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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 4, issue 25</text>
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            <text>Guskin releases authorization</text>
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            <text>Guskin releases authorization&#13;
by Betsy Neu&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin&#13;
released the long awaited list of&#13;
position authorizations March 17.&#13;
This list spells out to each&#13;
discipline how many teaching&#13;
positions they may begin to&#13;
recruit for next fall.&#13;
According to Guskin, this list&#13;
represents a reduction of eight&#13;
teacher positions in the College of&#13;
Science and Society (CSS) and an&#13;
addition of six in the School of&#13;
Modern Industry (SMI).&#13;
An explanation accompanying&#13;
the list and signed by Guskin&#13;
states that the "denial of a&#13;
position allocation...should be&#13;
interpreted as a challenge to that&#13;
discipline to come to terms with&#13;
the mission and priorities" of&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Guskin also said that he is&#13;
"only going to invest in those&#13;
areas where there exists a clarity&#13;
with relation of that program to&#13;
the (institutional) priorities."&#13;
Guskin emphasized that he&#13;
feels "no individual is losing a job&#13;
on the basis of position&#13;
allocation." He said that the&#13;
unfilled teaching vacancies are&#13;
all a result of pre-existing terminations&#13;
of regular faculty&#13;
members or the expiration of&#13;
short term ad hoc or visiting&#13;
professor contracts.&#13;
He further explained that as a&#13;
teaching position becomes&#13;
vacant he "DUIIS it in" and&#13;
examines whether the vacancy&#13;
merits authorization for&#13;
replacement.&#13;
According to Guskin "the&#13;
decision in each case was based -&#13;
on three criteria, relationship to&#13;
campus mission priorities,&#13;
degree of programmatic&#13;
flexibility, number of student&#13;
credit hours in relation to size of a&#13;
discipline's faculty."&#13;
When asked if the loss of full&#13;
time teachers would effect course&#13;
offerings, Guskin said no; that ad&#13;
hoc budgets (as yet not released)&#13;
would fill in the gap, though he is&#13;
"trying to get away from ad&#13;
hoeing it."&#13;
Guskin then qualified his&#13;
statement by saying that individual&#13;
disciplines may decide&#13;
to drop courses which are&#13;
drawing low enrollments, but&#13;
that those decisions should not be&#13;
affected by position&#13;
authorizations.&#13;
Those disciplines which will be&#13;
reduced by one faculty position&#13;
are: German, Spanish,&#13;
Philosophy, Math, Physics,&#13;
History, Anthropology and&#13;
English.&#13;
The disciplines that will have&#13;
their faculties increased are:&#13;
Labor, Economics by one,&#13;
Education by two and&#13;
Management Science and&#13;
Engineering Science by three&#13;
each.&#13;
Communication, divorced from&#13;
its Theatre option, has been&#13;
authorized to recruit for one&#13;
teacher for its two public information&#13;
vacancies. Guskin said&#13;
that this was a special case as&#13;
nothing can be decided until the&#13;
results of the special group&#13;
charged to study Communication&#13;
are in. Therefore the one new&#13;
teacher will be recruited to teach&#13;
"basic communication skills."&#13;
Anthropology, too, may stand&#13;
to lose another position in addition&#13;
to the one announced by&#13;
Guskin. Assistant Professor&#13;
William Folan has been&#13;
recommended for contract&#13;
renewal by the Social Science&#13;
Executive Committee; however,&#13;
although CSS Dean Eugene&#13;
Norwood has recently acted on&#13;
that recommendation and forwarded&#13;
his decision to Guskin, it&#13;
is not known whether that&#13;
decision represents a confirmation&#13;
or denial of the&#13;
Executive Committee's&#13;
recommendation. Should Norwood&#13;
deny renewal, the position&#13;
will then become vacant.&#13;
Folan was terminated in 1974&#13;
and won a subsequent appeal&#13;
when he was reinstated that&#13;
summer. He is now completing a&#13;
research project in Mexico and&#13;
hopes to return to Parkside in the&#13;
Fall.&#13;
The Parkside-&#13;
"SPRING SOLITUDE"&#13;
Vol. IV No. 25 March 24, 1976&#13;
Committee wrestles with structure&#13;
by Mick Andersen&#13;
The Academic Policies&#13;
Committee continues to wrestle&#13;
with the structure for implementing&#13;
the proposed breadth&#13;
of knowledge and basic skills&#13;
requirements, as had been&#13;
charged to them by the Faculty&#13;
Senate. Last Thursday the&#13;
Committee set down the&#13;
guidelines on who will serve, how&#13;
many, and for what purpose the&#13;
special committees will be&#13;
established.&#13;
James Shea, professor of Earth&#13;
Science, had previously&#13;
recommended the establishment&#13;
of two committees: one to review&#13;
the basic skills question and the&#13;
other to dispose of th e breadth of&#13;
knowledge dilemma. At Thursday's&#13;
meeting Shea fleshed out&#13;
his proposal, offering guidelines&#13;
for the size and composition of&#13;
both groups.&#13;
The amended Shea proposal for&#13;
the breadth requirement mandated&#13;
a subcommittee chairperson&#13;
designated by the A.P.C.;&#13;
eight faculty members; and&#13;
three students, who are to be&#13;
chosen by the Parkside Student&#13;
Gov ern men t Association&#13;
(PSGA). The eight faculty&#13;
members are to be named by&#13;
their respective divisions, which&#13;
include one apiece from&#13;
Humanities, Science, Fine Arts,&#13;
the Social Sciences, and the&#13;
Behavioral Sciences. Two subcommittee&#13;
members will come&#13;
from the School of Modern Industry,&#13;
one from the Engineering&#13;
Science area and the other from&#13;
Management Science.&#13;
Membership of the A.P.C.&#13;
Subcommittee on the basic skills&#13;
requirement, according to the&#13;
revised Shea proposal, will include&#13;
a representative of the&#13;
Academic Skills Program&#13;
(named by the Vice-Chancellor);&#13;
three students nominated by&#13;
P.S.G.A.; and three at large&#13;
faculty positions, named by the&#13;
continued on pg. 5&#13;
Spring a messenger&#13;
for perceptual ecstacy,&#13;
aiding my discovery,&#13;
that I am one of many,&#13;
Yet I grow alone.&#13;
photo by Michael Nepper&#13;
Thomas S. Heinz&#13;
COP implementation&#13;
group selection delayed&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
The major concern of the&#13;
University Committee in their&#13;
meeting with the Chancellor was&#13;
beginning the selection of&#13;
members for the implementation&#13;
group suggested by the Committee&#13;
of Principals guidelines.&#13;
Other topics of discussion were&#13;
the final decision on the number&#13;
of positions to be allocated to the&#13;
various divisions, the modification&#13;
of a student awards committee,&#13;
and the announcement of&#13;
members of a search and screen&#13;
committee to name a group of&#13;
candidates for the job of assistant&#13;
chancellor for academic support&#13;
and student services.&#13;
The various divisions submitted&#13;
names of faculty to be&#13;
named to the implementation&#13;
committee, and due to the fact&#13;
that a RANGER reporter was&#13;
present, it was decided by those&#13;
at the meeting to choose the&#13;
members of the task force after&#13;
the Faculty Senate meeting.&#13;
Those being considered for the&#13;
positions were: Gerald Fowler,&#13;
Timothy Fossum, Eugene&#13;
Goodman, Norbert Isenberg,&#13;
Richard Rosenberg, Gerald&#13;
Greenfield, Ming Kuo, William&#13;
Moy, Ronald Singer, Peter Ellis,&#13;
Paul Kleine, Steve Stephens,'&#13;
Orpheus Johnson, Erik Forrest&#13;
and Frank Mueller.&#13;
With regard to positions for the&#13;
academic divisions, Chancellor&#13;
Alan Guskin reported that a lot of&#13;
positions were being held back&#13;
for future hiring. The&#13;
authorizations were in the hands&#13;
of divisional heads last Wednesday.&#13;
According to Guskin,&#13;
some positions in disciplines not&#13;
reflecting the mission will&#13;
probably be reduced if th ey don't&#13;
meet the requisite number of&#13;
student credit hours.&#13;
by Mike Palecek&#13;
Udall visits Kenosha&#13;
A crowded Kenosha sports bar, a likely place to&#13;
catch men from the motors, seems hardly the place for&#13;
a rally of a Presidential candidate. Nevertheless, Chet&#13;
Metoska's Sports Bar, described as the Democratic&#13;
stronghold of Kenosha, was the scene of a Tuesday&#13;
March 13 meeting between about 200 citizens and&#13;
Morris Udall, complete with Secret Service men and&#13;
blinding television lights.&#13;
Udall seemed the typical candidate, mixing both the&#13;
issues and hometown talk, by sipping a beer and telling&#13;
gathers that he closed his garage door that morning on&#13;
his Pacer.&#13;
Udall slammed President's Ford's unemployment&#13;
policies during campaign stops in Milwaukee, Racine&#13;
and Kenosha, according to news reports, saying&#13;
"President Ford says it's good unemployment is down&#13;
to 7 per cent, but there is no work for 8 million&#13;
people...We say we believe in the work ethic, but aren't&#13;
willing to provide jobs; there should be jobs for&#13;
everybody who wants to work."&#13;
Mo Udall&#13;
Udall told crowds that action should be taken against&#13;
major U.S. corporations dominating me energy&#13;
situation as well as controlling other economic factors,&#13;
in America. Udall said tax laws should be tightened to&#13;
discourage American companies from expanding&#13;
overseas.&#13;
Udall quoted George Wallace's campaign slogan&#13;
"Trust the People", saying "give the people leaders&#13;
they can trust-that's the unspoken issue-and trust all of&#13;
the people, not just the white or the wealthy."&#13;
Udall told the Kenosha group that John Kennedy's&#13;
campaign "got started in this bar (Chet's), and I'm&#13;
asking you to do the same thing for me in 1976."&#13;
Udall repeatedly stated that winning the Wisconsin&#13;
primary was very important, because it marks a win in&#13;
a progressive state. Udall often identified with&#13;
Wisconites, calling himself the leading "progressive"&#13;
candidate in the campaign, but some doubt has been&#13;
experessed by the media and private concerns that if&#13;
he doesn't win in Wisconsin and New York on April 6, it&#13;
may mark the end of his chance to reach out beyond&#13;
the "narrow McGovernite wing of his party". &#13;
2 T HE PARKSID E RANGER March 2 4 , 1 9 7 6&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
Public denied information&#13;
Democracy depends upon a knowledgeable public and&#13;
when information on the workings of o ur institutions is&#13;
denied us; we end up being helpless victims of those&#13;
institutions. Ranger has been denied access to certain&#13;
information and because of this, we feei we can not&#13;
guarantee students complete news coverage of&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Within the last couple of weeks we have experienced&#13;
several cases where information has been withheld and&#13;
we haven't been able to report certain things to the&#13;
students. In one instance last Friday, Dean Eugene&#13;
Norwood would not release the current budget request&#13;
for ad hoc teaching dollars for disciplines in the College&#13;
of Science and Society. This is an issue presently being&#13;
discussed on campus and rumors are flying about which&#13;
disciplines will have probable budget cuts and which&#13;
will have increases. But, since Norwood has declared&#13;
that this is not public information, Ranger cannot&#13;
respond to these rumors or report to the students on&#13;
what's really happening. We will continue to try to&#13;
obtain these requests but until we do, students will&#13;
remain uninformed.&#13;
Another case involves the Chancellor's academic&#13;
position allocations. This week's issue contains&#13;
Ranger's first article on the subject. We had intended to&#13;
report on this earlier, before the allocations were&#13;
finalized, but we were denied access to the Chancellor's&#13;
original proposal by the University Committee and by&#13;
the Chancellor himself.&#13;
Possibly the most complex problem we've encountered&#13;
with regard to the withholding of information&#13;
concerns the faculty evaluations which students complete&#13;
every semester. Ranger had planned to run a&#13;
Point of view&#13;
series which would report the results of last fail's&#13;
evaluations We found, however, that the divisions&#13;
would not release such Information, Vice Chancellor&#13;
Otto Bauer considered the results private and the&#13;
Chancellor didn't know anything about&#13;
Chapter 19.21 subchapter II of the Wisconsin State&#13;
Statutes says except as expressly provided otherwise,&#13;
any person may examine or copy official property or&#13;
records. Ranger has yet to find any official university&#13;
policy or any state law which make faculty evaluations&#13;
confidential. ,,&#13;
We have been in contact with other campuses in the&#13;
system in an effort to c^ar up this matter, bufje ve&#13;
met with confusion on just about ail fronts. We did find&#13;
some interesting procedures in practice at other&#13;
campuses which we wiII report in a later issue.&#13;
With these incidents happening in such a short period&#13;
of t ime, it seems to indicate that we'll be having future&#13;
problems in this area unless there is a clear line&#13;
established which indicates what is and what is not&#13;
public information. Ranger plans to further Investigate&#13;
this question and find a legally binding answer.&#13;
In a political sense, information is power and the&#13;
students cannot have an effective voice in the University&#13;
unless they are informed, it is the purpose of this paper&#13;
to keep students informed, but because of the developing&#13;
practice of deeming information confidential, Ranger is&#13;
unable to completely carry out this function.&#13;
The U.S. Constitution guarantees the freedom of the&#13;
press, but what does this freedom mean when a paper Is&#13;
denied access to Information which affects its readers&#13;
As we find this becoming a more common occurance at&#13;
Parkside, Ranger feels a growing cause for alarm.&#13;
Humanities' abstentions side-step ethics&#13;
by Betsy Neu and&#13;
Rita Nicholas&#13;
Some Executive Committee members of the Humanities Division&#13;
exhibited blatant cowardice and negligent irresponsibility in a total of&#13;
seven abstention votes at the reconsideration hearing of two candidates&#13;
for tenure.&#13;
On March 10, the committee heard presentations by Assistant&#13;
Professors Scott Baudhuin and Corwin King, previously refused&#13;
tenure by this committee.&#13;
The responsibility of th e Executive Committee is to recommend or&#13;
deny faculty promotions. The written charge to the members implies&#13;
painstakingly thorough examination of the facts leading to an informed&#13;
vote by each member. This was willfully disregarded by those&#13;
who abstained.&#13;
Legitimate reasons for abstention, that of conflict of interest or a&#13;
member's inability to make himself familiar with the personnel file&#13;
and published materials, were not applicable in these cases. No abstaining&#13;
member declared prior to the meeting a conflict of interest or&#13;
an unavoidable ignorance of the vital information. In these abstentions,&#13;
cold feet and a lack of responsibility are interdependent.&#13;
The result was a misuse of the right to abstain which neatly sideThe&#13;
ParksideEDITOR-IN-CHIEF:&#13;
Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
CO-NEWS EDITORS: Mike Terry&#13;
Mike Palecek&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Mick Andersen&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Thorn Aiello&#13;
VISAGE EDITOR: jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
PRODUCTION MANAGER: Bruce Wagner&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Cathy Brnak&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Gerry Ferch&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: Michael Nepper&#13;
WRITERS: Judy Trudrung (events), Betsy Neu, Carol Arentz,&#13;
Thomas A. Merriam, Fred Johnson, Diane Carlson, Phil Hermann,&#13;
Terri Gayhart, Ron Parker, David Brandt, Kai Nail, Bill Barke,&#13;
Thomas Heinz, Terry A. Maraccini&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Dave Daniels, jeffrey j. swencki, Terri&#13;
Gayhart, Van Thompson&#13;
stepped the ethical obligations to judge, vote and be accountable for a&#13;
decision.&#13;
We have no lack of respect for those who cast a positive or a negative&#13;
vote. However, we question the neutrality of an abstaining vote,&#13;
because while not tallied with the negative votes, abstention sacrifices&#13;
neutrality by inherently implying a refusal to support the candidate.&#13;
This injustice is not worthy of the committee or the candidates.&#13;
Public minutes of the hearings state that Professors Robert Canary,&#13;
English; Herbert Kubly, English; Jose Ortega, Foreign Languages;&#13;
Harry Walbruck, Foriegn Languages; Associate Professors James&#13;
Dean, English; Orpheus Johnson, Chairperson of the Humanities&#13;
Division all cast abstention votes in one or both cases. Associate&#13;
Professors A. Aaron Snyder, Philosophy and Stephen Swedish, Music&#13;
absented themselves from the proceedings entirely.&#13;
What prompted these votes to abstain? Perhaps the candidates were&#13;
unfairly subjected to either the whim, the caprice or the cowardice of&#13;
their colleagues, who in abstaining stepped on the fingers of those&#13;
climbing the tenure ladder behind them.&#13;
No teacher's career should be decided without an awareness of the&#13;
critical elements of ethical responsibility concomitant with membership&#13;
in the Executive Committee. Abstentions demonstrate a&#13;
profound denial of c ommittee and personal moral responsibility.&#13;
Commentary&#13;
Most dangerous drug of all&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
John gets up in the morning to go to school. When he gets in his car&#13;
one hand reaches for the ignition and one hand reaches under the front&#13;
seat for the last can of beer that's left over from the six pack he bought&#13;
last night. He usually has two or three on the way to school. After an&#13;
average day at school he stops off at the local bar and has a few more&#13;
beers and shoots some pool. Now he figures its too late to go home and&#13;
eat something. About midnight, John stumbles to his car another day&#13;
gone, same thing tomorrow. John has a drinking problem, he is 17,18,&#13;
19 or any age. His parents thank the Lord he's not on drugs.&#13;
What the USA is finding out, however, is that the most dangerous&#13;
drug of all is booze. Alcoholism is running rampart among young&#13;
SS Win"? 8&#13;
° 3ny 3 weekend ni8&#13;
ht&#13;
- From the moment a&#13;
totoSSSTST* aK°&#13;
WSdrinMnghe istein&#13;
g conditioned&#13;
^ I A Can [&#13;
emember seein8 his parents getting bombed&#13;
££?$££?£* Tl&#13;
seemed so happy&#13;
-&#13;
He didn,t reaiize ^ alcohol in the USA is one of th e major causes of c hild abuse divorces&#13;
wife and husband abuse, murders, insanity etc. etc.&#13;
A W^R 3RE U° barriers t0 a y°&#13;
un8 Person well on his or her way to&#13;
^out their problems.nHisTra^e^&#13;
U^enTr^ncerned^teca^e^hey^m"e&#13;
there to do a job, and then, "don't bother me kid." t pSS&#13;
continued on pg 3 &#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER March 24, 1976 3&#13;
EC VGJG&#13;
GQ1J17GE&#13;
All candidates' letters were edited for length. Their comDlete&#13;
ff are available for students' reading in the RANGER office LiLL D195. '&#13;
Jain comments&#13;
on quote&#13;
To the Editor :&#13;
I was quoted out of context in&#13;
your story about the accounting&#13;
program at Parkside (February&#13;
25). My comments were directed&#13;
only toward accounting&#13;
speciality in the Division of&#13;
Business Management.&#13;
I feel strongly that the prime&#13;
responsibility of all of us in the&#13;
Division of Business&#13;
Management should be to&#13;
provide best possible educational&#13;
background for our students,&#13;
while, at the same time, we look&#13;
after the "personal" welfare of&#13;
our faculty members. I believe in&#13;
high professional standards and I&#13;
reject mediocrity.&#13;
I am making concerted efforts&#13;
to get our accounting program&#13;
accredited so that our students&#13;
will be able to sit for the C.P.A.&#13;
Examination. However, accreditation&#13;
by itself does not&#13;
mean much, unless we improve&#13;
our standards of education; so&#13;
that, when our students are able&#13;
to take the Examination, they are&#13;
also able to pass with flying&#13;
colors.&#13;
We have some very fine individuals&#13;
in the Division of&#13;
Business Management. Also, it is&#13;
a known fact that business&#13;
management program is vital for&#13;
the "survival" of Parkside. We&#13;
should bury the past, for it is&#13;
"gone." We should use our&#13;
"own" judgments and&#13;
imaginations as we analyze the&#13;
present and the future course&#13;
of action. Not only this will foster&#13;
excellent inter-personal relations&#13;
among the faculty and the staff,&#13;
such a course will lead us to&#13;
developing strong academic&#13;
programs in different areas of&#13;
b u s i n e ss m a n a g e m e n t;&#13;
som eth ing we, fac ult y and&#13;
students, can really be proud of!&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Mahesh C. Jain&#13;
Assistant Professor&#13;
student body voted in the PSGA&#13;
elections. Such a turn-out compares&#13;
favorably with other&#13;
universities across the nation.&#13;
Perhaps the reason for the large&#13;
number of vacancies in PSGA&#13;
rests with other factors. Could&#13;
disillusionment with the&#13;
leadership be the answer?&#13;
Over summer and early last&#13;
fall, many of the Senators (at&#13;
least the ones that hadn't yet&#13;
resigned) began to feel that the&#13;
Vice President of PSGA was&#13;
abusing his prerogatives as&#13;
chairperson of the meetings.&#13;
They claimed that the Vice&#13;
President was difficult to approach&#13;
when they wanted to&#13;
privately discuss their feelings&#13;
with him. For this reason, a&#13;
motion censuring the Vice&#13;
President was introduced last&#13;
September&#13;
While these allegations of vice&#13;
presidential misconduct may be&#13;
debated, the fact that they have&#13;
been made emphasizes a concern&#13;
of m any Senators that the chair&#13;
of PSGA meetings (a position&#13;
held by the current Vice&#13;
President) should be held by&#13;
someone who gets along with the&#13;
people involved. Having served&#13;
on the Senate since February,&#13;
1975 (longer than any other PSGA&#13;
member), I have been able to&#13;
communicate with others without&#13;
allowing conflicting opinions to&#13;
precipitate personality clashes.&#13;
My year in the Senate has given&#13;
me the chance to acquire an&#13;
understanding of the people involved,&#13;
and of the possibilities of&#13;
having a chairperson compatible&#13;
with those he is to preside over. I&#13;
feel that I am capable of performing&#13;
this role. I urge you, as&#13;
students, to consider my&#13;
qualifications for Vice President.&#13;
I now announce my candidacy for&#13;
Vice President. My running&#13;
mate, Kiyoko Bowden, will make&#13;
a strong, effective and rational&#13;
President of PSGA. I request that&#13;
you support us both. Thank you.&#13;
Robert G. Vlach&#13;
Senator&#13;
PSGA, Inc.&#13;
Vlach speaks&#13;
on elections&#13;
o the Editor:&#13;
Next month, Parkside students&#13;
nil once again have the oportunity&#13;
to express their&#13;
references about whom they&#13;
/ant to represent them in student&#13;
;overnment. Several Senate and&#13;
allocations Committee seats are&#13;
ip for election-at-large by the&#13;
itudents, as are the offices of&#13;
Resident and Vice President.&#13;
Jince last April, PSGA, Inc. has&#13;
;een a considerable turnover of&#13;
jersonnel. Currently, a&#13;
significant number of vacancies&#13;
jxist in both the Senate and the&#13;
Allocations Com mit tee.&#13;
Arguments arise that this&#13;
situation stems from an unlerlying&#13;
apthetic atmosphere&#13;
which preys upon commuter&#13;
colleges. This may not&#13;
necessarily be true. Last year,&#13;
over twenty percent of the&#13;
Senate&#13;
to speak&#13;
for students&#13;
student organizations, the administration&#13;
and university&#13;
committees.&#13;
Rod Luft is managing my&#13;
campaign and Bob Vlach, a&#13;
senator, is running for vicepresident&#13;
with me. If you have&#13;
any questions about my&#13;
campaign, suggestions for&#13;
student government or would like&#13;
to volunteer your help in my&#13;
campaign you can contact Rod at&#13;
637-6453-or leave a message in&#13;
care of me, Kiyoko Bowden, or&#13;
Bob Vlach, my vice-presidential&#13;
running mate at PSGA office 553-&#13;
2244.&#13;
Last October the Senate&#13;
amended the Constitution to&#13;
develop an effective&#13;
Organizational Council. The&#13;
Council will consist of&#13;
representatives from every&#13;
student organization at Parkside.&#13;
At the Senate meeting of March&#13;
9, Kai Nail suggested that the&#13;
Organizational Council should be&#13;
a committee of the President.&#13;
This means that the President&#13;
would be the filtering agent&#13;
through which legislation or&#13;
suggestions or needs of the&#13;
organizations would flow or not&#13;
flow "as the President sees fit" to&#13;
the Senate. I am opposed to Mr.&#13;
Nail's proposal. The&#13;
Organizational Council should&#13;
remain a Senate Committee. It&#13;
could then propose legislation&#13;
directly to the Senate, would&#13;
report directly to the Senate, and&#13;
could become an effective body of&#13;
PSGA, Inc.&#13;
At a commuter campus like&#13;
Parkside the Senate must be&#13;
strong. A t oo-powerful President&#13;
could seriously compromise the&#13;
effectiveness of PSGA, Inc. If the&#13;
Senate is to be strong, it must&#13;
have as much direct input from&#13;
students as possible. It must&#13;
foster involvement. Mr. Nail's&#13;
proposed committee structure&#13;
would limit the effectiveness of&#13;
the Organizational Council and&#13;
the Senate.&#13;
I ask for your support and your&#13;
vote for myself and Bob Vlach&#13;
April 14 and 15. We want to see&#13;
the Senate speak for the students,&#13;
not just the President.&#13;
Ms. Kiyoko T. Bowden&#13;
Justice PSGA, Inc.&#13;
Candidate for President PSGA,&#13;
Inc.&#13;
Candidacy&#13;
announced&#13;
To the Students:&#13;
Elections for positions in&#13;
PSGA, Inc. will be held April 14-&#13;
15. My name is Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
and I'm announcing my candidacy&#13;
for President of PSGA,&#13;
Inc. I'm 28 y ears old, JapaneseAmerican,&#13;
and a senior majoring&#13;
in History and Psychology. I&#13;
believe more adult students&#13;
should get involved in student&#13;
government at Parkside. PSGA&#13;
has a need for their maturity and&#13;
experience. As a woman I would&#13;
also like to encourage more&#13;
women to get involved in student&#13;
government and I hope, by my&#13;
example, more will. I would like&#13;
to offer myself as an individual&#13;
who will strive to improve the&#13;
working relationship between&#13;
Alcohol&#13;
continued from page 2&#13;
drinking by adults and children, just compare the percentage of&#13;
drunkenness arrests to the number of people drinking.&#13;
Solutions can be classified only as temporary. AA cannot handle the&#13;
large young crowd who would he laughed at by their friends if they&#13;
went to an A A meeting. The Church has no influence on most alcoholic&#13;
youngsters because most go to services only one day a week.&#13;
The only solution to this problem is people. Until young adults see&#13;
older people set the example that drinking to excess is not kosher.&#13;
Drinking cannot be done in leisure; once you get started its too damn&#13;
hard to stop. As long as kids see their parents and older brothers and&#13;
sisters boozing it up this problem can never be solved.&#13;
And John, he will get up at seven, get into his car and travel that long&#13;
road to school. And John's parents will say "Damn drug pushers&#13;
throw them in jail for life, thank God Johnny's like his old man."&#13;
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S.A.B. HI&#13;
S.A.B. Q|&#13;
To Parkside students:&#13;
This letter is to announce the&#13;
candidacy of Kai Nail for&#13;
President of P.S.G.A, and Rusty&#13;
Tutlewski as Kai Nail's running&#13;
mate for Vice President of&#13;
P.S.G.A. We want to be a part of&#13;
P.S.G.A because, a) we have&#13;
projects and issues that need to&#13;
be brought to the students attention,&#13;
b) we do not see P.S.G.A.&#13;
working on most of these projects&#13;
or raising the issues that really&#13;
effect students and, c) we think&#13;
we can bring into student&#13;
government the effective&#13;
leadership needed to accomplish&#13;
projects and effectively press the&#13;
issues.&#13;
We have developed a platform&#13;
that includes what we think&#13;
should be top priority projects&#13;
and issues for P.S.G.A ecause of&#13;
the limited space, we will briefly&#13;
describe.our platform, and explain&#13;
it in more detail in the&#13;
weeks to come.&#13;
Student housing on campus is&#13;
not a dead issue at Parkside. This&#13;
project is so overwhelming that&#13;
no one group has been able to&#13;
tackle it. We want to see this&#13;
continued on page 4&#13;
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Phone: 553-2150&#13;
Main Office: 1400 No. Newman Rd. Racine&#13;
• Phone 634-6661 &#13;
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continued from pg 3&#13;
project become a reality at&#13;
Parkside, and we are committing&#13;
ourselves to put in the energy&#13;
necessary to get this project&#13;
going.&#13;
We think it is time that&#13;
something positive be done about&#13;
the high cost of books on campus.&#13;
With the experience that we have&#13;
on Co - o p s, we w i l l p u t t o g e t h er a&#13;
fully organized, effective Book&#13;
Co-op. We think that it is very&#13;
important that students be&#13;
allowed in the signing of contracts&#13;
with the Book Store and the&#13;
food service.&#13;
A very serious problem with&#13;
P.S.G.A, is that the present&#13;
system does not guarantee a&#13;
broad base of student input in the&#13;
decision making process. We&#13;
would form an Executive Advisory&#13;
Board that would consist&#13;
of students representing the&#13;
different areas of interests.&#13;
Students from student&#13;
organizations, Ranger, Parkside&#13;
Activities Board, and academic&#13;
areas, would be selected for the&#13;
Board.&#13;
There are many other topics&#13;
that we would like to bring up,&#13;
and they will be explained in&#13;
future weeks.&#13;
One of the most important&#13;
issues in this election is the way&#13;
in which P.S.G.A and the administration&#13;
interact. Because of&#13;
the new chancellor, Parkside is&#13;
going through some very important&#13;
changes. We think it is&#13;
important for student government&#13;
to hold strong on protecting&#13;
student interest, otherwise&#13;
students are going to be left out in&#13;
the cold. There are some very&#13;
serious changes being made in&#13;
the Dean of Students Office. If the&#13;
administration gets it's way,&#13;
there will not be a Dean of&#13;
Students area to any real extent&#13;
on this campus. We would not put&#13;
up with this.&#13;
The most important campaign&#13;
promise we will make and keep is&#13;
that we are going to work hard&#13;
for students and student&#13;
government. We are also going to&#13;
work with the different areas of&#13;
the university and student areas.&#13;
There will not be any trips to&#13;
Kansas City for student government&#13;
members or free parking&#13;
stickers for P.S.G.A. officers or&#13;
any of those self-rewarding&#13;
projects. Our projects will geared&#13;
to students. Kai Nail has been in a&#13;
position this year of not having a&#13;
vote in the Senate nor having a&#13;
voice in the Executive Branch.&#13;
We have good experience, a lot of&#13;
energy, and we are working on&#13;
getting more people involved in&#13;
student government than ever&#13;
before. We hope you will support&#13;
us in the elections on April 14 and&#13;
15. Thank you.&#13;
Kai Christian Nail&#13;
Rusty Tutlewski&#13;
Open&#13;
hearing&#13;
The Search and Screen Committee&#13;
for the Assistant Chancellor&#13;
of Academic Support and&#13;
Student Services will hold an&#13;
open hearing for students in room&#13;
D110 of the Library at 3:30 on&#13;
Wednesday, March 24.&#13;
SCHWINN PEUGEOT&#13;
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Complete Line of Cycling Clothing&#13;
Phone (414) 652-6468&#13;
5006 - 7th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
DON AVIS&#13;
In defense of Parkside:&#13;
A sense of self-worth&#13;
by Faye Jackson&#13;
This interview was written in defense of the students at U.W.&#13;
Parkside. It is also an attempt on the part of student and faculty&#13;
members to help brother students in developing a sense of self-worth&#13;
and awareness, and why the need to understand this awareness is&#13;
essential in order for students to attain their educational goals from&#13;
this University. Faculty members from the Psychology and Education&#13;
Departments were interviewed on questions that this reporter feels&#13;
are of great urgency concerning the student population of our&#13;
University.&#13;
Q: Parkside has been called a small commuter college. What are&#13;
some of the advantages of a commuter college?&#13;
A: Some of the advantages are that a commuter college allows&#13;
people to work and go to school. It allows working students and adults&#13;
who ordinarily would not go to school a chance to go.&#13;
One disadvantage is a lack of s ocial life for unmarried, full-time&#13;
students. Another disadvantage is living at one's parents' home and&#13;
not experiencing the traditional campus life.&#13;
Q: Are there any commuter college syndromes that students should&#13;
become aware of or watch out for?&#13;
A: Students should watch out for loneliness, apathy, and a lack of a&#13;
sense of belonging. Be aware of the fact that because this is a commuter&#13;
college most students come from already existing friendship&#13;
groups, minimizing the need for affiliation or the need for making new&#13;
friends.&#13;
There is also a built in lack of ' 'school spirit." The closeness of home&#13;
and familiar surroundings tend to prevent conscientious study. Do not&#13;
be convinced that commuter colleges can not give the kind of quality&#13;
education that can be obtained elsewhere. Research proves that&#13;
Parkside students are as good, or "test" as good, as any other student&#13;
in the state of Wisconsin.&#13;
Q: How does an optimistic student survive at Parkside?&#13;
A: It's up to the student to get proper counseling from university&#13;
staff personnel and be realistic about abilities and growth potential,&#13;
one can be successful with these guidelines. If the student does not&#13;
raise a hand to help himself it won't get done. Students should be open,&#13;
not afraid to try new things, meet new people, and familiarize&#13;
themselves with campus services. Don't be afraid to change your&#13;
major. "If not now, when?"&#13;
Q: How does a student survive college life without losing his&#13;
progressive ideology in the mental shuffle or having his mental growth&#13;
stunted?&#13;
A: The key is to keep an open mind and believe that the professional&#13;
staff (faculty) has something to offer even if you think they do not,&#13;
remember they are professionals. Students should not try to blame&#13;
Parkside for a feeling of boredom. Remember, there are interesting&#13;
and boring instructors at Parkside, UWM, or at Madison. It's interesting&#13;
to note that about as many people are coming from&#13;
Milwaukee and Madison to Parkside each year as there are students&#13;
transferring from Parkside to Milwaukee or Madison. continued on pg. 5&#13;
mwm&#13;
f a tree falls in the forest&#13;
and there's no one ther6,&#13;
who are you going to drink&#13;
your Cuervo with?&#13;
IMPORTED AND BOJ&#13;
rrtEEDUBY (T°IQ7&#13;
T&lt;&#13;
E8^M A80&#13;
PROOF.&#13;
BY (O 1975, HEUBLEIN. INC.. HARTFORD. CONN &#13;
Motivation: a hard job&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER March 24, 1 976 5&#13;
by Mick Andersen&#13;
"To try and motivate people who have nothing,&#13;
who come from nothing, and have nothing to look&#13;
forward to" is a tough job. That was the central&#13;
assertion made by UWP student Kenneth Webster&#13;
before Dr. Glenn Doston's class "Teaching in a&#13;
Multi-cultural Society" last Tuesday night. Webster,&#13;
a junior, is currently on a leave of absence&#13;
from his job as an alcohol rehabilitation counselor&#13;
at the Milwaukee American Indian Council on&#13;
Alcoholism.&#13;
Webster began his talk with a brief history of&#13;
Native American interactions with the dominant&#13;
white society, focusing on the Onieda tribe of wh ich&#13;
he is a member. Webster spoke of a legacy of deceit&#13;
and fraudulent expropriations forced upon the&#13;
Native American from which Indian peoples are&#13;
only now beginning to painfully recover. As the&#13;
rhetoric of the governmental bureaucracy has&#13;
changed over years of inter-cultural interaction&#13;
from "extermination," to "assimilation" and&#13;
"termination," the end result hasn't changed&#13;
much: Native American life expectancies hovering&#13;
around 44 y ears, a death rate among reservation&#13;
children four times that of their dominant society&#13;
counterparts, and an educational system bent on&#13;
producing anglicized Indians who receive on an&#13;
average 5.5 years of formal education.&#13;
Webster related his own experiences in a school&#13;
system utilized by Oniedas but run by whites.&#13;
Webster explained that until he was exposed to the&#13;
educational process he had spoken Onieda as his&#13;
first language, and had lived with his grandparents&#13;
in a traditional Onieda manner. The educational&#13;
options given on the Onieda people by the dominant&#13;
society were very limited. In the primary grades&#13;
native children could attend the Indian Mission&#13;
school or St. Joseph's Catholic school. Because of&#13;
the relatively better quality education at St. Joseph&#13;
the decision was made for Webster to attend there.&#13;
Webster noted that even at this early date the&#13;
stereotypes applied to Native Americans, labels&#13;
such as "lazy" or "shy," were being applied to him -&#13;
a result, he believes, of his lack of facility with&#13;
English and his then dramatically different lifestyle.&#13;
In mentioning the "culture shock" he experienced,&#13;
Webster discerned a trend in Native&#13;
American interaction with the dominant society's&#13;
educational system. Feeling that native peoples&#13;
become embittered during the interaction process,&#13;
Webster sees the acquisition of a defensive style&#13;
rooted in the maxim "go along with what you're&#13;
taught but maintain you're own identity." Webster&#13;
used himself as an example of the alternative to this&#13;
uncompromising attitude. "Somehow I got lost in&#13;
my identity," Webster explained.&#13;
Webster maintained that Indians essentially have&#13;
two vocations for which their education and&#13;
demoralized self-concept allow: a stint in the&#13;
military or employment in a trade. Webster did&#13;
both, first serving in the armed forces and then&#13;
working as a pressman in Washington D.C., where&#13;
he became the vice-president of a predominantly&#13;
black printer's union.&#13;
As Webster's search for more rewarding job&#13;
experiences proved fruitless, he sought relief in&#13;
other ways, ways always allowed to disenfranchised&#13;
peoples- drugs and alcohol. It wasn't&#13;
until 1969 and the emergence of the American Indian&#13;
Movement that Webster was able to pull&#13;
together enough pride in who he was and where he&#13;
came from to enable him to make a change in his&#13;
living condition. "If I wouldn't have had that&#13;
problem (chemical addiction) I probably would&#13;
have remained apathetic...I learned something&#13;
about who I am and how I relate to the rest of t he&#13;
world."&#13;
"Militant," "deviant," and "radical" may be the&#13;
dominant society's way of dismissing native&#13;
peoples' attempts to change their condition, but&#13;
Webster has decided to face his accusers on different&#13;
terms. "I will look beyond the words that you&#13;
tell me, to the emotions, and hear you in my heart,"&#13;
he said softly.&#13;
PAB elects&#13;
president&#13;
Glen Christensen was elected&#13;
president of the Parkside Act&#13;
tivities Board last Tuesday in an&#13;
executive council session.&#13;
In other elections, Pete&#13;
Strutynski was elected to the vice&#13;
presidency after a second ballot.&#13;
The president-elect and vice&#13;
president-elect will take their&#13;
posts at the end of the school&#13;
year.&#13;
Parkside receives grant&#13;
MAR1LYN LANGDON&#13;
for S CHOOL BOARD&#13;
Racine Unified&#13;
Independence in voting&#13;
Experience in Negotiations&#13;
Decisive &amp; Hard Working&#13;
Paid for by Longdon School Boord Comm&#13;
Gil Bachmann, Treas,&#13;
1158 N. Osborne Blvd., Racine&#13;
Regents of Wisconsin System&#13;
accepted a federal Office of&#13;
Education grant of $57,618 in&#13;
support of student financial aid&#13;
under the basic educational&#13;
opportunity program at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
The grant brings total&#13;
federal support of the program at&#13;
UW-P to $240,448 for the fiscal&#13;
year.&#13;
The regents also accepted a gift&#13;
of $5 0 from Seymour I. Burton of&#13;
Chicago for the Kenneth L.&#13;
Greenquist Memorial Scholarship&#13;
Fund. The fund, named for&#13;
the late Racine regent, attorney&#13;
and civic leader, offers&#13;
scholarships to Parkside&#13;
students.&#13;
A.P.Gr&#13;
A.P.C. and consisting of an&#13;
A.P.C. member who will serve as&#13;
chairperson of the subcommittee.&#13;
The subcommittee&#13;
membership will be rounded out&#13;
to nine with the inclusion of a&#13;
faculty representative from the&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
two disciplines directly related to&#13;
the basic skills issue,&#13;
Mathematics and English. These&#13;
members will be chosen by the&#13;
faculty of those disciplines.&#13;
The Shea proposals were&#13;
passed as amended.&#13;
Self-worth&#13;
continued from pg. 4&#13;
Q: This semester students witnessed the dropping of many of their&#13;
fellow students. Do you see any of the syndromes or commuter&#13;
problems as being the major downfall of those students that were&#13;
dropped?&#13;
A: Students must be conscientious and study hard. Most will make&#13;
it. Students should watch for peer groups, some will pressure enough&#13;
to take some students away from their studies.&#13;
Q: Do you feel that our present instructors are surviving the commuter&#13;
college syndromes as well, or worse, than students?&#13;
A: Some can not lose the dream of teaching at the prestigious&#13;
colleges and feel that Parkside is a slap in the face- they have not come&#13;
to grips with reality or themselves. Particular advantages and&#13;
disadvantages seem to be shared equally.&#13;
Q: Any other comments or opinions?&#13;
A: There should be some weekly events on Friday afternoons.&#13;
Students should chose and operate a regular, popular on-going activity&#13;
that students genuinely care about. Students should be proud of our&#13;
commuter school's uniqueness and the personality that is centered&#13;
around it.&#13;
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Nights in the Great Lakes Room&#13;
This Week Featuring...&#13;
SASS&#13;
Foosball Tables&#13;
Drinking and Dancing&#13;
$1.00 cover&#13;
Doors open 7:00, Music starts 8:30&#13;
633-3551 6th at Main&#13;
„ R A C I N E&#13;
"^./VIOTOR INN &#13;
6 T HE PARKSIDE RANGE R March 24, 1 9 76&#13;
. .Parkside's Eastern Folklore Day drew an over capacity crowd to&#13;
the Comm Arts Theater last Saturday afternoon. The festival con- *&#13;
sisted of folksongs and an open-air bazaar in Main Place immediately&#13;
* Live Disco Music *\&#13;
at Lighthouse II&#13;
This Week Featuring...&#13;
"Happiness Is"&#13;
WED., THURS., FRI., SAT., SUN. COVER: $1.00&#13;
FREE Drink with admission on Wed., Thurs. and Sunday&#13;
M&#13;
1146 SfanMcut TRd.,&#13;
0?C£Ha4&amp;4, )&#13;
YOUNG ADULT&#13;
NIGHT&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Admission *1.25&#13;
Skate Rental 50'&#13;
RED'S ROLLER RINK&#13;
6220 67th St., Kenosha&#13;
just off highway 31&#13;
following the performance. Pictured are the El Ettehad Near East&#13;
Dancing Group doing the Syrian-Lebanese "Debke"; a folkdance&#13;
usually performed in local festivities such as weddings.&#13;
Wednesday, March 24&#13;
Skellar: Featuring Clark Anderson at 11:30 a.m. to 1:30p.m.&#13;
Movie: "Murder On The Orient Express" at 7:30 p.m. in the SAB&#13;
Admission is $1.00.&#13;
Bake Sale and raffle: sponsored by Pi Sigma Epsilon, in the alcove&#13;
by the candy shop from 8:30 a.m. to 2:30p.m.&#13;
. Thursday, March 25&#13;
Movie: "Murder On The Orient Express" at 7:30 p.m. in the SAB&#13;
Admission is $1.00.&#13;
Bake Sale and raffle: sponsored by Pi Sigma Epsilon, in the alcove&#13;
by the candy shop from 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.&#13;
Friday, March 26&#13;
Skellar: Featuring Mark &amp; Ma rv from 2:00-4:00 p.m.&#13;
Guest Recital: Harpsichordist Jane Clark at 7:30 p.m. in GR103.&#13;
Movie: "Murder On Th e Orient Express" at 8:00 p.m. in the SAB&#13;
Admission is $1.00.&#13;
Concert: Ramsey Lewis at 8:00 p.m. in the Phy Ed Bldg. Student&#13;
ticket tickets are $2.50 at the Info Kiosk.&#13;
Saturday, March 27&#13;
Opera: Two American operas, Seymour Barub's A Game Of Chan ce&#13;
and Kurt Weill's Down in the Valley, performed by the Parkside&#13;
Chamber Singers at 7:30 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Sunday, March 28&#13;
Opera: Two American operas performed by the Parkside Chamber&#13;
Smgers at 3:30 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Movie: "Murder On The Orient Express" at 7:30 p.m. in the SAB&#13;
Admission is $1.00.&#13;
Student Recital: Featuring Linda Truax on the flute with Kristin&#13;
Gould at the piano at 7:30 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
All events must be submitted to the Ranger by 9:00 a.m. Thursday of&#13;
the week before publication.&#13;
Monday, March 29&#13;
Wisconsin Children's Theater: Will present four performances of&#13;
The Ransom of Re d Chief" in the Comm Arts Theater. 7:30 p.m.&#13;
performance is open to the public and daytime performances at 9:30&#13;
and 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. will be attended by groups of c hildren from&#13;
grade and junior high schools.&#13;
Authorities&#13;
to speak&#13;
Two nationally-known&#13;
authorities on school counseling&#13;
and guidance will speak at the&#13;
Southe astern Wisconsin&#13;
Guidance Conference Saturday,&#13;
March 27 at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside from 9 a .m.&#13;
to 3 p.m.&#13;
They are John D. Krumboltz, a&#13;
fellow of the Center for Advanced&#13;
Study in the Behavioral Sciences&#13;
at Stanford, Calif., and professor&#13;
of education and psychology at&#13;
Stanford University, and Roger&#13;
Aubrey, director of Gu idance for&#13;
the Brookline, Mass., school&#13;
system.&#13;
The program is sponsored by&#13;
the Southeastern Personnel and&#13;
Guidance Association, Wisconsin&#13;
Personnel and Guidance&#13;
Association and UW-Parkside.&#13;
On site registration is $5 for&#13;
members, $8.50 for non-members&#13;
on a space-available basis&#13;
beginning at 9 a.m. Krumboltz&#13;
will speak at 9:30, Aubrey at&#13;
12:45.&#13;
Contact&#13;
Elections&#13;
announced&#13;
byKaiNall&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association will be holding our&#13;
Spring elections on April 14 an d&#13;
15. Elections are for President&#13;
and Vice President of P .S.G.A, 8&#13;
Senate seats, 5 Segregated fee&#13;
Allocation Committee Seats&#13;
and 5 seats for the Union&#13;
Operating Board. Any student&#13;
may run for these seats so long as&#13;
they are taking 6 credits and can&#13;
not be on Final Academic&#13;
Probation.&#13;
Students interested in running&#13;
for office must have a petition&#13;
signed by Parkside students.&#13;
Petitions for President and Vice&#13;
President need 50 signatures and&#13;
petitions for the other seats need&#13;
25 si gnatures. Petitions can be&#13;
picked up in the Student&#13;
Government office, D-193, WLLC.&#13;
Any student interested in&#13;
helping the Elections Committee&#13;
put on the elections can stop in&#13;
the P.S.G.A. office or come to a&#13;
Senate meeting on Tuesdays at&#13;
4:30, in room D-174, WLLC.&#13;
CRB INSURANCE&#13;
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Insure your bike for two&#13;
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639-0900. Get a "QuickQu&#13;
ote " on CRB's low, low&#13;
cost motorcycle insuran ce.&#13;
4061 NORTH MAIN STREET&#13;
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PHONE: 639-0900&#13;
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featuring:&#13;
a variety of your candy&#13;
and nut favorties sold&#13;
the old-fashioned way&#13;
OPEN:&#13;
Mon. thru Fri.&#13;
10 a.m 4 fum.&#13;
.&#13;
located on the concourse between the Library-Learning&#13;
Center &amp; Greenquist Hall &#13;
Winter sports:&#13;
a reflection&#13;
by Thom Aiello&#13;
With Parkside's winter sports season&#13;
time to reflect a bit on the teamsand afe£ of&#13;
reason. The teamtffereTgleirhope^ase^o TT' ^ W"&#13;
h g00d&#13;
good additions, for a championsto sltn 1 and a f™&#13;
below expectations, a good number of nooni k crowds were far&#13;
games. They were not disappointed Tho R * owed&#13;
"&#13;
uP for home&#13;
U - a streak that dates ^** home&#13;
UW-Whitewater. 8 8 me iast season, agamst&#13;
to^^ZTXt"&#13;
1&#13;
Parkside has known, despite some injuries to key ^avef&#13;
3&#13;
'&#13;
1 hT™&#13;
other problems. The season ended prematurely LXs?? VT&#13;
Tour—&#13;
P&#13;
°&#13;
int S6tbaCk&#13;
^ Se™nd ™ ^NAiInTS&#13;
No matter how Parkside did in Kansas nur u , „&#13;
came home champions in the minds of m ost Gary Cote XfJT&#13;
forward, had an outstanding, consistent vear Mtahiw J ,&#13;
a t o p p r o f e s s i o n a l d r a ft c h o i c e , p o s s i b i l i t y ( H e s o o n w i l l b f ? ^&#13;
Ranger Sports.) Also, junior Leartha Scott had a fineyeaT showh^e he&#13;
rv&#13;
21&#13;
with, think of next year and watch for the play of Marshall "site"&#13;
Hill, Joe Foots, and Marvin Chones, among others. Should be another&#13;
able "n7 ^ ^ ^ ^ «*"» -&#13;
d S&#13;
Wrestling&#13;
Next in mind is wrestling. Again, unless a great amount of nitpicking&#13;
is desired, what can be criticized? Coach Jim Koch, assistant&#13;
Kenny Martin, and the squad put together an impressive vear&#13;
Beating UW-Whitewater by a point in a dual meet was a highlight as&#13;
was the overall performance of wrestlers like Dan O'Connell jihn&#13;
Gale, Dave Wagner, and Bob Gruner, who finished just out of the&#13;
money in the national tourney.&#13;
When 1975-76 wrestling highlights are mentioned though, the second&#13;
g on the llst should be finishing 9th in the NAIA N ational Tournament.&#13;
The Rangers soon should have a place reserved for them in&#13;
the top ten - they make it every year. What's the number one&#13;
highlight? It has to be the Joe Landers story. Close to a decade of&#13;
wrestling for the hard-driving senior paid-off as he accomplished his&#13;
goal of winning an individual national championship. He certainly&#13;
deserved it, earned it, and can be very proud of it. It's great to see a&#13;
guy like Landers work and win, as his wife would surely agree.&#13;
Fencing&#13;
Women's fencing is not the most popular sport. The team is small in&#13;
number. But that didn't stop it from winning all but one dual meet this&#13;
season. Nor did anyone really stop Iris Gericke, who won the women's&#13;
championship at Great Lakes. Her team also should be credited for a&#13;
first place finish there.&#13;
Unfortunately, the men's fencing squad had a down season. Trying&#13;
to compensate for various problems this year, coach Loran Hein had&#13;
trouble finding anyone, outside of foilist Jim Herring, to win consistently&#13;
for the men. Herring had a noteworthy season, outclassing&#13;
most competitors, until his early loss at the Great Lakes Championships.&#13;
&#13;
continued on pg. 8&#13;
THINK SPRING&#13;
newly orrived&#13;
fashions in&#13;
• Leisure Wear&#13;
• Leathers&#13;
• Jeans &amp; Things&#13;
• Print Shirts&#13;
• Casual Slacks&#13;
madarfc&#13;
men's shop&#13;
"The Big and&#13;
Tall Specialists"&#13;
5014 7th ave. kenosha,wis. (414)657 5675&#13;
Tracksters&#13;
truck on&#13;
by Thom Aiello&#13;
In track news this week, the&#13;
women's team finished fourth in&#13;
last Thursday's Carthage meet, a&#13;
Saturday clinic was a success,&#13;
and more meets are scheduled&#13;
for this week.&#13;
Carroll College won Thursday's&#13;
four-team meet, with Carthage&#13;
College and UW-Whitewater also&#13;
placing above Parkside. The&#13;
small Ranger squad was led by&#13;
Chris Susterich, who won the 220&#13;
yard dash and the shot-put. Her&#13;
time of 29.3 in the 220 was "good&#13;
for that track," according to&#13;
coach Barb Lawson. Susterich's&#13;
shot-put of 41W' qualified her&#13;
for the AIAW National Track&#13;
Meet, held in May at Kansas&#13;
State University.&#13;
Parkside's other National&#13;
qualifier, Kim Merritt, was a&#13;
winner in the mile event. Kathy&#13;
DeBaere placed third in the 880&#13;
yard run. Both women competed&#13;
in only one event.&#13;
Today the Women compete at&#13;
UW-Oshkosh, along with UWWhitewater,&#13;
UW-Milwaukee, and&#13;
UW-Stevens Point.&#13;
Much of last Saturday was&#13;
devoted to Parkside's Track and&#13;
Field Clinic for high school, and&#13;
some junior high students and&#13;
coaches. The annual event&#13;
(except for last year) drew about&#13;
250 girls from over 30 schools.&#13;
Many Parkside coaches and&#13;
runners, headed by Jeff Sitz, ran&#13;
the clinic.&#13;
Lawson said, "We were&#13;
pleased with the way it (the&#13;
clinic) went. We g ot quite a few&#13;
favorable comments on it."&#13;
Calling it a "participation&#13;
clinic," Lawson said the participants&#13;
were led "through the&#13;
basics," and then had a chance to&#13;
do things themselves. The main&#13;
purposes, according to Lawson,&#13;
were to "upgrade track and field&#13;
to the state," and to "attract&#13;
people to the campus." In these&#13;
respects, at the least, the clinic&#13;
appeared to serve its purpose.&#13;
This Saturday the men's and&#13;
women's track squads will be&#13;
taking-part in the Wisconsin AAU&#13;
Championships at Whitefish Bay&#13;
High School. Starting time is set&#13;
for 5:30 p.m.&#13;
On Friday, a ten kilometer&#13;
road-race is on Parkside's&#13;
agenda. Check with Vic Godfrey&#13;
at the Phy. Ed. Building for&#13;
details on the meet.&#13;
Finally, the February issue of&#13;
RUNNER'S WORLD reports that&#13;
Kim Merritt, a junior, has posted&#13;
the 4 th fastest women's&#13;
marathon clocking in history. She&#13;
ran a 2:46:14 in winning the&#13;
National AAU Championships&#13;
last September in New York. The&#13;
time also rates her 4th in the&#13;
world and 2nd in the United&#13;
continued on pg. 8&#13;
UW Porkside Activities Board presents&#13;
£&#13;
if&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER March 24, 19 76 7&#13;
-*c&#13;
The B est Ham&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
in T own&#13;
SMITTY'S&#13;
Highway 31 an d County Trunk E&#13;
HEY PARKSIDE!!&#13;
Oly Draft is Here&#13;
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PHY. ED. BUILDING&#13;
Students *2.50 in advance&#13;
$5.00 at door&#13;
£&#13;
Tickets at the Info Kiosk&#13;
s&#13;
*&#13;
A UW P and WRKR PRODUCTION &#13;
8 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER March 2 4, 1 9 7 6&#13;
Winter sports&#13;
continued from pg 7&#13;
Track&#13;
Indoor track events have had fine moments for Parkside. The&#13;
biggest thing here was the third place in the NAIA Championships. All&#13;
season long walking star Jim Heiring headed the field, and in the&#13;
championships he again took first, heading a slew of Ranger walkers&#13;
among the top finishers.&#13;
Other big names in track are Kim Merritt and Lucian Rosa, the&#13;
former Ranger star who is still preparing here for the Boston&#13;
Marathon and the Summer Olympics. Rosa took firsts in the United&#13;
States rrack and Field Federation (USTFF) meet to reinforce his&#13;
reputation as a premier runner. Merritt, an AAU champion, also has&#13;
continued sweeping her races. The two give Parkside a realistic&#13;
chance at having the nation's finest in marathon running. Perhaps&#13;
Boston will tell for sure.&#13;
Club sports have gone well too. The men's swimming club, coached&#13;
by Barb Lawson, enjoyed one of Parkside's best swimming seasons.&#13;
Even groups like the soccer club and boxing club have scored successes&#13;
over the past few months.&#13;
That just about concludes it, though many people did not get all of&#13;
the credit they deserve for making Parkside's winter sports season a&#13;
major success, on the whole, this year. There just isn't enough room&#13;
for more insights.&#13;
As it's noticeable, it should be mentioned that this article is purposely&#13;
very complimentary. It's well deserved. People like Wayne&#13;
Dannehl, the athletic director, and Orby Moss, the assistant athletic&#13;
director, can share the compliments for making a small budget go a&#13;
long way. Now, if only there could be a few more home events...&#13;
At last, it is hoped that after the spring sports - things like baseball,&#13;
track, golf, men's tennis, and women's softball - this column can once&#13;
again be filled with championship acknowledgement. Or, at least, a&#13;
report on fine efforts.&#13;
Teachers to be&#13;
recruited&#13;
Four Australian states will&#13;
again recruit teachers at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
on Tuesday, March 30, beginning&#13;
at 9 a.m. in Tallent Hall. The&#13;
recruiting sessions are open to&#13;
graduates of any four-year institution.&#13;
&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
FOR SALE: 1961 Volvo, model B16544.&#13;
Restored and in very good condition. Call&#13;
654-5474 after 4 p.m. .&#13;
BUSINES S FOR SALE: Established private&#13;
nursery school and kindergarten. Call 654-&#13;
5474 or 654-8536 anytime.&#13;
FOR SALE : Marantz 1060 Amp; Marantz i 15&#13;
Tuner $350 together. 1 ,pr. 5 way speakers,&#13;
$100. Brand name magnetic cartridges for&#13;
turntables. Call Tom aft. 4 414 862 6207.&#13;
FOR SALE: REALISTIC SCT 10 cassette&#13;
deck with various pre recorded and&#13;
unrecorded tapes. $90 or offer Call 552 7113&#13;
aft. 6.&#13;
RES UME S COMP ILED and duplicated.&#13;
Complete service available. Call 552 7113 aft.&#13;
6.&#13;
FOR SALE : Floor weaving loom made in&#13;
1937; 4 harness type, phone 637 3238 and ask&#13;
for David. 24,31&#13;
EUROPE&#13;
©&#13;
tToOTM l'irfreee e D80QV-'U-325 -O^O-'+486OO 7&#13;
Utr.Travel Charters&#13;
Track&#13;
continued from page 7&#13;
T&#13;
States for 1975. A picture of&#13;
Merritt is on the cover of t he 1976&#13;
MARATHON HANDBOOK.&#13;
Meanwhile, Lucian Rosa, with&#13;
a time of 2:14:31, is ranked 24th&#13;
among world leaders and 74th on&#13;
the all-time list. Also a current&#13;
national champion, Rosa has won&#13;
the USTFF marathon title.&#13;
Merritt and Rosa currently are&#13;
training for the April 19th running&#13;
of the Boston Marathon.&#13;
Both are expected to be ranked as&#13;
leading contenders.&#13;
D.&#13;
Final statistics released&#13;
Albums&#13;
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feather, silver, Hishi, Puka liquid silver&#13;
and tur q uois e .. .Neck laces,&#13;
bracelets.&#13;
Gift&#13;
chokers, earrings and rings.&#13;
Certificates Available&#13;
Gary Cole edged Leartha Scott&#13;
for season scoring honors in final&#13;
1975-76 University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
basketball statistics&#13;
released today.&#13;
Cole, a 6-9 senior forward from&#13;
Racine (Park), edged Scott, a 6-4&#13;
junior forward from Chicago&#13;
(Gordon Tech) with 648 points in&#13;
31 games for a 20.9 scoring&#13;
average. Scott had 517 points in 25&#13;
games for a 20.7 average.&#13;
Cole and Scott were both NAIA&#13;
all-district and Wisconsin Independent&#13;
College Assn. (WICA)&#13;
Elect Bill "Blue"&#13;
JENKINS&#13;
for School B oard&#13;
Racine Unified&#13;
"Everybody s eems t o forget&#13;
about th e k ids"&#13;
Paid for by Leroy Wooley, Sec.&#13;
1328 Hamilton Street, Racine&#13;
choices. Cole was also named&#13;
WICA player of the year for the&#13;
second straight season. Cole also&#13;
led the team in field goal percentage&#13;
(.526), free throw percentage&#13;
(.739) and rebounds (324)&#13;
and average (10.5). Senior Bill&#13;
Sobanski finished second in&#13;
rebounding with a 7.0 average.&#13;
Cole finished his four year&#13;
career at Parkside with 2262&#13;
points, a UW-P record, for a 20.6&#13;
average over 110 games. He alo&#13;
had 1177 rebounds for a 10.7&#13;
career average.&#13;
Scott had the single game&#13;
scoring high for Parkside with 37&#13;
points against North Texas State&#13;
while Cole had his high, 35,&#13;
against UW-Milwaukee. Cole had&#13;
a season high 18 rebounds against&#13;
St. Xavier College and Sobanski&#13;
had his high of 16 vs. Northern&#13;
Illinois.&#13;
In team statistics, the Rangers&#13;
averaged 75.4 points while&#13;
holding their foes to 67.3.&#13;
Parkside shot .457 from the field&#13;
to its opponents' .433 while&#13;
Parkside foes were .642 from the&#13;
foul line and UW-P was .646. UWP&#13;
outrebounded its foes 46.2 to&#13;
40.9.&#13;
The Rangers won 24 games,&#13;
equalling the single season&#13;
record set by the 1974-75 squad,&#13;
and the Parkside winning percentage&#13;
of .774 (24 wins, 7 losses)&#13;
was also a UW-P record.&#13;
Parkside finished 14-0 at home&#13;
and now has a 24-game winning&#13;
streak at home.&#13;
uniquG gifts fon event/one&#13;
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Why do some people think&#13;
Bud is sort of special?&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make a difference.)&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Presents&#13;
Bus Trip&#13;
to the&#13;
Milwaukee Brewers&#13;
vs&#13;
New York Yankees&#13;
Thursday, April 8&#13;
*6 includes bus trip and lower&#13;
grandstand tickets&#13;
Bus leaves at 11:30 a.m. from&#13;
Tallent Hall Lot&#13;
Deadline March 29 -&#13;
sign up at Info Kiosk&#13;
When you say Budweisen, you've said it all! </text>
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