<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="2800" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://archives.uwp.edu/exhibits/show/rangernews/item/2800?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-03T04:21:00+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="3412">
      <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/decb341f6960e47c023dbcc59499cccb.pdf</src>
      <authentication>ca145e0cc4baf4ad01bd6fc0784a48ee</authentication>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="8">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="96">
        <name>Headline</name>
        <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="66308">
            <text>Journal Times levels cheap shot at UW-P&#13;
</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="97">
        <name>Issue</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="66309">
            <text>Volume 5, issue 20</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="95">
        <name>Series Number</name>
        <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="66310">
            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="1">
        <name>Text</name>
        <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="90020">
            <text>March 2, 1977&#13;
Vol. 5, No. 20&#13;
er It got so bad at the station&#13;
/l /l last Sunday. I couldn't even ()()&#13;
IJU sneak a beer from the cooler. V V&#13;
Had to get a pint at whiskey&#13;
and ride around in my truck.&#13;
-Bilty Carter&#13;
er&#13;
March 2, 1977&#13;
Vol. 5, No. 20&#13;
It got so bad at the station&#13;
ll /l last Sunday, I couldn 't even ()()&#13;
IJU sneak a beer from the cooler. V V&#13;
Had to get a pint of whiskey&#13;
and ride around in my truck .&#13;
-Billy Carter&#13;
Rangers blast Platteville .&#13;
Leartha Scott, Porkside's leading scorer, lays in on easy basket against UW-Platteville Monday night. The Rangers had&#13;
six players in double figures to win, 112 to 70. Parkside 's next playoff opponent is UW-Eau Claire, who they will play&#13;
tonight at Eau Claire. If the Rangers win, it will be the third year in a row they have gone to Kansas City to&#13;
compete in the NAIA Championships. Racine,s WRJN and Kenosha,s WLIP will be carrying the game live from Eau Claire.&#13;
More sports on page 8&#13;
*****************~**********+**********************************+****************&#13;
Student government elections are next week!&#13;
pages 3 &#13;
leditorial&#13;
Journa'i Times levels ,&#13;
cheap shot at UW-P&#13;
The Journal Times in Racine ran a special&#13;
series of articles about the quality of the&#13;
education at the University of Wisconsin-Madison&#13;
on Sunday, F'ebruary20. In an article titled Racine&#13;
area UW students grade professors, Journal&#13;
Times state bureau writer, Dennis Chaptman&#13;
quoted Richard Schneider, a Madison pre-med&#13;
student (who was enrolled in one class during&#13;
one of Parkside's summer sesslors to represent&#13;
the superiority of Madison professors over&#13;
Parkside's. Schneider was quoted. as saying&#13;
Parkside is a school of misfits, people that are&#13;
here becausethey couldn't make it elsewhere or&#13;
stuck here because of their location. The use of&#13;
Schneider's quote was a cheap shot at Parkside&#13;
and unfair representation of Richard Schneider's&#13;
actual feelings about Parkside and the quality of'&#13;
professors at the two schools.&#13;
RANGER contacted Schneider at home in&#13;
Madison. He said he was very surprised that&#13;
Chaptman quoted comments that Schneider&#13;
meant to be taken in a joking manner.&#13;
"I passed on some remarks about Parkside .ln&#13;
an innocent and jovial manner thinking these&#13;
comments were off the cuff.&#13;
"I put the matter out of my mind having faith&#13;
that the interviewer would use his discretion, that&#13;
is, to sort out my serious comments from my&#13;
jovial statements.&#13;
"Professors in Madison and Parkside are about&#13;
equal. I would say equal. I decided to go to&#13;
Madison because I'm a pre-med" and its just the&#13;
best place for me.&#13;
"The things printed in the paper (Journal Times)&#13;
really make me look bad. I have a lot of good&#13;
friends at Parkside. There is just a friendly rivalry&#13;
between the schools."&#13;
Schneider is right! There is a friendly rivalry&#13;
betweenthe schools in this area. Recently, at the&#13;
Ranger vs. Panther basketball game in Milwaukee,&#13;
there was almost the same amount of&#13;
applause for the Rangers as there was for' the&#13;
Panthers. A good part of the crowd consisted of&#13;
transfer students from Parkside. The entire crowd&#13;
was spirited and generous with cheers as the&#13;
Rangers won.&#13;
To pick a few comments made in jest about a&#13;
school that was not eventhe subject of the article&#13;
was in poor taste.&#13;
It's the right of every student to decide where&#13;
he or she wants to receive an education and&#13;
because that decision is somewhat subjective it&#13;
should not be extrapolated to serve the&#13;
amusement of a writer trying to spruce up an&#13;
article.&#13;
As far as a faculty comparison of UW-Madison&#13;
and Parkside, many administrators and faculty&#13;
have stated repeatedly that the quantity of&#13;
qualified academicians in the early 70's provided&#13;
Parkside with an excellent faculty that in other&#13;
periods of higher education would have been&#13;
lured by more prestigious institutions.&#13;
Among young professors, Timothy Bell, Russel&#13;
Jennings, Sam Wright, Henry Cole, Don&#13;
Kummings, Carol-Lee Saffioti, Peter Hoff, Dan&#13;
Little, Richard Pomazal, Bruce Weaver, Ron&#13;
Singer, Walter Ulbricht, just to name a few, are&#13;
well respected by students for their'expertlse and&#13;
would be spotllqhted on any university faculty.&#13;
Inspired and enthusiastic young Professors&#13;
mixed with older more experienced professors in&#13;
over forty million dollars worth of buildlnqs and&#13;
facilities, not yet ten years old, seemsItke a good&#13;
combination.&#13;
Parkside has qualities and problems that are&#13;
different from other universities with dormitories.&#13;
A discussion of the quality of education at&#13;
Parkside was not the intention of the Journal&#13;
Times article. They just gave Parkside some bad&#13;
press. RANGER extends an invitation to the&#13;
Journal Times to come out here and do a series&#13;
about the school that is right next door. A school&#13;
that has a bit more impact on the community than&#13;
a school over one hundred miles away.&#13;
"In the last five years Parkslde's pre-med program&#13;
has placed 75 to 80 percent of its students in&#13;
medical and dental schools. .&#13;
Our W rite:rs&#13;
Rob Hoffman, Chris Clausen, Mona Maillet,&#13;
Fred" Tenuta. Thomas Noten. Karen Putman,&#13;
Timothy d. Zuehlsdorf, 80b Jambois, Jami LaMar&#13;
Linda. Lasco. Douglas Edenhauser. 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 Swift&#13;
C'opy"Editor Rruce Wagner&#13;
New s Editor John McKloskey&#13;
'Feature Editor Wendy Millet&#13;
Sports Editor Jean Tenuta&#13;
Circulation Sue Marquardt&#13;
General Manager Thomas R. Cooper 553-2287&#13;
Advertising Manager John Gabriel 553.2287&#13;
Adverti~ing Sales Kathy Sabbath&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students 01 the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy artd content.&#13;
.:I editorial&#13;
Journa·1 Times levels I • '&#13;
cheap shot· at UW-P&#13;
The Journal Times in Racine ran a special&#13;
series of articles about the quality of the&#13;
education at the University of Wisconsin-Madison&#13;
on Sunday, F-'ebruary 20. In an article titled Racine&#13;
area UW students grade professors, Journal&#13;
Times state bureau writer, Dennis Chaptman&#13;
quoted Richard Schneider, a Madison pre-med&#13;
student (who was enrolled in one class during&#13;
one of Parkside's summer sessio~ to-represent&#13;
the superiority of Madison professors over&#13;
Parkside's. Schneider was quoted. as saying&#13;
Parkside is a school of misfits, people that are&#13;
here because they couldn't make it elsewhere or&#13;
stuck here because of their location. The use of&#13;
Schneider's quote was a cheap shot at Parkside&#13;
and unfair representation of Richard Schneider's&#13;
actual feelings about Parkside and the quality of·&#13;
professors at the two schools.&#13;
RANGER contacted Schneider at home in&#13;
Madison. He said he was very surprised that&#13;
Chaptman quoted comments that Schneider&#13;
meant to be taken in a joking manner.&#13;
"I passed on some remarks about Parkside in&#13;
an innocent and jovial manner thinking these&#13;
comments were off the cuff.&#13;
"I put the matter out of my mind having faith&#13;
that the interviewer would use his discretion, that&#13;
is, to sort out my serious comments from my&#13;
jovial statements.&#13;
"Professors in Madison and Parkside are about&#13;
equal. I would say equal. I decided to go to&#13;
Madison because I'm a pre-med* and its just the&#13;
best place for me.&#13;
"The things printed in the paper (Journal Times)&#13;
really make me look bad. I have a lot of good&#13;
friends at Parkside. There is just a friendly rivalry&#13;
between the schools."&#13;
Schneider is right! There is a friendly rivalry&#13;
between the schools in this area. Recently, at the&#13;
Ranger vs. Panther basketball game in Milwaukee,&#13;
there was almost the same amount of&#13;
applause for the Rangers as there was for · the&#13;
Panthers. A good part of the crowd consisted of&#13;
transfer students from Parkside. The entire crowd&#13;
•&#13;
was spirited and generous with cheers as the&#13;
Rangers won.&#13;
To pick a few comments made in jest about a&#13;
school that was not even the subject of the article&#13;
was in poor taste.&#13;
It's the right of every student to decide where&#13;
he or she ~ants to receive an education and&#13;
because that decision is somewhat subjective it&#13;
should not be extrapolated to serve the&#13;
amusement of a writer trying to spruce up an&#13;
article.&#13;
As far as a faculty comparison of UW-Madison&#13;
and Parkside, many administrators and faculty&#13;
have stated repeatedly that the quantity of&#13;
qualified academicians in the early 70's provided&#13;
Parkside with an excellent faculty that in other&#13;
periods of higher education would have been&#13;
lured by more prestigious institutions.&#13;
Among young professors, Timothy Bell, Russel&#13;
Jennings, Sam Wright, Henry Cole, Don&#13;
Kummings, Carol-Lee Saffioti, Peter Hoff, Dan&#13;
Little, Richard Pomazal, Bruce Weaver, Ron&#13;
$inger, Walter Ulbricht, just to name a few, are&#13;
well respected by students for theit expertise and&#13;
would be spotlighted on any university faculty.&#13;
Inspired and enthusiastic young professors&#13;
mixed with older more experienced professors in&#13;
over forty million dollars worth of buildings and&#13;
facilities, not yet ten years old, seems'like a good&#13;
combination.&#13;
Parkside has qualities and problems that are&#13;
different from other universities with dormitories.&#13;
A discussion of the quality of education at&#13;
Parkside was not the intention of the Journal&#13;
Times article. They just gave Parkside some bad&#13;
press. RANGER extends an invitation to the&#13;
Journal Times to come out here and do a series&#13;
about the school that is right next door. A school&#13;
that has a bit more impact on the community than&#13;
a school over one hundred miles away.&#13;
*In the last five years Parkside's pre-med program&#13;
has placed 75 to 80 percent of its students in&#13;
medical and dental schools. ·&#13;
Our Write.rs&#13;
Bob Holtman, Chris Clausen, Mona Maillet, Fred.Tenuta, Thomas Nolen, Karen Putman, Timothy J. Zuehlsdorf, Bob Jambois, Jami LaMar&#13;
Linda Lasco, Douglas Edenhauser, Phil Hermann,&#13;
Michael Murphy Laura Lacock, Mary N. Gehring&#13;
Cheryl Powalisz&#13;
P hotographers&#13;
D~an C. Rothenmaier&#13;
Editor Philip L. Livingston 553-2295&#13;
Art Director Vanessa Swift C-opy Editor Bruce Wagner&#13;
News Editor John McKloskey · Feature Editor Wendy Miller&#13;
Sports Editor Jean Tenuta&#13;
C.i.rcula tion Sue Marquardt&#13;
General Manager Thomas R. Cooper 553-2287&#13;
Advertising Manager John Gabriel 553-2287&#13;
Advertising Salt'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 arld content .&#13;
. &#13;
Bowden-Folsom announce&#13;
PSGA candidacy&#13;
To the Students:&#13;
I would like to announce my&#13;
candidacy for re-election to the&#13;
position of President. of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association. Sentor Rick Folsom&#13;
has agreed to run as my&#13;
Vice-President.&#13;
We believe that we can offer&#13;
the students of Parks ide a team&#13;
that has the most experience and&#13;
dedication of any ticket of&#13;
candidates that will be running&#13;
for executive positions. Rick is&#13;
the Undecided Divisional Senator,&#13;
the Chairperson of the&#13;
Senate Ways and Means&#13;
Committee, the Chairperson of&#13;
the Union Operating Board, the&#13;
United Council Education Committee&#13;
representative from&#13;
Parkside, a member of this year's&#13;
Segregated Fees Committee, and&#13;
a .member of the Senate Select&#13;
Committee on Budget Priorities&#13;
for the coming year.&#13;
I have one year's experience in&#13;
the office of President. One of&#13;
the traditional problems of any&#13;
student government is the lack&#13;
of continuity from year to year in&#13;
the membership of the executive&#13;
and legislative positions. I am&#13;
running for re-election because I&#13;
believe that with my experience&#13;
of the past year I can alleviate&#13;
some of the problem of lack of&#13;
continuity. I know my job!&#13;
Rick and I are opposed to&#13;
parties and will - not see.k or&#13;
accept any slates. Parties tend to&#13;
be cliques of special interest&#13;
groups and organizations and&#13;
leave no room for individuals to&#13;
think or act independently.&#13;
Student Government must rise&#13;
above petty special interest and&#13;
self-interest in order to serve all&#13;
students and not the SELECT&#13;
FEW. We offer a non-partisan&#13;
executive ticket.&#13;
I hope that students will vote&#13;
for Rick and I on March 9 and 10.&#13;
We believe that the Senate will&#13;
have to become the strongest&#13;
representative body of the&#13;
students within Student Government.&#13;
The present Senate has&#13;
started to move in that direction.&#13;
We will-support the Senate. They&#13;
(the Senators) are your representatives.&#13;
You and they will not be&#13;
muffled by the Bowden-Folsom&#13;
ticket.&#13;
Vote, please, Bowden-Folsom&#13;
on March 9 or 10.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden,&#13;
Candidate for&#13;
Re-Election as&#13;
President&#13;
Rick Folsom, Candidate&#13;
for Vice-President&#13;
Tutlewski pledges&#13;
to serve&#13;
,&#13;
Dea; Editor;&#13;
This letter is to announce my&#13;
candidacy for the office of&#13;
president of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association.&#13;
There seems to be an&#13;
illfounded idea here at Parkside;&#13;
that people elected to student&#13;
government 'know' what students&#13;
want.&#13;
My campaign, and the&#13;
presidency if elected, are&#13;
founded on exactly the opposite&#13;
idea. There is a vast untapped&#13;
source of information on this&#13;
campus,j:he student body itself,&#13;
which I intend to make full use&#13;
of.&#13;
My plan: 1. General interest&#13;
surveys to determind what&#13;
students are thinking - what's&#13;
important. 2. 'Specific polls on&#13;
major issues as they arise.&#13;
3. Advisors from different interest&#13;
groups and divisions on&#13;
campus. 4. Further pursuit of&#13;
programs such as the proposed&#13;
outpost. S. Personal availability&#13;
to any student with a problem.&#13;
6. Regular meetings with Chancellor&#13;
Guskin. Implementation&#13;
of this plan will provide me with&#13;
solid information and a much&#13;
needed knowledge-base to-draw&#13;
upon when making decisions.&#13;
lately there has been a lot of&#13;
friction between P.S.G.A. and&#13;
the Segregated Fees Comm. due&#13;
to sections of the constitution&#13;
which are not clearly defined. In&#13;
order to prevent such problems&#13;
from arising again, in Seg. Fees&#13;
or anywhere else, I wi II work to&#13;
streamline and clearly define any&#13;
ambiguous sections of the&#13;
P.S.G.A. constitution.&#13;
If elected, J promise to serve&#13;
Parkside students, not dictate to&#13;
them. I wi II work to support and&#13;
implement any worthwhile&#13;
projects on campus. I will also&#13;
continue my current efforts on&#13;
the Book CO&lt;JP and with the&#13;
University Bookstore Comm.&#13;
which is investigating alternative&#13;
bookstore possibilities due to the&#13;
text shortage problem with Follet&#13;
Corp. this year.&#13;
I promise to work diligently to&#13;
achieve . my goals and have&#13;
confidence that P.S.G.A. can&#13;
become an efficient and truly&#13;
representative organization&#13;
through hard work and intercampus&#13;
cooperation.&#13;
I ask your support for myself&#13;
and Harvey Hedden, my Vice&#13;
Presidential running mate, in the&#13;
upcoming P.S.G.A. elections.&#13;
Respectfully.&#13;
"Rusty" A. Tutlewski&#13;
-Gripes·&#13;
To Whom it may concern:&#13;
Oh, sure plenty of ashtrays&#13;
for the smokers, but 1-get real&#13;
tobacco. flavor from chewln"!&#13;
High Time for a spittoon or two&#13;
to be installed.&#13;
Skoal!&#13;
R.A. Horton&#13;
WM. G. Praninsky&#13;
Dear Horton and Praninsky:&#13;
I took up your problem with&#13;
Prof. Spitz of the Parkside&#13;
smoking board. He suggested a&#13;
Pcrta-sptttoon! They come in&#13;
three sizes to accomodate the&#13;
subtle spit, the sociable spit, and&#13;
the spit supreme (which comes&#13;
equipped with the economical&#13;
spit-saver for the cheap-chewer!&#13;
To each his own! A'snuff said!?!&#13;
Gripe Gripper&#13;
Cooper runs&#13;
for SUFAC&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I wish to announce my&#13;
candidacy for the Segregated&#13;
University Fees Allocation&#13;
Committee to the students of&#13;
UW.-Parkside. The SUFAC,&#13;
Committee is one of the most&#13;
important university committees&#13;
that affect the student's directly,&#13;
it is the committee that&#13;
recommends where approximately&#13;
$116.00 of your tuition&#13;
money goes. The last SUFAC&#13;
Committee was made up of only&#13;
two students that were elected&#13;
by the students, the rest were&#13;
either appointed or sit on the&#13;
committee because of positions&#13;
they hold else where in the&#13;
university. It is also interesting to&#13;
note that there were three&#13;
vacancies on the committee. I&#13;
would like to help change that.&#13;
The Seg Fee Committee is a&#13;
vital part of every student on&#13;
campus and should be represented&#13;
by elected members of the&#13;
student body, not appointed&#13;
ones. An elected member has the&#13;
feeling of responsibility to the&#13;
students whom elected him&#13;
whereas an appointed member&#13;
does not have to answer to&#13;
anyone. I wish to be elected by&#13;
students to have that responsibility,&#13;
the responsibility, to&#13;
....represent the interest of the&#13;
students.&#13;
Thomas Richard Cooper&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This is to announce my intent&#13;
to run for reelection to the office&#13;
of Vice President of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association,&#13;
Inc. I am grateful to have&#13;
been able to serve in this office&#13;
over the-fast five months. Yet I&#13;
have also observed some&#13;
significant problems of the&#13;
present administration that Ifeel&#13;
preclude it from effectively&#13;
leading student government for&#13;
another term. For months I have&#13;
watched the rifts and factions&#13;
within student government grow&#13;
deeper and multiply, all at the&#13;
expense of many truly interested&#13;
students. Perhaps this is inherent&#13;
to any student government, but I&#13;
don't feel that we should&#13;
condone or encourage it. The&#13;
most important goal of student&#13;
government will always be&#13;
increasing student participation.&#13;
But hfstorv tells us that we&#13;
I&#13;
. ····· .&#13;
. :.:' .: views.:.:.....:&#13;
Hedden asks students&#13;
participate and vote&#13;
cannot expect to "etain those&#13;
students if they view student&#13;
government as an arena for&#13;
political gladiators. What is&#13;
needed then is a government&#13;
willing to recognize diversity in&#13;
students and their views and&#13;
strive to work with them, not&#13;
defeat them. We must utilize the&#13;
sum of our human resources to&#13;
produce a government that&#13;
represents and serves the&#13;
students. With my running mate&#13;
Rusty Tutlewski, I hope to be&#13;
able to achieve my own&#13;
potential toward accomplishing&#13;
this goal.&#13;
I hope that I· deserve the&#13;
students' support on March 9&#13;
and 10 and even more&#13;
importantly, that the student&#13;
body will actively participate in&#13;
this election.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
Fine Arts Division s&#13;
Drornctlc Arts Discipline&#13;
Presents&#13;
"The merchant"&#13;
b!:J Ploutus&#13;
(0. Roman Comedy)&#13;
Illorch 9. 10. 11. 1977&#13;
CA Studio&#13;
4:30&#13;
B&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Admission Free&#13;
limited Seoting Hvotloble&#13;
Authorized&#13;
ZENITH-SANYO-NIKKO-LLOYDS&#13;
The Mo.I Sophi.'ica'ed Equipment&#13;
To Serve You Beller&#13;
• Sweep-markerGeneratorprovides some alignment accuracy as factory&#13;
• Transistor checker 99% accurate Good bed&#13;
• Tube checker - most sophisticateddesign available&#13;
• Audia-frequencygenerator, Stereo repair - can provide distortion &amp; power ratings&#13;
• Oscilloscope- provides visual indicationsof "invisible" problems&#13;
• literature and ports avoilablecountry wide by phone&#13;
DOUGLAS AVENUE&#13;
WISCONSIN 53402&#13;
639-0951&#13;
'\.&#13;
Bowden-Folsom announce&#13;
PSGA can·didacy&#13;
To the Students:&#13;
I would like to announce my&#13;
candidacy for re-election to the&#13;
position of President . of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association. Sentor Rick Folsom&#13;
has agreed to run as my&#13;
Vice-President .&#13;
We believe that we can offer&#13;
the students of Parkside a team&#13;
that has the most experience and&#13;
dedication of any ticket of&#13;
candidates that will be running&#13;
for executive positions. Ri"ck is&#13;
the Undecided Divisional Senator,&#13;
the Chairperson of the&#13;
Senate Ways and Means&#13;
Committee, the Chairperson of&#13;
the Union Operating Board, the&#13;
United Council Education Committee&#13;
representative from&#13;
Parkside, a member of this year's&#13;
Segregated Fees Committee, and&#13;
a .member of the Senate Select&#13;
Committee on Budget Priorities&#13;
for the coming year.&#13;
I have one year's experience in&#13;
the office of President. One of&#13;
the traditional problems of any&#13;
student government is the lack&#13;
of continuity from year to year in&#13;
the membership of the executive&#13;
and legislative positions . I am&#13;
running for re-election because I&#13;
believe that with my experience&#13;
of the past year I can alleviate&#13;
some of the problem of lack of&#13;
continuity. I know my job!&#13;
Rick and I are opposed to&#13;
parties and will not see-k or&#13;
accept any slates . Parties tend to&#13;
be cliques of special interest&#13;
groups and organizations and&#13;
leave no room for individuals to&#13;
think or act independently.&#13;
Student Government must rise&#13;
above petty special interest and&#13;
self-interest in order to serve all&#13;
st1-1dents and not the SELECT&#13;
FEW. We offer a non-partisan&#13;
executive ticket.&#13;
I hope that students will vote&#13;
for Rick and I on March 9 and 10.&#13;
We believe that the Senate will&#13;
have to become the strongest&#13;
representative body of the&#13;
students within Student Government.&#13;
The present Senate has&#13;
started to move in that direction .&#13;
We will -support the Senate. They&#13;
(the Senators) are your representatives&#13;
. You and they will not be&#13;
muffled by the Bowden-Folsom&#13;
ticket.&#13;
Vote, please, Bowden-Folsom&#13;
on March 9 or 10.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden ,&#13;
Candidate for&#13;
Re-Election as&#13;
President&#13;
Rick Folsom, Candidate&#13;
for Vice-President&#13;
Tutlewski pledges&#13;
to serve&#13;
Dear Editor;&#13;
This letter is to announce my&#13;
candidacy for the office of&#13;
president of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association .&#13;
There seems to be an&#13;
illfounded idea here at Parkside;&#13;
that people elected to student&#13;
government 'know' what students&#13;
want.&#13;
My campaign, and the&#13;
presidency if elected, are&#13;
founded on exactly the opposite&#13;
idea. There is a vast untapped&#13;
source of information on this&#13;
campus, the student body itself,&#13;
which I -intend to make full use&#13;
of.&#13;
My plan : 1. General interest&#13;
surveys to determind what&#13;
students are thinking - what's&#13;
important. 2. 'Specific polls on&#13;
major issues as they arise.&#13;
3. Advisors from different interest&#13;
groups and divisions on&#13;
campus. 4. Further pursuit of&#13;
programs such as the proposed&#13;
outpost. 5. Personal availability&#13;
to any student with a problem .&#13;
6. Regular meetings with Chancellor&#13;
Guskin . Implementation&#13;
of this plan will provide me with&#13;
solid information and a much&#13;
needed knowledge-base to--draw&#13;
upon when making decisions.&#13;
Lately there has been a lot of&#13;
friction between P.S.G.A. and&#13;
the Segregated Fees Comm. due&#13;
to sections of the constitution&#13;
which are not clearly defined . In&#13;
order to prevent such problems&#13;
from arising again, in Seg. Fees&#13;
or anywhere else, I will work to&#13;
streamline and clearly define any&#13;
ambiguous sections of the&#13;
P .S.G .A. constitution .&#13;
If elected, I promise to serve&#13;
Parkside students, not dictate to,&#13;
them . I will work to support and&#13;
implement any worthwhile&#13;
projects on campus . I will also&#13;
continue my current efforts on&#13;
the Book Co-op and with the&#13;
University Bookstore Comm .&#13;
which is investigati-ng alternative&#13;
bookstore possibilities due to the&#13;
text shortage problem with Fol let&#13;
Corp . this year.&#13;
I promise to work diligently to&#13;
achieve . my goals and have&#13;
confidence that P.S.G.A. can&#13;
become an efficient and truly&#13;
representative organization&#13;
through hard work and intercampus&#13;
cooperation.&#13;
I ask your support for myself&#13;
and Harvey Hedden , my Vice&#13;
Presidential running mate, in the&#13;
upcoming P.S.G.A. elections.&#13;
Respectfully, '&#13;
"Rusty" A. Tutlewski&#13;
To Whom it may concern:&#13;
Oh, sure ... plenty of ashtrays&#13;
for the smokers, but I- get real&#13;
tobacco- flavor from chewin'!&#13;
High Time for a spittoon or two&#13;
to be installed .&#13;
Skoal!&#13;
R.A. Horton&#13;
WM. G. Praninsky&#13;
Dear Horton and Praninsky:&#13;
I took up your problem with&#13;
Prof. Spitz of the Parkside&#13;
smoking board. He suggested a&#13;
Porta-spittoon! They come in&#13;
th.ree sizes to accomodate the&#13;
subtle spit, the sociable spit, and&#13;
the spit supreme (which comes&#13;
equipped with the economical&#13;
spit-saver for the cheap-chewer!&#13;
To each his own! A'snuff said!?!&#13;
Gripe Gripper&#13;
Cooper runs&#13;
for SUFAC&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I wish to announce my&#13;
candidacy for the Segregated&#13;
University Fees Allocation&#13;
Committee to the students of&#13;
U .W .-Parkside. The SUFAC&#13;
Committee is one of the most&#13;
important university committees&#13;
that affect the student's directly,&#13;
it is the committee that&#13;
recommends where approximately&#13;
$116.00 of your tuition&#13;
money goes. The last SUFAC&#13;
Committee was made up of only&#13;
two students that were elected&#13;
by the students , the rest were&#13;
either appointed or sit on the&#13;
committee because of positions&#13;
they hold else where in the&#13;
university. It is also interesting to&#13;
note that there were three&#13;
vacancies on the committee. I&#13;
would like to help change that.&#13;
The Seg Fee Committee is a&#13;
vital part of every student on&#13;
campus and should be represented&#13;
by elected members of the&#13;
student body, not appointed&#13;
ones . An elected member has the&#13;
feeling of responsibility to the&#13;
students whom elected him&#13;
whereas an appointed member&#13;
does not have to answer to&#13;
anyone. I wish to be elected by&#13;
students to have that responsibility&#13;
, the responsibility , to&#13;
, represent the interest of the&#13;
students .&#13;
Thomas Richard Cooper&#13;
Hedden asks students&#13;
participate and vote&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This is to announce my intent&#13;
to run for reelection to the office&#13;
of Vice President of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association,&#13;
Inc. I am grateful to have&#13;
been able to serve in this office&#13;
over the last five months. Yet I&#13;
have also observed some&#13;
significant problems of the&#13;
present administration that I feel&#13;
preclude it from effectively&#13;
leading student government for&#13;
another term . For months I have&#13;
watched the rifts and factions&#13;
within student government grow&#13;
deeper and multiply, all at the&#13;
expense of many truly interested&#13;
students . Perhaps this is inherent&#13;
to any student government, but I&#13;
don't feel that we should&#13;
condone or encourage it . The&#13;
most important goal of student&#13;
government will always be&#13;
increasing student participation .&#13;
But hi~tory tells us that we&#13;
cannot expect to retain those&#13;
students if they view student&#13;
government as an arena for&#13;
political gladiators. What is&#13;
needed then is a government&#13;
willing to recognize diversity in&#13;
students and their views and&#13;
strive to work with them, not&#13;
defeat them . We must utilize the&#13;
sum of our human resources to&#13;
produce a government that&#13;
represents and serves the&#13;
students . With my running mate&#13;
Rusty Tutlewski, I hope to be&#13;
able to achieve my own&#13;
potential toward accomplishing&#13;
this goal .&#13;
I hope that I deserve the&#13;
students' support on March 9&#13;
and 10 and even more&#13;
importantly, that the student&#13;
body will actively participate in&#13;
this election&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
Fine Arts Division &amp;&#13;
Dro.mo.tic Arts Discipline&#13;
Presents&#13;
"Th·e merchont"&#13;
b_y Plautus&#13;
(o Romon Comedy)&#13;
morch Q, 10, 11, 1977&#13;
CA Studio B&#13;
4:30 p.m.&#13;
Admission Free&#13;
limited Seo.ting Avo.ilo.ble&#13;
L ~'=-:::=:;::.....----~--&#13;
METR0PoL1TAN TV SERVICE&#13;
Authorized&#13;
ZENITH-SANYO-NIKKO-LLOYDS&#13;
The Mo,t Sophi,ticated Equipment&#13;
To erve You Better&#13;
• Sweep-marker Generator provides some alignment accuracy as factory&#13;
• Transistor checker 99% accurate Good bed&#13;
• Tube checker - most sophisticated design available&#13;
• Audi;-frequency generator, Stereo repair - con provide distortion &amp; power ratings&#13;
• Oscilloscope - provides visual indications of "invisible" problems&#13;
• Literature and ports available country wide by phone&#13;
5402 DOUGLAS AVENUE&#13;
RACINE, WISCONSIN 53402&#13;
LAWRENCE YOUNG PHONE 639-0951&#13;
L ~ &#13;
(&#13;
;:.r .' • .electlons&#13;
Pete Strutynski - Rusty Tutlewski&#13;
•&#13;
At presstime the following&#13;
individuals have withdrawn&#13;
petitions from PSCA to run for&#13;
offices OR the March 9 ballot.&#13;
Allocations Committee&#13;
Neal Nicklaus&#13;
Thomas R. "cooper&#13;
John Gabriel&#13;
Dan Nielsen&#13;
Glen D. Christensen&#13;
Kai Christian Nail&#13;
Darrell Falcon&#13;
Senate&#13;
Douglas Edenhauser&#13;
Terry Zuehlsdorf&#13;
Timothy Zuehlsdorf&#13;
Jeffrey K. LeMere&#13;
Francis Nwokike&#13;
Dave Cramer&#13;
Lance Frickensmith&#13;
Mark Nickel&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
HOllie of the Suhlllarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington"'e. 634-2373&#13;
P.A.B. FILM SERIES PRESENTS&#13;
HIS CIA CODE NAME IS CONDOR.&#13;
IN THE NEXT SEVENTY-TWO HOURS&#13;
ALMOST EVERYONE HE TRUSTS&#13;
Will TRY TO Kill HIM.&#13;
~ ..... AlllltC)frfe 11'ECHNIOOl.()III.&#13;
FILMS INCORPORATED .--- "~"'I(ft]&#13;
STARRING ROBfRT RfDFORD&#13;
FRI., MARCH4, 8:00 P.M.&#13;
SUN., MARCH6, 7:30 P.M.&#13;
UNION CINfMA THfATRf&#13;
I&#13;
..&#13;
I&#13;
I~&#13;
his letter to ~he editor&#13;
Candidates speak out&#13;
Rick Folsom Rusty A. Tutlewski decisions.- This plan would also&#13;
candidate for Vice-President&#13;
*&#13;
candidate for President serve to notify students or&#13;
"I think that the three mo~t ,.. special interest groups of&#13;
urgent problems facing student: "I am totally' against upcoming issues that might&#13;
government are: 1) factional- affect them. •&#13;
I h h h P.S.G.A.s current methods of ism, 2) re ations ip Wit t e "'f" "My plan: 1. General interest&#13;
administration, 3) Communica-&#13;
*"&#13;
leadership. I have seen no efforts *' what-so-ever to involve students surveys to determine what&#13;
tion with the students.&#13;
*"&#13;
students are thinking _ what's&#13;
"The recent development of&#13;
*"&#13;
in the functions of their&#13;
h d h ~ government, and I view this as important. 2. Specific polls on parties ere on campus an t e .....&#13;
*&#13;
one of the chief duties of the major issues as they arise. move to make the Allocations ....&#13;
,.. 'ff,'ce of President. 3. Advisors from different inter- Committee an autonomous body *- 0&#13;
h&#13;
~ "I can't help but ask how it's est groups and divisions on are both movements in t e .....&#13;
direction of factionalism. This&#13;
*"&#13;
possible to make decisions in the campus. 4. Further pursuit of&#13;
will split student government up': best interests of the students, programs such as the proposed&#13;
and the administration will&#13;
*&#13;
when you don't even attempt to outpost. 5. Letters of -notifica-&#13;
*&#13;
f d h t th . ttl tion on issuesrelating to clubs or slowly but surely pick them off .. In outw a ose In eres s are. Indlvidual areas. 6. Personal&#13;
one by one. ... "If elected I would implement&#13;
f I h h&#13;
*&#13;
a plan designed to provide me availability to any student with a "I ee t at to ave a strong, ~&#13;
effective student government it&#13;
*&#13;
with solid information and a problem or suggestion. 7. Regmust&#13;
be a unified student&#13;
*'&#13;
much needed knowledge base to ular meetings with Chancellor&#13;
government, I am opposed to: draw upon when making Cuskin"&#13;
parties or the Seg Fees&#13;
* ***** *****************************&#13;
Committee becoming a separate&#13;
*&#13;
place in the final decision. A..&#13;
entity. I think that Allocations ~ PeteStrutynski total separation of power can&#13;
Committee should continue to ... candidate for President only lead to enmity on the ,part&#13;
be under the control of P.s.G.A. ,.. of the excluded interest and this&#13;
"The relationship between ~ "I am thirty yearsold and have would not be conductive to&#13;
student government and the&#13;
*'&#13;
been at Parksidefor four years. I effective decision making.&#13;
administration is presently a&#13;
*&#13;
am a veteran of the U.S. Navy "The Chancellor presently has&#13;
good one, and will only continue ~ and have served in leadership input through a budget represenif&#13;
student government continues .. positions within that organiza- tative but perhaps this should be&#13;
to sit down and talk things out, *"tion. I am presently Vice- enhanced through granting of&#13;
and not threaten to call in the : Pre~i?~nt of the P.arkside voting regents to this member.&#13;
Regents or TV6 every time the&#13;
*"&#13;
Activities Board and Chairman of, The PSCA has the appointive&#13;
price of beer jumps a nickel. *" the Allocations Committee. I am power over members, but I feel&#13;
"Probably the biggest problem : a.declared ma.jor in Communica- that the PSGA President should&#13;
facing student government is ,.. nons and English and am 6 hours have a designated seat so that&#13;
communications with the stu- ... short of a major in Political PSGA input could be assured.&#13;
dents. Implementing programs ~ Science, as yet undeclared. This same method should be&#13;
such as the outpost, having Jt "The Allocations Committee used with other important&#13;
executive officers and Senators&#13;
*'&#13;
should be subject to both the student organizations council,&#13;
in the P.S.G.A.Office as much as ~ Chancellor and PSGA because Parkside Activities' Board, Ranger&#13;
possible and continuing such&#13;
*'&#13;
each of those interests has a and other groups.&#13;
things as Contact articles, ~&#13;
*********************************&#13;
Newsletters and the excellent&#13;
*'&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden Advocates. Students need somecoverage&#13;
the RANGERhas given ~ candidate for Pres.ident. where to go 'to get .the straight&#13;
P.S.G.A. lately should help&#13;
*&#13;
"After the past year In office, I story about Parkside. If reo&#13;
alleviate this problem. ,.. have found that the students at elected, I will commit all of my&#13;
Horvey Hedden's stotement is in ~ Parkside for the most part feel energy and my past year's&#13;
:+ estranged from the flow of experience to training all&#13;
student services. They don't members of P.S.G.A. to be&#13;
know where to go to get help. Student Advocates. If a student&#13;
With the elimination of the approaches any Senator or&#13;
student peer-to-peer counselors Executive officer of Student&#13;
recently students feel even more Government, that individual will&#13;
isolated. be able to help them, direct&#13;
"Student government is emin- them, Inform them and/or fight&#13;
ently suited to provide the for them. I want to see&#13;
students of Parks ide with P.S.G.A. provide advocates who&#13;
information and help in working care and who know. In this way,&#13;
their way through the massive, no scudent will feel that. they&#13;
confusing and often oppressive must be a member of a select&#13;
bureaucracy that exists here. The few elite organizations or parties&#13;
most urgent need that I feel in order to- get help.&#13;
faces P·.S.G.A.is that of Student&#13;
n&#13;
dU&#13;
ill&#13;
~n&#13;
T&#13;
ICl&#13;
BROWN BAG&#13;
/&#13;
GET-TOGETHER . FOR&#13;
WOmEN STUD"ENTS&#13;
TImE"&#13;
IV&#13;
o&#13;
1st. Get-Together Wed. morch 9th.&#13;
ot Union 207&#13;
"HOW TO GET mORE OUT OF YOUR&#13;
Let's find out&#13;
Just drop in onytlme between&#13;
11:30-1:30&#13;
BRING YOUR LUNCH AND JOIN US&#13;
FREE COFFEE&#13;
With this Coupon and a&#13;
$5.00 purchase you get&#13;
a Free Plant&#13;
FOR mORE INFO CALL Connie Cummings&#13;
3&#13;
o~&#13;
n&#13;
::r&#13;
:D&#13;
Q.&#13;
Q.&#13;
r---------·-----~&#13;
COUPON&#13;
553-2008&#13;
,.&#13;
., Pete Strutynski -&#13;
At presstime the following&#13;
individuals have withdrawn&#13;
petitions from PSGA to run for&#13;
offices on the March 9 ballot.&#13;
Rusty Tutlewski&#13;
Senate Allocations Committee&#13;
Douglas Edenhauser&#13;
Terry Zuehlsdorf&#13;
Timothy Zuehlsdorf&#13;
Jeffrey K. LeMere&#13;
Francis Nwokike&#13;
Dave Cramer&#13;
Lance Frickensmith&#13;
Mark Nickel&#13;
Neal Nicklaus&#13;
Thomas R. ·cooper&#13;
John Gabriel&#13;
Dan Nielsen&#13;
Glen D. Christensen&#13;
Kai Christian Nall&#13;
Darrell Falcon&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
'&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington /we. 634-2373&#13;
P .A.B. FILM SERIES PRESENTS&#13;
HIS CIA CODE NAME IS CONDOR.&#13;
IN THE NEXT SEVENTY-TWO HOURS&#13;
ALMOST EVERYONE HE TRUSTS&#13;
WILL TRY TO KILL HIM.&#13;
~ MNAIIISIQHO / T£CHNICOt.Ofl•&#13;
FILMS INCORPORATED A-OUNUE~ASE ,~~J&#13;
STARRING ROBERT REDFORD&#13;
FRI., MARCH 4, 8:00 P .M.&#13;
SUN., MARCH 6, 7 :30 P .M.&#13;
UNION. CINEMA THEATRE&#13;
I'&#13;
I&#13;
Harvey Hedden&#13;
-&#13;
Candidates -speak out&#13;
Rick Folsom . d · · . Th . I Id I . . . Rusty A Tutlewski ec1s1ons. 1s p an wou a so candidate for V1ce-Pres1dent * · . ff t d t " I think that the three mo.st * candidate for President serve_ to no I Y s u en s or . * special interest groups of&#13;
urgent problems facing student ..._ II . t upcom·ing issues tha.t might 1) f · I ~ "I am tota y • agains government are: act1ona - * affect them . 2) I h. · h h ..._ P.S.G .A.s current methods of ism, re ations 1P wit t e ~ "My plan: 1. General interest d · · · 3) c · lt leadership. I have seen no efforts a min1strat1on, ommunica- ..._ surveys to determine what · · h h d ~ what-so-€ver to involve students t1on wit t e stu ents. * students are thinking - what's&#13;
"The recent development of * in the .functions of their · h d h lt government, and I view this as important. 2. Specific polls on parties ere on campus an t e ..._ . . h move to make the Allocations * one of the chief duties of the major issues as t ey arise.&#13;
Committee an autonomous body lt- tfice of President. 3. Advisors from different inter-&#13;
..._ "I ' h I b t k h 't' est groups and divisions on are both movements in the ~ cant e P u as ow I s&#13;
direction of factionalism . This J possible to make decisions in the campus. 4. Further pursuit of&#13;
will split student government up * best interests of the students, programs such as the proposed&#13;
..._ h d 't attempt to outpost. 5. Letters of ·notifica- and the administration will ~ w en you on even&#13;
slowly but surely pick them off : find out what those in:erests are! tion on issues relating to clubs or&#13;
one by one . * "If elected I would implement individual areas. 6. Personal&#13;
" I feel that to have a strong lt a plan designed to provide me availability to any student with a&#13;
effective student government it : with solid information and a problem or suggestion. 7. Regmust&#13;
be a unified student * much needed knowledge base to ular meetings with Chancellor&#13;
government . I am opposed to : draw upon when making Guskin ."&#13;
parties or the Seg Fees * ***** ***************************** Committee becoming a separate * place in the final decision. A&#13;
entity . I think that Allocations t Pete Strutynski total separation of power can&#13;
Committee should continue to )4- candidate for President only lead to enmity on the part&#13;
be under the control of P.S.G.A. * of the excluded interest and th is&#13;
" The relationship between : " I am thirty years old and have would not be conductive to&#13;
student government and the * been at Parkside for four years . I effective decision .making.&#13;
administration is presently a lt am a veteran of the U.S. Navy " The Chancellor presently has&#13;
good one, and will only continue : and have served in leadership input through a budget represenif&#13;
student goverr:iment continues * positions within that organiza- tative but perhaps this should be&#13;
to sit down and talk things out, lt tion . I am presently Vice- enhanced through granting of&#13;
and not threaten to call in the : President of the Parkside voting regents to this member.&#13;
Regents or TV6 every time the * Activities Board and Chairman of The PSGA has the appointive&#13;
price of beer jumps a nickel. lt the Allocations Committee. I am power over members, but I feel&#13;
"Probably the biggest problem i a declared major in Communica- that the PSGA President should&#13;
facing student government is * tions and English and am 6 hours have a designated seat so that&#13;
communications with the stu- * short of a major in Political PSGA input could be assured .&#13;
dents. Implementing programs : Science, as yet undeclared . This same method should be&#13;
such as the outpost, having * "The Allocations Committee used with other important&#13;
executive officers and Senators * should be subject to both the student organizations council,&#13;
in the P.S.G.A. Office as much as : Chancellor and PSGA because Parkside Activities·Board, Ranger&#13;
possible and continuing such * each of those interests has a and other groups .&#13;
things as Contact articles, : ********************************* Newsletters and the excellent * Kiyoko Bowden Advocates. Students need somecoverage&#13;
the RANGER has given * candidate for President where to go lo get the straight&#13;
P.S .G.A . l_ately should help : " After the past year in office, I story about Parkside . If realleviate&#13;
this problem. * have found that the students at elected, I will commit all of my&#13;
Harvey Hedden 's statement is in i Parkside for the most part feel energy and my past year's&#13;
his letter to the editor&#13;
BAG GET -TOGETHER FOR&#13;
:+, estranged from the flow of experience to training all&#13;
student services. They don't members of P.S.G.A. to be&#13;
know where to go to get help. Student Advocates . If a student&#13;
With the elimination of the approaches any Senator or&#13;
student peer-to-peer counselors Executive officer of Student&#13;
recently students feel even more Government, that individual will&#13;
isolated . be able to help them, direct&#13;
womEN&#13;
1st. Get-Together Wed. morch 9th.&#13;
ot Union 207&#13;
"HOW TO GET mORE OUT OF YOUR&#13;
Let's find out&#13;
Just drop in on_ytime between&#13;
11:30-1:30&#13;
BRING YOUR LUNCH AND JOIN US&#13;
FREE COFFEE&#13;
TlmE"&#13;
FOR ffiORE INFO CALL Connie Cummings 553-2008&#13;
3&#13;
0&#13;
.....&#13;
()&#13;
=r&#13;
"-&gt;&#13;
0&#13;
:D&#13;
a..&#13;
a..&#13;
0&#13;
Cl)&#13;
,..,.&#13;
I&#13;
-I&#13;
0&#13;
&lt;D&#13;
Cl)&#13;
,..,.&#13;
=r&#13;
Cl)&#13;
.....&#13;
en&#13;
"Student government is emin- them, inform them and/or fight&#13;
ently suited to provide the for them . I want to see&#13;
students of Parkside with P.S.G .A. provide advocates who&#13;
information and help in working care and who know . In this way,&#13;
their way through the massive, no S[Udent will feel that . they&#13;
confusing and often oppressive mu-st be a member of' a select&#13;
bureaucracy that exists here. The few elite organizations or parties&#13;
most urgent need that I feel in order to. get help .&#13;
faces P·. s.G.A. is that of Student&#13;
,---------.------,&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
COUPON&#13;
With this Coupon and ci&#13;
$5.00 purchase you get&#13;
a Free Plant&#13;
(&#13;
,~&#13;
Tl&#13;
otu&#13;
lor&#13;
ann&#13;
T&#13;
aca&#13;
aw;&#13;
be1&#13;
ye;&#13;
un &#13;
Blood drive&#13;
Donations increase&#13;
Women's scholarship offered&#13;
On Valentine's Day Parkside hosted another&#13;
successful blood drive. A total of 106 pints were&#13;
donated, almost 3 times the number received&#13;
during Parkside's last effort on November 22nd.&#13;
Milwaukee Blood Center officials were pleased&#13;
with what they termed an "excellent" turnout.&#13;
Under Mrs. Edith Isenberg's supervision, the staff&#13;
enacted an intensive public relations campaign,&#13;
answered questions concerning blood donations,&#13;
and registered appointments. Mrs. Isenberg cited&#13;
the work of volunteer Mona Maillet, as being "just&#13;
fantastic" in both the planning and operational&#13;
phases. Edith went on to invite all students, even&#13;
those who cannot donate, to participate in some&#13;
form in future drives.&#13;
Pomazal Encouraged&#13;
The program's director, Dr. Richard Pomazal, was&#13;
also quick to point out, "I was quite encouraged by&#13;
the enthusiasm displayed by the students during&#13;
the blood drive." Pomazal spent much of his time&#13;
correcting rnisconceptions about donating. He&#13;
pointed out that, "Both donors and non-donors&#13;
agree on the positive aspects of donating blood&#13;
The Racine Branch of the American Association&#13;
of University Women is now accepting applications&#13;
for the $400 scholarship which AAUW awards&#13;
annually to a Racine County girl.&#13;
The scholarship award, which is based on&#13;
academic achievement and financial needs, is&#13;
awarded each year to a Racine County woman&#13;
beginning the first or second semester of her junior&#13;
year at any accredited, degree-granting college or&#13;
university the fall-after the grant is awarded.&#13;
•&#13;
(satisfaction, providing needed blood, etc.). It's the&#13;
negative aspects, (pain, feeling faint, etc.), upon&#13;
which they disagree. Most donors feel little if any&#13;
pain; don't feel faint, and are back in class within&#13;
the hour." Clarifying misconceptions encourages&#13;
more donors, Pomazal said.&#13;
Donor ofthe Day&#13;
Pomazal said that the "donor of the day" award&#13;
(if there was one) would have to go to John Boyer.&#13;
He explained, "John is the programmer analyst at&#13;
the Computer Center. John is also blind and deaf _&#13;
blind since birth and deaf since age eight. With his&#13;
seeing eye dog 'Sugar', John left the Comm-Arts&#13;
Computer Center and walked the length of Parkside&#13;
to keep his 10:45 appointment. His pre-donation&#13;
screening was done by means of his Tete-Touch _&#13;
a unique brail typewriter. John donated a pint of&#13;
blood and was back to work within the hour."&#13;
The next drive is tentatively planned for the&#13;
beginning of May. Pomazal said he hopes this drive&#13;
will be completely supported by walk-in donors. He&#13;
envisions future blood drives at Parkside every 3&#13;
months.&#13;
Deadline for filling applications is April 1. The&#13;
scholarship will be awarded in May.&#13;
Application blanks may be obtained from Mrs.&#13;
Florence ann ink, 4647 Bluffside Dr.. Racine,&#13;
Wisconsin 53402, the scholarship committee&#13;
chairman, or Parkside's financial aids office.&#13;
Application blanks should be returned to Onnmjo&#13;
with a transcript of the student's credits for her&#13;
college work to date.&#13;
When school's jus1ibegun and already you're&#13;
4 chapters, 3 papers, 2 outlines and 1project behind&#13;
. ~ .&#13;
Parkslde's problem&#13;
faculty morale&#13;
newsI&#13;
by Gary Ledger&#13;
Dr. Philip Nanzetta, the&#13;
second Vice Chancellor candidate&#13;
was at Parks ide last&#13;
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday,&#13;
to meet with faculty, staff&#13;
and students.&#13;
Nanzetta, Dean of Faculty of&#13;
Natural Science and Mathematics&#13;
at Stockton State College&#13;
(New Jersey) met with approximately&#13;
10 people Wednesday&#13;
morning to answer questions.&#13;
One of the first questions,&#13;
asked by Diane German,&#13;
Director of the Learning&#13;
Disability Program, made reference&#13;
to the Special Education&#13;
Program at Staton. Nanzetta&#13;
explained they do not have a&#13;
specific learning disability program&#13;
but do have a basic skilis&#13;
curriculum.&#13;
Chuck Tinder, Assistant to the&#13;
Dean of the College of Science&#13;
and Society, askedfor Nanzetta's&#13;
reaction to the elimination of the&#13;
affirmative action officer. He&#13;
replied with the idea that the&#13;
position was not necessarily for&#13;
one single person. The candidate&#13;
agreed with Chancellor Guskin&#13;
that the responsibility should&#13;
rest with each division.&#13;
Tinder also asked what would&#13;
be the biggest problem he would&#13;
be faced with as Vice&#13;
Chancellor. Nanzetta responded,&#13;
"Faculty morale."&#13;
It was also reported that the&#13;
Dean was impressed with the&#13;
number of library acquisitions.&#13;
FrN PIZZI Delivery&#13;
Club Hlghvlew&#13;
5035 60tl1 Str •• t&#13;
Phon.: 652-8737&#13;
AIM C S~••• tttI IH'&#13;
OPEII 4 ~.•. It 1 •.•.&#13;
LITE&#13;
Now&#13;
Available&#13;
•&#13;
In the&#13;
Union&#13;
and&#13;
Rec&#13;
Center&#13;
Blood drive&#13;
Doncitions increase&#13;
On Valenti ne's Day Parkside hosted another&#13;
successfu l blood drive. A total of 106 pints were&#13;
donated, almost 3 times the number received&#13;
during Parkside' s last effort on November 22nd.&#13;
Milwaukee Blood Center officials were pleased&#13;
with what they termed an "excellent" turnout.&#13;
Under Mrs . Edith lsenberg's supervisio_n, the staff&#13;
enacted an intensive public relations campaign ,&#13;
answered questions concerning blood donations,&#13;
and registered appointments . Mrs. Isenberg cited&#13;
the work of volunteer Mona Maillet, as being "just&#13;
fantastic" in both the planning and operational&#13;
phases . Edith went on to invite all students, even&#13;
those who cannot donate, to participate in some&#13;
form in future drives.&#13;
Pomazal Encouraged&#13;
The program's director, Dr. Richard Pomazal, was&#13;
also quick to point out, " I was quite encouraged by&#13;
the enthusiasm displayed by the students during&#13;
the blood drive ." Pomazal spent much of his time&#13;
correcting misconceptions about donating. He&#13;
pointed out that, " Both donors and non-donors&#13;
agree on the positive aspects of donating blood&#13;
(satisfaction, providing needed blood, etc .). It's the&#13;
negative aspects , (pain, feeling faint, etc .), upon&#13;
which they disagree. Most donors feel little if any&#13;
pain; don't feel faint, and are back in class within&#13;
the hour." Clarifying misconceptions encourages&#13;
more donors, Pomazal said .&#13;
Donor of the Day&#13;
Pomazal said that the " donor of the day" award&#13;
(if there was one) would have to go to John Boyer.&#13;
He explained, " John is the programmer analyst at&#13;
the Computer Center. John is also blind and deaf -&#13;
blind since birth and deaf since age eight . With his&#13;
seeing eye dog 'Sugar', John left the Comm-Arts&#13;
Computer Center and walked the length of Parkside&#13;
to keep his 10:45 appointment. His pre-&lt;ionation&#13;
screening was done by means of his Tele-Touch -&#13;
a un.ique brail typewriter. John donated a pint of&#13;
blood and was back to work within the hour."&#13;
The next drive is tentatively planned for the&#13;
beginning of May. Pomazal said he hopes this drive&#13;
will be completely supported by walk-in donors . He&#13;
e;ivisions future blood drives at Parkside every 3&#13;
months.&#13;
Women's scholarship offered&#13;
The Racine Branch of the American Association&#13;
of University Women is now accepting applications&#13;
for the $400 scholarship which AAUW awards&#13;
annually to a RacinP County girl.&#13;
The scholarship award, which is based on&#13;
academic ach ievement and financial needs, is&#13;
awarded each year to a Racine County woman&#13;
beginning the first or second semester of her junior&#13;
year at any accredited, degree-granting college or&#13;
university the fall ·after the grant is awarded .&#13;
-&#13;
Deadline for filling applications is April 1. The&#13;
scholarship will be awarded in May.&#13;
Application blanks may be obtained from Mrs.&#13;
Florence Onnink, 4647 Bluffside Dr., Racine,&#13;
Wisconsin 53402, the scholarship committee&#13;
chairman , or Parkside's financial aids office.&#13;
Application blanks should be returned to Onnin~&#13;
with a transcript of the student's credits for her&#13;
college work to date .&#13;
When school's just begun and already you're 4 chapters, 3 papers, a outlines and 1 project behind&#13;
• i • •&#13;
Parkslde's problem&#13;
faculty morale&#13;
by Gary Ledger&#13;
Dr . Philip Nanzetta , the&#13;
second Vice Chancellor candidate&#13;
was at Parkside last&#13;
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday,&#13;
to meet with faculty, staff&#13;
and students .&#13;
anzetta, Dean of Faculty of&#13;
atural Science and Mathematics&#13;
at Stockton State College&#13;
( ew Jersey) met with approximately&#13;
10 people Wednesday&#13;
morning to answer questions.&#13;
One of the first questions,&#13;
asked by Diane German ,&#13;
Director of the Learning&#13;
Disability Program, made reference&#13;
to the Special Education&#13;
Program at Staton . Nanzetta&#13;
explained they do not have a&#13;
specific learning disability program&#13;
but do have a basic skills&#13;
curriculum&#13;
Chuck Tinder, Assistant to the&#13;
Dean of the College of Science&#13;
and Society , asked for Nanzetta's&#13;
reaction to the elimination of the&#13;
affirmative action officer. He&#13;
repl ied with the idea that the&#13;
position was not necessarily for&#13;
one single person . The candidate&#13;
agreed with Chancellor Guskin&#13;
that the responsibility should&#13;
rest with each division&#13;
Tinder also asked what would&#13;
be the biggest problem he would&#13;
be faced with as Vi ce&#13;
Chancellor. anzetta responded,&#13;
" Faculty morale "&#13;
It was also reported that the&#13;
Dean was impressed with the&#13;
number of library acquisitions.&#13;
FrH Pizza D.U.ery&#13;
Club Hlghvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-1737&#13;
AIM •• .,... c~······ s, .• ~tffl. R1vltll, '"'&#13;
OPEN 4 •·• · It 1 •·•· '''''''''' - ,,,,,,,,,,,,, - ----''''' ,,,,,, '&#13;
LITE&#13;
Now&#13;
Available&#13;
•&#13;
Ill the&#13;
Union&#13;
and&#13;
Rec&#13;
Center &#13;
I&#13;
Inews&#13;
No tax break&#13;
for students&#13;
'Assembly to legalize- pot&#13;
"The Wisconsin Controlled Substance Board&#13;
found at a series of statewide public hearings that&#13;
most people now favor decriminalization. Since&#13;
several communities have already enacted their&#13;
own local ordinances reducing penalties for&#13;
personal use of marijuana, now is a perfect time for&#13;
the state to change its laws," Clarenbach declared.&#13;
Co-sponsors of AB 325 and the Senate&#13;
companion bill are Representatives Susan&#13;
Engeleiter (R-Brookfield), Richard Hintrop&#13;
(D-Oshkosh), Mike Elconin (D-Mil), Peter Tropman&#13;
(D-Mil), Marcia· Coggs (D-Mil), Pete Litscher&#13;
(D-Baraboo), Tom Loftus (D-Sun Prairie), Stephen&#13;
Leopold (D-Mil), Phil Tuczynski (D-MiI), Mary Lou&#13;
Munt; (D-Madison), Walter Ward (D-Mil), Jim&#13;
Moody (D-Mil), and State Senators Fred Risser&#13;
(D-Madison), Dale McKenna (Dvlefferson), and&#13;
Gary Goyke (D'Oshkoshl. Eight other states have&#13;
already passed decriminalization laws. Oregon was&#13;
the first to do so in 1973.&#13;
Decriminalization of marijuana for personal use&#13;
was introduced last week by State Representative&#13;
David Clarenbach (D-Madison) and fifteen other&#13;
legislators.&#13;
Assembly Bill 325 was introduced at the request&#13;
of the League of Women Voters, the Wisconsin&#13;
Association on Alcoholism &amp; Other Drug Abuse,&#13;
-and NORML (National Organization for the Reform&#13;
of Marijuana Laws). It reduces penalties for&#13;
possession to a civil forfeiture of $50.00&#13;
maximum and sets quantities of up to 100 grams as&#13;
presumed to be for personal use. Penalties for&#13;
profit-making sales would remain the same.&#13;
"Medical experts and law enforcement officials&#13;
now recognize -the illogical reasoning behind our&#13;
current laws against marijuana possession. Pot is&#13;
clearly lessdangerous than alcohol or tobacco, and&#13;
we should not subject our citizens to a possible&#13;
prison term and life-long criminal record for its&#13;
use," C1arenbach said.&#13;
by Curt Koehler&#13;
(CPS) - Strapped by tuition and cost of living increases, many students&#13;
and their families were looking for a tax break last summer to provide&#13;
relief from the high cost of going to school. .&#13;
Congress was rewriting the tax laws and one move considered - and. at&#13;
one point. approved by the Senate - was a tuition tax credit. This&#13;
proposal would have allowed taxpayers to subtract a small portion of the&#13;
money they spent on tuition and fees - initially. up to 5100 - from their&#13;
tax bill.&#13;
The House didn't include the proposal in their tax bill, however, and the&#13;
credit was eventually dropped from what was to become the Tax Reform&#13;
Act of 1976. For students, nothing changed.&#13;
The original Senate proposal provided a 5100 tax credit for tuition and&#13;
fees beginning next year, with stepped increases of 550 bringing the credit&#13;
to a 5250 maximun by 1980. Total cost for the ill-fated credit was&#13;
estimated at 51.1 billion per year by the time the credit reached the $250&#13;
maximum.&#13;
This proposal was by no means a universally agreed upon boon for&#13;
students. with some critics arguing that the money was poorly targeted&#13;
while others charged that it stood in the way of genuine tax reform. Still&#13;
others claimed the tuition credit was so small as to be nothing more than a&#13;
political sop to middle income families and a way of diverting pressure&#13;
away from the deep rooted crisis in financing higher education.&#13;
This proposal consequently left students in a bind: whether to push for&#13;
far reaching tax reform, seek to modify the proposal to make it more&#13;
equitable and effective, or simply line up at the Internal Revenue Service&#13;
for a dip in the tax till.&#13;
Robles, Mitka, Dagenbach&#13;
Students work in Washington&#13;
staff members from the executive and legislative&#13;
branches of government.&#13;
Prof. Samuel Pernacciaro, assistant professor of&#13;
political science, said the internship assignments&#13;
are designed to provide both educational&#13;
attainment and personal growth. The aim of the&#13;
program is quality educational experience in&#13;
alternative formats drawing on the unique&#13;
concentration of human talents and organizational&#13;
resources in Washington, he said.&#13;
The program offers 9 to 12 Parks ide&#13;
undergraduate credits and participants may also&#13;
receive credits for the center seminars. Students&#13;
interested in participating in the program, which&#13;
operates in the summer as well as during the&#13;
academic year, can obtain additional information&#13;
by contacting Pernacciaro in Room 367 Classroom&#13;
Bldg. Phone 553-2316.&#13;
Three students are interning in a new Washington&#13;
Semester programinitiated by the Parkside p':olitical&#13;
science discipline in cooperation with Washington&#13;
Center for Learning Alternatives.&#13;
The First students selected for the program are&#13;
David Robles, 4616 32nd Ave., Kenosha, who is&#13;
interning with Congo Alvin Baldus of Wisconsin;&#13;
Michael Mitka, 5202 35th Ave., Kenosha interning&#13;
with Sen. Donald Riegle of Michigan; and Warren&#13;
Dagenbach, 3540 16th Ave., Kenosha, interning&#13;
with Congress Watch, a public interest group.&#13;
The program provides placement in a federal&#13;
agency, the congress or a public interest group and&#13;
housing accommodations in the center's dormitory&#13;
facilities in the capital. In addition to their intern&#13;
experience, students also attend seminar courses at&#13;
the center taught by faculty members from Howard&#13;
University and George Washington University and&#13;
Pure Brewed I From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#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;
~~&#13;
626 Fifty-Sixth St., Kenosha, Wis. ~~~~-&#13;
Free performqlnce&#13;
Baroque Players to perform&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Baroque Players will&#13;
present a free public concert at&#13;
3:30 p.rn. on Sunday, March 6, in&#13;
the Union Cinema Theater.&#13;
The ensemble will include&#13;
director Frances Bedford, harpsichord,&#13;
Frank Suetholz, flute,&#13;
Carol Irwin, mezzo-soprano, and&#13;
Roger Daniels, percussion, all of&#13;
the Parkside music faculty;&#13;
Rhonda Palmgren, soprano, a&#13;
Parkside student; Robert Honck,&#13;
bassoon, of Carroll College,&#13;
Waukesha; and Monte Bedford,&#13;
oboe, a faculty member at the&#13;
state University of Pennsylanvia&#13;
and a member of the Claremont&#13;
Woodwind Quintet.&#13;
The Program will open with ,&#13;
LS. Bach's Sonata in G Major,&#13;
the aria from "Diane and&#13;
Acteon" by LB. Boismortier and&#13;
Bach's aria duet from Cantata&#13;
No. 99 for flute, oboe, soprano,&#13;
alto and bassoon.&#13;
The program will continue&#13;
with a group of works by living&#13;
composers: Carlos Surinach's&#13;
Tientos; Roger- Bourland's&#13;
Soliloquy IV, Muselles and&#13;
Memoirs for Oboe; Max&#13;
Vredendurg's Ah l Beau Rossignol&#13;
Volage; Lester Trimble's Arioso:&#13;
and Gordon Jacob's Trio for flute&#13;
and piccolo, oboe and harpsichord.&#13;
The Bourland work was&#13;
written for Monte Bedford, who&#13;
gave the work its premiere&#13;
performance on Dec. 13, 1976.&#13;
During the coming week, the&#13;
Baroque Players also will&#13;
perform at Carthage College on&#13;
March 2, Lake Forest (III.)&#13;
College on March 3 and Alverno&#13;
College, Milwaukee, on March 4.&#13;
~~~~ I MU8HSIOM I&#13;
~ §IUiD§ ~&#13;
~ RADIOS CB UNITS TAPE DECKS ~,&#13;
" CUSTOM INSTALLATIONIN YOUR CAR OR TRUCK ~&#13;
Sat., March 5th ' 9 P.M. ~ ~ FO;~::E G~~:T:EE:LL ~ ~&#13;
.l=========~~=i.~=~=~=e~=:~=;e=d=P'A='8':;::Pr=ese=n=tat=ian:;::::;;:~~=:~=o=~=~e:;:::st=::;:::S:::;:tU=de=nt=&#13;
5&#13;
=====:::-~_~...:...~~~&#13;
J&#13;
1 ,news&#13;
No tax break&#13;
for students&#13;
by Curt Koehler&#13;
(CPS) - Strapped by tuition and cost of living increases, many students&#13;
and their families were looking for a tax break last summer to provide&#13;
relief from the high cost of going to school. .&#13;
Congress was rewriting the tax laws and one move considered - and, at&#13;
one point, approved by the Senate - was a tuition tax credit. This&#13;
proposal would have allowed taxpayers to subtract a small portion of the&#13;
money they spent on tuition and fees - initially, up to $100- from their&#13;
tax bill.&#13;
The House didn't include the proposal in their tax bill, however, and the&#13;
credit was eventually dropped from what was to become the Tax Reform&#13;
Act of 1976. For students, nothing changed.&#13;
The original Senate proposal provided a $100 tax credit for tuition and&#13;
fees beginning next year, with stepped increases of $50 bringing the credit&#13;
to a $250 maximun by 1980. Total cost for the ill-fated credit was&#13;
estimated at Sl.1 billion per year by the time the credit reached the $250&#13;
maximum.&#13;
This proposal was by no means a universally agreed upon boon for&#13;
students. with some critics arguing that the- money was poorly targeted&#13;
while others charged that it stood in the way of genuine tax reform. Still&#13;
others claimed the tuition credit was so small as to be nothing more than a&#13;
political sop to middle income families and a way of diverting pressure&#13;
away from the deep rooted crisis in financing higher education.&#13;
This proposal consequently left students in a bind: whether to push for&#13;
far reaching tax reform, seek to modify the proposal to make it more&#13;
equitable and effective, or simply line up at the Internal Revenue Service&#13;
for a dip in the tax till.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#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;
/Assembly ~o legalize-pot&#13;
Decriminalization of marijuana for personal use&#13;
was introduced last week by State Representative&#13;
David Clarenbach (D-Madison) and fifteen other&#13;
legislators.&#13;
Assembly Bill 325 was introduced at the request&#13;
of the League of Women Voters, the Wisconsin&#13;
Association on Alcoholism &amp; Other Drug Abuse,&#13;
- and NORML (National Organization for the Reform&#13;
of Marijuana Laws). It reduces penalties for&#13;
possession to a civil forfeiture of. $50.00&#13;
maximum and sets quantities of up to 100 grams as&#13;
presumed to be for personal use. Penalties for&#13;
profit-making sales would remain the same. __&#13;
"Medical experts and law enforcement off1c1als&#13;
now recognize -the illogical reasoning behind our&#13;
current laws against marijuana possession . Pot is&#13;
clearly less dp.ngerous than alcohol or tobacco, and&#13;
we should not subject our citizens to a possible&#13;
prison term and life-long criminal record for its&#13;
use," Clarenbach said.&#13;
" The Wisconsin Controlled Substance Board&#13;
found at a series of statewide public hearings that&#13;
most people now favor decriminalization. Since&#13;
several communities have already enacted their&#13;
own local ordinances reducing penalties for&#13;
personal use of marijuana, now is a perfect time for&#13;
the state to change its laws," Clarenbach declared.&#13;
Co-sponsors of AB 325 and the Senate&#13;
companion bill are Representatives Susan&#13;
Engeleiter (R-Brookfield), Richard Flintrop&#13;
(D-Oshkosh), Mike Elconin (D-Mil), Peter Tropman&#13;
(D-Mil), Marcia . Coggs (D-Mil), Pete Litscher&#13;
(D-Baraboo), Tom Loftus (D-Sun Prairie), Stephen&#13;
Leopold (D-Mil), Phil Tuczynski (D-Mil), Mary Lou&#13;
Munts (D-Madison), Walter Ward (D-Mil), Jim&#13;
Moody (D-Mil), and State Senators Fred Risser&#13;
(D-Madison), Dale McKenna (D-Jefferson), and&#13;
Gary Goyke (D-Oshkosh). Eight other states have&#13;
already passed decriminalization laws. Oregon was&#13;
the first to do so in 1973.&#13;
Robles, Mitka, Dagenbach&#13;
Students work in Washington&#13;
Three students are interning in a new Washington&#13;
Semester program _initiated by the Parkside P,OI itical&#13;
science discipline in cooperation with Washington&#13;
Center for Learning Alternatives.&#13;
staff member~ from the executive and legislative&#13;
branches of government.&#13;
Prof. Samuel Pernacciaro, assistant professor of&#13;
political science, said the internship assignments&#13;
are designed to provide both educational&#13;
attainment and personal growth. The aim of the&#13;
program is quality educational experience in&#13;
alternative formats drawing on the unique&#13;
concentration of human talents and organizational&#13;
resources in Washington, he said.&#13;
The First students selected for the program are&#13;
David Robles, 4616 32nd Ave., Kenosha, who is&#13;
interning with Cong. Alvin Baldus of Wisconsin;&#13;
Michael Mitka, 5202 35th Ave., Kenosha interning&#13;
with Sen . Donald Riegle of Michigan; and Warren&#13;
Dagenbach, 3540 16th Ave., Kenosha, interning&#13;
with Congress Watch, a public interest group.&#13;
The program provides placement in a federal&#13;
agency, the congress or a public interest group and&#13;
housing accommodations in the center's dormitory&#13;
facilities in the capital. In addition to their intern&#13;
experience, students also attend seminar courses at&#13;
the center taught by faculty members from Howard&#13;
University and George Washington University and&#13;
The program offers 9 to 12 Parkside&#13;
undergraduate credits and participants may also&#13;
receive credits for the center seminars. Students&#13;
interested in participating in the program, which&#13;
operates in the summer as well as during the&#13;
academic year, can obtain additional information&#13;
by contacting Pernacciaro in Room 367 Classroom&#13;
Bldg., Phone 553-2316.&#13;
Free performqince&#13;
Baroque Players to perform&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Baroque Players will&#13;
present a free public concert at&#13;
3:30 p.m. on Sunday, March 6, in&#13;
the Union Cinema Theater.&#13;
The ensemble will include&#13;
director Frances Bedford, harpsichord,&#13;
Frank Suetholz, flute,&#13;
Carol Irwin, mezzo-soprano, and&#13;
Roger Daniels, percussion, all of&#13;
the Parkside music faculty;&#13;
Rhonda Palmgr~n, soprano, a&#13;
Parkside student; Robert Horick,&#13;
bassoon, of Carroll College,&#13;
Waukesha; and Monte Bedford,&#13;
oboe, a faculty member at the&#13;
state University of Pennsylanvia&#13;
and a member of the Claremont&#13;
Woodwind Quintet.&#13;
The Program will open with&#13;
J.S. Bach's Sonata in G Major,&#13;
the aria from "Diane and&#13;
Acteon" by J.B. Boismortier and&#13;
Bach's aria duet from Cantata&#13;
No. 99 for flute, oboe, soprano,&#13;
alto and bassoon.&#13;
The program will continue&#13;
with a group of works by living&#13;
composers: Carlos Surinach's&#13;
Tientos; Roger Bourland's&#13;
Soliloquy IV, Musettes and&#13;
Memoirs for Oboe; Max&#13;
Vredendurg's Ah! Beau Rossignol&#13;
Volage; Lester Trimble's Arioso;&#13;
and Gordon Jacob's Trio for flute&#13;
and piccolo, oboe and harpsichord.&#13;
&#13;
The Bourland work was&#13;
written for Monte Bedford, who&#13;
gave the work its premiere&#13;
performance on Dec . 13, 1976.&#13;
During the coming week, the&#13;
Baroque Players also will&#13;
perform at Carthage College on&#13;
March 2, Lake Forest (111.)&#13;
College on March 3 and Alverno&#13;
College, Milwaukee, on March 4.&#13;
RADIOS CB UNITS TAPE DECKS&#13;
CUSTOM INSTALLATION IN YOUR CAR OR TRUCK&#13;
~ · WORK GUARANTEED&#13;
Sat., March 5th 9 P.M. ~ ~ FOR FREE ESTIMATE CALL ~ ~&#13;
Union Squore Sl .00 UW-P Students ~ .J C., JOHN GABRIEL SS3-2287 ,W ~ ~ 1.0.'s Required $1.50 Guests • ~&#13;
f::==================P.:::::;: A.B. ==Prese==ntotio::::;:::::: n ::::::::;==;:::;=:::::=:::::::::::=======:::.__~-~ ~ -&#13;
I &#13;
1500 Wash. Ave.&#13;
Books sold at coop&#13;
- 'J jobs··&#13;
Elmore: 'Jobs are hard to find'&#13;
~nut4 ~rU11&#13;
Clift S}1Jl1PP~&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
John Elmore has been Director of Student&#13;
Development at Parkside since 1976. Before that&#13;
time he was the school's first Director of&#13;
Admissions and Financial Aids from the faJf of 1968&#13;
to 1973, when he became Acting Chairman of the&#13;
Education Department. After graduating with' a&#13;
degree in History, Elmore worked in industry,&#13;
taught high school in New York and Iowa, then&#13;
went to Los Angeles for graduate school work. In&#13;
1968, then Chancellor Wyllie offered him a job at&#13;
Parkside and he has been here ever since.&#13;
RANGER: Basically what is your job?&#13;
ELMORE: I work with students in the 18-21 age&#13;
bracket in such things as career planning, Parkside&#13;
academic counseling, and helping students with&#13;
personal problems as well.&#13;
RANGER: What about recruiting of new students.?&#13;
ELMORE: We go to the high schools on a regular&#13;
basis and work with high school students and&#13;
counselors on planning their Parkside entrance.&#13;
Eachschool in the Racine-Kenosha area is visited at&#13;
least one day a month, every month.&#13;
RANGER: What do you stress?.&#13;
ELMORE: Well, people don't really know a lot&#13;
about Parkside , so we point out the advantages of&#13;
going here. We are closer arid cheaper than other&#13;
schools in the area and we point out the monetary&#13;
benefits to students who maybe don't have a lot of&#13;
money. We also stress that Parkside can fulfill the&#13;
student's basic college and graduate school needs&#13;
so that he can save the money going here and use it&#13;
later to go to a graduate school.Parksfde is also a&#13;
physically beautiful school and we stress that fact&#13;
as well.&#13;
RANGER: With all the recent changes in faculty&#13;
and administration, how do new students see these&#13;
problems?&#13;
ELMORE: Well, students really don't give a damn&#13;
about what happens to the administration. They are&#13;
more worried about the faculty. We explain that&#13;
most of the faculty is very good and they won't be&#13;
taught by graduate students like at Madison. We&#13;
also stress the excellent library facilities because it&#13;
is one of the best in the state. Our science labs are&#13;
excellent and the resources available to the&#13;
individual students are excellent.&#13;
RANGER: What about that "Left out" feeling that&#13;
seems so relevant at Parkside?&#13;
ELMORE: We insist that it is up to the individual&#13;
student to get involved and if he doesn't wish to,&#13;
that is his perogative.&#13;
RANGER: Has enrollment declined'&#13;
ELMORE: Yes, it has dipped a little, but this is the&#13;
first time it has and I'm not too worried about it.&#13;
RANGER: What about the turmoil in the business&#13;
department?&#13;
ELMORE: We tell all potential students that the&#13;
business department is undergoing some: changes,&#13;
but that we are still a young school. None of the&#13;
problems can't be solved and I have faith in&#13;
Chancellor Guskin that· he will solve them.&#13;
Corporations don't care about the changes at a&#13;
school, only the individual's qualifications. .&#13;
RANGER: When do you get involved in the job&#13;
placement side of it?&#13;
ELMORE: The semester before a 'student graduates,&#13;
,we bring him in to do a few things:&#13;
1) We ask what kind of job and company he&#13;
would like to work at. These aren't always easy ,"" Health highlights&#13;
presented&#13;
by phone&#13;
Parkside, in cooperation with&#13;
the Extension Health Sciences&#13;
Unit and the UW-Madison&#13;
Center for Health Sciences, is&#13;
sponsoring a series of HealthLine&#13;
Highlights.&#13;
Each message runs tor a week&#13;
on the Health-Line and is&#13;
available 24 hours a day. To hear&#13;
the message, call 553-2588 and&#13;
ask to hear the Health-Line&#13;
Highlight.&#13;
For further information, and&#13;
for a schedule of the Highlights,&#13;
contact John VaJaske at&#13;
553·2271.&#13;
by Linda Lasco some money on text books." It's&#13;
run purely by voluntary help&#13;
The Co-op received the final&#13;
okay along with permission from&#13;
the Follett Co. to open at the end&#13;
of last semester. After a six week&#13;
lapse from the time permission&#13;
was given to the time Tutlewski&#13;
received the keys to the location,&#13;
the Co-op opened its doors in its&#13;
current place.&#13;
There is optimism that the&#13;
Co-op will find a better location&#13;
soon. Until that time, you'll find&#13;
it located behind the information&#13;
kiosk at Main Place, and open&#13;
[rom ~ ·3 p.m. on Tues. and 10&#13;
a.m to 1 p.m. on Wed.&#13;
The Book Co-op is beginning&#13;
service to the students.&#13;
Located just behind the&#13;
information kiosk at Main Place,&#13;
the Book Co-op sells used books:&#13;
be they text or otherwise. "All&#13;
you have to do," says manager&#13;
Rusty Tutlewski, "is leave your&#13;
books on consignment for 62%&#13;
of the last price marked on the&#13;
book."&#13;
The Co-op will increase that&#13;
price 10% for sale to other&#13;
students. After }our book is sold,&#13;
you're promptly paid, Tutlewski&#13;
says "The main purpose of the&#13;
Book Co-op is to save students&#13;
questions when a graduating senior really has to&#13;
think about a job.&#13;
2) We give him materials that include&#13;
recommendation forms, information sheets on&#13;
various companies, and guidelines on how to write&#13;
a proper resume, which will be his professional&#13;
calling card.&#13;
3) We teach and guide him on how to write a&#13;
proper resume. This is very important because&#13;
knowing how to write a proper resume is half the&#13;
battle.&#13;
4) We teach him/her how to research the job&#13;
and company they have chosen. It is necessary to&#13;
have a background knowledge of a company in&#13;
order to deal with it.&#13;
Basically we don't place people; we teach them&#13;
how to place themselves.&#13;
RANGER: How much contact do you have with the&#13;
companies?&#13;
ELMORE: They call or write to us when they need&#13;
someone and then we contact the student to let&#13;
them know of a potential opening. W~ implore the&#13;
student to use every source in finding a job:&#13;
relatives, friends, or our oftice ,&#13;
RANGER: What kind of companies hire students&#13;
from Parkside?&#13;
ELMORE: Small firms and unsophisticated&#13;
companies, such as Case and Johnson's Wax. You&#13;
won't get many feelers from ITT, IBM or ATT. We&#13;
don't turn out the sophisticated image student that&#13;
these companies prefer.&#13;
RANGER: Do Parkside students get jobs?&#13;
ELMORE: Yes,they do. Each student must maintain&#13;
certain standards to be hireable.&#13;
AD U LT N I G H T&#13;
1) geographically mobile&#13;
2) make a good impression 18 and OLDER&#13;
3) have a good resume and recommendations&#13;
4) look hard for the job From 9·11 :30 p.m. Every Sunday&#13;
liable to stand in the unemployment line. We&#13;
If a student sits back and says "Here I am," he is RED'S ROLLER RINK&#13;
cannot force students to get a job. That is their&#13;
personal decision. Jobs are hard to find and if he 6220 67th St., Kenosha&#13;
isn't willing to check all posibilities then that is up just off highway 31&#13;
to him. RANGER: Do most graduates stav in this area? ~:::::::=========:::::=~~~ I&#13;
ELMORE: Most Parkside graduates stay in the area&#13;
which stresses the fact that Parkside has a great&#13;
committment to this community. Right now there&#13;
are openings for accountants, science majors and&#13;
engineers.&#13;
RANGER: Would dormitories helot&#13;
ELMORE: Of course, but you have to accept the&#13;
fact that Parkside will never be a residence school.&#13;
We have to quit crying about no dorms and start&#13;
looking at all our resources. We have the best&#13;
physical location in the state, in a heavy industrial 2062 lothrop Ave.&#13;
area and right in between two great job markets, Racine,Wise.&#13;
Milwaukee and Chicago. I~========================~ RANGER: What kind of relationship with the&#13;
Chancellor does your department have?&#13;
ELMORE: We are virtually independent. He&#13;
realized that our office is extremely critical to the&#13;
well-being of Parkside and he knows we are doing&#13;
our best.&#13;
RANGER: What is in the future?&#13;
ELMORE: Improvement. We can't be another&#13;
Harvard or Yale and I don't think we should try to&#13;
be. The value of"'a university is how well it serves&#13;
the community and the state. We are doing all we&#13;
can to fulfil these goals and the Chancellor knows&#13;
that if he doesn't someone else will. .&#13;
P.A.B. Coffeehouse Presents&#13;
New York Folksinger&#13;
JOHN IMS&#13;
Wed. &amp; Thurs.&#13;
MARCH 2 and 3&#13;
7 p.m. UNION SQUARE&#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;
ARBEf 'G UCUORt CTOREG&#13;
4606 Douglas Ave.&#13;
KENOSHA ICE ARENA&#13;
ad uvfuf&#13;
.RECREATIONAL SKATING&#13;
.FIGURE SKATING&#13;
.BROOM BALL&#13;
.YOUTH HOCKEY&#13;
.SEMI·PRO HOCKEY&#13;
COME ON OUTI&#13;
TO THE&#13;
Ratan Bird Cages or&#13;
use as planters&#13;
One story to ten stories high&#13;
Starting at $8.95&#13;
Come in and browse.&#13;
------------------------, I'id;;) FREE I&#13;
~ ADMISSION i&#13;
TO I&#13;
ANY PUBLIC SKATING SESSION I&#13;
WITH THIS COUPON I&#13;
KENOSHA ICE ARENA I&#13;
L2~22_~0lh..~':..E!~~~~_~9~i3~19J 637·7076 Muter Charg~ Atcepted&#13;
Elmore: 'Jobs are hard to find'&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
John Elmore has been Director of Student&#13;
Development at Parkside since 1976. Before that&#13;
time he was the school's first Director of&#13;
Admissions and Financi-al Aids from the fall of 1968&#13;
to 1973, when he became Acting Chairman of the&#13;
Education Department. After graduating with· a&#13;
degree in History, Elmore worked in industry,&#13;
taught high school in New York and Iowa, then&#13;
went to Los Angeles for graduate school work. In&#13;
1968, then Chancellor Wyllie offered him a job at&#13;
Parkside and he has been here ever since.&#13;
RANGER: Basically what is your job?&#13;
ELMORE: I work with students in the 18-21 age&#13;
bracket in such things as career planning, Parkside&#13;
academic counseling, and helping students with&#13;
personal problems as well.&#13;
RANGER: What about recruiting of new students.?&#13;
ELMORE: We go to the high schools on a regular&#13;
basis and work with high school students and&#13;
counselors on planning their Parkside entrance.&#13;
Each school in the Racine-Kenosha area is visited at&#13;
least one day a month, every month.&#13;
RANGER: What do you stress?&#13;
ELMORE: Well , people don't really know a lot&#13;
about Parkside, so we point out the advantages of&#13;
going here. We are closer and cheaper than other&#13;
schools in the area and we point out the monetary&#13;
benefits to students who maybe don't have a lot of&#13;
money. We also stress that Parkside can fulfill the&#13;
student's basic college and graduate school needs&#13;
so that he can save the money going here and use it&#13;
later to go to a graduate school. Parkside is also a&#13;
physically beautiful school and we stress that fact&#13;
as well.&#13;
RANGER: With all the recent changes in faculty&#13;
and administration, how do new students see these&#13;
problems?&#13;
ELMORE: Well, students really don't give a damn&#13;
about what happens to the administration . They are&#13;
more worried about the faculty . We explain that&#13;
most of the faculty is very good and they won't be&#13;
taught by graduate students like at Madison. We&#13;
also stress the excellent library facilities because it&#13;
is one of the best in the state. Our science labs are&#13;
excellent and the resources available to the&#13;
individual students are excellent.&#13;
RANGER: What about that " Left out" feeling that&#13;
seems so relevant at Parkside?&#13;
ELMORE: We insist that it is up to the individual&#13;
student to get involved and if he doesn't wish to,&#13;
that is his perogative.&#13;
RANGER: Has enrollment declined?&#13;
questions when a graduating senior really has to&#13;
think about a job.&#13;
2) We give him materials that include&#13;
recommendation forms, information sheets on&#13;
various companies, and guidelines on how to write&#13;
a proper resume, which will be his professional&#13;
calling card.&#13;
3) We teach and guide him on how to write a&#13;
proper resume. This is very important because&#13;
knowing how to write a proper resume is half the&#13;
battle.&#13;
4) We teach him/ her how to research the job&#13;
and company they haye chosen . It is necessary to&#13;
have a background knowledge of a company in&#13;
order to deal with it.&#13;
Basically we don't place people; we teach them&#13;
how to place themselves .&#13;
RANGER: How much contact do you have with the&#13;
companies?&#13;
ELMORE: They call or write to us when they need&#13;
someone and then we contact the student to let&#13;
them know of a potential opening. We implore the&#13;
student to use every source in findin5 a job:&#13;
relatives, friends, or our office,_&#13;
RANGER: What kind of companies hire students&#13;
from Parkside?&#13;
ELMORE: Small firms and unsophisticated&#13;
companies, such as Case and Johnson's Wax. You&#13;
won't get many feelers from ITT, IBM or ATT. We&#13;
don't turn out the sophisticated image student that&#13;
these companies prefer.&#13;
RANGER: Do Parkside students get jobs?&#13;
ELMORE: Yes, they do. Each student must maintain&#13;
certain standards to be hireable.&#13;
1) geographically mobile&#13;
2) rriake a good impression&#13;
3) have a good resume and recommendations&#13;
4) look hard for the job&#13;
If a student sits back and says "Here I am," he is&#13;
liable to stand in the unemployment line. We&#13;
cannot force students to get a job. That is their&#13;
personal decision . Jobs are hard to find and if he&#13;
isn't willing to check all posibilities then that is up&#13;
to him .&#13;
RANGER: Do most graduates stay in this area?&#13;
ELMORE: Most Parkside graduates stay in the area&#13;
which stresses the fact that Parkside has a great&#13;
committment to this community. Right now there&#13;
are openings for accountants, science majors and&#13;
engineers.&#13;
RANGER: Would dormitories help? ·&#13;
ELMORE: Of course, but you have to accept the&#13;
fact that Parkside will never be a residence school.&#13;
We have to quit crying about no dorms and start&#13;
looking at all our resources . We have the best&#13;
physical location in the state, in a heavy industrial&#13;
area and right in between two great job markets,&#13;
- ., jobs·=...-= ...&#13;
-&#13;
Books sold at coop&#13;
by Linda Lasco&#13;
The Book Co-op is beginning&#13;
service to the students.&#13;
Located just behind the&#13;
information kiosk at Main Place,&#13;
the Book Co-op sells used books:&#13;
be they text or otherwise. "All&#13;
you have to do," says manager&#13;
Rusty Tutlewski, "is leave your&#13;
books on consignment for 62%&#13;
of the last price marked on the&#13;
book."&#13;
The Co-op will increase that&#13;
price 10% for sale to other&#13;
students. After your book is sold,&#13;
you're promptly paid. Tutlewski&#13;
says "The main purpose of the&#13;
Book Co-op is to save students&#13;
some money on text books" It's&#13;
run purely by voluntary help&#13;
The Co-op received the final&#13;
okay along with p rm,ss,on from&#13;
the Follett Co. to open at the end&#13;
of last semester. After a si week&#13;
lapse from the time permission&#13;
was given to the time Tutlewsk,&#13;
re eived the keys to the location,&#13;
the Co-op opened ,ts doors m its&#13;
current place.&#13;
There is optimism that the&#13;
Co-op will find a better location&#13;
soon. Until that time, you'll find&#13;
it located behind the information&#13;
kiosk at Main Place, and open&#13;
frorr. :.. . 3 pm on Tues. and 10&#13;
am to 1 pm. on Wed .&#13;
P .A.B. Coffeehouse Presents&#13;
New York Folksinger&#13;
JOHN IMS&#13;
Wed. &amp; Thurs.&#13;
MARCH 2 and 3&#13;
7 p.rn. UNION SQUARE&#13;
ADULT NIGHT&#13;
18 and OLDER&#13;
From 9-11 :30 p.m. Every Sunday&#13;
RED'S ROLLER RINK&#13;
6220 67th St., Kenosha&#13;
just off highway 31&#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;
2062 Lathrop&#13;
~·~ Ave.&#13;
UCtJO~ ~&#13;
4606 Douglas Ave.&#13;
ELMORE: Yes, it has dipped a little, but this is the&#13;
first time it has and I'm not too worried about it.&#13;
RANGER: What about the turmoil in the business&#13;
department?&#13;
ELMORE: We tell all potential students that the&#13;
business department is undergoing som~ changes,&#13;
but that we are still a young school . None of the&#13;
problems can't be solved and I have faith in&#13;
Chancellor Guskin that · he will solve them .&#13;
Corporations don't care about the changes at a&#13;
Milwaukee and Chicago. • .... • ..... -.... ·.~-:. ........... • ..... •.~1111,,•_.•.,•••..._._..._._ ...... -:. ............... • ..... • ........................................ •.-:..~ RANGER: What kind of relationship with the&#13;
school, only the individual's qualifications. .&#13;
RANGER: When do you get involved in the job&#13;
placement side of it?&#13;
ELMORE: The semester before a ·student graduates,&#13;
we bring him in to do a few things:&#13;
1) We ask what kind of job and company he&#13;
would like to work at. These aren't always easy&#13;
Chancellor does your department have?&#13;
ELMORE: We are virtually independent. He&#13;
realized that our office is extremely critical to the&#13;
well-being of Parkside and he knows we are doing&#13;
our best.&#13;
RANGER: What is in the future?&#13;
ELMORE: Improvement. We can't be another&#13;
Harvard or Yale and I don't think we should try to&#13;
be. The value of 'a university is how well it serves&#13;
the community and the state. We are doing all we&#13;
can to fulfil these goals and the Chancellor knows&#13;
that if he doesn't someone else will.&#13;
Health highlights&#13;
presented&#13;
by phone&#13;
Parkside, in cooperation with&#13;
the Extension Health Sciences&#13;
Unit and the UW-Madison&#13;
Center for Health Sciences, is&#13;
sponsoring a series of HealthLine&#13;
Highlights.&#13;
&amp;nutq &amp;rns&#13;
Clift ~IJoppe&#13;
Each message runs tor a week&#13;
on the Health-Line and is&#13;
available 24 hours a day. To hear&#13;
the message, call 553-2588 and&#13;
ask to hear the Health-Line&#13;
Highlight.&#13;
For further information, and&#13;
for a schedule of the Highlights,&#13;
contact John Valaske at&#13;
553-2271 .&#13;
Ratan Bird Cages or&#13;
use as planters&#13;
One story to ten stories high&#13;
Star~ing at sg_95 ·&#13;
Come in and browse.&#13;
1500 Wash. Ave . 637-7076· Master Charge Accepted&#13;
COME ON OUTI&#13;
TO THE&#13;
KENOSHA ICE ARENA&#13;
4114~&#13;
eRECREA TIONAL SKATING&#13;
eFIGURE SK A TING&#13;
e8ROOM BALL&#13;
•YOUTH HOCKEY&#13;
eSEMI-PRO HOCKEY&#13;
I~&#13;
·------------------------, FREE I&#13;
I ~ ADMISSION I&#13;
I TO I I ANY PUBLIC SKATING SESSION I&#13;
I WITH THIS COUPON I&#13;
I KENOSHA ICE ARENA I lz:22_~~~!~E_ __ !~~~~-~~~~!.DJ &#13;
3932 DOUGLAS AVE., RACINE (DOUGLAS AVE. &amp; 3 MILE RD. HWY. 32 SOUTH)&#13;
·Isports&#13;
!!ght to compete&#13;
Wrestlers go .to&#13;
nationals&#13;
by Jean Tenuta pins.&#13;
Parkside teams, coached by&#13;
Jim Koch have placed in the top&#13;
ten nationally the past six&#13;
seasons, with their best&#13;
performance I in 1974, when&#13;
Parkside had two individual&#13;
champions and a runner up.&#13;
The Rangers won their last&#13;
dual meet of the season,blasting&#13;
Carthage 37-3 February 22 here.&#13;
O'Connell pinned Robert&#13;
Krusinski in 4:15 as did Gruner&#13;
against Brian Reynolds in 6: 18.&#13;
Rick langer at 142 also pinned,&#13;
Mike Hooks in 4:54.&#13;
Steve la Count beat Brian Van&#13;
Horn, 9-2 at 134; Bill lynch beat&#13;
Dennis Kerp 7-5 at 158; Dave&#13;
Wagner over Jeff Kellogg at 2-1&#13;
at 177; Ron Zmuda defeated&#13;
Harry Flanagan 7-2 at 190 and&#13;
Gale beat Todd Stephenson, 15-5&#13;
at heavyweight.&#13;
Eight Parksidewrestlers will try&#13;
to improve on Parkside's sixth&#13;
place finish last year in the NAIA&#13;
National Wrestling Tournament&#13;
listed on their schedule as&#13;
Thursday, Friday and Saturday at&#13;
Eastern Washington State College&#13;
near Spokane.&#13;
The Rangers ranked sixth in&#13;
the nation are led by Dan 0'&#13;
Connell at 126 pounds with a&#13;
24-3 record including six pins&#13;
and Bob Gruner, 23-3 at 150&#13;
pounds. Gruner was fourth last&#13;
season.&#13;
Also appearing to have a&#13;
chance to-do well is John Gale, a&#13;
sophomore from Kenosha Tremper&#13;
at 190 pounds. Gale had&#13;
competed mainly at heavyweight&#13;
during the seasonand has&#13;
a 18-5 records including three&#13;
FREE DELIVER Y&#13;
Member Parksfde 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
C2' ~ 0 A{4.(( Ie.&#13;
2&gt; 2\ )J.)\Hl ~I&#13;
RA...~\\-\.t.V/,&#13;
6~Y.-6~63&#13;
~~Cd C '-n&lt;,\C~S-jORt-.S- }.(OYEL\\E:S&#13;
OPEN&#13;
SJ.::!&#13;
\'2..- 5"&#13;
..tb&#13;
MI CASA&#13;
"HAPPY HOUR COCKTAILS" TUES. - FR!. 4 P.M. - 6 P.M.&#13;
RESTAURANT -COCKTAILS&#13;
MEXICAN &amp; AMERICAN CUISINE&#13;
EXPANDED AMERICAN MENU&#13;
STEAKS - CHOPS - SEAFOOD&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
TUES. THRU FRI. 11 :30 A.M. - 2 P.M.&#13;
DINNERS&#13;
TUE. THRU THURS. 5 - 10 P.M.&#13;
FRI s SAT: 5 • 11:30 P.M.&#13;
SUN. 5 - 10 P.M.&#13;
--CLOSED ON MDNDAYS--&#13;
PRIVATE PARTY FACILITIES&#13;
639·8084&#13;
Hill leads scoring&#13;
Parkside clobbers Carroll&#13;
by Bruce Wagner as their shooting percentage was 28 per cent,&#13;
compared with Parkside's 65 per cent in the second&#13;
half&#13;
leading scorer for both teams was Carroll's NCAA&#13;
Division III leading shooter, David Shaw, who was&#13;
held to 18 points. Marshall Hill led Parkside with 17&#13;
points.&#13;
Also scoring in double figures were Marvin&#13;
Chones (10) Joe Foots (9), Mike Hanke (14), and&#13;
Stevie King (11).·Parkside's reading scorer, leartha&#13;
Scott, was held to 9 points. This reduction was due&#13;
to the fact that Scott committed his fourth personal&#13;
foul with 14:35 left in the game. The scoring slack&#13;
was taken up by Hill, who had three blocked shots&#13;
and kept down the scoring of Carroll's three&#13;
centers, who managed a total of 4 points, while Hill&#13;
had 17 points.&#13;
The next opponent was UW-Platteville,the second&#13;
place Wisconsin State University conference team,&#13;
who the Rangers played last night.&#13;
Excellent shooting and defense were the key for&#13;
the Parkside Rangers as they outmanned Carroll&#13;
College 87-64. in a WICA (Wisconsin&#13;
Inter-Collegiate Association) playoff game,&#13;
Parkside took an early lead in the game but was&#13;
tied with 6:31 left in the first half by Carroll, which&#13;
took the lead at 24-23.&#13;
The lead was extended to 10 points before the&#13;
Rangers' Joe Foots tied it with an 18 foot jumper.&#13;
The Rangers wound up with a 42-37 halftime lead.&#13;
The second half found Marvin Chones starting a&#13;
hot offensive and defensive streak as he hit two&#13;
shots and Carroll found themselves unable to&#13;
answer sixteen straight Parkstde points.&#13;
Chones, leartha Scott, and Marshall Hill&#13;
maintained the spurt until the 14:30 mark, when&#13;
Carroll scored with a free throw.&#13;
The Warriors were 'never in the game after that,&#13;
Box Scores&#13;
•&#13;
PARKSIOE (112)&#13;
, F TP&#13;
PARKSIDE R F TP CARROLL R F TP Chcnes 9 •&#13;
II&#13;
cnones e 2 '0 Bouzeos 7 , 3 Scott , 1&#13;
SCott "&#13;
• •&#13;
s Heuvelmans S , 13 Hill 8&#13;
, 9&#13;
Hill '0 , 17 Newak 3 3 2 Brown •&#13;
3&#13;
"&#13;
Brown 1 2 s Hucke 3 2&#13;
"&#13;
King 5 3&#13;
"&#13;
King s&#13;
, 11 Shaw 5 3 '8 , 1&#13;
Hanke, J, 1 0 0 Mane 0 2 0&#13;
Foots 5&#13;
Foots 1 ,,. Doherty 1 0 0 lewis&#13;
, 0 13&#13;
Nixon 1 0 0 Westrich , 0 2 Oimitriievic 0 0 0&#13;
Lewis 3 2 •&#13;
Zemonovic , 3 • Thompson 0 0 • Oimitrljevic 1 0 0 Wirth 2 1 • Hanke 3 , 10&#13;
Hanke, M. 3 •&#13;
,. Hougaard 1 0 1&#13;
- - - Hartl 0&#13;
, Mathews S 1&#13;
54 ,. 87 1 •&#13;
- - - -----&#13;
"&#13;
'8 54 .1 18&#13;
'"&#13;
Heir-ing wins;&#13;
se·ts record&#13;
PLATTEVILLE (10)&#13;
MEYER 3&#13;
, 8&#13;
Sutherland S 3&#13;
Kraiewski " •&#13;
S 23&#13;
Chapman •&#13;
, ,&#13;
Riehle 8 z 3&#13;
Zwettler I 1 ,&#13;
scbteve 0 0&#13;
,&#13;
Gross 1 0 •&#13;
Telschlag •&#13;
3 •&#13;
Schlies 3 1 3&#13;
Stansell 3 I&#13;
• ------- 36 "&#13;
70&#13;
Parkside's jim Heiring won the fifth in the long jump with a 23'&#13;
two mile walk in the NAIA 10" effort, a seasonbest. A junior&#13;
National Indoor 'Championships" from Milwaukee Wisconsin&#13;
in Kansas City, Missouri lutheran, Sitz was also fifth in Ferra ro&#13;
Saturday. last year's indoor meet.&#13;
Heinng. a senior from Kenosha Also competing were Chris goes to&#13;
Bradford has now won five Hansen, AI Halbur and Mike • I&#13;
successive NAIA walk titles over Rummelhardt, walker s: Joe nationa 5&#13;
the last three seasons with Perera, triple jump; Pat Durns, Jim Ferraro will be Parkside's&#13;
outdoor competition still re- shot put; Bob Meekma and Bob only representative in the NAIA&#13;
maining. Downs, pole vault; Ray National Swimming and Diving&#13;
Heiring has had a best time Fredericksen, two mile run; Bill Championships held tonight&#13;
this year of 13:36 and held NAIA Werve, 600 run; le Roy Jefferson through Saturday at Southwest&#13;
records for both the indoor two 60 high hurdles and Gary Priem State University in Marshall,&#13;
mile at 14:07.3 apd outdoor 1000 yd. run. Minnesota .&#13;
10,000 meters 47:40.2. The team will compete at the Ferraro, having led Parkside&#13;
Teammate John Van Den North Central Relays in during the season with top&#13;
Brandt is a sophomore from Naperville Illinois Saturday. finishes in the 50 and 100&#13;
A..oFDClell:tll:0~n~E~a~s~t.~J~e~ff~S~i~l z~w~a~s~a~l~so~~~~l:II:a~::I:ll:llll:II:a::l:ll:llll:ll:\1 freestyle events needed times of Il 22.6 and 49.7 respectively to&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE qualify&#13;
TH E MIN I-MALL Having come close to these&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE times on several occasions in&#13;
STOP IN TODAY AT PARAPHERNAliA SQUARE recent meets, Ferraro"a freshman&#13;
YOU'LL LOVE THE UNIQUE, COMFORTABLE ATMOSPHERE from Kenosha Bradford, took&#13;
advantage of his last opportunity&#13;
to reach the required marks in a&#13;
meet against Carroll College&#13;
February 19.&#13;
In addition to swimming in the&#13;
50 and 100, Ferraro has also&#13;
competed in the 400 free relay&#13;
for ~~~~ers ~~~sseaso~'&#13;
WILLIAM A. GLASS&#13;
Elmwood Plaza&#13;
Prices Quoted By Phone&#13;
~Jr anger&#13;
needs:&#13;
-photographers&#13;
-writers&#13;
-ad salespersons&#13;
call 553-2295/553-2287&#13;
554·1500&#13;
INCOME TAX&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
1&#13;
l=sports&#13;
Eight to compete&#13;
W restlers go _to&#13;
nationa ls&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Eight Parkside wrestlers will try&#13;
to improve on Parkside's sixth&#13;
place finish last year in the NAIA&#13;
National Wrestling Tournament&#13;
listed on their schedule as&#13;
Thursday, Friday and Saturday at&#13;
Eastern Washington State College&#13;
near Spokane.&#13;
The Rangers ranked sixth in&#13;
the nation are led by Dan O'&#13;
Connell at 126 pounds with a&#13;
24-3 record including six pins&#13;
and Bob Gruner, 23-3 at 150&#13;
pounds. Gruner was fourth last&#13;
season.&#13;
Also appearing to have a&#13;
chance to do well is John Gale, a&#13;
sophomore from Kenosha Tremper&#13;
at 190 pounds. Gale had&#13;
competed mainly at heavyweight&#13;
during the season and has&#13;
a 18-5 records including three&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
pins.&#13;
Parkside teams, coached by&#13;
Jim Koch have placed in the top&#13;
ten nationally the past six&#13;
seasons, with their best&#13;
performance in 1974, when&#13;
Parkside had two individual&#13;
champions and a runner up.&#13;
The Rangers won their last&#13;
dual meet of the season, blasting&#13;
Carthage 37-3 February 22 here.&#13;
O'Connell pinned Robert&#13;
Krusinski in 4:15 as did Gruner&#13;
against Brian Reynolds in 6:18.&#13;
Rick Langer at 142 also pinned&#13;
Mike Hooks in 4:54.&#13;
Steve La Count beat Brian Van&#13;
Horn, 9-2 at 134; Bill Lynch beat&#13;
Dennis Kerp 7-5 at 158; Dave&#13;
Wagner over Jeff Kellogg at 2-1&#13;
at 177; Ron Zmuda defeated&#13;
Harry Flanagan 7-2 at 190 and&#13;
Gale beat Todd Stephenson, 15-5&#13;
at heavyweight.&#13;
•&#13;
443 7 - 22nd A venue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
(!) ~ 0 .A.(-1q le_&#13;
~2.\ ~A.\&gt;-{ ~,&#13;
R~\)\~t. 'A\&#13;
6':J 4 -6'0 63&#13;
.A,&#13;
Ml CASA&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
OP£).{&#13;
S.q11-5&#13;
&#13;
"HAPPY HOUR COCKTAILS" TUES. - FRI. 4 P.M . - 6 P.M.&#13;
RESTAURANT-COCKTAILS&#13;
MEXICAN &amp; AMERICAN CUISINE&#13;
EXPANDED AMERICAN MENU&#13;
STEAKS - CHOPS - SEAFOOD&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
TUES. THAU FRI. 11:30 A.M. - 2 P.M.&#13;
DINNERS&#13;
TUE. THAU THURS. 5 - 10 P.M.&#13;
FRI &amp; SAT. 5 - 11 :30 P.M.&#13;
SUN. 5 - 10 P.M .&#13;
"CLOSED ON MONDAYS"&#13;
PRIVATE PARTY FACILITIES&#13;
639-8084 3932 DOUGLAS AVE., RACINE (DOUGLAS AVE. &amp; 3 MILE RD. HWY. 32 SOUTH)&#13;
Hill leads scoring&#13;
Parkside clobbers Carroll&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Excellent shooting and defense were the key for&#13;
the Parkside Rangers as they outmanned Carroll&#13;
College 87-64, in a WICA (Wisconsin&#13;
Inter-Collegiate Association) playoff game.&#13;
as their shooting percentage was 28 per cent,&#13;
compared with Parkside's 65 per cent in the second&#13;
half .&#13;
Parkside took an early lead in the game but was&#13;
tied with 6:31 left in the first half by Carroll, which&#13;
took the lead at 24-23.&#13;
Leading scorer for both teams was Carroll's NCAA&#13;
Division Ill leading shooter, David Shaw, who was&#13;
held to 18 points . Marshall Hill led Parkside with 17&#13;
points .&#13;
The lead was extended to 10 points before the&#13;
Rangers' Joe Foots tied it with an 18 foot jumper.&#13;
The Rangers wound up with a 42-37 halftime lead.&#13;
The second half found Marvin Chones starting a&#13;
hot offensive and defensive streak as he hit two&#13;
shots and Carroll found themselves unable to&#13;
answer sixteen straight Parkside points.&#13;
Chones, Leartha Scott, and Marshall Hill&#13;
maintained the spurt until the 14:30 mark, when&#13;
Carroll scored with a free throw.&#13;
Also scoring in double figures were Marvin&#13;
(hones (10) Joe Foots (9), Mike Hanke (14), and&#13;
Stevie King (11) .. Parkside's leading scorer, Leartha&#13;
Scott, was held to 9 points . This reduction was due&#13;
to the fact that Scott committed his fourth personal&#13;
foul with 14:35 left in the game. The scoring slack&#13;
was taken up by Hill, vyho had three blocked shots&#13;
and kept down the scoring of Carroll's three&#13;
centers, who managed a total of 4 points, while Hill&#13;
had 17 points .&#13;
The Warriors were never in the game after that,&#13;
The next opponent was UW-Plotteville, the second&#13;
place Wisconsin State University conference team,&#13;
who the Rangers played last night.&#13;
Box Scores ..&#13;
PARKSIDE R F TP CARROLL R F TP&#13;
Chones 6 2 10 Bouzeos 7 1 3&#13;
Scott 9 4 9 Heuvelmans 5 1 13&#13;
Hill 10 1 17 Novak 3 3 2 Brown 1 2 6 Hucke 3 2 14&#13;
King 9 2 11 Shaw 5 3 18&#13;
Hanke, J. 1 0 0 Mane 0 2 0 Foots 1 2 18 Doherty 1 0 0 Nixon 1 0 0 Westrich 1 0 2 Lewis 3 2 4 Zemonovic 2 3 6&#13;
Oimitrijevic 1 0 0 Wirth 2 1 4&#13;
Hanke, M. 3 4 14 Hougaard 1 0 1 - - Hartl 0 2 1 54 19 87 - 41 18 64&#13;
Heiring wins;&#13;
se-ts record&#13;
Parkside's Jim Heiring won the&#13;
two mile walk in the NAIA&#13;
National Indoor -Championships ·&#13;
in Kansas City, Missouri&#13;
Saturday .&#13;
Heiring, a senior from Kenosha&#13;
Bradford has now won five&#13;
successive NAIA walk titles over&#13;
the last three seasons with&#13;
outdoor competition still remaining.&#13;
&#13;
Heiring has had a best time&#13;
this year of 13 :36 and held NAIA&#13;
records for both the indoor two&#13;
mile at 14:07 .3 a,nd outdoor&#13;
10,000 meters 47 :40.2.&#13;
Teammate John Van Den&#13;
Brandt is a sophomore from&#13;
Aooleton East. Jeff Si1z was also&#13;
fifth in the Long jump with a 23'&#13;
10" effort, a season best. A junior&#13;
from Milwaukee Wisconsin&#13;
Lutheran, Sitz was also fifth in&#13;
last year's indoor meet.&#13;
Also competing were Chris&#13;
Hansen, Al Halbur and Mike&#13;
Rummelhardt, walkers ; Joe&#13;
Perera, triple jump; Pat Durns,&#13;
shot put; Bob Meekma and Bob&#13;
Downs, pole vault; Ray&#13;
Fredericksen, two mile run; Bill&#13;
Werve, 600 run ; Le Roy Jefferson&#13;
60 high hurdles and Gary Priem&#13;
1000 yd . run .&#13;
The team will compete at the&#13;
North Central Relays in&#13;
Naperville Illinois Saturday.&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SCJUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
STOP IN TODAY AT PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE.&#13;
YOU 'LL LOVE THE UNIQUE . COMFORTABLE ATMOSPHERE&#13;
~,&#13;
needs:&#13;
-photographers&#13;
-writers&#13;
-ad salespersons&#13;
)&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
(hones&#13;
Scott&#13;
Hill&#13;
Brown&#13;
King&#13;
Foots&#13;
Lewis&#13;
Oimitrijevic&#13;
Thompson&#13;
Honke&#13;
Mothews&#13;
PLATTEVILLE&#13;
MEYER&#13;
Sutherland&#13;
Krajewski&#13;
Chopman&#13;
Riehle&#13;
Zwettler&#13;
Schieve&#13;
Gross&#13;
Tetschlog&#13;
Sch lies&#13;
Stansell&#13;
(112)&#13;
R TP&#13;
9 4 17&#13;
2 1 22&#13;
8 2 9&#13;
4 3 14&#13;
5 3 12&#13;
5 2 7&#13;
6 0 13&#13;
0 0 0&#13;
0 0 4&#13;
3 2 10&#13;
s 4&#13;
-----&#13;
47 18 112&#13;
(70)&#13;
3 2 8&#13;
5 3 12&#13;
4 5 23&#13;
4 2 6&#13;
8 2 3&#13;
1 1 2&#13;
0 0 2&#13;
1 0 4&#13;
4 3 4&#13;
3 1 3&#13;
3 4&#13;
36 21 70&#13;
Ferraro&#13;
goes to .&#13;
nationals&#13;
Jim Ferraro will be Parkside's&#13;
only representative in the NAIA&#13;
National Swimming and Diving&#13;
Championships held tonight&#13;
through Saturday at Southwest&#13;
State University in Marshall,&#13;
Minnesota.&#13;
Ferraro, having led Parkside&#13;
during the season with top&#13;
finishes in the 50 and 100&#13;
freestyle events needed times of&#13;
22 .6 and 49.7 respectively to&#13;
qualify.&#13;
Having come close to these&#13;
times on several occasions in&#13;
recent meets, Ferraro a freshman&#13;
from Kenosha Bradford, took&#13;
advantage of his last opportunity&#13;
to reach the required marks in a&#13;
meet against Carroll College&#13;
February 19.&#13;
In addition to swimming in the&#13;
50 and 100, Ferraro has also&#13;
competed in the 400 free relay&#13;
for the Rar_1gers ~~is season . r,,_ __________ ...,&#13;
554-1500&#13;
INCOME TAX&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
WILLIAM A. GLASS&#13;
Elmwood Plaza&#13;
Prlces Quoted By Phone&#13;
,:: . &#13;
, ~&#13;
,,&#13;
, n&#13;
I ,&#13;
'"&#13;
3 II&#13;
I I&#13;
I II&#13;
o I&#13;
o ,&#13;
'"&#13;
I ,&#13;
I III&#13;
,&#13;
"n&#13;
I&#13;
3&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
I&#13;
,&#13;
-,&#13;
Is&#13;
p~\&#13;
rliell\~&#13;
Ii!l'q&#13;
II~ighl&#13;
~&#13;
~-&#13;
,~&#13;
~j~&#13;
ar/-&#13;
djllli ~&#13;
,~'&#13;
-"II' ¢iii'&#13;
I~&#13;
..&#13;
~&#13;
;&gt;&#13;
iJI&#13;
~,~&#13;
'III'&#13;
/Il'~&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
-Al&#13;
Film depicts&#13;
L.A. lifestyle&#13;
by Michael Murphy&#13;
FILM REVIEW - "WELCOME TO L.A."&#13;
"Welcome to L.A.," as the title suggests, is a&#13;
panoramic travelogue of southern California, Its&#13;
flavor, however, is less that of a scenic overview&#13;
and more of a cross cultural study into Californian&#13;
lifestyle.&#13;
Director Alan Rudolph chose to present Los&#13;
Angeles in the light of its people. It is through&#13;
observation of an area's inhabitants and their 'way&#13;
of life that the unique characteristics of an area is&#13;
revealed. California, with its exceptional social laws&#13;
and standards of morality, supplied ample material&#13;
for Rudolph's cinematic endeavor.&#13;
Los Angeles, as one.of the film's songs suggests, is&#13;
a "City of One Night Stands." In Welcome to L.A.&#13;
the concentration is more on interaction between&#13;
characters instead of on any overt storyline.&#13;
Throughout the film, relationships between&#13;
characters are developed in a complicated but&#13;
wonderfully intricate manner. Lives that at first&#13;
observation appear unrelated, eventually intertwine&#13;
like worms in a bait box.&#13;
The film focuses upon ten select people each&#13;
representing different levels of cultural and&#13;
economic styles. Stereotyping is avoided, however,&#13;
by constantly dividing attention between the&#13;
characters, neither demanding prestige over others.&#13;
Many of the characterizations, also, are affected in&#13;
such a manner as to appear highly obscure and&#13;
undefinable, but still manage believability.&#13;
Welcome to L.A. marks Rudolph's first directorial&#13;
effort. The style and presentation of the film,&#13;
however, can be highly attributed to the influence&#13;
of the f~lm's producer, Robert Altman. Rudolph&#13;
assisted with Altman's Nashville and wrote the&#13;
screenplay for Buffalo Bill and the Indians. The&#13;
experience of these collaborations is definitely&#13;
reflected in this film. .&#13;
As in many Altman films, Welcome to L.A. is&#13;
composed of several. separate character studies,&#13;
the cumulation of which is chosen to represent a&#13;
specific slice of Americana. Rudolph, also like&#13;
Altman, employs a complex soundtrack, using&#13;
music as a transitory device between characters&#13;
and points of action.&#13;
Rudolph also borrowed extensively from&#13;
Altman's group of stock players. Keith Carradine&#13;
virtually recreates his Nashville role, that of a&#13;
quietly mysterious loner who has a strange hold&#13;
over woman. All of the others (Harvey Keitel, Sally&#13;
Kellerman, Sissy Spacek, etc.) are beautifully&#13;
effective in their respective roles greatly&#13;
contributing to the overall sense of realism,&#13;
characteristic to the film.&#13;
With his first film, Rudolph has launched a&#13;
promising career as a director. His approach is fresh&#13;
and effective, offering a unique escape from&#13;
traditional film formats.&#13;
The major drawback of the film is it's&#13;
conservative use of the camera. The scenes,&#13;
basically filmed using close-ups and medium shots,&#13;
appear static and near lifeless. The film, as a result,&#13;
becomes visually tedious at times, forcing attention&#13;
rather than demanding it.&#13;
The film, taken as a whole, supplies an&#13;
interesting social analysis in a highly entertaining&#13;
manner. If this is an example of Rudolph's ability, I&#13;
look forward to his future undertakings.&#13;
_.-....._-&#13;
372(l Douglas&#13;
Racine&#13;
showsI&#13;
Ralston presents&#13;
JFK connections&#13;
Sociologist and cnmmologtst&#13;
R.F Ralston of the National&#13;
Committee to Investigate Assassinations&#13;
in Washington, DC.,&#13;
will speak on "The Conspiracy&#13;
That Murdered John F. Kennedy"&#13;
at The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
at 7.30 p.m. on&#13;
Thursday, March 3, in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theater under sponsorship&#13;
of the student Parkside&#13;
Activities Board.&#13;
Admission is $1 for Parkside&#13;
students and $1.50 for the public&#13;
and tickets are available at the&#13;
Union Information Center, Sears&#13;
in Kenosha and Team Electronics&#13;
in Racine.&#13;
Author of "History's Verdict:&#13;
The Acquittal of Lee Harvey&#13;
Oswald," Ralston claims to have&#13;
visual evidence which proves it&#13;
was physically impossible for&#13;
one man to have shot the&#13;
President Ralston also alleges&#13;
there may be a connection&#13;
between the Kennedy assassmation&#13;
persons associated WIth the&#13;
Watergate case&#13;
Ralston's collection of VIsual&#13;
evidence Includes a copy of the&#13;
famous Zapruder ftlm sequence&#13;
while the assassination was in&#13;
progress Ralston has spent more&#13;
than ten years researching the&#13;
assas~atlon and has worked&#13;
With Bernard Festerwald, attorney&#13;
for James Earl Ray In the&#13;
Martin Luther King assassmanon&#13;
case and an attorney for&#13;
Watergate defendant James&#13;
McCord&#13;
A select committee on&#13;
assassinations of the U.S House&#13;
of Representatives has reopened&#13;
Investigation of both the&#13;
Kennedy and King assassrnanons&#13;
IMIIUIUllllHlllllld.IIIII1IHIIHIIIlIUIIIIIIlIHIIII_ ... •&#13;
DINO'S&#13;
1816 16th St.&#13;
Racine&#13;
634-1991 639.7115&#13;
WE DELIVER&#13;
Open 4:00 p.m. till one hour after&#13;
taverns close&#13;
1IIIIHIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIUIUIIHU_IIII11U __ U 11&#13;
OLYMPIA BREWING COMPANY OLYMPIA· Sf. PAUL&#13;
HEY PARKSIDE!!&#13;
Oly Draft is Here&#13;
3637&#13;
Dist. by&#13;
30th&#13;
C.J.W.&#13;
• Avenue,&#13;
Inc.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
II&#13;
~cen,&#13;
lee~&#13;
Oll'sNcA,&#13;
'~was&#13;
w~v&#13;
e~&#13;
(~ Ii&#13;
),~&#13;
er,tea~&#13;
11asi~&#13;
Iller~&#13;
lllg1~1&#13;
~~t , whi~H~&#13;
the!!(~&#13;
ceteilli&#13;
f ~&#13;
l 11&#13;
1 n&#13;
2 '&#13;
3 ll&#13;
3 ll&#13;
I 1&#13;
13&#13;
0&#13;
' 10&#13;
112&#13;
11&#13;
1l&#13;
6&#13;
3&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
' ' 3&#13;
10&#13;
Film deplct.s&#13;
L.A. lifestyle&#13;
by Michael Murphy&#13;
FILM REVIEW - " WELCOME TO L.A."&#13;
"Welcome to L.A.," as the title suggests, is a&#13;
panorall)ic travelogue of southern California. Its&#13;
flavor, however, is less that of a scenic overview&#13;
and more of a cross cultural study into Californian&#13;
lifestyle.&#13;
Director Alan Rudolph chose to present Los&#13;
Angeles in the light of its people. It is through&#13;
observation of an area's inhabitants and their way&#13;
of life that the unique characteristics of an area is&#13;
revealed . California, with its exceptional social laws&#13;
and standards of morality, supplied ample material&#13;
for Rudolph's cinematic endeavor.&#13;
Los Angeles, as one of the film's songs suggests, is&#13;
a "City of One Night Stands." In Welcome to L.A.&#13;
the concentration is more on interaction between&#13;
characters instead of on any overt storyline.&#13;
Throughout the film, relationships between&#13;
characters are developed in a complicated but&#13;
wonderfully intricate manner. Lives that at first&#13;
observation appedr unrelated, eventually intertwine&#13;
like worms in a bait box .&#13;
The film focuses upon ten select people each&#13;
representing different levels of cultural and&#13;
economic styles . Stereotyping is avoided, however,&#13;
by constantly dividing attention between the&#13;
characters, neither rlPmanding prestige over others .&#13;
Many of the characterizations, also, are affected in&#13;
such a manner as to appear highly obscure and&#13;
undefinable, but still manage believability.&#13;
Welcome to L.A. marks Rudolph's first directorial&#13;
effort. The style and presfntation of the film ,&#13;
however, can be highly attributed to the influence&#13;
of the f11m's producer, Robert Altman . Rudolph&#13;
assisted with Altman's Nashville and wrote the&#13;
screenplay for Buffalo Bill and the Indians. The&#13;
experience of these collaborations is definitely&#13;
reflected in this film.&#13;
As in many Altman films, Welcome to L.A. is&#13;
composed of several , separate character studies,&#13;
the cumulatio11 of which is chosen to represent a&#13;
specific slice of Americana . Rudolph, also like&#13;
Altman, employs a complex soundtrack, using&#13;
music as a transitory device between characters&#13;
and points of action.&#13;
Rudolph also borrowed extensively from&#13;
Altman's group of stock players . Keith Carradine&#13;
virtually recreates his Nashville role, that of a&#13;
quietly mysterious loner who has a strange hold&#13;
over woman . All of the others (Harvey Keitel, Sally&#13;
Kellerman, Sissy Spacek, etc .) are beautifully&#13;
effective in their respective roles greatly&#13;
contributing to the overall sense of realism,&#13;
characteristic to the film .&#13;
With his first film, Rudolph has launched a&#13;
promising career as a director. His approach is fresh&#13;
and effective, offering a unique escape from&#13;
traditional film formats .&#13;
The major drawback of the film is it's&#13;
conservative use of the camera . The scenes,&#13;
basically filmed using close-ups and medium shots,&#13;
appear static and near lifeless . The film, as a result,&#13;
becomes visually tedious at times, forcing attention&#13;
rather than demanding it.&#13;
The film, taken as a whole, supplies an&#13;
interesting social analysis in a highly entertaining&#13;
manner. If this is an example of Rudolph's ability, I&#13;
look forward to his future undertakings .&#13;
Shows'I&#13;
Ralston presents&#13;
JFK connections&#13;
Soc1olog1st and crrmrnologrst&#13;
R F Ralston of the ational&#13;
Committee to Investigate Assassinations&#13;
in Washington, DC,&#13;
will speak on "The Conspiracy&#13;
That Murdered John f . Kennedy"&#13;
at The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
at 7 30 p .m on&#13;
Thursday, March 3, in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theater under sponsorship&#13;
of the student Parkside&#13;
Activities Board.&#13;
Adm 1ssion is $1 for Parkside&#13;
students and $1 .50 for the public&#13;
and tickets are available at the&#13;
Union Information Center, Sears&#13;
in Kenosha and Team Electronics&#13;
in Racine .&#13;
Author of " History's Verdict&#13;
The Acquittal of Lee Harvey&#13;
Oswald," Ralston claims to have&#13;
visual evidence which proves it&#13;
was physically impossible for&#13;
one man to have shot the&#13;
Pres,d nt Ralston also&#13;
there may be a connection&#13;
between the Kennedy assassin·&#13;
at,on p rsons associated with th&#13;
Wat rgate case&#13;
Ralston's collection of visual&#13;
evidenc includ s a copy of the&#13;
famous Zapruder frlm equence&#13;
whrle the as assination was in&#13;
progress Ralston has spent more&#13;
than ten years researching the&#13;
assas ·nation and has worked&#13;
wrth Bernard Festerwald, attorney&#13;
for James Earl Ray in the&#13;
Martin Luther King assassination&#13;
case and an attorney for&#13;
Watergate defendant James&#13;
McCord&#13;
A select committee on&#13;
assassinations of the U S House&#13;
of Representatives has reop ned&#13;
investigation of both the&#13;
Kennedy and King assas inat1ons&#13;
&#13;
INHINIUIIUIIIIIIINIIIINIIHflftlllllllfllHIIHlllftlHIIIIIIININllatD&#13;
IN O'S&#13;
1816 16th St. 3728 Dougla&#13;
Racine Racine&#13;
634-1991 639-7115&#13;
WE DELIVER&#13;
Open 4:00 p.m. till one hour after&#13;
11•01111111&#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, Kenosha &#13;
e&#13;
Kenosha Racine&#13;
PHONE, 552·1844&#13;
2121 . 21st ST.&#13;
VilLA CAPRI CENTER&#13;
PHONE, (414) 632-1665&#13;
1007 WASHINGTON AVENUE&#13;
RACINE, WISCONSIN 53403&#13;
lJ"hereIS. differerue!!,! 0., J&#13;
yPREPARE&#13;
FOR:&#13;
~.lOCI1.~&#13;
GMAT • GRE • OCAT&#13;
CPAT • VI« • SAT&#13;
Our broad fange of programs provides an umbrella 01 fe,sting&#13;
know·how that enables us to offer the bast preparation&#13;
available, 90 matter which course is taken. Over 38 years&#13;
,of experience and, success. Small classes. votumtnous&#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&#13;
use of supplementary materials. Make-ups for missed leesons&#13;
at our centers.&#13;
ASK ABOUT OUR&#13;
COMPACT COURSES&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Sales people for&#13;
Ranger Ads&#13;
Call 553· 2287&#13;
Chester-the-molester 'finds help&#13;
by Linda Lasco&#13;
Chester-the-Molester, out making his usual&#13;
rounds around Parksides parking lot this past&#13;
week, passed Voluptuous Voola who was out&#13;
vending vicarious thrills. Now Chester, conniving a&#13;
chance collision with the vamp, veered his VW into&#13;
Voluptuous voola's van.&#13;
Voola van'ished from her van vowing to return&#13;
(After her Human Sexu~lity class) ONLY if&#13;
Chester-the-Molester would warrant being worth&#13;
her while in a while which meant 1.) he'd be&#13;
worth five bucks 2.) he was WELL INFORMED on&#13;
what to do, and 3.) he was well-working. Well&#13;
now, Chester knew that he only had 15c "and his&#13;
checkbook, and he knew he worked well with&#13;
women, but WHERE to get informed ... he&#13;
wondered.&#13;
After a few fortified fact-filled moments at the&#13;
information center, Chester was informed that he&#13;
could cash a five dollar personal check for only a&#13;
15c fee. Voluptuous Voola and Chester-theMolester&#13;
vamoosed in Voola's van shortly&#13;
thereafter. Of course there's NO guaranteeing that&#13;
the information centers will solve all of your&#13;
problems as easily as this, but a brief look at the&#13;
following list of whet they have to offer might&#13;
save you some time. The choice is yours.&#13;
There are two information centers on campus:&#13;
one by WLLC at Main Place and the other near&#13;
Union Square in the student union. The kiosk at&#13;
WLLC Main Place is open from:&#13;
M-8:00 to 4:30 p.m.; T-8:00 to 11:00 a.m.;&#13;
CAll: l&amp;3taMOR.u-H&#13;
(608) 255-0575 MPIAN Bard' 1 t' On Saturday, March 5, the&#13;
1001 Rutledge St., EDUCATIONAL CENTER lTD 5 TOn osy Modern Language Program will&#13;
Madison, Wis. 53703 sponsor a workshop on "The&#13;
CLASSES IN MADISON TEST PREPARATION presen ted h Role of Foreign Languages in a&#13;
AND MilWAUKEE SPECIALISTS SINCE lq3t1 ere&#13;
•&#13;
iiiiil:::~ii:ii.~:~~:~~:~_;;;;;;;;;~~_" Centers inMajorU.S. Cities Pre-Professional Curriculum." The meeting will be held in&#13;
The New Shakespeare Com- currently is on.tts sixth national Rm. D174 of the Wyllie Library&#13;
pany of San Francisco will tour, launched last fall with a Learning Center from 10 a.m. to&#13;
present "As You Like It" at the series of performances or'! 1 p.m. -&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside Broadway. The program will consist of a&#13;
at 8 p.m. on Sunday, March 6, in Directed by Zurich-born panel discussion of topics&#13;
the Communkation Arts Theater. Margrit Roma, who has studied related to international business&#13;
The program ts part of with such masters of European and community services. Besides&#13;
Parkside's Accent on Enrichment theater as Reinhardt, Piscator the moderator, Dr. Sylvie&#13;
subscription series. A limited and Brecht, the company was Debevec Henning, coordinator&#13;
number of tickets at $5 each are founded and dedicated to the of the Modern Language&#13;
on sale at the campus Union idea of making Shakespeare's Program, the panel will include&#13;
Information Center, Sears in plays total theater and relevant John Stanger of the Marine&#13;
Kenosha and Cook-Cere and to today's world. Critics National Exchange Bank; Arland&#13;
TEAM in Racine. throughout the country have Crump of the U.S. Department of&#13;
The New Shakespeare Com- attested tc, its success. Commerce; Mariano Bosisio of&#13;
pany performs year-round in "As You Like It," written by Jockey International; Thomas&#13;
residency at San Francisco's Shakespearewhen he was 35 is a Newman of 5.&lt;:-. Johnson and&#13;
Golden Gate Park and at Lake romantic fantasy in which Son; Daniel Ramirez of the&#13;
Tahoe in addition to an extensive Orlando, a love-smitten youth, SpanishCenter-Racine; and Mrs.&#13;
'touring program through-out the and Rosalind, his beloved Koch of the Centro HispanoU.S.&#13;
and Canada. The company masquerading as a boy, frolic in Kenosha.&#13;
the enchanted Forest of Arden. Although the workshop is&#13;
One of the bard's most rollicking planned prirnarilv for area high&#13;
comedies, the play was written school teachers, students and&#13;
between completion of his staff interested in careers in&#13;
serious histories of English international trade or communirovaltv.&#13;
and Hamlet, which he ty work are encouraged to&#13;
P!',ote soon afterward''i""te~b:'8&#13;
:~\ 'ourt,&#13;
'':I .-J PUll &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
The Conspiracy that&#13;
Murdered J.F.K.&#13;
Lecture by R.F. Ralston&#13;
Thurs., March 3&#13;
Union Cinema&#13;
Theatre&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
'1.00 UW-P Students&#13;
.'1.50 General&#13;
Tickets at Union Info Center and at the Door&#13;
Sponsored by P .A.B.&#13;
and 1:00 to 4:00 p.m.; W-B:OO to 11:30 a.m.&#13;
and 12:00 to 4:00 p.m.; T-9:00 to 4:00 p.m.;&#13;
F -10:00 to 4:00 p.m.&#13;
It has lists of class cancellations, office numbers&#13;
of faculty, financial aids, it can answer questions&#13;
pertaining to. the timetable (such as room&#13;
changes), and has daily events calenders of bake&#13;
sales, UW-Parkside Extension courses, candy sales,&#13;
and club meeting times.&#13;
The Union information center is open from 7:45&#13;
a.m. to 4:30 p.m. M- F. In addition to the general&#13;
information, this center has ticket sales for&#13;
basketball gamesand concerts, and keeps a book of&#13;
daily events. They send out time tables and school&#13;
catalogs from this center and also sell bus tokens&#13;
for Racine and Kenosha bus service. They have a"&#13;
check cashing service which allows students,&#13;
faculty, and staff to cash a personal check (written&#13;
up to $5) for only a 15c fee.&#13;
Both information centers have a lost and found&#13;
center. The centers employ six people altogether:&#13;
Gall Hinks (Supervisor) and Lorraine Kiekhoefer,&#13;
both of which are part-time people, and students&#13;
Randy Sell, Cheryl Powalisz, Michele Rothman, and&#13;
Meegan Carr. You can reach one of these people in&#13;
the Union center at ext. (553-) 2345 and in WLLC&#13;
Kiosk at ext ..(553-) 2699.&#13;
If you need information after 4:30 p.m., dial ext&#13;
(553-) 2345. You will. hear a recording.of 'any events&#13;
taking place that night on campus, and times the&#13;
shuttle bus is operating, as well as times the&#13;
bookstore, PEbuilding, pool, recreation center, and&#13;
library are open.&#13;
Role workshop&#13;
to be held&#13;
LIVE ENTERTAINMFNT&#13;
Wed, thru Sat. 9:30-12:30&#13;
listening music&#13;
Unusual and excellent food&#13;
eyeryday.&#13;
1&#13;
(&#13;
632-6151&#13;
On Spring tWest of 31 in Greenridge Plaza&#13;
·.• .,;. -;.···.:, .· .• .;;-·.··.···:·. .:: ::: -: :: . . . . . . :- -:· -: .· . . . . . : ...:\ ..... / p&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
PHONE, 552-7844&#13;
2121 • 21st ST.&#13;
VILLA CAPRI CENTER&#13;
e&#13;
Racine&#13;
PHONE, (414) 632-1665&#13;
1007 WASHINGTON AVENUE&#13;
RACINE, WISCONSIN 53403&#13;
crhere JS.difference!!! Our J YNr&#13;
PREPARE FOR:&#13;
~-~-~&#13;
GMAT • GRE • OCAT&#13;
CPAT • Via • SAT&#13;
Our broad range of programs provides an umbrella of t9.sting&#13;
know-how that enables us to offer the best preparation&#13;
available, no matter which course is take.n. Over 38 years&#13;
of experience and success. Small classes. Voluminous ·home study materials. Courses that are constantly updated.&#13;
Permanent centers open days &amp; weekends all year.&#13;
Complete tape facilities for ~eview of class lesso~s 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&#13;
TEST PREPARATION&#13;
SPECIALISTS SINCE 19Jb&#13;
Centers in Major U.S. Cities&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Sales people for&#13;
Ranger Ads&#13;
Call 553- 2287&#13;
Chester-the-molester ·finds help&#13;
by Linda Lasco&#13;
Chester-the-Molester, out making his usual&#13;
rounds around Parksides parking lot this past&#13;
week, passed Voluptuous Voola who was out&#13;
vending vicarious thrills. Now Chester, conniving a&#13;
chance collision with the vamp, veered his VW into&#13;
Voluptuous yoola's van.&#13;
' and 1:00 to 4:00 p.m.; W-8:00 to 11:30 a.m.&#13;
and 12:00 to 4:00 p.m.; T-9:00 to 4:00 p.m.;&#13;
F- 10:00 to 4:00 p .m.&#13;
Voola vanished from he~ van vowing to return&#13;
(After her Human Sexuality class) ONLY if&#13;
Chester-the-Molester would warrant being worth&#13;
her while in a while which meant 1.) he'd be&#13;
worth five bucks 2.) he was WELL INFORMED on&#13;
what to do, and 3.) he was well-working. Well&#13;
now, Chester knew that he only had 15c and his&#13;
checkbook, and he knew he worked well with&#13;
women, but WHERE to get informed . . . he&#13;
wondered.&#13;
After a few fortified fact-filled moments at the&#13;
information center, Chester was informed that he&#13;
could cash a five dollar personal check for only a&#13;
15c fee. Voluptuous Voola and Chester-theMolester&#13;
vamoosed in Voola's van shortly&#13;
thereafter. Of course there's NO guaranteeing that&#13;
the information centers will solve all of your&#13;
problems as easily as this, but a brief look at the&#13;
following list of what they have to offer might&#13;
save you some time. The choice is yours.&#13;
There are two information centers on camp1.1s :&#13;
one by WLLC at Main Place and the other near&#13;
Union Square in the student union . The kiosk at&#13;
WLLC Main Place is open from:&#13;
M-8:00 to 4:30 p.m.; T-8:00 to 11 :00 a.m.;&#13;
It has lists of class cancellations, office numbers&#13;
of faculty, financial aids_, it can answer questions&#13;
pertaining to • the timetable (such as room&#13;
changes), and has daily events calenders of bake&#13;
sales, UW-Parkside Extension courses, candy sales,&#13;
and club meeting times.&#13;
The Union information center is open from 7:45&#13;
a.m. to 4:30 p .m. M- F. In addition to the general&#13;
information, this center has ticket sales for&#13;
basketball games and concerts, and keeps a book of&#13;
daily events. They send out time tables and school&#13;
catalogs from this center and also sell bus tokens&#13;
for Racine and Kenosha bus service. They have a·&#13;
check cashing service which allows students,&#13;
faculty, and staff to cash a personal check (written&#13;
up to $5) for only a 15c fee.&#13;
Both information centers have a lost and found&#13;
center. The centers employ six people altogether:&#13;
Gail Hinks (Supervisor) and Lorraine Kiekhoefer,&#13;
both of which are part-time people, aAd students&#13;
Randy Sell, Cheryl Powalisz, Michele Rothman, and&#13;
Meegan Carr. You can reach one of these people in&#13;
the Union center at ext. (553-) 2345 and in WLLC&#13;
Kiosk at ext . .(553-) 2699.&#13;
If you need information after 4:30 p .m., dial ext&#13;
(553-) 2345 . You will.hear a recording .of any events&#13;
taking place that night on campus , and times the&#13;
shuttle bus is operating, as well as times the&#13;
bookstore, PE building, pool, recreation center, and&#13;
library are open .&#13;
Role workshop&#13;
to be held&#13;
On Saturday, March 5, the&#13;
Modern Language Program will&#13;
sponsor a workshop on " The&#13;
Role of Foreign Languages in a&#13;
Pre-Professional Curriculum ."&#13;
Bard's fantasy&#13;
presented here&#13;
The meeting will be held in&#13;
currently is on .its sixth national Rm . D174 of the Wyllie Library&#13;
tour, launched last fall with a Learning Center from 10 a.m . to&#13;
The New Shakespeare Company&#13;
of San Francisco will&#13;
present " As You Like It" at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
at 8 p.m. on Sunday, March 6, in&#13;
the Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
The program is · part of&#13;
Parkside's Accent on Enrichment&#13;
subscription series . A limited&#13;
number of tickets at $5 each are&#13;
on sale at the campus Union&#13;
Information Center, Sears in&#13;
Kenosha and Cook-Gere and&#13;
TEAM in Racine .&#13;
The New Shakespeare Company&#13;
performs year-round in&#13;
residency at San Francisco's&#13;
Golden Gate Park and at Lake&#13;
Tahoe in addition to an extensive&#13;
·touring program through-out the&#13;
U.S. and Canada. The company&#13;
series of performances on 1 p .m. · -&#13;
Broadway. The program will consist of a&#13;
Directed by Zurich-born panel discussion of topics&#13;
Margrit Roma, who has studied related to international business&#13;
with such masters of European and community services . Besides&#13;
theater as Reinhardt, Piscator the moderator, Dr . Sylvie&#13;
and Brecht, the company was Debevec Henning, coordinator&#13;
founded and dedicated to the of the Modern Language&#13;
idea of making Shakespeare's Program, the panel will include&#13;
plays total theater and relevant John Stanger of the Marine&#13;
to today' s world . Critics National Exchange Bank; Arland&#13;
throughout th·e country have Crump of the U.S. Department of&#13;
attested tQ. its success . Commerce; Mariano Bosisio of&#13;
"As You Like It," written by Jockey International; Thomas&#13;
Shakespeare when he was 35 is a Newman of S.C. Johnson and&#13;
romantic fantasy in which Son; Daniel Ramirez of the&#13;
Orlando, a love-smitten youth, Spanish Center-Racine; and Mrs .&#13;
and Rosalind , his beloved Koch of the Centro Hispanomasquerading&#13;
as a boy, frolic in Kenosha .&#13;
the enchanted Forest of Arden . Although the workshop is&#13;
The Conspiracy that&#13;
Murdered J .F .K.&#13;
One of the bard's most rollicking planned primarily for area high&#13;
comedies, the play was written school teachers , students and&#13;
between completion of his staff interested in careers in&#13;
serious histories of English international trade or communiroyalty&#13;
and Hamlet, which he ty work are encouraged to&#13;
wrote soon afterward. attend .&#13;
~ 'ierbur,,&#13;
Lecture by R.F. Ralston&#13;
Thurs., March 3&#13;
Union Cinema&#13;
Theatre&#13;
7 :30 p.m.&#13;
'1.00 UW-P Students&#13;
· '1.50 General&#13;
Tickets at Union Info Center and at the Door&#13;
Sponsored by P .A.B.&#13;
r ~\ 'ourt,0&#13;
J PUa &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
LIVE ENTERTAINMF.NT&#13;
Wed. thru Sot. 9:30-12:30&#13;
listening music&#13;
Unusual and excellent food&#13;
everyday.&#13;
632-6151&#13;
On Spring tWest of 31 in Greenridge Plaza&#13;
(&#13;
I &#13;
The merchants are on stage&#13;
by Cheryl Powalisz&#13;
Parkside's studio production&#13;
class will present a Roman&#13;
comedy, The Merchant by&#13;
Plautus, March 9,10 and 11. The&#13;
production will be directed by&#13;
Hali Rosen, and staged in the&#13;
Communication Arts Studio B.&#13;
(D155b)&#13;
The costumes and the scenery&#13;
, will be designed by Deborah Bell.&#13;
John Dickson will be designing&#13;
the lighting for the show and Dr.&#13;
Rhoda-Gale Pollack is named as.&#13;
the producer.&#13;
The :\ierchant cast list is&#13;
Charinus - Robert Hlk. Acanthio&#13;
- Carol Knudson, Demipho -&#13;
Marc Miller, Lysimachus - Fred&#13;
Schoepke, Eutycha Mary&#13;
Stankus, Peri strata - Annette&#13;
Peyote:&#13;
Narcotic or medicine&#13;
Sabbath, lycissa Melissa&#13;
Nissen, Syra - Cathy Nelson,&#13;
Dorippa Donna Linde,&#13;
Pasicompsa - Jody Jones and&#13;
the Cook - Melissa Nissen.&#13;
The play is free and open to&#13;
the public. The doors will open&#13;
at 4:00, and it is to be noted that&#13;
there will be a limited amount of&#13;
seating available. The curtain&#13;
will be at 4:30 p.m.&#13;
The useof peyote, which the federal government&#13;
calls a narcouc and Indians of the Native Amerrcan&#13;
Church call a non-addictive conscious-rarsmg agent&#13;
used In tribal worshrp, wrll be the tOPiCof the talk&#13;
. by WillidfR Hawk, a member of the anthropology&#13;
C~a-.:L faculty at the University of Wisconsm-Mrlwaukee&#13;
and a son of the Matennecock tribe of Long Island,&#13;
, NY" at ParksIde at 7 pm tonight. March 2, In.&#13;
Classroom Bldg Room 107&#13;
HIS talk IS sponsored by the Parksrde&#13;
Anthropology Club and IS free and open to the&#13;
public&#13;
American Brass - accounting&#13;
and sales&#13;
- March 8 - Modine&#13;
mechanical engineering&#13;
March 9 - Ryerson - Inland&#13;
Steel-sales and AST majors&#13;
March 9 t.C, Penney&#13;
Computer Center - computer&#13;
trainees.&#13;
Veterans who have trained&#13;
under the CI Bill during the past&#13;
10 years may qual ify for an&#13;
additional nine months "entitlement,&#13;
the Veterans Administration&#13;
reported.&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• j&#13;
~ Say YO.u i&#13;
• •&#13;
i saltY it in i ••&#13;
••&#13;
i~Ir i •&#13;
• ••&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
· s i upport our i·&#13;
• •&#13;
i advertisers. i&#13;
I•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••,&#13;
Career recruiters to visit&#13;
The Career Planning and&#13;
Placement office at Parkside has&#13;
announced a schedule of&#13;
upcoming recruiters who will be&#13;
here in the upcoming months.&#13;
March 2 Northwestern&#13;
Mutual Insurance career&#13;
underwriting&#13;
March 8 Anaconda&#13;
Smith wins&#13;
Cannon Award&#13;
Parkside art professor Moishe&#13;
Smith has won the top graphic&#13;
arts award, the Cannon Prize of&#13;
$400.. in the 152nd annual&#13;
exhibition of the National&#13;
Academy of Design, on display&#13;
through March 25 at the&#13;
academy gallery in New York&#13;
City.&#13;
Smith was elected to membership&#13;
in the academy in 1976. He&#13;
has exhibited his work in major&#13;
invitational shows throughout&#13;
the U.S. and in Europe and is&#13;
represented in more than 70&#13;
permanent collections both in&#13;
the U.S. and abroad.&#13;
International&#13;
•&#13;
students elect&#13;
"To promote intercultural&#13;
exchange through increased&#13;
awareness of foreign cultural&#13;
contributions to world civilization,&#13;
utilizing the club's natural&#13;
resource of foreign students in&#13;
our community area," the&#13;
Parkside International Students&#13;
Club last Tuesday drafted and&#13;
unanimoustv endorsed the&#13;
foresaid objective to welcome&#13;
and involve members throughout&#13;
the Parkside community.&#13;
Newly elected President Sam&#13;
Kamau Waithaka, accepting&#13;
three new members from India,&#13;
United States, and Germany,&#13;
lead into a group planning&#13;
session on future cultural fairs&#13;
with International foods, speakers,&#13;
and media presentations,&#13;
asking anyone with further ideas&#13;
and information to please&#13;
contact him at school, 553-2306,&#13;
at home, 633-5267, or attend&#13;
next Tuesday's noon meeting in&#13;
the WlLC conference room&#13;
0174, across the Information&#13;
Kiosk. Refreshments will be&#13;
servedby the faculty advisor, Dr.&#13;
Omar Amin&#13;
March 10 Prudentialsales&#13;
March 11 Northwestern&#13;
Mutual - data processing&#13;
March 29 - Prudential&#13;
career underwriters&#13;
March 30 - Aetna Life&#13;
sales and sales management&#13;
Total training entitlement for&#13;
CI Bill students has been&#13;
extended to 45 months, the&#13;
Veterans Administration reported.&#13;
news'l'I&#13;
Peyote:&#13;
The 111erchants are on stage Narcotic or medicine&#13;
by Cheryl Powalisz&#13;
Parkside's studio production&#13;
class will present a Roman&#13;
comedy, The Merchant by&#13;
Plautus, March 9, 10 and 11 . The&#13;
production will be directed by&#13;
Hali Rosen , and staged in the&#13;
Communication Arts Studio B.&#13;
(O155b)&#13;
The costumes and the scenery&#13;
, will be designed by Deborah Bell.&#13;
John Dickson will be designing&#13;
the lighting for the show and Dr.&#13;
Rhoda-Gale Pollack is named as&#13;
the producer.&#13;
The Merchant cast list is&#13;
Charinus - Robert Jilk, Acanthio&#13;
- Carol Knudson, Demipho -&#13;
Marc Miller, Lysimachus - Fred&#13;
Schoepke, Eutycha Mary&#13;
Stankus, Peri strata - Annette&#13;
Sabbath , Lycissa Melissa&#13;
Nissen , Syra - Cathy Nelson,&#13;
Dorippa Donna Linde,&#13;
Pasicompsa - Jody Jones and&#13;
the Cook - Melissa issen .&#13;
The play is free and open to&#13;
the public. The doors will open&#13;
at 4:00, and it is to be noted that&#13;
there will be a limited amount of&#13;
seating available . The curtain&#13;
will be at 4:30 p .m .&#13;
Career recruiters to visit&#13;
The Career Planning and&#13;
Placement office at Parkside has&#13;
announced a schedule of&#13;
upcoming recruiters who will be&#13;
here in the upcoming months.&#13;
March 2 - Northwestern&#13;
Mutual Insurance career&#13;
underwriting&#13;
March 8 Anaconda&#13;
Smith wins&#13;
Cannon Award&#13;
Parkside art professor Moishe&#13;
Smith has won the top graphic&#13;
arts award, the Cannon Prize of&#13;
$400, in the 152nd annual&#13;
exhibition of the National&#13;
Academy of Design, on display&#13;
through March 25 at the&#13;
academy gallery in New York&#13;
City .&#13;
Smith was elected to membership&#13;
in the academy in 1976. He&#13;
has exhibited his work in major&#13;
invitational shows throughout&#13;
the U.S. and in Europe and is&#13;
represented in more than 70&#13;
permanent collections both in&#13;
the U.S. and abroad.&#13;
International&#13;
students elect&#13;
"To promote intercultural&#13;
exchange through increased&#13;
awareness of foreign cultural&#13;
contributions to world civilization,&#13;
utilizing the club's natural&#13;
resource of foreign students in&#13;
our community area," the&#13;
Parkside International Students&#13;
Club last Tuesday drafted and&#13;
un~nimously endorsed the&#13;
foresaid objective to welcome&#13;
and involve members throughout&#13;
the Parkside community.&#13;
Newly elected President Sam&#13;
Kamau Waithaka, accepting&#13;
three new members from India,&#13;
United States, and Germany,&#13;
lead into a group planning&#13;
session on future cultural fairs&#13;
with International foods, speakers,&#13;
and media presentations,&#13;
asking anyone with further ideas&#13;
and information to please&#13;
contact him at school, 553-2306,&#13;
at home, 633-5267, or attend&#13;
next Tuesday's noon meeting in&#13;
the WLLC confer~nce room&#13;
0174, across the Information&#13;
Kiosk Refreshments will be&#13;
served by the faculty advisor, Dr.&#13;
Omar Amin&#13;
American Brass - accounting&#13;
and sales&#13;
, March 8 - Modine -&#13;
mechanical engineering&#13;
March 9 - Ryerson - Inland&#13;
Steel-sales and AST majors&#13;
March 9 J.C. Pennev&#13;
Computer Center - computer&#13;
trainees.&#13;
Veterans who have tr4ined&#13;
under the GI Bill during the past&#13;
10 years may qualify for an&#13;
additional nine months ·entitlement,&#13;
the Veterans Administration&#13;
reported .&#13;
March 10 Prudential -&#13;
sales&#13;
March 11 Northwestern&#13;
Mutual - data processing&#13;
March 29 - Prudential&#13;
career underwriters&#13;
March 30 - Aetna Life&#13;
sales and sales management&#13;
Total training entitlement for&#13;
GI Bill students has been&#13;
extended to 45 months, the&#13;
Veterans Administration re -&#13;
ported.&#13;
,&#13;
Lng&#13;
10-3 &amp; 5-7&#13;
the book~tou.&#13;
$10&#13;
.&#13;
.. .:, ; ; •• •• ,._ r ~&#13;
.... : ... , . . &#13;
Ilevents&#13;
Wednesday, March 2&#13;
Senior Recruiting: Northwestern Mutual Insurance during the day at&#13;
Tallent Hall. Call 2452 for more information.&#13;
Cultural Day for rvtexicen/Chicano and other students during the day&#13;
in Union 207. Poets Dr. Ricardo Sanchez and Raymond "Tigre"&#13;
Perez will read their works at 11 am and 7 pm and the dance group&#13;
"Las Aguilas" will perform at 7 pm.&#13;
Transcendental Meditation Lecture at noon and 7:30 p.m. in Cl 0133.&#13;
Boxing Club meeting at 2 pm. in the Wrestling/Boxing room of the&#13;
Phy Ed Bldg&#13;
History Club Meeti,:t at 2:30 pm in CL 111. Topic is "Scoundrel Times&#13;
and McCarthyism."&#13;
Anthropology Club: William Hawk, Ph D, on "Peyote's Role in Tribal&#13;
Worship" at 7 p.rn . in CL 107.&#13;
Shakespeare on Film: Polanski's "Macbeth" (19711 at 7 p.rn, at the&#13;
Golden Rondelle, Racine. Call 554-2154 for free tickets.&#13;
Thursday, March 3&#13;
Women's Basketball vs.Waukesha Tech. at 7 p.m. in the Phy Ed Bldg.&#13;
Happel for School Board Student Subcommittee: meeting at 4:00&#13;
p.m. in WllC 0195. Everyone welcome.&#13;
friday, March 4&#13;
Brewery Tour - for tletails, contact the Union Office, 209.&#13;
Chemistry-Life Science seminar Series: Dr. Robert Feinstein, division&#13;
of Biology and Biomedical Research, on "Mice Without Catalase"&#13;
at 2 p.m. in CL 105.&#13;
Mathematics Colloquim: Prof. J. Vasak, Department of Mathematics,&#13;
UW-M, on "Decomposition of the Complete Graph into Planar&#13;
Sub-graphs" at 3:30 p.m. in CL 107.&#13;
Men's Swimming meet at 4 p.m. in the Phy Ed Bldg.&#13;
Movie: "Three Days of the Condor" at 8 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Saturday, March 5&#13;
Fencing Meet at 9 a.m . in the Phy Ed Bldg.&#13;
Women's Basketball at 5: 15 p.rn . in the Phy Ed' Bldg.&#13;
Men's Basketball vs . Lakeland College at 7:30 p.m. in the Phy Ed Bldg.&#13;
Sunday, March 6&#13;
Wargamers meeting from 1 to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Baroque Players Concert at 3:30 in the Union Cinema. Admission free.&#13;
Movie: "Three Days of the Condor" at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series: New Shakespeare Company of San&#13;
Francisco at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater. Admission charge&#13;
Wednesday, March 9&#13;
PA8 Coffeehouse from 2 to 4 pm in the Union Cafeteria.&#13;
Play: "The Merchant" at 4:30 p.m. in Comm Arts StudioS.&#13;
'Wargamers meeting from 6 to 8 p.m. irt CL 140.&#13;
All events are due in the RANGER office by the Wednesday before&#13;
publication. An events form is now available.&#13;
classifieds&#13;
or Sale: 1972 Fiat 128 Coupe. Reliable, 35&#13;
pg. $1100 Gall 637·1754 evenings.&#13;
Typing done. Reasonable rates. Gall Mona&#13;
at b53-2295 or contact the RANGER office.&#13;
anted: Room and board in a private home&#13;
or a cerebral palsied young man, preferably&#13;
family-type arrangement. Please call&#13;
5947.&#13;
A volunteer is needed immediately to work&#13;
with 2-3 problem kids. Time: Monday&#13;
through Friday. 8:30-11:00. For details,&#13;
contact Miss Stell burg at the Kenosha&#13;
Montessori School, 654-4012.&#13;
For Sale: Custom Chevy Van; fully equipped&#13;
or camping: sink stove, furnace, ice box,&#13;
cmene-beo conversion, AM/FM/8 track,&#13;
ca. Mags, trick painting. Best offer over&#13;
$2.000. Call 637-601f.&#13;
For Sale: Chevy '75 Mooza 2 + 2 Hatchback&#13;
automobile. 4 cyl. PSB AMIFM, rear&#13;
defogger. Good condition. $2000. 553-2576&#13;
8:30-4:30. 552-7538 after 5.&#13;
The 2nd eighth week classes&#13;
will begin on March 21, 1977, not&#13;
April 21 as stated in the&#13;
timetable.&#13;
Cultural day&#13;
scheduled&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association is sponsoring a&#13;
Cultural day on Wednesday,&#13;
March 2. Poets Dr. Ricardo&#13;
Sanchez and Raymond "Tigre"&#13;
Perez will be reading some of&#13;
their works, and the dance group&#13;
"Las Aguilas" .will also perform.&#13;
The purpose of the event is not&#13;
only a "cultural exchange and&#13;
enlightment" but also to explain&#13;
minority admissions and the&#13;
facilities available to the general&#13;
community as well as students.&#13;
Paula Ruiz, bi-lingual resource&#13;
person at Racine Case High&#13;
School will be the interpreter.&#13;
There wi II be two performances:&#13;
11:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m.&#13;
"Las Aguilas" will perform only&#13;
at 7:00 p.m. There is no&#13;
admission charge and refreshments&#13;
will be served.&#13;
Unfurnished upper flat with refrigerator and&#13;
stove and all utilities. 6431-39th Ave&#13;
658-2703.&#13;
For Sale: 1968 Ford Falcon. 6 Cylinder.&#13;
automatic, runs good. Cheap. Call 63g.1434.&#13;
Wanted: Customer for best Mexican Ioc r.&#13;
Mi case. 3932 Douglas Ave. Racine.&#13;
= ryWriting&#13;
contest&#13;
announced&#13;
International Publications is inviting entries in its annual creative&#13;
writing contests&#13;
. Cash prizes are awarded for short stories, humorous essays, and&#13;
poems&#13;
For details, send self-addressed, stamped envelope to:&#13;
International Publications, 4747 Fountain Ave., Los Angeles, CA&#13;
900n&#13;
DOoooolOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOoolooooOl&#13;
Zuehlsdorf&#13;
for&#13;
Senate-At-Lar'ge Seat&#13;
Paid Political Advertising&#13;
00000000000&#13;
Music to sit back and enjoy. Wednesday&#13;
thru Saturday, Jim and Jerry at Canterbury&#13;
Court, 9:30-12:30 o.rn.&#13;
Wickensteln, a philosophically Interesting&#13;
cat (feline variety). is looklnq for lodging&#13;
with compatible, person(s). Call 886-5154.&#13;
Wanted: secretary for Student Government,&#13;
must be OrJ worx-stuov. 10 hours per week,&#13;
pays $2.50 per hour: Contact Kiyoko at&#13;
WllC D193 or call 553-2244.&#13;
Beginning March 9 Classified Ad Charges:&#13;
Free: Student ads. 20 words or under for&#13;
one-time run. (25 cents charge for every&#13;
additional 10 words or under.)&#13;
.SOC: For each additional running °after the&#13;
first time.&#13;
$1.00: Non-student ads, 20 words or under&#13;
per issue. (25 cents charQ6 rcr every&#13;
additional 10 w~)rIjs or undAr)&#13;
To place a classifiet! ad pno. , 553 :&lt;2%&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
PARKSIDE SPECIAL&#13;
l"HE NEW&#13;
Lighthouse II&#13;
1146 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
UNDER NEW&#13;
N.T.N.&#13;
MANAGEME!lT&#13;
INC.&#13;
NOW IN THE UNION... DISCO&#13;
PnxIenhal&#13;
Prudential Offers&#13;
You An Excellent&#13;
Career Opportunity It ®lilt&#13;
&amp;Wtd &amp;4oppt&#13;
4 featuring-&#13;
~~ (jCJ(3wu&#13;
~tj§~~~~ [ill1][jtj&#13;
(SLiu~~~only 50c half pound&#13;
Locoted Just Off The Union Bozoar&#13;
Fulfill your personal needs&#13;
for earnings, independence,&#13;
success with&#13;
"A Piece of the Rock"&#13;
-Prudential Insurance.&#13;
No experience necessary&#13;
... Complete training in&#13;
Life and Health Insurance&#13;
... Prudential Property&#13;
and Casualty's Auto and&#13;
Homeowners coverages,&#13;
too Excellent Benefits&#13;
Unlimited Sales&#13;
and Sales Management&#13;
opportunities.&#13;
If you can qualify,&#13;
Prudential wil! offer you&#13;
the opportunity to be in&#13;
business for yourself but&#13;
not by yourself..&#13;
An Equal Opportunity Employer. M W&#13;
Tue.&#13;
Wed.&#13;
Thurs.&#13;
Sun.&#13;
No Cover&#13;
Charge&#13;
Fri.&#13;
Sat. )&#13;
LIVE&#13;
ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
Admission&#13;
50c&#13;
12 OUNCE OLY DRAFT - .35&#13;
MIXED DRINKS - .60&#13;
Wis. ,.ID Positively Required N.T.N. Inc. reserves the right,&#13;
according to state laws, to refuse service at it'll own&#13;
discretion.&#13;
,&#13;
4&#13;
events ~&#13;
Wednesday, March 2&#13;
Senior Recruiting: Northwestern Mutual Insurance during the day at&#13;
Tallent Hall. Call 2452 for more information.&#13;
Cultural Day for Mexican/ Chicano and other students during the day&#13;
in Union 207. Poets Dr. Ricardo Sanchez and Raymond " Tigre"&#13;
Perez will read their works at 11 am and 7 pm and the dance group&#13;
"las Aguilas" will perfqrm at 7 pm.&#13;
Transcendental Meditation Lecture at noon and 7:30 p.m. in CL D133.&#13;
Boxing Club meeting at 2 p.m. in the Wrestling/ Boxing room of the&#13;
Phy Ed Bldg.&#13;
History Club Meeti,if; at 2:30 pm in CL 111. Topic is "Scoundrel Times&#13;
and McCarthyism."&#13;
Anthropology Club: William Hawk, Ph D, on "Peyote's Role in Tribal&#13;
Worship" at 7 p.m . in CL 107.&#13;
Shakespeare on Film: Polanski 's "Macbeth" (1971). at 7 p.m, at the&#13;
Golden Rondelle, Racine. Call 554-2154 for free tickets.&#13;
Thursday, March 3&#13;
Women's Basketball vs. Waukesha Tech . at 7 p .m . in the Phy Ed Bldg.&#13;
Happel for School Board Student Subcommittee: meeting at 4:00&#13;
p.m . in WLLC D195. Everyone welcome.&#13;
Friday, March 4&#13;
Brewery Tour - for tletails, contact the Union Office, 209.&#13;
Chemistry-Life Science Seminar Series: Dr. Robert Feinstein, division&#13;
of Biology and Biomedical Research, on "Mice Without Catalase"&#13;
at 2 p.m. in CL 105.&#13;
Mathematics Colloquim: Prof. J. Vasak, Department of Mathematics,&#13;
UW-M, on " Decomposition of the Complete Graph into Planar&#13;
Sub-graphs" at 3:30 p .m. in CL 107.&#13;
Men's Swimming meet at 4 p.m . in the Phy Ed Bldg.&#13;
Movie: "Three Days of the Condor" at 8 p .m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1 .00.&#13;
Saturday, March 5&#13;
Fencing Meet at 9 a.m . in the Phy Ed Bldg.&#13;
Women's Basketball at S: 15 p .m . in the Phy Ec:f' Bldg.&#13;
Men's Basketball vs. Lakeland College at 7: 30 p .m . in the Phy Ed Bldg.&#13;
Sunday, March 6&#13;
Wargamers meeting from 1 to 6 p.m . in CL 140.&#13;
Baroque Players Concert at 3:30 in the Union Cinema. Admission free .&#13;
Movie: "Three Days of the Condor" at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1 .00.&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series: New Shakespeare Company of San&#13;
Francisco at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater. Admission charge&#13;
Wednesday, March 9&#13;
PAB Coffeehouse from 2 to 4 pm in the Union Cafeteria.&#13;
Play: "The Merchant" at 4:30 p .m. in Comm Arts Studio 13.&#13;
Wargamers meeting from 6 to 8 p.m . in CL 140.&#13;
All events are due in the RANGER office by the Wednesday before&#13;
publication. An events form is now available.&#13;
classifieds or Sale: 1972 Fiat 128 Coupe. Reliable, 35&#13;
pg. $1100 Call 637-1754 evenings.&#13;
anted : Room and board in a private home&#13;
or a celebral palsied young man, preferably&#13;
family-type arrangement. Please call&#13;
5947.&#13;
For S1le:Custom Chevy Van; fully equipped&#13;
for camping : sink stove, furnace, ice box,&#13;
dinette-bed conversion, AM/FM/8 track,&#13;
CB, Mags, trick painting. Best offer over&#13;
$2,000. Call 637-Mlf.&#13;
Prudenhal&#13;
Prudential Offers&#13;
You An Excellent&#13;
Career Opportunity&#13;
Fulfill your personal needs&#13;
for earnings, independence,&#13;
success with&#13;
"A Piece of the Rock"&#13;
- Prudential Insurance.&#13;
Typing done. Reasonable rates. Call Mona&#13;
at !&gt;53-2295 or contact the RANGER office.&#13;
A volunteer is needed immediately to work&#13;
with 2-3 problem kids. Time : Monday&#13;
through Friday, 8 :30-11 :00. For details,&#13;
contact Miss Stellburg at the Kenosha&#13;
Montessori School, 654-4012.&#13;
For Sale: Chevy '75 Monza 2 + 2 Hatchback&#13;
automobile. 4 cyl. PSB AM / FM, rear&#13;
defogger. Good condition. $2000. 553-2576&#13;
8 :30-4 :30, 552-7538 alter 5.&#13;
NOW IN THE UNION ...&#13;
The 2nd eighth week classes&#13;
will begin on March 21, 1977, not&#13;
April 21 as stated in the&#13;
timetable.&#13;
Cultural day&#13;
scheduled&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association is sponsoring a&#13;
Cultural day on Wednesday,&#13;
March 2. Poets Dr. Ricardo&#13;
Sancnez and Raymond "Tigre"&#13;
Perez will be reading some of&#13;
their works, and the dance group&#13;
" las Aguilas" .will also perform.&#13;
The purpose of the event is not&#13;
only a " cultural exchange and&#13;
enlightment" but also to explain&#13;
minority admissions and the&#13;
facilities available to the general&#13;
community as well as students.&#13;
Paula Ruiz, bi-lingual resource&#13;
person at Racine Case High&#13;
School will be the interpreter.&#13;
There will be two performances:&#13;
11 :00 a.m. and 7:00 p .m .&#13;
"las Aguilas" will perform only&#13;
at 7:00 p.m . There is no&#13;
admission charge and refreshments&#13;
will be served .&#13;
Unlurnished upper flat with refrigerator and&#13;
~love and all utIiitIes. 6431-39th Ave&#13;
658-2703.&#13;
For Sale: 1968 Ford Falcon. 6 Cylinder&#13;
automatic, runs good. Cheap. Call 639-1434.&#13;
Wanted: Customer for best Mexican lot j&#13;
Mi Ca;;a, 3932 Douglas Ave. Racine.&#13;
Music to sit back and enjoy. Wednesday&#13;
thru Saturday, Jim and Jerry at Canterbury&#13;
Court, 9:30-12:30 p.m.&#13;
Wlckensteln, a philosophically interesting&#13;
cat (feline variety), is looking for lodging&#13;
with compatible, person(s). Cai l 886-5154.&#13;
Wanted: secretary for Student Government,&#13;
must be on Work-Study. 10 hours per week,&#13;
pays $2.50 per hour. Contact Kiyoko at&#13;
WLLC 0193 or call 553-2244.&#13;
Beginning March 9 Classlfled Ad Charges:&#13;
Free: Student ads. 20 words or under for&#13;
one-time run. (25 cents charge for every&#13;
additional 1 O words or under.)&#13;
.50c: For each additional running ·after the&#13;
first time.&#13;
$1.00: Non-student ads, 20 words or under&#13;
per issue. (25 cents char9,; ,or every&#13;
additional 10 W?rds or undAr )&#13;
To place a c lassilie!J ad ;,he• , 553 ,2%&#13;
No experience necessary&#13;
... Complete training in&#13;
Life and Health Insurance&#13;
... Prudential Property&#13;
and Casualty's Auto and&#13;
Homeowners coverages,&#13;
too ... Excellent Benefits&#13;
. . . Unlimited Sales&#13;
,4 featuring-&#13;
~# GGJC~fJU and Sales Management&#13;
opportunities.&#13;
If you can qualify,&#13;
Prudential will offer you&#13;
the opportunity to be in&#13;
business for yourself but&#13;
not by yourself.&#13;
An Equal Opportunity Employer. MW&#13;
~oo~~~w fWUDtJ (S~~~ only 59c half pound&#13;
Located Just Off The Union Bazaar&#13;
Writing contest&#13;
announced&#13;
International Publications is inviting entries in its annual creative&#13;
writing contests.&#13;
Cash prizes are awarded for short stories, humorous essays, and&#13;
poems .&#13;
~or details, send self-addressed , stamped envelope to :&#13;
International Publications, 4747 Foufltain Ave ., Los Angeles, CA&#13;
9002')&#13;
000000000000000000000&#13;
Zuehlsdorf&#13;
for&#13;
Senate~At-Large Seat&#13;
Paid Political Advertising&#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 MANAGEME~T&#13;
N.T.N. INC.&#13;
DISCO&#13;
No Cover&#13;
Charge&#13;
LIVE&#13;
ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
Admission&#13;
5gc&#13;
12 OUNCE OL Y DRAFT - .35&#13;
MIXED DRINKS - .60&#13;
Wis. , ID Positively Required N.T.N. Inc. reserves the right,&#13;
accoriling to state laws, to refuse service at it's own&#13;
discretion. </text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66296">
              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 5, issue 20, March 2, 1977</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66297">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66298">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="66299">
              <text>Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="66300">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="40">
          <name>Date</name>
          <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66301">
              <text>1977-03-02</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66302">
              <text>Text</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="42">
          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66303">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="38">
          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66304">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66305">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="45">
          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66306">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66307">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="222">
      <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4534">
      <name>racine journal times</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4533">
      <name>student university fees allocation committee (SUFAc)</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2142">
      <name>uw-madison</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
