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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Subcommittee suggests strict requirements for declaring majors&#13;
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            <text>Volume 5, issue 25</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>er&#13;
VVednesday,ApriI13,1977&#13;
Vol. 5, No. 25&#13;
()() Comedy" is the last refuge of ~~&#13;
the non-conformist mind.&#13;
- Gilbert Seide.&#13;
Subcommittee suggests&#13;
strict requirements&#13;
for declaring.·maiors&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
The Subcommittee on Academic Advising of the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee has completed its&#13;
proposal for academic advising which will require&#13;
all degree candidates to declare a major or area of&#13;
interest before they have completed 30 credit hours&#13;
at Pgrkside. In addition, students will have to&#13;
obtain the signature of an advisor in order to&#13;
register, if the subcommittee's report is adopted by&#13;
the full committee.&#13;
The proposal will take current full-time&#13;
counselors off academic advising. The counselors&#13;
will now be responsible for recruiting and&#13;
conducting general advising for new students, plus&#13;
personal and career counseling. The task of&#13;
academic counseling will be given to faculty&#13;
members; each faculty member will counsel&#13;
students with majors or areas of interest in his&#13;
particular field.&#13;
The subcommittee held a public hearing on the&#13;
matter last Thursday and committee members.&#13;
blamed the poor attendance on a RANGER story&#13;
last week, which gave the wrong date of the&#13;
meeting. However, PSGA President-elect Rusty&#13;
Tutlewski was among those present and said "I&#13;
wonder if 30 credits is enough for students to&#13;
decide what they want, because that's only 10&#13;
classes I'm going in an entirely different direction&#13;
(major) than I was at that point."&#13;
However, the subcommittee pointed out that a&#13;
declaration of major is revocable, and said it would&#13;
make an effort to publicize that students can&#13;
change their majors. "The student is not straitjacketed&#13;
for the rest of his life, he can change hts&#13;
mind," said subcommittee chairman Omar Amin&#13;
The proposal would also require that students get&#13;
the signature of their advisor before registration. A&#13;
student could change his advisor if he wished,&#13;
according to subcommittee member Stella Gray,&#13;
faculty members have been complaining about the&#13;
current Quality of advising at Parkside, and would&#13;
prefer faculty to do the advising, "Here's their&#13;
chance to improve the situation:' she said.&#13;
She gave as an example of erroneous advising the&#13;
cases of students who were advised not to take the&#13;
required foreign language because "sooner or later&#13;
the requirement will be eliminated." According to&#13;
Gray, "the students had pretty good evidence that&#13;
this is what the counselor told them," As a result,&#13;
some students have found themselves unable to&#13;
graduate because they hadn't fulfilled the language&#13;
requirement.&#13;
The requirements the subcommittee IS workmg&#13;
on were originally submitted by the administration&#13;
because of the fact that counselors will be&#13;
reassigned to duties other than academic adVISing&#13;
If after 30 credits the student IS stili unsure of a&#13;
major, the student can opt for an "area of mterest&#13;
such as behavioral SCIence, labor econormcs,&#13;
SCiences,and hurnarunes According to Tutlewski.&#13;
30 credits IStoo early for a student to be forced to&#13;
determine a major "I would personallv re ent&#13;
having to declare a major or area of Interest before&#13;
two years at the university," she said&#13;
Tutlewski said that PSGA Will survey students on&#13;
the question and let the subcommittee know how&#13;
the students feel The subcommittee also mvues&#13;
and urges students to comment on the proposals,&#13;
which must now be approved by the full Academic&#13;
Policies Committee&#13;
She also said that "people should be able to&#13;
decide for themselves why they are here but If It&#13;
seems the student body IS In favor of It, I'll let It&#13;
go"&#13;
Students are urged to submit their written&#13;
comments on the subcommittee proposal by&#13;
tonight, Wednesday, April 13, to Ch"irm.n Omu&#13;
Amin, associate professor lifescience, whose office&#13;
is GR 341, extension 2547.&#13;
Education professor&#13;
Happel wins school board seat&#13;
by Christopher Clausen&#13;
Last September, Marvin Happel, Assistant&#13;
Professor of Education, announced his candidacy&#13;
for a seat on the Racine School Board. Happel, a&#13;
former. Park High Unified school teacher, was&#13;
elected last week along with Richard Kreul ,and&#13;
William Jenkins to defeat incumbents Lowell&#13;
McNeill and Howard Stanton.&#13;
"I wasn't too happy. with the decisions being&#13;
made by the -present school board and, being in&#13;
education I felt I had something better to&#13;
contribute. I felt they needed somebody who knew&#13;
something about education on the board, I didn't&#13;
see too much of that. [ felt they needed somebody&#13;
to be able to provide a check and balance to the&#13;
administration."&#13;
Happel feels there were some who voted for him&#13;
because he was a professor of education and not for&#13;
other reasons.&#13;
"It is a political position and you have to run for&#13;
it. You have to convince people that you are there.&#13;
You have to do all the standard kind of things and&#13;
we did a good job of that. . •&#13;
"I think the strike helped me, not so much during&#13;
the strike but after the strike was over. It kind of&#13;
had people settle down and wonder what they&#13;
could do to prevent another one. Apparently,&#13;
looking at the candidates, they felt I was .going to&#13;
be much better preventing another strike than&#13;
McNeill or Stanton.&#13;
"I'm on the board to do what I can to improve&#13;
and- build education so that people can become&#13;
successful in whatever they choose to do, whether&#13;
it is to go on to universities like Parkside, or&#13;
factories or business or whatever. This is the goal of&#13;
primary/secondary education, and even if that&#13;
means moving away from making the students&#13;
more academically oriented than they are or&#13;
moving towards It. I think the students who want to&#13;
become academically oriented should have the&#13;
basic tools and knowledge to be a success In life, I&#13;
think that whatever influence I have will turn out&#13;
better students, more able to cope at Parkside, but&#13;
then Iwould also hope that I would help turn out a&#13;
student more able to cope with life, whatever they&#13;
hope to do"&#13;
What effect will being on the board have on his&#13;
teaching In the class? "It ought to make it better&#13;
because it should give me more insight as to&#13;
schools and school systems and how they work, so&#13;
it should give me a little bro~der perspective; and&#13;
of course, 1deal with t-bat in the classroom, training&#13;
teachers."&#13;
Happel does not mind the fact that Parkside has&#13;
as industrial mission. "I thmk if you're dealing with&#13;
turning-out people for an Industrial society, being&#13;
hurnarustcallv Oriented and making that industrial&#13;
society more humane, IS a bIg part of what thiS&#13;
uruv rsity should be about Training teachers for&#13;
that purpose ISto turn teachers Into people that can&#13;
make the bureaucres, Institutions and the industrial&#13;
society more human personal and more liberal In&#13;
fact, I think Irs essential for humanists to be&#13;
Involved In the Industrial society"&#13;
Racine stokes have been big events for the last&#13;
several years. Happel feels he ISable to understand&#13;
and communicate With the tea hers and avoid&#13;
future conflicts&#13;
I saw It ail the way through that probably the&#13;
biggest stubborness tended to be on "the board's&#13;
Side It's going to be difficult dealing With teachers&#13;
for a while because there has been so much&#13;
bitterness burlt up I think that my election With&#13;
Blue lenkms Signals a change. The teachers are&#13;
going to have to re-evaluate how they deal With&#13;
us. I personally think they Will. 1 have been saYlllg&#13;
that ail the way through and I sul! believe It&#13;
"Now then, If you stili get some real radical&#13;
responses from the teachers, you will have to use&#13;
some other tactics to relate to them and find out&#13;
how you can communicate more effectivelv With&#13;
them&#13;
"You do not have to have strtkes and you don't&#13;
have to have the threat of strikes hanging over your&#13;
head all the time, You are going to have,&#13;
sometimes, the possibihtv that negotiations are&#13;
gorng to break down and the possibihtv of a strike&#13;
exrsts But there is no reason to have the bitterness&#13;
and so on that we have had So I'd like to see&#13;
negotiations get to the POlOt where contracts are&#13;
settled without the constant turmoil that. goes on in&#13;
our negotiations. There is no reason we have to&#13;
have trus climate In Racine "&#13;
:1editorials&#13;
Subcommittee attempts&#13;
to pun a· fast one&#13;
on -matriculant· students&#13;
Out to solvethe problems of the world, the subcommittee&#13;
on academic advising of the academic&#13;
policies committee has come up with some really&#13;
great ideas to add to general confusion.&#13;
One idea is to require all "matriculating"&#13;
students to declare a major or area of interest&#13;
after they have completed thirty credits (two&#13;
semesters of work).&#13;
Another suggestion the committee proposed is&#13;
to require all students to get their advisor's&#13;
signature on their schedule before students could&#13;
participate in the rite of registration. Why not ask&#13;
for a note from mommy? Most students already&#13;
know how to forge that one from high school.&#13;
This campus has plenty of problems,&#13;
committees, and subcommittees. They are&#13;
somewhat related. While it is healthy to let&#13;
faculty, staff, and students participate in campus&#13;
governance and solve problems, somehow it&#13;
doesn't seem proper to convene a subcommittee&#13;
to create additional bureautic bullshit and try to&#13;
pawn it off as some kind of academic standard of&#13;
discipline.&#13;
Presently, Parkside students are strongly&#13;
requested to declare a major after about four&#13;
full-time semesters or .60credits. Registration is&#13;
rather open and the restrictions placed on&#13;
students are low with regard to demanding&#13;
specific courses. So, where is the problem?&#13;
If there is a problem, it is with the current&#13;
quality of advice given students who have&#13;
declared majors by their advisors. Most students&#13;
who know the situation are aware that most&#13;
advisors are pretty much on their own as far as&#13;
what they advise, to whom, when, and how much&#13;
time they spend with advisees. This problem&#13;
doesn't evenhaveto go to committee. All that has&#13;
to be done is to hire professors who can&#13;
communicate effectively with students. There are&#13;
some who already know how. The rest will&#13;
eventually die andlor be replaced.&#13;
In a free society, acquiring a liberal education&#13;
should mean consulting an advisor on the basis&#13;
of the student's need for what should be, quality&#13;
advice. If advice were significant and important&#13;
on its own merit, it shouldn't be necessary to&#13;
legislate its necessity.&#13;
It is doubtful great harm comes to those&#13;
students Who declare a major after they have.&#13;
taken their sweet time trying to decide what in the&#13;
world they are going to become.&#13;
It is speculated that the committee was&#13;
expected to fabricate some plan for faculty to&#13;
assume full academic counseling responsibility&#13;
for the students of this campus. This plan is&#13;
going to take a revolution to implement at&#13;
Parkside. The faculty of this school is relatively&#13;
insulated from this problem and will probably&#13;
fight to the end or unionize before they accept the&#13;
inevitable student! professor relationship of the&#13;
future. In any event, professors who point fingers&#13;
at students for not coming up to some academic&#13;
discipline standard, deserve a few fingers&#13;
themselves.&#13;
The complete text of the subcommittee's&#13;
recommendations is reprinted in the student&#13;
government Contact article on page 3. RANGER&#13;
urges everyone to dash off a quick letter to&#13;
Associate Professor Omar Amin in Greenquist&#13;
341 if you haveviews on this subject. Those who&#13;
can't do it today, (deadline Wednesday) call him&#13;
in his office at 553-2547before you find out no&#13;
one responded and "the subcommittee's follies&#13;
were inacted into law.&#13;
Our \\f riters&#13;
Sob HoHman, Chris Clausen. Michael Murphy,&#13;
Fred Tenuta.. Thomas Nolen. Karen Putman&#13;
T!mothy J. Zuehlsdorf, Sob Jambois, Jam; LaMar&#13;
LInda Lasco. Douglas Edenhauser, Phil Hermann,&#13;
Cheryl Powalisz&#13;
Photographer.&#13;
Leanne Dillingham&#13;
Editor Philip L. Livingston 555.2295.&#13;
Art Oirector&#13;
Copy Editor Bruce Wagner&#13;
News Editor John McKloskey&#13;
Feature Editor' Mona. Maillet&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Circulation Sue Marquardt&#13;
(Jeneral Manager Thomas R. Cooper 553.2287&#13;
Advertising Manager John Gabriel 553.2287&#13;
Advertising Sales .&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin ..Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial pollcy and content.&#13;
.• _.. •• • l, •••&#13;
I&#13;
r-----------------~ __ ~~&#13;
by Terrence E. Zuehlsdorf&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
Committee suggests changes&#13;
for undecided 'matriculants'&#13;
More Parkside Bureaucracy!&#13;
A matriculant student according&#13;
to Webster's New Collegiate&#13;
Dictionary is one who is a&#13;
member of a body particularly a&#13;
college or a university. With this&#13;
definition, advisors would be&#13;
needed for 4,720 students.&#13;
Considering the P1anoed release&#13;
time tor professors based on&#13;
their advising "load, we are at a&#13;
time when the university is trying&#13;
to limit expenditures. Many&#13;
professors do not have the right&#13;
attitude to advise students&#13;
properly nor the knowledge of&#13;
the other disciplines needed to&#13;
help students plan a schedule.&#13;
All the committee requires is a&#13;
professors signature to provide&#13;
members involved.&#13;
(b) Students with declared areasof interest are to&#13;
be generally advised by faculty members; see&#13;
5. below.&#13;
(c) Undecided students are to be advised by the&#13;
Office of Student Services at least during their&#13;
first semester at Parkside.&#13;
(d) Every student should have an assigned&#13;
advisor at all times.&#13;
5. An Ad Hcc Advising Committee established by&#13;
the Adademic Policies Committee will form a&#13;
permanent Advising Office which will be manned&#13;
at all times to advise students particularly&#13;
those with declared areas of interest. Faculty&#13;
members of the Advising Office representing&#13;
academic divisions will be given release time&#13;
appropriate to their advising load. Assignment of&#13;
advisors to students with declared area of interest&#13;
shall be initiated at this office.&#13;
6. (~) The signature of the advisor, divisional chairman&#13;
or designee will be required for registration.&#13;
The signature does not necessarily imply&#13;
approval of the program by the advisor but&#13;
rather that advising has taken place.&#13;
(b) In the case of Education-Certification students&#13;
and multiple majors the signature of all&#13;
involved advisors will be required.&#13;
7. The process of advising (declaring, coding, processing,&#13;
assigning and notification) is to be&#13;
handled through one central office under the&#13;
Vice Chancellor's office.&#13;
proof that counseling has taken&#13;
place, but no student even needs&#13;
to talk to a professor to get&#13;
his/her signature. Another flaw&#13;
in this proposed plan is that it&#13;
will increase the bureaucratic&#13;
structure at Parkside.&#13;
Although the basic plan has its&#13;
good points, there is still much&#13;
work that needs to be done&#13;
before it can be implemented.&#13;
Therefore, all students are urged&#13;
to contact Omar Amin the&#13;
committees' chairman, with&#13;
written comments prefered,&#13;
before Wednesday night. Send&#13;
them to Professor Amin, GR 341,&#13;
or phone 553·2547 if you cannot&#13;
complete comments before&#13;
Wednesday night.&#13;
Hey Parkside!&#13;
Miller Lite on Tap&#13;
at the Union and Rec. Center&#13;
........ I;'~,- --'&#13;
Lire Beer from Millf'r.&#13;
~",erythin~~ you alwaylJ wanted&#13;
in .tI beer. And leu.&#13;
We regretfully announce the&#13;
resignation of the following&#13;
Senators and officers, Daniel&#13;
Nielsen, Richard Folsom, Lance&#13;
Frickensmith, Mona Maillet, and&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden.&#13;
We would like to announce&#13;
the following appointments:&#13;
Mary Braun, Dave Cramer,&#13;
Robert Hansen, and Joseph&#13;
Powers to a Senate At-Large seat.&#13;
Timothy Zuehlsdorf to a Senate&#13;
Engineering Science seat.&#13;
,&#13;
views I&#13;
Ranger prints&#13;
misinformation&#13;
To the editor,&#13;
I need to correct mlsmforrnanon&#13;
appearing on the front page&#13;
of the April 6 Ranger. Reporter&#13;
McKloskey quotes Ms. Johnson&#13;
of DPI as saying, "l'rn appalled&#13;
that would-be English teachers&#13;
don't have to take any literature&#13;
courses." Had McKloskey pard&#13;
attention to his notes, he would&#13;
certainly have realized that the&#13;
alleged statement was essentially&#13;
meaningless, even ridiculous.&#13;
The English major (whether&#13;
aiming for teacher certification&#13;
or not) takes almost exclusively&#13;
literature courses. What DPI&#13;
representatives had apparently&#13;
assumed was that UWP English&#13;
majors are not required to take a&#13;
class in CONTEMPORARY literature.&#13;
That is a misconception on&#13;
their part since one course in&#13;
contemporary literature is a&#13;
requirement in the present&#13;
structure of the English major,&#13;
and other courses in modern&#13;
literature are available as&#13;
electives. Whether more courses&#13;
DANISH&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
In contemporary literature I&#13;
should be required of English&#13;
majors seeking teaching certification&#13;
is probably a matter worth&#13;
discussing, for much literature&#13;
now taught in elementary and&#13;
hrgh school classes is contemporary&#13;
However, we must also&#13;
recognize that not all Enghsh&#13;
majors plan to teach and that not&#13;
all of them are interested&#13;
pnrnarllv (or even secondarily) In&#13;
modern writers, Furthermore. tn&#13;
the minds of at least some&#13;
people, the present tendency In&#13;
pre-college English classes to&#13;
stress contemporary writers to&#13;
the near elimination of all else is&#13;
not necessarily a virtue&#13;
Go talk to any weerv-eved&#13;
English major on the twohundred-fiftieth&#13;
poem, the&#13;
fifteenth novel, the eightv-nmth&#13;
short story of the semester - If&#13;
you think English majors don't&#13;
take literature coursesl&#13;
Sincerely yours,&#13;
SIeila C. Gray&#13;
Professor of English&#13;
lUI DouglasA._&#13;
RlKine, WisIonsin 53402&#13;
I ,&#13;
Ifut~~&#13;
PHONE, 637-8895&#13;
ITALIAN/SCANDINAVIAN FESTIVAL&#13;
~11&#13;
.,&#13;
ETHNIC FOODS&#13;
WINE TASTING&#13;
CHEESE TASTIf'G&#13;
LIVE MUSIC AND DAf'CE&#13;
FILMS AND LECT RES&#13;
FLOWER CART&#13;
GENEALOGICAL DISPLAYS&#13;
ETHNIC SHOPS&#13;
ARTS AND CR;\FTS&#13;
COSl1JME EXHIBITS&#13;
ARTIST-AT-WORK&#13;
VIKINGS&#13;
HEIRLOOMS&#13;
DEMONSTRA TIONS OF&#13;
+PASTA-MAKING&#13;
+WINE-MAKING&#13;
+NEEDLEWORK&#13;
+HANDCRAFTS&#13;
+FOLKARTS&#13;
+BOCCE&#13;
•&#13;
These are the recommendations of the&#13;
Subcommittee on Academic Advising of the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee to the Academic&#13;
Policies Committee regarding the advising of&#13;
UW-Parkside matriculant students:&#13;
1. Three categories of students are recognized:&#13;
(a) Students with declared majors.&#13;
(b) Students with declared area of interest.&#13;
(c) Undecided.&#13;
2. Areas of interest are broad categories' that do not&#13;
correspond with majors and include:&#13;
Behavioral Sciences, Labor Economics, Engineering&#13;
Sciences, Social Sciences, Fine Arts,&#13;
Education, Humanities, Science, Management&#13;
Science (current divisions) as well as Liberal Arts,&#13;
Allied Health and Pre-Professional (ex., preagricu&#13;
lture, pre-dentistry, pre-medicine, prepharmacy&#13;
as well as prelaw, etc.).&#13;
3. In order to provide meaningful advising to the&#13;
largest possible population of matriculant students&#13;
as early as possible in their academic program&#13;
the following is proposed. Declarations of&#13;
major or area of interest would have to be made&#13;
by the end of the first 30 credit hours taken at&#13;
UW-Parkside, preferably earlier.&#13;
4. (a) Students with declared majors are to be&#13;
advised by faculty members in their major.&#13;
It is the responsibility of the divisions (or their&#13;
respective disciplines as may be delegated) to&#13;
decide the format and individual faculty&#13;
No admission cherge&#13;
SUNDAY, APRIL 16 NOON·5:30 PM&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
CAMPUS UNION&#13;
_&#13;
.&gt; .... ~. '&#13;
.&gt; . ::.&#13;
: -. ···\..:::,news&#13;
legal high&#13;
with lettuce&#13;
College Press service&#13;
Now, like salt and sugar, tnere is a hash substitute. The Woodley&#13;
Herber Company in Okemos, Michigan has "introduced an herbal&#13;
smoking mixture called Lettucene Brand Wild Lettuce Hash and&#13;
Opium.&#13;
The hashish substitute is similar in appearance to light Afghani&#13;
hash and, the company says, burns well. The opium substitute is&#13;
black and sticky and the stronger of the two. Both come in large&#13;
three'gra~ packages.&#13;
The Herber Co. studied extracts and concentrates of herbs trorn all&#13;
over the world and selected a variety of Wild Lettuce grown in South&#13;
America and a strain of Damiana from Mexico. A recent review of the&#13;
final product was enthusiastic:&#13;
... both the opium substitute and ·the hashish substitute not only&#13;
look, feel, smell and taste similar to the illegal items, but they really&#13;
do get you stoned as well."&#13;
MacDonald's:&#13;
a place to worship&#13;
the hamburger&#13;
College Press service&#13;
is Here&#13;
In a last ditch attempt to attract the attention of&#13;
Kenosha voters who voted not to build a new high&#13;
school in that- city, 'New Bradford Now'&#13;
campaigners protested on the steps of the&#13;
antiquated Bradford High School. With Parksider,&#13;
Ron Parker, as their leader, this core group led&#13;
hundreds of Kenosha high school students and&#13;
.concerned Kenoshans to the streets in a three&#13;
division march on the city recently, only to have&#13;
by Bruce Wagner and John R. McKloskey&#13;
The Parks ide Union Operating Board (UOB)&#13;
voted last Thursday to begin serving wine in the&#13;
Union, effective as soon as possible.&#13;
The proposal to serve wine began with a request&#13;
to Chancellor Guskin from PSGA President Harvey&#13;
Hedden and President-elect Rustv Tutlewski. The&#13;
chancellor had no substantial objection to the&#13;
proposal, and the UOB voted unanimously to&#13;
permit wine.&#13;
EASTER MORNING BREAKFAST&#13;
LASAGNA TACOS 3/'1.50'&#13;
MON-TUE, '2.95&#13;
w/Salad Bread&#13;
and DINNER WINE ..&#13;
WED.THU&#13;
ENCHILADAS 3/'1.95&#13;
NACHOS '1.50/pla'e&#13;
FRENCH PIZZA ON REGULAR MENU EVERYDAY&#13;
Ia~R~~~bA~,r~&#13;
NEWMAN ROAD&#13;
632·6151&#13;
their hopes and cause turned down by two&#13;
thousand votes. Parker admlts "most student&#13;
workers are dissappointed in their city's concern for&#13;
the future of secondary education. Parker, not&#13;
intimidated by what many feel is a hopeless&#13;
communication problem, says he will fight for the&#13;
issue again as soon as it is clear the high school&#13;
referendum will be on the next election ballot.&#13;
William Niebuhr, Director of Student Life-Union&#13;
said he is in favor of wine for the union. "I have no&#13;
objection philosophically because some people&#13;
don't like beer and would prefer wine instead:' he&#13;
said.&#13;
Three other UW campuses already serve wine,&#13;
apd Niebuhr said he wants to give it a fair chance&#13;
here and hopes "it will not be abused by students."&#13;
Niebuhr said the details of what kind of wines&#13;
will be ser-vedor whether it will be sold in package&#13;
goods or by the glass, have not been worked out.&#13;
Robert S. Tragesser, visiting&#13;
professor of' mathematics at&#13;
Parkside, is the author of a new&#13;
book, "Phenomenology and&#13;
Logic," to be issued April 15 by&#13;
Cornell University Press.&#13;
Wine to be served in Union&#13;
during sections to be held at 9:30, 10:45, 1:30,2:45,&#13;
and 4:00. Executives attending will be John&#13;
Langhaut, Ceneral Plant Manager; Dwight Gause,&#13;
Manufacturing Planner/Manager; Robert Casteel,&#13;
Regional Controller; Dr. David Aldrich; John Henry;&#13;
regional personnel manager; Glenn Stinson,&#13;
personnel supervisor; Bill Hall" environmental&#13;
affairs manager; Pete Langlois, regional public&#13;
affairs manager; Gene Meyer, regional vice&#13;
president; and Lois Petterson, administrative&#13;
secretary - regional labor relations.&#13;
Junior and senior courses, for the most part, will&#13;
be cancelled. Students interested in attending a&#13;
particular session should sign up this week on the&#13;
L1 level of the Classroom building.&#13;
A room will be set aside for students interested in&#13;
finding out about job opportunities with&#13;
Weyerhaeuser, whose regional offices are located&#13;
in Schofield, WI.&#13;
For more information, contact G.raham or the&#13;
BusinessManagement discipline.&#13;
Parkside's Tragesser&#13;
publishes book&#13;
9 • 2 p.m.&#13;
SUNDAYS&#13;
ALL YOU WANT&#13;
Egg., Saulale,&#13;
Potatoes. Toest&#13;
Fresh fruit, Juice&#13;
'2.95 9-1 p.m.&#13;
CHICKENFISHRIMP&#13;
ALL YOU WANT&#13;
'3.25&#13;
554-1500&#13;
INCOME TAX&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
WILLIAM A. GLASS&#13;
Elmwood Plaza&#13;
Prices Quoted By Phone&#13;
A graduate of Franklin and&#13;
Marshall College, Tragesser&#13;
received his Ph. D. degree from&#13;
Rice University. He has taught at&#13;
Idaho State University, Stanford&#13;
University and the University of&#13;
Illinois Chicago Circle Campus.&#13;
outside. Uniform attire is&#13;
worn by. the agents of&#13;
McDonald's behind the counA&#13;
university of Michigan ter. From the rolling hills of&#13;
anthropologist is suggesting that Georgia to the snowy plains of,&#13;
McDonald's, far from being just Minnesota, with only minor&#13;
another greasy burger house, variations, the menu is located in&#13;
may in fact be an edifice where the same place, contains the&#13;
latter-day American agnostics same items, and has the same&#13;
come to worship. prices.&#13;
"When we go in (to a "The neophyte customer who&#13;
McDonald'sl,"Conrad Phillip dares \0 ask 'What kind of&#13;
Kotfak observes, "our surround- hamburgers do you have?' or&#13;
ings tell us that we are in a 'What's a Big Mac t": he&#13;
sequestered place, somehow concludes, "is as out of place&#13;
apart from the variety, messiness and ridiculous as a chimpanzee&#13;
ran.d_va.ri.ab.il.itY_O..f .t.he_w.o.r1d_.i.n.a .Ro.m.a.n.c.at.ho.li.c.M.as.s•."--. Weye rha use r to ta Ik to stu den ts&#13;
Business management students will have a&#13;
chance to talk to Weyerhaeuser Company&#13;
executives about major policies, practices and&#13;
solving of problems faced by modern business&#13;
concerns on April 21st.&#13;
This "Management Day" is the first of a series to&#13;
be held once a semester, according to visiting&#13;
professor of businessmanagement Robert Graham,&#13;
who is coordinating the event.&#13;
The purpose of this dav is to expose company&#13;
executives to Parkside's students and vice versa,&#13;
according to Graham, and he is hopeful that this&#13;
day will "help get students an entry for jobs. That is&#13;
what this day is all about."&#13;
Areas to be covered will be: marketing;&#13;
finance! Accounti ng/data processi ng; personnel/labor&#13;
relations/safety; environmental concerns;&#13;
public affairs/governmental relations' ~~;!~~lrr""::::::::L'-" corporate planning/policy/ethics. '&#13;
'7ii t1uJlJl'irI8ro. These topics will be covered two times April 21,&#13;
FOR THE RIDER&#13;
WHO DEMANDS&#13;
111£&#13;
UlnMATlIIlITUlClClI&#13;
FA.CTORY AUTHOIffZfD&#13;
SALES &amp; SERVICE&#13;
COMPLm REPAIRS,'Aln&#13;
&amp; CUSTOM ACCfSSOlIE$&#13;
632-5241&#13;
CMI 0111151 ill ilEAl saoo "'"&#13;
R&amp;B&#13;
IIlllIf-oaylDSOllW6&#13;
1S3~ Douglas Ave ..&#13;
Racine&#13;
Ray lurevlcius. Kenosha sophomore&#13;
"I don't go the the dances because I've got better&#13;
things to do. I'd rather go to bars where I know&#13;
more people than I know at school or go to&#13;
individual parties."&#13;
••&#13;
+-&#13;
Joe Harrison, Racine Senior&#13;
"I am planning to graduate in May. I have been&#13;
here for four years. The thing I liked most about&#13;
Parkside is the cheap tuition. My favorite classes&#13;
were all the Social Science classes."&#13;
eyesI&#13;
Carol Petges, Wheatland Senior&#13;
"I think the education program should be a major&#13;
instead of certification because of all the classes&#13;
you have to take."&#13;
Bridget Penzkowski, Racine Freshman&#13;
"My favorite class is English because I was going to&#13;
be an English major But now I don't know because&#13;
what can you do wuh an English major but teach&#13;
and I don't want to teach"&#13;
Mary Gehring, Kenosha senior&#13;
"I'm looking to the End I think we had a pretty&#13;
good variety of dances, although we could have&#13;
had more jazz-types and cultural oriented dances&#13;
to reach the majontv of the students"&#13;
Photogro.phs boY Leo.nne Dillingho.m&#13;
Hey Parksid .... How Milch Can 1011 Take1 6" - r' -r 11&#13;
P.,ksl •• FoN Servlc. Annolnctl&#13;
•&#13;
10 F.OOTSUBMARINE SANDWICHES&#13;
FRESH BAKED PAlElU'S BREAD, ASSORTED MEATS &amp; CHEESES, lETTUCE, TOMATO &amp; oUR OWN&#13;
SPECIAl SAUCE&#13;
SOLD B1 THE INCH - 15~ PER INCH&#13;
FRIDA1, APRIL 1S UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
r-:-:-~----------------------------~--------1&#13;
Bnews&#13;
Graduate education corrupt&#13;
Payoffs needed&#13;
to get into&#13;
medical school&#13;
College Press Service&#13;
"It's been common knowledge that you could&#13;
pay to get into medical school tor years. There have&#13;
been payoffs to all types of professional schools;&#13;
medical, veterinary, dental, law. It's nationwide,"&#13;
says FBI agent jim Perry.&#13;
The deals are made with anyone but the common&#13;
person. Many students who have the way to&#13;
graduate school bought and paid for come from&#13;
families where fathers are politicians, businessmen&#13;
or wealthy doctors in the community. And Perry is&#13;
working on one case in Philadelphia where daddy&#13;
happened to know a State Representative. -&#13;
Herbert Fineman, Democratic Speaker of the&#13;
Pennsylvania House of Representatives, was&#13;
indicted last month on charges of blackmail,&#13;
bribery, obstruction of justice, mail fraud and&#13;
conspiracy in connection with alleged payoffs by&#13;
three parents who sought admission for their&#13;
children to the University of Pennsylvania School&#13;
of Veterinary Medicine, Thomas Jefferson&#13;
University and the Philadeiphia School of&#13;
Osteopathic Medicine.&#13;
Fineman, 56, allegedly extorted $41,000 from&#13;
1968 to 1976 from the parents. Named as&#13;
co-conspirator was Martin Abrams who reportedly&#13;
collected the payoffs but was not indicted.&#13;
Fineman's identity was never revealed to the&#13;
parents.&#13;
Fineman is the fourth Philadelphian politician to&#13;
be indicted for soliciting bribes to influence&#13;
professional school admission. David W. Marston,&#13;
U.S. Attorney in Philadelphia, said the indictments&#13;
resulted from a "monster investigation over six&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home 01 the Spbmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington /W.. 6M-2J7J&#13;
months long." The FBI entered the Fineman case on&#13;
a lead from a confidential FBI source, according to&#13;
Perry.&#13;
Based on the indictment, Fineman took $15,000&#13;
through Abrams from Oscar Braunstein, one of the&#13;
parents, in 1972. On April 5, 1973, Fineman sent an&#13;
undisclosed letter to Mark Allam, who was then&#13;
dean of the Veterinary School. He soon received&#13;
the payoff money from Abrams a month later and&#13;
Braunstein'S son, Michael, was admitted to the&#13;
school.&#13;
Later, on August 31,1976, the indictment charges&#13;
that Fineman met with Senior Vice-President for&#13;
one of the University's programs, E. Craig Sweeten,&#13;
and ordered him to destroy all correspondence&#13;
relating to Braunstein's admission located iri the&#13;
student's files. As yet, no school administrators&#13;
involved or parents have been indicted.&#13;
Nobody is happy about the situation at the&#13;
University of Pennsylvania, least of all the students.&#13;
In an editorial in the Daily Pennsylvanian, the&#13;
schooi paper, Sweeten was asked to temporarily&#13;
step down from his position until "all questions&#13;
concerning his role in the affair have been&#13;
answered." President Martin Meyerson issued a&#13;
public statement about the Fineman case but thatdidn't&#13;
seem to be more than a five-paragraph&#13;
document of good will that the students said&#13;
demonstrated "an extreme lack of assertiveness and&#13;
an attempt to gloss over the case's implications."&#13;
And the implications are serious. With medical&#13;
and professional" school admissions getting mere&#13;
limited every year, cases like Fineman's only&#13;
underline the fact that the rich get richer and the&#13;
poor get rejection notices. It also serves to-make&#13;
influence-peddling a serious, if not detrimental,&#13;
objective for other professional school applicants.&#13;
As a result, says FBI mall Perry, the Bureau has&#13;
moved most of its manpower form work o~ smaller&#13;
crimes to white collar crirr e.&#13;
I'nfluence-peddling, whil ~ not a crime, is worth&#13;
more to children of the we rlthv than perfect grade&#13;
point averages, which, ofte 1 enough, many of these&#13;
children never have.&#13;
At the University of Cahfornia-Davis Medical&#13;
School, Dean John Tupper openly admits to&#13;
, interceding on behalf of students seeking admission&#13;
to the school and makes sure that ch iIdren of&#13;
politicians, influential physicians, and wealthy&#13;
businessmen are accorded special treatment.&#13;
"In a fledgling medical school like Davis, which&#13;
only admitted its first class in 1968, money for&#13;
capital construction and facilities is life-blood,"&#13;
said Peter L. Storandt, assistant dean of the medical&#13;
school from 1972to 1975. He cited incidents where&#13;
the sons of California politicians were admitted by&#13;
the dean without ever going through the admissions&#13;
process at all.&#13;
Back in Philadelphia, Representative Fineman&#13;
faces a total of 80 years in prison and a $78,000 fine&#13;
if convicted. But even that ..conviction may not&#13;
discourage the sale of places in graduate schools.&#13;
Perry says that the FBI currently has leads to other&#13;
payoffs schemes in other states. "There's no doubt&#13;
they are going on," he says.&#13;
Extention offers collective bargaining course&#13;
Collective bargaining in the public sector will be&#13;
the topic of a seven week course beginning April 13&#13;
and meeting from 7 to 9:30 p.m. on Wednesdays at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The course will cover practical issues and laws&#13;
governing collective bargaining in the. public&#13;
sector, methods for settling such' disputes and&#13;
current practices, case law and proposed legislation&#13;
from the point of view of the parties and the public&#13;
interest involved.&#13;
The instructor will be Charles E. Carlson, an&#13;
employee relations consultant for a Madison firm&#13;
and chief negotiator for several public employer&#13;
clients with experience in both grievance and&#13;
interest arbitration. A former personnel director for&#13;
the city of Beloit, he holds masters degrees in&#13;
industrial relations and public administration from&#13;
UW-Madison. He authors the labor relations&#13;
newsletter of the Wisconsin institute of Municipal'&#13;
and County Employers, Inc.&#13;
The course is sponsored by Parkside, the&#13;
UW-Milwaukee Division of Urban Outreach and&#13;
University Extension. Registration for the non-credit&#13;
program is being handled by the Extension office at&#13;
Parkside (Telephone 553-2312). Fee for the course is&#13;
$20.&#13;
Summer work offered in Europe&#13;
Hundreds of u.s. students will&#13;
find jobs in France, Ireland and&#13;
I !!~~~~~~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Great Britain th is summer&#13;
Ir through the Work in Europe&#13;
program sponsored by the&#13;
Council on International Educational&#13;
Exchange (CIEE). For the&#13;
past "eight years, this popular&#13;
program has provided students&#13;
with the direct experience of&#13;
living and working in another&#13;
country and, at the same time,&#13;
helped them reduce the cost of&#13;
their trip abroad. The Work in&#13;
Europe program virtually eliminates&#13;
the red tape that students&#13;
faced in the past when they&#13;
wanted to work abroad.&#13;
Participants must find their&#13;
own jobs but will have the help&#13;
of cooperating student travel&#13;
organizations in each country. In&#13;
France and Ireland they may&#13;
work during the summer; in&#13;
Creat Britain they may work at&#13;
any time of the year for up to six&#13;
months.&#13;
The jobs are usually unskilled&#13;
- in factories, department&#13;
stores, hotels, etc. Salaries are&#13;
low, but students generally earn&#13;
'- ~&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE PEOPLE GET&#13;
RED CARPET TREATMENT&#13;
AT&#13;
Bank of Elmwood&#13;
Banking House: 2704 Lathrop Avenue&#13;
Motor Bank: Durand Avenue ,t Kentucky.St.&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53405&#13;
(Of course, so does everyone ersel)&#13;
FOR THE BEST RECORDS IN KENOSHA&#13;
AT PRICES YOU'LL LIKE!&#13;
JAZZ ROCK SOUL V&#13;
CONTEMPORARY &lt;1.&#13;
CLASSICAL&#13;
COME TO US AT&#13;
~~&#13;
enough to pay for their room and&#13;
board while they work. A typical&#13;
job would be that ~f&#13;
chambermaid in a, hotel in&#13;
London's West End. But last&#13;
summer one enterprising student&#13;
found work in Paris as a wine&#13;
steward in a restaurant on the&#13;
Champs-Elvseesl&#13;
To qualify for ClEE's program,&#13;
students must be between the&#13;
ages of 18 and 30 and must be&#13;
able to prove their student&#13;
status. To work in France, they&#13;
must also be able to speak and&#13;
understand French.&#13;
For more information and&#13;
application forms, contact ClEE,&#13;
Dept. PR4, 777 United Nations&#13;
Plaza, New York, New York&#13;
10017; or 236 North Santa Cruz,&#13;
#314, Los Gatos, California&#13;
95030.&#13;
626 Fifty-Sixth SI;, Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
~«~ ~~~~~-~o",-~~~&#13;
-&#13;
, I&#13;
-&#13;
,&#13;
·Isports&#13;
Dannehl opposes&#13;
elimination of&#13;
sport-s scholarships&#13;
Elimination of legislative scholarships for out of&#13;
state students would be a severe blow to the&#13;
Parkside athletic program, athletic director Wayne&#13;
Dannehl said today.&#13;
"The generosity of local legislators in awarding&#13;
their scholarships to Parkside has been a Godsend&#13;
in building our athletic program to its current level&#13;
of success and national recognition," Dannehl said.&#13;
"I think the university as well as the&#13;
Kenosha-Racine area have benefitted from that&#13;
success&#13;
Dannehl was commenting on three current bills&#13;
before the state Legislature to eliminate the&#13;
scholarships, which cover the out of state portion&#13;
of tuition - about $1,600 a year. CQv. Patrick&#13;
Lucey has proposed elimination, and a&#13;
subcommittee of the Joint Finance Committee&#13;
preparing a UW System budget tentatively&#13;
supported his position earlier this week.&#13;
Seven legislators from Kenosha and Racine&#13;
counties currently are giving their scholarships to&#13;
Parkside students. Six of the seven students are&#13;
athletes.&#13;
"That's nearly $10,000 worth of aid that we&#13;
wouldn't otherwise have," Dannehl said. "It's&#13;
crucial to our program."&#13;
Parkside students currently receiving scholarships&#13;
and their legislative sponsors are Marshall Hill&#13;
(Marcel Dandeneau). Stevie King (Eugene Dorff)&#13;
and lester Thompson (joseph Andrea), all&#13;
basketball plevers. Mike Rivers (john Maurer) and&#13;
Joe Perera (Russell Olson), track; James DeVasquez&#13;
(James F. Rooney) tennis and cross country; and&#13;
Steven Bomgaars (R. Michael Ferrall), a political&#13;
science major. Michael Zvbora, a science major,&#13;
was sponsored by Cloyd Porter until recently&#13;
establishing Wisconsin residency. Perera is a&#13;
freshman from \ Sri Lanka, formerly Ceylon, the&#13;
others from Illinois.&#13;
Past recipients of legislative scholarships include&#13;
such well known Parkside athletes as basketball star&#13;
Bill Sobanski, standout distance runner Lucian Rosa&#13;
and nationally-ranked fencer jim Herring.&#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«4&amp;1-~&#13;
• RECREATIONAL SKATING&#13;
.FIGURE SKATING&#13;
dROOM BALL&#13;
.YOUTH "'OCKEY&#13;
,.SEMI·PRO HOCKEY&#13;
.------------------------, I ~ FREE I&#13;
i \!!.I!!J 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;
I 7727 60th AVE PHONE: 694-8010 I&#13;
L ~-------------~&#13;
Front (l to R) Bob Gruner, Tracyl Faustino, Back, David Bouman, leartho SCott, and Jim Ferraro selected Most Valuable Players&#13;
Wintersports ban~&#13;
Teams. coaches honored&#13;
by Thomas Nolen&#13;
and&#13;
Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside winter sports teams&#13;
and coaches were honored&#13;
Friday night at a banquet in the&#13;
Union cafeteria.&#13;
Wayne Dannehl, athletic&#13;
director, introduced the five&#13;
coaches of the winter sports who&#13;
named most valuable and letter&#13;
winners.&#13;
The cheerleading squad,&#13;
advised by Shirley Schmerling,&#13;
were also cited for their efforts to&#13;
promote school spirit during the&#13;
season. The squad included Terri&#13;
Brown, captain; Debra Catlett,&#13;
Teri Heinl, Judy Iverson, Crystal&#13;
McCoy, Sybil Nichols 'and&#13;
Debbie Thogerson.&#13;
Ranger Bear Bill Morrone and&#13;
alternate Mike Mondragon were&#13;
also acknowledged.&#13;
Teams participating in the&#13;
banquet included:&#13;
Women's Badminton: Lucian&#13;
Rosa, coach. Most valuable:&#13;
Tracy Faustino; Faustino and&#13;
Debbie Drissel, co-captains and&#13;
letter winners. In their first&#13;
season of competition, the team&#13;
showed improvement all season&#13;
in building Parkside's program.&#13;
Wrestling: Jim Koch, coach.&#13;
Most valuable and most pins Bob&#13;
Cruner. Gruner, Dan O'Connell&#13;
(inspirational) and Steve La&#13;
Count, (most improved) cocaptains&#13;
and letterwinners Dave&#13;
Wagner, John Cale, Doug&#13;
Andrewski, Scott ~Hintz~ick&#13;
Langer, John Weiter, Cliff Smith,&#13;
Ron Zmuda, Bill Lynch, Tony&#13;
Apostoli, and Dean Quam.&#13;
The team finished fifth in the&#13;
NAIA National tournament, their&#13;
second highest finish ever.&#13;
Cruner and Gale were awarded&#13;
All-American honors and Gale&#13;
and O'Connell were named to&#13;
first team All-District 14. Gruner,&#13;
Bill Lynch and Dave Wagner&#13;
were listed on the District's&#13;
second team, while Ron Zmuda&#13;
was honorably mentioned.&#13;
Men's swimming: Barbara&#13;
Lawson, coach. Most Valuable&#13;
Jim Ferraro (and bobber). Rich&#13;
Kwas and Dennis Steeves, cocaptains.&#13;
Rick Haas, (sinker)&#13;
Keith Krueger, Rick Lopes,&#13;
(tugboat) Kevin Nelson and Bob&#13;
Wilbershide, other letter winners.&#13;
After competing as a team&#13;
during the past, the men's swim&#13;
team began varsity participation&#13;
with a 6-7 record in dual meets.&#13;
Ferraro was the only member to&#13;
qualify for the nationals where&#13;
he swam to a 35 place in the 50&#13;
free and 43rd place in the 100&#13;
free.&#13;
Men's and Women's Fencing:&#13;
Loran Hein, coach. Most&#13;
valuables David Baumann and&#13;
Theresa Swenson; captain,&#13;
Corbett Christensen. Letter&#13;
winners were Curtis Studey, and&#13;
Peggy Harmel.&#13;
The team finished the season&#13;
with a third place at the 16 team&#13;
Great Lakes meet; their highest&#13;
finish since 1971. The women's&#13;
P.A.B. WANTS TO REMIND YOU&#13;
"CLAUDINE"&#13;
PG lllibyrtlJlllAB. ~&#13;
fi llli Pnnts by DELUXE· L!Il?IJ&#13;
11)l!'J Snrorid&lt; Abrn ~ ()"1U:OOl RElDi'DS &lt;nl oox In:sl&#13;
Wednesday, April 13 ·2:30 7:30&#13;
Thursday, April 14· 2:30 7:30&#13;
UNION CINEMA THEATRE&#13;
ADMISSION '1.00&#13;
team won 10 and lost six while&#13;
the men won 8 and lost 12.&#13;
Swenson had a record of 39-9&#13;
and Baumann went 48-12 for the&#13;
season.&#13;
Basketball: Steve Stephens&#13;
coach Rudy Collum assistant.&#13;
Most valuable, Leartha Scott.&#13;
Rade Dimitrijevic and Stevie&#13;
King, co-eaptains. Most improved,&#13;
Lester Thompson,&#13;
Marvin Chones. Hustle award:&#13;
Rade Dimitrijevic. 1977-78 cocaptains&#13;
Stevie King, Marvin&#13;
(hones.&#13;
Letter winners; Dimitrijevic&#13;
and Mike Hanke, fourth year;&#13;
Scott, Marshall Hill and King,&#13;
third year; Laurence Brown,&#13;
Marvin Chones, Joe Foots,&#13;
second year, and lonnie Lewis,&#13;
Mike Mathews, Raymond Nixon&#13;
and Lester Thompson, first year.&#13;
The team compiled a 20-10&#13;
record 'on the season, winning&#13;
the NAIA District championship&#13;
to qual ify for the national&#13;
tournament for the third straight&#13;
year, the third team in Wisconsin&#13;
history to do this. Scott was&#13;
named to the NAIA first team&#13;
with All-American honors and to&#13;
the third team of Basketball&#13;
Weekly and the Associated&#13;
Press. Scott led the Rangers in&#13;
the two games they played at the&#13;
Nationals, defeating Paine Col-"&#13;
lege 112-i&gt;Snut gelling nipped by&#13;
eventual NAIA national champ&#13;
Texas Southern 82-80, the third&#13;
straight time Parkside had been&#13;
beaten be the eventual winner .&#13;
Scott was also named WICA&#13;
player of the year and Stephens&#13;
was named WICA Coach of the&#13;
year. Hill and king were also&#13;
named to the AII-WICA teams&#13;
while Hill was honorably&#13;
\. mentioned the all-district list.&#13;
KENOSHA &amp; LOAN&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
S935 Se ....enth Avenue&#13;
7535 Pershing Bl....d&#13;
4235 52nd Street&#13;
410 Broad St lake Gene ....a&#13;
Bound for Glory&#13;
Guthrie's story told&#13;
,'&#13;
by Michael Murphy&#13;
I have a way of approaching any filmed biography with an&#13;
immediate air of skepticism. Most filmmake-rs, when attacking&#13;
biographies, indeed any literary adaptation, tend to illirninate&#13;
abstractor visually stagnant passages favoring, instead, more active&#13;
and readily objective sequences. Too often the final product fails in&#13;
capturing the essence of its source material, resulting in grossly&#13;
distorted theatrical fabrications such asWilliam Wyler's Buffalo Bill.&#13;
There is an enormous, widespread affection for Woody Cuthrie in&#13;
this country. The man's appeal stems, not only from his songs, but&#13;
from his simple incisive, and deeply personal outlook of America.&#13;
A successful adaptation to film would need to incorporate these&#13;
aspects within its structure. In Bound.For Glory, director Hal Ashby&#13;
seems aJItoo aware of his responsibility and often times manages to&#13;
capture that essence that I spoke of.&#13;
The film disregards backgrounds and origins and immediately&#13;
establishes Woody as a young man, keenly intuitive and estremely&#13;
curious in his environment, but disillusioned; understandable with&#13;
life during the depression. At his home town in Texas, we witness the&#13;
foundation of Woody's basic philosophy, cumulated through the&#13;
people he meets and the situations he encounters. This is effectively&#13;
interpreted, on screen,_in a series of short segmented events. These&#13;
events, though seemingly unrelated, join together in painting a&#13;
realistic picture of Texas in 1936.&#13;
Enroute to California, leaving his wife and children in search of a&#13;
better life, Woody, in essence, becomes a window to America.&#13;
Whether hitchhiking, jumping at train, or just plain walking, both&#13;
Woody and the audience gain a unique perspective of our country.&#13;
Arriving in California, broken both physically and financially, his&#13;
expectations and hopes are immediately shattered. Within the&#13;
Symphony&#13;
'technically excellent'&#13;
by Terry Zuehlsdorf and Mary Braun pieces. Although the piece had its high points, the&#13;
overall effect was rather boring.&#13;
The third piece, Korngold's "Symphony in F&#13;
Sharp," hailed as one of Korngold's greatest works,&#13;
was the most well developed of the three pieces&#13;
played. The first and third movements deserve&#13;
specf al commendation for their excellence.&#13;
Particularly memorable in the first movement were&#13;
the dulcet interludes which featured solo clarinet&#13;
and flute. The third movement was characterized&#13;
by deep emotion highlighted against generally dark&#13;
background music. The contrast between the two&#13;
was excellent.&#13;
Overall the concert was well received by many&#13;
and certainly was a fine example of what a fine&#13;
symphony orchestra can do. They demonstrated&#13;
amazing versitility and a quality of sound that is&#13;
rarely found. The music may have been too&#13;
technical for the audience to appreciate, but it&#13;
provided a fine showcase for the Milwaukee&#13;
Symphony's talents.&#13;
I&#13;
!&#13;
I&#13;
A crowd ofover 550 people listened Wednesday&#13;
night as the Mi Iwaukee Symphony proved why it is&#13;
considered one of the finest orchestras in the&#13;
country. Technically, the concert performance was&#13;
excellent and audience appreciation was apparent,&#13;
with the final piece receiving 4 curtain calls.&#13;
The first piece was Wagner's classic, the Overture&#13;
. to the "Flying Dutchman". The skillful execution of&#13;
this piece made it an exciting, dramatic experience&#13;
even for those who are not ordinarily moved by&#13;
music. It was easy to imagine the Phantom Ship's&#13;
stormy passage through the North Sea and to feel&#13;
the rise and swell of the water.&#13;
The second piece, "Rachmaninoff's "Rhapsody on&#13;
a Theme ofPaganini," was also well performed. The&#13;
pianist, Martha Naset, deserves high praise for her&#13;
performance. The piece inself, however, was rather&#13;
disappointing. This could be due to the fact that it&#13;
was surrounded by two stronger, more popular&#13;
NOW IN THE UNION .. ,&#13;
reviews I&#13;
crowded, detenorattng conditions of the migrant workers camp&#13;
(closelv resemblrng, Ii 1I0t vrsuetlv supenor to the one used In John&#13;
Ford's Crepes of Wrath), Woody finally comes to grips WIth the&#13;
overwhelming effects of the depressron&#13;
In retaliation, he joins forces With a union advocater and&#13;
eventually achieves local fame, on radio, With rabble rousing, anudepression&#13;
songs. His unrelenting urge to continue his travels across&#13;
America, however Interferes with any attempt at settlmg down In the&#13;
end, as may be expected, he again leaves his wife and family and, as&#13;
if spurned by some Insatiable calling, heads north In further&#13;
exploration of his land&#13;
The movie, extremely long and expensivelv produced, has&#13;
pretensions of being a quret little film The Simplicity of life and&#13;
people are Ironically juxtaposed amidst rnegruftctentlv recreated sets&#13;
of depression America. The blending, however, ISlughlv convmcmg,&#13;
a testtmorual to a competent director and crew&#13;
The film, however, has a tendency to be overlong It's uuuel levels&#13;
of energy and vitality become diluted toward the movie's conclusion&#13;
The first half is both fast paced and cinematically exctttng ,&#13;
concentrating less on the character of Woody Cuthne and more on&#13;
his overland adventures&#13;
The second half, however. chrcmclues the man himself, hts affair&#13;
and his subsequent rise In populantv The rhythm ISslowed and some&#13;
of the sequences become tediously soap operauc, dragging and&#13;
seriously damaging the film as a whole&#13;
Despite ItS shortcommgs, Bound For Glory IS undisputablv the&#13;
finest film biography to come out in a long while With ItS honest,&#13;
emotionally affecting approach, coupled with Davrd Carndines&#13;
sensitive portrayal, the film leaves an indelible Imprint of one of&#13;
Amenca's finest balladers&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
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PRICES YDU'LL ALWAYS REMEMBER ~,'.e'LAWN &amp;GARDEN .U'-l and CENTER FIt",.",,-- CLOSEST FLORIST TO PAIISIDE&#13;
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,&#13;
Micro-computers reviewed , -'&#13;
by Christopher Clausen the cost for micro-computers is relatively low.&#13;
Firebaugh lectured during the summer at Madison&#13;
and he had.to bring micro-computers from P-arkside&#13;
to Madison because of the lack of micro-computers&#13;
at Physics Department in Madison.&#13;
The use of micro-computers is unending, points&#13;
out Firebaugh. Their usage will be expanding, not&#13;
only in their current uses, but in others as well.&#13;
They can be used in dishwashers, washers, dryers,&#13;
and other electrical devices to help save energy and&#13;
ease the energy load.&#13;
Among these and other numerous projects,&#13;
Professor Firebaugh is working on the second&#13;
edition of his book, P.erspective on Energy, with ~&#13;
co-editor and former Parks ide professor Lon&#13;
Ruedisili, an associate professor of geology at the&#13;
University of Toledo, Toledo, Ohio.&#13;
•&#13;
"I think we have the reputation as having one ot&#13;
the best experimental computer programs (in the&#13;
system}," according to Physics professor Morris&#13;
Firebaugh, who explained the recent developments&#13;
in micro-computers and the research he and two&#13;
assistants are conducting here at Park-side.&#13;
Micro-eomputers are becoming more common in&#13;
usage every day and the most common usage of&#13;
this type is in hand-held calculators. Other uses&#13;
include pinball machines, radar ovens, television&#13;
video games, and laboratorv equipment, such as&#13;
osciliscopes. There arf two advantages in using&#13;
micro-eomputers, the first being the amount of&#13;
information that can be stored on the 1Jl inch&#13;
memory blocks that help make up the&#13;
micro-eomputer. The second is the various uses the&#13;
micro-eomputer can fill with the low cost of the&#13;
parts to perform basic operations.&#13;
The research began when professor Firebaugh,&#13;
William Stone, Parks ide electronics technician, and&#13;
physics student Luther Johnson saw the rising use of&#13;
micro-eomputers and wrote up an experiment to&#13;
show students how to use and understand them.&#13;
Stone built the first micro-computer on campus just&#13;
a little over 3 years ago.&#13;
They presented their final results in a paper to the&#13;
winter convention of the American Association of&#13;
Physics Teachers on February 8. Luther Johnson&#13;
presented the paper for the group and the reaction&#13;
was enthusiastic. The report was so well-liked that a&#13;
national magazine for physics teachers called The&#13;
Physics Teacher asked the group to do a review of&#13;
micro-computers for publication in the magazine.&#13;
itA physics teacher reads about this stuff&#13;
(micro-computers) and he knows he should be&#13;
doing something on it, but he doesn't know what&#13;
type of equipment to use," explained Firebaugh.&#13;
"That is why this study is so important."&#13;
The group has sent out over 40 letters to various&#13;
companies telling of their interest In reviewing&#13;
micro-computers and of the results being published&#13;
in The Physics Teacher.&#13;
This work is relatively new despite the fact that&#13;
Free fi'ms&#13;
Als••• 0•.,'1, C~,.lcel.S~~I~ettI. R.... II. 8.. 1&#13;
OPEN4~ .• :to , •.•.&#13;
Free PizzI Deli"e"&#13;
Club Highvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
In recognition of National&#13;
Library Week, a free film&#13;
program Leaturing, "The American&#13;
Woman: Portraits of&#13;
Courage" will be shown at the&#13;
Golden Rondelle Theater on&#13;
April 19 at 7:00 p.rn.&#13;
This film program is cosponsored&#13;
with the Racine&#13;
Public Library Reservations and&#13;
additional information can be&#13;
obtained by calling the Rondelle&#13;
at 554-2154.&#13;
INTRAMURAL BOWLING&#13;
TOURNAMENT&#13;
MENS &amp; WOMENS SCRATCH AND&#13;
HANDICAP DIVISIONS.&#13;
QUALIFICATION THROUGH APRIL 22nd.&#13;
FINALS, APRIL 28th &amp; 29th.&#13;
TROPHIES, TROPHIES, TROPHIESI&#13;
((i Signup in the Union ReeCenter&#13;
or call 553-2695&#13;
for further information. ---======i.&#13;
~~~~~~~&#13;
Morris Firebough, William Stone, and luther Johnson won: micro..(;omputers&#13;
Meet your Senators&#13;
by Terry Zuehlsdorf&#13;
In an effort to familiarize students with their elected&#13;
representatives, RANGER is starting a series of articles featuring&#13;
Senators, justices, and members of various University committees&#13;
This week we are featuring Senator Mary Braun.&#13;
Mary Braun is one of eight students recently elected to the PSGA in&#13;
the spring elections and also one of the five students appointed to the&#13;
Senate on March 30, 1977. When asked why she ran for the Senate&#13;
she responded, "It is important to have a Senate that can co-operate&#13;
and get things done without bickering, and I feel that I can help to&#13;
accomplish this."&#13;
Braun pointed out what she felt was wrong with the Senate: "I&#13;
don't like the fact that Senators don't seem to take their jobs&#13;
seriously. They have an important job to do and they're taking their&#13;
jobs too lightly."&#13;
On the subject of student apathy she said, "I think student apathy&#13;
is pathetic. Students complain that nothing is being done to help&#13;
them, but if they don't make their complaints known, then nothing&#13;
can be expected to be done." She also disliked the poor attendance'&#13;
records of most Senators and the high turnover of Senators in the&#13;
past.&#13;
Braun also had some favorable comments on the Senate. "Many of&#13;
the new Senators are genuinely interested in helping the students and&#13;
there is now a movement towards Senate reform. Senate stability is&#13;
important and if we can get the good, hard-working Senators to stay,&#13;
we will end up with an experienced, progressive Senate."&#13;
Among the many things Mary hopes to accomplish during her term&#13;
are: clearing up the vague areas in the Constitution, working on&#13;
Senate elections procedures, increasing Senate stability, and&#13;
increasing student involvement be actively seeking student opinions&#13;
and making P5GA offices more accessible to students.&#13;
If you have any questions or comments for Braun, her office hours&#13;
are Monday from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and Thursdav from 2 to 3:30 p.m.&#13;
in WLLC D 193, ext. 2244. She is interested in hearing from all&#13;
students.&#13;
P.A.B. Film Series Presents&#13;
FILMS INCORPORATED&#13;
FRIDAY. APJIL 15 -&#13;
SUIIDAY. APRIL 17&#13;
8:00 p.•.&#13;
1:30 p .•.&#13;
UNION CINEMA THEATRE&#13;
Admission $1.00&#13;
Bring a Friend&#13;
r&#13;
Senior&#13;
recital&#13;
held&#13;
Engineering&#13;
contest&#13;
here&#13;
Parkside's Main Place will&#13;
become an airport at noon on&#13;
Saturday, May 7, as students&#13;
from Wisconsin and Illinois high&#13;
schools compete in the fifth&#13;
annual Engineering Science&#13;
Division Design Contest. This&#13;
year's project: construct a paper&#13;
sail plane and launching system&#13;
designed for maximum flight&#13;
distance.&#13;
The planes must be constructed&#13;
of 8 V2 by 11 inch heavy paper&#13;
(card stock) which contest rules&#13;
stipulate, may be spindled,&#13;
folded or mutilated but may&#13;
NOT be altered in physical or&#13;
chemical properties.&#13;
Launching devices must be&#13;
powered by rubber bands as the&#13;
sole energy source and the total&#13;
cost of materials used may not&#13;
exceed $5.&#13;
Entrants will be supplied with&#13;
"regulation" paper and rubber&#13;
bands.&#13;
The contest will be conducted&#13;
and judged by Parks ide&#13;
engineering science faculty and&#13;
students. First and second place&#13;
prizes will be awarded for flight&#13;
distance and another prize will&#13;
be awarded for creative and&#13;
innovative design. Prizes are&#13;
monetary and will be supplied bv&#13;
the Young Radiator Company of&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Pianist Mary Manulik will&#13;
present her senior recital at 3:30&#13;
p.m. on Sunday, April 17, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Miss Manulik is a student of&#13;
Stephen Swedish.&#13;
Shewill play 32 Variations in C&#13;
Minor by Beethoven, Fantaisie in&#13;
F minor by Chopin, Four&#13;
Preludes by Debussy and Sonata&#13;
No.7 by Prokofiev.&#13;
Student&#13;
concert&#13;
slated&#13;
Student members of Music&#13;
Educators National Conference&#13;
(M.E.NC.) will sponsor the&#13;
fourth annual "New Music"&#13;
concert. The concert, which will&#13;
be held on Thursday, April 14 at&#13;
8 pm, performed by Parkside&#13;
students.&#13;
Students who have worked on&#13;
the program are: Eric Weiss-Brass&#13;
Quintet; Peter Hybert-Serial&#13;
Number; Linda Martin-The&#13;
Journey; Geoffrey StantonFantasie;&#13;
Marge Balazs-Three&#13;
Instrumental Sons; Anthony&#13;
Burke-Matrix; and Paula NovackThree&#13;
Pieces for Flute and Piano.&#13;
These are all students of the&#13;
composition seminar a new&#13;
music course on composition at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
In the future, there is a&#13;
possibility of havmg two&#13;
concerts per year due to the&#13;
large number of works being&#13;
written by students.&#13;
All students are urged to&#13;
attend this concert and see&#13;
Parkside students make their&#13;
contribution to the world of&#13;
,.music. _&#13;
Eden Vaninll, (arol Bell, and Harry Strum comprise the Oriana Trio&#13;
Trio to perform&#13;
The Oriana Trio comprised of&#13;
Carol Bell, piano, Eden Vaning,&#13;
violin, and Harry Sturm, cello,&#13;
will present a free public concert&#13;
featuring works by Turina,&#13;
Shostakovich and Dvorak at 8&#13;
p.m. on Wednesday, April 13, in&#13;
the Commu.ucation Arts Theatre&#13;
at Parkslde.&#13;
The trjo was formed last fall&#13;
when the three artist-teachers&#13;
from different areas of the&#13;
country met at Parks ide.&#13;
Dedicating themselves to taking&#13;
music to the community, they&#13;
have presented more than 20&#13;
mini-concerts this season in area&#13;
schools. Enthusiasm generated&#13;
by the concerts has resulted in&#13;
numerous pictures and letters to&#13;
the group from school children,&#13;
which will be on display in the&#13;
theater gallery during the&#13;
concert.&#13;
Italian-Scandinavian&#13;
Free festival&#13;
An Italian-Scandinavian Festival, designed to&#13;
showcase the cultural heritage of two of&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin's largest ethnic groups, will&#13;
be held at Parkstde in the Union on Sunday, April&#13;
17, from noon to 5:30 p.m.&#13;
The festival will feature the foods, wines, folk&#13;
arts, handcrafts, music, dance, costumes and&#13;
cultural contributions of Italy and the Scandinavian&#13;
countries.&#13;
There is no admission charge for the festival,&#13;
which is sponsored by Parkside in cooperation with&#13;
more than 20 area ethnic and religious groups.&#13;
This weekend&#13;
Music festiva I&#13;
A Contemporary Music Festi- Helen Ceci soprano, Roger&#13;
val including three concerts and Daniels, percussion, JamesDean,&#13;
a series of seminars with the double bass, Carol Irwin,&#13;
Contemporary Music Ensemble mezzo-soprano, Eden Vaning,&#13;
of Northwestern University as violin and Swedish and Wegner,&#13;
visiting artists and Barbara piano.&#13;
Froman-Syverud and Stephen A concert by Northwestern's&#13;
Syverud of NU as visiting Contemporary Ensemble at 8&#13;
composers will be held at the p.m. on Saturday, April 16, in the&#13;
University of Wisconsin- theater directed by Svverud and&#13;
Parkside Thursday through M. William Karlins and including&#13;
Saturday, April 14 through 16. "Icicles" by David Stock, an&#13;
Festival highlights include: improvisation with two syntheA&#13;
concert by the Parkside sizers and acoustic instruments.&#13;
Contemporary Players directed Seminars by Syverud and&#13;
by August Wegner at 8 p.m. on Froman-Svverud on electronic&#13;
Friday, April 15, in the theater music at 8, 10 and na.m. and on&#13;
featuring the premieres of works composition at 9 a.m. on&#13;
by Syverud and John White, Thursday, April 14, and on&#13;
visiting professor at Parkside, as notation of 20th Century music&#13;
well as compositions by Froman- at 8, 10 and 11 a.m. on Friday,&#13;
Syverud, Colin Seamarks, John April 15, all in Communication&#13;
Cage and Charles tves. Members Arts Bldg. Room 105.&#13;
of" the ensemble are Carol Bell, All concerts and seminars are&#13;
piano, Timothy Bell, clarinet, f-reeand open to the public.&#13;
UUIIllIllIIUIIIIIIIUnllllnIIIllUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIU .. IIIIIUIIlIlIUUIIMIU&#13;
DINO'S&#13;
1816 16th St. 3728 Douglas&#13;
Racine Racine&#13;
634-1991 639-7115&#13;
WE DELIVER&#13;
Open 4:00 p,m. till one hour after&#13;
taverns close&#13;
UIIIIIIUIUIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIUIUIHMMIIl"IIIIIIIUIIII __ I~~UHtI~_.&#13;
eve nt stt&#13;
Shakespeare seminarscheduled&#13;
Three intemanonallv-known Shakespeare scholars&#13;
and teachers and students of Shakespeare from&#13;
a three-state area will gather at Parkstde Union on&#13;
Saturday, April 23, from 9 a m to 4 30 pm for a&#13;
symposium on "Teaching Shakespeare," The&#13;
registration deadline IStoday&#13;
Principal speaker will be Samuel Schoenbaum,&#13;
distinguished professor of English at the University&#13;
of Maryland, whose books Include "Wilham&#13;
Shakespeare A Documentary Life," "A New&#13;
Companion to Shakespeare Studies," and&#13;
"Shakespeare's lives," for which he received the&#13;
Friends of literature non-ncnon award for 1970 He&#13;
has been a VISIting scholar at a number of US&#13;
institutions and at King's College of the University&#13;
of London and is on the executive boards of&#13;
"Shakespeare Quarterly" and the "Vanorurn&#13;
Shakespeare"&#13;
Other featured speakers Will be Donald Skoller,&#13;
chairman of the film department at&#13;
UW-Milwaukee and author of "Problems of&#13;
Transformation in the Adaption of Shakespeare to&#13;
Cinema," and louis Marder, editor of the&#13;
"Shakespeare Newsletter" and author of "HIS Exits&#13;
and Entrances' The Story of Shakespear's&#13;
Reputation .:&#13;
NOW IN •.•&#13;
UNION&#13;
SQUARE&#13;
PITCHER BEER&#13;
$150&#13;
254; OFF during&#13;
Happy Hour&#13;
Fridays 3-6&#13;
PITCHER SODA&#13;
$120&#13;
$1.00 Deposit on Pitcher.&#13;
'Ilevents&#13;
Typing done. Reasonable rates. Call Mona 1 Wednesday, April 13 at 553-2295 or contact the RANGER office.&#13;
Musica Primavera .from 12 noon to 2 p.rn . in Mid Main Place.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
PAD Coffee house presents Mark Heller from 2 to 4 p-rn. in Union&#13;
Square.&#13;
Movie: "Claudine" at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Student Concert at 3 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
Softball game vs. Milwaukee Tech (2) and 4 p.rn. at Pets.&#13;
Concert: Oriana Trio. Eden Vaning, violin; Harry Sturm, cello; Carol&#13;
Bell, piano; at 8 p.rn. in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
Thursday, April 14&#13;
Softball game vs. Wright). C. (2) at 1 p.m. at Pets.&#13;
Movie: "Claudine" at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Music Educators National Conference (MENC) Annual Concert of&#13;
Student Composition at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
Friday, April 15&#13;
Earth Science Club Colloquium: "Laramide Structures and Basement&#13;
Block Faulting: Two Examples From the Bighorn Mountains,&#13;
Montana" by John Palmquist, Lawrence Col1egeat 12 noon in CR&#13;
113, Coffee and donuts will be served.&#13;
Chemistry..J.ife Science Seminar Series Lecture: "Harvesting the Sun's&#13;
Energy: a Biological Approach" by Dr. Shen-Miller, Division of&#13;
Biology and Biomedical Research, Argonne National Laboratory, at&#13;
2 p.m. in CL 105.&#13;
USTFF State Decathlon Championships at 2 p.m. at the track .... Iso&#13;
April 16.&#13;
Concert: Parkside Contemporary Players, August Wegner, director,&#13;
featuring premiere of work by Stephen Syverud, guest composer,&#13;
at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts. Theater.&#13;
Movie: "The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother" at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema, Admission $1.00.&#13;
Saturday, April 16&#13;
Men's Tennis vs. III. Ben. at 9:30 a.m. at the Tennis Courts.&#13;
Vet's Club Pike River Clean-up at 8 a.m.&#13;
Track Team Invitational at 11 a.m. at the Track.&#13;
Baseball game vs. UW-Stevens Point (2) at 12 noon at the field.&#13;
Young People's Concert featuring Stephen Swedish, piano at 2 p.m .&#13;
in the Comm Arts Theater. Admission $2.00 for.adults. $1.00 for&#13;
students.&#13;
Concert: Northwestern Contemporary Music Croup, Stephen Syverud&#13;
and M. William Karlins, co-directors. at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Classified For 58le: Morbtocn accordion. 120 Bass,&#13;
like new. Under $200.554-7748.&#13;
CB radios, public service monitor scanners,&#13;
TV and stereo equipment, electronics, all at&#13;
rock bottom prices. John. 554-6635.&#13;
Important Study Abroad Announcement:&#13;
APPLICATIONS NOW BEING ACCEPTED&#13;
for Summer 1977 and Academic Year&#13;
1977-78 for MOSCOW, LENINGRAD,&#13;
LONDON, PARiS, DIJON, NICE, SALAMANCA,&#13;
VIENNA, FLORENCE, PERUGIA,&#13;
GENEVA, COPENHAGEN, AMSTERDAM.&#13;
All subjects lor all stcoents in good&#13;
standing. Accredited university courses. 4,&#13;
6, a-week summer terms or quarter,&#13;
semester, full year terms. Summer from&#13;
$710. Year term from $1590. CONTACT:&#13;
CENTER FOR FOREIGN STUDY, SlAY&#13;
Admissions-Dept. M, 216 S, StateIBox606,&#13;
Ann Arbor, Michigan 48107, 313-662-5575.&#13;
Typing done by experienced typist. Just 5&#13;
minutes from Parkside. '-Gall sandy at&#13;
554-6251.&#13;
~ouse for Rent: Summer months, fully&#13;
furnished. $175 a month. Gall 658-2313 or&#13;
654-5882. Ask for Mr. Campbell,&#13;
Need extra cnh? Student keypunch&#13;
operators needed for part-time jobs in a&#13;
keypunch pool at UW-Parkside. One job&#13;
available immediately. Please call Laurlrl&#13;
Gehrig, Comm Arts 120, ext. 2383.&#13;
JOB HUNTING SECRET /111:&#13;
Hiring decisions are not based on&#13;
qualifications, They never have been, and&#13;
they never will be. The major factor in hiring&#13;
is body chemistry - the image the&#13;
candidate projects, the vibrations the&#13;
candidate emits - charisma, not&#13;
qualifications.&#13;
From the book JOB HUNTING SECRETS &amp;&#13;
TACTICS by Kirby Stanat, who has hired&#13;
over 8,000 people. Get the competitive edge&#13;
you need in this economy before you&#13;
graduate. Available from the University&#13;
Bookstore for $4.95. Kirby Stanat will speak&#13;
and answer questions about job hunting on&#13;
Wednesday, April 27, at 800 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema Theater.&#13;
Classified Ad Charges&#13;
Free: Student ads, 20 words or under.tor&#13;
one-lime run. (25 cents charge for&#13;
- every additional 10 words or under.)&#13;
$ .50: For each additional running after the&#13;
first time.&#13;
$1.00: Non-student ads, 20 words or under&#13;
per issue. (25 cents charge for every&#13;
additional 10 words or under.)&#13;
To place a classified ad phone 553-2295.&#13;
Roommate Wanted: Share half of two&#13;
bedroom furnished apartment. Includes&#13;
basement, garden trees. 5 miles away.&#13;
$95.00 plus utilities. Call Jeremiah,&#13;
552-9034.&#13;
~******************~************ iMusica Primavera!&#13;
# Wednesday, April 13 !&#13;
* . * : 12 2 Mam Place #&#13;
I -FREE i&#13;
t******************************~&#13;
Join The&#13;
Celebration&#13;
April 29th, 30th&#13;
May 1st&#13;
Stelte iob&#13;
information&#13;
The Wisconsin Bureau of&#13;
Personnel will be on campus to&#13;
discuss the state's job positions&#13;
to May and August graduates in&#13;
an information session on April&#13;
18 in WLLC D 173. The sessions&#13;
will be held at 11 a.m . and at&#13;
1:15 p.m.&#13;
Sunday, April 17&#13;
Italian-Scandinavian Festival during the day in the Union.&#13;
Student Concert: Mary Manulik, piano, at 3:30 p.m. in the Comm&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
Vet's Club Meeting at 4 p.m. in WLLC D 174.&#13;
Movie: "The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother" at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Monday, April 18&#13;
Student Art Show in the Comm Arts Gallery. Mondays thru&#13;
Thursdays, 12 noon till 5 p.m., Tuesdays and Wednesdays, 7 to 10.&#13;
p.m. Thru May 11.&#13;
April 8. 1977&#13;
TO: ALL ACADEMIC STAFF&#13;
FROM: ACADEMIC STAFF DIST1NGUISHED SERVICE AWARD COMMITTEE&#13;
Carla Stoffle, Chairperson, Larry L. Duetsch, O. Clayton Johnson,&#13;
Walter Shirer, Charles Tinder, President, Student Government 'Association&#13;
Tuesday I April 19&#13;
Baseball game vs. Milton (2) at 1 p.m. at the Field.&#13;
Tennis Meet vs. Carroll at 1 p.m. at the Courts.&#13;
All events are due in to the RANGER by the Wednesday before&#13;
publication. An events form is now available in the RANGER office.&#13;
SUBJECT: NCMINATIONS FOR ACADEMIC STAFF DISTINGUISHED SERVICE AWARD&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin has established four awards of $500 each to be awarded ......is&#13;
Spring: two for faculty teaching excellence, one to a faculty member for Ccmn.um ty&#13;
Outreach, and one to an Academic Staff member for "Exemplary Unlvers1cy serv ..._'E:.1t&#13;
The above named selection committee has been established by the Academic Sta~~ Committee&#13;
and the Chancellor to establish criteria, invite nominations and sele~L d&#13;
recipient. Should a member of the selection committee become a candidate foY th~&#13;
award, he/she will resig~ from the committee.&#13;
ELIGIBIL1TY&#13;
Any Parkside employee or student may nominate any Academic Staff member~&#13;
CRITERIA&#13;
Criteria will be especially distinguished service which demonstrably benefits th~&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parks ide or the Parks ide campus community, anc which exceeds&#13;
the required performance of his/her normal duties or job responsibili~y at the Uhiversity,&#13;
i.e., "above and beyond the call of duty~1I&#13;
Further, it is expected that such distinguished service would be related to his/her&#13;
professional training; could have been ~ significant activity or service or a patt~?n&#13;
of exemplary service over the years at Parkside; and could have been performec or&#13;
ccomplished on and/or off campus~&#13;
April 21,1977&#13;
PROCEDURE FOR NO!llNATING&#13;
(1) Nominations should be sent by letter to Chairperson, Academic Staff Distinguished&#13;
Service Committee, WLLC, Dll5~&#13;
(2) Nominations must include (a) name,' title and occupational unit of the nornLnee (b)&#13;
complete description of the distinguished performance (c) benefit to Parks ide of the&#13;
distingUished performance (d) time period over which the distinguished performan~e&#13;
occurred (e) other persons who could support or elaborate on the distinguish~d performance&#13;
(f) your name, title and relationship, 1f any, to the nominee~ .&#13;
(3) Supporting docum~nts, tangible evidence, etc., would be appropriate.&#13;
(4) Deadline for nominations is Friday. April 22. 4:30 p.m.&#13;
(5) Persons who are nominated will be notified and may be asked for further informatio&#13;
(6) The recipient will be announced and recognized at an appropriate occasion sometime)&#13;
bef6re Ma.~ 23.&#13;
,l~~~~~~~_~":",,,,~==~~~~~~~~&#13;
Film/51"&#13;
Displays&#13;
Discussion&#13;
Literature&#13;
&amp; n&#13;
Admission&#13;
Reservations: 554·2154</text>
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