<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="2959" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://archives.uwp.edu/exhibits/show/rangernews/item/2959?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-25T12:44:27+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="3444">
      <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/137211c3009ae9c46978c5b63ea142e7.pdf</src>
      <authentication>8adaaa6df2e5a8a8f1c455b5bd2aa29a</authentication>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="8">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="97">
        <name>Issue</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="68662">
            <text>Volume 6, issue 10</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="96">
        <name>Headline</name>
        <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="68663">
            <text>Nature trails being abused</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="95">
        <name>Series Number</name>
        <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="68673">
            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="1">
        <name>Text</name>
        <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="90036">
            <text>An unidentified runner&#13;
nature trails north of&#13;
,&#13;
Wednesday, November 2, 1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No. 10&#13;
er II II Men are not against you; they're n()&#13;
UU merely out for themselves. V V&#13;
-GMeFowler&#13;
Forbes&#13;
Nature trails&#13;
being abused&#13;
on the&#13;
last Sunday, October 30, Parkside Athletics hosted "Pumpkin&#13;
Pant", a cross-country meet on the newly developed nature trails&#13;
north of the Union parking lot, A public tnformanon office news&#13;
release described the event as "a trail-blazing 5,(0) meter&#13;
cross-country run on the UW~P nature trails," An inspection of the&#13;
trails by several university people last Friday, revealed the trails are&#13;
also being used by horse riders and mini-bikers&#13;
The nature trails were developed last summer by workers funded&#13;
through a Carter administration job program The work on the&#13;
campus was authorized by Cushing Phillips, Director of the Physical&#13;
Plant, who was also responsible for university supervision of the&#13;
workers&#13;
Committee asks for halt on development&#13;
Two weeks ago, the newly formed committee on Environmental&#13;
Concerns (CECl asked Chancellor Guskin to halt further development&#13;
of the nature trails until the committee could review the plan There&#13;
is some question whether or not there is or was a plan.&#13;
Ranger contacted (CECl Chairman,EugeneGaslorkiewicz,Professor&#13;
of life Science, and asked him what he thought of current use of the&#13;
nature trails by cross-country runners.&#13;
"1 personally feel the use of the trails for racmg is not the intent of&#13;
the nature trails. The exploitation of them for running trails is a&#13;
mistake. If they are wide enough for running, then they should have&#13;
never been made that wide,"saidGasiorkiewicz.He also commen\ed&#13;
on the helpless situation the university is In trying 'to exclude the&#13;
public from what the state of wtsconsrn considers a state park like&#13;
any other university property.&#13;
security has problems with patrolinl trails&#13;
Ranger asked Parks ide Security Chief, Ron Brinkman. what security&#13;
measures could be taken to stop horse riders and rmm-bikers from&#13;
using the nature trails Brinkman said there wasn't much secuntv&#13;
could do, short of getting its own official trail bike, an idea Brinkman&#13;
thinks is impractical. It is currently Impossible for present security&#13;
automobiles to patrol the three miles of trails. It is also difficult to&#13;
hear mini-bikes or horses in the thickly wooded area The Side of the&#13;
natural area that borders County "A" is completely open The only&#13;
fence that borders the natural area is on the west edge facing the golf&#13;
course.&#13;
PSGA elections garner&#13;
record turnout vote&#13;
by Diane jalenskv&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Three bundred sixteen Parks ide students, compared with 72 last&#13;
year, voted in the 1977 fan Parks ide Student Government Association&#13;
(PSGA) election which was held Wednesday and Thursday, October&#13;
19 and 20 on the concourse of the Classroom Building.&#13;
In the Segregated Fee Allocations. winning ballot positionings&#13;
included Tom DaVroy, Maggie Juszkiewicz, Elsa Carpenter, Chelle&#13;
Phelps and Douglas Wright. Candidate-elect Maggie juszkiewicz&#13;
declined her seat in the Senate. Replacement candidate must be&#13;
attain for her position. I&#13;
The Allocations Committee, consisting of 11 voting members, five&#13;
each elected in the fall and spring, and the president of the Student&#13;
Organizational Council) reviews requests for program support and&#13;
budget allocations. In additlon- non-voting members include the&#13;
Assistant Chancellors for Student Affairs and for Administration, and&#13;
the Director ot Budget Planning sits in with the committee.&#13;
John P. Smith and Shaun Helgesen are the newly elected&#13;
candidates attaining seats in the Undeclared Major Category. Other&#13;
students obtaining divisional seats in the Senate include Patrick&#13;
Odell-Humanities, Kenneth Kuehnl, Jr. - Labor Economics, Gerald&#13;
Muchlin - Management Science, Mark Merten - Social Science&#13;
and Harvey Hedden - Science. N9 one ran for the Engineering&#13;
Science seat and so it is vacant.&#13;
The declared divisions mentioned above consist of one senator&#13;
each. An additional senator is added for each additional 700 students&#13;
within the division. The elected candidates' terms last for one year&#13;
The Parks ide student body also had the opportunity to vote on the&#13;
constitutional referendum, which was approved by a vote of 225 to&#13;
49.&#13;
Below is a copy- of the passed constitutional referendum:&#13;
The Allocations Committee as a whole shall deal directly with the&#13;
Chancellor or his/her designee in consultation with the Allocations&#13;
Committee. recommendations.&#13;
The President of P.S.G.A., Inc. and the President Pro Tempore of&#13;
the Senate or his/her designee, who shall be a member of P.S G A&#13;
Inc., shall. b~ voti~g members of the Allocations Committee dU;in~&#13;
the negotiations With the Chancellor. The President or President Pro&#13;
Tempore, if an elected or appointed members of the Allocations&#13;
Committee shall not send a designee to the committee while also&#13;
participating in the negotiation process.&#13;
If the Allocations Committee and the Chancellor can not reconcile&#13;
their differences in the allocation of the allocable portion of&#13;
Segregated University Fees, each will send a set of recommendations&#13;
to the Board of Regents for final disposition. Vacancies on the&#13;
Allo~ations Committee shall be filled through appointment, by the&#13;
President of the P.S.G.A., lnc., with the approval of a simple majority!&#13;
of the entire Senate."&#13;
er&#13;
Wednesday, November 2, 1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No. 10&#13;
/l ll Men are not again t you; they're Cl()&#13;
UU merely out for themselves l/ l/&#13;
-Gene Fowler&#13;
Forbes&#13;
Nature trails&#13;
being ab~sed&#13;
Last Sunday, October 30, Parkside Athletics hosted "Pumpkin&#13;
Pant'', a cross-country meet on the newly developed nature trail&#13;
north of the Union parking lot A public information office n ws&#13;
release described the event as "a trail-blazing 5,000 meter&#13;
cross-country run on the UW-P nature trails" An inspection of the&#13;
trails by several university people last Friday, revealed the trails are&#13;
also being used by horse riders and m1ni-b1kers.&#13;
The nature trails were developed last summer by workers fund d&#13;
through a Carter administration 10b program . The work on the&#13;
campus was authorized by Cushing Phillips, Director of the Phy ical&#13;
Plant, who was also responsible for university supervision of the&#13;
workers&#13;
Committee asks for halt on development&#13;
Two weeks ago, the newly formed committee on Environmental&#13;
Concerns (CEC) asked Chancellor Guskin to halt further development&#13;
of the nature trails until the committee could review the plan There&#13;
is some question whether or not there is or was a plan.&#13;
Ranger contacted (CEC) Chairman,Eugene Ga iorkiewicz.Profes or&#13;
of Life Science, and asked him what he thought of current use of the&#13;
nature trails by cross-country runners .&#13;
" I personally feel the use of the trails for racing is not the intent of&#13;
the nature trails . The exploitation of them for running trails I a&#13;
mistake. If the are wide enough for running, then they should have&#13;
never been made that wide," saidGasiork1ewicz .He also commen\ed&#13;
on the helpless situation the university 1s in trying to e elude the&#13;
public from what the state of isconsin considers a state park like&#13;
any other university property .&#13;
Security has problems with patroling trails&#13;
Ranger asked Parkside Security Chief, Ron Brinkman, what security&#13;
measures could be taken to stop horse riders and mini-bikers from&#13;
using the nature trails Brinkman said there wasn't much security&#13;
could do, short of getting its own official trail bike, an idea Brinkman&#13;
thinks is impractical It 1s currently 1mposs1ble for present curity&#13;
automobiles to patrol the three miles of trails It 1s also difficult to&#13;
hear mini-bikes or horses in the thickly wooded area. The side of the&#13;
natural area that borders County " A" 1s complete! op n. The only&#13;
fence that borders the natural area is on the west edge facing the golf&#13;
course .&#13;
PSGA · elections garner&#13;
record turnout vote&#13;
by Diane Jalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Three bundred sixteen Parkside students , compared with 72 last&#13;
year, voted in the 1977 fall Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
(PSGA) election which was held Wednesday and Thursday, October&#13;
19 and 20 on the concourse of the Classroom Building.&#13;
In the Segregated Fee Anocations, winning ballot positionings&#13;
included Tom DaVroy, Maggie Juszkiewicz, Elsa Carpenter, Chelle&#13;
Phelps and Douglas Wright. Candidate-elect Maggie Juszkiewicz&#13;
declined her seat in the Senate. Replacement candidate must be&#13;
attain for her position . I&#13;
The Allocations Committee, consisting of 11 voting members, five&#13;
each elected in the fall and spring, and the president of the Student&#13;
Organizational Council) reviews requests for program support and&#13;
budget allocations . In addition, non-voting members include the&#13;
Assistant Chancellors for Student Affairs and for Administration , and&#13;
the Director ot Budget Planning sits in with the committee.&#13;
John P. Smith and Shaun Helgesen are the newly elected&#13;
candidates attaining seats in the Undeclared Major Category. Other&#13;
students obtaining divisional seats in the Senate include Patrick&#13;
Odell-Humanities, Kenneth Kuehnl, Jr. - Labor Economics, Gerald&#13;
Muchlin - Management Science, Mark Merten - Social Science&#13;
and Harvey Hedden - Science . No one ran for the Engineering&#13;
Science seat and so it is vacant.&#13;
The declared divisions mentioned above consist of one senator&#13;
each. An additional senator is added for each addit ional 700 students&#13;
with in the division . The elected candidates' terms last for one year.&#13;
The Parkside st udent body also had the opportunity to vote on the&#13;
constitut ional referendum , which was approved by a vote of 225 to&#13;
49.&#13;
Below is a copy of the passed constitut ional referendum:&#13;
The Allocations Committee as a whole shall deal directly with the&#13;
Chancellor or his/her designee in consultation with the Allocat ions&#13;
Committee recommendations&#13;
The President of PS.G A, Inc and the President Pro Tempore of&#13;
the Senate or his/her des1gnee, who shall be a member of p S.G A&#13;
Inc ., shall be voting members of the Allocations Committee durin~&#13;
the negotiations with the Chancellor. The President or President Pro&#13;
Tempore, if an elected or appointed members of the Allocations&#13;
Committee shall not send a designee to the committee while also&#13;
participating in the negotiation process .&#13;
If the Allocations Comm ittee and the Chancellor can not reconci le&#13;
their differences in the allocation of the allocable portion of&#13;
Segregated University Fees, each will send a set of recommendations&#13;
to the Board of Regents for f inal disposition . Vacancies on the&#13;
Allo~ations Committee shall be filled through appointment, by the&#13;
President of the P.S.G.A., Inc., with the approval of a simple majority{&#13;
of the entire Senate." &#13;
/&#13;
J&#13;
•&#13;
When Parkslde administrators consented to&#13;
the development of nature trails through the&#13;
northern half of the campus,animportant resource&#13;
became endangered. The last parcel of,&#13;
undevelopedland became"developed". The thick&#13;
brush and wooded areas that once hindered&#13;
recreational traffic\vere removed. Now, the area&#13;
is up for grabs. Cross-country meets are held&#13;
there and mini-bikers and horse riders can&#13;
traverse the area unnoticed by security. Will&#13;
Winter bring snowmobiles?&#13;
The trails that were cut through· this&#13;
undevelopedareaare over four feet wide in some&#13;
places. There is chipped bark on trails near water&#13;
or mud, and steps going u'pa bank. Large blocks&#13;
of cement cut across the creek that bisects the&#13;
area, and the field of prairie grass has been&#13;
divided up into pieces.&#13;
If this is a natural area, is it necessary to&#13;
deveiopH?&#13;
If the purposeof the trail is to provide direction&#13;
for those seeking communion with nature,&#13;
perhapswe should direct these people next door&#13;
to Petrifying Springs County Park.&#13;
Life -Science professors are going to know&#13;
whereto take their classes. Periodic field trips to&#13;
the area by students do not require developed&#13;
"trails". When humanswalk through natural areas'&#13;
editorial&#13;
(&#13;
./&#13;
/&#13;
repeatedly, a small fool' path usually develops.&#13;
These foot' paths should be adequate for&#13;
'educational purposes.&#13;
The presence of wide trails has attracted&#13;
recreational vehicles and horse riders. This&#13;
unnecessarytraffic can only turn this once quiet&#13;
area into just another part of Petrifying Springs.&#13;
Surely w~ can come up with a better plan for the&#13;
use of our campus.&#13;
It is in the best interests of this university to&#13;
protect and preserveany natural areasadjacent to&#13;
the campus. What is to encouragedonors of other&#13;
natural areas to give their land to a campus that&#13;
has ruined its own natural resources?&#13;
It is the business of unlverslty administrators&#13;
-to plan ahead. Someone has clearly made a&#13;
mistake with the nature trails. To prevent further&#13;
abuse of the land, measures should be taken to&#13;
erase what has' been "developed" and return. as&#13;
much o1'it 'as possible to its original state.&#13;
A comprehensive plan of maintenance and&#13;
preservation of natural areas such as Chiwaukee&#13;
Prairie and the Harris Tract is also noticeably.&#13;
\ absent.&#13;
Twenty years from now, when Parkside is&#13;
surrounded by suburbs, will Parkside be&#13;
something to respect or just another abandoned&#13;
lot? -&#13;
Ranger is written. al\d edited by students 01 the&#13;
University 01 Wisconsin·Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible tor its editorial policy and content ..&#13;
Om" \Ii f'itTr'1&#13;
Mary Casswell. Debbie Siwek, Ann St~idl.&#13;
Cb.ris-Ratcks, Marcia. Vlach.&#13;
Pb.ilipL. Livingston 553.2295&#13;
Gcrt&gt;: ri\ M Thomas R. Cooper ;)-;).22-8";&#13;
( 0 L ~- dohl\. R ..McKloskey&#13;
d.~'''''.. Diane dalensky&#13;
r&lt;,&gt;· \) Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Sports Editor Alane Andresen&#13;
C iy \l~ H -, Wen.dy&#13;
Ilc,tta.' Adv~r~ '&gt;J ". l\1 \ aiD alise '2 (&#13;
Ranger Newspaper. Un.iversity 01 Wisconsin-Park.ide&#13;
Kenosh.a. Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Subscriptions: $5.00 ye&amp;r lor U.S.A.&#13;
i&#13;
)&#13;
• •&#13;
I&#13;
editorial&#13;
(&#13;
/&#13;
When Parksid'e administrators consented to&#13;
the development of nature trails through the&#13;
n_orthern half of the campus.an important resource&#13;
became endangered. The last parcel of&#13;
undeveloped land became "developed". The thick&#13;
brush and wooded areas that once hindered&#13;
recreational traffic were removed. Now, the area&#13;
is up for grabs. Cross-country meets are held&#13;
there and mini-bikers and horse riders can&#13;
traverse the area unnoticed by security. Will&#13;
Winter bring snowmobiles?&#13;
The trails that were cut through · this&#13;
undeveloped area are over four feet wide- in some&#13;
places. There is chipped bark on trails near water&#13;
or mud, and steps going up a bank. Large blocks&#13;
of cement cut across the creek that bisects the&#13;
area, and the field of prairie grass ha$ been&#13;
divided up into pieces.&#13;
If this is a natural area, is it necessary to&#13;
deveiop it?&#13;
If the purpose of the trail is to provide direction&#13;
for those seeking communion with nature,&#13;
perhaps we should direct these people next door&#13;
to Petrifying Springs County Park.&#13;
Life ~science professors are going to know&#13;
where to take their classes. Periodic field trips to&#13;
the area by students do not require developed&#13;
"trails". When humans walk through natural areas&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
repeatedly, a small foof path usually develops.&#13;
These foot' paths should be adequate for&#13;
educational purposes.&#13;
The presence of wide trails has attracted&#13;
recreational vehicles and horse riders. This&#13;
unnecessary traffic can only turn this once quiet&#13;
area into just another part of Petrifying Springs.&#13;
Surely w~ can come up with a better plan for the&#13;
use of our campus.&#13;
It is in the best interests of this university to&#13;
protect and preserve any natural areas adjacent to&#13;
' the campus. What is to encourage donors of other&#13;
natural areas to give their land to a campus that&#13;
has ruined its own natural resources?&#13;
It is the business of university administrators&#13;
-to plan ahead. Someone has clearly made a&#13;
mistake with the nature trails. To prevent further&#13;
abus~ of the land, measures should be taken to&#13;
erase what has· been "developed" and return,_ as&#13;
much ot'it as possible to its original state.&#13;
A comprehensive plan of maintenance and&#13;
preservation of natural areas such as Chiwaukee&#13;
Prairie and the Harris Tract is also noticeably&#13;
, absent.&#13;
Twenty years from now, when Parkside is&#13;
surrounded by suburbs, will Parkside be&#13;
something to respect or just another abandoned&#13;
lot? , -&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students of the&#13;
University ~f Wisc~nsin-~ar~side and they are solely responsible for ats edatonal policy and content . .&#13;
Ou w -i•,,·&#13;
Mary Casswell, Debbie Siwek, Ann Steidl.&#13;
Chris Ratcks, Marcia Vlach.&#13;
Philip L. Livingston 553-2295&#13;
Thomas R. Cooper 53 ?281&#13;
John R . . McKloskey Diane dalensky&#13;
F.•,\ vi Dan Guidebeck&#13;
· Sports Editor Alane Andresen&#13;
C .\. M , Wendy&#13;
R~ a , u &amp;ill &amp;lise&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, U~iversity of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Subscriptions: $5.00 year for U.S.A.&#13;
• I &#13;
letters&#13;
\&#13;
Reader amazed at egocentric rhetoric&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Congratulations lamron! You&#13;
have motivated me (one of the&#13;
apathetic mass, a member of no&#13;
student organization, 9- constant&#13;
complainer) to "get involved."&#13;
As a serious student of human&#13;
behavior I 'am amazed by the&#13;
stunning combination of lack of&#13;
understanding and egocentric&#13;
rhetoric YOU spit out in your&#13;
attem pt to motivate othees to&#13;
"get involved." Your lack of&#13;
understanding is evidenced by&#13;
your insults to the integrity and&#13;
eating habits of the audience&#13;
you are attempting to reach. You&#13;
are not aware of the personal&#13;
circumstances surrounding the&#13;
lives of other students and It IS&#13;
therefore impudent of you to&#13;
suggest that their assessment of&#13;
how much time they can spare.&#13;
for what activities is inferior to&#13;
your assessment&#13;
The impudence borders on&#13;
arrogance when ·those who&#13;
disagree with you are labeled as&#13;
"dumb s hi ts". accused ·of&#13;
engaging in "an example of sheer&#13;
rncromcness" as well as having&#13;
"been eating from a crock of&#13;
shit" (a repugnant image as well&#13;
as an offensive and unnecessary&#13;
insult).&#13;
The egocentric nature of your&#13;
rhetoric is apparent in your&#13;
Cut mud slingi.ng&#13;
and work together&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
I am not writing this letter to&#13;
condone or to condemn. I am&#13;
writing this Jetter in the regards&#13;
as to how I feel. I think that it is&#13;
time for every one to lay down&#13;
the slings and arrows. There have&#13;
been enough' articles in the&#13;
Ranger to condemn and to&#13;
condone the students of&#13;
Parks ide. It is not up -to one or&#13;
two individuals to determine&#13;
what the student population&#13;
should or should not do with&#13;
their free time. It is up to the&#13;
students themselves.&#13;
As a former member of the&#13;
Ranger staff I think that it is time&#13;
to stress the high points of Parkside.&#13;
let us hear from some of&#13;
the student organizations. Show&#13;
us what some of the organization&#13;
have to offer us. Do a feature a&#13;
{ week on -them. It should not be&#13;
so hard.&#13;
Believe me, I am not cutting&#13;
down the Ranger. It is having its&#13;
own problems getting the much&#13;
needed help. What I am doing is&#13;
giving a few suggestions so that&#13;
the students may find out what is&#13;
going on. I don't think that any&#13;
organization is asking for vour&#13;
full 100% free time. But rather a&#13;
couple of hours a week to help&#13;
out once in a while.&#13;
Come on everyone. let us cut&#13;
out the mud slinging and the&#13;
back stabbing and work together&#13;
for a change. Who knows, maybe&#13;
you will get to like Parkstde and.&#13;
what it has to offer.&#13;
JohnA. Gabriel&#13;
P.S. If you would like at least30&#13;
good reasons to go to Parkside, I&#13;
would suggest seeing Prof. Gerry&#13;
Greenfield. He would be most&#13;
willing to tell you.&#13;
United Council Legislative Update&#13;
AS 325 - The decriminalization of marijuana bill was referred to&#13;
the State Affairs Committee, effectively killing bill for this legislative&#13;
session. The vote of 54-11 came after minimal debate and Just&#13;
minutes before the Assembly adjourned until next lanuary (or until&#13;
the Special Session, if held). There seems little hope for passage of&#13;
any decriminalization bill until the next legislature goes Into session&#13;
in January of 1979. United Council strongly supported this bill, but&#13;
the response from the campuses was not strong. AB 325 would have&#13;
removed criminal penalties and created civil penalties for the&#13;
personal possession of two ounces of marijuana, with a maxiumum&#13;
fine of $50&#13;
AB181 255 318et al. - Assemblybills to raisethe legaldrinking&#13;
age to 19: United Council has consistently opposed these bills, and&#13;
will testify against them once again. The UC p~si~ion .is that these&#13;
bills would encroach on the hard won age of majority rights, and do&#13;
nothing to help alcohol abuse. ....&#13;
58289,335,363 - The faculty collective bargaining bills, having&#13;
lain dormant since being introduced last April, may now see some&#13;
action. The Regents discussed the issue in a wide ranging hearing last&#13;
week, at whtch UC testified concerning the necessity for student&#13;
involvement in the process.&#13;
Having met with Senate Labor Committee Ghairman Ti~ Cullen,&#13;
UC President Jim Eagon and lobbyist R~b Steven~ are confldent)ha~&#13;
student concerns will be addressed In any bill reported out 0&#13;
committee. Currently: the UC Executive Board is ready to ~upp.ort&#13;
faculty andacadem!c staff collective bargaining enabling legislation&#13;
that adequately protects student governance rights.&#13;
woeful fear that you exist in a&#13;
world of idiots" I, too, have&#13;
sometimes felt surrounded by&#13;
idiots Reflection often revealed&#13;
that this feeling was caused by&#13;
my own unchecked concert and&#13;
my lack of knowledge about&#13;
those 'idiots." These Idiots"&#13;
often have a we altb- of&#13;
knowledge and innovative ways&#13;
of dealing With di t ti cul ttes .&#13;
However, the gifts they have to&#13;
offer can only be discovered if&#13;
the "idiots" are allowed to speak&#13;
without having others tell them&#13;
to direct their energies in "more&#13;
useful" ways&#13;
You say you are opposed to&#13;
. people infringing on others'&#13;
rights. That is an excellent&#13;
position and 1 commend you for&#13;
having the Insight and courage&#13;
to v tate It publicly Effective&#13;
concern for the rights of others.&#13;
however requrres compassion&#13;
and undervtanding tar beyond&#13;
that required for the mere stating&#13;
of a principle Please, try to&#13;
remember that people will work&#13;
on those thing .. that they (not&#13;
you} have decided are Important&#13;
The only How of energy YOU&#13;
should aspire to direct IS your&#13;
o.. n&#13;
Name Withheld upon request&#13;
'Personali'jed&#13;
Barbering&#13;
MEN WOMAN CHILDREN&#13;
PH. 658·8384&#13;
APPOINTMENT&#13;
~~&#13;
1902·SOth 5TREET NANCY RINALDI&#13;
YES! INTERNATIONAL SPEED READING COURSE WILL BE&#13;
TAUGHT HERE IN THE RACINE·KENOSHA AREA&#13;
National Reading Enrichment&#13;
Institute (a non profit organization)&#13;
will offer a 4 week course in speed&#13;
reading to a limited number of&#13;
qualified people In the Kenosha.&#13;
Racine area. NREI panoramic&#13;
method of instruction is the most&#13;
innovative and effective program&#13;
available In the United States. Not&#13;
only does this famous course reduce&#13;
your time in the classroom to just&#13;
one class per week for 4 short weeks&#13;
but it also includes an advance speed&#13;
reading course on cassette tape so&#13;
that you can continue to improve for&#13;
the rest of your life. In just four&#13;
weeks the average student should be&#13;
reading 3 to 10times faster. In a few&#13;
months some students are reading&#13;
20to 30times faster obtaining speeds&#13;
that approach 6000 words per&#13;
minute. In their instances speeds up&#13;
to 20,000words per minute have been&#13;
documented.&#13;
Our Average graduate reads 3 to&#13;
10times faster upon completion with&#13;
greatly increased comprehension&#13;
and concentration. For those who&#13;
would like additional information&#13;
and series of FREE 1 . hour or ientation&#13;
lectures have been scheduled.&#13;
At the free meetings the course will&#13;
be explained in cqmplete detail&#13;
Including classroom procedures,&#13;
instruction methods, class schedule&#13;
and a special introductory tuition&#13;
that is' one half the cost ot similar&#13;
courses. You must attend anyone ot&#13;
these meetings tor Information&#13;
about classes.&#13;
These orientations are opened to&#13;
the public above age 14 (persons&#13;
under 18 should be accompanied by&#13;
a parent if possible). If you have&#13;
always wanted to be a speed reader&#13;
but found the cost prohibitive or the&#13;
course too time. consuiTllng ... Now&#13;
you can, just by attending one evening&#13;
per week for four short weeks&#13;
read 3 to 10times faster with greater&#13;
comprehension and concentration.&#13;
If you are a student who would like&#13;
to make A's Instead of B's or C's, or&#13;
if you are II business person who&#13;
wants to stay abreast of todays&#13;
everchanging accelerating world&#13;
then this course Is an absolute must.&#13;
These special THREE one hour&#13;
meetings will be held at the&#13;
following times and places in the&#13;
Kenosha·R.acine area: Monday,&#13;
November 7th, two meetings, one at&#13;
6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m. and&#13;
Tuesday, November 8th, two&#13;
meetings, one at 6: 30 p.m. and again&#13;
at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday, two&#13;
meetings, one at 6: 30 p.m. and again&#13;
at 8:30 p.m., Wednesday, two&#13;
meetings, one at 6: 30 p.m. and again&#13;
8:30p.m.&#13;
TWO FINAL ME ETINGS&#13;
Thursday, November 3rd, one at&#13;
6:30 p.m. and another at 8:30 p.m.&#13;
These meetings will be held In the&#13;
Holtoay Inn at 5125·6th Street in&#13;
Kenosha. If you are a businessman,&#13;
a student, housewife, or executive&#13;
this course, which took years of&#13;
intensive research to develop Is a&#13;
must, you can read 3 to 10 times&#13;
faster, comprehend more, con.&#13;
centrate better, and remember&#13;
longer. This course can be taught to&#13;
industry or civic groups at group&#13;
rates upon request. Be sure to attend&#13;
whichever free orientation that fits&#13;
in your schedule. REMEMBER&#13;
TUITION FOR THIS COURSE IS&#13;
ONE HALF THAT OF SIMILAR&#13;
COURSES, MONEY SPENT IN&#13;
SELF· IMPROVEMENT IS NOT AN&#13;
EXPENSE IT IS AN iN.&#13;
VESTMENT. MAKE AN IN.&#13;
VESTMENT TODAY.&#13;
letters&#13;
Reader amazed at egocentric rhetoric&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Congratulations Lamron ! You&#13;
have motivated me (one of the&#13;
apathetic mass, a member of no&#13;
student organization, a constant&#13;
complainer) to " get involved."&#13;
rt•mt•mbt•r that peopl&#13;
on tho&#13;
o n&#13;
As a serious student of human&#13;
behavior I 'am amazed by the&#13;
stunning combination of lack of&#13;
understanding and egocentric&#13;
rhetoric you spit out in your&#13;
attempt to motivate other6 to&#13;
"get involved." Your lack of&#13;
understanding is evidenced by&#13;
your insults to the integrity and&#13;
eating habits of the audience&#13;
you are attempting to reach. You&#13;
are not aware of the personal&#13;
circumstances surrounding the&#13;
lives of other students and 1t is&#13;
therefore impudent of you to&#13;
suggest that their assessment of&#13;
how much time they can spare.&#13;
for what activities is inferior to&#13;
your assessment&#13;
woeful fear that you exist "in a&#13;
world of 1d1ots." I, too, have&#13;
sometimes felt surrounded bv&#13;
idiots Reflection otten revealed&#13;
that th1 feeling was cau ed b&#13;
my o'°"n unchecked concet and&#13;
my lack of knm .. ledge about&#13;
those "1d1ots ." These '1d1ots"&#13;
often ha\e a wealtl of&#13;
kno\\ ledge and innO\ at1ve ways&#13;
of dealing w 1th diff1cult1es&#13;
However, the gifts the ha e to&#13;
offer can onlv be discovered 1f&#13;
the '' idiots" are allowed to speak&#13;
without having others tell them&#13;
to direct their energies in " more&#13;
useful ways .&#13;
having the insight and courage&#13;
to tale ,t publicly Effective&#13;
concern for the rights ot others,&#13;
however, requires compa mn&#13;
and und r tandmg far b ond&#13;
that requir d for the m re tatmg&#13;
ot a prmcipl Plea e, try to Name withheld upon requ t&#13;
The impudence borders on&#13;
arrogance when those who&#13;
disagree with you are labeled as&#13;
" dumb shits", accused of&#13;
engaging in " an example of sheer&#13;
moronicness" as well as having&#13;
" been eating from a crock of&#13;
shit" (a repugnant image as well&#13;
as an offensive and unnecessary&#13;
insult).&#13;
The egocentric nature of your&#13;
rhetoric is apparent in your&#13;
Cut mud slingi_ng&#13;
and work together&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
I am not writing this letter to&#13;
condone or to condemn. I am&#13;
writing this letter in the regards&#13;
as to how I feel. I think that it is&#13;
time for every one to lay down&#13;
the slings and arrows. There have&#13;
been enough' articles in the&#13;
Ranger to condemn and to&#13;
condone the students of&#13;
Parkside. It is not up -to one or&#13;
two individuals to determine&#13;
what the student population&#13;
should or should not do with&#13;
their free time. It is up to the&#13;
students themselves.&#13;
As a former member of the&#13;
Ranger staff I think that it is time&#13;
to stress the high points of Parkside.&#13;
Let us hear from some of&#13;
the student organizations. Show&#13;
us what some of the organization&#13;
have to offer us. Do a feature a&#13;
week on them . It should not be&#13;
so hard.&#13;
Believe me, I am not cutting&#13;
down the Ranger. It is having its&#13;
own problems getting the much&#13;
needed help. What I am doing is&#13;
giving a few suggestions so that&#13;
the students may find out what is&#13;
going on. I don't think that any&#13;
organization is asking for your&#13;
full 100% free time. But rather a&#13;
couple of hours a week to help&#13;
out once in a while.&#13;
Come on every one. Let us cut&#13;
out the mud slinging and the&#13;
back stabbing and work together&#13;
for a change. Who knows, maybe&#13;
you will get to like Parkside and&#13;
what it has to offer.&#13;
John A. Gabriel&#13;
P.S. If you would like at least 30&#13;
good reasons to go to Parkside, I&#13;
would suggest seeing Prof. Gerry&#13;
Greenfield . He would be most&#13;
willing to tell you.&#13;
United Council Legislative Update&#13;
AB 325 - The decriminalization of marijuana bill was referred to&#13;
the State Affairs Committee, effectively killing bill for this legislative&#13;
session. The vote of 54-11 came after minimal debate and Just&#13;
minutes before the Assembly adjourned until next January (or until&#13;
the Special Session, if held). There seems little hope for passage_ of&#13;
any decriminalization bill until the next legislature goes into session&#13;
in January of 1979 United Council strongly supported this bill, but&#13;
the response from the campuses was not strong. AB 325 would have&#13;
removed criminal penalties and created civil penalties for the&#13;
personal possession of two ounces of marijuana, with a maxiumum&#13;
fine of $50. AB 181 255 318 et al. - Assembly bills to raise the legal drinking •&#13;
age to 19' united Council has consistently opposed these bills, and&#13;
will testify against them once again. The UC position is that these&#13;
bills would encroach on the hard won age of maiority rights , and do&#13;
nothing to help alcohol abuse. _ .&#13;
SB 289, 335, 363 - The faculty collective bargaining bills, having&#13;
lain dormant since being introduced last April, may now see some&#13;
action . The Regents discussed the issue in a wide ranging hearing last&#13;
week, at which UC testified concerning the necessity for student&#13;
involvement in the process .&#13;
Having met with Senate Labor Committee Chairman Tim Cullen,&#13;
UC President Jim Eagon and lobbyist Rob Stevens are confident that&#13;
student concerns will be addressed in any bill reported out of&#13;
committee. Currently, the UC Executive Board is ready to ~uppmt&#13;
faculty and'academic stc1ff collective bargaining enabling leg1slat1on&#13;
that adequately protects student governance rights .&#13;
I'&#13;
'Personalised&#13;
Barbering&#13;
MEN WOMAN CHILDREN&#13;
PH. 658-8384&#13;
APPOINTMENT&#13;
You say you are opposed to&#13;
people infringing on others'&#13;
rights. That is an excellent&#13;
position and I commend you for&#13;
~~ NANCY RINALDI&#13;
,..&#13;
...&#13;
1902-SOth STREET&#13;
YES! INTERNATIONAL SPEED READING COURSE WILL BE&#13;
TAUGHT HERE IN THE RACINE-KENOSHA AREA&#13;
National Reading Enrichment&#13;
Institute (a non profit organization)&#13;
will offer a 4 week course in speed&#13;
reading to a limited number of&#13;
qualified people in the KenoshaRacine&#13;
area. NREI panoramic&#13;
method of instruction is the most&#13;
innovative and effective program&#13;
available in the United States. Not&#13;
only does this famous course reduce&#13;
your time in the classroom to just&#13;
one class per week for 4 short weeks&#13;
but it also includes an advance speed&#13;
reading course on cassette tape so&#13;
that you can continue to improve for&#13;
the rest of your life. In just four&#13;
weeks the average student should be&#13;
reading 3 to 10 times faster. In a few&#13;
months some students are reading&#13;
20 to 30 times faster obtaining speeds&#13;
that approach 6000 words per&#13;
minute. In their instances speeds up&#13;
to 20,000words per minute have been&#13;
documented.&#13;
Our Average graduate reads 3 to&#13;
l0times faster upon completion with&#13;
greatly increased comprehension&#13;
and concentration. For those who&#13;
would like additional information&#13;
ar'ld series of FREE 1 - hour orientation&#13;
lectures have been scheduled.&#13;
At the free meetings the course will&#13;
be explained in cor:rplete detail&#13;
including classroom procedures,&#13;
instruction methods, class schedule&#13;
and a special intr:oductory tuition&#13;
that is one half the cost of similar&#13;
courses. You must attend any one of&#13;
these meetings for information&#13;
about classes.&#13;
These orientations are opened to&#13;
the public above age 14 (persons&#13;
under 18 should be accompanied by&#13;
a parent if possible). If you have&#13;
always wanted to be a speed reader&#13;
but found the cost prohibitive or the&#13;
course too time consuming ... Now&#13;
you can, just by attending one evening&#13;
per week for four short weeks&#13;
read 3 to 10 times faster with greater&#13;
comprehension and concentration.&#13;
If you are a student who would like&#13;
to make A's instead of B's or C's, or&#13;
if you are a business person who&#13;
wants to stay abreast of todays&#13;
everchanging accelerating world&#13;
then this cotsrse Is an absolute must.&#13;
These special THREE one hour&#13;
meetings will be held at the&#13;
following times and places in the&#13;
Kenosha-Racine area : Monday,&#13;
November 7th, two meetings, one at&#13;
6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m. and&#13;
Tuesday, November 8th, two&#13;
meetings, one at 6: 30 p.m. and again&#13;
at 8: 30 p.m. Wednesday, two&#13;
meetings, one at 6: 30 p.m. and again&#13;
at 8: 30 p.m., Wednesday, two&#13;
meetings, one at 6: 30 p.m. and again&#13;
8:30 p.m.&#13;
TWO FINAL MEETINGS&#13;
Thursday, November 3rd, one at&#13;
6:30 p.m. and another at 8:30 p.m.&#13;
These meetings will be held In the&#13;
Holiciay Inn at 5125-6th Street ln&#13;
Kenosha. If you are a businessman,&#13;
a student, housewife, or executive -&#13;
this course, which took ye rs of&#13;
intensive research to develop Is a&#13;
must, you can read 3 to 10 times&#13;
faster, comprehend more, concentrate&#13;
better, and remember&#13;
longer. Th is course can be taught to&#13;
industry or civic groups at group&#13;
rates upon request. Be sure to attend&#13;
whichever free orientation that fits&#13;
in your schedule. REMEMBER&#13;
TUITION FOR THIS COURSE IS&#13;
ONE HALF THAT OF SIMILAR&#13;
COURSES, MONEY SPENT IN&#13;
SELF-IMPROVEMENT IS NOT AN&#13;
EXPENSE IT IS AN INVESTMENT.&#13;
MAKE AN INVESTMENT&#13;
TODAY.&#13;
.&#13;
I &#13;
news/space&#13;
Construction provides&#13;
office space 'for&#13;
student organizations&#13;
would be in easy access if the&#13;
students had questions or were&#13;
just curious about these- clubs.&#13;
If you have been down in the The bad part, according til&#13;
Coffee Shoppe lately you may· Galbraith, was the fear of closing&#13;
have wondered what all the up Main Place. The use of glass&#13;
construction was for. has preserved the open feeling&#13;
After talking to Jim Galbraith, that is the main attraction to&#13;
Director of Planning and Main Place.&#13;
Construction, many of the The Academic Skills and&#13;
unanswered questions that are I Student Development Offices&#13;
floating around were answered.' are being moved. Academic"&#13;
The basic problem according Skills has already been moved to&#13;
to Galbraith is that 'when the the '01 level of the WLLC and&#13;
'Student Union was b\lilt~there Student Development will move&#13;
wasn't enough space to .lit in all into the. area which Academic&#13;
oftheorpnizationsthatwanted Skills vacated. This will&#13;
to be located in there. After hopefully make students more&#13;
much deliberation, the Campus willing to go and seek help when&#13;
Planning Commtttee ~decided they need or want it, said&#13;
that being located in Main Place Galbraith.&#13;
was the answer for these The big question is "What·&#13;
organizations. about the Coffee'Shoppe!" It will&#13;
This idea had both its good remain open for student&#13;
and bad points, said Galbraith. convenience. I&#13;
The good is that student The target date to finish the&#13;
functions like P.S.G.A., and the construction work and have the&#13;
Ranger would be in the hub of offices filled is about January 16,&#13;
the student activities. They 1978.&#13;
WlIIlIIlllIIllllllIIHltlllllllllllnlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll1111I1II~1II1111!!!&#13;
~ WHO ME? A BLOOO OONOR? ~&#13;
= =&#13;
I ~&#13;
I WALK·IN·BLOOD·DRIVE I&#13;
II WEDNESDAY,NOVEMBER 9th ~ I 10:00·4:00 i&#13;
= = § UNION 104 &amp; 105 §&#13;
I No appointment necessary I&#13;
I&#13;
FOR INFORMATION CALL I&#13;
THE CAMPUS HEALTH OffiCE ;;&#13;
553-2366 PLEASE CONSIDER IT... §&#13;
111111111111_1Rt1l11111111111111111111111ll1ll1ll11l1l11ll11ll11l1111l1111II1II1I111II1111111I111I§&#13;
by Mary Lasswell&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Chlwaulcee Prairie/Harris Tract&#13;
4&#13;
/ I&#13;
. . . - .&#13;
Committee Investigates&#13;
Parkside's natural areas&#13;
by John D. Hoefflin&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
'A. visit was made to the Chi-"&#13;
waukee Prairie by the Environmental&#13;
Concerns Committee last&#13;
Tuesday morning. The purpose&#13;
of the trip was to investigate&#13;
damage done to the area by&#13;
molorcylces and other off-road&#13;
vehicles. People have been&#13;
trespassing and riding on the&#13;
land for the past few .vears.&#13;
Previous attempts to discourage&#13;
riders by building fences have&#13;
failed, and the committee is&#13;
considering possible alternative&#13;
solutions.&#13;
This problem is of major&#13;
concern to the committee&#13;
because the Chiwaukee Prairie,&#13;
which is under Parkside ownership&#13;
and care, is considered to&#13;
be the last area of its size in the&#13;
Midwest that has never been&#13;
tampered with by man. It is also&#13;
one of the few examples of a&#13;
"wet prairie" left in the United&#13;
States. According to Professor&#13;
Eugene Casiorkiewicz, Environmental&#13;
Concerns Committee&#13;
Chairman.' the main problem is&#13;
how to "maintain the integrity of&#13;
this area without molestation."&#13;
He went on to sav, "Just as we&#13;
must put fences around zoos to&#13;
keep the wild animals in, now we&#13;
must put up fences to keep man&#13;
out." The Chiwaukee Prairie has&#13;
been designated a Natural&#13;
Scientific Area by the State&#13;
Preservation Council and the&#13;
Department of Natural Resources&#13;
in Wisconsin. It has also been&#13;
declared a National Monument&#13;
under the provisions of the&#13;
Department of tile Interior.&#13;
The damages done to the area&#13;
include the cutting of fences and&#13;
wide trails left by motorcycles&#13;
and dune buggies. Fences were&#13;
;rso pushed over in several&#13;
places. Unfortunately for one&#13;
vandal, when he drove over the&#13;
fence, his license plate was torn&#13;
off and was left at the si,te.It is&#13;
now being traced; and charges&#13;
wi II be brought against the&#13;
owner of the vehicle.&#13;
Possible solutions being considered&#13;
include stronger fences,&#13;
trenches, posts sunk in the&#13;
ground, and the posting of signs&#13;
warning of fines far trespassing.&#13;
The committee would also like&#13;
to see more regular patrolling of&#13;
the area by Sheriff's squads, and&#13;
....possibly, some arrests.According&#13;
to Kenosha Sheriff Deputy Hardy&#13;
Schmalfeldt, "Parkside Security&#13;
has made a blanket request that&#13;
if we find anyone on the prairie,&#13;
then we can take appropriate&#13;
action."&#13;
- -&#13;
_Pluto discovery a coincidence?&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
"Ever since celestial mechanics in the skillful&#13;
hands of Leverrier and Adams led to the discovery&#13;
of Neptune, a belief has existed begotten of that&#13;
success that still other planets lay beyond, only&#13;
waiting to be found," wrote Percival lowell in his&#13;
Memoir on a Trans-Neptunian Planet, published in&#13;
1915,&#13;
Lowell proceeded to caution against simple&#13;
wishful thinking; but in that now-famous Memoir&#13;
he himself claimed to have evidence for a "Planet&#13;
X" lying beyond Neptune and Making itself evident&#13;
through gravitional influe~.&#13;
Discoverer dies&#13;
lowell was not exactly laughed at, but neither&#13;
was he taken at his word.~A wealthy Bostonian,&#13;
Lowell was .undeterred by the public's apathy,&#13;
because he owned his own observatory, Lowell&#13;
Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona. He' went ...there&#13;
and dedicated his time and energy to proving his&#13;
theory single-handedly; but, having proved&#13;
nothing, he died only a year- later. His quest,&#13;
however, had become a matter of family honor and&#13;
dedication. The Lowell Observatory would carry on&#13;
in his name.&#13;
Family canies on research&#13;
From 1916on, the problem was not so much that&#13;
of locating "Planet X" as it was that of acquiring&#13;
telescopesand cameras sensetive enough to record&#13;
the dim and distant object expected to be only in&#13;
about 15th magnitude (a correct assumption).&#13;
In 1925, observatory trustee Cuy Lowell bought,&#13;
with his own money, a component that promised&#13;
success: a rough 13-inch disc that had to be&#13;
polished into a-finished lens. But Cuy died before&#13;
the task could be completed, and another member&#13;
of the family, Percival's brother, A. Lawerence&#13;
Lowell, then President of Harvard, took up the&#13;
torch in 1927. He contributed the funds needed to&#13;
complete the telescope-camera assembly.&#13;
Once operational, the photo-telescope had to be&#13;
manned constantly, and hundreds of photographic&#13;
plates had to be collected and compared. The task&#13;
fell to an apprentice in Flagstaff, Clyde Tornbaugh,&#13;
a 23-year-old astronomy lover who could not afford&#13;
a college education. '&#13;
Discovery earns a scholarship&#13;
After he had been plate-making for nearly a year,&#13;
Clyde finally saw something meaningful on two of&#13;
his plates: a tiny point of light wasn't at the same&#13;
position two nights in a row. Clyde has discovered&#13;
"Planet X", and won himself a scholarship to&#13;
college.&#13;
The unnamed planet conformed so closely to&#13;
what Lowell had predicted for it that no onehas&#13;
seriously considered the prediction and the&#13;
discovery mearly a coincidence. Planet X soon&#13;
became Pluto, named by a eleven year old girl,&#13;
according to a persistent story, after the god of&#13;
darkness.&#13;
The discovery of Pluto was announced on March&#13;
13, 1930, on the double anniversaries of Percival&#13;
Lowell's birth and William Herschel's 1781&#13;
discovery of the planet Uranus.&#13;
Pluto is still a mystery&#13;
$0 little is known about Pluto that it would seem&#13;
more appropriate to continue calling it Planet X.&#13;
And much of what we do know is perplexing. It is&#13;
now understood that Pluto is a terrestrial rather&#13;
than a gaseous planet in defiance of the accepted&#13;
planetological theory that outer planets should be&#13;
composed primarily of gases. Also, the orbit of&#13;
Pluto is so erratic that some of the time (currently&#13;
as a matter of fact) it is nearer to the sun than&#13;
Neptune. Many believe Pluto to be a errant satellite&#13;
of Neptune or Uranus. ",&#13;
"Pluto," saysspacescape'artist Don Dixon, "is so&#13;
-ter away that we can do little but guess about its&#13;
nature."&#13;
Even a guess, however, must be based upon&#13;
whatever knowledge IS available. Dixon,&#13;
determined t9 be as accurate as possible, has&#13;
reasonedthat the planet "many be Gold enough to&#13;
have placid lakes of liquid methane, unrippled by&#13;
tides or weather."&#13;
news/.space&#13;
Construction pro·vides&#13;
off ice space ·for&#13;
student organizations&#13;
by Mary Lasswell&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
If you have been down in the&#13;
Coffee Shoppe lately you may&#13;
have wondered what all the&#13;
construction was for.&#13;
After talking to Jim Galbraith,&#13;
Director of Planning and&#13;
Constructio·n, many of the&#13;
unanswered questions that ar~&#13;
floating around were answered.&#13;
The basic problem according&#13;
to Galbraith is that when the&#13;
Student Union Wa$· liuilt.there&#13;
wasn't enough space to fit in .all&#13;
of the organizations t~at wanted&#13;
to be located in there: After&#13;
much deliberation, the Campus&#13;
Planning Committee _decided&#13;
that being located in Main Place&#13;
was the answer for these&#13;
organizations.&#13;
This idea had both its good&#13;
and bad points, said Galbraith.&#13;
The good is that student&#13;
functions like P.S.G.A., and the&#13;
Ranger would be in the hub of&#13;
the student activities. They&#13;
would be in easy access if the&#13;
students had questions or were&#13;
just curious about these clubs.&#13;
The bad part, according tQ&#13;
Galbraith, was the fear of closing&#13;
up Main Place. The use of glass&#13;
has preserved the open feeling&#13;
that is the main attraction to&#13;
Main Place.&#13;
The Ac~demic Skills and&#13;
Student Development Offices&#13;
are being moved. Academic&#13;
Skills has already been moved to&#13;
the 'r&gt;1 level of the WLLC and&#13;
Studeot-Development will move&#13;
into the area which Academic&#13;
Skills vacated . This will&#13;
hopefully make students more&#13;
willing to go and seek help when&#13;
they need or want it, said&#13;
Galbraith. .&#13;
The big question is "What ·&#13;
about the Coffee·Shoppe?" It will&#13;
remain open for student&#13;
convenience. ,&#13;
The target date to finish the&#13;
construction work and have the&#13;
offices filled is about January 16,&#13;
1978.&#13;
WIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~&#13;
§ WHO ME? A BLOOD DONOR? §&#13;
WALK-IN-BLOOD-DRIVE&#13;
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 9th&#13;
10:00 - 4:00&#13;
UNION 104 &amp; 105&#13;
i No appointment necessary i&#13;
I FOR INFORMATION CALL i&#13;
I THE CAMPUS HEAL TH OFACE ~ I · 553-2366 PLEASE CONSIDER IT... ii§&#13;
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllllllllllllll5&#13;
~ IT/ OW-Parkside&#13;
~,, Semester Break Jan. 6-1 i, 1978&#13;
.IAMAlr.A&#13;
*299&#13;
Chlwaukee Prairie/Harris Tract&#13;
. . . - .&#13;
·committee 1nvest1gates&#13;
Parkside' s natural areas&#13;
by John D. Hoefflin&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
I'&#13;
'A visit was made to the Chiwaukee&#13;
Prairie by the Environmental&#13;
Concerns Committee last&#13;
Tu_esday morning. The purpose&#13;
of the trip _ was to investigate&#13;
damage done to the area by&#13;
mo'torcylces and other off-road&#13;
vehicles. .People have been&#13;
trespassing and riding on the&#13;
land for the past few years.&#13;
Previous attempts to discourage&#13;
riders by building fences have&#13;
failed, and the committee is&#13;
considering possible alternative&#13;
solutions.&#13;
This problem is of major&#13;
concern to the committee&#13;
because the Chiwaukee Prairie,&#13;
which is under Parkside ownership&#13;
and care, is considered to&#13;
be.the last area of its size in the&#13;
Midwest that has never been&#13;
tampered with by man. It is also&#13;
one of the few examples of a&#13;
"wet prairie" left in the United&#13;
States. According to Professor&#13;
Eugene Gasiorkiewicz, Environmental&#13;
Concerns Committee&#13;
Chairman,· the main problem is&#13;
how to "maintain the integrity of&#13;
this area without molestation."&#13;
He went on to say, " Just as we&#13;
must put fences around zoos to&#13;
keep the wild animals in, now we&#13;
must put up fences to keep man&#13;
out." The Chiwaukee Prairie has&#13;
been designated a Natural&#13;
Scientific Area by the State&#13;
Preserv~tion Council and the&#13;
Department of Natural Resources&#13;
in Wisconsin. It has also been&#13;
declared a National Monument&#13;
under the provisions of the&#13;
Department of the Interior.&#13;
and dune buggies. Fences were&#13;
.Jso pushed over in several&#13;
places. l:lnfortunately for one&#13;
vandal, when he drove over the&#13;
fence, his license plate was torn&#13;
off and was left at the si,te. It is&#13;
now being traced, and charges&#13;
will be brought against the&#13;
owner of the vehicle.&#13;
Possible solutions being considered&#13;
include stronger fences,&#13;
trenches, posts sunk in the&#13;
ground, and the posting of signs&#13;
warning of fines for trespassing.&#13;
The committee would also like&#13;
to see more regular patrolling of&#13;
the area by Sheriff's squads, a.nd&#13;
, possibly, some arrests. According&#13;
to Kenosha Sheriff Deputy Hardy&#13;
Schmalfeldt, " Parkside Security&#13;
has made a blanket request that&#13;
if we find anyone on the prairie,&#13;
then we can take appropriate&#13;
action."&#13;
The damages done to the area&#13;
include the cutting of fences and&#13;
wide trails left by motorcycles&#13;
Pluto discovery a coincidence?&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
" Ever since celestial mechanics in the skillful&#13;
hands of Leverrier and Adams led to the discovery&#13;
of Neptune, a belief has existed begotten of that&#13;
success that still other planets lay beyond, only&#13;
waiting to be found," wrote Percival Lowell in his&#13;
Memoir on a Trans-Neptunian Planet, published in&#13;
1915.&#13;
Lowell proceeded to caution against simple&#13;
wishful thinking; but in that now-famous Memoir&#13;
he himself claimed to have evidence for a " Planet&#13;
X" lying beyond Neptune and Making itself evident&#13;
through gravitional influeii'ces.&#13;
Discoverer dies&#13;
Lowell was not exactly laughed at, but neither&#13;
was he taken at his word. -A wealthy Bostonian,&#13;
Lowell was -undeterred by the public's apathy,&#13;
because he owned his own observatory, Lowell&#13;
Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona. He' went -there&#13;
and dedicated his time and energy to proving his&#13;
theory si ngle-handedly; but, having proved&#13;
nothing, he died only a year- later. His quest,&#13;
however, had become a matter of family honor and&#13;
dedication. The Lowell Observatory would carry on&#13;
in his name.&#13;
Family carries on research .&#13;
From 1916 on, the problem was not so much that&#13;
of locating "Planet X" as it was that of acquiring&#13;
telescopes and cameras sensetive enough to record&#13;
the dim and distant object expected to be only in&#13;
about 15th magnitude (a correct assumption).&#13;
In 1925, observatory trustee Guy Lowell bought,&#13;
with his own money, a component that promised&#13;
success: a rough 13-inch disc that had to be&#13;
polished into a .finished lens. Bµt Guy died before&#13;
the task could be completed, and another member&#13;
of the fami ly, Percival's brother, A. Lawerence&#13;
Lowell, then President of Harvard, took up the&#13;
torch in 1927. He contributed the funds needed to&#13;
complete the telescope-camera assembly.&#13;
Once operational, the photo-telescope had to be&#13;
manned constantly, and hundreds of photographic&#13;
plates had to be collected and compared . The task&#13;
fell to an apprentice in Flagstaff, Clyde Tombaugh,&#13;
a 23-year-old astronomy lover who could not afford&#13;
a college education. '&#13;
Discovery earns a scholarship&#13;
After he had been plate-making for nearly a year,&#13;
Clyde finally saw something meaningful on two of&#13;
his plates: a tiny point of light wasn't at the same&#13;
position two nights in a row. Clyde has discovered&#13;
" Planet X", and won himself a scholarship to&#13;
college.&#13;
The unnamed planet conformed so closely to&#13;
what Lowell hacf predicted for it that no one.has&#13;
seriously considered the prediction and the&#13;
discovery mearly a coincidence. Planet X soon&#13;
became Pluto, named by a eleven year old girl,&#13;
according to a persistent story, after the god of&#13;
darkness.&#13;
The discovery of Pluto was announced on March&#13;
13, 1930, on the double anniversaries of Percival&#13;
Lowell's birth and William Herschel's 1781&#13;
discovery of the planet Uranus.&#13;
Pluto is still a mystery&#13;
So little is known about Pluto that it would seem&#13;
more appropriate to continue calling it Planet X.&#13;
And much of what we do know is perplexing. It is&#13;
now understood that Pluto is a terr-estrial rather&#13;
than a gaseous planet in defiance of the accepted&#13;
planetological theory that outer planets should be&#13;
composed primarily of gases. Also, the orbit of&#13;
Pluto is so erratic that some of the time (currently&#13;
as a matter of fact) it is nearer to the sun than&#13;
Neptune.Many helie~e Pluto to be a errant satellite&#13;
of Neptune or Uranus. '&#13;
" Pluto," says spacescape -artfst Don Dixon, "is so&#13;
-tar away that we can do little but guess about its&#13;
nature."&#13;
Even a gues~, however, must be based upon&#13;
whatever knowledge Is avai lable . Dixon,&#13;
determined to be as accurate as possible, has&#13;
reasoned that t he planet " many be c;;old enough to&#13;
have placid lakes of liquid methane, unrippled by&#13;
tides or weather." &#13;
Volleyball team&#13;
wins invitational&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
•&#13;
On Friday, October 21, the&#13;
Parkside Women's Volleyball&#13;
team traveled to the 2nd Annual&#13;
Whitewater Invitational, to bring&#13;
home the first place trophy of&#13;
the two-day tournament.&#13;
In pool play the Rangers won&#13;
three out of four, 11 point two&#13;
game matches. They defeated&#13;
Rock Valley 11-5~ 11-6; Marquette&#13;
11-8, 11-4; and UWOshkosh&#13;
8-11,11-6,12-10. Their&#13;
only loss being to U~-Platteville&#13;
11-0, 1-11, 5-11. In the&#13;
semi-finals Parkside defeated&#13;
Whitewater 8-15,15-6,15-5, in a&#13;
two out of three match. In the&#13;
finals, the Rangers again met&#13;
UW-Qshkosh in a three out of&#13;
five game match. Parkside beat&#13;
them rapidly, winning three&#13;
straight games 15-7, 15-7, 15-12;&#13;
to capture first place .&#13;
In a triangular meet at&#13;
Parkside, tuesday, October 26,&#13;
the Rangers met lewis University&#13;
and Carroll College. In the first&#13;
round of play, UW-P was beat by&#13;
lewis 11-5, 15-13, 0-15. The&#13;
Parks ide ,players were not&#13;
working very well together, and&#13;
Parkside spirit&#13;
born or reborn&#13;
by Mary Lasswell&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Parkside's school -spint is&#13;
being reborn. This veal twentythree&#13;
girls tried out to fill the&#13;
eight openings on the cheer-,.&#13;
leading squad. Two girls were&#13;
held over from last year's squad.&#13;
They are Debbie Catlett and&#13;
Crystal McCoy. Six girls were&#13;
chosen to be regulars on the&#13;
squad. They are Lowrie Melotik,&#13;
lynn Sage, Noreen Myers,&#13;
PamelaMitchell, Cindy Johnson&#13;
and Shiela Taylor. The two&#13;
alternates are Sheryl Setum and&#13;
Cheviere lomax.&#13;
The judges, Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Johnson, Barb Lawson, linda&#13;
Draft, SuO' Tobachnik and&#13;
Adviser Shirly Smirling awarded&#13;
each girls points on how well&#13;
they did in each event, The&#13;
events they were judged on&#13;
were: how well they did a group&#13;
cheer, a cartwheel, a solo cheer&#13;
of their choice, a solo stunt, and&#13;
their overall appearance. The&#13;
girls with the eight highest&#13;
scores were awarded the&#13;
positions.&#13;
The cheerleaders will, be&#13;
cheering for the basketball&#13;
games and traveling with the&#13;
team to Some of the away games.&#13;
They will also cheer at the major&#13;
track, swimming and tencing&#13;
events '&#13;
lost many of their serves into the&#13;
net. In second round action,&#13;
Lewis went on to also defeat&#13;
Carroll 15-12, 12-15, 15-10. In the&#13;
final round of play found'&#13;
Parks ide vs. Carroll, with the&#13;
Rangers ready for revenge after&#13;
their loss to Carroll -a few&#13;
weekends back. In a very well&#13;
played volleyball match, from&#13;
Parkside's stendpotnt, they&#13;
defeated Carroll in two games&#13;
straight 15-7, 15-10.&#13;
In speaking with Coach Draft,&#13;
she commented "We seemed to&#13;
be a slow starting team, our&#13;
second match is always better&#13;
than our first. We'll be working&#13;
on this and trying to overcome it&#13;
before the state tournament,&#13;
November 11 and 12. One good&#13;
point is that the team again&#13;
demonstrated' its ability "to pull&#13;
together when they are down "&#13;
The Volleyball team's next&#13;
match will be another triangular&#13;
at home, on Friday, November 4&#13;
at 6;30 p.m. at the P.E. Bldg.&#13;
They'll by playing against North&#13;
Central and lake Forrest" both&#13;
teams are from Illinois.&#13;
sports&#13;
Parbide .occer team lo.e. to IUinoi.&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
shoulder, which means its&#13;
doubtful ,f he'll be back m time&#13;
to finish out the season&#13;
According to Coach Hal&#13;
Henderson, "We played a&#13;
basically defensive game. The&#13;
team played very well even&#13;
though they lost, we were JUst&#13;
-out matched" Their next game&#13;
will be for the Dutrict&#13;
championship against Platteville,&#13;
at 1200 Saturday,&#13;
November 5, to be played there&#13;
If they Win they'll be traveling to&#13;
Minnesota for the regronal&#13;
playoffs.&#13;
On Saturday, October 22nd,&#13;
the Parks Ide Soccer players were&#13;
beat by nationally ranked&#13;
Eastern lllmors by a score of 5-0,&#13;
here at Parkside&#13;
Parkside's defense started the&#13;
game well, holding the score to&#13;
0-0 for the first 30 minutes of&#13;
play By the end of the first hall&#13;
though, Parks ide was down 2-0,&#13;
and In the end lost 5-0. Yet the&#13;
biggest loss carne in the last few&#13;
minutes of play when goalie Dan&#13;
Brieschke re-seoer ated hIS&#13;
ISHIRTS+&#13;
SHORECREST SHOPPING CENTER&#13;
3900 Erie Street. Racine 414-639-6882&#13;
Open Daily 9am-9pm&#13;
Saturday 9am-5: 30pm&#13;
3. Three word. containing 5 "e's":&#13;
Your challenge is to spell a word, or words, using the letters shown below.&#13;
Each word must contain the letter the indicated number of times.&#13;
2. A word containing 5 "a's":&#13;
4. Fo~r word. containing 4 "o's":&#13;
5. Two word. containing 4 ..u' ... :&#13;
When there's a challenge,&#13;
quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope 90u have some fun with the .challenge.&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon is the Number 1 beer In&#13;
Milwaukee: beer capital of the world. .&#13;
That's why we have the confidence to Issue&#13;
another challenge-the Pabst challenge. Taste and&#13;
compare Pabst Blue Ribbon to any other prem,u,!,&#13;
beer. You'll like Pabst because Blue Ribbon quality&#13;
means the best-tasting beer you can gel. _&#13;
Since 1844 it always has.&#13;
PABST. Since 1844. The quality has always come through.&#13;
PABST BREWING COMPANY, M'lwaukee. W,s Peo"a HeIghts. III Newark. N J, los Angeles Cal,I Pabst. Geo'gla&#13;
snoru nurru 'Srl0lndnJ::&gt;sun 'i WOOJlOOll::&gt;S'wooJ"IIooq 'jOOl$IOO, ',oOJdIOO.:l .-&#13;
Jada.np~k 'a::&gt;uapuadapJalu, 'a::&gt;ua:lU"Jal'3 £ e'QlI'pl:lelqy c: ~llIiQISIMPU. l :' •• IUY&#13;
sports&#13;
Vol-leyball team&#13;
wins invitational&#13;
Parkside soccer team loses to lllinoi&#13;
b Alane Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
On Saturda Octob r 22nd,&#13;
the Parkside Soccer pla ers were&#13;
beat b nationally ranked&#13;
Eastern Illinois by a scor of 5-0,&#13;
here at Parkside&#13;
Parks,de's defense started the&#13;
game well, holding the score to&#13;
0-0 for the first 30 minute of&#13;
play By the end of the first half&#13;
though, Parkside was down 2-0,&#13;
and in the end lost 5-0. Yet the&#13;
biggest loss came m th last few&#13;
minutes of play when goalie Dan&#13;
Brieschke re-separated his&#13;
hould r, wh, h m an ,t&#13;
doubtful 1f he'll b b in time&#13;
to finish out th on&#13;
Coach Hal&#13;
play d a&#13;
ame Th&#13;
II v n&#13;
champion hip a am t&#13;
die, at 12 00 aturda •,&#13;
ov mb r 5, to be play d th re.&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
On Friday, October 21, the&#13;
Parkside Women's Volleyball&#13;
team traveled to the 2nd Annual&#13;
Whitewater Invitational, to bring&#13;
home the first place trophy of&#13;
the two-day tournament.&#13;
In pool play the Rangers won&#13;
three out of four, 11 point two&#13;
game matches_. They defeated&#13;
Rock Valley 11-5, 11-6; Marquette&#13;
11-8, 11-4; and UWOshkosh&#13;
8-11, 11-6, 12-10. Their&#13;
only loss being to UW-Platteville&#13;
11-0, 1-11, 5-11. In the&#13;
semi-finals Parkside defeated&#13;
Whitewater 8-15, 15-6, 15-5, in a&#13;
two out of three match. In the&#13;
finals, the Rangers again met&#13;
UW-Oshkosh in a three out of&#13;
five game match. Parkside beat&#13;
them rapidly, winning three&#13;
straight games 15-7, 15-7, 15-12;&#13;
to capture first place.&#13;
In a triangular meet at&#13;
Parkside, tuesday, October 26,&#13;
the Rangers met Lewis University&#13;
--i.nd Carroll Coll.ege. In the first&#13;
round of play, UW-P was beat by&#13;
Lewis 11-5, 15-13, 0-15. The&#13;
Parkside , players were not&#13;
working very well together, and&#13;
Parkside spirit&#13;
born or re born&#13;
by Mary Lasswell&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Parkside's school --spirit ,s&#13;
being reborn. This year twentythree&#13;
girls tried out to fill the&#13;
eight openings on the cheerleading&#13;
squad . Two girls were'&#13;
held over from last year's squad.&#13;
They are Debbie Catlatt and&#13;
Crystal McCoy . Six girls were&#13;
chosen to be regulars on the&#13;
squad. They are Lowrie Melotik,&#13;
Lynn Sage , Noreen Myers,&#13;
Pamela Mitchell, Cindy Johnson&#13;
and Shiela Taylor. The two&#13;
alternates are Sheryl Setum and&#13;
Cheviere Lomax.&#13;
The judges, Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Johnson, Barb Lawson, Linda&#13;
Draft, Sue Tobachnik and&#13;
Adviser Shirly Smirling awarded&#13;
each girls points on how well&#13;
they did in each event. The&#13;
events they were judged on&#13;
were: how well they did a group&#13;
cheer, a cartwheel, a solo cheer&#13;
of their choice, a solo stunt, and&#13;
their overall appearance. The&#13;
girls with the eight highest&#13;
scores were awarded the&#13;
positions.&#13;
The cheerleaders wi II be&#13;
cheering for the basketball&#13;
games and traveling with the&#13;
team to some of the away games.&#13;
They will also cheer at the major&#13;
track, swimming and tencing&#13;
P.vents.&#13;
If th • wm th ~11 be tra eling to •&#13;
Minnesota for the regional&#13;
pla offs&#13;
lost many of their serves into the&#13;
net. In second round action,&#13;
Lewis went on to also defeat&#13;
Carroll 15-12, 12-15, 15-10. In the&#13;
final round of play found&#13;
Parkside vs. Carroll, with the&#13;
Rangers ready for revenge after&#13;
their loss to Carroll ·a few&#13;
weekends back. In a very well&#13;
played volleyball match, from&#13;
Parkside's standpoint, they&#13;
defeated Carroll in two games&#13;
straight 15-7, 15-10.&#13;
second match is always better&#13;
than our first. We'll be working&#13;
on this and trying to overcome 1t&#13;
before the state tournament,&#13;
November 11 and 12. One good&#13;
point is that the team again&#13;
demonstrated its ability to pull&#13;
together when they are down ."&#13;
The Volleyball team's next&#13;
match will be another triangular&#13;
at home, on Friday, November 4&#13;
at 6:30 p .m. at the P.E. Bldg.&#13;
They'll by playing against North&#13;
Central and Lake Forrest,· both&#13;
teams are from Illinois.&#13;
ISHIRTS+&#13;
SHORECREST SHOPPING CENTER&#13;
In speaking with Coach Draft,&#13;
she commented "We seemed to&#13;
be a slow starting team, our&#13;
3900 Erie Str9et. Reane 414-639-6662&#13;
Open Daily 9am-9pm&#13;
Saturday 9am-5: 30pm I&#13;
Your challenge is to spel! a word, or words, using the letters shown below.&#13;
Each word must contain the letter the indicated number of times.&#13;
1. A word containing 6 "i's":&#13;
2. A word containing 5 "a's":&#13;
3. Three words containing 5 "e's" :&#13;
4. Four words containing 4 "o's":&#13;
5. Two words containing 4 "u's" :&#13;
When there's a challenge, quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope 9ou have some fun with the ~hallenge.&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon is the Number 1 beer in&#13;
Milwaukee: beer capital of the world. .&#13;
That's why we have the confidence to issue&#13;
another challenge-the Pabst challenge. Taste_and&#13;
compare Pabst Blue Ribbon to any other premium&#13;
beer. You'll like Pabst because Blue Ribbon quality&#13;
meaAs the best-tasting beer you can get.&#13;
Since 1844 it always has.&#13;
II&#13;
PABST. Since 1844. The quality has always come through. PABST BREWING COMPANY, Milwaukee w ,s Peoria He1gh1s . Ill ewark NJ Los Angeles . Catir Pabst. Georgia&#13;
snonunwn1 ·sno1ndn1:,sun c; woo,100~:,s ·woo, ooq ·100111001 ·,oo,d100.i • Htdaa)(aaq ·a:,uapuadapH:t1u1 ·a::,ua:,saA.HIJl3 t e,qepa:,e,qy z -'t111Cl1S1MPUt l ·,•••uw &#13;
news&#13;
,United Council supports&#13;
Student .Regent ,BiIlAB604&#13;
"&#13;
Reading:&#13;
no big deal?&#13;
(CPS) - College students are&#13;
no longer being asked to handle&#13;
as much required reading as their&#13;
counterparts of 15 or 20 years&#13;
ago, according to a sport survey&#13;
taken by the New York Times.&#13;
"Ten years ago, anyone&#13;
coming to college would have&#13;
read book, like 'Huckleberry&#13;
Finn,' or 'The Hunchback of&#13;
Notre Dame' but now they&#13;
haven't and what they do read&#13;
tends to be faddish, comtemporary&#13;
and of their own culture,"&#13;
said Perry Lentz, an assoctate "&#13;
professor of English at Kenyon&#13;
College in Ohio.&#13;
But some believe that the&#13;
situation is not as negative as it&#13;
appears.&#13;
"If we do read less, and I'm not&#13;
ready to concede this in every&#13;
case, it is partly a function that&#13;
we ask them to do more with&#13;
what they read," said William B.&#13;
Coley of the English department&#13;
at Wesleyan.&#13;
"I think students do more&#13;
interesting things ... " he said.&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR. YOU!&#13;
Come Today See \Ours.&#13;
quality comnercial printers&#13;
1417 50th sireet . 658-8990&#13;
At an Assembly Education Committee meeting Wednesday&#13;
October 19, United Council strongly supported AS 604, a bill that&#13;
would create student membership on the UW Board of Regents.&#13;
United Council CUe) legislative Affairs Director, Rob Stevens, told&#13;
the committee that there is a need for formal student participation on&#13;
the board. While emphasizing that the UW Regents and Central&#13;
Administration have a tradition of being open with United Council,&#13;
Stevens encouraged the committee "not to consider this matter of&#13;
access to the Board moot just because there is a tradition of relative&#13;
openness to student opinion. Students have a continuing struggle to&#13;
be listened to and taken seriously."&#13;
Student participation&#13;
United Council stated that there were three issues related to the&#13;
student regent proposal, the nature of a "constituent" board, student&#13;
accessto the beard, and the selection" of the students. The fear of the&#13;
Regents becoming a constituent board mired in interest group&#13;
rhetoric is not valid according to United Council. Student&#13;
membership would not increase the amount of board time devoted to&#13;
student issues unless there was a need for extended discussion.&#13;
Stevens remarked that "students are not a mere interest group in the&#13;
university decision making process." I&#13;
Both UC and Wisconsin Student Association (WSA) President Paul&#13;
Rusk stressed the need for formal student access to the Regents.&#13;
Present student involvement at the system wide level is informal and&#13;
"is dependent on the good will of the Regent'," said Rusk. "The&#13;
general make up of the Board can change, thus leaving the students&#13;
out in the cold; formal student membership on the Board will prevent&#13;
this." Stevens indicated that while the chancellors and faculty ha~e&#13;
their system-wide policy forums funded by the university, the&#13;
students have had to develop and fund their system-wide&#13;
involvement in governance out of their own pockets. "Students&#13;
should have formal access to the board in the interests of parity."&#13;
Precedent for student involvement&#13;
United Council also emphasized that the student regents would&#13;
have to be selected by students in order to be credible as s(udent&#13;
representatives. Stevens indicated that there is precedent for&#13;
ex-officio Regent membership in Wisconsin with the State&#13;
Superintendent of Schools and the VTAE Board President serving in&#13;
that capacity, and in both the SUNY (State Universities of New York)&#13;
and CUNY (City Universities of New York) systems the system student&#13;
association presidents serve as ex-officio student regents. In the two&#13;
California systems, Florida, Purdue, and Indiana, the student trustees&#13;
are chosen by the governor from a list of candidates submitted by the&#13;
students. Whoever the student regents are, they must be responsive,&#13;
and accountable to the students in the system.&#13;
UW-Centrat Administration representative Wally Lemon testified&#13;
in opposition to the bill on behalf of Regent John Lavine. In a letter&#13;
to the committee, Lavine related his experience with student&#13;
membership on the Board of Trustees of Coker College (Minnesota)&#13;
where, he felt the problems of "tokenism" and decreased diversity-of&#13;
student input were detrimental to student interests. Lavine&#13;
concluded that adequate student input to the board is best served by&#13;
maintaining the present system.&#13;
Rep. Dave Clarenbach, sponsor and author of A.B 604 told the&#13;
committee that students should have a significant role in the&#13;
university decision making- process. he felt that this was consistent&#13;
with the growing consumer movement, and that those who are most&#13;
affected by decisions should participate in making those decisions.&#13;
He urged the committee to recognize the need for, and importance&#13;
of student participation on the regent level, and pass AS 604.&#13;
Members of the Education Committee with universities in their&#13;
districts include Rep,. Flintrop (Oshkosh), Miller (Madi,on), and&#13;
Travis (Platteville).&#13;
Pie poli ics gaining&#13;
slapstick credibility&#13;
(CPS) - "Co ~o hell you asshole," said E. Howard Hunt, scraping Despite such forebears: pieing lacked, as Marx pointed out in his&#13;
the new politics off his face. Hunt had just been pied; a fate he shares "18th Brurnaire", a concrete praxis. It attained puberty one frigid day&#13;
with a stellar lineup stretching from Bill Buckley and Daniel in Washington DC, 'when Yippie Tom Fourcade blasted a member of&#13;
Moynihan to anti-feminist Phyllis Schlafly. the Presidential Commission on Obscenity and Pornography.&#13;
c This evolution from pastry to politics is not a recent phenomena. Although history records the year as 1970 it does not mention the&#13;
While some historians seepieing as a twentieth century update of the flavor of that historic pie. '&#13;
medieval custom of throwing the gauntlet, most trace its theoretical Lull in pieing&#13;
roots to the anarchic slapstick of Laurel &amp; Hardy and Soupy Sales. After Fourcade, pieing hit a lull. For years you would read of a few&#13;
\. . scattered pie-niks splattering this or that obnoxious luminary, but the Big brother whole thing seemed like another leftist confection and not the real&#13;
pap. Like the early sDs, it lacked a program.&#13;
t P d It was Aron Kay who. figuratively speaking, arrived on the sealed&#13;
a ur ue train and read the situation correctly. For three years Kay brooded&#13;
over Fourcade's historic heave. He brooded in the New York.Cttv&#13;
subwevs. he brooded over cappucino in the Village, he brooded at&#13;
the latest Warhol opening. Then, in 1973, he propelled a tentative,&#13;
first pie at guru-new Rennie Davis. He missed.&#13;
"Press the flesh"&#13;
A wiser and wilier Kay attributes the miss to poor tactics. "When&#13;
push comes to shove," he said, "you got to press the flesh and that&#13;
means there is no substitute for body contact. It's the only way I&#13;
know of to intensify the contradictions between the pie. and the&#13;
mighty." Like a good guerilla, the practiced pier needs patience,&#13;
surprise and an ability to fade comparable to a good pair of Levis.&#13;
Kay's west coast com padre is Frankie Lee, who specializes in the&#13;
personalized pie. He greeted the cerebral experimenter Jose Delgado&#13;
with a pie of cowbrains and tomato sauce. Eldridge Cleaver received&#13;
an oreo cream pie. "~hy do I do it," asks the rhecorical, introspective&#13;
Lee? "For one thing it's not as much work as organizing the working&#13;
class and its less boring,"&#13;
Pieticipatory democracy&#13;
Several proponents of pieticipatory democracy have come to grief&#13;
at th~ hands of humorless, enraged mobs. Pat Halley, who creamed&#13;
~ess.!ah Maharaj ji, had his skull fractured by a gang of premies.&#13;
Yippie Steve Coni iff, who polished off Ohio Covernor ~hodes faces a&#13;
possible seven months in jail. \ '{&#13;
C?ne plus for the politics of pie is media hype. The Vancouver&#13;
pieing of Eldridge Cleaver drew more coverage in Montreal papers&#13;
than a 10,000 strong union march held that same day in Montreal.&#13;
Aron Kay, who has parlayed his piepularity into the New York City&#13;
mayoral .race, inaugurated his campaign against incumbent Abe&#13;
B~ame With an apple crrumb pie and proclaimed that Beame was "the&#13;
biggest crllmb in. the big apple."&#13;
~), . N\~G\C&#13;
~ O~O.. ~\t'ee'&#13;
. \ ~4)\{\. '" ,tn3&#13;
Open 3Z.· ~\~_'5~3&#13;
Mon. &amp; Fri. ~ ..... .,.rioe. .A." ()34'- '&#13;
Noontii9~~(4~" ., '&#13;
Sat, Noon u f 5 '" 1V--&#13;
MAGIC TRiCKS - JOKES - NOVEL TIES&#13;
HAVE A FREE DRINK ON THE BEAN&#13;
With This Coupon.&#13;
1 Per Customer YOW IAA&#13;
- .Hours&#13;
M.;.. T&#13;
7 p.m••&#13;
lOp.m.&#13;
Tappers'&#13;
,.,~~ ....."'"- '25'&#13;
Ladies Night&#13;
Wed.&#13;
o. till Corner&#13;
of 57t11 &amp; 23 Aye&#13;
Mic.&#13;
35'&#13;
Mlxld Drinks&#13;
40'&#13;
(CPS) - Purdue University in&#13;
Lafayette, Ind. is using videotape&#13;
cameras to patrol crowds at&#13;
football game, .&#13;
The filmin'g lias been in&#13;
operation for two years but the&#13;
practice wai riot revealed until&#13;
one of the camera's victims&#13;
found out h~ was in movies.&#13;
Plirduf Police Chief Donald&#13;
lanes called the technique very&#13;
successful- in spotting illegal&#13;
alcohGI.andmarijuana use. The&#13;
camera also helped to assist&#13;
r:rnergency'situations that arose&#13;
at the games.&#13;
Early in October, eight people&#13;
were arrested and taken to jail on&#13;
dope charges, thanks to the&#13;
camera's roving eye. '&#13;
In addition to the camera&#13;
officers sit in the press box at the&#13;
footbal t games and scan the&#13;
crowd with binoculars.&#13;
The film, says Jones, is used as&#13;
evidence in Court. The taping is&#13;
legal and does not invade&#13;
privacy laws or constitute police&#13;
harrassment, according to Jones.&#13;
/&#13;
news&#13;
Reading:&#13;
no big deal?&#13;
(CPS) - College students are&#13;
no longer being asked to handle&#13;
as much required reading as their&#13;
counterparts of 15 or 20 years&#13;
ago, according to a sport survey&#13;
taken by the New York Times.&#13;
"Ten years ago, anyone&#13;
coming to college would have&#13;
read books like 'Huckleberry&#13;
Finn,' or 'The Hunchback of&#13;
Notre Dame' but now they&#13;
haven't and what they do read&#13;
tends to be faddish, comtempor-'&#13;
ary and of their own culture,"&#13;
said Perry Lentz, an associate&#13;
professor of English at Kenyon&#13;
College in Ohio.&#13;
But some believe that the&#13;
situation is not as negative as it&#13;
appears.&#13;
"If we do read less, and I'm not&#13;
ready to concede this in every&#13;
case, it is partly a function that&#13;
we ask them to do more with&#13;
what they read," said William B.&#13;
Coley of the English department&#13;
at Wesleyan.&#13;
"I think students do more&#13;
interesting things. " he said.&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR_ YOU!&#13;
.United Council supports ,,&#13;
Student ·Regent.Bill AB604&#13;
At an Assembly Education Committee meeting Wednesday&#13;
October 19, United Council strongly supported AB 604, a bill that&#13;
would create student membership on the UW Board of Regents.&#13;
United Council (UC) Legislative Affairs Director, Rob Stevens, told&#13;
the committee that there is a need for formal student participation on&#13;
the board. While emphasizing that the UW Regents and Central&#13;
Administration have a tradition of being open with United Council,&#13;
Stevens encouraged the committee "not to consider thfs matter of&#13;
access to the Board moot just because there is a tradition of relative&#13;
openness to student opinion Students have a continuing struggle to&#13;
be listened to and taken seriously."&#13;
Student participation&#13;
United Council stated that there were three issues related to the&#13;
student regent prop~sal, the nature of a "constituent" board, student&#13;
access to the ,board, and the selection of the students_ The fear of the&#13;
Regents becoming a constituent board mired in interest group&#13;
rhetoric is not valid according to United Council. Student&#13;
membership would not increase the amount of board time devoted to&#13;
student issues unless there was a need for extended discussion.&#13;
Stevens remarked that "students are not a mere interest group in the&#13;
university decision making process."&#13;
Both UC and Wisconsin Student Association (WSA) Presidenl Paul&#13;
Rusk stressed the need for formal student access to the Regents.&#13;
Present student involvement at the system wide level is informal and&#13;
"is dependent on the good will of the Regents," said Rusk. "The&#13;
general make up of the Board can change, thus leaving the students&#13;
out in the cold; formal student membership on the Board will prevent&#13;
this." Stevens indicated that while the chancellors and faculty ha~e&#13;
their system-wide policy forums funded by the university, the&#13;
students have had to develop and fund their system-wide&#13;
involvement in governance out of their own pockets. "Students&#13;
should have formal access to the board in the interests of parity."&#13;
Precedent for student involvement&#13;
United Council also emphasized that the student regents would&#13;
have to be selected by students in order to be credible as sfudent&#13;
representatives. Stevens indicated that there is precedent for&#13;
ex-officio Regent members.hip in Wisconsin with the State&#13;
Superintendent of Schools and the VT AE Board Pr~sident serving in&#13;
that capacity, and in both the SUNY (State Universities of New York)&#13;
and CUNY (City Universities of New York) systems the system student&#13;
association presidents serve as ex-officio student regents. In the t',Vo&#13;
California systems, Florida, Purdue, and Indiana, the student trustees&#13;
are chosen by the governor from a list of candidates submitted by the&#13;
students. Whoever the student regents are, they must be responsive,&#13;
and accountable to the students in the system.&#13;
UW-Central Administration representative Wally Lemon testified&#13;
in opposition to the bill on behalf of Regent John Lavine. In a letter&#13;
to the committee, Lavine related his experience with student&#13;
membership on the Board of Trustees of Coker College (Minnesota)&#13;
where, he felt the problems of "tokenism" and decreased diversity-of&#13;
student input were detrimental to student interests. Lavine&#13;
concluded that adequate student input to the board is best served by&#13;
maintaining the present system.&#13;
Rep . Dave Clarenbach, sponsor and author of hB 604 told the&#13;
committee that students should have a significant role in the&#13;
university decision making process. he felt that this was consistent&#13;
with the growing consumer movement, and that those who are most&#13;
affected by decisions should participate in making those decisions.&#13;
He urged the committee to recognize the need for, and importance&#13;
of student participation on the regent level, and pass AB 604.&#13;
Members of the Education Committee with universities in their&#13;
districts include Reps. Flintrop (Oshkosh), Miller (Madison), and&#13;
Travis (Platteville).&#13;
Pie poli ics gaining·&#13;
slapstick · credibility&#13;
(CPS} - "Go to hell you asshole," said E. Howard Hunt, scraping Despite such forebears; pieing lacked, as Marx pointed out in his&#13;
the new politics off his face. Hunt had just been pied; a fate he shares "18th Brumaire", a concrete praxis. It attained puberty one frigid day&#13;
with a stellar lineup stretching from Bill Buckley and Daniel in Washington DC,"when Yippie Tom Fourcade blasted a member of&#13;
Moynihan to anti-feminist Phyllis Schlafly. the Presidential Commission on Obscenity and Pornography.&#13;
This evolution from pastry to politics is not a recent phenomena. Alth&lt;;_ugh history records the year as 1970, it does not mention the&#13;
~hile some historians see pieing as a twentieth century update of the flavor of that historic pie.&#13;
medieval custom of throwing the gauntlet, most trace its theoretical Lull in pieing&#13;
roots to the anarchic slapstick of Laurel &amp; Hardy and Soupy Sales. After Fourcade, pieing hit a lull. For years you would read of a few&#13;
Big brother&#13;
at Purdue&#13;
(CPS) - Purdue University in&#13;
Lafayette, Ind. is using videotape&#13;
cameras to patrol crowds at&#13;
football games.&#13;
scattered pie-niks splattering this or that obnoxious luminary, but the&#13;
whole thing seemed like another leftist confection and not the real&#13;
pap. Like the early SOS, it lacked a program .&#13;
It was Aron Kay w.bo, figuratively speaking, arrived on the sealed&#13;
train and read the situation correctly. For three years Kay brooded&#13;
over Fourcade's historic heave. He brooded in the New York..City&#13;
subways, he brooded over cappucino in the Village, he brooded at&#13;
the latest Warhol opening. Then, in 1973; he propelled a tentative,&#13;
fir?t pie at guru-new Rennie Davis . He missed.&#13;
"Press the flesh"&#13;
MAGIC TRICK·s - JOKES - NOVEL TIES&#13;
The - filmin"g h~s been in&#13;
operation for two years but the&#13;
practice was riot revealed until&#13;
one of the camera's victims&#13;
found out he was in movies .&#13;
A wiser and wilier Kay attributes the miss to poor tactics . "When&#13;
push comes to shove," he said , "you got to press the flesh and that&#13;
means there is no substitute for body contact. It's the only way I&#13;
know of to intensify the contradictions between the pie and the&#13;
mighty." Like a good guerilla, the practiced pier needs patience, HAVE A FREE-DRINK ON THE BEAN surprise and an ability to fade comparable to a good pair of Levis .&#13;
With This Coupon -&#13;
1 Per Cu_stomer.&#13;
ladies Night&#13;
Wed.&#13;
On tlle Corner&#13;
of 57111 &amp; 23 Ave.&#13;
YOWZAA&#13;
Hours&#13;
M~T&#13;
7p.m.-&#13;
10p.m.&#13;
Tappers25("&#13;
&#13;
Mic.&#13;
35c&#13;
Purduf Police Chief Donald&#13;
Jones called the technique very&#13;
successful in spotting illegal&#13;
-alcohol and marijuana use. The&#13;
camera also helped to assist&#13;
emergency situations that arose&#13;
at the games.&#13;
Early in October, eight people&#13;
were arrested and taken to jail on&#13;
dope charges, thanks to the&#13;
camera's roving eye. '&#13;
In addition to the camera&#13;
officers sit in the press box at th~&#13;
football games and scan the&#13;
crowd with binoculars.&#13;
The film, says Jones, is used as&#13;
evidence in court. The taping is&#13;
legal and does not invade&#13;
privacy laws or constitute police&#13;
harrassment, according to Jones.&#13;
Kay's west coast compadre is Frankie Lee, who specializes in the&#13;
personalized pie. He greeted the cerebral experimentor Jose Delgado&#13;
with a pie of cowbrains and tomato sauce. Eldridge Cleaver received&#13;
an oreo cream pie. "Why do I do it," asks the rhecorical, introspective&#13;
Lee? " For one thing it's not as much work as organizing the working&#13;
class and its less boring."&#13;
Pieticipatory democracy&#13;
Several proponents of pieticipatory democracy have come to grief&#13;
at the hands of humorless, enraged mobs . Pat Halley, who creamed&#13;
messiah Maharaj ji, had his skull fractured by a gang of premies.&#13;
Yipp1e Steve Conliff, who polished off Ohio Governor Rhodes faces a&#13;
poss1 "bl e seven months ) ' in jail. \&#13;
_ One plus for the politics of pie is media hype. The Vancouver&#13;
pieing of Eldridge Cleaver drew more coverage in Montreal papers&#13;
than a 10,CJ90 strong union march held that same day in Montreal.&#13;
Aron Kay, who _has parl~yed his piepularity into the New York City&#13;
mayoral _race, inaugurated his campaign against incumbent Abe&#13;
Beame with an apple &lt;1:rumb pie and proclaimed that Beame was "the&#13;
biggest crumb in the big apple." &#13;
Student paper&#13;
weaned&#13;
(CPS) - The Wildcat News &amp; Review in Chico,&#13;
California, joined the ranks of more than 100&#13;
student newspapers nationally late last spring when&#13;
the paper severed its umbilical cord to the university&#13;
and entered into a contractual arrangement&#13;
with the school.&#13;
Overrtle past few years student newspapers&#13;
which could possibly support themselves on combined&#13;
advertising revenue and student fees money,&#13;
have been incr~singly opting for a contractual&#13;
arrangement with the student government and/or&#13;
the administration.&#13;
The arrangement benefits everyone. The student&#13;
paper gets a healthy dose of reality as it learns that&#13;
advertisers are the lifeblood of a newspaper.&#13;
The student government learns that _with a&#13;
contract it can not expect to ma-nipulate the&#13;
editorial content of the paper or threaten it with a&#13;
funding cut the first time the president of the&#13;
student government is criticized in print.&#13;
The students are also freed to use and develop in&#13;
their own skills as journalists without an instructor&#13;
breathing down their necks.&#13;
Although many administrators over the years&#13;
have treated their students as less than journalists,&#13;
court rulings haven't. Most censorship and ha-rassment&#13;
of the college media results from lack of&#13;
information rather than from genuine power-mad&#13;
malice.&#13;
The birth of The Wildcat News &amp; Review is&#13;
significant since it embodies the major issues that&#13;
have been at play in the.college media cver tbe last&#13;
year. The Wildcat had always had a stormy relationship&#13;
with the school, expecially as the Wildcat&#13;
continued to wander off-campus and increase its&#13;
coverage of community events.&#13;
Reporters sit on&#13;
secret documents&#13;
(CPS) - The editors at the Stanford Daily, Stanford University's&#13;
student daily, walked right into a scoop and all it took was a used&#13;
desk purchased from the university last month.&#13;
Two weeks ago, the Stanford Daily bought a used desk which had&#13;
formerly been used by the foreign studies program. One drawer still&#13;
held some confidential documents.&#13;
The records were 500 pages of confidential correspondence&#13;
exchanged between 1962 and 1972 by Stanford's overseas studies&#13;
headquarters and directors of its special studies campuses in England,&#13;
France Germany and Austria. The material referred to students'&#13;
medical and sexual situations. drug habits, and other matters&#13;
protected by both university rufes and federal statutes regarding&#13;
confidentiality .&#13;
"It's as though the Nixon White House had delivered its own secret&#13;
files to the Washington Post,".said Stanford Daily editor Jacob Young.&#13;
An embarrassed director of the overseas studies program_&#13;
commented, "I really can't say how it happened."&#13;
Editor Young is awaiting word from the newspaper's lawyer on&#13;
what to do with the secret papers now.&#13;
But the beans have been spilled and the first fall issue contained&#13;
the story headlined "University Mishandles Overseas Records."&#13;
u(]rn 1]~(]rn(]OO~&#13;
~(Dm§ (DU&#13;
1]~(]rn(]OO~ (JrnU~[$§&#13;
•&#13;
UnNersl1 Imports&#13;
SERVICE·PARTS CAR SALES&#13;
2301 OlKand Ave.,. Racine&#13;
554-9412 Racine 552.$580 Kenosha&#13;
news&#13;
The Oriana Trio: left to right, Harry Sturm, Carol&#13;
Bell, Eden Vaning. Dedicated to lithe enrichment of&#13;
those who love chamber music", the ensemble&#13;
played more' than 20 concerts last yeAr in Kenosha&#13;
schools and this year will present A concert leries in&#13;
the R.J.cine Ichoob.&#13;
Oriana trio plays Shostakovich&#13;
The first concert of the&#13;
1977-78 season in Parkside's New&#13;
Music Series will be presented&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 6, at 3:30 p.m. in&#13;
the Communication Arts Theater,&#13;
under the direction of August&#13;
Wegner.&#13;
The featured work will be the&#13;
Shostakovich Piano Trio performed&#13;
by the Oriana Trio,&#13;
UW-P's faculty chamber ensemble,&#13;
consisting of violinist&#13;
Eden Vaning, cellist Harry Sturm&#13;
and pianist Carol Bell.&#13;
Other works programmed are&#13;
Mario Davidowsky's "Synchronisms&#13;
for Cello and Magnetic&#13;
Tape", performed by John White&#13;
who gave the world premiere of&#13;
the work; White's "Variations for&#13;
Clarinet and Piano", performed&#13;
by clarinetist Timothy Bell and&#13;
pianist Wegner; and Olivier&#13;
Messiaen's "Cantevodjava", performed&#13;
by Stephen Swedish,&#13;
UW-P artist-in-residence.&#13;
Concert-goers are invited to&#13;
attend a wine and cheese&#13;
reception after the concert.&#13;
Other programs in the series&#13;
are scheduled for Sunday, Feb.&#13;
,2, and Friday, April 7. Those&#13;
performances will include the&#13;
premieres of several new works.&#13;
All concerts in the series are free.&#13;
Information on the series is&#13;
available from the UW-Parkside&#13;
Fine Arts Division Office&#13;
(Telephone 553-2481).&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
HOIII. 01the S.~•• ,I..&#13;
S..wlth&#13;
~~~&#13;
OPEl I u. Tl 11:38 P.1.&#13;
2615Wu~I"'" Alt. 614-2171&#13;
APPLICA TIONS ARE NOW&#13;
BEING ACCEPTED FOR 1978&#13;
Mailletter of application and resume to&#13;
Don Kopriva&#13;
Public Information Office -,&#13;
U niversi ty ofWisconsin- Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Phone 551-2404&#13;
Applications due on&#13;
or before Nov. 9th,&#13;
Student paper&#13;
weaned&#13;
(CPS) - The Wildcat News &amp; Review in Chico,&#13;
California, joined the ranks of more than 100&#13;
student newspapers nationally late last spring when&#13;
the paper severed its umbilical cord to the university&#13;
and entered into a contractual arrangement&#13;
with the school.&#13;
Overtne past few years student newspapers&#13;
which could possibly support themselves on combined&#13;
advertising revenue and student fees money,&#13;
have been incr~singly opting for a contractual&#13;
,- arrangement with the student government and/ or&#13;
the administration .&#13;
The arrangement benefits everyone. The student&#13;
paper gets a healthy dose of reality as it learns that&#13;
advertisers are the I ifeblood of a newspaper.&#13;
The student government learns that _ with a&#13;
contract it can not expect to manipulate the&#13;
editorial content of the paper or threaten it with a&#13;
funding cut the first time the president of the&#13;
student government is criticized in print.&#13;
The students are also freed to use and develop in&#13;
their own skills as journalists without an instructor&#13;
breathing down their necks.&#13;
Although many administrators over the years&#13;
have treated their studeryts as less than journalists,&#13;
court rulings haven't . Most censorship and harrassment&#13;
of the college media results from lack of&#13;
information rather than from genuine power-mad&#13;
malice.&#13;
The birth of The Wildcat News &amp; Review is&#13;
significant since it embodies the major issues that&#13;
have been at play in the college media ove the last&#13;
year. The Wildcat had always had a stormy relationship&#13;
with the school, expecially as the Wildcat&#13;
continued to wander off-campus and increase its&#13;
coverage of community events.&#13;
Reporters sit on&#13;
secret documents&#13;
(CPS) - The editors at the Stanford Daily, Stanfotd University's&#13;
student daily, walked right into a scoop and all it took was a used&#13;
desk purchased from the university last month .&#13;
Two weeks ago, the Stanford Daily bought a used desk which had&#13;
formerly been used by the foreign studies program. One drawer still&#13;
held some confidential documents.&#13;
The records were 500 pages of confidential correspondence&#13;
exchanged between 1962 and 1972 by Stanford's overseas studies&#13;
headquarters and directors of its special studies campuses in England,&#13;
France, Germany and Austria. The material referred to students'&#13;
medical and sexual situations, drug habits, and other matters&#13;
protected by both university rules and federal statutes regarding&#13;
confidentiality.&#13;
"It's as though the Nixon White House had delivered its own secret&#13;
files to the Washington Post,".said Stanford Daily editor Jacob Young.&#13;
An embarrassed director of the overseas studies program _&#13;
commented, " I really can't say how it happened."&#13;
Editor Young is awaiting word from the newspaper's lawyer on&#13;
what to do with the secret papers now.&#13;
But the beans have been spilled and the first fall issue contained&#13;
the story headlined "University Mishandles Overseas Records."&#13;
(l(]GJ ($(B(]l](]00ij&#13;
(B(DGJ§ (D'I]&#13;
L$CBCDl](]00ij lluJOCBl:E§&#13;
-&#13;
Uaiversal Imports&#13;
SERVICE-PARTS CAR SALES&#13;
2301 Durand Ave.,_ Racine&#13;
554-9412 Racine 552-8580 Kenosha&#13;
news&#13;
The Oriana Trio: left to right, Harry Sturm, Carol&#13;
Bell, Eden Vaning. Dedicated to "the enrichment of&#13;
those who love chamber music", the ensemble&#13;
played more than 20 concerts lut year in Keno ha&#13;
schools and this year will present a concert series in&#13;
the Racine schools.&#13;
•&#13;
ra a trio&#13;
The first concert of the&#13;
1977-78 season in Parkside's New&#13;
Music Series will be presented&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 6, at 3:30 p.m. in&#13;
the Communication Arts Theater,&#13;
under the direction of August&#13;
Wegner.&#13;
The featured work will be the&#13;
Shostakovich Piano Trio performed&#13;
by the Oriana Trio,&#13;
UW-P's faculty chamber ensemble,&#13;
consisting of violinist&#13;
Eden Vaning, cellist Harry Sturm&#13;
and pianist Carol Bell.&#13;
Other works programmed are&#13;
Mario Davidowsky's "Synchronisms&#13;
for Cello and Magnetic&#13;
Tape", performed by John White&#13;
who gave the world premiere of&#13;
the work; White's "Variations for&#13;
Clarinet and Piano", performed&#13;
by clarinetist Timothy Bell and&#13;
pianist Wegner; and Olivier&#13;
ays Shostakovich&#13;
Messiaen's "Canteyodjaya", performed&#13;
by Stephen Swedish,&#13;
UW-P artist-in-residence.&#13;
Concert-goers are invited to&#13;
attend a wine and cheese&#13;
reception after the concert.&#13;
Other programs in the series&#13;
are scheduled for Sunday, Feb.&#13;
12, and Friday, April 7. Those&#13;
performances will include the&#13;
premieres of several new works.&#13;
All concerts in the series are free.&#13;
Information on the series is&#13;
available from the UW-Parkside&#13;
Fine Arts Division Office&#13;
(Telephone 553- 24811.&#13;
APPLICATIONS ARE NOW&#13;
BEING ACCEPTED FOR 1978&#13;
Mail letter of application and resume to&#13;
Phone 55~-2404&#13;
Applications due on&#13;
or before Nov. 9th.&#13;
Don Kopriva&#13;
Public Information Office&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141 &#13;
events&#13;
NOTES&#13;
Life Science Field Trip to Horicon Marsh 8:00 a.rn.,&#13;
Saturday, November 12, from Tallent Hall parking&#13;
lot. Return by 3:00 p.m. Brown bag lunch. $1.00&#13;
advanced fee. $1.50 after November 10. Contact&#13;
Richard Wagner at 639-3828.&#13;
classified&#13;
Wanted: 'The RANGER needs people, or Whatever, to&#13;
write feature etcrree. do book-play-meyl&amp;-&#13;
and-record reviews. Or anything else you&#13;
can think 01.&#13;
Please come to 'renent Hall, Am. 11287on&#13;
Mondays from 3:00 til 6:00.&#13;
Cocktail •• It.... or 00 go girl.&#13;
S3OO.-$400.wk, paid Florida vacation&#13;
and 1nsllrance. No hassles.&#13;
No experience neceS$liry, call (312)&#13;
634-3313.&#13;
Wanttd: Any old or new Johnny Cash&#13;
singles. Contact EVENTS 634-5680.&#13;
Brown tt.lr: Yes it Is me. Drama with&#13;
Polleck has never been 80 Interesting&#13;
before. Don't you agree? You were'eyelng&#13;
mealllastWedn~ybut I'll tell you something&#13;
honey. I look a helluva lot bettsr in the&#13;
evening. The Back seat Chick.&#13;
Wanted: part-Hme typist. Should be free&#13;
whole mornings or afternoons. Call&#13;
553-2228.&#13;
John:.. ThanKs for your slJpport last week.&#13;
You anl right about Mr. Jambols but tell me&#13;
what makes you 80 sure that I am male and&#13;
not female? Unlversltybf Vermont -lamron.&#13;
An Intereslecl'ella In the back row wants 10&#13;
know If the beMdlful bruMtte In the second&#13;
row of History 10'1, 11-11:50a.m., MWF., Is&#13;
spolten for. How about a date somellrne?&#13;
a.c.: SMt ChIck: I am also In Drama and sit&#13;
fairly near the front but every time I look for&#13;
you alii see Is that mouse blocking the view&#13;
with his death-like Iod!.s. Who the hell are&#13;
you? F ru8trated but not brown haired.&#13;
Math Club sponsors&#13;
hyperbolic space tallc&#13;
The Math Club will sponsor a&#13;
colloquium this Friday, November&#13;
4, on the subject of&#13;
"hyperbolic space". The 3.:30&#13;
talk, to be preceded by a coffee&#13;
hour, will feature Proles&#13;
Jorgensen, a Denmark native&#13;
who presently teaches at the&#13;
University of Minnesota, after&#13;
being Benjamin Pierce assistant&#13;
professor of math of Harvard&#13;
from 1975-1977.&#13;
Jorgensen's area of research is&#13;
that of discrete groups. This talk,&#13;
aimed at undergraduates, will be&#13;
at 3:30 p.m. in CL 107, preceded&#13;
by a coffee hour at 3 p.m. in CL&#13;
111.&#13;
Comm 'Arts Ga.llery&#13;
17~----'--l&#13;
I I&#13;
1~1&#13;
I OPEN 7 DAYS I&#13;
I Mon.-Sat 10 'til close I&#13;
I Sun. 6 'til close I&#13;
Grnquist 103 ! I&#13;
I NOON LUNCHES I&#13;
I Sandwiches 'til midnight - !&#13;
! I&#13;
I SAT. LADIES NITE I&#13;
II Ladies' Drinks Y2 Price - II I With date a 'til close I&#13;
L_~~JU~iO~J~~_J I&#13;
r- From Madison ----~I Friday No. 4th ,&#13;
t DR. BOP &amp; . ,&#13;
t THE HEADLINES I&#13;
t Featurl;9&#13;
p&#13;
.:&#13;
e&#13;
_ ~h:.: Raven ,&#13;
t&#13;
Advance $4.50 Pabst on ,&#13;
At the Door $5.00 . Tab 50' t&#13;
'f Vance's Bar t&#13;
l&#13;
1-94 &amp; Hy. 11 (Racine County)&#13;
r&#13;
---------'&#13;
UW-Parkside art faculty.&#13;
Holmes, who held a National&#13;
Endowment for the Arts craftsman&#13;
fellowship during 1976-77,&#13;
previously taught at UW-Mil-·&#13;
waukee. He has exhibited&#13;
throughout the Midwest and in&#13;
New York and had a one-man&#13;
invitational show last summer at&#13;
the Kohler Art Center in&#13;
Sheboygan. In 1975, he won a&#13;
major award at the Lakefront&#13;
Festival of the Arts at the&#13;
Milwaukee Art Center. He holds&#13;
an MFA-..degree from UW-Mad~&#13;
tson and also has studied mItalv.&#13;
Kohlstedt has .an MFA degree&#13;
Reading competence&#13;
test offered&#13;
The first offering of the Reading&#13;
Competence Test, a requirement&#13;
of the Parkstde-Collegiate&#13;
Skills Program, will be held&#13;
according to the following&#13;
schedule:&#13;
Monday, November 21:&#13;
English 101 students:&#13;
Students currently enrolled&#13;
in a Monday&#13;
class. CIests will be adrninistered&#13;
during the&#13;
regular class period in&#13;
the regular classrooms.)&#13;
Monday, November 21:&#13;
Non-English 101 students:&#13;
For students not&#13;
currently in English 101.&#13;
All such students must&#13;
register for the test in&#13;
the Educational Program&#13;
Support Office&#13;
(EPS)in the D-l level of&#13;
the library between&#13;
Oct. &lt;6, and Nov. 14.&#13;
. Students scoring 80&#13;
of'abova on the English&#13;
Placement test&#13;
but not enrolled in&#13;
Eng. 101 this semester.&#13;
- Transfer students&#13;
needing to complete&#13;
the Reading Competence&#13;
test.&#13;
The [aetest-groioing&#13;
Premium Beer in America.&#13;
On tap at Union ~quare&#13;
.~vM.-_::~ - . ..- .'"&#13;
Thursday, November 3&#13;
Life Science Club Meeting 5:00 p.m. in Union room&#13;
104. Drug Use and Human values will be discussed&#13;
by Richard J. Pomazal, Assistant Professor of&#13;
Psychology. Coffee and Kringle will be served.&#13;
Competence Test: No books, notes or calculators&#13;
allowed. GR 103.11-12:30,2-3:30, and 6-7:30 p.m.&#13;
Friday, November 4&#13;
Film A Clockwork Orange in Union Cinema. Show&#13;
at)8:00 p.m. Admission $1.00. .&#13;
Science: Dr. J. Gorman talks on Amoebae Genetics&#13;
in the S~ime Mold, Physarum Polvcephahnn. CL Art fal'ulty exhibits&#13;
_ 105.at 2.00 p.m. , ..&#13;
Science: Dr.. Bill Cordua- from UW River Falls will •&#13;
speak on Ancient Mountain Building Events of In&#13;
Wyoming and Montana;,&#13;
Saturday November 5 The P.arkside Art Faculty will&#13;
, .' present an exhibition from Oct.&#13;
Cross Country: USTFF Mid-America at \JW-P. Starts 26 through Nov. 17 in the&#13;
at 3:00 p.m. Communicat!on Arts Gallery.&#13;
C t 'Entertainment: features Peter Alsop, Formal opening of the show will&#13;
on empary . . .11b be Nov. 1, when a public&#13;
Paffrath and Dvkhuis. Advanced tickets WI .e reception will be held from 7 to 9&#13;
sold in the Union Square center. Starts at 9:00 In p.m.&#13;
the Union Square. Artists and their media are&#13;
Competence Test: Will be held in GR 103 at 10-11:30 Rollm Jansky, sculpture; John&#13;
Satre Murphy, ceramics: John&#13;
_a.m. No books, notes or calculators are allowed. Goray, paintings; Dennis BayuSoccer:&#13;
Parkside at UW-Platteville. Starts at 2:00 zick, prints and drawings; Dale&#13;
p m Kohlstedt, prints; and David&#13;
. . Valentine Holmes, sculpture.&#13;
Sunday November 6 Bayuzick, Kohlstedt and&#13;
Film A Clockwork Orange in Union Cinema. Show Holmes are new this year to the&#13;
begins at 7:30 p.m. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Music: Starring the Oriana Trio playing the,&#13;
Shostakovitch Piano Trio. CAT 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, November 9 ~&#13;
Film: Day for Night in the Union Cinema. Starts at&#13;
2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Movie: Inherit the Wind starring Spencer Tracy and&#13;
Frederic March. For reservations call the Golden&#13;
Rondelle, 554-2154. Free. Starts at 7:00 p.m.&#13;
Women's Brown Bag Lunch: Florence Shipek of the&#13;
Anthropology facultv will talk on 'A Role Model&#13;
Of Our Own.' CL 111 (Faculty Lounge), at 12 noon.&#13;
Accent on Enrichment: Features the Stan Kenton&#13;
Orchestra .'&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES aDARD&#13;
PRESENTS THE&#13;
BO"&#13;
~&#13;
. HO~&#13;
.. SEARCHJOR&#13;
TOP IN&#13;
COLLEGIATE TALLENT _&#13;
l.i'-~· ' Y ~-~ -Apply Union&#13;
~~;(4' 207&#13;
JUdging Mon., Noy. 7&#13;
- TIME&#13;
10:00 to 10:50 a.m.&#13;
2:00 to 2:S0 p.m.&#13;
6:00 to 6:50 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday, November 22:&#13;
English 101 students:&#13;
Students currently enrolled&#13;
irr a Tuesday&#13;
class. (Tests will. be administered&#13;
during the -&#13;
regular class period in&#13;
the regular classrooms.)&#13;
ROOM&#13;
Applications by&#13;
Fri., Noy. 4,&#13;
4:30 p.m.&#13;
~ath test offered&#13;
The "end of 1st 6 wee,&#13;
module" offering of the&#13;
Mathematics Competence Test&#13;
will be held according to the&#13;
below listed schedule on&#13;
Thursday and Saturday, Nov. 3&#13;
and 5 in GR 103. This test is a&#13;
requirement of the CoJJegiate&#13;
Skills Program.&#13;
Testing Schedule&#13;
Thursday, November 3:&#13;
11:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m.&#13;
2:00 p.m.- 3:30 p.m.&#13;
. 6:00 p.m.- 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Saturday: November 5:&#13;
10:00 a:m.-l1 :30 a.m.&#13;
from. UW-Milwaukee, where he&#13;
taught design and-was a project&#13;
assistant in printmaking and in&#13;
the Fine Arts Gallery. He also has&#13;
taught at the secondary school&#13;
level. .Bavuzick has an MFA&#13;
degree from Ohio University and&#13;
is a doctoral candidate there. He&#13;
also taught at Ohio and has&#13;
shown his painting in the East&#13;
and Midwest.&#13;
Regular gallery hours are&#13;
Mondays through Thursdays&#13;
from noon to 5 p.m., Tuesdays.&#13;
and Wednesdays from 7 to 10&#13;
p.m. and Fridays by appointment.&#13;
I&#13;
events&#13;
Thursday, November 3&#13;
Life Science Club Meeting 5:00 p.m. in Union room&#13;
104. Drug Use and Human values will be discussed&#13;
by Richard J. Pomazal, Assistant Professor of&#13;
Psychology. Coffee and Kringle will be served.&#13;
Competence Test: No books, notes or calculators&#13;
allowed. GR 103. 11-12:30, 2-3:30, and 6-7:30 p.m.&#13;
Math Club sponsors&#13;
hyperbolic space tallc&#13;
The Math Club will sponsor a being Benjamin Pierce assistant&#13;
colloquium this Friday, Novem- professor of math of Harvard&#13;
ber 4, on the subject of from 1975-1977.&#13;
"hyperbolic space". The 3.:30 Jorgensen's area of research is&#13;
Math test offered&#13;
talk, to be preceded by a coffee that of discrete groups. This talk,&#13;
Friday, November 4 hour, will feature Proles aimed at undergraduates, will be&#13;
Film A Clockwork Orange in Ur:iion Cinema. Show Jorgensen, a Denmark native at 3:30 p.m . in CL 107, preceded&#13;
The "end of 1st 8 weel..&#13;
module" offering of the&#13;
Mathematics Competence Test&#13;
will be held according to the&#13;
below listed schedule on&#13;
Thursday and Saturday, Nov. 3&#13;
and 5 in GR 103. This test is a&#13;
requirement of the Collegiate&#13;
Ski /Is Program .&#13;
who presently teaches at the by a coffee hour at 3 p.m . in CL at)8:00 p.m. Admission $1.00. University of Minnesota, after 111.&#13;
Testing Schedule&#13;
Thursday, November 3:&#13;
11 :00 a.m.-12:00 p.m.&#13;
2:00 p.m .- 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Science: Dr. J. Gorman talks on Amoebae Genetics • •&#13;
in the S~ime Mold, Physarum Polycephalum. CL Art faculty exh·,b,ts · 6:00 p.m.- 7:30 p.m.&#13;
105 at 2.00 p.m .&#13;
- Science: Dr_. Bill Cordua· from UW River Falls will •&#13;
speak on Ancient Mountain Building Events of f ft&#13;
Wyoming and Montana. Coinm 'Arts Ga.llery&#13;
Saturday,' November 5:&#13;
10:00 a:m.-11 ::30 a.m.&#13;
Saturday, N'ovember 5&#13;
Cross Country: USTFF Mid-America at lJW-P. Starts&#13;
at 3:00 p.m. _&#13;
Contempary Entertainment: features Peter Alsop,&#13;
Paffrath and Dykhuis. Advanced tickets will be&#13;
sold in the Union Square center. Starts at 9:00 in&#13;
the Union Square.&#13;
CompetenceTest:Willbeheld in GR 103 at 10-11 :30&#13;
. a.m. No books, notes or calculators are allowed.&#13;
Soccer: Parkside at UW-Platteville. Starts at 2:00&#13;
p.m .&#13;
Sunday November 6&#13;
"' Film A Clockwork Orange in Union Cinema. Show&#13;
The P.arkside Art Faculty will&#13;
present an ~xhibition from Oct.&#13;
26 through Nov. 17 in the&#13;
Communication Arts Gallery.&#13;
Formal opening of the show will&#13;
be Nov. 1, when a public&#13;
reception will be held from 7 to 9&#13;
p.m .&#13;
Artists and their media are&#13;
Rollin Jansky, sculpture; John&#13;
Satre Murphy, ceramics; John&#13;
Coray, paintings; Dennis Bayuzick,&#13;
prints and drawings; Dale&#13;
Kohl stedt, prints; and David&#13;
Valentine Holmes, sculpture.&#13;
Bayuzick, Kohlstedt an·d&#13;
Holmes are new this year to the&#13;
UW-Parkside art faculty.&#13;
Holmes, who held a National&#13;
Endowment for the Arts craftsman&#13;
fellowship during 1976-77,&#13;
previously taught at UW-Mil- ·&#13;
waukee. He has exhibited&#13;
throughout the Midwest and in&#13;
New York and had a one-man&#13;
invitational show last summer at&#13;
the Kohler Art Center in&#13;
Sheboygan . In 1975, he won a&#13;
major award at the Lakefront&#13;
Festival of the Arts at the&#13;
Milwaukee Art Center. He holds&#13;
an MFA-...degree from UW-Madison&#13;
and also has studied in 'Italy.&#13;
Kohlstedt has -an MFA degree&#13;
from. UW-Milwaukee, where he&#13;
taught design and-was a project&#13;
assistant in printmaking and in&#13;
the Fine Arts Gallery. He also has&#13;
taught at the secondary school&#13;
level. · Bayu7ick has an MFA&#13;
degree from Ohio University and&#13;
is a doctoral candidate there . He&#13;
also taught at Ohio and has&#13;
shown his painting in the East&#13;
and Midwest. ·&#13;
Regular gallery hours are&#13;
Mondays through Thursdays&#13;
from noon to 5 p.m., Tuesdays.&#13;
and Wednesdays from 7 to 10&#13;
p.m . and Fridays by appointment.&#13;
&#13;
begins at 7:30 p.m. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Music: Starring the Oriana Trio playing th,e&#13;
Shostakovitch Piano Trio. CAT 3:30 p.m .&#13;
Wednesday, November 9&#13;
Reading competence j"7k' _____ l&#13;
test offered ! ~ ! Film: Day for Night in the Union Cinema. Starts at&#13;
2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Admission $1 .00.&#13;
Movie: Inherit the Wind starring Spencer Tracy and&#13;
Frederic March. For reservations call the Golden&#13;
Rondelle, 554-2154. Free. Starts at 7:00 p.m.&#13;
Women's Brown Bag Lunch: Florence Shipek of the&#13;
Anthropology factJJty will talk on 'A Role Model&#13;
Of Our Own.' CL 111 (Faculty Lounge), at 12 noon.&#13;
Accent on Enrichment: Features the Stan Kenton&#13;
Orchestra.&#13;
NOTES&#13;
Life Science Field Trip to Horicon Marsh 8:00 a.m .,&#13;
Saturday, November 12, from Tallent Hall parking&#13;
lot. Return by 3:00 p.m. Brown bag lunch. $1 .00&#13;
advanced fee . $1.50 after November 10. Contact&#13;
Richard Wagner at 639-3828.&#13;
classified&#13;
Wanted:&#13;
Cocktail wait- or go go glr1.&#13;
$300.-$400. wk. paid Florida vacation&#13;
and Insurance. No hassles.&#13;
No experience necessary, call (312)&#13;
634-3313.&#13;
Brown Hair: Yes It Is me. Orama wl\h&#13;
Pollack has newr been so Interesting&#13;
before. Don't you agree? You were·eyelng&#13;
me all last Wednesday but I'll tell you something&#13;
honey, I look a helluva lot better In the&#13;
ewnlng. The Back Seat Chick.&#13;
·The RANGER needs people, or whatever, to&#13;
write feature stories, do book-ptay-movleand-record&#13;
reviews. Or anything else you&#13;
can think of.&#13;
Please come to Tallent Hall, Rm. #287 on&#13;
Mondays from 3:00 1116:00.&#13;
Wanted: Any old or new Johnny Cash&#13;
singles. Contact EVENTS 634-5680.&#13;
Wanted: part-time typist. Should be free&#13;
whole mornings or afternoons . Call&#13;
553-2228.&#13;
The f irst offering of the Reading&#13;
Competence Test, a requirement&#13;
of the Parkside Collegiate&#13;
Skills Program, will be held&#13;
according to the following&#13;
schedule:&#13;
Monday, November 21:&#13;
English 101 students:&#13;
Students currently enrolled&#13;
in a Monday&#13;
class. (Tests will be administered.&#13;
during the&#13;
regular class period in&#13;
the regular classrooms.)&#13;
Monday, November 21:&#13;
Non-English 101 students:&#13;
For students not&#13;
currently in English 101.&#13;
All such students must&#13;
register for the test in&#13;
the Educational Program&#13;
Support Office&#13;
(EPS) in the D-1 level of&#13;
the library between&#13;
Oct. '26, and Nov. 14.&#13;
- Students scoring 80&#13;
orabove on the English&#13;
Placement test&#13;
but not enrolled in&#13;
Eng. 101 this semester.&#13;
&#13;
· - Transfer students&#13;
needing to complete&#13;
the Reading Competence&#13;
test.&#13;
John: Thanks for your support last week.&#13;
You are right about Mr. jambols but tell me&#13;
what makes you so sure that I am male and&#13;
not female? Unlwrslty'of Vermont - Lamron.&#13;
An Interested fella In the back row wants to&#13;
know If the beautllul brunette In the second&#13;
row of History 101, 11-11 :50 a.m., MWF., Is&#13;
spoken for. How about a date sometime?&#13;
BIid! Seit Chick: I am also In Orama and sit&#13;
fairly near the front but every time I look for&#13;
you all I see la that mouse blocking the view&#13;
with his death-like looks. Who the hell are&#13;
you? Frustrated but not brown haired .&#13;
The fastest-growing&#13;
Premium Beer in America.&#13;
On tap at Union ~quare&#13;
-¥i&#13;
~ ---!&#13;
i Mon.-Sat 10 'til close i&#13;
i Sun. 6 'til close i - TIME&#13;
10:00 to 10:50 a.m.&#13;
ROOM&#13;
2:00 to 2:50 p.m. Grnquist 103 i i&#13;
6:00 to 6:50 p.m. i NOON LUNCHES i&#13;
Tuesday, November 22:&#13;
ErJglish 101 students:&#13;
i Sandwiches 'til midnight i&#13;
i i&#13;
i SAT. LADIES NITE ~&#13;
) La~ies' Drinks ½ Price ~ j i with date 8 'til close i&#13;
L--~~.J!n~~:1~~-J ,&#13;
r ~om M=.o ... n-~Frlday7o.7,';7&#13;
t DR. BOP &amp; t&#13;
Students currently enrolled&#13;
irr a Tuesday&#13;
class. (Tests will be administered&#13;
during the -&#13;
regular class period in&#13;
the regular classrooms.)&#13;
t THE HEADLINES t t featuring the White Raven&#13;
9 p.m. - 1 a.m. t t Advan..ce $4.50 Pabst on&#13;
At the Door $5.00 Tab so• t&#13;
•t Vance's Bar t L 1-94 &amp; Hy. 11 [ Racine County J&#13;
,... ~~~~~~-.~~&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
PRESENTS THE&#13;
Applications by&#13;
Fri., Nov. 4,&#13;
4:30 p.m.&#13;
BO~&#13;
HOPE&#13;
RCHJ~&#13;
TOP IN~"/&#13;
COLLEGIATE TALLENT&#13;
,~·&#13;
::v... -" -&#13;
.. ,, .... '&#13;
Judging Mon., Nov. 7&#13;
Apply Union&#13;
207&#13;
..... </text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68659">
              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 6, issue 10, November 2, 1977</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68660">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="40">
          <name>Date</name>
          <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68661">
              <text>1977-11-02</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68664">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="68665">
              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="68666">
              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="42">
          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68667">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68668">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="38">
          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68669">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68670">
              <text>Text</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="45">
          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68671">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68672">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="4547">
      <name>chiwaukee prairie</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4487">
      <name>eugene gasiorkiewicz</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2127">
      <name>nature trail</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="222">
      <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
