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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Budget to be cut&#13;
</text>
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            <text>Volume 5, issue 4</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Staff unaware&#13;
The Parkside------- of rules&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No.4 Wednesday, September 29, 1976&#13;
Enrollment down 400&#13;
Budget to be cut&#13;
by Robert Hoffman&#13;
The segregated fees budget will&#13;
be cut by up to $33,100 if&#13;
enrollment figures stay at their&#13;
present levels.&#13;
Head count enrollment has&#13;
fallen by 600 from projected&#13;
figures and is 400 less than last&#13;
year's enrollment.&#13;
These cuts will hurt the student&#13;
union the most. Tony Totero,&#13;
coordinator of student&#13;
programmiog, said that possible&#13;
cutbacks could mean reductions&#13;
in the coffee house, hours of the&#13;
Union or cutting hack on dances&#13;
and activities.&#13;
Only half of the Union's activities&#13;
budget is from segregated&#13;
fees. The other balf is raised from&#13;
revenues from dances and the&#13;
activities staged. This means&#13;
that as-activities and dances are&#13;
cut back, revenue would fall&#13;
leading to further cutbacks.&#13;
Totero said that if students&#13;
want activities and dances they&#13;
will bave to support them. He was&#13;
encouraged by the response to&#13;
the first dance, saying "revenue&#13;
from tbe dance exceeded our&#13;
projections. If this trend continues&#13;
the Union will be able to&#13;
afford to get good bands."&#13;
He also sounded a note of&#13;
pessimism, saying "its too bad&#13;
that this (budget cutbacks) had&#13;
to occur the first year, but we'll&#13;
just have to play it by ear and see&#13;
how it goes."&#13;
A group from the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board is being set up,&#13;
to determine, as the year goes&#13;
along, what cuts should be made.&#13;
Students are encouraged to&#13;
stop by the Union and make&#13;
suggestions to the committee on&#13;
further activities.&#13;
Other areas that receive&#13;
segregated fees will not be as&#13;
drastically affected by the cutback.&#13;
The athletics, housing, health,&#13;
and transportation departments&#13;
will make up for the deficit by&#13;
drawing on reserve carry-over&#13;
funds. -&#13;
Nurse Edith Isenberg of the&#13;
bealth department said that "the&#13;
doctor will still be in on Fridays&#13;
or by appointment and all&#13;
medical services will continue to&#13;
be free."&#13;
Declines of this nature will not&#13;
affect Parkside yet, according to&#13;
Gary Goetz, director of budgeting&#13;
and planning analysis.&#13;
Goetz said that tbere "will be&#13;
no cutbacks of classes and absolutely&#13;
no cutbacks of staff."&#13;
However, should enrollments&#13;
continue to decline in the next few&#13;
years, Parkside would face the&#13;
unpleasant fact of less state aid&#13;
and cuthacks in classes and staff.&#13;
As to why enrollment "declined,&#13;
David Holle, specialist in&#13;
budgeting and planning analysis,&#13;
said that "committees are being&#13;
formed to look into the matter&#13;
and will, by the end of october,&#13;
have some recommendations."&#13;
Business report finished&#13;
by Christopher Clausen&#13;
On July 13, 1976 the Chancellor's&#13;
Task Force on the&#13;
business management program&#13;
issued a report recommending&#13;
seven changes in the program.&#13;
This task force was another in the&#13;
series of committies created by&#13;
Chancellor Guskin's original&#13;
Committee of Principals.&#13;
The changes in the program in&#13;
the opinions of several task force&#13;
members are long overdue. They&#13;
Board disputed&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
At its september meeting on&#13;
Tuesday, sept. 21, the Faculty&#13;
senate voted 12-11 to recommit&#13;
legislation which would abolish&#13;
the Faculty Fund Board,&#13;
established in 1973,and replace it&#13;
with a Research Board.&#13;
The functions of the Research&#13;
Board would 'be to "advise the&#13;
Administration regarding means&#13;
of stimulating and supporting&#13;
academic research and creative&#13;
activity." and to "independently&#13;
generate and administer funds&#13;
for tbe support of academic&#13;
research and creative activity."&#13;
Richard Keehn, associate&#13;
professor of economics and&#13;
chairman of tbe Faculty Fund&#13;
Board which would be&#13;
eliminated, said he objected to&#13;
the proposed legislation on the&#13;
basis that his committee was not&#13;
shown the document before it was&#13;
put on the agenda. "We object to&#13;
the fact that we were not given&#13;
the chance to see the finalized&#13;
document before this afternoon,"&#13;
said Keehn.&#13;
He also objected to the fact that&#13;
the members of the new com-&#13;
.mittee would be appointed rather&#13;
than elected, and that the&#13;
Research Board would be&#13;
"purely advisory to the administration,"&#13;
in debate before&#13;
the legislation was sent back to&#13;
the University Committee for&#13;
overhauling.&#13;
According to University&#13;
Committee chairman Larry&#13;
Deutsch, "We hope to establish a&#13;
group with the authorization to&#13;
advise the administration on&#13;
these matters." Chancellor&#13;
Guskin, who supports the change,&#13;
said that "this new proposal&#13;
would prevent our having to&#13;
appoint an ad-hoc committee&#13;
each year to take care of&#13;
allocating the money for&#13;
research. "&#13;
In other Faculty senate news, a&#13;
new chairman was unanimously&#13;
elected at the sept. 21 meeting.&#13;
He is Michael Marron, associate&#13;
professor of chemistry.&#13;
The senate also voted to permit&#13;
the engineering science division&#13;
to organize officially now that it&#13;
has nine faculty members in its&#13;
discipline .including seven&#13;
associate professors and two full&#13;
professors.&#13;
feel that once tbe changes are&#13;
implemented, Parkside's&#13;
business program will compare&#13;
favorably with any program in&#13;
the state. There are five major&#13;
areas in which the task force&#13;
recommended changes:&#13;
organization, faculty, the undergraduate&#13;
program, the&#13;
graduate program and accreditation&#13;
of the School of&#13;
Modern Industry.&#13;
The recommendations called&#13;
for incorporation of the three&#13;
divisions within the School of&#13;
Modern Industry. The task force&#13;
would also like the various&#13;
personnel courses combined into&#13;
one in order to have continuity in&#13;
the overall business program.&#13;
The third step would be to appoint&#13;
someone over the entire business&#13;
program to handle not only undergraduate&#13;
and graduate&#13;
program development, but also&#13;
faculty development.&#13;
The task force felt that the&#13;
present facully lacks sufficienUy&#13;
qualified instructors. They feel&#13;
that 75 percent of the staff should&#13;
hold a PhD or it's equivalent. The&#13;
task force recommended this&#13;
hiring policy have the highest&#13;
priority to gather permanent&#13;
senior leadership to effectively&#13;
guide the School of Modem industry.&#13;
"'Recommendations were also&#13;
made for the undergraduate pro&#13;
gram with accreditation from&#13;
the American Association of&#13;
Collegiate Schools of Business&#13;
(MCSB), the student would have&#13;
to blend his professional studies&#13;
»00with a liberal arts program.&#13;
continued Oft ,... S&#13;
by John McKl.... ey&#13;
The draft copy of "Rules&#13;
Governing Academic Staff"&#13;
created by the Interim Academic&#13;
Staff Advisory Committee has&#13;
been completed, sent to Olancellor&#13;
Guskin for conunent and&#13;
returned to the committee for&#13;
further action. Committee&#13;
members admit that only a rew of&#13;
the persons affected by tbe new&#13;
rules even know that the draft&#13;
copy exists.&#13;
According to the committee,&#13;
chaired by Carla Stolfie, head of&#13;
the Public services Division of&#13;
the Ubrary-Learning Center, the&#13;
committee's meetings have been&#13;
open and academic staff members&#13;
"are always welcome to&#13;
attend." At its last meeting on&#13;
Mondsy, sept. 20, the Committee&#13;
agn;ed to issue a notice to all&#13;
staff members telling them that&#13;
the draft exists and inviting&#13;
comment.&#13;
The draft of the proposed rules&#13;
will eventually have to be sent to&#13;
Central Administration for a&#13;
committee tbere to review and&#13;
revise the rules.&#13;
Committee members expressed&#13;
feelings that their wor"&#13;
will be changed at Madlson to suit&#13;
smneone else's views. --Whatever&#13;
tbe hell Central wants to do about&#13;
this, they wIlI do, and wbat&#13;
happens in the end will not be&#13;
decided by us." said Walter&#13;
Shirer, Director of Public Information.&#13;
The new rules will apply to all&#13;
academic staff appointments on&#13;
tbe Parkside campus. Faculty&#13;
members such as professors wIlI&#13;
not be affected. The rules define&#13;
an academic staffer as&#13;
''professional and administrative&#13;
personnel, other than faculty,&#13;
with duties andsubject to types of&#13;
appointments that are primarily&#13;
associated with hlgber education&#13;
Institutions or their administration."&#13;
&lt;llairperson StoIDe said that If&#13;
the committee decides that it&#13;
wants most of the Parkside appointments&#13;
to be probationaryindefinite,&#13;
rather than flxedterm,&#13;
the committee will be "in&#13;
for a fight" with Olancellor&#13;
Guskin. She felt he would prefer&#13;
most of the academic staff to be&#13;
contll'lWd 011 ,... S&#13;
Tickets available&#13;
Tickets for the final 11 individual&#13;
events in the Accent on&#13;
Enrichment series are on exclusive&#13;
sale through Friday (Oct.&#13;
1) for UW-Parkside students and&#13;
staff at the Information Center&#13;
kiosk in Main Place.&#13;
Students receive substantial&#13;
price discounts on the three&#13;
events being offered&#13;
cooperatively with tbe Parkside&#13;
Activities Board-Dizzy Gillespie,&#13;
Keith Berger and the Milwaukee&#13;
Repertory theater ....egard1ess of&#13;
wben tbey buy tickets, and will&#13;
receive 50 cent discounts on the&#13;
ether eight events during this&#13;
week only.&#13;
After this week's sale to&#13;
students and staff, remaining&#13;
individual event tickets will be&#13;
available to anyone. During the&#13;
first two days of tbe on-campus&#13;
saie Monday and Tuesday, only&#13;
students were allowed to purchase&#13;
tickets for the three P .A.B.&#13;
co-sponsored events.&#13;
The Accent on Enrichment&#13;
Committee reports that nearly&#13;
450 season subscription sales&#13;
were made during the highly&#13;
successful campaign just concluded.&#13;
The remaining events&#13;
contll'lMel N ,... S&#13;
Inside:&#13;
Johnson interveiw&#13;
page 3&#13;
The F:'arkside--------&#13;
Staff unaware&#13;
of rules&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No. 4 Wednesday, September 29, 1976&#13;
Enrollment down 400&#13;
_ Budget to he cut&#13;
by Robert Hoffman&#13;
The segregated fees budget will&#13;
be cut by up to $33,100 if&#13;
enrollment figures stay at their&#13;
present levels.&#13;
Head count enrollment has&#13;
fallen by 600 from projected&#13;
figures and is 400 less than last&#13;
year's enrollment.&#13;
These cuts will hurt the student&#13;
union the most. Tony Totero,&#13;
coordinator of student&#13;
programming, said that possible&#13;
cutbacks could mean reductions&#13;
in the coffee house, hours of the&#13;
Union or cutting back on dances&#13;
and activities.&#13;
Only half of the Union's activities&#13;
budget is from segregated&#13;
fees. The other half is raised from&#13;
revenues from dances and the&#13;
activities staged. This means&#13;
that as-activities and dances are&#13;
cut back, revenue would fall&#13;
leading to further cutbacks.&#13;
Totero said that if students&#13;
want activities and dances they&#13;
will have to support them. He was&#13;
encouraged by the response to&#13;
the first dance, saying "revenue&#13;
from the dance exceeded our&#13;
projections. If this trend continues&#13;
the Union will be able to&#13;
afford to get good bands."&#13;
He also sounded a note of&#13;
pessimism, saying "its too bad&#13;
that this ( budget cutbacks) had&#13;
to occur the first year, but we'll&#13;
just have to play it by ear and see&#13;
how it goes."&#13;
A group from the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board is being set up,&#13;
to determine, as the year goes&#13;
along, what cuts should be made.&#13;
Students are encouraged to .&#13;
stop by the Union and make&#13;
suggestions to the committee on&#13;
further activities.&#13;
Other areas that receive&#13;
segregated fees will not be as&#13;
drastically affected by the cutback.&#13;
&#13;
The athletics, housing, health,&#13;
and transportation departments&#13;
will make up for the deficit by&#13;
drawing on reserve carry-over&#13;
funds.&#13;
Nurse Edith Isenberg of the&#13;
health department said that "the&#13;
doctor will still be in on Fridays&#13;
or by appointment and all&#13;
· medical services will continue to&#13;
be free."&#13;
Declines of this nature will not&#13;
affect Parkside yet, according to&#13;
Gary Goetz, director of budgeting&#13;
and planning analysis.&#13;
Goetz said that there "will be&#13;
no cutbacks of classes and absolutely&#13;
no cutbacks of staff."&#13;
However, should enrollments&#13;
continue to decline in the next few&#13;
years, Parkside would face the&#13;
unpleasant fact of less state aid&#13;
and cutbacks in classes and staff.&#13;
As to why enrollment lleclined,&#13;
David Holle, specialist in&#13;
budgeting and planning analysis,&#13;
said that "committees are being&#13;
formed to look into the matter&#13;
and will, by the end of October,&#13;
have some recommendations."&#13;
Business report finished&#13;
by Christopher Clausen&#13;
On July 13, 1976 the Chancellor's&#13;
Task Force on the&#13;
business management program&#13;
issued a report recommending&#13;
seven changes in the program.&#13;
This task force was another in the&#13;
series of committies created by&#13;
Chancellor Guskin's original&#13;
Committee of Principals.&#13;
The changes in the program in&#13;
the opinions of several task force&#13;
members are long overdue. They&#13;
Board disputed&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
At its September meeting on"&#13;
Tuesday, Sept. 21, the Faculty&#13;
Senate voted 12-11 to recommit&#13;
legislation which would abolish&#13;
the Faculty Fund Board,&#13;
established in 1973, and replace it&#13;
with a Research Board.&#13;
The functions of the Research&#13;
Board would ·be to "advise the&#13;
Administration regarding means&#13;
of stimulating and supporting&#13;
academic research and creative&#13;
activity," and to "independently&#13;
generate and administer funds&#13;
for the support of academic&#13;
research and creative activity."&#13;
Richard Keehn, associate&#13;
professor of economics and&#13;
chairman of the Faculty Fund&#13;
Board which would be&#13;
eliminated, said he objected to&#13;
the proposed legislation on the&#13;
basis that his committee was not&#13;
shown the document before it was&#13;
put on the agenda. "We object to&#13;
the fact that we were not given&#13;
the chance to see the finalized&#13;
document before this afternoon,"&#13;
said Keehn.&#13;
He also objected to the fact that&#13;
the members of the new com-&#13;
. mittee would be appointed rather&#13;
than elected, and that the&#13;
Research Board would be&#13;
"purely advisory to the administration,"&#13;
in debate before&#13;
the legislation was· sent back to&#13;
the University Committee for&#13;
overhauling.&#13;
According to University&#13;
Committee chairman Larry&#13;
Deutsch, "We hope to establish a&#13;
group with the authorization to&#13;
advise the administration on&#13;
these matters." Chancellor&#13;
Guskin, who supports the change,&#13;
said that "this new proposal&#13;
would prevent our having to&#13;
appoint an ad-hoc committee&#13;
each year to take care of&#13;
allocating the money for&#13;
research."&#13;
In other Faculty Senate news, a&#13;
new chairman was unanimously&#13;
elected at the Sept. 21 meeting.&#13;
He is Michael Marron, ass~iate&#13;
professor of chemistry.&#13;
The Senate also voted to permit&#13;
the engineering science division&#13;
to organize officially now that it&#13;
has nine faculty members in its&#13;
discipline including seven&#13;
associate professors and two full&#13;
professors.&#13;
feel that once the changes are&#13;
implemented, Parkside's&#13;
business program will compare&#13;
favorably with any program in&#13;
the state. There are five major&#13;
areas in which the task force&#13;
recommended changes:&#13;
organization, faculty, the undergraduate&#13;
program, the&#13;
graduate program and accreditation&#13;
of the School of&#13;
Modern Industry.&#13;
The recommendations called&#13;
for incorporation of the three&#13;
divisions within the School of&#13;
Modern Industry. The task force&#13;
would also like the various&#13;
personnel courses combined into&#13;
one in order to have continuity in&#13;
the overall business program.&#13;
The third step would be to appoint&#13;
someone over the entire business&#13;
program to handle not only undergraduate&#13;
and graduate&#13;
program development, but also&#13;
faculty development.&#13;
The task force felt that the&#13;
present faculty lacks sufficiently&#13;
qualified instructors. They feel&#13;
that 75 percent of the staff should&#13;
hold a PhD or it's equivalent. The&#13;
task force recommended this&#13;
hiring policy have the hfghest&#13;
priority to gather permanent&#13;
senior leadership to effectively&#13;
guide the School of Modern Industry.&#13;
&#13;
"'Recommendations were also&#13;
made for the undergraduate pro&#13;
gram with accreditation from&#13;
the American Association of&#13;
Collegiate Schools of Business&#13;
(AACSB), the student would have&#13;
to blend his professional studies&#13;
50-50 with a liberal arts program. continued on page s&#13;
by John McKlostey&#13;
The draft copy of "Rules&#13;
Governing Academic Staff"&#13;
created by the Interim Academic&#13;
Staff Advisory Committee has&#13;
been completed, sent to Chancellor&#13;
Guskin for comment and&#13;
returned to the committee for&#13;
further action. Committee&#13;
members admit that only a few of&#13;
the persons affected by the new&#13;
rules even know that the draft&#13;
copy exists.&#13;
According to the committee,&#13;
chaired by Carla Stoffle, head of&#13;
the Public Services Division of&#13;
the Library-Learning Center, the&#13;
committee's meetings have been&#13;
open and academic staff members&#13;
"are always welcome to&#13;
attend." At its last meeting on&#13;
Monday, Sept. 20, the Committee&#13;
agreed to issue a notice to all&#13;
staff members telling them that&#13;
the draft exists and inviting&#13;
comment.&#13;
The draft of the proposed rules&#13;
will eventually have to be sent to&#13;
Central Administration for a&#13;
committee there to r.eview and&#13;
revise the rules.&#13;
Committee members expressed&#13;
feelings that their work&#13;
will be changed at Madison to suit&#13;
someone else's views. "Whatever&#13;
the hell Central wants to do about&#13;
this, they will do, and what&#13;
happens in the end will not be&#13;
decided by us." said Walter&#13;
Shirer, Director of Public Information.&#13;
&#13;
The new rules will apply to all&#13;
academic staff appointments on&#13;
the Parkside campus. Faculty&#13;
members such as professors will&#13;
not be affected. The rules define&#13;
an academic staffer as&#13;
"professional and administrative&#13;
personnel, other than faculty,&#13;
with duties and subject to types of&#13;
· appointments that are primarily&#13;
associated with higher education&#13;
institutions or their administration."&#13;
&#13;
Chairperson Stoffle said that if&#13;
the committee decides that it&#13;
wants most of the Parkside appointments&#13;
to be probationaryindefinite,&#13;
rather than fixedterm,&#13;
the committee will be "in&#13;
for a fight" with Chancellor&#13;
Guskin. She felt he would prefer&#13;
most of the academic staff to be conhnu~d on P«I• 5&#13;
Tickets available&#13;
Tickets for the final 11 individual&#13;
events in the Accent on&#13;
Enrichment series are on exclusive&#13;
sale through Friday (Oct.&#13;
1) for UW-Parkside students and&#13;
staff at the Information Center&#13;
kiosk in Main Place.&#13;
Students receive substantial&#13;
price discounts on the three&#13;
events being offered&#13;
cooperatively with the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board-Dizzy Gillespie,&#13;
Keith Berger and the Milwaukee&#13;
Repertory theater-regardless of&#13;
when they buy tickets, and will&#13;
receive 50 cent discounts on the&#13;
lither eight events during this&#13;
.i!Jnside:&#13;
·week only.&#13;
After this week's sale to&#13;
students and staff, remaining&#13;
individual event tickets 'Yfil be&#13;
available to anyone. During the&#13;
first two days of the on-campus&#13;
sale Monday and Tuesday, only&#13;
students were allowed to purchase&#13;
tickets for the three P.A.B.&#13;
co-sponsored events.&#13;
The Accent on Enrichment&#13;
Committee reports that nearly&#13;
450 season subscription sales&#13;
were made during the highly&#13;
successful campaign just concluded.&#13;
The remaining events continued on P•I• 5&#13;
Johnson interveiw&#13;
page 3 &#13;
PAI.K~IDE IlAtol8E&#13;
•&#13;
hould fulfill&#13;
• • mission&#13;
e&#13;
Paorltsl*'l spec million· to&#13;
ml~l", Industr soc • II ~t1y&#13;
__ 01 university which II most&#13;
rMIllu1tlon and nstrlctlng the scope of&#13;
IOC&#13;
The n_~tot II ngspec 1m ss ons to every schoolin&#13;
-:~~~:.:~ kl concentra ed development ot&#13;
.. spec f c schools The attempt by all&#13;
ClPall programs -..1lI only yield&#13;
POLITICAL&#13;
critiqued&#13;
PMB...... _&#13;
mediocrity whereas emphasis In certain areas may&#13;
produce excellent programs on a system-wide basis.&#13;
For Parkslde to Incorporate' its mlsslon into every&#13;
exlstln malor only insures continuing mediocrity In all&#13;
progra~s and defeats the purpose of having special&#13;
I Ions If resources were pooled to strengthen&#13;
:~ness~relntated disciplines, Parks Ide may be able to&#13;
achieve excellence and recognition In bne area.&#13;
While the emphasis would only be on certain&#13;
disciplines, programs In other areas should stili be&#13;
maintained as much as possible but not be required to&#13;
relate to the modern Industrial society. They should&#13;
keep their broad outlook and not become variations of&#13;
the same theme.&#13;
Also, there should be an administrative position&#13;
aeated to unite and offer direction to business related&#13;
disciplines and divisions.&#13;
Understandably, this proposal may not seem very&#13;
appealing to students and faculty whose interests do not&#13;
lie in business. Ranger itself has always supported&#13;
establishment of a journalism major. But expectations&#13;
must change with the sad realization that financial&#13;
limitations have subverted ParksIde's plan for extensive&#13;
growth. Everyone had hopesthat the University&#13;
would excel In their area of Interest but this is not&#13;
possible.&#13;
It was great watching Parkside grow and expand but&#13;
unlesswe now want to watch it stagnate, concentration&#13;
on the development of one area of study should occur&#13;
while retaining the diversity of experience offered by&#13;
programs. Though personal Interest may blind one to&#13;
that fact, a more detached view shows its benefit. The&#13;
desire for excellence should be put above that of selfgain.&#13;
FORUM&#13;
contributions you can bet your ass the Democrats would have jumped&#13;
alloverhimmtbepress; tbeydidnot. 2. Dole, because of the&#13;
~aterga~Agnew affair was the most investigated man in the country&#13;
SIIICI!. Lee Harvey Oswald. Republicans never would have accepted&#13;
him if thete was any hint of scandal.&#13;
~ Maddox and E~ene McCarthy are two other presidential&#13;
~tes. Maddox ~ a JOkethat tbe American Party figured would&#13;
ge tbem som~ a!lenti?" from the press and give them strength in the&#13;
~nservative faction of the parties; needless to say they have&#13;
~ their chances to become a legitimate third party alternative.&#13;
Carter ~ ~ otber hand might steal liberal vote s from Jimmy&#13;
In tbe IIdministr ore wlll ~~bly be bought off by Carter with a post&#13;
iDthelilito ation. Predictions: Carter wlll beat Ford somewbere&#13;
4$ percent range and remember, you heard it here first ~If:.The Parkside .&#13;
RANGER&#13;
r , f76&#13;
•&#13;
hould fulfill&#13;
• • mission&#13;
ed. ·ty whereas emphasis in certain areas may·&#13;
m ,ocra t 'd b · roduce excellent programs on a sys em-w, e as1s.&#13;
P F Parkside to tncorporatei its mission into every&#13;
exis~~ng major only insures continuing mediocrity In all&#13;
programs and defeats the purpose of having special&#13;
missions. If resources were pooled to strengthen&#13;
buslness-oreintated disciplines, Parkside may be able to&#13;
achieve excellence and recognition in one area.&#13;
While the emphasis would only be on certain&#13;
disciplines, programs in other areas should still be&#13;
maintained as much as possible but not be required to&#13;
relate to the modern industrial society. They should&#13;
eep their broad outlook and not become variations of&#13;
the same theme.&#13;
Also, there should be an administrative position&#13;
created to unite and offer direction to business related&#13;
disciplines and divisions.&#13;
Understandably, this proposal may not seem very&#13;
appealing to students and faculty whose interests do not&#13;
lie in business. Ranger itself has always supported&#13;
establishment of a journalism major. But expectations&#13;
must change with the sad realization that financial&#13;
llmltatlons have subverted Parkside's plan for extensive&#13;
growth. Everyone had hopes that the University&#13;
would excel In their area of interest but this is not&#13;
possible.&#13;
It was great watching Parkside grow and expand but&#13;
unless we now want to watch It stagnate, concentration&#13;
on the development of one area of study shoutd occur&#13;
while retaining the diversity of experience offered by&#13;
programs. Though personal interest may bl ind one to&#13;
that fact, a more detached view shows its benefit. The&#13;
desire for excellence should be put above that of selfgain.&#13;
&#13;
CAL FORUM&#13;
·qued&#13;
contribution~ you can bet your ass the Democrats would have jumped&#13;
all over him m the press; they did not. 2. Dole, because of the&#13;
~alergate-Agnew affair was the most investigated man in the country&#13;
~e. Lee Harvey Oswald. Republicans never would have accepted&#13;
him if there was any hint of scandal.&#13;
~ter Maddox and Eugene McCarthy are two other presidential&#13;
~dates. Maddox ~ a joke that the American Party figured would =~?:'~ ge em som~ attenti?n from the press and give them strength in the&#13;
faction of the parties; needless to say they have&#13;
McCartb eir th ces to become a legitimate third party alternative.&#13;
Carter a~ 0:ere~ othe~ hand might steal liberal votes- from Jimmy&#13;
in the administr ;e will pr?~bly be bought off by Carter with a post&#13;
in the 55 to 45 a on. Predictions: Carter will beat Ford somewhere&#13;
percent range and remember, you heard it here first. i,r._ The Parksid .&#13;
RANGER&#13;
TIie P_s,de Ran I by ,..,._ :' 1 "'rltten •nd edited&#13;
osunsln,P•rhlde !be University of 'flPOlts tor "'ho •re solel&#13;
«•t t Op 1110~~ ::11or1a1 policy an:&#13;
.• Pressed •re not EDITOR,tN-CHIE . IUSINESS MANA~·EJtannlne Slpsrna&#13;
necess,,rlly representative of those held by the ~tudents, faculty or administration of&#13;
Parkside. Editorial and Business SSl-2217;&#13;
Newsroom SSl-229S.&#13;
IIDYEltTISING RS: Catt,y 8rnak, J NEWS COOR01:"NAGER: Torn Coo Udy Trudrung (asst)&#13;
DEPARTMENTs:"TOR : 8ruce Wagn:.er .&#13;
A..,.l tr-ah-P011cie1• SMI • Dave lra1141 • John McKlosby si..s...i FEATIJR ...... p, &amp; 1P .. kers • Ma s- E EDITOR : ......... . ry Kay Ohmer rvRTS EDITOR • ..._. 8auer&#13;
YISIIGE EDITORS•Jun Tenuta&#13;
COPY ED1TO1t , J; lfl,f~ey j , '"'•nckl 8111 8&#13;
P"OTO EDITOit, e ... nge • Arkt&#13;
ClltCULATION• • Vu Thompson&#13;
STAFF• w--,·M~ue Marquardt&#13;
Larry o.-t •lier, Te.-rt Ga&#13;
._Ja ty, Phil H.,rnann Yhart, Robert Hottman&#13;
PHOTOG':;:j. lev.,ly Pella, 8;t:::ona Maillet, Allen 8~=~ls Clausen, 8rldget Penikowskl,&#13;
110 SALl!SPE HERS : P.J. Auor eu, Linda Knudtson K n, Carol Arentz, John Overman,&#13;
RSONS: JO&lt;! Lan~na, Ricky Cooper, Rick F•,rln LaFournler, Judy Trudrung. •· Rick Fluch Heh , &#13;
Johnson:&#13;
key is flexibility&#13;
by Roberta Kofoed&#13;
Adark skinned, friendly man now occupies office 343in WLLC. He is&#13;
Clayton Johnson, Parkside's newest assistant chancellor. Johnson is&#13;
bead of the support systems. Eleven department heads work under&#13;
him including housing and athletics.&#13;
JoMson carne to Parkside from a small college in Binnington, New&#13;
York wbere he was an administrator and on the faculty, teaching&#13;
higher educational systems. Parkside seemed like a-good challenge.&#13;
Johnson and his fourteen year old son are bacheloring it at Parkside&#13;
Village until they decide on a permanent residence. They will be&#13;
joined tben by Mrs. Johnson and their eleven year old daughter.&#13;
Johnson's goals are to make Parkside flexible enough to adapt to&#13;
the upcoming changes in modern society and to keep the best interests&#13;
on view of all students who will be attending Parkside in the future. He&#13;
feels that as society progresses so musttbe degree of education expand.&#13;
Someday, ordinary household tasks will be run by computers&#13;
and the housewife must be educated enough to deal with this.&#13;
"Parkside is not trying to produce the small amount of scholars who&#13;
can develop new advanced changes, instead Parkside is trying to give&#13;
a well-rounded education to what will be the bulk of America's&#13;
middle class," Johnson explained.&#13;
Johnson, as yet, does not feel a strong closeness with the student.&#13;
body because he has only heen working here six weeks. He hopes to get&#13;
in with it as the year progresses.&#13;
Parkside, Johnson believes, being a commuter school, needs an&#13;
especially strong student government. Itis the responsibility of each&#13;
student to know how the administration is run so that he can form a&#13;
stronger, more effective, student government.&#13;
Clayton Johnson hopes to he flexible in his position as Parkside&#13;
changes throughout the years.&#13;
Council to meet&#13;
The Student Organizational&#13;
Council, a Council set up to&#13;
represent all student&#13;
organizations on campus, will&#13;
have its fll"st meeting on Thursday,&#13;
September 30, 1976 at 3:15&#13;
p.m. in WLLC-0174. There are&#13;
several very important mailers&#13;
that this Council will be dealing&#13;
with and all Parkside clubs are&#13;
ur~ed to send a representative to&#13;
the Organizational Council. Any&#13;
,------,&#13;
I I&#13;
I&#13;
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I&#13;
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I&#13;
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T&#13;
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I I&#13;
I I&#13;
I --- I&#13;
S&#13;
I I&#13;
I&#13;
• I I&#13;
L__ ~---~&#13;
questions about this council may&#13;
be directed to either Linda&#13;
Knudtson or Bob Foght at the&#13;
Student Government Office&#13;
(WLLC-0193 or 553-2244).&#13;
Drug counseling available&#13;
Jack Albright personally felt Parkside had a&#13;
direct need for this type of service on campus, and&#13;
feels P.O.Q. may be an essential element in offering&#13;
students the support they need in combating a drug&#13;
problem.&#13;
Every case is held in confidence, aod handled&#13;
individually. Jack explains there is no specific way&#13;
to handle every case, rather you must deal with the&#13;
person singularly to determine objective alternatives&#13;
for the student concerned.&#13;
Alcohol, in Jack's estimation, would seem to be&#13;
the most apparent problem he is in contact with. He&#13;
stressed that P .O.Q. doesn't look down on people&#13;
who drink socially and in control, but believes&#13;
limitations must be exercised, eliminating possible&#13;
chances for a problem to develop.&#13;
Self-realization that you think you might have a&#13;
drinking problem is the fll"st step toward rectifying&#13;
it. Jack admits that the only way P .0.Q.'s services&#13;
can be effective is if the student realizes that a&#13;
problem exists, and is ready to view the problem&#13;
constructively.&#13;
"Scare tactics," as Jack terms them, are not&#13;
practiced by members of the P.O.Q. staff. The key&#13;
word is support, and that is P.O.Q.'sprime !unction.&#13;
Viable alternatives are offered for the student to&#13;
study and evaluate.&#13;
Literature is also made available to students at&#13;
P.O.Q. headquarters. If you think you might have a&#13;
drug problem, consider checking your behavior&#13;
pattern. How do you deal with problems - do 100&#13;
depend on drugs to face tense silqation, or to put yoo&#13;
at ease in a social atmosphere? Just askmg yourself&#13;
.a few questions, and answering them honestly can&#13;
determine your possible dependance. "A natural&#13;
high," as Jack refers to, is more rewarding and in&#13;
~ the long-run more se1f-gralifying than any drug&#13;
'2 induced high.&#13;
~ Currently, P .O.Q. is staffed by volunteers ranging&#13;
~ in the ages of 19-40.Their office is located in Ta1Ient&#13;
~ Ha1I, Room 187, and they encourage students&#13;
S requesting belp, or students who are interested in&#13;
t helping staff this pregram to contact their&#13;
beadquarters, or call 553-2623.&#13;
by Debbie Sharpe&#13;
The Parkside Drug Quarters (P.O.Q.) opens its&#13;
doors once again this. semester to any students&#13;
seeking help with any drug related problem. A&#13;
meelinl! will be held Friday. Seotember 24. to&#13;
determine new hours and policies, with Jack&#13;
Albright acting as President, and Rick Pomazol,&#13;
Assistant professor of psychology, and Cliff&#13;
Johnson, clinical counselor, serving as advisors.&#13;
J&#13;
P.D.Q&gt; AdvOOr&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER september 29, 19763&#13;
Wedaesday" Sept. ZI&#13;
Executive Council of PSGA meets with O. Clayton Johoaon at 2 p.m. In&#13;
WLLC 0193&#13;
Women's tennis, UW-P vs, carroll College at 3 p.m. at the lamia&#13;
coorta.&#13;
Soccer, UW-Pvs. Aurora College,at3:30 p.m. at the IIOCCt!I"fieid.&#13;
Thanday, Sept .•&#13;
Committee of the Whole meets at 1 p.m. in WLLC 0174. All members&#13;
of PSGA, Inc. and student. ep. esenlatives to university COITIII'Itteee&#13;
should attend.&#13;
Society of Physics Students meets at 2:30 p.m. in GR 230. All Interested&#13;
students and faculty welcome.&#13;
Public Relations and Sludentlnformatloo Committee meets at 3 p.m.&#13;
in WLLC 0193&#13;
Organizational Council meets at 3: 15 p.m. in WLLC 0174. All&#13;
presidents of student organizatiOlls shou1d attend.&#13;
PSGA Senate l1!eeling at 4:30 p.m. in Unloo 'JI11&#13;
WargarnersCiubmeets!rom 6-10p.m. inCL 140.&#13;
Senate Ways and Means Committee meets at 7 p.m. in WLLC 01113.&#13;
Open to all interested students.&#13;
FrIday, Oct. I&#13;
Senate Business and Finance Committee meets at 10:15a.m. in WLLC&#13;
0193. Open to aU interested students.&#13;
Life Science Club meets at2 p.m. in GR 0127. All interested students&#13;
welcome to this first meeting.&#13;
Movie, "The Four Musketeers," plays at 7 and 9 p.m. in tbe Cinema&#13;
Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
. Saturday, Oct. 2&#13;
Mens ,golf, UW-Parkside Tournament at Brigbton Dale.&#13;
Women's volleyba1l: UW-P, Marquette, and UW-Milwaukee at I p.m.&#13;
in the Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Edmonds and Curley perform at 8 p.m. in Union Square. Admission&#13;
charge.&#13;
Suday, Oct. 3&#13;
Soccer, UW-P vs. Minnesota at I p.m. at the soccer field.&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from I p.m. to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Movie, "The Four Musketeers," plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Cinema&#13;
Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 5&#13;
Womens volleyba1l: UW-P, UW-Madison, and Milwaukee Tech. at 6&#13;
p.m. in the Pby. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Wargamers Club meets !rom 6to 10p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Please submit all events to the RaDger by WedDelldllyof the week&#13;
before publication.&#13;
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LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
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OPEl 8 A.II. TIL 10:30 P.11.&#13;
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ass Wani ..... ",..&#13;
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Tippers - 20t Mixed Driab - 40t&#13;
Pltehers $110&#13;
Johnson: ,------7&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
f&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
key is flexibility&#13;
by Roberta Kofoed&#13;
A dark skinned, friendly man now occupies office 343 in WLLC. He is&#13;
Clayton Johnson, Parkside's newest assistant chancellor. Johnson is&#13;
head of the support systems. Eleven department heads work under&#13;
him including housing and athletics.&#13;
Johnson came to Parkside from a small college in Birmington, New&#13;
York where he was an administrator and on the faculty, teaching&#13;
higher educational systems. Parkside seemed like a ,good challenge.&#13;
Johnson and his fourteen year old son are bacheloring it at Parkside&#13;
Village until they decide on a permanent residence. They will be&#13;
joined then by Mrs. Johnson and their eleven year old daughter.&#13;
'&#13;
~&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
E&#13;
V&#13;
E&#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;
Johnson's goals are to make Parkside flexible enough to adapt to&#13;
the upcoming changes in modern society and to keep the best interests&#13;
on view of all students who will be attending Parkside in the future. He&#13;
feels that as society progresses so must the degree of education expand.&#13;
Someday, ordinary household tasks will be run by computers&#13;
and the housewife must be educated enough to deal with this.&#13;
"Parkside is not trying to produce the small amount of scholars who&#13;
can deve_lop new advanced changes, instead Parkside is trying to give&#13;
a well-rounded education to what will be the bulk of America's&#13;
middle class," Johnson explained.&#13;
Johnson, as yet, does not feel a strong closeness with the student,&#13;
body because he has only been working here six weeks. He hopes to get&#13;
in with it as the year progresses.&#13;
Parkside, Johnson believes, being a commuter school, needs an&#13;
especially strong student government. It is the responsibility of each&#13;
student to know how the administration is run so that he can form a&#13;
stronger, more effective, student government.&#13;
Clayton Johnson hopes to be flexible in his position as Parkside&#13;
changes throughout the years.&#13;
Council to meet&#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;
N&#13;
T&#13;
/&#13;
s&#13;
~&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
f&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
The Student Organizational&#13;
Council, a Council set up to&#13;
represent all student&#13;
organizations on campus, will&#13;
have its first meeting on Thursday,&#13;
September 30, 1976 at 3:15&#13;
p.m. in WLLC-D174. There are&#13;
several very importafit matters&#13;
that this Council will be dealing&#13;
with and all Parkside clubs are&#13;
urged to send a representative to&#13;
the Organizational Council. Any&#13;
questions about this council may&#13;
be directed to either Linda&#13;
Knudtson or Bob Foght at the&#13;
Student Government Office&#13;
(WLLC-Dl93 or 553-2244).&#13;
Drug counseling available&#13;
by Debbie Sharpe&#13;
The Parkside Drug Quarters (P.D.Q.) opens its&#13;
doors once again this, semester to any students&#13;
seeking help with any drug related problem. A&#13;
meet~ will be held Friday. Seotember 24. to&#13;
determine new hours and policies, with Jack&#13;
Albright acting as President, and Rick Pomazol,&#13;
Assistant professor of psychology, and Cliff&#13;
Johnson, clinical counselor, serving as advisors.&#13;
Jack Albright personally felt Parkside had a&#13;
direct need for this type of service on campus, and&#13;
feels P .D.Q. may be an essential element in offering&#13;
students the support they need in combating a drug&#13;
problem.&#13;
Every case is held in confidence, and handled&#13;
individually. Jack explains there is no specific way&#13;
to handle every case, rather you must deal with the&#13;
person singularly to determine objective alternatives&#13;
for the student concerned.&#13;
Alcohol, in Jack's estimation, would seem to be&#13;
the most apparent problem he is in contact with. He&#13;
stressed that P.D.Q. doesn't look down on people&#13;
who drink socially and in control, but believes&#13;
limitations must be exercised, eliminating possible&#13;
chances for a problem to develop.&#13;
Self-realization that you think you might have a&#13;
drinking problem is the first step toward rectifying&#13;
it. Jack admits that the only way P.D.Q.'s services&#13;
can be effective is if the student realizes that a&#13;
problem exists, and is ready to view the problem&#13;
constructively.&#13;
"Scare tactics," as Jack terms them, are not&#13;
practiced by members of the P.D.Q. staff. The key&#13;
word is support, and that is P .D.Q. 's prime function.&#13;
Viable alternatives are offered for the student to&#13;
study and evaluate.&#13;
Literature is also made available to students at&#13;
P.D.Q. headquarters. If you think you might have a&#13;
drug problem, consider checking your behavior&#13;
pattern. How do you deal with problems - do jOU&#13;
depend on drugs to face tense situation, &lt;'r to put you&#13;
at ease in a social atmosphere? Just askmg yourself&#13;
, a few questions, and answering them honestly can&#13;
determine your possible dependance. "A natural&#13;
high," as Jack refers to, is more rewarding and in&#13;
~ the long-run more self-gratifying than any drug&#13;
~ induced high.&#13;
~ Currently, P .D.Q. is staffed by volunteers ranging&#13;
~ in the ages of 19-40. Their office is located in Tallent&#13;
Ji Hall, Room 187, and they encourage students&#13;
~ requesting help, or students who are interested in&#13;
a helping staff this pregram to contact their&#13;
headquarters, or call 553-2623.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER September 29, 1976 3&#13;
Wednesday. Sept. %9&#13;
Executive Council of PSGA meets with 0. Clayton Johnson at 2 p.m. in&#13;
WLLC D193&#13;
Women's tennis, UW-P vs. Carroll College at 3 p.m. at the tennis&#13;
courts.&#13;
Soccer, UW-P vs. Aurora College, at3:30p.m. at the soccer field.&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 30&#13;
Committee of the Whole meets at 1 p.m. in WLLC D174. All members&#13;
of PSGA, Inc. and student representatives to university committees&#13;
should attend.&#13;
Society of Physics Students meets at 2:30 p.m. in GR 230. All interested&#13;
students and faculty welcome.&#13;
Public Relations and Student Information Committee meets at 3 p.m.&#13;
in WLLC D193&#13;
Organizational Council meets at 3:15 p.m. in WLLC D174. All&#13;
presidents of student organizations should attend. . . '1Jfl&#13;
PSGA Senate Il}eeting at 4:30 p.m. m Uruon&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 6-10 p.rn. in CL 140.&#13;
Senate Ways and Means Committee meets at 7 p.m. in WLLC D193.&#13;
Open to all interested students.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 1&#13;
Senate Business and Finance Committee meets at 10: 15 a.m. in WLLC&#13;
D193. Open to all interested students.&#13;
Life Science Club meets at 2 p.m. in GR D127. All interested students&#13;
welcome to this first meeting. .&#13;
Movie, "The Four Musketeers, " plays at 7 and 9 p.m. in the Cinema&#13;
Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 2&#13;
Mens golf, UW-Parkside Tournament at Brighton Dale.&#13;
Women's volleyball: UW-P, Marquette, and UW-Milwaukee at 1 p.m.&#13;
in the Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Edmonds and Curley perform at 8 p.m. in Union Square. Admission&#13;
charge.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 3&#13;
Soccer, UW-P vs. Minnesota at l p.m. at the soccer field .&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Movie, "The Four Musketeers," plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Cinema&#13;
Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 5&#13;
Womens volleyball: UW-P, UW-Madison, and Milwaukee Tech. at 6&#13;
p.m. in the Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 6 to 10 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Please submit all events to the Ranger by Wednesday of the week&#13;
before publication.&#13;
·-the quiet leader 1n synthetic lubrication&#13;
@D&#13;
Mike Villers- Dealer 637-2726&#13;
Ongoing admissions Monthly tuition&#13;
~ ,IJ&#13;
RACINE MONTESSORI SCHOOL&#13;
OeKoven · Foundation 520-21st St&#13;
Admitting age: 2 yr 6 mo thru 3 yr 9 mo&#13;
PHONE: 637-7892&#13;
The Rac11e Montessori School admits students of any race ,&#13;
creed , color and natlOnal or ethnic orig11 .&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P .M.&#13;
261S Washi119ton /we. 634--2373&#13;
Mary's Alibi&#13;
83S Wuhlngfon /we.&#13;
Raeine&#13;
Monclay - Friclay 8 - 10 pm&#13;
Tappers -20+ Mixed Drinks-40+&#13;
Pitehers $130&#13;
• &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RA GER ~mber 29. 197'&#13;
the qUiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Senate, administra~ion to meet&#13;
Mike ViUers-Oealer 637-2726 decided and engineering SCienc&#13;
Senate members will a~i&#13;
to have office hours between 10&#13;
and 4 each day.&#13;
Elections for PSGA's divisional&#13;
seats and two at-large seats will&#13;
be lield October 13 and 14 in Main&#13;
Place.&#13;
President Bowden is calling a&#13;
meeting of the Union Operating&#13;
Board for this Thursday in the&#13;
PSGA office, WLLC 0193, at 9&#13;
a.m,&#13;
the Senate and it was found that&#13;
Elsa Carpenter, and Lita&#13;
Wimbley were no longer attending&#13;
Parkside and thus, no&#13;
longer members of the Union .&#13;
Operating Board and senate,&#13;
respecitvely. President&#13;
protempore Foght. also announced&#13;
a need for students to fill&#13;
seats in the science .division spot&#13;
vacated by Wimbley; at large&#13;
spots vacated by Marilyn Phillips&#13;
and Johnson; plus seats in unby&#13;
Bruce wagaer&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association, PSGA,&#13;
despite dwindling numbers, is&#13;
meeting with the administration&#13;
on a weekly basis, it was announced&#13;
at last Friday's Senate&#13;
meeting.&#13;
The executive council (composed&#13;
of President Kiyoko&#13;
Bowden, Vice president Robert&#13;
Vlach, President pro tempore&#13;
Robert Foght, and assistant&#13;
President protempore Chris&#13;
Meyer) will be meeting with&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin and&#13;
Assistant Chancellbr Clayton&#13;
Johnson this week.&#13;
The purpose of these meetings,&#13;
according to Vlach, is to halt&#13;
problems that might cause&#13;
friction between the administration&#13;
and student body.&#13;
In other action, Susan Johnson&#13;
submitted her resignation from&#13;
WHAT HE WANTS I&#13;
uper selection&#13;
f weaters.&#13;
GJ ACCENT STRIPED KNITS&#13;
Seft. __ ,.esJI acrylic. _. b..... grey&#13;
...... s.xt '16 Deadline for applications £!J BULKY FISHBlMAN KNITS&#13;
.. "ltc. .......... Fvl foIllionod croWl&#13;
It turtIft '15&#13;
@] WRAP A cozy CARDIGAN&#13;
Y. booIfy Q10ne .."Iic. 5IlawI c_ aIId ......&#13;
MIt s.xt '20&#13;
0 IUCH-TONE SCENIC SWEATER&#13;
Ololca eI po_ In c"'_'" _Ian&#13;
ocryIic 5,M.1Jtt '15&#13;
[!J PULLOVERS IN GREAT PAnE~&#13;
~ ..,.. 10 I''' • • ,brant patfem definition.&#13;
Acrylic s.xt '13.99&#13;
Overseas student teaching in&#13;
Australia, England, Scotland&#13;
Wales or Ireland, is also an op~&#13;
available to UW-P students. For&#13;
further information please&#13;
contact the Clinical Programs&#13;
Office. GR211.&#13;
Education ..tudents who plan to&#13;
student teach Spring Semester&#13;
1977 are reminded that the&#13;
deadline for these applications is&#13;
October 1, 1976. Forms are&#13;
available in the Clinical&#13;
Programs Office, Greenquist 210.&#13;
Petrie:&#13;
politics not a career&#13;
by Terrt Gayhart District.&#13;
uWhile there are many issues that we could&#13;
debate, I think that the first four should definitely be&#13;
. concerned with Congressional reform, the energy&#13;
situation, welfare reform, and national defense"&#13;
Aspin has see~ f[t not to reply to Petrie's chaUeng~.&#13;
Petrie chalks it up to Aspin seeing it politically&#13;
advantageous not to accept.&#13;
"I'm not interested in it as a career," stated&#13;
Professor William Petrie, Republican candidate for&#13;
Congress, but this is not due to lack of enthusiasm.&#13;
Petrie explains~ that "career" congressmen&#13;
became ineffective because they have lost touch&#13;
with their constituents. Petrie would make his&#13;
contribution and then pass the seat on.&#13;
The third year professor at Parkside was asked&#13;
by the Wisconsin Republican Party to run for the&#13;
office. Alter much thought and a belief that he could .&#13;
make a considerable contribution, Petrie accepted&#13;
the challenge.&#13;
Even considering the difficulty in unseating an&#13;
incumbent, Petrie strongly believes that if his&#13;
positions reach the people he has a very good&#13;
possibility of a victory in November.&#13;
Petrie stressed the federal govenunent's poor&#13;
• communication with the public: "Congress has lost&#13;
touch with those of us who work for a living." Petrie&#13;
feels that this is characteristic of his opponent&#13;
Congressman Les Aspin.&#13;
Further, the candidate stated that due to the&#13;
Vietnam War, pollution, and public outcry, several&#13;
fads have arisen in Congress such as attacking the&#13;
budget for national defense, environmenta1ism, and&#13;
consumerism. Petrie has reported that it has been&#13;
very popular for Congressmen to ride such issues&#13;
ignoring constructive work. While these issues are&#13;
important, they bave been abused in recent years.&#13;
The candidate was further convinced that&#13;
Congressman Aspin uses his good rapport with the&#13;
press services to keep his name in circulation.&#13;
Petrie has also continually attempted to convince&#13;
the Congressman that debates before the public&#13;
would be worthwhile. "I'm flexible on the format"&#13;
Petrie said, but stated that he strongly favors at&#13;
least four dehates - one in each county of the First William Petrie&#13;
/&#13;
" Union&#13;
Recreation Center&#13;
Latest looks? Look here .&#13;
_&#13;
•Pirit~,:/P value 0&#13;
...--- USE WAJtOS CHAItC-All CREDIT ---&#13;
3600 SZnd Street KE OSHA&#13;
Phone 658-4331&#13;
DoULY' _...... I.••:. A.... Ie I·. P M&#13;
121e~P .. '"&#13;
HOURS -&#13;
Monday.Frlday&#13;
9 a.m. - 10 p.m•&#13;
Satu.rday Noon. 11 p.m.&#13;
Sunday Noon. 5 p.m.&#13;
BOWLING - 50' /game&#13;
BILLIARDS - $1.25/hour&#13;
TABLE TENNIS - 25' /hour&#13;
FOOSBALL &amp; PINBALL&#13;
PHONE 553-2695 FOR INFORMATION!&#13;
THE P RKSIDE RA GER September 29, 1976&#13;
the qu et leader synthet"c lubrication&#13;
Mike Villers-Oeater 637-2726&#13;
WHAT HE WANTS&#13;
per selection&#13;
of sweaters. ~ ITS&#13;
, Bro , blue, grey $16&#13;
ioned ere&#13;
'15&#13;
co r d sosh&#13;
'20&#13;
Acrilo&#13;
'15&#13;
GREAT PATTERNS • ra t pottem d , i 'on. $13.99&#13;
L te t looks? Look here.&#13;
1pirit,~6&#13;
value&#13;
OSHA&#13;
P . .&#13;
Senate, administration to meet&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association, PSGA,&#13;
despite dwindling numbers, is&#13;
meeting with the administration&#13;
on a weekly basis, it was announced&#13;
at last Friday's Senate&#13;
meeting.&#13;
the Senate and it was found that&#13;
Elsa carpenter, and Li ta&#13;
Wimbley were no longer attending&#13;
Parkside and thus, no&#13;
longer members of the Union -&#13;
Operating Board and s_enate,&#13;
respecitvely. President&#13;
protempore Foght . also announced&#13;
a need for students to fill&#13;
seats in the science division spot&#13;
vacated by Wimbley; at large&#13;
spots vacated by Marilyn Phillips&#13;
and Johnson; plus seats in undecided&#13;
and engineering science.&#13;
Senate members will attempt&#13;
to have office hours between 10&#13;
and 4 each day.&#13;
Elections for PSGA's divisional&#13;
seats and two at-large seats will&#13;
be held October 13 and 14 in Main&#13;
Place.&#13;
President Bowden is calling a&#13;
meeting of the Union Operating&#13;
Board for this Thursday in the&#13;
PSGA office, WLLC D193, at 9&#13;
a.m.&#13;
The executive council ( composed&#13;
of President Kiyoko&#13;
Bowden, Vice president Robert&#13;
Vlach, President pro tempore&#13;
Robert Foght, and assistant&#13;
President protempore Chris&#13;
Meyer) will be meeting with&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin and&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Clayton&#13;
John.son this week.&#13;
'Deadline for applications&#13;
The purpose of these meetings,&#13;
ccording to Vlach, is to halt&#13;
problems that might cause&#13;
friction between the administration&#13;
and student body.&#13;
In other action, Susan Johnson&#13;
submitted her resignation from&#13;
Education students who plan to&#13;
student teach Spring Semester&#13;
1977 are reminded that the&#13;
deadline for these applications is&#13;
October 1, 1976. Forms are&#13;
available in the Clinical&#13;
Programs Office, Greenquist 210.&#13;
Overseas student teaching in&#13;
Australia, England, Scotland&#13;
Wales or Ireland, is also an optio~&#13;
available to UW-P students. For&#13;
further infor_mation please&#13;
contact the Clinical Programs&#13;
Office, GR211.&#13;
Petrie:&#13;
politics not a career&#13;
by Terri Gayhart&#13;
" Im not interested in it as a career," stated&#13;
Professor William Petrie, Republican candidate for&#13;
Congress, but this is not due to lack of enthusiasm.&#13;
Petrie explains that "career" congressmen&#13;
became ineffective because they have lost touch&#13;
with their constituents. Petrie would make his&#13;
contribution and then pass the seat on.&#13;
The third year professor at Parkside was asked&#13;
by the Wisconsin Republican Party to run for the&#13;
office. After much thought and a belief that he could .&#13;
make a considerable contribution, Petrie accepted&#13;
the challenge.&#13;
Even considering the difficulty in unseating an&#13;
incwnbent, Petrie strongly believes that if his&#13;
positions reach the people he has a very good&#13;
possibility of a victory in November.&#13;
Petrie stressed the federal government's poor&#13;
communication with the public: "Congress has lost&#13;
touch with those of us who work for a living." Petrie&#13;
feels that this is characteristic of his opponent&#13;
Congressman Les Aspin.&#13;
Further, the candidate stated that due to the&#13;
Vietnam War, pollution, and public outcry, several&#13;
fad&lt;; have arisen in Congress such as attacking the&#13;
rudgetfor national defense, environmentalism and&#13;
consumerism. Petrie has reported that it has been&#13;
very popular for Congressmen to ride such issues&#13;
ignoring constructive work. While these issues ar~&#13;
important, they have been abused in recent years.&#13;
The candidate was further convinced that&#13;
Congressman Aspin uses his good rapport with the&#13;
Ire services to keep his name in circulation.&#13;
Petrie has also continually attempted to convince&#13;
the Congressman that debates before the public&#13;
would be worthwhile. "I'm flexible on the format "&#13;
Petrie said, but stated that he strongly favors ~t&#13;
least four debates - one in each county of the First&#13;
District.&#13;
"While there are many issues that we could&#13;
debate, I think that the first four should definitely be&#13;
concerned with Congressional reform, the energy&#13;
situation, weHare reform, and national defense."&#13;
Aspin has see~ fit not to reply to Petrie's challenge.&#13;
Petrie ch~ it up to Aspin seeing it politically&#13;
advan!ageous not to accept.&#13;
William Petrie&#13;
Union&#13;
Recreation Center&#13;
HOURSBOWLING&#13;
- 50' /game&#13;
BILLIARDS - $1.25/hour&#13;
TABLE TENNIS - 25' /hour&#13;
FOOSBALL &amp; PINBALL&#13;
PHONE 553-2695&#13;
Monday-Friday&#13;
9 a.m. - 10 p.m.&#13;
Saturday Noon - 11 p.m.&#13;
Sunday Noon _ 5 p.m.&#13;
FOR INFORMATION! &#13;
Food. co-op&#13;
•&#13;
In operation&#13;
by Mary Kay Ohmer&#13;
The idea behind-a foo~ co-operative is people working together to&#13;
buy good quality food WIthout havmg to pay high profits to a store&#13;
owner. Not only are the members concerned with buying, they are also&#13;
concerned with sharing information about food and nutrition.&#13;
Parkside's food co-operative, now called the Chiwaukee Prairie C&lt;&gt;-&#13;
op provides these opportunities.&#13;
The co-op is now located betWeen Parkside Village and Tallent Hall&#13;
in the old Student Activities Building. '&#13;
The membership fee, five dollars per year for students, seven for&#13;
IlOlHltudents, and .an additional three dollars for 'groups or families&#13;
goes to pay for capital expenditures and development of the C~&#13;
Learning Center.&#13;
In the Learning Center members- can fmd information about food&#13;
nutrition, and co-ops. Workshops are also held on a variety of topics.'&#13;
The CIHlP provides a good selection of quality foods and is always&#13;
expanding. TIle next addition to their list will be frozen foods such as&#13;
orange juice.&#13;
Certain foods (breads, canned goods, and dairy products) must be&#13;
ordered a week in advance, but most foods are kept in stock.&#13;
Meat is not are not available through the co-op. This is due to the&#13;
high cost of handling and transporting. The exclusion of meat helps&#13;
keep co-op prices low.&#13;
In addition to the store and learning center, the co-op also runs a&#13;
recycling center open not only to members, but to th'e rest of the&#13;
campus as well.&#13;
Food is also sold to non-members but at a substantial mark-up.&#13;
Films open&#13;
(1929)&#13;
Oct. 18 - Charlie Chaplin's "The&#13;
Goldrush" (1925). and' Buster&#13;
Keaton's "The Navigator" (1925)&#13;
, Oct. 25 - "IAm a Fugitive From&#13;
a Chain Gang" starring Paul&#13;
Muni&#13;
Nov. 1 - "King Kong" (1933)&#13;
Nov. 8 - "Bride of Frankenstein"&#13;
(1933)&#13;
Nov. 15 - Leni Riefenstahl's&#13;
"Triumph of the Will" (1935) and&#13;
Pare Lorentz' "The River"&#13;
(1935)&#13;
Nov. 22 - Frank Capra's "Mr.&#13;
Deeds Goes to Town" (1936)&#13;
Nov. 29 ~ John Ford's "The&#13;
Informer" (1936)&#13;
Dec. 6 - Orson Welles' "Citizen&#13;
Kane'!&#13;
Fllrn screening sections of a&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
humanities course titled "Introduction&#13;
to Film" will be open&#13;
to tbe public free of charge,&#13;
course instructor Walter Ulbright&#13;
has announced. All screenings&#13;
are at 7 p.m. in Classroom Bldg.&#13;
Room 105.&#13;
Fi\ms to be shown are:&#13;
Sept. 20 - D.W. Griffith's&#13;
"Intolerance" (1916)&#13;
Sept. 27 - Robert Wiene's&#13;
"Cabinet of Doctor Caligara"&#13;
(1919) and "Warning Shadows"&#13;
(1923)&#13;
Oct. 4 - F.W. Murnau's "The&#13;
Last Laugh" (1924)&#13;
Oct. 11 - Serge Eisenstein's&#13;
"Battleship Potemkin" (1925)&#13;
and uMBoWith a Movie Camera"&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER september 29, 1'" 5&#13;
Rules------&#13;
contlfl~ "om Pave 1&#13;
on fixed terms; which would&#13;
make them easier to fire without&#13;
their being able to appeal. A&#13;
person with a Probationary&#13;
appointment has a number of&#13;
procedures to go through if he&#13;
wishes to appeal a dismissal,&#13;
therefore, his job is more secure&#13;
than that of a fixed-term employee.&#13;
In other Staff Advisory Com-'&#13;
millee news, the committee has&#13;
made nominations of four persons&#13;
for two vacancies in the&#13;
Budget Priorities Committee,&#13;
and three persons for one&#13;
vacancy on the Affirmative&#13;
Action Committee. Tbey are:&#13;
Budget Priorities - Jan K.&#13;
Ocker, Oliver Hayward, Murray,&#13;
Tickets&#13;
continued from p... 1&#13;
and their prices are: Thursday,&#13;
Oct. 7, dancer Rayinond Johnson,&#13;
students $2, others $2.50;&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 26, jazz great Dizzy&#13;
Gillespie, $3 and $5; Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 3, Utah Repertory Dance&#13;
,Theater, $4.50 and $5; Friday,&#13;
Nov. 19, Second City, $3.50 and&#13;
$4; Thursday, Dec. 9, Roberta&#13;
Peters, $6.50 and $7; Tuesday,&#13;
Jan. 25. mime Keith Berger, $1.50&#13;
and $3; Sunday, March 6, New&#13;
• Shakespeare Company of San&#13;
Francisco, $4.50 and $5; Sunday,&#13;
March 27, Washington Post editor&#13;
lien Bradlee, $2 and $2.50;&#13;
Wednesday, April 6. The&#13;
Milwaukee Symphony with&#13;
Stepehn Swedish, piano soloist,&#13;
$5.50 and $6; Thursday, April 21,&#13;
Milwaukee Repertory Theater, $2&#13;
and $4; and Saturday, May 14,&#13;
combined Racine-Kenosha&#13;
Sympbony Orchestras, Antonia&#13;
Brico conducting, violinist&#13;
Eugene Fodor guest artist, $4.50&#13;
and $5.&#13;
Business-----'-----&#13;
confm..-d from ~I. 1&#13;
The student would also have to&#13;
take a quantitative mixture of&#13;
courses in the business program.&#13;
It was recommended that&#13;
students be required to maintain&#13;
a G.P.A. of 2.5 in the general&#13;
program and major, with a S.O&#13;
G.P.A. in tbe specialty area of the&#13;
major. Prerequisites would insure&#13;
strict control of the business&#13;
program to bring about high&#13;
standards.&#13;
The task force recommended&#13;
that the graduate program be&#13;
delayed until well after the undergraduate&#13;
program is&#13;
developed. This would delay&#13;
initiation of the program until&#13;
1980 at the' earliest. The task&#13;
force realized that accreditation&#13;
with MCSB may be impossible&#13;
since MCSB qualifications don't&#13;
allow for delay in starting the&#13;
program if there are plans for&#13;
one. If a delay occurs, the undergraduate&#13;
program would&#13;
have to be accredited on a&#13;
separate basis before a graduate&#13;
program could begin to develop.&#13;
NEED A BREAK FROM CLASSES?&#13;
Try Bowling&#13;
at the&#13;
Union Rec-Center&#13;
Only 50~a game .&#13;
------------- I I&#13;
TOURNAmENT I BOWLING COUPON I&#13;
I Present this slip et the I&#13;
I Rec - Center enytime I&#13;
I durng open bowing I&#13;
I hours end bowl 3 I&#13;
I games for $1 .00 I&#13;
1__ ---------_1&#13;
SCOTCH DOUBLES HANDICAP&#13;
Fridoy, October 1st ot the Rec - Center&#13;
Lones only ~2.50/teom. Prizes include&#13;
trophies, free gomes ond much more. For.&#13;
entry forms, come to the Rec - Center&#13;
or coli 553-26Q5 for reservotions or&#13;
informotion.&#13;
and Judith Hamilton. they objected to the AffIrmative&#13;
Affirmative Action - Victor Action Committee', "butting in"&#13;
Godfrey, Connie Berg, and Susan on their job by a1llO nomJnatlng&#13;
Unsmeier. three staff members at 0IanMembers&#13;
of tbe committee said cellor Guskin's request.&#13;
oJitVu'd He • u nwvt ••• , 'N • u •• 4JIN V GA¥t/\t¥NlN'W Nt&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
~&#13;
Mike VillerS-Dealer 637-2726&#13;
~. Ai ¥ It U NIl YlIN'J .... tV, VW"¥'IiJJIJI¥ • Nt' A¥A u At&#13;
IHE P.A.B. Fil SEIIES&#13;
PIESEIIS&#13;
THE FOUR&#13;
MUSKETEERS&#13;
IIIHE&#13;
UNIOII CINEMA&#13;
FRI., OCT. 1 7:00 p.m.&#13;
9:00 p.m.&#13;
SUN., OCT. 3 7:30 p.m.&#13;
:'''·~I......... ;a..;a.'''I-.o;·o;a,'''·18;a.....---:t:r-:t~*--:t'''''''''''~Ci ~:,.~~"""'''M..•,..,,.....;t~"':r.-: ~.: :M. ;N;; ~..",.".....: I&#13;
~ .&#13;
W A reminder for&#13;
M&#13;
~ UW-P-arkside students,&#13;
.... a faculty and staff -&#13;
~&#13;
a BASIC SKILLS .&#13;
~OPEN HEARINGM&#13;
~ Greenquist 101&#13;
~&#13;
.~&#13;
B Thursdey, Sept 30, 1976&#13;
W¥. 3:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m, I&#13;
ji2I5.. ~ ,. ... :... •• on.... "," ..&#13;
_ .0;";0;..1·..1·_1·":a.~lw",_;o;wl__l~r"'~"''''_IW f; ;t.:r..,.... ~ ...."'-' ... ~...,...... ;H;&#13;
EARN&#13;
While you&#13;
LEARN&#13;
Ask how you can earn while&#13;
you learn - as a Northwestern Mutual&#13;
college agent. You work part-time,&#13;
attend classes full-time. A limited&#13;
number of internships are still available.&#13;
Donald J. Brink, a.u&#13;
Racine&#13;
632·2731&#13;
Evg.... F. Soens, a.u&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
654-5316&#13;
The QUet Company&#13;
NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL LIFE . MilWAUkEE ~&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER September 29, 1976 5&#13;
Food. co-op&#13;
• 1n operation Rules------&#13;
by Mary Kay Ohmer&#13;
The idea be~ind a foo~ co-operat~ve is people working together to&#13;
buy good quality food without having to pay high profits to a store&#13;
owner. Not o~y are ~e ~embers concerned with buying, they are also&#13;
concerned with sharing information about food and nutrition.&#13;
Parkside's food co-operative, now called the Chiwaukee Prairie Co.&#13;
op provides these opportunities.&#13;
The co-op is now located between Parkside Village and Tallent Hall&#13;
in the old Student Activities Building. '&#13;
The membership fee, five dollars per year for students, seven for&#13;
non-students, and an additional three dollars for groups or families&#13;
goes to pay for capital expenditures and development of the Co-o~&#13;
Learning Center.&#13;
In the Learning Center members can find information about food&#13;
nutrition, and co.ops. Workshops are also held on a variety of topics.'&#13;
The co-op provides a good selection of quality foods and is always&#13;
expanding. The next addition to their list will be frozen !oods such as&#13;
orange juice.&#13;
Certain foods (breads, canned goods, and dairy products) must be&#13;
ordered a week in advance, but most foods are kept in stock.&#13;
Meat is not are not available through the co.op. This is due to the&#13;
high cost of handling and transporting. The exclusion of meat helps&#13;
keep co-op prices low.&#13;
In addition to the store and learning center, the co-op also runs a&#13;
recycling center open not only to members, but to the rest of the&#13;
campus as well.&#13;
Food is also sold to non-members but at a substantial mark-up.&#13;
Films open&#13;
Film screening sections of a&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
humanities course titled "Introduction&#13;
to Film" will be open&#13;
to the public free of charge,&#13;
course instructor Walter Ulbright&#13;
has announced. All screenings&#13;
are at 7 p.m. in Classroom Bldg.&#13;
Room 105.&#13;
Films to be shown are:&#13;
Sept. 20 - D.W. Griffith's&#13;
"Intolerance" ( 1916)&#13;
Sept. 27 - Robert Wiene's&#13;
"Cabinet of Doctor Caligara"&#13;
(1919) and "Warning Shadows"&#13;
(1923)&#13;
Oct. 4 - F.W. Murnau's "The&#13;
Last Laugh" (1924)&#13;
Oct. 11 - Serge Eisenstein's&#13;
"Battleship Potemkin" (1925)&#13;
and "Man With a Movie Camera"&#13;
(1929)&#13;
Oct. 18 - Charlie Chaplin's "The&#13;
Goldrush" (1925) and Buster&#13;
Keaton's "The Navigator" (1925)&#13;
, Oct. 25 - "I Am a Fugitive From&#13;
a Chain Gang" starring Paul&#13;
Muni&#13;
Nov. 1 - "King Kong" (1933)&#13;
Nov. 8 - "Bride of Frankenstein"&#13;
( 1933)&#13;
Nov. 15 - Leni Riefenstahl's&#13;
"Triumph of the Will" (1935) and&#13;
Pare Lorentz' "The River"&#13;
(1935)&#13;
Nov. 22 - Frank Capra's "Mr.&#13;
Deeds Goes to Town" (1936)&#13;
Nov. 29 - John Ford's "The&#13;
Informer" (1936)&#13;
Dec. 6 - Orson Welles' "Citizen&#13;
Kane"&#13;
continued from page I&#13;
on fixed tenns·, which would&#13;
make them easier to fire without&#13;
their being able to appeal. A&#13;
person with a Probationary&#13;
appointment has a number of&#13;
procedures to go through if he&#13;
wishes to appeal a dismissal,&#13;
therefore, his job is more secure&#13;
than that of a fixed-term employee.&#13;
&#13;
In other Staff Advisory Com-'·&#13;
mittee news, the committee has&#13;
made nominations of four persons&#13;
for two vacancies in the&#13;
Budget Priorities Committee,&#13;
and three persons for one&#13;
vacancy on the Affirmative&#13;
Action Committee. They are:&#13;
Budget Priorities - Jan K.&#13;
Ocker, Oliver Hayward, Murray,&#13;
Tickets&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
and their prices are: Thursday,&#13;
Oct. 7, dancer Raymond Johnson,&#13;
students $2, others $2.50;&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 26, jazz great Dizzy&#13;
Gillespie, $3 and $5; Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 3, Utah Repertory Dance&#13;
Theater, $4.50 and $5; Friday,&#13;
Nov. 19, Second City, $3.50 and&#13;
$4; Thursday, Dec. 9, Roberta&#13;
Peters, $6.50 and $7; Tuesday,&#13;
Jan. 25. mime Keith Berger, $1.50&#13;
and $3; Sunday, March 6, New&#13;
• Shakespeare Company of San&#13;
Francisco, $4.50 and $5; Sunday,&#13;
March 27, Washington Post editor&#13;
Ben Bradlee, $2 and $2.50;&#13;
Wednesday, April 6. The&#13;
Milwaukee Symphony with&#13;
Stepehn Swedish, piano soloist,&#13;
$5.50 and $6; Thursday, April 21,&#13;
Milwaukee Repertory Theater, $2&#13;
and $4; and Saturday, May 14,&#13;
combined Racine-Kenosha&#13;
Symphony Orchestras, Antonia&#13;
Brico conducting, violinist&#13;
Eugene Fodor guest artist, $4.50&#13;
and $5.&#13;
Business·--------&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
The student would also have to&#13;
take a quantitative mixture of&#13;
courses in the business program.&#13;
It was recommended that&#13;
students be required to maintain&#13;
a G.P.A. of 2.5 in the general&#13;
program and major, with a 8.0&#13;
G.P.A. in the specialty area of the&#13;
major. Prerequisites would insure&#13;
strict control of the business&#13;
program to bring about high&#13;
standards.&#13;
The task force recommended&#13;
that the graduate program be&#13;
delayed until well after llie undergraduate&#13;
program is&#13;
developed. This would delay&#13;
initiation of the program until&#13;
1980 at the· earliest. The task&#13;
force realized that accreditation&#13;
with AACSB may be impossible&#13;
since AACSB qualifications don't&#13;
allow for delay in starting the&#13;
program if there are plans for&#13;
one. If a delay occurs, the undergraduate&#13;
program would&#13;
have to be accredited on a&#13;
separate basis before a graduate&#13;
program could begin to develop.&#13;
NEED A BREAK FROM CLASSES?&#13;
Try Bowling&#13;
at the&#13;
Union Rec-Center&#13;
Only so~ a game .&#13;
------------- ' I&#13;
SCOTCH DOUBLES HANDICAP TOURNAffiENT I BOWLING COUPON I&#13;
1&#13;
1 Present this stip at the I&#13;
I Rec - Center anytime I&#13;
I during open bowing I&#13;
I hours and bowl 3 I&#13;
I games for $1 .00 I&#13;
fridoy. October 1st ot the Rec - Center&#13;
Lones onl_y $2.5O/teom. Prizes include&#13;
trophies. free gomes ond much more. For&#13;
entr_y forms , come to the Rec - Center&#13;
or coll 553-2695 for reservotions o,&#13;
informotion.&#13;
·------------·&#13;
and Judith Hamilton. they objected to the Affirmative&#13;
Affirmative Action • Victor Action Committee's "butting in"&#13;
Godfrey, Connie Berg, and Susan on their job by also nominating&#13;
Linsmeier. three staff members at ChanMembers&#13;
of the committee said cellor Guskin's r~~~~ _ _ _ _ _ ~....-•~wxwwrsv.v.u&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Mike Villers-~ Dealer 637-2726&#13;
THE P.A.B. FILI SERIES&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
THE FOUR&#13;
MUSKETEERS&#13;
IN THE&#13;
UNION CINEMA&#13;
FRI., OCT. 1 7:00 p.m.&#13;
9:00 p.m.&#13;
SUN., OCT. 3 7:30 p.m.&#13;
i1.••;r;•:a;•;a; .. :a; .. 1~1°1 .. 1 .. 1·1 .. 1·:t··•~1-1"1 .. 1 .. 1-:cct·· ~&#13;
~~~~---~~---~---~-~~~~ .. E' A reminder for ! ~ w. w. a UW-P.arkside students, ~&#13;
~ w + l d ,++ w 1 acu ty an sta11 - i ~&#13;
a BASIC SKILLS ~ ~ :9:-l&#13;
aoPEN HEARINGS&#13;
w g M Greenquist 101 g&#13;
w. ~&#13;
~ Thursday, Sept 30, 1976 6&#13;
w w • • C ~&#13;
~ 3: 30 p.m. - 5: 30 p.m. ~ ~ .&#13;
~-:a; ........... ,;a.••;r,; .. ;r,;••.a.••1· ........... ;a; .. ;a;••.a.•.a.•.a.•1 .. :a:··1"1"1 .. ~ ll~tt~tt!lr.••~o!r.,,!r. .. !l!u!I" .. , .... u!l: .. ~ .. !l"'.-,!P.,,,,_..,,_..~ ...... ;w!P.w ....... ~•- ;,t •&#13;
EARN&#13;
While you&#13;
LEARN&#13;
Ask how you can earn whil&#13;
you learn - a a 'orthwe t rn Mutual&#13;
college agent. You work part-time,&#13;
attend classes full-time. A limited&#13;
number of internship are still available.&#13;
Donald J. Brink, ClU&#13;
Racine&#13;
632-2731&#13;
Eugene F. Soens, CLU&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
6S4-S316&#13;
The Quiet Company&#13;
ORTH\\ESTER "'1.JTU"l LIFE · ~ll\\4UkEE ~&#13;
I &#13;
, THE PARKSIDE RANGER september 29. 197'&#13;
Jeffersonian dinner hosted&#13;
NJ EwJIiaI II P' t! -Po"&#13;
........... ., ....... 8Dd&#13;
7 7' ., .. Cd. 17 .,&#13;
• Wtt III ..&#13;
lie 'd _ F.ah'aL&#13;
". ...-. ...&#13;
lIoD ., • IOd8I ennlII?I ., w::~~n.- JeIf __ '. Y , Iab1.-nlloD&#13;
..., ......... _ will be&#13;
...... I&#13;
1 • "l'nr Iar .-nalianlla&#13;
4 nde.... AUle.dI&#13;
IIIdinc las and If8IlIIt* 8Dd&#13;
.,.., be obWDed from !be Inform.lI...&#13;
Cmter iJI Wyllie&#13;
lJbrwy-Learllln« ceder.&#13;
'l1Ie menu Iar !be eigbkGune&#13;
cliJlner, _bleb Includes two&#13;
"My, 'de -1ree:I" wiD hue •&#13;
deddeIy I"reDc:b flllvor, refIec&gt;.&#13;
tiDI Jeff.m.. •• IeI'"rice as tbe&#13;
~tioa's ImMsspdnr to France&#13;
8Dd his , lnlroducti ...&#13;
of """u-. euiaIne to AmerIca •&#13;
Enlerlllinmeni will be iJI·&#13;
le _ aed l1ftuBbout!be course&#13;
of !be dinner, which will last&#13;
lIboul 2\2 hours. The Parkslde&#13;
Baroque PIllyers will pre...,'&#13;
music from !be period of Jef·&#13;
ferson, bimself a violinist.&#13;
Memben of !be Parkside PIllyers&#13;
will provide a dramatic&#13;
..-.1IIu... 01\ !be Jeffersonian&#13;
.... 8Dd students from Racine's&#13;
J.I. Case High School under the&#13;
direclion of KeviJI Wurtz will&#13;
present • finale of excerpls from&#13;
the musical "1776. n&#13;
en managers studied&#13;
the project 15 a cooperative&#13;
public service venture. It grew&#13;
out of facully contacls with PIRA&#13;
and a luncheon last spring hosted&#13;
by O1ancellor Alan Guakin. At&#13;
that lime, members of the PIRA&#13;
Executive Committee met&#13;
, , students and Faculty from the&#13;
two diVISions.&#13;
Cl efe d I The project bas two main aSSI Ie objectives: (I) To meet a I research need for lbe PIRA&#13;
"eM: SAL. C. RadIo&amp;Md~, membership, and (2) To involve&#13;
'--"_ .... tprk .. fOoooof\~1r'l1 be f lb&#13;
...... lit..,.,." WY n ~!lU1l 113. 1M mem rs 0 e Parkside&#13;
::: .... , sw...us eft« • p rn AS'!; tor I Ccxnmunity (especially students)&#13;
in working wilb Personnel Ad·&#13;
IMf!'OR'ANT nUDY 8.0AO AN , ministrators in Wisconsin&#13;
IltQIUMEMEtf' Lomt openJnos sN:1 r..,..&#13;
~ .. .., C'-S accreGt'-' ~'C v.. r, .....eanizatiom.&#13;
..,. n ~atI"S tar Fall w..".... $IJlo1tlg. Of Interested students are asked "11I' v.., ........NtIM ..... 'cMtI 5tudent1,&#13;
............ F~ Su;If..... to contact Hall in CL 351 or at&#13;
..... .s...w v.,. .. ....... Good extensioo 2552 ex' 2280 before&#13;
.'Mutry ,.. .,.ilftCft ~c. of •• It-,&#13;
~ .. and ~ on '" stucfY October 4. U there is sufficient&#13;
....... and ......... -. cv"""a' bCMnve stude t . terest ls&#13;
C*IM ....,.. .. .., CFS "*' specifiC ~rade' n In ,arrangemen&#13;
,..", FOf' .pOIICilI'on "'orm.lion can be JDade to develop this into a&#13;
celllTER FOR FOItEtGN STUDY AV I&#13;
A~IUIO"'S oJ" S 51.... eo;. tOt.. Ann group independent study project&#13;
• .-,. AnllW MI.'. om Ml IDS (ex' a'edit.&#13;
........... _--------_ .&#13;
.... IIIIW "'911!!!1~-"'''&#13;
_..... y ...&#13;
om n into exempt&#13;
managerial positions since&#13;
1964 According to Fran Hall.&#13;
A islanl Professor of&#13;
~t ScIence, who is&#13;
nlinaling!be projecl with Ben&#13;
Lowenberg of l.abor Economics.&#13;
ROCK&#13;
0&lt;_0-&#13;
C"'~&#13;
Jo.-_ ETc~&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
""- Dog H;ghI Ct_ -_av"""ll&#13;
JAZZ&#13;
v'-LMeef&#13;
Jonmyw~&#13;
lloYe IInJbecl&lt; __ L_&#13;
o-s&#13;
0u0e EIIngIon&#13;
Jollneo.r.,.&#13;
c...._--.&#13;
UW Parkside&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
a ASSICAL&#13;
-'oce Allrav ..... Uten&#13;
Symphony W...,Steonbefg, P~gh&#13;
S\'ll'lllhony&#13;
MalIce Anae&#13;
A_ll&lt;ondef&#13;
Anc*es SegoV18&#13;
London Symphony OrChestra&#13;
S.... _1owe&#13;
-&#13;
Complaint Dept.&#13;
by LInda Knudlson and KarIn LaFoumler -&#13;
Dear complaint Department,&#13;
The lamps over the salad bar in the Student Union wills the letlu&lt;e&#13;
and ruin the cbeese. Is there something tbat you can do to correct tbia&#13;
situation? E.C. .&#13;
ANSWER: 'This problem should be solved by the lime this BrIlcle is&#13;
in print. According to Richard Manthey, ma~ger of Saga FOOd&#13;
Service, Ike original plans for lbe salad tJm: pr&lt;!Vl~ed for a dee-1IeJI&#13;
arrangement lbat would keep tbe salad mgredienls Olt ice. 'lbia&#13;
equipment did not arrive as scheduled and bas only recently been&#13;
received. Mr. Manlbey assured u~that the instaUalion of tile new&#13;
salad bar will take place as soon as possible.&#13;
Dear Complaint Department,&#13;
I understand lbat las! Spring, the Parkside Stude~t Government ran&#13;
elections for lbe stude~t seals on tbe Uruon Operating Board (UOB).&#13;
But since then, no meeting of the Board has been beld, so I feellhat my&#13;
vote has been wasted. Whom or what, exactly IS responsible for tbia&#13;
adborrable delay? When will the UOB meet?&#13;
ANSWER: The Union Operating aoard has been inactive aUsummer&#13;
but there will be a meeting of the student members of the UOB on&#13;
Tuesday, September 28,1976 at 12:00 in the Union Cafeteria. The non.&#13;
student members (faculty, staff, and alwnni) lbat are supJlOOedto sit&#13;
on lbe Board bave not yet been chosen but according to Wi1liam&#13;
Niebuhr, Director of Student Life, lbey sbould be selected by Oct. I.&#13;
'The Committee will meet during lbe week of Oct. 4-ll and will elect a&#13;
student who will serve as the Board's president and will set future&#13;
meeting limes in collaboration witb Mr. Niebuhr.&#13;
PLEASE ADDRESS ALL COMPLAINTS TO: THE COMPLAINT&#13;
DEPARTMENT COO UW-P RANGER&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
~&#13;
Mike VillerS-Dealer 637-2726&#13;
'u uv ~u , ,.....~ .. ¥iIJA-IrJwA¥¥¥' ~&#13;
*"&#13;
u\11t\u&#13;
../Y-au/: ,q&gt;oe4 W /PoeUy /M&#13;
1/~&#13;
(ftoe4y/ft-06e -~f/ conoinf/)&#13;
•&#13;
BLUES - FOLK&#13;
Brownie McGhee&#13;
Lightnin' Hopktns&#13;
DocWalson&#13;
Butty Sa;nte Marie&#13;
OtosSpann&#13;
Jmmy RUSI'llOg&#13;
Joan Baez&#13;
JOhn Lee Hooker&#13;
LABELS&#13;
SineOua Non&#13;
Westminster Gold&#13;
RCA&#13;
Vanguard&#13;
Columbia&#13;
Elektra&#13;
Philips&#13;
Turnabout&#13;
Allantic&#13;
and many others&#13;
IIu.ay - Thmay 9 u. -7 p.•.&#13;
Fri.ay 9 a.•.• 4 p.•.&#13;
Satlthy 10 a... - 1 p •••&#13;
HE PA KSIOE RA GER September 29, 1976&#13;
j ff er onian dinner hosted&#13;
from the lnyllie&#13;
&#13;
of the dinner, which will last&#13;
about 2½ hours. The Parkside&#13;
Baroque Players will present&#13;
music from the period of Jeff&#13;
er on, himself a violinist.&#13;
embers of the Parkside Players&#13;
ill provide a dramatic&#13;
iresentation on the Jeffersonian&#13;
era and students from Racine's&#13;
J.I. Case High School under the&#13;
direction of Kevin Wurtz will&#13;
present a finale of excerpts from&#13;
th mmical "1776."&#13;
anagers studied&#13;
pro t is a cooperative&#13;
public nice venture. It grew&#13;
out faculty contacts with PIRA&#13;
a luncheon last pring hosted&#13;
by Clumcellor Alan Guskin. At&#13;
th t tim • members of the PIRA&#13;
Executive Committee met&#13;
tu n and Faculty from the&#13;
two dhisions.&#13;
The project has two main&#13;
obj ctives: (l) To meet a&#13;
rch need for the PIRA&#13;
m bership, and (2) To involve&#13;
members of the Parkside&#13;
Community ( e pecially students)&#13;
in rking with Personnel Administrators&#13;
in Wisconsin&#13;
Organizations.&#13;
Interested students are asked&#13;
to conlact Hall in CL 351 or at&#13;
extension 2552 or 2280 before&#13;
October 4. If there is sufficient&#13;
student interest, arrangements&#13;
can be made to develop this into a&#13;
group independent study project&#13;
for credit.&#13;
CLASSICAL&#13;
i,ice At&gt;ravanel, Utah&#13;
Symp00ny&#13;
W Stemberg. Prttsbu-gh&#13;
Symp00ny&#13;
Malsice Andre&#13;
A edBfendel&#13;
Andres 5eQolll8&#13;
London S phony Orchestra&#13;
S Marlowe&#13;
Uomplaint Dept.&#13;
by Linda Knudtson and Karin LaFournier&#13;
Dear Complaint Department,&#13;
The lamps over the salad bar in the Student Union wilts the lettuc&#13;
and ruin the cheese. Is there something that you can do to correct th~&#13;
situation? E.C. · ANSWER: This problem should be solved by the time this article is&#13;
in print. According to Richard Manthey, ma~ger of Saga FOOd&#13;
Service, the original plans for the salad b31: provi~ed for a dee-well&#13;
arrangement that would keep the salad ingredients on ice. This&#13;
equipment did not arrive as scheduled and has only recenUy been&#13;
received. Mr. Manthey assured u~ that the installation of the new&#13;
salad bar will take place as soon as possible.&#13;
Dear Complaint Department,&#13;
I understand that las~ Spring, the Park~ide Stude~t Government ran&#13;
elections for the student seats on the Uruon Operating Board (UOB)&#13;
But since then, no meeting of the Board has been held, so I feel that m;&#13;
vote has been wasted. Whom or what, exactly is responsible for this&#13;
adhorrable delay? When will the UOB meet?&#13;
ANSWER: The Union Operating Board has been inactive all sum. mer but there will be a meeting of the student members of the UOB on&#13;
Tuesday, September 28, 1976 at 12:00 in the Union Cafeteria. The nonstudent&#13;
members (faculty, staff, and alumni) that are supposed to sit&#13;
on the Board have not yet been chosen but according to William&#13;
Niebuhr, Director of Student Life, they should be selected by Oct. l.&#13;
The Committee will meet during the week of Oct. 4-8 and will elect a&#13;
student who will serve as the Board's president and will set future&#13;
meeting times in collaboration with Mr. Niebuhr.&#13;
PLEASE ADDRESS ALL COMPLAINTS TO: THE COMPLAINT&#13;
DEPARTMENT C-0 UW-P RANGER&#13;
~ ~&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Mike Villers-~ Dealer 637-2726&#13;
.h'eeded: a'oelo ~ a'o~ foa,&#13;
r~ ~/~ ua~fl' com,infl')&#13;
BLUES- FOLK&#13;
Brownie McGhee&#13;
Lightnrn' Hopkins&#13;
Doc Watson&#13;
Buffy Sainte Marie&#13;
Ohs Spann&#13;
Jimmy Rushing&#13;
Joan Baez&#13;
John lee Hooker&#13;
LABELS&#13;
SrneOua Non&#13;
Westminster Gold&#13;
RCA&#13;
Vanguard&#13;
Columbia&#13;
Elektra&#13;
Phillps&#13;
Turnabout&#13;
Atlantrc&#13;
~&#13;
UW Parkside&#13;
and many others&#13;
Bookstore Moaday - Thlrsday 9 a.m. _ 7 p.m.&#13;
Friday 9 a.m. _ 4 p.m.&#13;
Sat1rday 10 a.•. _ 1 p.m. &#13;
******************&#13;
: SPORTS:&#13;
* *&#13;
******************&#13;
Swimmers&#13;
compete&#13;
S/J.0rts commentary&#13;
by Jean Tenu!n&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER September 29, 197' 7&#13;
F'ishing and Firing Lines&#13;
by Scott Reinbard&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
The soccer learn will host two&#13;
Ieams and travel to play another&#13;
In the coming week.&#13;
The Rangers host Aurora&#13;
College this afternoon In a 3: 30&#13;
p.m. match and the University of&#13;
MInnesota Sunday in a. 1 p.m.&#13;
contest. Saturday, the team will&#13;
travel to _Charleston Illinois to&#13;
play Eastern Illinois at 11 a.m.&#13;
Parkslde suffered their third&#13;
defeat of the season to Rockford&#13;
College, 4-1, last Saturday.&#13;
"Although we totally&#13;
dominated Rockford and played&#13;
our best soccer of the season,"&#13;
said Coach Hal Henderson, "we&#13;
were tied I-I at halftime."&#13;
The Rangers' lone goal was&#13;
scored by -Earl Campbell, who&#13;
took a volley out of the air on a&#13;
cross from Jack Landwehr.&#13;
Parkslde out shot Rockford, 13-&#13;
II. _&#13;
"Once we got behind in the&#13;
game, we didn't play our kind of&#13;
game and we can't be successful&#13;
if we don't control the play,"&#13;
Henderson stated.&#13;
Fifty years from now sportsmen and women will be able to bounce&#13;
their grandchildren on their knee and reminice 1976as the year of the&#13;
beginning and the end of some of the most important outdoor sports&#13;
known to us.&#13;
To begin with, bow hunters saw their opening weekend trickle down&#13;
The women's swim team faces a dry drain as the ten most heavily hunted counties in the state were&#13;
UW-Milwaukee in the Panther closed to all forms of hunting, stream fishing, and camping. Itseems&#13;
pool to begin the 1976 season this that Adams, Clark, Green Lake, Jackson, Juneau, Marquette,&#13;
evening at 6:30. • Monroe, Portage, Washara, and Wood counties are closed due to their&#13;
Coach Barb Lawson has three potential fire hazard. The state has become a virtual tinderbox caused&#13;
returnees on her five member by a lack of precipitation. This is the first time such a closure has&#13;
squad, including Mary Beth occurred since 1953when hunting was set aside for a week until the&#13;
Leitch, last year's most valuable hazard was over.&#13;
swimmer, Gail Olson and Lynn There is rumor that bowmen will be given back their subtracted&#13;
Peterson. time after the rifle season, but a lot of good this does after the herd has&#13;
Lawson also has two been substantially reduced and spooked. I would think a refund would&#13;
newcomers to Parkside and to be in order.&#13;
competitive swimming in Sally Don't give up hope though as there is plenty of hunting available in&#13;
Francis and Lilly Crnich. the unclosed counties of Racine and Kenosha. Private lands would be&#13;
"Olson and Leitch swim all the best bet for your quarry but Bong and New Munster pu'llic&#13;
hunting&#13;
strokes and will fill the events grounds should prove mildly fruitful. Deer registration will be in&#13;
according III the strength of the Burlington at the Police station. This must be a first to see bowmen&#13;
opposing team, while Francis praying for rain in order to hunt.&#13;
and Crnich are mostly freestyle The duck hunting this year will he long remembered as the last of its&#13;
participants," said Coach kind. Not that itwill be anymore spectacular than it was last year; and&#13;
Lawson. Peterson will be the only that isn't saying much; but this is the last year lead shot may be used&#13;
diver and may swim in the on waterfowl in Wisconsin waters. When the season opens this Friday&#13;
breaststroke competition. at noon take time in loading your chamber and remember it well.&#13;
"Because of our lack of size in Remember also the Great Horicon Marsh as this is the first year of its&#13;
numbers and our inexperience, it four year goose reduction plan that has already gotten off on a sour&#13;
will be a real challenge to win any note.&#13;
of our meets, although we hope to A first came to Root River fishennen this year on September 16,&#13;
keep the score close if possible." which is opening day of salmon snagging in all bays, harbors, except&#13;
UWM has one of its bigger Racine County's Root River. This was caused by the combined efforts&#13;
teams in the past few years and of the Root River Restoration Council and Salmon Unlimited due to the&#13;
also have a new coach, so fact that there are large numbers of trout in the river at this time right&#13;
Parkside's chances of being a along with the salmon. It is not legal to snag these anadromous&#13;
competitive opponent depends on salmonids because of. their fine qualities and also because they don't&#13;
the lineup, according to Lawson. die after spawning as the salmon do so there is no sense in harvesting&#13;
Overall, Coach Lawson sees a them in this manner.&#13;
possibility to break some of the&#13;
Parkside records, improve their&#13;
point total in the conference&#13;
championships and to qualify&#13;
some of the Mid-West Regional&#13;
meet in March. A faculty, staff and students The team will practice noon&#13;
"The team members are men's volleyball team has been hours on Tuesday and Thursday.&#13;
working very hard and I'm organized, according to Orby Those involved with the learn&#13;
pleased to see how much they're Moss, coordinator. are Bob Lawson, Lucian Rosa,&#13;
putting into this." The team will play ap- Hal Henderson, Hans Nuernberg,&#13;
Coach Lawson is hoping that proximately six games at Racine Jan Ocker, Hank Krause, Vic&#13;
more girls will come out for the Park, Horlick, and Case at 7 p.m. Godfrey, Jack Landwehr and&#13;
team, as many positions are still _ on Sept. 21, 28, and 30and October leRoy Jefferson. Starters will be&#13;
open. 4. 12, and $8. picked from those who show up&#13;
Soccer playedToday&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
The PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
Invites !:Iou to experience the&#13;
ZANY COMEDY&#13;
1.0'5 required&#13;
of&#13;
EDMONDS &amp; CURLEY&#13;
As seen on national T.V.&#13;
.&#13;
Also feQturing Folksingers&#13;
CHRIS&#13;
TONY&#13;
INlOES ond&#13;
ROlANDS&#13;
SATURDA Y, OCTOBER 2,&#13;
B:OOP.M. Union Square&#13;
\)R\~Il-S&#13;
. \tI\'J-t.\) n~\.t.&#13;
f\~f\\\.n&#13;
Adm., '150 UW-l' Students&#13;
'2.00 General&#13;
o'\ny intentional foul booIdng, including unsucceasful attempts at&#13;
ripping, can bring a large fine from Racine's new game warden, Tcm&#13;
Edwards. Edwards claims he will even be giving cilaUons for the&#13;
possession of a siver tongued spider, otherwise known 88 a snaulnlI&#13;
hook and Ithink he means business. He packs a .357magnum plstoI.on&#13;
his hip!&#13;
Concluding this history of firsts and lasts is the new pnlpOISl&#13;
brought to rifle deer hunting. It is the controversial spilt .... e deer&#13;
hunting for 1977developed in hopes of easing opening day pressures.&#13;
The proposal calls f&lt;Jr the state to be divided into three zones. The&#13;
hunter has a choice of which zone he wishes to hunt and aIao between&#13;
whether he wishes to hunt the first three days of the 8e88OII or the last&#13;
six. Each zone has a different seBSOlt.&#13;
To introduce this proposal to the DNR set up state wide meetings to&#13;
infonn the public and to obtain public opinion. I have only one question&#13;
as a result of these meetings: "Who did the people who attended these&#13;
meetings think they were?" There actions could only be compared to&#13;
that of a pack of wild apes on a jungle raid. Uncalled for Immature&#13;
actions such as stomping of feet, screaming obscenlUes, and throwing&#13;
questionnaires back at the DNR reps not only made jackasses out of&#13;
these people in the eyes of the public but also cheated themselves out&#13;
of the opportunity to be infonned of tile programs advantages and&#13;
~~~~ta::~At'1k M% Av'MftAM ,AtMPP7t uWUWt _&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
~&#13;
Mike Villers- Dealer 637-2726 ¥-',~~~~". ¥sUV_IWVVV.%tlASAu An&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEl 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington /We. 6J4.2J7J&#13;
YOUR PLACE LOUNGE&#13;
1214 • 60lIl St., 1CtMtIt.&#13;
-WEDNESDAY NIGHT&#13;
IS LADIES' NIGHT&#13;
AU WIES AT1E8II1 WILL RECEIVE&#13;
COCKTAILS AT V2 PRICE!&#13;
THURSDAY'S TIl MIGHT TO DRI. BEER.&#13;
BEER MIGHT SCIIOOBS 35c&#13;
BOmES 50c&#13;
HumlflWN/&#13;
*****************: SP_orts commentary THE PARKSIDE RANGER September 29, 1976 7&#13;
: SPORTS·&#13;
* * ****************** Swimmers Flshing and Firing Lines&#13;
compete&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
The women's swim team faces&#13;
UW-Milwaukee in the Panther&#13;
pool to begin the 1976 season this&#13;
evening at 6:30.&#13;
Coach Barb Lawson has three&#13;
returnees on her five member&#13;
squad, including Mary Beth&#13;
Leitch, last year's most valuable&#13;
swimmer, Gail Olson and Lynn&#13;
Peterson.&#13;
Lawson also has two&#13;
newcomers to Parkside and to&#13;
competitive swimming in Sally&#13;
Francis and Lilly Crnich.&#13;
"Olson and Leitch swim all&#13;
strokes and will fill the events&#13;
according oo the strength of the&#13;
opposing team, while Francis&#13;
and Crnich are mostly freestyle&#13;
participants," said Coach&#13;
Lawson. Peterson will be the only&#13;
diver and may swim in the&#13;
breaststroke competition.&#13;
"Because of our lack of size m&#13;
numbers and our inexperience, it&#13;
will be a real challenge to win any&#13;
of our meets, although we hope to&#13;
keep the score close if possible."&#13;
UWM has one of its bigger&#13;
teams in the past few years and&#13;
also have a new coach, so&#13;
Parkside's chances of being a&#13;
competitive opponent depends on&#13;
the lineup, according to Lawson.&#13;
Overall, Coach Lawson sees a&#13;
possibility to break some of the&#13;
Parkside records, improve their&#13;
point total in the conference&#13;
championships and to qualify&#13;
some of the Mid-West Regional&#13;
meet in March.&#13;
"The team members are&#13;
working very hard and I'm&#13;
pleased to see how much they're&#13;
putting into this."&#13;
Coach Lawson is hoping that&#13;
more girls will come out for the&#13;
team, as many positions are still&#13;
open.&#13;
Soccer&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
The soccer team will host two&#13;
teams and travel to play another&#13;
in the coming week.&#13;
The Rangers host Aurora&#13;
College this afternoon in a 3: 30&#13;
p.m. match and the University of&#13;
Minnesota Sunday in a. 1 p.m.&#13;
contest. Saturday, the team will&#13;
by Scott Reinhard&#13;
Fifty years from now sportsmen and women will be able to bounce&#13;
their grandchildren on their knee and reminice 1976 as the year of the&#13;
beginning and the end of some of the most important outdoor sports known to us.&#13;
To begin with, bow hunters saw their opening weekend trickle down&#13;
a dry drain as the ten most heavily hunted COllllties in the state were&#13;
closed to all forms of hunting, stream fishing, and camping. It seems&#13;
that Adams, Clark, Green Lake, Jackson, Juneau, Marquette,&#13;
Monroe, Portage, Washara, and Wood counties are closed due to their&#13;
potential fire hazard. The state has become a virtual tinderbox caused&#13;
by a lack of precipitation. This is the first time such a closure has&#13;
occurred since 1953 when hunting was set aside for a week until the&#13;
hazard was over. 1&#13;
There is rumor that bowmen will be given back their subtracted&#13;
time after the rifle season, but a lot of good this does after the herd has&#13;
been substantially reduced and spooked. I would think a refund would&#13;
be in order.&#13;
Don't give up hope though as there is plenty of hunting available in&#13;
the unclosed counties of Racine and Kenosha. Private lands would be&#13;
the best bet for your quarry but Bong and New Munster public hunting&#13;
grounds should prove mildly fruitful. Deer registration • will be in&#13;
Burlington at the Police station. This must be a first to see bowmen&#13;
praying for rain in order to hunt.&#13;
The duck hunting this year will be long remembered as the last of its&#13;
kind. Not that it will be anymore spectacular than it was last year; and&#13;
that isn't saying much; but this is the last year lead shot may be used&#13;
on waterfowl in Wisconsin waters. When the season opens this Friday&#13;
at noon take time in loading your chamber and remember it well.&#13;
Remember also the Great Horicon Marsh as this is the first year of its&#13;
four year goose reduction plan that has already gotten off on a sour&#13;
note.&#13;
A first came to Root River fishermen this year on September 16,&#13;
which is opening day of salmon snagging in all bays, harbors, except&#13;
Racine County's Root River. This was caused by the combined efforts&#13;
of the Root River Restoration Council and Salmon Unlimited due to the&#13;
fact that there are large numbers of trout in the river at this time right&#13;
along with the salmon. It is not legal to snag these anadromous&#13;
salmonids because of their fine qualities and also because they don't&#13;
die after spawning as the salmon do so there is no sense in harvesting&#13;
them in this manner.&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
A faculty, staff and students The team will practice noon&#13;
men's volleyball team has been hours on Tuesday and Thursday.&#13;
organized, according to Orby Those involved with the team&#13;
Moss, coordinator. are Bob Lawson, Lucian Rosa,&#13;
The team will play ap- Hal Henderson, Hans Nuernberg,&#13;
proximately six games at Racine Jan Ocker, Hank Krause, Vic&#13;
Park, Hor lick, and Case at 7 p.m. Godfrey, Jack Landwehr and&#13;
on Sept. 21, 28, and 30 and October LeRoy Jefferson. Starters will be&#13;
4. 12, and $8. picked from those who show up&#13;
played"'iOday&#13;
travel to Charleston Illinois to&#13;
play Eastern Illinois at 11 a.m.&#13;
Parkside suffered their third&#13;
defeat of the season to Rockford&#13;
College, 4-1, last Saturday.&#13;
"Although we totally&#13;
dominated Rockford and played&#13;
our best soccer of the season,"&#13;
said Coach Hal Henderson, "we&#13;
were tied 1-1 at halftime."&#13;
The Rangers' lone goal was&#13;
scored by -Earl Campbell, who&#13;
took a volley out of the air on a&#13;
cross from Jack Landwehr.&#13;
Parkside out shot Rockford, 13-&#13;
11. .&#13;
"Once we got behind in the&#13;
game, we didn't play our kind of&#13;
game and we can't be successful&#13;
if we don't control the play,"&#13;
Henderson stated.&#13;
The PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
invites you to experience the&#13;
I.D's required&#13;
ZANY COMEDY&#13;
of&#13;
EDMONDS &amp; CURLEY&#13;
As seen on notional T.V . . Riso featuring Folksingers&#13;
CHRIS&#13;
TONY&#13;
INLOES and&#13;
ROLANDS&#13;
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2,&#13;
8:00 P.M. U nlon Square&#13;
~R\~"'$&#13;
(\\ \'1't.~ p.~\.t. p.\JP.\\:&#13;
Adm .: '1.50 UW.f&gt; Students&#13;
'2.00 General&#13;
Any intentional foul hooking, including unsuccessful attempts at&#13;
ripping, can bring a large fme from Racine's new game warden, Tom&#13;
Edwards. Edwards claims he will even be giving citations for the&#13;
possession of a siver tongued spider, otherwise known as a snagging&#13;
hook and I think he means business. He packs a .:357 magnum pistol.on his hip!&#13;
Concluding this history of firsts and lasts is the new proposal&#13;
brought to rifle deer hunting. It is the controversial split zone deer&#13;
hunting for 1977 developed in hopes of easing opening day p~.&#13;
The proposal calls for the state to be divided into three zones. The&#13;
hunter has a choice of which zone he wishes to hunt and also between&#13;
whether he wishes to hunt the first three days of the season or the last&#13;
six. Each zone has a different seasotf.&#13;
To introduce this proposal to the DNR set up state wide meetings to&#13;
inform the public and to obtain public opinion. I have only one question&#13;
as a result of these meetings: "Who· did the people who attended these&#13;
meetings think they were?" There actions could only be compared to&#13;
that of a pack of wild apes on a jungle raid. Uncalled foe immature&#13;
actions such as stomping of feet, screaming obscenities, and throwing&#13;
questionnaires back at the DNR reps not only made jackasses out of&#13;
these people in the eyes of the public but also cheated themselves out&#13;
of the opportunity to be informed of the programs advantages and&#13;
disadvanta~4:s_: _________________ ... __ u,.~ ........................ ¾liJ4?¥&lt;t4¼¾¥$4KV-iA.&amp;!ht4- -iA4!V_. ... ............. -- ....... - ..... -- - -&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
$9&#13;
Mike Ville rs - Dealer 637-2726&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington "''· 634-2373&#13;
YOUR PLACE LOUNGE&#13;
3214 - 60lh St., ICIIIOOI&#13;
·WEDNESDAY NIGHT&#13;
IS LADIES' NIGHT&#13;
ALL LADIES ATTENDING WILL RECEIVE&#13;
COCKTAILS AT 1/2 PRICE!&#13;
THURSDAY'S THE NIGHT TO DRINK BEER.&#13;
00:Cba&#13;
BEER NIGHT SCHOONERS 35c BOmES 50c&#13;
HU/1/W IIWIIII &#13;
wins two&#13;
"w. raDY needed a team&#13;
eIf«t to beat Lo)'OIa," said&#13;
Godfr01. "Everyon. of tb.&#13;
.-sin the meet ran tbeir beSt&#13;
tImeS ... the five mile course of&#13;
IIle __ U the team keeps&#13;
bt1P o¥iDI at this rate. we shOuld&#13;
~ In good .... pe ."&#13;
1be R8JlIe"S opened lIlell" Q1I8i&#13;
meel _ at boJDO September&#13;
\I,~liIIll UW·Wb!tewater. I&amp;-&#13;
e. bat IoaioIto the UnIversity of&#13;
lJIIDnl ............. o Orcle. ~.&#13;
Chicago Clrcl.·s Fernando&#13;
Re7ea _ the meet in 216: 12.&#13;
beatlnc out Parkald.'s Gary&#13;
PrIem. wbo flniIbed aeeond. by 13&#13;
--&#13;
JuDI« Ray FredoriCkaeo. th.&#13;
. I III8Il In the - opener •&#13;
.. sizth with a llme of 216:41.&#13;
Freshman J.ff MUI.r .. as&#13;
_th; ......_ •• MIk. Riven&#13;
.. eiIbIh and freIIbman Lee&#13;
A1lIapr .... Illth, roundlng out&#13;
IIle 1Illp lift.&#13;
Otber \lip flniIbers for the&#13;
Rang.rs ... re Gary Prl.m.&#13;
1llur1b; Jeff MIII«. flttb; Lee&#13;
A1lInc.... elgbIb; MIk. Rivers.&#13;
ninth;Grec JuIlcb. 12th and John&#13;
Van den Brandl. 13th.&#13;
I opens season&#13;
'" 8lId ~k from COach .. belieVeS the team&#13;
_. ~a. was the state canWIn the doub1e dual ~es&#13;
~ In 1m. Saturday. a1tbougb the team lost&#13;
• Racine Park. to these two tams last year.&#13;
lOIeeted to A1I-Raclne • 'ibis y..... the oquad has built&#13;
fer wlIOJbaII a pbjloaoP"y of intensity and&#13;
:&#13;
'::::.:~ doaire 10play the ball at all costs.&#13;
1bey are leamlng to bit the floor&#13;
wltbout getllng burt and building&#13;
~----.:&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
'.•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
- •&#13;
.•&#13;
• •&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•• •&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
r-----.~----.•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
nue Kenosha ••&#13;
Phone 65 -0774 •&#13;
-I •&#13;
nd&#13;
"the ~U::~deZi-;:;::~~&#13;
.Mi~e"~Yi!~~====~~~~~?~&#13;
Fr.. Pizza D.liv.ry&#13;
Club Hlghview&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652·8737&#13;
Alii .~D•.,I.I Chlcke.,S~llhtIH,...... , ....&#13;
OPEII 4 ~.• , ,&#13;
to I I.•.&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD •••&#13;
invites you to •&#13;
PARK CITY .:.&#13;
WINTER 1lF&#13;
FESTIVAL&#13;
Park City, Utah&#13;
JAN. 1-9&#13;
'205 -'"&#13;
Includes: ''',l;-'&amp;''&#13;
~&#13;
• Roundtrip bus fare ,&#13;
•&#13;
• Condominium (4 to a room)&#13;
•. ...• Lift tickets, dances, races...and...mOl'e&#13;
Sign-up in UW-P Union Office&#13;
For more info call 553-2278&#13;
I&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
When you say B d' , • ",: u welser., you ve said It (J •&#13;
E. F. Madrigrano- --&#13;
•&#13;
i&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
r 2t, 76&#13;
t&#13;
wins two&#13;
season&#13;
~;i:'ie'~bi-~~ ·~-,&#13;
Mike 'Villers - ~~?J~:- __ §~?-2726&#13;
~zv,,., - - -541rtT£4,.,..,.,.,.,..vvzvv,;•¾n+t ....... --- ........ --- h al,•41, r&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
Free Pizza Delivery ;&#13;
;.&#13;
Club Highview ;&#13;
5035 60th Street i&#13;
Ph~ne:652~737 I&#13;
Also dtUierl119 Chlek,11, s,11htflt, R1flt11, a-, i . OPEii 4 ,.11. to 1 1.11. ~ ' ~&#13;
..,,....._,::-__ ,.,._.,, PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD •$•&#13;
PA;~y0&#13;
~&#13;
1&#13;
;TY.&#13;
WINTER f.&#13;
FESTIVAL&#13;
Park City, Utah&#13;
JAN. 1-9&#13;
'205&#13;
Includes:&#13;
• Roundtrip bus fare&#13;
• Condominium (4 to a&#13;
Lift tickets, dances, roces ... and ... more&#13;
Sign-up in UW-P Union Office&#13;
For more info call 553-2278 </text>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers&#13;
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