;
111 i,ookS ther people wear&#13;
111 t11e faces. 0&#13;
n Christmas is suppose to bringthe&#13;
ein~tio e come cowardly alone Ill , I haV •&#13;
1,11 ag~another year&#13;
IO inee mer word of gone&#13;
ano like a shadow&#13;
da,rung fingers on shingles of stars&#13;
~ad bybre:A man thrU ti}ne- ~ a wau&#13;
vjsage n.&#13;
'&#13;
. the visage is dream&#13;
~ ag~ shinning thru me&#13;
~ shieSS as shadowi-it&#13;
.ne the visage is silen_t&#13;
agaJJl seeming to wink&#13;
a&#13;
5&#13;
~ down in ice light breaking&#13;
!,II s~:et night with speed and mercy&#13;
even thic rapist rl a tel_epa even my sound of alone .&#13;
-tillgdoes a drowning man's skinas&#13;
water&#13;
m. ebb tide&#13;
e to count winter eves- :e c:ing tides i walk wet coral dream&#13;
Jiki'IS star -fish&#13;
· g seacrabs .&#13;
l!ldng ear to day _in shells echoing&#13;
what passed mto gone ·&#13;
pa.,tYou&#13;
me . flaming cloud castle of dusk,&#13;
· to lizardlike fish, ·&#13;
llenating ·&#13;
crabapple &amp; apple tre~s too closely grownIV.&#13;
wonder&#13;
11111 prayers get answered (sometimes) .&#13;
hven for a moment peace comes ( ~ometunes) -&#13;
1111 now, waiting eternity unconce1ved dream,&#13;
· · to taper,&#13;
wonder -&#13;
wonder You in a timeless silent wayvisage&#13;
is You&#13;
You are my iconjeff&#13;
re y j. swencki&#13;
•&#13;
·zsage&#13;
by Bill Barke Daily Journal Tuesday, Jan. 13, 197&#13;
10:30 a.m. 6&#13;
Woke up at 5:50 a.m.&#13;
Cloudy today .&#13;
Morning bowel movement: firm&#13;
Registr~tion Day. I signed up for a bunch of sleepers this time again.&#13;
God, but 1t worked out beautifully. Now if I can just wing it this&#13;
semester like I have for the past three at this tomb, I can rip off my&#13;
B.A. as e-asily as kicking a cripple. I swore that nobody would ever&#13;
make a sap out of me again, ever since I did that tour in the service&#13;
over in that godforsaken stinkhole with that festering disease. If I had&#13;
that slavering little troll in front of me right now, I'd draw a whip&#13;
across her fleshy back and forearms till she would whine like an impaled&#13;
dog. God for months I could hardly-I can't! !can't write this!! I&#13;
must be going mad! Every time I think of the hurt, and all the&#13;
flaking ... Well, never again! I'll show them! I will!&#13;
I'll be turning in my first column a little later today. It's about time I&#13;
was asked to do something like this. They must have known what they&#13;
were missing when they found out what I can do. My stuff is hilarious,&#13;
and they know it. Hell, I don't have to beat any drums. I re-wrote that&#13;
old story I heard from some kid in sixth grade, the one about the queer&#13;
dentist. It's beautiful.Those idiots on the news staff get off on that&#13;
garbage anyway. They love it. Yeah, like a butcher loves a cow's&#13;
bladder. They'd enjoy tossing me out on my butt. They're all Jealous.&#13;
Wait till the new editor reads it, though. God, the part about the incisors&#13;
will kill her. It comes on as strong as a hippo pooping on a&#13;
chipmunk. I know she'll love it. Then the other writers will try to make&#13;
a jerk out of me. Just wait. Well, we'll see. Never _again_! No~ s&#13;
going to walk over this kid. God, ever since that disgusting little ....&#13;
--NOTE TO PR INTER--&#13;
WRONG COPY SUBMITTEC!.&#13;
DISREGARD DIARY NOTES AND PRINT AUTHOR'S COLUMN " OPEN WIDE"&#13;
r-~~~~humanities section&#13;
THREE, OR MORE, OR LESS, KOANS&#13;
The wheat&#13;
is divided into chaff and grain.&#13;
And yet is sold as wheat.&#13;
A novite priest&#13;
weeding his small garden.&#13;
It begins to rain.&#13;
Jack Cody&#13;
These I have loved: ·&#13;
Lush green grasses, '&#13;
Yellow sun and warm blue skies,&#13;
Sweet Lilac blossoms, strawberries&#13;
r~ and ripe, Cool breezes of Spring, .&#13;
Violets gently sweeping and dandelions creeping.&#13;
Green dewy apples and cherry blossoms,&#13;
ruffled leaves of ·summer's end, robins, sparrows lllld Wheelbarrows.&#13;
Ice cream cotton candy crazy cars, Clo ' ' '\Vns and merry-go-rounds.&#13;
Fairy tales and starry nights, flowers,&#13;
~Wers and evening showers.&#13;
e smell of 1·asmine and wild heather, Ab' ' Th lrd With many a colorful feather.&#13;
ese I have loved:&#13;
an 'l'he fresh smell of pine, .&#13;
fir d gentle sipping of wine, A warm. crackling&#13;
e and then to retire. A quiet winter rught,&#13;
lllld a soft flicker of Candle light.&#13;
Kathy Anderson ph~O by Mike Nepper&#13;
A SONG IN THE SNOW&#13;
· c round th ttm&#13;
and I, an 1 -cold&#13;
compounded drawn-and qu&#13;
my mind on u ...&#13;
I find no little comfort th e&#13;
where warm before your fi ey our r&#13;
would m It y ..•&#13;
Fire and win • ppl , cheesei~c~I I'm&#13;
alone ton t&#13;
good ood to rum&#13;
a boo&#13;
but&#13;
m ...&#13;
noma ~-&#13;
And now y remind&#13;
finally,&#13;
of te"""'N'lf'\'I:&#13;
on&#13;
Brian K pp &#13;
Contact&#13;
weekly from student government Ken,""",. AdvisOry Board made up of those&#13;
by It.aI Nan posal f(l" the com- We are also proposing to~t:~::' Union but do not have any rights&#13;
P G.A .. boIdinll open beann&amp;l' OIlOW' pro . be areas of the campus that&#13;
lion of the UIUODOperalinl! Board tIu.5 week. TIle Board .:::f-will to governance of the bUilding. ill be finalized by P.S.G.A. and&#13;
""IlJOIIsWle for blJs/un8 policies lit the new Student Union After the hearinllS. the proposal w I The proposal will be&#13;
the avenun&amp; bod of the Uni.... sent to O1ancellor Alan Guskin for his approva 4 m in room D-174.&#13;
TIle are on wodnesday, JanlllU)' 221, from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m, f alized at a Senate meeting on February 3ha;"'~ing and the Senate&#13;
ed on 1'bunday. Janoary 29. from Z p.m to 7 p.m, in room D-174. ~ Everyone is invited to attend both tel who cannot at- WU.c. . . wishing to respond to the proposa • (193&#13;
We re prop&lt;&gt;sIII8 thefollowln« composition of a 13member Board: 5 meetingthe' AnY.:':s should send a written response to p.S.G.A. D- •&#13;
•~_ P S GoA e1edi 3 students tend mee~.... 6&#13;
1\IIl~llls eleclld al targe in .... spnng .. . OIlS; W!LCl before February 3. 197 . . k We hope that&#13;
awoinlld by the Presidenl of P.S.GoA and approved by the Senate; I . also sponsoring Winterfest this wee. . will be an&#13;
PrlosllJlrnl of P G or d' ; I A5S15\a1IIPresidenl Pro Tempore p.S.G.A .. IS. me wa , participate in this event. This&#13;
G Ie; I QwrpenOn of the P.S.G.A. Allocations every,;"e ~~ ':e hope;t will get higger and better as the years go&#13;
. and Z members,onefrom Racine and one from annua even II -&#13;
, -&#13;
'\&#13;
II )ON&amp;J'~EET·&#13;
Communication ----------- I - DR:E~,r&#13;
......_1&#13;
all\-\sotS.&#13;
111 re are nearll 800&#13;
eoroDmenlS lit c:oounwticalion&#13;
lI1\s oem Ie" and oorne bldents&#13;
and . acber5 alike have voiced&#13;
concem over the lack of continuily&#13;
in teachiog and advising&#13;
that may result from the one&#13;
resignation and (our terminations.&#13;
roy-----------&#13;
I COP', r co&#13;
and reporU&#13;
be llnal. d&#13;
G lit'&#13;
I&#13;
only lull tuDe teecben&#13;
may aCI u aCllCloJnk aem-.s to&#13;
I udeots maJor1ni In&#13;
CmtmUlllcali.... BaacltWD, C...&#13;
ordlnalor of the di.clpline.&#13;
leJl.l'.at 80 perceIIl of those&#13;
~nls will be reassigned 10&#13;
.. &lt;I"th Central·s enluation were&#13;
bll' a Utile premalure.&#13;
"In retro&gt;pe&lt;:l Iguess Ihave to&#13;
lake the blame f(l" going so&#13;
rapidly with It, but, If l'OUjust Sli&#13;
"",und. nothing happens."&#13;
"You move wad by taIring&#13;
rub. not by .~ around&#13;
pIanrung until bell freexes over."&#13;
With regard to the rumored&#13;
verlleI denial of accreditatiOll,&#13;
MOl said. "When you go out on a&#13;
limb, you get clobbered&#13;
.sornetilDeS. ,.&#13;
Guskin said that by June I,&#13;
1976, he will have appointed a ten&#13;
member committee to study and&#13;
review the Master's program and&#13;
make recommendations as to&#13;
"where we should go from here,'l&#13;
The committee will tentatively&#13;
Include three local business&#13;
people and one student.&#13;
Guskin vowed to "lead an alloul&#13;
effort to make the quality of&#13;
the School of Modem Industry's&#13;
programs in business, labor and&#13;
engineering technology the finest&#13;
in the country among comparable&#13;
universities."&#13;
Drop~----------&#13;
Ial\ure 10""11""" academically&#13;
wIlI rstIl III the studenl beq&#13;
drvplJed ac8lll for one) ar, afIe"&#13;
wtjch be may make a second&#13;
appeal f(l" readoul~.&#13;
According 10 Ecbelbarger,&#13;
aweaJ.s are not granlld unleos&#13;
the ~nt call provide suff\CleI1t&#13;
e'fIcIeJa to prvve thai bis lJIlOl"&#13;
~ .... _tosome&#13;
facIor beyood bIs cootrol. sudlas&#13;
, job.~.&#13;
ParUIde oricIJWly had an&#13;
academic dJ'Op policy sIml.1ar to&#13;
the one ~ above. bUl II&#13;
was discontinued seftral years&#13;
ll11lt JobnsOl1, eba1r'penOll&#13;
'" the eademlc Pl&gt;lides CommIUee&#13;
thaI ................. bIe f(l"&#13;
lbe telDllll of \be policy,&#13;
oaId thai \be orIIIJI8l po\ley was&#13;
drvplJed of a pre'V~&#13;
the riIl&gt;l of eedc atudenl&#13;
eGJc:a lion in the&#13;
1DaI"* of dIcIce. He added&#13;
\ d-.· Sltuatlon al!o&#13;
e bad somellu1lC to do&#13;
th I\IIdents '"'" ere cnlJllOd from the University at&#13;
I bme lI\OOd a ....,.s ehance of&#13;
~afted a.nd sent Oiet '&#13;
to ftIbl.&#13;
JobIPl aIao IiIIed severa\&#13;
hie ..- for the rest&gt;-&#13;
\eIIlenl of the aeademie dJ'Op&#13;
policy. For one tblD&amp;. be said be&#13;
consldcn II a "cneI ~ ... "&#13;
for Ihe Unlyerail)' 10 allow&#13;
~oIS with low grades to&#13;
__ to reclaI« and pay&#13;
tlon "blilllfuDy I!&gt;'nki.....thai&#13;
they wl1\ grMlate wbeJl they&#13;
ba attl81lulalld the deltignalld&#13;
IIUltlber of &lt;ndil hours t '0 one&#13;
may lI'aduate with a GPA of lea&#13;
Ihan z.o .&#13;
He a oaId lIlal \arle llWl&gt;-&#13;
ben '" stlIIlonta '"'" do nol&#13;
'*"'""&#13;
weB academieally teDd&#13;
to "drag down" the quality of&#13;
classes, Finally, Johnson said&#13;
thai oorne students who receive&#13;
financial aida and GJ. Bill&#13;
benefits regisIe" in order to keep&#13;
11\ receiving the IDOIIe)' bul neve.-&#13;
attend classes, Some members of&#13;
the academic policies committee&#13;
conside.-ed this type of behavior a&#13;
ri»&lt;lff, he said.&#13;
Johnson said he knows of no&#13;
other school in the state&#13;
university system that has a nl&gt;-&#13;
drop policy. He said he considers&#13;
Parkside's new policy generous&#13;
because "students have to push it&#13;
befcre it bites."&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at the Skellar&#13;
GJ0&#13;
National&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
lift lItIrtai lit Wed., Fri., Sat. and Sunday&#13;
De JiVu&#13;
No eo- C1lorIl"&#13;
usic from the 40's&#13;
through the 50's&#13;
FREE&#13;
Typing done in my hOme C'-.. __&#13;
886·2091. . -.~ ...&#13;
WANTED: Sales PffSon&#13;
commission, fleXible hOll~' 'II&#13;
students. Contacl thl! ~il' IlIrIttt&#13;
WLLC·D194 or call 5S3.nt5.~ 0lIict&#13;
Typing done: 50 cents&#13;
negotiable. Call JUdy Vlac~ -...&#13;
Wanted: Girl 10 live In WIth "'.&#13;
teenagers. Free rOOm IJIl(! ..-...&#13;
'2836. Ask for Sharon, boIro&#13;
I&#13;
~: ~.&#13;
I',' Cf'hooe 414-654-3578 .&#13;
~ 5010 _7th Avenue GKenosha,GWisconsin ( , ,&#13;
(&#13;
~-'&#13;
Albu""&#13;
&amp;TQPtI&#13;
Jewe!ly&#13;
Inee,.&#13;
Oil Lamps Tapestl\ts&#13;
Leather GoocI&amp;&#13;
Jewelry, .. Free Gift lloxes&#13;
We offer a unique and fashionable&#13;
assortment of jewelry for both men&#13;
and women. Including designed&#13;
feather, silver. Hlshi, Puka liqUid silver&#13;
and turquoise ... Necklaces,&#13;
bracelets, chokers, earrings and rings.&#13;
Gift Certificotes Availoble&#13;
aniqae gi.J=t:s.J=0ReveRyooe&#13;
With vacation time fast approaching,&#13;
many of you will no doubt be traveling&#13;
to Mexico. Some of you might evenbe&#13;
coming back. Here are some helpful&#13;
hints.&#13;
1. A man on a burro always has the&#13;
right of way, unless he appears tobe&#13;
a weakling.&#13;
2. In local cantinas, pouring a shot of&#13;
Cuervo down a man's collar is not&#13;
thought to be humorous.&#13;
3. Falling onto a cactus even an ,&#13;
actual Cuervo cactus can be&#13;
. '&#13;
a ~bcky proposit;.ion. .&#13;
4. It IS tough to find hamburger&#13;
rolls in the smaller towns; it's&#13;
best to bring your own.&#13;
IMPORTED AND B JOSE CUERVO~ TEQUILA ~oPROOFHARTfORD&#13;
OTTLED BY \I. 1975. HEUBLEIN,INc..&#13;
n act FREE&#13;
w eldy from student government&#13;
Keno.sha. . te an Advisory Board made up of ~hose&#13;
Typing done in my home C'.01\ 886-2091 . ' ~ ~&#13;
croPoSal for the com-&#13;
'e are also proposmg to ~ea th Union but do not have any rights&#13;
areas of the campus that_w~ use e&#13;
WANTED : Sales l&gt;efson&#13;
commission, flexlbl@ ~et, IO&#13;
students. Contact the R;s, WLLC-D194 or call 553 2295 l)ger&#13;
Live&#13;
• The Board be&#13;
t Union and'1rill to governance of the building, will be finalized by P.S.G.A. and&#13;
After the hearings, the pr~pc:: his approval. The proposal will be&#13;
sent to Qiancellor Alan G':15kin ar 3 at 4 p.m., in room D-174,&#13;
finalized at a Senate meetmg on Fe!~t~ the hearing and the Senate&#13;
WU,C. Everyone is_in~tedtotoreasttennd to the proposal, who cannot atTyping&#13;
done: so cen"&#13;
negotiable. Call Jucty Vlac~ .... , Wanted : Girl to l ive •n ••tt\&#13;
teenagers. Free room a d&#13;
2836. Ask for Sharon n boo,o&#13;
An wishing p0 SGA (D-193 SKIS_forsale Kastlesk .. ..,,tt,&#13;
meeting. yone nd itten response to P. . . . , bindings. GOOd condition. " q&#13;
tend the meetings, should se a wr&#13;
WU£) before February 3,_ 197~interfest this week. We hope that&#13;
P.S.G.A. is also sponsoring ticipate in this event. This will be an Another one down tile dr&#13;
everyone will, in some Wa~' ~ t bigger and better as the years go Congratulations, M ike anaa~&#13;
:'ual event ,nd we hope ,t ge ff&#13;
rn over the lack of con·&#13;
tinuity in teaching and advising&#13;
t may result from the one&#13;
r 1gnation a nd four tertions.&#13;
&#13;
• I&#13;
1976, he 'll ha e appointed a ten&#13;
member committee to study and&#13;
re,.i the aster's program and&#13;
make recommendations as to&#13;
r e should go from here."&#13;
The committee will tentatively&#13;
include three local business&#13;
peop e and one student.&#13;
·\ . . "'- '&#13;
II 1 oN&amp;J'~~ET-~&#13;
II 1 DREQfif ·&#13;
II ~ l·I CJ&gt;hone 414-654-3578&#13;
Albums&#13;
&amp;Tapes&#13;
Jewetiy&#13;
Incense&#13;
I ( . 5010 - 7th Avenue GKenosha. G\Visconsin&#13;
I ,,&#13;
I&#13;
-, I . ; -· Oil lamps Tapestries&#13;
leather Goods&#13;
Jewelry . .. Free Gift Boxes&#13;
We offer a unique and fashionable&#13;
assortment of jewelry for both men&#13;
and women. Including designed&#13;
feather, silver, Hishi, Puka liquid silver&#13;
and turquoise .. . Necklaces,&#13;
bracelets, chokers, earrings and rings.&#13;
Gift Certificates Avoiloble&#13;
aniqae gi.J=t:s .J=OR eve~yone&#13;
t by June 1,&#13;
Guskin vowed to " lead an allout&#13;
effort to make the quality of&#13;
the School of Modern Industry's&#13;
programs in business, labor and&#13;
engineering technology the finest&#13;
m the country among comparable&#13;
universities."&#13;
rip-off, he said.&#13;
Johnson said be knows of no&#13;
other school in the state&#13;
university system that has a nodrop&#13;
policy. He said he considers&#13;
Parkside's new policy generous&#13;
because "students have to push it&#13;
before it bites."&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
·····-- c. - ·-~-... -&#13;
On tap at the Skellar -&#13;
OJ(D&#13;
National&#13;
6?()8 Greenbay Road&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
tertai ent Wed., Fri., Sat. and Sunday&#13;
De J3Vu . CcN On-ge&#13;
u ic from the 40's&#13;
th ough the 50's&#13;
TRAvELhPs&#13;
~TO&#13;
U&lt;JlEXICO&#13;
With vacation time fast approaching.&#13;
many of you will no doubt be travehng&#13;
to Mexico. Some· of you might even be&#13;
coming back. Here are some helpful&#13;
hints.&#13;
1. A man on a burro always has the&#13;
right of way, unless he appears to be&#13;
a weakling.&#13;
2. In local cantinas, pouring a shot of&#13;
Cuervo down a man's collar is not&#13;
thought to be humorous.&#13;
3. Falling onto a cactus even an&#13;
' actual Cuervo cactus can be . '&#13;
a sticky proposition.&#13;
4. It is tough to find hamburger&#13;
rolls in the smaller towns; it's&#13;
best to bring your own.&#13;
IMPORTED AND BOJOSE CUERVO' TEQUILA 80 PROOF HARffOIID,&#13;
"rrLED BY &lt; Ig75 , HEUBLEIN. INC · &#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 28, 1976THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
THE PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD InlTES YOU&#13;
TO TAKE A TRIP IIITO THE PAST- .&#13;
AT A NIGHTCLUB&#13;
II CELEm TlOi OF II WIITEIFEST&#13;
f.allri.&amp;&#13;
A~.issi. '2.50 - UW - P SI.... ts&#13;
'3.00 - O~.r&#13;
(TKXET IHaUoes CONCBtT &amp;&#13;
CASH lIAR AVAIlABLE!!&#13;
in one week&#13;
~&#13;
Cagers ~ontinue to Win&#13;
byThoroAiello Stephens said he was w .&#13;
. s inoneweek. That is before the' UWM orrted ParkSide to play .ts&#13;
your WID Y of the Parkside whether or not hisgamI ib about basketball. In a pre I type of '_mar t"· C U could· -season press&#13;
I SU""U team's m~st recen stay on the boards with guide,NT's newhead coach .&#13;
~."ng the College0t St. (UWM)." But the Ran them Blakeley, said "I hope 'ed&#13;
B111&#13;
~ .,...~' J 17 gers, now ,SOm ay ..... IsStSaturday, an. , 13-4 on the year overcam thei we are good enough that an&#13;
~ ngers continued their height disadvan'tage by~. eir ponentwillhave to score95po'~&#13;
~;": ways throughout the "little quicker" than UWMmga to beat us..." In its first mn&#13;
m&#13;
_~ be" and gam tho .. e . . cause 'everybody did the lob." es IS year, wmmngeight of&#13;
lIlIl: jnga measure of revenge -including the players co ,J 'f them, the Mean Green averaged&#13;
~onday, the cagers dealt the bench. rnmg 0 f exactly 95 points per game.&#13;
~"" Illinoisa 7l~7 defeat Four wins in one W k Blakeley's. hopes may well be&#13;
.....- the scoring of Leartha cording to Stephens .:e. Ac- answered:&#13;
~22 pts.,andStevie King, 16 healthy situation sinc~i: gawastha&#13;
The Rangers finally return to&#13;
.... ' .. P th b t be h ve e the home co tth· 11)evisiting, an ers ea nc some experience whil th . ur IS Saturday&#13;
~de lastyear, 79-72, ending wins aided the team's c~nf ~e e ,meetmg Wayne State Universi~&#13;
~amewinning streak for the "It pulled our kids tog~~~~~; (Detroit, Mich.) at 7:30 p.rn.&#13;
.... Stephens said ,Stephens called the Tartars a&#13;
~~as the scoring leader The scheduie doesn't get "capable" club, /in' last Wednesday, as he easier for the Rangers as a-r~~~ The cagers will try to keep&#13;
~ on 13of 24field goals game versus North Texas St t their perfect home record intact&#13;
.. ansevenfree-throwattempts another major college teama&#13;
~~ again next Tuesday as they play&#13;
.. 33points, whilethe Rangers next on the agenda. Game um'e is host to Milton College (7:30&#13;
~pastUW-GreenBay, 67-, set for 7:30 p.m., Wed.. p.m.).&#13;
~ GarY Cole,troubled with the Stephens calIed the Mean&#13;
.",ation'sdouble-teamingand Green "one of the top Division I&#13;
fjIIS, still managed to net 18 teams," and said the running&#13;
tlii'for Parkside.Colealso led club was "extremely. big." In&#13;
"sides with10rebounds. order to beat the Mean Green&#13;
ksidecoachSteveStephens ' which only a tew teams have&#13;
the GreenBay game was a done thus far, Stephen' feels his&#13;
ballgame,"though both .squad must play very well and&#13;
started "a little tense, work on "controlling the back-&#13;
." Stephens credited "our board." In respect to this&#13;
ity" during the closing Stephens would like to get some&#13;
losas the difference in the help from Bill Sobanski and&#13;
result. . MarshalI Hill, both coming off&#13;
tinuingon the road, the ankle injuries.&#13;
erg walloped UW- One player in particular, 6'7"&#13;
ukee, 95-81, on Friday sophomore Fred Mitchell, will be&#13;
Mllwaukee, an NCAA a man to watch for by the&#13;
I team, also found Cole Rangers. He had hit 54 of 106&#13;
too muchto handle, as sbots at the time of this writing.&#13;
hit for 35and 26 points, Stephens thougbt he migbt&#13;
Joe Foots added 11 bave to "hide the ball in the&#13;
. bleachers," 'if::the'"Texans get&#13;
Parkslde Food Service Invites you to&#13;
PLAYIIIC&#13;
.. AUTHElTlC HOT&#13;
STUFF FIOM&#13;
THE28's"&#13;
SATURDAY,&#13;
IAIUm 31&#13;
9:38 P.M.&#13;
MAil PLACE&#13;
WIN A WINTERFEST&#13;
"NIGHT ON THE TOWN" FOR 2&#13;
~&#13;
i \ (worth 59.00 - 12 pair to be given away)&#13;
~ fOU CANItII&#13;
Two tickets to the UW-Parkside ys. Wayne State basketball game&#13;
TIl,,, ,/18, III, "111' ...&#13;
Two admissions to the Nightclub in Main Place ~~&#13;
featuring \llT~&#13;
.THE WOLVERINES JAZZ BAND&#13;
, fA III",ill/lIi, hI. " III, 10', , III,}&#13;
To . ,. I b of the 1ucky customers at the&#13;
Win simp y, e one h&#13;
Burger Sh h" paying for his or her purc ase&#13;
oppe W 0 IS ffl&#13;
w.hen the alarm clock goes 0 .&#13;
I&#13;
\&#13;
. ~OU'RE A WINNER •&#13;
Bet • Thurs Jan. 29 at the Burger Shoppe&#13;
Ween 11 :00 a.m. &amp; 2:00 p.m. on .,&#13;
in one week&#13;
~&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 28, 1976 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Cagers ~ontinue to win THE PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD INVITES YOU&#13;
TO TAKE A TRIP INTO THE PAST- ·&#13;
by 'fhom Aiello Stephens said he was . AT A NIGHTCLUB . s in one week. That is before the UWM a worried Parkside to play its&#13;
four winry of the Parkside whether or not hisg ml eb about basketball. In a pre-sea type of IN CELE BRA TIO OF IN I UR FEST&#13;
uJllllla t " • c u could 'd son press i s tb ll team's most recen stay on the boards with th gui e, NT's new head coach B'll&#13;
:¢1te :eating the College of St. (UWM)." But the Rangers em Blakeley, said, ''I hope som'ed~y&#13;
itkciS last Saturday, Jan. 17, 13-4 on the year, overcame' ~o~ we are good enough that an opfraJl&#13;
R ngers continued their height disadvantage by be. ell' ponent will have to score 95 points&#13;
s~e . a ways throughout the "little quicker" than UWMmg a to beat ~s ... " In its first nine&#13;
~g . - ~cause "everybody did the ·o~n~ games this year, winning eight of&#13;
,ee : ing a measure of revenge · including the players co . J 'f them, the Mean Green averaged&#13;
. G~onday, the cagers dealt the bench. mmg O f exactly ,95 points per game.&#13;
iaSI Illinois a 71-67 defeat Four wins in one ·w k Blakeley s hopes may well be&#13;
f.aS_let the scoring of Leartha cording to Stephens i:e · Ac- answered.&#13;
~~ 22 pts. and Stevie King, 16 healthy situation sine~ it gawastha The Rangers finally return to&#13;
ll-,,.., · '. · p th b t be h · ve e the home court th' Sa 'fbe visiting an ers ea nc some experience whil th . lS turday,&#13;
~\side last year, 79-72, ending wins aided the team's c~nfideencee · ~tm~ Wa~ne State University&#13;
~s-game winning streak for the "It pulled our kids together ,; S troit, Mich.) at 7:30 p.m. a Stephens said ' tephens called the Tartars a&#13;
Rallgers. · "ca bl " 1 Scott was the scorin~ leader T.he schedule doesn't get an pa e cub:&#13;
ain last Wednesday, as he easier for the Rangers as a-roa~ 1;he cagers will try to keep&#13;
Al&#13;
:mected on 13 of 24 field goals . game versus North Texas State :e~ perfect home record intact&#13;
andallsevenfree-throw·attempts another major college team . ' hgam next ~esday as they play&#13;
fit 33 points, while the Rangers next on the agenda. Game tun'e : OSt to Milton College ( 7: 30&#13;
,pieezedpast UW-Green Bay, 67- set for 7:30 p.m., Wed. p.m.).&#13;
ld issio i2.so - U - P Stud nts&#13;
s3.00 - Other&#13;
&amp;5. Gary Cole, troubled ~ith the · Stephens called the Mean&#13;
~sition's double-teammg and Green "one of the top Division I&#13;
f(Alis, still managed to net 18 teams," and said the running&#13;
points for P~kside. Cole also led club was "extremely. big." In&#13;
ooth sides with 10 rebounds. order to beat the Mean Green&#13;
Parkside coach Steve Stephens which only a tew teams hav;&#13;
said the Green Bay game was a done thus far, Stephen~ feels his&#13;
·good ballgame," though both .squad must play very well and&#13;
teamS started "a little tense, work on "controlling the backtight."&#13;
Stephens credited "our board." In respect to this&#13;
maturity" during the closing Stephens would like to get som;&#13;
minutes as the difference in the help from Bill Sobanski and&#13;
final result. Marshall Hill, both coming off&#13;
Omtinuing on the road, the ankle injuries.&#13;
Rangers walloped UW- One player in particular, 6'7"&#13;
llilwaukee, 95-81, on Friday sophomore Fred Mitchell, will be&#13;
night. Milwaukee, an NCAA a man to watch for by the&#13;
!XMon I team, also found Cole Rangers. He had hit 54 of 106&#13;
11d Scott too much to handle, as shots at the time of this writing.&#13;
Ille duo hit for 35 and 26 points, Stephens thought he might&#13;
'tfely. Joe Foots added 11 have to "hide the ball in the ~ bleachers:" ·u : the 1'exans get&#13;
(TIOET I UDES 0 T &amp; FOOD)&#13;
Parkside Food Service invites you to&#13;
WIN A WINTERFEST&#13;
"NIGHT ON THE TOW "FOR 2 ~ \ (worth ,.oo - 12 pair to be give a ay)&#13;
~ rou CAN WIN&#13;
Two tickets to the OW-Parkside vs. Wayne State basketball game&#13;
11,en ,11,, 11,e I'"''···&#13;
Two admissions to the Nightclub in Main Place ----~,&#13;
·.~. :::::-- featuring H iT-®!1~ ~~-·---~--~i~~&#13;
.THE WOLVERINES JAZZ BAND /&#13;
{A m,lliul lrip Nek lo II,, Zf/1 &amp; lff1)&#13;
To . \. I b ne of the 1ucky customers at the win s1mp y . e o h ··?&#13;
Burger Shoppe who is paying for his or her pure ase&#13;
when the alarm cloc~ goes off!&#13;
. 10U'RE A WINNER - Bet - Thurs Jan. 29 at the Burger Shoppe&#13;
Ween 11 :00 a.m. &amp; 2 :00 p.m. on ., &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RA GER wedMSday. Jan. 21. 197'&#13;
rtft I... aParblcI&lt;..-u..llld1&lt;s lliIa_L&#13;
a en upset Oshkosh;&#13;
e to o~!t!!~bs.~i~~~I~&#13;
Ridl K .... and gol wins by a freshman; and Hwt.,&#13;
td .ilb 00. second Freberg losl both 01 his malches.&#13;
.-allIu:lfl In his other malcb; Before gaining over o~ week's&#13;
W..- and Doag.Ao&lt;ftnlli. 167 absence lrom competition, the&#13;
IIId 117 • ~.eIy. boIb matmen will travel 10 Notre&#13;
'-d WIDand .... loss; 190 lbs., Dame this Saturday. The lour,&#13;
Gale \tn&gt; maldles b)' a IH l.eam meel will also include&#13;
11*110•ad\-anc his seasonal 'ebraska~ and Edinboro&#13;
record 10 I:N. an\y \tn&gt; wins stale. S\arting time IS I p.m.&#13;
Deiring champ&#13;
bY Carol AreIlIl&#13;
JoIm HeInlC lougbI his first boxing maid! January 19 in the Golden&#13;
GJovea -.wn&lt;nl beld al lbe Kenosha Eag1es Club. ot ooIy did he&#13;
wiD. bul be ..... also awarded a Inlpby lor best boxer of the evening.&#13;
HarulI. a ,4 graduate of Bradford High SCbooI, is currenUy a&#13;
Iresbmallal Parbide. H. started lraining in Seplanber, in a boxing&#13;
Ionned bere by Dr. RIck Pl&gt;mazal. psychology professor.&#13;
0nI' bruit. HeJt1l1g sIarted training with the firefighters&#13;
team 10Keaosba. Jolul Paul. a lrieodol his lather and a lonner fighter&#13;
&lt;amiDc:ed ~ 10 enter \he Eagles tournameot.&#13;
fIeino&amp; was prelt&gt; well battered up in \he secood of \be three&#13;
ramds, 10\he -.wn&lt;nt, but, be said. "It doesn't rea1ly hurt because&#13;
)'OU'" so psyched "l' about \he matcll. You start leeling it aftonoanls."&#13;
.-, leels tho malO thing tbat beIped him in the fight was his en,&#13;
dlInlDl:e. .. . ccad&gt;. Bobby JoIuuoo. said \be best thing 10do was nm.&#13;
Rulllwl&amp; beIps build .., endurance, and }'OUoeed a lot 01 it lor that&#13;
short time)'OG"" Ul the nag." Each bout is three-two-minute rounds.&#13;
TramiIl&amp; ISheld altho W~ Road fire station live nights a&#13;
......... A IypieaJ wo might include a warm-up, exercises, shadow&#13;
and rope. 0ceui00a1Iy. there will be sparring&#13;
.......accardJ"lI Ib olber club lIleD1bon of IlJlIlI'OXimateiy the same weight&#13;
10 RrInlC. '&#13;
'Ibe Dat 1IlIImameJ:lUorHeIJ'Ulg is \he stale Golden Gloves meet at&#13;
eo 1\ Tuesday. Feb. 2Il, and will nm three consecutive&#13;
n-la)'S.&#13;
fIeino&amp; II 01110 a good start with DOe win already under his belt, is&#13;
bopiIIc 10 do D Ul bos upcoming boul&#13;
That's right, Madar's men's_shophasa&#13;
1110%interest in the way you look.1IIer'&#13;
got the styles and sizes to makeYOi!all&#13;
dyn-o-mite. Check out the selection:-.&#13;
slacks, shirts, and leisure wear with ae&#13;
now, today look. For the big man,tall&#13;
man, or the guy who measuresup .,...&#13;
in between, it's Madars.&#13;
SOl4 7th..-. kenosha,wis..(414M7!6'J1&#13;
ft'NOf~FINE FOODS&#13;
" ~ &amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
. Northside 3728 Douglas&#13;
Southside 1816-16th St.&#13;
639·7115&#13;
*&#13;
634-1991&#13;
PICKUP OR ~&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS ~&#13;
DELI ....ERED TO YOUR HOME&#13;
\!rbe&#13;
1Lantern&#13;
J[ounge&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
NEW DISC JOCKEY&#13;
Dyno Doug&#13;
PLAYING HITS FROM THE&#13;
505,605 &amp; 70s&#13;
Tue.,Wed.,Fri.&amp; Sat.&#13;
HOURS: 3 p.m. to 1a.m. 4917- 7th Ave&#13;
~IJ? University of Wiseonsin-Part&lt;sii ~rr .' SPRING BIEAI •&#13;
1Jl®Ni&lt;0&#13;
APRIL 16 - 24&#13;
$389 Pro::&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
• Round trip jet air tI1I&#13;
• 1 nights lo~gilg al ..&#13;
First-Class LOI~DIpllb&#13;
• Continental breakfast ""&#13;
a Tour escort throlgblll&#13;
a Ground transfers il L....&#13;
• All tips &amp; tues II -&#13;
II Limited space - sigo up todaY!&#13;
CAMPUS TRAVEL CENTER WLLC 0-191&#13;
GER ednesda , Jan. 21, 1976 ---&#13;
t Oshkosh;&#13;
g cha1np&#13;
1&#13;
That's right, Madar's men's_ shop has a&#13;
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CAMPUS TRAVEL CENTER WLLC 0-197 §SJ-</text>
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