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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 9, issue 1</text>
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            <text>Tuition jumps $61</text>
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            <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Tuition jumps $61&#13;
by Susan Michetti&#13;
Tuition and fees are set from&#13;
year to year by the action of the&#13;
Board of Regents and are subject to&#13;
change without notice. This year&#13;
they changed.&#13;
On May 8 the Regent Business&#13;
and Finance Committee approved a&#13;
$31 UW-system increase in tuition&#13;
rates. Shortly later, Governor&#13;
Dreyfus ordered all state agencies&#13;
to cut back their 1980-81 budgets&#13;
by 4.4%. This amounts to a $18.5&#13;
million reduction from the University-system&#13;
budget.&#13;
On July 14, the Board of Regents&#13;
approved a $30 emergency surcharge&#13;
fee for each full time&#13;
student enrolling in the UW-system&#13;
for just the fall semester. This&#13;
should generate about $3.75&#13;
million. As a result, UW-P tuition&#13;
fees rose from $401.50/semester to&#13;
$463.00 (including 50 cents for the&#13;
United Council of UW Student&#13;
Governments).&#13;
The Board of Regents determined&#13;
that other steps be taken to&#13;
absorb the remaining $14.75&#13;
million reduction: 1) committing at&#13;
once the $1 million usually held for&#13;
contingencies toward the potential&#13;
deficit; 2) the various institutions&#13;
will examine the potential for&#13;
increasing the budgeted levels of&#13;
energy conservation incorporated&#13;
in the 1980-1981 budget estimates;&#13;
3) the system administration will&#13;
examine all other fund accounts to&#13;
identify any potential reductions; 4)&#13;
Chancellors and system administration&#13;
will begin at once to identify&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• Editorial: Introduction&#13;
and explanation&#13;
• Guskin gives address&#13;
• Distinguished service awards&#13;
• From the Parking Lot&#13;
means by which savings can be&#13;
generated in this fiscal year by&#13;
deferring budgeted costs into next&#13;
fiscal year.&#13;
Pres. O'Neil wrote to the Regents&#13;
that "given (1) the academic&#13;
programs already planned, (2) the&#13;
prospect of the largest student body&#13;
in the history of the system, (3) the&#13;
binding contracts with personnel,&#13;
and (4) the existing deficits caused&#13;
by inflation, no responsible means&#13;
exists for the institutions to absorb&#13;
an allotment reduction of $18.5&#13;
million without seeking to increase&#13;
revenues."&#13;
Gary Goetz, Assistant Chancellor&#13;
of Administration and Fiscal&#13;
Affairs at Parkside, stated that the&#13;
tuition money pays about 25% of&#13;
the cost of instruction while the&#13;
other 75%is state supported. Goetz&#13;
said that since there is a formula&#13;
relationship between tuition and&#13;
costs, the $30 surcharge will&#13;
increase the student cost toward&#13;
instruction, but tuition costs still&#13;
remain quite reasonable in terms of&#13;
state support. He said that the $30&#13;
surcharge will generate enough&#13;
money to offset an additional&#13;
$115,000 cost that would have&#13;
resulted in a budget reduction for&#13;
the Parkside campus. He said that&#13;
without the $30 surcharge the&#13;
budget reduction would have been&#13;
$330,000, instead of the $215,000 it&#13;
presently is at Parkside.&#13;
"It appears that this cutback is a&#13;
Cont. on page 3&#13;
Ranger photo by Mike Holmdohl&#13;
Enrollment projected&#13;
by S. Michetti&#13;
Carla Stoffle, Assistant Chancellor&#13;
at Parkside, said that there is&#13;
a one to two percent projected&#13;
increase in the number of Parkside&#13;
students this semester despite the&#13;
tuition increase.&#13;
Gary Goetz, Assistant Chancellor&#13;
of Administration and Fiscal&#13;
Affairs at Parkside, feels that most&#13;
students want a campus away from&#13;
home, one that best meets a&#13;
student's academic program, one&#13;
where the student's friends are&#13;
going, or one that offers a special&#13;
attraction, such as sports.&#13;
Goetz said that there are all&#13;
kinds of considerations made&#13;
before dollars and cents. He said&#13;
that Parkside, which offers an&#13;
excellent quality academic program&#13;
with face to face contact with overall&#13;
the best faculty in the state and&#13;
no teaching assistants, would have&#13;
more students if they thought of&#13;
dollars and cents first. &#13;
Thursday, September 4. 1980 Ranger&#13;
Editorial&#13;
An introduction&#13;
and explanation&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Editor&#13;
This is the first RANGER of the academic year and I, as&#13;
editor, would like to set a few things straight about&#13;
RANGER and its functions.&#13;
As state in RANGER's corporate bylaws, "The&#13;
RANGER publishes independent of the UW-P&#13;
administration and any other student organization." That&#13;
statement wasn't included just to look impressive. It's true.&#13;
But still there are those ever-present complainers who&#13;
charge RANGER "is more a propaganda sheet for the&#13;
administration than a responsible and provocative student&#13;
newspaper." Think that they may; everybody's entitled to&#13;
their own opinion. Too bad this one is totally unwarranted.&#13;
RANGER, in the first place, is not a propaganda sheet&#13;
tor the administration. Those who think so are the same&#13;
ones who want the student press to find fault in everything&#13;
They (the administrators) do and "blast the hell" out of&#13;
their policies. Believe it or not, administrators are not&#13;
always wrong. But when they are wrong (and they — like&#13;
everyone — will be), RANGER will "blast the hell" out of&#13;
them if that's what the situation calls for.&#13;
But RANGER will not attack the administration and its&#13;
policies just because that's what we're "supposed" to do.&#13;
That's only true for an underground radical newspaper,&#13;
something Parkside could never support considering the&#13;
small number of students actively involved in student&#13;
organizations.&#13;
In the second place, RANGER is not irresponsible.&#13;
Charging that it is can only be called name-calling without&#13;
any supporting facts. And if RANGER isn't provocative,&#13;
who is to blame? That's easy — the student body. Of the&#13;
5000 Parkside students, about 25 state a desire to work on&#13;
RANGER. As the semester goes on, the number of staff&#13;
members drops to under 20. The number of those who&#13;
actively participate on RANGER is around half the staff.&#13;
Placing the responsibility of producing a "provocative"&#13;
newspaper onto a handful of students is highly unfair. I'm&#13;
not saying 2000 students should fight to the death over&#13;
editorial positions, but having a dozen (or less) students&#13;
producing a paper for 5000 is bad. A dozen students&#13;
equals 0.24% of the student body.&#13;
I'm also not saying that those students who do volunteer&#13;
their time to work on RANGER should have to write a&#13;
story or two every week and try to maintain a good G.P.A.&#13;
The same is true for every other student organization at&#13;
Parkside — the more members the group has, the less&#13;
work each member has to do to upkeep the organization's&#13;
performance.&#13;
RANGER is truly a student newspaper; it is completely&#13;
run by students both editorially and financially. Our&#13;
readership is made up of Parkside's faculty, staff,&#13;
administration and community, but our number one&#13;
concern is the student body.&#13;
RANGER is the only common link among the diverse&#13;
student body, everyone from the 18-year old freshman to&#13;
the 70-year old grandmother auditing classes to enrich her&#13;
life. We alone show — to other students, to the&#13;
administration, and to the community — how Parkside&#13;
students feel about the issues that affect their lives.&#13;
No one cares about newspapers the way journalists do.&#13;
Quite a few students pick up RANGER only to read the&#13;
classifieds. I think those are the average ones. The worse&#13;
ones don't pick up the paper at all, and the better readers&#13;
skim the headlines and stories on the way to the classifieds.&#13;
That is an exaggeration, I know; we do have readers who&#13;
appreciate having a completely student-run newspaper on&#13;
campus.&#13;
Sure, I'd like to keep all the readers happy, but that's&#13;
impossible. Not everybody will agree with the opinions&#13;
stated in RANGER; they may not think that RANGER&#13;
covers the topics the way we should. But at least we make&#13;
an effort. Everybody has the chance to make an effort by&#13;
joining a student organization or by participating in&#13;
campus events (such as Winter Carnival), but most&#13;
students don't follow up on the opportunities.&#13;
Whether or not a student makes an effort and becomes&#13;
involved in campus activities makes no difference;&#13;
RANGER is here for all students. If a student feels that he&#13;
or she has been mistreated, or notices some questionable&#13;
activities, we're the ones to go to in order to tell the rest of&#13;
the student body.&#13;
If you have something to say, you can tell us in a letter.&#13;
If you don't want your letter to be printed, just don't follow&#13;
the letter policy and it won't be. If you don't feel like&#13;
writing, stop in RANGER office and talk to me — Ken&#13;
Meyer. If you don't bother to care, at least respect&#13;
RANGER for caring.&#13;
Students support Huck for Congress&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
The United States amiss economy&#13;
is following a disastrous trail. Our&#13;
present First District Congressman&#13;
has contributed to this economic&#13;
misfortune by spending a fortune&#13;
through his voting on the floor of&#13;
the House of Representatives. At a&#13;
time when most Americans have&#13;
decreased personal spending, our&#13;
Congressman has refused to vote&#13;
for meaningful spending cuts.&#13;
Republican candidate Edward&#13;
Huck, if elected, will bring to&#13;
Washington fiscal responsibility.&#13;
Fiscal responsibility may be&#13;
unheard of to many professional&#13;
politicians, but to Edward Huck&#13;
and millions of other Americans&#13;
who must balance their checkbooks&#13;
at the end of each month, it is not a&#13;
new concept.&#13;
Farmers, small businesses and&#13;
corporations must demonstrate&#13;
financial responsibility or face&#13;
bankruptcy. Edward Huck manages&#13;
a small successful business in&#13;
the area. As a businessman he&#13;
knows that when revenue through&#13;
sales decreases you do not overextend&#13;
yourself unless bankruptcy&#13;
is your goal.&#13;
To the&#13;
Editor&#13;
Our Congressman, over the past&#13;
ten years has contributed to our&#13;
economic predicament by overextending&#13;
the U.S. Government&#13;
through his reckless philosophy&#13;
that throwing money at a particular&#13;
problem may solve it.&#13;
It is time to replace our present&#13;
Congressman with a person who&#13;
will manage government in a&#13;
manner which will keep government&#13;
out of the red.&#13;
Allan Braun&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
On September 9, 1980, there will&#13;
be a Republican Congressional&#13;
primary election. There are four&#13;
candidates vying for the Republican&#13;
slot on the November general&#13;
election ballot. After reading the&#13;
various candidates' literature,&#13;
Edward huck stands out as the one&#13;
having superior credentials.&#13;
Huck is a middle class&#13;
Republican who has lived and&#13;
worked in Racine all of his life.&#13;
Lifetime residency is an asset&#13;
necessary to a representative who&#13;
wishes to build a strong line of&#13;
communication with his or her&#13;
constituents. Huck's Bachelor&#13;
degree in Communications becomes&#13;
evident to anyone that has&#13;
heard him expressing his views at&#13;
the many public meetings and&#13;
forums he has attended, the&#13;
Citizens of the First District need a&#13;
representative capable of communicating&#13;
in Washington D.C. to&#13;
provide quality representation.&#13;
Degrees in Economics and Marketing&#13;
along with his experience as a&#13;
businessman in the construction&#13;
industry provide leadership and&#13;
insight that the professional&#13;
politicians in Washington D.C.,&#13;
have failed to produce.&#13;
The citizens of the First District&#13;
should elect a middle class person&#13;
who has the experience and&#13;
education to deal with the agony&#13;
and burden that government has&#13;
created for the average American.&#13;
Gail Kudrna&#13;
Tell us what YOU think!&#13;
Do you have something you want&#13;
everyone to know? Or something&#13;
everybody should know? If you do,&#13;
the RANGER WOULD LIKE TO&#13;
HEAR FROM YOU!&#13;
The RANGER feels that it is&#13;
important for students to voice&#13;
their opinions, and what better way&#13;
is there than to write a letter to the&#13;
editor? Whether it's about a group&#13;
that you think deserves praise,&#13;
something you feel is unfair, something&#13;
you read in RANGER that&#13;
you stronly agree or disagree with,&#13;
or anything from the presidential&#13;
election to the food service — let us&#13;
know about it! Let your voice be&#13;
heard by your fellow students.&#13;
All you have to do is follow these&#13;
simple guidelines:&#13;
— keep your letters under 500&#13;
words&#13;
— type them, double-spaced with&#13;
one-inch margins on standard&#13;
size typing paper&#13;
— sign the letter and include your&#13;
phone number for verification&#13;
purposes&#13;
Names will be withheld for valid&#13;
reasons, but any letter received&#13;
without a signature and phone&#13;
number will be thrown away.&#13;
The RANGER will publish as&#13;
many letters as space allows, but&#13;
has the right to refuse publication&#13;
of letters with defamatory content.&#13;
Letters will not be editied, so&#13;
misspelled words and grammatical&#13;
errors will remain intact. If you&#13;
need help or have any questions&#13;
about letters, contact Ken Meyer,&#13;
editor, in RANGER office.&#13;
The deadline for letters to the&#13;
editor is Tuesday, 9 a.m. for&#13;
publication Thursday.&#13;
Viewpoint&#13;
What was the major deciding factor in your attending Parkside&#13;
this fail?&#13;
Chris Crowell, sophomore&#13;
"Convenience."&#13;
Carolyn Grumley, special student&#13;
"It's close to where I live."&#13;
Kim Bakke, freshman&#13;
"Locality, the tuition is fairly cheap&#13;
for residents and they have a lot of&#13;
Psychology classes here."&#13;
Sue Roeschen, freshman&#13;
"It's close to home. I can work,&#13;
save money and live at home."&#13;
r &gt;&#13;
ganger&#13;
Ken Meyer Editor&#13;
Brian Felland Executive Business Manager&#13;
Dan Galbraith Business Manager&#13;
Sue Michetti News Editor&#13;
Wendy Westphal Feature Editor&#13;
Dave Cramer Sports Editor&#13;
Mike Holmdohl Photo Editor&#13;
Mike Farrell, Bruce Preston Advertising Managers&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Pete Cramer, Doug Edenhauser, Ginger Helgeson, Carol Klees, Dan&#13;
McCormick, Lori Meyer, Brian Passino, Joe Ripp, Art Schneiderman,&#13;
Sue Stevens, Bill Stougaard, Leslie Thompson.&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students of UW Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible tor its editorial policy and content.&#13;
Published every Thursday during the academic year except during breaks and holidays,&#13;
RANGER is printed by the Union Cooperative Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
Written permission is required tor reprint of any portion of RANGER.&#13;
All correspondence should be addressed to: Parkside Ranger, WLLC D139, UW&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, Wl 53141.&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be accepted if typewritten, doublespaced on standard size&#13;
paper with one-inch margins. All letters must be signed and a telephone number included&#13;
for verification.&#13;
Names will be withheld for valid reasons. Maximum length accepted is 500 words&#13;
Deadline for letters is Tuesday at 9 a.m. for publication on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
reserves all editorial privileges in refusing to print letters which contain false or&#13;
defamatory content. &#13;
Ranger Thursday, September4, 1980&#13;
Tuition rises $31 - then $30 more&#13;
Cont. from page 1&#13;
result of not maintaining enough&#13;
reserves at the state level to protect&#13;
state services," said Goetz. Dreyfus&#13;
broke with the Schreiber traditional&#13;
position of holding reserves for just&#13;
this type of emergency when he&#13;
made his decision to return the&#13;
reserves to the taxpayers through a&#13;
two month rebate.&#13;
Gary Goetz said that we hope to&#13;
know what shape the state is&#13;
actually in by late October or early&#13;
November. Then we can compare&#13;
the actuality against the 4.4%&#13;
projected deficit in the 1980 state&#13;
tax revenue due to the economic&#13;
recession. We may actually have&#13;
less or more than a 4.4% reduction.&#13;
This is why there has not been any&#13;
dramatic reductions taken at&#13;
UW-P which would hurt programs.&#13;
Said Chancellor Guskin in his&#13;
state of the university address:&#13;
"With the cooperation of faculty&#13;
and staff, the administrators of this&#13;
campus have developed very&#13;
effective, centralized budget controls.&#13;
We are confident that the&#13;
judicious use of these budget&#13;
controls can see us through this&#13;
fiscal crisis. It won't be easy, and it&#13;
won't be painless," he said to the&#13;
faculty and staff-dominated audience,&#13;
"but with your cooperation&#13;
we can avoid damage to the quality&#13;
ot our academic programs and&#13;
student services."&#13;
Chancellor Guskin's memo on&#13;
July 18 about the present fiscal&#13;
situation said, "We must resist all&#13;
temptation to trade the future&#13;
quality of this university for an&#13;
expedient solution to today's real or&#13;
imagined state budget crisis." He&#13;
said that this is the time to apply&#13;
the rigorous effective budget&#13;
controls already developed such as:&#13;
1) freeze all capital purchases&#13;
except library books and computer&#13;
WHERE THE MONEY COMES FROM: WHERE THE MONEY GOES-BY PROGRAM:&#13;
center equipment; 2) freeze all&#13;
distribution of inflationary offset&#13;
money; 3) review all purchase&#13;
orders and defer expenditures&#13;
which are not critical; 4) review all&#13;
currently open personnel positions&#13;
and defer filling those that are not&#13;
critical for up to three months; 5)&#13;
require special authorization to fill&#13;
any personnel positions which&#13;
become vacant; 6) conduct detailed&#13;
monthly audits of all unit budgets."&#13;
His memo also said, "The&#13;
appropriateness — and even the&#13;
legality — of this unprecedented&#13;
approach to state fiscal management&#13;
has been seriously questioned&#13;
by many." Madison Chancellor Irv&#13;
Shain commented, "This is a&#13;
political problem, not a budget&#13;
problem."&#13;
Logan to head Affirmative Action&#13;
Patronize&#13;
our&#13;
Lawrence B. Logan has been&#13;
named the affirmative action&#13;
officer at Parkside. Chancellor&#13;
Alan E. Guskin announced the&#13;
appointment Friday in an alluniversity&#13;
convocation address in&#13;
which Guskin reaffirmed his&#13;
administration's commitment to&#13;
affirmative actions goals and&#13;
outlined a series of new steps to&#13;
speed their implementation on the&#13;
campus.&#13;
Logan has been an executive&#13;
assistant to Guskin since 1979 and&#13;
also directs the university's&#13;
CHAMP program, which is&#13;
designed to encourage and motivate&#13;
minority high school youth to&#13;
prepare for post-secondary education.&#13;
He will continue his duties in&#13;
those areas while serving as&#13;
affirmative action officer.&#13;
Guskin said that Logan "will&#13;
have the freedom to monitor all&#13;
hiring activities and have access to&#13;
anyone on this campus."&#13;
Specifically, Guskin said Logan&#13;
will meet with every divisional&#13;
chairperson and director who is&#13;
hiring any staff to review recruitment&#13;
strategies and success to date&#13;
in recruiting black and other&#13;
minority and women faculty and&#13;
staff members; work with campus&#13;
affirmative action committees and&#13;
senior administrators for more&#13;
effective recruiting; report to the&#13;
senior administrators on his review&#13;
and recommend any corrective&#13;
action that should be taken; and&#13;
review all university position and&#13;
budget allocations and policies on a&#13;
continuing basis.&#13;
"Larry is staking his personal&#13;
reputation on our commitment to&#13;
affirmative action. I am aware of&#13;
this and am fully prepared to see to&#13;
it that he and we will be successful&#13;
in our efforts," Guskin said.&#13;
Logan also will serve as a liaison&#13;
with education and governmental&#13;
affirmative action/equal employment&#13;
agencies and community&#13;
action groups concerned with&#13;
employment opportunities.&#13;
Logan joined the UW-parkside&#13;
staff as a lecturer in its business&#13;
program in 1975 after 17 years&#13;
experience in private industry.&#13;
While working full time, Logan&#13;
attended college nights from 1965&#13;
to 1973 to earn a bachelor's degree&#13;
from Roosevelt University and an&#13;
MBA from the University of&#13;
Chicago School of Business.&#13;
His experience includes positions&#13;
as financial analyst with Joseph&#13;
Schlitz Co., cost accountant with&#13;
Inland Steel and data processing&#13;
production manager with Chicago&#13;
Tabulating Co. He is a life member&#13;
and treasurer of the Racine&#13;
NAACP Branch and he is the&#13;
treasurer and serves on the Board&#13;
of Directors for the Kenosha&#13;
County Advocates for Youth.&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
HOURS&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM:&#13;
7:30 am-2:00 pm DAILY (M-F)&#13;
FEATURING BREAKFASTS, SOUP, SALADS,&#13;
SANDWICHES. BURGERS, COMPLETE ENTREE&#13;
MEALS, DESSERTS. ETCUNION&#13;
SQUARE GRILL:&#13;
10:30 am-7 pm (M-TIl)&#13;
10:30 am-2 pm (FRIDAYS)&#13;
FEATURING CHARC BROILED BURGERS&#13;
&amp; BRATS, HOMEMADE PIZZA, FISH &amp; CHIPS.&#13;
SPECIALTY SANDWICHES, SHAKES, ETC.&#13;
WLLC COFFEE SHOPPE:&#13;
7:30 am-8:00 pm (M-Th)&#13;
7:30 am-2:00 pm (FRIDAYS)&#13;
FEATURING SANDWICHES &amp; SNACK ITEMS &#13;
Thursday, SeptemhprA 1980 Ranger&#13;
Chancellor Guskin addresses major issues&#13;
Chancellor Chancellor Alan Alan Guskin : , - w issued&#13;
strong mandates both to the&#13;
university and to the communities&#13;
it serves during his state of the&#13;
campus address Friday which&#13;
annually opens the school year.&#13;
Affirmative Action&#13;
He told his faculty and staff&#13;
colleagues that the university must&#13;
significantly increase the hiring and&#13;
promotion of women and minorities,&#13;
particularly black faculty&#13;
members, because "not only is it&#13;
the right thing to do, it is critical for&#13;
the quality of education we provide&#13;
to (both) our minority and majority&#13;
students."&#13;
Guskin announced a series of&#13;
specific steps to accomplish that,&#13;
including the appointment of his&#13;
executive assistant, Larry Logan, as&#13;
affirmative action officer with&#13;
broad authority to monitor all&#13;
hiring and promotion practices and&#13;
policies and to recommend any&#13;
needed changes directly to the&#13;
Parkside administration.&#13;
Guskin said specific measures in&#13;
faculty and staff hiring would&#13;
include more flexible job descriptions&#13;
and authorizations where&#13;
possible, more aggressive recruitment&#13;
searches, more emphasis on&#13;
internal promotions to fill vacant&#13;
positions, more on-the-job staff&#13;
training, and "review of candidates&#13;
not only for the best qualified but&#13;
for the minorities and women who&#13;
are obviously qualified and could&#13;
more than adequately fulfill the&#13;
requirements of the position."&#13;
Community Saboteurs&#13;
Guskin emphasized to the&#13;
communities, however, that UWParkside&#13;
"will never permit outside&#13;
groups to substitute their judgment&#13;
for that of our faculty and administration&#13;
on questions of tenure and&#13;
educational philosophy. To do so&#13;
would erode the very foundation&#13;
and deny the basic tenets of what a&#13;
university is and must be."&#13;
Guskin lashed out at what he&#13;
said were attempts by some in&#13;
Racine's minority community —&#13;
"hopefully few in number" — to&#13;
"sabotage" Parkside's efforts to&#13;
hire black faculty and "discourage"&#13;
support of its successful CHAMP&#13;
program for minority youth in&#13;
junior and senior high school,&#13;
apparently because of a recent&#13;
tenure denial to Glenn Doston, a&#13;
black UW-P professor.&#13;
Guskin said a senior black&#13;
faculty member of a Big 10&#13;
university who was considering&#13;
Parkside recently received a call&#13;
from an individual Guskin did not&#13;
identify, urging him not to come to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
"When certain self-appointed&#13;
leaders of the black community in&#13;
Racine state publicly — as they&#13;
have — that they will do all in their&#13;
power to undermine our hiring of&#13;
black faculty because they happen&#13;
to disagree with a recent tenure&#13;
denial, is that not hypocrisy?"&#13;
Guskin asked. "Do their words and&#13;
their behavior show concern for&#13;
improving the situation at UWParkside?&#13;
Are they being honest in&#13;
claiming to be concerned about the&#13;
education of minority students at&#13;
UW-Parkside? Are their words and&#13;
their actions helpful in assuring&#13;
that both minority and majority&#13;
students receive the educational&#13;
benefits which accrue to both&#13;
groups when there is an appropriate&#13;
number of minorities on a university&#13;
faculty?"&#13;
Guskin described another&#13;
"equally disturbing situation&#13;
(which) occured at approximately&#13;
the same time."&#13;
"The board of directors of the&#13;
Racine branch of a prominent&#13;
national human rights organization&#13;
recently informed us that they&#13;
could not support our highly&#13;
promising CHAMP program...&#13;
because it might be interpreted as&#13;
supporting the faculty decision on&#13;
tenure in the same case. In&#13;
addition, some members of the&#13;
organization's board tried —&#13;
unsuccessfully, by the way — to&#13;
discourage the support of others in&#13;
the community for the program. I&#13;
should add that UW-Parkside has&#13;
cooperated with this organization&#13;
in the past on a number of projects&#13;
of benefit to the minority&#13;
community. In fact, we currently&#13;
are cooperating with them, at their&#13;
earlier request, on a federally&#13;
funded youth job program. Are the&#13;
actions of this organization helpful&#13;
to our mutually shared goals of&#13;
helping minority youth? Are they&#13;
being honest, and fair, to the scores&#13;
of minority youngsters who are&#13;
being helped by the program?"&#13;
Tenure&#13;
Guskin also emphasized&#13;
"another point that many people&#13;
outside the university often misunderstand."&#13;
&#13;
"Denying an individual tenure is&#13;
not a rejection of the values of that&#13;
individual. The decision is a rather&#13;
limited one — simply put, the&#13;
faculty and the university are&#13;
stateing that the individual has not&#13;
performed up to the expected level&#13;
of quality on one or more of the&#13;
criteria which are used — teaching,&#13;
research and service."&#13;
"No matter who is granted or&#13;
denied tenure, the university&#13;
remains committed to community&#13;
outreach... aiding the development&#13;
of the Kenosha-Racine&#13;
area. . . working closely with and&#13;
aiding the minority communities...&#13;
and increasing the number of&#13;
minorities and women on our&#13;
faculty and staff," he said.&#13;
"It is to be expected that the&#13;
university and its constituencies&#13;
will not always be in agreement. We&#13;
cannot, however, react to temporary&#13;
differences by shutting our eyes&#13;
or covering our ears. We must&#13;
continue dialogue and interaction&#13;
with all segments of society. Some&#13;
may reject us temporarily, but we&#13;
will never reject them," Guskin&#13;
said.&#13;
Women and Minorities&#13;
Guskin said there had been&#13;
"significant accomplishments" in&#13;
affirmative action made in the past&#13;
year, particularly for women. He&#13;
cited statistics showing that onethird&#13;
of the 21 faculty and&#13;
two-thirds of the 30 academic staff&#13;
hired were female; that two of the&#13;
six faculty promoted to tenure were&#13;
female; and that of the five significant&#13;
administrative appointments&#13;
made, three were women and one a&#13;
black man.&#13;
He also said that UW-p's affirmative&#13;
action plan was approved by&#13;
the federal government and said it&#13;
had been called a "model plan,"&#13;
and that an administrative internship&#13;
established last year for&#13;
women and minorities on campus&#13;
had already resulted in a significant&#13;
promotion for a female staff&#13;
member.&#13;
"It is a fact, however, that we&#13;
have not accomplished nearly&#13;
enough. I am not proud of having&#13;
only one black faculty member and&#13;
a few black staff members,"&#13;
Guskin said.&#13;
"Professional role models do&#13;
make a positive difference to&#13;
minority youth and women," he&#13;
said.&#13;
"By exposure to professionals, by&#13;
interaction and discussion with&#13;
such individuals, by seeing firsthand&#13;
that a black or hispanic or&#13;
woman can actually be successful,&#13;
and by learning that such success&#13;
can be achieved only by developing&#13;
skills through hard work, individuals&#13;
can change their behavior,&#13;
increase their realistic aspirations,&#13;
and be motivated and equipped to&#13;
succeed."&#13;
"I would also submit that a lack&#13;
of minority and women faculty&#13;
members has a significant and&#13;
negative impact on majority&#13;
students; it reinforces prejudicial&#13;
feelings and images that many&#13;
white males and females have of&#13;
women and minorities. Majority&#13;
student are being denied a reality&#13;
that will prepare them for a society&#13;
that is 52% female and in which&#13;
more than 20% of the people are&#13;
black and hispanic," he said.&#13;
Guskin reitereated UW-Parkside's&#13;
commitment to its three&#13;
institutional priorities of focusing&#13;
programs on the urban-industrial&#13;
needs of this area of the state, on&#13;
quality education and on broad&#13;
community outreach activities.&#13;
"As in the past, we will translate&#13;
these priorities into programs and&#13;
activities which serve our students&#13;
and the communities through a&#13;
continual reassessment of their&#13;
needs and our resources," he said.&#13;
Budget Outlook&#13;
Guskin said that UW-Parkside's&#13;
fiscal resources are "becoming a&#13;
matter of serious concern." He said&#13;
it will be difficult but "judicious&#13;
use of budget controls can see us&#13;
through" the Governor's 4.4&#13;
percent cutback from the current&#13;
budget, about $214,000 in UW-P's&#13;
case.&#13;
"For most of the 1970's,&#13;
cutbacks were piled on top of&#13;
inflationary losses. Frankly, I don't&#13;
know of how much longer this&#13;
campus — and this university&#13;
system — can do as much, or more,&#13;
with less. The day is coming, soon,&#13;
when the University of Wisconsin&#13;
will be forced to say to the&#13;
Governor and the Legislature, to&#13;
taxpayers and students, that we&#13;
have no choice but to do less with&#13;
less," Guskin said.&#13;
Wegner piece recorded&#13;
"Something for Flute and&#13;
Piano," a composition by Parkside&#13;
music professor August M. Wegner,&#13;
is included on a new album, "Prepared&#13;
Piano: The First Four&#13;
Decades," just issued by the&#13;
Musical Heritage Society.&#13;
The album contains representative&#13;
works composed since John&#13;
Cage "invented" the prepared&#13;
piano 40 years ago, applying nuts,&#13;
bolts and other assorted hardware&#13;
to the strings to create a simulated&#13;
percussion ensemble to accompany&#13;
Syvilla Fort's modern dance,&#13;
Bacchanal, in 1940. The composition&#13;
now is regarded as a milestone&#13;
in modern music.&#13;
The album includes Bacchanal,&#13;
Lou Harrison's "May Rain," Alan&#13;
Stout's "For Prepared Piano,"&#13;
Samuel Pellman's "Silent Night."&#13;
Richard Bunger's "Mirrors for&#13;
Pianist and Tape Recordist" and&#13;
the Wegner work for prepared&#13;
piano and amplified flute. Richard&#13;
Bunger and Delores Stevens are&#13;
featured as pianists and John&#13;
moaooooooaow&#13;
Heitmann is flutist for the Wegner&#13;
piece.&#13;
Wegner says his composition&#13;
could be thought of as a dance from&#13;
some mythical, exotic land and is&#13;
meant to be enjoyed for its rhythm&#13;
and timbre.&#13;
Wegner has published a number&#13;
of his compositions, which include&#13;
a wide range of instrumentation,&#13;
and has had his works performed at&#13;
a number of major universities and&#13;
before state and regional composers'&#13;
societies.&#13;
He joined the UW-Parkside&#13;
music faculty in 1972 and teaches&#13;
composition and theory classes. He&#13;
is co-director, with cellist harry&#13;
Sturm, of the New Music at&#13;
Parkside series; is director of the&#13;
Oriana Trio international competition&#13;
for new works for piano&#13;
trio; and is active as a pianist in the&#13;
New Music series and the Parkside&#13;
Piano Duo comprised of Wegner&#13;
and Oriana Trio pianist Carol Bell.&#13;
He holds a PhD in composition&#13;
from the University of Iowa.&#13;
OOOOOOOOOO&#13;
Friday, September 12&#13;
A Fabulous Friday&#13;
A Free Afternoon of Music by&#13;
Northern Lights 1-3 pm&#13;
Sierra 3-4 pm&#13;
Corn &amp; Brats for sale&#13;
All outside of Union Square&#13;
'loo&#13;
9 pm in Union Square&#13;
The Country Rock&#13;
of Sierra&#13;
$1.50 Parkside Students&#13;
$2.00 Guests&#13;
U.W.-P and State Id's required&#13;
A P.A.B. Production&#13;
oooo 000000000000000 &#13;
Esser, Maris win Distinguished Service awards&#13;
Distinguised service awards for&#13;
teaching excellence were presented&#13;
to Profs. Robert E. Esser and&#13;
Barbara English Maris and an&#13;
award for exemplary university&#13;
service by an academic staff&#13;
member was presented to Carol J.&#13;
Cashen, director of UW-P's&#13;
Educational Support Program,&#13;
during an all-university convocation&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Chancellor Alan E. Guskin&#13;
presented the awards of $500 each&#13;
and gave his annual "state of the&#13;
campus" address.&#13;
The teaching awards are based&#13;
on nominations by students with&#13;
the final selection of winners made&#13;
'by a committee of four recent&#13;
winners of the faculty awards and&#13;
tour students. Nominations were&#13;
received for 126 UW-P faculty&#13;
members. Selection of winners was&#13;
based on five areas of teacing&#13;
excellence: ability to create an&#13;
effective learning environment,&#13;
pedagogical skills, knowledge of&#13;
subject matter, evidence of tangible&#13;
results and exemplary character as&#13;
a teacher.&#13;
Esser, a member of the life&#13;
science faculty since 1968 and&#13;
previously a teacher at Parkside's&#13;
predecessor two-year campus in&#13;
Racine, was cited for the&#13;
outstanding clarity and organization&#13;
of his lectures, whether for&#13;
freshmen with no scientific background&#13;
or inclinations or senior life&#13;
science majors. Both students and&#13;
colleagues say they are impressed&#13;
by the way he puts his practical&#13;
farming experience to work in the&#13;
classroom, teaching a popular&#13;
course on organic gardening. One&#13;
student commented • "He is the&#13;
only person who can make the&#13;
formation of a peat bog sound&#13;
interesting."&#13;
Maris, a pianist who joined the&#13;
music faculty in 1978, was&#13;
described by nominators as an&#13;
"inspiring" teacher, whose "love of&#13;
teaching and enthusiasm for music&#13;
are infectious." Other nominators&#13;
said "she maintains high standards&#13;
and gets students to do their best&#13;
work (and) maintains outstanding&#13;
and relaxed rapport with students&#13;
who learn from her not only in the&#13;
classroom, but in the concert hall."&#13;
Maris' accomplishments also have&#13;
been recognized by the College&#13;
Music Society, which has elected&#13;
her its national president for 1981.&#13;
Cashen was cited for organization&#13;
of the first Basic Skills Conference&#13;
last fall, shortly after she&#13;
joined the Parkside staff, and&#13;
development of the conference into&#13;
a UW System-wide event this fall.&#13;
She also received praise for&#13;
outreach activities to other units of&#13;
the university which have increased&#13;
the impact of services offered by the&#13;
Educational Program Support&#13;
Office and Collegiate Skills&#13;
Program, which requires that&#13;
students pass competency tests in&#13;
writing, readings, mathematics and&#13;
library use by the time they are&#13;
juniors.&#13;
The academic staff award is&#13;
based on faculty, student and staff&#13;
nominations, with selection by a&#13;
special academic staff award&#13;
committee.&#13;
Woman chancellor at Eau Claire&#13;
[&#13;
WPS&#13;
Student Health Insurance&#13;
Available through WPS Blue Shield&#13;
Contact Student Health Center&#13;
or local WPS office at&#13;
5500 • 8 th Ave. or 552-4746 I&#13;
The University of Wisconsin&#13;
System has chosen a top woman&#13;
educator from Minnesota to lead&#13;
one of its major universities.&#13;
Dr. Emily Hannah, the chief&#13;
academic officer of the State&#13;
University System of Minnesota,&#13;
was appointed by the UW System&#13;
Board of Regents to serve as&#13;
chancellor of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Eau Claire. She will&#13;
succeed Chancellor Leonard Haas,&#13;
who has headed UW-Eau Claire&#13;
administration since 1959. the&#13;
appointment is effective Jan. 1,&#13;
1981.&#13;
Hannah was the first woman to&#13;
serve as a vice chancellor of the&#13;
Minnesota System. In Wisconsin,&#13;
she will be the first woman to head&#13;
a public university.&#13;
"Dr. Emily Hannah brings to the&#13;
chancellorship of UW-Eau Claire&#13;
many years of distinguished service&#13;
in college and university administration,"&#13;
UW System President&#13;
Robert M. O'Neil said in&#13;
commenting on the appointment he&#13;
had recommended to the board.&#13;
"Following her years as a faculty&#13;
member and faculty leader, she has&#13;
held several highly responsible&#13;
posts in the Minnesota State&#13;
System," O'Neil added. "She&#13;
understands keenly the many issues&#13;
which face and challenge us in the&#13;
UW System in the 1980's, for she&#13;
already has dealt with many of&#13;
these issues in Minnesota."&#13;
As vice chancellor of academic&#13;
affairs, Hannah has been the&#13;
Minnesota System's top academic&#13;
program counsel, coordinator and&#13;
planner for the last four years.&#13;
There are seven universities in the&#13;
Minnesota System — Bemidji,&#13;
Mankato, Metropolitan, Moorhead,&#13;
St. Cloud, Winona and&#13;
Southwest State. Total enrollment&#13;
is 43,000.&#13;
A native of Denver, Hannah&#13;
received her B.A. degree in speech&#13;
and English from Grinnel College&#13;
in Iowa in 1958, her M.A. in speech&#13;
from the University of Iowa in&#13;
1962, and her Ph.D. in speech from&#13;
the University of Illinois in 1967.&#13;
She served on the St. Cloud&#13;
faculty from 1962-64, and returned&#13;
in 1967 after her doctoral work and&#13;
a year of teaching at California&#13;
State University in Sacramento.&#13;
She chaired the speech department&#13;
at St. Cloud from 1968-71 and&#13;
continued as a member of the&#13;
faculty until 1975 when she went to&#13;
Metropolitan State to serve as&#13;
assistant to the vice president for&#13;
academic affairs.&#13;
She was elevated to associate&#13;
vice-chancellor for academic affairs&#13;
shortly after her arrival at&#13;
Metropolitan and served the&#13;
institution as acting president in&#13;
1978.&#13;
"We are extemely fortunate to&#13;
have attracted Dr. Hannah to&#13;
Wisconsin as the successor to our&#13;
longest term chancellor," said&#13;
President O'Neil. "If anyone can&#13;
continue the wise and sensitive&#13;
leadership of Leonard Haas, I am&#13;
convinced that Emily Hannah is&#13;
precisely the person to do so."&#13;
The new UW-Eau Claire&#13;
chancellor is 44. Her starting salary&#13;
will be $55,500.&#13;
Guys — Gals&#13;
BOWLING CLUB&#13;
Organizational Meeting&#13;
Monday, September 15&#13;
1 pm - 2 pm&#13;
Union Rec Center&#13;
For more info —&#13;
Contact Mike Menzhuber&#13;
in Rec Center&#13;
REC CENTER&#13;
5EPTEMBER&#13;
SPECIRL&#13;
Ladies9 Nite Mon. 7-10 pm&#13;
Guy9&#13;
s NiteThurs. 7 - lO pm&#13;
1/2 PRICE&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
1/2 PRICE&#13;
BILLIRRDS&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
73 Javelin-AMX, stick, 49,000&#13;
original miles. $700. 694-4730.&#13;
T"&#13;
POLICY&#13;
for student/&#13;
student organization&#13;
1. Submitters must&#13;
present valid Parkside&#13;
ID.&#13;
2. Two free ads —&#13;
10 words or less.&#13;
3. 30$ will be&#13;
charged for every&#13;
additional 10 words&#13;
or less.&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
DEADLINE: FRIDAY 10:30 AM!&#13;
STUDENT/STUDENT O R GA N I Z A T I O N RATE&#13;
Any r e g i s te r e d UW-P s t u d en t or s t ud e n t o r g a n i za t i o n is qualified&#13;
to insert a c la s s i f i e d line ad in th e Ranger at no c o st if un der or&#13;
equivalent to 10 words. (Phone n u mb e r s equal 1 word.)&#13;
Classification:&#13;
Name&#13;
SS No..&#13;
Ranger&#13;
WLLCD139 &#13;
From the Parking Lot 1&#13;
How I spent my |&#13;
summer vacation&#13;
Gen-Con&#13;
The annual GenCon of Wargamers was held Aug. 21-24. It drew&#13;
enthusiasts from all over the country together to participate in&#13;
games as varied as reenactments of World Wars, and the old&#13;
staple, D &amp; D (D ungeons and Dragons). In addition to gaming&#13;
and seminars, national distributors of games, miniatures and&#13;
associated paraphenalia attended. The convention was sponsored&#13;
by TSR, a Lake Geneva based organization.&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
P.S.G.A.&#13;
by Tracy Gruber&#13;
President, P.S.G.A.&#13;
I'd like to welcome everyone&#13;
back for another semester at&#13;
Parkside. This portion of the&#13;
Ranger is reserved for a weekly&#13;
article from the Parkside Student&#13;
Government to help inform you of&#13;
what is happening in university&#13;
governance.&#13;
P.S.G.A. is the official student&#13;
governing body at Parkside. Since&#13;
merger in 1974, all campuses in the&#13;
U.W. system have a student&#13;
government that, according to state&#13;
statute 36.09(5), entitles them to be&#13;
active participants in campus&#13;
policy decision making.&#13;
The P.S.G.A. is comprised of the&#13;
President, the Vice President, the&#13;
President Pro-Tempore, the Assistant&#13;
Pro-Tempore, 18 senators and&#13;
five justices. There are three&#13;
standing committees of the senate.&#13;
One of them is SUFAC, segregated&#13;
university fee allocation committee.&#13;
welcomes&#13;
This committee allocates money to&#13;
and reviews the spending of student&#13;
organizations. The allocations&#13;
made by the SUFAC last year, for&#13;
this year's use were $516,563.00.&#13;
Another senate committee is&#13;
Student Services. The members of&#13;
this committee investigate and&#13;
make recommendations concerning&#13;
problems students face at Parkside.&#13;
the other committee is Legislative&#13;
Attairs. This is a new committee&#13;
that will deal with political issues in&#13;
the community, state, and nation.&#13;
P.S.G.A. is also a member of the&#13;
United Council of Wisconsin&#13;
Student Governments (UC). UC is a&#13;
lobbying organization in the state&#13;
concerned with student issues. A&#13;
$.50 refundable fee was part of your&#13;
semester tuition to support our&#13;
membership. If you express your&#13;
opinions on state and national&#13;
issues to the senate, they will relay&#13;
them to UC.&#13;
There is a place for you in&#13;
students&#13;
P.S.G.A. The ultimate involvement&#13;
is to become a senator, but there&#13;
are other ways to become involved&#13;
that don't require as much time or&#13;
responsibility. Some faculty committees&#13;
have students as voting&#13;
members. These committees range&#13;
in interest from athletics to library&#13;
policy decision making. P.S.G.A.&#13;
also needs people who would like to&#13;
volunteer a few hours at special&#13;
events or to help in the office. If you&#13;
would like to become involved stop&#13;
in at our office, WLLC D-137, next&#13;
to the coffee shop.&#13;
P.S.G.A.'s major concern is you!&#13;
What is on your mind? If you have&#13;
any problems, stop in and talk&#13;
them over with us. We would like to&#13;
meet you.&#13;
REMEMBER:&#13;
FALL ELECTIONS ARE OCT.&#13;
15-16.&#13;
Internships&#13;
The Public Service Intership&#13;
Program (PSIP) at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside is seeking&#13;
students to intern in local, state,&#13;
and national governmental&#13;
agencies. Many opportunities exist&#13;
for practical experience in working&#13;
in political campaigns, helping with&#13;
legal services for the poor, solving&#13;
consituent problems for legislators,&#13;
assisting local administrators in&#13;
providing community services,&#13;
working with planning agencies,&#13;
and assisting court officers.&#13;
In the past year students at&#13;
Parkside have worked for Senator&#13;
Gaylord Nelson, Congressman Les&#13;
Aspin, the City of Kenosha, Racine&#13;
By G. Helgeson&#13;
On my summer vacation, I went&#13;
way the hell up north to a place&#13;
called Woodville, Wisconsin with&#13;
some friends. Woodie's is a real fun&#13;
place. There's lots to do, especially&#13;
at night, when you can go to the&#13;
bars (there's something like ten&#13;
bars for a town of 900 or so people)&#13;
and really get wasted and then kick&#13;
out the hicks. Shit, we had fun! The&#13;
music ain't so hot cuz they all seem&#13;
to like stuff we used to listen to&#13;
when we were about in the 8th&#13;
grade, but the mixed drinks are&#13;
super strong and cheap. A coupla&#13;
times we got kicked out, but that&#13;
was a misunderstanding, well a few&#13;
misunderstandings at least.&#13;
Anyway, the nights were the most&#13;
fun. The days were mostly painful&#13;
and boring, what with the hangovers&#13;
and nothing to do. A coupla&#13;
times we did have some excitement,&#13;
though, Like the day we thought&#13;
my friend's dog was in a dog fight&#13;
and getting killed. But that turned&#13;
out a lot different than we thought&#13;
it was gonna. We were sitting on&#13;
the hill in the back of my friend's&#13;
parents' house just hanging around&#13;
and recovering from our overindulgences&#13;
of the preceeding&#13;
evening, if you know what I mean.&#13;
Well, all of a sudden we heard this&#13;
barking and growling and yapping&#13;
and carrying on like you would not&#13;
believe. My friend turned as white&#13;
as a sheet. My friend really thinks&#13;
the world and the moon of that dog.&#13;
I mean his wolfy-looking old mutt&#13;
Caesar. And it sure sounded like&#13;
Caesar had gotten into some sort of&#13;
a dispute with the farm dogs of the&#13;
area, or maybe in a tussle with&#13;
some rabid weasel or something. I&#13;
mentioned the latter, just in&#13;
passing, and my friend was in his&#13;
ma's pickup truck, backing up in a&#13;
way that catapulted gravel onto the&#13;
side of the house (that his dad just&#13;
painted the week before), before I&#13;
could even get the whole sentence&#13;
out.&#13;
Gees, he sure is crazy about that&#13;
dog. He got him one summer when&#13;
he had mono and had to stay home&#13;
available&#13;
Police Department, Racine County&#13;
Public Defenders office, the Racine&#13;
County Planner, kenosha County&#13;
Public Defenders, Kenosha Police&#13;
Department, Wisconsin Department&#13;
of Local Affairs and Development,&#13;
and Racine County Juvenile&#13;
Court. Currently, there are openings&#13;
in these areas and others for&#13;
summer and fall semester. Students&#13;
enrolled in the program can receive&#13;
from 3-12 credits of academic&#13;
work.&#13;
For further information, contact&#13;
Dr. Samuel Pernacciaro, 344&#13;
WLLC Building, University of&#13;
Wisconsin-parkside, Kenosha.&#13;
(Telephone Number: 414-553-2032).&#13;
all summer. I guess he's pretty&#13;
attached to that mutt. Caesar is a&#13;
good dog and all, I guess, he's&#13;
really smart and big — he can jump&#13;
up on me, put his paws on my&#13;
shoulders, one on each side, and&#13;
rest his head on the top of mine&#13;
with no problem. He sheds all year&#13;
long, and my friend's ma is always&#13;
chasing him outside, but he sneaks&#13;
back in as soon as someone opens&#13;
the door, cuz he likes to watch TV&#13;
so much. Mostly talk shows. And&#13;
commercials for Bonanza and Mr.&#13;
Steak.&#13;
When he is outside though, his&#13;
favorite activity is chasing birds.&#13;
God, it's beautiful to watch that&#13;
dog run and turn and jump after&#13;
those birds. And the damn things&#13;
just stay out of his reach to taunt&#13;
him. They could just fly about a&#13;
mile away to the neighbor's farm,&#13;
where the dog doesn't chase them,&#13;
but they don't. They just stay right&#13;
there to dive-bomb Caesar and&#13;
tease him. I think Caesar wouldn't&#13;
know what to do if he caught one,&#13;
cuz he never has, but I kinda think&#13;
he'd be disappointed cuz then the&#13;
game would be over.&#13;
Anyway, I just barely got my butt&#13;
into the truck with my friend and&#13;
closed the door when we went&#13;
screeching down the driveway and&#13;
onto the country road. I was&#13;
beginning to wish I'd kept that&#13;
damn thought about the rabid&#13;
weasel to myself. My friend kept&#13;
asking me which way the barking&#13;
was coming from, saying, "That's&#13;
Caesar all right. I'd know his bark&#13;
anywhere," and looking worried.&#13;
Then we came over the top of this&#13;
big hill about two miles up the road&#13;
and sure enough, there were a&#13;
bunch of dogs all carrying on just&#13;
like we thought. But we didn't have&#13;
time to look too hard, cuz my friend&#13;
was whipping that old truck onto&#13;
the field, right into the corn or&#13;
wheat or whatever was growing&#13;
there. I was hoping we wouldn't&#13;
look up and see some big old airconditioned&#13;
monster of a tractor&#13;
with a crazy mad farmer in it&#13;
getting ready to run us off his land,&#13;
when I looked over to my friend&#13;
and he was laughing of all things. I&#13;
couldn't believe it. He runs me&#13;
around in circles, gets me all&#13;
worked up over a stupid dog, and&#13;
then when we finally get to the dog&#13;
to help him, he just sits there and&#13;
laughs. I thought I was gonna&#13;
punch the moronic sucker out. But&#13;
the he got his breath back, and&#13;
kinda half wheezed and half&#13;
coughed, "Look. I shoulda known&#13;
it. Caesar's got a wife on every farm&#13;
in this entire county."&#13;
Just then the rest of the dogs that&#13;
had been chasing and barking up a&#13;
storm around Caesar musta got&#13;
tired or something cuz they broke&#13;
formation and scattered in every&#13;
which direction. And I got one&#13;
quick glance at Caesar as he got&#13;
down off this mangy looking old&#13;
dog, glanced over his shoulder like,&#13;
"Oh, good. A ride home," and then&#13;
the next thing I knew he was in the&#13;
back of the truck, laying down with&#13;
his head in his paws real exhaustedlike.&#13;
&#13;
When we got him home, my&#13;
friend made this big stink over&#13;
him and gave him a big frozen&#13;
steak that I think was supposed to&#13;
be for his dad that night. I think my&#13;
triend was just relieved, myself.&#13;
I know I was. That's why I&#13;
couldn't hardly stay real mad at&#13;
him for going off on such a tangent.&#13;
Cuz I knew I'd have something to&#13;
bullshit about for my first assignment&#13;
in Creative Writing this fall.&#13;
Well, see ya. I gotta go hand this in&#13;
now!&#13;
s.o.c.&#13;
ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING&#13;
Mon., Sept. 8 1:00 pm&#13;
in S.O.C. Office&#13;
-BE THERETHE&#13;
POWER PLANT&#13;
SOUTHERN WISCONSIN'S&#13;
NEWEST ROCK SPOT!&#13;
•IN * 3931 - 45th St.&#13;
657-3101&#13;
LIVE BAND S&#13;
Fridays, Saturdays&#13;
Sundays &amp; Wednesdays&#13;
McSATV,. *7*1 A A '&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
• DANISH TORTE CAKES&#13;
• KRINGIES v&#13;
• WEDDING CAKES&#13;
• CAKES FOR All OCCASIONS&#13;
OTCN • FINE ITALIAN BREAD £?* iz • hard rou a b un specialists 654-0785&#13;
6C20 39TH AVE NUE &#13;
Ftengef Thursday, September4,1980 7&#13;
"Smokey&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
"Smokey and the Bandit II" has&#13;
all the makings of a hit, multiple&#13;
car wrecks, a Country and Western&#13;
soundtrack (ala "Urban Cowboy"),&#13;
great comic talent, and even the&#13;
Pittsburg Steeler's. Yet it still fails.&#13;
As the film begins we find that&#13;
our hero, Bandit (Burt Reynolds),&#13;
has changed from a lovable racer to&#13;
a shallow, egotistical, drunken&#13;
Country and Western singer (who's&#13;
only single, "Let's Do Something&#13;
Cheap And Superficial", has sold&#13;
only one copy) and Frog (Sally&#13;
Field) after making a big decision,&#13;
in the first movie, not to marry&#13;
Junior (because she didn't love him)&#13;
is once again being led to the alter&#13;
by him.&#13;
The opening scenes jump around&#13;
quickly. They contain humor which&#13;
belongs in an edition of "Second&#13;
City TV."&#13;
The plot hasn't changed much&#13;
from the first film except that&#13;
Parkside graduate teaching biology in Malaysia&#13;
Living amid Kadazans, Bajaus,&#13;
Chinese, East Indians, Pakistanians&#13;
and West Malaysians, nancy&#13;
M. Sahakian, 26, from Racine,&#13;
helps fill a temporary void of&#13;
science teachers in East Malaysia&#13;
by teacing biology in a government&#13;
secondary school.&#13;
Ms. Sahakian, who received a&#13;
bachelor's degree in life science&#13;
with a teaching certificate in 1976&#13;
from Parkside, is a Peace Corps&#13;
volunteer who will complete two&#13;
years of service in Southeast Asia&#13;
this November. Her school is&#13;
located 10 miles out of Kota&#13;
Kinabalu, the capital of Sabah, one&#13;
of two Malaysian states on the&#13;
Island of Borneo.&#13;
"A local teacher," she maintains,&#13;
"could teach the subject better&#13;
than I from the point of language&#13;
fluency, but I feel that I have a lot&#13;
more to contribute outside of giving&#13;
notes.&#13;
"I challenge them to think rather&#13;
than- just to understand," she&#13;
continues. "Hopefully, this will&#13;
have a lasting impact on them&#13;
throughout the remainder of their&#13;
lives, regardless of whether they do&#13;
further studies in science."&#13;
A two year curriculum at the&#13;
school follows the course syllabus&#13;
and is aimed at teaching for an&#13;
achievement examination the&#13;
students take at the end of the fifth&#13;
form to qualify for further study.&#13;
Their class time from 7:30 a.m. to&#13;
12:30 p.m. is intensive, according&#13;
to Ms. Sahakian, with little or no&#13;
time allotted for homework, the&#13;
students take nine different&#13;
subjects simultaneously, including&#13;
chemistry, physics, biology, modern&#13;
mathematics and additional mathematics.&#13;
In the afternoon, additional&#13;
science labs are conducted and&#13;
classes are scheduled for the lower&#13;
forms so that the school building is&#13;
in use continuously throughout the&#13;
day.&#13;
"My time is almost totally&#13;
consumed preparing lesson plans,&#13;
setting up labs or correcting exams&#13;
and notebooks," reports Ms.&#13;
Sahakian. "Whatever free time I&#13;
have is spent in the school library as&#13;
the librarian.&#13;
"While here," she continues, "I&#13;
have read Roots, Trinity and the&#13;
Triology (Tolkien) whose misty&#13;
mountains I see daily from my back&#13;
porch as Mount Kinabalu, but outside&#13;
of that good books are hard to&#13;
come by in Sabah so I spend most&#13;
of my free time studying for the&#13;
MCAT examination that I will be&#13;
taking this October."&#13;
She says that the movies there&#13;
are generally of the Kung Fu&#13;
variety or over-melodramatic, so&#13;
her social life revolves around&#13;
school functions such as programs&#13;
put on by the students and sports&#13;
activities.&#13;
The food, she notes, is greasy and&#13;
spicy, surrounded by a plate of rice.&#13;
"The rice can be eaten from a bowl&#13;
with chop sticks, from a plate with&#13;
a large spoon and fork, or with the&#13;
hands," she relates. "Depending on&#13;
the circumstances, I have eaten it&#13;
all three ways."&#13;
Ms. Sahakian has become&#13;
accustomed to the spicy food and&#13;
rice and finds that she can't eat a&#13;
meal without rice and come away&#13;
feeling full.&#13;
She teaches in the national&#13;
language of Bahasa Malaysia,&#13;
which she learned in intensive&#13;
Peace Corps training. She talks to&#13;
her Chinese housemate in English&#13;
and her Malay housemate in&#13;
Bahasa Malaysia. "When we all&#13;
three get together," she observes,&#13;
"the conversation usually flows in&#13;
mixed English-Malay."&#13;
She points out that she is lucky&#13;
that she doesn't smoke or drink&#13;
since both of these activities are not&#13;
acceptable for women. "My laugh&#13;
does give rise to many comments&#13;
because it is a bit more wholehearted&#13;
than is typical here," she&#13;
notes.&#13;
One thing that Ms. Sahakian&#13;
didn't catch on to right away is that&#13;
Muslims can't touch dogs. "This&#13;
was after talking to a neighbor&#13;
while continually petting a dog for&#13;
five minutes," she recalls. "As&#13;
always, he didn't say anything but&#13;
sidestepped the issue by asking if I&#13;
like dogs. He would not want to&#13;
offend me by telling me the reason&#13;
for his asking.&#13;
"Usually behind polite inquiries&#13;
of this nature is an attempt to tell&#13;
the offending party something,"&#13;
she observes. "Malay culture is&#13;
truely polite and quiet."&#13;
A resident of 1925 North Main&#13;
Street in Racine, Ms. Sahakian&#13;
previously served in the Peace&#13;
Corps as a biology teacher in&#13;
Belize. She is one of about 145&#13;
Peace Corps volunteers serving in&#13;
agriculture health, special education,&#13;
math/science education and&#13;
youth development projects in&#13;
Malaysia, there are about 6,000&#13;
Peace Corps volunteers serving in&#13;
60 developing countries around the&#13;
world.&#13;
The benefits of breakfast&#13;
ftfllflBOW&#13;
uptown&#13;
GIFTS&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
JEWELRY&#13;
r^- kenosha&#13;
The idea that you don't need to&#13;
eat breakfast the morning after&#13;
having a good dinner the previous&#13;
evening is a myth, according to an&#13;
article on breakfast and weight&#13;
control featured in the first issue of&#13;
a new publication by Cereal&#13;
Institute, Inc.&#13;
The Institute's new publication,&#13;
CURRENTS in Food, Nutrition&#13;
and Health, seeks to provide&#13;
well-informed perspectives on relationships&#13;
between what we eat&#13;
and good health. It features&#13;
statements, interviews and information&#13;
from well-respected food,&#13;
nutrition and health authorities.&#13;
In the article on weight control,&#13;
Dr. W. Henry Sebrell, Medical&#13;
Consultant to Weight Watchers&#13;
International, Inc., and former&#13;
Director of the National Institutes&#13;
of Health, explained in an interview&#13;
why the body needs breakfast&#13;
nutrition after a night-long fast:&#13;
'After all those hours without&#13;
eating, the calories from last night's&#13;
dinner have been metabolized and&#13;
used up by morning, for most&#13;
people. If you want to avoid a&#13;
morning letdown, you should eat&#13;
breakfast."&#13;
In fact, experts believe it is&#13;
especially important for people in a&#13;
weight control program not to skip&#13;
breakfast, the article explains. To&#13;
lose weight, one's intake of calories&#13;
should be distributed throughout&#13;
the day, when energy is expended.&#13;
An overweight person often concentrates&#13;
eating toward the end of&#13;
the day, according to Dr. Sebrell,&#13;
who described a typical "bad" diet&#13;
as follows:&#13;
"You don't eat any breakfast.&#13;
You eat a light lunch. Then you eat&#13;
a big dinner, and you eat&#13;
continuously from dinner to when&#13;
you go to bed. Now, that's the way&#13;
to get obese."&#13;
How much breakfast should you&#13;
eat? That depends on who you are.&#13;
Many nutritionists recommend that&#13;
about one-fourth of the day's&#13;
nutritional needs should be&#13;
obtained at breakfast. But the&#13;
number of calories you consume at&#13;
breakfast depends on your total&#13;
daily caloric needs, the article&#13;
states.&#13;
Breakfast skipping is still a&#13;
common problem, according to&#13;
CURRENTS. A recent national&#13;
survey established that nearly half&#13;
of all young adults 18-29 skip&#13;
breakfast on any given day.&#13;
Many nutritionists regard breakfast&#13;
as the most important meal of&#13;
the day. The Iowa Breakfast&#13;
Studies, a 10-year research project,&#13;
clearly showed that a nutritious&#13;
breakfast improves physical and&#13;
mental performance.&#13;
K^SOSCOCCOOCKWQOSOSOQOCOOCOOOOCO&amp;SCCac^&#13;
NEED A JOB?&#13;
Wisconsin Job Service is now set up in Tallent Hall, Room&#13;
290, to provide student employment opportunities both oncampus&#13;
and off-campus for currently enrolled UW-Parkside&#13;
students. Please see Mr. Mike Plate, Job Service Representative,&#13;
between 8:00 a.m. and 12:00 noon, Monday through&#13;
Friday, or phone&#13;
553-2656&#13;
JOOOOCCOCOOOOOCOOCCCOCOCOOCOCOW wo000 xJt&#13;
H" suffers from sequel syndrome&#13;
instead of Coors Beer, their cargo is&#13;
an elephant named Charlotte.&#13;
When Bandit discovers Charlotte is&#13;
pregnant, he is faced with the&#13;
problem of whether or not to make&#13;
the run, collect $400,000 and regain&#13;
his hero status at the risk of losing&#13;
Charlotte and her unborn baby.&#13;
Dom Deluise is cast in a typical&#13;
Dom Deluise role as Charlotte's&#13;
doctor. His part is well acted, but&#13;
just doesn't belong in this film.&#13;
Jackie Gleason is again excellent&#13;
in the role of Sheriff Buford T.&#13;
Justice, but he falls victim to the&#13;
movie's absurdity when he appears&#13;
as his two brothers: Reggie (a&#13;
"Nelson Eddy" type Canadian&#13;
Policeman) and Gaylord (a homosexual&#13;
with an Indian side-kick&#13;
who comes complete with corn row&#13;
hair).&#13;
The film's best scenes are those&#13;
with Sheriff Justice and his&#13;
bumbling son Junior and the car&#13;
crash-chase scenes which made&#13;
dramatic roles for himself in&#13;
"Starting Over," appearing in roles&#13;
so far beneath their stature. Their&#13;
talents are grossly overlooked by&#13;
the film's script writer.&#13;
Some of the scenes are so absurd,&#13;
they seem to be taken from a Mel&#13;
Brooks production (a telephone&#13;
ringing in church during a wedding&#13;
ceremoney and an ambulance&#13;
patient rolling down the highway in&#13;
his gurney for example). It's not the&#13;
type of humor that made "Smokey&#13;
I" so famous and it's not the type&#13;
that fits with this movie.&#13;
Although it does have it's&#13;
moments, and they are hilarious&#13;
(such as the bridge, gas station and&#13;
"calvarly to the rescue" sequences)&#13;
and it will pr obably turn out to be a&#13;
hit, because of the success of&#13;
"Smokey and the Bandit", this film&#13;
definitely suffers from the "sequel&#13;
syndrome" and should be put on&#13;
your list of things to do when&#13;
there's nothing else to do.&#13;
"Smokey I" so famous. However,&#13;
when the action drifts back to the&#13;
elephant plot, we find ourselves&#13;
subject to bad jokes and poor&#13;
acting.&#13;
It's really sad to see Sally Field,&#13;
after creating such powerful&#13;
characters as "Sybil" and more&#13;
recently "Norma Rae" and Burt&#13;
Reynolds who opened new doors to &#13;
Thursday, September 4. 1980 Ranger&#13;
Rader new director&#13;
«i . . Ranger photos by Mike Holmdohl&#13;
Hey brother, CQn you The Union parking lot (top) has been under construction&#13;
over the summer in order to begin mini-car parking. The&#13;
spare a parkino space? c&#13;
f&#13;
n&#13;
s&#13;
t"&#13;
,c*|pn&#13;
j&#13;
wa&#13;
s stm not completed by the time school&#13;
" sorted. That s why the outer loop road (bottom) became&#13;
a parking lot on the first day of school.&#13;
ganger&#13;
is looking for:&#13;
* Reporters&#13;
* Photographers&#13;
•Ad Reps&#13;
If your interested&#13;
stop by our office&#13;
today (next to the&#13;
Coffee Shoppe) or&#13;
phone 553-2295&#13;
GENERAL MEMBERSHIP MEETING&#13;
Wed., Sept. 10 at 1 P.M.&#13;
Hannelore B. Rader has been&#13;
appointed Director of the Wyllie&#13;
Library/Learning Center. She&#13;
comes to UW-Parkside from&#13;
Eastern Michigan where she was&#13;
Coordinator of the Education/Psychology&#13;
Division's Center for&#13;
Educational Resources.&#13;
At Parkside she will administer&#13;
the staff and services of the library,&#13;
the media production and audiovisual&#13;
division, the Archives and&#13;
Area Research Center, and the&#13;
bibliographic instruction program,&#13;
an area in which Parkside has&#13;
achieved national recognition and&#13;
grant support.&#13;
Rader's selection follows a&#13;
national search and screen process&#13;
for a successor to Joseph Boisse,&#13;
who left UW-P to become the&#13;
director of the Temple University&#13;
library last summer. Thomas Kirk,&#13;
who has been acting director since&#13;
then, was not a candidate for the&#13;
permanent position and took over&#13;
the directorship of the Berea (Ky.)&#13;
College library.&#13;
Rader's expertise in the areas of&#13;
bibliographic instruction and staff&#13;
development has made her a&#13;
popular speaker at national library&#13;
conferences and workshops and she&#13;
has written extensively on those&#13;
subjects. She has been an officer of&#13;
the Reference and Academic&#13;
Sections of the Michigan Library&#13;
Association and of the Eastern&#13;
Michigan University Women's&#13;
Association.&#13;
Rader earned three degrees from&#13;
the University of Michigan: a&#13;
Master of Library Science in 1968,&#13;
a Master of Arts in German&#13;
Literature in 1971, and a Bachelor&#13;
of Arts in Russian/Spanish in 1960.&#13;
She completed a specialist program&#13;
in educational leadership in 1978&#13;
from Eastern Michigan University.&#13;
She served as a children's&#13;
librarian in the Washington, D.C.&#13;
public library from 1960 to 1962.&#13;
After earning her M.L.S. degree,&#13;
she accepted a position as Assistant&#13;
Humanities librarian at Eastern&#13;
Michigan University.&#13;
From 1970 to 1976 she served as&#13;
Orientation Librarian and head of&#13;
the Orientation Program. That&#13;
position included administration of&#13;
a College Library Resources&#13;
Program grant to Eastern Michigan&#13;
University, which contributed to&#13;
the establishment of a clearinghouse&#13;
for information on bibliographic&#13;
instruction and an annual&#13;
national conference on that topic.&#13;
Over-due policy changed&#13;
The new school year has brought&#13;
about changes in the Library/&#13;
Learning Center policy regarding&#13;
overdue materials.&#13;
Overdue notices will no longer be&#13;
sent out as reminders to students&#13;
with overdue materials. The grace&#13;
period, which was 11 days, has been&#13;
decreased to seven days.&#13;
The minimum service charge for&#13;
overdue materials has been reduced&#13;
from $5.00 to $1.00. There is no&#13;
charge for books overdue 1-7 days&#13;
because of the grace period. The&#13;
charge for materials 8-14 days&#13;
overdue is $1.00, 15-21 days $2.00&#13;
and 22-28 days $3.00. There is an&#13;
additional $1.00 for each seven&#13;
days, (or part thereof), up to a limit&#13;
of $20.00 (that comes to 141-147&#13;
days, or about five months).&#13;
These changes in policy affect&#13;
only material which may be&#13;
checked out for three weeks.&#13;
Policies regarding material with&#13;
other check out periods remain the&#13;
same.&#13;
But the library is offering a&#13;
special discount concerning charges&#13;
for any overdue materials. If the&#13;
overdue charge is paid at the time&#13;
fo the return, the charge will be&#13;
reduced by one-half.&#13;
These policy changes took affect&#13;
at the start of the fall semester.&#13;
Fines instituted before the fall are&#13;
not altered.&#13;
Perkside Union Rec. Center&#13;
RED PIN&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
During The Day&#13;
Mori. &amp; Wed. Mornings&#13;
\ 9:00am-noon&#13;
'' Friday Afternoons&#13;
—^ 2:00-6:00pm&#13;
/ A&#13;
i 25'&#13;
Introductory&#13;
Special!&#13;
Strike when&#13;
the head pin&#13;
/' PER LINE f* redr, j j W.n a Free&#13;
/ / P'tcher of beer&#13;
* or scde&#13;
nn» Customp- pp. -,ey &#13;
Science dept.&#13;
granted $&#13;
The National Science Foundation&#13;
has awarded a grant of $19,100&#13;
to Parkside for purchase of a&#13;
Liquid Scintillation Counting System,&#13;
a versatile research tool used&#13;
to count very small, very weak&#13;
amounts of radioactive isotopes&#13;
used as tracers in biological and&#13;
biochemical experiments.&#13;
The system will replace an outdated&#13;
counter acquired in 1970,&#13;
which university scientists say has&#13;
simply been "worn out by use."&#13;
On-going research programs in&#13;
which the new equipment will be&#13;
used include:&#13;
• Two studies by Prof. Chong-Maw&#13;
Chen, life science, of cell division&#13;
and differentiation in plants,&#13;
currently funded by a $136,000&#13;
National Science Foundation grant&#13;
and a $66,000 National Institute of&#13;
Health Grant.&#13;
• A study of electromagnetic field&#13;
effects on the cell membrane, part&#13;
of a series of studies of extremely&#13;
low frequency electromagnetic&#13;
fields on cell growth and development,&#13;
by Profs. Michael T. Marron,&#13;
chemistry, Eugene M. Goodman,&#13;
life science, and Ben Greenebaum,&#13;
physics, currently funded by a&#13;
National Institute of Environmental&#13;
Health Sciences grant of&#13;
$95,000.&#13;
• A study of the relationship&#13;
between the light/dark cycle and&#13;
the pineal gland in control of the&#13;
brain's regulation of reproduction&#13;
in mammals by Prof. Edward P.&#13;
Wallen, life science, currently&#13;
funded by a National Science&#13;
Foundation grant of $50,000.&#13;
NEWS&#13;
BRIEFS&#13;
Ten new profs this fall&#13;
Ten new professors joined the&#13;
Parkside faculty for the fall&#13;
semester.&#13;
Leon Jay Van Dyke, a Wayne&#13;
State University PhD who previously&#13;
taught at Northwestern Univerm&#13;
sity, joins the dramatic arts faculty&#13;
available here rank „ f&#13;
assistant professor are Charles&#13;
Erven, a Racine native and MFA&#13;
graduate of UW-Madison who has&#13;
Job service&#13;
Parkside students looking for&#13;
jobs while in school may find help&#13;
now that Mike Plate, a Wisconsin&#13;
Job Service representative, is on&#13;
campus. The program here is not&#13;
designed to place graduates in&#13;
careers, but to place present UW-P&#13;
students in on- or off-campus jobs,&#13;
these jobs vary from parttime to&#13;
summer, to fulltime, temporary&#13;
employment.&#13;
This service is free to students.&#13;
Mr. Plate will be maintaining files&#13;
of potential student employees as&#13;
well as employers. Located in&#13;
Tallent 290, Mr. Plate's office will&#13;
usually be open from 8:00-12 noon&#13;
on weekdays. The phone extension&#13;
is 2656.&#13;
taught at the University of&#13;
Colorado, in dramatic arts; Linda&#13;
Kamens, Southern Illinois University&#13;
PhD, in psychology; Anne&#13;
Gurnack, University of TexasArlington&#13;
PhD who also taught&#13;
there, in behavioral science;&#13;
Michael Frame, Tulane University&#13;
PhD, in mathematics; S. Richard&#13;
Christoph, University of IllinoisUrbana&#13;
PhD, in German; and&#13;
James Bearden, State University of&#13;
New York-Stony Brook PhD who&#13;
come to UW-P from the University&#13;
of Edinburgh (Scotland), in&#13;
sociology.&#13;
Visiting faculty coming to&#13;
UW-Parkside this fall are John&#13;
Carman, Pennsylvania State University&#13;
PhD formerly at Virginia&#13;
Polytechnic Institute, as associate&#13;
professor in earth science; Frances&#13;
Kavenik, UW-Madison PhD previously&#13;
at Roosevelt University, as&#13;
assistant professor in English; and&#13;
John Tiller, McMaster University&#13;
(Hamilton, Ont.) MSc, as assistant&#13;
professor in mathematics.&#13;
Oil recycling project begun&#13;
A grass roots oil recycling project&#13;
is underway at Parkside.&#13;
Used motor oil from university&#13;
fleet vehicles already is being&#13;
pumped into the program and&#13;
UW-P Physical Plant Director Jack&#13;
Dudley has invited students, faculty&#13;
and staft and the public to join in&#13;
the effort.&#13;
Persons wishing to participate&#13;
should bring their old oil — in&#13;
tight, leak-proof containers such as&#13;
plastic milk jugs — and leave it&#13;
outside the east door of the Physical&#13;
Plant Building, which is located on&#13;
the north side of the Tallent&#13;
Parking Lot. The oil will be stored&#13;
in an underground tank on campus&#13;
and periodically pumped out and&#13;
sold to a recycling firm.&#13;
A recent article in Parade, a&#13;
national Sunday magazine, pointed&#13;
out that lubricating oil "never&#13;
wears out, it just gets dirty."&#13;
According to Department of&#13;
Energy (DOE) officials, imports of&#13;
crude oil could be cut as much as&#13;
250 million gallons annually if all of&#13;
the approximately 1.4 billions of&#13;
gallons of oil used in U.S. vehicles&#13;
in a year were collected and&#13;
recycled. DOE studies indicate that&#13;
re-refined oil performs just as well&#13;
as "virgin" oil, costs less and&#13;
produces little pollution.&#13;
The article also pointed out that&#13;
improper disposal of used oil —&#13;
common disposal practices include&#13;
dumping in empty lots, sewers,&#13;
lakes and rivers — can cause&#13;
serious environmental damage to&#13;
plant and animal life and human&#13;
water supplies.&#13;
Dudley said re-refiners currently&#13;
are paying about ten cents a gallon&#13;
for used motor oil. He said money&#13;
realized in the campus recycling&#13;
project would go into a general&#13;
university fund.&#13;
Oriana winners announced&#13;
P.A.B. presents&#13;
firroyo&#13;
"Wisconsin's Top Rock flct..."&#13;
(WLPX Survey)&#13;
Sat. Sept. 6&#13;
9 pm Union Square&#13;
$1.50 Parkside Students&#13;
$2.00 Guest&#13;
UW-P and State Id's Required&#13;
A California composer with a&#13;
long list of major composition&#13;
credits is the winner of the 1980&#13;
Oriana Trio International Composers'&#13;
Competition, which carries&#13;
a $1,500 prize, and an Arizonan&#13;
was named winner of a special $300&#13;
honorable mention award.&#13;
A resident chamber ensemble at&#13;
Parkside, the Oriana Trio is&#13;
comprised of Eden Vaning,&#13;
violinist, Harry Sturm, cellist, and&#13;
Carol Bell, pianist. They will&#13;
premiere both of the winning&#13;
works in a 3:30 p.m. concert on&#13;
campus on Nov. 23 in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Truman Rex Fisher, a composition&#13;
professor at Pasadena (Cal.)&#13;
City College, won the major award&#13;
for his "Piano Trio," a lyrical,&#13;
contemporary work in three&#13;
movements. Randall Shinn, professor&#13;
of composition and theory at&#13;
Arizona State University, won the&#13;
honorable mention for a work titled&#13;
"Forgotten Letters," a montage of&#13;
impressions of American historical&#13;
events.&#13;
Fisher has written a number of&#13;
large-scale works including "Celebration&#13;
Mass" for mixed chorus,&#13;
soloists and orchestra, which won&#13;
first prize in the National&#13;
Composers' Guild Contest and his&#13;
"Harlequinade" for concert band&#13;
was a winner in the annual New&#13;
Music for Bands Contest. His&#13;
"Symphony of the Desert" was&#13;
premiered by the Santa Maria&#13;
Symphony and also performed by&#13;
the Santa Barbara Symphony and&#13;
his "Lincoln, The Man of the&#13;
People" for chorus and orchestra&#13;
has been commercially recorded on&#13;
CAPRA.&#13;
Shinn has published a number of&#13;
compositions for chorus in addition&#13;
to his instrumental works and has&#13;
compositions performed at the&#13;
national Conference of the American&#13;
Society of University Composers&#13;
in 1977 and 1978.&#13;
The competition, which drew&#13;
entries from 15 states (including&#13;
two from Wisconsin), Europe and&#13;
Canada, was judged by trio&#13;
members and by August Wegner,&#13;
UW-P professor of composition&#13;
and theory. The high calibre of the&#13;
entries led them to add an honorable&#13;
mention category, the judges&#13;
said. The awards are funded by&#13;
private donors.&#13;
The competition was established&#13;
in 1979 to encourage modern works&#13;
for piano trio and the initial winner&#13;
was John White, a professor of&#13;
music at Whitman College in Walla&#13;
Walla, Wash., and a former&#13;
Wisconsinite.&#13;
The 1981 competition, now being&#13;
organized, will add a new element,&#13;
soliciting compositions for piano&#13;
trio and soprano, contralto or tenor&#13;
voice, incorporating the vocal as a&#13;
part of the chamber ensemble.&#13;
Detailed guidelines for the 1981&#13;
competition are available from&#13;
Prof. Wegner or the Fine Arts&#13;
Divisional Office at UW-Parkside.&#13;
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RED PIN BOWLING: 50VGAME [Effective thru Sept. 12]&#13;
BILLIARDS FOR A BUCK: $1.00 per HOUR&#13;
TABLE TENNIS: FREE&#13;
DOUBLES LEAGUE: MONDAYS,&#13;
BEGINS OCT. 13 S1.25/PERSON &#13;
Thursday, September 4,1980&#13;
Two UW-P Ail-Americans wrestle in Japan&#13;
On June 11,11 wrestlers and two&#13;
coaches gathered at Biola College&#13;
in Los Angeles to begin preparation&#13;
for a three week cultural exchange&#13;
wrestling trip to Japan. Among the&#13;
wrestlers were two All-Americans&#13;
from Parkside, Bob Gruner and&#13;
Bob Pekarske.&#13;
Gruner, a senior from Genoa&#13;
City, Wis., earned All-American&#13;
honors in wrestling five times,&#13;
including winning an NAIA&#13;
National Championship as a junior.&#13;
His honors include practically every&#13;
wrestling record in Parkside's&#13;
history. Pekarske, a junior from&#13;
Valders, Wis., placed second this&#13;
past year in the NAIA National&#13;
Championships.&#13;
The team members were selected&#13;
on the basis of their performance at&#13;
the 1980 NAIA National Wrestling&#13;
Championships. Most of them were&#13;
Ail-Americans.&#13;
The purpose of the cultural&#13;
exchange trip was to provide the&#13;
participants with international&#13;
wrestling competition and an international&#13;
cultural experience. This&#13;
was the fifth such exchange, but&#13;
this trip took on special significance&#13;
in that both countries&#13;
boycotted the Moscow Olympics&#13;
and this exchange provided international&#13;
experience for the participants.&#13;
&#13;
After assembling at Biola&#13;
College, the coaches spent four&#13;
days preparing the team for the&#13;
trip. The team participated in&#13;
two-a-day practices under the&#13;
leadership of visiting coach Gene&#13;
DAvis, a 1976 Olympic Bronze&#13;
Medalist. While at Biola College,&#13;
the team also held an open freestyle&#13;
tournament. Gruner and Pekarske&#13;
both wrestled in the same weight&#13;
class with Gruner placing first and&#13;
Pekarske third. Gruner pinned all&#13;
of his opponents except Pekarske.&#13;
On June 15 the team departed&#13;
from Biola College for Pacific&#13;
Lutheran University, located in&#13;
Tacoma, Washington, for four&#13;
more days of physical training, and&#13;
classroom teaching on the culture,&#13;
customs, and language of japan.&#13;
The workouts at Pacific Lutheran&#13;
were under the direction of guest&#13;
coach, Don Behm, a 1968 Olympic&#13;
Silver medalist. The team wrestled&#13;
two dual meets in Washington with&#13;
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Gruner and Pekarske both winning&#13;
their matches.&#13;
On June 19 the team was ready to&#13;
depart to Japan. After eight days of&#13;
intensive training, both mentally&#13;
and physically, the team felt they&#13;
were ready to make a good&#13;
representation of themselves. Jus as&#13;
important, during the eight days,&#13;
the wrestlers and coaches had&#13;
developed friendships that had&#13;
pulled them together as a team&#13;
ready to represent their country.&#13;
After a long flight, the team&#13;
landed at Tokyo Airport. The team&#13;
was met by their Japanese hosts&#13;
and taken to the Japanese Olympic&#13;
Village, which was to be their home&#13;
for the next nine days. Tokyo was&#13;
the site of the 1964 Olympics, so the&#13;
Olympic Village is the training site&#13;
for the Japanese national teams&#13;
and their foreign visitors.&#13;
A series of four duals against&#13;
universities in the Tokyo area had&#13;
been arranged for the team.&#13;
Beginning with Meiji University on&#13;
Saturday, June 21, the team&#13;
wrestled Tokai University on&#13;
Monday, Nihon on Wednesday,&#13;
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PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
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PERIOD&#13;
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September 8, lO, &amp; 12&#13;
Between 1:00 &amp; 2:00 pm only&#13;
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- Union Square&#13;
Friday, September 12&#13;
Starting at 1:00 pm&#13;
Sweet Corn 254&#13;
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Charbroiled outside&#13;
off Union Square&#13;
and Kokuski on Friday. While the&#13;
emphasis was on friendship and&#13;
cultural experiences, the competition&#13;
was still intense. The American&#13;
team won the first two meets, tied&#13;
the third, and lost the fourth.&#13;
Gruner was the only American&#13;
wrestler to win all four of his bouts.&#13;
He did so with three pins and a 19-7&#13;
decision. Pekarske won three&#13;
matches and lost one. His three&#13;
wins included two pins and a 13-0&#13;
decision. His loss was by a 5-5&#13;
score, but his opponent earned the&#13;
win by scoring the first point.&#13;
On June 29 the team departed&#13;
from the Olympic Village and&#13;
traveled to Gumma, Japan. There&#13;
each wrestler and coach was met by&#13;
a family which was to be their host&#13;
for the next six days. For most of&#13;
the wrestlers and coaches this was&#13;
the most memorable part of the&#13;
trip, as they were able to develop a&#13;
very warm relationship with their&#13;
hosts. They got to see first hand&#13;
how the Japanese really lived, and&#13;
despite the differences in customs&#13;
and culture, the similarities in their&#13;
feelings and goals. Both Gruner&#13;
and Pekarske have exchanged&#13;
letters with their host families in&#13;
the few weeks since returning and&#13;
their Japanese hosts have expressed&#13;
a desire to visit them in the U.S.&#13;
On July 2 the American team&#13;
wrestled their final match of the&#13;
trip and defeated the Gumma&#13;
team. Gruner did not wrestle due to&#13;
a minor back injury, but Pekarske&#13;
wrestled twice, winning one and&#13;
losing one. Gruner ended up with&#13;
the top record on the team at 4-0&#13;
and Pekarske ended up with a 4-2&#13;
record. The team finished their&#13;
competition with a 3-1-1 record.&#13;
On July 4 the team departed&#13;
from Japan on a flight to Hawaii.&#13;
The team spent three days in&#13;
Honolulu resting and relaxing&#13;
before returning to Los Angeles&#13;
and then back to their homes. For&#13;
both Gruner and Pekarske it was&#13;
the highlight of their athletic&#13;
careers and the most educational&#13;
experience they had ever enjoyed, it&#13;
was truly an experience that they&#13;
will remember for the rest of their&#13;
lives.&#13;
Intramurals scheduled&#13;
The Intramural Department is&#13;
running several events this fall.&#13;
The scheduled events are:&#13;
Flag football-Coed. Sign up is&#13;
through Sept. 10. Flag Football&#13;
League is from Sept. 15-Oct. 24.&#13;
Sign up sheets are in the PE&#13;
Building on the wall opposite the&#13;
trophy showcase. There are nine&#13;
players to a side. Play will be from&#13;
12:00-1:30 on Mondays and&#13;
Wednesdays.&#13;
Golf-Coed. Sept. 15-Oct. 24.&#13;
Golf shall be played at Petrifying&#13;
Springs at your convenience, with&#13;
the green fees paid by the player.&#13;
The type of play shall be the Peoria&#13;
Handicap, for a total of four rounds&#13;
or 72 holes. After each 18 hole play,&#13;
have your score sheet signed by&#13;
your partner and turn the sheet into&#13;
the athletic office. You may play&#13;
any time, as long as you have&#13;
someone verifying your score.&#13;
Softball One Day TournamentCoed.&#13;
Oct. 18. A team consists of&#13;
11 players. Sign up sheets are in PE&#13;
hallway.&#13;
Tennis-Coed. September and&#13;
October, singles only. Sign up&#13;
sheets are in PE hallway. Round&#13;
robin two out of three sets — no&#13;
add scoring. Tie breaker at 6-6.&#13;
Racqeutball-Men only. A tournament&#13;
shall be played with&#13;
opponents contacting each other&#13;
and arranging for their court time.&#13;
Tournament arrangements will be&#13;
determined according to the&#13;
number of entries received.&#13;
Fencing championships here&#13;
Parkside will host the 1981&#13;
national Collegiate Athletic Assn.&#13;
(NCAA) fencing championships,&#13;
according to UW-P athletic&#13;
director Wayne Dannehl.&#13;
The event, which annually&#13;
attracts the nation's top college&#13;
teams and individuals, is open to all&#13;
NCAA member schools, regardless&#13;
of division. The 1981 meet will be&#13;
held March 19-21.&#13;
Parkside previously hosted the&#13;
meet in 1978.&#13;
"We're very pleased to have been&#13;
awarded this fine event a second&#13;
time," Dannehl said. "I think it's a&#13;
measure of the way in which the&#13;
meet was conducted here the first&#13;
time that the NCAA has again&#13;
selected UW-Parkside."&#13;
Parkside Coach Loran Hein, the&#13;
meet director, echoed those&#13;
sentiments, saying that "this meet&#13;
will again showcase the very best&#13;
fencers in the United States and&#13;
will be a bit of a preview of international&#13;
and national competition&#13;
leading up to the 1984 Olympics.&#13;
We expect it to be a great meet."&#13;
The NCAA will follow by a week&#13;
the nation's largest collegiate&#13;
fencing meet, the Midwest Collegiates,&#13;
which will be held at Parkside&#13;
March 14-15 and will serve as a&#13;
qualifying event for both the NCAA&#13;
and a newly-started Assn. for Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics for Women&#13;
(AIAW) championships.&#13;
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Ranger Thursday, September4, 1980 11&#13;
Soccer team has experience&#13;
bvy Dave Cramer M ... ^ .&#13;
Hal Henderson opens his seventh&#13;
year as head soccer coach for&#13;
Parkside with the type of team he&#13;
probably wishes he had his prior&#13;
years of coaching. "We've got a lot&#13;
of blue-chippers and a lot of guys&#13;
who should help the team. We have&#13;
a lot of competition for the&#13;
starters." The competition Henderson&#13;
points to is at the defense, midfield,&#13;
forward and goal-keeping&#13;
positions.&#13;
The defense returns with&#13;
experienced players like Alan&#13;
Gibson, John McNulty, Karl Goetz&#13;
Baseball, track&#13;
and Bob Newstrom. Perhaps the&#13;
strongest point of the team is the&#13;
midfield where Brad Faust returns&#13;
and gets strong competition from&#13;
the likes ot John Monks, Mike&#13;
Kiefer, John Onyiego and nacho&#13;
Marchena from Panama. Four&#13;
freshmen, Chiedu Okonmah, Ralph&#13;
DeGraft, Dave Schwartz and Scott&#13;
Gerhartz battle for the starting&#13;
forward line. The goal-keeping is&#13;
wide open with Don Caps, Dan&#13;
Opferman and Jeff Medin fighting&#13;
it out.&#13;
"We have a pretty tough&#13;
schedule but I wouldn't be satisfied&#13;
with less than winning 70% of our&#13;
games" Henderson said. "I'm&#13;
really optimistic because of the&#13;
depth and caliber of ability we&#13;
have. Depth is something new here&#13;
at Parkside and we plan to take full&#13;
advantage of it. We can do things&#13;
we were unable to do in the past.&#13;
We're going to play a wide open&#13;
game this year. It will be exciting&#13;
with a lot of scoring."&#13;
The Rangers open their season&#13;
here tomorrow, Friday the 5th,&#13;
against Indiana State-Evansville.&#13;
The 4:00 pm game is scheduled to&#13;
be played in the bowl.&#13;
Bible study being offered&#13;
Spring sports wrap-up&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
The UW-parkside baseball team&#13;
captured it's first ever NAIA&#13;
District 14 championship as they&#13;
finished with a 19-9 record last&#13;
spring.&#13;
The team then went on to the&#13;
WICA playoffs and beat St.&#13;
norbert, Milton and Eau Claire&#13;
twice, to earn themselves a berth in&#13;
NAIA area competition.&#13;
The NAIA area challengers&#13;
proved to be a larger threat than&#13;
district competition and the&#13;
Rangers were eliminated in the&#13;
double elimination after three&#13;
games. The Rangers won their first&#13;
game against Gustavus Adolphus&#13;
and then proceeded to be beaten by&#13;
Beginning September 5 there will&#13;
be a Bible Study sponsored by&#13;
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship&#13;
for taculty/staff and non-traditional&#13;
adult students, which will meet&#13;
on Fridays in Molinaro Hall Room&#13;
236 from 1:00 PM to 2:00 PM.&#13;
June Pomatto, a local artist and a&#13;
long time student of scripture will&#13;
lead the group.&#13;
All faculty/staff and non-traditional&#13;
adult students are invited&#13;
to join this group at any time&#13;
during the semester.&#13;
Call June Pomatto at 552-8650 or&#13;
Barbara Larson at 553-2122 for&#13;
more information.&#13;
William Jewell College and Briar&#13;
Cliff College. Jamie Oberbruner&#13;
and Bob Granitz had excellent&#13;
tournament performances and&#13;
earned NAIA all-area honors. Both&#13;
men were later named as honorable&#13;
mention All-Americans. Coach&#13;
Ken "Red" Oberbruner won&#13;
district coach-of-the-year honors.&#13;
The 1981 team begins fall&#13;
practice on Monday, September 8.&#13;
Anyone interested in playing&#13;
should see Coach Oberbruner.&#13;
Ray Gallo. the left-handed&#13;
pitching sophomore for Parkside,&#13;
went on to sign a professional&#13;
major league contract with the&#13;
Milwaukee Brewers of the American&#13;
League. Gallo has been&#13;
assigned to the Butte, Montana&#13;
team in the Rookie league.&#13;
In track, Mike Rummelhart and&#13;
Steve Ball received All-American&#13;
honors as they placed third and&#13;
sixth, respectively, in the race walk.&#13;
Wendy Burman led the Ranger&#13;
women to a 12th place finish in the&#13;
state meet as she placed third in the&#13;
5000 meter run.&#13;
Jim Heiring, a Parkside graduate,&#13;
would have been the first&#13;
Parkside athlete to compete in the&#13;
Olympic Games had the United&#13;
States not boycotted the Games.&#13;
Heiring qualified in the 20&#13;
Kilometer walk by finishing first in&#13;
the U.S. tryouts.&#13;
Team volleys up for new season&#13;
by Dan McCormack&#13;
Last week while we were all&#13;
looking for that last fantastic fling&#13;
of the summer break, the Parkside&#13;
women's volleyball team began&#13;
practice. Nineteen women tried out,&#13;
and 13 were kept on the final&#13;
roster.&#13;
Coach Linda Henderson held&#13;
practice three times a day —&#13;
morning, noon and night, totalling&#13;
seven hours a day. She reasoned she&#13;
had a "lot of new teaching" to do&#13;
with the team consisting of eight&#13;
freshmen and five returners from&#13;
last season. "This year's team will&#13;
be a harder hitting team. This&#13;
year's goal is to win state, and we&#13;
expect our greatest competition&#13;
when we meet UW-Milwaukee".&#13;
The team consists of returners&#13;
Member Parkside 2 00&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
ferri Bieser, Roxanne Nelson, Liz&#13;
Venci and Linda Zeihen. The newcomers&#13;
are sophomore Laurie Pope&#13;
and freshmen Chris Dament, Sally&#13;
Heiring, Robin Henschel," laurie&#13;
Hess, jeanne jacobs, Callie Lee,&#13;
Jane Prissel, and Paula Sandahl.&#13;
The team sees its first action&#13;
Saturday, September 6th at 7 p.m.&#13;
when they play alumni preceeding&#13;
an intra-squad match. Their first&#13;
match is at UW-Whitewater&#13;
September 10th, followed by their&#13;
first home meet Wednesday&#13;
September 17th against Chicago&#13;
State University and Carroll&#13;
College starting at 6:30 p.m.&#13;
Coach Henderson and her team&#13;
have an opportunity to compete in&#13;
Sweden during the semester break&#13;
if they can raise the needed funds.&#13;
They have a few fund raising&#13;
activities planned for this fall. "The&#13;
team looks very good and I don't&#13;
think they will have any trouble&#13;
getting the support they need," said&#13;
henderson.&#13;
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attachable c l am p .&#13;
$2295&#13;
Other st u d e n t lamps&#13;
starting at $ 2 0 . 00 .&#13;
Come see exciting&#13;
lighting at&#13;
Scandinavian Design&#13;
3127 ROOSEVELT RD., KENOSHA, WIS. 652-0034&#13;
Daily 10to6 Friday 10to9 Sunday 1to5&#13;
&gt;&#13;
(ffy Joseph&#13;
4433-22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 654-0774&#13;
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
J&#13;
Ret Center&#13;
Bowling Speciafo&#13;
Htww&amp;fe Sat, 8 pm-Midnite&#13;
Cash prizes awarded&#13;
°'W IwwJiwg: M, 9 am-Noon Th, 1 pm-5 p&#13;
Fri, 3 pm-6 pm&#13;
bflUiftwj: Sat, 1-6 pm, Sun, 1-6 pm&#13;
all you can bowl $3.00/hr.&#13;
fym fk Fiut - Boui£! &#13;
DISTURB t&#13;
Wyllie&#13;
Library/Learning Center&#13;
UW-P Library Learning Center&#13;
Warm welcome&#13;
to alt students&#13;
committed to service&#13;
The Library/Learning Center staff&#13;
extends a welcome to both returning&#13;
students and students who are&#13;
enrolled at U.W.-Parkside for the first&#13;
time.&#13;
The Library/Learning Center offers&#13;
each of you a wide variety of services&#13;
as well as an outstanding collection&#13;
of materials, both print and audiovisual.&#13;
We hope that you will make&#13;
extensive use of the collection and&#13;
services during the coming year and&#13;
that you will find it to be a valuable&#13;
asset in your academic work.&#13;
Even more than the facilities and&#13;
materials, we want to stress the&#13;
human resources which are at your&#13;
disposal. The staff are all eager to&#13;
help you. As a group, and individually,&#13;
we are committed above all to&#13;
service—service to you, the&#13;
U.W.-Parkside students.&#13;
We wish you a most successful and&#13;
rewarding academic year.&#13;
Hannelore B. Rader&#13;
Director of the L/LC&#13;
Public&#13;
Services&#13;
Division&#13;
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University Archives&#13;
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Research Center&#13;
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Technical&#13;
Services&#13;
Division&#13;
Library/Learning Center Guides&#13;
Interlibrary loan&#13;
Typewriters (electric rental)&#13;
Calculators&#13;
Copy machine (5c per page)&#13;
Microform copying equipment&#13;
Small group study rooms&#13;
PaSS (Parkside Search Serv.)&#13;
Self-production lab&#13;
Media&#13;
Services&#13;
Division&#13;
Reference Desk&#13;
Circulation&#13;
Print&#13;
Audio-visual&#13;
Reserves&#13;
Media Services&#13;
Public Services&#13;
Technical Services&#13;
Archives&#13;
Area Research Center&#13;
Library/Learning&#13;
Center Director&#13;
553-2360&#13;
553-2238&#13;
553-2282&#13;
553-2282&#13;
553-2567&#13;
553-2356&#13;
553-2167&#13;
553-2411&#13;
553-2411&#13;
553-2221&#13;
During vacation and holiday&#13;
periods, hours vary and are posted&#13;
at the entrances.&#13;
The weekly hours of the&#13;
Library/Learning Center are:&#13;
Sunday 12:00 Noon -10:30 p.m&#13;
Mon.-Thurs. 7:45 a.m.-midnight&#13;
Friday 7:45 a.m.-4:30 p.m.&#13;
Saturday 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. </text>
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