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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 4, issue 28</text>
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            <text>Academic and counseling aid increase probable</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>cademic ~d counseling&#13;
aid increase probable .&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
-ients at Parkside will get&#13;
1 ,,,. y increased Academic and&#13;
· g aid by 1977, that is the&#13;
of the Academic Probation&#13;
()rop Committee; who along&#13;
Chancellor Guskin have&#13;
up with a revitalized&#13;
ture of the counseling&#13;
ent.&#13;
tlie Committee formulated&#13;
student help in _ the&#13;
emic Development (AD)&#13;
of the counseling office.&#13;
AD would include a&#13;
stician, or someone who&#13;
start the student out right as&#13;
11 classes and tes~ing him to&#13;
what his potential&#13;
· 'ties are, and an English&#13;
· ator, who would help&#13;
ts in the basic english .&#13;
. A Math-Science coortor&#13;
would help students in .&#13;
two areas, and ReadingSkills&#13;
coordinator would be&#13;
"ble for teaching and&#13;
ting all activities inreading,&#13;
study skiHs and&#13;
Learning Center. These&#13;
special skills instructors would&#13;
also have a number of tutors to&#13;
further the education of the&#13;
stµdent.&#13;
The AD would report directly t.o&#13;
a yet unnamed dean of Student&#13;
Development, who would be a&#13;
faculty member.&#13;
~ Abis~la Gallagher, one of the&#13;
.. omzmttea members suw.med it&#13;
up this way, · "Right now the&#13;
tutoring and academic help is&#13;
adequate but this plan would give&#13;
broader and more concentrated&#13;
skills help to the student."&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger's counseling&#13;
department is also going&#13;
through some changes. Instead of&#13;
her reporting directly to the&#13;
Assistant Chancellor she would&#13;
now report to the new dean of&#13;
Student Development. Enchelbarger&#13;
hopes that her&#13;
department and the revamped&#13;
AD can work hand and hand in&#13;
giving the students better aid.&#13;
Echelbarger thinks that more&#13;
academic help is needed, but&#13;
expresses concern that the new&#13;
department will get to much&#13;
attention and counseling will&#13;
become secondary. "I think that&#13;
academic betterment is needed,&#13;
but these students will also need&#13;
increased counseling help," said continued on pg . 7&#13;
ASSISTANT CHA Ct LLOR&#13;
STUDENT SERVICES &amp; ACADEMIC SoPPOAT&#13;
EDUCATIO StRVICtS I TtAN&#13;
FINANCIAL AIDS&#13;
AoM1ss H1GH ScH RELATIONS&#13;
REGISTRAR&#13;
Budget priorities&#13;
On·1 CE Of" STU&#13;
DVLPHT&#13;
DEAN&#13;
FACULTY ADVISI Q&#13;
Co SELi G &amp; ADVISI Q&#13;
ACAD S I LLS Dt tLOPMCNT&#13;
CAREER PLA I Q&#13;
ATHLETIC&#13;
Structural changes seen&#13;
by Bruce Wagner position of assistant chancellor the computer c&#13;
The budget priorities advisory&#13;
committee, chaired by budget&#13;
planning director Gary Goetz,&#13;
have made a majority of their&#13;
recommendations on the 1976-77&#13;
budget.&#13;
These recommendations include&#13;
substantial _changes in&#13;
Parkside's structure. These&#13;
changes include : the merger of&#13;
the Library and Learning Center&#13;
and the removal of the student&#13;
life functions from the former&#13;
for student services, placing it follo sn&#13;
under the assistant chancellor of&#13;
university outreach .&#13;
The final details of the merger&#13;
for the Library and Learning&#13;
Center are as follows: J ph&#13;
Boisee will assume the control of&#13;
all functions of the Learning&#13;
Center; Beecham Robinson will&#13;
assume the post of pecial consultant&#13;
for mediated curriculum&#13;
development.&#13;
interface&#13;
payroll.&#13;
Th&#13;
Th~ Parkside!--------&#13;
Robinson's new post will involve&#13;
consulting with faculty and&#13;
advocating the media to them.&#13;
In other changes in the&#13;
structure of the Library and&#13;
Learning Center, the position&#13;
now held by Philip Quetscke will&#13;
be eliminated but some funding RANGER for his notice will remain in the&#13;
budget.&#13;
Vol. IV No. 28 April 14, 1976 In the final recommendation, a&#13;
film specialist position will not be&#13;
relocated.&#13;
Also, educational services&#13;
intern will be moved to the&#13;
audhuin denied tenure, agal·n ass~tant chancellor _for student&#13;
services and acadeauc support's&#13;
office.&#13;
by Betsy Neu&#13;
Baudhuin, ~ssistant&#13;
r .of Communications,&#13;
ived more positive than&#13;
live votes but lost his second&#13;
e for tenure with the&#13;
Faculty Division (TFD)&#13;
Y, April 6.&#13;
hairperson, Ben&#13;
ebaum, associate professor&#13;
sics, explained before the&#13;
took place, that since&#13;
ve TFD members were&#13;
t at the open meeting; a&#13;
'ty of seven must vote yes&#13;
'8rry the motion to recomtenure.&#13;
The tally was six&#13;
live no, and one abstention.&#13;
uin lost by one vote.&#13;
·ously, TFD had voted&#13;
to four to deny tenure, but&#13;
case was reconsidered when&#13;
Humanities Executive&#13;
'ttee voted unanimously to&#13;
1 to TFD to reconsider their&#13;
. major surprise at the&#13;
tng occurred after&#13;
uin's presentation when&#13;
r Phillip Burnett at-&#13;
~d to ask a procedural&#13;
. on regarding a recently&#13;
d anonymous letter about&#13;
~uin. Burnett's apparent&#13;
tion was to seek "other than&#13;
·ve comments" from the . ce. . .&#13;
~neba~ · stopped Burnett&#13;
d-sentence and warned him&#13;
to reveal tile contents as the&#13;
r had been sent&#13;
Yinously. Burnett said that&#13;
'°uld like to know if any of the&#13;
ty. some students present&#13;
like to identify themselves&#13;
Scott Baudhuin&#13;
as the author(s). When no one.&#13;
replied, Greenebaum then&#13;
quickly moved on to other&#13;
matters.&#13;
Although at least some&#13;
members of the committee had&#13;
been made aware of the letter&#13;
and l.ts contents before the&#13;
meeting, Baudhuin had not been&#13;
informed of its existence and&#13;
therefore was unable to discuss it&#13;
in his presentation.&#13;
Since Greenebaum ruled out&#13;
discussion of the letter during the&#13;
meeting, even though it had been&#13;
brought up by Burnett.and made&#13;
known to the other TFD members,&#13;
Baudhuin was not able to&#13;
respond to the letter during the&#13;
discussion portion either.&#13;
Burnett later said · "We all&#13;
agreed that since the letter was&#13;
anonymous, it couldn't be used"&#13;
in consideration of the Baudhuin&#13;
In other recommendations&#13;
made by the budget priorities&#13;
advisory committee, the computer&#13;
center lost two new&#13;
programmers, a $19,900 data in&#13;
base and a plotter. It was&#13;
recommended that the computer&#13;
center follow certain priorities&#13;
set down by the committee, such&#13;
as a limited general maintenance&#13;
of existing services, final installation&#13;
of the bursar system,&#13;
and finally, change existing&#13;
batch programs due to file&#13;
organization and pre-registration&#13;
plus other priorities too&#13;
numerous to be mentioned here. and&#13;
Delays in certain projects for con, ,,..,.., on 119 1&#13;
***********************************"&#13;
Student gov t I lion Vote Wed. and Thur •&#13;
Ranger endorsements&#13;
page 2&#13;
***********************************i&#13;
case.&#13;
The following day, Baudhuin&#13;
telephoned Greenebaum and&#13;
asked to see the letter .&#13;
Greenebawn said that he had&#13;
disposed of it, but later when&#13;
Baudhuin_informed him that this&#13;
consituted destruction of&#13;
evidence, Greenebaum said he'·d&#13;
look for it in his waste basket and&#13;
make a copy for Baudhuin. He&#13;
did not explain why he wanted to&#13;
keep the original.&#13;
The contents of the letter were&#13;
not disclosed during the open&#13;
meeting.&#13;
Baudhuin said that he will&#13;
continue his bid for tenure by&#13;
taking his case to the Hearing&#13;
and Appeals Committee, chaired&#13;
by Theresa Peck, assistant&#13;
professor of Education. The&#13;
Hearing and Appeals Committee&#13;
hears cases primarily on the continued on pg A &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER April 14, 1976&#13;
i LY/ The Park~ , ,·&#13;
..-v,r.,. RANGER· /&#13;
--EDITORIAL/OPINI.ON ,.&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
Ranger endorses Bowden-VliJc . After interviewing and carefully studying the candidates,&#13;
Ranger announces .its endorsement of Kryoko·&#13;
Bowden for President of student government and her&#13;
running-mate Robert Vlach for Vice President. We&#13;
found Bowden and Vlach to contain the combination of&#13;
competence and experience necessary to make PSGA&#13;
an effective working body.&#13;
It appears that Bowden would be quite responsive and&#13;
fair in her dealings with students. She seems to think&#13;
issues through in a rational and evaluative type manner&#13;
which leads her to prescr_i be more practical solutions&#13;
than her opponents. She also has a more mature attitude&#13;
which gives her a superior ability. to cope with problems.&#13;
Vlach has many of these same characteristics; plus&#13;
being a senator in PSGA he has had considerable experience&#13;
with its procedures and problems. We believe&#13;
as Vice President of PSGA, he would be able ·to chair&#13;
meeti.ngs in a fair and impartial manner.&#13;
Included in the Bowden-Vlach platform is a proposal&#13;
to have junior,. rather than or in addition to, senior&#13;
summaries; have a better mass transit system to&#13;
Parkside; improve the student housing situation and&#13;
-establish a representative counc i l of s tudent&#13;
organizations which would report to the Senate.&#13;
Ranger found presidential candidate Lawrence Tripp&#13;
to be rather amusing but hardly a serious choice for the&#13;
office. Tripp feels that trivia contests and beer parties&#13;
are the answer to PSGA's problems. Finding lack ot'&#13;
student involvement to be the biggest problem at&#13;
Parkside, ~e says of trivia contests, "It's just dutnb&#13;
enough to get them involved." Though it's doubtful that&#13;
he reallies it, we.feel that Tripp has possibly stumbled&#13;
upon a very unique and innovative way to relate to&#13;
Parkside's missiar1.&#13;
Tripp also appeared to be rather uniformed in just&#13;
about every area. He did, however, believe that students&#13;
should be informed on what's going on the PSGA by&#13;
using such methods as posting notices and "l iterature&#13;
drops." We actually began to fear for our lives as he&#13;
assured us thaJ the U.S. had effectively dropped 200&#13;
million piec.es of paper on Vietnam during the ~ ar.&#13;
The other candidates wl)ich Ranger interviewed were&#13;
Kai Nall who is vying for the position of President, and&#13;
his running-mate Rusty Smith Tutlewski. One objection&#13;
we had to their platform was the increased influence it&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is written and edited by the students of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside who are solely responsibl~ for its&#13;
editorial policy and c,ontent. Editorial and Business 5S3-2287;&#13;
Newsroom 553-2295.&#13;
E DITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
NEWS &amp; PRODUCTION COORDINATOR: Bruce Wagner&#13;
NEWS DEPARTMENTS:&#13;
ADMINISTftATION. &amp; POLICIES: Mick Andersen&#13;
STUDENT GROUPS-SPEAKERS-EVENTS: Diane Carlson,&#13;
SMI: Dave Brandt . Terri Gayhart&#13;
gave to the executive branch of PSGA. It demonstrated&#13;
a lack of confidence in the capabil ities of the Senate and&#13;
the resultant desire to take over some of its functions.&#13;
There was also a tendancy on Nall's part to disregard&#13;
more rational and logical procedures for solving&#13;
problems in favor of showy spectacles of student&#13;
resistence. For example, his solution to the problem of&#13;
getting ·student evaluations of faculty made public was&#13;
to call in Contact 6 and have them follow the Chancellor&#13;
around with a camera.&#13;
· Other issues mentioned in the Nall-Tutlewski platform&#13;
dealt with student housing, establishment of a book co- .&#13;
op and student rev iews of university contracts. These&#13;
seem to be worthwhile projects, however, the book co-op&#13;
was already attempted by Kai this year and failed. We&#13;
have no indication that the situation will change in the&#13;
near future.&#13;
Ranger also· questioned Nall's ability to work well&#13;
with the Senate. As previously stated, he does not seem&#13;
to have great faith in the Senate's capabilities which&#13;
may, however, be deserved af,ter 'this year's performance.&#13;
But, there has been speculation that the lack&#13;
of motivation in the Senate was brought about by the&#13;
dominating style of leadership exhibited by Nall who as&#13;
Vice President chaired the meetings. Last semester a&#13;
motion was made to censure Nall for using&#13;
parliamentary procedure to further his own ends in the&#13;
Senate.·&#13;
Tutlewski, N.all's running-mate for Vice President,&#13;
quite impressed the Ranger Editorial Board, but unfortunately&#13;
she's running on the same platform, which&#13;
appears to have _been drawn up mainly by NalL There&#13;
was also a problem in that she was not familiar with&#13;
parliamentary procedure, and was not as yet very&#13;
familiar with the workings of the University . .&#13;
Ranger did feel, however, that Tutlewski possessed&#13;
tremendous potential with many leadership qualities&#13;
and the motivation necessary to become a moving force&#13;
within the University, but her lack of experience and the&#13;
content of her platform prevented us from endorsing her . ,&#13;
We urge students to participate in the PSGA elections&#13;
and vote for Kiyoko Bowden - President and Robert&#13;
Vlach - Vice President.&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Mick Andersen&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Mike Terry&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Thom Aiello&#13;
VISAGE EDITOR:· jeffery j. swencki ·&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Cathy Brnak&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Gerry Ferch&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: Michael Nepper ,&#13;
WRITERS: Judy Trudrung, Betsy Neu, Carol Arentz, Kai Nall, Phil&#13;
H~rmann, Bill Barke, Thomas Heinz, Terry A. Maraccini&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Terri Gayhart, jeffrey j. swencki . . &#13;
THE PARKSIDE RA G R&#13;
Nall, Tutlew Id p a&#13;
Bowden,&#13;
a·ddress&#13;
Vlach&#13;
• issues&#13;
To Parkside students:&#13;
There is one · ue m this&#13;
campaign that may not have&#13;
been talked about very much&#13;
because most people take it for&#13;
granted. We would like to address lbe students:&#13;
'9i Nall bas responded to what&#13;
perceives to be a personal&#13;
This we believe· to be&#13;
·typical of his inability to&#13;
rate issues from per-&#13;
·ties. .&#13;
fe questioned Mr. Nail's&#13;
ed positioning of the&#13;
anizational Council as a&#13;
· nt's Committee. Nowhere&#13;
we attack Mr. Nall as a&#13;
. Our dispute was over an&#13;
I&#13;
1 Mr. Nall is incapable of&#13;
ing affect (himself) from&#13;
Hect (issues) every time&#13;
ne criticizes a proposal he&#13;
forward, how can he hope&#13;
be an effective leader of PSGA ·&#13;
0 frequently conflicting&#13;
· ~ must be coordinated into&#13;
.-.fied whol~?&#13;
Robert Vlach and I will stick to&#13;
tssues.&#13;
n,e issues are our idea for&#13;
A run Faculty Evaluations&#13;
opposed to Nall's&#13;
gebammering Faculty&#13;
uations out of divisions&#13;
unnecessary threats of&#13;
ation. Why bother when&#13;
A can do it itself?&#13;
n,eissues are Who pays for the&#13;
a of projects Mr. Nall is&#13;
... ni:·su· 1g? The issues are do&#13;
Assistant&#13;
e Wagner ·&#13;
dorses&#13;
wden-Vlach&#13;
lhe Editor:&#13;
After carefully examining the&#13;
'dates running for the office&#13;
President of PSGA, I have&#13;
· to support the ticket of&#13;
olto Bowden and Robert&#13;
. I feel that PSGA has come&#13;
lang way toward restoring&#13;
'bility and respect in PSGA&#13;
• viable student organization.&#13;
would hate to see that&#13;
'bility destroyed.&#13;
lai Nall is already tllreatening&#13;
ent action which would&#13;
il student government in a&#13;
with the Administration at&#13;
'de. PSGA before '75-76'was&#13;
Uy raising controversy,&#13;
Ing internal strife and&#13;
·on. Kai Nall is unable to&#13;
diplomatically, which is a&#13;
when you don't have any&#13;
power. Many conflicts&#13;
een PSGA and other&#13;
· tions were perpetuated&#13;
actions of Kai Nall. I feel that&#13;
will do more harm and_&#13;
bably be instrumental · in&#13;
eloping many negative&#13;
towards PSGA.&#13;
liyoko Bowden is an inent&#13;
candidate who has&#13;
nt versus personal interests&#13;
beart and would be a valuable&#13;
t to PSGA. Kiyoko is very&#13;
lllinded and willing to listen&#13;
Git concerns of others. I feel&#13;
if PSGA is to continue to&#13;
. it will need lead~rship&#13;
is sincere, dedicated, and&#13;
. orthy. Kiyoko Bowden can&#13;
that type of leadership. If&#13;
•ant an effective student&#13;
ent that students can&#13;
Pride in, Vote Kiyoko&#13;
. n and Robert Ylach for&#13;
nt and Vfce President.&#13;
Lee Wagner,&#13;
President of PSGA&#13;
Chancellor who is an ad- this issue in this letter to the&#13;
ministration-paid friend? Editor. The is.sue is the comCannot&#13;
PSGA represent student mitment of the candidates.&#13;
needs rationally and con- We have outlined, explained m&#13;
vincingly to all administrators detail, and distributed copies of&#13;
involved in a particular area? the types of programs, polict ,&#13;
PSGA .will have the opportunity and projects we would like to&#13;
to make a recommendation on tring to P.S.G.A. during the last&#13;
the individual who will be hired. month. Some of them are: Co-op&#13;
Is this not enough for the Book Store, Housing Co-op&#13;
moment? If PSGA is diMatisfied project, financial aids service,&#13;
with the decision then the only WlSCOnsin Homestead Tax Credit&#13;
then should we seek an outside Service, publishing faculty&#13;
forum. evaluation forms, creation of an&#13;
We address questions to the Executive Advisory • Board no&#13;
is.sues without Mr. Nall's slurring r trips to Kansas City for P.S.G.A.&#13;
comments about our platform officials, no free reserved&#13;
which as he knew had been parking sticker for P .S.G.A.&#13;
submitted to the Ranger a week president, and more.&#13;
before, but which the Ranger But, no matter bow many good&#13;
didn't have enough room to projects a candidate talks about&#13;
publish. in a platform or bow moch better&#13;
We encouragec students to a system they will bring to&#13;
analyze Nall-Tutlewski's rhetoric P.S.G.A.; the people ~&#13;
for concrete plans for im- mu.st have a commitment for&#13;
plementation and then look at what they are doing, to P .S.G.A.&#13;
Bowden-Vlach's outline for and to students.&#13;
projects and policies in their Commitment On : We will not&#13;
platform. give up. We- will not -give up on&#13;
Robert Vlach and I address the P.S.G.A. if tbe going gets rough&#13;
issues! or something doesn't go through.&#13;
Ms. Kiyoko T. Bowden We will finish the term we are&#13;
Candidate for President of PSGA elected to, and we will pursue our&#13;
and programs and projects to their&#13;
RobertG. Vlach limits.&#13;
Candidate for Commitment Two: We will&#13;
Vit&gt;e-President of PSGA always go through the Senate.&#13;
Bravo!&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Congratulations to the Music&#13;
community, students and faculty&#13;
members, who provided this&#13;
week's concerts for all of us. The&#13;
concerts were delightful. Please&#13;
consider giving us a once-amonth&#13;
concert throughout the&#13;
Every single issue , project,&#13;
program or policy will be brought&#13;
to the Senate for full debate. We&#13;
will depend on the Senate to&#13;
debate both tbe merits of the&#13;
issue and it's weaknesses. We&#13;
will faithfully execute the&#13;
legislation that the Senate&#13;
passes, except in the case where&#13;
the dent vetoes the legislation&#13;
and the Senate fails to override it.&#13;
year. Bravo!&#13;
Commitment T~: We will&#13;
always listen. The channels to the&#13;
Executive Branch will always be&#13;
Minon J. Mochon open and -we will do everything&#13;
Assistant to the Vice Chancellor we can to keep an open mind on&#13;
"Free" gratitude&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Thanks to all for malting&#13;
Thursday night's free concert&#13;
with Blueprint and Glenn Super a&#13;
super event. Thanks to the many&#13;
volunteers; the T.V. crew, the&#13;
talent and special thanks to the&#13;
audie~ce for their enthusiasm&#13;
and support. Hopefully, more&#13;
free shows of this nature will be&#13;
offered in the future, made&#13;
. possible by the concerned efforts&#13;
of all. Again, thanks!&#13;
Glen A. Christensen&#13;
P.A.B. Video Chairperson,&#13;
Producer of the T. V. -&#13;
concert series: "For Free! "&#13;
the issues in front of us. •&#13;
• Commitment Four: We will&#13;
work hard. We realize that the&#13;
job ahead of us is not going to be&#13;
easy and it is not going to get&#13;
done if we expect everyone else to&#13;
do the job for us. We will get right&#13;
in there and work. This is no&#13;
popularity contest foc us, this is&#13;
going to be a full time job.&#13;
We feel that it is important to&#13;
Remember&#13;
to vote !&#13;
Cor•on Auto Parts, inc.&#13;
Racine, Wi.&#13;
/Ji11oanl lo Slai1nfl&#13;
Phone 632-88411230 Lath~ M._&#13;
Phone 637-8882 1400 Mlhflilcet ,.,. ·&#13;
P A.B. P1tES9ITT&#13;
Georgia ~to t or&#13;
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hurs., April 29 - 8 p.m. Com-Art&#13;
Theater&#13;
Admission 5 1.00 VWP Students&#13;
5 1.50 General&#13;
Tickets and lnformotion Kiosk&#13;
Attention : All V. •&#13;
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••••tr sc ool, it i1 •••111n&#13;
make Hrt •• soo&#13;
are certified for I er sdlool i ortltr&#13;
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622-58th Street 6~-0 &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE ~ANGER April 14,1976&#13;
~.O.P, codification issues discussed&#13;
by M1ckAndersen&#13;
The University Committee&#13;
continued to wrestle. with the&#13;
recommendations of the&#13;
COOification Committee on the&#13;
implementation of the report of&#13;
the Committee of Principles and&#13;
with the problem of course&#13;
duplication between dlscipUnes&#13;
at their Tuesday meeting.&#13;
The Codification Committee&#13;
report called for the establishment&#13;
.of a Implementation&#13;
Committee composed of an&#13;
elected representative from&#13;
"eaclr fully or provisionally&#13;
organized division". as well as&#13;
two full time stndent members,&#13;
who are to be named by the. Vice..&#13;
Chancellor after consulting with&#13;
the Parkside Student .Government&#13;
Association. In a previous&#13;
meeting . objections to the&#13;
COOification Committee's report&#13;
)lQnilnzil&#13;
Free with this coupon&#13;
'.&#13;
a bottle of beer&#13;
with any steak dinner&#13;
3315 52 St., Kenosha&#13;
694·6700&#13;
!'~~.~&#13;
tWI4~ .&#13;
~WIUI-(p...ec"" ~ ",e~, - *~ * e"., .LiUu ~" ••'c 4. t..,e't .eI«tw ..&#13;
....... ......... ..... • 1f1S.&#13;
i&#13;
ii;,::'=" _.-&#13;
30Z1 • 75.h S'",e~ Kenooha&#13;
-&#13;
Your first job ill the single most important&#13;
step towards your future, and your chances&#13;
of finding the right job are better at&#13;
Snelling and Snelling hi Kenosha. For&#13;
personal counseling with your career&#13;
objeetiv;'; stop in, send resume or call.&#13;
Wile", N_ Futu"," Seghl .••~linil ~&#13;
"!.~.!'~....-.I!II&#13;
2031- 22nd Ave., Villa Capri Plaza, .&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
(414)552-78So'&#13;
surfaced in two areas: whether&#13;
the charge of the University&#13;
Committee \0 the Codification&#13;
Committee allowed for the&#13;
divisional election of officers and&#13;
whether the size of the proposed&#13;
Curriculum Committee was what&#13;
the University Committee had in&#13;
mind.&#13;
David Beach, associate&#13;
professor of psychology, wondered&#13;
whether the intent of tfie&#13;
/' charge "had been violated." John&#13;
Harbeson, chairperson of' the&#13;
Codification Committee&#13;
disagreed, saying that his&#13;
committee had acted within the&#13;
limits of its power and that the&#13;
committee "had the right to&#13;
initiate" its own proposals. He&#13;
also mentioned that the membership&#13;
of the Codification&#13;
Committee felt strongly in favor&#13;
of the changes' that had been&#13;
made as a way of "opening up"&#13;
the decisionomalWig process.&#13;
After protracted discussion the&#13;
revised recommendations of the&#13;
Codification Committee were&#13;
added to the agenda of the April&#13;
meeting of the Faculty Senate.&#13;
The inunediate problem of&#13;
course duplication between the&#13;
Math and Economics diScipUnes&#13;
was again brought up, having&#13;
been delayed at the previous&#13;
Thursday'S meeting.&#13;
Ronald Gatterdam, 'associate&#13;
professor of Mathematics, saw&#13;
two basic issues in this dispute.&#13;
The first was whetlter there&#13;
s h 0 u I d b e overlapping&#13;
courses. "H there should the&#13;
question is moot;' he S~id.&#13;
The second issue was the&#13;
&lt;lpecifics of the particular case.&#13;
Gatterdam suggested that the&#13;
acting deans be contacted and&#13;
that no new courses he approved&#13;
until the new Course and&#13;
Curriculwn Committee becomes&#13;
operational in the fall.&#13;
"I'm not very haiJpy with that&#13;
.solution," replied Beach.&#13;
"We cOlild set up an appeals&#13;
recourse," added William Murin,&#13;
associate -professor .of political&#13;
science. _&#13;
David Beach suggested putting&#13;
the whole matter off until the new&#13;
Course and Curriculwn Committee&#13;
began its work. "We're&#13;
not - going to do anything&#13;
retroactive. That's part of· the&#13;
charge heing given to the campus&#13;
Course and Curriculum Committee,"&#13;
Beach declared. "There&#13;
is no mechanism to deal&#13;
equitably on this issue until&#13;
September 1;" he added.&#13;
Gatterdam was not happy. "We&#13;
can't keep sweeping this under&#13;
the rug every time by declaring&#13;
this a contentious issue and that&#13;
we can't decide," he said.&#13;
Larry Duetsch, associate&#13;
professor of Economics,&#13;
disagreed. "It is a concious&#13;
decision we can make, that we&#13;
can postpone it one more&#13;
semester." .-.-&#13;
"Do we want to get retroactive&#13;
. on anything?" Murin asked to no&#13;
one in particular.&#13;
Doetsch suggested that the&#13;
University Committee "extend to&#13;
the Curriculwn Committee the&#13;
final right to appro.ve each&#13;
course."&#13;
-An ad' hoc ,Course and&#13;
Curriculum Committee was&#13;
suggested by Beach to the&#13;
problem of course overlap between&#13;
C.S,S. and S.M.I. as an&#13;
interim solution, Murin agreed,&#13;
asking that it consist of three&#13;
members of the College Course&#13;
and Curriculwn Committee and&#13;
three from the School of Modern&#13;
Industry's Executive Committee.&#13;
Immediately a debate ensued&#13;
over the suggested composition&#13;
of the ad hoc committee. At one&#13;
point it was suggested that the&#13;
committee be made up of eight&#13;
members of ll)e College Course&#13;
.Summer Session&#13;
Timetables&#13;
Will be available the week ofApril&#13;
25th at these locations:&#13;
• Classroom Building Concourse&#13;
• Main ~Iace Information Center&#13;
• Student Records Office~&#13;
Tallent Hall, Room 181&#13;
Continuing students: To' have a proe-printed&#13;
packet at registration, fill out a blue IBM card&#13;
at the locations above.&#13;
HEY PARKSIDEII&#13;
Oly'Drafi 1s Here&#13;
.9.W~ '&#13;
~...."nn,,~...l~If "''Itl.!\ J:~.AI&#13;
/&#13;
OLYMPIA BREWING COtolMNY OIJMPIA' S'tAWI.&#13;
Dial. by C.J.W. Inc.&#13;
36.37 - 30th Avenue, Kenosha&#13;
and Curriculwn Committee&#13;
four from the School of MOd&#13;
Industry. This caused Millin&#13;
declare 10 exasperation, "If&#13;
want to power play the Y&#13;
we'll wipe them out."&#13;
Doetsch wanted the ad&#13;
"conference cOmmittee" to&#13;
charged with all matter.&#13;
related to hoth the School&#13;
College regarding course&#13;
curriculwn.&#13;
Eventually it was decided&#13;
the conference should COIIsist&#13;
representative from&#13;
division. It was made cIesr&#13;
this committee would not tate&#13;
pJact; of the CoUege Course&#13;
Curriculwn Conunittee nil'&#13;
School of Modern Industry.&#13;
The Committee then cloeed&#13;
doors to non-members to lIIIl,,1iOI&#13;
personnel matters,&#13;
Filippone&#13;
co-authors&#13;
,&#13;
math text&#13;
Tenure&#13;
continued from pg. 1&#13;
grounds of procedural&#13;
although Peck said thsl8lt~:2~&#13;
of prejudice may be C'&#13;
as well.&#13;
Meanwhile,- in another&#13;
sonnel matter, Ass!&#13;
Professor Corwin King,&#13;
denied tenure by the H&#13;
'Studies Executive Comml&#13;
• (by 8 yes, 9 no, and 5 absten&#13;
will present his case to&#13;
Hearing and Appeals Co&#13;
on Wednesday;- April 14.&#13;
According to Peck, if&#13;
committee should decide ..&#13;
candidates Javor, the case&#13;
either be sent back III lbe&#13;
that refused tenure, or ..if....&#13;
that it is of no purpose IIIdO&#13;
the case can then be sent&#13;
that body to the next In uae.&#13;
Therefore, if the Hearla8&#13;
Appeals Committee&#13;
decide in King's favor Ibe&#13;
may be sent hack to&#13;
Humanities Executive,&#13;
mittee with directlOlll&#13;
reconsider. Otherwise,&#13;
Hearing and Appeals Co&#13;
can clrcwnvent that steP&#13;
send King's case directlY to&#13;
the last faculty committee&#13;
has jurisdiction on tenure&#13;
. FoUowing that, cases are&#13;
the Dean, and ~allY to&#13;
Chancellor.&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE ~ANGER April 14, 1976 ·&#13;
(:.0.P, codification issues dis.cusse.d&#13;
by Mick Andersen&#13;
The University Committee&#13;
continued to wrestle. with the&#13;
recommendations of the&#13;
Codification Committee on the&#13;
implementation of the report of&#13;
the Committee of Principles and&#13;
with the problem of course&#13;
duplication between disciplines&#13;
at their Tuesday meeting.&#13;
The Codification 'Committee&#13;
report called for the establish~&#13;
ment .of a Implementation&#13;
Committee composed of an&#13;
elected representative from&#13;
"each' fully or provisionally&#13;
organized division" . as well as&#13;
• two full time student members,&#13;
who are to be named by the. Vice,.&#13;
Chancellor after consulting with&#13;
the Parkside student -Govern.-&#13;
ment Association. In a previous&#13;
meeting - object-ions to the&#13;
Codification· Committee's ~eport&#13;
BQDAIIZil ·~&#13;
Free with this coupon.&#13;
a bottle of beer ·&#13;
with any steak dinner&#13;
3315 52 St., Kenosha&#13;
?)~~-~&#13;
~ -&#13;
'Bu~(~~~ -&#13;
*~*~-411iu,&#13;
,:eci,d'4 ,,_ ~ ~~,;~'.4'.~U~&#13;
3021 · 75ih Sireei, Keno.ha 694-6700&#13;
•&#13;
• l'UIITS&#13;
Cll£.ITM&#13;
~&#13;
• ClfTS •&#13;
•&#13;
--IIIIT IWl£TS -·-&#13;
~&#13;
Your first job is the single most important&#13;
step towards your future, and your chances&#13;
of finding the right job are better at&#13;
Snelling and Snelling iri Kenosha. For&#13;
personal counseling with your career&#13;
objectives; stop in, send resume or call.&#13;
... ~-·~.,.· ·--. -~~h"~&#13;
203l 22nd Ave., Villa Capri Plaza,&#13;
, Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
(414)552-7850&#13;
surfaced in two areas: whether&#13;
the charge of the University&#13;
Committee t,o the Codification&#13;
Committee allowed for the&#13;
divisional election of officers and&#13;
whether the size of the proposed&#13;
Curriculum Committee was what&#13;
the University Committee had in&#13;
mind. '&#13;
David Beach, associate&#13;
professor of psychology, wondered&#13;
whether the intent of tlie&#13;
_,,, charge "had been vfolated. "John&#13;
Harbeson, chairperson of · the&#13;
Codification Committee&#13;
disagreed,, saying that his&#13;
committee had acted within the&#13;
limits of its power and that the&#13;
committee "had the right to&#13;
initiate" its own proposals. He&#13;
also mentioned that the membership&#13;
of th~ Codification&#13;
Committee felt strongly in favor&#13;
of the changes- that had been&#13;
made as a way of "opening up"&#13;
the decision:malilifg process.&#13;
After protracted discussion the&#13;
revised recommendations of the&#13;
Codification Committee were&#13;
added to the agenda of the April&#13;
meeting of the Faculty Senate.&#13;
The • immediate problem of&#13;
course duplication between the&#13;
Math and Economics disciplines&#13;
was again brought up, having&#13;
been delayed at the ~ previous&#13;
Thursday's meeting.&#13;
: Ronald Gatterdam, associate&#13;
professor of Mathematics, saw&#13;
two basic issues in this dispute.&#13;
The first was whetber there&#13;
s h o u 1 d b e overlapping&#13;
courses. "If there should the&#13;
question is moot," he s;id.&#13;
The second issue was the&#13;
~pecifics of the particular case.&#13;
Gatterdam suggested that the&#13;
acting deans be contacted and&#13;
that no new courses be approved&#13;
until the new Course and&#13;
Curriculum Committee becomes&#13;
operational in the fall.&#13;
"I'm not very happy with that&#13;
solution," replied Beach.&#13;
"We co~ld set up an appeals&#13;
recourse," added William Murin,&#13;
associate -professor .of political&#13;
science . ,&#13;
David Beach suggested putting&#13;
the whole matter off witil the new&#13;
Course and Curriculum Committee&#13;
began its work. "We're&#13;
not - going to do anything&#13;
retroactive. That's part of . the ·&#13;
charge being given to the campus&#13;
Course and · Curriculum Committee,"&#13;
Beach declared. "There&#13;
is no mechanism to deal&#13;
equitably on this issue until&#13;
September 1;" he added.&#13;
Gatterdam was not happy. "We&#13;
can't keep . sweeping this wider&#13;
the rug every time by declaring&#13;
this a contentious issue and that&#13;
we can't decide," he said.&#13;
Larry Duetsch, associate&#13;
professor of Economics,&#13;
disagreed. "It is a concious&#13;
decision we can make, that we&#13;
can postpc:me it one more&#13;
semester." -&#13;
"Do we want to get retroactive&#13;
· on anything?" Murin asked to no&#13;
one in particular.&#13;
Duetsch suggested that the&#13;
University Committee "extend to&#13;
the Curriculum Committee the&#13;
final right to appra.ve each&#13;
course.''&#13;
-An ad • hoc Course _and&#13;
Curriculum Committee was&#13;
suggested by Beach to the&#13;
problem of course overlap between&#13;
C.S.S. and S.M.I. as an&#13;
interim solution, Murin agreed,&#13;
asking that it consist of three&#13;
members of the College Course&#13;
and Curriculum Committee and&#13;
three from the School of Modern&#13;
Industry's Executive Committee.&#13;
Immediately a debate ensued&#13;
over the suggested composition&#13;
of the ad hoc committee. At one&#13;
point it was suggested that the&#13;
committee be made up of eight&#13;
members of the College Course&#13;
· Summer Session&#13;
Timetables&#13;
Will be available the week of -&#13;
April 25th at these locations:&#13;
• Classroom Building Concourse&#13;
• Main "lace ~nformation Center&#13;
• Student-Records Offjce;.&#13;
Tallent Hall, Room 181&#13;
Con~inuing students: To·have a pr.a-printed&#13;
packet at registration, fill out a blue IBM card&#13;
at the locations above. 11&#13;
HEY PARKSIDE!!·&#13;
Oly · Draft ·ts Here&#13;
; \&#13;
OLYMPIA BREWING COftf PANY 01.YMPIA •ST.PAUL&#13;
Dist,, by C.J. W. Inc.&#13;
36_37 30th Avenue, Kenosha&#13;
-~-&#13;
and Curriculwn Committee&#13;
four from the School of 'MOd a&#13;
Industry. This caused 'Mu .&#13;
declare in exasperation,&#13;
"IG&#13;
want to power play the bastar&#13;
we'll wipe them out."&#13;
Duetsch wanted the ad&#13;
"conference committee" to&#13;
charged with all matters&#13;
related to both the School&#13;
College regarding course&#13;
curriculum.&#13;
Eventually it was decided&#13;
the conference should consist of ,&#13;
representative from e&#13;
di . . ie v1s1on. It was made clear&#13;
this committee would not take&#13;
place of the College Course&#13;
Curriculum Committee nor&#13;
&amp;hool of Modern Industry.&#13;
The Committee then clOIJed&#13;
doors to non-members to&#13;
personnel matters. .._;-..11111&#13;
F-ilippone&#13;
co-authors&#13;
I&#13;
math text&#13;
continued from pg. I&#13;
growids of procedural e&#13;
although Peck said that ma&#13;
of prejudice may be consid&#13;
as well. ·&#13;
Meanwhile; in another&#13;
sonnel matter, Assist&#13;
Professor Corwin King, r&#13;
denied tenure by the Hum ·studies Executive Comm!&#13;
.. (by 8 yes, 9·no, and 5 abstenti&#13;
will present his case to&#13;
Hearing and Appeals Comm!&#13;
on Wednesday, April 14.&#13;
According to Peck, if&#13;
committee should decide ID&#13;
candidates favor, the case&#13;
either be sent back to the&#13;
that ref~d tenure, or "if we&#13;
that it is of no purpose to do&#13;
the case can then be sent be&#13;
that body to the next in line·&#13;
Therefore, if the HearinB&#13;
Appeals Committee sbO&#13;
decide in King'.s favor the&#13;
may be sent back to&#13;
Humanities Executive, C&#13;
mittee with directions&#13;
reconsider. Otherwise,&#13;
Hearing and Appeals eomini&#13;
can circumvent that step&#13;
send King's case directly to&#13;
the last faculty committee&#13;
has jurisdiction on tenure&#13;
· Following that, cases are&#13;
the Dean, and (inallY to&#13;
Chancellor. &#13;
ludent requirements waived ,&#13;
byBruce'Wagner&#13;
was a meeting of the '&#13;
re of Science and Society,&#13;
geg Committee last Wed-&#13;
~' sludenls probably&#13;
OS, ed b t&#13;
't be concern a ou&#13;
t haPpened at thai meeting,&#13;
to two sludents wbos.e&#13;
uationlie in the balance, It&#13;
I a lot.&#13;
e@tt-person committee of '&#13;
\lie McKeown of sociology;&#13;
campbell, cbairperson of&#13;
gocial Sciences Division;&#13;
Johnson, cbairperson of&#13;
Humanities Division; Stella&#13;
y, assistant professor of&#13;
'sh' Norbert Isenberg,'&#13;
'rpe;son of the Science,&#13;
"00' Paul Kleine, chairofthe&#13;
Education Division;&#13;
Shea, associate, professor .&#13;
earth science, and Wayne&#13;
1, athletic director was&#13;
five strong tbat day as they&#13;
to fu1fill their charge of&#13;
ding upon waivers of general&#13;
ationrequirements affecting&#13;
ols in the College.&#13;
of the most common&#13;
asked by the majority-of&#13;
students who come before the&#13;
committee involves the language&#13;
requirement. The convenor of the&#13;
COmmittee, CSS associate dean&#13;
Leon Applebaum, recommended&#13;
to the, group that they waive the&#13;
second semester of this&#13;
requirement first applicant&#13;
present at the meeting.&#13;
Although many of the waivers&#13;
presented to the committee are&#13;
approved, APplebaum told this'&#13;
reporter that not all are approved&#13;
without going through him for&#13;
advice and information about the&#13;
procedures for having a general&#13;
education requirement removed.&#13;
The College steering committee&#13;
was developed in the fall&#13;
of 1971 to set up an agenda for the&#13;
executive committee of the CSS.&#13;
Later, in November of 1972, the&#13;
college executive committee&#13;
decid~ to add the steering&#13;
committee to facilitate the means&#13;
by which students could&#13;
e1iminate some of the problems&#13;
that might arise attending&#13;
Parkside, such as having a&#13;
speech defect, thus making the&#13;
language requirement meffective&#13;
for such a person,&#13;
StudentS wishing to make such&#13;
, '&#13;
U51~E55 tJN-llliIE&#13;
Paper presented by Parkside prof.&#13;
by David Brandt&#13;
'week~nd 'prof;ssors James P~icz~ki: iarry' shh:iand and&#13;
I Grabam traveled to St. Louis, Missouri for the twelfth annual&#13;
of the Midwest Business Administration Association. The&#13;
are co-authors of a paper entitled, Increasing Student Effort by&#13;
their Instrumentallty Levels Through ,Contract Grading,&#13;
h was selected for presentation to the association. Polczynski,&#13;
is the main author of the paper, gave the presentation before a&#13;
of approximately 50 business instructors from throughout the&#13;
st.&#13;
Research for the paper was conducted during the 1974-75school year,&#13;
nine classes of Parkside business students with a total of 278&#13;
cipants. The research was based on the motivational theory of&#13;
clancy, which, if applied to the classroom could result in higher&#13;
nl motivation. ' ,&#13;
Results of the study showed that student effort, productivity and&#13;
, g significantly increased using the contract grading method.&#13;
use the contract arrangement forces students to make a comtand&#13;
live up to it, the system may also prove a.valuable aid in&#13;
. g the transition from the classroom to the business world, as&#13;
depend upon commitments and responsibility. .,&#13;
SIlce Ihe study proved the contract grading more effective in&#13;
'son to traditional methods, students may be seeing more of its&#13;
intheir business classes. It does require extra effort from both the&#13;
tor and the student but it may be worth it if it works as well as&#13;
claim. In the works of the authors, "And is not this what teaching&#13;
an about?"&#13;
THE PARKS IDE RANGER April 14, 1976 ~&#13;
.., .-, ... - -&#13;
a waiver must submit a letter to&#13;
Applebaum regarding the&#13;
problem and also include&#13;
documentation of such a&#13;
problem.&#13;
01 the twenty students that&#13;
.bave applied' for waivers this&#13;
year, many of them have&#13;
requested it in the area of&#13;
distribution of requirements for&#13;
Social science, humanities, and&#13;
natural science. The other&#13;
student wbo appeared before the&#13;
committee last Wednesday&#13;
requested such a waiver in the&#13;
science division. It was accepted&#13;
after the committee decided that&#13;
APplied Science 132, otherwise&#13;
known as Computers and&#13;
Computing, was a 'good course for&#13;
him to take for his science&#13;
requirement, allowing for the&#13;
fact that the other courses the&#13;
student was taking this semester&#13;
would have conflicted with the&#13;
Science Division offerings.&#13;
Paid 'Of b, Tripp for Pr"*nt commit, ..&#13;
~11~lBU&#13;
LAWRENCE R.&#13;
TRIPP&#13;
~rnlE~UlDlEGJU&#13;
~(DGJrn~UlDl5&#13;
~U(!)lDl5l.lJU lBlIlWl5GJIlUll5l.lJU&#13;
PDQ&#13;
...............................................&#13;
•.' •.&#13;
e LEE SAUSAGE SHOP i&#13;
•• •&#13;
•&#13;
e Ho.e 01 the S.~••ri... I&#13;
• •&#13;
i San.~eh !&#13;
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• •&#13;
• •&#13;
:. 26t5 W........ Alt. 6~217J =&#13;
I•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,&#13;
One of the goals for one of&#13;
Parkside's student service&#13;
organizations, Parkside Drug&#13;
';luarters (PDQ), is to provide&#13;
help and information for fellow&#13;
students who have a self-defmed&#13;
problem in the area of chemical&#13;
use and-or abuse, including&#13;
alcohol as well as other drugs. -&#13;
PDQ is also involved with some&#13;
outreach activities in lbat they&#13;
work with several community&#13;
agencies with the assistance of&#13;
, the student Health Service, who&#13;
is directed by Edith Isenberg and&#13;
one of the counselors, Clifford&#13;
Johnson, whose area of speciality&#13;
is chemical dependency,&#13;
The group is open to all&#13;
students, although they emphasize&#13;
the fact that students who&#13;
join the organization need not&#13;
bave, or have bad a chemically&#13;
related problem to join PDQ.&#13;
In order to promote better&#13;
understanding of these dependencies,&#13;
PDQ is sponsoring&#13;
weekly informal discussion&#13;
groups, convened by Cliff&#13;
Johnson. These sessions will also&#13;
include some special speakers&#13;
from the student body, the&#13;
faculty, and the community. The&#13;
first session will be held in CA 132&#13;
at 7:00 p.m., Apri115.&#13;
For further information on&#13;
PDQ's activities, contact them in&#13;
Tallent Hall 187 by calling 553-&#13;
2623 or contacting Cliff Johnson&#13;
~t553-2575,&#13;
* Hair Styling&#13;
. • Hair Coloring&#13;
* Hair Relaxing&#13;
on "T owords Government&#13;
European Anwers to American&#13;
Announcing a free&#13;
public conference on&#13;
Government Institutions&#13;
in Modern America&#13;
9:30 a.m. - 1 p.m.&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Comm Arts Theater&#13;
Featuring talks by:&#13;
• Theodore C. Sorensen, adviser to Pres. John F.&#13;
Kennedy and author of books on hiS, .&#13;
administration, on "Perspectives on Presidenticl&#13;
Power: Prospects for Accountability."&#13;
. ~~~&#13;
Featuring Roffler Hair Styling far Men &amp; Women&#13;
Services Include:&#13;
• Phillippe Strum, Brooklyn College Campus of CUNY,&#13;
Accountability: Adapting&#13;
Questions. "&#13;
• Penna Styles,&#13;
curls or waves&#13;
"Ask aboul some af lhese new styles"&#13;
Rum LOOK - MARK III AVANTE LOOK -&#13;
SCULPTUR-KUT us MALE - MALE SHAG&#13;
(Pictures available)&#13;
• James L. Sundquist.. Brookings Institution, on&#13;
"Congress and the Presidency: The Dilemma of&#13;
Perpetually Divided Government."&#13;
Four slylisls 1o serve you • Opportunity for questions from the audience.&#13;
Som Korghlanian· Ken Beecher&#13;
(member 1974 Wi. State Hair Styling Team)&#13;
Dan Beecher Gracie Balian&#13;
3701 .Durand Ave. Ratine&#13;
.West End Elmwood Plaza&#13;
Appointments not necessary ,&#13;
..If' Sponsored by the Wisoonsin Hum&lt;llihs&#13;
~ Committee, UW-Plrkside, the Racine/Kenosho&#13;
~ • • .BIcentennial lecture Series and the Johnson&#13;
foundation.&#13;
Phone 554-7939&#13;
tudent reqU:irements Waived - ... by Bruce·Wagner&#13;
was a meeting of the ·&#13;
tlJel'e of Science and · Society .&#13;
~eg Committee last Wedy.&#13;
students probably&#13;
)fo;,t be . concerned · about&#13;
t happened at that meeting,&#13;
to two students whos_e 1 uation lie in the balance, it&#13;
talot. · 11Je eight-person committee of ·&#13;
McKeown of sociology;&#13;
campbell, chairperson of&#13;
Soeial Sciences Division;&#13;
us Johnson, chairperson of&#13;
aumanities Division; Stella&#13;
y, assistant professor of _&#13;
lish· Norbert Isenberg, '&#13;
jrpe;son of the Science ·&#13;
.. ·on· Paul Kleine, chairn&#13;
of the Education Division;&#13;
Shea, associate,professor . earth science, and Wayne&#13;
ehl, athletic director was&#13;
five strong that day as they&#13;
to fulfill their charge of&#13;
'ding upon waivers of general&#13;
ation requirements affecting&#13;
nts in the College·. ·&#13;
oie of the · most common&#13;
ers asked by the majority;of&#13;
,, :.;&#13;
U5l~E55&#13;
students who come before the a waiver must submit a letter to&#13;
. committee involves the language Applebaum regarding the&#13;
requiremen~. The convenor of the problem and also include&#13;
committee, CSS associate dean documentation o{ such a&#13;
Leon Applebaum, recommended problem.&#13;
to the. group that they waive the Of the twenty students that&#13;
second semester of this .have appliea for waivers this&#13;
requireme~t first applicant year, many of them have&#13;
present at the meeting. requested it in the area of&#13;
Although many of the waivers distribution of requirements for&#13;
presented to the committee are social science, humanities, and&#13;
approved, Applebaum told this · natural science. The other&#13;
reporter that not all are approved ., student who appeared before the&#13;
without going through him for committee last Wednesday&#13;
advice and information about the requested such a waiver in the&#13;
proc~ures for having a general science division; It was accepted&#13;
education requirement removed. after the committee decided that&#13;
The College steering com- Applied Science 132, otherwise&#13;
mittee was developed in the fali known as Computers and&#13;
of 1971 to set up an agenda for the Computing, was a·good course for&#13;
executive committee of the CSS. him to take for his science&#13;
Later in November of 1972 the requirement, allowing for the&#13;
coll~ge executive committee fact that the other courses the&#13;
decided to add the steering student was taking this semester&#13;
committee -to facilitate the means would have conflicted with the&#13;
by which students could Science Division offerings.&#13;
eliminate some of the problems&#13;
that migl)t arise l attendi_ng .&#13;
Parkside, such as having a&#13;
speech defect, thus making the&#13;
· language requirement ineflective&#13;
for such a person.&#13;
Stude_nts wishing to make such&#13;
PDQ&#13;
' -&#13;
One of the goals for one of&#13;
Parkside's student service&#13;
organizations, Parkside Drug&#13;
~arters (PDQ), is to provide&#13;
help and information· for fellow&#13;
students who have a self-defined&#13;
problem in the area of chemical&#13;
ust\ and-or abuse, including&#13;
-alcohol as well as other drugs. ~ Paper presented by Parkside prof ...&#13;
by David Brandt.&#13;
:-- n .. - ..... , ~•-4-· .,. ·'"' ~• J ,&#13;
tast' week€tid ·professors James Polczynski, Larry Shirland and&#13;
t Graham traveled to St. Louis, Missouri for the twelfth annual&#13;
of the Midwest Business Administration Association. The&#13;
are co-authors of a paper entitled, Increasing Stuclent Effort by&#13;
Ing their Instrumentality Levels Through .Contract Grading,&#13;
h was selected for presentation to the association. Polczynski,&#13;
is the main author of the paper, gave the presentation before a&#13;
up of approximately 50 business instructors from througbou_t the - - Research for the paper was conducted during the 1974-75 school year.&#13;
nine classes of Parkside business students with a total of 278&#13;
'cipants. The research was based on the moti,.vational ~heo~ of&#13;
ctancy, which, if applied to the classroom could result m higher ·&#13;
nt motivation. 1 • •&#13;
Results of the study showed that student effort, productivity and&#13;
· g significantly increased using the contract grading method.&#13;
use the contract arrangement forces students ~ make a ~o~-&#13;
nt and live up to it, the system may also prove a_ valuable aid m&#13;
· g the transition from the classroom to the business world, as&#13;
depend upon commitments and responsibility.&#13;
&amp;nee the study proved the contract grading more effective in&#13;
rison to traditional methods, Stu.dents may be seeing more of its '&#13;
in their business tlasses. It does require extra effort from both the&#13;
ctor and the student but it may be worth it if it works as well as&#13;
claim. In the works of.the authors, "And is not this what teaching&#13;
all about?"&#13;
PDQ is also involved with some&#13;
outreach activities in that they&#13;
work with several community&#13;
agencies with the assistance of&#13;
· the Student Health Service, who&#13;
is directed by Etlith Isenberg and&#13;
one Of the C()unselors, Clifford&#13;
Johnson, whose area of speciality&#13;
is chemical dependency.&#13;
The group is open to all&#13;
students, although· they emphasize&#13;
the fact that students who&#13;
join the organization need not&#13;
have or have had a chemically&#13;
rela~ problem to join PDQ.&#13;
In order to promote better&#13;
understanding of these dependencies,&#13;
_ PDQ is sponsoring&#13;
weekly informal discussion&#13;
groups, convened by Cliff&#13;
Johnson. These sessions will also&#13;
include some special speakers&#13;
from the student body, the&#13;
faculty, and the community. The&#13;
first session will be held in CA 13~&#13;
at 7:00 p.m., April 15.&#13;
For further information on&#13;
PDQ's activities, contact them in&#13;
Tallent Hall 187 by calling 553-&#13;
2623. or contacting Cliff Johnson&#13;
;;it 553-2575.&#13;
Featuring&#13;
~~s~ Rottier Hair Styling for Men &amp; Women&#13;
Services Include:&#13;
* Hair Styling :e Penna Styles,&#13;
. * Hair Coloring curls or waves&#13;
·• Hair Relaxing&#13;
"Ask about some of these new styles"&#13;
RUFF~ . LOOK _ MARK III AV ANTE LOOK -&#13;
SCULPTUR-KUT US MALE - MALE SHAG&#13;
(Pictures available)&#13;
four_ stylists to serve you&#13;
Sam Korghlanian . Ken Beecher&#13;
(member 1974 WL Stole Hoir Styling Teom)&#13;
Dan Beecher Gracie Balian&#13;
Appointments not necessary&#13;
3701 . Durand Ave. Racine&#13;
· West End Elmwood Plaza Phone 554-7939&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER April 1_4, 1976 ~&#13;
LAWRENCE R.&#13;
TRIPP&#13;
~l:Bl5§0ffil51]'il&#13;
~£Drnrn00CDl3&#13;
0UffiCDl3rnU~0Wl3rnrnool3WU&#13;
Paid for by Tripp for President committN&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • • • •&#13;
e LEE SAUSAGE SHOP E&#13;
• • • • i Home of the S11~111rine i&#13;
• • i - San~wieh ! -· • . • • • : · 261S W11hl19fo1 /wt. 634-2373 :&#13;
1 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,&#13;
Announcing a free&#13;
public conference on&#13;
Government Institutions&#13;
in Modern America&#13;
9:30 a.m. - 1 p.m.&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Comm Arts Theater&#13;
Featuring talks by:&#13;
• Theodore c. Sorensen, adviser to Pres. John F.&#13;
Kennedy and author of books on his . .&#13;
administration, on "Perspectives on i'res1dent1al&#13;
Powe~: Prospects for Accountability."&#13;
• Phillippa Strum, Brooklyn College Campus of CUNY,&#13;
on "Towards Government Accountability: Adapting&#13;
European Anwers to American Questions."&#13;
• James L. Sundquist,· Brookings Institution, on&#13;
"Congress and the Presidency: The Dilemma of&#13;
Perpetually Divided Government."&#13;
· for questions from the audience. • Opportunity&#13;
~ Committee, UW-Porkside, the Rocine/Kenosho&#13;
~ - , Sponsored by the Wisconsin Humanities&#13;
~ • .Bicentennial Lecture Series and the Johnson&#13;
Foundation. &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER, April 14, 1976&#13;
,Mustang II. America's&#13;
favorite small luxury car.&#13;
Racy shape. Rich interior. Features&#13;
you find in expensive European cars,&#13;
including overhead-cam enqine.andlike '&#13;
the Pinto, the Mustang II's 4-speed'stick '&#13;
shift, rack-and-pinion steering, solid state&#13;
ignition, and front disk brakes all come standard.&#13;
',ijjjjJ).&#13;
"'.".".,.0'&#13;
Meet the free-wheetin'&#13;
fun cars from your&#13;
Ford Deater.&#13;
The fun is where you find it.And wherever it's at for you-the excitement&#13;
of a beach party to the solitude of a hiking trail, there's no better way to&#13;
go than in one of the fun cars from your Wisconsin/Upper Peninsula Ford dealer.&#13;
Pinto. America's '&#13;
best-scttlng sub-compact.&#13;
Ford Pinto packs a bigger engine, a wider&#13;
stance, and more road-hugging weight than&#13;
any of the leading imports, Even at&#13;
that, Pinto is still sticker-priced less&#13;
than many imports. Economical, easy&#13;
to own. But mostly fun,&#13;
Opt for options.&#13;
You can practically design your own&#13;
Ford fun car using your own ideas and&#13;
. our long list of accessories and equipment-from&#13;
sun-roof to wide-oval tires.&#13;
You'll find plenty of nU1-tI'41HUILIIINrj&#13;
good Ideas to get you&#13;
started in our new 24- )'&lt;\"$ ,&#13;
page magazine""Free,, ',c'&#13;
Wheelin"-free at your&#13;
Ford dealer. Slop in for,&#13;
your copy, and take a&#13;
close iook at the fun&#13;
cars for '76,- at your,&#13;
Wiscon'sin/Upper Peninsula&#13;
Ford dealer.&#13;
Maverick. America's&#13;
proven family compact.&#13;
Small, easy to handle, yet you still get room for&#13;
five in the Maverick 4-door sedan. Plus the&#13;
weight and roadability you want for highway travel.&#13;
And as with any Ford you buy, you're backed by the&#13;
professionally-staffed, fUlly-equipped service facilities at your&#13;
Ford dealer-here at school, or back home.&#13;
Wisconsin/&#13;
Upper Peninsula&#13;
Ford Dealersthat's&#13;
us! "&#13;
~'I:I.J;I.J&#13;
[iI,.,"&#13;
, '&#13;
1"1 ..&#13;
6 THE f'ARKSIDE RANGER April 14, 1976&#13;
Meet the· free-wheelin'&#13;
fut) cars frotit·your Ford Dealer. · ·&#13;
The fun is where you find it.And wherever it's at for you~the ~xcitement&#13;
of a beach party to the solitude of a hiking trail, there's no better way to&#13;
go than in one of the fun cars from your Wisconsin/ Upper Peninsula Ford dealer.&#13;
Pinto. America's . best-seJting sub-compact.&#13;
Ford Pinto packs a bigger engine, a wider&#13;
stance, and more road-hugging weight than&#13;
any of the leading imports. Even at&#13;
that, Pinto is still sticker-priced less&#13;
than many imports. Economical, easy&#13;
to own. But mostly fun.&#13;
.,&#13;
· . Mustang II. America's&#13;
favorite small luxury car.&#13;
~~~:::===,JJ;~~~-==-=-&#13;
......,. ~~~" Racy shape. Rich interior. Features - ,,;:a you find in expensive European cars,&#13;
including overhead-cam engine; and·like ·&#13;
the Pinto, the Mustang ll 's 4-speed·stick ·&#13;
shift, rack-and-pinion steering, solid state&#13;
ignition, and front disk brakes all come standard.&#13;
Maverick. America's&#13;
proven family compact. - Small, easy to handle, yet you still get room for&#13;
five in the Maverick 4-door sedan. Plus the&#13;
weight and roadability you want for highway travel.&#13;
And as with any Ford you buy, you're backed by the&#13;
professionally-staffe~, fully-equipped service facilities at your&#13;
Ford dealer-here at school, or back home.&#13;
Opt for options.&#13;
You can practical ly design your own&#13;
Ford fun car using your own ideas and&#13;
, our long list of accessories and equipment-from&#13;
sun-roof to wide-oval tires.&#13;
You'I! find plenty of IFfRIU \W~HIUILIIINI"&#13;
good ideas to get you . .&#13;
started in our new 24- )~-,t · ·&#13;
page magazine,_" Free · ' ·&#13;
Wheelin"-free at your -··&#13;
Ford dealer. Stop in for ··&#13;
your copy, and take a&#13;
close look at the fun&#13;
cars for '76·- at your&#13;
Wiscon·sin/Upper Peninsula&#13;
Ford dealer.&#13;
Wisconsin/&#13;
·Upper Peninsula&#13;
Ford Dealers- -that's us! · &#13;
I!.right spot: w6men's job offers&#13;
Employment outlook bleak&#13;
(cPS) - Those who have hit the&#13;
reswne route have already found&#13;
out the latest news on the job&#13;
market for college grads: em-_&#13;
ployment prospects are bleak. To&#13;
be more exact, this year's&#13;
graduates face possibly the worst&#13;
job outlook ever.&#13;
The number of job offers for&#13;
students graduating in the spring&#13;
is smaller than last year's figure,&#13;
according to a recent sutdy&#13;
released by the College&#13;
Placement Council. "And just&#13;
about everyone agreed that 1974-&#13;
75 was a tough year," said the&#13;
council,an organization made up&#13;
of career planning directors at&#13;
universities.&#13;
Job offers to students at 159&#13;
collegesare 16 percent lower this&#13;
year than last year for B.A.&#13;
candidates, the report said. For&#13;
master's degree candidates the&#13;
declineis 25 percent; for doctoral&#13;
candidates, 32 percent.&#13;
The biggest drop in job offers&#13;
appears to pe for students&#13;
graduating with degrees in the&#13;
humanities and social sciences.&#13;
Offers for B.A. candidates in&#13;
those fields decreased .by 26&#13;
percent from last March.&#13;
The next largest drop - 23&#13;
percent - was for engineering&#13;
stuljents. Then came the sctences,&#13;
with a 12 percent decrease&#13;
and business fields with a 4&#13;
percent drop.&#13;
The drop in engineering and&#13;
business field!' is puzzling, the&#13;
council said, because estimates&#13;
from employers last November&#13;
indicated that job prospects were&#13;
expected to be good in those&#13;
fields.&#13;
Accounting, banking, insurance&#13;
and chemical and drug&#13;
'companies made about the same&#13;
number' of offers as last' year,&#13;
while offers rose from the&#13;
automotive, electrical&#13;
machinery, research-consulting&#13;
and tire and rubber firms.&#13;
Starting salaries at the B.A.&#13;
level range from an average high&#13;
of $16,788 for engineering&#13;
students to $8,580 for humanities&#13;
majors, the council said.&#13;
One bright spot in the council's&#13;
report was that undergraduate .&#13;
women received 27 percent more&#13;
job offers this year than in March&#13;
of 1975. Job offers to women were&#13;
also 36 percent higher at the&#13;
master's level.&#13;
Job offers to men declined 20&#13;
percent for undergraduates and&#13;
Reorganizationcontinued&#13;
from pq , 1&#13;
planning and construction. This&#13;
post is currently held by Ervin&#13;
Zuelhke.&#13;
The assistant chancellor for&#13;
development will be responsible&#13;
, for the student life and campus&#13;
union operations. This post will&#13;
be held by Allen Dearborn.&#13;
The newest post of student&#13;
services and academic support&#13;
will control the areas of financial&#13;
aids, counseling, and support&#13;
functions, Under the new post&#13;
will come a change in the student&#13;
services area in that the counseling&#13;
and academic skills&#13;
program will .combine to make&#13;
the Office of Student Development,&#13;
delinated in another story&#13;
this week.&#13;
You and the family are invited to the GRAND&#13;
ONE-HALF OPENING ON THE WATERBED&#13;
SIDE OF ONE SWEETD~EAM!Experience the&#13;
pleasure of the Waterbed, now considered&#13;
classic for the home. DRINK All THE FREE&#13;
HINKLEY&amp; SCHMIDT YOU CAN HOLD. Free&#13;
lemon drops' too! Register to win a FREE&#13;
WATERBED... or one or 4 Bean Bag Chairs.&#13;
IT IS YOUR FIRSTONE-HALFGRAND OPENING&#13;
EVER!&#13;
13 percent for master's candidates.&#13;
Nevertheless, the number of&#13;
jobs offered to Women is still only&#13;
16 percent of the total offered to&#13;
B.A. candidates and 15 percent of&#13;
the number offered to master's&#13;
degree candidates.&#13;
The bad job news for -college&#13;
seniors this year is only the latest&#13;
chapter in a continuing bleak&#13;
e'COnomicstory. By the end of this&#13;
academic year about 1.3 million&#13;
people will receive bacbelor's&#13;
master's and doctor'. degrees:&#13;
according to Harvard Economist&#13;
Richard Preernan. This is nearly&#13;
double the number of degrees&#13;
doled out ten years ago.&#13;
Yet during tbe same time, says&#13;
Freeman, the number of&#13;
professional, technical and&#13;
managerial jobs in the U.S. has&#13;
grown by barely more than a&#13;
third.&#13;
Counselingcontinued&#13;
from pg. I&#13;
Echelbargar.&#13;
One casulty of the revamping is&#13;
a secretarial position.&#13;
Echelbarger and Gallagher both&#13;
expressed the opinion that more&#13;
secretarial help is needed,&#13;
because they can not do all the&#13;
paperwork and still devote a lot&#13;
of time to the students. Gary&#13;
Goetz, head of the budget com.&#13;
mittee said, however, "We went&#13;
through the counseling department&#13;
and decided that by pooling&#13;
the secretaries that this position&#13;
would not have to be filled."&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER April 14, 19767&#13;
......&#13;
LAWRENCE R.&#13;
TRIPP&#13;
lJW~~U(D I1J&#13;
I.HLGl[~([~&#13;
f?U~[13lLv l!l.i.lr13llilw:mrV&#13;
.:~&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
AMERICAN&#13;
~uSTATE BANK&#13;
!i§&#13;
3928 - 60th St. Phone 658·2582&#13;
~1emberF 0 I C&#13;
,&#13;
•&#13;
:&gt;. Live Disco Music •&#13;
at Lighthouse II&#13;
"SPANK"&#13;
WID., THURS., FRI.. SAT.• SUN. COVill, 51.00&#13;
FREE Orin&lt; with admission on Wed .. Th..-s, ond Sundoy&#13;
H&#13;
•&#13;
C&#13;
You are cordially invited on&#13;
2Oth.to&#13;
RI&#13;
liJurFirst ONE·HAIF&#13;
Q\JE·H~F Of Ore Svveei Dream IsOp2nhg&#13;
On The.WATERBED SIDE&#13;
3910 Seventy Fifth Street.&#13;
Come roll an a Waterbedl&#13;
Grand Opening runs&#13;
April 20 - 25&#13;
'One Sweet Side&#13;
,,&#13;
~ght spot:wi&gt;men 's job offers THE PARKSIDE RANGER April 14', 1976 7&#13;
Employment outlook bleak&#13;
(CPS) -Those who have hit the&#13;
resume route have already found&#13;
out the latest news on the job&#13;
market for coll~ge grads: employment&#13;
prospects are bleak. To&#13;
be more exact, this year's&#13;
graduates face possibly the worst&#13;
job outlook ever.&#13;
The number of job offers for&#13;
stude.nts graduating in the spring&#13;
is smaller than last year's figure,&#13;
according to a recent sutdy&#13;
released by the College&#13;
Placement Council. "And just&#13;
about everyone_agreed that 1974-&#13;
75 was a tough year," said the&#13;
council, an organization made up&#13;
of career planning directors at&#13;
universities.&#13;
Job offers to students at 159&#13;
colleges are 16 percent lower this&#13;
year than last year for B.A.&#13;
candidates, the report said. For&#13;
master's degree ca_ndidates the&#13;
decline is 25 percent; for doctoral&#13;
candidates, 32 percent.&#13;
The biggest drop in job offers&#13;
appears to be for students&#13;
graduating with degrees in the&#13;
humanities and social sciences.&#13;
Offers for B.A. candidates· in&#13;
those fields decreased .by 26&#13;
percent from last March.&#13;
The next largest drop - 23&#13;
percent - was for engineering&#13;
stuqents. Then came the sciences,&#13;
with a 12 percent decrease&#13;
and business fields with a 4. percent drop.&#13;
The · drop in engineering and&#13;
business field$ is puzzling, the&#13;
council said, because estimates&#13;
from employers last November&#13;
indicated that job prospects were&#13;
expected to be good in those&#13;
fields.&#13;
Accounting, banking, in-··&#13;
surance and chemical and drug&#13;
·companies made about the same&#13;
nwnber . of offers as last' year'&#13;
while offers rose from the&#13;
automotive, electrical&#13;
machinery, research-consulting&#13;
and tire and rubber firms.&#13;
Starting salaries at the B.A.&#13;
level range from an average high&#13;
of $16,788 for engineering&#13;
. students to $8,580 for hwnanities&#13;
majors, the council said.&#13;
One bright spot in the council's&#13;
report was that undergraduate .&#13;
women received 27 percent more&#13;
.job offers this year than in March&#13;
of 1975. Job offers to women were&#13;
also 36 percent higher at the&#13;
master's level.&#13;
Job offers to men declined 20&#13;
percent for undergraduates and&#13;
Reorganization- continued from pg. 1&#13;
planning and construction. This&#13;
post is currently held by Ervin&#13;
Zuelhke.&#13;
will control the areas of financial&#13;
aids, counseling, and support&#13;
functions. Under the new post&#13;
will come a change in the student&#13;
services area in that the counThe&#13;
assistant chancellor for&#13;
development will be responsible&#13;
· for the student -life and campus&#13;
union operations. This post will&#13;
be held by Allen Dearborn.&#13;
- seling and academic skills&#13;
program will combine to make&#13;
the Office of Student Develop1!).ent,&#13;
delinated in another story&#13;
this week.&#13;
The newest post of student&#13;
services and academic support&#13;
.,&#13;
;&#13;
You and the family are_ invited to the GRAND&#13;
ONE-HALF OPENING ON THE WATERBED&#13;
SIDE OF ONE SWEET DBEAM! Experience the&#13;
pleasure of the Waterbed, now considered&#13;
classic for the home. DRINK ALL THE FREE&#13;
HINK-LEY &amp; SCHMIDT YOU CAN HOLD. Free&#13;
lemon drops· too! Register to win a FREE&#13;
WATERBED ... or one of 4 Bean Bag Chairs.&#13;
IT IS YOUR FIRST ONE-HALF GRAND OPENING&#13;
EVER!&#13;
13 percent for master's candidates.&#13;
&#13;
Nevertheless, the number of&#13;
jobs offered to women is still only&#13;
16 percent. of the total offered to&#13;
B.A. candidates and 15 percent of&#13;
the nwnber offered to master's&#13;
degree candidates.&#13;
The bad job news for college&#13;
seniors this year is only the latest&#13;
chapter in a continuing bleak&#13;
E!conomic story. By the end of this&#13;
academic year about 1.3 million&#13;
people will receive bachelor's&#13;
master's and doctor's degrees:&#13;
according to Harvard Economist&#13;
Richard Preeman. This is nearly&#13;
double the number of degrees&#13;
doled out ten years ago.&#13;
Yet during the same time, says&#13;
Freeman, the number of&#13;
professional, technical and&#13;
managerial jobs in the U.S. has&#13;
grown by barely more than a .third.&#13;
LAWRENCE R.&#13;
TRIPP&#13;
Poid for by Tnpp for l'ru nl t&#13;
3928 - 60th t. Ph n 8-2. 82&#13;
\I mber F D I C&#13;
Counsel~g- C&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
Live Disco Music&#13;
at Lighthouse II&#13;
:&gt;.&#13;
continued from pg. 1&#13;
Echelbar_gar.&#13;
One casulty of the revamping is&#13;
a secretarial position.&#13;
Echelbarger and Gallagher both&#13;
expressed the opinion that more&#13;
secretarial help is needed,&#13;
because they can not do all the&#13;
paperwork and still devote a lot&#13;
of _time to the students. Gary&#13;
Goetz, head of the budget committee&#13;
said, however, "We went&#13;
through the counseling department&#13;
and decided that by pooling&#13;
the secretaries that this position&#13;
would not have to be filled." •&#13;
C&#13;
"SPANK"&#13;
WED., THURS., AU., SAT., SUN. COVER, Sl .00&#13;
FREE Drink with admission on Wed., Thcxs. ond Sunday&#13;
1146&#13;
~~n ~ ~ -~4'4&#13;
• I&#13;
You are cordially invited on&#13;
O\JE--H~F Of One Svveer Dream Is Op'znhg&#13;
On The .WATERBED SIDE&#13;
•&#13;
Grand Opening runs&#13;
April 20 - 25&#13;
3910 Seventy Fifth Stritet.&#13;
Come roll on a Woterbed!&#13;
bed&#13;
•&#13;
,. • &#13;
..&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER April 14, 1976&#13;
GOOD FOOD&#13;
RESTAURANT HOURS:&#13;
Mon. - THURS&#13;
Fri. &amp; Sot.&#13;
Sun.&#13;
11 p.m.&#13;
1 p.m.&#13;
8 p.m.&#13;
6 a.m.&#13;
6 a.m.&#13;
6 a.m.&#13;
LOCATED AT 245 MAIN STREET&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Porkside 200&#13;
Notional Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha&#13;
Wisconsin Pho~e 654-0774&#13;
2nd National&#13;
6208 • Green Bay Road Kenosha&#13;
Friday April 16 -&#13;
"Spank"&#13;
Saturday April 17 -&#13;
"Orphan"&#13;
The Italian cook respectsjood. The spice&#13;
of a sauce, the fine texture of warm, .fresh&#13;
bread. the consistancy of a melted cheese&#13;
sauce. Por him the reward is the pleasure&#13;
of those who enjoy his work. Experience&#13;
this pleasure.&#13;
~ Cap'Ll&#13;
2129 !BiuJ'z. &lt;::Rd.,&#13;
!J(E.no~h.a., &lt;W~.&#13;
TbeFamJly&#13;
Once we were young,&#13;
Now;&#13;
Wiser and younger.&#13;
Your precious gifts,&#13;
entered my soul.&#13;
Ilive for you,&#13;
Knowing,&#13;
You live for me,&#13;
'Thus you are the seed,&#13;
and I,&#13;
the plant.&#13;
.J k.d +0 ~u- /&#13;
~..J ~ iV77.dMJ la.-rwl.&#13;
1j6aA s~&#13;
'Thomas S. Heinz&#13;
1l1J.w&#13;
cdtPa.UJ&#13;
&amp;vn hUlA..&#13;
!jCH-V1 S LLe'7ic.e-.&#13;
GUrm:J&#13;
BEING&#13;
i may be blind&#13;
but i can still see Spring ,&#13;
in the scent of freshly cut grass rained on,&#13;
a new day break&#13;
in the brisk moistness&#13;
of a morning air.&#13;
the Sun's warming rays&#13;
paint a portrait on my mind&#13;
and a cloud shadows its face.&#13;
i see joy&#13;
in the laughter&#13;
of a child free at play,&#13;
and indifference&#13;
in Your footsteps fading&#13;
into the yesterways of us.&#13;
. Jeffrey [, sweneki&#13;
Someday&#13;
a reunion&#13;
between you and i;&#13;
the only question,&#13;
Will you speak to me&#13;
as i was, ,&#13;
or how i am?&#13;
'Thomas S:Henz '&#13;
Ah Ode On FRUSTRATION •••••.&#13;
You can- tell it in my hands&#13;
'They are clenched, '&#13;
awaiting the powers that be'&#13;
'and their decision&#13;
,.• AN OLD'AMERICAN PEANUT&#13;
It is supposedly perfect,&#13;
and yet.... J,&#13;
THERE'IS FRUSTRA!l10N!!!!!!&#13;
A bag of peanuts&#13;
like a pile of sOggy wood shavings&#13;
had been watching me for months&#13;
waiting to be snacked upon.&#13;
It is not straight.&#13;
It gets so that you do not give&#13;
a&#13;
DAMN.&#13;
An old American peanut&#13;
with the shape of a pygmy's buttocks&#13;
concluded: "You don't snack, do your"&#13;
which I ignored.&#13;
Life is like that.&#13;
NO:one can please&#13;
He persisted with vulgar jokes about nuts,&#13;
flattering me for having arms and legs,&#13;
telling me if the phone rang while Iwas out.&#13;
Everyone wants everything&#13;
and yet... c&#13;
NOTHING IS PERFECT .....&#13;
except for those who think so.&#13;
When he died I cracked him open.&#13;
He split like the vagina of an old squaw,&#13;
and Iput his shells on a key chain.&#13;
'They remind me at times&#13;
of two snails doing a trapeze act&#13;
that never sold. '&#13;
I may be wrong.&#13;
but no one (1) gives me&#13;
lip ,service or calmness&#13;
BIlL BARKE&#13;
for perfectivity,&#13;
'That's life.&#13;
(to empee) bruce wagner&#13;
We're offering our Charter Customers&#13;
all of these free .personal banking services&#13;
• free' checking • no service&#13;
charges&#13;
• free' personalized checks for&#13;
five years '&#13;
• free rental of a 2"x5"x24"&#13;
safe deposit box for two years&#13;
• free travelers checks for one&#13;
year&#13;
You become a Cha'rter Customer&#13;
when you open a personal&#13;
checking account with us while&#13;
our new building is being&#13;
completed. That's all it takes to&#13;
qualify for these free services.&#13;
Pleasant'&#13;
6125 Durand Avenue. Racine, Wisconsin 53406 • Phone 554-6500&#13;
MONDAY-THURSDAY 7:00-5:30 0 FRIDAY 7:00-8:00 0 SATURDAY 8:00.NOON&#13;
-&#13;
d&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER April 14, 1976&#13;
GOOD FOOD&#13;
RESTAURANT HOURS:&#13;
Mon. - THURS&#13;
Fri. &amp; Sat.&#13;
6 a.m.&#13;
6 a.m. -&#13;
6 a.m. -&#13;
11 p.m.&#13;
l p.m.&#13;
8 p.m.&#13;
LOCATED ~T 245 MAIN STREET IN RACINE&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
Notional Varsity Club&#13;
•&#13;
443 7 - 22nd A venue Kenosha&#13;
Wisconsin Phorie 654-077 4&#13;
2nd N atiollal . 6208 - Green Bay Roa_d ~enosha . ·&#13;
. l&#13;
Friday April 16 -&#13;
''Spank"&#13;
Saturday April 17 -&#13;
"Orph~n"&#13;
9-ine 9-aod&#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;
&amp;ua Cap'il&#13;
2129 !l3i'LCh d?d.,&#13;
!J(eno~ha, &lt;W~.&#13;
The Family&#13;
Once we were young,&#13;
Now;&#13;
Wiser and younger.&#13;
Your precious gifts,&#13;
entered my soul.&#13;
I live for you,&#13;
Knowing,&#13;
You live for me,&#13;
Thus you are the seed,&#13;
and I,&#13;
the plant.&#13;
Thomas S. Heinz&#13;
BEING&#13;
i may be blind ·&#13;
.;J had -1-o ~u-&#13;
&amp;-p-u- ~ \ ~ U/n.aMJ'/,a.-rid,&#13;
·!/(}a,( j'~· -&#13;
/40-w&#13;
a,1- ta~ ·&#13;
.J t:.a./71 h.uvt&#13;
i; o-a.,/1 s u..e..'7ic,e '&#13;
~~r~&#13;
/&#13;
but i can still see Spring .&#13;
in the scent of freshly cut grass rained on,&#13;
a new day break&#13;
Someday&#13;
a reunion .&#13;
between you and i;&#13;
the only question,&#13;
Will you speak to me&#13;
as i was,&#13;
in the brisk moistness&#13;
of a morning air.&#13;
the Sun's warming rays&#13;
paint a portrait on my mind&#13;
and a cloud shadows its face.&#13;
i see joy&#13;
in the laughter&#13;
of a child free at play,&#13;
" and indifference ·c · ' •&#13;
in Your footsteps fadipg&#13;
into the yesterways of us. . ,. · jeffrey j. swencki ~ r , •&#13;
or how i am? .&#13;
Thomas S: Henz -;&#13;
Ah Ode On FRUSTRATION ...... ~- ,&#13;
Yo~ c~•tell it in my hands&#13;
They are clenched, · .&#13;
awaiting the powers that be·&#13;
· and their decision .&#13;
It is supposediy perfect.-&#13;
and yet.... ·· · .&#13;
THERE •IS FRUSTRA!l'ION! ! ! ! ! ! •' :. ,AN OLD·AMERICAN PEANUT&#13;
A bag of peanuts ' . .&#13;
like a pile of soggy wood shavings&#13;
had been watching me for months&#13;
waiting to be snacked upon.&#13;
An old American peanut&#13;
with the shape of a pygmy's buttocks&#13;
concluded: "You don't snack, do you7''&#13;
which I ignored.&#13;
He persisted with vulgar jokes about nuts,&#13;
flattering me for having anns and legs,&#13;
telling me if the phone rang while I was out.&#13;
When he died I cracked him open.&#13;
He split like the vagina.of an old squaw,&#13;
and I put his shells on a key chain.&#13;
They remind me at times&#13;
of two snails doing a trapeze act&#13;
that never sold. ·&#13;
BILLBARKE&#13;
It is not straight.&#13;
It gets so that you do not give&#13;
a&#13;
DAMN.&#13;
Life is like that.&#13;
No;one can please&#13;
Everyone wants ever,ything&#13;
and yet... ·'&#13;
NOTHING IS PERFECT .....&#13;
except for those who. think so.&#13;
I may be wrong.&#13;
· but no one ( 1) gives me&#13;
lip .service or calmness&#13;
for perfectivity,&#13;
Thai's life.&#13;
( to empee) bruce.wagner&#13;
-&#13;
We're offering our Charter.Customers&#13;
all of these free personal hanking services ' . \ \&#13;
• free . checking - no service&#13;
charges&#13;
• free · personalized checks for ,&#13;
five years&#13;
• free rental of a 2"x5"x24"&#13;
safe deposit box for two years&#13;
• free travelers checks for one&#13;
yea~&#13;
You become a Charter Customer&#13;
when y~u open a p~rsonal&#13;
checking ac~01.µ1t with us while&#13;
our new building is being&#13;
completed. That's all it takes to&#13;
quaJify for these free services,&#13;
Pleasant·&#13;
6125 Durand Avenue • Racine, Wisconsin 53406 • Ph one 554-6500&#13;
MONDAY-THURSDAY 7:00-5:30 • FRIDAY 7:0Q-8:00 • SATURDAY 8:00-NOON&#13;
---&#13;
-' WednesdaY;Aprll14&#13;
Bake sale: Begins at 8'36 a m in the wu.&#13;
the Parkside Christi;U; Fello~ship. C concourse. Spon.ored by&#13;
Skeller: Featuring Mike Gorman from 11:30 to 1'30&#13;
:i&gt;nc~rt:. Student ~oncert at 3: 30p.m. in the CAT. ~:&#13;
. earmg. Eq&#13;
uaIRightshearingfroml0:30a.m to4'30pm inCL325&#13;
IS&#13;
StudentArtSbow: Last day to pick up entry blanks . ~&#13;
open to the public. . . '. ~;=~~~~ ~~~.I:!aa&#13;
(limit 3 pieces) in CA DI44. Jurying is 10:30 a.m. n.=bmit ..... k _&#13;
Sponsored by the,Parkside&#13;
Capsule. College 76: Deadline for registration by mail or at&#13;
Art Association (PM). y, April&#13;
the&#13;
IS. D,ANDELION K :;)&#13;
. Jlruverslty Extension OffICe, T:Uent Hall room 180,telephone number&#13;
553-2312. Semi "T Kn Thursda A&#13;
y, P&#13;
rII 15 WINE • •&#13;
~r: 0 ow God" with Peter Dybvad of TrInity Theological&#13;
Serrunary speaking'from 11:30to 12:26in CA 129.&#13;
Easter dance: Featuring "Ramrock" at 9 p.m. in the SAB. Admission By Roy Bradbury&#13;
IS $1 for students, $1.50 for general public. ........ .. _ ......&#13;
FrIday, April 1&amp; A '128&#13;
Trackmee~: USTFF Decathlon at 2 p.m. by the Phy. Ed. Bldg. Spring pn&#13;
recess beains. Saturday, April 17 7 30&#13;
Track meet: USTFF Decathlon at 9a.m. by the Phy. Ed. Bldg. Men's : p.m.&#13;
and Women s Wisconsm Relays at 11a.m, by the P.E. Bldg. COM MARTS&#13;
Tennis match: UW-Parkside vs. SI. Norbert College at 1 p.m. by the&#13;
Phy .. Ed. Bldg. Monday, April 19 . THEATER&#13;
Ten~IS match: UW·Parkside vs. Northeastern of Illinois at 3 p.m at&#13;
tennis courts. .&#13;
'. Saturday, April Z4&#13;
BICentenmallecture: James L. Sundquist speaking on "Congress and&#13;
the Presiden~y: The Dilemma of Perpetually Divided Government"&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. m the CAT. Free.&#13;
. Monday, April 2&amp;&#13;
Lecture: An Evening with Antonia Brico at 7:30 p.m. in the CAT&#13;
Admission is $1 for students, and $1.50 for the general public. Spon:&#13;
sored by the International Women's Year Committee.&#13;
. Wednesday, April 28&#13;
PM student Art Show: Opens at the CAT Art Gallery. with a reception&#13;
from 5 to 7 p.m, Coming&#13;
Women In Motion (WIM: Floor exercise, ynga, jogging, swiJnnlq.&#13;
Free· 2:30-4 Tuesdays and Thursdays. Call Kathy Jobns at 654-8578.&#13;
&amp;&lt;li"e""'oe,..i'oI!!.4'~i'oI!!.4'-.e,._~~ ........e.A.-.e",..oe,..i'oI!!.4'~"""~-..e......!.Ai~C"~&#13;
Thursday, April 15&#13;
.: FILM:&#13;
Harold Pinter's The Caretaker&#13;
11:30 a.m, in CA 140.&#13;
Breadth, Basic skills discussed&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER April 14, 19769&#13;
Gen. adm, - $2 public.&#13;
$1 UW-P students&#13;
Tickets at Info. Kiosk&#13;
---..~--,... -...... ----_--""'-----,...- ._-&#13;
•&#13;
Parkslde Actlvltle•• oard&#13;
pre.. nt. It.&#13;
Annual Easter Dance&#13;
with&#13;
Charges set for subcommittees&#13;
by Mlck Andersen&#13;
The Academic Policies&#13;
Committee met to set up the&#13;
'specific charges to theii- subcommittees&#13;
dealing with the&#13;
issues of breadth of knowledge&#13;
and basic skills last Monday&#13;
afternoon.&#13;
It was agreed that the charges&#13;
to the breadth of knowledge&#13;
subcommittee will be drafted into&#13;
a letter that will be sent to the&#13;
chairperson of the subcommittee.&#13;
Beecham Robinson, director of&#13;
theLearning Center was assigned&#13;
the task of preparing a final draft&#13;
of the charges to the basic skills&#13;
'lJ1bcommittee. The chairperson&#13;
of the Academic Policies Committee,&#13;
Stella Gray, will then&#13;
incorporate the Robinson draft&#13;
into a letter, to the chairperson of&#13;
the hasic skills subcommittee.&#13;
James Shea, professor of earth ~---""''''''--.&#13;
science, noted that the reeommendations&#13;
of the Committee of&#13;
Principles had lacked&#13;
"specificity." He urged that the&#13;
sub-committees study the&#13;
feasibility of implementing the&#13;
C.O.P. report. Stella Gray,&#13;
professor of English, agreed,&#13;
saying, "We need to know what&#13;
implementation will mean in&#13;
terms of instruction and what it&#13;
will cost."&#13;
The importance of the subcommittees&#13;
.conferring widely,&#13;
with both faculty and student&#13;
input included, was discussed,&#13;
Gray recommended that both&#13;
committees hold a series of open&#13;
hearings as a means of obtaining&#13;
a broad base of opinion and&#13;
knowledge.&#13;
The issue of how the basic skills&#13;
and breadth of know ledge&#13;
curriculum, would affect the&#13;
general degree requirements was&#13;
For an effective,&#13;
fairminded, and rational&#13;
, , .&#13;
executive:&#13;
VO,te&#13;
KIYOKO· BOWDEN&#13;
PRES1D;ENT, P.S.G.A.&#13;
R'OBERT VLACH&#13;
VICE PRESIDENT&#13;
P.S.G.A.&#13;
For impartiality in&#13;
condl'cting Senate meetings&#13;
also brougftt up. Gray mentioned&#13;
that that the breadth of&#13;
knowledge courses could be offered&#13;
on a pa ss-fail basis. Shea&#13;
wondered about the amount of&#13;
credit that will be given for&#13;
taking basic skills classes. "We&#13;
may want to give credit, but not&#13;
credit for graduation," Shea said.&#13;
Gray mentioned the possible&#13;
dilemma facing veterans should&#13;
basic skills credits not be at&#13;
parity with those of other classes.&#13;
She questioned whether veterans&#13;
would be eligible for benefits if&#13;
they were taking credits that did&#13;
not count towards graduation.&#13;
featuring mu.lc of the 60'.&#13;
*&#13;
Thur.day, April 15&#13;
*&#13;
9 p.m. - 1 a.m.&#13;
Student Actlvltle. Building&#13;
'1.00 UW-P.tudent.&#13;
'1.50 Gue.t. &amp; other&#13;
UW••tudent.&#13;
I.D.'. required&#13;
Thursday, April 15&#13;
· , ' FILM:&#13;
Harold Pinter's The Caretaker&#13;
11:30 a.m. in CA 140.&#13;
- · Wednesday,°April 14 Bake sale : Begins at 8 · 30 a m in the&#13;
the Parkside Christi~ Fello~shi WLLC concourse. Spoll.50red by&#13;
Skeller: Featuring Mike Gormanpfrom 11:30 to l ·30&#13;
Conc~rt: Student concert at3:30 p.m. in the CAT F . .&#13;
~earing : Equal Rights hearing from 10: 30 a m .to ~:;O P m m· CL 325 is open to the public. · · · · ·&#13;
St_ud~nt ~rt Sho~: Last day to pick up entry blanks and submit work&#13;
(limit 3 pieces) m CA Dl44. Jurying is 10:30 a.m. Thursday April 15&#13;
Sponsoted by the ,Parkside Art Association ( p AA). ' ·&#13;
Ca~ule_ College _76: DE:adline for registration by mail or at the&#13;
. JJruversity Extension Office, T:tlent Hall room 180, telephone number&#13;
553-2:312· Thursday, April 15&#13;
Se~ar: "To ~ow God" with Peter Dybvad of Trinity Theological&#13;
Seminary speaking-from 11:30to 12:20 in CA 129.&#13;
~aster dance: Featuring "Ramrock" at 9 p.m. in the SAB. Admission&#13;
is $1 for students, $1.50 for general public.&#13;
Friday, April 16&#13;
Track mee!: USTFF Decathlon at 2 p.m. by the Phy. Ed. Bldg. Spring&#13;
recess begins. Saturday, April 17&#13;
Track mee\ US_TFF J?ecathlon at 9 a.m. by the Phy. Ed. Bldg. Men's&#13;
and ~omens Wisconsin Relays at 11 a.m. by the P.E. Bldg.&#13;
Tehms match: UW-Parkside vs. St. Norbert College at 1 p.m. by the&#13;
Phy._Ed. Bldg. Monday,April19 .&#13;
Ten~is match: UW-Parkside vs. Northeastern of Illinois at 3 p.m. at&#13;
t:enms courts.&#13;
. . Saturday, April 24&#13;
B1centen_mal lecture: J~mes L. Sundquist speaking on "Congress and&#13;
the Pres1d~ncy: The Dilemma of Perpetually Divided Government"&#13;
at 7:~0 p.m. in the CAT. Free.&#13;
. Monday, April 26&#13;
Lec11;We_: ~ Evening with Antonia Brico at 7:30 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Admission lS $1 for stu!1ents, and $1.50 for the general public. Sponsored&#13;
by the International Women's Year Committee.&#13;
· Wednesday, April 28&#13;
~AA Student Art Show: Opens at the CAT Art Gallery. with a recep- tion from 5 to 7 p.m. Coming&#13;
Women In Motion (WIM: Floor exercise, y.oga, jogging, swimming.&#13;
Free - 2:30-4 Tuesdays and Thursdays. Call Kathy Johns at 654-9578.&#13;
Br~adth, Basic skills discussed&#13;
Charge~ set for suhcon1n1ittees&#13;
by Mick Andersen science, noted that the recommendations&#13;
of the Committee of&#13;
The Academic Policies Principles had lacked&#13;
Committee met to set up the " specificity." He urged that the&#13;
' specific charges to iheii- sub- sub-committees study the&#13;
committees ,dealing _ with the · . feasibility of implementing the&#13;
ismtes of breadth of knowledge C.O.P. report. Stella Gray,&#13;
and basic skills last Monday professor of English, agreed,&#13;
afternoon. saying, "We need to know what&#13;
It was agreed that the charges implementation will mean in&#13;
to the breadth of knowledge terms of instruction and what it&#13;
subcommittee will be drafted into will cost.''&#13;
a letter that will be sent to the The importance of the subchairperson&#13;
of the subcommittee. committees .conferring widely,&#13;
Bee&lt;"..ham Robinson, director of with both faculty and student&#13;
theLearningCenter was assigned input included, was discussed.&#13;
the task of preparing a final draft Gray recommended that both&#13;
of the charges to th~ basic skills committees.hold a series of open&#13;
ubcommittee. The chairperson hearings as a means of obtaining&#13;
of the Academic Policies Com- a broad base of opinion and&#13;
mittee, Stella Gray, will then knowledge.&#13;
incorporate the Robinson draft The issue of how the basic skills&#13;
int-o a letter.to the chairperson of and breadth of knowledge&#13;
the basic skills subcommittee. cur riculum_ would affect the&#13;
James Shea, professor .of earth general degree requirements was&#13;
For an effective,&#13;
f airminded, and rational I •&#13;
executive:&#13;
Vote '&#13;
KIYOKO BOWDEN&#13;
PRESID;ENT, P.S.G.A.&#13;
ROBERT VLACH&#13;
VICE PRESIDENT&#13;
P.S.G.A.&#13;
For· impartiality in&#13;
cond~cting Senate meetings&#13;
also broug t up. Gray mentioned&#13;
that that the breadth of&#13;
knowledge courses could be offered&#13;
on a pass-fail basis. Shea&#13;
wondered about the amount of&#13;
credit that will be given for&#13;
-taking bai;ic skills classes. "We&#13;
may want to give credit, but not&#13;
credit for graduation," Shea said.&#13;
Gray mentioned the possible&#13;
dilemma facing veterans should&#13;
basic skills credits not be at&#13;
parity with those of other classes.&#13;
She questioned whether veterans&#13;
would be eligible for benefits if&#13;
they were taking credits that did&#13;
not count towards graduation.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANG E R Apr il 14, 1976 9&#13;
DANDELION&#13;
WINE&#13;
By Roy Bradbury&#13;
Adapted a.., ,. • Joly, 'aolaw&#13;
April 28&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
COMM ARTS&#13;
THEATER&#13;
Gen. adm.-$2 public,&#13;
$1 UW-P students&#13;
Ticke ts at Info. Kiosk&#13;
presents Its&#13;
Annual Easter Dance&#13;
with&#13;
featuring music of the 60'1 * Thursday, April 15 *&#13;
9 p.m. - 1 a.m.&#13;
Student Activities Bulldlng&#13;
• 1.00 UW-P students&#13;
'1.50 Guests &amp; other&#13;
UW-1tudent1&#13;
Best&#13;
Application&#13;
Picture Makes&#13;
The Differance&#13;
...&#13;
Buzzz&#13;
,'7k-'&#13;
at&#13;
551-9488 &#13;
Men's tennis ;;quad victorious&#13;
Parkside's men's tennis squad proved to be too strong fo, teams&#13;
from Carthage and Milton last week. The meri beal Carthage on&#13;
Friday, though number one player Chr~ Jo!m~n was upend.ed 6-3, 6-3 .&#13;
. Parl&lt;side beat the host school 8-2. Wmners mcluded: Mike Olson&#13;
Gregg Pfarr, Jim DeV811lluez,John Orzechowski, and Greg Petersm:&#13;
rn singles. Most matches wer~ wo~ by comforta~e margins. Jim&#13;
Dolnik was beaten. In doubles, things were' a .blt closer, but, the&#13;
Rangers still swept through them. Winning du:'ls included JohnsonOlson&#13;
DeVasquez-SCott Huge, and Pfarr-Dolnik,&#13;
At home on Saturday, Parkside breezed past Milton College, 9-11.&#13;
That makes all Ranger players winners, and ups the team record to 2-&#13;
1, after the tough opening loss to Marquette. Olson has not lost any&#13;
match he's participated in this year. ,&#13;
. On Tuesday the Rangers were to h.os}Carroll College and will host&#13;
St. Norbert College at 1 p.m, Saturday and then I)lorthealitern lllinois&#13;
at 3 p.m. next Monday. Coach Dick Frecka commented after the&#13;
Marquette loss, "This team (Parkside) will improve with'eachlIJatcb&#13;
and should have a very successful season." "&#13;
Men's track running well.&#13;
The.men's track team ran well again on Saturday at UW-Stevens&#13;
Point's Coleman Relays Invitational, a five-team, non-scoring affair.&#13;
The 10 000 meter walk, 'as usual, belonged to the Rangers, led by Jim&#13;
Heiring's 46:29:5 firsi place time - his second best ever. John Van Den&#13;
Brandt placed second in 49:51.5, .which was 50 seconds better than&#13;
anything he'd ever done before, while Al Halbur finished third in 51:36,&#13;
also a personal best. Chris Hansen, another leading walker, missed&#13;
the meet due to work. , '&#13;
Ray Fredericksen won a relatively new race, the five-mile road&#13;
race, which at 5 miles and 100 yards acts as a sort of substitute lor&#13;
marathon runners,' according to head coach 'Bob Lawson.&#13;
Fredericksen's time was 24:15. He also placed 4th in the 3-mile with'a&#13;
14:33.6 clocking. He may have done bettef had there been more time&#13;
between races, Lawson said.&#13;
With a 52'2" toss, Pat Burns won the shot put, while Jeff Sitz longjumped&#13;
22'11",,;' to 11 first place. After LeRoy Jefferson fell down in the&#13;
preliminaries, which.he was, leading, it appeared Parkside had lost&#13;
any chance of winning the event. B~t, not so, as ~~ul Nelson ran ~ 15.~&#13;
'to win the 120 high hurdles. Calling Nelson a pleasant surpnse,&#13;
Lawson also said, "His development will be a help to us later in the&#13;
year." . . '&#13;
, Bob Downs pole-vaulted 14'3.", his personal best, to come m second&#13;
in that event. Mike Rivers was 2nd and Greg Julich was 5th in the road,&#13;
race: Bill Werve was 4th in the 400 meter hurdles with 57.3, his best&#13;
effort of the year. Rick Hessefort was 4th in the javelin, and Sitz ran a&#13;
10.4 100yd. dash, good for 4th. The 440relay team was fifth. '&#13;
Men compete in intramural badminton&#13;
In intramural badminton last Wednesday night, Scott Hintz beat&#13;
Bob Lawson 5-15, 15-3, 15-5in the finals. Hintz beat Jim Heiring in the&#13;
semi-finals, while Lawson advanced by overtaking Rick Birdsall.-&#13;
Fourteen people played in the men's singles compeition. This Wednesday,-starling&#13;
at 6 p.m., men's doubles and mixed doubles will be&#13;
played. If interested, sign up at the Issue Room in the Phy. Ed.&#13;
Building. Winter sports players awardedLast&#13;
Tuesday night Parkside held its annual winter sports banquet&#13;
at Maplecrest Country Club. Most valuable player awards were giyen&#13;
to Gary Cole, who won 'the honor in addition to leading his club In&#13;
scoring and rebounding for the third straight year. Joe Landers, the&#13;
1340pound NAIA champion wrestler who will be touring Japan mtI&#13;
Korea on an all-star team this summer, and fencer Iris Gericke, who&#13;
compiled a 33-2 record in leading the women to a championship at the&#13;
Saturday, April 24, will bring Great Lakes Tournament, which she won, .&#13;
the Conference to the Com- Captains for this year's basketball team were Cole and Malcolm&#13;
munication Arts Theater. The MalIone. Next season, Rade Dimitrejevic and Stevie King will share&#13;
three speakers will ,present a the honors. Mahone also won the new defensive award as well as the&#13;
shortened version of their papers "hustle" award. Marshall Hill was named the most improved player.&#13;
beginning at 9:30 a.m. followed Honored as captain of the 1975-76'men's and women's fencing teanJ!I&#13;
bya break. The general public is was Jim Herring. Other awards included Landers and Dan o'Connell&#13;
invited to discuss and question named 1975-76 eo-captains in wrestling: O;Conriell was named the&#13;
the. speakers until .1:00 p.m. "most inspirational" and Brad Freberg was 'honored as the most "'r=~~=~~~:~::::;;:;;:::::;;:::~":Th~' :er:e~is:.:no::a:dmiss:·:io:n~c:ha::r=g:e.~.. improved wrestler, ~' '&#13;
Live Rock on Friday anCi Saturday Nights&#13;
, -&#13;
THE JIM ,SCHWALL 'BAND&#13;
THEJl!seill ~!_B~1f.II&#13;
10 THE PARKSIDE RANGER ~prll 14. 1976&#13;
On April 23and 24 a conference&#13;
entitled "Government Institutions&#13;
and Democratic Values&#13;
in Modern America" will be held&#13;
at - Parkside and Wingspread ..&#13;
. '&#13;
'JISCOUNr&#13;
!!!!Pi -~-;&amp;&amp;&#13;
Vi;e;;C~C;;tlirA;;;;;";'c~&#13;
Bikes are here! !!&#13;
Stop it;' and see the new&#13;
"Flying Machines" from Britain:&#13;
• Built in the Briti.h&#13;
tradition, djltribut~d&#13;
hy Yamaha&#13;
• Hand' brazed alloy&#13;
frames&#13;
• Cotteeless ,cranks&#13;
• LightweightLheavier&#13;
model i. only 24&#13;
lb •. 13 os.]&#13;
Stop in and "weigh"&#13;
the advantage •• You'll&#13;
go with Viscount.'&#13;
1647&#13;
TOWN &amp;&#13;
Taylor Ave.&#13;
COUNTRY BICYCLES&#13;
Racine, WI 634-3009&#13;
ftINO:S FilE FOODS II &amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
Northside 3728 Douglas&#13;
639,7115&#13;
Southside 1816,16th St.&#13;
634-1991&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEAFOOD&#13;
C",Cps&#13;
·plZZA&#13;
LASAGANA&#13;
RAVIOLI&#13;
MOSTACCIOLI&#13;
GNOCCHl&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFl DRINKS&#13;
WINES PICK UP OR&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS&#13;
DELIVERED TO YO,UR HOME Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
------ . Old&#13;
St,yle,&#13;
-Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at the Skellar&#13;
"&#13;
The conference begins on&#13;
Friday, April 23; at Wingspread&#13;
for invited guests. One of the&#13;
, three guest speakers will be Ted&#13;
Sorensen, a fonner advisor to&#13;
President John Kennedy and&#13;
author, who will speak on Perspectives&#13;
on Presidential Po,wer:&#13;
Prospects of Accountability.,&#13;
Phillipa Strum, professor of&#13;
politicaI..science at the Brooklyn&#13;
campus 'of CUNY (City&#13;
University of New York), will&#13;
read her p~per entitled "Towards&#13;
Government Accountability:·&#13;
Adopting 'European Answers to&#13;
American Questions." Professor&#13;
Strum has studied European"&#13;
parliamentary systems with the&#13;
view of what the U.S. could&#13;
borrow to improve our institutions.&#13;
The third speaker will be&#13;
James L: Sundquist of the&#13;
Brookings Institution, the center&#13;
for study of government in&#13;
Washington. Sunllquist will&#13;
,present his paper "Congress and&#13;
the Presidency: The Dilemil of&#13;
Perpetually Divided Government."&#13;
CO"'IItO&#13;
NflT '&#13;
WEEl •••&#13;
, According to Alan Shucard,&#13;
Associate professor of English at&#13;
Parkside, one of the questions to&#13;
be discussed" is: "Does our&#13;
present structure of government,&#13;
especially the President and&#13;
Congress with respect to the&#13;
Presidency, promote as efficently&#13;
as they should and&#13;
Democratic Values in America&#13;
that our founding documents&#13;
propose?" Arguments for and&#13;
against our present institutions&#13;
will also be presented,&#13;
,-&#13;
SPORTS 'SHORTS&#13;
at the Back Door&#13;
Racine Mot!" Inn's New&#13;
!\pion Spot (fornlllrly&#13;
the. Greot lokes Room)&#13;
• Foosboll To~les&#13;
• I?rinking .ond Dancing&#13;
•&#13;
I&#13;
The&#13;
Rack&#13;
Door&#13;
Stop in and see what we have added.&#13;
, .&#13;
____________________ .:....- .-d&#13;
..&#13;
10 THE PARKSIDE RANGER April 14, 1976 •·&#13;
- . .&#13;
Conference quest~ons ·&#13;
institritional relevance- - - by Jeffrey J. Swencki&#13;
On April 23 and 24 a conference&#13;
entitled "Government Institutions&#13;
and Democratic Values&#13;
in Modern America"" will be held&#13;
at - ·Parkside and Wingspread . . . '&#13;
The conference is sponsored by&#13;
the· Wisconsin Humanities&#13;
Committee, the -state&#13;
organization for distribution of&#13;
funds . from the National Endowment&#13;
of Humanities. This . .&#13;
'JISCOUNr _j_&#13;
Vi~=~c;tlj~~'";;:;:.c~&#13;
Bikes are here!!!&#13;
Stop ii} and see the new&#13;
"Flying Machines" from Britain:&#13;
• Built in the British&#13;
tradition, distributed&#13;
by Yamaha&#13;
• Hand · brazed alloy&#13;
frames&#13;
• Cott_erless . cranks·.&#13;
• LightweightLheavier&#13;
model is only 24&#13;
lbs. 13 oz.)&#13;
Stop in and "w~igh"&#13;
the advantages. You'll&#13;
go with Viscount. ·&#13;
TOWN &amp; COUNTRY BICYCLES&#13;
1647 Taylor Ave. Racine, WI&#13;
,,IN-of~ FINE FOODS&#13;
• &amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
Northside 3728 Douglas •&#13;
639,7115&#13;
Southside 1816:16th St.&#13;
634-1991 ·&#13;
DELIVERED&#13;
PIPING&#13;
PICKUP&#13;
HOT&#13;
TO YO&#13;
FOODS&#13;
.UR&#13;
OR&#13;
HOME&#13;
.&#13;
Racine,&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
-Pure Brewed&#13;
634-3009&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEAFOOD&#13;
CHOPS&#13;
· PIZZA, .&#13;
LASAGANA&#13;
RAVIOLI&#13;
. MOSTACCIOLI&#13;
GNOCCHI&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
BOMBERS .&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT DRINKS&#13;
WINES&#13;
program is financed through&#13;
Washington to ensure that the&#13;
humanities are brought into&#13;
public issues. Other sponsors&#13;
include Parkside, The Johnson&#13;
Foundation, the Kenosha&#13;
Bicentennial Committee and the&#13;
Racine Bicentennial Committee:&#13;
. The conference begins on&#13;
Friday, April 23; at Wingspread&#13;
for invited guests. One of the&#13;
· three guest speakers will be Ted&#13;
So~ensen, a former advisor to&#13;
President John Kennedy and&#13;
author, who will speak on Perspectives&#13;
on Presidenti~l Po_wer:&#13;
Prospects of Accountability ..&#13;
Phillipa Strum, professor of&#13;
politicaLscience at the Brooklyn&#13;
campus ·of CUNY · ( City&#13;
University of New York), will&#13;
read her p~per entitled ''Towards&#13;
Government· Accountability:&#13;
Adopting ·European' Answers to&#13;
American Questions.'' Professor&#13;
Strum has .studied European .-&#13;
parliamentary. systems with the&#13;
view of what the U.S. could&#13;
borrow to, improve · our institutions.&#13;
&#13;
The third speaker will be&#13;
James L: _ Sundquist of the&#13;
Brookings Institution, the center&#13;
for study of g·overnment in&#13;
Washington. Sun8quist will&#13;
_present his paper "Congress and&#13;
the Presidency: The Dilema of&#13;
Perpetually Divided Government."&#13;
&#13;
· According to Alan Shucard,&#13;
Associate professor of English at&#13;
Parkside, one of the questions to&#13;
be discussed° is: " Does our&#13;
present structure of government,&#13;
especially the President and&#13;
Congress with respect to the&#13;
Presidency, promote as efficently&#13;
as they should· and&#13;
Democratic Values in America&#13;
that out founding documents&#13;
propose?" Arguments for and&#13;
against our present institutions&#13;
~ill also be pr~sented.&#13;
Saturday, April 24, will bring&#13;
S'PORTs·· SHORTS ·Men's tennis ,squad vi~torious&#13;
Parkside's men's tennis squad proved to be too strong fo}' teams&#13;
from Carthage and Milton last w~ek. The .men beat Carthage on&#13;
Friday, though number one player Chri~ Jo~s?n was upended 6-3, 6-3. ' ParRside beat the host school 8-2. Wmners mcluded: Mike Olson&#13;
Gregg Pfarr, Jim DeVa~t1uez, John Orzechowski, and Greg Peterso~&#13;
m · singles. Most matches wert won by . co~ortable margins. Jim&#13;
Dolnik was beaten. In doubles, things were· a _bit closer, but the&#13;
Rangers still swept through them. Winning d~ls included John~nOlson,&#13;
DeVasquez-Scott Huge, and Pfarr.:Dolnik.&#13;
At home on Saturday, Parkside breezed past Milton College, 9-0.&#13;
That makes all Ranger players winners, and ups the team record to 2-&#13;
1, after the tough opening loss to Marquette. Olson has not lost any&#13;
match he's participated in this year . .&#13;
· On Tuesday the Rangers were to hosJ Carroll College and will host&#13;
St. Norber.t College at 1 p.m. Saturday and then ~ortheastem Illinois&#13;
at 3 p.m. riext Monday. Coach Dick Free~ commented after the&#13;
Marque~e loss, "This team (Parkside) will improve with each 'match&#13;
and should have a very successful season." "&#13;
Men's track running well _&#13;
The men's track team ran well again on Saturday at UW-Stevens&#13;
Point's Coleman Relays Invitational, a tive-team, non-scoring affair.&#13;
The 10,000 meter walk, ·as usual, belonged to the Rangers, led by Jim&#13;
Heiring's 46:29:5 first plac~ time - his second best ever. John Van Den&#13;
Brandt placed second in 49:51.5, .which was 50 seconds better than&#13;
anything he'd ever do~e before,. while Al Halbur finished third in 51:36,&#13;
also a per~onal best. Chris Hansen, another leading walker, mis.,ed&#13;
the meet due to work.&#13;
Ray Fredericksen won a relatively new race, the five-mile road&#13;
race, which at 5 miles and 100 yards acts as a sort of substitute for&#13;
marathon runners, · according to head coach 'lfob Lawson.&#13;
Fredericksen 's time was 24: 15. He also placed 4th in the 3-mile with ·a&#13;
14:33.6 clocking. He may have done better had there been more time&#13;
between races, Lawson said.&#13;
With a 52'2." ~oss, Pat Burns won the shot put, while -Jeff Sitz longjumped&#13;
22'111/2" to a first place. After LeRoy Jefferson fell down in the&#13;
p~elinililaries, which he was. leading, it appeared Parkside hall lost&#13;
any chance of winning the event. But, not so, as l;&gt;aul Nelson ran a 15.2&#13;
· to win the 120 high hurdles. Calling Nelson a "pleasant surprise,"&#13;
Lawson also said, "His development will be a help to us later in the&#13;
year." .&#13;
· Bob Downs pole-vaulted 14'3.", his personal best, to come in second&#13;
iri that event. Mike Rivers was 2nd and Greg Julich was 5th in the road&#13;
race: Bill Werve was 4th in the 400 meter hurdles with 57.3, his best&#13;
effort of the ·year. Rick Hessefort was 4th in the javelin, and Sitz ran a&#13;
10.4 100 yd. dash, good f9r 4th. The 440 relay team was fifth. ·&#13;
Men compete in intramural badminton&#13;
In intramural badminton last Wednesday night, Scott Hintz beat&#13;
Bob Lawson 5-1!&gt;, 15-3, 15-5 in the finals. Hintz beat Jim Heiring in the&#13;
semi-finals, while Lawson advanced 6y overtaking Rick Birdsall.-&#13;
Fourteen people played in the men's singles compeition. This Wednesday,-starting&#13;
at 6-p.m., men's doutiles and mixed doubles will be&#13;
played. If interested, sign up at the fssue Room in the Phy. Ed.&#13;
Building. ·&#13;
. · Winter sports players awarded'&#13;
Last Tuesqay night Parkside held its annual winter ·sports b~quet&#13;
at Maplecrest Country Club. Most valuable player awards were given&#13;
to Gary Cole, who won ·the honor in addition to leading his club in&#13;
scoring and rebounding for the third straight year. Joe Landers, the&#13;
134-pound NAIA champion wrestler ·who will be touring Japan and&#13;
Korea on an all-star team this swnmer, and fencer Iris Gericke', who&#13;
compiled a 33-2 record in leading the women to a championship at the&#13;
Fr~m God's Country.&#13;
0 Hl ll l"'"'NalUWINOCO t&lt;M; I IICll0$ SI . W IS&#13;
' the . conference to the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. The&#13;
three speakers will -present a&#13;
shortened version of their .papers&#13;
beginning at 9:30 a.m. followed&#13;
by·a break. The general public is&#13;
invited to discuss and question&#13;
the. speakers until ~1:00 p.m.&#13;
Great Lakes Tournament, which she won. · ·&#13;
Captains for this year's basketball team were Cole atid Malcolm&#13;
Mapone. Next season, Rade Dimitrejevic and Stevie King will share&#13;
the honors. Mahone also won the new defensive award as well as the&#13;
. "hu.stl~" award. Marshall Hill was named the most un'proved player.&#13;
Hono.red ~s. captain of the 1975-76 ·men's and women's fencing teaffl!I&#13;
was Jim Herring. Other awards included Landers and Dan O'Connell&#13;
named 1975-76 co-captains in wrestling. O;Coruiell was named the&#13;
'.'most inspirational" and Brad Freberg \YaS ·honored as the most&#13;
1mprov.ed wrestl~r.&#13;
On tap at the Skellar&#13;
r.~-=-~-:-:-=~~~----------- li v e Rock on FridCly anil Saturday Nights&#13;
There is no admission charge.&#13;
. - THE JIM SCHWALL .BAND&#13;
n:;~~r-;::&#13;
co,,,1,,6&#13;
NEXT&#13;
WEIi ... STILLWATER&#13;
Formerly of the s·iegal-Schwall Band&#13;
~t-the Back Door ·&#13;
The&#13;
Hack&#13;
Door&#13;
Rooine Motor Inn's New&#13;
Apion Spot (formerly&#13;
the, Great Lakes Room) ·&#13;
• Foosball Ta~les&#13;
• !?rinking _and Dancing&#13;
Doors Open 7 :00 Music sJarts 8:30&#13;
llJ!tirR A1&#13;
C10IN E ··: c.,.&#13;
~.MOTOR INN .&#13;
Stop in and see what we have added. &#13;
byThoD!Aiello&#13;
yoU ever heard of&#13;
aa&#13;
ve ad Ali? O.K., good.&#13;
Pd~s the name Don Dorff&#13;
NoW, bell boxing fans? How&#13;
..:..d a ' ' r.. ,t BobbyJohnson? .&#13;
aIJOlI [)Orffand Johnson are not&#13;
\lhiIe nearly as identifiable as&#13;
Jl8lllfSf&#13;
the Great One, they are&#13;
lbSt&#13;
0 at Kenosha's Fire&#13;
kJiowntment on Washington&#13;
vep;rNo,not because they ever . "':t -to burn down t,he Eagle's&#13;
III but because the two men&#13;
C1U\volVedwith .the Kenosha&#13;
. are . team that works-out&#13;
Boxln;eellnightat the Fire Dept.&#13;
rler'lff 26 is a Gateway Dor, '&#13;
hnical Institute student. But&#13;
TeealsO works-out from 6 to 8: 30&#13;
be during the week to prepare&#13;
plJlhiSfirst bout, scheduled for&#13;
: firSt week in May at the&#13;
K~OShaEagle's Club. . .&#13;
Johnsonis the man who trams&#13;
the boxers. He volunteers his&#13;
services,providing free training&#13;
fU' anyoneseriously. interested in&#13;
Fresh from a double-header&#13;
sweep and an "almost" win last&#13;
week,coach Rep Oberbruner's&#13;
baseball squad will have its&#13;
bands full this week. It plays&#13;
eight gamesin a span of six days.&#13;
Last Tuesday in Milwaukee,&#13;
the Rangers upped their season&#13;
record to, 3-4 by beating&#13;
Milwaukee Area Technical&#13;
College(MATC) 6-1 in the first&#13;
game,then 6-3 in game two.&#13;
Ross Donnelly, a sophomore&#13;
from Milwaukee, pitched five&#13;
innings of one-hit ball before&#13;
being relieved by freshman Brian&#13;
Francour, from Racine Sl.&#13;
Catherine's, in the opener.&#13;
Francourdidn't let up a hit, so&#13;
the two pitchers combined for a&#13;
Me-hitter.&#13;
Parkside had trailed in that&#13;
game, I.Q, before pounding out&#13;
fiI'e straight hits to open-up a&#13;
five·run fourth ianing. The&#13;
Rangers added one more run&#13;
later.&#13;
In game two of the twin-bill,&#13;
sohpomore Jeff Martinek, a&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper) product,&#13;
wentthe distance on the mound&#13;
firthewin.Oberbruner credited,&#13;
"biginningsin both ballgames,"&#13;
as the difference for Parkside.&#13;
Parkside's home opener&#13;
against Carroll College last&#13;
Wednesdaycould be labeled an&#13;
"almost" triumph. Then again, it&#13;
could be called an '''almost'' loss.&#13;
Instead, it will Ile counted as'&#13;
neither.&#13;
A simple explaination:&#13;
Parkside usually schedules two&#13;
seven-inning games at home. But&#13;
Carroll belongs to a conference&#13;
that says it must play just one&#13;
nine-inning game. So, Parkside&#13;
trailed, 8-1, after seven innings,&#13;
which means it normally would&#13;
have been a loss. But the teams&#13;
kept playing, so as to not&#13;
jeopardize Carroll's conference&#13;
rule, and the Rangers rallied for&#13;
eight runs in the bottom half of&#13;
the ninth inning to win !HI. In the&#13;
end though, Oberbruner said the&#13;
"conflict" was resolved by&#13;
declaring the game-vno contest."&#13;
Parkside's only southpaw&#13;
hurler, foriner A11-8tater Tom&#13;
Vog!, pitched the Carroll game.&#13;
He's still fighting a nagging little&#13;
pull in a shoulder muscle, but&#13;
, Oberbruner left him 'in the game&#13;
to get some throwing in.&#13;
Again in the Carroll game, the&#13;
Rangers showed the ability to&#13;
come up with the big inning. That&#13;
pleased the veteran coach, but he&#13;
said I'We never know when it&#13;
will 'come." He added that if it&#13;
always comes as late as it did in&#13;
the Carroll contest, "it may be&#13;
two innings too late."&#13;
Oberbruner also said he missed&#13;
starting centerfielder' Wally&#13;
THE PARKS/OE RANGER April 14, 1976 "&#13;
.According to Dorff, when a&#13;
newcomer arrives -Iohnso ta1ks&#13;
Withhim and then 'the first ~wo or&#13;
three weeks are spent doing&#13;
calisthenICS, jumping rope, and&#13;
the like. Dorff said, "It's all run&#13;
very strictly." After that time a&#13;
person is allowed to spar, under&#13;
very close supervision.&#13;
Last January'S "card" at lbe&#13;
Eagle's inclUded 10 bouts for&#13;
$1.50, With most all good seats.&#13;
Dorff said that night "stimulated&#13;
a lot of interest," in boxing. He&#13;
added that boxing faded in&#13;
popularity around 1968 but last&#13;
ye".' interest in lbe sport picked.&#13;
up In this area. With lbe help of&#13;
sponsors, the early May ring.&#13;
mght at lbe Eagle's is currently&#13;
being planned, and another enthusiastic&#13;
capacity crowd is&#13;
hoped for by the sport's&#13;
promoters.&#13;
•&#13;
Boxing offers release&#13;
the Sport of boxing P&#13;
there are about six boOresently&#13;
tici . xers par- clpating regUlarly and th&#13;
four or five people w~:o ::_&#13;
caslonally work-out. .&#13;
1v:0 Parkside students, John&#13;
Heiring and Mark Demet&#13;
currently involved With ~~e&#13;
program. Heiring, it may ~&#13;
reme~b ..red. was named lbe&#13;
evenmg s best boxer at lb&#13;
Eagle's last Jan. 18th, arter h:&#13;
won a hard.fought match.&#13;
Recently he was eliminated in the&#13;
second week of the Slate Golden&#13;
Gloves m~et in MilwaUkee .&#13;
Demet hasn ~ had a fight yet, but&#13;
he. plans to in a few months, he&#13;
said, when he gets his weight&#13;
down to where he wants to&#13;
compete at. Meanwhile he uses&#13;
the training as a stimulating&#13;
physical way to get into Shape:&#13;
The Kenosha boxing team&#13;
sponsored by the Kenosha New~&#13;
until 1967 when the Fire Dept.&#13;
took over, offers a challenging&#13;
way for some to release&#13;
.hostilities and inner tensions.&#13;
WEb'T KEM)SHA&#13;
S1l\TE BANK&#13;
Rangers win two&#13;
-Baseball squad busy&#13;
byThorn Aiello&#13;
5'+'1_50&#13;
---------- to'\M.l*"".\tJoS ~3&#13;
JOMDloa e-)~'5551&#13;
Fula, a Wauwatosa junior, who&#13;
has been out of his "clean-up"&#13;
spot in the batting order because&#13;
of an injury to his arch. Oberbruner&#13;
said. "When he raises up&#13;
on his toes it hurts him." The&#13;
coach also said, "1 need him&#13;
(Fula) in there." He quickly&#13;
added Vogt's name to the&#13;
"wanted" list, citing the fact that&#13;
he's the only left-jlanded pitcher&#13;
the Rangers have.&#13;
Freshman Andy Johnson, a&#13;
.designated hitter (among 'other&#13;
duties), continues to belt the ball&#13;
for Parkside and is the team's&#13;
• leading hitter. Oberbruner called&#13;
Johnson "a pleasant surprise."&#13;
Friday, April 16 -&#13;
Reflection&#13;
Sat., April 17 -&#13;
Spank&#13;
WI Sell IIsl11l F.'&#13;
1111 N. Mail 51. lac.t 133-5244&#13;
.. MEMtE~ F 0 i.c&#13;
Brat Stop&#13;
1·94 &amp; Highway 50;&#13;
"Live&#13;
Entertainment&#13;
Every Thursday ight'&#13;
Thursday, April 15&#13;
PluDlb Loc&#13;
• 'FREE STUDENT CHECKING&#13;
ECKING ACCOUNTS ....• BUSINESS LOANS&#13;
• CH INGS ACCOUNTS .....• MONEY ORDERS&#13;
• SAV EPOSIT BOX RENTALS .• INSTALLMENT LOANS, •••.&#13;
• SAFE D • TRAVELERS CHECKS&#13;
• PERSONAL LOANS '. UTILITY PAY STATION •••.&#13;
AUTO LOANS .&#13;
• FACILITIES • AMPLE PARKING ••.•••• • DRIVE-IN .....&#13;
OPEN MORE HOURS (46)&#13;
TO SERVE YOU BETTER&#13;
Mon. Thru Thurs. 9 AM . 5 PM&#13;
Fri. 9 AM . 8 PM&#13;
Sot. 9 AM . Noon&#13;
cal! 694-6800&#13;
5621 15th STREET&#13;
KENOSHA. WISC. 53"0&#13;
JJoxing Offe'rs release&#13;
by Thom Aiello , the sport of boxing Pre ti&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Aprll 14, 1976 11&#13;
there are about six ho. sen . y&#13;
you ever heard of ti . tin · xers par aave d Ali? O.K., good. c1pa g regularly anci a th -&#13;
1'fubaJlllll8does the name Don Dorff fou~ or five people wb:0 er&#13;
NoW, bell bo,xing fans? H.ow cas1onally work-out . ocrj/Jg&#13;
a , ? · ~o Parkside students, John Bobby Johnson· · Heirm d&#13;
a~t l)Orff and Johnson are not · g an Mark Demet are&#13;
\Vhil~ nearly as identifiable as curr~ntly involved with' the&#13;
nalll f the Great One, they are program. Heiring, it may be&#13;
that O at Kenosha's Fire reme~b~red. - was named the&#13;
known W h " gt Eevenlm' gs _best bo_xer at the 'trnent· on as m on l)epdarNo, not because they ever ages last Jan. 18th, after he&#13;
ROS h E I ' won a hard-fought match. ·ed iO burn down t_ e ag e s Recently he was eliminated in the&#13;
trt b bllt because the two men se d k&#13;
Clu 'm· volved with the Kenosha con wee of the State Golden&#13;
are . Gloves meet in Milwauk . g· team that works-out D th , ee. sox1nweeknight at the Fire Dept. eme asn ~ had a fight yet, but&#13;
ever'/ · he_ plans to in a few months, he&#13;
Dorff, 26, is a Gateway said, when he gets his weight&#13;
Technical Institute student. But down to where he wants to&#13;
also works-out from 6 to 8:30 t&#13;
be d ..... ng the week to prepare compe e at. Meanwhile he uses p 111 ..., "' the training as a stimulating f. his first bout, scheduled for physical way to get into shape'.&#13;
:e first week ' in May at the The Kenosha boxing team:,&#13;
Kenosha Eagle's Club. · . sponsored by tlie Kenosha News&#13;
Johnson is the man who trams until 1967 when the Fire Dept.&#13;
the boxers. He_ volunteer~ ~is took over, offers a challenging&#13;
services, providing free trammg way for some to release&#13;
1,.,-anyone seriously_interested in · hostilities and inner tensioi:is.&#13;
Ranger~. win two&#13;
According to Dorff h · , wen a n~wco~er arrives, Johnson talks&#13;
with bun and then the first two or&#13;
thr~ W~ks are spent doing&#13;
calis~emcs, jwnping rope, and&#13;
the like. Dorff said, "It's all run&#13;
very s~ictly." After that time a&#13;
. person lS allowed to spar' under&#13;
very close supervision.&#13;
Last Januaris "card" at th&#13;
Eagle's included 10 bouts fo:&#13;
$1.50, ~th most all good seats.&#13;
Dorff said that night "stimulated&#13;
a lot of interest," in boxing. He&#13;
added that boxing faded in&#13;
popul~rity around 1968, but last&#13;
yea_r m~rest in the sport pickedup&#13;
m this area. With the help of&#13;
s~nsors, the early May ringrught&#13;
at the Eagle's is currently&#13;
being planned, and another enthusiastic&#13;
capacity crowd is&#13;
hoped for by the sport's&#13;
promoters.&#13;
....r&#13;
SAA Stot• S&#13;
Modu.on , o&#13;
53703&#13;
608 25tr5551&#13;
P'LEASE.5END ME&#13;
INFOR1'1A"TION AB0',Ji&#13;
l~C&gt;K:, -=~.s&#13;
N,_., ________ _&#13;
Arc,-eM&#13;
Baseball squad busy&#13;
by Thom Aiello&#13;
Bra Sto&#13;
1-94 &amp; Highwa&#13;
''Live&#13;
Entertainment&#13;
Every Thursday ight&#13;
Fresh from a double-header&#13;
sweep and an "almost" win las~&#13;
week, coach Re,sl Oberbruner's&#13;
baseball squad will have its&#13;
hands full this week. It plays&#13;
eight games in a span of six days.&#13;
Last Tuesday in Milwaukee,&#13;
the Rangers upped their season&#13;
record to , 3-4 by beating&#13;
Milwaukee Area Technical&#13;
College (MATC) .6-1 in the first&#13;
game, then 6-3 in game two.&#13;
Ross Donnelly, a sophomore&#13;
from Milwaukee, pitched five&#13;
innings of one-hit ball before&#13;
being relieved by freshman Brian&#13;
Francour, from Racine St.&#13;
Catherine's, iri . the opener.&#13;
Francour didn't -let up a hit, so&#13;
the two pitchers combined for a&#13;
ooe-hitter.&#13;
Parkside had trailed in that&#13;
game, 1-0, before pounding out&#13;
five straight hits to open-up a&#13;
five-run fourth . inning. The&#13;
Rangers added one more run later.&#13;
In game two of the twin-bill,&#13;
sohpomore Jeff Martinek, a&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper) product,&#13;
went the distance on the mound&#13;
fer the win. Oberbruner credited,&#13;
"big innings in both ballgames,''&#13;
as the difference for Parkside.&#13;
Parkside's home opener&#13;
against Carroll College last&#13;
Wednesday could be labeled an&#13;
"almost'1 triumph. Then again, it&#13;
could be called an ·"almost" loss.&#13;
Instead, it will Ile counted as ·&#13;
neither.&#13;
A simple explaination:&#13;
Parkside usually schedules two&#13;
seven-inning games at home. But&#13;
Carroll belongs to a conference&#13;
that s¥ys- it must play just one&#13;
nine-inning game. So, Parkside&#13;
trailed, 8-1, after seven innings,&#13;
which means it normally would&#13;
have been a loss. But the teams&#13;
kept playing, so as · to not&#13;
jeopardize. Carroll's conference&#13;
rule, and the Rangers rallied for&#13;
eight runs in the bottom half of&#13;
· the ninth inning to win 9-8. In the&#13;
end though, Oberbruner said the&#13;
"conflict" was resolved by&#13;
declaring the game·"no contest."&#13;
Parkside's only southpaw&#13;
hurler,, former All-Stater Tom&#13;
Vogt, pitched the Carroll game.&#13;
·. He's still fighting a nagging little&#13;
pull in a shoulder muscle, but 1 Oberbruner left him 1&#13;
in the game&#13;
to get some throwing in.&#13;
Again in the Carroll game, the&#13;
Rangers snowed the ability to&#13;
come up with the big inning. That&#13;
pleased the veteran coach, but he&#13;
said "We never know when it&#13;
will 'come." He added that if it&#13;
always comes as late as it did in&#13;
. the Carroll contest, "it may be&#13;
two innings too late." '&#13;
Oberbruner also said he missed&#13;
starting centerfielder · Wally&#13;
Fula, a Wauwatosa junior, who&#13;
has been out of his " clean-up"&#13;
spot in the batting order because&#13;
of an injury to his arch. Oberbruner&#13;
said, "When he raises up&#13;
on his toes it hurts him." The&#13;
coach also said, "I need him&#13;
(Fula) in there." He quickly&#13;
added Vogt's name to the&#13;
"wanted" list, citing the fact that&#13;
he's the only left-}landed pitcher&#13;
the Rangers have.&#13;
Freshman Andy Johnson, a&#13;
. designated hitter (among ·other&#13;
duties), continues to belt the ball&#13;
for Parkside and is the team's&#13;
, leading hitter. Oberbruner called&#13;
Johnson "a pleasant surprise."&#13;
continued o~ paae 12&#13;
We Sell lftstat f•!&#13;
1101 N. llai1 St. laci11 533-5244&#13;
II&#13;
Thur day Apr· 15&#13;
Plumb Loe&#13;
Friday, April 6 -&#13;
Reflection&#13;
Sat., April 7 -&#13;
Spank&#13;
~TKE&#13;
S'D\TE R&#13;
MEMIEII. f O I C.&#13;
·FREE STUDENT CHECKING&#13;
CHECKING ACCOUNTS ... -• BUSINESS LOANS •.• • • • .&#13;
• ACCOUNTS .... . • MONEY ORDERS&#13;
• SAVIN~SPOSIT BOX RENTALS .• INSTALLMENT LOANS&#13;
• SAFE • TRAVELERS CHECKS&#13;
• PERSONAL NLSOANS ..... .. • UTILITY PAY STATION •.••&#13;
AUTO LOA · · · · · · · · · · : DRIVE-IN FACILITIES .....• AMPLE PARKI G .•.••••&#13;
OPEN MORE HOURS ( 46) /J 694-&#13;
To SERVE YOU BETTER ca&#13;
5 PM S621 7St ST EET&#13;
Mon. Thru Thurs. 9 AM · , KE OSHA, WISC S11'0&#13;
Fri. 9 AM - 8 PM&#13;
Sot. 9 AM - Noon -&#13;
-- -&#13;
12 THE PARKSIDE RANGER April 14, 1976&#13;
Dannehl optimistic&#13;
Women's softball to begin&#13;
by Thorn Aiello&#13;
Women's softball was&#13;
scheduled to begin as a varsity&#13;
sport Monday', as Parkside was to&#13;
play an afternoon game of fastpitch&#13;
softball at tbe University of&#13;
Chicago. Athletic Director&#13;
Wayne Dannehl, who is coaching&#13;
the team, is fairly optimistic&#13;
about his club's charices this&#13;
year. He compared it favorably&#13;
with county recreational league&#13;
play that he watched last summer.&#13;
About having an opportunity to&#13;
coach, Dannehl said, "f kind of&#13;
enjoy it. It's nice to get out." The&#13;
only problem, be said, is that&#13;
sometimes it confJicis with his&#13;
busy schedule.&#13;
Dannehl, whose team has been&#13;
practicing for more than three&#13;
weeks now, said he knows little or&#13;
· nothing about most of the opposing&#13;
teams and vice versa.&#13;
Many of the other teams have&#13;
played before though. The coach&#13;
also said it's hard to tell just how&#13;
good 'his team could be since,&#13;
· with the mound only 40 feet away,&#13;
an opposing pitcher, if good'&#13;
· enough, "can be avery, very&#13;
dominate factor." About the&#13;
Rangers' defensively, Dannehl&#13;
said, "They look fairly sound to&#13;
me."&#13;
Thirty players started out on&#13;
the roster. but now there are&#13;
twenty-six players left. Among&#13;
Tennis schedule tougher&#13;
hy Phil Hermann&#13;
"This year the schedule is&#13;
tougher but Ithink we can have a&#13;
winning season," so says Coach&#13;
Richard Frecka of the Parkside&#13;
Men's tennis teain.&#13;
Frecka's team will rely exClusively&#13;
on sophomores, juniors&#13;
and freshman. Parkside which&#13;
pays such schools as Carthage,&#13;
Carroll and Milton as an independent,&#13;
will have sophomores&#13;
Chris Johnson and Mike Olsen as&#13;
no. 1 and 2 singles and also as the&#13;
no. 2 doubles team. no. 3 singles&#13;
player is Greg Farr who teams&#13;
with no. 5 Jim Dolnik to form the&#13;
no. 3 doubles team. Rounding out&#13;
the squad are no. 4 singles junior&#13;
Jim Devasquez who teams with&#13;
Scott Hugh to form the no. 2&#13;
doubles team, and JohD o--&#13;
zechkowski no. 6 singles who is a&#13;
freshmen.&#13;
Parkside last J.ear was 10-2&#13;
:·.':?@f*lfW~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i~~~~&#13;
~ -::::;:;:.:&gt;. .0::::::::-:&#13;
RANGE&#13;
needs writers!&#13;
Apply&#13;
WLLe D194&#13;
,&#13;
or call 553-2287&#13;
against easier opponents&#13;
hopefully this year they can&#13;
make it to the NAlA District 14&#13;
championships at Stout on May&#13;
14-15. Ifthey come out of that, it's&#13;
on to Kansas City for the NAlA&#13;
Final Tournament.&#13;
them, a basic line-up would include:&#13;
Barbara Piasecki, pitcher&#13;
first base; Liz Sipple or Marge&#13;
Balazs, catcher; Judy Kingsfield&#13;
and Donna Karpowitz, first base;&#13;
Barb Secor, second base-pitcher&#13;
and Ramona Curio, second baseinfielder;&#13;
Debbie Drissel,&#13;
shortstop, who Dannehl called "a&#13;
real fine infielder;" and Diane&#13;
Kolovos; third base.&#13;
The outfield consists of: sandy&#13;
Kingsfield, who "really hits the&#13;
ball, II according to Dannehl, in&#13;
leftfield; Nina Hunter, centerfield;&#13;
and Karen Oster,&#13;
rightfield. Carol Knudson is the&#13;
fourth outfielder - she can play&#13;
any field.&#13;
The new team plays Thursday,&#13;
'at 4 p.m., in a double-header at&#13;
Milwaukee Area Technical&#13;
College. Next Tuesday it will play&#13;
North Central College at&#13;
Parkside (4p.m.). There will also&#13;
be a twin-bill on Friday, April 23,&#13;
at the College of DuPage (2&#13;
p.m.), before returning home on&#13;
Sat., April 24, for games with&#13;
George Williams College (11&#13;
a.m.) and the University of&#13;
Chicago (1 p.m.).&#13;
Baseball-----&#13;
continued from page 11&#13;
The Rangers are hoping for&#13;
nice weather this week to aid the&#13;
pitching staff in loosening-up its&#13;
arms. On Monday the squad was&#13;
to host MATC for two games and&#13;
Wednesday the Milwaukee&#13;
School of Engineering, entering&#13;
its first year of competition in the&#13;
WleA conference, will be here for&#13;
a double-header, starting at 1&#13;
p.m. Oberbruner said, "I know&#13;
very little about -them, " since&#13;
they are a newer team, so almost&#13;
anything could happen.&#13;
This Friday and Saturday the&#13;
Rangers will be at UW-Stevens&#13;
Point for double-headers both&#13;
days. Noon starting times are&#13;
also scheduled both days.&#13;
Oberbruner figures UWSP to be&#13;
"very tough," saying Parkside&#13;
was "lucky to beat them" last&#13;
year to move on in tourney play.&#13;
Stevens Point figures to be either&#13;
the best or second best school in&#13;
the Wisconsin State University&#13;
Conference, if not the state.&#13;
One of the Midwest's&#13;
Most Complete&#13;
SPORTING GOODS&#13;
DEALERS&#13;
FOR SALE: 1961 ·VoIVO. model B16544&#13;
Restored,and lin very good condition. Call&#13;
654·5474 after 4 p'TJ.&#13;
BUSINESS FOR SALE: Established private&#13;
nursery school and kindergarten. Call 654·&#13;
5474 or 654·8536 a·nytime.&#13;
FOR SALE: Floor weaving loom made in&#13;
1937: 4 harness type. phone 637·3238 and ask&#13;
for David.&#13;
Maple neck new telecaster. custom. hum&#13;
bucking. Brand New. unscratched, Brown,&#13;
Supro Amp, Jenson Speaker. 16 Inch. $250.00&#13;
or best offer. Call Tom 552-7254.&#13;
Classifieds free&#13;
Japanese cooking...ctasses start"&#13;
everuncs. April 28. For more i Ing Wed.&#13;
call 5549475. nformatiOn&#13;
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14TH. AVENUE AT 62NO. STREET&#13;
KENOSHA. 'WISCONSIN 53140&#13;
THE&#13;
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OURSE&#13;
PABST-Since 1844.&#13;
The quality has always&#13;
come through.&#13;
MARVIN KITZEROW ENTERPRISES INC. PRESENTS&#13;
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In Kenosha, WI. .&#13;
LIVE ROCK MUSIC - Wed., Fri., Sat., Sun.&#13;
.Outrigger Band Schedule&#13;
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THE RECORDS ARE&#13;
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ALWAYS&#13;
626 Filly·Sixth· SIr.e'&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN 53140.' 5629 • 24th Ave.&#13;
l:i~ "' _&#13;
12 THE PARKSIDE RANGER April 14, 1976&#13;
Dannehl optimistic Classifieds free Woinen's softball to_ begin . \&#13;
FOR SALE : 1961 'v olvo,· model B16544 .&#13;
Restor ed .and 1in very good condition . Cal l&#13;
654 -5474 after 4 P·rr'·&#13;
Japanese cooking ,classes starting W&#13;
evenings, April 28. For m ore i f ed.&#13;
cal l 554 9475. n ormation&#13;
by Thom Aiello&#13;
Women's softball was&#13;
scheduled to begin as a varsity&#13;
sport Monday·, as Parkside was to&#13;
play an afternoon game of fastpitch&#13;
softball at the University of&#13;
Chicago. Athletic Director&#13;
Wayne Dannehl, who is coaching&#13;
the team, is fairly optimistic&#13;
about his club's charices this&#13;
year. He compared it favorably&#13;
with county recreational league&#13;
play that he watched last summer.&#13;
&#13;
About having an opportunity to&#13;
coach, Dannehl said, " I kind of&#13;
enjoy it. It's nice to get out." Toe&#13;
only problem, he said, is that&#13;
sometimes it conflicts with his&#13;
busy schedule.&#13;
Dannehl, whose team has been&#13;
practicing for more than three&#13;
weeks now, said he knows little or&#13;
. nothing about most of the op-.&#13;
posing teams and vice versa.&#13;
Many of the other teams have&#13;
played before though. Toe coach&#13;
also said it's hard to tell just how&#13;
good ·his team could be since,&#13;
· with the mound only 40 feet away,&#13;
an opposing pitcher, if good·&#13;
· enough, "can be a very, very&#13;
dominate factor. " About the&#13;
Rangers' defensively, Dannehl&#13;
said, "They look fairly sound to&#13;
me."&#13;
Thirty players started out on&#13;
the roster, but now there are&#13;
twenty-six players left. Among&#13;
them, a basic line-up would include:&#13;
Barbara Piasecki, pitcher&#13;
first base; Liz Sipple or Marge&#13;
Balazs, catcher; Judy Kingsfield&#13;
and Donna Karpowitz, first base;&#13;
Barb Secor, second base-pitcher&#13;
and Ramona Cµrio, second baseinfielder;&#13;
Debbie Drissel,&#13;
shortstop, who Dannehl called "a&#13;
real fine infielder; " and Diane&#13;
Kolovos; third base. ·&#13;
Toe outfield consists of: Sandy&#13;
. Kingsfield, who "really hits the&#13;
ball," according to Danrlehl, in&#13;
leftfield; Nina Hunter, centerfield;&#13;
and Karen Oster,&#13;
rightfield. Carol Knudson is the&#13;
fourth outfielder - she can play&#13;
any field.&#13;
BUS INESS FOR SALE : Established private .&#13;
nursery school and k indergarten . Call 654 -&#13;
5474 or 654 -8536 a'nytime.&#13;
FOR SALE : Floor weaving loom m ade in&#13;
1937 : 4 harness type, phone 637 -3238 and ask&#13;
for David.&#13;
M aple neck new telecaster, Custom, hum&#13;
bucking, Brand New, unscratched, Brown,&#13;
Supr o Amp, Jenson Speaker, 16 inch, $250.00&#13;
or best offer, Cal l Tom 552 -7254.&#13;
One of_ the Midwest's _Most Com·plete&#13;
Tennis $.chedule tougher&#13;
Toe new team plays Thursday,&#13;
·at 4 p.m., in a double-header at&#13;
Milwaukee Area Technical&#13;
College. Next Tuesday it will play&#13;
North Central College at&#13;
Parkside ( 4p.m.). There will also&#13;
be a twin-bill on Friday, April 23,&#13;
at the College of DuPage (2&#13;
p.m.), before returning home on&#13;
Sat., April 24, for games with&#13;
George Williams College ( 11&#13;
a.in.) and the University of&#13;
Chicago (1 p.m.).&#13;
SPORTING GOODS&#13;
DEALERS&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
"This year the schedule is&#13;
tougher but I think we can have a •&#13;
winning season," so says Coach&#13;
Richard Frecka of the Parkside&#13;
Men's tennis teatn.&#13;
Frecka's team will rely exclusively&#13;
on sophomores, juniors&#13;
and freshman. Parkside which&#13;
pays such schools as Carthage,&#13;
Carroll and Milton as an independent,&#13;
will have sophomores&#13;
Chris Johnson and Mike Olsen as&#13;
no. 1 and 2 singles and also as the&#13;
no. 2 doubles team. no. 3 singles&#13;
player is Greg Farr who teams&#13;
with no. 5 Jim Dolnik to form the&#13;
no. 3 doubles team. Rounding out&#13;
the squad 8!e no. 4 singles junior&#13;
Jim Devasquez who teams with&#13;
Scott Hugh to form the no. 2&#13;
doubles team, and 'John Orzechkowski&#13;
no. 6 singles who is a&#13;
freshmen.&#13;
,t::i::)la~:.:; artwas 0 10-2&#13;
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needs writers I&#13;
Apply&#13;
WLLC D194&#13;
'&#13;
or call 553-2287&#13;
........ ..... .&amp;. --- - ' -&#13;
COME TO WHERE&#13;
THE RECORDS ARE&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST&#13;
RECORD DEPART~NT&#13;
- LOWEST PRICES&#13;
ALWAYS&#13;
626 Fifty-Sixth · Street&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN 53140 • •&#13;
against easier opponents&#13;
hopefully this year they can&#13;
make it to the NAIA District 14&#13;
championships at Stout on May&#13;
14-15. If they come out of that, it's&#13;
on to Kansas City for the NAIA&#13;
Final Tournament.&#13;
Pl1nly ol FREE P11king&#13;
n~1~1t11&#13;
~~ml~lit'~ ~~ ,r~~ .&#13;
Baseball---- con tinued from page 11&#13;
Toe Rangers are hoping for&#13;
nice weather this week to aid the&#13;
pitching staff in loosening-up its&#13;
arms.-On Monday the squad was&#13;
to host MATC for two games and&#13;
Wednesday the Milwaukee&#13;
School of Engineering, entering&#13;
its first year of competition in the&#13;
WICA conference, will be here for&#13;
a double-header, starting at 1&#13;
p.m. Oberbruner said, "I know&#13;
very little about -them," since&#13;
they are a newer team, so almost&#13;
anything could happen.&#13;
This Friday and · Saturday the&#13;
Rangers will be at UW-Stevens&#13;
Point for double-headers both&#13;
days. Noon starting times are&#13;
also scheduled both days.&#13;
Oberbruner.figures UWSP to be&#13;
"yery tough," saying Parkside&#13;
was "lucky to beat them" last&#13;
year to move on in tourney play. .&#13;
Steveris Point figures to be either&#13;
the best or second best school in&#13;
the Wisconsin State University&#13;
Conference, if not the state.&#13;
THE&#13;
QUALITY&#13;
.COURSE&#13;
PABST- Since 1844.&#13;
The quality has always&#13;
con1e through. .&#13;
MARVIN KITZEROW ENTERPRISES INC. PRESENTS&#13;
-ou_trigger West&#13;
In Kenosha, Wi.&#13;
LIYE ROCK MUSIC - Wed., Fri., Sat., Sun.&#13;
~~IIESD4&#13;
. ~&#13;
GIRLS IN&#13;
FREE&#13;
_Outrigger Band Schedule&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sot., Sun., April 14-18&#13;
Chi- Chi) Band (formerly Magic)&#13;
21-25 Pegasus&#13;
. Wed., I Thurs.,! Fri.; Sot., Sun., April 28&#13;
May ·2 Chi.(hi Band (formerly Magic)&#13;
Wed.&#13;
Wed.&#13;
Wed. -&#13;
5-9 Big Tips&#13;
,--&#13;
\\\\I 4A . ~·~ . ,,,,.'/&#13;
~ THURS.~,&#13;
. (sl .00 cover)&#13;
2 for 1 ·night · ·&#13;
2· people admitted for .&#13;
the price of 1 </text>
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