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            <text>Petrie runs for Congress &#13;
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            <text>Volume 6, issue 4</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>aD&#13;
Petrie runs&#13;
Wednesday, 5eplember21, 18n&#13;
Vol. 6, No.4&#13;
er ()() Education is what you have left oo&#13;
over after you have forgotten V V&#13;
everything you have learned.&#13;
ANON.&#13;
for. Congress&#13;
William W. Petrie, Assistant Professor of Labor Economics has&#13;
announced his candidacy for the seat of Congressman for&#13;
Wisconsin's First Congressional District. Petrie is a member of the&#13;
Republican Party Les Aspin now holds the seat, but many speculate&#13;
Aspin will run for the governorship.&#13;
Petrie graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1957&#13;
with a Bachelor of Business Administration with an emphasis in labor&#13;
relations. In 1959 he received his Juris Doctorate from Madison.&#13;
Before starting school, Petrie was a journeyman pipefitter and served&#13;
in the Naval Reserve aboard a destroyer escort.&#13;
Labor Arbitrator&#13;
After 1959, he was a management consultant with McKinsey and&#13;
Company in Los Angeles, a lahar Relations Assistant for North&#13;
American Aviation, a Personnel and lahar Relations Manager for the&#13;
Aeronutronic Division of the Philco-Ford Corporation, a labor&#13;
Relations Manager for the American Cement Corporation, and&#13;
maintained a private law practice. Since 1971 he has acted as an&#13;
arbitrator in labor disputes for California, Nevada, Illinois,&#13;
Minnesota, Iowa, and Wisconsin. He is a member of the bar&#13;
associations in Wisconsin and California. Petrie has taught at&#13;
Parkside since 1974.&#13;
With Aspin serving four terms as Congressman, Petrie feels that&#13;
there should be a limit on terms served in the house.&#13;
"One of the weaknesses in the House.of Representatives is that we&#13;
have so many long service representatives. The lower house was&#13;
designed, in the system of checks and balances, to be closer to the&#13;
voters and to react to changes in sentiment in the short swing. That is&#13;
the reason we have two year elections in the House, but the&#13;
advantages of incumbency are such that there is a tendency for&#13;
people to remain in the House for extended periods of time.&#13;
"I would like to seea change where two or three terms in the House&#13;
would be the maximum and I will be setting this as a personal limit&#13;
for myself. After .three terms I would have someone else run for the&#13;
opening,"&#13;
Unemployment: major issue&#13;
Petrie feels unemployment is still one of the major issues in the&#13;
First Congressional District.&#13;
"The present administration in Washington seems preoccupied&#13;
with the necessity of creating public sector make-work jobs. With&#13;
Humphrev-Hawkins there will be four million new [cbs at the cost of&#13;
Institute promotes economic&#13;
outreach to communities&#13;
on the Kenosha-Racine area's economy. The research project study&#13;
allowed students to participate in the communities' economic&#13;
situation. Finally, the third goal was to educate businessmen,&#13;
students, and teachers, by offering workshops, credit courses,&#13;
lectures, and seminars in economics.&#13;
Along with Professor Keehn, Assistant Professor of Education&#13;
Dwayne Olsen offered a summer course entitled, 'Workshop in&#13;
Economic Education for Junior and Senior High School Teachers of&#13;
Social Studies." In this course, primary and secondary teachers&#13;
reviewed their economic skills. Principles, concepts and other&#13;
meaningful learning methods were taught.&#13;
Worbhops pl~nned&#13;
In the fall of 1977, the Institute will present two non-credit&#13;
workshops for area teachers. One course will stress greater&#13;
perception in the teaching of economics. The second will supply&#13;
material and concepts for teaching insurance to high school students.&#13;
Keehn acknowledged by saying, "The Institute program is an&#13;
excellent way to gain experience in the economic field ",nd applying&#13;
the knowledge to actual business problem solving situations,"&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Editor&#13;
by Di~ne J~len.ky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Richard H, Keehn, Associate Professor of Economics and&#13;
Coordinator qf UW~P'sEconomic Education and Research Institu~e,&#13;
was awarded the Distinguished Service Award for commumty&#13;
. ,&#13;
outreach at the Fall Semester Convocation.&#13;
The Institute established January 1977, was primarily aimed to&#13;
increase communication and interchange between Parkside'scampus&#13;
and the Kenosha~Racine business communities. In addi.tion, the&#13;
Institute establishment made varied resources of Parkside more&#13;
available to the community. .&#13;
According to Professor Keehn, the Institute's program enlightens&#13;
"principles, problems and ideas in the incr.eas!ng ,~f community&#13;
understanding and knowledge of the economic field. ~&#13;
Institute has three goals&#13;
In developing the economic prog.ram, Prof~ss~r Keehn&#13;
accomplished three major activities. The first pra.grams aim was to&#13;
\ "increase the level of economic literacy of residents of the area&#13;
d b h . s·,ty"The second goal was to research and report serve y t e umver '&#13;
$10,000each. This would create something in the magnitude of 40&#13;
billion dollars in additional federal expenditures. With the present&#13;
rate of inflation, Idon't think we can afford that. More Importantly,&#13;
make-work government jobs have just not worked in terms of solving&#13;
our unemployment problems."&#13;
Encourage Private Sector&#13;
Professor Petrie believes a tax incentive plan for small businesses&#13;
would better serve both long and short term unemployment&#13;
"What I would like to see, for example, is if you have large&#13;
unemployment in urban areaswith respect to teenagersand first time&#13;
job seekers, you can target and identify that group, and talk to the&#13;
small businesses in that area and say, 'if you hire a member of that&#13;
target group, you will get a tax credit of a dollar an hour for a year'&#13;
That would be about $2,000 a year which is one fifth of what a&#13;
make-work job would cost taxpayers. If we are finding jobs for people&#13;
that are unable to find jobs because of a lack of basic skills, they are&#13;
going to be able to compete much better in the job market with a&#13;
year working in the private sector than if they have a year of work in a&#13;
make-work job."&#13;
Energy is a major problem&#13;
Another major issue in this election is energy, according to Peine.&#13;
The industry in southeastern Wisconsin depends heavily on natural&#13;
gas and oil. These fossil fuels are the subject of much debate and&#13;
discussion with regard to future use and consumption&#13;
"We have two areas of energy concern in the country right now&#13;
One is short term energy needs.What are we going to do for the next&#13;
ten or twenty years?Second, we have a long term energy problem&#13;
What are we going to do from the turn of the century on? Idon't see&#13;
any realistic short term alternative to fossil fuels. I strongly disagree&#13;
with the current administration's policy with respect to the price&#13;
controlling of fossil fuels, because it has no effect on creating more&#13;
exploration and increasing short term supply. In the long term, Isee&#13;
all the presently exotic energy sources, nuclear fusion, Wind power,&#13;
geothermal, tidal power, and of course solar energy, have great value&#13;
in the future. But what do we do for the next ten or twenty years? If&#13;
we don't do something to Increase the supply of fossil fuels in the&#13;
short term, we are going to come up with a major shortfall In meeting&#13;
the energy needsof not only southeastern Wisconsin, but the entire&#13;
country."&#13;
Anyone interested in helping the campaign should write the Petrie&#13;
for CongressCommittee, Route #1, Box 809, Waterford, Wisconsin&#13;
53185 or call (414) 534-6579.&#13;
er&#13;
Petrie runs&#13;
Wednesday, September 21 , 1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No. 4&#13;
()() Education ls what you have left 5)()&#13;
over after you have forgotten II&#13;
everything you have learned .&#13;
ANON.&#13;
for . Congress&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Editor&#13;
Will iam W . Petrie, Ass istant Professor of Labor Economics has&#13;
announced his candidacy for the seat of Congressman for&#13;
Wisconsin's First Congressional District. Petrie is a member of the&#13;
Republican Party Les Aspin now holds the seat, but many speculate&#13;
Aspin will run for the governorship.&#13;
Petrie graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1957&#13;
with a Bachelor of Business Administration with an emphasis in labor&#13;
relations . In 1959 he received his Juris Doctorate from Madison .&#13;
Before starting school, Petrie was a journeyman pipefitter and served&#13;
in the Naval Reserve aboard a destroyer escort.&#13;
labor Arbitrator&#13;
After 1959, he was a management consultant with McKinsey and&#13;
Company in Los Angeles, a Labor Relations Assistant for orth&#13;
American Aviation , a Personnel and Labor Relations Manager for the&#13;
Aeronutronic Division of the Philco-Ford Corporation, a Labor&#13;
Relations Manager for the American Cement Corporation, and&#13;
maintained a private law practice. Since 1971 he has acted as an&#13;
arbitrator in labor disputes for California, Nevada, Illinois,&#13;
M innesota, Iowa, and Wisconsin . He is a member of the bar&#13;
associations in Wisconsin and California. Petrie has taught at&#13;
Parkside since 1974.&#13;
With Aspin serving four terms as Congressman, Petrie feels that&#13;
there should be a limit on terms served in the house.&#13;
"One of the weaknesses in the House of Representatives is that we&#13;
have so many long service representatives . The lower house was&#13;
designed, in the system of checks and balances, to be closer to the&#13;
voters and to react to chan-ges in sentiment in the short swing. That is&#13;
the reason we have two year elections in the House, but the&#13;
. advantages of incumbency are such that there is a tendency for&#13;
people to remain in the House for extended periods of time.&#13;
"I would like to see a change where two or three terms in the House&#13;
would be the maximum and I will be setting this as a personal limit&#13;
for myself. After three terms I would have someone else run for the&#13;
opening."&#13;
Unemployment: major issue&#13;
Petrie feels unemployment is still one of the major issues in the&#13;
First Congressional District.&#13;
"The present administration in Washington seems preoccupied&#13;
with t he necessity of creating public sector make-work jobs. With&#13;
Humphrey-Hawkins there will be four mill ion new jobs at the cost of&#13;
$10,000 each. This would create something in the magnitude of 40&#13;
billion dollars in additional federal expenditures With th pre ent&#13;
rate of inflation, I don't think we can afford that. More importantly,&#13;
make-work government Jobs have Just not worked in term of sol Ing&#13;
our unemployment problems "&#13;
Encourage Private Sector&#13;
Professor Petrie believes a tax rncent1ve plan for small busrnesses&#13;
would better serve both long and short term unemployment.&#13;
"What I would like to see, for example, is if you have lar&#13;
unemployment in urban areas with respect to teenagers and first time&#13;
job seekers, you can target and identify that group, and talk to the&#13;
small businesses in that area and say, 'if you hire a memb r of that&#13;
target group, you will get a tax credit of a dollar an hour for a year.'&#13;
That would be about $2,000 a year which is one fifth of what a&#13;
make-work job would cost taxpayers If we are finding Jobs for people&#13;
that are unable to find jobs because of a lack of basic ski lls, they are&#13;
going to be able to compete much better in the job market with a&#13;
year working in the private sector than if they have a year of work in a&#13;
make-work job."&#13;
Energy is a major problem&#13;
Another major issue m this elecf n i n r , cordi o P.e n&#13;
The industry in southeastern Wisconsin depends heavily on natur&#13;
gas and oil. These fossil fuels are the subJect of much debate and&#13;
discussion with regard to future use and consumption .&#13;
"We have two areas of energy concern in the country right now.&#13;
One is short term energy needs What are we gorng to do for the ne t&#13;
ten or twenty years7 Second, we have a long term energ probl m .&#13;
What are we going to do from the turn of the century on? I don't ee&#13;
any realistic short term alternat" e to fossil fuels . I strong! d1 agree&#13;
with the current admrn1stration's policy with respect to the pric&#13;
controlling of fossil fuels, because 1t has no effect on creating more&#13;
exploration and increasing short term supply. In the long term , I&#13;
all the presently exotic energy sources, nuclear tu ion, ind pow r,&#13;
geothermal, tidal power, and of course solar energy, have great alu&#13;
in the future . But what do we do for the next t n or twenty y ar ? If&#13;
we don't do something to increase the supply of fo 11 fu Is in th&#13;
short term, we are going to come up with a ma1or shortfall rn m tin&#13;
the energy needs of not only southeastern Wisconsin, but the ent1r&#13;
country "&#13;
Anyone rnterested in helping tt-ie campaign should writ th&#13;
for Congress Committee, Route #1, Box 809, Waterford, Wi&#13;
53185 or call (414) 534-6579&#13;
Institute promotes economic&#13;
outreach to communities&#13;
by Diane Jalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Richard H. Keehn , Associate Professor of Economics . and&#13;
Coordinator of UW-P's Economic Education and Research Institute,&#13;
was awardel the Distinguished Service Award for community&#13;
outreach at the Fall Semester Convocati~n .&#13;
The Institute established January 1977, was primarilyaimed to&#13;
increase comm~nication and interchange between Parkside~s-campus&#13;
and the Kenosha-Racine business communities . In add1_t1on, the&#13;
Institute establishment made varied resources of Parkside more&#13;
available to the community . . According to Professor Keehn, the lnsti_tute's ~rogram enltghte_ns&#13;
" principles problems and ideas in the rncreasmg of community&#13;
understanding and knowledge of the economic field ."&#13;
Institute has three goals&#13;
In developing the econom ic prog_ram , Prof~ss~r Keehn&#13;
accomplished three major activities . The first pro_gram s aim was to&#13;
' "increase the level of economic literacy of residents of the area&#13;
served by the university." The second goal was to research and report&#13;
on the Kenosha-Racine area's economy. The research project study&#13;
allowed students to partIc1pate in the communitie ' aconomic&#13;
situation . Finally, the third goal was to educate businessm n,&#13;
students, and teachers, by offering workshops, credit cour es,&#13;
lectures, and seminars in economics .&#13;
Along with Professor Keehn, Assistant Professor of Education&#13;
Dwayne Olsen offered a summer course entitled, 'Workshop ,n&#13;
Economic Education for Junior and Senior High School Teachers of&#13;
Social Studies." In this course, primary and secondary teachers&#13;
reviewed their economic skills Principles, concepts and other&#13;
meaningful learning methods were taught&#13;
Workshops planned&#13;
In the fall of 1977, the Institute will present two non-credit&#13;
workshops for area teachers . One course will stress greater&#13;
perception in the teaching of economics . The second will supply&#13;
material and concepts for teaching insurance to high school students&#13;
Keehn acknowledged by saying, " The Institute program is an&#13;
excellent way to gain experience in the economic field ~nd applying&#13;
the knowledge to actual business problem solving situations." &#13;
editorial&#13;
Freshmen:&#13;
now that you're here •••&#13;
What do you think a university education is?&#13;
More important, what does it mean in your life?&#13;
To, many freshmen, it means transferringto&#13;
Madison or Milwaukeeafter a year or two. Why?&#13;
Social Studies! There are more' people at&#13;
"other" schools. Also, everyoneeveryplaceelse is&#13;
more friendly. There are dormitories, apartments&#13;
near campus, and "other'( places to live ('other'&#13;
than home).&#13;
"Everybody is always stoned and guys aren't&#13;
afraid to talk to ya, ya know?" said a young&#13;
visiting coed from Madison.&#13;
Last Friday, after Classeswere through, there&#13;
were less than twenty people "celebrating" in&#13;
Union Square. Most people did the same thing&#13;
they do every day at Parkside;'they get in their&#13;
cars and drive off. On their way to their cars they&#13;
look straight aheadalmost hoping nobody smiles&#13;
or talks to them on their way out. Is this you?&#13;
What's wrong?&#13;
Hopefully, more goes on here than students&#13;
just sitting in white fluorescent boxes getting&#13;
"the word", and booking a ride home.&#13;
Student activities, clubs, organizations, are&#13;
just crying for more people. The women sports&#13;
program here, for example, just hired more&#13;
women coaches in an effort to get ~hewomen's&#13;
program off the ground. They could use eight&#13;
times the number of participants they currently&#13;
have (seeevents notes).&#13;
If it is more social life you are after and&#13;
unhappy because you are not getting it, maybe&#13;
you have been watching too much television.&#13;
Social life is people having a good time with&#13;
each other. If you can't experiencethat, it's your&#13;
own fault. Doyou think there is something wrong&#13;
with 'Parkside? Should there be more of&#13;
something there isn't enough of? Then change it,&#13;
don't bitch!&#13;
The people who plan the "social atmosphere"&#13;
at' Parkside are mostly students in the&#13;
organizations that sponsor events. The Parkside&#13;
Activities Board is a group of students planning&#13;
coffeehouses, films, dances, and other types of&#13;
events. They need more people! Don't you like.&#13;
your school newspaper?Who do you think writes&#13;
it everyweek?And if you would really like to have&#13;
an effect on change in this institution, the&#13;
student government is looking for people with&#13;
ideas to sit on the faculty and administrative&#13;
committees that run this campus.&#13;
Now, if education means more than social life,&#13;
you shouldn't be fooled by the size of the&#13;
institution. If you have a campus with 30,000&#13;
students as opposed to 5,000, which campus is&#13;
going to have a b,etter student/professor ratio?&#13;
Which campus is going to have more teaching&#13;
assistants teaching classes? And which campus&#13;
is going to be more flexible to change?&#13;
So, if you give it a chance and you find you,&#13;
don't respect the professors in your discipline,&#13;
hate the social life, and you-don't care, then&#13;
leave. Get out of here! Chances are with an&#13;
~ttitude like that y,?uwon't make anything of your&#13;
life anyway. Maybe a degree from a "known"&#13;
school will help a loser.&#13;
Parkside needs more students who care who&#13;
know who they areand why they are here and who&#13;
want to have a good time. These are the people&#13;
who should be running the student end of the&#13;
school. If they are, in fact, running the school,&#13;
then we need more!&#13;
•&#13;
, ~lU\l!'"is wr'!tten a.nd edited by students of the -&#13;
UJUverslty 01 Wlsconsm-Parkside a.nd they a.re s 1 1&#13;
respon.sibte for its editorial. policy &amp;l\d con.ten.~.e y&#13;
Our W titers&#13;
,Dan Guidebeck, Robert' Hansen, .left Prostko Kun' ••, h&#13;
K&#13;
' wunse ,&#13;
". at Hermal\1\"Chria Ratcks, Marcia Vlach.&#13;
Editor Philip L. Livingston 553-2295&#13;
General M"n ...ger Thomas R. Cooper 553.2287&#13;
Copy Ed~tor J~hn R. McKloskey&#13;
. .News EdItor DIane Jaleasky&#13;
Circulation Mana.ger Karen. Putman. '&#13;
Sales Manager John Gabriel 553-2287&#13;
Retail Advertising Manager Ken Larse,n 553.2287 '&#13;
Ranier Newspa.per, University 01 Wisconsin-Park.ide&#13;
Kenoaba, Wi.eoa.in 63141&#13;
Subscriptions: $5.00 year for U.S.A.&#13;
,.&#13;
editorial&#13;
Freshmen:&#13;
now that , you're here •••&#13;
-· ..::, ... - -~- --.. -&#13;
What do you think a university education is?&#13;
More important, what does it mean in your life?&#13;
To. many fresh!llen, it means transferringto&#13;
Madison or Milwaukee after a year ·or two. Why?&#13;
Social Studies! There are more · people at&#13;
"other" schools. Also, everyone everyplace else is&#13;
more friendly. There are dormitories, apartments&#13;
near campus, and "other" places to live ('other'&#13;
than home).&#13;
"Everybody is always stoned and guys aren't&#13;
afraid to talk to ya, ya know?" said a young&#13;
visiting coed from Madison.&#13;
Last Friday, after classes were through, there&#13;
were less than twenty people "celebrat ing" in&#13;
Union Square. Most people did the same thing&#13;
they do every day at Parkside; · they get in their&#13;
cars and drive off. On their way to their cars they&#13;
look straight ahead almost hoping nobody smiles&#13;
or talks to them on their way out. Is this you?&#13;
What's wrong?&#13;
Hopefully, more goes on here than students&#13;
just sitting in white fluorescent boxes getting&#13;
"the word", and booking a ride home.&#13;
Student activities, clubs, organizations, are&#13;
just crying for more people. The women sports&#13;
program here, for example, just hired more&#13;
women coaches in an effort to get the women's&#13;
program off the ground. They couid use eight&#13;
times the number of participants they currently&#13;
have (see events notes).&#13;
If it is more social life you are after and&#13;
unhappy because you are not getting it, maybe&#13;
you have been watching too much television.&#13;
Social life is people having a good time with&#13;
each other. If you can't experience that, it's your&#13;
own fault. Do you think there is something wrong&#13;
with · Parkside? Should there . be more of&#13;
something there isn't enough of? Then change it,&#13;
don't bitch!&#13;
The people who plan the "social atmosphere"&#13;
at · Parkside are mostly students in the&#13;
· organizations that sponsor events. The Parkside&#13;
Activities Board is a group of students planning&#13;
coffeehouses, films, dances, and other types of&#13;
events. They need more people! Don't you like,&#13;
your school newspaper? Who do you think writes&#13;
it every week? And if you would really like to have&#13;
an effect on change in this institution, the&#13;
student government is looking for people with&#13;
ideas to sit on the faculty and administrative&#13;
committees that run this campus.&#13;
Now, if education means more than social life,&#13;
you shouldn't be fooled by the size of the&#13;
institution. If you have a campus with 30,000&#13;
students as opposed to 5,000, which campus is&#13;
going to have a better student/professor ratio?&#13;
Which campus is going to have more teaching&#13;
assistants teaching classes? And which campus&#13;
is going to be more flexible to change?&#13;
So, if you give it a chance and you find you -&#13;
don't respect the professors in your discipline,&#13;
hate the social life, and you' don't care, then&#13;
leave. Get out of here! Chances are with an&#13;
~ttitude like that y9u won't make anything of your&#13;
life anyway. Maybe a degree from a "known"&#13;
school will help a loser.&#13;
Parkside needs more students who care, who&#13;
know who they are and why they are here and who&#13;
want to have a good time. These are the people&#13;
who should be running the student· end of the&#13;
school. If they are, in fact, running the school,&#13;
then we need more!&#13;
. ~2u,~er is wl"!tten a_nd edite~ by •tudents of the - Uruvers,ty of W1sconsan-Parks1de and they are sol I&#13;
responsible lor its editorial. policy and content.e y&#13;
Our W rite.rs&#13;
. Dan Guidebeck, Robert Hansen, Jeff Prostko KID\· w · h&#13;
K ' ~~.&#13;
. at Hennann, Chris Ratcks, Marcia Vlach.&#13;
Editor Philip L. Livingston 55~·2295&#13;
General Ml'&lt;n.age.r Thomas R. Cooper 553-2287&#13;
Copy Editor John R. McKloskey&#13;
. _News Editor Diane Jalel\sky C1rculatton Manager Karen Putman&#13;
. Sales Manager John Gabriel 553 •&#13;
2287&#13;
Retail Advertising Mat\ager Ken Larse_n 553-2287&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, Uni'!ersity of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Subscriptions: $5.00 year lor U.S.A. &#13;
•&#13;
views&#13;
w~kly by student government&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
by Rusty Smith&#13;
President, PSGA&#13;
-&#13;
The Parkside Student Government constitution provides for three&#13;
branches of government as in the United States Constlt tl . . (wht h ' I Ulan, Executive W tc you met last week), legislative and Judicial hi h I&#13;
WI Intra uee to you uring '11' d d ,w IC the next few weeks&#13;
The legislative branch consists of your Senators half of whi h&#13;
elected in the fall and the other half in the spring. There are al'~ot:~&#13;
distinct classes of Senators; Divisional, which represent the variou&#13;
Diciplines on campus, and At-Large Senators who represent the&#13;
entire Student Body. '&#13;
These student Senators are YOUR representatives. They are quite&#13;
knowledgable about the workings of almost every area of Parkside&#13;
a~d are ready, willing, ariq able to help you with any problems you&#13;
might have. You should make use of them. Our office is located in&#13;
WllC 0-193, our ~elephone number is 553-2244,and there is usually&#13;
someonethere dally from 10:00 a.m. until 3:00 p.m. Pleasefeel free&#13;
to stop in for any reason.&#13;
Today I would like to introduce three of the At-Large Senatorsto&#13;
you. '&#13;
Mary Braun is 18 years old, a second semester freshman here at&#13;
Parkside, and lives in Union Grove. She is majoring in Political&#13;
Scienceand is a member of The Debate and Forensics Association&#13;
andthe SenateWays and Means Committee. Her term of office will&#13;
run through the spring of 1978.&#13;
Dave Cramer is 19 years old, is a sophomore, but as yet is&#13;
undecided as to his major. He lives in Racine, is a farmer, takes a&#13;
great interest in the local political scene, and is a sports buff who&#13;
especially enjoys attending horse shows.&#13;
He stated "While in office, Ihope to become a very active member&#13;
of the Senate and help my ccnstttutents realize that PSCA is a&#13;
beneficial organization." Dave's term of office also runs through the&#13;
spring of 1978.&#13;
JosephW. Powers is a 25 year old sophomore, from Racine. He is&#13;
majoring in Management Science and is a member of the Senate&#13;
Academic Policies and Student Services Committees. Joe is a&#13;
basketball coach and also enjoys tennis, golf and softball. His term of&#13;
office also runs through the spring of 1978.&#13;
I hope you will acquaint yourself with these students. They&#13;
representall students on campus. If you need anything or want to&#13;
makeyour views known get in touch with them.&#13;
Segregated Fees Committee&#13;
The student segregated fees&#13;
committee met for the first time&#13;
this academic year Sept. 13. At&#13;
the meeting the committee's&#13;
discussion centered around the&#13;
Feb.15 deadline for submissions&#13;
of budgets.&#13;
As a resuIt of the short period&#13;
of time allowed for the&#13;
discussion and evaluation of the&#13;
1978-79 budget requests we have&#13;
set Nov. 1S and Dec. 5 as&#13;
deadlines for submission of&#13;
budgets to the segregated fees&#13;
committee.&#13;
Based on our evaluation, the&#13;
less controversial and more&#13;
easilydeveloped budgets; Union&#13;
Debt Service, Student Health,&#13;
Transportation, Athletics, Intraprogresses&#13;
murals, P.S.G.A., Building Costs&#13;
and Housing could be more&#13;
fairly and effectively dealt with if&#13;
submitted by Nov. 1S.&#13;
The other budgets; Performing&#13;
Arts and Lectures, Union&#13;
Operations and Programming,&#13;
Student Groups, Child Care&#13;
Center, Student Newspapers and&#13;
Others will be required by Dec.&#13;
5.&#13;
After a preliminary level has&#13;
been set you will have the&#13;
opportunity to come in and&#13;
discuss your organization's&#13;
budget with the committee. Also&#13;
the committee will follow their&#13;
policy of last year - No Budget,&#13;
No Money. If you have any&#13;
questions, contact the P.S.G.A.&#13;
-&#13;
Anthro Club makes&#13;
foray. to Chicago&#13;
The Anthropology Club is sponsoring a field trip to the 25th Annual&#13;
Meetings of the American Society for Ethnohistory in Chicago on&#13;
October 13-15, 1977.&#13;
Someof the topics of this meeting are Ecology and Ethnohistory,&#13;
Folklore Research Among Euro-Amencans, Pioneer Applied&#13;
Anthropology, Native American 1 Ethnohisto.ry and Afro-American&#13;
Ethnohistory. Students interested in Anthropology, History and&#13;
Ethnic Studies should find these meetings interesting and useful for&#13;
their college and career goals.&#13;
Transportation will be provided to and hom Chicago for students&#13;
staying the entire 3 days. rt is necessary that all interested persons&#13;
sign up by Sept. 25th, so that soom reservations can be made at the&#13;
Sheraton-Chicago Hotel where the meetings are being hel? .&#13;
Departure time will be 6:30 a.m., Oct. 13 and the group will arrive&#13;
back at U.W.P. at approximately 7:00 p.m. Oct. 1S. . ..&#13;
If interested please sign up in the- Behavioral Science DIVISion&#13;
Office on the 2nd floor of the Classroom Building before Sept. 25th. If&#13;
additional information is needed, please contact Dr. Richard Stoffle,&#13;
Classroom 349.&#13;
Only transportation is being provided by Anthropo.logy ~Iub. ~&#13;
Additional costs such as hotel costs, food and registration will be&#13;
paid by each individual student. »&lt;&#13;
/&#13;
Mass media&#13;
divided between&#13;
Kenosha and Racine&#13;
Kenoshans&#13;
Racinians&#13;
attracted to Chicago;&#13;
prefer Milwaukee&#13;
by John R. McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Theseconclusions Idrew from&#13;
researching the viewing audiences&#13;
and circulation figures for&#13;
the Racine and Kenosha areas.&#13;
Although none of the individual&#13;
TV stations keep data on the&#13;
Racine/Kenosha audience the&#13;
American Research B~reau&#13;
(Arbitron) keeps generalized&#13;
figures. If 51% of the target&#13;
audience views Milwaukee&#13;
stations 51% of their TV time&#13;
then that audience is "given" to&#13;
the Milwaukee area stations.&#13;
Such is the case for the 55,700&#13;
home Racine County market, but&#13;
surprisingly, Kenosha was given&#13;
to the Chicago AD! {television&#13;
market} in the past year. "They&#13;
(Milwaukee stations) lost 4O,()(X)&#13;
homes to the Chicago ADI in the&#13;
past year," according to an&#13;
Arbitron spokesman. The Kenosha&#13;
County viewing audience&#13;
amounts more precisely to&#13;
40,300 homes.&#13;
Nielsen fiSUre&lt;..-&#13;
The Nielsen ratings (the A.C.&#13;
Nielsen Company surveys audiences&#13;
nationwide every week)&#13;
also indicate that Kenosha&#13;
viewers watch Chicago stations,&#13;
but an important difference is&#13;
that a Nielsen representative said&#13;
it has been that way for several&#13;
years. The reason is probably&#13;
that Nielsen only requires a&#13;
majority of viewers (as opposed&#13;
to 51%) to view a Chicago&#13;
station before assigning the&#13;
viewers to Chicago.&#13;
This, then, would indicate that&#13;
Chicago TV viewing by Kenosha&#13;
people has been high for a long&#13;
time and is getting even higher.&#13;
Nielsen also reports, not&#13;
surprisingly, that the Racine&#13;
market is assigned to the&#13;
Milwaukee stations.&#13;
Newspaper Readership has&#13;
Similar Pattern&#13;
The same pattern is indicated&#13;
in Audit Bureau of Circulation&#13;
(ABC) figures of the number of&#13;
papers distributed each day in&#13;
media&#13;
Racine and Kenosha (see table&#13;
below). The only exception to&#13;
this is the Sunday Milwaukee&#13;
Journal, of which 50 more copies&#13;
are distributed in Kenosha than&#13;
in Racine.&#13;
The reason is probably&#13;
because the local paper (the&#13;
Kenosha News) does not publish&#13;
on Sunday.&#13;
All other data indicate that&#13;
Kenosha readers read Chicago&#13;
papers and Racine readers&#13;
peruse Milwaukee papers; in&#13;
addmon to their local newspapers&#13;
Milwaukee &amp; Chicago Newspaper Circulation&#13;
in Racine &amp; Kenosha&#13;
Kenoshia bcine&#13;
Milw41ukee 5entin411 1480 2500&#13;
Milwaukee loumal&#13;
D41ily 850 1700&#13;
Sunday 6500 6450&#13;
Chicago Sun- TImes&#13;
Daily 420 252&#13;
Suncby 850 275&#13;
Chicago Tribune&#13;
D41ily 2154 1864&#13;
Sund41Y 3014 1935&#13;
~)_ N'\~G\C&#13;
~ O~Oz.\O ~,ree'&#13;
O.. n 3Z\ ~ ~\~ 5~&#13;
Mon. &amp; r«. ~ ".c.\oe. .A." ()34-&#13;
NOO(l Iii 9 t6-""'~ (4~1&#13;
Sat. Noon til 5 "'..,.. -&#13;
MAGIC TRICKS - JOKES - NOVEL lIES&#13;
I------------------ BECOMEA COllEGE CAMPUSDIALER I&#13;
I I&#13;
I Sell Brand Name Stereo Components I&#13;
I At lowest Prices. High Profits; NO I&#13;
IINVESTMENTREQUIRED.For DetaOs , I&#13;
I Con~et: FAD CompoHnts, Inc. 65 I&#13;
IPassaic Ave., P.O. BOI 689, Fairfield, I&#13;
INew Jers, 07006 I&#13;
I nene Orlowsk, I&#13;
I 201·227·6884 I&#13;
------------------ PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
YOU ASIED FOR ITI&#13;
HOMEMADE&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
(flESH DAilY fJOM 001: OWN KITCHEN)&#13;
• B.A.C:S [B1G-i::DDKIES) • DONUTS&#13;
• RJDGE FROSTED BROWNIES • TURNOVERS&#13;
• HOT CDFFEE CAKE • PIES &amp; CAKES&#13;
• SPECIALTY DESSERTS, BREADS, ETC.&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
• views&#13;
by Rusty Smith&#13;
President, PSGA&#13;
The Parkside Student Government constitution provides for three&#13;
branches of government as in the United States Constitution ·&#13;
Executive (which you met iast week), Legislative and Judicial, which I&#13;
will introduce to you during the next few weeks.&#13;
The Legislative branch consists of your Senators, half of which are&#13;
elected in the fall and the other half in the spring. There are also two&#13;
distinct classes of Senators; Divisional, which represent the various&#13;
Diciplines on campus, and At-Large Senators who represent the&#13;
entire Student Body.&#13;
These student Senators are YOUR representatives. They are quite&#13;
knowledgable about the workings of almost every area of Parkside&#13;
and are ready, willing, arid abl~ to help you with any problems you&#13;
might have. You should m-ake use of them. Our office is located in&#13;
WLLC 0-193, our telephone number is 553-2244, and there is usually&#13;
someone there daily from 10:00 a.m . until 3:00 p.m . Please feel free&#13;
to stop in for any reason .&#13;
Today I would like to introduce three of the At-Large Senators to&#13;
you . ·&#13;
Mary Braun is 18 years old, a second semester freshman here at&#13;
Parkside, and lives in Union Grove. She is majoring in Political&#13;
Science and is a member of The Debate and Forensics Association&#13;
and the Senate Ways and Means Committee. Her term of office will&#13;
run through the spring of 1978.&#13;
Dave Cramer is 19 years old, is a sophomore, but as yet is&#13;
undecided as to his major. He lives in Racine, is a farmer, takes a&#13;
great interest in the local political scene, and is a sports buff who&#13;
especially enjoys attending horse shows.&#13;
He stated "While in office, I hope to become a very active member&#13;
of the Senate and help my constitutents realize that PSGA is a&#13;
beneficial organization." Dave's term of office also runs through the&#13;
spring of 1978.&#13;
Joseph W. Powers is a 25 year old sophomore, from Racine. He is&#13;
majoring in Management Science and is a member of the Senate&#13;
Academic Policies and Student Services Committees. Joe is a&#13;
basketball coach and also enjoys tennis, golf and softball. His term of&#13;
office also runs through the spring of 1978.&#13;
I hope you will acquaint yourself with these students . They&#13;
represent all students on campus . If you need anything or want to&#13;
make your views known get in touch with them.&#13;
Segregated Fees Committee progresses&#13;
The student segregated fees&#13;
committee met for the first time&#13;
this academic year Sept. 13. At&#13;
the meeting the committee's&#13;
discussion centered around the&#13;
Feb. 15 deadline for submissions&#13;
of budgets.&#13;
As a resu It of the short period&#13;
of time allowed for the&#13;
discussion and evaluation of the&#13;
1978-79 budget requests we have&#13;
set Nov. 15 and Dec. 5 as&#13;
deadlines for submission of&#13;
budgets to the segregated fees&#13;
committee.&#13;
Based on our evaluation, the&#13;
less controversial and more&#13;
easily developed budgets; Union&#13;
Debt Service, Student Health,&#13;
Transportation, Athl_etics, lntramurals,&#13;
P.S.G.A., Building Costs&#13;
and Housing could be more&#13;
fairly and effectively dealt with if&#13;
submitted by Nov. 15.&#13;
The other budgets; Performing&#13;
Arts and Lectures, Union&#13;
Operations and Programming,&#13;
Student Groups, Child Care&#13;
Center, Student Newspapers and&#13;
Others will be required by Dec.&#13;
5.&#13;
After a preliminary level has&#13;
been set you will have the&#13;
opportunity to come in and&#13;
discuss your organization's&#13;
budget with the committee. Also&#13;
the committee will follow their&#13;
policy of last year - No Budget,&#13;
No Money. If you have any&#13;
questions, contact the P.S.G.A.&#13;
A nth ro Club makes&#13;
foray to Chicago&#13;
The Anthropology Club is sponsoring a field tr~p to t~e 25t~ Annual&#13;
Meetings of the American Society for Ethnoh1story in Chicago on&#13;
October 13-15, 1977. .&#13;
Some of the topics of this meeting are Ecology and Ethnoh,story,&#13;
Folklore Research Among Euro-Americans, Pioneer Ap~lied&#13;
Anthropology, Native American I Et_hnohistory and Afr~-Amen:~~&#13;
Ethnohistory. Students interested in Anthropol~gy, HIstory&#13;
Ethnic Studies should find these meetings interesting and useful for&#13;
their college and car~er goals. f d t&#13;
Transportation will . d f Chicago or stu en s be provided to an ~om&#13;
staying the entire 3 days. it is necessary that all interestedd perso~s&#13;
sign up by Sept 25th so that soom reservations can be ma e at t e · ' · b · held Sheraton-Chicago Hotel where the meetings are eing .&#13;
11&#13;
· .&#13;
Departure 0 13 d the group wI arrive time will be 6:30 a.m., ct. an&#13;
back at U.W.P. at approximately 7:00 P·IT/·· Oct. 15_- 0&#13;
... . . h B h ·oral Science IvIsIon If interested please sign up in t e- e _av_, Sth If&#13;
Office on the 2nd floor of the Classroom Building befor~ ~ep~. ~t ff.I&#13;
additional information is needed, please contact Dr. Ric ar O e,&#13;
Classroom 349 I b · . ·d d b Anthropology C u · Only transportation is being prov, e Y . . ·,11 be&#13;
Add . . f d and reg1stratIon w ItIonal costs such as hotel costs, oo /&#13;
paid by each individual student.&#13;
I&#13;
Mass media&#13;
divided between&#13;
Kenosha and Racine&#13;
Kenoshans attracted to Chicago;&#13;
Racinians prefer Milwaukee media&#13;
by John R. McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
These conclusions I drew from&#13;
researching the viewing audiences&#13;
and circulation figures for&#13;
the Racine and Kenosha areas.&#13;
Although none of the individual&#13;
TV stations keep data on the&#13;
Racine/Kenosha audience, the&#13;
American Research Bureau&#13;
(Arbitron) keeps generalized&#13;
figures . If 51% of the target&#13;
audience views Milwaukee&#13;
stations 51% of their TV time,&#13;
then that audience is " given" to&#13;
the Milwaukee area stations.&#13;
Such is the case for the 55,700&#13;
home Racine County market, but&#13;
surprisingly, Kenosha was given&#13;
to the Chicago ADI (television&#13;
market) in the past year. "They&#13;
(Milwaukee stations) lost 40,000&#13;
homes to the Chicago ADI in the&#13;
past year," according to an&#13;
Arbitron spokesman. The Kenosha&#13;
County viewing audience&#13;
amounts more precisely to&#13;
40,300 homes.&#13;
Nielsen figures agree&#13;
The Nielsen ratings (the A.C.&#13;
Nielsen Company surveys audiences&#13;
nationwide every week)&#13;
also indicate that Kenosha&#13;
viewers watch Chicago stations,&#13;
but an important difference is&#13;
that a Nielsen representative said&#13;
it has been that way for several&#13;
years. The reason is probably&#13;
that Nielsen only requires a&#13;
majority of viewers (as opposed&#13;
to 51%) to view a Chicago&#13;
station before assigning the&#13;
viewers to Chicago.&#13;
This, then, would indicate that&#13;
Chicago TV viewing by Kenosha&#13;
people has been high for a long&#13;
time and is getting even higher&#13;
Nielsen also reports, not&#13;
surprisingly, that the Racine&#13;
market is assigned to the&#13;
Milwaukee stations.&#13;
Newspaper Readership has&#13;
Similar Pattern&#13;
The same pattern is indicated&#13;
in Audit Bureau of Circulation&#13;
(ABC) figures of the number of&#13;
papers distributed each day in&#13;
.,,&#13;
Racine and Kenosha (see table&#13;
below) The only exception to&#13;
this is the Sunday Milwaukee&#13;
Journal, of which 50 more copies&#13;
are distributed in Kenosha than&#13;
in Racine.&#13;
K nosha ews) doe not publi h&#13;
on Sunday.&#13;
The reason is probably&#13;
because the local paper (the&#13;
All other data indicate that&#13;
Kenosha read r r ad Chica o&#13;
papers and Racine reader&#13;
peru e Milwaukee paper ; in&#13;
addition to their local new -&#13;
papers&#13;
Milwaukee &amp; Chicago ewspaper Circulation&#13;
in Racine &amp; Kenosha&#13;
Kenosh.1 Ruine&#13;
Milwaukee Sentin.11 1480 25&#13;
Milwaukee Joum.11&#13;
Daily 850 1700&#13;
Sunday 6500 6450&#13;
Chicago Sun-Times&#13;
Daily 420 252&#13;
Sunday 850 275&#13;
Chicago Tribune&#13;
Daily 2154 1864&#13;
Sunday 3014 1935&#13;
~- N\N ~ ~ o~ia\O 5\ree~3&#13;
Open 3Z\ • ~\~ 5 .@63&#13;
Mon. &amp; Fri. ~ 7'.C.\ne, 1 .. qA,) 634&#13;
Noon 11/ 9 ~~ '-qo&#13;
Sat. Noon Ill 5&#13;
MAGIC TRICKS - JOKES - NOVEL TIES&#13;
•&#13;
------------------ BECOME A COLLEGE CAMPUS DIALER I&#13;
I I I Sell Brand Name Stereo Component I&#13;
I At Lowest Prices. High Profit ; NO I I INVESTMENT REQUIRED. For Details , I&#13;
I Contact: FAD Components, Inc. 65 I&#13;
I Passaic Ave., P .0. Box 689, Fairfield, I I New Jersy 07006 I&#13;
I Ilene Orlowsky I&#13;
I 201-227-6884 1&#13;
------------------ PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
YOU ASKED FOR ITI&#13;
HOMEMADE&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
(FRESH DAILY FROM OUR OWN KITCHEH)&#13;
• B.A.C.'S [BIG-COOKIES) • DONUTS&#13;
• RJDGE FROSTED BROWNIES • TURNOVERS&#13;
• HOT COFFEE CAKE • PIES &amp; CAKES&#13;
• SPECIAL TY DESSERTS, BREADS, ETC.&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM &#13;
news&#13;
Crisis hotline aids community&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
6-5-8-4-3-5-7 Switchboard Reed speaking: . uh, yeah, sure I&#13;
could talk to you! That's what I'm here for.&#13;
"People helping people is a life time opportunity." This is the&#13;
motto of Switchboard. Switchboard is a non-profit, volunteer,&#13;
24-hour-a-day (including holidays) help-line.&#13;
The Kenosha County Switchboard was conceived in January of&#13;
1971. People from the local colleges, universities, and technical&#13;
school formed the nucleus of the group which later became the first&#13;
Switchboard volunteers. The group was originated under Kenosha&#13;
Drug Abuse, Inc. The original training was provided by doctors,&#13;
lawyers and psychiatrists who were associated with the Underground&#13;
Switchboard in Milwaukee.&#13;
Started on weekends&#13;
In March of 1971 the Kenosha Switchboard began operation in&#13;
Kenosha Memorial Hospital, mainly as a drug line, with two phone&#13;
lines from 6:00 p.m. to 3:00 a.m. on weekends only. After a few&#13;
months the volunteers were receiving a wider range of crisis calls&#13;
than expected, from callers of all ages. It then became switchboard&#13;
policy to meet all these demands in crisis situations. Volunteers&#13;
received broader training and the referral files were expanded to&#13;
allow Switchboard to deal with a wider variety of problems.&#13;
"Although Switchboard was originally conceived as a drug line, drug&#13;
related calls are now only 1~20% of our total calls," said a&#13;
Switchboard representative.&#13;
By September of 1971, Switchboard moved to larger facilities with&#13;
three phone lines and service seven nights a week. Many calls&#13;
involved problems too serious or involved to be handled over the&#13;
phone. Although these callers needed professional help, many did&#13;
not have enough money or were dissatisfied with the help received&#13;
elsewhere. For this reason Switchboard asked professional counselors&#13;
to donate their time to establish the Counseling Center. Counselors&#13;
were recruited from local schools, colleges, the Welfare Department&#13;
and the local clergy.&#13;
Leases a building&#13;
In April of 1974,Switchboard leased a building which allowed it to&#13;
meet community needs through an advocacy attitude with regard to&#13;
other new social help agencies. At times this advocacy approach has&#13;
involved direct cooperation and participation by the staff, as has&#13;
been the case with Women's Horizons, Youth and Family Services&#13;
and Impact programs. At other times, as in the case of Welfare&#13;
Rights, the Youth Employment Program, VISTA and the Community&#13;
THE&#13;
2226-57th St.&#13;
Kenosha'&#13;
654~9909&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Assistance&#13;
. ALL SUBJECTS&#13;
Choose from our library of 7,000 topics.&#13;
All papers have been prepared by our&#13;
staff of professional wrtters -to insure&#13;
excellence. Send $1.00 (air mail&#13;
postage) for the current edition of our&#13;
mail order catalog.&#13;
r~U~T.O~LSvSTE~----&#13;
I P.O. Box 25916-E;- I&#13;
1 Los Angeles, Calif. 90025 I&#13;
I Name I&#13;
w •• 110 provld. origin.' I Address L&#13;
r.... rch ••• n IIolde. I City II&#13;
Theal' and dl..... tlon&#13;
L-----~~~-L. ... Ittance also avell.b1e. I State Zip JI&#13;
Action Program, -i t- has "supplied needed office space. At one time&#13;
Switchboard housed a Recreation/Drop-in Center and a Bicycle&#13;
Repair Program through the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Extension.&#13;
Funding setback&#13;
Switchboard is now in the process of reorganization due to a&#13;
temporary funding setback in December of 1976. They now have a&#13;
temporary office located in the Reuther Alternative Aigh School&#13;
building and are staffed through a federal CETA grant. Switchboard,&#13;
plans to enlist the services of more professionals to train operators&#13;
and to provide in-service training. Avenues for more diversified and&#13;
stable sources of funding are being explored. Switchboard is striving&#13;
to improve tts-tmage and the services offered by working toward&#13;
becoming a comprehensive information and referral agency with an&#13;
advocacx approach.&#13;
What Switchboard can do&#13;
There are persons in Kenosha County who are troubled by personal&#13;
difficulties but who, due to workshift and school limitations and/or&#13;
personal limitations are hesitant or unable to seek traditional agency&#13;
counseling. Many of these people wish to remain anonymous but&#13;
wish to talk with a neutral party about their particular difficulty.&#13;
This is Switchboard's job. The volunteers are trained to listen in a&#13;
non-judgemental manner, help callers pinpoint their problems,&#13;
present them with different alternatives and provide the appropriate&#13;
help or refer them d,irectly to an agency.&#13;
The rationale behind Switchboard is:&#13;
1. To provide emergency counseling with para-professional&#13;
volunteers on a 24-hour basis to those in a crisis situation so that they&#13;
may deal with their immediate problems until further help can be&#13;
obtained.&#13;
2. To enable persons being serviced by agendes to obtain neededservice&#13;
during periods when their agendes are closed.&#13;
3. To enable persons to deal with their crisis situations and develop&#13;
independence in solving their problems.&#13;
4. To enable persons to obtain medical information and services&#13;
needed to deal with such problems as unwanted pregency, drug&#13;
overdose, veneral disease, and others.&#13;
5. To enable persons to obtain counseling to help them deal with&#13;
social, economic and family problems.&#13;
6. To provide information on legal assistance suited to their&#13;
individual needs.&#13;
7. To develop an awareness in persons of all ages in the-community&#13;
of the services available through other agencies and Switchboard.&#13;
8. To develop an awareness of job opportunities available in- the&#13;
Kenosha area to those in need.&#13;
9. To develop complete referral services to aid persons in receiving&#13;
appropriate assistance.&#13;
10, To provide a free face to face counseling service with on call&#13;
profe'ssional counselors, on an appointment basis.&#13;
11. To assist low income and/or disadvantaged people.&#13;
In 1976 Switchboard' received 10,305 calls. The average caller is&#13;
from 15-25 years of age. People who call in do not-have to give any&#13;
information about themselves that they don't want to. \&#13;
Funding ends in Julv&#13;
CETA funding is assured for staff positions' until June 20, 1978.&#13;
Temporary office space is also assured at Reuther until the first week&#13;
of October, at which time, if no more permanent quarters have been&#13;
funded, the office will be moved to the school district's&#13;
Administration Center at Weiskopt School located on the corner of&#13;
50th Street and Sheridan Road.":&#13;
Fund raising is essential&#13;
Since Switchboard is a non-profit organization it relies on fundraising&#13;
events to pay for operational costs. The next fund raising&#13;
event will be the Carthage College Flea Market on November 12&#13;
Switchboard has rented a booth and hope to sell plants, crafts:&#13;
ru~mage and baked goods. On Friday, November 25, the Carthage&#13;
Christmas Craft and Art Fair will be held. Switchboard hopes to&#13;
contract for the two food concessions at the fair.&#13;
Training Sessions&#13;
- For those who would wish to volunteer or for those who simply&#13;
-wa~t more information feel free to call 658~H-E-L-P anytime during&#13;
b~slOess hours Monday thru Friday and ask for Carla Senecal,&#13;
DI~e~tor of VolunteersfTraining. Volunteers go through a 12-hour&#13;
training ~rogram during which you listen to calls as they are handled&#13;
by experienced operator~ and you will have the opportunity to also&#13;
~n~w.er the ~honeJ during this period. You must attend several&#13;
srofessi sessions uring which you listen to talks from several&#13;
pro esstonal and para-professional speakers. To be eligible to be an&#13;
operator you must be 18 or' over and have access to a phone.&#13;
Men's, women's, track&#13;
teams to organize&#13;
There ~ill be an organizational meeting for the 1977-78&#13;
Uw-Parkstde men's and women's track teams at 3'30 Th d&#13;
S t 22 . th . I . p.rn, urs ay&#13;
ep. , In. e upstairs. ounge of the Physical Education Bldg. '&#13;
All ParksIde students mterested in competinDfo th&#13;
, ' . _ ...... r e men's or&#13;
women steams at UW-P are Invited to attend For m . f .&#13;
C h&#13;
. are In ormation&#13;
contact oac Bob Lawson at 553-2245. '&#13;
4&#13;
Switt.:hboo..-d&#13;
24 hours&#13;
()liS-help&#13;
FranklinWhite&#13;
to&#13;
•&#13;
Instruct&#13;
stage&#13;
movement·&#13;
A former member of England's&#13;
.Royal Ballet, Peter Franklin&#13;
White, will be at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside Monday&#13;
through Friday (Sept. 26-30) to&#13;
present workshops on stage&#13;
movement in period plays.&#13;
Representatives of community&#13;
theater groups and high school&#13;
drama teachers in the area have&#13;
been invited to participate in the&#13;
workshops along with UWParkside&#13;
dramatic arts students,&#13;
according to Prof. Rhonda-Gale&#13;
Pollack, dramatic arts coordinator.&#13;
Franklin White joined the&#13;
Royal Ballet (then Sadler's Wells)&#13;
in 1942, rising from the corps de&#13;
ballet to the rank of principal&#13;
and danced over 150 roles&#13;
including all the major character&#13;
and acting roles in the -Roval&#13;
Ballet repertoire.&#13;
He has taught and given&#13;
lecture-demonstrations throughout&#13;
the U.S., Canada, Zambia,&#13;
Rhodesia, Iceland and England.&#13;
He has appeared in televised&#13;
performances in the U.S.,&#13;
Canada, Rhodesia and England&#13;
and in a film on the Royal Ballet&#13;
f~aturing Margot Fonteyn,&#13;
Michael Seames and Rosemary&#13;
Lindsay, with Franklin White as&#13;
Kotschie in "The Firebird."&#13;
He is the author of the book,&#13;
"Sadler's Wells Goes Abroad,"&#13;
completed shortly after hi'&#13;
second American tour with the&#13;
company, and has contributed to&#13;
a number of ballet periodicals.&#13;
news&#13;
Crisis hotline aids community&#13;
by Dan Cuidebeck&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
6-5-8-4-3-5-7 ... Switchboard Reed speaking : . . uh, yeah, sure I&#13;
could talk to you! ... That's what I'm here for . ..&#13;
"People helping people is a life time opportunity." This is the&#13;
motto of Switchboard. Switchboard is a non-profit, volunteer,&#13;
24-hour-a-day (including holidays) help-line.&#13;
The Kenosha County Switchboard was conceived in January of&#13;
1971. People from the local colleges, universities, and technical&#13;
school formed the nucleus of the group which later became the first&#13;
Switchboard volunteers. The group was originated under Kenosha&#13;
Drug Abuse, Inc. The original training was provided by doctors,&#13;
lawyers and psychiatrists who were associated with the Underground&#13;
Switchboard in Milwaukee.&#13;
Started on weekends&#13;
In March of 1971 the Kenosha Switchboard began operation in&#13;
Kenosha Memorial Hospital, mainly as a drug line, with two phone&#13;
lines from 6:00 p.m. to 3:00 a.m. on weekends only. After a few&#13;
months the volunteers were receiving a wider range of crisis calls&#13;
than expected, from callers of all ages. It then became switchboard&#13;
policy to meet all these demands in crisis situations. Volunteers&#13;
received broader training and the referral files were expanded to&#13;
allow Switchboard t9 deal with a wider variety of problems.&#13;
"Although Switchboard was originally conceived as a drug line, drug&#13;
related calls are now only 10-20% of our total calls," said a&#13;
Switchboard representative.&#13;
By September of 1971, Switchboard moved to larger facilities with&#13;
three phone lines and service seven nights a week. Many calls&#13;
involved problems too serious Or involved to be handled over the&#13;
phone. Although these callers needed professional help, many did&#13;
not have enough money or were dissatisfied with the help received&#13;
elsewhere. For this reason Switchboard asked professional counselors&#13;
to donate their time to establish the Counseling Center. Counselors&#13;
were recruited from local schools, colleges, the Welfare Department&#13;
and the local clergy.&#13;
Leases a building&#13;
In April of 1974, Switchboard leased a building which allowed it to&#13;
meet community needs through an advocacy attitude with regard to&#13;
other new social help agencies. At times this advocacy approach has&#13;
involved direct cooperation and participation by the staff, as has&#13;
been the case with Women's Horizons, Youth and Family Services&#13;
and Impact programs. At other times, as in the case of Welfare&#13;
Rights, the Youth Employment Program, VISTA and the Community&#13;
THE&#13;
2226-57th St.&#13;
Kenosha ·&#13;
654~9909&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Assistance . ALL SUBJECTS&#13;
Choose from our library of 7,000 topics.&#13;
All papers have been prepared by our&#13;
staff of professional writers ,to insure&#13;
excellence. Send $1.00 (air mail&#13;
postage) for the current edition of our&#13;
mail order catalog.&#13;
j EDUCATIONAL SYSTEMS&#13;
I P.O. Box 25916-E;- I&#13;
I Los Angeles, Calif. 90025 I&#13;
•&#13;
We also provide original&#13;
research -- all fields.&#13;
I Name I l Address ________ L&#13;
1c~ I Thesis and dissertation&#13;
assistance also available. I State ___ Zip--~-- I&#13;
----------~---------------~&#13;
A~tion Program, ·it· has ·supplied needed office space. At one time&#13;
Switchboard housed a Recreation/Drop-in Center and a Bicycle&#13;
Repair Program through the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Extension.&#13;
Funding setback&#13;
Switchboard is now in the process of reorganization due to a&#13;
temporary funding setback in December of 1976. They now have a&#13;
temporary office located in the Reuther Alternative Aigh School&#13;
building and are staffed through a federal CETA grant. Switchboar9 ,&#13;
plans to enlist the services of more professionals to train operators&#13;
and to provide in-service training. Avenues for more diversified and&#13;
stable sources of funding are being explored. Switchboard is striving&#13;
to improve it-s- image and the services offered by working toward&#13;
becoming a comprehensive information and referral agency with an&#13;
advocacy approach.&#13;
What Switchboard can do&#13;
There are persons in Kenosha County who are troubled by personal&#13;
difficulties but who, due to workshift and school limitations and/or&#13;
personal limitations are hesitant or unable to seek traditional agency&#13;
counseling. Many of these people wish to remain anonymous but&#13;
wish to talk with a neutral party about their particular difficulty.&#13;
This is Switchboard's job. The volunteers are trained to listen in a&#13;
non-judgemental manner, help callers pinpoint their problems,&#13;
present them with different alternatives and provide the appropriate&#13;
help or refer them directly to an agency.&#13;
The rationale behind Switchboard is :&#13;
1. To provide emergency counseling with para-professional&#13;
volunteer,s on a 24-hour basis to those in a crisis situation so that they&#13;
may deal with their immediate problems until further help can be&#13;
obtained.&#13;
2. To enable persons being serviced by agencies to obtain needed&#13;
service during periods when their agencies are closed.&#13;
3. To enable persons to deal with their crisis situations and develop&#13;
independence in solving their problems.&#13;
4. To enable persons to obtain medical information and services&#13;
needed to deal with such problems as unwanted pregency, drug&#13;
overdose, veneral disease, and others.&#13;
5. To enable persons to obtain counseling to help them deal with&#13;
social, economic and family problems.&#13;
6. To provide information on legal assistance suited to their&#13;
individual needs.&#13;
7. To develop a-n awareness in persons of all ages in the community&#13;
of the services available through other agencies and Switchboard.&#13;
8. To develop an awareness of job opportunities available in the&#13;
Kenosha area to those in need.&#13;
9. To develop _complete referral services to aid persons in receiving&#13;
appropriate assistance.&#13;
10. To provide a free face to face counseling service with on call&#13;
profe·ssional counselors, on an appointment basis.&#13;
11. To assist low income and/ or disadvantaged people.&#13;
In 1976 Switchboard· received 10,305 calls. The average caller is&#13;
from 15-25 years of age. People who call in do not have to give any&#13;
information about themselves that they don't want to.&#13;
Funding ends in July&#13;
CET A funding is assured for staff positions· until June 20, 1978.&#13;
Temporary office space is also assured at Reuther until the first week&#13;
of October, at which time, if no more permanent quarters have been&#13;
funded, the office will be moved to the school district's&#13;
Administration Center at Weiskopt School located on the corner of&#13;
50th Street and Sheridan Road .&#13;
Fund raising is essential&#13;
Since Switchboard is a non-profit organization it relies on fundraising&#13;
events to pay for operational costs. The next fund raising&#13;
event will be the Carthage College Flea Market on November 12&#13;
Switchboard has rented a booth and hope to sell plants, crafts:&#13;
rum_mage and baked goods. On Friday, November 25, the Carthage&#13;
Christmas Craft and Art Fair will be held. Switchboard hopes to&#13;
contract for the two food concessions at the fair.&#13;
Training Sessions&#13;
- For those who would wish to volunteer or for those who simply&#13;
wa~t more information feel free to call 658-H-E-L-P anytime during&#13;
b~smess hours Monday thru Friday and ask for Carla Senecal&#13;
D1~ector of Volunte~rs/Tra_ining. Volunteers go through a 12-hou~&#13;
training ~rogram during which you listen to calls as they are handled&#13;
by experienced operators and you will have the opportunity to al&#13;
answer the phones during this period. You must attend sol&#13;
t · · · d · . severa&#13;
rammg sessions urmg which you listen to talks from several&#13;
professional and para-professional speakers. To be eligible to be an&#13;
operator you must be 18 or- over and have access to a phone.&#13;
Men's, women's track&#13;
teams to organize&#13;
There ~ill be1&#13;
an organizational meeting for the 1977_78&#13;
UW-Parks1de mens and women's track teams at 3·30 Th d&#13;
S t 22 · h · · p.m. urs ay&#13;
ep . ' '". t e upstairs lounge of the Physical Education Bldg '&#13;
All Parkside students interested in competinafo th , · ' t u . . co.- r e men s or&#13;
women s earns at W-P are invited to attend For m · f . · ore m ormatIon contact Coach Bob Lawson at 553-2245. '&#13;
4&#13;
§witchboar-d&#13;
24 hours&#13;
6~S-helP&#13;
FranklinWhite&#13;
to&#13;
instruct&#13;
stage&#13;
movement- A former member of England's&#13;
Royal Ballet, Peter Franklin&#13;
White, will be at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside Monday&#13;
through Friday (Sept. 26-30) to&#13;
present workshops on stage&#13;
movement in period plays.&#13;
Representatives of community&#13;
theater groups and high school&#13;
drama teachers in the area have&#13;
been invited to participate in the&#13;
workshops along with UWParkside&#13;
dramatic arts students&#13;
according to Prof. Rhonda-Gal~&#13;
Pollack, dramatic arts coordinator.&#13;
&#13;
Franklin White joined the&#13;
Royal Ballet (then Sadler's Wells)&#13;
in 1942, rising from the corps de&#13;
ballet to the rank of principal&#13;
and danced over 150 roles&#13;
including all the major character&#13;
and acting roles in the ,Royal&#13;
Ballet repertoire.&#13;
He has taµght and given&#13;
lecture-demonstrations throughout&#13;
the U.S., Canada, Zambia,&#13;
Rhodesia, Iceland and England.&#13;
He has appeared in televised&#13;
performances in the U.S.,&#13;
Canada, Rhodesia and England&#13;
and in a film on the Royal Ballet&#13;
f~aturing Margot Fonteyn,&#13;
Michael Seames and Rosemary&#13;
Lindsay with Franklin White as&#13;
Kotschie in "The Firebird."&#13;
He is the author of the book,&#13;
"Sadfer's Wells Goes Abroad,"&#13;
completed shortly after his&#13;
second American tour with the&#13;
company, and has contributed to&#13;
a number of ballet periodicals. &#13;
people&#13;
Professor David Beach:&#13;
active and concerned&#13;
by Kat Hermann&#13;
RANGER STAFF&#13;
time thinking about it'." So Beach tried out&#13;
for the part and landed it. He was very&#13;
satisfied with the production and enjoyed&#13;
being a part of it.&#13;
When asked what he thought about the&#13;
problems Parks ide has been faced with, he&#13;
sort of shook his head.&#13;
"Parks ide has an almost paranoid&#13;
concern for the range of problems it has!"&#13;
he said. 'When I was at the University of&#13;
Buffalo-NewYork, they closeddown the&#13;
school for three and a half months. Now&#13;
'THAT was something to worry about. And&#13;
it was under martial law besides.&#13;
"After eight rears Parkside still doesn't&#13;
have a graduate program, although it is&#13;
trying. They started with one concept and&#13;
now they're trying to reform.&#13;
"It seems like there are always two sides.&#13;
One is apathy - the type that say "I don't&#13;
way to give another second of my life to&#13;
this!" Then there is the other; the&#13;
go-getters. They're the ones who want to&#13;
get it done and done right before the&#13;
second hand has a chance to sweep&#13;
around again."&#13;
The behavorial science division used to&#13;
be two seperate divisions, psychology and&#13;
sociology jantropology. The new consolidated&#13;
division is comprised of nineteen&#13;
full time faculty members.&#13;
Behavorial science is really the study of&#13;
human behavior. "Until recently, it existed&#13;
only in print," Beach said. "Up until last&#13;
fall, psychology was in the science division&#13;
and sociology/anthropology were in the&#13;
social science division."&#13;
The faculty of all the divisions and the&#13;
administration both decided in the 75/76&#13;
school year to put the two divisions&#13;
together. A sizable portion of the division,~.&#13;
administration, and students were&#13;
involved to re-align the division's&#13;
structure.&#13;
"In the' beginning there were four&#13;
faculty members; one from anthropology,&#13;
one from sociology and two from&#13;
psychology."Beachsaid. They only met&#13;
once or twice and that was it. But then the&#13;
rest of us realized that we had to get&#13;
everyone involved, so we all got together&#13;
at least once a week to discuss how to&#13;
operate a new division, what it would&#13;
mean to have a behavorial science&#13;
division, what we were getting into, and&#13;
finally, what did we expect to get out of&#13;
it."&#13;
So the discussions and the COP&#13;
(Committee of Principals) process&#13;
continued. Finally the Faculty Senate&#13;
introduced and passed a resolution on&#13;
March 16, 1976 forming the Behavorial&#13;
Science Division.&#13;
According to a survey taken by the&#13;
Ranger staff during the spring semester,&#13;
1977, the psychology major was the&#13;
second most popular choice. Business&#13;
management came in first.&#13;
Keeping the above ranking in mind,&#13;
RANGER interviewed David&#13;
Beach, chairman of the Behavorial Science&#13;
Division. Professor Beach received his&#13;
Ph.D. at the University of Rochester, has&#13;
been teaching at Parks ide for five years,&#13;
was granted tenure in June of 1975, and&#13;
received the teaching Excellence Award in&#13;
the spring of 1976.&#13;
Among the many things he has done at&#13;
Parks ide, he participated in the play&#13;
Mousetrap, a "whodunit" written by&#13;
Agatha "Christie. It was first written as a&#13;
radio play, set in post-war 1948.&#13;
"I decidedto readfor the part for many&#13;
reasons, mostly personal ones," Beach&#13;
said. "I always had an interest in theatre as&#13;
an adolescent and as an adult. But I was&#13;
shy as a kid, so I let it go and pursued other&#13;
interests. It was almost a fantasy. Finally I&#13;
began to spend a lot of time driving&#13;
around and I said to myself, 'If you're&#13;
serious about acting and the theatre, you'll&#13;
try it. Otherwise stop spending so much&#13;
Although the Ranger studies found&#13;
psychology in high favor among students,&#13;
Beach disagrees with that finding&#13;
"Student enrollments are down. Some of&#13;
the problem lies in the Breadth&#13;
requirement. Most of the students still&#13;
believe that psychology is science and&#13;
sociology/anthropology is social science."&#13;
Also, there is a lot of faculty turnover."&#13;
(There are 1,050 to 1,100 students&#13;
currently enrolled in psychology courses&#13;
and close to the same number in&#13;
sociology/anthropology.)&#13;
When ProfessorBeachwas askedif he&#13;
was doing any research here at Parkside,&#13;
he grinned and said, 'Who has timel I&#13;
have a total of five articles and projects&#13;
that haven't been touched In almost a&#13;
year. 1 need a large block of time in which&#13;
to write and I just don't have It"&#13;
Does he like it here at Parksidel&#13;
"Of course. If I didn't, I wouldn't be&#13;
here."&#13;
Recollectio~&#13;
Collectio'l---&#13;
Sure you might not miss the old alma mater next year Maybe not&#13;
even the following year. But someday, you're gonna look back&#13;
and say "hey, wasn't it great back then". That's when you'll WIsh&#13;
you had a few mementos to remind you of the "good old days".&#13;
Before that happens to you, stop down at the bookstore and take&#13;
a look at the great collection of mementos we've got right now!&#13;
RINGS&#13;
MUGS&#13;
BEER STEINS&#13;
PENDANTS&#13;
.",~. ~~~-&#13;
-.-&#13;
~ -&#13;
THE BOOKSTORE&#13;
-.&#13;
people&#13;
Professor David Beach:&#13;
active and concerned&#13;
by Kat Hermann&#13;
RANGER STAFF&#13;
According to a survey taken by the&#13;
Ranger staff during the spring semester,&#13;
1977, the psychology m-ajor was the&#13;
second mbst popular choice. Business&#13;
management came in first.&#13;
Keeping the above ranking in mind,&#13;
RANGER interviewed David&#13;
Beach, chairman of the Behavorial Science&#13;
Division. Professor Beach received his&#13;
Ph.D. at the University of Rochester, has&#13;
been teaching at Parkside for five years,&#13;
was granted tenure in June of 1975, and&#13;
received the teaching Excellence Award in&#13;
the spring of 1976.&#13;
Among the many things he has done at&#13;
Parkside, he participated in the play&#13;
Mousetrap, a "whodunit" written by&#13;
Agatha -Christie. It was first written as a&#13;
radio play, set in post-war 1948.&#13;
"I decided to read for the part for many&#13;
reasons, mostly personal ones," Beach&#13;
said. "I always had an interest in theatre as&#13;
an adolescent and as an adult. But I was&#13;
shy as a kid, so I let it go and pursued other&#13;
interests. It was almost a fantasy. Finally I&#13;
began to spend a lot of time driving&#13;
around and I said to myself, 'If you're&#13;
serious about acting and the theatre, you'll&#13;
try it. Otherwise stop spending so much&#13;
time thinking about it'." So Beach tried out&#13;
for the part and landed it. He was very&#13;
satisfied with the production and enjoyed&#13;
being a part of it.&#13;
When asked what he thought about the&#13;
problems Parkside has been faced with, he&#13;
sort of shook his head.&#13;
"Parkside has an almost paranoid&#13;
concern for the range of problems it has !"&#13;
he said. "When I was at the University of&#13;
Buffalo-New York, they closed down the&#13;
school for three and a half months. Now&#13;
·THAT was something to worry about. And&#13;
it was under martial law besides.&#13;
"After eight years Parkside still doesn't&#13;
have a graduate program, although it is&#13;
trying. They started with one concept and&#13;
now they're trying to reform.&#13;
"It seems like there are always two sides.&#13;
One is apathy - the type that say " I don't&#13;
way to give another second of my life to&#13;
this!" Then there is the other; the&#13;
go-getters. They're the ones who want to&#13;
get it done and done right before the&#13;
second hand has a chance to sweep&#13;
around again."&#13;
The behavorial science division used to&#13;
be two seperate divisions, psychology and&#13;
sociology/ antropology. The new consolidated&#13;
division is comprised of nineteen&#13;
full time faculty members.&#13;
Behavorial science is really the study of&#13;
human behavior. " Until recently, it existed&#13;
only in print," Beach said " Up until last&#13;
fall, psychology was in the science division&#13;
and sociology/anthropology were in the&#13;
social science division."&#13;
The faculty of all the divisions and the&#13;
administration both decided in the '75/ '76&#13;
school year to put the two divisions .&#13;
together. A sizable portion of the division, r,.: :.&#13;
administration , and students were Although the Ranger stud1e found&#13;
involved to re-align the division 's psychology in high favor among stud nts,&#13;
structure. Beach disagrees with that finding&#13;
" In the beginning there were four "Student enrollments are down Some of&#13;
faculty members; one from anthropology, the problem lies in the Breadth&#13;
one from sociology and two from requirement. Most of the students still&#13;
psychology." Beach said. They only met bel ieve that psychology 1s science and&#13;
once or twice and that was it. But then the sociology/ anthropology 1s social science."&#13;
rest of us realized that we had to get Also, there is a lot of faculty turnover."&#13;
everyone involved, so we all got together (There are 1,050 to 1,100 students&#13;
at least once a week to discuss how to currently enrolled in psychology course&#13;
operate a new division, what it would and close to the same number 1n&#13;
mean to have a behavorial science sociology/ anthropology.)&#13;
division, what we were getting into, and When Professor Beach was asked if he&#13;
finally, what did we expect to get out of&#13;
it."&#13;
So the discussions and the COP&#13;
(Committee of Principals) process&#13;
continued. Finally the Faculty Senate&#13;
introduced and passed a resolution on&#13;
March 16, 1976 forming the Behavorial&#13;
Science Division.&#13;
was doing any research here at Parkside,&#13;
he grinned and said, 'Who has t1m ? I&#13;
have a total of five article and projects&#13;
that haven't been touched in almo t a&#13;
year I need a large block of time in which&#13;
to write and I 1ust don't have it."&#13;
Does he like 1t here at Park~1del&#13;
"Of course. If I didn't, I wouldn't b&#13;
here "&#13;
Recollectio~&#13;
Collectior:t···&#13;
Sure you might not miss the old alma mater next year. Maybe not&#13;
even the following year. But someday, you're gonna look back&#13;
and say "hey, wasn't it great back then" That's when you'll wish&#13;
you had a few mementos to remind you of the "good old days".&#13;
Before that happens to you , stop down at the bookstore and take&#13;
a look at the great collection of mementos we've got right now1&#13;
RINGS&#13;
BEER STEINS&#13;
-~«,CMUGS&#13;
&#13;
THE BOOKSTORE &#13;
news&#13;
'Home cooking' .invades _Apply fo~ educat!on&#13;
campus food service "~~~,~~~~:o~n~~;~~,~~;~:~;~&#13;
b Dan Guidebeck and John Gabriel in previous years. There is a cook who comes in and Semester 1978 are reminded that consult the Fall 1977 Timetable&#13;
Y makes home made soup. the deadline for these applica- or the 1977-78 Catalog for a&#13;
"Food service will improve," says William R. Those surveyed were asked where they wou~d tions is October 1, 1977. Forms statement of admission requireNiebuhr,&#13;
Director of the Union. A survey prefer to have lunch both on and off campus.Teare available in the Clinical ments for student teaching.&#13;
conducted last May by Niebuhr tells of satisfaction number one choice was the Union Dining Room ProgramsOffice, Greenquist 210. Education students who have&#13;
and dissatisfaction with the existing food services. with 18%. The Union Square Grill garnered 12%, There are a limited number of additional questions about these&#13;
At the time of the survey Parkside was on the Brown bag lunch 11%, at home before class 10.5%, internships in Science, English, requirements, or timing the&#13;
verge of completing its first year of food service in WLLC coffeeshop 9%, and McDonald's, 8%. Social Studies and at the student teaching/interning exthe&#13;
new Parkside Union. This provided Niebuhr Several other eating establishments were elementary level in area schools. perience, are encouraged to&#13;
information enabling him to find out exactly how mentioned in the survey. While the dining room For those who can leave the area - make an appointment with Dr.&#13;
the campus community was accepting the food was first, the' average check is greater at the Union there are some internships at the Dwayne Olsen of the Education&#13;
provided on campus. SquareGrill which showsthat people are willing to elementary level and in Division.&#13;
The initial idea for the survey came from a pay more for something of a good quality. secondary Art, German, Spanish, Overseas student teaching in&#13;
system-wide meeting of all University of Wisconsin Mc~nald's on Campus Science. Students who are Australia, England, S.cotland,&#13;
union directors held at Platteville by the Elsewherein the survey, respondents were'asked interested in learning -more Wales or Ireland as well as&#13;
UW~CentralAuxiliary Operations Analysis Office in to rate the three eating establishments on campus. about these internships, please student teaching in other areas&#13;
the spring of 1977,At that meeting a presentation The Union Squarehad an overall rating of 60%. The so indicate on your application. of the United States, are options&#13;
wasmade by Donald Findley, Executive Director of Union Dining Room followed with 45.3%, and the Further. information wi II be available to UW-P students. For&#13;
the Associated Students of UCLA. They used a WLLC Coffee Shop with 31%. It appears that she provided later. further information please c~nsimilar&#13;
type of survey to obtain the appropriate Union Square Grill with its char-broiled Students who have questions tact the Programs Office.&#13;
information needed for them to "redesign and sandwiches, pizza's, and fish 'n chip menu is the about their eligibility for student&#13;
redevelop" UCLA's food service program. The best accepted food area on campus. With the&#13;
resultsof the UGLAstudv had an apparent positive interest in McDonald's on the survey, a&#13;
effect on that campus's food service program. "McDonal&lt;fs-like hamburger" and cheeseburgerare&#13;
The .Parksidesurvey, unlike that of UCLA's had now being marketed. Respondents on the survey&#13;
very little to do with physical facilities in as much showed an interest in more fresh fruit, larger salads&#13;
as we had just moved into our new Union. It was anc!Jnade-to-order deli sandwiches all of which on&#13;
more practical to change the menu then to change now being sold. A question was raised by the&#13;
a building that was not yet a year old, respondents as to why the dining room is not open&#13;
The survey forms were mailed to 400 selected "later in the day.&#13;
students, faculty, staff and civil service employees. This was tried but it was evident that as the day&#13;
All were chosen with the help of the Parkside went on, there were simply not enough people on&#13;
Computer Center. Of the 400 surveyed,only 149 campus to make it feasible to keep the dining room&#13;
reports were returned by the deadline. This open very late, When the dining room was being&#13;
representsa 37% return rate compared to UCLA's closed at 2:00 p.m, it was expected that profit&#13;
40% and UWM's 17%......... would go down, but with the dining room closed&#13;
Breakfastat Parkside more and more people were using the Union Square&#13;
With the help of the survey, it was determined Grill and profits increased there.&#13;
that a majority of the campus community is on PricesMost Important ~&#13;
campus between 7:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.rn., with the When respondents were asked what was&#13;
greatest numbers between 9:30 a.m, and 3:30 p.m. important to them in a place to eat, prices were the&#13;
Obviously lunch is the biggest market. But with number one.concern. Surprisingsly, although the&#13;
40% of the responents indicating they are on price of food in outside establishments has gone up&#13;
campus five days a week in the early morning, a marketly, prices here at Parkside have had little or&#13;
potential breakfast market may exist. In a different no price increase. The quality of the food bought&#13;
part of the survey respondents reported that home was the second choice. .&#13;
type cooking was lacking, So, now there is a pastry Although the decor and surroundings of the&#13;
chef who comes in very early every morning and restaurantswer~ted very low as being of any real&#13;
bakespies, pastries and desserts.This compared to importance, physical remodeling of the Coffee&#13;
their frozen or store bought bakery goods available Shop is in progress.&#13;
pOOl&#13;
. 1.. ,.; .. ". .... .',..,. IN "'" :;:;&#13;
.DIRTY HARRY&#13;
Thurs., Sept. 22, 2:30 &amp; 7:30 p.m.&#13;
AND&#13;
MAGNUM FORCE&#13;
Fri., Sept. 23, 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Sun., Sept. 25, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
UNIONCINEMA $1.00&#13;
Cole goes&#13;
to EPA&#13;
Parkside meteorologist Henry&#13;
S. Cole is on leave of absence&#13;
during the 1977-78 academic&#13;
year to serve as staff scientist&#13;
with the federal Environmental&#13;
Protection Agency's Office of Air&#13;
Quality Planning and Standards&#13;
Monitoring and Data Analysis&#13;
Division at Research Triangle&#13;
Park, N.C.&#13;
As a staff scientist for the&#13;
EnvironmelJtal Protection,&#13;
Agency, he will be working on&#13;
in-depth analyses of the&#13;
transport, dispersion and trans";&#13;
formation of air pollutants. In&#13;
making the appointment the EPA&#13;
cited his "broad experience in air&#13;
pollution meteorology and air&#13;
quality management."&#13;
Professor Cole has been&#13;
involved in several major studies&#13;
of air quality along the Lake&#13;
Michigan shore from the&#13;
Chicago-Gary industrial complex&#13;
to Milwaukee,&#13;
An associate professor of&#13;
earth science, Cole joined Parkside&#13;
in 1969. He received his&#13;
undt7rgraduate degree from&#13;
Rutgers University and holds a&#13;
Ph.D. degree from l.(W-MadisQn.&#13;
Good oldie films slated&#13;
A series of free public film screenings has been announced by&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside Humanities Division for the fall&#13;
semester. The films will be shown on Tuesdaysat 7 p.m. in Classroom&#13;
Bldg. Room 105.&#13;
The series focuses on the first five decades of American film&#13;
history from the experiments of Thomas Edison in 1889to the release&#13;
of Orson Welles' "Citizen Kane" in 1941, A brief discussion will&#13;
precede each film.&#13;
Films to be shown are: "Birth of a Nation" Part Two on .Sept, 20,&#13;
"The Cabinet of Doctor Caligari" on Sept. 27, "Battleship Potemkin"&#13;
on Oct. 4, "The Goldrush" and "Cops" on Oct. 11, "Public Enemy" on&#13;
Oct. 18, "King Kong" on Oct, 25, "Bride of Frankenstein" and&#13;
"Hollywood: Dream Factory" on Nov. 1, "The River" and "The Plow&#13;
ThatBroke the Plains" on Nov. 8, "My Man Godfrey" on Nov. 15,&#13;
"Stagecoach" on Nov. 22, "Citizen Kane" on Nov. 29, (no screening&#13;
on Dec: 6) and "Prelude to War" on Dec. 13.&#13;
Japanese prints&#13;
visit Parlcside&#13;
A traveling exhibition of 30 Japanesewoodblock prints _ in which&#13;
two. artists vi~w the famous Iokaido Road linking Tokyo and the&#13;
ancl~nt Irnperial capital of Kyoto from perspectives 140 years apart&#13;
- will open at Parkside Communication Arts Gallery on Tuesday,&#13;
Sept. .20, and continue through· Oct. 6.&#13;
Gallery hours are noon to 5 and 7 to 10 p.m. for the opening and on&#13;
Sept. 27, 28, 29 and Oct. 4 and 5; noon to 5 p.rn. on Sept. 21, 22, 26,&#13;
29; and noon to 3 and 6 to 9 p.rn, on Oct. 2. Group tours will be&#13;
available by appointment which the UW-P Fine Arts Division on Sept.&#13;
23 and 30.&#13;
Artis~s featured in the show and Ando Hiroshige, whose classic&#13;
collectlo~ of Tokatdo Road prints appeared in 1834, and Sekino,&#13;
whose series was completed over the period between 1959and 1974.&#13;
Hiroshige's work is characterized by a concurrent interest in nature&#13;
a~d humanity. He evokes the subtle and majestic beauty of nature&#13;
With a strength and economy of line, sensitive color and lyrical spirit&#13;
that made him the most popular master of landscape of his day.&#13;
Th?ugh ~he f~mous views along the Tokaido are the subject of this&#13;
series, Hlroshlge has emphasized the hardships of travelers the work&#13;
of the country people, and the comic incidents one might encounter&#13;
on the journey. ....&#13;
Sekino's series, by comparison, plays down the human element in&#13;
order' to concentrate on the architectural patterns and structural&#13;
pre~enceof the natural landmarks along the Tokaido. Sekino chooses&#13;
~ubJectssuch as co~rtyards, tree branches and roof tiles which differ&#13;
rom the famous views Hiroshige immortalized .&#13;
M~ny of .the sights which greeted Hiroshige's eyes no longer&#13;
rernain. In his tim th T k id ..&#13;
. e e 0 31 0 oeriodtcallv shrank to a footpath or&#13;
required travelers to d· d&#13;
I k wa e across rivers and ferry across bays an&#13;
a es. Today the Tokaido is a super highway and the journey which&#13;
and r took two weeks in good weather now takes two and a half hours&#13;
an many of the 5t S k' d .&#13;
. I es e 100 eplcts - the graveyards subways and&#13;
cltyscapes fl h "&#13;
k&#13;
- re ect t e changes of the last thirty ye~rs and were&#13;
un nown to Hiroshige. . _~'&#13;
One of the fundament I d'ff .&#13;
f&#13;
a I erences b'etween the two s~riesis their&#13;
manner 0 production In H· h· 'd&#13;
f f . IroS Ige s· ay the print designer was only&#13;
one 0 Our membe f '&#13;
print. The publisher ~ 0 a team ~f men who created a woodblock&#13;
choose the ro r ?uld dete~mlOethe subject matter for a series,&#13;
would creat~ t~e _artl~t,and flOance the production. The designer&#13;
CUller who ~;oug sketch for the print and give it to the block&#13;
Fjnall~ th w?U carve the blocks according to the artist's drawing.&#13;
, e printer would take the blOCksand create the print itself.&#13;
, ,&#13;
I&#13;
news&#13;
'Home cooking' .invades _Apply fo~ educa~ion&#13;
student. 1nternsh1p campus foOd service&#13;
b Dan Guidebeck and John Gabriel in previous years. There is a cook who comes in and&#13;
y makes home made soup.&#13;
"Food service will improve," says William R.&#13;
Niebuhr, Director of the Union. A survey&#13;
conducted last May by Niebuhr tells of satisfaction&#13;
and dissatisfaction with the existing food services.&#13;
At the time of the survey Parkside was on the&#13;
verge of completing its first year of food service in&#13;
the new Parkside Union. This provided Niebuhr&#13;
information enabling him to find out exactly how&#13;
the campus community was accepting the food&#13;
provided on campus.&#13;
The initial idea for the survey came from a&#13;
system-wide meeting of all University of Wisconsin&#13;
union directors held at Platteville by the&#13;
UW-Central Auxiliary Operations Analysis Office in&#13;
the spring of 1977. At that meeting a presentation&#13;
was made by Donald Findley, Executive Director of&#13;
the Associated Students of UCLA. They used a&#13;
similar type of survey to obtain the appropriate&#13;
information needed for them to "redesign and&#13;
redevelop" UCLA's food service program. The&#13;
results of the UGLA stµdy had an apparent positive&#13;
effect on that campus's food service program.&#13;
The Parkside survey, unlike that of UCLA's had&#13;
very little to do with physical facilities in as much&#13;
as we had just moved into our new Union. It was&#13;
more practical to change the menu then to change&#13;
a building that was not yet a year old.&#13;
The survey forms were mailed to 400 selected&#13;
students, faculty, staff and civil service employees.&#13;
All were chosen with the help of the Parkside&#13;
Computer Center. Of the 400 surveyed, only 149&#13;
reports were returned by the deadline. This&#13;
represents a 37% return rate compared to UCLA's&#13;
40% and UWM's 17%.&#13;
Breakfast at Parkside&#13;
With the help of the survey, it was determined&#13;
that a majority of the campus community is on&#13;
campus between 7:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m., with the&#13;
greatest numbers between 9:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Obviously lunch is the biggest market. But with&#13;
40% of the responents indicating they are on&#13;
campus five days a week in the early morning, a&#13;
potential breakfast market may exist. In a different&#13;
part of the survey respondents reported that home&#13;
type cooking was lacking. So, now there is a pastry&#13;
chef who comes in very early every morning and&#13;
bakes pies, pastries and desserts. This compared to&#13;
their frozen or store bought bakery goods available&#13;
Those surveyed were asked where they would&#13;
prefer to have lunch both on and off campus. The&#13;
number one choice was the Union Dining Room&#13;
with 18%. The Union Square Grill garnered 12%,&#13;
Brown bag lunch 11%, at home before class 10.5%,&#13;
WLLC coffeeshop 9%, and McDonald's, 8%.&#13;
Several other eating establishments were&#13;
mentioned in the survey. While the dining room&#13;
was first, the· average check is greater at the Union&#13;
Square Grill which shows that people are willing to&#13;
pay more for something of a good quality.&#13;
McDonald's on Campus&#13;
Elsewhere in the survey, respondents were· asked&#13;
to rate the three eating establishments on campus.&#13;
The Union Square had an overafl rating of 60%. The&#13;
Union Dining Room followed with 45.3%, and the&#13;
WLLC Coffee Shop with 31%. It appears that 5he&#13;
Union Square Grill with its char-broiled&#13;
sandwiches, pizza's, and fish 'n chip menu is the&#13;
best accepted food area on campus. With the&#13;
interest in McDonald's on the su,rvey, a&#13;
"McDonalcfs-like hamburger" and cheeseburger are&#13;
now being marketed. Respondents on the survey&#13;
showed an interest in more fresh fruit, larger salads&#13;
and~made-to-order deli sandwiches all of which on&#13;
now being sold. A question was raised by the&#13;
respondents as to why the dining room is not open 0 later in the day.&#13;
This was tried but it was evident that as the day&#13;
went on, there were simply not enough people on&#13;
campus to make it feasible to keep the dining room&#13;
open very late. When the dining room was being&#13;
closed at 2:00 p.m., it was expected that profit&#13;
would go down, but with the dining room closed&#13;
more and more people were using the Union Square&#13;
Grill and profits increased there.&#13;
Prices Most Important&#13;
When respondents were asked what wa·s&#13;
important to them in a place to eat, prices were the&#13;
number one .concern . Surprisingsly, although the&#13;
price of food in outside establishments has gone up&#13;
marketly, prices here at Parkside have had little or&#13;
no price increase. The quality of the food bought&#13;
was the second choice.&#13;
Although th~ decor and surroundings of the&#13;
restaurants were rated very low as being of any real&#13;
importance, physical remodeling of the Coffee&#13;
Shop is in progress.&#13;
Cole goes&#13;
to EPA&#13;
Parkside meteorologist Henry&#13;
S. Cole is on leave of absence&#13;
during the 1977-78 academic&#13;
year to serve as staff scientist&#13;
with the federal Environmental&#13;
Protection Agency's Office of Air&#13;
Quality Planning and Standards&#13;
Monitoring and Data Analysis&#13;
Division at Research Triangle&#13;
Park, N.C.&#13;
As a staff scientist for the&#13;
Environme1Jtal Protection,&#13;
Agency, he will be working on&#13;
in-depth analyses of the&#13;
trarisport, dispersion and trans~&#13;
formation of air pollutants. In&#13;
making the appointment the EPA&#13;
cited his "broad experience in air&#13;
pollution meteorology and air&#13;
quality management."&#13;
Professor Cole has been&#13;
involved in several major studies&#13;
of air quality along the Lake&#13;
Michigan shore from the&#13;
Chicago-Cary industrial complex&#13;
to Milwaukee.&#13;
An associate professor of&#13;
earth science, Cole joined Parkside&#13;
in 1969. He received his&#13;
undergraduate degree from&#13;
Rutgers University and holds a&#13;
Ph.D. degree from UW-Madison.&#13;
Education students who plan&#13;
to student teach during Spring&#13;
Semester 1978 are reminded that&#13;
the deadline for these applications&#13;
is October 1, 1977. Forms&#13;
are available in the Clinical&#13;
Programs Office, Creenquist 210.&#13;
There are a limited number of&#13;
internships in Science, English,&#13;
Social Studies and at the&#13;
elementary level in area schools.&#13;
For those who can leave the area&#13;
there are some internships at the&#13;
elementary level and in&#13;
secondary Art, German, Spanish,&#13;
Science. Students who are&#13;
interested in learning -more&#13;
about these internships, please&#13;
so indicate on your application.&#13;
Further - information will be&#13;
provided later.&#13;
Students who have questions&#13;
about their eligibility for student&#13;
teaching or interning Spring&#13;
Semester 1978 are urged to&#13;
consult the Fall 1977 Timetable&#13;
or the 1977-78 Catalog for a&#13;
statement of admission requirements&#13;
for student teaching.&#13;
Education students who have&#13;
additional questions about these&#13;
requirements, or timing the&#13;
student teaching/interning experience,&#13;
are encouraged to&#13;
make an appointment with Dr.&#13;
Dwayne Olsen of the Education&#13;
Division.&#13;
Overseas student teaching in&#13;
Australia, England, S.cotland,&#13;
Wales or Ireland as well as&#13;
student teaching in other areas&#13;
of the United States, are options&#13;
available to UW-P students. For&#13;
further information please contact&#13;
the Programs Office.&#13;
Good oldie films slated · A series of free public film screenings has been announced by&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside Humanities Division for the fall&#13;
semester. The films will be shown on Tuesdays at 7 p.m. in Classroom&#13;
Bldg. Room 105.&#13;
The series focuses on the first five decades of American film&#13;
history from the experiments of Thomas Edison in 1889 to the release&#13;
of Orson Welles' "Citizen Kane" in 1941. A brief discussion will&#13;
precede each film.&#13;
Films to be shown are: "Birth of a Nation" Part Two on Sept. 20,&#13;
"The Cabinet of Doctor Caligari" on Sept. 27, "Battleship Potemkin"&#13;
on Oct. 4, "The Coldrush" and "Cops" on Oct. 11, "Public Enemy" on&#13;
Oct. 18, "King Kong" on Oct. 25, "Bride of Frankenstein" and&#13;
" Hollywood : Dream Factory" on Nov. 1, "'The River" and "The Plow&#13;
That Broke the Plains" on Nov. 8, "My Man Godfrey" on Nov. 15,&#13;
"Stagecoach" on Nov. 22, "Citizen Kane" on Nov. 29, (no screening&#13;
on Dec.· 6) and "Prelude to War" on Dec. 13.&#13;
Japanese prints&#13;
visit Parkside&#13;
A traveli,:;g exhibition of 30 Japanese woodblock prints - in which&#13;
two_ artists view the famous To-kaido Road linking Tokyo and the&#13;
anc1~nt Imperial capital of Kyoto from perspectives 140 years apart&#13;
- will open at Parkside Communication Arts Callery on Tuesday,&#13;
Sept. _20, and continue through · Oct. 6.&#13;
Gallery hours are noon to 5 and 7 to 10 p.m. for the opening and on&#13;
Sept. 27, 28, 29 and Oct. 4 and 5; noon to 5 p.m. on Sept. 21, 22, 26,&#13;
29; _and noon to 3 and 6 to 9 p.m. on Oct. 2. Group tours, will be&#13;
available by appointment which the UW-P Fine Arts Division on Sept.&#13;
23 and 30.&#13;
Artis~s featured in the show and Ando Hiroshige, whose classic&#13;
collect10~ of Tokaido Road prints appeared irr 1834, and Sekino,&#13;
whose series was completed over the period between 1959 and 1974.&#13;
Hiroshige's work is characterized by a concurrent interest in nature&#13;
and humanity. He evokes the subtle and majestic beauty of nature&#13;
with a str~ngth and economy of line, sensitive color and lyrical spirit&#13;
that made him the most popular master of landscape of his day.&#13;
Th?ugh ~he f~mous views along the Tokaido are the subject of this&#13;
series, Hirosh1ge has emphasized the hardships of travelers, the work&#13;
of the country people, and the comic incidents one might encounter&#13;
on the journey. ,&#13;
Sekino's series, by comparison, plays down the human element in&#13;
order· to concentrate on the architectural patterns and structural&#13;
pre~ence of the natural landmarks along the Tokaido. Sekino choa"ses&#13;
;ubiects such as co~rtyards, tre~ branches and roof tiles which differ&#13;
. rom the famous views Hiroshige immortalized.&#13;
· M~ny of _th~ sights which greeted Hiroshige's eyes no longer&#13;
rem~m . In his time the Tokaido periodically shrank to a footpath or&#13;
~e~uired travelers to wade across rivers and ferry across bays and&#13;
a es. Today the Tokaido is a super highway and the journey which&#13;
on~e took two weeks in good weather now takes two and a half hours&#13;
a~ many of the sites Seki no depicts - the graveyards subways and&#13;
citykscapes - reflect the changes of the last thirty y~~rs and ~ere&#13;
un nown to Hiroshige_ '&#13;
One offthe fundamental differences between the two series is their&#13;
manner o production In H. h' , d I&#13;
one of f b · iros ige s ay, the print designer was on Y&#13;
our rnem ers of a tea f h bl k print. The publisher m ~ men w o created a wood oc&#13;
choose th w?uld determine the subject matter for a series,&#13;
would cre:t~r~:er ,arti~t, and finance the production. The designer&#13;
cutter who eldroug sketch for the print and give it to the block&#13;
' wou carve the block d. · Finally th · s accor mg to the artist's drawing. ' e printer would take the blocks and create the print itself.&#13;
I&#13;
I &#13;
sports&#13;
Heiring&#13;
competes&#13;
in England&#13;
FormerUW-Parkside walker&#13;
Jim Heiring of Kenosha; who&#13;
missed making the 1976 U.s.&#13;
Olympic team by two places&#13;
in his specialty, gets his first&#13;
shot at international competition&#13;
next week as he vies in&#13;
the Lugano Cup walk in&#13;
England.&#13;
Heiring, a May graduate of&#13;
Parkside, will compete Sept.&#13;
24-25in the 20 kilometer walk&#13;
with three other U.S. walkers.&#13;
Four other Americans will&#13;
compete in the 50 kilometer&#13;
race, which was left out of the&#13;
Montreal games but has been&#13;
reinstated by the organizers in&#13;
Moscow for 1980.&#13;
The competition in London&#13;
will include the world's best&#13;
walkers, among them Olympic&#13;
champion and world&#13;
record-holder Daniel Bautista&#13;
and the silver and bronze&#13;
medalists from Montreal.&#13;
Heiring, who beganwalking&#13;
as a freshman at Parkside in&#13;
1974, won six indoor and&#13;
outdoor NAIA walk championships&#13;
for the Rangers.At&#13;
22, he's probably the best&#13;
young walker in the country&#13;
and was the youngest by&#13;
some five or six years of the&#13;
top Olympic Trials finishers.&#13;
CHI-RHO Center&#13;
announces&#13;
fall schedule&#13;
L&#13;
Sister Colette and Father&#13;
Wayne, Campus Ministers at&#13;
Parks ide, announce the following&#13;
schedule of activities for the&#13;
first semester.&#13;
Mass is celebrated each.&#13;
Sundaymorning at 10:00 and&#13;
11:30a.m. at CHI-RHOCENTER&#13;
located at 3825 12th Street in&#13;
Kenosha.(The CENTERis just&#13;
southeast of the Parkside&#13;
fieldhouseon Highway E.)&#13;
A series of partnership or&#13;
bre-rnarnage sessions will be&#13;
held at CHI-RHO CENTERon&#13;
each Wednesday evening in&#13;
Octoberbeginning at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Registration is required and can&#13;
be madeby phoningthe CENTER&#13;
at 552-8626before October 1,&#13;
1977.&#13;
BeginningOctober 26 at 7:30&#13;
p.m, and ,running for six&#13;
consecutive weeks, a Communications&#13;
Workshop will be&#13;
conducted for any persons&#13;
interested in improving the&#13;
quality of" their communication&#13;
and increasing their ability to&#13;
live life as productively as&#13;
Possible, Participation will be by&#13;
registration only.&#13;
Sister Colette and Father&#13;
Wayne are available for listening,&#13;
caring and sharing your concerns&#13;
and needs. Private confession&#13;
and personal counseling are&#13;
available by appointment. More&#13;
information and further, details'&#13;
are available by phoning&#13;
CHI-RHOCENTERat 5S2-8j&gt;26.&#13;
Cross-country open&#13;
meets scheduled&#13;
Parkside will sponsor all-comers cross-country&#13;
races this fall on four Sunday afternoons in&#13;
September and October.&#13;
Races for men and women and boys and girls in&#13;
seven age groups will be held beginning at 1 p.rn. on&#13;
Sept. 18, Sept. 25, Oct. 9 and Oct. 23 on the UW-P&#13;
cross-country course, site of this year's NAIA&#13;
national cross-country meet.&#13;
The entry fee is 50 cents per person per race with&#13;
certificates going to all finishers and ribbons to the&#13;
top five in each age group.&#13;
A one mile race will go at 1 p.m. for boys and girls&#13;
12 and under, two mile races beginning at 1:20 p.m.&#13;
for those 16 and under and 18 and under, and three&#13;
mile races starting at 2 p.m. for 18 and under, 30 and&#13;
over, and 40 and over and open.&#13;
For more information, contact UW-P cross-&#13;
'country coach Lucian Rosa at 553-2245.&#13;
MaryAnn Cairns attempts to save Q set against UW-Milwaukee,&#13;
Parkside lost 9~,&#13;
Fill in the blank spaces to complete the words, each containing the letters "u S e:'&#13;
The clues may, or may not, help you.&#13;
1. USE _&#13;
II it's this, you don 'I need it&#13;
2. __ USE_&#13;
This will gel you upset. 3. USE&#13;
Don't get any wrong ideas.&#13;
4._USE _&#13;
There is a tail to this one,&#13;
5. USE&#13;
Not too quick 10 catch on.&#13;
When there's a challenge,&#13;
quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope you have some fun with the challenge.&#13;
'Pabst Blue Ribbon i~ the Number 1 beer in Milwaukee.&#13;
beer capital of the world,&#13;
That's why we'd like to offer you another challenge&#13;
-the Pabst challenge. Taste and compare Pabst Blue&#13;
Ribbon to any other premium beer You'll like Pabst&#13;
because Blue Ribbon quality means the best-tasting beer&#13;
you can get, Since 1844 it always has.&#13;
PABST. Since 1844.The quality has always come through.&#13;
PABST BREWING COMPANY, Milwaukee, Wis" Peori. Heigtlts, Ill., NewaJ1l:,N.J., los Angel.s, Calif" Pabst, GeOfgia&#13;
sports&#13;
Heiring&#13;
competes&#13;
in England&#13;
Former UW-Parkside walker&#13;
Jim Heiring of Kenosha; who&#13;
missed making the 1976 U .S.&#13;
Olympic team by two places&#13;
in his specialty, gets his first&#13;
shot at international competition&#13;
next week as he vies in&#13;
the Lugano Cup walk in&#13;
England .&#13;
Heiring, a May graduate of&#13;
Parkside, will compete Sept.&#13;
24-25 in the 20 kilometer walk&#13;
with three other U .S. walkers.&#13;
Four other Americans wi II&#13;
compete in the SO kilometer&#13;
race, which was left out of the&#13;
Montreal games but has been&#13;
reinstated by the organizers in&#13;
Moscow for 1980.&#13;
Cross-country open&#13;
meets scheduled&#13;
Parkside will sponsor all-comers cross-country&#13;
races this fall on four Sunday afternoons in&#13;
September and October.&#13;
Races for men and women and boys and girls in&#13;
seven age groups will be held beginning at 1 p.m . on&#13;
Sept. 18, Sept. 25, Oct. 9 and Oct. 23 on the UW-P&#13;
cross-country course, site of this year's NAIA&#13;
national cross-country meet.&#13;
The entry fee is 50 cents per person per race with&#13;
certificates going to all finishers and ribbons to the&#13;
top five in each age group.&#13;
The competition in London&#13;
will include the world' s best&#13;
walkers, among them Olympic&#13;
champion and world&#13;
record-holder Daniel Bautista&#13;
and the silver and bronze&#13;
medalists from Montreal.&#13;
MaryAnn Cairns attempts to save a set against UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
A one mile race will go at 1 p.m . for boys and girls&#13;
12 and under, two mile races beginning at 1 :20 p.m .&#13;
for those 16 and under and 18 and under, and three&#13;
mile races starting at 2 p.m . for 18 and under, 30 and&#13;
over, and 40 and over and open .&#13;
For more information, contact UW-P crosscountry&#13;
coach Lucian Rosa at 553-2245.&#13;
Heiring, who began walking&#13;
as a freshman at Parkside in&#13;
1974, won six indoor and&#13;
outdoor NAIA walk championships&#13;
for the Rangers. At&#13;
22, he's probably the best&#13;
young walker in the country&#13;
and was the youngest by&#13;
some five or six years of the&#13;
top Olympic Trials finishers.&#13;
CHI-RHO Center&#13;
announces&#13;
fall schedule&#13;
Sister Colette and Father&#13;
Wayne, Campus Ministers at&#13;
Parkside, announce the following&#13;
schedule of activities for the&#13;
first semester.&#13;
Mass is celebrated each .&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:00 and&#13;
11:30 a.m. at CHI-RHO CENTER&#13;
located at 3825 12th Street in&#13;
Kenosha. (The CENTER is just&#13;
southeast of the Parkside&#13;
fieldhouse on Highway E.)&#13;
A series of partnership or&#13;
pre-marriage sessions will be&#13;
held at CHI-RHO CENTER on&#13;
each Wednesday evening in&#13;
October beginning at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Registration is required and can&#13;
be made by phoning the CENTER&#13;
at 552-8626 before October 1,&#13;
1977.&#13;
Beginning October 26 at 7:30&#13;
p.m·. and running for six&#13;
consecutive ~eeks, a Communications&#13;
Workshop will be&#13;
conducted for any persons&#13;
interested in improving the&#13;
quality of their communication&#13;
and increasing their ability to&#13;
live life as productively as&#13;
possible Participation will be by&#13;
registration only.&#13;
Sister Colette and Father&#13;
Wayne are available for listening,&#13;
caring and sharing your concerns&#13;
and needs. Private confession&#13;
and personal counseling are&#13;
available by appointment. More&#13;
information and further , details'&#13;
are available by phoning&#13;
CHI-RHO CENTER at 552-8626.&#13;
Parkside lost 9-0.&#13;
Fill in the blank spaces to complete the words, each containing the letters "US e:·&#13;
The clues may, or may not, help you.&#13;
1. USE ___ _ If it's this, you don't need it. 2.&#13;
__ usE_&#13;
This will get you upset. 3. _____ USE&#13;
Don't get any wrong ideas. 4._usE ___ _&#13;
There is a tail to this one.&#13;
s. ___ usE&#13;
Not too quick to catch on.&#13;
When there's a challenge, quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope you have some fun with the challenge.&#13;
·Pabst Blue Ribbon ii, the Number 1 beer in Milwaukee.&#13;
beer capital of the world.&#13;
That's why we'd like to offer you another challenge&#13;
-the Pabst challenge. Taste and compare Pabst Blue&#13;
Ribbon to any other premium beer. You'll like Pabst&#13;
because Blue Ribbon quality means the best-tasting beer&#13;
you can get. Since 1844 it always has.&#13;
PABST. Since 1844. The quality has always come through. PABST BREWING COMPANY, Milwaukee, Wis., Peoria Heights, Ill., Newarl&lt;, N.J., Loa Angeles, Calif., Pabat, Georgia&#13;
3 S IU80 c; 3~V13Sn.:I ~ 3snavs1a C V3SnVN l SS313Sn l :JeMsuy &#13;
events&#13;
Wednesday, September 21&#13;
Film The Wild Bunch 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Soccer Parkside vs. Trinity College on the soccer&#13;
field off of Wood Road at 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Boxing Organizational Meeting at 3:00 p.m. in CL&#13;
0-174. For more information call Professor&#13;
Pomazal 553-2428.&#13;
Thursday ,September 22·&#13;
Track Team Meeting at 3:30 p.m. in the upstairs&#13;
lounge of the Physical Education Building.&#13;
Film Dirty Harry 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Yom Kippur see Leviticus: 16.&#13;
Friday, September 23&#13;
Film Magnum Force 8:00 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00. _&#13;
Golf Parkside at UW-Oshkosh Invitational 9:30 a.m.&#13;
Saturday, September 24&#13;
Soccer Parkside vs. Rockford College on the soccer&#13;
field off of Wood Road at 2:00 p.m.&#13;
Volleyball Parkside at Depaul University Tournament,&#13;
Chicago 10:00 a.m.&#13;
Cross-country: United States Track and Field&#13;
Federation Midwestern Championships. Here at&#13;
12:00 noon on the cross-country field off of&#13;
County JR.&#13;
Picnic Life Science Club, from noon to 4:00 p.m.&#13;
Food provided. Members 50c, non-members 75c.&#13;
Volleyball and Frisbee provided. Call 554-9512 or&#13;
639-3828.&#13;
Monday, September 26&#13;
Golf Parkside at Steinauer Invitational in Madison.&#13;
Tennis Parkside at UW-Oshkosh with UW-Green&#13;
Bay, 2:00 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, September 28&#13;
Soccer Parkside at Aurora College, Illinois 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Tennis Parkside vs. Carroll College here at 3:30 on&#13;
the tennis courts next to the Physical Education&#13;
Building. .&#13;
Friday, September 30&#13;
Golf Warhawk Invitational at Janesville 9:15 a.m.&#13;
Tennis Parkside vs. Carthage and UW-Whitewater at&#13;
Carthage College in Kenosha, 2:00 p.m.&#13;
notes&#13;
All women interested in playing on Parkside's&#13;
Women's Varsity Basketball Team should call Coach&#13;
Sue Tobachnik as soon as possible at 553-2318.&#13;
Anyone interested in Debate and Forensics should&#13;
come to Comm Arts room 258 at 6:30 p.m: any&#13;
Wednesday. If this time conflicts with your&#13;
schedule, call Professor Weaver at 553-2420.&#13;
Anyone interested in trying out for fall baseball&#13;
should come to the club's practice every week night&#13;
at 3:45 p.m. on Parkside's baseball field off of&#13;
County E.&#13;
Men's Swim Team has already begun pre-season&#13;
conditioning, but it is not too late to get on the&#13;
team. The first meet is the Coed Ranger Relays&#13;
November 18, at 3:30 p.m. Any men interested&#13;
should attend a meeting in the Physical Education&#13;
Building, Friday, September 30, at 3:30 p.m. or call&#13;
Barb Lawson 553-2257.&#13;
Women's Swim Team will begin its season October&#13;
4, at Carroll College. The team needs many more&#13;
swimmers than it now has and anyone interested&#13;
should contact Barb Lawson immediately. Call&#13;
553-2257.&#13;
The Ranger ,Basketball Team needs a large louo&#13;
Cheerleading Squad. Anyone meeting the need&#13;
should contact Shirley Schmerling in Tallent Hall&#13;
115 or call 553-2320.&#13;
Women's Golf needs more women. Those interested&#13;
should contact Loran Hein 553-2162.&#13;
/&#13;
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classified&#13;
Help wantfICI part-tlme help. $4.25 per hour,&#13;
15 hours per week. call Jim ClgJ!lske&#13;
634-4995 between 11:00 a.m. and 1:00 p.ra.&#13;
For sale Irlsh_ Setter Puppies $50. 654-3810.&#13;
or 654-8383 at 2008 8181 Street-ln Kenosha.&#13;
-&#13;
For 811. '973 Monte carlo. Gold wfblack&#13;
vinyl top. Excellent condition. $2,000 or ,&#13;
_ best offer. call 652-5049 and ask for Tom.&#13;
Wanted: Coach and Intramural Instructor&#13;
candidates Kenosha Unified Schools&#13;
contact Glen McCulloch Athletic Coordinator&#13;
by letter - Hannan Administration&#13;
Building 4001 60th Street If Interested.&#13;
Ride W.nted from Part&lt;slde to 1538 Arthur&#13;
Ave., Racine. Between 4:30-5:00 PM. I am&#13;
deaf, blind, and have a guide dog.·Wlli pay&#13;
reasonable amount If requested. Contact me&#13;
at Parkslde Computer Center CA 120 or call&#13;
553-2303.&#13;
28 mil .. per gellon. For salell 1965 VW. It&#13;
runs, needs some wors. $225. 553-2428.&#13;
College Rep needect Call between 911 AM&#13;
to set up appointment for Interview. Call&#13;
Marlon James at 654-8692.&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR -YOU!&#13;
quality corrrnercial printers&#13;
1417 50th street . 658·8990&#13;
Events forms are available at the Information Center&#13;
8&#13;
in the Union and at the Information Kiosk in Main&#13;
Place. They may be mailed through intra-campus&#13;
mail or delivered personally to Tallent Hall, room&#13;
290. All events forms-must be in at least eight days&#13;
prior to the Wednesday issue of Ranger.&#13;
J(apiJ~ J?laza -2~ Cinema, '&#13;
Mondaythru Saturday7,30 &amp;9,30&#13;
~=iiiiiiiii;:Su:n:d:aY:S:l ,:30,3,30. 5,30:,:7:,30=&amp;:9.:.30=====:::&#13;
VISIT THE&#13;
UNION&#13;
REC. CTR.&#13;
1. BOWUNG SPECIAL&#13;
Break the monday morning&#13;
b-lues. Bowling 25' 9am-noon&#13;
2. STUDENT LEAGUES&#13;
Fall leagues now forming&#13;
individuals or teams, sign up&#13;
NOW lFor information on times t&#13;
costs, openings;e'tc. Visit or call&#13;
&lt;; Rec. Ctr. 553-2695&#13;
Sat.&#13;
Sept. 24·&#13;
9:00pm&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
Mixed Drinks I'railahle&#13;
ID', R... I,... '&#13;
~&#13;
'- _(J~ ,(;; r;r/}Ig", 'c~fJl/ni&#13;
*1.00 uw-p Stu•••&#13;
*1.50 Oth.n&#13;
,.&#13;
events&#13;
Wedn-esday, September 21&#13;
Film The Wild Bunch 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Soccer Parkside vs. Trinity College on the soccer&#13;
field off of Wood Road at 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Boxing Organizational Meeting at 3:00 p.m. in CL&#13;
D-174. For more information call Professor&#13;
Pomazal 553-2428.&#13;
Thursday,·September 22&#13;
Track Team Meeting at 3:30 p.m. in the upstairs&#13;
lounge of the Physical Education Building.&#13;
Film Dirty Harry 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1 .00.&#13;
Yom Kippur see Leviticus: 16.&#13;
Friday, September 23&#13;
Film Magnum Force 8:00 p.m . in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Golf Parkside at UW-Oshkosh Invitational 9:30 a.m.&#13;
Saturday, September 24&#13;
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Events forms are available at the Information Center&#13;
in the Union and at the Information Kiosk in Main&#13;
Place. They may be mailed through intra-campus&#13;
mail or delivered personally to Tallent Hall, room&#13;
290. All events forms.-must be in at least eight days&#13;
prior to the Wednesday issue of Ranger.&#13;
Soccer Parkside vs. Rockford College on the soccer&#13;
field off of Wood Road at 2:00 p.m . .classified&#13;
Volleyball Parkside at r;:&gt;epaul University Tournament,&#13;
Chicago 10:00 a.m.&#13;
Cross-country: United States Track and Field&#13;
Federation Midwestern Championships. Here at&#13;
12:00 noon on the cross-country field off of&#13;
County JR.&#13;
Help wanted part-time help. $4.25 per hour,&#13;
15 hours per week. Call Jim ClgJ lske&#13;
634-4995 between 11 :00 a.m. and 1 :00 p.m.&#13;
For Sale Irish Setter Puppies $50. 654-3810.&#13;
or 654-8383 at 2008 81 st Street-In Kenosha.&#13;
For Sale 1973 Monte Carlo. Gold w/black&#13;
vinyl top. Excellent condition. $2,000 or _&#13;
Picnic Life Science Club, from noon to 4:00 p.m . _ best offer. Call 652-5049 and ask for Tom.&#13;
Food provided . Members 50c, non-members 75c.&#13;
Volleyball and Frisbee provided. Call 554-9512 or&#13;
639-3828.&#13;
Monday, September 26&#13;
Golf Parkside at Steinauer Invitational in Madison.&#13;
Tennis Parkside at UW-Oshkosh with UW-Creen&#13;
Bay, 2:00 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, September 28&#13;
Soccer Parkside at Aurora College, Illinois 3:30 p.m .&#13;
Tennis Parkside vs. Carroll College here ..at 3:30 on&#13;
the tennis courts next to the Physical Education&#13;
Building. ·&#13;
Friday, Septem~er 30&#13;
Golf Warhawk Invitational at Janesville 9:15 a.m.&#13;
Tennis Parkside vs . Carthage and UW-Whitewater at&#13;
Carthage College in Kenosha, 2:00 p.m .&#13;
notes&#13;
All women interested in playing on Parkside's&#13;
Women's Varsity Basketball Team should call Coach&#13;
Sue Tobachnik as soon as possible at 553-2318.&#13;
Anyone interested in Debate and Forensics should&#13;
come to Comm Arts room 258 at 6:30 p.m: any&#13;
Wednesday . If this time conflicts with your&#13;
schedule, call Professor Weaver at 553-2420. '&#13;
Anyone interested in trying out for fall baseball&#13;
should come to the club's practice every week night&#13;
at 3:45 p.m . on Parkside's baseball field off of&#13;
County E.&#13;
Men's Swim Team has already begun pre-season _&#13;
conditioning, but it is not too late to get on the&#13;
team. The first meet is the Coed Ranger Relays&#13;
November 18, at 3:30 p.m. Any men interested&#13;
should attend a meeting in the Physical Education&#13;
Building, Friday, September 30, at 3:30 p.m. or call&#13;
Barb Lawson 553-2257.&#13;
Women's Swim Team will begin its season October&#13;
4, at Carroll College. The team needs many more&#13;
swimmers than it now has and anyone interested&#13;
should contact Barb Lawson immediately. Call&#13;
553-2257.&#13;
The Ranger ,Basketball Team needs a large loua&#13;
Cheerleading Squad. Anyone meeting the need·&#13;
should contact Shirley Schmerling in Tallent Hall&#13;
115 or call 553-2320.&#13;
Women's Golf needs more women. Those interested&#13;
should contact Loran Hein 553-2162.&#13;
/&#13;
Wanted : Coach and Intramural Instructor&#13;
candidates Kenosha Unlfled Schools&#13;
cQntact Glen McCulloch Athletic Coordinator&#13;
by letter - Hannan Administration&#13;
Building 4001 60th Street If Interested.&#13;
Ride Wanted from Parkside to 1538 Arthur&#13;
Ave., Racine. Between 4:30-5 :00 PM. I am&#13;
deal, blind, and have a guide dog.'WIII pay&#13;
reasonable amount If requested. Contact me&#13;
at Parkside Computer Center CA 120 or call&#13;
553-2303.&#13;
28 mlles per gallon. For Salel I 1965 VW. It&#13;
runs, needs some work. $225. 553-2428.&#13;
Collage Rap needed. Call between 91 1 AM&#13;
to set up appointment for Interview. Call&#13;
Marlon James at 654-8692.&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS. FOR ¥OU!&#13;
,/?apiJs /?Laza 2&#13;
~=----,&#13;
cinema ~ j&#13;
Monday thru Saturday 7:30 &amp; 9:30&#13;
Sundays 1 :30, 3:30, 5:30, 7 :30 &amp; 9:30&#13;
VISIT THE&#13;
UNION&#13;
REC. CTR.&#13;
1. BOWUN8 SPECIAL&#13;
Break the monday morning&#13;
blues. Bowling 25' 9am-noon&#13;
2. STUDENT LEAGUES&#13;
Come Today See Yours.&#13;
quality corm,ercial printers&#13;
1417 50th street - 658-8990&#13;
Sat.&#13;
Sept. 24-&#13;
9:00pm&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
Mixed Drinks Awailahle&#13;
ID'1 Re.ulred&#13;
Fall leagues now forming&#13;
individuals or teams, sign up&#13;
NOW !·For information on times,&#13;
costs, openings;e'tc. Visit or call&#13;
~ Rec. Ctr. 553-2695&#13;
*1.00 UW-P Students&#13;
*t_SO Others </text>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 6, issue 4, September 21, 1977</text>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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        <element elementId="49">
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              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="66479">
              <text>Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="66480">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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              <text>1977-09-21</text>
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      <name>anthropology club</name>
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      <name>crisis hotline</name>
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    <tag tagId="2482">
      <name>segregated university fee allocation committee (SUFAC)</name>
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      <name>william petrie</name>
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</item>
