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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Dudycha discusses Parkside's problems&#13;
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            <text>Volume 5, issue 19</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>\&#13;
er ()() Wednesday, February 23, 1977&#13;
Vo1.5, No.19&#13;
When I hear the word 'culture' ()()&#13;
I slip back the safety catch 1/ 1/&#13;
of my revolver.&#13;
-Hanns Johst&#13;
Arthur Dudycha&#13;
. Rangers&#13;
Wednesday, February 23, 1977&#13;
Vol.5, No.19 erM When I hear the word 'culture'()()&#13;
I slip back the safety catch ll ll&#13;
of my revolver.&#13;
Dudycha ·.discusses&#13;
Parkside's problems&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
New management science division chairm;,n Arthur Dudycha was&#13;
on campus last week to begin work towards Lis eventual takeover of&#13;
the position on July 1.&#13;
Dudycha spoke to mem9ers of the local media last Tuesday about&#13;
current concerns dealing with the business management/management&#13;
science program .&#13;
The new chairman feels that the business program should be a&#13;
combination of a traditional academic program and professional&#13;
school, which trains a student for a position he will have 5-15 years in&#13;
the future . Currently, the primary emphasis of the program should be&#13;
to acquire more personnel, according to Dudycha.&#13;
" We can 't expand, let alone to a graduate program, without&#13;
additional faculty for our undergraduate program." stated Dudycha&#13;
Those faculty will probably not be ad hoc (part time), because&#13;
Dudycha emphasized the necessity for more faculty with a&#13;
commitment to the school , to de~mphas1ze the part-time instructor's&#13;
role and bring in a large contingent of full-time faculty&#13;
Asked about the number of administrative turnovers that have&#13;
been occurring on campus Dudycha commented that the West&#13;
Virginia College of Graduate Studies had gone through a serious&#13;
number of changes, where numbers of high administrative personnel&#13;
have been resigning The problems we had there make Parks1de's&#13;
look minuscule,· accord mg to Dudycha&#13;
With regard to the graduate program, the new chairman stated that&#13;
many of the decisions were left in " limbo" until a new chairperson&#13;
had been named to the pos1t1on . As to when graduate course would&#13;
be offered, Dudycha stated that 1t would be done as soon as 1t is&#13;
possible. His priority remains with the undergraduate program&#13;
system When an undergraduate program can meet its role with&#13;
industry, hen the will implement the decisions made on the&#13;
graduate program&#13;
A concern was expressed that a number of students were leaving&#13;
Parkside because of the instability of the programs . Dudycha felt that&#13;
the business program needed to communicate with students, to tell&#13;
them what is going on and what to expect, because a lack of&#13;
communication between administration, students, and faculty leaves&#13;
an average student confused about his future at Parkside.&#13;
Niebuhr's ark?&#13;
still fighting&#13;
for Kansas City&#13;
last Thursday morning, the Union fire alarm&#13;
went off and sprinklers doused the furniture in the&#13;
Union Bazaar. Maintenance workers cleaned up the&#13;
mess . &#13;
leditorials&#13;
Your annual chance at chcinge&#13;
-Elections.tor Parkside Student Government Association,&#13;
Inc. President, Vice-president, and senators are the&#13;
second week in March, and once again it's time to&#13;
remember your rationalizations for not getting involved.&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin has stated several times when&#13;
he wants to know what "students" think, or when he wants&#13;
student opinions on campus matters, he consults PSGA,&#13;
Inc.&#13;
Being a senator or officer of this organization is surely&#13;
one of the best ways students can affect change through&#13;
the power hiearchy at Patkstde, This organization appoints&#13;
students to faculty and.staff committees that control much&#13;
of Parkside's academic procedures.&#13;
The Allocations Committee that decides where over one&#13;
hundred dollars of every student's annual tuition this year&#13;
had only two elected members. The rest of the committee&#13;
was appointed by PSGA.&#13;
In years past, student governments on this campus have&#13;
not been very popular among students. This is a result of&#13;
the type of relations between students and their&#13;
government. RANGER has tried to help by publishing&#13;
CONTACT, a weekly article usually written by the&#13;
President of PSGA. Better communications requires&#13;
better commu~icators. The type of student that decides to&#13;
run for a student office shouldn't be just a Political Science&#13;
major, but a student who cares about this school enough&#13;
to take a position of leadership. This caring should not be&#13;
iimited to the radical or conservative at heart. The ones&#13;
most dissatisfied with their representation in PSGA would&#13;
be the most logical group to appear on the ballot.&#13;
Elections for the PSGA, definitely shouldn't be scoffed&#13;
at. With a chancellor that supports student government,&#13;
this campus should be a place where students do have&#13;
some controllng power. Last Monday the President of&#13;
PSGA took the. Allocations Committee budget before&#13;
Chancellor Guskin for negotiations and' approval. 'The&#13;
budget was for around five hundred thousand dollars of&#13;
student tuitions. Talking about where to spend a half&#13;
million dollars is not the pastime ot-rnany students here,&#13;
granted, but who is going to decide where the hundred or&#13;
so dollars of your tuition is going to go next year?&#13;
Perhaps, it is more fun just to sit back on the concourse&#13;
and laugh at RANGER accounts of poorly run PSGA&#13;
meetings or mass resignations every semester. One can&#13;
rationalize that they are here to get an education at a.&#13;
university and not to argue mute points late into the&#13;
evening with a bunch of immature undergraduates. When&#13;
PSGA votes on matters that determine the quality of&#13;
student life on campus, democracy lives. There are&#13;
countries without student governments. There are also&#13;
universities with better, more representative, intelligent&#13;
student QQvernments. The quality of your representation&#13;
as well as how hard you laugh is all up to you.&#13;
RANGER has to put up with PSGA because they are&#13;
right across the hall, and we urge you to run for office, or&#13;
at least vote! Do something t(l improve the quality 01&#13;
student lile lor all 01 us.&#13;
UGU!GCJTTA&#13;
HAve ANOTHER.&#13;
NiCOTINe FI)CIf&#13;
/&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
,., OF IUESe: Tf.{IN6S&#13;
- II ON6 I ONe: 0/= 711, IS NOr Lf"E 1f46&#13;
01UE~; fl~SN'T 8Et.O,.~SI? TH'N6~ JOST&#13;
QO'" f"I:J ". .I.."&#13;
.... ------------&#13;
/:::I~";~ t4J1lO ~ ...... s ~&#13;
Our Writers&#13;
Sob Honman, Chris Clausen, Mona MaUlet,&#13;
Fred Tenuta, Thomas Nolen, Karen Putman&#13;
Timothy d. Z~ehlsdorft Bob Jambois, Jami LaMa.r&#13;
Linda Lasco, Douglas Eden.hauser, Phil Hermann&#13;
Michael Murphy Laura Lacock, Mary N. Gehring'&#13;
Cheryl Powalisz&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Dean C. Rothenmaier&#13;
Editor Philip L. Livingston 553.2295&#13;
Art Director Vanessa Swilt&#13;
Copy Editor Sruce Wagner&#13;
News Editor John McKloskey&#13;
Feature Editor Wendy Miller&#13;
Sports Editor Jean Tenuta&#13;
C~t;;on Sue' Marquardt&#13;
General Manager Thomas R. Cooper 553.2287&#13;
. Advertising Manager John Gabriel 553.2287&#13;
Advertising Sal~s Kathy Sabbath&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students of the&#13;
University 01 Wisconsin-Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible lor its editorial policy and content.'&#13;
,leditorials&#13;
Your annual chance at chcinge ·Elections for Parkside Student Government Association,&#13;
Inc. President, Vice-president, and senators are the&#13;
second week in March , and once again it's time to&#13;
remember your rationalizations for not getting involved .&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin has stated several times when&#13;
he wants to know what "students" think, or when he wants&#13;
student opinions on campus matters, he consults PSGA,&#13;
Inc.&#13;
Being a senator or officer of this organization is surely&#13;
one of the best ways students can affect change through&#13;
the power hiearchy at Parkside. This organization appoints&#13;
students to faculty and.staff committees that control much&#13;
of Parkside's academic procedures.&#13;
The Allocations Committee that decides where over one&#13;
hundred dollars of every student's annual tuition this year&#13;
had only two elected members. The rest of the comm ittee&#13;
was appointed by PSGA.&#13;
In years past, student governments on this campus have&#13;
not been very popular among students. This is a result of&#13;
the type of relations between s.tudents and their&#13;
government. RANGER has tried to help by publishing&#13;
CONTACT, a weekly article usually written by the&#13;
President of PSGA. Better communications requires&#13;
better commu\1icators. The type of student that decides to&#13;
run for a student office shouldn't be just a Political Science&#13;
major, but a student who cares about this school enough&#13;
to take a position of leadership. This caring should no1 be&#13;
limited to the radical or conservative at heart. The ones&#13;
most dissatisfied with their representation in PSGA would&#13;
be the most logical group to appear on the ballot.&#13;
Elections for the PSGA, defi nitely shouldn't be scoffed&#13;
at. With a chancellor that supports student government,&#13;
this campus should be a place where students do have&#13;
some control ing power. ·Last Monday the President of&#13;
F'"SGA took the Allocations Committee budget before&#13;
Chancellor Guskin for negotiations anc:t approval. ' The&#13;
budget was for around five hundred thousand dollars of&#13;
student tuitions. Talking about where to spend a half&#13;
million dollars is not the pastime of ·many students here,&#13;
granted , but who is going to decide where the hundred or&#13;
so dollars of your tuition is going to go next y:ear?&#13;
Perhaps, it is more fun just to sit back on the concourse&#13;
and laugh at RANGER accounts of poorly run PSGA&#13;
meetings or m?ss resignations every semester. One can&#13;
rationalize that they are here to get an education at a.&#13;
university and not to argue mute points late into the&#13;
evening with a bunch of immature undergraduates. When&#13;
PSGA votes on matters that determine the quality of&#13;
student life on campus, democracy lives. There are&#13;
countries without student governments. There are also&#13;
universities with better, more representative, intelligent&#13;
student governments. The quality of your representation&#13;
as well as how hard you laugh is all up to you.&#13;
RANGER has to put up with PSGA because they are&#13;
right across the hall, and we urge you to run for office, or&#13;
at least vote! Do something tQ improve the quality of&#13;
student life for all of us.&#13;
~TENDE-l&lt;'f&#13;
6IMME- ANOTUE~&#13;
AL.tO~0 L F'\ )( /.'&#13;
UGUfGoTTA&#13;
HA\Je ANOlllER.&#13;
NIC.OTINe Fl~ /!&#13;
t ' ,&#13;
i'1 of iUESE T/.11N6 ., "" ot-t€ I 0 ,..ie: 01= .,1&#13;
/ 15 NOT LIKE ;ue&#13;
0111eV:S; fl es...i'T 8Et.o•~SI;: TfftN&amp;s JOST&#13;
t)() r,v,\\ -'r, ________________________________ ~ .. a;.,, sq ,q,.. ~-s -&#13;
Our Writers&#13;
Rob Hoffman, Chris Clausen, Mona Maillet, Fred Tenuta, Thomas Nolen, Karen Putman&#13;
Timothy J. Z~ehlsdorf, Rob Jambois, Jami La.Mar&#13;
Linda Lasco, Douglas Edenhauser, Phil Hermann , Michael Murphy Laura Lacock, Mary N. Gehring&#13;
Cheryl Powalisz ,&#13;
Photographer&amp;&#13;
Dean C. Rothenmaier&#13;
Editor Philip L. Livingston 553-2295&#13;
Art Director Vanessa Swift&#13;
Copy Editor Rruce Wagner&#13;
News Editor John McKloskey&#13;
Fea ture Editor Wendy Miller&#13;
Sports Editor Jean Tenuta&#13;
Cu:c.ul~t.ion Sue' Marquardt&#13;
Gener a l Mat\ager Thomas R. Cooper 553-2287 . Advertising Manag~r John Gabriel 553-2287&#13;
Advertising Salf!s Kathy Sabbath&#13;
· Ranger is written and edited by students of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside and they are. solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content.·&#13;
/ &#13;
Iviews&#13;
Bowden contradicting ?&#13;
Dear Editor,&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden, in her weekly&#13;
Contact article, is continuously&#13;
asking for interested students to&#13;
apply for vacant positions in&#13;
student government, on University&#13;
Committees, etc.&#13;
I would like to know why&#13;
Annika .jansson, who has&#13;
submitted three resumes (the&#13;
first two being lost), who has&#13;
. been attending meetings" and&#13;
who has demonstrated a sincere&#13;
interest, has not been considered&#13;
for appointment to one of the&#13;
three vacant seats on the&#13;
Allocations Committee.&#13;
This is certainly no way to&#13;
encourage student participation&#13;
in P.S.G.A.&#13;
Rusty Tullewski&#13;
Editorial attacked&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
While the death of a young&#13;
artist is indeed extremely&#13;
unfortunate, I must take&#13;
exception to the editorial "Brian&#13;
'too soon' gone" appearing on&#13;
page two of the February 16&#13;
Ranger. The article makes an&#13;
emotional attack on everyone&#13;
who didn't support and pay&#13;
enough attention to Brian Kipp.&#13;
Such claims as "for too many&#13;
artists Parkside is a cold place&#13;
with uncaring hurried students&#13;
with race horse blinders so as not&#13;
to seewhat is too strong fortheir&#13;
frai I egos and small worlds"&#13;
seems to imply the fanatical&#13;
position that anyone not&#13;
particularly "into" folksingers&#13;
and poets is uncaring, with frail&#13;
egos and small worlds, a rather&#13;
Continued ---1&#13;
Brian&#13;
radical statement.&#13;
The author goes on to ask&#13;
"how many more Brians will be&#13;
passed and discarded?" and to&#13;
assert that "it is a damn shame&#13;
more attention is not paid to&#13;
artists and musicians while they&#13;
are still alive," The same thing&#13;
could be said for a myriad of&#13;
other talented groups of people.&#13;
Why does the author feel we owe&#13;
Conservation&#13;
Dear Editor,&#13;
la.eking at&#13;
finz nci-al choices regarding&#13;
uw-P&#13;
From all indications federal organizational directions (he just&#13;
and state governments are recently terminated 11 admtnisputting&#13;
on a great campaign trative positions and reallocated&#13;
urging citizens, business, and the funds to teaching positions).&#13;
industry to conserve energy. I certainly hope turning on and&#13;
That's fine as we all need to off light switches at the&#13;
become more aware of, how appropriate times is not too great&#13;
energy use relates to well-being, a political decision. Why just&#13;
for this and future generations. think, if we all made an effort to&#13;
However, I wish the government conserve we would not need the&#13;
would do a better job at self- Pleasant Prairie Power Plant. It is&#13;
regulation. A case in point is the a flagrant misuse of capital and&#13;
total disregard for comprehen- human resources to create more&#13;
stve energy conservation at uw- of something of which we can't&#13;
Parks ide. The buildings are rationally manage even our&#13;
lighted like christmas trees and present supply. I truly wish&#13;
empty parking lots resemble Parkside can learn to better&#13;
O'hare Field. During the 73 manage its energy use. And I&#13;
energy crunch and again a few hope it can one day soon&#13;
weeks ago the thermostats were diseminate to its supportive&#13;
dialed down, but that is not community information as to&#13;
enough. Eachenergy use must be how we might be more rational&#13;
evaluated. Chancellor Cuskin energy users.&#13;
obviouslv has not done this. It is&#13;
interesting he is willing to make&#13;
a primary obligation to folksingers&#13;
and poets? Perhaps the&#13;
phrase "frail egos and small&#13;
worlds" is a befitting' answer to&#13;
this question.&#13;
John VanDenBrandt&#13;
.We can only speculate what&#13;
Brian would say to your&#13;
interpretation and question.&#13;
- Editor&#13;
When school's just begun and already you're&#13;
4 chapte,rs, 3 papers, 2 outlines and 1project behind&#13;
. ,. .&#13;
Sincerely&#13;
Richard Polansky&#13;
LITE&#13;
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:1:views&#13;
Bowden cont.radicting ?&#13;
Dear Editor,&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden-, in her weekly&#13;
Contact article, is continuously&#13;
asking for interested students to&#13;
apply for vacant positions in&#13;
student government, on University&#13;
Committees, etc.&#13;
I would like to know why&#13;
Annika Jansson, who has&#13;
submitted three resuR1es (the&#13;
first two being lost), who has&#13;
been attending meetings, and&#13;
who has demonstrated a sincere&#13;
interest, has not been considered&#13;
for appointment to one of the&#13;
three vacant seats on the&#13;
Allocations Committee.&#13;
This is certainly no way to&#13;
encourage student participation&#13;
in P.S.G.A.&#13;
Rusty Tutlewski&#13;
Editorial attacked&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
While the death of a young&#13;
artist is indeed extremely&#13;
unfortunate, I must take&#13;
exception to the editorial "Brian&#13;
'too soon' gone" appearing on&#13;
page two of the February 16&#13;
Ranger. The article makes an&#13;
emotional attack on everyone&#13;
who didn't support and pay&#13;
enough attention to Brian Kipp.&#13;
Such claims as "for too many&#13;
artists Parkside is a cold place&#13;
with uncaring hurried students&#13;
with race horse blinders so as not&#13;
to see what is too strong for_ their&#13;
frail egos and small worlds"&#13;
seems to imply the fanatical&#13;
position that anyone not&#13;
µarticularly "into" folksingers&#13;
ana poets is uncaring, with frail&#13;
egos and small worlds, a rather&#13;
Continued---~&#13;
Brian&#13;
radical statement.&#13;
The author goes on to ask&#13;
"how many more Brians will be&#13;
passed and discarded?" and to&#13;
assert that "it is a damn shame&#13;
more attention is not paid to&#13;
artists and musicians while they&#13;
are still alive." The same thing&#13;
could be said for a myriad of&#13;
other talented groups of people.&#13;
Why does the author feel we owe&#13;
a primary obligation to folksingers&#13;
and poets? Perhaps the&#13;
phrase "frail egos and small&#13;
worlds" is a befitting answer to&#13;
this question .&#13;
John VanDenBrandt&#13;
We can only speculate what&#13;
Brian would say to your&#13;
interpretation and question.&#13;
- Editor&#13;
Conservation&#13;
la_cking at UW-P&#13;
Dear Editor, fin&amp;ncinl choices regarding&#13;
From all indications federal organizational directions (he just&#13;
and state governments are recently terminated 11 adminisputting&#13;
on a great campaign trative positions and reallocated&#13;
urging citizens, business, and the funds to teaching positions).&#13;
industry to conserve energy. I certainly hope turning on and&#13;
That's fine as we all need to off light switches at the&#13;
become more aware of~ how appropriate times is not too great&#13;
energy use relates to well-being, a political decision . Why just&#13;
for this and future generations. think, if we all made an effort to&#13;
However, I wish the government conserve we would not need the&#13;
would do a better job at self- Pleasant Prairie Power Plant. It is&#13;
regulation. A case in point is the a flagrant misuse of capital and&#13;
total disregard for CO_!Tiprehen- human resources to create more&#13;
siv«:&gt; energy conservation at UW- of something. of which we can't&#13;
Parkside . The buildings are rationally manage even our&#13;
lighted like christmas trees and present supply. I truly wish&#13;
empty parking lots resemble Parkside can learn to better&#13;
O'hare Field. During the '73 manage its energy use. And I&#13;
energy crunch and again a few hope it can one day soon&#13;
weeks ago the thermostats were diseminate to its supportive&#13;
dialed down, but that is not community information as to&#13;
enough. Each energy use must be how we might be more rational&#13;
evaluated. Chancellor Guskin energy users.&#13;
c,bviously has not done this. It is&#13;
interesting he is willing to make&#13;
Sincerely&#13;
Richard Polansky&#13;
C&#13;
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When schools just begun and already you're&#13;
4 chapt~rs, 3 papers, a outlines and 1 project behind&#13;
/J LIie Beer from llllller,&#13;
'---- Everything you always wamed&#13;
in a beer. And fen. . ,. . . &#13;
.news&#13;
="-=""·---=~~~~~-~=--------------l&#13;
Spanish-Speaking Cultural Day&#13;
P.S.G.A. is sponsoring a Spanish-Speaking&#13;
Cultural Dayan March 2, Wednesday at 11:00 and&#13;
7:00 there will be poetry readings and discussion&#13;
with Dr. Ricardo Sanchez and Tigre in Union 107.&#13;
Please plan to attend. There will be a dance group&#13;
performance the time and location will be&#13;
announced soon.&#13;
This Cultural Day is free and open to all students&#13;
and the public. Talk it up. Invite your friends.&#13;
Elections&#13;
Elections will be held on March 9 and 10.&#13;
Positions open will be the President and&#13;
Vice-President of PSG.A., eight (8) At-Large&#13;
representative seats 5 Union Operating Board jn the&#13;
Senate and five (5) At-Large representative seats on&#13;
.the Allocations Comm ittee.&#13;
Nominating petitions are available in P.S.C.A.&#13;
office. Election rules and information are also&#13;
available at the office. If you are interested, stop&#13;
down at WLLC 0193 and pick up the forms and&#13;
information.&#13;
let's get involved. It's your Student Government.&#13;
If you want to be an active part of an active body&#13;
that cares about the students at Parkside, join us. If&#13;
you haven't got the time to spare, at least vote.&#13;
moved to the bus&#13;
Mail pickups are&#13;
PM, Mon.- Sat,&#13;
The campus mailbox has been&#13;
underneath the Union bridge.&#13;
9:30 AM and 4:00&#13;
stop&#13;
~~~~i~~f/&#13;
I I •.Pure Brewed&#13;
~ f From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
Parkside sends 4&#13;
by Gary Ledger&#13;
Parkside sent two competitors and a foosball&#13;
team to regional competition as a result of placing&#13;
in an ACU-I Local tournament.&#13;
Ted Patterson and Scott Arnett placed first and&#13;
second, respectfully, in the chess competition. A&#13;
foosball team comprised of Gregory Anderegg and&#13;
Kun Sang Yi placed first.&#13;
The local tournaments, held at Parkside on&#13;
February 4, 5, and 6, were followed by the regionals&#13;
in Madison on February 17, 18, and 19. Results were&#13;
not available at press time.&#13;
25 % Off&#13;
on&#13;
Engine Heaters&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Batteries&#13;
•&#13;
PLUS ... Comp/ere Machine&#13;
Shop Service PLUS..•AII rite Tools 01 rhe&#13;
Traae&#13;
PLUS... Marine&#13;
Inboara ana&#13;
boara Motors&#13;
Supplies lor&#13;
Inboora/Out. PLUS...Rebuilding 01 Starters,&#13;
Genera'ors, AI'erno'ors ana&#13;
Carburetors&#13;
Thru&#13;
Feb.&#13;
Opt:n Daily at 8 A.M .• Mon., Tue., Wed. to 6 P.M.&#13;
__ ~_T_h.;u.;r'.;&amp;;.;"Fri.to 8 P.M.• Saturday 1o 5:30&#13;
OLSON X AUTO X~S-UP-PL-Y. ---..&#13;
134 MAIN ST. (Near Slate) • PhoM 632-8838 '--rF"--.;.;:~&#13;
PLENTY OF FREEPARKI,NG AT STATE &amp; MAIN&#13;
1976 Fall and 1977 Spring semester headcounts for UW-System&#13;
1975 1976&#13;
Campus Headcount Headcount Change&#13;
Eau Claire 9,920 9,974 + 54&#13;
Green Bay 3,874 },641 -233&#13;
La Crosse 7,734 7,756 + 22&#13;
Madison 38,545 37,857 -688&#13;
Milwaukee 24,961 24,686 -275&#13;
Oshkosh 10,555 10,230 -325&#13;
Parkside 5,404 4,984 -420&#13;
Platteville 4,285 4,447 +162&#13;
River Falls 4,433 4,873 +440&#13;
Stevens Point 8,220 8,522 +302.&#13;
Stout 5,609 6,066 +457&#13;
Superior 2;610 2,450 -160&#13;
Whitewater 8,727 9,388 +661&#13;
Center System (all campuses) 8,863 8,565 -293&#13;
• ~&#13;
TOTALS 143,740 143,439 -301&#13;
-From UW-System Central Admm;straticm Faculty Memo, 15 Feb. 1977.&#13;
Student services&#13;
reorganized&#13;
by Tim Zuehlsdorf&#13;
"Coming along fine&#13;
These' were the exact words of John Elmore,&#13;
Head of Student Development, on the&#13;
reorganization of Student Services.&#13;
For those of you who are unaware of what the&#13;
Student Services department is, it is organized&#13;
into two separate areas.&#13;
The first area, headed by Elmore, is called&#13;
Student Development. This office helps the&#13;
"traditional" age student of 18-24 years old.&#13;
The second area, headed by Charles Kugel, is&#13;
called Community Student Services. Kugel's&#13;
groups deals with students 25 and older.&#13;
Since Parks ide is a new type of college, a&#13;
commuter college, Elmore said, they had. no&#13;
precedents to follow. Even though they lack a&#13;
model to follow, each team tries to deal with the&#13;
different kinds of anxieties of the two age groups.&#13;
For the adults, the office helps them to learn to&#13;
cope with a new type of bureaucracy. The younger&#13;
student is assisted in getting involved with&#13;
Parks ide and its many varied activities .&#13;
Elmore also said, "There are ~ lot of services&#13;
til at the students do not evatl themselves of." So,&#13;
there is talk of Student Services moving up to the&#13;
main complex of buildings for eas ier access for the&#13;
students.&#13;
Elmore poin.ted out, if there were any volunteers&#13;
who were interested in helping recruit prospective&#13;
new students, their services would be very&#13;
welcome.&#13;
Fossils stolen&#13;
Valuable fossils were stolen from Parkside's Life&#13;
Science Division on Wednesday, February 9,&#13;
according to a very reliable RANGER source.&#13;
The burglary was apparently discovered by&#13;
Parkside Security officers who followed a suspect or&#13;
suspects to a cemetery near Parkside where they&#13;
were apprehended.&#13;
Parkside Security director Ronald Brinkmann&#13;
refused to comment to RANGER or provide any&#13;
information as to what was stolen or who was&#13;
apprehended in the late-afternoon incident.&#13;
Brinkmann also refused to tell whether the&#13;
property was recovered or why Security let the&#13;
burglar leave campus without asking for assistance&#13;
from the Kenosha Sheriffs Department.&#13;
'=' ~&#13;
FOR THE BEST RECORDS IN KENOSHA&#13;
AT PRICES YOU'LL LIKE!&#13;
JAZZ ROCK SOUL V&#13;
CONTEMPORARY (.&#13;
CLASSICAL&#13;
COME TO US AT&#13;
~~&#13;
p&#13;
626 Fifty-Sixth SI., Kenosha, Wis. )&#13;
II&#13;
~..-~~ ~&#13;
"'~ .,.,~&#13;
- - -~ --.-·&#13;
4=news&#13;
The campus mailbox has been&#13;
underneath the Union bridge.&#13;
9:30 AM and 4:00&#13;
~~~Mi~-f/&#13;
moved to the bus&#13;
Mail pickups are&#13;
PM, Mon.- Sat.&#13;
I Pure Brewed&#13;
stop&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
Spanish-Speaking Cultural Day&#13;
P.S.G.A. is sponsoring a Spanish-Speaking&#13;
Cultural Day on March 2, Wednesday at 11:00 and&#13;
7:00 there will be poetry readings and discussion&#13;
with Dr. Ricardo Sanchez and Tigre in Union 107.&#13;
Please plan to attend. There will be a dance group&#13;
performance the time and location will be&#13;
announced soon.&#13;
This Cultural Day is free an~ open to all students&#13;
and the public. Talk it up. Invite your friends.&#13;
Elections&#13;
Elections will be held on March 9 and 10.&#13;
Positions open will be the President and&#13;
Vice-President of P.S.G .A., eight (8) At-Large&#13;
representative seats 5 Union Operating Boardjn the&#13;
Senate and five (5) At-Large representative seats on&#13;
the Allocations Committee.&#13;
Nominating petitions are available in P.S.G.A.&#13;
office. Election rules and information are also&#13;
available at the office. If you are interested, stop&#13;
down at WLLC D193 and pick up the forms and&#13;
information .&#13;
Let's get involved. It's your Student Government.&#13;
If you want to be an active part of an active body&#13;
that cares about the students at Parkside, join us. If&#13;
you haven't got the time to spare, at least vote.&#13;
Parkside sends 4&#13;
by Gary Ledger&#13;
Parkside sent two competitors and a foosball&#13;
team to regional competition as a result of placing&#13;
in an ACU-I Local tournament.&#13;
Ted Patterson and Scott Arnett placed first and&#13;
second, respectfully, in the chess competition . A&#13;
foosball team comprised of Gregory Anderegg and&#13;
Kun Sang Yi placed first.&#13;
The local tournaments, held at Parkside on&#13;
February 4, 5, and 6, were followed by the regionals&#13;
in Madison on February 17, 18, and 19. Results were&#13;
not available at press time.&#13;
Student services&#13;
reorganized&#13;
by Tim Zuehlsdorf&#13;
"Coming along fine&#13;
These were the exact words of John EI more,&#13;
Head of Student Development, on the&#13;
r€organization of Student Services.&#13;
For those of you who are unaware of what the&#13;
Student Services department is, it is organized&#13;
into two separate areas.&#13;
The first area, headed by Elmore, is called&#13;
Student Development. This office helps the&#13;
"traditional" age student of 18-24 years old.&#13;
The second area, headed by Charles Kugel, is&#13;
called Community Student Services. Kugel's&#13;
groups deals with students 25 and older.&#13;
Since Parkside is a new ty~ of college, a&#13;
commuter college, Elmore said, they had_ no&#13;
precedents to follow. Even though they lack a&#13;
model to follow, each team tries to deal with the&#13;
different kinds of anxieties of the two age groups.&#13;
For the adults, the office helps them to learn to&#13;
cope with a new type of bureaucracy. The younger&#13;
student is assisted in getting involved with&#13;
Parkside and its many varied activities.&#13;
Elmore also said, "There are fl lot of services&#13;
t-hat the students do not avail themselves of." So,&#13;
there is talk of Student Services moving up to the&#13;
main complex of buildings for easier access for the&#13;
students.&#13;
EI more pointed out, if there were any volunteers&#13;
who were interested in helping recruit prospective&#13;
new students, their services would be very&#13;
welcome .&#13;
Fossils stolen&#13;
Valuable fossils were stolen from Parkside's Life&#13;
Science Division on Wednesday, February 9,&#13;
according to a very reliable RANGER source.&#13;
The burglary was apparently discovered by&#13;
Parkside Security officers who followed a suspect or&#13;
suspects to a cemetery near Parkside where they&#13;
were apprehended .&#13;
Parkside Security director Ronald Brinkmann&#13;
refused to comment to RANGER or provide any&#13;
information as to what was stolen or who was&#13;
apprehended in the late-afternoon incident.&#13;
Brinkmann also refused to tell whether the&#13;
property was recovered or why Security let the&#13;
burglar leave campus without asking for assistance&#13;
from the Kenosha Sheriff's Department.&#13;
1976 Fall and 1977 Spring semester headcounts for UW-System&#13;
1975 1976&#13;
25 % Off&#13;
on&#13;
Campus&#13;
Eau Claire&#13;
Green Bay&#13;
La Crosse&#13;
Madison&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
Oshkosh&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Headcount&#13;
9,920&#13;
3,874&#13;
7,734&#13;
38,545&#13;
24,961&#13;
10,555&#13;
5,404&#13;
Headcount Change&#13;
9,974 + 54&#13;
?,641 -233&#13;
7,756 + 22&#13;
37,857 -688&#13;
24,686 -275&#13;
10,230 -325&#13;
4,984 -420&#13;
E~gine Heaters&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Batteries&#13;
PLUS ... Complete Machine&#13;
Shop Service&#13;
PLUS ... Marine Supplies for&#13;
Inboard and lnboard10ut-&#13;
&amp;oord Motors&#13;
PLUS ... A/1 the Tools ol the&#13;
Trade&#13;
PLUS ... Rebuilding ol Starters,&#13;
Generators, Alternators and&#13;
Carburetors&#13;
Thru&#13;
Feb.&#13;
Platteville 4,285 4,447 +162&#13;
River Falls 4,433 4,873 +440&#13;
Stevens Point 8,220 8,522 +302&#13;
Stout 5,609 6,066 +457&#13;
Superior 2,610 2,450 - 160&#13;
Whitewater 8,727 9,388 +661&#13;
Center System (all campuses) 8,863 8,565 -293&#13;
TOTALS 143,740 143,439 -301&#13;
-From UW-System Central Administration Faculty Memo, 15 Feb . 1971&#13;
~&#13;
FOR THE BEST RECORDS IN KENOSHA&#13;
AT PRICES YOU'LL LIKE!&#13;
JAZZ ROCK SOUL&#13;
CONTEMPORARY&#13;
CLASSICAL&#13;
COME 'TO US AT&#13;
626 Fifty-Sixth St., Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
°"...-~~ _____ _...,_~·-= --~&#13;
( &#13;
P5GA sets 5e9" Fees rules&#13;
3637&#13;
Senate acts&#13;
by Chris Clausen&#13;
The February 10 meeting of the PSG.A. Senate&#13;
produced a great deal of action in several areas of&#13;
importance in various Senate activities.&#13;
President Pro Tempore Daniel Nielsen&#13;
introduced 10 rules to give the Senate better&#13;
control over the Segregated University Fees&#13;
Allocations Committee. The rules were to take&#13;
effect immediately and NielsEfn said he hoped the&#13;
'Seg Fees Committee would cooperate fully with the&#13;
Senate.&#13;
United Council Provides Information&#13;
Nielsen gathered his information for the rules&#13;
from attending the United Council meeting in&#13;
Madison the previous weekend. Nielsen told the&#13;
Senate that similar rules are in effect at the other&#13;
UW campuses, and that "the Allocations&#13;
Committee (at Parkside) is in very great danger of&#13;
having the actions of the Allocations Committee&#13;
rendered moot through a procedural oversight,"&#13;
Nielsen said he felt this reorganization was&#13;
necessary due to the large amount of money being&#13;
handled by the Committee. The Senate voted with&#13;
only one abstention in favor of the rules.&#13;
President Presents Resolution&#13;
President Kiyoko Bowden introduced three&#13;
resolutions to the Senate. The first was to ask the&#13;
Library Learning Center to consider allowing those&#13;
who check out recording equipment that is due on&#13;
a weekend to return it during the next week so as to&#13;
save the student time and to avoid needless waste&#13;
of energy. The Senate passed this resolution&#13;
unanimously. .&#13;
The second resolution was to sponsor a Spanish&#13;
Speaking Cultural Day in the hope of encouraging&#13;
mere students of Spanish descent to attend&#13;
Parkside. Two well known poets, D.R. Sanchez and&#13;
Rumundo Perez Tigre, will be invited to Parkside to&#13;
read their poetry. A local dance group will also be&#13;
invited to the cultural day.&#13;
The third resolution was to sponsor a dance&#13;
marathon for the benefit of the Wisconsin Mental&#13;
Health Association.&#13;
The Senate also added to the rules covering&#13;
conduct of Senate members and the actions of the&#13;
Students Organizational Council. These rules cover&#13;
absence by a Senator and the removal of a Senator&#13;
from a committee by the President Pro Tempore.&#13;
The nw rules of the Student Organizational&#13;
Council require semester election of the president&#13;
of the Council as well as regular weekly meeting&#13;
days. The rules also require the Council to submit&#13;
its budget to the Senate by November 15. These&#13;
rules take effect immediately.&#13;
Bowlers begin&#13;
by Mona Maillet&#13;
There is a new activity in the Union Rec Center. It&#13;
is known as the Student Organizational League&#13;
Bowling and it takes place every Wednesday at 3:30&#13;
P.M. Currently 5 teams make up the league, which&#13;
got under wayan February 9.&#13;
The teams include: RANGER Riters (who are&#13;
currently in first place) and Off The Record, both&#13;
representing the RANGER; the PAS Bonzo Boys&#13;
(currently in second place) and the PAS Doormats,&#13;
both obviously representing the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board; and Academic Probation, representing&#13;
themselves because another league, just for groups&#13;
of students, did not go over and the league was&#13;
dissolved.&#13;
At its meeting on Feb. 11, the&#13;
UW Board of Regents voted&#13;
unanimously to eliminate the&#13;
revocation of financial aids as a&#13;
student disciplinary sanction&#13;
under 17.02(4) of the UWS&#13;
Student Disciplinary Procedures.&#13;
United Council President Buff&#13;
Wright was the only person to&#13;
newsl&#13;
Financial aids guaranteed&#13;
speak before the Board on the&#13;
subject prior to their vote.&#13;
Wright stated that the United&#13;
Council strongly opposed the&#13;
revocation of financial aids as a&#13;
disciplinary sanction as it&#13;
"represents a markedly disproportionate&#13;
treatment of financially&#13;
disadvantaged students."&#13;
e- NEW IN RACINE cus ~~;::~~rS In' Topps Z~f!:41&#13;
O&#13;
'0&lt;01 &lt;?ili Fun shirts for everyone' t)~:b::&#13;
"to,&#13;
Zeny designs of eU kinds E"tcblll.&#13;
Large selectIOn of heat transfers&#13;
Advertise your busnes6 with ~ualrty ahll"ts&#13;
&amp;nut4 &amp;tU&#13;
Clift ~1Joppe&#13;
Latest Fashioned Jewelr~&#13;
for men and Women&#13;
in NOW!!!&#13;
Will convert pierced&#13;
and non-pierced earrings&#13;
for FREE!!!&#13;
1500 Wau.. An. 637-7076 MIS'" Cha'te "ccept~d&#13;
HEY PARKSIDE!!&#13;
Oly Draft is Here&#13;
*:X -t: ..... .. ••&#13;
718lluJ Wilier.&#13;
Dist. by&#13;
30th&#13;
c.).w.&#13;
Avenue,&#13;
OLYMPIA BREWING COMPANY OLYMPIA· Sf. PAUL&#13;
-&#13;
Inc.&#13;
Kenoslia&#13;
' ~&#13;
Senate acts&#13;
PSGAsets Seg· Fees r-ules&#13;
by Chris Clausen read their poetry. A local dance group will also be&#13;
invited to the cultural day.&#13;
The February 10 meeting of the P.S.G.A. Senate The third resolution was to sponsor a dance&#13;
produced a great deal of action in several areas of marathon for the benefit of the Wisconsin Mental&#13;
importance in various Senate activities . Health Association.&#13;
President Pro Tempore Daniel Nielsen The Senate also added to the rules covering&#13;
introduced 10 rules to give the Senate better conduct of Senate members and the actions of the&#13;
control over the Segregated University Fees Students Organizational Council. These rules cover&#13;
Allocations Committee. The rules were to take absence by a Senator and the removal of a Senator&#13;
effect immediately and Nielsen said he hoped the . from a committee by the President Pro Tempore .&#13;
Seg Fees Committee would cooperate fully wrth the The nw rules of the Student Organizational&#13;
Senate. Council require semester election of the president&#13;
United Council Provides Information of the Council as well as regular weekly meeting&#13;
Nielsen gathered his information for the rules days. The rules also require the Cour.cil to submit&#13;
from attending the United Council meeting in its budget to the Senate by November 15. These&#13;
Madison the previous weekend. Nielsen told the rules take effect immediately.&#13;
Senate that similar rules are in effect at the other&#13;
UW campuses, and that "the Allocations&#13;
Committee (at Parkside) is in very great danger of&#13;
having the actions of the Allocations Committee&#13;
rendered moot through a procedural oversight."&#13;
Nielsen said he felt this reorganization was&#13;
necessary due to the large amount of money being&#13;
handled by the Committee . The Senate voted with&#13;
only one abstention in favor of the rules .&#13;
President Presents Resolution&#13;
President Kiyoko Bowden introduced three&#13;
resolutions to the Senate. The first was to ask the&#13;
Library Learning Center to consider allowing those&#13;
who check out recording equipment that is due on&#13;
a weekend to return it during the next week so as to&#13;
save the student time and to avoid needless waste&#13;
of energy . The Senate passed this resolution&#13;
unanimously. ·&#13;
The second resolution was to sponsor a Spanish&#13;
Speaking Cultural Day in the hope of encouraging&#13;
mo.re students of Spanish descent to attend&#13;
Parkside. Two well known poets, D.R. Sanchez and&#13;
Rumundo Perez Tigre, will be invited to Parkside to&#13;
Bowlers begin&#13;
by Mona Maillet&#13;
There is a new activity in the Union Rec Center It&#13;
is known as the Student Organizational League&#13;
Bowling and it takes place every Wednesday at 3.30&#13;
P.M. Currently 5 teams make up the league, which&#13;
got under way on February 9.&#13;
The teams include: RANGER R1ters (who are&#13;
currently in first place) and Off The Record, both&#13;
representing the RANGER; the PAB Bonzo Boys&#13;
(currently in second place) and the PAB Doormats,&#13;
both obviously representing the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board; and Academic Probation, representing&#13;
themselves because another league, just for groups&#13;
of students, did not go over and the league was&#13;
dissolved .&#13;
newsl,&#13;
Flnanclal -aids guaranteed&#13;
At its meeting on Feb. 11, the&#13;
UW Board of Regents voted&#13;
unanimously to eliminate the&#13;
revocation of financial aids as a&#13;
student disciplinary sanction&#13;
under 17.02(4) of the UWS&#13;
Student Disciplinary Procedures.&#13;
United Council President Buff&#13;
Wright was the only person to&#13;
speak before the Board on the&#13;
sub1ect prior to their vote.&#13;
Wright stated that the United&#13;
Council strongly opposed the&#13;
revocation of financial aids as a&#13;
disciplinary sanction as it&#13;
"represents a markedly disproportionate&#13;
treatment of financially&#13;
disadvantaged students."&#13;
~'(,,- NEW IN RACINE -~&#13;
~~\~f-&gt;· r · · , ~:~~·»1~~ s n opps ~ Fun shirts for everyone! • h v Zany designs of an kinds. V&#13;
Large select10n of heat transfers&#13;
&amp;nutq &amp;rus&#13;
Clift 8qoppe&#13;
Latest Fashioned Jewelry&#13;
for men and Women&#13;
in NOW!!!&#13;
Will convert pierced&#13;
and non-pierced earrings&#13;
for FREE!!!&#13;
1500 Wash. Ave . Mastu Charge Accepted&#13;
HEY PARKSIDE!!&#13;
Oly Draft is Here&#13;
OLYMPIA BREWING COMPANY OLYMPIA• ST. PAUL&#13;
Dist. by C.J.W. Inc.&#13;
3637 - 30th A venue, Kenoslia &#13;
The first candidate for Vice Chancellor/Dean of&#13;
Faculty, Dr. William Capitan, was at Parks ide last&#13;
- - - - -STUD- -ENT-TRA-VE-LDE-SK- - - - -, week to meet with faculty and staff, Chancellor, t .Alan Guskin the Committee in charge of the t ~ ~ ~i t selection process, and sfudents as well as to receive&#13;
(312) 332-5658 I a tour of the campus. I •Summer charter flights to Europe-round trip from Capitan, Vice President for Academic Affairs and&#13;
I&#13;
Chicago- Prices start at $299.00. I Dean of Faculty at Wesleyan College in&#13;
• Student discounted Eurail passes Buckhannon, West Virginia, came to ......Parkside&#13;
, • Icelandic Airlines , Tuesday and Wednesday of last week. In the open&#13;
• Discounted youth and excursion fares -'I meeting Capitan met with a variety of people, the&#13;
, • Bicycle and student tours of N. America, Europe Africs majority being library staff.&#13;
• Discounted European car rentaIa for students/teachers&#13;
, • Information on discounted rates to other destinations t- Joseph Attwell began the informal questioning by&#13;
'inquiring as to the extent of Capitan's involvement I ASK FOR OUR 1977 CATALOGUE Iin affirmative action. Capitan responded that his&#13;
- - - - - - - - - - - experience had been' extensive in the area of&#13;
administration while he had been at Wesleyan.&#13;
Capitan told those at the meeting that his&#13;
affirmative action experiences at Wesleyan had&#13;
been limited in success due. to the location of&#13;
Wesleyan in the rural reaches of West Virginia.&#13;
Capitan said that at Saginaw Valley State College,&#13;
located near Detroit, 'he had a much better&#13;
situation under which to recruit minority persons&#13;
and women.&#13;
Joseph Boisse, director of Library Learning&#13;
Center, asked Capitan where, in his opinion, the&#13;
library should be located in the -administrative&#13;
Inews&#13;
Guskin gets offl&#13;
According to RANGER sources. Chancellor Alan Guskin received a&#13;
warning from Parkside Security last Monday after his car was seen&#13;
driving through two stop signs on the inner loop road, at the Comm&#13;
Arts building and at the physical Education building.&#13;
Guskin and Security director Ronald Brinkmann were unavailable&#13;
for comment.&#13;
Free PiZZI Deli~ery&#13;
Club Highview&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
Alit lI.her' •• C.'ek ... S•••••• RlfI.lI. B.. I&#13;
OPEII 4 •.•. It 1 I.•.&#13;
COSMETOLOGY:&#13;
A Career Choice!&#13;
c&gt;\' f'" ..~c:. f( '~"A.i\ .\ .. , .._, ~;:(tJ~·,~\ American. Beauty&#13;
!"\( ~..!., ~y College&#13;
\_~~;, -" 500 College Ave., Racine&#13;
. For more information call: 637-6511&#13;
PARKSIDE SPECIAL&#13;
THE NEW&#13;
Lighthouse II&#13;
1146 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
UNDER NEW&#13;
N.TN.&#13;
MANAGEMENT&#13;
INC.&#13;
Tue. DISCO&#13;
Wed.&#13;
Thurs.&#13;
Sun.&#13;
No Cover&#13;
Charge&#13;
Fri.&#13;
Sat. }&#13;
LIVE&#13;
ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
Admission&#13;
$2.00&#13;
12 OUNCE OLY DRAFT -e .35'&#13;
MIXED DRINKS - .60&#13;
Wi8. ID Positively Required N.T.N. Inc. reserves the right,&#13;
eeecrding to state laws, to refuse servtee at it's own&#13;
discretion.&#13;
Vice Chancellor&#13;
candidates visit Parkside&#13;
Capitan ~isits Parkside&#13;
! !DON'T DO IT AGAIN!!&#13;
Don't Spend too much for 0 Stereo&#13;
BUY AT PRICES YQ..U CAN&#13;
~IG.&#13;
mony other monufoctures, too&#13;
• HOME STEREO COMPONENTS&#13;
• CAR STEREO&#13;
• CB'S&#13;
• ACCESSORIES&#13;
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WholesQle Prices for Ever,yone!!!&#13;
SAVE 25% to 35%&#13;
OVER MOST RETAIL OUTLETS&#13;
FREE CATALOGSAVA!lABlE&#13;
Vice-Chancellor candidate&#13;
by Chris Clausen&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
The final five candidates for the position of vice&#13;
chancellor/dean of faculty have been named by the&#13;
search and screen committee, the committee&#13;
announced last Wednesday.&#13;
The five are:&#13;
Dr. Betsy Ancker-johnson, 47, Assistant Secretary&#13;
for Science and Technology, U. S. Department of&#13;
Commerce, Washington, D.C. Ph. D. from&#13;
Tubingen University, West Germany, in Physics.&#13;
Dr. William H. Capitan, 44, Vice President for&#13;
Academic Affairs and Dean of Faculty at Wesleyan&#13;
College, Buchannan, West Virginia. Ph. D. in&#13;
Philosophy from University of Minnesota.&#13;
Dr. Peter M. Mitchell, 42, Vice President for&#13;
Academic Affairs, Seton Hall University, South&#13;
Orange, New jersey. Ph. D. in History from&#13;
University of Colorado.&#13;
Dr. Philip Nanzetta, 36, Dean, Faculty of Natural&#13;
Science and Mathematics at Stockton State&#13;
College, Pomona, New jersey. Ph. D. from&#13;
University of Illinois in Mathematics.&#13;
Dr. Lorman A. Ratner, 44, Dean of Social&#13;
Sciences, Hunter~Lehman College of the City&#13;
University of New York. Ph. D. in History from&#13;
Cornell University.&#13;
These five candidates for the position will be on&#13;
campus starting with Capitan.&#13;
!&#13;
structure. Capitan responded by saying he felt that&#13;
the library should be under the academic area.&#13;
Capitan was "very impressed" with the library,&#13;
especially in the amount of books about 250,000,&#13;
and said he would like to see that amount&#13;
expanded.&#13;
When asked his views on the subject of part time&#13;
students Capitan said that part time students are a&#13;
necessary part of any campus's future due to&#13;
today's economic situation. Saginaw, Capitan told&#13;
the group, was very similar to Parkside in that they&#13;
both have large quantities of adult and part time&#13;
students. Capitan was pleased to see that Parkside&#13;
was designed to help serve these students. Capitan&#13;
felt that a Business Management program would&#13;
have to work with the standard "liberal" education&#13;
system if Parkside and other universities were to&#13;
survive.&#13;
The other candidates for the position will visit&#13;
Parkside and meet with students as follows:&#13;
Feb. 23 Dr. Philip Nazetta at 10:00 a.m.&#13;
Feb. 25 Dr. Lorman Ratner at 11:00 a.m ..&#13;
Mar. 2 Dr. Peter Mitchell at 11:00 a.m.&#13;
- Mar. 4 Dr. Betsy Ancker-johnson at 11:00 a.m.&#13;
All meetings are open and will be held in Union&#13;
104+ 106. The resumes of the candidates are&#13;
available at the Information desk in the library. All&#13;
comments are welcomed by the Search and Screen&#13;
Committee and may be left at the education office,&#13;
GR 207&#13;
On the 23rd, Nanzetta will be available for&#13;
questions at 10 a.m.&#13;
On the 25th, Ratner can be questioned at 11 a.m.&#13;
Mitchell will be available on the 2nd, at 11 a.m.&#13;
Dr. Ancker-johnson can be questioned on the&#13;
4th, at 11 a.m.&#13;
All interviews will be held in Union 104-106.&#13;
Each of the candidates will be on campus for two&#13;
days, with the exception of Dr. Nanzetta, who will&#13;
be here on three days.&#13;
Contact Bob Frederiksen&#13;
AT Stereo Wholesalers&#13;
Bus. 632-2168&#13;
Home 632-1196&#13;
(After 6)&#13;
l=news&#13;
Vice -Chancellor candidate&#13;
Guslcin· gets offl&#13;
According to RANGER sources, Chancellor Alan Guskin received a&#13;
warning from Parkside Security last Monday after his car was seen&#13;
driving through two stop signs on the inner loop road, at the Comm&#13;
Arts building and at the Physical Education building.&#13;
Capitan visits Parkside&#13;
by Chris Clausen&#13;
Guskin and Security director Ronald Brinkmann were unavailable&#13;
for comment. The first candidate for Vice Chancellor/Dean of&#13;
Faculty, Dr. William Capitan, was at Parkside last&#13;
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -t week to meet with faculty and staff, Chancellor, t STUDENTTRAVELDESK .Alan Guskin the Committee in charge of the&#13;
t ~~~ ~i t selection process, and sfudents as well as to receive&#13;
(3121332-5558 t a tour of the campus. t • Summer charter flights to Europe-round trip from Capitan, Vice President for Academic Affairs and&#13;
t Chicago-Pricesstartat$299.00. t Dean of Faculty at Wesleyan ColJege in&#13;
• StudentdiscountedEurailpasses Buckhannon, West Virginia, came to ~Parkside&#13;
t • Icelandic Airlines t Tuesday and Wednesday of last week. In the open&#13;
• Discounted youth and excursion fares t meeting Capitan met with a variety of people, the t • Bicycle and student tours of N · America, Europe Africa majority being library staff. • Discounted European car rentals for students/teachers t • Information on discounted rates to other destinations t- Joseph Attwell began the informal questioning by&#13;
inquiring as to the extent of Capitan's involvement&#13;
t ASK FOR OUR 1977 CATALOGUE t in affirmative action . Capitan responded that his&#13;
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - experience had been extensive in the area of&#13;
#;!A.S:,~~"-"'~""'~~u~~~"-"'~""'~~qp;s,,si,-;~:s:~:s:~~~~~~.~ administration while he had been at Wesleyan .&#13;
Capitan told those at the meeting that his&#13;
affirmative action experiences at Wesleyan had&#13;
been limited in success due to the location of&#13;
Wesleyan in the rural reaches of West Virginia.&#13;
Capitan said that at Saginaw Valley State College,&#13;
located near Detroit, ·he had a much better&#13;
situation under which to recruit minority persons&#13;
and women .&#13;
Free Pizza Delivery&#13;
Club Highview&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
Alt• ••H•erla1 Chlekta, s,11htfll, R1.aoll, IHI&#13;
OPEN 4 •·•· to 1 •·•·&#13;
Joseph Boisse, director of Library Learning&#13;
Center, asked Capitan where, in his opinion, the&#13;
library should be located in the administrative&#13;
structure. Capitan responded by saying he felt that&#13;
the library should be under the academic area.&#13;
Capitan was "very impressed" with the library,&#13;
especially in the amount of books about 250,000,&#13;
and said he would like to see that amount&#13;
expanded .&#13;
When asked his views on the subject of part time&#13;
students Capitan said that part time students are a&#13;
necessary part of any campus's future due to&#13;
today's economic situation . Saginaw, Capitan told&#13;
the group, was very similar to Parkside in that they&#13;
both have large quantities of adult aod part time&#13;
students . Capitan was pleased to see that Parkside&#13;
was designed to help serve these students . Capitan&#13;
felt that a Business Management program would&#13;
have to work with t~e standard " liberal" education&#13;
system if Parkside and other universities were to&#13;
survive. .&#13;
The other candidates for the pos_ition will visit&#13;
Parkside and meet with students as follows:&#13;
Feb. 23 Dr. Philip Nazetta at 10:00 a.m.&#13;
Feb. 25 Dr. Lorman Ratner at 11 :00 a.m .&#13;
Mar. 2 Dr. Peter Mitchell at 11 :00 a.m .&#13;
Mar. 4 Dr. Betsy Ancker-Johnson at 11 :00 a.m.&#13;
All meetings are open and will be held in Union&#13;
104-106. The resumes of the candidates are&#13;
available at the Information desk in the library. All&#13;
comments are welcomed by the Search and Screen&#13;
Committee and may be left at the education office,&#13;
GR 207.&#13;
p COSMETOLOGY:&#13;
·~~~ft A Career Choice! A ~ • -~&#13;
Vice ChancellOr&#13;
candidates visit Parksid·e&#13;
~(;;!~ ~ \ American Beauty &gt;~~t~J--.: . ~) College&#13;
' ~ -~ ~,i, _., 500 College Ave., Racine&#13;
For more information call: 637-6571&#13;
PARKSIDE SPECIAL&#13;
Tue.&#13;
Wed.&#13;
Thurs.&#13;
Sun.&#13;
Fri.&#13;
Sat. )&#13;
THE NEW&#13;
Lighthouse 11&#13;
1146 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT&#13;
N.T.N. INC.&#13;
DISCO&#13;
No Cover&#13;
Charge&#13;
LIVE&#13;
ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
Admission&#13;
$2.00&#13;
12 OUNCE OL Y DRAFT ~ .35 ·&#13;
MIXED DRINKS - .60&#13;
Wis. ID Positively Required N.T.N. Inc. rese~ves the right,&#13;
according to state laws, to refuse service at it's own&#13;
discretion.&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
The final five candidates for the position of vice&#13;
chancellor/ dean of faculty have been named by the&#13;
search and screen committee, the committee&#13;
announced last Wednesday.&#13;
The five are:&#13;
Dr. Betsy Ancker-Johnson, 47, Assistant Secretary&#13;
for Science and Technology, U. S. Department of&#13;
Commerce, Washington, D.C. Ph. D. from&#13;
Tubingen University, West Germany, in Physics.&#13;
Dr. William H. Capitan, 44, Vice fresident for&#13;
Academic Affairs and Dean of Faculty at Wesleyan&#13;
College, Buchannon, West Virginia. Ph. D. in&#13;
Philosophy from University of Minnesota .&#13;
Dr. Peter M. Mitchell, 42, Vice President for&#13;
Academic Affairs, Seton Hall University, South&#13;
Orange, New Jersey. Ph . D. in History from&#13;
University of Colorado.&#13;
Dr. Philip Nanzetta, 36, Dean, Faculty of Natural&#13;
! ! DON'T DO IT AGAIN!!&#13;
Science and Mathematics at Stockton State&#13;
College, Pomona, New Jersey. Ph. D. from&#13;
University of Illinois in Mathematics .&#13;
Dr. Lorman A. Ratner, 44, Dean of Social&#13;
Sciences, Hunter-Lehman College of the City&#13;
University of New York . Ph. D. in History from&#13;
Cornell University.&#13;
These five candidates for the position will be on&#13;
campus starting with Capitan .&#13;
On the 23rd, Nanzetta will be available for&#13;
questions at 10 a.m .&#13;
On the 25th, Ratner can be questioned at 11 a.m.&#13;
Mitchell will be available on the 2nd, at 11 a.m.&#13;
Dr. Ahcker-)ohnson can be questioned on the&#13;
4th, at 11 a.m.&#13;
All interviews will be held in Union 104-106.&#13;
Each of the candidates will be on campus for two&#13;
days, with the exception of Dr. Nanzetta, who will&#13;
be here on three days.&#13;
Don't Spend too much for o Stereo&#13;
BUY AT PRICES YQU CAN AFFORD&#13;
~IG.&#13;
mon_y other monufoctures. too&#13;
• HOME STEREO COMPONENTS&#13;
• CAR STEREO&#13;
• CB'S&#13;
·• ACCESSORIES&#13;
• SCANNERS&#13;
• TAPE RECORDERS&#13;
Wholesole Prices for Ever.Yone!H&#13;
SAVE 25% to 35%&#13;
OVER MOST RETAIL OUTLETS&#13;
FREE CATALOGS AVA!LABLE&#13;
Contoct 8ob Frederiksen&#13;
AT Stereo Wholesolers&#13;
Bus. 632-2168&#13;
Home 632-1196&#13;
(After 6) &#13;
More, better lobs&#13;
jobs 7&#13;
Women gaining •&#13;
In ~mployment for women indicate that more&#13;
women will work, I) who are&#13;
married. 2) who have young&#13;
children. who are divorced. 3) who&#13;
have pressing economic needs.&#13;
There is presently a small percent&#13;
of women who are moving into&#13;
traditionally male dominated&#13;
fields. Until the majority of the&#13;
women consider all the career&#13;
options open to them, not just the&#13;
traditional ones, they will continue&#13;
to find themselves working for&#13;
economic reasons in the low paying&#13;
jobs.&#13;
Adult women (and men) who&#13;
have not made career plans are&#13;
encouraged to call 553·2225 for an&#13;
appointment with a career&#13;
counselor and a visit to the Career&#13;
Resource Center in 107 Tallent&#13;
Hall. Students under the age of 2S&#13;
should call 553-2251 for an&#13;
appointment.&#13;
Anyone interested in joining a&#13;
Women's Awareness group can call&#13;
Niki DiPolo at 658-2878 for more&#13;
nformation.&#13;
~t&#13;
'ea.&#13;
I~,&#13;
fll,&#13;
Jnt&#13;
'"&#13;
, a&#13;
10&#13;
~d&#13;
'I&#13;
'"&#13;
d,&#13;
in ~&#13;
Id&#13;
~&#13;
10&#13;
iit&#13;
by Barbara Larsen&#13;
Career Counselor&#13;
The U.S. Department of Labor&#13;
reports that in 1975 36.5 million&#13;
women worked, comprising around&#13;
4OIlJoof the entire civilian labor&#13;
force. The figures indicate that 460/0&#13;
of all women sixteen years and over&#13;
were employed. Between the years&#13;
1950 and _1974 the number of&#13;
women in the work 'force has nearly&#13;
doubled. More women who are&#13;
married are working to the extent&#13;
that since 1950 the number of&#13;
married working women has more&#13;
than doubled. In 1974 58% of all&#13;
women workers were married.&#13;
Mothers between the ages of 25&#13;
and 34 with pre-school children are&#13;
working in larger numbers than&#13;
ever before. The U.S. Department&#13;
of Labor, Women's Bureau states,&#13;
"More than half of all mothers of&#13;
school age children were in the&#13;
labor force in 1974".&#13;
Women are motivated to work by&#13;
many factors. The Employment&#13;
Standards Administration of the&#13;
U.S. Department of Labor&#13;
contends that women work for the&#13;
same reasons men work. They work&#13;
to provide for themselves, their&#13;
families, and for other people. Of&#13;
the women, 36.5 million who work,&#13;
8.9 million have never been married&#13;
6.9 million were previously&#13;
married. and 5.3 million have&#13;
husbands earning less than $7,000&#13;
- per year. The increase in the&#13;
divorce rate and the increase in the&#13;
cost of living are forcing more&#13;
women to work out of economic&#13;
necessity. Regarding where women&#13;
are inclined to work, the Women's&#13;
Bureau states that in 1974 around&#13;
35% of all the women who worked&#13;
were in clerical positions, over 21 %&#13;
were in service positions (which&#13;
includes employment in private&#13;
homes), 13% were employed in&#13;
operatives (mainly in factories) and&#13;
15% were in professional and&#13;
technical jobs.&#13;
In 1975 410/, of the people&#13;
employed in all professional and&#13;
technical jobs were women.&#13;
However, the women were&#13;
concentrated in the lower paying&#13;
occupations such as teaching,&#13;
nursing, social work and library&#13;
science. The percent of women in&#13;
more lucrative fields such as&#13;
engineering, dentistry, architecture,&#13;
optometry, law, veterinary&#13;
science, medicine and pharmacy&#13;
was low. Even when women work in&#13;
the same occupations as men their&#13;
salaries have generally not been&#13;
equal. The Bureau of Labor&#13;
Statistics reports that in May of&#13;
1974 the typical earnings of women&#13;
in eight occupational groups&#13;
ranged from around 40 to 70 % of&#13;
the men's earnings in the same&#13;
occupational group. The following&#13;
is a list of the eight occupational&#13;
groups with the percent of the&#13;
men's salaries the women in that&#13;
group earned: professional and&#13;
technical-71 %; managers and&#13;
administrators-S9%; sales workers·43%;&#13;
clerical workers-67%;&#13;
craft workers-59%. operatives&#13;
(except transport)-63%; non-farm&#13;
laborers-69%; service workers-61&#13;
%.&#13;
Many reasons are given for this&#13;
gap in salaries such as, men on the&#13;
average have had more work&#13;
experience than women, women&#13;
work less overtime, women are&#13;
concentrated in low wage occupations&#13;
end tow - w.-ge industries.&#13;
"Nevertheless," the Women's&#13;
Bureau reports, "various research&#13;
studies have found that a&#13;
differential of earnings of women&#13;
and men remain after adjusting for&#13;
such factors as education, work&#13;
experience, and occupation or&#13;
industry group."&#13;
The gap between men's and&#13;
women's salaries is widening; it has&#13;
nearly doubled since 1955&#13;
according to the Women's Bureau&#13;
statistics. In 1955 men's earnings&#13;
exceeded women's by 56%. In 1974&#13;
the salary differential between men&#13;
and women had increased to 75%.&#13;
Two explanations for the increases&#13;
in this gap are, women are still&#13;
concentrated in low paying jobs&#13;
and the large numbers of women&#13;
entering the labor market in entry&#13;
level jobs. Men's and women's&#13;
salaries are both increasing, but&#13;
men's salaries are increasing at a&#13;
faster rate than women's.&#13;
Carmen Maymi, Director of the&#13;
Women's Bureau is concerned&#13;
about the difference between the&#13;
careers women are preparing for&#13;
and " the careers which are in'&#13;
demand. In October 1976 she said&#13;
"It is ironic that so few women are&#13;
drawn to careers in management at&#13;
a time when many companies are&#13;
beginning to actively seek them&#13;
out. Employers are under&#13;
pressure to comply with the law&#13;
prohibiting sex discrimination in&#13;
employment and requiring affirmative&#13;
action to provide equal&#13;
opportunities to women... Although&#13;
the supply of women&#13;
graduating with degrees in business&#13;
administration is increasing ... college&#13;
women are still more attracted&#13;
to careers in education, social&#13;
science, home economics, and&#13;
health services than in management."&#13;
The future employment trends&#13;
1IIIIIUIIUIUIHIHIUIIII_U .. IIIII11IRUHIIIIHRIIIHIII ... _I......__.&#13;
DINO'S&#13;
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Racine&#13;
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Open 4:00 p,m. till one&#13;
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1I111111111111111111H111111111111111 .. __ 181&#13;
hour after&#13;
.11&#13;
Your challenge is to discover words of&#13;
four letters in this pentagon. Discover&#13;
them br following the straight lines to&#13;
and from the letters, forming words as&#13;
you go. Youmar not use two of the same&#13;
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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;
The Pabst challenge:&#13;
We welcome the chance 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 gel, Since 1844 it always has.&#13;
PABST. Since 1844. The quality has always come through.&#13;
C'1971 PABST BREWINQ COMPANY '.MwaUk''e Wls PI.'flI",a 1-\fo'lIhtS III N"wark N J los AA9&lt;'h." CaI,1 Pabst {""""gra&#13;
rt&#13;
More, better /obs&#13;
j0bs'7&#13;
Women gaining in ~mployment for women indicate that more&#13;
women will work, 1) who are&#13;
married, 2) who have young&#13;
children, who are divorced, 3) who&#13;
have pressing economic needs.&#13;
There is presently a small percent&#13;
of women who are moving into&#13;
traditionally male dominated&#13;
fields. Until the majority of the&#13;
women consider all the career&#13;
options open to them, not just the&#13;
traditional ones, they will continue&#13;
to find themselves working for&#13;
economic reasons in the low paying&#13;
jobs.&#13;
Adult women (and men) who&#13;
have not made career plan are&#13;
encouraged to call 553-2225 for an&#13;
appointment with a career&#13;
counselor and a visit to the Career&#13;
Resource Center in 107 Tallent&#13;
Hall. Students under the age of 25&#13;
should call 553-2251 for an&#13;
appointment.&#13;
by Barbara Larson&#13;
Career Counselor&#13;
The U.S. Department of Labor&#13;
reports that in 1975 36.5 million&#13;
women worked, comprising around&#13;
40% of the entire civilian labor&#13;
force. The figures indicate that 46%&#13;
of all women sixteen years and over&#13;
were employed. Between the years&#13;
1950 and .1974 the number of&#13;
women in the work force has nearly&#13;
doubled. More women who are&#13;
married are working to the extent&#13;
that since 1950 the number of&#13;
married working women has more&#13;
than doubled. In 1974 58% of all&#13;
women workers were married.&#13;
Mothers between the ages of 25&#13;
and 34 with pre-school children are&#13;
working in larger numbers than&#13;
ever before. The U.S. Department&#13;
of Labor, Women's Bureau states,&#13;
"More than half of all mothers of&#13;
school age children were in the&#13;
labor force in 1974".&#13;
Women are motivated to work by&#13;
many factors. The Employment&#13;
Standards Administration of the&#13;
U.S. Department of Labor&#13;
contends that women work for the&#13;
same reasons men work. They work&#13;
to provide for themselves, their&#13;
families, and for other people. Of&#13;
the women, 36.5 million who work,&#13;
8.9 million have never been married&#13;
6.9 million were previously&#13;
married. and 5.3 million have&#13;
husbands earning less than $7,000&#13;
· per year. The increase in the&#13;
divorce rate and the increase in the&#13;
cost of living are forcing more&#13;
.women to work out of economic&#13;
necessity. Regarding where women&#13;
are inclined to work, the Women's&#13;
Bureau states that in 1974 around&#13;
35% of all the women who worked&#13;
were in clerical positions, over 21 %&#13;
were in service positions (which&#13;
includes employment in private&#13;
homes), 13% were employed in&#13;
operatives (mainly in factories) and&#13;
15% were in professional and&#13;
technical jobs.&#13;
In 1975 41 % of the people&#13;
employed in all professional and&#13;
technical jobs were women.&#13;
However, the women were&#13;
concentrated in the lower paying&#13;
occupations such as teaching,&#13;
nursing, social work and library&#13;
science. The percent of women in&#13;
more lucrative fields such as&#13;
engineering, dentistry, architecture,&#13;
optometry, law, veterinary&#13;
science, medicine and pharmacy&#13;
was low. Even when women work in&#13;
the same occupations as men their&#13;
salaries have generally not been&#13;
equal. The Bureau of Labor&#13;
Statistics reports that in May of&#13;
1974 the typical earnings of women&#13;
in eight occupational groups&#13;
ranged from around 40 to 70% of&#13;
the men's earnings in the same&#13;
occupational group. The following&#13;
is a list of the eight occupational&#13;
groups with the percent of th!;:&#13;
men's salaries the women in that&#13;
group earned: professional and&#13;
technical- 71 %; managers and&#13;
administrators-59%; sales workers&#13;
-43 %; clerical workers -6 7 %;&#13;
craft workers - 59%, operatives&#13;
(except transport)-63%; non-farm&#13;
laborers - 69%; service work -&#13;
ers-61 %.&#13;
Many reasons are given for this&#13;
gap in salaries such as, men on the&#13;
average have had more work&#13;
experience than women, women&#13;
work less overtime, women are&#13;
concentrated in low wage occupations&#13;
and low wage industries.&#13;
"Nevertheless," the Women's&#13;
Bureau reports, "various research&#13;
studies have found that a&#13;
differential of earnings of women&#13;
and men remain after adjusting for&#13;
such factors as education, work&#13;
experience, and occupation or&#13;
industry group."&#13;
The gap between men's and&#13;
women's salaries is widening; it has&#13;
nearly doubled since 1955&#13;
according to the Women's Bureau&#13;
statistics. In 1955 men's earnings&#13;
exceeded women's by 56%. In 1974&#13;
the salary differential between men&#13;
and women had increased to 75%.&#13;
Two explanations for the increases&#13;
in this gap are, women are still&#13;
concentrated in low paying jobs&#13;
and the large numbers of women&#13;
entering the labor market in entry&#13;
level jobs. Men's and women's&#13;
salaries are both increasing, but&#13;
men's salaries are increasing at a&#13;
faster rate than women's.&#13;
Carmen Maymi, Director of the&#13;
Women's Bureau is concerned&#13;
about the difference between the&#13;
careers women are preparing for&#13;
and the careers which are in·&#13;
demand. In October 1976 she said&#13;
"It is ironic that so few women are&#13;
drawn to careers in management at&#13;
a time when many companies are&#13;
beginning to actively seek them&#13;
out... Employers are under&#13;
pressure to comply with the law&#13;
prohibiting sex discrimination in&#13;
employment and requiring affirmative&#13;
action to provide equal&#13;
opportunities to women. . . Although&#13;
the supply of women&#13;
graduating with degrees in business&#13;
administration is increasing ... college&#13;
women are still more attracted&#13;
to careers in education, social&#13;
science, home economics, and&#13;
health services than in management."&#13;
&#13;
Anyone interested in joining a&#13;
Women's Awareness group can call&#13;
Niki DiPolo at 658-2878 for more&#13;
nformation.&#13;
DINO'S&#13;
1816 16th St. 3728 Dougla8&#13;
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Open 4:00 p.m. till one hour after&#13;
The future employment trends tai-erns close&#13;
II 111111 IIIIUIIIIIIIIJllllltfllUII&#13;
Your challenge is to discover words of you go. You may not use two of the same&#13;
four letters in this pentagon. Discover letters In any one word. If you can make&#13;
them by following the straight lines to 30 words or more, you've met the&#13;
anti from the letters, forming words as challenge.&#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 chance to prove the quality of&#13;
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Pabst Blue Ribbon to any other premium beer. You'll&#13;
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tasting beer you can get. Since 1844 it always has.&#13;
PABST. Since 1844. The quality ·has always come through. ('197 7 PABSl BREW~O COMPANY M1lwaukt"'t" Wis Pt•oria 1--k'19hls Ill Nt"Natk N J los Anq&lt;"lt·~ Calil Pabsl Georgia&#13;
II &#13;
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Leartha Scott&#13;
player of the year&#13;
CearthaScott of Parksidewas&#13;
unanimously selected Wisconsin&#13;
Independent College Assn.&#13;
fWICAj player of the year&#13;
Sunday by WICA coaches here.&#13;
Scott, a &amp;-4 senior forward&#13;
from Chicago, currently averages&#13;
24 points a game. \&#13;
Parkside CoachSteveStephens&#13;
was named coach of the year for&#13;
the second time in three years.&#13;
UW-P, the top seeded team in&#13;
the upcoming playoffs, is&#13;
seeking its third straight NAIA&#13;
District 14 championship.&#13;
Joining Scott on the first team&#13;
were Stevie King and Marshall&#13;
Hill. Second seeded Milton&#13;
placed Scott Murray and former&#13;
Parksider Don Snow on the&#13;
squad;for LakelandTerry Daniel&#13;
and Randy Buchmann; St.&#13;
Norbert Joe Schneiderand Mike&#13;
Scbrarnke: and Carroll 'guard&#13;
Dave Shaw rounded out the&#13;
ten-man team.&#13;
Named honorable mention&#13;
were Dan Hucke and Kevin&#13;
Heuvelmans of Carroll, Jack Coy&#13;
and Rob Reader of Northland,&#13;
Paul Lallensack and Rick Rusch&#13;
of Milton, Mark Ton of St.&#13;
Norbert and Tyrone King of Mt.&#13;
Senario.&#13;
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ADULT NIGHT&#13;
18 and OLDER&#13;
From 9·11 :30 p.m. Every Sunday&#13;
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iust off highway 3 J&#13;
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We have the&#13;
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Our Price ONLY $100 Ea.&#13;
Complete line of latest lP Records and Tapes&#13;
"Costume Jewelry"&#13;
CARE TO LEARN&#13;
THE FACTS OF LIFE?&#13;
Rangers enter playoffs&#13;
by ThomasNolen&amp; JeanTenuta&#13;
Parkside will face the winner&#13;
of the Carroll St. Norbert game&#13;
here Thursday in the second&#13;
round of the WICA playoffs.&#13;
The game to be played at&#13;
Carroll is Tuesday as two teams&#13;
I Parkside has defeated previously&#13;
will clash. Parkside is seeded&#13;
number 1 and received a first&#13;
round bye.&#13;
Should Parksidewin they will&#13;
play the #2 WSUC tournament&#13;
team at Parkside Monday.&#13;
The Rangers scored a solid&#13;
victory over Nebraska-omaha&#13;
77-68 Saturday in their last&#13;
regular season game.&#13;
Although the final score&#13;
separating the two teams was&#13;
nine, this was no indication of&#13;
the dominating game the team&#13;
played Parkside led by 21 points&#13;
nearthe end of the first half and&#13;
didn't allow them to get closer&#13;
Specifically, Northwestern Mutual Life.&#13;
A Quiet Company representative will be on campus Wed., March 2nd&#13;
to interview men and women interested in learning about the&#13;
NML life underwriting career.&#13;
We're big ~ world's largest company specializing in individual life&#13;
insurance/ and among the nation's 40 largest corporations.&#13;
We're solid - $8 billion of assets; $31.6 billion of life insurance&#13;
in force, and 119 years of experience.&#13;
We're growing - $4.6 billion of sales last year.&#13;
Arrange an interview at your placement office. Persons interested&#13;
in individuality and compensation commensurate with&#13;
productivity are especially welcomed.&#13;
We also have an Internship Program that lets you earn&#13;
while you learn.&#13;
The Quiet Company&#13;
NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL LIFE' MILWAUkEE ~&#13;
than 14 until the final minutes.&#13;
• The Rangersforced Omaha to&#13;
commit 15 turnovers, perhaps&#13;
not a striking amount but&#13;
Parkside only had two in the first&#13;
half&#13;
leartha Scott was the scoring&#13;
and rebounding leader with 20&#13;
and 12 respectively. Stevie King&#13;
had 11 points followed by&#13;
lawrence Brown with 10 and&#13;
Marvin Chones and Jot Foots&#13;
with nine points each.&#13;
Chonesand Marshall Hill had&#13;
eight rebounds each and Mike&#13;
Hanke had s&lt;!lien allowing&#13;
Parkside to keep their overpowering&#13;
control.&#13;
The Rangers were narrowly&#13;
defeatedby EasternIllinois 81-79&#13;
February 16 as a shot went in&#13;
with four seconds" remaining.&#13;
A stall of close to two minutes&#13;
was executed by Eastern before&#13;
they took a shot on a pass from&#13;
Chones. King heaved a 40 footer&#13;
into the hoop before time ran&#13;
out, but Chones was called for&#13;
charging.&#13;
The Rangersheld a 63-57 lead&#13;
with 12 minutes to go after being&#13;
behind by 10late in the first half.&#13;
After the score was tied at 65,&#13;
Parkside led until two minutes&#13;
remained and Eastern tied the&#13;
game at 79.&#13;
Scott missed the next shot&#13;
which gave Eastern possession of&#13;
the ball and allowed them to go&#13;
into the stall.&#13;
The Rangers exhibited balanced&#13;
scoring, a rare occurance for&#13;
the team. Four of five starters&#13;
were in double figures and&#13;
• Choneshad 9 pts.&#13;
Scott led the Rangerswith 18&#13;
points, laurence Brown had 16,&#13;
King 14 and Marshall Hill 12.&#13;
Marshall Hill and Leartho Scott scramble&#13;
as the Rangers beat Nebraska 76 to 68.&#13;
632-6151&#13;
On Spring West oj 31 in Greenridge Ploza&#13;
•&#13;
~erbur.&#13;
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Wed. thru Sat. 9:30-12:30&#13;
Listening music&#13;
Unusual and excellent food&#13;
everyday.&#13;
=l=sports Rangers enter playoffs&#13;
Leartha Scott&#13;
player of the year&#13;
Ceartha Scott of Parkside was&#13;
unanimously selected Wisconsin&#13;
Independent College Assn.&#13;
(WICA) player of the year&#13;
Sunday by WICA coaches here.&#13;
Hill. Second seeded Milton&#13;
placed Scott Murray and former&#13;
Parksider Don Snow on the&#13;
squad; for Lakeland Terry Daniel&#13;
and Randy Buchmann; St.&#13;
Norbert Joe Schneider and Mike&#13;
Schramka; and Carroll · guard&#13;
Dave Shaw rounded out the&#13;
ten-man team.&#13;
Scott, a 6-4 senior forward&#13;
from Chicago, currently averages&#13;
24 points a game. \&#13;
Parkside Coach Steve Stephens&#13;
was named coach of the year for&#13;
the second time in three years.&#13;
UW-P, the top seeded team in&#13;
the upcoming playoffs, is&#13;
seeking its third straight NAIA&#13;
District 14 championship.&#13;
Named honorable mention&#13;
were Dan Hucke and Kevin&#13;
Heuvelmans of Carroll, Jack Coy&#13;
and Rob Reader of Northland,&#13;
Paul Lallensack and Rick Rusch&#13;
of Milton, Mark Ton of St.&#13;
Norbert and Tyrone King of Mt.&#13;
Senario.&#13;
Joining Scott on the first team&#13;
were Stevie King and Marshall&#13;
----------------,&#13;
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~~~~~~~~~~~~&#13;
Jerry Kellner f ~~~~&#13;
ADULT NIGHT&#13;
18 and OLDER&#13;
From 9-11 :30 p.m. Every Sunday&#13;
RED'S ROltER RINK&#13;
6220 67th St., Kenosha&#13;
just off highway 31&#13;
'Ju.em.an'~ c:f?,c.o'l.d ~hop.&#13;
1501 65th St.&#13;
We have the&#13;
Top 1 00 "45" Soul Chart&#13;
Our Price ONLY $1 °0 Ea.&#13;
Complete line of latest 'LP Records and Tapes&#13;
"Costume Jewelry"&#13;
CARE TO LEARN&#13;
THE FACTS OF LIFE?&#13;
Specifically, Northwestern Mutual Life.&#13;
by Thomas Nolen &amp; Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside will face the winner&#13;
of the Carroll St. Norbert game&#13;
here Thursday in the second&#13;
round of the WICA playoffs.&#13;
The game to be played at&#13;
Carroll is Tuesday as two teams&#13;
I Parkside has defeated previously&#13;
will clash . Parkside is seeded&#13;
number 1 and received a first&#13;
round bye.&#13;
Should Parkside win they will&#13;
play the #2 WSUC tournament&#13;
team at Parkside Monday.&#13;
The Rangers scored a solid&#13;
victory over Nebraska-Omaha&#13;
77-68 Saturday in their last&#13;
regular season game.&#13;
Although the final score&#13;
separahng the two teams was&#13;
nine, this was no indication of&#13;
the dominating game the team&#13;
played. Parkside led by 21 pojnts&#13;
near the end of the first half and&#13;
didn't allow them to get closer&#13;
A Quiet Company representative will be on campus Wed., March 2nd&#13;
to interview men and women interested in learning about the&#13;
NML life underwriting career.&#13;
We're big - world's largest company specializing in individual life&#13;
insurance, and among the nation 's 40 largest corporations.&#13;
We're solid - $8 billion of assets; $31 .6 billion of life insurance&#13;
in force, and 119 years of experience.&#13;
We're growing - $4.6 billion of sales last year.&#13;
Arrange an interview at your placement office. Persons interested&#13;
in individuality and compensatio n commensurate with&#13;
productivity are especially welcomed .&#13;
We also have an Internship Program that lets you earn&#13;
while you learn. The Quiet Company NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL LIFE · MILWAUKEE ~&#13;
than 14 until the final minutes .&#13;
~ The Rangers forced Omaha to&#13;
commit 15 turnovers, perhaps&#13;
not a striking amount but&#13;
Parkside only had two in the first&#13;
half.&#13;
Leartha Scott was the scoring&#13;
and rebounding leader with 20&#13;
and 12 respectively . Stevie King&#13;
had 11 points followed by&#13;
Lawrence Brown with 10 and&#13;
Marvin Chones and Jot Foots&#13;
with nine points each .&#13;
Chones and Marshall Hill had&#13;
eight rebounds each and Mike&#13;
Hanke had sEc'\ten allowing&#13;
Parkside to keep their overpowering&#13;
control .&#13;
The Rangers were narrowly&#13;
defeated by Eastern Illinois 81-79&#13;
February 16 as a shot went in&#13;
with four seconds remaining .&#13;
A stall of close to two minutes&#13;
was executed by Eastern before&#13;
they took a shot on a pass from&#13;
Chones. King heaved a 40 footer&#13;
into the hoop before time ran&#13;
out, but Chones was called for&#13;
charging .&#13;
The Rangers held a 63-57 lead&#13;
with 12 minutes to go after being&#13;
behind by 10 late in the first half.&#13;
After the score was tied at 65,&#13;
Parkside led until two minutes&#13;
remained and Eastern tied the&#13;
game at 79 .&#13;
Scott missed the next shot&#13;
which gave Eastern possession of&#13;
the ball and al lowed them to go&#13;
into the stall.&#13;
The Rangers exhibited balanced&#13;
scoring, a rare occurance for&#13;
the team . Four of five starters&#13;
were in double figures and&#13;
• Chones had 9 pts .&#13;
Scott led the Rangers with 18&#13;
points , Laurence Brown had 16,&#13;
King 14 and Marshall Hill 12.&#13;
Marshall Hill and Leartha Scott scramble&#13;
as the Rangers beat Nebraska 76 to 68.&#13;
~erbur.&#13;
,ourtw&#13;
PUI &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
Wed. thru Sat. 9:30-12:30&#13;
Listening music&#13;
Unusual and excellent food&#13;
everyday.&#13;
632-6151&#13;
On Spring West of 31 in Greenridge Plaza &#13;
spor s8&#13;
Parkside plays Maranatha·· ..·....&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Frozene Lott led the scoring&#13;
with 16 points, followed by Dita&#13;
Hunter with 12 and Diana&#13;
Kolovos with 11 and Pat Munger&#13;
with 8.&#13;
Kolovos was the game's top&#13;
rebounder with 14&#13;
The team has a record of 3-5&#13;
with a win over Joliet JUOIor&#13;
College Februarv S in" which&#13;
Track team&#13;
enters. Nationals Kolovos scored 22 and Lott had&#13;
21&#13;
"We have been Improving our&#13;
shooting stausucs' each game,"&#13;
said Coach Hal Henderson&#13;
"We're running our offense&#13;
correctly and consuuentlv have&#13;
made and took a better&#13;
percentage of shots."&#13;
Parkstde's women's basketball&#13;
club team will meet Maranatba&#13;
Bible College Friday in their last&#13;
game of the season, on the road.&#13;
The Rangers played at Ripon&#13;
Tuesday, after beating Marantha&#13;
57-38, here Saturday.&#13;
The team had been consistantIy&#13;
improving their offense in&#13;
each outing going 27 of 74 from&#13;
the field.&#13;
by Iean Tenula measuring 23' 93/4".&#13;
Perera set a meet record in the&#13;
triple jump with a 47' 61/4",&#13;
breaking the 47' 51/4" record by&#13;
Dennis Rue, who was second in&#13;
the meet, from Stevens Point in&#13;
1976.&#13;
Meekma and Bob Downs were&#13;
second and third respectively&#13;
with 14' 6" efforts in the pole&#13;
vault event.&#13;
Burns was third iO the shot put&#13;
behind Bill Versen of Carthage&#13;
who won the event. Burns had a&#13;
51' 1" heave.&#13;
Bill Werve was third in the 600&#13;
yard run finals only four tenths&#13;
of a second away from winning.&#13;
Cary Priem was fourth and&#13;
Mike Rivers tied for sixth in the&#13;
1000 yard run.&#13;
The Teams next meet will be&#13;
the North Central Relays in&#13;
Napperville Illinois' March 5,&#13;
after the Nationals.&#13;
Most of Coach Bob lawson's&#13;
track team will be participating&#13;
in the NAIA national indoor&#13;
championships at Kansas City&#13;
this weekend.&#13;
Walkers Jim Heiring, Chris&#13;
Hansen, all-Americans; John Ven&#13;
Den Brandt, and AI Halbur; pole&#13;
vaulter Bob Meekma, triple&#13;
jumper Joe Perera, long jumper&#13;
Jeff Sitz and Pat Burns in the shot&#13;
put qualified after having done&#13;
so last year.&#13;
The team had qualifying&#13;
performances in Saturday's&#13;
UW-oshkosh Titan Open Meet.&#13;
Heiring set a meet record in&#13;
the two mile walk in 13:52.0&#13;
followed by Hansen and Van&#13;
Den Brandt. Halbur and Mike&#13;
Rummelhardt were fifth and&#13;
sixth.&#13;
Sitz won the long jump in one&#13;
of his best efforts of the season,&#13;
Wrestlers lose&#13;
The wrestlers lost Friday to&#13;
undefeated Northern Michigan,&#13;
a top ten rated NCAA division II&#13;
team, 22-12 here.&#13;
Winning their matches were&#13;
Tony Apostoli, with a 6-3 record&#13;
at 118, Dan O'Connell upping his&#13;
record to 23-3; Dave Wagner&#13;
10-5 at 177, and John Gale 17-5 at&#13;
heavyweight. All won on points.&#13;
The team has a 4-3 record and&#13;
faced Carthage last night at&#13;
home.&#13;
F&#13;
FIRSTNA=....."":'" RACINE&#13;
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! 411 Main Sf, Racine ! l.._ .s&#13;
Swimmers beat Carroll&#13;
by Jean Tenuta Krueger, Dennis Steeves, Haas&#13;
and Wilbershide won in 4:12.0.&#13;
Krueger won the 200 free and&#13;
200 back and Steeves won the&#13;
200 I.M.&#13;
Other winners included Rick&#13;
Lopes, 1000 free; Kwas, 200 fly&#13;
and Wilbershide, 500 free.&#13;
Mihran Gaghinjian and AI&#13;
lowell also scored for the&#13;
Rangers.&#13;
The swimmers had a 5-7 record&#13;
going into the last dual meet of&#13;
the season last night with the&#13;
University of Chicago, whom&#13;
they beat earlier in the season.&#13;
Parkside lost to lake Forest&#13;
66-38 February 16. Ferraro was&#13;
the only individual winner in the&#13;
50 and 100 free and again was in&#13;
the winning 400 free relay.&#13;
jim Ferraro qualified for the&#13;
NSIA Swimming and Diving&#13;
Championships March 3-5 at&#13;
Southwest State University in&#13;
Marshall, Minnesota as the&#13;
Parkside swimmers beat Carroll&#13;
College 63-34, Saturday in&#13;
Waukesha.&#13;
Ferraro set school records in&#13;
the 50 and 100 freestyles with&#13;
qualifying times of 22.6 and 49.7&#13;
respectively.&#13;
Ferraro also combined with&#13;
Bob Wilbershide, Rich Kwas and&#13;
Rick Haas in the 400 free relay&#13;
which Parkside won in 4:45.7.&#13;
Haas set a school record in the&#13;
200 breast winning the event in&#13;
2:337.&#13;
The 400 Medley relay of Keith&#13;
------------------------1 ~ FREE I&#13;
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it's&#13;
the&#13;
real&#13;
thing&#13;
TrClck tean,&#13;
enter Nationals&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Most of Coach Bob Lawson's&#13;
track team will be participating&#13;
in the NAIA national indoor&#13;
championships at Kansas City&#13;
this weekend.&#13;
Walkers Jim Heiring, Chris&#13;
Hansen, all-Americans; John Ven&#13;
Den Brandt, and Al Halbur; pole&#13;
vaulter Bob Meekma, triple&#13;
jumper Joe Perera, long jumper&#13;
Jeff Sitz and Pat Burns in the shot&#13;
put qualified after having done&#13;
so last year.&#13;
The team had qualifying&#13;
performances in Saturday's&#13;
UW-Oshkosh Titan Open Meet.&#13;
Heiring set a meet record in&#13;
the two mile walk in 13:52 .0&#13;
followed by Hansen anq Van&#13;
Den Brandt. Halbur and Mike&#13;
Rummelhardt were fifth and&#13;
sixth.&#13;
Sitz won the long jump in one&#13;
of his best efforts of the season,&#13;
measuring 23' 93/ 4".&#13;
Perera set a meet record in the&#13;
triple jump with a 47' 61 / 4" ,&#13;
breaking the 47' 51/ 4" record by&#13;
Dennis Rue, who was second in&#13;
the meet, from Stevens Point in&#13;
1976.&#13;
Meekma and Bob Downs were&#13;
second and third respectively&#13;
with 14' 6" efforts in the pole&#13;
vault event.&#13;
Burns was third io the shot put&#13;
behind Bill Versen of Carthage&#13;
who won the event. Burns had a&#13;
51' 1" heave.&#13;
Bill Werve was third in the 600&#13;
yard run finals only four tenths&#13;
of a second away from winning .&#13;
Gary Priem was fourth and&#13;
Mike Rivers tied for sixth in the&#13;
1000 yard run .&#13;
The Teams next meet will be&#13;
the North Central Relays in&#13;
Napperville Illinois' March 5,&#13;
after the Nationals .&#13;
Swimmers beat Carroll&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Jim Ferraro qualified for the&#13;
NSIA Swimming and Diving&#13;
Championships March 3-5 at&#13;
Southwest State University in&#13;
Marshall, Minnesota as the&#13;
Parkside swimmers beat Carroll&#13;
College 63-34, Saturday in&#13;
Waukesha .&#13;
Ferraro set school records in&#13;
the 50 and 100 freestyles with&#13;
qualifying times of 22 .6 and 49.7&#13;
respectively.&#13;
Ferraro also combined with&#13;
Bob Wilbershide, Rich Kwas and&#13;
Rick Haas in the 400 free relay&#13;
which Parkside won in 4:45.7 .&#13;
Haas set a school record in the&#13;
200 breast winning the event in&#13;
2:33.7.&#13;
The 400 Medley relay of Keith&#13;
Krueger, Dennis Steeves, Haas&#13;
and Wilbershide won in 4:12 .0.&#13;
Krueger won the 200 free and&#13;
200 back and Steeves won the&#13;
200 J.M.&#13;
Other winners included Rick&#13;
Lopes, 1000 free; Kwas, 200 fly&#13;
and Wilbershide, 500 free.&#13;
Mihran Gaghinjian and Al&#13;
Lowell also scored for the&#13;
Rangers .&#13;
The swimmers had a 5-7 record&#13;
going into the last dual meet of&#13;
the season last night with the&#13;
University of Chicago, whom&#13;
they beat earlier in the season .&#13;
Parkside lost to Lake Forest&#13;
66-38 February 16. Ferraro was&#13;
the only individual winner in the&#13;
50 and 100 free and again was in&#13;
the winning 400 free relay.&#13;
spor S=I&#13;
Parksi.de plays Maranatha ·· ... ..... by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside's women 's basketball&#13;
club team will meet Maranatha&#13;
Bible College Friday in their last&#13;
game of the season, on the road .&#13;
The Rangers played at Ripon&#13;
Tuesday, after beating Marantha&#13;
57-38, here Saturday .&#13;
The team had been consistantly&#13;
improving their offense in&#13;
each outing going 27 of 74 from&#13;
the field .&#13;
Wrestlers lose&#13;
The wrestlers lost Friday to&#13;
undefeated Northern Michigan,&#13;
a top ten rated NCAA division 11&#13;
team, 22-12 here.&#13;
Winning their matches were&#13;
Tony Apostoli , with a 6-3 record&#13;
at 118, Dan O'Connell upping his&#13;
record to 23-3; Dave Wagner&#13;
10-5 at 177, and John Gale 17-5 at&#13;
heavyweight. All won on points&#13;
The team has a 4-3 record and&#13;
faced Carthage last night at&#13;
home.&#13;
r .................. ..__.....,,.~___....,, . .,_.....,..1&#13;
i i&#13;
i fJfl • ~i l ~~ ~&#13;
I (T~ I \ (P"- ~&#13;
~ {§(o'i &lt;Ji)~\ I 411 Main St. Racine I&#13;
i. ................ ..__.. ............ ..,....._...._....__..__...!&#13;
r&#13;
554-1500&#13;
INCOME TAX&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
WILLIAM A. GLASS&#13;
Elmwood Plaza&#13;
Prices Quoted By Phone&#13;
Frozene Lott led the scoring&#13;
with 1b points, followed by Dita&#13;
Hunter with 12 and Diana&#13;
Kolovos with 11 and Pat Munger&#13;
with 8&#13;
Kolovos was the game's top&#13;
rebounder with 14&#13;
The team has a record of 3·5&#13;
with a win over Joliet Junior&#13;
College Februarv 5 in· which&#13;
F&#13;
Kolovo scor d 22 and Lott had&#13;
21&#13;
" We have been improving our&#13;
shooting tat1\t1 a h game,"&#13;
said oach Hal Hend rson .&#13;
"We're running our often&#13;
correctly and consqu ntl have&#13;
made and took a better&#13;
percentag of hots "&#13;
FIRSTNA~~RACINE&#13;
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eRECREA TION4L SKA TING&#13;
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I TO I I ANY PUBLIC SKATING SESSION I&#13;
I WITH THIS COUPON I&#13;
I KENOSHA ICE ARENA I&#13;
lz~22_~a.:.~~~~--~~2~~-~9~J~!.DJ&#13;
it's&#13;
the&#13;
real&#13;
thing &#13;
Stephen Swedish&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
Tti E MIN I-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
STOP IN TODAY AT PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE,&#13;
YOU'lL lOVE THE UNIQUE. COMFORTABLE ATMOSPHERE&#13;
Swedish: performer, teacher&#13;
by Karen Putman&#13;
According to Stephen Swedish, Assistant&#13;
professor of music, and accompanist for Eugene&#13;
Fodor, the job market for concert pianists is very&#13;
difficult. Most of the pianists who, want concert&#13;
careers, if they get a masters andlor a doctorate,&#13;
will end up on a university faculty.&#13;
)'You can count the number of fingers on both&#13;
hands the number of pianists who could make a&#13;
good living just performing," says Swedish. He&#13;
would not like to just concertize. Swedish says,&#13;
"Performing is only half of what I enjoy doing, I&#13;
love teaching too."&#13;
Before coming to Parkside, he was-en the faculty&#13;
at Indiana University, visiting artist-in-residence at&#13;
Iowa State, and then he taught in Texas.He decided&#13;
to stay at Parkside because of the location and,&#13;
since he has been here, we have a new chancellor,&#13;
who has emphasized the arts.&#13;
Turning the questions back to performing,&#13;
Swedish has been playing 25-50 concerts a year for&#13;
about twelve years. The most he has ever done is 81&#13;
which occurred this past year. He hasn't really had&#13;
a vacation in two years, because of his performing&#13;
,with Fodor. Although, he does just as much of his&#13;
own performing as he does with Fodor.&#13;
"Musically it's a marvelous experience playing&#13;
for Fodor," says Swedish.&#13;
He says that he doesn't like to speculate too far&#13;
into the future, but he will be playing with Fodor&#13;
next season and they are already booked into the&#13;
1978-1979 season.&#13;
If you are shopping at Arbee's because&#13;
of our advertising in this newspaper tell&#13;
.us...Our support of the Ranger is in&#13;
direct proportion to your support of the&#13;
Ranger advertisers.&#13;
ARBEE 'C UC;UOJ2;GJOREG&#13;
2062 Lathrop Ave.&#13;
Racine, ·Wise.&#13;
4606 Douglas Ave.&#13;
DANISH&#13;
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Douglas Avenue&#13;
Racine, Wis&lt;onsin 53402&#13;
I I&#13;
DANISH KRINGlE&#13;
Send !:Jour sweetheo.rt 0.&#13;
delicious box of 2 cherr.\!&#13;
do.nish po.stries&#13;
Shipped prepo.id ~6.25&#13;
PHONE: 637-8895&#13;
After performing on their sixth show on the&#13;
Tonight Show with Johnny Larson, he says, "Johnny&#13;
Carson has been nothing less than a pure joy to&#13;
work with, and that goes for everyone else on the&#13;
show." He has gotten a chance to meet many&#13;
celebrities, some of whom have asked him to give&#13;
them piano lessons, and also has received a few&#13;
dinner invitations. ~&#13;
Swedish would like to clear up the fact, that&#13;
. because he and Fodor are from Parkside, people&#13;
believe that it should be mentioned every time.&#13;
Well, just for the record, Fodor has tried at least&#13;
twice to turn the questions around so that Parkside&#13;
could get mentioned, but if the producer says no,&#13;
there's nothing you can do. The reason Swedish is&#13;
not mentioned is because Eugene Fodor is the star,&#13;
although once in a while he does get a separate&#13;
shot. .&#13;
Professor Swedish always has the student's best&#13;
interest at heart, so he has decided to give master&#13;
classes. It gives students-a chance to play for each&#13;
other and to talk about anything they want. What&#13;
he istrying to do with these classes is to break down&#13;
the barriers keeping things very informal. He held&#13;
two sessions over the past semester break and one&#13;
'on January 22 with good attendance.&#13;
Students have told Swedish that they can learn&#13;
more from these informal sessions than from&#13;
private lessons. As it stands now there is no&#13;
schedule for these sessions but they will be&#13;
announced asthey are to happen. The next one will&#13;
be on Saturday, February 12. Hopefully, says&#13;
Swedish, the next semester the sessions can&#13;
become a scheduled ;v~nt.&#13;
Theatre festival scheduled&#13;
by Cheryl Powalisz&#13;
The bi-yearly Festival of the American&#13;
Community Theatre will be held at the Racine&#13;
Theatre Guild, February 26 and 27.&#13;
The Festival is broken down into three sessions;&#13;
February 26, the first session begins at 1:00 p.m.,&#13;
the second session begins at 7:00 p.m. These two&#13;
sessions will play three plays each set. The third&#13;
session February 27 begins at 1:00 p.m., and will&#13;
play two plays. The winner will be announced&#13;
Sunday afternoon. Each session will cost $2.25 or&#13;
you can attend all three sessionsfor $5.00. Tickets&#13;
are available at the Racine Theatre Guild's box&#13;
office between 1:00 and 5:00 p.m. weekdays or you&#13;
can make reservations by calling 633:A218.&#13;
The eight plays that are to be performed at the&#13;
F.A.C.T.Festival and the community theatre groups&#13;
performing them are Gotami, The Frail by the River&#13;
Valley Community Theatre, Spring Creen; The&#13;
Effect of Gama Rays on Man-in-the-moon&#13;
Marigolds by the West Allis Players; Godspell by&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
PHONE: SS2-7844&#13;
2121 • 215t ST.&#13;
VilLA CAPRI CENTER&#13;
Racine&#13;
PHONE, (4)4l 632-166S&#13;
1007 WA.SHINGTON A.VENUE&#13;
RACINE, WISCONSIN 53403&#13;
fJ'"hereIS. differencem&#13;
PREPARE FOR:&#13;
0.,&#13;
8t J&#13;
r..,&#13;
~.[!nJ.~&#13;
GMAT • GRE • OCAT&#13;
CPAT • VAT • SAT&#13;
CALL:&#13;
(608) 255-0575&#13;
1001 Rutledge St.,&#13;
Modison, Wis. 53703&#13;
CLASSES IN MADISON&#13;
AND MilWAUKEE&#13;
Centers in Major U.S. Cities&#13;
TEST PREPARATJON&#13;
SPECIALISTS SINCE 1931:1&#13;
the Ex Calibire Players, Sheboygan; Noon by the&#13;
Waukesha Civic Theatre; Still the Mountain Wind&#13;
by the Racine Theatre Guild; Epiphany by the&#13;
Madison Theatre Guild; News of Marian Hill by the&#13;
Shake Rage Players, Mineral Point; and The Late&#13;
La.te Computer Date by the Cameo Players,&#13;
Milwaukee. Eachgroup is allowed up to 60 minutes&#13;
of performance time, followed by up to 30 minutes&#13;
of critique by the three judges.&#13;
The winner of this Festival will then compete at&#13;
the Regional Festival, which will be held at Barat&#13;
College, Lake Forest, Illinois on May 7 and 8. The&#13;
regional winner will then attend the National&#13;
Festival on June 24 through the 26 in Spokane,&#13;
Washington. There will be nine regional winners in&#13;
competition at the National Festival. The National&#13;
winner then wins the right to attend the&#13;
International Festival of Amateur Theatre which is&#13;
to be held August 26 through September 10 in&#13;
Monaco. There will be thirty countries in&#13;
competition at the International Festival of&#13;
Amateur Theatre. -&#13;
L---'- ~--=:::::::==~ ~ - -""&#13;
METROPOLITAN rv SERVICE&#13;
Authorized&#13;
ZENITH.SANYO.NIKKO.LLOYDS&#13;
The Most Sophisticated Equipment&#13;
To Serve You Belter&#13;
• SweejH110rker Generator. provides same alignment accuracy as factory&#13;
• Transistor checker 99% accurate Good bed&#13;
• Tube checker = most sophisticated design available&#13;
• Audio-frequency generator, Stereo repair - can provide distortion &amp; power ratings&#13;
• Oscilloscope • provides visual indications of "invisible" pr.oblems&#13;
• literature and parts available country wide' by phone&#13;
5402 DOUGLAS AVENUE&#13;
RACINE, WISCONSIN 53402&#13;
LAWRENCE YOUNG PHONE 639-0951 /- _!!.~~-:.:::;~&#13;
Our broad range of programs provides an umbrsfJa of testing&#13;
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. Voluminous&#13;
home study materials. Courses that ere constantly updated.&#13;
Permanent centers open days &amp; weekends all year.&#13;
Complete tape lactu ties for review of class lessons and for&#13;
use of supplementary materials. Make-ups lor missed teesons&#13;
at our centers.&#13;
ASK ABOUT OUR&#13;
COMPACT COURSES&#13;
!&#13;
II : people&#13;
'&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
STOP IN TODAY AT PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE,&#13;
YOU'LL LOVE THE UNIQUE. COMFORTABLE ATMOSPHERE&#13;
If you are shopping at Arbee's because&#13;
of our advertising in this newspaper tell&#13;
us ... Our support of the Ranger is in&#13;
direct proportion to your support of the&#13;
Ranger advertisers.&#13;
ARBEE 'C UCl.10~ CTOREC&#13;
2062 Lathrop Ave. 4606 Douglas Ave.&#13;
~a, ~&#13;
DANISH KRINGLE&#13;
Send ~our sweetheort Q --&#13;
-&#13;
.&#13;
DANISH delicious box of 2 cherry 1 BAKERY- donish postries&#13;
'\ r-,.&#13;
I I " Shipped prepoid i6.25 1841 Douglas Avenue&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53402 PHONE: 637-8895&#13;
I I&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
PHONE: 552-7844&#13;
2121 - 21st ST.&#13;
VILLA CAPRI CENTER&#13;
Racine&#13;
PHONE, (414) 632-1665&#13;
1007 WASHINGTON AVENUE&#13;
RACINE, WISCONSIN 53403&#13;
I «There IS o difference!!!~";,~ YHr&#13;
PREPARE FOR:&#13;
~-~-~&#13;
GMAT • GRE&#13;
CPAT • VI« •&#13;
• OCAT&#13;
SAT&#13;
Our broad range of programs provides an umbrella of testing&#13;
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. Voluminous&#13;
home study materials. Courses that are constantly updated.&#13;
Permanent centers open days &amp; weekends all year.&#13;
Complete tape facilities for review of class lessons and for use of supplementary materials. 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 TEST PREPARATION&#13;
SPECIALISTS SINCE 193b&#13;
Centers in Major U.S. Cities&#13;
:&#13;
'&#13;
Swedish: performer, teacher&#13;
by Karen Putman&#13;
According to Stephen Swedish, Assistant&#13;
professor of music, and accompanist for Eugene&#13;
Fodor, the job market for concert pianists is very&#13;
difficult. Most of the pianists who, want concert&#13;
careers, if they get a masters and/or a doctorate,&#13;
will end up on a university faculty.&#13;
"You can count the number of fingers on both&#13;
hands the number of pianists who could make a&#13;
good living just performing," says Swedish. He&#13;
would not like to just ·concertize. Swedish says,&#13;
"Performing is only half of what I enjoy doing, I&#13;
love teaching too. "&#13;
Before coming to Parkside, he was-on the faculty&#13;
at Indiana University, visiting artist-in-residence at&#13;
Iowa State, and then he taught in Texas. He decided&#13;
to stay at Parkside because of the location and,&#13;
since he has been here, we have a new chancellor,&#13;
who has emphasized the arts.&#13;
Turning the questions back to performing,&#13;
Swedish has been piaying 25-50 concerts a year for&#13;
about twelve years . The most he has ever done is 81&#13;
which occurred this past year. He hasn't really had&#13;
a vacation in two years, because of his performing&#13;
with Fodor. Although, he does just as much of his&#13;
own performing as he does with Fodor.&#13;
"Musically it's a marvelous experience playing&#13;
for Fodor," says Swedish .&#13;
He says that he doesn't like to speculate too far&#13;
into the future, but he will be playing with Fodor&#13;
next season and they are already booked into the&#13;
1978-1979 Sei!SOn.&#13;
After performing on their sixth show on the&#13;
Tonight Show with Johnny Carson, he says, "Johnny&#13;
Carson has been nothing less than a pure joy to&#13;
work with, and that goes for everyone else on the&#13;
show." He has gotten a chance to meet many&#13;
celebrities, some of whom have asked him to give&#13;
them piano lessons, and also has received a few&#13;
dinner invitations .&#13;
Swedish would like to clear up the fact, that&#13;
. because he and Fodor are from Parkside, people&#13;
believe that it should be mentioned every time.&#13;
Well, just for the record, Fodor has tried at least&#13;
twice to turn the questions around so that Parkside&#13;
could get mentioned, but if the producer says no,&#13;
there\ nothing you can do. The reason Swedish is&#13;
not mentioned is because Eugene Fodor is the star,&#13;
although once in a while he does get a separate&#13;
shot. •&#13;
Professor Swedish always has the student's best&#13;
interest at heart, so he has decided to give master&#13;
classes. It gives students.a chance to play for each&#13;
other and to talk about anything they want. What&#13;
he is trying to do with these classes is to break down&#13;
the barriers keeping things very informal. He held&#13;
two sessions over the past semester bieak and one&#13;
·on January 22 with good attendance.&#13;
Students have told Swedish that they can learn&#13;
more from these informal sessions than from&#13;
private lessons. As it stands now there is no&#13;
schedule for these sessions but they will be&#13;
announced as they are to happen . The next one will&#13;
be on Saturday, February 12. Hopefully, says&#13;
Swedish, the next 1eryiester the sessions can&#13;
become a scheduled event.&#13;
Theatre festival scheduled&#13;
by Cheryl Powalisz&#13;
The bi-yearly Festival of the American&#13;
Community Theatre will be held at the Racine&#13;
Theatre Guild, February 26 and 27.&#13;
The Festival is broken down into three sessions;&#13;
February 26, the first session begin"s at 1:00 p.m.,&#13;
the second session begins at 7:00 p.m. These two&#13;
sessions will play three plays each set. The third&#13;
session February 27 begins at 1 :00 p.m., and wilt&#13;
play two plays. The winner will be announced&#13;
Sunday afternoon. Each session will cost $2.25 or&#13;
you can attend all three sessions for $5.00. Tickets&#13;
are available at the Racine Theatre Guild's box&#13;
office between 1 :00 and 5:00 p.m . weekdays or you&#13;
can make reservations by calling 63.1,.4218.&#13;
The eight plays that are to be performed at the&#13;
F.A.C.T. Festival and the community theatre groups&#13;
performing them are Gotami, The Frail by the River&#13;
Valley Community Theatre, Spring Green; The&#13;
Effect of Gama Rays on Man-in-the-moon&#13;
Marigolds by the West Allis Players; Godspell by&#13;
L&#13;
the Ex Calibire Players, Sheboygan; Noon by the&#13;
Waukesha Civic Theatre; Still the Mountain Wind&#13;
by the Racine The?tre Guild; Epiphany by the&#13;
Madison Theatre Guild; News of Marian Hill by the&#13;
Shake Rage Players, Mineral Point; and The Late&#13;
La_te Computer Date by the Cameo Players,&#13;
Milwaukee. Each group is allowed up to 60 minutes&#13;
of performance time, followed by up to 30 minutes&#13;
of critique by the three judges.&#13;
The winner of this Festival will then compete at&#13;
the Regional Festival, which will be held at Barat&#13;
College, Lake Forest, Illinois on May 7 and 8. The&#13;
regional winner will then attend the National&#13;
Festival on June 24 through the 26 in Spokane&#13;
Washington . There will be nine regional winners i~&#13;
competition at the National Festival . The National&#13;
winner then wins the right to attend the&#13;
International Festival of Amateur Theatre which is&#13;
to be held August 26 throug_h September 10 in&#13;
Monaco. There will be thirty countries in&#13;
competition at the International Fes.tival of&#13;
Amateur Theatre.&#13;
METROPdLITAN TV SERVICE&#13;
Authorized&#13;
ZENITH-SANYO-NIKKO-LLOYDS&#13;
The Most Sophisticated Equipment&#13;
To Serve You Better&#13;
• Sweep-marker Generator provides same alignment accuracy as factory&#13;
• Transistor checker 99% accurate Good bed&#13;
• Tube checker - most sophisticated design available&#13;
• Audio-frequency generator, Stereo repair - can provide distortion &amp; power ratings&#13;
• Oscilloscope - provides visual indications of "invisible" problems&#13;
• Literature and parts available country wide by phone&#13;
5402 DOUGLAS A VENUE&#13;
RACINE, WISCONSIN 53402&#13;
LA WREN CE YOUNG PHONE&#13;
L&#13;
639-0951&#13;
~&#13;
I &#13;
, =&#13;
- eyestt&#13;
Fred Schoepke, Kenosha Freshman&#13;
"I think we need a new artist in residence. I don't&#13;
think Eugene Fodor has done that much for&#13;
Parkside. Honestly!, Master classes?" [ami LaMar, Kenosha Junior&#13;
"A person can lose sight of their goals in life. If a&#13;
person loses sight of their goals, they also lose&#13;
control and direction in their life. I plan to go to&#13;
graduate school and specialize in counseling young&#13;
women."&#13;
Joe Orlowski, Kenosha Senior&#13;
"Nobody has ever determined the proper role of the&#13;
Aflocation Committee on campus. Everybody kind&#13;
of ignores it for nme months, the committee works&#13;
on the budget for three months, and then the last&#13;
three weeks everybody tries to get their two cents&#13;
In.&#13;
Barb Sadowski, Freshman, Racine&#13;
"l'd like to go away to school but everyone, would.&#13;
It is not as easy at Parkside as everybody thinks. I&#13;
think people here are friendly."&#13;
~&#13;
.s:&#13;
Q.&#13;
o&#13;
(j,&#13;
B&#13;
o&#13;
.c&#13;
Q.&#13;
Bob /ilk, Kenosha Junior&#13;
"I think its good the Fine Arts are growing at&#13;
Parkside. Its long overdue. I like the Chancellor's&#13;
attitude towards Fine Arts. He has given the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine community something they&#13;
need."&#13;
\&#13;
Maureen Evans, Freshman, Racine•&#13;
"One good thing about the weather, it is pretty. You&#13;
can't beat it. It might be bad for cars but its nice to&#13;
walk in. Parkside has big windows and you can see&#13;
it all.&#13;
Fred Schoepke, Kenosha Freshman&#13;
"I think we need a new artist in residence. I don 't&#13;
think Eugene Fodor has done that much for&#13;
Parkside. Honestly 1, Master classes?"&#13;
L: "'&#13;
Q.&#13;
0&#13;
0)&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
L:&#13;
Q.&#13;
Barb Sadowski, Freshman, Racine&#13;
"I'd like to go away to school but everyone would.&#13;
It is not as easy at Parkside as everybody thinks . I&#13;
think people here are friendly ."&#13;
Bob Jilk, Kenosha Junior&#13;
"I think its good the Fine Arts are growing at&#13;
Parkside. Its long overdue. I like the Chancellor's&#13;
attit.ude towards Fine Arts. He has given the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine community something they&#13;
need."&#13;
Jami LaMar, Kenosha Junior&#13;
"A person can lose sight of their goals in Ide. If a&#13;
person loses sight of their goals, they also lose&#13;
control and direction in their life. I plan to go to&#13;
graduate school and specialize in counseling young&#13;
women ."&#13;
Joe Orlowski, Kenosha Senior&#13;
obody has ever determined the proper role of the&#13;
Allocation Committee on campu E\i rybody kind&#13;
of ignores ,t for nine month , the committee work&#13;
on the budget for three month , and then th la t&#13;
three week everybody trie to get their two cent&#13;
in."&#13;
Maureen Evans, Freshman, Racine&#13;
.. One good thing about the weather, it is pretty. You&#13;
can't beat it. It might be bad for cars but its nice to&#13;
walk in. Parkside has big windows and you can see&#13;
it all. &#13;
Wednesday, February 23&#13;
PAB Coffeehouse from 2 to 4 pm in the Union Cafeteria.&#13;
Boxing Club meeting at 2 P.M. in the Wrestling/Boxing room of the&#13;
Phy Ed. Big.&#13;
Wargamers meeting from p to 8 P'!1 in CL.140.&#13;
Thursday, February 24&#13;
senior Recruiting: Equity Concept Corp. during the day at Tallent&#13;
Hall. Call 2452 for more information.&#13;
Guest Vocal Duet Recital: Christine Flasch, soprano, and John Bills,&#13;
baritone at 8 pm in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
Friday, February 25&#13;
Last day to enroll in the Student- Health Insurance program.&#13;
Earth Science Club: "The Penokean Orogeny, Wisconsin's Ancient&#13;
Mountain Range" by John Klasner, Western Illinois University at&#13;
12 noon in GR 113. Coffee and donuts will be served.&#13;
Chemlstrv-Llfe Science seminar Series: "Folding and Unfolding of an&#13;
Enzyme" by Dr. FW. Benz, School of Pharmacy, UW-Madison,&#13;
at 2 pm in CL 105.&#13;
Colloquium Talk: "Computation and Reconstruction of Reality" by&#13;
Prof. JosephWeizenbaum, Massachusetts Institute. of Technology,&#13;
at 3:30 pm in CL 107. Coffee will be served at 3 pm in CL 111.&#13;
Faculty Recital: Piano Duo, Stephen Swedish and August Wegner at&#13;
8 pm in the Comm Arts Theater"&#13;
Movie: "Catch 22" at 8 pm in the Union Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Saturday, February 26&#13;
Young Person's Concert: Tim Bell and Jazz Ensemble at 2 pm in the&#13;
Comm Arts Theater. Admission is $1.00 for students and $2.00 for&#13;
adults.&#13;
PADDance: "Disco Night" at 9 pm in Union Square. Admission charge.&#13;
Sunday, February 27&#13;
wargamers meeting from 1 to 6 pm in CL 140.&#13;
Parkside Chamber Orchestra Concerti David Schripsema, conductor,&#13;
at 3:30 pm in the Comm Arts Theater..&#13;
,Movie: "Catch 2~" at 7:30 pm in the Union Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Monday I February 28&#13;
Movie: "A Man For All Seasons" at 7:30 pm at the Colden Rondelle&#13;
in Racine.&#13;
Events must be into -Ranger by the Wednesday before publication.&#13;
An events form is now available in the Ranger office. .&#13;
Landscaping course offered&#13;
Learning how to plan, design&#13;
and care for a new landscape or&#13;
add to an existing landscape will&#13;
be the featured topics at a&#13;
Landscape and Lawn Care&#13;
Program planned for March 3 at&#13;
7:30 p.rn. at the Colden Rondelle&#13;
Theater, located at 14th and&#13;
Franklin Sts.&#13;
Tom Lieds, well-known landscaoe&#13;
architect and host of the&#13;
television program "Dig It" will&#13;
discuss and demonstrate how to&#13;
make a more pleasing and useful&#13;
landscape.&#13;
This program is offered free to&#13;
the public. Reservations and&#13;
further information can beobtained&#13;
by calling the Rondelle&#13;
at 554-2154.&#13;
Swedish, Wegner play&#13;
Duo-pianists Stephen Swedish&#13;
and August Wegner of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
music faculty will present a free&#13;
public concert at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Friday, . Feb. 25, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Their program will include JS.&#13;
Bach's Wachet auf (Sleepers&#13;
Awake) arranged by Lawrence&#13;
Rackley, who contributes some&#13;
20th Century additions to the&#13;
harmony, Variations on a Theme&#13;
by Haydn OP. 56b by Brahms,&#13;
and three contempory works,&#13;
Poulenc's 1918 Sonata, Stravinsky's&#13;
Sonata written in 1943-44&#13;
and Copland's Danzon Cubano&#13;
written in 1942.&#13;
Swedish, who is an artist-inresidence&#13;
at Parkside, has&#13;
performed in solo recitals and&#13;
with major orchestras throughout&#13;
the U.S. and in Europe.&#13;
Wegner, a composer as well as&#13;
a performing artist, is an&#13;
assistant professor of music&#13;
theory and composition at Parkside.&#13;
~FLORIDA&#13;
(By NightCoach Air)&#13;
[From ChicagoI&#13;
DAYTONA, .....·156.00&#13;
l TAMPA.""."".·162.00&#13;
FT. LAUDERDALE""",,·182.00&#13;
MIAMI , ·182.00&#13;
classifieds&#13;
For sale: '76 Ford pick-up. In good&#13;
condJlion. Heavy duty half-ton. AMfFM&#13;
radio. ,"or more information call John at&#13;
553-2287.&#13;
GuIt8r!&gt;: 2 Gibson acoustics. $100.00 and&#13;
$125.00. Both made in mid '50's. 637-8017.&#13;
Wicker Love Seat and matching Nymph's&#13;
chair, $100.00. Wicker rocker $35. 637-8017.&#13;
All .tudent orgenlutlons and clubs must&#13;
submit their Charters for approval by the&#13;
Senate by March 1, 1977, if they wish to&#13;
receive .Segregated Fees money. Contact&#13;
P.S.G.A. at WLLC 0193 immediately for&#13;
details. 553-2244.&#13;
For 8Ile: 2 snow tires S78x14, S30 or best&#13;
offer for the P4ir. Gall 886-5154.&#13;
secretary for Student Government, must be&#13;
on Work-Study. 10 hours per w~k, pays&#13;
$2.50 per hour. Contact Klyoko at WLLC&#13;
0193 or call 553-2244.&#13;
Wickensteln, a philosphically interesting&#13;
cat (feline variety), is looking for lodginp&#13;
with compatible cersorus). Gall 886-5154.&#13;
'laI'iHe~~&#13;
7403 Lamberton Road&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
Classes otarting February 28, 1977&#13;
All Classes ar~ Co-Ed&#13;
For more information call&#13;
414-639.5941&#13;
Sandy Herman Carol Hellrung&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE· SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
1615Washington /We. 6i~237i&#13;
For Sale: Sr-50A calculator in qoco condo&#13;
S30 or best offer. Gall 634-6215 after 6.&#13;
,'or sale or Trade: One slightly used (Mode&#13;
t955) recreation vehicle. Never needs oil!&#13;
can be used to transport people for just&#13;
about anything, including sacrificial virgins&#13;
to altars! Send all inquiries to Box 129,&#13;
WLLC 0197. Replies will be handled&#13;
discreetly.&#13;
Typing done. Reasonable rates. Gall Mona&#13;
.1.1553-2295 or contact the Ranger office.&#13;
Jazz recital"&#13;
Timothy Bell and the Parkside&#13;
Jazz Ensemble will present the&#13;
second in the series of Young&#13;
Persons' Concerts af the&#13;
University of Wisconstn-Parkside&#13;
this season at 2 p.m. on&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 26, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Admission for single concerts&#13;
is $1 for students and $2 for&#13;
adults. Tickets can be reserved&#13;
by calling the Parkside Information&#13;
Center at 553-2345.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
staff&#13;
meeting&#13;
Thursday&#13;
2:00 PM&#13;
D 194LLC&#13;
Accent on Enrichment presents&#13;
NEW SHAKESPEARE&#13;
Company of San Francisco&#13;
'AS YOU LIKE IT'&#13;
Bp.rn, Mar. 6 Adm. $5&#13;
COMM ARTS THEATER&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
Tickets at Sears, Kenosha; Cook-Gere,&#13;
RacIne; Team, Elmwood Plaza; campus&#13;
Info Center.&#13;
P.A.B. FILM SERIES PRESENTS&#13;
ADMISSION '1.00 BRING A FRIEND!&#13;
aTCH-2Z&#13;
~.Jr~:ll\~Tt~:~~:.~~.&#13;
c5ta.ning dlta.n dI'tkin&#13;
Fri., Feb. 25, 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Sun., Feb. 27, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
UNION CINEMA THEATRE&#13;
SAT.&#13;
NITE&#13;
Union&#13;
Square&#13;
FEB.&#13;
26th&#13;
Adm.&#13;
$1.00&#13;
Guests&#13;
$1.25&#13;
•&#13;
*&#13;
MIXED DRINKS&#13;
AVAILABLE&#13;
*&#13;
IC-.h.·. m.......IOUIlillie ftC. h.lchl .:~&#13;
"Si- Il.II.££lii.&#13;
....wI -.elK" 654-3551&#13;
MAIN OFFICE. 3801-60th Street, Kenosha, WI.&#13;
'&#13;
:·. ·····&#13;
.&#13;
:::.: •&#13;
.·&#13;
·.&#13;
·.&#13;
.·&#13;
·.&#13;
····. . :·.\&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. 4W~ . n . t .&#13;
:. ,c ·'':ewe S&#13;
Wednesday, February 23&#13;
PAB Coffeehouse from 2 to 4 pm in the Union Cafeteria.&#13;
Boxing Club meeting at 2 P.M. in the Wrestling/Boxing room of the&#13;
Phy. Ed . Big. .&#13;
Wargamers meeting from {&gt; to 8 pm in CL 140.&#13;
Thursday, February 24&#13;
Senior Recruiting: Equity Concept Corp. during the day at Tallent&#13;
Hall. Call 2452 for more information.&#13;
Guest Vocal Duet Recital: Christine Flasch, soprano, and John Bills,&#13;
baritone at 8 pm in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
Friday, February 25&#13;
Last day to enroll in the Student Health Insurance program.&#13;
Earth Science Club: " The Penokean Orogeny, Wisconsin's Ancient&#13;
Mountain Range" by John Klasner, Western Illinois University at&#13;
12 noon in GR 113. Coffee and donuts will be served .&#13;
Chemistry-Life Science Seminar Series: "Folding and Unfolding of an&#13;
Enzyme" by Dr. F.W . Benz, School of Pharmacy, UW-Madison,&#13;
at 2 pm in CL 105.&#13;
Colloquium Talk: "Computation and Reconstruction of Reality" by&#13;
Prof. Joseph Weizenbaum, Massachusetts Institute of Technology ,&#13;
at 3:30 pm in CL 107. &lt;:;offee will be served at 3 pm in CL 111 .&#13;
Faculty Recital: Piano Duo, Stephen Swedish and August Wegner at&#13;
8 pm in the Comm Arts Theater,&#13;
Movie: "Catch 22" at 8 pm in the Union Cinema . Admission $1 .00.&#13;
Saturday, February 26&#13;
Young Person's Concert: Tim Bell and Jazz Ensemble at 2 pm in the&#13;
Comm Arts Theater. Admission is $1.00 for students and $2.00 for&#13;
adults&#13;
PAB Dance: "Disco Night" at 9 pm in Union Square . Admission charge.&#13;
Sunday, February 27&#13;
Wargamers meeting from 1 to 6 pm in CL 140.&#13;
Parkside Chamber Orchestra Concert, David Schripsema, conductor,&#13;
at 3·30 pm in the Comm Arts Theater&#13;
. Movie: "Catch 2~" at 7:30 pm in the Union Ci nema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Monday, February 28&#13;
Movie: "A Man For All Seasons" at 7: 30 pm at the Golden Randel le&#13;
in Racine.&#13;
Events must be into .Ranger by the Wednesday before publication.&#13;
An events form is now available in the Ranger office.&#13;
Landscaping course offered&#13;
Learning how to plan, design&#13;
and care for a new landscape or&#13;
add to an existing landscape will&#13;
be the featured topics at a&#13;
Landscape and Lawn Care&#13;
Program planned for March 3 at&#13;
7:30 p.m. at the Golden Rondelle&#13;
Theater, located at 14th and&#13;
Franklin Sts.&#13;
Tom Lieds, well-known landscape&#13;
architect and host of the&#13;
television program " Dig It" will&#13;
discuss and demonstrate how to&#13;
make a more pleasing and useful&#13;
landscape.&#13;
This program is offered free to&#13;
the publi c. Reservations and&#13;
{urther information can be·&#13;
obtained by calling the Rondelle&#13;
at 554-2154.&#13;
Swedish, Wegner play&#13;
Duo-pianists Stephen Swedish&#13;
and August Wegner of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
music faculty will present a free&#13;
public concert at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Friday, , Feb . 25 , in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Their program will include J.S.&#13;
Bach's Wachet auf (Sleepers&#13;
Awake) arranged by Lawrence&#13;
Rackley, who contributes some&#13;
20th Century additions to the&#13;
harmony, Variations on a Theme&#13;
by Haydn Qp. 56b by Brahms,&#13;
and three contempory works,&#13;
Poulenc's 1918 Sonata, Stravinsky's&#13;
Sonata written in 1943-44&#13;
and Copland's Danzon Cubano&#13;
written in 1942.&#13;
Swedish, who is an artist-inres&#13;
idence at Parkside, has&#13;
performed in solo recitals and&#13;
with major orchestras throughout&#13;
the U.S. and in Europe.&#13;
Wegner, a composer as well as&#13;
a performing artist, is an&#13;
assistant professor of music&#13;
theory and composition at Parkside.&#13;
&#13;
FLORIDA&#13;
(By NightCoach Air)&#13;
(From· Chicago)&#13;
DAYTONA ...... • 156.00&#13;
i TAMPA ........... '162.00&#13;
FT. LAUDERDALE ........ '182.00&#13;
MIAMI ........................ • 182.00&#13;
·';!! 1Conooh1'1 m1r-.olou1 little o,cope h1tchl i:Sf:i:&#13;
.,;- Ila llaccliia&#13;
f ... ffl tNJf'IKII 654-3551&#13;
MAIN OFFICE. 3801-60th Street, Kenosha, WI.&#13;
classifieds&#13;
For Sale: '76 Ford pick-up. In good&#13;
condition. Heavy duty half-ton. AM /FM&#13;
radio. For more information call John at&#13;
553-2287.&#13;
Guitars: 2 Gibson acoustics. $100.00 and&#13;
$125.00. Both made in mid '50's. 637-8017.&#13;
Wicker Love Seat and matching Nymph's&#13;
chair, $100.00. Wicker rocker $35. 637-8017.&#13;
All student organizations and clubs must&#13;
submit their Charters for approval by the&#13;
Senate by March 1 , 1977, if they wish to&#13;
receive Segregated Fees money. Contact&#13;
P.S.G.A. at WLLC 0193 immediately for&#13;
details. 553-2244.&#13;
For Sale: 2 snow tires S78x14, $30 or best&#13;
offer for the ~ir. Gall 886-5154.&#13;
Secretary for Student Government, must be&#13;
on Work-Study. 10 hours per W8!lk, pays&#13;
$2.50 per hour. Contact Kiyoko at WLLC&#13;
D193 or call 553-2244.&#13;
Wlckensteln, a phi losphically Interesting&#13;
cat (feline variety), is looking for lodginp&#13;
with compatible person(s). Gall 886-5154.&#13;
For Sale: Sr-50A calculator in good cond.&#13;
$30 or best offer. Gall 634-6215 after 6.&#13;
,·or Sale or Trade : One slightly used (Mode&#13;
1955) recreation vehicle. Never needs oil '.&#13;
can be used to transport people for just&#13;
about anything, including sacrificial virgins&#13;
to altars! Send al l inquiries to Box 129,&#13;
WLLC D197. Replies will be handled&#13;
discreetly.&#13;
Typing done. Reasonable rates. Gall Mona&#13;
., t 553-2295 or contact the Ranger office .&#13;
Jazz recital&#13;
Timothy Bell and the Parkside&#13;
Jazz Ensemble will present the&#13;
second in the series of Young&#13;
Persons' Concerts aC the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
this season at 2 p.m. on&#13;
Saturday , Feb. 26, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Admission for single concerts&#13;
is $1 for students and $2 for&#13;
adults. Tickets can be reserved&#13;
by calling the Parkside Information&#13;
Center at 553-2345.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
staff&#13;
meeting&#13;
Thursday&#13;
2:00 PM&#13;
D 194LLC&#13;
SAT.&#13;
NITE&#13;
'&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
'&#13;
~~~&#13;
7403 Lambe rton Road&#13;
Racine, Wiscon~in&#13;
Classes starting February 28, 1977&#13;
All Classes are Co-Ed&#13;
For more information call&#13;
414-639-5941&#13;
Sandy Herman Carol Hellrung&#13;
-- --&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE· SHOP&#13;
Home of the Submarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P .M.&#13;
2615 Washington "'•· 634-2373&#13;
Accent on Enrichment presents&#13;
NEW SHAKESPEARE&#13;
Company of San Francisco&#13;
'AS YOU LIKE IT1&#13;
8p~m. Mar. 6 Adm. $5&#13;
COMM ARTS THEATER&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
Tickets at Sears, Kenosha; Cook-Ger e,&#13;
Racine; Team, El1nNOod Plaza; campus&#13;
Info Center.&#13;
P.A.B. FILM SERIES PRESENTS&#13;
"CATl:11·22'&#13;
,;,fz;!jj .. . · . IS QUITE SIMPLV i(&gt;&gt; .. r· , ,, . r, THE BEST AMERICAN FILM . · l'VE SEEN THIS YEAR!"-~'."t~:i;;br.&#13;
c:8ta't'tin9 dlfan dl'tkin&#13;
Fri., Feb. 25, 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Sun., Feb. 27, ~:30 p.m.&#13;
UNION CINEMA THEATRE&#13;
ADMISSION s1 .00 BRING A FRIEND!&#13;
FEB.&#13;
26th&#13;
Adm. Union s1.oo&#13;
Square --~&#13;
ffiJn~@J&#13;
0U~CIJU 0 01.](]Jl][D STEREO · SYSTEM&#13;
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            <elementText elementTextId="66289">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66290">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
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