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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 6, issue 12</text>
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            <text>UW-Milwaukee students chop Athletic budget</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>-,&#13;
Wednesday, November 16, 1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No. 12&#13;
an er ()() Universities are full of 99&#13;
knowledge; the freshmen bring&#13;
a little in and the seniors take&#13;
none away, and knowledge&#13;
accumulates.&#13;
UW-Milwaulcee students&#13;
chop A th le tic budget&#13;
The Student Association-Senate of UW-Milwaukee voted Sunday&#13;
night, November 7, to cut off funds to the_ Athletic Department in&#13;
1980 unless provision is made for equitable student representation on&#13;
the Athletic Board _ Currently the Senate allocates approximately&#13;
$150,000 per semester to the Athletic Department.&#13;
University Committee limits student input&#13;
The resolution was promted by the discovery Friday that the&#13;
University Committee had recommended increasing the faculty and&#13;
·academic staff positions on the Athletic Board, while the number of&#13;
student seats remained the same. The University Committee&#13;
recommended the change as an interim composition of the Athletic&#13;
Board when it seemed unlikely that the Faculry Senate would be able&#13;
to deal with the final Athletic Board Charter this year or anytime in&#13;
the near future . Members of the University committee cited a full&#13;
calendar and the "low legislative priority of the Athletic Board&#13;
charter" as the reason for an interim composition of the Board .&#13;
The current composition of the Athletic Board is 7 faculty&#13;
members, 4 students, and 2 alumni . The charter that the Faculty&#13;
Senate is postponing calls for a composition of 4 faculty, 4 students, 3&#13;
academic staff and 2 alumni . The composition suggested by the&#13;
University Committee in the interim was 8 faculty, 4 students, 1&#13;
academic staff and 2 alumni .&#13;
Taxation without representation&#13;
Chairperson of the Student Legislative Affairs Committee, David&#13;
Olson, compared the change in the Athletic Board to taxation&#13;
without representation .&#13;
he Senate passed the resolution on their authority to allocate&#13;
funds and organize themselves in a manner they determine under&#13;
Wisconsin Statute 36.09(5) which gives students primary responsibility&#13;
in areas of student life, services, and interests . The statute,&#13;
passed in 1971 when the two state university systems were merged,&#13;
grants authority to the Board of Regents, Chancellors, Faculty,&#13;
and Students in their respective areas of interests.&#13;
Because Wisconsin is the only state in the country with a statute of&#13;
this kind, there have been problems forming an athletic board that&#13;
meets with the approval of the NCAA but does not violate the&#13;
Legislature's grant of authority to students in this area. Chancellor&#13;
Baum has agreed to seek an exception from the NCAA.&#13;
The text of the resolution followsPassed&#13;
by Student Association Senate, University of WisconsinMilwaukee&#13;
November 6, 1977.&#13;
U9-USS-2&#13;
WhereasStudents&#13;
have primary responsibility for areas of student life, services&#13;
and interests, with Athletics being one of those areas; and&#13;
WhereasStudent&#13;
segregated fee funding is the primary-support for the Athletic&#13;
Department; and&#13;
WhereasThe&#13;
University Committee has recommended an interim solution for&#13;
the composition of the athletic Board, while they delay on the actual&#13;
Athletic Board Charter, to consist of an additional faculty and an&#13;
additional academic staff position, and&#13;
WhereasThis&#13;
results in a total composition of 8 faculty , 2 alumni, 1 academic&#13;
staff, and only 4 students; and&#13;
WhereasThi&#13;
s effectively eliminates student participation on the Athletic&#13;
Board to a significant degree, therefore,&#13;
BE I.T RESOLVEDThat&#13;
if the faculty take control of the Athletic Board in this manner,&#13;
and students do not maintain their current proportion on the Board,&#13;
Student Association shall eliminate in total funding for the Athletic&#13;
Department as of 1980, or as soon as possible.&#13;
Co-,,munication reorganized&#13;
by Philip l. Livingston&#13;
Last week the Academic Planning and Program Review Committee&#13;
approved a reorganization of the communication discipline. The&#13;
reorganization includes rearr~ngement of the Organizational&#13;
Communication specialization and the replacement of the Public&#13;
Information specialization with Mass Communication. A new&#13;
specialization, Speech Communication, was also approved. The&#13;
reorganization will be sent to central administration in Madison for&#13;
approval before the changes are implemented .&#13;
If approved, the Communication discipline would be organized in&#13;
the following manner (course designation numbers of new courses&#13;
may change}:&#13;
Requirements for the Communication major&#13;
The following courses constitute the core requirements:&#13;
Comm 101 An Introduction to Human Communication 3 er&#13;
DA 110 Idea of Theatre 3 er&#13;
Comm 102&#13;
.Comm 260&#13;
Introduction to Organizational&#13;
Communication '&#13;
Mass Media in American Society&#13;
3 er&#13;
3 er&#13;
28 credits shall be earned in one of the following options: Speech&#13;
Communication, Organizational CommJJnication, Mass Communication,&#13;
or Dramatic Arts.&#13;
Speech Communication&#13;
In addition to the core requirement, the stude~t specializing in&#13;
Speech Communication must· complete the following courses or their&#13;
equivalents:&#13;
Comm 105&#13;
Comm 201&#13;
Comm 320&#13;
Comm 445&#13;
Public Speaking&#13;
Group Dynamics&#13;
Communication Theory&#13;
Communication Research&#13;
Electives (communication or related&#13;
courses; subject to advisor's written&#13;
approval)&#13;
3 er&#13;
3 er&#13;
3 er&#13;
3 er&#13;
16 er&#13;
Organizational Communication&#13;
In addition to the core requirement, the student specializing in&#13;
Organizational Communication must complete the following courses&#13;
or their equivalents :&#13;
Comm 202 Conference Techniques and 3 er&#13;
Group Discussion&#13;
.Comm 302 Theories of Organizational 3 er&#13;
Communication&#13;
Comm 222 or 277 Business and Professional 3 er&#13;
Comm 445&#13;
Speaking or Communication in Business&#13;
Communication Research&#13;
Electives (communication or related&#13;
courses; subject to advisor's written&#13;
Approval}&#13;
Mass Communication&#13;
3 er&#13;
16 er&#13;
In addition to the core requirement, the student specializ-ing in&#13;
Mass Communication must complete the following courses or their&#13;
equivalents:&#13;
Comm 360 Theories of Mass Communication&#13;
Comm 375 Public Opinion and Communication&#13;
Two of the following:&#13;
Comm 109 Basic Filmmaking&#13;
Comm 248 Radio Production&#13;
Cbmm 249 Television Production&#13;
Electives (communication or related&#13;
courses; subject to advisor's written&#13;
approval)&#13;
Explanation of discipline structure&#13;
3 er&#13;
3 er&#13;
6 er&#13;
16 er&#13;
The following is an explanation of the communication major at&#13;
Parkside as it will appear in the next catalog of course descriptions.&#13;
The 40 credits major in Communications is an interdisciplinary&#13;
program preparing students for positions which meet the business,&#13;
industrial and aesthetic needs of the-~ommunity. The core of&#13;
required courses comprise an introduction to the four options:&#13;
-Speech Communication, Organizational Communication, Mass&#13;
Communication, and Dramatic Arts.&#13;
Continued on page 8 &#13;
editorials&#13;
Even Oshkosh ,has apathy&#13;
The following guest editorial first appeared in the&#13;
October 13 issue of adft°fice•lilaft&#13;
Apathy is like a silent fart.&#13;
The more silent the fart is, the deadlier the&#13;
smell gets, causing people in the surrounding&#13;
area to have breathing difficulties.&#13;
Student apathy is like that because the more&#13;
silent students become towards campus&#13;
organizations, the deadlier the work becomes for&#13;
people involved, smothering chances to make&#13;
their involvement a su.ccess. \&#13;
Student apathy is a problem people have 'been&#13;
trying to suppress for quite some time.&#13;
All the ways to get students to change their&#13;
apathetic ways, ranging from editorials to rallies,&#13;
have not started any monumental changes.&#13;
Nothing seems to get students to rise to any sort&#13;
of occasion unless it deals with ~ good time.&#13;
UW-O is no exception.&#13;
Last week, the Oshkosh Student Association&#13;
held their senate election. 4.5 per cent of the&#13;
students attending this university voted.&#13;
It's surprising to find how many students turn&#13;
their backs when questioned about anything&#13;
.&#13;
' concerning their school. Responses run from&#13;
"Don't bother me," to "Get the hell out of my&#13;
way," to '.'I don't care."&#13;
Headlfnes across the nation's newspapers are&#13;
full of statements claiming that the intelligence of&#13;
America's college , students bprders on the&#13;
illiterate stage. Non-involvement in student&#13;
activities is one way to prove ~uch_ a statement.&#13;
Getting students involved is ~ very difficult&#13;
1 proce~s and it's possible that organizations such&#13;
as OSA may be going the wrong way in trying to&#13;
motivate everybody.&#13;
'Speeches in the Titan Room during the lunch&#13;
hours, or pamphlets concerning the OSA election&#13;
and the nominees explaining the whole election&#13;
are just a couple of ways that might motivate the&#13;
students. But it is still up to the studen·ts to pick&#13;
up the pencil and fill in the ballot.&#13;
Mommy. and Daddy are not here anymore to&#13;
lead us by the hand to get things done. Students&#13;
every day are trying to prove that they can handle&#13;
themselves without their parents. But by being&#13;
apathetic to just about every cause except their&#13;
own is one way to show that they haven't cut the&#13;
apron strings yet .&#13;
Play it again, Co~munication&#13;
The broader university political network&#13;
determines such compromises as lefting Parkside&#13;
grant a B.A. in fine arts instead of a Bachelor of&#13;
Fine Arts (B.F.A.), or giving Parkside permission&#13;
to set up a business graduate school that may&#13;
grant a Master of Administrative Sciences&#13;
(M.A.S.) instead of the traditional Master of&#13;
Business Administration (M.B.A.). This political&#13;
system was also responsible for not offering a&#13;
Journalism major at Parkside.&#13;
Between Chicago and Milwaukee, there are -&#13;
many publishing companies: Chicago is thought&#13;
by many, to be the number two publishing city in&#13;
the United States, following New York. With&#13;
these types of surroundings, and given that&#13;
Parkside is one of the few four year universities in&#13;
the corridor between Chicago and Milwaukee, you&#13;
would think the UW-System would use a little&#13;
creativity and perhaps institute a Publishing&#13;
major at Parkside or at least the time honored&#13;
Journalism major. Nope!&#13;
Finally, in the Communication discipline&#13;
reorganization, the nebulous Public Information&#13;
specialization was canned and replaced with a&#13;
new nebulous Mass Communication specialization.&#13;
This is the same catch-all major offered at&#13;
UW-Milwaukee. In Mass eommunication you can&#13;
stuff film studies, radio, television, in addition to&#13;
some other communication courses. To graduate&#13;
with a Mass Communication degree from&#13;
Parkside in the overcrowded field of journaf1sm&#13;
and compete with graduates from the finest&#13;
schools in Journalism (UW-Madison, University&#13;
of Minnesota, ·Northwestern), is a noble endeavor&#13;
indeed. ,,&#13;
If Parkside had a radio station (the one that GTI&#13;
garnered), a television station, or some major&#13;
publishing concern, a degree in Mass&#13;
Communication might be attractive. Parkside has&#13;
one untenured professor teaching in the Mass&#13;
Communication specialization. The rest of the&#13;
workload is shared by adhocs (professionals not&#13;
necessarily endowed with research degrees) ..&#13;
One of the biggest laughs thrs year is that&#13;
Communication received permission for one more&#13;
professor in ,the discipline. Well, you would think&#13;
they_ would try to get one in Mass&#13;
Communications. Mass Communication offers&#13;
eighteen courses (the largest offering of any&#13;
specialization in the discipline) and it would seem&#13;
logical to have at least two tenure· track&#13;
professors to advise and teach in the&#13;
specialization. The new professor will teach in&#13;
Organizational Communication. So much for&#13;
common sense. 1&#13;
It would be interesting if administrators and&#13;
decision making professors wo~ld try to answer&#13;
the needs of continuing education in the area and&#13;
the needs_ of students competing with graduates&#13;
of established universities, before trying out&#13;
another reorganization scheme.&#13;
. · Ranger _is written and edited by students of th&#13;
1 University of Wisconsin-Parrside and they are sof I .&#13;
responsib~e for its e_ditor1al policy and content.e Y&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin '53141&#13;
Subscriptions: $5.00 year for U.S.A.&#13;
... ,. &#13;
• views&#13;
Senior praises Pollack&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I would just like to comment&#13;
on the review of Lillian&#13;
Hellman's Children's Hour written&#13;
by Wendy Ratner and&#13;
published in the November 9th&#13;
issue of the Ranger. I do not feel&#13;
that educational theatre can be&#13;
compared with eommunity and&#13;
professional theatre. There are a&#13;
great deal of differences that&#13;
have~ be understood. You can't&#13;
realistically compare community&#13;
theatre or professional theatre to&#13;
a university theatre sit.!Jation . A&#13;
director has different goals for&#13;
his actors/actresses as the play&#13;
progresses to performance level&#13;
in university theatre .&#13;
A student reviewer has to&#13;
consider what the director in a&#13;
university situation has to work&#13;
with when the rehearsals begin&#13;
and measure the progressive&#13;
growth to performance level .&#13;
Here are some aspects to&#13;
consider when deciding to&#13;
review for a university theatre:&#13;
1. How much acting ability the&#13;
Actors/ actresses have had before&#13;
auditioning for the play? (i.e.&#13;
acting, voice, and movement&#13;
classes or actual acting experiences&#13;
on stage.)&#13;
2. Compare director's interpetation&#13;
of the theme of the play&#13;
with the playwright's interpetation&#13;
.&#13;
3. Evaluate how well the actors&#13;
ex~cute the director's overall&#13;
interpetation.&#13;
4 . Criticize the patterns of&#13;
movement, picturization,&#13;
pacing, timing, rhythm and style&#13;
of the play as presented by the&#13;
actors and director.&#13;
When looking at these aspects&#13;
of performance, I feel that Dr.&#13;
Rhoda-Gale Pollack did one&#13;
heck of a job and so did the&#13;
designers, cast and crew . During&#13;
the course of a production&#13;
actors/a~tresses may feel a sense&#13;
of growth or a sense of failure,&#13;
but within this produc'tion there&#13;
has certainly been more growth&#13;
than failure . More than half of&#13;
the actors / actresses in The&#13;
Children's Hour were acting on a&#13;
stage for the first time . You could&#13;
sense when watching the&#13;
performance, that their concentration&#13;
level and enthusiasm was&#13;
extremely high . The females&#13;
were not artifically portrayed as&#13;
mentioned in the review. Those&#13;
students had their first experience&#13;
in playing a highly dramatic&#13;
emotional role on the stage and&#13;
they handled this extremely well .&#13;
It was entrancing to watch, and&#13;
its dramatic pull kept suspense&#13;
within the audience members&#13;
throughout . The actresses were&#13;
sensitive to the author's theme&#13;
and they understood the&#13;
gentleness of their relationships .&#13;
The director had to give a&#13;
combination of mm, courses&#13;
such as a history course on the&#13;
period of the play; an indepth&#13;
acting course on character&#13;
analysis; a vocal and stage&#13;
movement course within 6 weeks&#13;
of rehearsals to aid the students&#13;
in developing characters different&#13;
than themselves . You have to&#13;
know that a director does not&#13;
just put an actor on the stage to&#13;
perform . And an actor can not&#13;
just walk on the stage without&#13;
any real work on lines, voice,&#13;
body and concentratin on&#13;
character.&#13;
And when you look at the&#13;
technical side of the performance&#13;
consider what the designers&#13;
had to work with; students who&#13;
might not know how to hammer&#13;
a nail or sew on a sewing&#13;
machine . Remember when&#13;
watching a theatrical production&#13;
on a university level that the&#13;
students are running the show.&#13;
That it is their first experience of&#13;
having the total responsibility for&#13;
a computerized lighting board,&#13;
sound system, box office or the&#13;
front of house&#13;
I heard many good comments&#13;
by faculty members concerning&#13;
this production. The fact is that&#13;
The Children's Hour was one of&#13;
the most successful plays&#13;
performed at Parkside within the&#13;
past four years .&#13;
A senior at Parkside&#13;
His whole life was a million-to-one shot.&#13;
United Council Legislative Update&#13;
AB 181, 255, 318 et al. - These Assembly bills to raise the lepi&#13;
drinking age to 19 were debated in an Assembly Jud1c1ary Committee&#13;
hearing Tuesday, October 18. United Council and student&#13;
representatives from three UW campuses testified against the bills .&#13;
Although it does not look as if the Judiciary Committee will act on&#13;
these bills (a fate similar to the Senate versions of these bills), It 1s&#13;
important that your legislators know that you oppose raising the legal&#13;
drinking age.&#13;
SB 289,335,363, - Faculty Collective Bargaining was discussed in&#13;
Executive Session of the Senate Labor Committee last Tuesday,&#13;
October 25, in Beloit UC Presfdent Jim Eagon presented amendments&#13;
to the three bills authored by UC and emphasized that student&#13;
involvement in collective bargaining Is necessary to protect students'&#13;
rights in university governance. Although the committee postponed&#13;
action until after the next Regent meeting, action is expected on a&#13;
committee substitute bill in mid November Once the Labor&#13;
Committee reports their bill out, it must be reviewed by the&#13;
Education Committee and Joint Finance Committee before r-eaching&#13;
the Senate floor&#13;
AB 604 - The student regent bill was the subject of an Assembly&#13;
Education Committee hearing Wednesday, October 19, at the State&#13;
Capitol. UC testified strongly supporting the bill and emphasized the&#13;
need for formal student involvement m decision-making at the&#13;
systemwide level Central Administration representatives testified in&#13;
opposition to the student regent proposal An Executive Session will&#13;
be held on this bill in mid ovember&#13;
SB 594, AB 1022 and 1030 - These bills would authorize a school&#13;
of veterinary medicine at UW-Madison with a food animal clinical&#13;
facility established at UW-River Falls&#13;
"Mini-budget'' - The state 1977-79 biennial budget (SB 77) was&#13;
passed last June and will be reviewed during the coming February&#13;
legislative floor period . In addition to the landlord-tenant issue&#13;
SB 426 , other potential issues include the UW graduata&#13;
application fee, the State Hygiene Lab funding, and a sales tax&#13;
exemption on required textbooks . Please contact your campus and&#13;
hometown state legislators about these issues and let them know&#13;
your views . They can't represent you 1f they don't know your posIt1on&#13;
on these and other issues.&#13;
S 1437 - Reform of the Federal Criminal Code. Th is is the latest&#13;
version of the infamous S-1, said to be one of the most regressive&#13;
pieces of legislation since the Alien and Sed1t1on Act of 1798 While&#13;
much of the new bill is necessary in order to clarify and standardize&#13;
federal law, several sections dealing with public assembly,&#13;
demonstrations, and conspiracy are vaguely worded and open to&#13;
abuse. More information will be available from your student&#13;
government officers &#13;
news&#13;
Committee moves t9.&#13;
Copy Editor the traffic on the steep portions would wear them down and change&#13;
the character of the prairie.&#13;
Fourth, outside groups who want to use the nature trail should&#13;
have to get permission from the committee chairman, Eugene&#13;
Casiorkiewicz Professor-Life Science or the Security Department&#13;
before walking the trails. Morris Firebaugh, Professor-Physics,&#13;
questioned the last proposal on the grounds it might discourage use&#13;
of the trails. "We don't want to hamstring law-abiding citizens by&#13;
creating a new bureaucracy," he said. Chairman Gasiorkiewicz&#13;
replied that "it wouldn't form a big bureaucracy .. Security could&#13;
take care of all the requests." The committee approved all four&#13;
actions by consensus.&#13;
The Environmental Concerns Committee has made some final&#13;
recommendations on what Parkside should do with its nature trail.&#13;
First, signs will be posted in the area prohibiting bikes, horses, and&#13;
snowmobiles from traveling on the trails. . I&#13;
Second, the gr~s should be mowed on the perimeter around the&#13;
'area to "isolate the prairie for firebreak purposes". Prairie lands&#13;
should be burned at regular intervals to prevent the encroachment of&#13;
higher plant life such as trees. ~ .&#13;
Third the committee recommended "relocation of the trails to&#13;
avoid steep grades". This meansthat a few portions of the trail will be&#13;
Government harassment&#13;
conference starts today&#13;
A conference open to the&#13;
public entitled, "Government&#13;
SurveilIance and Harassment vs.&#13;
the Majority" will be held at the&#13;
university of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 19, under the&#13;
sponsorship of eight. Racine and&#13;
Kenosha organizations.&#13;
The all-day conference will&#13;
feature general sessions in the&#13;
morning and afternoon, with&#13;
workshops and discussion sessions&#13;
scheduled in between. The.&#13;
registration fee of $7 in advance&#13;
and $8 at the door (students $4)&#13;
includes lunch.&#13;
Sponsoring groups include the&#13;
Kenosha-Racine chapter of the&#13;
American Civil Liberties Union&#13;
(ACLUj, the Kenosha and Racine&#13;
Education Associations, Kenosha&#13;
and Racine chapters of the&#13;
National Organization of Women&#13;
(NOWt Wisconsin State&#13;
Employees Union local 2180,the&#13;
Social Concerns committee of&#13;
the Unitarian-Universalist&#13;
Church of Kenosha and Racine&#13;
and the UW-Parkside Student&#13;
Government' Association.&#13;
The general morning sessions&#13;
beginning at 9 a.m. in Classroom&#13;
107 will consider "Groundbreaking&#13;
lawsuits Against Government&#13;
Spying, Harrassment&#13;
and Disruption" presented by&#13;
David Hamlin, executive secretary&#13;
of the Illinois AClU, and&#13;
Robert Schwarz, Milwaukee&#13;
chairman of the Sociatist&#13;
Workers Party. Racine-Kenosha&#13;
AClU President Robert Bramscher&#13;
will moderate.&#13;
The-afternoon general sessions&#13;
beginning at 2:15 in Classroom&#13;
107 wi II be on "Government&#13;
Surveillance of the Women's&#13;
Movement," presented by Nancy&#13;
Borman, editor and co-publisher&#13;
of Majority Report, a New York&#13;
City feminist newspaper, and&#13;
"AClU legislative Program for&#13;
Intelligence Agency Control,"&#13;
featuring-john Shattuck, director&#13;
of the Washington D.C. national&#13;
office of ACLU. Shattuck was the&#13;
attorney for Morton Halperin's&#13;
successful wiretap suit against&#13;
Richard Nixon et al. The session&#13;
will be moderated by Eunice&#13;
Edgar of Milwaukee, executive&#13;
director of the Wisconsin AClU.&#13;
Group discussions and workshops&#13;
from 12:30-2 p.m. will be&#13;
"How to Use the Freedom of&#13;
Inforrnatton Act to Get Secret&#13;
Files," by Hamlin; "Surveillance&#13;
and Harassment of Teachers," by&#13;
leaders of the Kenosha Education&#13;
Associations; "Repressive legislation&#13;
Pending:' by UWMi&#13;
Iwaukee professor David&#13;
Luce, state ACLU executive&#13;
board member; and "lawsuits&#13;
Against Government Spying:&#13;
Whether and How to Sue," by&#13;
William Lynch, legal director for&#13;
the state ACLU.&#13;
The conference will be held in&#13;
the UW-Parkside Union and&#13;
nearby classrooms, with registration-&#13;
beginning at 8:30 a.m.&#13;
outside Classroom 107 where the&#13;
first general session will be held.&#13;
Advance registration can be&#13;
made through Mrs. Ginger&#13;
Clapper, 2321 Washington Ave:,&#13;
Racine, 53403, tel. 634-5086 or&#13;
through the UW-P Union&#13;
Information Center.&#13;
Universities to pay royalties&#13;
Payments of perhaps several&#13;
million dollars a year in royalties&#13;
will be mandatory starting&#13;
January 1, 1978. The federal&#13;
copyright law will no, longer&#13;
exempt universities from royalty&#13;
payments for music played on&#13;
their campuses by action of the&#13;
federal government The impact&#13;
of the new regulations could be&#13;
"devestating" in the short run&#13;
because the change in the law&#13;
becomes effective in the middle&#13;
of the colleges' fiscal year, and&#13;
the payment of royalties was not&#13;
anticipated bv university budgetmakers,&#13;
according to Gary&#13;
English, a representative of one&#13;
of several nationwide university&#13;
groups plunged into the&#13;
confusion over the regulations.&#13;
Three copyright companies&#13;
stand to make sizeable profits&#13;
from the new laws' guidelines.&#13;
Broadcast Music, Inc. (BMI)&#13;
represents 47,000 individuals&#13;
who collect royalties through use&#13;
of their lyrics, compositions, and&#13;
music publications; the American&#13;
Society of Composers,&#13;
Authors, and Publishers (ASCAP)&#13;
and SESAC, Inc. collecfivelv&#13;
represent approximately 160,000&#13;
works. Russell Sanjek, a VP of&#13;
8MI, said that "There is no&#13;
difference between the educational&#13;
establishment and the&#13;
dance hall busjness as far as&#13;
copyright law. is concerned."&#13;
Even marching bands will pay&#13;
A proposal presented by BMI&#13;
for the payment of royalty fees&#13;
combines a 10c/student enrolled&#13;
charge for- "non-live" music&#13;
Jotape or&#13;
not to tape&#13;
The Board of Regents&#13;
Education Committee tabled the&#13;
issue of tape recording of class&#13;
until its November meeting. The&#13;
action was a surprise to many'&#13;
who viewed the amendment to&#13;
existing Regent Policy as a&#13;
non-controversial item. The&#13;
action that was being considered&#13;
would have allowed handicapped&#13;
students to use tape&#13;
recorders....in 'classes. Federal&#13;
handicapped regulations state&#13;
that such use of tape recorders _&#13;
cannot be denied to handicapped&#13;
students; thus, the&#13;
amendment would have brought&#13;
Regent resolution 1326 in&#13;
compliance with federal regulations.&#13;
During discussion of the&#13;
issue, .Erv Portman stated that&#13;
United Council supported the&#13;
.amendment, and urged the&#13;
Board to extend the right to tape&#13;
record classes to all students in&#13;
the UW System. Regent Bert&#13;
McNamara responded to this&#13;
idea by stating "Any student who&#13;
needs to use a tape recorder to&#13;
get through a class doesn't&#13;
belong in the University." He&#13;
went on to substantiate his&#13;
remarks by saying "I think of all&#13;
scholars that have existed in the&#13;
past 1500 years, and know that&#13;
none of them ever had the use of&#13;
a tape recorder."&#13;
Discussion continued, and&#13;
Portman explained that in many&#13;
cases the use of a recorder is an&#13;
educational aid, enabling the&#13;
student to better comprehend&#13;
the subject matter being&#13;
discussed. Some faculty spoke&#13;
stating that this would have a&#13;
"chilling effect" on academic&#13;
freedom. They stated that this&#13;
policy would be in violation of&#13;
their constitutional rights. The&#13;
committee then decided to table&#13;
the issue and directed Central&#13;
Administration to work out the&#13;
wording of the amendment with&#13;
respect given to the faculty&#13;
concerns. It was felt that the&#13;
student c,oncerns were not widespread&#13;
and, therefore, the.Board&#13;
would not deal with further&#13;
liberalization of existing policy.&#13;
(piped music, intro or intermission&#13;
music at any event, etc.)&#13;
and a fee schedule for live&#13;
performances (example: $100 for&#13;
10,001to 12,500 seating capacity&#13;
facility). Charges for marching&#13;
band performances would also&#13;
be made. The present advice&#13;
from national officers is not to&#13;
sign any contract now. with the&#13;
copyright corporations.&#13;
the actual payment. Then the&#13;
representative demonstratingthe'&#13;
device can add, for example, six&#13;
inches of insulation to the model&#13;
house, and get a read-out of how&#13;
much such a move would save&#13;
the "homeowner each month&#13;
compared to how much the&#13;
insulation would cost. Other&#13;
energy-saving measures and cost&#13;
comparisons also can be&#13;
calculated by the computer and&#13;
wi II be demonstrated.&#13;
Energy microcomputer demonstrated&#13;
Want to know how much&#13;
money you'd really save - if any&#13;
- by insulating your house,&#13;
dialing down your thermostat or&#13;
eliminating your electric blanket?&#13;
A microcomputer in a suitcasesized&#13;
display which its developers&#13;
claim can do all that and&#13;
more will be demonstrated to the&#13;
public at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Wednesday,&#13;
- Nov. 16, at 4 p.m. and again at&#13;
7:30 p.rn. in Greenquist Hall&#13;
room 103. which is called the "home energy&#13;
Sponsored by UW-P's Center conservation demonstrator."&#13;
for the Application of Cornpu-, The computer calculates ___&#13;
.ters, flie demonstration and talk economic advantages versus&#13;
will feature Ron Weinberg of the various costs of energy-saving&#13;
Energy Education Office of Oak steps, Some 40 knobs on the&#13;
Ridge (Tenn.) Associated Umver- display represent variables in Cl&#13;
sities,' .developer s of the person's home - everything&#13;
computer. Weinberg also will from the number of square feet&#13;
meet infOrmally with anyone in the home to whether the&#13;
interested at 1 p.m. in television set is color or black&#13;
Greenquist 230 .to discuss the and white, instant-on or regular.&#13;
construction of the device, Other variables indicated with-&#13;
---&#13;
the. twist of a knob include&#13;
electricity cost, whether coal, oil&#13;
or gas heats Or cools the house,&#13;
the temperature of the hot water&#13;
and information about appliance&#13;
such as refrigerators, dishwashers,&#13;
freezers and electric&#13;
blankets.&#13;
Two screens display the&#13;
'fesu Its. One reads out the&#13;
device's calculation of the&#13;
individual's current average&#13;
energy bill, usually within 20&#13;
percent and often much closer to&#13;
news&#13;
Com-mittee moves t9 _&#13;
Y c opy Ed·t , or the traffic on the steep portions would wear them down and change&#13;
The Environmental Concerns Committee has made some final&#13;
recommendations on what Parkside should do with its nature trail.&#13;
First, signs will be posted in the area prohibiting bikes, horses, and&#13;
snowmobiles from traveling on the trails . . ,&#13;
Second the grass should be mowed on the perimeter aroun~ the&#13;
area to "isolate the prairie for firebreak purposes". Prairie lands&#13;
should be burned at regular intervals to prevent the encroachment of&#13;
higher plant life such as trees . • ' _&#13;
Third the committee recommended "relocation of the trails to&#13;
avoid st~p grades". This means that a few portions of the trail will be&#13;
the character of the prairie.&#13;
Fourth, outside groups who want to use the nature trail should&#13;
have to get permission from the committee chairman, Eugene&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz Professor-Life Science or the Security Department&#13;
before walki~g the trai'ls. Morris Firebaugh, Professor-Physics,&#13;
questioned the last proposal on the grounds it might _disco_u_rage use&#13;
of the trails. "We don't want to hamstring law-abiding cItIzens by&#13;
creating a new bureaucracy," he said. Chairman Gasiorkiewicz&#13;
replied that "it wouldn't form a big bureaucracy ... Security could&#13;
take care of all the requests." The committee approved all four&#13;
actions by consensus.&#13;
Government harassment&#13;
·conference starts today&#13;
A conference open to the&#13;
public entitled, "Government&#13;
Surveillance and Harassment vs.&#13;
the Majority" will be held at the&#13;
university of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 19, under the&#13;
sponsorship of eight_ Racine and&#13;
Kenosha organizations.&#13;
The all-day conference will&#13;
feature general sessions in the&#13;
morning and afternoon, with&#13;
workshops and discussion sessions&#13;
scheduled in between. The .&#13;
registration fee of $7 in advance&#13;
and $8 at the door (students $4)&#13;
includes lunch.&#13;
Sponsoring groups include the&#13;
Kenosha-Racine chapter of the&#13;
American Civil Liberties Union&#13;
(ACLU), the Kenosha and Racine&#13;
Edu-cation Associations, Kenosha&#13;
and Racine chapters of the&#13;
National Organization of Women&#13;
(NOW), Wisconsin StateEmployees&#13;
Union local 218(), the&#13;
Social Concerns committee of&#13;
the Unitarian-Universalist&#13;
Church of Kenosha and Racine&#13;
and the UW-Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association .&#13;
The general morning sessions .&#13;
beginning at 9 a.m. in Classroom&#13;
107 will consider " Groundbreaking&#13;
Lawsuits Against Government&#13;
Spying, Harrassment&#13;
and Disruption" pre·sented by&#13;
David Hamlin, executive secretary&#13;
of the Illinois ACLU, and&#13;
Robert Sc hwarz, Milwaukee&#13;
chairman of the Socia'list&#13;
Workers Party. Racine-Kenosha&#13;
ACLU President Robert Bramscher&#13;
will moderate.&#13;
The-afternoon general sessions&#13;
beginning at 2:15 in Classroom&#13;
107 will be on "Government&#13;
Surveillance of the Women's&#13;
Movement," presented by Nancy&#13;
Borman, editor and co-publisher&#13;
of Majority Report, a New York&#13;
City feminist newspaper, anct&#13;
"ACLU Legislative Program for&#13;
Intelligence Agency Control,"&#13;
featuring~ohn Shattuck, director&#13;
of the Washington D.C. national&#13;
office of ACLU . Shattuck was the&#13;
attorney for Morton Halperin's&#13;
successful wiretap suit against&#13;
Richard Nixon et al. The session&#13;
will be moderated by Eunice&#13;
Edgar of Milwaukee, executive&#13;
director of the Wisconsin ACLU.&#13;
Group discussions and workshops&#13;
from 12:30-2 p.m. will be&#13;
"How to Use the Freedom of&#13;
lnformqtion Act to Get Secret&#13;
Files," by Hamlin; "Surveillance&#13;
and Harassment of Teachers," by&#13;
. leaders of the Kenosha Education&#13;
Associations; " Repressive Legislation&#13;
Pending," by UWMilwauk_ee&#13;
professor David&#13;
Luce, state ACLU executive&#13;
board member; and "Lawsuits&#13;
Against Government Spying :&#13;
Whether and How to Sue," by&#13;
William Lynch, legal director for&#13;
the state ACLU.&#13;
The conference will be held in&#13;
the UW-Parkside Union and&#13;
nearby classrooms, with registration·&#13;
beginning at 8:30 a.m.&#13;
outside Classroom 107 where the&#13;
first general session will be held.&#13;
Advance registration can be&#13;
made through Mrs . Ginger&#13;
Clapper, 2321 Washington Ave.~&#13;
Racine, 53403, tel. 634-5086 or&#13;
through the UW-P Union&#13;
Information Center.&#13;
Univers.ities to pay royalties&#13;
Payments of perhaps several&#13;
million dollars a year in royalties&#13;
will be mandatory starting&#13;
January 1, 1978. The federal&#13;
copyright law will no , longer&#13;
exempt universities from royalty&#13;
payments for music played on&#13;
their campuses by action of the&#13;
federal gover,1ment. The impact&#13;
of the new regulations could be&#13;
"devestating" in the short run&#13;
because the change in the law&#13;
becomes effective in the middle&#13;
of the colleges' fiscal year, and&#13;
the payment of royal~ies was not&#13;
anticipated by university budgetmakers,&#13;
according to Gary&#13;
English, a representative of one&#13;
of several nationwide university&#13;
groups plunged into the&#13;
confusion over the regulations.&#13;
Three copyright companies&#13;
stand to make sizeable profits&#13;
from the new laws' guidelines.&#13;
Broadcast Music, Inc. (BMI)&#13;
represents 47,000 individuals&#13;
who collect royalties through use&#13;
of their lyrics, compositions, and&#13;
music publications; the American&#13;
Society of Composers,&#13;
Authors, and Publishers (ASCAP)&#13;
and SESAC, Inc. colleq:ively&#13;
represent approximately 160,000&#13;
works. Russell Sanjek, a VP ot&#13;
BMI, said that "There is no&#13;
difference between the educational&#13;
establishment and the&#13;
dance hall buslness as far as&#13;
copyright law. is concerned."&#13;
Even marching bands will pay&#13;
A proposal presented by BMI&#13;
for the payment of royalty fees&#13;
combines a 10c/student enrolled&#13;
charge for "non-live" music&#13;
Jo -tape or&#13;
not to tape&#13;
The Board of Regents&#13;
Education Committee ta6Ied the&#13;
issue of tape recording of class&#13;
until its November meeting. The&#13;
action was a surprise to many&#13;
who viewed the amendment to&#13;
existing Regent Policy as a&#13;
non-controversial item. The&#13;
action that was being considered&#13;
would have allowed handicapped&#13;
students to use tape&#13;
recorders"' in • classes. Federal&#13;
handicapped regulations state&#13;
that such use of tape recorder.s -&#13;
cannot be denied to handicapped&#13;
stugents; thus, the&#13;
amendment would have brought&#13;
Regent resolution 1326 in&#13;
compliance with federal regulations&#13;
. During discussion of the&#13;
issue, .Erv Portman stated that&#13;
United Council supported the&#13;
amendment, and urged the&#13;
Board to extend the right to tape&#13;
record classes to all students in&#13;
the UW System. Regent Bert&#13;
McNamara responded to this&#13;
idea by stating "Any student ~ho&#13;
needs to use a tape recorder to&#13;
get through a class doesn't&#13;
belong in the Un~verslty." He&#13;
went on to substantiate his&#13;
remarks by saying "I think of all&#13;
scholars that have existed in the&#13;
past 1500 years, and know that&#13;
none of them ever had the use of&#13;
a tape recorder."&#13;
Discussion continued, and&#13;
Portman explained that in many&#13;
cases the use of a recorder is an&#13;
educational aid, enabling the&#13;
student to bett~r comprehend&#13;
the subject matter being&#13;
discussed. Some faculty spoke&#13;
stating that this would have a&#13;
"chilling effect" on academic&#13;
freedom . Th(!y stated that this&#13;
policy would be in violation of&#13;
their constitutional rights. The&#13;
committee then decided to table&#13;
the issue and directed Central&#13;
Administration to work out the&#13;
wording of the amendment with&#13;
respect given to the faculty&#13;
concerns . It was felt that the&#13;
student concerns were not widespread&#13;
and, therefore, the .Board&#13;
would not deal with further&#13;
liberalization of existing policy.&#13;
(piped music, intro ot intermission&#13;
music at any event, etc.)&#13;
and a fee schedule for live&#13;
performances (example: $100 for&#13;
10,001 to 12,500 seating capacity&#13;
, facility). Charges for marching&#13;
band performances would also&#13;
be made. The present advice&#13;
from national officers is not to&#13;
sign any contract now, with the&#13;
copyright corporations.&#13;
Energy microcomputer demonstrated&#13;
Want to know how much&#13;
money you'd really save - if any&#13;
- by insulating your house,&#13;
dialing down your thermostat or&#13;
eliminating your electric blanket?&#13;
&#13;
A microcomputer in a suitcasesized&#13;
display which its developers&#13;
claim can do all that and&#13;
more will be demonstrated to the&#13;
public at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 16, at 4 p.m. and again at&#13;
7:30 p .m. in Greenquist Hall&#13;
room 103.&#13;
Sponsored by UW-P's Center&#13;
for the Application of Compu-~&#13;
ters, the demonstration and talk&#13;
will feature Ron Weinberg of the&#13;
Energy Education Office of Oak&#13;
Ridge (Tenn.) Associated Universities,&#13;
. developers of the&#13;
computer. Weinberg also will&#13;
meet informally with anyone&#13;
interested at 1 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist 230 to discuss the&#13;
construction of the device,&#13;
which is called the "home energy&#13;
conservation demonstrator."&#13;
The computer calculates .__&#13;
economic advantages versus&#13;
various costs of energy-saving&#13;
steps. Some 40 knobs on the&#13;
display represent variables in -a&#13;
person's home - everything&#13;
from the number of square feet&#13;
in the home to whether the&#13;
television set is color or black&#13;
and white, instant-on or regular.&#13;
Other variables indicated with-&#13;
-&#13;
the twist of a knob include&#13;
electricity cost, whether coal, oil&#13;
or gas heats or cools the house,&#13;
the temperature of the hot water&#13;
and information about appliance&#13;
such as refrigerators, dishwashers,&#13;
freezers and electric&#13;
blankets .&#13;
Two screens display the&#13;
results. One reads out the&#13;
device's calculation of the&#13;
individual's current average&#13;
energy bill, usually within 20&#13;
percent and often much closer to&#13;
the actual payment. Then the,&#13;
representative demonstrati ngthe&#13;
device can add, for example, six&#13;
inches of insulation to the model&#13;
house, and get a read-out of how&#13;
much such a move would save&#13;
the ·homeowner each month&#13;
compared to how much the&#13;
insulation would cost. Other&#13;
energy-saving ~easures and cost&#13;
comparisons also can be&#13;
calculated by the computer and&#13;
will be demonstrated. &#13;
news&#13;
Student publishes&#13;
in research iournal&#13;
UW-Parkside ibr ry&#13;
awarded 3 year grant&#13;
by Diane lalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Mike Evans, Parkside sociology major with an&#13;
anthropology concentration, is the first student to&#13;
publish a co-authored historial research article in&#13;
the Journal of Enthnohistory which will be released&#13;
in the spring.&#13;
Associate Professor of Anthropology, Richard&#13;
Stoffle, is the other co-author of the pre-published&#13;
article entitled, "Resource Competition and&#13;
Population Change A Kaibab Paiute&#13;
Enthnohistorial Case." In the library research&#13;
report. Evans and Staffle analyzed "resource&#13;
competition, population fluctuations, and ethnicity&#13;
change resulting from Euroamerican instrusion in to&#13;
Kaibab Paiute territory in northern Arizona and&#13;
Southern Utah." More specifically, the research&#13;
paper "is an enthnohistoncal reconstruction of how&#13;
the Kaibab Paiutes have dealt with loss of essential&#13;
subsistence resources, depopulation by disease,&#13;
and Euroamerican pressure to relinguish traditional&#13;
ethnicity patterns."&#13;
last March, Professor Stoffle and Mike Evans&#13;
traveled to San Diego, California, where Mike&#13;
presented the 33-page research article to&#13;
approximately 450 world-wtde anthropology&#13;
professors at the annual Society for Applied&#13;
Anthropology meeting.&#13;
Joseph A. Boisse, Director of the library/learning Center, said&#13;
"The bibliographic instruction program seeks to equip students with&#13;
library research skills which will be useful to them not only In their&#13;
academic work, but also in their professional lives after graduation .-&#13;
The UW-Parkside library/learning Center has already been Cited&#13;
as an outstanding teacher library.&#13;
Along with many other anthropology professors,&#13;
Professor Stoffle agreed that Mike did an excellent&#13;
job in presenting the article and "handled himself&#13;
very well during" the questioning' period."&#13;
In Mid-August, Mike independently composed&#13;
another library research article. The second article,&#13;
completed on October 13, 1977, was entitled, "A&#13;
Reexamination of Southern-Most Paiute Populations."&#13;
In this article, Mike attempted "to show how&#13;
to use comparative data as a guide in calculating&#13;
population levels for groups who have similar&#13;
environments, adaptive strategies, culture and&#13;
history."&#13;
American Society for Ethnohistory's 25th annual&#13;
meeting was held in Chicago, Illinois on October&#13;
13-15. Mike, along with others, presented their&#13;
research articles to anthropology professors.&#13;
t\A.4ke was very pleased with his second&#13;
presentation and believed "it was a fairly good&#13;
paper "&#13;
Professor Stoffle was very optimistic about&#13;
Mike's second article being published within a year&#13;
or two. Stoffle believed that more faculty-student&#13;
pieces, with proper guidance in academic research,&#13;
should be composed while students are still&#13;
undergraduates.&#13;
The National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) has awarded&#13;
$72,297 to the University of Wisconsin-Parks ide as part of the College&#13;
library Program. Funded jointly by the National Endowment for the&#13;
Humanities and the Council on library Resources, the grant will&#13;
cover a period of three years, beginning January 1, 1978.&#13;
The award will be used to provide additional professional and&#13;
support staff in the library/learning Center to accelerate the&#13;
development of materials for use in the library's bibliographic&#13;
instruction program.&#13;
"Competition for endowment funds is quite rigorous and generally&#13;
only one in every five requests results in an award," Chancellor Alan&#13;
Guskin saidjn announcing the award.&#13;
,&#13;
Course announcement&#13;
Title: Special Topics in English Magazine Article Writing (English&#13;
490)&#13;
Instructor: Emmett Bedford&#13;
Prerequisite: Consent of Instructor; evidence of advanced writing&#13;
experience in courses or on publications will be required&#13;
Credit: 1 hour&#13;
Description: The course will concern Itself with writing articles for&#13;
the Uw-Parkside publication, Reports of Scholarly and Creative&#13;
Activity at the University of W;sconsin*Parkside. The subject of the&#13;
articles will be research, scholarship, and creative work of Parkside&#13;
faculty and staff. The students will be given Individual assignments&#13;
and will be expected to research the subject's background, Interview&#13;
the subject, and write an article suitable for publication. Depending&#13;
on the scope of the subject and length of the article, one or more&#13;
articles will be required to satisfy a' hour credit. Selected reading in&#13;
books on article writing.&#13;
The class will meet as a seminar periodically throughout the&#13;
semester; there will also be individual conferences.&#13;
Tell: A suitable handbook of grammar and rhetoric and Strunk and&#13;
White, The Elements of Style.&#13;
Students interested in registering for this course Mxt semnter should&#13;
contact Emmett Bedford 553-2020.&#13;
KKK expands operations&#13;
[CPSI - The KKKseems to be&#13;
having an upsurge in popularity,&#13;
Their latest exploit will take on&#13;
the federal immigration service.&#13;
The Klan plans to patrol the&#13;
Mexico-Texas border in search of&#13;
illegal aliens crossing to look for&#13;
work. Although illegal, they have&#13;
publicized the action.&#13;
1S0 members will patrol on&#13;
foot In street clothes Three light&#13;
planes will scour the area as well&#13;
Spokespersons say the Klan&#13;
Will turn any aliens found over to&#13;
the rrnmrgratton authonues In&#13;
one piece It IS hoped&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
CooJe 100ay See bJl'S.&#13;
"This grant will enable us to build our program into one of the most&#13;
comprehensive in the country," Boisse said. "The materials&#13;
developed as a result of the grant will also be. made available to-other&#13;
academic institutions around the country"&#13;
Two seniors nominated&#13;
for Danforth Fellowship&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside - has&#13;
announced selection of its two nominees 'or&#13;
Danforth Foundation Fellowships. They are Gregg&#13;
Hermann, 1215 Carlisle Ave., Racine, a senior with&#13;
majors in English, German and history, and Steve&#13;
Edwards, 1431 College Ave.. Racine, a senior music&#13;
major.&#13;
About 60 to 65 of the fellowships will be awarded&#13;
nationally next April to students selected from&#13;
nominees from individual campuses throughout the&#13;
country. The fellowships are awarded to students&#13;
who plan to teach at the university level and wish&#13;
to study for the Ph. D. degree. They include&#13;
graduate school tuition and fees and a living&#13;
stipend and are normally renewable for four years.&#13;
To be considered for-the awards, students must&#13;
have the recommendation of the faculty of their&#13;
major field, submit essays and interview with a&#13;
campus selection committee headed by their&#13;
university's' Danforth Foundation campus liaison&#13;
officer.&#13;
Members of the selection committee at&#13;
UW-Parkside were Prof. Carol Lee Saffiotti, liaison&#13;
officer ahd committee chairperson, and Profs.&#13;
Constantine Stathatos, Ben Greenebaum, Norbert&#13;
Isenberg, lionel Maldonado .and William Murin.&#13;
Additionally, three Parkside alumni will be&#13;
applying for Danforth Fellowships under the&#13;
Foundations post-baccalaureate program. All&#13;
spring, 1977 graduates, they are Maureen Flynn,&#13;
history, Debbie D1Pasquale, humanities, and Jeffrey&#13;
Nehr. physics. Post-baccalaureate students make&#13;
application directly to the Foundation.&#13;
qUOllfy CXlfTYT"etClal p!lnlen&#13;
1417 50th weer 658·8990&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From Goers Country.&#13;
O. Tap At Uli•• S~lar.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
HOlll8of th8 S.~III.ri ...&#13;
S....w1eh&#13;
C¥~~&#13;
OPEl I A.M. TI 11:31 , .M.&#13;
2615 W......... ",.. 614-2171&#13;
news&#13;
Stu-dent publishes&#13;
resea·rch iournal • 1n&#13;
by Diane Jalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Mike Evans, Parkside sociology major with an&#13;
anthropology concentration, is the first student to&#13;
publish a co-authored historial research article in&#13;
the Journal of Enthnohistory which will be released&#13;
in the spring.&#13;
Associate Professor of AnthroP.ology, Richard&#13;
Stoffle, is the other co-author of the pre-published&#13;
article entitled, "Resource Competition and&#13;
Population Change A Kaibab Paiute&#13;
Enthnohistorial Case." In the library research&#13;
report, Evans and Stoffle analyzed "resource&#13;
competition, population fluctuations, and ethnicity&#13;
change resulting from Euroamerican instrusion in to&#13;
Kaibab Paiute territory in northern Arizona and&#13;
Southern Utah." More specifically, the research&#13;
paper "is an enthnohistorical reconstruction of how&#13;
the Kaibab Paiutes have dealt with loss of essential&#13;
subsistence resources, depopulation by disease,&#13;
and Euroamerican pressure to relinguish traditional&#13;
ethnicity patterns ."&#13;
Last March, Professor Stoffle and Mike Evans&#13;
traveled to San Diego, California, where Mike&#13;
presented the 33-page research article to&#13;
approximately 450 world-wide anthropology&#13;
professors at the annual Society for Applied&#13;
Anthropology meeting.&#13;
Along with many other anthropology professors,&#13;
Professor Stoffle agreed that Mike did an excellent&#13;
job in presenting the article and "handled himself&#13;
very well during· the questioning· period."&#13;
In Mid-August, Mike independently composed&#13;
another library research article. The second article,&#13;
completed on October 13, 1977, was entitled, "A&#13;
Reexamination of Southern-Most Paiute Populations&#13;
." In this article, Mike attempted "to show how&#13;
to use comparative data as a guide in calculating&#13;
population levels for groups who have similar&#13;
environments, adaptive strategies, culture and&#13;
history."&#13;
American Society for Ethnohistory's 25th annual&#13;
meeting was held in Chicago, Illinois on October&#13;
13-15. Mike, along with others, presented their&#13;
research articles to anthropology professors.&#13;
Mike was very pleased with his second&#13;
presentation and believed " it was a fairly good&#13;
paper."&#13;
Professor Stoffle was very optimistic about&#13;
Mike's second article being published within a year&#13;
or two. Stoffle believed that more faculty-student&#13;
pieces, with proper guidance in academic research,&#13;
should be composed while students are still&#13;
undergraduates.&#13;
,&#13;
Course announcement&#13;
Title: Special Topics in English. Magazine Article Writing (Engli h&#13;
490)&#13;
Instructor: Emmett Bedford&#13;
Prerequisite: Consent of instructor, ev1d nee of advanced writing&#13;
experience in courses or on publications will be required&#13;
Credit: 1 hour&#13;
Description: The course will concern itself with writing articles for&#13;
the UW-Parks1de publication, Reports of Scholarly and Creative&#13;
Activity at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside. The sub1ect of the&#13;
articles will be research, scholarship, and creative work of Parkside&#13;
faculty and staff The students will be given md1v1dual assignments&#13;
and will be expected to research the sub1ect's background, interview&#13;
the subject, and write an article suitable for publication Depending&#13;
on the scope of the subject and length of the article, one or more&#13;
articles will be required to satisfy a 1 hour credit Selected reading in&#13;
books on article writing.&#13;
The class will meet as a seminar periodically throughout the&#13;
semester; there will also be individual conferences.&#13;
Text: A suitable handbook of grammar and rhetoric and Strunk and&#13;
White, The Elements of Style.&#13;
Students interested in registering for this course next semester should&#13;
contact Emmett Bedford 553-2020.&#13;
KKK expands operations&#13;
[CPS] - The KKK seems to be&#13;
having an upsurge in popularity..--&#13;
Their latest exploit will take on&#13;
the federal immigration service&#13;
The Klan plans to patrol the&#13;
Mexico-Texas border in search of&#13;
illegal aliens crossing to look for&#13;
work . Although illegal, they have&#13;
publicized the action&#13;
150 members will patrol on&#13;
foot an stre t clothes Three light&#13;
planes will scour the ar a as well .&#13;
Spokespersons say the Ian&#13;
will turn any aliens found over to&#13;
the immigration authorities . In&#13;
one piece It Is hoped.&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIO S UW-Parkside FOR YOU!&#13;
awarded 3 year grant .&#13;
_.,_.. .&#13;
---_ ........ ...... ... _ --~ ____ __ _.. .... _ .&#13;
;, I&#13;
The National Endowment for the Humanities (NfH) has awarded&#13;
$72,297 to the University of Wisconsin-Parkside as part of the College&#13;
Library Program. Funded jointly by the National Endowment for the&#13;
Humanities and the Council on Library Resources, the grant will&#13;
cover a period of three years, beginning January 1, 1978.&#13;
The award will be vsed to provide additional professional and&#13;
support staff in the Library/ Learning Center to accelerate the&#13;
development of materials for use in the library's bibliographic&#13;
instruction program .&#13;
"Competition for endowment funds is quite rigorous and generally&#13;
only one in every five requests results in an award," Chancellor Alan&#13;
Gus kin said _in announcing the award.&#13;
Joseph A. Boisse, Director of the Library/ Learning Center, said&#13;
" The bibliographic instruction program seeks to equip students with&#13;
library research skills which will be useful to them not only in their&#13;
academic work, but also in their professional lives after graduation."&#13;
The UW-Parkside Library/ Learning Center has already been cited&#13;
as an outstanding teacher library&#13;
"This grant will enable us to build our prograf'T' into one of the most&#13;
comprehensive in the country," Boisse said. " The material&#13;
developed as a result of the grant will also be.made available to other&#13;
academic institutions around the country "&#13;
-.... ._. .....&#13;
--.,._ .... ...... --- •. ! -- ,)· ... , .... -&#13;
Two seniors nominated Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
for Danforth Fellowship&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside has&#13;
announced selection of its two nominees ,)r&#13;
Danforth Foundation Fellowships·. They are Gregg&#13;
Hermann, 1215 Carlisle Ave., Racine, a senior with&#13;
majors in English, German and history, and Steve&#13;
Edwards, 1431 College Ave., Racine, a senior music&#13;
major.&#13;
About 60 to 65 of the fellowships will be awarded&#13;
natiohally next April to students selected from&#13;
nominees from individual campuses throughout the&#13;
country. The fellowships are awarded to students&#13;
who plan to teach at the university level and wish&#13;
to study for the Ph. D. degree. They include&#13;
graduate school tuition and fees and a living&#13;
stipend and are normally renewable for four years.&#13;
To be considered for ·the awards, students must&#13;
have the recommendation of the faculty of their&#13;
major field, submit essays and interview with a&#13;
campus selection committee headed by their&#13;
university's· Danforth Foundation campus liaison&#13;
officer.&#13;
Members of the selection committee at&#13;
UW-Parkside were Prof. Carol Lee Saffiotti, liaison&#13;
officer and committee chairperson, and Profs.&#13;
Constantine Stathatos, Ben Greenebaum, Norbert&#13;
Isenberg, Lionel Maldonado and William Murin .&#13;
Additionally, three Parkside alumni will be&#13;
applying for Danforth Fellowships under the&#13;
Foundations post-baccalaureate program . All&#13;
spring, 1977 graduates, they are Maureen Flynn,&#13;
history, Debbie DiPasquale, humanities, and Jeffrey&#13;
Nehr, physics . Post-baccalaureate students make&#13;
application directly to the Foundation.&#13;
Tap At Union Square&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the S11~111rine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.ll. TIL 10:30 P .I.&#13;
2615 W11hi119to1 ""· 634-2373&#13;
... &#13;
news&#13;
Market research /&#13;
replaces a"cademics&#13;
[CPS] - The textbook is no longer the 'publish or perish' affair of&#13;
college professors alone. Publishing- companies are entering into&#13;
major collaborative arrangements with authors and in at least one&#13;
case, have virtually written the texts completely through market&#13;
research.&#13;
Authorless wonder ....&#13;
In 1969, the publishers of Psychology Today brought out a new&#13;
college-level textbook, Psychology Today, An Introduction. The First&#13;
edition sold about 180,00Ctcopies, a marked success since the cutoff&#13;
for textbook bestseller status is 20,IXK). But the unusual circumstance&#13;
surrounding the new text was that it was put out by a market research&#13;
corporation, CRM Books, and was essentially written inside the&#13;
publishing house itself by a "book-team" of writers, market&#13;
researchers"and graphic designers. There was no author listed&#13;
anywhere.&#13;
CRM's move into the college market place left an impression on&#13;
other textbook publishers who began moving toward more market&#13;
research, more graphics and more in-house control by publishers&#13;
over the content of textbooks.&#13;
Publishers become professors&#13;
The publisher hasassumedan omnipresent place in what was once&#13;
the professor's realm. The author is getting more help from the&#13;
publisher, and David P. Amerman, vice-present and director of&#13;
marketing of the college division at Prentice-Hall lnc., said recently&#13;
that they are "exercising ... muscle and telling the author the best.&#13;
way to do it, a lot more than (we) used to."&#13;
There has been a glut of college textbooks in recent years and&#13;
according to Amerman, "where you usedto have four or five books in&#13;
a field, today you have 150, and at least 12 of them are good."&#13;
"The competition has made it a selling game," adds Amerman.&#13;
George Madden and Associates, a publishing company in San&#13;
Diego, focuses more on what professors say they want in a textbook&#13;
than on what they use. Madden's service relies on personal interviews&#13;
with a - sample of teachers whereas CR"1 marketing uses&#13;
_computerized surveys of the college market place to help them plan&#13;
their manuscripts.&#13;
Authors; not necessary&#13;
In fact, the original concept at CRM was that an author was not&#13;
necessary but specialists in each area were consulted instead and&#13;
provided chapters. The idea did not work out and was abandoned.&#13;
Addison-Wesley, a major textbook publisher, insiststhat the author&#13;
remains the most important contributor but whether or not he&#13;
actually does the writing varies with the textbook.&#13;
In the meantime, the prospect of a drop in college enrollments and&#13;
a tightening of the market place has caused publishers of college&#13;
texts to become less willing to leave all the decisions about a&#13;
textbook to their authors. -&#13;
Nevertheless, authors still manage to hold their own on campus,&#13;
where students are often required to use books penned by their&#13;
professors.Someof the books are costly; law texts, for example, often&#13;
running as high as $17-20&#13;
Royalties go to school&#13;
One professor at Florida Technological University told his students&#13;
that he specified any royalties he received from FTU sales of his book&#13;
be returned to the university specifically for his department.&#13;
While the price of a text is determined by the publisher, usual&#13;
royalties for an author remain high, about 10 to 15 percent. The&#13;
bookstore receives a 40 to 50 percent profit.&#13;
Says the FTU professor, the author has little control over what&#13;
happens to their text.&#13;
And that is the way the marketing research departments at&#13;
publishing houses will try and keep it.&#13;
Office closes&#13;
Parkside's Office of Student&#13;
Development and Community&#13;
Student Services will be closed&#13;
the evenings of Nov. 23 and 24&#13;
because of the Thanksgiving&#13;
holiday.&#13;
Regular evening hours, which&#13;
extend until 8 p.m. Mondays&#13;
through Thursdays, will resume&#13;
Nov~mber 28.&#13;
Recital Sunday&#13;
A flute recital by Frank&#13;
Suetholz, his wife Barbara and&#13;
three of his Parkside flute&#13;
students will be presented at 8&#13;
p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 20, in the&#13;
UW-P Communication Arts&#13;
Theater. The student participants&#13;
are Marjorie Roth, Lori Meyer&#13;
and Mary )0 Niatupski. Carol Bell&#13;
will be the pianist.&#13;
The program will focus on two&#13;
centuries of French music dating&#13;
from 1731 to 1936. '&#13;
The performance will include&#13;
Suite NO.3 in G minor for solo&#13;
flute and Concerto for Jive&#13;
Flutes, both by Joseph Bodin de&#13;
Boismortier; Fantasie for flute&#13;
and piano by Georges Hue; and&#13;
Suite de 3 Morceaux, Op. 116, by&#13;
Benjamin Godard; and a 1936&#13;
work by EdgardVarese.&#13;
The Suetholz' will also play&#13;
Four Duets in G by Johann&#13;
Adolph Hasse and will be joined&#13;
by Mrs. Bell in Franz and Karl&#13;
Doppler's Hungarian Phantasy.&#13;
Op.35.&#13;
The program is free and open&#13;
to the public.&#13;
-sports&#13;
Soccer team wins district&#13;
by Alane Adresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
scored five minutes into the first&#13;
half of the game by Earl&#13;
Campbell, giving Parkside the&#13;
lead, 1-0; but ten minutes later&#13;
Platteville tied up the score.&#13;
Then with ten minutes left in the&#13;
half Parkside's Steve Borggren&#13;
scored a goal when Platteville's&#13;
fullback passed the ball back to&#13;
the goalkeeper, who couldn't I&#13;
handle it, thus Steve kicked it in&#13;
to give the Ranger's the lead of&#13;
2-1, at the half.&#13;
The UW-Parkside SoccerTeam&#13;
defeated UW-Platteville Saturday,&#13;
November 5th, by a score of&#13;
4-2 to become the 1977 District&#13;
champions.&#13;
Scoring goals for the Rangers&#13;
were Earl Campbell (3), assisted&#13;
by Mike Oleson (1) and Bob&#13;
Stuewe (2) and Sorggren (1),&#13;
unassisted. The first goal was&#13;
In the second half Coach&#13;
Henderson replaced Bob Stoewe&#13;
in the goal with Mike Oleson,&#13;
, and put Stoewe in the forward&#13;
line. With Bob's speed he beat&#13;
out Platteville's defense and&#13;
layed the ball off on Earl&#13;
Campbell, who then scored with&#13;
only 57 seconds into the half,&#13;
raising the lead to 3-1. Eleven&#13;
minutes later both Bob and Earl&#13;
repeated the same play to boost&#13;
the score to 4-1. Within the last&#13;
Rangers second in midwest&#13;
by John VanDen Brandt&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Winner, finish irtg nineteen&#13;
seconds ahead of the field in a&#13;
course record of 16:35 (l.miles).&#13;
The previous course mark was&#13;
held by world record holder, Peg&#13;
Keppel of Iowa.&#13;
In the final race of the day, the&#13;
Parkside men's team put&#13;
together an impressive effort to&#13;
finish second in the MidAmerica&#13;
Championships, beating&#13;
perennial tevonte University of&#13;
Chicago Track Club, by three&#13;
points. The Rangers were five.&#13;
points shy of the first place&#13;
winners, Sports Complex ltd.&#13;
Tom Burleson of Indiana T.C.,&#13;
shattered the U.S.T.F.F. record&#13;
by twenty-three seconds with his&#13;
winning time of 24:46. Parkside's&#13;
Approximately 400 distance&#13;
runners of all ages gathered on&#13;
the cross country course&#13;
Saturday, November 5, as&#13;
Parkside hosted the U.S.T.F.F.&#13;
National and Mid-America Cross&#13;
Country Charnplonships. The day&#13;
featured eleven - races that&#13;
decided championships in age&#13;
groups from under ten to over&#13;
forty. Racing distances varied&#13;
from one to five miles.&#13;
The Women's Nationals and&#13;
Men's Mid-America championships&#13;
highlighted the meet. In&#13;
the former, Cindy Bremsen of&#13;
Mishicot, was the unchallenged&#13;
Ray Fredricksen was also under&#13;
the previous \ecord, finishing&#13;
sixth in 25:17. The Ranger's&#13;
outstanding freshman, Bob&#13;
Langenhol, wal only seconds&#13;
back taking seventh place. Gary&#13;
Priem rounded out the race's top&#13;
ten, with sophomore jeff Miller&#13;
closely behind in twelfth. Bill&#13;
Werve's 39th place capped the&#13;
scoring. Parkstde's two other&#13;
variety runners, john Poulakos&#13;
and Mike Rummelhart finished&#13;
49th and 53rd, respectively.&#13;
Parks ide hosts the NAIA&#13;
National Cross Country Championships&#13;
on November-;19th.'&#13;
The race will feature nearly five&#13;
hundred runners.&#13;
ten minutes Platteville scored&#13;
. another goal, to make the final&#13;
score 4-2.&#13;
As to the team's championship&#13;
win, Coach Henderson commented,&#13;
"I didn't feel we played&#13;
that well, but the field was soft&#13;
and slick, so with a shuffled up&#13;
line-up I was pleased with the&#13;
results. I'm extremely encouraged&#13;
for the playoffs in&#13;
Minnesota. We seem to be&#13;
coming off our injuries; Mike&#13;
Oleson, Earl Campbell and Dan&#13;
Brieschke appear to be healthy&#13;
again. This is probably the&#13;
healthiest we've been all year,&#13;
coming at the best possible time,&#13;
the playoffs."&#13;
If they should win in&#13;
Minnesota they'll play the&#13;
district champions of Illinois;&#13;
and whoever wins that receives&#13;
the right to go to Alabama over&#13;
Thanksgiving.&#13;
Parkside ranks 12th in NAIA&#13;
UW-Parkside's cross-country&#13;
team istied for 12th in the nation&#13;
in the latest poll of NAIA&#13;
coaches.&#13;
Coach Lucian Rosa's Rangers&#13;
made their first appearance in&#13;
the rankings two weeks before&#13;
the NAIA national championship&#13;
run scheduled for Nov. 19 on the&#13;
UW-P's five mile campus course.&#13;
Parkside is tied with Harding&#13;
College (Ark.) and Malone (0.).&#13;
Adams State College (Colorado)&#13;
was ranked first followed by&#13;
.lndiana University (Pa.) and&#13;
Saginaw Valley State' of&#13;
Michigan.&#13;
Cross-country ski meeting planned&#13;
There will be an important&#13;
organization meeting of all&#13;
students, faculty, arid staff, who&#13;
are interested in cross-country&#13;
I skiing activities.&#13;
This year, the club will sponsor&#13;
competitive events, tours, and&#13;
instructional ctintcs , One of the&#13;
club's goals is to organize a&#13;
men's .and women's cr osscountry&#13;
ski team.&#13;
The meeting will be in CL 322&#13;
at 6:45 p.m., on Wednesday,&#13;
November 16. Movies will be&#13;
shown.&#13;
Interested parties not able to&#13;
attend the meeting should&#13;
contact J. Georgeson at&#13;
553-2446.&#13;
I&#13;
news&#13;
Market research /&#13;
replace_&#13;
s a·cademics&#13;
[CPS] - The textbook is no longer the 'publish or perish' affair of&#13;
college professors alone. Publishing, companies are entering into&#13;
major collaborative arrangements with authors and in at least one&#13;
case, have virtually written the texts completely through market&#13;
research .&#13;
Authorless wonder&#13;
In 1969, the publishers of Psychology Today brought out a new&#13;
college-level textbook, Psychology Today, An Introduction. The First&#13;
edition sold about 180,000 copies, a marked success since the cutoff&#13;
for textbook bestseller status is 20,000. But the unusual circumstance&#13;
surrounding the new text was that it was put out by a market research&#13;
corporation , CRM Books, and was essentially written lnside the&#13;
publishing house itself by a " book-team" of writers, market&#13;
researchers -and graphic designers . There was no author listed&#13;
anywhere.&#13;
CRM's move into the college market place left an impression on&#13;
other textbook publishers who began moving toward more market&#13;
research, more graphics and more in-house control by publishers&#13;
over the content of textbooks .&#13;
Publishers become professors&#13;
The publisher has assumed an omnipresent place in what was once&#13;
the professor's realm . The author is getting more help from the&#13;
publisher, and David P. Amerman , vice-present and director of&#13;
marketing of the college division at Prentice-Hall Inc., said recently&#13;
that they are "exercising . . . muscle and telling the author the best&#13;
way to do it, a lot more than (we) used to."&#13;
There has been a glut of college textbooks in recent years and&#13;
according to Amerman, "where you used to have four or five books in&#13;
a field, today you have 150, and at least 12 of them are good ."&#13;
"The competition has made it a selling game," adds Amerman .&#13;
George Madden and Associates, a pubiishing company in San&#13;
-sports&#13;
Diego, focuses more on what professors say they want in a textbook&#13;
than on what they use. Madden's service relies on personal interviews&#13;
with a · sample of teachers whereas CR.\1 marketing uses&#13;
computerized surveys of the college market place to help them plan&#13;
their manuscripts.&#13;
Authors; not necessary&#13;
In fact, the original concept at CRM was that an author was not&#13;
necessary but specialists in each area were consulted instead and&#13;
provided chapters. The idea did not work out and was abandoned .&#13;
Addison-Wesley, a major textbook publisher, insists that the author&#13;
remains the most important contributor but whether or not he&#13;
actually does the writing varies with the textbook .&#13;
In the meantime, the prospect of a drop in college enrollments and&#13;
a tightening of the market place has caused publishers of college&#13;
texts to become less willing to leave all the decisions about a&#13;
textbook to their authors .&#13;
Nevertheless, authors still manage to hold their own on campus,&#13;
where students are often required to use books penned by their&#13;
professors . Some of the books are costly; law texts , for example, often&#13;
running as high as $17-20.&#13;
Royalties go to school&#13;
One professor at Florida Technological University told his students&#13;
that he specified any royalties he received from FTU sales of his book&#13;
be returned to the university specifically for his department.&#13;
While the price of a text is determined by the publisher, usual&#13;
royalties for an author remain high, about 10 to 15 percent. The&#13;
bookstore receives a 40 to 50 percent profit.&#13;
Says the FTU professor, the author has little control over what&#13;
happens to their text .&#13;
And that is the way the marketing research departments at&#13;
publishing houses will try and keep it.&#13;
Office closes&#13;
Parkside's Office of Student&#13;
Development and Community&#13;
Student Services will be closed&#13;
the evenings of Nov. 23 and 24&#13;
because of the Thanksgiving&#13;
holiday.&#13;
Regular evening hours, which&#13;
extend until 8 p.m. Mondays&#13;
through Thursdays, will resume&#13;
November 28.&#13;
Recital Sunday&#13;
A flute recital by Frank&#13;
Suetholz, his wife Barbara and&#13;
three of his Parkside flute&#13;
students will be presented at 8&#13;
p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 20, in the&#13;
UW-P Communication Arts&#13;
Theater. The student participants&#13;
are Marjorie Roth, Lori Meyer&#13;
and Mary Jo Niatupski. Carol Bell&#13;
will be the pianist.&#13;
The program Will focus on two&#13;
centuries of French music dating&#13;
from 1731 to 1936.&#13;
The performance will include&#13;
Suite No. 3 in G minor for solo&#13;
flute and Concerto for .Jive&#13;
Flutes, both by Joseph Bodin de&#13;
Boismortier; Fantasie for flute&#13;
and piano by Georges Hue; and&#13;
Suite de 3 Marceaux, Op. 116, by&#13;
Benjamin Godard; and a 1936&#13;
work by Edgard Varese .&#13;
The Suetholz' will also play&#13;
Four Duets in G by Johann&#13;
Adolph Hasse and will be joined&#13;
by Mrs. Bell in Franz and Karl&#13;
Doppler's Hungarian Phantasy,&#13;
Op. 35 .&#13;
The program is free and open&#13;
to the public .&#13;
-&#13;
Soccer team· wins district&#13;
by Alane Adresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The UW-Parkside Soccer Team&#13;
defeated UW-Platteville Saturday,&#13;
November 5th, by a score of&#13;
4-2 to become the 1977 District&#13;
champions.&#13;
Scoring goals for the Rangers&#13;
were Earl Campbell (3), assisted&#13;
by Mike Oleson (1) and Bob&#13;
Stoewe (2) and Sorggren (1),&#13;
unassisted. The first goal was&#13;
scored five minutes into the first&#13;
half of the game by Earl&#13;
Campbell, giving Parkside the&#13;
lead, 1-0; but ten minutes later&#13;
Platteville tied up the score.&#13;
Then with ten minutes left in the&#13;
half Parkside's Steve Berggren&#13;
scored a goal when Platteville's&#13;
fullback passed the ball back to&#13;
the goalkeeper, who couldn't ,&#13;
handle it, thus Steve kicked it in&#13;
to give the Ranger's the lead of&#13;
2-1, at the half.&#13;
In the second half Coach&#13;
Henderson replaced Bob Stoewe&#13;
in the goal with Mike Oleson,&#13;
and put Stoewe in the forward&#13;
line. With Bob's speed he beat&#13;
out Platteville's qefense and&#13;
layed the ball off on Earl&#13;
Campbell, who then scored with&#13;
only 57 seconds into the half,&#13;
raising the lead to 3-1. Eleven&#13;
minutes later both Bob and Earl&#13;
repeated the same play to boost&#13;
the score to 4-1. Within the last&#13;
Rangers s·econd in midwest&#13;
by John VanDenBrandt&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Approximately 400 distance&#13;
runners of all ages gathered on&#13;
the cross country course&#13;
Saturday, November 5, as&#13;
Parkside hosted the U.S.T.F.F.&#13;
National and Mid-America Cross&#13;
Country Champi&lt;l@hips. The day&#13;
featured eleven races that&#13;
decided championships in age&#13;
groups from under ten to over&#13;
forty. Racing distances varied&#13;
from one to five miles .&#13;
The Women's Nationals and&#13;
Men's Mid-America championships&#13;
highlighted the meet. In&#13;
the former, Cindy Bremsen of&#13;
Mishicot, was the unchallenged&#13;
winner, finishing nineteen&#13;
seconds ahead of the field in a&#13;
co~rse record of 16:35 (3JT1iles).&#13;
The prevjous course mark was&#13;
held by world record holder, Peg&#13;
Keppel of Iowa.&#13;
In the final race of the day, the&#13;
Parkside men's team put&#13;
together an impressive effort to&#13;
finish second in the MidAmerica&#13;
Championships, beating&#13;
perennial favorite University of&#13;
Chicago Track Club, by three&#13;
point~. The Rangers were five.&#13;
points shy of the first place&#13;
winners, Sports Complex Ltd.&#13;
Tom Burleson of Indiana T.C.,&#13;
shattered the U .S.T.F .F. record&#13;
by twenty-three seconds with his&#13;
winning time of 24:46. Parkside's&#13;
Ray Fredricksen was also under&#13;
the previous record, finishing&#13;
sixth in 25:17. The Ranger's&#13;
outstanding freshman, Bob&#13;
Langenhol, wa~ only seconds&#13;
back taking seventh place. Gary&#13;
Priem rounded out the race's top&#13;
ten, with sophomore Jeff Miller&#13;
closely behind in twelfth. Bill&#13;
Werve's 39th place capped the&#13;
scoring. Parkside's two other&#13;
variety runners, John Poulakos&#13;
and Mike Rummelhart finished&#13;
49th and 53rd, respectively.&#13;
Parkside hosts the NAIA&#13;
National Cross Country Championships&#13;
on November-;19th .'&#13;
The race will feature nearly five&#13;
hundred runners.&#13;
ten minutes Platteville scored&#13;
· another goal, to make the final&#13;
score 4-2.&#13;
As to the team's championship&#13;
win, Coach Henderson commented,&#13;
"I didn't feel we played&#13;
that well, but the field was soft&#13;
and slick, so with a shuffled up&#13;
line-up I was pleased with the&#13;
results. I'm extremely encouraged&#13;
for the playoffs in&#13;
Minnesota. We seem to be&#13;
coming off our injuries; Mike&#13;
Oleson, Earl Campbell and Dan&#13;
Brieschke appear to be healthy&#13;
again . This is probably the&#13;
healthiest we'.ve been all year,&#13;
coming at the best possible time,&#13;
the playoffs ."&#13;
If they should win in&#13;
Minnesota they'll play the&#13;
district champions of Illinois;&#13;
and whoever wins that receives&#13;
the right to go to Alabama over&#13;
Thanksgiving.&#13;
Parkside ranks 12th in NAIA&#13;
UW-Parkside's cross-country&#13;
team is tied for 12th in the nation&#13;
in the latest poll of NAIA&#13;
coaches.&#13;
Coach Lucian Rosa's Rangers&#13;
made their first appearance in&#13;
the rankings two weeks before&#13;
the NAIA national championship&#13;
run scheduled for Nov. 19 on the&#13;
UW-P's five mile campus course.&#13;
Parkside is tied with Harding&#13;
College (Ark .) and Malone (0.).&#13;
Adams State College (Colorado)&#13;
was ranked first followed by&#13;
-Indiana University (Pa.) and&#13;
Saginaw Valley State' of&#13;
Michigan .&#13;
Cross-country ski meeting planned&#13;
There will be an important&#13;
organization meeting of all&#13;
students, faculty, arid staff, who&#13;
are interested in cross-country&#13;
, skiing activities.&#13;
This year, the club will sponsor&#13;
competitive events, tours, and&#13;
instruction-al clinics _ One of the&#13;
club's goals is to organize a&#13;
men's and women's crosscountry&#13;
ski team.&#13;
The meeting will be in CL 322&#13;
at 6:45 p.m ., on Wednesday,&#13;
November 16. Movies will be&#13;
shown.&#13;
Interested parties not able to&#13;
attend the meeting should&#13;
contact J. Georgeson at&#13;
553-2446. &#13;
Korean diary&#13;
Dinner with Professor Kim: Professor Kim [in Korean dress], Professor&#13;
Dennis Dean, Mrs. Susan Dean. In backgrcJund, Mrs. Kim. We sat in&#13;
chairs and had individual bowls for rice, ribs, and soup. -photo by&#13;
Bob Hulsey&#13;
Korean dining not for squeamish&#13;
by Dennis R. Dean&#13;
Associate Professor of English&#13;
HAVE A FREE DRINK ON THE BEAN&#13;
With Thi. Coupon.&#13;
1 Per Cu.tome, YOW IAA , Houn&#13;
M-T&#13;
7 p.m.·&#13;
lOp.m.&#13;
Ta"e,.&#13;
25'&#13;
Despite Kwangju's status as a provincial&#13;
capital in a country dominated by the&#13;
national one, there was lots to do. By far&#13;
the most usual social activity, however,&#13;
was eating out. Though Kwangju boasted a&#13;
fine Japanese restaurant and several&#13;
excellent Chinese ones, together with&#13;
others that attempted to be Western, the&#13;
majority were naturally Korean. As of our&#13;
arrival, my wife and I had never had a&#13;
Korean meal.&#13;
Our first was dinner that Sunday night, 6&#13;
March, when Kim Tae hn invited us and&#13;
David Miller to a Genghis Khan-style meal,&#13;
in which meat, mushrooms, and&#13;
vegetables were heated at the table in a&#13;
water-filled Oesbaoed vessel, with a spicy&#13;
sauce in the center. Having left our shoes&#13;
outside, we were sitting cross-legged&#13;
(insofar as we could manage) on cushions&#13;
in a private room that consisted of a raised&#13;
wooden platform surrounded by thin&#13;
partitions. The table from which we ate -&#13;
all of us with chopsticks - was only a few&#13;
inches high.&#13;
Stark courtesy marks dinner&#13;
Aside from the food, which was fine on&#13;
this occasion, three aspects of a Korean&#13;
dinner might bother the squeamish&#13;
Westerner. The first is that diners often eat&#13;
directly from the serving dishes with their&#13;
own chopsticks. Usually, except for a small&#13;
bowl of rice (usually mixed with barley in&#13;
Korea), there are no individual plates. The&#13;
second aspect, which we learned that&#13;
night, is the Korean custom of passing&#13;
glasses. Having finished your first drink,&#13;
you do not pour a refi II for yourself, but&#13;
pass the empty glass to an esteemed&#13;
friend, who graciously receives it (always&#13;
with the right hand, in both cases) and&#13;
then holds it for you to refill. He then&#13;
drinks from your former glass while you&#13;
wait patiently for some otber friend to&#13;
hand you his and fill. Several might do so&#13;
shortly, so an especially honored quest&#13;
often accumulates a number of filled&#13;
alessesbefore him, all of which must then&#13;
Ladies Night&#13;
Wed.&#13;
O.t.eCo,ner&#13;
of 57t11 &amp; 23 Ave&#13;
be emptied (in other words, drunk) and&#13;
passedon - not necessarily to the original&#13;
owner - until all reciprocations have&#13;
been paid. For those who can forget about&#13;
the germ theory of disease, this is a&#13;
pleasant, convivial custom, but it also&#13;
means that how much you drink will pretty&#13;
much be determined by the group. The&#13;
third thing about Korean dinners likely to&#13;
bother some of us is that they normally&#13;
exclude women, including (if the dinner is&#13;
at a private home) the woman who worked&#13;
all day preparing it.&#13;
Raw..octopus!&#13;
A more typically Korean dinner than the&#13;
first was given in my honor by the English&#13;
department at Chonnam on Wednesday,&#13;
16 March. It was attended by about 18&#13;
men, who first sat around for almost an&#13;
hour in our matted room, shoeless,&#13;
cross-legged, and talking in both&#13;
languages. Dinner was then carried in,&#13;
fully laid out, on three large, low tables&#13;
(around which we gathered), each of&#13;
which was loaded with small dishes. The&#13;
particular delicacy of the evening was raw&#13;
octopus. Killed only moments before and&#13;
then seasoned with 'sesame oil, it lay&#13;
silvery and squirming on a platter, like&#13;
translucent rubber. When you try to grab it&#13;
with your chopsticks, it grabs them back or&#13;
fights you off. But I finally succeeded in&#13;
eating a few bites. Small live octopuses&#13;
were regularly for sale at Yongdong&#13;
market. Seeing my fascination with them,&#13;
the fish woman there once reached into&#13;
her tank and dangled forth one unlucky&#13;
octopus by a tentacle. She invited me to&#13;
reach in and dangle one of the others.&#13;
Dave Miller's favorite story is about a&#13;
drunk who once boasted, and then tried to&#13;
prove, that he -could swallow a live&#13;
octopus whole. It clung to the sides of his&#13;
throat and he died of suffocation.&#13;
Koreans are fond of raw things. At&#13;
various times I ate raw fish (frequently),&#13;
raw octopus. and squid, raw stingray, raw&#13;
oysters and shellfish, and raw eel, the last&#13;
being killed before my eyes. Other&#13;
offerings on the 16th included hamburgerlike&#13;
patties, fish, seafood in the half-shell.&#13;
Mle.&#13;
35"&#13;
Mlxell DrI.b&#13;
40"&#13;
ribs in sauce, mushrooms, turnip kimchi,&#13;
and Korean sake. Kimchi, perhaps the&#13;
most typical of all Korean dishes, is a spicy&#13;
pickle, usually made from cabbage and&#13;
seasoned with red pepper, but found also&#13;
in many' other forms. Almost all Korean&#13;
households make their own.&#13;
Two days later Susan and I went for&#13;
dinner at the home of Professor Kim&#13;
(physics), who was renting a bedroom to&#13;
our Peace Corps friend, Bob Hulsey. The&#13;
splendid menu this time included ribs,&#13;
another beef dish, shellfish, eggs and&#13;
meat, spinach, meat soup, rice, fish&#13;
casserole, bean sprouts, chestnuts,&#13;
delicious sesameconfections, lots of plum&#13;
wine, and rice in syrup for dessert. This&#13;
was probably the most enjoyable Korean&#13;
meal we ever had, the menu being&#13;
particularly tactful and the execution&#13;
marvellous. Neither Professor Kim nor his&#13;
wife had ever seen us before.&#13;
On the evening of the 19th we went to a&#13;
concert of Western musk with Bob and,&#13;
on the lOth, went by bus with him to a&#13;
nearby village famed for its bamboo&#13;
manufacture. On 22 March all three of us&#13;
were guests of honor at the English&#13;
Speaking Union (a student group) dinner.&#13;
Afterwards, everyone had to sing songs,&#13;
and the students sang some traditional&#13;
Koreans especially for us. Then a Korean&#13;
friend took us to a tearoom for a while,&#13;
where we talked.&#13;
American Snacks and scotch well received&#13;
On Friday, 25 March, Susan and I hosted&#13;
a reception at our apartment, with Ed&#13;
Wright (who came down from Seoul,&#13;
bringing some of the party supplies with&#13;
him) asguest of honor. BesidesEd and two&#13;
Korean artist friends of his, Dave Miller,&#13;
Bob, his Professor Kim, and ourselves, the&#13;
guests included my colleagues at the&#13;
University: professors Kim Tae [in, Koh,&#13;
Myung, Bum, Pae, Kim Chung Soc, Cho,&#13;
and Dean Shin. Kim Tae jtn I have already&#13;
identified. Koh )i-Moon regularly audited&#13;
my classes, advised me usefully about a&#13;
variety of things, and spent considerable&#13;
time with me discussing literary topics. His&#13;
current research interest is Saul Bellow's&#13;
concept of freedom. Professor Myung, an&#13;
avid tennis player, was one of the most&#13;
gracious and forward-looking of my&#13;
colleagues. Professor Bum, our department&#13;
head, was a reclusive poet, while Pae&#13;
(who resembles him) was a linguist&#13;
capable of some unexpectedly sly humor&#13;
Kim Chung Soc, the oldest active member&#13;
of the department, taught Eliot, Joyce, and&#13;
Donne. Cho, a delightful man, and Dean&#13;
Shin had doctorates; the others did not&#13;
We served American-style snacks, and all&#13;
were well received - as were two bottles&#13;
of Johnny Walker scotch.&#13;
After our party was over, and most of&#13;
the guests gone home, Dave and his&#13;
Korean associate, Mr. Park, surprised Bob&#13;
and us with a dinner invitation, including&#13;
Ed, his two Korean friens, and Dean Shin.&#13;
We nine taxied to a secluded restaurant&#13;
neal the river and had a remarkable formal&#13;
dinner (including hostesses)of turtle. After&#13;
an initial course of turtle blood cocktails (a&#13;
sip will do, thanks), the turtle itself came&#13;
in, together with chicken, seaweed, bean&#13;
sprouts, cucumber kimchi, kimchi soup,&#13;
spinach, turnips, and plum wine. Korean&#13;
pears - they're large and have the texture&#13;
of an apple - were offered for dessert&#13;
And after that, they brought in turtle soupl&#13;
Next day, we went on a short trip WIth&#13;
Ed and friends, who had joined us at the&#13;
apartment for breakfast. And then that&#13;
night we tried a chonjon place with Bob,&#13;
lee Myung-hee (one of my female grad&#13;
students; Bob's and Dave's tutor In&#13;
Korean) and Bill Gerity, another Peace&#13;
Corps volunteer ~The chonjon, or rice&#13;
wine, came with a generous array of&#13;
snacks, including raw octopus, squid,&#13;
oysters, fish, and beef (but we sent thi-t&#13;
back to be cooked), carrots, cucumbers,&#13;
cole slaw, mushrooms, seaweed, soup.&#13;
roast chestnuts, shellfish, and tongue. On&#13;
the last night of the month there was a&#13;
stunning program of Korean dance at the&#13;
public auditorium. So it went, and this was&#13;
only one month out of the four that I was&#13;
there. \&#13;
.. Acquirinl animal virtues by dipstion&#13;
But I must also mention the fine dinner&#13;
at Kim Tae lin's house on 8 April, which&#13;
was remarkable for its conversation.&#13;
Besides the ribs, raw fish, and stingray,&#13;
plum and ginseng wines were passed&#13;
around and we all began to open up.&#13;
Agreeing with an observation of mine,&#13;
Professor Myung said it was traditional&#13;
Korean belief that you acquire the virtues&#13;
of an animal by eating it - turtle for&#13;
longevity, dog for stamina, and so on. (But&#13;
he served us neither when we had a similar&#13;
group dinner at his house the next night.)&#13;
No-one could tell me what virtues one&#13;
acquired through the eating of raw&#13;
octopus. Korean humor was much in&#13;
evidence, a usual form of which is the&#13;
identifying catch-phrase, a personal and&#13;
characteristic response that the proud&#13;
owner thereof would inject Into the&#13;
conversation at every opportunity. Kim&#13;
Tae [in, a particular master of this art, has&#13;
two: "learning by doingl" and "Ladles&#13;
first!", the latter being contrary to Korean&#13;
manners and a big Joke. One interesting&#13;
Korean custom, by the way, ISthat when&#13;
hosting a dinner party at home you&#13;
attempt to make everyone present feel at&#13;
ease by dressmg more tnformaltv than any&#13;
of your guests. Throughout the evening,&#13;
therefore, Kim Tae Jin was in hIS green&#13;
jogging outfit, Professor Myung, the next&#13;
night, wore his tennis clothes&#13;
.As the glasses circulated, there was an&#13;
outpouring of candid talk as well I got&#13;
ribbed about being henpecked because I'd&#13;
said 10 class (WIth reference to "Rrp Van&#13;
Winkle'") that all American husbands are&#13;
"The only difference between Korean men&#13;
and Amencan ones," I retorted, "IS that we&#13;
admit It." How, I was asked, did my first&#13;
impressions of Korea differ from my&#13;
expectations? I had been worned about&#13;
the government and my freedom to teach&#13;
What did I like least about Korea/ Your&#13;
treatment of animals and women On the&#13;
other hand, Korean society emphasizes&#13;
certain desirable humane values much&#13;
more forcefully than we do. One of the&#13;
aspects of Amencan I.fe that Korean&#13;
students find It Impossible to sympathize&#13;
with, for example, is our treatment of the&#13;
elderly. They also find our materialistic&#13;
emphasrs upon the sensual rather funny&#13;
Though It may seem, from this One&#13;
article, as If I did little else but eat while In&#13;
Korea, I actually lost fifteen pounds&#13;
Dinner with Professor Kim: Professor Kim [in Korean dress], Professor&#13;
Dennis Dean, Mrs. Susan Dean. In background, Mrs. Kim. We sat in&#13;
chairs and had individual 'bowls for rice, ribs, and soup. -photo by&#13;
Bob Hulsey&#13;
Korean dining not for squeamish&#13;
by Dennis R. Dean&#13;
Associate Professor of English&#13;
Despite Kwangju's status as a provincial&#13;
capital in a country dominated by the&#13;
national one, there was lots to do. By far&#13;
the most usual social activity, however,&#13;
was eating out. Though Kwangju boasted a&#13;
fine Japanese restaurant and several&#13;
excellent Chinese ones, together with&#13;
others that attempted to be Western, the&#13;
majority were naturally Korean . As of our&#13;
arrival, my wife and I had never had a&#13;
Korean meal.&#13;
Our first was dinner that Sunday night, 6&#13;
March, when Kirn Tae Jin invited us and&#13;
David Miller to a Genghis Khan-style meal,&#13;
in which meat, mushrooms, and&#13;
vegetables were heated at the table in a&#13;
water-filled O-shaped vessel, with a spicy&#13;
sauce in the center. Having left our shoes&#13;
outside, we were sitting cross-legged&#13;
(insofar as we could manage} on cushions&#13;
in a private room that consisted of a raised&#13;
wooden platform surrounded by thin&#13;
partitions . The table from which we ate -&#13;
all of us with chopsticks - was only a few&#13;
inches high .&#13;
Stark courtesy marks dinner&#13;
Aside from the food, which was fine on&#13;
this occasion, three aspects of a Korean&#13;
dinner might bother the squeamish&#13;
Westerner. The first is that diners often eat&#13;
directly from the serving dishes with their&#13;
own chopsticks . Usually, except for a small&#13;
bowl of rice (usually mixed with barley in&#13;
Korea), there are no individual plates. The&#13;
second aspect, which we learned that&#13;
night, is the Korean custom of passing&#13;
glasses . Having finished your first drink,&#13;
you do not pour a refill for yourself, but&#13;
pass the empty glass to an esteemed&#13;
friend, who graciously receives it (always&#13;
with the right hand, in both cases} and&#13;
then holds it for you to refill . He then&#13;
drinks from your f~rrner glass while you&#13;
wait patiently for some other friend to&#13;
hand you his and fill. Several might do so&#13;
shortly, so an especially honored quest&#13;
often . accumulates a number of filled&#13;
glasses before him, all of which must then&#13;
be emptied (in other words, drunk} and&#13;
passed on - not necessarily to the original&#13;
owner - until all reciprocations have&#13;
been paid. For those who can forget about&#13;
the germ theory of disease, this is a&#13;
pleasant, convivial custom, but it also&#13;
means that how much you drink will pretty&#13;
much be determined by the group. The&#13;
third thing about Korean dinners likely to&#13;
bother some of us is that they normally&#13;
exclude women, including (if the dinner is&#13;
at a private home} the woman who worked&#13;
all day preparing it.&#13;
Raw octopus!&#13;
A more typically Korean dinner than the&#13;
first was given in my honor by the English&#13;
department at Chonnarn on Wednesday,&#13;
16 March. It was attended by about 18&#13;
men, who first sat around for almost an&#13;
hour in our matted room, shoeless,&#13;
cross-legged , and talking in both&#13;
languages. Dinner was then carried in,&#13;
fully laid out, on three large, low tal5Ies&#13;
(around which we gathered}, each of&#13;
which was loaded with small dishes . The&#13;
particular delicacy of the evening was raw&#13;
octopus. Killed only moments before and&#13;
then seasoned with ·sesame oil, it lay&#13;
silvery and squirming on a platter, like&#13;
translucent rubber. When you try to grab it&#13;
with your chopsticks, it grabs them back or&#13;
fights you off. But I finally succeeded in&#13;
eating a few bites . Small live octopuses&#13;
were regularly for sale at Yongdong&#13;
market. Seeing my fascination with them,&#13;
the fish woman there once reached into&#13;
her tank and dangled forth one unlucky&#13;
octopus by a tentacle. She invited me to&#13;
reach in and dangle one of the others.&#13;
Dave Miller's favorite story is about a&#13;
drunk who once boasted, and then tried to&#13;
prove, that he could swallow a live&#13;
octopus whole. It clung to the sides of his&#13;
throat and he died of suffocation.&#13;
Koreans are fond of raw things . At&#13;
various times I ate raw fish (frequently},&#13;
raw octopus and squid, raw stingray, raw&#13;
oysters and shellfish, and raw eel, the last&#13;
being killed before my eyes. Other&#13;
offerings on the 16th included hamburgerlike&#13;
patties, fish, seafood in the half-shell.&#13;
HAVE A FREE DRINK ON THE BEAN&#13;
With This Coupon •&#13;
1 Per Customer,&#13;
_ Ladies Night&#13;
Wed.&#13;
On tlle Corner&#13;
of 57111 &amp; 23 Ave.&#13;
YOWZAA&#13;
Hours&#13;
M-T&#13;
7p.m. -&#13;
10 p.m.&#13;
ribs in sauce, mushrooms, turnip kirnchi,&#13;
and Korean sake Kirnchi, perhaps the&#13;
most typical of all Korean dishes, Is a spicy&#13;
pickle, usually made from cabbage and&#13;
seasoned with red pepper, but found also&#13;
in many other forms . Almost all Korean&#13;
households make their own&#13;
Two days later Susan and I went for&#13;
dinner at the home of Professor Kim&#13;
(physics), who was renting a bedroom to&#13;
our Peace Corps friend, Bob Hulsey. The&#13;
splendid menu this time included ribs,&#13;
another beef dish, shellfish, eggs and&#13;
meat, spinach, meat soup, rice, fish&#13;
casserole, bean sprouts, chestnuts ,&#13;
delicious sesame confections, lots of plum&#13;
wine, and rice in syrup for dessert. This&#13;
was probably the most enjoyable Korean&#13;
meal we ever had, the menu being&#13;
particularly tactful and the execution&#13;
marvellous. Neither Professor Kim nor his&#13;
wife had ever seen us before.&#13;
On the evening of the 19th we went to a&#13;
concert of Western music with Bob and,&#13;
on the 20th, went by bus with him to a&#13;
nearby village famed for its bamboo&#13;
manufacture. On 22 March all three of us&#13;
were guests of honor at the English&#13;
Speaking Union (a student group) dinner.&#13;
Afterwards, everyone had to sing songs,&#13;
and the students sang some traditional&#13;
Koreans especially for us. Then a Korean&#13;
friend took us to a tearoom for a while,&#13;
where we talked .&#13;
American Snacks and scotch well received&#13;
On Friday, 25 March, Susan and I hosted&#13;
a reception at our apartment, with Ed&#13;
Wright (who came down from Seoul,&#13;
bringing some of the party supplies with&#13;
him) as guest of honor. Besides Ed and two&#13;
Korean artist friends of his, Dave Miller,&#13;
Bob, his Professor Kirn, and ourselves, the&#13;
guests included my colleagues at the&#13;
University: professors Kirn Tae Jin, Koh,&#13;
Myung, Bum, Pae, Kim Chung Soo, Cho,&#13;
and Dean Shin. Kim Tae Jin I have already&#13;
identified. Koh Ji-Moon regularly audited&#13;
my classes, advised me usefully about a&#13;
variety of things, and spent considerable&#13;
time with me discussing literary topics . His&#13;
current research interest is Saul Bellow's&#13;
concept of freedom Prof~ssor Myung, an&#13;
avid tennis player, was one of the most&#13;
gracious and forward-looking of my&#13;
colleagues . Professor Bum, our department&#13;
head, was a reclusive poet, while Pae&#13;
(who resembles him) was a linguist&#13;
capable of some unexpectedly sly humor&#13;
Kim Chung Soo, the oldest active member&#13;
of the department, taught Eliot, Joyce, and&#13;
Donne. Cho, a delightful man, and Dean&#13;
Shin had doctorates; the others did not&#13;
We served American-style snacks, and all&#13;
were well received - as were two bottles&#13;
of Johnny Walker scotch .&#13;
After our party was over, and most of&#13;
the guests gone home, Dave and his&#13;
Korean associate, Mr Park, surprised Bob&#13;
and us with a dinner invitation, including&#13;
Ed, his two Korean fnens, and Dean Shin .&#13;
We nine taxied to a secluded restaurant&#13;
nea the river and had a remarkable formal&#13;
dinner (including hostesses) of turtle After&#13;
an initial course of turtle blood cocktails (a&#13;
sip will do, thanks), the turtle itself came&#13;
in, together with chicken, seaweed, bean&#13;
sprouts, cucumber kimch1, k1mch1 soup,&#13;
spinach, turnips, and plum wme Korean&#13;
pears - they're large and have t~ texture&#13;
of an apple - were offered for dessert.&#13;
And after that, the brought m turtle soup!&#13;
ext day, we went on a short trip with&#13;
Ed and friends, who had joined us at the&#13;
apartment for breakfast. And then that&#13;
night we tried a chon1on place with Bob,&#13;
Lee Myung-hee (one of my female grad&#13;
students, Bob's and Dave's tutor in&#13;
Korean) and Bill Centy, another Peace&#13;
Corps volunteer. 0&#13;
The chon1on, or nee&#13;
wine, came with a generous array of&#13;
snacks, including raw octopus, squid,&#13;
oysters, fish, and beef (but we sent that&#13;
back to be cooked); carrots, cucumbers,&#13;
cole slaw, mushrooms, seaweed, soup,&#13;
roast chestnuts, shellfish, and tongue On&#13;
the last night of the month there was a&#13;
stunning program of Korean dance at the&#13;
public auditorium So it went, and this was&#13;
only one month out of the four that I was&#13;
there&#13;
Acquiring animal virtues by digestion&#13;
But I must also mention the fine dinner&#13;
at Kim Tae Jin's house on 8 April, which&#13;
was remarkable for its conversation&#13;
Besides the ribs, raw fish, and stingray,&#13;
plum and ginseng wines were passed&#13;
around and we all began to open up&#13;
Agreeing with an observation of mine,&#13;
Professor Myung said It was traditional&#13;
Korean belief that you acquire the virtues&#13;
of an animal by eating it - turtle for&#13;
longevity, dog for stamina, and so on (But&#13;
he served us neither when we had a similar&#13;
group dinner at his house the next night.)&#13;
No-one could tell me what virtues one&#13;
acquired through the eating of raw&#13;
octopus. Korean humor was much m&#13;
evidence, a usual form of which is the&#13;
identifying catch-phrase, a personal and&#13;
characteristic response that the proud&#13;
owner thereof would inject mto the&#13;
conversation at every opportunity. Kim&#13;
Tae Jin, a particular master of this art, has&#13;
two: " Learning by doing!" and " Ladies&#13;
first!", the latter being contrary to Korean&#13;
manners and a big joke. One mterestmg&#13;
Korean custom, by the way, Is that when&#13;
hosting a dinner part at horn you&#13;
attempt to make everyone pres nt f I at&#13;
ease by dressing more informally than any&#13;
of your guests Throughout the evening,&#13;
therefore, Kim Tae Jin was m his green&#13;
Jogging outfit, Profe or Myung, the ne t&#13;
night, wore his tennI cloth&#13;
As the glass s circulated, th re was an&#13;
outpouring of candid talk a well . I got&#13;
ribbed about being h npecked b au I'd&#13;
said in class (with r fer n e to " Rip Van&#13;
Winkle"} that all American hu band ar&#13;
"The only difference b tw n or an m n&#13;
and American on ," I r torted, " 1 that w&#13;
admit 1t." How, I was a ked, d id my first&#13;
impressions of Korea d1ff r from my&#13;
expectation ? I had be n worn d about&#13;
the gov rnment and my fr edom to teach .&#13;
What did I lik I ast about Korea? Your&#13;
treatm nt of animals and women. On the&#13;
other hand, Korean oci ty mpha Ize&#13;
certain desirable human values much&#13;
more forcefully than we do. On of the&#13;
aspects of American life that orean&#13;
students fmd I impo s1ble to ympathize&#13;
with, for example, i our treatment of the&#13;
elderly. They al o find our material! ti&#13;
emphasis upon the sensual rather funny.&#13;
Though It may eem, from this one&#13;
article, as 1f I did little else but eat while in&#13;
Korea, I actually lost fifteen pounds. &#13;
events ..&#13;
Smokeout - T~~u;::~~:u~v::~ne: ~:cietY is askingCham ber&#13;
individuals to take one day off from smoking.&#13;
Pledge cards are-being distributed in the Health&#13;
Office.&#13;
Discussion - Support group for single- parents.&#13;
Tallent 115 at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Friday, November 18&#13;
Film - The Exorcist., Held at 8 p.rn, in Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Life Science - Dr. Emil T. Kaiser. Cl 105 at 2 p.m.&#13;
Women's Swimming- Parkside hosts Ranger Relays&#13;
(coed) at 3:30 p.rn. .&#13;
Concert - Oriana Trio performs in CAT at 8 p.rn.&#13;
Saturday, November 19 .&#13;
Cross Country - NAIA National Championship at&#13;
UW-P at 11 a.m.&#13;
Conference - Cov't Survellance vs. the Majority at&#13;
8:30-4:30 p.m. in Student Union. lunch included.&#13;
Details a-nd Advance T-ickets attainable at Information&#13;
Center. Registration in Cl, 107.&#13;
Sunday, November 20&#13;
Film - The Exorcist, 7:30 p.m. in Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Concert - Parkside Orchestra in CAT at 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Concert - Flute Recital CAT 8:00 p.m,&#13;
Tuesday, November 22&#13;
Concert - Jazz Ensembles I and 11 at 8 p.m. in CAT.&#13;
Notes&#13;
The Broadway musical Cabaret will be presented by&#13;
a 4O-member touring company, including musicians."&#13;
Dec. 1, CAT. Tickets $3 students, $5 others, on sale&#13;
at Union Information Center November 17.&#13;
Communication fro~ page one&#13;
The Speech Communication option is designed to provide&#13;
practical and theoretical instruction in the speech field. Students in&#13;
this option often enter careers such as teaching, county extension&#13;
communication, ombundsperson, consumer information, publishing,&#13;
legislation, "hotline" management, speech writing, and the ministry,&#13;
or continue their education in fields such as law, speech therapy, and&#13;
communication.&#13;
Within the Organizational Communication option lies the&#13;
opportunity for an interdisciplinary program of study. Students learn&#13;
about communication in various organizational settings and may&#13;
take courses in management science and behavioral science to better&#13;
prepare themselves for employment in industry. This option is&#13;
designed to prepare students for positions in organizational&#13;
communication consulting, personnel, public relations, organizational&#13;
development, biomedical communication, labor relations&#13;
communication, and job placement, as well as graduate study in&#13;
organizational communication and business management.&#13;
The Mass Communication option encourages learning of both&#13;
theoretical and applied media principles. Students may enter such&#13;
careers as broadcasting, film, journalism, teaching, media servies,&#13;
and media consultation. This option also provides a strong&#13;
theoretical background for graduate study in mass communication.&#13;
The option in Dramatic Arts prepares students for careers in&#13;
education, community theatre, and other theatre related areas. This&#13;
option also prepares students for graduate study in all areas of&#13;
theatre. Course descriptions are found in the Fine Arts Division&#13;
section.&#13;
Communication courses also serve as electives in other programs&#13;
of study such as business management, labor economics, social&#13;
science behavioral science, and the humanities.&#13;
COM'NG~1&#13;
Thursday; Dec. 1&#13;
A Natjonal Tour Broadway&#13;
Cast of&#13;
CABARET&#13;
8:110 P.M. COMM. ARTS THEATRE&#13;
ADM, $3.00 UW-PARKSIDE STUDENTS SS.OOGENERAL&#13;
Tickets will be available at the Union&#13;
Info Center starting Thurs., Nov. 17&#13;
SPONSORED BY P.A.B.&#13;
Symphony&#13;
performs Mozart&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Chamber Symphony&#13;
will present its fall concert at&#13;
3:30 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 20, in&#13;
the Communication Arts Theater&#13;
with David Schripsema conducting&#13;
and Timothy Bell as clarinet&#13;
soloist. The- event is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
The program will include&#13;
"Romanian Folk Dances" of Bela&#13;
Bartok, Mozart's "Symphony -No.&#13;
29 in A major," Charles tves'&#13;
"Unanswered Question" and&#13;
Mozart's "Concerto for Clarinet&#13;
and Orchestra."&#13;
Bell, a member of the&#13;
UW-Parkside music faculty since&#13;
1975, previously taught at North&#13;
Texas State University and was&#13;
first chair clarinet in its concert&#13;
band. He is a member of the&#13;
Parkside Contemporarv Players&#13;
and teaches woodwind students&#13;
in 'addition to directing UW-P's&#13;
award-winning Jazz Ensembles.&#13;
In addition to his conducting&#13;
assignment at UW-P, Schripsema&#13;
also directs the Kenosha&#13;
Symphony and the Bradford&#13;
High School orchestra. He holds&#13;
a master's degree from Michigan&#13;
. State University and in 1973&#13;
received the diploma of&#13;
conducting from the Mozarteum&#13;
in Salzburg, Austria. He has&#13;
conducted in several major&#13;
European music centers and has&#13;
been guest conductor of the&#13;
Michigan State University Orchestra&#13;
and the Aspen {Colo.)&#13;
Festival Repertoire Orchestra.&#13;
Smoke··out this week&#13;
The Parkside Campus Health.&#13;
Office will cooperate with the&#13;
American Cancer Society in&#13;
promoting "The Great American&#13;
Smokeout," a day to stop&#13;
smoking, on Nov. 17.&#13;
On Nov. 16 volunteers will&#13;
staff tables on campus asking&#13;
students and faculty to sign&#13;
pledge .cards in which they&#13;
promise not to smoke the&#13;
following day.&#13;
In announcing the project,&#13;
Campus Nurse Edith Isenberg&#13;
pointed out that smoking causes&#13;
lung cancer, emphysema and&#13;
chronic bronchitis; kills an&#13;
estimated 300,000 persons in the&#13;
U.S. each year; and causes&#13;
irritation, discomfort and Illness&#13;
to many non-smokers.&#13;
classified&#13;
NMd Ride Student from Burlington wants&#13;
rider to share driving &amp; expenses. Call Jim&#13;
(414) 534-6232.&#13;
HOlt Family Wanted Helpl, I'm 20 years old&#13;
and lOOkingfor a host family In Kenosha. I&#13;
am an I.C.Y.E. exchange student from&#13;
Germany. If you are interested, please call&#13;
652-8620. I&#13;
1973 Kawasaki 175 cern, 7000 miles,&#13;
excellent condition. $28()". with helment.&#13;
Further information call Goetz, Burlington,&#13;
763-&lt;l564.&#13;
!,W UW-Parkside&#13;
'" Semester Break&#13;
CA&#13;
Jln. 6-11. 1'78 "299 .Ccmp'ete bosed&#13;
~ on 2 to a room&#13;
EXTRA SEATS&#13;
NOW AVAILABLE&#13;
.ORIGINAL TRIP&#13;
SOLDOUTl&#13;
SIGN UP TODAY&#13;
UNION OFFICE, RM. 209&#13;
553-2200&#13;
Nearly 30 million persons have&#13;
stopped smoking in the U.S., but&#13;
there are still about 50 million&#13;
adult smokers in the country, she ,,-&#13;
said. Over half of all cigarette&#13;
smokers say that they want to&#13;
quit, she added. "The Great&#13;
American Smokeout" is designed&#13;
to give them an incentive to do&#13;
so.&#13;
ISHIRTS+&#13;
SHORECREST SHOPPING CENTER&#13;
3900 Erie Street. Racine 414-639~6662&#13;
Open Daily 9am-9pm&#13;
Saturday Barn-S:30pm&#13;
PAHAo\I\OUNl f'K·lUHl ~ PHISlNT&lt;; \&#13;
A TURMAN-FOSTER COMPANY&#13;
PRODUCTION "FIRST LOVE"&#13;
Starring WILLIAM KATT SUSAN DEY&#13;
Screenplay by JANE STANTON&#13;
HITCHCOCK and DAVID FREEMAN&#13;
Produced by LAWRENCE TURMAN&#13;
and DAVID FOSTER Directed by&#13;
lOAN DARLING&#13;
N Showi 554-6970&#13;
NOW SHOWING, OW Sot.owmq ~~ &amp; Sun.: ... • '&#13;
1,30, 3,30: DO. ],30 &amp; 903'&#13;
We.knlfes: ]:30 &amp; 9:30&#13;
events .-&#13;
\ Thursday,November17 Chambe-r Symphony&#13;
Mozart·&#13;
Smokeout - The Smokeout begins. Society is as~ing&#13;
individuals to take one day off from smoking.&#13;
Pledge cards are-being distributed in the Health&#13;
Office.&#13;
Discussion Support group for single parents.&#13;
Tallent 115 at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Friday, November 18&#13;
Film - The Exorcist. Held at 8 p.m. in Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Life Science - Dr. Emil T. Kaiser. CL 105 at 2 p.m.&#13;
Women's Swimming- Parkside hosts Ranger Relays&#13;
(coed) at 3:30 p.m. ·&#13;
Concert - Oriana Trio performs in CAT at 8 p.m.&#13;
Saturday, November 19 •&#13;
Cross Country - NAIA National ChampiQnship at&#13;
UW-P at 11 a.m.&#13;
Conference - Gov't Survellance vs. the Majority at&#13;
8:30-4:30 p.m. in Student Union. Lunch included.&#13;
Details a-nd Advance Tickets attainable at Information&#13;
Center. Registration in CL 107.&#13;
Sunday, November 20&#13;
Film - The Exorcist, 7:30 p.m. in Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Concert - Parkside Orchestra in CAT at 3_:30 p.m.&#13;
Concert - Flute Recital CAT 8:00 p.m:&#13;
Tuesday, November 22&#13;
Concert - Jazz Ensembles I and II at 8 p.m. in CAT.&#13;
Notes&#13;
The Broadway musical Cabaret will be presented by&#13;
a 40-member touring company, including musicians, -&#13;
Dec. 1, CAT. Tickets $3 students, $5 others, on sale&#13;
at Union Information Center November 17.&#13;
Communication from page one&#13;
The Speech Communication option is designed to provide&#13;
practical and theoretical instruction in the speech fiefd . Students in&#13;
this option often enter careers such as teaching, county extension&#13;
communication, ombundsperson, consumer information, publishing,&#13;
legislation, "hotline" management, speech writing, and the ministry,&#13;
or continue their education in fields such as law, speech therapy, and&#13;
communication .&#13;
Within the Organizational Communication option lies the&#13;
opportunity for an interdisciplinary program of study. Students learn&#13;
about communication in various organizational settings and may&#13;
take courses in management science and behavioral science to better&#13;
prepare themselves for employment in industry . This option is&#13;
designed to prepare students for positions in organizational&#13;
communication consulting, personnel, public relations, organizational&#13;
development, biomedical communication, labor relations&#13;
communication, and job placement, as well as graduate study in&#13;
organizational communication and business management.&#13;
The Mass Communication option encourages learning of both&#13;
theoretical and applied media principles. Students may enter such&#13;
careers as broadcasting, film, journalism, teaching, media servies,&#13;
and media consultation. This option also provides a strong&#13;
theoretical background for graduate study in mass communication .&#13;
The option in Dramatic Arts prepares students for careers in&#13;
education, community theatre, and other theatre related areas . This&#13;
option also prepares students for graduate study in all areas of&#13;
theatre. Course descriptions are found in the Fine Arts Division&#13;
section .&#13;
Communication courses also serve as electives in other programs&#13;
of study such as business management, labor economics, social&#13;
science behavioral science, and the humanities.&#13;
COMINGll ·&#13;
Thu~sday: Dec. l&#13;
A Natjonal T9ur Broadway&#13;
Cast of&#13;
CABARET&#13;
8:00 P.M. COMM. ARTS THEATRE&#13;
ADM: $3.00 UW..PARKSIDE STUDENTS $5.00 GENERAL&#13;
Tickets will be available at the Union&#13;
Info Center starting Thurs., Nov. 17&#13;
SPONSORED BY P.A.B.&#13;
performs&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Chamber Symphony&#13;
will present its fall concert at&#13;
3:30 p .m . on Sunday, Nov. 20, in&#13;
the Communication Arts Theater&#13;
with David Schripsema conducting&#13;
and Timothy Bell as clarinet&#13;
soloist. The- event is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
The program will include&#13;
"Romanian Folk Dances" of Bela&#13;
Bartok, Mozart's "Symphony No.&#13;
29 in A major," Charles Ives'&#13;
"Unanswered Question" and&#13;
Mozart's "Concerto for Clarinet&#13;
and Orchestra."&#13;
Bell, .a member of the&#13;
UW-Parkside music faculty since&#13;
1975, previously taught at North&#13;
Texas ~tate University and was&#13;
first chair clarinet in its concert&#13;
band. He is a member of the&#13;
Parkside !=ontempprary Players&#13;
and teaches woodwind students&#13;
in addition to directing UW-P's&#13;
award-winning Jazz Ensembles.&#13;
In addition to his conducting&#13;
assignment at UW-P, Schripsema&#13;
also directs the Kenosha&#13;
Symphony and the Bradford&#13;
High School orchestra. He holds&#13;
a master's degree from Michigan&#13;
· State University and in 1973&#13;
received the diploma of&#13;
conducting from the Mozarteum&#13;
in Salzburg, Austria. He has&#13;
conducted in several major&#13;
European music centers and has&#13;
been guest conductor of the&#13;
Michigan State University Orchestra&#13;
and the Aspen (Colo,)&#13;
Festival Repertoire Orchestra.&#13;
-&#13;
Smolce~out tbis weelc&#13;
The Parkside Campus Health&#13;
Office will cooperate with the&#13;
American Cancer Society in&#13;
promoting "The Great American&#13;
Smokeout," a day to stop&#13;
smoking, on Nov. 17.&#13;
On Nov. 16 volunteers will&#13;
staff tables on campus asking&#13;
students and faculty to sign&#13;
pledge _cards in which they&#13;
promise not to smoke the&#13;
following day.&#13;
In announcing the project,&#13;
Campus Nurse Edith Isenberg&#13;
pointed out that smoking causes&#13;
lung cancer, emphysema and&#13;
chronic bronchitis; kills an&#13;
estimated 300,000 persons in the&#13;
U.S. each year; and causes&#13;
irritation, discomfort and illr:iess&#13;
to many non-smokers.&#13;
classified&#13;
Need Ride Student from Burlington wants&#13;
rider to share driving &amp; expenses. Call Jim&#13;
(414) 534-6232.&#13;
Host Family Wanted Help!, I'm 20 years old&#13;
and looking for a host family In Kenosha. I&#13;
am an I.C.Y.E. exchange student from&#13;
Germany. If you are Interested, please call&#13;
652-8620.&#13;
1973 K-aaakl 175 ccm, 7000 miles,&#13;
excellent condition. $280. with helment.&#13;
Further Information call Goetz, Burlington,&#13;
763-8564.&#13;
~ I.If/ OW-Parkside ~ff Semester Break&#13;
r.A&#13;
Jan.· 6-13, 1978 ~299 Complete based .. on2toaroom&#13;
EXTRA SEATS&#13;
NOW AVAIL.ABLE&#13;
, ORIGINAL TRIP&#13;
SOLDOUT!&#13;
SIGN UP TODAY&#13;
UNION OFFICE, RM. 209&#13;
553-2200&#13;
Nearly 30 million persons have&#13;
stopped smoking in the U.S., but&#13;
there are still about 50 million&#13;
adult smokers in the country, she /'&#13;
said . Over half of all cigarette&#13;
smokers say that they want to&#13;
quit, she added. "The Great&#13;
American Smokeout" is designed&#13;
to give them an incentive to do&#13;
so.&#13;
ISHIRTS+&#13;
SHORECREST SHOPPING CENTER&#13;
3900 Erie Street. Racine 414-639-6662&#13;
Open Daily 9am-9pm&#13;
Saturday 9ar:n-5: 30pm&#13;
PAl&lt;AMOUNl PK"TUl&lt;l~ PIU,l T,&#13;
A TURMAN-FOSTER COMPANY&#13;
PRODUCTION "FIRST LOVE"&#13;
Starring WILLIAi\1 KATT SUSAN DEY&#13;
Screenplay by JANE STANTON&#13;
HITCHCOCK and DAVID FREEMAN&#13;
Produced by LAWRENCE TURMAN&#13;
and DAVID FOSTER Directed by JOAN DARLING&#13;
Now Showing&#13;
NOW SHOWING, Sot. &amp; Sun.,&#13;
1,30, 3,30, 5,30, 7,30 &amp; 9,30,&#13;
Weeknites, 7,30 &amp; 9,30&#13;
554~970 </text>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 6, issue 12, November 16, 1977</text>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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              <text>1977-11-16</text>
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          <elementTextContainer>
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            </elementText>
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              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="68696">
              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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          </elementTextContainer>
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          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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