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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 4, issue 21</text>
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            <text>Accounting students misled</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>The Parkside&#13;
Racine transit&#13;
in question&#13;
Vol. IV. No. 21 February 25, 1976&#13;
Accounting students misled&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
"Parkside students who are&#13;
majoring in Business and&#13;
specializing in accounting have&#13;
been misled in the past and are&#13;
being misled now," so says&#13;
Mahesh Jain, Assistant&#13;
professor in Business&#13;
Management.&#13;
"Students who started here&#13;
three or four years ago were told&#13;
that Parkside would do all it&#13;
could to develop a Business&#13;
program that would allow them&#13;
to qualify to sit for the CPA exam&#13;
in Wisconsin, and that project has&#13;
not been undertaken effectively."&#13;
Jain said that he came from&#13;
North Carolina A&amp;T where he&#13;
straightened out their accounting&#13;
program and got them accredited.&#13;
He was hired last year&#13;
to do the same thing at Parkside.&#13;
"So far, however, I haven't been&#13;
able to do that job because the&#13;
faculty here have not asked me&#13;
for input into critical areas such&#13;
as curriculum and hiring of&#13;
competent faculty."&#13;
For the record, Parkside accounting&#13;
students, as of n ow, are&#13;
not qualified to sit for the&#13;
Wisconsin CPA exam even&#13;
though they have graduated as a&#13;
Business major. Only graduates&#13;
from five schools in Wisconsin&#13;
have that right: UW-Whitewater,&#13;
Mahesh Jain&#13;
Oshkosh, Milwaukee, Eau Claire&#13;
and the main campus at Madison.&#13;
This means that a Parkside&#13;
student has to either go out of&#13;
state or transfer to one of those&#13;
schools to obtain their&#13;
qualifications. This has proven to&#13;
be an inconvenience to most&#13;
Parkside students.&#13;
Jain said, "The main stumbling&#13;
block here at UW-P'is the&#13;
(Business) faculty. They aren't&#13;
qualified and the state recognizes&#13;
this. I teach an advanced accounting&#13;
course but I wind up&#13;
teaching the basics all over again&#13;
because the previous teacher&#13;
hasn't prepared the student."&#13;
Jain worked with students to&#13;
help form the Accounting club. It&#13;
is made up of UW-P Business&#13;
students with Harold Seidel as&#13;
president.&#13;
When asked his feelings on the&#13;
UW-P dilemma Seidel stated, "I&#13;
think in the beginning the main&#13;
problem was that faculty didn't&#13;
do the job in getting information&#13;
to the student. You can't really&#13;
say they misled us, but they&#13;
certainly didn't make sure that&#13;
UW-P students knew what they&#13;
were getting into. The reason&#13;
students are not being taught the&#13;
basics is that the classes simply&#13;
don't have accounting students in&#13;
them, but students from all areas&#13;
of business. The teachers have to&#13;
dilute the material so that&#13;
students can handle it." "The&#13;
plain fact about this problem is&#13;
that most freshmen and&#13;
sophomore students weren't even&#13;
aware of it although they are&#13;
becoming aware of it now."&#13;
Seidel also supported Jain's&#13;
contention that Business faculty&#13;
at Parkside are not up to par.&#13;
"We have only two PhD holders&#13;
on the faculty here and the state&#13;
knows it."&#13;
According to Seidel, the future&#13;
looks a little brighter because of&#13;
the Accounting Club and Chancellor&#13;
Guskin's forming of a&#13;
special task force headed by&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
by Carol Arentz&#13;
Bus service provided for&#13;
Racine students by the Vets Club&#13;
will be coming to an end this&#13;
year, due to financial problems.&#13;
Low ridership and high costs&#13;
are the biggest problems facing&#13;
the service, but some alternatives&#13;
have been proposed.&#13;
According to Jewel&#13;
Echelbarger, Associate Dean of&#13;
Students, the main things to&#13;
consider are convenience,&#13;
reliability and price. The current&#13;
system has seven runs a day up to&#13;
Parkside. The bus, a yellow&#13;
Jelco, is constantly in motion,&#13;
covering a route close to where it&#13;
can serve the bulk of students.&#13;
This means that some people&#13;
have to ride for a considerable&#13;
amount of time before they reach&#13;
campus. Because of this, the bus&#13;
doesn't reach campus every&#13;
hour, and it comes at a different&#13;
part of the hour each time it does&#13;
arrive. Most students would&#13;
rather drive than ride so long or&#13;
pay the 75 cent fare, so consequently,&#13;
only about 40-50 people&#13;
ride the bus each day. In order to&#13;
break even, about 300 riders a&#13;
day are needed.&#13;
"A bus from Racine would help&#13;
not only students, but the senior&#13;
citizens as well, They have&#13;
helped to pay for the University,&#13;
and should be able to enjoy its&#13;
benefits, such as auditing&#13;
classes, attending concerts, and&#13;
using the library," said Ms.&#13;
Echelbarger. "So far, the city of&#13;
Racine has expressed an interest&#13;
in taking over the route."&#13;
Racine is currently re-routing&#13;
their system and would like to&#13;
include Parkside, but they refuse&#13;
to take a loss on the operation.&#13;
They have appealed to the&#13;
University for a subsidy, and the&#13;
matter was turned over to the&#13;
Segregated Fees Allocation&#13;
Committee. •&#13;
"We wouldn't subsidize the&#13;
system per se, but would pick up&#13;
the deficit instead," stated&#13;
Segregated Fees committee&#13;
member Warren Dagenbach.&#13;
"The money would not come&#13;
from Seg Fees itself.&#13;
"What has been proposed is to&#13;
use a portion of the funds from&#13;
faculty-staff parking fees. This&#13;
"money currently goes into a&#13;
"transportation fund" used for&#13;
lot security, etc."&#13;
The rest of parking permit&#13;
money is a "user" fee, paying for&#13;
maintenance of the lots. Shuttle&#13;
service is paid out of Seg Fees.&#13;
Kenosha has been running a&#13;
bus to Parkside the past year and&#13;
a half. At first, ridership was&#13;
discouraging, but since the&#13;
present routes were implemented&#13;
last August, ridership .increased&#13;
to two or three times as many&#13;
passengers over a year ago.&#13;
Part of Kenosha Transit's&#13;
annual losses come from the&#13;
extra 1V4 mi les it takes to get to&#13;
Parkside, but transportation&#13;
director Ed Jenkins thinks it's&#13;
worth it. He also feels that it is&#13;
reasonable for Racine to request&#13;
the subsidy. "They have to come&#13;
further out of t heir way, at least&#13;
six or seven miles. This can be&#13;
costly, and it's only fair for them&#13;
to ask for assistance."&#13;
What will be the fate of Racine&#13;
mass transit to Parkside? Will&#13;
students be willing to take advantage&#13;
of a bus system if it&#13;
offers convenience and reliability&#13;
at a low price? If Racine can&#13;
come up with such a system, it&#13;
would be well worth the try.&#13;
Segregated fees disputed&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Editor's Note: On Thursday/ February 12# the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board (PAB) disputed an $8/000 budget cut&#13;
proposed by the Segregated Fees Committee for the&#13;
l976-'77 school year. The following are interviews which&#13;
represent the two conflicting points of view on this issue,&#13;
by Diane Carlson&#13;
Tony Totero, PAB Staff&#13;
Coordinator, feels that the budget&#13;
cut will preclude the chance of&#13;
having a balanced, well-rounded&#13;
program for the coming year.&#13;
The budget proposed by the&#13;
Seg. Fees Committee allows PAB&#13;
to continue all their other activities&#13;
(mini concerts, video,&#13;
movies), if they completely&#13;
eliminate the big name entertainment.&#13;
PAB, in their&#13;
budget submitted to the committee,&#13;
had planned to have three&#13;
concerts for the year which fell&#13;
into this catagory. Totero stated&#13;
he feels that by doing this the Seg.&#13;
Fees committee "Is making a&#13;
decision as to what the students&#13;
on the campus do and do not want&#13;
in the way of entertainment. In&#13;
doing so, they are making a value&#13;
judgement."&#13;
In response to the argument&#13;
that PAB is losing too much&#13;
money on their activities,&#13;
especially contemporary entertainment,&#13;
Totero said, "We&#13;
are here to offer a service, not&#13;
make money. We operate on the&#13;
premise that most college&#13;
students are pretty poor and&#13;
couldn't afford to attend these&#13;
concerts if they weren't subsidized."&#13;
When PAB submitted their&#13;
proposed budget, Totero said, the&#13;
sxpense figures were estimated&#13;
figures, and the amount of money&#13;
requested for any one area might&#13;
vary one way or the other. When&#13;
an excess occurred in one area, it&#13;
could be used in another. This&#13;
flexibility, he felt, was necessary,&#13;
because "We can't depend on the&#13;
money and what's going to&#13;
happen next year, especially with&#13;
a new building (the Union)&#13;
opening." He said that when the&#13;
revised budget was figured, the&#13;
original figures submitted to the&#13;
committee were taken as stable&#13;
operating figures rather than&#13;
estimates.&#13;
Totero said he feels that&#13;
students at Parkside should be&#13;
able to expect the services offered&#13;
by PAB, because "things&#13;
like this (big name concerts)&#13;
happen on every college campus,&#13;
and students should have the&#13;
same opportunities as on other&#13;
campuses. Even if the cut is&#13;
finalized, we won't completely&#13;
cut the contemporary entertainment.&#13;
To have a balanced&#13;
program we need some of&#13;
everything."&#13;
Seg. Fees Committee&#13;
Kai Nail&#13;
The budget cut was proposed&#13;
by Segregated Fee Committee&#13;
member Kai Nail, who feels that&#13;
the money allocated for big name&#13;
"contemporary" entertainment&#13;
is money that could be better&#13;
spent on other programs.&#13;
Nail said that if the committee's&#13;
recommendations were&#13;
followed, all that would have to&#13;
be cut were the three planned&#13;
major concerts for the year.&#13;
"We're losing $2,000 a year on&#13;
three big name concerts. This&#13;
includes the money lost renting&#13;
the facilities (the gym), for the&#13;
services needed to run the concert,&#13;
and for the cost of the entertainment&#13;
itself."&#13;
If PAB were to follow the&#13;
proposed suggestion of the&#13;
Committee to cut the contemporary&#13;
entertainment, Nail&#13;
feels that none of the other&#13;
programs would have to be cut.&#13;
"For instance, PAB doesn't loose&#13;
any money on movies - they&#13;
break even. So, from my standpoint,&#13;
they could have as many as&#13;
they wanted without losing&#13;
money."&#13;
The proposed cut would include&#13;
a cut in fixed operating expenses&#13;
as well as the cut in contemporary&#13;
entertainment.&#13;
Since there are several&#13;
progress that don't take in any *&#13;
revenue (the coffeehouse, video),&#13;
and some that lose money in&#13;
spite of their revenue (contemporary&#13;
entertainment, mini&#13;
concerts), the PAB is operated on&#13;
a cash-flow basis, and the money&#13;
made at a concert can be used to&#13;
fund additional programs. Nail&#13;
proposed a change in the&#13;
budgeting procedures, and said&#13;
that with the proposed cut, a kind&#13;
of "floating" system should be&#13;
established where the PAB was&#13;
credited with program revenue,&#13;
which was then used as the year&#13;
progressed. He said that this plan&#13;
is more feasible, and that&#13;
"budget people tell me it can&#13;
work."&#13;
Although Nail originally&#13;
proposed on $8,000 c ut "because&#13;
we wanted to convince them of&#13;
the seriousness of the decision,"&#13;
he said he will propose a $6,000&#13;
cut at the Tuesday, February 24&#13;
meeting, instead. This meeting is&#13;
to revise the proposed program&#13;
budgets.&#13;
Nail said, "I may have to agree&#13;
with the fact that big name encontinued&#13;
on page 3&#13;
2 THE P ARKSIDE RA NGER Feb . 25, 1 976&#13;
K The Parkside&#13;
EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
Basic skills beneficial&#13;
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special courses until they reach an acceptable level of&#13;
fortunate that this burden has fallen on t he shoulders of&#13;
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process, and better it be done here rather than at the&#13;
•" -• ' ' ' • ": ' f ' Tf-pose. quite a few&#13;
';":|^.":::l'"'I : If'I-'- if :i' / v&#13;
to improve the quality of education at Parkside, it seems&#13;
raising admission standards. This denies some the&#13;
skills requirement&#13;
principle, but there are many questions (eft open as to&#13;
:: -•. .• • ' i.- :. .&#13;
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their responsibility/ Ranger feels that Parkside's&#13;
willingness to take on such a task should be highly&#13;
commended.&#13;
Point of view&#13;
Give us this day our daily breadth&#13;
by Mick Anderson&#13;
Any complex and venturesome man who a ttempts to plan change&#13;
and institute new standards runs the risk of a ppearing to the many&#13;
clamoring for favor not the multi-facted, profound purveyor of a&#13;
higher reality and order, but rather many one-dimensional characters&#13;
mirroring whatever attitude is being advanced at the moment.&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin, who came to Parkside less than six months&#13;
ago with the view of bridging what appears to be an ever-widening gap&#13;
"between a high-quality liberal arts education and the world of work,"&#13;
has been a disappointment to many who had great expectations of&#13;
quality education through integration with the surrounding community.&#13;
Alas and alack, it seems that the price of a thoroughfare to the&#13;
world of work i s the ultimate ransoming of the educational structure&#13;
that has come to represent our tools and dtir aspirations, our hope and&#13;
our lives. Education through integration is in danger of becoming&#13;
education by constriction.&#13;
One can argue that this is a bit of a bad rap on the Chancellor. It can&#13;
be argued that it is not Dr. Guskin's fault that the Committee of&#13;
Principals (COP) has chosen to accuse the student population of&#13;
mediocrity in the first degree, ignorant until proven guilty. However&#13;
UQEUGB&#13;
plausible, this view seems to me rather shallow and naive. Rather it&#13;
appears that Chancellor Guskin's experiment in the greening of&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin is dependent on the aquiescence of a faculty&#13;
insecure about its future role, and dependent too, on division heads&#13;
who see in this confusion an opportunity to shore up their uncertain&#13;
empires.&#13;
That the Chancellor believes that it is time for the acadmeic community&#13;
to involve itself in a meaningful way with the surrounding area&#13;
is surely commendable. What is less laudable is a persistent feeling&#13;
that the price of involvement includes some hidden cost that students&#13;
are just beginning to comprehend, such as a loss of academic freedom&#13;
of choice. And lest the faculty feel too smug, when will they wake up to&#13;
the possibility that just maybe their frustration is being used to cause&#13;
change that is neither debatable nor reversible? Students, it seems&#13;
are not the only pawns in the game.&#13;
The view that student government should spearhead the challenge&#13;
to-toe COP's recommendations is at best ill-advised. As it stands now,&#13;
PSGA s vice president, Kai Nail, has yet to charge his vaunted student&#13;
committees with their ostensible mission of reviewing the planned&#13;
changes. But as Norman Mailer once said, committees do not create&#13;
they proliferate. Even if Nail's committees bring back recomcontlnued&#13;
o n p age 3&#13;
Letters to the editor are welcome. Contributions of up&#13;
to 250 words are due by Thursday of each week. The,&#13;
Ranger editorial staff shall reserve the right to edit!&#13;
for length and correct spelling.&#13;
UWP guns defended&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This is a reply to the letter to&#13;
the editor in last week's Ranger,&#13;
entitled "UWP Guns Shock&#13;
Masked Writer".&#13;
In my four years as a student at&#13;
this university, I've discovered&#13;
information about the Campus&#13;
Security Department. The&#13;
following is an attempt to convey&#13;
the facts rather than just a bunch&#13;
of heresy as the author of the&#13;
editorial repeated.&#13;
The author falsely assumed&#13;
that the entire Security Department&#13;
is composed of Security&#13;
Guards; that is false. The&#13;
Security Department is divided&#13;
up into police officers and&#13;
security officers.&#13;
His second error: to my&#13;
knowledge absolutely no security&#13;
officers carry guns. Security&#13;
officers are those who walk&#13;
through the academic complex.&#13;
The author said he knew a couple&#13;
security guards who carried&#13;
guns; none do. The officers who&#13;
carry the guns are state certified&#13;
police officers and have had&#13;
police training.&#13;
A third point of disagreement is&#13;
the fact that the author suggests&#13;
that Security notify Kenosha&#13;
Police Dept. on their walkie&#13;
talkies in case of an emergency.&#13;
The Kenosha Police" Department&#13;
has no jurisdiction in Kenosha&#13;
County-the people to be notified&#13;
would be the Kenosha Sheriff's&#13;
Dept. Furthermore the walkietalkies&#13;
carried are only for&#13;
campus use and as far as I know&#13;
are not connected with any other&#13;
law enforcement agency.&#13;
If the situation arose when&#13;
there was a need for the Sheriff's&#13;
Dept. armed deputies, I would&#13;
really hate to be the officer for&#13;
Security who is trying to apprehend&#13;
an armed suspect using&#13;
only a night stick for defense, as&#13;
the author suggests. If you don't&#13;
believe that police officers should&#13;
be armed than you also should&#13;
not expect them to stop or&#13;
question any suspects involved in&#13;
criminal acts (even if it is your&#13;
tape deck or CB radio which was&#13;
ripped off).&#13;
If you still believe police officers&#13;
should be unarmed and&#13;
that the Security Department&#13;
should call the Kenosha Sheriff's&#13;
Dept.-I would venture to suggest&#13;
that by the time the Sheriff's&#13;
Dept. arrived the suspects would&#13;
be long gone and the crime&#13;
committed. (For I hear the&#13;
Sheriff's Dept. is also short on&#13;
personnel).&#13;
It is my opinion t^at a lot more&#13;
damage can be done by the use of&#13;
a night stick than was done by the&#13;
firing of one single warning shot&#13;
#on Officer Augustine's part.&#13;
Before you start blowing your&#13;
stack, I suggest you get the facts&#13;
straight. It is apparent that the&#13;
author of t hat letter has not been&#13;
ripped-off like a lot of my friends&#13;
here on campus.&#13;
Tom Chiapete&#13;
Senior&#13;
Vets protest&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
The Parkside Vets Club is&#13;
opposing the closing of the&#13;
Communication Arts parking lot&#13;
on Thursday, Feb. 26 after 4 p.m.&#13;
We feel this action is a rip-off to&#13;
all students and faculty who paid&#13;
for the right to use this lot.&#13;
Jeffrey J. Swencki&#13;
Sgt. at Arms UW-P Vets Club&#13;
Parking lot closed&#13;
Due to the Eugene Fodor&#13;
concert and the WICA playoffs&#13;
occurring on campus on the night&#13;
of the 26th of February, the&#13;
Communication Arts parking lot&#13;
will be closed to entering&#13;
vehicles, according to assistant&#13;
chancellor for administration&#13;
Erwin Zuehlke.&#13;
Zuehlke stated in a memo&#13;
mailed to faculty and staff last&#13;
week that Parkside will have&#13;
about 3,000 ad ditional people on&#13;
campus that evening, attending&#13;
the concert and basketball&#13;
games.&#13;
The intent is to provide some&#13;
close-in parking for the many&#13;
community residents who&#13;
regularly support Parkside&#13;
programs and activities; as it is,&#13;
most of the people attending the&#13;
game will have to park in the&#13;
Tallent or East lots and ride up&#13;
the hill on shuttle buses.&#13;
Additional shuttles will be&#13;
running for students inconvienced&#13;
by the closing of the&#13;
Comm. Arts lot.&#13;
According to Zuehlke, anyone&#13;
may park in the lot prior to 4 p.m.&#13;
or after 7:15.&#13;
Accounting club&#13;
Students interested in joining&#13;
the Accounting Club can attend&#13;
the next meeting on February 26&#13;
at 5 in CL 326.&#13;
Accounting&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
Surinder Datta, associate&#13;
professor of Life Science to study&#13;
this problem.&#13;
On March 1 ag roup of students,&#13;
faculty will journev to Madison&#13;
for a joint Senate-Assembly&#13;
hearing' on Wisconsin CPA&#13;
requirements. Jain will be in this&#13;
group as well as Seidel.&#13;
Until then Jain says "To place&#13;
blame on individuals now is&#13;
foolish, we must work together to&#13;
solve this problem, Chancellor&#13;
Guskin has stated that he will do&#13;
everything in his power to rectify&#13;
this situation. We must do&#13;
something, not just for the&#13;
faculty, but for the students."&#13;
Wednesday, February 25&#13;
Skellar: Tryouts-11:30-1:30, Sign-up at info Kiosk.&#13;
Thursday, February 26&#13;
Concert: Violinist Eugene Fodor accompanied by Stephen Swedish at&#13;
the piano. Tickets on sale at the Info Kiosk for $3.50 for students, $5 00&#13;
for general public.&#13;
Meeting: Psychology Club, 1:00 p.m., CL213.&#13;
Friday, February 27&#13;
Basketball: WISAA Region 8 High Schools at 7 p.m. and 8:45 p m in&#13;
the P.E. Bldg.&#13;
Sunday, February 29&#13;
Basketball: WISAA Region 8 High School finals at 2 p.m. in the P E&#13;
Bldg.&#13;
Monday, March 1&#13;
Informational meeting: Students enrolled in the Learning Disabilities&#13;
program meeting at 6 p.m. in CA D107. New students interested in&#13;
enrolling in hte program will meet at 6:30p .m.&#13;
Point of view&#13;
continued from page 2&#13;
mendations sometime this side of Christmas, all may be for naught&#13;
anyway. Nail has allowed how these reports would be made to him&#13;
personally, rather than to PSGA as a whole. Apparently the rest of us-,&#13;
students, senators included, will be left relying on information heavily&#13;
influenced by the Gospel according to Kai.-&#13;
So the central issue remains: Is community involvement being&#13;
purchased at the price of academic subordination by a faculty scared&#13;
witless, and if so, does the chancellor really believe that out of this&#13;
"creative confusion" there will be a distillation of a higher academic&#13;
order?&#13;
And to this year's graduating seniors who maintain that this is not&#13;
their fight, think what COP is essentially saying to the surrounding&#13;
community be denigrating the present standards for graduating from&#13;
Parkside. Your forthcoming degree, not unlike the dollar, is being&#13;
devalued by people who already have jobs, good state jobs - and that&#13;
diploma, maybe its only currency you've got.&#13;
'%( cPhone 414-654-3578&#13;
? \ 5010 - 7th Avenue&#13;
Albums&#13;
&amp;Topes&#13;
GKenosha.GWisconsin Jewelry&#13;
Incense&#13;
"&gt; Oil Lamps Tapestries&#13;
Leather Goods&#13;
Albums, Tapes...&#13;
A great selection of albums, topes,&#13;
and casettes including on outstanding&#13;
selection of Imported Albums,&#13;
plus first hand availability of new&#13;
releases. All New Release L.P.'s ore&#13;
$4.49. Topes $5.40.&#13;
Gift Certificates Available&#13;
unique gifts fon everyone&#13;
Placement&#13;
announces&#13;
interviews&#13;
The Office of Career Planning&#13;
and Placement announced the&#13;
first on-campus interviews of th e&#13;
spring semester.&#13;
On Thursday, February 26, the&#13;
Department of Social Security&#13;
will be on campus to talk to all&#13;
majors regarding employment.&#13;
The Rexnord Corporation will&#13;
be interviewing majors in&#13;
c h e m i s t r y , b u s i n e s s&#13;
management (with a year of&#13;
chemistry) and labor economics&#13;
(also with a year of chemistry)&#13;
on March 2, 1976.&#13;
AST majors will be interviewed&#13;
on March 5, 1976 by the Modine&#13;
Manufacturing Company. The&#13;
Placement office asks that all&#13;
interested have their placement&#13;
files completed prior to the&#13;
signup for interviews.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Feb. 25, 1976 3&#13;
Seg. fee opinions&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
tertainment is important to&#13;
campus life. We're making the&#13;
decision that we don't want this&#13;
big name entertainment, or are&#13;
going to have to make the choice&#13;
of cutting something else to buy&#13;
it. There are so many areas&#13;
where not much money is spent&#13;
at all. PAB is not necessarily&#13;
more important than those ares." r&#13;
t&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
presents&#13;
Eugene Fodor, v iolinist&#13;
( Winner in the 1974 Moscow&#13;
Tchaikowsky Competition)&#13;
with&#13;
Stephen Swedish, pianist&#13;
All seats reserved&#13;
8 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 26&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre&#13;
Tickets at: UW-P Information Center&#13;
Adm: UW-P Students *3.50; Others *5.00&#13;
COLLEGE CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE&#13;
Needed to sell Brand Name Stereo Components&#13;
to Students at lowest prices. Hi Commission, NO&#13;
Investment required. Serious Inquiries ONLY!&#13;
FAD COMPONENTS, INC.&#13;
20 Passaic Ave., Fairfield, New Jersey 07006&#13;
JERRY DIAMOND 201-227-6814&#13;
AMERICAN&#13;
STATE BANK&#13;
3928 - 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
Bonanza&#13;
Free with this coupon&#13;
a bottle of beer&#13;
with any steak dinner&#13;
3315 52 St., Kenosha&#13;
LIVE ROCK MUSIC EVERY FRIDAY!!!&#13;
in the&#13;
Great L akes Room&#13;
Back for a second&#13;
'smash' week.&#13;
PEGASUS&#13;
Foosball Table s .&#13;
Drinking and Dancing&#13;
Doors Op en 7:0 0&#13;
Music s tarts 8:30&#13;
•1.00 Cover&#13;
*422^ 633-3551 6th at Main&#13;
• RACINE&#13;
^jVIOTOR INN&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Feb. 25, 1976&#13;
Two Irish Poets&#13;
JAMES LIDDY&#13;
&amp;&#13;
MICHAEL HARNETT&#13;
will present a reading&#13;
Thursday, March 4.8 p.m.&#13;
2nd floor overlook lounge&#13;
UW-P Library&#13;
v i&#13;
a s&#13;
g e&#13;
I Don't Understand&#13;
Why do people do it?&#13;
Why do they treat their lives&#13;
like the garbage they carry out&#13;
Everyday-&#13;
Can't they see?&#13;
Can't they see the sacredness—&#13;
I can,&#13;
you can,&#13;
he's starting to,&#13;
why can't they see&#13;
the world as it is&#13;
and like it—&#13;
Sometimes I don't understand,&#13;
are they trying to live&#13;
or just bring death&#13;
a little closer—&#13;
Michael Nepper&#13;
J1—1——&#13;
Frampton comes alive"&#13;
by Terry A. Maraccini&#13;
It can be said that rock music's greatest assest is its ability to express&#13;
a wide spectrum of emotions. Elvis was the release for the&#13;
generation of the late 1950's. The Beatles were the symbols of the&#13;
urgent 1960's. But here in the 1970's we are faced with stagnation. The&#13;
uproar over Bruce Springsteen has largely been a media blitz. His&#13;
meandering compositions seem to be notable for their form rather&#13;
than for any substance; surely they do not represent the revitalization&#13;
of ro ck music.&#13;
Rock music has always been best appreciated in performance. The&#13;
studio often seems to limit a performer's ability to express the absolute&#13;
joy that rock music is. Previous live albums usually have been&#13;
disastrous. The only possible exception to this is The Band's brilliant&#13;
Rock of Ages a few years back. Live rock music has never been able to&#13;
excape from the predicament that ensues when the performance is&#13;
transferred from the stage to vinyl.&#13;
That is till now. 1976 greets us with Peter Frampton's Frampton&#13;
Comes Alive (A&amp;M), and to me it is rock's best advertisement that it&#13;
did not die a horrible death on Highway 61 not so many years ago.&#13;
Frampton's live effort is rock music the way rock was meant to be.&#13;
Culled from performances recorded on tour in 1975, Frampton shows&#13;
at the age of 25 a remarkable maturity which graces the performances&#13;
contained herein.&#13;
What makes this album so special is easy to explain. Frampton&#13;
reallv enjoys making his music. And it s hows clearly throughout the&#13;
two-record set. His guitar playing is brilliant; just the right;&#13;
combination of frenzy and control. He relies on a set of dynamics that&#13;
keep you on t he edge of yo ur seat throughout all four sides of this&#13;
record.&#13;
The album begins with "Somethin's Happening" the title track from&#13;
his third album. It, and the other selections on the album are marked&#13;
improvements over the studio versions of all the songs here. Bob&#13;
Mayo's piano playing is especially noteworthy for its drive and intensity,&#13;
and in many ways sounds much like Nicky Hopkins' work on&#13;
some of the Rolling Stones best efforts.&#13;
Frampton's version of "Jumping Jack Flash", slowed down here, is&#13;
even better than the Stones' classic rock statement. The version of his&#13;
own "Show Me t he Way" (which received a moderate amount of AM&#13;
airplay last autumn) is much more accessible here, with Frampton's&#13;
guitar teasing and toying as his flawless phrasing leaves you&#13;
breathless and waiting for more.&#13;
Frampton's compositions are showcased here, and they all&#13;
represent his ability to write beautiful words and music that are not&#13;
only vehicles for his fluid guitar excursions, but also at times haunting&#13;
and poetic. His "Baby I Love Your Way" and the melancholy "Lines&#13;
on My Face" are sensitive and fragile statements. The latter&#13;
highlights Frampton's delicate and melodic guitar in an ethereal solo&#13;
that might be missed the first time you play this record. So, play this&#13;
cut twice.&#13;
But what sets this collection off from all others is the sense of joy&#13;
which shines throughout. The promotion which has followed the&#13;
release of this album describes it as Frampton in his natural habitat,&#13;
the stage. Never has rock sounded more alive. Every note rings with&#13;
Frampton's genuine devotion to the music that he so joyously sets&#13;
forth.&#13;
This album has rekindled my faith in good ol rock n ' roll. It shines&#13;
like a beacon through the morass of hypes and promoters' wet dream&#13;
and tells us that Peter Frampton has arrived. And not a moment too&#13;
soon!&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of t he Submarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
2615 Washington /We. 634-2575&#13;
H E I L E M A m „ Pure Brewed&#13;
|J From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at the Skellar&#13;
Lovers (one on top)&#13;
Two peo ples.&#13;
Lovers (one on top).&#13;
Doctor, lawyers,&#13;
police chiefs apprehend,&#13;
the best of one .&#13;
Vagabond chieftains,&#13;
hustlers, the fast movers,&#13;
the brightest of the other.&#13;
Like opposing armies&#13;
in c lose quarters,&#13;
street to street&#13;
in so ul-slack slumsa&#13;
folk wisdom&#13;
takes two turns:&#13;
validating victors;&#13;
the bittersweet wine&#13;
of a reality beyond numbing.&#13;
Borne in the alcoholic mist&#13;
wisdom comes crying&#13;
out, you hear it&#13;
in the voices on the street...&#13;
an unremembered proverb&#13;
from a charmin-sheeted bible&#13;
those on top are pained,&#13;
a r e s t r a i n e d ,&#13;
to remember.&#13;
Right and wrong...&#13;
jingoism&#13;
for a war&#13;
distant from,&#13;
not among the dead&#13;
and dying&#13;
in smoldering streets.&#13;
Mick Andersen&#13;
"these thoughts are dedicated to the Supreme Being&#13;
and His creation; for without You I lack entity."&#13;
GENESIS&#13;
there exists only a beginning,&#13;
Conclusive reflections are not plausible&#13;
Due t o intellectual evolution,&#13;
If you find this to be a falsehood;&#13;
It is you I am composing for....&#13;
Thomas S. Heinz&#13;
War Child&#13;
A ch ild's war&#13;
is&#13;
just a game&#13;
When it's all over&#13;
nothing's ever&#13;
the same&#13;
The young trees&#13;
have been shot&#13;
and&#13;
the flowers&#13;
all burned&#13;
with&#13;
nothing left&#13;
for the&#13;
children&#13;
to&#13;
learn&#13;
Lori Beinke 1975&#13;
Listen&#13;
wordlessly to me&#13;
shh!&#13;
Gently&#13;
watch my parted lips&#13;
tremble&#13;
Slowly&#13;
feel my cheek&#13;
glisten&#13;
Quietly&#13;
know these tears&#13;
are love&#13;
D.E.C.&#13;
Today is just a drop of rain,&#13;
falling softly on my heart-&#13;
Tomorrow will bring flowers &amp; sunshine&#13;
to light the path we'll start.&#13;
Together down the road&#13;
we'll see and feel the world&#13;
that love brings to us.&#13;
Our hearts have touched, together,&#13;
hands....&#13;
Jerry Pate&#13;
BOOGIE DOWN&#13;
with the&#13;
LIVE SOUNDS&#13;
° This Week Featuring...&#13;
ijjQSSQCj&#13;
WED., THURS., FRI., SAT., SUN.&#13;
THURS. NITE - LADIES NITE (No cover for ladies)&#13;
COVER: WED., THURS., SUN. 50c FRI. &amp; SAT. $1.00&#13;
1146 SherUdaK fed., TC&amp;tte&amp;a,&#13;
COCKTAILS QUIET&#13;
24th and 25th on 60th St. Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
OINO'S Northside 3728 D ouglas&#13;
639-7115&#13;
Southside 18 16-16th S t&#13;
634-1991&#13;
PICK UP OR&#13;
PIPING HOT POODS&#13;
DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME&#13;
FINE F OODS&#13;
&amp; C OCKTAILS&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEAFOOD&#13;
CHOPS&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
LASAGA&amp;A&#13;
RAVIOLI&#13;
MOSTACCIOLI&#13;
GNOCCHI&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT DRINKS&#13;
WINES&#13;
Fodor to perform&#13;
THE PAR KSIDE RAN GER F e b . 25, 1976 5&#13;
Violinist Eugene Fodor, winner&#13;
in the 1974 Moscow Tchaikowsky&#13;
Competition, will appear in&#13;
recital with pianist Stephen&#13;
Swedish at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 26, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
The program is part of&#13;
Parkside's "Accent on Enrichment"&#13;
series.&#13;
Admission is $5 for the public&#13;
and $3.50 fo r Parkside students.&#13;
All seats are reserved. Public&#13;
tickets are available at the&#13;
Parkside Information Center in&#13;
Main Place of Wyllie Library-&#13;
Learning Center, Sears in&#13;
Kenosha and Team Electronics,&#13;
Elmwood Plaza, Racine. Student&#13;
tickets are available only on&#13;
campus.&#13;
Fodor came to international&#13;
fame in July, 1974, when he tied&#13;
for top prize in the Moscow&#13;
competition and was hailed by&#13;
the Russians as the best&#13;
American musician since Van&#13;
Cliburn.&#13;
In 1967 he won the&#13;
Merriweather Post Competition&#13;
in Washington, D.C. In 1972 he&#13;
won the International Paganini&#13;
Competition in Genoa, Italy, the&#13;
first American in 21 years to win&#13;
top prize there. That same year&#13;
he gave recitals in London,&#13;
Vienna, and Budapest and toured&#13;
throughout Poland and Central&#13;
America.&#13;
It was at the Paganini Competition&#13;
that a Soviet violinist&#13;
suggested to Fodor that he enter&#13;
the Russian contest. For some&#13;
mysterious reason the 19 judges&#13;
for the 1974 T chaikowsky Competition&#13;
withheld first prize and&#13;
gave three second prizes - to&#13;
Fodor and two Soviet violinists.&#13;
Reports from Moscow, however,&#13;
say that many in the capacity&#13;
Russian audience felt the 25-yearold&#13;
American should have had&#13;
the gold medal and that he was&#13;
the only one of th e trio to receive&#13;
a standing ovation.&#13;
The White House cabled;&#13;
concert and recording offers&#13;
poured in. Fodor made a&#13;
whirlwind tour of the Soviet&#13;
Union and returned to the United&#13;
States. With very little rest he&#13;
faced television cameras,&#13;
recording microphones and&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
weekly from student government&#13;
by Kai Nail&#13;
There will be a very important&#13;
meeting of th e Faculty Senate on&#13;
Thursday, February 26, i n room&#13;
101, Greenquist Hall. The&#13;
meeting will be from 2 p.m. to 6&#13;
p.m. P.S.G.A. is encouraging all&#13;
students to make an effort to&#13;
attend this meeting.&#13;
Some of the things that will be&#13;
discussed at this meeting are: the&#13;
imposition of a basic skills&#13;
requirement and a breadth of&#13;
knowledge requirement, implimentation&#13;
of non-degree&#13;
centers, restructuring of majors&#13;
offered under each division, the&#13;
elimination of the School of&#13;
Modern Industry's Executive&#13;
Committee and a recommendation&#13;
that SMI not be&#13;
staffed at the Dean's level, and&#13;
that SMI be retained as three&#13;
separate divisions.&#13;
Other proposals dealing with&#13;
Parkside's academic structure&#13;
and faculty restructuring will be&#13;
brought up at this meeting also.&#13;
P.S.G.A. feels that it is very&#13;
important for students to at least&#13;
hear, if not respond to, what these&#13;
proposals are going to do to this&#13;
University.&#13;
The proposals are the work of&#13;
the Committee of Principals&#13;
work-groups. They have been&#13;
working on this for at least four&#13;
months. If you want to see what&#13;
the effect of all this work will&#13;
have, just come to the Faculty&#13;
Senate meeting.&#13;
Any student interested in&#13;
working with P.S.G.A. to respond&#13;
to this proposal by COP, just stop&#13;
in the P.S.G.A. office (D-193,&#13;
WLLC) or call 553-2244 or come to&#13;
a Senate meeting on Tuesdays at&#13;
4:30 p.m. in room D-174, WLLC.&#13;
P.S.G.A. submitted a total&#13;
budget this year of $6,000.00.&#13;
$2,500.00 would go to United&#13;
Council, $1,000.00 for the&#13;
President's salary, and $2,500.00&#13;
for operating expenses. P.S.G.A.&#13;
was allocated $2,600 by the&#13;
Allocations Committee. Last&#13;
year's budget was $2,500. U nited&#13;
Council and the President's&#13;
salary were cut from the budget.&#13;
The Allocations Committee is the&#13;
committee that distributes the&#13;
segregated fees, and is a committee&#13;
of P.S.G.A.&#13;
P.S.G.A. can only adopt the&#13;
entire segregated fee proposal or&#13;
reject the entire proposal. We&#13;
cannot change parts of it.&#13;
There are vacancies in the&#13;
Senate of P.S.G.A. Any student&#13;
who would like to become a&#13;
Senator should come to a Senate&#13;
meeting on Tuesdays at 4:30 in&#13;
room D-174, or contact Ed&#13;
Bielarczyk, President Pro&#13;
Tempore of the Senate.&#13;
GOOD F OOD&#13;
RESTAURANT HOURS:&#13;
Mon. - THURS 6 a.m.&#13;
Fri. &amp; Sat. 6 a.m.&#13;
Sun. 6 a.m.&#13;
rounds of interviews and photo&#13;
sessions. (Since that time CBS&#13;
and NBC have done network&#13;
profiles on Fodor and he has&#13;
appeared on the "Today Show"&#13;
and the Mike Douglas Show and&#13;
is scheduled for the Johnny&#13;
Carson "Tonight" Show.) He&#13;
then made his New York area&#13;
debut with a recital at the&#13;
Caramoor Festival; it was the&#13;
first time that this Festival had&#13;
had a "guest star" in its 29 years&#13;
of operation.&#13;
Swedish has performed&#13;
throughout the United States with&#13;
major orchestras and in recital.&#13;
Last summer he gave a series of&#13;
concerts in Italy, where he was&#13;
on the faculty of the American&#13;
Academy of Arts in Europe at&#13;
Verona.&#13;
His performance schedule this&#13;
season, in addition to&#13;
engagements with Eugene&#13;
Fodor, includes a series of appearances&#13;
on the West Coast with&#13;
performances with the San Diego&#13;
Symphony and several solo&#13;
recitals, a solo recital at Lincoln&#13;
Center in New York City, and two&#13;
recitals in London in May including&#13;
a debut recital at the&#13;
Royal Festival Hall.&#13;
His spring schedule of appearances&#13;
with Fodor includes&#13;
two recitals in Norway where&#13;
Swedish also will give a solo&#13;
recital, solo and joint recitals on&#13;
a cruise ship bound from Oslo to&#13;
Leningrad, where they will give&#13;
two recitals at the Kirov Ballet,&#13;
and a recital in Anchorage,&#13;
Alaska. In August, Swedish will&#13;
go to Austria for the Haydn&#13;
Festival at Vienna, Salzburg and&#13;
Eisenstadt, where he will appear&#13;
in recital and lecture in&#13;
Esterhazy Palace where Haydn&#13;
wrote his major works. In&#13;
November, he and Fodor will&#13;
tour for two weeks in Japan.&#13;
A member of the Parkside&#13;
music faculty since 1973, he&#13;
previously taught at Indiana&#13;
University where he also did his&#13;
doctural work and at Iowa State&#13;
University and at Texas&#13;
Christian University where he&#13;
was director of chamber music&#13;
before coming to UW-P. He is a&#13;
native of Milwaukee.&#13;
FREE BUS TO MILWAUKEE&#13;
A free chartered bus will leave&#13;
the C.A.T. parking lot at 7:30&#13;
p.m. on Saturday, February 28,&#13;
for downtown Milwaukee. It will&#13;
return at approximately 1 a.m.&#13;
Call Ext. 2214 for details.&#13;
rra&amp;i Stcituta&#13;
*76e Katunal fyvi men cutd CWUHCK&#13;
Services i nclude:&#13;
• Hair coloring&#13;
• Beard and mustache t rims&#13;
• Creative h air s tyling&#13;
• Custom hair r eplacements&#13;
• Perma styles, C uries o r W aves&#13;
For appointment c all&#13;
694-4603&#13;
OPEN WEEKLY&#13;
Tun . Thru F r i . E:30 AM&#13;
S a t . 6 A.M. Close d M onday&#13;
®ljr kittg'B Srm&#13;
Studio&#13;
7509 45th AVE.&#13;
Town &amp; Country Shopping Center&#13;
tmGlAS DE&#13;
Recipe #liy2.&#13;
C, THE&#13;
UERVICLE:&#13;
1. Find someone who has a freezer.&#13;
2. Put a bottle of Jose Cuervo Gold in it.&#13;
3. Go away.&#13;
4. Come back later that same day.&#13;
5. Open the bottle and pour a shot of the&#13;
golden, viscous liquid.&#13;
6. Drink it with grace and dignity.&#13;
Or other people, if they're not around.&#13;
JOSE CUERVO* TEQUILA. 80 PROOF&#13;
IMPORTED AND BOTTLED BY © ,975. HEUBLEIN, INC HARTFORD. CONN.&#13;
LOCATED AT 245 MAIN STREET IN RACINE&#13;
IN PERSON KID D*Y*N*0*M*l*T*E&#13;
Jimmie "JJ" Walker from the&#13;
TV Show GOOD TIMES&#13;
Special Guests: Clover (from Racine)&#13;
Monday Night, 7:30, March 8t h&#13;
Racine Memorial H all&#13;
All Tickets are s5.00 and are on sale now at:&#13;
ONE S WEET DREAM, BOTH JJ'S, BEAUTIFUL DAY,&#13;
GRACIES, MR. HUB'S AND MEMORIAL HALL.&#13;
Mail Order: Send check or money order for l5.25 per ticket&#13;
payable to WRKR along with a self-addressed stamped envelope&#13;
to: Concert-WRKR, Racine, Wisconsin 53403&#13;
A 3-D Production&#13;
WALKER —&#13;
D-Y-N-O-M-l-T-E&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Feb. 25, 1976 BUSINESS BY-UNE EUROPE&#13;
Guskin appoints task force&#13;
by Dave Brandt&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin called a special meeting last week to announce&#13;
his appointments to the recently formed business management&#13;
task force. The twelve person committee consisting of two SMI&#13;
seniors, three industrial leaders, three SMI faculty members and four&#13;
CSS faculty members were given the task of r eviewing the business&#13;
management program.&#13;
Appointed to the committee from SMI were Labor Economics&#13;
lecturer William Petrie, Business Management lecturer Jack Starrett&#13;
and Business Management assistant professor Dr. Mahesh Jain. Also&#13;
appointed were students Ed Bielarczyk and Marian A. Kropp.&#13;
Heading up the committee is associate professor Surinder Datta.&#13;
Guskin said he appointed Datta as chairman because of his abilities as&#13;
a researcher and his professional orientation. He felt that Datta had&#13;
the respect of the faculty and had no "territorial interests." He hopes&#13;
Datta will be able to bridge the gap that exists between CSS and SMI.&#13;
Three mandates were issued to the committee by Guskin. First, the&#13;
committee is to review the present business program in detail,&#13;
evaluating both the present undergraduate and proposed graduate&#13;
programs. Secondly, it is to make proposals concerning the&#13;
development of th e programs for the future. And third, it is to determine&#13;
the resources necessary to make the changes. The committee's&#13;
report is due June 1, 1976.&#13;
The faculty expressed apprehension over the committee's review&#13;
and possible changes. But Guskin made it clear that the committee&#13;
was not to consider individual instructors in its study. Guskin hopes&#13;
that the committee doesn't pose a threat to the department as it will&#13;
require continuous input and support from the faculty.&#13;
BRAT STOP&#13;
194 and Hy. 50&#13;
Friday&#13;
February 27&#13;
New Legion&#13;
Rock Spectacular&#13;
Saturday&#13;
February 28&#13;
Stillwater&#13;
The Italian cook respects food. The spice&#13;
of a sauce, the fine texture of warm, fresh&#13;
bread, the consistancy of a melted cheese&#13;
sauce. For him the reward is the pleasure&#13;
of those who enjoy his work. Experience&#13;
this pleasure.&#13;
CL±CL da.h.ii&#13;
212Q tBizcfc&#13;
U(zno±ticL, H/l/is.&#13;
Foii'lee 800-325-4867&#13;
Utv.Travel Charters&#13;
As a result of the review and subsequent changes the Chancellor&#13;
hopes to first bridge the gap between CSS and SMI and then bring the&#13;
University and local industries closer together.&#13;
Guskin sees a definite need for better communications between the&#13;
University and local industries and felt that it had been discouraged in&#13;
the past. With over 200 major corporations in the area, Guskin feels1&#13;
that there is no justification for anything but the best in business&#13;
programs.&#13;
Guskin stated that he is committed to providing resources to develop&#13;
a top-notch business program.As a start he has allocated $10,000 to the&#13;
committee and has promised more if needed. In addition, he hopes to&#13;
bring in some of t he best consultants in the country to assist in the&#13;
review process.&#13;
HALL A VAILABLE&#13;
FOR SMALL PARTIES,&#13;
MEETINGS, E TC.&#13;
HOLDS 75 P EOPLE&#13;
Call 6 54-4186&#13;
Bicentennial&#13;
contest&#13;
announced&#13;
University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside students are being&#13;
invited to participate in a&#13;
Bicentennial contest to include&#13;
both written and visual&#13;
presentations on the theme&#13;
"Wisconsin's Heritage and&#13;
America's Future."&#13;
Entries in the written division&#13;
may take the form of poetry,&#13;
essays and short fiction or drama&#13;
and entries in the visual category&#13;
may include photography, art&#13;
and movies, slides or video tape.&#13;
Deadline for entries is March 22.&#13;
The contest is open to all&#13;
students registered in the 1975-76&#13;
academic year for any program&#13;
or. courses offered by Parkside or&#13;
UW Extension. Written entries&#13;
should be no longer than 2,500&#13;
words and audio-visual&#13;
presentations no longer than 20&#13;
minutes.&#13;
The competition will be judged&#13;
by a panel of five judges in both&#13;
main categories from the campus&#13;
and the community. First, second&#13;
and third prizes plus an&#13;
honorable mention citation are to&#13;
be awarded in each of the six subcategories.&#13;
Prizes consist of cash&#13;
awards plus certificates.&#13;
Contest details are available by&#13;
contacting University Archivist&#13;
Nicholas Burckel, chairman of&#13;
Parkside's Bicentennial Committee,&#13;
553-2411, UW-Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha, 53140.&#13;
•Si®t&#13;
--v,&#13;
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Men's Clothing&#13;
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madarfe men's shop&#13;
'The Big and&#13;
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If you plan on going, w e need&#13;
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may he no room left for you!!!!!&#13;
5014 7th ave. kenosha,wis. (414)657 5675&#13;
Make this Spring Break the&#13;
One You'll Remember!!&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
INVITES YOU TO SPEND SPRING BREAK IN&#13;
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Tracksters place third&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Feb. 25, 1976 7&#13;
Free Classifieds&#13;
"Our kids went down there with&#13;
the idea that they could do the job&#13;
and they just did it for themselves&#13;
.... Our kids really did&#13;
good." The coach that said this&#13;
was Bob Lawson. "Our kids,"&#13;
was a reference to the men's&#13;
track squad that represented&#13;
parkside at the NAIA Indoor&#13;
Championships in Greensboro,&#13;
N.C. la st Friday and Saturday.&#13;
The Rangers finished in a tie&#13;
for third place, with Texas&#13;
Southern, among the 57 schools&#13;
involved. Parkside's 24 points&#13;
followed Jackson State, the&#13;
winners, and Eastern New&#13;
Mexico. Jackson State qualified&#13;
39 men for the meet, while&#13;
Parkside did the job with just&#13;
nine.&#13;
Jim Heiring, a junior, acquire&#13;
his third meet record as he set a&#13;
new NAIA national record with a&#13;
14 minute, 7.3 second two-mile&#13;
walk. That broke the outstanding&#13;
walker's record of last year,&#13;
14:14.6. In his last lap. going for&#13;
the record, Heiring received a&#13;
standing ovation from the&#13;
spectators. Heiring repeats as an&#13;
All-America.&#13;
Also earning All-America was&#13;
shot putter Pat Burns, a junior&#13;
with a throw of 53'6", which was&#13;
good for third place. Burns had&#13;
54'4y4" qualifying, which goes&#13;
down as a personal and school&#13;
record.&#13;
Others that did "a great job&#13;
competing," according to&#13;
Lawson, included walkers Chris&#13;
.Sports SPORTS by Thom Aiello&#13;
SHORTS Matmen victorious&#13;
Hansen, a junior, with a 4th-place&#13;
time of 15:06.36, and John Van&#13;
Den Brandt, a freshman, with&#13;
15:10.17, good for fifth in the 18-&#13;
man field. Jeff Sitz, a sophomore,&#13;
long jumped 23'7" for fifth place.&#13;
Sitz may havedone better had he&#13;
not been called for a foul on a 24-&#13;
foot final jump.&#13;
Ray Fredericksen, a&#13;
sophomore, finished a respectable&#13;
eighth in the two-mile run.&#13;
Lawson said he was "very&#13;
pleased," with his squad's performance&#13;
against many bigger&#13;
schools. He mentioned that some&#13;
times were not up to par because&#13;
it was a slow, banked track.&#13;
In all, though, the trackmen&#13;
"just did a great job. They don't&#13;
know when to quit," said Lawson.&#13;
Parkside had finished eighth&#13;
indoors the past two years, while&#13;
placing sixth outdoors last year.&#13;
For Jackson State, it was the&#13;
third national championship in&#13;
the last four years.&#13;
This Saturday Parkside will&#13;
enter four or five trackmen in the&#13;
United States Track and Field&#13;
Federation (USTFF) meet in&#13;
Champaign, 111. About 40 schools&#13;
will be represented, but there will&#13;
not be any walkers involved.&#13;
1975 KAWASAKI F 9, 350 cc. Dirt and Road&#13;
bike. Under 400 miles. Excellent condition,&#13;
asking only $950. Call 878-1981 after 4 p.m.&#13;
WANTED: Secretary to take minutes at&#13;
P.S.G.A. meetings. Typing needed and other&#13;
office jobs. Must be on work study. Call 553-&#13;
2244 or inquire at WLLC D 193.&#13;
1974 OPEL MANTA Ra.llye, 4 speed, good&#13;
mileage. Lime Green. Extras. Excellent&#13;
condition. Asking $2,795. Call 878-1981 after 4&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Retiredcollege professor desires services&#13;
of a itudent (preferably in humanistic&#13;
stud!-*s) 4-6 hrs. per week. Must have car.&#13;
Hotrs flexible. Pay S2.50-$3.00 per hour&#13;
depending on maturity and experience.&#13;
Phone 694-2251.&#13;
BABYSITTING by former nursery school&#13;
teacher in my home. Call 634-1447. Ask for&#13;
Sharon.&#13;
SNOWPLOWING - Commercial and&#13;
residential; reasonable rates. Call 637-4348.&#13;
Racine's newest nitespot&#13;
Presenting ... on Thursday nights "50c Nite"&#13;
f for Parkside Students (50c for standard Highball&#13;
f. drinks, etc. or beers with Parkside I.D.)&#13;
And for your enjoyment - JU-JU on "The Lounge's Fantastic Stereo&#13;
A System" playing hits from '66 to '76 while you enjoy pool,&#13;
A foosball or Electronic tennis.&#13;
^ 3162-Sheridan Road&#13;
(just south of the Durand Underpass)&#13;
'J\ Hours: 7 p.m. to 1 a.m. Phone: 634-5335&#13;
Parkside's wrestling team rebounded from a 20-13 lo ss to Grand&#13;
Valley State to beat UW-Milwaukee, 39-6, in double-dual action here&#13;
last Friday. Leading the 12-3-1 Rangers were Bob Gruner, 16-8, and&#13;
John Gale, 22-4-1; both won two matches and pinned one opponent.&#13;
Other good performances came from: Dan O'Connell, 23-4, who split&#13;
two close decisions, losing to Grand Valley's former NAIA champion,&#13;
Mark Mangianti; Joe Landers, 24-3-1, who had a pin and a draw; Dave&#13;
Wagner, 18-5-3, also had a draw and won 17-0 in his second match; and&#13;
Parkside's wrestlers at 167 lbs., Bob Epping and Doug Andrewski,&#13;
both won. Epping, formerly of UWM, beat an ex-teammate.&#13;
Cole named MVP&#13;
Parkside's standout basketball player, 6'9" senior Gary Cole, has&#13;
again been named Wisconsin Independent College Association's&#13;
(WICA) player of the year. The multi-talented co-captain won the&#13;
award last year also. High-scoring junior forward. Leartfia Scott, was&#13;
also named to the 10-man honor squad. Seniors Malcolm Mahone and&#13;
Bill Sobanski were awarded honorable mention.&#13;
Parkside fencers defeated&#13;
Foilist Jim Herring improved his seasonal record to 44-4, with a 9-0&#13;
slate in last Saturday's fencing action in Illinois. That wasn't enough,&#13;
though, as the men lost to Milwaukee Area Technical College (MATC),&#13;
17-10; Illinois, 20- 7; and Detroit, 21-6 . Now 5-11 , the fe ncers meet the&#13;
University of Chicago, Ohio State, and MATC this Saturday in&#13;
Chicago. Parkside's women, 9-1, will also meet MATC in that meet.&#13;
Swimmers sink Carroll&#13;
The Rangers' men's swimming club sunk Carroll College, 80-27,&#13;
here last Friday. Though finishing second, Bob Kueny set a team&#13;
record with a 2:42.321 in the 200 breast-stroke. First place finishers in&#13;
individual events included: Rick Lopes, Bob Tesch (twice), Jim&#13;
Wilbershide, Dennis Steeves, Rich Kwas, Mark Flynn, and Keith&#13;
Krueger. The 400 medley and 400 free-style relays also scored firsts&#13;
against the out-manned v isitors. On Tuesday the much-improved&#13;
Rangers, 6-7, travelled to Chicago to meet the University of Chicago.&#13;
Women tennis players All-Conference&#13;
Three women tennis players from Parkside were named to the allconference&#13;
second team of the Wisconsin Women's Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletic Conference (WWIAC). Those honored were: Peggy Gordon, a&#13;
freshman singles player, and the doubles team of senior Sandy&#13;
Kingsfield and freshman Kathy Feichtner. All were key figures in the&#13;
Rangers' improvement the past season.&#13;
HIGH FLYING BIRD !!&#13;
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our new building is being&#13;
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MONDAY-THURSDAY 7:00-5:30 • FRIDAY 7:00-8:00 • SATURDAY 8:00-NOON&#13;
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Phone 634-2141&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER F e b . 25 , 19 7 6&#13;
U.W.P. Vets&#13;
Club opposes&#13;
the closing&#13;
of the CA&#13;
Parking Lot&#13;
on Thursday,&#13;
Feb. 26.&#13;
Sobanski strong and steady forward&#13;
It takes the best&#13;
to challenge&#13;
all the rest.&#13;
Pabst. Since 1844.&#13;
The quality has always&#13;
come through.&#13;
PABST BREWING COMPANY, Milwaukee Wis&#13;
Peoria Heights, III., Newark, N.J., Los Angeles, Calif.,'Pabst, Georgia.&#13;
^ Sobanski&#13;
Sobanski, listed at 6'7", 225&#13;
pounds, is also known as a&#13;
steady, solid performer on the&#13;
basketball court. If a nything has&#13;
slowed the senior center-forward,&#13;
it would be the occurance of in juries&#13;
that have plagued his&#13;
college career off-and-on,&#13;
especially the past two seasons.&#13;
This year Sobanski missed&#13;
several weeks with thigh and&#13;
ankle injuries.&#13;
The three-time letterman&#13;
admitted that his confidence had&#13;
gone down some because he&#13;
"missed-out quite a bit," this&#13;
season. But Sobanski is hoping&#13;
that last Saturday's loss, 73-66, at&#13;
Nebraska-Omaha will help him in&#13;
the upcoming play-offs. "The&#13;
game down in Nebraska helped&#13;
me a little bit," Sobanski said,&#13;
adding that he could feel the shots&#13;
coming back. In that game he hit&#13;
five of seven shots and ended with&#13;
11 points.&#13;
That is how many of Sobanski's&#13;
games are. He always seems to&#13;
score around the double-figure&#13;
mark and match that with about&#13;
the same number of rebounds. He&#13;
is the team's second leading&#13;
rebounder (7.2) and third leading&#13;
scorer (8.5).&#13;
Number 53 is considered&#13;
Parkside's "primary rebounder,"&#13;
according to Stephens,&#13;
whether playing the post man&#13;
position or forward. Collum&#13;
called the muscular big man&#13;
"one of th e top rebounders in the&#13;
state." Collum added, "He can&#13;
score, beat the boards, and get&#13;
tips." Again, that's pretty much&#13;
how Sobanski plays it.&#13;
There are a few other&#13;
characteristics that reflect the&#13;
"very strong, very physical"&#13;
Gary Cole was not scoring. He&#13;
explained that he was more&#13;
"offensive orientated" back then.&#13;
Now, with Leartha Scott added to&#13;
the offensive machine, Sobanski&#13;
considers "setting picks" for his&#13;
high-scoring team mates one of&#13;
his main weapons.&#13;
Sobanski, a Business and Labor&#13;
Economics major, now fe els his&#13;
job is "picking up the slack"&#13;
when Cole or S cott is down. Also&#13;
part of his job is to take the&#13;
pressure off of Cole, s o the All-&#13;
America can score more easily.&#13;
After the team's thrilling&#13;
overtime win, 62-61, over a very&#13;
fine UW-Green Bay club last&#13;
Tuesday night here, and&#13;
Saturday's loss to end the regular&#13;
season, Sobanski knows it will be&#13;
"a whole different type of&#13;
ballgame," when the play-offs&#13;
get underway this Thursday.&#13;
Sobanski said the do-or-die&#13;
games should make him, "put a&#13;
little more into it myself. I have&#13;
to keep playing. There's no&#13;
tomorrow .... This is it, for us&#13;
seniors." He added that when it's&#13;
all over, even with a possible&#13;
championship, he will, "still be&#13;
kind of sorry.... cause it was a&#13;
good th ing."&#13;
The tournament, like in Kansas&#13;
City last year, just may be Bill&#13;
Sobanski's time to show some&#13;
more people just how "strong"&#13;
and "physical" he can be. As&#13;
Stephens said, "Bill tended to&#13;
have his best games against the&#13;
best competition."&#13;
Against UWGB, Scott scored 30&#13;
points, including 6 of the 8&#13;
overtime points for the Rangers.&#13;
Cole added 15 points to the cause.&#13;
The same two were the big guns&#13;
against Nebraska, with Scott&#13;
getting 24 pts. and Cole netting 22&#13;
pts. But within the last three&#13;
minutes, both fouled out and the&#13;
Rangers couldn't buy a bucket. A&#13;
66-64 lead was washed away.&#13;
Those games are now history.&#13;
The coaches are hoping the losing&#13;
is also washed away now, si nce&#13;
one loss would end the season in&#13;
tourney play. Thursday night, at&#13;
8:30 this time, Parkside meets&#13;
the winner of Lakeland-Milton&#13;
here.&#13;
If Parkside can continue to win,&#13;
it will keep the home-court advantage&#13;
right up to Kansas City,&#13;
Mo., the site of the National&#13;
Tournament. Next Monday,&#13;
Parkside would host the second&#13;
place Wisconsin State University&#13;
conference team. If it can win&#13;
that game too, it would play&#13;
again here next Wednesday.&#13;
Tickets for Thursday's game&#13;
will be available at the door, or&#13;
can be purchased in advance at&#13;
the Phy. Ed. Office and LLC's&#13;
Information Kiosk.&#13;
If RANGER |&#13;
| needs writers&#13;
play of S obanski. One i s that he&#13;
plays "pretty good defense inside,"&#13;
said Collum, noting that&#13;
the Oak Lawn, 111. product&#13;
usually defends against the opponent's&#13;
most physical player.&#13;
Stephens said Sobanski is good at&#13;
"boxing-out" the opponent's big&#13;
guy, which many fans do not&#13;
notice too often. Stephens said,&#13;
"Bill is a very fine inside post&#13;
man," and added that Sobanski is&#13;
a "very fundamentally sound&#13;
player."&#13;
Collum said Sobanski was one&#13;
of P arkside's "main recruits out&#13;
of Chic ago," where he played at&#13;
Mount Carmel High School. Since&#13;
the time he's started at Parkside,&#13;
Sobanski has "played some&#13;
excellent basketball," said&#13;
Stephens.&#13;
Over the years though, the&#13;
strong forward's role has&#13;
changed. Sobanski said of his&#13;
earlier years here, "I scored a lot&#13;
more then," especially when&#13;
When someone is talking about&#13;
the Parkside basketball team and&#13;
they start talking about a player&#13;
being "very strong, very&#13;
physical," the odds are the&#13;
player that person is referring to&#13;
is Bill Sobanski. That is the way&#13;
head coach Steve Stephens&#13;
describes the aggressive forward,&#13;
and assistant coach Rudy&#13;
Collum uses similar phrases.</text>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 4, issue 21, February 25, 1976</text>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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              <text>1976-02-25</text>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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