<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="2784" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://archives.uwp.edu/exhibits/show/rangernews/item/2784?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-03T04:13:37+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="3396">
      <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/5f67b2d7b410436aa76c19d491ef2a05.pdf</src>
      <authentication>eead35225774eea9d6c2499342621ea7</authentication>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="8">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="96">
        <name>Headline</name>
        <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="66068">
            <text>Singer speaks to business majors&#13;
</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="97">
        <name>Issue</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="66069">
            <text>Volume 5, issue 5</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="95">
        <name>Series Number</name>
        <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="66070">
            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="1">
        <name>Text</name>
        <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="90003">
            <text>Singer speaks to business majors&#13;
by BnICe Wagner be too much of an effort to '&#13;
Singer stated that this no&#13;
maximize the effect of such a longer was the state of recruiting&#13;
report, when responses were yet efforts bythe program. He hoped&#13;
to come from the division' and that. it was a lesson that was&#13;
from students. learned, Wecausethe division now&#13;
Singer talked about the current has input on all salary offers&#13;
situation with the management given to possible candidates for&#13;
- science division, which has felt open posts,&#13;
the crunch of some late Singer was optimistic about&#13;
resignations.- This leaves the future recruiting efforts. In&#13;
accounting speciality with one . answering a student's question&#13;
full-time instructor. about what Parkside has to offer&#13;
Singer told the group that he is to prospective candidates, Singer&#13;
currently trying to recruit a responded that new faculty would&#13;
faculty member in accounting ,be able to help make changes in&#13;
but owing to the fact tbat it is he program instead of being met&#13;
hard to find accomplished with too rigid of a structure and&#13;
business instructors and most also would be attracted by the&#13;
schools are looking for them, it ideal location of Parkside.&#13;
may not be possible fOr Parkside He also announced that&#13;
to get a new faculty member in Parkside graduates are now able&#13;
that area by January. to take the CPA exam because ofThe&#13;
administration bad given a new state certifying board&#13;
the business program six ruling which named the courses&#13;
positions to recruit for, but they that one must lake instead of&#13;
failed to get sufficient response. specifying which schools can give&#13;
A Ranger interview brought out courses leading to the certificate.&#13;
the fact that a promising in- Students at the meeting, were&#13;
structor of marketing and per- concerned with the reputation of&#13;
sonnel had been offered one of tl!e Parkside at the lime when they&#13;
open positions in the marketing go out into the job market.&#13;
speciality, but Chancellor Gusliin Student Carl Leonard called for a&#13;
offered that applicant a salary general "cleaning of the house"&#13;
.$4,000 less than recommended by regarding the attitude of faculty&#13;
the business program coer- members, which he found&#13;
dinator and it was refused. generally to be. negative&#13;
regarding the progress of the&#13;
-TheParkside,------""-';""'-d ""-pg.,&#13;
Saying Ranger coverage of the&#13;
.business management situation&#13;
was "designed to make a bad·&#13;
situation worse,"· business&#13;
management coordinator Ronald&#13;
- Singer star ted .a Wednesday&#13;
afternoon meeting with, students&#13;
designed to clear up wha t he&#13;
called "a lot of- misun-·&#13;
derstandings which have been&#13;
generated through what Ifeel is a&#13;
lack of information."&#13;
Singer spent most of the&#13;
meeting. talking about' the&#13;
Chancellor's task force on the&#13;
business program which recently&#13;
put out it's report. .&#13;
This report is in the process of&#13;
being responded to by the&#13;
management science division.&#13;
Singer told the crowd of about 60&#13;
that the report is I 'not carved in&#13;
stone." The t'!lsk force's intention,&#13;
Singer said, was to look&#13;
at the present situation and make&#13;
some suggestions.&#13;
According to.Singer, "it should&#13;
have some impact" on the future&#13;
of business management but 'he&#13;
also stated that there seemed, to&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No.5 Wednesday. October 6. 1976&#13;
Ronald SInger&#13;
.... 11:...""" _ •&#13;
photo by V.n Thompson&#13;
Faculty Senate&#13;
eliminates TFD&#13;
by John McKioskey&#13;
Last Tuesday the Faculty&#13;
Senate voted to elirninate the&#13;
Tenured Faculty Division (TFD)&#13;
and to replace it with a Personnel&#13;
Review Committee (PRC), which&#13;
Bowden ~pposes rules&#13;
by Diane Cal!§on&#13;
Beginning in October, faculty&#13;
and administration will meet in&#13;
committees to begin implementation&#13;
of a number of&#13;
student disciplinary procedures&#13;
passed by the UW Board of&#13;
, Regents for all UW Campuses.&#13;
. This disciplinary guideline sets&#13;
up standards of conduct for all&#13;
students, and outlines&#13;
disciplinary action which can be&#13;
taken against students for infractions.&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden, President of&#13;
student government, said she&#13;
'feels very strongly against the&#13;
code, which consists of two&#13;
sections: I) Procedures for nonacademic&#13;
misconduct and 2)&#13;
Procedures for academic&#13;
misconduct.&#13;
Non-academic misconduct can&#13;
be broken down into- two .types:&#13;
serious offenses like vandalism&#13;
and assault which are considered&#13;
illegal in civil courts, and minor&#13;
offenses such as rowdiness and&#13;
breaking of dorm. rules.&#13;
Bowden, who said she will he&#13;
attending th,e implementation&#13;
procedures "under protest, J'&#13;
stated that "The University&#13;
should not be allowed to try a&#13;
student for serious offenses&#13;
because of the possibility of&#13;
double jeopardy; he could also&#13;
have action taken against him in&#13;
a civil court for the same act."&#13;
She pointed out. that these offenses&#13;
are not academic in&#13;
nature,' but the disciplinary&#13;
action taken because of. the offenses&#13;
is purely academic.&#13;
"A student can have his&#13;
transcripts . withheld, be&#13;
suspended or expelled, for an act&#13;
which has nothing to do with his&#13;
academic life. Once again, this is&#13;
a form of double jeopardy," said&#13;
Bowden.&#13;
Although she feels that some&#13;
guidelines are better than none,&#13;
and that the guidelines are at- _&#13;
tempting to arrive at' a guaranty&#13;
of due process of law, Bowden&#13;
stated: "The guidelines are,&#13;
based on the idea of 'In loco&#13;
parentis' and have more bearing&#13;
on a dorm campus than on a&#13;
commuter campus like&#13;
Parkside."&#13;
'In loco parentis' refers to the&#13;
policy of administrations at some&#13;
dorm campuses that they must&#13;
act as parents to students away&#13;
from home.&#13;
She added, "At Parkside 23&#13;
percent of the students are age 25&#13;
or older; we just don't need it."&#13;
The disciplinary code sets up&#13;
an appeals procedure and court&#13;
trial for the accused student. The&#13;
actual methods used in implementation&#13;
of the guidelines,'&#13;
such as who sits on the court, the&#13;
designation of an "investigating&#13;
officer" and establishment of&#13;
regulations for handling of&#13;
grades and transcripts of&#13;
students with charges pending&#13;
against them, are determined by&#13;
each campus. Once determined,&#13;
they are suhmitted to UW system&#13;
administration in Madison for&#13;
approval.&#13;
Students, administration, and&#13;
faculty are involved in the implementation,&#13;
but Bowden said&#13;
that "very litUe interest has been&#13;
shown. •&#13;
"Student government held&#13;
hearings this summer at which •&#13;
no one showed up. Nobody even&#13;
knows about the disciplinary&#13;
procedures.&#13;
"Obviously, there has been a&#13;
minimum of student input. ..&#13;
Bowgen said the disciplinary&#13;
guidelines for academic&#13;
misconduct - cheating and&#13;
plagiarism - seemed to be handled&#13;
properly, but that tbose&#13;
pertaining to non-academic&#13;
misconduct were an example of&#13;
the administration "regulating in&#13;
areas I don't believe we have a&#13;
right to regulate.&#13;
"These areas should be handled&#13;
strictly by tbe civil courts."&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
,&#13;
will consist of one representative&#13;
from each division plus four&#13;
members elected &amp;t large.&#13;
The TFD was a larger committee,&#13;
consisting of three faculty&#13;
members from each academic&#13;
division. The streamlined PRe&#13;
will have only 12 members.&#13;
The PRC proposal must now be&#13;
approved by ChanceDor Gustin&#13;
and sent to the University System&#13;
Regents in Madison for approval.&#13;
The purpose of the PRC will be to&#13;
consider recommendations for&#13;
appointment to professor and&#13;
appointment to tenured statusthe&#13;
same functions as TFD- but&#13;
the procedure is now more&#13;
streamlined.&#13;
Under the new system, a subconunittee&#13;
of four professors will&#13;
consider appointments to&#13;
professor status so that faculty&#13;
members who are not professors&#13;
will not have to consider lbe&#13;
promotion of their peers.&#13;
The reason the Senate decided&#13;
on the subcommittee method is&#13;
that if a non-professor decided&#13;
who is to become a professor, his&#13;
own chances for that status might&#13;
be jeopardized when he comes up&#13;
for review.&#13;
Since provisionally organized&#13;
division!" such as business&#13;
management would not have had&#13;
any representation on the PFC,&#13;
the Senate voted to let their interim&#13;
Executive Committee send&#13;
a member to the PRC.&#13;
In other action. the Senate&#13;
began consideration of the&#13;
creation of an Academic Actjpns&#13;
Committee to handle appeals for&#13;
special academic considerations.&#13;
This would replace two old&#13;
committees which went out of&#13;
action when the SChoolof Modern&#13;
Industry and the College of&#13;
SCience and Society, combined&#13;
some functions.&#13;
One objection to the proposal&#13;
voiced by senators was that&#13;
students should not be on such a&#13;
conunittee. As it reads now, the&#13;
Academic Actions Committee&#13;
legislation would have two&#13;
student members along with five&#13;
faculty members.&#13;
I&#13;
"&#13;
Singer speaks&#13;
by Br~ce Wagner&#13;
to business majors&#13;
Saying Ranger coverage of the&#13;
business management situation&#13;
was "designed to make a bad ·&#13;
situation wo)'se," business&#13;
management coordinator Ronald&#13;
- Singer started a Wednesday&#13;
afternoon meeting with students&#13;
designed to clear up what he&#13;
called "a lot of misuri-•&#13;
derstandings which have been&#13;
generated through what I feel is a&#13;
lack of information."&#13;
Singer spent most of the&#13;
meeting talking about" the&#13;
Chancellor's task force· on the&#13;
business program which recently&#13;
put out it's report.&#13;
This report is in the process of&#13;
being responded to by the&#13;
management science division.&#13;
Singer told the crowd of about 60&#13;
that the report is ''not carved in&#13;
stone." The task force's intention,&#13;
Singer said, was to look&#13;
at the present situation and make&#13;
some suggestions.&#13;
According to Singer, "it should&#13;
have some impact'' on the future&#13;
of business management but he&#13;
also stated that there seemed, to&#13;
be too much of an effort to&#13;
maximize the effect of such a&#13;
report, when responses were yet&#13;
to come from the division and&#13;
from students.&#13;
Singer talked about the current&#13;
situation with the manag'ement&#13;
. science divii,ion, which has felt&#13;
the crunch of some late&#13;
resignations. Th_is leaves the&#13;
accounting speciality with one&#13;
full-time instructor.&#13;
Singer told the group that he is&#13;
currently trying to recruit a&#13;
faculty' member in accounting&#13;
but owing to the fact that it is&#13;
hard to find accomplished&#13;
business instructors and most&#13;
schools are looking for them, it&#13;
may not be possible for Parkside&#13;
to get a new faculty member in&#13;
that area by January.&#13;
The administration had given&#13;
the business program six&#13;
positions to recruit for, but they&#13;
failed to get sufficient response.&#13;
A Ranger interview brought out&#13;
the fact that a promising instructor&#13;
of marketing and personnel&#13;
had been offered one of the&#13;
open positions in the marketing&#13;
speciality, but Chancellor GusKin&#13;
offered that applicant a salary&#13;
$4,000 less than recommended by&#13;
the business program coordinator&#13;
and it was refused.&#13;
Singer stated that this no&#13;
longer was the state of recruiting&#13;
efforts by'the program. He hoped&#13;
that it was a lesson that was&#13;
learned, ilecause the division now&#13;
has input on all salary offers&#13;
given to possible candidates for&#13;
open posts ..&#13;
Singer was optimistic about&#13;
future recruiting efforts. In&#13;
· answering a student's question&#13;
about what Parkside has to offer&#13;
to prospective candidates, Singer&#13;
responded that new faculty would&#13;
. be able to help make changes in&#13;
he program instead of being met&#13;
with too rigid of a structure and&#13;
also would be attracted by the&#13;
ideal location of Parkside.&#13;
He also announced that&#13;
Parkside graduates are now able&#13;
to take the CPA exam because of -&#13;
a new state certifying board&#13;
ruling which named the courses&#13;
that one must take instead of&#13;
specifying which schools can give&#13;
courses leading to the certificate.&#13;
Students at the meeting. were&#13;
concerned with the reputation of&#13;
Parkside at the time when they&#13;
go out into the job market.&#13;
Student Carl Leonard called for a&#13;
general "cleaning of the house"&#13;
regarding the attitude of faculty&#13;
members, which · he found&#13;
generally to be . negative&#13;
regarding the progress of the&#13;
-The Parkside------con-'inue-d on-pg. 5&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No. 5 Wednesday, October 6, 1976&#13;
Ronald Singer photo by Van Thompson&#13;
Faculty Senate&#13;
eli1ninates TFD&#13;
,&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Last Tuesday the Faculty&#13;
Senate voted to eliminate the&#13;
Tenured Faculty Division (TFD)&#13;
and to replace it with a Personnel&#13;
Review Committee (PRC), which&#13;
will consist of one representative&#13;
from each division plus four&#13;
members elected at large.&#13;
The TFD was a larger committee,&#13;
consisting of three faculty&#13;
members from each academic&#13;
division. The streamlined PRC&#13;
will have only 12 members.&#13;
Bowden opposes rules&#13;
The PRC proposal must now be&#13;
approved by Chancellor Guskin&#13;
and sent to the University System&#13;
Regents in Madison for approval.&#13;
The purpose of the PRC will be to&#13;
consider recommendations for&#13;
appointment to professor and&#13;
appointment to tenured statusthe&#13;
same functions as TFD- but&#13;
the procedure is now more&#13;
streamlined.&#13;
by Diane Ca~on&#13;
Beginning in October, faculty&#13;
and administration will meet in&#13;
committees to begin implementation&#13;
of a number of&#13;
student disciplinary procedures&#13;
passed by the UW Board of&#13;
, Regents for all UW Caml)uses.&#13;
This disciplinary guideline sets&#13;
up standards of conduct for all&#13;
students, and outlines&#13;
disciplinary action which can be&#13;
taken against students for infractions.&#13;
&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden, President of&#13;
_student government, said she&#13;
fee~s very strongly against the&#13;
code, which consists of two&#13;
sections: 1) Procedures for nonacademic&#13;
misconduct and 2)&#13;
Procedures for academic&#13;
misconduct.&#13;
Non-academic misconduct can&#13;
be broken down into-two .types:&#13;
serious offenses like vandalism&#13;
and assault which are considered&#13;
illegal in civil courts, and minor&#13;
offenses such as rowdiness and&#13;
breaking of dorm_ rules.&#13;
Bowden, who said she will be&#13;
attending the implementation&#13;
procedures "under protest,"&#13;
stated that "The University&#13;
should not be allowed to try a&#13;
student for serious offenses&#13;
because of the possibility of&#13;
double jeopardy; he could also&#13;
have action taken against him in&#13;
a civil court for the same act."&#13;
She poiqted out that these' offenses&#13;
are not academic in&#13;
nature, but the disciplinary&#13;
action taken because of the offenses&#13;
is purely academic.&#13;
"A student can have his&#13;
transcripts . withheld, be&#13;
suspended or expelled, for an act&#13;
which has nothing to do with his&#13;
academic life. Once again, this is&#13;
a form of double jeopardy," said&#13;
Bowden.&#13;
Although she feels that some&#13;
guidelines are better than none,&#13;
and that the guidelines are at- _&#13;
tempting to ~rrive at· a guaranty&#13;
of due process of law, Bowden&#13;
stated: "The guidelines are ,&#13;
based on the idea of 'In loco&#13;
parentis' and have more bearing&#13;
on a dorm campus than on ~&#13;
commuter campµs like&#13;
Parkside."&#13;
'In loco parentis' refers to the&#13;
policy of administrations at some&#13;
dorm campuses that they must&#13;
act as parents to students away&#13;
from home.&#13;
She added, "At Parkside 23&#13;
percent of the students are age 25&#13;
or older; we just don't need it."&#13;
The disciplinary code sets up&#13;
an appeals procedure and court&#13;
trial for the accu~ student. The&#13;
actual methods used in implementation&#13;
of the guidelines, 1&#13;
such as who sits on the court, the&#13;
designation of an "investigating&#13;
officer" and establishment of&#13;
regulations for handling of&#13;
grades and transcripts of&#13;
students with charges pending&#13;
against them, are determined by&#13;
each campus. Once determined,&#13;
they are submitted to UW system&#13;
administration in Madison for&#13;
approval.&#13;
Students, administration, and&#13;
faculty are involved in the implementation,&#13;
but Bowden said&#13;
that "very little interest has been&#13;
shown. •&#13;
"Student government held&#13;
hearings this summer at which&#13;
no one showed up. Nobody even&#13;
knows about the disciplinary&#13;
procedures.&#13;
"Obviously, there has been a&#13;
minimum of student input. "&#13;
Bow~en said the disciplinary&#13;
guidelines for academic&#13;
· misconduct - cheating and&#13;
plagiarism - seemed to be handled&#13;
properly, but that those&#13;
pertaining to non-academic&#13;
misconduct were an example of&#13;
the administration "regulating in&#13;
areas I don't believe we have a&#13;
right to regulate.&#13;
"These areas should be handled&#13;
strictly by the civil courts. "&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
Under the new system, a subcommittee&#13;
of four professors will&#13;
consider appointments to&#13;
professor status so that faculty&#13;
members who are not professors&#13;
will not have to consider the&#13;
promotion of their peers.&#13;
The reason the Senate decided&#13;
on the subcommittee method is&#13;
that if a non-professor decided&#13;
who is to become a professor, his&#13;
own chances for that status might&#13;
be jeopardized when he comes up&#13;
for review.&#13;
Since provisionally organized&#13;
divisions such as business&#13;
management would not have had&#13;
any representation on the PFC,&#13;
the Senate voted to let their Interim&#13;
Executive Committee send&#13;
a member to the PRC.&#13;
In other action. the Senate&#13;
began consideration of the&#13;
creation of an Academic Actions&#13;
Committee to handle appeals for&#13;
special academic considerations.&#13;
This would replace two old&#13;
committees which went out of&#13;
action when the School of Modern&#13;
Industry and the College of&#13;
Science and Society combined&#13;
some functions.&#13;
One objection to the proposal&#13;
voiced by senators was that&#13;
students should not be on such a&#13;
committee. As it reads now, the&#13;
Academic Actions Committee&#13;
legislation would have two&#13;
student members along with five&#13;
faculty members. &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 6, 1976&#13;
~ ". The Parkside&#13;
~rrRA'NGER&#13;
---EDITOR IAL/OPINION&#13;
Singer commended~. ".&#13;
, ,for meetrng with studentsmay'&#13;
have in accepting his stat~ments .. So":,e.students&#13;
were also quite frank in expressing their opinions. One&#13;
student felt that faculty should rid themselves. of&#13;
negative attitudes about the proqram b~fore expectl~g&#13;
students to show positive feelings about ItS future while&#13;
another related -his thoughts of transferrrng to another&#13;
school. '..&#13;
It's difficult to publicly discuss problems With one In&#13;
authority as it is difffcult to be in the.posltlon of. answering&#13;
those questions or .complaints. ~oth s~des&#13;
handled the siutation very well in Wednesday s meeting ..&#13;
It was hopefully just the beginning of some real communication.&#13;
, •&#13;
Singer has shown good intentions by opening himse!f&#13;
to student questions and opinions. Students, by their&#13;
appearance at the meeting, have demonstrated concern&#13;
and support for the development of a good business&#13;
management program. It seems the days of apathy at&#13;
Parkside are over.&#13;
Ron Singer, chairman of Management Science, should&#13;
be commended for demonstrating hiS. concern !or&#13;
students and the business progra.m by calling a meeting&#13;
of business management majors last Wednesday.&#13;
Singer explained the recent task force recornmendatlons&#13;
for the, program and answered questions&#13;
from the group of apprOXimately ,60 to 80 students. He&#13;
saIdthat student reaction to the task force report w~s&#13;
ImpOrtant and that the communication taking place In&#13;
the meeting was very constructive. He hllped there&#13;
would be further meetings of that nature.&#13;
Many times students are forgotten in the midst of&#13;
administrative hassles but Singer obl1iously s~w enoug.h&#13;
significance In student opinion to try to cultivate their&#13;
understanding and participation in building the business&#13;
management program. It's critical that st.ude~ts support&#13;
the program slrtce it cannot succeed If disgusted&#13;
business majors transfer to other schools.&#13;
Singer seemed to speak in a rather open manner,&#13;
acknowledging his biases and the reservations students&#13;
-POLITICAL&#13;
)-&#13;
'Jimm y-Jerry Show' discussed&#13;
going to call this a debate, Nosh Webster must have made a mistake in&#13;
defining the word, but Iguess tbat makes two of them: be also dRIri't&#13;
notice the difference between anmesty and pardon.&#13;
The ridiculous format tbat the League of Womel) Voters set for the&#13;
debates, has turned it into a safe TV time for both men. The NixonKennedy&#13;
debates were set up with one moderator, Howard K. Smith,&#13;
and had Nixon firing questions at Kennedy and, 'Kennedy doing the&#13;
same to Nixon. The format of the present debates is enough to make&#13;
anyone bored. Granted the three panelists were excellent but ~th only&#13;
three minutes answering time and two minutes follow-up time, skilled&#13;
politicians can sidestep the issues very well. The big flaw wi'S apparent&#13;
when 'Ford made a statement to the effect that the current&#13;
Governor of Georgia had testified to a Senate' committee that Jimmy&#13;
Carter's Medic-Aid program was, "in a shambles." Ford failed to&#13;
mention however that federal funds for the program have been shut off&#13;
and Carter has little to do with the program since be bas been out of ,&#13;
office. For tbat matter Carter has bad lit\le to do with Georgia's&#13;
policy-making at all. I&#13;
If you have been falling asleep reading this review it is understandable&#13;
since Iam falling asleep wrting it. Our retribution will&#13;
come on Thursday night when the screened audience will rise and&#13;
shout in a clear. consise American voice, "Bring, IiacJ&lt; Harry OrWIlll!"&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
'.&#13;
After Thursday nights spectacle on the national networks, I was&#13;
tempted to put the channel selector on the PBS 10 and kick it off the&#13;
set. Although the last thirty or so minutes were the most enjoyable, •&#13;
the rest of tbe time Icould have better spent reading a newspaper.&#13;
Any resemblance the "Jimmy-Jerry Show" had to a debate was&#13;
strictly coincidental. After the rhetoric and useless predictions were&#13;
over, Icame away wondering where Barney Miller had left off and the&#13;
debate bad begun. There have been predictions and projections in&#13;
presidential elections for as long"as I don't care to remember. and&#13;
everything that the candidates saio, has been said time and time&#13;
again. The fact that they called this massive news conference a debate&#13;
says something to me about-truth in politics.&#13;
Both men appeared nervous and robot-like, which is expected of&#13;
Ford, but Carter cannot afford to come off as anything but the confident&#13;
leader that his campaign image needs so badly. If Carter&#13;
maintains his Ford-like quality of debating, people might begin to'&#13;
wonder if tbere is any difference. '&#13;
'I1lere we""-!'o winners in Thursday's debate except maybe the&#13;
advertisers wbo paid for the commercials. Lester Maddox and Gene&#13;
McQii1hey, who were probably glad that they Were not a part of it,&#13;
and all the paranoids in the world, probably went wild when just as&#13;
• Carter started talking about tbe CIA, the so~went off. If they are&#13;
FORUM&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGERS: Cathy Brnak, JUdy TrUllru", (asst.)&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Tom Coopflr&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR: Bruce Wagner&#13;
DEPARTMENTS:&#13;
.. Admlnlstration-Policle,: John McKI~kev&#13;
.. $Ml: Dave Brandt&#13;
.. StUdent groups &amp; speakers: Mary Kay Ohmer&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debbie Bauer&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Jean Tenut.&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS: ieffrey I. swencki, Bill Barke "&#13;
. COpy EDITOR: Julie Lan",&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: Van Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION: Sue Marquardt _ ..&#13;
STAFF: Wendy Miller, Terri Gayhart, Robert Hoffman, ChriS Clausen, BrIdget Penlkowlki,.&#13;
Larry Donnelly. Phil Hermann, Ramona Maillet, Allen Brawn. Carol Arentt, John Overman.&#13;
Bob Jambois, Beverly Pella. Betsy Neu, Linda Knudtson. Karin La Fourier, Judy Trudrunll ..&#13;
Scott Reinhard, Philip L. Livingslon.&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: P.J. Anolin .., Ricky Cooper, Rick FraSCh&#13;
AD SALESPERSONS: Joe Landa, Rick Flasch&#13;
The Parkside Ranter Is written and edited&#13;
by the students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside who are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and CO"...... Opinions ell pressed .re nol&#13;
necessarily representalive of those held by&#13;
the students, faculty or administration of&#13;
Parkslde. Editorial and Business Ss:J-22'7;&#13;
Newsroom 55J-2295.&#13;
,&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 6, 1976&#13;
~ Jr.. The Parksid ~&#13;
...&#13;
· RA·NGER&#13;
--EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
Singer commended -. .. . · for meeting wit~ students- R~n Singer chairman of Management Science, should&#13;
be commended for demonstrating his. concern tor&#13;
students and the busin~ss progra.m by calling a meeting&#13;
of business management majors last Wednesday·&#13;
Singer explained the recent task force rec?mmendations&#13;
for the program and answered questions&#13;
from the group of approximately .60 to 80 students. He&#13;
said .that student reaction to the task force report w~s&#13;
important and that the communication taking place in&#13;
the meeting was very constructive. He h.oped there&#13;
would be further meetings of that nature.&#13;
Many times students are forgotten in the midst of&#13;
administrative hassles but Singer ob~iously saw enoug_h&#13;
significance in student opini~n t? try_ t~ cultivate their&#13;
understanding and participation in bu tiding the business&#13;
management program. It's critical that st_ude~ts support&#13;
the program since it cannot succeed 1f disgusted&#13;
business majors transfer to other schools.&#13;
Singer seemed to speak in a rather o~en manner,&#13;
acknowledging his biases and the re_servat,ons students&#13;
..&#13;
may · have in accepting his stat~ments .. son:ie. students&#13;
were also quite frank in expressing their opinions. One&#13;
student felt that faculty should rid themselves. of&#13;
negative attitudes about the p~ogram b:fore expectt~g&#13;
students to show positive feelings about ,ts future while&#13;
another related -his thoughts of transferri"ng to another&#13;
school. , . . It's difficult to publicly discuss problems with one in&#13;
authority as it is difficult to be in the _position of. answering&#13;
those questions or . complaints. Both s~des&#13;
handled the siutation very well in Wednesday's meeting_.&#13;
It was hopefully just the beginning of some real com -&#13;
munication. . .,&#13;
Singer has shown good intentions by opening himse_lf&#13;
to student questions and opinions. Stu~ents, by their&#13;
appearance at the meeting, have demonstrated concern&#13;
and support for the development of a good business&#13;
management program . It seems the ~ays of apathy at&#13;
Parkside are O'(er.&#13;
POLITICAL&#13;
FORUM&#13;
•&#13;
' ..&#13;
'Jimmy-Jerry Show' discussed&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
After Thursday nights spectacle on the national networks, I was&#13;
tempted to put the channel selector on the PBS 10 and kick it off the&#13;
set. Although the last thirty or so minutes were the most enjoyable,&#13;
the rest of the time I could have better spent reading a newspaper.&#13;
· Any resemblance the "Jimmy-Jerry Show" had to a debate was&#13;
strictly coincidental. After the rhetoric and useless predictions were&#13;
over, I came away wondering where Barney Miller had left off and the&#13;
debate had begun. There have been predictions and projections in&#13;
presidential elections for as long as I don't care to remember, and&#13;
everything that the candidates said', has been said time and time&#13;
again. The fact that they called this massive news conference a debate&#13;
says something to me about-truth in politics.&#13;
Both men appeared nervous and robot-like, which is expected of&#13;
Ford, but Carter cannot afford to come off as anything but the confident&#13;
leader that his campaign image needs so badly. If Carter&#13;
maintains his Ford-like quality of debating, people might begin to&#13;
wonder if there is any difference. ·&#13;
There wer~o winners in Thursday's debate except maybe the&#13;
advertisers who paid for the commercials. Lester Maddox and Gene&#13;
McCaFthey, who were probably glad that they were not a part of it,&#13;
and all the paranoids in the world, probably went wild when just as&#13;
Carter started talking about the CIA, the sound-went off. If they are&#13;
going to call this a debate, Noah Webster must have made a mistake in&#13;
defining the word, but I guess that makes two of them: he also di-art't&#13;
notice the difference between anmesty and pardon.&#13;
The ridiculous format that the League of Women Voters set for the&#13;
debates, has turned it into a safe TV time for bpth men. The NixonKennedy&#13;
debates were set up with one moderatot, Howard K. Smith,&#13;
and had Nixon firing questions at Kennedy and. :Kennedy doing the&#13;
same to Nixon. The format of the present debates is enough to make&#13;
anyone bored. Granted the three panelists were excellent but ~ith only&#13;
three minutes answering time and two minutes follow-up time, skilled&#13;
politicians can sidestep _the issues very well. The big flaw WpS apparent&#13;
when Ford made a statement to the effe~t that the current&#13;
Governor of Georgia had testified to a Senate· committee th~t Jimmy&#13;
Carter's Medic-Aid· program was, "in a shambles." Ford failed to&#13;
mention however that federal funds for the program have been shut off&#13;
and Carter has little to do with the program since l;le has been out of ,&#13;
office. For that matter Carter has had li~le to do with Georgia's&#13;
policy-making at all. 1&#13;
If you have been falling asleep reading this review it is understandable&#13;
since I am falling asleep wrting it. Our retribution will&#13;
come on Thursday night when the screened audience will rise and&#13;
shout in a clear, consise American voice, "Bring_ tiack Harry Orwell!"&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF : Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is written and edited&#13;
by the students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside who are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
coci• 0 "t Opinions expressed are not&#13;
necessarily representative of those held by&#13;
the students, faculty or administration of&#13;
Parkside. Editorial and Business 553-2217;&#13;
Newsroom S53-2295.&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGERS: Cathy Brnak, Judy Trudrung (asst.)&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER : Tom Cooper&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR: Bruce Wagner&#13;
DEPARTMENTS :&#13;
. . Administration-Policies : John McKloskey&#13;
.. SMI : Dave Brandt&#13;
.. Student groups &amp; speakers: Mary Kay Ohmer&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debbie Bauer&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Jean Tenuta&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS: jeffrey j. swencki, Bill Barke ' ,&#13;
. COPY EDITOR : Julie Lange&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: Van Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION : Sue Marquardt . . . STAFF: Wendy Miller, T,erri Gayhart, Robert Hoffman, Chros Clausen, Brodget Pen1kowsk1, .&#13;
Larry Donnelly, Phil Hermann, Ramona Maillet, Allen Br3wn, Carol Are~tl, John Overman,&#13;
Bob Jambois, Beverly Pella, Betsy Neu, Linda Knudtson, Karin La Fourier, Judy Trudrung1 Scott Reinhard, Philip L . Livingston.&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: P.J. Anolina, Ricky Cooper, Rick Flasch&#13;
AD SALESPERSONS: Joe Landa, Rick Flasch&#13;
.. &#13;
4&#13;
OSHA&#13;
discussed&#13;
J'Occupational Health&#13;
Requirements: How to Comply&#13;
Without Going Out of Business"&#13;
is the theme of a day-long conference&#13;
on occupational health&#13;
Oct. 8 at Parkside featurfng&#13;
specialists from industry, labor,&#13;
government and universities&#13;
throughout the country.&#13;
Sponsored by. Parkside,&#13;
University Extension and the&#13;
assoctajicn of Wisconsin Occupational&#13;
Health Professionals,&#13;
the conference will consider 11&#13;
topics related to the Occupational&#13;
continued on pg. S&#13;
Members&#13;
needed&#13;
The Parkside Legal Assistance&#13;
Co-op is still looking for 25&#13;
members so they can. place&#13;
Kenosha attorney Walter Stern&#13;
on retainer.&#13;
More information can be&#13;
received 'from the PSGA offices&#13;
(WLLC 0195) or call 553-2244&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October ~. 19763&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
by Kiyoko Bowden know who to yell at when we want to complain: P .S.G.A., Inc. will lake&#13;
your complaints to the proper people. We want to Improve STUDENT&#13;
SERVICES. Help us.&#13;
The student government BITCH boxes are located at strategic&#13;
locations around Parkside: the library circulatioll desk, the information&#13;
kiosks, the student lounges in the Burger Shoppe,&#13;
Classroom Bldg., and the Union. Put your complaints there or bring&#13;
them to the 9ffice, WLLC-0193.&#13;
If you have a gripe, for gawd'ssake let us know. One of the functions&#13;
of any government is to protect the interests of its constituency. One of&#13;
the responsibilities of a constituent is to keep her-his SPOkespeople&#13;
informed on the state of service.&#13;
We don't have a bureaucracy at the student government office.&#13;
Unlike, the rest of the University, we don't pass you around from one&#13;
sphere of "responsibility" to another or from one office to another.&#13;
We're students too. We know how it feels. Tell us where it hurts.&#13;
What's wrong at Parkside?&#13;
How have tbe services at Parkside been treating you????&#13;
Do you have any complaints????&#13;
Believe it or not your student government is capable of representing&#13;
you and your problems. Come to us and see. The worst thing that can&#13;
happen to you is that you might get some help.&#13;
How has the Financial Aids Dept. treated you when you've gone&#13;
. down for help??? Do they help???? Do you feelUke a human being&#13;
.when they process you?? Do they explain what and why you're fil\ing&#13;
out what you fill out?? Do you know enough to ask?? Rate the&#13;
Financial Aids personnel. Check one in each column.&#13;
Very helpful Cordial&#13;
Kind of helpful Civil&#13;
What help? Barely polite&#13;
How do you like the new Union??? Did you know your segregated&#13;
fees pay for it?? Do you have any complaints??? Did you know that&#13;
the Union Operating Board has students on it, who are supposed to&#13;
represent your interests?? -,&#13;
Bring your complaints about the food service, financial aids,&#13;
counseling, the union operation, the book store, and any other&#13;
STUDENT SERVICE complaints to the student government office at&#13;
WLLC-0193, and we will try to do something about them. Please write&#13;
your complaint out and sign it if you wish. In order to have attention&#13;
paid to complaints we have to have documentation to present to the&#13;
appropriate administrator, but if you don't wantyour name used, we&#13;
.promise to wfthhold it. All of us feel a little. at a loss when we don't&#13;
)&#13;
rj&#13;
Student teaching&#13;
criticized&#13;
To the Editor: _&#13;
I have meant to write about a&#13;
disturbing subject for a long time&#13;
but it's only been 'until now that&#13;
I've felt free enough of&#13;
Parkside's bonds to mention it.&#13;
I enjoyed Parkside as a school&#13;
until I had student teaching my&#13;
senior year. I heard the lecture&#13;
(as did everybody else in my&#13;
class) about how Parkside's&#13;
administration would do&#13;
everything possible to see to it&#13;
that you received a rewarding&#13;
and stimulating experience with&#13;
an instructor who was interested .&#13;
and compatible. Well, I arrived&#13;
the first dayfull of high hopes and&#13;
plans, only to have them shot&#13;
down when I was met by a&#13;
teacher who Seemed indifferent&#13;
to me and didn't have much idea&#13;
as to what he'd do with me. .&#13;
Ithappened I was in music and&#13;
the first day he told me that&#13;
women dit:!'.ctors tended to&#13;
conduct clumsily and couldn't'&#13;
control the kids as well as men.&#13;
Well, I'm not exactly a women's&#13;
libher but it was plain to see that&#13;
with this teacher I had a strike&#13;
against me from the 'beginning.&#13;
I was put in charge of two of the&#13;
groups and received hardly any&#13;
help) I was hardly ever even&#13;
observed! In the mornings I&#13;
taught my two classes but after&#13;
II I had nothing, to do for the rest&#13;
of the day. I asked if he wanted&#13;
help . but he always had his&#13;
student secretaries do it and he'd&#13;
often leave for 'the afternoon&#13;
leaving me with nothing to do. I&#13;
was bored stiff!&#13;
So, after a week (which I&#13;
thought was enough time to give&#13;
it a fair try and yet early enough&#13;
to change( I went to Dr. Olsen&#13;
and pleaded for a ne'!' experience.&#13;
Igave-him my reasons&#13;
expecting his full cooperation,&#13;
Instead, I got a lot of comeback&#13;
about how switching to other&#13;
student teaching experiences&#13;
gives Parkside a bad reputation&#13;
and how "we must protect the&#13;
welfare of the University and the&#13;
upcoming students."&#13;
I couldn't believe it! After&#13;
paying tuition for four years I&#13;
believed the University would do&#13;
what they could to protect my&#13;
interests. That's what I was&#13;
paying for, a good eduction, and I&#13;
certainly wasn't getting.it in this&#13;
situation.&#13;
I went to my advisor on Dr.&#13;
Olsen's suggestion and he said he&#13;
knew the teacher and wouldn't&#13;
want anybody to have student&#13;
teaching under that man. I had&#13;
him see Dr. Olsen to tell him what&#13;
he had told me. -When he came&#13;
out of his office my advisor was&#13;
suddenly in agreement with Dr.&#13;
Olsen (although he looked&#13;
sheepish about ill.&#13;
I went through the channels&#13;
with no results and would have&#13;
quit school for that semester if it'&#13;
wasn't for the lime ~actor in&#13;
making up the next experience.&#13;
So, I stuck it out, hated every&#13;
minute f of it: learned hardly&#13;
anything and grew bitter about&#13;
my rights as an individual and a&#13;
Parkside student.&#13;
I am presently very happily&#13;
teaching my second year but I&#13;
still have a bad feeling toward&#13;
Parkside after going through&#13;
this. I only hope that the&#13;
University and students wake up&#13;
to the' fael that Parkside is&#13;
supposedly here for the students,&#13;
not the students for Parkside.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Deborah Metke&#13;
Class of '75&#13;
Menu&#13;
good&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
,I was pleased to see that Saga&#13;
Food Service offered two dinners&#13;
last Tuesday; one for meateaters&#13;
and one ior non-meat&#13;
eaters.&#13;
I hope this is-a beginning, of a&#13;
new policy. I'm sure it will he I&#13;
enjoyed by boul vegetarians and&#13;
meat-eaters. It's a refreshing&#13;
change.&#13;
Wendy Miller&#13;
Dinner&#13;
superb&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
Bravo! The dinner-theater two&#13;
weeks ago was superb. Excellent&#13;
wine, great dinner, but most of&#13;
all, the stupendous play Heroes&#13;
and Hardcases by the AlphOmega&#13;
Players was entertaining&#13;
and professionally portrayed.&#13;
I hope to see more of this top&#13;
quality entertainment.&#13;
A Parkside Student&#13;
Course&#13;
offered&#13;
Immigration to Racine and&#13;
Kenosha will be the subject of a&#13;
University of WisconsinExtension&#13;
course beginning at&#13;
Parkside on Tuesday, October 5,&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
John Buenker, professor of&#13;
history at Parkside, will survey&#13;
the various immigrant groups&#13;
from the 1830's to the present,&#13;
from Europe, Latin America,&#13;
Mrica and Asia. Primary focus&#13;
will center on reasons for their&#13;
migration, occupations,&#13;
residence patterns, churches,&#13;
fraternal, benefit and cultural&#13;
societies, and contributions to the&#13;
. area.&#13;
Dr. Buenker has specialized in&#13;
the history of immigration, and is&#13;
the author of chapters on&#13;
Bicentennial Histories of Racine&#13;
and Kenosha counties.&#13;
Registration information can&#13;
be had by calling University&#13;
Extension at Parkside, 553-2312.,&#13;
Correction&#13;
L.ast week it was stated in a&#13;
feature about Clayton Johnson,&#13;
assistant chancellor for&#13;
academic support and student&#13;
services, that he ucame to&#13;
Parkside from a small college in&#13;
Binnington, New York." Ranger&#13;
has been informed that "the&#13;
State University of New York at&#13;
Binghampton is not a small&#13;
college. It is the campus of&#13;
, Harper College, one of the finest&#13;
public undergraduate liberal arts&#13;
colleges in the nation, offers&#13;
some nineteen doctoral&#13;
programs, and has a larger&#13;
enrollment' than all but two&#13;
campuses in the Wisconsin&#13;
systenl." •&#13;
Legal Asslslance CIHlP&#13;
The Legal Assistance Co-op still needs members. Faculty and staff&#13;
as well-as students can join. How many of you are foresighlfu1 enough&#13;
to join a pre-paid legal insurance group? Itis the wave of the future.&#13;
No one but the very wealthy can afford all attorney. All of us in the&#13;
middle (or lower) class frequently have to let legal matters slide as&#13;
well as our rights because we can't afford a Iwayer. Unlimited consultation&#13;
for $15to $20 per semester is cheap. Call the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
office today (553-2244) or stop down (WLLC-0193).&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
,~&#13;
Mike Villers - Dealer&#13;
Performing Friday &amp; Saturday&#13;
SUNDAY TRIAD&#13;
f=iLL YOU \~~&#13;
WANT \s'(...~&#13;
{.~ '" \ I'\\' C't-.\' \\'!JO&#13;
C'(...'\ \\ ",\\'cO&#13;
mos. &amp; TUES.&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
$1.95&#13;
On Spring, West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge Plaza&#13;
632-6151&#13;
FEAST&#13;
INCLUDES· Salad. italian&#13;
Breco and a FREE GtAS&#13;
OF WiNE....&#13;
~erbu~&#13;
~urt&#13;
_a •• nAIMANT&#13;
!-If' Universityo~~:SConsin.parkside&#13;
Fi!ta&#13;
AcapUlco&#13;
,&#13;
Semester Break .Jcna"y 6-13, 'fiJ17&#13;
$339 COMPLETE Triple occupancy&#13;
LIMITED SPACE - MAKE YOUR&#13;
RESERVATIONS, NOW!!&#13;
• For application forms or odctnono! informati6n&#13;
contact; Pcrksroe Union Office 553.2200&#13;
. ,&#13;
OSHA THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 6, 1976 3&#13;
discussed CtJntact weekly by student government&#13;
• 'Occupational Health&#13;
Requirements: How to Comply&#13;
Without Going Out of Business"&#13;
is the theme of a day-long conference&#13;
on occupational health&#13;
Oct. 8 at Parkside featuring&#13;
specialists from industry, labor,&#13;
government and universities&#13;
throughout the country.&#13;
by Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
What's wrong at Parkside?&#13;
How have the services at Parkside been treating you????&#13;
Do you have any complaints????&#13;
Believe it or not your student government is capable of representing&#13;
you and your problems. Come to us and see. The worst thing that can&#13;
happen to you is that you might get some help.&#13;
How has the Financial Aids Dept. treated you when you've gone&#13;
know who to yell at when we want to complain. P.S.G.A., Inc. will take&#13;
your complaints to the proper people. We want to improve STUDENT&#13;
SERVICES. Help us.&#13;
The student government BITCH boxes are located at strategic&#13;
locations around Parkside: the library circulation desk, the information&#13;
kiosks, the student lounges in the Burger Shoppe,&#13;
Classroom Bldg., and the Union. Put your complaints there or bring&#13;
them to the 9ffice, WLLC-D193.&#13;
Spom;ored by _ Parkside,&#13;
ff you have a gripe, for gawd's sake let us know. One of the functions&#13;
University Extension and the&#13;
association of Wisconsin Occupational&#13;
Health Professionals,&#13;
the conference will consider 11&#13;
topics related to the Occupational&#13;
. down for help??? Do they help???? Do you feel like a human being&#13;
when they process you?? Do they explain what and why you're filling&#13;
out what you fill out?? Do you know enough to ask?? Rate the&#13;
Financial Aids personnel. Check one in each column.&#13;
· of any government is to protect the interests of its constituency. One of&#13;
the responsibilities of a constituent is to keep her-his spokespeople&#13;
informed on the state of service.&#13;
continued on pg. S&#13;
Menthers&#13;
needed&#13;
The Parkside l.Algal Assistance&#13;
Co-op is still looking for 25&#13;
members so they can. place.&#13;
Kenosha attorney Walter Stern&#13;
on retainer.&#13;
More information can be&#13;
received · from the PSGA offices&#13;
( WLLC D195) or call 553-2244&#13;
Very helpful&#13;
Kind of helpful&#13;
What help?&#13;
Cordial&#13;
Civil&#13;
Barely polite&#13;
How do you like the new Union??? Did you know your segregated&#13;
fees pay for it?? Do you have any complaints??? Did you know that&#13;
the Union Operating Board has students on it, who are supposed to&#13;
represent your interests??&#13;
Bring your complaints about the food service, financial aids,&#13;
counseling, the union operation, the book store, and any other&#13;
STUDENT SERVICE complaints to the student government office at&#13;
WLLC-D193, and we will try to do something about them. Please write&#13;
your complaint out and ·sign it if you wish. In order to have attention&#13;
paid to complaints we have to have docwnentation to present to the&#13;
appropriate administrator, but if you don't want your name used, we&#13;
promise to wfthhold it. All of us feel a little.at a loss when we don't&#13;
~&#13;
irJ Dinner&#13;
superb&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
~tudent teaching&#13;
criticized&#13;
Bravo! The dinner-theater two&#13;
weeks ago was superb. Excellent&#13;
wine, great dinner, but most of&#13;
all, the stupendous play Heroes&#13;
and Hardcases by the AlphOmega&#13;
Players was entertaining&#13;
and professionally portrayed.&#13;
To the Editor: --&#13;
I have meant to write about a&#13;
disturbing subject for a long time&#13;
but it's only been 'until now that&#13;
I've felt free enough of&#13;
Parkside's bonds to mention it.&#13;
I enjoyed Parkside as a school&#13;
until I had student teaching my&#13;
senior year. I heard the lecture&#13;
( as did everybody else in my&#13;
class) about how Parkside's&#13;
administration would do&#13;
everything possible to see to it&#13;
that you received a rewarding&#13;
and stimulating experience with&#13;
an instructor who was interested ·&#13;
and compatible. Well, I arrived&#13;
the first day-full of high hopes and&#13;
plans, only to have them shot&#13;
down when I was met by a&#13;
teacher who seemed indifferent&#13;
to me and didn't have much idea&#13;
as to what he'd do with me. .&#13;
It happened I was in music and&#13;
the first day he told me that&#13;
women dh:~ctors tended to&#13;
conduct clumsily and couldn't'&#13;
control the kids as well as men.&#13;
Well, I'm not exactly a women's&#13;
libber but it was plain to see that&#13;
with this teacher I had a strike&#13;
against me from the 'beginning.&#13;
I was put in charge of two of the&#13;
groups and received hardly any&#13;
help) I was hardly ever even&#13;
observed! In the mornings I&#13;
taught my two classes but after&#13;
11 I had nothing to do for the rest&#13;
of the day. I asked if he wanted&#13;
help . but he always had his&#13;
student secretaries do it and he'd&#13;
often leave for the afternoon&#13;
leaving me with nothing to do. I&#13;
was bored stiff!&#13;
So, after a week (which I&#13;
thought was enough time to give&#13;
it a fair try and yet early enough&#13;
to change( I went to Dr . . Olsen&#13;
and pleaded for a new experience.&#13;
I gave him my reasons&#13;
expecting his full cooperation,&#13;
·instead, I got a lot of comeback&#13;
about how switching to other&#13;
student teaching experiences&#13;
gives Parkside a bad reputation&#13;
and how "we must ·protect the&#13;
welfare of the University and the&#13;
upcoming students."&#13;
I couldn't believe it! After&#13;
paying tuition for four years I&#13;
believed the University would do&#13;
what they could to protect my&#13;
interests. That's what I was&#13;
paying for, a good eduction, and I&#13;
-certainly wasn't getting.it in this&#13;
situation.&#13;
I went to my advisor on Dr.&#13;
Olsen's suggestion and he said he&#13;
knew the teacher and wouldn't&#13;
want anybody to have student&#13;
teaching undE:r that man. I had&#13;
him see Dr. Olsen to tell him what&#13;
he had told me: When he came&#13;
out of his office my advisor was&#13;
suddenly in agreement with Dr.&#13;
Olsen ( although he looked&#13;
sheepish about it).&#13;
I went through the channels&#13;
with no results and would have&#13;
quit school for that semester if it'&#13;
wasn't for the time £.actor in&#13;
making up the next experience.&#13;
I hope to see more of this top&#13;
quality entertainment.&#13;
A Parkside Student&#13;
Course&#13;
offered&#13;
.{mmigration to Racine and&#13;
Kenosha will be the subject of a&#13;
University of WisconsinExtension&#13;
course beginning at&#13;
Parkside on Tuesday, October 5,&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
John Buenker, professor of&#13;
history at Parkside, will survey&#13;
the various immigrant groups&#13;
from the 1830's to the present,&#13;
from Europe, Latin America,&#13;
Africa and Asia. Primary focus&#13;
will center on reasons for their&#13;
migration, occupations,&#13;
residence patterns, churches,&#13;
fraternal, benefit and cultural&#13;
societies, anp contributions to the&#13;
So, I stuck it out, hated every&#13;
minute f of it, learned hardly&#13;
anything and grew bitter about&#13;
my rights as an individual and a&#13;
Parkside student.&#13;
· area.&#13;
I am presently very happily&#13;
teaching my second year but I&#13;
still have a bad feeling toward&#13;
Parkside after going through&#13;
this. I only hope that the&#13;
University and students wake up&#13;
to the' fact that Parkside is&#13;
s~pposedly here for the students,&#13;
• not the students for Parkside.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Deborah Metke&#13;
Class of '75&#13;
Menu&#13;
good&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
.. I waS pleased to see that Saga&#13;
Food Service offered two dinners&#13;
last Tuesday; on~ for meateaters&#13;
and one for non-meat&#13;
eaters.&#13;
I hope this is a beginning_ of a&#13;
new policy. I'm sure it will be 1&#13;
enjoyed by both vegetarians and&#13;
meat-eaters. It's a refreshing&#13;
change. Wendy Miller&#13;
Dr. Buenker has specialized in&#13;
the history of immigration, and is&#13;
the author of chapters on&#13;
Bkentennial Histories of Racine&#13;
and Kenosha counties.&#13;
Registration information can&#13;
be had by calling University&#13;
Extension at Parkside, 553-2312.&#13;
Correction&#13;
Last week it was stated in a&#13;
feature about Clayton Johnson,&#13;
assistant chancellor for&#13;
academic support and student&#13;
services, that he "came to&#13;
Parkside from a small college in&#13;
Birmington, New York." Ranger&#13;
has been informed that "the&#13;
State University of New York at&#13;
Binghampton is not a small&#13;
college. It is the campus of&#13;
. Harper College, one of the finest&#13;
public undergraduate liberal arts&#13;
colleges in the nation, offers&#13;
some nineteen doctoral&#13;
programs, and has a larger&#13;
enrolhnent than all but two&#13;
campuses in the Wisconsin&#13;
system." •&#13;
We don't have a bureaucracy at the student government office.&#13;
Unlike the rest of the University, we don't pass you around from one&#13;
sphere of "responsibility" to another or from one office to another.&#13;
We're students too. We know how it feels. Tell us where it hurts.&#13;
Legal Assistance Co-op&#13;
The l.Algal Assistance Co-op still needs members. Faculty and staff&#13;
as well·as students can join. How many of you are foresightful enough&#13;
to join a pre-paid legal insurance group? It is the wave of the future.&#13;
No one but the very wealthy can afford an attorney. All of us in the&#13;
middle (or lower) class frequently have to let legal matters slide as&#13;
well as our rights because we can't afford a lwayer. Unlimited consultation&#13;
for $15 to $20 per semester is cheap. Call the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
office today (553-2244) or stop down (WLLC-D193 ).&#13;
-&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
- ~&#13;
,.....&#13;
Mike Villers - Dealer 637-2726&#13;
Performing Frida_y &amp; Saturda_y&#13;
TRIAD&#13;
moN. &amp; TUES.&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
FEAST $1.95&#13;
INCLUDES: Salad. Italian&#13;
Bread and a FREE GLASS&#13;
OF WINE ....&#13;
On Spring, West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge Plaza&#13;
632-6151&#13;
~erbu~&#13;
,ourt&#13;
~ If' University of Wisconsin-Parkside ~&#13;
Ft!ta&#13;
Acapulco&#13;
Semester Break January 6-13, 1977&#13;
$339 COMPLETE Triple occupancy&#13;
LIMITED SPACE - MAKE YOUR&#13;
RESERVATIONS, NOW!! • For application forms or additional informoti6n&#13;
contact: Parkside Union Office 553-2200 &#13;
Renshaw interviewed "&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER OCtober 6,' 1976&#13;
Basic'skill.s hearing held&#13;
by Jobn McKloskey&#13;
Only a dozen persons attended&#13;
an extensively publicized public&#13;
hearing on the basic skills&#13;
requirement held by the Basic&#13;
Skill. Subcommittee last&#13;
Th~ay.&#13;
The purpose of the hearing was&#13;
to solicit comment from all&#13;
members of the university&#13;
community as to exactly what&#13;
basic skill levels incoming freshmen&#13;
should be required to altain&#13;
in IIU!th, English, speech, and&#13;
library science.&#13;
If the 15-page list of basic skills&#13;
requirements is approved by the&#13;
Faculty Senate around January&#13;
1977, the program will go into&#13;
effect in the fall of 1977 and all&#13;
, incoming freshmen and transferees&#13;
will be required to pass&#13;
competency tests' before&#13;
graduation,&#13;
If a student should fail any of&#13;
the tests, he would have to obtainremedial&#13;
training and take the&#13;
test again, repeating the cycle if&#13;
he should happen to fail on the&#13;
second try,&#13;
, "Just passing one of the&#13;
coursesdoes not mean you have&#13;
satisfied the basic skil1s&#13;
requiremeni_," said sub committee&#13;
member Leo Comerford.&#13;
No student would be requiredor&#13;
allowed - to take a large&#13;
number of remedial courses in&#13;
his first semester at Parkside.&#13;
"We want to make sure that the&#13;
student doesn't take 12 hours of .&#13;
..&#13;
Claude Renshaw'&#13;
featuring:&#13;
a variety of your candy&#13;
and nut favorties sold&#13;
the old-fashioned way&#13;
PARKSID E&#13;
UNION&#13;
OPENING&#13;
Mon. thru FrL&#13;
10 a.m. - 4 p.m.&#13;
Locered in Union Brzorre&#13;
Why do some people think&#13;
Bud, is sort of special?&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make a difference.)&#13;
, . When you say Budweisan, you've said it all!&#13;
ANHEUSER·BUSCH, IN"c.•• 1. LOUIS&#13;
Lecture&#13;
slated •&#13;
just remedial courses here," smd&#13;
subcommittee member Carla&#13;
Stoffle. •&#13;
According to subcommittee&#13;
member and hearing moderator&#13;
Beecham Robinson, "Counseling&#13;
is very important during the&#13;
enrollment stages so that a '&#13;
student will have the right&#13;
, balance of remedial courses:"&#13;
The possibility was raised by a&#13;
member of the audience that&#13;
potential students might be&#13;
scared away from Parkside next '&#13;
year by the basic skills&#13;
requirement.&#13;
"People who are frightened off&#13;
by this requirement may end up&#13;
leaving, but the sad fact is that&#13;
many of them come back," .said&#13;
Stoffle,&#13;
When the new requirements go&#13;
into effect, copies will be sent to&#13;
EnglIsh and mathematics&#13;
departments in ..area high&#13;
schools.&#13;
"Africa Counts: Number and&#13;
Pattern in African Culture" will&#13;
be the topic of a tree public&#13;
lecture by Claudia Zaslavsky, an&#13;
authority on mathematical&#13;
contributions of African peoples -.&#13;
'It will be presented at Parkside&#13;
at 4 p.m. on Friday Oct. 8 in&#13;
Classroom Bldg. Room 0113.&#13;
The talk, the first in a series of&#13;
mathematics lectures sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside science division,&#13;
will be preceded by a coffee&#13;
reception honoring Zaslavsky at&#13;
3:30 p.m. in Classroom Bldg.&#13;
Room 111.&#13;
Zaslavsky is the author of a&#13;
recent book, "Africa Counts,".&#13;
described by its publisher as the&#13;
first of its kind and dealing with&#13;
the mathematical contributions&#13;
of peoples from Africa south of&#13;
the Sahara in the context of their&#13;
social and economic development.&#13;
The volume is based on&#13;
extensive research In. Africa.&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
Claude Renshaw is a member -of the business management faculty&#13;
who is leaving Parkside after this year. Following in the footsteps of&#13;
Mahesh Jain (Howard Univ.) , Peter Ellis (Utah St.) and Larry&#13;
Shirland (Univ. .of Vermont), Renshaw is taking a new job at St.&#13;
Mary's College in South Bend, Indiana. Ranger interviewed Renshaw&#13;
in an attempt to find out why he is leaving and what he feels Parkside&#13;
students can expect for the future of the business program.&#13;
RANGER: What were the events that led to your decision to leave&#13;
Parkside?&#13;
RENSHAW: First, let me say that leaving Parkside has been a&#13;
difficult decision for me to make. I've been treated fairly here and&#13;
except for a few incidents I've been happy. My decision to leave is not&#13;
a surprise; I informed the Vice-chancellor in Iate June of 1976that I&#13;
was going to St. .Mary's.&#13;
, Certain things had happened to make me think that I might be&#13;
happier elsewhere. The first thing thatllappened was the Chancellor's&#13;
firing of Bill Moy. (note: William Moy technically resigned as Dean of&#13;
the School of Modern Industry in the spring semester of '76). Up until&#13;
that time we in the department were excited and confident that the&#13;
Parkside business program was on the upswing. When Moy was fired&#13;
we considered it a rejection of everything we had tried to do.&#13;
The second thing that got me was when Mahesh Jain criticized the&#13;
faculty for reasons that were less than professional.&#13;
RANGER: What was the basis of the problem with Jain?&#13;
RENSHAW: When Jain first got here in 197~wewere all excited and&#13;
happy; here was a PhD and an excellent teacher and we were happy to&#13;
get him. (note: Jain was hired in the summer of 1974by the Business&#13;
Committee which included Renshaw). But Jain talked of a lot of&#13;
things, programs and ideas and then forgot about them. Then after;&#13;
Moy was fired and Larry Shirland had decided to leave Jain was&#13;
defeated in the election for the new chairmanship of the division, This&#13;
made him very unhappy and in turn seemed to take out hIS unhappiness&#13;
on us which made morale very low around here.&#13;
RANGER: What do you think of Jain's allegations that professor's.&#13;
wives called him on the phone to criticize him? '&#13;
RENSHAW: I don't really know, I can't think of anyone who might&#13;
have called., .&#13;
RANGER: What are your feelings regarding Chancellor Guskin's&#13;
handling of the business program?&#13;
RENSHAW: I strongly disagreed with his firing of Bill Moy. The&#13;
recently released task force reporj was 'supposed to greatly improve&#13;
the ~ur~i~ulumbut it's basically the same curriculum we set up, so&#13;
May s firing becomes even more questionable in my mind. .&#13;
RANGER: What action 'do you feel should be taken to improve the&#13;
business program?&#13;
RENSHAW: The big problem right now is faculty. There are only&#13;
three full-time teachers in the accounting section of the program and&#13;
I'll be leaving in January. We should hire at least five full-time&#13;
.teachers and require that any part-time teachers that are hired must&#13;
have hours available during the day so that students can talk to them&#13;
and get advice and help. The curriculum is excellent but without good&#13;
teachers, it is useless.&#13;
RANGER: Ho~would you sum up Parkside student's chances right&#13;
now with regard to majors in business?&#13;
• RENSHAW: If the teaching situation is cleared up, excellent.&#13;
Parkside students are graduating during a great time; accounting&#13;
jobs have opened up tmrrrensely in the Racine-Kenosha area and we&#13;
have had students who graduated last year get good jobs at local&#13;
firrrrs.&#13;
RANGER: Are UW-P students now eligible to sit for the CPA exam?&#13;
RENSHAW: Starting in May of 1977 students who have graduated&#13;
from any state university may sit for the exam providing they have&#13;
passed the courses required by the state. These courses are available&#13;
at Parkside and I can give a list oj themto anyconcerned student.&#13;
...&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER OCtober 6,- 1976&#13;
Basic skill_s hearing held Lecture&#13;
slated •&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Only a dozen persons attended '&#13;
an extensively publicized public&#13;
hearing on the basic skills&#13;
requirement held by the Basic&#13;
Skill~ Subcommittee last&#13;
ThurSC:ay.&#13;
The purpose of the hearing was&#13;
to solicit comment from all&#13;
members of the university&#13;
community as to exactly what&#13;
basic skill levels incoming fresh-&#13;
. men should be required to attain&#13;
in math, English, speech, and&#13;
library science.&#13;
~~&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
'.8' ·_ . Mike Villers- Dealer 637-2726&#13;
-&#13;
!)e &lt;!&amp;lbt&#13;
~Wttt &amp;boppt&#13;
featuring:&#13;
If the 15-page list of basic skills&#13;
requirements is approved by the&#13;
Faculty Senate around January&#13;
1977, the program -will go into&#13;
effect in the fall of 1977 and all&#13;
. incoming freshmen and transferees&#13;
will be required to pass&#13;
competency tests · before&#13;
graduation.&#13;
If a ~tudent should fail any of&#13;
the tests,.he would have to obtain--&#13;
remedial training and take the&#13;
·test again, repeating the cycle if&#13;
he should happen to fail on the&#13;
second try. 1 "Just passing one of the&#13;
courses·does not mean you have&#13;
satisfied the basic skills&#13;
requirement," said sub committee&#13;
member Leo Comerford.&#13;
No student would be requiredor&#13;
allowed - to take a large&#13;
number of remedial courses in&#13;
his first semester at Parkside.&#13;
"We want to make sure that the&#13;
student doesn't take 12 hours of .&#13;
just remedial courses here," said&#13;
subcommittee member Carla&#13;
Stoffle.&#13;
According to subcommittee&#13;
member and hearing moderator&#13;
Beecham Robinson, "Counseling&#13;
is very important during the&#13;
enrollment stages so that a ..&#13;
st_udent will have the right&#13;
· balance of remed{al courses.''&#13;
The possibility was raised by a&#13;
· member of the audience that&#13;
potential students might be&#13;
scared away from Parkside next -&#13;
year by the basic skills&#13;
requirement.&#13;
"People who are frightened off&#13;
by this requirement may end op&#13;
leaving, but the sad fact is that&#13;
many of tl)em come back," .said&#13;
Stoffle.&#13;
When the new requirements go&#13;
into effect, copies will be sent to&#13;
English and mathematics&#13;
departments in i,area high&#13;
schools.&#13;
"Africa Counts: Number and&#13;
P&amp;,ttern in African Culture" will&#13;
be the topic of a free public&#13;
lecture by Claudia iaslavsky, an&#13;
authority on mathematical&#13;
contributions of African peoples ..&#13;
'lt will be presented at. Parkside&#13;
at 4 p.m. on Friday Oct. 8 in&#13;
Classroom Bldg. Room i13.&#13;
The talk, the first in a series of&#13;
mathematics lectures sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside scjence division,&#13;
will be preceded by a coffee&#13;
recE:ption honoring Zaslavsky at&#13;
3:30 p.m. in Classroom Bldg.&#13;
Room 111.&#13;
Zaslavsky is the author of a&#13;
recent book, "Africa Counts,"&#13;
described by its publisher as the&#13;
first of its kind and dealing with&#13;
the mathematical contributions&#13;
of peoples from Africa south of&#13;
the Sahara in the context of their&#13;
social and economic development.&#13;
The volume is based on&#13;
extensive research !n Africa.&#13;
a variety of your candy&#13;
and nut favorties sold&#13;
the old-fashioned way R ensh1;1.W interviewed&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
UNION&#13;
OPENING&#13;
OPEN :&#13;
Mon. thru Fri.&#13;
10 o.m. - 4 p.m.&#13;
Locoted in Union Bizorre&#13;
C:&#13;
St&#13;
Q.&#13;
e&#13;
0&#13;
.c:&#13;
...&#13;
C:&#13;
..&#13;
&gt;&#13;
l;&#13;
~ 0&#13;
a&#13;
Claude Renshaw·&#13;
Why ~o sollle people think&#13;
Bud® is sort of special?&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make a difference.)&#13;
When ' you say-Budweiser~, you've said it all!&#13;
ANHEUSER-BUSCH, IN,C. • ~T. LOUI S&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
Claude Renshaw is a member of the business f11anagement faculty&#13;
who is leaving Parkside after this year. Following in the footsteps of&#13;
Mahesh Jain (Howard Univ.), Peter Ellis (Utah St.) and Larry&#13;
Shirland (Univ. of Vermont), Renshaw is taking a new job at St.&#13;
Mary's College in Sout~ Bend, Indiana. Ranger interviewed Renshaw&#13;
in an attempt to find out why he is leaving and what he feels Parkside&#13;
students can expect for the future of the business program.&#13;
RANGER: What were the events that led to your decision to leave&#13;
Parkside?&#13;
RENSHAW: First, let me say that leaving Parkside has been a&#13;
difficult decision for me to make. I've been treated fairly here and&#13;
except for a few incidents I've been happy. My decision to leave is not&#13;
a surprise; I informed the Vice-Chancellor in fate June of 1976 that I&#13;
was going to St. Mary½,.&#13;
.. Certain thin&amp;s had happened to make me think that I might be&#13;
happier elsewhere. The first thing that happened was the Chancellor's&#13;
firing of Bill Moy. (note: William Moy technically resigned as ~n of&#13;
the School of Modern Industry in the spring semester of '76). Up until&#13;
that time we in the department were excited and confident that the&#13;
Parkside business program was on the upswing. When Moy was fired&#13;
we considered it a rejection of everything we had tried to do.&#13;
The second thing that got me was when Mahesh Jain criticized the&#13;
faculty for reasons that were less than professional.&#13;
RANGER: What was the basis of the problem with Jain?&#13;
RENSHAW: When Jain first got here in 1974 we·were all excited and&#13;
happy; here was a PhD and an excellent teacher and we were happy to&#13;
get~- (note: Jain was hired in th_e summer of 1974 by the Business&#13;
Committee which included Renshaw). But Jain talked of a lot of&#13;
things, program_s and ideas and then forgot about them. Then ·after&#13;
Moy was fired and Larry Shirland had decided to ieave, Jain wa;&#13;
defeated in the election for the new chairmanship of the division. This&#13;
made him very unhappy and in turn seemed to take out his unhappiness&#13;
on us which made morale very low around here. •&#13;
RANGER: What do you think of Jain's allegations that professor's .&#13;
wives called him on the phone to criticize him?.&#13;
RENSHAW: I don't really know, I can't think of anyone who· might&#13;
have called. ·, ·&#13;
RANGER: What are your feelings regarding Chancellor Guskin's&#13;
handling of the business program? .&#13;
RENSHAW: I strongly disagreed with his firing -0f Bill Moy. The&#13;
recently release~ task force report was·supposed to greatly improve&#13;
the ~~i~ulum but it's basically the same curric~um we set up, so&#13;
Moy s fmng becomes ev~n more questionable in my mind. .&#13;
RANGER: What action ·do you feel should be taken to improve the&#13;
business program?&#13;
RENSH~ W: The big problem right now is faculty. There are only&#13;
three full-tune teachers in the accounting section of the program and&#13;
I'll be leaving in January. We should hire at least five full-time&#13;
. teachers and require that any part-time teachers that are hired must&#13;
have hours available during the day so that students can talk to them&#13;
and get advice and help. The curriculum is excellent but without good&#13;
teachers, it is useless.&#13;
RAN.GER: How would you sum up Parkside student's ch~ces right&#13;
l)OW with regard to majors in business?&#13;
. REI:JSHA_W: If the teaching situation is cleared up, excellent.&#13;
~arks1de students ar~ graduating during a great time; a~counting&#13;
Jobs have opened up unmensely in the Racine-Kenosha area and we&#13;
~ave had stude1!,ts who graduated last year get good jobs at local&#13;
firms.&#13;
RANGER: Are UW-P students now eligible to sit for the CPA exam?&#13;
RENSHAW: Starting in May of 1977 students who have graduated&#13;
from any state university may sit for th~ exam providing they have&#13;
passed the courses required by the state. These courses are available&#13;
at Parkside and I can give a list of them to any concerned student.&#13;
.) &#13;
=&#13;
OSHA.-·~- ,&#13;
continued from pg. 3&#13;
'Token price up&#13;
On Monday, September 27, bus&#13;
token prices far Racine 'and&#13;
Kenosha buses increased from 20&#13;
cents to 25 cents. Regular bus&#13;
fare for both bus lines is 25 cents.&#13;
Since registration the Information&#13;
Kiosk in Main Place&#13;
was sellilJli the tokens 5' for a&#13;
. dollar or 20 cents each.&#13;
The purpose of this bargain&#13;
according to Erwin Zuehlke,&#13;
assistant. chancellor for Administration,&#13;
was, "to encourage&#13;
people to ride the bus."&#13;
The bus tokens are accepted by&#13;
botb bus lines and are&#13;
redeemable at Parkside for 25&#13;
cents each. The bus tokens were&#13;
purchased for Parkside under the.&#13;
direction of James E. Galbraith,&#13;
director of Planning ami Construction,&#13;
as an accounting&#13;
device to help both state and local&#13;
transportation authorities count.&#13;
the number of Parkside students&#13;
using the new route No.9 of the&#13;
Belle Urban System in Racine.&#13;
The Kenosha Transit System&#13;
also agreed to honor the tokens&#13;
making it possible for Parkside to&#13;
market the tokens to students and&#13;
increase mass transit use.&#13;
Presently the'price of a token is&#13;
the same price as a regular fare.&#13;
When asked about recent sales,&#13;
Information Kiosk Clerk,&#13;
Lorraine Kiekhoeler said, "Sales&#13;
were very brisk last week when&#13;
the posters' went up saying the&#13;
o price was going up. It has been&#13;
slow So far this week."&#13;
Zuehlke was asked wbat action&#13;
would be taken if sales dropped&#13;
dramatically after tbe increase.&#13;
Zuehlke said, "We would have to&#13;
go to some marketing device to&#13;
increase sales."&#13;
SingeJ!'---------&#13;
continued from pg. 1&#13;
David Brandt, a student in the&#13;
marketing speciality, found the&#13;
task force report to be a little faro&#13;
sighted, since he felt problems&#13;
facing the program needed&#13;
solving in the immediate future.&#13;
He said, "this degree is going to&#13;
follow us for the rest of our&#13;
lives."&#13;
Singer stated that the&#13;
upheavals of the arrival of&#13;
Chancellor Guskin, and the&#13;
resignation of Dean William Moy&#13;
caused problems that will take a&#13;
long time to resolve.&#13;
He told students that the&#13;
management science division is&#13;
in the process of recruiting a new&#13;
chairman to begin looking into&#13;
FOR SALE: Portable Stereo with Garrard&#13;
turntable. Asking tSO. call 634·5305 after 4&#13;
p.m.&#13;
current problems.&#13;
He felt no one in the present&#13;
program has the experience or&#13;
expertise to facilitate major&#13;
changes in the business program.&#13;
The search and screen committee,&#13;
chaired by Singer, is&#13;
hoping to recruit a new chairperson&#13;
by next semester, but&#13;
according to Singer, not many&#13;
topnotcb administrators or&#13;
teachers are willing to leave&#13;
schools at midterm.&#13;
When such an administrator is&#13;
selected, he should be available&#13;
for consultation during the spring&#13;
semester even if be doesn't start&#13;
working full-time until next&#13;
September.&#13;
FOR SALE: CB Radios and Scanne~, t&#13;
lactory new, lowest prices in town. Now In I&#13;
stock: Robyn WV-23, Midland 6628, 883, 886&#13;
aeercet 101. 5$./0-6635after 6 p.m. A.sk for&#13;
John. t&#13;
WILL 00 any kind of typing at reasonable'&#13;
rates, For intOf'"mation call 652·3373. ,&#13;
FOUND: Women's identification bracelet. t&#13;
Call 639·3080. t&#13;
Allention students: CarterMondale&#13;
campaign needs volunteers. Interested I&#13;
parties should call Racine 632107.,&#13;
k enosbe- 652 9976. ,&#13;
, WA'NTED: Sports writer lor Ranger ~hat is Van E. Thompson Free lance Photography, I&#13;
talented, good in grammar, and most of all, weddings and candid portraits. Phone 652·&#13;
'&#13;
dependable. See Jean Tenuta in the Ranger 8862. ,&#13;
office, WLLC 0194. .. -.I&#13;
--------- Center needs toys&#13;
Health and Safety Act (OSHA)&#13;
and its enforcer agency in the&#13;
Department of Labor, as well as&#13;
to the National Institute of Occupational&#13;
Safety and Health&#13;
(NIOSH), which determines&#13;
occupational health standards ..&#13;
Morning sessions will.. Ieature&#13;
the following topics and&#13;
sPeakers:&#13;
OSHA and Industry, Nicholas&#13;
DiArchangel, regional administrator,&#13;
OSHA region V,&#13;
Chicago; Could OSHA Compliance&#13;
be Profitable?, Robert&#13;
Korevec, personnel and safety&#13;
director, Maynard Sleel Co.,&#13;
Milwaukee; OSH~ Health&#13;
Citations, Milan Racic, senior&#13;
industrial hygienist, Department&#13;
of Labor, Washington, D.C.;&#13;
Defining the Problem, Dr.&#13;
Marjorie Lundquist, industrial&#13;
hygiene manager, Globe-Union&#13;
Inc., Milwaukee; Role of the&#13;
Consultant, Dr. Jack E. Peterson,&#13;
civil engineering department,&#13;
Marquette University; and&#13;
Legal Aspects. of Occupational'&#13;
Health •. Lorice Ede, chief of&#13;
information services, National&#13;
Institute forOccupational Safety&#13;
and Health, Cincinnati. _&#13;
A luncheon session will feature&#13;
Women in the Woriwlace, Dr.&#13;
Vilma R.o Hunt, environmental&#13;
health professor, Pennsylvania&#13;
·State University.&#13;
Afternoon sessions are:&#13;
_Elements of a Sound Occupational&#13;
Health Program, Dr.&#13;
Clyde M. Berry, chief, industrial&#13;
hygiene, Department of&#13;
Preventive Medicine, University&#13;
of Iowa; The Role of Toxicology,&#13;
Doris Roettgers, industrial&#13;
toxicologist, Memorial Hospital.&#13;
West Allis; Medical&#13;
Requirements of OSHA, a panel&#13;
on medicine, govermnent and&#13;
insurance by Dr. Anthony A.'&#13;
Hermann, health services director, S.C, Johnson &amp; Son , -,&#13;
Inc., Racine, F'lcrence Ryer, CI .'fi d .&#13;
OSHA. Washington, D.C., and I asslIe' I&#13;
Betty Callow, Employers Mutual I . I&#13;
of Wausau; and OSHA Standards&#13;
Setting Process, a panel of I .&#13;
government, industry and labor , ' ( f ) ,&#13;
representatives· inclUding,&#13;
DiArchangel, Robert Hanna,&#13;
.ree "&#13;
area director of OSHA' in&#13;
Milwaukee, Charles.' A. Hawk, , ,&#13;
safety engineer, S.C. Johnson &amp; I&#13;
Son Inc., and a union panelist to "IMPORTANT' STUDY ABROAD ANbe&#13;
named, ., NOUNCEMENT: Limited openings still&#13;
, remain on'CFS accredited Academjc Year&#13;
Prof. Datta will moderate the , 1976.11Programs for Fall, Winter, Spring, or&#13;
morning sessions and. UW.P Prof. Full Year for qualified applicants. Students&#13;
in good standing - FreShman,. ~oPhomore,&#13;
Eugene C. Gasiorkiewicz the I Junior, Senior Year are euatere. Good&#13;
afternoon sessions. Registration f.aculty references.~ evidence. of sen.&#13;
'&#13;
motivation and sincere lnterest 10 study&#13;
will be held from 9-9:30 a.m, in abroad and internatlonat cultural exchange&#13;
. t count more with CFS than specific grade the Parkside Union, with the tirs I point. For application - Information:&#13;
session beginning at 9:45. The CENTER FOR FOREIGN STUDY: AY&#13;
'&#13;
ADMISSIONS, 216 s. StaN!, Box 606, Ann luncheon session will begin at Arbor, MI 48107 (313) 662-5575. '&#13;
1:15, with the concluding session I&#13;
beginning at 4 p.m. Registration&#13;
and more information can be t&#13;
obtained through University&#13;
Extension at Parkside, (414) 553-&#13;
2312. (A conference fee of $5&#13;
includes lunch).&#13;
by Chris Meyer&#13;
The Parkside Child Care Center is in need of toys for&#13;
its 81 children. The enrollment ther is expected to&#13;
climb' therefore -the Parkside Student Government&#13;
, , . d· th ek Association-has decided to sponsor a toy rIve ewe&#13;
of October 18-22' to benefit the Center. ted&#13;
There will be tbree drop boxes on camp~ (decora _&#13;
by the Child Care Center kids) - one in Mam Place, one&#13;
on the D-llevel of the Classromm building, and one m&#13;
the Union The Center itself will also be a drop pomt.&#13;
" " PSGA is Storage is a problem for the Center so .&#13;
asking that toys donated be relatively small.&#13;
b&#13;
-of " safe" toys had to be In the past a large num er un&#13;
discarded,_which partially accounts f~r t~e need to&#13;
replenish the Center's stock. Toys donated sho~ld meet&#13;
"safe" standards, that is they sbould be m good&#13;
condition and of simple, sturdy construction. Those&#13;
made of plastic or wood are best and any metal parts&#13;
must be rest-free and blunt-edged. .&#13;
Some examples o. useful toys and playthmgs are:&#13;
Manipulative, puzzles of 2-15 pieces, Tinker Toys&#13;
and other multi-fit buildirg toys, clay, beads for&#13;
stringing, and wooden lacmg boards. .&#13;
Role-playing; dolls (ethmc preferred) clothing toy&#13;
tea sets, and aluminum kitchen utensils .&#13;
Other: books, sand and water play eqUIpment,&#13;
tricycles, wagons, push-pull toys, punchmg _bag,&#13;
simple musical instruments, ease\s .&#13;
Larger items are also needed with which to furmsh&#13;
the Center such as rocking chairs, a couch, a reco~d&#13;
player and records, and a filmstrip projector (all m&#13;
good condition-working order).&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 6. 1976S&#13;
.....VW"JLit ...¥ATVU .. A •• V/Jk av-... UJ • n ¥iJ1Va1't1taAI N U A¥ 7Js&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
M ike Villers -&#13;
8&#13;
Dealer&#13;
~~~&#13;
637-2726&#13;
II1II_SW...:..-IT_C_H_H_I_T_S_&#13;
Special bu}t&#13;
- ~&#13;
Grey and rust plaid&#13;
plays the coordinated&#13;
game for fall.&#13;
TO&#13;
Mixoble blends or wool and nylon ror&#13;
campus or career. Snappy 8lyling in&#13;
rusr and gray plaid or solids,&#13;
Sizes 5 • 15.&#13;
Plaid blazer, trimly tailored '22&#13;
Rust pants ..'16&#13;
Bow&#13;
Solid&#13;
Plaid&#13;
blo";'e, in beige '13&#13;
veet , in autumn rust 0 ••• 'II&#13;
skirt '12&#13;
Sweater, beige turtle neck '10&#13;
JUNIOR REFLECTION SHOP&#13;
Coordinate. It figures.&#13;
USE WARDS&#13;
CHARG-ALL&#13;
CREDIT&#13;
360052nd Street KENOSHA&#13;
Phone 658-4331&#13;
OPEN DAILY: MOD.\IIroSat. 11:10 A.M. 10':. P,!M,.&#13;
SaD. 12 ID 5 P,M.&#13;
-&#13;
.0 SHA---.-:=-- , continued from pg. 3&#13;
Health and Safety Act (OSHA)&#13;
and its enforcer agency _in ,the&#13;
Department of Labor, as well as&#13;
to the National Institute of Occupational&#13;
Safety and Health&#13;
(NIOSH), which determines&#13;
occupational health standards._&#13;
Morning sessions will f~ature&#13;
he following topics and&#13;
speakers:&#13;
OSHA and Industry, Nicholas&#13;
DiArchangel, regional administrator,&#13;
OSHA region V,&#13;
Chicago; Could OSHA Compliance&#13;
be Profitable?, Robert&#13;
Korevec, personnel and safety&#13;
director, Maynard Steel Co.,&#13;
Milwaukee; OSHA Health&#13;
Citations, Milan Racic, senior&#13;
industrial hygienist, Department&#13;
of Labor, Washington, D.C.;&#13;
Defining the Problem, Dr.&#13;
Marjorie Lundquist, industrial&#13;
hygiene manager, Globe-Union&#13;
Inc., Milwaukee; Role of the&#13;
Consultant, Dr. Jack E. Peterson,&#13;
civil engineering department,&#13;
Marquette University; and&#13;
Legal Aspects, of Occupational '&#13;
Health, · Lorice Ede, chief of&#13;
information services, National&#13;
Institute for -Occupational Safety&#13;
and Health, Cincinnati. _&#13;
A luncheon session will feature&#13;
Women in the Worlg&gt;lace, Dr.&#13;
Vilma R. Hunt, environmental&#13;
health professor, Pennsylvania&#13;
·State University.&#13;
Afternoon sessions are:&#13;
Elements of a Sound Oc-&#13;
;upational Health Program, Dr.&#13;
Clyde M. Berry, chief, industrial&#13;
hygiene, Department of&#13;
Preventive Medicine, University&#13;
of Iowa; The Role of Toxicology,&#13;
Doris Roettgers, industrial&#13;
toxicologist, Memorial Hospital,,&#13;
West Allis; Medical&#13;
Requirements of OSHA, a panel&#13;
on medicine, government and&#13;
insurance by Dr. Anthony A.&#13;
Hei:mann, health services&#13;
director, S.C. Johnson &amp; Son&#13;
Inc,_, Racine, Florence Ryer,&#13;
OSHA, Washington,· D.C., and&#13;
Betty Callow, Employers Mutual&#13;
of Wausau; and OSHA Standards&#13;
Setting Process, a panel of&#13;
government, industry and ~abor&#13;
representatives · including&#13;
DiArchangel, Robert Hanna,&#13;
area director of OSHA·, in&#13;
Milwaukee, Charles · A. Hawk.&#13;
safety engineer, S.C. Johnson &amp;&#13;
Son Inc., and a union panelist to&#13;
be named.&#13;
Prof. Datta will moderate the&#13;
morning sessions and UW-P Prof.&#13;
Eugene C. Gasiorkiewicz the&#13;
afternoon sessions. Registration&#13;
will be held from 9-9:30 a.m. in&#13;
the Parkside Union, with the first&#13;
session beginning at 9:45. The&#13;
luncheon session will begin at&#13;
1: 15, with the concluding session&#13;
beginning at 4 p.m. Registration&#13;
. and more information can be&#13;
obtained through University&#13;
Extension at Parkside, ( 414) 553-&#13;
2312. (A conference fee of $5&#13;
includes lunch).&#13;
~Token price up&#13;
On Mo!}day, September 27, bus&#13;
token prices for Racine and&#13;
Kenosha buses increased from 20&#13;
cents to 25 cents. Regular bus&#13;
fare for both bus lines is 25 cents.&#13;
Since registration the Information&#13;
Kiosk in Main Place&#13;
was sellil)g the tokens 5 for a&#13;
dollar or 20 cents each.&#13;
The purpose of this bargain&#13;
according to Erwin Zuehlke,&#13;
assistant chancellor for Administration,&#13;
was, "to encourage&#13;
people to ride the bus."&#13;
The bus tokens are accepted by&#13;
both bus lines and are&#13;
redeemable at Parkside for 25&#13;
cents each. The bus tokens were&#13;
purchased for Parkside under the&#13;
direction of James E. Galbraith,&#13;
directpr of Planning and Construction,&#13;
as an accounting&#13;
device to help both state and local&#13;
transportat10n authorities count .&#13;
the number of Parkside students&#13;
using the new route No. 9 of the&#13;
Belle Urban System in Racine.&#13;
The Kenosha Transit System&#13;
also agreed to honor the tokens&#13;
making it possible for Parkside to&#13;
market the tokens to students and&#13;
increase mass transit use.&#13;
Presently the"price of a token is&#13;
the same price as a regular fare.&#13;
.When asked about recent sales,&#13;
Information Kiosk Clerk,&#13;
·Lorraine Kiekhoefer said, "Sales&#13;
were very brisk last week when&#13;
the posters went up saying the&#13;
-price was going up. It has been&#13;
slow so far this week."&#13;
Zuehlke was asked what action&#13;
would be taken if sales dropped&#13;
dramatically after the increase.&#13;
Zuehlke said, "We would have to&#13;
go to some marketing device to&#13;
increase sales."&#13;
Singe~--'-----&#13;
continued from pg. 1&#13;
David Brandt, a student in the&#13;
marketing speciality, found the&#13;
task force report to be a little far-&#13;
. sighted, since he felt problems&#13;
facing the program needed&#13;
solving in the immediate future.&#13;
He said, "this degree is going to&#13;
follow us for the rest of our&#13;
lives."&#13;
Singer stated that the&#13;
upheavals of the arrival of&#13;
Chancellor Guskin, and the&#13;
resignation of Dean William Moy&#13;
caused problems that will take a&#13;
long time to resolve.&#13;
He told students that the&#13;
management science division is&#13;
in the process of recruiting a new&#13;
chairman to begin looking into&#13;
current problems.&#13;
He felt no one in the present&#13;
program has the experience or&#13;
expertise to facilitate major&#13;
changes in the business program.&#13;
The search and screen committee,&#13;
chaired by Singer, is&#13;
hoping to recruit a new chairperson&#13;
by next semester, but&#13;
according to Singer, not many&#13;
topnotch administrators i&gt;r&#13;
teachers are willing to leave&#13;
schools at midterm.&#13;
When such an administrator is&#13;
selected, he should be available&#13;
for consultation during the spring&#13;
semester even if he doesn't start&#13;
working full-time until next&#13;
September.&#13;
r----------------l&#13;
!Classified ·: t .&#13;
f (free) !&#13;
t f&#13;
t · 0 0 AN IMPORTANT STUDY ABRA · t NOUNCEMENT: Limited openings still&#13;
remain on CFS accredited AcademJc Year 1976-77 Programs for Fall, Winter. Spring, or t&#13;
f&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
Full Year tor qualified applicants. Students&#13;
in good standing . Freshman, Sophomore,&#13;
Junior, Senior Year are eligible. Good&#13;
faculty references, evidence of selfmotivation&#13;
and sincere 1nterest in study&#13;
abroad and international cultural exchange&#13;
count more with CFS than specific gr_ade&#13;
point. For application · Information:&#13;
CENTER FOR FOREIGN STUOY : AY&#13;
ADMISSIONS, 216 S. Stale, Box 606, Ann&#13;
Arbor. Ml 48107 (313) 662-5575. '&#13;
t FOR SALE: Portable Stereo with Garrard&#13;
t turntable. Asking 550. call 634-5305 after 4&#13;
p.m .&#13;
FOR SALE : CB Radios and Scanners. t&#13;
factory new, lowest prices in town. Now '"f stock : Robyn WV-23, Midland 862B, 883, 886&#13;
Bearcat 101. 554 -6635 after 6 p.m . Ask for&#13;
John. t&#13;
WILL oo any kind of typing at reasonable t rates. For information call 652-3373. t&#13;
FOUND : Women's identification bracelet. f&#13;
C:~t&#13;
6&#13;
:::::o. students : carter Monda l e t&#13;
campaign needs volunteers. Interested t&#13;
parties should call Racine 632 107•,&#13;
Kenosha - 652-9976. t&#13;
t WA.NTED: Sports writer for Ranger that is van E. Thompson Free lance Photography, t talented, good in grammar I and most of alJ, weddings and candid portraits. Phone 652-&#13;
t dependable. See Jean Tenuta in the Ranger 8862 '&#13;
office, WLLC D194 . ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~&#13;
~~~~~~~~~&#13;
Center needs toys · by Chris Meyer&#13;
The Parkside Child Care Center is in need of toys for&#13;
its 81 children. The enrollment ther is expected to&#13;
climb therefore -the Parkside Student Government&#13;
condition and of simple, sturdy construction. Those&#13;
made of plastic or wood are best and any metal parts&#13;
' ' · d' th eek Association-has decided to sponsor a toy rive e w&#13;
of October 18-22 · to benefit the Center. ted&#13;
There will be three drop boxes on c~p~ ( decora .&#13;
by the Child Care Center kids) - one m Mam Place, o~e&#13;
on the D-1 level of the Classromm building, and 0n: m&#13;
the uru·on The Center itself will also be a drop pomt. . ' ' PSGA is Storage is a problem for the Center so _&#13;
asking that toys donated b!;! relatively small.&#13;
In the past a large number of "unsafe" toys had to be&#13;
discarded which partially accounts f~r t~e need tot&#13;
' · · ted ho ldmee replenish the Center's stock. Toys dona s ~-&#13;
"safe" standards, that is they should be m good&#13;
must be rest-free and blunt-edged. . Some examples of useful toys and playthings are:&#13;
Manipulative;. puzzles of 2-15 pieces, Tinker Toys&#13;
and other multi-fit buildipg toys, clay, beads for&#13;
stringing, and wooden lacing boards. . Role-playing; dolls ( ethnic preferred_) clothing toy&#13;
tea sets, and aluminum kitchen utens~ .&#13;
Other: books, sand and water play e~u1pment,&#13;
tricycles, wagons, push-pull toys, punchmg bag,&#13;
simple musical instruments, ease\s . Larger items are also needed with which to furrush&#13;
th Center such as rocking chairs, a couch, a reco~d&#13;
pl:yer and records, and a filmstrip projector (all m&#13;
good condition-working order).&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 6, 1976 S --~-&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Mike Villers ~ - Dealer 637-2726 . ... ----. .. . ... ... . .. . . .. . .. . . - - . . . - . . .&#13;
Bn---'sw_IT_C_H_H_IT_s____,&#13;
Special buy.&#13;
Grey and rust plaid&#13;
plays the coordinat d&#13;
game for fall.&#13;
TO&#13;
l\lixable blend or wool and n Ion for&#13;
campus or career. nappy tylin in&#13;
ru t and gray plaid r olid .&#13;
ize 5 - 15.&#13;
Plaid blazer triml tailor d .....•••.• '22&#13;
Rut&#13;
Bo~&#13;
Solid&#13;
Plaid&#13;
pant .•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '1 6&#13;
blo.; e, in beig ••.••••••...•....... '13&#13;
et, in autumn rut ............. '11&#13;
ki rt •••••••••••.•••••••••••••••••••• • 12&#13;
Sweater, beige turtle n ck ••••••••••••• • 10&#13;
J "'HOR REFLECTIO ' HOP&#13;
Coordinate. It figures.&#13;
USE WARDS&#13;
CHARG-ALL&#13;
CREDIT&#13;
3600 52nd Street KENOSHA&#13;
Phone 658-4331&#13;
OPEN DAILY : Mon. tbru Sat. 10:00 A.M. to 9:80 P.1\1,, Sun. lZ lo 5 P.M. &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 6, 1976&#13;
Career Center offers&#13;
•&#13;
serVlcesby&#13;
Barbara Larson&#13;
Career COUDSelor&#13;
looking for jobs after graduation. Standard and Poors Directory lists&#13;
companies according to, their products and services as well as by&#13;
geOgraphic area. For students who want to research companies before&#13;
writing letters or job interviews, there are twenty five file drawers&#13;
with information on specific businesses from AAI Corporation to Zurn&#13;
Industries, Inc; Job openings are posted on a bulletin board or in loose&#13;
leaf binders. Ad Search, a national want-ad newspaper, comes out&#13;
.weekly. It contains want-ads fisted by job catagories from 6il different&#13;
papers allover the country.&#13;
Books on how; tl&gt; write resumes, how to find a job, how to do interviews&#13;
and how to make career decisions are in the Center as well as&#13;
information from the federal government and state governments on&#13;
projected employment trends. . ,&#13;
Counselors are available to help students locate and use material in&#13;
the Resource Center Monday through Friday from 7:45 a.m. to 4:30&#13;
p.rh, Students making career decisions of any type are encouraged to&#13;
make use of this facility. -&#13;
'The Career Resource Center in 107Tallent Hall bas a collection of&#13;
materials on occupations, schoolS, employment trends, industries and&#13;
job seeking techniques.&#13;
Students researching a particular occupation can find information&#13;
on the work performed, training requirements and other&#13;
qualifications, places of employment, employment outlook as well as&#13;
earnings and working conditions.&#13;
'The individual who does not have a specific occupational choice can&#13;
read the 1976-77 edition of the Occupational Outlook Handbook,&#13;
available in the Resource Center, for some ideas. Books on occupations&#13;
from the Richard Rossen Press and Vocational Guidance&#13;
Press series can he checked out by students.&#13;
'There are about 500 files on different jobs which are arranged according&#13;
to general area of interest, such as government, socially&#13;
oriented careers, health careers, business and math careers,&#13;
engineering, science and environmental careers. A student without a&#13;
specific occupation in.mind, but with a general sense of direction can&#13;
hrowse through the files broadening his or her conception of the career&#13;
alternatives possible.&#13;
Information regarding graduate and professional schools include&#13;
books listing schools according to area, (withentrance requirements&#13;
summarized) material on getting into graduate school, booklets on&#13;
preparing for the Graduate RecordExam and other exams pius a&#13;
collection of catalogs from various graduate schools. Catalogs are also&#13;
available from schools in veterinary medicine, law, dentistry, nursing,&#13;
optometry, podiatry and medicine.&#13;
Applications for various exams are in the Resource Center such as&#13;
Graduate Record Exam, Graduate Management Admission Tests,&#13;
Law School Admission Test, Professional and Administrative Career&#13;
Examination for federal employment, and Pharmacy, Dental, Optometry&#13;
Admission Test. ~II.. E V__ -:::-E-:-"""":_N"",,,,:~~T...,.__ S__ · ]&#13;
~ Wednesday, Oct. 6&#13;
M&#13;
ike Viller-s_Dealer 637:..2726 Mini·tournamentsponsored by WargamersClubbegins with Game of Bar-Lev from the Yom-Kippur War of 1973.Register in CL 140.&#13;
"~J\lVtJV!¥ ...u _ Elections Sub-Committee meets at 11a.m. in WLLC-D193. Open to all"&#13;
students interested in helping conduct fall elections for PSGA, Inc.&#13;
Senate and Allocations Committee.&#13;
Executive Council of PSGA, Inc. meets at 2 p.m. in WLLC Dl93.&#13;
- ,&#13;
Pet fageant&#13;
sponsored&#13;
'The Parkside ACtivities Board&#13;
Outing Committee is sponsoring&#13;
a Pet Pageant on 'Thursday afternoon,&#13;
October 7, in the commons&#13;
area located in front of&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Awards of raw hot dogs will be&#13;
given to winners in the following&#13;
categories: prettiest, ugliest,&#13;
most obedient, most congenial, .&#13;
_ strangest, best pet-owner look&#13;
alike, strangest pet-owner&#13;
combination, strangest trick&#13;
performed by pet, owner or both.&#13;
All owners to be on leashes and&#13;
under control. Prizes will be&#13;
awarded between 2 and 3 p.m.&#13;
The pageant is open and free to&#13;
all students.&#13;
'Thursday, Oct. 7&#13;
Movie, "Harold and Maude," plays at 2:30 and 7:30 in the Cinema&#13;
'Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
_ Public Relation.and Student Information Committee meets at 3 p.m. in&#13;
WLLC Dl93. Open III all .interested students.&#13;
Foreign Students Club (on 2nd page)&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 6to 10p.m. in CLI4O.&#13;
Ways and M~ans Committee meets at 7 p.m. in WLLC Dl93.&#13;
Dancer, Raymond Johnson, performs at 8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Hom. of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich·&#13;
OPEN8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington #trI.. 6M-2i73&#13;
Friday, Oct. 8&#13;
Senate Student Service Committee Committee meets at 9:30 a.rn. in&#13;
WLLC Dl74. Open to all interested students. -'&#13;
Senate Business and Finance Committee meets at 10:15a.m. in WLLC&#13;
D174. •&#13;
Chess Club holds first meeting from 2 to 4 p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Lecture entitled "Africa Counts", a history of mathematics and art in&#13;
Africa, by Mrs. Claudia Zaslavsky is at 4 p.m, in CLll3. Preceded by&#13;
coffee and refreshments with the speaker at 3:30 p.m. in CLlll.&#13;
Sponsored by the Mathematics Faculty and the Science Division.&#13;
Women's swimming, UW-P v.s. Carroll College, begins 4 p.m, in the&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Movie, "Harold and- Maude," plays at 7 and 9 p.m. in the Cinema&#13;
'Theatre. Admission is $L .&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
.1&amp;ES1&#13;
q ?&#13;
'SALE&#13;
~I!~Books 10~&#13;
REFERENCEBOOKS&#13;
COLLEGE PAPERBACKS&#13;
Fr.. Pi.zza Deli"ery&#13;
Club Highview'&#13;
5035 6.0th Street&#13;
.Phone: 652·8737&#13;
Alt. 4.11.. '11' Chl.k.l, Stl.h.fII: RI"I.II, 8.. 1&#13;
OPEN- 4 t.M. to t I.M.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 10&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Movie, "Harold and Maude," plays at 7:30 p.m,&#13;
'Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
in the Cinema&#13;
'THOUSANDS TO·&#13;
CHOOSE FROm&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 12&#13;
WargamersClub meets from 6 to 10p.m.ln CL 140.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. H&#13;
Legal Assistance Co-op members meet ai 7 p.m. in C~ 325.&#13;
Foreign Students Club meets at 4:30 p.m. in WLLC Dl74. All foreign&#13;
students please attend. • ,&#13;
GIRLS &amp; GUYS 79e&#13;
PRo&#13;
Jeans&#13;
NAmE BRANDS&#13;
•&#13;
Furniture SOFAS. CHAIRS. BEDS. TABLES&#13;
All reduced· up to 50%&#13;
These &amp; more - SALE PRIC~S thru Oct. 13 •&#13;
GOODWILL BUDGET STORE&#13;
Elmwood Plaza • Racine&#13;
- /&#13;
HOUIS Doily 9-9 Sot. 9-6 Sun. 11-5&#13;
Dancer&#13;
to perform&#13;
"Raymond Johnson in Concert,"&#13;
a program of solo dance in&#13;
the modern idiom and the second&#13;
offering in the Accent on Enrjchment&#13;
series at Parkside, will be&#13;
presented at 8 p.m. on Thursday,&#13;
Oct. ~; in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. •&#13;
Johnson, whose work has been&#13;
acclaimed by such respected&#13;
critics as Clive Barnes of the New&#13;
York Times, will present a&#13;
program ranging from ,the&#13;
serious and introspective to the&#13;
surprising and zany in modern&#13;
dance. .&#13;
His touring show includes intricate&#13;
lighting effects designed&#13;
by Edward I. Byers, who has&#13;
designed the lighting for&#13;
numerous dance and theater&#13;
productions in New York City and&#13;
made his Broadway debut in 1974&#13;
with "Tubstrip."&#13;
Johnson is affiliated-with the&#13;
Artists-in-Schools program, and,&#13;
in addition to his performance at&#13;
Parkside, he will be. artist-inresidence&#13;
for the Racine Unified&#13;
School District during the week of&#13;
Oct, 4 through 9. His schedule will&#13;
include a series of classes and&#13;
demonstrations at the Fine Arts&#13;
School, workshops for teachers of&#13;
physical education, dance and&#13;
drama and a children's concert&#13;
at 10:30 a.m. on Saturday, Oct. 9,&#13;
in Horlick High School&#13;
Auditorium.&#13;
Seminars&#13;
scheduled ,&#13;
"Bioethics and. the Human&#13;
Prospect" will he the topic of Dr.&#13;
Van Potier, professor of oncology&#13;
at,McArdle Laboratory for&#13;
Cancer Research, at Parkside at&#13;
2 p.m, on Friday, Oct. 8. 'The&#13;
McArdle facility at UW·Madison&#13;
is one of the nation's major&#13;
cancer research centers.&#13;
Dr. Potter's lecture is part of a&#13;
series of free public seminars&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside Life&#13;
Science faculty for the first&#13;
semester.&#13;
Other seminars are:&#13;
Oct. 15 - "Protein Synthesis in&#13;
Developing Bean Seeds" by Dr.&#13;
T. Hall of the UW-Madison&#13;
Department of Horticulutre&#13;
Oct. 22 - "Pole of Light and the&#13;
Pineal Gland in the Regulation of&#13;
Reproduction" by Dr. F. W.&#13;
Turek of the N ortbwestern&#13;
University Department of&#13;
Biological Sciences&#13;
Oct. 28 ', "'The \,:volutionary&#13;
Ecology of Uni-Sex Fishes" by&#13;
Prof. Jack Schultz' of the&#13;
University of Connecticut&#13;
Nov. 5 - "Reactivity, Structure&#13;
and Behavior of Protoplasm in&#13;
Relation to Age" by Dr. Norman&#13;
Joseph of the University of&#13;
Illinois-Chicago College of&#13;
Pharmacy&#13;
Nov. 12· "Behavior in Cranes"&#13;
by Dr, George Archibald,&#13;
Director of the International&#13;
Crane Foundation.&#13;
Nov. 19 - "Electromagnetism,&#13;
Man and the Environment" by&#13;
Dr. J .H. Battocletti of the&#13;
Medical College of Wisconsin in&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
All seminars will be in&#13;
Greenquist Hall Room 0.127 with&#13;
the exceptions o( thOse on Oct. 8&#13;
and Nov. 12, which will be in&#13;
Classroom Bldg. Room 105. All&#13;
seminars begin at 2 p.m, Further&#13;
information can he obtained from&#13;
Eugene GoOdman~ the series&#13;
coordinator.&#13;
I&#13;
"&#13;
~&#13;
t&#13;
,&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
'"~&#13;
~&#13;
.-&#13;
•&#13;
.-&#13;
~&#13;
..&#13;
«&#13;
II&#13;
1&#13;
--&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 6, 1976&#13;
Career Center offers services&#13;
by Barbara Larson&#13;
Career Counselor&#13;
The Career Resource Center in 107 Tallent Hall has a collection of&#13;
materials on occupations, schools, employment trends, industries and&#13;
job seeking techniques.&#13;
Students researching a particular occupation can find information&#13;
on the work performed, training requirements and other&#13;
qualifications, places of employment, employment outlook as well as&#13;
earnings and working conditions.&#13;
The individual who does not have a specific occupational choice can&#13;
read the 1976-77 edition of the Occupational Outlook Handbook,&#13;
available in the Resource Center, for some ideas. Books on occupations&#13;
from the Richard Rossen Press and Vocational Guidance&#13;
Press series can be checked out by students.&#13;
There are about 500 files on different jobs which are arranged according&#13;
to general area of interest, such as government, socially&#13;
oriented careers, health careers, business and math careers,&#13;
engineering, science and environmental careers. A student without a&#13;
specific occupation in-mind, but with a general sense of direction can&#13;
browse through the files broadening his or her conception of the career&#13;
alternatives possible.&#13;
Informatiol\ regarding graduate and professional schools include&#13;
books listing schools according to area, (with .entrance requirements&#13;
summarized) material on getting into graduate school, booklets on&#13;
preparing for the Graduate Record _Exam and other exams plus a&#13;
collection of catalogs from various graduate schools. Catalogs are also&#13;
available from schools in veterinary medicine, law, dentistry, nursing,&#13;
optometry, podiatry and medicine.&#13;
looking for jobs after graduation. Standard and Poors Directory lists&#13;
companies according to.,_ their products and services as well as by&#13;
geographic area. For students who want to research companies before&#13;
writing letters or job interviews, there are twenty five file drawers&#13;
with information on specific businesses from AAI Corporation to Zurn&#13;
Industries, Inc; Job openings are posted on a bulletin board or in loose&#13;
leaf binders.Ad Search, a national want-ad newspaper, comes out&#13;
weekly. It contains want-ads fisted by job catagories from 68 different&#13;
papers all .over the country.&#13;
Books on how. to write resumes, how to find a job, how to do interviews&#13;
and how to make career decisions are in the Center as well as&#13;
information from the federal government and state governments on&#13;
projected employment trends.&#13;
Counselors are available {o help students locate and use material in&#13;
the Resource Center Monday through Friday from 7:45 a.m. to 4:30&#13;
p.rh. Students making career decisions of any type are encouraged to&#13;
make use of this facility. -&#13;
Pet fageant&#13;
sponsored&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Outing Committee is sponsoring&#13;
a Pet Pageant on Thursday afternoon,&#13;
October 7, in the commons&#13;
area located in front of&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Awards o(raw hot dogs will be&#13;
given to winners in the following&#13;
categories: prettiest, ugliest,&#13;
most obedient, most congenial,&#13;
strangest, best pet-owner look&#13;
alike, strangest pet,owner&#13;
combination, strangest trick&#13;
performed by pet, owner or both.&#13;
All owners to be on leashes and&#13;
under control. Prizes will be&#13;
awarded between 2 and 3 p.m.&#13;
The pageant is open and free to&#13;
all students.&#13;
Applications for various exams are in the Resource Center such as&#13;
Graduate Record Exam, Graduate Management Admission Tests,&#13;
Law School Admission Test, Professional and Administrative Career&#13;
Examination for federal employment, and Pharmacy, Dental, Optometry&#13;
Admission Test.&#13;
~ ·&#13;
., ... ___ ._E ___ v ___ E ___N ___ T ___ s __&#13;
· ___ J]&gt;&#13;
&lt;e) - - Mike Villers - Dealer 637-2726&#13;
--&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarini&#13;
Sandwich . OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P .M.&#13;
261S Washington /we. 634-2373&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
l(l(IJIIIRHSI SA LE&#13;
All Books&#13;
FICTION&#13;
REFERENCE BOOKS&#13;
COLLEGE PAPERBACKS&#13;
10~&#13;
THOUSANDS TO •&#13;
CHOOSE FROm&#13;
Jeans&#13;
NAffiE BRANDS&#13;
GIRLS &amp; GUYS 79e&#13;
PR.&#13;
Furniture sorns. CHAIRS. BEDs. TABLES&#13;
All reduced - up to 50%&#13;
These &amp; more - SALE f'RIC~S thru Oct. 13&#13;
GOODWILL BUDGET STORE&#13;
Elmwood Plozo. • Racine&#13;
Hours Doily 9-9 Sot. 9- 6 Sun. 11- 5&#13;
•&#13;
_,&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 6&#13;
Mini-tournament sponsored by Wargamers Club begins with Game of&#13;
Bar•Lev from the Yom-Kippur War of 1973. Register in CL 140.&#13;
Elections Sub-Committee meets at 11 a.m. in WLLC-D193. Open to all&#13;
students interested in helping conduct fall elections for PSGA, Inc.&#13;
Senate and Allocations Committee.&#13;
Executive Council of PSGA, Inc. meets at 2 p.m. in WLLC D193.&#13;
'&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 7&#13;
Movie, "Harold and Maude," plays at 2:30 and 7:30 in the Cinema&#13;
Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
. Public Relation and Student Information Committee meets at 3 p.m. in&#13;
WU..C D193. Open ~ all .interested students.&#13;
Foreign Students Club ( on 2nd page)&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 6 to 10 p.m. in CLl 40.&#13;
Ways and M~ans Committee meets at 7 p.m. in WLLC Dl93.&#13;
Dancer, RaymondJohnson,performsat8p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 8&#13;
Senate Student Service Committee Committee meets at 9:30 a.m. in&#13;
WLLC D174. Open to all interested students. ·&#13;
Senate Business and Finance Committee meets at 10: 15 a.m. in WLLC&#13;
D174. p&#13;
Chess Club holds first meeting from 2 to 4 p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Lecture entitled "Africa Counts", a history of mathematics and art in&#13;
Africa, by Mrs. Claudia Zaslavsk).'. is at 4 p.m·. in CL113. Preceded by&#13;
coffee and refreshments with the speaker at 3:30 p.m. in CLlll.&#13;
Sponsored by the Mathematics Faculty and the Science Division.&#13;
Women's swimming, UW-P v_s. Carroll College, begins 4 p.m. in the&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Movie, "Harold and Maude," plays at 7 and 9 p.m. in the Cinema&#13;
Theatre. Admission is $1.. .&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 10&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1 to 6 p.m. in CL 140. ,,-&#13;
Movie, "Harold and Maude," plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Cinema&#13;
Theatre. Admissi..9n is $1.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 12&#13;
Wargamers·club mee~ from 6 to IO p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 14&#13;
Legal Assistance Co-op members meet at 7 p.m. inc½. 325.&#13;
Foreign Students Club meets at 4:30 p.m. in WLLC D174. All foreign&#13;
students please attend'.&#13;
Fre, Pizza , Delivery&#13;
Club Highview ·&#13;
5035 6.0th Street&#13;
. Phone: 652-8737&#13;
Alto ••liierin9 Chiek111, Sp19hetff; Raiioli, Beef&#13;
OPEN· 4 p.M. to 1 .....&#13;
Dancer&#13;
to perform&#13;
"Raymond Johnson in Concert,"&#13;
a program of solo dance in&#13;
the modern idiom and the second&#13;
offering in the Accent on Enrichment&#13;
series at Parkside, will be&#13;
presented at 8 p.m. on Thursday,&#13;
Oct. 1; in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. /;&#13;
Johnson, whose work has been&#13;
acclaimed by such respected&#13;
critics as Clive Barnes of the New&#13;
York Times, will present a&#13;
program ranging from the&#13;
serious and introspective to the&#13;
surprising and zany in modern&#13;
dance. ·&#13;
His touring show includes intricate&#13;
lighting effects designed&#13;
by Edward I. Byers, who has&#13;
designed the lighting for&#13;
numerous dance and theater&#13;
productions in New York City and&#13;
made his Broadway debut in 1974&#13;
with "Tubstrip."&#13;
Johnson is affiliated with the&#13;
Artists-in-Schools program, and,&#13;
in addition to his performance at&#13;
Parkside, he will . be artist-inresidence&#13;
for the Racine Unified&#13;
School District during the week of&#13;
Oct, 4 through 9. His schedule will&#13;
include a series of classes and&#13;
demonstrations at the Fine Arts&#13;
School, workshops for teachers of ·&#13;
physical education, dance and&#13;
drama and a children's concertat&#13;
10:30 a.m. on Saturday, Oct. 9,&#13;
in Horlick High School&#13;
Auditorium.&#13;
Seminars&#13;
scheduled&#13;
"Bioethics and the Human&#13;
Prospect" will be the topic of Dr.&#13;
Van Potter, professor of oncology&#13;
at., McArdle Laboratory for&#13;
Cancer Research, at Parkside at&#13;
2 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 8. The&#13;
McArdle facility at UW-Madison&#13;
is one of the nation's major&#13;
cancer research centers.&#13;
DI": Potter's lec_ture is part of a&#13;
series of free public seminars&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside Life&#13;
Science faculty for the first&#13;
semester.&#13;
Other seminars are : .&#13;
Oct. 15 - "Protein Synthesis in&#13;
Developing Bean Seeds" by Dr.&#13;
T. Hall of the UW-Madison&#13;
Department of Horticulutre&#13;
Oct. 22 - "Pole of Light and the&#13;
Pineal Gland in the Regulation of&#13;
Reproduction" by Dr. F. W.&#13;
Turek of the Northwestern&#13;
University Department of&#13;
Biological ,Sciences&#13;
Oct. 28 ·_ "The ~volutionary&#13;
Ecology of Uni-Sex Fishes" by&#13;
Prof. Jack Schultz · of the&#13;
University of Connecticut .&#13;
Nov. 5 - "Reactivity, Structure&#13;
and Behavior of Protoplasm in&#13;
Relation to Age" by Dr. Norman&#13;
Joseph of the University of&#13;
Illinois-Chicago College of&#13;
Pharmacy&#13;
Nov. 12 - "Behavior in Cranes"&#13;
by . Dr_. George Archibald·,&#13;
Director of the International&#13;
Crane Foundation.&#13;
Nov. 19 - "Electromagnetism,&#13;
Man and the Environment" by&#13;
Dr. J .H. Battocletti of the&#13;
Medical College of Wisconsin in&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
All seminars will be in&#13;
Greenquist Hall Room D-127 with&#13;
the exceptions o( tho·se on Oct. 8&#13;
and Nov. 12, which will be in&#13;
Classroom Bldg. Room 105. All&#13;
seminars begin at 2 p.m. Further&#13;
information can be obtained from&#13;
Eugene Goodman,..J... the series&#13;
coordinator.&#13;
e &#13;
Student government&#13;
elections delayed&#13;
. by Robert Hoffman&#13;
rules to present to the Senate.&#13;
Student government is Bowden said that elections will&#13;
currently trying to get organized definitely be held in October and&#13;
and set up plans for the new year that the election rules will be&#13;
Elections, which were to have available next week.&#13;
been held in tbe beginning of Bowden feels that student&#13;
October, have been delayed go~~rnm~nt h~s a good&#13;
because election rules have n~t reoa ~onts ip ndwlth. the adbeen&#13;
diawn up yet. rrurus ra I~n a With student&#13;
support things can and will be&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden, president, said done.&#13;
that this is the fault of 1) The Two area5Bowden promises to&#13;
Senate: for not being able to' reform are financial aids and the&#13;
achieve a quor~ at its Sep- bookstore, which she says have&#13;
tember 24 meetmg and 2) The been especially insensitive to&#13;
Ways and Means committee's for students' needs.&#13;
their inability to agree on election&#13;
-'&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October •• 1'76 7&#13;
PBC fights corporations&#13;
•&#13;
by Jeff Sorensen&#13;
(CPS) - The year of the U.S. BiCentennial may be&#13;
almost over, but the People's Bicentennial Commission&#13;
(PBC) is not about to allow that fact to&#13;
curtail its activities. In September the group&#13;
changed its name to the People's Business Commission&#13;
and vowed to continue its efforts to&#13;
"declare independence from big business."&#13;
According to PBC Chairman Jeremy Rifkin, the&#13;
PBe is "de-emphasizing its focus on history and is&#13;
now focusing on economics ...rne bicentennial is&#13;
over. But the critical work of challenging the&#13;
economy must go on in the years ahead."&#13;
The PBC advocates employee-owned and&#13;
operated businesses. Thus, Rifkin explained, the&#13;
group differs from both capitalism and socialism as&#13;
they are practiced in most countries, "We don't&#13;
want a bunch of bureaucrats in Washington. To&#13;
replace those on Wall Street. We want the economy&#13;
decentralized," be explained.&#13;
Rifkin plans a number of lectures on college&#13;
campuses this year to promote PBC idea... Supported&#13;
by about 22,000 paid members, Rifkin said&#13;
the group will publish several books on economics&#13;
and history in 1977.&#13;
The group also plans to publish materials for use&#13;
in high school and college classes that will offer "an&#13;
alternative view of economics." Rifkin contended&#13;
that "most schools are now using books that offer a&#13;
one-sided, establishment view of American&#13;
government and business." In the pBs!, more than&#13;
5,000 schools have used PBC pamphlets, books and&#13;
.audio-visual material, he said.&#13;
In the fall elections, the PBC "will be moving in:';&#13;
electoral politics with a series of programs designed&#13;
to elect state legislators who are committed to&#13;
radical ideas." Rifkin said the group will endorse no&#13;
presidential or congressional candidates because&#13;
none have addressed the "democratization of the&#13;
economy."&#13;
"A patriotic movement Is needed to reclaim&#13;
democratic principles, to challenge the subversive&#13;
activities by corporatiOlls," Rifkin said. "We bave&#13;
decided to launch the People's Business Commission&#13;
because we do not believe that America's&#13;
economic future should rest in the very corporate&#13;
and political hands that bave plunged us into the&#13;
crisis in the first place."&#13;
(-&#13;
I&#13;
\&#13;
-~.&#13;
uw-r edges UW~:M . ,&#13;
by Jean,Tenuta&#13;
After tbeir opening weekend ofcompetition,&#13;
the women's&#13;
volleyball squad has a 1-1.record.&#13;
Saturday afternoon, the team&#13;
beat UW-Milwaukee 15-13 and 17-&#13;
15, but lost to Marquette, 7-15, 15-&#13;
13, 3-15.&#13;
Coach Orby Moss was bappy&#13;
with the performances of all the&#13;
members of his team: "Last&#13;
year, we shouldn't have been on&#13;
the same court with UWM, but&#13;
this year we came from behind&#13;
and heat them."&#13;
Although the team lost, Coach&#13;
Soccer&#13;
scheduled&#13;
The Wisconsin Chancellor's&#13;
Tournament at UW-Platteville is&#13;
next for the Parkside soccer&#13;
team, Friday and Saturday.&#13;
UW-Green Bay will meet UWMilwaukee&#13;
at 1 p.m. and&#13;
Parkside will meet UW-Pla~ville&#13;
at 3 p.m. and the following day,&#13;
the winners will battle it out.&#13;
During the past week, Parkside&#13;
blanked Aurora College last&#13;
Wednesday 1- 0 in a strong&#13;
defensive effort.&#13;
The winning goal was scored&#13;
by sophomore Mike Boyajian at&#13;
the 14:00 meet make of the first&#13;
balf, with an assist by freshman&#13;
Niall Power. Sophomore&#13;
Goalkeeper Bernie Hefner was&#13;
flawless in the goal, according to&#13;
Coach' Hal Henderson, and&#13;
"made a beautiful save on an&#13;
Aurora penalty shot with&#13;
1: 21 left in the game."&#13;
Camping&#13;
planned&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Outing Committee is sponsoring&#13;
a camping trip to Devils Lake,&#13;
October 8, 9 and 10.&#13;
The expeditions activities&#13;
include canoeing, rock climbing&#13;
and advanced campfire building.&#13;
A limited amount of equipment is&#13;
available from the school and is&#13;
included in the price of the trip.&#13;
Howe-ver, students are required&#13;
to bring their own sleeping bag.&#13;
Moss also had good things to say&#13;
about the matches with&#13;
Marquette. "I brought in six&#13;
second string players in the&#13;
second match when we were&#13;
behind and they turned around&#13;
the game and put us ahead Hl-9&#13;
. without Marquette scoring."&#13;
"The Warriors had a 6' 2"&#13;
player whose spiking we couldn't&#13;
return. We were forced to play&#13;
Fishing &amp;&#13;
Firing Lines&#13;
too much of a defensive game and&#13;
it kept us off stride and really&#13;
took a lot out 0.1 us," said Coach&#13;
Moss.&#13;
The Rangers played UWMadison&#13;
arid Milwaukee Tech&#13;
yesterday evening and will play&#13;
UW-Whitewater and Carroll&#13;
College at Whitewater on October&#13;
12.· :&#13;
by SCottReinhard&#13;
Fall has become one of the most difficult times of the year for the&#13;
outdoor sportsman. There is difficulty in figuring out what to do, but&#13;
not from a lack of choices, rather there is an over abundance of them.&#13;
Here in Southeastern Wisconsin much attention has been turned to&#13;
the sport of salmon fishing. The sport comes in a number of variations&#13;
with at least one proving tasteful to the angler. Snagging bas become&#13;
the most popular of inethods, though personally.J find no real sport in&#13;
it.&#13;
The method is achieved through the casting out of a treble hook&#13;
laden down with lead to give it depth and distance while casting.&#13;
Hooks must have a gape size from point to shank of not more tl1an one&#13;
half inch. The hook is retrieved through the water with short, forceful&#13;
jerks of the pole so as to inbed the hook into any part of the fish's body.&#13;
This practice may not b;e employed in the Root River 'of R,acine&#13;
County or the Menominee River of Milwaukee County. In these rivers&#13;
people fish in a civilized manner as opposed to the primitive one of&#13;
snagging. The majority of angling on these rivers Is by. treble hOoks&#13;
baited with eheeseand still fished on the bottom wiih as little weight as&#13;
river current permits.&#13;
Other choices on the fall sports agenda include the classic art of&#13;
hunting. Migratory waterfowl are probably on the most wanted list of&#13;
the Southern Wisconsin hunter.&#13;
At this time of the year, combined with the warm weather, youwIll&#13;
see little of the Northern Docks. Local waterfowl will be found in .semi-&#13;
"abundance thus attributing to the higher point value at the first half of&#13;
the split season. The Wisconsin waterfowl season is based on a point&#13;
system hunt where ducks bave a higher point value according to their&#13;
rarity. Most local ducks, thOse that stick in this area throughout the&#13;
summer, are mallards thus they also have been given a higher' point&#13;
value so as not to burn out the entire Dock easily.&#13;
Plher hunting pressure in the South car. be directed towards the gray&#13;
and fox squirrels along with ruffed grouse. To obtain these quarries&#13;
one must be quite diligent as their scarcity or cunning Is obviously.&#13;
seen through the few nwnbers of them which are taken.&#13;
For those who wish to venture North, the bow season for deer will&#13;
continue to be open in the unrestricted counties until November 14.&#13;
Wisconsin opens up a whole box of Cracker.Jack when fall rolls&#13;
around for the sportsmen who wish to wet a line, dirty a gun harrel, or&#13;
twang a how string. Itis all up to the sportsman if he or she wishes to&#13;
get out of the easy chair to take part in the harvest.&#13;
Ice hockey&#13;
Anyune interested in a Parkside Club Ice Hockey team should&#13;
contact Vic Godfrey in the Athletic Building by phoning 553-2245or his&#13;
offICe, 553-2310.&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Mike Villers8&#13;
Dealer 637-2726&#13;
~'U"""""2N"UUA'tL'UUUU"A"'UVUAAe&#13;
Series Presents&#13;
They met at the funeral 01 a perfect stranger.&#13;
From then on, things got perfectly stranger and stt1ln9li&#13;
Thurs., Oct. 7 . 2'30 pm &amp; 7:30 pm&#13;
Fri., Oct. B . 7 00 pm &amp; 9 00 pm&#13;
Sun., Oct. 10 • 7:30 pm&#13;
Cineme Theatre Adm. 51.00&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
AUTHENTIC ENGLISH STYLE&#13;
1J1is1} 'n&#13;
&lt;tt1}ips&#13;
Two pieces 01 deep fried Whiting served&#13;
in a basket with golden ~rown potatoes,&#13;
creamy cOle slew, malt vinegar or tartar aeuce.·&#13;
ONLY $100&#13;
(extra fish 35')&#13;
UNION SQUARE GRILL&#13;
/&#13;
Student governntent&#13;
electiOnS delayed · by Robert Hoffman&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 6, 1976 7&#13;
PBC fights corporations&#13;
Student government is&#13;
currently trying to get organized&#13;
and set up plans for the new year.&#13;
Elections, which were to have&#13;
been held in the beginning of&#13;
October, have been delayed&#13;
because election rules have n;t&#13;
been drawn up yet.&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden, president, said&#13;
that this is the fault of 1) The&#13;
Senate.· for not being able to·&#13;
achieve a quorwn at its September&#13;
24 meeting and 2) The&#13;
Ways and Means committee's for&#13;
their inability to agree on election&#13;
r·&#13;
I&#13;
\&#13;
rules to present to the Senate.&#13;
Bowden said that elections will&#13;
definitely be held in October and&#13;
that the election rules will be&#13;
available next week.&#13;
Bowden feels that student&#13;
government has a good&#13;
relationship with the administration&#13;
and with student&#13;
support things can and will be&#13;
done. ·&#13;
Two areasBowden promises to&#13;
reform are financial aids and the&#13;
bookstore, which she says have&#13;
been especially insensitive to&#13;
students' needs.&#13;
• by Jeff Sorensen&#13;
( CPS) -The year of the U.S. Bicentennial may be&#13;
almost over, but the People's Bicentennial Commission&#13;
(PBC) is not about to allow that fact to&#13;
curtail its activities. In September the group&#13;
changed its name to the People's Business Commission&#13;
and vowed to continue its efforts to&#13;
"declare independence from big business."&#13;
According to PBC Chairman Jeremy Rifkin, the&#13;
PBC is "de-emphasizing its focus on history and is&#13;
now focusing on economics .. :rne bicentennial is&#13;
over. But the critical work of challenging the&#13;
economy must go on in the years ahead."&#13;
The PBC advoc~tes employee-owned and&#13;
operated businesses. Thus, Rifkin explained, the&#13;
group differs from both capitalism and socialism as&#13;
they are practiced in most countries. "We don't&#13;
want a bunch of bureaucrats in Washington. To&#13;
replace those on Wall Street. We want the economy&#13;
decentralized," he explained.&#13;
Rifkin plans a number of lectures on college&#13;
campuses this year to promote PBC ideas. Supported&#13;
by about 22,000 paid members, Rifkin said&#13;
the group will publish several books on economics&#13;
and history in 1977.&#13;
The group also plans to publish materials for use&#13;
in high school and college classes that will offer "an&#13;
alternative view of economics." Rifkin contended&#13;
that "most schools are now using books that offer a&#13;
one-sided, establishment view of American&#13;
government and business." In the past, more than&#13;
5,000 schools have used PBC pamphlets, books and&#13;
audio-visual material, he said.&#13;
In the fall elections, the PBC "will be moving i;;t.;&#13;
electoral politics with a series of programs designed&#13;
to elect state legislators who are committed to&#13;
radical ideas." Rifkin said the group will endorse no&#13;
presidential or congressional candidates because&#13;
none have addressed the "democratization of the&#13;
economy."&#13;
"A patriotic movement is needed to reclaim&#13;
democratic principles, to challenge the subversive&#13;
activities by corporations," Rifkin said. "We have&#13;
decided to launch the People's Business Commission&#13;
because we do not believe that America's&#13;
economic future should rest in the very corporate&#13;
and political hands that have plunged us into the&#13;
~isis in the first place."&#13;
UW~P edges UW ~&#13;
.M the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
@.)&#13;
by Jean Tenuta Mike Villers-Dealer 637-2726&#13;
After their opening weekend of.&#13;
competition, the women's&#13;
volleyball squad has a 1-1.record.&#13;
' Saturday afternoon, the team&#13;
beat UW-Milwaukee 15-13 and 17-&#13;
15, but lost~ Marquette, 7-15, 15-&#13;
13, 3-15.&#13;
Coach Orby Moss was happy&#13;
with the performances of all the&#13;
members of his team: "Last&#13;
year, we shouldn't have been on&#13;
the same court with UWM, but&#13;
this year we came from behind&#13;
and beat them."&#13;
Although the team lost, Coach&#13;
Soccer&#13;
scheduled&#13;
The Wisconsin Chancellor's&#13;
Tournament at UW-Platteville is&#13;
next for the Parkside soccer&#13;
team, Friday and ~turday.&#13;
UW-Green Bay will meet UWMilwaukee&#13;
at 1 p.m. and&#13;
Parkside will meet UW-Platteville&#13;
at -3 p.m. and the following day,&#13;
the winners will battle it out.&#13;
During the past week, Parkside&#13;
blanked Aurora College last&#13;
Wednesday 1 - 0 in a strong&#13;
defensive effort.&#13;
The winning goal was scor~&#13;
by sophomore Mike Boyajian at&#13;
the 14:00 meet make of the first&#13;
half, with an assist by freshman&#13;
Niall Power. Sophomore&#13;
Goalkeeper Bernie Hefner was&#13;
flawless in the goal, according to&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson, and&#13;
"made a beautiful save on an&#13;
Aurora penalty shot with&#13;
1: 21 left in the game."'&#13;
Camping&#13;
planned&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Outing Committee is sponsoring&#13;
a camping trip to Devils Lake,&#13;
October 8, 9 and 10.&#13;
The expeditions activities&#13;
include canoeing, rock climbing&#13;
and advanced campfire building.&#13;
A limited amount of equipment is&#13;
available from the school and is&#13;
included in the price of the trip.&#13;
Howe..ver, students are required&#13;
to bring their own sleeping bag.&#13;
Moss also had good things to say&#13;
about the matches with&#13;
Marquette. "I brought in six&#13;
second string players in the&#13;
second match when we were&#13;
behind and they turned around&#13;
the game and put us ahead 10-9&#13;
· without Marquette scoring."&#13;
"The Warriors had a 6' · 2"&#13;
player whose spiking we couldn't&#13;
return. We were forced to play&#13;
too much of a defensive' game and&#13;
it kept us off stride and really&#13;
took a lot out of us," said Coach&#13;
Moss.&#13;
The Rangers plaY,ed UWMadison&#13;
and Milwaukee Tech&#13;
yesterday evening and will play&#13;
UW-Whitewater and Carroll&#13;
College at Whitewater ori Octol:&gt;er&#13;
12. ' :&#13;
Fishing &amp;&#13;
Firing Lin~s&#13;
by Scott Reinhard ·&#13;
I&#13;
Fall has become one of the most difficult times of the year for the&#13;
outdoor sportsman. There is difficulty in figuring out what to do, but&#13;
not from a lack of choices, rather there is an over abundance of them.&#13;
Here in Southeastern Wisconsin much attention has been turned to&#13;
the sport of salmon fishing. The sport comes in a nwnber of variations&#13;
with at least one proving tasteful to the angler. Snagging has become&#13;
the most popular of methods, though personally, I find no real sport in&#13;
it.&#13;
The method is achieved through the casting out of a treble hook&#13;
laden down with lead to give it depth and distance while casting.&#13;
Hooks must have a gape size from point to shank of not more than one&#13;
half inch. The hook is retrieved through the water with short, forceful&#13;
jerks of the pole so as to inbed the hook into any part of the fish's-body.&#13;
This practice may not be employed in the Root River of R;acine&#13;
County or the Menominee River of Milwaukee County. In these rivers&#13;
people fish in a civilized manner as opposed to the primitive one of&#13;
snagging, The majority of angling on these rivers is by treble hooks&#13;
baited with cheese ·and still fished on the bottom with as little weight as&#13;
river current permits.&#13;
Other choices on the fall sports agenda include the classic art of&#13;
hunting. Migratory waterfowl are probably on the most wanted list of&#13;
the Southern Wisconsin hunter.&#13;
At this time of the year, combined with the warm weather, you will&#13;
see little of the Northern flocks. Local waterfowl will be found in.semiabundance&#13;
thus attributing to the higher point value at the first half of&#13;
the split season. The Wisconsin waterfowl season is based on a point&#13;
system hunt where ducks have a higher point value according to their&#13;
rarity. Most local ducks, those that stick in this area throughout the&#13;
summer, are mallards thus they also have been given a higher point&#13;
value so as not to burn out the entire flock easily.&#13;
9ther hunting pressure in the South car. be directed towards the gray&#13;
and fox squirrels along with ruffed grouse. To obtain these quarries&#13;
one must be quite diligent as their scarcity or cunning is obviously&#13;
seen through the few numbers of them which are taken.&#13;
For those who wish to venture North, the bow season for deer will&#13;
continue to be open in the unrestricted counties untjl November 14.&#13;
Wisconsin opens up a whole box of Cracker-Jack when fall rolls&#13;
around for the sportsmen who wish to wet a line, dirty a gun barrel, or&#13;
twang a bow string. It is all up to the sportsman if he or she wishes to&#13;
get out of the easy chair to take part in the harvest.&#13;
Ice hockey&#13;
Anyone interested in a Parkside Club Ice Hockey team should&#13;
• contact Vic Godfrey in the Athletic Building by phoning 553-2245 or his&#13;
off~, 553-2310.&#13;
P.A.B. Film Series Pr esents&#13;
Harold &amp;&#13;
Tl,ey met at the funeral of a perfect stranger.&#13;
From then on, things got perfectly stranger and stranger.&#13;
Thurs . Oct . 7 - 2 30 pm &amp; 7 30 pm&#13;
Fri.. Oct 8 - 7 00 pm &amp; 9 0 0 pm&#13;
Sun , Oct. 10 . 7 30 pm&#13;
C1nem a Theatre Adm . $ 1 0 0&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
AUTHENTIC ENGLISH STYLE&#13;
,&#13;
n&#13;
Two pieces at deep fried Whiting served&#13;
in a basket with golden brown potatoes,&#13;
creamy cote slaw, malt vinegar or tartar sauce.&#13;
ONLY $100&#13;
(extra fish 35·]&#13;
UNION SQUARE GRILL&#13;
Introductory Special&#13;
FREE ... orange whip drink with&#13;
Fish ' N Chips purchase.&#13;
Now .thru Oct. 22 &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 6, 1976&#13;
Leitch breaks&#13;
swim records&#13;
by Jean Tenula&#13;
In their beginning performance&#13;
of the season, the women&#13;
swimmers lost to UW-Milwaukee&#13;
92-36 in the Panther pool last&#13;
. Wednesday.&#13;
. Leading the team place wise&#13;
was Mary Beth Leitch with a first&#13;
in the 50 yd. hutterfly, a second in&#13;
the 200yd. Individual Medley and&#13;
a third in the 100 yd. backstroke,&#13;
But according to Coach Barbara&#13;
Lawson, the real highlight&#13;
from Parkside's point of view&#13;
was the performance of' Sally&#13;
Francis, a newcomer to the&#13;
competitive sport, who captured&#13;
a second in the 100yed. freestyle&#13;
and thirds in the 500 yed.&#13;
freestyle and 50 yed. breaststroke.&#13;
"Sally's performance was&#13;
really a pleasant surprise," said&#13;
lawson. liThe whole team was&#13;
very excited about her fmishes."&#13;
Gail Olson picked up a second&#13;
in the 50 yed. freestyle and third&#13;
in the 50 yd. backstroke and LiIl&#13;
Crnich was third in both the 200&#13;
yd. freestyle and the 100 yd.&#13;
breastroke.&#13;
The four also teamed up for the&#13;
. 200 yd. freestyle relay, but came&#13;
in second. "We' did better than I&#13;
had expected, considering that it&#13;
was hard to see the turns in the '&#13;
pool," said Lawson. "The girls&#13;
iIriproved on most of their times&#13;
since the time trials we had&#13;
"bejore the season started."&#13;
At the UW-Madison Invitational, .&#13;
the swimmers finished last of 11&#13;
teams, as the host team scored a&#13;
deci~ive -victory.' ,&#13;
Leitch broke several school&#13;
records in the meet ihaddition to&#13;
heing ,the highest placer for&#13;
Parkside with a sixth in the 50 yd.&#13;
bulterfly.&#13;
The new records were set in the&#13;
100. LM. at 1:16.673; 50 yd.&#13;
freestyle, 29.6 and in the 100 yd.&#13;
backstroke at 1:17.125, which&#13;
broke a record that has stood&#13;
since 1972. These times gave&#13;
Leitch an eighth and two ninths,&#13;
respectively, in the meet.&#13;
Olson, Francis and Crnich also&#13;
added points to the team score, as&#13;
the tojr 22finishers gained points.&#13;
Olson was 17th'in the 50 free; 18th&#13;
in the 100 free and 19th in the 50&#13;
breast. Francis was 17th in the&#13;
200 free and 21st in the 100 free.&#13;
Crnich was 18th in the 1.00breast&#13;
and 200 free ..&#13;
In the 200 free relay, the squad&#13;
cut six seconds of their time on&#13;
Wednesday and Olson cut 3 .&#13;
seconds off of her time in the 50&#13;
breast: ,&#13;
Friday, the Rangers will host&#13;
Carroll and Lawrence Colleges in&#13;
a 4 p.m. meet.&#13;
Merritt takes second&#13;
runner won the meet with 2&#13;
minutes, 13 seconds ahead of&#13;
Merritt, the women's winner' of&#13;
the Amateur Athletic Union and&#13;
Boston Marathons last year.&#13;
Gail Bebrends, also of the US,&#13;
finished third at 2:47:43.&#13;
Kim Merritt, a senior, finished&#13;
second in the World Marathon&#13;
Championship for Women in&#13;
Duesseldorf, _West Germany&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Merritt finished-the 26 mile, 385&#13;
yard fun in 2 hours, 47 minutes&#13;
and 11 seconds -,A West German&#13;
N4.~¥u'AVA;Q''''', A ANA .~~&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
~.&#13;
Mike VillerS-Dealer 637-2726 Kim Merritt&#13;
Monday thru Friday&#13;
- ,&#13;
10"/game 9 am-· 10:30 am 25"/game4 pm· 7 pm&#13;
Beer and Soda Now On Sale'.&#13;
Tennis team wins&#13;
by Jean Temila&#13;
The women '8 tennis tearn won&#13;
their first meet. of the season,&#13;
conquering Carroll College, 3-2,&#13;
Wednl:sday,&#13;
In the victory, the first and&#13;
second singles players lost to&#13;
their opponents, but in the&#13;
reamining matches, the Rangers&#13;
came out clII top.&#13;
Jennifer Zuehlke' bombed&#13;
Karen Wait; ~, ~ in No. 3&#13;
singles, the No.1 doubles team of&#13;
Jean Covelli-Mary Ann Carins&#13;
beat Sue Wetta-Carol Budde; ~,&#13;
6-1, 6-2; and Pat Munger-Kathy&#13;
Feicthner beat Lynne Dempsey- I&#13;
Sharon MalIbu; 6-4, 6-3.&#13;
Marge Balszez lost to Debbie&#13;
Arps; ~,6-1; and Janine Hunter&#13;
lost to Claudia Lindquist; 6-2, 7-5..&#13;
The team will enter their first&#13;
tournament competition at the&#13;
UW-Whitewater Tournament&#13;
October 9.&#13;
On Sept. 24 and 25, the squad&#13;
faced four teams in two double&#13;
dual meets, in which Zuehlke was&#13;
the only member of the team to&#13;
win a match.&#13;
She defeated Becky Millerof&#13;
Carthage Sept. 24; 6-4, 7~ and&#13;
Kerri Holden of UW-Whitewater&#13;
Sept. 25; 6-1,6-3 in No.3 singles.&#13;
Parkside couldn't score a win&#13;
against either UW-Oshkosh or&#13;
UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
Golfers tee up&#13;
by Jean Tenula&#13;
On Monday and Tuesday of&#13;
next wee'k, Coach Steve Stephens'&#13;
golf squad will participate with&#13;
others in the Wisconsin district at&#13;
_ the 36· hole, two-day NA~&#13;
District 14. tournament at La&#13;
Crosse.&#13;
Favore6 in the meet are UWWhitewater&#13;
and UW-La Crosse.&#13;
The winner will advance to the&#13;
NAIA national tournament in&#13;
spring.&#13;
"I think we have a good chance&#13;
to do well, though," said&#13;
Stephens. "We're playing 'the&#13;
kind of golf we are capable of and&#13;
it will all depend on how well we&#13;
putt and play on the short, tight&#13;
course."&#13;
The Rangers wet:e third-in their&#13;
Parkside Tournament Saturday,&#13;
w!Jl!re UW-Whitewater finished&#13;
on top with 381, followed byUWLa&#13;
Crosse with 385. Parkside had&#13;
391,- as did UW-Madison.&#13;
Marquette was fifth with 394.&#13;
The meet medalist was Scott&#13;
Ludna, of UW-Oshkosh, with a 72.&#13;
Fred Miller of La Crosse totalled&#13;
73at the Brighton Dale Course: A&#13;
third place tie resulted between&#13;
Frank Harast of Carthage and&#13;
Gregg Caltworthy of Whitewater&#13;
at 74. Ranger Ray Zuzinec tied&#13;
with Tom Rajack and Dave&#13;
Young for fifth at 75.&#13;
Also competiling for Parkiiide&#13;
were Steve Christensen, 77; Mark&#13;
Kuyawa and Gary Paskiewicz,&#13;
79; and Tim Rouse, 81.·&#13;
Friday, Whitewater hosted&#13;
eleven teams and also won their&#13;
tournament with 366~ again&#13;
followed by La Crosse with 389.&#13;
Parkside was ninth at 407. Bob&#13;
Clark of Whitewater was meet&#13;
medalist .at 71.&#13;
Rangers included Zizinec, 78;&#13;
Rick Pedersen and Phil Smith, .&#13;
~; Paskiewicz, 81 and Rouse, 88.:&#13;
On Sept. 17, the golfers par-&#13;
. ticipated in the UW-Madison Golf&#13;
Tournament at Cherokee Country&#13;
Club, where they finished seventh&#13;
out of ten teams with a 417 total.&#13;
Northern Illinois came out on&#13;
top With 389strokes, UW-Madison&#13;
was second with 397 and UWMilwaukee&#13;
was third with 400.&#13;
Bob Wiebman of UW-Milwaukee&#13;
was the meet medalist with a 74.&#13;
Parkside participants were&#13;
Zuzinec,81; Rouse, 82; Pedersen,&#13;
82; Smith 82 and Paskiewicz, 90.&#13;
,&#13;
G~t the great new taste&#13;
In mocha, coconut,&#13;
banana or&#13;
.strawberry.&#13;
,&#13;
•&#13;
The Portable Huty:&#13;
30 PROOF AND REiUJY 10 GO&#13;
Kickers, 30 proof. e. 1976,Kicke~rsuo.. I-i.utford, Conn&#13;
\ "&#13;
,&#13;
~&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
""It&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
'1'&#13;
1&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 6, 1976&#13;
Leitch breaks&#13;
swinI records&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
In their beginning performance&#13;
of the season, the women&#13;
swimmers lost to UW-Milwaukee&#13;
92-36 in the Panther pool last&#13;
· Wednesday.&#13;
Leading the team place wise&#13;
was Mary aeth Leitch with a first&#13;
in the 50 yd. butterfly, a second in&#13;
the 200 yd. Individual Medley and&#13;
a third in the 100 yd. backstroke.&#13;
But according to Coach Barbara&#13;
Lawson, the real highlight&#13;
from Parkside's point of view&#13;
was the performance of Sally&#13;
Francis, a newcomer to the&#13;
competitive sport, who captured&#13;
a second in the 100 yed. freestyle&#13;
and thirds in the 500 yed.&#13;
freestyle and 50 yed. breaststroke.&#13;
&#13;
"Sally's performance was&#13;
really a pleasant surprise," said&#13;
Lawson. "The whole team was&#13;
very excited about her finishes."&#13;
Gail Olson picked up a second&#13;
in the 50 yed. freestyle and third&#13;
in the 50 yd. backstroke and Lili&#13;
Crnich was third in both the 200&#13;
yd. freestyle and the 100 yd.&#13;
breastroke.&#13;
The four also teamed up for the&#13;
. 200 yd. freestyle relay, but came&#13;
in second. "We' did better than I&#13;
had expected, considering that it&#13;
was hard to see the turns in the&#13;
pool," said Lawson. "The girls&#13;
improved on most of their times&#13;
since the time trials we had&#13;
before the season started."&#13;
At the UW-Madison Invitational, .&#13;
the swimmers finished last of 11&#13;
teams, as the host team scored a • • f&#13;
decisive -victory. ·&#13;
Leitch broke several school&#13;
records in the meet in addition to&#13;
being , the highest placer for&#13;
Parkside with a sixth in the 50 yd.&#13;
butterfly.&#13;
The new records were set in the&#13;
ioo . I.M. at 1: 16.673; 50 yd.&#13;
freestyle, 29.6 and in the 100 yd.&#13;
backstroke at 1:17.125, which&#13;
broke a record that has stood&#13;
since 1972. These times gave&#13;
Leitch an eighth ~d two ninths,&#13;
respectively, in the meet.&#13;
Olson, Francis and Crnich also&#13;
added points to the team score, as&#13;
the top 22 finishers gained points.&#13;
Olson was 17th-in the 50 free; 18th&#13;
in the 100 free and 19th in the 50&#13;
breast. Francis was 17th in the&#13;
200 free and 21st in the 100 free.&#13;
Crnich was 18th in the 100 breast&#13;
and 200 free . .&#13;
In the 200 free relay, the squad&#13;
cut six seconds of their time on&#13;
Wednesday and Olson cut 3&#13;
seconds off oi her time in the 50&#13;
breast. ,&#13;
Friday, the Rangers will host&#13;
Carroll and Lawrence Colleges in&#13;
a 4 p.m. meet.&#13;
Tennis team wins··&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
The women's tennis team won&#13;
their first meet. of the season,&#13;
conquering Carroll College, 3-2,&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
In the victory, the first and&#13;
second singles players lost to&#13;
their opponents, but in the&#13;
reamining matches, the Rangers&#13;
came out on top.&#13;
Jennifer Zuehlke · bombed&#13;
Karen Wait; 6--0, 6--0 in No. 3&#13;
singles, the No. 1 doubles team of&#13;
Jean Covelli-Mary Ann Carins&#13;
beat Sue Wetta-Carol Budde; 4-6,&#13;
6-1, 6-2; and Pat Munger-Kathy&#13;
Feicthner beat Lynne Dempsey- /&#13;
Sharon Manbu; 6-4, 6-3.&#13;
Marge Balszez lost to Debbie&#13;
Arps; 6--0, 6-1; and Janine Hunter&#13;
lost to Claudia Lindquist; 6-2, 7-5.&#13;
The team will enter their first&#13;
tournament competition at the&#13;
UW-Whitewater Tout'natnent&#13;
October 9.&#13;
On Sept. 24 and 25, the squad&#13;
faced four teams in two double&#13;
dual meets, in which Zuehlke was&#13;
the only member of the t~am to&#13;
win a match.&#13;
She defeated Becky Millerof&#13;
Carthage Sept. 24; 6-4, 7-6 and&#13;
Kerri Holden of UW-Whitewater&#13;
Sept. 25; 6-1, 6-3 in No. 3 singles.&#13;
Parkside couldn't score a win&#13;
against either UW-Oshkosh or&#13;
UW-Milwaukee. ·&#13;
G-olf ers tee up&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
On Monday and Tuesday ot&#13;
next week, Coach Steve Stephens'&#13;
golf squad will participate with&#13;
others in the Wisconsin district at&#13;
the 36· hole, two-day NA~&#13;
District 14 tournament at La&#13;
Crosse. .&#13;
Favore8 in the meet are UWWhitewater&#13;
and UW-La Crosse.&#13;
The winner will advance to the&#13;
NAIA national tournament in&#13;
spring.&#13;
"I think we have a good chance&#13;
to do well, tbough," said&#13;
Stephens. "We're playing "the&#13;
kind of golf we are capable of and&#13;
it will all depend on how well we&#13;
putt and play on the short, tight&#13;
course."&#13;
The Rangers wei:e third-in their&#13;
Parkside Tournament Saturday,&#13;
w~re UW-Whitewater finished&#13;
on top with 381, followed byUWLa&#13;
Crosse with 385. Parkside had&#13;
391,- as did UW-Madison.&#13;
Marquette was fifth with 394.&#13;
The meet medalist was Scott&#13;
Ludna, of UW-Oshkosh, with a 72.&#13;
Fred Miller of La Crosse totalled&#13;
73 at the Brighton Dale Course: A&#13;
third pla&lt;;e tie resulted betw~n&#13;
Frank Harast of Carthage and&#13;
Gregg caltworthy of Whitewater&#13;
at 74. Ranger Ray Zuzinec tied&#13;
with Tom Rajack and Dave&#13;
Young for fifth at 75.&#13;
Also competiting for Parkslde&#13;
were Steve Christensen, 77; Mark&#13;
Kuyawa and Gary Paskiewicz,&#13;
79; and Tim Rouse, 81.&#13;
Friday, Whitewater hosted&#13;
eleven teams and also won their&#13;
tournament with 366.._ again&#13;
followed by La Crosse with 389.&#13;
Parkside was ninth at 407. Bob&#13;
Clark of Whitewater was meet&#13;
medalist ;it 71.&#13;
Rangers included Zizinec, 78;&#13;
Rick Pedersen and Phil Smith,&#13;
80; Paskiewicz, 81 and Rouse, 88.&#13;
On Sept. 17, ~e golfers par-&#13;
. ticipated in the UW-Madison Golf&#13;
Tournament at Cherokee Country&#13;
Club, where they finished seventh&#13;
out of ten teams with a 417 total.&#13;
Northern Illinois came out on&#13;
top with 389 strokes, UW-Madison.&#13;
was second with 397 and UWMilwaukee&#13;
was third with 400.&#13;
Bob Wiebman of UW-Milwaukee&#13;
was the meet medalist with a 74.&#13;
Parkside participants were&#13;
Zuzinec, 81; Rouse, 82; Pedersen,&#13;
82; Smith 82 and Paskiewicz, 90.&#13;
Kim Merritt&#13;
Merritt takessecon·d&#13;
Kim Merritt, a senior, finished&#13;
second in the World Marathon&#13;
Championship for Women in&#13;
Duesseldorf, . West Germany&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
, Merritt finished,the 26 mile, 385&#13;
yard run in 2 hours, 47 minutes&#13;
and 11 seconds._ A West German&#13;
runner won the meet with 2&#13;
minutes, 13 seconds ahead of&#13;
Merritt, the women's winner of&#13;
the Amateur Athletic Union and&#13;
Boston Marathons last year.&#13;
Gail Behrends, also of the US,&#13;
finished third at 2:47:43.&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
~ -&#13;
M~ke Villers-Dealer 637-2726&#13;
---&#13;
AT THE&#13;
Monday f hru Friday . I&#13;
1oc/game 9 am - 10:30 am 25c/game 4 pm - 7 pm&#13;
I&#13;
•&#13;
Be.er and Soda Now On Sale'I&#13;
G~t the great new taste&#13;
in mocna, coconut,&#13;
banana or . strawberry.&#13;
The Portable .Hirty:.&#13;
30 PROOF AND READY 10 GO&#13;
Kickers, 30 proof, is:, 1976, Kicke'rs Ltd., Hartford, Conn .&#13;
'\ </text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66056">
              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 5, issue 5, October 6, 1976</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66057">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66058">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="66059">
              <text>Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="66060">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="40">
          <name>Date</name>
          <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66061">
              <text>1976-10-06</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66062">
              <text>Text</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="42">
          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66063">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="38">
          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66064">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66065">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="45">
          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66066">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66067">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="4513">
      <name>basic skills requirement</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2153">
      <name>ronald singer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3109">
      <name>school of business</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
