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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Center launched for teaching excellence&#13;
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            <text>Volume 5, issue 3</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>TheParkside,-- _&#13;
RANGER&#13;
, , Vol. V. No. 3 Wednesday, September 22, 1976&#13;
, 'Center launched&#13;
for teaching exc.ell~nce&#13;
Alan Shucard photo by Viln Thompson&#13;
Jain levels charges&#13;
by John McKlo.key&#13;
A.new office to help faculty members improve&#13;
their own methods and skills has opened here at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Directed by Alan Shucard, associate professor of&#13;
English, and a steering committee of students&#13;
adminIstration, and faculty, the Center f~&#13;
Teachmg Excellence works with the federal Project&#13;
for Institutional Renewal to expose new and-or&#13;
better instructional methods to faculty members.&#13;
The creation of the Center was mandated last year&#13;
by the Faculty senate as part of the program&#13;
suggested by the Committee of Principals.&#13;
Shucard cited the two main goals of his ollice as&#13;
1) professional development and 2) instructional&#13;
development. "The professional development goal&#13;
is to improve the faculty personally and&#13;
professionally," said Shucard. "With the job&#13;
market so tight, most people have to expect to slay&#13;
at the same institution for most of their professional&#13;
lives," he said, and promised his ollice would&#13;
provide stimulation for instructors.&#13;
Personal and professional counseling on a concontinued&#13;
on page 11&#13;
Reviews late&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
The quadrennIal performance&#13;
reviews of the Communication&#13;
and Sociology-Anthropology&#13;
disciplines sliD have nol been&#13;
written even though they were&#13;
due last academic year.&#13;
The University System&#13;
requires that each academic&#13;
program at every university&#13;
!ranch must be reviewed every&#13;
four years to assess program&#13;
qwility, student demand, and&#13;
program costs. Last year, allcanling&#13;
to members of the lameduck&#13;
Academic Planning&#13;
Council, the &lt;.'OUncll completed&#13;
eiglll of the reports. butlwo were&#13;
left undone - communicati ... and&#13;
Soc.-Arlhro.&#13;
The C¥nmunications program&#13;
was oot reviewed because the&#13;
duty of reviewing that department&#13;
was given to a task lorce&#13;
that was never appointed. The&#13;
task force was mandated by last&#13;
year's COP report to investigate&#13;
the "peculiar problems" of the&#13;
Communications program.&#13;
Since the lime of the COP&#13;
report, the Faculty Senate&#13;
decided to make the force into an&#13;
Academic Planning and&#13;
Programming Committee, the&#13;
elections for w!rich will oot be&#13;
held until mid-October. According&#13;
to council members,&#13;
however J the Communications&#13;
discipline is asking for the review&#13;
Business program viewed&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
H Parkside students have been wondering what's going on in the&#13;
Buslness Department lately, Ranger learned more on the situation in&#13;
an'interview with Mahesh Jain, former assislant professor of business&#13;
management at Parkside. Jain who resigned his position last summer&#13;
to lake a similar position at Howard University in Washington D.C.,&#13;
leveled various charges attheUW-PBusiJiess program and Chancellor&#13;
Guskin. -&#13;
RANGER: Why did you leave the University?&#13;
Jain: For a number of reasoos;-mainly because of personal confltcts&#13;
with the rest of the discipline and the fact that my efforts to imporve&#13;
the business faction didn't seem to acheive what I wanted.&#13;
RANGER: When did the personal confltcts begin?&#13;
Jain: After I criticized the faculty last year in that Ranger articJe-all&#13;
that I satd then, I slill hold true.&#13;
RANGER: What was the form of the personal conflicts or&#13;
harrasment? ..~&#13;
Jain: Alter the story came out, I had professor's wives calling me on&#13;
the phone and critizing me for opening my mouth. I could lake the&#13;
harrasment from the other faculty but when their families got involved,&#13;
it was too much.&#13;
RANGER: What do you see in the future for Parkside's business&#13;
management discipline?&#13;
Jain: I see nothing dillerentthan I've seen for the last year that I was&#13;
there. Chancellor Guskin doesn't seem to want a good business&#13;
program, he is too involved in the liheral arts section of the Univet-sity.&#13;
RANGER: What exactly is your conflict with Guskin?&#13;
Jain: Well, he named me to committees but then he didn't give me any&#13;
power to change tlrings. The Chancellor seems to use personal bias on&#13;
who he gives power to in the conimittees and you can.quote me on that.&#13;
RANGER: Do you have any suggestions on what to do now?&#13;
Jain: I t!rink an outside group made up of area businessmen and&#13;
Parkside students should investigate the entire Parkside system and&#13;
the business discipline especially&#13;
RANGER: What do you think about the other faculty leaving?&#13;
Jain: WI'Il, seiler (Lynn seiler, assistant to the Dean of SMl) retired.&#13;
but most of the others were as frustrated as I was. Add to th,t the fact&#13;
that were at odds most of last year and it doesn't surprise me. A&#13;
certain business teacher was taking classes lit Whitewater in the&#13;
summer and then leaching those same classes to students in the fall.&#13;
He also was leaching 'classes to the stud.,i;'ts that he never had&#13;
himself. III satd who it was it would only make matters worse for&#13;
everyone concerned. This is the kind ofteaclring I was talking about&#13;
last year when I criticized the faculty. .&#13;
RANGER: Did you inform the Chancellor of your reasons for&#13;
leaving?&#13;
Jain: Why should Ihave? He knew what the situation was and I think&#13;
he didn't care anyway.&#13;
Ranger called Chancellor GuSkin to ask him his opinion on the&#13;
situation. ,&#13;
When asked about Jain's charges Guskin said, "I can't believe he&#13;
said those tlrings; il anyone was in a position to change things he was. I&#13;
named him to both committees to evaluate the situatioo and be did&#13;
nothing." "As far as an outside committee is concerned we already&#13;
have inputlrom the area businessmen," said Guskin.&#13;
" ~n asked w.hat Parkside students should do, Guskin replied,&#13;
Wmt and be patient, we are working for the future goal ofa powerful&#13;
and successful business program. Right oow we have a l!ood baBe to&#13;
start with and we will be looking for more PhD professors, but for&#13;
the next six months or so, it will be very difficult."&#13;
A source close to the business discipline commented 00 Gusk!n's&#13;
remarks: GlISkln had a chance last year to hire a female professor&#13;
who held a PhD and was super-qualified but he offered her a saIary&#13;
. which was $4,000 less than that recommended by the business&#13;
program coordinator. The saIary level was not commensurate with&#13;
those at other universities or private industry, so she didn't lake the&#13;
job. "&#13;
Guskin said, "Right now we have to look to the future and I and the&#13;
task force committee are willing at any lime to Il.!eetwith concerned&#13;
students.&#13;
When this comment was related to the Ranger source, it was&#13;
countered with "What for , they'll just give us the runaround like they&#13;
usually do, but mayhe ilthere is enough of us and we ask the right&#13;
questions we can do something."&#13;
Mahesb Jain&#13;
to be delayed unW the 1tm-79,&#13;
school year, because. "they are&#13;
recovering from a mortal blow I"&#13;
accanIing to cormnitlee members.&#13;
The Soc-Anl1ro revi .... was oot&#13;
completed because, aa:ordlng to&#13;
committee members, Soc-Anlhro&#13;
representatives declined to&#13;
appear before the ~ttee&#13;
of APe that was studyInc SocAnlhro.&#13;
The subcommittee&#13;
therefore oblained a c:onaaIlanl,&#13;
wboae rnIew of Soc-Antbro Is&#13;
cD! this week. The """""""' of&#13;
the lull committee speculated&#13;
that the subcommlU8e wID adopt&#13;
the consultant's report immedlately,&#13;
thus lInlahlng the&#13;
task.&#13;
One of the ~atlons the&#13;
APe has about beginning the&#13;
Communicati .... revi .... now Is&#13;
that it mlghl not be dooe in lime&#13;
for the new-inslructor recruiting&#13;
season, which begins about&#13;
December I. The review Is&#13;
helpful for admlnislrators who&#13;
need to know how many additional&#13;
positions need to be&#13;
authorized to be l1\Ied in Com-&#13;
.munications. In order for&#13;
Parkside to hav~ the best 0pportunity&#13;
to get the best instructors,&#13;
it should get into&#13;
recruiting as early as possible&#13;
next season, said the committee&#13;
members.&#13;
The University Committee has&#13;
recommended to the Faculty&#13;
senate that the Student Financial&#13;
Aids Committee and the Sludent&#13;
Recruitment and Admissions&#13;
CUnmittee be eliminated and&#13;
some of their functions be&#13;
transferred to a new committee&#13;
_liDued OB page 11&#13;
Post open&#13;
by Clu1a CIaaa ..&#13;
On November 15 Olancellor&#13;
Alan GusItin will choose a ViceChancellor-Dean&#13;
of Faculty. ThIs&#13;
positioo Is lolal1y n.... to Perblde&#13;
having been created as a reauJt of&#13;
a report Issued by the Committee&#13;
of Princlpllis. The committee in&#13;
tum was created by Olancellor&#13;
Guskin to improve UW-Perblde.&#13;
The new post has to be ll1led&#13;
under committee recom ..&#13;
mendations by February 1, 1977.&#13;
Last July OIancellor Gustin&#13;
formulated a second committee&#13;
headed by Professor Paul Kleine.&#13;
This committee, the 8earch and&#13;
Screen Committee for the ViceChancellor-Dean&#13;
of Faculty,&#13;
began the process of looking for&#13;
the Dean of Faculty. The c0mmittee&#13;
was made up of faculty&#13;
members from the eight dltlerent&#13;
divisions and two students.&#13;
During July and August, the&#13;
committee held several open&#13;
meetings to get student and&#13;
faculty opinions about&#13;
qualifications f... the new Dean of&#13;
Faculty. The summer, however,&#13;
proved to be a poor time and only&#13;
a handluI of students and faculty&#13;
came to the open meetlnga to&#13;
make suggesli..... Kleine said&#13;
the criteria was selUed 00 three&#13;
main points:&#13;
I. Scholarly Acllvlty, a PhD.&#13;
with fair amount of leaching.&#13;
This would be necessary SO the&#13;
faculty wouJd rupeclthe Dean of&#13;
Faculty.&#13;
2: Previous administrative&#13;
_liDaed on page 11&#13;
T~_e Parkside--~----&#13;
RANGER Reviews late&#13;
Vol. V. No. 3 Wednesday, September 22, 1976&#13;
Center launched&#13;
for teac/iing excell~nce&#13;
Alan Shucard&#13;
Jain levels charges&#13;
photo by Viln Thompson&#13;
by John Mc.Kl;skey&#13;
A_ new. office to help faculty members improve&#13;
their own methods and skills has opened here at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
nu:ected by Alan Shucard, associate professor of&#13;
English, and a steering committee of students&#13;
adminfstration, and faculty, the Center f~&#13;
Teaching Excellence works with the federal Project&#13;
for Institutional Renewal to expose new and~r&#13;
better ins~ructional methods to faculty members.&#13;
The creation of the Center was mandated last year&#13;
by the Faculty Senate as part of the program&#13;
suggested by the Committee of Principals.&#13;
Shucard cited the two main goals of his office as&#13;
1) professional development and 2) instructional&#13;
?evelop1?ent. "The professional development goal&#13;
1s to tmprove the faculty personally and&#13;
professionally," said Shucard. "With the job&#13;
market so tight, most people have to expect to stay&#13;
at the same institution fer most of their professional&#13;
lives," he said, and promised his office would&#13;
provide stimulation for instructors.&#13;
Personal and professional counseling on a concontinued&#13;
on page 11&#13;
by John McKI ke ·&#13;
The quadrennial performance&#13;
reviews of the Communication&#13;
and Sociology-Anthropology&#13;
disciplines still have not been&#13;
written even though they were&#13;
due last academic year.&#13;
The University System&#13;
requires that each academic&#13;
program at every university&#13;
branch must be reviewed every&#13;
four years to assess program&#13;
quality, student demand, and&#13;
program costs. Last year, according&#13;
to members of the lameduck&#13;
Academic Planning&#13;
Council, the council completed&#13;
eight of the reports, but two were&#13;
left undone - communication and&#13;
Soc.-Arthro.&#13;
The C!&gt;mmunications program&#13;
was not reviewed because the&#13;
duty of reviewing that department&#13;
was given to a task force&#13;
that was never appointed. The&#13;
task force was mandated by last&#13;
year's COP report to investigate&#13;
the " peculiar problems" of the&#13;
Communications program.&#13;
Since the time of the COP&#13;
report, the Faculty Senate&#13;
decided to make the force into an&#13;
Academic Planning and&#13;
Programming Committee, the&#13;
elections for which will not be&#13;
held until mid-October. According&#13;
to council members,&#13;
however, the Communications&#13;
discipline is asking for the review&#13;
Business program viewed&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
H Parkside students have been wondering what's going on in the&#13;
Business Departmtlnt lately, Ranger learned more on the situation in&#13;
an interview with Mahesh Jain, former assistant professor of business&#13;
management at Parkside. Jain who resigned his position last summer&#13;
to take a similar position at Howard University in Washington D.C.,&#13;
leveled various charges at the UW-PBusiness program and Chancellor&#13;
Guskin.&#13;
RANGER: Why did you leave the University?&#13;
Jain: For a number of reasons, mainly because of personal conflicts&#13;
with the rest of the discipline and the fact that my efforts to imporve&#13;
the business faction didn't seem to acheive what I wanted.&#13;
RANGER: When did the personal conflicts begin?&#13;
Jain: After I criticized the faculty last year in that Ranger article-all&#13;
that I said then, I still hold true.&#13;
RANGER: What was the form of the personal conflicts or&#13;
harraSI11ent? •·&#13;
Jain: After the story came out, I had professor's wives calling me on&#13;
the phone and critizing me for opening my mouth. I could take the&#13;
harrasment from the other faculty but when their families got involved,&#13;
it was too much.&#13;
RANGER: What do you see in the future for Parkside's business&#13;
management discipline?&#13;
Jain: I seE: nothing different than I've seen for the last year that I was&#13;
there. Chancellor Guskin doesn't seem to want a good business&#13;
program, he is too involved in the liberal arts section of the Univehity.&#13;
RANGER: What exactly is your conflict with Guskin?&#13;
Jain: Well, he named me to committees but then he didn't give me any&#13;
power to change things. The Chancellor seems to use personal bias on&#13;
who he gives power to in the committees and you can.quote me on that.&#13;
RANGER: Do you have any suggestions on what to do now?&#13;
Jain: I think an outside group made up of area businessmen and&#13;
Parkside students should investigate the entire Parkside system and&#13;
the business discipline especially&#13;
RANGER: What do you think about the other faculty leaving?&#13;
Jain: W~ll, Seiler (Lynn Seiler, assistant to the Dean of SMI) retired,&#13;
but most of the others were as frustrated as I was. Add to that the fact&#13;
that were atoddsmostoflast year and it doesn't surprise me. A&#13;
certain business teacher was taking classes M Whitewater m the&#13;
summer and then teaching those same classes to students in the fall.&#13;
He also was teaching 'classes to the stude~ts that he never had&#13;
himself. If I said who it was it would only make matters worse for&#13;
everyone concerned. This is the kind of teaching I was talking about -&#13;
last year when I criticized the faculty. .&#13;
RANGER: Did you inform the Chancellor of your reasons for&#13;
leaving?&#13;
Jain: Why should I have? He knew what the situation was and I think&#13;
he didn't care anyway.&#13;
Ranger called Chancellor Guskin to ask him his opinion on the&#13;
situation. , When asked about Jain's charges Guskin said, "I can't believe he&#13;
said those things; if anyone was in a position to change things he was. I .&#13;
named him to both committees to evaluate the situation and he did&#13;
nothing." "As far as an outside committee is concerned we already&#13;
have input from the area businessmen," said Guskin.&#13;
When asked what Parkside students should do, Guskin replied&#13;
"Wait and be patient, we are working for the future goal of a powerntl&#13;
and successful business program. Right now we have a good base to&#13;
start with and we will be looking for more PhD professors, but for&#13;
the next six months or so, it will be very difficult."&#13;
A source close to the business discipline commented on Guskin's&#13;
remarks: Guskin had a chance last year to hire a female professor&#13;
who held a PhD and was super~ualified but he offered her a salary&#13;
which was $4,000 less than that recommended by the business&#13;
program coordinator. The salary level was not commensurate with&#13;
those at other universities or private industry, so she didn't take the&#13;
job."&#13;
Guskin said, "Right now we have to look to the future and I and the&#13;
task force committee are willing at any time to fl!eet with concerned&#13;
students.&#13;
When this comment was related to the Ranger source, it as&#13;
countered with "What for, they'll just give us the runaround like they&#13;
usually do, but maybe if there is enough of us and we ask the right&#13;
questions we can do something."&#13;
Mahesh Jain&#13;
to be delayed until th 1976-79.&#13;
school year, beca "they are&#13;
recovering from a mortal bl ,"&#13;
ccording to committee metnbers.&#13;
&#13;
The Soc-Anthro review wa not&#13;
completed because, a~ording to&#13;
cornmlttee members, Soc-Anthro&#13;
repre entatives declined to&#13;
appear before the subcommittee&#13;
of APC that was studying SocAnthro.&#13;
The subcommittee&#13;
therefore obtained a coMUltant,&#13;
whose review of Soc-Anthro ls&#13;
due this week. The members of&#13;
the full committee speculated&#13;
that the subcommittee will adopt&#13;
the consultant's report immediately,&#13;
thus finishing the&#13;
task.&#13;
One of the reservations the&#13;
APC has about beginning the&#13;
Communications review now ls&#13;
that it might not be done in time&#13;
for the new-instructor recruiting&#13;
season, which begins about&#13;
December 1. The revie ls&#13;
helpful for administrators who&#13;
need to know how many additional&#13;
positions need to be&#13;
authorized to be @led in Com-&#13;
.munica tions. In order for&#13;
Parkside to havtl the best opportunity&#13;
to get the best instructors,&#13;
it should et into&#13;
recruiting as early as possibl&#13;
next season, said the committee&#13;
members.&#13;
The University Committee has&#13;
recommended to the Faculty&#13;
Senate that the Student Financial&#13;
Aids Committee and the Student&#13;
Recruitment and Admissions&#13;
Commlttee be eliminated and&#13;
some of their functions be&#13;
transferred to a new committee&#13;
continued on page 11&#13;
Post open&#13;
by Chri Clau en&#13;
On November 15 Olancellor&#13;
Alan Guskin will choo a ViceOlancellor-Dean&#13;
of Faculty. This&#13;
position is totally new to Parkside&#13;
having been created as a result of&#13;
a report wued by the Committee&#13;
of Principals. The committee in&#13;
turn was created b Chancellor&#13;
Guskin to improve UW-Parkside.&#13;
The new post has to be filled&#13;
under committee recommendations&#13;
by February 1, 1977.&#13;
Last July Olancellor Gu n&#13;
formulated a cond comml&#13;
he ded by Prof r P ul Kl&#13;
This committ , th rch and&#13;
Ser n Committe for th Vic&#13;
Chancellor-D an of Faculty,&#13;
be an the process of lookin for&#13;
th Dean of Faculty. The committee&#13;
wa mad up of faculty&#13;
memb rs from the eight different&#13;
divisions and two studen .&#13;
During July and August, th&#13;
- committee held several open&#13;
meeting to et stud nt and&#13;
faculty opinion about&#13;
qualifications fC'r the new Dean of&#13;
• Faculty. The wnmer, however,&#13;
proved to be a poor tim and only&#13;
a handful of stud nts and faculty&#13;
came to the open meetings to&#13;
make suggestions. Kleine said&#13;
the criteria was setUed on three&#13;
main points.&#13;
l. Scholarly Acttvity, a PhD.&#13;
with fair amount of teaching.&#13;
This would be necessary so th&#13;
faculty ould respect the Dean of&#13;
Faculty.&#13;
2. • Previous administrative&#13;
continued on pag 11 &#13;
I THE PAR SIDE A GER 5 I ...... r 12. 1976 ~IfRANGER&#13;
__ -EDITORIAL/OPINIO~&#13;
Sense of community gained&#13;
nw stgdrnCa 0( PIrbIde oeem ID be gauung a sense of collUDlIIIity.&#13;
~ ID ~ InIe lbnJugb two slepo: the building of the&#13;
UaiIa and IIle IIIbolcI1for the Belle Urban System bus from Parkside&#13;
ID IlacIne&#13;
You'" aD.-.1Ile many artides wril1ell about the beautilu1loo1ts&#13;
at .... Un1an,IIle many activltJea planned by the Parkside Union&#13;
.... and Activl_ Baud. and the many new places for students to&#13;
JllOlId IbeIr free lime bet-. ~. nw Union must pay for itself.&#13;
may IIlMIl Iqh pne. for a willie. bat once paid lor. the Union&#13;
became buaIer becauae an Ino:eaao in the number of activities&#13;
.........,.s lor IIle baIldinll with 10.... cost to the student&#13;
AItboagb you may &lt;GIDp1ain tbal the&lt;e are not eoough activities for&#13;
......... a to attend or thai )'OU don'lUke wbal's being done, )'OU do&#13;
_ riPl to make l8IUestIona to the major programming&#13;
P'ClUP, tile PIrbIde ActMUes ao.d, If you "ve lime, !bey are more&#13;
u.. wlIIIng to "YO you __ tbem in oelectian, pramotion, and&#13;
P t ~ of IlICh enata. Don't c:ompIaln, participate!&#13;
nw BUS 8eIJII Urllen System) bas taRn over the ~ task of&#13;
,.. .. a .. ,.. !rom ~ RadDe to Parbide. nw Vela'&#13;
Oob... .. pwldbc RadDe",.... w1lbb..... 1aliCln to and&#13;
"...Pw ...... _theUl8.allly ... 'd"... aliCln baslpdlt_of&#13;
,ow bIItIoa _ illClIItIIIll tile fare at the BUS &amp;em • ceIU to 25&#13;
Y. may c 5" lllat the arrtva1 and cIoputIIre IImM are poor&#13;
aDd lllat tbey don't Ilf'G'i'Idt DiIbl.mce; .. you may be IIII8bIe to&#13;
take some of the evening courses thai you may need to graduate.&#13;
But you can do something aboul it. Ride the BUS. Get your friends to&#13;
ride the BUS. If enough students ride, you can change the system to&#13;
suit your needs as well as those of others.&#13;
You can save money by riding the BUS, allowing for a little time&#13;
inconvenience. Twenty five cents is very cheap, especially if you come&#13;
to Parkside from Racine. If enough ride, you can change the system.&#13;
A sense of commllllity is badly needed. We, the students, need to&#13;
work together to save our scliool. We don't want Parkside to be&#13;
regarded as an enlarged local high school. Our school should be one&#13;
that we are proud to attend.&#13;
Nothing is going to improve unless we get off our butts and do&#13;
something. We've seen a year in which several professors have gone&#13;
on to other schools because they were offered better jobs. This con-,&#13;
tinuing loss of faculty will become more and more critical unless we,&#13;
the students, do something about it. We can support good faculty&#13;
members by communicating our opinions to other students and those&#13;
involved with tenure decisions.&#13;
We've seen one major (commWlication) sent down the road of&#13;
oblivion. Let's become involved and stop this senseless firing of&#13;
faculty who are excellent teachers but haven't published enough in the&#13;
eres of the other facult)r members ..&#13;
In general, we must and shall fight for our rights as students. If we&#13;
don't create more of a senae of commllllity than we have now the&#13;
spirit of Parkside will die and no one will be at fault but yo.l, the&#13;
IIudeat. becauae you didn't care.&#13;
POLITICAL FORUM&#13;
80 eulogized&#13;
'" rt-lIISt......._&#13;
..... 8tnIce&#13;
: rt- SI -. ..... " I W)&#13;
SIlk "Of.' M·..... ' u-C ' 'a.&#13;
_ .... 'I1le a.1I-*r 18 I ~ 1127. 11'I4).&#13;
1'aHalI __ at lbe SaIl -W Ie8don "'- ..... em- ..... lie......, .. a -.. aad a paapIe. NbIa _Icai Irlead,&#13;
...... EIlIpr .... aid, after _lbe...., ......... 1Ife aad at lbe&#13;
011I_ Rae I U '" 'd".ill.hIe&#13;
... _ two r-nbefore 5mperlaI Japu .... 1nIo&#13;
.. Olma pnctpt .... a ~ of eWIIU tbat led to lbe fnt&#13;
•• I P' "1111. o.IDc u.e ..... as a read&#13;
... " ' .... Wtata1l writblp Ia Ira·· And be&#13;
\&#13;
emerged as an individual in a society that enforced conformity with&#13;
brutal pm1slmellt. • •&#13;
~'of""f~~and meant acquiring ideals going beyond the narrow&#13;
-.. ~ communtty as Confu' .&#13;
• be could, Mao left his borne bt the ~ prea~hed. As soon&#13;
for lbe CGWIlry's capital of Pe""-- small inland p-ovmce of HWlaD&#13;
peJia&gt;c:alQUa'. - .... As a young man there, he eJ:.&#13;
lb."aanda of )':~ revolutionary upsurge, He watched tens of&#13;
-un and swarm into lbe atreets, mIngle with&#13;
R1_rmoeut -Is, and hurl defiance at a cowardly and unpo' tent&#13;
gotatmentlbatconaeJedpalience imperial .&#13;
linda out of QUa's taT! as Japan. b1I~ly tore big&#13;
y~" u__ tory. Later, in Shanghai Cltina's "New&#13;
- '" - •• an ...... greater 1ipriaing that • IlrIb.It 1tU there be Joined small produced a &amp;eneral&#13;
0mmunIat Party on the ~ of Leninn~ of youths to organize a&#13;
s Party that had just scored a&#13;
CODtlnuedon page 3&#13;
HE p Rl&lt;SIDE RA GER Set,tember 22, 1976 ~"RANGE~&#13;
__ EDITORIAL/OPINIO~&#13;
'&#13;
SenSe of community gained&#13;
ani11 and departure times are poor&#13;
you may be unable to&#13;
take some of the evening courses that you may need to graduate.&#13;
But you can do something about it. Ride the BUS. Get your friends to&#13;
ride the BUS. If enough students ride, you can change the system to&#13;
suit your needs as well as those of others.&#13;
You can save money by riding the BUS, allowing for a little time&#13;
inconvenience. Twenty five cents is very cheap, especially if you come&#13;
to Parkside from Racine. If enough ride, you can change the system.&#13;
A sense of community is badly needed. We, the students, need to&#13;
work together to save our school. We don't want Parkside to be&#13;
regarded as an enlarged local high school. Our school should be one&#13;
that we are proud to attend.&#13;
Nothing is going to improve unless we get off our butts and do&#13;
something. We 've seen a year in which several professors have gone&#13;
on to other schools because they were offered better jobs. This con-,&#13;
tinuing loss of faculty will become more and more critical unless we,&#13;
the students, do something about it. We can support good faculty&#13;
members by communicating our opinions to other students and those&#13;
involved with tenure decisions.&#13;
We've seen one major (communication) sent down the road of&#13;
oblivion. Let's become involved and stop this senseless firing of&#13;
faculty who are excellent teachers but haven't published enough in the&#13;
eres of the other facult}'. members ..&#13;
In general, we must and shall fight for our rights as students. If we&#13;
don't create more of a sense of community than we have now the&#13;
spirit of Parkside will die and no one will be at fault but yoil, the&#13;
~dent, because you didn't .care.&#13;
I IC.AL FORUM&#13;
ulogized&#13;
whose person em-&#13;
. American hiend,&#13;
o' life and of the&#13;
rial Jai:-n I ed into&#13;
that led to the first&#13;
a teen-ager he read&#13;
trans1a on. And he&#13;
emerged a~ an individual in a society that _enforced conformity with&#13;
brutal punishment. •&#13;
Being an indi\idual meant acquiring ideals going beyond the narrow&#13;
~ld of family and CO~unity, as Confucianism preached. As soon as e could, Mao left his home in the small inland provin of H&#13;
for the country' ·ta1 of p . ce unan · · s capt eking. As a young man there he ex- ~C: c:;na·s greatest revolutionary upsurge. He watched tens of&#13;
work young people swarm into the streets mingle with&#13;
en and peasants, and hurl defiance t ' . government thatconseled atien a _a cowardly and impotent&#13;
shreds out of China •s te~to ~ Im~rial Jap~ blit~ly tore big&#13;
Y ,_" Ma ry. ter, m Shanghai China's "New or&amp;, o saw an even greater · · '&#13;
strike. It was there he joined a ~g that produced a general&#13;
Communist Party on the model of Le _n~ber of youths to organize a run 8 arty that had just scored a&#13;
continued on page 3 &#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER september 22. 197' 3&#13;
Mao---"-------_ continued from page 2&#13;
dazzling triumph in Russia.&#13;
From the beginning, a fault-line developed between those in the&#13;
party who obediently followed the higher wisdom handed down from&#13;
Moscow, and a few mavericks, like Mao, who placed more trust in&#13;
their own instinctive judgements than official dogma.&#13;
Assigned in 1927to the secondary task of organiiing peasants, he&#13;
had the good fortune to be in Hunan when Chiang Kai-,9hek, in alliance&#13;
with Shanghai's top mobster, killed off the main line of the Party in&#13;
Shanghai. When a 40 year old opium-smoking general named Chu Teh&#13;
broke with Chiang and took to the hills in traditional bandit fashion&#13;
Mao went along, preaching revolution in addition to survival. Fr~&#13;
the beginning, he had had a sixth sense that the peasants of China were&#13;
ready to rise like a gigantic hurricane, as they hllll periodically in the&#13;
past. That year, some 80,000,000peasants seized land, ousted government&#13;
forces, and joined to set up what was to become in 1931the&#13;
Chinese Soviet Republic.&#13;
If it was a sixth sense in the beginning, in time it became a vision.&#13;
Others would talk about what to do today and tomorrow, but Mao went&#13;
on about the next hundred years. While pragmatists throughout the&#13;
world saw it as just mad ranting, some began to notice that similar&#13;
themes kept recurring. One was the ultra-democratlc theme that all&#13;
history is made by 'people and not by rulers. &amp;lishing the Marxist&#13;
metaphor of turning things upside down, he upturned the old C0nfucian&#13;
notion that only the best and., brightest can rule, and only&#13;
trained experts can make the best and moderate decisions. Though&#13;
like other Marxists, he held voting in contempt, he nevertheless&#13;
believed that all government exists by, for and through the people.&#13;
In 1966,with internal dissension mounting in the party and external&#13;
threats from the Soviet Union and the U.S. forming on the borders,&#13;
Mao surprised everyone by launching a revolution within 'Irevolution.&#13;
China exploded in massive verbal violence in which all the pent up&#13;
grievances were allowed to burst out, virtually destroying the Communist&#13;
Party. When it revived it was no longer the Soviet modeled&#13;
hierarchical structure it had been, run by a tenured handful making.&#13;
decisions in utmost secrecy while outwardly practicing cheerful&#13;
deception. .&#13;
As a Leninist Mao believed in organization, though he never wrote&#13;
about it systematically. But Mao believed most deeply in the principle&#13;
that all human society is governed by contradiction, not harmony.&#13;
. Because of this belief, he never felt confident that a Party of c0mmunist&#13;
mandarins could long stay in power after his death. He well&#13;
knew, as did most Chinese, that 2000 years befcre lherte was a great&#13;
revolutionary dynasty that bri1liantly organized the unified China but&#13;
lasted only a score of years, swept away after the death of the great&#13;
indispensible leader. Mao looked upon the CbIneae Ommpmlst Party&#13;
• as a similar brittle structure. And he saw the Soviet Cnnmllnist Party&#13;
in exactly the same light.&#13;
What Mao understood by contradiction was more than conl1Ict. It&#13;
was the belief that every time one principle starts creating lnstltutloos&#13;
in a seciety, an opposite principle will arise. If government enunciates&#13;
a principle of organizing communes, somewhere else in society a&#13;
counter-principle of individual ownership will arise.&#13;
Interestingly, his vision is much more global than CbIneae. In fact,&#13;
Mao never promised China a rosy future, only contlnual Jjood, sweat&#13;
and tears through permanent rewlution. But the two superpowers, the&#13;
U.s. and USSR, be believed, would eventually wear one another away,&#13;
leaving the future to those nations that did not aspire to world rule.&#13;
If Mao were around to listen to all the speculation about his succession,&#13;
he would probably subscribe to the more lugubrious ones.&#13;
Uke most Chinese, he is well read in0Iinese ciaslics. many of which&#13;
are unending tales of the fickleness of poliUcs and the inevitable&#13;
depravity of government. But the thing that be believed from his&#13;
earliest Marxist days was that China's destiny was and had to be&#13;
linked witllthe rest of the world. Being a Marxist meant for Mao being&#13;
a man of the world, not just a Chinese bottled up in an OvelOllWded&#13;
country.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: JeOllnnlne Sipsmil&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGERS; Cathy Brn ..k, Judy TrudrunQ (ust.)&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Tom Cooper&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR: Bruce W..gne,&#13;
DEPARTMENTS:&#13;
.. Administration-Policies: John Mckloskey&#13;
.. SMI: Dave Br.nclt&#13;
.. Studen' groups &amp; speakers: Mary Kay Ohmer&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: o.ttIt6e .......&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Jean Tenut.&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS: leth)' I. swenetli. 8111•• rk.&#13;
COpy EDITOR: Julie L."ge&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: V..n Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION: Sue Marquudt&#13;
STAFF: Wend., Miller. Terri Gilyharf. RotMtrtHoHman. Chris ClauMn. 8rldg~ P.,.u.oW$ki.&#13;
Larry Donnelly. Phil Hermann, Ramon. Maillet, Allen Brown, Cilrol Arentl. John O....rm.n.&#13;
Bob Jambois, Beverly Pell .., Betsy Ne", Lj.nda Knudtson, K.rln LaFournlH", Judy Trucltung .&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: P.J. Anollna, Ricky Cooper, Rick Fluch&#13;
AD SALESPERSONS: Joe Landa, Rick Fluch&#13;
The Parkslde Ranger Is wrmen and edited&#13;
by the s'uden's of the Uni""enity of&#13;
Wisconsln·Pillrkside who illre solely&#13;
responsible for Its editorial policy and&#13;
con'en'. Opinions expressed iIIre no'&#13;
nKessarlly rep"esen'iII'l""e of those held by&#13;
.... s'u"nls. faculty or adminis'ra.ion of&#13;
Parkside. Editorial iIInd BuslneSi 553-2217;&#13;
Newsroom 553·2295.&#13;
Bowl At • UNION&#13;
RECREATION CENTER&#13;
ON1 Y 50' PER GAME&#13;
LEAGUE BOWLING:&#13;
STARTS WEEK Of OCT. 4th.&#13;
ENTRY fORMS AVAilABLE AT&#13;
THE RECREATION CENTER.&#13;
CAll 553-2695 .&#13;
. Individuol Molch Gome&#13;
S Person Intromurel&#13;
TUESDAY 7 p.m. Open Milled Trio&#13;
WEDNESDAY ~ p.m. Doubles leogue&#13;
THURSDAY .4 p.m. Motch Point leogue&#13;
1 p.m. - Mixed foursome&#13;
PRO EXH IBTION: COMING sm. 25 -&#13;
PROfESSIONAL TOUR BOWLER OICK RITGER.&#13;
PHYSICAL EOUCATION OEPARTMENT ClASS CliNIC&#13;
10 A.M. - 12 NOON. \&#13;
"BEAT THE CHAMP" COMPETION 1 1o 3 p.m.&#13;
All STUOENTS INVITEDI&#13;
SCOTCH DOItBLES IANDICAP&#13;
BOWLIN' TOUIIAMIltT&#13;
OcfOllfR I" AT THE RECRfATION aNTER LANfS.&#13;
SHIFTS AT S ,00 P.M. AND 7,00 P.M.&#13;
COST . $2.50ITEAM. PRIZES INClUDE TIlOI'HIES&#13;
AND MUCH,MUCH MOREl ENTER AT THE&#13;
RECREATION aNTER&#13;
MOONLIGHT BOWLING B,oo TO 1 ],00 P.M. SATURDAY NIGHT. 'l~/PERSON&#13;
9S RESERVATION ANll INfORMATION. $1" fOR NON-STUDENTS. CAll 553-26 fOR&#13;
fOR STUOENTS.&#13;
Hungry Head&#13;
Submarines· Bombers - Sandwiches&#13;
OPEN Sunday· Thursday - 10:30 A.M. ·2:30 A.M.&#13;
Fnday-Saturday - 10:30 A.M. ·3:00 A.M .&#13;
506 . 56t~ Street, Kenosha&#13;
Phone 652-0234&#13;
NEXT TO LAKE THEATER&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER September 22, 1976 3&#13;
Mao--~-----&#13;
continued from page 2&#13;
dazzling triumph in Russia.&#13;
From the beginning, a fault-line developed between those in the&#13;
party who obediently followed the higher wisdom handed down from&#13;
Moscow, and a few mavericks, like Mao, who placed more tt-mt in&#13;
their own instinctive judgements than official dogma.&#13;
Assigned in 1927 to the secondary task of organizing peasants he&#13;
had the good fortune to be in Hunan when Chiang Kai-shek in alli;nce&#13;
with Shanghai's top mobster, killed off the main line of the Party in&#13;
Shanghai. When a 40 year old opium-smoking general named Chu Teh&#13;
broke with Chiang and took to the hills in traditional bandit fashion&#13;
Mao went along, preaching revolution in addition to survival. Fro~&#13;
the beginning, he had had a sixth sense that the peasants of China were&#13;
ready to rise like a gigantic hurricane, as they hall periodically in the&#13;
past. That year, ~me 80,000,000 peasants seized land, ousted government&#13;
forces, and joined to set up what was to become in 1931 the&#13;
Chinese Soviet Republic.&#13;
about it systematically. But Mao believed most deeply in the principle&#13;
that all human society is governed by contradiction, not harmony.&#13;
Because of this belief, he never felt confident that a Party of communist&#13;
mandarins could long stay in power after his death. He well&#13;
knew, as did most Chinese, that 2000 years before there was a great&#13;
revolutionary dynasty that brilliantly organized the unified China but&#13;
lasted only a score of years, swept away after the death of the gi:eat&#13;
indispensible leader. Mao looked upon the Chinese Communist Party&#13;
as a similar brittle structure. And he saw the Soviet Communist Party&#13;
in exactly the same light.&#13;
What Mao understood by contradiction was more than conflict. It&#13;
was the belief that every time one principle starts creating institutions&#13;
in a society, an opposite principle will arise. If government enunciates&#13;
a principle of organizing communes, somewhere else in society a&#13;
counter-principle of individual ownership will arise.&#13;
If it was a sixth sense in the beginning, in time it became a vision.&#13;
Others would talk about what to do today and tomorrow, but Mao went&#13;
on about the next hundred years. While pragmatists throughout the&#13;
world saw it as just mad ranting, some began to notice that similar&#13;
themes kept recurring. One was the ultra-&lt;iemocratic theme that all&#13;
history is made by people and not by rulers. Relishing the Marxist&#13;
metaphor of turning things upside down, he upturned the old Confucian&#13;
notion that only the best andie brightest can rule, and only&#13;
ti:ained experts can make the best and moderate decisions. Though&#13;
like other Marxists, he held voting in contempt, he nevertheless&#13;
believed that all government exists by, for and through the people.&#13;
Interestingly, his vision is much more global than atlnese. In fact,&#13;
Mao never promised China a rosy future, only continual blood, sweat&#13;
and tears through permanent revolution. But the two superpowers, the&#13;
U.S. and USSR, be believed, would eventually wear one another away,&#13;
leaving the future to those nations that did not aspire to world rule.&#13;
In 1966, with internal dissension mounting in the party and external&#13;
threats from the Soviet Union and the U.S. forming on the borders,&#13;
Mao surprised everyone by launching a revolution within a revolution.&#13;
China exploded in massive verbal violence in which all the pent up&#13;
grievances were allowed to burst out, virtually destroying the Communist&#13;
Party. When it revived it was no longer the Soviet modeled&#13;
hierarchical structure it had been, run by a tenured handful making.&#13;
decisions in utmost secrecy while outwardly practicing cheerful&#13;
deception.&#13;
If Mao were around to listen to all the speculation about his succession&#13;
he would probably subscribe to the more lugubrious ones.&#13;
Like m~t Chinese, he is well read in Chinese classics, many of which&#13;
are unending tales of the fickleness of politics and the inevitable&#13;
depravity of government. But the thing that he believed from his&#13;
earliest Marxist days was that China's destiny was and had to be&#13;
linked witli the rest of the world. Being a Marxist meant foc Mao being&#13;
a man of the world, not just a Chinese bottled up in an overcrowded&#13;
country.&#13;
As a Leninist Mao believed in organization, though he never wrote&#13;
Th• Parkside Ranger ls written and edited&#13;
by the students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside who are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
content. Opinions expressed are not&#13;
necessarily repr.sentallve of those held by&#13;
the students, faculty or administration of&#13;
Parkside. Editorial and Business 553-2217;&#13;
Newsroom 553-2295.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jeannine Sipsm•&#13;
BUSltlESS MANAGERS: Cathy Brnak, Judy Trudrung ( asst.)&#13;
AOVERTISING MANAGER : Tom Cooper&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR : Bruce Wagner&#13;
DEPARTMENTS:&#13;
•• Administration-Policies: John McKloskey&#13;
.. SMI : Dave Brandt&#13;
•• Student groups &amp; speakers: Mary Kay Ohmer&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debbie Bauer&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR : Jean Tenuta&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS: leffrey j. swenckl, Bill Barke&#13;
COPY EDITOR : Julie Lange&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: Van Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION: Sue Marquardt&#13;
STAFF: Wendy M i ller, Terri Gayhart, Robert Hoffman, Chris Clau .. n, Bridget Penlkowskl,&#13;
Larry Donnelly, Phil Hermann, Ramona Maillet, Allen Brown, Carol Arentz, John Overman, Bob Jambols, Beverly Pella, Betsy Neu, Linda Knudtson, Karin La Fournier, Judy Trudrung.&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: P.J . Anolln•, Ricky Cooper, Rick Flasch&#13;
AO SALESPERSONS: Joe Landa, Rick Ftasch&#13;
Bowl At - .UNION&#13;
RECREATION CENTER&#13;
ONLY 504 PER GAME&#13;
LEAGUE BOWLING:&#13;
STARTS WEEK OF OCT. 4th.&#13;
ENTRY FORMS AVAILABLE AT&#13;
THE RECREATION CENTER,&#13;
CALL 553-2695 .&#13;
.f p.m . . Individual Match Gome&#13;
MONDAY 7 p.m •• 5 Person lnlramurel&#13;
TUESDAY 7 p.m · Open Mixed Trio&#13;
WEDNESDAY 4 p.m. · Doubles league&#13;
THURSDAY 4 p.m .. Match Point league&#13;
7 p.m .• Mixed Foursome&#13;
PRO EXH IBTION: COMING SEPT. 25 -&#13;
PROFESSIONAL TOUR BOWLER DICK RITGER.&#13;
PHYSICAL EDUCATION DEPARTMENT CLASS CLINIC&#13;
10 A.M. - 12 NOON.&#13;
"BEAT THE CHAMP" COMPETION 1 to 3 p.m.&#13;
ALL STUDENTS INVITED!&#13;
SCOTCH DOUBLES HANDICAP&#13;
BOWLING TOURNAMENT&#13;
OCTOSER 1st AT THE RECREATION CENTER LANES.&#13;
SHIFTS AT 5:00 P.M. AND 7:00 P.M.&#13;
COST - $2.50/TEAM. PRIZES INCLUDE TROPHIES&#13;
AND MUCH,MUCH MOREi ENTER AT THE&#13;
RECREATION CENTER&#13;
MOONLIGHT BOWLING 8:00 TO 11 :00 P.M. SATURDAY NIGHT. ']"/PERSON FOR STUDENTS,&#13;
$1" FOR NON-STUDENTS. CALL 553-2695 FOR RESERVATION AND INFORMATION.&#13;
Hungry Head&#13;
Submarines - Bombers - Sandwiches&#13;
QPEN Sunday-Thursday - 10:30 A.M. · 2:30 A.M .&#13;
Friday-Saturday - 10:30 A.M. - 3:00 A.M.&#13;
506 · 56th Street, Kenosha&#13;
Phone 652 -0234&#13;
NEXT TO LAKE THEATER&#13;
GOOD FOi 25' OFF&#13;
on ony re911lor aub_&#13;
HUNGRY HEAD &#13;
PA SIDE RA GER 5 ''''''lie' 21, 1t7,&#13;
·cal f~atures defined&#13;
~&#13;
.-md pllue, caUed&#13;
u ta 01 tbne&#13;
I'.c'lIaaa fCII' lit -at 11Imcr-..&#13;
...... ,Ia .........&#13;
...s.....-.w.rtumalc~ .1&#13;
......... IlII1WlIcuIar .... 110.. • met· _ • parpIe&#13;
... _ of lbI peIo,&#13;
.... a __ wacliGL frllm lbc&#13;
a..-"'1Icad a-u1Kftlklm&#13;
1Ilcl ....&#13;
2 • ..,).&#13;
Im1c1co a ......&#13;
............... bJper-&#13;
'Iht!m, .... IDa I 1 pIIIIc&#13;
.... 11Ic_1I .... ,... ..-,&#13;
__ cIco baa ......&#13;
"",,""_ of ilia .... W of tile&#13;
........ lilts ' I cl lie&#13;
1-1, of ilia .....&#13;
dlrcllnIllaa of 1cIlIc&#13;
.....- ..&#13;
............. __ Ilaadl&#13;
Or..-&#13;
ADd ...... lor \be '10.0G0&#13;
" «.. - wbcI bcWO' during ........... _ tile tHrd. bat IIIll&#13;
IIDc1 lliIe.&#13;
'nlere ere some .imilar&#13;
ncctlonI by bolh _II. IlOCb&#13;
.... COiIb IICIionI of lbc cncl&#13;
IllbiJlcler end uretJnI ClP""i ...&#13;
8DIb IIliJ ..... muacIe tlIIItrcetiOlII&#13;
of apuma. byper.&#13;
I 'lWion UD4 IDa"IF ~ puIae&#13;
rate Fedcl ClIP lon mey&#13;
, yNe tIIct of a In grccl&#13;
...... rclber lbcn lbc enJoJD-lI&#13;
lbc7 mey be 1ee1iDc,&#13;
1lIe mule .... ejcculcUon.&#13;
wbid1 in 'riel cantraetlonI of&#13;
\be Cc~ry orgens 01&#13;
reproc1uctlon (VU deferent,&#13;
-mel ealc1el, ejaculclory&#13;
dDct, prosInte I,end relucliGL&#13;
of lbI""'" bIcdder spNnc:ter.&#13;
11IcIcmcIe clio bel c pelvic:&#13;
ia; a... lrK1..... contndions&#13;
fII\be u\InII, _ relucllon of&#13;
lbc ~ cerriccI ClP""Inll (10&#13;
lbc uleniiI, _cr.ctlons 01 lbc&#13;
.... ...., p1clform (ouler 1401&#13;
ftIInil&#13;
",. 50IIDdI YUry clImca1. end&#13;
II II, We mUot nul .... 1 lbe&#13;
emotloncl .. Usfaclion end&#13;
..... 01 tension. In fact. if c&#13;
pPJ'IOil .0iS Ibr&lt;Ju&amp;b plcleiu end&#13;
... , _til orpsm. II can be&#13;
pcIDfaI. The pelvic congesIIon&#13;
ba1ll lIP b10ud In lbe lissuesl is&#13;
not relined. ... II ielie9Ud YUry&#13;
.... Iy. 1\ ccn be a YUry&#13;
fra*clinll illJlirience. We must&#13;
I'tIIleIDber tbct even !be most&#13;
virile male and responsive&#13;
femcle will not always acllieve&#13;
.......... TbIa 18 norma1 end&#13;
~ DOt bea ~ for conc:ern.&#13;
ReI*_&#13;
Probably lbc most important&#13;
pari 01 aemal __ Is lbe&#13;
..... lIon.. pbaoe. For bolh&#13;
...-. Ibere mey be sweating,&#13;
bypa ,enUlalion end inaeeaed&#13;
...... rale,&#13;
Far ilia male Ibere II a&#13;
rwhc\ary perlod wllb of&#13;
ponIc ecq_ and of&#13;
pemle erecliGL (wbIcII can go&#13;
raPd1Y or wry slowlyl. A man&#13;
_ reIIIm 10 anolber orpsm&#13;
wllbout going lbrougb 11m&#13;
I*lJId, ...s lbIa perlod leads 10&#13;
........ wIIb ....&#13;
1bIa Ii wbeR lemales are far&#13;
IIf ... 10 mal-. 1lIeY are&#13;
....., 10 reIIIm ............ 1lIeY&#13;
Im1 .... lbI "_41IID" CIllior of&#13;
lbc labia UD4 lbe .... ~c&#13;
p1clfc.-M may relax. and pelVIC&#13;
congcstlOll will go away. 'lbe&#13;
clitoris will ret1rD 10 illl usual&#13;
'lIon&#13;
JlOSI ~y speakin1l, females&#13;
are lar superior in Ibeir capaCIty&#13;
fCII' oemal """"""'", 'lb!S is 0I~&#13;
collilteracled by theIr socIal&#13;
~ 10 be a "good girl."&#13;
1lIeY can bave several .0I'Il"S'?'" 1lIeY _ a cliloris, whitll unlike&#13;
male parIS, bu no bodily tunelion&#13;
oIber \ban senal pleasure.&#13;
In golDg \brOU1lb \base pbaSCS.&#13;
Ills lmporIanllo I'CiiIiiiIbUrtbct&#13;
not all 01 tbeJi Ibings wiD happen&#13;
.......... and \bere tD eva yooeev~~..--,&#13;
.. oilier lbIngs which may&#13;
happen IhlII are DOt menliOlled.&#13;
'lbe ........ lIon phase ccn be Ibe&#13;
best part oIlbe cycle and sbou1d&#13;
........ be ignored. It ccn be a time&#13;
fCII' sbaring Ibougblll end feelings,&#13;
IIId juaI sensing illCb olber's&#13;
pre8eiICi.&#13;
U you remember only one tblng&#13;
IrIlin ibis arIIc1e, lei it be tbct&#13;
ORGASM IS NOT THE END OF&#13;
SEXUAL INTERCOURSE .&#13;
Korean&#13;
servants&#13;
rebel&#13;
Pacific News Service&#13;
American Gis stalloned here&#13;
are facing a growing rebellion&#13;
among the 14,000 Koreans who&#13;
work as servants for American&#13;
military units. Paid by individual&#13;
seM'icemen, these Korean&#13;
"personal hire employes" wash&#13;
clothes, clean barracks and&#13;
perform otber menial tasks for&#13;
wages 01 ~ a month.&#13;
Individual lips can raise the&#13;
workers' income 10 $100 1Il0nUlly,&#13;
but they often must work much&#13;
IDCft \ban eigbl bours a day to&#13;
i8tll them. 1lIeY are not covered&#13;
by any conlract, have no&#13;
proleclion against arbitrary&#13;
firing and receive no severance&#13;
pay.&#13;
Now some 1300 of these&#13;
workers bave organized to&#13;
demand beller working cond1110ns&#13;
and more pay. 1lIeY point&#13;
1030,000 Kore8ilS who work under&#13;
_tract for \be U.s. military-not&#13;
individual GIs-at starling&#13;
IIII1arIes 01 SUO a month.&#13;
, discovered&#13;
&lt;XDIMG Ii beiDg ~ by student governmenl&#13;
Pi..adtm,Klvotollowden. Toleadla .... davdaso&#13;
on aoIar energy iii m4, .. lliIii'llY expert waa&#13;
f1lIom In from Denver.&#13;
The Solar EilerllY conlennc:e ... spollJOl'Ud by&#13;
Parkside aod EJtenaion. The Energy Employment&#13;
IIId Eu,bGiWdiI day In AprI1 ... organized by&#13;
~ CIbenJ ,... lbc Environment and&#13;
\be OImm!\Iee fCII' lbc Euvlronmenl Ie Jobs w11b&#13;
.,..n frllm UW Eztension. Professor Hank Cole&#13;
_ lbc coordlDalor.&#13;
'lbe two COlIf8'encea were .... day couraes but&#13;
Extenaion ~ aWly 1ut about sa _,&#13;
..... dependi .. _ \be needa 01 \be people.&#13;
CndII coones rIlIl a full _.&#13;
Umvenlly aleilaIon believes in ~ lbe&#13;
Umvenlly lD lbc peapIe. County agenls, who beIp&#13;
farmers In me"&amp;Inc Ibeir farms, are part of \be&#13;
E1IeilSIon pragram.&#13;
Last year 4$,250 peop1e in Racine COIlilty ulllIzed&#13;
aod reeeived belp from Estenslon. In esaence, as&#13;
Kim Baugruad pula It,''The University ExIension is&#13;
a tie_ie froan wbich the universily reacbes \be&#13;
community."&#13;
II:.:;~";: beId ..,. II anI1able, .. G8er'ed al f'wbide; oIbIn at&#13;
_-... and _ tIaaI&#13;
Ia .........&#13;
::e::.:-=." ro.s .... nIilabla. • IIw&gt; PubIde and oaI1yIac&#13;
_ .... "' ...... bl&#13;
AESiHEiiCS OF JAPANESE&#13;
,&#13;
CTIVITIES BOARD ood lt1. UW,p ALUMNI ASSoaAT ....&#13;
pAlUCSIDE A .. ...&#13;
PRESENT&#13;
p~'&#13;
~+". ~ ,IS&#13;
i 'a ~RIGHT&#13;
U_R&#13;
YOUR'&#13;
NOSE&#13;
WHERE&#13;
THE&#13;
TIME&#13;
OF YOUR&#13;
LIFE&#13;
YOUR l'lTlmiIlmmcHI&#13;
THE WORLD'S WORST BANJO BAND&#13;
LIVE FROM NEW YORK CITY&#13;
SATURDAY,&#13;
9:00 P.M.&#13;
SEPTEMBER 25th&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
Admission: '2.00 UW-P students and UW-P Alumni&#13;
~.OO General&#13;
U.W. ood Stot. !.D's required&#13;
STUDENT SERVICE HOT LINE 551-7660 DIRECT LINE TO&#13;
ANYTHING YOU NEED - oELICIOUS PIZZA, THE WAY YOU&#13;
WANT IT ALWAYS, ROAST BEEF SANDWICHES, ICE CREAM,&#13;
AND FORGURT (FROZEN YOUGURT) ...&#13;
AND NOW-&#13;
"NEW TO YOU FROM PIZZA TECH PROF SHOm", SCHOOL&#13;
SUPPLIES. CHECK OUR INVENTORY LIST IN THIS AD AND&#13;
ORDER BY NU".R. WHEN YOU CALL FOR A MINIMUM&#13;
ORDER FROM THE PIZZA TECH MENU. WE'll DELIVER THE&#13;
SCHOOL SUPPLIES YOU NEED, FROM PENCILS AND PENS, TO&#13;
PAPER AND ERASERS DIREG TO YOU ALONG WITH YOUR&#13;
ORDER AT A PRICE WEll BELOW WHAT YOU HAVE PAID&#13;
ANYWHERE ElSE.&#13;
OR&#13;
STOP IN AND ORDER FROM. OUR MENU AND PICK UP&#13;
WHATMR YOU NEED IN THE WAY OF SCHOOl SUPPLIES.&#13;
ORDER&#13;
NO. ITEM PRICE&#13;
1.&#13;
2.&#13;
3.&#13;
4.&#13;
Wonder Writer Pens 49' ea.&#13;
No. 2 Pencils 6' ea.&#13;
Bic Relractable Pens 59' ea.&#13;
8~"Ill" Ruled Bond Paper 46" with or without binder holes&#13;
(pads)&#13;
5. Manilla Folden 6' ea.&#13;
6. Plastic Sheet Protectors 13' ea.&#13;
7. Paper Clips (Box of 1(0) 33' Box&#13;
8. Brads 2' each or box of' 11 '1.66&#13;
9. As.orled Colored Construction&#13;
Paper 50 sheets '1.20 or 3' ea.&#13;
10. 12" Plastic Ruler 25' ea.&#13;
PIZZA TECH HOURS&#13;
'Weekday. (Sunday - Thursday I 4 p.m .• 11:30 p.m.&#13;
"«Ie'" tFriday • Saturday I 4 p.m.. 12:30 a.m.&#13;
BIRCH RD. AT 16th AYE.&#13;
Phone 551-7660&#13;
around the corner from&#13;
HE PARKSIDE RA GER September 22, 1976&#13;
· cal fi atures defined&#13;
• on&#13;
the labia and the orga~c&#13;
platform may relax, and pelvic&#13;
conges\lon wlll go away. The&#13;
clitoris will return to its usual&#13;
position. '&#13;
Physically speakin~. fema~es&#13;
are far superior in their capacity&#13;
fer sexual response. This is of~n&#13;
counteracted by their social&#13;
upbring in to be a "good girl."&#13;
They can hav several _orga~-&#13;
They have a clitoris, which unlike&#13;
male parts, ha no bodily function&#13;
other than sexual pleasure.&#13;
In going through these phases,&#13;
it is important to remember that&#13;
not all of these things will happen&#13;
to everyone everyti.me, and there&#13;
are other things which may&#13;
happen that are not mentioned.&#13;
The resolution phase can be the&#13;
part of the cycle and should&#13;
ne r be · nored. It can be a time&#13;
for ring thoughts and feelings,&#13;
d ju t sensing each other's&#13;
presence.&#13;
If you remember only one thing&#13;
from this article, let it be that&#13;
ORG 1 IS 'OT THE END OF&#13;
SEXUAL INTERCOURSE.&#13;
Korean&#13;
servants&#13;
rebel&#13;
Pacific News Service&#13;
American Gls stationed here&#13;
are facing a growing rebellion&#13;
among the 14,000 Koreans who&#13;
work as servants for American&#13;
military units. Paid by individual&#13;
ser\'icemen, these Korean&#13;
" personal hire employes" wash&#13;
clothes, clean barracks and&#13;
perform other menial tasks for&#13;
wages of $35-$45 a month.&#13;
Individual tips can raise the&#13;
w kers' income to $100 monthly,&#13;
rut they often must work much&#13;
more than eight hours a day to&#13;
earn them. They are not covered&#13;
by any contract, have no&#13;
protection against arbitrary&#13;
firing and receive no severance&#13;
pay.&#13;
·o some 1300 of these&#13;
workers have organized to&#13;
demand better working conditions&#13;
and more pay. They point&#13;
to 30,000 Koreans who work under&#13;
contract for the U.S. military-not&#13;
individual G Is-at starting&#13;
salaries of $120 a month.&#13;
;&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD and the UW.P ALUMNI ASSOCIATIOt4&#13;
WHERE&#13;
THE&#13;
TIME&#13;
OF YOUR&#13;
LIFE&#13;
. IS&#13;
~ ~ '(}.ST~CI~&#13;
YDllR rmtm Mll&amp;mlm&#13;
THE WORLD'S WORST BANJO BAND&#13;
LIVE FROM NEW YORK CITY&#13;
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25th&#13;
9:00 P.M. UNION SQUARE&#13;
Admission: ~.00 UW-P students and UW-P Alumni&#13;
$J.00 General&#13;
U.W. and State I.D's required&#13;
ANYTHING YOU NEED - DELICIOUS PIUA, THE WAY YOU&#13;
WANT IT ALWAYS, ROAST BEEF SANDWICHES, ICE CREAM,&#13;
AND FORGURT (FROZEN YOUGURT) ...&#13;
AND NOW ·&#13;
"NEW TO YOU FROM PIZZA TECH PROF SHOPPE", SCHOOL&#13;
SUPPLIES. CHECK OUR INVENTORY LIST IN THIS AD AND&#13;
ORDER BY NUMBER. WHEN YOU CALL FOR A MINIMUM&#13;
ORDER FROM THE PIZZA TECH MENU, WE'LL DELIVER THE&#13;
SCHOOL SUPPLIES YOU NEED, FROM PENCILS AND PENS, TO&#13;
PAPER AND E-RASERS DIRECT TO YOU ALONG WITH YOUR&#13;
ORDER AT A PRICE WELL BELOW WHAT YOU HAVE PAID&#13;
ANYWHERE ELSE.&#13;
OR&#13;
STOP IN AND ORDER FROM OUR MENU AND PICK UP&#13;
WHATEVER YOU NEED IN THE WAY OF SCHOOL SUPPLIES.&#13;
ITEM PRICE&#13;
1. Wonder Writer Pens&#13;
2. No. 2 Pencils&#13;
3. Bic Retractable Pens&#13;
4. 8¼"xll" Ruled Bond Paper&#13;
with or without binder holes&#13;
(pads)&#13;
5. Manilla Folders&#13;
6. Plastic Sheet Protectors&#13;
6c&#13;
13c&#13;
7. Paper Clips (Box of 100) 33c&#13;
ea.&#13;
ea.&#13;
ea.&#13;
ea.&#13;
Box&#13;
8. Brads 2c each or box of 11 '1.66&#13;
9. Assorted Colored Construction&#13;
Paper 50 sheets '1.20 or 3c ea.&#13;
10. 12" Plastic Ruler 25c ea.&#13;
PIZZA TECH HOURS&#13;
Weekday&#13;
~·eelends ( unday - Thursday} 4 p.m .• 11:30 p.m.&#13;
(Friday - Saturday} 4 p.m .• 12:30 a.m.&#13;
BIRCH RO. AT 16th AVE.&#13;
Phone 551-7660&#13;
around the corner from &#13;
f-~-----l , E ' , . ,&#13;
, ,&#13;
, ,&#13;
,, V ,t&#13;
, ,&#13;
t ,&#13;
t, E ', , ,&#13;
, ,&#13;
t I&#13;
I N I&#13;
t I&#13;
, ,&#13;
, t&#13;
'T' t· ,&#13;
I I&#13;
t ,&#13;
! S I&#13;
'------_-J&#13;
'. Wednesday, Sept. zz&#13;
The VIctorIan Photographer takes pictures from 11:00 _ 3:00 p.m. in&#13;
the Uruon Bazaar Area for $2.00 per pictare&#13;
Earth Science Club meets at 4:40 p.m, in G; 113. All Earth Science,&#13;
. Geography, Anthropology majors and any interested people&#13;
welcome. Eugene Fodor performs at8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
,&#13;
. Thursday, Sept. Z3&#13;
Folk-singer Nina Kahle plays at 1:00p.m. in Union Square. Free&#13;
First ?,eetmg of the Parkslde Boxing Club at 3:30 in the bozing_&#13;
lVresUln~ room.&#13;
FrIday, Sept. Z4&#13;
Center for Teaching Excellence invites Bob Menges from Northwestern&#13;
University's Center for the Teaching Professions to present&#13;
a classroom video-tape at 3:00 p.rn. in CL 111 to any&#13;
interested faculty and students.&#13;
Women's tennis match: UW-P, UW.Qshkosh, and Carthage at 3:00&#13;
p.m. at the tennis courts.&#13;
Movie, "The Front Page," plays at 7:00 p.m, and 9:00 p.m. at the&#13;
Cinema Theatre. Admission is $1.00.&#13;
Saturday, Sept. Z5&#13;
Women's tennis match with UW-P, UW-Muwaukee and Carthage&#13;
competing at 10:00 a.m. at Carthage.&#13;
Cross country meet with UW-P, UW-Milwaukee, and Loyola College&#13;
competing at 11:00 a.m. at Milwaukee.&#13;
Group, Your Father's Mustache plays at 9:00 p.m, in Union Square.&#13;
Admission is $2for UW-P students and alumni, and $3for others&#13;
War Club meets for 6:00 to 10:00 p.m. in CL 141.&#13;
Suoday, Sept. 26&#13;
Movie, "The Front Page," plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $1.&#13;
War Club meets for 6:00 to 10z:00 p.m. in CL 141.&#13;
Monday, Sept. Z7&#13;
Guest recital features Helen Boatwright, soprano; Blake Stern, tenor;&#13;
and Harmann Reutter, pianist at 8:00 p.rn. in the CAT.&#13;
Tickets are $1lor UW-P students, $2lor others, and free in advance to&#13;
UW-Pstudents at the Info Kiosk. .&#13;
Union costs listed&#13;
by Wendy MUler&#13;
In 1972a committee consisting&#13;
of three students, three faculty&#13;
members, and three staff&#13;
members was formed to plan a&#13;
project that is finally heing&#13;
completed-the Student Union.&#13;
Also in 1972, James Galbraith,&#13;
director of Planning and Construction,&#13;
Julie Donbar,&#13;
. secretary, and Brien Murray,&#13;
assistant director were instrwnental&#13;
in obtaining a federal&#13;
grant to help pay the interest on&#13;
the building loan.&#13;
The grant IViII pay aU the interest&#13;
over 31&gt; percent a year,&#13;
which amounts to $85,000a year&#13;
for up to 30 years bringing the&#13;
totaI to $255,000.That was the last&#13;
grant the federal government&#13;
ever gave to a university for&#13;
things such as W1ions and dormitories.&#13;
There is still a matter of where&#13;
the $3,772,500 of the Student&#13;
Union budget is going. The&#13;
ventilation system, when completed&#13;
IViII have taken $4,315 of&#13;
that money. Comosy Construction,&#13;
the general contractor,&#13;
is getting $2,063,375.Comosy also&#13;
handled the site preparation,&#13;
which was the first contract&#13;
made and cost $7,800.&#13;
Another $43,750was also spent&#13;
on site work for moving earth and&#13;
Say You&#13;
Saw&#13;
it in the&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Patronize&#13;
Our&#13;
Advertisers&#13;
putting in the service and entry&#13;
roads. That was done by A.W.&#13;
Oaks and Son.&#13;
Rewald Electric received a&#13;
total of $274,116 for its contribution.&#13;
The sound system lViII,&#13;
when completed, cost $27,527.&#13;
The bowling lanes will come to&#13;
$99,463.&#13;
The architects were. paid&#13;
$189,825.The Bureau of Facilities&#13;
Management from Madison&#13;
which supervises all construction&#13;
received $73,736. Last but not&#13;
least, a total of $961,532is heing&#13;
paid for plumbing, healing,&#13;
kitchen equipment, Irieght and&#13;
passenger elevators, and&#13;
moveable equipment.&#13;
But that still does not come to&#13;
$3,772,500. The reserve fund,&#13;
which at one time held $67,199&#13;
now contains $36,461. The only&#13;
cutback that had to be made, due&#13;
to rising building costs, was the&#13;
size. In 1971it was hoped that the&#13;
building would he 60,000 net&#13;
assignable feet. In order to keep&#13;
with the budget, the sizes had to&#13;
he cut to 46,500 net assignable&#13;
feet.&#13;
Classified&#13;
IMPORTANT STUDY ABROAD ANNOUNCEMENT:&#13;
Limited openings stili&#13;
remain on CFS accredited Academic Year&#13;
1976-77Programs for Fall, Winter. Spring, or&#13;
Full Year for qualified applicants. 5h.ldenf!;&#13;
in good standing _ FreShman, Sophomore,&#13;
Junior, Senior Yur lire eligible. GOOd&#13;
facutty references, evteeeee of seumotivation&#13;
and sincere lnt.rnt In in study&#13;
lIbt"CNId lind intern.tlonal cultural exchange&#13;
count more with CFS than specific oracle&#13;
point. For application Information:&#13;
CENTER FOR FOREIGN STUDY: lity&#13;
ADMISSIONS 216 S. Sta'., Boll 606. Ann&#13;
ArbOr, MI 48107 (313) 662-5575.&#13;
stOCk: Robyn WV-23, Midland 8628. 883, 816&#13;
BearClI' 101. S.s.t-6635lifter 6 p.m. Ask for&#13;
John.&#13;
FOR SALE: Portable stereo with GarriNcI&#13;
turntllbh!. ASking $50. Call 6J4.SJOSlitter 4&#13;
p.m.&#13;
FOUND: WemHl idRtifkat ..... HM«.&#13;
CaIlUf._&#13;
PARKS IDE FOREIGN STUDENT CLUe&#13;
All new and r~mlng foreign stuc:lents are&#13;
required to sign up in the note- boc*&#13;
available at tM Information KiOSk. PINSe&#13;
respond immediately.&#13;
FOR SALE: CB Radloa and Scann.".&#13;
factory new. lowest prices In town. Now In&#13;
WILL DO any kind Of typing at rHsoneble&#13;
ratn. For Informallon een 6b·3373.&#13;
YOUR PLACE LOUNGE&#13;
12M - 60lIl St., ICe.....&#13;
WEDNESDAY NIGHT&#13;
-IS LADIES' NIGHT&#13;
ALL LADIES ATTEIIIING WILL RECEIVE&#13;
COCKTAILS AT Y2 PRICE!&#13;
THURSDAY'S THE fliGHT TO DRI. BEER.&#13;
BEER fliGHT SCIIJOIIRS 35C&#13;
BOTILES 50c&#13;
NIIRIWIJfJWM'&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER September 22. 1'76 5&#13;
Special buy.&#13;
~ PACE-SETIERS I&#13;
The giad plaid pantsuit.&#13;
Happy trio for&#13;
campus or career.&#13;
$24 3-PIECE SUIT&#13;
Simply smashing! And so today. Snappy&#13;
styling: 2-button blazer; fly-front trouser;&#13;
button-down vest. Tailored your way with&#13;
that expensive look. Pick your plaid in blue,&#13;
brown or green. Sizes 5-15.&#13;
Whats new? Ask us.&#13;
-~• 'Pmt~~6 value&#13;
r--- USE WNtDS CHARC-ALL CREDIT --..,&#13;
3600 52nd Street KENOSHA •&#13;
Phone 658-4331&#13;
OPEN DAlLY: Me...... SaL 1.:. A.M ... to. P.M.&#13;
Su. IZ .. $ P.M.&#13;
,-------1&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
f&#13;
t&#13;
E&#13;
V&#13;
E&#13;
N&#13;
T&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
f&#13;
t&#13;
f&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
f&#13;
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t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
s ! L~~~~~~..J&#13;
. . Wednesday, Sept. 22&#13;
The V1~for1an Photographer takes pictures from 11:00. 3:00 p.m. in the Uruon Bazaar Area for $2.00 per picture&#13;
Earth Science Club meets at 4:40 p.m. in Gr.113. All Earth Science,&#13;
Geography, Anthropology majors and any interested people&#13;
welcome. Eugene Fodor performs at 8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 23&#13;
i;:olk-singe~ Nina Kahle plays at 1: 00 p.m. in Union Square. Free&#13;
wrestling&#13;
First ?3eetmg of the Parkside Boxing Club at 3:30 in the boxing- room.&#13;
Friday, Sept. 24&#13;
Center for Teaching Excellence invites Bob Menges from Northwestern&#13;
University's Center for the Teaching Professions to pr-esent&#13;
a classroom video-tape at 3:00 p.m. _in CL 111 to any&#13;
interested faculty and students.&#13;
Women's tennis match: UW-P, UW-Oshkosh, and Carthage at 3:00 p.m. at the tennis courts.&#13;
~ovie, "The Front Page," plays at 7:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m. ~t the Cinema Theatre. Admission is $1.00. • •&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 25&#13;
Women's tennis match with UW-P, UW-Milwaukee and Carthage&#13;
competing at 10:00 a.m. at Carthage.&#13;
Cross country meet with UW-P, UW-Milwaukee, and Loyola College&#13;
competing at 11:00 a.m. at Milwaukee.&#13;
Group, Your Father's Mustache plays at 9:00 p.m. in Union Square.&#13;
Admission is $2 for UW-P students and alwnni, and $3 for others&#13;
War Club meets for 6:00 to 10:00 p.m. in CL 141:&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 26&#13;
Movie, "The Front Page," plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $1.&#13;
War Club meets for6 :00to l()'z:00 p.m. in CL 141.&#13;
Monday, Sept. 27&#13;
Guest recital features Helen Boatwright, soprano; Blake Stern, tenor;&#13;
and Harmann Reutter, pianist at 8:00 p.m. in the CAT. Tickets are $1 for UW-P students, $2 for others, and free in advance to&#13;
UW-Pstudentsat the Info Kiosk. ·&#13;
Union costs· listed&#13;
by Wendy Miller&#13;
In 1972 a committee consisting&#13;
of three students, three faculty&#13;
members, and three staff&#13;
members was formed to plan a&#13;
project that is finally being&#13;
completed-the Student Union.&#13;
Also in 1972, James Galbraith,&#13;
director of Planning and Construction,&#13;
Julie Don bar,&#13;
secretary, and Brien Murray,&#13;
assistant director were instrumental&#13;
in obtaining a federal&#13;
grant to help pay the interest on&#13;
the building loan.&#13;
The grant will pay all the interest&#13;
over 3½ percent a year,&#13;
which amounts to $85,000 a year&#13;
for up to 30 years bringing the&#13;
total to $255,000. That was the last&#13;
grant the federal government&#13;
ever gave to a university for&#13;
things such as unions and dormitories.&#13;
&#13;
There is still a matter of where&#13;
the $3,772,500 of the Student&#13;
Union budget is going. The&#13;
ventilation system, when completed&#13;
will have taken $4,315 of&#13;
that money. Comosy Construction,&#13;
the general contractor,&#13;
is getting $2,053,375. Comosy also&#13;
handled the site preparation,&#13;
which was the first contract&#13;
made and cost $7,800.&#13;
Another $43,750 was also spent&#13;
on site work for moving earth and&#13;
Say You&#13;
Saw&#13;
it in the&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Patronize&#13;
Our&#13;
Advertisers&#13;
putting in the service and entry&#13;
roads. That was done by A.W.&#13;
Oaks and Son.&#13;
Rewald Electric received a&#13;
total of $274,116 for its contribution.&#13;
The sound system will,&#13;
when completed, cost $27,527.&#13;
The bowling lanes will come to&#13;
$99,463.&#13;
The architects were . paid&#13;
$189,825. The Bureau of Facilities&#13;
Management from Madison&#13;
which supervises all construction&#13;
received $73,736. Last but not&#13;
least, a total of $961,532 is being&#13;
paid for plumbing, heating,&#13;
kitchen equipment, frieght and&#13;
passenger elevators, and&#13;
moveable equipment.&#13;
But that still does not come to&#13;
$3,772,500. The reserve fund,&#13;
which at one time held $67,199&#13;
now contains $36,461. The only&#13;
cutback that had to be made, due&#13;
to rising building costs, was the&#13;
size. In 1971 it was hoped that the&#13;
building would be 60,000 net&#13;
assignable feet. In order to keep&#13;
with the budget, the sizes had to ·&#13;
be cut to 46,500 net assignable&#13;
feet.&#13;
Classified&#13;
IMPORTANT STUDY ABROAD ANNOUNCEMENT:&#13;
L imited openings still&#13;
remain on CFS accredited Academic Year&#13;
1976·77 Programs tor Fall, Winter, Spring, or&#13;
Full Year for Qualified applicants. Students&#13;
in good standing . Freshman, Sophomore,&#13;
Junior, Senior Year are eligible. Good&#13;
faculty references, evidence of self&#13;
motivation and sincere interest in in study&#13;
abroad and international cultJJral exchange&#13;
count more with CFS than specific grade&#13;
point. For application . Information.&#13;
CENTER FOR FOREIGN STUDY· AY&#13;
ADMISSIONS 216 s . State, Box 606, Ann&#13;
Arbor, Ml 48107 (313) 662-5575.&#13;
FOR SALE: CB Radios and Scanners,&#13;
factory new, lowest prices In town. Now in&#13;
stock Robyn WV-23, M idland 8628, 813, 186&#13;
Bearcat 101. 55' 6635 after 6 p.m . Ask for&#13;
John&#13;
FOR SALE: Portable stereo with Garrard&#13;
turntable. Asking $50. Call ~ -5305 after ,&#13;
p.m.&#13;
FOUND: Womens identification brac,elet.&#13;
Call '39·3UO&#13;
PARKSIDE FOREIGN STUDENT CLUII&#13;
All new and returning foreign students are&#13;
required to sign up in the note book&#13;
available at the Information Kiosk. Please&#13;
respond immediately.&#13;
WILL DO any kind of typing at reasonable&#13;
rates. For Information call 652 3373.&#13;
YOUR PLACE LOUNGE&#13;
3214 - 60lh St., Kenosha&#13;
WEDNESDAY NIGHT ·IS LADIES' NIGHT&#13;
ALL LADIES ATTENDING WILL RECEIVE&#13;
COC.KTAILS AT 1/2 PRICE!&#13;
THURSDAY'S THE NIGHT TO DRINK BEER.&#13;
BEER NIGHT SCHOONERS 35c BOTTLES 50c&#13;
HURIWDOtt/11&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER September 22, 1976 5&#13;
I&#13;
BR PACE-SETTERS&#13;
Special buy.&#13;
The giad plaid pantsuit.&#13;
Happy trio for&#13;
campus or career.&#13;
$24 3-PIECE SUIT&#13;
Simply smashing! And o today. napp ·&#13;
styling: 2-button blazer; fly-front trou er;&#13;
button-down ve t. Tailored your way with&#13;
that expensive look. Pick your plaid in blue,&#13;
brown or green. Sizes 5-15.&#13;
Whats new? Ask us.&#13;
spirit~6&#13;
value&#13;
---USE WARDS CHARG-ALL CREDIT ----.&#13;
3600 52nd Street KENOSHA&#13;
Phone 658-4331&#13;
OPE. DAILY: Mo . thru Sat. 10:0I A.M. to t:N P.M. Su. 1% to S P.~. &#13;
fellibet' 22, 19"&#13;
Sears&#13;
ings that every&#13;
student should-know:&#13;
31 /&#13;
1. You can SAVE $5 on this&#13;
slide-rule calculator&#13;
SALE 149R~ular&#13;
319.99&#13;
a. An ll.dil\it slide rule calculator can make the difference&#13;
in the speed and ar-r-ura ..y with which you solve complex&#13;
problems. Work square roots, squares, reciprocals instantly.&#13;
4.key memory lets yon work 2 problems at once.&#13;
Has percent key, floating decimal and large green digital&#13;
elisplay. With case. Runs on batteries (included). Optional&#13;
adapter avaitab!e.&#13;
b. Reg. 124-.99 • Full slide-rule calculator with scientific notalion,&#13;
4--ke)' memory. Runs on baueries (included). Oprional&#13;
adapter avaifahle 19.99&#13;
2.You can SAVE '40 on our&#13;
Electric 1 typewriter&#13;
SALE 99~?ular&#13;
$139.99&#13;
Ter.lu papers, lab reports, essays-s-it's hard to reduce your&#13;
typmg load, but yon can make your job easier with Sears&#13;
Electri~ ~ portable. H as wide 12 inch carriage with pre-set&#13;
tab positrons for fast column work. With 3 different reo&#13;
peat keys, standard pica type. Typewriter cover included.&#13;
3.You can SAVE '3 on Sears&#13;
carry-pack shelving&#13;
SALE 1099&#13;
Regular&#13;
, 113.99&#13;
Den't limit yourself to dorm room furniture Expand&#13;
your .toral\" spa . IS'&#13;
I I&#13;
~WItI ears 4·shelf steel shelving unit&#13;
a nut-co or umt will ace .&#13;
reeords book _ H . ommodate stereo equipment,&#13;
pa&#13;
nel. 'c e. as adjustable shelves, decorative end&#13;
. .omes unasst"mbled.&#13;
in ..rr I thN ..... Oc-tohf'r 2, 1976&#13;
ROER( •OK '. 0 CO.&#13;
.... .. .\\ailabl .. in&#13;
A k about Sears Credit Plall.&#13;
lallt ..r S..a.... R..lail Sto re-s and Catalop;&#13;
R••&#13;
HE PARKSIDE R GER September 22, 1976&#13;
Sears&#13;
3 things that every /&#13;
student s-hOuld li.now:&#13;
I lhnm •h&#13;
1. You can SAVE •5 on this&#13;
slide-rule calculator&#13;
SALE }49&#13;
2u1 ..&#13;
$19.99&#13;
a. An 8-&lt;li~it slitle rule calculator can make the difference&#13;
in the peetl anti a1·c·uracy with which you soJve complex&#13;
problems. Work S&lt;.juare roots, squares, reciprocals insta,ntly.&#13;
4~key memory lets you work 2 problems at once.&#13;
Has pert·ent key, floating clecimal and large green digital&#13;
,lisplay. With case. Runs on batteries (included). Optional&#13;
adapter arnilable.&#13;
b. Rt&gt;g. $24.99 . Full slide-rule calculator with scientific nota•&#13;
tion, 4-key memory. Runs on batteries (included). Op -&#13;
tional adapter available. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19.99&#13;
2. You can SAVE $40 on our&#13;
Electric I typewriter&#13;
3.&#13;
cit h r 2. 19 .. 6&#13;
\, ailahlc- in&#13;
SALE 99~11 ••&#13;
8139.99&#13;
Te~m papers, lab reports, essays-it's hard to reduce your&#13;
typmg load, but you can make your job easier with Sears&#13;
Electri~ : portable. Has wide 12 inch carriage with pre-set&#13;
tab po-it1ons for fast column work. With 3 different repeat&#13;
ke:,- tandard pica type. Typewriter cover included.&#13;
You can SAVE •3 on Sears&#13;
carry-pack shelving&#13;
SALE 10~?1 ••&#13;
$13.99&#13;
Don't limit If&#13;
·our yourse to dorm room furniture. Expand&#13;
} , l tora!!;e space with Sears 4-shelf steel shelving unit&#13;
a nut-color unit will . . d · r l h k accommo ate stereo equipment ~ro7, .' ( oo s. Has adjustable shelves, decorative end&#13;
pane "· .ome: unassembled.&#13;
!-ik about Sea1·s Cl'edit Plans&#13;
laq.:t•r S a R 'I&#13;
• r" t&gt;!at • lor.-s and Catalocr l"I &#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER September 22. 1976 7&#13;
Art show&#13;
'slated Contact&#13;
"Wisconsin '76"; a showing of&#13;
paintings, drawings and graphics&#13;
sponsored by the Art League of&#13;
Stevens Point in cooperation with&#13;
the UW-SP College of Fine Arts.&#13;
All artists residing in&#13;
Wisconsin are eligible to submit&#13;
two entries to "Wisconsin '76";...&#13;
Work and entry blanks must be&#13;
delivered directly to the Edna&#13;
Carlslen' Gallery, UW-SP, on&#13;
October ist, 2nd and 3rd. Entries&#13;
must be suitably framed and&#13;
wired for hanging and must not&#13;
exceed by 8' in size. No crafts,&#13;
sculpture or photography will be&#13;
eligible.&#13;
Artists may obtain the. full.&#13;
prospectus and entry blanks from&#13;
Mrs. James Delzell, 1124 Ridge&#13;
Road, Stevens Point, Wis., 54481.&#13;
Forms will also be available at&#13;
the registration desk.&#13;
The public is invited to attend&#13;
the opening reception and anDOWlCement&#13;
of awards at the&#13;
Carlsten Gallery, Fine Arts&#13;
Center, from 8 to 10:30 p.m. on&#13;
Sal, October 9. Cash and purchase&#13;
awards of over $2,000 will&#13;
be presented.&#13;
FEES&#13;
,&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
by K1yokoBowden&#13;
Logo Contest&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. would like to thank all the students who submitted&#13;
entries in the P .S.G.A., Inc. logo contest this summer. John Kruse&#13;
designed the winning entry and we would like to contratolate him.&#13;
Registration Fee&#13;
Parkside Students . $5.00per family&#13;
Non~dents who wish to pay student rates $2ll.ooper family&#13;
Non~dents regu1ar fee $10.00per family&#13;
Developmental Program-two Block mInlmwn per week&#13;
Cblld Care Center Student rate ' $2.110per block per cbIJd&#13;
Parkside has an unusually "mature" student population. More than NOIHltudentrate $3.ooperblockpercblld&#13;
40percent of the students are over 25 years old. These o1der students Playschool PrOgJ'llllHllle hour per week minimum&#13;
have had an opportlDlity to acquire more responslblllties than the $.110per hour and $.40 per half hour&#13;
tradition, stereotype college student. One of' those additional For more information call: Racine Gall N..... W • III-Z1I8&#13;
responsiblllties could be children. r: Kenosha .SuMn 'nshuk • 851-t712&#13;
. Parents, did you know that Parkside's Child Care Center has moved P .s.G.A •• Inc.and IDIpnnrIq IlenIeee&#13;
into the speclany remodeled student Activities Building next door to Student Govenunent is trying to Improve existIDI .-vices ~.&#13;
Tallent Hall. The new faclllties have substantially increased the Parkside. ODe of the ways we can do that Is by ~ cwnpIatnta from&#13;
nwnber of children the Child Care Center can take care of. students about deficient service. If you have a bltcb about lIOIIIetllq&#13;
For quality child care, please, consider bringing)'Our children to the here at Parkside, come and see us. Future Contact articles will try to&#13;
Parkside Child Care Center. The Center accepts children between the deal with informing students about services that seem to be adequate.&#13;
ages of 2 to 7 years. It is open from 7:30 a.m, to 5:15 p.m., Monday (_DO:;:YO:U;::KN~O~W~WHE:::RE:;WE::::ARE~:?:?::?':'?:WILC::=:D:I9S:.:Call=;5U-'::DM:::~. through Friday.&#13;
The Center offers two programs to meet the needs of parents on a&#13;
more individoalized basis. The two programs are Playschool and P .A.B. Film Serietl Pretlenle&#13;
Developmental. The major differences between the programs depend&#13;
on the amount of lime the child attends the Center.&#13;
Developmental is a program by which sequential preplanned activities&#13;
are based on the interest and ablllty level of the individoa!&#13;
child.&#13;
Playschool is a program iii which development of the socialization&#13;
process is set in an informal environment. Children wlll be exposed to&#13;
various social and cognitive skills on an indiVIdual and group basis.&#13;
[EJU5ffiiE55 Br-llf.'fE ]&#13;
Renshaw leaving&#13;
byDA\'.EBRANDT&#13;
Last weeks column reported on the problems facing the University's&#13;
business management program. In conclusion, it posed the question&#13;
''Who will be the next to resign?" Well, the answer was short in&#13;
coming. Accounting lecturer Claude Renshaw has announced his&#13;
acceptance of a position at St. Mary's College in South Bend, Indiana.&#13;
nis alarming to note the large number of faculty members who are&#13;
leaving the program. But apparenUy there isn't one underlying cause.&#13;
Each individual has their own reason. InRenshaw's case it was due to&#13;
personality confli&amp;tswith accounting professor Mahesh Jain. Had Jain&#13;
resigned before Renshaw decided to, Renshaw would have probably&#13;
stayed. According to Renshaw, "Jain was one of themajor reasons I&#13;
decided- to leave."&#13;
In another case, Harold Heaser, it was just coincidence. Heaser&#13;
simply had reached the end of liis career and retired.&#13;
In still other cases it was due to recent changes in the program.&#13;
Renshaw feels that several resignations were at least in part caused&#13;
by the leadership vacuum created by the sudden and forced&#13;
resignation of former Dean William A. Moy. In Renshaw's opinion,&#13;
even though there may hsve been other contributing factors in each&#13;
individuals case, most, if not all of the resigned faculty members&#13;
would still be here if Moy had remained as Dean.&#13;
!lis this writer's opinion that if Moy's departure was justifiable it&#13;
must follow thst whst we will receive in exchange for Moy, his faculty&#13;
and the program they left behind, will be a new program SO superior&#13;
that it offsets our recent faculty losses. But is this realistically&#13;
possible? We have only to walt for the task force report to find out.&#13;
ATTENTION BUSINESS MANAGEMENT MAJORS&#13;
You are invited to attend an informational meeting focusing on the&#13;
business management program, Wednesday, September 29 at 2:30&#13;
p.m. in room CL 326. The following topics will be addressed by the&#13;
program coordinator, Ron Singer:&#13;
Current departmental recruiting efforts&#13;
The present state of the business management program&#13;
Long and short range program plans&#13;
Results and recommendations of the task force study&#13;
BE INFORMED! BRING YOUR QUESTIONS AND GET THE&#13;
FACTS. A service of Pi Sigma Epsilon in the interest of Parkside&#13;
students. '&#13;
•&#13;
Groups to organize&#13;
A Council composed of all&#13;
Iftsidents (or theit' representatives)&#13;
of every studellt&#13;
organization on campus is being&#13;
set up. This Council will deal with&#13;
problems faced by the&#13;
organizations (such as room&#13;
reservations, duplicating and&#13;
malllng services, etc.) as well as&#13;
being responsible for administering&#13;
a budget of approx.&#13;
$11,000.Any organization that has&#13;
not been contacted about this&#13;
Council is urged to call Linda&#13;
Knudtson (632-4288or 553-2244)or&#13;
Bob Foght (553-2244) for further&#13;
details. Any organizations now&#13;
receiving money or those who&#13;
plan to apply for money should be&#13;
actively involved in this Council.&#13;
Shelter&#13;
needs&#13;
workers&#13;
Kenosha Area Group Homes,&#13;
Inc., is a community based, nonprofit&#13;
corporation which attempts&#13;
to provide effective&#13;
services and treatment to&#13;
Kenosha County youth as&#13;
alternatives to detention and&#13;
institutionalization, by attempting&#13;
to meet nationally&#13;
recognized standards which&#13;
would minimize commitments to&#13;
institutions.&#13;
Kenosha Area Group Homes&#13;
currently has three residential&#13;
home-like faclllties. One home&#13;
houses boys and one is for girls&#13;
with each facility handling up to&#13;
eight young people for an'&#13;
average of six months. A co-ed&#13;
shelter care facility houses up to&#13;
eight young people for -an&#13;
average of ten days.&#13;
The placement of a young&#13;
person in a group home faclllty&#13;
keeps him in the community&#13;
where he must eventually work&#13;
out his future, In short, the&#13;
teenager is asked to face the&#13;
realities of everydsy life, but is&#13;
not isolated from them.&#13;
Group Homes is now in the&#13;
process of hiring young couples&#13;
or single people to work in these&#13;
homes with the the teenager.&#13;
Campus Ministry, with rits&#13;
mission of care and service for&#13;
people asks that you give Group&#13;
Homes some consideration. If&#13;
you are .interested in working&#13;
with young people for young&#13;
people contact Tim Gaynor at&#13;
Group Homes, Inc., 657-7188.&#13;
Video&#13;
presentation&#13;
planned&#13;
The Center for Teaching Excellence&#13;
has invited Bob Menges&#13;
from Northwestern University's&#13;
Center For The Teachfng&#13;
Professions to visit Parkslde&#13;
Friday, September 24th to&#13;
present a clsssroorn video-tape&#13;
prodoced by his Center.&#13;
.1 .•&#13;
5c'eenpbyby5IlI1mmR &amp; I h I D1hMOND D"wed by I'JIlllM,DI'R&#13;
[,ecuh""r,oduce' J[NNIN051I.NO r,oduced by f'l,lJl M()Nh5tI&#13;
!lCNNICOlORe rhN,\\15ION· h UNWll\5I&gt;1rlClURl ~-&#13;
in the Cinema Theatre&#13;
Fri., Sept. 24 7:00 p.m.&#13;
9:00 p.m.&#13;
doors open at 6:30 p.m.&#13;
Sun., Sept. 26 7:30 p.m.&#13;
doors open at 7:00 p.m.&#13;
Admission $1.00&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
wants yau to have a&#13;
FREE&#13;
Get a FREE Superwhizme with any Purchase of&#13;
51.00 or more at the Parkside Union Main&#13;
Dining Room, Union Square &amp; Th'e WUC· Coffee&#13;
Shoppe.&#13;
Give U. A Fllngl&#13;
Valid Sopl. 27 tl"u Oct. 1&#13;
--~----lComlng------&#13;
CAMPUS FRISBEE COMPETITION&#13;
.Win...Pizzas, Beer, lines of Bowling, Pool Table&#13;
Time, etc. For Distance Throw, Longest Time in&#13;
Air &amp; Accuracy&#13;
Thurs. Sept. 30&#13;
(Rain Dole, Mon. Oct.4)&#13;
Sign Up At Union Rec. Clr.&#13;
·, THE PARKSIDE RANGER September 22, 1976 7&#13;
Art show&#13;
slated Contact weekly by student government&#13;
"Wisconsin '76"; a showing of&#13;
paintings, drawings and graphics&#13;
sponsored by the Art League of&#13;
Stevens Point in cooperation with&#13;
the UW-SP College of Fine Arts.&#13;
by Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
Logo Contest&#13;
All artists residing in&#13;
Wisconsin are eligible to submit&#13;
two entries to "Wisconsin '76"; .&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. would like to thank all the students who submitted&#13;
entries in the P.S.G.A., Inc. logo contest this summer. Jolm Kruse&#13;
designed the winning entry and we would like to contratulate him.&#13;
Child Care Center&#13;
Work and entry blanks must be&#13;
delivered direcUy to the Edna&#13;
Carlsten Gallery, UW-SP, on&#13;
October 1st, 2nd and 3rd. Entries&#13;
must be suitably framed and&#13;
wired for hanging and must not&#13;
exceed by 8' in size. No crafts,&#13;
sculpture or photography will be&#13;
eligible.&#13;
Parkside has an unusually "mature" student population. More than&#13;
40 percent of the students are over 25 years old. These older students&#13;
have had an opportunity to acquire more responsibilities than the&#13;
tr~dition, stereotype college student. One of those additional&#13;
responsibilities could be children.&#13;
Parents, &lt;qd you know that Parkside's Child Care Center has moved&#13;
into the speclally remodeled Student Activities Building next door to&#13;
Tallent Hall. The new facilities have substantially increased the&#13;
number of children the Child Care Center can take care of.&#13;
Artists may obtain the. full.&#13;
prospectus and entry blanks from&#13;
Mrs. James Delzell, 1124 Ridge&#13;
Road, Stevens Point, Wis., 54481.&#13;
Forms will also be available at&#13;
the registration desk.&#13;
For quality child care, please, consider bringing your children to the&#13;
Parkside Child Care Center. The Center accepts children between the&#13;
ages of 2 to 7 years. It is open from 7:30 a.m. to 5:15 p.m., Monday&#13;
through Friday.&#13;
The public is invited to attend&#13;
the opening reception and announcement&#13;
of awards at the&#13;
Carlsten Gallery, Fine Arts&#13;
Center, from 8 to 10:30 p.m. on&#13;
Sat., October 9. Cash and purchase&#13;
awards of over $2,000 will&#13;
be presented.&#13;
The Center offers two programs to meet the needs of parents on a&#13;
more individualized basis. The two programs are Playschool and&#13;
Developmental. The major differences between the programs depend&#13;
on the amount-Of time the child attends the Center.&#13;
Developmental is a program by which sequential preplanned activities&#13;
are based on the interest and ability level of the individual&#13;
child.&#13;
Playschool is a program in which development of the socialization&#13;
process is set in an informal environment. Children will be exposed to&#13;
various soc1ai and cognitive skills on an indivfdual and group basis.&#13;
[BU5lla'\E55 0.1-llla'tE)&#13;
Renshaw leaving&#13;
by DA ~E BRANDT&#13;
Last weeks column reported on the problems facing the University's&#13;
business management program. In conclusion, it posed the question&#13;
"Who will be the next to resign?" Well, the answer was short in&#13;
coming. Accounting lecturer Claude Renshaw has announced his&#13;
acceptance of a position at St. Mary's College in South Bend, Indiana.&#13;
It is alarming to note the large number of faculty members who are&#13;
leaving the program. But apparently there isn't one underlying cause.&#13;
Each individual has their own reason. In Renshaw's case it was due to&#13;
personality conflicts with accounting professor Mahesh Jain. Had Jain&#13;
resigned before Renshaw decided to, Renshaw would have probably&#13;
stayed. According to Renshaw, "Jain was one of the major reasons I&#13;
decided. to leave."&#13;
In another case, Harold Heaser, it was just coincidence. Heaser&#13;
simply had reached the end of his career and retired.&#13;
In still other cases it was due to recent changes in the program.&#13;
Renshaw feels that several resignations were at least in part caused&#13;
by the leadership vacuum created by the sudden and forced&#13;
resignation of former Dean William A. Moy. In Renshaw's opinion,&#13;
even though there may have been other contributiqg factors in each&#13;
individuals case, most, if not all of the resigned faculty members&#13;
would still be here if Moy had remained as Dean.&#13;
ltis this writer's opinion that if Moy's departure was justifiable it&#13;
must follow that what we will receive in exchange for Moy, his faculty&#13;
and the program they left behind, will be a new program so superior&#13;
that it offsets our recent faculty losses. But is this realistically&#13;
possible? We have only to wait for the task force report to find out.&#13;
ATTENTION BUSINESS MANAGEMENT MAJORS&#13;
You are invited to attend an informational meeting focusing on the&#13;
business management program, Wednesday, September 29 at 2:30&#13;
p.m. in room CL 326. The following topics will be addressed by the&#13;
program coordinator, Ron Singer:&#13;
Current departmental recruiting efforts&#13;
The present state of the business management program&#13;
Long and short range program plans&#13;
Results and recommendations of the task force study&#13;
BE INFORMED! BRING YOUR QUESTIONS AND GET THE&#13;
FACTS. A service of Pi Sigma Epsilon in the interest of Parkside&#13;
students.&#13;
Groups to organize&#13;
A Council composed of all&#13;
presidents ( or theil' representatives)&#13;
of every student&#13;
organization on campus is being&#13;
set up. This Council will deal with&#13;
problems faced by the&#13;
organizations (such as room&#13;
reservations, duplicating and&#13;
mailing services, etc.) as well as&#13;
being responsible for administering&#13;
a budget of approx.&#13;
$11,000. Any organization that has&#13;
not been contacted about this&#13;
Council is urged to call Linda&#13;
Knudtson (632-4288 or 553-2244) or&#13;
Bob Foght (553-2244) for further&#13;
details. Any organizations now&#13;
receiving money or those who&#13;
plan to apply for money should be&#13;
actively involved in this Council.&#13;
Shelter&#13;
needs&#13;
workers&#13;
Kenosha Area Group Homes,&#13;
Inc., is a community based, nonprofit&#13;
corporation which attempts&#13;
to provide effective&#13;
services and trea~ment to&#13;
Kenosha County youth as&#13;
alternatives to detention and&#13;
institutionalization, by attempting&#13;
to meet nationally&#13;
recognized standards which&#13;
would minimize commitments to&#13;
institutions.&#13;
Kenosha Area Group Homes&#13;
currenUy has three residential&#13;
home-like facilities. One home&#13;
houses boys and one is for girls&#13;
with each facility handling up to&#13;
eight young people for an&#13;
average of six months. A c&lt;Hld&#13;
shelter care facility houses up to&#13;
eight young people for -an&#13;
average of ten days.&#13;
The placement of a young&#13;
person in a group home facility&#13;
keeps him in the community&#13;
where he must eventually work&#13;
out his future. In short, the&#13;
teenager is asked to face the&#13;
realities of everyday life, but is&#13;
not isolated from them.&#13;
Group Homes is now in the&#13;
process of hiring young couples&#13;
or single people to work in these&#13;
homes with the the teenager.&#13;
Campus Ministry, with , its&#13;
mission of care and service for&#13;
people asks that you give Group&#13;
Homes some consideration. If&#13;
you are interested in working&#13;
with young people for young&#13;
people contact Tim Gaynor at&#13;
Group Homes, Inc., 657-7188.&#13;
Video&#13;
presentation&#13;
planned&#13;
The Center for Teaching Excellence&#13;
has invited Bob Menges&#13;
from Northwestern University's&#13;
Center For The Teaching&#13;
Professions to visit Parkside&#13;
Friday, September 24th to&#13;
present a classroom video-tape&#13;
produced by his Center.&#13;
FEES&#13;
Registration Fee&#13;
Parkside Students ................. ........ .•...... $5.00 per family&#13;
Non-students who wish to pay student rates •. .•... . $20.00 per family&#13;
Non-students regular fee ....... . ....... ......... . . $10.00 per family&#13;
Developmental Program-two Block minimwn per week&#13;
Student rate · . . .. . ....... .. ............ . .... $2.50 per block per child&#13;
Non-student rate . . . . ... ...... ...... . .. ..... $3.00 per block per child&#13;
Playschool Program~me hour per week minimum&#13;
$.80 per hour and $.40 per half hour&#13;
For more information call: Racine ...... Gall Navratil - 886-2189&#13;
KenO&amp;Ut .... Susan Tishuk - 8SM712&#13;
P .S.G.A., Inc. and Improvtng Services&#13;
Student Govermnent is trying to improve existing services 1i •&#13;
Parkside. One of the ways we can do that is by taking complaints from&#13;
students about deficient service. If y-0u have a bitch about something&#13;
here at Parkside, come and see us. Future Contact articles will try to&#13;
deal with informing students about services that seem to be adequate.&#13;
DO YOU KNOW WHERE WE ARE????? WILC D193. Call ~2244.&#13;
P.A.B. Film Series Presents&#13;
ScreenploybyBtllY'M.Dl'Ro l DIAMOND D•ec•ed t&gt;v 5l'Y Dt&#13;
~ut1ve Proouce1 JENNIN05 LAN0 Produced by MON"511&#13;
TtCt1NICOLOR9 PANAVlSION A UNIVtRShl PICTURt ~ .§-&#13;
in the Cinema Theatre&#13;
Fri., Sept. 24 7:00 p.m.&#13;
9:00 p.m.&#13;
doors open at 6:30 p.m.&#13;
Sun., Sept. 26 7:30 p.m.&#13;
doors open at 7:00 p.m.&#13;
Admission 81.00&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
wants you to have a&#13;
FREE&#13;
Get a FREE Superwhizme with any Purchase of&#13;
$1.00 or more at the Parkside Union Main&#13;
Dining Room, Union Square &amp; Th'e WLLC. Coffee&#13;
Shoppe. Give Us A Fllngl Valid Sept. 27 thru Oct. 1&#13;
-------Comlng-------&#13;
CAMPUS FRISBEE COMPETITION&#13;
·Win ... Pizzas, Beer, Lines of Bowling, Pool Table&#13;
Time, etc. For Distance Throw, Longest Time in&#13;
Air &amp; Accuracy&#13;
Thurs. Sept. 30&#13;
(Rain Dote, Mon. Oct.4)&#13;
Sign Up At Union Rec. Ctr. &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5ep"mber 22. 1'76&#13;
.... e.. lIIIoe&#13;
'D _Iller oller ..... force&#13;
-,-. phi' • r'l7 apan You ...... u.I .. y__&#13;
plelIc Ioowl •&#13;
..._-- ......&#13;
_ .,.....f_ 1IIlOIb' -as&#13;
IIlr owIa 10 _ lIIelr """lempIaU .....&#13;
pi rGllCed&#13;
_ ....... faD enn lIIe U~&#13;
mwbi_ RnJWII roolIesa&#13;
III our 1'."01 iOW)&#13;
Ieod IIlr an lIMearIiocI 1ft .&#13;
I'D IIIilIler retract ..... retrace&#13;
_ 1M-. lowanIl'm' _ _I.-.t .......&#13;
could .. been bohIIId) • blIl ....&#13;
IrIl11 Yllke&#13;
amid lila miaIIlalJpon lllulallona .. _I we've CGIIIe 10calIliIe·&#13;
IbeII ...... of put&#13;
1aet000mu&#13;
( baal alienI&#13;
In .-nI&amp;bl1&#13;
_iIltr llIIIlunI tree faIIIDIlD virIID 1_ •&#13;
'U Iller f_ .....fortll&#13;
-- of m-tac You lila -.1 of reborn day&#13;
llWh1nllla) •&#13;
bul_ ........&#13;
lhe of """tenl dims&#13;
roDinl, IIImbIlnc lrom sbadowed northern IIghI •&#13;
• waJker"~ -&#13;
\l1li1 III •~.&#13;
rurn&#13;
of Uma)&#13;
rftIoded b atorIiIhll III lhe rain •&#13;
jeffrey J.1weII&lt;tl&#13;
LeuT1Iu. Soatl&#13;
0.7&#13;
When radianl srrlnllJ/lIne Ilfts lIIe winter's bough&#13;
and bran&lt; I IIIh willi ....lief, lbeir reots&#13;
enaambarecllICIIIOlIIeIeu, Pan's IIute refutes&#13;
• feelinl lIIre ne' IlroIIe her 'lOW; -&#13;
In of IfOUIII! revealed, Her myst'rys no.&#13;
ve willi ~ hue 01 mood.&#13;
I She, Love apan one'sIa~ ren~&#13;
was ne' lbere .... lII _lIler-bended brow.&#13;
11lon we. _ lImea, ~elfuJ&#13;
of our Ia~ willi tired eyes,&#13;
11ft aoolbed willi IiIhlIIleeUni and raJnfuI&#13;
of Her&#13;
W~ wall, and naIiIe.&#13;
.....; .' .' .j"&#13;
0. .- -0.0'&#13;
nE TION STUDENTS:&#13;
•&#13;
for ,oar old textlJoolcs.&#13;
I 'M h.ck , •• r-roand.&#13;
UW Parks ide&#13;
Bookstore IhIQy - '''lUI, !u. -1,.•.&#13;
Fria, !u..4 , .•.&#13;
SaInay 11 u. . 1 , .•.&#13;
···&#13;
-&#13;
•&#13;
UNPACKING HIPPO TOES&#13;
Marvin had sent for some new&#13;
genitals&#13;
when he was twelve&#13;
I have no use lor&#13;
old privates he said&#13;
The company sent him some&#13;
hippo toes&#13;
They must have I'1!8d&#13;
my name wrong he said&#13;
and put them in place&#13;
to try them out and&#13;
They walked him into&#13;
a lagoon&#13;
WUIlamllarke&#13;
GOD ANSWERS&#13;
MARVIN'S LETTER&#13;
Marvin wrote a big&#13;
o&#13;
in the sand,&#13;
a piclure 01 the world&#13;
I do not.&#13;
he said,&#13;
wanl my kids to come&#13;
into such a world.&#13;
God thought il was a letter&#13;
to Him Alpha Omega&#13;
with a post-script prayer,&#13;
so he dropped a stone tablet&#13;
on Marvin's balls.&#13;
wUUamBarke&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER September 22, 1976&#13;
to call life •&#13;
J rtre J. kf&#13;
BrhulKJpp&#13;
ATTENTION STUDENTS: #&#13;
Cash for your old texthoolcs.&#13;
Bring "-•m back year-round.&#13;
UW Parkside&#13;
. . . . • ....&#13;
Bookstore Moaday - Tharsday 9 a.m. - 7 p.m.&#13;
Friday 9 a.m. - 4 p.11.&#13;
Sat1rday 10 a.11. - 1 p.11.&#13;
#&#13;
UNPACKING HIPPO TOF.S&#13;
Marvin had sent for some new&#13;
genitals&#13;
when he was twelve&#13;
I have no use for&#13;
old privates he said&#13;
The company sent him some&#13;
hippo toes&#13;
They must have read&#13;
my name wrong he said&#13;
and put them in place&#13;
to try them out and&#13;
They walked him into&#13;
a lagoon&#13;
William Barke&#13;
GOD ANSWERS&#13;
MARVIN'S LETTER&#13;
Marvin wrote a big&#13;
0&#13;
in the sand,&#13;
a picture of the world&#13;
I do not,&#13;
he said,&#13;
want my kids to come&#13;
into such a world.&#13;
God thought it was a letter&#13;
to Him Alpha Omega&#13;
with a post-script prayer,&#13;
so he dropped a stone tablet&#13;
on Marvin's balls.&#13;
William Barke &#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER s....-m- 22. 1971.,&#13;
WE'RE&#13;
KICKING New Union struts its stuff THE CAN&#13;
at grand opening ceremony&#13;
By Pbl1Ip L. UvlDgsloD&#13;
Parkside Chancelbr ~und· Brpwn Carter Huskey, former&#13;
~alor from ~me, cut the ribbon to the new student union yesteroay&#13;
WItha dull knife borrowed from Parkside grounds crew foreman lam&#13;
T. Walrus. .&#13;
"These kids are just great and you'll remember I promised we&#13;
would have this new union built here when I first became Chancellor&#13;
more than a year ago.&#13;
I can promise that everyone will be made happy! I intend to&#13;
promote some key people who I hope will make everyone else happy&#13;
and I can promise you this - WHAT YOU SEE IS WHAT YOU GET!&#13;
Everyone knows this is the last building we'll ever see constructed&#13;
here. New.sight signs have been ordered proclaiming this building our&#13;
"cultural heritage."&#13;
Chancellor-Huskey did not comment on the Regent's play to phase&#13;
out Parkside and sell the buildings to a shopping mall development&#13;
company in UW's latest retrenchment program as the UW system&#13;
budget goes before state legislature.&#13;
After the ceremony Huskey went to a Union men's room Be.&#13;
companied by his coiffeur to groom his meticulously trimmed beard&#13;
and toupee. "The lighting in here is just fine," he was reported to have&#13;
said.&#13;
UnlOl\ Director, Jim Neighbors, held a brief news conference&#13;
simultaneously in his new office.&#13;
"Golly, our bard work and efforts to coordinate effective student&#13;
programming and the extraordinary cooperation and communication&#13;
function in traditional higher education can only reach full self actualization&#13;
as a community through fresh new offices for us cheeses,"&#13;
said Neighbors .&#13;
.....many new committees. Golly, my only gripe is I am always&#13;
quoted out of context. We do not keep the guns and smoke grenades ~&#13;
here in the office. They are kept.. ."&#13;
.....this is a fish bowl, a great view. This has just got to add another&#13;
couple of thousand to my sa1ary next year. Golly, I am just so very&#13;
very happy ... "&#13;
Neighbors passed out expensive full color student life andprogramming&#13;
management flow charta showing power changes and&#13;
been named New Student Activities Director. The late Jimi Hendrix&#13;
has been named Student Death Coordinator, and Richie Huskey,&#13;
freshman at Case HIgh School, was named Chairman of the Accent on&#13;
Enrichment Committee.&#13;
Students m1IIed in and out of the Union all day. Many were disappointed&#13;
that no activities were planned.&#13;
"Our objectlve is to close the Union to student traffic during the day&#13;
leevIDg the faclUty neat and unvandal1zed for 0Ill" adult students,&#13;
said Baloney, watet-boy to Neighbor's secretary.&#13;
"We· thought of having some movies and concerts so the Grand&#13;
OpenIng would look real big to the communitY. We put ads all over in&#13;
newspapers and gave·r- coupon.i:&#13;
"Actually the entertainment was never booked (1aughIlIg) but it&#13;
didn't matter-flobody came anyway, Haas Ha Ha Haas "Hal" said&#13;
Baloney.&#13;
Architect Gengis Kahn Fury, UW-P PIaMing and Construction&#13;
waterboy and former Notre Dame basketball coach suggested&#13;
changes be made to the finished building. .&#13;
"We could stili gut the Union's Administration wing and put in a&#13;
nice restaurant with good food and a beautiful view. This is what was&#13;
originally intended but Chancellor Huskey made some crazy promises&#13;
and we were just so surprised he kept them we put offices here instead,"&#13;
said Fury.&#13;
student reaction varied as several students tripped over rubber&#13;
expansion strips in the Union sidewalk.&#13;
"The doors are locked at ground level so you have to walk up to the&#13;
concourse level or come in by helicopter via the heli-pad on the Union&#13;
roof," said Muhammad Witboi, Business Management Senior.&#13;
"What Union? I thought this was Comm Arts," said freshman Sally&#13;
~eetwater.&#13;
Former Psychology professor William Dean OBoy said the Union&#13;
would help the meat parade.&#13;
"The section of concourse going through Greenquist Hall commonly&#13;
referred to as the 'meat Parade' can only improve now with its connection&#13;
to the Union. Young pretty girls and hot young bucks can strut&#13;
their stutflwice, both coming and going to the new Union," said 080y&#13;
who has spent the last six years in a concourse chair in Greenquist&#13;
Hall.&#13;
Grand Opening ceremonies came to a cermonious haIt as the Union&#13;
was cleared. Chancellor Huskey locked the doors with a special gold&#13;
key.&#13;
"I promised Elton John he couId come here whenever he wanted&#13;
without fear of getting paid. Look!, he gave me tbeae primo&#13;
sunglasses," said Huskey as he dOMed a pair of oversized rh!nestGne&#13;
sunglasses and headed for the D-2 level making his way back to his&#13;
penthouse in the Learning Center.&#13;
"See you all next year," he said waving goodoobye.&#13;
LATE BREAKER BREAKER&#13;
AT PRESS TIME UNION DIRECTOR JIM NEIGHBORS ANNOUNCED&#13;
HE WAS RENAMING THE UNION ADMINI5l'RATION&#13;
WING AND HEREAFTER IT WOUlD BE CALLED THE NORML&#13;
NEOPHYTE MEMORIAL WING COMMEMORATING THE&#13;
FAMOUS STUDENT LEADER. IN 1974NORML CAMPAIGNED TO&#13;
LEVEL ALL UNNECESSARY TREES IN PETRIFYING SPRINGS&#13;
TO INSURE AMPLE PARKING FOR THE UNION, HOWEVER,&#13;
ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE WON OUT AGAIN AS MORE THAN 400&#13;
TENURED ACTIVIST PROFESSORS PUBlJSHED PAPERS&#13;
DENOUNCING THE PLAN AS FOOL HARDY AND WASl'EFUL.&#13;
~-;;~MASSY&#13;
I. Pure Brewed&#13;
From Goers Country.&#13;
.. I&#13;
S~le·&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
FrN PIZZID_"&#13;
Club Hlghvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652.. 737&#13;
AlIt e S '"&#13;
OPE .&#13;
~~~&#13;
On. 01 the MI.WIII'.&#13;
Milt Colli'....&#13;
SPORTINO OOODS&#13;
DEALERS&#13;
"." " M",.."&#13;
ni$m1ND&#13;
Il&#13;
tlgam1t:l~ ~~~~&#13;
UTN AVENUE AT UNO STREET&#13;
KENOSHA.. WISCONSIN 51140&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER September 22, 1976 'I&#13;
New UniOn struts its Stuff&#13;
at grand open_ing ceremony&#13;
WE'RE&#13;
KICKING&#13;
THE CAN&#13;
By Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Parkside Ch~ceUJr E~und Brown Carter Huskey, former&#13;
s~nator from ~fame, ·~ut the ribbon to the new student union yesterday&#13;
with a dull knife borrowed from Parkside grounds crew foreman lam&#13;
T. Walrus. .&#13;
"These kids are just great and you'll remember I promised we&#13;
would have this new union built here when I first became Chancellor&#13;
more than a year ago.&#13;
I can promise that everyone will be made happy! I intend to&#13;
promote some key people who I hope will make everyone else happy&#13;
and I can promise you this- WHAT YOU SEE IS WHAT YOU GET!&#13;
Everyone knows this is the last building we'll ever see constructed&#13;
here. New.sight signs have been ordered proclaiming this building our&#13;
"cultural heritage."&#13;
Chancellor-Huskey did not comment on the Regent's play to phase&#13;
out Parkside and sell the buildings to a shopping mall development&#13;
company in UW's latest retrenchment program as the uw system&#13;
budget goes before state legislature.&#13;
After the ceremony Huskey went to a Union men's room accompanied&#13;
by his coiffeur to groom his meticulously trimmed beard&#13;
and toupee. "The lighting in here is just fine," he was reported to have&#13;
said.&#13;
Union Director, Jim Neighbors, held a brief news conference&#13;
simultaneously in his new office.&#13;
"Golly, our hard work and efforts to coordinate effective student&#13;
programming and the extraordinary cooperation and communication&#13;
function in traditional higher education can only reach full self actualization&#13;
as a community through fresh new offices for us cheeses,"&#13;
said Neighbors.&#13;
Grand Opening ceremonies came to a cermonious halt as the Union&#13;
was cleared. Chancellor Huskey locked the doors with a special gold&#13;
key.&#13;
"I promised Elton John he could come here whenever be wanted&#13;
without fear of getting paid. Look!, he gave me these primo&#13;
sunglasses," said Huskey as he donned a pair of oversized rhinestone&#13;
sunglasses and headed for the D-2 level making his way back to his&#13;
penthouse in the Learning Center.&#13;
"See you all next year," he said waving good-bye.&#13;
LATE BREAKER BREAKER&#13;
AT PRESS TIME UNION DIRECT'OR JIM NEIGHBORS ANNOUNCED&#13;
HE WAS RENAMING THE UNION ADMINISTRATION&#13;
WING AND HEREAFTER IT WOULD BE CALLED TIIE NORML&#13;
NEOPHYTE MEMORIAL WING COMMEMORATING THE&#13;
FAMOUS STUDENT LEADER. IN 1974 NORML CAMPAIGNED TO&#13;
LEVEL ALL UNNECESSARY TREES IN PETRIFYING SPRINGS&#13;
TO INSURE AMPLE PARK.ING FOR TIIE UNION, HOWEVER,&#13;
ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE WON OUT AGAIN AS MORE THAN 400&#13;
TENURED ACTIVIST PROFESSORS PUBLISHED P.APERS&#13;
DENOUNCING TIIE PLAN AS FOOL HARDY AND WASTEFUL.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
,&#13;
From God's Country. " ... many new committees. Golly, my only gripe is I am always&#13;
quoted out of context. We do not keep the guns and smoke grenades&#13;
here&#13;
" ... this&#13;
in the&#13;
is a&#13;
office.&#13;
fish bowl,&#13;
They a&#13;
are&#13;
great&#13;
kept..."&#13;
view. This has just got to add another&#13;
f&#13;
couple of thousand to my salary next year. Golly, I am just so very&#13;
very happy ... "&#13;
Neighbors passed out expensive full color student life andprogramming&#13;
management flow charts showing power changes and&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
been named New student Activities Director. The late Jimi Hendrix&#13;
has been named Student Death Coordinator, and Richie Huskey,&#13;
freshman at Case High School, was named Chairman of the Accent on&#13;
Enrichment Committee.&#13;
students milled in and out of the Union all day. Many were disappointed&#13;
that no activities were planned.&#13;
"Our objective is to close the Union to student traffic during the day&#13;
leaving the facility neat and unvandalized for our adult students,&#13;
said Baloney, waterboy to Neighbor's secretary.&#13;
"We thought of having some movies and concerts so the Grand&#13;
Opening would look real big to the community. We put ads all over in&#13;
newspapers and gave free coupons: "Actually the entertainment was never booked (laughing) but it&#13;
didn't matter-nobody came anyway, Haaa Ha Ha Haaa Ha!" said&#13;
Baloney.&#13;
Architect Gengis Kahn Fury, UW-P Planning and Construction&#13;
waterboy and former Notre Dame basketball coach suggested&#13;
changes be made to the finished building. •&#13;
"We could still gut the Union's Administration wing and put in a&#13;
nice restaurant with good food and a beautiful view. This is what was&#13;
originally intended but Chancellor Huskey made some crazy promises&#13;
and we were just so surprised he kept them we put offices here instead,"&#13;
said Fury.&#13;
student reaction varied as several students tripped over rubber&#13;
expansion strips in the Union sidewalk.&#13;
"The doors are locked at ground level so you have to walk up to the&#13;
concourse level or come in by helicopter via the hell-pad on the Union&#13;
roof " said Muhammad Witboi Business Management Senior. , ; , . "What Union? I thought this was Comm Arts," said freshman Sally&#13;
Sweetwater. Former Psychology professor William Dean OBoy said the Union&#13;
would help the meat parade.&#13;
"The section of concourse going through Greenquist Hall commonly&#13;
referred to as the 'meat Parade' can only improve now with its connection&#13;
to the Union. Young pretty girls and hot young bucks can strut&#13;
their stuff twice, both coming and going to the new Union," said OBoy&#13;
who has spent the last six years in a concourse chair in Greenquist&#13;
Hall.&#13;
Free Pizza Deliiery&#13;
Club Highview&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
Alt• 4tll•trl11 C~l1kt1, St11~tftf. R1ntll, IHf&#13;
OPEN 4 t·•· fl 1&#13;
One of the Midwest's&#13;
Most Complete&#13;
SPORTING GOODS&#13;
DEALERS&#13;
Pl,tdf ,I FREE hrM111&#13;
n.~ fffl Wl ijla .fliiiilflid~ .~~~ ~~~1~~~ aireuJ"3 :J ~ :.L~lN o·~:n&#13;
1&#13;
~&#13;
l!&#13;
f,&#13;
l&lt;&#13;
"'&#13;
!t&#13;
l&#13;
,&#13;
E&#13;
' "' &#13;
SIDlE RANGER S., .......... 22. 197_&#13;
eert produce winners&#13;
" "1be Revenge of D_e1'1y falWlte eulll are ''tbe Reaper. " and "Morning ..,...." D -. Ven GeDIni," "SInful Love.&#13;
nw." both high and&#13;
I wwId ..-mmend ..~~ ...: simply put. It IIIlIdente dedbIe LP -g.&#13;
~ --' IIlUIic &amp;am • WIique group .&#13;
.. ..- lbe "Oyster" unique? Well. name&#13;
Wbat III8bs mast of lbe musicianS can&#13;
8DIllber bud wbere and percussion .nd&#13;
eilber IliB7 guiW, keybo8rda, als&#13;
aIIlbe bud members can ~ voc 'lllIcago0yIIer&#13;
ClIIt wID be m lI\e&#13;
- lII'OUIld November wlth a Iaser ~ =. wbat iDformlItlQIII've gathered&#13;
IIcbt ....,.s In concert and fJ'lll1lthe album. I&#13;
lbey:&#13;
=&#13;
are eu:elleftt Inlbe studio as well.&#13;
canHEART (MRS4005) Dreamboet Alllde bas got ~&#13;
be the mast laIIoed about and bougbt al~ this&#13;
Good _ for this too. For being new.&#13;
~ .... gane put probably any~e'sto ':&#13;
peclatioll8Dd produced 811 album that Is gomg&#13;
''rDanIter "&#13;
• 'I1IIa O,,':'dI8n ~ bud consists of Ann;.;and;.••••••••••••••••••• ,&#13;
T itA&#13;
cke&#13;
, renders pleasure&#13;
.., ..... ...,..* ,&#13;
-&amp;alrt h.&#13;
0ctabIr • tblnebDoa, bat&#13;
the .-td a Iaata1IIIIllI&#13;
-:::.:~~ III11* ..-lb·. II v...... -.Dy&#13;
p' • IIIID tile nadIa&amp; .-&#13;
.... IIle IInI I'c:bepfa s 01 -"1laok. .-din ph e In allanIs&#13;
~IW ''11le Ilnnlle lIleIDOirs of&#13;
A IcaD pillldoul balthe WGrId 1riII&#13;
...m ~ to flaIb' Il8IIl the III&gt;- .........'* daIm. PlaJboy pnNIsbed jail&#13;
.. to iIlflIrlaIe 8Dd oaafaund any&#13;
(....... -., e U...,umc. the&#13;
IlnI pa_ c........ Is partta,ed as Jd&amp;bIy an. -::.:"1IidaIl1la1 matortaL&#13;
"'all&#13;
....... ..&#13;
cNldboocl And we are shocked.&#13;
Dr. SwaIn .... born a dbygotlc twin; he has a&#13;
lemaIe counterpart. Brolber and sisler were. by&#13;
conventional standards, IImonsters." Their&#13;
physlc.1 deformities made them grotesque&#13;
creallnll; creatures resembling stone-age man.&#13;
Too UI1Y to be Included In tile immediate lives of&#13;
lbeIr naltby parents. Daffodil and sisler Eliza&#13;
were Isolated from the world, "entombed In a&#13;
spooIty old mansion" in the mountains of Vermont.&#13;
The mansion was redesigned to accommodate the&#13;
!lJge, frealtisbly objectionable cbiJdren and a staff&#13;
of servants was hired to care for them. Mother and&#13;
F.ther SwaIn vialled their offspring once a year - on&#13;
DoffodlI's and Eliza's birthday .&#13;
The cbiJdren had been diagnosed as hopeless&#13;
1ROI'tlI1S. In actuality. Daffodil and Eliza were exlremely&#13;
intel1lgent but, In deference to their&#13;
parenta" illusions and. moreover, because "all the&#13;
Information we received about the planet we were&#13;
on lndIc.ted that idiots were lovely things to he,"&#13;
lbey ·'eultivaled idiocy." Inpublic,they said "Bub"&#13;
and "Duh," drooled sod roDed their eyes. They also&#13;
t"farted" and laugbed. II&#13;
In private. bow" .. , they C&lt;lOllUDled volwnes of&#13;
literature from the manslon's vast IiIrary. They&#13;
debated phi!cwJpbies. Protested Darwin, learned&#13;
calculus and foreign languages. StIll. their&#13;
briIIIaDce did DOtImpress them: ''We did not itch to&#13;
display - iJlle1IIgencein public. We did not think&#13;
01 iJlle1IlBenceas being useful or attractive ... we&#13;
Ibaagbt 01 It as being _ more example of our&#13;
fnw"'''''- ..&#13;
"We may bave been rigbl at that. You know?&#13;
uBI' boo It&#13;
TbeIr InteI1llence rested on _ crucial coodltlon:&#13;
!bey bad to tbink latletber; each mind was an InIocra1&#13;
eJement-tbeir iJltel1IlIence was a product of&#13;
callectlve lbougbt. Alone, neither Daffodl1 nor Eliza - "*" thin moder~ Inlel1lgenl Together.&#13;
\bey cWljA Iaed. l8lIfIed genla 1bIs need for each&#13;
other under ea a famI1Iar VOIIIIeIUttheme; ane&#13;
that crIea &amp;r • '" '''''dty, for togetherness. fer&#13;
IIIIllaa1 ~ ill • warId g_ cruelly insane.&#13;
III keeping with V--..'s eliemaI daamation of&#13;
• -'ety wboae be..... bIDocellll are forever at&#13;
the ~ 01YicIou ilP&gt;crance, be bas Daffodl1 and&#13;
EIiD. allbe ace III I$, rev..r lbeIr true iJlteIIectua1&#13;
aHI"' II wllere-upoo \bey are proInptIy declared&#13;
by aperta to be IIIlIIt &amp;r each other. Ileuon:&#13;
cIarinI an IDleI1Iaence leIl, bnllber and siater ''in ..... *" ~ 01 chectinc 8Dd I'OlC1Ieekq&#13;
-. ......s lIP 1IIIIIer lbe taNI 01lDtl and&#13;
-.II1II .. I8ch ....... cratc:bi&amp;" Da«odn and&#13;
..... C 8lIid. DdDdI1 .... Io. 8dlOCl1 r.&#13;
.. bid X'EiL_&#13;
N Wilson Steve Fossen, Roger Fisher. and a ancy wusou, ha bin .&#13;
.few-other musicians. They ve com ed .theu&#13;
talents and voices to make an album tha! will be&#13;
around for quite a few summers.&#13;
The girls sound like Grace (Jeffers,on. ~tarship)&#13;
Slick, play acoustic guitar and flute ~ to Ian&#13;
Anderson of Jethro Tull, and Ioo~~en limes be~&#13;
that both above-mentloned musicians .. '1'!'" lyncs&#13;
catcby as.is the melody. The music IS gentle. are .&#13;
haunting and enchanting.&#13;
Their AM hits uCrazy on You" and uMagic Man"&#13;
are not even the best.sets on the album. "Dr.earnboat&#13;
Annie " the title cut, carnes you away (If not&#13;
careful). "White Lightning and Wine" picks up the&#13;
tempo aod deliveres a welcomed change of P~.&#13;
Critics like to he cynical of talent that mushrooms'&#13;
overnight but HE~T leaves little r~?,. f~&#13;
criticism. LIke it says on the record sleeve. this IS&#13;
for each of you."ltcouldn·t be any mo!e true.&#13;
BASIC SKILLS&#13;
OPEN 'HEARING&#13;
Greenquist 101&#13;
Thursday, September 30, 1976&#13;
3 :'30 p.m. - 5: 30 p.m.&#13;
The Basic Skills Subcommittee of the Academic&#13;
Policies Committee encourages students, faCUlty.&#13;
and staff of UW·Parksldeto attend a public hearing on&#13;
a DRAFT of the proposed report on testing&#13;
procedures, goals, specific skills, and monitoring of&#13;
the program to be in effect for the fall semester of&#13;
1977. The report on the proposed program will affect&#13;
all freshmen and.transfer students admitted for that&#13;
semester. The Faculty Senate will receive the final&#13;
details of the program early in the spring semester.&#13;
but our subcommittee needs approval of the general&#13;
outlines before it can wqrk out these details.&#13;
The Subcommittee was charged to develop and monitor the&#13;
program mandated by the Senate last March when it resolved. as.&#13;
part of the approval of the COP Report, that:&#13;
"An effective student needs to read, write, speak Engl.i.sb, use&#13;
basic mathematical skills. and be able to utilize library resources.&#13;
We propose that all degree candidates he tested In these areas at&#13;
admission' thai a suitable series of courses, tutorials, and&#13;
programn:ed Instruction be established;and that a student enroll in&#13;
these courses until an acceptable level of competence Is achieved.&#13;
Continued demonstration of competence must be enCQuraged and&#13;
expected throughout the University. c&#13;
A student must complete this Basic Skills Requirement no later&#13;
than the end of three semesters (or Its equivalent) In order to&#13;
continue as a student at Parkside."&#13;
Section I of the report sets forth the overall goals. defines three&#13;
general levels of competence. and suggests individual skills which&#13;
3I'l! examples of what a student should he able to do at each level.&#13;
The three levels of competence listed for each of the gollls are:&#13;
Levell: The level generally thought of as that of a b1ghschool&#13;
graduate with adequate preparation for college freslunan work.&#13;
Level 11: The level generally thought of as that of a college&#13;
sophomore with adequate preparation for entry Into specialized or&#13;
gpper·level courses. The student must show competence at tbIs&#13;
level during the sophomore year.&#13;
Level III:The level generally thought of as that of a university&#13;
graduate; this level will vary considerably. depending upon the&#13;
student·s major field.&#13;
Section 11 describes the general outlines of the tesllng program.&#13;
Section 111 discusses the teacbing programs in the same Iroad&#13;
outline as was used In Section 11. •&#13;
SectIon IV contains both some suggestions for the 'academlc&#13;
regulations which would apply to the program and some general&#13;
statements about tbe program's governance. advising. and test&#13;
administration. .&#13;
Several copies of the Report DRAFT are available&#13;
at the Information Klosk.,d a few are on reserve at&#13;
the library-learning Center Reference Qesk.&#13;
The Subcommittee welcomes your wrItten comments&#13;
an the DRAFT. Please direct them to Beecham&#13;
Robinson. Chairman. Baalc Skills Subcommittee,&#13;
0115 F Wl-lC.&#13;
We hope to see yOUat the Public Hearing on Sep- tember 30.&#13;
0 HE PARKSIDE RA GER September 22, 1976&#13;
' eart produce winners&#13;
" "The Revenge of fa rite cuts are " the Reaper, ,, and "Morning&#13;
Vera ,.._,"; ,, "Sinful Love, ua...,u,&#13;
N ancy Wi.lson Steve Fossen, Roger Fisher, and a , . f other musicians. They have combmed their&#13;
~nts and voices to make an albwn tha! will be&#13;
around for quite a few summers. Final" th. lbum to both high and&#13;
1 would recommend. 15 a Most simply put, it moderate dedble LP listeners.&#13;
The girls sound like Grace (Jeffers_on_ ~tarship)&#13;
Slick play acoustic guitar and flute Slffilmr to Ian&#13;
Ande~son of Jethro Tull, and too~ ~en times be~er&#13;
that both above-mentioned musicians .. T~e lyrics&#13;
are catchy as is the melody. The music 1s gentle,&#13;
haunting and enchanting.&#13;
is good music from,aOyunit!!~ ~~? Well, name&#13;
What makes the s · · can&#13;
anothe band where most of the mus1c1~ nd&#13;
r ds d percuss10n a either play guitar, keyboar , an&#13;
all the band members can handle vocals. .&#13;
• Bl O ·sier Cult will be in the Chicago-&#13;
. uke: area around November with a laser&#13;
Their AM. hits "Crazy on You" and "Magic Man"&#13;
are not even the best .sets on t~e albwn. "Dr_eamboat&#13;
Annie," the title c~t, carries _yo?, a~ay (if not&#13;
careful). "White Lightning and Wme picks up the&#13;
tempo and deliveres a welcomed change of pace.&#13;
light sh From hat information I've gathered&#13;
· ood in concert and from the album, I they are ery g · 11 tell they are excellent in the studio as we . .&#13;
HEART (MRS-SOOS) Dreamboat Annie has got ~o&#13;
be the most talked about and bought al~um thiS&#13;
Critics like to be cynical of talent that mushrooms·&#13;
overnight but HE4RT leaves little room for&#13;
criticism. Like it says on the record sleeve, "this is&#13;
for each of you." It couldn't be any mo!e true.&#13;
Good reason for this too. For being new, summer. , ex the group has gone past probably ~yo~e s to ~&#13;
pectation and produced an album that 15 going&#13;
a''Inonster''&#13;
This Canadian based band consists of Ann and&#13;
renders pleasure&#13;
ood. And we are shocked.&#13;
Dr. in as born a dizygotic twin; he has a&#13;
f le counterpart. Brother and sister were, by&#13;
con ntional tandards, "monsters." Their&#13;
phy ical deformit es made them grotesque&#13;
tures; creatures resembling stone-age man.&#13;
Too ugly to be included in the immediate lives of&#13;
their althy parents, Daffodil and sister Eliza&#13;
lated from the world, "entombed in a&#13;
old mansion" in the mountains of Vermont.&#13;
Th mansion was redesigned to accommodate the&#13;
huge, freakishly objectionable children and a staff&#13;
·ants hired to care for them. Mother and&#13;
F th in 'led their offspring once a year-on&#13;
fodil' and Eliza's birthday.&#13;
The children had been diagnosed as hopeless&#13;
morons. In actuality, Daffodil and Eliza were exly&#13;
intelligent but, in deference to their&#13;
ts' ill ·ons and, moreover, because " all the&#13;
ormati we received about the planet we were&#13;
indic ted that idiots were lovely things to be,"&#13;
the • cultivated idiocy.'' In public, they said "Buh"&#13;
"Duh," drooled and rolled their eyes. They also&#13;
• rted' and laughed.''&#13;
In pivate, howe\'er, they conswned volumes of&#13;
Ii ture..from the mall.5ion's vast library. They&#13;
de d philosophies, protested Darwin, learned&#13;
and foreign languages. Still, their&#13;
trll1iance d not impress them: "We did not itch to&#13;
o Intelligence in public. We did not think&#13;
· ence as being ~ful or attractive ... we&#13;
t of it as being one more example of our&#13;
BASIC SKILLS&#13;
OPEN HEARING&#13;
Greenquist 101&#13;
Thursday, September 30, 1976&#13;
3:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m.&#13;
The Basic Skills Subcommittee of the Academic&#13;
Policies Committee encourages students, faculty,&#13;
and staff of UW-Parkside to attend a public hearing on&#13;
a DRAFT of the proposed report on testing&#13;
procedures, goals, specific skills, and monitoring of&#13;
the program to be in effect for the fall semester of&#13;
1977. The report on the proposed program will affect&#13;
all freshmen and transfer students admitted for that&#13;
semester. The Faculty Senate will receive the final&#13;
details of the program early in the spring semester,&#13;
but our subcommittee needs approval of the general&#13;
outlines before it can w~rk out these details.&#13;
The Subcommittee was charged to develop and monitor the&#13;
program mandated by the Senate last March when it resol'ved, as.&#13;
part of the approval of the COP Report, that:&#13;
"An effective student needs to read, write, speak English, use&#13;
basic mathematical skills, and be able to utilize library resources.&#13;
We propose that all degree candidates be tested in these areas at&#13;
admission; that a suitable series of courses, tutorials, a~&#13;
programmed instruction be established ;and that a student enroll m&#13;
these courses until an acceptable level of competence is achieved.&#13;
Continued demonstration of competence must be encouraged and&#13;
expected throughout the University. •&#13;
A student must complete this Basic Skills Requirement no later&#13;
than the end of three semesters ( or its equivalent) in order to&#13;
continue as a student at Parkside."&#13;
Section 1 of the report sets forth the overall goals, defines three&#13;
general levels of competence, and suggests individual skills which&#13;
are examples of what a student should be able to do at each level.&#13;
The three levels of competence listed for each of the goals are:&#13;
Level 1: The level generally thought of as that of a high school&#13;
graduate with adequate preparation for college freshman work.&#13;
Level 11: The level generally thought of as that of a college&#13;
sophomore with adequate preparation for entry into specialized or&#13;
upper-level courses. The student must show competence at this&#13;
level during the sophomore year.&#13;
Level 111: The level generally thought of as that of a university&#13;
graduate; this level will vary considerably, depending upon the&#13;
student's major field.&#13;
Section 11 describes the general outlines of the testing program.&#13;
Section Ill discusses the teaching programs in the same broad&#13;
outline as was used in Section 11. *&#13;
SecUon lV contains both some suggestions for the ·academic&#13;
regulatiom which would apply to the program and some general&#13;
statements about the program's governance, advising, and test administration.&#13;
Several copies of the Report DRAFT are available&#13;
at the Information Kiosk and a few are on reserve at&#13;
the Library-Learning Center Reference Desk.&#13;
The Subcommittee welcomes your written comments&#13;
oo the DRAFT. Please direct them to Beecham&#13;
Robinson, Chairman, Basic Skills Subcommittee, D11s F WL-LC.&#13;
We hope to see you at the Public Hearing on Sep- tember 30. &#13;
POWI pow, cheerleading&#13;
meetings scheduled&#13;
Any students Interested In&#13;
forming a porn porn squad should&#13;
attend a meeting Tuesday,&#13;
September 28 at 6:00 p.m, on the&#13;
2nd floor of the Physical&#13;
.Education Building. If unable to&#13;
attend the mee.ling, students&#13;
should sign up In,the PE offices.&#13;
Additional meetings for all&#13;
those students interested in'&#13;
trying out for the cheerleadlng&#13;
squad will be Monday and&#13;
Tuesday, September r1 and 28.&#13;
The meetings and subsequent&#13;
practiees will start at 7:00 p.rn,&#13;
on the 2nd floor of the Physical&#13;
Education Building. If unable to&#13;
attend either meetmi:, students&#13;
should sign up at the PE Offices.&#13;
Post-· ----~------&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
experience as a Dean or Chan.&#13;
cellor. I&#13;
3. The new Dean of Faculty will .&#13;
also have to be open to the&#13;
commuter student as well as the&#13;
rest of the UW·P adult com.&#13;
munity.&#13;
An extensive advertising&#13;
campaign was started to July&#13;
with the ads going out all over the&#13;
country. The ads, In letter form,&#13;
described UW·P, job&#13;
qua1lfications and the job. The&#13;
Dean of Faculty will be the chief&#13;
academic officer and will have&#13;
adminia1rative control over the 8&#13;
divisions, the three interdivisional&#13;
centers and respons1~ty&#13;
over all faculty matters.&#13;
The new Dean would. report&#13;
directly to Chancellor Guskin.&#13;
Mter the deadline for receipt of&#13;
appllcattons, they will be&#13;
reviewed by the cormnittee and&#13;
narrowed from the 150 submitted&#13;
as of the 15th of September and&#13;
will be cut to approximately 30.&#13;
Professor Kleine said that once&#13;
the 30 had been chosen, they&#13;
would visit the uw·p and meet&#13;
with students, faculty, senior&#13;
.staff and Division ChaIrmen In a&#13;
series of open meetings with the&#13;
public also Invited. The 30 will&#13;
also talk In closed session with&#13;
Chancellor Guskin. In addition,&#13;
the resumes of the applicants will&#13;
soon be In the litrary, available&#13;
to everyone. Any suggestions&#13;
should be written out and taken to&#13;
the office of the cormnittee In the&#13;
Library, Room 'J£J7&#13;
t" University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
'1T~&#13;
Fi~ta .&#13;
Acapulco&#13;
BRANIFF .&#13;
Sen leSter Break JanJary 6-13, 'S17&#13;
$339 COMPLETE .Triple occupancy&#13;
Includes:&#13;
• Round trip via Braniff Airlines .&#13;
• Seven nights lodging in the luxury beachfront&#13;
La Palapa Hotel.&#13;
• Round trip ground transfers including&#13;
porterage .&#13;
• Tips and taxes on the above services.&#13;
• Complimentary bonus book good for dollar&#13;
discounts.&#13;
• An Acapulco orientation evening co~plete&#13;
with films, slides and refreshments "tipco"&#13;
• For application forms or additional&#13;
information contact: Parkside Union&#13;
Office 553-2200.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER septem ..... 22, 197' 11&#13;
Reviews-----------'---&#13;
•&#13;
..... tlnued from page 1 actiClllS, such as refused requem&#13;
for waiver of major requirements&#13;
and deletion of portIClIlS of !be&#13;
student's transaipl.&#13;
The recruitment portion of !be&#13;
SRAC would be dropped enlirely,&#13;
according to tbe proposed&#13;
legislation, and the admiIsIons&#13;
portions of SRAC duties .would&#13;
then be perfClr1DOd by MC, wbIdl&#13;
is to consIat of five facu1ty ~&#13;
members and two studenta appoInled&#13;
by the Chancellor. The&#13;
functions of the FInanda1 Ala&#13;
Committee, "bich are to&#13;
establisb policies cODcerning&#13;
student loa08, stud .... t employment&#13;
and fInatIct.l aldI.&#13;
to be called the Academic Actions&#13;
Committee.&#13;
The new cormnittee, which bas&#13;
to be approved by the F'!.culty .&#13;
Senate, will also be designed to&#13;
function as an appeal board for&#13;
students who wish to appeal&#13;
Teaching excellence'--&#13;
continued fnm page 1 said Shueard, who bas alreactY 8pOII8IlnC! a c0nvocation&#13;
and an orientation for new InstrUClnili.&#13;
Shueard stressed that ..... are not a complalnt&#13;
department. If students have suggelllions, they can&#13;
&lt;:&lt;me to the SteerIng CommIttee meetInp."&#13;
Shueard suggested that if a student sees room for&#13;
improvement in an Inalructor, he sbouId approach&#13;
the Instructor and subtly advlae him to get&#13;
lIsaistance from the Center.&#13;
But Shueard said that doesn't mean a student&#13;
sbouJd tell an Instructor that he-ebe Is Iro ,."pet .. t,&#13;
"There are _ys of doing this that are not offensive.&#13;
What ... hope Is that students will -en gentle and&#13;
subtle pressure tbrougb the lndIvIcIuallnstructor or&#13;
d1v1.s1onto call attention to the fact that the ......&#13;
could improve his teaching."&#13;
fidenllal basis is available, so that "if a faculty&#13;
member has some pedagogical problem, he or she&#13;
can get help here," according to ShuClll'i, who said&#13;
that some of the best teachers on campus are interested&#13;
In the Center because they realize they are&#13;
not perfect. "We asswne that !be teaching here is&#13;
already very good What ... are after is beUer&#13;
teachlng-there is room for improvement in&#13;
everyone," be said.&#13;
The other goal Shucard cited for the Center for&#13;
Teaching Excellence is instructional development.&#13;
"We will be helping individual faculty members at&#13;
their request to make changes In their teaching that&#13;
may improve the teachlng-learnlng experience,"&#13;
Get the great new taste&#13;
in mocha, coconut,&#13;
banana or&#13;
strawberry.&#13;
The Portable Hufy:&#13;
30 PIlIOOFAND READY 10 GO&#13;
Kickers. JOproof. CI976. Kickers lid .. Hartford. Conn&#13;
-&#13;
·rom porn, cheerleading&#13;
meetings scheduled&#13;
Any students interested in&#13;
forming a porn porn squad should&#13;
attend a meeting Tuesday,&#13;
September 28 at 6:00 p.m. on the&#13;
2nd floor of the Physical&#13;
· Education Building. If unable to&#13;
attend the mee.ting, students&#13;
should sign up in the PE offices.&#13;
Additional meetings for all&#13;
those students interested in&#13;
trying out for the cheerleading&#13;
squad will be Monday and&#13;
Tuesday, September 'l:l and 28.&#13;
The meetings and subsequent&#13;
practices will start at 7:00 p.m.&#13;
on the 2nd floor of the Physical&#13;
Education Building. If unable to&#13;
attend either meeting, students&#13;
should sign up at the PE Offices.&#13;
Post~-----&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
experience as a Dean or Chancellor.&#13;
&#13;
3. The new Dean of Faculty will&#13;
also have to be open to the&#13;
commuter student as well as the&#13;
rest of the UW-P adult community.&#13;
&#13;
An extensive advertising&#13;
campaign was started 1n July&#13;
with the ads going out all over the&#13;
country. The ads, in letter form,&#13;
described UW-P, job&#13;
qualifications and the· job. The&#13;
Dean of Faculty will be the chief&#13;
academic officer and will have&#13;
administrative control over the 8&#13;
divisions, the three interdivisional&#13;
centers and responsibility&#13;
over all faculty matters.&#13;
The new Dean would report&#13;
directly to Chancellor Guskin.&#13;
After the deadline for receipt of&#13;
applic~tions, they will be&#13;
reviewed by the committee and&#13;
narrowed from the 150 submitted&#13;
as of the 15th of September and&#13;
will be cut to approximately 30.&#13;
Professor Kleine said that once&#13;
the 30 had been chosen, they&#13;
would visit the UW-P and meet&#13;
with students, faculty, senior&#13;
staff and Division Chairmen in a&#13;
series of open meetings with the&#13;
public also invited. The 30 will&#13;
also talk in closed session with&#13;
Chancellor Guskin. In addition,&#13;
the resumes of the applicants will&#13;
soon be in the library, available&#13;
to everyone. Any suggestions&#13;
should be written out and taken to&#13;
the office of the committee in the&#13;
Library, Room '11,7&#13;
~ ,U University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
~rr i~&#13;
Fi~ta&#13;
Acapulco&#13;
BRANIFF -&#13;
Semester Break Jal'1Ucl)' 6·13, W7&#13;
$339 COMPLETE Triple occupancy&#13;
Includes:&#13;
• Round trip via Braniff Airlines.&#13;
• Seven nights lodging in the luxury beachfront&#13;
La Palapa Hotel.&#13;
• Round trip ground transfers including&#13;
porterage.&#13;
• Tips and taxes on the above services.&#13;
• Complimentary bonus book good for dollar&#13;
discounts.&#13;
• An Acapulco orientation evening complete&#13;
with films, slides and refreshments "tipco"&#13;
• For application forms or additional&#13;
information contact: Parkside Union&#13;
Office 553-2200.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER September 22, 1976 11&#13;
Reviews-------- •&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
to be called the Academic Actions&#13;
Committee.&#13;
actions, such as refused requests&#13;
f&lt;r waiver of major requirements&#13;
and deletion of portions of the&#13;
student's transcript.&#13;
then be performed by MC, which&#13;
is to consist of fiv faculty&#13;
.. member and two tudents appointed&#13;
by the Chancellor. Th&#13;
functions of the Financial Aids&#13;
Committee, which are to&#13;
e tablish policies concerning&#13;
student loans, tudent employment&#13;
and financial a ds.&#13;
The new committee, which has&#13;
to be approved by the Faculty •&#13;
Senate, will also be designed to&#13;
function as an appeal board for&#13;
students who wish to appeal&#13;
The recruitment portion of the&#13;
SRAC would be dropped entirely,&#13;
according to the proposed&#13;
legislation, and the admissions&#13;
portions of SRAC duties would&#13;
Teaching excellence--&#13;
continued from page l&#13;
fidential basis is available, so that "if a faculty&#13;
member has some pedagogical problem, he or she&#13;
can get help here," according to Shucard, who said&#13;
that some of the best teachers on campus are interested&#13;
in the Center because they realize they are&#13;
not perfect. "We assume that the teaching here is&#13;
already very good. What we are after is better&#13;
teaching-there is room for improvement in&#13;
everyone," he said.&#13;
The other goal Shucard cited for the Center for&#13;
Teaching Excellence is instructional development.&#13;
"We will be helping individual faculty members at&#13;
their request to make changes in their teaching that&#13;
may improve the teaching-learning experience,"&#13;
Get the ~eat new taste&#13;
in mocna, coconut, -- banana or ........ -~ strawberry. '·&#13;
'&#13;
said Shucard, who has already sponsored a convocation&#13;
and an orientation for new instructor .&#13;
Shucard stressed that ''we are not a complaint&#13;
department. If students have suggestions, they can&#13;
come to the Steering Committee meetings."&#13;
Shucard suggested that if a student sees room for&#13;
improvement in an instructor, he should approach&#13;
the instructor and subtly advise him to get&#13;
assistance from the Center.&#13;
But Shucard said that doesn't mean a student&#13;
should tell an instructor that he-she is incompetent.&#13;
"There are ways of doing this that are not offensive.&#13;
What we hope is that students will exert gentle and&#13;
subUe pressure through the individual instructor or&#13;
division to call attention to the fact that the person&#13;
could improve his teaching."&#13;
The Portable fluty:&#13;
30 PROOF AND READY 1U GO&#13;
KJCkers. 30 proof. C1Q7t,, Kie er; Ltd . Hartford , Conn &#13;
12 THE PARKSIOE RANGER sep..... ...,. 22. 197'&#13;
earn&#13;
~~......pete&#13;
HIlls GGIf ColIne in St. John,&#13;
1ndIaa, Ibe boot !em PurdueCallmel&#13;
.... !be meet WIlli 317.&#13;
Rape CoIIop was --' willi&#13;
_ Pwbide lied with VaJpariao,&#13;
eedI stro bul&#13;
PubIde .... Ibe pI8yoff f Ibe&#13;
lIIInI pI.ce Inlpby.&#13;
Ra1 ZtIdnec led lbe IqUad wilb&#13;
75. lyJnc for fourth pfac.&#13;
nwIaI!st Abo IeeInc off were&#13;
Rick Pede....... 71: Steve&#13;
0lriIler-., D: (;ary I'utiewIl2.&#13;
D; aDd TIm Rwa. •.&#13;
er team slips&#13;
opens season&#13;
.,....."-&#13;
'nle ParbIde _', lennIa&#13;
...... wID ... bGme_&#13;
Friday -eaINt UW~ t .h ...s&#13;
CU1llll.- .1 3 pm.&#13;
1anIa7, Ibe _ wID flft&#13;
w.uee and UW. W1III __ .t ClIrlbaae&#13;
III • doable dual meet Jut&#13;
IanIa7 .1La 0-. P..uIde&#13;
....... by 'Lao-.l-g&#13;
IIld by ..Eq CIIn, 4 _ I&#13;
lbeoaJywtn ...&#13;
.Ielrifer ZaeIIIIte Oftr SIIe Sarles&#13;
of Eaa Calre 1-4.1-4. 7", ill • 0&#13;
2&#13;
...... 110 IIlIlldl r... lbooe&#13;
two _." aaId CMcb Barbar.&#13;
Ma1ll1llky. .",. pgy far&#13;
IIbove oars. ,.&#13;
cb .IlMlty speculated&#13;
the ..... due to • \acIt&#13;
of IInnclb ill \be 1Int...s __&#13;
poaitlol-. 'It·, _Ual&#13;
strq players ill&#13;
-- tIana r... but - ......"''1IIa 1biI. W.&#13;
wID lr)' cbaaclAI_ u-up ...s&#13;
IlopeflaIIy IIlat wID IIaIp "&#13;
la tIM compeUllOll ...-La~.""tII ....&#13;
.IalIInt 1floDtar. 1 IMl&#13;
to TerrI 7..otbaIben. ~1. ...&#13;
JoaaifeI' ZloobIb ....... Ied III 2""'" by Garbelt; ~&#13;
W AlIIIc.n.. G1lpped&#13;
to J RIIIdl... ~t.1 0 3 _1- III !be cIou1lIa matelles,&#13;
ol ...... ofKJl&#13;
tneI' IIldy f to&#13;
Swa_IoJ ... 1WIIDeI ..... "&#13;
.,....'h-.&#13;
'nle Raapr..,. aqud ,_&#13;
two SS ..... TriIIit)' CoIIap&#13;
IIld Jlllltiln CaDItt tooIa7 aDd&#13;
.... i S II"".&#13;
'nle _ wID In I to&#13;
Daorflolld. IIIIn* lbIa arwfar&#13;
• 3 • ad to RodlfanI.&#13;
...... f... ~y aner-',&#13;
I.&#13;
Aboul tile RocItfotd conteal,&#13;
11ondar_ staled, •.... w&#13;
Ibem tile jNIl two yean&#13;
-.I _ c-.. IooIt IOod to&#13;
IlilIa yew."&#13;
1WUIdo', \acIt of oIfaMe 4lIe&#13;
10 aDd )'Galli ill lbe&#13;
IIIkWlIId lad to two defeatl cIIIrq&#13;
jNIl It.&#13;
.- do 1" \be Rqen&#13;
IaI1 lD lJ.l 0lIaiID Clrdo ~I,&#13;
- 01 ..,. _IbotOllloallll&#13;
tIle w.&#13;
'1lIe Raapra lnl1ad W. wbaD&#13;
.......... aeond lbe oaIy&#13;
PalWdo ....&#13;
III • ~ Salllrday. lbe&#13;
• nn&#13;
Raapra ...... 1Ml, lbiI lime to&#13;
NortIlera II1IDoiI, 1-4.&#13;
Eweo tbooIIb we 1Ml, It was&#13;
~ • IOod pille. W. bavea'l&#13;
bealea tbom ill&amp;Iz y.... and lbiI&#13;
IIlbe lint lime wew come lbiI&#13;
doae." IIald Coacb Hend .......&#13;
"Our defe... rea!Iy kepi It&#13;
doae We'd be baving difllculty&#13;
wIlboul lhe ItInd of defenslv.&#13;
play Ibe t.un has beelI showing&#13;
this statOn 11&#13;
'Stev. 8endelbaell has beelI&#13;
0011I&amp; exceptionally ""n. whiell&#13;
"" expect Ills play in lbiI game&#13;
should bring him one step e10ser&#13;
to becoming an All·American lhis&#13;
year."&#13;
ItJj far .. off_ve play goes,&#13;
lbe Kaneers. accordIIlg to Coaell&#13;
11eudei_. have beelI getlinll&#13;
opportlimtlea to ac..-e." bul ""&#13;
just.vea' beelI .bIe to pullt in&#13;
lbe nel&#13;
ParItslde '. rec..-d stands at ~z.&#13;
I&#13;
(kt September II. lbe Rangers&#13;
played to. W tI. as UW.Madlson&#13;
aeond • Jut minute goal in&#13;
Mwhm.&#13;
ParUide gaaIs were ac..-ed by&#13;
Earl Campbell, and Descb&#13;
ImIaW. wbooe came OIl 11II assial&#13;
., MIIte 0Ieeeu.&#13;
0; and !be No. 2 team of Jean&#13;
QweIII • Pal MlIIIller .... losers&#13;
to Mary Llnrson-Gioria HaJver.&#13;
all; 6-1. 1-3.&#13;
ApIDIt Eou Claire, dropping&#13;
lbelr matches were Hmlter to&#13;
Ilorotby Murphy; ....... : Carina&#13;
to Am Heelen; s.t, &amp;04; CoveIJi.&#13;
F.lcbtnel' to Unda JOIl3llI&gt;JIlIIine&#13;
Ilaw\esld: ~I.W; 1W-g.1la1az&amp;.&#13;
Maneer to KIm Grabam-Kalhy&#13;
Sleinpl; "I, "I.&#13;
IIIlhe two "-til coming up lbiI&#13;
..and. Coacb MaIinsky lbinIts&#13;
lbe teun wID ha... less trouble&#13;
!ban in lbe __ opener.&#13;
"W. sbouId hove better scores,&#13;
especi.lly lrom o. 3 singles and&#13;
ill lbe doubles C&lt;IIIlpOtlllon. I&#13;
lbinIt "" should hove an easier&#13;
lime, .tleaJt .gainst Carthag.,"&#13;
said Coaell Ma1iDIIty.&#13;
Tbe 'lJlI8I! II worlling on improvtnc&#13;
\be ~ rec..-d' of last&#13;
year'. team. wbicb iacluded&#13;
Kathy Feicbtner. who ... aamed&#13;
to \be aIkonfa .nce second team&#13;
at lbe WiacoIwin W&lt;men·. Intercolle",te&#13;
AlbieUc Coa.&#13;
ler.nee F.lelltaer i. •&#13;
sopbomor. from Racin •&#13;
(HorIlct)&#13;
AIao retw:nin&amp; from last y......&#13;
...... are junior Zuehlke and&#13;
sophomor.. Cov.II,. Judy&#13;
~Id and Balazs.&#13;
FresIman unger and her&#13;
80pb0ulOh! teammates icbols.&#13;
&lt;:arias and Hun_ are also ex.&#13;
pected to see acllon donng lhe&#13;
--&#13;
) BASIC SKILLS~&#13;
OPEN&#13;
HEARING&#13;
Greenquist 101&#13;
Thursday, .&#13;
September 30,1916&#13;
3:30 p.m. - 5:30 p•••&#13;
,.-&#13;
Milwaukee School 01&#13;
EnginOerlng, 483.&#13;
A three-way lie resulted for&#13;
medalist atBO points. The playoff&#13;
was won by John Eckman of&#13;
Green Bay, while Rangers Rouse&#13;
and ZUZinec sellled for second&#13;
and third. 'ed&#13;
A three way tie also end up&#13;
r... fourth place. Mark Kuyawa&#13;
finisbed fifth in that playoff.&#13;
The Rangers faced Marquett.&#13;
yesterday in their only dual meet&#13;
of the season in Milw!'ukee.&#13;
Otber teams in the meet were&#13;
Hope College No. 2, 413; Sl&#13;
Josepb.lndiana. 415: Purdue·&#13;
calumet No.2: 416: Indiana&#13;
Uaiv.r.ity.Nortbwesl. 419;&#13;
OlIvet Co1le&amp;., 433: and PurdueN..-lb&#13;
Central, 456.&#13;
Saturday.1be Rangers won the&#13;
five team Green Bay Tour·&#13;
namenl.t Brown County Country&#13;
Cub. -&#13;
ParItslde lDlaI1ed 410: followed&#13;
by Platteville wiib 415: St. N... •&#13;
bert, 428; UW-Green Bay, 433: and&#13;
Runners&#13;
place&#13;
third&#13;
In lbeir opening meet of the&#13;
_, Ibe rum .... placed third&#13;
in • Ii~ meet bere, September&#13;
II.&#13;
Leading the Rangers was Ray&#13;
Fredericksen, who finished liflb&#13;
willi a lime of 26:32. WlIUIingthe&#13;
meet was Eastern Illinois' Reo&#13;
Rorem, willi a lime of 25: 36.&#13;
The meel was scored twice,&#13;
once as a five-team meet, in·&#13;
eluding winner Eastern ll!inois,&#13;
and once as a quadrangular with&#13;
UW-Stev.ns Poin!. Parkside&#13;
finished second in the quad,&#13;
followed by Carthag. and UW· I'&#13;
Whitewater. Includes: .,,"&gt; - 'il1 KIm Merritt ran unopposed in , •&#13;
women's competition, with a (-til ~ l't\""'.i$' .&#13;
• Roundtrip bus fore ~ .. .. lime of 30:45. •• •&#13;
Otber men rwmers were Milte • Condominium (4 to a room) •&#13;
~;~~:;.:: ~~::: .•........• Lift tickets, donees, roces ...ond ...more&#13;
31st; ,rIm H.iring. 36111; Jolm&#13;
VanDen Brandt 41st; Greg 5ign-op in UW.P Union Office&#13;
Juliell, 44th; Al Halbur, 51sl; Bill •.,.&#13;
Werve, 52nd: and Joe' Carey" For more info call 553.2278&#13;
l4lh:. ...!:*~.!.~. ====::==:::=:=:~~..&#13;
Why do some people think&#13;
Bud.is sort of special?&#13;
-&#13;
Park City, Utah&#13;
JAN. 1-9&#13;
PARK51DE ACTI¥tTlES BOARD " .. ~&#13;
invites you to ...~ •&#13;
.~:~ PARK CITY .•'4&#13;
WINTER ..&#13;
FESTIVAL&#13;
'205&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
malie a diJference.)&#13;
"&#13;
-&#13;
E.F. Madrigrano&#13;
12 TH PARKSIDE RANGER September 22, 1976&#13;
oc&#13;
t ant&#13;
e&#13;
t. John&#13;
er team, slips&#13;
ord stands at 0-2-&#13;
1.&#13;
On September 11, the Rangers&#13;
yed to a 2-2 tie as UW-Madison&#13;
minute goal in&#13;
eason&#13;
Other t~ in the meet were&#13;
Hope College No. 2, 413; St.&#13;
Joseph-Indiana, 415; PurdueCalumet&#13;
·o. 2; 416; Indiana&#13;
University-Northwest, 419;&#13;
61ivet College, 433; and Purdue-&#13;
'orth Central, 456.&#13;
Saturday, the Rangers won the&#13;
fi\'e team Green Bay Tournament&#13;
at Brown County Country&#13;
Club. - Parkside totalled 410; followed&#13;
by P1atteville with 415; St. Norbert,&#13;
428:UW-GreenBay,433; and&#13;
Runners&#13;
place&#13;
third&#13;
In their opening meet of the&#13;
season, the runners placed third&#13;
in a five-team meet here, September&#13;
11.&#13;
Leading the Rangers was Ray&#13;
Fredericksen, who finished fifth&#13;
with a time of 26:32. Winning the&#13;
meet was Eastern Illinois' Reo&#13;
Rorem, with a time of 25:36.&#13;
The meet was scored twice,&#13;
once as a five-team meet, including&#13;
winner Eastern Illinois,&#13;
and once as a quadrangular with&#13;
UW-Stevens Point. Parkside&#13;
finished second in the quad,&#13;
followed by Carthage and UWWhitewater.&#13;
&#13;
Kim Merritt ran unopposed in&#13;
women's competition, with . a&#13;
time of 30:45.&#13;
Other men runners were Mike&#13;
Rivers, 13th; Gary Priem, 14th;&#13;
Jeff Miller, 25th; Lee Allinger,&#13;
31st; Jim Heiring, 36th; John&#13;
VanDen Brandt 41st; Greg&#13;
Julich, 44th; Al Halbur, 51st; Bill&#13;
Werve, 52nd; and Joe Carey,&#13;
54th.&#13;
School of Milwaukee&#13;
Engineering, 483.&#13;
A three-way tie resulted for&#13;
medalist at 80 points. The playoff&#13;
was won by John Eckman of&#13;
Green Bay, while Rangers Rouse&#13;
and Zuzinec settled for second&#13;
and third. · A three way tie also ended up&#13;
for fourth place. Mark Kuyawa&#13;
finished fifth in that playoff.&#13;
The Rangers faced Marquette&#13;
yesterday in their only dual meet&#13;
of the season in Milw~ukee.&#13;
BASIC SKILLS&#13;
OPEN&#13;
HEARING&#13;
Greenquist 101&#13;
Thursday,&#13;
,September 30, 1976&#13;
3:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m.&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVtTIES BOARD '*' .• $t&#13;
invites you to .-~~ ..&#13;
'&#13;
-~-&#13;
PARK CITY -~·~&#13;
WINTER * ·FESTIVAL&#13;
Park City, Utah&#13;
JAN. 1-9&#13;
s2os&#13;
Includes:&#13;
• Roundtrip bus fare&#13;
• Condominium (4 to&#13;
~-· • Lift tickets, dances, races ... and ... more&#13;
Sign-up in UW-P Union Office&#13;
For more info call 553-2278&#13;
Why do sonie people think&#13;
Bud. is sort of special?&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
ma lee a difference.)&#13;
.&#13;
When you say Budweiser., you've said it- all! , INC , ST lOUIS&#13;
E.F. Madrigrano </text>
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          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 5, issue 3, September 22, 1976</text>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="66029">
              <text>Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="66030">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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              <text>1976-09-22</text>
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          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="66034">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66035">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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          <name>Publisher</name>
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