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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Degree requirements changed&#13;
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            <text>Volume 5, issue 22</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>\&#13;
reedom of choice endon ered&#13;
er&#13;
Degree requirements changed&#13;
by John R. McKloskey&#13;
Parkside's breadth of knowledge requirements&#13;
have been tentativelv &gt;- set )by the Breadth&#13;
Subcommittee' of the Academic Policies&#13;
Committee. These requirements will be discussed at&#13;
open hearings this week. "&#13;
The breadth requirement consists of introductory&#13;
courses which must be taken as follows, according&#13;
to the committee's draft report: "Each student must&#13;
complete at least six credits in each in five specified&#13;
"breadth" areas outside the area of his/her own&#13;
major. The "breadth" areas are as follows:&#13;
a. Behavioral Science&#13;
b. Business Management, Engineering Technology,&#13;
Computers&#13;
c. Fine Arts&#13;
d. Humanities&#13;
e. Natural Science (not including mathematics)&#13;
f. Social Science&#13;
Public hearings on this breadth proposal will be&#13;
held by the subcommittee on March 24 from&#13;
12:30·2:00 and on March 28 from 3:004:30, both in&#13;
Classroom 211. 'The committee recommends that&#13;
those offering comments at the hearing also&#13;
prepare written versions of their comments for the&#13;
members to read. \&#13;
30 CREDITS REQUIRED&#13;
If instituted, the requirements will require a totaJ&#13;
of 30 breadth credits for graduation, except that&#13;
students with major requiring more than 80 credits&#13;
will be required to complete six credits in each of&#13;
three breadth areas and three credits in each of two&#13;
breadth areas.&#13;
According to .subcomrnittee chairman James&#13;
Shea, "the requirements will probably go into effect&#13;
in the fall of 1978, and will begin to affect the&#13;
freshmen that year." Shea said the subcommittee&#13;
will hold public hearings on March 24 and 28 to&#13;
obtain student and faculty input on the proposed&#13;
draft. The committee will seek input particularly on&#13;
the question of whether certain physical education&#13;
courses should be counted as fulfilling a part of&#13;
some breadth requirements. The committee has not&#13;
answered the question and will base its decision on&#13;
the input from the hearings.&#13;
Shea said, "We urge all students and faculty to&#13;
come and offer their comments at the hearings."&#13;
The question of whether foreign language should'&#13;
be in the breadth requirement will be left to the&#13;
divisions to decide for their own majors.&#13;
One proposal for course designations that was&#13;
rejected by the committee during its deliberations&#13;
was the suggestion that only "a small number of&#13;
specifically designed courses be designated as&#13;
meeting the breadth requirement." According to&#13;
the subcommittee's draft report, the subcommittee&#13;
felt tKe proposal was unwise because student&#13;
choice of courses would be severely restricted, and&#13;
it would "severely affect the ability of some&#13;
programs to attract sufficient numbers of students&#13;
See poge 7&#13;
Wednesday March 23, 1977&#13;
Vo1.5, No.22&#13;
Education is the process of ()()&#13;
dnving a set of prejudices V V&#13;
down your throat.&#13;
Martin H. Fischer&#13;
Tutlewslcll&#13;
Hedden win&#13;
PSGA .I.ction rlSulh&#13;
PRESIDENT&#13;
Tutlewski&#13;
Balhntme&#13;
Bowden&#13;
Strutvnskt&#13;
VICE-PRESIDENT&#13;
Hedden&#13;
Moreno&#13;
SENATE&#13;
Nwokike&#13;
Hansen&#13;
Braun&#13;
Te. Zuehlsdorf&#13;
Ti. Zuehlsdorf&#13;
Cramer&#13;
Lemere&#13;
Edenhouser&#13;
Nickel&#13;
Frickensmith&#13;
ALLOCATIONS&#13;
Kuchrskr&#13;
Falcon&#13;
Nail&#13;
Nicklaus&#13;
Christiansen&#13;
Cooper&#13;
Gabriel&#13;
Washington Post editor&#13;
Bradlee speaks at Parkside&#13;
by Philip L. livingston&#13;
Votes&#13;
312&#13;
172&#13;
47&#13;
37&#13;
Votes&#13;
312&#13;
232&#13;
369&#13;
353&#13;
353&#13;
319&#13;
116&#13;
310&#13;
273&#13;
269&#13;
251&#13;
229&#13;
Votes&#13;
284&#13;
213&#13;
308&#13;
241&#13;
336&#13;
246&#13;
313&#13;
Ben Bradlee, Executive Editor of the Washington&#13;
Post, will speak at Parkside's Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre on Sunday, March 27 at 800 PM on "The&#13;
Media - the Fourth Estate" There are a few tickets&#13;
left. Ticket Information is available at the Info&#13;
Center in the UnIOn, 553-2345.&#13;
Bradlee was a key figure in the Washmgton Post's&#13;
"Watergate" investigative reporting that earned&#13;
Post reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein&#13;
the Pulitzer Prize.&#13;
On February of this year, Bradlee was&#13;
instrumental in exposing CIA payments to King&#13;
Hussein of Jordan. The Washington Post's coverage&#13;
of the story has drawn criticism again, bringing up&#13;
the issue of what is secret and what should be&#13;
public knowledge.&#13;
Bradlee has reported the political scene in&#13;
Washington since 1957 as a political correspondent&#13;
for Newsweek. In that capacity he began intensive&#13;
coverage of the 1960 presidential campaign. He&#13;
became a close friend of Senator John F. Kennedy,&#13;
who was his next-door neighbor. After Kennedy&#13;
became President, Bradlee maintained his close&#13;
contact, which provided material for his book,&#13;
entitled "Conversations with Kennedy" published in&#13;
1975 by WW. Norton &amp; Co. In 1964 after Kennedy',&#13;
assassination Bradlee also authored "That Special&#13;
Crace" published by Lippincott. a tribute to the&#13;
slain President. He was named Executive Editor of&#13;
the Washington Post September of 1968 after&#13;
serving nearly three years as Managing Editor.&#13;
Bradlee, 55, was educated at St. Mark's School,&#13;
Southboro. Massachusetts and Harvard College,&#13;
where he received a B.A. degree&#13;
Ratner appointed&#13;
Dean see page 8&#13;
er&#13;
reedom of choice endan ered&#13;
Wednesday Morch 23, 1977&#13;
Vol.5, No.22&#13;
·ll /l E~ucation is the process of ()()&#13;
l.Jl.J driving a set of prejudices V V&#13;
down your throat.&#13;
Martin H. Fischer&#13;
Degree requiren,ents changed&#13;
Tutlewslcl/&#13;
Hedden win&#13;
by John R. McKloskey&#13;
Parkside's breadth of knowledge requirements&#13;
have been tentatively ,, set , by the Breadth&#13;
Subcommittee' of the Academic Policies&#13;
Committee. These requirements will be discussed at&#13;
open hearings this week.&#13;
The breadth requirement consists of introductory&#13;
courses which must be taken as foJlows, according&#13;
to the committee's draft report: "Each student must&#13;
complete at least six credits in each in five specified&#13;
"breadth" areas outside the area of his/her own&#13;
major. The "breadth" areas are as follows:&#13;
a. Behavioral Science&#13;
b. Business Management, Engineering Technology,&#13;
Computers&#13;
c. Fine Arts&#13;
d . Humanities&#13;
e. Natu~:!I Science (not including mathematics)&#13;
f. Social Science&#13;
Public hearings on this breadth proposal will be ,&#13;
held by the subcommittee on March 24 from&#13;
12:30-2:00 and on March 28 from 3:00-4:30, both in&#13;
Classroom 211. The committee recommends that&#13;
those offering comments at the hearing also&#13;
prepare written versions of their comments for the&#13;
members to read.&#13;
30 CREDITS REQUIRED&#13;
If instituted, the requirements will require a totaJ&#13;
of 30 breadth credits for graduation, except that&#13;
students with major requiring more than 80 credits&#13;
Washington Post editor&#13;
will be required to complete six credits in each of&#13;
three breadth areas and three credits in each of two&#13;
breadth areas&#13;
According to subcommittee chairman James&#13;
Shea, "the requirements will probably go into effect&#13;
in the fall of 1978, and will begin to affect the&#13;
freshmen that year." Shea said the subcommittee&#13;
will hold public hearings on March 24 and 28 to&#13;
obtain student and faculty input on the proposed&#13;
draft. The committee will seek input particularly on&#13;
the question of whether certain physical education&#13;
courses should be counted as fulfilling a part of&#13;
some breadth requirements. The committee has not&#13;
answered the question and will base its decision on&#13;
the input from the hearings.&#13;
Shea said, "We urge all students and faculty to&#13;
come and offer their comments at the hearings."&#13;
The question of whether foreign language should&#13;
be in the breadth requirement will be left to the&#13;
divisions to decide for their own majors.&#13;
One proposal for course designations that was&#13;
rejected by the committee during its deliberations&#13;
was the suggestion that only " a small number of&#13;
specifically designed courses be designated as&#13;
meeting the breadth requirement." According to&#13;
the subcommittee's draft report, the subcommittee&#13;
felt die proposal was unwise because student&#13;
choice of courses would be severely restricted, and&#13;
it would " severely affect the ability of some&#13;
programs to attract sufficient numbers of students&#13;
See poge 7 ..&#13;
PSGA oloction rosults&#13;
PRESIDENT&#13;
Tutlewsk1&#13;
Ballint1ne&#13;
Bowden&#13;
Strut nsk1&#13;
VICE-PRESIDENT&#13;
Hedden&#13;
Moreno&#13;
SENATE&#13;
wok1ke&#13;
Hansen&#13;
Braun&#13;
Te Zuehlsdorf&#13;
Ti. Zuehlsdorf&#13;
Cramer&#13;
Lemere&#13;
Eden houser&#13;
1ckel&#13;
Fncken math&#13;
ALLOCATIONS&#13;
Kuchrsk1&#13;
Falcon&#13;
all&#13;
1cklaus&#13;
Christiansen&#13;
Cooper&#13;
Gabriel&#13;
otes&#13;
312&#13;
172&#13;
47&#13;
37&#13;
Votes&#13;
312&#13;
2 2&#13;
369&#13;
353&#13;
353&#13;
319&#13;
116&#13;
310&#13;
273&#13;
269&#13;
251&#13;
229&#13;
Votes&#13;
284&#13;
213&#13;
308&#13;
241&#13;
336&#13;
246&#13;
313&#13;
Bradlee speaks at Parkside&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Ben Bradlee, Executive Editor of the Wa hington&#13;
Post, will speak at Parkside's Commun1cat1on Arts&#13;
Theatre on Sunda , March 27 at 8 00 P 1 on " Th&#13;
Media - the Fourth Estate " There are a few tickets&#13;
left Ticket information 1s available at the Info&#13;
Center in the Union, 553-2345&#13;
Bradlee was a key figure in the Washington Post's&#13;
"Watergate" investigative reporting that earned&#13;
Post reporters Bob Woodward and Carl B rnstem&#13;
the Pulitzer Prize&#13;
On Februar of this ear, Bradl was&#13;
instrumental in exposing IA payments to King&#13;
Hussein of Jordan. The Washington Post's coverag&#13;
of the story ha drawn crit1c1sm again, bringing up&#13;
the issue of what 1s secret and what should b&#13;
public knowledge&#13;
Bradlee has reported the political scene in&#13;
Washington since 1957 as a political corre pondent&#13;
for ewsweek In that capacity he began intensive&#13;
coverage of the 1%0 presidential campaign . H&#13;
became a close friend of Senator John F. Kennedy,&#13;
who was his next-&lt;loor neighbor After Kennedy&#13;
became President, Bradlee maintained his close&#13;
contact, which provided material for his book,&#13;
entitled " Conversations with Kennedy" published in&#13;
1975 by W .W orton &amp; Co. In 1%4 after Kennedy's&#13;
assassination Bradlee also authored " That Special&#13;
Grace" published by Lippincott. a tribute to the&#13;
slain Pre ident. He was named Executive Editor of&#13;
the Washington Post September of 1%8 after&#13;
serving nearl three years as Managing Editor&#13;
Bradlee, 55, was educated at St Mark's School,&#13;
Southboro, Massachusetts and Harvard College,&#13;
where he received a B.A degree&#13;
Ratner appointed&#13;
Dean See page a &#13;
-----~--------~------------------_.&#13;
I editorial&#13;
Where do, you spend your money?&#13;
spent it? Are you concerned about that? Perhaps&#13;
happy consumers should not be plagued with&#13;
such thoughts. You probably don't know where&#13;
your sewage goes either.&#13;
HANGER is concerned! If you will kindly flip a&#13;
few pages of this free newspaper, you'll find the&#13;
overwhelming majority of our advertisers are&#13;
small businesses in Racine and Kenosha. They&#13;
aren't high rollers with a shop in South ridge.&#13;
Most of them are a few minutes from your home.&#13;
Most of the small businesses,' in addition to&#13;
supporting Parkside, also stick around town,&#13;
vote, and support other community causes. They&#13;
need your business more than a chain operation&#13;
that can transfer losses and profits where needed.&#13;
If we are a part of a continuing community of&#13;
human beings, we should all be concerned with&#13;
not only where our money goes but where our&#13;
sewage goes as well..&#13;
So, as you page through RANGER, get hungry,&#13;
or think about spending your. money, kindly&#13;
remember the local folks who really do care about&#13;
you and need your business. If you tell them you&#13;
saw their ad in the RANGER, you have a good way&#13;
to start a conversation. Please support our&#13;
advertisers.&#13;
Where do you spend your money? It is a&#13;
personal question, but this is a personaleditorial.&#13;
If you spend like everyone else in southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin, you probably eat out quite a bit at a&#13;
fast food resturant, shop in a chain store, and&#13;
splurge once in awhile over at the shopping mall&#13;
off the freeway.&#13;
The money you spend in a chain store probably&#13;
goes to a local checking account where a small&#13;
amount will go to the employees who often work&#13;
for minimum wage. Most of the rest of the money&#13;
will undoubtedly go to New York or wherever the&#13;
chain's headquarters is located.&#13;
The money you spend in a local small business&#13;
will probably go to a local checking account in a&#13;
bank where the business has a few loans as well.&#13;
Except for rent and inventory most of the money&#13;
will stay around here for a while.&#13;
When money is kept circulating in a certain&#13;
area for a while it can have a multiplying effect,&#13;
that is, before the money hits New York or&#13;
Washington, D.C. in the form of taxes or other&#13;
transfer payments it will have passed hands&#13;
within the area a number of times, thus, multiplying&#13;
its use.&#13;
Where does your money go after you have&#13;
political comment&#13;
Student government&#13;
Unable to keep house in order&#13;
by Bob lam bois responsibility (according to Kai Nail, a member of&#13;
the' committee) was to determine reasonable&#13;
funding levels for the services and organizations&#13;
supported by Segregated Fees. SUFAC is supposed&#13;
to have 11 members; 10 elected at large and one&#13;
member elected by the Student Organizational&#13;
Council. Actually there are only 9 members; the&#13;
one elected by SOC, (Kia Nail), 2 elected at large,&#13;
and 6 appointed by the President of PSGA subject&#13;
to the advice and consent of the Senate.&#13;
, PSGA is supposed to be comprised of 16&#13;
elected Senators. Currently there are 12 Senators&#13;
and only 4 of them were elected. The other 8&#13;
were appointed by Dan Nielsen, President Pro&#13;
Tempore of the Senate, subject to the Senate's&#13;
confirmation.&#13;
In speaking with elected and appointed&#13;
members of PSGA, it becomes apparent that&#13;
there's no consensus of opinion as to what the&#13;
Senate's responsibilities, or even PSGA's&#13;
responsibilities, are with respect to the budget.&#13;
Senator Jeff LeMere feels that PSGA&#13;
appointments to academic, faculty, and search&#13;
and screen committees, rate a higher priority in&#13;
the Senate than the budget does.&#13;
Senator Gigi Osborne (one of the few Senators&#13;
actually elected), doesn't know why the PSGA&#13;
should have anything at all to do with the budget&#13;
being as they (the Senators), don't learn anything&#13;
about it anyway.&#13;
President Kiyoko Bowden feels that it is&#13;
absolutely imperative that the PSGA be given&#13;
complete control of SUFAC.&#13;
Kai NaIl, meanwhile, feels that PSGA's control&#13;
of the budget would result in a conflict of interest&#13;
being as PSGA's operating expenses are part of&#13;
the Segregated Fees budget,&#13;
In light of the low voter turnout for the last&#13;
PSGA elections (around 5 percent) the high&#13;
personnel turnover (75 percent of Senate seats are&#13;
either empty or filled by appointments) and the&#13;
lack of alternatives in the election (there' are&#13;
currently 10 candidates for 8 seats), I feel that&#13;
PSGA's claim to be the voice of the student body&#13;
is preposterous.&#13;
Furthermore, considering PSGA's obvious&#13;
inability to keep its own house in order, I think it&#13;
even more ridiculous to expand the sphere of this&#13;
incompetence by putting the budget under their&#13;
control. Indeed, under the circumstances, the less&#13;
PSGA does, the better.&#13;
Meanwhile, whether initiatives come from the&#13;
administration, student government, or the&#13;
students themselves, some sort of system for&#13;
analyzing the budget on a qualitative basis should&#13;
be devised for next year. Also, basic reforms in the&#13;
size, composition, manner of selection and&#13;
operating procedures f~r PSGA are in orde'r. The&#13;
number of senators and committee appointments&#13;
should be substantially reduced, their responsibilities&#13;
and powers more clearly enunciated.&#13;
Finally, some kind of incentives for becoming a&#13;
student representative should be devised. A job&#13;
which has no renumeration, little real power,&#13;
almost no social prestige and yet, subjects the&#13;
jobholders to long hours and harsh criticisms (like'&#13;
this article),. is not going to be a highly prized&#13;
occupation. .&#13;
On February 20th the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association (PSGA) Senate passed a&#13;
$474,000 budget. Some of the Senators weren't&#13;
ever certain if the budget was a preliminary or&#13;
final version.&#13;
With the exception of three Senators who&#13;
served on the Student University Fees Allocation&#13;
Committee (SUFACl, none of the Senators had&#13;
any substantive knowledge of the budget. In&#13;
short, of the 11 Senators present, 8 were&#13;
abysmally ignorant of where and how the money&#13;
was being spent.&#13;
By the way, that's your money. If you attend&#13;
this school full time for the next veer. you'll have&#13;
invested $116 in this budget.&#13;
The question immediately springs to mind:&#13;
Who is to blame? After interviewing Senators, the&#13;
President of PSGA, and members of SUFAC, it&#13;
transpires that no one is at fault, - or so they&#13;
say.&#13;
Notwithstanding their objections to the&#13;
contrary, 1 believe the Senators and the President,&#13;
in short, the PSGA, are guilty of dereliction of&#13;
duty or, at best, ineptitude. The worst offenders&#13;
are the Senators, while the' most responsible&#13;
component of Student Government was SUFAC.&#13;
An' analysis of governmental bodies responsible&#13;
for the budget is in order.&#13;
The Student University Fees Allocation&#13;
Committee (SUFACj produces the budget&#13;
submitted to the Senate after approximately 3 to&#13;
4 months of hearings and deliberation. Their&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students of the&#13;
University of 'Wisconsin-Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content.&#13;
/&#13;
\&#13;
,leditOrial&#13;
Where do1 you spend your mOney?&#13;
Where do you spend your money? It is a&#13;
personal question, but this is a personal editorial.&#13;
If you spend like everyone else in southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin, you probably eat out quite a bit at a&#13;
fast food resturant , shop in a chain store, and&#13;
splurge once in a while over at the shopping mall&#13;
off the freeway.&#13;
spent it? Are you concerne~ about that? Perhaps&#13;
happy consumers should not be plagued with&#13;
such thoughts. You probably don't know where&#13;
your sewage goes either. ·&#13;
HANGER is concerned! If you will kindly flip a&#13;
few pages of this free newspaper, you'll find -the&#13;
overwhelming majority of our advertisers are&#13;
small businesses in Racine and Kenosha. They&#13;
aren't high rollers with a shop in Southridge.&#13;
Most of them are a few minutes from your home.&#13;
The money you spend in a chain store probably&#13;
goes to a local checking account where a small&#13;
amount will go to the employees who often work&#13;
for minimum wage. Most of the rest of the money&#13;
will undoubtedly go to New York or wh_erever the&#13;
chain's headquarters is located,&#13;
The money you spend in a local small business&#13;
will probably go to a local checking account in a&#13;
bank where the business has a few loans as well.&#13;
Except for rent and inventory most of the money&#13;
will stay around here for a while.&#13;
Most of the small businesses, · in addition to&#13;
supporting Parkside, also stick around town,&#13;
vote, and support other community causes. They&#13;
need your business more than a chain operation&#13;
that can transfer losses and prof its where needed.&#13;
When money is kept circulating in a certain&#13;
area for a while it can have a multiplying effect,&#13;
that is, before the money hits New York or&#13;
Washington, D.C. in the form of taxes or other&#13;
transfer payments it will have passed hands&#13;
within the area a nulT)ber of times, thus, multiplying&#13;
its use.&#13;
If we are a part of a continuing community of&#13;
human beings, we should all be concerned with&#13;
not only where our money goes but where our&#13;
sewage goes as wel I. ,&#13;
So, as you page through RANGER, get hungry,&#13;
or think about spending your _ money, kindly&#13;
remember the local folks who really do care about&#13;
you and need your business. If you tell them you&#13;
saw their ad in the RANGER, you have a good way&#13;
to start a conversation. Please support our&#13;
Where does your money go after you have advertise.rs.&#13;
political comment&#13;
Student government&#13;
Unable to keep house il1 order&#13;
by Bob Jambois&#13;
On February 20th the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association (PSGA) Senate passed a&#13;
$474,000 budget. Some of the Senators weren't&#13;
ever certain if the budget was a preliminary or&#13;
final version.&#13;
With the exception of three Senators who&#13;
served on the Student University Fees Allocation&#13;
Committee (SUFAC), none of the Senators had&#13;
any substantive knowledge of the budget. In&#13;
short, of the 11 Senators present, 8 were&#13;
abysmally ignorant of where and how the money&#13;
was being spent.&#13;
By the way, that's your money . If you attend&#13;
this school full time for the next year, you'll have&#13;
invested $116 in this budget.&#13;
The question immediately springs to mind :&#13;
Who is to blame? After interviewing Senators, the&#13;
President of PSGA, and members of SUFAC, it&#13;
transpires that no one is at fault, - or so they&#13;
say .&#13;
Notwithstanding the ir objections to the&#13;
contrary, I believe the Senators and the President,&#13;
in short, the PSGA, are guilty of dereliction of&#13;
duty or, at best, ineptitude. The worst offenders&#13;
are the Senators, while the· most responsible&#13;
component of Student Government was SUFAC.&#13;
An' analysis of governmental bodies responsible&#13;
for the budget is in order.&#13;
The Student University Fees Allocation&#13;
Committee (SUFAC) produces the budget&#13;
submitted to the Senate after approximately 3 to&#13;
4 months of hearings and deliberation. Their&#13;
responsibility (according to Kai Nall, a member of&#13;
the committee) was to determine reasonable&#13;
funding levels for the services and organizations&#13;
supported by Segregated Fees . SUFAC is supposed&#13;
to have 11 members; 10 elected at large and one&#13;
member elected by the Student Organizational&#13;
Council. Actually there are only 9 members; the&#13;
one elected by SOC, (Kia Nall), 2 elected at large,&#13;
and 6 appointed by the President of PSGA subject&#13;
to the advice and consent of the Senate .&#13;
PSGA is supposed to be comprised of 16&#13;
elected Senators. Currently there are 12 Senators&#13;
and only 4 of them were elected . The other 8&#13;
were appointed by Dan Nielsen , President Pro&#13;
Tempore of the Senate, subject to the Senate's&#13;
confirmation .&#13;
In speaking with elected and appointed&#13;
members of PSGA, it becomes apparent that&#13;
there's no consensus of opinion as to what the&#13;
Senate' s respon sibilities , or even PSGA' s&#13;
responsibilities, are with respect to the budget .&#13;
Senator Jeff LeMere feels that PSGA&#13;
appointments to academic, faculty, and search&#13;
and screen committees, rate a higher priority in&#13;
the Senate than the budget does .&#13;
Senator Gigi C&gt;sborne (one of the few Senators&#13;
actually elected), doesn't know why the PSGA&#13;
should have anything .at all to do with the budget&#13;
being as they (the Senators), don't learn anything&#13;
about it anyway.&#13;
President Kiyoko Bowden feels that it is&#13;
absolutely imperative that the PSGA be given&#13;
complete control of SUFAC.&#13;
Kai Nall, meanwhile, feels that PSGA's control&#13;
of the budget would result in a conflict of interest&#13;
being as PSGA's operating expenses are part of&#13;
the Segregated Fees budget.&#13;
In I ight of the low voter turnout for the last&#13;
PSGA elections (around 5 percent) the high&#13;
personnel turnover (75 percent of Senate seats are&#13;
either empty or filled by appointments) and the&#13;
lack of alternatives in the election (there· are&#13;
currently 10 candidates for 8 seats), I feel that&#13;
PSGA's claim to be the voice of the student body&#13;
is preposterous.&#13;
Furthermore , con siderin g PSGA 's obviou s&#13;
inability to keep its own house in order, I think it&#13;
even more ridi culous to expand the sphere of thi s&#13;
incompetence by putting the budget under their&#13;
control. Indeed , under the circumstances, the less&#13;
PSGA does, the better .&#13;
Meanwhile, whether initiatives come from the&#13;
admini stration , student governm ent, o r th e&#13;
students themselves, some sort of system for&#13;
analyzing the budget on a qualitative basis should&#13;
be devised for next year . Also , basic reforms in the&#13;
size, composition , manner of selection, and&#13;
operating procedures for PSGA are in order. The&#13;
number of senators and committee appointments&#13;
should be substantially reduced , their respons ibilities&#13;
and powers more clearly enunciated .&#13;
hnally, some kind of incentives for becoming a&#13;
student representative should be devised . A job&#13;
which has no renumeration , little real power,&#13;
almost no social prestige and yet, subjects the&#13;
jobholders to long hours and harsh criticisms (like·&#13;
thi s article), _ is not !50ing to be a highly prized&#13;
occupation .&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content.&#13;
I&#13;
ro&amp;e&#13;
Ma&#13;
1a&amp;&#13;
local&#13;
[mpl&#13;
~ion&#13;
1M~i&#13;
1rite&#13;
lpror:&#13;
10\ t&#13;
'atU&#13;
lell&#13;
fisl&#13;
I&#13;
re&#13;
to &#13;
•&#13;
Ranger ignores ceremony&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
On behalf of the Parkside PreMed&#13;
Club, I would like to&#13;
adman ish the Ranger staff for&#13;
negligence in covering news&#13;
from any source but administration&#13;
or sports. These two areas&#13;
are well covered but Ranger staff&#13;
personnel seem reluctant to get&#13;
other stories even when notified.&#13;
The Ranger told Jay Grassell they&#13;
would send a reporter/photographer&#13;
to cover the sweating-in&#13;
ceremony of Jay Grassel! and&#13;
Mike Ross into the Air Force, 'but&#13;
no one from the paper showed&#13;
up. Since the paper did not cover&#13;
the story, here it is:&#13;
At 9:30 on Friday, March 11,&#13;
Jay Grassel! and Michael Ross&#13;
were Sworn into the Air Force&#13;
Medical Reserves as 2nd&#13;
Lieutenants by Captain Robert&#13;
Brown and Master Sergeant&#13;
Raymond Wolf of the Milwaukee&#13;
Air Force Medical Recruiting&#13;
Center. The ceremony was held&#13;
in the student-faculty lounge in&#13;
the Classroom Building. In&#13;
attendance were Dr. Anna Marie&#13;
Williams, I-rank Lowenthal, head&#13;
of the Science Division, and Vice&#13;
Chancellor' for Student Affairs,&#13;
Clayton Johnson, among others.&#13;
The ceremony lasted about 10&#13;
minutes and involved the taking&#13;
of the oath of allegiance to the&#13;
United States and the Air Force&#13;
by 'both participants.&#13;
Mike and Jay have both been&#13;
exemplary (sic) students here at&#13;
Parkside and both are slated to&#13;
graduate this May. After&#13;
graduation they will spend this&#13;
summer at Lackland AFB, Texas&#13;
Chancellor's affirmative ecflon.&#13;
questioned&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
At a meeting on March 8, the&#13;
Parkside Women's Caucus of&#13;
Local 2180, Wisconsin State&#13;
Employees Union (classified&#13;
union employees who work at&#13;
Parkside) voted unanimously to&#13;
write to the Ranger to protest the&#13;
procedures followed to fill one&#13;
of the most high level positions&#13;
at UW-Parkside, Assistant Chancellor&#13;
for Administration and&#13;
Fiscal Affairs.&#13;
We feel that it would be&#13;
reasonable to appoint someone&#13;
to fill the position immediately&#13;
on an acting basis. The decision&#13;
which was made, however,&#13;
eliminates one more opportunity&#13;
to recruit or promote a member&#13;
of a minority group, a&#13;
handicapped person, or a&#13;
woman into a highly desirable&#13;
position here. As taxpayers, we&#13;
are also concerned that the&#13;
position is filled by the best&#13;
qualified person. This could only&#13;
be determined by open&#13;
competition.&#13;
This is not a new issue. The&#13;
incumbent Chancellor for Administration&#13;
attained his position&#13;
the same way .. His previous&#13;
position was then filled the same&#13;
way. Many other examples could&#13;
be given.&#13;
We hear that there will be&#13;
changes. The Chancellor has&#13;
committed himself to affirmative&#13;
action, but how can we believe&#13;
that equal opportunity pnnciples&#13;
will be followed in hiring at&#13;
lower levels when one of the&#13;
most highly visible positions on&#13;
campus is filled without any&#13;
regard for these principles?&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
PARKSIDE WOMEN'S CAUCUS&#13;
local 2180, WSEU&#13;
Guskin and gang thanked&#13;
To the Editor; .&#13;
I would like to thank&#13;
Chancellor Guskin and his&#13;
administrative staff for accepting&#13;
the 1977-78 Segregated Fees&#13;
Budget drawn up by the&#13;
Segregated Fees Committee. It&#13;
was not an easy decision for the&#13;
Chancellor, Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Clayton Johnson, Budget Director&#13;
Gary Goetz, and Budget&#13;
Specialist David Holle to make.&#13;
The result of their decision&#13;
shows that students voices and&#13;
input on important matters at&#13;
Parkside can make a difference&#13;
and influence the course of this&#13;
University.&#13;
In addition I would like to&#13;
especially thank David Holle for&#13;
Ranger needs more people&#13;
to do (] better job!&#13;
FOR THE RIDER '&#13;
WHO DEMANDS&#13;
1IIE&#13;
UmlAlE MOTORCYCLE&#13;
FACTORY AUTHa.llfO&#13;
SAUS &amp; SERVICE&#13;
COIotIL£T£ UPAIRS. PAin&#13;
&amp; C\JSTOM ACCE$5O';IES&#13;
his work with the Segregated&#13;
FeesComm ittee. Dave is a hard&#13;
working, objective budget specialist&#13;
and I am sure that I can&#13;
speak for the rest of the&#13;
Committee in saying that we all&#13;
greatly appreciated his presence&#13;
and help on the Committee.&#13;
This kind of co-operation&#13;
between students and administrators&#13;
makes for an encouraging&#13;
future for the Segregated Fees&#13;
process and has encouraged me&#13;
to continue working with&#13;
Segregated Fees.&#13;
Kai Christian Nail&#13;
Segregated Fees Committee&#13;
Member&#13;
Gruhl grins&#13;
viewsI&#13;
before returning to Milwaukee In&#13;
the fall to attend the Medical&#13;
College of Wisconsin, where&#13;
they will be for another four&#13;
years Matthew G. Kinselman&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In my opmton the make-up&#13;
and contents of RA~CER IS&#13;
better than It has ever been at&#13;
any time In the past.&#13;
Good for you ali'&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Arthur Gruhl&#13;
'11~'\,1.\"''''/&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
COME ON OUTI&#13;
TO THE&#13;
KENOSHA ICE ARENA&#13;
a«4U1-fMI&#13;
.RECREA TlONAL SKATING&#13;
.FlGURE SKATING&#13;
.BROOM BALL&#13;
.YOUTH HOCKEY&#13;
.SEMI·PRO HOCKEY&#13;
·------------------------1 I ~ FREE I&#13;
I ~ ADMISSION I&#13;
I TO I&#13;
I ANY PUBLIC SKATING SESSION I&#13;
I WITH THIS COUPON I&#13;
IKENOSHA ICE ARENA I&#13;
LZ~~_~O,;,~~~!ll2~~_~9~i!21.°....&#13;
I&#13;
,~~MU§HllOtM ~&#13;
~ §OUND§ ~&#13;
~ "'IDS. CB UNITS TAPE DECKS .M&#13;
." CUSTOM INSTALLATION IN YOUR CAR OR TRUCK ~&#13;
~~ ~ FOR fREE ESTIMATE CALL ~&#13;
~ .,z r-: JOHN GABRiEl 553-2287 W (# ~&#13;
~~~ ~&#13;
WORK GUARANTEED&#13;
PARKSIDE SPECIAL&#13;
THE NEW&#13;
Lighthouse II&#13;
1146 SHERID~ ROAD&#13;
UNDER NEW&#13;
NTN&#13;
MANAGE_NT&#13;
INC.&#13;
Tue.&#13;
Wed.&#13;
Thurs.&#13;
Sun.&#13;
DISCO&#13;
No Cover&#13;
Charge&#13;
Fr i..&#13;
Sat. )&#13;
LIVE&#13;
ENTERT AINMENT&#13;
Admission&#13;
50c&#13;
12 OUNCE OLY DRAFT - .35&#13;
MIXED DRINKS - .60&#13;
"'iii. tD Positivel" Required N.T.N. Inc. reeervee the ri,:ht.&#13;
according to 81811" 18~·8.10 refuse service al it', 0"""&#13;
disc....euon.&#13;
Ranger ignores ceremony&#13;
Gruhl grins&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In my opinion the make-up&#13;
and content of RA,_ GER Is&#13;
better than It ha ever b en at&#13;
any time in the pa t&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
On behalf of the Parkside PreMed&#13;
Club, I would like to&#13;
admonish the Ranger staff for&#13;
negligence in covering news&#13;
from any source but administration&#13;
or sports. These two areas&#13;
are well covered but Ranger staff&#13;
personnel seem reluctant to get&#13;
other stories even when notified .&#13;
The Ranger told Jay Grassell they&#13;
would send a reporter/ photographer&#13;
t-0 cover the swearing-in&#13;
ceremony of Jay Grassell and&#13;
Mike Ross into the Air Force, ·but&#13;
no one from the paper showed&#13;
up. Since the paper did not cover&#13;
the story, here it is:&#13;
At 9:30 on Friday, March 11,&#13;
Jay Grassell and Michael Ross&#13;
were sworn into the Air Force&#13;
Medical Reserves as 2nd&#13;
Lieutenants by Captain Robert&#13;
Brown and Master Sergeant&#13;
Raymond Wolf of the Milwaukee&#13;
Air Force Medical Recruiting&#13;
Center. The ceremony was held&#13;
in the student-faculty lounge in&#13;
the Classroom Build.ing . In&#13;
attendance were Dr. Anna Marie&#13;
Williams, I-rank Lowenthal, head&#13;
of tile Science Division, and Vice&#13;
Chancellor· for Student Affairs,&#13;
Clayton Johnson, among others&#13;
The ceremony lasted about 10&#13;
minutes and involved the taking&#13;
of the oath of allegiance to the&#13;
United States and the Air Force&#13;
by 'both participants.&#13;
Mike and Jay have both been&#13;
exemplary (sic) students here at&#13;
Parkside and both are slated to&#13;
graduate this May. After&#13;
graduation they will spend this&#13;
summer at Lackland AFB, Texas&#13;
Chancellor's affirmative action,&#13;
questioned&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
At a meeting on March 8, the&#13;
Parkside Women's Caucus of&#13;
Local 2180, Wisconsin State&#13;
Employees Union (classified&#13;
union employees who work at&#13;
Parkside) voted unanimously to&#13;
write to the Ranger to protest the&#13;
procedures followed to fill one&#13;
of the most high level positions&#13;
at UW-Parkside, Assistant Chancellor&#13;
for Administration and&#13;
Fiscal Affairs .&#13;
We feel that it would be&#13;
reasonable to appoint someone&#13;
to fill the position immediately&#13;
on an acting basis . The decision&#13;
which was made, however,&#13;
eliminates one more opportunity&#13;
to recruit or promote a member&#13;
of a minority group, a&#13;
handi cap ped person , or a&#13;
woman into a highly desirable&#13;
position here. As taxpayers, we&#13;
are also concerned that the&#13;
position is filled by the best&#13;
qualified person . This could only&#13;
be determined by open&#13;
competition .&#13;
This is not a new issue. The&#13;
incumbent Chancellor for Administration&#13;
attained his position&#13;
the same way . His previous&#13;
position was then filled the same&#13;
way. Many other examples could&#13;
be given .&#13;
We hear that there will be&#13;
changes. The Chancellor has&#13;
committed himself to affirmative&#13;
action, but how can we believe&#13;
that equal opportunity principles&#13;
will be followed in hiring at&#13;
lower levels when one of the&#13;
most highly visible positions on&#13;
campus is filled without any&#13;
regard for these principles?&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
PARKSIDE WOMEN'S CAUCUS&#13;
local 2180, WSEU&#13;
Guskin and ga'1g thankedTo&#13;
the Editor; .&#13;
I would like to thank&#13;
Chancellor Guskin and his&#13;
administrative staff for accepting&#13;
the 1977-78 Segregated Fees&#13;
Budget drawn up by the&#13;
Segregated Fees Committee. It&#13;
was not an easy decision for the&#13;
Chancellor, Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Clayton Johnson, Budget Director&#13;
Gary Goetz, and Budget&#13;
Specialist David Holle to make.&#13;
The result of their decision&#13;
shows that students voices and&#13;
input on important matters at&#13;
Parkside can make a difference&#13;
and influence the course of this&#13;
University.&#13;
In addition I would like to&#13;
especially thank David Holle for&#13;
Ranger needs more people&#13;
to do a better job!&#13;
FOR THE RIDER '&#13;
WHO DEMANDS&#13;
TH£&#13;
ULTIMATE MOTORCYCLE&#13;
FACTORY AUTHOIIIZED&#13;
SALES &amp; SERVICE COMPLETE lEPAIRS, PAlTS&#13;
&amp; CUSTOM ACCESso« IES&#13;
632-5241 COUil OIi UI! 1111 61UI IIIYKI SHOP&#13;
R&amp;B 11Allll-DAYID!41 mn&#13;
1535 Douglas Ave . @)l!J(W\'il'!l ~ ·&#13;
Racine ~&#13;
his work with the Segregated&#13;
Fees Committee. Dave is a hard&#13;
working, objective budget specialist&#13;
and I am sure that I can&#13;
speak for the rest of the&#13;
Committee in saying that we all&#13;
greatly appreciated his presence&#13;
and help on the Committee .&#13;
between students and administrators&#13;
makes for an encouraging&#13;
future for the Segregated Fees&#13;
process and has encouraged me&#13;
to continue working with&#13;
Segregated Fees&#13;
This kind of co-operation&#13;
Kai Christian Nall&#13;
Segregated Fees Committee&#13;
Member&#13;
COME ON OUTI&#13;
TO THE&#13;
KENOSHA ICE ARENA&#13;
4ll!f( (!,#,tu,&#13;
eRECREA TIONAL SKA TING&#13;
eFIGURE SKATING&#13;
eBROOM BALL&#13;
•YOUTH HOCKEY&#13;
eSEMI-PRO HOCKEY&#13;
'&#13;
I~&#13;
·---------------------~--1 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&#13;
tz:~-~°!~!~E..--..P~~~~-~g~~~l_DJ&#13;
before returning to Milwaukee rn&#13;
the fall to attend the Medical&#13;
College of Wisconsin, where&#13;
they will be for another four&#13;
years Matthew G. Kinselman&#13;
Good for you all'&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Arthur Gruhl&#13;
,,,~ ,u,., /&#13;
• Pu-,e Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
PARKSIDE SPECIAL&#13;
Tue.&#13;
Wed.&#13;
Thurs.&#13;
Sun.&#13;
THE NEW&#13;
Lighthouse 11&#13;
1146 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT&#13;
N TN INC&#13;
DISCO&#13;
No Cover&#13;
Charge&#13;
Fri.&#13;
Sat. ) LIVE&#13;
ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
Admission&#13;
50c&#13;
12 OUNCE DL Y DRAFT - .35&#13;
MIXED DRINKS - .60&#13;
Wis. ID Positively Required N.T.N. In&lt;'. l'e enes the righ t.&#13;
a&lt;'t'Ording to state laws. to refu e ervi&lt;'e a t it" own&#13;
disnetion. &#13;
/&#13;
_eyes•&#13;
Janet Pruett, Kenosha Freshman&#13;
"It bothers me that I don't know&#13;
what 1want to do in the future.&#13;
I'm just taking courses that&#13;
friends have told me are good&#13;
courses to take."&#13;
Renee Bedford, Kenosha Junior&#13;
"tthmk that the food at Parks ide&#13;
cafeteria is terrible. It's the same&#13;
old thing everyday. I'm at the&#13;
point where I don't even eat here&#13;
anymore."&#13;
,&#13;
Photoqrophs by Leonne Dillinghom,&#13;
Kurt Jensen, Union Grove Junior&#13;
"Take Parkside - Please!"&#13;
-limmv Smith, Freshman&#13;
"I personally feel that some of&#13;
the classes here should be&#13;
changed so that you would be&#13;
competing against yourself. To&#13;
measure your progress, you&#13;
could be tested at the start of a&#13;
class and retested on it's&#13;
completion "&#13;
Jackie- Shallenburg,&#13;
Kenosha Junior&#13;
"Being in charge of the theater&#13;
props for our productions gets&#13;
awfully hectic sometimes, but I&#13;
Ralph Mood.y, Greenfield&#13;
Wisconsin Sophomore&#13;
"I feel as though I'm an omnidirectional&#13;
person in a singularly&#13;
orientated world where specialization&#13;
and goal orientation are&#13;
at the root of our social&#13;
structure .. In other words, I'm&#13;
leaving for Uranus next week "&#13;
Theresa Adrianson, Junior&#13;
"I think the Parkside complex is a&#13;
fascinating space to breeze&#13;
through. I especially enjoy it&#13;
when things seem very serene&#13;
and the sun is creating&#13;
reflections and warm areasabout&#13;
it .:&#13;
love the work. I started out&#13;
majoring in art but changed my&#13;
major when I realized I was&#13;
spending all my time around the&#13;
theater anyway."&#13;
\&#13;
Creig Flatley, Freshman&#13;
"Wine, women and song."&#13;
.,eyes&#13;
Janet Pruett, kenosha Freshman&#13;
" It bothers me that I don't know&#13;
what I want to do in the future .&#13;
I'm just taking courses that&#13;
friends have told me are good&#13;
courses to take ."&#13;
Ralph Moody, Greenfield&#13;
Wisconsin Sophomore&#13;
"I feel as though I'm an omnidirectional&#13;
person in a singularly&#13;
orientated world where specialization&#13;
and goal orientation are&#13;
at the root of our social&#13;
structure. In other words, I'm&#13;
leaving for Uranus next w~ek "&#13;
'&#13;
Renee Bedford, Kenosha Junior&#13;
"l think that the food at Parkside&#13;
cafeteria is terrible. It's the same&#13;
old thing everyday. I'm at the&#13;
point where I don't even eat here&#13;
anymore ."&#13;
r&#13;
Photogrophs b_y Leonne Dillinghom&#13;
Kurt Jensen, Union Grove Junior&#13;
"Take Parkside - Please!"&#13;
Jackie· Shallenburg,&#13;
Kenosha Junior&#13;
" Being in charge of the theater&#13;
props for our productions gets&#13;
awfully hectic sometimes, but I&#13;
Theresa Adrianson, Junior&#13;
" I think the Parkside complex is a&#13;
fascinating space to breeze&#13;
through·. I especially enjoy it&#13;
when things seem very serene&#13;
and the sun is creating&#13;
reflections and warm areas about&#13;
it.".&#13;
Jimmy Smith, Freshm,m&#13;
" I personally feel that some o.f&#13;
the classes here should be&#13;
changed so that you would be&#13;
competing again st yourself . To&#13;
measure your progress , you&#13;
could be tested at the start of a&#13;
class and retested on it' s&#13;
completion ."&#13;
love the ,vork. I started out&#13;
majoring in art but changed my&#13;
major when I realized I was&#13;
spending all my time around the&#13;
theater anyway ."&#13;
Creig Flatley, Freshman&#13;
" Wine, women and song ."&#13;
/ &#13;
On Poetry&#13;
I am someone&#13;
You are not&#13;
I am something&#13;
You are not&#13;
I am the poet&#13;
You are only&#13;
Part of the poem.&#13;
Leah Williams&#13;
Beams&#13;
The gray globe in the black space&#13;
sends small silver fingers&#13;
reaching out&#13;
to remind the darkness&#13;
that it cannot cover&#13;
Light's wondrous face.&#13;
Mollie Clarke&#13;
poetry I&#13;
To My Current Lover&#13;
Worries about your fidelityI&#13;
have none.&#13;
These daily reminders of&#13;
Your inadequacy&#13;
Is just my way of hoping&#13;
Shame&#13;
Will keep your zipper&#13;
Up.&#13;
Epitaph&#13;
I do nol know when this soul&#13;
had Ihe hands to shape my dreams&#13;
and lift me when dirt clods&#13;
cover my wooden casket.&#13;
Do not bring roses&#13;
to my grave.&#13;
I won't be there&#13;
10 smell them.&#13;
Leah Williams&#13;
Mollie Clerke&#13;
AFTER MELONCHOL Y&#13;
God works in mysterious ways&#13;
and never leaves a phone number.&#13;
He smiles with teeth&#13;
like a thousand cheese pizzas&#13;
And an old man wakes up&#13;
with an erection.&#13;
William Barke&#13;
Heated computerized hatred&#13;
vibrating in civic eardrums.&#13;
Swallows at Wautoma&#13;
Delicate black arrows&#13;
Scour and sweep the twilight.&#13;
They rise and fall,&#13;
Tracing vanished arches&#13;
Over a darkening lake.&#13;
Sitting on the pier with you.&#13;
I lean close to whisper a secret;&#13;
You draw away again and mutter something.&#13;
T urnihg back to the birds&#13;
I wonder who will win the game&#13;
This time,&#13;
And how many dragonflies&#13;
A swallow catches each evening.&#13;
Taxed'&#13;
Don't talk to people'&#13;
Drive fast and get there quick!&#13;
Hale red lights'&#13;
Like to stare ahead in a daze'&#13;
Moving somewhere. tunnelled'&#13;
In my comfortable locomonve'&#13;
Dreaming madly about summer!&#13;
Crazy crashing in my head!&#13;
The end must be near'&#13;
Come on baby. hit me like a hurricane!&#13;
Destruction to all this heap!&#13;
Blow up things in haste!&#13;
Grin and smile!&#13;
YOU STINKING WASTEIIl&#13;
by Gloria Anderson&#13;
Laura Lacock&#13;
On Poetry&#13;
I am someone&#13;
You are not&#13;
I am something&#13;
You are not&#13;
I am the poet&#13;
You are only&#13;
Part of the poem.&#13;
Leah Williams&#13;
Beams&#13;
To My Current Lover&#13;
Worries about your fidelity-&#13;
! have none.&#13;
These daily reminders of&#13;
Your inadequacy&#13;
Is just my way of hoping&#13;
Shame&#13;
Will keep your zipper&#13;
Up.&#13;
Leah Williams&#13;
The gray globe in the black space&#13;
sends small silver fingers&#13;
reaching out&#13;
to remind the darkness&#13;
that it cannot cover&#13;
Light's wondrous face.&#13;
Mollie Clarke&#13;
Swallows at Wautoma&#13;
Delicate black arrows&#13;
Scour and sweep the twilight.&#13;
They rise and fall,&#13;
Tracing vanished arches&#13;
Over a darkening lake.&#13;
Sitting on the pier with you,&#13;
I lean close to whisper a secret:&#13;
You draw away again and mutter something.&#13;
Turnihg back to the birds&#13;
I wonder who will win the game&#13;
This time,&#13;
And how many dragonflies&#13;
A swallow catches each evening.&#13;
Laura Lacock&#13;
poetry I =&#13;
Epitaph&#13;
I do not know when this soul&#13;
had the hands to shape my dreams&#13;
and lift me when dirt clods&#13;
cover my wooden casket.&#13;
Do not bring roses&#13;
to my grave.&#13;
I won't be there&#13;
to smell them.&#13;
Mollie Oarke&#13;
AFTER MELO CHOL Y&#13;
God works in mysterious ways&#13;
and never leaves a phone number.&#13;
He smiles with teeth&#13;
like a thousand cheese pizzas&#13;
And an old man wakes up&#13;
with an erection&#13;
Heated computeriz d hatred&#13;
vibrating in c1v1c eardrum .&#13;
Taxed'&#13;
Don·t talk to peopl&#13;
Drive fa t and get there quick'&#13;
Hate red lights'&#13;
Like to tare ah ad in a dal •1&#13;
Moving .omewh re. tunn 11 d 1&#13;
In m&gt;' comfortable locomot1v !&#13;
Dreaming madly about umm r1&#13;
Crazy era hing in my head!&#13;
The end must b near!&#13;
Come on baby. hit me lik a humcan&#13;
Destruction to all this heap'&#13;
Blow up things m ha te1&#13;
Grin and smile!&#13;
YOU STI Kl G WA TE! 11&#13;
by Gloria Anderson&#13;
William Barke &#13;
Inews&#13;
Parkside receives&#13;
fina ...cial. aids&#13;
Regents of the University of&#13;
wlsconstn Svstern today&#13;
accepted a federal grant of&#13;
$133,824 for student financial&#13;
aids at Parkside. The Department&#13;
of Health, Education and&#13;
Welfare grant for the Basic&#13;
Educational Opportunity Program&#13;
brings total funding for that&#13;
program at Parkside to $379,324&#13;
.for 1976-77.&#13;
The regents also accepted a&#13;
Wisconsin Humanities Committee&#13;
grant of $200 in support of&#13;
the Thomas More Quincentennial&#13;
Festival held at Parkside&#13;
during February.&#13;
ADULT NIGHT&#13;
18 and OLDER&#13;
From 9·11 :30 p.m. Every Sunday&#13;
RED'S, ROLLER RINK&#13;
6220 67th sr., Kenosha&#13;
just off highway 3 J&#13;
RNER FRESH FLOWERS YOU'LL NEVER FORGET AT&#13;
PRICES YOU'LL ALWAYS REMEMBER ~.'.e'LAWN &amp;GARDEN _VI-I and CENTER FI'''I.",,~ CLOSEST FLORIST TO PARKSIOE&#13;
1780 N. 22nd Ave. Phone 552-8411&#13;
~nut4&amp;rttB&#13;
Clift ~l1oppe&#13;
EXCLUSIVE&#13;
in the Racine Kenosha areaBAMBOO&#13;
VEGETABLE&#13;
STEAMERS - Also... ~&#13;
we have Chinese Woks in stock&#13;
HOO Wuh. Ave. 637·7076 Master Charge Accepted&#13;
~ CHICKEN ATHENIAN&#13;
Roasted and delicately seasoned&#13;
BRAISED SPRING LAMB SHANK&#13;
Deliciously seasoned, served. over Rice Pilaf&#13;
COMBINATION PLATE&#13;
.. Dolmathes, Pastichio, Braised Lamb Shank,&#13;
Rice Pilaf, Grecian meat balls&#13;
Four Communlcotlon positIons&#13;
Candidates visit Parkside&#13;
by Christopher Clausen and Bruce Wagner Madsen said. She would like to teach both&#13;
traditional and non-traditional students. ·Madsen&#13;
said that the mix of professional and liberal arts&#13;
should be a good attraction to women and men&#13;
who are past the traditional college age.&#13;
Madsen said she was looking for somewhere else&#13;
to teach for academic advancement as well as a&#13;
larger program. Madsen received her M.A. from&#13;
Whitewater and her Ph.D. from the University of&#13;
Kansas in 1975. She has been teaching at Buena&#13;
Vista since then.&#13;
Dr. Rebecca Rubin, currently teaching at&#13;
University ef North Carolina in Greensboro, was&#13;
interested in Parkside primarily for it's location.&#13;
Dr. Rubin said that the relationship between the&#13;
business school and the traditional liberal arts&#13;
program were vital for the survival of the business&#13;
program. Rubin stressed the idea that business must&#13;
communicate in order to successfully conduct&#13;
busmess. To further assist a business or public&#13;
relations student Rubin would like to see a&#13;
internship program to better prepare those&#13;
students.&#13;
Rubin said she would also like to see&#13;
undergraduate programs better prepare students for&#13;
graduate school as well for wide ranging jobs in&#13;
business.&#13;
When asked why she was leaving North Carolina,&#13;
Rubin said that two things had-pressured her in to&#13;
seeking another job. The lack of proper funds for&#13;
work and research and the lagerness of the&#13;
department was also a factor. Rubin said that a 12&#13;
hour class load was not uncommon.&#13;
Rubin received her B.S. and M.A. from&#13;
Pennsylvania State University and her Ph.D. from&#13;
the University of Illinios in 1975.&#13;
PSGA, Ranger, others&#13;
Organizations to relocate&#13;
Lower Main Place will be the&#13;
site of a remodeling program&#13;
slated for completion' by&#13;
September 1977. Moneys have&#13;
been allocated to relocate the&#13;
offices of PSGAofficers, student&#13;
organizations, and the RANGER,&#13;
from their present location to&#13;
lower Main Place. To facilitate&#13;
this change, offices will be&#13;
constructed in a portion of lower&#13;
Main Place which now contains&#13;
tables for Burger Shop customers.&#13;
REDUCTION AND ADDITIONS&#13;
James Galbraith, Director of&#13;
Planning and Construction,&#13;
explained the renovations. "The&#13;
Burger shop will be reduced from&#13;
its original size. Three main&#13;
rooms will then be added. The&#13;
. first is to contain offices for&#13;
PSGA officers. The second will&#13;
provide space for student&#13;
organizations with an attached&#13;
workroom. The third will house&#13;
the RANGER and contain a&#13;
darkroom and editor's office."&#13;
Each shall be constructed of&#13;
-~&#13;
3.95&#13;
COUPON&#13;
A FREE GLASS OF FINE&#13;
GREEK WINE - RODYTOl&#13;
An Excellant Light Rose&#13;
for Your Dinner&#13;
5.50&#13;
\ll.iEiii~~~~~~~~EfII&#13;
BAKLAVA PHYLLO Honey' Nut Pastry , , .••• , ••••.•••...••••.• , ••• , •• 50&#13;
KOURAMBIETHES' Butter Cooky •..•••.•••••••.••.•••••••.••••••••••. , 25&#13;
All dinners include the traditional Greek Salad of refreshingly delicate greens, tender onions, dotted with&#13;
plump olives. Liberally laced with garlic and creamy Peto che-ese, and delicious Grecian dressing,&#13;
IMPORTED GREEK WINES &amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
METAXA BRANDY·MA VRODAPHNE-A Sweet Red RETSINA, National Wine of GREECE- Delicately dry, white wine.&#13;
QUZO L1QUER -Zesty , anise-flavored wine, on rocks, or pony glass&#13;
MONDAY thru THURSDAY 4:30 to 10:30&#13;
8607 Highway 11 Sturtevant, Wisconsin FOR RESERV A nONS PHONE&#13;
large glass panes with wood trim.&#13;
"Class was chosen," said&#13;
Calbraith, "to open them up to&#13;
create student interest, and&#13;
hopefully involvement, in each&#13;
of the offices."&#13;
Galbraith emphasized Chancellor&#13;
Cuskm's interest and&#13;
encouragement for this project.&#13;
CHANCELLOR EXPLAINS&#13;
In an RANGER interview with&#13;
the Chancellor, he reaffirmed his&#13;
interest and explained his&#13;
objectives in the remodeling. He&#13;
stated, "I preceive this campus&#13;
to contain two magnets of&#13;
student interest, these being the&#13;
Library and the Union: each&#13;
should possess equal power.&#13;
Main Place is the hub of the&#13;
campus and entrance to the&#13;
Library. It is important to keep&#13;
Main Place alive."&#13;
"The key issue," Guskin&#13;
explained, "is active participation&#13;
in student government,&#13;
student organizations, and&#13;
student news pap e r . This is&#13;
essential for a strong University.&#13;
1 By relocating these offices we&#13;
"will make them very accessible&#13;
to students. The product o(this&#13;
accessibility is more activity in&#13;
student groups, a more exciting&#13;
Main Place and in the long run a&#13;
stronger University."&#13;
fh&#13;
l=news&#13;
Parkside receives&#13;
financial aids&#13;
Regents of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin System today&#13;
accepted a federal grant of&#13;
$133,824 for student financial&#13;
aids at Parkside. The Department&#13;
of Health, Education and&#13;
Welfare grant for the Basic&#13;
Educational Opportunity Program&#13;
brings total funding for that&#13;
program at Parkside to $379,324&#13;
,for 1976-77.&#13;
The regents also accepted a&#13;
Wisconsin Humanities Committee&#13;
grant of $200 in support of&#13;
the Thomas More Quincentennial&#13;
Festival held at Parkside&#13;
during February.&#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;
FINER FRESH FLOWERS YOU'LL NEVER FORGET AT&#13;
PRICES YOU'LL ALWAYS REMEMBER ~,,,er LAWN &amp;GARDEN. .,uj and CENTER Finl.,,,.,.&#13;
CLOSEST FLORIST TO PARKSIDE&#13;
1780 N. 22nd Ave. Phone 552-8411&#13;
&amp;nut4 &amp;ens&#13;
Clift ~}Jnppe&#13;
EXCLUSIVE&#13;
in the Racine Kenosha areaBAMBOO&#13;
&#13;
VEGETABLE&#13;
STEAMERS - · Also... · &lt;!.::'.5&#13;
we have Chinese Woks in stock&#13;
1500 Wash. Ave . 637-7076 Master Charg~ Accepted&#13;
Four Communication positions&#13;
Candidates visit Parkside&#13;
by Christopher Clausen and Bruce Wagner&#13;
Candidates for the communication positions&#13;
continued to visit Parkside last week .&#13;
Dr. Sam Geonetta, Assistant Professor of&#13;
Communications at Mount Union College in&#13;
Alliance, Ohio, and the second candidate for one of&#13;
the four communications faculty positions, cited&#13;
the small, unchangeable program at Mount Union&#13;
as his reason for leaving there.&#13;
In his open meeting with faculty and students,&#13;
Geonetta said that his areas of research centered on&#13;
small group communication, politics and mass&#13;
media, and the history of printing and graphics.&#13;
When asked about his teaching experience&#13;
Geonetta listed not only his current job bu·t also 2&#13;
years as a teaching assistant at Indiana University&#13;
where he received his Ph.D. in 1974.&#13;
Geonetta told a student interested in forensics&#13;
and debate that he felt it was a neccessary for&#13;
smaller schools to switch to parliamentary debate&#13;
in order to compete with larger richer schools&#13;
which can spend more money on research.&#13;
Candidate Sandra Madsen, an Assistant Professor&#13;
of Communications at Buena Vista College in Storm&#13;
Lake, Iowa, was interested in Parkside's location,.as&#13;
well as the chan.ce for traditional and&#13;
non-traditional students to share ideas and&#13;
experiences.&#13;
Madsen said she was interested in rhetoric and&#13;
small group communication as area's of research.&#13;
In this matter Madse.n said that Parkside as a&#13;
commuter school had excellent possibilities for&#13;
small group communication in the area of&#13;
committees and inter-personal relationships .&#13;
General introduction courses should not be so&#13;
much theory as is often done in such courses,&#13;
·PSGA, Ranger, others&#13;
Madsen said. She would like to teach both&#13;
traditional and non-traditional students . Madsen&#13;
said that the mix of professional and liberal arts&#13;
should be a good attraction to women and men&#13;
who are past the traditional college age.&#13;
Madsen said she was looking for somewhere else&#13;
to teach for academic advancement as well as a&#13;
larger program . Madsen received her M.A. from&#13;
Whitewater and her Ph.D. from the University of&#13;
Kansas in 1975. She has been teaching at Buena&#13;
Vista since then .&#13;
Dr. Rebecca Rubin, currently teaching at&#13;
University 0f North Carolina in Greensboro, was&#13;
interested in Parkside primarily for it's location .&#13;
Dr. Rubin said that the relationship between the&#13;
business school and the traditional liberal arts&#13;
program were vital for the survival of the business&#13;
program. Rubin stressed the idea that business must&#13;
communicate in order to successfully conduct&#13;
business . To further assist a busines5 or public&#13;
relations student Rubin would like to see a&#13;
internship program to better prepare those&#13;
students .&#13;
Rubin said she would also like to see&#13;
undergraduate programs better prepare students for&#13;
graduate school as well for wide ranging jobs in&#13;
business.&#13;
When asked why she was leaving North Carolina,&#13;
Rubin said that two things had· pressured her in to&#13;
seeking another job. The lack of proper funds for&#13;
work and research and the lagerness of the&#13;
department was also a factor. Rubin said that a 12&#13;
hour class load was not uncommon.&#13;
Rubin received her B.S. and M.A. from&#13;
Pennsylvania State University and her Ph.D. from&#13;
the University of lllinios in 1975.&#13;
Organizat_ions to relocate&#13;
Lower Main Place will be the&#13;
site of a remodeling program&#13;
slated for completion · by&#13;
September 1977. Moneys have&#13;
been al located to relocate the&#13;
offices of PSGA officers, student&#13;
organizations, and the RANGER,&#13;
from their present location to&#13;
lower Main Place. To facilitate&#13;
this change, offices will be&#13;
constructed in a portion of lower&#13;
Main Place which now contains&#13;
tables for Burger Shop customers.&#13;
&#13;
REDUCTION AND ADDITIONS large glass panes with wood trim.&#13;
" Glass was &lt;;:hosen," said&#13;
Galbraith , "to open them up to&#13;
create student interest, and&#13;
hopefully involvement, in each&#13;
of the offices ."&#13;
James Galbraith, Director of&#13;
Planning and Construction,&#13;
explained the renovations. "The&#13;
Burger shop will be reduced from&#13;
its original size. Three main&#13;
rooms wi 11 then be added . The&#13;
· first is to contain offices for&#13;
PSGA officers. The second will&#13;
provide space for student&#13;
organizations with an attached&#13;
workroom. The third will house&#13;
the RANGER and contain a&#13;
darkroom and editor'.s office ."&#13;
Each shall be constructed of&#13;
Galbraith emphasized Chancellor&#13;
Guskm's intere; t and&#13;
encouragement for this project.&#13;
CHANCELLOR EXPLAINS&#13;
QR€CIAO mtnu&#13;
In an RANGER interview with&#13;
the Chancellor, he reaffirmed his&#13;
interest and explained his&#13;
objectives in the remodeling. He&#13;
stated, "I preceive this campus&#13;
to contain two magnets of&#13;
student interest, these being the&#13;
Library and the Union : each&#13;
should possess equal power.&#13;
Main Place is the hub of the&#13;
campus and entrance to the&#13;
Library . It is important to keep&#13;
Main Place alive."&#13;
THE GRANDEUR OF DRIFTWOOD SUPPER CLUB&#13;
¼ CHICKEN ATHENIAN&#13;
Roasted and delicately seasoned&#13;
BRAISED SPRING LAMB SHANK&#13;
Deliciously seasoned, served_ over Rice Pilaf&#13;
COMBINATION PLATE ,.. Dolmathes, Pastichio, Braised Lamb Shank,&#13;
Rice Pilaf, Grecian meat balls&#13;
2.95&#13;
3.95&#13;
5.50&#13;
~&#13;
COUPON&#13;
A FREE GLASS OF FINE&#13;
GREEK WINE - RODYTO!&#13;
An Excellant Light Rose&#13;
for Your Dinner&#13;
BAKLAVA PHYLLO Boney· Nut Pastry .......................................................... 50&#13;
KOURAMBIETHES Butter Cooky ............................................................... 2 5&#13;
All dinners include the traditional Greek Salad of refreshingly delicate greens, tender onions, dotted with&#13;
plump olives. Liberally laced with garlic and creamy Feta cheese, and delicious Grecian dressing,&#13;
IMPORTED GREEK WINES &amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
METAXA BRANDY·MAVRODAPHNE-A Sweet Red RETSINA, National Wine of GREECE- Delicately dry, white wine.&#13;
QUZO LIQUER -Zesty , anise-flavored wine,on rocks, or pony glass&#13;
- MONDAY thru THURSDAY 4:30 to 10:30&#13;
8607 Highway 11 Sturtevant, Wisconsin FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE&#13;
" The key issue," Guskin&#13;
explained, " is active participation&#13;
in student government,&#13;
student organizations, and&#13;
student newspaper. This is&#13;
essential for ~ strong University.&#13;
, By relocating these offices we&#13;
·will make them very accessible&#13;
to students . The product of th is&#13;
accessibility is more activity in&#13;
student groups, a more exciting&#13;
Main Place and in the long run a&#13;
stronger University."&#13;
-&#13;
fi &#13;
-.&#13;
Cam~n winners&#13;
Tutlewski/Hedden comment&#13;
by Bob Hoffman&#13;
Now that the campaign is over and the realities of&#13;
P5GA have started to become apparent to the&#13;
winners Rusty Tut/ewski and Harvey Hedden,&#13;
Ranger thought it would be interesting to see from&#13;
what vantage point the winners now viewed the&#13;
situation.&#13;
President Rusty Tutlewski&#13;
RANGER: Now that you've won what are your&#13;
immediate plans?&#13;
RUSTY: First of all I don't know when I'm going to&#13;
be taking office. There's some confusion over that.&#13;
Right now though, I'm just getting myself familiar&#13;
with everything, like who the chairmen of all the&#13;
committees are. I'm also getting in touch with all&#13;
the Presidents of all the student organizations. And&#13;
I want to start getting together a mailing list.&#13;
RANGER: What about attending committee&#13;
meetings that you will be a member of?&#13;
RUSTY: I'm going to attend the Union Operating&#13;
Board meeting this Monday, technically I'm still a&#13;
member of Seg. Fees, we'll have .a meeting when&#13;
school starts again. And I'm going to attend the&#13;
next SQC(Student Organizational Council) meeting&#13;
just to let them know whets going on.&#13;
. RANGER: What about the Allocations Committee,&#13;
have you made a decision about whether or not it&#13;
should be autonomous?&#13;
RUSTY:I really won't be able to make up my mind&#13;
until I have a chance to put together people" from&#13;
all organizations and go through the Constitution&#13;
and clear up ambigious parts of it and streamline it.&#13;
RANGER: When are you hoping to do that?&#13;
RUSTY: Hopefully we might start before the&#13;
summer if things go smoothly. Otherwise we'll&#13;
definitely be doing it over the summer.&#13;
RANGER: what about the outpost? Do you have&#13;
any timetable as to when you want that&#13;
implemented?&#13;
RUSTY: I don't have a timetable for the outpost.&#13;
Right now we're going to run a workshop for&#13;
Senators who didn't go through the last workshop.&#13;
. I'm also working on an interest sheet that will&#13;
hopefully be included in the summer registration&#13;
packet, but for sure in the fall packet.&#13;
RANGER: Do you view other student organizations&#13;
as being in competition with you?&#13;
RUSTY: No, we can get rid of this competition. I&#13;
just want to do anything I can to make this school&#13;
run smoother whether it be to have PSGA act as a&#13;
mediator, or whatever we can do.&#13;
Vice-president Harvey Hedden&#13;
RANGER: You've been involved in PSGA&#13;
HARVEY: Not consistently though. I've been VicePresident&#13;
since October and I was a Senator from&#13;
the fall of 73 to the fall of 7S.&#13;
RANGER:Well, even so, what can you do now that&#13;
you couldn't do before?&#13;
HARVEY:There really wasn't anything I could do as&#13;
a Senator except stay in the middle. For the time&#13;
I've been Vice-President I've had to deal with a&#13;
President of PSGA and a President Pro Tern who&#13;
have been active participants in factionalism. I&#13;
hope now we'll have a spirit of co-operation.&#13;
RANCER: Then what do you see the role of PSCA&#13;
being?&#13;
HARVEY: To represent the students interests. To&#13;
find out what the problems are on campus. We can&#13;
do that through outposts, outreach, listening to&#13;
students, questionnaires. We've just got to get the&#13;
students here at Parkside involved .&#13;
RANGER: Should PSGA have control over student&#13;
organizations?&#13;
HARVEY: Student organizations should not be a&#13;
sub-committee of the Senate. I haven't seen any&#13;
necessity to put Student Organization under the&#13;
control of PSGA.We need their input, not control&#13;
. over them.&#13;
RANGER: Should Allocations be autonomous of&#13;
PSCA?&#13;
HARVEY: Allocations and-PSCA will have a friendly&#13;
working relationship. They shouldn't be&#13;
autonomous of PSGA, but they shouldn't be a&#13;
subcommittee of PSGA. The Senate should act as a&#13;
check upon Allocations. In order for the Senate to&#13;
be a responsible check though we will have to have&#13;
summaries of what has happened, their rationale&#13;
for decisions. If effect, the Senate has to know&#13;
about the budget.&#13;
Firms contribute cash&#13;
America's corporate community&#13;
increased its giving to higher&#13;
education from $445 million in&#13;
1974 to $4S0 million in 1975, a&#13;
newall-time high.&#13;
The 1% increase was the fifth&#13;
consecutive annual rise in&#13;
corporate giving to higher&#13;
education since the recession of&#13;
1969-70 and was achieved in the&#13;
face of a drop in corporate&#13;
profits in 1975 of more than&#13;
10%, according to a survey&#13;
Aid to education, as a&#13;
percentage of pretax net income,&#13;
rose from 0.35% in 1974 to&#13;
0.39% in 1975, which level was&#13;
only slightly less than the 0.41%&#13;
average during the period&#13;
1963-72. This rise in percentage&#13;
was due to the fact that giving&#13;
rose slightly while profits fell&#13;
precipitously. Educationsl support&#13;
as a percentage of total&#13;
corporate giving also went up,&#13;
from 35.6% in 1974 to 38.3% in&#13;
1975.&#13;
"~UJl .~TfFrs· i ~.&#13;
FROM OUR GIFT GALLERY&#13;
v?~&#13;
~i&#13;
WICK'S&#13;
DOWNTOWN RACINE&#13;
ACROSS FROM PENNY'S&#13;
Direct corporate giving normally&#13;
drops when corporate&#13;
profits fall. Nowever, corporatesponsored&#13;
foundations are able&#13;
.~. . .&#13;
to maintain, or even Increase&#13;
their giving by drawing on their&#13;
reserves. In 1975, for example,&#13;
corporate foundations paid out&#13;
$55 million more than they&#13;
received from their sponsoring&#13;
companies. In 1974 they paid out&#13;
only about as much as they&#13;
received.&#13;
report, CORPO~A TE SUPPORT&#13;
OF HIGHER EDUCATION 1975,&#13;
published this week by the&#13;
Council for Financial Aid to&#13;
Education (CFAE).&#13;
The rise in giving despite the&#13;
drop in profits was made&#13;
possible by the fact that many&#13;
corporations give both directly&#13;
as corporations, and indirectly,&#13;
through corporate-sponsored&#13;
foundations, the CFAE report&#13;
explains.&#13;
news'&#13;
Breadth&#13;
Continued from page 1&#13;
to some of their courses&#13;
OTHER BREADTH AREAS&#13;
The subcommittee IS proposmg that drvrsions&#13;
other than the SIX listed above could Petition to&#13;
have some of their courses count toward fulfilling&#13;
the requirement in a breadth area Chances are,&#13;
most divisions will ask for this consrderenon In&#13;
order to keep their' Instructors employed&#13;
PURPOSE OF THE BREADTH REQUIREMENT&#13;
When the subcornrruttee began work after being&#13;
appointed last spring, the members agreed that the&#13;
purpose of the breadth requirements IS to&#13;
"guarantee" Insofar as possible that every student IS&#13;
at least mirumallv exposed to some bas.c set of&#13;
areas of knowledge"&#13;
The specific reasons the subcommittee listed are&#13;
so that the student will be culturally enriched, to&#13;
avoid student overspecialization, to "enhance and&#13;
Improve the student's abiluv and desrre to&#13;
parttctpate as a citizen in hrs socretv." and to give&#13;
the student "a broader baSISfor choosmg a major"&#13;
COSMETOLOGY:&#13;
A Career Choice I&#13;
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On Spring West of 31 in Greenridge Plola&#13;
HEY PARKSIDEII&#13;
Oly Draft is Here&#13;
~~ fl~&#13;
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OUMPlA.BREWING COMPIUlY OIJMPIA' 51:IWIL&#13;
DiAt. by C.J. W. Inc.&#13;
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NOW IN THE UNION,,,&#13;
It (@lbe&#13;
t;weft t;ltoppt&#13;
. COUNTER&#13;
•&#13;
By moonlight, By Sunlight. or By&#13;
Suck Savory "Starlight mints"&#13;
your Sweetie!!&#13;
ONLy Boe Half Pond at&#13;
Ye OIde Sweet Shoppe!&#13;
with&#13;
Located Just Off The Union Bozaar&#13;
-.&#13;
'&#13;
Campa ign winners&#13;
Tutlewski/Hedden comment&#13;
by Bob Hoffman&#13;
Now that the campaign is over and the realities of&#13;
PSCA have started to become apparent to the&#13;
winners Rusty Tutlewski and Harvey Hedden,&#13;
Ranger thought it would be interesting to see from&#13;
what vantage point the winners now viewed the&#13;
situation.&#13;
President Rusty Tutlewski&#13;
RANGER: Now that you've won what are your&#13;
immediate plans?&#13;
RUSTY: First of all I don't know when I'm going to&#13;
be taking office. There's some confusion over that.&#13;
Right now though, I'm just getting myself familiar&#13;
with everything, like who the chairmen of all the&#13;
committees are. I'm also getting in touch with all&#13;
the Presidents of all the student organizations. And&#13;
I want to start getting together a mailing list.&#13;
RANGER: What about. attending committee&#13;
meetings that you will be a member of?&#13;
RUSTY: I'm going to attend the Union Operating&#13;
Board meeting this Monday, technically I'm still a&#13;
member of Seg. Fees, we' ll have .a meeting when&#13;
school starts again . And I'm going to attend the&#13;
next SOC (Student Organizational Council) meeting&#13;
just to let them know whats going on.&#13;
RANGER: What about the Allocations Committee,&#13;
have you made a decision about whether or not it&#13;
should be autonomous?&#13;
RUSTY: I really won't be able to make up my mind&#13;
until I have a chance to put together people from&#13;
all organizations and go through the Constitution&#13;
and clear up ambigious parts of it and streamline it.&#13;
RANGER : When are you hoping to do that?&#13;
RUSTY: Hopefully we might start before the&#13;
summer if things go smoothly. Otherwise we'll&#13;
definitely be doing it over the summer.&#13;
RANGER: What about the outpost? Do you have&#13;
any timetable as to when you want that&#13;
implemented?&#13;
RUSTY: I don't have a timetable for the outpost.&#13;
Right now we're going to run a .workshop for&#13;
Senators who didn't go through the last workshop .&#13;
. I'm also working on an interest sheet that will&#13;
hopefully be included in the summer registration&#13;
packet, but for sure in the fall packet.&#13;
RANGER: Do you view other student organizations&#13;
as being in competition with you?&#13;
RUSTY: No, we can get rid of this competition. I&#13;
just want to do anything I can to make this school&#13;
run smoother whether it be to have PSGA act as a&#13;
mediator, or whatever we can do.&#13;
Vice-president Harvey Hedden&#13;
RANGER: You've been involved in PSGA&#13;
HARVEY: ot consistently though . I've been VicePresident&#13;
since October and I was a Senator from&#13;
the fall of 73 to the fall of 75.&#13;
RANGER: Well, even so, what can you do now that&#13;
you couldn't do before?&#13;
HARVEY: There really wasn't anything I could do as&#13;
a Senator except stay in the middle. For the time&#13;
I've been Vice-President I've had to deal with a&#13;
President of PSGA and a President Pro Tern who&#13;
have been active participants in factionalism . I&#13;
hope now we'll have a spirit of co-operation .&#13;
RANGER: Then what do you see the role of PSGA&#13;
being?&#13;
HARVEY: To represent the students interests. To&#13;
find out what the problems are on campus. We can&#13;
do that through outposts, outreach, listening to&#13;
students, questionnaires. We've just got to get the&#13;
students here at Parkside involved.&#13;
RANGER: Should PSGA have control over student&#13;
organizations?&#13;
HARVEY: Student organizations should not be a&#13;
sub-committee of the Senate. I haven't seen any&#13;
necessity to put Student Organization under the&#13;
control of PSGA. We need their input, not control&#13;
· over them .&#13;
RANGER: Should Allocations be autonomous of&#13;
PSGA?&#13;
HARVEY: Allocations and-PSGA will have a friendly&#13;
working relationship . They shouldn't be&#13;
autonomous of PSGA, but they shouldn't be a&#13;
subcommittee of PSGA. The Senate should act as a&#13;
check upon Allocations . In order for the Senate to&#13;
be a responsible check though we will have to have&#13;
summaries of what has happened, their rationale&#13;
for decisions. If effect, the Senate has to know&#13;
about the budget.&#13;
Firms contribute cash&#13;
America's corporate community&#13;
increased its giving to higher&#13;
education from $445 million in&#13;
1974 to $450 million in 1975, a&#13;
new all-time high.&#13;
The 1 % increase was the fifth&#13;
consecutive annual ri se in&#13;
corporate giving to higher&#13;
education since the recession of&#13;
1969-70 and was achieved in the&#13;
face of a drop in corporate&#13;
profits in 1975 of more than&#13;
10%, according to a survey&#13;
Direct corporate giving normally&#13;
drops when corporate&#13;
profits fall. Nowever, corporatesponsored&#13;
foundations are able ·1. . . to maintain, or even increase&#13;
their giving by drawing on their&#13;
reserves . In 1975, for example,&#13;
corporate foundations paid out&#13;
$55 million more than they&#13;
received from their sponsoring&#13;
companies . In 1974 they paid out&#13;
only about as much as they&#13;
received.&#13;
report, CORPOt{A TE SUPPORT&#13;
OF HIGHER EDUCATIO 1975,&#13;
published this week by the&#13;
Council for Financial Aid to&#13;
Education (CFAE).&#13;
The rise in giving despite the&#13;
drop in profits was made&#13;
possible by the fact that many&#13;
corporations give both directly&#13;
as corporations, and indirectly,&#13;
through corporate-sponsored&#13;
foundations, the CFAE report&#13;
explains.&#13;
Aid to education, as a -&#13;
percentage of pretax net income, - ------ ------ - ------ - - - ---.&#13;
0&#13;
rose .39% from in 1975 0.35% , which in level 1974 was to H EY PARKSIDE ' '&#13;
only slightly less than the 0.41 % , • •&#13;
average during the period&#13;
1963-72. This rise in percentage&#13;
was due to the fact that giving&#13;
rose slightly whi le profits fell&#13;
precipitously. Educations! support&#13;
as a percentage of total&#13;
corporate giving also went up,&#13;
from 35.6% in 1974 to 38.3% in&#13;
1975.&#13;
--~·~*'PIS· \\_JI Jl I :t-·&#13;
FROM OUR GIFT GALLERY&#13;
,/"~&#13;
~ :&#13;
WICK'S&#13;
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ACROSS FROM PENNY'S&#13;
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Dist. by C.J. W. Inc.&#13;
3637 - 30th A venue, Kenosha&#13;
Breadth&#13;
Continued from page 1&#13;
to some ot their ourses&#13;
OTHER BREADTH AREAS&#13;
The subcommittee 1s proposing that d1v1s1ons&#13;
other than the six listed above could p t1t1on to&#13;
have some of their courses count toward fulfilling&#13;
the requirement m a breadth area Chances ar ,&#13;
most d1v1s1ons will ask for this consideration m&#13;
order to keep their instructors employed&#13;
PURPOSE OF THE BREADTH REQUIREMENT&#13;
When the subcommittee began work aft r being&#13;
appointed last spring, the members agreed that the&#13;
purpose of the breadth requirements 1s to&#13;
" guarantee" insofar as possible that every student 1s&#13;
at least minimally expo ed to some ba ic et of&#13;
areas of knowledge "&#13;
The specific reasons the subcommitt e listed ar&#13;
so that the student v ill be culturally enrich d, to&#13;
avoid student overspec1al1zat1on, to " enhance and&#13;
improve the student's ability and desire to&#13;
part1c1pate as a c1t1zen m h1 oc1 ty," and to g1v&#13;
the student " a broader bam for choosing a major "&#13;
COSMETOLO GY:&#13;
A Career Choice!&#13;
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PUa &amp; ltlSTAUltANT&#13;
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Wed. thru So.t.&#13;
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Wednesdoys &amp; Thursdoy ofter Q,OO&#13;
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NOW IN THE UNION ...&#13;
By moonlight. By Sunlight. or By&#13;
Suck So.vor~ "Sto.rlight mints" with&#13;
your Sweetie!!&#13;
ONLY &amp;De Half Pound at&#13;
Ye Olde Sweet Shoppe!&#13;
Located Just Off The Union Bazaar &#13;
Election analysis&#13;
Tutlewski, Hedden held early lead&#13;
by Christopher Clausen her running mate Rick Folsom. RANGER reporters Christopher similar story. Glen D. Christen- Several people were surprised&#13;
and Douglas Edenhauser (Folsom dropped out at the last Clausen, Douglas Edenhauser, sen, John Gabriel, and Kai Nail at Bowden's campaign. "I can&#13;
Th ick f R T I ki minute, just before the ballot and Robert Hoffman helped out had early leads that held all tell you this," said Dan Nielsen,&#13;
e tiC et 0 usty ut ews I . " . d h d&#13;
f P&#13;
id tiP k id 5t d t was made up.) in an effort to speed the process night. Neal Nicklaus and Darrell Kivoko Bowen never a any or resl en 0 ar SI e u en . . ....&#13;
G t A&#13;
iati d Tad Ballantyne and his up. Stili things dragged on and Falcon lost, but Nicklaus lost Intention of running for&#13;
overnmen SSOClaIon an . . "&#13;
H H dd I V· running mate Vic Moreno the ordeal lasted until 2:15. Only only by 6 votes to Thomas President agam. When asked&#13;
arvey e en or Ice-. h d"d '&#13;
P&#13;
id t bb d I I d campaigned and received about then did the race for senate-at- Cooper. Falcon trailed Nicklaus why s e I anyway, Nielsen&#13;
resI en gra e an ear y ea d d ., don' II&#13;
h&#13;
' t d th h 25% of the total vote. large seats come out with 8 by 20 votes for most of the night respon e , I on t rea y know t at never evapora e roug " ."&#13;
the long night of ballot counting The tally of the vote got off to defini.te winn~rs. Robert Hansen, Th~ a~endment to t~e PSGA you II have to ask Kly?ko. (Ms.&#13;
Th d M h' 10 a slow start at 8:45 as the Senate FranCISNwokike and Mary Braun constitution on concernmg pres- Howden was unavailable for&#13;
on urs ev. arc ' bl! h ' 'I ) "I' h h h Tutlewski and Hedden spent the Elections Committee which is in esta. IS ed strong earl.y leads Id~ntla. terms and elections c?m~ent.. ~s a same t "at s.e&#13;
better part of Election Day charge of the tally process leaving the other 8 candl?~tes to failed m. part to the proper didn t partICIP.a:~ more, said&#13;
talking to potential voters as the counted and verified the ballots compete for the remarrung 6 preparation of the ballot. Rusty Tutlewskr ". We co~ld have&#13;
voters walked to the polls at in accordance with Senate se.ats. In the end Lance Another factor in the loss of the gotten a lot of Issues discussed&#13;
Main Place. Absent from the election rules. As the night Fnckensmith and Mark Nickel amendment was the fact that and m avbe more student&#13;
roceedings was incumbent dragged on so &lt;:Hdthe tallying lost out. Frickensmith never most voters ignored the issue. activity at the polls."&#13;
president Kiyoko Bowden and process. se,emedto be in the race while The questio~ on the ballot was Frank Zappa,. ldi Amin,&#13;
Nickel saw an early lead fade as when pr esident ial elections Margaret Mead, Oliver Wendell&#13;
the night wore on. should be held and when the Holmes and Gary Gilmore also&#13;
BAllOT IRREGULARITIES president should begin his/her received votes for various&#13;
The Allocatioris vote was a term in office. positions.&#13;
Inews&#13;
Fr.. PIZZI Dellve"&#13;
Club Highvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
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Open -32\ N\i)~\e, 5~3&#13;
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Noon '" 9 ~~ (.4\'1'&#13;
Sat. Noon til 5 "" WU'--&#13;
MAGIC TRICKS - JOKES - NOVEL TIES&#13;
-IIUI_UIUUHIIIIUUIIIUHIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIHUHIIIQIIIIIIUUIHIIIUUIIIIIII&#13;
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taverns close J. I&#13;
U.. UllHllUllllllllllllllllluulml_ .. uIllIUIUII.... IUUIU.IUIIIIIlUUHIII&#13;
, \&#13;
Ratner appointed, Dean&#13;
Parlcside students needed&#13;
Lorman A. Ratner, a Dean at&#13;
Lehman College of the City&#13;
University 01 New York (CUNY),&#13;
has been appointed Vice&#13;
Chancellor/Dean of Faculty at&#13;
the' University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
Chancellor Alan, E,&#13;
Guskin Announced Friday.&#13;
The appointment of Ratner,&#13;
44, culminates a national search&#13;
begun last July lor the Chiel&#13;
academic officer of the campus&#13;
and principal deputy to&#13;
Chancellor Guskin. Ratner, who&#13;
will begin July 1, will have&#13;
administrative responsibility for&#13;
Parkside's eight academic divisions&#13;
and three centers.&#13;
Ratner has served as Dean of&#13;
Social Sciences at Lehman since&#13;
1974, and for two years before&#13;
that was Dean of Academic&#13;
Ca,np Counselors&#13;
Parkside students who may be&#13;
interested in participating as&#13;
instructors and/or supervisors for&#13;
area lifth and sixth grade&#13;
children in an outdoor education&#13;
project.&#13;
These projects, under the&#13;
direction of public school&#13;
teachers and administrators,&#13;
Planning, During 1971-72 he&#13;
chaired Lehman's Department of&#13;
History, in which he had taught&#13;
since 1961.&#13;
Ratner was one of five finalists&#13;
announced last month and&#13;
brought to campus for interviews&#13;
with faculty, staff and students&#13;
by a search and screen&#13;
committee chaired by Prof. Paul&#13;
Kleine, Education Division&#13;
chairman.&#13;
Chancellor Guskin said Ratner&#13;
was "a perfect fit" for Parkside.&#13;
"His experience in academic&#13;
planning, his sensitivity to such&#13;
relationships as university and&#13;
community, liberal arts. and&#13;
professional studies, his mature&#13;
decision-making capabilities,&#13;
and his demonstrated success in&#13;
a major public higher ed~cation&#13;
usually take place in late Mayor&#13;
early June and involve three or&#13;
four days of outdoor and related&#13;
activities at a nearby camp.&#13;
"Students who express interest&#13;
in a program early may be able&#13;
to participate in the planning&#13;
phase," said Dwayne C. Olsen,&#13;
Clinical Programs Coordinator.&#13;
Hey&#13;
Miller Lite on Tap&#13;
at the Union and Rec. Cent~r&#13;
Parkside!&#13;
•&#13;
Lite Beer rrom Miller.&#13;
Everylhin~ you IIlwllYljlwanted&#13;
in II beer. And leu.&#13;
Dial. by C.J.". Ine. 3637.301h Ave. Kenosha&#13;
system ideally fit the needs 01&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
"He reacted very well to our&#13;
campus, and we to him," Guskin&#13;
said. "We ....are pleased to have&#13;
obtained a person of his calibre."&#13;
Ratner has published four&#13;
books on American history and&#13;
culture and serves as editor of a&#13;
history series for Prentice-Hall,&#13;
co-editor of a series for Basic&#13;
Books and consultant to Holt,&#13;
Rhinehart &amp; Winston. He earned&#13;
his undergraduate degree from&#13;
Harvard and his PhD, from&#13;
Cornell,&#13;
Active in civic ,affairs in&#13;
Putnam Valley, N,y, where he&#13;
lives with his wife and four&#13;
children, Ratner is past president&#13;
of the Board of Education on&#13;
which he served for five years.&#13;
Room and board is usually&#13;
paid for university participants&#13;
but there is 'no salary. Students&#13;
interested in earning ~ne credit&#13;
of independent study are invited&#13;
to inquire in GR210.&#13;
John Kleist, director of the&#13;
outdoor education program at&#13;
Pleasant Prairie School, Kenosha,&#13;
will present slides and answer&#13;
questions about that&#13;
program in CL D 111 at 3:00 p,m,&#13;
on Monday, March 28. Interested&#13;
students are invited. Signup&#13;
sheets will be available at that&#13;
meeting, and at other times in&#13;
Greenquist 210.&#13;
"Students interested in learning&#13;
more about working with&#13;
children in this age group are&#13;
urged to take advantage of th is&#13;
opportunity," said Olsen.&#13;
554·1500&#13;
INCOME TAX&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
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/&#13;
/&#13;
=l=news&#13;
Election analysis&#13;
Tutlewski, Hedden held early lead&#13;
by Christopher Clausen her running mate Rick Folsom. RANGER reporters Christopher similar story. Glen D . Christen- Several people were surprised&#13;
and Douglas Edenhauser (Folsom dropped out at the last Clausen, Douglas Edenhauser, sen, John Gabriel, and Kai Nall at Bowden's campaign . " I can&#13;
minute, just before the ballot and Robert Hoffman helped out had early leads that held all tell you this," sa_id Dan Nielsen, The ticket of Rusty Tutlewski&#13;
for President of Parkside Student was made up.) in an effort to speed the process night. Neal Nicklaus and Darrell "Kiyoko Bowden never had any&#13;
Tad Ballant yne and h i s up. Still things dragged on and Falcon lost, but Nicklaus lost i ntention of run ning for Government Association and&#13;
Harvey Hedden for VicePresident&#13;
grabbed an early lead&#13;
that never evaporated through&#13;
the long night of ballot counting&#13;
on Thursday , Maren 10.&#13;
Tutlewski and Hedden spent the&#13;
better part of Election Day&#13;
talking to potential voters as the&#13;
voters walked to the polls at&#13;
Main Place. Absent from the&#13;
running mate V i c Moreno the ordeal lasted until 2:15. Only only by 6 votes to Thomas President ~gain ." When asked&#13;
campaigned and received about then did the race for senate-at- Cooper. Falcon trailed Nicklaus why she did anyway, Nielsen&#13;
25% of the total vote. large seats come out with 8 by 20 votes for most of the night. responded, " I don't really know&#13;
The tally of the vote got off to definite winners. Robert Hansen, The amendment to the PSGA you'll have to ask Kiyoko." (Ms.&#13;
a slow start at 8:45 as the Senate Francis Nwokike and M ary Braun constitution on concerning pres- Bowden was unavailable for&#13;
Elections Committee which is in established strong early leads idential terms and elections comment.) " It's a shame that she&#13;
charge of the tally process leaving the other 8 candidates to failed in part to the proper didn't participate more," said&#13;
counted and verified the ballots compete for the remaining 6 preparation of the ballot. Rusty Tutlewsk i .. " We could h~ve&#13;
in accordance w ith Senate seat s. In the end La nce Another factor in the loss of the gotten a lot of issues discussed&#13;
election rules. As the night Frickensmith and Mark Nickel amendment was the fact that and maybe more student&#13;
proceedings was incumbent dragged on so did the tallying lost out. Frickensmith never most voters ignored the issue. activity at the polls ."&#13;
president Kiyoko Bowden and process . seemed to be in the race while The question on the ballot was Frank Zappa, ldi Am in,&#13;
Nickel saw an early lead fade as w hen presidential elections Margaret Mead, Oliver Wendell&#13;
~~~~1.s:u~~~~~~~1.s:n~~ls:DP~.:S,,.~s~s~sns~s.~ the night wore on . should be held and when the Holmes and Gary Gilmore also&#13;
BALLOT IRREGULARITIES president should begin his/ her received votes for various&#13;
Free Pizza Delliery&#13;
Club Hlghvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
Aln •••.,••• c••••••· s,•t•tftl. 11.a,11, , .. ,&#13;
OPEN 4 •·•· It 1 •·•·&#13;
.. ~ - N\p,...G\C ~ o~O . ~\ree\ a&#13;
Open • 3Z\ ~~\~\~ 0~3&#13;
Mon. &amp; Fri. ~ ~.\~' , _..,,.).@4- Noon ti/ 9 ~~oe ,,_.,,_.,&#13;
Sat. Noon ti / 5 Y'S"&#13;
MAGIC TRICKS - JOKES - NOVEL TIES&#13;
IIHNIIIIIIIIIIAIIIIHIIHIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIII .. IIIIIHHHIIIIIIIIIIIIII&#13;
DINO'S&#13;
1816 16th St.&#13;
Racine&#13;
634-1991&#13;
3728 Douglas&#13;
Racine&#13;
639-7115&#13;
WE DELIVER&#13;
Open 4 :00 p .m. till one hour after&#13;
taverns close Ii 1&#13;
HIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUII_I_IIHIIIIIIIIIII ... IIIIIIIIIIIIIHlll. 1111111111&#13;
The Al locations vote was a term in office. positions .&#13;
Ratner appointed, Dean&#13;
Lorman A. Ratner, a Dean at&#13;
Lehman College of the City&#13;
University of New York (CUNY),&#13;
has been appoi nted Vice&#13;
Chancellor/Dean of Faculty at&#13;
the University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
Chancellor Alan, E.&#13;
Guskin Announced Friday.&#13;
The appointment of Ratner,&#13;
44, culminate,s a national search&#13;
begun last July for the Chief&#13;
academic officer of the campus&#13;
and principal deputy to&#13;
Chancellor Guskin. Ratner, who&#13;
will begin July 1, will have&#13;
administrative responsibility for&#13;
Parkside's eight academic divisions&#13;
and three centers.&#13;
Ratner has served as Dean of&#13;
Social Sciences at Lehman since&#13;
1974, and for two years before&#13;
that was Dean of Academic&#13;
Camp Counselors&#13;
Planning. During 1971-72 he&#13;
chaired Lehman's Department of&#13;
History, in which he had taught&#13;
since 1961.&#13;
Ratner was one of five finalists&#13;
announced last month and&#13;
brought to campus for interviews&#13;
with faculty, staff and students&#13;
by a search and screen&#13;
committee chaired by Prof. Paul&#13;
Kleine, Education Division&#13;
chairman .&#13;
Chancellor Guskin said Ratner&#13;
was "a perfect fit" for Parkside.&#13;
" His experience in academic&#13;
planning, his sensitivity to such&#13;
relationships as university and&#13;
community, liberal arts and&#13;
professional studies, his mature&#13;
decision-making capabilities,&#13;
and his demonstrated success in&#13;
a major public higher edl'cation&#13;
system ideally fit the needs of&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
" He reacted very well to our&#13;
campus, and we to him," Guskin&#13;
said. "We are pleased to have&#13;
obtained a person of his calibre."&#13;
Ratner has published four&#13;
books on American history and&#13;
culture and serves as editor of a&#13;
history series for Prentice-Hall,&#13;
co-editor of a series for_ Basic&#13;
Books and consultant to Holt,&#13;
Rhinehart &amp; Winston. He earned&#13;
his undergraduate degree from&#13;
Harvard and his Ph .D . from&#13;
Cornell.&#13;
Active in civic affairs in&#13;
Putnam Valley, N .Y. where he&#13;
lives with his wife and four&#13;
children, Ratner is past president&#13;
of the Board of Education on&#13;
which he served for five years.&#13;
Parkside students needed&#13;
Parkside students who may be&#13;
interested in participating as&#13;
instructors and/or supervisors for&#13;
area fifth and sixth grade&#13;
children in an outdoor education&#13;
project.&#13;
These projects, under the&#13;
direction of public school&#13;
teachers and administrators,&#13;
usually take place in late May or&#13;
early June and involve three or&#13;
four days of outdoor and related&#13;
activities at a nearby camp.&#13;
" Students who express interest&#13;
in a program early may be able&#13;
to participate in the planning&#13;
phase," said Dwayne G. Olsen&#13;
Clinical Programs Coordinator'.&#13;
Hey Parksidr.!&#13;
Miller Lite on Tap&#13;
at the Union and Rec. Cent~r&#13;
Lite Beer from Miller.&#13;
Everything you ttlwtty- wanted&#13;
in tt beer. And less.&#13;
Di•t. by C.J.lf. Inc. 3637-J 0 th Ave. Keno8 ha&#13;
Room and board is usually&#13;
paid for university participants&#13;
but there is no salary. Students&#13;
interested in earning ~ne credit&#13;
of independent study are invited&#13;
to inquire in GR 210.&#13;
John Kleist, director of the&#13;
outdoor education program at&#13;
Pleasant Prairie School, Kenosha,&#13;
will present slides and answer&#13;
questions about that&#13;
program in CL D 111 at 3:00 p .m .&#13;
on Monday, March 28. Interested&#13;
students are invited . Sign up&#13;
sheets will be available at that&#13;
meeting, and at other times in&#13;
Greenquist 210.&#13;
" Students interested in learning&#13;
more about working with&#13;
children in this age group are&#13;
urged to take advantage of this&#13;
opportunity," said Olsen .&#13;
r&#13;
554-1500&#13;
INCOME TAX&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
WILLIAM A. GLASS&#13;
Elmwood Plaza&#13;
Prices Quoted By Phone /&#13;
/&#13;
•&#13;
lP &#13;
",I&#13;
New Parlcside ma/or approved&#13;
by Douglas Edenhauser&#13;
Last week the UW Board of Regents approved it&#13;
proposal to bring a new major in Industrial and&#13;
Environmental Hygiene to UW-Parkside.&#13;
The new major will be the first of its kind in the&#13;
Midwest at the undergraduate level, according to&#13;
Dr. S. P. Datta;'coordinator of the program. Several&#13;
degree programs in safety exist in Wisconsin but&#13;
they deal primarily with the causes and prevention&#13;
of accidents.&#13;
The Parkside program's emphasis will be on the&#13;
health hazards that exist in industrial plants or in&#13;
industrv-dorninated regions. ......&#13;
The Parkside hygiene program will be basically&#13;
geared for two tvpesot students, Datta said: those&#13;
working toward a degree to enter the occupational&#13;
health and safety field, and those already employed&#13;
who wish to upgrade their skills or sharpen their&#13;
specialization in one of three specialties, which are&#13;
industrial hygiene, environmental hygiene, and&#13;
radiological health.&#13;
An industrial hygienist must have the ability to&#13;
(1) recognize environmental factors and stresses&#13;
associated with work and work operations and to&#13;
understand their effect on man and his well being,&#13;
[21to evaluate on the basis of experience ann with&#13;
the aid of qualitative measuring techniques the&#13;
magnitude of the effect of these stresses on man's&#13;
well being, and (l) to prescribe methods to&#13;
eliminate of reduce the stresses when possible&#13;
Chancellor Alan E. Guskin called she program&#13;
"another important step in developing our special&#13;
educational mission of serving the needs of the&#13;
modern industrial society."&#13;
PARKSIDE'S PROGRAM TO BEGIN NEXT YEAR&#13;
The program' will be fully implemented by&#13;
September, 1978, but some courses will be offered&#13;
this fall on campus and probably at an off-eampus&#13;
location convenient for Milwaukee and Waukesha&#13;
residents.&#13;
Dr-Datta said "job possibilities for graduates in&#13;
hygiene are excellent'. Some 5,500 Industrial&#13;
Hygienists are currently needed in the U.S., and&#13;
B.S. graduates of the few existing programs are&#13;
experiencing 100% employment, in industry,&#13;
government agenctqs. insurance companies, and&#13;
consulting firms."&#13;
Pla~ners of the Parkside hygiene program worked&#13;
with area, regional, and national consultants in&#13;
designing the program. Among those supporting&#13;
the new major were spokesmen from J.1. Case,&#13;
American Motors, S.c. Johnson, Globe Union, the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine city health departments and&#13;
the Kenosha Manufacturing Association. A number&#13;
of companies have already indicated they will&#13;
provide internships for students in the program&#13;
APPR to review disciplines&#13;
The Academic Planning and&#13;
Program Review committee&#13;
reviews all academic programs&#13;
each year.&#13;
The reviews this semester will&#13;
be of the art, economics, life&#13;
science, philosophy, and psvchology&#13;
discipline.&#13;
Students interested in cornmenti&#13;
ng on each of the above&#13;
disciplines should contact the&#13;
various sub cornraittee chairpersons&#13;
by Monday, March 28.&#13;
Those chair- persons are: (Art)&#13;
larry Duetsch, assistant professor&#13;
of economics (economics)&#13;
Teresa Peck, associate professor&#13;
of education, (life science)&#13;
David Barone, associate professor&#13;
of education, (philosophy)&#13;
2062 lathrop Ave,&#13;
Racine, Wise.&#13;
4606 DouglasAve.&#13;
William May, professor of&#13;
industrial engineering, and&#13;
(Psychology) Peter Hoff, assistant&#13;
profess or of English.&#13;
The committee asks that&#13;
students sign their complaints!&#13;
comments because they carry a&#13;
lot more weight; all letters will&#13;
be held in strictest confidence.&#13;
The purpose of the committee&#13;
is to assessthe general goals of&#13;
the programs, in these reviews&#13;
FREE&#13;
LEE.SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home 01 the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN8 A.M, TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 WIsllin,ton /We. 6M-2J7J&#13;
,&#13;
news'I&#13;
Geriatrics&#13;
MADISON - The National&#13;
Cenencs Society is providing&#13;
scholarships to assist Interested&#13;
students to attend Its 24th&#13;
annual meeting April 25~26 on&#13;
the University of WisconsinMadison&#13;
campus. The meeting&#13;
will focus on new developments&#13;
in quality long-term care.&#13;
Full and part-time students&#13;
from any college or university in&#13;
the, nation are invited to apply&#13;
for a scholarship by April 1.&#13;
Depending on the number of&#13;
applications scholaeshrps could&#13;
cover registration fee (S80 for&#13;
members, $100 for nonmembers),&#13;
lodging, meals and&#13;
travel Recipients will be notified&#13;
by April 10&#13;
For an application, call or&#13;
write Betsy M. Sprouse, Faye&#13;
McBeath Institute on AgIng,&#13;
University of Wisconsin, 425&#13;
Henry Mall, MadISon, WI 53706,&#13;
tel (608) 263-4020&#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'~ UC(JOJ2, ~&#13;
Ha~ing those mid-semester ups &amp; downs ? ? ? ? ?&#13;
Parlcsi.e Foo. SeNice wants you to have&#13;
a professional mo.el Imperial Duncan to to $1~9&#13;
retail vallie free with any $150 foo. purchase heginning&#13;
3/28 limite. quantity - Union Dining Room, Union&#13;
Square, WLLCCoHee Shop. Watch for Campus yo yo&#13;
competition, free pizzas, howling, hilliar •• , etc .&#13;
...&#13;
I 'Chere IS II-differeruem a&#13;
g&#13;
....... PREPARE FOR:&#13;
~.~.~&#13;
GMAT • GRE • OCAT&#13;
CPAT • VAT • SAT&#13;
Our broad range of programs provides lin umbrella of testing&#13;
know-how that enables us to otter the bast preparallon&#13;
available. no marter whIch course /$ taken Over 38 years&#13;
01 experience and success Small classes Voluminous&#13;
home study materrals Courses that are constanlly updated&#13;
Permanent centers open day. &amp; weekends all year&#13;
Complete tape facllllles lor reviewal cla.s lessons and for&#13;
use 01 supplementary materials Make-ups for missed lessons&#13;
at our centers&#13;
ASK ABOUT OUR&#13;
COMPACT COURSES&#13;
CALL:&#13;
(608) 2SS.{)S7S&#13;
SSO Stale Sf&#13;
Madison. Wis. 53703&#13;
CLAsses IN MADISON&#13;
AND MILWAUKEE&#13;
l(S1 P,,(P ••• uO...&#13;
SP(CI.IIS T\ SINC( "U8&#13;
centersm Malor U S CItIes&#13;
,&#13;
New Parkside major approved&#13;
by Douglas Edenhauser&#13;
Last week the UW Board of Regents approved a&#13;
proposal to bring a new major in Industrial and&#13;
Environmental Hygiene to UW-Parkside.&#13;
The new major will be the first of its kind in the&#13;
Midwest at the undergraduate level, according to&#13;
Dr. S. P. Datta, coordinator of the program. Several&#13;
degree programs in safety exist in Wisconsin but&#13;
they deal primarily with the causes and prevention&#13;
of accidents .&#13;
The Parkside program's emphasis will be on the&#13;
health hazards that exist in industrial plants or in&#13;
indus_try-dominated regions .&#13;
The Parkside hygiene program will be basically&#13;
geared for two types .of students, Datta said : those&#13;
working toward a degree to enter the occupational&#13;
health and safety field, and those already employed&#13;
who wish to upgrade their skills or sharpen their&#13;
specialization in one of three specialties, which are&#13;
industrial hygiene, environmental hygiene, and&#13;
radiological health .&#13;
An industrial hygienist must have the ability to&#13;
(1) recognize environmental factors and stresses&#13;
associatea with work and work operations and to&#13;
understand their effect on man and his well being,&#13;
(2) to evaluate on the basis of experience ancl with&#13;
the aid of qualitative measuring techniques the&#13;
magnitude of the effect of these stresses on man's&#13;
well being, and (1) to prescribe methods to&#13;
eliminate of reduce the stresses when possible.&#13;
Chancellor Alan E. Cuskin called *ie program&#13;
" another important step in developing our special&#13;
educational mission of serving the needs of the&#13;
modern industrial society ."&#13;
PARKSIDE'S PROGRAM TO BEGIN NEXT YEAR&#13;
The program· will be fully implemented by&#13;
September, 1978, but some courses will be offered&#13;
this fall on campus and probably at an off-campus&#13;
location convenient for Milwaukee and Waukesha&#13;
residents .&#13;
Dr.·Datta said "job possibilities for graduates in&#13;
hygiene are excellent' Some 5,500 Industrial&#13;
Hygienists are currently needed in the U .S., and&#13;
B.S. graduates of the few existing programs are&#13;
experiencing 100% employment . in industry,&#13;
government agenci~, insurance companies, and&#13;
consulting firms ."&#13;
Pla'nners of the Parkside hygiene program worked&#13;
with area, regional , and national consultants in&#13;
designing the program . Among those supporting&#13;
the new major were spokesmen from J.I. Case,&#13;
American Motors, S.C. Johnson , Globe Union, the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine city health departments and&#13;
the Kenosha Manufacturing Association . A number&#13;
of companies have already indicated they will&#13;
provide internships for students in the program&#13;
A PPR to revi·ew disciplines&#13;
The Academic Planning and&#13;
Program Review committee&#13;
reviews all academic programs&#13;
each year.&#13;
The review~ this semester will&#13;
be of the art~ economics, life&#13;
science, philosophy, and psychology&#13;
discipline.&#13;
Students interested in commenting&#13;
on each of the above&#13;
disciplines should contact the&#13;
various subcomfl'littee chairpersons&#13;
by Monday, March 28.&#13;
Those chair- persons are: (Art)&#13;
Larry Duetsch, assistant professor&#13;
of economics (economics)&#13;
Teresa Peck, associate professor&#13;
of education, (life science)&#13;
David Barone, associate professor&#13;
of education, (philosophy)&#13;
William Moy , professor of&#13;
industrial engineering, and&#13;
(Psychology) Peter Hoff, assistant&#13;
profess or of English.&#13;
The committee asks that&#13;
students sign their complaints /&#13;
comments because they carry a&#13;
lot more weight; all letters will&#13;
be held in strictest confidence.&#13;
The purpose of the committee&#13;
is to assess the general goals of&#13;
the programs, in these reviews&#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 Lothrop&#13;
AR.Bf&#13;
Ave&#13;
t&#13;
.&#13;
·~ U(XJOJ2; ~&#13;
4606 Douglas Ave.&#13;
news=I&#13;
Geriatrics&#13;
MADISO - The at1onal&#13;
Geriat1cs Society ,s providing&#13;
scholarships to asmt interested&#13;
students to attend ,ts 24th&#13;
annual meeting April 25-26 on&#13;
the University of W1sconsmMadison&#13;
campus . The meeting&#13;
will focus on new developments&#13;
in quality long-term care&#13;
Full and part-time students&#13;
from any college or university m&#13;
the nation are invited to apply&#13;
for a scholarship by April 1&#13;
D pendm • on the numb r of&#13;
application , scholarship could&#13;
cover r gi trat,on fe ($80 for&#13;
members, $100 for non -&#13;
members). lodging, meal and&#13;
travel Re 1p1 nts will b not1f1 d&#13;
by April 10&#13;
For an application, call or&#13;
write B tsy M Sprous , Faye&#13;
McBeath lnst1tut on Aging,&#13;
University of Wiscon in, 425&#13;
Henry Mall, Madison, WI . 53706,&#13;
tel. (608) 263-4020.&#13;
LEE . SAUSACE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P .M.&#13;
2615 Wasliington /we. 634-2373&#13;
crhere IS 11-difference!!! J ,. .. ,&#13;
~ PREPARE FOR:&#13;
~ -WJ-~&#13;
GMAT • GRE&#13;
CPAT • VAT&#13;
• OCAT&#13;
• SAT&#13;
Our broad range of programs provides 11n umbrella of testing&#13;
know-how that enables us to ofler the best prep11r11t1on&#13;
11v111/11ble , no marre, whi ch course 1s taken Over 38 years&#13;
of experoence and success Small classes Voluminous&#13;
home study materrals Courses that are constantly up·&#13;
dated Permanent centers open days &amp; weekends all year&#13;
Complete tape fac,ht,es for review of class lessons and for&#13;
use of supplementary materoals Make-ups for mossed les· sons at our centers&#13;
ASK ABOUT OUR&#13;
COMPACT COURSES&#13;
CALL:&#13;
(608) 255-0575&#13;
S50 State St&#13;
Madison, Wis S3703&#13;
CLASSES IN MADISON&#13;
AND MILWAUKEE l(ST Pflt(PAPAflOH&#13;
Sl'£ &lt;. ••t1S ,,. ~,,.&lt;.£ , le&#13;
Centers 1n Ma1or US. Cities&#13;
Hafing those mia-semester ups &amp; downs ? ? ? ? ?&#13;
Parkside Food Service wants you to have&#13;
FREE· ,&#13;
a professional model Imperial Duncan Yo Yo $1~9&#13;
.retail val11e free with any $1 50 food purchase beginning&#13;
3/28 limited quantity - Union Dining Room, Union&#13;
Square, WLLC Coffee Shop. Watch for Campus yo yo&#13;
competition, free pizzas, bowling, billiards, etc.&#13;
, &#13;
�.&#13;
-,&#13;
lII1&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
'"&gt;&lt;1'&#13;
'"&#13;
"""",;j&#13;
~,&#13;
I&#13;
iii&#13;
I'&#13;
r'&#13;
011&#13;
I'm!&#13;
,.1&#13;
"&#13;
I&#13;
""&#13;
It finally comes down to commitment. ,&#13;
When you don't like a course, it's hard to excel. The class gets&#13;
tedious. The texts get boring. The lectures get dreadful. Your work&#13;
suffers. And-so do your grades.&#13;
Compare that with the courses you really believe in. -&#13;
You care more. You try more. And without even noticing, you just&#13;
naturally do better.&#13;
It's true in school. It's true outside of school.&#13;
. For example, we believe there's just one way to brew&#13;
Busch beer. The natural way. With natural ingredients.&#13;
Natural carbonation. Natural.ageing.&#13;
We believe that's the best way to brew a beer.&#13;
And when you believe.in what you're&#13;
doing, you just naturally do it better.&#13;
Taste a Busch and we think you'll agree.&#13;
. BUSCH@ When you believe in what you're doing,&#13;
you just naturally do it better.&#13;
/&#13;
G&#13;
It finally comes down to commitment.&#13;
When you don't like a course, it's hard to excel. The class gets&#13;
tedious. The texts get boring. The lectures get dreadful. Your work&#13;
suffers. And -so do your grades.&#13;
Compare that with the courses you really believe in. -&#13;
You care more. You try more. And without even noticing, you just&#13;
naturally do better.&#13;
- It's true in school. It's true outside of school.&#13;
- For example, we believe there's just one way to brew&#13;
Busch beer. The natural way. With natu~l ingredients.&#13;
Natural carbonation. Natural _ageing.&#13;
We believe that's the best way to brew a beer.&#13;
And when you believ in what you're&#13;
doing, you just naturally do it better.&#13;
Taste a Busch and we think you'll agree.&#13;
· BUSCH.&#13;
When you believe in what you're doing,&#13;
you just naturally do it better.&#13;
Anheuser-Busch Inc s, Louis. Mo&#13;
I&#13;
~ &#13;
"&#13;
Response to critics&#13;
Greenfield defends Parkside&#13;
by Christopher Clausen and lohn Gabriel&#13;
\&#13;
According to Assistant Professor of History&#13;
Gerald Greenfield, there are many numerous&#13;
reasons for attending UW-Parkside.&#13;
Greenfield, who has been at Uw-P for three&#13;
years, has felt that recent criticisms of UW-P are&#13;
unjustified. In an interview with RANGER, he&#13;
elaborated about such topics as faculty at UW-P,&#13;
student apathy, general college education and a&#13;
variety of other subjects.&#13;
Faculty constantly improving&#13;
"The faculty at this school: students don't realize&#13;
how good they are. Most of UW-P's recruiting was&#13;
done in a bad job market. The school started in&#13;
1969, essentially that was when the bottom&#13;
dropped out of the Ph.D. market. Most of the&#13;
people who were recruited to come to UW-P were&#13;
upwardly mobile types who had already taught&#13;
some place else and this was a step up for them&#13;
because UW-P was supposed to be one of the four&#13;
universities, (UW-P, Madison, Milwaukee and&#13;
Green Bay) this was before the merger. So people&#13;
came who were recruited for here. were already&#13;
established people with some books to their credit&#13;
and really good folks.&#13;
The rest of our recruiting has been done&#13;
throughout a abysmal job market. We hired a&#13;
Harvard Ph. D. in Philosophy. In Communications a&#13;
guy from Hopkins who won an award as an&#13;
outstanding graduate student. In other words, what&#13;
I'm suggesting is that we have a faculty here that we&#13;
really would never have had if you were back 10&#13;
years ago&#13;
Research adds to knowledge&#13;
Greenfield pointed auf two ways in which this&#13;
helps the student: 1) A faculty member that&#13;
continues to do research is better informed on his&#13;
field. 2) Recommendations to graduate school look&#13;
better from well known faculty than from a nobody&#13;
"Their lectures, even at the introductory level, tend&#13;
to reflect their academic research, so students are&#13;
getting the benefit of new scholarship rather than&#13;
old," said Greenfield.&#13;
"Personal contact with professors at early levels&#13;
as well as the availability of course flexibility is a&#13;
great help towards the student's career in and out of&#13;
the classroom including references for grad&#13;
school or jobs out of college," states Greenfield.&#13;
-, UW-P not perfect&#13;
Greenfield acknowledges that UW-P is not&#13;
perfect for everyone. "There is no way Parkside can&#13;
compete with Madison They (Madison) have a&#13;
much bigger school, a much bigger faculty."&#13;
"Parkstde is not the best of all worlds. Nor is this&#13;
the place, I would say, I want to spend my&#13;
academic career."&#13;
Professor Greenfield is quick to point out that&#13;
Parkside's facilities, equipment and programs are&#13;
capable of taking cere of almost any academic&#13;
concern .&#13;
UW-P problems not unique&#13;
Problems, Greenfield acknowledges, exist but&#13;
they are not confined to UW-P. "Berkeley, the most&#13;
selective of the campuses in the University of&#13;
California system, has something like about 60 or 70&#13;
percent of their entering freshmen having to take&#13;
remedial Enghsh."&#13;
50 Professor Gerald Greenfield keeps working to&#13;
correct problems and talking of the flexible course&#13;
schedules, low professor, student ratio, night&#13;
courses, the award-winning Library-Learning Center&#13;
and the 35 other good reasons he says why you&#13;
should attend UW-P.&#13;
-.&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
Gera Id Greenfield r------------------, Accent on Enrichment presents&#13;
BENBRADLEE&#13;
Washington Post executive editor&#13;
talking on&#13;
'The Media: The 4th Estate'&#13;
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A biophysicist at the University, Dr. Kathryn Lovell, has found that&#13;
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Lovell sald that headless cockroaches have actually learned to&#13;
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FRl &amp; SAT. 5 - 11:30 P.M.&#13;
SUN. 5 - 10 PJil.&#13;
"CLOSED ON MONDAYS"&#13;
PRIVATE PARTY FACILITIES&#13;
639·8084&#13;
people 'l'I&#13;
Response to critics&#13;
Greenfield defends Parkside&#13;
by Christopher Clausen and John Gabriel&#13;
According to Assistant Professqr of History&#13;
Gerald Greenfield, there are many numerous&#13;
reasons for attending UW-Parkside.&#13;
Greenfield, who has been at UW-P for three&#13;
years, has felt that recent criticisms of UW-P are&#13;
unjustified. In an interview with RANGER , he&#13;
elaborated about such topics as faculty at UW-P,&#13;
student apathy, general college education and a&#13;
variety of other subjects. ·&#13;
faculty constantly improving&#13;
"The faculty at this school: students don't realize&#13;
how good they are. Most of UW-P's recruiting was&#13;
done in a bad job market. The school started in&#13;
1969, essentially that was when the bottom&#13;
dropped out of the Ph.D. market. Most of the&#13;
people who were recruited to come to UW-P were&#13;
upwardly mobile types who had already taught&#13;
some place else and this was a step up for them&#13;
because UW-P was supposed to be one of the four&#13;
universities , (UW-P, Madison, Milwaukee and&#13;
Green Bay) this was before the merger. So people&#13;
came who were recruited for bere, were already&#13;
established people with some books to their credit&#13;
and really good folks.&#13;
The rest of our recruiting has been done&#13;
throughout a abysmal job market. We hired a&#13;
Harvard Ph .D. in Philosophy In Communications a&#13;
guy from Hopkins who won an award as an&#13;
outstanding graduate student. In other words , what&#13;
I'm suggesting is that we have a faculty here that we&#13;
really would never have had if you were back 10&#13;
years ago&#13;
Research adds to knowledge&#13;
Greenfield pointed out two ways in which this&#13;
helps the student : 1) A faculty member that&#13;
"'&#13;
... ~&#13;
----~--&#13;
continues to do research is better informed on his&#13;
field . 2) Recommendations to graduate school look&#13;
better from well known faculty than from a nobody&#13;
"Their lectures, even at the introductory level, tend&#13;
to reflect their academic research, so students are&#13;
getting the benefit of new scholarship rather than&#13;
old," said Greenfield&#13;
"Personal contact with professors at early levels&#13;
as well as the availability of course flexibility is a&#13;
great help towards the student's career in and out of&#13;
the classroom including references for grad&#13;
school or jobs out of college," states Greenfield.&#13;
UW-P not perfect&#13;
Greenfield acknowledges that UW-P is not&#13;
perfect for everyone . " There is no way Parkside can&#13;
compete with Madison . They (Madison) have a&#13;
much bigger school, a much bigger faculty ."&#13;
"Parkside is not the best of all worlds . or is this&#13;
the place, I would say, I want to spend my&#13;
academic career."&#13;
Professor Greenfield is quick to point out that&#13;
Parkside's facilities, equipment and programs are&#13;
capable of taking care of almost any academic&#13;
concern .&#13;
UW-P problems not unique&#13;
Problems , Greenfield acknowledges , exist but&#13;
they are not confined to UW-P. " Berkeley, the most&#13;
selective of the campuses in the University of&#13;
California system , has something like about 60 or 70&#13;
percent of their entering freshmen having to take&#13;
remedial English ."&#13;
So Professor Gerald Greenfield keeps working to&#13;
correct problems and talking of the flexible course&#13;
schedules , low professor, student ratio , night&#13;
courses, the award-winning Library-Learning Center&#13;
and the 35 other good reasons he says why you&#13;
should attend UW-P.&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
- .c&#13;
a.&#13;
- 0&#13;
a,&#13;
B&#13;
- 0&#13;
.c&#13;
a.&#13;
- E&#13;
0&#13;
.c&#13;
a,&#13;
J&#13;
0&#13;
QI '&#13;
C:&#13;
C:&#13;
0&#13;
.. ~&#13;
Gerald Greenfield Accent on Enrichment presents&#13;
.Ks.L&#13;
KENOSHA &amp; LOAN&#13;
SAYINGS&#13;
5935 Seventh Avenue&#13;
7535 Persh ing Blvd .&#13;
4235 · 52nd Street&#13;
410 Brood St . · Lake Geneva&#13;
BENBBADLEE&#13;
Washington Post executive editor&#13;
talking on&#13;
'The Media: The 4th Estate'&#13;
8 pm-March 27-Adm. $2.50&#13;
COMM ARTS THEATER&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
Tickets at Sears, Kenosha, Cook-Gere, Racine, Team,&#13;
Elmwood _Plaza, Campus Info Center.&#13;
Roaches get smarter&#13;
(CPS-ZNS) - In some exciting and revealing experiments,&#13;
researchers at Michigan State University have discovered that&#13;
decapitated cockroaches can learn some tricks faster than the quick&#13;
little pests can with their heads in place&#13;
A biophysicist at the University, Dr. Kathryn Lovell, has found that&#13;
roaches can live up to a week without their heads due to nerve cell&#13;
clusters in other parts of their bodies .&#13;
Lovell s_aid that headless cockroaches have actually learned to&#13;
avoid painful electrical shocks more quickly than complete roaches&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
M ember Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
443 7 - 22nd A venue Kenosha&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
DAD'S PLACE&#13;
Best Live Entertainment&#13;
WED.-FRI.-SAT.&#13;
Free Beer 8:30 - 10:00&#13;
WED. NITE IS GIRLS' NITE&#13;
Girls Free Admittance&#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&#13;
~~ Fifty-Sixth St., Kenosha , Wis.&#13;
~ J=&#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.~.&#13;
"CLOSED ON MONDAYS"&#13;
PRIVATE PARTY FACILITIES&#13;
639-8084&#13;
3932 DOUGLAS AVE., RACINE (DOUGLAS AVE. &amp; 3 MILE RD . HWY. 32 SOUTH) &#13;
3*hi' ....• • c&#13;
Ilevents&#13;
Wednesday I March 23&#13;
Health Line Highlights at 553-2588: "Before You Begin Y,?ur Pregnancy:&#13;
#126.5&#13;
Wargamers meeting from 6~8 p.m., in Cl 140&#13;
Boxing Club meeting in P.E. Wrestling/Boxing room at 2:30 p.m.&#13;
Call 553~2428 for more information.&#13;
Thursday, March 24&#13;
History Club lecture and slides on Northern Ireland, by Robert Glen,&#13;
'associate professor of history at 2:30 p.m., in Cl 111&#13;
Hearings on Breadth: 3-4:30 p.m., in Cl 211&#13;
Friday, March 25&#13;
Life Science Lecture: Har Gobind Khorana, Nobel laureate, "On&#13;
Total Laboratory Synthesus of a Biologically Functional Gene"&#13;
at 4 p.m., in CR 103&#13;
Earth Science Lecture: Dr. E. L Smith, Associate professor of earth&#13;
science on "The Viking Mission to Mars - part 2" at 12 noon in&#13;
GR 113. Coffee and donuts will be served.&#13;
Math Lecture: "The Mathematics of Bowing a Violin and other Non-:&#13;
Linean Phenomena" by Professor W. Loud of U. of Minn. at 3:30&#13;
p.m. in CL 107 -&#13;
Music Recital: Harpsichordist Jane Clark of London, England, at&#13;
8 p.rn. in GR 103&#13;
Sunday, March 27&#13;
Lecture: Washington Post executive editor Ben Bradlee on "The&#13;
Media - the Fourth Estate" in CA Theatre at 7:30·p.m.&#13;
Wargamers meeting from 1~6 p.m.,' in CL 140&#13;
Monday, March 28&#13;
APPR (Academic Planning and Program Review) Comments: Deadline&#13;
for comments to subcornmtttee chairpersons (see story elsewhere&#13;
in RANGER)&#13;
Hearings on Breadth: 3-4:30 p.m., in CL 211&#13;
All Campus Pinball Tournament in Rec Center through April 1&#13;
Tuesday, March 29&#13;
Parkside Preview-open house for high school students and parents&#13;
Senior Recruiting-Prudential needs career underwriters. Sign up in&#13;
Tallent 107 or call ext. 2452.&#13;
All events are due in the RANGER office by the Wednesday before&#13;
publication. An events form is now available.&#13;
Herb program planned&#13;
Chives, oregano and orange mint are just a few of the herbs you&#13;
can learn how to grow and use to season foods at a Herb Program.&#13;
planned for March 24 at the Golden Rondelle Theater, 14th and&#13;
Franklin Sts., in Racine. This free program begins at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Guest speaker for the program- is Wally Schiller, owner of the Barn&#13;
Door, Oak Creek, specializing in herb plants, seeds and decorative&#13;
accessories.&#13;
The program includes a demonstration and discussion on the&#13;
popular herbs such as pumpkin, lavender, basil and rosemary and&#13;
unusual herbs including lemon balm, juniper and rhubarb. A portion&#13;
of the program will be devoted to planning an herb garden that will&#13;
enhance and blend with home landscaping'. Schiller will talk about&#13;
using herbs in seasoning foods such as sauces, soups an~ main dishes.&#13;
For further information and reservations contact the Rondelle at&#13;
554-2154.&#13;
Chess Club has high-Quality, regulation.&#13;
sized chess sets for sale. Leave inquiries at&#13;
Chess Club desk in WLLC 0191.&#13;
••••••••••••••••&#13;
classlfleds&#13;
T,pIng done In my home. Professionally&#13;
experienced. Reasonable rates. For more&#13;
Information call or write; veruee Koker, 7315&#13;
16th Ave., Kenosha, WI 53140. Phone:&#13;
'5H06a. UW-PARKSIDE PEOPLE GET&#13;
RED CARPET TREATMENT&#13;
AT&#13;
Bank of Elmwood&#13;
Reward: $20.00 for losl class ring. Blue, cut&#13;
stone as 81, initials J.F.N. Call 639-0568,&#13;
asK tor Jim.&#13;
lOlM making music but haven'l been discovered&#13;
yet? Forming band, preferably&#13;
Jazz/rock but am flexible. Required:&#13;
ambition, stamina, degree of musical&#13;
intuition. Call Lindy afternoons 553-2578,&#13;
Wanted: Vocallst for original recording and&#13;
performing group. Must have good stage&#13;
presence. Call Randy 652-6326 or Dennis&#13;
694-8501. I&#13;
. Banking House: 2704 Lathrop Avenue&#13;
Motor Bank: Durand Avenue iilt Kentucky .51.&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53405&#13;
~ 28 year old male looking for someone to&#13;
share lakeside house near Twin lakes. $125&#13;
a month plus ututtres. Gall 658-2878.&#13;
(Of course, so does everyone eisel)&#13;
Ride needed to Madison this weekend&#13;
(Friday). Call Bruce at 553-2295 or 634--6215.&#13;
Rally to be held&#13;
The UW-Parkside Teacher&#13;
Support Committee will sponsor&#13;
a rally and informational&#13;
meeting relative to the recent&#13;
teacher's strike in the Racine&#13;
Unified School District on&#13;
Wednesday, March 23. The&#13;
meeting will be held in CL 107&#13;
beginning at 12 noon. All&#13;
faculty, staff and students are&#13;
invited.&#13;
---------------,&#13;
: COUPON t&#13;
t With this Coupon and a t&#13;
I $5.00 purchase you get t&#13;
t a Free Plant t&#13;
t Something Special t&#13;
t 216 Sixth Street t&#13;
, Racine.Wi ~.1142 JerryKellner t ----------------&#13;
REQUEST FOR STUDENT OPINION ON&#13;
ART, ECONOMICS, LIFE SCIENCE, PHILOSOPHY,&#13;
PSYCHOLOGY&#13;
The faculty Academic Planning and Program Review Committee&#13;
holds regular reviews of all academic programs. This spring,&#13;
reviews are of A~, Economics,life Science,Philosophy and&#13;
Psychology.The Committee invites students to contact the&#13;
chairperson of the review subcommitteeslisted below to express&#13;
opinions and concerns.Signed comments usually corry more&#13;
waight than unsigned ones, all will be held in confidence.&#13;
Commentswill assist subcommitteesin formulating questions&#13;
will ask of faculty. Programs' general goals and ways&#13;
they. are meeting those 9.°015, not individual faculty members,&#13;
ere wher is being reviewed.&#13;
Contact the following chairpersonsby Monday, March 28: Art,&#13;
Prof. Larry Duetsch, CL235, Economics,Prof. Teresa Peck,&#13;
GR21S, lifa Science, Prof. Dayid Borone, GR360, Philosophy,&#13;
Prof. William Moy, CL259, Psychology, Prof. Peter Hoff, CA240.&#13;
UNION&#13;
SGUARE&#13;
PITCHER BEER&#13;
$1.50&#13;
PITCHER SODA&#13;
$1.20&#13;
25~ Off During HA~PY HOUR&#13;
Fridays 3-6&#13;
$1.00 Deposit on Pitchers&#13;
events&#13;
Wednesday, March 23&#13;
Health Line Highlights at 553-2588: " Before You Begin Ye;&gt;ur Pregnancy:&#13;
#1 265&#13;
Wargamers meeting from 6-8 p.m ., in CL 140&#13;
Boxing Club meeting in P.E. Wrestling/ Boxing room at 2:30 p.m .&#13;
Call 553-2428 for more information .&#13;
Thursday, March 24&#13;
History Club lecture and slides on Northern Ireland, by Robert Glen,&#13;
associate professor of history at 2:30 p.m ., in CL 111&#13;
Hearings on Breadth: 3-4:30 p.m., in CL 211&#13;
Friday, March 25&#13;
Life Science lecture: Har Gobind Khorana, Nobel laureate, " On&#13;
Total Laboratory Synthesus of a Biologically Functional Gene"&#13;
at 4 p.m., in CR 103&#13;
Earth Science lecture: Dr. E. I, Smith, Associate professor of earth&#13;
science on "The Viking Mission to Mars - part 2" at 12 noon in&#13;
GR 113. Coffee and donuts will be served .&#13;
Math lecture: "The Mathematics of Bowing a Violin and other Non- ·&#13;
Linean Phenomena" by Professor W . Loud of U. of Minn. at 3: 30&#13;
p.m . in CL 107&#13;
Music Recital: Harpsichordist Jane Clark of London, England, at&#13;
8 p.m . in GR 103&#13;
Sunday, March 27&#13;
lecture: Washington Post executive editor Ben Bradlee on " The&#13;
Media - the Fourth Estate" in CA Theatre at 7:30 .p.m .&#13;
Wargamers meeting from 1-6 p.m .,' in CL 140&#13;
Monday, March 28&#13;
APPR (Academic Planning and Program Review) Comments : Deadline&#13;
for comments to subcommittee chairpersons (see story elsewhere&#13;
in RANGER)&#13;
Hearings on Breadth: 3-4:30 p.m ., in CL 211&#13;
All Campus Pinball Tournament in Rec Center through April 1&#13;
Tuesday, March 29&#13;
Parkside Preview-open house for high school students and parents&#13;
Senior Recruiting-Prudential needs career underwriters . Sign up in&#13;
Tallent 107 or ~all ext. 2452.&#13;
All events are due in the RANGER office by the Wednesday before&#13;
publication. An events form is now available.&#13;
Herb program planned&#13;
Chives, oregano and orange m int are just a few of the herbs you&#13;
can learn how to grow and use to season foods at a Herb Program .&#13;
planned for March 24 at the Golden Rondelle Theater, 14th and&#13;
Franklin Sts ., in Racine . This free program begins at 7:30 p.m .&#13;
Guest speaker for the program-is Wally Schiller, owner of the Barn&#13;
Door, Oak Creek, specializing in herb plants, seeds and decorative&#13;
accessories.&#13;
The program includes a demonstration and discussion on the&#13;
popular herbs such as pumpkin, lavender, basil and rosemary and&#13;
unusual herbs including lemon balm, juniper and rhubarb. A portion&#13;
of the program will be devoted to planning an herb garden that will&#13;
enhance and blend with home landscaping. Schiller will talk about&#13;
using herbs in seasoning foods such as sauces, soups and main dishes.&#13;
For further information and reservations contact the Rondelle at&#13;
554-2154.&#13;
••••••••••••••••&#13;
classifieds&#13;
Typing done In my home. Professionally&#13;
experienced. Reasonable rates. For more&#13;
Information call or write ; Varllee KOker, 7315&#13;
16th Ave. , Kenosha, WI 53140. Phone :&#13;
651-6068.&#13;
R-ard:$20.00 for lost class ring. Blue, cut&#13;
stone BS 81 , initials J.F.N. Call 639-0568,&#13;
ask for Jim.&#13;
Love making music but haven't been discovered&#13;
yet? Forming band, preferably&#13;
Jazz/rock but am flexible. Required :&#13;
ambition, stamina, degree of musical&#13;
intuition. Call Lindy afternoons 553-2578,&#13;
Wanted: Vocalist for original recording and&#13;
performing group. Must have gOOd stage ·&#13;
presence. Call Randy 652-6326 or Dennis&#13;
694-8501 . '&#13;
- 28 year old male looking for someone to&#13;
share lakeside house near Twin Lakes. $125&#13;
a month plus utilities. Call 658-2878.&#13;
Ride needed to Madison this weekend&#13;
(Friday). Call Bruce at 553--2295 or 634-6215.&#13;
Chess Club has high-quality, regulationsized&#13;
chess sets tor sale. Leave inquiries at&#13;
Chess Club desk in WLLC 0191 .&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE PEOPLE GET&#13;
RED CARPET TREATMENT&#13;
AT&#13;
Bank of Elm~ood&#13;
· Banking House: 2704 Lathrop Avenue&#13;
Motor Bank: Durand Avenue at Kentucky .St.&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53405&#13;
(Of course, so does everyone e1se!)&#13;
Rally to be held&#13;
The UW-Parkside Teacher&#13;
Support Committee will sponsor&#13;
a rally and informational&#13;
meeting relative to the recent&#13;
teacher's strike in the Racine&#13;
Un ified School District on&#13;
Wednesday, M arch 23 . The&#13;
meeting will be held in CL 107&#13;
beginning at 12 noon . All&#13;
faculty , staff and students are&#13;
invited .&#13;
r--------------7&#13;
t COUPON t&#13;
f With this ·coupon and a t&#13;
f ~i~~ $5.00 purchase· you get f&#13;
f a Free Plant f&#13;
t Something Special f&#13;
f ==== 216 Sixth Street f f •••• Racine, Wi 632-1142 Jerry Kellner f ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~&#13;
REQUEST FOR STUDENT OPINION ON&#13;
ART, ECONOMICS, LIFE SCIENCE, PHILOSOPHY,&#13;
PSYCHOLOGY&#13;
The faculty Academic Planning and Program Review Committee&#13;
holds regular reviews of all academic programs. This spring, the&#13;
reviews are of Art, Economics, Life Science, Philosophy and&#13;
Psychology. The Committee invites students to contact the&#13;
chairperson of the review subcommittees listed below to express&#13;
opinions and concerns. Signed comments usually carry more&#13;
weight than unsigned ones; all will be held in confidence.&#13;
Comments will assist subcommittees in formulating questions they&#13;
will ask of faculty. Programs' general goals and ways&#13;
they , are meeting those g_oals, not individual faculty members,&#13;
are what is being reviewed.&#13;
Contact the following chairpersons by Monday, March 28: Art,&#13;
Prof. Larry Ouetsch, CL235, Economics, Prof. Teresa Peck,&#13;
GR215, Life Science, Prof. David Barone, GR360, Philosophy,&#13;
Prof. William May, CL259, Psychology, Prof. Peter Hoff, CA240.&#13;
UNION&#13;
SQUARE&#13;
PITCHER BEER&#13;
$1.50&#13;
PITCHER SODA&#13;
$1.20&#13;
25 ~ Off During HAPPY ~OUR&#13;
Fridays 3-6&#13;
$1.00 Deposit on Pitchers </text>
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