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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 6, issue 11</text>
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            <text>Faculty Senate receives breadth and academic advising proposals</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>aD&#13;
Wednesday, November 9, 1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No. 11&#13;
er Illl If fIlty million people say a ()()&#13;
UU foolish thing, It Is still a 1111&#13;
foolish thing.&#13;
-Anatola France&#13;
Faculty -Senate receives breadth&#13;
and academic advising proposals&#13;
. The Faculty Senate will meet at 3:30 p.m., Tuesday, November 15,&#13;
m CL D-105, to act on the new Academic Advising proposal and the&#13;
Breadth Requirement. If the Faculty Senate approves the two proposals,&#13;
both the Breadth Requirement and complete Academic Ad-&#13;
,vising will be in effect at Parkside Fall registration of 1978. The texts&#13;
of both proposals follows.&#13;
Affirmative Action Questions&#13;
Another Item on the agenda is a set of questions to Chancellor Alan&#13;
E. Cuskin from Assistant Professor Carol-Lee Satfioti and Associate&#13;
Professor Carole Vopat; both Humanities Senators. It is presumed the&#13;
Chancellor himself will answer the four questions. The text of the&#13;
memorandum is as follows:&#13;
November 1, 1977&#13;
To: Alan Guskin, Chancellor&#13;
From: Carol Lee and Carole Vopat&#13;
Senate Representatives for I:'umanities&#13;
Subject: In October you reported to the Senate only on affirmative&#13;
action in hiring at UW-Pj we have the following questions:&#13;
1977 Affirmative Action Progress&#13;
1. What has bee« the overall progress made through affirmative&#13;
action during the past year? How much have nonrenewals and&#13;
resignations affected any apparent progress?&#13;
Affirmative Action PI.."&#13;
2. Why has there been no official public response to the Aff"mati ....e&#13;
Action Plan submitted last May?&#13;
3. Why was there no indication made, during your report at the last&#13;
Senate meeting, concerning nonrenewals and resignations which&#13;
might have affected progress in hiring and promotion among&#13;
faculty and staff? .&#13;
Affirmative Action Officer appointment&#13;
4. Why has your special assistant been designated the Affirmative&#13;
Action Officer for the campus, when this position has in the past&#13;
been conceived of as an independent position; and why has this&#13;
decision not been announced to the university community?&#13;
Continued on page two&#13;
Administration holds open faculty meeting&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Parks ide an ins ructor who&#13;
wishes to take a sabbatical could&#13;
then be replaced by an ad-hoc&#13;
for a year.&#13;
Since ad-hoes cost far less&#13;
than regular faculty members,&#13;
the person on a sabbatical could&#13;
still receive half pay and the&#13;
ad-hoc would teach his classes at&#13;
no extra cost to the university&#13;
system. At this point, the number&#13;
of sabbaticals available to each&#13;
campus is limited to 1.5% of the&#13;
total full time faculty. "It's&#13;
absurd that Central won't give&#13;
you an option on it, even though&#13;
you can replace the instructors&#13;
with ad-hoes at no extra cost,"&#13;
said Guskin.&#13;
Chancellor Cuskin and ViceChancellor&#13;
Ratner held an&#13;
informal meeting with the&#13;
faculty last THursday to discuss&#13;
anything faculty members wanted&#13;
to bring up.&#13;
One of the' subjects Guskin&#13;
discussed was that of faculty&#13;
sabbaticals. At this point&#13;
Parkside is only allowed one&#13;
person to take a sabbatical per&#13;
year at half pay, which is the&#13;
minimum allowed by- UW&#13;
regulations. Cuskin said the UW&#13;
system should change its policy&#13;
to remove restrictions on the&#13;
number of positions, because at&#13;
Guskin and Ratner were asked&#13;
if Parkslde will meet the&#13;
November 15 deadline for&#13;
recruiting of ad-hoes and regular&#13;
faculty members. Guskin said&#13;
Parkside wiII be ready, and&#13;
Ratner said "We should be able&#13;
to start recruiting at an&#13;
appropriate time."&#13;
Morris Firebaugh, ProfessorPhysics,&#13;
told Guskln that the&#13;
budget in the science department&#13;
for replacement of capital&#13;
equipment is too small to pay.-for&#13;
new equipment to replace old&#13;
tube-type instruments which are&#13;
wearing out due to heavy use&#13;
Guskin replied that Central&#13;
Administration doesn't understand&#13;
that equipment doesn't&#13;
last forever, and only lets him&#13;
budget once for each piece of&#13;
equipment. Guskin said he will&#13;
talk to Central and try to get&#13;
some more money, and that&#13;
several other measures are&#13;
available.&#13;
In response to a question from&#13;
Richard Pomazal, Assistant&#13;
Professor-Psychology, about the&#13;
direction Parks ide is taking&#13;
concerning the development of&#13;
its natural areas, Cuskin said&#13;
there is virtually no posstbilitv of&#13;
ever building another parking lot&#13;
here 'We want to keep these&#13;
tracts the way they are for&#13;
Prairie land •&#13;
In danger of marina development&#13;
by 'ohn McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Prairie land adjacent to Parkside-owned Chiwaukee Prairie is in&#13;
danger of being commercially developed by the Trident Marina,&#13;
according to the newly-formed Environmental Concerns Committee.&#13;
According to the committee, the grass on the land has been cut and&#13;
the land disced by farm tractors.&#13;
The committee chairman, Eugene Gasiorkiewicz, Professor-Life&#13;
Science, said he will check with Kenosha County's zoning&#13;
administrator to see what use Trident has proposed for the land.&#13;
According to a committee member, "the very reason we acquired the&#13;
Chiwaukee Prairie in 1965 was to keep Trident from making it&#13;
commercial." Richard Pomazal, Assistant Professor-Psvchologv, said&#13;
the committee should move to help prevent the deyelopment of the&#13;
adjacent area.&#13;
Signs to be posted&#13;
As for the Parkside-owned portion of the prairie, the committee&#13;
agreed that educational signs should be posted telling that the land is&#13;
to be preserved for ecological studies. The committee believed&#13;
educational signs explaining why vehicles should be kept off the&#13;
prairie would be more effective than the "No trespassing" type of&#13;
signs which are currently in use and have a tendency to "evaporate."&#13;
James Galbraith, Director-Planning and Construction, said he talked&#13;
to a young man who had been motorcycling on the prairie, and "had&#13;
he known what he was doing, he wouldn't have been doing It"&#13;
The signs might mention that the Chiwaukee Prairie is a state&#13;
scientific area and a nation a.! monument (Galbraith has a bronze&#13;
plaque which could be erected) in addition to being university&#13;
property. The area has also been nominated for national coastal zone&#13;
status.&#13;
University should encourage support&#13;
According to Morris Firebaugh, Professor-Physics, the university&#13;
"should encourage use of the prairie by people in an environmentally&#13;
sound manner. This would improve the chance of its surviving,&#13;
because the people who use it could then become its defenders,&#13;
reporting any violations."&#13;
The type of sign the committee is considering is similar to those&#13;
found in state and national parks: wooden sign{s) engraved with&#13;
lettering. -&#13;
Nature tr..ils to be discussed&#13;
The committee might make some final decisions on the Chiwaukee&#13;
matter this week. At the same time, the committee will consider the&#13;
use or misuse of the Parkside nature trail or whether it should have&#13;
ever been constructed. According to Pomazal, "I used to take walks&#13;
out there all the time, to see the sun rise, and I had no difficulty&#13;
getting through the area without the assistance of a nature trail. The&#13;
nature trail is unnecessary."&#13;
er&#13;
Wednesday, November 9, 1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No. 11&#13;
() 11 If fifty million people say a ()()&#13;
l) foolish thing, It Is still a ll V&#13;
foolish thing.&#13;
-Anatole France&#13;
Faculty Senate receives breadth&#13;
·and academic advising proPosals&#13;
The Faculty Senate will meet at 3:30 p.m., Tuesday, November 15&#13;
in Cl D-105, to act on the new Academic Advising proposal and th~&#13;
Breadth Requirement. If the Faculty Senate approves the two proposals,&#13;
both the Breadth Requirement and compl-ete Academic Aci-&#13;
,vising will be in effect at Parkside Fall registration of 1978. The texts&#13;
of both proposals follows.&#13;
Affirmative Action Questions&#13;
Another item on the agenda is a set of questions to Chancellor Alan&#13;
E. Cuskin from Assistant Professor Carol-lee Saffioti and Associate&#13;
Professor Carole Vopat; both Humanities Senators. It is presumed the&#13;
- Chancellor himself will answer the four quest-ions. The text of the&#13;
, memorandum is as follows:&#13;
November 1, 1977&#13;
To: Alan Guskin, Chancellor&#13;
From: Carol Lee and Carole Vopat&#13;
Senate Representatives for J:tumanities&#13;
Subject: In October you reported to the Senate only on affirmative&#13;
action in hiring at UW-P; we have the following questions:&#13;
1977 Affirmative Action Progress&#13;
1. What has Qeen the overall progress made through affirmative&#13;
action during the past year? How much have nonrenewals and&#13;
resignations affected any apparent progress?&#13;
Affirmative Action Plan&#13;
2. Why has there been no official public response to the Affirmative&#13;
Action Plan submitted last May?&#13;
3. Wh y was there no indication made, during your report at the last&#13;
Senate meeting, concerning nonrenewals and resignations which&#13;
might have affected progress in hiring and promotion among&#13;
faculty and staff? ·&#13;
Affirmative Action Officer appointment&#13;
4. Wh y has your special assistant been designated the Affirmative&#13;
Action Officer for the campus, when this position has in the past&#13;
been conceived of as an independent position; and why has this&#13;
decision not been announced to the university community?&#13;
Continued on page two&#13;
Administration holds open faculty meeting&#13;
by John cK os ey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Chancellor Guskin and ViceChancellor&#13;
Ratner held an&#13;
informal m~eting with the&#13;
faculty last Tllursday to discuss&#13;
anything faculty members wanted&#13;
to bring up .&#13;
One of the ' subjects Guskin&#13;
discussed was that of faculty&#13;
sabbaticals. At this point&#13;
Parkside is only allowed one&#13;
person to take a sabbatical per&#13;
year at half pay, which is the&#13;
minimum allowed by - UW&#13;
regulations. Guskin said the UW&#13;
system should change its policy&#13;
to remove restrictions on the&#13;
nymber of positions, because at&#13;
Parl&lt;side an ins ructor who&#13;
wishes to take a sabbatical could&#13;
then be replaced by an ad-hoc&#13;
for a year.&#13;
Since ad-hoes cost far less&#13;
than regular faculty members,&#13;
the person on a sabbatical could&#13;
still receive half pay and the&#13;
ad-hoc would teach his classes at&#13;
no extra cost to the university&#13;
system. At this point, the number&#13;
of sabbaticals available to each&#13;
campus is limited to 1.5% of the&#13;
total full time faculty. " It's&#13;
absurd that Central won't give&#13;
you an option on it, even though&#13;
you can replace the instructors&#13;
with ad-hoes at no extra cost,"&#13;
said Guskin .&#13;
Guskin and Ratner were asked&#13;
if Parkside will meet the&#13;
November 15 deadline for&#13;
recruiting of ad-hoes and regular&#13;
faculty members. Guskin said&#13;
Parkside will be ready, and&#13;
Ratner said "We should be able&#13;
to start recruiting at an&#13;
ap0&#13;
propriate time."&#13;
Morris Firebaugh, ProfessorPhysics,&#13;
told Guskin that the&#13;
budget in the science department&#13;
for replacement of capital&#13;
equipment is too small to pay for&#13;
new equipment to replace old&#13;
tube-type instruments which are&#13;
wearing out due to heavy use&#13;
Guskin replied that Central&#13;
Administration doesn't understand&#13;
that equipment doesn't&#13;
last forever, and only lets him&#13;
budget once for each piece of&#13;
equipment. Guskin said he will&#13;
talk to Central and try to get&#13;
some more money, and that&#13;
several other measures are&#13;
available.&#13;
In response to a question from&#13;
Richard Pomazal, Assistant&#13;
Professor-Psychology, about the&#13;
direction Parkside is taking&#13;
concerning the development of&#13;
its natural areas, Guskin said&#13;
there is virtually no possibility of&#13;
ever building another parking lot&#13;
here. "We want to keep these&#13;
tracts the way they are for&#13;
Prairie land in danger Of marina development&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
, Copy Editor&#13;
Prai;ie land adjacent to Parkside-owned Chiwaukee Prairie 1s m&#13;
danger of being commercially developed by the Trident Marina,&#13;
according to the newly-formed Environmental Concerns Committee .&#13;
According to the committee, the grass on the land has been cut and&#13;
the land disced by farm tractors.&#13;
The committee chairman, Eugene Casiorkiewicz, Professor-life&#13;
Science, said he will check with Kenosha County's zoning&#13;
administrator to see what use Trident has proposed for the land.&#13;
Acc"ording to a committee member, "the very reason we acquired the&#13;
Chiwaukee Prairie in 1965 was to keep Trident from making it&#13;
commercial." Richard Pomazal, Assistant Professor-Psychology, said&#13;
the committee should move to help prevent the deyelopment of the&#13;
adjacent area .&#13;
Signs to be posted&#13;
As for the Parkside-owned portion of the prairie, the committee&#13;
agreed that edu'cational signs should be posted telling that the land is&#13;
to be preserved for ecological studies. The committee believed&#13;
educational signs explaining why vehicles should be kept off the&#13;
prairii;- would be more effective than t_he "No trespassing" type of&#13;
signs which are currently in use and have a tendency to "evaporate."&#13;
James Galbraith, Director-Planning and Construction, said he talked I '&#13;
to a young man who had been motorcycling on the prairie, and "had&#13;
he known what he was doing, he wouldn't have been doing 1t."&#13;
The signs might mention that the Chiwaukee Prairie is a state&#13;
scientific area and a nationaJ. monument (Galbraith has a bronze&#13;
plaque which could be erected) in addition to being university&#13;
property. The area has also been nominated for national coastal zone&#13;
status.&#13;
University should encourage support&#13;
According to Morris Firebaugh, Professor-Physics, the university&#13;
"should encourage use of the prairie by people in an environmentally&#13;
sound manner. This would improve the chance of its surviving,&#13;
because the people who use it could then become its defenders,&#13;
reporting any violations."&#13;
The type of sign the committee is considering is similar to those&#13;
found in state and national parks: wooden sign(s) engraved with&#13;
lettering . -&#13;
Nature trails to be discussed&#13;
The committee might make some final decisions on the Chiwaukee&#13;
matter this week. At the same time, the committee will consider the&#13;
use or misuse of the Parkside nature_ trail or whether it should have&#13;
ever been constructed. According to Pomazal, "I used to take walks&#13;
out there all the time, to see the sun rise, and I had no difficulty&#13;
getting through the area without the assistance of a nature trail. The&#13;
nature trail is unnecessary." &#13;
Ranger is-written and edited by students of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its eCiitorial policy and content.&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, University of Wisconsin~Parkside&#13;
Kenosha. Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Sub.scriptions: $5.00 year for U.S.A.&#13;
Handicapped Parkside students can expect to see some improvements&#13;
in their ease o.f access to the building complex, but not right&#13;
away.&#13;
Among the improvements will be a pressure-plate automatic&#13;
sliding door to the Classroom building, according to Gary Goetz -&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for Administration and Fiscal Affairs. Goetz said&#13;
"the door will be installed as soon as possible, but since it's part of&#13;
_the state building program, we won't get the money for another year&#13;
or so." Estimating the cost of the door at $25,()(X) to $30,(0), Goetz&#13;
said it will be a "major construction project" and expressed hope that&#13;
"the state will become more responsive to the needs, of the handicapped&#13;
by establishlng a fund for this type of construction."&#13;
Facul~y Senate from page 1 Resolutions on Academic Advising&#13;
Academic Policies Committee assumes from&#13;
discussion and a survey that the majority of UWP&#13;
faculty are committed to the belief that academic&#13;
advising of students should be done by faculty.&#13;
APC strongly endorses this position and has&#13;
developed the following resolutions from that&#13;
premise.&#13;
(1) Formal declaration of an area of interest must&#13;
be made upon completion of 45 credits.&#13;
Formal declaration of a major is required upon&#13;
. completion of 60 credits. A student who fails&#13;
to make such formal declarations by these&#13;
deadlines will be transferred to special stu-&#13;
'dent status and will be so notified. Students&#13;
are encouraged to identify an area of&#13;
interest as early as possible in their academic&#13;
careers, but they are free, of course, to&#13;
change the area of interest or major.&#13;
(2) Every student shall have an assigned advisor&#13;
or advising officer as provided below:&#13;
(a) Students' with declared majors or area of&#13;
interest shall be advised by faculty members&#13;
in their major or area of interest. It is&#13;
the responsibility of the divisions to decide&#13;
the advising format for their unit.&#13;
(b) Students who have not declared a major&#13;
or area of interest shall be assigned faculty&#13;
advisors by the Office of the Dean of&#13;
Faculty. These advisors will be assigned&#13;
according to the students' preliminary&#13;
interests, if any. All such assignments&#13;
will be made with the prior consent of the (&#13;
proposed faculty advisor.&#13;
mutimTirmrn:n:7IT~~~=~~~~~&#13;
,&#13;
WEDDING -&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
~r .r:&#13;
,&#13;
,.'&#13;
c.&#13;
..=-&#13;
Come Today See Yours.&#13;
@! .' -~~~&#13;
~" ~-'._~~&#13;
quality corrrnercial printers&#13;
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3904-561h 65-'-0202&#13;
.Prairie pg. 1 '&#13;
decades : to come," he said,&#13;
_adding that shuttle bus service&#13;
may in the future be funded by&#13;
the users. "We could let them&#13;
park in the East lot for free, and&#13;
then charge a dime to let them&#13;
use the bus service," said&#13;
Guskin.&#13;
Guskin said that to help attract&#13;
more students to the campus,&#13;
Parkside might enter into 'a&#13;
program with the Racine and&#13;
Kenosha Unified school districts&#13;
to let Parks ide instructors go into&#13;
local high schools to teach&#13;
advanced classes, or have the&#13;
classes come t'o Parkside, 'which&#13;
would give advanced students an&#13;
opportun ity to become acquainted&#13;
with the campus. This&#13;
would also tend 'to attract more&#13;
outstanding students to attend&#13;
here, he said.&#13;
\&#13;
(3) A student who is a candidate for a degree&#13;
must secure his/her advisor's signature, or&#13;
the signature of the advisor's designee, prior&#13;
to each registration. The signature indicates&#13;
only that the opportunity for advising has&#13;
occurred.· (&#13;
(4) These policies shall become effective with the&#13;
fall registration of 1978.&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge proposal&#13;
To insure that the degree programs of&#13;
UW-Parkside students include study in a variety&#13;
of academic fields, the following. requirements&#13;
are established. To obtain a UWP degree, a&#13;
student must accumulate 9 credits in each of 3&#13;
designated areas of study and 3 credits in a 4th&#13;
area, making a core of studies of 30 credits.&#13;
Fine Arts and Humanities&#13;
Social and Behavioral Sciences&#13;
Science&#13;
arid&#13;
Management Science, Engineering&#13;
Science, Labor&#13;
Economics and Education (excluding&#13;
Physical Education courses)&#13;
9 cr "&#13;
s cr "&#13;
9 cr "&#13;
3cr&#13;
30cr&#13;
• The total of 9 credits per unit must include&#13;
work in-at least two disciplines. No more than 6&#13;
credits in any one discipline may be counted&#13;
toward fulfilling the Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
requirement. Academic Skills courses, English&#13;
090, 100, and 101, o-ievet mathematics courses· , ,&#13;
and foreign language courses taken to fulfill the&#13;
language requirement, will not count toward the&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge requirement.&#13;
lSHIRTS+ thought that the theatre members knew their roles&#13;
well. Why then did the play seem so phony and&#13;
.J artificial? \&#13;
On Thursday, October 27, at eight o'clock, 1- It seemed to me that there was a certain&#13;
witnessed a courageous effort by the members of distance between the actresses. Words were&#13;
the Parkside Theatre, to perform Lillian Hellman's uttered without feeling, as if they had just&#13;
complicated play, The Children's Hour. It is a memorized their lines. In fact opening night can be&#13;
story about Mary Tilford (Donna Linde) who compared to a typical dress rehearsal with hardly&#13;
destroys four peoples' lives by telling a malicious any differences at all. ,&#13;
lie. Through her lively dialogue, Hellman raises The missing cues and feelings of awkwardness&#13;
Important questions of intimacy between can be easily blamed on opening night. I am sure&#13;
individuals of the same sex. Can two friends love that the members of the play recognized \their&#13;
each other too much? Are there boundaries of faults and performed with ease the following three&#13;
normal and 'unnatural' love? Is it fair for a society nights.&#13;
to establish restrictions on the individuals' Technically, the costumes and props that took&#13;
relationship? approximately one month to complete were made&#13;
The answers are not of surface quality. with the utmost precision. Both Deborah Bell&#13;
Hellman's theme of friendship versus. lesbianism is (Costume Designer) and John Dickson (Scenic&#13;
not only hard to convey to an audience, but it is and Lighting Designer) ought to be given a&#13;
difficult to establish this theme among the standing ovation for correlating the wardrobe and&#13;
actresses and actors as well. The director, scenery so well. Never have I-seen both elements&#13;
Rhode-Galle Pollack, stressed the significance of match with one another as well as the individual,&#13;
character knowledge in hopes of her "students either in community or professional theatre. They&#13;
portraying a realistic individual. It" you can both tied together thus ,creating a perfect&#13;
establish a believeable character on stage then atmosphere and flavor to the play.&#13;
your chances of having a realistic play are high. I&#13;
by Wendy Ratner&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
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OPEU U. TIL10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 WI.hi .. ton Itwt. 6M-2i7J&#13;
news&#13;
Ranger is- written and edited by students of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its ec:titorial policy and content.&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Subscriptions: $5.00 year for U.S.A. ·Prairie pg. 1 '&#13;
Handicapped students c_an&#13;
expect campus improvements __&#13;
By John McKloskey The committee to which the handicapped are invited to brm~ their&#13;
decades · to come," he said,&#13;
-adding that shuttle bus service&#13;
may in the future be funded by&#13;
the users. "We could let them&#13;
park in the East Lot for free , and&#13;
then charge a dime to let them&#13;
use the bus service," said&#13;
Guskin .&#13;
Guskin said that to help attract&#13;
more students to the campus,&#13;
Parkside might enter into 'a&#13;
program with the Racine and&#13;
Kenosha Unified school districh&#13;
to let Parkside instructors go into&#13;
local high schools to teach&#13;
advanced classes, or have the&#13;
classes come to Parkside, 'which&#13;
would giv·e advanced students an&#13;
opportunity to become acquainted&#13;
with the campus. This&#13;
would also tend ·to attract more&#13;
outstanding students to attend&#13;
here, he said.&#13;
Copy Editor access problems is the Campus Planning Committee; the student&#13;
Handicapped Parkside students can expect to see some improvements&#13;
in their ease of access to the building complex, but not right&#13;
member of which is Elizabeth Perry. The faculty members of the&#13;
committee will be elected within the next few weeks. Rick Folsom of&#13;
PSGA said he will be bringing the problems of the handicapped to the&#13;
attention of the committee. "These students would be forever&#13;
grateful to the 5=ommittee if it would get goi~g on these projects," he&#13;
said. "Sometimes the handicapped have to. yell and kick the door to&#13;
get someone to open the door for them."&#13;
away. Among the improvements will be a pressure-plate automatic&#13;
sliding door to the Classroom building, according to Gary Goetz -&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for Administration and Fiscal Affairs. Goetz said&#13;
"the door will be installed as soon as possible, but since it's part of&#13;
- the state building program, we won't get the money for another year&#13;
or so." Estimating the cost of the door at $25,000 to $30,000, Goetz&#13;
said it will be a "major construction project" and expressed hope that&#13;
"the state will become more responsive to the need~ of the handicapped&#13;
by establishing a fund for this type of construction."&#13;
Parkside's campus nurse, Edith lsenbe'rg, said she has set up a&#13;
program to help prevent that. "I don't think they usually have to yell,&#13;
because we in' the Health:- Office usually send someone at a prearranged&#13;
time to let them in", she said, adding that this year's&#13;
wheelchair population is the highest it has ever been at Parkside. "We&#13;
have seven or eight, which is a lot for this size campus," she said.&#13;
Faculty Senate from page 1 Resolutions on Ac;ademic Advising (3) A student who is a candidate for a degree&#13;
must secure his/her advisor's signature, or&#13;
the signature of the advisor's designee, prior&#13;
to each registration. The signature indicates&#13;
WEDDING only that the opportunity for· advising has&#13;
INVITATIONS ·&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
.~ /&#13;
quality corrrnerc,al printers&#13;
1417 50th street . 658-8990&#13;
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Full Senil'e&#13;
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Academic Policies Committee assumes from&#13;
discussion and a survey that the majority of UWP&#13;
faculty are commiUed to the belief that academic&#13;
advising of students should be done by faculty.&#13;
APC strongly endorses this position and has&#13;
developed the following resolutions_ from that&#13;
premise.&#13;
(1) Formal declaration of an area of interest must&#13;
be made upon completion of 45 credits.&#13;
Formal declaration of a major is required upon&#13;
completion of 60 credits. A student who fails&#13;
to make such formal declarations by these&#13;
deadlines will be transferred to special student&#13;
status and will be so notified. Students&#13;
are encouraged to identify an area of&#13;
- interest as early as possible in their academic&#13;
careers, but they are free, of course, to&#13;
change the area of interest or major.&#13;
(2) Every student shall have an assigned advisor&#13;
or advising officer as provided below:&#13;
(a) Students with declared majors or area of&#13;
interest shall be advised by faculty members&#13;
in their major or a·rea of interest. It is&#13;
the responsibility of the divisions to decide&#13;
the advising format for their unit.&#13;
(b) Students who have not declared a major&#13;
or area of interest shall be assigned faculty&#13;
advisors by the Office _of the Dean of&#13;
Faculty. These advisors will be assigned&#13;
according to the students' preliminary&#13;
interests, if any. All such assignments&#13;
will be made with the prior consent of the r&#13;
proposed faculty advisor.&#13;
occurred. · (&#13;
(4) These policies shall become effective with the&#13;
fall registration of 1978.&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge Proposal&#13;
To insure that the degree programs of&#13;
UW-Parkside students include study in a variety&#13;
of academic fields, the following requirements&#13;
are established. To obtain a UWP degree, a&#13;
student must accumulate 9 credits in each of 3&#13;
designated areas of study and 3 credits in a 4th&#13;
area, making a core of studies of 30 credits.&#13;
Fine Arts and Humanities&#13;
Social and Behavioral Sciences&#13;
Science&#13;
and&#13;
Management Science, Engineering&#13;
Science, Labor&#13;
Economics and Education (excluding&#13;
Physical Education courses)&#13;
9cr *&#13;
9 er*&#13;
9 er*&#13;
3cr&#13;
30cr&#13;
* The total of 9 credits per unit must include&#13;
work in -at least two disciplines. No more than 6&#13;
credits in any one discipline may be counted&#13;
toward fulfilling the Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
requirement. Academic Skills courses, English&#13;
090, 100, and 101 , 0-level mathematics courses,.&#13;
and foreign language courses taken to fulfill the&#13;
language requirement, will not count toward the&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge requirement.&#13;
ISHIRTS+&#13;
EWREVIEWREVIEWREVIEWREVIEWREVIEWREVIE&#13;
by Wendy Ratner&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
On Thursday, October 27, at eight o'clock,&#13;
witnessed a courageous effort by the members of&#13;
the Parkside Theatre, to perform Lillian Hellman's&#13;
complicated play, The Children's Hour. It is a&#13;
story about Mary Tilford (Donna Linde) who&#13;
destroys four peoples' lives by telling a malicious&#13;
lie. Through her lively dialogue, Hellman raises&#13;
imp6rtant questions of intimacy between&#13;
individuals of the same sex. Can two friends love&#13;
each other too much? Are there boundaries of&#13;
normal and 'unnatural' love? Is it fair for a society&#13;
to establish restrictions on the individuals'&#13;
relationship?&#13;
thought that the theatre members knew their roles&#13;
well. Why then did the play seem so phony and&#13;
artificia1?&#13;
It seemed to me that there was a certain&#13;
distance between the actresses. Words were&#13;
uttered without feeling, as if they had just&#13;
memorized their lines. In fact opening night can be&#13;
compared to a typical dress rehearsal with hardly&#13;
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The answers are not of surface quality.&#13;
Hellman's theme of friendship versus. lesbianism is&#13;
not only hard to convey to an audience, but it is&#13;
difficult to establish this theme among the&#13;
actresses and actors as well. The director&#13;
Rhoda-Galle Pollack, stressed the significance of&#13;
character knowledge in hopes of her -students&#13;
portraying a realistic individual. If you can&#13;
establish a believeable character on stage then&#13;
your chances of having a realistic play are high. I&#13;
any differences at all. ,&#13;
The missing cues and feelings of awkwardness&#13;
can be easily blamed on opening night. I am sure&#13;
that the members of the play recognized I their&#13;
faults and performed with ease the following three&#13;
nights.&#13;
Technically, the costumes and props that took&#13;
approximately one month to complete were made&#13;
with the utmost precision. Both D~borah Bell&#13;
(Costume Designer) ~nd John Dickson (Scenic&#13;
and Lighting Designer) ought to be given a&#13;
standing ovation for correlating the wardrobe and&#13;
scenery so well. Never have 1-seen both elements&#13;
match with one another as well as the individual,&#13;
either in community or professional theatre. They&#13;
both tied together thus creating a perfect&#13;
atmosphere and flavor to the play. &#13;
•&#13;
p Views&#13;
Parkside administrators should CONTACT&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
by Rusty Smith stop proiecting their mistakes&#13;
President, P.S.G.A. To the Editor: brought about the slow death of&#13;
the woods as a natural area.&#13;
... Couldn't the admanistrators&#13;
foresee that their wish to exploit&#13;
the woods might be shared by&#13;
others? How dare they cry&#13;
"abuse" to runners, minibikers,&#13;
and horse riders after the&#13;
university caused so much&#13;
damage to the environment by&#13;
building the trail itself. How can&#13;
Parks ide be naively surprised to&#13;
see that now that they have&#13;
made the area accessible, it is&#13;
being used and abused like all&#13;
public lands.&#13;
It seems that people who have&#13;
the power to make such&#13;
decisions about the environment&#13;
should have the intelligence and&#13;
responsibility to consider the&#13;
simple question of whether a&#13;
project such as a nature trail will&#13;
bring more destruction or benefit&#13;
to the land. As a runner and a&#13;
photographer, I have never&#13;
neededa path to enjoy that area,&#13;
and the environment never&#13;
suffered from my occasional&#13;
visits. However, now that the&#13;
university,has made it easier and&#13;
easier to travel through, it is&#13;
becoming less and less worth&#13;
traveling through.&#13;
I hope the Parkside administrators&#13;
will stop projecting their&#13;
mistakes onto others and realize&#13;
they're stumbling over the&#13;
consequences of their past&#13;
actions. I end witl&gt;-the plea that&#13;
the University administrators&#13;
show their concern for the area&#13;
by taking appropriate steps to&#13;
return the woods to its previous&#13;
condition.&#13;
The Parkside Student Government Association, Parkside Activities&#13;
Board, Schirley Schmerling, and Wayne Dannehl are making plans for&#13;
a Winterfest celebration to be held in January or February. Since&#13;
Parkside has no home coming or similar activity, we hope to institute&#13;
this event as a tradition for our campus.&#13;
The main events would be a basketball game and dance on Friday&#13;
night and a formal dance including dinner on Saturday night. Other&#13;
activities would be scheduled campus wide during the two days and&#13;
possibly on Sunday, too. Some 'of the ideas that are being tossed&#13;
around include: cross country skiing, a snowman building contest&#13;
(with Mother Nature's assistance, of course), ice sculpting, bingo,&#13;
sleigh rides, softball on Wyllie pond, snowball throwing contests, and&#13;
ice skating.&#13;
Need more students&#13;
We need the help of students who are willing to organize and&#13;
conduct some of the activities. We would also appreciate any helpful&#13;
ideasor suggestionsfor other events. Think about it! What would you&#13;
like to see happening during a Winterfest celebration at your school?&#13;
Let is know!&#13;
Towing insurance&#13;
A representative from Triple A (AAA) auto insurance will be on&#13;
campus from 9:00 a.m. until 3:00 p.m. November 7th through&#13;
November 12th. His table will be located on the concourse, and he&#13;
will be offering towing insurance plus several extras to students at a&#13;
cost of $22.00 per year. He is being sponsored by the P.5.GA Senate.&#13;
Student Voice anyongJ&#13;
I would also like to announce that there are several openings for&#13;
students on University Committees. Among them are the Campus&#13;
Ceremonies Committee which helps to plan our December&#13;
Commencement and other formal occasions, the Parking Appeals&#13;
Committee, the "Academic Appeals Committee, The Academic&#13;
Policies Committee and the Library Learning Center Committee. I&#13;
would gladly welcome any student who wishes to become involved&#13;
in any of these or any other area of campus governance.&#13;
Our society has a chronic&#13;
inability to anticipate the&#13;
consequences of its acts. As a&#13;
country, we often engage in&#13;
programs, plans, and projects&#13;
with reckless enthusiasm, then&#13;
become perturbed and frustrated&#13;
when we are forced to deal with&#13;
the disastrous, unforseen, consequencesof&#13;
our actions.&#13;
The Parkside nature trail&#13;
project seemsto be a classic case&#13;
in point. Parkside decided to&#13;
"develop" a heavily wooded area&#13;
by building a three mile trail&#13;
through it (perhaps the idea that&#13;
we consider untouched woods&#13;
"underdeveloped" says something&#13;
about our egosand values).&#13;
Now that the project is&#13;
complete, the university is&#13;
bewildered over the fact that the&#13;
"success" of their project has&#13;
John Van Den Brandt&#13;
Amen, brother! -editor&#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"doesthis famous course reduce&#13;
your time in the classroom to just&#13;
oneclass per week for 4 short weeks&#13;
but it also includesan 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;
weeksthe 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 speedsup&#13;
to 20,000words per minute have been&#13;
documented.&#13;
Our Average graduate reads 3 to&#13;
10tlmesfaster 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 orientation&#13;
lectures have been scheduled.&#13;
At the free meetings the course will&#13;
be explained in complete detail&#13;
including classroom procedures,&#13;
instruction methods, class schedule&#13;
and a special Introductory tuition&#13;
that is qne half the cost of similar&#13;
courses.You must attend anyone of&#13;
these meetings for information"&#13;
about classes.&#13;
These orientations are opened to&#13;
the public above age 14 (persons&#13;
under 18should·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, lust by attending one evening&#13;
per week for four short weeks&#13;
read 3to 10times faster with greater&#13;
comprehension and concentration.&#13;
If you are a student who would like&#13;
to make A's Insteadof 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 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-Racine area:&#13;
November 7th Two meetings, one at&#13;
6:30 P.M. and again at&#13;
8:30 P.M.&#13;
R r&#13;
Ranger errors&#13;
To the Editor: from the nature trails.&#13;
Unfortunately, despite all the&#13;
efforts to clearly mark the course&#13;
a few runners got lost in the&#13;
heavily wooded area and strayed&#13;
onto the nature trails. However,&#13;
the race itself was not contested&#13;
on the nature trails.&#13;
AIHalbur&#13;
Cross-country runner&#13;
I would like to clarify some&#13;
points made in the RANGER&#13;
article, "Nature Trails Being&#13;
Abused". The article stated that&#13;
on October 30, Parks ide&#13;
Athletics Department hosted a&#13;
cross country meet on the nature&#13;
trails.&#13;
That statement is in error on&#13;
two accounts. First, Parkside&#13;
Athletics had no connection&#13;
with the meet. The race was&#13;
conceived of and promoted by&#13;
runners Ray Fredericksen and&#13;
Bob Langanoh.&#13;
More importantly, the race&#13;
was NOT run on the Parkside&#13;
nature trails. The day before the&#13;
race Fredericksen received&#13;
requests by university personnel&#13;
to change the site of the race.&#13;
Fredericksen complied, rerouting&#13;
the entire race away&#13;
November 8th Two meetings. one at&#13;
6: 30 P.M. and again at&#13;
8:30 P.M.&#13;
November 9th Two meetings, one at&#13;
6: 30 P.M. and again at&#13;
8:30 P.M.&#13;
Ranger was well represented at&#13;
the event. Parkside Athletics did&#13;
co-ordinate the event along with&#13;
Professor Eugene Gasiorkiewicz,&#13;
Asst. Chancellor O. Clayton&#13;
Johnson, and Asst. Chancellor&#13;
Gary Goetz. The fact that things&#13;
got confused may be because of&#13;
this mass involvement. The race&#13;
was run on the nature trails along&#13;
the south side of the creek. The&#13;
front page photograph was of&#13;
tbis area. -edjtor&#13;
TWO FINAL MEETINGS&#13;
November 10th One at 6: 30 P.M. and&#13;
again at 8: 30 P.M.&#13;
These meetings will be held In the&#13;
Holiday Inn at 5125-6th Street in&#13;
Kenosha.If you are a businessman,&#13;
a student, housewlte, 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, com prehend more, concentrate&#13;
better, and remember&#13;
longer. This course can be taught to&#13;
industry or qlvlc groups at group&#13;
rates upon request. Besure 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 INVESTMENT&#13;
TODAY.&#13;
HAVE A FREE DRINK ON THE BEAN&#13;
With Thi. Coupon. YOW IIA&#13;
1 Per Cu.tomer H&#13;
our.&#13;
M-T&#13;
7p.m ••&#13;
lOp.m.&#13;
Tapper.&#13;
25'&#13;
Mic.&#13;
. 35"&#13;
Milled Drinks&#13;
W&#13;
Ladiei Night&#13;
Wed.&#13;
o. the Cor•• r&#13;
of 57th &amp; 23 Ay •• •&#13;
.,&#13;
• views&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
by Rusty Smith&#13;
President, P .S.G.A.&#13;
The Parkside Student Government Association, Parkside Activities&#13;
Board, Schirley Schmerling, and Wayne Dannehl are making plans for&#13;
a Winterfest celebration to be held in January or February. Since&#13;
Parkside has no home coming or similar activity, we hope to institute&#13;
this event as a tradition for our campus .&#13;
The main events would be a basketball game and dance on Friday&#13;
night and a formal dance including dinner on Saturday night. Other&#13;
activities would be sch~duled campus wide during the two days and&#13;
possibly on Sunday, too. Some 'of the ideas that are being tossed&#13;
around include: cross country skiing, a snowman building contest&#13;
(with Mother Nature's assistance, of course), ice sculpting, bingo,&#13;
sleigh rides, softball on Wyllie pond, snowball throwing contests, and&#13;
ice skating.&#13;
Need more students&#13;
We need the help of students who are willing to organize and&#13;
conduct some of the activities. We would also appreciate any helpful&#13;
ideas or suggestions for other events. Think about it! What would you&#13;
like to see happening during a Winterfest celebration at your school?&#13;
let is know!&#13;
Towing insurance&#13;
A representative from Triple A (AAA) auto insurance will be on&#13;
campus from 9:00 a.m. until 3:00 p.m. November 7th through&#13;
November 12th. His table will be located on the conc9urse, and he&#13;
will be offering towing insurance plus several extras to students at a&#13;
cost of $22.00 per year. He is being sponsored by the P.S.G.A. Senate.&#13;
Student Voice anyongl&#13;
I would also like to announce that there are several openings for&#13;
students on University Committees. Among them are the Campus&#13;
Ceremonies Committee which helps to plan our December&#13;
Commencement and other formal occasions, the Parking Appeals&#13;
Committee, the Academic Appeals Committee, The Academic&#13;
Policies Committee and the Library Learning Center Committee. I&#13;
would gladly welcome any student who wishes to become involved&#13;
in any of these or any other area of campus governance.&#13;
R • d r&#13;
Ranger errors&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I would like to clarify some&#13;
points made in the RANGER&#13;
article, "Nature Trails Being&#13;
Abused". The article stated that&#13;
on October 30, Parkside&#13;
Athletics Department hosted a&#13;
cross country meet on the nature&#13;
trails.&#13;
That statement is in error on&#13;
two accounts. First, Parkside&#13;
Athletics had no connection&#13;
with the meet. The race was&#13;
conceived of and promoted by&#13;
runners Ray Fredericksen and&#13;
Bob Langanoh .&#13;
More importantly, the race&#13;
was NOT run on the Parkside&#13;
nature trails. The day before the&#13;
race Fredericksen received&#13;
requests by university personnel&#13;
to change the site of the race.&#13;
Fredericksen complied, rerouting&#13;
the entire race away&#13;
from the nature trails.&#13;
Unfortunately, despite all the&#13;
efforts to clearly mark the course&#13;
a few runners got lost in the&#13;
heavily wooded area and strayed&#13;
onto the nature trails. However,&#13;
the race itself was not contested&#13;
on the nature trails.&#13;
Al Halbur&#13;
Cross-country runner&#13;
Ranger was well represented at&#13;
the event. Parkside Athletics did&#13;
co-ordinate the event along with&#13;
Professor Eugene Gasiorkiewicz,&#13;
Asst. Chancellor 0 . Clayton&#13;
Johnson, and Asst. Chancellor&#13;
Gary Goetz. The fact that things&#13;
got confused may be because of&#13;
this mass involvement. The race&#13;
was run on the nature trails along&#13;
the south side of the creek. The&#13;
front page photograph was of&#13;
.this area. -edjtor&#13;
HAYE A FREE DRINK ON THE BEAN&#13;
With This Coupon •&#13;
Ladies Night&#13;
Wad.&#13;
0• tlle Corner&#13;
1 Per Customer&#13;
of 57111 &amp; 23 Ave.&#13;
YOWZAA&#13;
Hours&#13;
'M-T&#13;
7 p.m. - 10 p.m.&#13;
Tappers&#13;
25r&#13;
Mic.&#13;
35c&#13;
nka&#13;
'&#13;
Parkside administrators should&#13;
stop proiecting their mistakes&#13;
To the Editor: brought about the slow death of&#13;
the woods as a natural area.&#13;
to the land. As a runner and a&#13;
photographer, I have never&#13;
needed a path to enjoy that area,&#13;
and the environment never&#13;
suffered from my occasional&#13;
visits . However, now that the&#13;
university has made it easier and&#13;
easier to travel through, it is&#13;
becoming less and less worth&#13;
traveling through&#13;
Our society has a chronic&#13;
inability to anticipate the&#13;
consequences of its acts. As a&#13;
country, we often engage in&#13;
programs, plans, and projects&#13;
with reckless enthusiasm, then&#13;
become perturbed and frustrated&#13;
when we are forced to deal with&#13;
the disastrous, unforseen, consequences&#13;
of our actions.&#13;
Couldn't the administrators&#13;
foresee that their wish to exploit&#13;
the woods might be shared by&#13;
others? How dare they cry&#13;
"abuse" to runners, minibikers,&#13;
and horseriders after the&#13;
university caused so much&#13;
damage to the environment by&#13;
building the trail itself. How can&#13;
Parkside be naively surprised to&#13;
see that now that they have&#13;
made the area accessible, it is&#13;
being used and abused like all&#13;
public lands.&#13;
I hope the Parkside administrators&#13;
will stop projecting their&#13;
mistakes onto others and realize&#13;
they're stumbl ing over the&#13;
consequences of their past&#13;
actions. I end with-the plea that&#13;
the University administrators&#13;
show their concern for the area&#13;
by taking appropriate steps to&#13;
return the woods to its previous&#13;
condition.&#13;
The Parkside nature trai I&#13;
project seems to be a classic case&#13;
in point. Parkside decided to&#13;
"develop" a heavily wood~ area&#13;
by building a three mile trail&#13;
through it (perhaps the idea that&#13;
we consider untouched woods&#13;
" underdeveloped" says something&#13;
about our egos and values).&#13;
Now that the project is&#13;
complete, the university is&#13;
bewildered over the fact that the&#13;
"success" of their project has&#13;
It seems that people who have&#13;
the power to make such&#13;
decisions about the environment&#13;
should have the intelligence and&#13;
responsibility to consider the&#13;
simple question of whether a&#13;
project such as a nature trail will&#13;
bring more destruction or benefit&#13;
John Van Den Brandt&#13;
Amen, brother! -editor&#13;
,...&#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. NRE I panoramic&#13;
method of instruction is the most&#13;
innovative and effective program&#13;
available in the United States. ~ot&#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;
20to 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;
10 times 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 orientation&#13;
lectures have been scheduled.&#13;
At the free meetings the course will&#13;
be explained in complete detail&#13;
including c1assroom procedures,&#13;
instruction methods, class schedule&#13;
and a special introductory tuition&#13;
that is Qne 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;
•&#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 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 -Racine area:&#13;
November 7th Two meetings, one at&#13;
6: 30 P.M. and again at&#13;
8:30 P.M .&#13;
November 8th Two meetings, one at&#13;
6: 30 P.M. and again at&#13;
8: JO P.M .&#13;
November 9th Two meetings, one at&#13;
6: JO P.M . and again at&#13;
8: 30 P.M.&#13;
TWO FINAL MEETINGS&#13;
November 10th One at 6: 30 P .M . and&#13;
again at 8· JO P.M .&#13;
These meetings wlll be held In the&#13;
Holiday Inn at 5125-6th Street in&#13;
Kenosha. If you are a businessman,&#13;
a student, house"'lfe, 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, concentrate&#13;
better, and remember&#13;
longer. This course can be taught to&#13;
industry or c;lvlc 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 INVESTMENT&#13;
TODAY. &#13;
health&#13;
Fiberous fodder forage&#13;
frees food followers&#13;
(CPS) - The word is out. You&#13;
can take the bran flakes out of&#13;
the medicine cabinet.&#13;
Mom was right, but shedidn't&#13;
have all the facts. When she told&#13;
you to eat bran for "occasional&#13;
irregularity", she didn't know&#13;
that high fiber is "the word" in&#13;
healthy diets this year.&#13;
And that means that bran,&#13;
being one of the best high-fiber&#13;
foods, bas become the hip cereal&#13;
of the year, ranking right up&#13;
there with granola. The&#13;
high-fiber-craze has also uplifted&#13;
the status of lowly celery, apples&#13;
and broccoli.&#13;
Here's why. To start with, fiber&#13;
is the tough structural portion of&#13;
foods composed essentially of&#13;
stiff cell walls that give plants&#13;
their body and strength.&#13;
Fiber is not digestable by&#13;
humans. The best thing about it&#13;
is that it has the ability to absorb&#13;
and hold water.&#13;
Stools are the key ,&#13;
Why is that so outstanding?&#13;
Well, here's a somewhat messyexplanation,&#13;
and it has to do&#13;
with ... stools. Not your kitchen&#13;
or bar stool, but the one your&#13;
doctor pronounces with aslightly&#13;
fastidious "yew" sound&#13;
to it. Styewls. Yes.&#13;
You don't need to take Stool&#13;
Analysis 101 to know that&#13;
sometimes your stools aren't as&#13;
soft, squishy and spontaneous as&#13;
they ought to be. Chances are&#13;
this has to do with diet. The&#13;
average American diet includes&#13;
basicmeat, milk, eggs, sugarand&#13;
fat, which, co-incidentally,&#13;
contains little or no fiber. This&#13;
kind of diet will produce stools&#13;
that are hard, small and&#13;
strenuous. Eating more fiber will&#13;
produce the more desirable&#13;
aforementioned stool, and you&#13;
will 'stool' more often,&#13;
They used to cal! high-fiber&#13;
foods "roughage" and say the&#13;
same things -ebout the benefits.&#13;
But the word "roughage" has&#13;
taken on a medicinal {mage, the&#13;
"It'v-good-tor-vcu" aura that&#13;
surrounds the suspicious likes of&#13;
lima beans, swiss chard, or liver.&#13;
Diverticulosis&#13;
Besides, the big news is not&#13;
only that you should "go" more&#13;
often, it's that high fiber food&#13;
probably (some say "wtll") wards&#13;
off the painful disease of&#13;
diverticulosis.&#13;
Diverticulosis is nothing to&#13;
burp at. Approximately 40&#13;
percent of Americans over 40&#13;
suffer from it with a higher&#13;
percentage in older age groups.&#13;
It occurs when tiny pouches&#13;
(diverticula) form on~ the&#13;
intestine _wall, start collecting&#13;
bits of food and get infected.&#13;
Now, a stool without much&#13;
fiber forces intestinal muscles to&#13;
contract and strain _to push it&#13;
along. After years of such effort,&#13;
weak spots may develop in&#13;
intestinal walls.and develop into&#13;
diverticula. Thus it is easy to see&#13;
that a soft, easily moved stool&#13;
would rarely provoke diverticulosis.&#13;
Most everyone agrees that a&#13;
high-fiber diet is important in&#13;
elimination, but as in most&#13;
health 'movements', there will be&#13;
radicals claiming that the diet is&#13;
essential in curing most&#13;
diagnosable diseases.&#13;
Wjud off diseases&#13;
Someof these opinions sprang&#13;
from a study done in Africa by&#13;
British surgeon Dr. Denis P.&#13;
Burkitt. He observed that rural&#13;
Africans eating a high-fiber diet&#13;
had a very low incidence of&#13;
appendicitis, diverticulosis,&#13;
. hemorrhoids, 'heart -attack,&#13;
cancer of the colon and rectum,&#13;
gall-stones, hiatus hernia, and&#13;
obesity.&#13;
Most epidemiologists (students&#13;
of disease) relate these&#13;
diseases to a diet that is&#13;
low-fiber, but more importantly&#13;
high in fat and sugar. But many&#13;
give credibility to the claim that&#13;
a low-fiber diet results in an&#13;
Increased incidence of cancer of&#13;
the colon.&#13;
When the friendly bacteria in'&#13;
the intestines break down certain&#13;
substances, particularly bile&#13;
acids, carcinogenic (cancer&#13;
causing) chemicals are created.&#13;
If the stool is small, the&#13;
carcinogens are concentrated in&#13;
small areas. If the stool moves&#13;
slowly, the carcinogens have&#13;
more.time to affect the intestinal&#13;
walls.&#13;
Dr. Burkitt's fiber eating&#13;
Africans rarely get cancer of the&#13;
colon. But when they moved to&#13;
the city and began eating more&#13;
refined foods the cancer rate&#13;
began to resemble that of the&#13;
urbanites. ... ,&#13;
As for the heart disease claim,&#13;
many doctors," including the&#13;
respected Harvard nutritionist&#13;
Dr. Jean Mayer, say that a high&#13;
fat diet correlates far better than&#13;
low-fiber to increased heart&#13;
disease.&#13;
,Study before you sleep&#13;
Are you the kind of student&#13;
who usually studies hard before&#13;
going to bed, or the kind who&#13;
goes to bed, sets the alarm for&#13;
five or six o'clock and then&#13;
crams? If you're a pre-sleep&#13;
studier, GLAMOUR Magazine&#13;
reports you may be getting better&#13;
grades as a result of your study&#13;
habits than someone who does&#13;
the work afterward.&#13;
Recent research into steepand&#13;
study habits shows that sleep&#13;
prior to study disrupts memory&#13;
significantly, unless considerable&#13;
.Mascara ~ay&#13;
make- you blind&#13;
(CPS) - Mascara and other through the applicator wand.&#13;
eye makeups can cause infection Without an adequate preservaand&#13;
blindness, the FDA tive system the micro- organisms&#13;
announced recently. After re- can survive and multiply inside&#13;
ceiving several reports of corneal. the container. When the mascara&#13;
ulceration caused by bacteria is used again, if the microintroduced&#13;
when the cornea was organisms on the wand come&#13;
scratched, the FDA said it plans into contact with a scratched or&#13;
to require cosmetic manufac- damaged. cornea, the eye can&#13;
turers to include a preservative become infected. It the infection&#13;
in mascara and'other cosmetics. isn't treated immediately, it can&#13;
The bacteria is one often lead to partial or total blindness&#13;
present on the skin, and is in the injured eye.&#13;
absorbed by the cosrnetic s&#13;
waking time is allowed before&#13;
digging into the material vou&#13;
want to learn.. The shorter the&#13;
period of sleep that precedesthe&#13;
studying, the more this sleep&#13;
disrupts learning. Sleeping four&#13;
hours or less was found to be&#13;
highly disturbing to memory;&#13;
sleeping six hours disturbed it&#13;
less.&#13;
Researchersaren't exactly sure&#13;
how sleep disturbs the memory&#13;
process, but they believe it might&#13;
involve hormones. In laboratory&#13;
tests on mice, the hormone&#13;
somatotrophin, produced naturally&#13;
during sleep, severely&#13;
affected the memory of mice&#13;
injected with it.&#13;
I-fyou have a test to study for,&#13;
study first instead of putting it&#13;
off until the next morning. Better&#13;
grades might be your reward.&#13;
Sing-song birdseeds&#13;
mysteriouslY vanish&#13;
(CPS) - A major chain of'&#13;
British -Cofumbla pet stores&#13;
removed all packages of&#13;
Sing-SongTreat birdseed from its&#13;
display shelves recently after it&#13;
was suspected that the product&#13;
contained quantities of highgrade&#13;
African marijuana seeds.&#13;
The manufacturer of SingSongsaid&#13;
on the Packagethat its&#13;
product "promotes singing in&#13;
canaries and other song birds"&#13;
and that its ingredients would&#13;
"also aid weak and sick birds to&#13;
recover from illness".&#13;
Apparently Canadian consumers&#13;
enjoyed- Sing-Song's 15&#13;
percent of. "Nigerseed". One&#13;
storekeeper said, "We've had a&#13;
lot of people coming into our&#13;
stores buying packages of&#13;
Sing-Song who really don't look&#13;
like they own canaries.&#13;
'Vitamin C licks heroin&#13;
(CPS)- Vitam~n C has been acknowledged to cure everything, butare&#13;
doctors going too far when they include heroin addiction?&#13;
Dr. Alfred F. Libby, who pioneered the theory of orthomolecular&#13;
medicine (the use of vitamins to cure disease) thinks not. Libby&#13;
claims he lias used vitamin therapy .on 75 addicts at his Calif. clinic&#13;
and has had -cornplete.success.&#13;
Libby's most startling claim is that the addict can't get high after&#13;
receiving a massive dose of the vitamin. Vitamin C detoxifies the&#13;
heroin. The appetite returns in a few days and a feeling of well being&#13;
as well. Addicts report few of the discomforts of withdrawl or&#13;
methadone accompanying the vitamin cure.&#13;
Another voice in favor of the vitamin cure is Dr. Linus Pauling, two&#13;
times Nobel Prize winner. "I'd perhaps be a tittle cautious in saying&#13;
that large quantities of sodium ascorbate can detoxify heroin&#13;
inimediately, but I think there's no doubt that very large ,doses of&#13;
vitamin C will rel!eve addiction ."&#13;
[rmQ (]tBmrnmOO~&#13;
(5wQ0 illU&#13;
(](5mrnmOO~IlQU(5(]§&#13;
Universal Imports&#13;
SERVICE-PARTS CAR SALES -&#13;
A~&#13;
••••&#13;
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2301 Durand&#13;
554-9412 Racine&#13;
Ave.,. ~QCine&#13;
552-8580 Kenosha&#13;
rFrida;:N;;;;ber l1th-,&#13;
tvance's Sports Association Presents,&#13;
t&#13;
Rocket 88 ,&#13;
Plus WZUU Superstar ,&#13;
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t Prizes-Contests-Pabst on tap 50' ,&#13;
t&#13;
Tickets on Sale Now $3.00 , , Llmlte~::~;~:s, ~:;urry , ,&#13;
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WIII""I"I11"""!"I11IIII11"I11I"""I11III11"II11II11IIII11III11III11""III11UIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII11III1111II!!! IfOR -TODA V'S LOOK I&#13;
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health·-&#13;
Fiberous fodder forage&#13;
frees food followers&#13;
(CPS) - T~e word is out. You that are hard, small and&#13;
can take the bran flakes out of strenuous. Eating more fiber will&#13;
the medicine cabinet. produce the more desirable&#13;
Mom was right, but she didn't aforementioned stool, and you&#13;
have all the facts. When she told will 'stool' more often,&#13;
you to eat bran for "occasional They used to call high-fiber&#13;
irregularity", she didn't know foods "roughage" and say the&#13;
that high fiber is "the word" in sam~ things about the benefits .&#13;
healthy diets this year. But the word "roughage" has&#13;
And that means that bran, taken on a medicinal image, the&#13;
being one of the best high-fiber "it's-good-for-you" aura that&#13;
foods, llas become the hip cereal surrounds the suspicious likes of&#13;
of the year, ranking right up lima bea~s, swiss chard, or liver.&#13;
there with granola. The Diverticulosis&#13;
high-fibeF-craze has also uplifted Besides, the big news is not&#13;
the status of lowly celery, apples only that you should ,;go" more&#13;
and broccoli. often, it's that high fiber food&#13;
Here's why . To start with, fiber probably (some say "will:') wards&#13;
is the tough·structural portion of off the painful disease of&#13;
foods composed essentially of diverticulosis-.&#13;
stiff cell walls that give plants Diverticulosis is nothing to&#13;
their body and strength . burp at . Approximately 40&#13;
Fiber is not digestable by percent of Americans over 40&#13;
humans . The best thing about it suffer from it with a higher&#13;
is that it has the ability to absorb percentage in older age groups .&#13;
and hold water. It occurs when tiny pouches&#13;
Stools are the key ' (diverticula) form on _ the&#13;
Why is that so outstanding? intestine _wall, start collecting&#13;
Well , here's a somewhat messy bits of food and get infected .&#13;
explanation, and it has to do Now, a stool without much&#13;
with ... stools . Not your kitchen fiber forces intestinal muscles to&#13;
or bar stool, but the one your contract and strain to push it&#13;
doctor pronounces with a - along. After years of such effort,&#13;
slightly fastidious "yew" sound weak spots may develop in&#13;
to it. Styewls . Yes . intestinal walls and develop into&#13;
You don't need to take Stool diverticula. Thus it is easy to see&#13;
Analysis 101 to know that that a soft, easily moved stool&#13;
sometimes your stools aren't as would rarely provoke diverticusoft,&#13;
squishy and spontaneous as losis.&#13;
they ought to be. Chan'ces are Most everyone agrees that a&#13;
this has to do with diet. The high-fiber diet is important in&#13;
average American diet includes elimination, but as in most&#13;
basic meat, milk, eggs, sugar and health 'movements', there will be&#13;
fat, which, co-in_cidentally, radicals claiming that the diet is&#13;
contains little or no fiber. This essential in curing most&#13;
kind of diet will produce stools diagnosable diseases .&#13;
Are you the kind of student&#13;
who usually studies hard before&#13;
going to bed, or the kind who&#13;
goes to bed, sets the alarm for&#13;
five or six o'clock and then&#13;
crams? If you're a pre-sleep&#13;
studier, GLAMOUR Magazine&#13;
reports you may be getting better&#13;
grades as a result of your study&#13;
habits than someone who does&#13;
the work afterward.&#13;
Recent research into sleep and&#13;
study habits shows that sleep&#13;
prior to study disrupts memory&#13;
significantly, unless considerable&#13;
waking t ime is allowed before&#13;
digging into the material ·you&#13;
want to learn. The shorter the&#13;
period of sleep that precedes the&#13;
studying, the more this sleep&#13;
disrupts learning. Sleeping four&#13;
hours or less was found to be&#13;
highly disturbing to memory;&#13;
sleeping six hours disturbed it&#13;
less.&#13;
Researchers aren't exactly sure&#13;
how sleep disturbs the memory&#13;
process, but they believe it might&#13;
involve hormones. In laboratory&#13;
tests on mice, the hormone&#13;
.-Mascara may&#13;
make_ you blind&#13;
(CPS) - Mascara and other through the applicator wand .&#13;
eye makeups can cause infection Without an adequate preservaand&#13;
blindness, the FDA tivesystem the micro- organisms&#13;
announced recently . After re- can survive and multiply inside&#13;
ceiving several reports of corneal. the container. When the mascara&#13;
ulceration caused by bacteria is used again, if the microintroduced&#13;
when the cornea was organisms on the wand come&#13;
scratched, the FDA said ~it plans into contact with a scratched or&#13;
to require cosmetic manufac- damaged cornea, the eye can&#13;
turers to include a preservative become infected. It the infection&#13;
in mascara and other cosmetics. isn't treated immediately, it can&#13;
The bacteria is one often lead to partial or total blindness&#13;
present on the skin, and is in the injured eye.&#13;
absorbed by the cosmetics&#13;
W,ud off diseases&#13;
Some of these opinions sprang&#13;
from a study done in Africa by&#13;
British surgeon Dr. Den is P.&#13;
Burkitt. He observed that rural&#13;
Africans eating a high-fiber diet&#13;
had a very low incidence of&#13;
appendicitis, diverticulosis,&#13;
- hemorrhoids, tie art ~attack,&#13;
cancer of the colon and rectum,&#13;
gall-stones, hiatus hernia, and&#13;
obesity.&#13;
Most epidemiologists (students&#13;
of disease) relate these&#13;
diseases to a diet that is&#13;
low-fiber, but more importantly&#13;
high in fat and sugar. But many&#13;
give credibility to the claim tfi'at&#13;
a low-fiber diet results in an&#13;
increase_d incidence of cancer of&#13;
the colon . . ~&#13;
When the friendly bacteria in&#13;
the intestines break down certain&#13;
substances, particularly bile&#13;
acids, carcinogenic (cancer&#13;
causing) chemicals are created .&#13;
If the stool is small, the&#13;
carcinogens are concentrated in&#13;
small areas . If the stool moves&#13;
slowly, the carcinogens have&#13;
more. time to affect the intestinal&#13;
walls .&#13;
Dr. Buc.kitt' s fiber eating&#13;
Africans rarely get cancer of the&#13;
colon. But when they moved to&#13;
the city and began eating more&#13;
refined foods the cancer rate&#13;
began to resemble that of the&#13;
urbanites .&#13;
As for the heart disease claim,&#13;
many doctors,· including the&#13;
respected Harvard nutritioni~t&#13;
Dr. Jean Mayer, say that a high&#13;
fat diet correlates far better than&#13;
low-fiber to increased heart&#13;
disease.&#13;
somatotrophin, produced naturall&#13;
y during sleep, severely&#13;
affected t he memory of mice&#13;
injected with it.&#13;
l·f you have a test to study for,&#13;
study first instead of putting it&#13;
off until the next morning. Better&#13;
grades might be your reward.&#13;
~ Vitamin C licks heroin&#13;
(CPS) - Vitam~n Chas been acknowledged to cure everything, butare&#13;
doctors going too far when they include heroin addiction?&#13;
Dr. Alfred F. Libby, who pioneered the theory of orthomolecular&#13;
medicine (the use of vitamins to cure disease) thinks not. Libby&#13;
claims he has used vitamin therapy .on 75 addicts at his Calif. clinic&#13;
and has had complete.success.&#13;
Libby's most startling claim is that t.he addict can't get high after&#13;
receiving a massive dose of the vitamin. Vitamin C detoxifies the&#13;
heroin . The appetite returns in a few days and a feeling of well being&#13;
as well . Add.icts report few of the discomforts of withdraw! or&#13;
methadone accompanying the vitamin cure .&#13;
Another voice in favor of the vitamin cure is Dr. Linus Pauling, two&#13;
times Nobel Prize winner. "I'd perhaps be a little cautious in saying&#13;
that lirge quantities of sod.ium ascorbate can detoxify heroin&#13;
immediately, but I think tnere's no doubt that very large doses of&#13;
vitamin C will rel!eve addiction."&#13;
Universal Imports&#13;
SERVICE-PARTS CAR SALES&#13;
2301 Durand Ave.,_ ~cine&#13;
554-9412 Racine 552-8580 Kenosha&#13;
' .., &#13;
eyes Silver Lake, Wisconsin&#13;
Sunday, November 6, 1977, p.m.&#13;
"&#13;
I&#13;
Philip l. Livmgs ton pholognphs&#13;
eyes Silver Lake, Wisconsin&#13;
Sunday, November 6, 1977, p.m.&#13;
Philip L. Lmn~ston photo raphs &#13;
Korean diary&#13;
City life in Korea: diverse and exciting&#13;
by Dennis R. Dean&#13;
Associate Professor of English&#13;
Campus activities for faculty members&#13;
at Chonnam National University in&#13;
Kwangju, where I taught, were generally&#13;
more predictable than they are here. For&#13;
example, many of the teachers had only&#13;
two suits - one for summer and one for&#13;
winter - and a few more virtually&#13;
identical clothing day after day, as if&#13;
remembering the school uniforms of their&#13;
younger years. There was actually a set day&#13;
on campus for the switch to allowably&#13;
informal summer wear. 1,however, dressed&#13;
as I pleased and when I started showing up&#13;
in short sleeves ahead of, everyone else,&#13;
the students joked that summer came&#13;
earlier for me.&#13;
None of my colleagues owned cars, so&#13;
almost all of them depended upon the free&#13;
but overcrowded faculty bus. As a result,&#13;
faculty members were generally on&#13;
campus from about" 8:30 to 5:10 every day,&#13;
with lunch in the school cafeteria (where I&#13;
also ate). But it was cheap and easy to&#13;
come and go by taxi (40 cents) or&#13;
commercial bus (8 cents). so I did.&#13;
Although taxi drivers usuallv Ispoke no&#13;
English, we soon learned enough Korean to&#13;
direct them to the campus ("Chonnam&#13;
Dai-Hakvo"). or downtown ("YMCA")or to&#13;
our apartment ("Jai-II Mansion"). Because&#13;
my pronounciation was so bad, I carried&#13;
with me the first and third of these written&#13;
in Korean, and had to use them once or&#13;
twice. Going other places than these three&#13;
by taxi required help from friends, who&#13;
either wrote out the Korean, instructed the&#13;
driver personally, or (as often happened)&#13;
came along. Economical, courteous, and&#13;
readily available transportation was one of&#13;
the pleasures of Kwangju.&#13;
Because distances were short, I often&#13;
chose to walk downtown (past small&#13;
shops, street vendors, and horse carts),&#13;
usually attracting some attention when I&#13;
did. My wife and I were not, however, the&#13;
only Americans in Kwangju. On Sunday, 6&#13;
March, for example - the day after we&#13;
arrived - Kim Tae [In invited us for an&#13;
authentic Korean dinner (our first) at a&#13;
local restaurant and introduced us to&#13;
David Miller, the 27-year-old head of the&#13;
United States Information Service in&#13;
Kwangju, who immediately became and&#13;
remained one of our closest friends. USIS&#13;
sponsored occasional free showings of&#13;
American movies, talks !:y visiting U.S.&#13;
scholars, and a regular discussion group on&#13;
current American fiction (choosing and&#13;
supplying books). It also had a fine&#13;
English-language library and was responsible&#13;
for evacuating U.S. citizens in the&#13;
event of war. Under USIS -sponsorship, I&#13;
gave a talk in Kwangju "Asian&#13;
Influences on American Literature" - and&#13;
then repeated it at a Christian college in&#13;
Chonju and a Buddhist one in Iri, receiving&#13;
lavish welcomes in both places as well as&#13;
the unexpected company of Ed Wright,&#13;
who came down from Fulbright House in&#13;
Seoul to hear me. Dave often invitedpeople&#13;
t~ his home (U.S. government&#13;
property, with an elaborate security&#13;
system) for repast prepared by his resourceful&#13;
housekeeper, Miss Kim. Besides&#13;
an agreeable supply of anecdotes, Dave&#13;
also had the best and most generous liquor&#13;
cabinet in Kwangju, which was frequently&#13;
restocked from the Embassy commissary in&#13;
Seoul. Koreans, it seemed; would put up&#13;
with about anything for the sake of Johnny&#13;
Walker scotch, but would scarcely tolerate&#13;
its absence.&#13;
On Monday, 7' March, our first official&#13;
teaching day on campus, Susan and I met&#13;
Bob Hulsey. then 24, a wonderfully&#13;
personable and extremely obligingPeace&#13;
Corps volunteer from the Kansas/Oklahoma&#13;
area who was teaching English&#13;
conversation and composition at&#13;
Chonnam. Bob was invaluable to us&#13;
throughout our stay and we spent more&#13;
time in his company (often between&#13;
classes) than witt) any other person. He,&#13;
my wife, and I shared an office together&#13;
and Bob was extremely thoughtful in&#13;
assisting Susan to get through the first few&#13;
days of her unanticipated duties as a&#13;
teacher. OR this particular Monday, as on&#13;
many other days, the three of us had lunch&#13;
together in the newly opened school&#13;
cafeteria (Fnenu in Korean). Later, Bob&#13;
came by the apartment for us at 5 and we&#13;
walked to USIS for Fred Astaire a.nd Ginger&#13;
Rogers in "Top Hat," which the audience&#13;
of Korean students obviously enjoyed. We&#13;
then had dinner at a Chinese restaurant.&#13;
The next day, after classes, Bob and Mrs.&#13;
Kim introduced us to Yongdong market, a&#13;
fascinating array of shops, (ish vendors,&#13;
butchers. live animal sellers, men in old&#13;
costumes, and so on, where we bought a&#13;
variety of needed household goods and&#13;
were amazed at Mrs. Kim's success in&#13;
bargaining on our behalf Anyone who&#13;
thinks Oriental women are inherently&#13;
demure and passive has never seen them&#13;
haggle.&#13;
I&#13;
Be-sides Dave and Bob, there were other&#13;
Americans in Kwangju. At least three more&#13;
Peace Corps volunteers taught in local&#13;
schools; the Mormons, Adventists, and&#13;
Presbyterians all had missionary contingents,&#13;
and the Presbyterians ran an&#13;
impressive hospital. Sometimes, small&#13;
groups of U,S. soldiers from a nearby&#13;
airbase would come to town, usually for&#13;
the sake of drunken ruckuses or a debauch&#13;
on pleasure street. We saw the volunteers&#13;
and missionaries occasionally.&#13;
Despite the, language batrier, we also&#13;
dealt regularly with a number of Koreans&#13;
whose names I never knew: our laundryman,&#13;
his wife, and children: bank and&#13;
postal clerks; our tailor, from whom I&#13;
bought three pairs of custom-made slacks;&#13;
my barber; waiters in the va'rious&#13;
restaurants; bus girls and taxi drivers;&#13;
clerks in the supermarkets; and it large&#13;
number of small shop keepers, both&#13;
downtown and in Yondong market. There&#13;
being no laundromats in town (and no&#13;
washing machines that we could discover)&#13;
laundry was done by hand, but it was&#13;
always done well, and with invariable&#13;
courtesy. My paychecks in dollars were the&#13;
first my bank had ever handled. Even in&#13;
Korean currency, checks are unusual;&#13;
salaries at the university, for example, are&#13;
pard in cash. Any bank transaction&#13;
-requires not only your signature but your&#13;
seal of chop ("tojang" is the Korean word),&#13;
so I had -to have one made. At the post&#13;
office, there are no stamp machines and&#13;
the stamps you buy are without glue,&#13;
which you must put on yourself from jars.&#13;
(As a special courtesy, however, my&#13;
stamps were sometimes put on for me.)&#13;
Arriving packages had to be picked up at&#13;
narrowly designated times, and were&#13;
subject to duty. The Korean government is&#13;
empowered to inspect both incoming and&#13;
outgoing mail for possible propaganda as&#13;
well.&#13;
As my tailor got to know me.chts price&#13;
came down, each pair of slacks I bought&#13;
being cheaper than the last. A haircut in&#13;
Korea includes, for those who want it, not&#13;
only shampoo and massage but a&#13;
considerable amount of agreeable female&#13;
attention as well; the whole thing costs a&#13;
buck.&#13;
The usual pattern of small shops is&#13;
slowly changing in Kwangju, although the&#13;
few so-called department stores never had&#13;
anything we wanted. There were also two&#13;
small supermarkets, with a variety of&#13;
goods, open shelves, and fixed prices. We&#13;
were cautious about meat and relied in our&#13;
~ IJY UW-Parkside&#13;
..",,, Semester Break&#13;
CA&#13;
J.d. 6-13, 197.&#13;
$299 - Complete based&#13;
on 2 to u room&#13;
Make Reservation&#13;
Deposit Now&#13;
Full Payment Due Dec. 6&#13;
CONTACT, PARKSIDE UNION OffiCES&#13;
RM. 209 CALL 553-2200&#13;
81Z .. ,&#13;
NUTS TO&#13;
tout&#13;
".Ad oth., ...... too&#13;
.t&#13;
10 ... -4plI&#13;
P.,k.I •• Union&#13;
own home upon canned and frozen thing&#13;
brought down from Seoul, but otherwis&#13;
found much to like in Kwangju and&#13;
patronized the two supermarkets regularly.&#13;
I also gave some business to the small&#13;
shops, on~ of which (for instance) sold m&#13;
three eggs every Saturday, so that I coul&#13;
make my usual omelette the next 'day.&#13;
The most interesting shops in Kwangju&#13;
- for me at least - were those devoted t&#13;
antiques and 'art. While there, I developed&#13;
a considerable respect for Korea's cultural&#13;
heritage, which is not simply a footnote to&#13;
the Chinese but vigorous and significan&#13;
itself. Korean cufture seems to&#13;
underrated for three reasons: 1( th&#13;
relative lack of Korean scholars in th&#13;
West; 2( the unfortunate policies of th&#13;
Japanese occupation (1910 - 1945), which&#13;
attempted to Nipponize Korea; and 3( th&#13;
poor jqb that the Koreans themselve&#13;
have done in researching and popularizin&#13;
their cultural legacy. How man&#13;
Americans are aware, for example, tha&#13;
Koreans were printing from moveable tv&#13;
before Gutenberg, or that it was th&#13;
Koreans who taught not only ceramics bu&#13;
architecture to the Japanese?&#13;
I wou ld have loved to have an exampl&#13;
of early Korean printing, but we neve&#13;
succeeded in finding one for sale. As fo&#13;
ceramics, they are readily available, and&#13;
widely collected by Koreans, but the bes&#13;
pieces are hazardous to buy (for reasons a&#13;
expense, fragility, and authenticity) and&#13;
are almost impossible to export - unless,&#13;
of course, your friend knows the friend in&#13;
charge! ....&#13;
Modern Korean ceramics are well worth&#13;
having, and they also do some interestin&#13;
trade work with black lacquer, especiall&#13;
as inlaid with mother of pearl. The mos&#13;
popular Korean items right now, however,&#13;
are antique chests, which once were used&#13;
in every hyme for storage, there bein&#13;
typically no closets. As I mentioned&#13;
earlier, Ed Wright is a fervent collector.&#13;
Among cqntemporary Korean arts,&#13;
landscape painting ~is surely the mos&#13;
popular, and Kwangju has long been not&#13;
for the quality of its artists. Whethe&#13;
antique or modern, landscape screens,&#13;
scrolls, and paintings are much in&#13;
evidence, but good work is by no means&#13;
cheap. I own one small, slightly damaged&#13;
scroll done in 1928 and a book&#13;
reproducing the works of a major artis&#13;
who lived upon Mt. Mudung until hi·&#13;
death last February - but no othe&#13;
originals, and that's one of my regrets&#13;
Harpsichordist plays&#13;
British harpstchordist Jane&#13;
Clark will present two programs&#13;
at the Universtiy of WisconsinParks&#13;
ide on Thursdav, Nov. 10.&#13;
Both are free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
- At 10 a.m., after a short&#13;
reception sponsored by the&#13;
music discipline and-the student&#13;
chapter - of 'Music Educators&#13;
National Conference (MENC),&#13;
Miss Clark will present a lecturerecital.&#13;
At 11 a.m. she will teach&#13;
a master class for applied&#13;
harpsichord students. Both&#13;
events are in Communication&#13;
Arts Bldg. Room 0-118.&#13;
Miss Clark is active in london&#13;
as a performing artist, teacher&#13;
and critic. She broadcasts&#13;
frequently '00 the BBC both as a&#13;
music commentator and harpsichord&#13;
soloist and has appeared&#13;
on Ang-ha Television and&#13;
recorded for Radio Eireann and&#13;
Radiodiffusion Television&#13;
Francaise. Last year she&#13;
participated in the English Bach&#13;
Festival in london and the&#13;
Festival Estiva! , de Paris,&#13;
presenting programs on Scarlatti&#13;
and Spain.&#13;
Korean diary&#13;
City life in Korea: diverse aqd exciting&#13;
by Dennis R. Dean&#13;
Associate Professor of English&#13;
Campus activities for faculty members&#13;
at Chonnam National University in&#13;
Kwangju, where I taught, were generally&#13;
more predictable than they are here. For&#13;
example, many- of the teachers had only&#13;
two suits - one for summer and one for&#13;
winter - and a few more virtually&#13;
identical clothing day after day, as if&#13;
remembering the school uniforms of their&#13;
younger years. There was actually a set day&#13;
on campus for the switch to allowably&#13;
informal summer wear. I, however, dressed&#13;
as I pleased and when I started showing up&#13;
i11 short sleeves ahead of, everyone else,&#13;
the students joked that summer came&#13;
earlier for me.&#13;
None of my colleagues owned cars, so&#13;
almost all of them depended upon the free&#13;
but overcrowded faculty bus. As a result,&#13;
faculty members were generally on&#13;
campus from about" 8:30 to 5:10 every day,&#13;
with lunch in the school cafeteria (where I&#13;
also ate). But it was cheap and easy to&#13;
come and go by taxi (40 cents) or&#13;
commercial bus (8 cepts), so I did.&#13;
Although taxi drivers usually 'spoke no&#13;
English, we soon learned enough Korean to&#13;
direct them to the campus ("Chonnam&#13;
Dai-Hakyo"), or downtown (''YMCA") or to&#13;
our apartment ("Jai-11 Mansion"). Because&#13;
my pronounciation was so b&amp;d, I carried&#13;
with me the first and third of these written&#13;
in Korean, and had to use them once or&#13;
twice. Going other places than these three&#13;
by taxi required help from friends, who&#13;
either wrote out the Korean, instructed the&#13;
driver personally, or (as often happened)&#13;
came along. Economical, courteous, and&#13;
readily available transportation was one of&#13;
the pleasures of Kwangju.&#13;
Because distances were short, I often&#13;
chose to walk downtown (past small&#13;
shops, street vendors, and horse carts),&#13;
usually attracting some attention when I&#13;
did. My wife and I were not, however, the&#13;
only Americans in Kwangju. On Sunday, 6&#13;
March, for example - the day after we&#13;
arrived - Kim Tae Jin invited us for an&#13;
authentic Korean dinner (our first) at a&#13;
local restaurant and introduced us to&#13;
David Miller, the 27-year-old head of the&#13;
United States Information Service in&#13;
Kwangju, who immediately became and&#13;
remained one of our closest friends. USIS&#13;
sponsored occasional free showings of&#13;
American movies, talks by visiting U.S.&#13;
scholars, and_ a regular discussion group on&#13;
current American fiction ( choosing and&#13;
supplying books). It also had a fine&#13;
English-language library and was responsible&#13;
for evacuating U.S. citizens in the&#13;
event of war. Under USIS sponsorship, I&#13;
gave a talk in Kwangju - "Asian&#13;
Influences on American Literature" - and&#13;
then repeated it at a Christian college in&#13;
Chon ju and a Buddhist o~e in lri, receiving&#13;
lavish welcomes in both places as well as&#13;
the unexpected company of Ed Wright,&#13;
who came down from Fulbright 'House in&#13;
Seoul to hear me. Dave often invited&#13;
people t~ his home (U.S. government&#13;
property, with an elaborate security&#13;
system) for repast prepared by his resourceful&#13;
housekeeper, Miss Kim. Besides&#13;
an agreeable supply of anecdotes, Dave&#13;
also had the best and most generous liquor&#13;
cabinet in Kwangju, which was frequently&#13;
restocked from the Embassy commissary in&#13;
Seoul. Koreans, it seemed,' would put up&#13;
with about anything for the sake of Johnny&#13;
Walker scotch, but would scarcely tolerate&#13;
its absence.&#13;
On Monday, 7 March, our first official&#13;
teaching day on campus, Susan and I met&#13;
Bob Hulsey, then 24, a wonderfully&#13;
personable and extremely obliging Peace&#13;
Corps volunteer from the Kansas/Oklahoma&#13;
area who was teaching English&#13;
conversation and composition at&#13;
Chonnam. Bob was invaluable to us&#13;
throughout our stay and we spent more&#13;
time in his company (often between&#13;
classes) than witlJ any other person. He,&#13;
my wife, and I shared an office together&#13;
and Bob was extremely thoughtful in&#13;
assisting Susan to get through the first few&#13;
days of her unanticipated duties as a&#13;
teacher. OR this particular Monday, as on&#13;
many other days, the three of us had lunch&#13;
together in the newly opened school&#13;
cafeteria [menu in Korean). Later, Bob&#13;
came by the apartment for us at 5 and we&#13;
walked to USIS for Fred Astaire ~.nd Ginger&#13;
Rogers in "Top Hat," which the audience&#13;
of Korean students obviously enjoyed. We&#13;
then had dinner at a Chinese restaurant.&#13;
The next day, after classes, Bob and Mrs.&#13;
Kim introduced us to Yongdong market, a&#13;
fascinating array of shops, fish vendors,&#13;
.):&gt;utchers, live animal sellers, men in old&#13;
costumes, and so on, where we bought a&#13;
varfety of needed household goods and&#13;
were amazed at Mrs. Kim's success in&#13;
bargaining on our behalf. Anyone who&#13;
thinks Oriental women are inherently&#13;
demure and passive has never seen them&#13;
haggle. I&#13;
B;sides Dave and Bob, there were other own home upon canned aQd frozen thing&#13;
Americans in Kwangju. At least three more brought down from Seoul, but otherwis&#13;
Peace Corps volunteers taught in local found much to like in Kwangju and&#13;
schools; the Mormons, Adventists, and patronized the two supermarkets regularly.&#13;
Presbyterians all had missionary con- I also gave some business to the small&#13;
tingents, and the Presbyterians ran an shops, one of which (for instance) sold m&#13;
·impressive hospital. Sometimes, small three eggs every Saturday, so that I coul&#13;
groups of U,S. soldiers from a nearby make my usual omelette the next day.&#13;
airbase would come to town, usually for The most interesting shops in Kwangju&#13;
the sake of drunken ruckuses or a debauch - for me at least - were those devoted t&#13;
on pleasure street. We saw the volunteers antiques and art. While there, I developed&#13;
and missionaries occasionally. a considerable respect for Korea's cultural&#13;
Despite the1 language barrier, we also heritage, which is not simply a footnote to&#13;
dealt regularly with a number of Koreans the Chinese but vigorous and significant&#13;
whose names I never knew: our laundry- itself. Korean cufture seems to be&#13;
man, his wife, and children; ban'k and underrated for three reasons: 1( the&#13;
postal clerks; our tailor, from whom I relative lac~ of Korean scholars in the&#13;
bought three pairs of custom-made slacks; West; 2{ the unfortunate policies of the&#13;
my barber; waiters in the various Japanese occupation (1910 - 1945), which&#13;
restaurants; bus girls and taxi drivers; attempted to Nipponize Korea; and 3( th&#13;
clerks in the supermarkets; and a large poor jqb that the Koreans themselve&#13;
number of small shop keepers, both have done in researching and popularizin&#13;
downtown and in Yondong market. There their cultural legacy. How man&#13;
being no laundromats in town (a'nd no Americans are aware, for example, tha&#13;
washing machines that we could discover) Koreans were printing from moveable ty&#13;
laundry was done by hand, but it was before Gutenberg, or that it was th&#13;
always done well, and with invariable Koreans who taught not only ceramics bu&#13;
courtesy. My paychecks in dollars were the architecture to the Japanese?&#13;
first my bank had ever handled. Even in I would have loved to have an exampl&#13;
Korean currency, checks are unusual; of early Korean printing, but we neve&#13;
salaries at the university, for example, are succeeded in finding one for sale. As fo&#13;
paia in cash. Any bank transaction ceramics, they are readily available, and&#13;
, requires not only your signature but your widely collected by Koreans, but the bes&#13;
seal of chop ("tojang" is the Korean word), pieces are hazardous to buy (for reasons o&#13;
so I had -to have one made. At the post expense, fragility, and authenticity) and&#13;
office, there are no stamp machines and are almost impossible to export - unless,&#13;
the stamps you buy are without glue, of course, your friend knows the friend in&#13;
which you must put on yourself from jars. charge!&#13;
(As a special courtesy, however, my Modern Korean ceramics are well worth&#13;
stamps were sometimes put on for me.) having, and they also do some interestin&#13;
Arriving packages had to be picked up at trade work with black lacquer, especial!&#13;
narrowly designated times, and were as inlaid with mother of pearl. The mos&#13;
subject to duty. The Korean government is popular Korean items right now, however,&#13;
empowered to inspect both incoming and are antique chests, which once were used&#13;
outgoing mail for possible propaganda as in every h_,ome for storage, there bein&#13;
well. typically no closets. As I mentioned&#13;
As my tailor got to know me,his price earlier, Ed Wright is a fervent collector.&#13;
came down, each pair of slacks I bought Among cqntemporary Korean arts,&#13;
being cheaper than the last. A haircut in landscape painting is surely the mos&#13;
Korea includes, for those who want it, not popular, and Kwangju has long been noted&#13;
only shampoo and massage but a for the quality of its artists. Whethe&#13;
considerable amount of agreeable female antique or modern, landscape screens,&#13;
attention as well; the whole thing costs a scrolls, and paintings are much in&#13;
buck. evidence, but good work is by no means&#13;
The usual pattern of small shops is , cheap. I own one small, slightly damaged&#13;
slowly changing in Kwangju, although the scroll done in 1928 and a book&#13;
few so-called department stores never had reproducing the works of a major artis&#13;
anything we wanted. There were also two who lived upon Mt. Mudung until hi.&#13;
small supermarkets, with a variety of death last February - but no othe&#13;
goods, open shelves, and fixed prices. We originals, and that's one of my regrets&#13;
were cautious about meat and relied in our&#13;
Harpsichordist plays&#13;
~ IY/ OW-Parkside&#13;
, ~ff Semester Break NUTS TO&#13;
YOU!&#13;
British harpsichordist Jane&#13;
Clark will present two programs&#13;
at the Universtiy of WisconsinParkside&#13;
on Thursday, Nov. 10.&#13;
Both are free and open to the&#13;
public .&#13;
,.299 Complete based ~ on 2 to a room&#13;
2,3 Filled&#13;
Make Reservation&#13;
Deposit Now&#13;
Full Payment Due Dec. 6&#13;
CONTACT, PARKSIOE UNION OFFICES&#13;
RM. 209 CALL, 553-2200&#13;
... And other 1weefl too&#13;
at&#13;
10 111-4p11&#13;
Park1itle Uni11&#13;
Bazaar&#13;
' At 10 a.m., after a short&#13;
reception sponsored by the&#13;
music discipline and-the student&#13;
chapter · of · Music Educators&#13;
National Conference (MENC),&#13;
Miss Clark will present a lecturerecital.&#13;
At 11 a.m. she will teach&#13;
a master class for applied&#13;
harpsichord students . Both&#13;
events are in Communication&#13;
Arts Bldg. Room D-118.&#13;
Miss Clark is active in London&#13;
as a performing artist, teacher&#13;
and critic. She broadcasts&#13;
frequently oa the BBC both as a&#13;
music commentator and harpsichord&#13;
soloist and has appeared&#13;
on Ang-ha Television and&#13;
r~corded for Radio Eireann and&#13;
Radiodiffusion Television&#13;
Francaise . Last year she&#13;
participated in the English Bach&#13;
Festival in London and the&#13;
Festival Estival. de Paris,&#13;
presenting programs on Scarlatti&#13;
and Spain. &#13;
sports&#13;
Women's volleyball&#13;
meets Carroll&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Women's Volleyball team&#13;
had ,a full schedule this past&#13;
week, playing a tournament in&#13;
Illinois, Saturday, October '29; a&#13;
triangular meet . at home&#13;
Tuesday, November 1; and a&#13;
quadrangular meet also at home&#13;
Friday, November 4.&#13;
Saturday, October 29th, the&#13;
team traveled to Dekalb, Illinois&#13;
to play in the Northern Illinois&#13;
Tournament with - all the top&#13;
teams in the midwest. They lost&#13;
to all four schools there, yet they&#13;
were very 'tomp-etitive with alot&#13;
of very close game scores.&#13;
On Tuesday, November 1,&#13;
Parkside competed against&#13;
Trinity College in the first match&#13;
oftheir triangular meet. Parkside&#13;
soundly defeated Trinity by&#13;
scorers of 15-3, 15-8; with their&#13;
fine team work they totally&#13;
dominated Trinity. In the next&#13;
match, UW-Milwaukee followed&#13;
Parkside's trail to also defeat&#13;
Trinity, 15-7, 15-9, 15-1; in a&#13;
three out of five game match. In&#13;
Wrestling&#13;
clinic&#13;
scheduled&#13;
by Alane.Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
On Saturday, November 12,&#13;
1977, Parks ide will sponsor its&#13;
eighth annual wrestling clinic for&#13;
high school and junior high&#13;
school students to participate.&#13;
Registration begins at 8:30 a.m.,&#13;
with a nominal fee of $1.00 per&#13;
participant, plus an approximate&#13;
cost of $1.00 for lunch.&#13;
Clinic director is Jim Koch,&#13;
wrestling coach at Parkside for&#13;
the last seven years. He has&#13;
produced 12 All-Americans and&#13;
5 National Champions, with his&#13;
1974 squad scoring 66 points to&#13;
finish 3rd at the National Meet.&#13;
Both are all-time records for&#13;
Wisconsin NAIA teams.&#13;
Also featured will be some&#13;
outstanding coaches and wrestlers&#13;
as instructors. They will&#13;
include Russ Hellickson, assistant&#13;
coach at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin, and winner of two&#13;
Pan American Gold Medals and&#13;
a9- Olympic Silver Medal. Also&#13;
there will be NAIA National&#13;
Champion Ken Martin (currently&#13;
head wrestling coach at Cody&#13;
High School in Wyoming), Joe&#13;
Landers, and Sam Fiorella; and&#13;
NCAA National Champion Jack&#13;
Reinwald, who placed 2nd in the&#13;
1977 World Cup Championships.&#13;
"The emphasis will be on&#13;
making the instruction as&#13;
relevant as possible to the&#13;
particlpante. The clinic is&#13;
designed that each wrestler can&#13;
learn new wrestling techniques.&#13;
Many schools use this clinic as a&#13;
practice session for their teams,"&#13;
said Koch.&#13;
the final match Parkside faced&#13;
UW-Milwaukee in a two out of&#13;
three game match. In the first&#13;
game Parks ide started slow being&#13;
down 1-7, but with good serves&#13;
and hard hitting they made a&#13;
strong comeback to win 15-9,&#13;
and took the match the next&#13;
game 15-11.&#13;
Friday, November 4, the&#13;
Ranger's faced North Central&#13;
College and Lake Forrest College&#13;
at home. Their first match was&#13;
against North Central, whom&#13;
they easily beat 15-4, 15-4. They&#13;
then went on to dominate lake&#13;
Forrest, to take the win with&#13;
15-4, 15-8. In reference to both&#13;
games Coach Draft commented,&#13;
"neither team was much of&#13;
challenge. Everybody played and&#13;
executed well against both&#13;
opponents."&#13;
Next on their schedule is the&#13;
state meet on November 11 and&#13;
12, at Carroll College in&#13;
Waukesha. Parkside should be&#13;
ceded in one of the top three&#13;
positions. As of Friday night the&#13;
Ranger's season record was&#13;
20-10.&#13;
Swim team face WWIAC&#13;
The Women's Swim Tearn will&#13;
conclude its regular season at&#13;
the WWIAC (Wisconsin Women's&#13;
Intercollegiate Athletic&#13;
Conference) Championships Friday&#13;
and Saturday Nov. 11-12 at&#13;
UW-la Crosse. Scoring will be&#13;
for 12 plates, and Coach Barb&#13;
lawson Expects to score points&#13;
from three relays (200 and 400&#13;
Free and the 200 Medley) as well&#13;
as from the learn's top pointgetter,&#13;
Debbie Woinows'ki.&#13;
Debbie will probably enter her&#13;
specialties, the 200 and 500 Free&#13;
as well as the 200 1M, and swim&#13;
in two of the relays. Debbie's&#13;
time in the 500 this fall ranks her&#13;
#4 in the Conference and she's&#13;
within the top 12 in the 200 Free&#13;
and 1M.&#13;
Since Madison is not com peting&#13;
in the Conference this year&#13;
for the first time, it looks as&#13;
though the team title will go to&#13;
La Crosse, based on their depth&#13;
in all events. Parks ide looks to&#13;
finish ahead of River Falls and&#13;
possibly some of the other&#13;
smaller schools. Team members&#13;
will enter their usual events in&#13;
pursuit of personal bests:&#13;
Diving - Donna Peterson and&#13;
Mary Beth Mogensen&#13;
50 Breast - Kay Kauffman and&#13;
Lowrie Melotik&#13;
100 Breast - Kay Kauffman and&#13;
Lowrie Melotik&#13;
50 Free - lynn Peterson, Sally&#13;
Francis, and Maureen Graves&#13;
100 FREE - Sally Francis&#13;
50 and 100 BACK - Maureen&#13;
Graves and lynn Peterson&#13;
During the last week, Parkstde&#13;
placed 12 out of 14 at the&#13;
Madison Invitational and lost to&#13;
Whitewater, 33-84 (up a point&#13;
from the earlier meeting when&#13;
UWP scored 32 to their 89. And&#13;
on Friday afternoon, November&#13;
4, Parkside was beaten by Carroll&#13;
College 71-47 First place&#13;
finishers for the Ranger's&#13;
included Debbie Wojnowski in&#13;
the 200 and 500 freestyle events,&#13;
100 butterfly; and Donna&#13;
Peterson in the one meter dive.&#13;
The WWI AC Meet will hold&#13;
prelims and finals on Friday at&#13;
12:00 and 7:00, and prelims and&#13;
finals on Saturday at 10:00 and&#13;
3:30 p.m. 12 schools will&#13;
compete: Carroll, Carthage,&#13;
UW-Green ..Bay, Eau Claire,&#13;
La Crosse, Milwaukee, Oshkosh,&#13;
Parkside, River Falls, Stevens&#13;
Point, Stout, Whitewater.&#13;
Soccer loses to Kalamazoo&#13;
by Alane Adresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
On Saturday, October 29, the&#13;
Parks ide Soccer Team traveled&#13;
all the way to Kalamazoo,&#13;
Michigan to play Western&#13;
Michigan University. After&#13;
regulation play the final score&#13;
was 0-0, then in overtime, the&#13;
Rangers lost a very disappointing&#13;
game at 2·0.&#13;
The first zoal came after a&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
FromGod's ~ountry.&#13;
On Tap AI Union Square 1'~~&#13;
~ "&#13;
- ...... _J&#13;
good shot, a hit ball off a cross to&#13;
take the lead for Michigan. The&#13;
final goal was a break away with&#13;
two minutes left in the overtime,&#13;
coming after Parkside had pulled&#13;
everybody up in an attempt to&#13;
score the equalizing goal.&#13;
• In his assessment of the game,&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson commented,&#13;
'We played an outstanding&#13;
defensive game considering the&#13;
MAGIC TRICKS - JOKES - NOVELTIES&#13;
fact that our regular goalkeeper&#13;
did not play. Bob Stoewe, our&#13;
leading scorer, played in the&#13;
goal, thus hurting our offense&#13;
very badly. We did have&#13;
numerous chances to score early&#13;
and actually had a statistical&#13;
edge In shots, 14-10 at the half.&#13;
With fifteen minutes to go, Chris&#13;
Carter was ejected for rough&#13;
play, so we played the last 25'&#13;
minutes a man short."&#13;
sports I&#13;
Swim team face WWIAC&#13;
Women's volleyball&#13;
meets Carroll&#13;
The Women's Swim Team will&#13;
conclude its regular season at&#13;
the WWIAC {Wisconsin Women's&#13;
Intercollegiate Athletic&#13;
Conference) Championships Friday&#13;
and Saturday Nov. 11-12 at&#13;
UW-La Crosse. Scoring will be&#13;
for 12 places, and Coach Barb&#13;
Lawson Expects to score points&#13;
from three relays (200 and 400&#13;
Free and the 200 Medley) as well&#13;
as from the team's top pointgetter,&#13;
Debbie Wojnowski.&#13;
Debbie will probably enter her&#13;
specialties, the 200 and 500 Free&#13;
as well as the 200 IM, and swim&#13;
in two of the relays. Debbie's&#13;
time in the 500 this fall ranks her&#13;
#4 in the Conference and she's&#13;
within the top 12 in the 200 Free&#13;
and IM.&#13;
ing in the Conference this year&#13;
for the first time, It looks as&#13;
though the team title will go to&#13;
La Crosse, based on their depth&#13;
in all events. Parkside looks to&#13;
finish ahead of River Falls and&#13;
possibly some of the other&#13;
smaller schools. Team members&#13;
will enter their usual events in&#13;
pursuit of personal bests:&#13;
Madison Invitational and lost to&#13;
Whitewater, 33-84 (up a point&#13;
from the earlier meeting when&#13;
UWP scored 32 to their 89. And&#13;
on Friday afternoon, November&#13;
4, Parkside was beaten by Carroll&#13;
College 71-47 . First place&#13;
finishers for the Ranger's&#13;
included Debbie Wo1nowski in&#13;
the 200 and 500 freestyle events,&#13;
100 butterfly; and Donna&#13;
Peter on in the one meter dive.&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Women's Volleyball team&#13;
had , a full schedule this past&#13;
week, playing a tournament in&#13;
Illinois, Saturday, October 29; a&#13;
triangular meet at home&#13;
Tuesday, November 1; and a&#13;
quadrangular meet also at home&#13;
Friclay, November 4.&#13;
Saturday, October 29th, the&#13;
team traveled to Dekalb, Illinois&#13;
to play in the Northern Illinois&#13;
Tournament with all the top&#13;
teams in the midwest. They lost&#13;
to all four schools there, yet they&#13;
were very t:omp-etitive with alot&#13;
of very close game scores .&#13;
On Tuesday, November 1,&#13;
Parkside competed against&#13;
Trinity College in the first match&#13;
of their triangular meet. Parkside&#13;
soundly defeated Trinity by&#13;
scorers of 15-3, 15-8; with their&#13;
fine team work they totally&#13;
dominated Trinity . In the next&#13;
match, UW-Milwaukee followed&#13;
Parkside's trail to also defeat&#13;
Trin ity, 15-7, 15-9, 15-1; in a&#13;
three out of five game match . In&#13;
Wrestling&#13;
clinic&#13;
scheduled&#13;
by Alane.Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
On Saturday, November 12,&#13;
1977, Parkside will sponsor its&#13;
eighth annual wr'estling clinic for&#13;
high school and junior high&#13;
school students to participate.&#13;
Registration begins at 8:30 a.m .,&#13;
with a nominal fee of $1 .00 per&#13;
participant, plus an approximate&#13;
cost of $1 .00 for lunch .&#13;
Clinic director is Jim Koch,&#13;
wrestling coach at Parkside for&#13;
the last seven years . He has&#13;
produced 12 All-Americans and&#13;
5 National Champions, with his&#13;
1974 squad scoring 66 points to&#13;
finish 3rd at the National Meet.&#13;
Both are all-time records for&#13;
Wisconsin NAIA teams .&#13;
Also featured will be some&#13;
outstanding coaches and wrestlers&#13;
as instructors. They will&#13;
include Russ Hellickson, assistant&#13;
coach at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin, and winner of two&#13;
Pan American Gold Medals apd&#13;
• a9- Olympic Silver Medal. Also&#13;
there will be NAIA National&#13;
Champion Ken Martin {currently&#13;
head wrestling coach at Cody&#13;
High School in Wyoming), Joe&#13;
Landers, and Sam Fiorella; and&#13;
NCAA National Champion Jack&#13;
Reinwald, who placed 2nd in the&#13;
1977 World Cup Championships.&#13;
"The emphasis will be on&#13;
making the instruction as&#13;
relevant as possible to the&#13;
participanrt. The clinic is&#13;
designed that each wrestler can&#13;
learn new wrestling techniques.&#13;
Many schools use this clinic as a&#13;
practice session for their teams,"&#13;
said Koch.&#13;
the final match Parkside faced&#13;
UW-Milwaukee in a two out of&#13;
three game match. In the first&#13;
game Parkside started slow being&#13;
down 1-7, but with good serves&#13;
and hard hitting they made a&#13;
strong comeback to win 15-9,&#13;
and took the match the next&#13;
game 15-11.&#13;
Friday, November 4, the&#13;
Ranger's faced North Central&#13;
College and Lake Forrest College&#13;
at home. Their first match was&#13;
against North Central, whom&#13;
they easily beat 15-4, 15-4. They&#13;
then went on to dominate Lake&#13;
Forrest, to take the win with&#13;
15-4, 15-8. In reference to both&#13;
games Coach Draft commented,&#13;
"neither team was much of&#13;
challenge. Everybody played and&#13;
executed well against both&#13;
opponents."&#13;
Next on their schedule is the&#13;
state meet on November 11 and&#13;
12, at Carroll College in&#13;
Waukesha. Parkside should be&#13;
ceded in one of the top three&#13;
positions . As of Friday ntght the&#13;
Ranger's season record was&#13;
20-10.&#13;
Since Madison is not competDiving&#13;
- Donna Peterson and&#13;
Mary Beth Mogensen&#13;
50 Breast - Kay Kauffman and&#13;
Lowrie Melotik&#13;
100 Breast - Kay Kauffman and&#13;
Lowrie Melotik&#13;
50 Free - Lynn Peterson, Sally&#13;
Francis, and Maureen Graves&#13;
100 FREE - Sally Francis&#13;
50 and 100 BACK - Maureen&#13;
Graves and Lynn Peterson&#13;
During the last week, Parkside&#13;
placed 12 out of 14 at the&#13;
The WWIAC Meet will hold&#13;
prelims and finals on Friday at&#13;
12:00 and 7.00, and prelims and&#13;
finals on Saturday at 10.00 and&#13;
3:30 p .m 12 schools will&#13;
compete : Carroll, Carthage,&#13;
UW-Green, Bay, Eau Claire,&#13;
La Crosse, Milwaukee, Oshkosh,&#13;
Parkside, River Falls, Stevens&#13;
Point, Stout, Whitewater.&#13;
Soccer loses to Kalamazoo&#13;
by Alane Adresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
On Saturday, October 29, the&#13;
Parkside Soccer Team traveled&#13;
all the way to Kalamazoo,&#13;
Michigan to play Western&#13;
Michigan University. After&#13;
regulation play the final score&#13;
was 0-0, then in overtime, the&#13;
Rangers lost a very disappointing&#13;
game at 2-0.&#13;
The first 2oal came after a&#13;
good shot, a hit ball off a cross to&#13;
take the lead for Michigan . The&#13;
final goal was a break away with&#13;
two minutes left in the overtime,&#13;
coming after Parkside had pulled&#13;
everybody up in an attempt to&#13;
score the equalizing goal .&#13;
, In his assessment of the game,&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson commented,&#13;
"We played an outstanding&#13;
defensive game considering the&#13;
fact that our regular goalkeeper&#13;
did not play Bob Stoewe, our&#13;
leading scorer, played in the&#13;
goal, thus hurting our offense&#13;
very badly . We did have&#13;
numerous chances to score early&#13;
and actually had a statistical&#13;
edge in shots, 14-10 at the half.&#13;
With fifteen minutes to go, Chris&#13;
Carter was e1ected for rough&#13;
play, so we played the la t 25&#13;
minutes a man short ."&#13;
Pure Brewed ~ N\~G\C o~O . ~,~e, 3 From God's Country. Open 32,\ ~~\~\~ :&gt;~3&#13;
On Tap At Union Square Mon. &amp; Fri . "7'Cloe, a~) 034--&#13;
Noon t1/ 9 ~~(._A,¥"'&#13;
Sat. Noon t1/ 5 \"..,.-&#13;
MAGIC TRICKS - JOKES - NOVEL TIES&#13;
THI.NK&#13;
P.A.B. INVITES YOU TO&#13;
THE GREAT MIDWESTERN&#13;
SKI WEEK /&#13;
WINTER PARK/MARY JANE&#13;
WINTER PAR,C, COLORADO&#13;
JAN. 1-9 only ~ J QOO&#13;
Includes: Round trip bus fare, condominiums (4 to a room),&#13;
lift tickets, parties, dances and MORE!!&#13;
OR BY CAR&#13;
SAVE THE BUS FARE AND STILL GET THE FANTASTIC EXTRAS ...&#13;
Deadline for sign-up Nov. 18&#13;
Meeting for those interested Nov. 8 - Union 207 at 3:30&#13;
Sign up in UW-P Union Office 209 For more info call 553-2278 &#13;
events&#13;
Wednesday, November 9&#13;
Walk-in Blood Drive frori110:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., in&#13;
Union 104-105. No appointment necessary:&#13;
Goal: 125 donors. , '&#13;
Thursday, November 10&#13;
Happy Birthday, United States Marine Corps.&#13;
Men's Basketball Scrimmage against Lora College.&#13;
Come and see th is years Ranger Basketball team&#13;
(that intends to win the 1978 NAIA Championships)&#13;
at 6:30 p.rn. in the Physical Education&#13;
Building. &lt;,&#13;
Music British harpsichordist, Jane Clark will give a&#13;
lecture-recital. It will begin at 10 a.m. in ,CL-118.&#13;
Science Club - Features Dr. LEwing. CL 105 at 7:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Film Day for Night, in Union Cinema at 2:30 and&#13;
7:30 p.m. Admission $1.00;&#13;
Friday, November 11&#13;
Women's Swimming WWIAC Championships at&#13;
La Crosse at 2:00.&#13;
Women's Volleyball WWIAC State Tournament&#13;
at Waukesha. 4:00 p.m.&#13;
Science Club - Dr. E. Epstein CL 105 at 2 p.m.&#13;
Film The Immigrants in Union Cinema -at 8 p.m.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Saturday, November 12&#13;
Cross Country - Parkside hosts NAIA district #14&#13;
Meet at 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Women's Swimming - WWIAC Championships at&#13;
La Crosse at 2:00 p.m. ' " .&#13;
Women's Volleyball - WWIAC State Tournament at&#13;
Waukesha. Starting at 9:00 a.m.&#13;
Wtestling - Clinic opens Physd Building from&#13;
8:30-4:00 p.m. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Sunday, Novem~er 13&#13;
Film - The Immigraots in Union Cinema at 7:30&#13;
p.m. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Monday, November 14&#13;
Lecture Theories of Punishment, by Richard&#13;
Wasserstrom, Professor of Law and Philosophy at&#13;
U.C.L.A. Sponsored by the Parkside Philosophical&#13;
Society.&#13;
\&#13;
Tuesday, November 15&#13;
Informal Discussion on Sexism by Richard Wasserstrom,&#13;
Professor of Law and Philosophy at&#13;
U.C.LA. Sponsored by the Parkside Philosophical&#13;
Society. .&#13;
Music - The Gus Giordano Jazz Dance Company&#13;
will perform at 8 p.m. in CA Theatre. Tickets are&#13;
available in Sears' Kenosha, Racine Team Electronics&#13;
and Union' Information Center.&#13;
Video Show - Martian Space Party with Filesign&#13;
Theatre in Union Square at 12:00 noon. Free.&#13;
Wednesday, November 16&#13;
Student Concert - CAT at 3:00 p.m. For further information&#13;
call Bedford in CA 290.&#13;
Movie - Split Second. A screenplay by Irving&#13;
Wallace. 7 p.m. at Rondelle. Call 55'4-2154 for&#13;
reservations.&#13;
Meeting - Communication Student and faculty&#13;
meeting to discuss curricular changes .and introduce&#13;
new faculty. 7:00 p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
'"&#13;
NOTES&#13;
.Conference - To be held on Nov. 19 at the Student&#13;
Union, 8:30 a.m. Advance Tickets - $4 for UW-P&#13;
Students, $7 for others at $8 at the door. Includes a&#13;
free lunch. For more details and tickets call the&#13;
Union Information Center.&#13;
Singers team up&#13;
with Jazzband&#13;
The nationally-known Wisconsin&#13;
Singers of UW-Madison&#13;
will' have a Kenosha flavor&#13;
Wednesday night (Nov. 2) when&#13;
they join. forces with the&#13;
UW-Parkside Jazz Ensemble,&#13;
directed by Tim Bell, in a benefit&#13;
concert for the UW Alumni&#13;
Scholarship Fund. Mac Huff, Ir.,&#13;
a Tremper and Madison&#13;
graduate, is in his firh year as&#13;
director of the Singers, while&#13;
Kenoshans Phil Dekok, Dave&#13;
Chase and Trez Tianeo are&#13;
performers with4k€ well-traveled&#13;
group. Former Kenoshan Tom&#13;
Terrien is choreographer and&#13;
stage director.&#13;
Tickets for the 7:30 p.m.&#13;
concert tonight in the Cornmunication&#13;
Arts Theater are on&#13;
sale at the UniUn Information&#13;
Center for $1 and will be available&#13;
at the door for $1.50 for all&#13;
students. General admission is&#13;
$3&#13;
A II proceeds go to the UW&#13;
Alumni Association of Kenosha&#13;
scholarship fund which has&#13;
awarded $18,000 in scholarships&#13;
to students to attend the Parkside&#13;
and Madison campuses&#13;
since the mid 196Os.&#13;
The Wisconsin Singers have&#13;
performed throughout the country&#13;
in their 11-year history, including&#13;
two appearances at the&#13;
White House and on national&#13;
television. Their repertoire&#13;
ranges from show tunes to rock&#13;
and roll, all in an up-beat style,&#13;
fu Ily choreographed and&#13;
costumed.&#13;
The concert will mark the first&#13;
public appearance of the new&#13;
school year for the UW-P Jazz&#13;
Ensemble I, fast establishing a&#13;
..reputation as one of the top&#13;
collegiate jazz groups in the&#13;
state. Director Bell, who has a&#13;
national reputation as a&#13;
clarinetist, will solo on several&#13;
numbers.&#13;
classified&#13;
Wanted:&#13;
Cocktail waitress or ,go go gltt.&#13;
$300.-$400. wk, paid Florida vacation&#13;
and Insurance. No hassles.&#13;
No experience necessary, call (312)&#13;
634-3313.&#13;
Wanted on campus part-lime typist. Should&#13;
be free whole mornings or afternoons. Call&#13;
553-2336.&#13;
RMI Cottage on the take near Carthage. Call&#13;
Stoulenger efter 5:30 on Weekdays for more&#13;
InfOfrT1fl110n.551-7024.&#13;
. Brown Hair - I told you sol B.S.C.&#13;
8adl SMt Chick - Now that I know who&#13;
you finally are, maybe we can get together&#13;
and well you know. I doubt that anyone as&#13;
pretty as you ccurc lOOk prettier In the&#13;
...evenlng. Frustrated No Longer.&#13;
Toot. - Although I only 888 you&#13;
approximately once a week, I think you are&#13;
one of the most prettiest girls In this&#13;
college. How 'bout a date lIometlme? EIJETS.&#13;
I&#13;
The Chiwaukee Prairie Food Co-op will present the Falls City&#13;
Ramblers, Bluegrass concert on Wedn~!day, November 16, at 8:00&#13;
p.m. Tickets are $1.50 in advance, 52.00 at the door. Co-op peanuts&#13;
and cheeses will be sold at the concert. Falls City appeared at "The&#13;
End" two years ago.&#13;
Comm meeting planned&#13;
The faculty of the Communication discipline will host an informal&#13;
social gathering on Wednesday, November 16th at 7:00 P.M. in room&#13;
207 of the Parkside Union. All Communication majors and students&#13;
interested in finding out about the Communication program at&#13;
Parkside are invited to attend.&#13;
The purpose of the meeting is to enable Communication students&#13;
and faculty to meet each other outside the classroom and to provide&#13;
information regarding the curricular changes in the Communication&#13;
program. Refreshments will be served.&#13;
For additional information contact Dr. Alan Rubin in&#13;
Communication ....Arts 273 or at extension 2526.&#13;
._---_..-..-..-_._-~ .---------.. 17~ I&#13;
I /lA.,..~J'...-. I&#13;
I~I&#13;
I DPEN 7 DAYS I&#13;
I Mon.-Sat 10 'til close II I Sun. 6 'til close ,&#13;
I I&#13;
I NOON LUNCHES I&#13;
I Sandwiches 'til midnight I&#13;
I I&#13;
I&#13;
I SAT. lAOIES NITE I&#13;
I&#13;
Ladies' Drinks 112Price [ r with date B 'til close I&#13;
I 1436 Junction, Racine I&#13;
L oJ.&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
J&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAINOF.FICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658.2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.l.e.&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsi,ty Club&#13;
~ 4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha, lis• ' Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
I /&#13;
• &lt; .&gt;,,''0' Mention this ad!&#13;
PAS presents the&#13;
GUS GIORDANQ JAZZ DANCE&#13;
COMPANY&#13;
~Tues. Nov.15 COMM ARTS THEATRE 8:00pm&#13;
ADMISSION: ADVANCE- 13.00 UW.-P STUDENTS&#13;
AT- DOOR- 14.00 15.00 GENERAL&#13;
Tickets Available At Union Info. Center&#13;
Wednesday, November 9&#13;
Walk-in Blood Drive from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., in&#13;
Union 104-105. No appointrnent necessary.&#13;
Goal: 125 donors. ~ ,&#13;
Thursday, November 10&#13;
Happy Birthday, United States Marine Corps.&#13;
Men's Basketball Scrimmage against Lora College.&#13;
Come and see this years Ranger Basketball team&#13;
(that i_ntends to win the 1978 NAIA Championships)&#13;
at 6:30 p.m. in the Physical Education&#13;
Building.&#13;
Music British harpsichordist, Jane Clark will give a&#13;
lecture-recital. It will begin at 10 a.m . in ,CL-118.&#13;
Science Club - Features Dr. L. Ewing. CL 105 at 7:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Film Day for Night, in Union Cinema at 2:30 and&#13;
7:30 p.m. Admission $1.00i,&#13;
Friday, November 11&#13;
Women's Swimming WWIAC Championships at&#13;
La Crosse at 2:00.&#13;
Women's Volleyball WWIAC State Tournament&#13;
at Waukesha. 4:00 p.m.&#13;
Science Club - Dr. E. Epstein CL 105 at 2 p.m.&#13;
Film The Immigrants in Union Cinema at 8 p.m.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Saturday, November 12&#13;
Cross Country - Parkside hosts NAIA district #14&#13;
Meet at 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Women's Swimming - WWll,\.C Championships at&#13;
La Crosse at 2:00 p.m.&#13;
Women's Volleyball - WWIAC State Tournament at&#13;
Waukesha. Starting at 9:00 a.m.&#13;
Wtestling - Clinic opens Physd Building from&#13;
8:30-4:00 p.m. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Sunday, November 13&#13;
Film - The lmmigraots in Union Cinema at 7:30&#13;
p.m. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Monday, November 14&#13;
Lecture Theories of Punishment, by Richard&#13;
Wasserstrom, Professor of Law and Philosophy at&#13;
U.C.L.A. Sponsored by the Parkside Philosophical&#13;
Society.&#13;
Tuesday, November 15&#13;
Informal Discussion on Sexism by Richard Wasserstrom,&#13;
Professor of Law and Philosophy at&#13;
U .C.L.A. Sponsored by the Parkside Philosophical&#13;
Society.&#13;
Music - The Gus Glordano Jazz Dance Company&#13;
will perform at 8 p.m. in CA Theatre. Tickets are&#13;
available in Sears' Kenosha, Racine Team Electronics&#13;
and Union Information Center.&#13;
Video Show - Martian Space Party with Filesign&#13;
Theatre in Union Square at 12:00 noon. Free.&#13;
Wednesday, November16&#13;
Student Concert - CAT at 3:00 p.m. For further information&#13;
call Bedford in CA 290.&#13;
Movie - Split Second. A screenplay by Irving&#13;
Wallace. 7 p.m. at Rondelle. Call 554-2154 for&#13;
reservations.&#13;
Meeting - Communication Student and faculty&#13;
meeting to discuss curricular changes _and introduce&#13;
new faculty. 7:00 p.m. in Union 207. I&#13;
NOTES&#13;
.Conference - To be held on Nov. 19 at the Student&#13;
Union, 8:30 a.m. Advance Tickets - $4 for UW-P&#13;
Students, $7 for others at $8 at the door. Includes a&#13;
free lunch. For more details and tickets call the&#13;
Union Information Center.&#13;
/&#13;
Singers team up&#13;
with Ja11band&#13;
The nationally-known Wisconsin&#13;
Singers of UW-Madison&#13;
will · have a Kenosha flavor&#13;
Wednesday night (Nov. 2) when&#13;
they join forces with the&#13;
UW-Parkside Jazz Ensemble,&#13;
directed by Tim Bell, in a benefit&#13;
concert for the UW Alumni&#13;
Scholarship Fund. Mac Huff, Jr.,&#13;
a Tremper and Madison&#13;
graduate, is in his first year as&#13;
director of the Stngers, while&#13;
Kenoshans Phil Dekok, Dave&#13;
Chase and Trez Tianen are&#13;
performers with4Re well-traveled&#13;
group. Former Kenoshan Tom&#13;
Terrien is choreographer and&#13;
stage di rector. _&#13;
Tickets for the 7:30 p.m.&#13;
concert tonight in the &lt;;ommunication&#13;
Arts Theater are on&#13;
sale at the Unit&gt;n Information&#13;
Center for $1 and will be available&#13;
at the door for $1.50 for all&#13;
...&#13;
students. General admission is The Chiwaukee Prairie Food Co-op will present the Falls City&#13;
$3. d h ' . Ramblers, Bluegrass concert on Wednesday, November 16, at 8:00&#13;
All procee s go to t e UW p.m. Tickets are $1.50 in advance, $2.00 at the door. Co-op peanuts&#13;
Alumni Association of Kenosha and cheeses will be sold at the concert. Falls City appeared at "The scholarship fund which has&#13;
awarded $18,000 in scholarships&#13;
to students to attend the Parkside&#13;
and Madison campuses&#13;
since the mid 1960s.&#13;
The Wisconsin Singers have&#13;
performed throughout the country&#13;
in their 11-year history, including&#13;
two appearances at the&#13;
White House and on national&#13;
television. Their repertoire&#13;
ranges from show tunes to rock&#13;
and roll, all in an up-beat style,&#13;
fully choreographed and&#13;
costumed.&#13;
The concert will mark the first&#13;
public appearance of the new&#13;
school year for the UW-P Jazz&#13;
Ensemble I, fast establishing a&#13;
Ieputation as one of the top&#13;
collegiate jazz groups in the&#13;
state. Director Bell, who has a&#13;
national reputation as a&#13;
clarinetist, will solo on several&#13;
numbers.&#13;
classified&#13;
Wanted:&#13;
Cocktail waitress or go go girt.&#13;
$300.-$400. wk. paid Florida vacation&#13;
and Insurance. No hassles.&#13;
No experience necessary, call (312)&#13;
634-3313.&#13;
Wanted on campus part-time typist. Should&#13;
be free whole mornings or afternoons. Call&#13;
553-2336.&#13;
Rent Cottage on the lake near Carthage. Cal I&#13;
Stoutenger after 5 :30 on weekdays for more&#13;
Information. 551-7024.&#13;
Brown Hair - I told you sol B.S.C.&#13;
Baell Seat Chick - Now that I know who&#13;
you finally are, maybe we can get together&#13;
and well you know. I doubt that anyone as&#13;
pretty as you could look prettier In the&#13;
. evening. Frustrated No Longer.&#13;
Toota - Although I only see you&#13;
approximately once a week, I think you are&#13;
one of the most prettiest glr1a In this&#13;
college. How 'bout a date sometime? EVETS.&#13;
End" two years ago.&#13;
Comm ~eeting planned&#13;
The faculty of the Communication discipline will host an informal&#13;
social gathering on Wednesday, November 16th at 7:00 P.M. in room&#13;
207 of the Parkside Union. All Commun-ication majors and students&#13;
interested in finding out about the Communication program at&#13;
Parkside are invited to attend.&#13;
The purpose of the meeting is to enable Communication students&#13;
and faculty to meet each other outside the classroom and to provide&#13;
information regarding the curricular changes in the Communication&#13;
program. Refreshments will be served.&#13;
For additional information contact Dr. Alan Rubin in&#13;
Communication Arts 273 or at extens[on 2526. f7k-----~-7&#13;
~ ~&#13;
!~!&#13;
i OPEN 7 DAYS i i Mon.-Sat 10 'til close i ~ Sun. 6 'til close l&#13;
i i i NOON LUNCHES i -~ Sandwiches 'til midnight ~&#13;
i \&#13;
i SAT. LADIES NITE i&#13;
j Ladies' Drinks ½ Price i f with date 8 'til close ~&#13;
L _,1!~~.Juncti,f!!J, Racine J&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
~ 4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha, ,1.,·· ~ Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
\)W I&#13;
' ~¢.,Y Mention this ad!&#13;
.. ~ ......&#13;
PA·B presents the&#13;
If&#13;
=&#13;
GUS GIORDANO JAZZ DANCE&#13;
COMPANY .&#13;
"" Tues. Nov.15 COMM ARTS THEATRE&#13;
ADMISSION: .ADVANCE- 53.00 UW.-P STUDENTS&#13;
AT DOOR- 54.00 55.00 GENERAL&#13;
Ticketi Available At Union Info. Center </text>
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