<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="2796" 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/2796?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-03T04:20:13+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="3408">
      <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/ce7b6d48a0543a57a0d612d3dc7dd77e.pdf</src>
      <authentication>6995c0720e855d7e97fe3e5416955bd3</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="66248">
            <text>Lucey visits Parkside &#13;
</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="97">
        <name>Issue</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="66249">
            <text>Volume 5, issue 16</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="95">
        <name>Series Number</name>
        <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="66250">
            <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="90014">
            <text>Lucey visits Parkside&#13;
by Chris Clausen the homestead program totalling nearlv j,89 rrulbon&#13;
as well as an increase in the number of state&#13;
employees of up to 1552 people&#13;
The UW system educational budget received a 3&#13;
per cent increase in anucrpanon of increased&#13;
enrollment&#13;
Lucey planned on ratstng the money necessary&#13;
for these increases by taxing trucks Clod new cars&#13;
after 1978 according to their efficiency The&#13;
efficiency would be rated according to EPA figures&#13;
with less efficient cars paying $48 and more&#13;
efficient cars paving only $24&#13;
Trucks, Lucev said, would pay more for the&#13;
upkeep of the 1-94system with truck trailers also&#13;
being taxed&#13;
•&#13;
..&#13;
Covemor Patrick Lucey presented his budget In&#13;
an address to the state assembly on January 24.&#13;
He then traveled the state holding a series of&#13;
public rneetlngs , talking with reporters and other&#13;
interested parties, including a stop at&#13;
UW-Parks ide.&#13;
Highlights of the budget were: No increases in&#13;
spending but this budget does not include the&#13;
contracts that must be negotiated with 51,000&#13;
state employees. A family of four making up to&#13;
$10,250 a year could get credit under Lucey's tax&#13;
relief plan.&#13;
Lucey also planned for increases (n tax credit in&#13;
February 2, 1977&#13;
Vol. 5, No. 16&#13;
er Illl language is only necessary when C\()&#13;
00 ccmmunccncn IS m danger V V&#13;
Professor Irwm Corey&#13;
Chancellor 'reallocates resources'&#13;
by firing administrators&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
The equivalent of 11 jobs, including four top administrators, will be&#13;
eliminated from Parkside's administration on July 1, Chancellor Alan&#13;
Cuskin announced. The money (approximately $200,COO) saved by&#13;
the job eliminations will be used to support the instructional budget&#13;
and the Basic Skills program.&#13;
"Ctven the competing priorities for limited funds, I have decided&#13;
10 reallocate resources from the administrative to the instructional&#13;
area andin the process restructure certain campus units:' said Cuskin&#13;
in a statement distributed to all offices on campus. Guskin told&#13;
Ranger "I believe in having a lean administration."&#13;
The major reorganization caps a secret four-month consultation&#13;
period in which Guskin discussed "the administrative profile and&#13;
structure of the university" with members of the administration,&#13;
according to the release.&#13;
Guskin said the talks were kept closed.. because "sensitive&#13;
personnel issues as well as administrative functions were discussed."&#13;
However Cuskin-- said that his decisions were particularly painful&#13;
because ;'the decisions were made on the basis of positions and not&#13;
personnel. "&#13;
In announcing the job cut, Cuskin said -he is now able to increase&#13;
"the number of full-time faculty, and correspondingly reduce our&#13;
dependence on temporary end part-time lecturers 1 think every&#13;
student on campus would agree that it is better to have a more stable&#13;
faculty. One-year (ad hoc) appointments have no commitment to the&#13;
The higher positions eliminated by Chancellor Guskin last week are&#13;
listed below&#13;
Position of Associate Dean for Administration, now held by Eugene&#13;
Norwood.&#13;
Position of Associate Dean for CradOate and Professional&#13;
Programs, now held by William Murin&#13;
POSItionof ASSistantChancellor for University Relations. now held&#13;
uni~ers'ty and the university has no commitment to them," However.&#13;
Cuskin emphas-zed that occasronallv speciahsts must be brought In&#13;
from the outside to teach a single course, "In some applied areas,&#13;
clinical faculty who have had practical experience are needed, such&#13;
as in.teecbiog." he said ..&#13;
One of the appointments Cuskm eliminated was that of Special&#13;
Assistant to the Chancellor for Affirmative Action, a post now held by&#13;
Joe Attwell Guskin said that his commitment to affirmative action&#13;
has "by no means" decreased. potnttng out a number of hrs&#13;
appointments of rnmonnes to Important positions Cuskrn feels that&#13;
the Special Assistant positron is no longer needed because "you don't&#13;
reaffy need a special assistant if the university has a strong&#13;
commitment to affirmative ection." Cuskin IS now placmg the&#13;
responsrbilities of enforcmg affirmative action rules on the tme&#13;
admmistrators&#13;
Another position cut was that of Archives specialist, and Guskm&#13;
said he hopes to fund the position with grants from ....oundenons or&#13;
government&#13;
The posuton of Associate Dean for Graduate and Professional&#13;
Programs will be eliminated, and Cuskm said division chairmen&#13;
particularly that of BUSinessManagement (now vacant. soon to be&#13;
filled], will now be responsible for their graduate programs&#13;
Cuskin debunked rumors that local businessmen had recently&#13;
Inspected and criticized Parkside's busmess program. 'I intend to&#13;
rebuild the business program Into one of the finest in the country. I'm&#13;
very serious about tha(" he said&#13;
by Allen Dearborn&#13;
Position of Special Assistant to the Chancellor for Affirmative&#13;
Action, now held by Joe"AnwellConsultant&#13;
for mediated CUrriculum development. now held by&#13;
Beecham Robinson&#13;
ASSistantdirector of planning and construction, Brien Murray&#13;
r&#13;
..&#13;
February 2, 1977&#13;
Vol. 5, No. 16&#13;
/l /l longuog Is only n s:.ary&#13;
:.JI..) communicot1on s in do&#13;
Lucey visits Parkside&#13;
by Chris Clausen the home tedd program totall1n nearl 89m1lhon&#13;
Governor Patrick Lucey presented his budget ,n&#13;
an address to the state assembly on ) anuary 24&#13;
He then traveled the state holding a series of&#13;
public meetings. talking with reporters and other&#13;
interested parties, including a stop at&#13;
UW...P arks ide.&#13;
Highlights of the budget wer.e · No increases in&#13;
spending but this budget does not include the&#13;
contracts that must be negotiated with 51,000&#13;
state employees. A family of four making up to&#13;
$10,250 a year could get credit under Lucey's tax&#13;
relief plan .&#13;
Lucey also planned for increases in tax credit in&#13;
as \\ell as an mcrea e in the numb r o tate&#13;
emplo ees of up to 1552 peopl&#13;
The U\\' s stern educational bud et r ce1ved a 3&#13;
per cent increase 1n antIc1patIon of mcrea d&#13;
enrollment&#13;
Lucey planned on rai mg the mon n c&#13;
for the~e tn rea s b taxm truck cmd n&#13;
atter 1978 according to their eff1cienc&#13;
effic1enq vould be rated accord in to EPA figure&#13;
with le s eff1c1ent car. pay,n -48 and more&#13;
efficient car paving onl $24&#13;
Trucks, Lucey said, would pa mor for th&#13;
upkeep of the 1-94 s tern v. 1th truck trailer also&#13;
being ta ed&#13;
Chancellor 'reallocates resources'&#13;
by firing administrators&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
The equivalent of 11 jobs, includi ng four top administrators, will be&#13;
eliminated from Parkside's administrat ion on July 1, Chancellor Alan&#13;
Guskin announced. The money (approxi mately $200,000) saved by&#13;
the job eliminations wi ll be used to support the instructional budget&#13;
and the Basic Skills program .&#13;
"Civ~n the competing priorities for limited funds, I have decided&#13;
to reallocate resources from the administrative to the instructional&#13;
area and in the process restructure certain campus units," said Guskin&#13;
in a statement distributed to all offices on campus . Guskin told&#13;
Ranger "/ believe in having a lean administration."&#13;
The major reorganization caps a secret four-month consultation&#13;
period in whi&lt;.:h Guskin discussed "the administrative profile and&#13;
structure of the university" with members of the administration,&#13;
accordi ng to the release.&#13;
Guskin said the talks were keot closed because "sensitive&#13;
personnel issues as we// as administrative functions were discussed."&#13;
However Guskin- said that his decisions were particularly painful&#13;
because ;,the decisions were made on the basis of positions and not&#13;
personnel. "&#13;
In announcing the job cut, Guskin said ·he is now able to increase&#13;
"the number of full-time facult y, and correspondingly reduce our&#13;
dependence on temporary and part-time lecturers I think every&#13;
student on campus would agree that it is better to have a more stable&#13;
faculty. One-year (ad hoc) appointments have no commitment to the&#13;
The higher positioRs eliminated by Chancellor Guskin last week are&#13;
listed below&#13;
Position of Associate Dean for Administration, now held b Eugene&#13;
Norwood.&#13;
Position of Associate Dean for Grad0ate and Professional&#13;
Programs , now held by 'v\ 1lliam Murin&#13;
Position of Assistant Chancellor for University Relations no\, held&#13;
un1~ers1t and the univers1t ha no commitment to them." How r,&#13;
Guskm emphas&gt;zed that occasional I c1alist mu t b brou ht In&#13;
from the out ide to teach a single course "In om applied area .&#13;
clinical faculty who have had practical experience are need d, uch&#13;
a in teach,og," he said •&#13;
One of the appointment Guskm hmmated wa that of&#13;
Assi tant to the Chancellor for ff1rmat1ve ctIon, a po t nm h&#13;
Joe Attwell Guskm said that h1 commitment to aff1rmat1v&#13;
has "by no mean • decrea ed. pomtm out a numb r of h1&#13;
appointments of mioor1tIe to important po ItIon Gu km f&#13;
the pec1al Assistant posItIon i no long r n ded b cau&#13;
really need a special a si tant if the univer it ha a tron&#13;
commitment to aff,rmati~e action." Gu km I now placm , th&#13;
re pon 1bil1t1es of enforcing affirmat1 e action rules on the Im&#13;
administrator&#13;
Another po 1tion cut was that of Arch, es pec,al1 t , and Gu km&#13;
said he hope to fund the position with grants from foundation or&#13;
gO\,ernment&#13;
The position of Associate Dean for Graduate and Prof 1onal&#13;
Programs ~ ill be eliminated , and Guskin said di is1on cha1rm n&#13;
particular! that of Business Management (now acant, oon to b •&#13;
tilled), will nm be responsible for their graduate program .&#13;
Guskm debunked rumors that lbcal busme smen had recent)&#13;
inspected and criticized Parkside' bu me. program. "/ intend to&#13;
rebu,ld th~ business program into one of the finest in the country. I'm&#13;
\ery serious about that," he aid&#13;
b\ lien Dearborn&#13;
Pos1t 1on of Special Assistant to the Chancellor for Aft1rmatl\ e&#13;
ction, nm, held by Joe· Att\\el~&#13;
Con, ultant tor mediated curriculum development, nov. held b&#13;
Heecham Robin on&#13;
~s, tant director of planning and con true ion Brien Murra\ &#13;
,&#13;
editorial&#13;
Parkside hits another snag - ,&#13;
This young campus is still riding the waves of&#13;
public criticism and negative opinions as it&#13;
strives to meet its mission. Chancellor Guskin,&#13;
last week in an effort to do what he was hired to&#13;
do, found it necessary to let go of 11 administrators.&#13;
To some, it came as quite a shocker.&#13;
Most students are not aware of the information&#13;
that actions like. these are based upon. The&#13;
Ranger has tried to track down rumors but the&#13;
rumors havebeentoo numerous for our writers to&#13;
adequately substantiate. '&#13;
Our concern is with the sentiment of the&#13;
communities surrounding Parkside. They have&#13;
seenour Business education program reduced to&#13;
shambles and a graduate program indefinitely&#13;
postponed. They haveseen the College of Racine&#13;
fold and surely some must look at this group of&#13;
buildings beside Petrifying Springs Park and&#13;
wonder if we are swimming or sinking. It's been&#13;
too cold to go swimming and the ice prevents us'&#13;
from sinking, at the moment.&#13;
So soon after the firings it is difficult to find&#13;
rampart optimism. But Professor Beecham&#13;
Robinson, who lost his administrative position in&#13;
the shake-up, provideda pragmatic viewpoint that&#13;
Rangerfound quite refreshing. He said he came&#13;
to this campus to teach and he was asked10 help&#13;
out with some administrative work. At one time&#13;
he was director of the Library Learning Center.&#13;
When he wasstrlpped of that he believes that his&#13;
job performance or personality was not a&#13;
consideration as much as just the budgetary&#13;
necessity to eliminate duplication of services. He&#13;
says he always wanted to teach and he is'&#13;
satisfied with helping out where he can. He is&#13;
positive about the school and its mission. He /&#13;
likes the community he lives in and is optimistic&#13;
about the future.&#13;
The dertslve forces in this school such as;&#13;
student groups bickering with each other for more&#13;
money, merefaculty fighting with administrators&#13;
fpr more power and a lack of community spirit&#13;
among students, all work against Parkslde's.&#13;
smooth dash into the future.&#13;
We must resolveour differences and accept the&#13;
fact that enrollment of 18 year-olds is starting, to&#13;
wain. We remain an institution with the big task&#13;
of adjusting to the public education needs of a&#13;
changing community. Our continuing education&#13;
program has to have plenty of fresh warm blood&#13;
flowing through it. We have to keep the best of&#13;
our professors and administrators happy and&#13;
motivated. We haveto show ourselves that we are&#13;
able to roll with the punches and come back up&#13;
better equipped to deal.with the future.&#13;
~~&#13;
Bob Hoffm~, Chris Clausen, Mona Maillet,&#13;
Fred Tenuta, Thomas Nolen, Karen Putman;&#13;
Linda Lasco, Douglas Edenhauser, Michael Murphy,&#13;
, Timothy J. Zuehlsdorf&#13;
~~1il@lfPbi11pL.Livingstcm ~&#13;
.li.\lril IDi1l!'IIl©il@lr&#13;
l]J(Ql1il@lf &lt;Onr ll1li\@1l~lffil~&#13;
®®~1Iill Wt1!\llil1!\[£lllllfTbcJmas B. Cooper ~&#13;
©. l]J&lt;ill1j1;©lfBruce wagner&#13;
lWlIlIWfll ~&lt;ill1j1;@l!'John B. Mc:J[Joekey&#13;
J]'1Il1!\ilmlflll ~&lt;ill1j1;@lfJeffrey J. 8weDc1d&#13;
O!IJil@~fll ~&lt;ill1j1;@lfJean Tenuta&#13;
Rllil'l'7l1li5il1~1!\j1;hll1lmIllJil@~lIllfPhU Hermann&#13;
. ©~_1l1!\j1;1@llil8ue Marquardt&#13;
l1'l!'@&lt;il\m©U@i1i\Wt1!\llil1!\l1lllllf.&#13;
M'I'7'1llfj1;1i5blt Wt1!\llilI!li/lllllfJohn Gabriel ~~&#13;
.Ii.\&lt;ill'l'7l1llfj1;1i5ml1lO!IlIilllllfll'&#13;
•&#13;
Ranger is published weeekly by students of the University of wrsconstn-Parxstoe. Views&#13;
herein are not necessarily those of anyone else. . Subscriptions: $5.00 '1r for U.S.&#13;
Ranger Newspaper&#13;
university of Wlsconsln·Parkslde&#13;
Keno5ha. Wisconsin 53140 \&#13;
,&#13;
editorial&#13;
• •&#13;
Parkside hits another snag - .&#13;
This young campus is still riding the waves of&#13;
public criticism and negative opinions as it&#13;
strives to meet its mission. Chancellor Guskin,&#13;
last week in an effort to do what he was hired to&#13;
do, found it necessary to let go of 11 administrators.&#13;
To some, it came as quite a shocker.&#13;
Most students are not aware of the information&#13;
that actions like, these are based upon. The&#13;
Ranger has tried to track down rumors but the&#13;
rumors have been too numerous for our writers to&#13;
adequately substantiate.&#13;
Our concern is with the sentiment of the&#13;
communities surrounding Parkside. They have&#13;
seen our Business education program reduced to&#13;
shambles and a graduate program indefinilely&#13;
postponed. They have seen the College of Racine&#13;
fold and surely some must look at this group of&#13;
buildings beside Petrifying Springs Park and&#13;
wonder if we are swimming or sinking. It's been&#13;
too cold to go swimming and the ice prevents us&#13;
from sinking, at the moment.&#13;
So soon after the firings it is difficult to find&#13;
rampart optimism. But Professor Beecham&#13;
Robinson, who lost his administrative position in&#13;
the shake-up, provided a pragmatic viewpoint that&#13;
Ranger found quite refreshing. He said he came&#13;
to this campus to teach and he was askedio help&#13;
out with some administrative work. At one time&#13;
he was director of the Library Learning Center.&#13;
When he was ·stripped of that he believes that his&#13;
job performance or personality was not a&#13;
consideration as much as just the budgetary&#13;
necessity to eliminate duplication of services. He&#13;
says he always wanted to teach and he is ·&#13;
satisfied with helping out where he can. He is&#13;
positive about the school and its mission. He&#13;
likes the community he lives in and is optimistic&#13;
about the future.&#13;
The derisiv~ f9rces in this school such as;&#13;
student groups bickering with each other for more&#13;
money, mere faculty fighting with administrators&#13;
fpr mdre power- and a lack of community spirit&#13;
among students, all work against Parkside's&#13;
smooth dash into the future.&#13;
We must resolve our differences and accept the&#13;
fact that enrollment of 18 year-olds is starting__to&#13;
wain. We remain an institution with the big task&#13;
of adjusting to the public education needs of a&#13;
changing community. Our continuing education .&#13;
program has to have plenty of fresh warm blood&#13;
flowing through it. We have to keep the best of&#13;
our professors and administrators happy and&#13;
motivated. We have to show ourselves that we are&#13;
able to roll with the punches and come back up&#13;
better equipped to deal. with the future.&#13;
,,&#13;
.,.. Bob Ho.ffm1}U, Chris Clausen, Mona Maillet ,&#13;
Fred Tenuta, Thomas Nolen, Karen Putman ;&#13;
Linda Lasco, Douglas Edenhauser, Michael Murphy,&#13;
' Timothy J. Zuehlsdorf&#13;
.!fil.rt&gt;i lIDb@@i@ir&#13;
~l'!.~@lfPhilip L.Livingston ~&#13;
1mJ(g),l'!.t;@re ~ ~~~lffll~&#13;
®®IB®~&amp;li&#13;
~&#13;
lffl&amp;llil.&amp;j®Jr&#13;
1mJ(g),l'!,iwBruce&#13;
Thomas&#13;
Wagner&#13;
B.. Cooper ~&#13;
~®'i!A!T~ 1mJ(g),l'!.i@reJohn B.. McKJoskey&#13;
JJ'@&amp;iw~ lm](g),i,;(~rt'Jeffrey J. Swen.cld.&#13;
~~@lf~~ ~~@rt'Jean Tenuta&#13;
:irmw@~~l'!.~&amp;il'!.w lli®~@ri@lf Phil 'Hermann · ©b@'l!llll.&amp;~ft@mi.Sue Marquardt&#13;
~'llll@~l'!.@m lffl&amp;m&amp;j@re.&#13;
Mw@ret;l'!.~l'!.~ lffl&amp;~@reJohn Gabriel ~~'W&#13;
.!fil.(g),w@reil'!.~l'!.llil.~ ~&amp;Ji@~&#13;
Ranger is published weeekly by students of the U_niversity of Wisconsin-Parkside. Views&#13;
herein are not necessarily those of anyone else. Subscriptions : $5.00 yr for U.S.&#13;
\ • \ I • • ~ \. • • j ,. I • • • •&#13;
• ~ • • • . .. .. • • • ' t • " .. • •&#13;
Ranger Newspaper&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wlaconsin 53140&#13;
•&#13;
• &#13;
••&#13;
v.e~s&#13;
/&#13;
Dearborn'·s elimination&#13;
draws sympathy&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
How sad it is to watch a man,&#13;
who has given eight years of his&#13;
life to a cause he truly believed&#13;
in, be suddenly eliminated of his&#13;
duties.&#13;
Those who have come to know&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Allen Dear-,&#13;
born know that he has always&#13;
fought for the things he believed&#13;
right for the University. Whether&#13;
or not he won his battles, the&#13;
main thing is that he fought, he&#13;
cared. Yet, no matter what is&#13;
said, pro or can, soon will come&#13;
the time when o"nly his record&#13;
will stand as judgement. Stand it&#13;
will, for he is a leader, a doer, a&#13;
fightffr, but most of all, he is a&#13;
man:&#13;
There are many things I'd like&#13;
to say, to explain, things which&#13;
should have been said by others.&#13;
But this is not the time or place&#13;
for contemplation. It is time for&#13;
those who realiy care about this&#13;
institution to stand 'up and be&#13;
counted. The cards have been&#13;
dealt for all to see, the dealer&#13;
waits uneasy, hoping nobody&#13;
will call his hand. Are there any&#13;
players?&#13;
The sun has set in one chapter&#13;
of Allen Dearborn's life, his&#13;
visions and hopes dimmed. But&#13;
he will always remain a guiding&#13;
light to his family and me.&#13;
Respectfully,&#13;
Dave Dearborn&#13;
Senator blasts United Council&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I think that PSGA should not&#13;
belong to United Council&#13;
because the Council does not&#13;
benefit the students. PSGA can&#13;
get necessary information&#13;
through correspondence with&#13;
other' universities. The minutes&#13;
from their meetings are very&#13;
informative and have been a&#13;
great help in the past as models&#13;
for PSGA legislation. Presently&#13;
United Council meetings are&#13;
open and information from the&#13;
Council is easily obtainable for&#13;
non-member schools. The&#13;
$2056.80 membership fee and&#13;
$800.00 travel expense should&#13;
either be removed trom the&#13;
PSCA budget or re-allocated to&#13;
an area of greater need. If PSGA&#13;
dropped out of United Council,&#13;
they (PSGA) would be no better&#13;
or worse than they are now.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Terrence E. Zuehlsdorf&#13;
PSGA Senator&#13;
Student defends Niebuhr&#13;
To Ihe Editor:&#13;
As a concerned student, I am&#13;
responding to the January' 19&#13;
article pertaining to the Segregated&#13;
Fees issue. First, I do not&#13;
think that Kai Nail has the right&#13;
or knowledge to hire or fire the&#13;
Director of the Union. As a&#13;
member of the Parks ide&#13;
Activities Board, I feel Bill&#13;
Niebuhr is fulfilling his job to the&#13;
utmost degree. Because the&#13;
Union is new this year, problems&#13;
may have arisen, yet they have&#13;
been dealt with efficiently and in&#13;
the best interest of the students.&#13;
Next, I would like' to ask why&#13;
the majority of the article was&#13;
Kal Nail's opinion? It was a very'&#13;
biased article. Kai stated that&#13;
major concerts were out of the&#13;
question, yet the students of&#13;
Parkside want major concerts.&#13;
My information comes from a&#13;
recent concert, Harry Chapin,&#13;
which had the highest attendance&#13;
ever! Many of our events&#13;
.are not brought to the students&#13;
as money making ventures, but&#13;
as extra-curricular educational&#13;
exposures.&#13;
As a voluntary member, I&#13;
resent the implications that this&#13;
article portrayed.&#13;
Thank you,&#13;
Kitty kav~naugh&#13;
Introducing: French Pizza $1.50&#13;
I·EVERY I_AY &amp; TUESDAY I&#13;
SPAGHETTI FEAST&#13;
$1.95&#13;
Includes: Salad, Italian Bread and a Free Glass of Wine.&#13;
Wed. - Thurs. 9:30 - 11:00 p.rn.&#13;
I Bubble Up&#13;
Mixed Drinks 60'&#13;
On titerburu&#13;
Spring, Wllst of 31 in 0&#13;
Gr~en Ridge Plaza ourt&#13;
632-6151 _&amp;RE51AURANT&#13;
CONTACT.&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
by Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
Congratulations are extended to the following&#13;
students on their appointments to positions in&#13;
Parkside Student Government:&#13;
John Tabar Allocations Committee&#13;
Mona Mailet Senate-At-Large Representative&#13;
John Stewart Chairperson Senate Student&#13;
Services Committee&#13;
OPENINGS IN STUDENT GOVERNMENT&#13;
Their are still many openings for students in&#13;
student government. We are in dire need of fresh&#13;
ideas and diligent, responsible individuals to&#13;
represent student interest throughout Parkside.&#13;
One student needed for Academic Act;oQS&#13;
Committee which is empowered. to do the&#13;
following: .&#13;
{al receive and dispose of appeals for special&#13;
consideration as provided by the admissions&#13;
requirement policy;&#13;
(b) act on appeals in cases of academic&#13;
probation, drop actions and readmissions of&#13;
students dropped for academic reasons;&#13;
(c) act on student requests for wtavers of&#13;
university-wide academic policies, including, but&#13;
not limited to, requests for waivers of general&#13;
degree requirements;&#13;
(d) act on student requests for modifications of&#13;
their official academic record.&#13;
Two students for the Bookstore Committee which&#13;
monitors the bookstore operation.&#13;
Two students needed for the Curriculum and&#13;
Program Committee which is a policy making&#13;
committee.&#13;
SENATE OPENINGS&#13;
One Senate Seat for At-Large Representative and&#13;
one Senate Seat for Engin~ering Science Divisional&#13;
Seat.&#13;
If interested in one of these positions contact&#13;
Dan Nielson, President Protempore of the Senate at&#13;
the PS.G.A. office.&#13;
ALLOCA liONS COMMITTEE&#13;
Two students needed immediately.&#13;
STUDENT COURT OPENINGS&#13;
Two Associate Justice positions for the Student&#13;
Court.&#13;
One Chief Justice of the Appelate Court and two&#13;
Associate Appelate Justices.&#13;
If interested in any of these positions, please&#13;
contact Kiyoko Bowden at the PS.GA office.&#13;
PROCEDUR~OR APPLYING FOR POSITIONS&#13;
An applicant must fill out an application for the&#13;
position. Application forms are available at the&#13;
PSGA offices WLLC D-193.&#13;
I&#13;
.&#13;
,.;...····· .&#13;
,-,~. -,:&#13;
.. .&#13;
. ..&#13;
..&#13;
" ",&#13;
.~. ,-. 0 0 .0 .:&#13;
weekly by student govemment&#13;
An academic grievance is a student's complaint&#13;
that a grade he/she earned was not received&#13;
Examples of this are when an Instructor arbitrarily&#13;
changes the grade scale because there were too&#13;
many A's and not enough D's or when for no&#13;
particular reason an instructor gives a student a&#13;
substantially lower grade than the student earned.&#13;
An academic grievance, heretofore, was a&#13;
hopeless Situation for a student _Many of us simply&#13;
sat back and accepted the injustice of the situation&#13;
because there was seemingly no alternative. No&#13;
more is this the case.&#13;
If you have an academic gnevance, use the&#13;
following procedure, If you have any questions or&#13;
,problems as you go along, call Student Government&#13;
and ask for Kiyoko Bowden, one of the Senators or&#13;
a Legal Service Executive Advisory Committee&#13;
member.&#13;
1. A student receives the wrong grade.&#13;
2. Contact the instructor to see if it wasn't a&#13;
simple clerics! error or misunderstanding. If&#13;
that fails,&#13;
3. Contact the Divisional Chairperson and&#13;
explain the problem. If that fails,&#13;
4. Contact the vice-Cbenceiior/Deen of Faculty&#13;
and explain the situation. If that fails,&#13;
5. Bring a petition for a hearing of your&#13;
grievance to the Student Court. The petition&#13;
will be heard within 10 (ten) days after receipt&#13;
and you wiJJ be informed as to time and place&#13;
so you can appear and present your case.&#13;
(Information about what to Include in your&#13;
petition is available at the Student&#13;
Government Office, WLLC 0193 If you&#13;
need hefp, a member of the Legal Service&#13;
Executive Advisory Committee will be&#13;
avadable by appointment.)&#13;
(Be prepared to present docutmentatlon and&#13;
evidence for your case for exemol»,&#13;
syllabus ;n which the grade requirements&#13;
were listed, and graded papers and exams&#13;
which resulted in the Grade received.)&#13;
6. The Student Court will hear your case.&#13;
1. The Court will decide your case and send a&#13;
recommendation to the Chancellor.&#13;
8. If the recommendation is in your favor the&#13;
Court asks that the Chancellor send your&#13;
grievence to the Faculty Rights and&#13;
ResponsibilIty Committee.&#13;
9. The Faculty Rights and ResponsibilIty&#13;
Committee is the Courl of Last Resorts. There&#13;
is no appeal beyond this po;nl.&#13;
The procedure attempts 10 guarantee thet a&#13;
student gets a hearing, something that has never&#13;
occurred In the past It is indeed formidable and&#13;
may appear cumbersome, but it can and hopefully&#13;
will grant students an opportunity to rectify an&#13;
arbitrary decision by an instructor.&#13;
• • views&#13;
/&#13;
Dearborn's elimination&#13;
draws sympathy&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
How sad it is to watch a man,&#13;
who has given eight years of his&#13;
life to a cause he truly believed&#13;
in, be suddenly eliminated of his&#13;
duties.&#13;
Those who have come to know&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Allen Dearborn&#13;
know that he has always&#13;
fought for the things he believed&#13;
right for the University. Whether&#13;
or not he won his battles, the&#13;
main thing is that he fought, he&#13;
cared. Yet, no matter what is&#13;
said, pro or con, soon will come&#13;
the time when o·nly his record&#13;
will stand as judgement. Stand it&#13;
will, for he is a leader, a doer, a&#13;
fi6hte'r, but most of all, he is a&#13;
man.&#13;
There are many things I'd like&#13;
to say, to explain, things which&#13;
should have been said by others.&#13;
Hut this is not the time or place&#13;
for contemplation. It is time for&#13;
tho~e who really care abovt this&#13;
institution to stand -up and be&#13;
counted. The cards have been&#13;
dealt for all to see, the dealer&#13;
waits uneasy, hoping nobody&#13;
will call his hand . Are there any&#13;
players?&#13;
The sun has set in one chapter&#13;
of Allen Dearborn's life, his&#13;
visions and hopes dimmed. But&#13;
he will always remain a guiding&#13;
light to his family and me.&#13;
Respectfully,&#13;
Dave Dearborn&#13;
Senator blasts United Council&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I think that PSGA should not&#13;
belong to United Council&#13;
because the Council does not&#13;
benefit the students. PSGA can&#13;
get necessary information&#13;
through correspondence with&#13;
other universities. The minutes&#13;
from their meetings are very&#13;
informative and have been a&#13;
great help in the past as models&#13;
for PSGA legislation. Presently&#13;
United Council meetings are&#13;
open and information from the&#13;
Council is easily obtainable for&#13;
non-member schools. The&#13;
$2056.80 membership fee and&#13;
$800.00 travel expense should&#13;
either be removed from the&#13;
PSGA budget or re-allocated to&#13;
an area of greater need. If PSGA&#13;
dropped out of United Council,&#13;
they (PSGA) would be no better&#13;
or worse than they are now.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Terrence E. Zuehlsdorf&#13;
PSGA Senator&#13;
Student def ends Niebuhr&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
As a concerned student, I am&#13;
responding to the January 19&#13;
article pertaining to the Segregated&#13;
Fees issue. First, I do not&#13;
think that Kai Nal l has the right&#13;
or knowledge to hire or fire the&#13;
Director of the Union . As a&#13;
member of the Parkside&#13;
Activit ies Board, I feel Bil l&#13;
Niebuhr is f ulfilling his job to the&#13;
utmost degree. Because the&#13;
Union is new this year, problems&#13;
may have arisen, yet they have&#13;
been dealt with ef-ficiently and in&#13;
the best interest of the students.&#13;
Next, I would like to ask why&#13;
the majority of the article was&#13;
Kai Nail's opinion? It was a very&#13;
biased article. Kai stated that&#13;
major concerts were out of the&#13;
question, yet the students of&#13;
Parkside want major concerts .&#13;
My information comes from a&#13;
recent concert, Harry Chapin,&#13;
which had the highest attendance&#13;
ever! Many of our events&#13;
.are not brought to the students&#13;
as money making ventures, but&#13;
as extra-qirricular educational&#13;
exposures.&#13;
As a voluntary member, I&#13;
resent the implications that this&#13;
art icle portrayed.&#13;
Thank you,&#13;
Kitty Kavanaugh&#13;
Introducing: French Pizza $1.50&#13;
I-EVERY MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY I&#13;
SPAGHETTI FEAST&#13;
$1.95&#13;
Includes: Salad, Italian Bread and a Free Blass of W ine.&#13;
On&#13;
Wed. - Thurs. 9 :30 - 11 :00 p.m.&#13;
f Bubble Up&#13;
Mixed Drinks so•&#13;
Spring, Wt!st of 31 in&#13;
Green Ridge Plaza ,.&#13;
632-6151&#13;
~Jerbui&#13;
, ourt&#13;
PUB &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
I&#13;
by Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
Congratulations are extended to the following&#13;
students on their appointments to positions in&#13;
Parkside Student Government:&#13;
John Tabar Allocations Committee&#13;
Mona Mailet Senate-At-Large Representative&#13;
John Stewart Chairperson Senate Student&#13;
Services Committee&#13;
OPENINGS IN STUDENT GOVERNMENT&#13;
Their are still many openings for students in&#13;
student government. We are in dire need of fresh&#13;
ideas and diligent, responsible individuals to&#13;
represent student interest throughout Parkside.&#13;
One student needed for Academic ActiOQS&#13;
Committee which is empowered . to do the&#13;
following:&#13;
(a) receive and dispose of appeals for special&#13;
consideration as provided by the admissions&#13;
requirement policy;&#13;
(b) act on appeals in cases of academic&#13;
probation, drop actions and readmissions of&#13;
students dropped for academic reasons;&#13;
(c) act on student requests for w1avers of&#13;
university-wide academic policies, including, but&#13;
not limited to, requests for waivers of general&#13;
degree requirements;&#13;
(d) act on student requests for modifications of&#13;
their official academic record .&#13;
Two students for the Bookstore Committee which&#13;
monitors the bookstore operation.&#13;
Two students needed for the Curriculum and&#13;
Program Committee which is a policy making&#13;
committee.&#13;
SENATE OPENINGS&#13;
One Senate Seat for At-Large Representative and&#13;
one Senate Seat for Engineering Science Divisional&#13;
Seat&#13;
If interested in one of these positions contact&#13;
Dan Nielson, President Protempore of the Senate at&#13;
the P.S.G.A. office.&#13;
ALLOCATIONS COMMITTEE&#13;
Two students needed immediately.&#13;
STUDENT COURT OPENINGS&#13;
Two Associate Justice positions for the Student&#13;
Court&#13;
One Chief Justice of the Appelate Court and two&#13;
Associate Appelate Justices.&#13;
If interested in any of these positions, please&#13;
contact Kiyoko Bowden at the P.S.G.A. office.&#13;
PROCEDUR FOR APPLYING FOR POSITIONS&#13;
An applicant must fill out an application for the&#13;
position . Application forms are available at the&#13;
P.S.G.A. offices WLLC 0-193.&#13;
An academic grievance 1s a tudent's complaint&#13;
that a grade he/ she earned wa not received .&#13;
Examples of this are when an instructor arbitrarily&#13;
changes the grade scale because there were too&#13;
many A's and not enough D's or when for no&#13;
particular reason an instructor gives a stud nt a&#13;
substantially lower grade than the student earned.&#13;
An academic grievance, heretofore, was a&#13;
hopeless situation for a student Many of us imply&#13;
sat back and accepted the in Justice of th s1tuat1on&#13;
because there was seemingly no alternative o&#13;
more is this the ca e&#13;
If you have an academic grievance, u e the&#13;
following procedure If you have any questions or&#13;
problems as you go along, call Student Gov rnment&#13;
and ask for Kiyoko Bowden, one of the enator or&#13;
a Legal erv1ce Ex cut1ve Adv, ory Committee&#13;
member&#13;
1. A student receives the wrong grade.&#13;
2. Contact the instructor to see if it wasn't a&#13;
simple clerical error or misunderstanding. If&#13;
that fails,&#13;
3. Contact the Divi ional Chairperson and&#13;
explain the problem If that fails,&#13;
4 Contact the Vice-Chancellor/Dean of Faculty&#13;
and explain the s1tuat1on. If that fails,&#13;
5. Bring a pet1t1on for a hearing of your&#13;
grievance to the Student Court. The petition&#13;
will be heard within 10 (ten) day a her receipt&#13;
and you will be informed as to time and place&#13;
so you can appear and present your ca e.&#13;
(Information about what to include in your&#13;
petition i available at the tudent&#13;
Co..,ernment Office, WLLC D 193. If you&#13;
need help, a member of the Legal ervice&#13;
Executiv Ad\/ ory Committee will be&#13;
available by appointment.)&#13;
(Be prepared to pres nt do utm ntallon nd&#13;
evidence for your ca e I or e amp! ,&#13;
syllabus in which the grade r quir m nt&#13;
..,.,ere listed, and graded pap r and exam&#13;
which resulted in the grade r c ,ved.)&#13;
6. The tudent Court will h ar your ca e.&#13;
7. The Court will decide your ca e and&#13;
recommendation to the Chane //or.&#13;
8 If the recommendation i in &gt;Our favor th&#13;
Court asks that the Chancellor end your&#13;
grievance to the Faculty Right and&#13;
Respon ibility Committee&#13;
9. The Faculty Rights and R spon ibility&#13;
Committee i the Court of La\! R ort . Th re&#13;
is no appeal b yond th, point.&#13;
The procedur attempt to uarante that a&#13;
stlldcnt gPt a hearing, omething that ha n v r&#13;
')&lt;_curred in the past It I ind d formidabl and&#13;
may appear cumb rsome, but 1t an and hop full&#13;
will grant tud nts an opportunity to r tif&#13;
arbitrary decision by an in tructor&#13;
DA~&#13;
SPONSORED BY THE VARSITY CLUB&#13;
AT UNIO N SQ UA RE ,&#13;
FEB 5th&#13;
9pm-1am&#13;
$1.00adv. $1.50 door&#13;
REQ.&#13;
co &#13;
...... ··········1········· .~.;:~., l. ;")&#13;
.~:o.o,&#13;
Debate meet announced&#13;
The meet will be open to all&#13;
comers. Regis tration .forms for&#13;
the tournament are due in&#13;
Professor Peter Hoff's office,&#13;
CA 240 bv the end of Thursday,&#13;
February&#13;
The Parks ide Debate and&#13;
Forens ics As S ociation will&#13;
sponsor its first annual&#13;
intramural debate tournament&#13;
on Friday, February 5, starting&#13;
at 2 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Building. .&#13;
~;'~~A,~f'j7&#13;
I I •.Pure Brewed&#13;
J From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parksfde 200&#13;
National Vanity Club&#13;
•&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
Mention this adl&#13;
FIRSTNA=:RACINE 500 WisconSin Avenue, RaCine, WisconSin 53403&#13;
(414.j633·8201 Memtfer FDIC&#13;
located Just Off The Union Bazaar&#13;
NOW IN THE UNION ...&#13;
It &lt;JUlt&#13;
t;wut t;l1oppt&#13;
COUNTER&#13;
featuring-&#13;
.PIPE TOBACCO&#13;
.BREATH MINTS&#13;
.HANDKERCHIEFS&#13;
.PAIN RELIEVERS&#13;
.SUGAR FREE GUM&#13;
.MOUTHWASH&#13;
.. COUGH DROPS&#13;
,.SINUS TABLETS&#13;
'. COMBS&#13;
.£t(o.£t(..£t(&#13;
-.&#13;
follow-ue.&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
airs~ips&#13;
'orders&#13;
by Douglas Edenhauser&#13;
FIBER STUDENTS III&#13;
•••&#13;
FrH PIZZI D..... "&#13;
Club Hlghvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street •&#13;
Phone: 652.. 7'37 Do you ever wonder what is being done to rectify the book&#13;
situation as it now exists at Parksidel You will probablv be somewhat&#13;
...... I eLI..·S L.... .111-11 • f relieved to know that the University Bookstore Committee is _I ..,11'•• I, ........, ...." presently working on the situation to try to get all the missing books&#13;
OPEl 4 •• II t • •&#13;
in by the end of nexu week. Bookstore manager Pa~1 Hoffman listed&#13;
. . . .&#13;
~::::::::::::::::::::~ as one of the major problems the taridness of the faculty members to&#13;
.. turning in their book lists. The deadline for booklists to be in to the&#13;
bookstore was November 'lst. At that date only 33% of the 190&#13;
sections had submitted their lists. Within the next two weeks, only an&#13;
additional 14% added theirs to the list. At the present time&#13;
approximately 10% of the sections still have some problem with late&#13;
books ordered.&#13;
Another major problem mentioned was the inclement weather that&#13;
they are having oufon the east coast where a majority of the books&#13;
come from. Hoffman is now in the process of following up on orders&#13;
that have not yet been shipped air freighted out here at an additional&#13;
cost to the bookstore. There will be no extra charge to the students&#13;
tor the cost of shipping.&#13;
Hoffman pointed out that he couldn't start putting together the&#13;
orders until December 20th because of the lateness of the booklists .&#13;
He also mentioned that time was-the major problem because he was&#13;
generally the only person working on this particular project. The&#13;
Follett Corporation, the company that now runs the bookstore, has&#13;
stated that they may be able to send a full time assistant to help&#13;
Hoffman with his many functions. When asked whv there weren't a&#13;
number of differer.t ordering dates in order to get those faculty&#13;
members that ordered on time their books, Hoffman stated that that&#13;
was a teas.i.ble solution and that he had been notified by his superiors&#13;
that that was a case of bad judgement on Hottman's part. Two&#13;
different ordering dates would definitely solve much of the problem.&#13;
Charles Tinder reviews the lists that come from the division heads. If&#13;
he thinks that the division heads overestimated on their lists too&#13;
much, he sits down with the division heads and cuts down on the&#13;
number of books ordered. John Harbeson, the head of the division of&#13;
social sciences said that he intentionally over estimates on his&#13;
booklists to account for possible over registration. Paul Hoffman also&#13;
stated that over registration for some classes was a problem in not&#13;
receiving books. The reason that Tinder cuts the lists is that the&#13;
bookstore looses money on any number of books that are not said.&#13;
Clayton. Johnson also did his part to settie this book problem. He&#13;
assigned Bob Puder to investigate the book crisis and assist in any&#13;
way possible. In some instances, Puder had to drive down to Chicago&#13;
himself to pick up books that were available.&#13;
Hoffman mentioned that the first thing that is done in such a crisis&#13;
is to search the Pollett-warehouses for any used books that they might&#13;
have in stock. He said that it is virtually impossible for Follett to&#13;
maintain an inventory of the books in stock because there may be as&#13;
many as 15 buyers in the warehouse at one time.&#13;
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~1The present bookstore contract witp the Follett Corporation expires&#13;
in August, and there is some question as to whether or not Follett will&#13;
want to renew the contract with Parkside. The University Bookstore '\&#13;
Committee will look into possible alternatives to the present&#13;
situation, including research into the possibility of a university&#13;
owned bookstore. Members of the committee emphasized that there&#13;
should be a system of mechanics that ensures that all book list be&#13;
sent out on time under any circumstances.&#13;
If you have any ideas, gripes or recommendations as to the&#13;
operations of the Bookstore, please submit your feeling to the&#13;
Business Management. Class 71-319, Room CL 112, Information&#13;
systems analysis Monday and Wednesday 2:00-3:15 p.m., or call Dan&#13;
Thomsen, 634-7066 or Ron veu. 639-5741. . .&#13;
l!1&#13;
Unique weaving and .pinning .upplie ••••&#13;
Inexpensive cotton &amp; rayon novelties&#13;
Beautiful Swedish &amp; Irish yams&#13;
Primitive Greek &amp; Columbian homespun&#13;
Wide variety of unique bulkies,&#13;
thick-thins &amp; highly textured yarn&#13;
} Fibers&#13;
WEAVER'S ALLEY&#13;
;145,Main St." Racine&#13;
Raw wool&#13;
Alpoca&#13;
Mohair&#13;
Flax&#13;
Silk&#13;
Yak&#13;
Beads&#13;
Feathers&#13;
Equipment&#13;
12:30 to 6:00 MOBo-Fri.&#13;
Saturdays by appoint.&#13;
Graduate P&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Parks ide has had certain pressures to m&#13;
high level of instruction, according&#13;
chancellor/dean of faculty John Campbell&#13;
Campbell stated that the long run directi&#13;
external reviews that the UW system bud&#13;
through has drastically affected the admi&#13;
budgets. One of these external revi&#13;
no-increase budget of Gov. Patrick L&#13;
forced the university to switch mo~&#13;
Administrative reor CJ&#13;
by Bob Hoffman&#13;
C·hancellor Alan Guskin 'stunned&#13;
members Tuesday by announcing the eli&#13;
of' ejght administrative positions and thre&#13;
positions in what he termed an attempt to'&#13;
the university."&#13;
MURIN ON THE 'GRADUATE PROGRAM&#13;
Associate Dean of Faculty William J. M&#13;
it came as a "total shock" to him whe&#13;
informed in a meeting with Guskin Monda&#13;
Dean of Graduate Programs position h&#13;
eliminated. Murins job for the last seven&#13;
and until july 1, 1977, was to implement a&#13;
program here at Parkside by the fall of 197&#13;
secure grants for faculty research projects.&#13;
Initially, the tasks of implementing the&#13;
program will go to the new chairperson&#13;
management science division. However&#13;
Dean Murin feels that Cuskin's action will&#13;
delay of at least six months and possibly&#13;
year because there is no one now on camp&#13;
primary function is the implementati&#13;
graduate program. According to Murin, i&#13;
chairman of the management science&#13;
implementing the graduate program waul&#13;
one of my primary tasks.·· "It's only one&#13;
tasks thaI the chairman will have, t&#13;
uvcreese in resources in that area and f&#13;
him WE'll.·'&#13;
Murin said, "Some of the faculty W&#13;
exactly about a graduate program are disa&#13;
in the pOSition the chancellor took. The&#13;
implementing that program plus the great&#13;
demand for graduate programs is the caus&#13;
-di~Jpp()int meTlt ."&#13;
Murin had difficulty in understanding t&#13;
"V\lhy walt. rhere is an interest for Parksid&#13;
quality programs. My guess is that we'!&#13;
ma/...C'a trade-off. We'll sacrifice first rate&#13;
there wi/f be a delay of a semester or '&#13;
implementing the program and it will cau&#13;
of problems. We haven't 'had graduate pr&#13;
offer. yet and we were hoping to get tr&#13;
graduate students from other schools in&#13;
system to ParkSide. Now it·5 going to hav&#13;
1 alking about morale Murin said&#13;
members are more depressed today than&#13;
a week ago. There's a black cloud over rh&#13;
It's one more time that the system has&#13;
apart again."'&#13;
As for faculty research grants, Mu&#13;
painted a gloomy picture. "There is no cen&#13;
a faculty member can come to and get&#13;
where to get grants. / can't see how fhis n&#13;
will work The faculty is going to have t&#13;
whole new function, They're going to hav&#13;
the granbmanship game. They're going t&#13;
...r art from ground 7ero. "&#13;
A primary focus in Cuskin's reorganizat&#13;
was that the Basic Skills- program waul&#13;
mar€' funding than it presently does, (Pr&#13;
receives $72,000.) The faculty' senate last&#13;
madp a com'mitment tQ expand the B&#13;
program. (Basic Skills is a remedial pr&#13;
freshmen which teaches the basics of E&#13;
math.)&#13;
Murin maintains that when the Facul&#13;
made a commitment to_ Basic Skills, "T&#13;
I..now ~e full impact of what they were&#13;
thpy knew that increasing the Basic Skill&#13;
would lead to admini~tration changes, if&#13;
the full ,tory they might have voted differ&#13;
common reaction i3 that this adm&#13;
\h.Jkeup is just ta/...ing money from one p&#13;
putting it info another.·'&#13;
William Murin is also concerned wit&#13;
the faculty members WIll be stay&#13;
permanently "'I card tel! if people want&#13;
. ,said Murin. ':Some people wi/J roake fa&#13;
••••• •••• • •&#13;
. • . . • .&#13;
-: ····:·. . . . .&#13;
:- -: . . . . . . .·&#13;
\ .......... ::·&#13;
Debate meet announced&#13;
The Parkside Debate and&#13;
Forensics Association will&#13;
sponsor its first an nu al&#13;
intramural debate tournament&#13;
on Friday, February 5, starting&#13;
at 2 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Building.&#13;
The meet will be open to all&#13;
comers . Registration -forms for&#13;
the tournament are due in&#13;
Professor Peter Hoff's office,&#13;
CA 240 bv the end of Thursday,&#13;
February .&#13;
Free Pizza Delifery&#13;
Club Hlghvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-87-37&#13;
AIM •.a.11111 C~l1b1, Sf11~lfll. R1fltll, Inf&#13;
OPEN 4 •·•· II 1 •·•·&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
~&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
•&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
Mention this ad I&#13;
FIRSTNA=:RACINE&#13;
500 Wisconsin Avenue. Racine, w,scons1n 53403 (414) 633-8201 MemtS'er FDIC&#13;
NOW IN THE UNION ...&#13;
featuring-&#13;
•PIPE TOBACCO&#13;
•BREATH MINTS&#13;
•HANDKERCHIEFS&#13;
•PAIN RELIEVERS&#13;
•SUGAR FREE GUM&#13;
• MOUTHWASH&#13;
,COUGH DROPS&#13;
,•SINUS TABLETS&#13;
-• COMBS&#13;
•£tt .. £tt .. £tr&#13;
Located Just Off The Unfon Bazaar&#13;
Follow-up&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
airships&#13;
·orders&#13;
by Douglas Edenhauser&#13;
,.&#13;
Do you ever wonder what i~ being done to rectify the ·book&#13;
situation as it now exists at Parkside? You will pr.obably be somewhat&#13;
relieved to know that the University Bookstore Committee is&#13;
presently working on the situation to try to get all the missing books&#13;
in by the end of next week. Bookstore manager Pa~I Hoffman listed&#13;
as one of the major problems the taridness of the faculty members to&#13;
turning in their book lists. The deadline for booklists to be in to the&#13;
bookstore was November 1st. At that date only 33% of the 190&#13;
sections had submitted their lists. Within the next two weeks, only an&#13;
additional 14% added theirs to the list. At the present time&#13;
approximately 10% of the sections still have some problem with late&#13;
books ordered.&#13;
Another major problem mentioned was the inclement weather that&#13;
they are having oufon the east coast where a majority of the books&#13;
come from. Hoffman is now in the process of following up on orders&#13;
that have not yet been shipped air freighted out here at an additional&#13;
cost to the bookstore. There will be no extra charge to the students&#13;
for the cost of shipping.&#13;
Hoffman pointed out that he couldn't start putting together the&#13;
orders until December 20th because of the lateness of the booklists.&#13;
He also mentioned that time was the major problem because he was&#13;
generally the only person working on this particular project. The&#13;
Follett Corporation, the company that now runs the bookstore, has&#13;
stated that they may be able to send a full time assistant to help&#13;
Hoffman with his many functions. When asked why there weren't a&#13;
number of diff~re1 .t ordering dates in order to get those faculty&#13;
members that ordered on time their books, Hoffman stated that that&#13;
was a feas,i.ble solution and that he had been notified by his superiors&#13;
that that was a case of bad judgement on Hoffman's part. Two&#13;
different ordering dates would definitely solve much of the problem.&#13;
Charles Tinder reviews the lists that come from the division heads. If&#13;
he thinks that the division heads overestimated on their lists too&#13;
much, he sits down with the division heads and cuts down on the&#13;
number of books ordered. John Harbeson, the head of the division of&#13;
social sciences said that he intentionally over estimates on his&#13;
booklists to account for possible over registration . Paul Hoffman also&#13;
stated that over registration for some classes was a problem in not&#13;
receiving books. The reason that Tinder cuts the lists is that the&#13;
bookstore looses money on any number of books that are not sold.&#13;
Clayton. Johnson also did his part to settle this book problem . He&#13;
assigned Bob Puder to investigate the book crisis and assist in any&#13;
way possible. In some instances, Puder had to drive down to Chicago&#13;
himself to pick up books that were available.&#13;
Hoffman mentioned that the first thing that is done in such a crisis&#13;
is to search the Folle warehouses for any used books that they might&#13;
have in stock . He said that it is virtually impossible for Follett to&#13;
maintain an inventory of the books in stock because there may be as&#13;
m'clny as 15 buyers in the waret-iouse at one time.&#13;
The present bookstore contract wit!:\ the Follett Corporation expires&#13;
in August, and there is some qu~stion as to whether or not Follett will&#13;
want to renew the contract with Parkside. The University Bookstore&#13;
Committee will Look into possible alternatives to the present&#13;
situation, including research into the possibility of a university&#13;
owned bookstore. Members of the committee emphasized that there&#13;
should be a system of mechanics that ensures that all book list be&#13;
sent out on time under any circumstances.&#13;
If you have any ideas, gripes or recommendations as to the&#13;
operations of the Bookstore, please submit your feeling to the&#13;
Business Management. C!~ss 71-319, Room CL 112, Information&#13;
systems analysis Monday and Wednesday 2:00-3: 15 p.m ., or call Dan&#13;
Thomsen, 634-7066 or Ron Vo)I, 639-5741. '&#13;
Ill&#13;
••• FIBER STUDENTS Ill&#13;
• ••&#13;
Unique weaving and spinning supplies .••&#13;
Inexpensive cotton &amp; rayon novelties&#13;
Beautiful Swedish &amp; Irish yorns&#13;
Primitive Greek &amp; Columbian homespun&#13;
Wide variety of unique bulkies,&#13;
thick-thins &amp; highly textured yarn&#13;
Row wool&#13;
Alpoca&#13;
Mohair&#13;
Flax&#13;
Silk&#13;
Yak&#13;
WEAVER'S ALLEY&#13;
345 Main St., Racine&#13;
Beads&#13;
Feathers&#13;
Equipment&#13;
12:30 to 6:00 Mon.-Fri.&#13;
Saturdays by appoint.&#13;
. , ofl1 -Graduate p cl&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Parkside has had certain pressures to m&#13;
high level of instruction, according&#13;
chancellor/dean of faculty John Campbell&#13;
Campbell stated that the long run directi&#13;
external reviews that the UW system bud&#13;
through has drastically affected the admi&#13;
by Bo!,&gt; Hoffman&#13;
( hancellor Alan Guskin stunned&#13;
members Tuesday by announcing the eli&#13;
of"ejght administrative positions and thre&#13;
positions in what he termed an attempt to'&#13;
the university ."&#13;
MURIN ON THE GRADUATE PROGRAM&#13;
Associate Dean of Facult.y William J. M&#13;
It came as a "total shock" to him when&#13;
informed in a meeting with Guskin Monda&#13;
Dean of Graduate Programs position h&#13;
eliminated. Murins job for the last seven&#13;
and until July 1, 1977, was to implement a&#13;
program here at Parkside by the fall of 1978&#13;
secure granb for faculty research projects&#13;
Initially, the tasks of impl.ementing the&#13;
program will go to the new chairperson&#13;
management science division . However&#13;
Dean Murin feels that Guskin's action will&#13;
delay of at least six months and possibly&#13;
year because there is no one now on camp&#13;
primary function is the implementatiOII a oitheRac,&#13;
graduate program . According to Murin, i Jnothertra&#13;
chairman of the management science I of &lt;Olll'flt&#13;
implementing the graduate program woul rhmtParl.&#13;
one of my primary tasks ." " It's only one&#13;
tasks that the chairman will have, t&#13;
increase in resources in that area and I&#13;
him well. "&#13;
Murin said, "Some of the faculty w&#13;
exactly about a graduate program are disa&#13;
in the position the chancellor took. The&#13;
implementing that program plus the great&#13;
demand for graduate programs is the caus&#13;
clisJpp01ntment ."&#13;
Murin had difficulty in understanding t&#13;
"\tvhy wait. There is an interest for Park id&#13;
quality programs . My guess is that we'/&#13;
makC' a trade-off. We'll sacrifice first rate&#13;
there will be a delay of a semester or·&#13;
1mplement1ng the program and it will cau&#13;
of problems. We haven 't 'had graduate pr&#13;
offer yet and we were hoping to get tr&#13;
graduate students from other schools in&#13;
system to Parkside. Now it's going to hav&#13;
l alking about morale Murin said&#13;
members are more depressed toda y than&#13;
a week ago. There 's a black cloud over th&#13;
It 's one more time that the system has&#13;
apart again."&#13;
' As for faculty research grants, Mu · '1&#13;
painted a gloomy picture. " There is no cen ~&#13;
a faculty member can come to and get&#13;
where to get grants. I can 't see how th is n&#13;
will work . The facult y is going to have t ~a&#13;
whole new function . They're going to hav 'to&#13;
the grant\manship game. They 're going t \&#13;
\tart from ground 7ero."&#13;
A primary focus in Guskin's reorganizat&#13;
was that the Basic Skills· program woul&#13;
more funding than it presently does . (Pr&#13;
receives $72,000.) The faculty· senate last&#13;
madt&gt; a commitment tQ expand the B&#13;
program. (Basic Skills is a remedial pr&#13;
freshmen which teaches the basics of E&#13;
math.)&#13;
Murin maintains that when the Facul&#13;
made a commitment to Basic Skills, " T&#13;
1-.now f.he full impact of what they were&#13;
th&lt;'Y knew that increasing the Basic Skill&#13;
would lead to administration changes, if&#13;
the full story they might have voted differ&#13;
common rea ction is that this adm&#13;
\h.ikeup is ;ust taking money from one P&#13;
putting it into another."&#13;
William Murin is also concerned wit&#13;
the faculty members will be stay 1&#13;
permanently " I can't tell if people want 1&#13;
• . . .. said Murin .. ·:some people will roake la &#13;
""=&#13;
ne~s PlOgram planning edelayeCi&#13;
Canary hosts&#13;
radio program&#13;
A series of Parkside-produced radio programs called The Uteruy&#13;
Almanac will be broadcast over WGTD, 92 FM, The two-mmute&#13;
literary featurettes starring Robert Canary will start January "30,&#13;
Sunday through Friday at llAS a.m. and Saturday at 11.1S am&#13;
administrative to instructional, since there has not faculty to become more centralized and busy, The&#13;
, been an increase in-the instructional budget for the two former assistant .. to the Associate Dean for res to . . -.(&#13;
ord' rtlitalR a next biennium. \ Administration (Eugene Norwood), Chuck Tinder&#13;
~ Ing vice The $200,000 generated by the firings, stated and Sally Watson, will now be attached to the vice&#13;
.aOlpbel Campbell, is "not exactly money in hand:' since it chancellor and their workload will increase&#13;
n direct' ofthe has already 'been used to take care of the increase significantly.&#13;
tern&#13;
re ad _ . goes of faculty that will OCcur in the next year, and for an The bulk of planning for- graduate program will,&#13;
I ' 'hI rative expanded ad hoc budget, plus more professors' for according to Campbell, now be placed with the&#13;
a. T£\!' the the basic skills areas. -" management science division, whose major :hCk l ','has The elimination of the two dean positions will responsibility it is to start the master's in&#13;
monr from cause the office of the vice chancellor/dean of administrative science program.&#13;
~ LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
HOlll8 01 th. S"•• I"'"&#13;
SI •• wieh&#13;
OPEl8 U. n10:30P.I.&#13;
2615~.Ihi..."" /We. 6~2nJ&#13;
oetz comment on ImpJlct&#13;
ahout leaving but the market is just not there. Some determined. according to the source, that we had&#13;
people are going to be able to go, This action might thp highest administration costs of any other&#13;
came people who otherwise would not leave university in the UW system in relation again to&#13;
Parl.....ide to rethink their position and apply for educational costs.&#13;
other positions." The same source also said that many at the&#13;
Another worry of Murin's is trying to bring in new personnel reorganizations made Tuesday were not&#13;
people at this point. "Right now Parkside is hiring ..,0 much to clear up the flow of command and&#13;
probably two of the most important jobs that we'll streamline the operation but were rather to hide the&#13;
he hiring in the next few years, the new vice budget costs. The source said that "we're one of the&#13;
chancelfor and chairman of the management dumbest universities in terms of hiding our&#13;
&lt;csence division, Thi~ is not rhe best point to be adm.mstrettve costs. Now we'll just hide our&#13;
hringlng in good senior faculty people for job administrative costs better, by shifting positions&#13;
!Ilt('n'iew~. f aculry on these Search and Screen from under the Chancellor where they are&#13;
Committees [set up with faculty members to screen considered an administrative expense to the Viceorosoecuve&#13;
: faculty members] are really Chancellors office where they are considered an&#13;
disappointed and let down by what the Chanceffor educational expense," according to our source.&#13;
&lt;1/(1." he said. Another associate professor basically confirmed&#13;
"tor five to s;x years we've had major transfers the gist of this story and further elaborated on this&#13;
Jffeuing thi!:&gt; university. It's hard to convince point of where the $200J'm is going to go. "You&#13;
'ltudenl!:&gt; Ihat we know what we're doing when we're have to look very closely next fall at the new fullcon...tantly&#13;
reinventing the wheel." tune positions created and count very carefully to&#13;
"'I thini-.. I have a pretty good feeling of the pulse determine whether the money actually made it over&#13;
0; the Racine community. The last thing we need is here," ..aid our source. 50 the net effect of the&#13;
,Iflother trauma, If J was a parent and I had a child chancellor' v decrsro n Tuesday will not be&#13;
0; (o/fflge age and if my memory was good I'd determmed until next fall? "Exactly," said our&#13;
thin/.... Par/·side, didn't they do the same thing last "OLlfl e&#13;
yeart.. Cary Goetl, budget analysis director, denied&#13;
"I'd ..enously begin to rhink if my c'hiJdren can't the",,,, allegations. "There were no mandated cuts in&#13;
gd a quality education at Parkside. I'd start to look t'lfe&lt; t when Guskin made this decision. We're&#13;
,If the options." always under review by state agencies. There were&#13;
A BUDGETARY TRICK! no budgetary g,mmicks," Goetz sa,d.&#13;
Ranger has learned from an associate professor "'I he basIC impetus behind these changes was to&#13;
\that the admmistration cuts made by Guskin were 'ltrpngthen the Basic Skills program," said Goetz&#13;
mandated by a state agency five months ago. 'Whpl1 administrative costs are so high irs a&#13;
Howt'ver, the ..ame source said that a month ago polltl&lt; dl !:&gt;ensation to cut these resources. Cuskin's&#13;
the "late agency rescinded its mandate. The IllOVt:' f u~",day saved these resources. If you have&#13;
:lnding t ::telay manodtp basKally originated from a study that the high administrative expenses thE' pflce you pay IS&#13;
Parksi ' otter agen( y did of the university administration "ollwone coming down and taking these resources&#13;
rsf tar rate we'l ~rams~ \'f' to Ip,,~,~p;e;n~,,~,,~v;e;r;,u~,~e:d:U~C~'a~t~,o;n;d~l~c~O:S~ts~'';T~h~e~a~g~e:n~c~y;'~'';W;d~y~.~ ••• ~ •••••• ~ ••••••• ~::::::::::::::::::::::::::~j&#13;
!iter or· ~ar in&#13;
.il/ cau J SOliS&#13;
'uate pr ms to&#13;
) get tr ers of&#13;
\001, in' UW&#13;
to ha walt."&#13;
n said ,cuhy&#13;
J¥ than (were&#13;
rover t ~eads.&#13;
,m has ') tom&#13;
,ts MIl ~in&#13;
i"~Oceni place&#13;
and get Id, on&#13;
N thirndY'lfm&#13;
have r;am a&#13;
, tollaJ learn&#13;
g .... t~vt to&#13;
gOI"~&#13;
unned cultv&#13;
the eli ation&#13;
nd thre sncal&#13;
'mpt 10' &amp;ilize&#13;
'GRAM&#13;
am I.M ,said&#13;
m whe : was&#13;
Monda It the&#13;
sitton h been&#13;
st seve onth s&#13;
~menta uate&#13;
II of 19 to&#13;
proiecu&#13;
.ing the&#13;
airpers&#13;
Howev&#13;
tion wiD&#13;
possibly&#13;
In cam&#13;
nentati of a&#13;
\Aurin, i was&#13;
sdence islon&#13;
m woul at be&#13;
"yone any&#13;
lave, t s no&#13;
, and I wi,h&#13;
:ulty tw&#13;
are dis liflled&#13;
ok. The lay in&#13;
,e great q'Pped&#13;
the causP" rhis&#13;
EARN&#13;
While you&#13;
LEARN&#13;
Ask how you can earn while&#13;
you learn - as a Northwestern Mutual&#13;
college agent. You work part-time,&#13;
attend classes full-time. A limited&#13;
number of internships are sttll available.&#13;
.Donald J. Brink, au&#13;
Racine&#13;
Eugen. F. Sotns, au&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
632·2731 654-5316&#13;
The Quiet Company&#13;
NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL tiFf· MllWi\UKEf :mo&#13;
T&#13;
o&#13;
Super Drinks&#13;
Buy a 16 oz. Soft drink&#13;
Keep the.Super Hero glass&#13;
New Hero Gloss every 2 days&#13;
or while supplies last&#13;
- Limited quantity-Collect a set&#13;
UNIONDININGROOM 7:30 AM-2:00 PM&#13;
STARTING. THURSDAY, FEB•. 3 .&#13;
---,_---~----------------------------------------&#13;
P109ra111 planning delayed&#13;
-news&#13;
es to ni· . Ord· &lt;tain a ing vice&#13;
arnpl)ell&#13;
n directi of the&#13;
tern bud oes&#13;
~e d . . g a '111 rative&#13;
al revi the&#13;
rick Lu ' h h , as lllon, from&#13;
administrative to instructional, since there has not&#13;
been an increase in the instructional budget for the&#13;
next biennium.&#13;
The $200,000 generated by the firings, stated&#13;
Campbell, is "not exactly money in hand," since it&#13;
has already been used to take care of the increase&#13;
of faculty that will occur in the next year, and for an&#13;
expanded ad hoc budget, plus more professors for&#13;
the basic skills areas.&#13;
The elimination of the two dean positions will&#13;
r:ause the office of the vice chancellor/ dean of&#13;
a9atlon&#13;
faculty to become more centralized and busy. The&#13;
two former assistant$ to the Associate· Dean for&#13;
Administration (Eugene Norwood), Chuck Tinder&#13;
and Sally Watson, will now be attached to the vice&#13;
chancellor and their workload will increase&#13;
significantly.&#13;
The bulk of planning for graduate program will ,&#13;
according to Campbell, now be placed with the&#13;
management science division, whose major&#13;
responsibility it is to start the master's in&#13;
administrative science program .&#13;
Canary h~sts&#13;
radio program&#13;
A series of Parkside-produced radio programs called The Literilry&#13;
Almanac will be broadcast over WGTD, 92 FM The two-minute&#13;
literary featurettes starring Robert Canary will tart January 30,&#13;
Sunday through Friday at 11 -45 am and Saturday at 11. 15 a m .&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
lnt;oetz comment on lmpoct Home of the Submarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
unned : ulty&#13;
the eli ation&#13;
nd thre .rical&#13;
mpt to · ilize&#13;
RAM&#13;
urin, it was&#13;
cience v1 s1on&#13;
wouloot be&#13;
ly one many&#13;
1ave, tfi's no&#13;
and I I wish&#13;
ulty wl.koow&#13;
are disajllnted&#13;
ok. The lay in&#13;
1e great u3pped&#13;
he causor this&#13;
Mur a ain&#13;
ts, I 1 s no cen dp ace&#13;
d get I s on&#13;
a~his nE!YS tem&#13;
have rl'arn a&#13;
hav&gt; learn&#13;
g tog t&lt;8ve to gain&#13;
izat ove rgan I ce1ve wou&#13;
rn (Pr ntly it oes -&#13;
last ester&#13;
ate B Skills the&#13;
. 1 pr m for&#13;
,d1a E ,h and&#13;
,cs of&#13;
ul )enate faC d e ··T idn 't&#13;
illS, 1ng If 4'/ere&#13;
eY skill Ogram&#13;
51c ·f ' knew ges , T&#13;
n differ Y- he&#13;
ed dr11 ration&#13;
,s a p~ c and&#13;
one&#13;
·thh ther d WI e staYI, here&#13;
ant ,eave,"&#13;
, /e w Jalno,ses&#13;
~ .&#13;
Jbout leaving but the m arket is just no t there. Some&#13;
people are going to be ab le to go. Th is action m ight&#13;
c.aw,e people w ho otherw ise w o u ld no t /ea ve&#13;
Par/...,ide to rethink their posit ion and apply for&#13;
othf'r pmitions ."&#13;
Another worry of Murin's is trying to bring in new&#13;
people at this poi nt. " Right now Parkside is hiring&#13;
probably two of the most important jobs that we 'll&#13;
be hiring in the next few years, the new vice&#13;
chancellor and chairman of the management&#13;
,c1enc.e divi!&gt;ion . Thi!&gt; is not the best point to be&#13;
bringing in good !&gt;enior faculty people for job&#13;
interviews . faculty on these Search and Screen&#13;
Committees [set up with faculty members to screen&#13;
p r o.,pective faculty members] are really&#13;
disappointed and let down by what the Chancellor&#13;
d id. " he said .&#13;
··for five to six years we've had major transfers&#13;
Jffec.ting this university . It's hard to convince&#13;
,tudents that we know what we 're doing when we're&#13;
comtantly reinventing the whee/. "&#13;
··t think I have a pretty good feeling of the pulse&#13;
of the Racine community. The last thing we need is&#13;
,inother trauma. If I was a parent and I had a child&#13;
of college age and if my memory was good I'd&#13;
think : Parkside, didn 't they do the same thing last&#13;
yearr&#13;
'"/'cl ,er1ous/y begin to t h ink if my children ca n 't&#13;
g&lt;'t a quality educat ion at Parkside. I'd sta rt to look&#13;
.it the options ."&#13;
A BUDGET ARY TRICK?&#13;
Ranger has learned from an associate professor&#13;
that the administration cuts made by Guskin were&#13;
m,rndated by a state agency five months ago .&#13;
HowPver, the ~ame source said that a month ago&#13;
thP ,tate agency re cinded its mandate. The&#13;
mandate ba 1c.ally originated from a tudy that the&#13;
agpm y did of the university administration&#13;
t•xpPn,P~ ver,u, t-&gt;ducat1onal costs . The agency&#13;
dt-&gt;termined, accordi ng to the source, that we had&#13;
the highe~t administration costs of any other&#13;
university in the UW system in relation again to&#13;
Pducational costs-.&#13;
The same source also said that many of_ the&#13;
per&lt;;onnel reorganizations IT\ade Tuesday were not&#13;
,o much to cl~ar up the flow of command and&#13;
,treamline the operation but were rather to hide the&#13;
budgt-&gt;t costs . The source said that " we're one of the&#13;
dumbest universities in terms of hiding our&#13;
administrative costs . Now we'll just hide our&#13;
administrative costs better, by shifting positions&#13;
from under the Chancellor where they are&#13;
considered an administrative expense to the ViceChancellor's&#13;
office where they are considered an&#13;
; ducational expense," according to our source.&#13;
Another associate professor basically confirmed&#13;
the gist of this story and further elaborated on th is&#13;
point of where the $200,000 is going to go " You&#13;
have to look very closely next fall at the new fulltime&#13;
positions created and count very carefully to&#13;
dett-&gt;rmine whether the money actually made it over&#13;
here," ,aid our source. So the net effect of the&#13;
chan cellor', decision Tuesday will not be&#13;
determined until next fall? " Exactly," said our&#13;
,oun P&#13;
Cary Goetz, budget analysis director, denied&#13;
thP,e allegations . "There were no mandated cuts in&#13;
ptf P&lt; t when Guskin made this decision We're&#13;
always under review by state agencies. There were&#13;
no budgetary gimmicks," Goetz said.&#13;
" I he basic impetus behind these changes was to&#13;
\trengthen the Basic Skills program," said Goetz&#13;
'WhPn administrative costs are so high it's a&#13;
pol1t1c al ~ensation to cut these resources . Guskm's&#13;
mow l ue\day ,aved these resources. If you have&#13;
high administrative expenses the price you pay 1s&#13;
,onwone coming down and taking these resources&#13;
c1W a&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington Ille. 634-2373&#13;
EARN&#13;
While you&#13;
LEARN&#13;
Ask how you can earn while&#13;
you learn - as a orthwe tern Mutual&#13;
college agent. You work part-time,&#13;
attend classes full-time. A limited&#13;
number of intern hip are trll a ailabl&#13;
.Donald J. Brink, CLU&#13;
Racine&#13;
632-2731&#13;
Eugene F. Soens, CLU&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
654-531 6&#13;
The Quiet Company&#13;
NORTHWESTER'I M TUAL LIFE · ~ILW l&lt;H&#13;
0&#13;
Super Drinks&#13;
/~~ -----~&#13;
Buy a 16 oz. Soft drink&#13;
Keep the. Super Hero glass&#13;
New Hero Gloss every 2 days&#13;
or while supplies last&#13;
- Limited quantity-Collect a set&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM 7:30 AM-2:00 PM&#13;
STARTING . THURSDAY, FEB. 3 · &#13;
Fencing tournament hosted&#13;
:a::lIiIllI:I::I3l:1:1S:l1::a:s:s:l:I:I:Iill:l:lS:ll::a:s:s:l:I:I:Iil-l:I:IS:lIlilIiJ '&#13;
Foilists Mike Mainland" Bryan Spalla, and Perry&#13;
Lehrke, who will be expected to, when dueling on&#13;
. Conjuring in your mind visions of the Three the strip, use the point of their weapon to touch&#13;
Musketeers,the sport of fencing is becoming very the trunk or back of their opponent five times&#13;
popular in the. United States. within a period of 4 minutes.&#13;
Many of the area high schools have adopted the The epee demands more expertise and agility&#13;
sport as part of their athletic program", Parks ide is than the other weapons since the whole body is&#13;
the only college in the area that has a fencing the target for the weapon, which used to have a&#13;
program. poison tip. You must also score five points. On&#13;
FOR THE BEST RECORDS II KEIOSHA The Parks ide program started a long time ago this weapon are; Bob Vlach, David Baumann, Curt&#13;
AT PlICES YOU'LL LlKEI when what became Parks ide was the two centers Studey, and Christopher Lehnert.&#13;
• of the UW center system at Kenosha and Racine. -On sabre this season is Jim Redmond, Corbett&#13;
JAZZ ROCK SOUL ~ Coach of the team was Loran Hein, who also spent Christensen, and Ken Greatsinger.&#13;
V time in the mathematics department, teaching. In the upcoming weeks, Parkslde will be hosting&#13;
CONTEMPORARY I( He became Parks ide's coach when the two 'its largest tournament with 12 strips being run.&#13;
centers joined with the buildings. on the Wood These strips will entirely cover the gym so there&#13;
C&#13;
LASSICAL Road campus to form Parks ide. The team had might not be a large number of seating available&#13;
, some outstanding fencers in John Hanzalik, who for the tournament on February 5, which starts at&#13;
COME TO US AT went to the World University Games and. was 930. '&#13;
Parkside's first all-American in fencing among Teams invited to the meet are: Tri-State&#13;
~~&#13;
• HOUIl. others. University of Indiana, Norte Dame (which placed&#13;
_____ The team is very enthusiastic about this season. second or third in the NCAA Nationals last year),&#13;
~ but lacks the strip experience to make this season a .Milwaukee Area Technical College, Minnesota,&#13;
, )J successful one. "They will be beaten many times by and the Univers ity of Illinois-Chicago Circle.&#13;
626 Fifty-Sixth St., Kenosha, Wis. someone with more savvy and strip experience The week after that, Madison, Michigan State,&#13;
~~ai~~ f than them," according to Hein. and Northwestern will meet Parks ide in another L::~!~.:~=:4~~~~.... ~:~:::=:~:",:~:.",..;~..:::';:;~~~c~u~r:re:n:t~t~e:a:m~m:e:m:be:r~s.i~n:c:lu:d:e~: :h:o:m:e~m:e:e:t,~w:h~iChstarts at 9:30 a.m.&#13;
I&#13;
,. ~;.·"'..,·· ..&#13;
:: ...::&#13;
. '.&#13;
:~ . ::&#13;
.: . ..:&#13;
" .." '&#13;
by Bruce Wagner PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
THE 'MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
STOP I~ TOOAY AT PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE,&#13;
YOU'LL LOYE THE UNIQUE, COMFORTABLE ATMOSPHERE&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
Here'. the chellenge. You'll need a watch In numerical order. When you've reached&#13;
and a pencil. Stert with number 1 In the cen- number 60, check your watch. If it took you&#13;
ter of the ribbon. Then, al quickly al you leiS than three mtnutee, you've met the&#13;
can, cro.. out every number, one at 8 time challenge.&#13;
2 47 9&#13;
57 16 19 46&#13;
33 24 7 51 21 42 4&#13;
43 12 60 52 31 41&#13;
23 15. 1 45 50 25&#13;
22 28 34 53 48&#13;
49 27 14 59 20&#13;
58 30 11 40 8 29 3&#13;
36 6 44 18 5 17&#13;
When there's a challenge,&#13;
quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope you have some fun with the challenge,&#13;
There's another challenge we'd like to offer you, too.&#13;
w:::~s~~:~~:ncghe~n'ce to prove the quality of&#13;
our beer. We challenge you to taste and compare&#13;
Pabst Blue R1bbon to any other premium beer. You'll&#13;
like Pabst better. Blue Ribbon quality means the best&#13;
tasting beer you can get Since 1844 it always has,&#13;
PABST.Since 1844.The quality has always come through.&#13;
~UI76. PABST BREWING COMPANY MilwlIJ.lkn, we.. Peoria Height,. m, Newark, N. J .. Loa Angeles. caiu.. Pabst, Georgia,&#13;
Women&#13;
Improve&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parks ide's women's basketball&#13;
club will travel to play&#13;
UWC-Waukesha tomorrow.' "the&#13;
team they narrowly defeated&#13;
here last Thursday, 45-42 .&#13;
For the first time this season,&#13;
all members of Coach Hal&#13;
Henderson's squad played in the&#13;
game, but consistantly high&#13;
scorer Diana Kolovos was the&#13;
team's top point-getter and&#13;
rebounder with 16 points and 11&#13;
rebounds.&#13;
Henderson was pleased to see&#13;
more of the players contributing&#13;
to the team score, but hopes to&#13;
see more,&#13;
"We have been shooting close&#13;
to' 30% from the field," said&#13;
Coach Henderson. "We don't&#13;
have an outside shooter and&#13;
those that have been shooting&#13;
haven't been shooting that well."&#13;
Dita Hunter and Sue Kortendick&#13;
each had eight points.&#13;
Kortendick was one of the&#13;
forwards that had been unable to&#13;
see action 50 far this season.&#13;
Because of the lack of&#13;
balanced scoring, the team got&#13;
off to a slow start and were&#13;
behind 25·13 with seven minutes&#13;
remaining in the first half.&#13;
The Rangers put up a tough&#13;
defense and battled on the&#13;
boards, holding Waukesha&#13;
scoreless for the next six minutes&#13;
and 40 seconds when the score&#13;
became 27-25.&#13;
Parkside was behind 28-25 at&#13;
halftime and were unable to get&#13;
closer than two the rest of the&#13;
way.&#13;
Although Parks ide had some'&#13;
what improved at the free throw&#13;
lane, turnovers in the last five&#13;
minutes and four fast break ...&#13;
layups missed in key moments&#13;
kepi the Rangers from taking the&#13;
lead.&#13;
Coach Henderson is hoping&#13;
the squad has learned something&#13;
by playing Waukesha that will&#13;
help them win in tomorrow's&#13;
contest.&#13;
"I'm very encouraged," said&#13;
Henderson, "We've gotten all of&#13;
our -players healthy and we're&#13;
improvin-g every game."&#13;
•&#13;
• •••• •&#13;
: : '&#13;
' ',&#13;
: \: .... .&#13;
Fencing tournament hosted&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Conjuring in your mind visions of the Three&#13;
Musketeers, the sport of fencing is becoming very&#13;
popular in the United States.&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
STOP IN TODAY AT PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE,&#13;
YOU'LL LOVE THE UNIQUE, COMFORTABLE ATMOSPHERE&#13;
Many of the area high schools have adopted the&#13;
sport as part of their athletic program. Parkside is&#13;
the only college in the area that has a fencing&#13;
program.&#13;
FOR THE BEST RECORDS IN KENOSHA&#13;
AT PRICES YOU'LL LIKE!&#13;
The Parkside program started a long time ago&#13;
when what became Parkside was the two centers&#13;
of the UW center system at Kenosha and Racine.&#13;
Coach of the team was Loran Hein, who also spent JAZZ ROCK SOUL time in the mathematics department, tea2hing.&#13;
CONTEMPORARY He became Parks ide's coach when the two&#13;
centers joined with the bliildings_ on the Wood&#13;
Road campus to form Parkside. The team had&#13;
some outstanding fencers in John Hanzalik, who&#13;
went to the World University Games and. was&#13;
Parkside's first all-American in fencing among&#13;
others.&#13;
. ,CLASSICAL&#13;
COME TO US AT&#13;
p&#13;
626 Fifty-Sixth St., Kenosha, Wis. )&#13;
* ~·~~&#13;
The team is very enthusiastic about this seasdn,&#13;
but lacks the strip experience to make this season a&#13;
successful one. "They will be beaten many times by&#13;
someone with more savvy and strip experience&#13;
than them," according to Hein.&#13;
Current team members include:&#13;
,.&#13;
Here's the challenge. You'll need a watch In numerical order. When you've reached&#13;
and a pencil. Start with number 1 in the cen- number 60, check your watch. If it took you&#13;
ter of the ribbon. Then, as quickly as you less than three minutes, you've met the&#13;
can, cross out every number, one at a time challenge.&#13;
47 9&#13;
37 ST 16 19 46&#13;
24 7 51 21 42 4&#13;
54 43 12 60 52 31&#13;
39 23 15 1 45 50&#13;
22 28 34 53 48&#13;
49 27 14 59 20&#13;
/&#13;
58 30 11 40 8 29 3&#13;
, . .&#13;
When there's a challenge, quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope you have some fun with the challenge.&#13;
There's another challenge we'd like to offer you, too.&#13;
The Pabst challenge: ,&#13;
We welcome the ch?nce to prove the quality of&#13;
our beer. We challenge you to taste and compare&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon to any other premium beer. You'll&#13;
like Pabst better. Blue Ribbon quality means the best&#13;
tasting beer you can get. _Since 1844 it always has.&#13;
Foilists Mike Mainland_, Bryan Spalla, and Perry&#13;
Lehrke, who will be expected to, when dueling on&#13;
the strip, use the point of their weapon to touch&#13;
the trunk or back of their opponent five times&#13;
within a period of 4 minutes.&#13;
The epee demands more expertise and agility&#13;
than the other weapons since the whole body is&#13;
the target for the weapon, which used to have a&#13;
poison tip. You must also score five points. On&#13;
this weapon are; Bob Vlach, David Baumann, Curt&#13;
Studey, and Christopher Lehnert.&#13;
-On sabre this season is Jim Redmond, Corbett&#13;
Christensen, and Ken Greatsinger.&#13;
In the upcoming weeks, Parksic!e will be hosting&#13;
its largest tournament with 12 strips being run.&#13;
These strips will entirely cover the gym so there&#13;
might not b.e a large number of seating available&#13;
for the tournament on February 5, which starts at&#13;
9:30. '&#13;
Teams invited to the meet are: Tri-State&#13;
University of Indiana, Norte Dame (which placed&#13;
second or third in the NCAA Nationals last year),&#13;
Milwaukee Area Technical College, Minnesota,&#13;
and the University of Illinois-Chicago Circle.&#13;
The week after that, Madison, Michigan State,&#13;
and Northwestern wi II meet Parkside in another&#13;
home meet, which starts at 9:30 a.m .&#13;
Women&#13;
improve&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside's women's basketball&#13;
club will travel to play&#13;
UWC-Waukesha tomorrow, the&#13;
team they narrowly defeated&#13;
here last Thursday , 45-42.&#13;
For the first time this season ,&#13;
all members of Coach Hal&#13;
Henderson's squad played in the&#13;
game, but consistantly high&#13;
scorer Diana Kolovos was the&#13;
team's top point-getter and&#13;
rebounder with 16 points and 11&#13;
rebounds .&#13;
Henderson was pleased to see&#13;
more of the players contributing&#13;
to the team score, but hopes to&#13;
see more.&#13;
"We have been shooting close&#13;
to 30% from the field," said&#13;
Coach Henderson . "We don't&#13;
have an outside shooter and&#13;
those that have been shooting&#13;
haven't been shooting that well."&#13;
Dita Hunter and Sue Kortendick&#13;
each had eight points .&#13;
Kortendick was one of the&#13;
forwards that had been unable to&#13;
see action so far this season.&#13;
Because of the lack of&#13;
balanced scoring, the team got&#13;
off to a slow start and were&#13;
behind 25-13 with seven minutes&#13;
remaining in the first half.&#13;
The Rangers put up a tough&#13;
defense and battled on the&#13;
boards, holding Waukesha&#13;
scoreless for the next six minutes&#13;
and 40 seconds when the score&#13;
became 27-25 .&#13;
Parkside was behind 28-25 at&#13;
halftime a11d were unable to get&#13;
closer than two the rest of the&#13;
way .&#13;
Although Parkside had somewhat&#13;
improved at the free throw&#13;
lane, turnovers in the last five&#13;
minutes and four fast break&#13;
layups missed in key moments&#13;
kepi the Rangers from taking the&#13;
lead .&#13;
Coach Henderson is hoping&#13;
the squad has learned something&#13;
by playing Waukesha that will&#13;
help them win in tomorrow's&#13;
contest.&#13;
PABST. Since 1844. The quality has always come through. " I'm very encouraged," said&#13;
Henderson, "We've gotten all of&#13;
our players healthy and we're&#13;
improving every game." @1976. PABST BREWING COMPANY Milwaukee, Wis., Peoria Heights, Ill., Newark, N. J., Los Angeles, Calif., Pabst, Georgia. &#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
OJ' .&gt;:~:&#13;
. ° °&#13;
~. ."&#13;
.&#13;
• e"&#13;
•&#13;
basket for the first minutes of the&#13;
game. Parks ide was held&#13;
- scoreless with 20 points while&#13;
Central made their score 30.&#13;
,After Central built up a 20&#13;
point lead in the second half, the&#13;
game never was closer than 10.&#13;
In addition to Scott's 30 point&#13;
total, Joe Foots and Stevie King&#13;
each had 12&#13;
In the Wayne State victory,&#13;
the Rangers led 08-66 when the&#13;
Tartars started louling to gain&#13;
control of the ball. sending King&#13;
to the free throw lane where he&#13;
made eight of eight in the&#13;
closing minutes.&#13;
King ended the game with&#13;
nine of 11 free throws ana&#13;
totalled 15 points. Scott was top&#13;
scorer for the Rangers with 25&#13;
points. Marvin Chones and Foots&#13;
each added 10.&#13;
Track team&#13;
sponsors&#13;
Invltatlona'&#13;
Parkslde p'ays Milton Icnaere IS. diffneru:eW fffP&#13;
PREPARE FOR:&#13;
SwImmers scrImmage H.S.&#13;
against Carthage.&#13;
Wilbershide was the only&#13;
other winner in the 200 fly&#13;
against Carthage, second against&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
The 400 medley relay team&#13;
finished second to both teams&#13;
and broke a school record at&#13;
4:08.906. Swimming were Haas,&#13;
Keith Kruegar, Kwas and&#13;
Wilbershide.&#13;
Haas set a record in the 200&#13;
I.N. in 2:18.004 and Nelson&#13;
broke the record in the 200&#13;
freestyle in 2:00.107. Both scored&#13;
records against Milwaukee, third&#13;
against Carthage.&#13;
Haas also broke a record in the&#13;
200 breast with a time of&#13;
2:34.724 and was second against PITCHER BEER •&#13;
bO~~uegar was a second place&#13;
finisher in the 200 back. He took&#13;
Hog a n5&#13;
~&#13;
"'150&#13;
third against Milwaukee. fourth • Subs • Sandwloches&#13;
against Carthage in the 200 I.N. (&#13;
Kwas took second against • Char1Jrololed Pial *100 Pitch., D•• OIit)&#13;
Carthage and thiret ag aihst&#13;
Milwaukee in the 200 fly. PABS'" BUD OLD S""'LE UTE 0·" Taking thirds against both Sandwiches '1- - ,11 - -.1&#13;
schools were Rick Lopes, 1000 H HOUR FRI&#13;
free and Nelson in the 500 free. • Salads , 1:00 to S:iO •&#13;
Mark flynn was third against PITCHER BEER *115&#13;
Milwaukee, fou rth aga inst Carth _ ~~5:1:1::W:isc:o=n:s=in=A:ve:.=D:own::t:own:::!.!::::::::::::::::::=:::::::::=::~:::::::::::::::::::~&#13;
age in the 50 and 100 free. ~&#13;
lourth place finishers against&#13;
both schools were Lopes, 500&#13;
free; Dennis Steeves, 200 breast&#13;
and 1000 free and Steve&#13;
Pontiakowski, 200 free.&#13;
YOUNG ADULT&#13;
NIGHT&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Admission $1.25&#13;
Skate Rental 504&#13;
!rry&#13;
on&#13;
lch&#13;
'05&#13;
lily&#13;
is \..&#13;
'aOn&#13;
Ult&#13;
ett&#13;
109&#13;
lO.&#13;
~elie&#13;
at&#13;
.te&#13;
edr),&#13;
:a,&#13;
:e,&#13;
er&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside's basketball team will&#13;
end their five game road trip&#13;
after a contest tonight at Milton&#13;
College.&#13;
The Rangers will host Lakeland&#13;
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. They will&#13;
be going into the Milton game&#13;
with either a 12-6 or 11-7 record,&#13;
after beating a 4-13 Wayne State&#13;
team in Detroit last Saturday&#13;
afternoon, 76-71, and playing&#13;
UW-Green Bay Monday night.&#13;
The Rangers lost to Central&#13;
State January 24, 84-72 at&#13;
Wilberforce, Ohio.&#13;
leartha Scott had 30 points' for&#13;
the sixth time this season, but&#13;
the Rangers picked up 11 more&#13;
fouls that turned into 22 free&#13;
throws for Central to Parks ide's&#13;
six&#13;
The 'teams played basket-for-&#13;
,&#13;
The Ranger men's swim team&#13;
will scrimmage Thomas More&#13;
high school here Friday at 4 pm.&#13;
In a double dual meet&#13;
Saturday, Parks ide hosted UW·&#13;
Milwaukee and Carthage and&#13;
lost to both 67 -38 and 85-26.&#13;
respectively.&#13;
The Rangers had lost to&#13;
Milwaukee earlier in the season&#13;
but Coach Barb Lawson felt her&#13;
team "did better this time, and&#13;
we had some good individual&#13;
performances."&#13;
Coach Lawson noted that&#13;
some of the swimmers are ill&#13;
with the f-1uand cited "Rich Haas&#13;
was one of the outstanding&#13;
performers in the meet and he&#13;
probably felt the worst."&#13;
Also outstanding the meet was&#13;
lim Ferraro, who set records in&#13;
the 50 and 100 free with times of&#13;
22.932 and 50.462. Ferraro is&#13;
nearing the qualifying marks for&#13;
the NA1A National meet&#13;
scheduled for next mdhth with&#13;
his firsts against both schools in&#13;
the 100 and first against&#13;
Milwaukee, second against&#13;
Carthage.&#13;
Ferraro was also a member of&#13;
the 400 free relay team along&#13;
with kevin Nelson, Rick Kwas&#13;
and Bob Wilbershide which set a&#13;
record at 3:33.729 with a first&#13;
against Milw~ukee and second&#13;
ball&#13;
,lay the&#13;
ted&#13;
00,&#13;
Hal&#13;
th&amp;,gh&#13;
the&#13;
md&#13;
, 11&#13;
aid lII't&#13;
md ing&#13;
~II."&#13;
enjts.&#13;
the&#13;
!to&#13;
on. of got&#13;
ere '-&#13;
tes&#13;
Igh&#13;
iIIeha&#13;
tes&#13;
ore&#13;
at get&#13;
the&#13;
ne- oW&#13;
jve&#13;
!ak&#13;
ntS :he&#13;
,ng ing&#13;
,~I&#13;
~'s&#13;
aid&#13;
of&#13;
~&#13;
~.~.~&#13;
GMAT • GRE • OCAT&#13;
CPAt· ... • SAT&#13;
The Ranger Track team will&#13;
sponsor the Parks ide Invitational&#13;
. February 5, at Racine Park High&#13;
School. The First National USTFF&#13;
Three mile walk championships&#13;
will be held along with regular&#13;
track events.&#13;
The team competed Saturday&#13;
on the 220 yard synthetic track at&#13;
Camp Randall Memorial Building&#13;
in Madison in the Wisconsin&#13;
Invitational.&#13;
No team scores were kept as&#13;
UW-Madison, Northwestern&#13;
loyola, Northern Illinois, UW~&#13;
Whitewater, UW-Stevens Point,&#13;
Wisconsin Track Club and&#13;
Kegosa track team competed.&#13;
Winners for Parkside included&#13;
Jeff Sitz , long jump measuring&#13;
23' 9"; Jim Heiring, two-mile in&#13;
13:41.03, setting a field house&#13;
record; Pat Burns, shot put with&#13;
a 52' 10" heave; Bob Meekma&#13;
in the pole vault with 13'16" and&#13;
Herb DeGroot in the 440 at 51.9.&#13;
Sue Von Behren won the high&#13;
jump at 5'6", tying the fieldhouse&#13;
record she set two years ago.&#13;
Ray Fredricksen was third in&#13;
the two-mile and fifth in the mile&#13;
and Bill Werve had his best&#13;
performance in the 600 for a&#13;
Fifth.&#13;
"We gave an overall good&#13;
performance," said Coach Bob&#13;
lawson. "We took as many of&#13;
the top places as most there,&#13;
except for Madison."&#13;
Our broad ran"e of program. prev/d. an umbrella 01,.. tlng&#13;
know-how tha' enable. UI to oner the be.t prepararion&#13;
available, no matter which coursa I. talcan.Ovar 38 ye."&#13;
01 experience and eucc .... Small el...... Voluminoul&#13;
home study material.. Courses that are eonltanttv updated.&#13;
Permanenl cente" OJMln day. &amp; .. eIlend. all year.&#13;
Complete tape laclllties lor review 01 cia.. lellOnl and lor&#13;
use 01 supplementary materiels. Make-upa lor missed leesons&#13;
at our centers.&#13;
ASK ABOUT OUR&#13;
COMPACT COURSES&#13;
CALL:&#13;
(608) 2S~S7S&#13;
1001 RIrttedot St.,&#13;
Madison, Wis. 53103&#13;
CLASSES IN MADtSON&#13;
AND MILWAUKEE&#13;
TEst PlIIEPAAAnON&#13;
SPECIALIStS SINCE 19lb&#13;
Centers in Major U.S. Cities&#13;
This Se.ester ....&#13;
UNION&#13;
SQUARE&#13;
..... ,11&#13;
~FLORIDA&#13;
Bowling&#13;
Sweepstak&#13;
Startin" 'ell. 6t"&#13;
ADULTS ONLY ta and OLDER&#13;
From 1)·11:30 p.m. Every Sunday&#13;
RED'S ROLLER RINK&#13;
6220 67th St., Ilenosha&#13;
i_st oH .i••.. ' 31&#13;
1st place prize· A Free trip&#13;
to Daytona Beach, Florida&#13;
Spring Break Trip, \&#13;
March 11·20&#13;
Entry forms and&#13;
Information available&#13;
at the Rec Center.&#13;
Phone: Ext. 2695&#13;
,&#13;
!rry&#13;
on&#13;
Ucn&#13;
es&#13;
ity&#13;
is&#13;
aPn&#13;
&#13;
Urt&#13;
tt&#13;
ng&#13;
un.&#13;
re&#13;
, le&#13;
at&#13;
te&#13;
ed&#13;
r),&#13;
a,&#13;
e,&#13;
er&#13;
all&#13;
lay&#13;
he&#13;
ted&#13;
n,&#13;
al&#13;
the&#13;
1gh&#13;
the&#13;
nd&#13;
11&#13;
see&#13;
ring&#13;
to&#13;
se&#13;
aid&#13;
on't&#13;
!&#13;
~;&#13;
II."&#13;
~nits.&#13;
&#13;
he&#13;
rto&#13;
F~i&#13;
~ot&#13;
bre&#13;
tes&#13;
gh&#13;
he&#13;
ha&#13;
ies&#13;
ore&#13;
aid&#13;
of&#13;
f're&#13;
Parkside plays MIiton&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
•&#13;
Parkside's basketball team will&#13;
end their five game road trip&#13;
after a contest tonight at Milton&#13;
College.&#13;
The Rangers will host Lakeland&#13;
Saturday at 7:30 p .m . They will&#13;
be going into the Milton game&#13;
with either a 12-6 or 11-7 record,&#13;
after beating a 4-13 Wayne State&#13;
team in Detroit last Saturday&#13;
afternoon, 76-71, and playing&#13;
UW-Green Bay Monday night.&#13;
The Rangers lost to Central&#13;
State January 24, 84-72 at&#13;
Wilberforce, Ohio.&#13;
Leartha Scott had 30 points· for&#13;
the sixth time this season, but&#13;
the Rangers picked up 11 more&#13;
fouls that turned into 22 free&#13;
throws for Central to Parkside's&#13;
six.&#13;
The 'teams played basket-forbasket&#13;
for the first minutes of the&#13;
game. Parkside was held&#13;
scoreless with 20 points while&#13;
Central made their score 30.&#13;
, After Central built up a 20&#13;
point lead in the second half, the&#13;
game never was closer than 10.&#13;
In addition to Scott's 30 point&#13;
total, Joe Foots and Stevie King&#13;
each had 12.&#13;
In the Wayne State victory,&#13;
the Rangers led 68-66 when the&#13;
Tartars start.ed fouling to gain&#13;
control of the ball, sending King&#13;
to the free throw lane where he&#13;
made eight of eight in the&#13;
closing minutes.&#13;
King ended the game with&#13;
nine of 11 free throws and&#13;
totalled 15 points . Scott was top&#13;
scorer for the Rangers with 25&#13;
points. Marvin Chones and Foots&#13;
each added 10.&#13;
Swimmers scrimmage H.S.&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
The Ranger me~·s swim team&#13;
will scrimmage Thomas More&#13;
high school here Friday at 4 p .m .&#13;
In a double dual meet&#13;
Saturday, Parkside hosted UWMilwaukee&#13;
and Carthage and&#13;
lost to both 67-38 and 85-26,&#13;
respectively .&#13;
The Rangers had lost to&#13;
Milwaukee earlier in the season&#13;
but Coach Barb Lawson felt her&#13;
team " did better this time, and&#13;
we had some good individual&#13;
performances ."&#13;
Coach Lawson noted that&#13;
some of the swimmers are ill&#13;
with the flu and cited "Rich Haas&#13;
was one of the outstanding&#13;
performers in the meet and he&#13;
probably felt the worst."&#13;
Also outstanding the meet was&#13;
Jim Ferraro, who set records in&#13;
the 50 and 100 free with times of&#13;
22.932 and 50.462. Ferraro is&#13;
nearing the qual ifying marks for&#13;
the NAIA National meet&#13;
scheduled for next md'hth with&#13;
his firsts against both schools in&#13;
the 100 and first against&#13;
Milwaukee, second against&#13;
Carthage.&#13;
Ferraro was also a member of&#13;
the 400 free relay team along&#13;
with Kevin Nelson, Rick Kwas&#13;
and Bob Wilbershide which set a&#13;
record at 3:33.729 with a first&#13;
against Milw~ukee and second&#13;
against Carthage.&#13;
Wilbershide was the only&#13;
other winner in the 200 fly&#13;
against Carthage, second against&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
The 400 medley relay team&#13;
finished second to both teams&#13;
and broke a school record at&#13;
4:08.906. Swimming were Haas,&#13;
Keith Kruegar, Kwas and&#13;
Wilbershide.&#13;
Haas set a record in the 200&#13;
1.N. in 2:18.004 and Nelson&#13;
broke the record in the 200&#13;
freestyle in 2:00.107. Both scored&#13;
records against Milwaukee, third&#13;
against Carthage.&#13;
Haas also broke a record in the&#13;
200 breast with a time of&#13;
2:34.724 and was second against&#13;
both .&#13;
Kruegar was a second place&#13;
finisher in the 200 back . He took&#13;
third against Milwaukee, fourth&#13;
against Carthage in the 200 I .N.&#13;
Kwas took second against&#13;
Carthage and third against&#13;
Milwaukee in the 200 fly.&#13;
Taking thirds against both&#13;
schools were Rick Lopes, 1000&#13;
free and Nelson in the 500 free.&#13;
Mark rlynn was third against&#13;
Milwaukee, fourth against Carthage&#13;
m the 50 and 100 free.&#13;
I ourth place finishers against&#13;
both schools were Lopes, 500&#13;
free; Dennis Steeves, 200 breast&#13;
and 1000 free and Steve&#13;
Pontiakowski , 200 free.&#13;
YOUNG ADULT&#13;
NIGHT&#13;
Saturday&#13;
i1• Admission $1 .25&#13;
Skate Rental so~&#13;
Starting Feb. 6th&#13;
ADULTS ONLY 1_8 and OLDER&#13;
From 9-11 :30 p.m. Every Sunday&#13;
RED'S ROLLER RINK&#13;
6220 61th St., Kenosha&#13;
just off highway 3 I&#13;
Track team&#13;
sponsors&#13;
Invitational&#13;
The Ranger Track team will&#13;
sponsor the Parkside Invitational&#13;
. February 5, at Racine Park High&#13;
School. The First National USTFF&#13;
Three mile walk championships&#13;
will be held along with regular&#13;
track events.&#13;
The team competed Saturday&#13;
on the 220 yard synthetic track at&#13;
Camp Randall Memorial Building&#13;
in Madison in the Wisconsin&#13;
Invitational .&#13;
No team scores were kept as&#13;
UW-Madison, Northwestern&#13;
Loyola, Northern Illinois, UW~&#13;
Whitewater, UW-Stevens Point&#13;
Wisconsin Track Club and&#13;
Kegosa track team competed .&#13;
Winners for Parkside included&#13;
Jeff Sitz, long jump measuring&#13;
23' 9"; Jim Heiring, two-mile in&#13;
13:41.03, setting a field house&#13;
record; Pat Burns, shot put with&#13;
a 52' 10" heave; Bob Meekma&#13;
in the pole vault with 13'16" and&#13;
Herb DeGroot in the 440 at 51.9.&#13;
Sue Von Behren won the high&#13;
jump at 5'6" , tying the fieldhouse&#13;
record she set two years ago.&#13;
Ray Fredricksen was third in&#13;
the two-mile and fifth in the mile&#13;
and Bill Werve had his best&#13;
performance in the 600 for a&#13;
Fifth .&#13;
"We gave an overall good&#13;
performance," said Coach Bob&#13;
Lawson. "We took as man_y of&#13;
the top places as most there,&#13;
except for Madison ."&#13;
Hogans&#13;
• Subs • Sandwiches&#13;
• Charbroiled&#13;
Sandwiches&#13;
• Salads&#13;
511 Wisconsin Ave. Downtown&#13;
=, .. ... .. . . .&#13;
'Chere IS.difference!!! Our J YNr&#13;
PREPARE FOR:&#13;
GMAT • GRE&#13;
CPAT • Via&#13;
• OCAT&#13;
• SAT&#13;
Our broad range of programs provides an umbrella of test- ing know-how that enables us to offer the best preparation&#13;
available, no matter which course is taken. Over 38 years&#13;
of experience and success. Small classes. Volumlnous&#13;
home study materials. Courses that are constantly up- dated. Permanent centers open days &amp; weekends all year. Complete tape facilities for review of class lessons and for use of supplementary materlals. Make-ups for missed lessons&#13;
at our centers.&#13;
ASK ABOUT OUR&#13;
COMPACT COURSES&#13;
CALL:&#13;
(608) 255-0575&#13;
1001 Rutledge St ..&#13;
Madison. Wis. 53703&#13;
CLASSES IN MADISON&#13;
AND MILWAUKEE&#13;
TEST PREPARATION&#13;
SPECIALISTS SINCE 19lb&#13;
Centers in Major U S. Cities&#13;
This Semester ••••&#13;
UNION&#13;
QUARE&#13;
1111101111611&#13;
PITCHER BEER&#13;
$150&#13;
(Plus *1°0 Pitcher Detosit)&#13;
PABST-BUD-OLD STYLE -UTE-OLY&#13;
HAPN HOUR 3:oo to S:3o FRI.&#13;
PITCHER BEER *125&#13;
FLORIDA&#13;
Bowling&#13;
Sweepstak&#13;
1st place priz:e - A Free trip&#13;
to Daytona Beach, Florida&#13;
Sp,:ing Break Trip,&#13;
March 11-20&#13;
Entry forms and&#13;
information available&#13;
at the Rec Center.&#13;
Phone: Ext. 2695&#13;
, &#13;
-&#13;
I&#13;
..&#13;
. . ..&#13;
·········· .&#13;
::- -:.&#13;
: . :&#13;
0. .:&#13;
-. ,°0 •••• " •••••••&#13;
Wednesday, February 2&#13;
PAD Coffeehouse from 2 to 4 p.m. in the Union Cafeteria.&#13;
Wargamer's meeting from 6 to 8 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Shakespeare on Film: Three silent films starting a 7 p.m. at the&#13;
Colden Rondelle, Racine. For further information call 554-2154.&#13;
Thursday, February 3&#13;
Free throw contest from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the Phy Ed BIg.'&#13;
Movie: "The Producers" at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Marv Happel for School Board Student Subcommittee meeting at&#13;
4:00 p.m. in WlLC D 195. Everyone welcome.&#13;
friday 1 february 4&#13;
Earth Science Club slide presentation ofChristrnas field trip to the&#13;
Louisiana Gulf Coast at 12:00 noon in GR 114. 'Coffee' and donuts&#13;
served.&#13;
Society of Physics students meeting at 12:00 noon in GR 230.&#13;
IMPORTANT but short.&#13;
Mathematics Colloquium: "Geometry qf Groups on Trees," Prof. R.&#13;
Lyndon, speaker at 3:30 p.rn. in CL 107.&#13;
Movie: "Young Frankenstein" at 8 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
ACU-I local Chess and Foosball Tournaments in the Union Rec&#13;
Center. Also Feb. 5 and 6.&#13;
Intramural Debale Tourney at 2 p.m., rooms to be announced.&#13;
Registration ends Feb. 3. For more information or registration call&#13;
Peter Hoff at 553-2644 or 634-1237. '&#13;
Week-end Ski Trip to Ski Rib Mountain. For details contact the-Union&#13;
Office, Room 209, thru Feb. 6.&#13;
Saturday I February 5&#13;
Track meet: Parkside,.lnvitational at 10 a.m. at Racine Park.&#13;
Parkside Foreign Students Club meeting at 2 p.et . in CR 107. )&#13;
Basketball Gamevs. Lakeland College at 730 pm . in the Phy Fd Big.&#13;
Wargamer's miniature Series from 12 to 5 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Fencing meet at 9:30 p.m. in the Phy Ed Big.&#13;
Sunday, February6&#13;
Wargamer's meeting from 1 to 6 p.m. in CL 140&#13;
Movie: "Young Frankenstein" at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Monday, February 7&#13;
Rec center Bowling Leagues start. Bowling sweepstakes in the Union&#13;
Rec Center thru Mar. 4.&#13;
Tuesday I February 8&#13;
Free throw contest from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the Phv Ed BIg.&#13;
Mal'\' Happel for School Board Student Subcommittee meeting at&#13;
3:30 p.m. in WLLC D 195. Everyone welcome.&#13;
Tuesday, February 22 is the&#13;
deadline for students to apply for&#13;
University of Wisconsin Health&#13;
1 nsurance.&#13;
The insurance plan covers&#13;
everything from emergency&#13;
medical care to surgerv and is Friday, Feb. 4 8:00 p.m.&#13;
open to all students with 6 or&#13;
"lore credits Sunday, Feb. 6 - 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Forms can be picked upat the UNION CINEMA THEATRE&#13;
Campus Health Office, WL~C&#13;
D198 ~:::::::::;:::~A:dm~i~S&gt;~io~n~'~$l~.~OO~;::;;::;;::;::;:;;:;;;;;;;~ For further information contact&#13;
the Health Office at Ext&#13;
2366&#13;
Insurance&#13;
deadline near&#13;
Needed by Student Government - a&#13;
Secretary - must be on Work-Study.&#13;
Apply at P.S.G.A. office, WLLC 0193&#13;
with Kiyoko Bowden. Call 553-2244.&#13;
Wicklenstein, a philosophically interesting&#13;
cat is in search of permanent&#13;
lodgings With compatible pers6n(s). If&#13;
interested in entertaining him, .crease&#13;
can 886-5154.&#13;
STUDENT HELP NEEDED FOR PARKSIDE&#13;
UNION.SPECIAL EVENTS:We are&#13;
looking for students 10 work on a&#13;
stand·by basis as bartenders, set-up&#13;
crew and food service workers for&#13;
special evenIs as they occur during the&#13;
week and week-end. Interested&#13;
students should complete application&#13;
terms available in the Parkside Union&#13;
Qllice -&#13;
FOUND: In Ranger office, one new English&#13;
textbook. Call John McKtoskey, 553-2295&#13;
and identify.&#13;
FOR SALE: Sears 17" Q.0rtable color T.V.&#13;
$95, good condition. Call 654·8874, ask for&#13;
Gene, after 5.&#13;
TYPING: will do at home. Call 654-8141.&#13;
P.A.B. Film Series Presents&#13;
events&#13;
~~~&#13;
.. ~ ..&#13;
CINEMA~~&#13;
Atlmission: t.00&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
~ • .&#13;
• •••••&#13;
. .&#13;
. . . : . . •.•.•.&#13;
Wednesday, February 2&#13;
PAB Coffeehouse from 2 to 4 p.m. in the Union Cafeteria.&#13;
Wargamer's meeting from 6 to 8 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Shakespeare on Film: Three silent films starting a 7 p.m. at the&#13;
Golden Rondelle, Racine. For further information call 554-2154.&#13;
Thursday, February 3&#13;
Free throw contest from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the Phy Ed Big.&#13;
Movie: "The Producers" at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Union Ci nema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Marv Happel for School Board Student Subcommittee meeting at&#13;
4:00 p.m . in WLLC D 195. Everyone welcome.&#13;
Friday, February 4&#13;
Earth Science Club slide presentation of Christmas field trip to the&#13;
Louisiana Gulf Coast at 12:00 noon in GR 114. ·Coffee and donuts&#13;
served.&#13;
Society of Physics students meeting at 12:00 noon in GR 230.&#13;
IMPORT ANT but short.&#13;
Mathematics Colloquium: "Geometry of Groups on Trees," Prof. R.&#13;
Lyndon, speaker at 3:30 p .m . in CL 107.&#13;
Movie: " Young Frankenstein" at 8 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
ACU-1 Local Chess and Foosball Tournaments in the Union Rec&#13;
Center. Also Feb. 5 and 6.&#13;
Intramural Debate Tourney at 2 p.m ., rooms to be announced.&#13;
Registration ends Feb. 3. For more information or registration call&#13;
Peter Hoff at 553-2644 or 634-1237.&#13;
Week~nd Ski Trip to Ski Rib Mountain. For details contact the Union&#13;
Office, Room 209, thru Feb. 6.&#13;
Saturday, February 5&#13;
Track meet: Parksid~ Invitational at 10 a.in. at Racine Park.&#13;
Parkside Foreign Students Club meeting at 2 p.l'fl. in GR 107&#13;
Basketball Game vs Lakeland College at 7:30 p.m. in the Phy F.d Big.&#13;
Wargamer's miniature Series from 12 to 5 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Fencing meet at 9:30 p.m . in the Phy Ed Big.&#13;
Sunday,February6&#13;
Wargamer's meeting from 1 to 6 p.m. in CL 140&#13;
Movie: 'Young Frankenstein" at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Monday, February 7&#13;
Rec Center Bowling Leagues start. Bowling sweepstakes in the Union&#13;
Rec Center thru Mar. 4.&#13;
Tuesday, February 8&#13;
Free throw contest from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the Phy Ed Big.&#13;
Marv Happel for School Board Student Subcommittee meeting at&#13;
3:30 p.m . in WLLC D 195. Everyone welcome.&#13;
TCHAIKOVSKY: • The Nutcracker Ballet (complete)&#13;
: - Artur Rodzinski, London Phil.&#13;
: $4.98(2RS)&#13;
: BAROQUE TRUMPET&#13;
AND HORN - Feat.,:..vlrtuosl Maurice Andre&#13;
and othen&#13;
$9.98 (SRS)&#13;
JEAN-PIERRE RAMPAL:&#13;
&amp;roque Flute Concert&#13;
$6.98(3RS)&#13;
lDEL,&#13;
BEETHOVEN:&#13;
Favorite Piano Sonatas -&#13;
.l'Jfred Brendel performing&#13;
$6.98(3RS)&#13;
•&#13;
JULIAN BREAM:&#13;
Classical Guitar&#13;
$6.98 (3RS)&#13;
BACH:&#13;
Foui- Orchestral Suites -&#13;
Sololsls include Maurice "'ndre&#13;
and Roger Bourdin&#13;
$4.98(2RS)&#13;
·fnsuran.ce&#13;
deadline near&#13;
Tuesday, February 22 is the&#13;
deadline for students to apply for&#13;
University of Wisconsin Health&#13;
Insurance.&#13;
The insurance plan covers&#13;
everything from emergency&#13;
medical care to surgery and is&#13;
open to all students with 6 or&#13;
"lore credits .&#13;
Forms can be picked up at the&#13;
Campus Health Office, WLLC&#13;
D198.&#13;
For further informa-tion contact&#13;
the Health Office at Ext.&#13;
2366.&#13;
Needed by Student Government - a&#13;
Secretary - must be on Work-Study.&#13;
Apply at P.S.G.A. office, WLLC D193&#13;
with Kiyoko Bowden. Call 553-2244.&#13;
Wicktenstein, a philosophically interesting&#13;
cat. Is rn search of perJnanent&#13;
lodgings with compatible pers6n(s). If&#13;
interested rn entertarn1ng him, please&#13;
call 886-5154.&#13;
STUDENT HELP NEEDED FOR PARKSIDE&#13;
UNION.SPECIAL EVENTS: We are&#13;
looking for students lo work on a&#13;
stand-by basis as bartenders, sel-lfp&#13;
crew and food service workers for&#13;
special events as they occur during the&#13;
week and week-end Interested&#13;
students should complete application&#13;
forms available in the Parkside Union&#13;
Office. -&#13;
FOUND: In Ranger office, one new English&#13;
textbook. Call John McKloskey, 553-2295&#13;
and identify.&#13;
FOR SALE: Sears 17" QOrtable color T.V.&#13;
$95, good condition. Call 654-8874, ask for&#13;
Gene, after 5.&#13;
TYPING : will do al home. Call 654-8141.&#13;
events&#13;
P .A.B. Film Series Presents&#13;
Friday, Feb. 4 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Sunday, Feb. 6 - 7:30 p.m.&#13;
UNION CINEMA THEATRE&#13;
Admission, $1 .00&#13;
P.A.B. Film Series Presents ~ ""&#13;
,,t•"" :.,I -\. ~ta'&#13;
... ,&#13;
1.~~ - , ~~ .&#13;
CINEMA~~&#13;
Admission: 1.00&#13;
.. .. : .. ~ -~- ·,.:.-· :&#13;
Sl'1Svo O)&amp;, For the Classical. Side·/ ~ ' -&#13;
\i of you ~'2.&#13;
~ co&#13;
•&#13;
tl~t~tll91' 141~1~ . /&#13;
ALBUMS from $1.98 to $14.98&#13;
Mfg. List $3. 98 to $27. 98&#13;
U. W. Parkside Bookstore&#13;
Mon.-Thurs. 9:00 to 7:00 Fri. 9:00 to 4:00 Sot. lOiOO to l :00 </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="66236">
              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 5, issue 16, February 2, 1977</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66237">
              <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="66238">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="66239">
              <text>Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="66240">
              <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="66241">
              <text>1977-02-02</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66242">
              <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="66243">
              <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="66244">
              <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="66245">
              <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="66246">
              <text>UW-Parkside</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66247">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="100">
      <name>administration</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="156">
      <name>assistant chancellor allen dearborn</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="963">
      <name>chancellor alan guskin</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="891">
      <name>governor patrick lucey</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="222">
      <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
