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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 7, issue 26</text>
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            <text>Editorial  - 'Progressive' Restraint a Big Step Backward</text>
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Wed"esday Apri' 4, 1979 IANGE~&#13;
Editorial ,&#13;
'Progressive' Restraint&#13;
a Big Step Backward&#13;
By Michael J. Murphy'&#13;
The cover illustration in this issue was designed by our contributing&#13;
graphic artist and political cartoonist, Matt Poliakon. He&#13;
claims neither great experience in physics nor scholastic honors in&#13;
the field. His information was obtained solely through assorted,&#13;
easily attainable physics books. His design, he assures, given certain&#13;
omissions and misinformation, is accurate and very feasible.&#13;
I felt, as a comment on freedom of the press and the right of free&#13;
and open discussion in American society, that publication of the&#13;
diagram was totally warranted. -&#13;
This decision, if you haven't already guessed, is in response to the&#13;
restraining order by U.S. Justice Federal Judge Robert Warren on&#13;
The Progressive magazine. The restraint is on an' article that would&#13;
purportedly make the secrets of the hydrogen bomb public.&#13;
The restraining order, based partially on fear and partially on&#13;
irrationality and ignorance sets another alarming precedent in the&#13;
Government's ability to hold back information the public needs to&#13;
know about.&#13;
The decision, which is in direct violation of the 1st Amendment,&#13;
hints the destruction of the philosophical and moral foundation by&#13;
which this country was built. . . the right to speak and ~he right of&#13;
knowledge.&#13;
The Progressive has ,been known, over the years, to take a strong&#13;
stand against the growth of nuclear power and the creation of&#13;
nuclear weapons. Howard Morland" the author of the article, has&#13;
also given talks on nuclear weapons and was actively involved in the&#13;
peace movement.&#13;
The decision to print the story was an editorial one. The magazine&#13;
placed an importance on stimulating public knowledge on what goes&#13;
into the making of such a horrible and, destructive weapon.&#13;
Allegations by the Justice Department and Energy Secretary&#13;
""'I&#13;
RANGER Is written and edited by students of V,W. Parks ide&#13;
and they are solely responsible for Its editorial policy and&#13;
content.&#13;
\ Published every Wednesday during the academic year,&#13;
except during breaks and holidays, RANGER is printed by&#13;
Zion Publishing Company. Zion, illinois.&#13;
Written permission Is required for reprint of any' portion of&#13;
RANGER content. All correspondence should be addressed&#13;
to Parl&lt;sldeRanger, U,W, Parkslde, WLLC 0-139, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53141.&#13;
Mike Murp/ly, """""""""""""""" ,Editor&#13;
Jon FI.n_gen .....••................. General Manager&#13;
Tom Cooper. . ..•••••........... Student AdYlsor&#13;
John Stewart ...........•.•.••........... News Editor&#13;
Sue St.. en•... ' ............•.••........ Featur. Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhluler , , , , .. ' , , . , , , , , , , , , , , , ,Sportl Editor&#13;
Chftl Miller"" "' ......... """" ,Ad Mlnlg ..&#13;
Mike Holmdohl ' , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , .. , , , Photo Editor&#13;
REPORTINGSTAFF&#13;
Linda Adam., Sheila AUla, Cathy Brownlee, Mollie&#13;
C'lrke, Oaye Cremer, Tom Fervoy, Dee Goodwin, Rose&#13;
KollNllnlk, Pete Jeckel, Thom.. Jenn, Nicki Kroll, Kim&#13;
Putman, Carolyn Rudd, Doneld Scherrer, Ros8m.~&#13;
Shier\&lt;Cha ... Eppo &amp; Oenl.. Sobl.lkl.&#13;
PHOTO&#13;
, Tony RaymOnd,&#13;
GRAPHIC&#13;
Mathew Pollakon.&#13;
letters to the Editor will be accepted for publication if they&#13;
a~e typewritten, double spaced with one inch margins and&#13;
signed by the author. A telephone number must be inclUded&#13;
for purposes of verification. Names will be withheld from&#13;
publication, when valid reasons are giverl.&#13;
RANGER reserves the right to edit letters and refuse&#13;
publication to letters with defamatory or unsuitable content.&#13;
All ~at~rial must be received by Thursday noon for&#13;
~Ubllcat,on on the follOWing Wednesday.&#13;
~..... .. .. .. '. .- ...&#13;
James R. Schlesinger that publication of the article "would increase&#13;
the risks of a thermonuclear war" are ridiculous.&#13;
Edwin' Knoll, editor of The Progressive, explained that the&#13;
information in the article (as that in our cover illustration) is readily&#13;
available and in the public domain. A world power need only address&#13;
the physics section of a major library to .obtain necessary information&#13;
on the bomb's design.&#13;
Possibly, the Government is considering censoring library books&#13;
and arresting physics instructors for releasing information that they&#13;
deem as "dangerous!'&#13;
But if the Government insist'S on slashing it's omnipotent sword&#13;
across the public media, at least it should know what it's fighting.&#13;
The Government claims that the article, ~"How the Hydrogen Bomb&#13;
Works" contains "specific and detailed information concerning the&#13;
design and operation of the H-bomb and certain technical&#13;
information necessary to construct such a bomb.&#13;
Editor Knoll, however, says the title ofthe article is not "How the&#13;
Hydrogen Bomb Works" but "The Hydrogen Bomb Secret." It is&#13;
not, K'noll explains, a kit on how to make an H-bomb, but rather a&#13;
review of the secrecy in the H-bomb business.&#13;
The Government, it seems, is fearful of what the public will find&#13;
out and is embarrased that they were unable to put any hold on tire&#13;
information in the first place. Knoll, because of the restraining&#13;
order, is even unable to show the article to scientists who could help&#13;
in his defense.&#13;
It reflects on ineptitude in the Justice Department not to recognize&#13;
the public's right to know over maintaining government face in the&#13;
wake of revealing potentially embarrassing and damaging&#13;
information.&#13;
Ifthe Government feels impelled to put a restraint on potentially&#13;
harmful and destructive devices, I think it should look at Three Mile&#13;
Island. .&#13;
I,ff--L~~'--....!....:.-~&amp; ~&#13;
.§iJ."1l ~&#13;
----JC&#13;
"&#13;
,I dOn't know how ~ou d~lt us bon f",e&#13;
aces JIIYI, bvt we thInk Itsgrea.t!"&#13;
By Matt Polialcon&#13;
Wednesday April 4, 1919 RANGE~&#13;
Editorial .&#13;
1Progressive' Restrai&#13;
_&#13;
nt&#13;
a Big Step Backward&#13;
By Michael J. Murphy ·&#13;
The cover illustration in this issue was designed by our contributing&#13;
graphic artist and politjcal cartoonist, Matt Poliakon. He&#13;
claims neither great experience in physics nor scholastic honors in&#13;
the field. His information was obtained solely through assorted,&#13;
easily attainable physics books. His design, he assures, given certain&#13;
omissions and misinformation, is accurate and very feasible.&#13;
I felt, as a comment on freedom of the press and the right of free&#13;
and open discussion in American society, that publication of the&#13;
diagram was totally warranted. - .&#13;
This decision, if you haven't already guessed, is in response to the&#13;
restraining order by U.S. Justice Federal Judge Robert Warren on&#13;
The Progressive magazine. The restr"aint is on an,article that would&#13;
purportedly make the secrets of the hydrogen bomb public.&#13;
The restraining order, based partially on fear and partially on&#13;
irrationality and ignorance sets another alarming precedent in the&#13;
Government's ability to hold back information the public needs to&#13;
know about.&#13;
The decision, which is in direct violation of the 1st Amendment,&#13;
hints the destruction of the philosophical and moral foundation by&#13;
which this country was built. . . the right to speak and the right of&#13;
knowledge.&#13;
The Progressive has been known, over the years, to take a strong&#13;
stand against the growth of nuclear power and the creation of&#13;
nuclear weapons. Howard Morland, the author of the article, has&#13;
also given talks on nuclear weapons and was actively involved in the&#13;
peace movement.&#13;
The decision to print the story was an editorial one. The magazine&#13;
placed an importance on stimulating public knowledge on what goes&#13;
into the making of such a horrible and. destructive weapon.&#13;
Allegations by the Justice Department and Energy Secretary&#13;
\&#13;
RANGER Is written and edited by students of U.W. Parkside&#13;
and they are solely responsible for Its editorial policy and&#13;
content.&#13;
~ Published every Wednesday during the academic year,&#13;
except during breaks and holidays, RANGER is printed by&#13;
Zion Publishing Company, Zion, Illinois.&#13;
Written permission Is required for reprint of any· portion of&#13;
RANGER content. All correspondence should be addressed&#13;
to Parkside Ranger, U.W. Parkside, WLLC D-139, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53141 .&#13;
Mike Murphy ........... . .................... .. Editor&#13;
Jon Flanagan ....................... . General Manager&#13;
Tom Cooper .......................... Student Advisor&#13;
John Stewart ......................... . .. News Editor&#13;
Sue Stevens . . .' . . ...................... Feature Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser .. . ................... . Sports Editor&#13;
Chris Miller . ... .. .......... . ............. Ad Manager&#13;
Mike Holmdohl .................... . .... ~Photo Editor&#13;
REPORTING STAFF&#13;
Linda Adams, Shella Asala, Cathy Brownlee, Mollie&#13;
Clarke, Dave Cramer, Tom Fervoy, Dee Goodwin, Rose&#13;
Kolbasnlk, Pete Jackel, Thomas Jenn, Nickl Kroll, Kim&#13;
Putman, Carolyn Rudd, Donald Scherrer, RosemariY&#13;
Shierk Chavez Epps &amp; Denise Sobieski.&#13;
PHOTO&#13;
Tony Raymond,&#13;
GRAPHIC&#13;
Mathew Pollakon.&#13;
Letters to ~he Editor will be accepted for publication if they&#13;
a~e typewritten, double spaced with one inch margins and&#13;
signed by the author. A telephone number must be included&#13;
for purposes of verification. Names will be withheld from&#13;
publication, when valid reasons are given.&#13;
RANGER reserves the right to edit letters and refuse&#13;
publication to letters with defamatory or unsuitable content.&#13;
All ~at~rial must be received by Thursday noon for&#13;
~ublicat1on on the following Wednesday.&#13;
. . .&#13;
/&#13;
., . - . . . . ~&#13;
James R. Schlesinger that publication of the articl~ "would increase&#13;
the risks of a thermonuclear war" are ridiculous. ,&#13;
Edwin· Knoll, editor of The Progressive, explained that the&#13;
information in the article (as that in our cover illustration) is readily&#13;
available and in the public domain. A world power need only address&#13;
the physics section of a major library to ,obtain necessafy information&#13;
on the bomb's design.&#13;
Possibly, the Government is considering censoring library books&#13;
and arresting physics instructors for releasing information that they ~&#13;
deem as "dangerous."&#13;
But if the Government insists on slashing it's omnipotent sword&#13;
across the public media·, at least it should know what it's fighting. ,&#13;
The Government claims that the article, '"How the Hydrogen Bomb&#13;
Works" contains "specific and detailed information concerning the&#13;
design and operation of the H-bomb and certain technica!&#13;
information necessary to construct such a bomb.&#13;
Editor Knoll, however, says the title of the article is not "How the&#13;
Hydrogen Bomb Works" but "The Hydrogen Bomb Secret." It is&#13;
not, Knoll explains, a kit on how to make an H-bomb, but rather a&#13;
review of the secrecy in the H-bomb business.&#13;
The Government, it seems, is fearful of what the public will find&#13;
out and is embarrased that they were unable to put any hold on the&#13;
information in the first place. Knoll, because of the restraining&#13;
order, is even unable to show the article to scientists who could help&#13;
in his defense.&#13;
It reflects on ineptitude in the Justice Department not to re~ognize&#13;
the public's right to know over maintaining government face in the&#13;
wake of revealing potentially embarrassing and damaging&#13;
information.&#13;
If the Government feels impelled to put a restraint on potentially&#13;
harmful and destructive devices, I think it should look at Three Mile 'It:&#13;
Island. '&#13;
II&#13;
I do"'t know how ~ou c/~l t us both f ,ve&#13;
oces J,m, bvt we 11',nk ,tsgrea.t!"&#13;
By Matt Poliakon · ~ &#13;
,.dll, Apri' 4, J 979&#13;
IANGII&#13;
incident how do you feel Letters to the Editor&#13;
Petitioll For&#13;
Henderson'&#13;
No Help&#13;
CROP Spon 0&#13;
Hunger Hike&#13;
•&#13;
In Kenosha&#13;
This Sunday&#13;
a gross example of hov. the&#13;
pers~nal review committee memfests.It&#13;
politicism without regard for&#13;
the Interests of the student bed&#13;
Thi . y.&#13;
IS miSrepresentation is remrmscent&#13;
of hearings in the McCan-hy&#13;
era. I am no longer placated by&#13;
surface arguments which disparage&#13;
Pro~essor Henderson's academic&#13;
achievements. His work has been&#13;
superb and has earned for him the&#13;
respect of his students and&#13;
colleagues. Parkside is losing ao&#13;
excellent scholar.&#13;
My thanks to the many students&#13;
who supported Professor Henderson.&#13;
Sincerely.&#13;
Ralph W. Moody.&#13;
Laue Woodland. I think'that&#13;
they need to do a lot more&#13;
eeaee r-eh on what to do with wa~le&#13;
and they need 10 know how to '&#13;
IIhut down in I eese 0 emergency. To the Editor,&#13;
During the final weeks of&#13;
February signatures were collected&#13;
on a petition supporting Assistant&#13;
Professor John Henderson of the&#13;
Ge~gr~phy Department in his&#13;
quest tor tenure reevaluation. On&#13;
February 28th I visited ViceChancellor&#13;
Ratner and presented to&#13;
him this petition on behalf of the&#13;
student body.&#13;
1 explained the seriousness and&#13;
sincerity of our position to him. He&#13;
expressed his understanding of the&#13;
situation and agreed to look into&#13;
the matter on our behalf. He added&#13;
that any real action would have to&#13;
be prompted by Professor&#13;
Henderson through administrative&#13;
channels.&#13;
Accordingly, Professor Henderson&#13;
wrote a two page letter&#13;
explaining his position and&#13;
expressing his desire to remain at&#13;
Parkside. In a return letter (of five&#13;
lines) the Vice-Chancellor turned&#13;
him down, citing the lack of a&#13;
procedural method for re-opening&#13;
the case. In essence, it seems as&#13;
though the existing rules were used&#13;
as an t:.xcuse for inaction.&#13;
It would be unfair, however, to&#13;
pin the blame for this travesty on&#13;
anyone person especially considering&#13;
the lapse of time between the&#13;
tenure denial and) the student&#13;
appeal. However, I do feel that the&#13;
student body was caught off-guard.&#13;
Students don't expect the university&#13;
to fire its finest professors.&#13;
It is. a sad testimony to the&#13;
democratic process when a petition&#13;
expressing strong student set&#13;
sentiment has no power. After all,&#13;
isn't this whole affair a matter of&#13;
power and politics. It is an&#13;
incredible shame that the tenure&#13;
process is saturated with such&#13;
politicism. Professor Henderson&#13;
was misrepresented and his case is&#13;
T..... £AIIoeo •••&#13;
Whe:n we take: lime from r&#13;
CN n struggle to think of the&#13;
thirds of the world locked In I htl&#13;
and·death ttanlc for tll"1\ll.&#13;
fell powerless. What caq • penon&#13;
do! JOin me people _he are&#13;
doing \Ome:thlng. that' _hat&#13;
Ken~hI' Hunger Hike'. un&#13;
day. Apnl 8, 1 to 4 p.m •• u • teemile&#13;
lloa~'of helpin hungr) pcopk&#13;
CROP, the inter-farth group thai&#13;
rs runmng the HIke. n rftpom. bk&#13;
and effective. CROP bdlt'\ In&#13;
dlrtCl aid and to d~tlopment&#13;
the target ccuntrv's n raources&#13;
About cne-Ieurth of the mann&#13;
raised laY' In I\C' h. r;&#13;
emergenc~ food nca:l&#13;
Partl~lpatC' In the Hun H1 C'&#13;
as. hiker ponsor ,. t&#13;
a mll ") or helper II the&#13;
pomt In! n cod 1&#13;
Chur&lt;h.919bOlh I&#13;
the SC\ n bee potn&#13;
Parkslde: .,hkt Ibe&#13;
or runnmg - I&#13;
them. ma be I' I more m&#13;
paf.'t'. and rea h out to&#13;
n=l our help&#13;
for lnfannalion&#13;
ICA 120) ur me Yo u.C ) III&#13;
in my offK'C'nC' d. about 11.:&#13;
to 2.JO p.m I ha\C' • m&#13;
wpplv of enll) b nk For nof&#13;
help, all Ka Yo ade&#13;
coordlnll r t -46)&#13;
You don't hnr I bf •&#13;
Ken hln 1 ,nlk If\' ~ n knd&#13;
a hand (and I '0 fC't't Mel • han)&#13;
10 Ihe Hunlrtt Hike&#13;
~ Rexhsusen: I think they&#13;
.... Wll•t build any more. They&#13;
".'1 Plow enough ahout it right&#13;
,p. fa.lion would be alright&#13;
f Ikeybew how to haodle it&#13;
III linton it too de nger-c ue,&#13;
, Zimmer&#13;
Thanks&#13;
Supporters&#13;
To the EdJtor.&#13;
l would like to take this&#13;
opportunity to extend a thank YOU&#13;
to all of the students who backed&#13;
me in the recent student&#13;
government elections.&#13;
I feel several groups should&#13;
receive special recognition. The&#13;
staffs of both Parltside Perspectnt!&#13;
and the Ranger did an excellent&#13;
job of presenting the news of tfi.e&#13;
candidates. 1 am panicularly&#13;
grateful to a11 the .people who&#13;
helped my campaign by making&#13;
posters, buttons or by talking to&#13;
their friends and getting them to&#13;
vote.&#13;
I would also like to send a&#13;
special note of thanks to the group&#13;
of students who stood behind me&#13;
after my unfortunate campaign $et&#13;
back of March 4. Their continued&#13;
backing restored my faith in the&#13;
students of Parkside.&#13;
In closing, I would like to SlY&#13;
that) am looking forward to my&#13;
term as President ofP.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
My office will always be open Ind I&#13;
look forward to helping Ihe&#13;
students of Parkside.&#13;
Sincerely.&#13;
Tim Zimmer&#13;
Phillip Tohl: I, ~till feel they&#13;
ehou ld continue uBing nucl~ar power.&#13;
They do have the back-up eyetems&#13;
and there WlltO't any great dit.Bler&#13;
from it (the Three Mile bland&#13;
incident).&#13;
'. J.!.&#13;
!Ie Valeule: I think they "ld pUI a little more effort&#13;
.. Ue tafely atpectB. There&#13;
lit 72 nuclear power plautt in&#13;
"U. S. aud on!&gt;' 12-safety&#13;
.to'" to cover them all.&#13;
ne, den.itely thould have more"&#13;
1Ipetto1"l.'&#13;
Peace.&#13;
. Floren«M hi&#13;
Look Wflat We Have!&#13;
Sample Price List Sample Food List&#13;
45· a&#13;
1.63·lb&#13;
165·lb •&#13;
1.701b&#13;
179 lb.&#13;
1 75·lb&#13;
2S-lb&#13;
Wheat Germ .36·lb. Lettuce&#13;
Active YeasI' 131-lb. Colby&#13;
Butter 13S·lb. Muenster&#13;
large Eggs .76'00'. Cheddar Md&#13;
Dennon Yogurt .40-8 oz. Honey&#13;
Homo Milk 1.59-901. Cashews&#13;
2 percent Milk 1.5O-gal. Rolled Oats&#13;
Catherine Clark Breads .... 10 percent off list&#13;
All Vitamins &amp; Supplements .... 2O percent off list.&#13;
\&#13;
~ FOOD CO-OP stocks a $10,000.00 inventory including: a complete&#13;
bne of Borden's dairy products _Maya and Dennon Yogurt, keifer and ice&#13;
cream, farm fresh eggs, natural Wisconsin cheeses, CatherIne Cl~rk&#13;
breads, Kallas Honey products, Pepperridge Farm· products, a WIde&#13;
selection of fresh nuts. unsulferred dried fruits, grains, flours. oIls, whole.&#13;
wheat and spinach pastas, fresh natural juices, sodi~m nitrate and nitrate&#13;
free meats, canned goods, vitamins. soaps and shampoos, teas and spIces,&#13;
fiaagen-Oazs ice cream· and puffed millet!&#13;
(Above are member prices for April 1. 1979. Our prices do change. but nOl&#13;
very often.)&#13;
AND LO OK AROUND! STOP IN Only $5.00 tyro&#13;
for student&#13;
memberships&#13;
Jk Are&#13;
/.ton, &amp; F' r . r~...&#13;
lJe.· Wed.' Thur . 10 -10&#13;
And Sat..". 10:: 5&#13;
Open:&#13;
.10 - 6&#13;
,,,,,sdoy April 4, 1979&#13;
the Three Mile Island incident how do You feel plants?&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Letters to the Edit r :..&#13;
Lane Woodland: I think ' that&#13;
they need to do a lot more&#13;
re1earc b on what to do with waete&#13;
and they need to k now how to '&#13;
1hut down in&#13;
Petition For&#13;
Henderson·&#13;
No Help&#13;
a gross exampl of ho t&#13;
pers~nal revie" committee manifests&#13;
it politi . m "ith ut re ard I r&#13;
the_ inte_rests of the tudent boo •&#13;
This misrepresentation i remtni·&#13;
scent of hearin in th Mc rth .&#13;
era. I am no longer pla ated b&#13;
surface argument which disp ra •&#13;
Professor Henderson's a d ·&#13;
CROP o&#13;
Hunger&#13;
Johln Rexhausen: I think they&#13;
~oaldn't build any more. They&#13;
i,,·, know enough about it r ight&#13;
1&#13;
,.,, Fu11ion would be alright&#13;
I ihey knew how to handle it&#13;
••' fi11ion ie too dangeroue.&#13;
~e Valente: I thin k t h ey&#13;
,i,,id put a little more effort&#13;
110 the 1afety a ape cta. There&#13;
trt 72 nuclear powe r i,lante in&#13;
it U, S. and on ly 12 oafety&#13;
lllpectors to cove r them a 11.&#13;
lley definitely ohou ld h ave more"&#13;
ptCIOl'I, ·&#13;
c , , e of emergency.&#13;
Phillip Tohl: I, ,till feel they&#13;
1hould continue using nucl~ar power.&#13;
They do have the back-up oyotemo&#13;
and there waen't any great disaster&#13;
from it (the Three Mile bland&#13;
incident).&#13;
• 'I '"' .... ~ .• •&#13;
To the Editor, /&#13;
During the final weeks of&#13;
February signatures were collected&#13;
on a petition supporting Assistant&#13;
Professor John Henderson of the&#13;
Geography Department in his&#13;
quest tor tenure reevaluation. On&#13;
February 28th I visited ViceChancelJor&#13;
Ratner and presented to&#13;
him this petition on behalf of the&#13;
student body.&#13;
I expla ined the seriousness and&#13;
sincerity of our position to him. He&#13;
expressed his understanding of the&#13;
situation and agreed to look into&#13;
the matter on our behalf. He added&#13;
·that any real action would have to&#13;
be prompted by Professor&#13;
Henderson through administrative&#13;
channels.&#13;
Accordingly, Professor Henderson&#13;
wrote a two page letter&#13;
explaining his position and&#13;
expressing his desire to remain at&#13;
Parkside. In a return letter (of five&#13;
lines) the Vice-Chancellor turned&#13;
him down, citing the lack of a&#13;
procedural method for re-opening&#13;
the case. In essence, it seems as&#13;
though the existing rules were used&#13;
as an excuse for inaction.&#13;
It would be unfair, however, to&#13;
pin the blame for this travesty on&#13;
any one person especially considering&#13;
the lapse of time between the&#13;
tenure denial and ) the student&#13;
appeal. However, I do feel that the&#13;
student body was caught off-guard.&#13;
Students don't expect the university&#13;
to fire its finest professors.&#13;
It is. a sad testimony to the&#13;
democratic process when a petition&#13;
expressing strong student set&#13;
sentiment has no power. After all,&#13;
isn't this whole affair a matter of&#13;
power and politics. It is an&#13;
incredible shame that the tenure&#13;
process is saturated with such&#13;
politici~m. Professor Henderson&#13;
was misrepresented and his case is&#13;
h . cm1 ac 1evements. His wor h n&#13;
superb and has earned for him the&#13;
respect of his students nd&#13;
colleagues. Parkside is I in an&#13;
excellent scholar.&#13;
My thanks to the man tudent&#13;
who supported Profes r Hender- son.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Ralph W. Mood&#13;
Zimmer&#13;
Thanks&#13;
Supporters&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
I would like to iake thi&#13;
opportunity to extend a thank u&#13;
to all of the student ho b c ed&#13;
me in the recent tudent&#13;
government election .&#13;
I feel everal group h uld&#13;
job of presenting the vie s&#13;
candidate . I am particul rl&#13;
grateful to all the people wh&#13;
helped my campaign by m kin&#13;
posters. buttons or by talkin to&#13;
their friends and getting them to&#13;
vote.&#13;
I would al o like to end&#13;
special note of thank to th group&#13;
of students who stood behind m&#13;
after my unfortunate campai n et&#13;
back of March 4. Their 1..'0ntinued&#13;
backing restored m)· faith · n the&#13;
students of Park ide.&#13;
In closing, I would Ii t a&#13;
that t am looking forward to m&#13;
term as President of P .. GA., In .&#13;
My office will alway be open and I&#13;
look forward to helping the&#13;
students of Parkside.&#13;
inccrel •&#13;
Tim Zimm r&#13;
•&#13;
I&#13;
Thi&#13;
Look Wfiat We Hav--&#13;
Sample Food List&#13;
\&#13;
'.he FOOC&gt; CO-OP stocks a $10,000.00 inventory including: a complete&#13;
hne of Borden's dairy products. Maya and Dannon Yogurt, keif~r and ice&#13;
cream, farm fresh eggs, natural Wisconsin cheeses, Catherine Cl~rk&#13;
breads, Kallas Honey products, Pepperridge Farm, products, a wide&#13;
selection of fresh nuts unsulferred dried fruits, grains, flours, oils, whole_&#13;
wheat and spinach pa~tas, fresh natural juices, sodium nitrate and ni!rate&#13;
free meats·, canned goods, vitamins, soaps and shampoos, teas and spices,&#13;
Haagen-Dazs ice cream.and puffed millet!&#13;
Sample Price Lis&#13;
Wheat Germ .36-lb. Lettuc&#13;
Active Yeast 1.31-lb. Colby&#13;
Butter 1.35-lb. Muenst r&#13;
Large Eggs .76-doz. Ch ddar Md&#13;
Dannon Yogurt .40-8 oz. Honey&#13;
Homo Milk 1.59-gal. Ca h w&#13;
2 percent Milk 1.50-gal. Rolled Oa&#13;
Catherine Clark Breads .... 10 percent off h t&#13;
All Vitamins &amp; Supplements.. 20 p rcent off 11 .&#13;
(Above are member prices for April 1, 1979 Our prlc&#13;
very often.)&#13;
I&#13;
•&#13;
IN AND AROUND r&#13;
Only $5.00 /yr. We.. Are Open: ~ .&#13;
on. &amp; Fr,· 10 - 6 r . .. . for student&#13;
IJe. · Wed.· Thur. . 10 -10&#13;
And Sat . . , . 10 - 5&#13;
~ memberships&#13;
e&#13;
"'I &#13;
.--------~--------- Wednesday April 4, 1979 RANGER&#13;
De""opmental/v Disabled&#13;
Bluegrass Benefit at UWP&#13;
state's developmental disabilities&#13;
system as the local community&#13;
service boards are geared only to&#13;
providing services for people in the&#13;
state category which is more&#13;
limiting than the current federal&#13;
category," Wittenmyer said.&#13;
However. Dennis Fillippelli,&#13;
director of the Kenosha Center said&#13;
that the law "doesn't affect us a&#13;
great deal at the present time. It&#13;
will affect the federal program, but&#13;
the state program remains the&#13;
same.&#13;
The Developmental Disabilities&#13;
program, explained Fillippelli, "is&#13;
doing an impact study on how the&#13;
Federal law will affect the -state&#13;
law."&#13;
Under Wisconsin law and the old&#13;
federal law only people with mental&#13;
retardation, cerebral palsy, epilepsy,&#13;
autism and other similar&#13;
conditions were considered to have&#13;
a developmental disability. The&#13;
local community service boards for&#13;
developmental disabilities are&#13;
The Developmental Disabilities&#13;
Service Center of Kenosha will hold&#13;
a Bluegrass Benefit at the&#13;
UW -Parks ide Student Union on&#13;
April 27 at 7 p.m. untit 1 a.m.&#13;
The concert will feature five&#13;
bluegrass bands including 1978&#13;
National Bluegrass Championsthe&#13;
Blue Ridge Mountain Grass&#13;
from Illinois, Alive and Tickin'&#13;
from Oshkosh, and Home-cookin.&#13;
The concert is being sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association and the University&#13;
of Wisconsin Parkside.&#13;
The Developmental Disabilities&#13;
Center, near St. Catherine's&#13;
Hospital in Kenosha, is a United&#13;
Way agency servicing the Kenosha&#13;
County area. The term "developmentally&#13;
disabled" refers to&#13;
disabilities arising from mental&#13;
retardation, cerebral palsy, epilepsy,&#13;
or other neurological&#13;
conditions related to mental&#13;
retardation.&#13;
The center provides day care and&#13;
home training facilities for&#13;
developmentally disabled children.&#13;
Classes in areas of speech.&#13;
occupational, and physical therapy&#13;
are offered to help the children&#13;
master motor skills, self help skills&#13;
(feeding, dressing, and toileting),&#13;
and speech and language skills.&#13;
Other activities such as respite&#13;
parent training. counseling programs,&#13;
and speaking forums to&#13;
create public awareness of&#13;
developmental disabilities are&#13;
offered by the Center.&#13;
Barbara Gartzke, program&#13;
coordinator at the Center.&#13;
explained that the-Center requested&#13;
$10,000 for a recreation program&#13;
for the mentally retarded but only&#13;
~ceive'" $2,000 from state grants&#13;
and aids. This, in addition to the&#13;
fact that the Center is attempting to&#13;
extend its services to include more&#13;
children. necessitates a fund raising&#13;
program. "All money." Gartzke&#13;
explained, "goes directly to the&#13;
children." The Kenosha Center&#13;
services children from the ages of 6&#13;
to 19.&#13;
Gartzke said that she hopes to&#13;
raise at least $5.000 through the&#13;
bluegrass concert.&#13;
Recently a state panel reviewed&#13;
the affect of services and funding&#13;
on statewide dvelopmental pregrams,&#13;
by a recent change in the&#13;
federal law. The law, passed by&#13;
Congress last fall. might increase&#13;
the number of people identified as&#13;
having a developmental disability&#13;
from 89,000 to 150,000 or more&#13;
according to Jayn Wittemyer,&#13;
Executive Director of the Wisconsin&#13;
Council on Developmental&#13;
Disabilities.&#13;
"This could cause difficulties in&#13;
providing services through the&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
4433-22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 65~77 4&#13;
All MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
supported by federal, state, and&#13;
local monies.&#13;
Now under federal law,&#13;
blindness, deafness, arthritis,&#13;
spinal cord injuries and other&#13;
conditions can be termed developmental&#13;
disabilities if the conditions&#13;
impede the life functions of the&#13;
individual and create difficulties&#13;
before the individual reaches&#13;
twenty-one.&#13;
"Many potential consumers have&#13;
assumed _they can get services&#13;
through these local boards but the&#13;
boards are not mandated to operate&#13;
under the federal law and so do not&#13;
have to provide services. We need&#13;
to look at what kind of impact this&#13;
federal law will have in terms of&#13;
money and administration" and&#13;
services to people in the state," said&#13;
Wittenmyer.&#13;
WEAC WITHDRAWS HIGHER&#13;
EDUCATION -COLLECTIVE&#13;
BARGAINING BILL&#13;
WILL SUPPORT SB 121&#13;
In an attempt to insure passage of enabling legislation for higher education collective&#13;
bargaining, the Wisconsin Education Association Council will withdraw its collective&#13;
bargaining bill from the legislature. We feel that the presence of a second bill can only&#13;
serve to impeed passage of collective bargaining enabling legislation.&#13;
However, there are several items in ~ 121 which we feel should be changed. The&#13;
present unit language still fails to provide an option to the academic staff, except at&#13;
Madison and Milwaukee, for separate collective bargaining units if they so desire. We&#13;
full comprehend the arguments on both sides of this issue. However, we believe that a&#13;
number of academic staff employees will show up at the legislature to ask that the bill&#13;
provide this option. Further, we have consistently opposed anything in the scope of&#13;
bargaining other than "compensation, hours, and conditions of employment." Tile truth&#13;
should come out at the bargaining table and not in the legislature. We do not feel. based&#13;
on our experiences at the collective bargaining table, that the current scope of bargaining&#13;
language in SB 121 provides for anything other than confusion.&#13;
It isour intention to initiate discussion with TAUWF and the legislature in an effort to&#13;
make what we feel are reasonable and politically intelligent changes in SB 121. We urge&#13;
each of you to write letters to your local legislator in support Of collective bargaining for&#13;
higher education and to attend the forthcoming hearings in support of higher education&#13;
collective bargaining enabling legislation.&#13;
The above is an edictorial by Dr. John W. Coe , Higher Education Consultant for the&#13;
Wisconsin Education Association Counsil.&#13;
Paid Polilical Advertisement&#13;
Cltiwallkee lIews&#13;
o&#13;
Tidbits for&#13;
Easy Living - ,&#13;
by tbe friends of tb. Co-ep&#13;
*Popcorn pops because wheat varieties are I each&#13;
kernel contains a minute amount of&#13;
water. As it heats the moisture&#13;
t~rns to steam and a little explosion&#13;
splits the kernels open. If you have&#13;
some popcorn that has been sitting&#13;
out for awhile and has become too when cut lengthwise, and eel&#13;
lazy to pop, just soak it for 15 retains more of its nutritional val&#13;
minutes in cold water, drain and try, when cut diagonally.&#13;
again. .Nails go through hard surfa&#13;
«Before you work on the car, better if lubricated in some WI&#13;
lather your hands up good with grease or water.&#13;
soap and let them dry. The grease • A missing spark plug can&#13;
can '! penetrate r in~o ~!t..,eP9~es ~nd.&lt;&gt;~- detecteq.R:Y~I~t.a.rt#,tg r,&amp;hr' eRg!&#13;
~'.- '.&#13;
will wash right off. turning it off and checking the b&#13;
"If you get drinking glasses stuck of each plug. The one that's cold&#13;
together put the bottom one in hot the culprit.&#13;
water and pour cold water into the .. A couple of. tin cans in t&#13;
top one. middle of the fireplace will abso&#13;
"Next time you paint. glue a heat and radiate a surprisi&#13;
paper plate to the bottom of the amount into the room. Repla&#13;
paint can and you won't have to every three or four times -.&#13;
move the papers along and it'll "Hardened paint brushes rna&#13;
keep things neat. become soft- again by simmerin&#13;
*To determine how much _paint them in vineg~r and then washin&#13;
you'll need divide the number of them in soapy water .&#13;
• Research proves that the earli square feet of surface by 200. This&#13;
gives you the gallons needed for 2 you start to smoke cigerettes th&#13;
heavier you tend to smoke. Twice coats.&#13;
~The difference between noodles many high school students smoke i&#13;
.both parents smoke as compared t and macaroni is eggs. If high&#13;
~ those whose parents don't smoke&#13;
quality flour is used the noodles will • Snails anti slugs preying 0&#13;
be higher in protein than the your garden love beer. Put som&#13;
macaroni. If not, the macaroni, saucers around, flush with th&#13;
even without eggs will have about ground hose in the evening, and i&#13;
the same nutritional value. Whole the morning - dead drunks.&#13;
have the best taste.&#13;
·Mosquitoes are attracted to w&#13;
clothing more so than dry, and t&#13;
like the color blue.&#13;
THE&#13;
BACK&#13;
DOOR 2608 21st Sl.&#13;
Rocine, Wisconiin&#13;
63"-3810&#13;
OPEl DAILY&#13;
AIID EVENINGS&#13;
CLOSED MOIIDAYS&#13;
"'[MALE STAU:&#13;
. Hairstyling.&#13;
Facials.&#13;
Manicures&#13;
FOR MEN&#13;
Complete line of HI products for 1m&#13;
-&#13;
Wednesday April 4, 1979 RANGER&#13;
Developmentally Disabled&#13;
Bluegrass Benefit at UWP&#13;
The Developmental Disabilities&#13;
Service Center of Kenosha will hold&#13;
a Bluegrass Benefit at the&#13;
UW-Parkside Student Union on&#13;
April 27 at 7 p.m. until 1 a.m.&#13;
The concert will feature five&#13;
bluegrass bands including 1978&#13;
ational Bluegrass Championsthe&#13;
Blue Ridge Mountain Grass&#13;
from Illinois, Alive and Tickin'&#13;
from Oshkosh, and Home-cookin.&#13;
The concert is being sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association and the University&#13;
of Wisconsin Parkside.&#13;
The Developmental Disabilities&#13;
Center, near St. Catherine's&#13;
Hospital in Kenosha, is a United&#13;
Way agency servicing the Kenosha&#13;
County area. The term "developmentally&#13;
disabled" refers to&#13;
disabilities arising from mental&#13;
retardation, cerebral palsy, epilepsy,&#13;
or other neurological&#13;
conditions related to mental&#13;
retardation.&#13;
The center provides day care and&#13;
home trammg facilities for&#13;
developmentally disabled children.&#13;
Classes in areas of speech,&#13;
occupational, and physical therapy&#13;
are offered to help the children&#13;
master motor skills, self help skills&#13;
(feeding, dressing, and toileting),&#13;
and speech and language skills.&#13;
Other activities such as respite&#13;
parent training, counseling proMember&#13;
Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
grams, and speaking forums to&#13;
create public awareness of&#13;
developmental disabilities are&#13;
offered by the Center.&#13;
Barbara Gartzke, program&#13;
coordinator at the Center,&#13;
explained that the-Center requested&#13;
$10,000 for a recreation program&#13;
fqr the mentally retarded but only&#13;
receive $2,000 from state grants&#13;
and aids. This, in addition to the&#13;
fact that the Center is attempting to&#13;
extend its services to include more&#13;
children, necessitates a fund raising&#13;
program. "All money," Gartzke&#13;
explained, "goes directly to the&#13;
children." The Kenosha Center&#13;
services children from the ages of 6&#13;
to 19.&#13;
Gartzke said that she hopes to&#13;
raise at least $5,000 through the&#13;
bluegrass concert.&#13;
Recently a state panel reviewed&#13;
the affect of services and funding&#13;
on statewide dvelopmental programs,&#13;
by a recent change in the&#13;
federal law. The law, passed by&#13;
Congress last fall, might increase&#13;
the number of people identified as&#13;
having a developmental disability&#13;
from 89,000 to 150,000 or more&#13;
according to Jayn Witternyer,&#13;
Executive Director of the Wisconsin&#13;
Council on Developmental&#13;
Disabilities.&#13;
"This could cause difficulties in&#13;
providing services through the&#13;
4433-22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 654-077 4&#13;
All MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
state's developmental disabilities&#13;
system as the local community&#13;
service boards are geared only to&#13;
.providing services for people in the&#13;
state category which is more&#13;
limiting than the current federal&#13;
category," Wittenmyer said.&#13;
However, Dennis Fillippelli,&#13;
director of the Kenosha Center said ,&#13;
that the law "doesn't affect us a&#13;
great deal at the present time. It&#13;
will affect the federal program, but&#13;
the state program remains the&#13;
same.&#13;
The Developmental Disabilities&#13;
program, explained Fillippelli, "is&#13;
doing an impact study on how the&#13;
Federal law will affect the state&#13;
law."&#13;
Under Wisconsin law arrd the old&#13;
federal law only people with mental&#13;
retardation, cerebral palsy, epilepsy,&#13;
autism and other similar&#13;
conditions were considered to have&#13;
a developmental disability. The&#13;
local community service boards for&#13;
developmental disabilities are&#13;
supported by federal, state, and&#13;
local monies.&#13;
Now under federal law,&#13;
blindness, deafness, arthritis,&#13;
spinal cord injuries and other&#13;
conditions can be termed developmental&#13;
disabilities if the conditions&#13;
impede the life functions of the&#13;
individual and create difficulties&#13;
before the individual reaches&#13;
twenty-one.&#13;
"Many potential consumers have&#13;
assumed , they can get services&#13;
through these local boards but the&#13;
boards are not mandated to operate&#13;
under the federal law and so do not&#13;
have to provide services. We need&#13;
to look at what kind of impact this&#13;
federal law will have in terms of&#13;
money and administration and&#13;
services to people in the state," said&#13;
Wittenmyer.&#13;
WEAC WITHDRAWS HIGHER&#13;
EDUCATION _ COLLECTIVE&#13;
BARGAINING BILL&#13;
WILL SUPPORT SB 121&#13;
In an attempt to insure passage of enabling legislation for higher education collective&#13;
bargaining, the Wisconsin Education Association Council will withdraw its collective&#13;
bargaining bill from the legislature. We feel that the presence of a second bill can only&#13;
serve to impeed passage of collective bargaining enabling legislation.&#13;
However, there are several items in SB 121 which we feel should be changed. The&#13;
present unit language still fails to provide an option to the academic staff, except at&#13;
Madison and Milwaukee, for separate collective bargaining units if they so desire. We&#13;
full comprehend the arguments on both sides of this issue . However, we believe that a&#13;
number of academic staff employees will show up at the legislature to ask that the bill&#13;
provide this option. Further, we have consistently opposed anything in the scope of&#13;
bargaining other than "compensation, hours, and conditions of employment." Tile truth&#13;
should come out at the bargaining table and not in the legislature . We do not feel, based&#13;
on our experiences at the collective bargaining table, that the current scope of bargaining&#13;
language in SB 121 provides for anything other than confusion.&#13;
It is our intention to initiate discussion with TAUWF and the legislature in an effort to&#13;
make what we feel are reasonable and politically intelligent changes in SB 121. We urge&#13;
each of you to write letters to your local legislator in support o( collective bargaining for&#13;
higher education and to attend the forthcoming hearings in support of higher education&#13;
collective bargaining enabling legislation.&#13;
The above is an edictorial by Dr. John W. Coe, Higher Education Consultant for the&#13;
Wisconsin Education Association Counsil.&#13;
Paid P~litical Advertisement&#13;
Clliwaukee Jlews&#13;
0&#13;
Tidbits for --&#13;
Easy Living '' / ~$&#13;
by the friends of tht Co-op&#13;
*Popcorn pops because I each&#13;
kernel contains a minute amount of&#13;
water. As it heats the moisture&#13;
turns to steam and a little explosion&#13;
splits the kernels open. If you have&#13;
some popcorn that has been sitting&#13;
out for awhile and has become too&#13;
lazy to pop, just soak it for 15&#13;
minutes in cold water, drain and try_&#13;
again.&#13;
*Before you work on the car,&#13;
lather your hands up good with&#13;
soap and let them dry. The grease&#13;
can't penetrate into the pores ~nd&#13;
will wash right off.&#13;
*If you get drinking glasses stuck&#13;
together put the bottom one in hot&#13;
water and pour cold water into the&#13;
top one.&#13;
*Next time you paint, glue a&#13;
paper plate to the bottom of the&#13;
paint can and you won't have to&#13;
move the papers along and it'll&#13;
keep things neat.&#13;
*To determine how much, paint&#13;
you'll need divide the number of&#13;
square feet of surface by 200. This&#13;
gives you the gallons needed for 2&#13;
coats.&#13;
*The difference between noodles&#13;
and macaroni is eggs. If high&#13;
quality flour is used the noodles will&#13;
be higher in protein than the&#13;
macaroni. If not, the macaroni,&#13;
even without eggs will have about&#13;
the same nutritional value. Whole&#13;
THE&#13;
BACK&#13;
DOOR 2608 21st s,. Rocine, WiM:onStn&#13;
634-3810&#13;
OPEN DAILY&#13;
ANO EVENINGS&#13;
CLOSED MONDAYS&#13;
FEMALE STAFF&#13;
Hairstyling,&#13;
Facials,&#13;
Manicures&#13;
FOR MEN&#13;
wheat varieties are the best&#13;
have the best taste.&#13;
retains more of its nutritional valu ..&#13;
when cut diagonally. ~jmir&#13;
*Nails go through hard surfaces·· '&#13;
!&#13;
better if lubricated in some way,,!J.9&#13;
grease or water. l S&#13;
• A missing spark plug can be He's&#13;
detected by ~tartwg the eugleo~"-&#13;
turning it off and checking the base,,-&#13;
of each plug. The one that's cold i&#13;
the culprit. '.-l&#13;
* A couple of tin cans in the 1 lo&#13;
middle of the fireplace will absorb .. at&#13;
h d d. . . ~ eat an ra sate a surpr1smgt&#13;
amount into the room. Replace I&#13;
every three or four times.&#13;
*Hardened paint brushes may~&#13;
become soft- again by simmering 1111_&#13;
them in vinegar and then washing&#13;
them in soapy water. .m&#13;
*Research proves that the earlier~ u&#13;
you start to smoke cigerettes the i&#13;
heavier you tend to smoke. Twice as&#13;
many high school students smoke if ·1!11_&#13;
both parents smoke as compared to _"'1 . ')I&#13;
those whose parents don't smoke. &lt;II&#13;
• Snails and slugs preying on .&#13;
I your garden love beer. Put some&#13;
saucers around, flush with the&#13;
ground hose in the evening, and in 1 •&#13;
the morning- dead drunks. ~p&#13;
llj&#13;
Complete line of RK products for men &#13;
Sports Banquet Honors&#13;
Most Valuable Players&#13;
MAlAAll-American basketball NCAA championships after a fifth Meeks, Lonnie Lewis, Kent&#13;
Lonnie Lewis and national. place finish in the foil at the Great Schneider, Lester Thompsen;&#13;
ions Bob Gruner and John Lakes Tournament. And Swenson, Manager: Paul Charapata.&#13;
Den Brandt were honored a senior from Racine (Horlick), was WOMEN'S BASKETBALL:&#13;
7night (March 30) along with third in the Great Lakes after Cindy Henschel, Diana Kolovos,&#13;
's eager Donna Mann, winning the District 10 women's Donna Mann; Manager; Cindy&#13;
er Jim Ferraro and fencers title. She'll compete April 7 in the Van de Yen.&#13;
Zwolinski and Theresa national women's college champ- MEN'S FENCING: Mike Pasas&#13;
most valuables in their ionship at San Jose State. kiewicz, Bryan Spalla, Mark&#13;
at the UW -Parkside Winter Captains in each sport for Zwolinski.&#13;
Banquet. 1978· 79 were also honored. They WOMEN'S FENCING: Debra HyLewis,&#13;
a 6-8 junior forward from included Marvin Chones and Ioe sell, Theresa Swenson.&#13;
(Simeon), averaged 13.3 Foots for men's basketball; Diana SWIMMING: Ann Conrardy,&#13;
and 10.9 rebounds in leading Kolovos for women's basketball; Jim Ferraro, Rick Lopes, Lowrie&#13;
.p to a 20-9 record and the Zwolinski for men's fencing; Melotik, Jim Walker.&#13;
of the NAIA District 14 Swenson for women's fencing; WRESTLING: Dave Fedie, Bob&#13;
ent. He's Parkside's Ferraro for swimming; and Gruner, Gruner, Rick Kubiak, Steve&#13;
blsketball"a1J.A1ftJ.efit:afi:"=O""~'=-Steve LaCbunt&lt;-irid Ron Zmuda for LaCount, Tom LaCoursiere, Rick&#13;
Gm1er, a junior from Genoa wrestling. Langer, George Nikolopoulos, Bob&#13;
(Lake Geneva Badger), Special awards were also Pekarske, Dean Quam, Dan&#13;
. a 27-2 record and had 17 presented in men's basketball to Winter, Ron Zmuda.&#13;
enroute to the NAIA 1979-80 co-captains Lonnie" Lewis&#13;
ionship at 158 lbs. as and Walter Greene; to Greene as&#13;
. e finished fifth in the the most improved player; to Joe&#13;
meet. Gruner is the fifth Foots and Dave Mcleish as hustle&#13;
to win a national wrestling award winners; and to Foots as thetop&#13;
defensive player.&#13;
Special swimming awards went&#13;
to Jim Walker (bobber) and Chris&#13;
Ohm (sinker).&#13;
Other" wrestling honors went to&#13;
Gruner for most pins and as the&#13;
most inspirational; and to Dean&#13;
Quam as most improved.&#13;
Coaches in each of the winter&#13;
sports-Steve Stephens for men's&#13;
basketball, Sue Tobachnik for&#13;
women's basketball; Loran Hein&#13;
for fencing; Barb Lawson for&#13;
swimming; Bob Lawson for men's&#13;
track; and 'Jim Koch for&#13;
wrestling-presented the awards&#13;
and spoke briefly about their&#13;
seasons.&#13;
Letterwinners follow:&#13;
MEN'S BASKETBALL: Reginald&#13;
Anderson, Man-in Chones, Joe&#13;
Foots, Walter Greene, Alex&#13;
Jennings, Dave McLeish, Lanzy&#13;
flD Den Brandt, a senior from&#13;
OD (West), became UW-P's&#13;
national titlist in the walk&#13;
I victory in the NAIA indoor&#13;
ionships at Kansas City.&#13;
be the odds-on favorite to&#13;
the outdoor 10,000 meter&#13;
crown and give Parkside its&#13;
-SUCCessivewin in that event.&#13;
Mann, a 5-6 freshman guard&#13;
... Rib Lake (Medford), led the&#13;
UI-p women's team with 17.1&#13;
-,4.9 rebounds and 4.2 assists&#13;
......&#13;
Ferraro, a junior from Kenosha&#13;
tadford), led Parkside in scoring&#13;
Ice 'Bain and was the Rangers'&#13;
lit representative in the NAIA&#13;
ttiuDaI swimming championships.&#13;
la-oiinski, a sophomore from&#13;
'-ville (Parker)~ in his second&#13;
IIIr of fencing, advanced to the&#13;
Tropbles&#13;
(Top 4 Players)&#13;
&amp;Ill YO\I'semester with your best work prepared electronically.&#13;
Error Free. Reasonable Rates. Fast Service.&#13;
~eCall MENING SYSTEMS414-886-5998&#13;
*SPECIALISTS IN WORD-PROCESSING FOR:&#13;
TERM PAPE::lS EXECUTIVE RESUMES&#13;
REpORTS - SURVEYS&#13;
"':3EARCHPAPERS GENERAL TYPING&#13;
5&#13;
Care Ce&#13;
to Expa&#13;
The Par sjde Child Can- CIl:Der&#13;
is planning expan I n t Inc DeSe&#13;
(\\0 nev.. progr-ams. a ktnd" anea&#13;
and a ·10 y&lt;v old program Tbe&#13;
Center presend&#13;
schoolers lIf about&#13;
students.&#13;
T~ ktndetprtcn program&#13;
being initiated 10 help cart" f r&#13;
children .. ho norm.11y .a.,dd in&#13;
kinderganen for half • d.,. aDd&#13;
then be traMponed by their&#13;
parents to the Care Center for the&#13;
other half.&#13;
The Care Center hu people&#13;
certified to teach the kinder arten&#13;
The ratio for teachers to cbildren 1$&#13;
about 1 to 16. TeachlOg will focus&#13;
on points such &amp;5 phonet.tC\ and t~&#13;
alphabet as ell as educational&#13;
activities nov. provided by the&#13;
Center.&#13;
The 7·10 jur old program,&#13;
explained One Pedersen, Dean of&#13;
Student Life... ill begin du.rin the&#13;
summer months to care for thole&#13;
children "too youog to be left at&#13;
home but lli"ho only need a htt~&#13;
supervision."&#13;
To get I.he programs ofT lhe&#13;
ground, a memo was KOllO faculty&#13;
members ming for donations to&#13;
help the Center. "Any sludent&#13;
TV&#13;
~t?~R'TS!:E: ~&#13;
Sportilg &amp; Athletic Equpment&#13;
One of The Mldweou t..vea S*:rona&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
14th Ave It 62nd St&#13;
e..- .. 930&#13;
Best of 3&#13;
Game&#13;
Stralabt In&#13;
Call Your&#13;
Pocket&#13;
Miller&#13;
Eight-Ball&#13;
Classic&#13;
Cue Stick&#13;
(I Case lor&#13;
Every Entrant&#13;
When: April 26th, 1979 1:00-5:00 pm&#13;
W-here: Union Recreation Center&#13;
5i Up at Union Ree Center SS.oo HoW: gn •&#13;
Why: Because We Like You.&#13;
Sports Banquet Honors&#13;
Most Valuable Players ~AIA All-American bask~tball NCAA championships after a fifth Meeks, Lonnie Lewis, Kent&#13;
, Lonnie Lewis and national place finish in the foil at the Great Schneider, Lester Thompsun;&#13;
pions Bob Gruner and John Lakes Tournament. And Swenson, Manager: Paul Charapata .&#13;
• Den Brandt were honored a senior from Racine (Horlick), was WOMEN'S BASKETBALL:&#13;
y night (March 30) along with third in the Great Lakes after Cindy Henschel, Diana Kolo os,&#13;
n's cager Donna Mann, winning the District 10 women's Donna Mann; Manager; Cindy&#13;
::uner Jim Ferraro and fencers title. She'll compete April 7 in the Van de Ven.&#13;
Zwolinski and Theresa national women's college champ- MEN'S FENCING: Mike Pas-&#13;
,mson as most valuables in their ionship at San Jose State. kiewicz, Bryan Spalla, Mark&#13;
at the UW-Parkside Winter Captains in each sport for Zwolinski.&#13;
Banquet. 1978-79 were also honored. They WOMEN'S FENCING: Debra H -&#13;
Lewis, a 6-8 junior forward from included Marvin Chones and Joe sell, Theresa Swenson.&#13;
go (Simeon), averaged 13.3 Foots for men's basketball; Diana SWIMMING: Ann Conrardy,&#13;
ts and 10.9rebounds in leading Kolovos for women's basketball; Jim Ferraro, Rick Lopes Lowrie&#13;
·.p to a 20-9 record and the Zwolinski for men's fencing; Melotilc, Jim Walker.&#13;
of the NAIA District 14 Swenson for women's fencing; WRESTLING: Dave Fedie, Bob&#13;
mament. He's Parkside's Ferraro for swimming; and Gruner, Gruner, Rick Kubiak, Steve&#13;
bask-etball&lt;a-11-A"filerlt:afi~-- -,-· Steve LaCount and Ro·n Zniuda for Lacount, Tom LaCoursiere, Rick&#13;
Gruner, a junior from Genoa wrestling. Langer, George Nilcolopoulos, Bob&#13;
(Lake Geneva Badger), Special awards were also Pekarske, Dean Quam, Dan&#13;
piled a 27-2 record and had 17 presented in men's basketball to Winter, Ron Zmuda.&#13;
• enroute to the NAIA 1979-80 co-captains Lonnie· Lewis&#13;
pionship at 158 lbs. as and Walter Greene; to Greene as&#13;
rk.side finished fifth in the the most improved player; to Joe&#13;
. nal meet. Gruner is the fifth Foots and Dave McLeish as hustle&#13;
ger to win a national wrestling award winners; and to Foots as the&#13;
Van Den Brandt, a senior from&#13;
leton (West), became UW-P's&#13;
national titlist in the walk&#13;
~ a victory in the NAIA indoor&#13;
411lpionships at Kansas City.&#13;
·u be the odds-on favorite to&#13;
. 1 the outdoor 10,000 meter&#13;
crown and give Parkside its&#13;
successive win in that event.&#13;
\lann, a 5-6 freshman guard&#13;
Rib Lake (Medford), led the&#13;
,v.p women's team with 17 .1&#13;
ts,4.9 rebounds and 4.2 assists&#13;
top defensive player.&#13;
Special swimming awards went&#13;
to Jim Walker (bobber) and Chris&#13;
Ohm (sinker).&#13;
Other wrestling honors went to&#13;
Gruner for most pins and as the&#13;
most inspirational; and to Dean&#13;
Quam as most improved .&#13;
Mille&#13;
Eight• all&#13;
e.&#13;
Ferraro, a junior from Kenosha&#13;
Bradford), led Parkside in scoring&#13;
again and was the Rangers'&#13;
representative in the NAIA&#13;
llional swimming championships.&#13;
Zwolinski, a sophomore from&#13;
:itsville (Parker), in his second&#13;
of fencing, advanced to the&#13;
Coaches in each of the winter&#13;
sports-Steve Stephens for men's&#13;
basketball, Sue Tobachnilc for&#13;
women's basketball; Loran Hein&#13;
for fencing; Barb Lawson for&#13;
swimming; Bob Lawson for men's&#13;
track; and 'Jim Koch for&#13;
wrestling-presented the awards&#13;
and spoke briefly about their&#13;
seasons.&#13;
betterwinners follow:&#13;
MEN'S BASKETBALL: Reginald&#13;
Anderson, Marvin Chones, Joe&#13;
Foots, Walter Greene, Alex&#13;
Jennings, Dave McLeish, Lanzy&#13;
~d Teiiiii 1vP1iGr~s? . II tnd Y~ur semester with your best work prepared electromca y.&#13;
Error Free. Reasonable Rates. Fast Service.&#13;
~eCall MENING SYSTEMS 414-995-5999&#13;
*SPECIALISTS IN WORD-PROCESSING FOR:&#13;
ERM PAPE~S EXECUTIVE RESUMES&#13;
REPORTS SURVEYS&#13;
"":~EAACH PAPERS GENERAL TYPING&#13;
Classic&#13;
Be t of 3&#13;
Trophies&#13;
(Top 4 Players)&#13;
Cut, St1c&#13;
8 Ca e for&#13;
Every Entr&#13;
When: April ~6th, 1979&#13;
W-here: Union Beere t·o&#13;
How: Sign Up at Union&#13;
Why: Because We Li e Y&#13;
:o&#13;
t&#13;
0 &#13;
Wednesday Apri' 4, J 1J11J RANGER / .'&#13;
It Just Shows To Go YQ•••&#13;
Throw the Key Away , .&#13;
by Sue Stevens&#13;
After breaking my house key in&#13;
the door last week. I've had it! I'm&#13;
sick of fumbling with keys in the&#13;
dark, eo!'pecially when I'm in a&#13;
hurry. I'm fed up with hunting all&#13;
over the house for the keys to a car.&#13;
I'm tired of having expensive copies&#13;
of keys made by morons in&#13;
department stores, only to find&#13;
later that the keys don't work right.&#13;
Why shouldI have to bother with&#13;
keys at all? Why can't someone use&#13;
modern technology to find an&#13;
alternative to the lock and key?&#13;
For about 4,&lt;XlOyears (The oldest&#13;
known example of a lock and key is&#13;
an Egyptian style lock that hasbeen&#13;
dated to be approximately&#13;
4,000 years old.) people have been&#13;
locking up their belongings with&#13;
keys. It seems to me that we're&#13;
ready for a change, but I don't&#13;
think everyone agrees with me.&#13;
The manufacturers of locks.&#13;
keys, key rings, and other pieces of&#13;
junk that go with keys have too&#13;
much invested in their businesses to&#13;
change now. (I'd give my typewriter&#13;
to have Linus Yale's small fortune.)&#13;
Who knows, someone may have&#13;
already invented an alternative but&#13;
was bought off by the 'bigger&#13;
companies who were protecting&#13;
their market. -&#13;
It would take much more than&#13;
the introduction of a new invention&#13;
to rid ourselves of keys forever. Too&#13;
many people use keys for other&#13;
purposes besides unlocking things.&#13;
For many people, keys are a&#13;
status symbol. The more keys one&#13;
carries, the higher his status. To&#13;
have a key to an office makes a&#13;
person feel like he's someone to be&#13;
looked up to in a way. Of course,&#13;
this is warranted much of the time,&#13;
but there are people who walk&#13;
down halls jingling their keys just&#13;
to be sure that everyone knows that&#13;
they have them.&#13;
Keys are also good as a toy to&#13;
play with when nervous. Many&#13;
people waiting for someone fondle&#13;
their keys in different ways. Some&#13;
throw them up in the air and catch&#13;
them over and over. Others take&#13;
one key and turn it around the key&#13;
ring, then take the next-one and do&#13;
the same thing with it. Then there&#13;
are those who shake them to their&#13;
own special rhythm, annoying&#13;
everybody around them:&#13;
It seems to me that someone&#13;
would've come up with' something&#13;
by now that would serve "the same&#13;
purpose without all the bother.&#13;
Maybe there's some way to fix locks&#13;
to that a person can stick his finger&#13;
in front of it and it will open only if&#13;
it has been programmed to accept&#13;
his fingerprint.&#13;
Maybe we should have electronic&#13;
combination systems on doors like&#13;
those proposed for car ignitions.&#13;
that way, all you'd have to do is&#13;
.....-punchout a combination to get in&#13;
the door. They'd have to be made&#13;
so that you could change the code&#13;
to have someone water your plants&#13;
while you're away. You'd never&#13;
have to give someone your own&#13;
special code. ..&#13;
" The only problem with this type&#13;
of system would be that you'd have&#13;
troubles getting in your house after&#13;
a wild night on the town. But then,&#13;
maybe everyone would remember&#13;
not to get too bombed.&#13;
•&#13;
n~~&#13;
At last! Financial aid&#13;
}&#13;
for middle income&#13;
college students.&#13;
Financial aid applications for 1979-80 are&#13;
now available in the Financial Aids office in&#13;
Tallent Hail and there's something new this&#13;
year, A new federal law called the Middle&#13;
Income Student Assistance Act has extended&#13;
eligibility for federal educational&#13;
grants to dependent students from families&#13;
earning as much as $25,000 a year, Under&#13;
the old law, eligibility was limited to&#13;
dependent students from families earning'&#13;
no more than $15,000 a year. For example. a&#13;
dependent student from a family of four with&#13;
a 520,000 income and no unusual assets or&#13;
expenses was not eligible under the old law,&#13;
•&#13;
Now a student from that family could get a&#13;
$700 grant. ,&#13;
What it all means is that nearly every USParkside&#13;
student who expects to carry at&#13;
least six credits should apply for' federal&#13;
fi~ancial aid, You may be pleasantly surprised&#13;
about your eligibility. But this is&#13;
important, Apply as soon as possible! The&#13;
final priority deadline for the fall semester is&#13;
May I.You can begin the simple application&#13;
process by contacting the Office of Financial&#13;
Aids, Tallent Hall, phone 553-2291.&#13;
University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
'Sign&#13;
Language&#13;
\&#13;
WE'r~ +rtf-. r~ChE.'5t pEOplE. WE. kMw?}&#13;
but WE. ftE.£d Llou,"" £(n'~&#13;
QII (:\Pl-; \ ~:5lit&#13;
(H d (\o;d '? AW2lI-£ Il€.~~ 1)~L\ ar&#13;
o w- 'Ycil-k),ou)&#13;
Academic Advising'&#13;
April 2nd thru 18th&#13;
The Early Registration committee&#13;
wants to encourage all&#13;
continuing UW-Parkside students&#13;
to seek faculty advising during the&#13;
designated advising week April 2nd&#13;
through the 18th. Those continuing&#13;
students who are"seeking adegree at&#13;
UW-Parkside are required to s&#13;
their advisor and obtain a sign&#13;
Certification of Advising ca&#13;
before they can register on the 17&#13;
or 18th of April. This card is n&#13;
required for non-degree seekin&#13;
students. '---&#13;
10% OFF&#13;
ALL PARKSIDE STUDENTS. FACULTY AlIiD&#13;
STAFF WILL RECEIVE 10'll0 OFF ON ALL&#13;
REGULARLY PRICE MENU ITEMS WITH&#13;
PROPER PARKSIDE IDt:NllFiCAll0N, '&#13;
Wednesday April 4, 1979 RANGER .&#13;
It Just Shows To Go Ya. • •&#13;
'&#13;
Throw the Key Away . - by Sue Stevens&#13;
After breaking my house key in&#13;
_the door last week, I've had it! I'm&#13;
sick of fumbling with keys in the&#13;
dark, e~pecially when I'm in a&#13;
hurry. I'm fed up with hunting all&#13;
over the house for the keys to a car.&#13;
I'm tired of having expensive copies&#13;
of keys made by morons in&#13;
department stores, only to find&#13;
later that the keys don't work right.&#13;
Why should I have to bother with&#13;
keys at all? Why can't someone use&#13;
modern technology to find an&#13;
alternative to the lock and key?&#13;
For about 4,000 years (fhe oldest&#13;
known example of a lock and key is&#13;
an Egyption style lock that hasbeen&#13;
dated to be approximately&#13;
4,000 years old.) people have been&#13;
locking up their belongings with&#13;
keys. It seems to me that we're&#13;
ready for a change, but I don't&#13;
think everyone agrees with me.&#13;
The manufacturers of locks,&#13;
keys, key rings, and other pieces of&#13;
junk that go with keys have too&#13;
much invested in their businesses to&#13;
change now. (I'd give my typewriter&#13;
to have Linus Yale's small fortune.)&#13;
Who knows, someone may have&#13;
already invented an alternative but&#13;
was bought off by the ·bigger&#13;
companies who were protecting&#13;
their market.&#13;
It would take much more than&#13;
the introduction of a new invention&#13;
to rid ourselves of keys forever. Too&#13;
many people use keys for other&#13;
purposes besides unlocking things.&#13;
For many people, keys are a&#13;
status symbol. The more keys one&#13;
carries, the higher his status. To&#13;
have a key to an office makes a&#13;
person feel like he's someone to be&#13;
looked up to in a way. Of course,&#13;
this is warranted much of the time,&#13;
but there are people who walk&#13;
down halls jingling their keys just&#13;
to be sure that everyone knows that&#13;
they have them.&#13;
Keys are also good as a toy to&#13;
play with when nervous. Many&#13;
people waiting for someone fondle&#13;
their keys in different ways. Some&#13;
throw them up in the air and catch&#13;
them over and over. Others take&#13;
one key and turn it around the key&#13;
ring, then take the next one and do&#13;
the same thing with it . Then there&#13;
are those who shake them to their&#13;
own special rhythm, annoying&#13;
everybody around them:&#13;
It seems to me that someone&#13;
would've come up witn something&#13;
by now that would serve 'the same&#13;
purpose without all the bother.&#13;
Maybe there's some way to fix locks&#13;
to that a person can stick his finger&#13;
in front of it and it will open only if&#13;
it has been programmed to accept&#13;
his fingerprint.&#13;
Maybe we should have electronic&#13;
combination systems on doors like&#13;
those proposed for car ignitions.&#13;
that way, all you'd have to do is&#13;
.,punch out a combination to get in&#13;
the door. They'd have to be made&#13;
so that you could change the code&#13;
to have someone water your plants&#13;
while you're away. You'd never&#13;
have to give someone your own&#13;
special code. _&#13;
The only problem with this type&#13;
of system would be that you'd have&#13;
troubles getting in your house after&#13;
a wild night on the town. But then,&#13;
maybe everyone would remember&#13;
not to get too bombed.&#13;
~ ~&#13;
At last! Financial aid&#13;
for middle income&#13;
college students. • •&#13;
Financial aid applications for 1979-80 are&#13;
now available in the Financial Aids office in&#13;
Tallent Hall and there's something new this&#13;
year. A new federal law called the Middle&#13;
Income Student Assistance Act has extended&#13;
eligibility for federal educational&#13;
grants to dependent students from families&#13;
earning as much as $25,000 a year . Under&#13;
the old law, eligibility was limited to&#13;
dependent students from families earning&#13;
no more than $15,000 a year. For example, a&#13;
dependent student from a family of four with&#13;
a $20,000 income and no unusual assets or&#13;
expenses was not eligible under the old law.&#13;
Now a student from that family could get a&#13;
$700 grant.&#13;
What it all means is that nearly every USParkside&#13;
student who expects to carry at&#13;
least six credits should apply for · federal&#13;
fi~ancial aid. You may be pleasantly surpnsed&#13;
about your eligibility. But this is&#13;
important. Apply as soon as possible! The&#13;
final priority deadline for the fall semester is&#13;
May 1. You can begin the simple application&#13;
process by contacting the Office of Financial&#13;
Aids, Tallent Hall, phone 553-2291.&#13;
University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
I&#13;
Sign&#13;
Language&#13;
-W£'rE.. 1\rtE. r~ch£st ptop\c. WE. 'i&lt;Mw~7&#13;
bl)t WE. ftE.£d l_\OU, £ct~~&#13;
00 A p~~\ ~ -s '4l&#13;
( µ d f\afca '? A Wa~£ f\£.~51)~L\ .a\'&#13;
o. w.-'Pcl""ki10£..,,)&#13;
Academic Advising&#13;
April 2nd thru 18th&#13;
The Early Registration committee&#13;
wants to encourage all&#13;
continuing UW-Parkside students&#13;
to seek faculty advising during the&#13;
designated advising week April 2nd&#13;
through the 18th. Those continuing&#13;
students who are· seeking adegree at&#13;
t/4 \b&#13;
UW-Parkside are required to see ~&#13;
their advisor and obtain a signed&#13;
Certification of Advising card&#13;
before they can register on the 17th&#13;
or 18th of April. This card is not'·&#13;
required for non-degree seekingi&#13;
students. ..._ m&#13;
10% OFF&#13;
ALL PARKSIDE STUDENTS, FACULTY A~iD&#13;
STAFF WILL RECEIVE 10,. OFF ON ALL&#13;
REGULARLY PRICE MENU ITEMS WITH&#13;
PROPER PARKSIDE IDENTIFICATION. · &#13;
,.4., Apri'4, 1919 IANGfl&#13;
7&#13;
Interest Groups Activate&#13;
And perhaps most important&#13;
students who work for PIRGs hav~&#13;
the opportunity to lobby, organize,&#13;
do research, and participate in the&#13;
management of a statewide&#13;
organization. The ...invaluable experience&#13;
and skills gained through&#13;
PIRG work are lasting assets to&#13;
one's career.&#13;
A national PIRG movement is&#13;
alive. In 1977, the state PIRGs set&#13;
UP.8 national office in Washington,&#13;
which organizes new PIRGs and&#13;
provides support services to the&#13;
state PIRGs. Organizing drives to&#13;
establish new PIRGs are underway&#13;
across the country.&#13;
In a special message to the&#13;
Governing Council of National&#13;
PIRG on February 9, 1979,&#13;
President Carter caUed on all&#13;
"students, faculty, university administrators&#13;
and all concerned&#13;
students ... to provide the support&#13;
necessary to PIRGs so they may&#13;
further expand their valuable work&#13;
in solving some of the pressing&#13;
political and social problems of our&#13;
country."&#13;
The PIRG movement races some&#13;
obstacles, however. Student contributions&#13;
to PIRGs are usually&#13;
by RaIpb Nader&#13;
so often one reads a&#13;
ftII1 or magazine article&#13;
tbt loss of student&#13;
. Gooe is the movement of&#13;
101. the author tells us with&#13;
• touch of sadness or&#13;
L.-&lt;lCP'"",ing on .his politics.&#13;
are out, toga parties are in;&#13;
..... reports say, But students&#13;
sUD concerned about the&#13;
of life and many are doing&#13;
,boUt it. Perhaps they&#13;
't .s visible as. their&#13;
.parts ten yea", ago, thugh&#13;
DIY be effective in their own&#13;
•&#13;
d&#13;
d&#13;
~&#13;
-"Bottle Bills," (laws requiring&#13;
on all beverage containers)&#13;
_ 011 the books in Oregon,&#13;
I Michigan, and ConnectiJIItIy&#13;
beeause of the efforts of&#13;
inthese states,&#13;
-IeIoraI PIRGs are working&#13;
community residents to&#13;
utility rate increases and&#13;
g." ("Redlining" is the&#13;
by which banks and&#13;
companies sxstematically&#13;
te against individuals in&#13;
geosraphic areas-usually&#13;
plltieli-by refusing to grant&#13;
mortgages or insurance&#13;
.)&#13;
Jo-.Sneral PIRGs are in&#13;
...... ' to reveal standardized&#13;
'" abuses. Maryland, ColorlIld&#13;
New York PIRGs have&#13;
aced "Truth·in-Testing"&#13;
which would require&#13;
companies to disclose test&#13;
and answers along with&#13;
...... lioIJ on exactly what a test&#13;
, scoring procedures, and&#13;
pllati'oo o£the results.&#13;
ISsac~setts PIRG was&#13;
responsible for passage of&#13;
.which strengthens tenants'&#13;
.ID the treatment of security&#13;
N... York PIRG was&#13;
in the passage of a bill&#13;
decriminalized the possess-&#13;
"lDarijuana.&#13;
ldditioD, PIRGs have worked&#13;
te discrimination against&#13;
I by auto insurance&#13;
and banks; they have&#13;
food co-ops, small&#13;
~rt advisory services, and&#13;
~ botlines, and they have&#13;
......... - a variety of useful&#13;
---.nch as DCPIRG's com-&#13;
-.aaiYe guide to women's health&#13;
or New Je",ey PIRG's solar&#13;
-_uaI.&#13;
I&#13;
I.,p. N.4.r&#13;
collected through a "cbeek-cff" on&#13;
the term bill. Even when a vast&#13;
majority of students supports the&#13;
creation of a PIRG on campus,&#13;
university trustees frequently resist.&#13;
Trustees often claim that&#13;
students are forced to finance the&#13;
PIRG because a special fee Is&#13;
assessed on the term bill. But in&#13;
reality, when a tenn bill fee&#13;
mechanism is established by&#13;
majority students petitions or&#13;
referenda. students can still choose&#13;
whether or not to contribute.&#13;
Why, then, do trustees someUrnes&#13;
oppooe PIRGs' Pa!lapo b&#13;
becaase the PIRG pi&lt;&#13;
and difl'....... to .- ..&#13;
because I.he Cl"ttaIiC 01&#13;
poorer fri tem!hem, or&#13;
simpl, be ause the&#13;
d... ~&#13;
economIC,&#13;
~ues.&#13;
Aoother pn&gt;blem __&#13;
PIRGs is _ , &lt;hand&#13;
mOJ c1t1ttn ps&#13;
inte-rull ba e .. II, aler&#13;
re50Urces to use ta&#13;
banles&#13;
But perho .. the b -..&#13;
is thai JOU, tbe iladeDu&#13;
undttes1imatt r ow.&#13;
vee sbouJd DOl be l:Imidarrd&#13;
when uniYenllJ tnISUa eee&#13;
democralX npu. ror ..", Co&#13;
ch.l.llenge the uwtees, R&#13;
their COIlllicts of Illteft$l. _&#13;
aJuUUli a.OO eomma. ppan&#13;
Y OIl sbOCIld also reaIiIIo _ ,..&#13;
can become the: su.le"W'tidC'crpen 011&#13;
• IepJame iuRe ia e-mce&#13;
etrrironmentaI, -. ..--:&#13;
and ether area". ¥oo a.&#13;
cctlectwelj-, put I ether ~&#13;
('I'vegot Pabst Blue Ribbon onl1~r mind."&#13;
,l,,sday April 4, 1919 I NGEI&#13;
Interest Groups Activate&#13;
by Ra)ph Nader&#13;
JtlY so often one reads a&#13;
per or magazine article&#13;
,ting the loss of student&#13;
· m Gone is the movement of&#13;
the author tells us with&#13;
~ touch of sadness or&#13;
epending on his politics.&#13;
are out, toga parties are in;&#13;
p~ reports say. But students&#13;
still concerned about the&#13;
of life and many are doing&#13;
· g about it. Perhaps they&#13;
't as visible as their&#13;
· .parts ten years ago, thugh&#13;
1111y be effective in their own&#13;
· activism is demonstrated by&#13;
Interest Research Groups&#13;
_ GS), which we helped to start&#13;
years ago, and now flourish in&#13;
sates,&#13;
ptRGs are student-run, studentded&#13;
organizations that do&#13;
azch, advocacy, and organizing&#13;
1 ,ride range of issues, including&#13;
111Det rights, social justice,&#13;
00mental protection and&#13;
roment responsibility. Stuhire&#13;
professional organizers,&#13;
archers, scientists, attorneys,&#13;
, lobbyists to support their&#13;
. There are now more than&#13;
professional staff working in&#13;
across the country, whose&#13;
ined budget, including grants&#13;
student contributions for 1978&#13;
~S3million.&#13;
ith 500,000 student contrin,--each&#13;
paying $2 to S6 a year&#13;
111pport the PIRG at their&#13;
PIRGs have become a vital&#13;
cc. Note some of the PIRG's&#13;
accomplishments:&#13;
-In 1975, Vermont PIRG&#13;
ned passage of the nation's&#13;
law requiring state legislative&#13;
al for nuclear power plant&#13;
ction.&#13;
- ·Bottle Bills," 0aws requiring&#13;
its on all beverage containers)&#13;
aow on the books in Oregon,&#13;
ont, Michigan, and Connectipartly&#13;
because of the efforts of&#13;
Gs in these states.&#13;
-Several PIRGs are working&#13;
• community residents to&#13;
~ utility rate increases and&#13;
lining." ("Redlining" is the&#13;
e by which banks and&#13;
nee companies systematically&#13;
inate against individuals in&#13;
geographic areas-usually&#13;
"ties-by refusing to grant&#13;
mortgages or insurance&#13;
.)&#13;
PIRGs are in&#13;
paigns to reveal standardized&#13;
8 abuses. Maryland, Colorand&#13;
New York PIRGs have&#13;
iduced "Truth-in-Testing"&#13;
lation which would require&#13;
companies to disclose test&#13;
ns and answers along with&#13;
ation on exactly what a test&#13;
And perhaps most important&#13;
students who work for PIRGs hav~&#13;
the opportunity to lobby, organize,&#13;
do research, and participate in the&#13;
management of a statewide&#13;
organization. The , invaluable experience&#13;
and skills gained through&#13;
PIRG work are tasting as et to&#13;
one's career.&#13;
A national PIRG movement is&#13;
alive. In 1977, the state PIRGs set&#13;
up~ national office in Washington,&#13;
which organizes new PIRGs and&#13;
provides support services to the&#13;
state PIRGs. Organizing drives to&#13;
establish new PIRGs are underway&#13;
across the country.&#13;
In a special message to the&#13;
Governing Council of National&#13;
PIRG on February 9, 1979,&#13;
President Carter called on all&#13;
"students, faculty, university administrators&#13;
and all concerned&#13;
students . .. to provide the support&#13;
necessary to PlRGs so they may&#13;
further expand their valuable work&#13;
in solving some of the pressing&#13;
political and social problems of our&#13;
country."&#13;
The PIRG movement faces some&#13;
obstacles, however. Student contributions&#13;
to PIRGs are usually&#13;
. res, scoring procedures, and&#13;
bution of the results.&#13;
-Massacl\usetts PIRG was&#13;
b rily responsible for passage of&#13;
~I _which strengthens tenants'&#13;
In the treatment of security&#13;
its.&#13;
York PIRG was&#13;
mental in the passage of a bill&#13;
h decriminalized the possessof&#13;
marijuana.&#13;
0.addition, PIRGs have worked&#13;
' 1llllinate discrimination against&#13;
dents by auto insurance&#13;
Panics and banks· they have&#13;
I' ' !Shed food co-ops, small&#13;
collected through a "chec -off' o&#13;
the term bill. E en hen a ut&#13;
majority of students supports t e&#13;
creation of a PIRG on campus.&#13;
university trustees frequently resist.&#13;
Trustees often claim that&#13;
students are forced to fin ce the&#13;
PIRG because a pecial fee •&#13;
assessed on the term bill. But m&#13;
reality, when a term bill ee&#13;
mechanism is e tab\i hed b&#13;
majority student pe 1tion or&#13;
referenda, students can still ch&#13;
whether or not to contribute.&#13;
Why, then, do trustees me1lls&#13;
court advisory services, and&#13;
~mer hotlines, and they have&#13;
hcd a variety of useful&#13;
uch as DCPIRG's comsive&#13;
guide to women's health&#13;
or New Jersey PIRG's solar&#13;
. manual.&#13;
"I've go! Pabst Blue Ri /1 11111 &#13;
W.d".,da, Aprj' 4, "79 lANGEI&#13;
Coming Events.&#13;
EVENTS POLICY&#13;
All events must be turned in to the Ranger office by 10:00 a.m,&#13;
on the Thursday previous to the Wednesday issue that they will&#13;
appear in.&#13;
Wedneoday, AprD 4&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE starting at 1 p.m. in Union 104-106 featuring&#13;
Darry Drake, a folk singer. Admission is free to Parkside students.&#13;
Sponsored by PAD.&#13;
MOVIE "West Side Story" will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theatre. Admission at the door is 51.00 for aParkside&#13;
student and 51.00 for a guest. Sponsored by PAD.&#13;
DANCE at 8 p.m. in Union Square featuring the "Buffalo Chip&#13;
Kickers." Admission at the door is 51.00 Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Thunday, AprD 5&#13;
CONFERENCE "New Roles for the Elderly" from 9 a.m. to 12:15&#13;
p.m, in Union 104. The program is free and open to the public&gt;&#13;
Please call ext. 2658 for reservations.&#13;
DINNER/LECI'URE Prof. John Harbeson will talk on' "Global&#13;
Interdependence am! the American Interest" from 5:30 to 6:30&#13;
p.m, Dinner will take place from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m, the dialogue&#13;
session speakers from 7:30 to 9 a.m. are Carol Halsted and Donald&#13;
Thompson. The lecture and dialogue are free and open to the&#13;
public. Please call ext. 2316 for dinner reservations.&#13;
LECI'URE/DISCUSSION at 12:30 in MOLN 236 on Christian&#13;
apologetics, sponsored by Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship.&#13;
Everyone is welcome.&#13;
FrIday, AprD 6&#13;
CONFERENCE for N.E.C.A.A. members in the Union and&#13;
Molinaro buildings. Sponsored by Student Life.&#13;
SEMINAR ChemlLife Sci. at 2 p.m. in MOLN 107. The program&#13;
is free and open to the public.&#13;
WORKSHOP at Teacher Place from 10 a.rn. to 1 p.m, Limited to&#13;
first 2S to 'sign up. Sign-up sheet is posted on SWEA Bulletin&#13;
Board next to GR 214. 51 donation.&#13;
COLLOQUIUM Earth Science at 12 noon in GR 113. Dr. Roger&#13;
Springman of the Wisconsin Geological Survey will speak on&#13;
"Coastal Erosion: A Hazard Without A Permanent Solution." The&#13;
program is free and open to the public. "-&#13;
LECI'URE/DISCUSSION at 2:00 in MOLN 236. This week on the&#13;
Regeneration of Man. All interested please attend.&#13;
Saturday, AprD 7&#13;
CONFERENCE N.E.C.A.A. continues all day today.&#13;
ART FIELD TRIP from 8:30, a.m, to 6:30 p.m, All-day art&#13;
adventure to Chicago. 52 round trip. Contact Fine Arts Division&#13;
Office. CA 285 for more information: 553-2581. -&#13;
Sanday, AprD 8&#13;
CONCERT at 3:30 p.m. in GR 103 featuring the Parkside Guitar&#13;
society with Patrick Noel directing. The program is free and open&#13;
to the public,&#13;
AlE SERIES presents "Odetta," a folk singer, at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre. A few tickets remain for sale at the&#13;
Union Information Center. Admission is 56.00.&#13;
MODday, AprD 9&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12 noon in Union 106. Joseph Boisse will talk&#13;
on "Catcher in the Rye Revisited." The program is free and open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
Tuesday, AprD 10&#13;
CONCERT at 8 p.m. in the Union Cinema Theatre featuring Val&#13;
Lagodieh on the horn and Carol Christianson at the piano. The&#13;
program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Wedneoday, AprD 11&#13;
LECTURE at 12 noon in MOLN 130. Irene Frieze from the&#13;
University of Pittsburgh will talk on "Power of Dynamics in&#13;
Marriage." The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
SEMINAR at 2:30 p.m. in MOLN 11I. Ms. Frieze will talk on&#13;
"Attribution Theory: Theoretical &amp; Methodological Advances."&#13;
The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
NOW AT 2 LOCATIONS&#13;
6100 Washington Ave.&#13;
Pioneer Village&#13;
886-5077 • 886.0207&#13;
2615 Washington Ave.&#13;
634.2373 • 634.2374&#13;
NewsBriefs- -'&#13;
Your Lost&#13;
May Be Found&#13;
Parks ide Security has a lost and&#13;
found at their offices in Tallent&#13;
Hall that is overflowing. Students&#13;
who have lost articles during the&#13;
school year can reclaim their&#13;
possessions by identifying them in&#13;
person.&#13;
Some of the articles on hold at&#13;
Security "include: watches .....calculators.&#13;
jewelry. gloves. hats. jackets.&#13;
radios. and lost books.&#13;
There is a time Jimit that found&#13;
articles are held at Parkside"&#13;
security before they are shipped to&#13;
Madison for auction. Students are&#13;
reminded. therefore. to stop by&#13;
Security in room 188 in Tallent&#13;
Hall as soon as possible. The office&#13;
phone number is 553-2455.&#13;
New Book Return&#13;
Program&#13;
With Racine&#13;
Patrons of the Parkside Library/&#13;
Learning Center and the Waterford.&#13;
Rochester. Union Grove,&#13;
Burlington and Racine Public&#13;
Libraries may now return borrowed&#13;
materials at anyone of those&#13;
libraries. Although this new service&#13;
will be more wotk for participating&#13;
libraries, the Racine County&#13;
Federated Library System and&#13;
Director of the Racine Public&#13;
Library, Jack LeSuer hope to&#13;
provide a quicker and more&#13;
convenient return system for&#13;
patrons.&#13;
Classified&#13;
Ads&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1972 MOB: 79,000 miles, good condition.&#13;
$1 ,BOO or best offer. Call Larry Duetsch at&#13;
553-2450 or""639-6115.&#13;
1982 120(1 Ro.ct • .., Flat. New engine. Runs&#13;
excellently, but needs body work. Call after&#13;
5:00 at 652-7708 or 537-4942.&#13;
1975 Okt.mobU. Cutl •••. Lt. blue, power&#13;
steering, power brakes, automatic trans.,&#13;
radial tires &amp; mags. Ex. Condition. Price&#13;
negotiable. Phone 859-2448 after 5 P.M.&#13;
EMPLOYMENT&#13;
Summer wol1t: All pre-law, pre-mad, predent,&#13;
pre-professional students: High peying&#13;
and rewarding summer work. Write to:&#13;
Summer Work. Box 34, LaCrosse, WI 54601.&#13;
Include name, major, year, school ettenclng,&#13;
phone and address.&#13;
Babysitter: Room and board plus pay-,-Call&#13;
652-2364 after 8 p.m. Daily, alt day and&#13;
weekends.&#13;
PERSONAL&#13;
T,...,et/room-mata (female) for UWP trip to&#13;
Spain June 1-9. Call Janet at 652-8664 anytime&#13;
until 1 a.m.&#13;
Inter-Varsity Blbfe-atudy will be held at Bill&#13;
Nelson's, 6483 Hwy. K, in Franksville Friday&#13;
night at 7:15. Call 835·2597 for details.&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
. of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFiCE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBED F.D.I.C.&#13;
The return date; will be marked&#13;
on slips in each item and fines will&#13;
be handled by each library. Books&#13;
returned at Parkside belonging to&#13;
other libraries will be picked up&#13;
every Tuesday and Thursday&#13;
afternoons. Linda Piele, Head of&#13;
Public Services. commented that&#13;
. the Library/Learning Center hasn't&#13;
had any problems....ret.&#13;
'Capitalism'&#13;
Topic for Apr. 10&#13;
"Jimmy Carter and the Crisis of&#13;
'American Capitalism" will be the&#13;
title of a public talk to be given by&#13;
Professor Kenneth _ Dolbeare,&#13;
author of several books on political&#13;
issues and Professor of Political&#13;
Science at the University of&#13;
Massachusetts-Amherst, The pro-&#13;
-gram will be held in Molinaro 107&#13;
at 3:30 p.m. on Tuesday. April )0.&#13;
The sponsors include: the&#13;
Academically Talented and Special&#13;
Students Program. the Lectures&#13;
and Fine Arts Committee, the&#13;
Social Science Colloquium Committee.&#13;
and the Political Science&#13;
Club.&#13;
Professor Dolbeare will also&#13;
speak at the public brown bag&#13;
lunch in Molinaro 111 at Noon,&#13;
Tuesday, April 10. on the topic:&#13;
"The University Without Walls:&#13;
Integrating Life Experience and&#13;
Academic Education."&#13;
- Dolbeare is the author' of two&#13;
widely used texts on American&#13;
politics and on contemporary&#13;
political ideas. The President;Elect&#13;
of the Policy Studies Organization.&#13;
he has also written books on Public&#13;
Policy Evaluation. political C&#13;
in the United States. The Sc&#13;
Prayer Decis~·ons. and j;=-&#13;
Groups of Neighbors: The Selec .&#13;
Serivce System.&#13;
Professor Dolbeare received&#13;
doctorate from Columbia U .&#13;
sity in 1965 and has taught at&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Mad&#13;
and was the Chairman of&#13;
Political Science Department at&#13;
University of Washington.&#13;
received a Guggenheim Fello&#13;
in 1969~70 and is listed in w:&#13;
Who in America.&#13;
Academic Staff&#13;
Awards Nominati&#13;
Forms Available&#13;
Nomination forms for Acade&#13;
Staff awards are now available&#13;
the Info Kiosks. Nominees for&#13;
award are listed on the forms.&#13;
- Linda Piele, head of the Pub&#13;
Service Division of the Lib&#13;
Learning Center. explained that&#13;
award is given to academic st&#13;
who exhibited service for&#13;
university, and surrounding&#13;
munities, above and beyond the c&#13;
of duty. Evaluation depends on h&#13;
a person relates his/her professio&#13;
al training to their specific job.&#13;
Piele explained that ma&#13;
students are not aware of w&#13;
academic staff is. It involves th&#13;
people in a non teaching capaci&#13;
but are still providing .essenti&#13;
~~fvices t~ tii~.u~ivenity.·&#13;
Piele encourages students&#13;
participate in the nominatio&#13;
process. Nominations will end Ap&#13;
30th. -&#13;
.!"'t~·r==so..nby.&#13;
,&#13;
On Tap AI_Union Square ttf-'",t·~'&#13;
1.- ..&#13;
- .~&#13;
- '."&#13;
N,,,$/'1,,,,,,,, I, 1,,1&#13;
Wednesday April 4, 1979&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
EVENTS POLICY&#13;
All events must be turned in to the Ranger office by 10:00 a.m.&#13;
on the Thursday previous to the Wednesday issue that they will&#13;
appear in.&#13;
Wednesday, Aprll 4&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE starting at 1 p.m. in Union 104-106 featuring&#13;
Barry Drake, a folk singer. Admission is free to Parkside students.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
MOVIE "West Side Story" will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theatre. Admission at the door is Sl.00 for a Parkside&#13;
student and $LOO for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
DANCE at 8 p.m. in Union Square featuring the "Buffalo Chip&#13;
Kickers." Admission at the door is Sl.00 Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Tbunday, April 5&#13;
CONFERENCE "New Roles for the Elderly" from 9 a.m. to 12:15&#13;
p.m. in Union 104. The program is free and open to the public/&#13;
Please call ext. 2658 for reservations.&#13;
DINNER/LECTURE Prof. John Harbeson will talk on "Global&#13;
Interdependence an&lt;! the American Interest" from 5:30 to 6:30&#13;
p.m. Dinner will take place from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. the dialogue&#13;
session speakers from 7:30 to 9 a.m. are Carol Halsted and Donald&#13;
Thompson. The lecture and dialogue are free and open to the&#13;
public. Please call ext. 2316 for dinner reservations.&#13;
LECTURE/DISCUSSION at 12:30 in MOLN 236 on Christian&#13;
apologetics, sponsored by Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship.&#13;
Everyone is welcome.&#13;
Friday, April 6&#13;
CONFERENCE for N.E.C.A.A. members in the Union and&#13;
Molinaro buildings. Sponsored by Student Life.&#13;
SEMINAR Chem/Life Sci. at 2 p.m. in MOLN 107. The program&#13;
is free and open to the public.&#13;
WORKSHOP at Teacher Place from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Limited to&#13;
first 25 to ·sign up. Sign-up sheet is posted on SWEA Bulletin&#13;
Board next to GR 214. $1 donation.&#13;
COLLOQUIUM Earth Science at 12 noon in GR 113. Dr. Roger&#13;
Springman of the Wisconsin Geological Survey will speak on&#13;
"Coastal Erosion: A Hazard Without A Permanent Solution." The&#13;
program is free and open to the public. "&#13;
LECTURE/DISCUSSION at 2:00 in MOLN 236. This week on the&#13;
Regeneration of Man. All interested please attend.&#13;
Saturday, April 7&#13;
CONFERENCE N .E.C.A.A. continues all day today.&#13;
ART FIELD TRIP from 8:30 _ a.m. to 6:30 p.m. All-day art&#13;
adventure to Chicago. $2 round trip. Contact Fine Arts Division&#13;
Office. CA 285 for more information: 553-2581. -&#13;
Sunday, April 8&#13;
CONCERT at 3:30 p.m. in GR 103 featuring the Parkside Guitar&#13;
ociety with Patrick Noel directing. The program is free and open&#13;
to the public.&#13;
A/E SERIES presents "Odetta," a folk singer, at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre. A few tickets remain for sale at the&#13;
Union Information Center. Admission is $6.00.&#13;
Monday, April 9&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12 noon in Union 106. Joseph Boisse will talk&#13;
on "Catcher in the Rye Revisited." The program is free and open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
Tuesday, April IO&#13;
CONCERT at 8 p.m. in the Union Cinema Theatre featuring Val&#13;
Lagodich on the horn and Carol Christianson at the piano. The&#13;
program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Wednesday, April 11&#13;
LECTURE at 12 noon in MOLN 130. Irene Frieze from the&#13;
Univer ity of Pittsburgh will talk on "Power of Dynamics in&#13;
Marriage." The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
SEMINAR at 2:30 p.m. in MOLN 111. Ms. Frieze will talk on&#13;
"Attribution Theory: Theoretical &amp; Methodological Advances."&#13;
The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
NOW AT 2 LOCATIONS&#13;
6100 Washington Ave.&#13;
Pioneer Village&#13;
886-5077 • 886-0207&#13;
2615 Washington Ave.&#13;
634-2373 • 634-2374&#13;
RANGER&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
Your Lost&#13;
May Be Found&#13;
Parkside Security has a lost and&#13;
found at their offices in Tallent&#13;
Hall that is overflowing. Students&#13;
who have lost articles during the&#13;
school year can reclaim their&#13;
possessions by identifying them in&#13;
person.&#13;
Some of the articles on hold at&#13;
Security -include: watches,/calculators,&#13;
jewelry, gloves, hats, jackets,&#13;
radios, and lost books.&#13;
There is a time Jimit that found&#13;
articles are held at Parkside -&#13;
security before they are shipped to&#13;
Madison for auction. Students are&#13;
reminded, therefore, to stop by&#13;
Security in room 188 in Tallent&#13;
Hall as soon as possible. The office&#13;
phone number is 553-2455.&#13;
New Book Return&#13;
Program&#13;
With Racine&#13;
Patrons of the Parkside Library/&#13;
Learning Center and the Waterford,&#13;
Rochester, Union Grove,&#13;
Burlington and Racine Public&#13;
Libraries may now return borrowed&#13;
materials at any one of those&#13;
libraries. Although this new service&#13;
will be more work for participating&#13;
libraries, the Racine County&#13;
Federated Library System and&#13;
Director of the Racine Public&#13;
Library, Jack LeSuer hope to&#13;
provide a quicker and more&#13;
convenient return system for&#13;
patrons.&#13;
Classified&#13;
Ads&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1972 MOB: 79,000 miles, good condition.&#13;
$1 ,800 or best offer. Call Larry Duet sch at&#13;
553-2450 oro39-6115.&#13;
1962 1200 Roadster Flat. New engine. Runs&#13;
excellently, but needs body work. Call after&#13;
5 :00 at 652-7708 or 537-4942.&#13;
1975 Oldsmobile Cutla11. Lt. blue, power&#13;
steering, power brakes, automatic trans.,&#13;
radial tires &amp; mags. Ex. Condition. Price&#13;
negotiable. Phone 859-2448 after 5 P.M.&#13;
EMPLOYMENT&#13;
Summer work: All pre-law, pre-med, predent,&#13;
pre-professional students: High paying&#13;
and rewarding summer work. Write to:&#13;
Summer Work, Box 34, Lacrosse, WI 54601 .&#13;
Include name, major, year, school attending,&#13;
phone and address.&#13;
Babysitter: Room and board plus pay. Cal I&#13;
652-2364 after 8 p.m. Daily, all day and&#13;
weekends. ' ·&#13;
PERSONAL&#13;
Travel/room-mate (female) for UWP trip to&#13;
Spain June 1-9. Call Janet at 652-8664 anytime&#13;
until 1 a.m.&#13;
Inter-Varsity Blble-study will be held at Bill&#13;
Nelson's, 6483 Hwy. K, in Franksville Friday&#13;
night at 7 :15. Call 835-2597 for details.&#13;
,· ~&#13;
S'\11().._,.; 1.&#13;
,, j .. FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
· ofKenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAINOFFlCE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBED F.0.1.C.&#13;
- ,&#13;
The return date will be marked&#13;
on slips in each item and fines will&#13;
be handled by each library. Books&#13;
returned at Parkside belonging to&#13;
other libraries will be picked up&#13;
every Tuesday and Thursday&#13;
afternoons. Linda Piele, Head of&#13;
Public Services, commented that&#13;
the Library/Learning Center hasn't&#13;
had any problems yet.&#13;
'Capitalism'&#13;
Topic for Apr. 10&#13;
"Jimmy Carter and the Crisis of&#13;
'American Capitalism" will be the&#13;
title of a public talk to be given by&#13;
Professor Kenneth Dolbeare,&#13;
author of several books on political&#13;
issues and Professor of Political&#13;
Science at the University of&#13;
Massachusetts-Amherst. The program&#13;
will be held in Molinaro 107&#13;
at 3:30 p.m. on Tuesday, April _10.&#13;
The sponsors include: the&#13;
Academically Talented and Special&#13;
Students Program, the Lectures&#13;
and Fine Arts Committee, the&#13;
Social Science Colloquium Committee,&#13;
and the Political Science&#13;
Club.&#13;
Professor Dolbeare will also&#13;
speak at the public brown · bag&#13;
lunch in Molinaro 111 at Noon,&#13;
Tuesday, April 10, on the topic:&#13;
"The University Without Walls:&#13;
Integrating Life Experience and&#13;
Academic Education."&#13;
Dolbeare is the author' of two&#13;
widely used texts on American&#13;
politics and on contemporary&#13;
political ideas. The President;Elect&#13;
of the Policy Studies Organization,&#13;
he has also written books on Public&#13;
Policy Evaluation, Political Cha&#13;
in the United States, The Schn&#13;
Prayer Decisions, and LiftA&#13;
Groups of Neighbors: The Selecti&#13;
Serivce System.&#13;
Professor Dolbeare received h&#13;
doctorate from Columbia Univ&#13;
sity in 196_5 and has taught at&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Madiso&#13;
and was the Chairman of t&#13;
Political Science Department at t&#13;
University of Washington.&#13;
received a Guggenheim Fellowshi&#13;
in 1969-70 and is listed in Who•&#13;
Who in America.&#13;
Awards Nominatio&#13;
Forms Available&#13;
Nomination forms for Academ·&#13;
Staff awards are now available&#13;
the Info Kiosks. Nominees for t&#13;
award are listed on the forms.&#13;
Linda Piele, head of the Pub!&#13;
Service Division of the Libra&#13;
Learning Center, explained that t&#13;
award is given to academic sta&#13;
who exhibited service for&#13;
university, and surrounding com&#13;
munities, above and beyond the cal&#13;
of duty. Evaluation depends on ho&#13;
a person relates his/her profession&#13;
al training to their specific job.&#13;
Piele explained that man&#13;
students are not aware of whalt&#13;
academic staff is. It involves th i&#13;
people in a non teaching capacity l&#13;
but are still providing essenti d&#13;
s~rvice~ to the university. -&#13;
Piele encourages students to ' ·&#13;
participate in the nomination ·&#13;
process. Nominations will end April &amp;,-e&#13;
30th. -&#13;
On Tap At_ Union Square&#13;
JELLY BEANS&#13;
for your&#13;
BELLY JEANS&#13;
REGULARLY .43 ½ lh.&#13;
NOW THROUGH&#13;
THE END OF MARCH&#13;
ONLY .JS ½lh.&#13;
N,w Sl,l11111111 /1 /11/ </text>
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