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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Watergate reporter tells his story&#13;
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            <text>Volume 6, issue 5</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>&lt;,&#13;
Wednesday, September 28, 1977&#13;
YoU, No.5 er ()() The mass media 15 rearrangng oo&#13;
ethos lust hke It rearranges 1I11&#13;
reality.&#13;
-Ron Hunter, WMAQ News&#13;
Watergate reporter&#13;
tells his story&#13;
by Diane [alenskv&#13;
News Editor&#13;
At approximately 11:00 am.,&#13;
last Thursday. thousands of&#13;
anxious students focused their&#13;
attention to the platform located&#13;
in the foreground of UW-Whitewater's&#13;
Williams Center Gymnasium,&#13;
where Campus Conference&#13;
Coordinator, Dr. Richard Nelson&#13;
welcomed young journalists t~&#13;
the 14th Annual High School&#13;
Newspaper Conference&#13;
Following his salutation Dr&#13;
Nelson introduced a inve~tjgative&#13;
reporter who won various&#13;
awards, some including the&#13;
Pul itzer Prize, the Drew Peerson&#13;
Award, the George Pope&#13;
Memorial Award, and the&#13;
University of Missouri Department&#13;
of Journalism Gold Key.&#13;
The individual co-authored two&#13;
Space travel anyone?&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
RangerStaff&#13;
Who hasn't, at one time or another&#13;
dreamed of being an astronaut? Haven't&#13;
we all taken that fantasy trip-imagining the&#13;
rumble of the rockets' roar; the crush of&#13;
acceleration; the dizzying drop of free-fall&#13;
in zero gravity; the thrill of knowing that&#13;
the infinite universe is but a few centimeters&#13;
away, chilling the outside of the&#13;
ship's sleek skin.&#13;
Readers of science fiction have long&#13;
been aware of the ecstasy and excitement&#13;
of spac-e travel. For years we'v,! followed&#13;
the exploits of larger-than-life heros as&#13;
they've eased their way into space and&#13;
beyond. And for many of them it really&#13;
was easy. Robert Heln lein's Starman Jones&#13;
was just a runaway kid who picked up the&#13;
skills needed for spaceflight while on&#13;
board a rocket. Burrough's John Carter was&#13;
a Southern gentleman and Confederate&#13;
soldier who proved a fast learner when&#13;
hastily deposited on Mars. Flash Gordon,&#13;
one of the great space heros of all time,&#13;
got his chance when he was kidnapped by&#13;
a paranoid Dr. Zarkov. It was even easier&#13;
in Have Spacesuit, Will Travel.&#13;
Yes, throughout the history of science&#13;
fiction there have been a host of ordinary&#13;
citizens chosen by fate to experience the&#13;
delights of soaring through outer space.&#13;
The real world of astronautics, however,&#13;
has been dismayingly different in its&#13;
choice of prospective space voyagers. No&#13;
ordinary applicants need apply. The men&#13;
who have flown into space during the past&#13;
two decades have been picked from an&#13;
elite cadre of highly trained and superbly&#13;
conditioned individuals. So few of these&#13;
all-around specimens have been selected&#13;
for actual missions that many a would-be&#13;
astronaut has put aside his or her dreams&#13;
of planet hopping in despair.&#13;
Despair not&#13;
Well, the time may be right to remove&#13;
those dreams of glory from the mothballs.&#13;
As often happens with delightful reliability,&#13;
modern science FACT is finally&#13;
catching up with the traditional science&#13;
FICTION. With the dawning of the Space&#13;
Shuttle era, space will indeed be wide&#13;
open for practically anybody who wants to&#13;
try for it. .&#13;
Enterprise is ready&#13;
On September 17, 1976 the world's first&#13;
re-usable space craft was rolled out of its&#13;
hangar at Palmdale, California, and was&#13;
christened the "Enterprise" to the Star Trek&#13;
theme song. In the invited audience were&#13;
Gene Roddenberry, leonard Nimoy,&#13;
DeForest Kelley, Nichelle Nichols, George&#13;
Takei. and Walter K enig, who all had very&#13;
gratified smiles; the name was changed&#13;
almost at the very last minute by President&#13;
Ford-In response to a massive letter-writing&#13;
campaign mounted by Star Trek fans all&#13;
over the country.&#13;
Wanted: Pilots&#13;
Now, many a science-fiction fan has&#13;
probably imagined sitting steely-eyed and&#13;
square jawed at the helm of some giant&#13;
spaceship, hands firmly gripping the&#13;
throttle as the engines roar and the Earth&#13;
falls far behind. For a few such dreamers&#13;
their wishes may one day be fulfilled. But&#13;
for the most, the numbers aren't there. Not&#13;
in the pilot's seat, anyway.&#13;
In this sense, tlle Shuttle program still&#13;
clings to the elitist theory. Assuming a full&#13;
traffic load of sixty or more Space Shuttle&#13;
flights a year (conducted by a fleet of five&#13;
different vehicles led by the already&#13;
constructed Enterprise) with three flights&#13;
per pilot a year, simple calculations show&#13;
that forty astronauts (a commander and a&#13;
pilot for each mission) could easily handle&#13;
continued on page 6&#13;
highly successful books tncludmg&#13;
All the President's Men and&#13;
The Final D~ys. He and hi&gt;&#13;
co-worker, Carl Bernstein undercovered&#13;
Watergate, one of the&#13;
largest governmental scandals In&#13;
the world The young journalist,&#13;
born in Wheatland, Illinois, is a&#13;
reporter for the Wuhington&#13;
Post. His name ISBob Woodward&#13;
As Woodward walked to the&#13;
podium, the audience cheered&#13;
and photographers purged him&#13;
with their cameras In hts&#13;
Introduction, Woodward outlined&#13;
the address In three major&#13;
headings - "The Watergate&#13;
Story", "the press after Watergate"&#13;
and "\he relationship&#13;
between the press and the&#13;
government,"&#13;
continued on page 8&#13;
er&#13;
Wednesday, September 28, 1977&#13;
Vol.6, No.S&#13;
()() The mass media 1s rearrangng ()()&#13;
eth1CS Just b e 1t rearranges l/ l/&#13;
reality.&#13;
-Ron Hunter, WMAQ News&#13;
Watergate reporter&#13;
tells his story&#13;
by Diane Jalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
At approximately 11 :00 am&#13;
last Thursday, thousands ~f&#13;
anxious students focused their&#13;
attention to the platform located&#13;
in the foreground of UW-Vvh1tewater's&#13;
v'villiams Center Gymnasium,&#13;
where Campus Conference&#13;
Coordinator, Dr. Richard 'elson&#13;
welcomed young journalists t~&#13;
the 14th Annual High chool&#13;
ewspaper Conference&#13;
Following his salutation, Dr&#13;
elson introduced a investigative&#13;
reporter who won various&#13;
awards , some including the&#13;
Pulitzer Prize, the Drew Peerson&#13;
Award , the George Pope&#13;
Memorial Award , and the&#13;
University of Missouri Department&#13;
of Journalism Gold Key.&#13;
The individual co-authored two&#13;
highly succe sful books includ -&#13;
ing All the President'&#13;
The Final Da s. H&#13;
co-work r Carl Bernst in und r·&#13;
covered Watergate, on of th&#13;
large t gov rnmental candals in&#13;
the world . Th young Journalist,&#13;
born m Wheatland, lllino1 , Is a&#13;
reporter for the Wa hington&#13;
Post. His name Is Bob v\:oodY.ard.&#13;
As Woodward walked to the&#13;
podium, th audience ch red&#13;
and photographers purg d him&#13;
with their cameras. In his&#13;
introduction, \! ood ard outlined&#13;
the address in thre ma1or&#13;
headings - " The Watergate&#13;
Story", "the pres after Watergate"&#13;
and " \he relationship&#13;
betY.een the press and the&#13;
go ernment "&#13;
continued on page 8&#13;
Space travel anyone?&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Who hasn't, at one time or another&#13;
dreamed of being an astronaut? Haven't&#13;
we all taken that fantasy trip-imagining the&#13;
rumble of t he rockets' roar; the crush of&#13;
acceleration; the dizzying drop of free-fall&#13;
in zero gravity; the thrill of knowing that&#13;
the infinite universe is but a few centimeters&#13;
away, chilling the outside of the&#13;
ship's sleek skin ...&#13;
Readers of science fiction have long&#13;
been aware of the ecstasy and excitement&#13;
of spa&lt;=e travel. For years we'v~ followed&#13;
the exploits of larger-than-life heros as&#13;
they've eased their way into space and&#13;
beyond . And for many of them it really&#13;
was easy . Robert Heinlein's Starman Jones&#13;
was just a runaway kid who picked up the&#13;
skills needed for spaceflight while on&#13;
board a rocket. Burrough's John Carter was&#13;
a Southern gentleman and Confederate&#13;
soldier who proved a fast learner when&#13;
hastily deposited on Mars. Flash Gordon,&#13;
one of the great space heres of all time,&#13;
got his chance when he was kidnapped by&#13;
a paranoid Dr. Zarkov. It was even easier&#13;
in Have Spacesuit, Will Travel.&#13;
Yes, throughout the history of science&#13;
fictioh there have been a host of ordinary&#13;
citizens chosen by fate to experience the&#13;
delights of soaring through outer space.&#13;
The real world of astronautics, however,&#13;
has been dismayingly different in its&#13;
choice of prospective space voyagers. No&#13;
ordinary applicants need apply. The men&#13;
who have flown into space during the past&#13;
two decades have been picked from an&#13;
elite cadre of highly trained and superbly&#13;
conditioned individuals. So few of these&#13;
all-around specimens have been selected&#13;
for actual missions that many a would-be&#13;
astronaut has put aside his or her dreams&#13;
of planet hopping in despair.&#13;
Despair not&#13;
Well, the time may be right to remove&#13;
those dreams of glory from the mothballs.&#13;
As often happens with delightful reliability,&#13;
modern science FACT is finally&#13;
catching up with the traditional science&#13;
FICTION. With the dawning of the Space&#13;
Shuttle era, space will indeed be wide&#13;
open for practically anybody who wants to&#13;
try for it. ·&#13;
Enterprise is ready&#13;
On September 17, 1976 the world's first&#13;
re-usable space craft was rolled out of its&#13;
hangar at Palmdale, California, and was&#13;
christened the "Enterprise" to the Star Trek&#13;
theme song. In the invited audience w~&#13;
Gene Roddenberry, Leonard imoy,&#13;
DeForest Kelley, Nichelle Nichols, George&#13;
Takei, and Walter K enig, who all had very&#13;
gratified smiles; the name was changed&#13;
almost at the very last minute by President&#13;
Ford-in response to a massive letter-writing&#13;
campaign mounted by Star Trek fans all&#13;
over the country.&#13;
Wanted: Pilots&#13;
Now, many a science-fiction fan has&#13;
probably imagined sitting steely-eyed and&#13;
square jawed at the helm of some giant&#13;
spaceship, hands firmly gripping the&#13;
throttle as the engines roar and the Earth&#13;
falls far behind. For a few such dreamers&#13;
their wishes may one day be fulfilled. But&#13;
for the most, the numbers aren't there. ot&#13;
in the pilot's seat, anyway.&#13;
In this sense, tne Shuttle program still&#13;
clings to the elitist theory. Assuming a full&#13;
traffic load of sixty or more Space Shuttle&#13;
flights a year (condt:Kted by a fleet of five&#13;
different vehicles led by the already&#13;
constructed Enterprise) with three flights&#13;
per pilot a year, simple calculations show&#13;
that forty astronauts (a commander and a&#13;
pilot for each mission) could e'™IY handle&#13;
continued on page 6 &#13;
The wisdom of· having&#13;
one shuttle bus&#13;
editorial •&#13;
forever, right? Not yet!&#13;
You may have noticed right at the begin(ling of&#13;
the semester there seemed to be two shuttle&#13;
buses, remember? So much for tKat.&#13;
The bus from Racine is a shuttle bus when it's&#13;
on campus. The Kenosha city bus is -oot a free&#13;
shuttle bus. The only shuttle bus running takes a&#13;
longtime to get around the loop .. The lowly red&#13;
stickered student parker waits at the bottom of&#13;
the hill. Wait until Winter!&#13;
Having just one shuttle bus is turning out to&#13;
be a terrible idea. Even with city buses helping&#13;
once every hour or so, one shuttle bus doesn't&#13;
make it. Many hurried commuter students rush&#13;
away from home only to be confronted with the&#13;
choice of waiting for the bus or walking. When&#13;
you are already fifteen minutes late this decision&#13;
can make a difference. Pouring rain? Hal&#13;
Marriott's Great America (sic) uses bus trains to&#13;
move people from the lots to the money gates.&#13;
Parks ide uses sidewalks and one rather&#13;
inefficient bus. ~&#13;
Well, you asked for it and you are paying for it&#13;
with your tuition money (did you think taxpayers&#13;
would pay for such a stupid system?). So, if you&#13;
are unhappy with such a method of moving&#13;
students to class, get those pens out and write&#13;
the Chancellor, student government, or even the&#13;
Ranger.&#13;
- ,&#13;
interview was very informal and relaxed. It&#13;
must be noted that Kummings rarely uses&#13;
profanity in his classes or in public for that&#13;
matter. I have had him for two courses and&#13;
I quite honestly think he is one of the best&#13;
professors at Parkside . He has a good sense&#13;
of humor, knows his material, and is a&#13;
damn good teacher. He 'is not a vulgar&#13;
man. This is a university newspaper not&#13;
Family Circle. If someone says a relatively&#13;
common curse word, there is no reason&#13;
why we should not print it. All you prudes&#13;
can start your own paper I or become&#13;
Editor of this one and change things.&#13;
Last week Ranger inviewed Professor&#13;
David Beach. Anyone who read the story&#13;
and knows Beach might have pondered&#13;
the a~sence of his polysyllabic responses.&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside and they are sol 1&#13;
responsible for its editorial p~licy and content.e&#13;
y&#13;
c ".&#13;
Dan Guidebeck, Robert Hansen, Jeff Proatko, KimWunsch&#13;
Kat Hermann, Chris Re.tcks, Marcia Vlach. '&#13;
F ,..d~{ Philip L. Livingston 553.22~5&#13;
ne a . Thomas R. Cooper 5. 1\.2:1117&#13;
C"py on)f John R. McKloskey&#13;
N,::w~f,( )1 Diane Jalensky&#13;
ecctabon ."i\a c Karen Putman&#13;
::tal ~;\.a er John Gabriel 553..2231&#13;
e 'j r..: 4 a9 Ken Larsen S' 228'1 .&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, Universitr of Wisconsin.Parkside&#13;
Kenosha. Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Subscriptions~ $5.00 year for U.S.A.&#13;
In the beginning; one .of the world's prominent&#13;
architects, Gyo Obata, thought Parks/de should&#13;
put aside the concerns of automobile storage by&#13;
placing parking lots on the periphery of the&#13;
campus. This would keep the core campus free&#13;
from automobile problems and the school could&#13;
provide a shuttle bus where professors and&#13;
students could ride to class together.&#13;
Soon after Obata drew up the master plan,&#13;
completed Greenquist Hall, and the Library&#13;
Learning Center, he was promptly kicked off the&#13;
site by the greater state of Wisconsin in a&#13;
misguided legislative effort to rid the state of out&#13;
of state architects. Parkside lost.&#13;
In following years, Parkside started building&#13;
parking lots like crazy. The original plan to keep&#13;
the central campus free from automobile traffic&#13;
has gone the way lof the Gooney Bird. First there&#13;
was the Communication Arts Lot, then came the&#13;
Union Lot and now comes the Physical Education&#13;
Lot (sic). In retrospect, the shuttle bus probably&#13;
didn't fill the needs of our rare, media&#13;
mesmerized, commuter students.&#13;
Last year the administration, student&#13;
government, and the segregated fees committee,&#13;
in great wisdom and financial restraint, chose to&#13;
save money and only employ one shuttle bus this&#13;
fall. After all, when the Physical Education Lot is&#13;
finished we will be rid of ;parking problems&#13;
Editor's File**** Feature Stories: some problems&#13;
by Philip l.livingston&#13;
Editor&#13;
about their lives and the business of&#13;
education? These are the questions we&#13;
want answered.&#13;
There is a danger in attempting to&#13;
illustrate people profiles in print. Someone&#13;
might pick up one story in one paper and&#13;
say, "Ugh, what a creep and how stupid."&#13;
T~ fact is, one story can not adequately&#13;
tell you all about a person.&#13;
A few weeks ago Ranger interviewed&#13;
Professor Don Kummings and in the story&#13;
(my story) Kummings used a few Anglo&#13;
Saxon terms to emphasize his plight. The&#13;
Our writer paraphrased Beach's remarks&#13;
and again editing was called out.&#13;
We are not going to give up yet. Ranger&#13;
will continue to tell you about people as&#13;
we find them and we will continue to&#13;
re-examine our editorial standards and our&#13;
responsibilities. We have a free press at&#13;
Parkside and we will keep it free.&#13;
These small problems could be blamed&#13;
on the fact that we do not have a·&#13;
cdmprehensive journalism program here.&#13;
Or perhaps there should be at least one full&#13;
time communications professor with a&#13;
print media background at Parkside.&#13;
Anyone interested in writing for Ranger&#13;
should come to the weekly meetings on&#13;
Mondays, from 2:00 p.rn to 6:00 p.m., in&#13;
Tallent Hall, room 287. And so it goes.&#13;
Sometimes a feature story will write&#13;
itself. That is, everything will fall together&#13;
and all that's needed is a byline and a&#13;
headline. This hasn't happened here yet.&#13;
We have had to pull teeth to get stories&#13;
and have gotten kicked in the process.&#13;
What we are trying to do, in addition to&#13;
printing the campus news, is to reveal&#13;
interesting parts of people's lives. What do&#13;
they think! What do they have to say&#13;
edito·rial •&#13;
, I&#13;
The wisdom of· having&#13;
one shuttle bus&#13;
.,&#13;
In the beginning, one of the world's prominent&#13;
architects, Gyo Obata, thought Parkside should&#13;
put aside the concerns of automobile storage by&#13;
placing parking lots on the periphery of the&#13;
'campus. This would keep the core campus free&#13;
from automobile problems and the school could&#13;
provide a shuttle bus where professors and&#13;
students could ride to class together.&#13;
Soon after Obata drew up the master plan,&#13;
completed Greenquist Hall, and the Library&#13;
Learning Center, he was promptly kicked off the&#13;
site by the greater state of Wisconsin in a&#13;
misguided legislative effort to rid the state of out&#13;
of state architects. Parkside lost.&#13;
In following years, Parkside started building&#13;
parking lots like crazy. The original plan to keep&#13;
the central campus free from automobile traffic&#13;
has gone the way 1&#13;
of the Gooney Bird. First there&#13;
was the Communication Art·s Lot, then came the&#13;
Union Lot and now comes the Physical Education&#13;
Lot (sic). In retrospect, the shuttle bus probably&#13;
didn't fill the needs of our rare, media&#13;
mesmerized, commuter students.&#13;
Last year the , ad,ministration, student&#13;
government, and the segregated fees committee,&#13;
in great wisdom and financial restraint, chose to&#13;
save money and only employ one shuttle bus this&#13;
fall. After all, when the Physical Education Lot is&#13;
finished we will be rid of ;parking problems&#13;
Editor's File**** Feature Stories: some problems&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Editor&#13;
Sometimes a feature story will write&#13;
itself. That is, everything will fall together&#13;
and all that's needed is a byline and a&#13;
headl ine. This hasn't happened here yet.&#13;
We have had to pull teeth to get stories&#13;
and have gotten kicked in the process .&#13;
What we are trying to do, in addition to&#13;
printing the campus news, is to reveal&#13;
interesting parts of people's lives . What do&#13;
they think? What do they have to say&#13;
about their lives and the business of&#13;
education? These are the questions we&#13;
want answered .&#13;
There is a danger in attempting to&#13;
illustrate people profiles in print. Someone&#13;
might pick up one story in one paper and&#13;
say, " Ugh, what a creep and how stupid."&#13;
T~ fact is, one story can not adequately&#13;
tell you all about a person .&#13;
A few weeks ago Ranger interviewed&#13;
Professor Don Kummings and in the story&#13;
(my story) Kummings used a few Anglo&#13;
Saxon terms to emphasize his plight. The&#13;
forever, right? Not yet!&#13;
You may have noticed right at the beginriing of&#13;
the semester there seemed to be two shuttle&#13;
buses, remember? So much_ for tKat.&#13;
The bus from Racine is a shuttle bus when it's&#13;
on campus. The Kenosha city bus is -not a free&#13;
shuttle bus. The only shuttle bus running takes a&#13;
long time to get around the loop .. The lowly red&#13;
stickered student parker waits at the bottom of&#13;
the hill. Wait until Winter!&#13;
Having just one shuttle bus is turning out to&#13;
be a terrible idea. Even with city buses helping&#13;
once every hour or so, one shuttle bus doesn't&#13;
make it. Many hurried commuter students rush&#13;
away from home only to be c6nfronted with the&#13;
choice of waiting for the bus or walking. When&#13;
you are already fifteen minutes late this decision&#13;
can make a difference. Pouring rain? Ha!&#13;
Marriott's Great America (sic) uses bus trains to&#13;
move people from the lots · to the money gates.&#13;
Parkside uses sidewalks and one rather&#13;
inefficient bus.&#13;
Well , you asked for it and you are paying for it&#13;
with your tuition money (did you think taxpayers&#13;
would pay for such a stupid system?). So,· if you&#13;
are unhappy with such a method of moving&#13;
students to class, get those pens out and write&#13;
the Chancellor, student government, or even the&#13;
Ranger.&#13;
interview was very informal and relaxed . It&#13;
must be noted that Kummings rarely uses&#13;
profanity in his classes or in public for that&#13;
matter. I have had him for two courses and&#13;
I quite honestly think he is one of the best&#13;
professors at Parkside. He has a good sense&#13;
of humor, knows his material, and is a&#13;
damn good teacher. He 'is not a vulgar&#13;
ma,p . This is a university newspaper not&#13;
Family Circle . If someone says a relatively&#13;
common curse word, there is no reason&#13;
why we should not print it. All you prudes&#13;
can start your own paper, or become&#13;
Editor of this one and change things .&#13;
Last week Ranger inv iewed Professor&#13;
David Beach. Anyone who read the story&#13;
and knows Beach might have pondered&#13;
the absence of his polysyllabic responses.&#13;
Our writer paraphrased Beach's remarks&#13;
and again editing was called out.&#13;
We are not going to give up yet. Ranger&#13;
will continue to tell you about people as&#13;
we find them and we will continue to&#13;
re-examine our editorial standards and our&#13;
responsibilities . We have a free press at&#13;
Parkside and we will keep it free.&#13;
These small problems could be blamed&#13;
on the fact that we do not have a ·&#13;
comprehensive journalism program here.&#13;
Or perhaps there should be at least one full&#13;
time communications professor with a&#13;
print media background at Parkside.&#13;
Anyone interested in writ ing for Ranger&#13;
shou ld come to t he weekly meetings on&#13;
Mondays, from 2:00 p.m . to 6:00 p.m., in&#13;
Tallent Hall, room 287 . And so it goes.&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside and they are solel&#13;
responsible for its editorial p~licy and content. y&#13;
(', \.v ,,.&#13;
Dan Guidebeck, Robert Hansen, Jeff Prostko, Kim Wunsch&#13;
Kat Hermann, Chris Ratcks, Marcia Vlach. '&#13;
· - f .. it , . Philip L. Livingston S!-3-22~5&#13;
General M;\na.11 Thomas R. Cooper ""..i·2237&#13;
Copy Edi ,r John R. McKloskey&#13;
N~w~ Edit .., Diane Jalensky&#13;
C1rC&gt;ulatlon M.al\a,g,r Karen Putman&#13;
C.,ah&gt; Man,,-:1c- John Gabriel 5.53-2287&#13;
.. "-J\ • ~ . a. Ken Larsen $,55.228""&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, Uni':'ersity of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Subscriptions_: $5.00 year for U.S.A.&#13;
j &#13;
news&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
Parking complaints&#13;
voiced by students&#13;
by Rusty Smith&#13;
President, P.S.G.A.&#13;
I have been receiving an enormous amount of complaints from&#13;
students concerning the lack of parking places in the Union and&#13;
Communication Arts white sticker lots. They were charged $15.00 per&#13;
semester for the right to park in these lots and have not been able to&#13;
find a place by 10:00 in the morning.&#13;
I went to the Security department and spoke with the Director, Mr.&#13;
Ronald D. Brinkmann. He told me that the lots had been oversold to a&#13;
lesser degree than last year and that there should be plenty of room&#13;
for everyone. He said that the current problems are due to a large&#13;
number of illegally parked vehicles (red stickers - no stickers at&#13;
all-etc).&#13;
Security has initated a new policy this year whereby illegally&#13;
parked cars are given two warning notices and then a ticket is issued.&#13;
This discussion took place on Tuesday morning aflast week and I was&#13;
shown a stack of at least 60 or 70 warning notices' that had been&#13;
handed out already during that week.&#13;
If, in fact, this is the cause of the problem, the Security department&#13;
is obviously doing it's best to remedy the situation, but if any of you&#13;
continue to have trouble finding parking places in the white sticker&#13;
lots, please get in touch with me or one of the Senators.&#13;
Offices moved&#13;
OUf offices have been moved. We are now located in WllC D-197.&#13;
That is just down the hall from our old offices and around the corner&#13;
from the Nurses office. OUf telephone number is still 553-2244, but 1&#13;
apologize to anyone who might have tried to call last week. We were&#13;
in the office, but the phone had not yet been moved. Our hours this&#13;
semester will be daily from 10:()() a.m. until 3:00 p.m. Please stop by.&#13;
I would also like to mention the fact that PSGA Elections will be&#13;
held on October 19 and 20. These are important elections! The eight&#13;
Divisional Representatives for the Senate will be chosen at that time&#13;
as will five new members of the Segragated Fees Committee.&#13;
The Segregated Fees Committee decides what will and what will&#13;
not be funded (such as the shuttle bus) by student dollars. This is&#13;
YOUR money! $56.00 of your tuition went into the $450,000.00 fund&#13;
which will be used to support practically every non-academic activity&#13;
on campus. The decisions will be made by an all-student committee.&#13;
You had better pay close attention to whom you elect as your&#13;
representatives on this committee and be sure that they understand&#13;
how you want your money spent!&#13;
If any of you are interested in becoming involved or running for&#13;
one of these positions, stop down at the PSGA office. But don't delay.&#13;
Time is running out.&#13;
Parking lot&#13;
underway&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Construction of a new 410-car capacity parking lot is underway&#13;
next to the Physical Education Building. This new lot for white permit&#13;
holders is to take the place of the "remote and deteriorating" East&#13;
lot.&#13;
Shuttle bus service from the East and Tallent lots will be&#13;
discontinued after the end of the semester, and persons using those&#13;
lots "will have to walk up the hill or use the Racine BUS as a shuttle&#13;
bus," said James E. Galbraith, Parks ide's Director of Planning and&#13;
Construction. He added that he will check with Kenosha Transit to&#13;
see if they can provide the same service.&#13;
Galbraith said that some people will likely end up walking during&#13;
the campus's peak congestion hours of 9-12 a.m. and 6-8 p.m. H~ said&#13;
that the East Lot will be retained as a reserve lot and not demolished&#13;
as was rumored.&#13;
The completion of the new lot may be slightly delayed due to the&#13;
wet weather the construction workers have been experiencing. The&#13;
installation of curbing, for example, was to have been begun last&#13;
Wednesday, but Galbraith said it will probably get under~~y tod~y&#13;
(Wednesday). "In spite of the weather, we hope to be finished In&#13;
October," he said, adding that blacktop must be put in before the&#13;
weather gets too cold. .&#13;
Academic Skills&#13;
offers free help&#13;
by Joyce Ann Brown&#13;
R~nger Staff&#13;
Academic skills is a program&#13;
designed with students in mind.&#13;
It was started to assist students in&#13;
developing the type of academic&#13;
skills needed for success in&#13;
college. The department aids&#13;
students in developing skills that&#13;
will benefit them now and in&#13;
their future academic endeavors.&#13;
Students have the use of tape&#13;
recorders, headphones, an automatic&#13;
tutor, slide presentations,&#13;
film strips and tape. These&#13;
materials consist of Individualized&#13;
English, mechanics of&#13;
spelling, relevance of sound,&#13;
basic English, math, outlining,&#13;
note taking, and effective&#13;
listening. Most of these materials&#13;
have been furnished by the&#13;
Academic Skills department.&#13;
When a student stops in with a&#13;
problem he is usually given a&#13;
diagnostic test to. determine&#13;
areas of strength and weakness.&#13;
Various materials are made&#13;
available to help the student&#13;
strengthen weak areas.&#13;
The department employs&#13;
tutors to work with students in&#13;
understanding basic course&#13;
concepts. There is no fee. To&#13;
obtain a tutor, just stop in the&#13;
Academic Skills office and fill&#13;
out a tutor request form. Don't&#13;
wait until you've failed your first&#13;
test to get help!&#13;
Students who would like to&#13;
become tutors are encouraged to&#13;
Life Science Club&#13;
seeks specimens&#13;
The Life Science Club is&#13;
looking for interesting "speclmens"&#13;
to be a part of academic&#13;
and fun-filled activities: tabogan&#13;
party, skating at Armstrong,&#13;
nature hikes, film clips on&#13;
various operating procedures,&#13;
trips, and renowned speakers are&#13;
part of this years Life Science&#13;
program.&#13;
Dr. C. M. Chen, life Science&#13;
professor, is advisor to all.&#13;
Officers are: Richard Melvin&#13;
Wagner, President, senior in Life&#13;
Science- Pre- dentistry; Dorothy&#13;
Pivovar, vice president, senior in&#13;
Life Science- pre- veterinary;&#13;
Gari Faustino, secretary, treasurer,&#13;
junior in life Science- premed;&#13;
executive comm ittee&#13;
members, jim Schoening, life&#13;
Science- pre- med; Paul Hinds in&#13;
Life Science- med. Tech; and&#13;
Kurt Buska, senior in Life&#13;
Science- pre- dentistry.&#13;
Information on all meetings&#13;
and activities are posted at&#13;
various bulletin boards throughout&#13;
the campus. Members are&#13;
notified by mail.&#13;
Dr. Severo Ochoa, an awardwinning&#13;
Nobel Prize laureate is&#13;
speaking on Friday, October 7,&#13;
1977 at 2:00 p.m. in GR 103 on&#13;
the subject of Protein Piosynthesis.&#13;
life Science Club is&#13;
co-sponsor to his visit here at&#13;
U.W.-Parkside. He has 492&#13;
publications and his awards fill&#13;
three type written pagesl&#13;
For further information contact&#13;
Dr. Chen at Greenquist Hall&#13;
359 Ext. #2434, or Richard&#13;
Wagner at Racine 639-3828, or&#13;
Gari Faustinoat Racine 554-9512.&#13;
contact the Academic Skills&#13;
office for an application&#13;
If you'd like to learn more&#13;
about the Academic Skills&#13;
Program or the services&#13;
provided, stop In and talk to one&#13;
of the staff members Carole&#13;
Hagarty - Director Educattonal&#13;
Program Support (Ac adertu c&#13;
Skills), Richard Ammann&#13;
Reading Specialist, Goeff Cajewski&#13;
- Writing SpeCialIst, Olivia&#13;
LUI-Hayne - Education SpecialISt&#13;
- Study Skills, Charles Kugel&#13;
- Testing Coordmator&#13;
The xcedermc Skills Office&#13;
hours are Monday thru&#13;
Thursday - 8 a m to 8 p.m&#13;
Frtday - 8 a m to 4 30 p.m and&#13;
Saturday 10 a m to 1.00 p m&#13;
THE&#13;
2226-57th St.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
654-9909&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
BOWLING LEAGUES&#13;
NOW FORMINGI&#13;
(BEGIN PLAY OCT. 6)&#13;
Stue'snt Organization league Thurs. 3,00 p.m.&#13;
Student mixed Trio Thurs. 7DO p.m.&#13;
Couples league (4 to Q team) hi. 2,00 p.m.&#13;
mixed Foursome Sun. 7,00 p.m.&#13;
DON'T MISS OUTI&#13;
SIGN UP TODAY • UNION REC CENTER&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Asslstinci&#13;
ALL SUBJECTS&#13;
Choose from our library 017,000 topics.&#13;
All papers neve been prepared by our&#13;
staff of protesslonal writers to Insure&#13;
excellence. Send 51.00 (air mall&#13;
postage) lor the current edltton of our&#13;
mail order catalog. r~iiCATiONAC"iY8T;MI---- I&#13;
I P.O. Box 25916-E. I&#13;
I Los Angeles. Calif. 90025 I&#13;
I Name ------ I&#13;
We alao provide origin" I Address ---------- I&#13;
r.... rch -- oil _. I City ------------ I&#13;
ThHiI and dl... rt.tlon&#13;
L---- ... Ietanc•• Iao ann.ble. I State lip I .L. .J&#13;
news&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
week ly by student government&#13;
Parkirig complaints&#13;
voiced by students&#13;
by Rusty Smith&#13;
President, P .S.G.A.&#13;
I have been receiving an enormous amount of complaints from&#13;
students concerning the lack of parking places in the Union and&#13;
Communication Arts white sticker lots . They were charged $15.00 per&#13;
semester for the right to park in these lots and have not been able to&#13;
find a place by 10:00 in the morning .&#13;
I went to the Security department and spoke with the Director, Mr.&#13;
Ronald D . Brinkmann. He told me that the lots had been oversold to a&#13;
lesser degree than last year and that there should be plenty of room&#13;
for everyone . He said that the current problems are due to a large&#13;
'number of illegally parked vehicles (red stickers - no stickers at&#13;
all-etc .). ·&#13;
Security has initated a new policy this year whereby illegally&#13;
parked cars are given two warning notices and then a ticket is issued .&#13;
This discussion took place on Tuesday morning of last week and I was&#13;
shown a stack of at least 60 or 70 warning notices · that had been&#13;
handed out already during that week.&#13;
If, in fact, this is the cause of the problem, the Security department&#13;
is obviously doing it's best to remedy the situation, but if any of you&#13;
continue to have trouble finding parking places in the white sticker&#13;
lots, please get in touch with me or one of the Senators .&#13;
Offices moved&#13;
Our offices have been moved . We are now located in WLLC D-197.&#13;
That is just down the hall from our old offices and around the corner&#13;
from the Nurses office. Our telephone number is still 553-2244, but I&#13;
apologize to anyone who might have tried to call last week . We were&#13;
in the office, but the phone had not yet been moved. Our hours this&#13;
semester will be daily from 10:00 a.m . until 3:00 p.m . Please stop by .&#13;
I would also like to mention the fact that PSGA Elections will be&#13;
held on October 19 and 20. These are important elections! The eight&#13;
Divisional Representatives for the Senate will be chosen at that time&#13;
as will five new members of the Segragated Fees Committee .&#13;
The Segregated Fees Committee decides what will and what will&#13;
not be funded (such as the shuttle bus) by student dollars. This is&#13;
YOUR money! $56.00 of your tuition went into the $450,000.00 fund&#13;
which will be used to support pract ically every non-academ ic activity&#13;
on campus . The decisions will be made by an all-student committee .&#13;
You had better pay close attention to whom you elect as your&#13;
representatives on this committee and be sure that they understand&#13;
how you want your money spent!&#13;
If any of you are interested in becoming involved or running for&#13;
one of these positions, stop down at the PSGA office. But don't delay .&#13;
Time is running out.&#13;
Parking lot&#13;
underway&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Construetion of a new 410-car capacity parking lot is underway&#13;
next to the Physical Education Build ing. Th is new lot for white permit&#13;
holders is to take the place of the "remote and deteriorating" East&#13;
Lot.&#13;
Shuttle bus service from the East and Tallent Lots will be&#13;
discontinued after the end of the semester, and persons us ing those&#13;
lots " will have to walk up the hill or use the Racine BUS as a shuttle&#13;
bus," said James E. Galbraith, Parkside's Director of Planning and&#13;
Construction . He added that he will check with Kenosha Transit to&#13;
see if they can provide the same service.&#13;
Galbraith said that some people will likely end up walking during&#13;
the campus's peak congestion hours of 9-12 a.m . and 6-8 p .m . H~ said&#13;
that the East Lot will be retained as a reserve lot and not demolished&#13;
as was rumored .&#13;
The completion of the new lot may be slightly delayed du_e to the&#13;
wet weather the construction workers have been experiencing. The&#13;
installation of curbing, for example, was to have been begun last&#13;
Wednesday, but Galbraith said it will probably get under~~Y tod~y&#13;
(Wednesday). "In spite of the weather, we hope to be finished in&#13;
October," he said, adding that blacktop must be put in before the&#13;
weather gets too cold. ·&#13;
Academic Skills&#13;
offers free help&#13;
by Joyce Ann Brown&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Academi c skills is a program&#13;
designed with students in mind&#13;
It was started to assist students in&#13;
developing the type of academic&#13;
skills needed for success in&#13;
college . The department aids&#13;
students in developing skills that&#13;
will benefit them now and in&#13;
their future academic endeavors .&#13;
Students have the use of tape&#13;
recorders , headphones, an automatic&#13;
tutor, slide presentations,&#13;
film strips and tape . These&#13;
materials consist of Individualized&#13;
English , mechan ics of&#13;
spelling, relevance of sound,&#13;
basic English, math, outlining,&#13;
note taki ng, and effective&#13;
listening. Most of these materials&#13;
have been furnished by the&#13;
Academlc Skills department.&#13;
When a student stops in with a&#13;
problem he is usually given a&#13;
diagnostic test to. determine&#13;
areas of strength and weakness .&#13;
Various materials are made&#13;
available to help the student&#13;
strengthen weak areas .&#13;
The department employs&#13;
tutors to work with students in&#13;
understanding bas i c course&#13;
concepts . There is no fee . To&#13;
obtain a tutor, just stop in the&#13;
Academic Skills office and fill&#13;
out a tutor request form . Don't&#13;
wait until you've failed your first&#13;
test to get help!&#13;
Students who would like to&#13;
become tutors are encouraged to&#13;
Life Science Club&#13;
seeks specimens&#13;
The Life Science Club is&#13;
looking for interesting " specimens"&#13;
to be a part of academic&#13;
and fun-fi lled activities: tabogan&#13;
party, skating at Armstrong,&#13;
nature hikes, film clips on&#13;
various operating procedures,&#13;
trips, and renowned speakers are&#13;
part of this years Life Science&#13;
program .&#13;
Dr. C. M . Chen, Life Science&#13;
professor, is advisor to all.&#13;
Officers are: Richard Melvin&#13;
Wagner, President, senior in Life&#13;
Science- pre- dentistry; Dorothy&#13;
Pivovar, vice president, senior in&#13;
Life Science- pre- veterinary;&#13;
Gari Faustino, secretary, treasurer,&#13;
junior in Life Science- premed&#13;
; executive committee&#13;
members, Jim Schoening, Life&#13;
Science- pre- med; Paul Hinds in&#13;
Life Science- med . Tech; and&#13;
Kurt Bu ska , senior in Life&#13;
Science- pre- dentistry.&#13;
Information on all meetings&#13;
and activities are posted at&#13;
various bulletin boards throughout&#13;
the campus . M embers are&#13;
notif ied by mail .&#13;
Dr. Severo Ochoa, an awardwinning&#13;
Nobel Prize Laureate is&#13;
speaking on Friday, October 7,&#13;
1977 at 2:00 p.m . in GR 103 on&#13;
the subject of Protein Piosynthesis&#13;
. Life Sc ience Club is&#13;
co-.sponsor to his visit here at&#13;
U .W .-Parks ide . He has 49 2&#13;
publications and his awards fill&#13;
three type wrj tten pages !&#13;
For further information contact&#13;
Dr. Chen at Greenquist Hall&#13;
359 Ext. #2434, or Richard&#13;
Wagner at Racine 639-3828, or&#13;
Gari Faustino at Racine 554-9512.&#13;
contact the Academ ic Skills&#13;
office for an application&#13;
Reading Specialist, Go ff Ga1 wsk,&#13;
- Writing pec1al1st, Olivia&#13;
Lui-Hayn - Education pec1alIst&#13;
- tud Skill s, Chari ug I&#13;
- T ting oordinator&#13;
If you'd like to learn more&#13;
about the Academ ic Skills&#13;
Program or the service&#13;
provided, stop in and talk to one&#13;
of the staff members . Carole&#13;
Hagart - Director Educational&#13;
Program Support (Ac ademi c&#13;
Sk ills). Richard Ammann&#13;
The A ad mIc kill Office&#13;
hours are · M onday t h ru&#13;
Thursday - 8 a m to 8 p m&#13;
Frida - 8 am to 4.30 pm and&#13;
aturda 10 a m to 1, pm&#13;
2226-57th St.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
654-9909&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
BOWLING LEAGUES&#13;
NOW FORMING!&#13;
(BEGIN PLAY OCT 6)&#13;
Stuc' ~nt Organization League Thurs 300 p.m.&#13;
Student m ixed Trio Thurs. 7:00 p.m.&#13;
Couples League (4 to a team) Fri. 200 p.m.&#13;
mixed Foursome Sun. 7:00 p.m.&#13;
DON'T MISS OUT!&#13;
SIGN UP TODAY - UNION REC CENTER&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Assistance&#13;
ALL SUBJECTS&#13;
Choose from our library ol 7,000 topics.&#13;
All papers have been prepared by our&#13;
staff of professional writers to Insure&#13;
excellence. SeAd $1 .00 (air mall&#13;
postage) for the current edition of our&#13;
mail order catalog.&#13;
l EDUCATIONAL SYSTEMS I&#13;
I P.O. Box 25916-E. I&#13;
I Los Angeles. Calif. 90025 I&#13;
I Name ---------- I&#13;
We alao provide original l Address ---------- I&#13;
rffearch -- all field•. City___________ I&#13;
ThHia and diHertatlon I I&#13;
aHiatance alao available. I State _ _ _ Zip ---- - I '---------~---------------~ &#13;
news&#13;
Defaulters hurt student loans&#13;
Bank of America's Social Policy&#13;
Department. The banks must be&#13;
very careful about properly&#13;
processing apphcations and&#13;
documenting their efforts in&#13;
collecting from defaulters. Even&#13;
then, according to James Koplev,&#13;
manager of New York Citibank's&#13;
student loan division, "it takes us&#13;
from six to nine months to&#13;
collect from ,the government."&#13;
OE has taken other steps aside&#13;
from contracting with a private&#13;
collection agency. HEW Seerstary&#13;
Joseph Califano has&#13;
consolidated seven loan programs&#13;
into one program which&#13;
will hopefully end duplicated&#13;
effort and waste.&#13;
HEW is also encouraging state&#13;
governments to act as guarantor&#13;
agencies. There are 26 states&#13;
which now act as guarantors and&#13;
results have been positive. Banks&#13;
deal directly with the state and&#13;
the federal government insures&#13;
80 percent of the loan money.&#13;
State lever Management&#13;
The benefits are better&#13;
management at state level and&#13;
less red tape, insuring quicker&#13;
processing of student applications&#13;
and collections on defaults.&#13;
State guarantor agencies may&#13;
eventually make the trip easier&#13;
for students. Citibank reported it&#13;
has increased its student loan&#13;
activity by 23 percent this year.&#13;
Manager Kopley cites a low 3.7&#13;
percent default rate for his bank&#13;
compared to 12.3 percent&#13;
nationally estimated for the&#13;
1977-78 fiscal year.&#13;
Kopley credits Cltibank's low&#13;
figure to working through the&#13;
state as a guarantor agency,&#13;
although Citibank still operates a&#13;
FISL program dealing directly&#13;
with OE.&#13;
implications of taking a loan or&#13;
of the options available for&#13;
repayment such as hardship&#13;
clauses.&#13;
The major source of default&#13;
lies Rot with students but with&#13;
vocational and proprietary&#13;
schools who comprise over 50&#13;
percent of the default claims&#13;
filed by banks. Many FISL&#13;
recipients find that they are&#13;
liable for the loans although&#13;
their vocational school closed&#13;
down or a training institute&#13;
overrated job opportunities and&#13;
that particular job market is&#13;
flooded. One way to cut down&#13;
on such defaults would be for&#13;
the government to enact stricter&#13;
licensing procedures.&#13;
Banks are protecting themselves&#13;
their way. Bank of&#13;
America (the main conduit for&#13;
California students'FISL money)&#13;
will not loan to students entering&#13;
vocational schools. Neither will&#13;
it loan to junior college or first&#13;
year students.&#13;
Bank of America also lowered&#13;
its maximum award from $2500&#13;
in 1976 to $1500 this year. Trust&#13;
Company of Ceorgia will loan to&#13;
students with a one year&#13;
minimum account with if. Some&#13;
banks, such as Security Pacific&#13;
National of California, loan only&#13;
to students who have previouslv&#13;
held loans from them. Successful&#13;
applicants may not hold loans&#13;
with other banks. Security&#13;
Pacific National also decreased&#13;
its student loan activity by 50&#13;
percent since 1976.&#13;
t Banksare leery&#13;
Banksare also leery about the&#13;
retrieval rate on FISL loans.&#13;
"You have to dot every 'i' and&#13;
crossevery 't' to collect from the&#13;
government," says Lu Steiner of&#13;
approach to collection.&#13;
The agency handling the loans&#13;
is in tlie process of contracting&#13;
with a private collection agency.&#13;
Bythe end of the year, the Office&#13;
of Education (GE) will turn over&#13;
50,000 overdue accounts on a&#13;
commission-for-funds collected&#13;
basis.&#13;
Maury Tansey, a special&#13;
assistant to the associate&#13;
Guaranteed Student Loan (GSL)&#13;
commissioner, explained the&#13;
decision to the Higher Education&#13;
Daily:&#13;
"The volume of defaults. has&#13;
continued to increase and we&#13;
have been unable to match that&#13;
increase with an increase in our&#13;
collections resources."&#13;
Because hiring has been&#13;
sporadic, TanseysaysOE has not&#13;
been able to keep up with the&#13;
work According to a recent&#13;
General Accounting Office&#13;
report, by the end of fiscal 1977,&#13;
OE will have paid out $436.5&#13;
million in default claims to&#13;
banks but will have collected&#13;
only $33.8 miiiion on bad debts.&#13;
That is up by about four times&#13;
the $136 million OE had to pay&#13;
out to banks in 1974.&#13;
Degreein no job guarantee&#13;
The increase in defaults has&#13;
been attributed to the economic&#13;
depression of the past few years.&#13;
Students graduating with BA's.,&#13;
MA's and Phd's have found their&#13;
education is not a job guarantee.&#13;
Another factor is the lack of&#13;
information banks and' college&#13;
financial aid offices give to&#13;
students taking loans. Students&#13;
are not fully aware of the&#13;
Bankscut loans&#13;
In many cases across the&#13;
country, banks are cutting their&#13;
student loans by up to 70&#13;
percent. Others have ended their&#13;
loan programs altogether. The&#13;
federal government, having&#13;
insured bank losses against&#13;
default under the Federally&#13;
Insured Student Loan (FISL)&#13;
pro~ram, is also toughening its&#13;
(CPS)Any student relying on&#13;
financial aid can tell you: it's a&#13;
rough trip.&#13;
With one out of every slx&#13;
graduates defaulting-eon their&#13;
student loans, banks have&#13;
adopted stringent guidelines and&#13;
more students are discovering&#13;
that once at their destination it is&#13;
becoming increasingly difficult&#13;
to pay for the cost of that trip.&#13;
SEMESTER BREAK&#13;
JAN. 7-14, 1978&#13;
IIII&#13;
Includes&#13;
• ROUND TRIP JET AIR&#13;
.7 NIGHTS LODGING IN&#13;
EXOTIC MONTEGO BAY&#13;
GROUND TRANSFERS&#13;
&amp; PORTERAGE&#13;
• FULLY ESCORTED&#13;
• TIPS &amp; TAXES ON&#13;
ABOVE&#13;
RESERVATIONS &amp; DETAILS - PAAKSIDE UNION&#13;
JAMAIC&#13;
NOW OPEN!.~&#13;
(Our candy&#13;
stock&#13;
finally&#13;
arrived)&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
Bookstore blames&#13;
COUNTER small publishers&#13;
. featuring:&#13;
Your favorite sweets &amp; candies served the&#13;
old fashioned way&#13;
plus&#13;
sundry items yOUoften need&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Parkside Bookstore manager Paul Hoffman complained to the&#13;
Boo~store Committee last week that the reason some textbooks are&#13;
late ISthat "a few certain publishers are consistently late"&#13;
Hoffman said that the New Amencan Library Penguin Books.....&#13;
Arnold, and Ronald, all small publishers, often du:l not deliver thel;&#13;
ParksIde orders on time As of last Wednesday, eight or nine book&#13;
orders affecting 10 classes had not yet come in Hoffman said the&#13;
publishers Involved claimed they had never received the order&#13;
The committee suggestedto Hoffman that he send a confirmation&#13;
p~~c~rd ~~t~ each order for the publisher to return, but Hoffman&#13;
tht '. pu IS.ers often simply throw them away ... they don't have&#13;
e time to fill them out."&#13;
eU~~~~:i~:!:obrej~cte~ the i~ea of using registered mail fa; sending&#13;
Id b&#13;
oo or ers. At 98c per letter times 100 letters it&#13;
wou e too expensrva" h id ffrnan sai '&#13;
f th d&#13;
·. ' e sal . Ho fman said that another reason&#13;
or e tar mess of the book /I h&#13;
enrolled" s was more t an 20 classeswere overestimate&#13;
's;e~ndl."t·gthlebnumber of students exceeded the original&#13;
, a Ilona ooks had to be ordered&#13;
As a result of the probl th b .&#13;
Bookst C . . ems e ookstore has been having the&#13;
ore ornrmttes will 500 b I k! . '&#13;
present bookstore Althou h n e o~ 109 Into alternatives to the&#13;
he will be excluded f g ~offman Is.amember of the committee,&#13;
"beea e h h rom meetings at which alternatives are discussed&#13;
use e as a pecum .&#13;
doing"'d . rarv Interest In what the committee will be&#13;
, 'Sal commIttee chairman Keith Wa d&#13;
The committee was to h (_ r . ~&#13;
meeting, but no oneontheave&#13;
e e~ted a new chairman at last week's&#13;
told the committee h Icommlttee wanted to be chairman. Ward&#13;
few weeks while a elacer d volunteer to continue in the chair for a&#13;
businessdid not all~eP~~eIT!.entsuccess~r is selected, but that other&#13;
w rm time to continue in the chair indefinitely.&#13;
Come Today See Yours.&#13;
PARK~DEUNIONBAZAAR&#13;
10:00 AM -4:00PM&#13;
~&#13;
quality corrrerocr printers&#13;
1417 50th street . 658.8990&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
YOU ASKED FOR IT!&#13;
HOME STYLE&#13;
COOKING&#13;
./&#13;
• HOME MADE sOUP DAILY [NELlIE'S SOUP KETILEJ&#13;
• LARGE CHEFS SALADS - ONLY 95'&#13;
• BIG, FRESH DELI TYPE SANDWICHES&#13;
• A BIGGER, BEITER 00- IT- YOURSELF SALAD BAR&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
news&#13;
Defaulters hurt student -loans&#13;
implications of taking a loan or&#13;
of the options available for&#13;
repayment such as hardship&#13;
clauses .&#13;
Bank of America's Social Policy&#13;
Department. The banks must be&#13;
very careful about properly&#13;
processing applications and&#13;
documenting their efforts in&#13;
collecting from defaulters. Even&#13;
then, according to James Kopley,&#13;
manager of New York Citibank's&#13;
student loan division, "it takes us&#13;
from six to nine months to&#13;
collect from _the government."&#13;
(CPS) Any student relying on&#13;
financial aid can tell you: it's a&#13;
rough trip.&#13;
With one out of every six&#13;
graduates defaultin on their&#13;
student loans, banks have&#13;
adopted stringent guidelines and&#13;
more students are discovering&#13;
that once at their destination it is&#13;
becoming increasingly difficult&#13;
to pay for the cost of that trip.&#13;
Banks cut loans&#13;
In many cases across the&#13;
country, banks are cutting their&#13;
student loans by up to 70&#13;
percent. Others have ended their&#13;
loan programs altogether. The&#13;
federal government, having&#13;
insured bank losses against&#13;
default under the Federally&#13;
Insured Student Loan (FISL)&#13;
pro~ram, is also toughening its&#13;
SEMESTER BREAK&#13;
JAN. 7-14, 1978&#13;
--&#13;
Includes&#13;
e ROUND TRIP JET AIR&#13;
e 7 NIGHTS LODGING IN&#13;
EXOTIC MONTEGO BAY&#13;
GROUND TRANSFERS&#13;
&amp; PORTERAGE&#13;
e FULLY ESCORTED&#13;
e TIPS &amp; TAXES ON&#13;
ABOVE&#13;
RESERVATIONS &amp; DETAILS - PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
JAMAIC&#13;
NOW OPEN!~&#13;
(Our candy&#13;
stock&#13;
finally&#13;
arrived)&#13;
t&#13;
. featuring: Your favorite sweets &amp; candies served the&#13;
old fashioned way&#13;
p!us sundry items you often need&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION BAZAAR&#13;
10:00AM-4:00PM&#13;
approach to collection.&#13;
The agency handling the loans&#13;
is in the process of contracting&#13;
with a private collection agency.&#13;
By the end of the year, the Office&#13;
of Education (OE) will turn over&#13;
50,000 overdue accounts on a&#13;
commission-for-funds collected&#13;
basis.&#13;
Maury Tansey, a special&#13;
assistant to the associate&#13;
Guaranteed Student Loan (GSL)&#13;
commissioner, explained the&#13;
decision to the Higher Education&#13;
Daily:&#13;
"The volume of defaults. . has&#13;
continued to increase and we&#13;
have been unable to match that&#13;
increase with an increase in our&#13;
collections resources."&#13;
Because hiring has been&#13;
sporadic, Tansey says OE has not&#13;
been able to keep up with the&#13;
work. According to a recent&#13;
General Accounting Office&#13;
report, by the end of fiscal 1977,&#13;
OE will have paid out $436.5&#13;
million in default claims to&#13;
banks but will have collected&#13;
only $33.8 million on bad debts.&#13;
That is up by about four times&#13;
the $136 million OE had to pay&#13;
out to banks in 1974.&#13;
Degree in no job guarantee&#13;
The increase in defaults has&#13;
been attributed to the economic&#13;
depression of the past few years .&#13;
Students graduating with BA's.,&#13;
MA's and Phd's have found their&#13;
education is not a job guarantee.&#13;
Another factor is the lack of&#13;
information banks and college&#13;
financial aid offices give to&#13;
students taking loans. Students&#13;
are not fully aware of the&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
Come Today See Yours.&#13;
quality. corrvnercial printers&#13;
1417 50th street . 658-8990&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
YOU ASKED FOR IT!&#13;
HOME STYLE&#13;
COOKING • HOME MADE SOUP DAILY [NELLIE'S SOUP KETTLE)&#13;
• LARGE CHEFS SALADS - ONLY 95•&#13;
• BIG, FRESH DELI TYPE SANDWICHES&#13;
• A BIGGER, BETTER DO- IT- YOURSELF SALAD BAR&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
The major source of default&#13;
lies Rot with students but with&#13;
vocational and proprietary&#13;
schools who comprise over 50&#13;
percent of the default claims&#13;
filed by banks. Many FISL&#13;
recipients find that they are&#13;
liable for the loans although&#13;
their vocational school closed&#13;
down or a training institute&#13;
overrated job opportunities and&#13;
that particular job market is&#13;
flooded. One way to cut down&#13;
on such defaults would be for&#13;
the government to enact stricter&#13;
licensing procedures.&#13;
Banks are protecting themse&#13;
Ives their way. Bank of&#13;
America (the main conduit for&#13;
California siudents'FISL money)&#13;
will not loan to students entering&#13;
vocational schools. Neither will&#13;
it loan to junior college or first&#13;
year students.&#13;
Bank of America also lowered&#13;
its maximum award from $2500&#13;
in 1976 to $1500 this year. Trust&#13;
Company of Georgia will loan to&#13;
students with a one year&#13;
minimum account with it. Some&#13;
banks, such as Security Pacific&#13;
National of California, loan only&#13;
to students who have previously&#13;
held loans from them . Successful&#13;
applicants may not hold loans&#13;
with other ban ks . Security&#13;
Pacific National also decreased&#13;
its st udent loan act ivity by 50&#13;
percent since 1976.&#13;
Banks are leery&#13;
Banks are also leery about the&#13;
retrieval rate on FISL loans.&#13;
"You have tq dot every ' i' and&#13;
cross every 't' to collect from the&#13;
government,"' says Lu Steiner of&#13;
OE has taken other steps aside&#13;
from contracting with a private&#13;
collection agency. HEW Secretary&#13;
Joseph Califano has&#13;
consoliaated seven loan programs&#13;
into one program which&#13;
will hopefully end duplicated&#13;
effort and waste .&#13;
HEW is also encouraging state&#13;
governments to act as guarantor&#13;
agencies. There are 26 states&#13;
which now act as guarantors and&#13;
results have been positive. Banks&#13;
deal directly with the state and&#13;
the federal government insures&#13;
80 percent of the loan money.&#13;
State level Management&#13;
The benefits are better&#13;
management at state level and&#13;
less red tape, insuring quicker&#13;
processing of student applications&#13;
and collections on defaults.&#13;
State guarantor agencies may&#13;
eventually make the trip easier&#13;
for students. Citibank reported it&#13;
has increased its student loan&#13;
activity by 23 percent this year.&#13;
Manager Kopley cites a low 3.7&#13;
percent default rate for his bank&#13;
compared t o 12 .3 percent&#13;
nationally estimated for the&#13;
1977-78 fiscal year.&#13;
Kopley credits Citibank's low&#13;
figure to working through the&#13;
state as a guarantor agency,&#13;
although Citibank still operates a&#13;
Fl SL program dealing directly&#13;
with OE.&#13;
Bo.okstore blames&#13;
small publishers&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Parkside Bookstore manager Paul Hoffman complained to the&#13;
Bookstore Committee last week that the reason some textbooks are&#13;
late Is that " a few certain publishe!s are consistently late ."&#13;
Hoffman said that the New American Library, Penguin Books,&#13;
Arnold, and Ronald, all small publishers, often did not deliver their&#13;
Parkside ord~rs on time. As of last Wednesday, eight or nine book&#13;
orders affecting 10 classes had not yet come in. Hoffman said the&#13;
publishers involved claimed they had never received the order.&#13;
The committee suggested to Hoffman that he send a confirmation&#13;
po.:c~rd ~It~ each order for the publisher to return but Hoffman&#13;
sha, ' . pu is. ers often simply throw them away ... they don't have&#13;
t e time to fill them out."&#13;
Hoffma I · d h · t p k -~ a, so re1ecte t e idea of using - registered mail for sending&#13;
eu ldabr si es book _orders. "At 98c per letter times 100 letters it&#13;
wou e too expensive " h 'd H f . for the t d. · f h ' ' e sai · 0 fman said that another reason&#13;
enrolled" ar mess o t e books a ,, h . w s more t an 20 classes were overestimate&#13;
,s;e~nd1_nt_g thlebnumk ber of students exceede&lt;;l the original&#13;
, a ' ,ona oo s had to be ordered&#13;
Bookstore As a result of the p · bl h · Committee :illems t e book~tore has been having, the&#13;
present bookstore Alth ~oon be I&lt;&gt;?kmg into alternatives to the&#13;
he will be excluded f oug H_offman is _a member of_ the committee,&#13;
"becaus~ he has a rom r:neetmgs at ~hich alternatives are discussed&#13;
doing" -said comm~tetcunihar~ interest_ m what the committee will be&#13;
Th ' I ee c airman Keith Ward . ecommitteewastoh meeting; 1- · - but no one on th/ve e e~ted a new chairman at last week's&#13;
told the committee h ,committee wanted to be chairman. Ward&#13;
few weeks while a r e rou d volunteer to continue in the chair for a&#13;
business did not alloep ~~em_ent success?r is _selected, but that other w im time to continue m the chair indefinitely. &#13;
•&#13;
news&#13;
Drama Dept. announces Debate team preps&#13;
cast for 'Children's Houri for first tournament&#13;
Parkside's Fine Arts Division and the Dramatic&#13;
Arts Discipline will be presenting Lillian Hellman's&#13;
The Children's Hour, October 28, 29 and 30 at 8:00&#13;
p.m. and a matinee October 30 at 2:00 p.m. This&#13;
production will be directed by Dr. Rhoda-Gale&#13;
Pollack, John H. Dickson is the Scenery and&#13;
Lighting Designer. Deborah Bell will be the&#13;
Costume Designer.&#13;
-The Cast for The Children's Hour: Peggy Rogers,&#13;
Cindy Ackerman, Mrs. Lilly Mortar; Margaret&#13;
Madison fifth in gifts&#13;
The University of WisconsinMadison&#13;
ranked fifth among the&#13;
nation's state universities in the&#13;
amount of volunteer financial&#13;
support it received in 1975-76,&#13;
according to the Council for&#13;
Financial Aid to Education. All&#13;
four of the institutions which led&#13;
UW-Madison are multiple campus&#13;
state university systems. In&#13;
another list, which included all&#13;
u.S. colleges and universities -&#13;
public and private - UW-Madison&#13;
ranked 16th in the amount&#13;
of support it received from&#13;
sources such as foundations,&#13;
businesses, alumni and other&#13;
individuals. The $22,341,693 in&#13;
total voluntary support for&#13;
UW-Madison included funds&#13;
from several sources: private&#13;
gifts and donations; additions to&#13;
endowment fund principal;&#13;
receipts ear-marked for the&#13;
university's foundation; and gifts&#13;
from groups such as the&#13;
Wisconsin Alumni Research&#13;
Foundation. Statewide, the ten&#13;
UW System ~niversities which&#13;
contributed to the 1975-76 report&#13;
listed a total of $26.6 million in&#13;
voluntary support.&#13;
McCarthy, Evelyn Munn; Karen Topolovec, Helen&#13;
Burton; Wendy Sorenson, lois Fisher; laura Bruno,&#13;
Catherine; Patti lowe, Rosalie Wells, Catherine&#13;
Casselman, Mary Tilford; Donna Linde, Nancy;&#13;
Teresa Adrianson, Karen Wright; Mary Stankus,&#13;
Martha Dobie: Susan Wishaw, Doctor Joseph&#13;
Cardin; Bill Fitzgerald, Agatha; Cheryl Powalicz,&#13;
Mrs. Amelia Tilford; Iacquie 5hallenburg, and the&#13;
Grocery Boy; larry Hargen.&#13;
Dope is mailed&#13;
to Miss Lillian&#13;
(CPS) The Revolutionary Cannabis Party (RCP) sent President&#13;
Carter's mother a letter urging decriminalization of marijuana aJong&#13;
with two marijuana cigarettes last August. Earlier, Miss Lillian told&#13;
People magazine that she has never smoked dope, but if her son's&#13;
proposal to lift federal criminal penalties for possession of up to one&#13;
ounce becomes law, she hopes to see some.&#13;
Along with instructions on smoking the joints, the Rep warned&#13;
Miss Lillian that there are some disadvantages to smoking pot.&#13;
"One of which is the dreaded munchies .Another disadvantage is&#13;
that marijuana is still illegal .. However, we doubt if you really have&#13;
to be concerned with being arrested. So enjoy yourself." The letter&#13;
was signed "Fidel Castor-oil."&#13;
So far, no word on Miss Lillian.&#13;
The fastest-growing Premium Beer&#13;
in America'.&#13;
~I.&#13;
r~.~&#13;
Get a free calendar with a glan of Old St"le! - .'&#13;
The debate and forensscs&#13;
squad, under the direction of&#13;
Cornmumcenon Professor Bruce&#13;
Weaver. IS preparing for Its first&#13;
intercollegiate tournament&#13;
which will be held at Whitewater&#13;
on October 1 The national tOPiC&#13;
this year IS, Resolved That Law&#13;
enforcement agencies in the U.S&#13;
should be gtven significantly&#13;
greater freedom In the mvesugetron&#13;
and or presecution of&#13;
felony crimes Aside from&#13;
par trcrp atmg In tournaments&#13;
throughout the Midwest, Parkside's&#13;
debate club hopes to&#13;
engage In debates and diSCUS"&#13;
~lonS on local I sv at high&#13;
scbocls and fVIC organizations.&#13;
In the area and In MalO Place&#13;
here at the umversuv&#13;
Member~ Interested In IcrenSICS&#13;
are working on persuasive&#13;
speeches, poetry readings, and&#13;
other mdrvrdual events In&#13;
preparation for their first meet 10&#13;
the middle of October If you are&#13;
Interested In becoming a&#13;
member of thiS ecuve group,&#13;
contact Dr Weaver at 2420 or&#13;
leave your name address. and&#13;
number at CA2S8&#13;
Suits and ties win&#13;
(CPS) - A teacher In leans,&#13;
sneakers and a sportshirt IS a&#13;
teacher who's sympathetic,&#13;
friendly, and tlexible. while a&#13;
teacher in a SUIt and tie IS one&#13;
who's knowledgeable, well·&#13;
prepared and well-organized&#13;
That's the way It seemed to&#13;
students at Pennsylvania State&#13;
University looking at photos of&#13;
teachers In venous modes of&#13;
attire&#13;
Actually, the photos they saw&#13;
were of the same two teachers In&#13;
different clothes Dr Steven A&#13;
Rollman, who directed the study,&#13;
said the students not only&#13;
thought the women Informally&#13;
dressed was sympathetic and&#13;
Inendlv, they also thought she&#13;
was fair and snmulenng&#13;
..&#13;
Library Learning Center Survey&#13;
b r 26-29 the University community--&#13;
During the week of sep~e~r:a resid~nts--will be surveyed refaculty,&#13;
students, .staff anf&#13;
the Library/Learning Center services,&#13;
garding the effectl~e~e~s 0 he surve is part of a year-long selfcollections&#13;
and facliltles. Tt&#13;
f om t~e Council on Library Resources,&#13;
study program fund~d by a gran r&#13;
a national foundatlon.&#13;
com lete the questionnaire and return it&#13;
When conta~ted, Pleas=Ciliiate the return of the questionnaire,&#13;
as soon as posslble. ;0 f 11 have been placed on the concourse&#13;
boxes marked IIL~br~ry urQv~~stionnaires may also be mailed to level in all bUlldlngs. .&#13;
Carla Stoffle, Library/Learnlng Center.&#13;
Your assistance Wl e g ·11 b reatly appreciated.&#13;
Jf O,~ UD~;- of the Library /&#13;
Learning Center&#13;
•&#13;
news&#13;
Drama Dept. announces Debate team preps&#13;
cast for 'Children's Hour' for first tournament&#13;
Parkside's Fine Arts Division and the Dramatic&#13;
Arts Discipline will be presenting Lillian Hellman's&#13;
The Children's Hour, October 28, 29 and 30 at 8:00&#13;
p.m. and a matinee October 30 at 2:00 p.m . This&#13;
production will be directed by Dr. Rhoda-Gale&#13;
Pollack, John H. Dickson is the Scenery and&#13;
Lighting Designer. Deborah Bell will be the&#13;
Costume Designer.&#13;
McCarthy, Evelyn Munn; Karen Topolovec, Helen&#13;
Burton; Wendy Sorenson, Lois Fisher; Laura Bruno,&#13;
Catherine; Patti Lowe, Rosalie Wells; Catherine&#13;
Casselman, Mary Tilford; Donna Linde, ancy,&#13;
Teresa Adrianson, Karen Wright; Mary Stankus,&#13;
Martha Dobie; Susan Wishaw, Doctor Joseph&#13;
Cardin; Bill Fitzgerald, Agatha; Cheryl Powalicz,&#13;
Mrs. Amelia Tilford; Jacquie Shallenburg, and the -The Cast for The Children's Hour: Peggy Rogers, Grocery Boy; Larry Hargen . Cindy Ackerman, Mrs. Lilly Mortar; Margaret&#13;
The debate and foren 1&#13;
squad, under the d1r tIon of&#13;
Commun1cat1on Professor Bruce&#13;
Wea er, i prepann for It fir t&#13;
intercollegiate tournam nt&#13;
which will be held at Whitewater&#13;
on Octob r 1 Th national topic&#13;
this ear I Resol ed That Law&#13;
enforcement agenci in th U S&#13;
should be given s1gnif1cantl&#13;
greater freedom in th in e t1gat&#13;
Ion and / or presecutIon of&#13;
felon crime Aside from&#13;
partIc IpatIng In tournam nt&#13;
throughout th \.11d e t, Par -&#13;
side· debate club hop to&#13;
Madison fifth in gifts&#13;
The University of WisconsinMadison&#13;
ranked fifth among the&#13;
nation's state universities in the&#13;
amount of volunteer financial&#13;
support it received in 1975-76,&#13;
according to the Council for&#13;
Financial Aid to Education. All&#13;
four of the institutions which led&#13;
UW-Madison are multiple campus&#13;
state university systems. In&#13;
another list, which included all&#13;
U.S. colleges and universities -&#13;
public and private - UW-Madison&#13;
ranked 16th in the amount&#13;
of support it received from&#13;
sources such as foundations,&#13;
businesses, alumni and other&#13;
individuals. The $22,341,693 in&#13;
total voluntary support for&#13;
UW-Madison included funds&#13;
from several sources : private&#13;
gifts and donations; additions to&#13;
endowment fund principal;&#13;
receipts ear-marked for the&#13;
university's foundation; and gifts&#13;
from groups such as the&#13;
Wisconsin Alumni Research&#13;
Foundation . Statewide, the ten&#13;
UW System ~niversities which&#13;
contributed to the 1975-76 report&#13;
listed a total of $26.6 million in&#13;
voluntary support.&#13;
Dope iS mailed&#13;
to Miss Lillian&#13;
(CPS) The Revolutionary Cannabis Party (RCP) sent President&#13;
Carter's mother a letter urging decriminalization of marijuana aJong&#13;
with two marijuana cigarettes last August. Earlier, Miss Lillian told&#13;
People magazine that s_he has never smoked dope, . but if her son's&#13;
proposal to lift federal criminal penalties for possession of up to one&#13;
ounce becomes law, she hopes to see some.&#13;
Along with instructions on ~moking the joints, the .RCP warned&#13;
Miss Lillian that there are some disadvantages to smoking pot.&#13;
"One of which is the dreaded munchies .. Another disadvantage is&#13;
_ that marijuana is still illegal ... However, we _doubt if you,,really have&#13;
to be concerned with being arrested. So en1oy yourself. The letter&#13;
was signed "Fidel Castor-oil."&#13;
So far, no word on Miss Lillian .&#13;
P'lliliN1 The fastest-growing Premium Beer&#13;
in America.&#13;
Get a free calendar with a gla88 or Old Style!&#13;
Suits and ties win&#13;
h · teach r in anou mod (CPS) - A teac er m Jeans,&#13;
sneakers and a sportsh1rt Is a&#13;
teacher who' s s mpathet1c,&#13;
fnendl , and flexible, while a&#13;
teacher in a SUit and tie I one&#13;
who's knowledgeabl , wellprepared&#13;
and well-organiz d&#13;
That's the way It seemed to&#13;
students at Penns I ania State&#13;
Un1vers1ty looking at pho os of&#13;
.. Open&#13;
Alon. &amp; Fri.&#13;
Noon t// 9&#13;
Sat. Noon 1,1 5&#13;
MAGIC TRICKS - JOKES - NOVEL TIES&#13;
Library Learning Center Survey&#13;
mber 26-29 the University communi y--&#13;
During the week of Sep~e resid~nts--will be surveyed refaculty,&#13;
students, _staff anf ~~:a Library/Learning Centers r ic s,&#13;
garding the effecti~e~e~s o The survey is part of a year-long fcollections&#13;
and facilities. t from the Council on Library R ourc , study program fund~d by a gran&#13;
a national foundation.&#13;
lete the questionnaire and return it&#13;
When conta?ted, plea;~c~~:iate the return of the questionnair,&#13;
as soon as possible. ~o '' have been placed on the concours&#13;
boxes marked "L~br~ry urQvey stionnaires may also be mailed to&#13;
level in all buildings. ue_&#13;
Carla Stoffle, Library/Learning Center.&#13;
Your assistance Wi. 11 be greatly appreciated.&#13;
Jt o.~ u~~o~ of the Library/&#13;
Learning Center&#13;
of &#13;
• ,&#13;
space&#13;
from page 1&#13;
the duty. For the mission specialist,&#13;
another forty engineers and scientists&#13;
could satisfy all personnel requirements.&#13;
Assuming a average duty of five to ten&#13;
years, the turnover rate of the Space&#13;
Shuttle crew astronauts wo-uld cntvproduce&#13;
about a dozen or so openings a year. These&#13;
numbers aren't much better than the&#13;
highly competitive space corps days of ~he&#13;
Apollo missions. NASA's latest recruitment&#13;
drive (which will culminate in the&#13;
selection of thirty to forty astronauts late&#13;
in 1977) still resembles the old program.&#13;
These new recruits will be career&#13;
astronauts, regular duty crewmen for the&#13;
routine operations of the Space Shuttle.&#13;
Seats up for grabs&#13;
Sound discouraging? Well, things aren't&#13;
as bad as they seem at first glance. For,&#13;
aboard each and every Space Shuttle,&#13;
there will be four additional seatsavailable&#13;
for additional passengers.Not pilots. Not&#13;
engineers. But PASSENGERS!These crew&#13;
members, designated as "payload specialmembers&#13;
will be designated as "payload&#13;
specialists" and will primarily be&#13;
concerned with the scientific and&#13;
technological experiments on the flight.&#13;
And these seats are currently up for grabs!&#13;
A payload specialist is basically a&#13;
part-time astronaut. The specialists are not&#13;
NASA employees nor are they career&#13;
spacemen or spacewomen in any senseof&#13;
the word. They are visitors who take part in&#13;
an expedition in orbit after less than six&#13;
months total training and who&#13;
immediately return to their homes after&#13;
their space sabbaticals to study the results&#13;
of their experimentation.&#13;
The first selection for the part-time&#13;
astronaut program will be taking place&#13;
immediately, with most of the first choice&#13;
being made in 1977 and early 1978.&#13;
NASA estimates that at least five&#13;
hundred payload specialists will be able to&#13;
ride the Space Shuttle in the period&#13;
between 1980 and 1989 alone. Some&#13;
experts predict that the number may&#13;
exceed twice that much. All types of&#13;
people will be included in this "visitor"&#13;
category, too:&#13;
• A technician from a pharmaceutical&#13;
company may spend two weeks in orbit&#13;
operating a vaccine production-module&#13;
which will create drugs of unprecedented&#13;
purity and potency.&#13;
• An astronomer from a small Midwestern&#13;
college might be chosen to implement an&#13;
celestial observation program on a&#13;
NASA-provided infra-red survey telescope&#13;
spectrometer.&#13;
• A graduate student in oceanography&#13;
could do a PhD disertation from orbit,&#13;
charting the tropical currents on&#13;
. continental shelves.&#13;
• A construction foreman might be sent&#13;
into orbit by his building research division&#13;
to oversee the assembly and operation of a&#13;
beam rolling plant which converts Shuttle&#13;
fuel tank aluminum into structural spars a&#13;
half mile long, to be used in the&#13;
construction of a giant radio telescope and&#13;
a solar power station.&#13;
• A neurologist studying balance and&#13;
vertigo mechanisms in an attempt to&#13;
understand normal and abnormal brain&#13;
psychology may bring along a small zoo of&#13;
experimental animals and then be granted&#13;
official permission to test reluctant fellow&#13;
shipmates also.&#13;
• An Air Force technical sergeant from a&#13;
New Englandlaboratory might spend days&#13;
in orbit monitoring the performance of a&#13;
new design for a large unfurable space&#13;
telemetry antenna system.&#13;
Payload Specialist: the common man&#13;
Payload specialists, unlike current&#13;
astronauts, will not be chosen from an&#13;
elite group nor will they be unique in&#13;
any way in terms of backgrounds, interests&#13;
and goals. NASA plans to have both men&#13;
and women in the program, ranging in age&#13;
from their early 20's to late 60's. They may&#13;
be any height from 5'1" to 6'4". They can&#13;
wear glasses, have false teeth, allergies,&#13;
flat feet, pot bellies and bad posture. All&#13;
they have to do is to take what the Air&#13;
Force calls a Class II Flight Physical; a&#13;
standard test which a large part of the&#13;
present day adult population cpuld pass.&#13;
Even Carter could go&#13;
Science buffs will not be the only&#13;
passengers considered for the role of&#13;
payload specialist. Other observers may&#13;
include newsmen, tourists, medical&#13;
patients,' artists and the President of the&#13;
United States.&#13;
Space Shuttle jaunt as a specialist? \l\t:!II,&#13;
NASA itself determines what type of&#13;
experiments will be conducted o~ e~ch&#13;
mission. Once that is done, the principle&#13;
scientists involved form a panel which&#13;
picks the appropriate freelance astronauts&#13;
from matching fields. NASA still hasn't&#13;
come up with a method for picking the&#13;
"space available" payload specialist, but&#13;
they're working on it.&#13;
Space available travel&#13;
On some missions, such as routine&#13;
satellite launchings and the like, NASAwill&#13;
offer seats on a "space available" basis,&#13;
which will not interfere with the primary&#13;
mission. In all cases, it's up to the&#13;
would-be payload specialists to watch out&#13;
for any and all opportunities and then go&#13;
after them with glee.&#13;
But just what are the particulars&#13;
involved in actually being chosen for a&#13;
Who can go&#13;
With the creations of the Shuttle's&#13;
"visiting astronaut" program, many hopeful&#13;
space pioneers wonder; "What field&#13;
should I study in college to increase the&#13;
chances of my becoming an astronaut?"&#13;
Most NASA officials can't answer that&#13;
question directly but can offer a reply in&#13;
reverse. They advise anyone interested at&#13;
all in the space program to study anc(&#13;
i·j I . [' ,-&#13;
"," ·j'll. \ : ~~";:i+:-i-.'\ l'_~;c:, - " /T /i\ : --",.-".__1_ ~.-', I&#13;
,: -: _.--_;".' '.'_' _"_, __ 1 , . __ '._.I~~~&#13;
Space Shuttle: plenty of room for everyone&#13;
, /&#13;
master anyone of a countless number of&#13;
disciplines in school or on the job. But&#13;
they are quick to point out, it should be in&#13;
a field or a subject that the-space lover&#13;
enjoys and can excel in. After the subject&#13;
is picked and knowledge is garnered, then&#13;
and only then should a prospective&#13;
payload specialist look for a possible space&#13;
connection.&#13;
Once an eager space enthusiast hasmet&#13;
NASA's qualifications and has been picked&#13;
as a payload specialist, he or she will have&#13;
to go through a period of preparation. The&#13;
most crucial planning for a mission will&#13;
always be in the subject of specialization&#13;
which justifies the part-time astronaut's&#13;
selection for the tlight in the first place.&#13;
(Remember, the whole purpose of the&#13;
semi-spaceman program is to advance the&#13;
"state of the art" in one's chosen .field.j&#13;
With each payload specialist's ticket to&#13;
space costing over three million dollars,&#13;
those lucky ones chosen had better spend&#13;
a lot of time boning up on his or her top&#13;
subjects, preparing a series of original and&#13;
appropriate experiments to take place on&#13;
board the shuttle.&#13;
As a fu II crew, the embryonic Shuttle&#13;
troupe will go through a series of launch,&#13;
orbit and landing exercises. Finally, the&#13;
payload specialist will study the corollary&#13;
minor experiments which they will&#13;
conduct or assist in for the benefit of other&#13;
scientists not actually on the flight. Once&#13;
finishing the six month of preparation,&#13;
there is only one further task awaiting the&#13;
part-time astronaut; LIFT-OFF!&#13;
So, after years of dreaming, the re~lity of&#13;
space flight for science-fiction fans will&#13;
finaliy be here. The rockets will roar. The&#13;
acceleration will feel crushing. The&#13;
universe will stretch infinitely out-side the&#13;
spaceship's window.&#13;
Space settlements&#13;
The next problem is whene to stay once&#13;
you get there. In an effort to publicize&#13;
their grandest (and as yet unfunded)&#13;
scheme, NASA has published Space&#13;
Settlements - A J Design Study. This&#13;
18S-page, beautifully iilustrated book&#13;
printed on glossy, heavy-stock paper, is&#13;
available from the Superintendent of&#13;
Documents, U.S. Government Printing&#13;
Office, Washington~D.C. 20402 for $5.00.&#13;
The stock number for ordering is&#13;
033-000-00669-1. The report grew out of a&#13;
ten-week program in systems design at&#13;
Stanford Universitv and NASA's Ames&#13;
Research Center,&#13;
O'NeTI is pioneer&#13;
Gerard O'Neil, whose recent book The'&#13;
High Frontier first brought the feasibility of&#13;
orbiting habitats to the public's attention,&#13;
acted as a technical director for the study.&#13;
The groups conclusions are as&#13;
mind-boggling as the concepts discussed:&#13;
it is entirely feasible to house this planet's&#13;
total population in sophisticated space&#13;
habitats in Earth-orbit by the turn of the&#13;
21st century. This can be achieved using&#13;
currently existing technology and&#13;
hardware. Their findings about the&#13;
availability of raw materials in space are&#13;
no less spectacular; a thorough&#13;
examination of the problem suggeststhat&#13;
the Moon and the Asteroid Belt between&#13;
Mars and Jupiter can be mined for ores in&#13;
sufficient quantities as to eliminate the&#13;
need for costly shipments from Earth. The&#13;
habitat is 19 miles long and 4&#13;
miles in diameter. The materials used for&#13;
its construction would be mined and&#13;
manufactured in space using solar power.&#13;
The interior could be landscaped tc .&#13;
resemble the Rocky Mountain·s, the plains&#13;
of South Dakota or the timber forests of&#13;
Oregon, depending on how the builders&#13;
plan it to be. A space colony of this size&#13;
could support a population of two hundred&#13;
thousand to several million depending on&#13;
the design. In this, the- largest of the four&#13;
colonies proposed by Dr. O'Neil, Earth-like&#13;
gravity would be produced by the&#13;
centrifugal force of rotation of the large&#13;
cylinder around its axis every 114 seconds.&#13;
Sunlight coming through the glass&#13;
"windows" would be controlled by mirrors&#13;
outside, so that the days, nights and&#13;
seasons wouf'd resuIt. -&#13;
•&#13;
space&#13;
from page 1&#13;
the duty. For the mission specialist,&#13;
another forty engineers and scientists&#13;
could satisfy all personnel requirements.&#13;
Assuming a average duty of five to ten&#13;
years the turnover rate of the Space&#13;
Shuttle crew astronauts wo·uid only produce&#13;
about a dozen or so openings a year. These&#13;
numbers aren't much better than the&#13;
highly competitive space corps days of ~he&#13;
Apollo missions. NASA's latest recruitment&#13;
drive (which will culminate in the&#13;
selection of thirty to forty astronauts late&#13;
in 1977) still resembles the old program.&#13;
These new recruits will be ,career&#13;
astronauts, regular duty crewmen for the&#13;
routine operations of the Space Shuttle.&#13;
Seats up for grabs&#13;
Sound discouraging? Well, things aren't&#13;
as bad as they seem at first glance. For,&#13;
aboard each and every Space Shuttle,&#13;
there will be four additional seats available&#13;
for additional passengers. Not pilots. Not&#13;
engineers . But PASSENGERS! These crew&#13;
members, designated as "payload specialmembers&#13;
will be designated as "payload&#13;
specia lists" and will primarily be&#13;
concerned with the scientific and&#13;
technological experiments on the flight.&#13;
And these seats are currently up for grabs!&#13;
A payload specialist is basically a&#13;
part-time astronaut. The specialists are not&#13;
NASA employees nor are they career&#13;
spacemen or spacewomen in any sense of&#13;
the word . They are visitors who take part in&#13;
an expedition in orbit after less than six&#13;
months total training and who&#13;
immediately return to their homes after&#13;
their space sabbaticals to study the results&#13;
of their experimentation.&#13;
The first selection for the part-time&#13;
astronaut program will be taking place&#13;
immediately, with most of the first choice&#13;
being made in 1977 and early 1978.&#13;
NASA estimates that at least five&#13;
hundred payload specialists will be able to&#13;
ride the Space Shuttle in the period&#13;
between 1980 and 1989 alone. Some&#13;
experts predict that the number may&#13;
exceed twice that much. All types of&#13;
people will be included in this "visitor"&#13;
category, too:&#13;
• A technician from a pharmaceutical&#13;
company may spend two weeks in orbit&#13;
operating a vaccine production-module&#13;
which will create drugs of unprecedented&#13;
purity and potency.&#13;
• An astronomer from a small Midwestern&#13;
college might be chosen to implement an&#13;
celestial observation program on a&#13;
NASA-provided infra-red survey telescope&#13;
spectrometer.&#13;
• A graduate student in oceanography&#13;
could do a PhD disertation from orbit,&#13;
charting the tropical currents on&#13;
continental shelves.&#13;
• A construction foreman might be sent&#13;
into orbit by his building research division&#13;
to oversee the assembly and operation of a&#13;
beam rolling plant which converts Shuttle&#13;
fuel tank aluminum into structural spars a&#13;
half mile long, to be used in the&#13;
construction of .a giant radio telescope and&#13;
a solar power station.&#13;
• A neurologist studying balance and&#13;
vertigo mechanisms in an attempt to&#13;
understand normal and abnormal brain&#13;
psychology may bring along a small zoo of&#13;
experimental animals and then be granted&#13;
official permission to test reluctant fellow&#13;
shipmates also.&#13;
• An Air Force technical sergeant from a&#13;
New England ·laboratory might. spend days&#13;
in orbit monitoring the performance of a&#13;
new· design for a large unfurable space&#13;
telemetry antenna system.&#13;
Payload Specialist: the common man&#13;
Payload specialists, unlike current&#13;
astronauts, will not be chosen from an&#13;
elite group nor will they be unique in&#13;
any way in terms of backgrounds, interests&#13;
and goals. NASA plans to have both men&#13;
and women in the program, ranging in age&#13;
from their early 20's to late 60's. They may&#13;
be any height from 5'1" to 6'4". They can&#13;
wear glasses, have false teeth, allergies,&#13;
flat feet, pot bellies and bad posture. All&#13;
they have to do is to take what the Air&#13;
Force calls a Class 11 Flight Physical; a&#13;
standard test which a large part of the&#13;
present day adult population c~uld pass.&#13;
, Even Carter could go&#13;
Science buffs will not be the only&#13;
passengers considered for the role of&#13;
payload specialist. Other observers may&#13;
include newsmen , tourists, medical&#13;
patients, artists and the President of the&#13;
United States.&#13;
Space available travel&#13;
On some missions, such as routine&#13;
satellite launchings and the like, NASA will&#13;
offer seats on a "space available" basis,&#13;
which will not interfere with the primary&#13;
mission. In all cases, it's up to the&#13;
would-be payload specialists to watch out&#13;
for any and all opportunities and then go&#13;
after them with glee.&#13;
But just what are the particulars&#13;
involved in actually being chosen for a&#13;
Space Shuttle jaunt as a specialist? ~II,&#13;
NASA itself determines what type of&#13;
experiments will be conducted on e~ch&#13;
mission . Once that is done, the principle&#13;
scientists involved form a panel which&#13;
picks th~ appropriate freelance astronau~&#13;
from matching fields . NASA still hasn t&#13;
come up with a method for picking the&#13;
"space available" payload specialist, but&#13;
they're working on it.&#13;
Who can go&#13;
· With the creations of the Shuttle's&#13;
"visiting astronaut" program, many hopeful&#13;
space pioneers wonder; "What field&#13;
should I study in college to increase the&#13;
chances of my becoming an astronaut?"&#13;
Most NASA officials can't answer that&#13;
question directly but can offer a reply in&#13;
reverse. They advise anyone interested at&#13;
all in the space program to study anf&#13;
Space Shuttle: plenty of room for everyone&#13;
'&#13;
' /&#13;
master any one of a countless number of&#13;
disciplines in school or on the job. But&#13;
they are quick to point out, it should be in&#13;
a field or a subject that the -space lover&#13;
enjoys and can excel in. After the subject&#13;
is picked and knowledge is garnered, then&#13;
and only then should a prospective&#13;
pay lo.ad specialist look for a possible space&#13;
connection. '&#13;
Once an eager space enthusiast has met&#13;
NASA's qualifications and has been picked&#13;
as a payload specialist, he or she will have&#13;
to go through a period of preparation. The&#13;
most crucial planning for a mission will&#13;
always be in the subject of specialization&#13;
which justifies the part-time astronaut's&#13;
selection for the flight in the first place.&#13;
(R~member, the whole purpose of the&#13;
semi-spaceman program is to advance the&#13;
"state of the art" in one's chosen . field.)&#13;
With each payload specialist's ticket to&#13;
space costing over three million dollars,&#13;
those lucky ones chosen had better spend&#13;
a lot of time boning up on his or her top&#13;
subjects, preparing a series of original and&#13;
appropriate experiments to take place on&#13;
board the shuttle.&#13;
As a full crew, the embryonic Shuttle&#13;
troupe will go through a series of launc::h,&#13;
orbit and landing exercises. Finally, the&#13;
payload specialist will study the corollary&#13;
minor experiments which they will&#13;
conduct or assist in for the benefit of other&#13;
scientists not actually on- the flight. Once&#13;
fi nishing the six month of preparation,&#13;
there is only one further task awaiting the&#13;
part-time astronaut: LI FT-OFF!&#13;
So, after years of dreaming, the re~.lity of 1&#13;
space flight for science-fiction fans will&#13;
finally be here. The rockets will roar. The&#13;
acceleration will feel crushing. Jhe&#13;
universe will stretch infinitely out0 side the&#13;
spaceship's window.&#13;
Space settlements&#13;
The next problem is whene to stay once ./&#13;
you get there. In ar. d fort to publicize&#13;
their grandest (and as yet unfunded)&#13;
scheme, NASA has published Space&#13;
Settlements - A , Design Study. This&#13;
185-page, beautifully illustrated book&#13;
printed on glossy, heavy-stock paper, is&#13;
available from the Superintendent of&#13;
Documents, U.S. Government Printing&#13;
Office, Washington,_D.C. 20402 for $5.00.&#13;
The stock number for ordering is&#13;
033-000-00669-1. The report grew out of a&#13;
ten-week program in systems design at&#13;
Stanford University and NASA's Ames&#13;
Research Centei:_.&#13;
O'Neil is pioneer&#13;
Gerard O'Neil, whose recent book The&#13;
High Frontier first brought the feasibility of&#13;
orbiting habitats to the public's attention,&#13;
acted as a technical director for the study.&#13;
The groups conclusions are as&#13;
mind-boggl ing as the concepts discussed:&#13;
it is entir.ely feasible to house this planet's&#13;
total population in sophisticated space&#13;
habitats in Earth-orbit by the turn of the&#13;
21st century. This can be achieved using&#13;
currently existing technology and&#13;
hardware. Their findings about the&#13;
availability of raw materials in space are&#13;
no less spectacular: a thorough&#13;
examination of the problem suggests that&#13;
the Moon and the Asteroid Belt between&#13;
Mars and Jupiter can be mined for ores in&#13;
sufficient quantities as to eliminate the&#13;
need for costly shipments from Earth. The&#13;
habitat is 19 miles long and 4&#13;
miles in diameter. The materials used for&#13;
its construction would be mined and&#13;
rt;1anufactured in space using solar power.&#13;
The inter-ior could be landscaped to ·&#13;
resemble the Rocky Mountains, the plains&#13;
of South Dakota or the timber forests of&#13;
Oregon, depending on how the builders&#13;
plan it to be. A space colony of this size&#13;
could support a population of two hundred&#13;
thousand to several million depending on&#13;
the design. In this, the- largest of the four&#13;
colonies proposed by Dr. O'Neil, Earth-like&#13;
gravity would be produced by the&#13;
centrifugal force of rotation of the large&#13;
cylinder around its axis every 114 seconds.&#13;
Sunlight coming through the glass&#13;
"windows" would be controlled by mirrors&#13;
outside, so that the days, nights and&#13;
seasons wouf'd resu It. . -&#13;
•&#13;
news&#13;
Montoya&#13;
concert&#13;
sold out&#13;
Flamenco guitarist Carlos Montoya, who introduced the Gypsy&#13;
musical idiom to the concert stage and has made the distinctive&#13;
Flamenco style familiar throughout the world, will present the&#13;
opening program in the University of Wisconsin-Parkside's Accent on&#13;
Enrichment Series at 8 p.m. on Wednesday, Sept. 28, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
The series is sold out on a subscription basis. No individual tickets&#13;
are available.&#13;
A Spanish gypsy, born in Madrid, Montoya was a musical prodigy,&#13;
achieving national renown at 14. His debut as a concert artist dye first&#13;
to present 5010 performances of Flamenco guitar without the aid of a&#13;
dancer or singer, was preceded by years of accompaeving such&#13;
distinguished dancers as La Argentina, Vicente Escudero and&#13;
Argentinita.&#13;
Original compositions&#13;
All of the selections Montoya plays are his own compositions and&#13;
all derive from traditional Flamenco themes, usually consisting of one&#13;
short verse, which Montoya uses as a basis for improvisation to create&#13;
a wholly new, self- contained musical entity.&#13;
Since improvisation is the essence of Flamenco music, Montoya&#13;
cannot rely on printed music. Just as well in Montoya's case, since he&#13;
has built an international reputation as a concert and recording artist&#13;
v-Aithoutever learning to read music. Flamenco does, however, have&#13;
strict rules of rhythm and characteristic chord patterns which&#13;
underlie all of Montoya's compositions.&#13;
Consistently acclaimed by critics for his remarkable musicianship.&#13;
Montoya regards as the capstone of his career the performance of his&#13;
"Suite Flamenca" for guitar and orchestra with the St. Louis&#13;
Symphony Orchestra in 1966, the culmination of a 25-year effort to&#13;
transcribe the Flamenco idiom into music for solo guitar and&#13;
orchestra.&#13;
Four sided gypsy&#13;
Montoya is, as the Spaniard's say, "Gitana por los cuatro costados"&#13;
or "Gypsy on all four sides." He studied guitar first with his mother,&#13;
who played for her own enjoyment, and then with a Madrid barber,&#13;
who also taught guitar. After one year, the barber told Montoya he&#13;
had nothing left to teach him. When the famed dancer "La&#13;
Argentina" came to Madrid looking for a guitarist, she chose&#13;
Montoya and he left Spain for the first time to tour Europe with her&#13;
for three years.&#13;
In 1948, he began to give full solo concert recitals of Flamenco&#13;
music and has since toured throughout the world. He has also won&#13;
international fame through his recordings and is the most recorded&#13;
Flamenco artist in history.&#13;
A Week in the Sun!&#13;
CHRISTMAS BREAK&#13;
"Paradise In the Caribbean"&#13;
JAMAICA from $279.00&#13;
Jan. s to Jan. 10&#13;
"A Secret Paradise"&#13;
~1~alWdo(&#13;
Dec. 17to Dec. 24&#13;
Dec. 31 to Jan. 07&#13;
Jan. 07 to Jan. 14&#13;
$339.00&#13;
ALL DEPARTURES FROM CHICAGO&#13;
PRICES PER PERSON - DOUBLE OCCUPANCY&#13;
$100.00 DEPOSIT&#13;
SIGN UP EARLY - SPACE LIMITED!&#13;
GROUP TRAVEL ASSOCIATES, INC.&#13;
202 Division St., Elgin, iL 60120&#13;
Phone: (312) 697·8855&#13;
,Cheated' students sue universities&#13;
(CPS) - Two years ago, Jim Lowenthal was&#13;
working towards a doctoral degree at the graduate&#13;
school of management at Vanderbilt Uruversttv in&#13;
Nashville, Tenn Before long, he realized he was not&#13;
getting what he paid for. _&#13;
By 1974, when the program was not yet a year&#13;
old, problems had set in There was sharp&#13;
disagreement among faculty over the students in&#13;
the program, over the proper methods of research,&#13;
over what constituted legitimate and competent&#13;
doctoral work and over the basic direction of the&#13;
program. Faculty members began urulaterallv&#13;
resigning from qualifying committees of students&#13;
due to internal squabbles. The doctoral committee&#13;
voted not to accept any new students into the&#13;
doctoral program because it was under review.&#13;
Crash review&#13;
In March 1975, the faculty decided to conduct a&#13;
crash review of the entire program and the 12&#13;
students in it. As a result of the review, the faculty&#13;
voted on wheather to retain or expel each student&#13;
and one person got the ax after he had previously&#13;
been admitted.&#13;
After an unsuccessful trip through academic&#13;
channels to get the situation resolved, Lowenthal&#13;
and seven other students in the program took their&#13;
case to court. Last week, a chancery court in&#13;
Nashville ruled that Vanderbilt must pay damages&#13;
of more than $30,000 to the eight former students&#13;
for breach of contract.&#13;
Ilene Ianniello, a former student at the University&#13;
of Bridgeport in Corm., was not so lucky. Ianniello&#13;
charged that a required course she had taken was&#13;
worthless and contended that she was entitled to a&#13;
refund. Her suit complained that she had learned&#13;
nothing in the course, Materials and Methods in&#13;
Education, which whe had attended in the spring of&#13;
1974 and that the university owed her $155 in&#13;
registration fees, $15 for books, $120 for lost wages&#13;
and $180 in travel expenses. A common pleas court&#13;
in Bridgeport said no.&#13;
Education as a commodity&#13;
Many people now consider education a&#13;
commodity and if the buyer is not satisfied with the&#13;
product, he or she can return it to the store for a&#13;
complete fund. Since education is not yet a&#13;
returnable commodity, students and lawyers are&#13;
taking the only course they see open to them and&#13;
suing in order to retrieve damages suffered because&#13;
the product failed to deliver.&#13;
The Vanderbilt case took two years and more&#13;
than $5,000 of the students' funds&#13;
"At first they (Vanderbilt) stonewalled It It was&#13;
like Watergate:' said Lowenthal "Would I do It&#13;
again1 Sure The university is in a posruon to&#13;
resource you to death It takes a lot of time and&#13;
money'&#13;
The students at Vanderbilt had a difficult time&#13;
finding a lawyer to take on their case Four lawyers&#13;
turned them down Finally, Gary Blackburn, a&#13;
district attorney 10 Tenn, agreed to help Lowenthal&#13;
and the other students on the fundamental&#13;
pnncrple that "students in btgher education, as 10&#13;
all other contexts of the market place, should get&#13;
what they're paying for"&#13;
Blackburn could not find any cases where an&#13;
entire program was involved and used legal&#13;
precedents involving state universities which had&#13;
violated due process of law by terminating students&#13;
in programs.&#13;
According to Blackburn, the Ianniello case was&#13;
probably more difficult to win because it is&#13;
"economically unfeasible to sue over failure to&#13;
deliver one course." The judge in the case&#13;
commented that the agreement to provide an&#13;
education between a student and a school cannot&#13;
be viewed in the same light as other consumer&#13;
purchases.&#13;
. (he.tedl&#13;
There are several specific things a student can do&#13;
if he or she feels cheated by a course or program&#13;
The student must obtain a private attorney with&#13;
experience in contract law.&#13;
"Throwaway nothing," advises Blackburn. It IS&#13;
necessary to keep all correspondence, catalogues,&#13;
bulletins for the course, promotions, all class&#13;
materials including the syllabus and any letters&#13;
between students and the administration&#13;
It is helpful to write down everything the student&#13;
can remember about the situation, according to&#13;
Blackburn&#13;
The Vanderbilt case, while a victory for the&#13;
doctoral students, will not bind other courts unless&#13;
appealed and upheld venderbrlts lawyer, Wilham&#13;
Ozier, has appealed the decision&#13;
The Vanderbilt graduate school of management&#13;
is still functioning but there IS a new dean and the&#13;
doctoral program has been terminated&#13;
And Jim Lowenthal has SWitched to the sociology&#13;
department.&#13;
at the&#13;
BRAT STOP&#13;
located at 50 &amp; 1-94&#13;
THURSDAY &amp; FRIDAY FREE BEER&#13;
From 8:00 PM to 10:00 P.M&#13;
[With cover cherge)&#13;
Thurs.ar~&#13;
'100 off With valid college 10&#13;
Bar Dnnks and Beer only 50'&#13;
Call Drinks shghtly more&#13;
this week:&#13;
Thursday&#13;
Friday&#13;
Saturday&#13;
STORMCROW&#13;
TRUe&#13;
BAD BOY [Formerly Crossfire)&#13;
FRI.&#13;
HEART &amp; SOUL&#13;
SAT.&#13;
AMBERJACK&#13;
news&#13;
Montoya&#13;
concert&#13;
sold out&#13;
Flamenco guitarist Carlos Montoya, who introduced the Gypsy&#13;
musical idiom to the concert stage and has made the distinctive&#13;
flamenco style familiar throughout the world, will present the&#13;
opening program in the University of Wisconsin-Parkside's Accent on&#13;
Enrichment Series at 8 p.m. on Wednesday, Sept. 28, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
The series is sold out on a subscription basis. No individual tickets&#13;
are available.&#13;
A Spanish gypsy, born in Madrid, Montoya was a musical prodigy,&#13;
achieving national renown at 14. His debut as a concert artist, tire first&#13;
to present solo performances of Flamenco guitar without the ~id of a&#13;
dancer or singer, was preceded by years of accompanying such&#13;
distinguished dancers as La Argentina, Vicente Esc~dero and&#13;
Argentinita.&#13;
Original compositions&#13;
All of the selections Montoya play~ are his own compositions and&#13;
all derive from traditional Flamenco themes, usually consisting of one&#13;
short verse, which Montoya uses as a basis for improvisation to create&#13;
a wholly new, self- contained musical entity.&#13;
Since improvisation is the essence of Flamenco music, Montoya&#13;
cannot rely on printed music. Just as well in Montoya's case, since he&#13;
has built an international reputation as a concert and recording artist&#13;
without ever learning to read music. Flamenco does however have&#13;
strict rules of rhythm and characteristic chord 'patterns ~hich&#13;
underlie all of Montoya's compositions.&#13;
Consistently acclaimed by critics for.his remarkable musicianship,&#13;
Montoya regards as the capstone of his career the performance of his&#13;
" Suite Flamenca" for guitar and orchestra with the St. Louis&#13;
Symphony Orchestra in 1966, the culmination of a 25-year effort to&#13;
transcribe the Flamenco idiom into music for solo guitar and&#13;
orchestra .&#13;
Four sided gypsy&#13;
Montoya is, as the Spaniard's say, "Gitano por los cuatro costados"&#13;
or "Gypsy on all four sides." He studied guitar first with his mother,&#13;
who played for her own enjoyment, and then with a Madrid barber,&#13;
who also taught guitar. After one year, the barber told Montoya he&#13;
had nothing left to teach him. When the famed dancer "La&#13;
Argentina" came to Madrid looking for a guitarist, she chose&#13;
Montoya and he left Spain for the first time to tour Europe with her&#13;
for three years .&#13;
In 1948, he began to give full solo concert recitals of Flamenco&#13;
music and has since toured throughout the world . He has also won&#13;
international fame through his recordings and is the most recorded&#13;
Flamenco artist in history.&#13;
A Week in the Sun!&#13;
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Phone: (312) 697-·8855&#13;
'Cheated' students sue universities&#13;
(CPS) - Two years ago, Jim Lowenthal was&#13;
working towards a doctoral degree at the graduate&#13;
school of management at Vanderbilt University in&#13;
Nashville, Tenn . Before long, he realized he was not&#13;
getting what he paid for . _&#13;
By 1974, when the program was not yet a year&#13;
old, problems had set in . There was sharp&#13;
disagreement among faculty over the students in&#13;
the program, over the pr'°~per methods of research ,&#13;
over what constituted legitimate and competent&#13;
doctoral work and over the basic direction of the&#13;
program . Faculty members began unilaterally&#13;
resigning from qualifying committees of students&#13;
due to internal squabbles. The doctoral committee&#13;
voted not to accept any new students into the&#13;
doctoral program because it was under review.&#13;
Crash review&#13;
In March 1975, the faculty decided to conduct a&#13;
crash review of the entire program and the 12&#13;
students in it. As a result of the review, the faculty&#13;
voted on wheather to retain or expel each student&#13;
and one person got the ax after he had previously&#13;
been admitted .&#13;
After an unsuccessful trip through academic&#13;
channels to get the situation resolved , Lowenthal&#13;
and seven other students in the program took their&#13;
case to court. Last week, a chancery court in&#13;
Nashville ruled that Vanderbilt must pay damages&#13;
of more than $30,000 to the eight former students&#13;
for breach of contract.&#13;
Ilene Ianniello, a former student at the University&#13;
of Bridgeport in Conn ., was not so lucky . Ianniello&#13;
charged that a required course she had taken was&#13;
worthless and contended that she was entitled to a&#13;
refund . Her suit complained that she had learned&#13;
nothing in the course, Materials and Methods in&#13;
Education, which whe had attended in the spring of&#13;
1974 and that the university owed her $155 in&#13;
registration fees, $15 for books, $120 for lost wages&#13;
and $180 in travel expenses . A common pleas court&#13;
in Bridgeport said no.&#13;
Education as a commodity&#13;
Many peo__Qle now consider educat ion a&#13;
commodity and if the buyer is not satisfied with the&#13;
product, he or she can return it to the store for a&#13;
complete fund . Since education is not yet a&#13;
returnable commodity, students and lawyers are&#13;
taking the only course they see open to them and&#13;
suing in order to retrieve damages suffered because&#13;
the product failed to deliver.&#13;
The Vanderbilt case took two years and mor&#13;
than $5,000 of the students' funds&#13;
"At first they (Vanderbilt) stonewalled It, It was&#13;
like Watergate," said Lowenthal. " Would I do It&#13;
again? Sure The university is in a posItIon to&#13;
resource you to death It takes a lot of time and&#13;
money "&#13;
The students at Vanderbilt had a difficult time&#13;
find ing a lawyer to take on their case r our lawyers&#13;
ti}med them down Finally, Gary Blackburn , a&#13;
district attorney in Tenn ., agreed to help Low nthal&#13;
and the other students on the fundamental&#13;
principle that " students in b1gher education, as in&#13;
all other contexts of the market place, should get&#13;
what they're paying for."&#13;
Blackburn could not find any cases where an&#13;
entire program was involved and used legal&#13;
precedents involving state universities which had&#13;
violated due process of law by terminating students&#13;
in programs .&#13;
According to Blackburn, the Ianniello case was&#13;
probably more difficult to win because it is&#13;
" economically unfeasible to sue over failure to&#13;
deliver one course ." The judge in the case&#13;
commented that the agreement to provide an&#13;
education between a student and a school cannot&#13;
be viewed in the same light as other consumer&#13;
purchases .&#13;
· Cheated?&#13;
There are several specific things a student can do&#13;
if he or she feels cheated by a course or program .&#13;
The student must obtain a private attorney with&#13;
experience in contract law.&#13;
"Throw away nothing,'' advises Blackburn . It Is&#13;
necessary to keep all correspondence, catalogues,&#13;
bulletins for the course, promotions, all class&#13;
materials including the syllabus and any letters&#13;
between students and the administration&#13;
It is helpful to write down everything the student&#13;
can remember about the situation, according to&#13;
Blackburn&#13;
The Vanderbilt case, while a victory for the&#13;
doctoral students , will not bind other courts unle s&#13;
appealed and upheld . Vanderbilt's lawyer, W11l1am&#13;
Ozier, has appealed the decision&#13;
The Vanderbilt graduate school of management&#13;
is still functioning but there I a new dean and th&#13;
doctoral program has been terminated&#13;
And Jim Lowenthal has switch d to the soc,olo&#13;
department .&#13;
at the&#13;
BRAT STOP&#13;
this week:&#13;
THURS.&#13;
located at 50 &amp; 1-94&#13;
THURSDAY &amp; FRIDAY FREE BEER&#13;
From s·oo P.M. to 10:0 0 P.M.&#13;
[ with cover charge)&#13;
1&#13;
1.00 off with valid college 10&#13;
Bar Drinks and Beer only 50'&#13;
Call Drinks slightly m ore&#13;
this week:&#13;
Thursday&#13;
Friday&#13;
Saturday&#13;
STORMCROW&#13;
TRUC&#13;
BAD BOY&#13;
FRI.&#13;
( Formerly Crossfire)&#13;
SAT.&#13;
SMOKEHOUSE HEART &amp; SOUL AMBERJACK &#13;
Watergate reporter speaks from page 1.&#13;
The Watergate Story the fact that journalists must proble~ that Ca~l B~rnstem a~d I&#13;
Wednesdaf, September 28 Woodward began his speech make people trust in them by have In publi shi ng storres;&#13;
Facult~ and Staff Meeting tnformation session on by disagreeing with Senator learning what's happening and readers expect that the story is&#13;
collective bargaining and discussion of pen.ding Church's (chairman of the senate the reason why. going to be like Watergate. There&#13;
CL committee that investigated the The Bert Lance Affa~ will. never be another Watergate.&#13;
state legislation regarding same. 1:00 p.m. In CIA) statement "the truth always "Too many people were That is something we must&#13;
0-107. comes out' .. 'Woodard challeng- foaming at the mouth looking tor realize. In prlntrn~ the Watergate&#13;
Guitarist Carlos Montoya, Flamenco guitarist. ed Senator Church's opinion. another Watergate Story in the articles we received a lot of&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Serres, p.m. . 8 "I do not have confidence that Lanceaffair", Woodward said. He support from the Washington d&#13;
we learn the truth. During the believed that half to two-thirds Post. It was not extraor inarv, it&#13;
Friday, September 30 Watergate story it was apparent of the stories printed on the was basic reporting. Llike doing&#13;
Film Uptown Saturday Nlg t : p.m. a n . h 8 00 t U ion to me that disclosure hangs on a Lance affair were overplayed, that work and I am going to&#13;
very fragile thread. The method The fantastic power in the post- continue being a reporter."&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00. of getting the truth out is not Watergate morality has capsized&#13;
Saturday, October 1 institutionalized. There is no Americans. The press is powerful&#13;
Cross-Country Parks ide at Nort ern Inois h III·· department of truth in the enough that "reputations can fly&#13;
government, in the. newspaper, out of the "window with one&#13;
Invitational in DeKalb, Illinois 1:00 p.m. nor a television station." morning's story."&#13;
Golf UW-Parkside Invitational (men's) at Brighton Woodward continued, "Certainly Questions and Answers&#13;
Dale Country Club in Brighton Township (Kenosha if you look at the last ten or During the second half of&#13;
:---fifteen years of American Woodward's talk, the audience.&#13;
County), 9:30 a.m. History, it seems that govern- asked questions. One student&#13;
Tennis Women at UW-Whitewater Invitational, 9 ment, at least on the national asked Woodward if he was a&#13;
level, often proceeds by Democrat or Republican.&#13;
Volleyball Women at U - a.m. W M'I k .th concealments rather than dis- ~'Iam a registered independent I wau ee WI&#13;
closures. The awful fact is voter. I did vote for Nixon in&#13;
Marquette, 1 p.m. reporters don't often find out 1968 because I was in the Navy&#13;
Thursday, September 29 what really happens and if.we do while the Vietnam War was&#13;
b D· I find out what really happens going on and I was convinced.he Health-line Athlete's Foot. Through Octo er 6. la we're not very good at finding had the best chance of ending&#13;
553-2588 and ask to hear the Health-Line High- out exactly why it happens:'- the war or.more so than Senator&#13;
light. Woodward emphasized that, Humphrey. I did not vote in&#13;
"in reporting the Watergate Story 1972," said Woodward.&#13;
acted as police reporters, city A reporter from the Milwaukee&#13;
reporters - we were very much Sentinel put Woodward in the&#13;
outsiders. If you look back on same category as Iohn Erlichman&#13;
the chronology of the Watergate in taking $3,000 for appearing at&#13;
Story as it unfolded, a lot of it the conference. Woodward&#13;
was very obvious and simple. justified his presence.&#13;
The reporting took a lot of time "I think there is a valid&#13;
and there was a lot of distinction to be made. I am not&#13;
frustration." benefiting financially from&#13;
In undercovering the Water- criminal acts I committed. I&#13;
gate Scandal, Woodward and think of rnvself as a reporter. I&#13;
Bernstein could tel] something feel an obligation, frankly, to&#13;
unlawful was going on by the come out every now and then to&#13;
"uncertainty, fear, and the answer questions, and I feel I&#13;
Waukesha;. concern" they saw in people's should subject myself to&#13;
faces. But yet, how could they questioning."&#13;
expresspeople's fears in writing. In his closing comments,&#13;
Woodward replied by stressing Woodward concluded, "One&#13;
events&#13;
Sunday, October 2&#13;
Film Uptown Saturday Night, 8:00 p.m. at Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
_Monday, October 3&#13;
Auditions Tryouts for Midnight Musical Madness II&#13;
Gong Show. All faculty and students' invited,&#13;
individuals and groups. 6:30-8:30 p.m. Contact&#13;
Eden Vaning at 553-2457 for more information.&#13;
Tuesday, October 4&#13;
Volleyball Women at North Park with Mundelein,&#13;
Chicago; 6:15 p.m.&#13;
Swimming Women at Carroll College,&#13;
6 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, October 5&#13;
Film Wisconsin Artists Film Festival presents "The&#13;
Front Page". 7 p.m. No admission charge.&#13;
Rondelle Reservations, 554-2154.&#13;
Film Sahara 2:30 and'7:30 p.m. in Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Coffeehouse Claudia Schmidt of the Green Bay area&#13;
plays in Union 104-106. 2-4 p.m. No admission.&#13;
Wine will be served.&#13;
Thursday, October 6&#13;
Golf: Men's NAIA District 14 Tournament, at Spring&#13;
Green, through October 8.&#13;
Volleyball Women's at Lake Forest College, with&#13;
University of Chicago, 6 p.m.&#13;
Health-Line An unwanted Pregnancy? How to deal&#13;
with the problem. Through October 13. Dial 553-&#13;
2588 and ask to hear the Health-Line Highlight.&#13;
Film Caine Mutiny, 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Friday, October 7&#13;
Soccer Men at UW Chancellors' Cup Tournament:&#13;
Parkside vs. UW-Milwaukee at 1 p.m. on Friday,&#13;
finals begin at 1 p.m. Saturday.&#13;
Wisconsin State Assembly votes on decriminalization&#13;
of marijuana at the Capitol in Madison.&#13;
Cross Country Men at Notre Dame invitational 3 p.m.&#13;
Film African Queen 8 p.m. in Union Cinema. $1.00&#13;
admission.&#13;
Lecture Dr. Severo Ochoa, Nobel Laureate, will&#13;
speak about Protein Biosynthesis. GR 103 at 2 p.m.&#13;
Free.&#13;
-Saturday, October 8&#13;
Cross Country Men at Lakefront Invitational,&#13;
Chicago, 10:30 a.m.&#13;
Tennis Women at UW-Milwaukee with UW-Green&#13;
Bay, 10 a.m.&#13;
Swimming Women a' JW-Green Bay with Lawrence,&#13;
1p.m.&#13;
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• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 4P •&#13;
events Watergate reporter speaks from page 1&#13;
Wednesday-, September 28 Woodward&#13;
The Watergate Story the fact that journalists must problem that Ca~I Bernstein and I&#13;
Facult; and Staff Meeting&#13;
began his speech make people trust in them by have in publishing stories;&#13;
t.nformation session _on by disagreeing with Senator learning what's happening and readers exp~ct th!lt the story is&#13;
Collective bargaining and discussion of pen_ ding CL Church's&#13;
committee (chairman of the senate the reason why. going to be hke Watergate. There&#13;
state that investigated the The Bert Lance Affair ~ill never be another Watergate.&#13;
0-107.&#13;
legislation regarding same. 1 :00 p.m. in CIA) statement "the truth always "Too many people - were That is something we must&#13;
Guitarist Carlos Montoya, Flamenco&#13;
comes out' .. Woodard challeng- foaming at the mouth looking f9r realize . In printing the Watergate&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series, 8 p&#13;
guitarist. ed Senator Church's opinion. another Watergate Story in the articles we received a lot of&#13;
.m.&#13;
we&#13;
" I do not have confidence that Lance affair", Woodward said. He support from the Washington&#13;
Friday, September 30 Watergate&#13;
learn the truth . During the believed that half to two-thirds Post. It was not extraordinary, it&#13;
Film Uptown Saturday Night&#13;
story it was appaJent of the stories printed on the was basic reporting. Llike doing&#13;
8:00 p.m. at Union&#13;
very&#13;
to me that disclosure hangs on a Lance affair were overplayed. that work and I am going to&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00. fragile thread . The method The fantastic power in the post- continue being a reporter."&#13;
of getting the truth out is not Watergate morality has capsized&#13;
Saturday, October 1 institutionalized. There is no Americans. The press is powerful&#13;
Cross-Country Parkside at Northern 111 inois department of truth in the enough that "reputations can fly&#13;
Invitational&#13;
government, in the. newspaper, out of the -window with one&#13;
Golf UW-Parkside&#13;
in DeKalb, Illinois 1:00 p.m . . nor a television station." morning's story ."&#13;
D&#13;
Invitational (men's) at Brighton Woodward continued, "Certainly Questions and Answers&#13;
a&#13;
le Country Club in Brighton Township (Kenosha if you look at the last ten or During the second ha~f of&#13;
County), ~:30 a.m. - fifteen years of American Woodward's talk, the audience ·&#13;
.&#13;
Tennis Women at UW-Wh1tewater&#13;
' History, it seems that govern- asked questions. One student&#13;
Invitational, 9 ment, at least on the national asked Woodward if he was a&#13;
level, often proceeds by D~mocrat or Republican . a.m. ,&#13;
I b Vol ey a&#13;
II W&#13;
omen&#13;
at UW-Milwaukee with concealments rather than . dis- " lamaregisteredindependent&#13;
Marquette, 1 p.m.&#13;
closures. The awful fact is voter. I did vote for Nixon in&#13;
reporters don't often find out 1968 because I was in the Navy&#13;
Thursday, September 29 what really happens and if_ we do while the Vietnam War was&#13;
Health-L·ane Athlete's Foot. Throblgh October 6 . Dial&#13;
we&#13;
find out w~at really happens going on and I was convinced he&#13;
553-2588 and ask&#13;
're not very good at finding had -the best chance of ending&#13;
to hear the Health-Line High- out exactly why it happens.~'· the war, or more so than Senator&#13;
light. Woodward emphasized that, Humphrey. I did not vote in&#13;
" in reporting the Watergate Story 1972," said Woodward.&#13;
acted as police reporters, city A reporter from the Milwaukee&#13;
Sunday, October 2&#13;
Film Uptown Saturday Night, 8:00&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
p.m. at Union reporters - we were very much Sentinel put Woodward in the&#13;
outsiders . If you look back on sa~e category as John Erlichman&#13;
_ Monday, October 3&#13;
Auditions Tryouts for Midnight Musical Madness 11&#13;
Gong Show. All faculty and students invited,&#13;
individuals and groups. 6:30-8:30 p.m. Contact&#13;
Eden Vaning at 553-2457 for more information.&#13;
Tuesday, October 4&#13;
Volleyball Women at North Park with Mundelein,&#13;
Chicago; 6:15 p.m.&#13;
Swimming Women at Carroll College, Waukesha; .&#13;
6 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, October 5&#13;
Film Wisconsin Artists Film Festival presents "The&#13;
Front Page". 7 p.m. No admission charge.&#13;
Rondelle Reservations, 554-2154.&#13;
Film Sahara 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Coffeehouse Claudia Schmidt of the Green Bay area&#13;
plays in Union 104-106. 2-4 p.m. No admission.&#13;
Wine will be served.&#13;
Thursday, October 6&#13;
the chronology of the Watergate in taking $3,000 for appearing at&#13;
Story as it unfolded, a lot of it the conference . Woodward&#13;
was very obvious and simple. justified his presence.&#13;
The reporting took a lot of time " I thirik there is a valid&#13;
and there was a lot of&#13;
frustration."&#13;
In undercovering the Watergate&#13;
Scandal, Woodward and&#13;
Bernstein could telL something&#13;
unlawful was going on by the&#13;
"uncertainty, fear, and the&#13;
concern" they saw in people's&#13;
faces . But yet, how could they&#13;
express people's fears in writing.&#13;
Woodward replied by stressing&#13;
distinction to be made. I am not&#13;
benefiting financially from&#13;
criminal acts I committed. I&#13;
think of myself as a reporter. I&#13;
feel an obligation, frankly , to&#13;
come out every now and then to&#13;
answer questions, and I feel I&#13;
should subject myself to&#13;
questioning."&#13;
In his closing c·omments,&#13;
Woodward concludeq , " One&#13;
PAB Presents good old times w.ith&#13;
• ••• of the 50's featuring&#13;
AAA WORLD WIDE&#13;
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Full Se,·,ice&#13;
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•Airline Tickets •Tours&#13;
•Cruises • Rail • Hotel&#13;
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Be our exclusive rep on your&#13;
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Golf: Men's NAIA&#13;
I&#13;
District 14 Tournament, at Spring&#13;
Green, through October 8.&#13;
Volleyball Women's at Lake Forest College, with&#13;
University of Chicago, 6 p.m.&#13;
$1.00 UW Students&#13;
$1.50 Others&#13;
-Big Al &amp;-The HiFi's . DANCE&#13;
CONTEST Health-Line An unwanted Pregnancy? How to deal&#13;
with the problem. Through October 13. Dial 553-&#13;
2588 and ask to hear the Health-Line Highlight.&#13;
Film Caine Mutiny, 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Friday, October 7&#13;
Soccer Men at UW Chancellors' Cup Tournament:&#13;
Parkside vs. UW-Milwaukee at 1 p.m . on Friday,&#13;
finals begin at 1 p.m. Saturday.&#13;
Wisconsin State Assembly votes on decriminalization&#13;
of marijuana at the Capitol in Madison.&#13;
Cross Country Men at Notre Dame invitational 3 p .m.&#13;
Film African Queen 8 p.m. in Union Cinema. $1.00&#13;
admission.&#13;
Lecture Dr. Severo Ochoa, Nobel Laureate, will&#13;
speak about Protein Biosynthesis. GR 103 at 2 p.m.&#13;
Free.&#13;
-Saturday, October 8&#13;
Cross Country Men at Lakefront Invitational,&#13;
Chicago, 10:30 a.m.&#13;
Tennis Women at UW-Milwaukee with UW-Green&#13;
Bay, 10 a.m.&#13;
Swimming Women a' JW-Green Bay with Lawrence ._ I 1 p.m .&#13;
SAT. OCT. 1 9:00 UNION SQ.&#13;
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