<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="2788" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://archives.uwp.edu/exhibits/show/rangernews/item/2788?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-03T04:27:22+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="3400">
      <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/f0db7fe2b6af25f10c3cbf4d1a8495be.pdf</src>
      <authentication>8d5e81ebeff9d0016070e0d658c9c199</authentication>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="8">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="96">
        <name>Headline</name>
        <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="66128">
            <text>Parkside planner interviewed&#13;
</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="97">
        <name>Issue</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="66129">
            <text>Volume 5, issue 9</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="95">
        <name>Series Number</name>
        <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="66130">
            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="1">
        <name>Text</name>
        <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="90006">
            <text>i·.S&#13;
Parks ide planner interviewed&#13;
by Phil Livingston&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No.9 Wednesday, November 3, 1976&#13;
...-.-.._ .._.--..-.-....-._ ..-.._.-..-....-..._-..-..-..-....-...-.....-...-&#13;
"Our firsl goal was 10 respect Ihe natural beauty 01 the site and to&#13;
reflect exisling lopography and ecology. In order 10 UmIt encroachment&#13;
on natural environment auto parkiDg was placed on the&#13;
perimeter of the site with a simple bus system bringing students 8Dd&#13;
faculty to lhe main campus. We placed the parking areas on the less&#13;
desirable land aud kepi much of the center of the campus ill Its natural&#13;
state with mJnimum movement connections between bufldtugs. The&#13;
original idea was to keep the original grass, the wild weeds, and the&#13;
trees undisturbed, and, I hope the campus wUl continue to maintain&#13;
this philosophy. 1\ is so unusual to come 10 a campus and see the laD&#13;
grass rather than to see so much manicured lawn." -Gyo Obata&#13;
mounled aud costumed perf ... •&#13;
mance at Parkside on Wed·&#13;
nesday, Nov. 3 al 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Communication Arls Thealer.&#13;
Tickets for the show, pari of the&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series,&#13;
are $5 and are available at the&#13;
Campus Information Center in&#13;
Wyllie Library-Learning Center,&#13;
Sears in Kenosha, Cook-Gere in&#13;
Racine and Team Electronics in&#13;
Elmwood Plaza. Parkside&#13;
studenl tickets are available on&#13;
campus only.&#13;
Preceeding lheir public per.&#13;
formance the company will be on&#13;
campus Tuesday, Nov. 2,&#13;
presenting a seminar and&#13;
demonstration from 10to 11 a.m.&#13;
for dramatic arts students and&#13;
conllnued on po. 6&#13;
Gyo Obata is the principal in charge of design for the internationally&#13;
famous architectural firm of Hellmuth, Obata, and.Kassabaum of St.&#13;
Louis. Obata drew the master plan for this campus and supervised the&#13;
construction of the Wyllie Library Learning Center and Greequist HaD&#13;
before the state of Wisconsin ruled out of state architects could not&#13;
continue working on Wisconsin buildings.&#13;
Obata drew master plans and-or campus buildings for Duke,&#13;
Stanford, Cornell, Missouri, Southern Illinois University, Washington&#13;
University (where he is an affiliate professor of architecture) and ~&#13;
g. currently the University of Riyad in Saudi Arabia, one of the largest&#13;
" university projects in the world. RANGER interviewed Gyo Obata&#13;
~ shortly after his address at the Wyllie Library Learning Center&#13;
u' Dedication on Sunday, October 24.&#13;
rdifferently&#13;
if you had your way. I think they basically tried to follow&#13;
wbat we set out to do.&#13;
RANGER: In your address at tbe dedication you brought up the&#13;
parking lois. What is your opinion of the development of the Comm.&#13;
Arts and Union lots close to the buildings as an invasion to your&#13;
original plan?&#13;
OBATA: What happened was the legislature passed a ruling stating&#13;
they didn't want out of state architects to continue to work on&#13;
Wisconsin buildings. Originally, you know, the University and also the&#13;
Engineering Department of the state wanted us to continue working as&#13;
master planner so we would be used as a consultant, but they (the&#13;
state) didn't want us 10 do that so, that's what happened. I knew that&#13;
conlinued on pg 1&#13;
Dancers to perform&#13;
The Utah Repertory Dance&#13;
Theater, a 12 member&#13;
professional modern dance&#13;
company, will present a fullyCareer&#13;
needs projected&#13;
~ 'RANGER: What do you think of our new Student Union?&#13;
§' OBATA: I really don't want to make any comments on the other&#13;
if buildings because, first of all, I haven't really studied the building that&#13;
Gyo Obala carefully.&#13;
RANGER: But as you drove up and saw the Union did you think it fit&#13;
in with the general campus design?&#13;
OBATA: I think they tried to use the same kind of malo rials and bave&#13;
fairly open kind of spaces. AS an architect you always would do things&#13;
TheParkside,---------:.-&#13;
by Barbara Larson&#13;
Career Couselor&#13;
The U. S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, predicts&#13;
that the employment growth through the 1980's will continue to be&#13;
more rapid in industries that produce services than in industries that&#13;
produce goods. Presently about 54 million workers are in service&#13;
producing industries, while around 30 million are in goods producing&#13;
industries.&#13;
The following is a breakdown of the estimated employment growth&#13;
for service producing industries through the middle 1980's: government&#13;
(federal, state and local) 34 percent, trade (wholesale and&#13;
retail) 22 percent, transportation and public utilities 11 percent,&#13;
services and miscellaneous (including health services, maintenance,&#13;
repair, advertising, domestic help and business services) 51 percent.&#13;
The breakdown· for growth in goods producing industries:&#13;
manufacturing 12percent, contract construction 25percent, mining 18&#13;
percent, agriculture " minus 35 percent.&#13;
Changes are projected in the overall occupational structure&#13;
as in growth by industries. Through the mid 1980's there ,,:ill be a&#13;
continuation of the growth in white collar and service OCCUpatIOnsbut.&#13;
a slower that average increase in blue collar occupations.&#13;
Professional and. technical workers are projected to grow ahout 30&#13;
percent between 1974and 1985. The only occupational rate higher is&#13;
clerical with a 33 percent projected growth rate. The manager and&#13;
administrator group has ahout a 22 percent projected growth rate.&#13;
Open meeting law&#13;
interpreted&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
An interpretation of Wisconsin's revised open meetings law has been&#13;
circulated to all faculty and staff members by Secretary of the&#13;
Faculty Walter Feld. This law applies to all governmental bodies meluding&#13;
those at Parkside.&#13;
The open meetings law provides among other things, that unless the&#13;
members of a committee specifically vote in favor of closing a&#13;
meeting, the meeting must be held in the open session, unIe~ it concerns&#13;
certain personnel matters.In addition, any closed meeting must •&#13;
begin in open session; the vote to go into closed s~ion must '?"&#13;
recorded by name; and the business to be undertaken in closed sess~on&#13;
must be announced by the chairperson before the closed session&#13;
hegins. .&#13;
The law appears to be quite strict-and penalties range to $300 for&#13;
each violation-but a serious loophole exists in the penalty section. To&#13;
find the loophole, one must carefully read the language of the penalty&#13;
section:&#13;
...No memb" of a governmental body is liable under this subchapter&#13;
if he or she-nuikes or votes in favor of a motion to prevent the violation&#13;
from occurring, or if,before the violation occurs, his or her votes on aU&#13;
relevant motions were inconsistent with all those circumstances&#13;
which cause the violation ...&#13;
With careful study, one can see that unscrupulous public officials&#13;
continued on pg. 1&#13;
/&#13;
Because government and business will continue to need management&#13;
specialists, the demand for salaried managers is likely to continue to&#13;
increase rapidly as in the past. The trend toward larger business is&#13;
expected to continue, limiting the number of firms as well as limiting&#13;
the number of self-employed managers.&#13;
The operative group, including factory workers and vehicle drivers,&#13;
is expected to grow only 9 percent by 1985.The number of laborers&#13;
needed is also expected to grow about 9 percent during tbat period.&#13;
;rhe actual projected number of workers needed between 1974and&#13;
1985 breakdown as foDows: clerical workers- 16million plus, service&#13;
continued on 00 6&#13;
Inside:&#13;
Dizzie excites crowd page 5&#13;
Parkside planner interviewed&#13;
· by Phil Livingston&#13;
Gyo Oba ta is the principal in charge of design for the internationally&#13;
famous architectural firm of Hellmuth, Obata, and.Kassabaum of St.&#13;
Louis. Obata drew the master plan for this campus and supervised the&#13;
construction of the Wyllie Library Learning Center and Greequist Hall&#13;
before the state of Wisconsin ruled out of state architects could not&#13;
continue working on Wisconsin buildings.&#13;
Obata drew master plans and-or campus buildings for Duke,&#13;
Stanford, Cornell, Missouri, Southern Illinois University, Washington&#13;
-g University (where he is an affiliate professor of architecture) and&#13;
~ currently the University of Riyad in Saudi Arabia, one of the largest&#13;
!l university projects in the world. RANGER interviewed Gyo Obata&#13;
~ shortly after his address at the Wyllie Library Learning Center&#13;
.;· Dedication on Sunday, October 24. r&#13;
~ ·RANGER: What do you think of our new Student Union?&#13;
~- OBATA: I really don't want to make any comments on the other&#13;
g buildings because, first of all, I haven't really studied the building that&#13;
carefully.&#13;
RANGER: But as you drove up and saw the Unioq did you think it fit&#13;
in with the general campus design?&#13;
OBATA: I think they tried to use the same kind of materials and have&#13;
fairly open kind of spaces. As an architect you always would do things&#13;
The Parkside------~&#13;
Vol. V. No. 9 Wednesday, November 3, 1976&#13;
.............. ~ ....... ··-·-·---· ...... -·-·---·~--........ --~ ............... "Our first goal was to respect the natural beauty of the site and to&#13;
reflect existing topography and ecology. In order to limit encroachment&#13;
on natural environment auto parking was placed on the&#13;
perimeter of the site with a simple bus system bringing students and&#13;
faculty to the main campus. We placed the park.Ing areas on the les&#13;
desirable land and kept much of the center of the campus In its natural&#13;
state with minimum movement connections between buildings. The&#13;
original idea was to keep the original grass, the wild weeds, and the&#13;
trees undisturbed, and, I hope the campus will continue to maintain&#13;
this philosophy. It is so unusual to come to a campus and see the tall&#13;
grass rather than to see so much manicured lawn." -Gyo Obata&#13;
differently if you had your way. I think they basically tried to follow&#13;
what we set out to do.&#13;
RANGER: In your address at the dedication you brought up the&#13;
parking lots. What is your opinion of the development of the Comm.&#13;
Arts and Union lots close to the buildings as an invasion to your&#13;
original plan?&#13;
OBATA: What happened was the legislature passed a ruling stating&#13;
they didn't want out of state architects to continue to work on&#13;
Wisconsin buildings. Originally, you know, the University and also the&#13;
Engineering Deparbnent of the state wanted us to continue working as&#13;
master planner so we would be used as a consultant, but they (the&#13;
state) didn't want us to do that so, that's what happened. I knew that continued on pg 7&#13;
Dancers to perfor1n&#13;
The Utah Repertory Dance&#13;
Theater, a 12 member&#13;
professional modern dance&#13;
company' will present a fullymounted&#13;
and costumed performance&#13;
at Parkside on Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 3 at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Career needs projected Tickets for the show, part of the&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series,&#13;
are $5 and are available at the&#13;
Campus Information Center in&#13;
Wyllie Library-Learning Center,&#13;
Sears in Kenosha, Cook-Gere in&#13;
Racine and Team Electronics in&#13;
Elmwood Plaza. Parkside&#13;
student tickets are available on&#13;
campus only.&#13;
by Barbara Larson&#13;
Career Couselor&#13;
The U. S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, predicts&#13;
that the employment growth through the 1980's will continue to be&#13;
more rapid in industries that produce services than in industries that&#13;
produce goods. Presently about 54 million workers are in service&#13;
producing industries, while around 30 million are in goods producing&#13;
inrlustries.&#13;
The following is a breakdown of the estimated employment growth&#13;
for service producing industries through the middle 1980's: government&#13;
(federal, state and local) 34 percent, trade (wholesale and&#13;
retail) 22 percent, transportation and public utilities 11 percent,&#13;
services and miscellaneous (including health services, maintenance,&#13;
repair, advertising, domestic help and business seiwices) 51 percent.&#13;
The breakdown -for growth in goods producing industries:&#13;
manufacturing 12percent, contract construction 25 percent, mining 18&#13;
percent, agriculture minus 35 percent.&#13;
Changes are projected in the overall occupational s~ructure&#13;
as in growth by industries. Through the mid 198~'s there "'.1ll be a&#13;
continuation of the growth in white collar and service occupations but.&#13;
a siower that average increase in blue collar occupations. Professional and technical workers are projected to grow about 30&#13;
percent between 1974 and 1985. The only occupational rate higher is&#13;
clerical with a 33 percent projected growth rate. The manager and&#13;
administrator group has about a 22 percent projected growth rate.&#13;
Open 1neeting law&#13;
interpreted&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
An interpretation of Wisconsin's revised open meetings law ha_s been&#13;
circulated to all faculty and staff members by Secretary ~f ~e&#13;
Faculty Walter Feld. This law applies to all governmental bodies mcluding&#13;
those at Parkside.&#13;
The open meetings law provides among other things, that unle~s the&#13;
members of a committee specifically vote in favor of closmg a&#13;
meeting, the meeting must be held in the open session, unle~ it concerns&#13;
certain personnel mattElJ'S. In addition, any closed meeting must&#13;
begin in open session; the vote to go into closed s~ssion must ~e&#13;
recorded by name; and the business to be undertaken m closed sess~on&#13;
must be announced by the chairperson before the closed session&#13;
begins. ·&#13;
The law appears to be quite strict-and penalties range to ~300 for&#13;
each violation- but a serious loophole exists in the penalty section. To&#13;
find the loophole, one must carefully read the language of the penalty&#13;
section:&#13;
... No memb" of a governmental body is liable under this sub~hapter&#13;
if he or she-makes or votes in favor of a motion to prevent the vmlation&#13;
from occurring, or if, before the violation occurs, his or h~r votes on all&#13;
relevant motions were inconsistent with all those circumstances&#13;
which cause the violation ...&#13;
With careful study, one can see that unscrupulous public officials continued on pg. 7&#13;
/&#13;
Because government and business will continue to need management&#13;
specialists, the demand for salaried managers is likely to continue to&#13;
increase rapidly as in the past. The trend toward larger business is&#13;
expected to continue, limiting the number of firms as well as limiting&#13;
the number of self-employed managers.&#13;
The operative group, including factory workers and vehicle drivers,&#13;
is expected to grow only 9 percent by 1985. The number of laborers&#13;
needed is also expected to grow about 9 percent during that period.&#13;
J'he actual projected number of workers needed between 1974 and&#13;
1985 breakdown as follows: clerical workers - 16 million plus, service continued on oa 6&#13;
Inside:&#13;
Preceeding their public performance&#13;
the company will be on&#13;
campus Tuesday, Nov. 2,&#13;
presenting a seminar and&#13;
demonstration from 10 to 11 a .m.&#13;
for dramatic arts students and continued on pg 6&#13;
Dizzie exciies crowd page 5 &#13;
/&#13;
-,&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 3,1976 \&#13;
i '1lY the Parkside ~".. RANGER· -&#13;
---EDITOR IAL/OPIN'ION&#13;
Guidelines cause double jeopardy , ,I&#13;
• by Kiyoko Bowden wishes and even demand that a student live where the university&#13;
says, ie. Mandatory Dorm Residency, which still exists at several UW&#13;
system campuses. .'&#13;
I'm not arguing that the Guidelines should only be imposed at dorm&#13;
campuses, ,although it is possible to see some vague, albeit highly&#13;
questionable rationale for "in loco parentis" at them. There are many&#13;
young students who are away frpm home for the first time. Oddly&#13;
enough that is about the same argument used four-hundred years&#13;
ago; and presumablyignores a higher level of sophistication among&#13;
"young'! people now. If these same "young" people, most of whom are&#13;
18 years or older, can vote, sign contracts and marry, then by wbat&#13;
right does the university presume to tell them where they may live and&#13;
how they may act?&#13;
Most of the infractions in the personal misconduct portion of the&#13;
Guidelines deal with inappropriate dorm resident's behavior. We have&#13;
no dorms at Parkside.&#13;
Parkside is not the place to practice "in loco parentis." The Regents&#13;
bear 'substantial blame for requiring that in order to comply with the&#13;
Guidelines-which are now law-Parkside must adopt a philosopby of&#13;
guardianship which is totally incompatible with tbe vast bulk of its&#13;
student population. .&#13;
Ican see no easy way out of our predicament. The-Guidelines'. implementation&#13;
procedures willsoon be completed. Since the civil courts&#13;
tend to examine constitutional rights cases, more often than not, for&#13;
flaws in the procedural due process portion; and most of the blatant&#13;
technical loop-holes will be plugged by the implementation procedures&#13;
now being structured here at Parkside, it may be a long time and a&#13;
costly court battle before we can bope that our substantive Constitutional&#13;
rights as student-citizens will be realized.&#13;
My reasoning that it will be long time before a test case of the&#13;
Constitutional question is, in part, precisely because it will involve a&#13;
costly court battle. We, who have very limited funds, can ill afford to&#13;
pay for the legal counsel that might gain us our rights.&#13;
There may be a little hope amid my prophesies of doom. We can&#13;
hope, for instance, that no one will misbehave. More realistically, we&#13;
can actively seek to bring pressure to bear on the State Legislature,&#13;
thereby removing students from the University's jurisdiction.&#13;
Ultimately, it may only be through legislative action that we may&#13;
• effectively become adults in the eyes of the law. .&#13;
The problem of the Student Disciplinary Guidelines will &lt;not be&#13;
solved with the completion of the implementation procedures. No&#13;
amount of procedural due process will remedy the basic flaw of the&#13;
Guidelines; that bel!Jg the unwarranted imposition of the University in&#13;
an area which it should and must not interfere.&#13;
Civil courts have been establisbed to handle personal misconduct.&#13;
The sanctions are clearly delimited and defined. Yet students,&#13;
whether 18 or 58, are set apart from the rest of society as a group of&#13;
children whose personal conduct must be monitored and for wborn&#13;
special punishments must be meted out.&#13;
We have no promise that civil action won't occur simultaneously&#13;
with University action in the event of an infraction of a University&#13;
personal misconduct. rule. Yet, the Regents, Central Administration&#13;
and our own University administrators argue that no "double&#13;
jeopardy" exists, either potentially or actually. They are most emphatically&#13;
wrong. A test case could argue for tbe interpretation that&#13;
the University and the civil courts, both state funded agencies, were&#13;
indeed capable of subjecting students to two-level, simultaneous&#13;
judgement and punishment. It could also be argued that students&#13;
neither need nor want "special citizen" status. .&#13;
We are not children nor are we mentally retarded. We can and must&#13;
accept responsibility for our actions and face the consequences for&#13;
those actions. I, for one, resent "special treatment." The relevant&#13;
example of the special stalus of women brings forward the reminder&#13;
that "special citizen" classifications can very easily, and frequently&#13;
do, degenerate into "non-citizen" classifications.&#13;
Historically, the concept of "in loco parentis" has its antecedents in&#13;
medieval Europe, where the academic community sought to protect&#13;
and nurture students. Itwas very often necessary for very young boys&#13;
to be sent quite a distance from home to receive education. These&#13;
, children fell under the protection of the local academic community,&#13;
who effectively became their local guardians.&#13;
The concept has carried down through the years as the rationale for&#13;
severe corporal punishment and losses of Adult privileges, so long as&#13;
the individual remained a student and thus under the protective&#13;
jurisdlction of the school. This continues to the present, wben the&#13;
university can demand that a student behave as the university&#13;
POLITICAL FORUM&#13;
by Phil Hermann say, so what? The constitution also says that when people aren't happy&#13;
WIththe government they have the Tight and the duty to change it.&#13;
2) If you don't vote, you have no right to bitch. Bullshit, freedom of&#13;
speech is also in the constitution! It is up to the political parties to&#13;
make me want to vote by offering choices that are acceptable to me.&#13;
Until they do, I'm not voting and I'll keep bitching.&#13;
3) Your vote means as much asanybody's! Bullshit a state like&#13;
. .. '&#13;
,WISCOnS\n only has a fourth of the electoral votes of a state like&#13;
California! Carter or Ford could have won California New York&#13;
.Illinois and about ten other states and would have won 'the election:&#13;
This means that tbfi'ly-seven states wouldn't have had a say.&#13;
Local elections are also ridiculous. If most of the people don't vote&#13;
how can democracy be.attained? Why don't they vote in these crucial&#13;
local election? Becuase they don't know who is running. They don't&#13;
have the time to study all the candidates and all the issues. Most&#13;
working people work fifty-hours a week and have to support families&#13;
and property.&#13;
Politicians such as Les Aspin and Bill Proxmire understand that&#13;
apathy and ignorance are a major part of any election. Aspin and&#13;
Proxmire always come out with at least one news headliQe a month&#13;
just to make sure people know their names. Do you think that if Les&#13;
Aspin was seriously hurting the military, he would still be in office?&#13;
Low voter tarn-out explained&#13;
In 1976voters were expected to stay away from the polls in record&#13;
numbers. Why? Let's examine their other choices'&#13;
1) They could have voted for Gene 'McCarthy, but he was only on.the&#13;
ballot in twenty-nine states (New York not included) and nobody likes&#13;
to vote for somebody who has no chance of winning. McCarthy has&#13;
already called this "the most unconstitutional presidential election&#13;
in history."&#13;
2) They could have voted for Lester Maddox or Gus Hall. Both were&#13;
the extremist candidates and got their share of the lunatic and-or&#13;
fanatic vote.&#13;
3) They 'could have voted for Jimmy Carter, who had smiled them&#13;
and vagued them to death.&#13;
4) They could have voted for Gerald Ford, the incumbent, who at&#13;
'best is a robot-like. 'Republican team player.&#13;
5) They could have written in somebody else,'s name and gotten&#13;
laughs from tbe news media. These five choices were not very appealing&#13;
to almost sixty percent of the American people.&#13;
The choice that over half the country made was not to vote at all and&#13;
who could blame them? If you didn't like either regular candidate you&#13;
had very little choice in alternatives. What is wrong with not voting?&#13;
1) You shouldn't mtsuse your cOjlstllullonal right to vote. To that I&#13;
EDITOR-tN-CHIEF: Junnlne SlpSma&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGERS: C.thy 8mall, JUdy Truclrunt ( ••••. )&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Tom CooPer ~&#13;
. NEWS COORDINATOR: Bruce Wagner&#13;
DEPARTMENTS;&#13;
.' Administration-PoUcees, John McKloslley&#13;
.. SMI, OilY. Brandt&#13;
.. Stvcten' 9tOUps &amp; speallen; ....&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debbie Bauer -&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR; Jean Tenuta \&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS: jeffrey ·1.swen~lIi, Bill Barile&#13;
COpy EDITOR: Julie Lan,e&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: Van Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION: Sue Marquardt&#13;
STAFF: Wendy Miller. Terri Gao/hart, RolMlrt Hoffman, Chris Claunn. Brleltet Penlllowltl;l,&#13;
Larry Donn.elly, Phil Hermann, Ramona Maillet, Allen Brown, Carol Arentl, John Oyerman,&#13;
80b Jamboll. Beyerly Pella. Behy Nev, Linda Knudtson. Karin La Fourier JUdy TrUdrun,&#13;
Scott Reinhard, Philip L. L,Jyln,s'on, Debbie Sharpe '.&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS, P.J. AUolin •• PhlllpL.LlylnSiston #&#13;
AD SALESPERSONS; Joe LUda, Rick Flasch&#13;
Tbe Parkslde Raneer is written .nd edited&#13;
by the stUdents of tile Unlyenlty 01&#13;
Wisconsin·Parllside who are solely&#13;
respollsibl. for its flIltwlal policy and&#13;
(OVt_"t .Opinlons expr •• sed are no'&#13;
necessarily representatiye of 'hose "eld by&#13;
the sludents, faculty or administra'ion of&#13;
Parhide. Editorial and Buslne .. 553·2217;&#13;
Newsroom 553-2"5.&#13;
/&#13;
2 THE p ARKSIDE RANGER November 3, 1976&#13;
i JJY the Parksid ' ~".. RANGER - - ... • j&#13;
---EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
Guidelines cause double jeopardy • I&#13;
by Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
The problem of the Student Disciplinary Guidelines will_~ot be&#13;
solved with the completion of the implementation procedures. No&#13;
amount of procedural due process will remedy the basic flaw of the&#13;
Guidelines; that being the unwarranted imposition of the University in&#13;
an area which it should and must not interfere.&#13;
Civil courts have been established to handle personal misconduct.&#13;
The sanctions are clearly delimited and defined. Yet students,&#13;
whether 18 or 58, are set apart from the rest of society as a group of&#13;
children whose personal conduct must be monitored and for whom&#13;
special punishments must be meted out.&#13;
We have no promise that civil action won't occur simultaneously&#13;
with University action in the event of an infraction of a University&#13;
personal misconduct. rule. Yet1 the Regents, Central Administration&#13;
and our own University administrators argue that no "double&#13;
jeopardy" exists, either potentially or actually. They are most emphatically&#13;
wrong. A test case could argue for the interpretation that&#13;
the University and the civil courts, both state funded agencies, were&#13;
indeed capable of subjecting students to two-level, simultaneous&#13;
judgement and punishment. It could also be argued that students&#13;
neither need nor want "special citizen" status. ·&#13;
We are not children nor are we mentally retarded. We can and must&#13;
accept responsibility for our actions and face the consequences for&#13;
those actions. I, for one, resent "special treatment." The relevant&#13;
example of the special status of women brings forward the reminder&#13;
that "special citizen" classifications can very easily, and frequently&#13;
do, degenerate into "non-citizen" classifications.&#13;
Historically, the concept of "in loco parentis" has its antecedents in&#13;
m~eval Europe, where the academic community sought to protect&#13;
and nurture students. It was very often necessary for very young boys&#13;
to be sent quite a distance from home to receive education. These&#13;
children fell under the protection of the local academic community,&#13;
who effectively became their local guardians.&#13;
The concept has carried down through the years as the rationale for&#13;
severe corporal punishment and losses of Adult privileges, so long as&#13;
the individual remained a student and thus under the protective&#13;
jurisdiction of the school. This continues to the present, when the&#13;
university can demand that a student behave as the university&#13;
-&#13;
POLITICAL&#13;
Low voter turn-oui explain~d&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
In 1976 voters were expected to stay away from the polls in record&#13;
numbers. Why? Let's examine their other choices;&#13;
1) They could have voted for Gene McCarthy, but he was only on-the&#13;
ballot in twenty-nine states (New York not included) and nobody likes&#13;
to vote for somebody who has no chance of winning. McCarthy has&#13;
already called this "the most unconstitutional presidential election&#13;
in history."&#13;
2) They could have voted for Lester Maddox or Gus Hall. Both were&#13;
the extremist candidates and got their share of the lunatic and-or&#13;
fanatic vote.&#13;
3) They could have voted for Jimmy Carter, who had smiled them&#13;
and vagued them to death.&#13;
4) They could have voted for Gerald Ford, the incumbent, who at&#13;
best is a robot-like, 'Republican team player.&#13;
5) They could have written in somebody else,'s name and gotten&#13;
laughs from the news media. These five choices were not very appealing&#13;
to almost sixty percent of the American people. .&#13;
The choice that over half the country made was not to vote at alland&#13;
who could blame them? If you didn_'t like either regular candidate you&#13;
had very little choice in alternatives. What is wrong with not voting?&#13;
1) You shol!1d~'t misuse your COJ1stitutional right to vote. To that I&#13;
wishes and even demand that a student live where the university&#13;
says, ie. Mandatory Dorm Residency, which still exists at several UW&#13;
system campuses. · • .&#13;
I'm not arguing that the Guidelines should only be imposed at dorm&#13;
campuses, .although "it is possible to see some vague, albeit highly&#13;
questionable rationale for "in loco parentis" at them. There are many&#13;
young students who are away fr.om home for the first time. Oddly&#13;
enough that is about the same argument used four-hundred years&#13;
ago; and presumably 'ignores a higher level of sophistication among&#13;
"young" people now. If these same "young" people, most of whom are&#13;
18 years or older, can vote, sign contracts and ma,rry, then by what&#13;
right does the university presume to tell them where they may live and&#13;
how they may act?&#13;
Most of _the infriictions· in the personal misconduct portion of the&#13;
Guidelines deal with inappropriate dorm resident's behavior. We have&#13;
no dorms at Parkside.&#13;
Parkside is not the place to practice "in loco parentis." The Regents&#13;
bear'substantial blame for requiring that in order to comply with the&#13;
Guidelines-which are now law-Parkside must adopt a philosophy of&#13;
guardianship which is totally incompatible with the vast bulk of its&#13;
student population.&#13;
I can see no easy way out of our predicament. The-Guidelines'. implementation&#13;
procedures will.soon be completed. Since the civil courts&#13;
tend to examine constitutional rights cases, more often than not, for&#13;
flaws in the procedural due process portion; and most of the blatant&#13;
technical loop-holes will be plugged by the implementation procedures&#13;
now being structured here at Parkside, it may be a long time and a&#13;
costly court battle before we can hope that our substantive Constitutional&#13;
rights as student-citizens will be realized.&#13;
My reasoning that it will be long time before a test case of the&#13;
Constitutional question is, in part, precisely because it will involve a&#13;
costly court battle. We, who have very limited funds, can ill afford to&#13;
pay f~r the legal counsel that might gain us our rights.&#13;
There may be a little hope amid my prophesies of doom. We can&#13;
hope, for instance, that no one will misbehave. More realistically, we&#13;
can actively seek to bring pressure to bear on the State Legislature,&#13;
thereby removing students from the University's jurisdiction.&#13;
Ultimately, it may only be through legislative action that we may&#13;
' effectively become adults in the eyes of the law. ·&#13;
FORUM&#13;
~Y, so what? The constitution also says that when people aren't happy&#13;
with the government they have the right and the duty to change it.&#13;
2) If you don't vote, you have no right to bitch. Bullshit freedom of&#13;
speech is also in the constitution! It is up to the politic;l parties to&#13;
make me want to vote by offering choices that are acceptable to me.&#13;
Until they do, I'm not voting and I'll keep bitching.&#13;
3) Your vote means as much as anybody's! Ifollshit a state like&#13;
, Wiscoils~n only has a fourth of the electoral votes of a state like&#13;
California! Carter or Ford could have won California New York&#13;
.Illinois and about ten other states and would have won 'the election'.&#13;
This means that thirty-seven states wouldn't have had a say.&#13;
Local elections are also r~diculous. If most of the people don't vote,&#13;
how can democracy be attained? Why don't they vote in these crucial&#13;
local electi~n? Becuase they don't know who is runnin~. They don't&#13;
have. the tune to stu~y all the candidates and all the issues. Most&#13;
working people work fifty-hours a week and have to support families&#13;
and property.&#13;
Politicians such as Les Aspin and Bill Proxmire understand that&#13;
apathy_ and ignorance are a major part of any election. Aspin and&#13;
:roxm1re always come out with at least one news headliQe a month&#13;
Just_to make s~e people know their names. Do you think that if Les&#13;
Aspm was seriously hurting the military, he would still be in office?&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jeannine ~ipsma&#13;
The Parkside Ranier is written and edited&#13;
by the students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside who are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorl'al policy and&#13;
coo••"• .Opinions expressed are not&#13;
necessarily representative of those held by&#13;
the students, faculty or administration of&#13;
Parkside. Editorial and Business SSl-2217;&#13;
Newsroom SS3-229S.&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGERS: Catlly Brnak, Judy Trudruni (asst.) , · ADVERTISING MANAGER: Tom Cooper -&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR: Bruce Wainer&#13;
DEPARTMENTS:&#13;
.. Administration-Policies: John McKloskey .. SMI: Dave Brandt&#13;
.. Student group• &amp; speakers:&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debbie Bauer&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Jean Tenuta \&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS: ielfrey -j. swencki, Bill Barke&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Julie Lanie&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: Van Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION : Sue Marquardt&#13;
STAFF : Wendy Miller, Terri Ga-.'hart, Robert Hollman, Chri• ClauHn, Bricl9et Penzkowski.&#13;
Larry Donn_elly, Phil Hermann, Ramona Maillet, Allen Brown, Carol Arentz, John Overman,&#13;
Bob Jambo,s, Bev':r!y Pell:'•. Betsy Neu, Linda Knudtson, Karin La Fourier, Judy Trudruni, Scott Reinhard, Phohp L. L1v1n1ston, Debbie Sharpe&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS : P.J. Auolina, Philip L. Livingston #&#13;
AD SALESPERSONS: Joe Landa, Rick FIHch&#13;
) ' &#13;
\&#13;
'-----&#13;
Accounting in sad shape&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
• My purpose in writing this&#13;
letter is to appeal to the administration&#13;
of Parkside to begin&#13;
a serious search for additional&#13;
accounting instructors. I never&#13;
believed tbe sad shape the accounting,&#13;
department was in until&#13;
recently.&#13;
A few days ago I visited the&#13;
Business Management office to&#13;
declare my specialty package in&#13;
accounting, At this time I also&#13;
requested that I be assigned an&#13;
advisor who was an accounting&#13;
. instructor. I was informed that&#13;
this would be- impossible. A&#13;
secretary told me that there were&#13;
only two accounting instructors,&#13;
Larry Logan and Claude Renshaw,&#13;
who were available to&#13;
counsel accounting students and&#13;
they have their hands' full .&#13;
The number of advisors is soon&#13;
to be reduced to one since Mr.&#13;
Renshaw is leaving Parkside&#13;
nexl semester. Itis impossible to&#13;
. expect Mr. Logan to handle all&#13;
Haiku wanted&#13;
Dear Readers,&#13;
As a special feature during&#13;
December VISAGE would like to&#13;
publish a haiku page. If you are a&#13;
writer of this poetry form, please&#13;
the accounting students at&#13;
ParksideStill,&#13;
many of us need an adl'isor&#13;
who is a specialist in the&#13;
accounting field. While my&#13;
present advisor is quite willing to&#13;
help me, wben it comes to&#13;
specific questions that I have&#13;
about the accounting field he&#13;
can't always provide me with the&#13;
answers I need.&#13;
I am now a junior and these last&#13;
two years of college are the time&#13;
when I most need advice about&#13;
my future career. I feel that&#13;
Parkside does have an obligation&#13;
to provide every student with the&#13;
guidance they need.&#13;
So please, Parks ide administration&#13;
and Chancellor&#13;
Guskin, start tbe wheels in&#13;
motion and do something about'&#13;
this predicament. Somewhere,&#13;
someplace, there must be ~ few&#13;
jobless accounting instructors&#13;
just waiting to be found!&#13;
A Very Concerned Student&#13;
send in your writings. We are still&#13;
located in WLLC-D194.&#13;
Love &amp; Shalom&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
Co-VISAGE Editor&#13;
- •• _ .. ' ...n ..... " 'n~------------------ _&#13;
TIlE PARKSIDE RANGER November a, JJ'lI 3&#13;
Bowden corrects Guskin&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
I would like to correct a&#13;
statement made by Chancellor&#13;
Guskin at the Open Meeting on&#13;
Oct. 21. He said in response to a&#13;
question about the naming of the&#13;
Union that I, Kiyoko Bowden, had&#13;
been consulted about the name&#13;
and that I had agreed to naming&#13;
the Union, the Parkside Union.&#13;
.. This was absolutely wrong.&#13;
It was agreed this summer&#13;
after conversations with Chancellor&#13;
Guskin about the Union&#13;
name that the Union Operating&#13;
Board would review the Union's&#13;
name. I at no time agreed&#13;
unilaterally as. President of&#13;
Student Government to name the&#13;
Union anything. I felt at that lime&#13;
and I still do now, that the Union&#13;
Operating Board was the only&#13;
body which could deal with the&#13;
issue. However, recently the&#13;
Senate voted unamimously to&#13;
name the Union, the Parkside&#13;
Student Union. In thIllght of the&#13;
Senate's action, I am as&#13;
President even more convinced&#13;
that the Union Operating Board&#13;
should convene at once to decide&#13;
among many other things the&#13;
final, official name of the Student&#13;
Union.&#13;
If the Senate perceives student&#13;
. concern over the name to be SOt&#13;
pressing that they would take&#13;
action, then it is urgent that the&#13;
UOB address itself to this&#13;
question.&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
President Student Government&#13;
Hermann apologizes&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
1 have wrillen this letter as a&#13;
public apology to Peter Canmejo&#13;
and the Socialist Party. 1 plead&#13;
ignorance to their campaign&#13;
platform and 1have only myselfto&#13;
blame. 1 am sure Mr. Camejo&#13;
and his supporters are working&#13;
very hard against our unjust&#13;
election system and they should&#13;
00- commended. 1 am guilty of&#13;
bias in neglecting candidates&#13;
other than Ford and Carter.&#13;
Hopefully this will change.&#13;
Phil Hermann&#13;
'Valley Forge' sponsored&#13;
The Law Club will sponsor a&#13;
multi-media slide presentajion,&#13;
"Pilgrimage to Valley Forge" on&#13;
Sunday, November 14 at 3 p.m.&#13;
The program depicts a bicentennial&#13;
wagon train as it journeys&#13;
to Pennsylvania.&#13;
The hour and a half presentation&#13;
will be held in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission is $2 for&#13;
adults, $1 for Parkside Students&#13;
and senior citizens, 50 cents for&#13;
children under 12.&#13;
For ticketinforrnation, call 553-&#13;
2244, or 553-2345.&#13;
Recruiting&#13;
• progressmg&#13;
by Bruce W..... er&#13;
Management ScIence Division&#13;
Chairperson Ron Singer is enthused&#13;
about the response for the&#13;
positions In the various areas of&#13;
business management and also&#13;
with the number of llpplicants for&#13;
the chairperson opening.&#13;
The search and screen commillee&#13;
has received 1~20 applicants,&#13;
and are in the process&#13;
of checking out their references&#13;
through telephone contact.&#13;
However, Singer "was a little&#13;
pessimistic about the recruiting&#13;
process. He felt that although&#13;
they've received several applications,&#13;
the university must&#13;
sell themselves to the candidate&#13;
to the school.&#13;
As for the interviews by&#13;
students, faculty, and administration,&#13;
Singer stated that&#13;
these should take place sometime&#13;
in December, once the top candidates&#13;
have been screened.&#13;
There will be ads placed in&#13;
major journals for each pf the&#13;
specialty areas next week which&#13;
Singer hoped would be bringing&#13;
more applications. He slated that&#13;
the chairperson should be&#13;
selected by the lime the second&#13;
semester starts.&#13;
Singer also stated that the&#13;
accounting positions he had&#13;
hoped to have filled by the second&#13;
semester. will probably not be&#13;
filled. He said that this was due to&#13;
the problem that faculty felt they&#13;
owed something to the school that&#13;
hired them first and most of the&#13;
lime. They will stay with that&#13;
school until the end of the&#13;
semester. "&#13;
\&#13;
Accounting in sad shape&#13;
To the Editor: the accounting students at&#13;
Parkside,&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 3, 1976 3&#13;
Bowden corrects Guskin&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
I would like to correct a&#13;
statement made by Chancellor&#13;
Guskin at the Open Meeting on&#13;
Oct. 21. He said in response to a&#13;
question about the naming of the&#13;
Union that I, Kiyoko Bowden, had&#13;
been consulted about the name&#13;
and that I had agreed to naming&#13;
the Union, the Parkside Union.&#13;
Recruiting&#13;
• progressmg&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Management Science Division&#13;
Chairperson Ron Singer is enthused&#13;
about the response for the&#13;
positions in the various areas of&#13;
business management and also&#13;
with the number of l'lpplicants for&#13;
the chairperson opening. My purpose in writing this&#13;
letter is to appeal to the administration&#13;
of Parkside to begin&#13;
a serious search for additional&#13;
accounting instructors. I never&#13;
believed the sad shape the accounting_department&#13;
was in until&#13;
recently.&#13;
Still, many of us need an advisor&#13;
who is a specialist in the&#13;
accounting field. While my&#13;
pr1:;sent advisor is quite willing to&#13;
help me, when it comes to&#13;
specific questions that I have&#13;
about the accounting field he&#13;
can't always provide me with the&#13;
answers I need.&#13;
' This was absolutely wrong.&#13;
Operating Board was the only&#13;
body which could deal with the&#13;
issue. However, recently the&#13;
Senate voted unamimously to&#13;
name the Union, the Parkside&#13;
Student Union. In the light of the&#13;
Senate's action, I am as&#13;
President even more convinced&#13;
that the Union Operating Board&#13;
should convene at once to decide&#13;
among many other things the&#13;
final, official name of the Student&#13;
Union.&#13;
The search and screen committee&#13;
has received 13-20 applicants,&#13;
and are in the process&#13;
of checking out their references&#13;
through telephone contact.&#13;
A few days ago I visited the&#13;
Business Management office to&#13;
declare my specialty package in&#13;
accounting. At this time I also&#13;
requested that I be assigned an&#13;
advisor who was an accounting&#13;
· instructor. I was informed that&#13;
this would be· impossible. A&#13;
secretary told me that there were&#13;
only two accounting instructors,&#13;
Larry Logan and Claude Renshaw,&#13;
who were available to&#13;
counsel accounting students and&#13;
they have their hands' full .&#13;
The number of advisors is soon&#13;
to be reduced to one since Mr.&#13;
Renshaw is leaving Parkside&#13;
next semester. It is impossible to&#13;
expect Mr. !.ogan to hanrlle all&#13;
I am now a junior and these last&#13;
two years of college are the time&#13;
when I most need advice about&#13;
my future career. I feel tbat&#13;
Parkside does have an obligation&#13;
to provide every student with the&#13;
guidance they need.&#13;
So please, Parkside administration&#13;
and Chancellor&#13;
Guskin, start the wheels in&#13;
motion and do -something about·&#13;
this predicament. Somewhere,&#13;
someplace, there must be ii few&#13;
jobless accounting instructors&#13;
just waiting to be found!&#13;
A Very Concerned Student&#13;
Haiku wanted&#13;
Dear Readers,&#13;
As a special feature during&#13;
December VISAGE would like to&#13;
publish a haiku page. If you are a&#13;
writer of this poetry form, please&#13;
send in your writings. We are still&#13;
located in WLLC-D194.&#13;
Love &amp; Shalom&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
Co-VISAGE Editor&#13;
HOURS:&#13;
It was agreed this summer&#13;
after conversations with Chancellor&#13;
Guskin about the Union&#13;
name that the Union Operating&#13;
Board would review the Union's&#13;
name. I at no time agreed&#13;
unilaterally as President of&#13;
Student Government to name the&#13;
Union anything. I felt at that time&#13;
~d I still do now, that the Union&#13;
If the Senate perceives student&#13;
concern over the name to be so&#13;
pressing that they would take&#13;
action, then it is urgent that the&#13;
UOB address itself to this&#13;
question.&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
President Student Government&#13;
Hermann apologizes&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I have written this letter as a&#13;
public apology to Peter Canmejo&#13;
and the Socialist Party. I plead&#13;
ignorance to their campaign&#13;
platform and I have only myself&#13;
to blame. I am sure.Mr. Camejo&#13;
and his supporters are working&#13;
very hard against our unjust&#13;
election system and they should&#13;
be commended. I am guilty of&#13;
bias in neglecting candidates&#13;
other than Ford and Carter.&#13;
Hopefully this will change.&#13;
PhilHermaM&#13;
'Valley Forge' sponsored&#13;
The Law Club will sponsor a&#13;
multi-media slide presentapon,&#13;
"Pilgrimage to Valley Forge" on&#13;
Sunday, November 14 at 3 p.m.&#13;
The program depicts a bicentennial&#13;
wagon train as it journeys&#13;
to Pennsylvania.&#13;
The hour and a half presentalion&#13;
will be heid in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission is $2 for&#13;
adults, $1 for Parkside Students&#13;
and senior citizens, 50 cents for&#13;
children under 12.&#13;
For ticket information, call 553-&#13;
2244, or 553-2345.&#13;
However, Slnger •was a little&#13;
pessimistic about the recruiting&#13;
process. He felt that although&#13;
they've received several applications,&#13;
the university must&#13;
sell themselves to the candidate&#13;
to the school.&#13;
As for the interviews by&#13;
students, faculty, and administration,&#13;
Singer stated that&#13;
these should take place sometime&#13;
in December, once the top candidates&#13;
have been screened.&#13;
There will be ads placed in&#13;
major journals for each .of the&#13;
specialty areas next week which&#13;
Singer hoped would be bringing&#13;
more applications. He stated that&#13;
the chairperson should be&#13;
selected by the time the second&#13;
setnester starts.&#13;
Singer also stated that the&#13;
accounting positions he had&#13;
hoped to have filled by the second&#13;
semester will probably not be&#13;
filled. He said that this was due to&#13;
the problem that faculty felt they&#13;
owed something to the school that&#13;
hired them first and most of the&#13;
time. They will stay with that&#13;
school until the end of the&#13;
semester."&#13;
bee'S . -901'&#13;
Monday - Thursday 9 - 5&#13;
Friday 9 - 8&#13;
- Student Discount&#13;
OPTICAL .&#13;
BOUTIQUE&#13;
552-7610&#13;
Saturday 9 -&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
Lorgest Selection&#13;
of Foshionoble&#13;
Fromes in South ·Eastern Wisconsin&#13;
Le rises&#13;
Duplico~ed&#13;
Ph_ysicion&#13;
Prescriptions&#13;
Filled&#13;
4425 · TAYLOR&#13;
Ten minutes&#13;
Kenosho!!&#13;
Onl.Y&#13;
From &#13;
4 THE P ARKSIDE RANGER November 3, 1976&#13;
David Vogt&#13;
~ tmerMy~~~.p8f1uIide&#13;
Filta&#13;
AcaplIlco&#13;
Semester Break&#13;
January &amp;-13, 1971&#13;
$339 COMPLETE&#13;
Triple occupancy&#13;
LIMITED SPACE -&#13;
MAKE YOUR&#13;
RESERVATIONS, NOW!&#13;
• For application forms or&#13;
additional information contact:&#13;
Parkside Union Office&#13;
553·2200&#13;
Information Analyst&#13;
studies. adult students&#13;
by Pbilip L. Livingston&#13;
Last August Parkside's Information Analyst,&#13;
David Vogt, released phase one of the three phased&#13;
Adult Student Study. The purpose of the study was&#13;
to find out more about the "non-traditional" or,&#13;
adult student who is over the age of 25.&#13;
This special information, specifically, the class,&#13;
. sex, race, marital status, major, and credit hour&#13;
load of adult students is obtained by writing a&#13;
program to extract these bits of data from the main&#13;
data base in the Computer Center.&#13;
David Vogt is quick to note that it's difficult. to&#13;
draw conclusions or make long term&#13;
generalizations on two years of data. Vogt's&#13;
-g. eighteen statement examination of the report's&#13;
~ tables is brief and direct. There are no big surprises&#13;
~ but we do know for a fact that 31 percent of our&#13;
~ students are over 25, and they are more likely to be&#13;
ii' enrolled in social science, Spanish, education,&#13;
r applied science and technology, business&#13;
~. management, and labor economics. ,.&#13;
lQ The phase one report also shows that the rn.a1.0rity&#13;
~&#13;
of the non-traditional students were majoring in&#13;
psychology, economics, geography, history,&#13;
. political science, sociology, German" Spanish,&#13;
applied science and technology, business&#13;
management, and labor economics:&#13;
Although this study is somewhat of apriority, ,&#13;
Vogt's office also has to complete state forms&#13;
regarding enrollment by semester. The other two&#13;
phases of the adult study will have to be squeezed&#13;
into the periods when demand for computer time is&#13;
low.&#13;
Phase two will dwell on attendance specifically&#13;
time-day patterns and course popularity. Phase&#13;
three is a questionaire that will be drawn up to try to&#13;
get the information not gathered by phases one and&#13;
two and will be designed to try and answer&#13;
questions synthesized from the earlier phases.&#13;
Vogt's office also bas other data pertaining to&#13;
area population curves that generally point to the&#13;
importance of understanding more about the future&#13;
growth of Parkside with regard to the type of&#13;
students most likely to attend classes.&#13;
MONEY&#13;
HUNGRY?-&#13;
Kenosha County Advocates&#13;
For Youth&#13;
Needs Students or Student&#13;
Organizations to Sell&#13;
Raffle Tickets on Campus!&#13;
KEEP 25% OF&#13;
SALES'I&#13;
Call 658-4911 for details&#13;
Last Saturday,. October 30;&#13;
members of the Foreign Student'&#13;
Club toured the Southern Center&#13;
for tbe Developmentally&#13;
Disabled (formerly Sonthern&#13;
Colony).&#13;
Members of tbe Foreign&#13;
Student Club from left to right&#13;
are: Sam Kaman; Natrebi,&#13;
Kenya, Mike Montessantos;&#13;
Athens, Greece, Conststino&#13;
Caloniatis; Panama, Panama&#13;
City, Alsane Hutchings; Tehran,&#13;
Iran, Francis' G.C, Nwokike;&#13;
Nigeria, West Africa, Harry&#13;
Gilbert, Volunteer Coordinator&#13;
for the Center, and Eugenia&#13;
Malaki-Hanseo; Athens, Greece.&#13;
Concerts scheduled&#13;
Parkside will present a series&#13;
of three Young Persons' Concerts&#13;
during the 1976-77academic year"&#13;
University spokesmen said the&#13;
series is designed for young&#13;
persons and their parents and&#13;
music students and their&#13;
teachers,&#13;
The series, nominally priced,&#13;
will begin ·with a program by&#13;
violinist Eugene Fodor, artist-inresidence&#13;
at Parkside, with&#13;
pianist Stephen Swedish,&#13;
associate professor of music, at&#13;
10:30a.m. on Nov. 26 ( the Friday&#13;
during the Thanksgiving school&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,OOO-mile oil change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60°F. pour point)&#13;
• Saves 011 RICK "BENTSON'&#13;
your AMSIOIL dea/.r 639-4067&#13;
recess).&#13;
Timothy Bell, assistant professor&#13;
of music, will present the second&#13;
concert with the award-winning&#13;
Parkside Jazz Ensemble I, of&#13;
which he is the director, at 2 p.rn.&#13;
on Saturday, Feb. 26, and pianist&#13;
Swedish, a concert artist in his&#13;
own right with performance&#13;
credits throughout the United&#13;
States and in Europe, will present&#13;
the final program at 2 p.m. on&#13;
Saturday, April 16.&#13;
All performances will be in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Tickets are $1 per .eoncert for&#13;
students; $2 per concert for&#13;
adults, tax included, and can be&#13;
obtained by writing Young'&#13;
Persons Concert Series,&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
Kenosha. WI" 53140.&#13;
Tickets can be purchased for the&#13;
entire series or for individual&#13;
programs. Additional concert&#13;
information can be obtained by&#13;
calling 553-2~.&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 3, 1976&#13;
t/1' l.kwefsily~-~~.pF&#13;
t !ta -Acapnlco&#13;
David Vogt&#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 1nformat10n contact:&#13;
Parkside Union Office&#13;
553-2200&#13;
MONEY&#13;
HUNGRY?-&#13;
Kenosha County Advocates&#13;
For Youth&#13;
Needs Students or· Student&#13;
Organizations to Sell&#13;
Raffl_e Tickets on Campus!&#13;
KEEP 25% OF&#13;
SALES-I&#13;
Call 658-4911 for details&#13;
Information Analyst&#13;
studies .. adult stu·dent·s&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Last August Parksidf s Information Analyst,&#13;
David Vogt, released phase one of the three phased&#13;
Adult Student Study. The purpose of the study was&#13;
to find out more about the "non-traditional" or,&#13;
adult student who is over the age of 25.&#13;
This special information, specifically, the class,&#13;
· sex; race, marital status, major, and credit hour&#13;
load of adult students is obtained by writing a&#13;
program to extract these bits of data from the main&#13;
data base in the Computer Center.&#13;
of the non-traditional students were majoring in&#13;
psychology, economics, geography, history,&#13;
political science, sociology, German, · Spanish,&#13;
applied science and technology, business&#13;
management, and labor economics:&#13;
Although this study is somewhat of a priority,&#13;
Vogt's office also has to complete state forms '&#13;
regarding enrollment by semester. The other two&#13;
phases of the adult study will have to be squeezed&#13;
into the periods when demand for computer time is&#13;
low.&#13;
David Vogt is quick to note that it's difficult, to&#13;
draw conclusions or make long term&#13;
generalizations on two years of data. Vogt's&#13;
-g. eighteen statement examination of the report's&#13;
~ tables is brief and direct. There are no big surprises&#13;
~ but we do know for a fact that 31 percent of our&#13;
~ students are over 25, and they are more likely to be&#13;
.;· enrolled in social science, Spanish, education,&#13;
,- applied science and technology, business&#13;
~ management, and labor economics. 5·&#13;
Phase two will dwell on attendance specifically&#13;
time-day patterns and course popularity. Phase&#13;
three is a questionaire that will be drawn up to try to&#13;
get the information not gathered by phases one and&#13;
two . and will be designed to try and answer&#13;
questions synthesized from the earlier phases.&#13;
Vogt's office also has other data pertaining to&#13;
area population curves that generally point to the&#13;
importance of understanding more about the future&#13;
growth of Parkside with regard to the type of&#13;
students most likely to attend classes.&#13;
~ TI1e phase onG rcpcrt also sho\vs that the rna1ority&#13;
d&#13;
:,&#13;
Last Saturday, October 30;&#13;
-members of the Foreign Student&#13;
Club toured the Southern Center&#13;
for the Developmentally&#13;
Disabled (formerly Southern&#13;
Colony).&#13;
Members of the Foreign&#13;
Student Club from left to right&#13;
are: Sam Kamau; NairoJ,i,&#13;
Kenya, Mike Montessantos;&#13;
Athens, Greece, Constatino&#13;
Caloniatis; Panama, Panama&#13;
City, Afsane Hutchings; Tehran,&#13;
Iran, Francis· G.C. Nwokike;&#13;
Nigeria, West Africa, Harry&#13;
Gilbert, Volunteer Coordinator&#13;
for the Center, and Eugenia&#13;
Malaki-Hansen; Athens, Greece.&#13;
Concerts scheduled - Parkside will present a series&#13;
of three Young Persons" Concerts&#13;
during the 1976-77 academic year.&#13;
University spokesmen said the&#13;
series is d~signed for young&#13;
persons and their parents and&#13;
music students and their&#13;
teachers.&#13;
The series, nominally priced,&#13;
will begin ·with a program by&#13;
violinist Eugene Fodor, artist-inresidence&#13;
at Parkside, with&#13;
pianist Stephen Swedish,&#13;
associate professor of music, at&#13;
10:30a.m. on Nov. 26 ( the Friday&#13;
during the Thanksgiving school&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
your AMS/OIL dealer&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,000-mile oil change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60°F. -pour point)&#13;
• saves 011 RICK BENTSON,&#13;
639-4067&#13;
recess).&#13;
Timothy Bell, assistant professor&#13;
of music, will present the second&#13;
concert with the award-winning&#13;
Parkside Jazz Ensemble I, of&#13;
which he is the director, at 2 p.m.&#13;
on Saturday, Feb. 26, and pianist&#13;
Swedish, a concert artist in his&#13;
own right with performance&#13;
credits throughout the United&#13;
States and in Europe, will pre&amp;ent&#13;
the final program at 2 p.m. on&#13;
Saturday~ April 16.&#13;
All performances will be in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Tickets are $1 per .concert for&#13;
students; $2 per concert for&#13;
adults, tax included, and can be&#13;
obtained by writing Young&#13;
Persons Concert Series,&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
Kenosha WI. 53140.&#13;
Tickets can be purchased for the&#13;
entire series or for individual&#13;
programs. Additional concert&#13;
information can be obtained by&#13;
calling 553-2i88. &#13;
0:0"£0:' 0 Ie&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November S, 1171 5&#13;
Dizzy excites crowd&#13;
A Bit of Warmth&#13;
Wendy MlUer-8eptember 23rd&#13;
It&#13;
• Salaried position demanding at least 20~ hours a week&#13;
• Experience in journalism necessary&#13;
• Applic':1nts will be advised of interview time and place&#13;
by Wendy MlUer&#13;
Tuesday night, October 26th, Dizzy Gillespie shared his music and&#13;
himself with the many people who gathered to see him here at&#13;
Parkside. Dizzy, one of the main me.n responsible for Bebop music.&#13;
seems to be a natural comedian. He had the audience laughing many&#13;
times, sometimes -by just rolling his eyes. The person next to me&#13;
remarked, "Sure does have a good.time; doesn't he?" He does. That is&#13;
why it is so easy for the audience to have a good time. He began the&#13;
evening somewhat humorously, but very sincerely, "We're all&#13;
branches of one tree, leaves of one branch, and fruit there of."&#13;
He shared the stage well with his band, which consisted of bassistBenjamin&#13;
Franklin Brown, drummer-Mickey Raker, and guitaristRodney&#13;
Jones. Rodney has only been with the band for five months. He&#13;
IS twenty years old and very impressive. In a piece entiUe Ole' he had&#13;
the audience transfixed. -Dizzyalso seemed to enjoy it but Dizzy seems&#13;
to enjoy everything.&#13;
Dizzy's solos were definitely distinctive. They came from deep&#13;
within himself and reached out to this spellbound audience. WhUe&#13;
packing after the concert he said, "It is up to the artist to penetrate&#13;
and be something to the people out there. It's your duty and if you don't&#13;
get to them, you are derelict in your duty, and I don't want to be&#13;
in my duty." He was speaking in reference to his part in tbe Bahai&#13;
faith.&#13;
Dizzy incorporates Mrican, Cuban, and Oriental styles into his&#13;
music. But that's not all that makes it so unique. He plays an upswept&#13;
trumpet that enables him to hear more of what he is playing. He has&#13;
been playing it that way for about twenty years, since his conventional&#13;
horn was bent at a party. .&#13;
At one point during the conceri he hall the audience singing. During&#13;
another tune he had people clapping alternately to his playing. During&#13;
a fast blues tune, entitled The Champ, he did some scat singing, sort of&#13;
jumbled almost nonsensical words that movewith the music. The&#13;
audience responded favorably to his vocals. When he asked if he&#13;
should do Sail Peanuts, he was greeted with enthusiastic en.&#13;
couragements from the crowd. Salt Peanuts is obviously one of his&#13;
more famous vocal tunes. The audience was also enthused when he&#13;
announced what they were going to do , A Night in Tunesia, which is&#13;
practically a classic. They did a tune, Land of the Living Dead, from&#13;
one of their recent albums, Bahia. He said that the album is, "an&#13;
album destined to become the 'greatest secrets in show business". I&#13;
doubt it. If you were there, you know why. If you weren't there, you&#13;
. can buy the album and hear part of what you missed.&#13;
Dizzy turned fifty-eight on October twenty-first. On October twentysixth,&#13;
he and his band left Parkside and headed for Tuscon. I don't&#13;
know how he stays so young. Maybe it's the way he lives. He does live&#13;
and his music always Will,&#13;
I was a pebble tumbling through&#13;
cloudy darkness,&#13;
You were the sun, warming me&#13;
through the cool waters.&#13;
Leading me with your rays,&#13;
together we danced to the rhythm&#13;
of the waves.&#13;
You've got it now&#13;
She's got it,. he's got it&#13;
We've aU got it&#13;
It's in the music&#13;
Can you feel it?&#13;
Let it take you&#13;
Teach you&#13;
Make you&#13;
Can you feel it?&#13;
Believe it&#13;
And if you loose it&#13;
Find it soon&#13;
Find it, keep it&#13;
Lose itt use it&#13;
It's in the music.&#13;
Call Don Kopriva for further detail. 553.2404&#13;
Every Wednesday, Thursday and Friday during the noon hours in Union Square. and on a TV Monitor in&#13;
Main Placs, the PAS. Video Committee will show the&#13;
.0&#13;
Without a warning, rain drops&#13;
dappled the waters surface&#13;
The rhythm had been broken&#13;
You reached out for me,&#13;
but I could not see,&#13;
I've lost you to the horizon.&#13;
Kathy Andersen&#13;
Applications now&#13;
being accepted for&#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;
"&#13;
o&#13;
o&#13;
and&#13;
Dizzy excites. crowd&#13;
by Wendy Miller&#13;
Tuesday night, October 26th, Dizzy Gillespie shared his music and&#13;
himself with the many people who gathered to see him here at&#13;
Parkside. Dizzy, one of the main men responsible for 1*bop music,&#13;
see.ms to be a natural comedian. He had the audience laughing many&#13;
times, sometimes ,by just rolling his eyes. The person next to me&#13;
remarked, "Sure does have a good time; doesn't he?" He does. That is&#13;
· why it is so easy for the audience to have a good time. He began the&#13;
evening somewhat humorously, but very sincerely, "We're all&#13;
branches of one tree, leaves of one branch, and fruit there of."&#13;
He shared the stage well with his band, which consisted of bassistBenjamin&#13;
Franklin Brown, drummer-Mickey Roker, and guitaristRodney&#13;
Jones. Rodney has only been with the band for five months. He&#13;
ls twenty years old and very impressive. In a piece entitle Ole' he had&#13;
the audience transfixed. Dizzy also seemed to enjoy it but Dizzy seems&#13;
to enjoy everything.&#13;
Dizzy's solos were definitely distinctive. They came from deep&#13;
within himself and reached out to this spellbound audience. While&#13;
packing after the concert he said, "It is up to the artist to penetrate&#13;
and be something to the people out there. It's your duty and if you don't&#13;
get to them, you are derelict in your duty, and I don't want to be&#13;
in my duty." He was speaking il_l reference to his part in the Bahai&#13;
faith.&#13;
Dizzy incorporates African, Cuban, and Oriental styles into his&#13;
music. But that's not all that makes it so unique. He plays an upswept&#13;
trumpet that enables him to hear more of what he is playing. He has&#13;
been playing it that way for about twenty years, since his conventional&#13;
horn was bent at a party. ·&#13;
At one point during the concert he had the audience singing. During&#13;
another tune he had people clapping alternately to his playing. During&#13;
a fast blues tune, entitled The Chall!P, he did some scat singin_g, sort of&#13;
jumbled almost nonsensical words that move ·with the music. The&#13;
audience responded favorably to his vocals. When he asked if he&#13;
should do Salt Peanuts, he was greeted with enthusiastic encouragements&#13;
from the crowd. Salt Peanuts is obviously one of his&#13;
more famous vocal tunes. The audience was also enthused when he&#13;
announcedwhatthey were going to do , A Night in Tunesia, which is&#13;
practically a classic. They did a tune, Land of the Living Dead, from&#13;
one of their recent albums, Bahia. He said that the album is, "an&#13;
album destined to become the ·greatest secrets in show business". I&#13;
doubt it. If you were there, you know why. if you weren't there, you&#13;
, can buy the album and hear part of what you missed.&#13;
Dizzy turned fifty-eight on October twenty-first. On October twentysixth,&#13;
he and his band left Parkside and headed for Tuscon. I don't&#13;
know how he stays so young. Maybe it's the way he lives. He does live&#13;
and his music always will,&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 3, 1976 5&#13;
-11'4atje&#13;
A Bit of Warmth&#13;
I was a pebble tumbling through&#13;
cloudy darkness,&#13;
You were the sun, warming me&#13;
through the cool waters.&#13;
Leading me with your rays,&#13;
together we danced to the rhythm&#13;
of the waves.&#13;
Without a warning, rain drops&#13;
dappled the waters surface&#13;
The rhythm had been broken&#13;
You reached out for me,&#13;
but I could not see,&#13;
I've lost you to the horizon.&#13;
Kathy Andersen&#13;
Wendy Miller-8eptember 23rd&#13;
It&#13;
You've got it now&#13;
She's got it, he's got it&#13;
We've all got it&#13;
It's in the music&#13;
Can you feel it?&#13;
Let it take you&#13;
Teach you&#13;
Make you&#13;
Can you feel it?&#13;
Believe it&#13;
And if you loose it&#13;
Find it soon&#13;
Find it, keep it&#13;
Lose it, use it&#13;
It's in the music .&#13;
Applications now&#13;
being accepted for&#13;
Ranger Editor foi&#13;
Spring Semester&#13;
RESUMES MUST BE TURNED IN TO&#13;
DON KOPRIVA,&#13;
288 Tallent Hall by ov. 11th&#13;
• Salaried position demanding at least 20-30 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;
Thursday and Friday during the noon hours in Union Square. and&#13;
Main Place. the P.A.B. Video Committee will show the&#13;
" .0&#13;
0&#13;
0 &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November~3, 1976&#13;
Career------&#13;
-continued from pg. 1&#13;
workers. 11million, professional and teclmical workers· 9 mI11ion,&#13;
operatives - 6million, managers and admimistrators - 5 million, crafts&#13;
and kindred workers - 5 million, salesworkers- 3 million, non-farm&#13;
, laborers -1 million, farm workerll -less than 1million,&#13;
Workers with education will be in greater demand than workers&#13;
without education because in general jobs will 'continue to become&#13;
more complex and employment gr~ in areas. requiring the most&#13;
education will continue to have the higbest growth rate,&#13;
The National Education Association reports that the numher of&#13;
people graduating from college with teaching certification exceeds the&#13;
number of available teaching jobs by 90,950,Of the potential teachers&#13;
graduating in 1974, 47,9 percent are employed 85' teachers: Twelve&#13;
years ago this percentage was 74,4,&#13;
Areas in education where the field is least crowded are&#13;
mathematics, natural and physical sciences, distributive education,&#13;
industrial arts and agriculture, The most competitive areas are :&#13;
social studies, physical and health education, art and foreign&#13;
Ie C!&amp;lbt&#13;
*l&gt;tue et B&gt;b Oppt&#13;
featuring:&#13;
a variety of your candy&#13;
and nut favorties said&#13;
the old-fashioned way&#13;
'Periodicals&#13;
cancelled&#13;
Mon. thru Fri.&#13;
10 c.m. - .4 p.m.&#13;
toccred in Union Btzcrre&#13;
language, Labor Market Analysts from Wisconsin Job Service Offices&#13;
in Racine and Kenosha were contacted for information about the local&#13;
job markets, "&#13;
Paul P'\lIshorn from the Racine Job Service stated that presently&#13;
Racine has one of the highest unemployment rates for a major&#13;
manufacturing city, He said that industrial engineers, accountants,&#13;
computer programmers, insurance salespeople and clerical workers&#13;
are in the greatest demand' in Racine County, while liberal arts&#13;
majors, social workers and teachers are the most difficult&#13;
'professionals to place, Penshorn noted that accountants with a great&#13;
deal of experience were having trouble finding jobs because employers&#13;
are seeking accountants with 1 to 2'h years of experience who&#13;
can be hired for less money,&#13;
Ken Neil, the Kenosha Job Service Labor Market Analyst, stated&#13;
that students majoring in generalliheral arts subjects were as likely&#13;
to find a job with one major as with another since employers hiring&#13;
them in trainee positions were looking for personal characteristics&#13;
such as good attitudes, general intelligence, adaptability and evidence&#13;
of initiative rather than a specific major or an exceptionally high'&#13;
grade point average,&#13;
According to Neil, the single most important faelor to a liberal arts&#13;
graduate in finding a job is the selection of an occupational goal, Neil&#13;
finds in Kenosha that business majors are among the easiest college&#13;
graduates to place in jobs especially those with concentrations in&#13;
accounting or computers '&#13;
The information in this article represents only a small proportion of&#13;
material available in employment trends, Projection breakdowns for&#13;
some specific jobs-are given in the bulletin board display on the first&#13;
floor of Classroom Building, The Career Resource Center in 107&#13;
Tallent Hall contains more data on this subject including information&#13;
estimating the employment needs of e~ch state,&#13;
by Unda Knudtson&#13;
Due to the rising cost of&#13;
-periodical subscriptions, a&#13;
limited budget, and plans by&#13;
Library administrators to revise&#13;
their lists of periodicals to meet&#13;
current needs at Parkside ,&#13;
several periodical subscriptions&#13;
are slated to be cancelled from&#13;
Parkside's collection,&#13;
A list of these periodiCll1s is&#13;
being sent to all faculty members&#13;
for final review, Two copies of the&#13;
list will also be available to&#13;
students for review, Once copy&#13;
Why' do some people think&#13;
Bud..is sort of special?&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make a difference.)&#13;
When you say Budweiser ..,'you've said it all!&#13;
~ ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC .• ST. LOUIS&#13;
E.F.. Madrigrano&#13;
will be available for inspection at&#13;
the lnfonnation Desk and the&#13;
other copy will be posted on the&#13;
bulletin board just inside the&#13;
Library doors, I&#13;
This list is the result of the&#13;
coordination of previous faculty&#13;
input by the Library. It was&#13;
designed to insure that&#13;
, periodicals supplemental to&#13;
Parkside courses as well as some&#13;
other top periodicals in the&#13;
adademic fields if interest to&#13;
Parkside students would not be&#13;
cancelled,&#13;
Special&#13;
course&#13;
, Y&#13;
offered&#13;
,&#13;
A special course for parents of&#13;
children wi th learning&#13;
disabilities ,will 'be offered&#13;
Parkside on Tuesdays from 7: 30&#13;
to 9:30 p.rn. beginning Nov. 2 and&#13;
continuing through Dec, 7 in&#13;
Classroom Bldg, Room 31L&#13;
Registrations will be taken at&#13;
the first class meeting, Fees are&#13;
$36,25 for those laking the course&#13;
for one credit; $25 for those attentling&#13;
in a no-credit audit basis,&#13;
-, Diane German, director of&#13;
Parkside's learning disabilities&#13;
program said that the course is&#13;
designed to help parents ,of&#13;
children with learning&#13;
disabilities understand and cope&#13;
with the particular problems&#13;
'their children Iaee in trying to&#13;
realize their academic potential.&#13;
Discussions will center arouod&#13;
characteristics, behavior,&#13;
diagnosis and remediation of&#13;
children wi th learning&#13;
disabilities,&#13;
German will be the principal&#13;
instructor for the classes,&#13;
assisted 'by students training for&#13;
learning disabilities certification,&#13;
"June Reinert, instructor in&#13;
learning disabilities, will lead a&#13;
special session on behavioral&#13;
problems of learning tlisabled&#13;
children,&#13;
Additional information on the&#13;
program is available from&#13;
Parkside's Education Division&#13;
.Office,&#13;
Dancers-----&#13;
~ontlnued from pg. 1&#13;
, others from 2 to 3 p.m, They will&#13;
hold a demonstration and improvisational&#13;
session for area&#13;
high school students, Both&#13;
programs will be held in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater,&#13;
Information is available from the&#13;
Parkside Admissions Office,&#13;
The Utah Dance Theater,&#13;
fonned in 1966with a grant from&#13;
the Rockefeller Foundation and&#13;
, the cooperation of the University&#13;
of Utah, is dedic~ted to the&#13;
modern idiom in dance which&#13;
developed as a reaction to the&#13;
more confining movement of&#13;
classical ballet. Along with jazz,&#13;
modern dance is considered one&#13;
of two original American performing&#13;
art forms,&#13;
The company has a repertory&#13;
of 33 works by 17 choreographers&#13;
spanning the entire' range of&#13;
modern dance styles from&#13;
classics of modern dance to&#13;
experimental works including&#13;
jazz. drama, movement and&#13;
humor,&#13;
Their 'Parkside program will&#13;
include three major production&#13;
numbers, separated by two in-,&#13;
termissions: Jose Limon's&#13;
classic "There is a Time," first&#13;
choreographed in 1957for his own&#13;
company, Lynne Wimmer's "My&#13;
Brother's Keeper," a dance&#13;
based on John Steinbeck's Of&#13;
Mice and Men, and contemporary&#13;
choreographer Lar&#13;
Lubovitch's "Session."&#13;
Remaining programs this&#13;
semester in the Accent on&#13;
Enrichment Series are Chicago's&#13;
Second City improvisational&#13;
theater company on Nov, 19 and&#13;
coloratura soprano Roberta&#13;
Peters on Dec, 9,&#13;
,Accent on Enrichment&#13;
presents&#13;
UTAH REPERTORY&#13;
DANCE THEATER&#13;
III . mpresSlve ••• one of the best disciplined&#13;
troupes in the country." '&#13;
-- Clive Barnes. New York Times&#13;
Sp.rn. TONIGHT&#13;
COMM ARTS THEA:TER&#13;
Tickets at the door&#13;
$4.50 UW-P students.$5 Others&#13;
•&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November-: 3, 1976&#13;
Career------ continued from pg. 1&#13;
workers - 11 million, professional and technical workers - 9 million,&#13;
operatives - 6 million, managers and admimistrators - 5 million, crafts&#13;
and kindred ~orkers - 5 million, salesworkers- 3 million, non-farm&#13;
laborers -1 million, farm workers -less than 1 million.&#13;
Workers with education will be in greater demand than workers&#13;
without education because in general jobs will ·continue to become&#13;
more complex and employment gro\ith in areas requiring the most&#13;
education will continue to have the highest growth rate.&#13;
The ·National Education Association reports that the number of&#13;
people graduating from college with teaching certification exceeds the&#13;
number of available teaching jobs by 90,950. Of the potential teachers&#13;
graduating in 1974, 47 .9 percent are employed as teachers: Twelve&#13;
years ago this percentage was 74.4.&#13;
Areas in education where the field is least crowded are&#13;
mathematics, natural and physical sciences, distributive education,&#13;
industrial arts and agriculture. The most competitive areas are :&#13;
social studies, physical and health education, art and · foreign&#13;
featuring:_&#13;
a variety of your candy&#13;
and nut fovorties sold&#13;
the old-fashioned way&#13;
OPEN :&#13;
Mon. thru Fri.&#13;
10 o.m. - .C p.m.&#13;
Loco.ted in Union Sizo.rre&#13;
language. Labor Market Analysts from Wisconsin Job Service Offices&#13;
in Racine and Kenosha were contacted for information about the local&#13;
job markets. . ·&#13;
Paul P~nshorn from the Racine Job Service stated that presently&#13;
Raci:_ne has one of the highest unemployment rates for a major&#13;
manufacturing city. He said that industrial engineers, accountants,&#13;
computer programmers, insurance salespeople and clerical wo::-kc:rs&#13;
are in the greatest demand· in Racine County, while liberal arts&#13;
majors, social workers and teachers . are the most difficult&#13;
professionals to place. Penshorn noted that accountants with a great&#13;
deal of experience were having trouble finding jobs because employers&#13;
are seeking accountants with 1 to 2½ years of experience who&#13;
can be hired for less money.&#13;
.l{en Neil, the Kenosha Job Service Labor Market Analyst, stated&#13;
that students majoring in general liberal arts subjects were as likely&#13;
to find a job with one major as with another since employers hiring&#13;
them in trainee positions were looking for personal characteristics&#13;
such as good attitudes, general intelligence, adaptability and evidence&#13;
of initiative rather than a specific major or an exceptiqnally high.&#13;
grade point average.&#13;
According to Neil, the single most important factor to a liberal arts&#13;
graduate in finding a job is the selection of an occupational goal. Neil&#13;
finds in Kenosha that business majors are among the easiest college&#13;
graduates to place in jobs especially those with concentrations in&#13;
accounting or computers .&#13;
The information in this article represents orJy a small proportion of&#13;
material available in employment trends. Projection breakdowns for&#13;
some specific jobs are given in the bulletin board display on the first&#13;
floor of Classroom Building. The Career Resource Center in 107&#13;
Tallent Hall contains more data on this subject including information&#13;
estimating the employment needs of each state.&#13;
· Periodicals&#13;
cancelled·&#13;
by Unda Knudtson&#13;
Due to the rising cost of&#13;
-periodical subscriptions, a&#13;
limited budget, and plans by&#13;
Library administrators to revise&#13;
their lists of periodicals to meet&#13;
current needs at Par.kside,&#13;
several periodical subscription,s&#13;
are slated to be cancelled from&#13;
Parkside 's collection.&#13;
A list of these periodicals is&#13;
being sent to all faculty members&#13;
for final review. Two copies of the&#13;
list will also be available to&#13;
students for review. Once copy&#13;
will be available for inspection at&#13;
the Information Desk and the&#13;
other copy wili be posteq on the&#13;
bulletin board just inside the&#13;
Library doors.&#13;
This list is the result of the&#13;
coordination of previous faculty&#13;
input by the Library. It was&#13;
designed to insure that&#13;
. periodicals supplemental to&#13;
Parkside courses as well as some&#13;
other top periodicals in the&#13;
adademic fields if interest to&#13;
Parkside students would not be&#13;
cancelled.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
Special&#13;
course • I&#13;
offered&#13;
A special course for parents of&#13;
children with learning&#13;
disabilities .will 'be offered&#13;
Parkside on Tuesdays from 7: 30&#13;
to 9:30 p.m. beginning Nov. 2 and&#13;
continuing through Dec. 7 in&#13;
Classroom Bldg. Room 311.&#13;
Registrations will be taken at&#13;
the first class meeting. Fee~ are&#13;
$36.25 for those taking the course&#13;
for one credit; $25 for" those attending&#13;
in a no-credit audit basis.&#13;
Diane German, director of&#13;
Parkside's learning disabilities ·&#13;
program said that the course is&#13;
designed to help parents ·of&#13;
children with learning&#13;
disabilities understand and cope&#13;
with the particular problems&#13;
their children face in trying to&#13;
realize their academic potential.&#13;
Discussions will center around&#13;
charact eristics, behavior,&#13;
diagnosis and remediation of&#13;
children with learning&#13;
disabilities.&#13;
German will be the principal&#13;
instructor for the classes,&#13;
assisted 'by students training for&#13;
learning disabilities certification.&#13;
June Reinert, instructor in&#13;
learning disabilities, will lead a&#13;
special session on behavioral&#13;
problems of learning disabled&#13;
children.&#13;
Additional information on the&#13;
program is available from&#13;
Parkside's Education Division&#13;
Office.&#13;
-&#13;
Why do some people think&#13;
Bude is sort of special?&#13;
Dancers---- cont inued from pg. 1&#13;
others from 2 to 3 p.m. They will&#13;
hold a demonstration and improvisational&#13;
session for area&#13;
high school students. Both&#13;
programs will be held in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Information is available from the&#13;
Parkside Admissions Office.&#13;
modern dance styles from&#13;
classics of modern dance to&#13;
experimental works including&#13;
jazz, drama, movement and&#13;
humor.&#13;
·-&#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. ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS&#13;
E.F '1adrigrano&#13;
The Utah Dance Theater,&#13;
formed in 1966 with a grant from&#13;
the Rockefeller Foundation and&#13;
. the cooperation of the University&#13;
of Utah, is dedic£ted to the&#13;
modern idiom in dance which&#13;
developed as a reaction to the&#13;
more confining movement of&#13;
classical ballet. Along with jazz,&#13;
modern dance is considered one&#13;
of two original American performing&#13;
art forms.&#13;
The company has a repertory&#13;
of 33 works by 17 choreographers&#13;
spanning the entire· range of&#13;
Their ·Parkside program will&#13;
include three major production&#13;
numbers, separated by two in- ·&#13;
termissions: Jose Limon's&#13;
classic "There is a Time," first&#13;
choreographed in 1957 for his own&#13;
company, Lynne Wimmer's "My&#13;
Brother's Keeper," a dance&#13;
based on John Steinbeck's Of&#13;
Mice and Men, and contemporary&#13;
choreographer Lar&#13;
Lubovitch's "Session."&#13;
Rema ining programs this&#13;
semester in the Accent on&#13;
Enrichment Series are Chicago's&#13;
Second City improvisational&#13;
theater company on Nov. 19 and&#13;
coloratura soprano Roberta&#13;
Peters on Dec. 9.&#13;
-Accent on 'Enrichment&#13;
presents&#13;
UTAH REPERTORY&#13;
DANCE TREATER&#13;
11 lmpressive •• • one o f the ·bes~ d i sc i p li ned&#13;
t roupes in t h~ coun t ry.11&#13;
-- Clive Ba rnes , New York T imes&#13;
8p.m. TONIGHT ·&#13;
COMM ARTS THEA:TER&#13;
Tickets at the door&#13;
$4.50 UW-P students,$5 Others &#13;
Worksheets&#13;
available&#13;
C a r e erE x p lor a t ion&#13;
Worksheets are now available in&#13;
the Career Resource Center for&#13;
students who 1wish to examine&#13;
their career interests, values,&#13;
preferred life styles, personality,&#13;
life goals, strengths and&#13;
weaknesses, in order to establish&#13;
career goals.&#13;
No appointment is necessary.&#13;
Interested students can pick up&#13;
Unit-I of the Career Exploration&#13;
Packet at 107 Tallent Hall or at&#13;
the Career Information Table on.&#13;
Tuesdays in the LLC. Concourse&#13;
between 9:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m.&#13;
-------- I I&#13;
I I&#13;
I&#13;
E&#13;
I&#13;
t t&#13;
, I&#13;
, I&#13;
t&#13;
V&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I I&#13;
I I&#13;
I&#13;
E&#13;
I&#13;
I I&#13;
, II&#13;
I&#13;
, t&#13;
, N&#13;
,&#13;
I I&#13;
I I&#13;
I ~ t&#13;
,&#13;
T&#13;
I&#13;
t I&#13;
t ,&#13;
I t&#13;
I&#13;
S&#13;
,&#13;
I t&#13;
t t&#13;
L ~ t I&#13;
,&#13;
WANTED: A female Siamese kitten between&#13;
S. \I weeks old. Would be assured of having&#13;
an excellent home. with lots of love, care,&#13;
and attention. Please call 6:)7·1521. Wanted&#13;
ee.soce as possible.&#13;
Nt'e(l ride from south side of Milwaukee. Will&#13;
Pay for '12 of gas. Call 762·6231- Ask for Carol.&#13;
'"4 PONTIAC SPRING a-eeeee Metallic&#13;
Blue, red buckets. Rally wheels, AM-FM,&#13;
FM stereo. a-Track 52195. 634·G876.&#13;
WILL 00 any kind of typing at reasonable&#13;
rates. For information. call 652-3373.&#13;
WANTED; Sports writer for RANGER that&#13;
is lalented, gOOd in grammar, and most of all&#13;
~pendable. See Jean Tenuta In the&#13;
RANGER office, WLLC 0194.&#13;
YAN. E. THOMPSON Free Lance&#13;
Photography, Weddings and candid perIralts.&#13;
Phone 652-8862.&#13;
FOR SALE; Portable Stereo with Garrard&#13;
turnf&amp;ble. Asking SSG. Call 634·5305 after&#13;
sa:SJICOlI ""&#13;
11IE PARKSIDE RANGER No... mber S, 1m 7&#13;
Parkside. plllnne~'----------;---&#13;
continued from pg. 1&#13;
gradually there would be an intrusion on this. I wanted to keep it&#13;
always natural because so many campuses look like manicured lawns.&#13;
This is very important. This prairie is a very delicate ecology. You&#13;
know these grasses and weeds that grow here are really very&#13;
beautiful. .&#13;
RANGER: Do you feel your work and program at Lake County&#13;
Community College in Grayslake, lllinois is much more in line with&#13;
what happened here after it became apparent this campus stopped&#13;
growing in student population and new buildings?&#13;
OBATA: No, I think (Parkside) was designed so it couid be a five&#13;
thousand student campus or it could potentially be a 20,000 student&#13;
campus. Lake County was a bit smaller program. Its not as ambitious&#13;
a program. That's more a junior college type of program where&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 3&#13;
Concert, Barry Drake, at 2:30 in Union Square.&#13;
PSGA Senate Meeting 8 p.m, in Union 104.&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series: the Utah Repertory Dance Theater at 8&#13;
p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 4&#13;
Society of Physics Students meets at 2: 30p.m. in GR 230.&#13;
Movie, "~ASH," plays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Union Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $l.&#13;
Magic Visage Organization presents its first Poetry-Prose Reading 8 ~ -,&#13;
p.m. in the 2nd floor Overlook Lounge, UW-P Library. No admission&#13;
charge.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 5&#13;
Debate and Forensics Association meets at 12p.m. in WLLC 295and at&#13;
1:30 p.m. in CA 233. Everybody is welcome. For further information&#13;
contact Harvey Hedden or Diane Carlson, MWF, 10 a.m. to ip.m. in&#13;
WLLC 295.&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Women's swimming, UW-P vs. UW- Whitewater, at 4p.m. in the Phy.&#13;
Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Concert, Tom Chapin performs at 8 p.m. in the Union Theatre. Admission&#13;
is $2.50 for students, $3 for others.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 6&#13;
Men's cross country meet, the USTFF Mid-America Championships,&#13;
at 10 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. at Parkside.&#13;
Soccer Club Dance begins at9 p.rn. in Union Square.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 7&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1to 6p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Movie, "MASH," plays at 7:30p.m. in the Union Theatre. Admission is&#13;
$1.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 9 .&#13;
Movie, "The Passenger," plays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Theatre. Admission is $l.&#13;
Women's volleyball, UW-P, Chicago State, Lewis College, and Carthage&#13;
College competing at 6 p.m. in the Phy. Ed. Bldg:&#13;
Faculty Recital: Carol Irwin, mezzo soprano, and William Robinson,&#13;
piano at 8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
All events must be submitted to Ranger before Wednesday of the week&#13;
before publication.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Submarine&#13;
Sandllich&#13;
OPEN8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 WashingtonAle. 6M-2i7S&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%)' • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,ooo-mlle 011change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60"F. pour point)&#13;
• Saves 011 RACINE&#13;
yo~rAMSIOILdea~r YELLOW 'PAGES&#13;
I&#13;
Parkside could eventually have graduate schools. This • much deeper&#13;
facilities. That comes with supply and demand really, I think we are&#13;
still ill a kind of depressed period as far as construction but that's&#13;
because there has been an over supply of buildings.&#13;
RANGER: Are you so insulated in running such a big firm that you&#13;
cannot achieve artistic satisfaction in architecture and are you content?&#13;
OBATA: I have structured IllY office in such a way that I actually&#13;
design my buildings. That's very important to me or Iwon't have an&#13;
office. You are never content. You always want to improve on what&#13;
you do.&#13;
I&lt; video tape of Obata's address and the WLLC dedication ceremony&#13;
should be in the non-print area of the library this week.&#13;
Opentneeting---&#13;
continued from pg. 1&#13;
could indeed hold an illegal meeting without being penalized. Al, an&#13;
example, each member of a five-member committee could make a&#13;
motion to continue a meeting in open session (a total of five motions).&#13;
and then vote against each of the five notions. In this way each of the&#13;
members has satisfied the requirement that he-she "make a motion to&#13;
prevent the violation from occurring," but now the members could&#13;
vote to go into closed session. They are all open for prosecution, but&#13;
there is no provison for penalizing them.&#13;
This reporter consulted the Attorney General's office for an opinion&#13;
of this interpretation. According to Robert S. Vergeront of the office,&#13;
"I don't think anybody is going to do something like that.,.it is&#13;
assumed that public officials are honest."&#13;
"They (the committee members) could be prosecuted and they&#13;
could raise that defense, but the making of tbe motion and the vote&#13;
would have to be in 'good faith' ." according to Vergeront, who added&#13;
that he thought an article of this type would only serve to show officials&#13;
how to get around the 18w. "I don't think people should be digging&#13;
around looking for possible loopholes," he said. \&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
Stop Inl&#13;
shed e new Life on shoppng I&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
, From GocI's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
•&#13;
Professional Football Games&#13;
Shown On The&#13;
NEW&#13;
7 Foot Advent&#13;
Screen&#13;
Union Square&#13;
Sundays, noon - 6 p.m.&#13;
BEGINS NoY~7th&#13;
BEER, POCORN TOO!&#13;
Worksheets&#13;
available&#13;
Car·eer Exploration&#13;
Worksheets are now available in&#13;
the Career Resource Center for&#13;
students who , wish to examine&#13;
their career interests, values,&#13;
preferred life styles, personality,&#13;
life goals, strengths and&#13;
weaknesses, in order to establish&#13;
career goals,&#13;
No appointment is necessary,&#13;
Interested students can pick up&#13;
Unit -1 of the Career Exploration&#13;
Packet at 107 Tallent Hall or at&#13;
the Career Information Table on,&#13;
Tuesdays in the LLC_ Concourse&#13;
between 9:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m.&#13;
.r------7&#13;
t t&#13;
t E t f . t&#13;
t t ·t t&#13;
t t&#13;
, V t : . :&#13;
t t&#13;
, E t t t&#13;
t r&#13;
t ~ t&#13;
, N , t t&#13;
t t&#13;
t t&#13;
, T -&#13;
, t . t&#13;
t t&#13;
t t&#13;
t s t t t&#13;
t t&#13;
t t&#13;
WANTED: A female Siamese kitten betwe'en&#13;
5 • 9 weeks old. Would be assured of having&#13;
an excellent home, with lots of love, care,&#13;
and attention. Please call 637-1521 . Wanted&#13;
as soon as possible.&#13;
Need ride from south side of Milwaukee. Will&#13;
Pay for 11, of gas. Call 762-6231 . Ask for Carol.&#13;
1974 PONTIAC SPRING 3-speed Metallic&#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&#13;
rates. For information. call 652-3373.&#13;
WANTED: Sports writer for RANGER that&#13;
is talented, good in grammar, and most of all&#13;
dependable. See Jean Tenuta in the&#13;
RANGER office, WLLC D194.&#13;
VAN . E. THOMPSON Free Lance&#13;
PhotQQraphy, weddings and candid portraits.&#13;
Phone 652-8862.&#13;
FOR SALE : Portable Stereo with Garrard&#13;
turntable. Asking sso. Cail 634-5305 after&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 3, 1976 7&#13;
Parkside. planne-P------- continued from pg. 1&#13;
gradually there would be an intrusion on this. I wanted to keep it&#13;
always natural because so many campuses look like manicured lawns.&#13;
This is very important. This prairie is a very delicate ecology. You&#13;
know these grasses and weeds that grow here are really very&#13;
beautiful.&#13;
RANGER: Do you feel your wqrk and program at Lake County&#13;
Community College in Grayslake, Illinois is much more in line with&#13;
what happened here after it became apparent this campus stopped&#13;
growing in student population and new buildings?&#13;
OBATA: No, I think (Parkside) was designed so it could be a five&#13;
thousand student campus or it could potentially be a 20,000 student&#13;
campus. Lake County was a bit smaller program. Its not as ambitious&#13;
a program. That's more a junior college type of program where&#13;
Wednesday,Nov.3&#13;
Concert, Barry Drake, at 2:30 in Union Square.&#13;
PSGA Senate Meeting 8 p.m. in Union 104.&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series: the Utah Repertory Dance Theater at 8&#13;
p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 4&#13;
Society of Physics Students meets at 2: 30 p.m. in GR 230.&#13;
Movie, "¥ASH," plays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Union ~eatre.&#13;
Admission is $1. ·&#13;
M~ic Visa~~ Organizatio_n presents its first Poetry-Prose Reading 8&#13;
p.m. in the 2nd floor Overlook Lounge, UW-P Library. No admission&#13;
charge.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 5&#13;
Debate and Forensics Association meets at 12 p.m. in WLLC 295 and at&#13;
1:30 p.m. in CA 233. Everybody is welcome. For further information&#13;
contact Harvey Hedden or Diane Carlson, MWF, 10 a.m. to i p.m. in&#13;
WLLC 295.&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4 p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Women's swimming, UW-P vs. UW- Whitewater, at 4 p.m. in the Phy.&#13;
Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Concert, Tom Chapin performs at 8 p.m. in the Union T~atre. Admission&#13;
is $2.50 for students, $3 for others.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 6&#13;
Men's cross country meet, the USTFF Mid-America Championships,&#13;
at 10 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. at Parkside.&#13;
Soccer Club Dance begins at 9 p.m. in Union Square.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 7&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1 to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Movie, "MASH," plays at 7:30p.m. in the Union Theatre. Admission is&#13;
$1.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 9 .&#13;
Movie, "The Passenger," plays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
Women's volleyball, UW-P, Chicago State, Lewis College, and Carthage&#13;
College competing at 6 p.m. in the Phy. Ed. Bldg~&#13;
Faculty Recital: Carol Irwin, mezzo soprano, and William Robinson,&#13;
piano at 8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
All events must be submitted to Ranger before Wednesday of the week&#13;
before publication.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Submarine&#13;
Sand11ich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington /We. 634-2373&#13;
• saves gas (up to 25%) ' • Saves wear&#13;
• saves maintenance (25,000-mile oil change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60of. pour point)&#13;
• saves oil RACINE&#13;
yo~rAMSIOILdea~er , YELLOW ' PAGES&#13;
•&#13;
Parkside could eventually have graduate schools. This ll much deeper&#13;
facilities. That comes with supply and demand really, I think we are&#13;
still ii'\ a kind of depressed period as far as construction but that's&#13;
because there has been an over supply of buildings.&#13;
RANGER: Are you so insulated in running such a big firm that you&#13;
cannot achieve artistic satisfaction in architecture and are you content?&#13;
&#13;
OBATA: I have structured ll}Y office in such a way that I actually&#13;
design my buildings. That's very important to me or I won't have an&#13;
office. You are never content. You always want to improve on what&#13;
you do.&#13;
Ir. video tape of Obata's address and the WLLC dedication ceremony&#13;
should be in the non-print area of the library this week. ·&#13;
Open tneeting---&#13;
continued from pg 1&#13;
could indeed hold an illegal meeting without being penalized. N. an&#13;
example, each mt.mber of a five-member corrunittee could make a&#13;
motion to continue a meeting in open session (a total of five motions).&#13;
and then vote against each of the five notions. In this way each of the&#13;
members has satisfied the requirement that he-she "make a motion to&#13;
prevent the violation from occurring," but now the members could&#13;
vote to go into closed session. They are all open for prosecution, but&#13;
there is no provison for penalizing them.&#13;
This reporter consulted the Attorney General's office for an opinion&#13;
of this inierpretation. According to Robert S, Vergeront of the office,&#13;
"I don't think anybody is going to do something like that . ..it is&#13;
assumed that public officials are honest."&#13;
"They (the committee members) could be prosecuted and they&#13;
could raise that defense, but the making of the motion and the vote&#13;
would have to be in 'good faith'," according to Vergeront, who added&#13;
that he thought an article of this type would only serve to show officials&#13;
how to get around the law. " I don't think people should be digging&#13;
around looking for possible loopholes," he said.&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SCJUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
Stop 111 I&#13;
shed e new Life on shoppngl&#13;
.,H777~MA °'~/&#13;
• Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
Professional Football Games&#13;
Shown· On The&#13;
NEW&#13;
7 Foot Advent&#13;
Screen&#13;
Union Square&#13;
Sundays, noon - 6 p.m.&#13;
BEGINS Nov.· 7th&#13;
BEER, POCORN TOO! &#13;
8 THE PARKSlDE RANGER November 3, 1976&#13;
One sweet Dream&#13;
~!~~&#13;
·=I!t~~ / ,,'.II&#13;
• I'· ·1: .• .~ ~I• • 1:tt.'I -, • .~-- .&#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;
~ ••••• IIII!••• '&#13;
Hey, scholars, look at&#13;
these gift selections.&#13;
Everything for Mind BBody&#13;
is right here at&#13;
two stores .. ', your&#13;
stores with atmosphere.&#13;
• Recorda • Tapn. ALL new&#13;
releases stacked floor to&#13;
ceiling!&#13;
• Import albums. We're the&#13;
one store in town the t&#13;
carries foreign releases.&#13;
• Special order •. He rd-to-get&#13;
records and tapes with&#13;
guaranteed one day&#13;
delivery.&#13;
• 'ewelry. Hand crafted &amp;:&#13;
beautiful for style conscious&#13;
guys and gals.&#13;
• Tapntries. Mobiles. Incense&#13;
burners. Stash&#13;
boxes.&#13;
• Jncense. Sticks and cones&#13;
to tickle your nose.&#13;
• Pictures. Decoupage. Wall&#13;
hangings. Artists: Escher.&#13;
Pitre, Roger Dean,&#13;
Rosamond.&#13;
• UplinK to create any&#13;
atmosphere.&#13;
• Leather Goods. WalletsPouches&#13;
- Purses - BeltsHe&#13;
Is &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 were-beds.&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
SOW Seventh Avenue&#13;
654·3578&#13;
WEST&#13;
3910 Seventy Fifth Street&#13;
694·2404&#13;
Par~side hosts&#13;
championships&#13;
by Thomas Nolen&#13;
Parkside will be the site of the&#13;
USTFF Mid·America Championships&#13;
in which over. 500&#13;
runners will compete in ten&#13;
different races.&#13;
Included in this meet are the&#13;
Women's championships. Kim&#13;
Merritt, who was second in world&#13;
competition last October, place&#13;
third in this meet last year.&#13;
The Ra~er squad finished&#13;
their dual meet season with a :;':1&#13;
recoN! with wins over Marquette&#13;
and Loras over tbe weekend. This&#13;
is the fifth straight season that&#13;
Parkside had had only one dual&#13;
loss in cross country.&#13;
Ray Fredericksen led the&#13;
finishers with a time of 25&#13;
minutes. 44.2 seconds tbe second&#13;
fastest time ever on the Parkside&#13;
course.&#13;
Gary Priem was next with a&#13;
. second place at 26 minutes. 14&#13;
seconds. .&#13;
Parkside totalled 19 over&#13;
Marquette's 42 and 16over Loras'&#13;
46 Marquette's Dan Malloy was&#13;
th~Op Warrior in third and Dave&#13;
Smith was first for the Duhawks&#13;
in sixth place.&#13;
Other Parkside runners&#13;
were Jeff Miller, fourth; Mike&#13;
Rivers, fifth; Lee Allinger,&#13;
eighth; Greg Julien, ninth; Jim&#13;
Heiring, 11th; Bill Werve, 13th .&#13;
and John VanDen Brandt, 16th.&#13;
.On Spring, West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge Plaza.&#13;
632-6151&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Soccer team&#13;
hosts meets&#13;
by Jean Tenuta it out of the net. The ball slipped&#13;
from his hands and an opposing&#13;
player was standing there, ready&#13;
to kick the ball in.&#13;
Parkside's lone goal was&#13;
scored by Chris Carter on a cross&#13;
from Mike Boyajian. Carter was&#13;
running full speed. then dove to&#13;
hit the ball "like a shot" into the&#13;
net, according to Henderwon,&#13;
"Western Michigan's goalie&#13;
was unbelieveilble.He-was an AllAmerican&#13;
last year and he showed&#13;
us why," said Henderson. "We&#13;
made 23 shots on goal and he&#13;
made 18 saves."&#13;
Western Michigan's coach was&#13;
impressed with Ranger steve&#13;
Sendelbach, stating: "he's the&#13;
finest I've seen all year."&#13;
"Our defense was super. Last&#13;
year, in a game like this, we&#13;
would have found some way to&#13;
lose, but we at least kept on the&#13;
same level and I think it's&#13;
significant that we can play&#13;
, under a pressure situation this&#13;
way." said Henderson. "I'm very&#13;
optimistic for the remaining&#13;
matches of the season."&#13;
Parkside's soccer squad hosts&#13;
UW-Plateville. Lakeland and Mt.&#13;
Scenario Friday and Saturday.&#13;
Tentative pairings for the&#13;
tourney are the No. 2 seeded&#13;
Rangers and No. 3 Platteville,&#13;
and Lakeland. No. 4 seeded vs.&#13;
NO.1 seeded Mt. Scenario. One of .&#13;
the matches will be at 1 p.m, the&#13;
other at 3 p.m.&#13;
Mt. Scenario has a season&#13;
record of 8-3-1. Parkside 6-5-2.&#13;
Platteville. 3-7and Lakeland, 2-l;.&#13;
Lasttime out, the Rangers tied&#13;
Western Michigan 1-1 Saturday .&#13;
"We played a super game,"&#13;
said Coach Hal Henderson. "It's&#13;
as good as we've played all year.&#13;
We shouldn't have tied."&#13;
Western Michigan got lucky&#13;
and happened to be in the right&#13;
place at the right time in the first&#13;
half. Parkside's goalkeeper,&#13;
Bernie Hefner, who, according to&#13;
Henderson. played just a super&#13;
game, had trouble intne rainwith&#13;
the wet ball when trying to throw&#13;
werbu'b&#13;
'ourt&#13;
_&amp;RISTA\lRA&#13;
After traveling to Whitewater a&#13;
week ago, Parkside's women's&#13;
swim team will host the&#13;
Warhawks this Friday at 4 p.m.&#13;
in their last dual meet.&#13;
Whitewater defeated the&#13;
Rangers 94-18, but there were&#13;
still highlights for the squad to&#13;
enjoy.&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch. turning in&#13;
her usual leading performance,&#13;
took two seconds in the 50 free&#13;
and 50back, and a-third in the 100&#13;
back.&#13;
But the Rangers had more than&#13;
that to feel good about as they&#13;
saw their teammate Lili Crnich&#13;
cut 4.2 seconds off of her best&#13;
time in the 100 breast, 4.55&#13;
. seconds off of her part in the 200&#13;
.. free relay and 3.5seconds in the no&#13;
free. She was third in the 100&#13;
breast.&#13;
"I was very pleased and excited&#13;
about her outstanding&#13;
improvement," said Coach Barb&#13;
Lawson.&#13;
_Judy Iverson added to the list&#13;
of good things about the meet,&#13;
taking two seconds in the 200 free&#13;
and 50 breast and a fourth in the&#13;
100 free.&#13;
Gail Olson had three thirds in&#13;
the 50, 100. and 500 free events&#13;
Sally Francis also had a third&#13;
in '.he 200 iree, a fourth in the 50&#13;
Volleyb.all&#13;
team loses&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
The women's volleyball team&#13;
travels to Deerfield, Illinois&#13;
Friday to play Trinity College in&#13;
a 7 p.m. match.&#13;
Parkside was originally sup--&#13;
posed to play UW-Stout and uw·&#13;
Eau Claire Friday and Saturday,&#13;
but .it was decided to drop the&#13;
meets since the team will be&#13;
traveling to Menomonee the next&#13;
Friday and Saturday anyway, for&#13;
the WWIAC Tournament.&#13;
The Rangers will also host&#13;
Carthage, Lewis University and&#13;
Chicago State next Tuesday,&#13;
Carthage will play Lewis and&#13;
Parkide will play Chicago State&#13;
at 6 p.m.&#13;
Last Saturday, the' Rangers&#13;
went to Milwaukee to battle&#13;
UWM's Panthers, but lost 15-9,&#13;
15-10. Parkside had defeated&#13;
UWM in their desson opener, 15-&#13;
11; 17-15. •&#13;
On October 26, the squad&#13;
bombed Marquette for the Iirst&#13;
time ever 15-6, 15-4 but then lost&#13;
io a very strong Carroll team 14-&#13;
16,12-15 and 3-15in a double dual&#13;
at Carroll.&#13;
"We've improved as the season&#13;
had moved along," Moss said. "I&#13;
credit this to hustle and desire on&#13;
the part of the team. They believe&#13;
they're capable of playing with&#13;
anyone and though they're short&#13;
and young, they are scrappy&#13;
and quick."&#13;
Season ends&#13;
by Jean Tennta&#13;
SUNDAY mos. &amp; TUES.&#13;
ALL YOU \~&lt;? SPAGHETTI&#13;
WANT \Sy..~ FEAST $1.Q5&#13;
Co,,' ~ \ I'~ INCLUDES Salad. Italian C~\'\' \\.-,0 Bread and a fREE GLASS (,y..'\ \\ '(o.~ ,0 Of WINE....&#13;
WiN ..... The ,&#13;
Album of Your&#13;
Ch'oice.&#13;
Free PIZZI tellve:y'&#13;
Club Hlghview&#13;
5035 60th Street·&#13;
Phone: 652·8737&#13;
AIt,.,0 •.,1". C~I.k,.,S.e.~IfII,lefl,lI, 8,.,&#13;
O'EN 4 •.•. It I •.•.&#13;
liP&#13;
breast and a fifh in the 100 free.&#13;
The Hangers were last out of&#13;
. five teams in a meet at Carthage&#13;
last Saturday.&#13;
. Host team Carthage and UW·&#13;
Eau Claire tied for first, Carroll&#13;
was third followed by UW-River&#13;
Falls.&#13;
In addition 19 three individual&#13;
school records set by Leitch. the&#13;
200 free relay also set a team&#13;
record at 2;00.7 with Olson,&#13;
Iverson, Francis and Leitch&#13;
swimming the event.&#13;
"Our second place in the relay&#13;
was a good way to end the meet,"&#13;
said Lawson.&#13;
Leitch crone in fourth in the&#13;
three events she set records for.&#13;
In the 50 free, her time was 29.06,&#13;
in .the 50 back. 35.2 and in the 100&#13;
hack, I: 16.9.&#13;
Olson placed sixth twice in the&#13;
5Qbreast and 100free and tenth in&#13;
the 50 free. Iverson was seventh&#13;
in the 200 free, eighth in the 100&#13;
breast and tenth in the 100 free.&#13;
Francis picked up two eighths in&#13;
the 200 free and 500 free and&#13;
Crnich was ninth in the 50 breast.&#13;
"It was a good meet, generally,&#13;
but the officiating was poor,"&#13;
according to Coach Lawson.&#13;
"Whistles were used instead of&#13;
pistols for starting the races and&#13;
close finishes were decided upon&#13;
. only one officials' judgement."&#13;
r. "'s;,c:s....&#13;
Have You'Turned Us&#13;
on Lately?&#13;
r&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 3, 1976&#13;
one sweet Dream&#13;
Hey, scholars, 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&#13;
releases stacked floor to&#13;
ceiling!&#13;
• Import albWD8. We're the one store in town that&#13;
carries foreign releases.&#13;
• 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. Mobiles. Incense&#13;
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 -&#13;
Pouches - Purses - Belts -&#13;
Ha 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;
50to Seventh Avenue&#13;
654-3578&#13;
WEST&#13;
3910 Seventy Fifth Street&#13;
694-2404&#13;
Parkside hosts&#13;
championships·&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
1.&#13;
--, ,,&#13;
j -· ··-___,..&#13;
Volleyh.all&#13;
team loses&#13;
by Thomas Nolen&#13;
Parkside will be the site of the&#13;
USTFF Mid-America Championships&#13;
in which over. 500&#13;
runners will compete in ten&#13;
different races.&#13;
Soccer team&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
The women's volleyball team&#13;
travels to Deerfield, Illinois&#13;
Friday to play Trinity College in&#13;
a 7 p.m. match.&#13;
Included in this meet are the&#13;
Women's Championships. Kim&#13;
Merritt, who was se·cond in worJd&#13;
competition last October, place&#13;
third in this meet last year.&#13;
hosts meets Parkside was originally sup--&#13;
posed to play UW-Stout apd UWEau&#13;
Claire Friday and Saturday,&#13;
but jt was decided to drop the&#13;
meets since the team will be&#13;
traveling to Menomonee the next&#13;
Friday and Saturday anyway, for&#13;
the WWIAC Tournament.&#13;
The Ranger squad finished&#13;
their dual meet season with a ~l&#13;
record with wins over Marquette&#13;
and Loras over the weekend. This&#13;
is the fifth straight season that&#13;
Parkside had had only one dual&#13;
loss in cross country.&#13;
Ray Fredericksen led the&#13;
finishers with a time of 25&#13;
minutes, 44.2 seconds the second&#13;
fastest time ever on the Parkside&#13;
course.&#13;
Gary Priem was next with a&#13;
· second place at 26 minutes, 14&#13;
seconds. ·&#13;
Parkside totalled 19 over&#13;
Marquette's 42 and 16 over Loras'&#13;
46 Marquette's Dan Malloy was&#13;
the top Warrior in third and Dave&#13;
Smith was first for the Duhawks&#13;
in sixth place.&#13;
Other Park~ic!~ runners&#13;
were Jeff Miller, fourth ; Mike&#13;
Rivers, fifth; Lee Allinger,&#13;
eighth; Greg Julich, ninth; Jim&#13;
Heiring, 11th; Bill Werve, 13th&#13;
and John Van Den Brandt, 15th.&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside's soccer squad hosts&#13;
UW-Plateville, Lakeland and Mt.&#13;
Scenario friday and Saturday.&#13;
Tentative pairings for the&#13;
tourney are the No. 2 seeded&#13;
Rangers and No. 3 Platteville,&#13;
and Lakeland, No. 4 seeded vs.&#13;
No. 1 seeded Mt. Scenario. One of&#13;
the matches will be at 1 p.m. the&#13;
other at 3 p.m.&#13;
Mt. Scenario has a season&#13;
record of 8-3-1, Parkside 6-5-2,&#13;
Platteville, 3-7 and Lakeland, 2-6.&#13;
Last.time out, the Rangers tied&#13;
Western Michigan 1-1 Saturday.&#13;
"We played a super game,"&#13;
said Coach Hal Henderson. "lt's&#13;
as good as we've played all year.&#13;
We shouldn't have tied."&#13;
Western Michi_gan got lucky&#13;
and happened to be in the right&#13;
place at the right time in the first&#13;
half. Parkside's goalkeeper,&#13;
Bernie Hefner, who, according to&#13;
Henderson, played just a super&#13;
game, had trouble in tne rainwith&#13;
the wet ball when trying to throw&#13;
SUNDAY moN. &amp; TUES.&#13;
ALL YOU \~~ SPAGHETTI&#13;
WANT ,':5~~ FEAST Jl.QS&#13;
~~ \ \ Q~ INCLUDES: Salod. Italian&#13;
C&#13;
\'l.\C~\,,;.. .__o \\·'),O Bread and a FREE GLASS&#13;
l' \\ ~,,. OF WINE ....&#13;
On Spring. West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge Plaza .&#13;
632-6151-&#13;
~erbu's&#13;
,OUTt&#13;
PUa &amp; RIST.AURA&#13;
WIN ..... The \&#13;
Album of Your&#13;
Ch'Oice.&#13;
·95&#13;
IIP I&#13;
Have You ·Turned Us&#13;
on Lately?&#13;
it out of the net. The ball slipped&#13;
from his hands. and an opposing&#13;
player was standing there, ready&#13;
to kick the ball in.&#13;
Parkside's lone goal was&#13;
scored by Chris Carter on a cross&#13;
from Mike Boyajian. Carter was&#13;
running full speed, then dove to&#13;
hit the ball "like a shot" into the&#13;
net, according to Henderwon.&#13;
"Western Michi~an's goalie&#13;
was unbelieveable.He-was an AllAnierican&#13;
last year and he showed&#13;
us why," said Henderson. "We&#13;
made 23 shots on goal and he&#13;
made 18 saves."&#13;
Western Michigan's coach was&#13;
impressed with Ranger Steve&#13;
Sendelbach, stating: "he's the&#13;
finest rve seen all year.,,&#13;
"Our defense was super. Last&#13;
year, in a game like this, we&#13;
would have found some way to&#13;
lose, but we at least kept on the&#13;
same level and I think it;s·&#13;
significant that we can play&#13;
. under a pressure situation this&#13;
way." said Henderson. "I'm very&#13;
optimistic for the remaining&#13;
matches of the season."&#13;
The Rangers will also host&#13;
Carthage, Lewis University and&#13;
Chicago State next Tuesday,&#13;
Carthage will play Lewis and&#13;
Parkide will play Chicago State&#13;
at 6 p.m.&#13;
Last Saturday; the· Rangers&#13;
went to Milwaukee to battle&#13;
UWM's Panthers, but lost 15-9,&#13;
15-10. Parkside had defeated&#13;
UWM in their desson opener, 15-&#13;
11; 17-15. -&#13;
On October 26, the squad&#13;
bombed Marquette for the fi.i·st&#13;
time ever 15-6, 15-4 but ~en lost&#13;
io a very strong Carroll team 14-&#13;
16, 12-15 and 3-15 in a double dual&#13;
at Carroll.&#13;
"We've improved as the season&#13;
had moved along," Moss said. "I&#13;
credit this to hustle and desire on&#13;
the part of the team. They believe&#13;
· they're capable of playing with&#13;
anyone and though they're short&#13;
and young, they are scrappy&#13;
and quick."&#13;
Season ends&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
After traveling to Whitewater a&#13;
week ago, Parkside's women's&#13;
swim team wrn host the&#13;
Warhawks this Friday at 4 p.m.&#13;
in their last dual meet.&#13;
Whitewater defeated the&#13;
Rangers 94-18, but there were&#13;
still highlights for the squad to&#13;
enjoy.&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch, turning in&#13;
her usual leading performance,&#13;
took two seconds in the 50 free&#13;
and 50 back, and a-third in the 100&#13;
back.&#13;
But the Rangers had more than&#13;
that to feel good about as they&#13;
saw their teammate Lili Crnich&#13;
cut 4.2 seconds off of her best&#13;
time in the 100 breast, 4.55&#13;
. seconds off of her part in the 200&#13;
free relay and 3.5 seconds in thP. no&#13;
free. She was third in the 100&#13;
breast.&#13;
"I was very pleased and excited&#13;
about her outstanding&#13;
improvement," said Coach Barb&#13;
Lawson.&#13;
Judy Iverson added to the list&#13;
of good things about the meet,&#13;
taking two seconds in the 200 free&#13;
and 50 breast and a fourth in the&#13;
100 free.&#13;
Gail Olson had three thirds in&#13;
the 50, 100, and 500 free events&#13;
Sally Francis also had a third&#13;
int.he 200 free, a foutth in the 50&#13;
breast and a fifh in the 100 free.&#13;
The Hangers were last out of&#13;
· five teams in a meet at Carthage&#13;
last Saturday.&#13;
· Host team Carthage and UWE.au&#13;
Claire tied for first, Carroll&#13;
was third followed by UW-River&#13;
Falls.&#13;
In addition t9 three individual&#13;
school records set py Leitch, the&#13;
200 free relay also . set a team&#13;
record at 2:00.7 with Olson,&#13;
Iverson, Francis and Leitch&#13;
swimming the event.&#13;
"Our second place in the relay&#13;
was a good way to end the meet,"&#13;
said Lawson.&#13;
Leitch crone in fourth in the&#13;
three events she set record!; for.&#13;
In the 50 free, her time was 29.06,&#13;
in .the 50 back, 35.2 and in the 100&#13;
back, 1: 16.9.&#13;
Olson placed sixth twice in the&#13;
5Q breast and 100 free and tenth in&#13;
the 50 free. Iverson was seventh&#13;
in the 200 free, eighth in the 100&#13;
breast and tenth in the 100 free.&#13;
Francis picked up two eighths in&#13;
the 200 free and 500 free a.nd&#13;
Crnich was n.i.nU1 in the 50 breast.&#13;
''It was a good meet, generally,&#13;
but the officiating .was poor,"&#13;
according to Coach Lawson.&#13;
"Whistles were used instead of&#13;
pistols for starting the races and&#13;
close finishes were decided upon&#13;
only one officials' judgement."&#13;
Free Pizza D·ellve:yCl&#13;
ub Highview&#13;
5035 60th Street ·&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
Altt ••hvttl19 Chlek11, s,11httt1, ~avloll, 8111&#13;
OPEN 4 t-•· to 1 •·•· </text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66116">
              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 5, issue 9, November 3, 1976</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66117">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66118">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="66119">
              <text>Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="66120">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="40">
          <name>Date</name>
          <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66121">
              <text>1976-11-03</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66122">
              <text>Text</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="42">
          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66123">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="38">
          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66124">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66125">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="45">
          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66126">
              <text>UW-Parkside</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66127">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="4523">
      <name>architecture</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4525">
      <name>dizzy gillespie</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4526">
      <name>foreign students club</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="449">
      <name>gyo obata</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2169">
      <name>phil livingston</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="223">
      <name>student union</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
