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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Guskin meets students&#13;
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            <text>Volume 5, issue 8</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>------~------------------t&#13;
~/f:.e_&amp;e-------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
- Vol. V. No. 8 Wednesday. Odober 27, 1976&#13;
Guskin meets, students&#13;
by Mona Maillet.&#13;
On Thursday, October 21,&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin held his&#13;
first open meeting of the year&#13;
with students., He was pleased&#13;
with the turnout of ahout 15&#13;
people, saying that a similar&#13;
meeting during the summer&#13;
attracted only one persori and that&#13;
,anything ahove that was an&#13;
improvement.&#13;
The first question brought up&#13;
was .regarding the communication&#13;
discipline. Guskin&#13;
was asked when' the discipline&#13;
would hire new permanent&#13;
professors. (Dr. Richard&#13;
Carrington is the only one at&#13;
present.) He replied that&#13;
November 15 is the deadline for,&#13;
position allocations for the fall&#13;
1977 semester.&#13;
Most colleges. would do this&#13;
during the spring semester and&#13;
by doing this earlier. Parkside&#13;
would not only get a hetter choice&#13;
of applicants, but would also have&#13;
them well prepared for t!:ie fall&#13;
- semester, he Said.&#13;
Guskin also expressed great&#13;
hopes for the 'business program.&#13;
He stated that the keyto building&#13;
. the program is the hirij'lg ~f a new&#13;
chairman.&#13;
He said that Parkside is&#13;
especially for.tunate in that it is a&#13;
relatively new institution and&#13;
that the chairman will be able to&#13;
build up the program as he sees&#13;
fit without having traditions of&#13;
the university restrict him.&#13;
. He added that Parkside needs a&#13;
first rate business program to&#13;
properly .serve the community&#13;
and a good chairman would be&#13;
able to fulfill this need.&#13;
Kai Nail, a student; asked&#13;
about the naming of the Union.&#13;
Guskin replied that after consulting&#13;
with Kiyoko Bowden,&#13;
president of the PSGA, and a few&#13;
of the people involved with the&#13;
Union, the name Parkside 'Union&#13;
was agreed upon. He said that&#13;
traditionally unions are named&#13;
after the campuses, and added&#13;
that there is no union within the&#13;
UW system named the Student&#13;
Union.&#13;
Guskin was then' asked his&#13;
feelings on student involvement&#13;
in their education.-He replied that&#13;
he strongly feels that students&#13;
'should get involved in the&#13;
university'. Every studentorienled&#13;
committee has at least,&#13;
one student on it. He stated that&#13;
-&#13;
student government assists him&#13;
m making decisions on studentrelated&#13;
matters.&#13;
Regarding having students&#13;
visit him Guskin said, "If a&#13;
student 'A'ants to see me, I won't&#13;
say no to a student."&#13;
He also expressed regrets at&#13;
lack of student participation in&#13;
student government. This is not a&#13;
problem restricted to commuter&#13;
colleges as even non-commuter&#13;
colleges have a voter turnout of&#13;
about 10 percent, he said.&#13;
A student asked Guskin about&#13;
the ability to govern through&#13;
increasing committees. Guskin&#13;
answered that he consults&#13;
committees, not governs through&#13;
them. He feels that as an aftermath&#13;
of Watergate, people&#13;
don't trust one another as much,&#13;
and through committees, they try&#13;
to influence each other.&#13;
In regard to people in administrative&#13;
positions, he said,&#13;
"People assume that people in&#13;
authority are SOB's trying to&#13;
manipulate the hell out of&#13;
everyhody." He feels that this is&#13;
a poor opinion to have and that by&#13;
proper interaction between&#13;
administration and students this&#13;
..I&#13;
:;&#13;
~ ......~&#13;
f&#13;
:&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin&#13;
Counseling services&#13;
&lt;ontinued on pg. 6 reorganized&#13;
Turnout one of poorest Development will handle the&#13;
student population from 18 to 24&#13;
years old. The office of&#13;
Community Student Services will&#13;
handle tbe 25 year and older&#13;
students.&#13;
. Jolmson pointed out that as the&#13;
groups would have different&#13;
needs and problems, the offices&#13;
will be divided to better flll those&#13;
differing needs. The offices will,&#13;
of course, have some overlapping&#13;
features.&#13;
Johnson hopes the counseling&#13;
services will be totally changed&#13;
within three months. "We are&#13;
going to have to help Parkside&#13;
students get ready for the&#13;
future," said Johnson. "We are&#13;
going to have to help !pe UW-P&#13;
communities, Racine and&#13;
Kenosha, get ready for the&#13;
changes of tbe future. To do this&#13;
successfully, we have to belp the&#13;
students maximize their lives&#13;
through efficient humane&#13;
counseling.'&#13;
by Chris ClauseD&#13;
On OCtober 18 Student Services&#13;
started a reorganization program&#13;
to improve counseling services to&#13;
UW-P students.&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
Academic Support and Student&#13;
Services, Clay Johnson explained&#13;
the reorganization, llPreviously&#13;
students had to go lrom box A to&#13;
B to C. With the reorganization,&#13;
students should be able to go to&#13;
one counselor for most of his or&#13;
her counseling needs.&#13;
"The concept is for the counselor&#13;
to get to know the student&#13;
completely and the problems&#13;
faced by the student, thus&#13;
enabling him to help solve their&#13;
problems.&#13;
"The counselors will he able to&#13;
belp in all areas Yel keep active&#13;
in their specialties."&#13;
The reorganization will divide&#13;
the counseling services into two&#13;
parts. The office of Student&#13;
Elections seat •&#13;
SIX&#13;
by Bruce WagDer Joan Fuetterer each receiving 13&#13;
votes. The elections committee&#13;
will decide the fate of the three&#13;
since there are no formal&#13;
procedures regarding such an&#13;
occurance.&#13;
In the business management&#13;
divisfon, Paula Lowecke was the&#13;
only candidate.&#13;
Write-ins will comprise the rest&#13;
of the 'divisional seats with Dan&#13;
Nielsen in labor economics;&#13;
Laura Bruno in humanities, and&#13;
Terrence Zuehlsdorf in .science.&#13;
The social science, applied&#13;
science, and allocations seats had&#13;
no declared candidates, 'and will&#13;
temporaruy remain vacant.&#13;
PSGA also had three amenoments&#13;
to the -eonstitution on the&#13;
election hallot. The first amendment&#13;
providing for a constitutional&#13;
referendum to amend&#13;
the PSGA constitution, or to&#13;
request an advisory referendum&#13;
passed, 65 to 12.&#13;
The' second amendment,&#13;
providing for an appellate court&#13;
within the judical branch of&#13;
. PSGA passed, 57 to 19.&#13;
The third amendment regarding&#13;
the date of elections, also&#13;
passed by a count of 57 to 19.&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association held&#13;
their fall elections this week, with&#13;
. six seats in the Senate and seats&#13;
in the segregated fees allocation&#13;
committee being filled.&#13;
The election turnout was one of&#13;
the Poorest ever at Parkside with&#13;
approximately 2 percent of the&#13;
student bndy voting.&#13;
The only race was for the two&#13;
undeclared divisional seats&#13;
, where Gigi Osborne was the only&#13;
clear winner with a three way tie&#13;
for the other seat between&#13;
Richard Folsom, Carol Bohn, and&#13;
Committees created&#13;
by Jobn McKioskey • committee to handle this."&#13;
How long, then, will It be before&#13;
the committee will bI' able to&#13;
function? According to MIchael&#13;
Marron, a member of the&#13;
University. Committee (which&#13;
now has the responsibility of&#13;
'appointing the Academic Action&#13;
Committee members), the&#13;
University Committee will act&#13;
"very rapidly, I expect ...within a •&#13;
few wceks at the latest."&#13;
Marron said that because of&#13;
the University committee's fixed&#13;
agenda the appointments were&#13;
not made at Its October 20&#13;
meeting, but the matter will be&#13;
taken up at the next meeting.&#13;
"There are students waiting for&#13;
action on waiver requests, 80 we&#13;
want to act as expeditiously as&#13;
possible," he said.&#13;
The new committee replaces ,a&#13;
handful of other committees..ovlth&#13;
similar functions, some of which&#13;
were dissolved wben the College&#13;
of Science and SocIety and the&#13;
School of Modern Industry&#13;
contlnU4icl on PSI. ,&#13;
At its October meeting held on&#13;
Tuesday, October 19, the&#13;
Parkside Faculty Senate gave&#13;
final approval to the creation of&#13;
two new cominittees.&#13;
The first committee created&#13;
was the Academic Actions&#13;
Cominittee, which will receive&#13;
and act on student appeals for&#13;
special academic consideration.·&#13;
At this time there are a number&#13;
of students awaiting. the&#13;
organization of this committee&#13;
because they wish to appeal&#13;
academic actions, and before the&#13;
Senate took action there was no&#13;
committee to receive their appeals.&#13;
•&#13;
According to Leon Applebaum,&#13;
who is the person to whom&#13;
students first take their requests,&#13;
"about half a dozen students are&#13;
waiting right now" appeals of&#13;
actions that Ap1llehaum refused&#13;
to grant. He added: "I don't know&#13;
what will happen when the word&#13;
gets out that there is now a&#13;
Kenosha artist George Pollard peses wltb his por- took place throughout lbe UDiversll)fincluding a plano&#13;
trait of the late Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie whlcb be recital by formal artist-in-residence Carmen VIla wbo&#13;
presented to Parkslde at Sunday's formal dedication of stann,ed the andlence with ber rendltlons of Mozart,&#13;
lbe Wyllie Ubrary-Learulag Center and OpeD HODse. Debussey, Uszt and Gershwin.&#13;
Several performaDces, dlsplnys, .and demonstratioDs l ~.......ii •&#13;
Guskin meets. students&#13;
by Mona Maillet .&#13;
On Thursday, October 21&#13;
· Chancellor Alan Guskin held hi~&#13;
first open meeting of the year&#13;
with students. · He was pleas~&#13;
with the turnout of about 15&#13;
people, saying that a similar&#13;
. meeting during the summer&#13;
attracted only one persori and that&#13;
. anything above that was an&#13;
improvement.&#13;
The first question brought up&#13;
was .regarding the communication&#13;
discipline. Guskin&#13;
was asked when · the discipline&#13;
would hire new permanent&#13;
professors. (Dr. Richard&#13;
Carrington is the only one at&#13;
present.) He replied that&#13;
November 15 is the deadline forposition&#13;
allocations for the fall&#13;
1977 semester.&#13;
Most colleges. would do this&#13;
during the spring semester and&#13;
by doing this earlier. Parkside&#13;
would not only get a better choice&#13;
,of-applicants, but would also have&#13;
them well prepared for the fall&#13;
semester, he said.&#13;
Guskin- also expressed great&#13;
hopes for the ·business program.&#13;
He· stated that the key ·to building&#13;
- the program is the hiriJ'}g (?f a new&#13;
chairman.&#13;
He said that Parkside is&#13;
especially fottunate in that it is a&#13;
relatively new institution and&#13;
that the chairman will be able to&#13;
build up the program as he sees&#13;
fit without having traditions of&#13;
the university restrict him.&#13;
- He added that Parkside needs a&#13;
first rate business program to&#13;
properly ,serve the community&#13;
and a good chairman would be&#13;
able to fulfill this need.&#13;
Kai Nall, a studenG asked&#13;
about the naming of the· Union.&#13;
Guskin replied that after consulting&#13;
with Kiyoko Bowden,&#13;
president of the PSGA, and a few&#13;
of the people involved with the&#13;
Union, the name Parkside Union&#13;
was agreed upon. He said that&#13;
traditionally unions are named&#13;
after the campuses, and added&#13;
that there is no union within the&#13;
UW system named the Student&#13;
Union.&#13;
Guskin was then · asked his&#13;
feelings on student involvement&#13;
in their education. He replied that&#13;
he strongly feels that students&#13;
should get involved in the&#13;
university. Every student-&#13;
~riented committee has at least&#13;
one student on it. He stated that&#13;
Turnout one of poorest&#13;
Elections seai&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association held&#13;
their fall elections this week, with&#13;
-six seats in the Senate and seats&#13;
in the segregated fees allocation&#13;
committee being filled.&#13;
The election turnout was one of&#13;
the poorest ever at Parkside with&#13;
approxim1;1tely 2 percent of the&#13;
student body voting.&#13;
The only race was for the two&#13;
undeclared divisional seats&#13;
. where Gigi Osborne was the only&#13;
clear winner with a three way tie&#13;
for the other seat between&#13;
Richard FoJ:;om, Carol Bohn, and&#13;
Joan Fuetterer each receiving 13&#13;
votes. The elections committee&#13;
will decide the fate of the three&#13;
since there are no formal&#13;
procedures regarding such an&#13;
occurance.&#13;
In the business management&#13;
division, Paula Lowecke was the&#13;
only candidate.&#13;
Write-ins will comprise the rest&#13;
of the divisional seats with Dan&#13;
Nielsen in labor economics;&#13;
Laura Bruno in hwnanities, and&#13;
"Terrence Zuehlsdorf in .science.&#13;
The social science, applied&#13;
science, and allocations seats h,ad&#13;
no declared candidates, and will&#13;
- student government assists him&#13;
in making decisions on studentrelated&#13;
matters.&#13;
Regarding having students&#13;
visit hlnl Guskin said, "If a&#13;
student \\rants to see me-, I won't&#13;
say no to a student."&#13;
He also expressed regrets at&#13;
lack of student participation in&#13;
student government. This is not a&#13;
problem restricted to commuter&#13;
colleges as even non-commuter&#13;
colleges have a voter turnout of&#13;
about 10 percent, he said.&#13;
A student asked Guskin about&#13;
the ability to govj:.!rn through&#13;
increasing committees. Guskin&#13;
answered that he consults&#13;
committees, not governs through&#13;
them. He feels that as an aftermath&#13;
of Watergate, people&#13;
don't trust one another as much,&#13;
and through committees, they try&#13;
to influence each other.&#13;
In regard to people in administrative&#13;
positions, he said,&#13;
"People assume that people in&#13;
authority are SOB's trying to&#13;
manipulate the hell out of&#13;
everybody." He feels that this is&#13;
a poor opinion to have and that by&#13;
proper interaction between&#13;
administration and students this&#13;
continued on pg, 6&#13;
• SIX&#13;
temporaruy remain vacant.&#13;
PSGA also had three amenaments&#13;
to the -constitution on the&#13;
election ballot. The first amendment&#13;
providing for a constitutional&#13;
referendum to amend&#13;
the PSGA constitution, or to&#13;
req\lest an advisory _referendum&#13;
passed, 65 to 12.&#13;
The second amendment,&#13;
providing for an appellate court&#13;
within the judical branch of&#13;
. PSGA passed, 57 to 19.&#13;
The third amendment regarding&#13;
the date of elections, also&#13;
passed by a count of 57 to 19.&#13;
Kenosha artist George Pollard poses with his por- took place throughout the University including a piano&#13;
trait of the late Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie whi_ch he recital by formal artist-in-residence Carmen Vila who&#13;
presented to Parkside at Sunday's formal dedication of stunn_ed the audience with her renditions of Mozart,&#13;
the Wyllie Llbrary-Learning Center and Open House. Debussey, Ll~zt and Gershwin.&#13;
Several performances, displays, .and demonstrations&#13;
ir,: ParksidP----------&#13;
R ANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No. 8 Wednesday, October 27, 1976&#13;
Chancellor Alon Guskin&#13;
Counseling services&#13;
reorganized&#13;
by Chris Clausen&#13;
On October 18 Student Services&#13;
started a reorganization program&#13;
to improve counseling services to&#13;
UW-P students.&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
Academic Support and Student&#13;
Services, Clay Johnson explained&#13;
the reorganization, !'Previously&#13;
students had to go kom box A to&#13;
B to C. With the reorganization,&#13;
students should be able to go to&#13;
one counselor for most of his or&#13;
her counseling needs.&#13;
"The concept is for the counselor&#13;
to get to know the student&#13;
completely and the problems&#13;
faced by the student, thus&#13;
enabling him to help solve their&#13;
problems.&#13;
"The counselors will be able to&#13;
help in all areas yet- keep active&#13;
in their specialties."&#13;
The reorganization will divide&#13;
the counseling services into two&#13;
parts. The office of Student&#13;
Development will handle the&#13;
student population from 18 to 24&#13;
years old. The office of&#13;
Community Student Services will&#13;
handle the 25 year and older&#13;
students.&#13;
. Johnson pointed out that as the&#13;
groups would have different&#13;
needs and problems, the offices&#13;
will be divided to better fill thos~&#13;
differing needs. The offices will,&#13;
of course, have some overlapping&#13;
features.&#13;
Johnson hopes the counseling&#13;
services will be totally changed&#13;
within three months. "We are&#13;
going to have to help Parkside&#13;
students get ready for the&#13;
future," said Johnson. "We are&#13;
going to have to help tpe UW-P&#13;
communities, Racine and&#13;
Kenosha, get ready for the&#13;
changes of the future. To do this&#13;
successfully, we have to help the&#13;
students maximize their lives&#13;
through efficient humane&#13;
counseling."&#13;
Coininittees created&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
At its October meeting held on&#13;
Tuesday, October 19, the&#13;
Parkside Faculty Senate gave&#13;
final approval to the creation of&#13;
two new committees.&#13;
The first committee created&#13;
was the Academic Actions&#13;
Committee, which will receive&#13;
and act on student appeals for&#13;
special academic consideration.&#13;
At this time there are a number&#13;
of students awaiting _ the&#13;
organization of this committee&#13;
because they wish to appeal&#13;
academic actions, and before the&#13;
Senate took action there was no&#13;
committee to receive their appeals.&#13;
'&#13;
According to Leon Applebaum,&#13;
who is the person to whom&#13;
students first take their requests,&#13;
"about half a dozen students are&#13;
waiting right now" appeals of&#13;
actions that Aplllebaum refused&#13;
to grant. He added: "I don't know&#13;
what will happen when the word&#13;
gets out that there is now a&#13;
c."Ommittee to handle this."&#13;
How long, then, will it be before&#13;
the committee will be able to&#13;
function? According to Michael&#13;
Marron, a member of the&#13;
University_ Committee (which&#13;
now has the responsibility of&#13;
appointing the Academic Action&#13;
Committee members), the&#13;
University Committee will act&#13;
"very rapidly, I expect... within a&#13;
few weeks at the latest."&#13;
Marron said that because of&#13;
the University committee's fixed&#13;
agenda the appointments were&#13;
not made at its October 20&#13;
meeting, but the matter will be&#13;
taken up at the next meeting.&#13;
"There are students waiting for&#13;
action on waiver requests, so we&#13;
want to act as expeditiously as&#13;
possible," he said.&#13;
The new committee replaces a&#13;
handful of other committees ..with&#13;
similar functions, some of which&#13;
were dissolved when the College&#13;
of Science and Society and the&#13;
School of Modern Industry&#13;
continued on pg. 6 &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27. 1976&#13;
POLITICAL FORUM&#13;
Camejo endorsed&#13;
by Carol Burke&#13;
.Edltor's Note: Ms. Burke is the chalrpersou of the Milwaukee Young&#13;
Socialist AlUance.&#13;
10 the September ~ Political Forum, Phil Hermann critiqued&#13;
presidential candidates Ford, Carter. Maddox, and McCarthy. Her,&#13;
lJUII)II neglected to mention the only campaign that I believe offers a&#13;
real positive alternative to voters in 1976·, the Socialist Workers&#13;
campaign of Peter camejo forpresident and Willie Mae Reid for vicepresident.&#13;
.&#13;
For a start, compare the!e background facts about Camejo and Reid&#13;
with the records of any of the candidates mentioned in Hermann's&#13;
article: Peter Camejo, 35, has been a member of the Socialist Workers&#13;
party since 1959.Active in the student movements of the 1960's, he was,&#13;
leading defender of the Cuban revolution and a 1eader of the massive&#13;
movement against the Vietnam War. Camejo actively supports the&#13;
desegregation struggle and participated in the May 17, 1975march,&#13;
sponsored by the NAACP, against racist attacks on school busing in&#13;
Boston. He has campaigned against layoffs and cutbacks across the'&#13;
country and joined the AFL-CIO march (or jobs in Washington, D.C.,&#13;
on April 26, 1975.He had campaigned for the right of every woman to&#13;
choose abortion and in support of the Equal Rights Amendment.&#13;
•Camejo, fluent in Spanish, is the first U.S. citizen of Latin American&#13;
descent to be a candidate for president of the United states.&#13;
On Willie Mae Reid: When Reid rim for mayor of Chicago on the&#13;
Socialist Workers ticket in early 1975, she was the fir.:;t candidate for&#13;
mayor under any party label other than Democrat or Republican to&#13;
obtain ballot status there since the 1930's. Reid, 36, grew up in Memphis,&#13;
Tennessee,wh~re she participated in civil rights struggles that&#13;
ended the segregated seating of Blacks on city buses. After moving to&#13;
Chicago, she helped organize the Illinois Women's Abortion Coalition,&#13;
a group fighting for women's right to choose abortion. A member of&#13;
the NAACP. Reid is campaigning in support of school desegregation&#13;
and the right of Black students to use busing to achieve equal&#13;
education.&#13;
-&#13;
Vote against Dems&#13;
by Ja~ Grassell&#13;
Myths abound in any electoral campaign, for such is the stuff of&#13;
politics. This year, the most pervasive and hence pathetic is the myth&#13;
that a vote for Carter and the Democrats is a vote for "change."&#13;
Change from what? Fact is that Wisconsin has:&#13;
Democratic State Senate&#13;
Democratic State Assembly&#13;
Democratic Governor&#13;
Democratic Congressional delegation .&#13;
Democratic Senators.&#13;
The Democrats have had control of Congress for 40 of the past 44&#13;
years. Every excess, loophole and inequity instituted in our lifetimes&#13;
has been passed by Democrats.&#13;
A vote fQl'the ruling Democratic majority represents not a vote for&#13;
"change" but a continuation and even an intensification of the present&#13;
trends: an inept foreign policy, a devalued and Inflated currency and&#13;
an ever increasing governmental intrusion into our lives and&#13;
livelihoods.&#13;
When you vote on November 2nd, vote for genuine change.&#13;
WU1IamPetrie for Congress&#13;
Stan York for the Senate&#13;
i IJY TheP~ . ~".. .. RANGER&#13;
necnurlly~""'.'Iv. of tboM tile'"by&#13;
the students. facutty or administration Of&#13;
P.nt.tIIe. Editorla' a"" B.. lnnrsn·U17 J&#13;
Newsroom SD-t2tS.&#13;
TM hrk ........... ls w,m.n ancllcllted&#13;
. by the ttucIetIts of 1M Unlv .... ny Of&#13;
: wl,c ... iln-P.rk,ld. who ar. ,.Ioly&#13;
...... MIM. tor "' MftwI.1 ...llcy .nd&#13;
coo'.n'. Opinion, .xpr .... d or. no'&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIIlF: .... nnlne Sip.....&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGERS: Cotlly BnlOk&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Tom CooPer&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR: .ruce WlIMf'&#13;
DEPARTMENtS:&#13;
.. A...,lnlstrotien-rotic,": Jolin McKloskey&#13;
.. SMI: Dove Brandl&#13;
.. StvdOnt ...... p'. sttNken:&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debbi. Bauer&#13;
_ SPORTS EDITOR: Je.n T... u'a&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS: jeffrey I_ ,wencki. Bill Barke&#13;
COpy IM)ITOR: Jull. Lan ..&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: Van Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION: Sue Marquard' ~&#13;
.. STAFF: Wendy Miller. Terri Gayhart. Robert Hoffman, Chris Clausen. Thomas Nolen,&#13;
Diane Carlson. Douglas Edenhauser. Mary Kay Ohmer, Larry DonneilY. Phil Hermann,&#13;
Ramona Maillel, Bob Jembois, Beverly Pella, Linda Knudtson, Karin LaFourler. JUdy&#13;
'!'rudrUng, scon Reinhar.d. Philip L. Livingston.&#13;
AD SALESPERSONS, Joe Landa, Rick Flasch&#13;
~.If:.The Parkside&#13;
~&#13;
.RANGER&#13;
, .&#13;
Dear Students:&#13;
It seems hard for us to call&#13;
Parkside our alma mater. That&#13;
term is saved for prestigious&#13;
institutions like Princeton, or&#13;
Oxford, or Yale. Yet Parkside is&#13;
or soon will be our alma mater. If&#13;
we are not to be embarrassed by&#13;
our alma mater, what it stands&#13;
for, what it is, and what it will be,&#13;
we, you and I must participate in&#13;
its development.&#13;
Unlike Oxford or Princeton,&#13;
Parkside has no traditions. There&#13;
is no set chatacter that one can&#13;
automatically associate with&#13;
UW-P. We ean and must have&#13;
some idea about what Parkside&#13;
will become. Perhaps pari of the&#13;
problem lies in our lack of&#13;
tradition and our lack of a clear&#13;
picture of what Parkside will be&#13;
ten years from now.&#13;
One possible solution requires&#13;
that ~ryone sit quietly back&#13;
and let the decisions be made for&#13;
. us. You see that everywhere now.&#13;
"I'm onl)' here fot' four years"-&#13;
syndrome. Parkside is no different&#13;
from any place else in the&#13;
country. People are ·sltting&#13;
passively waiting for someone to&#13;
do something, for them or to&#13;
them.&#13;
Get .uP and care.&#13;
It's not enough to react to&#13;
things. Sometimes self-respect or&#13;
self interest require that people&#13;
initiate. If you tolerate rhetoric&#13;
about the evils of passivity, then&#13;
your .right to outrage and indignation&#13;
have already been cOopted.&#13;
The clHlptor and the cooptee&#13;
were one and the same&#13;
--EDITOR IAL/OPINION&#13;
lI&#13;
\&#13;
'--- '&#13;
The ·Socialist Workers Party candidates are calling for "A am of&#13;
Rights for Working People." This campaign platform proposes the&#13;
following basic rights: I.) The right to a job; 2.) The right to an&#13;
adequate income protected against inflation; 3.) Right to a free&#13;
education; 4.) Right to free medical care; 5.) Right to a secure&#13;
retirement; 6.) Right of oppressed national minorities to control their&#13;
own affairs; 7.) Right to know the truth ahout and decide the political&#13;
policies that affect our-lives; 8.) Right to know the truth about and&#13;
decide economic. and-social policies. _&#13;
A society that puts human needs ahove profits could implement this&#13;
program. Neither the Democratic or 'Republican party can advance&#13;
the interests of workingpecpte and the oppressed in American society,&#13;
Both parties serve the interests of the .cqrporate and financial barons&#13;
"who wield the power in America today. We can defeat the serious&#13;
attacks on our rights and living standards only through our own united&#13;
action, independent of the Democrats and Republicans.&#13;
The Socialist Workers Party candidates urge the formation of a&#13;
labor party based on the immense power of the trade unions as a way&#13;
t6 defend and advance the interests of working people and all the&#13;
oppressed in the political arena.&#13;
Camejo and-Reid are campaigning for a new society - a socialist&#13;
society where industry and science will be put at the service of the vast&#13;
majority to improve their lives. Wars, racism, the oppression of&#13;
women, and all other forms of human degradation will no longer exist.&#13;
The Socialist Workers campaign believes this is a realistic goal- and a&#13;
necessary one if humanity is to survive.&#13;
Camejo and Reid will be on the ballot on November 2, along with&#13;
Robert SChwarz, SWP candidate for U,S. Senate from Wisconsin.&#13;
People who support the ideas of the SocialistWorkers campaign can&#13;
get involved, not only by voting November 2, but by working with the&#13;
Socialist Workers Party and the Young Socialist Alliance, a national&#13;
organization based on the high schools and college campuses which&#13;
supports the Camejo, Reid campaign. We can be. and need to beactive&#13;
365days a year to advance the struggle for socialism.'&#13;
Room for everybody&#13;
person. YOU.&#13;
ITyou want to set a tradition at&#13;
Parkside that could easily be&#13;
instituted, why not start with a&#13;
tradition of strong, active student&#13;
government. It couid start with&#13;
your participation. /&#13;
There is room for anyone and&#13;
everyone. People with just a little&#13;
time can· help as well as those&#13;
with a lot. Each of us has been hit&#13;
by Parkside's failings. We can do&#13;
something about them. I'm&#13;
issuing a plea on behalf of those&#13;
students who c""e to Parkside&#13;
after you and I have been long&#13;
gone. Do something now that&#13;
should have been done for you&#13;
• before you came. Set a tradition&#13;
of strong, active student&#13;
government.&#13;
'The old line about involvement&#13;
in politics applies here at&#13;
Parkside as much as in state or&#13;
local government.&#13;
Almost all universitY committees&#13;
have student&#13;
representatives in their structure.&#13;
Not even half have studentrepresentatives&#13;
sitting on them.&#13;
'No one wants the work. One&#13;
student cannot moniter the activities&#13;
of all the committees.&#13;
Even is one student could be&#13;
found who wanted to, h.... he&#13;
wouldn't be a slUdent for long&#13;
(there isa lot of wqrk to be done.)&#13;
And it's fairly obvious that one&#13;
student does not a university&#13;
make. One student cannot&#13;
possibly know about all the pointof-view,&#13;
needs and interests of a&#13;
student population as diverse as&#13;
Parkside's.&#13;
•&#13;
Please help us. Contact your&#13;
student government. There's&#13;
room for everybody.&#13;
-, Sincerely,&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
President-Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Donations&#13;
requested&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
.Chi-Rho Center, Campus&#13;
Ministry at Parkside, wishes to&#13;
call to your atiention a special&#13;
need of someone whose work has&#13;
come to mean a lot to many&#13;
people in the Racine area.&#13;
Louise Hunter is the founder&#13;
and director of theLoui.re Hunter&#13;
Love and Charity Club in Racine.&#13;
She has served her conununity&#13;
. wen through the Love and&#13;
Charity Club.&#13;
She serves poor people in the&#13;
RAcine area who for various&#13;
reasons are not able to receive&#13;
assistance from the other social&#13;
agencies. She sells clothes,&#13;
household items, and appliances .&#13;
for a few cents to a few dollars io&#13;
people who couid otherwise not&#13;
afford them. She.Often gives food .&#13;
and used merchandise to people&#13;
wbo have no money.&#13;
Louise Hunter and her husband&#13;
and family of 18 children have a&#13;
special need right now. Last&#13;
February their borne burned and&#13;
one of their children died in the&#13;
fire. The Welfare'Department&#13;
obtained temporary housing for&#13;
the Hunter family, but as of this&#13;
fall the Hunter family has. been&#13;
told that they must secure other&#13;
housing.&#13;
continued on po. 3&#13;
J&#13;
·::,;:_•· ..... _...... . .... - ·-·-&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE R'ANGER October 27, 197.6&#13;
POLITICAL FORUM&#13;
i · Jr.. The Parksid ~&#13;
. RANGER&#13;
--EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
Camejo endorsed&#13;
byCarol Burke&#13;
.Editor's Note: Ms. Burke is the chairperson of the Milwaukee Young&#13;
Socialist Alliance.&#13;
The So'cialist Workers Party candidates are calling for "A Bill of&#13;
Rights for Working People." This campaign platform proposes the&#13;
following basic rights: 1.) The right to a job; 2.) The rtght to an&#13;
adequate income protected against inflation; 3.) Right to a free&#13;
education; 4.) Right to free medical care; 5.) Right to a secure&#13;
retirement; 6.) Right of oppressed national minorities to control their&#13;
own affairs; 7.) Right to know the truth about and decide the political&#13;
policies that affect our ,li\'.es; 8.) Right to know the truth about and&#13;
decide economic, anctsocial policies.&#13;
In the September ~ Political Forum, Phil Hermann critiqued&#13;
presidential candidates Ford, Carter, Maddox, and McCarthy. Hermru;m&#13;
neglected to mention the only campaign that I believe offers a&#13;
real positive alternative to voters in 1976 · - the Socialist Workers&#13;
campaign of Peter Camejo for"president and Willie Mae Reid for vicepresident.&#13;
·&#13;
For a start, compare the~e background facts about Camejo and Reid&#13;
with the records of any of the candidates men_tioned in Hermann's&#13;
article: Peter Camejo, 35, has been a member of the Socialist Workers&#13;
party since 1959. Active in the student movements of the 1960's, he was,&#13;
leading defender of the Cuban revolution and a leader of the massive&#13;
movement against the Vietnam War. Camejo actively supports the&#13;
desegregation struggle and participated in the May 17, 1975 march-,&#13;
sponsored by the NAACP, against racist attacks on school busing in&#13;
Boston. He has campaigned against layoffs and cutbacks across the '&#13;
country and joined the AFL-CIO march {or jobs in Washington, D.C.,&#13;
on April 26, 1975. He had campaigned for. the right of every woman to&#13;
choose abortion and in support of the Equal Rights Amendment.&#13;
A society that puts human needs above profits cou!d implement this&#13;
program. Neither the Democratic or Republican party can advance&#13;
the interests of working people and the oppressed in American society.&#13;
Both parties serve the interests of the cqrporate and financial barons&#13;
who wield the power in America today. We can defeat the serious&#13;
attacks on our rights and living standards only through our own united&#13;
action, independent of the Democrats and Republicans.&#13;
The Socialist Workers Party candidates urge the formation of a&#13;
labor party based on the immense power of the trade unions as a way&#13;
to defend and advance the interests of working people and all the&#13;
oppressed in the political arena.&#13;
• Camejo, fluent in Spanish, is the first U.S. citizen of Latin American&#13;
descent to be a candidate for president of the United States.&#13;
Camejo and Eeid are campaigning for a new society- a socialist&#13;
society where industry and science will be put at the service of the vast&#13;
majority to improve their lives. Wars, racism, the oppression of&#13;
women, and all other forms of human degradation will no longer exist.&#13;
The Socialist Workers campaign believes this is a realistic goal - and a&#13;
necessary one if humanity is to survive.&#13;
•&#13;
On Willie Mae Reid: When Reid ran for mayor of Chicago on the&#13;
Socialist Workers ticket in early 1975, she was the fir~t candidate for&#13;
mayor under any party label other than Democrat or Republican to&#13;
obtain ballot status there since the 1930's. Reid, 36, grew up in Memphis,&#13;
Tennessee, wh~re she participated in civil rights struggles that&#13;
ended the segregated seating of Blacks on city buses. After moving to&#13;
Chicago, she helped organize the Illinois Women's Abortion Coalition,&#13;
a group fighting for women's right to choose abortion. A member of&#13;
the NAACP. Reid is campaigning in support of school desegregation&#13;
and the right of Black students to use busing to achieve equal&#13;
education.&#13;
Camejo and Reid will be on the ballot on November 2, along with&#13;
Robert Schwarz, SWP candidate for U.S. Senate from Wisconsin.&#13;
People who support the ideas of the Socialist.Workers campaign can&#13;
get involved, not only by voting November 2, but by working with the&#13;
Socialist Workers Party and the Young Socialist Alliance, a national&#13;
organization based on the high schools and college campuses which&#13;
supports the Camejo - Reid campaign. We can be .- and qeed to beactive&#13;
365 days a year to advance the struggle for socialism.&#13;
Vote against Dents&#13;
by Jay'Grassell&#13;
Myths abound in any electoral campaign, for such is the stuff of&#13;
politics. This year, the most pervasive and hence pathetic is the myth&#13;
that a vote for Carter and the Democrats is a vote for "change."&#13;
Change from what? Fact is that Wisconsin has:&#13;
Democratic State Senate&#13;
Democratic State Assembly&#13;
Democratic Governor&#13;
Democratic Congressional delegation ·&#13;
Democratic Senators.&#13;
The Democrats have had control of Congress for 40 of the past· 44&#13;
years. Every excess, loophole and inequity instituted in our lifetimes&#13;
has been passed by Democrats.&#13;
A vote fQr the ruling Democratic majority represents not a vote for&#13;
"change" but a continuation and even an intensification of the present&#13;
trends: an inept foreign policy, a devalued and inflated currency and&#13;
an ever increasing governmental intrusion into our lives and&#13;
livelihoods.&#13;
When you vote on November 2nd, vote for genuine change.&#13;
William Petrie for Congress&#13;
Stan York for the Senate&#13;
~ If:. The Parkside . ~ ~ ' .&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Th• Parkside Rang..- is written and edited&#13;
· by the students of the Unlvtrslty of&#13;
: Wl1coniln-Park1ide who are solely&#13;
rHponslltl• tor Its editorial policy and&#13;
content. Opinions exprened are not&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: JHnnlne Slpsma&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGERS: Catlly ernak&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Tom Cooper&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR: Bruce Wigner&#13;
DEPARTMENTS:&#13;
.. Administration-Policies: John McKloskey .. SMI: Dave Brandt&#13;
.. Student groups &amp; speakers:&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR : Debbie Bauer&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Jean Te11uta&#13;
necessarily repreHntatlve of those held by&#13;
the 1tvclenfl, faculty or administration of&#13;
Parkside. Editorial and 8u1inHr S53-2217;&#13;
Newsroom S53-22'S.&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS : jellrey j. swencki, Bill Barke&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Julie Lange&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: Van Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION: Sue Marquardt - .. STAFF : Wendy Miller, Terri Gayhart. Robert Hollman, Chris Clausen, Thomas Nolen,&#13;
Diane Carlson, Douglas Edenhauser, Mary Kay Ohmer, Larry Donneily, Phil Hermann,&#13;
Ramona Maillet, Bob Jambois, Beverly Pella, Linda Knudtson, Karin LaFourier, Judy&#13;
"!'rudrung, Scott Reinhar.d, Philip L. Livingston.&#13;
AD SALESPERSONS : Joe Landa, Rick Flasch&#13;
I&#13;
\&#13;
Room for everybody&#13;
Dear Students:&#13;
It seems hard for us to call&#13;
Parkside our alma mater. That&#13;
term is saved for prestigious&#13;
institutions like Princeton, or&#13;
Oxford, or Yale. Yet Parkside is&#13;
or soon will be our alma mater. If&#13;
we are not to be embarrassed by&#13;
our alma mater, what it stands&#13;
for, what it is, arid what it will be,&#13;
we, you and I must participate in&#13;
its development.&#13;
Unlike Oxford or Princeton,&#13;
Parkside has no traditions. There&#13;
is no set character that one can&#13;
autDmatically associate with&#13;
UW-P. We ean and must have&#13;
some idea about what Parkside&#13;
will become. Perhaps part of -the&#13;
problem lies in our lack of&#13;
tradition and our lack of a clear&#13;
picture of what Parkside will be&#13;
ten years from now.&#13;
One possible solution requires&#13;
that ewryone sit quietly back&#13;
and let the decisions be made for&#13;
. us. You see that everywhere now.&#13;
"I'm only here for four years"-&#13;
syndrome. Parkside is no different&#13;
from any place else in the&#13;
country. People are sitting&#13;
passively waiting for someone to&#13;
do something for them or to&#13;
them.&#13;
Get _up and care.&#13;
It's not enough to react to&#13;
things. Sometimes self-respect or&#13;
self interest require that people&#13;
initiate. If you tolerate rhetoric&#13;
about the evils of passivity, then&#13;
your .right to outrage and indignation&#13;
have already been coopted.&#13;
The c~ptor and the cooptee&#13;
were one and the same&#13;
person. YOU.&#13;
If you want to set a tradition at&#13;
Parkside that could easily be&#13;
instituted, why not start with a&#13;
tradition of strong, active student&#13;
government. It could start with&#13;
your participation.&#13;
There is room for anyone and&#13;
everyone. People with just a little&#13;
time can· help as well as those&#13;
with a lot. Each of us has been hit&#13;
by Parkside's failings. We can do&#13;
something about them. I'm&#13;
issuing a plea on behalf of those .&#13;
students who Ciffie to Parkside&#13;
after you and I have been long&#13;
·gone. Do something now that&#13;
should have been done for you&#13;
• before you came. Set a tradition&#13;
of strong, active student&#13;
government.&#13;
The old line about involvement&#13;
in politics applies here at&#13;
Parkside as much as in state or&#13;
local government. ·&#13;
Alrhost all university committees&#13;
have student&#13;
representatives in their structure.&#13;
Not even half have studentrepresentatives&#13;
sitting on them.&#13;
No one wants the work. One&#13;
student cannot moniter the activities&#13;
of all the committees.&#13;
Even is one student could be&#13;
found who wanted to, he-she&#13;
wouldn't be a student for long&#13;
( there is a lot of work to be done.)&#13;
And it's fairly obvious that one&#13;
student does not a university&#13;
make. One student cannot&#13;
possibly know about all the pointof-view,&#13;
needs and interests of a&#13;
student population as diverse as&#13;
Parkside's.&#13;
Please help us. Contact your&#13;
student government. There's&#13;
room for everybody.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
President-Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Donations&#13;
requested&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Chi~Rho Center, Campus·&#13;
Ministry at Parkside, wishes to&#13;
call to your attention a special&#13;
need of someone whose work has&#13;
come to mean a lot to many&#13;
people in the Racine area.&#13;
Louise Hunter is the founder&#13;
and director of the Louise Hunter&#13;
Love and Charity Club in Racine.&#13;
She has served her community&#13;
· wen through the Love and&#13;
Charity Club.&#13;
She serves poor people in the&#13;
Racine area who for various&#13;
reasons are not able to receive&#13;
assistance from the other social&#13;
agencies. She sells clothes,&#13;
household items, and appliances&#13;
for a few cents to a few dollars to&#13;
people who could otherwise not&#13;
afford them. She.often gives food&#13;
and used merchandise to people&#13;
who have no money.&#13;
Louise Hunter and her husband&#13;
and family of 18 children have a&#13;
special need right now. Last&#13;
February their home burned and&#13;
one of their children died in the&#13;
fire. The Welfare Department&#13;
obtained temporary housing for&#13;
the Hunter family, but as of this&#13;
fall the Hunter family has been&#13;
told that they must secure other&#13;
housing.&#13;
continued on pg . 3 &#13;
pastors at Carthage to organize&#13;
and participate in an attempt to&#13;
raise funds through donations, in&#13;
the hope of providing a down&#13;
payment for a home for the&#13;
. Hunter family.&#13;
We have entered into an informal&#13;
agreement with the&#13;
Racine Housing Authority&#13;
whereby if. we can raise approximately&#13;
$2500 for a down&#13;
payment they will guarantee a&#13;
mortgage for the purchase of a&#13;
. home.&#13;
We are' reporting a very&#13;
unusual need in the life of a very&#13;
unusual family. We believe that&#13;
Mrs. Hunter has used her talents&#13;
Livingston's opinion&#13;
illogi~al drivel&#13;
Letters con.'t&#13;
Donations,-------- continued from pg. 7&#13;
'They are not able to secure&#13;
financing for the purchase of&#13;
another home, and the possibility&#13;
of renting a home for that size&#13;
family is out of the question. Mr.&#13;
" Hunter works at American&#13;
Motors and has an income&#13;
adequate for many household&#13;
. needs, but their prospects for&#13;
making their Own arrangements&#13;
to buy a home seem to be nonexistent.&#13;
Louise Hunter called Chi-Rho&#13;
Center in August and asked for&#13;
help. After a series of conversations&#13;
with _ the Racine&#13;
Housing Authority, we have&#13;
decided to join the· campus&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I'll not comment on the bulk of&#13;
Philip Livingston's article other&#13;
than to say it was illogical driveL&#13;
Livingston mis-stated the facts&#13;
every time he referred to Carter&#13;
and I wish to set the record&#13;
straight.&#13;
First, Jimmy Carter is not&#13;
. worth five million dollars. As of&#13;
June 1976Carter's net worth was&#13;
Commentaries&#13;
not significant&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It is our opinion that the glittering&#13;
generalities that plague&#13;
the commentaries on Carter and&#13;
Ford are of too little significance&#13;
to be included in the Ranger.&#13;
'They could, for the most part, be&#13;
the same editorial with the&#13;
names reversed eg., "This man&#13;
eight hundred and ten tIiousand&#13;
dollars. Second, Jimmy Carter&#13;
does not quote God. He quotes the&#13;
Bible. He's a "born again"&#13;
Christian - same as Jerry Ford.&#13;
These are the only' facts&#13;
Livingston relied on on writing&#13;
his rather unfortunate piece, the&#13;
'resi of the article being character&#13;
assassination by innuendo .&#13;
Bob Jambois&#13;
•&#13;
of humble thought is intelligent&#13;
enough to use good advice."&#13;
'There is alreadY enough&#13;
bulIshit around to pretty well&#13;
cover all the great glittering&#13;
generalities. It's too bad all there&#13;
is to offer is Ford &amp; Carter, or&#13;
peanuts and clumsiness.&#13;
John Georgeson&#13;
Ed Randle&#13;
First reading&#13;
Nov.4&#13;
'TheMagic Visage Organization&#13;
will present its first open poetryprose&#13;
reading of the year on&#13;
'Thursday, November 4 in the&#13;
Overlook Lounge ottbe Parkside&#13;
Library. 'The reading will begin&#13;
at 8 p.m. and will 'conclude at&#13;
.approximately 10 p.m.&#13;
The reading will feature&#13;
Parkside students and faculty&#13;
reading their own creative&#13;
writings. Interested writers may&#13;
sign up for the reading with&#13;
. Jeffrey J. Swencki, Magic Visage&#13;
Coordinator, through the Ranger&#13;
Office, WLLC-D194.&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
e Saves maintenance (25,OOO-m1leoil change)&#13;
e Eases su~-zero starts (-60'F. pour point)&#13;
- eSavesoll Mike Villers&#13;
your AidS/OIL deeler 63 7 - 2 7 26&#13;
Magic Visage is also in the&#13;
process of publishing an anthology&#13;
of Parkside student and&#13;
faculty poetry, prose,&#13;
photography, and art work. Many&#13;
of the contributors to the anthology&#13;
have taken part in past&#13;
readings .&#13;
Future.readings are now being&#13;
planned. On November 18 Janet&#13;
Beeler will be the guest poet and&#13;
will conduct an afternoon&#13;
seminar. For more information&#13;
contact Jeffrey in the Ranger&#13;
Office or call 553-2295or 634-5305.&#13;
and resources to the ·best of her&#13;
ability to help the poor people of&#13;
her community. We believe that&#13;
the community should respond to&#13;
this need of the Hunter family,&#13;
and we appeal to you to consider&#13;
making a contribution.&#13;
Contributions can be maile or&#13;
brought to the Chi-Rho Censer,&#13;
382512 St. Checks should be made&#13;
out to the Louise Hunter Housing&#13;
Fund. The deadline for contributions&#13;
is November 7. 'Thank&#13;
you for this consideration and&#13;
your response.&#13;
Fr. Wayne&#13;
Campus Minister&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
P.S.G.A.&#13;
appoints&#13;
students&#13;
by Douglas Edeahauser&#13;
Three people were nomina ted&#13;
to committees at last week's&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association's Senate meeting.&#13;
Pat Heckle aOd Tad Ballantine&#13;
were appointed to the Budget&#13;
Priorities Committee and Art&#13;
Pollack was appointed to the&#13;
Vice-Chancellor's Search and&#13;
Screen ·committee.&#13;
'TheHealth Services committee&#13;
reported that there is a project&#13;
underway at getting Parkside to&#13;
record books for blind students.&#13;
'There was also a motion passed&#13;
to relocate the health office to&#13;
provide easier access for the&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER OCtober 27. 1976 3&#13;
students. There was discussion to WisconsIA and diIcuased a state&#13;
star! working with handicapped work-study program in which a&#13;
students to possibly open up the resolution was passed in opbowling&#13;
lanes for wheelchairs. position of the propollel! program.&#13;
A. motion was passed to UW-Stout was unanimously&#13;
examine the air quality in the art approved membership to the&#13;
department. If nothing is done by United Counell. Segregated Fees&#13;
Dec. I, this matter will be Budget Planning Conference will&#13;
discussed with OSHA. be held Nov. 5 in MadIson and a&#13;
A president's resolution was Legal Service Conference will be&#13;
passed that heartily endorses the held in MIlwaukee November 6.&#13;
creation of a veterinary school in In the president's report,&#13;
the U.W. system. President Kiyoko Bowden mentioned that&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden pointed out that Parkside leads the way in&#13;
there presently is no such school establishing an academic&#13;
in a highly agricultural state. grievance procedure and a&#13;
United Council held a meeting humane financial aids appeal&#13;
last weekend in Superior, procedure.&#13;
We're not&#13;
just another&#13;
rocker .&#13;
Album rock from&#13;
6 p.m. 'til 1 a.m,&#13;
every night on ..&#13;
•&#13;
• • • •&#13;
·WUPPm9S&#13;
WIIPPm9S&#13;
WUPPm9S&#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;
.- •. "'••..,.....'.J'&#13;
•&#13;
,&#13;
I ...&#13;
•&#13;
When you say Budweiser., you've said it all!&#13;
."HEUS("'USClt INC.• st. lOUIS&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27, 1976 3&#13;
Letters con.'t&#13;
Donations-·--'--------&#13;
students. There was discussion to&#13;
start working with handicapped&#13;
students to possibly open up the&#13;
bowling lanes for wheelchairs.&#13;
A motion was passed to&#13;
examine the air quality in the art&#13;
department. If nothing is done by&#13;
Dec. 1, this matter will be&#13;
discussed wil~ OSHA .&#13;
Wisconsin and discussed a state&#13;
work-study program in which a&#13;
resolution was passed in opposition&#13;
of the proposed program.&#13;
UW-Stout was unanimously&#13;
approved membership to the&#13;
United Council. Segregated Fees&#13;
Budget Planning Conference will&#13;
be held Nov. 5 in Madison and a&#13;
Legal Service Conference will be&#13;
held in Milwaukee November 6.&#13;
continued from pg. 1&#13;
They are not able to secure&#13;
financing for the .purchase of&#13;
another home, and the possibility&#13;
of renting a home for that size&#13;
family is out of the question. Mr.&#13;
Hunter works at American&#13;
Motors and has an income&#13;
adequate for many household&#13;
· needs, but their prospects for&#13;
making their own arrangements&#13;
to buy a home seem to be nonexistent.&#13;
&#13;
Louise Hunter called. Chi-Rho&#13;
Center in August and asked for&#13;
help. After a series cif conversations&#13;
with the Racine&#13;
Housing Authority, we have&#13;
decided to join the - campus&#13;
pastors at Carthage to organize&#13;
and participate in an attempt to&#13;
raise funds through donations, in&#13;
the hope of providing a down&#13;
payment for a home for the&#13;
Hunter family.&#13;
We have entered into an informal&#13;
agreement with the&#13;
Racine Housing Authority&#13;
whereby if. we can raise approximately&#13;
$2500 for a down&#13;
payment they will guarantee a&#13;
mortgage for the purchase of a&#13;
home.&#13;
We are · reporting a very&#13;
unusual need in the life of a very&#13;
unusual family. We believe that&#13;
Mrs. Hunter has used her talents&#13;
Livingston's o·pinion&#13;
illogical drivel&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I'll not comment on the bulk of&#13;
Philip Livingston's article other&#13;
than to say it was illogical drivel.&#13;
Livingston mis-stated the facts&#13;
everytime he referred to Carter&#13;
and I wish to set the record&#13;
straight.&#13;
First, Jimmy Carter is not&#13;
. worth five million dollars. As of&#13;
June 1976 Carter's net worth was&#13;
eight hundred and ten thousand&#13;
dollars. Second, Jimmy Carter&#13;
does not quote God. He quotes the&#13;
Bible. He's a "born again"&#13;
Christian - same as Jerry Ford.&#13;
These are the only facts&#13;
Livingston relied on on writing&#13;
his rather unfortunate piece, the&#13;
rest of the article being character&#13;
assassination by innuendo.&#13;
Bob Jambois&#13;
Commentaries&#13;
not significant&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It is our opinion that the glittering&#13;
generalities that plague&#13;
the commentaries on C.arter and&#13;
Ford are of too little significance&#13;
to be included in the Ranger.&#13;
They could, for the most part, be&#13;
the same editorial with the&#13;
names reversed eg., "This man&#13;
of humble thought is intelligent&#13;
enough to use good advice."&#13;
There is already enough&#13;
bullshit around to pretty well&#13;
cover all the great glittering&#13;
generalities. It's too bad all there&#13;
is to offer is Ford &amp; (',arter, or&#13;
peanuts and clwnsiness.&#13;
John Georgeson&#13;
Ed Randle&#13;
First reading&#13;
Nov.4&#13;
The Magic Visage Organization&#13;
will present its first open poetryprose&#13;
reading of the year on&#13;
Thursday, November 4 in the&#13;
Overlook Lounge of. the Parkside&#13;
Library. The reading will begin&#13;
at 8 p.m. and will ·conclude at&#13;
approximately 10 p.m.&#13;
The reading will feature&#13;
Parkside students and faculty&#13;
reading their own creative&#13;
writings. Intereste.,d writers may&#13;
sign up for the reading with&#13;
· Jeffrey J. Swencki, Magic Visage&#13;
Coordinator, through the Ranger&#13;
Office, WLLC-D194.&#13;
Magic Visage is also in the&#13;
process of publishing an anthology&#13;
of Parkside student and&#13;
faculty poetry, prose,&#13;
photography, and art work. Many&#13;
of the contributors to the anthology&#13;
have taken part in past&#13;
readings.&#13;
Future.readin~ are now being&#13;
planned. On November 18 Janet&#13;
Beeler will be the guest poet and&#13;
will conduct an afternoon&#13;
seminar. For more information&#13;
contact Jeffrey in the Ranger&#13;
Office or call 553-2295 or 634-5305.&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Sa~es ~ear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,000-mtle oll change)&#13;
• Eases su~-zero starts (-6~°F. pour point)&#13;
. • Saves oil Mike Villers&#13;
your AMS/OIL dealer 6 3 7 _ 2 7 2 6&#13;
and resources to the best of her&#13;
ability to help the poor people of&#13;
her community. We believe that&#13;
the community should respond to&#13;
this need of the Hunter family,&#13;
and we appeal to you to consider&#13;
making a contribution.&#13;
Contrihutionc; can be maile or&#13;
brought to the Chi-Rho cemt:r,&#13;
3825 12 St. Checks should be made&#13;
out to the Louise Hunter Housing&#13;
Fund. The deadline for contributions-is&#13;
November 7. Thank&#13;
you for this consideration and&#13;
your response.&#13;
Fr. Wayne&#13;
Campus Minister&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
P.S.G.A.&#13;
appoints&#13;
students&#13;
by Douglas Edenhauser&#13;
Three people were nominated&#13;
to committees at last week's&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association's Senate meeting.&#13;
Pat Heckle and Tad Ballantine&#13;
were appointed to the Budget&#13;
Priorities Committee and Art&#13;
Pollack was appointed to the&#13;
Vice-Chancellor's Search and&#13;
Screen-committee.&#13;
The Health Services committee&#13;
reported that there is a project&#13;
qnderway at getting Parkside to&#13;
record books for blind students.&#13;
There was also a motion passed&#13;
to relocate the health office to&#13;
provide easier access for the&#13;
A president's resolution was&#13;
passed that heartily endorses the&#13;
creation of a veterinary school in&#13;
the U.W. system. President&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden pointed out that&#13;
there presently is no such school&#13;
in a highly agricultural state.&#13;
United Council held a meeting&#13;
last weekend in Superior,&#13;
In the president's report,&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden mentioned that&#13;
Parkside leads the way in&#13;
establishing an academic&#13;
grievance procedure and a&#13;
humane financial aids appeal&#13;
procedure.&#13;
We're not&#13;
....&#13;
just another&#13;
rocker ...... .&#13;
Album rock from&#13;
6 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
every night on . . •&#13;
• • • •&#13;
WUP-ffll95&#13;
WUPffll95&#13;
WUPffll95 -&#13;
Why do sonie people think ·&#13;
Bud. is sort of special?&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make a difference.)&#13;
•&#13;
When you say Budweiser., you've said it all!&#13;
ANHEUSEII-IUSCM, INC. • ST. LOUIS &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27, 1976&#13;
•&#13;
One sweet Dream&#13;
~.~!~&#13;
=Il~ . ~-n =&#13;
.It!_ ~ '. •&#13;
• This Coupon is • • •&#13;
• worth 50c on all •&#13;
• items listed below. •&#13;
• Good thru October •&#13;
• only! One Coupon .•&#13;
• per customer per' •&#13;
• purchase. Happy •&#13;
• Holidays. Remember, •&#13;
• we never close, •&#13;
~ ........•,&#13;
Hey, sohotcrs, look at'&#13;
these gift selections:&#13;
Everything for Mind &amp;&#13;
BodY is right here at&#13;
two stores ... your&#13;
storeswith atmosphere,&#13;
• Recorda a Tapes. ALL new&#13;
releases stacked floor to&#13;
ceiling!&#13;
• Import albums. We're the.&#13;
one store in town that&#13;
carries foreign releases.&#13;
• Spedal orden. Hard-to-get .&#13;
records and tapes with&#13;
guaranteed one day .&#13;
· delivery.&#13;
• Jewelry. Hand crafted lit&#13;
beautiful for style conscious&#13;
guys and gals ..&#13;
• Tapestries. Mobiles. Incense&#13;
burners. Stash&#13;
boxes.&#13;
• Incense. Sticks and cones&#13;
to tickle your nOS8.&#13;
• Pi.cturel. Decoupage. Wall&#13;
hangings. Artists: Escher.&#13;
Pitre. Roger Dean.&#13;
Rosamond.&#13;
• UptiDI to create any&#13;
atmosphere.&#13;
• Leather Gooda. WalletsPouches&#13;
- Purses - BeltsHats&#13;
&amp;; accessories in&#13;
abundance. Beautifully&#13;
handcrafted.&#13;
• Paraphernalia - Pipes.&#13;
Papers. Smoking Accessories.&#13;
Party necessities&#13;
, from around the world ..&#13;
• Waterbeds. We're&#13;
everything in Waterbeds.&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
-" 5010 Seventh Avenue'&#13;
654-3578&#13;
WEST&#13;
3910 Seventy Fifth Street&#13;
694,2404&#13;
EVENTS .'&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 31&#13;
'Wargamers Club meets from Ito 6 p.m, in CL 140.&#13;
Concert, Midnight Musical Madness, midnight (12 a.m.) in the CAT,&#13;
Group S~Ilport Committee meets at I p.m. in WLLC D174, The&#13;
meeting will be for the purposes or establishing guidelines, priorities&#13;
and preliminary budgets for student organization funding, All student&#13;
organization presidents and students are invited,&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 2 .&#13;
Singer; Barry Drake, performs from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Square, .&#13;
Wargamers Club'meets from 6to tnp.m. in CL 140,&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 27&#13;
Movie, "TheBirds," 2:30 and 7:30 p.m, in the- CinemaTheatre.Ad"&#13;
mission is $1. .&#13;
Parkside Art Association meets at 5 p.m, in Main Place,&#13;
/ Thursday, Oct, 28&#13;
Movie, "Psycho," 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Cinema Theatre. Admission&#13;
is $1. .&#13;
Accounting cfub meets at 4:30p,m,in CL325.&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 6 to 10p,m. in CL 140, ,&#13;
Faculty Recital: Eden Vaning, violin; Stephen Swedish, piano, at 8&#13;
p.rn. in the CAT.&#13;
..&#13;
Please submit all events to the Ranger before Wednesday of the week&#13;
hefore publication.' .,&#13;
Friday, Oct. 29&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4p,m. in Union 207.&#13;
•&#13;
Saturday, Oct, 30&#13;
Foreign Student Club members meet .at 11:0!1 p.m, in the Union&#13;
Bazaar, This is a picnic and hospitality visit to the residents of&#13;
Southern Wisconsin Colony in Union Grove. The bus returns to the&#13;
campus at about 5 p.m.&#13;
Mens cross country meet, UW-P, Carthage, Loras, and Marquette-at&#13;
12 p.m, at Parkside,&#13;
'Soccer, UW-P vs, Western Michigan, at 2p.m, at the SOCCerfield,&#13;
Women's swimming meet, UW-P, Carthage, UW-River Falls, and UWEau&#13;
Claire, at 11 a.m, at Carthage. .&#13;
Garage sale&#13;
Switchboard is holding its First&#13;
Annual Halloween Garage Sale&#13;
.October 30th, Saturday, 11a.m, to&#13;
4p,m. .&#13;
The)' are asking fot contributions&#13;
of time and articles to&#13;
he sold at the sale, Contributions&#13;
should he brought to the Switchboard&#13;
center by October 28.&#13;
For more information on how&#13;
to make contributions, call&#13;
Switchboard: 65ll-help.&#13;
Join the Ford Bandwagon!&#13;
HELP HIM LEAD US TO A&#13;
REPUBLICAN 'VICTORY&#13;
NOVEMBER 2nd&#13;
· BECAUSE:&#13;
.'&#13;
HE CAN MAKE AMERICA A STRONG,&#13;
PROUD AMERICA&#13;
HE NEEDS YOUR SUPPORT TO FINISH'&#13;
A JOB WELL BEGUN&#13;
HE- WANTS TO KEEP AMERICA&#13;
STRONG AND AT PEACE&#13;
HE WANTS TO BUILD A ~AIRER TAX&#13;
STRUCTURE&#13;
•&#13;
HE WANTS TO INSURE JOBS&#13;
FOR EVERY WORKER •&#13;
HE WANTS TO BEAT INFLATION&#13;
f&#13;
~&#13;
HE WANTS A FREEDOM FOR AMERICA&#13;
THAT WILL ALLOW EQUALITY&#13;
TO ALL AMERICANS&#13;
•&#13;
FORD HAS A REALISTIC&#13;
RESPONSIBLE APPROACH,&#13;
re GOVERNMENT&#13;
GIVE HIM :YOUR VOTE! . .&#13;
~Ht PRESIDENT FORO EOMMmEE. JAMES A BAKER. III. CHAI~MAN, ROYSTON C HUGHES, TREASURER ~~&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27, 1976&#13;
one&#13;
sweet&#13;
Dream&#13;
'!!g&#13;
I / . I . --: JI I&#13;
. . -. • ll ~ ,n • llrl . . '-· ·: =&#13;
• •&#13;
• This Coupon is •&#13;
• worth 50c on all •&#13;
• items listed below. •&#13;
• Good thru October •&#13;
• only! One Coupon . •&#13;
• per customer per · •&#13;
• purchase. Happy •&#13;
• Holidays. Remember, •&#13;
• we never close. •&#13;
~ ........• ,&#13;
Hey, scho~ars, look at ·&#13;
these gift selections.&#13;
Everything for Mind &amp;&#13;
Body is right here at&#13;
two stores . . . your&#13;
stores ·with atmosphere.&#13;
• Records &amp; Tapes. ALL new releases stacked floor to&#13;
ceiling!&#13;
• Import albums. We're the. one store in town that&#13;
carries foreign releases. • Special orders. Hard-to-get&#13;
records and tapes with ·&#13;
guaranteed one day&#13;
delivery.&#13;
• Jewelry. Hand crafted &amp;&#13;
beautiful for style conscious&#13;
guys and gals . .&#13;
• Tapestries. ~obiles. In- cense burners. Stash&#13;
boxes.&#13;
• Incense. Sticks and cones to tickle your nose.&#13;
• Pictures. Decoupage. Wall&#13;
hangings. Artists: Escher,&#13;
Pitre, Roger Dean,&#13;
Rosamond.&#13;
• lighting to create any&#13;
atmosphere. .&#13;
• Leather Goods. Wallets- Pouches-Purses-BeltsHa&#13;
ts &amp; accessories in&#13;
abundance. Beautifully&#13;
handcrafted.&#13;
• Paraphernalia - Pipes.&#13;
Papers. Smoking Accessories.&#13;
Party necessities&#13;
from around the world.&#13;
• Waterbeds. We're&#13;
everything in Waterbeds.&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
' 5010 Seventp Avenue '&#13;
654-357B&#13;
WEST&#13;
391 0 Seventy Fifth Street&#13;
694 -2404&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. ?7&#13;
Movie, "The 'Birds," 2: 30 and 7: 30 p.m. in the Cinema . 'I:heatre. AdSunday,&#13;
Oct. 31&#13;
'Wargamers Club meets from 1 to 6 p.m. in CL-140.&#13;
mission is $1. • Concert, Midnight Musical Madness, midnight (12 a.m.) in the CAT.&#13;
Group Support Committee meets at 1 p.m: in WLLC D174. The&#13;
meeting will be for the purposes of establishing guidelines, P.riorities&#13;
and preliminary budgets·for student organization funding. NI student&#13;
organization presidents and students are invited.&#13;
Parkside Art Association meets at 5 p.m. in Main Place~&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 28&#13;
Movie, "Psycho," 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Cinema Theatre. Admission&#13;
is $1. .&#13;
Accounting Club meets at 4:30 p.m. in CL 325.&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 6 to 10 p.m. in CL 140 ..&#13;
Faculty Recital: Eden Vaning, violin; Stephen Swedish, pi~no, at 8&#13;
p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 29&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4 p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
. Saturday, Oct. 30&#13;
•&#13;
Foreign Student Club members .meet at 11:00 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Bazaar. This is a picnic ·and hospitality visit to the residents of&#13;
Southern Wisconsin Colony in Union Grove. The bus returns to the&#13;
campus at about 5 p.m. ·&#13;
Mens cross country meet, UW-P, Carthage, Loras, and Marquette,,at&#13;
12 p.m. at Parkside.&#13;
'Soccer,_ UW-P vs. Western Michigan, at 2p.m. at the soccer field.&#13;
Women's swimming meet, UW-P, Carthage, UW-River Falls, and UWEau&#13;
Claire, at 11 a.m. at Carthage.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 2 .&#13;
Singer; Barry Drake, performs from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Square.&#13;
Wargamers Club·m~ets from 6 to 10 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Please submit all events to the Ranger before Wednesday of the week&#13;
before publication. · ·&#13;
•&#13;
Garage sal~ ,_&#13;
Switchboard is holding its First&#13;
Annual Halloween Garage Sale&#13;
October 30th, Saturday, 11 a.m. to&#13;
4 p.m.&#13;
They are asking for contributions&#13;
of time and articles to&#13;
be sold at the sale. Contributions&#13;
should be brought to the Switchboard&#13;
Center by October 28.&#13;
For more information on how&#13;
to make contributions, call&#13;
Switchboard: 651J.help.&#13;
. .&#13;
..&#13;
•&#13;
Jointhe Ford Bandwagon! . .&#13;
HELP HIM LEAD US TO ·A&#13;
REP-UBLICAN ·v1CTORY&#13;
NOVEMBER 2nd 4&#13;
HE&#13;
HE&#13;
HEHE&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
HE.&#13;
HE&#13;
f&#13;
BECAUSE:&#13;
CAN MAKE AMERICA A STRONG,&#13;
PROUD AMERICA&#13;
NEEDS YOUR SUPPORT TO FINISH ·&#13;
A JOB WELL BEGUN&#13;
WANTS TO KEEP AMERICA&#13;
STRONG AND AT PEACE&#13;
WANTS TO BUILD A FAIRER TAX&#13;
STRUCTURE&#13;
WANTS TO INSURE JOBS&#13;
FO~ EVERY WORKER&#13;
WANTS TO BEAT tNFLATION&#13;
·HE ~ WANTS A FREEDOM FOR AMERICA&#13;
THAT WILL ALLOW EQUALITY&#13;
TO ALL AMERICANS&#13;
FORD HAS A REAllSTIC&#13;
RESPONSIBLE APPROACH -&#13;
JO GOVERNMENT&#13;
GIVE .HIM ~YOUR VOTE!&#13;
-&#13;
.-&#13;
~HL PRESIDENT FORD EOMMITTEE. JAMES A BAKER.Ill. CHAIRMAN. ROYSTON C HUGHES. TREASURER&#13;
(&#13;
, &#13;
- .&#13;
Contact&#13;
weekly by. student go.vernment&#13;
by Klyoko Bowden&#13;
Student Appointments&#13;
Congratulations are extended to the following students on their&#13;
appointments :&#13;
Tad Ballantyne ...Budget Priorities Conunittee&#13;
Pat Hechel...Budget Priorities Conunittee&#13;
Art Pollock ...Vice-chancellor's Search and Screen Conunittee&#13;
Openings for Interested Students&#13;
Student Court...3 positions as Associate Justices&#13;
Appellate Court...Chief Justice and 2 Associate Appellate Justices&#13;
Senate ...3 At-Large Seats and 3 Divisional Seats&#13;
Senate Ways and Means Commitlee any 'interested student&#13;
Senate Student Services Conunittee any interested student&#13;
Execut1ve Implementation Conunitlee ...any interested student&#13;
Executive Legal Service Committee ...any interested student&#13;
Academic Actions (University) Committee ...2 positions&#13;
Curriculum and Program (University) Conunittee ...2 full-time&#13;
students&#13;
Academic Plarining and Program Review ..;(UIiiversity) Committee&#13;
...2 students .&#13;
Teaching Awards (UIiiversity) Conunittee ...l student&#13;
Bookstore (University) Committee ...2 students&#13;
Anyone who is interested in participating in Student Gov~rnment,&#13;
please contact the P.S.G.A., Inc. office, either by stopping down at&#13;
WLLC0193 or calling 553-2244.There is a place for anyone, and a need&#13;
for everyone.&#13;
~-.-:_----~&#13;
.: Cla~sifieds :'&#13;
I ..,&#13;
t&#13;
HOUSe fl'arents·Coul'tselor Couple . $10,000 I&#13;
annual salarv. paid family health rns.. tree&#13;
rOOm e, board. 2 wks. paid vecencn. 6:3(1&#13;
'&#13;
P.m. -11 p.m. free time. Requlrements:.One I&#13;
Parentmust hllvt! at least Bachelor's d~ree.&#13;
, ~o Childre'l.. Contact: Racine RUnaWay"&#13;
nc.. 1331 Center st.. Racine. WI~ .. 632·0A2A t 8.~daily. , •&#13;
WANTED: Sports writer for RANGER that t&#13;
'&#13;
I'talented. gOOd ingram mar, and most of all'&#13;
dePendllble. 5ee Jean Tenuta in the&#13;
, RANGER offIce, WLLC G194. ,&#13;
~A.N. E .. THOMPSON Free Lance&#13;
, ~tDgraphy. weddings and candid por.'&#13;
trait!!. Phone 652.8862.&#13;
'In .. P~NTI~C SPRING 3·speed Metallic t&#13;
'&#13;
Blue, red buckets. Rally wheels, AM·FM, ,&#13;
FM stereo. 8·Track $2195. 634·0876.&#13;
, WILL DO any kind of typing at reasonable t&#13;
,&#13;
rllll!'S. For information. call 652·3373.&#13;
NEEDED FEMALE COMPANION to Share'&#13;
, el(penses to Denver, Colo. on November 2.,&#13;
Call 632·027 for mor~ information evenings.&#13;
'&#13;
FOR SALE: Portable Stereo wl1h G~rrard I&#13;
turntable. Asking .$50. Call 634-5305 after&#13;
, Runoff eleelion,· between Richard ,&#13;
I&#13;
Folaom' Carol Bohn' and Jpan&#13;
FueUerer Fri. 0e1.29 9:30AM-5:30PM t&#13;
-------- . .&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27. 1976 5&#13;
Musical madness Sunday&#13;
.. "Midnight Musical Madness,"&#13;
a Halloween program promising&#13;
"famous last performances of&#13;
unknown masterpieces in the&#13;
music literature," will be&#13;
presented ~y a group of&#13;
University of Wisconsin·Parkside&#13;
. music faculty members at 8 p.m.&#13;
on Sunday, Oct. 31 in the&#13;
Parkside Union Theater.&#13;
The participants explain the&#13;
discrepancy between the&#13;
program title and the time of the&#13;
performance by saying that it is&#13;
scheduled for the conveIiience of&#13;
those who turn into pumpkins at&#13;
midnight. The event is free ·and&#13;
open to the public and costumes&#13;
and-or disguises are encouraged.&#13;
Music faculty members involved&#13;
in the endeavor are Carol&#13;
Bell, pianist, Tim Bell,&#13;
saxophone and clarinet, Rodger&#13;
Daniels, percussion, Carol Irwin,&#13;
soprano, David Schripsema,&#13;
violin, Eden Vaning, violin, and&#13;
August Wegner, piano.&#13;
Model&#13;
U.N.&#13;
planned&#13;
The political science discipline&#13;
will be sponsoring,a delegation of&#13;
students to go to tbe Third Annual&#13;
Regional Model United Nations&#13;
on April 14-15, 1977 at Carleton&#13;
College in Northfield, Minnesota.&#13;
. The model United Nations are&#13;
designed to impart to the particular&#13;
participant. both a greater&#13;
knowledge of the functioning of&#13;
the UIiited Nations and an expanded&#13;
perspective of International&#13;
issues.&#13;
A delegation's first duty is to&#13;
determine which nation it will&#13;
represent and then study that&#13;
nation's foreign policy as well as&#13;
rationale for that policy. At the&#13;
conference i!'self, members of&#13;
the delegation will present and&#13;
defend their nation's position&#13;
before committees convened to&#13;
discuss issues and proposals and&#13;
then take resolutions decided by&#13;
the conunittees to the floor of the&#13;
Model General Assembly.&#13;
Interested students may&#13;
contact Dr. Samuel Pernacciaro&#13;
Greenquist 313 or CL 367.&#13;
Tickets at Info Center&#13;
.. They promise such esoteric&#13;
pr?gram fare as clarinet polkas,&#13;
Flight of the Bumblebee for&#13;
accompanied marimba. The&#13;
Pineapple Rag of Scott. Joplin,&#13;
and other musical ghoulishness.&#13;
'arkside Actiyitie. Board Film Series&#13;
pre.ent •&#13;
TWO HITCHCOCKCLASSICS&#13;
THE " PS)S~P .&#13;
~IR~ ,8j~~&#13;
Wednesday Thursday&#13;
Oct. 27 Oct. 28&#13;
2:30 &amp; 7:30 p.m. 2:30 &amp; 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre Union Cinema Theatre&#13;
$1.~ $1.~&#13;
Resignations and General Distress&#13;
It was with deep regret that the resignations of Vice-President&#13;
Robe:t Vlach and Senator David Harris were accepted at the Oct. 14,&#13;
meetmg of the P.S.G.A. Senate, Student Government cannot afford to&#13;
'lose two such hard working individuals.&#13;
The resignation of Acting Secretary Linda Knudtson and ~ator&#13;
Rohert Tremonte were also accepted.&#13;
It is partieularily difficult at a commuter campus such as Parkside&#13;
to getstudents to pa.rticipate in Student Government or any student&#13;
'. organ~ti~n. The. benefits are almost exclusively related to having&#13;
pride m doing a thankless job well. Regardless of criticism, which is&#13;
frequent, student government members are demonstrating initiative&#13;
resoursefW:ness. and perserverance, and will con-tinue to do so even&#13;
though their numbers diminish periodically. -'&#13;
Consider joining Student Go~ernment only if you are prepared to&#13;
work hard, spend time you ~a.n.III afford, and receive satisfaction from&#13;
the knowldege that responsibility IS a learned quality, just 8S calculus&#13;
and computer language are learned abilities. Consider joining Student&#13;
Government because it is important to Parksice and strangely enough&#13;
to you. •&#13;
No one will fault y?u: ~or huilding a resume for future job-hunting.&#13;
Ext:~-&lt;;:urrlc~ar activities are Important factors in· an employer's&#13;
decision to hire one prospective employee over another. Those activiti~s&#13;
coupled with ~ respectable grade point average imply that&#13;
here IS someone who WIllpush a little harder, who will take that extra&#13;
step, and perhaps accomplish a little more, Respectable grade point&#13;
averages are a dirne-a dozen; respdnsibility and initiative are far less&#13;
connnaon. •&#13;
No one can afford the time, but some manage to find a few extra&#13;
hours a week to work at something important.&#13;
Consider joining Student Government, not for the compliments and&#13;
prestige you'll gain; because there are damned few compliments and&#13;
less prestige. Consider joining Student Government because it's&#13;
important, and it needs you.&#13;
Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin's&#13;
album station&#13;
Album rock from&#13;
6 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
every night on . . . .&#13;
•&#13;
liP&#13;
.The quiet llader in synthetic lubricatilll&#13;
·"':r~~&#13;
~rMike Villers&#13;
Questions· Yau&#13;
Ask .Yourself:&#13;
1 Would You Like To Increase Gas&#13;
Mileage By 10% To 25% * And&#13;
Save $10.00 Every 1000 Miles?&#13;
[ IYES [ J NO&#13;
• overall average % increase&#13;
2 Would you Rather Change 011&#13;
Every 25,000 Miles/Once A Year&#13;
And Increase Engine Life?&#13;
[ IYES [ ) NO&#13;
3 Would you like To Eliminate&#13;
Towing And Service Expense&#13;
This Winter When Your Car&#13;
Won't Start Due To cold, Sluggish&#13;
Oil? . [I YES [ ) NO&#13;
If your answer Is YES to any of the&#13;
above questions, you should be&#13;
using SYNTHETIC AMS/OIL!&#13;
If,,., " ,.""&#13;
637·2726&#13;
Should'&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27, 1976 5&#13;
Contact M1lsical madness Sunday&#13;
weekly by.student government&#13;
by Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
Resignations and General Distress&#13;
It was with deep regret that the resignations of Vice-President&#13;
Robert Vlach and Senator David Harris were accepted at the Oct 14&#13;
meeting of the P.S.G.A. Senate, Student Government cannot afford t~&#13;
'lose two such hard working individuals.&#13;
The resignation of Acting Secretary Llnda Knudtson and Se;ator&#13;
Robert Tremonte were also accepted.&#13;
It is particularily difficult at a commuter campus such as Parkside&#13;
to get_ stu?ents to pa:tic~pate in Student Government or any student&#13;
. or?an~ti~n. The. benefits are ahnost exclusively related to having&#13;
pride m doing a thankless job well. Regardless of criticism, which is&#13;
frequent, student government members are dem&lt;?nstrating initiative,&#13;
resoursef'":"ess, and perserverance, and will continue to do so even&#13;
though their numbers diminish periodically. -'&#13;
Consider joining. Student Go~ernment only if you are prepared to&#13;
work hard, spend time you can 111 afford, and receive satisfaction f&#13;
the knowldege that responsibility is a learned quality, just as calcul~~m&#13;
and computer language are learned abilities. Consider joining Student&#13;
Government because it is important to Parksice and strangely enough&#13;
to you. '&#13;
No one~ fault Y?~ !or building a resume for future job-hunting.&#13;
Ext:~-curr1c~ar acnv1t1es are important factors in - an employer's&#13;
dec1S1on to hire one prospective employee over another. Those activiti~s&#13;
coupled with ~ respectable grade point average imply that&#13;
here lS someone who will push a little harder, who will take tbat extra&#13;
step, and perhaps accomplish a little more. Respectable grade point&#13;
averages are a dime-a dozen; responsibility and initiative are far less&#13;
common.&#13;
No one can afford the time, but some manage to find a few extra&#13;
hours a week to work at something important.&#13;
Consider joining Student Government, not for the compliments and&#13;
prestige you'll gain; because there are damned few compliments and&#13;
less prestige. Consider joining Student Government because it's&#13;
important, and it needs you.&#13;
Student Appointments&#13;
Congratulations are extended to the following students on their&#13;
appointments:&#13;
Tad Ballantyne ... Budget Priorities Committee&#13;
Pat Hechel...Budget Priorities Committee&#13;
Art Pollock ... Vice-Chancellor's Search and Screen Committee&#13;
Openings for Interested Students&#13;
Student Court ... 3 positions as Associate Justices&#13;
Appellate Court...Chief Justice and 2 Associate Appellate Justices&#13;
Senate ... 3 At-Large Seats and 3 Divisional Seats&#13;
Senate Ways and Means Conunittee ... any interested student&#13;
Senate Student Services Committee ... any interested student&#13;
Execut1ve Implementation Committee ... any interested student&#13;
Executive Legal Service Committee ... any interested student&#13;
Academic Actions (University) Committee ... 2 positions&#13;
Curriculum and Progtam (University) Committee ... 2 full-time&#13;
students ·&#13;
Academic Planning and Program Review .. ;(University) Committee&#13;
... 2 students ·&#13;
Teaching Awards (University) Committee .. .! student&#13;
Bookstore (University) Committee ... 2 students&#13;
Anyone who is interested in participating in Student Government,&#13;
please contact Ute P.S.G.A., Inc. office, either by stopping down at&#13;
WLLC Dl93 or calling 553-2244. There is a place for anyone, and a need&#13;
for everyone.&#13;
' "Midnight Musical Madness,"&#13;
a Halloween program promising&#13;
''famous last performances of&#13;
unknown masterpieces in the&#13;
music literature," will be&#13;
presented t&gt;Y a group of&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
music faculty members at 8 p.m.&#13;
on Sunday, Oct. 31 in the&#13;
Parkside Union Theater.&#13;
_ The participants explain the&#13;
discrepancy between the&#13;
program title and the time of the&#13;
performance by saying that it is&#13;
scheduled for the convenience of&#13;
those who turn into pumpkiru; at&#13;
midnight. The event is free and&#13;
open to the public and costumes&#13;
and-or disguises are encouraged.&#13;
Music faculty members involved&#13;
in the endeavor are Carol&#13;
Bell, pianist, Tim Bell,&#13;
saxophone and clarinet, Rodger&#13;
Daniels, percussion, Carol Irwin,&#13;
soprano, David Schripsema,&#13;
violin, Eden Vaning, violin, and&#13;
August Wegner, piano.&#13;
Model&#13;
U.N.&#13;
planned&#13;
The political science discipline&#13;
will be sponsoring a delegation of&#13;
students to go to the Third Annual&#13;
Regional Model United Nations&#13;
on April 14-15, 1977 at Carleton&#13;
College in Northfield, Minnesota.&#13;
The model United Nations are&#13;
designed to impart to the particular&#13;
participant both a greater&#13;
knowledge of the functioning of&#13;
the United Nations and an expanded&#13;
perspective of international&#13;
issues.&#13;
A delegation's first duty is to&#13;
determine which nation it will&#13;
represent ~d then study that&#13;
nation's foreign policy as well as&#13;
rationale for that policy. At the&#13;
conference it-self, members of&#13;
the delegation will present and&#13;
defend their nation's position&#13;
before committees convened to&#13;
discuss issues and proposals and&#13;
then take resolutions decided by&#13;
the committees to the floor of the&#13;
Model General Assembly.&#13;
Interested students may&#13;
contact Dr. Samuel Pernacdaro&#13;
Greenquist 313 or CL 367.&#13;
PA&amp; PREol:NTS ~~~ wmR forfii.6.W'NshON Ml\K.E AMr -&#13;
: Cla~sifieds l&#13;
t . . t - t House Parents-Counselor Couple . $10,000 t annual salary, paid family health ins., free&#13;
room &amp; board. 2 wks. paid vacation, 6:30&#13;
l P-m. · 11 p.m. free time. Requirements c One t ' Parent must hall\! at least Bachelor's degree. t 'lo Childreri. Contact : Rac ine Runaway, t 'nc., 1331 Center St., Racine, Wis .. 632-0424 f 8-5 daily. •&#13;
WANTED: Sports writer for RANGER that t t "talented, good in grammar, and most of all t&#13;
dependable. S-ee Jean Tenuta in the t RANGER office, WLLC 0194. t ~AN. E . . THOMPSON Free Lance t holography, weddings and candid por- t traits. Phone 652-8862.&#13;
t 1974 P~NTl1'C SPRING 3-speed Metallic t&#13;
'&#13;
Blue, red buckets, Rally wheels, AM-FM , t FM stereo, 8-Track S2195. 634-0876.&#13;
t WILL DO any kind of typing al reasonable t t rates. For Information. call 652-3373.&#13;
NEEDED FEMALE COMPANION to share'&#13;
l expenses to Denver, Colo. on November 2. ' f Call 632-4727 for morl information eve~lngs.&#13;
,.. t FOR SALE : Portable Stereo w ith Garrard t turntable. Asking $50. Call 634-5305 after&#13;
t Runoff elections" between Richard t&#13;
l Foloom' Carol Bohn' and Jpan&#13;
TOM CHAPIN&#13;
,&#13;
-Fuetterer ~ ____ Fri. Oci.29 9:30AM~&#13;
-5:30PM&#13;
_&#13;
l '-----------T-ick .. et .. s,.o_,t -'".;.fo~Ce_,n.;.ter ________ _,J&#13;
They promise such esoteric&#13;
pr?gram fare as clarinet polkas,&#13;
F1ight of the Bumblebee for&#13;
accompanied marimba, The&#13;
Pineapple Rag of Scott Joplin,&#13;
and other musical ghoulishness.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board Film Series&#13;
presents&#13;
TWO HITCHCOCK CLASSICS&#13;
THE~ ,llf/8/III/IIJ ... PS-~O .&#13;
~IR!J!~ .aJ;r~()b&#13;
Wednesday Thursday&#13;
Oct. 27 Oct. 28&#13;
2:30 &amp; 7:30 p.m. 2:30 &amp; 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre Union Cinema Theatre&#13;
• I&#13;
$1.00 $1.00&#13;
Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin's&#13;
album station&#13;
Album rock from&#13;
6 ·p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
every night on • • • •&#13;
• IIP&#13;
637-2726&#13;
Should&#13;
1 Would You Like To Increase Gas&#13;
Mileage By 10% To 25%* And&#13;
Save S10.00 Every 1000 Miles?&#13;
[ ] YES [ ] NO • overall average % increase&#13;
2 Would you Rather Change OH&#13;
Every 25,000 Miles/Once A Year&#13;
And lncrea~e Engine life?&#13;
[ ) YES [ ) NO&#13;
3 Would you like To Eliminate&#13;
Towing And Service Expense&#13;
This Winter When Your Car&#13;
Won't Start Due To cold, Sluggish&#13;
Oil? · [ ] YES [ ] NO&#13;
If your answer is YES to any of the&#13;
above questions, you should be&#13;
using SYNTHETIC AMS/OIL !&#13;
If', ,,,,,, lo ,,,,,,,, &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27, 1976&#13;
,EarthScience:&#13;
varied,Interests .&#13;
by Debbie Sbarpe'" camping gear and equipment has heen obtained by&#13;
the club,leaving smaller expenses for the sludentto&#13;
The process of' learning may appear rigidly assume. Last year's trip brought students to&#13;
structured and rather impersonal at limes, but that Arkansas and Missouri, and this year they plan a&#13;
is only one dimension. The field of earth science trip to Florida, commencing over the Christmas&#13;
involves several varied learning experiences. .break.&#13;
Earth science 'involves a substantial radious of Speakers from different areas of the country talk&#13;
interests. Geological and environmental sludies frequently withgrciups of earth science students.&#13;
intertwine with the fields of geology, meteorology Also, a yearly "Field Conference," consisting of&#13;
air and water pollution, weather observation, approximately 100 to 200 students from Parkside&#13;
mineralogy, planetary, geology and several more. and surrounding campuse .. gather (this year at&#13;
First-band learning experiences are gained by a Oshkosh) to discuss mutual areas of interest conseries&#13;
of field trips comprising of one major trip cerning the sludy of earth science: ,&#13;
.conducted annually, and sequeled with several The prospect of employment is also validly&#13;
shorter trips throughout the semester. Preparation considered. Many students seek and profitably find&#13;
for these trips naturally requires a background interesting and meaningful employment opknowledge&#13;
supplied from a text, but the field of portunities within the field of earth science,&#13;
earth science depends heavily upon self-observation Professor Shea explains, "I' think many sludents&#13;
and personal involvement just as well as the text. simply don't realize the opportunities that can grow&#13;
The "Earth Science Club," as well as earth out of education. In fact, there are many inscience&#13;
sludents or other interested participants teresting opportunities within the earth science&#13;
finance their trips from activities such as raffles in program. »,&#13;
approaching the administration for grants. Basic&#13;
, .&#13;
Guskin--------&#13;
continued from pg. 1&#13;
feeling can he reduced.&#13;
• Regarding to future meetings&#13;
of this type, he said that he would&#13;
like to have them on a regular&#13;
basis, possibly every other week.&#13;
As long as sludents are interested&#13;
and attend, "nobody and no topic&#13;
is forbidden," said Guskin.&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden inquired. about&#13;
policies regarding the tape&#13;
recording of classes by sludents&#13;
She said that at other campuses&#13;
this is an issue of great importance.&#13;
Guskin said that it is up&#13;
to the faculty memher in charge&#13;
of that particular class to decide&#13;
what goes on in their class.&#13;
The Chancellor and sludents&#13;
PARAPHERNALIAsOUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
Stop in!&#13;
shed a new Ufe on shopping!&#13;
~~~MA~-S=-' -,&#13;
! I I . Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
..&#13;
UW-"P.kside Activities Board and WRKR&#13;
present&#13;
HARRY CHAPIN&#13;
in Concert&#13;
Thursday; "ovember 11&#13;
8 p.m.&#13;
Parkside Fieldhouse&#13;
Admission - $3.00 Parkside, Students advance&#13;
$4.00 General Advance&#13;
$5.00 At door&#13;
Tickets Available at Info Center __&#13;
concluded the meeting in a group&#13;
decision after 2% hours. The&#13;
Chancellor mentioned he was late&#13;
for another meeting in progress&#13;
next door. Generally pleased with&#13;
the student turnout Guskin said&#13;
he was looking forward to the&#13;
next Chancellor-sludent meeting.&#13;
Committees&#13;
continued from es. 1&#13;
merged last year.&#13;
The other' committee created&#13;
by the Senate was the Committee&#13;
on Research and Creative Activity&#13;
(CORACO), which replaces&#13;
the old Faculty Fund Board. The&#13;
new committee will dole out&#13;
institutional funds to faculty&#13;
members for research they are&#13;
carrying out, and will also be&#13;
charged with raising some funds&#13;
on its own. The chairman will be&#13;
appointed by the Chancellor, and&#13;
according to Faculty Senate&#13;
chairman Michel Marron, will&#13;
serve in a capacity "like that of&#13;
an assistant to the .p,ancellor."&#13;
The chairman will be&#13;
responsible for handling information&#13;
about funding opportunities&#13;
and for assisting&#13;
faculty in obtaining outside&#13;
financial support for research&#13;
and creative activity.&#13;
Semester Break&#13;
January &amp;-13, -1977&#13;
$339 COMPLETE&#13;
Triple occupancy&#13;
LIMITED SPACE -&#13;
- MAKE YOUR&#13;
RESERVATIONS, NOWI&#13;
• For application forms 011&#13;
additional information contact:&#13;
Pe-kside Union Office'&#13;
553-2200&#13;
Editor's note: "Who Are Vou?" will be a regular column In whleh&#13;
students selected at random will be interviewed to find onl lbelr in-&#13;
,teresls, background; ele. These are tbe people we pass by in the haDs&#13;
every day, sit next to In class, ride with on the shuttle hus, bul&#13;
sometimes never have lhe opportunity to meet.&#13;
.&#13;
by Wendy Miller&#13;
Mary Jo Curty was randomly selected for this week's interview&#13;
from the Parkside student population'. When first approached, she was&#13;
reading, but not engrossed in a book entitled Deviant Behavior for her&#13;
social disorganization class. Sbe willingly put it aside to teD Ranger a&#13;
few things about herself.&#13;
She is an 18 year old freshman here and a Racine St. Catherioes&#13;
graduate. When asked how Parkside compared to her high school, she&#13;
responded. "There is so much more to do and so much more to take&#13;
here; and there are no OWlS running around."&#13;
According to Mary Jo, "Parkside is sort of a self-sufficient place."&#13;
She recalled days at St. Cat's, leaving the school illegally 10 go to the&#13;
nearby bakery or a park. "All that is right here. Parkside is so pretty&#13;
in the fall... it's a school with a view," she said;&#13;
"I'm a person who is thrilled with the idea that someone can come&#13;
here and sleep in the halls. I just woke up from a nap; it w"as great."&#13;
Marv Jo was sitting in the second floor of the union. "I'like the trees&#13;
around here," she said' referring to the trees inside the bUilding.&#13;
Mary Jo is on the Parkside Activity Board's film committee.&#13;
Vesterday she and two other committee memhers dressed up like the&#13;
Marx Brothers lo advertise the movie, Animal Crackers. She still has&#13;
bruises from the escapade. They took bundles of animal crackers and&#13;
"ran around throwing them at people all over the school.&#13;
We even went up to see Guskie, but he wasn't in. Someone must have&#13;
warned. him."&#13;
For' the past week the fibn committee has been making origami&#13;
(folded paper) 'birds to advertise their next presentation, Alfred&#13;
Hilehcock's The Birds. The films are shown in the Union Cinema&#13;
Theatre. "For a dollar it's good. We have to pull publicity stunts&#13;
because not everyone knows about the theatre yet," she said.&#13;
Mary Jo had planned on majoring in communications 'but she was&#13;
told at registration that she would not be able to do that at Parkside, "I&#13;
really wanted to major in it. I heard they dropped some teachers and&#13;
everything." She hopes that she will someday be able to major in&#13;
communications at Parkside. "I'm really upset about it. All the :way&#13;
through my senior year at St. Catherines 1 planned on coming here to&#13;
major in Communications."&#13;
She'also enjoys sewing and does it for extra money. She made the&#13;
coat that she was wearing during the interview, "I'm just starting to&#13;
get together my own business. My sisters are my advertisers because&#13;
they wear ..my things."&#13;
Mary Jo said, "I'm disorganized in everything but sewing. That's&#13;
why nook Social Disorganization; it sounded like my kind of course.&#13;
What 1like aJ&gt;outthis school is that it's not totally organized."&#13;
Editor's note: According to Chancellor Alan Guskln, Parkslde still&#13;
halil.a comm1tnif'atiH~ major, which will also be retained in the future.&#13;
J&#13;
•&#13;
,. ""&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the' Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Wathillgtoll lINe. 6M-2t7J&#13;
•&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27, 1976&#13;
. Earth Science:&#13;
varied , interests · _ ~ . ~ . by Debbie Sharpe&#13;
The process of · learning may appear rigidly&#13;
structured and rather impersonal at times, but tha!&#13;
is only one dimension. The field of earth science&#13;
involves several varied learning experiences.&#13;
Earth science ·involves a substa!ltial radious of&#13;
interests. Geological and environmental studies&#13;
intertwine with the fields of geology, meteorologY,&#13;
air and water pollution, weather observation,&#13;
mineralogy, planetary, geology and several more.&#13;
First-hand learning experiences are gained by a&#13;
series of field trips comprising of one major trip&#13;
· conducted annually, and sequeled with several&#13;
shorter trips throughout the semester. Preparation&#13;
for these trips naturally requires a background&#13;
knowledge supplied from a text, but the field of&#13;
earth science depends heavily upon self-observation&#13;
and personal involvement just as well as the text.&#13;
The "Earth Science Club," as well as earth&#13;
science students or other interested participants&#13;
finance their trips from activities such as raffles in&#13;
approaching the admir.istration for grants. Basic&#13;
camping gear and eqmpment has been obtamed by&#13;
the club, leaving smaller expenses for the student to&#13;
assume. Last year's trip brought stu~ents to&#13;
Arkansas and Missouri, and this year they plan a&#13;
trip to Florida, commencing over the Christmas&#13;
·break.&#13;
Speakers from different areas of thE: country talk&#13;
frequently with ·groups of earth science students.&#13;
Also, a yearly "Field Conference," consisting of&#13;
approximately 100 to 200 students from Parkside&#13;
and surrounding campuses- gather (this year at&#13;
Oshkosh) to discuss mutual areas of interest concerning&#13;
the study of earth science:&#13;
The prospect of employment is also validly&#13;
considered. Many students seek and profitably find&#13;
interesting and meaningful emplqyment opportunities&#13;
within the field of earth science,&#13;
Professor Shea explains, "I" think many students&#13;
simply don't realize the opportunities that can gtow&#13;
out of education. In fact, there are many interesting&#13;
opportunities within the earth science&#13;
program. "·&#13;
Gu skin----.------&#13;
continued from pg. 1&#13;
feeling can be reduced.&#13;
· Regarding to future meetings&#13;
of this type, he said that he would&#13;
like to have them on a regular&#13;
basis, possibly every other week.&#13;
As long as students are interested&#13;
and attend, "nobody and no topic&#13;
is forbidden," said Guskin.&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden inquired. about&#13;
policies regarding the tape&#13;
recording of classes by students&#13;
She said that at other campuses&#13;
this is an issue of great importance.&#13;
Guskin said that it is up&#13;
to the faculty member in charge&#13;
of that particular class to decide&#13;
what goes on in their class.&#13;
The Chancellor and students&#13;
PARAPHERNALfA -SCJUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
Stop in!&#13;
shed a new Life on shopping!&#13;
~ ~~Mi~-f , '&#13;
1 · Pure Brewed&#13;
From .God's Cou~ry.&#13;
On tap at Union Squijre&#13;
G&#13;
UW.:Parkside Activities Board and WRKR&#13;
present I&#13;
I&#13;
HARRY CHAPIN&#13;
in Concert&#13;
Thursday, ~~vember 11&#13;
8 p.m. _&#13;
Parkside Fieldhouse&#13;
Admission - $3.00 Parkside _ Students advance&#13;
$4.00 General Advance&#13;
$5.00 At door&#13;
Tickets Available at Info Center _.r&#13;
concluded the meeting in a group&#13;
decision after 2½ hours. The&#13;
Chancellor mentioned he was late&#13;
for another meeting in progress&#13;
next door. Generally pleas~d with&#13;
the student turnout Guskin said&#13;
he was looking forward to the&#13;
next Chancellor-student meeting.&#13;
-Committees&#13;
cpntlnued from pg. 1&#13;
merged last year.&#13;
The other· committee created •&#13;
by the Senate was the Committee&#13;
on Research and Creative Activity&#13;
(CORACO), which replaces&#13;
the old Faculty Fund Board. The&#13;
new committee will dole out&#13;
institutional funds to faculty&#13;
members for research they are&#13;
carrying out, and will also be&#13;
charged with raising some funds&#13;
on its own. The chairman will be&#13;
appointed by the Chancellor, and _&#13;
according to Faculty Senate&#13;
chairman Michel Marron, will&#13;
serve in a capacity "like that of&#13;
an assistant to the Chancellor."&#13;
The chairman will be&#13;
responsible for handling information&#13;
about funding opportunities&#13;
and for assisting&#13;
faculty in obtaining outside&#13;
financial support for research&#13;
and creative activity.&#13;
. ~, Universlty_o!, W'.5"onsin-Parkside&#13;
~ -&#13;
Fl~ta&#13;
Acapulco ·&#13;
Semester Break&#13;
January 6-13,-_ 1977&#13;
$339 COMPLETE&#13;
Triple occupancy&#13;
LIMITED SPACE - -· MAKE YOUR&#13;
RESERVATIONS, NOW! • For application forms or&#13;
additional information contact:&#13;
Parkside tlnion Office&#13;
553-2200&#13;
photo by Wendy Miller··&#13;
Editor's note: "Who Are You?" will be a regular column in which&#13;
students selected at, random will be interviewed to find out their interests,&#13;
background, etc. These are the people we pass by in the halls&#13;
every day, sit next to in class, ride with on the shuttle bus, but&#13;
sometimes never have the opportunity to meet. . by Wendy Miller&#13;
Mary Jo Curty was randomly selected for this week's interview&#13;
from the Parkside student population·. When first approached, she was&#13;
reading, but not engrossed in a book entitled Deviant Behavior for her&#13;
social disorganization class. She willingly put it aside to tell Ranger a&#13;
few things about herself.&#13;
She is an 18 year old freshman here and a Racine St. Catherines&#13;
graduate. When asked how Parkside compared to her high school, she&#13;
responded. "There is so much more to do and so much more to take&#13;
here; and there are no nuns running around."&#13;
According to Mary Jo, "Parkside is sort of a self-sufficient place."&#13;
She recalled days at St. Cat's, leaving the school illegally t-0 go to the&#13;
nearby bakery or a park. "All that is right here. P~rkside is so pretty&#13;
in the fall ... it's a school with a view," she said;&#13;
"I'm a person who is thrilled with the idea that someone can come&#13;
here and sleep in the halls. I just woke up from a nap; it w"as great."&#13;
Marv Jo was sitting in the second floor of the union. "I"like the trees&#13;
around here," she said ' referring to the trees inside the _ building.&#13;
Mary Jo is on the Parkside Activity Board's film committee.&#13;
Yesterday she and two other committee members dressed up like the&#13;
Marx Brothers to advertise the movie, Animal Crackers. She still has&#13;
bruises from the escapade. They took bundles of animal crackers and&#13;
"ran around throwing them at people all over the school.&#13;
We even went up to see Guskie, but he wasn't in. Someone must have&#13;
warned him.''&#13;
For the past week the film committee has been making origami&#13;
(folded paper) birds to advertise their next presentation, Alfred&#13;
Hitchcock's The Birds. The films are shown in the Union Cinema&#13;
Theatre. "For a dollar it's good. We have to pull publicity stunts&#13;
because not everyone knows about the theatre yet," she said .&#13;
. Mary Jo had planned on majoring in communications but she was&#13;
told at registration that she would not be able to do that at Parkside. "I&#13;
really wanted to major in it. I heard they dropped some teachers and&#13;
everything." She hopes that she will someday be able to major in&#13;
communications at Parkside. "I'm really upset about it. All the way&#13;
thro~gh my senior year at St. Catherines I planned on coming here to&#13;
major in Communications."&#13;
She·also enjoys sewing and does it for extra money. She made the&#13;
coat that she was wearing during the interview, "I'm just starting to&#13;
get together my own business. My sisters are my advertise.rs because&#13;
they wear ,.my things."&#13;
Mary Jo said, "I'm disorganized in everything but sewing. That's&#13;
why r took Social Disorganization; it l'jOUnded like my kind of course.&#13;
What I like about this school is that it's not totally organized."&#13;
Editor's note: According to Chancellor Alan Guskin, Parkside still&#13;
ha-. a comm1tnication major, which will also be retained in the future.&#13;
.. LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P .M.&#13;
2615 Washington ltle. 634-23·73 &#13;
Vets:a unique group&#13;
by Debbie Bauer . . .&#13;
. , IS also in the planning stage, as is a fund raising pool&#13;
tournament open to all students .&#13;
Schultz and Tom Olson, vice president of the cl~,&#13;
are actively campaigning for veteran's rights.&#13;
Olson IS president of Wisconsin Association of&#13;
Concerned Veteran's Organizations (WACVO) and&#13;
Schultz is secretary. WACVO beld their annual&#13;
conv~tion in Kenosha last spring, hosted by the&#13;
Parkside Vets Club. Schultz is also State Cordinator&#13;
for the National Association of Concerned Veterans&#13;
(NACV).&#13;
Schultz estimates that there are 508 veterans at&#13;
Parkside. Fourty-three are paid members Of the&#13;
.club. "Five percent membership is considered&#13;
g0oc:I,and we are well over that," he explained. "We&#13;
are in a lot better position than we have ever been."&#13;
He hopes to have 100paid members by the end of the&#13;
school year.&#13;
Vet's Club meets every other Sunday in WLLC&#13;
0174, across from the Information Kiosk.&#13;
. Veterans are that unique group of people who&#13;
have endu:ed an experience they often consider&#13;
unbearable. They wait impatiently for it to end&#13;
then when it's finally over, they want to get together&#13;
and talk about the good and riot so good old days&#13;
The Vets are a diverse ,group from varied&#13;
backgrounds, often with little ihCOmmonother than&#13;
their military service. But they usually agree on one&#13;
point: be",~ a Ve~beats being in the military.&#13;
Parkside s Vet s Club is one of the most active&#13;
orgamzanons on campus. According to Ron Schultz&#13;
president, 60 percent of the activities are-of a sociai&#13;
nature and 40 percent are service oriente.d. Last&#13;
spring, they cleaned up Pike's Creek and sponsored&#13;
a walk-run to raise funds for the Special Olympics.&#13;
Beer drinking, informal parties, and foothall&#13;
games form the bulk of the club's social activities.&#13;
They will hold a dance on November 20 in Union&#13;
Square. A pool tournament for Vet's Club members&#13;
Ron Shultz Pholo by Allen Bauer&#13;
by Linda Knudtson and Karin LaFournler&#13;
Dear Complaint DePartment,&#13;
I have a complaint about the math discipline at Parkside. I feel that&#13;
this semester I have been stuck with a professor who I feel is ineompetant&#13;
for a class that I need. There are other math professors&#13;
here who have the background to teach the class, so who decides which&#13;
classes are taught by which professors and how can students have a&#13;
say in this process?&#13;
No Choice (Note: this letter has been edited for content.)&#13;
u&#13;
-0&#13;
m&#13;
p&#13;
I&#13;
a&#13;
•&#13;
1&#13;
n&#13;
t&#13;
ANSWER: We 'Went to discuss this problem with Science Division&#13;
Chairperson, Frank Lowenthal, and with discipline coordinator&#13;
Timothy Fosswn, who is coordinating the teaching schedule for the&#13;
spring semester. According to these men, the math professors put in&#13;
requests for the classes they would like to teach. Using this information,&#13;
all classes are then assigned by the coordinating professor&#13;
(currently Mr. Fossum) as he sees fit.&#13;
The math discipline tries to be as flexible as possible with the&#13;
schedules. U a student feels that he-she has an incompelant professor&#13;
(in any department, not just math),ile-she may file either a formal or&#13;
an informal complaint. An informal complaint is a written statement&#13;
to the divisional chairperson. After talking with the student submitting&#13;
the complaint, the.chairperson tries to straighten out any problems&#13;
with the professor involved. (at no time will the name of the student&#13;
filing the complaint be released to the professor who is the object of&#13;
the complaint.)&#13;
A formal complaint is filed with the Chancellor in writing. We&#13;
suggest that any student who has a valid complaint about one of bisher&#13;
professors file an informal complaint first. (However we feel that&#13;
for most problems, the student should go directly to the professor that&#13;
is involvee anll try to straighten out the problem( s) with him-her.)&#13;
P.S. to No Choice: We have additional information that might be of&#13;
interest to you. Please get in contact with us. - The Editors&#13;
• Note on Spanlsb&#13;
We have received word from Sylvie Debevec Henning, Coordinator&#13;
of the Modern Language Program, that -this fall she has received&#13;
numerous complaints from students that no Spanish conversation and&#13;
composition Course was offered. Ms. Henning would like all students to&#13;
know that this problem has been remedied. Next semester Spanish&#13;
315-Compositlon and Conversation will be taught by Professor Ortega Dept. on Tuesday a!,d Thursday from 3:30-4:45..&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27. 1976 7&#13;
Applications now&#13;
being accepted for&#13;
Ranger Editor for&#13;
Spring Semester&#13;
RESUMESMUST BE TUum IN TO&#13;
DON KOPRIVA,&#13;
288 Tallent Hall by ItoV. 11th&#13;
• Salaried posilion demonding 01 loosl 20-30 hours a WHIt&#13;
• Experience in jOt.mOlism necessary&#13;
• Applicants will be advised of interview time and place&#13;
Call Don Kopriva for further details 553.2404&#13;
FREE DELIVER Y&#13;
Member Parkstde 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd A venue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
Mention Ihis ad I&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25.00G-mlle 011change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-6O"F. pour point)&#13;
• Saves 011 Mike Villers&#13;
637-2726 your AlIAS/OIL dea/eT&#13;
We're not&#13;
just another&#13;
rocker .&#13;
Album rock from&#13;
6 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
every night on .. • • • •&#13;
WUPMl95&#13;
WUPMl95&#13;
WUPMl95 .&#13;
•&#13;
Ve~s: a unique group&#13;
by Debbie Bauer · is also in the planning stage, as is a fund raising pool&#13;
· Veterans are that unique group of people who&#13;
have endured an experience they often consider&#13;
unbearable. They wait impatiently for it t.o end&#13;
then when it's finally over, they want t.o get togethe;&#13;
and talk about the good and riot so good old days.&#13;
The Vets are a diverse _group from varied&#13;
backgrounds, often with little ih common other than&#13;
their military service. But they usually agree on one&#13;
point: being a Vet beats being in the military.&#13;
t.ournament open t.o all students.&#13;
Schultz and Tom Olson, vice president of the club&#13;
are ac~ively 7ampaigning for veteran's rights'.&#13;
Olson is president of Wisconsin Association of&#13;
Concerned Veteran's Organizations·(WACVO) and&#13;
Schultz is secretary. WACVO held their annual&#13;
conve?tion in Kenosha last spring, hosted by the&#13;
Parkside Vets Club. Schultz is also State Cordinator&#13;
for the National Association of Concerned Veterans&#13;
Parkside's Vet's Club is one of the most active&#13;
org~izations on campus. According to Ron Schultz&#13;
president, 60 percent of the activities are-of a sociai&#13;
nature and 40 percent are service oriented. Last&#13;
spring, they cleaned up Pike's Creek and sponsored&#13;
a walk-run t.o raise funds for the Spe"cial Olympics.&#13;
Beer drinking, informal parties, and football&#13;
games form the bulk of the club's social activities.&#13;
They will hold a dance on November 20 in Union&#13;
Square. A pool t.ournruw~nt for Vet's Club members&#13;
(NACV). .&#13;
Schultz estimates that there are 508 veterans at&#13;
Parkside. Fourty-three are paid members of the&#13;
· club. "Five percent membership is considered&#13;
go~, and we are well over that," he explained. "We&#13;
are m a lot better position than we have ever been."&#13;
He hopes t.o have 100 paid members by the end of the&#13;
school year.&#13;
u&#13;
-0&#13;
m&#13;
p&#13;
I&#13;
a&#13;
•&#13;
I&#13;
D&#13;
t&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Vet's Club meets every other Sunday in WLLC&#13;
D174, across from the lnf&lt;'rmation Kiosk.&#13;
Ron Shultz Photo by Allen Bauer&#13;
by Llnda Knudtson and Karin LaFournier&#13;
Dear Complaint Department,&#13;
I have a complaint about the math discipline at Parkside. I feel that&#13;
this semester I have been stuck with a professor who I feel is incompetant&#13;
for a class that I need. There are other math professors&#13;
here who have the background t.o teach the class, so who decides which&#13;
classes are taught by which prpfessors and how can students have a&#13;
say in this process?&#13;
No Choice (Note: this letter has been edited for content.)&#13;
ANSWER: We went t.o discuss this problem with Science Division&#13;
Chairperson, Frank Lowenthal, and with discipline coordinator&#13;
Timothy Fosswn, who is coordinating the teaching schedule for the&#13;
spring semester. According t.o these men, the math professors put in&#13;
requests for the classes they would like t.o teach. Using this information,&#13;
all classes are then assigned by the coordinating professor&#13;
(currently Mr. Fossum) as he sees fit.&#13;
The math discipline tries to be as flexible as possible with the&#13;
schedules. If a student feels that he-she has an incompetant professor&#13;
(in any department, not just math), ile-she may file either a formal or&#13;
an informal complaint. An informal complaint is a written statement&#13;
to the divisional chairperson. After talking with the student submitting&#13;
the complaint, the chairperson tries t.o straighten out any problems&#13;
with the professor involved. ( at no time will the name of the student&#13;
filing the complaint be released to the professor who is the object of&#13;
the complaint.)&#13;
A formal complaint is filed with the Chancellor in writing. We&#13;
suggest that any student who has a valid complaint about one of hisher&#13;
professors file an informal complaint first. (However we feel that&#13;
for most problems, the student should go directly t.o the professor that&#13;
is involvee and try t.o straighten out the problem( s) with him-her.)&#13;
P.S. t.o No Choice: We have additional information that might be of&#13;
interest t.o you. Please get in contact with us. -The Editors&#13;
• Note on Spanish&#13;
We have received word from Sylvie Debevec Itenning, Coordinator&#13;
of the Modern Language Program, that -this fall she has received&#13;
numerous complaints from students that no Spanish conversation and&#13;
composition course was offered. Ms. Henning would like all students to&#13;
know that this problem has been remedied. Next semester Spanish&#13;
315-Composition and Conversation will be taught by Professor Ortega&#13;
on Tuesday aJld Thursday from 3:30-4:45.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27, 1976 7&#13;
Applications now&#13;
being accepted tor&#13;
Ranger Editor for&#13;
Spring Semester&#13;
RESUMES MUST BE TURNED IN TO&#13;
DON KOPRIVA,&#13;
288 Tallent Hall by Nov. 11th&#13;
• Salaried position demanding at least 20-ll hours a week&#13;
• Experience in journalism necessary&#13;
• Applicants will be advised of interview time and place&#13;
Call Don Kopriva for further details 553-2404&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Oub&#13;
•&#13;
443 7 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
Mention this odl&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,000-mlle oll change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60°F. pour point)&#13;
• Saves 011 Mike Villers&#13;
your AMS/ OIL dealer&#13;
.637-2726&#13;
~ "II&#13;
We're not&#13;
just another&#13;
•&#13;
rocker ........&#13;
Album rock from&#13;
6 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
every night on . . • • • •&#13;
WUP_ffll95&#13;
WUPffll95&#13;
WUPffll95&#13;
Ii,. ~ &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RA"'GER October 27, 1976-) --~&#13;
(&#13;
I&#13;
\ Netiers close season&#13;
•&#13;
round, the No. I doubles pair of'&#13;
Mary Ann Carins .and Jennifer'&#13;
Zuehlke· dropped to a team from&#13;
Oshkosh 7-5, 6-1. In No.2, Kathy&#13;
Feitchner and Pat Munger lost to&#13;
UW-Milwaukee's .Kellough_&#13;
Pataini, 6-2, 6-3, in the quar.&#13;
terfinal consolations. _ .&#13;
In the first consolation match&#13;
an No.3 singles, Jeanine Hunter&#13;
lost to Peg Gruenge of UW·&#13;
Whitewater, 6-0, 6-1. Marge.&#13;
Balasz was defeated in the&#13;
second round of consolation to&#13;
Carthage's Jan Daly; 6-1~6-0.&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Swimmers .Iose two .meets The women's tennis team&#13;
concluded their season with a&#13;
ninth place finish in the WWIAC&#13;
Championships at UW-La Crosse&#13;
Saturday. .&#13;
The host won the meet easily&#13;
with·60 points and UW-El\u Claire&#13;
and UW.stevens Point tied tor&#13;
second with 28. The Rangers&#13;
scored one point.&#13;
The highest finishers for the&#13;
Rangers were the doubles teams.&#13;
After the quarterfinal consolation&#13;
swam in the 200medley relay, the&#13;
first time this event lias been&#13;
swum by the Rangers this&#13;
season.&#13;
UWe're in better spirits and&#13;
have tried our hardest," said&#13;
Coach Barb Lawson. "After a&#13;
couple of weeks of hard work,&#13;
we'll be stronger next week."&#13;
Friday, the team lost ta UWMilwaukee,&#13;
IlJO.11.&#13;
"Nothing went right for us,"&#13;
said Lawson. The highest finishes&#13;
were a second In the'IOO back bY&#13;
Latch and a third in the 100 tree&#13;
bY Gail Olsen.&#13;
by'Jean Tenuta 1:06.73, finishing second against&#13;
Carroll and third against&#13;
Oshkosh. She took a first against&#13;
Oshkosh' and second against&#13;
Carroll in the lOO'back and a first&#13;
against Carroll and third against&#13;
Oshkosh in the 50 b1lfterfly.&#13;
Judy Iverson scored a first&#13;
agalilst Carroll and third against&#13;
Oshkosh in the 50 free, seconds in&#13;
the }DO breast and third In the 50&#13;
back.&#13;
Sally Francis scored thirds in&#13;
the 50 free and the 500 free. Lili&#13;
CrnIch also bad thirds in both. the&#13;
200 free and 50 breast. Four also&#13;
Parkside's women's swimming&#13;
squad will participate in two&#13;
meets this week. This afternoon&#13;
they travel to UW-Whitewater for&#13;
a 6 p.m. meet and will meet .&#13;
Carthage, UW-River Falls and&#13;
UW-Eau Claire in Kenosha&#13;
Saturday, at 10 a.m.&#13;
The Rangers dropped both ends&#13;
of a double dual meet last Saturdar,&#13;
losing to Oshkosh, 112-&#13;
15 and to' Carroll, 85-24.&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch set an~ther&#13;
school record In th~ 100 free at.&#13;
Housing workshop&#13;
Church.&#13;
Topics to be discussed include.&#13;
housing purchases, programs' for&#13;
low income famflies and&#13;
'veteran's housing programs.&#13;
The Urban League Operation of&#13;
Kenosha is·sponsoring a housing&#13;
workshop entitled "Housing in&#13;
Kenosha" on October 28 from 7 to&#13;
9:30 p.m, at the Second Baptist Soccer team-play'S W~stern Michigan&#13;
'.. Free Plm Delivery&#13;
C:,I~bHighvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street /.&#13;
Phone: 65~-8737&#13;
All. ~.n••rl•• Chi•••• , S,••hlfli, R.... ,!, 8H'&#13;
. OPEN 4 , ••• to t .....&#13;
Hendl,rson thought that this was&#13;
a record for a Ranger in a season.&#13;
Parkside's soccer team hosts Mike Boyaji;m, who has also&#13;
Western Michigan Saturday at 2 -seored quite well for the Rangers&#13;
p.m, in the soccer bowl, in wbat this season, added two goals -and&#13;
. Coach Hal Henderson expects to two assists to his season total. .&#13;
be a "very even game." Desch Ismsili gained two goals&#13;
"Weslern Michigan has fpced - arid one assist, Andy Gutierrez&#13;
three of the same teams that' we and J:ack Landwelir each had a&#13;
have and have done about the goal, Mihran Ganghinjian scored&#13;
same as we bave against them. one goal and had two assists, and&#13;
We're hoping our having the Chris Carter and Mike Olesen&#13;
home field will be enough of an added one asslst each.&#13;
advantage to put us ahead," said . The squad's record is 6-5-1,&#13;
Henderson. which ties the highest number of&#13;
• The Rangers are hoping, wins for a Parkside team and this&#13;
though, that the Western&#13;
Michigan team will be similar to&#13;
the Eastern Michigan team they&#13;
routed 10-0 at yItSiJanti.&#13;
"We totally dominated the&#13;
game. We out shot them 37-3 and&#13;
it was 6-0 at the half. It was unfortunate&#13;
that we didn't have&#13;
enough substitutes to give others&#13;
a chance to get considerable .&#13;
playing experience. I was just&#13;
shuffling players around, putting&#13;
them in different positions and&#13;
. we were trying not to run up the&#13;
score."&#13;
Earl Campbell, the team's .&#13;
leading scorer increased his&#13;
margin above other Rangers with&#13;
three 'goals lind two assists,&#13;
bringing his season total to eight&#13;
goals and eight assists. Coach&#13;
is also the first time a Parkside&#13;
tesm has had a record over .500&#13;
during a season in over five&#13;
years.&#13;
The team stili expects to win&#13;
· approximately ten games, while&#13;
finishing over break-even mark.&#13;
Henderson is stili cautious and is&#13;
taking Iris season goals one step&#13;
at a time.&#13;
"We've been getting better. ~;::::::::::~==========:::::::::::::. each game," said Henderson.&#13;
"Our strong schedule in the early The quiet leader in synthetic iubrication&#13;
part of the season got us used to&#13;
pressure situations and we're&#13;
better able to handle them now."&#13;
~. Mike Villers&#13;
.Questions You&#13;
Ask Yourself:&#13;
~&#13;
1 Would You Like To Increase Gas&#13;
Mileage By 10% To 25%* And&#13;
Save $10.00 Every 1000 Miles?&#13;
[ IYES [ INO .&#13;
• overall average % increase&#13;
.2 Would you Rather Change Oil&#13;
. Every 25,000 Miles/Once A Year&#13;
And Increase Engine life?&#13;
[ IYES [ INO&#13;
....3·Would· you. like' To Eliminate&#13;
Towing And' Service Expense&#13;
This Winter When Your Car&#13;
Won't Start Due To cold, Sluggish&#13;
. Oil? [ IYES t INO .&#13;
If your answer is YES to any of the&#13;
abOve questions, you should be&#13;
using SYNTHETIC AMS/OIL !&#13;
If,- H"" ItJ ,U."&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Runners finish fifth 637-2726&#13;
Parkside's runners face Should&#13;
Carthage, Loras, and Marquette&#13;
in the first of their last four home&#13;
meets of the season. The meet&#13;
will begin at 12 noon.&#13;
. The Rangers finished fifth in&#13;
the 20 leam Carthage Invitational&#13;
last Saturday, as Ray&#13;
Fredericksen was' second out of&#13;
the 250 plus competitors in the&#13;
.meet.&#13;
Luther of Iowa won overall&#13;
with 76 points. The UW:&#13;
•Milwaukee Track Club was next&#13;
with 100, UW.stevens Point, 115;&#13;
. Carthage,.123; and Parkside had&#13;
141.&#13;
Jim Drews won the meet,&#13;
representing the UWM Track&#13;
Club, with a time of 24minutes, 51&#13;
seconds. Fredericksen was right ~&#13;
on his heels, finishing only three -&#13;
seconds later. The top seven&#13;
· runners came in within 15&#13;
seconds of each other.&#13;
Egyptian history scheduled'&#13;
A personal perspective of 5,000&#13;
years. of Egyptian history,&#13;
culture and arts, will be reviewed&#13;
in a course taught by Omar&#13;
Amin, associate prof~ of life&#13;
science, who lived in Egwt for 25&#13;
years. From the historical&#13;
review, he will lead into modern&#13;
'Egwt, with· its economic and&#13;
political burdens and contributions.&#13;
Amin recommends this short&#13;
non-credit. course for mid-east&#13;
students, prospective visitors, or&#13;
interested individuals. He will&#13;
use his slide collection to&#13;
illustrate the lectures.&#13;
The class, sponsored bY the&#13;
, .&#13;
University of Wisconsin.&#13;
E;idension, will meet .on four&#13;
Tuesdays, beginning November 2&#13;
at 7:30 p.m., at Parkslde in the&#13;
Classroom Building. Contact.&#13;
University Extension for&#13;
registration information, phone&#13;
553-2312. -&#13;
•&#13;
Performing Frido.y &amp; So.tvrdo.y , r&#13;
SUNDAY TRIAD&#13;
WANT&#13;
ALL YOU S~v..\- ' *'~&#13;
c.,"\~'\ ~~.&#13;
Cy\&#13;
\~C~\.': ~o\\.~o FEAST&#13;
,\ ". . INCLUDES. Solod. Ilollon . \\ 9'&#13;
Breod ond 0 FREE CLASS&#13;
OF WiNE....&#13;
~lerbll'b·&#13;
~urt -&#13;
~&amp;.ISTAUR&#13;
mo«. &amp; TUES.&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
$1.95&#13;
On Spring, West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge Plo.zo. •&#13;
632-6151&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27, 1976&#13;
(&#13;
I&#13;
"\&#13;
j \ ---~&#13;
Swimmers ·lose twO .meets&#13;
byJean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside's women's swimming&#13;
squad will participate in two&#13;
meets this week. This afternoon&#13;
they travel to UW-Whitewater for&#13;
a 6 p.m. meet and will meet -&#13;
Carthage, UW-River Falls and&#13;
UW-Eau Claire in Kenosha&#13;
Saturday, at 10 a.m.&#13;
The Rangers dropped both ends&#13;
of a double dual meet last Saturdar,&#13;
losing to Oshkosh, 112-&#13;
15 and. to 'Carroll, 85-24.&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch set another&#13;
school record in th~ 100 free at .&#13;
1:06.73, finishing second asainsi&#13;
Carroll and third against&#13;
Oshkosh. She took a first against&#13;
Oshkosh · and second against&#13;
Carroll in the l(M&gt;'back and a first&#13;
against Carroll and third against&#13;
Oshkosh in the· 50 butterfly.&#13;
Judy Iver.son scored a first·&#13;
against Carroll and third against&#13;
Oshkosh in the 50 free, seconds in&#13;
the 100 breast and third in the 50&#13;
back.&#13;
Sally Francis scored thirds in&#13;
the 50 free and the 500 free. Lili&#13;
Crnich also had thirds in both. the&#13;
200 free and 50 breast. Four also&#13;
swam in the 200 medley relay, the&#13;
first time this event lias been&#13;
swum by th_e Rangers this&#13;
season.&#13;
"We're in better spirits and&#13;
have tried our hardest," said&#13;
Coach Barb Lawson. "After a&#13;
couple of weeks of hard work,&#13;
we'll be stronger next week."&#13;
Friday, the team lost to UWMilwaukee,&#13;
100-11.&#13;
"Nothing went right for us,"&#13;
said Lawson. The highest finishes&#13;
were a secona in the ·100 back by&#13;
Leitch and a third in the 1()0 free&#13;
by Gail Olsen.&#13;
Soccer team~ playij W ~stern Michigan&#13;
by Jean Tenuta Henderson thought that this was&#13;
a record for a Ranger in a season.&#13;
Parkside's soccer team hosts Mike Boyajian, who has also&#13;
Western Michigan Saturday at 2 scored quite well for the Rangers&#13;
p.m. in the soccer bowl, in what this season, added two goals and&#13;
· Coach Hal Henderson expects to two assists to his season total.&#13;
be a "very even game." Desch Ismaili gained two goals&#13;
"Western Michigan has f,.aced - and one assist, Andy Gutierrez&#13;
three of the same teams thaf we and ~ack 4ndwelir each had a&#13;
have and have done about the goal, Mihran Ganghinjian scored&#13;
same as we have against them. one goal and had two assists, and&#13;
We're hoping our having the Chris Carter and Mike Olesen&#13;
home field will be enough of an added one assist each.&#13;
advantage to put us ahead," said · The squad's record is 6-5-1,&#13;
Henderson. . which ties the highest number of&#13;
The Rangers are hoping, wins for a Parkside team and this&#13;
though, that the Western&#13;
Michigan team will be similar to&#13;
the Eastern Michigan team they&#13;
is also the first tigle a Parkside&#13;
team has had a record over .500&#13;
during a season in over five&#13;
years.&#13;
The team still expects to win&#13;
approximately ten games, while&#13;
finishing over break-even mark.&#13;
Henderson is still cautious and is&#13;
taking his season goals one step&#13;
at a time.&#13;
"We've been getting better&#13;
each game," said Henderson.&#13;
"Our strong schedule in the early&#13;
part of the season got us used to&#13;
pressure situations and we're&#13;
better able to handle them now."&#13;
routed 10-0 at Ypsilanti.&#13;
"We totally dominated the&#13;
game. We out shot them 37-3 and&#13;
it was 6-0 at the half. It was unfortunate&#13;
that we didn't have&#13;
enough substitutes to give others&#13;
Runners finish fifth&#13;
a chance to get considerable .&#13;
playing experience. I was just&#13;
shuffling players around, putting&#13;
them in different positions and&#13;
we were trying not to run up the&#13;
score."&#13;
Earl Campbell, the team's .&#13;
leading scorel' increased his&#13;
margin above other Rangers with&#13;
three goals and two assists,&#13;
bringing his season total to eight&#13;
goals and eight assists. Coach&#13;
Parkside's runners face , Milwaukee Track Club was next&#13;
Carthage, Loras, and Marquette with 100, UW-Stevens Point, 115;&#13;
in the first of their last four home · Carthage,_ 123; and Parkside had&#13;
meets of the season. The meet 141.&#13;
will begin at 12 noon. Jim Drews won the meet,&#13;
. The Rangers finished fifth in representing the UWM Track&#13;
the 20 team Carthage Invitational Club, with a time of 24 minutes, 51&#13;
last Saturday, as Ray seconds. Frederic~n was right&#13;
Fredericksen was second out of on his heels, finishing only three&#13;
the 250 plus competitors in the seconds later. The top seven&#13;
meet. -runners came in within 15&#13;
Luther of Iowa ~on overall seconds of each other.&#13;
with 76 points. The uw.:-&#13;
Egypti_an history ~cheduled&#13;
A personal perspective of 5,000&#13;
years of Egyptian history,&#13;
culture and arts, will be reviewed&#13;
in a course taught by Omar&#13;
Amin, associate professor of life&#13;
science, who lived in Egypt for 25&#13;
years. From the historical&#13;
review, he will lead into modern&#13;
Egypt, with · its economic and&#13;
political - burdens and contributions.&#13;
&#13;
Amin recommends this sho.rt&#13;
non-credit, course for mid-east&#13;
students, prospective visitors, or&#13;
interested individuals. He will&#13;
use his slide collection · to&#13;
illustrate the lectures.&#13;
The class, sponsored by the &gt; •&#13;
University of WisconsinE]dension,&#13;
will meet on four&#13;
Tuesdays, beginning November 2&#13;
at 7:30 p.m., at Parkside in the&#13;
Classroom Building. Contact&#13;
Uni,versity Extension for ·&#13;
registration information, phone&#13;
553-2312. -&#13;
. '&#13;
Netters -close se.ason·&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
The women's tennis team&#13;
concluded their season with a&#13;
ninth place finish. in the WWIAC&#13;
Championships at UW-La Crosse&#13;
Saturday. .&#13;
The host won the meet easily&#13;
with'60points and UW-E~u Claire&#13;
and UW-Stevens Point tied ,for&#13;
second with 28. The Rangers&#13;
scored. one point.&#13;
The highest finishers for the&#13;
Rangers were the doubles teams.&#13;
After the quarterfinal consolation&#13;
round, the No. 1 doubles pair of&#13;
Mary Ann Carins .and Jennifer'&#13;
Zuehlke dropped to a team from&#13;
Oshkosh 7-5, 6-1. In No. 2, Kathy&#13;
Feitchner and Pat Munger lost to&#13;
UW-Milwauke~'s . KelloughPataini,&#13;
6-2, 6-3, in the quar_.&#13;
t.erfinal consolations. .&#13;
In the first consolation match&#13;
an No. 3 singles, Jeanine Hunter&#13;
lost to Peg Gruenge of UW-&#13;
- Whitewater, 6-0, 6-1. Marge.&#13;
Balasz was defeated in the&#13;
second round of consolation to&#13;
Carthage's Jan Daly, 6-1,_ 6-0.&#13;
Housing workshop ..&#13;
The Urban League Operation of&#13;
Kenosha is-sponsoring a housing&#13;
workshop entitled "Housing in&#13;
Kenosha" on October 28 from 7 to&#13;
9:30 p.in. at the Second Baptist . .&#13;
Church.&#13;
_ Topics to be discussed include&#13;
housing purchases, programs' for&#13;
low income families and&#13;
Veteran's housing programs.&#13;
• Free Pizza Delivery :.-&#13;
Club Highvi~w&#13;
5035 60th Street . Phone: 65i-8737&#13;
./&#13;
Alt, •,n.,,,., ch11k11, s,11htfll, 11.a,1~, , .. ,&#13;
OPEN 4 •·•· to 1 1.11.&#13;
The quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
1 Mike Villers 637 -2726&#13;
· Questions You Should&#13;
Ask Yourself:&#13;
1 Would You Like To Increase Gas&#13;
Mileage By 10% To 25%·* And&#13;
Save $10.00 Every 1000 Miles?&#13;
[ ] YES f ] NO · • overall average % increase&#13;
2 Would you Rather Change Oil&#13;
- Every 25,000 Miles/Once A Yea-r&#13;
And Increase Engine Life?&#13;
( ] YES [ ) NO&#13;
_ 3·Would. you like· To Eliminate&#13;
Towing And · Service Expense&#13;
This Winter When Your Car&#13;
Won't Start Due To cold, Sluggish&#13;
. Oil? [ ] YES [ · ] NO&#13;
If your answer is YES to any of the&#13;
above questions, you should be&#13;
using SYNTHETIC AMS/OIL!&#13;
/f,- Nm, lo 1/,1ng1 ...&#13;
Performing Fridoy &amp; Sotu-rdoy&#13;
SUNDAY TRIAD· Join the Ford Bandwagon!&#13;
All YOU , '-.l\,~&#13;
WANT c._\\~,,~, - moN. &amp; TUES.&#13;
~ ~-;)~' ~ - SPAGHETTI&#13;
(;'¥.--\_~ ,,1'1 ~I&lt;- FEAST Jl.95 c,'f\'x \\ '?,.~ ..,_o INCLUDES: Salod. _Italian&#13;
Bread and a FREE GLASS&#13;
OF WINE....&#13;
On Spring, West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge Plozo -&#13;
632-6151-&#13;
~erbu's·&#13;
,ourt - PUa &amp; RIST.AUR&#13;
. We All Have Th~ Privi~ege&#13;
To -v·o1EDon't&#13;
Waste-It&#13;
on PEANUTS- ~ THE J?lESttNT FORD C~E£'-.JAMES A BAKER III CHAIRMAN ROVSTON C HUGHES TREASUR€R </text>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 5, issue 8, October 27, 1976</text>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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          <name>Subject</name>
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            <elementText elementTextId="66104">
              <text>Student publications&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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              <text>1976-10-27</text>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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