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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Breadth proposal reaches policies committee&#13;
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            <text>Volume 5, issue 27</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>\&#13;
Wednesday, April 27, 1977&#13;
Vol. 5, No. 27&#13;
er Survival ,.. not pos-able If one&#13;
approac hcv hi" environment. the&#13;
'&gt;0&lt; ral drama, wuh a Irxed&#13;
une h.lngpablp pomt of vrew -&#13;
lilt' wnh- .....repeutrve r(~SI)Qn'tE" to&#13;
ttu- unuerc orved&#13;
- Marshall McLuhan&#13;
Breadth proposal reaches&#13;
academic policies committee&#13;
by Philip l. Livingston&#13;
Last Wednesday, April 20, the academic policies&#13;
committe-e met to discuss the breadth requirement&#13;
proposal. A new rewritten report was submitted by&#13;
breadth committee chairman, james H. Shea,&#13;
Professor of Earth Science. The report contained&#13;
vorne rational torthe requirements.&#13;
Ihe proposal states:&#13;
Each student must complete at least six credits&#13;
In each 01 the six specified "breadth areas" The&#13;
"Breadth areas" are as follows:&#13;
1. Behavioral Science&#13;
2. Business Management, engineering Science and&#13;
Technology, computers, Mathematics&#13;
3. Fine Arts&#13;
4. Humanities&#13;
S. Natural Science&#13;
b. Social Science&#13;
Note 1. "'flJ(l('nt~ with a major requiring 80 or more&#13;
I&#13;
J&#13;
~&#13;
(rpdit\ are required to complete six credits in each&#13;
0/ thrpf' breadth areas and three credits in each of&#13;
two breadth oreas. Progrems to whose swdents&#13;
thl\ r uio appfie~ mu~r as/.. the Breadth&#13;
Subcommittee to so de~ignate.&#13;
Note 2. S/udenb majoring in a program&#13;
automatically meet the requiremenf for the&#13;
hrC'adrh area which includes that program.'&#13;
Nota J. A~ a genera/rule, any single course offered&#13;
by d program can only contribute toward meeting&#13;
the reqUirement of a single breadth area.&#13;
Note 4. Ihe education Division can petition to&#13;
ha\ (&gt; cour se , count toward fulfil/ing the&#13;
rf'Quirpment in relevant breadth areas. If the&#13;
i.ducetion Di\/~ion petitions to have one or more&#13;
of it~ cour~es count toward fulfilling the&#13;
requirement tn a given breadth area, the&#13;
coordinators of programs in that breadth area must&#13;
hf' notified and given an opportunity to speak to&#13;
thf' i.':&gt;!&gt;uc before actIOn is taken.&#13;
Ihi'l mean':&gt; that f.ducauon, unlike other&#13;
dJ\ 1'1100'1, can pelltton to have different courses&#13;
cOllnt In ddferent breadth areas Student seekmg&#13;
cC'rr"i&lt;'i,Hlon as teachers, hOlAever, cannot count&#13;
coorvcs taken to meet certtl,catlOn reqUIrements&#13;
to\'\ard meetmg the breadth requirement The&#13;
purpme of (hI' rule ;~ to Ifl~ure that sucb students,&#13;
no tovv than othef'&gt;, take courses from many&#13;
different breadth area~ and thus fuff'" the&#13;
ouroosev 01 the breadth reqUIrement&#13;
The acadern«, polrcres ccrnrnutee ....111decide on&#13;
whether to send It to the senate, In what form, at a&#13;
later date&#13;
Anyone Interested In rnvesttgattng the entire&#13;
report can do 0,0 at the Information desk ot the&#13;
IIbrar.,.&#13;
Today. WE"dnesday, Aprtl 27. the academiC&#13;
poliCIes committee will diSCUSS the controversial&#13;
academiC adVISing proposal (declaratIOn of malor&#13;
after 30 credits, faculty academiC counselmg. etc)&#13;
dnd the breadth proposal at 2·00 pm .. In GR-344A&#13;
Weyerhaeuser executives visit Parkside&#13;
related stories on pages 3 and 4&#13;
•&#13;
Players present 'Celebration'&#13;
more photographs on pages 6 &amp; 7&#13;
David Powell, Peter Hall, Terry Kehoss, Jody Jone~ Susan Wishon, Mary Jo Curty, Cindy Haberstadt, Fred Schoepke, Mark&#13;
Miller, Carol Knutson, and Donna Linde prepare for this weekend's 'Celebration'.&#13;
~I&#13;
er&#13;
Wednesday , April 27, 1977&#13;
Vol. 5, No. 27 tir\ t ,11 " not po ,,bit 11 om•&#13;
,1ppru,H he h" (•n 1ronm •n t, th,• &lt;i)~&#13;
,m tctl clrc1ma, with a ft l'CI,&#13;
un&lt; h,1n1,wc1bl&lt;• point ul t •w&#13;
tlw .-.1th•" repet1t1vc• rc•,pon, to I tht' unpnc c•1.PCI&#13;
Breadth proposal· reaches&#13;
academic policies committee&#13;
by Philip l. Livingston&#13;
Lc1,t Wednesday , April 20, the academic poli c ies&#13;
c omm1tt PP me t to disc uss the bre&lt;;!dth requ ireme nt&#13;
pro po,a l. A new re written re port wa s submitted by&#13;
breadth committee c hairman , James H . Shea,&#13;
Pro ie,~o r of Ea rth Sc ie nce . The report contai ned&#13;
\Onw rat io na l fo r'the requireme nts.&#13;
l ht&gt; p ropo~a l sta tes:&#13;
1:ac h ~tudent must compl ete at least six credits&#13;
1n Pac h ot the six specified "breadth a reas." The&#13;
"Hrt&gt;adt h a reas " a re as fo llows:&#13;
1. Behavioral Science&#13;
2. Business Management, engineering Science and&#13;
Technology , computers, Mathematics&#13;
J. Fine Arts&#13;
Humanities&#13;
Natural Science&#13;
Social Science&#13;
Note 1. '&gt;rud('nl\ with a ma1or requiring 80 or more&#13;
c r('c /it , are required to complete six credits in each&#13;
o / three breadth areas and three credit ,n each of&#13;
,..,.,o breadth areas. Programs to who e students&#13;
thh ruff' applies must as/.. the Breadt h&#13;
'iubcommitlee to o designate.&#13;
Note 2 . Studen ts ma1or, ng in a program&#13;
.iutomatic_al/y meet the reqwrement for the&#13;
brf'adth area which include that program:&#13;
Not 3. A~ a general rule. any single course offered&#13;
by a program can only contribute toward meeting&#13;
the reqwrement of a single breadth area.&#13;
Note 4. I he tducation Div1s1on can petition to&#13;
ha\ f' cour-f', count toward fulfilling the&#13;
rPqwrf'ment ,n relevant breadth areas. If the&#13;
lducat,on D1\1s.1on petitions to have one or more&#13;
at its cour es count toward fulfilftng the&#13;
rf'qwrement ,n a gn en breadth area, the&#13;
coord,nators of programs in that breadth area must&#13;
hf' not,i,ed and given an opportunity to pea/.. to&#13;
thf' ,,,ue before action is ta/..en .&#13;
I h,, meam that tiiucar,on. unlike oth r&#13;
c/1\1\/om . can pet111on to ha-.,, differ nt cour&#13;
count ,n different breadth ar as tudenl e ,ng&#13;
cf'rt,1,cat,on as teac:hNs, hov, e\er. cannot count&#13;
couf\e, ta/..en to mef't ~ertd, auon requ,r ment&#13;
ro"ard meeting the breadth reqwrement . The&#13;
purpo,e oi th,, rule i to ,mure that uch stud nt ,&#13;
no le,, than oth(•rs, ta e courses from man&#13;
d,tfNent breadth areas. and thu fulf1/I th&#13;
purpo e, 01 the breadth requ1rement .&#13;
The academic poltc1e, omm1tt e \\Ill dec1dt&gt; on&#13;
\'\hether to end tt to the&#13;
later date&#13;
An\one 1ntere~ted 1n in. ,t1i,:ating th&#13;
report can do ,o at the information d ,k&#13;
ltbrar&#13;
Today, \ edn ,day, April 27 , the a adpm1c&#13;
poltete, committee will d1 CU\ th controv r\lal&#13;
academic ad\ l\tng propo al (d larat1on of ma1or&#13;
aiter m credit • facult academ, oun elmg, etc )&#13;
and the breadth propo\al at 2 00 pm . tn R·J44A&#13;
Weyerhaeuser executives visit Parkside&#13;
related st ries on pages 3 and 4&#13;
Players present 'Celebration'&#13;
more photographs on pages 6 &amp; 7&#13;
David Powell, Peter Hall, Terry Kehoss, Jody Jone~ Susan Wishon, Mary Jo Curty, Cindy Haberstadt, Fred Schoepke, Mark&#13;
Miller, Carol Knutson , and Donna Linde prepare for this weekend's 'Celebration'.&#13;
• &#13;
Inews /&#13;
Parkside life science professor&#13;
Joseph Bal sano has been&#13;
awarded a $35,000 grant from&#13;
the National Science Foundation&#13;
to continue his studies of the&#13;
evolutionary biology of an&#13;
unusual species of small&#13;
unisexual fish in which all&#13;
offspring are female.&#13;
Balsano, who has been&#13;
studying various aspects of the&#13;
species, Poecilie formosa, since&#13;
the mid-1960's, points out that&#13;
the species is particularly&#13;
valuable for genetic research. It&#13;
is unusually useful for study 'of&#13;
endocrinology, 'genetics, blood&#13;
compatibility and tumor induction&#13;
because, it exhibits the&#13;
combinatlo- 01 all-fema'ieness&#13;
Inheritance .ilelv through th~&#13;
female and a clonal&#13;
population structure in which all&#13;
daughters are genetic reproductions&#13;
of their mothers.&#13;
The species also is useful in&#13;
the study of various mechanisms&#13;
that increase growth rates in fish&#13;
populations as well as the&#13;
influence of environmental&#13;
contaminants on growth and&#13;
reproduction in fishes. Both of&#13;
these areas have pote,ntial&#13;
significance for developing&#13;
commercial fisheries, Balsano&#13;
points out.&#13;
Poecefia formosa reproduces&#13;
Students react to&#13;
30 credit proposal&#13;
Balsano receives&#13;
unisexual grant&#13;
by mating with males of two&#13;
other species of Poecelia but the&#13;
males do not contribute to the&#13;
heredity of the offspring.&#13;
The aspects of the on-going&#13;
study which Balsano will pursue&#13;
under the current two-year NSF&#13;
grant include refining methods&#13;
of identification of specimens by&#13;
species, tissue transplantation&#13;
studies, protein variability problems,&#13;
and additional field&#13;
studies in the species' native&#13;
Mexican habitat.&#13;
Balsano said the tissue&#13;
transplantation studies have&#13;
significance because initial work&#13;
has indicated that transplantation&#13;
immunity in these fish&#13;
appears to be as hig~ly&#13;
developed as it is in mammals.&#13;
The transplantation approach is&#13;
used to determine the genetic&#13;
relationships among various&#13;
pedigrees of Poecefia formosa.&#13;
The protein studies will be&#13;
aimed at seeking an explanation&#13;
of a genetic abnormality,&#13;
tnplodv. common to Poecelia&#13;
formosa in which three geneticallv&#13;
distinct sets of chromosomes&#13;
occur in the same&#13;
organism. Normally, only two&#13;
sets of chromosomes occur in an&#13;
individual. The question under&#13;
study is: Where did the third set&#13;
come from?&#13;
In addition to Poecelia&#13;
specimens gathered In field&#13;
studies, Balsano's research uses a&#13;
breeding colony of more than&#13;
2,000 of the minnow-size (about&#13;
2 inches long) fish. They are&#13;
maintained at Parkside in 270&#13;
aquariums of 5 to 30 gallons&#13;
each plus 160 one gallon fish&#13;
bowls used to isolate specimens&#13;
used in transplant studies,&#13;
Balsano's previous work has&#13;
been conducted with Marquette&#13;
biology professor Ellen Rasch,&#13;
who will continue to collaborate&#13;
on the study. The research also is&#13;
being coordinated with work by&#13;
researchers at the Philadelphia&#13;
Academy .of Natural Sciences,&#13;
Rutgers University, Samford&#13;
University, lawrence University&#13;
and the University of Michigan&#13;
Museum of Zoology.&#13;
The proposal presented to the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee by&#13;
its Subcommittee on Academic&#13;
Advising requiring every student&#13;
to declare a major or major area&#13;
of interest upon the completion&#13;
of 30 credits has drawn a little&#13;
discussion from students and&#13;
faculty alike.&#13;
Others took a different view.&#13;
"This adds a little discipline that&#13;
some students need to get going&#13;
and get out of school in four&#13;
years," said Mary· Braun,&#13;
freshman, political science&#13;
major.&#13;
"In all intents and purposes it&#13;
helps to give the student an idea&#13;
of about where he is headed. I&#13;
think that some of the criticism&#13;
about it is really overdone.&#13;
People don't understand the full&#13;
impact of what it's about. It is&#13;
more of .a help than it is a&#13;
determent," said John Gabriel.&#13;
It was also mentioned&#13;
students, who wished to remain&#13;
anonymous, that the proposal&#13;
will cause "a bunch of wasted&#13;
paperwork, going through the&#13;
whole process of making sure&#13;
that everyone has declared their&#13;
major and then sending them&#13;
notices telling them that they&#13;
haven't declared yet." By&#13;
requiring that students declare a&#13;
major when they are unsure of&#13;
what they really want to do will&#13;
possibly force students to follow&#13;
a certain line of courses while&#13;
they are still trying to find&#13;
something that they're really&#13;
interested in, according to&#13;
students.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
.Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sand.ich&#13;
OPEN8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington /We. 634-2373&#13;
Parkside's archives has your roots&#13;
Necrology, a microfilm edition of 51 volumes of&#13;
selected newspaper obituaries of 24 500&#13;
Wisconsinites dating from 1846 to 1944· 'and&#13;
naturalization records from seve"'ral' area&#13;
municipalities.&#13;
Burckel pointed out that these sources provide a&#13;
rich lode for persons tracing immigrant ancestors.&#13;
The earliest of the census yield, in addition to&#13;
individual names and addresses, such information&#13;
as number of free white males in several broad age&#13;
categories, foreigners not naturalized, slaves and&#13;
"free colored persons" and deaf ..dumb, blind and&#13;
insane. By 1850, census takers added questions as&#13;
to literacy and numbers of paupers and convicts,&#13;
In 1860, individuals were required to give the&#13;
value of real estate owned as well as occupation or&#13;
trade, place of birth and whether parents were&#13;
foreign born.&#13;
Naturalization records of Racine County, dating&#13;
from the Wisconsin territorial period to the&#13;
post-World War II era, make it possible to trace the&#13;
history of immigrants and immigration in the area&#13;
Burckel said. '&#13;
, The center .also has a number of free brochures&#13;
outlining methods of genealogical research as well&#13;
as resources on the local,. state and national levels.&#13;
The publications available include a basic guide to&#13;
genealog~cal research which contains a family tree&#13;
chart which can be filled out by persons tracing&#13;
their ancestries.&#13;
Researchers ranging from scholarly historians to&#13;
family history buffs gain a rich new resource for&#13;
their inquiries and the Racine County Court House&#13;
gains needed storage space with the transfer of&#13;
nearly 500 volumes of tax rolls for the city of Racine&#13;
and county towns and villages to the Area Research&#13;
Center at the University of Wisconsjn-Parkside&#13;
Archives.&#13;
University Archivist Nicholas C. Burckel said he&#13;
believes the collection, dating from statehood in&#13;
1848 to 1961, is probably the onlv continuous run of&#13;
a single county's tax rolls available at any of the 13&#13;
centers operated as cooperative projects of the&#13;
State Historical Society and tour-year campuses of&#13;
the UW System. By law, the County Treasurer&#13;
retains the most recent 15 years of tax rolls.&#13;
The Research Center at Parkside has already&#13;
acquired all Kenosha County tax rolls prior to 1900'&#13;
and those for every fifth year since through 1955.&#13;
Burckel said tax records are of great value to&#13;
researchers interested in local history, family&#13;
history and genealogy as'well as those tracing the&#13;
history of individual buildings. Tax rolls often are&#13;
the on lv source of information about older&#13;
structures and are useful in tracing family estate&#13;
holdings, he said.&#13;
Other center resources available to researchers&#13;
include indexes to Wisconsin decennial censuses&#13;
from 1820 to 1880; the special census of 1890 and&#13;
the Wisconsin State Census of 1905; Wisconsin&#13;
Fine Rrts Division and Dramatic Brts Discipline&#13;
present&#13;
CELEBRATION&#13;
a musical fable&#13;
words by Tom Jones&#13;
music by Hafvey Schmidt&#13;
April 29, 30&#13;
8:00&#13;
Communicotion&#13;
ond&#13;
pm&#13;
Arts&#13;
mo'y 1&#13;
Theotre&#13;
$2.00 Students. Senior Citizens, UW-Parkside&#13;
Faculty and Stoff&#13;
$3.00 General Public&#13;
Tickets ore cvcucb!e ct&#13;
Union Informo.tlon Kiosk&#13;
REMINDS&#13;
YOU:&#13;
featuring: P.A.B.&#13;
OUT Writers&#13;
Bob Hoftman, Chris Clausen, Michael Murphy&#13;
. Fred Tenuta, Thomas Nolen. Karen Putm&#13;
T.'mothy J. Zuehtsdorf, Bob Jambois, Jami L:Mar&#13;
Linda Lasco. Douglas Edenhauser, Phil Hermann&#13;
Cheryl Powalisz '&#13;
Photograph,'''\-&#13;
Leanne Dillingham&#13;
E.dit&lt;&gt;rPhilip L. Livingston 5K~.2295&#13;
Art DU'e-ctor Jo.) -&#13;
Copy r::d~to! 8ruce Wagner&#13;
New s EdItor John McKloskey&#13;
Featur&lt;, Editor Mona Maillet&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Circulation Sue Marquardt&#13;
ucn\c'ra.l Mana..g(~rThomas R C&#13;
Advertisinl! Mana!!"r John Gab: I~"sper 553·:&lt;287&#13;
, Advertising Sal""s rre ;)·2287&#13;
Ranger is ~ritten and edit d b&#13;
University of Wisconsin Pa. ke'd y students of the&#13;
responsible for its e~it r. 51' e I~nd they are solely&#13;
orla po ICy and content,&#13;
SAT. NIGHT:&#13;
c::Rio &amp; d!ea.'Z.tj.hin9j.&#13;
SUN. NIGHT:&#13;
~ynod &amp; CWHfiu.&#13;
A SUNDAY&#13;
AFTERNOON SPECIAL:&#13;
A O{@NO SHOWI&#13;
,lnews&#13;
Students react to&#13;
30 credit proposal&#13;
The proposal presented to the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee by&#13;
its Subcommittee on Academic&#13;
Advising requiring every student&#13;
to declare a major or major area&#13;
of interest upon the completion&#13;
of 30 credits has drawn a little&#13;
discussion from students and&#13;
faculty alike.&#13;
Others took a different view.&#13;
"This adds a little discipline that&#13;
some students need to get going&#13;
and get out of school in four&#13;
years," said Mary • Braun,&#13;
freshman, political science&#13;
major.&#13;
"In all intents and purposes it&#13;
helps to give the student an idea&#13;
of about where he is headed. I&#13;
think that some of the criticism&#13;
about it is really overdone.&#13;
People don't understand the full&#13;
impact of what it's about. It is&#13;
more of a help than it is a&#13;
determent," said John Gabriel.&#13;
It was also mentioned&#13;
students, who wished to rema'in&#13;
anonymous, that the proposal&#13;
will cause "a bunch of wasted&#13;
paperwork, going through the&#13;
whole process of making sure&#13;
that everyone has declared their&#13;
major and then sending them&#13;
notices telling them that they&#13;
haven't declared yet." By&#13;
requiring that students declare a&#13;
major when they are unsure of&#13;
what they really want to do will&#13;
possibly force students to follow&#13;
a certain line of courses while&#13;
they are still trying to find&#13;
something that they're really&#13;
interested in, according to&#13;
students .&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
· Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington /1,/e. 634--2373&#13;
Fine Arts Division ond Dromotic Arts Discipline&#13;
present&#13;
CELEBRATION&#13;
o musicol foble&#13;
words by Tom Jones&#13;
music by Horvey Schmidt&#13;
April 2Q, 30&#13;
8:00&#13;
Communicotion&#13;
ond&#13;
pm&#13;
Arts&#13;
moy 1&#13;
Theotre&#13;
$2.00 Students, Senior Citizens, UW-Porkside&#13;
Foculty ond Stoff&#13;
$3.00 Generol Public&#13;
Tickets ore ovolloble ot&#13;
Union lnformotlon Kiosk&#13;
P.A.B. REMINDS&#13;
YOU:&#13;
Parkside life science professor&#13;
Joseph Balsano has been&#13;
awarded a $35,000 grant from&#13;
the National Science Foundation&#13;
to continue his studies of the&#13;
evolutionary biology of an&#13;
unusual species of small&#13;
unisexual fish in which all&#13;
offspring are female.&#13;
Balsano, who ha.s been&#13;
studying various aspects of the&#13;
species, Poecilia formosa, since&#13;
the mid-1%0's, points out that&#13;
the species is particularly&#13;
valuable for genetic research. It&#13;
is unusually useful for study ·of&#13;
endocrinology, ·genetics, blood&#13;
compatibility and tumor induction&#13;
because, it exhibits the&#13;
combinatio• 0.f all-femaleness&#13;
inheritancr )lely through th~&#13;
female 1 and a clonal&#13;
population structure in which all&#13;
daughters are genetic reproductions&#13;
of their mothers.&#13;
The species also is useful in&#13;
the study of various mechanisms&#13;
that increase growth rates in fish&#13;
populations as well as the&#13;
influence of environmental&#13;
contaminants on growth and&#13;
reproduction in fishes . Both of&#13;
these areas have pote,ntial&#13;
significance for developing&#13;
commercial fisheries, Balsano&#13;
points out.&#13;
Poecelia formosa reproduces&#13;
/&#13;
Balsano receives&#13;
unisexual grant&#13;
by mating with' males of two&#13;
other species of Poecelia but the&#13;
males do not contribute to the&#13;
heredity of the offspring.&#13;
The aspects of the on-going&#13;
study which Balsano will pursue&#13;
under the current two-year NSF&#13;
grant include refining methods&#13;
of identification of specimens by&#13;
species, tissue transplantation&#13;
studies, protein variability problems,&#13;
and additional field&#13;
studies in the species' native&#13;
Mexican habitat.&#13;
Balsano said the tissue&#13;
transplantation studies have&#13;
significance because initial work&#13;
has indicated that transplantation&#13;
immunity in these fish&#13;
appears to be as highly&#13;
developed as it is in mammals.&#13;
The transplantation approach is&#13;
used to determine the genetic&#13;
relationships among various&#13;
pedigrees of Poecelia formosa .&#13;
The protein studies will be&#13;
aimed at seeking an explanation&#13;
of a genetic abnormality,&#13;
triplody, common to Poecelia&#13;
formosa in which three genetically&#13;
distinct sets of chromosomes&#13;
occur in the same&#13;
organism. Normally, only two&#13;
sets of chromosomes occur in an&#13;
individual. The question under&#13;
study is: Where did the third set&#13;
come from?&#13;
In ad~ition to Poecelia&#13;
specimens gathered in field&#13;
studies, Balsano's research uses a&#13;
breeding colony of more than&#13;
2,000 of the minnow-size (about&#13;
2 inches long) fish. They are&#13;
maintained at Parkside in 270&#13;
aquariums of 5 to 30 gallons&#13;
each plus 160 one gallon fish&#13;
bowls used to isolate specimens&#13;
used in transplant studies.&#13;
Balsano's previous work has&#13;
beea conducted with Marquette&#13;
biology professor Ellen Rasch,&#13;
who will continue to collaborate&#13;
on the study. The research also is&#13;
being coordinated with work by&#13;
researchers at the Philadelphia&#13;
Academy of Natural Sciences,&#13;
Rutgers University, Samford&#13;
University, Lawrence University&#13;
and the University of Michigan&#13;
Museum of Zoology .&#13;
Parkside's archives has your roots&#13;
Researchers ranging from scholarly historians to&#13;
family history buffs gain a rich new resource for&#13;
their inquiries and the Racine County Court House&#13;
gains needed storage space with the transfer of&#13;
nearly 500 volumes of tax rolls for the city of Racine&#13;
and county towns and villages to the Area Research&#13;
Center at the University of Wiscons·n-Parkside&#13;
Archives.&#13;
Necrology, a microfilm edition of 51 volumes of&#13;
selec ted newspaper obituaries of 24,500&#13;
_Wisconsinites dating from 1846 to 1944· and&#13;
naturalization records from seve-ral ' area&#13;
municipalities.&#13;
Burckel pointed out that these sources provide a&#13;
rich lode for persons tracing immigrant ancestors.&#13;
The earliest of the census yield, in addition to&#13;
individual names and addresses, such information&#13;
as number of free white males in several broad age&#13;
categories, foreigners not naturalized, slaves and&#13;
"free colored persons" and deaf, dumb, blind and&#13;
insane. By 1850, census takers added questions as&#13;
to literacy and numbers of paupers and convicts.&#13;
University Archivist Nicholas C. Burckel said he&#13;
believes the collection, dating from statehood in&#13;
1848 to 1961, is probably the only continuous run of&#13;
a single county's tax rolls available at any of the 13&#13;
centers operated as cooperative projects of the&#13;
State Historical Society and four-year campuses of&#13;
the UW System . By law, the County Treasurer&#13;
retains the most recent 15 years of tax rolls.&#13;
The Research Center at Parkside has already&#13;
acquired all Kenosha County tax rolls prior to 1900&#13;
and those for every fifth year since through 1955.&#13;
Burckel said tax records are of great value to&#13;
researchers interested in local history, family&#13;
history and genealogy as-well as those tracing the&#13;
history of individual buildings . Tax rolls often are&#13;
the only source of information about older&#13;
structures and are useful in tracing family estate&#13;
holdings, he said.&#13;
Other center resources available to researchers&#13;
include indexes to Wisconsin decennial censuses&#13;
from 1820 to 1880; the special census of 1890 and&#13;
the Wisconsin State Census of 1905; Wisconsin&#13;
featuring:&#13;
In 1860, individuals were required to give the&#13;
value of real estate owned as well as occupation or&#13;
trade, place of birth and whether parents were&#13;
foreign born.&#13;
Naturalization records of Racine County, dating&#13;
from the Wisconsin territorial period to the&#13;
post-World War 11 era, make it possible to trace the&#13;
history of immigrants and immigration in the area&#13;
Burckel said. '&#13;
The center also has a number of free brochures&#13;
outlining methods of genealogical research as well&#13;
as resources on the local, state and national levels.&#13;
The publications available include a basic guide to&#13;
genealog1Cal research which contains a family tree&#13;
cha_rt which can be filled out by persons tracing&#13;
their ancestries .&#13;
SAT. NIGHT:&#13;
&amp; d-f ea tt~ttin9 ~&#13;
Our W rite rs&#13;
Bob Hoffman, Chris Clausen, Michael Murphy . Fred Tenuta, Thomas Nolen, Karen Pu&#13;
Timothy J. Zuehlsdorf, Bob Jambois Jam ~'raM&#13;
Linda Lasco, Douglas Edenhauser, Phil H~r:an:r&#13;
Cheryl Powalisz '&#13;
Photo~r&lt;'lph,• TII&#13;
'Ill&#13;
SUN. NIGHT:&#13;
~ynod &amp; Cto~~fiu "&#13;
Leanne Dillingham&#13;
A . 0 .Editor Philip L. Livingston 553 . .-.295 tt ,rector · ' "' '&#13;
Copy ~ditor Bruce Wagner&#13;
N 'Ws Ed1tor John McKloskey F\~,~ture Editor Mona Maillet&#13;
S ports Edito.-&#13;
IS COMING ...&#13;
MAY 21 &amp; 22&#13;
A SUNDAY&#13;
AFTERNOON SPECIAL:&#13;
t. . Circulati n Sue Marquardt enl;.'ra.l Mana.•sc, Thomas R C&#13;
Advcrt.1..,mg Mana.i;,'r John G b : 1 '!oper 5'l3-228 7 , Ad . a rie ... 53-2287 v~r 1sm,1; ~&lt; 1- !ot&#13;
Ranger is ~ritten and d·t d&#13;
University of Wisconsin-P~rk!id by stud~nts of the&#13;
responsible for its edito . 1 e 1&#13;
~nd they are solely na po icy and content. &#13;
Management interacts&#13;
with Parlcside students&#13;
r&#13;
Panticipants in Parkside's first "Management Day'·&#13;
included, from left, Business Management Prof.&#13;
Robert Graham, Chancellor Alan E.' Guskin,&#13;
Weyerhaeuser Vice President Gene C. Meyer, (related stories on page 4)&#13;
f!/iea ~htC&#13;
BEAUTY SALON&#13;
"Elegant in a A ny Language"&#13;
New Spring Styles!&#13;
Late Appointments Thurs. &amp; Fri.&#13;
2117-22nd Ave Kenosha Wis. 654-3417&#13;
Business Management senior David Brandt and&#13;
Robert R. Spitzer, industrial consultant and former&#13;
coordinator of the federal Food for Peace Program.&#13;
Dear University Community Member:&#13;
We need your help in improving the services offered for you by your campus. For&#13;
those of you who enjoy a relaxing moment in the Recreation Center or Union Square&#13;
we are asking you to participate in selecting what beers will be offered in the future.&#13;
Please stop and take a moment, or two, to complete the following questionnaire.&#13;
(Circle answers) Drop off your completed questionnaire at the Union Square Bar in&#13;
the Parkside Union between 10:00 a.m. and 10:30p.m., Mon. thru Thurs. (6:30 p.m,&#13;
on Fri.) Your time and concern is greatly appreciated and will be most helpful.&#13;
Thank you very much.&#13;
NAME· ~ _&#13;
J.D. No. _&#13;
1 Which of the following would you choose? (Select one) Budweiser Old Style Miller Schlitz&#13;
2. Which of the following is your preference? (Select one) Olympia Pabst Sll'ohs Hamms&#13;
3. If a superior quality beer was offered would you pay five cents (5 cents) more per glass? . Yes No&#13;
4. Which of the following superior beers would be your choice (Select one) Andeker : Michelob Special Export&#13;
•&#13;
5. Would you be interested in having a low calorie beer on campus? Yes No&#13;
6. Which low calorie beer would you prefer? Miller Ute Schlitz Light Olympia Gold&#13;
7. At thirty-five cents (35 cents) per glass which of the following would you buy? (Select one in each group) •&#13;
Schlitz&#13;
Andeker&#13;
or No Opinion&#13;
or No Opinion&#13;
or No Opinion&#13;
or No Opinion&#13;
or· No Opinion&#13;
or No Opinion&#13;
Group A. Pabst or&#13;
Group B. Michelob or&#13;
Group C. Budweiser or&#13;
. Group D. Old Style or&#13;
Group E. Blatz or&#13;
Group F. Schlitz or&#13;
Pabst&#13;
Strohs&#13;
Old Milwaukee&#13;
Old Style&#13;
Management $ie!i~htc interacts&#13;
with Parkside students BEA TY AL&#13;
''Elegant in a Any Language&#13;
Panticipants ew prin tyl in Parkside's first "Management Day'&#13;
included, from left, Business Management Prof.&#13;
Robert Graham, Chancellor Alan E. · Guskin,&#13;
Weyerhaeuser Vice President Gene C. Meyer,&#13;
Business Management senior David Brandt and&#13;
Robert R. Spitzer, industrial consultant and former&#13;
coordinator of the federal Food for Peace Program. Late Appointm nt Thur . ri.&#13;
( related stories on page 4) 2117-22nd Ave Keno ha . 654-3417&#13;
Dear University Community Member:&#13;
We need your help in improving the services offered for you by your campus. For&#13;
those of you who enjoy a relaxing moment in the Recreation Center or Union Square&#13;
we are asking you to participate in selecting what beers will be offered in the future.&#13;
Please stop and take a moment, or two, to complete the following questionnaire.&#13;
NAME ______ ______________ _____ _&#13;
1 Which of the following would you choose? (Select one) Budweiser&#13;
( Circle answers) Drop off your completed questionnaire at the Union Squar Bar in&#13;
the Parkside Union between 10:00 a.m. and 10:30p.m., Mon . thru Thur . (6:30 p.m.&#13;
on Fri.) Your time and concern is greatly appreciated and will be m t helpful.&#13;
Thank you very much.&#13;
I.D. No.---- ---------------------&#13;
Old Style Miller Schlitz&#13;
2. Which of the following is your preference? (Select one) Olympia Pabst Strohs Hamms&#13;
3. If a superior qualit}! beer was offered would you pay five cents (5 cents) more per glass? • Yes No&#13;
4. Which of the following superior beers would be your choice (Select one) Andeker · Michelob&#13;
5. Would you be interested in having a low calorie beer on campus? Yes No&#13;
6. Which low calorie beer would you prefer? Miller Lite Schlitz Light&#13;
7. At thirty-five cents (35 cents) per glass which of the following would you buy? (Select one in each group)&#13;
Group A. Pabst&#13;
Group B. Michelob&#13;
Group C. Budweiser&#13;
·Group D. Old Style&#13;
Group E. Blatz&#13;
Group F . Schlitz&#13;
or&#13;
or&#13;
or&#13;
or&#13;
or&#13;
or&#13;
Schlitz&#13;
Andeker&#13;
Pabst&#13;
Strohs&#13;
Old Milwaukee&#13;
Old Style&#13;
Special Export&#13;
Olympia Gold&#13;
or No Opinion&#13;
or No Opinion&#13;
or No Opinion&#13;
or No Opinion&#13;
or · No Opinion&#13;
or No Opinion &#13;
.&lt; ••&#13;
_news&#13;
',r .~..... ~~.~, .;.. ;&#13;
,,. . "&#13;
, ~", ',' .','.&#13;
"&#13;
Weyerhaeuser Veep war~s against government control&#13;
The vice president of one of the nation's largest&#13;
companies warned students and faculty at&#13;
Parkside's first "Management Day" Ihursdav that&#13;
"if the current trend in government control&#13;
continues, we will be confronted with pollution&#13;
requirement controls which exceed present&#13;
technological capabilities and require tremendous&#13;
infusions of capital."&#13;
Gene C. Meyer, vice president of Weyerhaeuser&#13;
Company, the largest wood products firm in the&#13;
country, said that "Wisconsin's forest products&#13;
industry has been in the forefront of environmental&#13;
control spending and is committed to a' cleaner&#13;
environment. But we are also businessmen who&#13;
must pay our employees, return dividends to our&#13;
stockholders, and reinvest in research and new&#13;
equipment and facilities. .&#13;
"However, industry needs tax relief to provide&#13;
capital to meet realistic - and J underline realistic&#13;
- environmental goals while providing the ne&#13;
productive capacity essential to avoid shortages&#13;
which push inflation, eliminate jobs and stall&#13;
economic recovery," Meyer said.&#13;
"Manufacturing processesare not clean or udv."&#13;
Meyer conceded. "But we should understand that&#13;
treatment of by-product wastes also pollutes and&#13;
consumes energy. Unfortunately, the nation still&#13;
approaches water pollution separately from air&#13;
pollution, separately from solid waste disposal, and&#13;
separately from energy problems, noise, odor" or&#13;
natural resources depletion."&#13;
Meyer was one of eight Weyerhaeuser executives&#13;
who conducted seminars in various management&#13;
areas for all juniors at Parkside. The "executive&#13;
teach-in" featuring major hational companies will·&#13;
be held once a semester here;&#13;
Meyer called for a rethinkink of state and&#13;
national environmental policies and regulations.&#13;
"Regulations should be based on realistic water&#13;
basin and airshed ambient standards, not on&#13;
, reducing point discharges to the illusory goal of&#13;
zero discharge without regard for the overall&#13;
economic, energy and environmental effect," he&#13;
said.&#13;
Wisconsin's economy and the health of state&#13;
forestry are {inked. Meyer said, pointing out that&#13;
the forest products industry provides 60,000, or 12&#13;
percent, of all manufacturing jobs in the state and&#13;
ranks third in the value of manufactured products.&#13;
"Our industry has known controversy, but (we)&#13;
have been the most sensitive and responsive of any&#13;
state industry to qualitative an-d quantitative&#13;
environmental concerns," Meyer claimed.&#13;
He said that Wisconsin has moved from a&#13;
position of timber scarcity to abundance since the&#13;
early 1900's through sound forest practices. but&#13;
•&#13;
NOW IN •.•&#13;
UNION"&#13;
SQUARE&#13;
PITCHER BEER&#13;
$150&#13;
PITCHER SODA&#13;
$120&#13;
warned that "another period of want" isless than 25&#13;
years away if foresters are not permitted by the&#13;
state to practice what he called "sound forest&#13;
management."&#13;
"In Wisconsin, forest practices have been on the&#13;
defensive and I'll give you an example," he said. "In&#13;
lanuarv. foresters and industry representatives&#13;
spoke out loud and strong against a proposal before&#13;
the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) board&#13;
which would severely restrict clear-cutting on state&#13;
and county forests. This proposal does not contain&#13;
sound, economic forest management practices, and&#13;
obviously was developed without consulting the&#13;
DNR's forestry staff. Today, that issue is being&#13;
voted on by the DNR board."&#13;
Meyer said "the vital first step in wise use" of&#13;
forest resources is increased funding to enable the&#13;
federal government to fulfill its responsibility to&#13;
make a complete forest inventory of all stat~ to&#13;
identify land suitable for forestry, including private -&#13;
property and marginal farm lands.&#13;
He also called for increased utilization by the&#13;
forestry industry of special state forest tax laws, as&#13;
well as government policy which encourages free&#13;
markets. accelerated industry research to make&#13;
forest products competitive and to 'advance&#13;
technology, and intensified public education&#13;
eff.orts by the forest products industry.&#13;
·Manogement Day&#13;
Parkside reaction to Management Day next issue&#13;
Managerial talent needed&#13;
to sol"veworld problems&#13;
Managerial talent is critical in&#13;
solving the world's problems,&#13;
Robert R. Spitzer told an&#13;
audience of business executives,&#13;
university faculty and students at&#13;
a "Management Day" luncheon&#13;
Thursday at Parkside.&#13;
, Spitzer served as coordinator&#13;
of th~ Food for Peace Program of&#13;
the U.5. Agency for International&#13;
Development (AID) in 1975-76&#13;
administering $).3 billion in food&#13;
programs which reached more&#13;
than 40 million people in 75&#13;
countries. Prior to that he was&#13;
.associated for almost 30 years&#13;
with Murphy Products Co., an&#13;
agricultural and food processing&#13;
firm in Burlington, resigning as&#13;
board chairman in 1975.&#13;
People with a business&#13;
background are a rare breed in&#13;
government, Spitzer said, noting&#13;
that during his service in&#13;
Washington he was the only one&#13;
of '12 top people in AID with a&#13;
background in agriculture despite&#13;
the fact that the agency&#13;
25· OFF during&#13;
Happy Hour&#13;
Fridays 3-6&#13;
- $1.00 Deposit on Pitchers&#13;
deals specifically with agricul-·&#13;
tural products and up-grading of&#13;
agriculture in underdeveloped&#13;
countries, ~&#13;
Government would be well&#13;
served at all levels if more multidisciplined&#13;
persons were involved&#13;
in spreading the message of&#13;
democracy and a free market&#13;
economy, he said.&#13;
"The price of democracv us&#13;
involvement, preferably of those&#13;
who have had education and&#13;
experience of life," Spitzer said.&#13;
Of the Food for PeaceProgram,&#13;
Spitzer pointed out that U.5.&#13;
efforts are good business for&#13;
America, citing factors including&#13;
developing markets in emerging&#13;
nations and U.S. reliance on&#13;
many of. them for strategic&#13;
materials.&#13;
Spitzer pointed out that the&#13;
u.s. has a long history of&#13;
providing food for a hungry&#13;
world dating back to post World&#13;
War I programs to aid Europe&#13;
and similar efforts under the&#13;
(~erbu'8&#13;
~ourt&#13;
PYa &amp; RESTAURANT '&#13;
live (ontmeporo.ry music&#13;
Bo.ss &amp; Piono&#13;
by Jimi o.nd Jerry&#13;
Wed, thru Sot.&#13;
ENCHILADAS&#13;
3/$195 \&#13;
NACHOS&#13;
$150 plale&#13;
, Wednesdo~s " Thursdo~ otter 9DO&#13;
632-6151&#13;
On Spring West of 31 in Greenridge&#13;
World War II Marshall' Plan.&#13;
Today, the Food for Peace&#13;
program supplies 60 percent of&#13;
all food aid given all the people&#13;
of the world, Spitzer said, The&#13;
stress of the program, he added,&#13;
is turning to, programs to&#13;
improve agriculture in underdeveloped&#13;
nations and food-forwork&#13;
programs in which persons&#13;
receive food in return for work&#13;
on public projects. Such&#13;
programs, he said, give recipients&#13;
the dignity of self-support.&#13;
All development starts with&#13;
agriculture, Spitzer said, pointing&#13;
out that the u.s. began as an&#13;
agricultural nation. Today, he&#13;
added, the U.S. exports $2J&#13;
billion in agricultural products in&#13;
excess of the $1.3 biilion&#13;
exported in Food for Peace&#13;
Programs.&#13;
Management, he reiterated,&#13;
has a major role in helping to&#13;
feed the world, He listed&#13;
education and research as&#13;
priority items in raising production&#13;
levels in y,nderdeveloped&#13;
countries and emphasized American&#13;
self-interest in support!ni&#13;
such endeavors.&#13;
"Hungry people are not&#13;
peaceful people," he said.&#13;
Of the "Management - Day"&#13;
program, Spitzer, a former&#13;
president of the Wisconsin&#13;
Manufacturers' Association,&#13;
commended participating Weyerhaeuser&#13;
Co, executives: "It's&#13;
good to see the flag of business&#13;
raised on a college campus," he&#13;
said. "Business has sometimes&#13;
neglected. its image and the&#13;
effort to tell the real story of&#13;
business is as important as the'&#13;
balance sheet."&#13;
. I&#13;
I&#13;
Weyerhaeuser Veep warns against government control&#13;
I&#13;
The vice president of one of the nation's largest&#13;
companies warned students and faculty at&#13;
Parkside's first "Management Day" Thu·rsday that&#13;
"if the current trend in government control&#13;
continues, we will be confronted with pollution&#13;
requirement controls which exceed present&#13;
technological capabilities and require tremendous&#13;
infusions of capital."&#13;
Gene C. Meyer, vice president of Weyerhaeuser&#13;
Company, the largest wood products firm in the&#13;
country, said that "Wisconsin's forest products&#13;
industry has been in the forefront of environmental&#13;
control spending and is committed to a cleaner&#13;
environment. But we are also businessmen who&#13;
must pay our employees, return dividends to our&#13;
stockholders, and reinvest in research and new&#13;
equipment and facilities. ·&#13;
"However, industry needs tax re.lief to provide&#13;
capital to meet realistic - and J underline realistic&#13;
- environmental goals while providing the new&#13;
productive capacity essential to avoid shortages&#13;
which push inflation, eliminate jobs and stall&#13;
economic recovery," Meyer said.&#13;
"Manufacturing processes are not clean or tidy,"&#13;
Meyer conceded. "But we should understand that&#13;
treatment of by-product wa5tes also pollutes and&#13;
consumes energy . Unfortunately, the nation sti II&#13;
approaches water pollution separately from air&#13;
NOW IN •••&#13;
UNION ·&#13;
SQUARE&#13;
PITCH ER BEER&#13;
$1so&#13;
PITCHER SODA&#13;
$120&#13;
254 OFF du~ing&#13;
Happy Hour&#13;
Fridays 3-6&#13;
$1 .00 Deposit on Pitchers&#13;
pollution, separately from solid waste disposal, and&#13;
separately from energy problems, noise, odor· or&#13;
natural resources depletion ."&#13;
Meyer was one of eight Weyerhaeuser executives&#13;
who conducted seminars in various management&#13;
areas for all juniors at Parkside. The "executive&#13;
teach-in" featuring major national companies will'&#13;
be held once a semester here;&#13;
warned that "another period of want" isless than 25&#13;
years away if foresters are not permitted by the&#13;
state to practice what he called "sound forest&#13;
management."&#13;
Meyer called for a rethinkin~- uf state and&#13;
national environmental policies and regulations.&#13;
"Regulations should be based on realistic water&#13;
basin and airshed ambient standards, not on&#13;
· reducing point discharg·es to the illusory goal of&#13;
zero discharge without regard for the overall&#13;
economic, energy and environmental effect," he&#13;
said .&#13;
"In Wisconsin, forest practices have been on the&#13;
defensive and I'll give you an example," he said. "In&#13;
Ja~uary, foresters and industry representatives&#13;
spoke out loud and strong against a proposal before&#13;
the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) board&#13;
which would severely restrict clear-&lt;:utting on state&#13;
and county forests. This proposal does not contain&#13;
sound, economic forest management practices, and&#13;
obviously was developed without consulting the&#13;
DNR's forestry staff. Today, that issue is ~eing&#13;
voted on by the DNR board."&#13;
Wisconsin's economy and the health of state&#13;
forestry are-linked, Meyer said, pointing out that&#13;
the forest pr~ducts industry provides 60,000, or 12&#13;
percent, of all manufacturing jobs in the state and&#13;
ranks third in the value of manufactured products.&#13;
Meyer said "the vital first step in wise use" of&#13;
forest ·resources is increased funding to enable the&#13;
federal government to fulfill its responsibility to&#13;
make a complete forest inventory of all stat~ to&#13;
identify land suitable for forestry, including private ·&#13;
property and marginal farm lands.&#13;
"Our industry has known controversy, but (we)&#13;
have been the most sensitive and responsive of any&#13;
state industry to qualitative alld quantitative&#13;
environmental concerns," Meyer claimed .&#13;
He said that Wisconsin has moved from a&#13;
position of timber scarcity to abundance since the&#13;
early 1900's through sound forest practices. but&#13;
He also called for increased utilization by the&#13;
forestry industry of special state forest tax laws, as&#13;
well as government policy which encourages free&#13;
markets, accelerated industry research to make&#13;
forest products competitive aod to 'advance&#13;
technology, and intensified public education&#13;
efforts by the forest products industry.&#13;
-Management Day&#13;
Parkside reaction to Management Day - next issue&#13;
Managerial talent needed&#13;
to sol·ve world probleffls&#13;
Managerial talent is critical in&#13;
solving the world's problems,&#13;
Robert R. Spitzer told an&#13;
audience of business executives,&#13;
university faculty and students at&#13;
a "Management Day" luncheon&#13;
Thursday at Parkside.&#13;
• Spitzer served as coordinator&#13;
of th; Food for Peace Program of&#13;
the U.S. Agency for International&#13;
De'-'.elopment (AID) in 1975-76&#13;
administering $).3 billion in food&#13;
programs which reached more&#13;
than 40 million people in 75&#13;
countries . Prior to that he was&#13;
associated for almost 30 years&#13;
with Murphy Products Co., an&#13;
agricultural and foQd processing&#13;
firm in Burlington, resigning as&#13;
board chairman in 1975.&#13;
People with a business&#13;
background are a rare breed in&#13;
government, Spitzer said, noting&#13;
that during his service in&#13;
Washington he was the only one&#13;
of 12 top people in AID with a&#13;
backgrou nd in agriculture despite&#13;
the fact that the agency&#13;
deals specifically with agricul- .&#13;
tural products and up-grading of&#13;
agriculture in under~eveloped&#13;
countries.&#13;
Government wo1.1ld be well&#13;
served at all levels if more multidisciplined&#13;
persons were involved&#13;
in spreading the message of&#13;
democracy and a free market&#13;
economy, he said .&#13;
"The price of democracy is&#13;
involvement, preferably of those&#13;
who have had education and&#13;
experience of life," Spitzer said.&#13;
Of the Food for Peace Program,&#13;
Spitzer pointed out that U.S.&#13;
efforts are good business for&#13;
America, c iting factors includi.ng&#13;
developing markets in emerging&#13;
nations and U .S. reliance on&#13;
many of . them for strategic&#13;
materials .&#13;
Spitzer pointed out that the&#13;
U.S. has a long history of&#13;
providing food for a hungry&#13;
world dating back to post World&#13;
War I programs to aid Europe&#13;
and similar efforts under the&#13;
PUB &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
Live Contm_eporory m usic&#13;
Boss &amp; Piono&#13;
TACOS&#13;
3/$150&#13;
by Jimi end Jerry&#13;
We,d. thru Sot.&#13;
ENCHILADAS&#13;
3/$195 '&#13;
NACHOS&#13;
$l5° plate&#13;
. Wednesdoys &amp; Thursdoy ofter 9:00&#13;
632-6151&#13;
On Spri ng West of 31 in Greenridge&#13;
World War II Marshal[ Plan .&#13;
Today, the Food for Peace&#13;
program supplies 60 percent of&#13;
all food aid given all the people&#13;
of the world, Spitzer said. The&#13;
stress of the program, he added,&#13;
is turning to, programs to&#13;
improve agriculture in underdeveloped&#13;
nations and food-forwork&#13;
programs in which persons&#13;
receive food in return for work&#13;
on public projects . Such&#13;
programs, he said, give recipients&#13;
the dignity of self-support.&#13;
All development starts with&#13;
agriculture, Spitzer said, poin~-&#13;
ing out that the U.S. began as an&#13;
agricultural nation . Todav., he&#13;
added , the U.S. exports $2~&#13;
billion in agricultural products in&#13;
excess of the $1.3 billion&#13;
exported in Food for Peace&#13;
Programs .&#13;
Management, he reiterated,&#13;
has a major role in helping to&#13;
feed the world. He listed&#13;
education and research as&#13;
priority items in raising production&#13;
levels in nderdeveloped&#13;
countries and e111phasized American&#13;
self-interest in supportini&#13;
such endeavors.&#13;
" Hun gry p eop le are not&#13;
peacefu l people," he said.&#13;
Of t he "Management - Day"&#13;
p rogram, Spitzer, a former&#13;
president of t h e W isconsin&#13;
Man ufacturers' Association ,&#13;
commended participati ng W eyerh&#13;
aeuser Co. executives: " It's&#13;
good to see t he flag of business&#13;
raised on a college campus," he&#13;
said . "Business has someti mes&#13;
neglected . its image and the&#13;
effort to tell the real story of&#13;
business is as important as the&#13;
balance sheet." &#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~&#13;
'When you believe in what you're doing,&#13;
you just naturally do it better.&#13;
It finally comes down to con1n1itn1ent.&#13;
When you don't like a course, it's hard to excel. Th la get&#13;
tedious. The texts get boring. The lecture get dreadful. Yi ur , vork&#13;
suffers. And so do your grades.&#13;
Compare that with the cour e y u really belie, in.&#13;
You care more. You try more. And \\~thout e, en n n 1n , y u JU ~t&#13;
naturally do better.&#13;
It's true in school. It's true outside of ch 1.&#13;
For example, we believe there' just on , Yay to bre,,&#13;
Busch beer. The natural v\ ay. With natural ingr di nt .&#13;
Natural carbonation. Natural ageing.&#13;
We believe that's the best ,vay to bre,v a beer.&#13;
And when you believe in , , hat you're&#13;
doing, you just naturally do it better.&#13;
Tc1ste a Busch and we think you '11 agree.&#13;
· BUSCH. ·When you believe in what you're doing,&#13;
you just naturally do it better. &#13;
, •. , shows&#13;
Donna Linde, Chris Krizan, and Jody Jones strike a pose for the show.&#13;
Peter Hall, J.e. Bussard. and Donnal Linde rehearse for the show this weekend.&#13;
Mary Jo Curty, Ruth Adamczyk, Jody Jones a&#13;
Mark Badtke adds finishing touches to 'Celebration' set.&#13;
Mary Jo Curty, Ruth Adamczyk, Jody&#13;
Donna Linde, Chris Krizan, and Jody Jones strike a pose for the show.&#13;
Mark Badtke adds finishing touches to 'Celebration' set.&#13;
Peter Hall, J.C. Bussard, and Donna! Linde rehearse for the show this weekend. &#13;
PI,yell&#13;
"tI"m&#13;
'CelelJ"H,nI&#13;
"Celebration," a musical fable by Harvey-Schmidt and Tom Jones,&#13;
the creators of "The Fantasticks," will be presented by the Fine Arts&#13;
DIvision and the Dramatic Arts Discipline of the Parkside at 8 p.m&#13;
f-riday. Saturday and Sunday, April 29~30 and May 1, In the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater&#13;
The show, a celebration of spring and life and Jove, is being staged&#13;
as a spectacle of music, motion and mirrors by Director Rhoda-Cale&#13;
Pollack, who also choreographed the show.&#13;
"Celebration" has a cast of 18 - four principals and a 14-member&#13;
chorus 01 revelers - and rncludes 18 musical numbers and more than&#13;
90 costume changes Written in 1968, it opened in Schmidt and Jones'&#13;
workshop theater and ran for 109 performances on Broadway. like&#13;
'Tantasucks" it is non-traditional American musical comedy, It's&#13;
songs range from rock to Latin beat to sentimental love songs and&#13;
dance numbers trip from soft shoe to ballet to "Fred Astaire."&#13;
The cast Includes Mark L. Badtke, Rt. 2, Union Grove, as&#13;
Potemokm. Christopher W. Krizan, Racine, as Orphan; Mary Stankus,&#13;
Racine, as Angel; and Christopher A. Roland, Racine, as Mr. Rich&#13;
'The chorus of revelers includes Jonathan C. Bussard, Terry L&#13;
Kehoss, Carol Knudson, David Powell and F. Cilbert Schoepke, all of&#13;
Kenosha; Ruth l. Adamczyk, Mary lo Curty, Cindy Halberstadt, lodv&#13;
L. Jones, Marc William Miller and Susan Wishaw, all of Racine; Peter&#13;
L_Hall, Evansville; Donna Linda, Rt. 1, Kansasville; and Anthony D.&#13;
Warren, Milwaukee.&#13;
Members of the pit band are Catherine [ilk, Kenosha, and Cindy&#13;
Denman, Racine, pianists; Roger Daniels, Scott Preston and David&#13;
Lenz, all Racine, percussion; Eric Goodwin, Kenosha, bass; Kent&#13;
Perkins, Racine, guitar; and William Krurnberger, Franksville, electric&#13;
plano&#13;
The multi-level set features rotating back pillars which transform&#13;
from a city-scape to a garden to a mirrored mylar reflective setting. It&#13;
is the design of John H. Dickson of the theater staff, who also is&#13;
technical director and light designer.&#13;
Choral director is Carol Irwin of the mUSICfaculty and costume&#13;
designer is Deborah Hell of the theater staff.&#13;
Admisvion is $2 for students, senior citizens and Faculty and staff&#13;
members: $3 for others. Tickets are available at the Union&#13;
Inforrnat ion Center.&#13;
'b : ...&#13;
Mary Stankus strikes an angelic pose.&#13;
John Dickson, set designer, plays tricks with mirrors.&#13;
photographs boY Leanne Dillingham&#13;
dance.&#13;
,,,,,,,&#13;
/erlorm&#13;
'Ce/el,rafion'&#13;
"Celebration ," a musical fable by Harvey Schmidt and Tom Jones,&#13;
the creators ot ''The Fantast1cks," will be presented b the Fine Arts&#13;
D1v1s1on and the Dramatic Arts D, c1pline of the Parkside at 8 p.m.&#13;
1-riday, Saturday and Sunday, April 29-30 and May 1, in the&#13;
ommunication Arts Theater&#13;
The show, a celebration ot spring and life and love, ,s being staged&#13;
as a spectacle of music , motion and mirrors by Director Rhoda-Cale&#13;
Pollack, who also choreographed the show.&#13;
"Celebration" has a cast of 18 - four principals and a 14-member&#13;
choru~ ot revelers - and includes 18 musical numbers and more than&#13;
90 costume changes Written in 1968, it opened in Schmidt and Jone '&#13;
workshop theater and ran for 109 performances on Broadway Like&#13;
'T antast,ck ," it ,s non-traditional American musical comedy It's&#13;
songs range from rock to Latin beat to sentimental love songs and&#13;
dance numbers trip from soft shoe to ballet to " Fred Astaire "&#13;
The cast 111clude Mark L Badtke, Rt . 2, Union Cro e, as&#13;
Potempkin; Christopher W . Krizan , Racine, as Orphan; Mary Stankus,&#13;
Rc1 ci ne, as Angel; and Christopher A . Roland, Racine, as Mr Ri ch&#13;
'The chorus of revelers incluaes Jonathan C. Bussard, Terry L&#13;
Kehoss, Carol Knudson, David Powell and F. Gilbert Schoepke, all of&#13;
Kenosha; Ruth L. Adamczyk, Mary Jo Curty, Cindy Halberstadt, Jody&#13;
L. Jones , Marc William Miller and Susan Wishaw, all of Racine; Peter&#13;
L. Hall, Evansville; Donna Linda, Rt . 1, Kansasville; and Anthony D.&#13;
Warren, Milwaukee.&#13;
Members of the pit band are Catherine Jilk, Kenosha, and Cindy&#13;
Denman , Racine, pianists; Roger Daniels, Scott Preston and David&#13;
LenL , all Racine, percussion ; Eric Goodwin, Kenosha, bass; Kent&#13;
Perkins, Racine, guitar; and William Krumberger, Franksville, electric&#13;
piano.&#13;
The multi-level set features rotating back pillars which transform&#13;
from a city-scape to a garden to a mirrored mylar reflective setting. It&#13;
is the design of John H . Dickson of the theater staff, who also is&#13;
technical director and light designer.&#13;
Choral director Is Carol Irwin of the music faculty and costume&#13;
designer is Deborah Bell of the theater staff.&#13;
Admi ~,on is $2 for students, senior citizens and Faculty and staff&#13;
members ; $3 for others. Tickets are available at the Union&#13;
Information Center.&#13;
Mary Stankus strikes an angelic pose.&#13;
John Dickson, set designer, plays tricks with mirrors.&#13;
photogro.phs b.Y Leo.nne Dillingho.m &#13;
�----------------------------------------''''''-~-----.,.&#13;
Inews&#13;
Security recovers 'oot&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Last Thursday Parks ide Security&#13;
officers started knocking on&#13;
doors at Parks ide Village. Hours&#13;
later I they returned to Parkside&#13;
with $1700 worth of recovered&#13;
furniture.&#13;
According to Security Director&#13;
Ronald Brinkmann, Security first&#13;
consulted with the adrninistration&#13;
and then asked the furniture&#13;
to be returned with no questions&#13;
asked, "There will be no&#13;
prosecution, we're just interested&#13;
in getting the furniture back," he&#13;
said.&#13;
Brinkmann said he was glad to&#13;
get the furniture back because&#13;
the replacement cost would have&#13;
come out of students' tuition.&#13;
,&#13;
"We asked no questions and&#13;
took no names. We just don't&#13;
have the money to buy new&#13;
furniture."&#13;
Brinkmann said he is still&#13;
trying to find out who stole the&#13;
lellers which spell "Union&#13;
Square" at the square's entrance.&#13;
"It was a childish thing to&#13;
do ... those letters cost $22&#13;
apiece," he said. The replacement&#13;
of the letters will be left to&#13;
the Union. Union director&#13;
William Niebuhr was unavailable&#13;
for comment.&#13;
The sign in front of the&#13;
Physical Education Building has&#13;
been vandalized, either by a rock&#13;
or by someone putting his fist&#13;
through the sign. Brinkmann said&#13;
he doesn't know who did that,&#13;
What suds do you like?&#13;
what beer students want in the&#13;
Union at what price.&#13;
Johnson urges students to&#13;
complete the questionaire so&#13;
administrative decisions on the&#13;
matter may include the choices&#13;
of students. (See Bottom page 3)&#13;
A survey questionaire concerning&#13;
beer preferences in the&#13;
Union appears in this issue of&#13;
RANGER. The survey is an&#13;
attempt by Assistant Chancellor&#13;
O. Clayton Johnson to find out&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIYIT1ES BOARD IN ASSOCIATION WITH&#13;
FOLLETT PUBLISHING" CO.&#13;
PRESENTS A&#13;
WED.&#13;
APRIL 27&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
FREE LECTURE&#13;
by&#13;
UNION&#13;
CINEMA&#13;
THEATRE&#13;
'KIRBY W. STANAT&#13;
on&#13;
"Job HuntiJig Secrets&#13;
&amp; Tactics"&#13;
It QDlllt&#13;
~Wttt ~1tDPPt&#13;
r&#13;
Ranger banquet slated&#13;
RANGER will hold its first&#13;
awards banquet on May 7&#13;
according to Tom Cooper,&#13;
RANGER's General Manager,&#13;
"The purpose of the banquet is&#13;
to thank the staff for the long&#13;
hours of volunteer work that&#13;
they ha~e. contributed," said&#13;
Cooper.&#13;
The RANGER staff currently&#13;
consists of five salaried positions&#13;
and a couple of comm issioned&#13;
advertising sales people, and&#13;
rnenvvolunteers'. Cooper added&#13;
that most of the salaried.&#13;
personnel worked for about. SOc&#13;
an hour and that the banquet&#13;
. was a way that Phil&#13;
Livingston (Ranger editor) and I&#13;
could show our appreciation to&#13;
everyone."&#13;
The banquet will begin at 6:00&#13;
at the Driftwood Lounge, 8607&#13;
Highway 11, Sturtevant. -&#13;
Robert Ross, publisher of the&#13;
Iour nal-Frrnes and Howard&#13;
Brown publisher of the Kenosha&#13;
News will be the guest speakers.&#13;
Cooper also added that&#13;
"Awards, some serious and som~&#13;
decidedly non-serious will be&#13;
given out to deserving members&#13;
of the staff," Chancellor Guskin&#13;
and Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
, Educational Services, O. Clayton&#13;
Johnson will also attend.&#13;
The banquet is open to the&#13;
pub/it at ten dollars a plate If&#13;
you are interested in attending&#13;
the banquet, call Cooper at&#13;
553-2287 by April 29, 1977,&#13;
Parlcside students conduct&#13;
motivational research&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
M,III" 11"11" "in,.,'"It&#13;
Located&#13;
Just Off The Union Bazaar,&#13;
Ever wonder why students attend Parks ide&#13;
dances? What factors motivated Parkside students&#13;
to attend worship services this past Easter? Would&#13;
faculty and staff participate in a paper recycling&#13;
program? What factors will motivate students to&#13;
enroll in summer session?&#13;
These questions are being answered by&#13;
behavioral science students Barbara Wemmert,&#13;
1F===========================fl Jeff Sitz, Art Leceese, and Tad Ballantyne. Over _&#13;
·000 questionaires were used to answer the&#13;
questions in a class with the most prerequisites of&#13;
anv behavioral science class, Assistant Professor&#13;
Richard Pomazal's Advanced Social Psychology&#13;
(15-320)&#13;
The purpose of the projects is to involve&#13;
students in applied attitude theory research.&#13;
The students employed the statistical package&#13;
for social sciences, a program in the computer&#13;
center, with regular consultation with Mr. Marvin&#13;
Nagy, computer specialist.&#13;
Their research is based on a popular theoretical&#13;
model of behavioral intentions which states that a&#13;
person's rntentional behavior is determined by one&#13;
or more of three variables; personal attitudes&#13;
towards the act, social norms regarding the act,&#13;
and/or felt moral obligation.&#13;
The consideration of a felt moral obligation as a&#13;
variable is a special interest of Professor Pomazal&#13;
that he has utilized to explain altruism in&#13;
."Itu r"I""&#13;
.' 'ONLY&#13;
50' QUARTER LB.&#13;
on sale now..lor only&#13;
40 ~a quarter pound&#13;
motivations .to donate blood and in developing&#13;
theories of drug use motivation.&#13;
The students determined salient beliefs of their&#13;
subjects by means of open ended eliciting&#13;
fllJPstionaires~ The modal salient beliefs were then&#13;
used in a second closed format questionatre After&#13;
randomly circulating the second questionaire, the&#13;
answers were coded and keypunched by the&#13;
students.&#13;
1ht&gt; coded keypunched cards were fed into a&#13;
computer to obtain a multiple regression analysis&#13;
in the form of data sheets. The sheets were then&#13;
analyzed to produce the findings.&#13;
Pornazal is quick to point out. there is no&#13;
"perfect study" utilizing this behavioral intention&#13;
theorv. but with the help of computer applications&#13;
many more variables can be taken into account&#13;
than be- less sophisticated methods. '&#13;
A productive working exchange relationship&#13;
WIth thp students and staff was a necessary&#13;
objet trve In order to achieve the tvpe of technical&#13;
rnalysi~ that would hold up under scientific&#13;
scrutmy or the student's findings, according to&#13;
Pomaval.&#13;
"I enjoyed the fact that the students became&#13;
pPf',ondlly involved and Intensely interested in the&#13;
prot e-dur al research that produced their findings.&#13;
1herr e-nthuvtavm was stimulating and rewarding,"&#13;
card Pomaval&#13;
1\,IIlJ.!,P( \11,11/publi ...h the finding:. of these&#13;
('\(',/1( h pro/f'('" IrJ our next issue, Wednesday,&#13;
,\1,J~-l&#13;
Security recovers foot&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Last Thursday Parkside Security&#13;
officers started knocking on&#13;
doors at Parkside Village. Hours&#13;
later, they returned .to Parkside&#13;
with $1700 worth of recovered&#13;
furniture .&#13;
According to Security Director&#13;
Ronald Brinkmann, Security first&#13;
consulted with the administration&#13;
and then asked the furniture&#13;
to be returned with no questions&#13;
asked. "There wi II be no&#13;
prosecution, we're just interested&#13;
in getting the furniture back," he&#13;
said .&#13;
Brinkmann said he was glad to&#13;
get the furniture back because&#13;
the replacement cost would have&#13;
come out of students' tuition .&#13;
I&#13;
"We asked no questions and&#13;
took no names. We just don't&#13;
have . the money to buy new&#13;
furniture."&#13;
Brinkmann said he is still&#13;
trying to find out who stole the&#13;
letters which spell "Union&#13;
Square" at the square's entrance.&#13;
"It was a childish thing to&#13;
do .. . those letters cost $22&#13;
apiece," he said. The replacement&#13;
of the letters will be left to&#13;
the Union . Union director&#13;
William Niebuhr was unavai~ble&#13;
for comment.&#13;
The sign in front of the&#13;
Physical Education Building has&#13;
been vandalized, either by a rock&#13;
or by someone putting his fist&#13;
through the sign. Brinkmann said&#13;
he doesn't know who did that.&#13;
What suds do you like?·&#13;
A survey questionaire con- what beer students want in the&#13;
cerning beer preferences in the Union at what price.&#13;
Union appears in this issue of Johnson urges students_ to&#13;
RANGER. The survey is an complete the questionaire so&#13;
attempt by Assistant Chancellor administrative decisions on the&#13;
0 . Clayton Johnson to find out matter may include the choices&#13;
of students . (See Bottom page 3)&#13;
--&#13;
r&#13;
.Ranger banquet slated&#13;
RANGER will hold its first&#13;
awards banquet on May 7&#13;
according to Tom Cooper,&#13;
RANGER's General Manager.&#13;
"The purpose of the banquet is&#13;
to thank the staff for the long&#13;
hours of volunteer work that&#13;
they ha'!'e . contributed," said&#13;
Cooper.&#13;
The RANGER staff currently&#13;
consists of five salaried positions&#13;
and a couple of commissioned&#13;
advertising sales people, and&#13;
many . volunteers'. Cooper added&#13;
\&#13;
that most of the salaried&#13;
personnel worked for about . 50c&#13;
an hour and that the banquet&#13;
.. . was a way that Phil&#13;
Livingston (Ranger editor) and I&#13;
could show our appreciation to&#13;
everyone."&#13;
The banquet will begin at 6:00&#13;
at the Driftwood Lounge, 8607&#13;
Highway 11, Sturtevant. ·&#13;
Robert Ross, publisher of the&#13;
Journal-Times and Howard&#13;
Brown publisher of the Kenosha&#13;
News will be the guest speakers .&#13;
Cooper also added that&#13;
"Awards, some serious and som~&#13;
decidedly non-serious will be&#13;
given out to deserving members&#13;
of the staff." Chancellor Guskin&#13;
and Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
· Educational Services, 0. Clayton&#13;
Johnson will also attend.&#13;
The banquet is open to the&#13;
public at ten dollars a plate . If&#13;
you are interested in attending&#13;
the banquet, call Cooper at&#13;
553-2287 by April 29, 1977.&#13;
Parkside students conduct&#13;
motivational r.esearch&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
motivdtions .to donate blood and in developing&#13;
theories of drug use motivation .&#13;
Ever wonder why students attend Parkside&#13;
dances? What factors motivated Parkside students&#13;
to attend worship services this past Easter? Would&#13;
faculty and staff participate in a paper recycling&#13;
program? What factors will motivate students to&#13;
enroll in summer session?&#13;
The students determined salient beliefs of their&#13;
subjects by means of open ended eliciting&#13;
questionaires . The modal salient beliefs were then&#13;
used in a second closed format questionaire . After&#13;
randomly circulating the second questionaire, the&#13;
answers were coded and keypunched by the&#13;
students .&#13;
These questions are being answered by&#13;
behavioral science students Barbara Wemmert, FF=========================:::::ii Jeff Sitz, Art Leceese, and Tad Ballantyne. Over ·60() questionaires were used to answer the&#13;
l he coded keypunched cards were fed into a&#13;
computer to obtain a multiple regression analysis&#13;
in the form of data sheets . The sheets were then&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD IN ASSOCIATION WITH analyLed to produce the findings.&#13;
FOLLETT PUBLISHING- CO.&#13;
WED.&#13;
APRIL 27&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
PRESENTS A&#13;
FREE LECTURE&#13;
by&#13;
UNION&#13;
CINEMA&#13;
THEATRE&#13;
'KIRBY W. STANAT&#13;
on&#13;
''Job Huntirag Secrets&#13;
&amp; Tactics''&#13;
questions in a class with the most prerequisites of&#13;
a'ny behavioral science class, Assistant Professor&#13;
Richard Pomazal 's Advanced Social Psychology&#13;
(15-320)&#13;
The purpose of the proiects is to involve&#13;
students in applied attitude theory research.&#13;
The students employed the statistical package&#13;
for social sciences, a program in the computer&#13;
center, with regular consultation with Mr. Marvin&#13;
Nagy, computer specialist .&#13;
Their research is based on a popular theoretical&#13;
model of behavioral intentions which states that a&#13;
person's intentional behavior is determined by one&#13;
or more of three variables; personal attitudes&#13;
towards the act, social norms regarding the act,&#13;
and/ or felt moral obligation .&#13;
The consideration of a felt moral obligation as a&#13;
variable is a special interest of Professor Pomazal !_=============================~ that he has utilized to explain altruism in&#13;
Located&#13;
Just Off The Union Bazaar .&#13;
Moll,,r Nahlre 81ing1 . B,1/t&#13;
.t11 t11 rally///&#13;
•• -ONLY&#13;
50' QUARTER LB.&#13;
on sale now .. for only&#13;
40, a quarter pound&#13;
PomaLal is quick to point out . there is no&#13;
" perfect study" utiliLing this behavioral intention&#13;
theory. but with the help of computer applications&#13;
many more variables can be taken into account&#13;
than be les~ sophisticated methods.&#13;
A productive working exchange relationship&#13;
with thP ~tudents and staff was a necessary&#13;
objP&lt; t1w 111 order to achieve the typt&gt; of technical&#13;
analysi~ that would hold up under scientific&#13;
scrutiny ol thP student's findings, according to&#13;
Pom,11al.&#13;
··1 enjoyed the fact that the students became&#13;
pt&gt;r,onally involved dnd intt--nsely interested in the&#13;
pro&lt; Pdurdl rP,edrlh that produced their findings .&#13;
I hP1r Pnthu~1a~m was ,timulating and rewarding,"&#13;
,01d Pom,11.1I.&#13;
/\,rng1•r ...,,JI publi.\h the finding~ of these&#13;
r1•,c•.1rc h prow&lt; h in our next issue, Wednesday,&#13;
.'v1.i~ -l &#13;
/&#13;
Author blames multinational&#13;
corporations for economic ills&#13;
OWN YOUR OWN lOB:&#13;
Economic Democracy for working&#13;
Americans by Jeremy Rifkin&#13;
(A Bantam Bbok, March 1977,&#13;
softcover. 1.50) Review by Steve&#13;
'Lemken.&#13;
"Perhaps the sentiment comained in these pages&#13;
are not yet sufficiently fashionable to procure them&#13;
genera! favor; a long habit of not thinking a thing&#13;
wrong, gives it a superficial appearance of being&#13;
right, and raises at first a formidable outcry in&#13;
defense of custom. But the tumult soon subsides.&#13;
Time makes more converts than reason."&#13;
- Thomas Paine, COMMON SENSE, 1776&#13;
Jeremy Rifkin, author of Own Your Own Job,&#13;
paints a clear picture of the economic ills&#13;
criss-crossing this country and tosses the blame&#13;
squarely in the laps of the multinational&#13;
corporations, Armed with surprising results of a poll&#13;
conducted by the Peter, D. Hart Research&#13;
~Associates, Rifkin maps out a sound, coherent&#13;
economic proposal that would give the American&#13;
citizen a chance to participate in decisions&#13;
concerning the economy th~ same way the people&#13;
elect their political representatives.&#13;
This book, according to the author, is the first of&#13;
its kind advocating such a radical change in the&#13;
American economy. And if the results of the Hart&#13;
poll are even slightly indicative of the current mood&#13;
of the American worker, the majority of our elected&#13;
representatives, and their cohorts, namely big&#13;
business, had better heed their "bread and butter."&#13;
Mad as hell&#13;
Hart, one of the top five research organizations&#13;
in the country, was hired by the Peoples Business&#13;
Commission (PBC), to gauge the mood and feelings&#13;
of the country towards the economy, What startled,&#13;
yet confirmed Rifkin's and the PBC's conclusions,&#13;
was that the average discontented person is about&#13;
38-years-old, a skilled or un-skilled laborer, redneck,&#13;
blue collar and a hard hat, living on a&#13;
combined income of $11:000 or less per year for a&#13;
family of four. The feeling of these people could be&#13;
summed up with the infamous line from the movie&#13;
Network," t'rn madder than hell and I'm not&#13;
going to take it anymore."&#13;
Alternatives proposed&#13;
Rifkin calls for an economic democracy, which&#13;
he describes as "a system drawn from the tenets&#13;
•&#13;
espoused in our own Declaration of&#13;
Independence based on the simple, but&#13;
profound, maxim that the people are the best&#13;
judges of their own welfare." He argues that the&#13;
capitalist system, in which the workers are "rented"&#13;
by the corporate elite, will not continue to work for&#13;
long. And neither will a Soviet-type socialism,&#13;
where it is the government who "rents" the worker&#13;
In either system, the worker shares little In the&#13;
spoils.&#13;
Rifkin offers a viable alternative to the present&#13;
system, an alternative that is already being&#13;
practiced in many parts of the country. One of the&#13;
most :successful worker-run companies is the&#13;
Vermont Asbestos Group, in lowell, Vt. In 1976 the&#13;
employees were faced with the closing of the plant&#13;
by the GAF Corporation (one of Fortune's 500&#13;
leading industries.) The closing would have&#13;
wreaked economic havoc for the entire area.&#13;
Instead of sitting back, the employees and&#13;
townspeople raised the capital to take over the&#13;
operation, and within a year had repaved its loans,&#13;
turned a handsome profit, provided a dramatic pay&#13;
boost to its working members and installed&#13;
$250,000 worth of environmental protection&#13;
equipment.&#13;
Own Your Own lob is a book of vision, a source&#13;
of an alternative and hope. Rifkin is a strong&#13;
believer in the ideals of the people who broke their&#13;
yoke.from a similar type of economic, and political,&#13;
oppression. A believer in the visions of America's&#13;
Founding Fathers and Mothers, whose words are&#13;
only mimicked by politicians, whose actions would&#13;
be condemned by those wh&lt;5 control the&#13;
pursestrings of the country. Rifkin asks we look at&#13;
the substance of the ideas presented in his book,&#13;
not the labels, which may make them look foreign&#13;
or "too" radical.&#13;
Perhaps a thought from those beginnings of&#13;
America will help move-those who wish no change,&#13;
who want no change. Sam Adams put It quite&#13;
bluntly when he said, "If you love wealth better&#13;
than liberty, the tranquility of servitude better than&#13;
the animating contest of freedom, go home from us&#13;
in peace. Crouch down and lick the hands which&#13;
feed you. May your chains sit lightly UpORyou, and&#13;
may posterity forget that you were our&#13;
countrymen."&#13;
jobs I&#13;
Manpower, 'nc. optimistic&#13;
about summer employment&#13;
Manpower, Inc., the world's&#13;
largest temporary help firm,&#13;
expects to have jobs for more&#13;
than 25,()(X)students With office&#13;
work skills throughout the&#13;
country this summer, a substantial&#13;
increase over last summer,&#13;
according to Mitchell S&#13;
Fromstein, President of Manpower.&#13;
"Every year students add an&#13;
Important dimension to our&#13;
workforce, This year they'll play&#13;
an even bigger role because of&#13;
the optimistic job forecast&#13;
Manpower has received from&#13;
businessmen," Fromstein said&#13;
"Manpower offices are&#13;
amazed at the number of students&#13;
who come in, fill out their&#13;
applications, and don't even&#13;
mention that they can type, take&#13;
shorthand or operate a busmess&#13;
machine These are good skills&#13;
which we need," Frornstein said&#13;
The person who's a skilled&#13;
typist or office machine operator&#13;
can usually find a lob With&#13;
Manpower There are also some&#13;
opportunities that don't require&#13;
as much skrll, such as Inventory&#13;
takers, memtenance workers,&#13;
etc.&#13;
Besides typists, secretaries.&#13;
material handlers and some&#13;
techmcians. Manpower offers&#13;
positions as systems analysts and&#13;
keypunch operators Students&#13;
can find lobs as survey takers,&#13;
mtervrewers. sample distributors,&#13;
or they may help out at&#13;
convenuons, or work on&#13;
assembly hnes.&#13;
'\1""'/&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
_1II1U;.iIllIlHUlllDlUllnIllIIllIllIlIUIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIltIIlllI_I_IU_&#13;
DINO'S&#13;
1816 16th 51. 372/\ Dougles&#13;
Racine Raeine&#13;
634-1991 639-7115&#13;
WE DELIVER&#13;
Op e" 4:00 p.m. til! 0"" hour Ofll'r&#13;
tarern« close&#13;
UIIII.IIIII1I1I1I11I1II1I11II11.. _1 ._111 _&#13;
1O~Igame ..Mondays &amp; Fridays&#13;
9 a.m. to 10 a.m.&#13;
25~/game&#13;
UNION REC •&#13;
Call, 553·2695 for&#13;
Wednesday,&#13;
Thursday, Friday&#13;
5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.&#13;
Saturdays&#13;
•&#13;
25~/game&#13;
CENTER&#13;
FURTHER INFORMATION&#13;
•&#13;
.noon to 2:30 p.m.&#13;
I&#13;
Author blames multinational&#13;
corporations for economic ills&#13;
'- -&#13;
OWN YOUR OWN JOB:&#13;
Economic Democracy for Working&#13;
Americans by Jeremy Rifkin&#13;
(A Bantam Book, March 1977,&#13;
softcover, 1.50) Review by Steve&#13;
' Lemken .&#13;
"Perhaps the sentiment contained in these pages&#13;
are not yet sufficiently fashionable to procure them&#13;
general favor; a long habit of not thinking a thing&#13;
wrong, gives it a superficial appearance of being&#13;
right, and raises at first a formidable outcry in&#13;
defense of custom . But the tumult soon subsides .&#13;
Time makes more converts than reason. "&#13;
- Thomas Paine, COMMON SENSE, 1776&#13;
Jeremy Rifkin, author of Own Your Own Job,&#13;
paints a clear picture of the economic ills&#13;
criss-crossing this country and tosses the bJame&#13;
squarely in tlie laps of the multinational&#13;
corporations . Armed with surprising results of a poll&#13;
conducted by the Peter . D. Hart Research&#13;
_Associates, Rifkin maps out a sound, coherent&#13;
economic proposal that would give the American&#13;
citizen a chance to participate in decisions&#13;
concerning the economy the same way the people&#13;
elect their political representatives .&#13;
This book, according to the author, is the first of&#13;
its kind advocating such a radical change in the&#13;
American economy . And if the results of the Ha(t&#13;
poll are even slightly indi cative of the current mood&#13;
of the American worker, the majority of our elected&#13;
representatives, and their cohorts, namely big&#13;
business, had better heed their " bread and butter."&#13;
Mad as hell&#13;
Hart, one of the top five research organizations&#13;
in the country, was hired by the Peoples Business&#13;
Commission (PBC), to gauge the mood and feelings&#13;
of the country towards the economy . What startled,&#13;
yet confirmed Rifkin's and the PBC's conclusions,&#13;
was that the average discontented person is about&#13;
38-years-old , a skilled or un-skilled laborer, redneck,&#13;
blue collar and a hard hat, living on a&#13;
combined income of $11,000 or less per year for a&#13;
family of four. The feeling of these people could be&#13;
summed up with the infamous line from the movie&#13;
Network. " 1'm madder than hell and I'm not&#13;
going to take it anymore."&#13;
Alternatives proposed&#13;
Rifkin calls for an economic democracy, whi ch&#13;
he describes as " a sys tem drawn from the tenets&#13;
espoused in our own Declaration of&#13;
Independence based on the simple , but&#13;
profound, maxim that the people are the best&#13;
judges of their own welfare ." He argues that the&#13;
capitalist system, in which the workers are " rented"&#13;
by the corporate elite, will not continue to work for&#13;
long. And neither will a Soviet-type socialism,&#13;
where it is the government who " rents" the worker&#13;
In either system, the worker shares little in the&#13;
spoils .&#13;
Rifkin offers a viable alternative to the present&#13;
system, an alternative that is already being&#13;
practiced in many parts of the country . One of the&#13;
most · successful worker-run companies is the&#13;
Vermont Asbestos Group, in Lowell , Vt. In 1976 the&#13;
employees were faced with the closing of the plant&#13;
by the GAF Corporation (one of Fortune's 500&#13;
leading industries .) The closing would have&#13;
wreaked economic havoc for the entire area.&#13;
Instead of sitting back, the employees and&#13;
townspeople raised the capital to take over the&#13;
operation, and within a year had repayed ,ts loans,&#13;
turned a handsome profit, provided a dramatic pay&#13;
boost to its working members and installed&#13;
$250,000 ~orth of environmental protection&#13;
equipment.&#13;
Own Your Own Job is a book of vision , a source&#13;
of an alternative and hope. Rifkin is a strong&#13;
believer in the ideals of the people who broke their&#13;
yoke from a similar type of economic, and political ,&#13;
oppression . A believer in the visions of America's&#13;
Founding Fathe·rs and Mothers, whose words are&#13;
only mimicked by politicians, whose actions would&#13;
be condemned by those who control the&#13;
pursestrings of the country . Rifkin asks we look at&#13;
the substance of the ideas presented in his book,&#13;
not the labels , whi ch may make them look forei gn&#13;
or " too" radical.&#13;
Perhaps a thought from thme beginnings of&#13;
America will help move-those who wish no change,&#13;
who want no change . Sam Adams put It quite&#13;
bluntly when he said, " If you love wealth better&#13;
than liberty, the tranquility of servitude better than&#13;
the animating contest of freedom, go home from us&#13;
in peace. Crouch down and lick the hands which&#13;
feed you. May your chains sit lightly upon you, and&#13;
may posterity forget that you w ere our&#13;
countrymen."&#13;
obS=I&#13;
Manpower, Inc. optimistic&#13;
about summer employment&#13;
Manpower, Inc , the world's&#13;
largest temporary help firm ,&#13;
expects to have Jobs for more&#13;
than 25,000 students with office&#13;
work skills throughout the&#13;
country this summer, a substantial&#13;
increase over last summer,&#13;
according to Mitchell S&#13;
Fromstein, President of Manpower.&#13;
&#13;
'Every year students add an&#13;
important d1mens1on to our&#13;
workforce This year they'll pla&#13;
an even bigger role because of&#13;
the opt1m1stic 10b forecast&#13;
Manpower has received from&#13;
businessmen ," Fromstem said&#13;
" Manpower offices are&#13;
amazed at the number of students&#13;
who come in, fill out their&#13;
applications, and don't e en&#13;
mention that they can type , take&#13;
shorthand or op rat a bu in ss&#13;
machine. Th e ar good skills&#13;
which wen ed," Fromstein aid&#13;
Th person who' a ski II d&#13;
typist or otf,c machine op rator&#13;
can usually find a 10b with&#13;
Manpow r Th re are al o some&#13;
opportunItIe that don·t r quir&#13;
a much kill , u h as inv ntor&#13;
taker , maIntenanc work r ,&#13;
etc&#13;
B side typI t , er tan ,&#13;
material handlers and ome&#13;
technicians, Manpower offer&#13;
po ItIons a s terns anal sts and&#13;
keypunch operator Stud nt&#13;
can find 10b as surve tak rs ,&#13;
interviewers, ampl distributors,&#13;
or they may help out at&#13;
convention , or work on&#13;
as embl linPs&#13;
.,~ .... ,,,.,/&#13;
• Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
DINO'S·&#13;
1816 16th t. 372R OU la&#13;
Racine&#13;
634-1991&#13;
WE DELI R&#13;
Rae-in&#13;
63 -7115&#13;
Open 4:00 p.m. till one hour &lt;Jjt,•r&#13;
1 oci: / game •·Mondays &amp; Fridays&#13;
9 ·a.m. to 10 a.m.&#13;
UNION REC -CENTER&#13;
Call. 553-2695 for&#13;
FURTHER INFORMATION&#13;
25¢/game • Wednesday,&#13;
Thursday, Friday&#13;
5 :30 p.m. to 7 p.m.&#13;
25 ci:/ game - Saturdays&#13;
. a,oon to 2:30 p.m. &#13;
I'people&#13;
I&#13;
t ~&#13;
Administrator doubles as&#13;
racquetball instructor&#13;
by Br';lce Wagner&#13;
This reporter, while covering&#13;
the sports beat, went up to the&#13;
penthouse. That's right, the&#13;
Wyllie library Learning Center&#13;
penthouse. Here's the story&#13;
behind such a move.&#13;
One of the courses that the&#13;
physical education discipline&#13;
offered this semester 'was&#13;
racquetball, but couldn't find&#13;
someone within the discipline&#13;
who has the time to teach it. So&#13;
they went to one of the campus'&#13;
top players, assistant chancellor&#13;
for administration and fiscal&#13;
affairs Cary Goetz, whose office&#13;
is in, you guessed it, the LlC&#13;
penthouse.&#13;
-Goetz is in love with the sport&#13;
of racquetball and was more&#13;
than willing to teach the class&#13;
which is held on Friday mornings "&#13;
from 8 to 9:50 a.m.&#13;
The purpose of the class,&#13;
according to Goetz, is to provide&#13;
fundamentals and the right&#13;
attitude for playing the sport.&#13;
"My job is to get them to like the&#13;
sport so that after they've left the&#13;
course, I hope they would.&#13;
continue playing," states Coetz .&#13;
As to what problems this&#13;
causes for his job, he says that it&#13;
costs him a few hours on the&#13;
weekend but it's worth it to&#13;
Goetz.&#13;
His impression of the class is&#13;
good. Goetz is convinced that&#13;
the quality of the students here&#13;
at Parkside is topnotch. "I will&#13;
bend over backwards to see that&#13;
the class is competitive I'm&#13;
still a student of racquetball so I&#13;
too learn," said Goetz with&#13;
regard to how he teaches the&#13;
class. "My major problem is&#13;
directing traffic."&#13;
Racquetball, according to&#13;
Goetz, is easy to play. "1t's so&#13;
easy to improve. You don't need&#13;
to be a super jock to play the&#13;
game."&#13;
Students are interested in the&#13;
game. 32 students are currently&#13;
taking the course and it has been&#13;
pretty even between both the&#13;
men and the women in&#13;
competition, according to Goetz.&#13;
The only thing is, now, .he's&#13;
created a Frankenstein monster.&#13;
"Now, getting a court will be a&#13;
headache." says Goetz.&#13;
,.,k,li, A,fMH" ",,/ P""nll&#13;
SYNESTHESIA&#13;
"•• 1••• 1 1II •• le eOlleert hy Chick ... Alllle He,hert"&#13;
Thurs.~April 28th&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre&#13;
Adm: 51.50 UW-P Students&#13;
52.00 Others&#13;
Hey&#13;
Miller Lite on Tap&#13;
the Union and Rec. Center I&#13;
at&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
!&#13;
;&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
,&#13;
i&#13;
i -&#13;
Parkside! -&#13;
Lilt" Beer (rom Miller.&#13;
EnrylhinK you alway~ wanted&#13;
in a beer. And lese.&#13;
Di8t. by (:J.W'. _Ine. 3637-301h Ave, Keno8h.&#13;
iii ..:~\-.."' ~&#13;
~.~.&#13;
(L-R) Mark Nickel, John Makalandra,&#13;
Harvey Hedden plot to win a war.&#13;
Wargamers continue to attract players&#13;
by Christopher Clausen The games ar-e very complex others are rather&#13;
simple. Strategy and Tactics, a magazine put out by&#13;
a manufacturer of wargames of the same name,&#13;
recently surveyed its readers about wargames. They&#13;
received back and published opinions. A copy is&#13;
on one of the blackboards in the wargamers room,&#13;
also known as the warroom. The games range in&#13;
size from one foot square to one that is about 8 foot&#13;
by 7 foot&#13;
Risk, 1812, Kingmaker, Panzer leader, Dungeon&#13;
and Battle of the Bulge are just of the few names of&#13;
the wargames being played by the Parkside&#13;
Association of Wargamers (PAW) in Classroom 140.&#13;
But why is this post-Vietnam era would anyone&#13;
want to play games about war? "It's a form of&#13;
recreation much like chess," says President Mark&#13;
Mulkins.&#13;
PAW began over 5 years ago as something that&#13;
only met once a week in the bottom floor of the&#13;
library on Thursday nights. "It all started from a&#13;
small seed back in the fall of '72 when the former&#13;
chess club advisor started playing wargarnes," said&#13;
Mulkins, "from there it just grew." Final4t there&#13;
were enough' members to form a club in the spring&#13;
of 1973. The club membership is not a concrete The monthly mini-tournament costs $.25 and is&#13;
group. There are approximately 30 very active open to everyone and anyone: It's purpose is two&#13;
members and about 40 slightly active members. fold: 1) to give people the chance to experience&#13;
The club owns only one wargame. However, if wargaming and 2) to allow someone to win and let&#13;
you counted all the wargames owned by the everyone have a good time playing wargames.&#13;
members you would have about 200 games! These The future of wargamers is good according to&#13;
games are generally a combination of tactics, Mulkins with the club planning bigger and better&#13;
strategy, and luck. There are, of course, games that activities, organization of a college league, more&#13;
ere all of one or various combinations of the three- mini-tournaments, as well as clinics and&#13;
Playing time ranges from 1-20 hours. The average _conventions. So if you want to have a little&#13;
ttme is 2-3 hours. The cost also. varies, with the recreation stop in to the war room (Cl 140) or call&#13;
average range being 8-10 dollars. - 553-2013&#13;
In addition to all this the club puts out a&#13;
newsletter entitled Situation. "It's a basic&#13;
newsletter intended to inform, entertain and keep&#13;
wargamers up to date about wargames and the&#13;
monthly mini-tournament," said communications&#13;
officer Bruce wagner.&#13;
'Not much to do'&#13;
for chief iustice&#13;
by Terry ZuehIsdorf Carovl came to Parkside because of "the&#13;
excellent history department" and "the intimate&#13;
class situation". Both of these she considers highly&#13;
important in any school. She is the President of Law&#13;
Club, a member of the Parking Appeals Committee,&#13;
has danced with the Racine Dance Theater in&#13;
addition to her marriage and her study in ballet.&#13;
After she graduates this May she will attend a law&#13;
school in the fall.&#13;
In closing, when asked what she wanted to see&#13;
happen at Parkside, she said, "More Senate&#13;
organization and more student participation. I&#13;
would also like to see administrators here at&#13;
Parkside realize that they are here because of the&#13;
students and that students cannot run their&#13;
organizations as a full-time job, because of their&#13;
full-time job is &amp;oing to school." Finally, she hoped&#13;
that there would be a cut in the bureaucracy at&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Caroyl Williamson has been the Chief Justice of&#13;
the Student Court for almost a year, Williamson, a&#13;
senior from Racine, says that being Chief Justice&#13;
has been rather dull this year. ."A chief Justice&#13;
co-ordinates all the activities of the student court,&#13;
but this year there has not been too much to do."&#13;
Although there has not been many cases, Caroyl&#13;
has not been idle.'''With the help of Maureen Flynn&#13;
(Associate Justice), 1 have set up rules of evidence&#13;
and procedural guidelines that had been lacking&#13;
until now."&#13;
The Student Court takes care of academic&#13;
grievences, constitutional matters and new&#13;
disciplinary codes. When asked about what she&#13;
thought the relationship between the Senate and&#13;
the Court should be, she said, "Ideally, we should&#13;
know what the Senate is doing and still retain our&#13;
autonomy."&#13;
.=Suppo;lour&#13;
• AJoIQl"t.'liQr!l&#13;
FOR THE BEST RECORDS IN KENOSHA&#13;
AT PRICES YOU'LL LIKE!&#13;
JAZZ ROCK SOUL V&#13;
CONTEMPORARY (&#13;
CLASSICAL&#13;
COME TO US AT&#13;
-~~ p&#13;
626 Fifty-Sixth St., Kenosha, Wis. 1&#13;
r--_-=-~_~..j'-~-~.~~=g~-~~~~~&#13;
\&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
KENOSHA &amp; LOAN&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
5935 Seventh Avenue&#13;
7535 eershing Blvd.&#13;
4235 52nd Street&#13;
410 Brood St. Lake Geneva&#13;
:II people&#13;
I&#13;
Administrator doubles&#13;
' as&#13;
racquetball instructor&#13;
by Br~ce Wagner&#13;
This reporter, while covering&#13;
the sports beat, went up to the&#13;
penthouse. That's right, the&#13;
Wyllie Library Learning Center&#13;
penthouse. Here's the story&#13;
behind such a move.&#13;
One of the courses that the&#13;
physical education discipline&#13;
offered this semester ·was&#13;
racquetball, but couldn't find&#13;
someone witnin the discipline&#13;
who has the time to teach it. So&#13;
they went to one of the campus'&#13;
top players, assistant chancellor&#13;
for administration and fiscal&#13;
affairs Cary Goetz, whose office&#13;
is in, you guessed it, the LLC&#13;
penthouse.&#13;
Goetz is in love with the sport&#13;
of racquetball and was more&#13;
than willing to teach the class,&#13;
which is held on Friday mornings&#13;
from 8 to 9:50 a.m.&#13;
The purpose of the class,&#13;
according to Goetz, is to provide&#13;
fundamentals and the right&#13;
attitude for playing the sport.&#13;
" My job is to get them to like the&#13;
sport so that after they've left the&#13;
course, I hope they would.&#13;
continue playing," states Goetz .&#13;
As to what problems this&#13;
causes for his job, he says that it&#13;
costs him a few hours on the&#13;
weekend but it's worth it to&#13;
Goetz.&#13;
His impression of the class is&#13;
good. Goetz is convinced that&#13;
the quality of the students here&#13;
at Parkside is topnotch . " I will&#13;
bend over backwards to see that&#13;
the class is competitive I'm&#13;
still a student of racquetball so I&#13;
too learn," said Goetz with&#13;
regard to how he teaches the&#13;
class. "My major problem is&#13;
directing traffic."&#13;
Racquetball, according to&#13;
Goetz, is easy to play. "It's so&#13;
easy to improve. You don't need&#13;
to be a super jock to play the&#13;
game."&#13;
Students are interested in the&#13;
game. 32 students are currently&#13;
taking the course and it has been&#13;
pretty even between both the&#13;
men and the women in&#13;
competition, according to Goetz.&#13;
The only thing is, now, he's&#13;
created a Frankenstein monster.&#13;
"Now, getting a court will be a&#13;
headache." says Goetz.&#13;
P•1k1li1 A1lltlH11 Bo•ri P111111II&#13;
SYNESTHESIA 111 il111I m111le eoneert hy Chiek ind Anne Herhert"&#13;
Thurs.! April 28th&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre&#13;
Adm·: 51.50 UW-P Students&#13;
52 .00 Others&#13;
Hey Parkside! -&#13;
Miller Lite on Tap&#13;
at the Union and Rec. c'enter&#13;
Litt&gt; Beer from Miller.&#13;
t:verything you alwayw wanted&#13;
in a beer. And le11.&#13;
Oi81, by C.J.W. Inc. 3637-JOth Ave. Keno8ha&#13;
(l-R) Mark Nickel, John Makolondra, Paula Miller, Terry Zuehlsdorf, and&#13;
Harvey Hedden plot to win a war.&#13;
Wargamers continue to attract players&#13;
by Christopher Clausen&#13;
Risk, 1812, Kingmaker, Panzer Leader, Dungeon&#13;
and Battle of the Bulge are just of the few names of&#13;
the wargames being played by the Parkside&#13;
Association of Wargamers (PAW) in Classroom 140.&#13;
But why is this post-Vietnam era would anyone&#13;
want to play games about war? " It's a form of&#13;
recreation much like chess," says President Mark&#13;
Mulkins.&#13;
PAW began over 5 years ago as something that&#13;
only met once a week in the bottom floor of the&#13;
library on Thursday nights. " It all started from a&#13;
small seed back in the fall of '72 when the former&#13;
c_hess club advisor started playing wargames," said&#13;
Mulkins, "from there it just grew." Finally there&#13;
were enough· members to form a club in the spring&#13;
The games are very complex others are rather&#13;
simple. Strateg y and Tactics, a magaz ine put out by&#13;
a manufacturer of wargames of the same name,&#13;
recently surveyed its readers about wargames . They&#13;
received back and published opinions . A copy is&#13;
on one of the blackboards in the wargamers room ,&#13;
also known as the warroom . The games range in&#13;
size from one foot square to one that is about 8 foot&#13;
by 7 foot .&#13;
In addition to all this the club puts out a ·&#13;
newsletter entitled Situation . " It' s a basic&#13;
newsletter inte-nded to inform, entertain and keep&#13;
wargamers up to date about wargames and the&#13;
monthly mini-tournament," said communications&#13;
officer Bruce Wagoer&#13;
of 1973. The club membership is not a concrete The monthly mini-tournament costs $.25 and is&#13;
group. There are approximately 30 very active open to everyone and anyone: It's purpose is two&#13;
members and about 40 slightly active members. fold : 1) to give people the chance to experience&#13;
The club owns only one wargame . However, if wargaming and 2) to allow someone to win and let&#13;
you counted all the wargames owned by the everyone have a good time playing wargames .&#13;
members you would have about 200 games! These The future of wargamers is good according to&#13;
games are generally a combination of tactics, Mulkins with the club planning bigger and better&#13;
strategy, and luck. There are, of course, games that activities, organization of a college league, more&#13;
are all of one or various combinations of the three.- mini-tournaments, as well as clinics and&#13;
Playing time ranges from 1-20 hours . The average _ conventions. So il you want to have a little&#13;
time is 2-3 hours . The cost also. varies, with the recreation stop in to the warroom (CL 140) or call&#13;
average range being 8-10 dollars. - 553-2013 .&#13;
'Not much to do'&#13;
for. chief iustice&#13;
by Terry Zuehlsdorf&#13;
Caroyl Williamson has been the Chief Justice of&#13;
the Student Court for almost a year. Williamson, a&#13;
senior from Racine, says that being Chief Justice&#13;
has been rather dull this year .. "A chief Justice&#13;
co-ordinates all the activities of the student court,&#13;
but this year there has not been too much to do."&#13;
Although there has not been many cases, Caroyl&#13;
has not been idle.'"With the help of Maureen Flynn&#13;
(Associate Justice), I have set up rules of evidence&#13;
and procedural guidelines that had been lacking&#13;
until now."&#13;
The Student Court takes care of academic&#13;
grievences, constitutional matters and new&#13;
disciplinary codes. When asked about what she&#13;
thought the relationship between the Senate and&#13;
the Court should be, she said, " Ideally, we should&#13;
know what the Senate is doing and still retain our&#13;
autonomy."&#13;
Caroy.l came to Parkside because of "the&#13;
excellent history department" and "the intimate&#13;
class situation". Both of these she considers highly&#13;
important in any school . She is the President of Law&#13;
Club, a member of the Parking Appeals Committee,&#13;
has danced with the Racine Dance Theater in&#13;
addition to her marriage and her study in ballet.&#13;
After she graduates this May she will attend a law&#13;
school in the fall.&#13;
In closing, when asked what she wanted to see&#13;
happen at Parkside, she said, " More Senate&#13;
organization and more student participation . I&#13;
would also like to see administrators here at&#13;
Parkside realize that they are here because of the&#13;
students and that students cannot run their&#13;
organizations as a full-time job, because of th~ir&#13;
full-trme job is &amp;oing to school." Finally, she hoped&#13;
that there would be a cut in the bureaucracy at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
FOR THE BEST RECORDS IN KENOSHA&#13;
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KENOSHA &amp; LOAN&#13;
SAVINGS 5935 Seventh Avenue&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
410 Brood St. - Lake Geneva &#13;
Blood pressure&#13;
clinic planned&#13;
ByMona Maillet&#13;
On Tuesday, May 3, the&#13;
HealthOffice will be conducting&#13;
its Annual Blood Pressure Clinic.&#13;
It will be held from 9 a.m. to&#13;
6 p.m. in Union 104-106.&#13;
The actual testing will only&#13;
take a few minutes. Participants&#13;
then will be able to see a movie&#13;
of blood pressure.Punch will be&#13;
served. It is open to all students,&#13;
staff, faculty, and members of&#13;
the community.&#13;
Campus Health Officer Edith&#13;
Isenberg, RN., said that the&#13;
purpose of the clinic is to detect,&#13;
peoplewith high blood pressure.&#13;
People with unusually high&#13;
blood pressurewill be asked to&#13;
see their doctor as soon as&#13;
possible.&#13;
last year, over 600 people had&#13;
their blood pressure checked.&#13;
The success was due mainly to&#13;
the location, according to&#13;
Isenberg. "We had it in the&#13;
Alcoves (in the- library/Learning&#13;
Center) and it was great because&#13;
everyone saw it and stopped."&#13;
This year she is worried that the&#13;
location isn't as accessible to&#13;
students as the alcoves and&#13;
because of that, this year's clinic&#13;
won't be as successful.&#13;
High blood pressure is the&#13;
main cause of heart disease,&#13;
kidney disease, and stroke. An&#13;
estimated 23 million Americans,&#13;
or 1 out of every 10 adults, have&#13;
high blood pressure. It is very&#13;
hard to detect as it has no&#13;
symptoms and the only way to&#13;
accurately detect it is with a&#13;
blood pressuretest. If detected,&#13;
however, it can be controlled&#13;
and treated.&#13;
Be sure to stop by Union&#13;
104-106on Tuesday and have&#13;
your blood pressure tested. A&#13;
few minutes then is better than&#13;
possibly an early death or&#13;
permanent disability a few years&#13;
later.&#13;
Safety program&#13;
scheduled at&#13;
Golden Rondelle&#13;
Learn how to be a "victim" of&#13;
self protection by attending the&#13;
free Self-Protection and Personal&#13;
Safety Program at the Golden&#13;
Rondelle Theater on April 27 at&#13;
7:00 p.rn.&#13;
Marty Defatte, Director of the&#13;
Crime Prevention Unit at the&#13;
Racine Police Department will&#13;
discuss and demonstrate ways to&#13;
avoid potentially dangerous&#13;
situations in the home, at work,&#13;
on the street and in the car. If&#13;
you are victimized, Defatte will&#13;
talk about what actions you can&#13;
take to protect yourself from&#13;
further harm.&#13;
Free literature will be available&#13;
and Defatte will hold an informal&#13;
question and answer session&#13;
For further information and&#13;
reservations contact the Golden&#13;
Rondelle at 554-2154.&#13;
eventst"&#13;
Mouris shows award winning 'Frank Film' Friday&#13;
by Michael Murphy use of single frame animation Mouris was able to accord life to his&#13;
pictures on screen.&#13;
Each frame of film Involves countless numbers of pictures&#13;
combined in-thousands of distinct and separate collages The effect,&#13;
when projected, results In a near stimulatory overload of building and&#13;
changing images.&#13;
The images are fused through the use of a double soundtrack One&#13;
soundtrack is a flowing narrative, sectionalizing the film into specihc&#13;
periods of Mauris' life. The second soundtrack Involves individual&#13;
words specifically commenting on the images on the SCreen.&#13;
The film, therefore, is a total exercise of one's sensory faculties and&#13;
requires several screenings to fully appreciate it.&#13;
Parkside students will be given the opportunity to see Frank Film&#13;
and meet Mouris Friday, April 29 from 1 to 2:30 pm in Classroom&#13;
105 and on Friday evening at 7:00 p.m. at the Colden Rondelle&#13;
Theater in Racine.&#13;
In addition to Frank Film, two other Mourls ftlms, Coney and&#13;
Screentest,will be shown.&#13;
Coney has been described as va universal beach party In a poetry of&#13;
neon and motion," whereas Screenrest is a portrait of nine men's lives&#13;
in New York City during 1974.&#13;
These programs should make for not only an interesting and&#13;
entertaining evening, but should provide Insight Into the works of&#13;
contemporary, independent filmmakers&#13;
In 1974,the Academy Award for BestShort Film of the year was&#13;
presented to a 9 minute animated movie entitled Frank Film. The film&#13;
involves all of 11,592 separate colleges incorporated within an autobiographical&#13;
theme.&#13;
Frank Mauris, the film's creator, is a graphic artist turned&#13;
filmmaker His experience in art and his fascination for forms, colors,&#13;
and images combine in the formulation of this unique and visually&#13;
exciting film.&#13;
Frank Film details the progression of both his life and his&#13;
continually changing interests. Structurally, however, the film l's&#13;
unique among other biographies.&#13;
Mauris explains, in a short paper titled Animation and Other&#13;
Obsessions, that one of the most driving obsessions in his life was the&#13;
magazine. His fascination was not in magazines themselves, but in&#13;
the fantasy and wonder surrounding pictures.&#13;
He collected pictures, selectively, catagorizing hundreds in order&#13;
to fulfill his obsession, combining many into collages. Still, he was&#13;
unable to achieve, for his pictures, that senseof liveliness that was so&#13;
much a part of his own personality.&#13;
Then Mouris decided, in the making of his autobiography, that the&#13;
best way to represent the true essence of himself was through these&#13;
hundreds of images that held such a major part of his life.&#13;
The resulting product is a visual pageantry of images. Through the&#13;
Your challenge is to construct the mystery&#13;
word in the boxes below. Todo this you must&#13;
fill in the correct missing letter in each of the&#13;
words listed in the columns. Then transfer the&#13;
missing letters to the corresponding numbered&#13;
boxes, Keep an eraser handy-its not&#13;
as easy as it looks!&#13;
1. S_RAP&#13;
2. P--ACH&#13;
3._EECH&#13;
4. FAC_S 8. TRAI_&#13;
5. _OAST 9. QU_ TE&#13;
8. TEA....-S 10. BR_WN&#13;
7. B_ILS 11. --AILS&#13;
When there's a challenge,&#13;
quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope you have some fun with the challenge.&#13;
There's another challenge we'd like to offer you, too.&#13;
The Pabst challenge:&#13;
We welcome the chance to prove the quality of&#13;
our beer. We challenge you to taste and compare&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon to any other premium beer. You'll&#13;
like Pabst better. Blue Ribbon quality means the best&#13;
tasting beer you can get. Si nce 1844 it always has.&#13;
Blood pressure&#13;
clinic planned&#13;
By Mona Maillet&#13;
On Tuesday, May 3, the&#13;
Health Office will be conducting&#13;
its Annual Blood Pressure Clinic .&#13;
It will be held from 9 a.m . to&#13;
6 p.m . in Union 104-106.&#13;
The actual testing will only&#13;
take a few minutes. Participants&#13;
then will be able to see a movie&#13;
of blood pressure. Punch will be&#13;
served. It is open to all students,&#13;
staff, faculty, and members of&#13;
the community .&#13;
Campus Health Officer Edith&#13;
Isenberg, R.N ., said that the&#13;
purpose of the clinic is to detect,&#13;
people with high blood pressure.&#13;
People with unusually high&#13;
blood pressure will be asked to&#13;
see their doctor as soon as&#13;
possible.&#13;
Last year, over 600 people had&#13;
their blood pressure checked .&#13;
The success was due mainly to&#13;
the location, according to&#13;
Isenberg. "We had it in the&#13;
Alcoves (in the Library / Learning&#13;
Center) and it was great because&#13;
everyone saw it and stopped ."&#13;
This year she is worried that the&#13;
location isn't as accessible to&#13;
students as the alcoves and&#13;
because of that, this year's clinic&#13;
won't be as successful.&#13;
High blood pressure is the&#13;
main cause of heart disease,&#13;
kidney disease, and stroke. An&#13;
estimated 23 million Americans,&#13;
or 1 out of every 10 adults, have&#13;
high blood pressure. It is very&#13;
hard to detect as it has no&#13;
symptoms and the only way to&#13;
accurately detect it is with a&#13;
blood pressure test . If detected,&#13;
however, it can be controlled&#13;
and treated .&#13;
Be sure to stop by Union&#13;
104-106 on Tuesday and have&#13;
your blood pressure tested . A&#13;
few minutes then is better than&#13;
possibly an early death or&#13;
permanent disability a few years&#13;
later.&#13;
Safety program&#13;
scheduled at&#13;
Golden Rondelle&#13;
\ .&#13;
Learn how to be a " victim" of&#13;
self protection by attending the&#13;
free Self-Protection and Personal&#13;
Safety Program at t~e Golden&#13;
Rondelle Theater on April 27 at&#13;
7:00 p .m .&#13;
Marty Defatte, Director of the&#13;
Crime Prevention Unit at the&#13;
Racine Police Department will&#13;
discuss and demonstrate ways to&#13;
avoid potentialiy dangerous&#13;
situations in the home, at work,&#13;
on the street and in the car. If&#13;
you are victimized, Defatte will&#13;
talk about what actions you can&#13;
take to protect yourself from&#13;
further harm .&#13;
Free literature will be available&#13;
and Defatte will hold an informal&#13;
question and answer session .&#13;
For further information and&#13;
reservations contact the Golden&#13;
Rondelle at 554-2154 .&#13;
events'l'I&#13;
Mouris shows award winning 'Frank Film' Friday&#13;
by Michael Murphy&#13;
In 1974, the Academy Award for Best Short Film of the year was&#13;
presented to a 9 minute animated movie entitled Frank Film . The film&#13;
involves all of 11,592 separate colleges incorporated within an autobiographical&#13;
theme.&#13;
Frank Mouris, the film's creator, is a graphic artist turned&#13;
filmmaker. His experience in art and his fascination for forms colors&#13;
and images combine in the formulation of this unique and 'visual!;&#13;
exciting film.&#13;
Frank Film details the progression of both his life and his&#13;
continually changing interests. Structurally, however, the film i's&#13;
unique among other biographies.&#13;
Mouris explains, in a short paper titled Animation and Other&#13;
Obsessions, that one of the most driving obsessions in his life was the&#13;
magazine. His fascination was not in magazines themselves, but in&#13;
the f&lt;rntasy and wonder surrounding pictures .&#13;
He collected pictures, selectively, catagorizing hundreds in order&#13;
to fulfill his obsession, combining many into collages . Still, he was&#13;
unable to achieve, for his pictures, that sense of liveliness that was so&#13;
much a part of his own personality .&#13;
Then Mouris decided, in the making of his autobiography, that the&#13;
best way to represent the true essence of himself was through these&#13;
hundreds of images that held such a major part of his life.&#13;
The resulting product is a visual pageantry of images . Through the&#13;
Your challenge is to construct the mystery&#13;
word in the boxes below. To do this you must&#13;
fill in the correct missing letter in each of the&#13;
words listed in the columns. Then transfer the&#13;
use of single trame an1mat1on Mouris was abl to accord lit to h1&#13;
pictures on screen .&#13;
Each frame of film involves countless number of p1ctur&#13;
combined in· thousands of distinct and eparate collag s The eff t,&#13;
when pro1ected, results in a near stimulatory overload of building and&#13;
changing images&#13;
The images are fused through the use of a double soundtrack On&#13;
soundtrack is a flowing narrative, sectionalizing the film into spec1f1c&#13;
periods of Mouris' life The second soundtrack involve ind1v1dual&#13;
words specifically commenting on the image on the screen&#13;
The film, therefore, is a total exercise of one's sensory fa ult1e and&#13;
requires several screenings to fully appreciate 1t&#13;
Parkside students will be g1 en the opportunity to see Frank Film&#13;
and meet Mouris Friday, April 29 from 1 to 2 30 pm in Cla room&#13;
105 and on Friday evening at 7 00 p.m at the Gold n Rondelle&#13;
Theater in Racine .&#13;
In addition to Frank Film, two other Mourn film , Coney and&#13;
Screentest, will be shown .&#13;
Coney has been described as " a universal bea h part in a poetry of&#13;
neon and motion," whereas Screentest 1s a portrait of nine m n's live&#13;
in ew York City during 1974&#13;
These programs should make for not only an intere ting and&#13;
entertaining e ening, but should provide insight into th work of&#13;
contemporar , independent filmmaker&#13;
missing letters to the corresponding numbered&#13;
boxes. Keep an eraser handy-its not&#13;
as easy as it looks!&#13;
1. $ _ RAP&#13;
2. P_ACH&#13;
J __ EECH&#13;
4. FAC_ S&#13;
s._OAST&#13;
s. TE S&#13;
1. B _ ILS&#13;
s. TRAI_&#13;
9. QU_ TE&#13;
10. BR_ WN&#13;
11 . ILS&#13;
When there's a challenge, quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope you have some fun with the challenge.&#13;
There's another challenge we'd like to offer you, too.&#13;
The Pabst challenge:&#13;
We welcome the chance to prove the quality of&#13;
our beer. We challenge you to taste and compare&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon to any other premium beer. You'll&#13;
like Pabst better. Blue Ribbon quality means the best&#13;
tasting beer you can get. Since 1844 it always has.&#13;
PABST. Since 1844. The quality has always come through. , 1975 PABST BREWING COMPANY M ilwaukee Wis Peor ,a He ights Ii Newarlit N J LO~ Ange 1&#13;
H Ca1ol PAbSI Geotg,A&#13;
NOi Vi:183l]J pJO-.A.JeJSJ.w &#13;
T,,"l&#13;
\&#13;
Bio-rythm aut,hority t~ lecture here&#13;
of some aspects of biological&#13;
clocks with drugs, and new&#13;
programs have been designed to&#13;
"reset" the clock of the mammal.&#13;
These findings have had&#13;
measurable impact on time, life&#13;
and energy saving in industries&#13;
dependent upon shift work and&#13;
crossing time zones, Similar&#13;
applications of environmental&#13;
controls of bio-rhythms have had&#13;
major impact not only on' plant&#13;
and animal systems in agriculture&#13;
but also on organisms that&#13;
play a crucial role in sewage&#13;
disposal and environmental&#13;
pollution control.&#13;
On Friday, April 29, the series&#13;
will present a talk by Dr. H. P.&#13;
- Rusch, Director pf the Wisconsin&#13;
Clinical Cancer Center at&#13;
UW-Madison on "The Center:&#13;
What It's Doing and Where It's&#13;
Going" at 2 p.m. in Greenquist&#13;
Hall Room 101.&#13;
Scientists have found that all&#13;
higher plants and animals have a&#13;
biological clock which regulates&#13;
such daily activities as waking or&#13;
sleeping, flourishing or vegetating&#13;
and. living or' dying. New&#13;
understandings of the molecular&#13;
mechanisms that make the clock&#13;
"tick" have already led to control&#13;
"The Biological Clock: Its role&#13;
in Fast Living and Slow Aging"&#13;
will be the topic of a public&#13;
lecture by Dr. Charles F. Ehret,&#13;
"an authority on bio-rhythms and&#13;
a senior biologist in the Division&#13;
of Biological and Medical&#13;
Research at Argonne National&#13;
laboratory, at 7:30 p.m. on&#13;
Thursday,-ApriI28, at Parkside in&#13;
Greenquist Hall Room 103.&#13;
Dr. Ehret will.focus his talk, a&#13;
part of the Chemts trv-t.ite&#13;
Science Seminar Series, on the&#13;
role of the clock in the processes&#13;
of cancer and aging.&#13;
Wednesday, April 27&#13;
Transcendental Meditation lecture at 1 and at 7:30 p.m. in CI D 133.&#13;
Student Concert at 3 p.m. in CA D 118.&#13;
Men's Tennis meet vs. UW-Waukesha at 3 p.m. at the courts.&#13;
PAB Coffeehouse presents Clark Anderson Electric Blues Band from&#13;
7:30 to 9:30 p.m. in Union Square.&#13;
lecture: "Job Hunting Secrets and Tactics" by Kirby Stanat at 8 p.m.&#13;
in the Union Cinema. Sponsored by PAB and Follett Publishing&#13;
Company.&#13;
Thursday, April 28&#13;
lecture: "More or Less: The Caseof Choice" by Dr. Gerald Dworkin at&#13;
3:30 p.m. in CA 129 Sponsored by the Parkside Philosophical&#13;
Society.&#13;
Chemistry-Life Science Seminar Series lecture: "The Role of Body&#13;
Biorhythms in Cancer and Aging" by Dr. C. Ehret, Division of&#13;
Biological at Biomedical Research, Argonne National Laboratory,&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. in GR 103&#13;
lecture: "Consent and Experimentation with Children" by Dr. Gerald&#13;
Dworkin at 7:30 p.m. in CL 105. Sponsored bv-the Parkside Philosophical&#13;
Society.&#13;
Concert: Synethesia, a "visual music concert" by Chick and Anne&#13;
Herbert at 8 p.m. in the Union Cinema. Admission is $1.50 for&#13;
students and $200 for others. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Friday, April 29&#13;
Earth Science Club Colloquium: "Geology of Morocco" by Tom&#13;
Vogel, at 12 noon in GR 113. Coffee and donuts will be served.&#13;
Chemistry-Life Science- Seminar Series lecture: "The Wisconsin&#13;
Clinical Cancer Center: What It's Doing and Where It's Going" by&#13;
Dr. H.P. Rusch, Director of the Center, at 2 p.m. in GR-101,&#13;
life Science Club Annual Meeting: Talk by Dr. Surinder Datta on&#13;
"Program Changes in life Sciences for 1977" and election of new&#13;
officers after the life Science Seminar in GR 127 at 3:00 p.m. (after&#13;
the lecture.)&#13;
Men's Tennis meet vs. Carthage at 3 p.m. at the courts&#13;
Women's Softball game vs. Uw-Oshkosh .at 4 p.m. at Pets.&#13;
Musical: "Celebration" at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
Admission $1.00 for students and $2,00 for others. Also April 30&#13;
and May 1.&#13;
Tuesday, May 3&#13;
Lecture: "The Invasion of America" by Dr. Francis Jennings, director&#13;
of the Center for the History of the American Indian, at 3 p.m. in CL&#13;
107. Sponsored by the Anthropology Club.&#13;
Softball game vs . Rock Valley (2) at 4: 15 p.rn. at Pets.&#13;
Concert: Parkside Percussion Ensemble, Roger Daniels, director, at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
PAR wishes to remind everyone that the END is near!&#13;
Blood Pressure Clinic from 9 a.rn. to 6 p.m. in Union 104-106.&#13;
Conducted by The Health Office&#13;
Switchboard schedules fund •&#13;
raiser&#13;
callers release, guidance, coun-&#13;
"seling inforrnatiorr and agency&#13;
referrals to troubled area&#13;
residents, specifically the lowincome&#13;
and/or disadvantaged.&#13;
Proceeds will go towards the&#13;
payment of operating expenses&#13;
of Switchboard, a non-profit&#13;
telephone crisis intervention&#13;
helpli ne or hotline which&#13;
provides trained para-professional&#13;
telephone operators to receive&#13;
calls - from people in need of&#13;
help. The O'perators seek to offer&#13;
Switchboard, Kenosha's helpline,&#13;
is sponsoring its first annual&#13;
fundraising dance on Sunday,&#13;
May tst. The Dance is to be held&#13;
at Dad's Place on Highway 31&#13;
and 60th Street from 8:30 p.m . to&#13;
1:30 a.m. The entertainment will&#13;
feature two popular local groups,&#13;
Orphan and Head Band. Their&#13;
specialty is todevs contemporary&#13;
rock music sound. Tickets at&#13;
$2:00 per person are available&#13;
from: East Kenosha Records and&#13;
Tapes; Switchboard, p.o. Box&#13;
522, Kenosha, 53141; or at the&#13;
door that night at no additional&#13;
cost. For more information,&#13;
interested persons may call&#13;
Switchboard at 658-HElP.&#13;
•&#13;
trip&#13;
scheduled&#13;
Free Pizza Delifery&#13;
Club Highview&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
AIt, .,11•.,1•• Chi , S~I.hettl, Ru',II, 8.. 1&#13;
OPEN 4 ~ 1 1.11.&#13;
PAS is sponsoring a camping&#13;
trip to Kettle Moraine State Park&#13;
from Friday, April 29 to Sunday,&#13;
May 1. There is a $3.00 fee for&#13;
site and equipment. Sign up in&#13;
the Student Union Office, Union&#13;
209.&#13;
DANISH&#13;
Classlfieds BAKERY $250 .. Stuffing 1000 envelopes: HOMEWORK:&#13;
GUARANTEEDl COMPANIES NEED&#13;
YOU Details: $1. self-addressed. stamped&#13;
envelope: Mobile 42 199. 258 Atwood,&#13;
ctttsburqn. PA 15213. t;M~(!4~&#13;
- PHONE: 637-8895&#13;
Found: Class ring in the womens bathroom&#13;
en the 01 level of the Library Learning&#13;
Center. Stiver With red stone. Call Mona at&#13;
553-2295 or come to the RANGER office. banquet&#13;
planne~&#13;
1841 Douglo, Avenue&#13;
Roline. WiSlon,in 53402&#13;
I I&#13;
SUMMER JOBS IN YOUR FIELD: To&#13;
students in the human services area,&#13;
education and recreation. Extensive precamp&#13;
and in-service training and high level&#13;
01 responsibility Will provide experience In&#13;
child care. group work and outdoor&#13;
education In a primitive setting With urban&#13;
children. Find out why wecan say this camp&#13;
job IS different from any other. Write for&#13;
mtormatron and application: Trail Blazer&#13;
Camps. ;6 W 45th sr , New York , NY&#13;
10036. Please Include your phone number.&#13;
Wanted: Male student to share a furnished&#13;
deluxe apartment for the months of June:&#13;
July, August. Flat rate of $300.00 includes&#13;
all utruues except long distance calls, Must&#13;
be dependable, honest and able to furnish&#13;
references, No security deposit is required&#13;
but payments must be prompt; terms&#13;
negotiable, Contact: Prof. David E. Miller,&#13;
12502 at st Avenue. Kenosha, WI 53140.&#13;
Phone 694-4639.&#13;
The Spring Sports Nhletic&#13;
Banquet will be held on&#13;
Wednesday, May 11 at 6:30 p.m&#13;
in the Union.&#13;
For Sale: Ford Fairlane. 1969. 2 door&#13;
hard-top. Thrifty 302 v-a eutorceuc. Power&#13;
steering, One OWf1er,96,000 faithful miles&#13;
Aboul $295. 6819 3rd Ave,. Kenosha. Phone&#13;
652-1582&#13;
JOB HUNTING SECRET '3&#13;
"To succeed in campus job interviews, you&#13;
have to know where that recruiter is coming&#13;
from. The simple answer is that he is&#13;
coming from corporate headquarters. If,&#13;
lor example. you assume that because the&#13;
mtervrew is on campus the recruiter expects&#13;
you to look and act like a student. you're in&#13;
for a shock."&#13;
An Answer/question about job hunling&#13;
tonighl. April 27, at 800 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theatre.&#13;
•&#13;
IS&#13;
OLYMPIA BREWING COMMNY 0IJMPfA· st PAUL&#13;
Diot. by C.J. W. Inc.&#13;
3637 • 30th Avenue, Kenosha&#13;
Bio-rythlll authority to lecture here "The Biological Clock : Its role&#13;
Wednesday, April 27 in Fast Living and Slow Aging"&#13;
Transcendental Meditation Lecture at 1 and at 7:30 p .m . in Cl D 133. will be the topic of a public&#13;
Student Concert at 3 p.m . in CA D 118. lecture by Dr. Charles F. Ehret,&#13;
Men's Tennis meet vs. UW-Waukesha at 3 p .m . at the courts. an authority on bio-rhythms and&#13;
PAB Coffeehouse presents Clark Anderson Electric Blues Band horn a senior biologist in the Division&#13;
7:30 to 9:30 p.m . in Union Square. of Biological and Medical&#13;
Lecture: " Job Hunting Secrets and Tactics" by Kirby Stanat at 8 p .m . Research at Argonne National&#13;
in the Union Cinema. Sponsored by PAB and Follett Publishing Laboratory, at 7:30 p.m . on&#13;
Company. · Thursday, .April 28, at Parkside in&#13;
Thursday, April 28 Greenquist Hall Room 103.&#13;
Lecture: "More or Less: The Case of Choice" by Dr. Gerald Dworkin at&#13;
3:30 p .m . in CA 129. Sponsored by the Parkside Philosophical&#13;
Society&#13;
Chemistry-Life Science Seminar Series Lecture: " The ~ole of Body&#13;
Biorhythms in Cancer and Aging" by Dr. C. Ehret, Division of&#13;
Biological at Biomedical Research, Argonne National Laboratory,&#13;
at 7:30 p.m . in GR 103.&#13;
Dr. Ehret will .focus his talk, a&#13;
part of the Chemistry-life&#13;
Science Seminar Series, on the&#13;
role of the clock in the processes&#13;
of cancer and aging.&#13;
On Friday, April 29, the series&#13;
will present a talk by Dr. H. P.&#13;
~ Rusch, Director pf the Wisconsin&#13;
Clinical Cancer Center at&#13;
UW-Madison on " The Center:&#13;
What It's Doing and Where It's&#13;
Going" at 2 p.m . in Greenquist&#13;
Hall Room 101.&#13;
Scientists have found that all&#13;
higher plants and animals have a&#13;
biological clock which regulates&#13;
such daily activities as waking or&#13;
sleeping, flourishing or vegetating&#13;
and . living or , dying. New&#13;
understandings of the molecular&#13;
mechanisms that make the clock&#13;
"tick:' have already led to control&#13;
-&#13;
of some aspects of biological&#13;
clocks with drugs, and new&#13;
programs have been designed to&#13;
"reset" the clock of the mammal.&#13;
These findings have had&#13;
measurable impact on time, life&#13;
and energy saving in industries&#13;
dependent upon shift work and&#13;
crossing time zones. Similar&#13;
applid1tions of environmental&#13;
controls of bio-rhythms have had&#13;
major impact not only on· plant&#13;
and animal systems in agricultur€&#13;
but also on organisms that&#13;
play a crucial role in sewage&#13;
disposal and environmental&#13;
pollution control.&#13;
Lecture: "Consent and Experimentation with Children" by Dr. Gerald&#13;
Dworkin at 7:30 p.m . in CL 105. Sponsored by the Parkside Philosophical&#13;
Society . Switchboard schedules fund raiser&#13;
Concert: Synethesia, a " visual music concert" by Chick and Anne&#13;
Herbert at 8 p .m . in the Union Cinema. Admission is $1.50 for&#13;
students and $2.00 for others . Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Friday, April 29&#13;
Earth Science Club Colloquium: "Geology of Morocco" by Tom&#13;
Vogel, at 12 noon in GR 113. Coffee and donuts will be served.&#13;
Chemistry-Life Science- Seminar Series Lecture: "The Wisconsin&#13;
Clinical Cancer Center: What It's Doing and Where It's Going" by&#13;
Dr. H.P. -Rusch, Director of the Center, at 2 p.m . in GR -101.&#13;
Life Science Club Annual Meeting: Talk by Dr. Surinder Datta on&#13;
" Program Changes in Life Sciences for 1977" and election of new&#13;
officers after the Life Science Seminar in GR 127 at 3:00 p.m. (after&#13;
the lecture.)&#13;
Men's Tennis meet vs . Carthage at 3 p .m . at the courts.&#13;
Women's Softball game vs . UW-Oshkosh .at 4 p.m . at Pets.&#13;
Musical: "Celebration" at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
Admission $1.00 for students and $2.00 for others. Also April 30&#13;
and May 1.&#13;
Tuesday, May 3&#13;
Lecture: "The Invasion of America" by Dr. Francis Jennings, director&#13;
of the Center for the History of the American Indian, at 3 p.m . in CL&#13;
107. Sponsored by the Anthropology Club.&#13;
Softball game vs . Rock Valley (2) at 4: 15 p .m . at Pets.&#13;
Concert: Parkside Percussion Ensemble, Roger Daniels, director, at 8&#13;
p.m . in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
PAB wishes to remind everyone that the END is near!&#13;
Blood Pressure Clinic from 9 a.m . to 6 p.m . in Union 104-106.&#13;
Conducted by The Health Office.&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
Found : Class ring In the womens bathroom&#13;
en the 01 level of the Library Learning&#13;
Center Silver with red stone. Call Mona at&#13;
553-2295 or corne to the RANGER office.&#13;
Wanted: Male student to share a furnished&#13;
deluxe apartment for the months of June'.&#13;
July, August. Flat rate of $300 00 includes&#13;
all utIilties except long distance calls. Must&#13;
be dependable, honest and able to furnish&#13;
references. No security deposit is required&#13;
but payments must be prompt; terms&#13;
negotiable. Contact. Prof. David E. Miller,&#13;
12502 41 st Avenue, Kenosha, WI 53140.&#13;
Phone 694-4639.&#13;
$250 .. Stuffing 1000 envelopes: HOMEWORK&#13;
: GUARANTEED! COMPANIES NEED&#13;
YOU. Details : $1 , self-addressed, stamped&#13;
envelope : Mobile 42 199. 258 Atwood,&#13;
Pittsburgh, PA 15213.&#13;
SUMMER JOBS - IN YOUR FIELD: To&#13;
students In the human services area,&#13;
education and recreation. Extensive precamp&#13;
and in-service training and high level&#13;
of respons1bil1ty will provide experience In&#13;
child care. group work and outdoor&#13;
esucation in a primitive setting with urban&#13;
children. Find out why we can say this camp&#13;
10b Is different lrom any other. Write for&#13;
information and application : Trail Blazer&#13;
Camps. ~6 W 45th St . New York, NY&#13;
10036. Please include your phone number.&#13;
Switchboard, Kenosha's helpline,&#13;
is sponsoring its first annual&#13;
fundraising dance on Sunday,&#13;
May 1st. The Dance is to be held&#13;
at Dad's Place on Highway 31&#13;
and 60th Street from 8:30 p.m. to&#13;
1:30 a.m. The entertainment will&#13;
feature two popular local groups,&#13;
Orphan and Head Band. Their&#13;
specialty is today's contemporary&#13;
rock music sound . Tickets at&#13;
$2-00 per person are available&#13;
from : East Kenosha Records and&#13;
Tapes; Switchboard, P.O . Box&#13;
522, Kenosha, 53141; or at the&#13;
door that night at no additional&#13;
cost. For more information,&#13;
interested persons may call&#13;
Switchboard at 658-HELP.&#13;
• trip&#13;
scheduled&#13;
PAl3 is sponsoring a camping&#13;
trip to Kettle Moraine State Park&#13;
from Friday, April 29 to Sunday,&#13;
May 1 There is a $3.00 fee for&#13;
site and equipment. Sign up in&#13;
the Student Union Office, Union&#13;
209.&#13;
banquet&#13;
planned&#13;
The Spring Sports Nhletic&#13;
Banquet will be held on&#13;
Wednesday, May 11 at 6:30 p.m .&#13;
in the Union.&#13;
For Sale: Ford Fairlane, 1969. 2 door&#13;
hard-top Thrifty 302 V-8 automatic Power&#13;
steering One owner 96,000 faithful miles.&#13;
About $295 6819 3rd Ave , Kenosha. Phone&#13;
652- 1582. HEY PARKSIDE!!&#13;
JOB HUNTING SECRET #3&#13;
"To succeed In campus 10b interviews. you&#13;
have to know where that recruiter Is coming&#13;
from The simple answer is that he is&#13;
coming from corporate headquarters ... If,&#13;
for example, you assume that because the&#13;
interview is on campus the recruiter expects&#13;
you to look and act like a student, you're in&#13;
for a shock."&#13;
An Answer/question about job hunting&#13;
tonight. April 27, at 8:00 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Oly Draft is Here&#13;
OLYMPIA BREWING COMPANY OIYMPIA • St PAUL&#13;
Di1t. by C.J. W. Inc.&#13;
3637 • 30th A venue, Keno1ha&#13;
Proceeds will go towards the&#13;
payment of operating expenses&#13;
of Switchboard, a non-profit&#13;
telephone crisis intervention&#13;
helpline or hotline which&#13;
provides trained para-professional&#13;
telephone operators to receive&#13;
calls - from people in need of&#13;
help. The operators seek to offer&#13;
callers release, guidance, coun-&#13;
. seling informatiort and agency&#13;
referrals to troubled area&#13;
residents, specifical ly the lowincome&#13;
and/ or disadvantaged.&#13;
~~~&#13;
Free Pizza Delh,ery&#13;
Club Highview&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
Altt •,n,111119 Chlelc11, s,11h1tt1, Ratloll, Bttf&#13;
OPEN 4 t-•· to 1 •·•·&#13;
DANISH&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
1841 Douglas Avenue&#13;
Tired of $3°0 an hour?&#13;
• You can earn more&#13;
• Remain a full tim~ student&#13;
• Assist other students in managing&#13;
their finances&#13;
Call: Don Brinlc (Racine) 632-2731&#13;
or&#13;
Stop by: 1300 S. Greenbay Rd.&#13;
Call: Gene Soens&#13;
(Keno·sha) 654-5316&#13;
· Stop by: 2525 - 63rd St.&#13;
cNo'tthwe~tn,n dl/(utua.f Life&#13;
'' Cfl'z.e Quiet Company '' </text>
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