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              <text>Theatre LTE fired</text>
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              <text>eatre&#13;
er&#13;
VVednesday, October 12, 1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No.7&#13;
()() Examinations are formidable ~~&#13;
even to the best prepared, for&#13;
the greatest fool may ask more&#13;
than the wisest man can&#13;
answer .&#13;
•&#13;
Ire&#13;
IAcademic Staff Committee called into special session I&#13;
Susan M. Zietz, a former Limited Term Employee&#13;
in the Communication Arts Theatre, was fired by her&#13;
supervisor, Thomas Reinert, Director of the Theatre&#13;
Auditorium/Gallery, Friday, September 30.&#13;
The dismissal was preceeded by a confrontation&#13;
on the stage of the theatre Wednesday night&#13;
(September 28) between Reinert and Zietz, following&#13;
the Carlos Montoya Concert. According to Zietz,&#13;
Reinert criticized the way Zietz performed her duties&#13;
the night of the concert. During this confrontation,&#13;
Zietz noted the strong smell of alcohol on Reinert's&#13;
breath.&#13;
Witnesses will testify&#13;
Two .students. who do not want their names&#13;
disclosed, have told Ranger they witnessed the&#13;
confrontation between Reinert and Zietz on the&#13;
night of September 28. The students told Ranger&#13;
they will testify before a committee or court that on&#13;
that Wednesday evening, Reinert exhibited behavior&#13;
like that of a person who has had too much to drink,&#13;
induding- slurred speech and difficulty walking.&#13;
On Saturday, October 1, Philip L. Livingston,&#13;
Editor of Ranger, took a deposition from Zietz of the&#13;
events leading to her dismissal. The deposition is&#13;
eight pages of single spaced type, and describes&#13;
Zietz' account of her activities in chronological&#13;
order from Tuesday night, September 27 through&#13;
Friday, September 30.&#13;
Crowd watches&#13;
bathroom burn&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Last Thursday a crowd of about 30 students stood in the Parkside&#13;
Union and watched the ladies' room burn. A fire alarm station across&#13;
the hall from the L1 rest room was ignored, and Parkside Security was&#13;
notified of the fire only after Dick Manthy, food service manager for&#13;
the Saga company, pushed through the crowd of students and put out&#13;
the smoky trash fire with an extinguisher.&#13;
Security director Ronald Brinkmann said the incident "really&#13;
bothers me. There could have been someone unconscious trapped in&#13;
one of the stalls." The fumes from the plastic trash liner and the paper&#13;
trash could have been deadly, he said. "We're not asking people to&#13;
become fire-fighters. but if anyone should see smoke (wh!ch was&#13;
billowing through the door) they should pull the alarm .or give us a&#13;
call." He emphasized that Security has no way of knowing an alarm&#13;
has been activated unless someone calls them and tells where he&#13;
hears an alarm There is no "alarm board" in the Security office.&#13;
Brinkmann said that making a buljding out of concrete doesn't&#13;
make it fireproof. "I've seen what fire can d~ to ~o~crete -. th.e heat&#13;
makes it literallv explode," he said. Damage-In this fire was limited to&#13;
smoke and heat damage to the tile surrounding the trash r,ec.eptacle,&#13;
and Brinkmann surmised it was started by a carelessly discarded&#13;
cigarette. . k&#13;
Manthy who put out the fire when alerted by a cafeteria war er,&#13;
said he w~s "really amazed" that no one set off the alarm across the&#13;
hall. "They were literally leaning up against the a1arr:n.The fact that&#13;
no one was concerned about anyone being trapped In there bothers&#13;
me the most," he said.&#13;
Complaint filed&#13;
On Monday, October 3, Livingston forwarded a&#13;
copy of the deposition to Vice Chancellor Lorman&#13;
Ratner, Reinert's supervisor, along with a letter of&#13;
complaint. The Vice Chancellor told Livingston he&#13;
would investigate the matter. Zietz told Ranger she&#13;
talked to the Vice Chancellor on Tuesday, October&#13;
4.&#13;
Committee to review complaint&#13;
On Thursday, October 6, Chancellor Alan Guskin,&#13;
in a letter, a copy of which was sent to Livingston at&#13;
the Ranger office, instructed Walter Shirer, Public&#13;
Information Director, to call a special meeting of the&#13;
Academic Staff Committee to review Livingston's&#13;
complaint in accordance with Academic Staff&#13;
Policies and Procedures. Although the committee&#13;
will investigate the actions of Reinert, Zietz remains&#13;
fired at presstime.&#13;
Ranger contacted Reinert in his office Thursday,&#13;
October 6, by phone. Reinert said he had no&#13;
comment to make to Ranger because it is a&#13;
personnel matter. Reinert did go on to say, however,&#13;
that Livingston was making a "Grave Error" by&#13;
following through with the Zietz incident.&#13;
The Montoyas are on tour in Alaska and Canada&#13;
and could not be reached for comment.&#13;
er&#13;
eatre&#13;
Wednesday, October 12, 1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No. 7&#13;
()() Examinations are formidable 5)5)&#13;
even to the best prepared , for&#13;
the greatest fool may ask more&#13;
than the wisest • man can&#13;
answer.&#13;
-&#13;
ire&#13;
I Academic Staff Committee called into special session I&#13;
Susan M. Zietz, a former Limited Term Employee&#13;
in the Communication Arts Theatre, was fired by her&#13;
supervisor, Thomas Reinert, Director of the Theatre&#13;
Auditorium/Gallery, Friday, September 30.&#13;
The dismissal was preceeded by a confrontation&#13;
on the stage of the theatre Wednesday night&#13;
(September 28) between Reinert and Zietz, following&#13;
the Carlos Montoya Concert. According to Zietz,&#13;
Reinert criticized the way Zietz performed her duties&#13;
the night of the concert. During this confrontation,&#13;
Zietz noted the strong smell of alcohol on Reinert's&#13;
breath .&#13;
Witnesses will testify&#13;
Two _?tudents, who do not want their names&#13;
disclosed, have told Ranger they witnessed the&#13;
confrontation between Reinert and Zietz on the&#13;
night of September 28. The students told Ranger&#13;
they will testify before a committee or court that on&#13;
that Wednesday evening, Reinert exhibited behavior&#13;
like that of a person who has had too much to drink,&#13;
induding lu red speech a cl difficu y a ing.&#13;
On Saturday, October 1, Philip L. Livingston,&#13;
Editor of Ranger, took a deposition from Zietz of the&#13;
events leading to her dismissal. The deposition is&#13;
eight pages of single spaced type, and describes&#13;
Zietz' account of her activities in chronologit:al&#13;
order from Tuesday night, September 27 through&#13;
Friday, September 30.&#13;
Crowd watches&#13;
bathroom burn&#13;
by John Mckloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Last Thursday a crowd of about 30 students stood in the Parkside&#13;
Union and watched the ladies' room burn . A fire alarm station across&#13;
the hall from the L 1 rest room was ignored, and Parkside Security was&#13;
notified of the fire only after Dick Manthy, food service manager for&#13;
the Saga company, pushed through the crowd of students and put out&#13;
the smoky trash f ire with an extinguisher.&#13;
Security di~ctor Ronald Brinkmann said the incident " really&#13;
bothers me. There could have been someone unconscious trapped in&#13;
one of the stalls ." The fumes from the plastic trash liner and the paper&#13;
trash could have been deadly, he said . " We're not asking people to&#13;
become fire-fighters but if anyone should see smoke (which was&#13;
billowing th~ough th~ door) they should pull the alarm _or give us a&#13;
call." He emphasized that Security has no way of knowing an alarm&#13;
has been activated unless someone calls them and tells where he&#13;
hears an alarm . There is no " alarm board" in the Security office. ,&#13;
Brinkmann said that making a buifding out of concrete doesn t&#13;
make it fireproof . " I've seen what fire can do to ~on_crete - . th_e heat&#13;
makes it literally explode," he said . Damage in this fire was limited to&#13;
smoke and heat damage to the tile surrounding the trash rec_eptacle,&#13;
and Brinkmann surmised it was started by a carelessly discarded&#13;
cigarette . · k&#13;
Manthy who put out the fire when alerted by a cafeteria wor er,&#13;
said he w~s "really amazed" that no one set off the alarm across the&#13;
hall. " They were literally leaning up against the alarm · The fact that&#13;
b · g trapped in there bothers no one was concerned about anyone ein&#13;
me the most," he said .&#13;
Complaint filed&#13;
On Monday, October 3, Livingston forwarded a&#13;
copy of the deposition to Vice Chancellor Lorman&#13;
Ratner, Reinert's supervisor, along with a letter of&#13;
complaint. The Vice Chancellor told Livingston he&#13;
would investigate the matter. Zietz told Ranger she&#13;
talked to the Vice Chancellor on Tuesday, October&#13;
4.&#13;
Committee to review complaint&#13;
On Thursday, October 6, Chancellor Alan Guskin,&#13;
in a letter, a copy of which was sent to Livingston at&#13;
the Ranger office, instructed Walter Shirer, Public&#13;
Information Director, to call a special meeting of the&#13;
Academic Staff Committee to review Livingston's&#13;
complaint in accordance with Academic Staff&#13;
Policies and Procedures . Although the committee&#13;
will investigate the actions of Reinert, Zietz remains&#13;
fired at presstime.&#13;
anger ontacted Reinert in his office Thursday,&#13;
October 6, by phone. Reinert said he had no&#13;
comment to make to Ranger because it is a&#13;
personnel matter. Reinert did go on to say, however,&#13;
that Livingston was making a " Grave Error" by&#13;
following through with the Zietz jncident.&#13;
The Montoyas are on tour in Alaska and Canada&#13;
and could not be reached for comment. &#13;
editorial&#13;
are unable to list the candidates on the ballot or&#13;
print-a sample ballot. This is unfortunate. Ranger&#13;
shares the same problem with PSGA of having a&#13;
hard time prying students from their automobiles,&#13;
classes, and homes to work on university&#13;
matters.&#13;
Please try to understand and cast a ballot in the&#13;
election. If you can, try to find out about who 'you&#13;
are voting for by asking around. It is a terrible&#13;
thing to represent all the majors in a division with&#13;
only a- handful of votes. Those elected will be&#13;
deciding the fate of parking problems,' shuttle&#13;
buses, food contracts, as well as serving as the&#13;
Chancellor's source of student sentiment&#13;
information. Get out and vote!&#13;
on burning bathrooms&#13;
TV TV on the wall. . . ,I&#13;
Perhaps the passersby didn't know the washroom&#13;
was on fire and that the alarm was on the wall with&#13;
the fire extinguisher. Maybe they thought it was out&#13;
of order or something. Well, if they didn't have }o&#13;
usethe washroom, why bother to get involved with a&#13;
burning building? Maybe they thought the whole&#13;
thingwas on television &lt;IS part of Barke's Bizarre. 'if&#13;
anY,of these things are true then it is obvious they&#13;
don t re.a!lzethey are paying for the building out of&#13;
their tuition every semester. Maybe they just forgot.&#13;
Make sure you never invite this group to vour&#13;
house for crumpets and tea, especially if you have a&#13;
fireplace. If you do, don't let them use th~&#13;
bathroom. '&#13;
I)&#13;
/&#13;
; r&#13;
~al\~er ia written a!'d edited by students oJ the&#13;
UlUver••ty ~fWisconsln ..Park.ide and they are" 1 I&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and cont SOte y&#13;
en .&#13;
Our Writers&#13;
Dan Guidebeck, Robert Hansen deft Prostko K' W - It '. Imun.ach.&#13;
at "'ermann, Chris Ra.t~k., MarCia.Vlach. I&#13;
Editor Philip L. Livingston 553.2295&#13;
General M"nager Thome.s R. Cooper 553-2287&#13;
Copy Editor dohn R. McKloskey&#13;
. .News Editor Diane dalensky&#13;
Circulahon Ma.nager Karen Putman&#13;
, Sales Manager dohn Gabriel 553 2287&#13;
Retail Advertising Manager Ken. Lusen. 553 ..2287&#13;
RaneeI' Newspaper, University 01 Wisconsln ..Parkaid&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141 e&#13;
Subscriptions: $5.00 year lor U.S.A.&#13;
I&#13;
~&#13;
Solve campus problems_by&#13;
voting in PSGA elections&#13;
The students of this campus grow tired and uninterested&#13;
reading accounts of student government&#13;
actions in the Ranger. We have received&#13;
negative remarks regarding such. accounts in the&#13;
past.&#13;
Among Ranger's editorial priorities, there are a&#13;
few university problems Ranger is able to help&#13;
solve. Most of the activity necessary in solving&#13;
these problems revolves around the actions and&#13;
behavior of the student representative unit,&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association, Inc. ,If&#13;
they are effective and truly represent the best and&#13;
most important interests of students, then&#13;
change can take place.&#13;
The PSGA elections October 19 and 20 are not&#13;
being handled too well." At Ranger presstime, we&#13;
Editor's File . ,&#13;
by Phnip L. Livingston&#13;
Editor&#13;
I hope the group of students who walked by the&#13;
fire in the Union's concourse level ladies room last&#13;
Friday, never get together again.&#13;
Riding the bus with creeps&#13;
I certainly wouldn't want to ride the shuttle bus'&#13;
with them all together. What if we got in a seriousaccident&#13;
on loop road and were all pinned inside the&#13;
bus? It would be sad to be the only survivor, but&#13;
maybe not. Maybe they would have fun watching _&#13;
the bus burn. Smoke looks nice sometimes&#13;
/&#13;
editorial /&#13;
" .&#13;
Solve campu-s problems_-b;y,&#13;
.. - .&#13;
' - / . -&#13;
voting 1n&#13;
_&#13;
PSGA elections , '&#13;
The students of this campus grow tired and uninterested&#13;
reading accounts of student govern-·&#13;
ment actions in the Ranger. We have received&#13;
negative remarks regarding such. accounts in the&#13;
past.&#13;
Among Ranger's editorial priorities, there are a&#13;
few university problems Ranger is able to help&#13;
solve. Most of the activity necessary in solving&#13;
these problems revolves around the actions and&#13;
behavior of the student representative unit,&#13;
Parkside Student Government Assoc.iation, lnc. -lf&#13;
they are effective and truly represent the best and&#13;
most important interests of studen·ts_, then&#13;
change can take place.&#13;
' The PSGA elections October 19 and 20 are not&#13;
being handled too we11.· At Ranger presstime, we&#13;
are unable to list the candidates on the ballot or&#13;
print a sample ballot. This ls unfortunate. Ranger&#13;
shares the same p(oblem with PSGA of having. a&#13;
hard time prying students fr9m their automobiles,&#13;
classes, and homes to work .on university&#13;
matters.&#13;
. Please try to understand and cast a ballot in the&#13;
election. If you can, try to find out about who'you&#13;
are voting for by asking around. It is a terrible&#13;
thing to represent all the majors in a division with&#13;
only a-handful of votes. Those elected wil'I be&#13;
deciding the fate of parking problems,' shuttle&#13;
buses, food contracts, as well as serving as. the&#13;
Chancellor's source of student sentime.nt&#13;
information. Get out and vote!&#13;
Editor's File ·,&#13;
on burning bathrooms&#13;
by Phi°lip L. Livingston&#13;
Editor&#13;
' ' TV TV on the wall. . . . I r&#13;
I hope the group of students who walked by, the&#13;
fire in the Union's concourse level ladies room last&#13;
Friday, never get together again. .&#13;
Perhaps the passersby didn't know the washro~m 1&#13;
was on fire and that the alarm was on the wall with&#13;
the fi:re extinguisher. Maybe they thought it was out&#13;
.of order or something. Well, if they didn't have lo&#13;
use the.washroom, why bother.to get involved with! a&#13;
b~rnihg building? Maybe they thought the whole&#13;
thmg was on television -as part of Barke's Bizarre. H&#13;
any 1&#13;
of th~se things are 'true then it is obvious they&#13;
do~ t re_a!1ze-they ~ue paying for the buildirig out of&#13;
their ~u1t1on every semester. Maybe they just forgot.&#13;
Riding tbe bus with creeps&#13;
I certainly wouldn't want to ride the shuttle bus ,&#13;
with the!Jl all together. What if we got in a serious _&#13;
accident on loop_road and were all pinned inside the&#13;
bus? It would be sad to be the only survivor, but&#13;
maybe not. Maybe they would have fun watching&#13;
the bus burn. Smoke looks nice sometimes&#13;
Make sure you never invite this group to yoJr&#13;
~ouse for crumpets and tea, especially if you have ~&#13;
fireplace. If you do, don't let them use th~&#13;
~ bathro~J. ,&#13;
/&#13;
' ,. ~an~er is wr!tten a_nd edited by students of th&#13;
University of W1scons1n-Parkside and they a · el 1&#13;
· re = "bl f . . re so e y spon:sa e or its editorial policy and content. .&#13;
· Our W titers&#13;
Dan Guidebeck, Robert Hansen Jeff Prostko K" ,., .:. K ' • am w unsch:&#13;
at Henna.1\1\, Chris Rat&lt;:_ks, Marcia. Vlach. '&#13;
Editor Philip L. Livingston 551•&#13;
2295 General Ml'\nager Thomas R. Cooper 553_&#13;
2287 Copy Editor John R. McKloskey&#13;
·_ . _News Editor Dia.ne Jalensky&#13;
~1rculahon M.,u\ager Karen Putman&#13;
' Sales Manager John Gabriel 553 2287&#13;
Retail Advertising Manager Ken Larsen 55~-2287&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, :clni'!ersity of Wisconsin-Parks"d&#13;
Ke~o!ha., Wisconsin 5314l I e Subscriptions: $5.00 yea.r for U.S.A.&#13;
/&#13;
I '&#13;
/&#13;
I&#13;
' &#13;
•&#13;
views&#13;
Blasts students&#13;
at UW·Parkside&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
. This fall I transferred to Uw-P&#13;
"from the University of Vermont.&#13;
The most apparent thing I&#13;
noticed at Parks ide was the total&#13;
lack of participation in student&#13;
activities. The majority of&#13;
students here seem to 'congregate&#13;
in cliques. Perhaps because&#13;
I come from a dorm related&#13;
campus, everything connected&#13;
with the supposed student life&#13;
here seems so obviously&#13;
apathetic. Unless you're involved&#13;
in certain sports events,&#13;
clubs or major organizations&#13;
such as the student government,&#13;
you fall" into a mundane life&#13;
which consists of getting up,&#13;
going to school, returning home&#13;
and then leaving for work.&#13;
"Welt," replied one student&#13;
tiredly, "I have six hours of&#13;
classes on Mondays, Wednesdays&#13;
and Fridays and then I work&#13;
on Tuesdays and Thursdays to&#13;
help pay for my education. It's&#13;
kind of hard to join a group when&#13;
you're studying and working all&#13;
the time."&#13;
"So you have tried joining a&#13;
club of some kind?"&#13;
"Well, not exactly. But if I did&#13;
I know that it would just be&#13;
another hassle. Besides this&#13;
college doesn't have a club&#13;
anyhow," he told me laughing&#13;
uproariously.&#13;
"Sure they do. In fact the&#13;
majority of Parks ide students are&#13;
enrolled in it. It's called&#13;
APATHY." I retorted.&#13;
At noon I wandered into Main&#13;
Place and sat down on one of&#13;
those orange pyramids. An overburdened&#13;
student sank down&#13;
beside me sighing in relief. I&#13;
decided that she looked slightly&#13;
more intelligent then the walking&#13;
zombies I'd passed earlier in&#13;
Greenquist so I decided to ask&#13;
her what things she'd like to see&#13;
changed at Parks ide. At first she&#13;
shrugged nonchalantly but with&#13;
a little bit of encouragement she&#13;
finally opened up.&#13;
"You know Parks ide is really a&#13;
beautiful campus and all that but&#13;
I think that they should get some&#13;
decent food around here. I&#13;
would eat at the Pub but I'm&#13;
afraid that when I returned for&#13;
my one o'clock class there'll be&#13;
no parking spaces open. And&#13;
Parks ide's suppose to be a&#13;
commuter's college too!", she&#13;
yelled, emphasizing her point&#13;
that parking spaces were&#13;
practically nonexistent. Several&#13;
students passing by couldn't help&#13;
but overhear her remark and&#13;
they smiled understandingly.&#13;
Once past us they resumed their&#13;
mummified walk,&#13;
"Have you heard that new&#13;
parking lots are being built?"&#13;
"That's news to me," __she&#13;
commented, thoughtfully&#13;
chomping on a large wad of&#13;
gum.&#13;
"Yes, as a matter of fact the&#13;
Ranger did an article on it two&#13;
weeks ago."&#13;
"The Ranger"? I stared at her&#13;
in disbelief.&#13;
"Why the hell should I read&#13;
anymore then I have to? look at&#13;
all these books. I must be about&#13;
a hundred pages behind&#13;
already."&#13;
"Well, 1 think that the&#13;
newspaper could tell you something&#13;
worthwhile about going to&#13;
Parkslde. But I doubt very much&#13;
that you'd understand the&#13;
sophisticated diction." I told her&#13;
sarcastically,&#13;
"Yeah, maybe so," she replied&#13;
while continuing to chew away&#13;
on that ridiculous piece of gum,&#13;
Knowing that my sarcasm had&#13;
been wasted I left her abruptly&#13;
and a little bit angrily.&#13;
The next.person I talked to was&#13;
holding up the side of the CA&#13;
wall.&#13;
"I'm a Technical Engineering&#13;
major. Not declared or anything,"&#13;
he informed me hastily.&#13;
"1 wouldn't. mind getting&#13;
involved with the student&#13;
government but I'm transferring&#13;
to Whitewater next semester so it&#13;
would look kind of funny, you&#13;
know?&#13;
"What about working for the&#13;
Ranger staff? I heard that they&#13;
were looking for a sports editor."&#13;
"Well I can't write that well&#13;
but I'd really like to get involved&#13;
with layout. Got any good&#13;
looking chicks on the crew?"&#13;
, I told him, "yes," and he&#13;
shrugged helplessly. "Hell I'm&#13;
going to be transferring so it&#13;
might not be such a good idea."&#13;
"Why Whitewater?"&#13;
"Well my girlfriend goes there&#13;
and besides I could use a couple&#13;
of good laughs."&#13;
"Oh you'd get a good laugh&#13;
working on the Ranger staff. But&#13;
at least they're all involved In&#13;
something worthwhile,"&#13;
While sitting in the Coffee&#13;
Shop it suddenly began to dawn&#13;
on me that the reason why&#13;
students would not get into the&#13;
clubs was simply that they were&#13;
scared. They refuse certain&#13;
commitments because they are&#13;
afraid of the responsibility&#13;
attached with them. They need&#13;
their mundane schedules and&#13;
dull cliques (formed by high&#13;
school pals etc.) to use as a&#13;
security blanket. Show enthusiasm&#13;
for Parkside - God&#13;
Forbid! Peers might label them&#13;
as being dumbshits that don't&#13;
know what they're talking about.&#13;
So most students, when&#13;
questioned about student activtties,&#13;
hide behind answers like, 1'1&#13;
don't have the time." Or "I'm&#13;
transferring, so what's the point!"&#13;
Well my feeling 15 this. If you&#13;
have time to bitch about how&#13;
awful Parkside IS, then you have&#13;
the time to get involved And no&#13;
dorms are going to give you any&#13;
of that much needed courage to&#13;
go out and participate. Dorms&#13;
are built for a strong student&#13;
body, not a bunch of weaklongs&#13;
like those of you at Parkside.&#13;
Anonymous&#13;
Wanted:&#13;
Haunted Houses&#13;
To the editor&#13;
Another writer and I are&#13;
gathering material for a book&#13;
about reportedly "haunted"&#13;
homes or areas and ghost&#13;
sightings in Wisconsin.&#13;
We're interested in expenences&#13;
of actual sightings and/or&#13;
unexplained physical disturbances&#13;
as reported by reliable&#13;
witnesses and preferably occurring&#13;
over a period of some time.&#13;
Indian legends, local lore. family&#13;
journals or diaries could all be&#13;
the basis for submitted material&#13;
We believe this phenomenon&#13;
IS a fascinating, although little&#13;
explored, facet of Wisconsin&#13;
history and, for this reason, we&#13;
hope to include authentic cases&#13;
from as many historical periods&#13;
and areas of the state as possible&#13;
Readers with information on&#13;
the subject should wnte to: Beth&#13;
Scott, PO. Box 352, River Falls,&#13;
WI 54022 Sources of all repltes&#13;
will be held In strictest&#13;
confidence, although for&#13;
accuracy only verified inferrnanon&#13;
can be included in the&#13;
final book&#13;
Beth Scott&#13;
flnyw~ere&#13;
Ware... Wherever you go, tell it like It is in an Imprinted&#13;
shirt. Whether you're In sports. Greeks, love, or&#13;
trouble, stop down at the bookstore and have it&#13;
put on a t-shirt. sweatshirt or jacket. Let everyone&#13;
know just where you're at, in ware that you can&#13;
wear anywhere ... at the bookstore.&#13;
New Shirts&#13;
And T's&#13;
To Fit&#13;
\ Your Needs&#13;
V&#13;
rr / UW Parkside ~ I Bookstore&#13;
_~ 'The Campus Outfitters"&#13;
• views&#13;
Blasts students&#13;
at UW-Parkside&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
' This fall I transferred to UW-P&#13;
- from the University of Vermont.&#13;
The most apparent thing I&#13;
noticed at Parkside was the total&#13;
lack of participation in student&#13;
activities. The majority of&#13;
students here seem to congregate&#13;
in cliques. Perhaps because&#13;
I come from a dorm related&#13;
campus, everything connected&#13;
with the supposed student life&#13;
here seems so obviously&#13;
apathetic. Unless you're involved&#13;
in certain sports events,&#13;
clubs or major organizations&#13;
such as the student government,&#13;
you fall' into a mundane life&#13;
which consists of getting up,&#13;
going to school, returning home&#13;
and then leaving for work.&#13;
"Well," replied one student&#13;
tiredly, " I have six hours of&#13;
classes on Mondays, Wednesdays&#13;
and Fridays and then I work&#13;
on Tuesdays and Thursdays to&#13;
help pay for my education. It's&#13;
kind of hara to join a group when&#13;
you're studying and working all&#13;
the time."&#13;
"So you have tried ioinini? a&#13;
club of some kind?"&#13;
"Well , not exactly . But if I did&#13;
I know that it would just be&#13;
another hassle. Besides this&#13;
college doesn't have a club&#13;
anyhow," he told me laughing&#13;
uproariously.&#13;
" Sure they do. In fact the&#13;
majority of Parkside students are&#13;
enrolled in it. It's called&#13;
APATHY." I retorted.&#13;
At noon I wandered into Main&#13;
Place and sat down on one of&#13;
those orange pyramids. An overburdened&#13;
student sank down&#13;
beside me sighing in relief. I&#13;
decided that she looked slightly&#13;
more intelligent then the walking&#13;
zombies I'd passed earlier in&#13;
Greenquist so I decided to ask&#13;
her what things she'd like to see&#13;
changed at Parkside. At first she&#13;
shrugged nonchalantly but with&#13;
a little bit of encouragement she&#13;
finally opened up.&#13;
"You know Parkside is really a&#13;
beautiful campus and all that but&#13;
I think that they should get some&#13;
decent food around here. I&#13;
would eat at the Pub but I'm&#13;
afraid that when I returned for&#13;
my one o'clock class there'll be&#13;
no parking spaces open. And&#13;
Parkside's suppose to be a&#13;
commuter's college too!", she&#13;
yelled, emphasizing her point&#13;
that parking spaces were&#13;
practically nonexistent. Several&#13;
students passing by couldn't help&#13;
but overhear her remark and&#13;
they smiled understandingly.&#13;
Once past us they resumed their&#13;
mummified walk.&#13;
" Have you heard that new&#13;
parking lots are being built?"&#13;
"That's news to me," ~ she&#13;
commented, thoughtfully&#13;
chomping on a large wad of&#13;
gum.&#13;
"Yes, as a matter of fact the&#13;
Ranger did an article on it two&#13;
weeks ago."&#13;
"The Ranger" ? I stared at her&#13;
in disbelief.&#13;
"Why the hell should I read&#13;
anymore then I have to? Look at&#13;
all these books. I must be about&#13;
a hundred pages behind&#13;
already."&#13;
"Well, I think that the&#13;
newspaper could tell you something&#13;
worthwhile about going to&#13;
Parkside. But I doubt very much&#13;
that you'd understand the&#13;
sophisticated diction." I told her&#13;
sarcastically.&#13;
"Yeah, maybe so," she replied&#13;
while continuing to chew away&#13;
on that ridiculous piece of gum.&#13;
Knowing that my sarcasm had&#13;
been wasted I left her abruptly&#13;
and a little bit angrily.&#13;
The nex person I talked to was&#13;
holding up the side of the CA&#13;
wall.&#13;
" I'm a Technical Engineering&#13;
major. Not declared or anything,"&#13;
he informed me hastily.&#13;
" I wouldn 't. mind getting&#13;
involved with the student&#13;
government but I'm transferring&#13;
to Whitewater next semester so it&#13;
would look kind of funny , you&#13;
know?&#13;
"What about working for the&#13;
Ranger staff? I heard that they&#13;
were looking for a sports editor."&#13;
"Well I can't write that well&#13;
but I'd really like to get involved&#13;
with layout. Got any good&#13;
looking chicks on the crew?"&#13;
· I told him, " yes," and he&#13;
shrugged helplessly. " Hell I'm&#13;
going to be transferring so it&#13;
might not be such a good idea."&#13;
"Why Whitewater?"&#13;
"Well my girlfriend goes there&#13;
and besides I could use a couple&#13;
of good laughs."&#13;
"Oh you'd get a good laugh&#13;
working on the Ranger staff. But&#13;
at least they're all involved in&#13;
something worthwhile."&#13;
While sitting in the Coffee&#13;
Shop 1t suddenly began to dawn&#13;
on me that the reason why&#13;
students would not get into the&#13;
clubs was simply that they were&#13;
scared . They refuse certain&#13;
commitments because they are&#13;
afraid of the responsibility&#13;
aUached with them . They need&#13;
their mundane schedules and&#13;
dull cliques (formed by high&#13;
school pals etc.) to use as a&#13;
security blanket Show enthusiasm&#13;
for Parkside - God&#13;
Wanted:&#13;
Forbid! P ers might label th m&#13;
as being dumbsh1ts that don't&#13;
know what th y're talking about&#13;
So most students, when&#13;
questioned about stud nt activities,&#13;
hide behind answers like, ''I&#13;
don't have the trme " Or " I'm&#13;
transfemng, so what's the point?"&#13;
Well my feeling 1s this If you&#13;
have time to bitch about how&#13;
awful Parkside 1s, then you have&#13;
the time to get involved And no&#13;
dorms are going to give you an&#13;
of that much needed courage to&#13;
go out and participate Dorms&#13;
are built for a strong student&#13;
body, not a bunch of weaklings&#13;
like those of you at Parkside&#13;
Anonymous&#13;
Haunted Houses&#13;
To the editor&#13;
Another writer and I are&#13;
gathering material for a book&#13;
about reportedly " haunted"&#13;
homes or areas and ghost&#13;
sightings in Wisconsin .&#13;
We're interested in experiences&#13;
of actual sightings and/ o,&#13;
unexplained physical disturbances&#13;
as reported by reliable&#13;
witnesses and preferably occurring&#13;
over a period of some time&#13;
Indian legends, local lore, family&#13;
journals or diaries cou ld all be&#13;
the basis for submitted material&#13;
We believe this phenomenon&#13;
1s a fascinating, although little&#13;
xplored, facet of Wisconsin&#13;
history and, for this reason, we&#13;
hope to include authentic cases&#13;
from as many historical period&#13;
and areas of the state as possible&#13;
Readers with information on&#13;
the subiect should write to Beth&#13;
Scott, PO Box 352, River Falls,&#13;
WI 54022 Sources of all r plies&#13;
will be held 1n strictest&#13;
confidence , although for&#13;
accuracy only verified information&#13;
can be included in the&#13;
final book&#13;
B th Ott&#13;
Jtnyw~ere Wate ... Wherever you go, tell it like 1t is in an imprinted&#13;
shirt. Whether you're in sports. Greeks. love, or&#13;
trouble, stop down at the bookstore and have it&#13;
put on at-shirt, sweatshirt or jacket. Let everyone&#13;
know just where you're at, in ware that you can&#13;
wear anywhere ... at the bookstore.&#13;
/ ,-=,&#13;
New Shirts&#13;
And T's&#13;
To Fit&#13;
Your Needs&#13;
~,:. / UW Parkside ~ ( Bookstore&#13;
''The Campus Outfitters'' --~ &#13;
Korean diary 4&#13;
to J'apan; to spot low-lying ginseng sheds,&#13;
under which was growing a dust-tasting&#13;
root whose medicinal and aphrodesiac&#13;
powers were regularly believed in; and&#13;
finally to recognize grapes, fruits, and&#13;
other crops in various stages of&#13;
production. As we saw even on that cold&#13;
winter- -day, and would increasingly&#13;
-appreciate with the advent of spring,&#13;
Korea is a ruggedly mountainous country&#13;
with narrow coastal plains in which many&#13;
who "live decently must work hard,&#13;
because of a difficult terrain that&#13;
challenges the people and yet surrounds&#13;
them with beauty.&#13;
At home in Kwangju&#13;
South from Seoul, the landScape&#13;
became increasingly more corrugated,&#13;
much to my, wife's delight, for she 'was&#13;
born in Denver and-has had a lifelong love&#13;
affair with mountains. Going over one last&#13;
range, we found ourselves looking out&#13;
upon an unexpectedly large city, which we&#13;
viewed with heightened interest, for this&#13;
was Kwangju, where we would be living for&#13;
the next four months. Soon we had arrived&#13;
at [ai-l l (meaning Number One) Mansion,&#13;
the just-completed apartment building in&#13;
-which we would be housed. After Fulbright&#13;
House, it looked like a palace. Inside the&#13;
door was an alcove, where we took off our&#13;
shoes and left them, putting on slippers or&#13;
walking around in socks. Our linoleum tile&#13;
living room contained a divan with a bad&#13;
leg.. two armchairs, the phones and their&#13;
table, the radiator, and a wicker tabJe with&#13;
two matching chairs. The bathroom also&#13;
was Western style (more or less), and our&#13;
kitchen included a stove and refrigerator&#13;
brought down earlier by Fulbright. Our two&#13;
bedrooms had ondal floors, heated from&#13;
below, and their papered surfaces were too&#13;
delicate even for slippers. We slept on the&#13;
floor (with mattresses and springs) in one&#13;
bedroom and used the other for the TV set&#13;
we borrowed. We also borrowed a radio&#13;
for the kitchen and could listen to the&#13;
American Forces Korea Network, which&#13;
broadcast in English, was.good company,&#13;
and gave us the only way we had of finding&#13;
out the correct time.&#13;
We were on the third floor of five and&#13;
had balconies to both the north and&#13;
south. Our south balcony looked out upon&#13;
the bamboo yard at left; a major&#13;
intersection of six streets (three of them&#13;
paved); the skyline of the city; and the&#13;
entrance to our building, with its iron&#13;
fence and gate, its ornamental plants and&#13;
rocks, and the gatekeeper's house, to&#13;
which one 'of our phones was connected&#13;
usefully, although he knew no English. Our&#13;
other balcony, though it housed our rattly&#13;
garbage chute, was my favorite, because&#13;
of its spectacular view. We had 180° of&#13;
mountain panorama from there, with the&#13;
traditional and colorful houses of Kwangju&#13;
as foreground; to the east, we had a full&#13;
view of Mt. Mudung, the home ot temples&#13;
and landscape artists. As I watched the sun&#13;
set from this balcony and saw the city&#13;
lights come on, it more than once&#13;
occurred to me that this was probably themost&#13;
beautiful setting in which I would&#13;
ever live.&#13;
in part because it is the unlucky capital of&#13;
an unlucky, devastated nation now&#13;
rebounding vigorously.&#13;
Fulbright House in Seoul (now&#13;
fortunately abandoned) was an outdated&#13;
concrete coffin of eleven stories, the top&#13;
floor of which was generally beyond the&#13;
reach of heated air or water. We spent four&#13;
days freezing there between visits to the&#13;
U.S. Embassy for ID-cards and other timewasting&#13;
bureaucratic nonsense. On the&#13;
other hand, this was also an opportunity to&#13;
I meet Ed Wright, the head of Fulbright in&#13;
Korea who is an affable bachelor with a&#13;
collector's mania for acquiring antique&#13;
Korean chests." Ed's welcoming party&#13;
enabled us to meet the other Fulbrighfers.&#13;
all of whom (with one exception)&#13;
remained as residents of Fulbright House&#13;
throughout their stays. I was the only&#13;
lecturer to live outside of Seoul.&#13;
On Saturday, 5 March, Fulbright'S&#13;
gracious Korean driver, Mr. Park, loaded&#13;
boxes of cooking utensils, bags of Western&#13;
groceries from the Embassy commissary,&#13;
six pieces of luggage, Susan, me, and&#13;
himself into a Datsun coupe we never&#13;
thought' would hold it, and with mixed&#13;
emotions we sped south on Korea's finest&#13;
highway toward Kwangju. This was our&#13;
first real look at the Korean countryside.&#13;
Not even the bleakness of winter and our&#13;
own fatigue could prevent us from staring&#13;
at what we passed, for much of what&#13;
would later become familiar to us we now&#13;
saw for the first time: the richly solid&#13;
mountains, brown on this dav, but later to&#13;
be sheathed with greenery as the seasons&#13;
turned; the irrigated flatlands that would&#13;
become rice paddies in the spring; the&#13;
dome-like graves and various Buddhist or&#13;
Confucians shrines, in honor 'of the dead;&#13;
the small villages, in which Christian&#13;
churches were surprisingly abundant; -and&#13;
the houses, with their swayback tile roofs&#13;
and pointed eves. Of course, much of what&#13;
we saw was beyond our understanding.&#13;
Travelling this same route later on, we&#13;
became accustomed. to Korean plowmen&#13;
with their patient, tawny oxen and wooden&#13;
plows sloshing in the pattered mud,&#13;
though it was always thrilling to us to see&#13;
flocks of large white cranes standing in the&#13;
fields. As the rice matured, it would be&#13;
transplanted by long lines of stooping&#13;
workers in field clothes and sun hats.&#13;
Although they all seemed happy enough,&#13;
there are diseases in the mud, and&#13;
sometimes in the cities we could see old&#13;
people - mostly women - bent double at&#13;
the waist, their trunks parallel to the&#13;
ground as they walked with stubby canes,&#13;
_because they had spent their lives&#13;
transplanting rice until their backs gave&#13;
out. We would also see Korean men of all&#13;
ages carrying heavy loads of bamboo or&#13;
whatever on their backs in A-frames, for&#13;
Korean rural life depends upon such&#13;
burdens. Young mothers of all classes carry&#13;
their children on their backs, usually&#13;
supported with both hands, the fingers&#13;
interlocked. Other women carry parcels on&#13;
their heads.&#13;
~ As our familiarity increased, we learned&#13;
to recognize sandalwood, grown for export&#13;
Next Week: Life and Education in Kwangju, Korea&#13;
f74e ----·--1&#13;
I /!AI ..-JJI"_ I&#13;
\~I&#13;
I . OPEN 7 DAYS I&#13;
\ Mon. -Sat 10 'til close I&#13;
\ Sun. 6 'til dose I&#13;
I I&#13;
I NOON LUNCHES \&#13;
I Sandwiches -,:til midnight I&#13;
I I&#13;
I SAT. LADIES NITE \&#13;
II Ladies' Orin~s Y2 Price I&#13;
I with date 8 'til close \&#13;
I 1436 Junction, Racine I ;...--------..-..-..- ..-J&#13;
Beauty and poverty in&#13;
a country of contrasts&#13;
. by Dennis R. Dean&#13;
Associate Prof_ of English •&#13;
Myanoshita for sightseeing at this famous&#13;
mountain resort. We then continued to&#13;
Kyoto, Japan's most historic and cultural&#13;
city, where we managed to survive the&#13;
chills of an unusually harsh winter without&#13;
losing our enthusiasm. From Kvoto we&#13;
went on to Nara, famous for its deer park&#13;
.and 11{)(}-year-oldtemples, and then had&#13;
one night in Ossaka before flying on-to&#13;
Seoul, ...arriving there as scheduled on 1&#13;
March. -&#13;
from 1 March through 30 June 1977 I&#13;
was a Senior Fulbright Lecturer in Korea.&#13;
This means that I was chosen in national&#13;
competition to represent the 'United States&#13;
(but as a private citizen) for a term while&#13;
serving as a faculty member at a deserving&#13;
foreign institution in this case,&#13;
Chonnam National University, which is in&#13;
Kwangju, a city of some 600,000 persons in&#13;
the rice lands of southwestern Korea. My&#13;
salary was paid by the U.S. government&#13;
and my wife and I lived in housing&#13;
furnished by the univeristy. In part&#13;
because I am the first Parkside faculty&#13;
member to have been awarded a Fulbright&#13;
lectureship, and perhaps, because Korea is&#13;
in the news right now, the editor of this&#13;
paper has asked me to share with you&#13;
some of my experiences and impressions&#13;
while there.&#13;
My wife, Susan, and I left Wisconsin on&#13;
3 February 1977 and, after brief visits with&#13;
our families in Denver and los Angeles,&#13;
flew the Pacific separately and were&#13;
reunited in Tokyo. After several days there,&#13;
including an excursion to - Kamakura&#13;
(where the great Buddha is), we took the&#13;
bullet train to Odawara and then taxied to&#13;
Dismal countryside&#13;
As an introduction to Korea, Seoul is not&#13;
particularly attractive. Even while driving&#13;
in from the airport, one notices the barren,&#13;
depleted mountains that surround much of&#13;
the city, which sprawls chaotically within&#13;
a basin too small to contain it. Habitually&#13;
congested traffic and polluted air are&#13;
apparent. Train riders, usually in western&#13;
dress, tend to crowd together unlike in&#13;
Japan. To make space, they brusquely&#13;
push and shove as needed. Some&#13;
traditionally exotic architecture remains,&#13;
and some of the new construction is&#13;
attractive, but Seoul is mostly a city of&#13;
ugly concrete high rises and oppressively&#13;
compacted single-story shops - in part&#13;
because, like most Asian cities, its growth&#13;
was totally unplanned; in part because it&#13;
adapted Western methods of construction&#13;
, without understanding our aesthetics; and&#13;
WINrERPARK&#13;
SKI fES,rlVAL ~,icc.&#13;
$210 Bus "'WINTER PARK COLORADO if"i'i' %~',&#13;
JANUARY 2-8 • - '~-,&#13;
INCLUDES. ' $137 .CONDOMINIUM LODGING i\ ~,&#13;
Own .6 DAYS OF LIFT TICKETS ~$'''',;&#13;
Transportation ::~T~~~ '" «&#13;
,$.... ~l "?,. 1OcSIGN&#13;
UP IN STUDENT UNION RM. 202&#13;
(DEAQLlNE NOVEMBER 18) it&#13;
P.A.B. invites you to&#13;
•&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
.DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE,&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658·2331&#13;
MEMBER f,D.I.C.&#13;
Korean C,iary to J'apan; to spot low-lying ginsen_g sheds,&#13;
under which was growing a dust-tasting&#13;
root whose medicinal and aphrodesiac&#13;
powers were regularly believed in; and&#13;
finally to recognize grapes, fruits, and&#13;
other crops in var ious stages of&#13;
productipn. As we saw even on that cold&#13;
winter day, and would increasingly&#13;
"appreciate with the advent of spring,&#13;
Korea is a ruggedly mountainous country&#13;
in part because it is the unlucky &lt;:apit~I of&#13;
an unlucky, devastated nation now&#13;
rebounding vigorously .&#13;
Fulbright House in Seoul (now&#13;
'fort unately abandoned) was an outdated&#13;
concrete coffin of eleven stories, the top&#13;
floor of which was generally beyond the&#13;
reach of heated air or water. We spent f&lt;;&gt; ur&#13;
days freezi ng there between visits to the&#13;
U.S. Embassy for I0 ,cards and other timewasting&#13;
bureaucratic nonsense. On the&#13;
other hand, this was also an opportunity to&#13;
; meet Ed Wright, the head of Fulbright in&#13;
Korea, who is an affaj:)le bachelor with a&#13;
collector's mania for acquiring antique&#13;
Korean chests .' Ed's welcoming party&#13;
enabled us to meet the other Fulbrighfers,&#13;
all of whom (with one exception)&#13;
remained as residents of Fulbright House&#13;
throughout their stays . I w~s the only&#13;
lecturer to live&lt; outside of Seoul.&#13;
On Saturday, 5 March, Fulbright's&#13;
gracious Korean driver, Mr. Park, loaded&#13;
boxes of cooking utensils, bags of Western&#13;
groceries from the Embassy commissary,&#13;
six pieces of luggage, Susan, me, and&#13;
himself into a Datsun coupe we never&#13;
thought . would hold it, and with mixed&#13;
emotions we sped south on Korea's finest&#13;
highway toward Kwangju. This was our&#13;
first real look at the Korean countryside.&#13;
Not eve!}_j.he bleakness of winter and our&#13;
own fatigue could prevent us from staring&#13;
at what we passed, for much of what&#13;
with narrow coastal plains in which _many&#13;
who 'live decently must work hard,&#13;
because ot a difficult terrain that&#13;
challenges the people and yet surrounds&#13;
them with beauty.&#13;
At home in Kwangju&#13;
South from Seoul, the landscape&#13;
became increasingly more corrugated,&#13;
much to my wife's delight, for she ·was&#13;
born in Denver and -has had a lifelong love&#13;
affair with mountains. Going over one last&#13;
range, we found ourselves looking out&#13;
upon an unexpectedly large city, which we&#13;
viewed with heightened interest, for this&#13;
was Kwangju, where we would be living for&#13;
the next four months . Soon we had arrived&#13;
at Jai-11 (meaning Number One) Mansion,&#13;
the just-completed apartment building in&#13;
-which we would be housed . After Fulbright&#13;
Beauty and poverty in&#13;
a country of contrasts&#13;
would later become familiar to us we now&#13;
saw for the first time: the richly solid&#13;
mountains, brown on this day, but later to&#13;
be sheathed with greenery as the seasons&#13;
turned; the irrigated flatlands that would&#13;
become rice paddies in the spring; the&#13;
dome-like graves and various Buddhist or&#13;
Confucians shrines, in honor of the dead;&#13;
the small vi llages, in which Christian&#13;
House, it looked like a palace. Inside the&#13;
door was an alcove, where we took off our&#13;
shoes and left them , putting on slippers or&#13;
walking around in socks. Our linoleum tile&#13;
living room contained a divan with a bad&#13;
leg, two armchairs, the phones and their&#13;
table, the radiator, and a wicker tabJe with&#13;
two matching chairs . The bathroom also&#13;
was Western style (more or less), and our&#13;
kitchen included a stove and refrigerator&#13;
brought down earlier by Fulbright. Our two&#13;
bedrooms had ondal floors, heated from&#13;
below, and their papered surfaces were too&#13;
delicate even for slippers. We siept on the&#13;
floor (with mattresses and springs) in one&#13;
bedroom and used the other for the TV set&#13;
we borrowed . We also borrowed a radio&#13;
for the kitchen and could listen to the&#13;
American Forces Korea Network, which&#13;
broadcast in English, was .good company,&#13;
and gave us the only way we had of finding&#13;
out the correct time.&#13;
. by Dennis R. Dean&#13;
Associate Professor of English ·&#13;
From 1 March through 30 June 1977 I&#13;
was a Senior Fulbright Lecturer in Korea .&#13;
This means that I was chosen in national&#13;
competition to represent the United States&#13;
(but as a private citizen) for a term while&#13;
serving as a faculty member at a deserving&#13;
foreign institution - in this case,&#13;
Chonnam National University, which is in&#13;
Kwangju, a city of some 600,000 persons in&#13;
the rice/ands of southwestern Korea. My&#13;
salary was paid by the U.S. government&#13;
and my wife and I lived in housing&#13;
furnished by the univeristy. In part&#13;
because I am the first Parkside faculty&#13;
member to have been awarded a Fulbright&#13;
lectureship, and perhaps, because Korea is&#13;
in the news right now, the editor of this&#13;
paper has asked me to share with you&#13;
some of my experiences and impressions&#13;
while there.&#13;
My wife, Susan, and I left Wisconsin on&#13;
3 February 1977 and, after brief visits with&#13;
our families in Denver and Los Angeles,&#13;
flew the Pacific· separately and were&#13;
reunited in Tokyo. After several days there,&#13;
including an excursion to Kamakura&#13;
(where the great Buddha is), we took the&#13;
bullet train to Odawara and then taxied to&#13;
Myanoshita for sightseeing at this famous&#13;
mountain resort. We then continued to&#13;
Kyoto, Japan's most historic and cultural&#13;
city, where we managed to survive the&#13;
chills of an unusually harsh winter without&#13;
losing our enthusiasm. From Kvoto we&#13;
went on to Nara, famous for its deer park&#13;
and 1100-year-old temples, and then had&#13;
one night in Ossaka before flying on -to&#13;
Seoul,...arriving there as scheduled on 1&#13;
March. •&#13;
Dismal countryside&#13;
As an introduction to Korea, Seoul is not&#13;
particularly attractive. Even while driving&#13;
in from the airport, one notices the barren,&#13;
depleted mountains that surround much of&#13;
the city, which sprawls chaotically within&#13;
a basin too small to contain it. Habitually&#13;
congested traffic and polluted air are&#13;
apparent. Train riders, usually in western&#13;
dress, tend to crowd together unlike in&#13;
Japan . To make space, they brusquely&#13;
push and shove as needed . Some&#13;
traditionally exotic architecture remains,&#13;
and some of the new construction is&#13;
attractive, but Seoul is mostly a city of&#13;
ugly concrete high rises and oppressively&#13;
compacted single-story shops - in part&#13;
because, like most Asian cities, its growth&#13;
was totally unplanned; in part because it&#13;
adapted Western methods of construction&#13;
without understanding our aestheti cs; and&#13;
churches were surprisingly abundant; and&#13;
t he houses , with their swayback t ile roofs&#13;
and pointed eves . Of course, much of what&#13;
we saw was beyond our understanding.&#13;
Travelling this same route later on, we&#13;
became accustomed to Korean plowmen&#13;
with their patient, tawny oxen and wooden&#13;
plows sloshing in the pattered mud,&#13;
though it was always fhrilling to us to see&#13;
·flocks of large white cranes standing in the&#13;
fields. As the rice matured, it would be&#13;
transplanted by long lines of stooping&#13;
workers in field clothes and sun hats.&#13;
Although they all seemed happy enough,&#13;
there are diseases in the mud, and&#13;
sometimes in the cities we could see old&#13;
people - mostly women - bent double at&#13;
the waist, their trunks parallel to the&#13;
ground as they walked with stubby canes,&#13;
_ because they had spent their lives&#13;
transplanting rice until their backs gave&#13;
out. We would also see Korean men of all&#13;
ages carrying heavy loads of bamboo or&#13;
whatever on their backs in A-frames, for&#13;
Korean rural life depends upon such&#13;
burdens . Young mothers of all classes carry&#13;
their ch ildren on their backs, usually&#13;
supported with both hands, the fingers&#13;
interlocked. Other women carry parcels on&#13;
their heads.&#13;
• As our famil iarity increased, we learned&#13;
to recogn ize sandalwood, grown for export&#13;
We were on the third floor of five and&#13;
had balconies to both the north and&#13;
south . Our south balcony looked out upon&#13;
the bamboo yard at left; a major&#13;
intersection of six streets (three of them&#13;
paved); the skyline of the city; and the&#13;
entrance to our building, with its iron&#13;
fence and gate, its ornamental plants and&#13;
rocks, and the gatekeeper's house, to&#13;
which one 'of our phones was connected&#13;
usefully, although he knew no English. Our&#13;
other balcony, though it housed our rattly&#13;
garbage chute, was my favorite, because&#13;
of its spectacular view . We had 180° of&#13;
mountain panorama from there, with the&#13;
traditional and colorful houses of Kwangju&#13;
as foreground ; to the east, we had a full&#13;
view of Mt. Mudung, the home ot temples&#13;
and landscape artists . As I watched the sun&#13;
set from this balcony and saw the city&#13;
lights come on, it more than once&#13;
occurred to me that this was probably the -&#13;
most beautiful setting in which I would&#13;
ever live . -&#13;
Next Week: Life and Education in Kwangju, Korea&#13;
P.A.B. invites you to i7~--~--~-7&#13;
FIRST .WINTER PARK&#13;
l!i • /4--r'&#13;
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.. &#13;
news&#13;
State Assembly resists mariiuana&#13;
The State Assembly has killed the decriminal- to discuss the issue on' its merits and not just&#13;
ization of marijuana in Wisconsin by referring AB disposeof the bill. Claiming that the bill would die&#13;
325 to the Committee on State Affairs on a 54 to 41 because of election year caution, Clarenbach said,&#13;
vote late Friday afternoon, September 30, 1977. "If this was a secret vote, you would vote for the bill&#13;
According to Rob Stevens, legislative Affairs because you know on its merits that we shouldn't&#13;
Director for the United Council of UW Student put people in jail for the personal use of&#13;
Governments, this is a major setback for students. marijuana." Rep. leroy litscher {D'Baraboo) held Reduced pefUllties .dopted by lOme&#13;
"The personal use of marijuana is obviously most aloft a sprig of marijuana that had grown wild on A moderate bill, AS 325 was supported by the&#13;
prevalent among the university s-tudent age group, his farm and asked the Assembly why he should be leadership in both the Assembly and Senate and&#13;
and the refusal by the legislature to- deal with this criminally liable for its possession. Oshkosh Rep. was endorsed by such "radical" groups as the&#13;
issue reflects the lack of student political Richard Flintrop urged debate on the bill, saying Wisconsin Police Chief's Association, WIsconsin&#13;
involvement," said Stevens. that this was the "one opportunity to address one of Council on Criminal Justice, the State Council on&#13;
Dorff votes against decrim. the most serious problems we've dealt with here Alcohol and other Drug Abuse, the Department of&#13;
Representatives with universities or significant this year." Many -of the other representatives Health end' Social Services and the Milwaukee&#13;
numbers of students in their districts voting in favor disagreed and were anxious to end their final day of County Board of Supervisors. and dozens of other&#13;
of the bill were Reps. Flintrop (D-Oshkosh), the session and go home. Rep. Trgoning, a individuals Moreover many local efforts to reduce&#13;
Groshek (D-Stevens Point), Looby (D-Eau Claire), Republican from South Western Wisconsin moved pot penalties have developed In communities&#13;
Lorman (R-Whitewater), Medinger (D-la Cr-osse); to refer AB 325 to the State Affairs Committee around the state. Decnrrunalrzanon ordinances&#13;
Metz (D-Green Bay), and Travis (R-Platteville). Another Republican, watching the clock approach have already been adopted by at least 10 local&#13;
Madison Representatives Clarenbach, Muntz, and 6 p.m., complained that he wanted to get home and governments, Including Brookfield. Cudahy&#13;
Miller and Milwaukee Representatives Moody, play football with his kids, "and now I have to listen Madison, Middleton, Milwaukee County. Monona.&#13;
leopold, lee,Coggs, Ward, Elconin, Wahner, ta-some people pontificate." Shorewood. South Milwaukee, St FranCIS and West&#13;
Behnke, Kirby, Soucie, Norquist, and Tuczynski AB 325 would have removed the criminal Allis&#13;
came out en masse in support of the bill, giving the penalties and created civil penalties for the Acording to Messina. there IS now little chance of&#13;
issue a distinct urban versus rural flavor. University personal (lOssesslOn and use of small amounts of decnrntnahz auon rn wecons.n before 1979 'We&#13;
Representatives voting against the bill included marijuana with a maximum fine of S50. local tried to get the-bill moving early this year said&#13;
Ausman (R~Stout), Dorff ID-Parksidel and Murray jurisdictions would have had the option of Messina, realizing that the closer the vote came to&#13;
(D-Superior). enforcement, otherwise it would be enforced by the election time, the less support we'd have We had&#13;
Eloquently defending the bill he sponsored, state. Possession of greater amounts and the sale of lots of legislators who are sold on the merits ot the&#13;
Madison Rep. Dave Clarenbech urged the Assembly marijuana would have remained criminal. offenses Issue. but who were afraid of the votes back home&#13;
--'--~-'-----'-------------....,----- Policies committee&#13;
•&#13;
agrees on' tentative&#13;
advisi'ng proposal&#13;
by Diane Jalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Parks ide's Academic Policies Committee (APC) proposed a&#13;
tentative resolution on the academic advising policies during last&#13;
Wednesday's (Oct. 5) meeting. The meeting lasted 2Y2 hours.&#13;
Members present at the meeting included learning Disability&#13;
Director Diane German, Professor Stella Gray, Ranger Editor Philip l.&#13;
livingston, Professor William Moy, Vice-Chancellor larry Ratner, Mr.&#13;
Richard Schoene and Professor James Shea, chairman of APe.&#13;
The temporary policies, effective in the fall registration of 1978,&#13;
briefly states that any Parks ide student with an undeclared major is&#13;
required to formally declare his major before he completes the 60&#13;
credits.&#13;
The policy report also asserts that every student shall be counseled&#13;
by an assigned faculty advisor concerning the students' major or area&#13;
of interest. Those students with undeclared majors will be assigned&#13;
faculty advisors by the Office of the Dean of Faculty.&#13;
Finally, APC members agreed that students must secure the&#13;
signature of their assigned advisor prior to each registration.&#13;
with stiff penalties; up to SJO,(X)()fine and 10 years&#13;
imprisonment for second or subsequent offenses&#13;
AS 325 would also have removed previous&#13;
convictions for simple possession from the&#13;
offenders' criminal record&#13;
WLLC offers&#13;
display space&#13;
Below is the tentative proposal&#13;
REPORT OF THE ACADEMIC POLICIES COMMITIEE&#13;
RESOLUTIONS ON ACADEMIC ADVISING&#13;
(1) Formal declaration of an area of interest must be made upon&#13;
completion of 45 credits. Formal declaration of a major is required&#13;
upon completion of 60 credits. If a student falls to make&#13;
such formal declarations by these deadlines, the student will be&#13;
transferred to special student status and will be so notified Students&#13;
are encouraged to identify an area of interest early in their&#13;
academic careers (the student is free to change the area of interest&#13;
or major).&#13;
(2) Every student shall have an assigned ttdvisor or advising officer ...&#13;
as provided below:&#13;
(a) Students with declared majors or area of interest shall be advised&#13;
by faculty members in their major or area of interest. It is&#13;
the responsibility of the divisions to decide the advising format&#13;
for their unit.&#13;
(b) Students who have not declared a major or area of interest&#13;
shall be assigned faculty advisors by the Office of the Dean of&#13;
Faculty. These advisors will be assigned according to the&#13;
students' preliminary interests, if any. All such asignments must&#13;
be made with the prior consent of the proposed faculty advisor.&#13;
(3) A student who is a candidate for a degree must secure his&#13;
advisor's signttture, or the signature of the advisor's designee,&#13;
prior to each 'registration. The signature indicates only that the&#13;
opportunity for advising has occurred.&#13;
(4) These policies shall become effective with the registration of the&#13;
fall semester of 1978.&#13;
-Phasers'too expensive to kill people'&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
lock all Phasers on Target, Mr. Sulu ... Phasers&#13;
locked on ... Fire main Phasers!!!&#13;
Thusly the crew of the Enterprise have gotten&#13;
themselves in trouble and out of trouble. But will&#13;
Phasers or even lasers for that matter, ever be used&#13;
in battle or will this be a part of science fiction that&#13;
will indeed remain science fiction? •&#13;
Phasers, Masers, lasers or some type of energy&#13;
ray weapon have populated the pages of science&#13;
- fiction for many years. From the Phasers of Star&#13;
Trek, to the lasers of Space: 1999. From the Ray&#13;
Gun from logan's Run, to those fantastic weapons&#13;
and Light Sabers from (May the force be with you)&#13;
Star Wars. But the question remains, will lasers,&#13;
Phasers. or whatever, be used in our lifetime for&#13;
offensive! or defensive reasons?&#13;
According to the Associated Press, "U.S. and&#13;
Soviet scientists are racing for a revolutionary&#13;
breakthrough to laser weaponry that could rival the&#13;
birth of the atomic bomb and the intercontinental&#13;
missle." High powered laser (light-Amplicicationby-Stimulated-Emission-of-Radiation)&#13;
weapons,&#13;
strategically placed, could provide an impregnable&#13;
defense field against atomic attack by vaporizing&#13;
any enemy missle aimed at the country.&#13;
Defense experts are predicting that the Pentagon&#13;
will begin building prototypes as soon as 1979 and&#13;
will have "something in pretty solid form for&#13;
combat use by the late 1980's." Is this the beginning&#13;
of the phaser we&lt;fpan? The government' isn't&#13;
planning on it because, as one scientist put it, "It's&#13;
just too expensive to kill people that way. Bullets&#13;
are cheaper."&#13;
But what about Photon torpedoes?&#13;
-Math council meets here&#13;
The Wisconsin Mathematics&#13;
Council will hold concurrent fall&#13;
meetings at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside and UW·Eau&#13;
Claire on Saturday, Oct. 15, from&#13;
8 a.m. to 3:30 pm.&#13;
Secondary school teachers will&#13;
get a look at "Plato," the most&#13;
advanced computer-based&#13;
teaching system in the world,&#13;
which will be demonstrated by&#13;
its inventor, Donald L. Bitzer ..&#13;
Sponsoring the event are&#13;
UW-Parkside and its Center far&#13;
the Application of Computers&#13;
and Center for Teaching&#13;
Excellence, the Wisconsin&#13;
Mathematics Council and the&#13;
National Council of Teachers of&#13;
Mathematics.&#13;
The library/learning Center IS&#13;
offering campus groups and&#13;
individuals the use of its display&#13;
facilities. Academic disciplmes,&#13;
support services. student orgemz&#13;
atrons , faculty, staff and&#13;
students may present displays&#13;
wruch are Judged by the Llbrary/&#13;
learning Center to be SUItable In&#13;
subject and quality&#13;
The displav cases WIll be&#13;
reserved on a first-come flrstserved&#13;
basis, Participants Will be&#13;
responsible for assembling,&#13;
setting up, and taking down their&#13;
displays. The library/learnlng&#13;
Center does have a staff artIst&#13;
who will be avarlable for help In&#13;
designing and constructing signs&#13;
and labels&#13;
If you or your organization has&#13;
materials that are looking for an&#13;
audience, or a timely tOPIC to&#13;
explore, get In touch with Mary&#13;
McDonald, extension 2356&#13;
.~_ N\~G\C&#13;
~ O~~Z)\"~,ree~&#13;
Open 32\. ~\-:,5 .()363&#13;
Mon, &amp; rn. ." 7&gt;C.,oe· "\4) 634'&#13;
Noon "'9 ~~( ...&#13;
Sat. Noon ttt 5&#13;
MAG'C TRICKS - JOKES - NOVEL TIES&#13;
..&#13;
THE&#13;
2226-57th St.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
654-9909&#13;
~l!!IImJ_ _ ... -&#13;
news&#13;
State Assembly resists -mariiuana&#13;
The State Assembly has killed the decriminalization&#13;
of marijuana in Wisconsin by referring AB&#13;
325 to the Committee on State Affairs on a 54 to 41&#13;
vote late Friday afternoon , September 30, 1977.&#13;
According to Rob Stevens, Legislative Affairs&#13;
Director for the United Council of UW Student&#13;
Governments, this is a major setback for students .&#13;
"The personal use of marijuana is obviously most&#13;
prevalent among the university student age group,&#13;
and the refusal by the legislature to deal w ith this&#13;
issue reflects t he lack of student political&#13;
involvement," said Stevens.&#13;
Dorff votes against decrim.&#13;
Representatives with universities or significant&#13;
numbers of students in their districts voting in favor&#13;
of the bill were Reps. Flintrop (D-Oshkosh),&#13;
Groshek (D-Stevens Point), Looby (D-Eau Claire),&#13;
t orman (R-Whitewater), M edinger (D-La Cr-0sse);&#13;
Metz (D-Green Bay), and Travis (R- Plattevi11e).&#13;
Madison Representatives Clarenbach, M untz, and&#13;
Miller and i'vlilwaukee Representatives Moody,&#13;
Leopold, Lee, Coggs, Ward, Elconin, Wahner,&#13;
Behnke, Kirby, Soucie, Norquist, and Tuczynski&#13;
came out en masse in support of the bill, giving the&#13;
issue a distinct urban versus rural flavor. University&#13;
Representatives voting against the bill included&#13;
Ausman (R-Stout), Dorff [D-Parkside] and Murray&#13;
(D-Superior).&#13;
Eloquently defending the bill he sponsored,&#13;
Madison Rep. Dave Clarenbach urged the Assembly&#13;
to discuss the issue on · its merits and not just&#13;
dispose of the bill. Claiming that the bill would die&#13;
because of election year caution, Clarenbach said,&#13;
"If this was a secret vote, you would vote for the bill&#13;
because you know on its merits that we shouldn't&#13;
put people in jail for the personal use of&#13;
marijuana ." Rep . Leroy Litscher (D-Baraboo) held&#13;
aloft a sprig of marijuana that had grown wild on&#13;
his farm and asked the Assembly why he should be&#13;
criminally liable for its possession. Oshkosh Rep.&#13;
Richard Flintrop urged debate on the bill, saying&#13;
that this was the " one opportunity to address one of&#13;
the most serious problems we've dealt with here&#13;
this year." Many -of the other representatives&#13;
disagreed and were anxious to end their final day of&#13;
the session and go home. Rep. Trgoning, a&#13;
Republican from South Western Wisconsin moved&#13;
to refer AB 325 to the State Affairs Committee&#13;
Another Republican, watching the clock approach&#13;
6 p.m ., complained that he wanted to get home and&#13;
play football with his kids, "and now I have to listen&#13;
to some people pontificate."&#13;
AB 325 would have removed the criminal&#13;
penalties and created civil penalties for the&#13;
personal P._Ossession and use of small amounts of&#13;
marijuana with a maximum fine of $50 Local&#13;
jurisdictions would have had the option of&#13;
enforcement, otherwise it would be enforced by the&#13;
state. Possession of greater amounts and the sale of&#13;
marijuana would have remained criminal.. offenses&#13;
Below is the tentative proposal:&#13;
with stiff penalties; up to S30,000 fine and 10 year&#13;
imprisonment for second or ubsequ nt offen&#13;
AB 325 would also have remo ed pr Ious&#13;
convictions for simple possernon from th&#13;
offenders' criminal record&#13;
Reduced penalties adopted by some&#13;
A moderate bill, AB 325 wa supported by th&#13;
leadership in both the A mbly and nate and&#13;
was endorsed by such "radical" group a th&#13;
Wisconsin Police Chief's A ocIatIon, Wt consin&#13;
Council on Criminal Justice, the tate oun 11 on&#13;
Alcohol and other Dru Abuse, the Department of&#13;
Health and' oc1al Service and the M 1lwauk e&#13;
County Board of Supervisors, and doz ns of oth r&#13;
individuals . Moreover, man local efforts tor du e&#13;
pot penalties ha e developed in commun1tI&#13;
around the state. Decriminaltzat,on ordinance&#13;
have already b n adopted by at lea t 10 lo al&#13;
governments, including Brookfield, Cudahy ,&#13;
Madison , Middleton , Milwaukee County, Monona,&#13;
Shorewood , South Milwaukee, St Francis and We t&#13;
Allis&#13;
Acording to Messina, there Is now ltttle chance o&#13;
decnmmaltzat1on m W1scon in befor 1 7 'VI.&#13;
tried to get the.bill moving early th, ar, ' aid&#13;
Messina, " realizing that the closer the vote ame to&#13;
election time, the le s support \,e'd have \\' had&#13;
lots of legislators who are sold on the m nts of th&#13;
issue, but who were afraid of the otes back horn "&#13;
Policies committee&#13;
• agrees on· tentative&#13;
REPORT OF THE ACADEMIC POLICIES COMMITTEE&#13;
RESOLUTIONS O N ACADEMIC ADVISING&#13;
WLLC offers&#13;
display space&#13;
advising proposal&#13;
by Diane Jalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Parkside's Academic Policies Committee (APC) proposed a&#13;
tentative resolution on the academic advising policies during last&#13;
Wednesday's (Oct. 5) meeting. The meeting lasted 2½ hours.&#13;
Members present at the meeting included Learning Disability&#13;
Director Diane German, Professor Stella Gray, Ranger Editor Philip L.&#13;
Livingston, Professor William Moy, Vice-Chancellor Larry Ratner, Mr.&#13;
Richard Schoene and Professor James Shea, chairman of APC.&#13;
The temporary policies, effective in the fall registration of 1978,&#13;
briefly states that any Parkside student with an undeclared major is&#13;
required to formally declare his major before he completes the 60&#13;
credits.&#13;
The policy report also asserts that every student shall be counseled&#13;
by an assigned faculty advisor concerning the students' major or area&#13;
of interest. Those students with undeclared majors will be assigned&#13;
faculty advisors by the Office of the Dean of Faculty.&#13;
Finally, APC members agreed that students must secure the&#13;
signature of their assigned advisor prior to each registration .&#13;
(1) Formal declaration of an area of interest must be made upon&#13;
completion of 45 credits . Formal declaration of a ma1or is required&#13;
upon completion of 60 credits . If a student fails to make&#13;
such formal declarations by these deadl ines, the student will be&#13;
transferred to special student status and will be so notified Students&#13;
are encouraged to identify an area of interest early in their&#13;
academic careers (the student is free to change the area of interest&#13;
or major).&#13;
(2) Every student shall have an assigned advisor or advising officer _&#13;
as provided below:&#13;
(a) Students with declared majors or area of interest shall be advised&#13;
by faculty members in their major or area of interest. It is&#13;
the responsibility of the divisions to decide the advising format&#13;
for their unit.&#13;
(b) Students who have not declared a major or area of interest&#13;
shall be assigned faculty advisors by the Office of the Dean of&#13;
Faculty. These advisors will be assigned according to the&#13;
students' preliminary interests, if any. All such asignments must&#13;
be made with the prior consent of the proposed faculty advisor.&#13;
(3) A student who is a candidate for a degree must secure his&#13;
advisor's signature, or the signature of the advisor's designee,&#13;
prior to each registration. The signature indicates only that the&#13;
opportunity for advising has occurred.&#13;
( 4) These policies shall become effective with the registration of the&#13;
fall semester of 1978.&#13;
The Library/ Learning Center Is&#13;
offering campus group and&#13;
individual the u of I d1 pla&#13;
facil1t1es Acad m1c di 1pl1n ,&#13;
upport ervIc s, stud nt organizations,&#13;
fa cult , ta ff and&#13;
students may pr nt di pla&#13;
which are judged by th Library/&#13;
Learning Center to be suitable in&#13;
subject and quality.&#13;
The d1 pla ca es will be&#13;
reserved on a fir t-com fir t·&#13;
served basis Partic1pan will be&#13;
responsible for ass mblin ,&#13;
setting up, and talong down th tr&#13;
display . The L1brary/ Learnin&#13;
Center does have a staff artist&#13;
who will be available for h Ip in&#13;
designing and onstru ting Ign&#13;
and label&#13;
If you or your organization h&#13;
materials that ar loolon for an&#13;
aud, nc , or a tIm ly topI to&#13;
e plor , g t in tou h with Mary&#13;
M cDonald, ten ion 2356&#13;
Phasers 'too expensive to kill people' '.' ~- N\~G\C ,&#13;
~ o~i~s,ree~3 by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Lock all Phasers on· Target, Mr. Sulu . .. Phasers&#13;
locked on .. . Fire main Phasers!!!&#13;
Thusly the crew of the Enterprise have gotten&#13;
themselves in trouble and out of trouble . But will&#13;
Phasers or even Lasers for that matter, ever be used&#13;
in battl~ or will this be a part of science fiction that&#13;
will indeed remain science fiction? •&#13;
Phasers,. Masers, Lasers or some type of energy&#13;
ray weapon have populated the pages of science&#13;
- fiction for many years . From the Phasers of Star&#13;
Trek to the Lasers of Space: 1999. From the Ray&#13;
Gun.from Logan's Run , to those fantastic weapons&#13;
and Light Sabers from (May the force ,be with you)&#13;
Star Wars . But the question remains, will Lasers,&#13;
Phasers, or whatever, be used in our lifeUme for&#13;
offensive; or defensive reasons?&#13;
According to the Associated Press, " U.S. and&#13;
Soviet scientists are racing for a revolutionary&#13;
breakthrough to laser weaponry that could rival the&#13;
birth of the atomic bomb and the intercontinental&#13;
missle." High powered laser (Light-Amplicicationby-Stimulated-Emission-of-Radiation)&#13;
weapons,&#13;
strategically placed, could provide an impregnable&#13;
defense field against atomic attack by vaporizing&#13;
any enemy missle aimed at the country .&#13;
Defense experts are predicting that the Pentagon&#13;
will begin building prototypes as soon as 1979 and&#13;
will have " something in pretty solid form for&#13;
combat use by the late 1980's." Is this the beginn ing&#13;
of the phaser wecfpon? The government · isn't&#13;
planning on it because, as one scientist put it, " It's&#13;
just too expensive to kill people that way. Bullets&#13;
are cheaper."&#13;
But what about Photon torpedoes?&#13;
Math council meets here Sponsoring the event are&#13;
UW-Parkside and its Center for&#13;
the Application of Computers&#13;
and Genter for Teaching&#13;
Excellence, th'e Wisconsin&#13;
Mathematics Council and the&#13;
National Council of Teachers of&#13;
Mathematics.&#13;
The Wisconsin Mathematics&#13;
Council will hold concurrent fall&#13;
meetings at the University of&#13;
Wisco~sin:Parkside and UW-Eau&#13;
Claire on Saturday, Oct. 15, from&#13;
8 a.m . to 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Secondary school teachers will&#13;
get a look at " Plato," the most&#13;
advanced computer-based&#13;
teaching system in the world,&#13;
which will be demonstrated by&#13;
its inventor, Donald L. Bitzer~&#13;
Open 32,\ ~\~ 5 ()363&#13;
Mon. &amp; Fri. "?\Cloe, .t\4,) e,34--&#13;
N~ It/ 9 ~~ ~&#13;
Sat . Noon Ii i 5&#13;
MAGIC TRICKS - JOKES - NOVEL TIES&#13;
.. &#13;
news&#13;
Facul_ty split en&#13;
collective bargaining&#13;
The Parkside faculty is split&#13;
exactly 50/50 as to whether it&#13;
wants to bargain collectively&#13;
with the University in the&#13;
matters of compensation, hours,&#13;
and conditions of employment.&#13;
The results are in a survey tally&#13;
released last week by the&#13;
Parkside University Committee,&#13;
which circulated the survey to&#13;
158 eligible faculty and received&#13;
only 78 replies. 34 of the replies&#13;
favored collective bargaining in&#13;
some form, wh iIe 34 opposed&#13;
any collective bargaining. Ten&#13;
replied that they are undecided.&#13;
Of the 34 who replied in the&#13;
affirmative, four thought the&#13;
Parkside faculty should bargain&#13;
collectively on all issues&#13;
including those now covered by&#13;
faculty governance (the faculty&#13;
has its own government&#13;
including a Senate). The other 30&#13;
said they should bargain&#13;
collectively only on the issues of&#13;
salary and fringe benefits.&#13;
late last week Larry Deutsch,&#13;
chairman of the committee,&#13;
went 'to Madison to tell the&#13;
university regents of the results&#13;
of the Parkside survey. The&#13;
regents will then take an official&#13;
stand on the collective bargaining&#13;
bills now before the state&#13;
legislature.&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
,Scholarships bring&#13;
$10,000 10 uw.~&#13;
A provision to continue legislative scholarships for out of state&#13;
students did not make headlines this summer when the state budget&#13;
was passed, but it was big news to University of Wisconsin athletic&#13;
directors around the state, including Parksfde's Wayne Dannehl who&#13;
credited local legislators for saving the measure.&#13;
"It means nearly $10,000 to our athletic program," Dannehl said&#13;
today. "And that's crucial to the successof our program."&#13;
The legislative scholarships, which cover the out of state portion of&#13;
tuition, about S1,6CX) a year, are used extensively at UW campuses for&#13;
athletes, but may be awarded to any student. Each legislator may&#13;
award one such scholarship a year. •&#13;
The scholarships came under fire earlier this year and there were&#13;
three separate bills before the legislature to eliminate them.&#13;
"We are especially indebted to Assemblymen Eugene Dorff and&#13;
Joseph Andrea of Kenosha, who led the fight to include the&#13;
scholarships in the budget," Dannehl said. "And we are extremely&#13;
pleased that seven of our- area legislators continue to support&#13;
Parkside by assigning their scholarships to this campus. The large&#13;
bulk of legislative scholarships go to UW-Madison, so we're very&#13;
happy to have support from almost all of our local representatives,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
In addition to Dorff-and Andrea, legislators who have assigned&#13;
their scholarships to UW-P are Assemblymen Marcel Dandeneau,&#13;
Michael Ferrall and JamesRooney of Racine, Senator John Maurer of&#13;
Kenosha and Assemblyman Russell Olson of Bassett.&#13;
Young Am&lt;rlcans&#13;
of Italian Descent&#13;
PRESENT&#13;
Maynard Fergeson&#13;
in&#13;
Concert&#13;
"henefit for senior Cilizen&#13;
J)f(&gt;jeo"&#13;
-,&#13;
'..&#13;
L&#13;
...... /-&#13;
A Spe.cial Thank! To ./&#13;
Budwe.i!e.r Corp.&#13;
-&#13;
Friday, October 21, 1977&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
St. Joseph's High School Auditorium&#13;
2401 69th Street 0 Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
.Prices 815 and 810&#13;
all.eatl re.erved&#13;
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT: Joemdt&amp;Ve.turo&#13;
618 55th St,&#13;
./ " With contmued emphasis on&#13;
the trend toward" relevance In&#13;
higher education, the Political&#13;
Science discipline has arranged&#13;
internship opportunities for&#13;
students in Washington, D.C.&#13;
According to Dr, Samuel&#13;
Pernacciaro of the Political&#13;
Science discipline, internships&#13;
are available during the Spring&#13;
semester in Congress ion pi&#13;
offices, executive agencies,&#13;
public interest organizations,&#13;
and judicial agencies as well as&#13;
in many other areas of interest&#13;
such as environment, consumeraffairs,&#13;
journalism, communication,&#13;
the arts, and business.&#13;
Internships have become an&#13;
increasingly popular component&#13;
of students' cirricula as they&#13;
provide students with the&#13;
opportunity to integrate academic&#13;
theory with practice in&#13;
an applied situation. In addition,&#13;
interships have helped to enable&#13;
students to develop professional&#13;
skills, explore career options,&#13;
participate in the professional&#13;
work "experience", and to&#13;
discover strengths and weaknesses&#13;
in their academic background&#13;
so that they may better prepare&#13;
for a career., Internships also&#13;
provide students 'with an&#13;
extraordinary opportunity for&#13;
personal development with the&#13;
wealth of political, historical,&#13;
and cultural attractions available&#13;
in the nation's capital.&#13;
The internships are being&#13;
handled by Pernacciaro and&#13;
have been developed in&#13;
conjunction with the Washington&#13;
Center for learning&#13;
,Alternatives of Washington,&#13;
D.C., a non-profit educational&#13;
agency which develops the&#13;
individual placements and&#13;
provid~s internship placement,&#13;
supervision, evaluation, academic&#13;
courses, seminars, housing,&#13;
and other support services for&#13;
students from colleges and&#13;
universities throughout the&#13;
country. While on an internship&#13;
for a fuli term, students remain&#13;
enrolled at and receive academic&#13;
credit from Parkside based on&#13;
evaluations performed by WClA·&#13;
staff and faculty in Washington&#13;
and facilitated by Parkside's&#13;
faculty liaison with WClA-.&#13;
Most interns are juniors or&#13;
seniors, but some sophomores&#13;
have participated in the&#13;
Washington intern program to&#13;
date. Placements are available in&#13;
a wide range of interests and are&#13;
appropriate for majors in most&#13;
disciplines. Students who are&#13;
interested in pursuing the&#13;
possibility of an I internship in&#13;
Washington, D.C. should contact&#13;
Pernacciaro at Greenquist 313 or&#13;
call extension 2316 for more&#13;
information.&#13;
The deadline for applying for&#13;
the Spring Semester program is \1"""&#13;
November 1, 1977.&#13;
approval for increased student&#13;
participation in the allocation of&#13;
student segregated fees and&#13;
looked forward to good relations&#13;
with the students of the&#13;
UW-Madison.&#13;
Two new vice chancellors&#13;
must be hired along with dealing&#13;
yv'ith the problems facing the&#13;
UW health sciences program.&#13;
Irving Shain, Vice President&#13;
for academic affairs and provost&#13;
of the University of Washington&#13;
in Seattle, was named chancellor&#13;
of the UW-Madison campus by a&#13;
unanimous- vote of the UW&#13;
Regents at their September&#13;
meeting. Shain, former vice&#13;
chancellor at the Madison&#13;
campus will succeed H. Edwin&#13;
Young who left in July to become&#13;
president of .the 27 campus UW&#13;
System. Shain is no new comer&#13;
to the Madison campus, being a&#13;
23 year veteran of a distinguished&#13;
university. Shain's selec:.&#13;
tion came as no surprise to most&#13;
UW observers, but was still&#13;
capable of generating excitement&#13;
upon announcement.&#13;
In remarks. made at a news&#13;
conference Shain gave his&#13;
-Shain- appo'nfed Ma ison Cllancellor&#13;
Labo~ Economics class i~ unique&#13;
The students of UW-Parksid~ have an&#13;
opportunity that is unique on the undergraduate&#13;
level. Specifically, this campus offers a Bachelor's&#13;
Degree in Labor Economics.&#13;
You say, "so what." The "so what" of the matter is&#13;
simply this. Labor Economics, Industrial Relations&#13;
and labor Relations are courses of study usually&#13;
pursued on a graduate level. The essence of labor&#13;
Economics on this campus is essentially of a&#13;
practical nature. In addition to, it provides an&#13;
opportunity for a degree, provides an excellent&#13;
basis for entry into law school or graduate school,&#13;
and allows a student to get involved in realistic&#13;
projects related to union and management&#13;
relations. I.E. (lE 330 is now conducting an organizing&#13;
campaign of LE 313 classes). For example,&#13;
members of one class represent a given union (in&#13;
this instance Precise Local 111 and the evening&#13;
class is I.W.W.) The members of another class&#13;
represent un-organized employees. Given a fact&#13;
situation and a free hand, labor Managemg,nt and )&#13;
employees embark on a campaign the same as in a&#13;
"real life" situation. The Union "organizers" are&#13;
Bruce Kellogg and Elida Saenz. Elections will be&#13;
held on October 13.&#13;
The guidance, instruction, and experience&#13;
provided by Mr. William Petrie both in class and in&#13;
specific projects provides his students with&#13;
applications, not just theory.&#13;
The LE 313 class is basically an introductory&#13;
course. But 'it gets students of all ages, experience,&#13;
and majors involved in an experience with a topic&#13;
that all can relate to.&#13;
Choose from our library of 7,000 topics,&#13;
All paper\s have been prepared by our&#13;
staff of professional writers to insure&#13;
excellence. Send $1.00 (air mail&#13;
postage) for the current edition of our&#13;
mail order catalog.&#13;
r~UCATiONA~SYSrEMS----&#13;
I P.O. Box 25916-E, II "-&#13;
I Los Angeles, Calif. 90025 II&#13;
Name I&#13;
W•• 110provide original : A~dress :&#13;
r•••• rch -- all fl.lds. I' CIty I&#13;
Th•• I. and dl••• rtatlon&#13;
L-~.ulstlnc. also av.llabl.. LI State Zip ~~I&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Assistance&#13;
ALL SUBJECTS&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FO~YOU!'&#13;
:IJ. It~&#13;
Come Today SeeYours.&#13;
"'" '&#13;
quality corrrnerciol printers&#13;
1417 50thstreet . 658-8990&#13;
news&#13;
Faculty split on&#13;
collective bargaining&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
The Parkside faculty is split&#13;
exactly 50/50 as to whether it&#13;
wants to bargain collectively&#13;
with the University in the&#13;
matters of compensation, hours,&#13;
and conditions of employment.&#13;
The results are in a survey tally&#13;
released last week by the&#13;
Parkside University Committee,&#13;
which circulated the survey to&#13;
158 eligible faculty and received&#13;
only 78 replies. 34 of the replies&#13;
favored collective bargaining in&#13;
some form, while 34 opposed&#13;
any collective bargaining. Ten&#13;
replied that they are undecided.&#13;
Of the 34 who replied in the&#13;
affirmative, four thought the&#13;
Parkside faculty should bargain&#13;
collectively on all issues&#13;
including those now covered by&#13;
faculty governance (the faculty&#13;
has its own government&#13;
including a Senate). The other 30&#13;
said they should bargain,&#13;
collectively only on the issues of&#13;
salary and fringe benefits.&#13;
Late last week Larry Deutsch,&#13;
chairman of the committee,&#13;
went ·to Madison to tell the&#13;
university regents of the results&#13;
of the Parkside survey. The&#13;
regents will then take an official&#13;
stand on the collective bargaining&#13;
bills now before the state&#13;
legislature.&#13;
.scholarships bring&#13;
$10,000 to UW-P&#13;
A provision to continue legislative scholarships for out of state&#13;
students did not make headlines this summer when the state budget&#13;
was passed, but it was big news to University of Wisconsin athletic&#13;
directors around the state, including Parkside'~ Wayne Dannehl who&#13;
credited local legislators for saving the measure.&#13;
"It means nearly $10,000 to our athletic program," Dannehl said&#13;
today. "And that's crucial to the success of our program."&#13;
The legislative scholarships, which cover the out of state portion of&#13;
tuition, about $1,600 a year, are used extensively at UW campuses for&#13;
athletes, but may be awarded to any student. Each legislator may&#13;
award one such scholarship a year. '&#13;
The scholarships came under fire earlier this year and there were&#13;
three separate bills before the legislature to eliminate them.&#13;
"We are especially indebted to Assemblymen Eugene Dorff and&#13;
Joseph Andrea of Kenosha, who led the fight to include the&#13;
scholarships in the budget," Dannehl said. "And we are extremely&#13;
pleased that seven of our area legislators continue to support&#13;
Parkside by assigning their scholarships to this campus. The large&#13;
bulk of legislative scholarships go to UW-Madison, so we're very&#13;
happy to have support from almost all of our local representatives,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
In addition to Dorff and.Andrea, legislator~ who have assigned&#13;
their scholarships to UW-P are Assemblymen Marcel Dandeneau,&#13;
Michael Ferrall and James Rooney of Racine, Senator John Maurer of&#13;
Kenosha and Assemblyman Russell Olson of Bassett.&#13;
Young Amuicans&#13;
of Italian Descfnt&#13;
PRE,ENT&#13;
Maynard Fergeson&#13;
/&#13;
• Ill&#13;
Concert&#13;
"l&gt;t-nefil .for senior citizen&#13;
project ..&#13;
L&#13;
/-'·&#13;
A.. JSpecia&#13;
-- -l Thank• To&#13;
Budwei8er Corp.&#13;
Friday, October 21, 1977&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
St. Joseph's High School Auditorium&#13;
2401 69th Street • Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
JPrices $15 and $10&#13;
all seats reserved&#13;
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT: Joerndt &amp; Ventura&#13;
618 55th St.&#13;
Announce D.C. internships . .&#13;
for Parkside students I&#13;
~&#13;
With conefnued emphasis qn&#13;
the trend toward· relevance in&#13;
higher education, the Political&#13;
Science discipline has arranged&#13;
internship opportunities for&#13;
students in Washington, D.C.&#13;
According to Dr. Samuel&#13;
Pernacciaro of the Political&#13;
Science discipline, internships&#13;
are available during the Spring&#13;
semester in Congressional&#13;
offices, executive agencies,&#13;
public interest organizations,&#13;
and judicial agencies as well as&#13;
in many other areas of interest&#13;
such as environment, consumer·&#13;
affairs, journalism, communication,&#13;
the arts, and business.&#13;
Internships have become an&#13;
increasingly popular component&#13;
of students' cirricula as they&#13;
provide students with the&#13;
opportunity to integrate academic&#13;
theory with practice in&#13;
an applied situation. In addition,&#13;
interships have helped to enable&#13;
students to develop professional&#13;
skills, explore career options,&#13;
participate in the professional&#13;
work "experience", and to&#13;
discover strengths and weaknesses&#13;
in their academic background&#13;
so that they may better prepare&#13;
for a career. , Internships also&#13;
· provide students ·with an&#13;
extraordinary opportunity for&#13;
personal development with the&#13;
wealth of political, historical,&#13;
and cultural attractions available&#13;
in the nation's capital.&#13;
The internships are being&#13;
handled by Pernacciaro and&#13;
have been developed in&#13;
conjunction with the Washington&#13;
Center for Learning&#13;
,Alternatives of Washington ,&#13;
D.C., a non-profit educational&#13;
agency which develops the&#13;
indiviaual placements and&#13;
provides internship placement,&#13;
supervision, evaluation, academic&#13;
courses, seminars, housing,&#13;
and other support services for&#13;
students from colleges and&#13;
universities throughout the&#13;
country. W hile on an internship&#13;
for a fuli term, students remain&#13;
enrolled at and receive academic&#13;
credit from Parkside based on&#13;
evaluations performed by WCLA ·&#13;
staff and faculty in Washington&#13;
and facilitated by Parkside's&#13;
faculty liaison with WCLA,.&#13;
Most interns are juniors or&#13;
seniors, but some sophomores&#13;
have participated in the&#13;
Washington . intern program to&#13;
date. Placements are available in&#13;
a wide range of interests and are&#13;
appropriate for majots in most&#13;
disciplines. Students who are&#13;
interested in pursuing the&#13;
possibility of an I internship in&#13;
Washington, D.C. should contact&#13;
Pernacciaro at Creenquist 313 or&#13;
call extension 2316 for more&#13;
information.&#13;
- The deadline for applying for&#13;
the Spring Semester program is .rNovember&#13;
1, 1977.&#13;
Shain-appointed Ma ison Chancellor&#13;
Irving Shain, Vice President&#13;
for academic affairs and provost&#13;
of the University of Washington&#13;
in Seattle, was named chancellor&#13;
of the UW-Madison campus by a&#13;
unanimous vote of the UW&#13;
Regents at their September&#13;
meeting. Shain, former vice&#13;
chancellor at the Madison&#13;
campus will succeed H. Edwin&#13;
Young who left in July to become&#13;
president of the 27 campus UW&#13;
System. Shain is no new comer&#13;
to the Madison campus, being a&#13;
23 year veteran of a distinguished&#13;
university. Shain's selec0&#13;
tion came as no surprise to most&#13;
UW ol:&gt;servers, but was still&#13;
capable of generafing excitement&#13;
upon announcement.&#13;
In remarks. made at a news&#13;
conference Shain gave his&#13;
approval for increased student&#13;
participation in the allocation of&#13;
student segregated fees and&#13;
looked forward to good relations&#13;
with the students of the&#13;
UW-Madison.&#13;
Two new vice chancellors&#13;
must be hired along with dealing&#13;
y,,ith the problems facing the&#13;
UW health sciences program.&#13;
- I&#13;
Labo~ Economics class i·~ unique&#13;
The students of UW-Parkside have an&#13;
opportunity that is unique on the undergraduate&#13;
level. Specifically, this campus offers a Bachelor's&#13;
Degree in Labor Economics.&#13;
You say, " so what." The "so what" of the matter is&#13;
simply this. Labor Economics, Industrial Relations&#13;
and Labor Relations are courses of study usually&#13;
pursued on a graduate level. The essence of Labor&#13;
Economics on this campus is essentially of a&#13;
practical nature. In addition to, it provides an&#13;
opportunity for a degree, provides an excellent&#13;
basis for entry into law school or graduate school,&#13;
and allows a student to get involved in realistic&#13;
projects related to union and management&#13;
relations. 1._E. (LE 330 is now conducting an organizing&#13;
campaign of LE 313 classes). For example,&#13;
members of one class represent a given union (in&#13;
this instance Precise Local 111 and the evening&#13;
class is I.W.W .) The members of another class&#13;
represent un-organized employees. Given a fact&#13;
situation and a free hand, Labor Management and&#13;
employ1;es embark on a campaign the ~ame as in a&#13;
"real life" situation. The Union " organizers" are&#13;
Bruce Kellogg and Elida Saenz. Elections will be&#13;
helg on October 13.&#13;
The guidance, instruction, an9 experience&#13;
provided by Mr. William Petrie both in class and in&#13;
specific projects provides his students with&#13;
applications, not just theory.&#13;
The LE 313 class is basically an introductory&#13;
course. But it gets students of all ages, experience,&#13;
and majors involved in an experience with a topic&#13;
that all can relate to.&#13;
Assistance / ALL SUBJECTS&#13;
Choose from our library of 7,000 topics.&#13;
All papers have been prepared by our&#13;
staff of professional writers to insure&#13;
excellence. Send $1 .00 (air mail&#13;
po·stage) for the current edition of our&#13;
mail order catalog.&#13;
j EDUCATIONAL SYSTEMS&#13;
I P.O. Box 25916-E, I--,. I Los Angeles, Calif. 90025 1 ·&#13;
I Name ---------- I&#13;
We also provide original l Address ---------- I&#13;
research •• all fields. 1&#13;
. City____________ I&#13;
Thesis and dissertation I&#13;
assistance also available. I State ____ Zip - ----- I L----------~- ·-------------~&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU! -&#13;
Come Today SeeYours.&#13;
~-- quality conn-ercial printers&#13;
1417 50th street . 658-8990 &#13;
sports&#13;
Parkside's 1977 Soccer Team:&#13;
Front row, left to right: Mike Petrovic, Mike Olesen,&#13;
Chris Crowell, Chris Carter, Wilson Corley, Karl&#13;
Goetz, Dan Brieschke. Back row, left to right:&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson, Mike Boyajian, Steve&#13;
Christensen, Alex Burojevich, Joe Eisen, Niall&#13;
Power, Bob Stoewe, Earl Campbell, Jim Andresen,&#13;
lim Worden, Jack Landwehr-manager.&#13;
Irish soccer team shuts&#13;
out Parkside I 4-0&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
RANGER Staff&#13;
On Tuesday, October 4, the Parkside soccer team was defeated by&#13;
the University College of Dublin, Ireland by a score of 4-0.&#13;
Parkside played an almost completely defensive game, with only&#13;
four or five good drives toward Dublin's goal. The first goal came at&#13;
8: 10 of the first half, when Parkside's goalie was pulled out of the goal&#13;
to give the Irish a 1-0 lead. The second goal came with 10:26 left in&#13;
the half, after a pass from the outside corner to a center player, to&#13;
make the halftime score 2-0.&#13;
Two minutes into the second half, Dublin bombed in another goal,&#13;
and five minutes later gained its last point on a penalty kick after a&#13;
Parkside Foul.&#13;
Dublin's goal scorers were Fintan Drury, Colin Kearns, Pat McKeon,&#13;
and Martin Moron.&#13;
Though they lost, Parside's goalie, DanBrleschke, who returned for&#13;
the first time in three weeks after a partial shoulder separation, did a&#13;
fine job of saving many possible goals. Parkside just couldn't get its&#13;
offense working because Dublin kept its defense under constant&#13;
pressure.&#13;
"I was very impressed with their teamwork and their continuous&#13;
'running." said Coach Hal Henderson. "They have what r call a onetwo&#13;
touch on the ball, without a lot of dribbling. This game has&#13;
served as a good tuneup for this weekends (now last weekend's)&#13;
Chancellor's Cup match."&#13;
Parkside's record'going into the Cup is ~-4-o.Their two wins were&#13;
over Trinity College of Illinois 4-2, and atremendous "come from&#13;
behind" 4-3 victory over Rockford College, also from Illinois.&#13;
"Ihev just beat us to every ball," said Parkside goalie Brieschke&#13;
about the loss to the Irish ..&#13;
"They can shoot from anywhere." The Dublin players commented&#13;
in the same way, saying, "they were always playing too slow. Theywould&#13;
kick the ball away and lose control over it."&#13;
The University College of Dublin is finishing four week soccer tour&#13;
of the United States. They stayed in Kenosha till last Thursday, being&#13;
housed and fed by the Soccer Club and friends in the area. They left&#13;
for New Jersey to play the last two games of their tour.&#13;
The team consists of 24 players and four officials. They h~ a ~6&#13;
game schedule in the States, playing in _Florida, Cahfornta&#13;
Minneapolis, Wisconsin, and ending in New Jersey. .. ..&#13;
They were initially sponsored by World Cup Sports Clmtcs, which IS&#13;
the corporation for which Henderson works at summer soccer camps.&#13;
This connection brought them. to Parksi~. ".' "" ,&#13;
What were their impressions of the United States? Fantastic, It s&#13;
great," and "It's too big" were some of the replies. John Flynn of the&#13;
Dublin team commented that "Parkside's a lovely place, you have a&#13;
very attractive campus here."&#13;
Woinowski sets records&#13;
The UW-Parkside women's swim team opened its season on&#13;
October 4 at Carroll College in Waukesha and lost 34-74 to Carroll&#13;
and 47-64 to Ripon College. However fres~man Debbie Wojnowski&#13;
(St. Francis) set three ream records: 2:15.70 in the 200 Free, 1'1627 In&#13;
the 100 Fly, and 601.0 in the SOOFree which also set a poll record for&#13;
Carroll.&#13;
Other Parkside performances Included sophomore Sally Francis&#13;
(Racine Park) placing 1st against Ripon and 2nd against Carroll In the&#13;
50 Free (a personal best of :30.9) as well as 2nd's against both schools&#13;
in the 100 Free. Freshmen Mary Beth Mogensen (Kenosha Tremper)&#13;
placed 2nd against Carroll and 1st against Ripon in 1·meter diving,&#13;
while teammate Donna Peterson, a freshmen from Racine Case, took&#13;
3rd and 2nd in the diving event Another freshman from St. Francis&#13;
was LOWrieMelotik who placed 2nd in 50 and the 100 Breast against&#13;
both schools Freshman Maureen Graves (Kenosha Reuther) placed&#13;
3rd against both 10 the 50 Free, 3rd in the 100 Back, and 2nd vs Ripon&#13;
and 3rd vs Carroll In the 50 Back The 200 Free Relay of FranCIS,&#13;
Wojnowski, Melotik, and Craves placed 1st vs Ripon and 2nd vs&#13;
Carroll&#13;
"I am pleased with the meet as the team scored more POints&#13;
against Carroll than last year Our performances show the&#13;
improvement that I've been expecting from our practice workloads. I&#13;
am especially pleased With our divers, as they both have had to learn&#13;
a full complement of dives for the college COMpetition - notably&#13;
Mary Beth, who never dived before We are gearing for the&#13;
conference meet In November, and will continue to look for better&#13;
times and scores as individuals and the team points will come as a&#13;
result" Parkside travels to Creen Bay Saturday for a meet with&#13;
UW-Creen Bay and Lawrence University&#13;
Heiring is top yankee&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
RANGER Staff&#13;
Kenosha's Jim Heiring, former UW-P walker, was the first American&#13;
to finish in the Lugano Cup Walk held in England on September 24&#13;
and 25.&#13;
Out of a field of 48 of the world's best walkers Heinng came In 36th&#13;
with a time of 1:33:40, 26 seconds off hts all time best In the 20&#13;
kilometer walk. Daniel Bautista of Mexico, the fevcnte, won the Cup&#13;
with a time of 1.24:04.&#13;
"It was great," said Heiring of the walk. "It was a totally great&#13;
experience competing against the best walkers in the world and&#13;
getting to know them all personally To walk In the lugano Cup IS&#13;
bigger than the Olympics,"&#13;
The lugano Cup is sponsored by the Olympic Committee, AAU.&#13;
The United States took eleventh place In a field of 12 countries,&#13;
beating only Hungary.&#13;
~ UY UW-Parksl •• ;,rr S•• esllr Bl1lk&#13;
(;&#13;
Don't 8, A&#13;
Sourp... 1&#13;
IWEmll q,Al ..&#13;
10 ......&#13;
$299~~:··~&#13;
• Round Trip Jel Air&#13;
• 7 Nights lodging&#13;
• Ground Transfers&#13;
• Tour Escon&#13;
• Tips and TOllotS&#13;
For AppIiC:01ion &amp; informa,1on&#13;
(OfilTAcr. PARkSlOE UNION Om(ES&#13;
RM 209 CAU SSU200&#13;
'.,b... a....&#13;
I.ZII'&#13;
Thefiuteot~i"ll Premium Beer&#13;
tnA~&#13;
01 .., at Uli. s... .&#13;
filfj&#13;
~I_j&#13;
- -~&#13;
sports&#13;
Parkside's 1977 Soccer Team:&#13;
Front row, left to right: Mike Petrovic, Mike Olesen,&#13;
Chris Crowell, Chris Carter, Wilson Corley, Karl&#13;
Goetz, Dan Brieschke. Back row, left to right:&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson, Mike Boyajian, Steve&#13;
Christensen, Alex Burojevich, Joe Eisen, Niall&#13;
Power, Bob Stoewe, Earl Campbell, Jim Andresen,&#13;
Jim Worden, Jack Landwehr-manager.&#13;
Irish soccer team shuts . .&#13;
out Parkside, 4-0&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
RANGER Staff&#13;
On Tuesday, October 4, the Parkside soccer team was defeated by&#13;
the University College of Dublin, Ireland by a score of 4-0.&#13;
Parkside played an almost completely defensive game, with only&#13;
four or five good drives toward Dublin's goal. The first goal came at&#13;
8: 10 of the first half, when Parkside's goalie was pulled out of the goal&#13;
to give the Irish a 1-0 lead . The second goal came with 10:26 left in&#13;
the half, after a pass from the outside corner to a center player, to&#13;
make the halftime score 2-0.&#13;
Two minutes into the second half, Dublin bombed in another goal,&#13;
and five minutes later gained its last point on a penalty kick after a&#13;
Parkside Foul.&#13;
Dublin's goal scorers were Fint,3n Drury, Colin Kearns, Pat McKeon,&#13;
and Martin Moron .&#13;
Though they lost, Parside's goalie, Dan'Brieschke, who returned for&#13;
the first time in three weeks after a partial shoulder separation, did a&#13;
fine job of s,aving many possible goals . Parkside just couldn't get its&#13;
offense working because Dublin kept irs defense under constant&#13;
pressure.&#13;
"I was very impressed with their teamwork and their continuous&#13;
-runnirTg," said Coach Hal Henderson . " They have what I call a onetwo&#13;
touch on the ball, without a lot of dribbling. This game has&#13;
served as a good tuneup for this weekends (now last weekend's)&#13;
Chancellor's Cup match ." ,&#13;
Parkside's record'going into the Cup is ~-4-0. Their two wins were&#13;
over Trinity College of Illinois 4-2, and a' tremendous " come from&#13;
behind" 4-3 victory over Rockford College, also from Illinois.&#13;
"They just beat us to every ball," said Parkside goalie Brieschke&#13;
about the loss to the Irish . .&#13;
"They can shoot from anywhere." The Dublin players commented&#13;
in the same way, saying, "they were always playing too slow. They&#13;
would kick the ball away and lose control over it."&#13;
The University College of Dublin is finishing four week soccer tour&#13;
of the United States . They stayed in Kenosha till last Thursday, being&#13;
housed and fed by the Soccer Club and friends in the area. They left&#13;
tor New Jersey to play the last two games of their tour.&#13;
The team consists of 24 players and four officials . They ha? a '.6&#13;
game schedule in the States, playing in . Florida, California&#13;
Minneapolis, Wisconsin, and ending in New Jersey. . . . .&#13;
They were initially sponsored by World Cup Sports Clinics, which 1s&#13;
the corporation for which Henderson w~rks at summer soccer camps.&#13;
This connection brought them_ to Parks1~e. ,, . ,, ,, ,&#13;
What were their impressions of the United States? Fantastic, Its&#13;
great," and "It's too big" were some of the replies. John Flynn of the&#13;
Dublin team commented that "Parkside's a lovely place, you have a&#13;
very attractive campus here."&#13;
Woinowski sets records&#13;
The UW-Parkside women's swim team opened its season on&#13;
October 4 at Carroll College in Waukesha and lost 34-74 to Carroll&#13;
and 47-64 to Ripon College However fresh.man Debbie Wo1now ki&#13;
(St. Francis) set three team records· 2:15.70 in th 200 Free, 1 16 27 in&#13;
the 100 Fly, and 6·01 .0 in the 500 Free which also set a poll record for&#13;
Carroll.&#13;
Other Parkside performances included sophomore Sally Franci&#13;
(Racine Park) placing 1st against Ripon and 2nd against Carroll in the&#13;
50 Free (a personal best of 30 9) as well as 2nd's against both schools&#13;
in the 100 Free. Freshmen Mary Beth Mogensen (K nosha Tremper)&#13;
placed 2nd against Carroll and 1st against Ripon in 1-meter diving,&#13;
while teammate Donna Peter on, a freshmen from Racine Case, took&#13;
3rd and 2nd in the diving event Another freshman from St Francis&#13;
was Lowrie Melotik· who placed 2nd in 50 and the 100 Breast again t&#13;
both schools. Freshman Maureen Graves (Keno ha Reuther) placed&#13;
3rd against both in the 50 Free, 3rd in the 100 Back, and 2nd s Ripon&#13;
and 3rd vs Carroll in the 50 Back The 2 Free Relay of Francis,&#13;
Wojnowski, Melotik, and Graves placed 1st vs Ripon and 2nd vs&#13;
Carroll .&#13;
" I am pleased with the meet as the team scored more points&#13;
against Carroll than last year Our performances show the&#13;
improvement that I've been expecting from our practice workloads . I&#13;
am especially pleased with our divers, as they both have had to learn&#13;
a full complement of dives for the college cor,petition - notabl&#13;
Mary Beth, who never dived before We are gearing for the&#13;
conference meet an ovember, and will continue to look for better&#13;
times and scores as ind1v1duals and the team point will com as a&#13;
result " Parkside travels to Green . Bay Saturday for a m t with&#13;
UW-Green Bay and Lawrence Univers1t&#13;
Heiring is top yankee&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
RANGER Staff&#13;
Kenosha's Jim Heiring, former UW-P walker, was the first Am rican&#13;
to finish in the Lugano Cup Walk held in England on Sept mb r 24&#13;
and 25.&#13;
Out of a field of 48 of the world's best walkers Heiring cam in 36th&#13;
with a time of 1:33 ·40, 26 seconds off his all tIm best m the 20&#13;
kilometer walk Daniel Bautista of Mexico, the favorite, won the up&#13;
with a time of 1 24.04&#13;
" It was great," said Heiring of the walk. " It was a totall gr at&#13;
experience competing against the best walkers in the world and&#13;
getting to know them all personally To walk in the Lugano Cup i&#13;
bigger than the Olympics "&#13;
The Lugano Cup Is sponsored by the 01 mpic Comm1tt , AAU&#13;
The United States took eleventh place in a field of 12 countne ,&#13;
beating only Hungary&#13;
Don't Be A&#13;
Sourpuss I&#13;
SWEETEN UP AT. ..&#13;
10 ••-4f•&#13;
Publ~• U1I••&#13;
81111,&#13;
,U UW-Parkside&#13;
7i7fT Se ester Break&#13;
Jan. 6-13, 1978 ,.299 Complete based&#13;
.. on 2 to o room&#13;
• Round Trip Jet Air&#13;
• 7 Nights Lodging&#13;
• Ground Tronsfers&#13;
• Tour Escort&#13;
• Tips and Tolles&#13;
For Apphc:011on &amp; lnformol,on&#13;
CONTACT PARKSIOE UNION OFFICES&#13;
RM 209 (:AU: SSJ-2200&#13;
Tile fastest-growin~ Premium Beer&#13;
in America. &#13;
events&#13;
Comedian Williams to appear here&#13;
- Mike Williams will be&#13;
appearing at Parkside on Oct. ~5.&#13;
Who is Mike Williams? Mike&#13;
Williams is a comedian,&#13;
musician and ,song-writer, singer&#13;
from Greensboro N.C. who has&#13;
a wide range in voice as well as&#13;
a 12 string guitar. Mike is steadily&#13;
PSGA election&#13;
October 19 a~d 20.&#13;
Wednesday, October 12&#13;
Coffeehouse Barry Drake of the Kenosha area plays&#13;
in Union 104-106. Free. Wine will be served. From&#13;
2-5. .&#13;
Soccer Parkside vs. Waukesha Tech Institute at 4&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Film Alexander's Ragtime Band starring Don Ameche&#13;
at 7:00 p.m. For reservations call Rondelle,&#13;
554-2154.&#13;
Thursday, October 13&#13;
Health Line Learn all about aspirin. Call 1383.&#13;
Anthro Club Fieldtrip to ethnohistory meetings.&#13;
Must sign up in CL 270 on October 13, 14, and 15.&#13;
Transportation provided by Anthro Club.&#13;
Friday, October 14&#13;
Movie What's Up Tiger Lily. Union Cinema at 8 p.m.&#13;
Admission $1.00. Also playing on Sunday; October&#13;
16 at 7;30. "&#13;
Monday, October 17 ,&#13;
Movie My Little Chickadee. 2:30 and 7:30 at Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Tuesday, OCtober 18&#13;
Coffeehouse Features James Mapes in Union&#13;
104-106. Admission Charged. Wine will be served.&#13;
Fim The Magnificent Amersons starring Orson&#13;
Welles at 7:00 p.m. For reservations call Rondelle&#13;
554-2154. Free.&#13;
Movie The Bank Dick at 7:30 in Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Wednesday, October 19&#13;
PSGA Election will be held in Main Place.&#13;
Education Speaker, Donna Ullman from SWEA.&#13;
Everyone welcome. 1:30 in CL .113 and 7:30 in&#13;
CL D-128. Contact Shirley Kersey for more information.&#13;
Thursday, October 20&#13;
PSGA Election will be held in Main Place.&#13;
Saturday, October 22&#13;
Concert Featuring the matrix Jazz Night Club. 9:00&#13;
p.m. in the Union Square. Admission will be&#13;
charged.&#13;
Events must be turned into the Ranger Office by no&#13;
later than Wednesday at 4:30.&#13;
Anyone interested in Debate and Forensics should&#13;
come to Comm Arts room 258 at 2;00 p.m. any&#13;
Friday. If this time conflicts with your schedule, call&#13;
Professor Weaver at 553-2420.&#13;
gaining popularity in the&#13;
Southwest. Songs like "Dumb&#13;
Azz Texas" and "The Donut&#13;
Man" have received much air&#13;
play. .&#13;
Mike's humor ranges from the&#13;
silly to the, shall we say ribald?&#13;
Risque? Obscure? He's one of&#13;
those people who doesn't take&#13;
anything seriously, and has&#13;
strives that are guaranteed to&#13;
keep you laughing for hours.&#13;
Appearing with Mike Williams&#13;
will be Randy Steger. When&#13;
you've missed Mike Williams&#13;
new concept of Picki nand&#13;
Grinnin, you've missed quite an&#13;
act.&#13;
Tickets are available in the&#13;
Union Information Center.&#13;
classified&#13;
For Sale - 1973 Monte carlo, gold with&#13;
black vinyl tee. Excellent condition, 52000&#13;
or best offer. 652-5049, ask for Tom,&#13;
For Sale - lrtsh Setter puppies, S56.&#13;
654-3810 or 654-8383, 2008 81st Street,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
For Sale - Four G60-14 tires on Keystone&#13;
chrome mags. 2000 miles, absOlutely&#13;
excellent condition. 633-1840.&#13;
For Sale - Saab 1972, auto, single owner,&#13;
low miles, best offer. 634-5620 after 5:00&#13;
p.m.&#13;
For 811.. -1973 Vega. New ba.!tery, AM~FM&#13;
stereo. Call 658-2033 after 5.&#13;
Peru subject of ~'ecture&#13;
F D b ns a visiting professor ofanthropologv at..the&#13;
Dr. Henry . ~ y ', P kslde in 1974~75 and now at the U' itv of wtsconstn- ar&#13;
U~:~:~::ty of Florida-Gainesville, will present ~ ~est lectu~Jdat&#13;
Parkside on Wednesday, Oct. 12, at 7:30 p.m. In assroom g.&#13;
Room~107b·' .11talk on the Vices Project in Peru as an example of Dr Do yns WI . id d.&#13;
r .. I Dobyns spent two years In rest ence unng&#13;
~i~j~I;~s:~r~~~~~ t~;y ~roject and made an additional six visits to the&#13;
site etween . b 1963 and 1970 His talk sponsored by the Anthropology (1 . ,&#13;
Club.Ts free and open to the public.. .&#13;
- ts orestd t of the American SOCiety for Ethnohistorv. He Dobyns ISprest en. h's 25th annual&#13;
will deliver the presidential address at t e group&#13;
- meeting Oct. 13 through 15 in Chicago.&#13;
PAS FALL FILM SERIES&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
WOODY ALLEN&#13;
in one of his earlier films&#13;
,WHATS~UP TIGE~ LILY&#13;
Fri. Oct. 14, 8:00pm&#13;
s&#13;
Sun. Oct. 16, 7:30pm&#13;
UNION CINEMA $1.00&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD'S&#13;
PERFORMING ARTS AND&#13;
LECTURE PRESENTS&#13;
MATRIX&#13;
SlIII,/,,, Oil. It 9:00,.111.&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
$g. It" ,ni IJIIf "11' N,t", In,_nil ,&#13;
Adm: UW-P students in advance $1.50&#13;
Guests in advance $2.00&#13;
Everyone at the door $2.50&#13;
PA8 PRESENTS&#13;
WITH&#13;
RANDY STEGER&#13;
Sat. Oct. 15 8:00&#13;
UN/o,"l SQUARE&#13;
$LOO UWP Students&#13;
Sl,50 Guests&#13;
S2.00 At the door /&#13;
f ID'S REQUIRED&#13;
'--'""'""l'&amp;1~:W~~~~ .~"';;""'''__'''''''-':':''_'. J ~ . ... ~~€~&#13;
,..&#13;
Parkside Activities Board's Performing Arts&#13;
and Lecture Presents&#13;
JAMES J. MAPES&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 18 .7:30 p.m,&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre&#13;
Adm: UW-P studen.ts $2.00 General $2.50&#13;
events&#13;
Peru subject of lecture&#13;
Dr. Henry F. Dobyns, a visiting professor of,anthropology at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside in 1974-75 and now at the&#13;
University of Florida-Gainesville, will present a guest lecture at&#13;
Parkside on Wednesday, Oct. 12, at 7:30 p.m . in Classroom Bldg.&#13;
Room 107. ·&#13;
Dr. Dobyns will talk on the Vicos Project in Peru as an example of&#13;
applied anthropology. Dobyns spent two years in residence during&#13;
field research for the project and made an additional six visits to the&#13;
site b~tween 1963 and 1970. His talk, sponsored by the Anthropology&#13;
Oub,' is free and open to the public.&#13;
Dobyns is president of the American Society for Ethnohistory. He&#13;
-will deliver the presidential address at the group's 25th annual&#13;
meeting Oct. 13 through 15 in Chicago.&#13;
Comedian Williams to appear here PAB FALL FILM SERIES&#13;
PRESENTS - Mike Williams will be&#13;
appearing at Parkside on Oct. 15.&#13;
Who is Mike Williams? Mike&#13;
Williams is a comedian,&#13;
musician and song-writer, singer&#13;
from Greensb~ro N .C. who has&#13;
a wide range in voice as well as&#13;
a 12 string guitar. Mike is steadily&#13;
PSGA election&#13;
October 19 and 20.&#13;
Wednesday, October 12&#13;
Coffeehouse Barry Drake of the Kenqsha area plays&#13;
in Union 104-106. Free. Wine will be served. From&#13;
2-5.&#13;
Soccer Parkside vs. Waukesha Tech Institute at 4&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Film Alexander's Ragtime Ban_d starring_ Don Ameche&#13;
at 7:00 p.m. For reservations call Rondelle,&#13;
554-2154.&#13;
Thursday, October 13&#13;
Health Line Learn all about aspirin. Call 1383.&#13;
Anthro Club Fieldtrip to ethnohistory meetings.&#13;
Must sign up in CL 270 on October 13, 14, and 15.&#13;
Transportation provided by Anthro Club.&#13;
Friday, October 14&#13;
Movie What's Up Tiger Lily. Union Cinema at 8 p.m.&#13;
Admission $1.00. Also playing on Sunday ·October / ' 16 at 7:30.&#13;
Monday, October 17 ,&#13;
Movie My Little Chickadee. 2:30 and 7:30 at Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1 .00.&#13;
. Tuesday, October 18&#13;
Coffeehouse Features James Mapes in Union&#13;
104-106. Admission Charged. Wine will be served.&#13;
Fim The Magnificent Amersons starring Orson&#13;
Welles at 7:00 p.m. For reservations call Rondelle&#13;
554-2154. Free.&#13;
Movie The Bank Dick at 7:30 in Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Wednesday, October 19&#13;
PSGA Election will be held in Main Place.&#13;
Education Speaker, Donna Ullman from SWEA.&#13;
Everyone welcome. 1:30 in Cl .113 and 7:30 in&#13;
CL D-128. Contact Shirley Kersey for more information.&#13;
&#13;
Thursday, October 20&#13;
PSGA Election will be held in Main Place.&#13;
Saturday, October 22&#13;
Concert Featuring the matrix Jazz Night Club. 9:00&#13;
p.m. in the Union Square. Admission will be&#13;
charged.&#13;
Events must be turned into the Ranger Office by no&#13;
later than Wednesday at 4:30.&#13;
Anyone interested in Debate and Forensics should&#13;
come to Comm Arts room 258 at 2:00 p.m. any&#13;
Friday. If this time conflicts with your schedule, call&#13;
Professor Weaver at 553-2420.&#13;
gaining popularity in the&#13;
Southwest. Songs like "Dumb&#13;
Azz Texas" and "The Donut&#13;
Man" have received much air&#13;
play.&#13;
Mike's humor ranges from the&#13;
silly to the, shall we say ribald?&#13;
Risque? Obscure? He's one of&#13;
those people who doesn't take&#13;
anything seriously, and has&#13;
strives that are guaranteed to&#13;
keep you laughing for hours.&#13;
Appearing with Mike Williams&#13;
will be Randy Steger. When&#13;
you've missed Mike Williams&#13;
new concept of Pickin and&#13;
Grinnirr, you've missed quite an&#13;
act.&#13;
Tickets are available in the&#13;
Union Information Center.&#13;
classified&#13;
For Sale - 1973 Monte Carlo, gold with&#13;
black vinyl top. Excellent condition. $2000&#13;
or best otter. 652-5049, ask for Tom.&#13;
For Sale - Irish Setter puppies, $50.&#13;
654-3810 or 654-8383. 2008 81st Street,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
WOODY ALLEN&#13;
in one of ~is earlier films - ,WHATS-UP TIGER LILY&#13;
Fri. Pct. 14, 8:00pm&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Sun. Oct. 16, 7:30pm&#13;
UNION CINEMA $1.00&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD'S&#13;
PERFORMING ARTS AND&#13;
LECTURE PRESENTS&#13;
MATRIX&#13;
Sal111i1y, 011. Zt 9:00 p.111.&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
For Sale - Four G60-14 tires on Keystone&#13;
chrome mags. 2000 miles, absolutely&#13;
excellent condition. 633-1840. Sa• 1100 and /Jllf 11111 H1kn1 In a""6n11 , For Sale - Saab 1972, auto, slngIe owner&#13;
low miles, best offer. 634-5620 after 5:00&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Adm: UW-P students in advance $1.50&#13;
Guests in advance $2.00&#13;
Everyone at the door $2.50 ForSele-1973 Vega. New battery, AM-FM&#13;
stereo. Call 658-2033 after 5.&#13;
,..&#13;
Parkside&#13;
PAB PRESENTS&#13;
WITH&#13;
RANDY STEGER&#13;
Sot. Oct. 15&#13;
UNIO,"&#13;
I -~&#13;
Activities Board's Performing&#13;
and Lecture Presents&#13;
Arts&#13;
JAMES J. MAPES&#13;
Tuesday, Oct •. 18 .7:30-p.m.&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre&#13;
Adm : Uv\'-P stud en.ts $2. oo&#13;
General $2.50&#13;
. </text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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              <text>Nobel Prize winner to speak at Parkside&#13;
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              <text>Nobel Prize&#13;
winner to speak&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
Dr. Severo Ochoa, winner of&#13;
the 1959 Nobel Prize in physiology&#13;
and medicine, will speak&#13;
on the regulation of protein&#13;
synthesis, including its relationship&#13;
to cancer drug research, at 2&#13;
p.m. on Friday, Oct. 7, in&#13;
Greenquist Hall, Room 103.&#13;
Ochoa currently is a distinguished&#13;
member of the Roche&#13;
Institute of Molecular Biology in&#13;
Nutley, New Jersey.&#13;
He won the Nobel laureate for&#13;
the biosynthesis of ribonucieic&#13;
acid (RNA), the substance basic&#13;
to the formation of macromolecules&#13;
including proteins&#13;
and hormones. That study, and&#13;
much of his subsequent work,&#13;
deals with the identification andsynthesis&#13;
of chemical components&#13;
of the genetic code, which&#13;
determines heredity.&#13;
Ochoa is the author of almost&#13;
500 papers published in&#13;
professional and scholarly journals.&#13;
He received his M. D. degree&#13;
from the University of Madrid in&#13;
his native Spain and did postdoctoral&#13;
research at several&#13;
other European institutions.&#13;
Ochoa holds 19 honorary&#13;
doctoral degrees, including the&#13;
doctor of humane letters, from&#13;
institutions in the U.S., Europe&#13;
and South America.&#13;
He is a fellow of the American&#13;
Academy for the Advancement&#13;
of Science and the American&#13;
Academy of Arts and Sciences&#13;
and is a member of a number of&#13;
other scientific societies around&#13;
the world including the&#13;
Academy of Sciences of the&#13;
U.S.S.R. He served for six years&#13;
as president of the international&#13;
Union of Biochemistry.&#13;
His free public lecture is&#13;
sponsored by the Parks ide&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee&#13;
and the Life Science Club.&#13;
er&#13;
Wednesday,Oclober5,1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No.6&#13;
17 17 If you stop to think about it ()()&#13;
l)O when you are playing, the V V&#13;
spirit disappears.&#13;
-C.rlos Montoy.&#13;
food contract renewed&#13;
without student input&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
When the Sagafood service contract for the Union was renewed on&#13;
June 1 of this year, the Union Operating Board (UOB) was not&#13;
notified so that it could provide student input for or against the&#13;
renewal.&#13;
. Rick Folsom, who was chairman of the UOB last year, said the&#13;
board decided in February to form a subcommittee to deal with the&#13;
food contract renewal. Folsom said Bill Niebuhr, Director of Student&#13;
Life-Union, neglected to contact the sUbcomm~~te.ewhen the&#13;
administration. decided to renew th~ co~tract. NIebuhr ,~ever&#13;
contacted anyone about participating In, the re~ewa,l: .he&#13;
complained to RANGER, and charged Niebuhr with. . taking&#13;
advantage of the UOB during its weakest _m~~ent - during the&#13;
-summer." The contract was renewed for an additional year on June 1.&#13;
Doug Edenhauser,the current chairman of the UOB, told RANGER&#13;
that Niebuhr didn't notify him, either. "I received I.etters on other&#13;
subjects at my home, including some letters fro~ hl~, so he kn~w&#13;
where to send any notices for me." The PS~A offlc: drd not receive&#13;
ti either according to Rusty Smith, president. (See PSGA any no ICe, ,&#13;
CONTACT in this RANGER for her comments.)&#13;
I&#13;
id th t PSGA took a"'survey last year, and the results Fa som sal a . . f d . h h&#13;
. d· d h t t that time the students were dtssat!s Ie Wit t e&#13;
In reate t a a '&#13;
/&#13;
service. "People were getting dcwnrtght vulgar In their comments&#13;
about the pnces and the quality of the food:' he said Niebuhr&#13;
countered that "several questions were asked in a fashion that&#13;
couldn't be properly interpreted:' and that "we could have&#13;
terminated the Sagacontract this year if there had been good reason&#13;
to."&#13;
Niebuhr did say that he won't renew a contract again Without&#13;
student input. "In the future I'd say this wouldn't be done The Saga&#13;
conuact is eligible for another one-veer extension on next June&#13;
"This year it's my hope to have a food service subcommittee of the&#13;
UOB which would be a standing committee:' Niebuhr said, claiming&#13;
that if the UOB had been organized, this wouldn't have happened&#13;
"I'd say the UOB was kind'Of loose in Its first year of existence They&#13;
spend their time putting out little fires, and a standing food service&#13;
committee was not set up"&#13;
Yet Folsom claims the UOB did just that, appointing John Stewart&#13;
as chairman.&#13;
At any rate, the UOB voted unammouslv at its last meeting to&#13;
create a food service committee Two members were appomted: Rick&#13;
Folsom and Terry Zuehlsdorf&#13;
In other UOB business, the board unanimously re-elected Doug&#13;
Edenhauser as chairman The Saga contract is eligible for another&#13;
one-year extension on next June I&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
Nobel Prize&#13;
winner to speak&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
Dr. Severo Ochoa, winner of&#13;
the 1959 Nobel Prize in physiology&#13;
and medicine, will speak&#13;
on the regulation of protein&#13;
synthesis, including its relat ionship&#13;
to cancer drug research, at 2&#13;
p.m. on Friday, Oct. 7, in&#13;
Greenquist Hall, Room 103.&#13;
Ochoa currently is a distinguished&#13;
member of the Roche&#13;
Institute of Molecular Biology in&#13;
Nutley, New Jersey.&#13;
He won the Nobel laureate for&#13;
the biosynthesis of ribonucieic&#13;
acid (RNA), the substance basic&#13;
to the formation of macromol&#13;
ec ul es inc ludi ng proteins&#13;
and hormones. That study, and&#13;
much of his subsequent wor ,&#13;
deals with the identification and&#13;
synthesis of chemical components&#13;
of the genetic code, which&#13;
determines heredity.&#13;
Ochoa is t he author of almost&#13;
500 papers published in&#13;
profession al and scholarly journals.&#13;
&#13;
He received his M .D. degree&#13;
from the University of Madrid in&#13;
his native Spain and did postdoctoral&#13;
research at several&#13;
other European i nstitutions .&#13;
O choa hold s 19 honorary&#13;
doctoral degrees, including the&#13;
doctoT of humane letters, from&#13;
institutions in the U.S., Europe&#13;
and South America.&#13;
He is a fellow of the American&#13;
Academy for the Advancement&#13;
of Science and the American&#13;
Academy of Arts and Sciences&#13;
and is a member of a number of&#13;
other scientific societies around&#13;
the world includ ing the&#13;
Academ y of Sciences of the&#13;
U.S.S.R. He s e for s· rs&#13;
as president of the international&#13;
Union of Biochemistry.&#13;
His free public lecture is&#13;
spo nsored by the Parksi de&#13;
Lecture and Fi ne Arts Committee&#13;
and the Life Science Club.&#13;
er&#13;
Wednesday, October 5, 1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No. 6&#13;
17 17 If you stop to think about 1t ()()&#13;
l)l) when you are playing, the l/ l/&#13;
spirit disappears.&#13;
-Car1os Montoya&#13;
food contract renewed&#13;
without student input&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
When the Saga food service contract for the Union was renewed on&#13;
June 1 of this year, the Union Operating Board (UOB) was not&#13;
notified so that it could provide student input for or against the&#13;
renewal . . Rick Folsom, who was chairman of the UOB last year, said the&#13;
board decided in February to form a subcommittee to deal with the&#13;
food contract renewal. Folsom said Bill Niebuhr, Director of Student&#13;
Life-Union neglected to contact the subcommittee when the&#13;
administration_ decided to renew the contract . " Niebuhr never&#13;
contacted anyone about participating in, the re~ewa!_,'' _he&#13;
complained to RANGER, and charged Niebuhr with . taking&#13;
advantage of the UOB during its weakest .m?ment - during the&#13;
summer." The confract was renewed for an add1t1onal year on June 1.&#13;
Doug Edenhauser, the current chairman of th~ UOB, told RANGER&#13;
that Niebuhr didn't notify him, either. " I received l_etters on other&#13;
subjects at my home, including some letters fron:1 him, so he kn~w&#13;
where to send any notices for me." The PS~A off1c~ did not receive&#13;
any notice, either, accord ing to Rusty Smith, president. (See PSGA&#13;
CONT ACT in thi s RANGER for her comments .)&#13;
I ·d th t PSGA took survey last year, and the results Fo som sa1 a d. . f. d . h th · d . d h t t that time the students were 1ssat 1s 1e wit e in 1cate t a a ,&#13;
service " People were getting downright vulgar in th ir comment&#13;
about the prices and the quality of the food .'' he aid I buhr&#13;
countered that several que t1ons were a k d in a fashion that&#13;
couldn't be properl interpreted," and that " w could hav&#13;
terminated the Saga contract this ear 1f there had b n good r ason&#13;
to "&#13;
iebuhr did say that he won t renew a contract again without&#13;
student input " In the future I'd say this wouldn't be done . The aga&#13;
conuact is eligible for another one-year e tension on next Jun&#13;
"This year it's my hope to have a food service subcommittee of the&#13;
UOB which would be a standing committee," 1ebuhr said, claim in&#13;
that 1f the UO B had been organized, this wouldn't ha e happened&#13;
" I'd sa the UOB was kindof loose in its first ear of existence The&#13;
spend their time putting out little fires, and a standing food erv1ce&#13;
committee was not set up."&#13;
Yet Folsom claims the UOB did Just that, appointing John Stewart&#13;
as chairman .&#13;
At an rate, the UOB voted unanimous! at its last meeting to&#13;
create a food service comm ittee Two members were appointed Rick&#13;
Folsom and Terry Zuehlsdorf&#13;
In other UOB business, the board unai:i1mousl re-elected Doug&#13;
Edenhauser as chairman The Saga contract is eligible for another&#13;
one-year extension on next June I &#13;
. i&#13;
editorial&#13;
/&#13;
Tlte administration&#13;
~andyou&#13;
) After registration, most students rarely have an&#13;
opportunity to do business with administrators.&#13;
This tends to limit a student's understanding of&#13;
how administrative procedures work at Parkside.&#13;
If a student has a problem in class; most likely&#13;
the problem will be resolved with the professor.&#13;
Even a problem with financial- aids or student&#13;
records will be handled by mid-level&#13;
administrators or secretaries. The common&#13;
student rarely meets the folks at the top. Most&#13;
students never meet the Chancellor until&#13;
graduation.&#13;
There are people who receive a good deal of&#13;
money to make decisions students have to live&#13;
with including, but not limited to, parking,&#13;
shuttle buses, and paperwork procedures.&#13;
Administrators of 'any campus as well as&#13;
corporate leaders possess g.reat power to effect&#13;
change in their respective institutions. This&#13;
power is centralized by having special&#13;
information relating to time and circumstances&#13;
that is not available to their constituents. It is the&#13;
business of this newspaper to dig up and decode&#13;
as much of this information as possible and to.&#13;
make it available to everyone.&#13;
Student sentiment and attitudes are&#13;
represented by student government. Views of&#13;
anyone at Parkside can be reproduced in the mass&#13;
media through a letter to the editor of Ranger as&#13;
long as they are typed, double spaced; signed&#13;
and under three pages in length.&#13;
/ Is everybody happy? Remember, just&#13;
complaining and mumbling about shuttle buses&#13;
or parking problems is just as good as having no&#13;
opinion at all. We know there are a lot of unhappy&#13;
people out there. Rang9r. encourages you to&#13;
speak out. Occasionally, an administrator will&#13;
read the newspaper and develop some idea of&#13;
what students are thinking. Ranger knows .the&#13;
Chancellor and his associates read the paper&#13;
because they know it gets sent all over the state&#13;
of Wisconsin. The Board of Regents all get a: copy&#13;
and they are interested in what students think on&#13;
the campuses they govern.. r&#13;
The University of Wisconsin System is known&#13;
for its self governance among faculty. The faculty&#13;
senate will be making a decision on the fate of the&#13;
proposed breadth requirement (required courses&#13;
for graduation) and the academic advising·&#13;
proposal (credit limit for undecided undergraduates&#13;
and the assignment of an area of study as&#13;
well as an assigned faculty advisor earlier in their&#13;
education). The' student gov~rnment will be&#13;
following these proposals by assigning students&#13;
to committees that will formulate upcoming&#13;
policies. . -&#13;
The administration holds up in the "penthouse"&#13;
above Main Place. They arE!'quite content to' do&#13;
what they feel is best for everyone. It is up to you&#13;
to insure they have the right student input. Speak&#13;
up or be lead quietly.&#13;
Parkside's administrators are not a bad bunch.&#13;
A good number of them went to the fine~t schools&#13;
in the east. They have to really mess up to get flak&#13;
from central adrntnlstratton. So, if you have an&#13;
opinion or a problem and can't solve it at your&#13;
level, get in touch with a senator from student&#13;
" .&#13;
government or the editor of Ranger. Those&#13;
administrators might have considerably more&#13;
credentials than we lOWlyundergraduates do, but&#13;
everyone kn.0wsthat they don't know as rtiuch.as&#13;
we do at the front.&#13;
~al\~eris wr!lten &amp;.ndedited by students of the&#13;
Un.lverslty 01 W Isconsu\·Pit.rkside and they are sol I&#13;
respon.sible for its editorial polley and content.e&#13;
y ,&#13;
Our Writers&#13;
Dan Guidebeck, Robert Han.sen. deft Prostko, Kim. Wun.sch,&#13;
Kat Hermaan, Chris Ratcks, Ma.rc~ Vlach.&#13;
Editor Philip L. Livingsto" 55:3.2295&#13;
Genera! Mn"ager Thomas R. Cooper 55:3.2287&#13;
Copy Editor doh" R. McKloskey&#13;
Ne:w$ Editor Diane d'.,len.sky&#13;
Circuta tion Maf\ager Karen Putman&#13;
. Sales Manager doh" Gabriel 553.2287&#13;
Retail Advertising Manager Ke" Larse" 55:3.2287&#13;
Ran.ger Newspaper, University 01 Wisconsin ..Pukside&#13;
K.enosha. Wisconsin 53141&#13;
• Subscriptiol\S: $5.00 year for U.S.A.&#13;
•&#13;
editorial I&#13;
\ I&#13;
,'&#13;
. The· administration·&#13;
~and you&#13;
After registration, most students rarely have an&#13;
opportunity to do business with administrators.&#13;
This tends to limit a student's understanding of&#13;
how administrative procedures work at Parkside.&#13;
If a student has a problem in class,- most likely&#13;
,the problem will be resolved with the professor.&#13;
Even a problem with financial~ aids or student&#13;
records will be nandled by mid-level&#13;
administrators or secretaries. The common&#13;
student rarely meets the folks at the top. Most&#13;
students never meet the Chancellor until&#13;
graduation.&#13;
There are people who receive a good deal of&#13;
money to make decisions students have to live&#13;
with including, but nor limited to, parking,&#13;
shuttle buses, and paperwork procedures.&#13;
Administrators of ·any campus as well as&#13;
corporate leaders possess great power to effect&#13;
change in their respective institutions. This&#13;
power is centralized by having special&#13;
information relating to time and circumstances&#13;
that is not available to their constituents. It is the&#13;
business of this newspaper to dig up and decode&#13;
as much of this information as possible and to.&#13;
make it available to everyone.&#13;
Student sentiment and attitudes are&#13;
represented by student government. Views of&#13;
anyone at Parkside can be reproduced in the mass&#13;
media through a letter to the editor of Ranger as&#13;
long as they are typed, double spaced,, signed&#13;
and· under three pages in length.&#13;
Is everybody happy? Remember, just&#13;
complaining and mumbling about shuttle buses&#13;
or parking problems is just as good as having no&#13;
opinion at all. We know there are a lot of unhappy&#13;
people out there. Ranger -encourages you to&#13;
speak out. Occasionally, an administrator will&#13;
read the newspaper and develop some idea of&#13;
what students are thinking. Ranger knows .the&#13;
Chancellor and his associates read the paper&#13;
because they know it gets sent al I over the stat~&#13;
of Wisconsin. The Board of Regents al I get a copy&#13;
arid they are interested in what students think on&#13;
the campuses they govern. ,&#13;
The University of Wisconsin System is known&#13;
for its self governance among faculty. The faculty&#13;
senate will be making a decision on th·e fate of the&#13;
proposed breadth requirement (required courses&#13;
for graduation) and the academic advising ·&#13;
proposal (credit limit for undecided undergraduates&#13;
and the assignment of an area of study as&#13;
.well as an assigned faculty advisor earlier.in their&#13;
education). The· student gov~rnment will be&#13;
following these proposals by assigning students&#13;
to committees that will formulate upcoming&#13;
policies. · -&#13;
The administration holds up in the "penthouse"&#13;
above Main Place. They are' quite content to, do&#13;
what they feel is best for everyone. It is up to you&#13;
to insure they have the right student input. Speak&#13;
up or be lead quietly.&#13;
Parkside's administrators are not a bad bunch.&#13;
A good number of them went to the fine~t schools&#13;
in the east. They h~ve to really mess up to get flak&#13;
from central_ administration. So, if you h~ve an&#13;
opinion or a problem and can't solve it at · your&#13;
l~vel, get in touch with a senator from student&#13;
government or the editor c;&gt;f Ranger. Those&#13;
administrators might have considerably more&#13;
credentials th~n we lowly undergraduates do, but&#13;
everyone knows that they don't know as much. -as&#13;
we do at the front.&#13;
~an~er is wr?tten a_nd edited by students of the&#13;
Un1vers1ty of W 1scons1n-Parkside and they are sol I&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content.e Y '&#13;
Our Writers&#13;
Dan Guidebeck, Robert Hansen, Jeff Prostko, Kun Wunsch,&#13;
Kat Hermann, Chris Ratcks, Marcia Vlach.&#13;
Editor Philip L. Livingston 55.3-2295&#13;
Gen.era{ Ml\n.ager Thomas R. Cooper 553-2287&#13;
Co~y Editor John R. McKloskey&#13;
News Editor Diane Jalensky&#13;
Circulation Manager Karen Putman&#13;
Sales Manager John Gabriel 553-2287&#13;
Retail Advertising Manager Ken Larsen 553-2287&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141 • Subscriptions: $5.00 year for U.S.A.&#13;
f&#13;
.., . &#13;
news Participants may&#13;
partake in the following physical&#13;
events Fitness improvement&#13;
program begins&#13;
By Diane lillensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Cyclin,&#13;
500 mile club&#13;
1000 mile club&#13;
louin,&#13;
100 mile club&#13;
500 mile club&#13;
1000mile club&#13;
Swimminl&#13;
so mile club&#13;
100 mile club&#13;
500 mile club&#13;
-,&#13;
,&#13;
I&#13;
The University of wisconstnParks&#13;
ide physical fitness improvement&#13;
program encourages&#13;
students faculty and staff to&#13;
participate in the program's&#13;
aerobic (respiratory fitness)&#13;
activities such as swimming,&#13;
cycling and jogging.&#13;
The program's primary objective&#13;
is to improve the&#13;
cardio-respiratory fitness of the&#13;
individual.&#13;
Requirements for each category&#13;
must be met to qualify in&#13;
these various events. Participants&#13;
active in the jogging club&#13;
must record not less than one&#13;
mile or exceed the limit of ten&#13;
miles each day. Swimmers must&#13;
record at least \4 mile and&#13;
cyclists are required to ride more&#13;
than 2.5 miles but not exceed 50&#13;
miles a day. Students enrolled in&#13;
jogging and swimming physical&#13;
education classes may count&#13;
exercises during class time&#13;
towards the program, provided&#13;
minimum distances are covered.&#13;
Awards will be administered to&#13;
those individuals who have met&#13;
the required standards. Approximately&#13;
50 lettered t-shirts will be&#13;
awarded to the first participants&#13;
qualifying. All qualifiers will&#13;
receive certificates for their&#13;
endeavor in the program.&#13;
In addition, the American Red&#13;
Cross "Swim and Fit" program&#13;
will offer additional awards upon&#13;
logging, 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50&#13;
miles. These swimmers will&#13;
recceive wallet-sized certificates.&#13;
An emblem and pin may&#13;
be purchased for those swimmers&#13;
who complete 50 miles.&#13;
Interested persons may obtain&#13;
an appointment to test their&#13;
body composition, blood pressure&#13;
and resting pulse rate&#13;
through the Human Performance&#13;
Lab with Coordinator Sue&#13;
Tobachnik at extension 2318 or&#13;
2519.&#13;
PARKSIOE&#13;
FOOD&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
Committee input&#13;
deliberately avoided&#13;
RANGER&#13;
GLASS&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
by Rusty Smith&#13;
President, PSGA&#13;
"-&#13;
last year, students were directly involved in the decision to extend&#13;
Follett Corporatioji's bookstore contract for only one year and to&#13;
begin investigations as to the possibilities of an alternative book&#13;
service here at Parkside. This right is guaranteed to students by&#13;
Merger law: "Students shall have primary responsibility for the&#13;
formulation and review of policies concerning student life, services&#13;
and interests."&#13;
This was not the case with the Saga food contract renewal. In fact,&#13;
student input was. deliberately avoided. .&#13;
On February 28, 1977 the Union Operating Board informed the&#13;
administration, via Mr. Bill Netbuhr. Director of Student&#13;
Life/Parkside Union, that it would form a committee specifically for&#13;
the purpose of reviewing Saga's contract which was up for renewal&#13;
june 1, 1977. The contract was renewed on May 1, 1977. The student&#13;
committee was never notified of discussions or included in any way;&#13;
a direct violation of student rights.&#13;
last week I spoke to Mr. O. Clayton Johnson, Assistant Chancellor&#13;
for Academic Support &amp; Student Services about this matter, but was&#13;
told that I would have to await the arrival of a new Dean of Student&#13;
life. This is a newly created position that has not yet been filled, and&#13;
until it is, the responsibility for what takes place in this area still lies&#13;
with Mr. Johnson and ultimately, of course, with the Chancellor.&#13;
More On The Parking Issue:&#13;
J am still receiving a number of complaints concerning this&#13;
semester's parking problems in the white lots. A number of students&#13;
who purchased white stickers are being forced to park in the red lots&#13;
due to the shortage of spaces in the Union and Communication Arts&#13;
lots. Though 'Security has put another bus in operation during the&#13;
busy morning hours, these students feel that they have a refund&#13;
coming and should be reissued the less expensive red stickers.&#13;
These lots were oversold to the tune of about 500 spaces. Ron&#13;
Brinkman, Director of Parks ide Security, has announced anyone&#13;
wanting a refund on their white parking sticker should come to the&#13;
Security offices in Tallent Hall. Red stickers may also be purchased&#13;
there.&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
IS LOOKING FOR A RETAIL ADYERTISING&#13;
MANAGER. PAID COMMISSION. INTERESTING&#13;
WORK FOR AN OUTGOING- PERSON.&#13;
FOR MORE INFORMATION,&#13;
CONTAO JOHN A. GABRIEL&#13;
AT TALLENT 294 OR CALL 553-2287.&#13;
• I&#13;
There will never be&#13;
enough writersl&#13;
P.A.B. invites you to&#13;
WINTER PARK&#13;
SKI FESTIVAL&#13;
._---_._----------~&#13;
NOW&#13;
OPEN!&#13;
I&#13;
• CONDOMINIUM LODGING&#13;
• 6 DAYS OF LIFT TICKETS&#13;
• PARTIES&#13;
• DANCES&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
$210&#13;
$137&#13;
Bus&#13;
For YOI Sweeiie ...&#13;
103m-4pm&#13;
UIION BAZAAR&#13;
Own Transportation&#13;
SIGN UP IN STUDENT UNION RM. 202&#13;
(DEADLINE NOVEMBER 18)&#13;
~._-._._----_.._--~&#13;
news&#13;
~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~===~~~~~~~·&#13;
g/!JC, w~~~d!~.~!&#13;
Committee input&#13;
deliberately avoided&#13;
by Rusty Smith&#13;
President, PSGA&#13;
Last year, students were directly involved in the decision to extend&#13;
Follett Corporatio_n's bookstore contract for only one year and to&#13;
begin investigations as to the possibilities of an alternative book&#13;
service here at Parkside. This right is guaranteed to students by&#13;
Merger Law: "Students shall have primary responsibility for the&#13;
formulation and review of policies concerning student life, services&#13;
and interests."&#13;
This was not the case with the Saga food contract renewal. In fact,&#13;
student input was. deliberately avoided. ·&#13;
On February 28, 1977 the Union Operating Board informed the&#13;
administration, via Mr. Bill Neibuhr, Director of Student&#13;
Life/Parkside Union, that it would form a committee specifically for&#13;
the purpose of r-eviewing Saga's contract which was up for renewal&#13;
June 1, 1977. The contract was renewed on May 1, 1977 . The student&#13;
committee was never notified of discussions or included in any way;&#13;
a direct violation of student rights.&#13;
Last week I spoke to Mr. 0 . Clayton Johnson, Assistant Chancellor&#13;
for Academic Support &amp; Student Services about this matter, but was&#13;
told that I would have to await the arrival of a new Dean of Student&#13;
Life. This is a newly created position that has not yet been filled, and&#13;
until it is, the responsibility for what takes place in this area still lies&#13;
with Mr. Johnson and ultimately, of course, with the Chancellor.&#13;
More On The Parking Issue:&#13;
I am still receiving a number of complaints concerning this&#13;
semester's parking problems in the white lots . A number of students&#13;
who purchased white stickers are being forced to park in the red lots&#13;
due to the shortage of spaces in the Unio11 and Communication Arts&#13;
lots . Though ·Security has put another bus in operation during the&#13;
busy morning hours, these students feel that they have a refund&#13;
coming and should be reissued the less expensive red stickers .&#13;
These lots were oversold to the tune of about 500 spaces . Ron&#13;
Brinkman, Director of Parkside Security, has announced anyone&#13;
wanting a refand on their white parking sticker should come to the&#13;
Security offices in Tallent Hall. Red stickers may also be purchased&#13;
there.&#13;
Fitness improvement&#13;
program begins&#13;
By Diane Jalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
physical fitness improvement&#13;
program encourages&#13;
stvdents, faculty and staff to&#13;
participate in the program's&#13;
aerobic (respi ratory fitness)&#13;
activities such as swimming,&#13;
cycling and jogging.&#13;
The program's primary objecti&#13;
ve is to improve the&#13;
cardio-respiratory fitness of the&#13;
individual.&#13;
Requirements for each category&#13;
must be met to qualify in&#13;
these various events. Participants&#13;
active in the jogging club&#13;
must record not less than one&#13;
mile or exceed the limit of ten&#13;
miles each day. Swimmers must&#13;
record at least ¼ mile and&#13;
cyclists are required to ride more&#13;
than 2.5 miles but not exceed 50&#13;
miles a day. Students enrolled in&#13;
jogging and swimming physical&#13;
education classes may count&#13;
exercises during class time&#13;
towards the program, provided&#13;
minimum distances are covered.&#13;
Awards will be administered to&#13;
those individuals who have met&#13;
the requ ired standards. Approximately&#13;
50 lettered t-shirts will be&#13;
awarded to the first participants&#13;
qualifying. All qualifiers will&#13;
receive certificates for their&#13;
endeavor in the program.&#13;
In addition, the American Red&#13;
Cross " Swim and Fit" program&#13;
will offer additional awards upon&#13;
logging, 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50&#13;
miles. These swimmers will&#13;
recceive wallet-sized certificates.&#13;
An emblem and pin may&#13;
be purchased for those swimmers&#13;
who complete 50 miles.&#13;
Interested persons may obtain&#13;
an appointment to test their&#13;
body composition, blood pressure&#13;
and resting pulse rate&#13;
through the Human Performance&#13;
Lab with Coordinator Sue&#13;
Tobachnik at extension 2318 or&#13;
2519.&#13;
Participants ma&#13;
partake in th following ph ,cal&#13;
e ents&#13;
Jogging&#13;
700 m,le club&#13;
500 mile club&#13;
1000 mile club&#13;
Swimmin&#13;
som,le club&#13;
700 m,/e club&#13;
SOOmtleclub&#13;
C cling&#13;
500 mile club&#13;
7 mile club&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
FOOD&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
RANGER&#13;
GLASS&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
IS LOOKING FOR A RETAIL ADVERTISING&#13;
MANAGER. PAID COMMISSION. INTERESTING&#13;
WORK FOR AN OUTGOING_ PERSON.&#13;
FOR MORE INFORMATION,&#13;
CONTACT JOHN A. GABRIEL&#13;
AT TALLENT 294 OR CALL 553-2287.&#13;
There ~ril never be&#13;
enough writers!&#13;
p.A.B. invites you to&#13;
------------------~&#13;
NOW&#13;
OPEN!&#13;
For You Sweeiie ...&#13;
10am-4pm&#13;
UNION BAZAAR&#13;
I&#13;
~-----------------·&#13;
¾~.-.~rP"--:&#13;
WINTER PAR·K&#13;
SKI&#13;
-W&#13;
FESTIVAL&#13;
INTER PARK COLORADO&#13;
~&#13;
JANUARY 2-8&#13;
• CONDOMINIUM LODGING&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
• 6 DAYS OF LIFT TICKETS&#13;
• PARTIES&#13;
• DANCES&#13;
$210 Bus&#13;
s 137 Own Transportation&#13;
SIGN UP IN STUDENT UNION RM . 202&#13;
(DEADLINE NOVEMBER 18) &#13;
neWs&#13;
No transcripts for&#13;
bankrupt students&#13;
private school.&#13;
The case was brought by&#13;
former students who argued that&#13;
they were covered by the&#13;
Bankruptcy Act, - which "enjoints)&#13;
all creditors whose .debts&#13;
are discharged from, .. employing&#13;
any process to collect such&#13;
debts as personal liabilities of&#13;
the bankrupt." But the court&#13;
found no congressional intent or&#13;
legislative history to indicate the&#13;
act prohibits nonlegal, informal&#13;
ways of prompting the debtor to&#13;
pay up.&#13;
The case was remanded to US&#13;
District Court in Missouri for&#13;
dismissal.&#13;
[HED-CPS) - The Eighth US&#13;
Court of Appeal, has ruied that&#13;
col,leges may wit~hold tranSCripts&#13;
from former students who&#13;
have discharged their student&#13;
loans through bankruptcy.&#13;
The majority opinion in the&#13;
case, Girardier v. Webster&#13;
College (Missouri) said the&#13;
Bankruptcy Act does not bar&#13;
private colleges from refusing to&#13;
issue transcripts to students&#13;
whose loans were discharged in&#13;
bankruptcy. However, the question&#13;
of public-private does not&#13;
enter the case and no college&#13;
should have to furnish records to&#13;
such students be it a public or&#13;
The fastest-growing Premium Beer&#13;
In America;&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
THE&#13;
222&amp;-57th St.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
654-9909&#13;
Adult enrollment&#13;
highest at UW-P the pared to 42 percent last year,&#13;
while the number of minority&#13;
students increased from 295 to&#13;
353 and now make up seven&#13;
percent of the student body.&#13;
The number of students from&#13;
Kenosha and Racine counties&#13;
also increased: 1,986 from&#13;
Kenosha, up from 1,906, and&#13;
2,700 from Racine, up from&#13;
2,6~9. UW-P also showed a&#13;
marked increase in Milwaukee&#13;
County students, as the&#13;
percentage- of the student body&#13;
from Kenosha or Racine counties&#13;
dropped slightly from 91 to 90&#13;
percent.&#13;
Final fall enrollment at Parkside&#13;
is 5,184, an increase of four&#13;
"percent over last fall's figure of&#13;
4,984. /&#13;
New students and transfers to&#13;
Parkside showed the greatest&#13;
increase. A total of 1,163 ~w&#13;
students registered, a nine&#13;
percent gain from the 1,072 in&#13;
1976. Transfer students to UW-P&#13;
increased 13 percent, from 561&#13;
to 636. _ -....&#13;
Continuing students at,UW-P&#13;
number 2,964, up slightly from&#13;
2,952 last year. The remaining&#13;
421 students are those who&#13;
previously attended UW-P but&#13;
did not attend last semester, a&#13;
five percent increase over&#13;
399 of 1976.&#13;
Adult enrollment up'&#13;
The prrce!1tage of part-time&#13;
students "and -those over age 25,&#13;
already the highest in the UW&#13;
System, increased again. Some&#13;
2,528 students-49 percent of&#13;
total enrollment- are attending&#13;
part-time, compared to 2,344 or&#13;
47 percent, I~st year. Those over&#13;
25 increased from 1,555 to 1,734&#13;
and now comprise 33 percent of&#13;
all students.&#13;
Women and minority students&#13;
also increased sign.ificantly.&#13;
Females now comprise 45 percent&#13;
of total enrollment com-&#13;
"Total reserved -&#13;
All 42 -&#13;
The available parking spaces&#13;
are approximately:&#13;
Total white available&#13;
Union lot - 490&#13;
Total white available&#13;
Comm. Arts lot - 440&#13;
Total white available&#13;
Tallent lot - 61&#13;
Total red available&#13;
Tallent lot - 361&#13;
Total red available&#13;
East lot - 910&#13;
Total spaces available&#13;
White - 991, Red - 1)71&#13;
Total - 2,262&#13;
Total Stickers Sold -&#13;
White - 1,506, Red - 1,681&#13;
Total - 3,187&#13;
Total oversell -&#13;
White - 515, Red - 407&#13;
Total - 922&#13;
Some conclusions to be made&#13;
from these statistics are, ,1) that&#13;
the situation is not as bad as it&#13;
has been made out to be. 2) that,&#13;
Parking sticker tally&#13;
- - '&#13;
shC)ws crowding&#13;
by Robert J. Hansen&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Parkside Security released the&#13;
parking sticker tally last week. As&#13;
of September 6, the total parking&#13;
sticker breakdown is as follows:&#13;
Total Annual white -&#13;
Students 606&#13;
Faculty 274&#13;
" Total semester white -&#13;
Students 626&#13;
Faculty 0&#13;
Total annual red -&#13;
Students 65&#13;
Faculty 27&#13;
Total semester red -&#13;
Students 1, 589&#13;
Faculty 0&#13;
Total annual green -&#13;
Students 55&#13;
Faculty 0&#13;
Total semester green -&#13;
Students 830&#13;
Faculty 0&#13;
given the fact that at some times&#13;
there are more classes scheduled&#13;
than at others, of course there&#13;
will be problems parking. 3) the,&#13;
institution of green parking&#13;
stickers and the amount of white&#13;
stickers to be used at night could&#13;
lead to a parking problem in the&#13;
early evenings. 4) the fact that&#13;
many red stickered cars use the&#13;
white areas illegally, thus taking&#13;
up many of the spaces that white&#13;
. stickered cars have paid for, also&#13;
adds to the problem.&#13;
To those few who have had to&#13;
park in red areas and feel that&#13;
they have been ripped off by&#13;
Security, Director Ronald Brinkman&#13;
said, "Security will be more&#13;
than happy to help these people&#13;
to gain a refund of their white&#13;
stickers for red ones." Further&#13;
complaints should be directed to&#13;
student government at 553-2244&#13;
or the RANGER at 553-2295.&#13;
!../fUNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN PARKSlDE'S CARIBBEAN HOLIDAY&#13;
semester Break '78 - Jan. 6 tbm 13&#13;
includes&#13;
• Round TrIp Jet Via Air Jamaica • 7 Nfghts Lodging at 1st Class "Casa Montego"&#13;
• Ground Transfers • Tour Escort Throughout • Orientation Program&#13;
• All Taxes &amp; Gratatles (Except for $2.00 Jamaican Departure Tax)&#13;
CAREFUL. •• DON'T "JAMAICA" MISTAKE&#13;
(Theirs is $20 less - but why?)&#13;
• 1st Class Hotel in Mo-Bays Main Hotel Dlstrltl&#13;
• S~ort Walk to Shopping, Restaurants, Bars, Disco, Etc.&#13;
• Near M-Bays most popular Beach· "Dr's Cave"&#13;
• Scheduled Flights Via AIr Jamaica&#13;
• Tour Escort Throughout&#13;
• MInimum RequIred Deposit ($50 vs. $100)&#13;
For MorelDformation Contact Parkslde Union, Rm. 209or call: 353-2200&#13;
COMPLETE PRICE BASED&#13;
ON TWIN OCCUPANCY&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
TRIP&#13;
YES&#13;
YE~&#13;
YES&#13;
YES&#13;
YES&#13;
YES&#13;
THEIRS&#13;
NO&#13;
NO&#13;
NO&#13;
YES&#13;
NO&#13;
NO&#13;
news Adult enrollment&#13;
No transcripts for highest· at u·w-P&#13;
bankrupt students Final fall enrollment at Parkside&#13;
is 5,184, an increase of four&#13;
/percent over last fall's figure of&#13;
4,984. ,,&#13;
five percent increase over&#13;
399 of 1976.&#13;
Adult enrollment upthe&#13;
pared to 42 percent last year,&#13;
while the number of minority&#13;
students increased from 295 to&#13;
353 and now make up seven The p~rcentage of rart-time&#13;
students . ancl ·those over age 25,&#13;
already the highest in the UW&#13;
System, increased again. Some&#13;
2,528 students - 49 percent of&#13;
total enrollment- are attending&#13;
part-time, co,mpared to 2,344 or&#13;
47 percent, last year. Those over&#13;
25 increased from 1,555 to 1,734&#13;
and now comprise 33 percent of&#13;
all students.&#13;
[HED-CPS] - The Eighth US&#13;
Court of Appeal; has ruled that&#13;
colleges may wit~hold transcripts&#13;
from former students who&#13;
have discharged their student&#13;
loans through bankruptcy.&#13;
private school.&#13;
The case was brought by&#13;
former students who argued that&#13;
they were covered by the&#13;
Bankruptcy Act, - which "enjoin(s)&#13;
all creditors whose debts&#13;
are discharged . from .. . employing&#13;
any process to c~llect such&#13;
debts as personal liabilities of&#13;
the bankrupt." But the court&#13;
found no congressional intent or&#13;
legislative history to indicate the&#13;
act prohibits nonlegal, informal&#13;
ways of prompting the debtor to&#13;
pay up .&#13;
New students and transfers t9&#13;
Parkside showed the greatest&#13;
increase . A total of 1,163 ~w&#13;
students registered, a nine&#13;
percent gain from the 1,072 in&#13;
1976. Transfer students to UW-P&#13;
increased 13 percent, from 561&#13;
to 636. - ,&#13;
Continuing students at ,UW-P&#13;
number 2,964, up slightly from&#13;
2,952 last year. The remaining&#13;
421 students are those who&#13;
previously attended UW-P but&#13;
did not attend last semester, a&#13;
Women and minority students&#13;
also increased sign..ificantly .&#13;
Females now comprise 45 percent&#13;
of total enrollment com-&#13;
. percent of the student body.&#13;
The number of students from&#13;
Kenosha and Racine counties&#13;
also increased : 1,986 from&#13;
Kenosha, up from 1,906, and&#13;
2,700 from Racine, up from&#13;
2,6:39 . UW-P also showed a&#13;
marked increase in Milwaukee&#13;
County students, as the&#13;
percentage· of the student body&#13;
from Kenosha or Racine counties&#13;
dropped slightly from 91 to 90&#13;
percent.&#13;
The majority opinion in the&#13;
case, Girardier v. Webster&#13;
College (Missouri) said the&#13;
Bankruptcy Act does not bar&#13;
private colleges from refusing to&#13;
issue transcripts to students&#13;
whose loans were discharged in&#13;
bankruptcy. However, the question&#13;
of , public-private does not&#13;
enter the case and no college&#13;
should have to furnish records to&#13;
such students be it a public or&#13;
The case was remanded to US&#13;
District Court in Missouri for&#13;
dismissal. Parking sticker tally&#13;
The fastest-growing Pre~ium Beer&#13;
in America·.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
- - ,&#13;
shc,ws crowding&#13;
by Robert J. Hansen&#13;
Ra.nger Staff&#13;
Parkside Security released the&#13;
parking sticker tally last week. As&#13;
of September 6, the total parking&#13;
sticker breakdown is as follows:&#13;
Total Annual white -&#13;
Students 606&#13;
Faculty 274&#13;
,, Total semester white -&#13;
StudeRts 626&#13;
Faculty0&#13;
Total annual red -&#13;
Students 65&#13;
Faculty 27&#13;
Total semester red -&#13;
Students 1, 589&#13;
Faculty 0&#13;
Total annual green -&#13;
Students 55&#13;
Faculty 0&#13;
Total semester green -&#13;
Students 830&#13;
Faculty 0&#13;
-Total reserved -&#13;
All 42 -&#13;
The available parking spaces&#13;
are approximately:&#13;
Total white available&#13;
Union lot - 490&#13;
Total white available&#13;
Comm. Arts lot - 440&#13;
Total white available&#13;
Tallent lot - 61&#13;
Total red available&#13;
Tallent lot - 361&#13;
Total red available&#13;
E,ast lot - 910&#13;
_ Total spaces available&#13;
White - 991, Red - 1,271&#13;
Total - 2,262&#13;
Total Stickers Sold -&#13;
White - 1,506, Red - 1,681&#13;
Total - 3,187&#13;
Total oversell -&#13;
White - 515, Red - 407&#13;
Total - 922&#13;
Some conclusions to be made&#13;
from these statistics a·re, 1) that&#13;
the situation is not as bad as it&#13;
has been made out to be. 2) that,&#13;
given the fact that at some times&#13;
there are more classes scheduled&#13;
than at others, of course there&#13;
will be problems parking. 3) thei&#13;
institution of green parking&#13;
stickers and the amount of white&#13;
stickers to be used at night could&#13;
lead to a parking problem in the&#13;
early evenings. 4) the fact that&#13;
many red stickered cars use the&#13;
white areas illegally, thus taking&#13;
up many of the spaces that white&#13;
· stickered cars have pai~ for, also&#13;
adds to the problem.&#13;
To those few who have had to&#13;
park in red areas and feel that&#13;
· they have been ripped off by&#13;
Security, Director Ronald Brinkman&#13;
said, "Security will be more&#13;
than happy to help these people&#13;
to gain a refund of their white&#13;
stickers for red ones." Further&#13;
complaints should be directed to&#13;
student government at 553-2244&#13;
or the RANGER at 553-2295.&#13;
tlfuNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - PARKSIDE'S CARIBBEAN HOLIDAY&#13;
I'&#13;
COMPLETE PRICE BASED&#13;
ON TWIN OCCUPANCY&#13;
Semester Break '78 - Jan. 6 thru 13&#13;
includes&#13;
• Round Trip Jet Via Air Jamaica • 7 Nights Lodging at 1st Class "Casa Montego''&#13;
• Ground Transfers • Tour Escort Throughout • Orientation ProgFam&#13;
• All Taxes &amp; Graqitles (Except for $2.00 Jamaican Departure Tax)&#13;
CAREFUL ... DON'T "JAMAICA" MISTAKE&#13;
(Theirs is $20 less - but why?)&#13;
• 1st Class Hotel in Mo-Bays Main Hotel District&#13;
• S!1ort Walle to Shopping, Restaurants, Bars, Disco, Etc.&#13;
• Near M-Bays most popular Beach - "Dr's Cave"&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
TRIP&#13;
YES&#13;
YE&amp;.,&#13;
YES • Scheduled Flights Via Air Jamaica YES&#13;
• Tour Escort Throughout&#13;
• Minimum Required Deposit ($50 vs. $100)&#13;
YES&#13;
YES&#13;
For Morelnformation Contact Parkside Union, Rm. 209 or call: 353-2200&#13;
' -&#13;
THEIRS&#13;
NO&#13;
NO&#13;
NO&#13;
YES&#13;
NO&#13;
NO &#13;
•&#13;
mUSIc&#13;
Carlos Montoya is still amazing&#13;
photographs by Philip L. Livin¥ston&#13;
Reuiew by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
The world's most famous flamenco guitarist&#13;
performed to a sellout audience last Wednesday&#13;
night in Parkside's Communication Arts Theatre&#13;
to open this year's Accent on Enrichment&#13;
program. It was enough to make almost everyone&#13;
forget about Eugene Fodor.&#13;
At 73, Montoya still amazes audiences with his&#13;
speed, agility, and musicality. The neck of his&#13;
handmade Arcangel Fernandez guitar remains&#13;
tender to his total command. Montoya produces a&#13;
wide range of tonal timber and rhythmns at will;&#13;
with transitions ranging iTom subtle to violently&#13;
dramatic.&#13;
After his first two arrangements the audience&#13;
seemed to murmur in disbelief that he was going&#13;
to play that fast and furious all night.&#13;
Music of the Gypsies&#13;
Montoya plays the music of the Spanish&#13;
Gypsies. There is no written music to learn. Until&#13;
Montoya made it popular, no one bothered to&#13;
research its origins. There are few today who can&#13;
play his arrangements as well as he does and it&#13;
makes one wonder if any gypsies played as well as&#13;
he. .&#13;
The guitar is Montoya" life. He believes guitars&#13;
must be played and .irat is why he only owns four&#13;
guitars. When he accumulates too many. he sells&#13;
them. The one he plays currently is his favorite.&#13;
He uses it for recording, practicing, and&#13;
performing. A few years ago Montoya returned to&#13;
his home in Madrid and left his favorite guitar at&#13;
his other home in Vermont. When he returned to&#13;
America, he discovered that his favorite was&#13;
"mad" at him. His guitar is very simple. It has&#13;
traditional wooden tuning pegs. Montoya tunes&#13;
his guitar about three half steps down from&#13;
concert pitch and capos up three frets. He tunes&#13;
the guitar in concert by stretching the strings above&#13;
the capo. The guitar is clean of any decoration but&#13;
the wood is perfectly matched on the top, stdes,&#13;
and back. On the back there is a worn spot where&#13;
Montoya holds the guitar to his torso.&#13;
World renown&#13;
Carlos Montoya was the first gultllJisl In many&#13;
parts of Asia, Stalinist Russia, and O&gt;ina before&#13;
the 30's. He remembers O&gt;ina very well and&#13;
would go back at a moment's notice if It were&#13;
possible. He travels light and he and his wife,&#13;
Sally, only carrying two large suitcases, a small&#13;
bag, and of course his guitar They don't&#13;
immediately appear special in a hotel lobby Or on&#13;
the street. After a few minutes walking with Carlos&#13;
and his wife, one learns Carlos is a very lovable&#13;
man. It is very easy for Carlos to get help carrytng&#13;
his bags. No one else carries his guitar, however&#13;
His fingers are long and narrow. When you shake&#13;
his hand they seem very cool even Immediately&#13;
followinq a concert.&#13;
Rehearsal&#13;
During Montoya's rehearsal he would throw his&#13;
head back and close his eyes as he would listen to&#13;
his guitar. He was much more formal in concert.&#13;
Those few who sat in on his rehearsal will not&#13;
soon forget it. because Montoya played his "hard&#13;
stuff' at the rehearsal. Rarely going back to repeat&#13;
difficult complex passages, he combed them with&#13;
subtle and astoundingly energetic transitions. This&#13;
man does not read one note of music.&#13;
Performance&#13;
At Wednesday night's performance, the same&#13;
crowd that put their cigarettes out, industrial&#13;
fashion, on the lobby carpet roared with approval&#13;
and gave Montoya two encores and a standing&#13;
ovation. The smiling gentleman said thank you&#13;
and Leftthe stage. No one could euer clop enough&#13;
for Carlos. When he ploys, the music and the&#13;
gypsies live!&#13;
music •&#13;
Carlos. Montoya is still amazing&#13;
photographs by Philip L. Livin~ston&#13;
Review by Philip L Livingston&#13;
The world's most famous flamenco guitarist&#13;
performed to a sellout audience last Wednesday&#13;
night in Parkside's Communication Arts Theatre&#13;
to open this year's Accent on Enrichment&#13;
program. It was enough to make almost everyone&#13;
forget about Eugene Fodor.&#13;
At 73, Montoya still amazes audiences with his&#13;
speed, agility, and musicality. The neck of his&#13;
handmade Arcangel Fernandez guitar remains&#13;
tender to his total command. Montoya produces a&#13;
wide range of tonal timber and rhythmns at will;&#13;
with transitions ranging -from subtle to violently&#13;
dramatic.&#13;
After his first two arrangements the audience&#13;
seemed to murmur in disbelief that he was going&#13;
to play that fast and furious all night.&#13;
Music of the Gypsies&#13;
Montoya plays the music of the Spanish&#13;
Gypsies. There is no written music to learn. Until&#13;
Montoya made it popular, no one bothered to&#13;
research its origins. There are few today who can&#13;
play his arrangements as well as he does and it&#13;
makes one wonder if any gypsies played as well as&#13;
he.&#13;
The guitar is Montoya' life. He believes guitars&#13;
must be played and ,i1at is why he only owns four&#13;
guitars. When he accumulates too many, he sells&#13;
them. The one he plays currently is his favorite.&#13;
He uses it for recording, practicing, and&#13;
performing. A few years ago Montoya returned to&#13;
his home in Madrid and left his favorite guitar at&#13;
his other home in Vermont. When he returned to&#13;
America, he discovered that his favorite was&#13;
"mad" at l:iim. His guitar is very simple. It has&#13;
traditional wooden tuning pegs. Montoya tunes&#13;
his guitar about three half steps down from&#13;
concert pitch and capos up three frets. He tunes&#13;
the guitar in concert by stretching the strings above&#13;
the capo. The guitar Is clean of any decoration but&#13;
the wood is perfectly matched on the top, ~s.&#13;
and back. On the back there Is a worn spot where&#13;
Montoya holds the guitar to his torso.&#13;
World renown&#13;
Carlos Montoya was the first guitar! In many&#13;
parts of Asia, Stalinist Russia, and Oilna before&#13;
the 30's. He remembers China very well and&#13;
would go back at a moment's notlc if It w re&#13;
possible He travels light and h and hi wlf ,&#13;
Sally, only carrying two IMge ultca a mall&#13;
bag, and of course his guitar. Th y don't&#13;
immediately appear special In a hot I lobby or on&#13;
the street. After a few minutes walking with Carlo&#13;
and his wife, one learn Carlos is a very lovabl&#13;
man. It Is very easy for Carlos to get h Ip carrying&#13;
his bags. No one el e carrle hi gultnr, how v r.&#13;
His fingers are long and narrow When you shak&#13;
his hand they seem very cool even immediately&#13;
following a concert&#13;
Rehearsal&#13;
During Montoya's rehearsal he would throw h'&#13;
head back and close his eye a he would It en to&#13;
his guitar. He was much more formal in cone rt.&#13;
Those few who sat m on hi rehear al will not&#13;
soon forget it, because Montoya played his "hard&#13;
stuff' at the rehearsal. Rarely going back to r peat&#13;
difficult complex passages, he combed them with&#13;
subtle and astoundingly energetic transitions. This&#13;
man does not read one note of music.&#13;
Performance&#13;
At Wednesday night's performance, the same&#13;
crowd that put their cigarette out, industrial&#13;
fashion, on the lobby carpet roared with approval&#13;
and gave Montoya two encores and a standing&#13;
ovation. The smiling gentleman said thank you&#13;
and left the stage. No one could ever clap enough&#13;
for Carlos. When he plays, the music and the&#13;
gypsies live! &#13;
space&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
FOOD&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
/&#13;
YOU AS~ED&#13;
FOR IT!&#13;
HAMBUGER&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
P.A.B. Coffeehouse presents&#13;
CLAUDIA SCHMIDT&#13;
high energy folk virtuoso&#13;
and&#13;
MARK' HELLER&#13;
as her musical sidekick&#13;
WEDNESDAY I OCT. 5th&#13;
2 5 PM&#13;
UNION CONFERENCE ROOMS 104 - 106&#13;
FREE ADMISSION WINE SERVED&#13;
.. -I&#13;
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0&#13;
0 til !!I CD&#13;
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lACK It POPULARIEMANI&#13;
MOONLIGHT&#13;
BOWUNG&#13;
II/N FREE lOWUNI, lEER I SOIA&#13;
FRIDA1S &amp; SATURDA1S&#13;
Itin -11,.&#13;
UNION RECREATION CENTER ~&#13;
RESERVATIONS RECOMMENIEI&#13;
,&#13;
S10P IN OR CAU: $$1-1696&#13;
Setting sail&#13;
for a 'comet&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
"The first sailors had gone out almost a hundrttd years before. They&#13;
had started with small sails not over two thousand square miles.&#13;
Gradually the' size of the sails increased. The technique of adiabatic&#13;
packing and the carrying of passengers in individual pods reduced&#13;
the damage done to the human cargo. It was great news when a sailor&#13;
returned to\Earth, a man born and reared under the light of another&#13;
star. He was a man who had spent a month of agony and pain,&#13;
bringing a few sleep-frozen settlers, guiding the immense&#13;
tight-pushed sailing craft ... "&#13;
That's from one of the now-numerous romances of science fiction&#13;
in which star-crossed lovers are at the mercy of old age and the speed&#13;
of light. The story is Cordwainer Smith's "The Lady Who Sailed The&#13;
Soul" dating from the late 50's and featuring a wildly speculative&#13;
notion: that high-speed interstellar craft might be propelled by&#13;
means of an unthinkably large sail pushed by sun and starlight. A&#13;
truly incredible idea!&#13;
Began in 1951&#13;
Actually, the first published mention of solar sailing-according to&#13;
researchers at NASA~dates from only a few years prior to Smith's&#13;
story. In May, 1951, an article by Carl A. Wiley-tusing the pen name&#13;
of Russel Saunders) appeared in the Astounding Science Fiction&#13;
Magazine.&#13;
Entitled "Clipper Ships of Space," Wiley's article proposed a&#13;
"light-jammer" sail-spacecraft which would "ob~ain mechanical&#13;
forces from the sun's radiation of great enough magnitude to drive a&#13;
spaceship between the planets."&#13;
Although science and science-fiction readers have heard little&#13;
about light-sailing since (and the general public has heard nothing&#13;
about it at all), the idea was never allowed.to perish. In 1958, Richard&#13;
L. Garwin' of the IBM Watson Scientific laboratory at Columbia&#13;
University wrote a short paper on "Solar Sailing - a Practical Method&#13;
of Propulsion Within the Solar System" for the American Rocket&#13;
Society's Jet Prooulsiot: Journal.&#13;
Numerous technical articles followed during the 60's and into the&#13;
70's. In 1969, the year in which man first set foot on the moon,&#13;
NASA's Office of Advanced Space Technology funded the first&#13;
-studies by Astro Research Corporation and MacNeal Schwendler&#13;
Corporation on solar sail technology.&#13;
These studies, and "a later one done by NASA's lewis Research&#13;
Center, produced interesting but far from exciting results.&#13;
Finally, a 1973 study at Batelle Memorial Institute produced a&#13;
favorable report for NASA. Headed by Jerome L. Wright, the project&#13;
not only established the feasibility of aluminized plastic solar sails up&#13;
to 800 meters square, but discovered the opportunity of a spacecraft&#13;
rendezvous with Halley's Comet in 1986 using such a sail.&#13;
Sailing to be a Reality&#13;
The idea Cordwainer Smith expressed in his story - the idea&#13;
seemed more fantasy than scientific extrapoation two decades ago is&#13;
about to be given concrete realitv." '"&#13;
NASA's official Solar Sailing Development Program, headquartered&#13;
at the Jet Propulsion Laboratorv (JPL) in Pasadena, asked itself: "Why&#13;
not use the Sun's photon energy to propel a large reflective sail on a&#13;
free ride through space? Why not employ the concept for long-term,&#13;
low-thrust space missions in the 1980's-jncluding the proposed&#13;
.... Halley's Comet rendezvous?" I&#13;
Spokesman at JPL explain their mission. "The Solar Sail would&#13;
employ a mirror-like alumi~ized plastic surface to attract the&#13;
.....photons.; which carry momentum. When reflected, the photons&#13;
change momentum and a force is exerted against the reflective&#13;
A surface-much like a wind against a sail.&#13;
"Speed of the Solar Sailcraft depends upon distance from the sun&#13;
and the size, weight and angle of the sail. The greater the sail surface&#13;
and .proximity to the Sun, the greater the reflectivity pressure or&#13;
energy thrust."&#13;
"The sail, its proponents.sav, has the potentjal of vast improvement&#13;
over ballisticJRocket) propulsion. Since it would carry no fuel, it&#13;
would be cheaper than conventional spacecraft systems."&#13;
"By tracking against (or with) the solar photon stream, the Solar&#13;
Sailcraft could fly inward toward the Sun or outward. NASA and JPL&#13;
will, if the plan succeeds, demonstrate the SOlar Sail with a 1981·2&#13;
launch from the Space Shuttle towards the Sun and a flight to&#13;
intercept Halley's Comet in March, 1986. For the first flight, the furled&#13;
sail would be taken to the Shuttle platform and erected by astronauts&#13;
in the space vacuum. .&#13;
"The technology development program, headed by Louis D.&#13;
Friedman, includes design of an 8OO-meter square plastic film sheet&#13;
that's only 2.5 microns thick, plus ultra-lightweight extensible booms&#13;
for the spars and masts of the Solar Sail." _&#13;
\ Starting outsmall&#13;
~he .NASAsail is only about a half mile square; the one Codwainer&#13;
~mlth Imagined was 2(),(X)() miles wide and 80,(X)()miles long-so large&#13;
It could take days or weeks for a fast-moving robot to scurry out&#13;
along the sail to make repairs. -c., , •&#13;
Bu.t if it s~ms that our feeble first photon flight is insignificant,&#13;
consider the Cerman V-2. It once seemed huge and awesome; tWO&#13;
decades later it was tiny- and quaint and thrust out of memory by the&#13;
thunderous lift-off of an Apollo/Saturn skyscraper. If the sail&#13;
succeeds, subsequent models will be larger and faster and more&#13;
complex. Today a comet, tomorrow the stars?&#13;
space&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
FOOD&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
YOU ASKED J&#13;
FOR IT!&#13;
HAMBUGER&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
. ,._&#13;
P.A.B. Coffeehouse presents&#13;
CLAUDIA SCHMIDT&#13;
high energy folk virtuoso&#13;
and&#13;
MARK-HELLER&#13;
as her musical · sidekick&#13;
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 5th&#13;
2 5 .PM&#13;
UNION CONFERENCE ROOMS 104 - 106&#13;
FREE ADMISSION WINE SERVED&#13;
BACK BY POPUIAR IEMANI&#13;
MOONLIGHT&#13;
BOWUNO&#13;
WIN FREE IOWl/NIJ, BEER , SOIA&#13;
FRIDA1S &amp; SATURDA1S&#13;
S.m -11pm&#13;
UNION RECREATION CENTER&#13;
RESERVATIONS RECOMMENIEI&#13;
STOP IN OR CALL: 111-1696&#13;
..&#13;
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/&#13;
Setting sail&#13;
· for a · comet&#13;
by Dan Gufdebeck&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
"The first sailors had gone out almost a hundr~d years before. They&#13;
had started with small sails n-ot over two thousand square miles.&#13;
Gradually the size of the sails increased. The technique of adiabatic&#13;
packing and the carrying of passengers in individual pods reduced&#13;
the damage done to the human cargo. It was great news when a sailor&#13;
returned to Earth, a man born and reared under the light of another&#13;
star. He was a man who had spent a month of agony and pain,&#13;
bringing a few sleep-frozen settlers, guiding the immense&#13;
light-pushed sailing craft . . . " ·&#13;
That's from one of the now-numerous romances of science fiction&#13;
in which star-crossed lovers are at the mercy of old age and the speed&#13;
of light. The story is Cordwainer Smith's " The Lady Who Sailed The&#13;
Soul" dating from the late 50's and featuring a wildly speculative&#13;
notion : that high-speed interstellar craft might be propelled by&#13;
means of an unthinkably large sail pushed by sun and starlight. A&#13;
truly incredible idea!&#13;
Began in 1951&#13;
Actually, the first published mention of solar sailing-according to&#13;
researchers at NASA-dates_ from only a few years prior to Smith's&#13;
story . In May, 1951, an article by Carl A. Wiley-tusing the -pen name&#13;
of Russel Saunders) appeared in the Astounding Science Fiction&#13;
Magazine. _&#13;
Entitled "Clipper Ships of Space," Wiley's article proposed a&#13;
" light-jammer" sail-spacecraft which would "ob~ain mechanical&#13;
forces from the sun's radiation of great enough magnitude to drive a&#13;
spaceship between the planets ."&#13;
Although science and science-fiction readers have heard little&#13;
about light-sailing since (and the general public has heard nothing&#13;
about it at all), the idea was never allowed to perish . In 1958, Richard&#13;
L. Garwin of the I BM Watson Scientific Laboratory at Columbia&#13;
University wrote a short paper on "Solar Sailing - a Practical Method&#13;
of Propulsion Within the Solar System" for the American Rocket&#13;
Society's Je( Propulsion Journal.&#13;
Numerous technical articles followed during the 60's and into the&#13;
70's. In 1969, the year in which man first set foot on the moon,&#13;
NASA's Office of Advanced Space Technology funded the first&#13;
studies by Astra Research Corporation and MacNeal Schwendler&#13;
Corporation on solar sail technology.&#13;
These studies, and ·a later one done by NASA's Lewis Research&#13;
Center, produced interesting but far from exciting results .&#13;
Finally, a 1973 study at Batelle Memorial Institute produced a&#13;
favorable report for NASA. Headed by Jerome L. Wright, the project&#13;
not only established the feasibility of aluminized plastic solar sails up&#13;
to 800 meters square, but discovered the opportunity of a sp,acecraft&#13;
rendezvous with Halley's Comet in 1986 using such a sail.&#13;
Sailing to be a Reality&#13;
The idea Cordwainer Smith expressed in his story - the idea&#13;
seemed more fantasy than scientific extrapoation two decades ago is&#13;
about to be given concrete reality: _,&#13;
NASA's official Solar Sailin_g Develop-ment Program, headquartered&#13;
at the Jet Propulsion Laborat ory (JPL) in Pasadena, asked itself: "Why&#13;
not use the Sun's photon energy to propel a large reflective sail on a&#13;
free ride through space? Why not employ the concept for long-term,&#13;
low-thrust space missions in the 1980's-including the proposed&#13;
~ Halley's Comet rendezvous?"&#13;
Spokesman at JPL explain_ their mission . " The Solar Sail would&#13;
employ a mirror-like aluminized plastic surface to attract the&#13;
' photons, which carry momentum . When reflected, the photons&#13;
change momentum and a force is exerted against the reflective&#13;
. surface' much like a wind against a sail.&#13;
"Speed of the Solar Sailcraft depends upon distance from the sun&#13;
and the size, weight and angle of the sail. The greater the sail surface&#13;
and _proximity to the Sun, the greater the reflectivity pressure or&#13;
energy thrust."&#13;
"The sail, its proponents say, has the potential of vast improvement&#13;
over ballistic_ (Rocket) propulsion . Since it would carry no fuel, it&#13;
wou!d be cheaper than conventional spacecraft systems ."&#13;
" By tracking against (or with) the solar photon stream , the Solar&#13;
Sailcraft could fly inward toward the Sun or outward . NASA and JPL&#13;
will , if the plan succeeds, demonstrate the Solar Sail with a 1981-2&#13;
launch from the Space Shuttle towards the Sun and a flight to&#13;
intercept Halley's Comet in March, 1986. For the first flight, the furled&#13;
sail would be taken to the Shuttle platform and erected by astronauts&#13;
in the space vacuum. .&#13;
"The technology development program, headed by Louis D.&#13;
Friedman, includes design of an 800-meter square plastic film sheet&#13;
thafs only 2.5 microns thick, plus ultra-lightweight extensible boom·s&#13;
for the spars and masts of the Solar Sail." -&#13;
Starting out small&#13;
The NASA sail is only about a half mile square· the one Codwainer&#13;
~mith imagined was 2q,ooo miles wide and 80,000 miles long-so large&#13;
it could take days or weeks for a fast-moving robot to scurry out&#13;
along the sail to make repairs. --.... 1 •&#13;
Bu_t if it s~ms that our feeble first photon flight is insignificant,&#13;
consider the Cerman V-2 . It on.ce seemed huge and awesome; two&#13;
decades later it was tiny- and quaint and thrust out of memory by the&#13;
thunderous I ift-off of an 'Apollo/ Saturn skyscraper. If the sail&#13;
succeeds, subsequent models will be larger and faster and more&#13;
complex . Today a comet, tomorrow the stars? &#13;
new~ . Library user survey&#13;
AcademIc ~I(I"spart of national grant&#13;
-moves off'ces by Jeff Prostko&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Morein, a Ph. D. 10 business&#13;
management and a Master in&#13;
library Science. The study does&#13;
involve Dr. Morein's work, and&#13;
he along with the team of&#13;
advisors, will be flying to&#13;
Parkside on several occasions for&#13;
comprehensive evaluations. The&#13;
first such visit will be October 3.&#13;
"We are very excited about&#13;
this opportunity," notes Carla&#13;
Stoffle, Assistant Director of the&#13;
Librafy/Learning Center, "this&#13;
will give us the chance to view&#13;
our library as a whole, not just a&#13;
look at our services and facilities&#13;
offered, but also a look at our&#13;
management, distribution, and&#13;
technology. It will give us a&#13;
chance to know what new&#13;
technology we should Of should&#13;
not adopt."&#13;
This is not the first survey&#13;
taken by the library.&#13;
A survey was taken in 1974&#13;
concerning user views of the&#13;
library and Its facthties and It&#13;
found that over 1,000 people&#13;
thought it was a good library and&#13;
well used last fall, Norman&#13;
Noerper, a lecturer of Applied&#13;
Science and Technology here at&#13;
Parks.de. also did a survey, the&#13;
result of which was the extension&#13;
of library hours.&#13;
So on the whole, the self study&#13;
appears to be very worthwh lie&#13;
and beneficial, not only to the&#13;
library but also Its users&#13;
However, its success is dependent&#13;
on the output. (Those&#13;
people surveyed will be students&#13;
and faculty.) So, as you are&#13;
walking down the hall, and&#13;
someone stops and asks you if&#13;
you've filled out a library survey,&#13;
take a survey and spend a couple&#13;
of minutes filling it in. After all,&#13;
how many times do you help&#13;
spend $21,3501&#13;
The Office of Educational&#13;
Program Support will be moving&#13;
to a new location on October 5,&#13;
1977. Academic skills and the&#13;
Testing Center will be located&#13;
across the hall from our present&#13;
quarters (D175) to the northeast&#13;
section of the D1 level of the&#13;
library in D150-D for the rest of&#13;
this semester. Enter through the&#13;
reserve area of the library.&#13;
The Tutoring Program will be&#13;
Course&#13;
administered at the D150-C&#13;
location. However, tutoring&#13;
sessionswill take place in D 194&#13;
WllC (formerly the Ranger&#13;
Office) beginning on October 5,&#13;
1977.&#13;
Academic Skills classes currently&#13;
held in our present&#13;
quarters will be moved back to&#13;
the room numbers assigned at&#13;
registration. These are:&#13;
last week, the library handed&#13;
out its user surveys. If you filled&#13;
one out, don't throw it away. If&#13;
you do, it would be like throwing&#13;
away $21,350. That's right, the&#13;
surveys are just a small part of a&#13;
large scale self study that deals&#13;
with how efficiently the&#13;
students, faculty and staff here&#13;
at Parkside believe their library is&#13;
run.&#13;
The money ($21,350) is a grant&#13;
from the Council on library&#13;
Resources (ClR), a national&#13;
foundation which granted the&#13;
money to pay for the part time&#13;
secretaries, computer work, and&#13;
duplicating fees involved in&#13;
amassing the information from&#13;
the study.&#13;
The project is to test a manual&#13;
developed by Dr. P. Grady&#13;
Section Room&#13;
09-090 Composition Preparation 1,2 CA 133&#13;
09-090 Composition Preparation 5 CA 128&#13;
09-140 Study Skills 1,2 CA 133&#13;
09-150 Reading Improvement 1,2 CA 133&#13;
09-135 Reading/Study Skills 1,2,3 CA 133&#13;
09-075 English for Foreign Students 1 CA 128&#13;
All changes will begin on ·Academic Skills office telephone&#13;
Wednesday, October 5, 1977 and numbers will remain the same.&#13;
SMI Building&#13;
scheduled&#13;
by Diane Jalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
A new addition to Parkside's&#13;
classroom building is currently in&#13;
the planning stages, High&#13;
student interest in the academic&#13;
areas of engineering technology,&#13;
management science and labor&#13;
economics has caused the 1,5&#13;
million dollar birth of the&#13;
Modern Industry Building,&#13;
Program's purpose&#13;
The building program's purpose&#13;
is to help meet the local,&#13;
statewide and national needs for&#13;
additional technically trained&#13;
persons.&#13;
According to the Engineer's&#13;
Council for Professional Development,&#13;
"Engineering Technology&#13;
is that part of the&#13;
engineering field which requires&#13;
the application of scientific and&#13;
engineering knowledge and&#13;
methods combined with technical&#13;
skills.&#13;
The program's objective is to&#13;
develop a high-quality Engineering&#13;
Technology major. Three&#13;
basic Technical specialities&#13;
include electrical, industrial&#13;
production and mechanical&#13;
engineering, .&#13;
Program Needs and faCilities&#13;
Parkside requested a facility&#13;
providing 53,0Cl0square feet to&#13;
satisfy the Modern Industry&#13;
Building's needs. The main&#13;
&lt;emphasts in the program's&#13;
development is to provide a&#13;
production laboratory furnished&#13;
with industrial equipment,&#13;
The new classroom building&#13;
and its existing laboratories&#13;
would benefit the Engjneering&#13;
Tech program. Furthermore,&#13;
other academic disciplines will&#13;
be housed in the building and be&#13;
'given suitable space.&#13;
Mr. James F. Galbraith,&#13;
director of the campus construction,&#13;
believes "the campus's&#13;
leaching staff is very enthusiastic&#13;
about the engineering tech&#13;
program." He concluded by&#13;
saying, "Parks ide's students&#13;
should be very proud at the&#13;
building's completions." ,&#13;
This is a cryptogram, a form at code len- "0 TOL~ the "a" always standing tor "A~ the&#13;
guaoo, where letters of the alphtlbet stand "T" for "C:' and the "L" fOt' "T." Your chilifor&#13;
cmer letters of the alphabet. For instance, lengtfis to break the code 01 the cryptogram _&#13;
the words "A CAT" in I cryptogram mighl be below. and discover its hidden message.&#13;
LI DOOWKH&#13;
BHDU ZHtJH&#13;
SODBLQJKROLGDBV&#13;
WRVSRUW&#13;
ZRXOG EH DV&#13;
WHGLRXVDV&#13;
WR ZRUN.&#13;
When there's a challenge,&#13;
quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope you have some fun with the challenge&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon IS the Number 1 beer," Milwaukee.&#13;
beer capital of the world. _&#13;
That's why we'd like to offer you another challenge&#13;
-the Pabst challenge Taste and compare Pabst Blue&#13;
Ribbon to any other premium beer: vcu'll hke Pabst&#13;
because Blue Ri6bon Quality means the best-tastinq beer&#13;
you can get. Since 1844 It always has&#13;
PABST.Since 1844.The quality has always come through.&#13;
PABST BREWING COMPANY ..... J.allkee W,s. Pea". HeIghts. 111....... rk. N J. los ""ie'''. ClllI, Pabst. Geo,,,,.&#13;
)I~OM OJ. SV snOl031 SV 38 OlnOM reoes OJ.&#13;
SAVQll0H !)NIA'Ild 31::13Mti'f'3A 31-'11'llt:ll AI A.ual-i $;JJ •• Il'$ .."t~S WOli UO'lltlono V .' ••• u.&#13;
.,.,&#13;
new~ . library user survey Academic ~lc,lls part of nationCII grant moves offices&#13;
The Office of Educational&#13;
Program Support will be moving&#13;
to a new location on October 5,&#13;
1977. Academic skills and the&#13;
Testing Center will be located&#13;
across the hall from our present&#13;
quarters (0175) to the northeast&#13;
section of the 01 level of the&#13;
library in O150-D for the rest of&#13;
this semester. Enter through the&#13;
reserve area of the library.&#13;
The Tutoring Program will be&#13;
Course&#13;
09-090 Composition Preparation&#13;
09-090 Composition Preparation&#13;
09-140 Study Skills&#13;
09-150 Reading Improvement&#13;
09-135 Reading/Study Skills&#13;
administered at the O150-C&#13;
location . However. tutoring&#13;
sessions will take place in D 194&#13;
WLLC (formerly the Ranger&#13;
Office) beginning on October 5,&#13;
1977.&#13;
Academic Skills classes currently&#13;
held in our present&#13;
quarters will be moved back to&#13;
the room numbers assigned at&#13;
registration . These are:&#13;
Section Room&#13;
1,2 CA 133&#13;
5 CA 128&#13;
1,2 CA 133&#13;
1,2 CA 133&#13;
1,2,3 CA 133&#13;
09-075 English for Foreign Students 1 CA 128&#13;
All changes will begin on&#13;
Wednesday, October 5, 1977 and&#13;
SMI Building&#13;
scheduled&#13;
by Diane Jalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
A new addition to Parkside's&#13;
classroom building is currently in&#13;
the planning stages . High&#13;
student interest in the academic&#13;
areas of engineering technology,&#13;
management science and labor&#13;
economics has caused the 1.5&#13;
million dollar birth of the&#13;
Modern Industry Building.&#13;
Program's purpose&#13;
The building program's purpose&#13;
is to help meet the local,&#13;
statewide and national needs for&#13;
additional technically trained&#13;
persons.&#13;
According to the Engineer's&#13;
Council for Professional Development,&#13;
"Engineering Technology&#13;
is that part of the&#13;
engineering field which requires&#13;
the application of scientific and&#13;
engi neering knowledge and&#13;
methods combined with technical&#13;
skills . .. "&#13;
The program's objective is to&#13;
develop a high-quality Engineering&#13;
Technology major. Three&#13;
basic Tec hn ical special ities&#13;
include electri cal , industrial&#13;
production and mechani cal&#13;
engineering.&#13;
Program Needs and Facilities&#13;
Parkside requested a facil ity&#13;
providing 53,000 square feet to&#13;
satisfy the M odern Industry&#13;
Build ing's needs . The main&#13;
·· emphas is in t he program's&#13;
development is to provide a&#13;
production ~aboratory furnished&#13;
with industrial equipment.&#13;
The new classroom building&#13;
and its existing laboratories&#13;
would benefit the En&amp;!neering&#13;
Tech program . Furt hermore,&#13;
other academic disciplines w ill&#13;
be housed in the bui lding and be&#13;
'given suitable space.&#13;
Mr. James F. Galbraith ,&#13;
director of the campus construction&#13;
believes "the campus's&#13;
teac,hing staff is very enthusiastic&#13;
abo ut t he engineering t ech&#13;
program ." He concluded by&#13;
saying, " Parkside's students&#13;
should be very proud at the&#13;
building's completions."&#13;
-Academic Skills office telephone&#13;
numbers will remain the same.&#13;
by Jeff Prostko&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Last week, the library handed&#13;
out its user surveys . If you filled&#13;
one out, don't throw it away. If&#13;
you do, it w.ould be like throwing&#13;
away $21,350. That's right, the&#13;
surveys are just a small part of a&#13;
large scale self study that deals&#13;
with how efficiently the&#13;
students, faculty and staff here&#13;
at Parkside believe their library is&#13;
run .&#13;
The money ($21,350) is a grant&#13;
from the Council on Library&#13;
Resources (CLR), a national&#13;
foundation which granted the&#13;
money to pay for the part time&#13;
secretaries, computer work, and&#13;
duplicating fees involved in&#13;
amassing the information from&#13;
the study .&#13;
The project is to test a manual&#13;
developed . by Dr. P. Grady&#13;
Morein, a Ph . D in business&#13;
management and a Master m&#13;
Library Science. The study does&#13;
involve Dr. Morem's work, and&#13;
he along with the team of&#13;
advisors, w i ll be flying to&#13;
Parkside on several occasions for&#13;
comprehensive evaluations. The&#13;
first such visit will be October 3.&#13;
"We are very excited abo.ut&#13;
this opportunity," notes Carla&#13;
Stoffle, Assistant Director of the&#13;
Libraty/ Leaming Center, "this&#13;
will give us the chance to view&#13;
our library as a whole, not just a&#13;
look at our services and facilities&#13;
offered, but also a look at our&#13;
management, distribution, and&#13;
technology. It will give us a&#13;
chance to know what new&#13;
technology we should or should&#13;
not adopt."&#13;
This is not the first survey&#13;
taken by the library.&#13;
A survey was taken in 197 4&#13;
concerning u er vi ws of the&#13;
library and ,ts fac,lltie and it&#13;
found that over 1, people&#13;
thought it was a good library and&#13;
well used. Last fall, Norman&#13;
oerper, a lectur r of Applied&#13;
Science and Technology here at&#13;
Parkside, also did a survey, the&#13;
result of which was the extension&#13;
of library hour&#13;
So on the whole, the self study&#13;
appears to be very worthwhile&#13;
and beneficial, not only to the&#13;
library but also ,ts users&#13;
However, ,ts success is dependent&#13;
on the output (Those&#13;
people surveyed w,11 be students&#13;
and faculty.) So, as you are&#13;
walking down the hall, and&#13;
someone stops and asks you ,f&#13;
you've filled out a library survey,&#13;
take a survey and spend a couple&#13;
of minutes filling it in After all,&#13;
how many times do you help&#13;
spend S21,350?&#13;
nge.&#13;
This is a cryptogram, a torm ot code Ian- "Q TQL~ the "0 " always standing tor "A~ the&#13;
guage, where letters ot the alphabet stand "T" tor -c~ and the "L" for "T" Your chal· for other letters ot the alphabet. For instance, lenge"is to break the code of the cryptogram • the words "A CAT" in a cryptogram might be below, and discover its hidden message&#13;
BHDU ZHtJH&#13;
SODBLQJ KROLGDBV&#13;
WRVSRUW&#13;
ZRXOG EH DV&#13;
WHGLRXV DV&#13;
WR ZRUN.&#13;
When there's a challenge, quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope you have some fun with the challenge&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon is the Number 1 beer in Milwaukee.&#13;
beer capital of the world. _&#13;
That's why we·d like to offer you another challenge&#13;
- the Pabst challenge.Taste and compare Pabst Blue&#13;
Ribbon to any other premium beer. You'll like Pabst&#13;
because Blue Ri6bon quality means the best-tasting beer&#13;
you can get. Since 1844 11 always has&#13;
PABST. Since 1844. The quality has always come through. PABST BREWING COMPANY. Milwaukee Wis . Peo11a Heights. Ill . Newark. N J . Los Angeles. Cahf , Pabst. Georg1a&#13;
)l!j0M OJ. S Y s nOl03J. S Y 38 a,noM J.tjOdS OJ. SA'IOl10H ~ NIA'lld 3tj3M tj'l3A 3 HJ. 11'1 ~, 111 A,uaH sa,eaosa~e~s wo,1 uo11e1on0 y .,.,uuy &#13;
events&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 5&#13;
Academic Policies Meeting at 2 p.m.&#13;
Film Wisconsin Artists Film Festival presents. The&#13;
Front Page. 7 p.m. No admission charge. Rondelle&#13;
Reservations, 554-2154.&#13;
Film Sahara 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Coffeehouse Claudia Schmidt of the Green Bay area&#13;
plays in Union 104-106. 2-4 p.m. No admission.&#13;
Wine will be served.&#13;
Film The Front Page starring Ben Hecht. Free at the&#13;
Rondefle.&#13;
Relocation of Offices Academic Skills and testing&#13;
will move from WLLC 0-175 to 0-1 level of the&#13;
library in D-150-C. Call 553-2608 for further&#13;
infprmation.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 6&#13;
Golf Men's NAIA District 14 Tournament, at Spring&#13;
Green through October 8.&#13;
Volleyball Women's at Lake Forest College, with&#13;
University of Chicago, 6 p.m.&#13;
Health-Line An unwanted Pregnancy? How to deal&#13;
with the problem. Through October 13. Dial&#13;
553-2588 and- ask to hear the Health-Line Highlight.&#13;
Film Caine Mutiny 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Philosophical Society organizational meeting at&#13;
4:00 p.m.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 7.&#13;
Soccer Men at UW Chancellors' Cup Tournament:&#13;
Parkside vs. UW-Milwaukee at 1 p.m. on Friday,&#13;
finals begin at 1 p.m. Saturday.&#13;
Wisconsin State Assembly votes on decriminalization&#13;
of marijuana at the Capital in Madison.&#13;
Cross Country Men at Notre Dame invitational. 3&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Film African Queen 8 p.m. in Union Cinema. $1.00&#13;
admission.&#13;
Lecture Dr. Severo Ochoa, Nobel Laureate, will&#13;
speak about Protein Biosynthesis. GR 103 at 2 p.m.&#13;
Free.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 8&#13;
Cross Country Men at Lakefr.ont Invitational,&#13;
Chicago, 10:30 a.m.&#13;
Tennis Women at UW-Milwaukee with UW-Green&#13;
Bay, 10 a.m.&#13;
Swimming Women at UW Green Bay with Lawrence,&#13;
. 1p.m.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 9&#13;
Film African Queen in Union Cinema at 7:3Q p.m.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Cross Country All comers be there at 12:00 noon..&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 12&#13;
Coffeehouse Barry Drake of the Kenosha area plays&#13;
in Union 104-106. Wine will be served. INo&#13;
admission. •&#13;
Soccer Parkside vs. Waukesha Tech Institute at 4:00&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Film Alexander's Ragtime Band starring Don Ameche&#13;
at 7:00 p.m. For reservations call Rondelle,&#13;
554-2154. Free.&#13;
. Thursday, Oct. 13 .&#13;
Health Line Learn all about aspirin. Call 1383.&#13;
Anthropology Club Fieldtrip to Ethnohistory&#13;
meetings. Must sign up in CL 270. Transportation&#13;
provided by Anthropology Club.&#13;
_ Saturday, Oct. 15&#13;
Volleybal! Invitational at 10:00 a.m.&#13;
Concert featuring Michael Williams in Union Square&#13;
at 9:00 p.m.&#13;
Sunday, Oct, 16&#13;
Film Whi!t's up Tiger Lily at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Artist contest&#13;
announced&#13;
Tuesday, ocr. 18&#13;
Coffeehouse Features James Mapes in Union&#13;
104-106 from 1-4 p.m. Admission is free and wine&#13;
will be served. .&#13;
Film The Magnificent Arne/sons starring Orson&#13;
Welles at 7:00 p:m. Call Rondelle for reservations.&#13;
554-2154. Free admission.&#13;
. Wednesday, Oct. 19&#13;
PSGA ELECTION will be held in Main Place.&#13;
Film My Little Chickadee in the Union Cinema at&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
The Fall season is approaching&#13;
and so is "Wisconsin 77", the&#13;
annual exhibit of paintings,&#13;
drawings and graphics sponsored&#13;
by the Art League of Stevens&#13;
Point, in cooperation with the&#13;
UW-SP College of Fine Arts.&#13;
All artists residing in the State&#13;
of Wisconsin are eligible to&#13;
submit two entries. Work and&#13;
entry blanks must be delivered .&#13;
directly to the Edna Carlston&#13;
Gallery, UW-SP, on October 14,&#13;
15 and 16. Entries must be&#13;
suitably framed and wired for&#13;
r hanging and must not exceed 6'&#13;
by 8' in size. No crafts, sculpture&#13;
or photography wi)1 be eligible.&#13;
Artists may obtain the full&#13;
prospectus and entry blanks&#13;
from Mrs. James Delzell, 1124&#13;
Ridge Road, Stevens Point, Wis.,&#13;
. 54481.&#13;
Juror for "Wisconsin 77" is&#13;
Stephen Prokopoff, Director&#13;
Museum of Contemporary Art,&#13;
Chicago, Illinois.&#13;
The public is invited to attend&#13;
the opening reception and&#13;
announcement of awards at the&#13;
Carlsten Gallery, Fine Arts&#13;
Center, from 8:00 p.m. to 10:30&#13;
p.m. on Saturday, October 29.&#13;
Cash and purchase awards of&#13;
over $2,000 will be presented.&#13;
The show will continue _until&#13;
November 18 during regular&#13;
gallery hours.&#13;
Launched in 1972, the&#13;
"Wisconsin" show has gained&#13;
recognition yearly and promises&#13;
to be one of the year's&#13;
outstanding exhibits inthe state."&#13;
"' Thursday, Oct. 20&#13;
PSGA fLECTION held in Main Place.&#13;
,Film The Bank Dick at 7:30 in Union&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
The Chiwaukee Prairie Food Co-op would like to&#13;
thank everyone who attended the Bluegrass concert&#13;
last Wednesday evening featuring Grass Food and&#13;
Lodging. We hope you enjoyed it as much as we did.&#13;
We'll do it again sometime. Next time we'll try for a&#13;
weekend.&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU I&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Assistance&#13;
ALL SUBJECTS&#13;
Choose from our library of 7,000 topics.&#13;
All papers have been prepared by our&#13;
staff 61 professional writers to insure&#13;
excellence. Send $1.00 (air mail&#13;
postage) for the current edition of our&#13;
mail order catalog.&#13;
r~UCATiONALSYSTEMS----&#13;
I P.O. Box 25916·E.&#13;
I Los Angele~ Calif. 90025&#13;
I Name ---'-_ I Address _&#13;
IC~ I&#13;
I Slate- _ Zip _______________ J . I -&#13;
Come Today See Yours.&#13;
w. allo provide original&#13;
r•••• rch •• all fields.&#13;
Theal •• nd dl ........ tlon&#13;
a •• iltanc •• lao avanable.&#13;
quality c:orrrnercial corres&#13;
1417 50th street . 658-8990&#13;
UNIOJ CINEMA $1.00&#13;
PAB FALL FILM SERIES PRESENTS&#13;
BOGART WEEK!&#13;
WED. OCT. 5&#13;
SAHARA&#13;
UW-P ID'S REQUIRED&#13;
THURS. OCT. 6&#13;
CAINE MUTINY- FRI. OCT.7 &amp;&#13;
SUN OCT. 9&#13;
I,AFRICAN QUEEN&#13;
FRI. 8,00 PM. SUN. 7,30 PM.&#13;
events&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 5&#13;
Academic Policies Mee~ing at 2 p.m.&#13;
--&#13;
Film Wisconsin Artists Film Festival presents_ The&#13;
Front Page. 7 p.m. No admission charge. Rondelle&#13;
Reservations, 554-2154.&#13;
Film Sahara 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Coffeehouse Claudia Schmidt of the Green Bay area&#13;
plays in Union 104-1b6. 2-4 p.m. No admission.&#13;
Wine will be served.&#13;
Film The Front Page starring Ben Hecht. Free at the&#13;
Rondefle.&#13;
Relocation of Offices Academic Skills and testing&#13;
will move from WLLC D-175 to D-1 level of the&#13;
library in D-150-C. Call 553-2608 for further&#13;
information.&#13;
'&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 6&#13;
Golf Men's NAIA District 14 Tournament, at Spring&#13;
Green through October 8.&#13;
Volleyball Women's at Lake Forest College, with&#13;
University of Chicago, 6 p.m.&#13;
Health-Line An unwanted Pregnancy? How to deal&#13;
with the problem. Through October 13. Dial&#13;
553-2588 and-- ask to hear the Health-Line Highlight.&#13;
&#13;
Film Caine Mutiny 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Philosophical Society organizational meeting at&#13;
4:00 p.m.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 7&#13;
Soccer Men at UW Chancellors' Cup Tournament:&#13;
Parkside vs. UW-Milwaukee at 1 p.m. on Friday,&#13;
finals begin at 1 p.m. Saturd~y.&#13;
Wisconsin State Assembly votes on decriminalization&#13;
of marijuana at the Capital in Madison .&#13;
Cross Country Men at Notre Dame invitational. 3&#13;
p.m .&#13;
Film African Queen 8 p.m. in Union Cinema. $1.00&#13;
admission.&#13;
Lecture Dr. Severo Ochoa, Nobel Laureate, will&#13;
speak about Protein Biosynthesis. GR 103 at 2 p.m.&#13;
Free.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 8&#13;
Cross Country Men at Lakefr.ont lnvrtational,&#13;
Chicago, 10:30 a.m.&#13;
Tennis Women at UW-Milwaukee with UW-Green&#13;
Bay, 10 a.m.&#13;
Swimming Women at UW Green Bay with_ Lawrence,&#13;
· 1 p.m .&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 9&#13;
Film African Queen in Union Cinema at 7:3Q p.m.&#13;
Admission $1 .00.&#13;
Cross Country All comers be there at 12:00 noon. _&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 12&#13;
Coffeehouse Barry Drake of the Kenosha area plays&#13;
in Union 104-106. Wine will be served. l'No&#13;
admission. '&#13;
Soccer Parkside vs. Waukesha Tech Institute at 4:00&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Film Alexander's Ragtime Band starring Don Ameche&#13;
at 7:00 p.m. For reservations· call Rondelle·,&#13;
554-2154. Free.&#13;
r ~»- N\r,..o\C ~o~O. s,~ a . Open 3Z\ ~~\~\~ 5~3&#13;
Mon. &amp; Fri . ~ ?\C}\\C• A,) 634-&#13;
Noon ti/ 9 ~~ (.A,\ ,&#13;
Sat. Noon ti/ 5 I"..,.-&#13;
- MAGIC TRICKS - JOKES- NOVEL TIES&#13;
...&#13;
· Thursday, Oct. 13 ·&#13;
Health Line· Learn all about aspirin. Call ·1383.&#13;
Anthropology Club Fieldtrip to Ethnohistory .&#13;
meetings. Must sign up in CL 270. Transportation&#13;
provided by Anthropology Club.&#13;
Artist contest&#13;
announced&#13;
The Fall season is approaching&#13;
and so is "Wisconsin '77", the&#13;
annual exhibit of- paintings&#13;
drawings and graphics sponsored&#13;
by the Art League of Stevens&#13;
Point, in cooperation with the&#13;
UW-SP College of Fine Arts.&#13;
- Saturday, Oct. 15&#13;
Volleyball Invitational at 10:00 a.m.&#13;
Concert featuring Michael Williams in Union Square . /&#13;
at 9:00 p.m .&#13;
Sunday, Oct.16&#13;
Film What's up Tiger Lily at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Tuesday, Oc.t. 18&#13;
Coffeehouse Features Jarnes Mapes in Union&#13;
104-106 from 2-4 p.m. Admission is free and wine&#13;
wi 11 be served.&#13;
Film The Magnificent Amers,ons starring Orson&#13;
Welles at 7 :00 p:m. Call Rondelle for reservations,&#13;
554-2154. Free admission.&#13;
. Wednesday, Oct. 19&#13;
PSGA ELECTION wirl be held in Main Place.&#13;
Film My Little Chickadee in the Union Cinema at&#13;
7:30 p .m. \.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 20&#13;
PSGA £LECTION held in Main Place.&#13;
, Film The Bank Dick at 7:30 in Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
The Chiwaukee Prairie Food Co-op would like to&#13;
thank everyone who attended the Bluegrass concert&#13;
last Wednesday evening featuring Grass Food and&#13;
Lodging. We hope you enjoyed it as much as we did.&#13;
We'll do it again sometime. Next time we'll try ·for a&#13;
weekend.&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
All artists residing in the State&#13;
of Wisconsin are eligible to&#13;
submit two ~ntries. Work and&#13;
entry blanks must be delivered ·&#13;
directly to the Edna Carlsten&#13;
Gallery, UW-SP, on October 14,&#13;
15 and 16. Entries must be&#13;
suitably framed and wired for&#13;
' hanging and must not exceed 6'&#13;
by 8' in size. No crafts, sculpture&#13;
or photography will be eligible.&#13;
Artists may obtain the full&#13;
prospectus and entry blanks&#13;
from Mrs. James Delzell, -1124&#13;
Ridge Road, Stevens Point, Wis .,&#13;
· 54481.&#13;
Juror for "Wisconsin '77" is&#13;
Stephen Prokopoff, Director&#13;
Museum of Contemporary Art,&#13;
Chicago, Illinois.&#13;
The public is invited to attend&#13;
the opening reception and&#13;
announcement of awards at the&#13;
Carlsten Gallery, Fine Arts&#13;
Center, from 8 :00 p.m. to 10:30&#13;
p.m. on Saturday, October 29.&#13;
Cash and purchase awards of&#13;
over $2,000 will be presented.&#13;
The show will continue until&#13;
November 18 during regular&#13;
gallery hours.&#13;
Launched in 1972, the&#13;
"Wisconsin" show has gained&#13;
recognition yearly and promises&#13;
to be one of the year's&#13;
outstanding exhibits in'the state.&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
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Choose from our library of 7,000 topics.&#13;
All papers have been prepared by our&#13;
staff et professional writers to insure&#13;
excellence. Send $1.00 (air mail&#13;
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mail order catalog.&#13;
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qua I ity corrmercial printers&#13;
1417 50th street . 658-8990&#13;
We also provide original&#13;
research -- all fields.&#13;
Thesis and dluerJalion&#13;
assistance also available.&#13;
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I Los Angeles.,__ Calif. 90025 I&#13;
I N(lme ---------'-- I l Address I&#13;
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I State:_· __ Zip ____ I •&#13;
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-PAB FALL FILM SERIES PRESENTS&#13;
.OGART WEEK!&#13;
WED. OCT. 5&#13;
$AHARA&#13;
THURS. 2:30 &amp; 7:30 PM.&#13;
CAINE MUTINYU._P&#13;
ID'S REQUIRED&#13;
FRI. OCT.7 &amp;&#13;
SUN OCT. 9&#13;
2:30 &amp; 7:30 PM&#13;
UNION CINEMA $1.00&#13;
I _AFRICAN QUEEN&#13;
FRI. 8:00 PM. SUN. 7 :30 PM . </text>
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              <text>&lt;,&#13;
Wednesday, September 28, 1977&#13;
YoU, No.5 er ()() The mass media 15 rearrangng oo&#13;
ethos lust hke It rearranges 1I11&#13;
reality.&#13;
-Ron Hunter, WMAQ News&#13;
Watergate reporter&#13;
tells his story&#13;
by Diane [alenskv&#13;
News Editor&#13;
At approximately 11:00 am.,&#13;
last Thursday. thousands of&#13;
anxious students focused their&#13;
attention to the platform located&#13;
in the foreground of UW-Whitewater's&#13;
Williams Center Gymnasium,&#13;
where Campus Conference&#13;
Coordinator, Dr. Richard Nelson&#13;
welcomed young journalists t~&#13;
the 14th Annual High School&#13;
Newspaper Conference&#13;
Following his salutation Dr&#13;
Nelson introduced a inve~tjgative&#13;
reporter who won various&#13;
awards, some including the&#13;
Pul itzer Prize, the Drew Peerson&#13;
Award, the George Pope&#13;
Memorial Award, and the&#13;
University of Missouri Department&#13;
of Journalism Gold Key.&#13;
The individual co-authored two&#13;
Space travel anyone?&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
RangerStaff&#13;
Who hasn't, at one time or another&#13;
dreamed of being an astronaut? Haven't&#13;
we all taken that fantasy trip-imagining the&#13;
rumble of the rockets' roar; the crush of&#13;
acceleration; the dizzying drop of free-fall&#13;
in zero gravity; the thrill of knowing that&#13;
the infinite universe is but a few centimeters&#13;
away, chilling the outside of the&#13;
ship's sleek skin.&#13;
Readers of science fiction have long&#13;
been aware of the ecstasy and excitement&#13;
of spac-e travel. For years we'v,! followed&#13;
the exploits of larger-than-life heros as&#13;
they've eased their way into space and&#13;
beyond. And for many of them it really&#13;
was easy. Robert Heln lein's Starman Jones&#13;
was just a runaway kid who picked up the&#13;
skills needed for spaceflight while on&#13;
board a rocket. Burrough's John Carter was&#13;
a Southern gentleman and Confederate&#13;
soldier who proved a fast learner when&#13;
hastily deposited on Mars. Flash Gordon,&#13;
one of the great space heros of all time,&#13;
got his chance when he was kidnapped by&#13;
a paranoid Dr. Zarkov. It was even easier&#13;
in Have Spacesuit, Will Travel.&#13;
Yes, throughout the history of science&#13;
fiction there have been a host of ordinary&#13;
citizens chosen by fate to experience the&#13;
delights of soaring through outer space.&#13;
The real world of astronautics, however,&#13;
has been dismayingly different in its&#13;
choice of prospective space voyagers. No&#13;
ordinary applicants need apply. The men&#13;
who have flown into space during the past&#13;
two decades have been picked from an&#13;
elite cadre of highly trained and superbly&#13;
conditioned individuals. So few of these&#13;
all-around specimens have been selected&#13;
for actual missions that many a would-be&#13;
astronaut has put aside his or her dreams&#13;
of planet hopping in despair.&#13;
Despair not&#13;
Well, the time may be right to remove&#13;
those dreams of glory from the mothballs.&#13;
As often happens with delightful reliability,&#13;
modern science FACT is finally&#13;
catching up with the traditional science&#13;
FICTION. With the dawning of the Space&#13;
Shuttle era, space will indeed be wide&#13;
open for practically anybody who wants to&#13;
try for it. .&#13;
Enterprise is ready&#13;
On September 17, 1976 the world's first&#13;
re-usable space craft was rolled out of its&#13;
hangar at Palmdale, California, and was&#13;
christened the "Enterprise" to the Star Trek&#13;
theme song. In the invited audience were&#13;
Gene Roddenberry, leonard Nimoy,&#13;
DeForest Kelley, Nichelle Nichols, George&#13;
Takei. and Walter K enig, who all had very&#13;
gratified smiles; the name was changed&#13;
almost at the very last minute by President&#13;
Ford-In response to a massive letter-writing&#13;
campaign mounted by Star Trek fans all&#13;
over the country.&#13;
Wanted: Pilots&#13;
Now, many a science-fiction fan has&#13;
probably imagined sitting steely-eyed and&#13;
square jawed at the helm of some giant&#13;
spaceship, hands firmly gripping the&#13;
throttle as the engines roar and the Earth&#13;
falls far behind. For a few such dreamers&#13;
their wishes may one day be fulfilled. But&#13;
for the most, the numbers aren't there. Not&#13;
in the pilot's seat, anyway.&#13;
In this sense, tlle Shuttle program still&#13;
clings to the elitist theory. Assuming a full&#13;
traffic load of sixty or more Space Shuttle&#13;
flights a year (conducted by a fleet of five&#13;
different vehicles led by the already&#13;
constructed Enterprise) with three flights&#13;
per pilot a year, simple calculations show&#13;
that forty astronauts (a commander and a&#13;
pilot for each mission) could easily handle&#13;
continued on page 6&#13;
highly successful books tncludmg&#13;
All the President's Men and&#13;
The Final D~ys. He and hi&gt;&#13;
co-worker, Carl Bernstein undercovered&#13;
Watergate, one of the&#13;
largest governmental scandals In&#13;
the world The young journalist,&#13;
born in Wheatland, Illinois, is a&#13;
reporter for the Wuhington&#13;
Post. His name ISBob Woodward&#13;
As Woodward walked to the&#13;
podium, the audience cheered&#13;
and photographers purged him&#13;
with their cameras In hts&#13;
Introduction, Woodward outlined&#13;
the address In three major&#13;
headings - "The Watergate&#13;
Story", "the press after Watergate"&#13;
and "\he relationship&#13;
between the press and the&#13;
government,"&#13;
continued on page 8&#13;
er&#13;
Wednesday, September 28, 1977&#13;
Vol.6, No.S&#13;
()() The mass media 1s rearrangng ()()&#13;
eth1CS Just b e 1t rearranges l/ l/&#13;
reality.&#13;
-Ron Hunter, WMAQ News&#13;
Watergate reporter&#13;
tells his story&#13;
by Diane Jalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
At approximately 11 :00 am&#13;
last Thursday, thousands ~f&#13;
anxious students focused their&#13;
attention to the platform located&#13;
in the foreground of UW-Vvh1tewater's&#13;
v'villiams Center Gymnasium,&#13;
where Campus Conference&#13;
Coordinator, Dr. Richard 'elson&#13;
welcomed young journalists t~&#13;
the 14th Annual High chool&#13;
ewspaper Conference&#13;
Following his salutation, Dr&#13;
elson introduced a investigative&#13;
reporter who won various&#13;
awards , some including the&#13;
Pulitzer Prize, the Drew Peerson&#13;
Award , the George Pope&#13;
Memorial Award , and the&#13;
University of Missouri Department&#13;
of Journalism Gold Key.&#13;
The individual co-authored two&#13;
highly succe sful books includ -&#13;
ing All the President'&#13;
The Final Da s. H&#13;
co-work r Carl Bernst in und r·&#13;
covered Watergate, on of th&#13;
large t gov rnmental candals in&#13;
the world . Th young Journalist,&#13;
born m Wheatland, lllino1 , Is a&#13;
reporter for the Wa hington&#13;
Post. His name Is Bob v\:oodY.ard.&#13;
As Woodward walked to the&#13;
podium, th audience ch red&#13;
and photographers purg d him&#13;
with their cameras. In his&#13;
introduction, \! ood ard outlined&#13;
the address in thre ma1or&#13;
headings - " The Watergate&#13;
Story", "the pres after Watergate"&#13;
and " \he relationship&#13;
betY.een the press and the&#13;
go ernment "&#13;
continued on page 8&#13;
Space travel anyone?&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Who hasn't, at one time or another&#13;
dreamed of being an astronaut? Haven't&#13;
we all taken that fantasy trip-imagining the&#13;
rumble of t he rockets' roar; the crush of&#13;
acceleration; the dizzying drop of free-fall&#13;
in zero gravity; the thrill of knowing that&#13;
the infinite universe is but a few centimeters&#13;
away, chilling the outside of the&#13;
ship's sleek skin ...&#13;
Readers of science fiction have long&#13;
been aware of the ecstasy and excitement&#13;
of spa&lt;=e travel. For years we'v~ followed&#13;
the exploits of larger-than-life heros as&#13;
they've eased their way into space and&#13;
beyond . And for many of them it really&#13;
was easy . Robert Heinlein's Starman Jones&#13;
was just a runaway kid who picked up the&#13;
skills needed for spaceflight while on&#13;
board a rocket. Burrough's John Carter was&#13;
a Southern gentleman and Confederate&#13;
soldier who proved a fast learner when&#13;
hastily deposited on Mars. Flash Gordon,&#13;
one of the great space heres of all time,&#13;
got his chance when he was kidnapped by&#13;
a paranoid Dr. Zarkov. It was even easier&#13;
in Have Spacesuit, Will Travel.&#13;
Yes, throughout the history of science&#13;
fictioh there have been a host of ordinary&#13;
citizens chosen by fate to experience the&#13;
delights of soaring through outer space.&#13;
The real world of astronautics, however,&#13;
has been dismayingly different in its&#13;
choice of prospective space voyagers. No&#13;
ordinary applicants need apply. The men&#13;
who have flown into space during the past&#13;
two decades have been picked from an&#13;
elite cadre of highly trained and superbly&#13;
conditioned individuals. So few of these&#13;
all-around specimens have been selected&#13;
for actual missions that many a would-be&#13;
astronaut has put aside his or her dreams&#13;
of planet hopping in despair.&#13;
Despair not&#13;
Well, the time may be right to remove&#13;
those dreams of glory from the mothballs.&#13;
As often happens with delightful reliability,&#13;
modern science FACT is finally&#13;
catching up with the traditional science&#13;
FICTION. With the dawning of the Space&#13;
Shuttle era, space will indeed be wide&#13;
open for practically anybody who wants to&#13;
try for it. ·&#13;
Enterprise is ready&#13;
On September 17, 1976 the world's first&#13;
re-usable space craft was rolled out of its&#13;
hangar at Palmdale, California, and was&#13;
christened the "Enterprise" to the Star Trek&#13;
theme song. In the invited audience w~&#13;
Gene Roddenberry, Leonard imoy,&#13;
DeForest Kelley, Nichelle Nichols, George&#13;
Takei, and Walter K enig, who all had very&#13;
gratified smiles; the name was changed&#13;
almost at the very last minute by President&#13;
Ford-in response to a massive letter-writing&#13;
campaign mounted by Star Trek fans all&#13;
over the country.&#13;
Wanted: Pilots&#13;
Now, many a science-fiction fan has&#13;
probably imagined sitting steely-eyed and&#13;
square jawed at the helm of some giant&#13;
spaceship, hands firmly gripping the&#13;
throttle as the engines roar and the Earth&#13;
falls far behind. For a few such dreamers&#13;
their wishes may one day be fulfilled. But&#13;
for the most, the numbers aren't there. ot&#13;
in the pilot's seat, anyway.&#13;
In this sense, tne Shuttle program still&#13;
clings to the elitist theory. Assuming a full&#13;
traffic load of sixty or more Space Shuttle&#13;
flights a year (condt:Kted by a fleet of five&#13;
different vehicles led by the already&#13;
constructed Enterprise) with three flights&#13;
per pilot a year, simple calculations show&#13;
that forty astronauts (a commander and a&#13;
pilot for each mission) could e'™IY handle&#13;
continued on page 6 &#13;
The wisdom of· having&#13;
one shuttle bus&#13;
editorial •&#13;
forever, right? Not yet!&#13;
You may have noticed right at the begin(ling of&#13;
the semester there seemed to be two shuttle&#13;
buses, remember? So much for tKat.&#13;
The bus from Racine is a shuttle bus when it's&#13;
on campus. The Kenosha city bus is -oot a free&#13;
shuttle bus. The only shuttle bus running takes a&#13;
longtime to get around the loop .. The lowly red&#13;
stickered student parker waits at the bottom of&#13;
the hill. Wait until Winter!&#13;
Having just one shuttle bus is turning out to&#13;
be a terrible idea. Even with city buses helping&#13;
once every hour or so, one shuttle bus doesn't&#13;
make it. Many hurried commuter students rush&#13;
away from home only to be confronted with the&#13;
choice of waiting for the bus or walking. When&#13;
you are already fifteen minutes late this decision&#13;
can make a difference. Pouring rain? Hal&#13;
Marriott's Great America (sic) uses bus trains to&#13;
move people from the lots to the money gates.&#13;
Parks ide uses sidewalks and one rather&#13;
inefficient bus. ~&#13;
Well, you asked for it and you are paying for it&#13;
with your tuition money (did you think taxpayers&#13;
would pay for such a stupid system?). So, if you&#13;
are unhappy with such a method of moving&#13;
students to class, get those pens out and write&#13;
the Chancellor, student government, or even the&#13;
Ranger.&#13;
- ,&#13;
interview was very informal and relaxed. It&#13;
must be noted that Kummings rarely uses&#13;
profanity in his classes or in public for that&#13;
matter. I have had him for two courses and&#13;
I quite honestly think he is one of the best&#13;
professors at Parkside . He has a good sense&#13;
of humor, knows his material, and is a&#13;
damn good teacher. He 'is not a vulgar&#13;
man. This is a university newspaper not&#13;
Family Circle. If someone says a relatively&#13;
common curse word, there is no reason&#13;
why we should not print it. All you prudes&#13;
can start your own paper I or become&#13;
Editor of this one and change things.&#13;
Last week Ranger inviewed Professor&#13;
David Beach. Anyone who read the story&#13;
and knows Beach might have pondered&#13;
the a~sence of his polysyllabic responses.&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside and they are sol 1&#13;
responsible for its editorial p~licy and content.e&#13;
y&#13;
c ".&#13;
Dan Guidebeck, Robert Hansen, Jeff Proatko, KimWunsch&#13;
Kat Hermann, Chris Re.tcks, Marcia Vlach. '&#13;
F ,..d~{ Philip L. Livingston 553.22~5&#13;
ne a . Thomas R. Cooper 5. 1\.2:1117&#13;
C"py on)f John R. McKloskey&#13;
N,::w~f,( )1 Diane Jalensky&#13;
ecctabon ."i\a c Karen Putman&#13;
::tal ~;\.a er John Gabriel 553..2231&#13;
e 'j r..: 4 a9 Ken Larsen S' 228'1 .&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, Universitr of Wisconsin.Parkside&#13;
Kenosha. Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Subscriptions~ $5.00 year for U.S.A.&#13;
In the beginning; one .of the world's prominent&#13;
architects, Gyo Obata, thought Parks/de should&#13;
put aside the concerns of automobile storage by&#13;
placing parking lots on the periphery of the&#13;
campus. This would keep the core campus free&#13;
from automobile problems and the school could&#13;
provide a shuttle bus where professors and&#13;
students could ride to class together.&#13;
Soon after Obata drew up the master plan,&#13;
completed Greenquist Hall, and the Library&#13;
Learning Center, he was promptly kicked off the&#13;
site by the greater state of Wisconsin in a&#13;
misguided legislative effort to rid the state of out&#13;
of state architects. Parkside lost.&#13;
In following years, Parkside started building&#13;
parking lots like crazy. The original plan to keep&#13;
the central campus free from automobile traffic&#13;
has gone the way lof the Gooney Bird. First there&#13;
was the Communication Arts Lot, then came the&#13;
Union Lot and now comes the Physical Education&#13;
Lot (sic). In retrospect, the shuttle bus probably&#13;
didn't fill the needs of our rare, media&#13;
mesmerized, commuter students.&#13;
Last year the administration, student&#13;
government, and the segregated fees committee,&#13;
in great wisdom and financial restraint, chose to&#13;
save money and only employ one shuttle bus this&#13;
fall. After all, when the Physical Education Lot is&#13;
finished we will be rid of ;parking problems&#13;
Editor's File**** Feature Stories: some problems&#13;
by Philip l.livingston&#13;
Editor&#13;
about their lives and the business of&#13;
education? These are the questions we&#13;
want answered.&#13;
There is a danger in attempting to&#13;
illustrate people profiles in print. Someone&#13;
might pick up one story in one paper and&#13;
say, "Ugh, what a creep and how stupid."&#13;
T~ fact is, one story can not adequately&#13;
tell you all about a person.&#13;
A few weeks ago Ranger interviewed&#13;
Professor Don Kummings and in the story&#13;
(my story) Kummings used a few Anglo&#13;
Saxon terms to emphasize his plight. The&#13;
Our writer paraphrased Beach's remarks&#13;
and again editing was called out.&#13;
We are not going to give up yet. Ranger&#13;
will continue to tell you about people as&#13;
we find them and we will continue to&#13;
re-examine our editorial standards and our&#13;
responsibilities. We have a free press at&#13;
Parkside and we will keep it free.&#13;
These small problems could be blamed&#13;
on the fact that we do not have a·&#13;
cdmprehensive journalism program here.&#13;
Or perhaps there should be at least one full&#13;
time communications professor with a&#13;
print media background at Parkside.&#13;
Anyone interested in writing for Ranger&#13;
should come to the weekly meetings on&#13;
Mondays, from 2:00 p.rn to 6:00 p.m., in&#13;
Tallent Hall, room 287. And so it goes.&#13;
Sometimes a feature story will write&#13;
itself. That is, everything will fall together&#13;
and all that's needed is a byline and a&#13;
headline. This hasn't happened here yet.&#13;
We have had to pull teeth to get stories&#13;
and have gotten kicked in the process.&#13;
What we are trying to do, in addition to&#13;
printing the campus news, is to reveal&#13;
interesting parts of people's lives. What do&#13;
they think! What do they have to say&#13;
edito·rial •&#13;
, I&#13;
The wisdom of· having&#13;
one shuttle bus&#13;
.,&#13;
In the beginning, one of the world's prominent&#13;
architects, Gyo Obata, thought Parkside should&#13;
put aside the concerns of automobile storage by&#13;
placing parking lots on the periphery of the&#13;
'campus. This would keep the core campus free&#13;
from automobile problems and the school could&#13;
provide a shuttle bus where professors and&#13;
students could ride to class together.&#13;
Soon after Obata drew up the master plan,&#13;
completed Greenquist Hall, and the Library&#13;
Learning Center, he was promptly kicked off the&#13;
site by the greater state of Wisconsin in a&#13;
misguided legislative effort to rid the state of out&#13;
of state architects. Parkside lost.&#13;
In following years, Parkside started building&#13;
parking lots like crazy. The original plan to keep&#13;
the central campus free from automobile traffic&#13;
has gone the way 1&#13;
of the Gooney Bird. First there&#13;
was the Communication Art·s Lot, then came the&#13;
Union Lot and now comes the Physical Education&#13;
Lot (sic). In retrospect, the shuttle bus probably&#13;
didn't fill the needs of our rare, media&#13;
mesmerized, commuter students.&#13;
Last year the , ad,ministration, student&#13;
government, and the segregated fees committee,&#13;
in great wisdom and financial restraint, chose to&#13;
save money and only employ one shuttle bus this&#13;
fall. After all, when the Physical Education Lot is&#13;
finished we will be rid of ;parking problems&#13;
Editor's File**** Feature Stories: some problems&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Editor&#13;
Sometimes a feature story will write&#13;
itself. That is, everything will fall together&#13;
and all that's needed is a byline and a&#13;
headl ine. This hasn't happened here yet.&#13;
We have had to pull teeth to get stories&#13;
and have gotten kicked in the process .&#13;
What we are trying to do, in addition to&#13;
printing the campus news, is to reveal&#13;
interesting parts of people's lives . What do&#13;
they think? What do they have to say&#13;
about their lives and the business of&#13;
education? These are the questions we&#13;
want answered .&#13;
There is a danger in attempting to&#13;
illustrate people profiles in print. Someone&#13;
might pick up one story in one paper and&#13;
say, " Ugh, what a creep and how stupid."&#13;
T~ fact is, one story can not adequately&#13;
tell you all about a person .&#13;
A few weeks ago Ranger interviewed&#13;
Professor Don Kummings and in the story&#13;
(my story) Kummings used a few Anglo&#13;
Saxon terms to emphasize his plight. The&#13;
forever, right? Not yet!&#13;
You may have noticed right at the beginriing of&#13;
the semester there seemed to be two shuttle&#13;
buses, remember? So much_ for tKat.&#13;
The bus from Racine is a shuttle bus when it's&#13;
on campus. The Kenosha city bus is -not a free&#13;
shuttle bus. The only shuttle bus running takes a&#13;
long time to get around the loop .. The lowly red&#13;
stickered student parker waits at the bottom of&#13;
the hill. Wait until Winter!&#13;
Having just one shuttle bus is turning out to&#13;
be a terrible idea. Even with city buses helping&#13;
once every hour or so, one shuttle bus doesn't&#13;
make it. Many hurried commuter students rush&#13;
away from home only to be c6nfronted with the&#13;
choice of waiting for the bus or walking. When&#13;
you are already fifteen minutes late this decision&#13;
can make a difference. Pouring rain? Ha!&#13;
Marriott's Great America (sic) uses bus trains to&#13;
move people from the lots · to the money gates.&#13;
Parkside uses sidewalks and one rather&#13;
inefficient bus.&#13;
Well , you asked for it and you are paying for it&#13;
with your tuition money (did you think taxpayers&#13;
would pay for such a stupid system?). So,· if you&#13;
are unhappy with such a method of moving&#13;
students to class, get those pens out and write&#13;
the Chancellor, student government, or even the&#13;
Ranger.&#13;
interview was very informal and relaxed . It&#13;
must be noted that Kummings rarely uses&#13;
profanity in his classes or in public for that&#13;
matter. I have had him for two courses and&#13;
I quite honestly think he is one of the best&#13;
professors at Parkside. He has a good sense&#13;
of humor, knows his material, and is a&#13;
damn good teacher. He 'is not a vulgar&#13;
ma,p . This is a university newspaper not&#13;
Family Circle . If someone says a relatively&#13;
common curse word, there is no reason&#13;
why we should not print it. All you prudes&#13;
can start your own paper, or become&#13;
Editor of this one and change things .&#13;
Last week Ranger inv iewed Professor&#13;
David Beach. Anyone who read the story&#13;
and knows Beach might have pondered&#13;
the absence of his polysyllabic responses.&#13;
Our writer paraphrased Beach's remarks&#13;
and again editing was called out.&#13;
We are not going to give up yet. Ranger&#13;
will continue to tell you about people as&#13;
we find them and we will continue to&#13;
re-examine our editorial standards and our&#13;
responsibilities . We have a free press at&#13;
Parkside and we will keep it free.&#13;
These small problems could be blamed&#13;
on the fact that we do not have a ·&#13;
comprehensive journalism program here.&#13;
Or perhaps there should be at least one full&#13;
time communications professor with a&#13;
print media background at Parkside.&#13;
Anyone interested in writ ing for Ranger&#13;
shou ld come to t he weekly meetings on&#13;
Mondays, from 2:00 p.m . to 6:00 p.m., in&#13;
Tallent Hall, room 287 . And so it goes.&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside and they are solel&#13;
responsible for its editorial p~licy and content. y&#13;
(', \.v ,,.&#13;
Dan Guidebeck, Robert Hansen, Jeff Prostko, Kim Wunsch&#13;
Kat Hermann, Chris Ratcks, Marcia Vlach. '&#13;
· - f .. it , . Philip L. Livingston S!-3-22~5&#13;
General M;\na.11 Thomas R. Cooper ""..i·2237&#13;
Copy Edi ,r John R. McKloskey&#13;
N~w~ Edit .., Diane Jalensky&#13;
C1rC&gt;ulatlon M.al\a,g,r Karen Putman&#13;
C.,ah&gt; Man,,-:1c- John Gabriel 5.53-2287&#13;
.. "-J\ • ~ . a. Ken Larsen $,55.228""&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, Uni':'ersity of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Subscriptions_: $5.00 year for U.S.A.&#13;
j &#13;
news&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
Parking complaints&#13;
voiced by students&#13;
by Rusty Smith&#13;
President, P.S.G.A.&#13;
I have been receiving an enormous amount of complaints from&#13;
students concerning the lack of parking places in the Union and&#13;
Communication Arts white sticker lots. They were charged $15.00 per&#13;
semester for the right to park in these lots and have not been able to&#13;
find a place by 10:00 in the morning.&#13;
I went to the Security department and spoke with the Director, Mr.&#13;
Ronald D. Brinkmann. He told me that the lots had been oversold to a&#13;
lesser degree than last year and that there should be plenty of room&#13;
for everyone. He said that the current problems are due to a large&#13;
number of illegally parked vehicles (red stickers - no stickers at&#13;
all-etc).&#13;
Security has initated a new policy this year whereby illegally&#13;
parked cars are given two warning notices and then a ticket is issued.&#13;
This discussion took place on Tuesday morning aflast week and I was&#13;
shown a stack of at least 60 or 70 warning notices' that had been&#13;
handed out already during that week.&#13;
If, in fact, this is the cause of the problem, the Security department&#13;
is obviously doing it's best to remedy the situation, but if any of you&#13;
continue to have trouble finding parking places in the white sticker&#13;
lots, please get in touch with me or one of the Senators.&#13;
Offices moved&#13;
OUf offices have been moved. We are now located in WllC D-197.&#13;
That is just down the hall from our old offices and around the corner&#13;
from the Nurses office. OUf telephone number is still 553-2244, but 1&#13;
apologize to anyone who might have tried to call last week. We were&#13;
in the office, but the phone had not yet been moved. Our hours this&#13;
semester will be daily from 10:()() a.m. until 3:00 p.m. Please stop by.&#13;
I would also like to mention the fact that PSGA Elections will be&#13;
held on October 19 and 20. These are important elections! The eight&#13;
Divisional Representatives for the Senate will be chosen at that time&#13;
as will five new members of the Segragated Fees Committee.&#13;
The Segregated Fees Committee decides what will and what will&#13;
not be funded (such as the shuttle bus) by student dollars. This is&#13;
YOUR money! $56.00 of your tuition went into the $450,000.00 fund&#13;
which will be used to support practically every non-academic activity&#13;
on campus. The decisions will be made by an all-student committee.&#13;
You had better pay close attention to whom you elect as your&#13;
representatives on this committee and be sure that they understand&#13;
how you want your money spent!&#13;
If any of you are interested in becoming involved or running for&#13;
one of these positions, stop down at the PSGA office. But don't delay.&#13;
Time is running out.&#13;
Parking lot&#13;
underway&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Construction of a new 410-car capacity parking lot is underway&#13;
next to the Physical Education Building. This new lot for white permit&#13;
holders is to take the place of the "remote and deteriorating" East&#13;
lot.&#13;
Shuttle bus service from the East and Tallent lots will be&#13;
discontinued after the end of the semester, and persons using those&#13;
lots "will have to walk up the hill or use the Racine BUS as a shuttle&#13;
bus," said James E. Galbraith, Parks ide's Director of Planning and&#13;
Construction. He added that he will check with Kenosha Transit to&#13;
see if they can provide the same service.&#13;
Galbraith said that some people will likely end up walking during&#13;
the campus's peak congestion hours of 9-12 a.m. and 6-8 p.m. H~ said&#13;
that the East Lot will be retained as a reserve lot and not demolished&#13;
as was rumored.&#13;
The completion of the new lot may be slightly delayed due to the&#13;
wet weather the construction workers have been experiencing. The&#13;
installation of curbing, for example, was to have been begun last&#13;
Wednesday, but Galbraith said it will probably get under~~y tod~y&#13;
(Wednesday). "In spite of the weather, we hope to be finished In&#13;
October," he said, adding that blacktop must be put in before the&#13;
weather gets too cold. .&#13;
Academic Skills&#13;
offers free help&#13;
by Joyce Ann Brown&#13;
R~nger Staff&#13;
Academic skills is a program&#13;
designed with students in mind.&#13;
It was started to assist students in&#13;
developing the type of academic&#13;
skills needed for success in&#13;
college. The department aids&#13;
students in developing skills that&#13;
will benefit them now and in&#13;
their future academic endeavors.&#13;
Students have the use of tape&#13;
recorders, headphones, an automatic&#13;
tutor, slide presentations,&#13;
film strips and tape. These&#13;
materials consist of Individualized&#13;
English, mechanics of&#13;
spelling, relevance of sound,&#13;
basic English, math, outlining,&#13;
note taking, and effective&#13;
listening. Most of these materials&#13;
have been furnished by the&#13;
Academic Skills department.&#13;
When a student stops in with a&#13;
problem he is usually given a&#13;
diagnostic test to. determine&#13;
areas of strength and weakness.&#13;
Various materials are made&#13;
available to help the student&#13;
strengthen weak areas.&#13;
The department employs&#13;
tutors to work with students in&#13;
understanding basic course&#13;
concepts. There is no fee. To&#13;
obtain a tutor, just stop in the&#13;
Academic Skills office and fill&#13;
out a tutor request form. Don't&#13;
wait until you've failed your first&#13;
test to get help!&#13;
Students who would like to&#13;
become tutors are encouraged to&#13;
Life Science Club&#13;
seeks specimens&#13;
The Life Science Club is&#13;
looking for interesting "speclmens"&#13;
to be a part of academic&#13;
and fun-filled activities: tabogan&#13;
party, skating at Armstrong,&#13;
nature hikes, film clips on&#13;
various operating procedures,&#13;
trips, and renowned speakers are&#13;
part of this years Life Science&#13;
program.&#13;
Dr. C. M. Chen, life Science&#13;
professor, is advisor to all.&#13;
Officers are: Richard Melvin&#13;
Wagner, President, senior in Life&#13;
Science- Pre- dentistry; Dorothy&#13;
Pivovar, vice president, senior in&#13;
Life Science- pre- veterinary;&#13;
Gari Faustino, secretary, treasurer,&#13;
junior in life Science- premed;&#13;
executive comm ittee&#13;
members, jim Schoening, life&#13;
Science- pre- med; Paul Hinds in&#13;
Life Science- med. Tech; and&#13;
Kurt Buska, senior in Life&#13;
Science- pre- dentistry.&#13;
Information on all meetings&#13;
and activities are posted at&#13;
various bulletin boards throughout&#13;
the campus. Members are&#13;
notified by mail.&#13;
Dr. Severo Ochoa, an awardwinning&#13;
Nobel Prize laureate is&#13;
speaking on Friday, October 7,&#13;
1977 at 2:00 p.m. in GR 103 on&#13;
the subject of Protein Piosynthesis.&#13;
life Science Club is&#13;
co-sponsor to his visit here at&#13;
U.W.-Parkside. He has 492&#13;
publications and his awards fill&#13;
three type written pagesl&#13;
For further information contact&#13;
Dr. Chen at Greenquist Hall&#13;
359 Ext. #2434, or Richard&#13;
Wagner at Racine 639-3828, or&#13;
Gari Faustinoat Racine 554-9512.&#13;
contact the Academic Skills&#13;
office for an application&#13;
If you'd like to learn more&#13;
about the Academic Skills&#13;
Program or the services&#13;
provided, stop In and talk to one&#13;
of the staff members Carole&#13;
Hagarty - Director Educattonal&#13;
Program Support (Ac adertu c&#13;
Skills), Richard Ammann&#13;
Reading Specialist, Goeff Cajewski&#13;
- Writing SpeCialIst, Olivia&#13;
LUI-Hayne - Education SpecialISt&#13;
- Study Skills, Charles Kugel&#13;
- Testing Coordmator&#13;
The xcedermc Skills Office&#13;
hours are Monday thru&#13;
Thursday - 8 a m to 8 p.m&#13;
Frtday - 8 a m to 4 30 p.m and&#13;
Saturday 10 a m to 1.00 p m&#13;
THE&#13;
2226-57th St.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
654-9909&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
BOWLING LEAGUES&#13;
NOW FORMINGI&#13;
(BEGIN PLAY OCT. 6)&#13;
Stue'snt Organization league Thurs. 3,00 p.m.&#13;
Student mixed Trio Thurs. 7DO p.m.&#13;
Couples league (4 to Q team) hi. 2,00 p.m.&#13;
mixed Foursome Sun. 7,00 p.m.&#13;
DON'T MISS OUTI&#13;
SIGN UP TODAY • UNION REC CENTER&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Asslstinci&#13;
ALL SUBJECTS&#13;
Choose from our library 017,000 topics.&#13;
All papers neve been prepared by our&#13;
staff of protesslonal writers to Insure&#13;
excellence. Send 51.00 (air mall&#13;
postage) lor the current edltton of our&#13;
mail order catalog. r~iiCATiONAC"iY8T;MI---- I&#13;
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I Name ------ I&#13;
We alao provide origin" I Address ---------- I&#13;
r.... rch -- oil _. I City ------------ I&#13;
ThHiI and dl... rt.tlon&#13;
L---- ... Ietanc•• Iao ann.ble. I State lip I .L. .J&#13;
news&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
week ly by student government&#13;
Parkirig complaints&#13;
voiced by students&#13;
by Rusty Smith&#13;
President, P .S.G.A.&#13;
I have been receiving an enormous amount of complaints from&#13;
students concerning the lack of parking places in the Union and&#13;
Communication Arts white sticker lots . They were charged $15.00 per&#13;
semester for the right to park in these lots and have not been able to&#13;
find a place by 10:00 in the morning .&#13;
I went to the Security department and spoke with the Director, Mr.&#13;
Ronald D . Brinkmann. He told me that the lots had been oversold to a&#13;
lesser degree than last year and that there should be plenty of room&#13;
for everyone . He said that the current problems are due to a large&#13;
'number of illegally parked vehicles (red stickers - no stickers at&#13;
all-etc .). ·&#13;
Security has initated a new policy this year whereby illegally&#13;
parked cars are given two warning notices and then a ticket is issued .&#13;
This discussion took place on Tuesday morning of last week and I was&#13;
shown a stack of at least 60 or 70 warning notices · that had been&#13;
handed out already during that week.&#13;
If, in fact, this is the cause of the problem, the Security department&#13;
is obviously doing it's best to remedy the situation, but if any of you&#13;
continue to have trouble finding parking places in the white sticker&#13;
lots, please get in touch with me or one of the Senators .&#13;
Offices moved&#13;
Our offices have been moved . We are now located in WLLC D-197.&#13;
That is just down the hall from our old offices and around the corner&#13;
from the Nurses office. Our telephone number is still 553-2244, but I&#13;
apologize to anyone who might have tried to call last week . We were&#13;
in the office, but the phone had not yet been moved. Our hours this&#13;
semester will be daily from 10:00 a.m . until 3:00 p.m . Please stop by .&#13;
I would also like to mention the fact that PSGA Elections will be&#13;
held on October 19 and 20. These are important elections! The eight&#13;
Divisional Representatives for the Senate will be chosen at that time&#13;
as will five new members of the Segragated Fees Committee .&#13;
The Segregated Fees Committee decides what will and what will&#13;
not be funded (such as the shuttle bus) by student dollars. This is&#13;
YOUR money! $56.00 of your tuition went into the $450,000.00 fund&#13;
which will be used to support pract ically every non-academ ic activity&#13;
on campus . The decisions will be made by an all-student committee .&#13;
You had better pay close attention to whom you elect as your&#13;
representatives on this committee and be sure that they understand&#13;
how you want your money spent!&#13;
If any of you are interested in becoming involved or running for&#13;
one of these positions, stop down at the PSGA office. But don't delay .&#13;
Time is running out.&#13;
Parking lot&#13;
underway&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Construetion of a new 410-car capacity parking lot is underway&#13;
next to the Physical Education Build ing. Th is new lot for white permit&#13;
holders is to take the place of the "remote and deteriorating" East&#13;
Lot.&#13;
Shuttle bus service from the East and Tallent Lots will be&#13;
discontinued after the end of the semester, and persons us ing those&#13;
lots " will have to walk up the hill or use the Racine BUS as a shuttle&#13;
bus," said James E. Galbraith, Parkside's Director of Planning and&#13;
Construction . He added that he will check with Kenosha Transit to&#13;
see if they can provide the same service.&#13;
Galbraith said that some people will likely end up walking during&#13;
the campus's peak congestion hours of 9-12 a.m . and 6-8 p .m . H~ said&#13;
that the East Lot will be retained as a reserve lot and not demolished&#13;
as was rumored .&#13;
The completion of the new lot may be slightly delayed du_e to the&#13;
wet weather the construction workers have been experiencing. The&#13;
installation of curbing, for example, was to have been begun last&#13;
Wednesday, but Galbraith said it will probably get under~~Y tod~y&#13;
(Wednesday). "In spite of the weather, we hope to be finished in&#13;
October," he said, adding that blacktop must be put in before the&#13;
weather gets too cold. ·&#13;
Academic Skills&#13;
offers free help&#13;
by Joyce Ann Brown&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Academi c skills is a program&#13;
designed with students in mind&#13;
It was started to assist students in&#13;
developing the type of academic&#13;
skills needed for success in&#13;
college . The department aids&#13;
students in developing skills that&#13;
will benefit them now and in&#13;
their future academic endeavors .&#13;
Students have the use of tape&#13;
recorders , headphones, an automatic&#13;
tutor, slide presentations,&#13;
film strips and tape . These&#13;
materials consist of Individualized&#13;
English , mechan ics of&#13;
spelling, relevance of sound,&#13;
basic English, math, outlining,&#13;
note taki ng, and effective&#13;
listening. Most of these materials&#13;
have been furnished by the&#13;
Academlc Skills department.&#13;
When a student stops in with a&#13;
problem he is usually given a&#13;
diagnostic test to. determine&#13;
areas of strength and weakness .&#13;
Various materials are made&#13;
available to help the student&#13;
strengthen weak areas .&#13;
The department employs&#13;
tutors to work with students in&#13;
understanding bas i c course&#13;
concepts . There is no fee . To&#13;
obtain a tutor, just stop in the&#13;
Academic Skills office and fill&#13;
out a tutor request form . Don't&#13;
wait until you've failed your first&#13;
test to get help!&#13;
Students who would like to&#13;
become tutors are encouraged to&#13;
Life Science Club&#13;
seeks specimens&#13;
The Life Science Club is&#13;
looking for interesting " specimens"&#13;
to be a part of academic&#13;
and fun-fi lled activities: tabogan&#13;
party, skating at Armstrong,&#13;
nature hikes, film clips on&#13;
various operating procedures,&#13;
trips, and renowned speakers are&#13;
part of this years Life Science&#13;
program .&#13;
Dr. C. M . Chen, Life Science&#13;
professor, is advisor to all.&#13;
Officers are: Richard Melvin&#13;
Wagner, President, senior in Life&#13;
Science- pre- dentistry; Dorothy&#13;
Pivovar, vice president, senior in&#13;
Life Science- pre- veterinary;&#13;
Gari Faustino, secretary, treasurer,&#13;
junior in Life Science- premed&#13;
; executive committee&#13;
members, Jim Schoening, Life&#13;
Science- pre- med; Paul Hinds in&#13;
Life Science- med . Tech; and&#13;
Kurt Bu ska , senior in Life&#13;
Science- pre- dentistry.&#13;
Information on all meetings&#13;
and activities are posted at&#13;
various bulletin boards throughout&#13;
the campus . M embers are&#13;
notif ied by mail .&#13;
Dr. Severo Ochoa, an awardwinning&#13;
Nobel Prize Laureate is&#13;
speaking on Friday, October 7,&#13;
1977 at 2:00 p.m . in GR 103 on&#13;
the subject of Protein Piosynthesis&#13;
. Life Sc ience Club is&#13;
co-.sponsor to his visit here at&#13;
U .W .-Parks ide . He has 49 2&#13;
publications and his awards fill&#13;
three type wrj tten pages !&#13;
For further information contact&#13;
Dr. Chen at Greenquist Hall&#13;
359 Ext. #2434, or Richard&#13;
Wagner at Racine 639-3828, or&#13;
Gari Faustino at Racine 554-9512.&#13;
contact the Academ ic Skills&#13;
office for an application&#13;
Reading Specialist, Go ff Ga1 wsk,&#13;
- Writing pec1al1st, Olivia&#13;
Lui-Hayn - Education pec1alIst&#13;
- tud Skill s, Chari ug I&#13;
- T ting oordinator&#13;
If you'd like to learn more&#13;
about the Academ ic Skills&#13;
Program or the service&#13;
provided, stop in and talk to one&#13;
of the staff members . Carole&#13;
Hagart - Director Educational&#13;
Program Support (Ac ademi c&#13;
Sk ills). Richard Ammann&#13;
The A ad mIc kill Office&#13;
hours are · M onday t h ru&#13;
Thursday - 8 a m to 8 p m&#13;
Frida - 8 am to 4.30 pm and&#13;
aturda 10 a m to 1, pm&#13;
2226-57th St.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
654-9909&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
BOWLING LEAGUES&#13;
NOW FORMING!&#13;
(BEGIN PLAY OCT 6)&#13;
Stuc' ~nt Organization League Thurs 300 p.m.&#13;
Student m ixed Trio Thurs. 7:00 p.m.&#13;
Couples League (4 to a team) Fri. 200 p.m.&#13;
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news&#13;
Defaulters hurt student loans&#13;
Bank of America's Social Policy&#13;
Department. The banks must be&#13;
very careful about properly&#13;
processing apphcations and&#13;
documenting their efforts in&#13;
collecting from defaulters. Even&#13;
then, according to James Koplev,&#13;
manager of New York Citibank's&#13;
student loan division, "it takes us&#13;
from six to nine months to&#13;
collect from ,the government."&#13;
OE has taken other steps aside&#13;
from contracting with a private&#13;
collection agency. HEW Seerstary&#13;
Joseph Califano has&#13;
consolidated seven loan programs&#13;
into one program which&#13;
will hopefully end duplicated&#13;
effort and waste.&#13;
HEW is also encouraging state&#13;
governments to act as guarantor&#13;
agencies. There are 26 states&#13;
which now act as guarantors and&#13;
results have been positive. Banks&#13;
deal directly with the state and&#13;
the federal government insures&#13;
80 percent of the loan money.&#13;
State lever Management&#13;
The benefits are better&#13;
management at state level and&#13;
less red tape, insuring quicker&#13;
processing of student applications&#13;
and collections on defaults.&#13;
State guarantor agencies may&#13;
eventually make the trip easier&#13;
for students. Citibank reported it&#13;
has increased its student loan&#13;
activity by 23 percent this year.&#13;
Manager Kopley cites a low 3.7&#13;
percent default rate for his bank&#13;
compared to 12.3 percent&#13;
nationally estimated for the&#13;
1977-78 fiscal year.&#13;
Kopley credits Cltibank's low&#13;
figure to working through the&#13;
state as a guarantor agency,&#13;
although Citibank still operates a&#13;
FISL program dealing directly&#13;
with OE.&#13;
implications of taking a loan or&#13;
of the options available for&#13;
repayment such as hardship&#13;
clauses.&#13;
The major source of default&#13;
lies Rot with students but with&#13;
vocational and proprietary&#13;
schools who comprise over 50&#13;
percent of the default claims&#13;
filed by banks. Many FISL&#13;
recipients find that they are&#13;
liable for the loans although&#13;
their vocational school closed&#13;
down or a training institute&#13;
overrated job opportunities and&#13;
that particular job market is&#13;
flooded. One way to cut down&#13;
on such defaults would be for&#13;
the government to enact stricter&#13;
licensing procedures.&#13;
Banks are protecting themselves&#13;
their way. Bank of&#13;
America (the main conduit for&#13;
California students'FISL money)&#13;
will not loan to students entering&#13;
vocational schools. Neither will&#13;
it loan to junior college or first&#13;
year students.&#13;
Bank of America also lowered&#13;
its maximum award from $2500&#13;
in 1976 to $1500 this year. Trust&#13;
Company of Ceorgia will loan to&#13;
students with a one year&#13;
minimum account with if. Some&#13;
banks, such as Security Pacific&#13;
National of California, loan only&#13;
to students who have previouslv&#13;
held loans from them. Successful&#13;
applicants may not hold loans&#13;
with other banks. Security&#13;
Pacific National also decreased&#13;
its student loan activity by 50&#13;
percent since 1976.&#13;
t Banksare leery&#13;
Banksare also leery about the&#13;
retrieval rate on FISL loans.&#13;
"You have to dot every 'i' and&#13;
crossevery 't' to collect from the&#13;
government," says Lu Steiner of&#13;
approach to collection.&#13;
The agency handling the loans&#13;
is in tlie process of contracting&#13;
with a private collection agency.&#13;
Bythe end of the year, the Office&#13;
of Education (GE) will turn over&#13;
50,000 overdue accounts on a&#13;
commission-for-funds collected&#13;
basis.&#13;
Maury Tansey, a special&#13;
assistant to the associate&#13;
Guaranteed Student Loan (GSL)&#13;
commissioner, explained the&#13;
decision to the Higher Education&#13;
Daily:&#13;
"The volume of defaults. has&#13;
continued to increase and we&#13;
have been unable to match that&#13;
increase with an increase in our&#13;
collections resources."&#13;
Because hiring has been&#13;
sporadic, TanseysaysOE has not&#13;
been able to keep up with the&#13;
work According to a recent&#13;
General Accounting Office&#13;
report, by the end of fiscal 1977,&#13;
OE will have paid out $436.5&#13;
million in default claims to&#13;
banks but will have collected&#13;
only $33.8 miiiion on bad debts.&#13;
That is up by about four times&#13;
the $136 million OE had to pay&#13;
out to banks in 1974.&#13;
Degreein no job guarantee&#13;
The increase in defaults has&#13;
been attributed to the economic&#13;
depression of the past few years.&#13;
Students graduating with BA's.,&#13;
MA's and Phd's have found their&#13;
education is not a job guarantee.&#13;
Another factor is the lack of&#13;
information banks and' college&#13;
financial aid offices give to&#13;
students taking loans. Students&#13;
are not fully aware of the&#13;
Bankscut loans&#13;
In many cases across the&#13;
country, banks are cutting their&#13;
student loans by up to 70&#13;
percent. Others have ended their&#13;
loan programs altogether. The&#13;
federal government, having&#13;
insured bank losses against&#13;
default under the Federally&#13;
Insured Student Loan (FISL)&#13;
pro~ram, is also toughening its&#13;
(CPS)Any student relying on&#13;
financial aid can tell you: it's a&#13;
rough trip.&#13;
With one out of every slx&#13;
graduates defaulting-eon their&#13;
student loans, banks have&#13;
adopted stringent guidelines and&#13;
more students are discovering&#13;
that once at their destination it is&#13;
becoming increasingly difficult&#13;
to pay for the cost of that trip.&#13;
SEMESTER BREAK&#13;
JAN. 7-14, 1978&#13;
IIII&#13;
Includes&#13;
• ROUND TRIP JET AIR&#13;
.7 NIGHTS LODGING IN&#13;
EXOTIC MONTEGO BAY&#13;
GROUND TRANSFERS&#13;
&amp; PORTERAGE&#13;
• FULLY ESCORTED&#13;
• TIPS &amp; TAXES ON&#13;
ABOVE&#13;
RESERVATIONS &amp; DETAILS - PAAKSIDE UNION&#13;
JAMAIC&#13;
NOW OPEN!.~&#13;
(Our candy&#13;
stock&#13;
finally&#13;
arrived)&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
Bookstore blames&#13;
COUNTER small publishers&#13;
. featuring:&#13;
Your favorite sweets &amp; candies served the&#13;
old fashioned way&#13;
plus&#13;
sundry items yOUoften need&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Parkside Bookstore manager Paul Hoffman complained to the&#13;
Boo~store Committee last week that the reason some textbooks are&#13;
late ISthat "a few certain publishers are consistently late"&#13;
Hoffman said that the New Amencan Library Penguin Books.....&#13;
Arnold, and Ronald, all small publishers, often du:l not deliver thel;&#13;
ParksIde orders on time As of last Wednesday, eight or nine book&#13;
orders affecting 10 classes had not yet come in Hoffman said the&#13;
publishers Involved claimed they had never received the order&#13;
The committee suggestedto Hoffman that he send a confirmation&#13;
p~~c~rd ~~t~ each order for the publisher to return, but Hoffman&#13;
tht '. pu IS.ers often simply throw them away ... they don't have&#13;
e time to fill them out."&#13;
eU~~~~:i~:!:obrej~cte~ the i~ea of using registered mail fa; sending&#13;
Id b&#13;
oo or ers. At 98c per letter times 100 letters it&#13;
wou e too expensrva" h id ffrnan sai '&#13;
f th d&#13;
·. ' e sal . Ho fman said that another reason&#13;
or e tar mess of the book /I h&#13;
enrolled" s was more t an 20 classeswere overestimate&#13;
's;e~ndl."t·gthlebnumber of students exceeded the original&#13;
, a Ilona ooks had to be ordered&#13;
As a result of the probl th b .&#13;
Bookst C . . ems e ookstore has been having the&#13;
ore ornrmttes will 500 b I k! . '&#13;
present bookstore Althou h n e o~ 109 Into alternatives to the&#13;
he will be excluded f g ~offman Is.amember of the committee,&#13;
"beea e h h rom meetings at which alternatives are discussed&#13;
use e as a pecum .&#13;
doing"'d . rarv Interest In what the committee will be&#13;
, 'Sal commIttee chairman Keith Wa d&#13;
The committee was to h (_ r . ~&#13;
meeting, but no oneontheave&#13;
e e~ted a new chairman at last week's&#13;
told the committee h Icommlttee wanted to be chairman. Ward&#13;
few weeks while a elacer d volunteer to continue in the chair for a&#13;
businessdid not all~eP~~eIT!.entsuccess~r is selected, but that other&#13;
w rm time to continue in the chair indefinitely.&#13;
Come Today See Yours.&#13;
PARK~DEUNIONBAZAAR&#13;
10:00 AM -4:00PM&#13;
~&#13;
quality corrrerocr printers&#13;
1417 50th street . 658.8990&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
YOU ASKED FOR IT!&#13;
HOME STYLE&#13;
COOKING&#13;
./&#13;
• HOME MADE sOUP DAILY [NELlIE'S SOUP KETILEJ&#13;
• LARGE CHEFS SALADS - ONLY 95'&#13;
• BIG, FRESH DELI TYPE SANDWICHES&#13;
• A BIGGER, BEITER 00- IT- YOURSELF SALAD BAR&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
news&#13;
Defaulters hurt student -loans&#13;
implications of taking a loan or&#13;
of the options available for&#13;
repayment such as hardship&#13;
clauses .&#13;
Bank of America's Social Policy&#13;
Department. The banks must be&#13;
very careful about properly&#13;
processing applications and&#13;
documenting their efforts in&#13;
collecting from defaulters. Even&#13;
then, according to James Kopley,&#13;
manager of New York Citibank's&#13;
student loan division, "it takes us&#13;
from six to nine months to&#13;
collect from _the government."&#13;
(CPS) Any student relying on&#13;
financial aid can tell you: it's a&#13;
rough trip.&#13;
With one out of every six&#13;
graduates defaultin on their&#13;
student loans, banks have&#13;
adopted stringent guidelines and&#13;
more students are discovering&#13;
that once at their destination it is&#13;
becoming increasingly difficult&#13;
to pay for the cost of that trip.&#13;
Banks cut loans&#13;
In many cases across the&#13;
country, banks are cutting their&#13;
student loans by up to 70&#13;
percent. Others have ended their&#13;
loan programs altogether. The&#13;
federal government, having&#13;
insured bank losses against&#13;
default under the Federally&#13;
Insured Student Loan (FISL)&#13;
pro~ram, is also toughening its&#13;
SEMESTER BREAK&#13;
JAN. 7-14, 1978&#13;
--&#13;
Includes&#13;
e ROUND TRIP JET AIR&#13;
e 7 NIGHTS LODGING IN&#13;
EXOTIC MONTEGO BAY&#13;
GROUND TRANSFERS&#13;
&amp; PORTERAGE&#13;
e FULLY ESCORTED&#13;
e TIPS &amp; TAXES ON&#13;
ABOVE&#13;
RESERVATIONS &amp; DETAILS - PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
JAMAIC&#13;
NOW OPEN!~&#13;
(Our candy&#13;
stock&#13;
finally&#13;
arrived)&#13;
t&#13;
. featuring: Your favorite sweets &amp; candies served the&#13;
old fashioned way&#13;
p!us sundry items you often need&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION BAZAAR&#13;
10:00AM-4:00PM&#13;
approach to collection.&#13;
The agency handling the loans&#13;
is in the process of contracting&#13;
with a private collection agency.&#13;
By the end of the year, the Office&#13;
of Education (OE) will turn over&#13;
50,000 overdue accounts on a&#13;
commission-for-funds collected&#13;
basis.&#13;
Maury Tansey, a special&#13;
assistant to the associate&#13;
Guaranteed Student Loan (GSL)&#13;
commissioner, explained the&#13;
decision to the Higher Education&#13;
Daily:&#13;
"The volume of defaults. . has&#13;
continued to increase and we&#13;
have been unable to match that&#13;
increase with an increase in our&#13;
collections resources."&#13;
Because hiring has been&#13;
sporadic, Tansey says OE has not&#13;
been able to keep up with the&#13;
work. According to a recent&#13;
General Accounting Office&#13;
report, by the end of fiscal 1977,&#13;
OE will have paid out $436.5&#13;
million in default claims to&#13;
banks but will have collected&#13;
only $33.8 million on bad debts.&#13;
That is up by about four times&#13;
the $136 million OE had to pay&#13;
out to banks in 1974.&#13;
Degree in no job guarantee&#13;
The increase in defaults has&#13;
been attributed to the economic&#13;
depression of the past few years .&#13;
Students graduating with BA's.,&#13;
MA's and Phd's have found their&#13;
education is not a job guarantee.&#13;
Another factor is the lack of&#13;
information banks and college&#13;
financial aid offices give to&#13;
students taking loans. Students&#13;
are not fully aware of the&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
Come Today See Yours.&#13;
quality. corrvnercial printers&#13;
1417 50th street . 658-8990&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
YOU ASKED FOR IT!&#13;
HOME STYLE&#13;
COOKING • HOME MADE SOUP DAILY [NELLIE'S SOUP KETTLE)&#13;
• LARGE CHEFS SALADS - ONLY 95•&#13;
• BIG, FRESH DELI TYPE SANDWICHES&#13;
• A BIGGER, BETTER DO- IT- YOURSELF SALAD BAR&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
The major source of default&#13;
lies Rot with students but with&#13;
vocational and proprietary&#13;
schools who comprise over 50&#13;
percent of the default claims&#13;
filed by banks. Many FISL&#13;
recipients find that they are&#13;
liable for the loans although&#13;
their vocational school closed&#13;
down or a training institute&#13;
overrated job opportunities and&#13;
that particular job market is&#13;
flooded. One way to cut down&#13;
on such defaults would be for&#13;
the government to enact stricter&#13;
licensing procedures.&#13;
Banks are protecting themse&#13;
Ives their way. Bank of&#13;
America (the main conduit for&#13;
California siudents'FISL money)&#13;
will not loan to students entering&#13;
vocational schools. Neither will&#13;
it loan to junior college or first&#13;
year students.&#13;
Bank of America also lowered&#13;
its maximum award from $2500&#13;
in 1976 to $1500 this year. Trust&#13;
Company of Georgia will loan to&#13;
students with a one year&#13;
minimum account with it. Some&#13;
banks, such as Security Pacific&#13;
National of California, loan only&#13;
to students who have previously&#13;
held loans from them . Successful&#13;
applicants may not hold loans&#13;
with other ban ks . Security&#13;
Pacific National also decreased&#13;
its st udent loan act ivity by 50&#13;
percent since 1976.&#13;
Banks are leery&#13;
Banks are also leery about the&#13;
retrieval rate on FISL loans.&#13;
"You have tq dot every ' i' and&#13;
cross every 't' to collect from the&#13;
government,"' says Lu Steiner of&#13;
OE has taken other steps aside&#13;
from contracting with a private&#13;
collection agency. HEW Secretary&#13;
Joseph Califano has&#13;
consoliaated seven loan programs&#13;
into one program which&#13;
will hopefully end duplicated&#13;
effort and waste .&#13;
HEW is also encouraging state&#13;
governments to act as guarantor&#13;
agencies. There are 26 states&#13;
which now act as guarantors and&#13;
results have been positive. Banks&#13;
deal directly with the state and&#13;
the federal government insures&#13;
80 percent of the loan money.&#13;
State level Management&#13;
The benefits are better&#13;
management at state level and&#13;
less red tape, insuring quicker&#13;
processing of student applications&#13;
and collections on defaults.&#13;
State guarantor agencies may&#13;
eventually make the trip easier&#13;
for students. Citibank reported it&#13;
has increased its student loan&#13;
activity by 23 percent this year.&#13;
Manager Kopley cites a low 3.7&#13;
percent default rate for his bank&#13;
compared t o 12 .3 percent&#13;
nationally estimated for the&#13;
1977-78 fiscal year.&#13;
Kopley credits Citibank's low&#13;
figure to working through the&#13;
state as a guarantor agency,&#13;
although Citibank still operates a&#13;
Fl SL program dealing directly&#13;
with OE.&#13;
Bo.okstore blames&#13;
small publishers&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Parkside Bookstore manager Paul Hoffman complained to the&#13;
Bookstore Committee last week that the reason some textbooks are&#13;
late Is that " a few certain publishe!s are consistently late ."&#13;
Hoffman said that the New American Library, Penguin Books,&#13;
Arnold, and Ronald, all small publishers, often did not deliver their&#13;
Parkside ord~rs on time. As of last Wednesday, eight or nine book&#13;
orders affecting 10 classes had not yet come in. Hoffman said the&#13;
publishers involved claimed they had never received the order.&#13;
The committee suggested to Hoffman that he send a confirmation&#13;
po.:c~rd ~It~ each order for the publisher to return but Hoffman&#13;
sha, ' . pu is. ers often simply throw them away ... they don't have&#13;
t e time to fill them out."&#13;
Hoffma I · d h · t p k -~ a, so re1ecte t e idea of using - registered mail for sending&#13;
eu ldabr si es book _orders. "At 98c per letter times 100 letters it&#13;
wou e too expensive " h 'd H f . for the t d. · f h ' ' e sai · 0 fman said that another reason&#13;
enrolled" ar mess o t e books a ,, h . w s more t an 20 classes were overestimate&#13;
,s;e~nd1_nt_g thlebnumk ber of students exceede&lt;;l the original&#13;
, a ' ,ona oo s had to be ordered&#13;
Bookstore As a result of the p · bl h · Committee :illems t e book~tore has been having, the&#13;
present bookstore Alth ~oon be I&lt;&gt;?kmg into alternatives to the&#13;
he will be excluded f oug H_offman is _a member of_ the committee,&#13;
"becaus~ he has a rom r:neetmgs at ~hich alternatives are discussed&#13;
doing" -said comm~tetcunihar~ interest_ m what the committee will be&#13;
Th ' I ee c airman Keith Ward . ecommitteewastoh meeting; 1- · - but no one on th/ve e e~ted a new chairman at last week's&#13;
told the committee h ,committee wanted to be chairman. Ward&#13;
few weeks while a r e rou d volunteer to continue in the chair for a&#13;
business did not alloep ~~em_ent success?r is _selected, but that other w im time to continue m the chair indefinitely. &#13;
•&#13;
news&#13;
Drama Dept. announces Debate team preps&#13;
cast for 'Children's Houri for first tournament&#13;
Parkside's Fine Arts Division and the Dramatic&#13;
Arts Discipline will be presenting Lillian Hellman's&#13;
The Children's Hour, October 28, 29 and 30 at 8:00&#13;
p.m. and a matinee October 30 at 2:00 p.m. This&#13;
production will be directed by Dr. Rhoda-Gale&#13;
Pollack, John H. Dickson is the Scenery and&#13;
Lighting Designer. Deborah Bell will be the&#13;
Costume Designer.&#13;
-The Cast for The Children's Hour: Peggy Rogers,&#13;
Cindy Ackerman, Mrs. Lilly Mortar; Margaret&#13;
Madison fifth in gifts&#13;
The University of WisconsinMadison&#13;
ranked fifth among the&#13;
nation's state universities in the&#13;
amount of volunteer financial&#13;
support it received in 1975-76,&#13;
according to the Council for&#13;
Financial Aid to Education. All&#13;
four of the institutions which led&#13;
UW-Madison are multiple campus&#13;
state university systems. In&#13;
another list, which included all&#13;
u.S. colleges and universities -&#13;
public and private - UW-Madison&#13;
ranked 16th in the amount&#13;
of support it received from&#13;
sources such as foundations,&#13;
businesses, alumni and other&#13;
individuals. The $22,341,693 in&#13;
total voluntary support for&#13;
UW-Madison included funds&#13;
from several sources: private&#13;
gifts and donations; additions to&#13;
endowment fund principal;&#13;
receipts ear-marked for the&#13;
university's foundation; and gifts&#13;
from groups such as the&#13;
Wisconsin Alumni Research&#13;
Foundation. Statewide, the ten&#13;
UW System ~niversities which&#13;
contributed to the 1975-76 report&#13;
listed a total of $26.6 million in&#13;
voluntary support.&#13;
McCarthy, Evelyn Munn; Karen Topolovec, Helen&#13;
Burton; Wendy Sorenson, lois Fisher; laura Bruno,&#13;
Catherine; Patti lowe, Rosalie Wells, Catherine&#13;
Casselman, Mary Tilford; Donna Linde, Nancy;&#13;
Teresa Adrianson, Karen Wright; Mary Stankus,&#13;
Martha Dobie: Susan Wishaw, Doctor Joseph&#13;
Cardin; Bill Fitzgerald, Agatha; Cheryl Powalicz,&#13;
Mrs. Amelia Tilford; Iacquie 5hallenburg, and the&#13;
Grocery Boy; larry Hargen.&#13;
Dope is mailed&#13;
to Miss Lillian&#13;
(CPS) The Revolutionary Cannabis Party (RCP) sent President&#13;
Carter's mother a letter urging decriminalization of marijuana aJong&#13;
with two marijuana cigarettes last August. Earlier, Miss Lillian told&#13;
People magazine that she has never smoked dope, but if her son's&#13;
proposal to lift federal criminal penalties for possession of up to one&#13;
ounce becomes law, she hopes to see some.&#13;
Along with instructions on smoking the joints, the Rep warned&#13;
Miss Lillian that there are some disadvantages to smoking pot.&#13;
"One of which is the dreaded munchies .Another disadvantage is&#13;
that marijuana is still illegal .. However, we doubt if you really have&#13;
to be concerned with being arrested. So enjoy yourself." The letter&#13;
was signed "Fidel Castor-oil."&#13;
So far, no word on Miss Lillian.&#13;
The fastest-growing Premium Beer&#13;
in America'.&#13;
~I.&#13;
r~.~&#13;
Get a free calendar with a glan of Old St"le! - .'&#13;
The debate and forensscs&#13;
squad, under the direction of&#13;
Cornmumcenon Professor Bruce&#13;
Weaver. IS preparing for Its first&#13;
intercollegiate tournament&#13;
which will be held at Whitewater&#13;
on October 1 The national tOPiC&#13;
this year IS, Resolved That Law&#13;
enforcement agencies in the U.S&#13;
should be gtven significantly&#13;
greater freedom In the mvesugetron&#13;
and or presecution of&#13;
felony crimes Aside from&#13;
par trcrp atmg In tournaments&#13;
throughout the Midwest, Parkside's&#13;
debate club hopes to&#13;
engage In debates and diSCUS"&#13;
~lonS on local I sv at high&#13;
scbocls and fVIC organizations.&#13;
In the area and In MalO Place&#13;
here at the umversuv&#13;
Member~ Interested In IcrenSICS&#13;
are working on persuasive&#13;
speeches, poetry readings, and&#13;
other mdrvrdual events In&#13;
preparation for their first meet 10&#13;
the middle of October If you are&#13;
Interested In becoming a&#13;
member of thiS ecuve group,&#13;
contact Dr Weaver at 2420 or&#13;
leave your name address. and&#13;
number at CA2S8&#13;
Suits and ties win&#13;
(CPS) - A teacher In leans,&#13;
sneakers and a sportshirt IS a&#13;
teacher who's sympathetic,&#13;
friendly, and tlexible. while a&#13;
teacher in a SUIt and tie IS one&#13;
who's knowledgeable, well·&#13;
prepared and well-organized&#13;
That's the way It seemed to&#13;
students at Pennsylvania State&#13;
University looking at photos of&#13;
teachers In venous modes of&#13;
attire&#13;
Actually, the photos they saw&#13;
were of the same two teachers In&#13;
different clothes Dr Steven A&#13;
Rollman, who directed the study,&#13;
said the students not only&#13;
thought the women Informally&#13;
dressed was sympathetic and&#13;
Inendlv, they also thought she&#13;
was fair and snmulenng&#13;
..&#13;
Library Learning Center Survey&#13;
b r 26-29 the University community--&#13;
During the week of sep~e~r:a resid~nts--will be surveyed refaculty,&#13;
students, .staff anf&#13;
the Library/Learning Center services,&#13;
garding the effectl~e~e~s 0 he surve is part of a year-long selfcollections&#13;
and facliltles. Tt&#13;
f om t~e Council on Library Resources,&#13;
study program fund~d by a gran r&#13;
a national foundatlon.&#13;
com lete the questionnaire and return it&#13;
When conta~ted, Pleas=Ciliiate the return of the questionnaire,&#13;
as soon as posslble. ;0 f 11 have been placed on the concourse&#13;
boxes marked IIL~br~ry urQv~~stionnaires may also be mailed to level in all bUlldlngs. .&#13;
Carla Stoffle, Library/Learnlng Center.&#13;
Your assistance Wl e g ·11 b reatly appreciated.&#13;
Jf O,~ UD~;- of the Library /&#13;
Learning Center&#13;
•&#13;
news&#13;
Drama Dept. announces Debate team preps&#13;
cast for 'Children's Hour' for first tournament&#13;
Parkside's Fine Arts Division and the Dramatic&#13;
Arts Discipline will be presenting Lillian Hellman's&#13;
The Children's Hour, October 28, 29 and 30 at 8:00&#13;
p.m. and a matinee October 30 at 2:00 p.m . This&#13;
production will be directed by Dr. Rhoda-Gale&#13;
Pollack, John H. Dickson is the Scenery and&#13;
Lighting Designer. Deborah Bell will be the&#13;
Costume Designer.&#13;
McCarthy, Evelyn Munn; Karen Topolovec, Helen&#13;
Burton; Wendy Sorenson, Lois Fisher; Laura Bruno,&#13;
Catherine; Patti Lowe, Rosalie Wells; Catherine&#13;
Casselman, Mary Tilford; Donna Linde, ancy,&#13;
Teresa Adrianson, Karen Wright; Mary Stankus,&#13;
Martha Dobie; Susan Wishaw, Doctor Joseph&#13;
Cardin; Bill Fitzgerald, Agatha; Cheryl Powalicz,&#13;
Mrs. Amelia Tilford; Jacquie Shallenburg, and the -The Cast for The Children's Hour: Peggy Rogers, Grocery Boy; Larry Hargen . Cindy Ackerman, Mrs. Lilly Mortar; Margaret&#13;
The debate and foren 1&#13;
squad, under the d1r tIon of&#13;
Commun1cat1on Professor Bruce&#13;
Wea er, i prepann for It fir t&#13;
intercollegiate tournam nt&#13;
which will be held at Whitewater&#13;
on Octob r 1 Th national topic&#13;
this ear I Resol ed That Law&#13;
enforcement agenci in th U S&#13;
should be given s1gnif1cantl&#13;
greater freedom in th in e t1gat&#13;
Ion and / or presecutIon of&#13;
felon crime Aside from&#13;
partIc IpatIng In tournam nt&#13;
throughout th \.11d e t, Par -&#13;
side· debate club hop to&#13;
Madison fifth in gifts&#13;
The University of WisconsinMadison&#13;
ranked fifth among the&#13;
nation's state universities in the&#13;
amount of volunteer financial&#13;
support it received in 1975-76,&#13;
according to the Council for&#13;
Financial Aid to Education. All&#13;
four of the institutions which led&#13;
UW-Madison are multiple campus&#13;
state university systems. In&#13;
another list, which included all&#13;
U.S. colleges and universities -&#13;
public and private - UW-Madison&#13;
ranked 16th in the amount&#13;
of support it received from&#13;
sources such as foundations,&#13;
businesses, alumni and other&#13;
individuals. The $22,341,693 in&#13;
total voluntary support for&#13;
UW-Madison included funds&#13;
from several sources : private&#13;
gifts and donations; additions to&#13;
endowment fund principal;&#13;
receipts ear-marked for the&#13;
university's foundation; and gifts&#13;
from groups such as the&#13;
Wisconsin Alumni Research&#13;
Foundation . Statewide, the ten&#13;
UW System ~niversities which&#13;
contributed to the 1975-76 report&#13;
listed a total of $26.6 million in&#13;
voluntary support.&#13;
Dope iS mailed&#13;
to Miss Lillian&#13;
(CPS) The Revolutionary Cannabis Party (RCP) sent President&#13;
Carter's mother a letter urging decriminalization of marijuana aJong&#13;
with two marijuana cigarettes last August. Earlier, Miss Lillian told&#13;
People magazine that s_he has never smoked dope, . but if her son's&#13;
proposal to lift federal criminal penalties for possession of up to one&#13;
ounce becomes law, she hopes to see some.&#13;
Along with instructions on ~moking the joints, the .RCP warned&#13;
Miss Lillian that there are some disadvantages to smoking pot.&#13;
"One of which is the dreaded munchies .. Another disadvantage is&#13;
_ that marijuana is still illegal ... However, we _doubt if you,,really have&#13;
to be concerned with being arrested. So en1oy yourself. The letter&#13;
was signed "Fidel Castor-oil."&#13;
So far, no word on Miss Lillian .&#13;
P'lliliN1 The fastest-growing Premium Beer&#13;
in America.&#13;
Get a free calendar with a gla88 or Old Style!&#13;
Suits and ties win&#13;
h · teach r in anou mod (CPS) - A teac er m Jeans,&#13;
sneakers and a sportsh1rt Is a&#13;
teacher who' s s mpathet1c,&#13;
fnendl , and flexible, while a&#13;
teacher in a SUit and tie I one&#13;
who's knowledgeabl , wellprepared&#13;
and well-organiz d&#13;
That's the way It seemed to&#13;
students at Penns I ania State&#13;
Un1vers1ty looking at pho os of&#13;
.. Open&#13;
Alon. &amp; Fri.&#13;
Noon t// 9&#13;
Sat. Noon 1,1 5&#13;
MAGIC TRICKS - JOKES - NOVEL TIES&#13;
Library Learning Center Survey&#13;
mber 26-29 the University communi y--&#13;
During the week of Sep~e resid~nts--will be surveyed refaculty,&#13;
students, _staff anf ~~:a Library/Learning Centers r ic s,&#13;
garding the effecti~e~e~s o The survey is part of a year-long fcollections&#13;
and facilities. t from the Council on Library R ourc , study program fund~d by a gran&#13;
a national foundation.&#13;
lete the questionnaire and return it&#13;
When conta?ted, plea;~c~~:iate the return of the questionnair,&#13;
as soon as possible. ~o '' have been placed on the concours&#13;
boxes marked "L~br~ry urQvey stionnaires may also be mailed to&#13;
level in all buildings. ue_&#13;
Carla Stoffle, Library/Learning Center.&#13;
Your assistance Wi. 11 be greatly appreciated.&#13;
Jt o.~ u~~o~ of the Library/&#13;
Learning Center&#13;
of &#13;
• ,&#13;
space&#13;
from page 1&#13;
the duty. For the mission specialist,&#13;
another forty engineers and scientists&#13;
could satisfy all personnel requirements.&#13;
Assuming a average duty of five to ten&#13;
years, the turnover rate of the Space&#13;
Shuttle crew astronauts wo-uld cntvproduce&#13;
about a dozen or so openings a year. These&#13;
numbers aren't much better than the&#13;
highly competitive space corps days of ~he&#13;
Apollo missions. NASA's latest recruitment&#13;
drive (which will culminate in the&#13;
selection of thirty to forty astronauts late&#13;
in 1977) still resembles the old program.&#13;
These new recruits will be career&#13;
astronauts, regular duty crewmen for the&#13;
routine operations of the Space Shuttle.&#13;
Seats up for grabs&#13;
Sound discouraging? Well, things aren't&#13;
as bad as they seem at first glance. For,&#13;
aboard each and every Space Shuttle,&#13;
there will be four additional seatsavailable&#13;
for additional passengers.Not pilots. Not&#13;
engineers. But PASSENGERS!These crew&#13;
members, designated as "payload specialmembers&#13;
will be designated as "payload&#13;
specialists" and will primarily be&#13;
concerned with the scientific and&#13;
technological experiments on the flight.&#13;
And these seats are currently up for grabs!&#13;
A payload specialist is basically a&#13;
part-time astronaut. The specialists are not&#13;
NASA employees nor are they career&#13;
spacemen or spacewomen in any senseof&#13;
the word. They are visitors who take part in&#13;
an expedition in orbit after less than six&#13;
months total training and who&#13;
immediately return to their homes after&#13;
their space sabbaticals to study the results&#13;
of their experimentation.&#13;
The first selection for the part-time&#13;
astronaut program will be taking place&#13;
immediately, with most of the first choice&#13;
being made in 1977 and early 1978.&#13;
NASA estimates that at least five&#13;
hundred payload specialists will be able to&#13;
ride the Space Shuttle in the period&#13;
between 1980 and 1989 alone. Some&#13;
experts predict that the number may&#13;
exceed twice that much. All types of&#13;
people will be included in this "visitor"&#13;
category, too:&#13;
• A technician from a pharmaceutical&#13;
company may spend two weeks in orbit&#13;
operating a vaccine production-module&#13;
which will create drugs of unprecedented&#13;
purity and potency.&#13;
• An astronomer from a small Midwestern&#13;
college might be chosen to implement an&#13;
celestial observation program on a&#13;
NASA-provided infra-red survey telescope&#13;
spectrometer.&#13;
• A graduate student in oceanography&#13;
could do a PhD disertation from orbit,&#13;
charting the tropical currents on&#13;
. continental shelves.&#13;
• A construction foreman might be sent&#13;
into orbit by his building research division&#13;
to oversee the assembly and operation of a&#13;
beam rolling plant which converts Shuttle&#13;
fuel tank aluminum into structural spars a&#13;
half mile long, to be used in the&#13;
construction of a giant radio telescope and&#13;
a solar power station.&#13;
• A neurologist studying balance and&#13;
vertigo mechanisms in an attempt to&#13;
understand normal and abnormal brain&#13;
psychology may bring along a small zoo of&#13;
experimental animals and then be granted&#13;
official permission to test reluctant fellow&#13;
shipmates also.&#13;
• An Air Force technical sergeant from a&#13;
New Englandlaboratory might spend days&#13;
in orbit monitoring the performance of a&#13;
new design for a large unfurable space&#13;
telemetry antenna system.&#13;
Payload Specialist: the common man&#13;
Payload specialists, unlike current&#13;
astronauts, will not be chosen from an&#13;
elite group nor will they be unique in&#13;
any way in terms of backgrounds, interests&#13;
and goals. NASA plans to have both men&#13;
and women in the program, ranging in age&#13;
from their early 20's to late 60's. They may&#13;
be any height from 5'1" to 6'4". They can&#13;
wear glasses, have false teeth, allergies,&#13;
flat feet, pot bellies and bad posture. All&#13;
they have to do is to take what the Air&#13;
Force calls a Class II Flight Physical; a&#13;
standard test which a large part of the&#13;
present day adult population cpuld pass.&#13;
Even Carter could go&#13;
Science buffs will not be the only&#13;
passengers considered for the role of&#13;
payload specialist. Other observers may&#13;
include newsmen, tourists, medical&#13;
patients,' artists and the President of the&#13;
United States.&#13;
Space Shuttle jaunt as a specialist? \l\t:!II,&#13;
NASA itself determines what type of&#13;
experiments will be conducted o~ e~ch&#13;
mission. Once that is done, the principle&#13;
scientists involved form a panel which&#13;
picks the appropriate freelance astronauts&#13;
from matching fields. NASA still hasn't&#13;
come up with a method for picking the&#13;
"space available" payload specialist, but&#13;
they're working on it.&#13;
Space available travel&#13;
On some missions, such as routine&#13;
satellite launchings and the like, NASAwill&#13;
offer seats on a "space available" basis,&#13;
which will not interfere with the primary&#13;
mission. In all cases, it's up to the&#13;
would-be payload specialists to watch out&#13;
for any and all opportunities and then go&#13;
after them with glee.&#13;
But just what are the particulars&#13;
involved in actually being chosen for a&#13;
Who can go&#13;
With the creations of the Shuttle's&#13;
"visiting astronaut" program, many hopeful&#13;
space pioneers wonder; "What field&#13;
should I study in college to increase the&#13;
chances of my becoming an astronaut?"&#13;
Most NASA officials can't answer that&#13;
question directly but can offer a reply in&#13;
reverse. They advise anyone interested at&#13;
all in the space program to study anc(&#13;
i·j I . [' ,-&#13;
"," ·j'll. \ : ~~";:i+:-i-.'\ l'_~;c:, - " /T /i\ : --",.-".__1_ ~.-', I&#13;
,: -: _.--_;".' '.'_' _"_, __ 1 , . __ '._.I~~~&#13;
Space Shuttle: plenty of room for everyone&#13;
, /&#13;
master anyone of a countless number of&#13;
disciplines in school or on the job. But&#13;
they are quick to point out, it should be in&#13;
a field or a subject that the-space lover&#13;
enjoys and can excel in. After the subject&#13;
is picked and knowledge is garnered, then&#13;
and only then should a prospective&#13;
payload specialist look for a possible space&#13;
connection.&#13;
Once an eager space enthusiast hasmet&#13;
NASA's qualifications and has been picked&#13;
as a payload specialist, he or she will have&#13;
to go through a period of preparation. The&#13;
most crucial planning for a mission will&#13;
always be in the subject of specialization&#13;
which justifies the part-time astronaut's&#13;
selection for the tlight in the first place.&#13;
(Remember, the whole purpose of the&#13;
semi-spaceman program is to advance the&#13;
"state of the art" in one's chosen .field.j&#13;
With each payload specialist's ticket to&#13;
space costing over three million dollars,&#13;
those lucky ones chosen had better spend&#13;
a lot of time boning up on his or her top&#13;
subjects, preparing a series of original and&#13;
appropriate experiments to take place on&#13;
board the shuttle.&#13;
As a fu II crew, the embryonic Shuttle&#13;
troupe will go through a series of launch,&#13;
orbit and landing exercises. Finally, the&#13;
payload specialist will study the corollary&#13;
minor experiments which they will&#13;
conduct or assist in for the benefit of other&#13;
scientists not actually on the flight. Once&#13;
finishing the six month of preparation,&#13;
there is only one further task awaiting the&#13;
part-time astronaut; LIFT-OFF!&#13;
So, after years of dreaming, the re~lity of&#13;
space flight for science-fiction fans will&#13;
finaliy be here. The rockets will roar. The&#13;
acceleration will feel crushing. The&#13;
universe will stretch infinitely out-side the&#13;
spaceship's window.&#13;
Space settlements&#13;
The next problem is whene to stay once&#13;
you get there. In an effort to publicize&#13;
their grandest (and as yet unfunded)&#13;
scheme, NASA has published Space&#13;
Settlements - A J Design Study. This&#13;
18S-page, beautifully iilustrated book&#13;
printed on glossy, heavy-stock paper, is&#13;
available from the Superintendent of&#13;
Documents, U.S. Government Printing&#13;
Office, Washington~D.C. 20402 for $5.00.&#13;
The stock number for ordering is&#13;
033-000-00669-1. The report grew out of a&#13;
ten-week program in systems design at&#13;
Stanford Universitv and NASA's Ames&#13;
Research Center,&#13;
O'NeTI is pioneer&#13;
Gerard O'Neil, whose recent book The'&#13;
High Frontier first brought the feasibility of&#13;
orbiting habitats to the public's attention,&#13;
acted as a technical director for the study.&#13;
The groups conclusions are as&#13;
mind-boggling as the concepts discussed:&#13;
it is entirely feasible to house this planet's&#13;
total population in sophisticated space&#13;
habitats in Earth-orbit by the turn of the&#13;
21st century. This can be achieved using&#13;
currently existing technology and&#13;
hardware. Their findings about the&#13;
availability of raw materials in space are&#13;
no less spectacular; a thorough&#13;
examination of the problem suggeststhat&#13;
the Moon and the Asteroid Belt between&#13;
Mars and Jupiter can be mined for ores in&#13;
sufficient quantities as to eliminate the&#13;
need for costly shipments from Earth. The&#13;
habitat is 19 miles long and 4&#13;
miles in diameter. The materials used for&#13;
its construction would be mined and&#13;
manufactured in space using solar power.&#13;
The interior could be landscaped tc .&#13;
resemble the Rocky Mountain·s, the plains&#13;
of South Dakota or the timber forests of&#13;
Oregon, depending on how the builders&#13;
plan it to be. A space colony of this size&#13;
could support a population of two hundred&#13;
thousand to several million depending on&#13;
the design. In this, the- largest of the four&#13;
colonies proposed by Dr. O'Neil, Earth-like&#13;
gravity would be produced by the&#13;
centrifugal force of rotation of the large&#13;
cylinder around its axis every 114 seconds.&#13;
Sunlight coming through the glass&#13;
"windows" would be controlled by mirrors&#13;
outside, so that the days, nights and&#13;
seasons wouf'd resuIt. -&#13;
•&#13;
space&#13;
from page 1&#13;
the duty. For the mission specialist,&#13;
another forty engineers and scientists&#13;
could satisfy all personnel requirements.&#13;
Assuming a average duty of five to ten&#13;
years the turnover rate of the Space&#13;
Shuttle crew astronauts wo·uid only produce&#13;
about a dozen or so openings a year. These&#13;
numbers aren't much better than the&#13;
highly competitive space corps days of ~he&#13;
Apollo missions. NASA's latest recruitment&#13;
drive (which will culminate in the&#13;
selection of thirty to forty astronauts late&#13;
in 1977) still resembles the old program.&#13;
These new recruits will be ,career&#13;
astronauts, regular duty crewmen for the&#13;
routine operations of the Space Shuttle.&#13;
Seats up for grabs&#13;
Sound discouraging? Well, things aren't&#13;
as bad as they seem at first glance. For,&#13;
aboard each and every Space Shuttle,&#13;
there will be four additional seats available&#13;
for additional passengers. Not pilots. Not&#13;
engineers . But PASSENGERS! These crew&#13;
members, designated as "payload specialmembers&#13;
will be designated as "payload&#13;
specia lists" and will primarily be&#13;
concerned with the scientific and&#13;
technological experiments on the flight.&#13;
And these seats are currently up for grabs!&#13;
A payload specialist is basically a&#13;
part-time astronaut. The specialists are not&#13;
NASA employees nor are they career&#13;
spacemen or spacewomen in any sense of&#13;
the word . They are visitors who take part in&#13;
an expedition in orbit after less than six&#13;
months total training and who&#13;
immediately return to their homes after&#13;
their space sabbaticals to study the results&#13;
of their experimentation.&#13;
The first selection for the part-time&#13;
astronaut program will be taking place&#13;
immediately, with most of the first choice&#13;
being made in 1977 and early 1978.&#13;
NASA estimates that at least five&#13;
hundred payload specialists will be able to&#13;
ride the Space Shuttle in the period&#13;
between 1980 and 1989 alone. Some&#13;
experts predict that the number may&#13;
exceed twice that much. All types of&#13;
people will be included in this "visitor"&#13;
category, too:&#13;
• A technician from a pharmaceutical&#13;
company may spend two weeks in orbit&#13;
operating a vaccine production-module&#13;
which will create drugs of unprecedented&#13;
purity and potency.&#13;
• An astronomer from a small Midwestern&#13;
college might be chosen to implement an&#13;
celestial observation program on a&#13;
NASA-provided infra-red survey telescope&#13;
spectrometer.&#13;
• A graduate student in oceanography&#13;
could do a PhD disertation from orbit,&#13;
charting the tropical currents on&#13;
continental shelves.&#13;
• A construction foreman might be sent&#13;
into orbit by his building research division&#13;
to oversee the assembly and operation of a&#13;
beam rolling plant which converts Shuttle&#13;
fuel tank aluminum into structural spars a&#13;
half mile long, to be used in the&#13;
construction of .a giant radio telescope and&#13;
a solar power station.&#13;
• A neurologist studying balance and&#13;
vertigo mechanisms in an attempt to&#13;
understand normal and abnormal brain&#13;
psychology may bring along a small zoo of&#13;
experimental animals and then be granted&#13;
official permission to test reluctant fellow&#13;
shipmates also.&#13;
• An Air Force technical sergeant from a&#13;
New England ·laboratory might. spend days&#13;
in orbit monitoring the performance of a&#13;
new· design for a large unfurable space&#13;
telemetry antenna system.&#13;
Payload Specialist: the common man&#13;
Payload specialists, unlike current&#13;
astronauts, will not be chosen from an&#13;
elite group nor will they be unique in&#13;
any way in terms of backgrounds, interests&#13;
and goals. NASA plans to have both men&#13;
and women in the program, ranging in age&#13;
from their early 20's to late 60's. They may&#13;
be any height from 5'1" to 6'4". They can&#13;
wear glasses, have false teeth, allergies,&#13;
flat feet, pot bellies and bad posture. All&#13;
they have to do is to take what the Air&#13;
Force calls a Class 11 Flight Physical; a&#13;
standard test which a large part of the&#13;
present day adult population c~uld pass.&#13;
, Even Carter could go&#13;
Science buffs will not be the only&#13;
passengers considered for the role of&#13;
payload specialist. Other observers may&#13;
include newsmen , tourists, medical&#13;
patients, artists and the President of the&#13;
United States.&#13;
Space available travel&#13;
On some missions, such as routine&#13;
satellite launchings and the like, NASA will&#13;
offer seats on a "space available" basis,&#13;
which will not interfere with the primary&#13;
mission. In all cases, it's up to the&#13;
would-be payload specialists to watch out&#13;
for any and all opportunities and then go&#13;
after them with glee.&#13;
But just what are the particulars&#13;
involved in actually being chosen for a&#13;
Space Shuttle jaunt as a specialist? ~II,&#13;
NASA itself determines what type of&#13;
experiments will be conducted on e~ch&#13;
mission . Once that is done, the principle&#13;
scientists involved form a panel which&#13;
picks th~ appropriate freelance astronau~&#13;
from matching fields . NASA still hasn t&#13;
come up with a method for picking the&#13;
"space available" payload specialist, but&#13;
they're working on it.&#13;
Who can go&#13;
· With the creations of the Shuttle's&#13;
"visiting astronaut" program, many hopeful&#13;
space pioneers wonder; "What field&#13;
should I study in college to increase the&#13;
chances of my becoming an astronaut?"&#13;
Most NASA officials can't answer that&#13;
question directly but can offer a reply in&#13;
reverse. They advise anyone interested at&#13;
all in the space program to study anf&#13;
Space Shuttle: plenty of room for everyone&#13;
'&#13;
' /&#13;
master any one of a countless number of&#13;
disciplines in school or on the job. But&#13;
they are quick to point out, it should be in&#13;
a field or a subject that the -space lover&#13;
enjoys and can excel in. After the subject&#13;
is picked and knowledge is garnered, then&#13;
and only then should a prospective&#13;
pay lo.ad specialist look for a possible space&#13;
connection. '&#13;
Once an eager space enthusiast has met&#13;
NASA's qualifications and has been picked&#13;
as a payload specialist, he or she will have&#13;
to go through a period of preparation. The&#13;
most crucial planning for a mission will&#13;
always be in the subject of specialization&#13;
which justifies the part-time astronaut's&#13;
selection for the flight in the first place.&#13;
(R~member, the whole purpose of the&#13;
semi-spaceman program is to advance the&#13;
"state of the art" in one's chosen . field.)&#13;
With each payload specialist's ticket to&#13;
space costing over three million dollars,&#13;
those lucky ones chosen had better spend&#13;
a lot of time boning up on his or her top&#13;
subjects, preparing a series of original and&#13;
appropriate experiments to take place on&#13;
board the shuttle.&#13;
As a full crew, the embryonic Shuttle&#13;
troupe will go through a series of launc::h,&#13;
orbit and landing exercises. Finally, the&#13;
payload specialist will study the corollary&#13;
minor experiments which they will&#13;
conduct or assist in for the benefit of other&#13;
scientists not actually on- the flight. Once&#13;
fi nishing the six month of preparation,&#13;
there is only one further task awaiting the&#13;
part-time astronaut: LI FT-OFF!&#13;
So, after years of dreaming, the re~.lity of 1&#13;
space flight for science-fiction fans will&#13;
finally be here. The rockets will roar. The&#13;
acceleration will feel crushing. Jhe&#13;
universe will stretch infinitely out0 side the&#13;
spaceship's window.&#13;
Space settlements&#13;
The next problem is whene to stay once ./&#13;
you get there. In ar. d fort to publicize&#13;
their grandest (and as yet unfunded)&#13;
scheme, NASA has published Space&#13;
Settlements - A , Design Study. This&#13;
185-page, beautifully illustrated book&#13;
printed on glossy, heavy-stock paper, is&#13;
available from the Superintendent of&#13;
Documents, U.S. Government Printing&#13;
Office, Washington,_D.C. 20402 for $5.00.&#13;
The stock number for ordering is&#13;
033-000-00669-1. The report grew out of a&#13;
ten-week program in systems design at&#13;
Stanford University and NASA's Ames&#13;
Research Centei:_.&#13;
O'Neil is pioneer&#13;
Gerard O'Neil, whose recent book The&#13;
High Frontier first brought the feasibility of&#13;
orbiting habitats to the public's attention,&#13;
acted as a technical director for the study.&#13;
The groups conclusions are as&#13;
mind-boggl ing as the concepts discussed:&#13;
it is entir.ely feasible to house this planet's&#13;
total population in sophisticated space&#13;
habitats in Earth-orbit by the turn of the&#13;
21st century. This can be achieved using&#13;
currently existing technology and&#13;
hardware. Their findings about the&#13;
availability of raw materials in space are&#13;
no less spectacular: a thorough&#13;
examination of the problem suggests that&#13;
the Moon and the Asteroid Belt between&#13;
Mars and Jupiter can be mined for ores in&#13;
sufficient quantities as to eliminate the&#13;
need for costly shipments from Earth. The&#13;
habitat is 19 miles long and 4&#13;
miles in diameter. The materials used for&#13;
its construction would be mined and&#13;
rt;1anufactured in space using solar power.&#13;
The inter-ior could be landscaped to ·&#13;
resemble the Rocky Mountains, the plains&#13;
of South Dakota or the timber forests of&#13;
Oregon, depending on how the builders&#13;
plan it to be. A space colony of this size&#13;
could support a population of two hundred&#13;
thousand to several million depending on&#13;
the design. In this, the- largest of the four&#13;
colonies proposed by Dr. O'Neil, Earth-like&#13;
gravity would be produced by the&#13;
centrifugal force of rotation of the large&#13;
cylinder around its axis every 114 seconds.&#13;
Sunlight coming through the glass&#13;
"windows" would be controlled by mirrors&#13;
outside, so that the days, nights and&#13;
seasons wouf'd resu It. . -&#13;
•&#13;
news&#13;
Montoya&#13;
concert&#13;
sold out&#13;
Flamenco guitarist Carlos Montoya, who introduced the Gypsy&#13;
musical idiom to the concert stage and has made the distinctive&#13;
Flamenco style familiar throughout the world, will present the&#13;
opening program in the University of Wisconsin-Parkside's Accent on&#13;
Enrichment Series at 8 p.m. on Wednesday, Sept. 28, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
The series is sold out on a subscription basis. No individual tickets&#13;
are available.&#13;
A Spanish gypsy, born in Madrid, Montoya was a musical prodigy,&#13;
achieving national renown at 14. His debut as a concert artist dye first&#13;
to present 5010 performances of Flamenco guitar without the aid of a&#13;
dancer or singer, was preceded by years of accompaeving such&#13;
distinguished dancers as La Argentina, Vicente Escudero and&#13;
Argentinita.&#13;
Original compositions&#13;
All of the selections Montoya plays are his own compositions and&#13;
all derive from traditional Flamenco themes, usually consisting of one&#13;
short verse, which Montoya uses as a basis for improvisation to create&#13;
a wholly new, self- contained musical entity.&#13;
Since improvisation is the essence of Flamenco music, Montoya&#13;
cannot rely on printed music. Just as well in Montoya's case, since he&#13;
has built an international reputation as a concert and recording artist&#13;
v-Aithoutever learning to read music. Flamenco does, however, have&#13;
strict rules of rhythm and characteristic chord patterns which&#13;
underlie all of Montoya's compositions.&#13;
Consistently acclaimed by critics for his remarkable musicianship.&#13;
Montoya regards as the capstone of his career the performance of his&#13;
"Suite Flamenca" for guitar and orchestra with the St. Louis&#13;
Symphony Orchestra in 1966, the culmination of a 25-year effort to&#13;
transcribe the Flamenco idiom into music for solo guitar and&#13;
orchestra.&#13;
Four sided gypsy&#13;
Montoya is, as the Spaniard's say, "Gitana por los cuatro costados"&#13;
or "Gypsy on all four sides." He studied guitar first with his mother,&#13;
who played for her own enjoyment, and then with a Madrid barber,&#13;
who also taught guitar. After one year, the barber told Montoya he&#13;
had nothing left to teach him. When the famed dancer "La&#13;
Argentina" came to Madrid looking for a guitarist, she chose&#13;
Montoya and he left Spain for the first time to tour Europe with her&#13;
for three years.&#13;
In 1948, he began to give full solo concert recitals of Flamenco&#13;
music and has since toured throughout the world. He has also won&#13;
international fame through his recordings and is the most recorded&#13;
Flamenco artist in history.&#13;
A Week in the Sun!&#13;
CHRISTMAS BREAK&#13;
"Paradise In the Caribbean"&#13;
JAMAICA from $279.00&#13;
Jan. s to Jan. 10&#13;
"A Secret Paradise"&#13;
~1~alWdo(&#13;
Dec. 17to Dec. 24&#13;
Dec. 31 to Jan. 07&#13;
Jan. 07 to Jan. 14&#13;
$339.00&#13;
ALL DEPARTURES FROM CHICAGO&#13;
PRICES PER PERSON - DOUBLE OCCUPANCY&#13;
$100.00 DEPOSIT&#13;
SIGN UP EARLY - SPACE LIMITED!&#13;
GROUP TRAVEL ASSOCIATES, INC.&#13;
202 Division St., Elgin, iL 60120&#13;
Phone: (312) 697·8855&#13;
,Cheated' students sue universities&#13;
(CPS) - Two years ago, Jim Lowenthal was&#13;
working towards a doctoral degree at the graduate&#13;
school of management at Vanderbilt Uruversttv in&#13;
Nashville, Tenn Before long, he realized he was not&#13;
getting what he paid for. _&#13;
By 1974, when the program was not yet a year&#13;
old, problems had set in There was sharp&#13;
disagreement among faculty over the students in&#13;
the program, over the proper methods of research,&#13;
over what constituted legitimate and competent&#13;
doctoral work and over the basic direction of the&#13;
program. Faculty members began urulaterallv&#13;
resigning from qualifying committees of students&#13;
due to internal squabbles. The doctoral committee&#13;
voted not to accept any new students into the&#13;
doctoral program because it was under review.&#13;
Crash review&#13;
In March 1975, the faculty decided to conduct a&#13;
crash review of the entire program and the 12&#13;
students in it. As a result of the review, the faculty&#13;
voted on wheather to retain or expel each student&#13;
and one person got the ax after he had previously&#13;
been admitted.&#13;
After an unsuccessful trip through academic&#13;
channels to get the situation resolved, Lowenthal&#13;
and seven other students in the program took their&#13;
case to court. Last week, a chancery court in&#13;
Nashville ruled that Vanderbilt must pay damages&#13;
of more than $30,000 to the eight former students&#13;
for breach of contract.&#13;
Ilene Ianniello, a former student at the University&#13;
of Bridgeport in Corm., was not so lucky. Ianniello&#13;
charged that a required course she had taken was&#13;
worthless and contended that she was entitled to a&#13;
refund. Her suit complained that she had learned&#13;
nothing in the course, Materials and Methods in&#13;
Education, which whe had attended in the spring of&#13;
1974 and that the university owed her $155 in&#13;
registration fees, $15 for books, $120 for lost wages&#13;
and $180 in travel expenses. A common pleas court&#13;
in Bridgeport said no.&#13;
Education as a commodity&#13;
Many people now consider education a&#13;
commodity and if the buyer is not satisfied with the&#13;
product, he or she can return it to the store for a&#13;
complete fund. Since education is not yet a&#13;
returnable commodity, students and lawyers are&#13;
taking the only course they see open to them and&#13;
suing in order to retrieve damages suffered because&#13;
the product failed to deliver.&#13;
The Vanderbilt case took two years and more&#13;
than $5,000 of the students' funds&#13;
"At first they (Vanderbilt) stonewalled It It was&#13;
like Watergate:' said Lowenthal "Would I do It&#13;
again1 Sure The university is in a posruon to&#13;
resource you to death It takes a lot of time and&#13;
money'&#13;
The students at Vanderbilt had a difficult time&#13;
finding a lawyer to take on their case Four lawyers&#13;
turned them down Finally, Gary Blackburn, a&#13;
district attorney 10 Tenn, agreed to help Lowenthal&#13;
and the other students on the fundamental&#13;
pnncrple that "students in btgher education, as 10&#13;
all other contexts of the market place, should get&#13;
what they're paying for"&#13;
Blackburn could not find any cases where an&#13;
entire program was involved and used legal&#13;
precedents involving state universities which had&#13;
violated due process of law by terminating students&#13;
in programs.&#13;
According to Blackburn, the Ianniello case was&#13;
probably more difficult to win because it is&#13;
"economically unfeasible to sue over failure to&#13;
deliver one course." The judge in the case&#13;
commented that the agreement to provide an&#13;
education between a student and a school cannot&#13;
be viewed in the same light as other consumer&#13;
purchases.&#13;
. (he.tedl&#13;
There are several specific things a student can do&#13;
if he or she feels cheated by a course or program&#13;
The student must obtain a private attorney with&#13;
experience in contract law.&#13;
"Throwaway nothing," advises Blackburn. It IS&#13;
necessary to keep all correspondence, catalogues,&#13;
bulletins for the course, promotions, all class&#13;
materials including the syllabus and any letters&#13;
between students and the administration&#13;
It is helpful to write down everything the student&#13;
can remember about the situation, according to&#13;
Blackburn&#13;
The Vanderbilt case, while a victory for the&#13;
doctoral students, will not bind other courts unless&#13;
appealed and upheld venderbrlts lawyer, Wilham&#13;
Ozier, has appealed the decision&#13;
The Vanderbilt graduate school of management&#13;
is still functioning but there IS a new dean and the&#13;
doctoral program has been terminated&#13;
And Jim Lowenthal has SWitched to the sociology&#13;
department.&#13;
at the&#13;
BRAT STOP&#13;
located at 50 &amp; 1-94&#13;
THURSDAY &amp; FRIDAY FREE BEER&#13;
From 8:00 PM to 10:00 P.M&#13;
[With cover cherge)&#13;
Thurs.ar~&#13;
'100 off With valid college 10&#13;
Bar Dnnks and Beer only 50'&#13;
Call Drinks shghtly more&#13;
this week:&#13;
Thursday&#13;
Friday&#13;
Saturday&#13;
STORMCROW&#13;
TRUe&#13;
BAD BOY [Formerly Crossfire)&#13;
FRI.&#13;
HEART &amp; SOUL&#13;
SAT.&#13;
AMBERJACK&#13;
news&#13;
Montoya&#13;
concert&#13;
sold out&#13;
Flamenco guitarist Carlos Montoya, who introduced the Gypsy&#13;
musical idiom to the concert stage and has made the distinctive&#13;
flamenco style familiar throughout the world, will present the&#13;
opening program in the University of Wisconsin-Parkside's Accent on&#13;
Enrichment Series at 8 p.m. on Wednesday, Sept. 28, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
The series is sold out on a subscription basis. No individual tickets&#13;
are available.&#13;
A Spanish gypsy, born in Madrid, Montoya was a musical prodigy,&#13;
achieving national renown at 14. His debut as a concert artist, tire first&#13;
to present solo performances of Flamenco guitar without the ~id of a&#13;
dancer or singer, was preceded by years of accompanying such&#13;
distinguished dancers as La Argentina, Vicente Esc~dero and&#13;
Argentinita.&#13;
Original compositions&#13;
All of the selections Montoya play~ are his own compositions and&#13;
all derive from traditional Flamenco themes, usually consisting of one&#13;
short verse, which Montoya uses as a basis for improvisation to create&#13;
a wholly new, self- contained musical entity.&#13;
Since improvisation is the essence of Flamenco music, Montoya&#13;
cannot rely on printed music. Just as well in Montoya's case, since he&#13;
has built an international reputation as a concert and recording artist&#13;
without ever learning to read music. Flamenco does however have&#13;
strict rules of rhythm and characteristic chord 'patterns ~hich&#13;
underlie all of Montoya's compositions.&#13;
Consistently acclaimed by critics for.his remarkable musicianship,&#13;
Montoya regards as the capstone of his career the performance of his&#13;
" Suite Flamenca" for guitar and orchestra with the St. Louis&#13;
Symphony Orchestra in 1966, the culmination of a 25-year effort to&#13;
transcribe the Flamenco idiom into music for solo guitar and&#13;
orchestra .&#13;
Four sided gypsy&#13;
Montoya is, as the Spaniard's say, "Gitano por los cuatro costados"&#13;
or "Gypsy on all four sides." He studied guitar first with his mother,&#13;
who played for her own enjoyment, and then with a Madrid barber,&#13;
who also taught guitar. After one year, the barber told Montoya he&#13;
had nothing left to teach him. When the famed dancer "La&#13;
Argentina" came to Madrid looking for a guitarist, she chose&#13;
Montoya and he left Spain for the first time to tour Europe with her&#13;
for three years .&#13;
In 1948, he began to give full solo concert recitals of Flamenco&#13;
music and has since toured throughout the world . He has also won&#13;
international fame through his recordings and is the most recorded&#13;
Flamenco artist in history.&#13;
A Week in the Sun!&#13;
CHRISTMAS BREAK&#13;
"Paradise In the Caribbean"&#13;
· JAMAICA from $279.00&#13;
Jan. 3' to Jan. 1 0&#13;
"A Secret Paradise"&#13;
&lt;.EliaMdo( $339.00&#13;
Dec. 17 to Dec·. 24&#13;
Dec. 31 to Jan. 07&#13;
Jan. 07 to Jan. 14&#13;
ALL DEPARTURES FROM CHICAGO&#13;
PRICES PER PERSON - DOUBLE OCCUPANCY&#13;
$100.00 DEPOSIT&#13;
SIGN UP EARLY - SPACE LIMITED!&#13;
GROUP TRAVEL ASSOCIATES, INC.&#13;
202 Division St., Elgin, IL 60120&#13;
Phone: (312) 697-·8855&#13;
'Cheated' students sue universities&#13;
(CPS) - Two years ago, Jim Lowenthal was&#13;
working towards a doctoral degree at the graduate&#13;
school of management at Vanderbilt University in&#13;
Nashville, Tenn . Before long, he realized he was not&#13;
getting what he paid for . _&#13;
By 1974, when the program was not yet a year&#13;
old, problems had set in . There was sharp&#13;
disagreement among faculty over the students in&#13;
the program, over the pr'°~per methods of research ,&#13;
over what constituted legitimate and competent&#13;
doctoral work and over the basic direction of the&#13;
program . Faculty members began unilaterally&#13;
resigning from qualifying committees of students&#13;
due to internal squabbles. The doctoral committee&#13;
voted not to accept any new students into the&#13;
doctoral program because it was under review.&#13;
Crash review&#13;
In March 1975, the faculty decided to conduct a&#13;
crash review of the entire program and the 12&#13;
students in it. As a result of the review, the faculty&#13;
voted on wheather to retain or expel each student&#13;
and one person got the ax after he had previously&#13;
been admitted .&#13;
After an unsuccessful trip through academic&#13;
channels to get the situation resolved , Lowenthal&#13;
and seven other students in the program took their&#13;
case to court. Last week, a chancery court in&#13;
Nashville ruled that Vanderbilt must pay damages&#13;
of more than $30,000 to the eight former students&#13;
for breach of contract.&#13;
Ilene Ianniello, a former student at the University&#13;
of Bridgeport in Conn ., was not so lucky . Ianniello&#13;
charged that a required course she had taken was&#13;
worthless and contended that she was entitled to a&#13;
refund . Her suit complained that she had learned&#13;
nothing in the course, Materials and Methods in&#13;
Education, which whe had attended in the spring of&#13;
1974 and that the university owed her $155 in&#13;
registration fees, $15 for books, $120 for lost wages&#13;
and $180 in travel expenses . A common pleas court&#13;
in Bridgeport said no.&#13;
Education as a commodity&#13;
Many peo__Qle now consider educat ion a&#13;
commodity and if the buyer is not satisfied with the&#13;
product, he or she can return it to the store for a&#13;
complete fund . Since education is not yet a&#13;
returnable commodity, students and lawyers are&#13;
taking the only course they see open to them and&#13;
suing in order to retrieve damages suffered because&#13;
the product failed to deliver.&#13;
The Vanderbilt case took two years and mor&#13;
than $5,000 of the students' funds&#13;
"At first they (Vanderbilt) stonewalled It, It was&#13;
like Watergate," said Lowenthal. " Would I do It&#13;
again? Sure The university is in a posItIon to&#13;
resource you to death It takes a lot of time and&#13;
money "&#13;
The students at Vanderbilt had a difficult time&#13;
find ing a lawyer to take on their case r our lawyers&#13;
ti}med them down Finally, Gary Blackburn , a&#13;
district attorney in Tenn ., agreed to help Low nthal&#13;
and the other students on the fundamental&#13;
principle that " students in b1gher education, as in&#13;
all other contexts of the market place, should get&#13;
what they're paying for."&#13;
Blackburn could not find any cases where an&#13;
entire program was involved and used legal&#13;
precedents involving state universities which had&#13;
violated due process of law by terminating students&#13;
in programs .&#13;
According to Blackburn, the Ianniello case was&#13;
probably more difficult to win because it is&#13;
" economically unfeasible to sue over failure to&#13;
deliver one course ." The judge in the case&#13;
commented that the agreement to provide an&#13;
education between a student and a school cannot&#13;
be viewed in the same light as other consumer&#13;
purchases .&#13;
· Cheated?&#13;
There are several specific things a student can do&#13;
if he or she feels cheated by a course or program .&#13;
The student must obtain a private attorney with&#13;
experience in contract law.&#13;
"Throw away nothing,'' advises Blackburn . It Is&#13;
necessary to keep all correspondence, catalogues,&#13;
bulletins for the course, promotions, all class&#13;
materials including the syllabus and any letters&#13;
between students and the administration&#13;
It is helpful to write down everything the student&#13;
can remember about the situation, according to&#13;
Blackburn&#13;
The Vanderbilt case, while a victory for the&#13;
doctoral students , will not bind other courts unle s&#13;
appealed and upheld . Vanderbilt's lawyer, W11l1am&#13;
Ozier, has appealed the decision&#13;
The Vanderbilt graduate school of management&#13;
is still functioning but there I a new dean and th&#13;
doctoral program has been terminated&#13;
And Jim Lowenthal has switch d to the soc,olo&#13;
department .&#13;
at the&#13;
BRAT STOP&#13;
this week:&#13;
THURS.&#13;
located at 50 &amp; 1-94&#13;
THURSDAY &amp; FRIDAY FREE BEER&#13;
From s·oo P.M. to 10:0 0 P.M.&#13;
[ with cover charge)&#13;
1&#13;
1.00 off with valid college 10&#13;
Bar Drinks and Beer only 50'&#13;
Call Drinks slightly m ore&#13;
this week:&#13;
Thursday&#13;
Friday&#13;
Saturday&#13;
STORMCROW&#13;
TRUC&#13;
BAD BOY&#13;
FRI.&#13;
( Formerly Crossfire)&#13;
SAT.&#13;
SMOKEHOUSE HEART &amp; SOUL AMBERJACK &#13;
Watergate reporter speaks from page 1.&#13;
The Watergate Story the fact that journalists must proble~ that Ca~l B~rnstem a~d I&#13;
Wednesdaf, September 28 Woodward began his speech make people trust in them by have In publi shi ng storres;&#13;
Facult~ and Staff Meeting tnformation session on by disagreeing with Senator learning what's happening and readers expect that the story is&#13;
collective bargaining and discussion of pen.ding Church's (chairman of the senate the reason why. going to be like Watergate. There&#13;
CL committee that investigated the The Bert Lance Affa~ will. never be another Watergate.&#13;
state legislation regarding same. 1:00 p.m. In CIA) statement "the truth always "Too many people were That is something we must&#13;
0-107. comes out' .. 'Woodard challeng- foaming at the mouth looking tor realize. In prlntrn~ the Watergate&#13;
Guitarist Carlos Montoya, Flamenco guitarist. ed Senator Church's opinion. another Watergate Story in the articles we received a lot of&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Serres, p.m. . 8 "I do not have confidence that Lanceaffair", Woodward said. He support from the Washington d&#13;
we learn the truth. During the believed that half to two-thirds Post. It was not extraor inarv, it&#13;
Friday, September 30 Watergate story it was apparent of the stories printed on the was basic reporting. Llike doing&#13;
Film Uptown Saturday Nlg t : p.m. a n . h 8 00 t U ion to me that disclosure hangs on a Lance affair were overplayed, that work and I am going to&#13;
very fragile thread. The method The fantastic power in the post- continue being a reporter."&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00. of getting the truth out is not Watergate morality has capsized&#13;
Saturday, October 1 institutionalized. There is no Americans. The press is powerful&#13;
Cross-Country Parks ide at Nort ern Inois h III·· department of truth in the enough that "reputations can fly&#13;
government, in the. newspaper, out of the "window with one&#13;
Invitational in DeKalb, Illinois 1:00 p.m. nor a television station." morning's story."&#13;
Golf UW-Parkside Invitational (men's) at Brighton Woodward continued, "Certainly Questions and Answers&#13;
Dale Country Club in Brighton Township (Kenosha if you look at the last ten or During the second half of&#13;
:---fifteen years of American Woodward's talk, the audience.&#13;
County), 9:30 a.m. History, it seems that govern- asked questions. One student&#13;
Tennis Women at UW-Whitewater Invitational, 9 ment, at least on the national asked Woodward if he was a&#13;
level, often proceeds by Democrat or Republican.&#13;
Volleyball Women at U - a.m. W M'I k .th concealments rather than dis- ~'Iam a registered independent I wau ee WI&#13;
closures. The awful fact is voter. I did vote for Nixon in&#13;
Marquette, 1 p.m. reporters don't often find out 1968 because I was in the Navy&#13;
Thursday, September 29 what really happens and if.we do while the Vietnam War was&#13;
b D· I find out what really happens going on and I was convinced.he Health-line Athlete's Foot. Through Octo er 6. la we're not very good at finding had the best chance of ending&#13;
553-2588 and ask to hear the Health-Line High- out exactly why it happens:'- the war or.more so than Senator&#13;
light. Woodward emphasized that, Humphrey. I did not vote in&#13;
"in reporting the Watergate Story 1972," said Woodward.&#13;
acted as police reporters, city A reporter from the Milwaukee&#13;
reporters - we were very much Sentinel put Woodward in the&#13;
outsiders. If you look back on same category as Iohn Erlichman&#13;
the chronology of the Watergate in taking $3,000 for appearing at&#13;
Story as it unfolded, a lot of it the conference. Woodward&#13;
was very obvious and simple. justified his presence.&#13;
The reporting took a lot of time "I think there is a valid&#13;
and there was a lot of distinction to be made. I am not&#13;
frustration." benefiting financially from&#13;
In undercovering the Water- criminal acts I committed. I&#13;
gate Scandal, Woodward and think of rnvself as a reporter. I&#13;
Bernstein could tel] something feel an obligation, frankly, to&#13;
unlawful was going on by the come out every now and then to&#13;
"uncertainty, fear, and the answer questions, and I feel I&#13;
Waukesha;. concern" they saw in people's should subject myself to&#13;
faces. But yet, how could they questioning."&#13;
expresspeople's fears in writing. In his closing comments,&#13;
Woodward replied by stressing Woodward concluded, "One&#13;
events&#13;
Sunday, October 2&#13;
Film Uptown Saturday Night, 8:00 p.m. at Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
_Monday, October 3&#13;
Auditions Tryouts for Midnight Musical Madness II&#13;
Gong Show. All faculty and students' invited,&#13;
individuals and groups. 6:30-8:30 p.m. Contact&#13;
Eden Vaning at 553-2457 for more information.&#13;
Tuesday, October 4&#13;
Volleyball Women at North Park with Mundelein,&#13;
Chicago; 6:15 p.m.&#13;
Swimming Women at Carroll College,&#13;
6 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, October 5&#13;
Film Wisconsin Artists Film Festival presents "The&#13;
Front Page". 7 p.m. No admission charge.&#13;
Rondelle Reservations, 554-2154.&#13;
Film Sahara 2:30 and'7:30 p.m. in Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Coffeehouse Claudia Schmidt of the Green Bay area&#13;
plays in Union 104-106. 2-4 p.m. No admission.&#13;
Wine will be served.&#13;
Thursday, October 6&#13;
Golf: Men's NAIA District 14 Tournament, at Spring&#13;
Green, through October 8.&#13;
Volleyball Women's at Lake Forest College, with&#13;
University of Chicago, 6 p.m.&#13;
Health-Line An unwanted Pregnancy? How to deal&#13;
with the problem. Through October 13. Dial 553-&#13;
2588 and ask to hear the Health-Line Highlight.&#13;
Film Caine Mutiny, 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Friday, October 7&#13;
Soccer Men at UW Chancellors' Cup Tournament:&#13;
Parkside vs. UW-Milwaukee at 1 p.m. on Friday,&#13;
finals begin at 1 p.m. Saturday.&#13;
Wisconsin State Assembly votes on decriminalization&#13;
of marijuana at the Capitol in Madison.&#13;
Cross Country Men at Notre Dame invitational 3 p.m.&#13;
Film African Queen 8 p.m. in Union Cinema. $1.00&#13;
admission.&#13;
Lecture Dr. Severo Ochoa, Nobel Laureate, will&#13;
speak about Protein Biosynthesis. GR 103 at 2 p.m.&#13;
Free.&#13;
-Saturday, October 8&#13;
Cross Country Men at Lakefront Invitational,&#13;
Chicago, 10:30 a.m.&#13;
Tennis Women at UW-Milwaukee with UW-Green&#13;
Bay, 10 a.m.&#13;
Swimming Women a' JW-Green Bay with Lawrence,&#13;
1p.m.&#13;
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funny when&#13;
you mess&#13;
with their&#13;
UNION CINEMA $1.00&#13;
Fri. Sept. 30 - 8:00 pm&#13;
Sun. Oct. 2 - 7:30 pm&#13;
money.&#13;
: ° 0 0 ° ijliiowo&#13;
• ° 0 0 ° :&#13;
: eA.IJR~AW ....."111.:&#13;
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 4P •&#13;
events Watergate reporter speaks from page 1&#13;
Wednesday-, September 28 Woodward&#13;
The Watergate Story the fact that journalists must problem that Ca~I Bernstein and I&#13;
Facult; and Staff Meeting&#13;
began his speech make people trust in them by have in publishing stories;&#13;
t.nformation session _on by disagreeing with Senator learning what's happening and readers exp~ct th!lt the story is&#13;
Collective bargaining and discussion of pen_ ding CL Church's&#13;
committee (chairman of the senate the reason why. going to be hke Watergate. There&#13;
state that investigated the The Bert Lance Affair ~ill never be another Watergate.&#13;
0-107.&#13;
legislation regarding same. 1 :00 p.m. in CIA) statement "the truth always "Too many people - were That is something we must&#13;
Guitarist Carlos Montoya, Flamenco&#13;
comes out' .. Woodard challeng- foaming at the mouth looking f9r realize . In printing the Watergate&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series, 8 p&#13;
guitarist. ed Senator Church's opinion. another Watergate Story in the articles we received a lot of&#13;
.m.&#13;
we&#13;
" I do not have confidence that Lance affair", Woodward said. He support from the Washington&#13;
Friday, September 30 Watergate&#13;
learn the truth . During the believed that half to two-thirds Post. It was not extraordinary, it&#13;
Film Uptown Saturday Night&#13;
story it was appaJent of the stories printed on the was basic reporting. Llike doing&#13;
8:00 p.m. at Union&#13;
very&#13;
to me that disclosure hangs on a Lance affair were overplayed. that work and I am going to&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00. fragile thread . The method The fantastic power in the post- continue being a reporter."&#13;
of getting the truth out is not Watergate morality has capsized&#13;
Saturday, October 1 institutionalized. There is no Americans. The press is powerful&#13;
Cross-Country Parkside at Northern 111 inois department of truth in the enough that "reputations can fly&#13;
Invitational&#13;
government, in the. newspaper, out of the -window with one&#13;
Golf UW-Parkside&#13;
in DeKalb, Illinois 1:00 p.m . . nor a television station." morning's story ."&#13;
D&#13;
Invitational (men's) at Brighton Woodward continued, "Certainly Questions and Answers&#13;
a&#13;
le Country Club in Brighton Township (Kenosha if you look at the last ten or During the second ha~f of&#13;
County), ~:30 a.m. - fifteen years of American Woodward's talk, the audience ·&#13;
.&#13;
Tennis Women at UW-Wh1tewater&#13;
' History, it seems that govern- asked questions. One student&#13;
Invitational, 9 ment, at least on the national asked Woodward if he was a&#13;
level, often proceeds by D~mocrat or Republican . a.m. ,&#13;
I b Vol ey a&#13;
II W&#13;
omen&#13;
at UW-Milwaukee with concealments rather than . dis- " lamaregisteredindependent&#13;
Marquette, 1 p.m.&#13;
closures. The awful fact is voter. I did vote for Nixon in&#13;
reporters don't often find out 1968 because I was in the Navy&#13;
Thursday, September 29 what really happens and if_ we do while the Vietnam War was&#13;
Health-L·ane Athlete's Foot. Throblgh October 6 . Dial&#13;
we&#13;
find out w~at really happens going on and I was convinced he&#13;
553-2588 and ask&#13;
're not very good at finding had -the best chance of ending&#13;
to hear the Health-Line High- out exactly why it happens.~'· the war, or more so than Senator&#13;
light. Woodward emphasized that, Humphrey. I did not vote in&#13;
" in reporting the Watergate Story 1972," said Woodward.&#13;
acted as police reporters, city A reporter from the Milwaukee&#13;
Sunday, October 2&#13;
Film Uptown Saturday Night, 8:00&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
p.m. at Union reporters - we were very much Sentinel put Woodward in the&#13;
outsiders . If you look back on sa~e category as John Erlichman&#13;
_ Monday, October 3&#13;
Auditions Tryouts for Midnight Musical Madness 11&#13;
Gong Show. All faculty and students invited,&#13;
individuals and groups. 6:30-8:30 p.m. Contact&#13;
Eden Vaning at 553-2457 for more information.&#13;
Tuesday, October 4&#13;
Volleyball Women at North Park with Mundelein,&#13;
Chicago; 6:15 p.m.&#13;
Swimming Women at Carroll College, Waukesha; .&#13;
6 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, October 5&#13;
Film Wisconsin Artists Film Festival presents "The&#13;
Front Page". 7 p.m. No admission charge.&#13;
Rondelle Reservations, 554-2154.&#13;
Film Sahara 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Coffeehouse Claudia Schmidt of the Green Bay area&#13;
plays in Union 104-106. 2-4 p.m. No admission.&#13;
Wine will be served.&#13;
Thursday, October 6&#13;
the chronology of the Watergate in taking $3,000 for appearing at&#13;
Story as it unfolded, a lot of it the conference . Woodward&#13;
was very obvious and simple. justified his presence.&#13;
The reporting took a lot of time " I thirik there is a valid&#13;
and there was a lot of&#13;
frustration."&#13;
In undercovering the Watergate&#13;
Scandal, Woodward and&#13;
Bernstein could telL something&#13;
unlawful was going on by the&#13;
"uncertainty, fear, and the&#13;
concern" they saw in people's&#13;
faces . But yet, how could they&#13;
express people's fears in writing.&#13;
Woodward replied by stressing&#13;
distinction to be made. I am not&#13;
benefiting financially from&#13;
criminal acts I committed. I&#13;
think of myself as a reporter. I&#13;
feel an obligation, frankly , to&#13;
come out every now and then to&#13;
answer questions, and I feel I&#13;
should subject myself to&#13;
questioning."&#13;
In his closing c·omments,&#13;
Woodward concludeq , " One&#13;
PAB Presents good old times w.ith&#13;
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AUDIO OUTLET&#13;
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Washington Township. Nlw Jlrwy 07675&#13;
Ananlion: Alie .. Muzyu (2011666-8868&#13;
Golf: Men's NAIA&#13;
I&#13;
District 14 Tournament, at Spring&#13;
Green, through October 8.&#13;
Volleyball Women's at Lake Forest College, with&#13;
University of Chicago, 6 p.m.&#13;
$1.00 UW Students&#13;
$1.50 Others&#13;
-Big Al &amp;-The HiFi's . DANCE&#13;
CONTEST Health-Line An unwanted Pregnancy? How to deal&#13;
with the problem. Through October 13. Dial 553-&#13;
2588 and ask to hear the Health-Line Highlight.&#13;
Film Caine Mutiny, 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Friday, October 7&#13;
Soccer Men at UW Chancellors' Cup Tournament:&#13;
Parkside vs. UW-Milwaukee at 1 p.m . on Friday,&#13;
finals begin at 1 p.m. Saturday.&#13;
Wisconsin State Assembly votes on decriminalization&#13;
of marijuana at the Capitol in Madison.&#13;
Cross Country Men at Notre Dame invitational 3 p .m.&#13;
Film African Queen 8 p.m. in Union Cinema. $1.00&#13;
admission.&#13;
Lecture Dr. Severo Ochoa, Nobel Laureate, will&#13;
speak about Protein Biosynthesis. GR 103 at 2 p.m.&#13;
Free.&#13;
-Saturday, October 8&#13;
Cross Country Men at Lakefront Invitational,&#13;
Chicago, 10:30 a.m.&#13;
Tennis Women at UW-Milwaukee with UW-Green&#13;
Bay, 10 a.m.&#13;
Swimming Women a' JW-Green Bay with Lawrence ._ I 1 p.m .&#13;
SAT. OCT. 1 9:00 UNION SQ.&#13;
UWP &amp; STATE ID's REQ. 5O's COSTUME GETS YOU A FREE BEER!&#13;
PAB FALL FILM SERIES&#13;
Fri. Sept. 30 - 8:00 pm&#13;
Sun. Oct. 2 - 7:30 pm&#13;
61~NEW 1&gt;91.IER&#13;
1&gt;11.1. S861)W&#13;
And •ARRW lf)El,A1Ji8N'IE&#13;
As "Geech,e Dan&#13;
UNION CINEMA $1.00&#13;
They get&#13;
funny when&#13;
you mess&#13;
with their&#13;
money.&#13;
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              <text>aD&#13;
Petrie runs&#13;
Wednesday, 5eplember21, 18n&#13;
Vol. 6, No.4&#13;
er ()() Education is what you have left oo&#13;
over after you have forgotten V V&#13;
everything you have learned.&#13;
ANON.&#13;
for. Congress&#13;
William W. Petrie, Assistant Professor of Labor Economics has&#13;
announced his candidacy for the seat of Congressman for&#13;
Wisconsin's First Congressional District. Petrie is a member of the&#13;
Republican Party Les Aspin now holds the seat, but many speculate&#13;
Aspin will run for the governorship.&#13;
Petrie graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1957&#13;
with a Bachelor of Business Administration with an emphasis in labor&#13;
relations. In 1959 he received his Juris Doctorate from Madison.&#13;
Before starting school, Petrie was a journeyman pipefitter and served&#13;
in the Naval Reserve aboard a destroyer escort.&#13;
Labor Arbitrator&#13;
After 1959, he was a management consultant with McKinsey and&#13;
Company in Los Angeles, a lahar Relations Assistant for North&#13;
American Aviation, a Personnel and lahar Relations Manager for the&#13;
Aeronutronic Division of the Philco-Ford Corporation, a labor&#13;
Relations Manager for the American Cement Corporation, and&#13;
maintained a private law practice. Since 1971 he has acted as an&#13;
arbitrator in labor disputes for California, Nevada, Illinois,&#13;
Minnesota, Iowa, and Wisconsin. He is a member of the bar&#13;
associations in Wisconsin and California. Petrie has taught at&#13;
Parkside since 1974.&#13;
With Aspin serving four terms as Congressman, Petrie feels that&#13;
there should be a limit on terms served in the house.&#13;
"One of the weaknesses in the House.of Representatives is that we&#13;
have so many long service representatives. The lower house was&#13;
designed, in the system of checks and balances, to be closer to the&#13;
voters and to react to changes in sentiment in the short swing. That is&#13;
the reason we have two year elections in the House, but the&#13;
advantages of incumbency are such that there is a tendency for&#13;
people to remain in the House for extended periods of time.&#13;
"I would like to seea change where two or three terms in the House&#13;
would be the maximum and I will be setting this as a personal limit&#13;
for myself. After .three terms I would have someone else run for the&#13;
opening,"&#13;
Unemployment: major issue&#13;
Petrie feels unemployment is still one of the major issues in the&#13;
First Congressional District.&#13;
"The present administration in Washington seems preoccupied&#13;
with the necessity of creating public sector make-work jobs. With&#13;
Humphrev-Hawkins there will be four million new [cbs at the cost of&#13;
Institute promotes economic&#13;
outreach to communities&#13;
on the Kenosha-Racine area's economy. The research project study&#13;
allowed students to participate in the communities' economic&#13;
situation. Finally, the third goal was to educate businessmen,&#13;
students, and teachers, by offering workshops, credit courses,&#13;
lectures, and seminars in economics.&#13;
Along with Professor Keehn, Assistant Professor of Education&#13;
Dwayne Olsen offered a summer course entitled, 'Workshop in&#13;
Economic Education for Junior and Senior High School Teachers of&#13;
Social Studies." In this course, primary and secondary teachers&#13;
reviewed their economic skills. Principles, concepts and other&#13;
meaningful learning methods were taught.&#13;
Worbhops pl~nned&#13;
In the fall of 1977, the Institute will present two non-credit&#13;
workshops for area teachers. One course will stress greater&#13;
perception in the teaching of economics. The second will supply&#13;
material and concepts for teaching insurance to high school students.&#13;
Keehn acknowledged by saying, "The Institute program is an&#13;
excellent way to gain experience in the economic field ",nd applying&#13;
the knowledge to actual business problem solving situations,"&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Editor&#13;
by Di~ne J~len.ky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Richard H, Keehn, Associate Professor of Economics and&#13;
Coordinator qf UW~P'sEconomic Education and Research Institu~e,&#13;
was awarded the Distinguished Service Award for commumty&#13;
. ,&#13;
outreach at the Fall Semester Convocation.&#13;
The Institute established January 1977, was primarily aimed to&#13;
increase communication and interchange between Parkside'scampus&#13;
and the Kenosha~Racine business communities. In addi.tion, the&#13;
Institute establishment made varied resources of Parkside more&#13;
available to the community. .&#13;
According to Professor Keehn, the Institute's program enlightens&#13;
"principles, problems and ideas in the incr.eas!ng ,~f community&#13;
understanding and knowledge of the economic field. ~&#13;
Institute has three goals&#13;
In developing the economic prog.ram, Prof~ss~r Keehn&#13;
accomplished three major activities. The first pra.grams aim was to&#13;
\ "increase the level of economic literacy of residents of the area&#13;
d b h . s·,ty"The second goal was to research and report serve y t e umver '&#13;
$10,000each. This would create something in the magnitude of 40&#13;
billion dollars in additional federal expenditures. With the present&#13;
rate of inflation, Idon't think we can afford that. More Importantly,&#13;
make-work government jobs have just not worked in terms of solving&#13;
our unemployment problems."&#13;
Encourage Private Sector&#13;
Professor Petrie believes a tax incentive plan for small businesses&#13;
would better serve both long and short term unemployment&#13;
"What I would like to see, for example, is if you have large&#13;
unemployment in urban areaswith respect to teenagersand first time&#13;
job seekers, you can target and identify that group, and talk to the&#13;
small businesses in that area and say, 'if you hire a member of that&#13;
target group, you will get a tax credit of a dollar an hour for a year'&#13;
That would be about $2,000 a year which is one fifth of what a&#13;
make-work job would cost taxpayers. If we are finding jobs for people&#13;
that are unable to find jobs because of a lack of basic skills, they are&#13;
going to be able to compete much better in the job market with a&#13;
year working in the private sector than if they have a year of work in a&#13;
make-work job."&#13;
Energy is a major problem&#13;
Another major issue in this election is energy, according to Peine.&#13;
The industry in southeastern Wisconsin depends heavily on natural&#13;
gas and oil. These fossil fuels are the subject of much debate and&#13;
discussion with regard to future use and consumption&#13;
"We have two areas of energy concern in the country right now&#13;
One is short term energy needs.What are we going to do for the next&#13;
ten or twenty years?Second, we have a long term energy problem&#13;
What are we going to do from the turn of the century on? Idon't see&#13;
any realistic short term alternative to fossil fuels. I strongly disagree&#13;
with the current administration's policy with respect to the price&#13;
controlling of fossil fuels, because it has no effect on creating more&#13;
exploration and increasing short term supply. In the long term, Isee&#13;
all the presently exotic energy sources, nuclear fusion, Wind power,&#13;
geothermal, tidal power, and of course solar energy, have great value&#13;
in the future. But what do we do for the next ten or twenty years? If&#13;
we don't do something to Increase the supply of fossil fuels in the&#13;
short term, we are going to come up with a major shortfall In meeting&#13;
the energy needsof not only southeastern Wisconsin, but the entire&#13;
country."&#13;
Anyone interested in helping the campaign should write the Petrie&#13;
for CongressCommittee, Route #1, Box 809, Waterford, Wisconsin&#13;
53185 or call (414) 534-6579.&#13;
er&#13;
Petrie runs&#13;
Wednesday, September 21 , 1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No. 4&#13;
()() Education ls what you have left 5)()&#13;
over after you have forgotten II&#13;
everything you have learned .&#13;
ANON.&#13;
for . Congress&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Editor&#13;
Will iam W . Petrie, Ass istant Professor of Labor Economics has&#13;
announced his candidacy for the seat of Congressman for&#13;
Wisconsin's First Congressional District. Petrie is a member of the&#13;
Republican Party Les Aspin now holds the seat, but many speculate&#13;
Aspin will run for the governorship.&#13;
Petrie graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1957&#13;
with a Bachelor of Business Administration with an emphasis in labor&#13;
relations . In 1959 he received his Juris Doctorate from Madison .&#13;
Before starting school, Petrie was a journeyman pipefitter and served&#13;
in the Naval Reserve aboard a destroyer escort.&#13;
labor Arbitrator&#13;
After 1959, he was a management consultant with McKinsey and&#13;
Company in Los Angeles, a Labor Relations Assistant for orth&#13;
American Aviation , a Personnel and Labor Relations Manager for the&#13;
Aeronutronic Division of the Philco-Ford Corporation, a Labor&#13;
Relations Manager for the American Cement Corporation, and&#13;
maintained a private law practice. Since 1971 he has acted as an&#13;
arbitrator in labor disputes for California, Nevada, Illinois,&#13;
M innesota, Iowa, and Wisconsin . He is a member of the bar&#13;
associations in Wisconsin and California. Petrie has taught at&#13;
Parkside since 1974.&#13;
With Aspin serving four terms as Congressman, Petrie feels that&#13;
there should be a limit on terms served in the house.&#13;
"One of the weaknesses in the House of Representatives is that we&#13;
have so many long service representatives . The lower house was&#13;
designed, in the system of checks and balances, to be closer to the&#13;
voters and to react to chan-ges in sentiment in the short swing. That is&#13;
the reason we have two year elections in the House, but the&#13;
. advantages of incumbency are such that there is a tendency for&#13;
people to remain in the House for extended periods of time.&#13;
"I would like to see a change where two or three terms in the House&#13;
would be the maximum and I will be setting this as a personal limit&#13;
for myself. After three terms I would have someone else run for the&#13;
opening."&#13;
Unemployment: major issue&#13;
Petrie feels unemployment is still one of the major issues in the&#13;
First Congressional District.&#13;
"The present administration in Washington seems preoccupied&#13;
with t he necessity of creating public sector make-work jobs. With&#13;
Humphrey-Hawkins there will be four mill ion new jobs at the cost of&#13;
$10,000 each. This would create something in the magnitude of 40&#13;
billion dollars in additional federal expenditures With th pre ent&#13;
rate of inflation, I don't think we can afford that. More importantly,&#13;
make-work government Jobs have Just not worked in term of sol Ing&#13;
our unemployment problems "&#13;
Encourage Private Sector&#13;
Professor Petrie believes a tax rncent1ve plan for small busrnesses&#13;
would better serve both long and short term unemployment.&#13;
"What I would like to see, for example, is if you have lar&#13;
unemployment in urban areas with respect to teenagers and first time&#13;
job seekers, you can target and identify that group, and talk to the&#13;
small businesses in that area and say, 'if you hire a memb r of that&#13;
target group, you will get a tax credit of a dollar an hour for a year.'&#13;
That would be about $2,000 a year which is one fifth of what a&#13;
make-work job would cost taxpayers If we are finding Jobs for people&#13;
that are unable to find jobs because of a lack of basic ski lls, they are&#13;
going to be able to compete much better in the job market with a&#13;
year working in the private sector than if they have a year of work in a&#13;
make-work job."&#13;
Energy is a major problem&#13;
Another major issue m this elecf n i n r , cordi o P.e n&#13;
The industry in southeastern Wisconsin depends heavily on natur&#13;
gas and oil. These fossil fuels are the subJect of much debate and&#13;
discussion with regard to future use and consumption .&#13;
"We have two areas of energy concern in the country right now.&#13;
One is short term energy needs What are we gorng to do for the ne t&#13;
ten or twenty years7 Second, we have a long term energ probl m .&#13;
What are we going to do from the turn of the century on? I don't ee&#13;
any realistic short term alternat" e to fossil fuels . I strong! d1 agree&#13;
with the current admrn1stration's policy with respect to the pric&#13;
controlling of fossil fuels, because 1t has no effect on creating more&#13;
exploration and increasing short term supply. In the long term , I&#13;
all the presently exotic energy sources, nuclear tu ion, ind pow r,&#13;
geothermal, tidal power, and of course solar energy, have great alu&#13;
in the future . But what do we do for the next t n or twenty y ar ? If&#13;
we don't do something to increase the supply of fo 11 fu Is in th&#13;
short term, we are going to come up with a ma1or shortfall rn m tin&#13;
the energy needs of not only southeastern Wisconsin, but the ent1r&#13;
country "&#13;
Anyone rnterested in helping tt-ie campaign should writ th&#13;
for Congress Committee, Route #1, Box 809, Waterford, Wi&#13;
53185 or call (414) 534-6579&#13;
Institute promotes economic&#13;
outreach to communities&#13;
by Diane Jalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Richard H. Keehn , Associate Professor of Economics . and&#13;
Coordinator of UW-P's Economic Education and Research Institute,&#13;
was awardel the Distinguished Service Award for community&#13;
outreach at the Fall Semester Convocati~n .&#13;
The Institute established January 1977, was primarilyaimed to&#13;
increase comm~nication and interchange between Parkside~s-campus&#13;
and the Kenosha-Racine business communities . In add1_t1on, the&#13;
Institute establishment made varied resources of Parkside more&#13;
available to the community . . According to Professor Keehn, the lnsti_tute's ~rogram enltghte_ns&#13;
" principles problems and ideas in the rncreasmg of community&#13;
understanding and knowledge of the economic field ."&#13;
Institute has three goals&#13;
In developing the econom ic prog_ram , Prof~ss~r Keehn&#13;
accomplished three major activities . The first pro_gram s aim was to&#13;
' "increase the level of economic literacy of residents of the area&#13;
served by the university." The second goal was to research and report&#13;
on the Kenosha-Racine area's economy. The research project study&#13;
allowed students to partIc1pate in the communitie ' aconomic&#13;
situation . Finally, the third goal was to educate businessm n,&#13;
students, and teachers, by offering workshops, credit cour es,&#13;
lectures, and seminars in economics .&#13;
Along with Professor Keehn, Assistant Professor of Education&#13;
Dwayne Olsen offered a summer course entitled, 'Workshop ,n&#13;
Economic Education for Junior and Senior High School Teachers of&#13;
Social Studies." In this course, primary and secondary teachers&#13;
reviewed their economic skills Principles, concepts and other&#13;
meaningful learning methods were taught&#13;
Workshops planned&#13;
In the fall of 1977, the Institute will present two non-credit&#13;
workshops for area teachers . One course will stress greater&#13;
perception in the teaching of economics . The second will supply&#13;
material and concepts for teaching insurance to high school students&#13;
Keehn acknowledged by saying, " The Institute program is an&#13;
excellent way to gain experience in the economic field ~nd applying&#13;
the knowledge to actual business problem solving situations." &#13;
editorial&#13;
Freshmen:&#13;
now that you're here •••&#13;
What do you think a university education is?&#13;
More important, what does it mean in your life?&#13;
To, many freshmen, it means transferringto&#13;
Madison or Milwaukeeafter a year or two. Why?&#13;
Social Studies! There are more' people at&#13;
"other" schools. Also, everyoneeveryplaceelse is&#13;
more friendly. There are dormitories, apartments&#13;
near campus, and "other'( places to live ('other'&#13;
than home).&#13;
"Everybody is always stoned and guys aren't&#13;
afraid to talk to ya, ya know?" said a young&#13;
visiting coed from Madison.&#13;
Last Friday, after Classeswere through, there&#13;
were less than twenty people "celebrating" in&#13;
Union Square. Most people did the same thing&#13;
they do every day at Parkside;'they get in their&#13;
cars and drive off. On their way to their cars they&#13;
look straight aheadalmost hoping nobody smiles&#13;
or talks to them on their way out. Is this you?&#13;
What's wrong?&#13;
Hopefully, more goes on here than students&#13;
just sitting in white fluorescent boxes getting&#13;
"the word", and booking a ride home.&#13;
Student activities, clubs, organizations, are&#13;
just crying for more people. The women sports&#13;
program here, for example, just hired more&#13;
women coaches in an effort to get ~hewomen's&#13;
program off the ground. They could use eight&#13;
times the number of participants they currently&#13;
have (seeevents notes).&#13;
If it is more social life you are after and&#13;
unhappy because you are not getting it, maybe&#13;
you have been watching too much television.&#13;
Social life is people having a good time with&#13;
each other. If you can't experiencethat, it's your&#13;
own fault. Doyou think there is something wrong&#13;
with 'Parkside? Should there be more of&#13;
something there isn't enough of? Then change it,&#13;
don't bitch!&#13;
The people who plan the "social atmosphere"&#13;
at' Parkside are mostly students in the&#13;
organizations that sponsor events. The Parkside&#13;
Activities Board is a group of students planning&#13;
coffeehouses, films, dances, and other types of&#13;
events. They need more people! Don't you like.&#13;
your school newspaper?Who do you think writes&#13;
it everyweek?And if you would really like to have&#13;
an effect on change in this institution, the&#13;
student government is looking for people with&#13;
ideas to sit on the faculty and administrative&#13;
committees that run this campus.&#13;
Now, if education means more than social life,&#13;
you shouldn't be fooled by the size of the&#13;
institution. If you have a campus with 30,000&#13;
students as opposed to 5,000, which campus is&#13;
going to have a b,etter student/professor ratio?&#13;
Which campus is going to have more teaching&#13;
assistants teaching classes? And which campus&#13;
is going to be more flexible to change?&#13;
So, if you give it a chance and you find you,&#13;
don't respect the professors in your discipline,&#13;
hate the social life, and you-don't care, then&#13;
leave. Get out of here! Chances are with an&#13;
~ttitude like that y,?uwon't make anything of your&#13;
life anyway. Maybe a degree from a "known"&#13;
school will help a loser.&#13;
Parkside needs more students who care who&#13;
know who they areand why they are here and who&#13;
want to have a good time. These are the people&#13;
who should be running the student end of the&#13;
school. If they are, in fact, running the school,&#13;
then we need more!&#13;
•&#13;
, ~lU\l!'"is wr'!tten a.nd edited by students of the -&#13;
UJUverslty 01 Wlsconsm-Parkside a.nd they a.re s 1 1&#13;
respon.sibte for its editorial. policy &amp;l\d con.ten.~.e y&#13;
Our W titers&#13;
,Dan Guidebeck, Robert' Hansen, .left Prostko Kun' ••, h&#13;
K&#13;
' wunse ,&#13;
". at Hermal\1\"Chria Ratcks, Marcia Vlach.&#13;
Editor Philip L. Livingston 553-2295&#13;
General M"n ...ger Thomas R. Cooper 553.2287&#13;
Copy Ed~tor J~hn R. McKloskey&#13;
. .News EdItor DIane Jaleasky&#13;
Circulation Mana.ger Karen. Putman. '&#13;
Sales Manager John Gabriel 553-2287&#13;
Retail Advertising Manager Ken Larse,n 553.2287 '&#13;
Ranier Newspa.per, University 01 Wisconsin-Park.ide&#13;
Kenoaba, Wi.eoa.in 63141&#13;
Subscriptions: $5.00 year for U.S.A.&#13;
,.&#13;
editorial&#13;
Freshmen:&#13;
now that , you're here •••&#13;
-· ..::, ... - -~- --.. -&#13;
What do you think a university education is?&#13;
More important, what does it mean in your life?&#13;
To. many fresh!llen, it means transferringto&#13;
Madison or Milwaukee after a year ·or two. Why?&#13;
Social Studies! There are more · people at&#13;
"other" schools. Also, everyone everyplace else is&#13;
more friendly. There are dormitories, apartments&#13;
near campus, and "other" places to live ('other'&#13;
than home).&#13;
"Everybody is always stoned and guys aren't&#13;
afraid to talk to ya, ya know?" said a young&#13;
visiting coed from Madison.&#13;
Last Friday, after classes were through, there&#13;
were less than twenty people "celebrat ing" in&#13;
Union Square. Most people did the same thing&#13;
they do every day at Parkside; · they get in their&#13;
cars and drive off. On their way to their cars they&#13;
look straight ahead almost hoping nobody smiles&#13;
or talks to them on their way out. Is this you?&#13;
What's wrong?&#13;
Hopefully, more goes on here than students&#13;
just sitting in white fluorescent boxes getting&#13;
"the word", and booking a ride home.&#13;
Student activities, clubs, organizations, are&#13;
just crying for more people. The women sports&#13;
program here, for example, just hired more&#13;
women coaches in an effort to get the women's&#13;
program off the ground. They couid use eight&#13;
times the number of participants they currently&#13;
have (see events notes).&#13;
If it is more social life you are after and&#13;
unhappy because you are not getting it, maybe&#13;
you have been watching too much television.&#13;
Social life is people having a good time with&#13;
each other. If you can't experience that, it's your&#13;
own fault. Do you think there is something wrong&#13;
with · Parkside? Should there . be more of&#13;
something there isn't enough of? Then change it,&#13;
don't bitch!&#13;
The people who plan the "social atmosphere"&#13;
at · Parkside are mostly students in the&#13;
· organizations that sponsor events. The Parkside&#13;
Activities Board is a group of students planning&#13;
coffeehouses, films, dances, and other types of&#13;
events. They need more people! Don't you like,&#13;
your school newspaper? Who do you think writes&#13;
it every week? And if you would really like to have&#13;
an effect on change in this institution, the&#13;
student government is looking for people with&#13;
ideas to sit on the faculty and administrative&#13;
committees that run this campus.&#13;
Now, if education means more than social life,&#13;
you shouldn't be fooled by the size of the&#13;
institution. If you have a campus with 30,000&#13;
students as opposed to 5,000, which campus is&#13;
going to have a better student/professor ratio?&#13;
Which campus is going to have more teaching&#13;
assistants teaching classes? And which campus&#13;
is going to be more flexible to change?&#13;
So, if you give it a chance and you find you -&#13;
don't respect the professors in your discipline,&#13;
hate the social life, and you' don't care, then&#13;
leave. Get out of here! Chances are with an&#13;
~ttitude like that y9u won't make anything of your&#13;
life anyway. Maybe a degree from a "known"&#13;
school will help a loser.&#13;
Parkside needs more students who care, who&#13;
know who they are and why they are here and who&#13;
want to have a good time. These are the people&#13;
who should be running the student· end of the&#13;
school. If they are, in fact, running the school,&#13;
then we need more!&#13;
. ~2u,~er is wl"!tten a_nd edite~ by •tudents of the - Uruvers,ty of W1sconsan-Parks1de and they are sol I&#13;
responsible lor its editorial. policy and content.e y&#13;
Our W rite.rs&#13;
. Dan Guidebeck, Robert Hansen, Jeff Prostko KID\· w · h&#13;
K ' ~~.&#13;
. at Hennann, Chris Ratcks, Marcia Vlach.&#13;
Editor Philip L. Livingston 55~·2295&#13;
General Ml'&lt;n.age.r Thomas R. Cooper 553-2287&#13;
Copy Editor John R. McKloskey&#13;
. _News Editor Diane Jalel\sky C1rculatton Manager Karen Putman&#13;
. Sales Manager John Gabriel 553 •&#13;
2287&#13;
Retail Advertising Mat\ager Ken Larse_n 553-2287&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, Uni'!ersity of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Subscriptions: $5.00 year lor U.S.A. &#13;
•&#13;
views&#13;
w~kly by student government&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
by Rusty Smith&#13;
President, PSGA&#13;
-&#13;
The Parkside Student Government constitution provides for three&#13;
branches of government as in the United States Constlt tl . . (wht h ' I Ulan, Executive W tc you met last week), legislative and Judicial hi h I&#13;
WI Intra uee to you uring '11' d d ,w IC the next few weeks&#13;
The legislative branch consists of your Senators half of whi h&#13;
elected in the fall and the other half in the spring. There are al'~ot:~&#13;
distinct classes of Senators; Divisional, which represent the variou&#13;
Diciplines on campus, and At-Large Senators who represent the&#13;
entire Student Body. '&#13;
These student Senators are YOUR representatives. They are quite&#13;
knowledgable about the workings of almost every area of Parkside&#13;
a~d are ready, willing, ariq able to help you with any problems you&#13;
might have. You should make use of them. Our office is located in&#13;
WllC 0-193, our ~elephone number is 553-2244,and there is usually&#13;
someonethere dally from 10:00 a.m. until 3:00 p.m. Pleasefeel free&#13;
to stop in for any reason.&#13;
Today I would like to introduce three of the At-Large Senatorsto&#13;
you. '&#13;
Mary Braun is 18 years old, a second semester freshman here at&#13;
Parkside, and lives in Union Grove. She is majoring in Political&#13;
Scienceand is a member of The Debate and Forensics Association&#13;
andthe SenateWays and Means Committee. Her term of office will&#13;
run through the spring of 1978.&#13;
Dave Cramer is 19 years old, is a sophomore, but as yet is&#13;
undecided as to his major. He lives in Racine, is a farmer, takes a&#13;
great interest in the local political scene, and is a sports buff who&#13;
especially enjoys attending horse shows.&#13;
He stated "While in office, Ihope to become a very active member&#13;
of the Senate and help my ccnstttutents realize that PSCA is a&#13;
beneficial organization." Dave's term of office also runs through the&#13;
spring of 1978.&#13;
JosephW. Powers is a 25 year old sophomore, from Racine. He is&#13;
majoring in Management Science and is a member of the Senate&#13;
Academic Policies and Student Services Committees. Joe is a&#13;
basketball coach and also enjoys tennis, golf and softball. His term of&#13;
office also runs through the spring of 1978.&#13;
I hope you will acquaint yourself with these students. They&#13;
representall students on campus. If you need anything or want to&#13;
makeyour views known get in touch with them.&#13;
Segregated Fees Committee&#13;
The student segregated fees&#13;
committee met for the first time&#13;
this academic year Sept. 13. At&#13;
the meeting the committee's&#13;
discussion centered around the&#13;
Feb.15 deadline for submissions&#13;
of budgets.&#13;
As a resuIt of the short period&#13;
of time allowed for the&#13;
discussion and evaluation of the&#13;
1978-79 budget requests we have&#13;
set Nov. 1S and Dec. 5 as&#13;
deadlines for submission of&#13;
budgets to the segregated fees&#13;
committee.&#13;
Based on our evaluation, the&#13;
less controversial and more&#13;
easilydeveloped budgets; Union&#13;
Debt Service, Student Health,&#13;
Transportation, Athletics, Intraprogresses&#13;
murals, P.S.G.A., Building Costs&#13;
and Housing could be more&#13;
fairly and effectively dealt with if&#13;
submitted by Nov. 1S.&#13;
The other budgets; Performing&#13;
Arts and Lectures, Union&#13;
Operations and Programming,&#13;
Student Groups, Child Care&#13;
Center, Student Newspapers and&#13;
Others will be required by Dec.&#13;
5.&#13;
After a preliminary level has&#13;
been set you will have the&#13;
opportunity to come in and&#13;
discuss your organization's&#13;
budget with the committee. Also&#13;
the committee will follow their&#13;
policy of last year - No Budget,&#13;
No Money. If you have any&#13;
questions, contact the P.S.G.A.&#13;
-&#13;
Anthro Club makes&#13;
foray. to Chicago&#13;
The Anthropology Club is sponsoring a field trip to the 25th Annual&#13;
Meetings of the American Society for Ethnohistory in Chicago on&#13;
October 13-15, 1977.&#13;
Someof the topics of this meeting are Ecology and Ethnohistory,&#13;
Folklore Research Among Euro-Amencans, Pioneer Applied&#13;
Anthropology, Native American 1 Ethnohisto.ry and Afro-American&#13;
Ethnohistory. Students interested in Anthropology, History and&#13;
Ethnic Studies should find these meetings interesting and useful for&#13;
their college and career goals.&#13;
Transportation will be provided to and hom Chicago for students&#13;
staying the entire 3 days. rt is necessary that all interested persons&#13;
sign up by Sept. 25th, so that soom reservations can be made at the&#13;
Sheraton-Chicago Hotel where the meetings are being hel? .&#13;
Departure time will be 6:30 a.m., Oct. 13 and the group will arrive&#13;
back at U.W.P. at approximately 7:00 p.m. Oct. 1S. . ..&#13;
If interested please sign up in the- Behavioral Science DIVISion&#13;
Office on the 2nd floor of the Classroom Building before Sept. 25th. If&#13;
additional information is needed, please contact Dr. Richard Stoffle,&#13;
Classroom 349.&#13;
Only transportation is being provided by Anthropo.logy ~Iub. ~&#13;
Additional costs such as hotel costs, food and registration will be&#13;
paid by each individual student. »&lt;&#13;
/&#13;
Mass media&#13;
divided between&#13;
Kenosha and Racine&#13;
Kenoshans&#13;
Racinians&#13;
attracted to Chicago;&#13;
prefer Milwaukee&#13;
by John R. McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Theseconclusions Idrew from&#13;
researching the viewing audiences&#13;
and circulation figures for&#13;
the Racine and Kenosha areas.&#13;
Although none of the individual&#13;
TV stations keep data on the&#13;
Racine/Kenosha audience the&#13;
American Research B~reau&#13;
(Arbitron) keeps generalized&#13;
figures. If 51% of the target&#13;
audience views Milwaukee&#13;
stations 51% of their TV time&#13;
then that audience is "given" to&#13;
the Milwaukee area stations.&#13;
Such is the case for the 55,700&#13;
home Racine County market, but&#13;
surprisingly, Kenosha was given&#13;
to the Chicago AD! {television&#13;
market} in the past year. "They&#13;
(Milwaukee stations) lost 4O,()(X)&#13;
homes to the Chicago ADI in the&#13;
past year," according to an&#13;
Arbitron spokesman. The Kenosha&#13;
County viewing audience&#13;
amounts more precisely to&#13;
40,300 homes.&#13;
Nielsen fiSUre&lt;..-&#13;
The Nielsen ratings (the A.C.&#13;
Nielsen Company surveys audiences&#13;
nationwide every week)&#13;
also indicate that Kenosha&#13;
viewers watch Chicago stations,&#13;
but an important difference is&#13;
that a Nielsen representative said&#13;
it has been that way for several&#13;
years. The reason is probably&#13;
that Nielsen only requires a&#13;
majority of viewers (as opposed&#13;
to 51%) to view a Chicago&#13;
station before assigning the&#13;
viewers to Chicago.&#13;
This, then, would indicate that&#13;
Chicago TV viewing by Kenosha&#13;
people has been high for a long&#13;
time and is getting even higher.&#13;
Nielsen also reports, not&#13;
surprisingly, that the Racine&#13;
market is assigned to the&#13;
Milwaukee stations.&#13;
Newspaper Readership has&#13;
Similar Pattern&#13;
The same pattern is indicated&#13;
in Audit Bureau of Circulation&#13;
(ABC) figures of the number of&#13;
papers distributed each day in&#13;
media&#13;
Racine and Kenosha (see table&#13;
below). The only exception to&#13;
this is the Sunday Milwaukee&#13;
Journal, of which 50 more copies&#13;
are distributed in Kenosha than&#13;
in Racine.&#13;
The reason is probably&#13;
because the local paper (the&#13;
Kenosha News) does not publish&#13;
on Sunday.&#13;
All other data indicate that&#13;
Kenosha readers read Chicago&#13;
papers and Racine readers&#13;
peruse Milwaukee papers; in&#13;
addmon to their local newspapers&#13;
Milwaukee &amp; Chicago Newspaper Circulation&#13;
in Racine &amp; Kenosha&#13;
Kenoshia bcine&#13;
Milw41ukee 5entin411 1480 2500&#13;
Milwaukee loumal&#13;
D41ily 850 1700&#13;
Sunday 6500 6450&#13;
Chicago Sun- TImes&#13;
Daily 420 252&#13;
Suncby 850 275&#13;
Chicago Tribune&#13;
D41ily 2154 1864&#13;
Sund41Y 3014 1935&#13;
~)_ N'\~G\C&#13;
~ O~Oz.\O ~,ree'&#13;
O.. n 3Z\ ~ ~\~ 5~&#13;
Mon. &amp; r«. ~ ".c.\oe. .A." ()34-&#13;
NOO(l Iii 9 t6-""'~ (4~1&#13;
Sat. Noon til 5 "'..,.. -&#13;
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INew Jers, 07006 I&#13;
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------------------ PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
YOU ASIED FOR ITI&#13;
HOMEMADE&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
(flESH DAilY fJOM 001: OWN KITCHEN)&#13;
• B.A.C:S [B1G-i::DDKIES) • DONUTS&#13;
• RJDGE FROSTED BROWNIES • TURNOVERS&#13;
• HOT CDFFEE CAKE • PIES &amp; CAKES&#13;
• SPECIALTY DESSERTS, BREADS, ETC.&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
• views&#13;
by Rusty Smith&#13;
President, PSGA&#13;
The Parkside Student Government constitution provides for three&#13;
branches of government as in the United States Constitution ·&#13;
Executive (which you met iast week), Legislative and Judicial, which I&#13;
will introduce to you during the next few weeks.&#13;
The Legislative branch consists of your Senators, half of which are&#13;
elected in the fall and the other half in the spring. There are also two&#13;
distinct classes of Senators; Divisional, which represent the various&#13;
Diciplines on campus, and At-Large Senators who represent the&#13;
entire Student Body.&#13;
These student Senators are YOUR representatives. They are quite&#13;
knowledgable about the workings of almost every area of Parkside&#13;
and are ready, willing, arid abl~ to help you with any problems you&#13;
might have. You should m-ake use of them. Our office is located in&#13;
WLLC 0-193, our telephone number is 553-2244, and there is usually&#13;
someone there daily from 10:00 a.m . until 3:00 p.m . Please feel free&#13;
to stop in for any reason .&#13;
Today I would like to introduce three of the At-Large Senators to&#13;
you . ·&#13;
Mary Braun is 18 years old, a second semester freshman here at&#13;
Parkside, and lives in Union Grove. She is majoring in Political&#13;
Science and is a member of The Debate and Forensics Association&#13;
and the Senate Ways and Means Committee. Her term of office will&#13;
run through the spring of 1978.&#13;
Dave Cramer is 19 years old, is a sophomore, but as yet is&#13;
undecided as to his major. He lives in Racine, is a farmer, takes a&#13;
great interest in the local political scene, and is a sports buff who&#13;
especially enjoys attending horse shows.&#13;
He stated "While in office, I hope to become a very active member&#13;
of the Senate and help my constitutents realize that PSGA is a&#13;
beneficial organization." Dave's term of office also runs through the&#13;
spring of 1978.&#13;
Joseph W. Powers is a 25 year old sophomore, from Racine. He is&#13;
majoring in Management Science and is a member of the Senate&#13;
Academic Policies and Student Services Committees. Joe is a&#13;
basketball coach and also enjoys tennis, golf and softball. His term of&#13;
office also runs through the spring of 1978.&#13;
I hope you will acquaint yourself with these students . They&#13;
represent all students on campus . If you need anything or want to&#13;
make your views known get in touch with them.&#13;
Segregated Fees Committee progresses&#13;
The student segregated fees&#13;
committee met for the first time&#13;
this academic year Sept. 13. At&#13;
the meeting the committee's&#13;
discussion centered around the&#13;
Feb. 15 deadline for submissions&#13;
of budgets.&#13;
As a resu It of the short period&#13;
of time allowed for the&#13;
discussion and evaluation of the&#13;
1978-79 budget requests we have&#13;
set Nov. 15 and Dec. 5 as&#13;
deadlines for submission of&#13;
budgets to the segregated fees&#13;
committee.&#13;
Based on our evaluation, the&#13;
less controversial and more&#13;
easily developed budgets; Union&#13;
Debt Service, Student Health,&#13;
Transportation, Athl_etics, lntramurals,&#13;
P.S.G.A., Building Costs&#13;
and Housing could be more&#13;
fairly and effectively dealt with if&#13;
submitted by Nov. 15.&#13;
The other budgets; Performing&#13;
Arts and Lectures, Union&#13;
Operations and Programming,&#13;
Student Groups, Child Care&#13;
Center, Student Newspapers and&#13;
Others will be required by Dec.&#13;
5.&#13;
After a preliminary level has&#13;
been set you will have the&#13;
opportunity to come in and&#13;
discuss your organization's&#13;
budget with the committee. Also&#13;
the committee will follow their&#13;
policy of last year - No Budget,&#13;
No Money. If you have any&#13;
questions, contact the P.S.G.A.&#13;
A nth ro Club makes&#13;
foray to Chicago&#13;
The Anthropology Club is sponsoring a field tr~p to t~e 25t~ Annual&#13;
Meetings of the American Society for Ethnoh1story in Chicago on&#13;
October 13-15, 1977. .&#13;
Some of the topics of this meeting are Ecology and Ethnoh,story,&#13;
Folklore Research Among Euro-Americans, Pioneer Ap~lied&#13;
Anthropology, Native American I Et_hnohistory and Afr~-Amen:~~&#13;
Ethnohistory. Students interested in Anthropol~gy, HIstory&#13;
Ethnic Studies should find these meetings interesting and useful for&#13;
their college and car~er goals. f d t&#13;
Transportation will . d f Chicago or stu en s be provided to an ~om&#13;
staying the entire 3 days. it is necessary that all interestedd perso~s&#13;
sign up by Sept 25th so that soom reservations can be ma e at t e · ' · b · held Sheraton-Chicago Hotel where the meetings are eing .&#13;
11&#13;
· .&#13;
Departure 0 13 d the group wI arrive time will be 6:30 a.m., ct. an&#13;
back at U.W.P. at approximately 7:00 P·IT/·· Oct. 15_- 0&#13;
... . . h B h ·oral Science IvIsIon If interested please sign up in t e- e _av_, Sth If&#13;
Office on the 2nd floor of the Classroom Building befor~ ~ep~. ~t ff.I&#13;
additional information is needed, please contact Dr. Ric ar O e,&#13;
Classroom 349 I b · . ·d d b Anthropology C u · Only transportation is being prov, e Y . . ·,11 be&#13;
Add . . f d and reg1stratIon w ItIonal costs such as hotel costs, oo /&#13;
paid by each individual student.&#13;
I&#13;
Mass media&#13;
divided between&#13;
Kenosha and Racine&#13;
Kenoshans attracted to Chicago;&#13;
Racinians prefer Milwaukee media&#13;
by John R. McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
These conclusions I drew from&#13;
researching the viewing audiences&#13;
and circulation figures for&#13;
the Racine and Kenosha areas.&#13;
Although none of the individual&#13;
TV stations keep data on the&#13;
Racine/Kenosha audience, the&#13;
American Research Bureau&#13;
(Arbitron) keeps generalized&#13;
figures . If 51% of the target&#13;
audience views Milwaukee&#13;
stations 51% of their TV time,&#13;
then that audience is " given" to&#13;
the Milwaukee area stations.&#13;
Such is the case for the 55,700&#13;
home Racine County market, but&#13;
surprisingly, Kenosha was given&#13;
to the Chicago ADI (television&#13;
market) in the past year. "They&#13;
(Milwaukee stations) lost 40,000&#13;
homes to the Chicago ADI in the&#13;
past year," according to an&#13;
Arbitron spokesman. The Kenosha&#13;
County viewing audience&#13;
amounts more precisely to&#13;
40,300 homes.&#13;
Nielsen figures agree&#13;
The Nielsen ratings (the A.C.&#13;
Nielsen Company surveys audiences&#13;
nationwide every week)&#13;
also indicate that Kenosha&#13;
viewers watch Chicago stations,&#13;
but an important difference is&#13;
that a Nielsen representative said&#13;
it has been that way for several&#13;
years. The reason is probably&#13;
that Nielsen only requires a&#13;
majority of viewers (as opposed&#13;
to 51%) to view a Chicago&#13;
station before assigning the&#13;
viewers to Chicago.&#13;
This, then, would indicate that&#13;
Chicago TV viewing by Kenosha&#13;
people has been high for a long&#13;
time and is getting even higher&#13;
Nielsen also reports, not&#13;
surprisingly, that the Racine&#13;
market is assigned to the&#13;
Milwaukee stations.&#13;
Newspaper Readership has&#13;
Similar Pattern&#13;
The same pattern is indicated&#13;
in Audit Bureau of Circulation&#13;
(ABC) figures of the number of&#13;
papers distributed each day in&#13;
.,,&#13;
Racine and Kenosha (see table&#13;
below) The only exception to&#13;
this is the Sunday Milwaukee&#13;
Journal, of which 50 more copies&#13;
are distributed in Kenosha than&#13;
in Racine.&#13;
K nosha ews) doe not publi h&#13;
on Sunday.&#13;
The reason is probably&#13;
because the local paper (the&#13;
All other data indicate that&#13;
Kenosha read r r ad Chica o&#13;
papers and Racine reader&#13;
peru e Milwaukee paper ; in&#13;
addition to their local new -&#13;
papers&#13;
Milwaukee &amp; Chicago ewspaper Circulation&#13;
in Racine &amp; Kenosha&#13;
Kenosh.1 Ruine&#13;
Milwaukee Sentin.11 1480 25&#13;
Milwaukee Joum.11&#13;
Daily 850 1700&#13;
Sunday 6500 6450&#13;
Chicago Sun-Times&#13;
Daily 420 252&#13;
Sunday 850 275&#13;
Chicago Tribune&#13;
Daily 2154 1864&#13;
Sunday 3014 1935&#13;
~- N\N ~ ~ o~ia\O 5\ree~3&#13;
Open 3Z\ • ~\~ 5 .@63&#13;
Mon. &amp; Fri. ~ 7'.C.\ne, 1 .. qA,) 634&#13;
Noon 11/ 9 ~~ '-qo&#13;
Sat. Noon Ill 5&#13;
MAGIC TRICKS - JOKES - NOVEL TIES&#13;
•&#13;
------------------ BECOME A COLLEGE CAMPUS DIALER I&#13;
I I I Sell Brand Name Stereo Component I&#13;
I At Lowest Prices. High Profit ; NO I I INVESTMENT REQUIRED. For Details , I&#13;
I Contact: FAD Components, Inc. 65 I&#13;
I Passaic Ave., P .0. Box 689, Fairfield, I I New Jersy 07006 I&#13;
I Ilene Orlowsky I&#13;
I 201-227-6884 1&#13;
------------------ PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
YOU ASKED FOR ITI&#13;
HOMEMADE&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
(FRESH DAILY FROM OUR OWN KITCHEH)&#13;
• B.A.C.'S [BIG-COOKIES) • DONUTS&#13;
• RJDGE FROSTED BROWNIES • TURNOVERS&#13;
• HOT COFFEE CAKE • PIES &amp; CAKES&#13;
• SPECIAL TY DESSERTS, BREADS, ETC.&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM &#13;
news&#13;
Crisis hotline aids community&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
6-5-8-4-3-5-7 Switchboard Reed speaking: . uh, yeah, sure I&#13;
could talk to you! That's what I'm here for.&#13;
"People helping people is a life time opportunity." This is the&#13;
motto of Switchboard. Switchboard is a non-profit, volunteer,&#13;
24-hour-a-day (including holidays) help-line.&#13;
The Kenosha County Switchboard was conceived in January of&#13;
1971. People from the local colleges, universities, and technical&#13;
school formed the nucleus of the group which later became the first&#13;
Switchboard volunteers. The group was originated under Kenosha&#13;
Drug Abuse, Inc. The original training was provided by doctors,&#13;
lawyers and psychiatrists who were associated with the Underground&#13;
Switchboard in Milwaukee.&#13;
Started on weekends&#13;
In March of 1971 the Kenosha Switchboard began operation in&#13;
Kenosha Memorial Hospital, mainly as a drug line, with two phone&#13;
lines from 6:00 p.m. to 3:00 a.m. on weekends only. After a few&#13;
months the volunteers were receiving a wider range of crisis calls&#13;
than expected, from callers of all ages. It then became switchboard&#13;
policy to meet all these demands in crisis situations. Volunteers&#13;
received broader training and the referral files were expanded to&#13;
allow Switchboard to deal with a wider variety of problems.&#13;
"Although Switchboard was originally conceived as a drug line, drug&#13;
related calls are now only 1~20% of our total calls," said a&#13;
Switchboard representative.&#13;
By September of 1971, Switchboard moved to larger facilities with&#13;
three phone lines and service seven nights a week. Many calls&#13;
involved problems too serious or involved to be handled over the&#13;
phone. Although these callers needed professional help, many did&#13;
not have enough money or were dissatisfied with the help received&#13;
elsewhere. For this reason Switchboard asked professional counselors&#13;
to donate their time to establish the Counseling Center. Counselors&#13;
were recruited from local schools, colleges, the Welfare Department&#13;
and the local clergy.&#13;
Leases a building&#13;
In April of 1974,Switchboard leased a building which allowed it to&#13;
meet community needs through an advocacy attitude with regard to&#13;
other new social help agencies. At times this advocacy approach has&#13;
involved direct cooperation and participation by the staff, as has&#13;
been the case with Women's Horizons, Youth and Family Services&#13;
and Impact programs. At other times, as in the case of Welfare&#13;
Rights, the Youth Employment Program, VISTA and the Community&#13;
THE&#13;
2226-57th St.&#13;
Kenosha'&#13;
654~9909&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Assistance&#13;
. ALL SUBJECTS&#13;
Choose from our library of 7,000 topics.&#13;
All papers have been prepared by our&#13;
staff of professional wrtters -to insure&#13;
excellence. Send $1.00 (air mail&#13;
postage) for the current edition of our&#13;
mail order catalog.&#13;
r~U~T.O~LSvSTE~----&#13;
I P.O. Box 25916-E;- I&#13;
1 Los Angeles, Calif. 90025 I&#13;
I Name I&#13;
w •• 110 provld. origin.' I Address L&#13;
r.... rch ••• n IIolde. I City II&#13;
Theal' and dl..... tlon&#13;
L-----~~~-L. ... Ittance also avell.b1e. I State Zip JI&#13;
Action Program, -i t- has "supplied needed office space. At one time&#13;
Switchboard housed a Recreation/Drop-in Center and a Bicycle&#13;
Repair Program through the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Extension.&#13;
Funding setback&#13;
Switchboard is now in the process of reorganization due to a&#13;
temporary funding setback in December of 1976. They now have a&#13;
temporary office located in the Reuther Alternative Aigh School&#13;
building and are staffed through a federal CETA grant. Switchboard,&#13;
plans to enlist the services of more professionals to train operators&#13;
and to provide in-service training. Avenues for more diversified and&#13;
stable sources of funding are being explored. Switchboard is striving&#13;
to improve tts-tmage and the services offered by working toward&#13;
becoming a comprehensive information and referral agency with an&#13;
advocacx approach.&#13;
What Switchboard can do&#13;
There are persons in Kenosha County who are troubled by personal&#13;
difficulties but who, due to workshift and school limitations and/or&#13;
personal limitations are hesitant or unable to seek traditional agency&#13;
counseling. Many of these people wish to remain anonymous but&#13;
wish to talk with a neutral party about their particular difficulty.&#13;
This is Switchboard's job. The volunteers are trained to listen in a&#13;
non-judgemental manner, help callers pinpoint their problems,&#13;
present them with different alternatives and provide the appropriate&#13;
help or refer them d,irectly to an agency.&#13;
The rationale behind Switchboard is:&#13;
1. To provide emergency counseling with para-professional&#13;
volunteers on a 24-hour basis to those in a crisis situation so that they&#13;
may deal with their immediate problems until further help can be&#13;
obtained.&#13;
2. To enable persons being serviced by agendes to obtain neededservice&#13;
during periods when their agendes are closed.&#13;
3. To enable persons to deal with their crisis situations and develop&#13;
independence in solving their problems.&#13;
4. To enable persons to obtain medical information and services&#13;
needed to deal with such problems as unwanted pregency, drug&#13;
overdose, veneral disease, and others.&#13;
5. To enable persons to obtain counseling to help them deal with&#13;
social, economic and family problems.&#13;
6. To provide information on legal assistance suited to their&#13;
individual needs.&#13;
7. To develop an awareness in persons of all ages in the-community&#13;
of the services available through other agencies and Switchboard.&#13;
8. To develop an awareness of job opportunities available in- the&#13;
Kenosha area to those in need.&#13;
9. To develop complete referral services to aid persons in receiving&#13;
appropriate assistance.&#13;
10, To provide a free face to face counseling service with on call&#13;
profe'ssional counselors, on an appointment basis.&#13;
11. To assist low income and/or disadvantaged people.&#13;
In 1976 Switchboard' received 10,305 calls. The average caller is&#13;
from 15-25 years of age. People who call in do not-have to give any&#13;
information about themselves that they don't want to. \&#13;
Funding ends in Julv&#13;
CETA funding is assured for staff positions' until June 20, 1978.&#13;
Temporary office space is also assured at Reuther until the first week&#13;
of October, at which time, if no more permanent quarters have been&#13;
funded, the office will be moved to the school district's&#13;
Administration Center at Weiskopt School located on the corner of&#13;
50th Street and Sheridan Road.":&#13;
Fund raising is essential&#13;
Since Switchboard is a non-profit organization it relies on fundraising&#13;
events to pay for operational costs. The next fund raising&#13;
event will be the Carthage College Flea Market on November 12&#13;
Switchboard has rented a booth and hope to sell plants, crafts:&#13;
ru~mage and baked goods. On Friday, November 25, the Carthage&#13;
Christmas Craft and Art Fair will be held. Switchboard hopes to&#13;
contract for the two food concessions at the fair.&#13;
Training Sessions&#13;
- For those who would wish to volunteer or for those who simply&#13;
-wa~t more information feel free to call 658~H-E-L-P anytime during&#13;
b~slOess hours Monday thru Friday and ask for Carla Senecal,&#13;
DI~e~tor of VolunteersfTraining. Volunteers go through a 12-hour&#13;
training ~rogram during which you listen to calls as they are handled&#13;
by experienced operator~ and you will have the opportunity to also&#13;
~n~w.er the ~honeJ during this period. You must attend several&#13;
srofessi sessions uring which you listen to talks from several&#13;
pro esstonal and para-professional speakers. To be eligible to be an&#13;
operator you must be 18 or' over and have access to a phone.&#13;
Men's, women's, track&#13;
teams to organize&#13;
There ~ill be an organizational meeting for the 1977-78&#13;
Uw-Parkstde men's and women's track teams at 3'30 Th d&#13;
S t 22 . th . I . p.rn, urs ay&#13;
ep. , In. e upstairs. ounge of the Physical Education Bldg. '&#13;
All ParksIde students mterested in competinDfo th&#13;
, ' . _ ...... r e men's or&#13;
women steams at UW-P are Invited to attend For m . f .&#13;
C h&#13;
. are In ormation&#13;
contact oac Bob Lawson at 553-2245. '&#13;
4&#13;
Switt.:hboo..-d&#13;
24 hours&#13;
()liS-help&#13;
FranklinWhite&#13;
to&#13;
•&#13;
Instruct&#13;
stage&#13;
movement·&#13;
A former member of England's&#13;
.Royal Ballet, Peter Franklin&#13;
White, will be at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside Monday&#13;
through Friday (Sept. 26-30) to&#13;
present workshops on stage&#13;
movement in period plays.&#13;
Representatives of community&#13;
theater groups and high school&#13;
drama teachers in the area have&#13;
been invited to participate in the&#13;
workshops along with UWParkside&#13;
dramatic arts students,&#13;
according to Prof. Rhonda-Gale&#13;
Pollack, dramatic arts coordinator.&#13;
Franklin White joined the&#13;
Royal Ballet (then Sadler's Wells)&#13;
in 1942, rising from the corps de&#13;
ballet to the rank of principal&#13;
and danced over 150 roles&#13;
including all the major character&#13;
and acting roles in the -Roval&#13;
Ballet repertoire.&#13;
He has taught and given&#13;
lecture-demonstrations throughout&#13;
the U.S., Canada, Zambia,&#13;
Rhodesia, Iceland and England.&#13;
He has appeared in televised&#13;
performances in the U.S.,&#13;
Canada, Rhodesia and England&#13;
and in a film on the Royal Ballet&#13;
f~aturing Margot Fonteyn,&#13;
Michael Seames and Rosemary&#13;
Lindsay, with Franklin White as&#13;
Kotschie in "The Firebird."&#13;
He is the author of the book,&#13;
"Sadler's Wells Goes Abroad,"&#13;
completed shortly after hi'&#13;
second American tour with the&#13;
company, and has contributed to&#13;
a number of ballet periodicals.&#13;
news&#13;
Crisis hotline aids community&#13;
by Dan Cuidebeck&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
6-5-8-4-3-5-7 ... Switchboard Reed speaking : . . uh, yeah, sure I&#13;
could talk to you! ... That's what I'm here for . ..&#13;
"People helping people is a life time opportunity." This is the&#13;
motto of Switchboard. Switchboard is a non-profit, volunteer,&#13;
24-hour-a-day (including holidays) help-line.&#13;
The Kenosha County Switchboard was conceived in January of&#13;
1971. People from the local colleges, universities, and technical&#13;
school formed the nucleus of the group which later became the first&#13;
Switchboard volunteers. The group was originated under Kenosha&#13;
Drug Abuse, Inc. The original training was provided by doctors,&#13;
lawyers and psychiatrists who were associated with the Underground&#13;
Switchboard in Milwaukee.&#13;
Started on weekends&#13;
In March of 1971 the Kenosha Switchboard began operation in&#13;
Kenosha Memorial Hospital, mainly as a drug line, with two phone&#13;
lines from 6:00 p.m. to 3:00 a.m. on weekends only. After a few&#13;
months the volunteers were receiving a wider range of crisis calls&#13;
than expected, from callers of all ages. It then became switchboard&#13;
policy to meet all these demands in crisis situations. Volunteers&#13;
received broader training and the referral files were expanded to&#13;
allow Switchboard t9 deal with a wider variety of problems.&#13;
"Although Switchboard was originally conceived as a drug line, drug&#13;
related calls are now only 10-20% of our total calls," said a&#13;
Switchboard representative.&#13;
By September of 1971, Switchboard moved to larger facilities with&#13;
three phone lines and service seven nights a week. Many calls&#13;
involved problems too serious Or involved to be handled over the&#13;
phone. Although these callers needed professional help, many did&#13;
not have enough money or were dissatisfied with the help received&#13;
elsewhere. For this reason Switchboard asked professional counselors&#13;
to donate their time to establish the Counseling Center. Counselors&#13;
were recruited from local schools, colleges, the Welfare Department&#13;
and the local clergy.&#13;
Leases a building&#13;
In April of 1974, Switchboard leased a building which allowed it to&#13;
meet community needs through an advocacy attitude with regard to&#13;
other new social help agencies. At times this advocacy approach has&#13;
involved direct cooperation and participation by the staff, as has&#13;
been the case with Women's Horizons, Youth and Family Services&#13;
and Impact programs. At other times, as in the case of Welfare&#13;
Rights, the Youth Employment Program, VISTA and the Community&#13;
THE&#13;
2226-57th St.&#13;
Kenosha ·&#13;
654~9909&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Assistance . ALL SUBJECTS&#13;
Choose from our library of 7,000 topics.&#13;
All papers have been prepared by our&#13;
staff of professional writers ,to insure&#13;
excellence. Send $1.00 (air mail&#13;
postage) for the current edition of our&#13;
mail order catalog.&#13;
j EDUCATIONAL SYSTEMS&#13;
I P.O. Box 25916-E;- I&#13;
I Los Angeles, Calif. 90025 I&#13;
•&#13;
We also provide original&#13;
research -- all fields.&#13;
I Name I l Address ________ L&#13;
1c~ I Thesis and dissertation&#13;
assistance also available. I State ___ Zip--~-- I&#13;
----------~---------------~&#13;
A~tion Program, ·it· has ·supplied needed office space. At one time&#13;
Switchboard housed a Recreation/Drop-in Center and a Bicycle&#13;
Repair Program through the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Extension.&#13;
Funding setback&#13;
Switchboard is now in the process of reorganization due to a&#13;
temporary funding setback in December of 1976. They now have a&#13;
temporary office located in the Reuther Alternative Aigh School&#13;
building and are staffed through a federal CETA grant. Switchboar9 ,&#13;
plans to enlist the services of more professionals to train operators&#13;
and to provide in-service training. Avenues for more diversified and&#13;
stable sources of funding are being explored. Switchboard is striving&#13;
to improve it-s- image and the services offered by working toward&#13;
becoming a comprehensive information and referral agency with an&#13;
advocacy approach.&#13;
What Switchboard can do&#13;
There are persons in Kenosha County who are troubled by personal&#13;
difficulties but who, due to workshift and school limitations and/or&#13;
personal limitations are hesitant or unable to seek traditional agency&#13;
counseling. Many of these people wish to remain anonymous but&#13;
wish to talk with a neutral party about their particular difficulty.&#13;
This is Switchboard's job. The volunteers are trained to listen in a&#13;
non-judgemental manner, help callers pinpoint their problems,&#13;
present them with different alternatives and provide the appropriate&#13;
help or refer them directly to an agency.&#13;
The rationale behind Switchboard is :&#13;
1. To provide emergency counseling with para-professional&#13;
volunteer,s on a 24-hour basis to those in a crisis situation so that they&#13;
may deal with their immediate problems until further help can be&#13;
obtained.&#13;
2. To enable persons being serviced by agencies to obtain needed&#13;
service during periods when their agencies are closed.&#13;
3. To enable persons to deal with their crisis situations and develop&#13;
independence in solving their problems.&#13;
4. To enable persons to obtain medical information and services&#13;
needed to deal with such problems as unwanted pregency, drug&#13;
overdose, veneral disease, and others.&#13;
5. To enable persons to obtain counseling to help them deal with&#13;
social, economic and family problems.&#13;
6. To provide information on legal assistance suited to their&#13;
individual needs.&#13;
7. To develop a-n awareness in persons of all ages in the community&#13;
of the services available through other agencies and Switchboard.&#13;
8. To develop an awareness of job opportunities available in the&#13;
Kenosha area to those in need.&#13;
9. To develop _complete referral services to aid persons in receiving&#13;
appropriate assistance.&#13;
10. To provide a free face to face counseling service with on call&#13;
profe·ssional counselors, on an appointment basis.&#13;
11. To assist low income and/ or disadvantaged people.&#13;
In 1976 Switchboard· received 10,305 calls. The average caller is&#13;
from 15-25 years of age. People who call in do not have to give any&#13;
information about themselves that they don't want to.&#13;
Funding ends in July&#13;
CET A funding is assured for staff positions· until June 20, 1978.&#13;
Temporary office space is also assured at Reuther until the first week&#13;
of October, at which time, if no more permanent quarters have been&#13;
funded, the office will be moved to the school district's&#13;
Administration Center at Weiskopt School located on the corner of&#13;
50th Street and Sheridan Road .&#13;
Fund raising is essential&#13;
Since Switchboard is a non-profit organization it relies on fundraising&#13;
events to pay for operational costs. The next fund raising&#13;
event will be the Carthage College Flea Market on November 12&#13;
Switchboard has rented a booth and hope to sell plants, crafts:&#13;
rum_mage and baked goods. On Friday, November 25, the Carthage&#13;
Christmas Craft and Art Fair will be held. Switchboard hopes to&#13;
contract for the two food concessions at the fair.&#13;
Training Sessions&#13;
- For those who would wish to volunteer or for those who simply&#13;
wa~t more information feel free to call 658-H-E-L-P anytime during&#13;
b~smess hours Monday thru Friday and ask for Carla Senecal&#13;
D1~ector of Volunte~rs/Tra_ining. Volunteers go through a 12-hou~&#13;
training ~rogram during which you listen to calls as they are handled&#13;
by experienced operators and you will have the opportunity to al&#13;
answer the phones during this period. You must attend sol&#13;
t · · · d · . severa&#13;
rammg sessions urmg which you listen to talks from several&#13;
professional and para-professional speakers. To be eligible to be an&#13;
operator you must be 18 or- over and have access to a phone.&#13;
Men's, women's track&#13;
teams to organize&#13;
There ~ill be1&#13;
an organizational meeting for the 1977_78&#13;
UW-Parks1de mens and women's track teams at 3·30 Th d&#13;
S t 22 · h · · p.m. urs ay&#13;
ep . ' '". t e upstairs lounge of the Physical Education Bldg '&#13;
All Parkside students interested in competinafo th , · ' t u . . co.- r e men s or&#13;
women s earns at W-P are invited to attend For m · f . · ore m ormatIon contact Coach Bob Lawson at 553-2245. '&#13;
4&#13;
§witchboar-d&#13;
24 hours&#13;
6~S-helP&#13;
FranklinWhite&#13;
to&#13;
instruct&#13;
stage&#13;
movement- A former member of England's&#13;
Royal Ballet, Peter Franklin&#13;
White, will be at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside Monday&#13;
through Friday (Sept. 26-30) to&#13;
present workshops on stage&#13;
movement in period plays.&#13;
Representatives of community&#13;
theater groups and high school&#13;
drama teachers in the area have&#13;
been invited to participate in the&#13;
workshops along with UWParkside&#13;
dramatic arts students&#13;
according to Prof. Rhonda-Gal~&#13;
Pollack, dramatic arts coordinator.&#13;
&#13;
Franklin White joined the&#13;
Royal Ballet (then Sadler's Wells)&#13;
in 1942, rising from the corps de&#13;
ballet to the rank of principal&#13;
and danced over 150 roles&#13;
including all the major character&#13;
and acting roles in the ,Royal&#13;
Ballet repertoire.&#13;
He has taµght and given&#13;
lecture-demonstrations throughout&#13;
the U.S., Canada, Zambia,&#13;
Rhodesia, Iceland and England.&#13;
He has appeared in televised&#13;
performances in the U.S.,&#13;
Canada, Rhodesia and England&#13;
and in a film on the Royal Ballet&#13;
f~aturing Margot Fonteyn,&#13;
Michael Seames and Rosemary&#13;
Lindsay with Franklin White as&#13;
Kotschie in "The Firebird."&#13;
He is the author of the book,&#13;
"Sadfer's Wells Goes Abroad,"&#13;
completed shortly after his&#13;
second American tour with the&#13;
company, and has contributed to&#13;
a number of ballet periodicals. &#13;
people&#13;
Professor David Beach:&#13;
active and concerned&#13;
by Kat Hermann&#13;
RANGER STAFF&#13;
time thinking about it'." So Beach tried out&#13;
for the part and landed it. He was very&#13;
satisfied with the production and enjoyed&#13;
being a part of it.&#13;
When asked what he thought about the&#13;
problems Parks ide has been faced with, he&#13;
sort of shook his head.&#13;
"Parks ide has an almost paranoid&#13;
concern for the range of problems it has!"&#13;
he said. 'When I was at the University of&#13;
Buffalo-NewYork, they closeddown the&#13;
school for three and a half months. Now&#13;
'THAT was something to worry about. And&#13;
it was under martial law besides.&#13;
"After eight rears Parkside still doesn't&#13;
have a graduate program, although it is&#13;
trying. They started with one concept and&#13;
now they're trying to reform.&#13;
"It seems like there are always two sides.&#13;
One is apathy - the type that say "I don't&#13;
way to give another second of my life to&#13;
this!" Then there is the other; the&#13;
go-getters. They're the ones who want to&#13;
get it done and done right before the&#13;
second hand has a chance to sweep&#13;
around again."&#13;
The behavorial science division used to&#13;
be two seperate divisions, psychology and&#13;
sociology jantropology. The new consolidated&#13;
division is comprised of nineteen&#13;
full time faculty members.&#13;
Behavorial science is really the study of&#13;
human behavior. "Until recently, it existed&#13;
only in print," Beach said. "Up until last&#13;
fall, psychology was in the science division&#13;
and sociology/anthropology were in the&#13;
social science division."&#13;
The faculty of all the divisions and the&#13;
administration both decided in the 75/76&#13;
school year to put the two divisions&#13;
together. A sizable portion of the division,~.&#13;
administration, and students were&#13;
involved to re-align the division's&#13;
structure.&#13;
"In the' beginning there were four&#13;
faculty members; one from anthropology,&#13;
one from sociology and two from&#13;
psychology."Beachsaid. They only met&#13;
once or twice and that was it. But then the&#13;
rest of us realized that we had to get&#13;
everyone involved, so we all got together&#13;
at least once a week to discuss how to&#13;
operate a new division, what it would&#13;
mean to have a behavorial science&#13;
division, what we were getting into, and&#13;
finally, what did we expect to get out of&#13;
it."&#13;
So the discussions and the COP&#13;
(Committee of Principals) process&#13;
continued. Finally the Faculty Senate&#13;
introduced and passed a resolution on&#13;
March 16, 1976 forming the Behavorial&#13;
Science Division.&#13;
According to a survey taken by the&#13;
Ranger staff during the spring semester,&#13;
1977, the psychology major was the&#13;
second most popular choice. Business&#13;
management came in first.&#13;
Keeping the above ranking in mind,&#13;
RANGER interviewed David&#13;
Beach, chairman of the Behavorial Science&#13;
Division. Professor Beach received his&#13;
Ph.D. at the University of Rochester, has&#13;
been teaching at Parks ide for five years,&#13;
was granted tenure in June of 1975, and&#13;
received the teaching Excellence Award in&#13;
the spring of 1976.&#13;
Among the many things he has done at&#13;
Parks ide, he participated in the play&#13;
Mousetrap, a "whodunit" written by&#13;
Agatha "Christie. It was first written as a&#13;
radio play, set in post-war 1948.&#13;
"I decidedto readfor the part for many&#13;
reasons, mostly personal ones," Beach&#13;
said. "I always had an interest in theatre as&#13;
an adolescent and as an adult. But I was&#13;
shy as a kid, so I let it go and pursued other&#13;
interests. It was almost a fantasy. Finally I&#13;
began to spend a lot of time driving&#13;
around and I said to myself, 'If you're&#13;
serious about acting and the theatre, you'll&#13;
try it. Otherwise stop spending so much&#13;
Although the Ranger studies found&#13;
psychology in high favor among students,&#13;
Beach disagrees with that finding&#13;
"Student enrollments are down. Some of&#13;
the problem lies in the Breadth&#13;
requirement. Most of the students still&#13;
believe that psychology is science and&#13;
sociology/anthropology is social science."&#13;
Also, there is a lot of faculty turnover."&#13;
(There are 1,050 to 1,100 students&#13;
currently enrolled in psychology courses&#13;
and close to the same number in&#13;
sociology/anthropology.)&#13;
When ProfessorBeachwas askedif he&#13;
was doing any research here at Parkside,&#13;
he grinned and said, 'Who has timel I&#13;
have a total of five articles and projects&#13;
that haven't been touched In almost a&#13;
year. 1 need a large block of time in which&#13;
to write and I just don't have It"&#13;
Does he like it here at Parksidel&#13;
"Of course. If I didn't, I wouldn't be&#13;
here."&#13;
Recollectio~&#13;
Collectio'l---&#13;
Sure you might not miss the old alma mater next year Maybe not&#13;
even the following year. But someday, you're gonna look back&#13;
and say "hey, wasn't it great back then". That's when you'll WIsh&#13;
you had a few mementos to remind you of the "good old days".&#13;
Before that happens to you, stop down at the bookstore and take&#13;
a look at the great collection of mementos we've got right now!&#13;
RINGS&#13;
MUGS&#13;
BEER STEINS&#13;
PENDANTS&#13;
.",~. ~~~-&#13;
-.-&#13;
~ -&#13;
THE BOOKSTORE&#13;
-.&#13;
people&#13;
Professor David Beach:&#13;
active and concerned&#13;
by Kat Hermann&#13;
RANGER STAFF&#13;
According to a survey taken by the&#13;
Ranger staff during the spring semester,&#13;
1977, the psychology m-ajor was the&#13;
second mbst popular choice. Business&#13;
management came in first.&#13;
Keeping the above ranking in mind,&#13;
RANGER interviewed David&#13;
Beach, chairman of the Behavorial Science&#13;
Division. Professor Beach received his&#13;
Ph.D. at the University of Rochester, has&#13;
been teaching at Parkside for five years,&#13;
was granted tenure in June of 1975, and&#13;
received the teaching Excellence Award in&#13;
the spring of 1976.&#13;
Among the many things he has done at&#13;
Parkside, he participated in the play&#13;
Mousetrap, a "whodunit" written by&#13;
Agatha -Christie. It was first written as a&#13;
radio play, set in post-war 1948.&#13;
"I decided to read for the part for many&#13;
reasons, mostly personal ones," Beach&#13;
said. "I always had an interest in theatre as&#13;
an adolescent and as an adult. But I was&#13;
shy as a kid, so I let it go and pursued other&#13;
interests. It was almost a fantasy. Finally I&#13;
began to spend a lot of time driving&#13;
around and I said to myself, 'If you're&#13;
serious about acting and the theatre, you'll&#13;
try it. Otherwise stop spending so much&#13;
time thinking about it'." So Beach tried out&#13;
for the part and landed it. He was very&#13;
satisfied with the production and enjoyed&#13;
being a part of it.&#13;
When asked what he thought about the&#13;
problems Parkside has been faced with, he&#13;
sort of shook his head.&#13;
"Parkside has an almost paranoid&#13;
concern for the range of problems it has !"&#13;
he said. "When I was at the University of&#13;
Buffalo-New York, they closed down the&#13;
school for three and a half months. Now&#13;
·THAT was something to worry about. And&#13;
it was under martial law besides.&#13;
"After eight years Parkside still doesn't&#13;
have a graduate program, although it is&#13;
trying. They started with one concept and&#13;
now they're trying to reform.&#13;
"It seems like there are always two sides.&#13;
One is apathy - the type that say " I don't&#13;
way to give another second of my life to&#13;
this!" Then there is the other; the&#13;
go-getters. They're the ones who want to&#13;
get it done and done right before the&#13;
second hand has a chance to sweep&#13;
around again."&#13;
The behavorial science division used to&#13;
be two seperate divisions, psychology and&#13;
sociology/ antropology. The new consolidated&#13;
division is comprised of nineteen&#13;
full time faculty members.&#13;
Behavorial science is really the study of&#13;
human behavior. " Until recently, it existed&#13;
only in print," Beach said " Up until last&#13;
fall, psychology was in the science division&#13;
and sociology/anthropology were in the&#13;
social science division."&#13;
The faculty of all the divisions and the&#13;
administration both decided in the '75/ '76&#13;
school year to put the two divisions .&#13;
together. A sizable portion of the division, r,.: :.&#13;
administration , and students were Although the Ranger stud1e found&#13;
involved to re-align the division 's psychology in high favor among stud nts,&#13;
structure. Beach disagrees with that finding&#13;
" In the beginning there were four "Student enrollments are down Some of&#13;
faculty members; one from anthropology, the problem lies in the Breadth&#13;
one from sociology and two from requirement. Most of the students still&#13;
psychology." Beach said. They only met bel ieve that psychology 1s science and&#13;
once or twice and that was it. But then the sociology/ anthropology 1s social science."&#13;
rest of us realized that we had to get Also, there is a lot of faculty turnover."&#13;
everyone involved, so we all got together (There are 1,050 to 1,100 students&#13;
at least once a week to discuss how to currently enrolled in psychology course&#13;
operate a new division, what it would and close to the same number 1n&#13;
mean to have a behavorial science sociology/ anthropology.)&#13;
division, what we were getting into, and When Professor Beach was asked if he&#13;
finally, what did we expect to get out of&#13;
it."&#13;
So the discussions and the COP&#13;
(Committee of Principals) process&#13;
continued. Finally the Faculty Senate&#13;
introduced and passed a resolution on&#13;
March 16, 1976 forming the Behavorial&#13;
Science Division.&#13;
was doing any research here at Parkside,&#13;
he grinned and said, 'Who has t1m ? I&#13;
have a total of five article and projects&#13;
that haven't been touched in almo t a&#13;
year I need a large block of time in which&#13;
to write and I 1ust don't have it."&#13;
Does he like 1t here at Park~1del&#13;
"Of course. If I didn't, I wouldn't b&#13;
here "&#13;
Recollectio~&#13;
Collectior:t···&#13;
Sure you might not miss the old alma mater next year. Maybe not&#13;
even the following year. But someday, you're gonna look back&#13;
and say "hey, wasn't it great back then" That's when you'll wish&#13;
you had a few mementos to remind you of the "good old days".&#13;
Before that happens to you , stop down at the bookstore and take&#13;
a look at the great collection of mementos we've got right now1&#13;
RINGS&#13;
BEER STEINS&#13;
-~«,CMUGS&#13;
&#13;
THE BOOKSTORE &#13;
news&#13;
'Home cooking' .invades _Apply fo~ educat!on&#13;
campus food service "~~~,~~~~:o~n~~;~~,~~;~:~;~&#13;
b Dan Guidebeck and John Gabriel in previous years. There is a cook who comes in and Semester 1978 are reminded that consult the Fall 1977 Timetable&#13;
Y makes home made soup. the deadline for these applica- or the 1977-78 Catalog for a&#13;
"Food service will improve," says William R. Those surveyed were asked where they wou~d tions is October 1, 1977. Forms statement of admission requireNiebuhr,&#13;
Director of the Union. A survey prefer to have lunch both on and off campus.Teare available in the Clinical ments for student teaching.&#13;
conducted last May by Niebuhr tells of satisfaction number one choice was the Union Dining Room ProgramsOffice, Greenquist 210. Education students who have&#13;
and dissatisfaction with the existing food services. with 18%. The Union Square Grill garnered 12%, There are a limited number of additional questions about these&#13;
At the time of the survey Parkside was on the Brown bag lunch 11%, at home before class 10.5%, internships in Science, English, requirements, or timing the&#13;
verge of completing its first year of food service in WLLC coffeeshop 9%, and McDonald's, 8%. Social Studies and at the student teaching/interning exthe&#13;
new Parkside Union. This provided Niebuhr Several other eating establishments were elementary level in area schools. perience, are encouraged to&#13;
information enabling him to find out exactly how mentioned in the survey. While the dining room For those who can leave the area - make an appointment with Dr.&#13;
the campus community was accepting the food was first, the' average check is greater at the Union there are some internships at the Dwayne Olsen of the Education&#13;
provided on campus. SquareGrill which showsthat people are willing to elementary level and in Division.&#13;
The initial idea for the survey came from a pay more for something of a good quality. secondary Art, German, Spanish, Overseas student teaching in&#13;
system-wide meeting of all University of Wisconsin Mc~nald's on Campus Science. Students who are Australia, England, S.cotland,&#13;
union directors held at Platteville by the Elsewherein the survey, respondents were'asked interested in learning -more Wales or Ireland as well as&#13;
UW~CentralAuxiliary Operations Analysis Office in to rate the three eating establishments on campus. about these internships, please student teaching in other areas&#13;
the spring of 1977,At that meeting a presentation The Union Squarehad an overall rating of 60%. The so indicate on your application. of the United States, are options&#13;
wasmade by Donald Findley, Executive Director of Union Dining Room followed with 45.3%, and the Further. information wi II be available to UW-P students. For&#13;
the Associated Students of UCLA. They used a WLLC Coffee Shop with 31%. It appears that she provided later. further information please c~nsimilar&#13;
type of survey to obtain the appropriate Union Square Grill with its char-broiled Students who have questions tact the Programs Office.&#13;
information needed for them to "redesign and sandwiches, pizza's, and fish 'n chip menu is the about their eligibility for student&#13;
redevelop" UCLA's food service program. The best accepted food area on campus. With the&#13;
resultsof the UGLAstudv had an apparent positive interest in McDonald's on the survey, a&#13;
effect on that campus's food service program. "McDonal&lt;fs-like hamburger" and cheeseburgerare&#13;
The .Parksidesurvey, unlike that of UCLA's had now being marketed. Respondents on the survey&#13;
very little to do with physical facilities in as much showed an interest in more fresh fruit, larger salads&#13;
as we had just moved into our new Union. It was anc!Jnade-to-order deli sandwiches all of which on&#13;
more practical to change the menu then to change now being sold. A question was raised by the&#13;
a building that was not yet a year old, respondents as to why the dining room is not open&#13;
The survey forms were mailed to 400 selected "later in the day.&#13;
students, faculty, staff and civil service employees. This was tried but it was evident that as the day&#13;
All were chosen with the help of the Parkside went on, there were simply not enough people on&#13;
Computer Center. Of the 400 surveyed,only 149 campus to make it feasible to keep the dining room&#13;
reports were returned by the deadline. This open very late, When the dining room was being&#13;
representsa 37% return rate compared to UCLA's closed at 2:00 p.m, it was expected that profit&#13;
40% and UWM's 17%......... would go down, but with the dining room closed&#13;
Breakfastat Parkside more and more people were using the Union Square&#13;
With the help of the survey, it was determined Grill and profits increased there.&#13;
that a majority of the campus community is on PricesMost Important ~&#13;
campus between 7:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.rn., with the When respondents were asked what was&#13;
greatest numbers between 9:30 a.m, and 3:30 p.m. important to them in a place to eat, prices were the&#13;
Obviously lunch is the biggest market. But with number one.concern. Surprisingsly, although the&#13;
40% of the responents indicating they are on price of food in outside establishments has gone up&#13;
campus five days a week in the early morning, a marketly, prices here at Parkside have had little or&#13;
potential breakfast market may exist. In a different no price increase. The quality of the food bought&#13;
part of the survey respondents reported that home was the second choice. .&#13;
type cooking was lacking, So, now there is a pastry Although the decor and surroundings of the&#13;
chef who comes in very early every morning and restaurantswer~ted very low as being of any real&#13;
bakespies, pastries and desserts.This compared to importance, physical remodeling of the Coffee&#13;
their frozen or store bought bakery goods available Shop is in progress.&#13;
pOOl&#13;
. 1.. ,.; .. ". .... .',..,. IN "'" :;:;&#13;
.DIRTY HARRY&#13;
Thurs., Sept. 22, 2:30 &amp; 7:30 p.m.&#13;
AND&#13;
MAGNUM FORCE&#13;
Fri., Sept. 23, 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Sun., Sept. 25, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
UNIONCINEMA $1.00&#13;
Cole goes&#13;
to EPA&#13;
Parkside meteorologist Henry&#13;
S. Cole is on leave of absence&#13;
during the 1977-78 academic&#13;
year to serve as staff scientist&#13;
with the federal Environmental&#13;
Protection Agency's Office of Air&#13;
Quality Planning and Standards&#13;
Monitoring and Data Analysis&#13;
Division at Research Triangle&#13;
Park, N.C.&#13;
As a staff scientist for the&#13;
EnvironmelJtal Protection,&#13;
Agency, he will be working on&#13;
in-depth analyses of the&#13;
transport, dispersion and trans";&#13;
formation of air pollutants. In&#13;
making the appointment the EPA&#13;
cited his "broad experience in air&#13;
pollution meteorology and air&#13;
quality management."&#13;
Professor Cole has been&#13;
involved in several major studies&#13;
of air quality along the Lake&#13;
Michigan shore from the&#13;
Chicago-Gary industrial complex&#13;
to Milwaukee,&#13;
An associate professor of&#13;
earth science, Cole joined Parkside&#13;
in 1969. He received his&#13;
undt7rgraduate degree from&#13;
Rutgers University and holds a&#13;
Ph.D. degree from l.(W-MadisQn.&#13;
Good oldie films slated&#13;
A series of free public film screenings has been announced by&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside Humanities Division for the fall&#13;
semester. The films will be shown on Tuesdaysat 7 p.m. in Classroom&#13;
Bldg. Room 105.&#13;
The series focuses on the first five decades of American film&#13;
history from the experiments of Thomas Edison in 1889to the release&#13;
of Orson Welles' "Citizen Kane" in 1941, A brief discussion will&#13;
precede each film.&#13;
Films to be shown are: "Birth of a Nation" Part Two on .Sept, 20,&#13;
"The Cabinet of Doctor Caligari" on Sept. 27, "Battleship Potemkin"&#13;
on Oct. 4, "The Goldrush" and "Cops" on Oct. 11, "Public Enemy" on&#13;
Oct. 18, "King Kong" on Oct, 25, "Bride of Frankenstein" and&#13;
"Hollywood: Dream Factory" on Nov. 1, "The River" and "The Plow&#13;
ThatBroke the Plains" on Nov. 8, "My Man Godfrey" on Nov. 15,&#13;
"Stagecoach" on Nov. 22, "Citizen Kane" on Nov. 29, (no screening&#13;
on Dec: 6) and "Prelude to War" on Dec. 13.&#13;
Japanese prints&#13;
visit Parlcside&#13;
A traveling exhibition of 30 Japanesewoodblock prints _ in which&#13;
two. artists vi~w the famous Iokaido Road linking Tokyo and the&#13;
ancl~nt Irnperial capital of Kyoto from perspectives 140 years apart&#13;
- will open at Parkside Communication Arts Gallery on Tuesday,&#13;
Sept. .20, and continue through· Oct. 6.&#13;
Gallery hours are noon to 5 and 7 to 10 p.m. for the opening and on&#13;
Sept. 27, 28, 29 and Oct. 4 and 5; noon to 5 p.rn. on Sept. 21, 22, 26,&#13;
29; and noon to 3 and 6 to 9 p.rn, on Oct. 2. Group tours will be&#13;
available by appointment which the UW-P Fine Arts Division on Sept.&#13;
23 and 30.&#13;
Artis~s featured in the show and Ando Hiroshige, whose classic&#13;
collectlo~ of Tokatdo Road prints appeared in 1834, and Sekino,&#13;
whose series was completed over the period between 1959and 1974.&#13;
Hiroshige's work is characterized by a concurrent interest in nature&#13;
a~d humanity. He evokes the subtle and majestic beauty of nature&#13;
With a strength and economy of line, sensitive color and lyrical spirit&#13;
that made him the most popular master of landscape of his day.&#13;
Th?ugh ~he f~mous views along the Tokaido are the subject of this&#13;
series, Hlroshlge has emphasized the hardships of travelers the work&#13;
of the country people, and the comic incidents one might encounter&#13;
on the journey. ....&#13;
Sekino's series, by comparison, plays down the human element in&#13;
order' to concentrate on the architectural patterns and structural&#13;
pre~enceof the natural landmarks along the Tokaido. Sekino chooses&#13;
~ubJectssuch as co~rtyards, tree branches and roof tiles which differ&#13;
rom the famous views Hiroshige immortalized .&#13;
M~ny of .the sights which greeted Hiroshige's eyes no longer&#13;
rernain. In his tim th T k id ..&#13;
. e e 0 31 0 oeriodtcallv shrank to a footpath or&#13;
required travelers to d· d&#13;
I k wa e across rivers and ferry across bays an&#13;
a es. Today the Tokaido is a super highway and the journey which&#13;
and r took two weeks in good weather now takes two and a half hours&#13;
an many of the 5t S k' d .&#13;
. I es e 100 eplcts - the graveyards subways and&#13;
cltyscapes fl h "&#13;
k&#13;
- re ect t e changes of the last thirty ye~rs and were&#13;
un nown to Hiroshige. . _~'&#13;
One of the fundament I d'ff .&#13;
f&#13;
a I erences b'etween the two s~riesis their&#13;
manner 0 production In H· h· 'd&#13;
f f . IroS Ige s· ay the print designer was only&#13;
one 0 Our membe f '&#13;
print. The publisher ~ 0 a team ~f men who created a woodblock&#13;
choose the ro r ?uld dete~mlOethe subject matter for a series,&#13;
would creat~ t~e _artl~t,and flOance the production. The designer&#13;
CUller who ~;oug sketch for the print and give it to the block&#13;
Fjnall~ th w?U carve the blocks according to the artist's drawing.&#13;
, e printer would take the blOCksand create the print itself.&#13;
, ,&#13;
I&#13;
news&#13;
'Home cooking' .invades _Apply fo~ educa~ion&#13;
student. 1nternsh1p campus foOd service&#13;
b Dan Guidebeck and John Gabriel in previous years. There is a cook who comes in and&#13;
y makes home made soup.&#13;
"Food service will improve," says William R.&#13;
Niebuhr, Director of the Union. A survey&#13;
conducted last May by Niebuhr tells of satisfaction&#13;
and dissatisfaction with the existing food services.&#13;
At the time of the survey Parkside was on the&#13;
verge of completing its first year of food service in&#13;
the new Parkside Union. This provided Niebuhr&#13;
information enabling him to find out exactly how&#13;
the campus community was accepting the food&#13;
provided on campus.&#13;
The initial idea for the survey came from a&#13;
system-wide meeting of all University of Wisconsin&#13;
union directors held at Platteville by the&#13;
UW-Central Auxiliary Operations Analysis Office in&#13;
the spring of 1977. At that meeting a presentation&#13;
was made by Donald Findley, Executive Director of&#13;
the Associated Students of UCLA. They used a&#13;
similar type of survey to obtain the appropriate&#13;
information needed for them to "redesign and&#13;
redevelop" UCLA's food service program. The&#13;
results of the UGLA stµdy had an apparent positive&#13;
effect on that campus's food service program.&#13;
The Parkside survey, unlike that of UCLA's had&#13;
very little to do with physical facilities in as much&#13;
as we had just moved into our new Union. It was&#13;
more practical to change the menu then to change&#13;
a building that was not yet a year old.&#13;
The survey forms were mailed to 400 selected&#13;
students, faculty, staff and civil service employees.&#13;
All were chosen with the help of the Parkside&#13;
Computer Center. Of the 400 surveyed, only 149&#13;
reports were returned by the deadline. This&#13;
represents a 37% return rate compared to UCLA's&#13;
40% and UWM's 17%.&#13;
Breakfast at Parkside&#13;
With the help of the survey, it was determined&#13;
that a majority of the campus community is on&#13;
campus between 7:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m., with the&#13;
greatest numbers between 9:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Obviously lunch is the biggest market. But with&#13;
40% of the responents indicating they are on&#13;
campus five days a week in the early morning, a&#13;
potential breakfast market may exist. In a different&#13;
part of the survey respondents reported that home&#13;
type cooking was lacking. So, now there is a pastry&#13;
chef who comes in very early every morning and&#13;
bakes pies, pastries and desserts. This compared to&#13;
their frozen or store bought bakery goods available&#13;
Those surveyed were asked where they would&#13;
prefer to have lunch both on and off campus. The&#13;
number one choice was the Union Dining Room&#13;
with 18%. The Union Square Grill garnered 12%,&#13;
Brown bag lunch 11%, at home before class 10.5%,&#13;
WLLC coffeeshop 9%, and McDonald's, 8%.&#13;
Several other eating establishments were&#13;
mentioned in the survey. While the dining room&#13;
was first, the· average check is greater at the Union&#13;
Square Grill which shows that people are willing to&#13;
pay more for something of a good quality.&#13;
McDonald's on Campus&#13;
Elsewhere in the survey, respondents were· asked&#13;
to rate the three eating establishments on campus.&#13;
The Union Square had an overafl rating of 60%. The&#13;
Union Dining Room followed with 45.3%, and the&#13;
WLLC Coffee Shop with 31%. It appears that 5he&#13;
Union Square Grill with its char-broiled&#13;
sandwiches, pizza's, and fish 'n chip menu is the&#13;
best accepted food area on campus. With the&#13;
interest in McDonald's on the su,rvey, a&#13;
"McDonalcfs-like hamburger" and cheeseburger are&#13;
now being marketed. Respondents on the survey&#13;
showed an interest in more fresh fruit, larger salads&#13;
and~made-to-order deli sandwiches all of which on&#13;
now being sold. A question was raised by the&#13;
respondents as to why the dining room is not open 0 later in the day.&#13;
This was tried but it was evident that as the day&#13;
went on, there were simply not enough people on&#13;
campus to make it feasible to keep the dining room&#13;
open very late. When the dining room was being&#13;
closed at 2:00 p.m., it was expected that profit&#13;
would go down, but with the dining room closed&#13;
more and more people were using the Union Square&#13;
Grill and profits increased there.&#13;
Prices Most Important&#13;
When respondents were asked what wa·s&#13;
important to them in a place to eat, prices were the&#13;
number one .concern . Surprisingsly, although the&#13;
price of food in outside establishments has gone up&#13;
marketly, prices here at Parkside have had little or&#13;
no price increase. The quality of the food bought&#13;
was the second choice.&#13;
Although th~ decor and surroundings of the&#13;
restaurants were rated very low as being of any real&#13;
importance, physical remodeling of the Coffee&#13;
Shop is in progress.&#13;
Cole goes&#13;
to EPA&#13;
Parkside meteorologist Henry&#13;
S. Cole is on leave of absence&#13;
during the 1977-78 academic&#13;
year to serve as staff scientist&#13;
with the federal Environmental&#13;
Protection Agency's Office of Air&#13;
Quality Planning and Standards&#13;
Monitoring and Data Analysis&#13;
Division at Research Triangle&#13;
Park, N.C.&#13;
As a staff scientist for the&#13;
Environme1Jtal Protection,&#13;
Agency, he will be working on&#13;
in-depth analyses of the&#13;
trarisport, dispersion and trans~&#13;
formation of air pollutants. In&#13;
making the appointment the EPA&#13;
cited his "broad experience in air&#13;
pollution meteorology and air&#13;
quality management."&#13;
Professor Cole has been&#13;
involved in several major studies&#13;
of air quality along the Lake&#13;
Michigan shore from the&#13;
Chicago-Cary industrial complex&#13;
to Milwaukee.&#13;
An associate professor of&#13;
earth science, Cole joined Parkside&#13;
in 1969. He received his&#13;
undergraduate degree from&#13;
Rutgers University and holds a&#13;
Ph.D. degree from UW-Madison.&#13;
Education students who plan&#13;
to student teach during Spring&#13;
Semester 1978 are reminded that&#13;
the deadline for these applications&#13;
is October 1, 1977. Forms&#13;
are available in the Clinical&#13;
Programs Office, Creenquist 210.&#13;
There are a limited number of&#13;
internships in Science, English,&#13;
Social Studies and at the&#13;
elementary level in area schools.&#13;
For those who can leave the area&#13;
there are some internships at the&#13;
elementary level and in&#13;
secondary Art, German, Spanish,&#13;
Science. Students who are&#13;
interested in learning -more&#13;
about these internships, please&#13;
so indicate on your application.&#13;
Further - information will be&#13;
provided later.&#13;
Students who have questions&#13;
about their eligibility for student&#13;
teaching or interning Spring&#13;
Semester 1978 are urged to&#13;
consult the Fall 1977 Timetable&#13;
or the 1977-78 Catalog for a&#13;
statement of admission requirements&#13;
for student teaching.&#13;
Education students who have&#13;
additional questions about these&#13;
requirements, or timing the&#13;
student teaching/interning experience,&#13;
are encouraged to&#13;
make an appointment with Dr.&#13;
Dwayne Olsen of the Education&#13;
Division.&#13;
Overseas student teaching in&#13;
Australia, England, S.cotland,&#13;
Wales or Ireland as well as&#13;
student teaching in other areas&#13;
of the United States, are options&#13;
available to UW-P students. For&#13;
further information please contact&#13;
the Programs Office.&#13;
Good oldie films slated · A series of free public film screenings has been announced by&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside Humanities Division for the fall&#13;
semester. The films will be shown on Tuesdays at 7 p.m. in Classroom&#13;
Bldg. Room 105.&#13;
The series focuses on the first five decades of American film&#13;
history from the experiments of Thomas Edison in 1889 to the release&#13;
of Orson Welles' "Citizen Kane" in 1941. A brief discussion will&#13;
precede each film.&#13;
Films to be shown are: "Birth of a Nation" Part Two on Sept. 20,&#13;
"The Cabinet of Doctor Caligari" on Sept. 27, "Battleship Potemkin"&#13;
on Oct. 4, "The Coldrush" and "Cops" on Oct. 11, "Public Enemy" on&#13;
Oct. 18, "King Kong" on Oct. 25, "Bride of Frankenstein" and&#13;
" Hollywood : Dream Factory" on Nov. 1, "'The River" and "The Plow&#13;
That Broke the Plains" on Nov. 8, "My Man Godfrey" on Nov. 15,&#13;
"Stagecoach" on Nov. 22, "Citizen Kane" on Nov. 29, (no screening&#13;
on Dec.· 6) and "Prelude to War" on Dec. 13.&#13;
Japanese prints&#13;
visit Parkside&#13;
A traveli,:;g exhibition of 30 Japanese woodblock prints - in which&#13;
two_ artists view the famous To-kaido Road linking Tokyo and the&#13;
anc1~nt Imperial capital of Kyoto from perspectives 140 years apart&#13;
- will open at Parkside Communication Arts Callery on Tuesday,&#13;
Sept. _20, and continue through · Oct. 6.&#13;
Gallery hours are noon to 5 and 7 to 10 p.m. for the opening and on&#13;
Sept. 27, 28, 29 and Oct. 4 and 5; noon to 5 p.m. on Sept. 21, 22, 26,&#13;
29; _and noon to 3 and 6 to 9 p.m. on Oct. 2. Group tours, will be&#13;
available by appointment which the UW-P Fine Arts Division on Sept.&#13;
23 and 30.&#13;
Artis~s featured in the show and Ando Hiroshige, whose classic&#13;
collect10~ of Tokaido Road prints appeared irr 1834, and Sekino,&#13;
whose series was completed over the period between 1959 and 1974.&#13;
Hiroshige's work is characterized by a concurrent interest in nature&#13;
and humanity. He evokes the subtle and majestic beauty of nature&#13;
with a str~ngth and economy of line, sensitive color and lyrical spirit&#13;
that made him the most popular master of landscape of his day.&#13;
Th?ugh ~he f~mous views along the Tokaido are the subject of this&#13;
series, Hirosh1ge has emphasized the hardships of travelers, the work&#13;
of the country people, and the comic incidents one might encounter&#13;
on the journey. ,&#13;
Sekino's series, by comparison, plays down the human element in&#13;
order· to concentrate on the architectural patterns and structural&#13;
pre~ence of the natural landmarks along the Tokaido. Sekino choa"ses&#13;
;ubiects such as co~rtyards, tre~ branches and roof tiles which differ&#13;
. rom the famous views Hiroshige immortalized.&#13;
· M~ny of _th~ sights which greeted Hiroshige's eyes no longer&#13;
rem~m . In his time the Tokaido periodically shrank to a footpath or&#13;
~e~uired travelers to wade across rivers and ferry across bays and&#13;
a es. Today the Tokaido is a super highway and the journey which&#13;
on~e took two weeks in good weather now takes two and a half hours&#13;
a~ many of the sites Seki no depicts - the graveyards subways and&#13;
citykscapes - reflect the changes of the last thirty y~~rs and ~ere&#13;
un nown to Hiroshige_ '&#13;
One offthe fundamental differences between the two series is their&#13;
manner o production In H. h' , d I&#13;
one of f b · iros ige s ay, the print designer was on Y&#13;
our rnem ers of a tea f h bl k print. The publisher m ~ men w o created a wood oc&#13;
choose th w?uld determine the subject matter for a series,&#13;
would cre:t~r~:er ,arti~t, and finance the production. The designer&#13;
cutter who eldroug sketch for the print and give it to the block&#13;
' wou carve the block d. · Finally th · s accor mg to the artist's drawing. ' e printer would take the blocks and create the print itself.&#13;
I&#13;
I &#13;
sports&#13;
Heiring&#13;
competes&#13;
in England&#13;
FormerUW-Parkside walker&#13;
Jim Heiring of Kenosha; who&#13;
missed making the 1976 U.s.&#13;
Olympic team by two places&#13;
in his specialty, gets his first&#13;
shot at international competition&#13;
next week as he vies in&#13;
the Lugano Cup walk in&#13;
England.&#13;
Heiring, a May graduate of&#13;
Parkside, will compete Sept.&#13;
24-25in the 20 kilometer walk&#13;
with three other U.S. walkers.&#13;
Four other Americans will&#13;
compete in the 50 kilometer&#13;
race, which was left out of the&#13;
Montreal games but has been&#13;
reinstated by the organizers in&#13;
Moscow for 1980.&#13;
The competition in London&#13;
will include the world's best&#13;
walkers, among them Olympic&#13;
champion and world&#13;
record-holder Daniel Bautista&#13;
and the silver and bronze&#13;
medalists from Montreal.&#13;
Heiring, who beganwalking&#13;
as a freshman at Parkside in&#13;
1974, won six indoor and&#13;
outdoor NAIA walk championships&#13;
for the Rangers.At&#13;
22, he's probably the best&#13;
young walker in the country&#13;
and was the youngest by&#13;
some five or six years of the&#13;
top Olympic Trials finishers.&#13;
CHI-RHO Center&#13;
announces&#13;
fall schedule&#13;
L&#13;
Sister Colette and Father&#13;
Wayne, Campus Ministers at&#13;
Parks ide, announce the following&#13;
schedule of activities for the&#13;
first semester.&#13;
Mass is celebrated each.&#13;
Sundaymorning at 10:00 and&#13;
11:30a.m. at CHI-RHOCENTER&#13;
located at 3825 12th Street in&#13;
Kenosha.(The CENTERis just&#13;
southeast of the Parkside&#13;
fieldhouseon Highway E.)&#13;
A series of partnership or&#13;
bre-rnarnage sessions will be&#13;
held at CHI-RHO CENTERon&#13;
each Wednesday evening in&#13;
Octoberbeginning at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Registration is required and can&#13;
be madeby phoningthe CENTER&#13;
at 552-8626before October 1,&#13;
1977.&#13;
BeginningOctober 26 at 7:30&#13;
p.m, and ,running for six&#13;
consecutive weeks, a Communications&#13;
Workshop will be&#13;
conducted for any persons&#13;
interested in improving the&#13;
quality of" their communication&#13;
and increasing their ability to&#13;
live life as productively as&#13;
Possible, Participation will be by&#13;
registration only.&#13;
Sister Colette and Father&#13;
Wayne are available for listening,&#13;
caring and sharing your concerns&#13;
and needs. Private confession&#13;
and personal counseling are&#13;
available by appointment. More&#13;
information and further, details'&#13;
are available by phoning&#13;
CHI-RHOCENTERat 5S2-8j&gt;26.&#13;
Cross-country open&#13;
meets scheduled&#13;
Parkside will sponsor all-comers cross-country&#13;
races this fall on four Sunday afternoons in&#13;
September and October.&#13;
Races for men and women and boys and girls in&#13;
seven age groups will be held beginning at 1 p.rn. on&#13;
Sept. 18, Sept. 25, Oct. 9 and Oct. 23 on the UW-P&#13;
cross-country course, site of this year's NAIA&#13;
national cross-country meet.&#13;
The entry fee is 50 cents per person per race with&#13;
certificates going to all finishers and ribbons to the&#13;
top five in each age group.&#13;
A one mile race will go at 1 p.m. for boys and girls&#13;
12 and under, two mile races beginning at 1:20 p.m.&#13;
for those 16 and under and 18 and under, and three&#13;
mile races starting at 2 p.m. for 18 and under, 30 and&#13;
over, and 40 and over and open.&#13;
For more information, contact UW-P cross-&#13;
'country coach Lucian Rosa at 553-2245.&#13;
MaryAnn Cairns attempts to save Q set against UW-Milwaukee,&#13;
Parkside lost 9~,&#13;
Fill in the blank spaces to complete the words, each containing the letters "u S e:'&#13;
The clues may, or may not, help you.&#13;
1. USE _&#13;
II it's this, you don 'I need it&#13;
2. __ USE_&#13;
This will gel you upset. 3. USE&#13;
Don't get any wrong ideas.&#13;
4._USE _&#13;
There is a tail to this one,&#13;
5. USE&#13;
Not too quick 10 catch on.&#13;
When there's a challenge,&#13;
quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope you have some fun with the challenge.&#13;
'Pabst Blue Ribbon i~ the Number 1 beer in Milwaukee.&#13;
beer capital of the world,&#13;
That's why we'd like to offer you another challenge&#13;
-the Pabst challenge. Taste and compare Pabst Blue&#13;
Ribbon to any other premium beer You'll like Pabst&#13;
because Blue Ribbon quality means the best-tasting beer&#13;
you can get, Since 1844 it always has.&#13;
PABST. Since 1844.The quality has always come through.&#13;
PABST BREWING COMPANY, Milwaukee, Wis" Peori. Heigtlts, Ill., NewaJ1l:,N.J., los Angel.s, Calif" Pabst, GeOfgia&#13;
sports&#13;
Heiring&#13;
competes&#13;
in England&#13;
Former UW-Parkside walker&#13;
Jim Heiring of Kenosha; who&#13;
missed making the 1976 U .S.&#13;
Olympic team by two places&#13;
in his specialty, gets his first&#13;
shot at international competition&#13;
next week as he vies in&#13;
the Lugano Cup walk in&#13;
England .&#13;
Heiring, a May graduate of&#13;
Parkside, will compete Sept.&#13;
24-25 in the 20 kilometer walk&#13;
with three other U .S. walkers.&#13;
Four other Americans wi II&#13;
compete in the SO kilometer&#13;
race, which was left out of the&#13;
Montreal games but has been&#13;
reinstated by the organizers in&#13;
Moscow for 1980.&#13;
Cross-country open&#13;
meets scheduled&#13;
Parkside will sponsor all-comers cross-country&#13;
races this fall on four Sunday afternoons in&#13;
September and October.&#13;
Races for men and women and boys and girls in&#13;
seven age groups will be held beginning at 1 p.m . on&#13;
Sept. 18, Sept. 25, Oct. 9 and Oct. 23 on the UW-P&#13;
cross-country course, site of this year's NAIA&#13;
national cross-country meet.&#13;
The entry fee is 50 cents per person per race with&#13;
certificates going to all finishers and ribbons to the&#13;
top five in each age group.&#13;
The competition in London&#13;
will include the world' s best&#13;
walkers, among them Olympic&#13;
champion and world&#13;
record-holder Daniel Bautista&#13;
and the silver and bronze&#13;
medalists from Montreal.&#13;
MaryAnn Cairns attempts to save a set against UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
A one mile race will go at 1 p.m . for boys and girls&#13;
12 and under, two mile races beginning at 1 :20 p.m .&#13;
for those 16 and under and 18 and under, and three&#13;
mile races starting at 2 p.m . for 18 and under, 30 and&#13;
over, and 40 and over and open .&#13;
For more information, contact UW-P crosscountry&#13;
coach Lucian Rosa at 553-2245.&#13;
Heiring, who began walking&#13;
as a freshman at Parkside in&#13;
1974, won six indoor and&#13;
outdoor NAIA walk championships&#13;
for the Rangers. At&#13;
22, he's probably the best&#13;
young walker in the country&#13;
and was the youngest by&#13;
some five or six years of the&#13;
top Olympic Trials finishers.&#13;
CHI-RHO Center&#13;
announces&#13;
fall schedule&#13;
Sister Colette and Father&#13;
Wayne, Campus Ministers at&#13;
Parkside, announce the following&#13;
schedule of activities for the&#13;
first semester.&#13;
Mass is celebrated each .&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:00 and&#13;
11:30 a.m. at CHI-RHO CENTER&#13;
located at 3825 12th Street in&#13;
Kenosha. (The CENTER is just&#13;
southeast of the Parkside&#13;
fieldhouse on Highway E.)&#13;
A series of partnership or&#13;
pre-marriage sessions will be&#13;
held at CHI-RHO CENTER on&#13;
each Wednesday evening in&#13;
October beginning at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Registration is required and can&#13;
be made by phoning the CENTER&#13;
at 552-8626 before October 1,&#13;
1977.&#13;
Beginning October 26 at 7:30&#13;
p.m·. and running for six&#13;
consecutive ~eeks, a Communications&#13;
Workshop will be&#13;
conducted for any persons&#13;
interested in improving the&#13;
quality of their communication&#13;
and increasing their ability to&#13;
live life as productively as&#13;
possible Participation will be by&#13;
registration only.&#13;
Sister Colette and Father&#13;
Wayne are available for listening,&#13;
caring and sharing your concerns&#13;
and needs. Private confession&#13;
and personal counseling are&#13;
available by appointment. More&#13;
information and further , details'&#13;
are available by phoning&#13;
CHI-RHO CENTER at 552-8626.&#13;
Parkside lost 9-0.&#13;
Fill in the blank spaces to complete the words, each containing the letters "US e:·&#13;
The clues may, or may not, help you.&#13;
1. USE ___ _ If it's this, you don't need it. 2.&#13;
__ usE_&#13;
This will get you upset. 3. _____ USE&#13;
Don't get any wrong ideas. 4._usE ___ _&#13;
There is a tail to this one.&#13;
s. ___ usE&#13;
Not too quick to catch on.&#13;
When there's a challenge, quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope you have some fun with the challenge.&#13;
·Pabst Blue Ribbon ii, the Number 1 beer in Milwaukee.&#13;
beer capital of the world.&#13;
That's why we'd like to offer you another challenge&#13;
-the Pabst challenge. Taste and compare Pabst Blue&#13;
Ribbon to any other premium beer. You'll like Pabst&#13;
because Blue Ribbon quality means the best-tasting beer&#13;
you can get. Since 1844 it always has.&#13;
PABST. Since 1844. The quality has always come through. PABST BREWING COMPANY, Milwaukee, Wis., Peoria Heights, Ill., Newarl&lt;, N.J., Loa Angeles, Calif., Pabat, Georgia&#13;
3 S IU80 c; 3~V13Sn.:I ~ 3snavs1a C V3SnVN l SS313Sn l :JeMsuy &#13;
events&#13;
Wednesday, September 21&#13;
Film The Wild Bunch 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Soccer Parkside vs. Trinity College on the soccer&#13;
field off of Wood Road at 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Boxing Organizational Meeting at 3:00 p.m. in CL&#13;
0-174. For more information call Professor&#13;
Pomazal 553-2428.&#13;
Thursday ,September 22·&#13;
Track Team Meeting at 3:30 p.m. in the upstairs&#13;
lounge of the Physical Education Building.&#13;
Film Dirty Harry 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Yom Kippur see Leviticus: 16.&#13;
Friday, September 23&#13;
Film Magnum Force 8:00 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00. _&#13;
Golf Parkside at UW-Oshkosh Invitational 9:30 a.m.&#13;
Saturday, September 24&#13;
Soccer Parkside vs. Rockford College on the soccer&#13;
field off of Wood Road at 2:00 p.m.&#13;
Volleyball Parkside at Depaul University Tournament,&#13;
Chicago 10:00 a.m.&#13;
Cross-country: United States Track and Field&#13;
Federation Midwestern Championships. Here at&#13;
12:00 noon on the cross-country field off of&#13;
County JR.&#13;
Picnic Life Science Club, from noon to 4:00 p.m.&#13;
Food provided. Members 50c, non-members 75c.&#13;
Volleyball and Frisbee provided. Call 554-9512 or&#13;
639-3828.&#13;
Monday, September 26&#13;
Golf Parkside at Steinauer Invitational in Madison.&#13;
Tennis Parkside at UW-Oshkosh with UW-Green&#13;
Bay, 2:00 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, September 28&#13;
Soccer Parkside at Aurora College, Illinois 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Tennis Parkside vs. Carroll College here at 3:30 on&#13;
the tennis courts next to the Physical Education&#13;
Building. .&#13;
Friday, September 30&#13;
Golf Warhawk Invitational at Janesville 9:15 a.m.&#13;
Tennis Parkside vs. Carthage and UW-Whitewater at&#13;
Carthage College in Kenosha, 2:00 p.m.&#13;
notes&#13;
All women interested in playing on Parkside's&#13;
Women's Varsity Basketball Team should call Coach&#13;
Sue Tobachnik as soon as possible at 553-2318.&#13;
Anyone interested in Debate and Forensics should&#13;
come to Comm Arts room 258 at 6:30 p.m: any&#13;
Wednesday. If this time conflicts with your&#13;
schedule, call Professor Weaver at 553-2420.&#13;
Anyone interested in trying out for fall baseball&#13;
should come to the club's practice every week night&#13;
at 3:45 p.m. on Parkside's baseball field off of&#13;
County E.&#13;
Men's Swim Team has already begun pre-season&#13;
conditioning, but it is not too late to get on the&#13;
team. The first meet is the Coed Ranger Relays&#13;
November 18, at 3:30 p.m. Any men interested&#13;
should attend a meeting in the Physical Education&#13;
Building, Friday, September 30, at 3:30 p.m. or call&#13;
Barb Lawson 553-2257.&#13;
Women's Swim Team will begin its season October&#13;
4, at Carroll College. The team needs many more&#13;
swimmers than it now has and anyone interested&#13;
should contact Barb Lawson immediately. Call&#13;
553-2257.&#13;
The Ranger ,Basketball Team needs a large louo&#13;
Cheerleading Squad. Anyone meeting the need&#13;
should contact Shirley Schmerling in Tallent Hall&#13;
115 or call 553-2320.&#13;
Women's Golf needs more women. Those interested&#13;
should contact Loran Hein 553-2162.&#13;
/&#13;
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classified&#13;
Help wantfICI part-tlme help. $4.25 per hour,&#13;
15 hours per week. call Jim ClgJ!lske&#13;
634-4995 between 11:00 a.m. and 1:00 p.ra.&#13;
For sale Irlsh_ Setter Puppies $50. 654-3810.&#13;
or 654-8383 at 2008 8181 Street-ln Kenosha.&#13;
-&#13;
For 811. '973 Monte carlo. Gold wfblack&#13;
vinyl top. Excellent condition. $2,000 or ,&#13;
_ best offer. call 652-5049 and ask for Tom.&#13;
Wanted: Coach and Intramural Instructor&#13;
candidates Kenosha Unified Schools&#13;
contact Glen McCulloch Athletic Coordinator&#13;
by letter - Hannan Administration&#13;
Building 4001 60th Street If Interested.&#13;
Ride W.nted from Part&lt;slde to 1538 Arthur&#13;
Ave., Racine. Between 4:30-5:00 PM. I am&#13;
deaf, blind, and have a guide dog.·Wlli pay&#13;
reasonable amount If requested. Contact me&#13;
at Parkslde Computer Center CA 120 or call&#13;
553-2303.&#13;
28 mil .. per gellon. For salell 1965 VW. It&#13;
runs, needs some wors. $225. 553-2428.&#13;
College Rep needect Call between 911 AM&#13;
to set up appointment for Interview. Call&#13;
Marlon James at 654-8692.&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR -YOU!&#13;
quality corrrnercial printers&#13;
1417 50th street . 658·8990&#13;
Events forms are available at the Information Center&#13;
8&#13;
in the Union and at the Information Kiosk in Main&#13;
Place. They may be mailed through intra-campus&#13;
mail or delivered personally to Tallent Hall, room&#13;
290. All events forms-must be in at least eight days&#13;
prior to the Wednesday issue of Ranger.&#13;
J(apiJ~ J?laza -2~ Cinema, '&#13;
Mondaythru Saturday7,30 &amp;9,30&#13;
~=iiiiiiiii;:Su:n:d:aY:S:l ,:30,3,30. 5,30:,:7:,30=&amp;:9.:.30=====:::&#13;
VISIT THE&#13;
UNION&#13;
REC. CTR.&#13;
1. BOWUNG SPECIAL&#13;
Break the monday morning&#13;
b-lues. Bowling 25' 9am-noon&#13;
2. STUDENT LEAGUES&#13;
Fall leagues now forming&#13;
individuals or teams, sign up&#13;
NOW lFor information on times t&#13;
costs, openings;e'tc. Visit or call&#13;
&lt;; Rec. Ctr. 553-2695&#13;
Sat.&#13;
Sept. 24·&#13;
9:00pm&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
Mixed Drinks I'railahle&#13;
ID', R... I,... '&#13;
~&#13;
'- _(J~ ,(;; r;r/}Ig", 'c~fJl/ni&#13;
*1.00 uw-p Stu•••&#13;
*1.50 Oth.n&#13;
,.&#13;
events&#13;
Wedn-esday, September 21&#13;
Film The Wild Bunch 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Soccer Parkside vs. Trinity College on the soccer&#13;
field off of Wood Road at 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Boxing Organizational Meeting at 3:00 p.m. in CL&#13;
D-174. For more information call Professor&#13;
Pomazal 553-2428.&#13;
Thursday,·September 22&#13;
Track Team Meeting at 3:30 p.m. in the upstairs&#13;
lounge of the Physical Education Building.&#13;
Film Dirty Harry 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1 .00.&#13;
Yom Kippur see Leviticus: 16.&#13;
Friday, September 23&#13;
Film Magnum Force 8:00 p.m . in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Golf Parkside at UW-Oshkosh Invitational 9:30 a.m.&#13;
Saturday, September 24&#13;
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Events forms are available at the Information Center&#13;
in the Union and at the Information Kiosk in Main&#13;
Place. They may be mailed through intra-campus&#13;
mail or delivered personally to Tallent Hall, room&#13;
290. All events forms.-must be in at least eight days&#13;
prior to the Wednesday issue of Ranger.&#13;
Soccer Parkside vs. Rockford College on the soccer&#13;
field off of Wood Road at 2:00 p.m . .classified&#13;
Volleyball Parkside at r;:&gt;epaul University Tournament,&#13;
Chicago 10:00 a.m.&#13;
Cross-country: United States Track and Field&#13;
Federation Midwestern Championships. Here at&#13;
12:00 noon on the cross-country field off of&#13;
County JR.&#13;
Help wanted part-time help. $4.25 per hour,&#13;
15 hours per week. Call Jim ClgJ lske&#13;
634-4995 between 11 :00 a.m. and 1 :00 p.m.&#13;
For Sale Irish Setter Puppies $50. 654-3810.&#13;
or 654-8383 at 2008 81 st Street-In Kenosha.&#13;
For Sale 1973 Monte Carlo. Gold w/black&#13;
vinyl top. Excellent condition. $2,000 or _&#13;
Picnic Life Science Club, from noon to 4:00 p.m . _ best offer. Call 652-5049 and ask for Tom.&#13;
Food provided . Members 50c, non-members 75c.&#13;
Volleyball and Frisbee provided. Call 554-9512 or&#13;
639-3828.&#13;
Monday, September 26&#13;
Golf Parkside at Steinauer Invitational in Madison.&#13;
Tennis Parkside at UW-Oshkosh with UW-Creen&#13;
Bay, 2:00 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, September 28&#13;
Soccer Parkside at Aurora College, Illinois 3:30 p.m .&#13;
Tennis Parkside vs. Carroll College here ..at 3:30 on&#13;
the tennis courts next to the Physical Education&#13;
Building. ·&#13;
Friday, Septem~er 30&#13;
Golf Warhawk Invitational at Janesville 9:15 a.m.&#13;
Tennis Parkside vs . Carthage and UW-Whitewater at&#13;
Carthage College in Kenosha, 2:00 p.m .&#13;
notes&#13;
All women interested in playing on Parkside's&#13;
Women's Varsity Basketball Team should call Coach&#13;
Sue Tobachnik as soon as possible at 553-2318.&#13;
Anyone interested in Debate and Forensics should&#13;
come to Comm Arts room 258 at 6:30 p.m: any&#13;
Wednesday . If this time conflicts with your&#13;
schedule, call Professor Weaver at 553-2420. '&#13;
Anyone interested in trying out for fall baseball&#13;
should come to the club's practice every week night&#13;
at 3:45 p.m . on Parkside's baseball field off of&#13;
County E.&#13;
Men's Swim Team has already begun pre-season _&#13;
conditioning, but it is not too late to get on the&#13;
team. The first meet is the Coed Ranger Relays&#13;
November 18, at 3:30 p.m. Any men interested&#13;
should attend a meeting in the Physical Education&#13;
Building, Friday, September 30, at 3:30 p.m. or call&#13;
Barb Lawson 553-2257.&#13;
Women's Swim Team will begin its season October&#13;
4, at Carroll College. The team needs many more&#13;
swimmers than it now has and anyone interested&#13;
should contact Barb Lawson immediately. Call&#13;
553-2257.&#13;
The Ranger ,Basketball Team needs a large loua&#13;
Cheerleading Squad. Anyone meeting the need·&#13;
should contact Shirley Schmerling in Tallent Hall&#13;
115 or call 553-2320.&#13;
Women's Golf needs more women. Those interested&#13;
should contact Loran Hein 553-2162.&#13;
/&#13;
Wanted : Coach and Intramural Instructor&#13;
candidates Kenosha Unlfled Schools&#13;
cQntact Glen McCulloch Athletic Coordinator&#13;
by letter - Hannan Administration&#13;
Building 4001 60th Street If Interested.&#13;
Ride Wanted from Parkside to 1538 Arthur&#13;
Ave., Racine. Between 4:30-5 :00 PM. I am&#13;
deal, blind, and have a guide dog.'WIII pay&#13;
reasonable amount If requested. Contact me&#13;
at Parkside Computer Center CA 120 or call&#13;
553-2303.&#13;
28 mlles per gallon. For Salel I 1965 VW. It&#13;
runs, needs some work. $225. 553-2428.&#13;
Collage Rap needed. Call between 91 1 AM&#13;
to set up appointment for Interview. Call&#13;
Marlon James at 654-8692.&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS. FOR ¥OU!&#13;
,/?apiJs /?Laza 2&#13;
~=----,&#13;
cinema ~ j&#13;
Monday thru Saturday 7:30 &amp; 9:30&#13;
Sundays 1 :30, 3:30, 5:30, 7 :30 &amp; 9:30&#13;
VISIT THE&#13;
UNION&#13;
REC. CTR.&#13;
1. BOWUN8 SPECIAL&#13;
Break the monday morning&#13;
blues. Bowling 25' 9am-noon&#13;
2. STUDENT LEAGUES&#13;
Come Today See Yours.&#13;
quality corm,ercial printers&#13;
1417 50th street - 658-8990&#13;
Sat.&#13;
Sept. 24-&#13;
9:00pm&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
Mixed Drinks Awailahle&#13;
ID'1 Re.ulred&#13;
Fall leagues now forming&#13;
individuals or teams, sign up&#13;
NOW !·For information on times,&#13;
costs, openings;e'tc. Visit or call&#13;
~ Rec. Ctr. 553-2695&#13;
*1.00 UW-P Students&#13;
*t_SO Others </text>
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              <text>aD&#13;
Nature trai's&#13;
penetrate&#13;
natural areas&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Parkside will soon open nature trails which will lead the nature&#13;
lover north from the Outer loop Road up to Highway" An. Along with&#13;
natural prairie grasses, 'the trails will feature various types of foliage&#13;
and flora and wildlife such as deer, fox, skunk, raccoon, opossum,&#13;
and other small mammals. The trails will add up to about 3.5 miles&#13;
and have not yet been completed.&#13;
According to Cushing Phillips, Director of the Physical Plant, the&#13;
federally-funded jobs project has been approved, "the entrances&#13;
have not yet been cut because we don't want people going on them&#13;
before they are completed." The trails will consist only of mown&#13;
prairie grass, and some bridges and wooden steps which still have to&#13;
be installed.&#13;
According to james Galbraith, Director of Planning and&#13;
Construction, the trail is intended to give the Parkside community,&#13;
and particularly Life Science students, access to some of the variety&#13;
of pJants on campus.&#13;
The Parkside campus plan describes the area serviced by the trails&#13;
as follows:&#13;
This area encompasses the widest variety of ecological conditions&#13;
with the flood plain of the Pike River, upland areas on the" north, east&#13;
and south. Because of this variety and its pro:timity to the aademic&#13;
core, this area should be developed as a natural teachinllaboratory,&#13;
with specimen communities of prairie, Northern, Southern and&#13;
Boreal Forest Groups.&#13;
Chancellor leills&#13;
housing co-op&#13;
by .Diane Jalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Parkstde's proposed housing co-operative plan, that cou~d have&#13;
been supported by the United States Department of HOUSingand&#13;
Urban Development (HUD), was rejected early September by&#13;
Park, ide Chancellor Alan E. Cuskin. .&#13;
The propound co-op college housing program had Intended to&#13;
purchase income property buildings throughout Kenosha. The&#13;
elected housing units would have been available for s~udent rent~1.&#13;
5 HUD had money for universities which were Interested In&#13;
rehabilitating homes for energy conservation~l ~urposes ..Mon.ey was&#13;
also available for the acquisition of extsttng housing In the&#13;
commun ity. . I C&#13;
Kai Nail founder and president of Parks Ide s St~dent o-o.ps,&#13;
submitted 'a request to HUD for elegibil.ity o~ ~vallable housing&#13;
funds. The University of wlsconsin-Parkstde didn t have the. legal&#13;
authority to borrow money or to co-sign with a student ~o-op In the&#13;
purchasing of property buildings. Th.erefore, the Parkside Stu.de~t&#13;
Co-op needed a letter of support written by Chancellor Cuskin In&#13;
VVednesday,~.rnber14, 1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No.3&#13;
~~ Those who make~~&#13;
peaceful revolution&#13;
impossible will make&#13;
violent revolution inevitable.&#13;
- John F. Kennedy&#13;
er&#13;
The establishment of controlled pedestrian tr.JIiltthrouah this are,a,&#13;
with crossing points over the Pike River, is essential to this pUrpoie.&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz Upset&#13;
However, according to Parkside's life science professor, Eugene&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz, the trail will not be useful to Life Science students in&#13;
their studies because the trail is not planned according to their needs&#13;
"I had no input whatsoever as to the location of these trails or what&#13;
particular kind of life is valuable to class presentations," he said&#13;
Martin Holzman, erounds Superintendent, who directed the&#13;
project, disagreed. "He {Gasiorkiewicz didn't voice any interest In the&#13;
trail except to say that it's a good idea. He didn't suggest a location&#13;
for the trail," said Holzman, who added that he sent a student to&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz "before July" (the project began mid-Iulv) to elicit hiS&#13;
comments.&#13;
Faux pu&#13;
Phillips, however, who IS Holzman's boss, admitted that he failed&#13;
to consult the life Science division in the early planning of the trail&#13;
"We probably committed a faux pas in not involving Professor&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz earlier than we did We have some fence-mending to&#13;
do to prevent future misunderstandings."&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz said that he did not recall any student, or anyone&#13;
involved with the project, asking for his comments or suggestIons&#13;
Asked if he is upset about his students not being able to use the trail&#13;
in their studies, he replied, "You figure it out. There are a lot of&#13;
people upset."&#13;
order for the application to be accepted.&#13;
HUD's federal program would hav financed housing units at&#13;
three-percent interest a year over a 40 year mortgage. Student renters&#13;
living under the co-op state statues in the proposed housing would&#13;
have paid S6O' a month. (This fee included utility expenses and&#13;
insurance.) All rental money collected would be rendered in meeting&#13;
maintenance expenses" Any excess money would have been restored&#13;
to student renters in the form of a rebate. In addition, the co-op&#13;
program would have provided jobs for students.&#13;
According to Chancellor Cuskin, in meeting HUD's August 15&#13;
dateline, Parkside didn't have enough time to analyze what its&#13;
housing needs were or what kind of housing the university wanted to&#13;
have. Guskin also stressed he was not opposed to cooperative&#13;
housing in principle, but thought it was the wrong time for Parkside&#13;
to get involved in co-op housing.&#13;
Co-op President Kai Nail, felt "there is very little in the way of&#13;
student services that this (Parkside) campus offers." Nail concluded&#13;
by stating "that community involvement has been going against&#13;
housing and it is the closest thing to interaction between the&#13;
university and community."&#13;
a&#13;
Wednesday, Septem r 14, 19TT&#13;
Vol. 6, No. 3&#13;
an er (3(3 Those who make~~&#13;
peaceful revolution&#13;
impossible will make&#13;
violent revolution inevitable.&#13;
&#13;
Nature trails&#13;
penetrate .&#13;
natural areas&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Parkside will soon open nature trails which will lead the nature&#13;
lover north from the Outer Loop Road up to Highway " An. Along with&#13;
natural prairie grasses, the trails will feature various types of foliage&#13;
and flora and wildlife such as deer, fox, skunk, raccoon, opossum,&#13;
and other small mammals. The trails will add up to about 3.5 miles&#13;
and have not yet been completed.&#13;
According to Cushing Phillips, Director of the Physical Plant, the&#13;
federally-funded jobs project has been approved, "the entrances&#13;
have not yet been cut because we don't want people going on them&#13;
before they are completed." The trails will consist only of mown&#13;
prairie grass, and some bridges and wooden steps which still have to&#13;
be installed.&#13;
According to James Galbraith, Director of Planning and&#13;
Construction, the trail is intended to give the Parkside community,&#13;
and particularly Life Science students, access to some of the variety&#13;
of plants on campus.&#13;
The Parkside campus plan describes the area serviced by the trails&#13;
as follows:&#13;
This area encompasses the widest variety of ecological conditions&#13;
with the flood plain of the Pike River, upland areas on the north, east&#13;
and south. Because of this variety and its proximity to the academic&#13;
core, this area should be developed as a natural teaching laboratory,&#13;
with specimen communities of prairie, Northern, Southern and&#13;
Boreal Forest Groups.&#13;
- John F. Kennedy&#13;
The establishment of controlled pedestrian trails through this area,&#13;
with crossing points over the Pike River, is essential to this purpose.&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz Upset&#13;
However according to Parkside's life science professor, Eugene&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz, the trail will not be useful to Life Science students in ·&#13;
their studies because the trail is not planned according to their needs.&#13;
" I had no input whatsoever as to the location of these trails or what&#13;
particular kind of life rs valuable to class presentations," he aid .&#13;
Martin Holzman, erounds Superintendent, who direct d the&#13;
project, disagreed. "He (Gas1orkiewicz didn't voice any intere tin the&#13;
trail except to say that it's a good idea. He didn't suggest a location&#13;
for the trail," said Holzman, who added that he sent a student to&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz "before July" (the project began mid-July) to elicit his&#13;
comments.&#13;
Faux pas&#13;
Phillips, however, who is Holzman's boss, admitted that he failed&#13;
to consult the Life Science division in the early planning of the trail.&#13;
"We probably committed a faux pas in not involving Professor&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz earlier than we did. We have some fence-mending to&#13;
do to prevent future misunderstandings."&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz said that he did not recall any student, or anyone&#13;
involved with the project, asking for his comments or sugge trons.&#13;
Asked if he is upset about his students not being able to use the trail&#13;
in their studies, he replied, "You figure it out. There are a lot of&#13;
people upset."&#13;
Chancellor kills&#13;
housing co-op&#13;
by .o'iane Jalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Parkside's proposed housing co-operative plan, that cou!d have&#13;
been supported by the United States Department of Housing and&#13;
Urban Development (HUD), was rejected early September by&#13;
Parkside Chancellor Alan E. Guskin. . The propound co-op college housing program had intended to&#13;
purchase income property buildings throughout Kenosha. The&#13;
selected housing units would have been available for s~udent rent~I.&#13;
HUD had money for universities which were interested in&#13;
rehabilitating homes for energy conservation~! ~urposes._Mon_ey was&#13;
also available for the acquisition of existing housing m the&#13;
community. . , S d t c Kai Nall, founder and president of Parkside s t~ en o-o_ps,&#13;
submitted a request to HUD for elegibil_ity o~ ~va1lable housing&#13;
funds. The University of Wisconsin-Parks~de d1dn t have the_ legal&#13;
authority to borrow money or to co-sign with a student ~o-op m the&#13;
purchasing of property buildings. Therefore, the Parkside Stu_de~t&#13;
Co-op needed a letter of support written by Chancellor Guskin in&#13;
order for the application to be accepted .&#13;
HUD's federal program would hav financed housing units at&#13;
three-percent interest a year over a 40 year mortgage Student rent r&#13;
living under the co-op state statues in the proposed housing would&#13;
have paid S60' a month (This fee included utilit expenses and&#13;
insurance.) All rental money collected would be rend red in meetin&amp;&#13;
maintenance expenses. Any excess money would have been ~estored&#13;
to student renters in the form of a rebate. In addition, the co-op&#13;
program would have provided 1obs for students.&#13;
According to Chancellor Guskin, in meeting HUD's August 15&#13;
dateline, Parkside didn't have enough time to analyze what its&#13;
housing needs were or what kind of housing the university wanted to&#13;
have Guskin also stressed he was not opposed to cooperative&#13;
housing in principle, but thought it was the wrong time for Parkside&#13;
to get involved in co-op housing.&#13;
Co-op President Kai all, felt " there is very little in the way of&#13;
student services that this (Parkside) campus offers." all concluded&#13;
by stating "that community involvement has been going against&#13;
housing and rt rs the closest thing to interaction between the&#13;
university and community." &#13;
eyes&#13;
A group of students stopp~d and li~tened to Cher~e&#13;
Dowman sing a song on the main concourse In&#13;
Greenquist Hall last Friday.&#13;
•&#13;
,&#13;
_ A 'fjj'fI!Jl&#13;
Tony Totero, Student Programming Coordinator,&#13;
Union&#13;
"All student organizations should come up to Union&#13;
209 to update their registration forms. Also, anyone&#13;
thinking of starting a student organization or anyone&#13;
just interested in getting involved in extracurricular&#13;
activities are welcome to come up and talk to Sue&#13;
Wesley and myself."&#13;
•&#13;
John R. Mckloskey has been named Copy Editof of&#13;
Ranger. Last Spring Semester Mc,kloskey was News&#13;
Editor of Ranger. Mckloskey edited his. high school&#13;
newspaper and has worked for Ranger since coming&#13;
to Parkside, a year ago.&#13;
2&#13;
Paul Hoffman, Parkside Bookstore&#13;
"Students who do not yet have their books for&#13;
classes should now come to the main bookstore next&#13;
to the library. The annex is closed. The books will be&#13;
on the shelves according to course title and number.&#13;
If your book is not in keep checking because there&#13;
will be several shipments during this week and next."&#13;
Ranger is written an.d edited by students of the.&#13;
University 01 Wisconsin."Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible lor its editorial policy and content.&#13;
,&#13;
Our Writerfi.&#13;
Dan Guidebeck, Robert Han.sen~Jeft Prostko Kim Wunsch&#13;
Kat Herman.n, Chris Rateks, "Marcia Vlach. '&#13;
Editor Philip L. Livingston 553.2295&#13;
.General M"""ger Thomas R. Cooper 553.2287&#13;
Copy Editor John R. McKloskey&#13;
News Editor Diane Jalensky&#13;
Circulation Mana-get Karen Putman.&#13;
, Sale" Manager John Gabriel 5511.2287&#13;
Retail Advertising M..""g"r Ken Larsen 553.228:1&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, University of Wisconsin-Parkaide&#13;
Kenosha., Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Subscriptions: $5.00 year for U.S.A.&#13;
I&#13;
eyes 2&#13;
\&#13;
A group of students stopp~d and li~tened to Cher~e&#13;
Dowman sing a song on the mam concourse m&#13;
Greenquist Hall last Friday.&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
Tony Totero, ~ Student Programming Coordinator,&#13;
Union&#13;
"All student organizations should come up to Union&#13;
209 to update their registration forms. Also, anyone&#13;
thinking of starting a student organization or anyone&#13;
just interested in getting involved in extracurricular&#13;
activities are welcome to come up and talk to Sue&#13;
Wesley and myself."&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
John R. Mckloskey has been named Copy Edito of&#13;
Ranger. Last Spring Semester Md&lt;loskey was News&#13;
Editor of Ranger. Mckloskey edited his_ high school&#13;
newspaper and has worked for Ranger -since coming&#13;
to Parkside, a year ago.&#13;
Paul Hoffman, Parkside Bookstore -&#13;
"Students who do not yet have their books for&#13;
classes should now-come to the main bookstore next&#13;
to the library. The annex is closed. The books will be&#13;
on the shelves according to course title and number.&#13;
If your book is not in keep checking because there&#13;
will be several shipments during this week and next."&#13;
Diane Jalensky has been named News Editor of&#13;
Ranger. Diane was editor of her high school newspaper&#13;
b~fore coming to Parkside. The News Editor&#13;
assigns and edits all news stories that appear each&#13;
week in the Ranger.&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content.&#13;
' Our Writus&#13;
Dan Guidebeck, Robert Hansen, Jeff Prostko, Kim Wunsch,&#13;
Kat Hermann, Chris Ratcks, Marcia Vlach.&#13;
Editor Philip L. Livingston 553-2295&#13;
General M;,;n.ager Thomas R. Cooper 553-2287&#13;
Copy Editor John R. McKloskey&#13;
N~ws Editor Diane Jalensky&#13;
Circulation Maf\ager Karen Putman&#13;
, Sales Manager John Gabriel 553-2287&#13;
Retail Advertising Manager Ken Larsen SS~-2287 Ranger Newspaper, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Subscriptions: $5.00 year for U.S.A. &#13;
•&#13;
views&#13;
H~rvey Hedden and lusty Tutlewslci at easl.&#13;
Hedden was was injured recently in a motorcycle accident.&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
PSGA officers&#13;
introduce themselves&#13;
by Rusty Smith&#13;
I would like to spend the next&#13;
few Contact articles acquainting&#13;
you with the students who serve&#13;
on the executive and legislative&#13;
branches of your parks ide&#13;
Student Government Association.&#13;
These students are your&#13;
representatives with the administration.&#13;
If the Chancellor wants&#13;
to know what students think on&#13;
an issue he calls the Student&#13;
Government. T-here is a lot of&#13;
responsibility placed in the&#13;
hand, of a few students and I&#13;
feel it is important that you know&#13;
who they are.&#13;
Your representatives are also&#13;
quite capable of assisting you&#13;
with problems in any area of&#13;
Parkside, If you need help with&#13;
anything large or small please&#13;
contact us. Our office is located&#13;
in WLLC D-193 and our campus&#13;
phone number is 553-2244.&#13;
This week I would like to&#13;
introduce myself and the Vice&#13;
President. My name is Rusty&#13;
Smith and I am President of&#13;
P.S.G.A.I am 30 years old, live in&#13;
Racine, and am a junior here at&#13;
Parkside majoring in Organizational&#13;
Communications. I was&#13;
elected last March and took&#13;
office May 1, 1977. My term will&#13;
expire May 1, 1976. My other&#13;
campus activities are as follows:&#13;
Vice President C.S.c., former&#13;
manager of the Book Co-op,&#13;
member of the Segregated Fees&#13;
Committee, member of' the&#13;
University Bookstore Committee,&#13;
member of the Campus&#13;
Planning Committee, member&#13;
S.O.c., former member of the&#13;
Student Services Committee,&#13;
member of {he Search and&#13;
Screen Committee for the new&#13;
Dean of Student Life position,&#13;
and former Senator. If there is&#13;
ever anything I can do for you or&#13;
if you would just like to share&#13;
your thoughts with me please&#13;
feel free to do '0.&#13;
I would also like to introduce&#13;
the Vice President of P.5.G.A.,&#13;
Harvey Hedden. He is 22 years&#13;
old, a Kenosha resident, and a&#13;
senior here at Parkside majoring&#13;
in Political Science and&#13;
Psychology with career objectives&#13;
in law Enforcement and&#13;
Psychiatric Counseling at Police&#13;
Departments. Harvey was also&#13;
elected last March, took office&#13;
May 1. 1977, and his term will&#13;
run through May 1, 1976. He is&#13;
also employed full time by the&#13;
Twin Lakes Police Department.&#13;
Harvey's other campus activities&#13;
are as follows: member Debate&#13;
and Forensics, Wargamers,&#13;
former Senator, former Assistant&#13;
President Pro Tempore of the&#13;
Senate, former Associate Justice,&#13;
and he also served a previous&#13;
term as Vice President of&#13;
P.S.G.A.&#13;
There are current openings in&#13;
the Student Senate, on the&#13;
Student Court, and on several&#13;
very important campus committees.&#13;
We are seeking competent&#13;
students to fill these positions. If&#13;
you feel qualified and are willing&#13;
to serve please contact us within&#13;
the next two weeks.&#13;
VISIT THE&#13;
UNION&#13;
REC. CTR.&#13;
-BILLARDS&#13;
-PINBALL&#13;
- TABLE TENNIS -BEER&amp;SODA&#13;
- COMPLETEVENDING AREA&#13;
-BOWLING&#13;
-FOOSBALL&#13;
HOURS&#13;
MON·THURS&#13;
FRIDAYS&#13;
SATURDAYS&#13;
SUNDAYS&#13;
9 AM· 10 PM&#13;
9 AM· 10 PM&#13;
1 PM • 11 PM&#13;
1 AM· 10 PM&#13;
NOTICE!&#13;
DUE TO RESURFACING OF THE&#13;
BOWLING LANES. the rec. CTR&#13;
WILL CLOSE AT 8:00 PM.&#13;
SEPT. 16 AND REMAIN CLOSED&#13;
UNTIL MON SEPT. 19&#13;
-~==-&#13;
.n Q(FORMERLY "DESETS" IN RACINE)&#13;
"lU MOW EXPERIENCE 'J THE EARTHQUAKE&#13;
• \ ROOM&#13;
~ FOR THE MOST&#13;
'"&#13;
ADVANCED IN&#13;
DISCO&#13;
ENTERTA INMENT! !&#13;
... WHILE YOU'RE THERE,&#13;
CHECK OUT THE "CARNIVAL LOUNGE"&#13;
WITH FOOSBALL-POOL-PINBALL-&amp; MORE&#13;
THURSDAY: COLLEGE NITE&#13;
HI BALL SOc with college I.D.&#13;
HALLS AVAILABLE FOR PRIVATE PARTIES&#13;
2130 RACINE STREET HIGHWAY 32, RAINE, WI.&#13;
j&#13;
• views&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
PSGA officers&#13;
introduce themselves&#13;
by Rusty Smith&#13;
I would like to spend the next&#13;
few Contact articles acquainting&#13;
you with the students who serve&#13;
on the executive and legislative&#13;
branches of your parks ide&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
.&#13;
These students are your&#13;
representatives with the administration&#13;
. If the Chancellor wants&#13;
to know what students think on&#13;
an issue he calls the Student&#13;
Government. There is a lot of&#13;
responsibility placed in the&#13;
hands of a few students and I&#13;
feel it is important that you know&#13;
who they are.&#13;
Your representatives are also&#13;
quite capable of assisting you&#13;
with problems in any area of&#13;
Parkside. If you need help with&#13;
anything large or small please&#13;
contact us. Our office is located&#13;
in WLLC D-193 and our campus&#13;
phone number is 553-2244.&#13;
This week I would like to&#13;
introduce myself and the Vice&#13;
President. My name is Rusty&#13;
Smith and I am President of&#13;
P.S.G.A. I am 30 years old, live in&#13;
Racine, and am a junior here at&#13;
Parkside majoring in Organizational&#13;
Communications. I was&#13;
elected last March and took&#13;
office May 1, 1977. My term will&#13;
expire May 1, 1978. My other&#13;
campus activities are as follows:&#13;
Vice President C.S.C., former&#13;
manager of the Book Co-op,&#13;
member of the Segregated Fees&#13;
Committee, member of the&#13;
University Bookstore Committee,&#13;
member of the Campus&#13;
Planning Committee, member&#13;
S.O.C., former member of the&#13;
Student Services Committee,&#13;
member of the Search and&#13;
Screen Committee for the new&#13;
Dean of Student Life position,&#13;
and former Senator. If there is&#13;
ever anything I can do for you or&#13;
if you would just like to share&#13;
your thoughts with me please&#13;
feel free to do so.&#13;
I would also like to introduce&#13;
the Vice President of P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Harvey Hedden. He is 22 years&#13;
old, a Kenosha resident, and a&#13;
senior here at Parkside maj6ring&#13;
in Political Science and&#13;
Psychology with career objectives&#13;
in Law Enforcement and&#13;
Psychiatric Counseling at Police&#13;
Departments. Harvey was also&#13;
elected last March, took office&#13;
May 1, 1977, and his term will&#13;
run through May 1, 1978. He is&#13;
also employed full time by the&#13;
Twin Lakes Police Department.&#13;
Harvey's other campus activities&#13;
are as follows: member Debate&#13;
and Forensics, Wargamers,&#13;
former Senator, former Assistant&#13;
President Pro Tempore of the&#13;
Senate, former Associate Justice,&#13;
and he also served a previous&#13;
term as Vice President of&#13;
P.S.G.A.&#13;
There are current openings in&#13;
the Student Senate, on the&#13;
Student Court, and on several&#13;
very important campus committees.&#13;
We are seeking competent&#13;
students to fill these positions. If&#13;
you feel qualified and are willing&#13;
to serve please contact us within&#13;
the next two weeks.&#13;
VISIT THE&#13;
UNION&#13;
REC. CTR.&#13;
•BOWLING&#13;
•FOOSBALL&#13;
•BILLARDS&#13;
•PINBALL&#13;
• TABLE TENNIS •BEER&amp;SODA&#13;
• COMPLm VENDING AREA&#13;
MON·THURS&#13;
FRIDAYS&#13;
SATURDAYS&#13;
SUNDAYS&#13;
HOURS&#13;
9 AM· 10 PM&#13;
9 AM· 10 PM&#13;
1 PM · 11 PM&#13;
1 AM· 10 PM&#13;
NOTICE !&#13;
DUE TO RESURFACING OF THE&#13;
BOWLING LANES, the rec. CTR.&#13;
WILL CLOSE AT 8 :00 PM.&#13;
SEPT. 16 AND REMAIN CLOSED&#13;
UNTIL MON. SEPT. 19&#13;
--====,•&#13;
H11rvey Hedden and lusty Tutlewsld at easa&#13;
Hedden was was injured recently in a motorcycle accident.&#13;
ADVANCED IN&#13;
DISCO&#13;
ENTERTAINMENT l!&#13;
... WHILE YOU'RE THERE,&#13;
CHECK OUT THE "CARNIVAL LOUNGE"&#13;
WITH -FOOSBALL-POOL-PINBALL-&amp; MORE&#13;
THURSDAY: COLLEGE NITE&#13;
HI BALL soc with college I. D.&#13;
HALLS AVAILABLE FOR PRIVATE PARTIES&#13;
2130 RACINE STREET HIGHWAY 32, RAINE, WI. &#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Editor&#13;
Donald D. Kummings, Associate&#13;
Professorof English, has been awarded the&#13;
Distinguished Service Award for Teaching&#13;
Excellence. The award was presented by&#13;
Chancellor Alan E. Guskin at the Fall&#13;
SemesterConvocation.&#13;
The English department publishes a&#13;
booklet describing the professors in the&#13;
discipline and their backgrounds. The&#13;
following is an excerpt from that booklet:&#13;
Donald Kummings, before coming to&#13;
Wisconsin, drove a delivery truck for a dry&#13;
cleaning plant, operated the bleach&#13;
machine at a Purex factory in Chicago,&#13;
worked as a switchman on the Norfolk and&#13;
Western Railroad, and attended Purdue&#13;
and Indiana Universities, earning at the&#13;
latter a Ph. D. in English and American&#13;
Studies. At Parkside Mr. Kummings&#13;
regularly teaches courses in American&#13;
Literature and served as the coordinator of&#13;
the English discipline. His published&#13;
writing includes essays on Nathaniel&#13;
Hawthorne, Alexis de Tocqueville, Henry&#13;
'ames, Stephen Crane, and Walt Whitman,&#13;
as well as some thirty-five original poems.&#13;
At Indiana University he won the Academy&#13;
of American Poets Prize.&#13;
Kummings was raised in northern&#13;
Indiana and attended a two room school&#13;
house as a child.&#13;
"I went to a small country school with&#13;
1IO to 45 students in it. 1 think there were&#13;
eight people in my grade school class.&#13;
When you were in this school, and say you&#13;
were in the fifth grade, the teacher would&#13;
stand on one side of the room and teach&#13;
fifth grade then walk over to the other side&#13;
and teach sixth. So, by the time you&#13;
reached sixth grade you really didn't have&#13;
to fool with it because you had already&#13;
heard it last year. We always had a lot of&#13;
time for reading and messing around.&#13;
"I always thought 1 was essentially&#13;
deprived, until recent years I have been&#13;
told that the grade school with all the&#13;
classes in one room or two, now reflects&#13;
modern thinking and progressive education."&#13;
Almost a Milwaukee Brave&#13;
He freely admits no early interests in&#13;
literature other than an avid interest in&#13;
baseball books. During high' school&#13;
Kummings went to a try-out camp&#13;
1&#13;
Don Kummings&#13;
~. receives .&#13;
Teaching&#13;
Excellence ,.&#13;
Award&#13;
-&#13;
conducted by the Milwaukee Braves&#13;
Baseball Team.&#13;
"I worked out there for three days&#13;
playing various positions and hitting the&#13;
ball. At the end of that 1 was offered a ,&#13;
contract to play with one of the farm&#13;
teams of the Milwaukee Braves. I was the&#13;
kind of player who was kind of flashy in&#13;
the field but didn't hit much. My dad&#13;
didn't really want me to go into baseball&#13;
and the thought of riding buses around the&#13;
gravel roads in Iowa, and playing farm&#13;
teams didn't appeal to me much. I have&#13;
never been sorry I didn't follow it up, but&#13;
subsequently, 1have always thought, given&#13;
the way major league averages have&#13;
dropped over the years, with players&#13;
hitting 200 and 210, shit, I could have&#13;
made that."&#13;
Teaching Freshman Comp&#13;
After finishing B.A. and M.A. degrees at&#13;
Purdue University, Kummings taught&#13;
freshman Composition in Adrian College&#13;
in Michigan. Teaching freshman composition&#13;
since 1963 as a Teaching Assistant has&#13;
given Kummings some strong views on&#13;
high school language skills preparation.&#13;
"I can remember my first year of&#13;
teaching freshman English and I had&#13;
people that are just as bad asthey are now.&#13;
I really think their verbal skills have&#13;
declined, there is no doubt about it. All&#13;
forms of measurement have shown us that.&#13;
People just write less in high school.&#13;
"My own thinking is that to be a good&#13;
writer two things are important. One, you&#13;
have to be a voracious reader. When you&#13;
are reading you have to pay attention not&#13;
only to vocabulary, but to the way the&#13;
writer uses different effects and do a&#13;
certain amount of imitating. You have to&#13;
be alert to how good writers do what they&#13;
do. One reason people can't write these&#13;
days is they just don't read. They can't&#13;
stand it. It takes too much time and they&#13;
would rather be doing something else.&#13;
~ "They may have read one or two books&#13;
in high school or a chapter here and there&#13;
but on the whole, they just can't stand it.&#13;
"The second critical thing .is'to write a&#13;
lot."&#13;
Walt Whitman&#13;
Recently, Professor Kummings has been&#13;
working on a book titled, Walt Whitman; a&#13;
reference guide 1940 to 1975, that will be&#13;
published by G. K. Hall in Boston. He has&#13;
been working on it for about three years.&#13;
Parkside has helped fund it with two grants&#13;
totaling about 5850.00. The work has&#13;
involved sifting through more than 3,000&#13;
books, articles, notes and papers, and&#13;
creating an annotated bibliography. A&#13;
former senior professor at Parkside has&#13;
claimed that upon completion of the book&#13;
Kummings will be one of the top five or six&#13;
Whitman scholars in the country.&#13;
"My first exposure to Whitman was as an&#13;
undergraduate. I had a survey course&#13;
much like Parkside's 212 course. I kind of&#13;
liked Song of Myself, but at the time I&#13;
wouldn't have ranked him higher than my&#13;
I favorite authors. He is central to American&#13;
Poetry. "when you discuss American&#13;
Poetry, you have to talk about Whitman. I&#13;
guesssince coming out of graduate school,&#13;
I ended up specializ·ing in Whitman. I&#13;
wrote some papers in a graduate seminar&#13;
about Whitman and published those. A&#13;
couple of chapters in my disertation were&#13;
on Whitman and I ended up publishing&#13;
those. Then the book contract came. I&#13;
never think of myself as an idolater of Walt&#13;
Whitman. I like other authors just as&#13;
much. if not more. FurtHermore, I don't&#13;
like to think qf myself as someone who has&#13;
to attach himself to one author and make a&#13;
living by writing about his' works."&#13;
On Majoring in English&#13;
"I have always though English is the best&#13;
major. I know I am going against the grain&#13;
of most people. When I was an&#13;
undergraduate in Creative Writing people&#13;
would ask me, 'what are you going to do&#13;
with a Creative Writing degree, and where&#13;
are you ever going to find a job?' 1 would&#13;
always gi~e them a smart-ass answer like&#13;
'I'm going to work for Hallmark Cards ' or&#13;
something. I just kn~w I was stud~ing&#13;
something I liked to study. It - had&#13;
something to do with everything. If you&#13;
are studying fundamental truths, which I&#13;
thought I was, to what don't these&#13;
fundamental truths apply? What job would&#13;
I get into that 1 wouldn't have learned&#13;
something about in English? 1 have always&#13;
thought I could do anything and that if I&#13;
was thrown out I would always be the one&#13;
to. bob to the top and find something&#13;
worthwhile to do."&#13;
Teaching&#13;
When asked if he thought he deserved&#13;
the teaching award Kummings said, "In the&#13;
p~st."l have had semesters when I thought&#13;
things went well. If there were better&#13;
4 I&#13;
_teaching around, I wanted to know where&#13;
it was. I wouldn't even get nominated; I&#13;
just couldn't understand it. I don't think&#13;
. last year was one of my better years. I had&#13;
a lot of problems. The damn book was&#13;
eating on me half the time and I can't&#13;
imagine I was doing a good job. The&#13;
seminar (Whitman, Williams, and Snyder)&#13;
1 had last semester, went as well as any&#13;
class I ever had. I was afraid to teach the&#13;
class because in the first place, it had three&#13;
poets in it, and I thought that was&#13;
death right off the bat. Because most&#13;
people don't understand poetry, 1 thought&#13;
there would be one whole semester of&#13;
people saying they can't understand what&#13;
they are doing here. But they did&#13;
understand the three poets and the class&#13;
got along very well.&#13;
"It is hard to determine who is the best -&#13;
teacher. If I look at my own performance,&#13;
there are alot of things that needimprovement.&#13;
To tell you the truth, the&#13;
type of teacher I liked very much in&#13;
undergraduate and graduate school is not&#13;
the type of teacher most people like now.&#13;
There was a professor in Bloom ington that&#13;
used to smoke a half of pack of cigarettes&#13;
in one class. He was so intense that if you&#13;
were not sympathetic with his approach,&#13;
he would drive you crazy. He ..waslike a&#13;
nervous fiend. j&#13;
"I'm not nearly as an envigorous grader&#13;
as I used to be. 1 used to be a real&#13;
son-of-a-bitch. You would have to work&#13;
your ass off just to get a "C" in my class&#13;
and then I would still be trying to figure&#13;
out how to give you a "D". It took me a&#13;
long time to learn to relax and ease up.&#13;
"The one thing that crops 'up in my&#13;
student evaluations all the time is that&#13;
people feel relaxed in my classes. leading&#13;
a class discussion is something I feel I am&#13;
. good at. Except when I keep answering my&#13;
own questions. I have a nasty habit of&#13;
asking a question and then when nobody&#13;
saysanything I answer my own question. If&#13;
1 would cut that out I would really be a&#13;
good teacher."&#13;
He is married to' Gail Kummings, a&#13;
lecturer at Parkside and has three&#13;
children. ' •.&#13;
This Fall semester, Professor Kummings&#13;
is teaching Composition and Reading,&#13;
Studies in American literature: American&#13;
Short Novel, and Contemporary literature&#13;
1920 to present: Poetry.&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Editor&#13;
Donald D. Kummings, Associate&#13;
Professor of English, has been awarded the&#13;
Distinguished Service Award for Teaching&#13;
Excellence. The award was presented by&#13;
Chancellor Alan E. Guskin at the Fall&#13;
Semester Convocation .&#13;
The English department publishes a&#13;
booklet describing the professors in the&#13;
discipline and their backgrounds. The&#13;
following is an excerpt from that booklet:&#13;
Donald Kummings, before coming to&#13;
Wisconsin, drove a delivery truck for a dry&#13;
deaning plant, operated the bleach&#13;
machine at a Purex factory in Chicago,&#13;
worked as a switchman on the Norfolk and&#13;
Western Railroad, and attended Purdue&#13;
and Indiana Universities, earning at the&#13;
latter a Ph. D. in English and American&#13;
Studies. At Parkside Mr. Kummings&#13;
regularly teaches courses in American&#13;
Literature and served as the coordinator of&#13;
the English discipline. His published&#13;
writing includes essays on Nathaniel&#13;
Hawthorne, Alexis de Tocqueville, Henry&#13;
James, Stephen Crane, and Walt Whitman,&#13;
as well as some thirty-five original poems.&#13;
At Indiana University he won the Academy&#13;
of American Poets Prize.&#13;
Kummings was raised in northern&#13;
Indiana and attended a two room school&#13;
house as a child.&#13;
"I went to a small country school with&#13;
40 to 45 students in it. I think there were&#13;
eight people in my grade school class .&#13;
When you were in this school, and say you&#13;
were in the fifth grade, the teacher would&#13;
stand on one side of the room and teach&#13;
fifth grade then walk over to the other side&#13;
and teach sixth. So, by the time you&#13;
reached sixth grade you really didn't have&#13;
to fool with it because you had already&#13;
heard it last year. We always had a lot of&#13;
time for reading and messing around.&#13;
"I always thought I was essentially&#13;
deprived, until recent years I have been&#13;
told that the grade school with all the&#13;
classes in one room or two, now reflects&#13;
modern thinking and progressive education."&#13;
&#13;
Almost a Milwaukee Brave&#13;
He freely admits no early interests in&#13;
literature other than an avid interest in&#13;
baseball books . During high · school&#13;
Kummings went to a try-out camp&#13;
4&#13;
Don Kummings&#13;
conducted by the Milwaukee Braves&#13;
Baseball Team .&#13;
" I worked out there for three days&#13;
playing various positions and hitting the&#13;
ball. At the end of that I was offered a ,&#13;
contract to play with one of the farm&#13;
teams of the Milwaukee Braves. I was the&#13;
kind of player who was kind of flashy in&#13;
the field but didn't hit much. My dad&#13;
didn't really want me to go into baseball&#13;
and the thought of riding buses around the&#13;
gravel roads in Iowa, and playing farm&#13;
teams didn't appeal to me much. I have&#13;
never been sorry I didn't follow it up, but&#13;
subsequently, I have always thought, given&#13;
the way major league averages have ·&#13;
dropped over the years, with players&#13;
hitting 200 and 210, shit, I could have&#13;
made that."&#13;
Teaching Freshman Comp&#13;
After finishing B.A. and M .A. degrees at&#13;
Purdue University, Kummings taught&#13;
freshman Composition in Adrian College&#13;
in Michigan . Teaching freshman composition&#13;
since 1963 as a Teaching Assistant has&#13;
given .Kummings some strong views on&#13;
high school language skills preparation.&#13;
"I can . remember my first year of&#13;
teaching freshman English and I had&#13;
people that are just as bad as they are now.&#13;
I really think their verbal skills have&#13;
declined, there is no doubt about it. All&#13;
forms of measurement have shown us that.&#13;
People just write less in high school.&#13;
"My own thinking is that to be a good&#13;
writer two things are important. One, you&#13;
have to be a voracious reader. When you&#13;
are reading you have to pay attention not&#13;
only to vocabulary, but to the way the&#13;
writer usP.s different effects and do a&#13;
certain amount of imitating. You have to&#13;
be alert to how good writers do what they&#13;
do. One reason people can't write these&#13;
days is they just don't read . They can't&#13;
stand it. It takes too much time and they&#13;
would rather be doing something else.&#13;
~ "They may have read one or two books&#13;
in high school or a chapter here and there&#13;
but on the whole, they just can't stand it.&#13;
"The second critical thing ,is to write a&#13;
lot."&#13;
Walt Whitman&#13;
Recently, Professor Kummings has been&#13;
working on a book titled, Walt Whitman; a&#13;
reference guide 1940 to 1975, that will be&#13;
published by G. K. Hall in Boston . He has&#13;
been working on it for about three years.&#13;
• • receives&#13;
TeaChing&#13;
Excellence&#13;
Award ,&#13;
Parkside has helped fund it with two grants&#13;
totaling about $850.00. The work has&#13;
involved sifting through more than 3,000&#13;
books, articles, notes and papers, and&#13;
creating an annotated bibliography. A&#13;
former senior professor at Parkside has&#13;
claimed that upon completion of the book&#13;
Kummings will be one of the top five or six&#13;
Whitman scholars in the country.&#13;
"My first exposure to Whitman was as an&#13;
undergraduate. I had a survey course&#13;
much like Parkside's 212 course. I kind of&#13;
liked Song of Myself, but at the time I&#13;
wouldn't have ranked him higher than my&#13;
1 favorite authors. He is central to American&#13;
Poetry . - when you discuss American&#13;
Poetry, you have to talk about Whitman. I&#13;
guess sin·ce coming out of graduate school,&#13;
I ended up specializing in Whitman. I&#13;
wrote some papers in a graduate seminar&#13;
about Whitman and published those. A&#13;
couple of chapters in my disertation were&#13;
on Whitman and I ended up publishing&#13;
those. Then the book contract came. I&#13;
never think of myself as an idolater of Walt&#13;
Whitman. I like other authors just as&#13;
much. if not more. FurtHermore, I don't&#13;
like to think qt myself as someone who has&#13;
to attach himself to one author and make a&#13;
living by writing about ·his works."&#13;
On Majoring in English&#13;
"I have always though English is the best&#13;
major. I know I am going against the grain&#13;
of most people. When I was an&#13;
undergraduate in Creative Writing people&#13;
would ask me, 'what are you going to do&#13;
with a Creative Writing degree, and where&#13;
are you ever going to find a job?' I would&#13;
always gi~e them a smart-ass answer like&#13;
'I'm going to work for _Hallmark Cards,' o;&#13;
something. I just knew I was studying&#13;
something I liked to study. It · had&#13;
something to do with everything. If you&#13;
are studying fundamental truths, which I&#13;
thought I was, to what don't these&#13;
fundamental truths apply? What job would&#13;
I get into that I wouldn't have learned&#13;
something about in English? I have always&#13;
thought I could do anything and that if I&#13;
was thrown out I would always be the one&#13;
to. bob to the top and find something&#13;
worthwhile to do."&#13;
Teaching&#13;
When asked if he thought he deserved&#13;
the teaching award Kummings said, "In the&#13;
past) have had semesters when I thought&#13;
things went well. If there were better&#13;
teaching around, I wanted to know where&#13;
it was . I wouldn't even get nominated; I&#13;
just couldn't understand it. I don't think&#13;
. last year was one of my better years. I had&#13;
a lot of problems . The damn book was&#13;
eat ing on me half the time and I can't&#13;
imagine I was doing a gc:&gt;0d job. The&#13;
seminar (Whitman, Williams, and Snyder)&#13;
I had last semester, went as well as any&#13;
class I ever had. I was afraid to teach the&#13;
class because in the first place, it had three&#13;
poets in it, and I thought that was&#13;
death right off the bat. Because most&#13;
people don't understand poetry, I thought&#13;
there would be one whole semester of&#13;
people saying they can't understand what&#13;
they are doing here. But they did&#13;
understand the three poets and the class&#13;
got along very well. .&#13;
"It is hard to determine who is the best -&#13;
teacher. If I look at my own performance,&#13;
there are alot of things that need&#13;
improvement. To tell you the truth, the&#13;
type of teacher I liked very much in&#13;
undergraduate and graduate school is not&#13;
the type of teacher most people like now.&#13;
There was a professor in Bloomington that&#13;
used to smoke a half of pack of cigarettes&#13;
in one class. He was so intense that if you&#13;
were not sympathetic with his approach,&#13;
he would drive you crazy. He _}Vas like a&#13;
nervous fiend.&#13;
"I'm not nearly as an envigorous grader&#13;
as I used to be. I used to be a real&#13;
son-of-a-bitch. You would have to work&#13;
your ass off just to get a "C" in my class&#13;
and then I would still be trying to figure&#13;
out how to give you a "D". It took me a&#13;
long time to learn to relax and ease up.&#13;
"The one thing that crops up in my&#13;
student evaluations all the time is that&#13;
people feel relaxed in my classes . Leading&#13;
a class discussion is something I feel I am&#13;
· good at. Except when I keep answering my&#13;
own questions. I have a nasty habit . of&#13;
asking a question and then when nobody&#13;
says anything I answer my own question. If&#13;
I would cut that out I would really be a&#13;
good teacher."&#13;
He is married to ' Gail Kummings, a&#13;
lecturer at Parkside and ·has three&#13;
children. ' •&#13;
This Fall semester, Professor Kummings&#13;
is teaching Composition and Reading,&#13;
Studies in American Literature: American&#13;
Short Novel, and Contemporary Literature&#13;
1920 to present: Poetry. &#13;
Teresa eck&#13;
•&#13;
receives&#13;
Teachi 9&#13;
xc&#13;
Teresa C Peck, Associate PrOfessor of&#13;
Education, V.as a....arded the DistingUished&#13;
Sf"rotlce Award for Teaching Excellence, at&#13;
thl Fall semestee s Convocation The&#13;
,ay,ard wa liven by Chancellor Ian E&#13;
CusklO&#13;
Prote "" Peck was born In England She&#13;
grew up there and rece« ed her bachelor of&#13;
art... degree hom the Unt'ver~1ty of&#13;
Mlnch"te, on England Although she&#13;
t.uted he-r elementary education atter&#13;
World \~ar \I he st,lI was able to&#13;
e~perl nee fir t hand. the 01'1 lnal open&#13;
eta sroom !\\any of her teacher had&#13;
tau ht durang World \\ at II when large&#13;
numbers of children .... re toeced to live at&#13;
schoo" whil England wa bem bombed&#13;
At eo". she entered grammar school&#13;
(England's h'gh school cocmer-penj and&#13;
began prt'pann fOt college&#13;
'hen t was In ram mar school. t~&#13;
.....ere very mu&lt;h IOta nreamlOC At a 11&#13;
'You ot streamed either IOto a col~&#13;
uack or a vocattonal trael.; There Yol1,5.&#13;
som chance to cro~s 0\1 r. but fllO)t&#13;
~I didn't So at age 11,I ",as coli&#13;
bound" hI f,om lhen - eXPlaoned Peck&#13;
At a e la, she entered the Un"' .... 'ly of&#13;
Manchester and majOred ,n psychology&#13;
he had a very stron ent education Sh&#13;
aUubutes her uccess In call e to her&#13;
fOtmat tralnlO&amp; ,n the arts and scumc.~ In&#13;
pammar school&#13;
• Until I had la~en the Craduate Record&#13;
E~mtnatlon to a: t tnto graduate school, I&#13;
had never taken a multiple chOice telot&#13;
The tests' had taken dunng my educat,on&#13;
In En land wefe essay so you were forced&#13;
to be analytIcal, logical. and '0 th,nk&#13;
thlnllS through"&#13;
Teresa Peck came to the United States In&#13;
1%8 She was employed at the South-&#13;
"'"Iern Medical School and the Dallas&#13;
Pub"c SChool System as a school&#13;
psychologist " year later, Peck was&#13;
accepted at the graduate school for&#13;
Developmental and Educal,onal Psychology,&#13;
at the UniversIty of Texas In Dallas&#13;
WIth a Ph d , and a year of profesSional&#13;
experience, Peck came to teach at&#13;
Parks Ide at the age of 24 Her area of&#13;
specialization IS human development and&#13;
she teaches related courses In the&#13;
Education DIVIsion&#13;
Proud of diVision&#13;
"Mosl of the people who go through Ihe&#13;
program here have a lot of potenttal to&#13;
become good teachers, and by the lime&#13;
they get out of. here they are, In most&#13;
cases, good teachers I thmk they are the&#13;
e ce&#13;
be-st trained teachers I ha ever comt"&#13;
across "hen Icompare our pr am th&#13;
the one at the UOI -ersu of Texas a&#13;
peesu IOU~school, our beat thtoirs hanch&#13;
do",n They (at Te.ai) get a&#13;
rudimentary educeuce Our program ha~ a&#13;
lot of different classes and ()U( student~ If't&#13;
a lot of mdividual attennoe I am proud to&#13;
be a part of the EducatIOn DIVISion at&#13;
Parks Ide I think we ha ..-e a ver, goOd&#13;
program here and t s.a that In all Inc,.,.&#13;
"ben a t she- than Me&#13;
qua ItI~ eo. t ac r hould hive P&#13;
aMw eel One thin I thl rnpott.,Int&#13;
In ell levels of teachrn ISa good degr 0&#13;
self a....areoess '"ou ha 'e to novw- our f&#13;
...-II enou to...,.. 00.. you are ng to&#13;
teach In certain ItWtJOl1 If you ~&#13;
\'00 ha e a \trone tempee for&#13;
that L&gt; """"dun YOUmould&#13;
on In tM cla.1noom So f \Om h&#13;
happpO-) .,00 Vrotl t 0Y'ffl'eac. t and&#13;
the kid and I~ .ny rapport cou&#13;
The&lt;e Ole """" p&lt;opIe who come ,&#13;
the prO&amp;'am who ""'" not ,... 1 Nd&#13;
hme to e pM MCe and ~ 0 now&#13;
themselv You N also to I&#13;
pPOple You mu~t ha.. iI thotOl.JKh&#13;
kno--le&lt;f e of ,he subrect man.. , and&#13;
mu)t be ab e to convnomc.te You&#13;
ha ...e 10 be «tthusla tiC n I&#13;
clASfotOOm It'S an herlln Ihln ,"04.1&#13;
tf)'mg to et a potnl acr 50£docatlon&#13;
interaction, 11'50.process tha 1&#13;
Unfortun.letv. for some I IS Jun. , a&#13;
rote thin . and It bft:omes rootule •&#13;
Class are too bt&#13;
There ate many problems ....Ith&#13;
edueattOO '" nef.J flernen&#13;
enrollmenb drop, t~e IS an opportun,&#13;
to '""er class s'"e 'iost s terns, ho,,~, ...&#13;
cut the num~ of te.cMo. In tl!'~&#13;
Prof""" Pec has trang f..,lon about&#13;
that process, ..., hate that' I miN. d.\-Se:S&#13;
are .....ay too big I IhlR the problem .....&#13;
ha,e could be solved b deereas' the&#13;
stooent teacher rattO·&#13;
Peck also belo",,, the 'rad,'oonal&#13;
educational system 115eH mlaht be&#13;
responSible for some of the probr..n,&#13;
""\'e seem to thm that one s tern&#13;
IS gOlOg to meet all the peop~·s ne'e'Cb&#13;
That lust Isn t possible \ hat I ....ould Ii e&#13;
to see happen IS a system that would Into&#13;
match up a studenfs needs ....,Ih a&#13;
teacher's qualifications and skills ThiS ~&#13;
more of an tdeahsllC teaching siluall()(l If&#13;
you have students that might do .....ell&#13;
under an open classroom situation tor&#13;
example, and If you have a teacher that IS&#13;
5&#13;
Compell ph,lo_ ~&#13;
The q"", ,on of '" he&lt; school \hould&#13;
get hac. to baslClo S 1'" naltonal&#13;
aUenttOn of late Pro'essor P feel50 thIS&#13;
hould be done, but moderatel&#13;
Id&#13;
t&#13;
""'" n to&#13;
n but&#13;
t WOt1&gt;etl&#13;
ach nd&#13;
human&#13;
people&#13;
Teresa Pe&#13;
• receives&#13;
Te chin&#13;
XC lence&#13;
r&#13;
cour&#13;
at1on Div1 10n.&#13;
Proud of d1 1sion&#13;
- o t of th peopl who go throu h th&#13;
pro ram h re ha e a lot of potential o&#13;
becom ood teachers, and b the time&#13;
th t out o . h re the are, in most&#13;
, ood teach rs. I thin the are the &#13;
I&#13;
sports&#13;
With high hopes for&#13;
improving its 7-7-2 mark of ~&#13;
year ago, the Parkside soccer&#13;
team opened its season at&#13;
home Friday against a&#13;
UW-Madison club that is&#13;
beginning its first year of&#13;
varsity competition.&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson is&#13;
starting his sixth year at the&#13;
helm of the Ranger booters&#13;
and is- calling this year's&#13;
squad his best to date. Last&#13;
year's .500 record was the&#13;
best ever by any Parkside&#13;
team, and with eight players&#13;
back who saw action as&#13;
starters in 1976, the veteran&#13;
coach has good reason to be&#13;
confident.&#13;
Campbell and Boyajian return&#13;
Heading that list are the&#13;
Rangers'top two scorersfrom&#13;
1976 in Earl Campbell and&#13;
Mike Bovajian. Campbell, a&#13;
sophomore from Racine&#13;
(Prairie), had eight goals and&#13;
nine assistsfor 17 points last&#13;
season while Boyajian, a&#13;
junior from Racine (Horlick),&#13;
had 13points on six goals and&#13;
seven assists.&#13;
Starters back on defense&#13;
include Neenah (Armstrong)&#13;
junior Chris Carter; Racine&#13;
(St. Bonaventure) sophomore&#13;
Krzys Serafin; St. Cloud,&#13;
Minn. (Tech) junior Jack&#13;
Landwehr; and Racine (Case)&#13;
senior Mike Olesen; other&#13;
starters back are Neenah&#13;
junior Dan Brieschke, a&#13;
goalkeeper; Waterford, Ireland,&#13;
sophomore Niall Power,&#13;
a midfielder; and Wilmette;&#13;
III., (New Trier East) sophomore&#13;
Joe Eisen, a midfielder&#13;
who lettered in 1975 but did&#13;
not compete last year.&#13;
Freshmenadded&#13;
Henderson also has six&#13;
top-notch freshmen whom he&#13;
figures will help the team.&#13;
They include two or three&#13;
likely starters in fullbacks&#13;
Chris Crowell of Racine&#13;
(Prairie) and Karl Goetz of&#13;
Racine (St. Bonaventure) and&#13;
forward Stathi Gianou of&#13;
Racine (Horlick). Other&#13;
rookies expected to aid the&#13;
Parkside cause are fullback&#13;
Wilson Corley of Bristol&#13;
(Salem Central), midfielder"&#13;
Steve Borggren of Kenosha&#13;
(Tremper) and Alejandro&#13;
Moro of Kenosha (Bradford).&#13;
"We're depending a lot on&#13;
younger players coming&#13;
through," Henderson said,&#13;
"but we do have a good blend&#13;
of experience and youth so I&#13;
think this could be as good a&#13;
team as we've ever had."&#13;
Despite the loss of&#13;
•&#13;
all-American Steve Sendelbach&#13;
on defense, Henderson&#13;
expects 'his team to be solid&#13;
with Carter, Landwehr, and&#13;
Olesen in front of goalkeeper&#13;
Brieschke. And the offense,&#13;
which has sputtered more&#13;
often than not for Ranger&#13;
teams in recent years, could&#13;
be solid with Campbell and&#13;
Boyajian and leaders on&#13;
attack.&#13;
Parkside's 38' goals last&#13;
season broke the previous&#13;
season high of 21 and the&#13;
Rangers 38-30 goal-scoring&#13;
edge over the opposition was&#13;
the first time a Ranger team&#13;
had ever come out on top in&#13;
that category.&#13;
Depth is major strength&#13;
And with 23 out for his&#13;
team, Henderson lists depth&#13;
as a major strength; only at&#13;
goal are the Rangers short,&#13;
with Brieschke the only man&#13;
with real game experience.&#13;
As for Friday's opener, the&#13;
Rangersand Badgerstied at 2&#13;
a year ago and since the game&#13;
is the opener for UW-Madison&#13;
asa varsity unit, it could have&#13;
added significance for the&#13;
Badgers. Henderson, however,&#13;
says his team is ready to&#13;
play and doesn't anticipate&#13;
having any trouble getting&#13;
them "up" for the encounter.&#13;
Harriers take third&#13;
UW-Parkside openedl its&#13;
1977 cross-country season&#13;
Sept. 10 with a five team&#13;
meet at Stevens Point pitting&#13;
the host Pointers against&#13;
UW-P, Carthage, UW-Whitewater&#13;
and Eastern Illinois.&#13;
It's a tough test for new&#13;
Parkside Coach' lucian Rosa&#13;
- himself a Ranger distance&#13;
running legend - and his&#13;
youthful but experienced&#13;
team. Stevens Point was&#13;
district runner-up in 1976&#13;
while Carthage has another&#13;
good team and Eastern&#13;
Illinois is always among the&#13;
best in NCAA Division II.&#13;
Fredericksen returns&#13;
Rosawill enter nine of ten&#13;
runners in the five mile race'&#13;
at the Wisconsin River&#13;
Country Club. Heading that&#13;
Cross-country&#13;
results&#13;
I. East.r "'inoi. 16&#13;
2. Parbid. 48&#13;
3. St•.,.n. Point 78&#13;
4. Cart.a,. 94&#13;
crew, which includes seven&#13;
lettermen from 1976;' is&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford) senior&#13;
RayFredericksen, who placed&#13;
fifth in the district and 36th&#13;
nationally last fall.&#13;
Backing up Fredericksen&#13;
are six letterwinners: sophomore&#13;
Jeff Miller, junior AI&#13;
Halbur and senior Gary&#13;
Priem, all from Racine (Case),&#13;
junior John Van Den Brandt&#13;
and sophomore Lee Allinger,&#13;
both from Appleton (east);&#13;
and junior Bill Werve of&#13;
Kenoshao(St.Joseph).&#13;
• Two newcomers have&#13;
looked good in the early&#13;
practices, according to Rosa,&#13;
and will run Saturday. Bob&#13;
Langennohol of Franklin and&#13;
John Poulakos of Oak Creek&#13;
are 'expected to be valuable&#13;
additions to the squad.&#13;
Rosa is confident&#13;
Rosa indicated that he's&#13;
confident by his team's&#13;
progress thus far and is&#13;
looking for tight grouping of&#13;
at least five runners in&#13;
Saturday's meet. "I was really&#13;
happy the way they ran at the&#13;
Charleston Distance Run in&#13;
Virginia last week," he said.&#13;
"Ray was tenth, Jeff 34th and&#13;
Bob 42nd which gave us fifth.&#13;
in the team scoring, just&#13;
behind Western Kentucky,&#13;
which had won four in a row&#13;
before that."&#13;
Parkside will remain on the&#13;
road again the following&#13;
week, traveling to Oak Brook,&#13;
III., to meet Illinois-Chicago&#13;
Circle and Eastern Illinois&#13;
again in a double dual meet.&#13;
Sat.,Sept.10&#13;
Cross-Country Schedule&#13;
at UW-Stevens Point with Eastern 12 noon&#13;
Illinois, Carthage,UW-Whitewater&#13;
at Illinois-ChicagoCirclewith Eastern 11a.m.&#13;
. Illinois&#13;
USTFFMidwestCollegiatesat UW-P 12noon&#13;
at NorthernIllinois Invitational 1p.m.&#13;
at NotreDameInvitational 3 p.m.&#13;
at lakefront Invitational, Chicago 10:30 a.m.&#13;
atCarthageInvitational 11:30a.m.&#13;
at terasCollege 12noon&#13;
USTFFMid-Americaat UW-P 3p.rn.&#13;
NAIA District 14at UW-P 11a.rn.&#13;
NAIA NationalChampionshipat UW-P11e.m.&#13;
Sat.,Sept.17&#13;
Sat., Sept.24 -&#13;
Sat., Oct. 1&#13;
Fri.,Oct. 7&#13;
Sat.,Oct. 8&#13;
Sat.,Oct. 22&#13;
Sat.,Oct. 2~&#13;
Sat.,Nov.5&#13;
Sat.,Nov.12&#13;
Sat.,Nov.19&#13;
,&#13;
6&#13;
3&#13;
Parkside 1&#13;
Parkside SoccerSchedule&#13;
Friday, Sept. 9 \&#13;
Wednesday,Sept.14&#13;
Saturday,Sept.17&#13;
VVednesday,Sept.21&#13;
Saturday,Sept.24&#13;
Wednesday,Sept.28&#13;
Friday·Saturday,&#13;
4:00p.m.&#13;
3:30p.m.&#13;
7:30p.m.&#13;
3'30p.m.&#13;
2:00p.m.&#13;
3:30p.m.&#13;
UW-Madison&#13;
at Illinois-ChicagoCircle&#13;
at Northern Illinois&#13;
Trinity College&#13;
RockfordCollege&#13;
at AuroraCollege&#13;
UW-Chancellor'sCupTournament&#13;
at UW-GreenBay&#13;
UVV-Parksidevs. UW-Milwaukee1:00p.m.&#13;
UW·GreenBayvs.&#13;
UW-Platteville&#13;
at Marquette University&#13;
lake ForestCollege&#13;
Eastern Illinois&#13;
at Western Michigan&#13;
at UW-Platteville&#13;
Saturday,Oct. 15&#13;
Wednesday,Oct. 19&#13;
Saturday,Oct. 22&#13;
Saturday,Oct. 29&#13;
Saturday,Nov. 5&#13;
3:00p.m.&#13;
1:oop.m.&#13;
3:00p.m.&#13;
2:00p.m.&#13;
1:30p.m.EST&#13;
2:00p.m.&#13;
Golfers play Marquette,&#13;
Stevens Point&#13;
team lastfall with a79.4average.&#13;
Also back is two-time letterwinner&#13;
Mark Kuyawa, a senior&#13;
from Kenosha(Bradford)whose&#13;
average card was 79.8. Other&#13;
lettermen include senior Steve&#13;
Christensen and sophomores&#13;
Rick Pederson, Tim Rouse, Cary&#13;
Paskiewicz,and Phil Smith.&#13;
The Rangersopen their dual&#13;
meet season Tuesday when they&#13;
faceMarquette in a 1p.m.match&#13;
in Brighton Dale.&#13;
UW-Parkside golfers opened&#13;
their season Friday with the&#13;
UW-Stevens Point Tournament&#13;
beginnlng at 9 a.m.&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens has&#13;
seven lettermen back from the&#13;
young 1976 unit that finished&#13;
seventh in the NAIA District 14&#13;
tourney.&#13;
Heading that crew is Kenosha&#13;
junior Ray Zuzinec, the team's&#13;
most valuableplayerwho led the'&#13;
T.8.I.F. _-c--.. r-'-~_&#13;
FRIDAY&#13;
HAPPY HOURS&#13;
3:00-6:00 PM&#13;
BEER&#13;
81.00&#13;
25"&#13;
20"&#13;
PITCHER&#13;
12 OZ. GLASS&#13;
9 OZ. GLASS&#13;
SODA:&#13;
90"&#13;
20"&#13;
15"&#13;
PITCHER&#13;
12 OZ. GLASS&#13;
9 OZ. GLASS&#13;
LOCATED ON THE GROUND LEVEL OF THE UNION&#13;
JUST OFF THE MAIN ENTRANCE ' .&#13;
(&#13;
/&#13;
sports .. 6&#13;
Campbell, Boyaiiall to lead wilining soccer team&#13;
With high hopes for&#13;
improving its 7-7-2 mark of "&#13;
year ago, the Parkside soccer&#13;
team opened its season at&#13;
home Friday against a&#13;
UW-Madison club that is&#13;
beginning its first year of&#13;
varsity competition.&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson is&#13;
starting his sixth year at the&#13;
helm of the Ranger boaters&#13;
and is, calling this year's&#13;
squad his best to date. Last&#13;
year's .500 record was the&#13;
best ever by any Parkside&#13;
team, and with eight players&#13;
back who saw action as&#13;
starters in 1976, the veteran&#13;
coach has good reason to be&#13;
confident.&#13;
Campbell and Boyajian return&#13;
Heading that list are the&#13;
Rangers' top two scorers from&#13;
1976 in Earl Campbell and&#13;
Mike Boyajian. Campbell, a&#13;
sophomore from Rac ine&#13;
(Prairie), had eight goals and&#13;
nine assists for 17 points last&#13;
season while Boyajian, a&#13;
junior from Racine (Horlick),&#13;
had 13 points on six goals and&#13;
seven assists.&#13;
Starters back on defense&#13;
include Neenah (Armstrong)&#13;
junior Chris Carter; Racine&#13;
(St. Bonaventure) sophomore&#13;
Krzys Serafin; St. Cloud,&#13;
Minn. (Tech) junior Jack&#13;
Landwehr; and Racine (Case)&#13;
senior Mike Olesen; other&#13;
starters back are Neenah&#13;
junior Dan Brieschke, a&#13;
goalkeeper; Waterford, Ireland,&#13;
sophon:iore Niall Power,&#13;
a midfielder; and Wilmette;&#13;
Ill., (New Trier East) sophomore&#13;
Joe Eisen, a midfielder&#13;
who lettered in 1975 but did&#13;
not compete last year.&#13;
Freshmen added&#13;
Henderson also has six&#13;
top-notch freshmen whom he&#13;
figures will help the team .&#13;
They include two or three&#13;
likely starters in fullbacks&#13;
Chris Crowell of Racine&#13;
(Prairie) and Karl Goetz of&#13;
Racine (St. Bonaventure) and&#13;
forward Stathi Gianou of&#13;
Racine (Horlick) . Other&#13;
rookies expected to aid the&#13;
Parkside cause are fullback&#13;
Wilson Corley of Bristol&#13;
(Salem Central), midfielder'&#13;
Steve Borggren of Kenosha&#13;
(Tremper) and Alejandro&#13;
Moro of Keoosha (Bradford).&#13;
"We're depending a lot on&#13;
younger players coming&#13;
through," Henderson said,&#13;
" but we do have a good blend&#13;
of experience and youth so I&#13;
think this could be as good a&#13;
team as we've ever had."&#13;
Despite the loss of&#13;
all-American Steve Sendelbach&#13;
on defense, Henderson&#13;
expects&#13;
1&#13;
his team to be solid&#13;
with Carter, Landwehr, and&#13;
Olesen in front of goalkeeper&#13;
Brieschke. And the offense,&#13;
which has sputtered more&#13;
often than not for Ranger&#13;
teams in recent years, could&#13;
be solid with Campbell and&#13;
Boyaj ian and leaders on&#13;
attack.&#13;
Parkside's 38 · goals last&#13;
season broke the previous&#13;
season high of 21 and the&#13;
Rangers 38-30 goal-scoring&#13;
edge over the opposition was&#13;
the first time a Ranger team&#13;
had ever come out on top in&#13;
that category.&#13;
Depth is major strength&#13;
And with 23 out for his&#13;
team, Henderson lists depth&#13;
as a major strength; only at&#13;
goal are the Rangers short,&#13;
with Brieschke the only man&#13;
with real game experience .&#13;
As for Friday's opener, the&#13;
Rangers and Badgers tied at 2&#13;
a year ago and since the game&#13;
is the opener for UW-Madison&#13;
as a varsity unit, it could have&#13;
added significance for the&#13;
Badgers. Henderson, however,&#13;
says his team is ready to&#13;
play and doesn't anticipate&#13;
having any trouble getting&#13;
them " up" for the encounter.&#13;
Harriers take third&#13;
UW-Parkside opened, its&#13;
1977 cross-country season&#13;
Sept. 10 with a five team&#13;
meet at Stevens Point pitting&#13;
the host Pointers against&#13;
UW-P, Carthage, UW-Whitewater&#13;
and Eastern Illinois .&#13;
It's a _tough test for new&#13;
Parkside Coach Lucian Rosa&#13;
- himself a Ranger distance&#13;
running legend - and his&#13;
youthful but experienced&#13;
tean:i . Stevens Point was&#13;
district runner-up in 1976&#13;
while Carthage has another&#13;
good team and Eastern&#13;
Ulinois is always among the&#13;
best in NCAA Division 11 .&#13;
Fredericksen returns&#13;
Rosa will enter nine of ten&#13;
runners in the five mile race&#13;
at the Wisconsin River&#13;
Country Club. Heading that&#13;
Cross-country&#13;
results&#13;
I. Easter Illinois 16&#13;
2. Parlcside 48&#13;
3. Stevens Point 78&#13;
4. Cartlaage 94&#13;
crew, which includes seven&#13;
lettermen from 1976; · is&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford) senior&#13;
Ray Fredericksen, who placed&#13;
fifth in the district and 36th&#13;
nationally last fall.&#13;
Backing up Fredericksen&#13;
ar~ six letterwinners: sophomore&#13;
Jeff Miller, junior Al&#13;
Halbur and senior Gary&#13;
Priem, all from Racine (Case);&#13;
junior John Van Den Brandt&#13;
and sophomore Lee Allinger,&#13;
both from Appleton (east);&#13;
and junior Bill Werve of&#13;
Kenosha"(St. Joseph).&#13;
• Two newcomers have&#13;
looked good in the early&#13;
practices, according to Rosa,&#13;
and wi II run Saturday. Bob&#13;
Langennohol of Franklin and&#13;
John Poulakos of Oak Creek&#13;
are ·expected to be valuable&#13;
additions to the squad.&#13;
Rosa is confident&#13;
Rosa indicated that he's&#13;
confident by his team's&#13;
progress thus far and is&#13;
looking for tight grouping of&#13;
at least five runners in&#13;
Saturday's meet. "I was really&#13;
happy the way they ran at the&#13;
Charleston Distance Run in&#13;
Virginia last week," he said .&#13;
"Ray was tenth, Jeff 34th and&#13;
Bob 42nd which gave us fifth .&#13;
in the team scoring, just&#13;
behind Western Kentucky,&#13;
which had won four in a row&#13;
before that."&#13;
Parkside will remain on the&#13;
road again the following&#13;
week, traveling to Oak Brook,&#13;
Ill., to meet Illinois-Chicago&#13;
Circle and Eastern Illinois&#13;
again in a double dual meet.&#13;
Cross-Country Schedule&#13;
Sat., Sept. 10&#13;
Sat., Sept. 17&#13;
Sat., Sept. 24 -&#13;
Sat., Oct. 1&#13;
Fri., Oct. 7&#13;
Sat., Oct.8&#13;
Sat., Oct. 22&#13;
Sat., Oct. 29&#13;
Sat., Nov. 5&#13;
Sat., No~. 12&#13;
Sat., Nov. 19&#13;
at UW-Stevens Point with Eastern 12 noon&#13;
Illinois, Carthage, UW-Whitewater&#13;
at Illinois-Chicago Circle with Eastern 11 a.m.&#13;
. Illinois&#13;
USTFF Midwest Collegiates at UW-P 12 noon&#13;
at Northern Illinois Invitational 1 p.m.&#13;
at Notre Dame Invitational 3 p.m.&#13;
at Lakefront Invitational, Chicago 10:30 a.m.&#13;
at Carthage Invitational 11 :30a.m.&#13;
at Loras College 12 noon&#13;
USTFF Mid-America at UW-P 3 p.m.&#13;
NAIA District 14 at UW-P 11 a.m.&#13;
NAIA National Championship at UW-P 11 a.m.&#13;
Soccer results&#13;
Madison 3&#13;
Parkside 1&#13;
Friday, Sept. 9&#13;
Wednesday,Sept. 14&#13;
Saturday,Sept. 17&#13;
Wednesday,Sept. 21&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 24&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 28&#13;
Friday-Saturday,&#13;
Parkside Soccer Schedule&#13;
UW-Madison&#13;
at Illinois-Chicago Circle&#13;
at Northern Illinois&#13;
Trinity College&#13;
Rockford College&#13;
at Aurora College&#13;
UW-Chancellor's Cup Tournament&#13;
at UW-Green Bay&#13;
4:00p.m.&#13;
3:30p.m.&#13;
7:30p.m.&#13;
3:30p.m.&#13;
2:00 p.m .&#13;
3:30p.m.&#13;
UW-Parkside vs. UW-Milwaukee 1:00 p.m.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 15&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 19&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 22&#13;
Saturday, Oct . 29&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 5&#13;
UW-Green Bay vs.&#13;
UW-Platteville&#13;
at Marquette University&#13;
Lake forest College&#13;
Eastern Illinois&#13;
at Western Michigan&#13;
at UW-Plattevtlle&#13;
3:00!).ffl1:00p.m.&#13;
&#13;
3:00p.m.&#13;
2:00p.m.&#13;
1:30 p.m . EST&#13;
2:00p.m.&#13;
Golfers play Marq-uette,&#13;
Stevens Point&#13;
team last fall with a 79.4 average.&#13;
UW-Parkside golfers opened .&#13;
their season Friday with the&#13;
UW-Stevens Point Tournament&#13;
begiQning at 9 a.m. ·&#13;
Also back is two-time letterwinner&#13;
Mark Kuyawa, a senior&#13;
from Kenosha (Bradford) whose&#13;
average card was 79.8. Other&#13;
lettermen include senior Steve&#13;
Christensen and sophomores&#13;
Rick Pederson, Tim Rouse, Cary&#13;
Paskiewicz, and Phil Smith .&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens has&#13;
seven lettermen back from the&#13;
young 1976 unit that finished&#13;
seventh in the NAIA District· 14&#13;
tourney.&#13;
Heading that crew is Kenosha&#13;
junior Ray Zuzinec, the team's&#13;
m9st valuable player who led the ·&#13;
The Rangers open their dual&#13;
meet season Tuesday when they&#13;
face Marquette in a 1 p.m. match&#13;
in Brighton Dale.&#13;
UNl·ON&#13;
SQUARE&#13;
FRIDAY&#13;
HAPPY HOURS&#13;
3:00-6:00 PM&#13;
BEER&#13;
111.00&#13;
25·&#13;
20•&#13;
SODA:.&#13;
PITCHER&#13;
12 OZ. GLASS&#13;
9 OZ. GLASS&#13;
so• PITCHER&#13;
20• 12 OZ. GLASS&#13;
15• 9 OZ. GLASS&#13;
LOCATED ON THE GROUND LEVEL OF THE UNION&#13;
JUST OFF THE MAIN ENTRANCE , .&#13;
r &#13;
'1&#13;
How do you conserve enerty?&#13;
Financial aid GIl, .Rondelle offer workshops&#13;
money arrives •&#13;
For the past several months, Americans have&#13;
been bombarded with advice and suggestions on&#13;
ways to conserve energy Many are asking what&#13;
they can do as individuals, to conserve our&#13;
diminishing energy resources&#13;
To assist Southeastern Wisconsin-area residents&#13;
in finding ways to reduce their energy consumption&#13;
and use alternate sources of energy. a series of&#13;
programs and workshops have been planned that&#13;
will offer suggestions on how to conserve energy in&#13;
the home and in daily living, while saving money&#13;
All programs and workshops are free and will be&#13;
held on both Racine and Kenosha Gateway&#13;
Technical Institute campuses and at the Colden&#13;
Rondelle. •&#13;
Information Programs&#13;
Three general information programs have been&#13;
scheduled on consecutive Tuesdays beginning&#13;
September 20 and will cover specific energy needs&#13;
and problems associated with family living, single&#13;
family homes, and apartments. Experts from various&#13;
fields and backgrounds will identify and talk about&#13;
.. the energy problems in these areas and offer&#13;
suggestions on ways to conserve energy now.&#13;
The general sessions will be follo .. ed by&#13;
wednesdav afternoon and evening workshops and&#13;
demonstrations beginning September 21, where&#13;
parncipants wrll receive expert Instruction In how&#13;
to implement and Improve conservation methods&#13;
Contractors will assist&#13;
More than 50 area contractors, builders,&#13;
educators, trades people and energy advisers will&#13;
offer instruction In Insulating homes, sealing and&#13;
weatherstripping doors and Windows. properly&#13;
maintaining a furnace and efftcient use of&#13;
appliances and machines&#13;
The general sessions have been scheduled for&#13;
100 and 7 00 p.m., September 20 and 27 at the&#13;
Golden Rondelle Theater in Racine and 700 pm.,&#13;
October 4 at Kenosha Gateway techmcel tnsutvte&#13;
The workshops and demonstrations will be held&#13;
at 1:00 and 700 p rn., September 21 and 28 and&#13;
October 4 locations for the meetings will be&#13;
Gateway Kenosha, Gateway Racine and the Golden&#13;
Rondelle Theater.&#13;
For complete information and to rnake&#13;
reservations for any of the programs and&#13;
workshops, write or call the Colden Rondelle,&#13;
Racine, 554-2154.&#13;
More than $169,000 in federal funds for various student financial&#13;
aidprograms at the University of Wisconsin-Parks ide were accepted&#13;
last Friday by the UW System Board of Regents.&#13;
The funds include $150,492 from the Office of Education for the&#13;
National Defense Student loan Program, $11,375 for the Veteran's&#13;
Costof Instruction Program and $7,000 from the justice Department&#13;
for the law Enforcement Education Program.&#13;
The funds are for the 1977-78 academic year.&#13;
Federal student financial aid funds previously accepted for&#13;
Parkside for 1977-78 include $427,253 for Supplemental Educational&#13;
Opportunity Grants, $275,400 for Basic Educational Opportunity&#13;
Grants, and $150,492 for the Work-Study Program.&#13;
TheParkside financial aids office said financial aid is still available&#13;
for 1977-78 for both full and part-time students. •&#13;
The regents also accepted a gift of $20 from Mrs. KW. Covell of&#13;
Racinefor the Kenneth l. Creenquist Memorial Scholarship Fund.&#13;
Teacher candidate&#13;
exams announced&#13;
Students completing teacher preparation programs and advanced&#13;
degreecandidates in specific fields may take Hie-National Teacher&#13;
Examinations (NTE) on any of three different test dates in 1977-78.&#13;
Educational Testing Service, the nonprofit organization that&#13;
administersthis testing program, said that the tests will be given in&#13;
this area Nov. 12, at UW-Whitewater, Feb. 18, at UW-Milwaukee and&#13;
July15, at UW-Madison.&#13;
A "Bulletin of Information for Candidates" contains a list of test&#13;
centersand general information about the examinations, as well as a&#13;
registrationform. Copies will be available at UW-Parkside from Mary&#13;
Fox an education services counselor, Tallent Hall, or directly from&#13;
National Teacher Examinations, Box 911, Educational Testing&#13;
Service,Princeton, New jersey 08540.&#13;
Resultsof the NTE are considered by many large school districts as&#13;
one of several factors in the selection of ne,wteachers and are used&#13;
by several states for the credential ling of teachers or licensing of&#13;
advanced candidates. Beginning next fall, the Racine Unified School&#13;
District will require the test.&#13;
On each full day of testing, registrants may take the Common&#13;
Examinations, which measure their professional preparation and&#13;
general educational background, and/or an Area Examination that&#13;
measurestheir mastery of the subject they 'expect to teach.&#13;
Prospective registrants should contact the school systems in which&#13;
they seek employment, their colleges, or appropriate educational&#13;
associationfor advice about which examinations to take and when to&#13;
take them. \&#13;
Rondelle features early, recent comics&#13;
A special film festival on the world of comic art is&#13;
being offered in conjunction with the johnson Wax&#13;
Golden Rondelle, Racine Art Association and&#13;
Wustum Museum and will be held on consecutive&#13;
Fridays beginning September 16.&#13;
Offered iree to "the public, all programs will be&#13;
held at the Colden Rondelle at 7:00 p.rn.&#13;
The first program, titled "Animators I", features&#13;
selections from the first Bugs Bunny, Porky Pig and&#13;
Daffy Duck cartoons which date back as far as the&#13;
late 1930's. The program traces the development of&#13;
these favorite characters from their conception to&#13;
their present roles.&#13;
On September 23, political satirist Bill Sanders&#13;
will provide an amusing look at the world of&#13;
satirical cartooning through a slide lecture and&#13;
demonstration. Sanders, who is Widely regarded as&#13;
one of the best editorial cartoornsts, has build a&#13;
solid reputation among readers of The Milwaukee&#13;
Journal and 35 other newspapers with his&#13;
syndicated cartoons&#13;
The final program of the series, "Animators 11",&#13;
will focus on a collection of cartoons including&#13;
"Steamboat Willie", the first black and white sound&#13;
cartoon, and "The Three Little P,gs", the first color&#13;
cartoon&#13;
Reservations and information on all three&#13;
program dates can be obtained by calling the&#13;
Golden Rondelle at 554-2154&#13;
Job hunting? Learn how!&#13;
Resource Center,&#13;
Mon., Sept. 19&#13;
Tues., Sept. 20&#13;
Wed., Sept. 21&#13;
Tallent Hall&#13;
2p m&#13;
lOa m&#13;
7 p m&#13;
you are graduating in December&#13;
1977 or a Parkside graduate&#13;
looking for another position.&#13;
Anyone Welcome!&#13;
Attend one at the Placement&#13;
The Placement Office has&#13;
announced Job Hunting Skills&#13;
Workshops for Fall Semester-Be&#13;
sure and attend one workshop if&#13;
'AiKSIDE FOOD SERVICE SA1S ....&#13;
YOUASKED FOR&#13;
(CAMPUS FOOD SERVICE SURYEY-MAY 1977)&#13;
m&#13;
SDNEREn/I. ...&#13;
AJ1t HAMBURIER ..,A BillER, BmER SAW W ...FRESH SMED,&#13;
HOME MADE PASTRIES, COOKIES AND DESSERTS.•• (MADE DAILY IN OUR&#13;
KlTCHEN) ...BII, FRESH DEU TYPE SANDWlCHES ...HOME MADE SOUP&#13;
(FROM NEWn SOUP KmLE) ..,A VARIETY OF FRESH FRUITS...NID MORE TO&#13;
COME&#13;
AVAlIAIlE IIOW-III1IONIINIIIIIIIII' RfJtJM&#13;
news&#13;
Financial aid&#13;
mo • ney arrives&#13;
More than $169,000 in federal funds for various student financial&#13;
aid programs at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside were accepted&#13;
last Friday by the UW System Board of Regents.&#13;
The funds include $150,492 from the Office of Education· for the&#13;
National Defense Student loan Program, $11,375 for the Veteran's&#13;
Cost of Instruction Program and $7,000 from the Justice Department&#13;
for the Law Enforcement Education Program.&#13;
The funds are for the 1977-78 academic year.&#13;
Federal student financial aid funds previously accepted for&#13;
Parkside for 1977-78 include $427,253 for Supplemental Educational&#13;
Opportunity Grants, $275,400 for Basic Educational Opportunity&#13;
Grants, and $150,492 for the Work-Study Program.&#13;
The Parkside financial aids office said financial aid is still available&#13;
for 1977-78 for both full and part-time students. •&#13;
The regents also accepted a gift of $20 from Mrs. K.W. Covell of&#13;
Racine for the Kenneth L. Greenquist Memorial Scholarship Fund.&#13;
Teacher candidate&#13;
exams announced&#13;
Students completing teacher preparation programs and advanced&#13;
degree candidates in specific fields may take ttie National Teacher&#13;
Examinations (NTE) on any of three different test dates in 1977-78.&#13;
Educational Testing Service, the nonprofit organization that&#13;
administers this testing program, said that the tests will be given in&#13;
this area Nov. 12, at UW-Whitewater, Feb. 18, at UW-Milwaukee and&#13;
July 15, at UW-Madison .&#13;
A "Bulletin of Information for Candidates" contains a list of test&#13;
centers and general information about the examinations, as well as a&#13;
registration form . Copies will be available at UW-Parkside from Mary&#13;
Fox, an education services counselor, Tallent Hall, or directly from&#13;
National Teacher Examinations, Box 911, Educational Testing&#13;
Service, Princeton, New Jersey 08540.&#13;
Results of the NTE are considered by many large school districts as&#13;
one of several factors in the selection of ne.w teachers and are used&#13;
by several states for the credentialling of teachers or licensing of&#13;
advanced candidates. Beginning next fall, the Racine Unified School&#13;
District will require the test.&#13;
On each full day of testing, registrants may take the Common&#13;
Examinations, which measure their professional preparation and&#13;
general educational background, and/or an Area Examination that&#13;
measures their mastery of the subject they expect to teach .&#13;
Prospective registrants should contact the school systems in which&#13;
they seek employment, thei~ colleges, or appropriate educational&#13;
association for advice about which examinations to take and when to&#13;
take them .&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
'7&#13;
How do you conserve energy?&#13;
GTI, _Ronde lie off er workshops&#13;
For the past several months, Americans have&#13;
been bombarded with advice and suggestions on&#13;
ways to conserve energy. Many ar.e asking what&#13;
they can do as individuals, to conserve our&#13;
diminishing energy resources&#13;
To assist Southeastern Wisconsin-area residents&#13;
in finding ways to reduce their energ\ consumption&#13;
and use alternate sources of energy, a series of&#13;
programs and workshops have been planned that&#13;
will offer suggestions on how to conserve energy in&#13;
the home and in daily laving, while saving money&#13;
All programs and workshops are free and wall be&#13;
held on both Racine and Kenosha Gateway&#13;
Technical Institute campuses and at the Golden&#13;
Rondelle. •&#13;
Information Programs&#13;
Three general information programs have been&#13;
scheduled on consecutive Tuesdays beginning&#13;
September 20 and will cover specific energy needs&#13;
and problems associated with family living, single&#13;
family homes, and apartments. Experts from various&#13;
fields and backgrounds will identify and talk about&#13;
.the energy problems in these areas and offer&#13;
suggestions on ways to conserve energy now.&#13;
Ronde lie features early, recent comics&#13;
A special film festival on the world of comic art is&#13;
being offered in conjunction with the Johnson Wax&#13;
Golden Rondelle, Racine Art Association and&#13;
Wustum Museum and will be held on consecutive&#13;
Fridays beginning September 16.&#13;
Offered free to -the public, all programs will be&#13;
held at the Golden Rondelle at 7:00 p.m.&#13;
The first program, titled "Animators I", features&#13;
selections from the first Bugs Bunny, Porky Pig and&#13;
Daffy Duck cartoons which date back as far as the&#13;
late 1930's. The program traces the development of&#13;
these favorite characters from their conception to&#13;
their present roles.&#13;
On September 23, political satirist Bill Sanders&#13;
will provide an amusing look at th world of&#13;
satirical cartooning through a slide I cture and&#13;
demonstration Sanders, who 1s widely r gard d a&#13;
one of the best editorial cartoona ts, ha build a&#13;
solid reputation among readers of The Milwaukee&#13;
Journal and 35 other newspap rs with ha&#13;
syndicated cartoons .&#13;
The final program of the series, ''Animator II",&#13;
will focus on a collection of cartoons tncludtng&#13;
'Steamboat Willie", the first black and white ound&#13;
cartoon, and "The Three Little Pig ", th first color&#13;
cartoon&#13;
Reservation and information on all thr&#13;
program date can be obt med by calling th&#13;
Golden Rondelle at 554-2154&#13;
Job hunting? Learn how!&#13;
The Placement Office has&#13;
announced Job Hunting Skills&#13;
Workshops for Fall Semester.,Be&#13;
sure and attend one workshop if&#13;
you are graduating an December&#13;
1977 or a Parkside graduate&#13;
looking for another position.&#13;
Anyone Welcome!&#13;
Attend one at the Placement&#13;
Re ource C nter,&#13;
Mon, S pt 19&#13;
Tu s, S pt. 20&#13;
Wed , pt. 21&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE SAYS ....&#13;
rou ASKED FOR ff/&#13;
(CAMPUS FOOD SERVICE SURVEY-MAY 1977}&#13;
SO HERE ff/$. ...&#13;
Tallent Hall.&#13;
2p m.&#13;
10a m&#13;
7p m.&#13;
A 31~ HIIMBURCER ... A BIOCER, BfflER SAlAD BAR ... FRESH BAKED,&#13;
HOME MADE PASTRIES, COOKIES AND DESSERTS ... (MADE DAILY IN OUR&#13;
IOTCHEN) ... 810, FRESH DEU TYPE SANDWICHES ... HOME MADE SOUP&#13;
(FROM NEWE'S SOUP l(ffllE) .. .A VARIETY OF FRESH FRUITS .. .AND MORE TO&#13;
COME&#13;
AVAIIABI.E NOW-UN/0/1 MAl/11//1//lfJ ROOM &#13;
events&#13;
Wednesday, september 14&#13;
Coffeehouse Louise Dimiceli (Chicago) will perform in Union 106-109&#13;
from 2:00 PM to 5:00 PM TODAY.&#13;
Last day to add courses to your schedule without consent of&#13;
instructor (except for modules).&#13;
Last day to make program changes from Audit to Credit.&#13;
Friday, September 1&amp;&#13;
Film Fritz the Cat, 8:00 PM in the Union Cinima. Admission $1.00 .&#13;
Students.&#13;
Sunday, september 18&#13;
Film Fritz the Cat, 7:30 PM in the Union Cinema. Admission $1.00&#13;
Students.&#13;
Monday, September 19&#13;
Late Payment Penalty of $30.00 if tuition and fees are not paid before&#13;
this date.&#13;
Tuesday, September 20&#13;
last Day for complete refund on textbooks in Bookstore. All refunds&#13;
must be accompanied by receipt of purchase.&#13;
Wednesday, september 21&#13;
Rangers are out for the best in lively hot news and dyno featuresr Get&#13;
your copy throughout the campus. We still could use a few more&#13;
good writers. If interested call 553-2295 during the day on Monday,&#13;
Wednesday, or Thursday or just come on overto Tallent Hall 290. Ask&#13;
for Phil.&#13;
Film The Wild Bunch, 2:30 and 7:30 PM in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Thursday, september 22&#13;
Film Dirty Harry, 2:30 and 7:30 PM in the Union Cinema. Admission&#13;
$1.00.&#13;
Yom Kippur see Leviticus, 16.&#13;
classified&#13;
Ride W8nted from Parf\Slde to 1538 Arthur&#13;
Ave., Racine. Between 4:30-5:00 PM. I am&#13;
deaf, blind, and have a guide dog. Will pay&#13;
1llU00lIb1e amount It requested. Contact me&#13;
at Parka\de Computer center CA 120 or call&#13;
563-ZlO3.&#13;
21 mil .. per gallon. For5aleI11965 VW. It&#13;
runs, needs some work. $225. 553-2428.&#13;
College Rep n..... Call between 911 AM&#13;
to set up appointment for Interview. Call&#13;
Marlon James at 854-8692.&#13;
Radio station&#13;
ad contest set&#13;
RKO RADIO- announces a&#13;
major graphic design competition&#13;
for colleges, universities and&#13;
accredited art schools. The&#13;
competition - THE FIRST&#13;
NATIONAL RKO RADIO&#13;
GRAPHICS COMPETITION -&#13;
will take place during the Fall&#13;
1977 semester and will involve&#13;
the creation of a full-page ad on&#13;
a theme provided.&#13;
The contest will be co~ducted&#13;
in two phases. Phase I will&#13;
consist of 11 Regional Contests&#13;
to be held within the service&#13;
areas of 9 different cities across&#13;
the nation in which an RKO&#13;
station is located. The winner of&#13;
each of the 11 Regional Contests&#13;
will receive a S2,5OO Scholarship&#13;
and will be eligible for the&#13;
National Award. Phase II will&#13;
consist of the selection of a&#13;
National Winner from a separate&#13;
contest among the 11 Regional?'&#13;
Winners. The National Winner&#13;
will receive a $10,000 Scholarship&#13;
Award.&#13;
In addition, the National&#13;
winning entry and the 11&#13;
Regional entries will be&#13;
published in such magazines as&#13;
TIME, ADVERTISING AGE,&#13;
BROAOCASTING, and others,&#13;
along with the artist's name and&#13;
school affiliation.&#13;
the Scholarships will be&#13;
awarded during the 1977-78&#13;
academic year and may be used&#13;
only by the winning student for&#13;
his or her ccnttnulng art&#13;
education at a college, Utttversity&#13;
or accredited art nhool in the&#13;
United 'States of the student's,&#13;
choosing.&#13;
All college, university and&#13;
accredited art school students -&#13;
undergraduate and graduate -&#13;
within the service area of the 11&#13;
RKO stations are eligible to enter&#13;
the Regional Contest announced&#13;
through that particular station.&#13;
The 11 RKO Radio stations&#13;
involved in the competition are:&#13;
KHJ-AM, Hollywood, Californi a;&#13;
KRTH-FM, Los Angeles, California;&#13;
KFRC-AM/FM, San Francisco,&#13;
California; WAXY-FM, Ft.&#13;
Lauderdale, Florida; WFYR-FM,.&#13;
Chicago, Illinois; WOR-AM, New&#13;
York City, N.Y.; WXLO-99X/FM,&#13;
New York City, N.Y.; WRKO-AM,&#13;
Boston, Massachusetts; WRORF~,&#13;
Boston, Massachusetts;&#13;
WHBQ-AM, Memphis, Tenneslee,&#13;
and WGMS-AM/FM, Washington,&#13;
D.C.&#13;
RKO Radio is sponsoring this&#13;
major national competition in an&#13;
effort to focus attention upon&#13;
the values of the communication&#13;
arts in our society. "This project&#13;
is but one aspect of the&#13;
corporation's concern for effective&#13;
communication for the&#13;
well-being of the communities it&#13;
serves, and is one of the largest&#13;
and most significant student art&#13;
competitions ever undertaken in&#13;
the United States," said an RKO&#13;
representative.&#13;
For more information, contact&#13;
Gloria' Sherman, Project. Coordinator,&#13;
West &amp; Brady, Inc., 6400&#13;
Goldsboro Rd., Wash., D.C.&#13;
20034, phone (301) 229-6900.&#13;
About fift, Parlcside professors participated in a conference at&#13;
Wingspreadlast Saturda,. The conference was sponsored b, the&#13;
Center for Teaching bcellence.&#13;
,.---------..,&#13;
Ranger is WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
still looking&#13;
for a&#13;
sports Come Today See Yours.&#13;
Edilor quality corrmerciol printers&#13;
1417 50th street . 658-8990&#13;
p.o.b, fall film series&#13;
presents&#13;
"FRITZ THE CAT"&#13;
fr i., sept. 16 - 8:00 p.m&#13;
sun., sept.18-7:30p.m.&#13;
union cinema&#13;
! $1.00 !&#13;
.... _. __ ._ ••__ u __ •...,&#13;
i PAl Fall film I&#13;
~eries present.&#13;
i ~&#13;
i&#13;
Wed., Sept. 21&#13;
2:30 &amp; 7:30 p.m.&#13;
. Uriion Cinema&#13;
$1.00&#13;
! Next week I Dirty Harry &amp;&#13;
i Magnum Force , ,&#13;
events&#13;
Wednesday, September 14 ,&#13;
Coffeehouse Louise Dimiceli (Chicago) will perform in Union 106-109&#13;
from 2:00 PM to 5:00 PM TODAY.&#13;
Last day to add courses to your schedule without consent of&#13;
instructor (except for modules).&#13;
Last day to make program changes from Audit to Credit .&#13;
Friday, September 16&#13;
Film Fritz the Cat, 8:00 PM in the Union Cinima. Admission $1 .00 ·&#13;
Students .&#13;
Sunday, September 18&#13;
Film Fritz the Cat, 7:30 PM in the Union Cinema. Admission $1 .00&#13;
Students.&#13;
Monday, September 19&#13;
Late Payment Penalty of $30.00 if tuition and fees are not paid before&#13;
this date .&#13;
Tuesday, September 20&#13;
Last Day for complete refund on textbooks in Bookstore. All refunds&#13;
must be accompan ied by receipt of purchase.&#13;
Wednesday, September 21&#13;
Rangers are out for the best in lively hot news and dyno features ~ Get&#13;
your copy throughout the campus . We still could use a few more&#13;
good writers . If interested call 553-2295 during the day on Monday,&#13;
Wednesday, or Thursday or just come on over to Tallent Hall 290. Ask&#13;
for Phil .&#13;
Film The Wild Bunch, 2:30 and 7:30 PM in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1 .00.&#13;
Thursday, September 22&#13;
Film Dirty Harry, 2:30 and 7:30 PM in the Union Cinema. Admission&#13;
$1.00.&#13;
Yom Kippur see Leviticus, 16.&#13;
classified&#13;
Aide WanMd from Par!(slde to 1538 Arthur&#13;
Ave., Racine. Between 4:30-5:00 PM. I am&#13;
deaf, blind, and have a guide dog. WIii pay&#13;
reasonable amount If requested. Contact me&#13;
at Parllalde Computer Center CA 120 or call&#13;
553-2303.&#13;
28 mllM per gallon. For Salell 1965 VW. It&#13;
runs, needs some work. $225. 553-2428.&#13;
College Rep ne.led. Call between 911 AM&#13;
to set up appointment for lnt8fVlew. Call&#13;
Marlon James at 654-8692.&#13;
Radio station&#13;
ad contest set&#13;
RKO RADIO- announces a&#13;
major graphic design competition&#13;
for colleges, universities and&#13;
accredited art schools. The&#13;
competition - THE FIRST&#13;
NATIONAL RKO RADIO&#13;
GRAPHICS COMPETITION -&#13;
will take place during the Fall&#13;
1977 semester and will involve&#13;
the creation of a full-page ad on&#13;
a theme provided.&#13;
The contest will be conducted&#13;
in two phases. Phase I will&#13;
consist of 11 Regional Contests&#13;
to be held within the service&#13;
areas of 9 different cities across&#13;
the nation in which an RKO&#13;
station is located . The winner of&#13;
each of the 11 Regional Contests&#13;
will receive a S2,500 Scholarship&#13;
and will be eligible for the&#13;
National Award . Phase II will&#13;
consist of the selection of a&#13;
National Winner from a separate&#13;
contest among the 11 Regional '&#13;
Winners . The National Winner&#13;
will receive a S10,000 Scholarship&#13;
Award .&#13;
In addition, the National&#13;
winning entry and the 11&#13;
Regional entries will be&#13;
published in such magazines as&#13;
TIME, ADVERTISING AGE,&#13;
BROADCASTING, and others,&#13;
along with the artist's name and&#13;
school affiliation .&#13;
the Scholarships will be&#13;
awarded during the 1977-78&#13;
academic year and may be used&#13;
only by the winning student for&#13;
his or her contin~ing art&#13;
education at a college, Ui'\tversity&#13;
or accredited art ;thool in the&#13;
United :states of the student's ,&#13;
choosing.&#13;
All college, university and&#13;
accredited art school students -&#13;
undergraduate and graduate -&#13;
within the service area of the 11&#13;
RKO stations are eligible to enter&#13;
the Regional Contest announced&#13;
through that particular station.&#13;
The 11 RKO Radio stations&#13;
involved in the competition are:&#13;
KHJ-AM, Hollywood, California;&#13;
KRTH-FM, Los Angeles, California;&#13;
KFRC-AM/FM, San Francisco,&#13;
California; WAXY-FM, Ft.&#13;
Lauderdale, Florida; WFYR-FM, .&#13;
Chicago, Illinois; WOR-AM, New&#13;
York City, N.Y.; WXLO-99X/FM,&#13;
New York City, N.Y.; WRKO-AM,&#13;
Boston, Massachusetts; WRORFm,&#13;
Boston, Massachusetts;&#13;
WHBQ-AM, Memphis, Tennes-&#13;
$ee, and WGMS-AM/FM, Washington,&#13;
D.C.&#13;
RKO Radio is sponsoring this&#13;
major national competition in an&#13;
effort to focus attention upon&#13;
the values of the communication&#13;
arts in our society . "This project&#13;
is but one aspect of the&#13;
corporation's concern for effective&#13;
communication for the&#13;
well-being of the communities it&#13;
serves, and is one cif the largest&#13;
and most significant student art&#13;
competitions ever undertaken in&#13;
the United States," said an RKO&#13;
representative .&#13;
For more information, contact&#13;
Gloria· Sherman, Project Coordinator,&#13;
West &amp; Brady, Inc., 6400&#13;
Goldsboro Rd ., Wash ., D.C.&#13;
20034, phone (301) 229-6900.&#13;
8&#13;
About fifty Parlcside professors participated in a conference at&#13;
Wingspread last Saturday. The conference was sponsored 1,y the&#13;
Center for Teaclaing Excellence.&#13;
Ranger is&#13;
still looking&#13;
for a&#13;
Sports&#13;
E~itor&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
Come Today See Yours.&#13;
quality corrrnercial printers&#13;
1417 50th street · 658-8990&#13;
p.o.b. foll film series&#13;
presents&#13;
""FRITZ THE CAr··&#13;
fri., sept. 16- s:oo p.m&#13;
sun., sept.18- 7:30 p. m. . . union cinema&#13;
! $1.00 !&#13;
r• ...... ·--··-·--·H-•-H• ... -7 I PAB Fall film 1 : . . ;er1e·s presenti : ~&#13;
Wed., Sept. 21&#13;
2:30 &amp; 7 :30 p.m.&#13;
Uriion Cinema&#13;
$1.00&#13;
I&#13;
. Next week&#13;
1 Dirty Harry &amp;&#13;
i ....... !!.9.~!~ ... ~!.~~! ....... ~ </text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66470">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Business Management Masters program hinges on recruiting&#13;
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              <text>..,.&#13;
W.d••• da" S.pt •• ", 7, 1977&#13;
YoU, .1.2&#13;
er &lt;3&lt;3 All good wri'~ i. swimming under ~~&#13;
water and hold"'ll ywr broo!tI.&#13;
F. Scott Fitzgerald&#13;
Business Management&#13;
Masters program&#13;
hinges on recruiting&#13;
Parkstde's new business management division chairman, Arthur&#13;
Dudycha, said the division will probably have serious problems&#13;
recruiting faculty for seven open business teaching positions. He also&#13;
indicated that the Business Master's Program hinges on good&#13;
recruiting.&#13;
In an interview with RANGER, Dudycha said "because of the&#13;
market situation, we have to be flexible and go with whatever good&#13;
people we can get." He cited as an example of the job market for&#13;
business instructors a convention which he attended in which 223&#13;
employers, some with multiple openings, were balanced by only 160&#13;
applicants. Accounting instructors were particularly rare, with an&#13;
applicant/employer ratio of twelve to one.&#13;
Dudycha said that seven positions are now open, and that he will&#13;
try to get back to two positions vacated when Francine Hall and&#13;
Erwin Saniga left after last year. "We will also try to get two more in&#13;
January", despite the problems of midyear recruiting, he said.&#13;
Besides the seven openings, four professors were recently hired to&#13;
Dudycha. They are:&#13;
Leroy Prvor; associate professor of accounting, with a DBA from&#13;
the University of Southern California who comes to Parks ide from the&#13;
University of Illinois, Chicago Circle Campus;&#13;
Earl L. Chrysler, associate professor to teach information systems&#13;
and quantitative methods, with a DBA from USC;&#13;
Suresh Jain, who holds a Ph. D. from Yale, who will be an associate&#13;
professor teaching quantitative methods and comes from the&#13;
Northwestern Graduate School of Business; and&#13;
Michael Sheffey, Assistant Professor of Accounting, who holds an&#13;
MBA with additional doctoral work at Penn State. Sheffey is a&#13;
certified public accountant and comes to Parkside from Wittenburg&#13;
University in Springfield, Illinois.&#13;
In other business news, a master's degree in business management&#13;
will be offered at Parks ide, probably in the fall of 1978. The MAS&#13;
(Master of Administrative Sciences) courses will be offered mostly, if&#13;
not entirely, in the evening to cater to the needs of master candidates&#13;
already emploved.Jn business. Parkside will not offer the .traditional&#13;
master's degree of MBA (Master of Business Administration) degree.&#13;
According to Dudycha, the decision to offer the MAS instead of&#13;
MBA was for "political reasons." The UW campuses at Milwaukee&#13;
and Whitewater, both relatively close to Parkside, both offer the&#13;
MBA, and "they are possibly afraid of losing students to Parkside",&#13;
said Dudycha, who added that there is virtually no difference&#13;
between the courses taken for either degree. "In terms of course&#13;
offerings and graduation requirements, our program could be&#13;
identical to an MBA program, it just carries a different name."&#13;
Parkside's Chancellor Alan E. Guskin told RANGER the key to&#13;
getting the MAS program moving is to "first get a quality&#13;
undergraduate program. You can't build a strong graduate program&#13;
without a strong undergraduate program. Once you have a very good&#13;
undergrad program, it's a relatively simple process," he said. Cuskin&#13;
said that master's accreditation by the North Central Acceditation&#13;
association and others should not delay the inception of the MAS&#13;
offering.&#13;
"I don't think the process of accreditation will hold us back," said&#13;
Guskin.&#13;
Guskin added that the current recruiting effort for the bachelor&#13;
business program will be "a hard game which takes time." He said&#13;
that "if Parkside can't get the necessary faculty through the usual&#13;
channels, we might temporarily hire retired professionals or obtain&#13;
loaned executives from area businesses. "&#13;
Guskin proclaims Parkside&#13;
community-based university&#13;
by Philip L LivinllSton&#13;
Editor&#13;
university and the communities&#13;
it serves ... such a university is&#13;
very different from the model of&#13;
the large, research-based university,&#13;
which necessarily focuses&#13;
most of its attention outside its&#13;
local area while serving state and&#13;
national interests."&#13;
Joint plilnni ...&#13;
He pointed out that Parkside&#13;
"serves a geographical area&#13;
which includes two major cities&#13;
of Wisconsin, each with a vitality&#13;
and integrity of its own and&#13;
each, like most cities of similar&#13;
size, having difficulty providing&#13;
its population with all the&#13;
services they desire. Because of&#13;
this there is a growing&#13;
con;ciousness among leadership&#13;
groups of both cities that&#13;
collaboration is essential and&#13;
joint planning should begin on a&#13;
In a convocation address last&#13;
Friday, Chancellor Alan E.&#13;
Guskin marked the end of the&#13;
first phase of administrative&#13;
changes during his first two years&#13;
as Chancellor, and outlined&#13;
plans ·for the second phase in&#13;
which Parks ide will become "a&#13;
commun ity-based un iversitv",&#13;
The "state of the university"&#13;
address was preceded by a&#13;
luncheon for faculty, selected&#13;
staff members, and student&#13;
leaders.&#13;
Community-based univenity&#13;
A community-based university:&#13;
according to Cuskin, is :'one&#13;
which focuses its educational&#13;
attention on mutually beneficial&#13;
relationships between the&#13;
number of fronts.&#13;
The Chancellor pointed out&#13;
how Parkside "can and must play&#13;
a central role in the development&#13;
of the Kenosha-Racine communities."&#13;
"It (UW-Parkside)· is the&#13;
largest public facility in the area;&#13;
it offers the educational, human,&#13;
and social resources so critical to&#13;
the future success of the two&#13;
communities."&#13;
According to Cuskin, there are&#13;
two major functions of a&#13;
community-based university:&#13;
"community development and&#13;
human resource development."&#13;
Community development&#13;
"By community development&#13;
we are referring to the role of&#13;
university as an educational and&#13;
cultural center attempting to&#13;
expand and upgrade th&lt;\ quality&#13;
of ed ucation offered to area&#13;
students and residents of all&#13;
ages, to improve the quality of&#13;
life experienced by community&#13;
members, to increase a sense of&#13;
community pride, to reduce&#13;
community tensions, to provide&#13;
the environment and expertise to&#13;
foster the economic development&#13;
of the area, and to provide&#13;
the resources to assess and solve&#13;
community problem s.&#13;
Human resource cIe.. lopment&#13;
"By human resource development&#13;
I am referring to the role of&#13;
the university in helping all who&#13;
participate in its educational&#13;
programs - on and off campus,&#13;
credit and non-credit - to fulfill&#13;
more completely their desire and&#13;
continued on page 6&#13;
..&#13;
' . er&#13;
Wednesday, Septe•lter 7, 1977&#13;
Yol.6, No.2&#13;
()() All good writi~ is_ swimming under~~&#13;
water ond hokhng your bfeoth.&#13;
F. Scott Fitzgerald&#13;
Business Management&#13;
Masters program&#13;
hinges on recruiting&#13;
by John R. McKloskey and Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Parkside's new business management division chairman, Arthur&#13;
Dudycha, said the division will probably have serious problems&#13;
recruiting faculty for seven open business teaching positions. He also&#13;
indicated that the Business Master's Program hinges on good&#13;
recruiting.&#13;
In an interview with RANGER, Dudycha said "because of the&#13;
market situation, we have to be flexible and go with whatever good&#13;
people we can get." He cited as an example of the job market for&#13;
business instructors a convention which he attended in which 223&#13;
employers, some with multiple openings, were balanced by only 160&#13;
applicants. Accounting instructors were particularly rare, with an&#13;
applicant/employer ratio of twelve to one.&#13;
Dudycha said that seven positions are now open, and that he will&#13;
try to get back to two positions vacated when Francine Hall nd&#13;
Erwin Saniga left after last year. "We will also try to get two more in&#13;
January" , despite the problems of midyear recruiting, he said.&#13;
Besides the seven openings, four professors were recently hired to&#13;
Dudycha. They are:&#13;
Leroy Pryor, associate professor of accounting, with a OBA from&#13;
the University of Southern California who comes to Parkside from the&#13;
University of Illinois, Chicago Circle Campus;&#13;
Earl L. Chrysler, associate professor to teach information systems&#13;
and quantitative methods, with a OBA from USC;&#13;
Suresh Jain, who holds a Ph . D. from Yale, who will be an associate&#13;
professor teac;:hing quantitative methods and comes from the&#13;
Northwestern Graduate School of Business; and&#13;
Michael Sheffey, Assistant Professor of Accounting, who holds an&#13;
MBA with additional doctoral work at Penn State. Sheffey is a&#13;
certified public accountant and comes to Parkside from Wittenburg&#13;
University in Springfield, Illinois&#13;
In other business news, a master'.; degree in business management&#13;
will be offered at Parkside, probably in the fall of 1978. The MAS&#13;
(Master of Administrative Sciences) courses will be offered mostly, if&#13;
not entirely, in the evening to cater to the needs of master candidates&#13;
already employed.in business Parkside will not offer the traditional&#13;
master's degree of MBA (Master of Business Administration) degree.&#13;
According to Dudycha, the decision to offer the MAS instead of&#13;
MBA was for " political reasons " The UW campuses at Milwaukee&#13;
and Whitewater, both relatively close to Parkside, both offer the&#13;
MBA, and "they are possibly afraid of losing students to Parkside",&#13;
said Dudycha, who added that there is virtually no difference&#13;
betw&lt;!E!n the courses taken for either degree. "In terms of course&#13;
offerings and graduation requirements, our program could be&#13;
identical to n MBA rogram, it Just drt;es a ditf rent name."&#13;
Parkside's Chancellor Alan E. Guskin told RA GER the key to&#13;
getting the MAS program moving 1s to " first get a quality&#13;
undergraduate program You can't build a strong graduate program&#13;
without a strong undergraduate program. Once you have a very good&#13;
undergrad program, it's a relatively simple process," he said. Guskin&#13;
said that master's accreditation by the orth Central Acceditat1on&#13;
association and others should not delay the inception of the MAS&#13;
offering.&#13;
" I don't think the process of accreditation will hold us back," said&#13;
Guskin.&#13;
Guskin added that the current recruiting effort for the bachelor&#13;
business program will be " a hard game which takes time." He said&#13;
that " if Parkside can't get the necessary faculty through the usual&#13;
channels, we might temporarily hire retired professionals or obtam&#13;
loaned executives from area businesses "&#13;
Guskin proclaims Parkside&#13;
community-based university&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Editor&#13;
In a convocation address last&#13;
Friday, Chancellor Alan E.&#13;
Guskin marked the end of the&#13;
first phase of administrative&#13;
changes during his first two years&#13;
as Chancellor, and outlined&#13;
plans for the second phase in&#13;
which Parkside will become "a&#13;
community-based university".&#13;
The "state of the university"&#13;
address was preceded by a&#13;
luncheon for faculty, selected&#13;
staff members, and student&#13;
leaders.&#13;
Community-based university&#13;
A community-based university-according&#13;
to Guskin, is "one&#13;
whi~h focuses its educational&#13;
attention on mutually beneficial&#13;
relationships between the&#13;
university and the communities&#13;
it serves . . such a university is&#13;
very different from the model of&#13;
the large, research-based university,&#13;
which necessarily focuses&#13;
most of its attention outside its&#13;
local area while serving state and&#13;
national interests."&#13;
Joint planning&#13;
He pointed out that Parkside&#13;
"serves a geographical area&#13;
which includes two major cities&#13;
of Wisconsin, each with a vitality&#13;
and integrity of its own and&#13;
each, like most cities of similar&#13;
size, having difficulty providing&#13;
its population with all the&#13;
services they desire. Because of&#13;
this there is a growing&#13;
con;ciousness among leadership&#13;
groups of both cities that&#13;
collaboration is essential and&#13;
joint planning should begin on a&#13;
number of fronts.&#13;
The Chancellor pointed out&#13;
how Parkside "can and must play&#13;
a central role in the development&#13;
of the Kenosha-Racine communities."&#13;
&#13;
"It (UW-Parkside) is the&#13;
largest public facility in the area;&#13;
it offers the educational, human,&#13;
and social resources so critical to&#13;
the future success of the two&#13;
communities."&#13;
According to Guskin, there are&#13;
two major functions of a&#13;
community-based university:&#13;
"community development and&#13;
human resource development."&#13;
Community development&#13;
"By community development&#13;
we are referring to tile role of&#13;
university as an educational and&#13;
cultural center attempting to&#13;
expand and upgrade the quality&#13;
of education offered to area&#13;
students and residents of all&#13;
ages, to improve the quality of&#13;
life experienced by community&#13;
members, to increase a sense of&#13;
community pride, to reduce&#13;
community tensions, to provide&#13;
the environment and expertise to&#13;
foster the economic development&#13;
of the area, and to provide&#13;
the resources to assess and solve&#13;
community problems.&#13;
Human resource development&#13;
"By human resource development&#13;
I am referring to the role of&#13;
the university in helping all who&#13;
participate in its educational&#13;
programs - on and off campus,&#13;
credit and non-credit - to fulfill&#13;
more completely their desire and&#13;
continued on page 6 &#13;
editorial&#13;
Guskin' s community·~ased&#13;
• • • university raises some&#13;
important questions&#13;
Chancellor Guskln's state of the university&#13;
address last Friday at convocation, was his most&#13;
important message to date. In the speech he&#13;
outlined his plan for Parkside to become&#13;
"community-based". It was a messageaimed at a&#13;
faculty, for the most part, hired under the promise&#13;
that Parkside would become a traditional 25,000&#13;
student university. The university has redefined&#13;
Itself!&#13;
Judging by the Chancellor's short graduation&#13;
ceremonies of the last two years and the total&#13;
exclusion of student speakers from the format,&#13;
the Chancellor is not a big one for long winded&#13;
speeches.His convocation speech, however, was&#13;
over thirty minutes long.&#13;
His plan for a community-based university&#13;
raises some urgent questions.&#13;
One might hope universities are based in some&#13;
community as not to become too cosmic.&#13;
Physically, Parkside is rather prairie-based or&#13;
park-based. Deceased Chancellor Wyllie might&#13;
have said Parkside was corridor-based (corridor,&#13;
meaning our location in the population corridor&#13;
between Chicago and Milwaukee). Take note&#13;
Guskin did not say community college, a term we&#13;
haveto avoid at all costs. In reality, few decades&#13;
from now with proper planning, we could very&#13;
well become suburban-based or even suburbansurrounded.&#13;
But alas, the Chancellor meant&#13;
community-basedas opposed to research-based!&#13;
This terminology could have caused young&#13;
untenured professors to squirm in their&#13;
convocation seats. Imagine physics or&#13;
philosophy professors fresh out of a graduate&#13;
school that prepared them for a life of teaching&#13;
and research (mostly research), praying dearly&#13;
that their research will be published and&#13;
acknowledged. Now, as they hear the Chancellor&#13;
of their university getting community-based,&#13;
imagine them also trying to relate physics and&#13;
chemistry to Racine and Kenosha, in a&#13;
community-based way.&#13;
If we place our emphasis on the community,&#13;
what about the time honored method of granting&#13;
tenure, for the most part, to professors with&#13;
researchoriented educations. Perhaps a school&#13;
with our mission should be recruiting those with&#13;
teaching doctoral degrees Instead of research&#13;
oriented backgrounds. How do we make research&#13;
careersrelevant to community service?&#13;
What about Parkside's outside funding?&#13;
Parkside's growing research posture has brought&#13;
thousands of extra dollars to lucky and proficient&#13;
professors, who, through success, can earn&#13;
valuable national exposure. What kind of cash&#13;
can community service (often volunteered) bring?&#13;
Clearly, these are issues of prime Importance if&#13;
Parkside continues to attract the best qualified&#13;
scholars as we have in the past and maintain&#13;
some balance in the transition.&#13;
In the Chancellor's speech he described the&#13;
completion of the first phase of administrative&#13;
changes which included, "a considerable number&#13;
of staff changes, including all senior&#13;
administrators. "Obviously, some of the audience&#13;
asked - why? Former acting Chancellor Otto&#13;
Baurer attended the convocation. He sat in the&#13;
back of the theatre. The rest of the deposed&#13;
officials were someplace else. So it goes ....&#13;
Before starting his speech, Guskin introduced&#13;
Vice-Chancellor Lorman Ratner, the new Dean of&#13;
Faculty, and Arthur Dudycha, the new Chairman&#13;
of the Management Science Division. These two&#13;
highly qualified and downright impressive gentlemen,&#13;
without question, occupy the professional&#13;
leadership positions instrumental in guaranteeing&#13;
Parkside will become community-based.&#13;
Also in the audience, although not officially&#13;
introduced, was a man whose performance is&#13;
paramount to achieving the community-based&#13;
goal. Stuart Rubner, the new Director of&#13;
Community services, will be responsible for&#13;
recruiting growing numbers of students over the&#13;
age of twenty-five needed for Parkside's survivaL&#13;
as numbers of high school graduates decline and&#13;
competition for older students increases.&#13;
Rubner's dedication, experience, sense of humor&#13;
and enthusiastic personality, promise success:&#13;
ConSider!ngthat Parkside's physical resources&#13;
are ~trategl?ally located in one of the largest&#13;
growl.ngregIons of Wisconsin, Chancellor Guskin&#13;
hasaimed Parkside in the right direction' towards&#13;
the two cities who will need all the help'they can&#13;
get to stretch westward gracefully. If it works, the&#13;
SChOOl.?ould -get some needed national&#13;
recognition and keep the shopping mall&#13;
developers away forever.&#13;
Ranger endorses the Chancellor'S plan to&#13;
~ome com~unltY-based because It is the best&#13;
og cal and Intelligent solution to Parkside's&#13;
prosperity. Here is '.&#13;
university with id a multi-million dollar&#13;
eas... Now, for the action .....&#13;
Raaau is .fittea &amp;Ad dlted b&#13;
UaIv_,. of Wiacoaala-P~aIde ~":'J.eat. of tbe&#13;
re._alble fo. ita editorial poIIc e,. .....,-lei,.&#13;
,. &amp;Ad Content.&#13;
IEdltor PUip L. LiYlaa&#13;
"hera!III n-. R C .toa 553-2295 -&#13;
Ad-.u.. Ill--. r ...... G&amp;b~'~ 553-2187&#13;
.-. ~~3-21187&#13;
s........... UOa.: $$.00 Fear for U.$&#13;
Raaaer Ne•• p.por. UalYeralty of W~ .A• ....0.'. WLo Lo aala,Parh.lde&#13;
• --11141&#13;
I&#13;
editorial 2&#13;
Guskin' s community-~ased • • • un1vers1ty raises some&#13;
important questions . ,&#13;
Chancellor Guskin's state of the university&#13;
address last Friday at convocation, was his most&#13;
important message to date. In the speech he&#13;
outlined his plan for Parkside to become&#13;
"community-based". It was a message aimed at a&#13;
faculty, for the most part, hired under the promise&#13;
that Parkside would become a traditional 25,000&#13;
student university. The university has redefined&#13;
itself!&#13;
Judging by the Chancellor's short graduation&#13;
ceremonies of the last two years and the total&#13;
exclusion of student speakers from the format,&#13;
the Chancellor is not a big one for long winded&#13;
speeches. His convocation speech, however, was&#13;
over thirty minutes long.&#13;
His plan for a community-based university&#13;
raises some urgent questions.&#13;
One might hope universities are based in some&#13;
community as not to become too cosmic.&#13;
Physically, Parkside is rather prairie-based or&#13;
park-based. Deceased Chancellor Wyllie might&#13;
have said Parkside was corridor-based (corridor,&#13;
meaning our location in the population corridor&#13;
between Chicago and Milwaukee). Take note&#13;
Guskin did not say community college, a term we&#13;
have to avoid at all costs. In reality, few decades&#13;
from now with proper planning, we could very&#13;
well become suburban-based or even suburbansurrounded.&#13;
But alas, the Chancellor meant&#13;
community-based as opposed to research-based!&#13;
This terminology could have caused young&#13;
untenured professors to squirm in their&#13;
convocation seats. Imagine physics or&#13;
philosophy professors fresh out of a graduate&#13;
school that prepared them for a life of teaching&#13;
and research (mostly research), praying dearly&#13;
that their research will be published and&#13;
acknowledged. Now, as they hear the Chancellor&#13;
of their university getting community-based,&#13;
Imagine them also trying to relate physics and&#13;
chemistry to ·Racine and Kenosha, in a&#13;
community-based way.&#13;
If we place our emphasis on the community&#13;
what about the time honored method of granting&#13;
tenure, for the most pa_rt, to professors with&#13;
research oriented educations. Perhaps a school&#13;
with our mission should be recruiting those with&#13;
teaching doctoral degrees instead of research&#13;
oriented backgrounds. How do we make research&#13;
careers relevant to community service?&#13;
What about Parkside's outside ~unding?&#13;
Parkside's growing research posture has brought&#13;
thousands of extra dollars to lucky and proficient&#13;
professors, who, through success, can earn&#13;
valuable national exposure. What kind of cash&#13;
can community service (often volunteered) bring?&#13;
Clearly, these are issues of prime importance If&#13;
Parkside continues to attract the best qualified&#13;
scholars as we have in the past and maintain&#13;
some balance in the transition.&#13;
In the Chancellor's speech he described the&#13;
completion of the first phase of administrative&#13;
changes which included, "a considerable number&#13;
of staff changes, including all senior&#13;
administrators." Obviously, some of the audience&#13;
asked - why? Former acting Chancellor Otto&#13;
Baurer attended the convocation. He sat in. the&#13;
back of the theatre. The rest of the deposed&#13;
officials were someplace else. So it goes ....&#13;
Before starting his speech, Guskin introduced&#13;
Vice-Chancellor Lorman Ratner, the new Dean of&#13;
Faculty, and Arthur Dudycha, the new Chairman&#13;
of the Management Science Division. These two&#13;
highly qualified and downright impressive gentlemen,&#13;
without question, occupy the professional&#13;
leadership positions instrumental in guaranteeing&#13;
Parkside will become community-based.&#13;
Also in the audience, although not officially&#13;
introduced, was a man whose performance is&#13;
paramount to achieving the community-based&#13;
goal. Stuart Rubner, the new Director of&#13;
Community Services, will be responsible for&#13;
recruiting growing numbers of students over the&#13;
age of twenty-five needed for Parkside's survival&#13;
as numbers of high school graduates decline and&#13;
competition for older students increases.&#13;
Rubner's dedication, experience, sense of humor,&#13;
and enthusiastic personality, promise success.&#13;
Consider~ng that Parkside's physical resources&#13;
are ~trateg1~ally located in one of the largest&#13;
grow,_ng regions of Wisconsin, Chancellor Guskin&#13;
has aimed Parkside in the right direction· towards&#13;
the two cities who will need all the help' they can&#13;
get to stretch westward gracefully. If it works, the&#13;
~i:iol. ?0 uld get some needed national&#13;
gn1t1on and keep the shopping mall&#13;
developers away forever.&#13;
Ranger endorses the Chancellor's plan to&#13;
~.ome community-based because it is the best&#13;
• ogical .and intelligent solution to Parkside's&#13;
prosperity. Here is a . .&#13;
university with .d mult1-mllhon dollar 1 eas · · · Now, for the action .....&#13;
Rlt.f\&amp;er ia writtel\ a.nd edited b&#13;
Ul\ivenity of Wiacol\ain·P&amp;rllaide Y • t11denta ol the&#13;
reapoftaible for it• editorial po::d they &amp;re solely · Y At\d conteftt.&#13;
Edit r Philip L Livia&#13;
\a r I &amp;Nt.aer ...._ · 1st01\ 553-2295 - • QOll\&amp;a R. Coope d rti ft Mana r .loka Gabriel 553 r 553-2287&#13;
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v1ews&#13;
Editor's File ******* Dean Dearborn's&#13;
Farewell Banquet&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Editor&#13;
Dean Dearborn helped get the sports&#13;
program off the ground and balled out the&#13;
Vet's Club who had gone mrserablv In debt&#13;
trying to subsidize a Racine bus to ParkSlde&#13;
When he was WIth people at a party, a game,&#13;
or other school funcnon, he would keep hrs&#13;
head raised high and not hesitate to let go w,th&#13;
a strong laugh, always smihng He looked Ioke&#13;
a Dean of Students. He gave people a senseof&#13;
pride and Importance&#13;
He got caught In the middle of the chang,ng&#13;
of the guard in an "adrninistranve reallocation"&#13;
A casualty of a Mac truck or something.&#13;
After all the testimonials were grven and&#13;
after hIS son, Dave Dearborn tned to speak&#13;
through hIStears, the Dean h'mself got up to&#13;
declare himself alive and well, saying, "I have&#13;
been deeply hurt But I want to tell you - I&#13;
stand proud to say I was a part of the WyllIe&#13;
adrnirustration I will never forget that."&#13;
Anyone who doesn't know hIm or remember&#13;
hirn as Dean of Students might not appreciate&#13;
hISefforts in pioneenng areasaround ParksIde&#13;
where no one had trod. One of the few&#13;
traditions this campus has was an idea of hIS.&#13;
Dean Dearborn thought up a year end&#13;
celebration under a CIICUS tent where&#13;
everyone In the school could get plenty of&#13;
beer and laugh It up, The End. How could&#13;
anyone forget!&#13;
There wasa farewell banquet last August for&#13;
a deposed adnoinistrator, Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Allen Dearborn, Dean of Students.&#13;
Essentially, it was a very sad banquet, but&#13;
plenty of happy people attended. There was a&#13;
judge, a university president, dozens of&#13;
administrators, and many secretaries, all&#13;
friends.&#13;
Dean Dearborn was here when Parkside was&#13;
a handful of weird buildings, the most&#13;
glamorous being Tallent Hall. I remember as a&#13;
high school student coming to visit him in his&#13;
office in the upper northwest corner of Tallent.&#13;
He looked out his windowed elevated view&#13;
and joked, "This is a fishbowl, so I can watch&#13;
the riots." It was the late sixties and Dearborn&#13;
had not been able to befriend the defiant ones.&#13;
Former editors of Newscope and Ranger&#13;
would mention Dearborn with grit teeth as&#13;
they spoke of destruction.&#13;
He rode the waves and gave more power to&#13;
students than they could handle in the form of&#13;
total control of segregated fees under the&#13;
merger law.&#13;
He also helped college aged people&#13;
recognize Parkside by helping to secure the&#13;
first national name entertainment in local high&#13;
school gymnasiums.&#13;
Chancellor Gusldn Icills housing co-op plan&#13;
D.an D.arborn (left) talb with Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
, '&#13;
•• rtol Scott, Kenosha iud,e and former&#13;
District Attorne,.&#13;
Next weelc:&#13;
fluyw~ere&#13;
Ware... Wherever you go, tell it like it is in an impnnted&#13;
shirt. Whether you're in sports, Greeks. love, or&#13;
trouble, stop down at the bookstore and have ,t&#13;
put on a t-shirt, sweatshirt or Jacket. Let everyone&#13;
know just where you're at, in ware that you can&#13;
wear anywhere ... at the bookstore.&#13;
New Shirts&#13;
And T's&#13;
To Fit&#13;
Your Needs&#13;
UWParkside&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
"The Campus Outfitters"&#13;
J&#13;
" • • views&#13;
Dean DearlJorn (left) tallcs witll Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Burton Scott, Kenoslla iudge and former&#13;
District Attorney,.&#13;
Next weelc:&#13;
Ed•t I f•I Dean Dearborn's 1 ors I e ******* Farewell Banqu t&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Editor&#13;
There was a farewell banquet last August for&#13;
a deposed adn,inistrator. Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Allen Dearborn, Dean of Students.&#13;
Essentially, it was a very sad banquet, but&#13;
plenty of happy people attended. There wa a&#13;
judge, a university president, dozens of&#13;
administrators, and many secretaries; all&#13;
friends.&#13;
Dean Dearborn was here when Parkside was&#13;
a handful of weird buildings, the most&#13;
glamorous being Tallent Hall. I remember as a&#13;
high school student coming to visit him in his&#13;
office in the upper northwest corner of Tallent.&#13;
He looked out his windowed elevated view&#13;
and joked, "This is a fishbowl, so I can watch&#13;
the riots." It was the late sixties and Dearborn&#13;
had not been able to befriend the defiant ones.&#13;
Former editors of Newscope and Ranger&#13;
would mention Dearborn with grit teeth as&#13;
they spoke of destruction .&#13;
He rode the waves and gave more power to&#13;
students than they could handle in the form of&#13;
total control of segregated fees under the&#13;
merger law.&#13;
He also helped college aged people&#13;
recognize Parkside by helping to secure the&#13;
first national name entertainment in local high&#13;
school gymnasiums.&#13;
Cltancellor Guslcin lcills ltousing co-op plan&#13;
Jlnyw~ere Ware ... Wherever you go, tell it like it is in an imprinted&#13;
shirt. Whether you're in sports, Greeks, love, or&#13;
trouble, stop down at the bookstore and have it&#13;
put on at-shirt, sweatshirt or Jacket. Let everyone&#13;
know just where you're at, in ware that you can&#13;
wear anywhere . .. at the bookstore.&#13;
New Shirts&#13;
And T's&#13;
To Fit&#13;
Your Needs&#13;
UWParksid&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
'The Campus Outfitters' ' &#13;
shows 4&#13;
Neil Diamond touches listener's_ hearts&#13;
and performances anyone&#13;
could bring. "This is~&#13;
beautiful," he said """ lO&#13;
defin.itely ~oming' back.~&#13;
prorruse you. With these ""'lIs&#13;
spoken, the place went intoan&#13;
all out uproar. Even the IIIOlt&#13;
lukewarm Diamond fan w&#13;
taken in by all the exci~&#13;
What more could an\'Onesay&#13;
about Neil Diamond. He isa bue&#13;
performer and magician. A true&#13;
superstar in all respects. A &amp;ItIt&#13;
concert, '3 great time, a &amp;reIt&#13;
man.&#13;
Neil Diamond .. "1 am, I&#13;
said."&#13;
He had many special effects&#13;
during the show which set the&#13;
moods of his songs very well.&#13;
_ The most interesting of which&#13;
was during his portrayal of&#13;
Jonathan livingston Seagull.&#13;
Clouds floating on the backdrop&#13;
with the outline of Jonathan&#13;
among them. The mood and the&#13;
sensitivity of the songs touched&#13;
rnanv a heart. They brought tears&#13;
to some and a great feeling of joy&#13;
and happiness to all.&#13;
To the 20,000 plus crowd&#13;
packed at Alpine Valley, he&#13;
brought one of the best show's&#13;
by John A. Gabriel clear, strong, forceful and&#13;
meaningful. His movements are&#13;
not mechanical but are&#13;
freeflowing and seem to&#13;
generate from the evergy of his&#13;
audience. He sang songs from&#13;
the very beginning of his career&#13;
(Kentucky Women) to his latest&#13;
album 'Magnificent Noise' of&#13;
which he sang the title track.&#13;
Always giving more than the&#13;
audience wanted of him.&#13;
- .&#13;
evolved from performer to&#13;
charismatic personality /superstar.&#13;
And, in doing so, hasproven&#13;
that there isn't an area in the&#13;
show businessworld he can't and&#13;
won-t conquer. This was so very&#13;
evident on Wed. August 24 at&#13;
Alpine Valley.&#13;
Diamond's presence on stage&#13;
brings such a magnetism to his&#13;
audience so strong that you can't&#13;
help but join in. His voice is&#13;
The crowd is restless. People&#13;
are waiting. There is a tenseness&#13;
in the air. A certain magnetism.&#13;
The lights go down. The band&#13;
comes out. They begin to play.&#13;
Suddenly, there, in the center of&#13;
the stage, The Man. Engulfed in&#13;
pure bright light. Neil Diamond.&#13;
Once performing only to get&#13;
his s~gs heard, Diamond has&#13;
$)50 Guests&#13;
er&#13;
is looking for writers, photographers and these&#13;
paid positions for the fall semester:&#13;
• Advertising Manager&#13;
• Feature Editor&#13;
• Sports Editor&#13;
Come to our meeting this FridayI&#13;
Sept. 9. I at 3:00 PM in WLlC D.174&#13;
shows 4&#13;
Neil Diamond touches listener's hearts&#13;
by John A. Gabriel&#13;
The crowd is restless. People&#13;
are waiting. There is a tenseness&#13;
in the air. A certain magnetism.&#13;
The lights go down. The band&#13;
com out. They begin to play.&#13;
uddenly, there, in the center of&#13;
the stage, The Man. Engulfed in&#13;
pure bright light. eil Diamond.&#13;
Once p rforming only to get&#13;
hi~ ong heard, Diamond has&#13;
evolved from performer to&#13;
charismatic personality / superstar.&#13;
And, in doing so, has proven&#13;
that there isn't an area in the&#13;
show business world he can't and&#13;
won't conquer. This was so very&#13;
evident on Wed. August 24 at&#13;
Alpine Valley.&#13;
Diamond's presence on stage&#13;
brings such a magnetism to his&#13;
audience so strong that you can't&#13;
help but join in His voice is&#13;
clear, strong, forceful and&#13;
meaningful. His movements are&#13;
not mechanical but are&#13;
freeflowing and seem to&#13;
generate from the evergy of his&#13;
audience. He sang songs from&#13;
the very beginning of his career&#13;
(Kentucky Women) to his latest&#13;
album 'Magnificent Noise' of&#13;
which he sang the title track.&#13;
Always giving more than the&#13;
audience wanted of him.&#13;
SAT., SEPT. 10 9:00 P.M.&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
$loo UW-P Students $1 50 Guests&#13;
er&#13;
He had many special effects&#13;
during the show which set the&#13;
moods of his songs very well.&#13;
The most interesting of which&#13;
was during his portrayal of&#13;
Jonathan Livingston Seagull.&#13;
Clouds floating on the backdrop&#13;
with the outline of Jonathan&#13;
among them. The mood and the&#13;
sensitivity of the songs touched&#13;
man)( a heart. They brought tears&#13;
to some and a great feeling of joy&#13;
and happiness to all.&#13;
, To the 20,000 plus crowd&#13;
packed at Alpine Valley, he&#13;
brought one of the best show's&#13;
and performances any one&#13;
cou Id bring. "This is rnan&#13;
b eau t.f I " h · so I u , e said "we&#13;
definitely coming' back ar~&#13;
promise you." With these Words&#13;
spoken, the place went into an&#13;
all out uproar. Even the mos&#13;
lukewarm Diamond fan w&#13;
taken in by all the exciternenas&#13;
What more could anyone sa&#13;
about Neil Diamond. He is a tru!&#13;
performer and magician. A true&#13;
superstar in all respects. A great&#13;
concert, a great time, a great&#13;
man .&#13;
Neil Diamond "I am, I&#13;
said."&#13;
is looking for writers, phOtographers and these&#13;
paid positions for the fall semester:&#13;
• Advertising Manager&#13;
• Feature Editor&#13;
• Sports Editor&#13;
Come to our meeting this Friday,.&#13;
Sept. 9. , at 3:00 PNI in WLLC D-174 &#13;
campus&#13;
g§a CONTACT&#13;
weekly. by student government&#13;
PSGAurges students "0 join committees&#13;
I would like to say welcome&#13;
backand briefly explain someof&#13;
the responsibilities designated to&#13;
your student government.&#13;
Student governments in the&#13;
University of Wisconsin System&#13;
can be powerful forces both on&#13;
their respective campuses and&#13;
collectively throughout the&#13;
entire system.&#13;
Students, through their Student&#13;
Governments, have been&#13;
given the opportunity here in&#13;
Wisconsin not only to learn, but&#13;
to be able to put that knowledge&#13;
to work by actively participating&#13;
in all decision making processes&#13;
for the purpose of programming,&#13;
planning, and budgeting in both&#13;
academic and non-academic&#13;
areas.&#13;
As stated in State Merger law&#13;
section36.09(5):&#13;
"The students of each Instltutlon or&#13;
campus subject to the responsibilities&#13;
and powers of the board, the president,&#13;
the chancellor and the faculty shall be&#13;
active participants in 'the Immediate&#13;
governance of and pcucy development&#13;
for such institutions. As such,&#13;
students shall have primary reepcnerbility&#13;
for the formulation and review of&#13;
policies concerning student IHe,&#13;
services and Interests. Students In&#13;
consultation with the chancellor and&#13;
subject to the final confirmation of the&#13;
bOerd shall have the responsibiltty for&#13;
the disposition of those student fees&#13;
which constitute substantial support&#13;
for campus student activities. The&#13;
students of each Institution of campus&#13;
shall have the right to organize themselves&#13;
In a manner they determIne and&#13;
to select their representatives to&#13;
participate in institutional governance."&#13;
The student fees mentioned&#13;
above amount to an annual&#13;
budget of around -$400,000.00&#13;
which is budgeted by the&#13;
SegregatedFee Committee as set&#13;
forth in the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Constitution, It&#13;
supports the Union, Programming,&#13;
the Health Office,&#13;
Transportation, Athletics, Intramurals,&#13;
PSGA, the Child Care&#13;
Center, Student Groups, the&#13;
Student Newspaper, and the&#13;
Housing Office.&#13;
Students also sit on all&#13;
University decision and policy&#13;
making committees. I would like&#13;
to quote again from a Board of&#13;
Regent Policy Statement concerning&#13;
Merger Law.&#13;
"The students ant usured of formal&#13;
representation on all campus ccmmntees&#13;
(or their equivalents) established&#13;
for purposes of prooramming,&#13;
planning, and budgeting In both&#13;
academic and non-academle .......&#13;
Student go.....mments and associations&#13;
shall be the vehicle for such repreeen~&#13;
tatlon. Formal student government&#13;
Input shall be provided Into all areas of&#13;
Institutional governance."&#13;
RustySmith&#13;
President Rusty Tutlewski,&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, changed her name.&#13;
As of September 1, 1977 her&#13;
nameis Rusty Smith.&#13;
There are committees on&#13;
campus dealing with virtually&#13;
every area of Parkside. A fuJI list&#13;
is available in the Student&#13;
Government office WLLC 0-193,&#13;
telephone 553-2244. Selections&#13;
for the coming year will be made&#13;
very shortly. If you are interested&#13;
in serving in any capacity please&#13;
contact me or one of the&#13;
Senators or stop in at the office&#13;
during the next two weeks. This&#13;
is a wonderful opportunity to put&#13;
your knowledge and skills to&#13;
work in a meaningful and&#13;
effective manner. Let us hear&#13;
from you.&#13;
Ranger needs&#13;
more Ite'p'&#13;
5&#13;
John Moses, former S,ecretary of Veterans Affairs Coordinator of the NitionoJ:l AssocioJ:tion of&#13;
[right] discussed the current state of veteran's Concerned Veterans. There will be oJ:meeting of the&#13;
benefits in Wisconsin with Ron Schultz, Parkside Vet's Club Sunday, september 11, at 4:00 p.m. in&#13;
Vet's Club President [left], during registration last Union Square with free beer for members.&#13;
week. Schultz is also the Assistant Wisconsin&#13;
When there's a challenge,&#13;
quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope you have some fun with the challenge.&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon is the Number 1 beer in Milwaukee,&#13;
beer capital of the world.&#13;
That's why we'd like to offer you another challenge&#13;
-the Pabst challenge. Taste and compare Pabst Blue&#13;
Ribbon to any other premium beer. You'll like Pabst&#13;
because Blue Ribbon quality means the best-tasting beer&#13;
you can gel. Since 1844 it always has.&#13;
PABST. Since 1844. The quality has always come through.&#13;
PABST BREW;NG COMPANY, Milwaukee, Wis., Peoria Heights, 111.,Newark, N.J. Los Angeles, Calif., Pabst, Georgia&#13;
O~laNI v~ &gt;4:1"118C~.131~,V8:1~~~i~18A~~*~1~~~~ ~~31~~~ ~ ~•• suy 3n18 S'3n18 L 1VNIOI::lV:I9 )l:l\l'18 0; &gt;4:1v&#13;
Match the proper colors to the clues shown below.&#13;
L London's Fang _&#13;
2, BeaUes' Field5&#13;
3. Chandler's Dahlia _&#13;
4. School's Board _&#13;
5. Calcutta's Hole _&#13;
6. Pope's Helper· _&#13;
7. Wambaugh's Knight _&#13;
8. High-Class Blood _&#13;
9. Capri's Grotto _&#13;
10. Hugo's Pimpernel _&#13;
11. Gainsborough's Boy _&#13;
12. Robin Hood's WiII _&#13;
13. Kaaba's Stone _&#13;
14. Duke's Mood _&#13;
campus&#13;
g/98 w~~~!~~!&#13;
5&#13;
PSGA urges students ·to join committees&#13;
I would like to say welcome&#13;
back and briefly explain some of&#13;
the responsibilities designated to&#13;
your student government.&#13;
Student .governments in the&#13;
University of Wisconsin System&#13;
can be powerful forces both ori&#13;
their respective campuses and&#13;
collectively throughout the&#13;
entire system .&#13;
Students, through their Student&#13;
Governments, ·have been&#13;
given the opportunity here in&#13;
Wisconsin not only to learn, but&#13;
to be able to put that knowledge&#13;
to work by actively participating&#13;
in all decision making processes&#13;
for the purpose of programming,&#13;
planning, and budgeting in both&#13;
academic and non-academic&#13;
areas.&#13;
As stated in State Merger Law&#13;
section 36.09 (5): "The students of each Institution or&#13;
campus subject to the responsJbllities&#13;
and powers of the board, the president,&#13;
the chancellor and the faculty shall be&#13;
active participants In ' the Immediate&#13;
governance.of and pollcy development&#13;
for such Institutions. As such,&#13;
students shall have primary responsibility&#13;
for the formulation and review of&#13;
policies concerning student life,&#13;
services and interests. Students In&#13;
consultation with the chancellor and&#13;
subject to the final confirmation of the&#13;
board shall have the responslblllty for&#13;
the disposition of those student fees&#13;
which constitute substantial support&#13;
for campus student activities. The&#13;
students of each institution of campus&#13;
shal I have the right to organize themselves&#13;
in a manner they determine and&#13;
to select their representatives to&#13;
participate In I nstltutlonal governance."&#13;
The student fees mentioned&#13;
above amount to an annual&#13;
budget of around -$400,000.00&#13;
which is budgeted by the&#13;
Segregated Fee Committee as set&#13;
forth in the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Constitution, It&#13;
supports the Union, Programming,&#13;
the Health Office,&#13;
Transportation, Athletics, Intramurals,&#13;
PSGA, the Child ·Care&#13;
Center, Student Groups, the&#13;
Student Newspaper, and the&#13;
Housing Office.&#13;
Students also sit on all&#13;
University decision and poli(:y&#13;
making committees. I would like&#13;
to quote again from a Board of&#13;
Regent Policy Statement concerning&#13;
Merger law.&#13;
"The students are assured of formal&#13;
representation on all campus committees&#13;
(or their equivalents) established&#13;
for purposes of programming,&#13;
planning, and budgeting In both&#13;
academic and non-academic areas.&#13;
Student governments and associations&#13;
shall be the vehicle for such representation.&#13;
Formal student government&#13;
Input shall be provided Into all areas of&#13;
Institutional governance."&#13;
Rusty Smith&#13;
President Rusty Tutlewski,&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, changed her name.&#13;
As of September 1, 1977 her&#13;
name is Rusty Smith.&#13;
There are committees on&#13;
campus dealing with virtually&#13;
every area of Parkside. A full list&#13;
is available in the Student&#13;
Government office WLLC D-193,&#13;
telephone 553-2244. Selections&#13;
for the coming year will be made&#13;
very shortly. If you are interested&#13;
in serving in any capacity please&#13;
contact me or one of the&#13;
Senators or stop in at the office&#13;
during the next two weeks. This&#13;
is a wonderful opportunity to put&#13;
your knowledge and skills to&#13;
work in a meaningful and&#13;
effective manner. Let us hear&#13;
from you .&#13;
Ranger needs&#13;
more ltelpl&#13;
John Moses, former S~cretary of Veterans Affairs Coordinator of the National Association of&#13;
[right] discussed the current state of veteran's Concerned Veterans. There will be a meeting of the&#13;
benefits in Wisconsin with Ron Schultz, Parkside Vet's Club Sunday, September 11, at 4:00 p.m. in&#13;
Vet's Club President [left], during registration last Union Square with free beer for members.&#13;
week. Schultz is also the Assistant Wisconsin&#13;
Match the proper colors to the clues shown below.&#13;
1. London's Fang ___ _&#13;
2. Beatles' Field!.&#13;
3 .. Chandler's Dahlia ___ _&#13;
4. School's Board ____ _&#13;
5. Calcutta's Hole ___ _&#13;
6. Pope's Helper ____ _&#13;
7. Wambaugh's Knight ____ _&#13;
8. High-class Blood ___ _&#13;
9. Capri's Grotto ____ _&#13;
10. Hugo's Pimpernel ___ _&#13;
11. Gainsborough's Boy ___ _&#13;
12. Robin Hood's Will ___ _&#13;
13. Kaaba's Stone ____ _&#13;
14. Duke's Mood ____ _&#13;
When there's a challenge, quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope you have some fun with the challenge.&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon is the Number 1 beer in Milwaukee.&#13;
beer capital of the world.&#13;
That's why we'd like to offer you another challenge&#13;
-the Pabst challenge.Taste and compare Pabst Blue&#13;
Ribbon to any other premium beer. You 'll like Pabst&#13;
because Blue Ribbon quality means the best-tasting beer&#13;
you can get. Since 1844 it always has.&#13;
ea&#13;
PABST. Since 1844. The quality has always come through.&#13;
PABST BREW;NG COMPANY-, Milwaukee, Wis., Peoria Heights, Ill., Newark, N.J., Los Angeles, Cahf. , Pabst, Georgia&#13;
0810NI ·i,1 .)(:)"t/78 'f;I 13~~7&#13;
\fJt ~~i~1s;~~5~1tt1i i 131m2. ~ :J8MSUY 3n1s s ·3n1s L ·1vN101:Jv::i 9 &gt;1::iv1s c; &gt;1.,. &#13;
news 6&#13;
Parkside now offering Guskin&#13;
graduate math courses&#13;
cont. from page 1&#13;
potential. The university attempts&#13;
to do this by the quality&#13;
of instruction it offers, the&#13;
variety of its educational&#13;
programs and their availability to&#13;
those seeking to learn."&#13;
Educational leadership&#13;
Guskin also pointed out how&#13;
Parkside can and does provide&#13;
educational leadership for the&#13;
area's other schools.&#13;
.. The standards we set for&#13;
our campus playa central role in&#13;
upgrading educational standards&#13;
for all community educational&#13;
institutions. Through our&#13;
Collegiate Skills Program, we are&#13;
attempting to directly influence&#13;
the achievement levels of&#13;
students in high schools by&#13;
demanding higher standards of&#13;
them at the university ... 1 might&#13;
add the schools have responded&#13;
positivelv to our efforts."&#13;
Library is a leader&#13;
Guskin pointed to the Parks ide&#13;
library as the "symbol of the&#13;
great tradition of university life"&#13;
and "a leader in community&#13;
outreach with more than 5,()X)&#13;
area non-student residents who&#13;
are registered users."&#13;
Call to action&#13;
Guskin concluded his "state of&#13;
he university speech" with a caU&#13;
to action for faculty and staff&#13;
"The University of Wisconsin_&#13;
Parks ide represents a new&#13;
conception of a regional&#13;
university that is being fashioned&#13;
to meet the challenges of the&#13;
late 1970's and 1980's. We are in&#13;
a position to provide the higher&#13;
education community in the&#13;
United States with a model to be&#13;
followed.&#13;
"We, the faculty and staff, can&#13;
together provide this leadership.&#13;
Let us join together in this&#13;
opportunity."&#13;
See editorial.&#13;
Parkside will offer graduate work.Jn mathematics&#13;
beginning this semester under a consortium&#13;
arrangement with UW-Whitewater.&#13;
The initial fall course offering, available for&#13;
Whitewater graduate credit or Parks ide&#13;
undergraduate credit, will be "Elementary Number&#13;
Theory" (Mathematics 367) which will be taught&#13;
from 6:30 to 7:45 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays.&#13;
The tentative spring offering will be "Abstract&#13;
Algebra 1" (Mathematics 411). All courses carrying&#13;
master's degree credit will be taught in the evening.&#13;
Graduate level students in the courses are&#13;
expected to meet higher standards and to complete&#13;
supplementary work not expected of undergraduates.&#13;
Under the consortium arrangement, persons&#13;
seeking the Master of Arts in Teaching or the&#13;
Master of Science in Teaching degrees should be&#13;
able to complete del!ree requirements by taking&#13;
one course in each of four semesters at Parks ide&#13;
and attending three summer sessions at&#13;
Wh itewater.&#13;
The program is expected to attract both certified&#13;
teachers who wish to pursue a master's level&#13;
program in mathematics and education and&#13;
persons in business and industry wishing to upgrade&#13;
mathematics skills. The program also will provide'&#13;
additional opportunity for undergraduate candidates&#13;
for the bachelor's degree to take upper level&#13;
mathematics courses during the evening.&#13;
•••and a math fraternity too&#13;
Parkside has been notified that it will become the&#13;
third university in the state to have a chapter of Pi&#13;
Mu Epsilon, the national honorary mathematics&#13;
fraternity.&#13;
Parkside's Gamma chapter will join a chapter at&#13;
Marquette University chartered in 1933 and one at&#13;
UW-Madison chartered in 1939. Nationwide, the&#13;
fraternity has about 200 chapters.&#13;
Installation of charter members will be held&#13;
during the fall semester, when a national officer of&#13;
the fraternity will be present.&#13;
Student officers of Gamma chapter are Lynn&#13;
Tenuta, Kenosha, president; Jerome Feucht,&#13;
Racine, vice president; and Dianna Kolovos,&#13;
Kenosha, secretary-treasurer. Prof. Samuel&#13;
Filippone is faculty advisor.&#13;
The purpose of the group is to promote scholarly&#13;
activity in mathematics.&#13;
Dudycha asks&#13;
business students&#13;
• •&#13;
to participate WLLC gets improvement grants by John R. McKloskey specialties, amount of education&#13;
and other data on the four are&#13;
elsewhere in this week's&#13;
RANGER.&#13;
Dudycha encouraged all&#13;
business students to see their&#13;
business faculty advisors regular·&#13;
ly, "certainly by their sophomexe&#13;
year." He noted that upper level&#13;
specialty business courses may&#13;
not count toward the student's&#13;
graduation without the enrollment&#13;
permission of the advisor.&#13;
Dudycha stressed also that&#13;
employers often require letters&#13;
of recommendation from faculty&#13;
members who taught or knew&#13;
the prospective employee. "If&#13;
the student's advisor didn't know&#13;
the student well, all he would be&#13;
able to do is look up his grades."&#13;
If, on the other hand, he said, the&#13;
student saw his advisor frequently,&#13;
the advisor would have a solid&#13;
basis on which to recommend&#13;
the student to the employer.&#13;
Dudycha used these reasons to&#13;
help convince the students to&#13;
see their advisors often and get&#13;
to know each other well.&#13;
Oudycha also told the&#13;
students that now the Administrative&#13;
Science Division will be&#13;
planning its courses well in&#13;
advance so that students ready&#13;
to graduate won't find themselves&#13;
short one required course&#13;
not offered during their last&#13;
semester here. "This advance&#13;
planning is particularly critical to&#13;
part-time students whose evening&#13;
courses are offered in a&#13;
particular order," he said.&#13;
This year's two Management&#13;
Days were announced at the&#13;
meeting. On Thursday, October&#13;
27, the J.I. Case Company will&#13;
send its executives to give the&#13;
students another insight into the&#13;
working business world. Unlike&#13;
last year's Management Day,&#13;
evening as well as daytime&#13;
sessions will be offered to let&#13;
part-time students participate.&#13;
last' semester's Management&#13;
Day, sponsored by Weyerhaeuser&#13;
Corporation, was heavily&#13;
attended by business students&#13;
~arkside's new Management&#13;
Science Division chairman&#13;
Arthur Dudycha told a group of&#13;
business majors last Thursday&#13;
night that he would /ike more&#13;
student participation in the&#13;
planning and operation of the&#13;
management science program.&#13;
Dudycha told the meeting,&#13;
attended by only 45 out of 677&#13;
declared business majors, that&#13;
"I would like to see some more&#13;
student involvement in Management&#13;
Sc ience activities such as&#13;
recruiting and program development."&#13;
Dudycha introduced the&#13;
students to two of four new&#13;
professors in Management this&#13;
year: Dr. LeRoy Pryor and Dr.&#13;
Michael Sheffey. The other two&#13;
new faculty, Dr. Suresh Kumar&#13;
Jain and Dr. Earl Chrysler had not&#13;
yet arrived at Parkside. The&#13;
The Council on library&#13;
Resources (CLR) has awarded&#13;
$21,350 to Parkside to enable the&#13;
library staff to carry out a&#13;
self-study directed toward improving&#13;
the services and&#13;
operations of the library system.&#13;
In performing the study, the staff&#13;
will utilize a draft manual&#13;
resulting from procedures developed&#13;
in a 1976 pilot project at&#13;
the University of North Carolina&#13;
at Charlotte (UNCC).&#13;
I&#13;
The UNCC project was the first&#13;
phase of the Council's Academic&#13;
Library Development Program&#13;
(ALDP). In phase 2, several&#13;
institutions including UWParkside&#13;
of various sizes and&#13;
characters will be selected to&#13;
work with the evolving model&#13;
program. It is hoped that&#13;
refinement of the draft manual&#13;
and its suggested procedures&#13;
may result from their further&#13;
applications.&#13;
Commenting on the grant,&#13;
Joseph A. Boisse, Director of the&#13;
Library-learning Center, said:&#13;
'We are delighted to have been&#13;
awarded this grant. We know&#13;
that the library-learning Center&#13;
will benefit from the study; we&#13;
hope that UW-Parkside can&#13;
contribute constructively to the&#13;
refinement of the Academic&#13;
library Development Program."&#13;
CLRinitiated the ALDP in 1975&#13;
in the belief that small and&#13;
mid-sf zed academic libraries&#13;
could benefit from looking&#13;
closely at how they are meeting&#13;
the needs of the campus&#13;
community - students, faculty,&#13;
and administrators - and at&#13;
what could be done to improve&#13;
library services and to increase&#13;
library use.&#13;
WELCOME TO&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
RECREATION CENTER&#13;
V2 PRICE&#13;
BACK~TO SCHOOL&#13;
SPECIAU&#13;
·BOWLING&#13;
•BILLIARDS&#13;
·FOOS BALL&#13;
·TABLE TENNIS&#13;
COUPON GOOD UNTIL SAT.,SEPT. 17&#13;
Parkside Food Service&#13;
Says WELCOMEI&#13;
O~OJlfJtoJ'f&#13;
PARISI DE UNION&#13;
RECREATION CENTER&#13;
V2 PRICE SPECIAL&#13;
(VALIDTHIU '·17.77)&#13;
WATCH FOR ME IN FUTURE WEEKS&#13;
AS WE ANNOUNCE HOW WE ARE&#13;
CHANGING FOR yOU ••••&#13;
YOU ASKED FOR IT&#13;
news&#13;
Parkside now offering&#13;
graduate math courses&#13;
Parkside will otter graduate workJn mathematics&#13;
beginning this semester under a consortium&#13;
arrangement with UW-Whitewater.&#13;
The initial fall course offering, available for&#13;
Whitewater graduate credit or Parkside&#13;
undergraduate credit, will be "Elementary Number&#13;
Theory" (Mathematics 367) which will be taught&#13;
from 6:30 to 7:45 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays.&#13;
The tentative spring ottering will be "Abstract&#13;
Algebra 1" (Mathematics 411). All courses carrying&#13;
master's degree credit will be taught in the evening.&#13;
Graduate level students in the courses are&#13;
expected to meet higher standards and to complete&#13;
supplementary work not expected of undergraduates.&#13;
&#13;
Under the consortium arrangement, persons&#13;
seeking the Master of Arts in Teaching or the&#13;
Master of Science in Teaching degrees should be&#13;
able to complete degtee requirements by taking&#13;
one course in each of four semesters at Parkside&#13;
and attending three summer sessions at&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
The program is expected to attract both certified&#13;
teachers who wish to pursue a master's level&#13;
program in mathematics and education and&#13;
persons in business and industry wishing to upgrade&#13;
mathematics skills. The program also will provide&#13;
additional opportunity for undergraduate candidates&#13;
for the bachelor's degree to take upper level&#13;
mathematics courses during the evening.&#13;
••• and a math fraternity too&#13;
Guskin&#13;
potential. The university attempts&#13;
to do this by the quality&#13;
of instruction it offers, the&#13;
variety of its educational&#13;
programs and their availability to&#13;
those seeking to learn."&#13;
Educational leadership&#13;
Guskin also pointed out how&#13;
Parkside can and does provide&#13;
educational leadership for the&#13;
area's other schools.&#13;
" . . . The standards we set for&#13;
our campus play a central role in&#13;
upgrading educational standards&#13;
for all community educational&#13;
institutions .. . Through our&#13;
Collegiate Skills Program, we are&#13;
attempting to directly influence&#13;
the achievement levels of&#13;
students in high schools by&#13;
demanding higher standards of&#13;
them at the university .. . I might&#13;
add the schools have responded&#13;
positively to our efforts."&#13;
Library is a leader&#13;
Guskin pointed to the Parkside&#13;
8&#13;
cont. from page 1&#13;
library as the "symbol of the&#13;
great tradition of university life"&#13;
and "a leader in community&#13;
outreach with more than 5,000&#13;
area non-student residents who&#13;
are registered users."&#13;
Call to action&#13;
Guskin concluded his "state of&#13;
the university speech" with a call&#13;
to action for faculty and staff&#13;
"The University of Wisconsin:&#13;
Parkside represents a new&#13;
conception of a regional&#13;
university that is being fashioned&#13;
to meet the challenges of the&#13;
late 1970's and 1980's. We are in&#13;
a position to provide the higher&#13;
education community in the&#13;
United States with a model to be&#13;
followed .&#13;
"We, the faculty and staff, can&#13;
together provide this leadership,&#13;
Let us join together in this&#13;
opportunity."&#13;
Parkside See editorial. has been notified that it will become the&#13;
third university in the state to have a chapter of Pi&#13;
Mu Epsilon, the national honorary mathematics&#13;
fraternity.&#13;
Parkside's Gamma chapter will join a chapter at&#13;
Marquette University chartered in 1933 and one at&#13;
UW-Madison chartered in 1939. Nationwide, the&#13;
fraternity has about 200 chapters.&#13;
during the fall semester, when a national officer of&#13;
the fraternity will be present.&#13;
Student officers of Gamma chapter are Lynn&#13;
Tenuta, Kenosha, president; Jerome Feucht,&#13;
Racine, vice president; and Dianna Kolovos,&#13;
Kenosha, secretary-treasurer. Prof . Samuel&#13;
Filippone is faculty advisor.&#13;
The purpose of the group is to promote scholarly&#13;
activity in mathematics.&#13;
Dudycha asks&#13;
business students&#13;
Installation of charter members will be held • •&#13;
WLLC gets improvement grants&#13;
to part1c1pate&#13;
by John R. McKloskey&#13;
Parkside's new Management&#13;
Science Division chairman&#13;
Arthur Dudycha told a group of&#13;
business majors last Thursday&#13;
night that he would like more&#13;
student participation in the&#13;
planning and operation of the&#13;
management science program.&#13;
specialties, amount of education&#13;
and other data on the four are&#13;
elsewhere in this week's&#13;
The Council RANGER. on Library&#13;
Resources (CLR) has awarded&#13;
$21,350 to Parkside to enable the&#13;
library staff to carry out a&#13;
self-study directed toward improving&#13;
the services and&#13;
operations of the library system.&#13;
In performing the study, the statt&#13;
will utilize a draft manual&#13;
resulting from procedures developed&#13;
in a 1976 pilot project at&#13;
the University of North Carolina&#13;
at Charlotte (UNCC).&#13;
The UNCC project was the first&#13;
phase of the Council's Academic&#13;
Library Development Program&#13;
(ALDP). In phase 2, several&#13;
institutions including UWParkside&#13;
of various sizes and&#13;
characters will be selected to&#13;
work with the evolving model&#13;
program . It is hoped that&#13;
refinement of the draft manual&#13;
and its suggested procedures&#13;
may result from their further&#13;
applications.&#13;
WELCOME TO&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
RECREATION CENTER&#13;
1/2 PRICE&#13;
BACK .. TO SCHOOL&#13;
SPECIALI&#13;
·BOWLING&#13;
·BILLIARDS&#13;
·FOOS BALL ·TABLE TENNIS&#13;
COUPON GOOD UNTIL SAT.,SEPT. 17&#13;
O~QJ(fJJt{tJf f&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
RECREATION CENTER&#13;
½ PRICE SPECIAL&#13;
(VALID THRU 9-17-77)&#13;
Commenting on the grant,&#13;
Joseph A. Boisse, Director of the&#13;
Library-Learning Center, said:&#13;
'We are delighted to have been&#13;
awarded this grant. We know&#13;
that the Library-Learning Center&#13;
will benefit from the study; we&#13;
hope that UW-Parkside can&#13;
contribute constructively to the&#13;
refinement of the Academic&#13;
Library Development Program."&#13;
CLR initiated the ALDP in 1975&#13;
in the belief that small and&#13;
mid-sized academic libraries&#13;
could benefit from looking&#13;
closely at how they are meeting&#13;
the needs of t he campus&#13;
community - students, faculty,&#13;
and administrators - and at&#13;
what could be done to improve&#13;
library services and to increase&#13;
library use.&#13;
Dudycha told the meeting,&#13;
attended by only 45 out of 677&#13;
declared business majors, that&#13;
"I would like to see some more&#13;
student involvement in Management&#13;
Science activities such as&#13;
recruiting and program development."&#13;
&#13;
Dudycha introduced the&#13;
students to two of four new&#13;
professors in Management this&#13;
year: Dr. LeRoy Pryor and Dr.&#13;
Michael Sheffey. The other two&#13;
new faculty, Dr. Suresh Kumar&#13;
Jain and Dr. Earl Chrysler had not&#13;
yet arrived at Parkside. The&#13;
Parkside Food Senice&#13;
Says WELCOME!&#13;
WATCH FOR ME IN FUTURE WEEKS&#13;
AS WE ANNOUNCE HOW WE ARE&#13;
CHANGING FOR YOU ••••&#13;
YOU ASKED FOR IT&#13;
Dudycha encouraged all&#13;
business students to see their&#13;
business faculty advisors regular·&#13;
ly, "certainly by their sophomore&#13;
year." He noted that upper level&#13;
specialty business courses may&#13;
not count toward the student's&#13;
graduation without the enroll·&#13;
ment permission of the advisor&#13;
Dudycha stressed also that&#13;
employers often require letters&#13;
of recommendation from faculty&#13;
members who taught or knew&#13;
the prospective employee. "If&#13;
the student's advisor didn't know&#13;
the student well, all he would be&#13;
able to do is look up his grades.H&#13;
If, on the other hand, he said, the&#13;
student saw his advisor frequent·&#13;
ly, the advisor would have a solid&#13;
basis on which to recommend&#13;
the student to the employer.&#13;
Dudycha used these reasons to&#13;
help convince the students to&#13;
see their advisors often and get&#13;
to know each other well.&#13;
Dudycha also told the&#13;
students that now the Administrative&#13;
Science Division will be&#13;
planning its courses well in&#13;
advance so that students ready&#13;
to graduate won't find them·&#13;
selves short one required course&#13;
not offered during their last&#13;
semester here. "This advance&#13;
planning is particularly critical to&#13;
part-time students whose even·&#13;
ing courses are offered in a&#13;
particular order," he said&#13;
This year's two Management&#13;
Days were announced at the&#13;
meeting. On Thursday, October&#13;
27, the J.I. Case Company will&#13;
send its executives to give the&#13;
students another insight into the&#13;
working business world. Unlike&#13;
last year's Management Day,&#13;
evening as well as daytime&#13;
session will be offered to let&#13;
part-time students participate&#13;
Last sem ester's Management&#13;
Day, sponsored by Weyer·&#13;
haeuser Corporation, was heav1I&#13;
attended by business student &#13;
news/ Sports I&#13;
• •&#13;
Your Ice cream&#13;
is loaded with&#13;
chemicals&#13;
In the old days, when ice&#13;
ream was made of whole eggs,&#13;
~i1k and sugarI and laboriously&#13;
cranked in the old home freezer,&#13;
a serving of ice cream was an&#13;
occasional family treat, and&#13;
didn't do much harm.&#13;
Today, in this mass-producing,&#13;
synthetic age, it is quite another&#13;
mailer entirely. Today, there is a&#13;
very good possibility that you are&#13;
treating your family to another&#13;
poison if you buy some cheap&#13;
super-market product.&#13;
Ice cream manufacturers are&#13;
not required by law to list the&#13;
additives used in the making of&#13;
ice cream. Consequently, today&#13;
the majority of ice -:reams are&#13;
synthetic from start to finish.&#13;
laboratory analyses have shown&#13;
the following:&#13;
1) Diethyl Glucol: a cheap&#13;
chemical that is used as an&#13;
emulsifier instead of eggs. It is&#13;
identically the 'same chemical&#13;
used in anti-freeze and in paint&#13;
removers.&#13;
2) Piperonal: used as a&#13;
substitute for vanilla. This is a&#13;
chemicalused to kill lice.&#13;
l) Aldehyde C17: used to&#13;
fhwoscherry ice cream. It is an&#13;
inllammable liquid which is used&#13;
in anilene dyes, plastic and&#13;
rubber.&#13;
4) Ethyl Acetate: used to give&#13;
ice cream a pineapple flavor. It is&#13;
used as a cleaner for leather and&#13;
textiles, and its vapors have been&#13;
known to cause chronic lung,&#13;
liver, and heart damage.&#13;
5) Butyraldehyde: used in nut&#13;
flavored ice cream. It is one of&#13;
the commoner ingredients of&#13;
rubber cement.&#13;
6) Amyl Acetate: used for its&#13;
banana flavor. It is used as an oil&#13;
paint solvent.&#13;
7) Benzyl Acetate: used for its&#13;
strawberry flavor. It is a nitrate&#13;
solvent,&#13;
The next time you are tempted&#13;
by a luscious-looking sundae or&#13;
banana split or ice cream soda,&#13;
think of it as a mixture of antifreeze,&#13;
oil paint, paint remover,&#13;
nitrate solvent, leather cleaner,&#13;
and lice killer, and you may not&#13;
find it so appetizing.&#13;
- Courtesy of Friends of the&#13;
Chiwaukee Prairie Food Coop -&#13;
7&#13;
Appoint new assistant athletics director&#13;
UW-Parkside athletic director Wayne Dannehl volleyball player there, she has sinced coached&#13;
announced the appointment of Linda Draft as a those sports and been especially active in Class B&#13;
lecturer in physical education ':'ld as assistant to women's softball in Michigan&#13;
the athletic director. After graduation, she worked in private industry&#13;
Draft, a native of Grand Haven, Mit..,",.,will also with computerized administration before returning&#13;
coach the women's volleyball team at CW~P this to the classroom for graduate work at Michigan&#13;
fall and the women's softball squad next spring. StateUniversity. Draft received her M.S. this year in&#13;
Draft received a bachelor of science in 1972from athletic administration and coaching&#13;
Hope College in Michigan with majors in physical "We're extremely pleased to find someone of&#13;
education and mathematics and a minor in linda's caliber," Dannehl said. 'We feel that she&#13;
business. An outstanding basketball, softball and has the perfect combination of education and&#13;
. exoertence. iust what we were looking for."&#13;
National fencing tourney slated here&#13;
UW-Parkside has seen selected&#13;
as the host school for the 1976&#13;
National Collegiate Athletic&#13;
Assn. (NCAA) fencing championship.&#13;
The tournament, to be held&#13;
Thursday-Saturday, March 1&amp;-16,&#13;
1978, encompasses schools in all&#13;
three NCAA divisions and is the&#13;
only national collegiate fencing&#13;
championship in the country.&#13;
"It's an extremefv fine tribute&#13;
to UW-Parkside and to our&#13;
coach, Loran Hein, that we have&#13;
been selected to host this&#13;
tournament," said Wayne Dannehl,&#13;
UW-Parkside Athletic&#13;
Director. "The coaches' committee&#13;
made the recommendation&#13;
that Parkside be the site and this&#13;
is due in no small part to&#13;
coaches' awareness of the job&#13;
Loran does here and of his&#13;
success with fencing."&#13;
The NCAA fencing meet has&#13;
long been dominated by schools&#13;
from the East and Midwest, with&#13;
1977 host Notre Dame the latest&#13;
in the string of champions going&#13;
back to the tournament's&#13;
beginnings in 1941.&#13;
It wi II be the second maiO\'&#13;
collegiate championship to be&#13;
hosted by Parks ide during the&#13;
1977-76 academic year. UW-P&#13;
will host the NAIA national&#13;
cross-country meet for the&#13;
second time on November 19.&#13;
TUITION AND SEGREGATED FEES BY UW-CAMPUS&#13;
1977-78 - reprinted from UW-Memo. 15 ....ug. 77&#13;
ACADEMIC FEE + TUITION&#13;
Resident Nonresident&#13;
Undergrad, Grad. Undel'llrad. Grad.&#13;
Madison &amp;31 935 2,561 3,1&amp;9&#13;
Milwaukee &amp;31 935 2,561 3,1&amp;9&#13;
(au Claire 561 726 2,313 2,42&amp;&#13;
Green Bay 561 726 2,313 2,42&amp;&#13;
La Crosse 561 728 2,313 2,42&amp;&#13;
Oshkosh 581 728 2,313 2,42&amp;&#13;
Parkside 581 N/A 2,313 N/A&#13;
Platteville 581 728 2,313 2,42&amp;&#13;
River Falls 581 728 2,313 2,42&amp;&#13;
Stevens Point 581 728 2,313 2,42&amp;&#13;
Stout 581 728 2,313 2,42&amp;&#13;
Superior 581 728 2,313 2,42&amp;&#13;
Whitewater 581 728 2,313 2,42&amp;&#13;
Centers (All) 558 N/A 2,22&amp; N/A&#13;
SEGREGATED FEE TOTAL FEES AND TUITION&#13;
Student Controlled Resident Nonresident&#13;
moneyforactivitiesUncle!Jrad. Grad. Unde'l!"d. Grad.&#13;
Parkside Rangers basketball schedule&#13;
1977-78&#13;
103 734 1,036 2,684 3,272&#13;
117 748 1,052 2,&amp;98 3,28&amp;&#13;
128' 709 85&amp; 2,441 2,554&#13;
120 701 648 2,433 2,54&amp;&#13;
124· 705 852 2,437 2,550&#13;
142 723 870 2,455 2,568&#13;
11&amp; &amp;97 N/A 2,429 N/A&#13;
144' 725 872 2,457 2,570&#13;
153' 734 861 2,4&amp;&amp; 2,579&#13;
127'(a) 708 855 2,440 2,553&#13;
121· 702 849 2,434 2,547&#13;
152 733 880 2,4&amp;5 2,578&#13;
134' 715 8&amp;2 2,447 2,5&amp;0&#13;
4&amp;-86' 604-&amp;46 N/A 2,272-2,314 N/A&#13;
, There is an additional charge of Sl&amp;-30 for Textbook Rental on these campuses;&#13;
on all other campuses books are purchased by students directly. (a) Rounded to nearest dol/ar.&#13;
Fri., Nov. 2S Milton College Home Game 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Sat., Nov. 26 Wayne Slate University Home Game 2:00 p.m.&#13;
Wed., Nov. 30 St. Xavier College Chicago, IL 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Sat., Dec. 3 Uw-Wh itewater Whitewater, WI 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Wed., Dec. 7 Utah State University Logan, UT 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Sat., Dec. 10 University of California-Irvine Irvine, CA 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Mon., Dec. 12 California State Univ.-fullerton Fullerton, CA 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Thun., Dec. 15 UW -Whitewater HomeGune 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Wed., Dec. 2B .. Ranger Classic::Toumament Horne Game TBA&#13;
Thurs., Dec:. 29 [Carthage, UW-SuperiO\', Pikeville, KYJ&#13;
Home Game 7:30 p.m. Tues., Jan. 3 Uw-¥Iatteville&#13;
Sat., Jan. 7 lamar University Beaumont, TJ( 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Mon., Jan. 9 McNeese State University Lake Charles, LA 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Sat., Jan. 14 UW -Stevens Point Home Game 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Mon., Jan. 1&amp; UW-LaCrosse LaCrosse, WI 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Thurs., Jan. 19 tJW-Green Bay Home Game 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Mon., Jan. 23 Central Slate University [OH] Home Game 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Wed., Jan. 25 Lakeland College Sheboygan, WI 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Sat., Jan. 2B UW-Milwaukee Home Game 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Wed., Feb. 1 Eastem Illinois Univenity Home Game 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Sat., Feb. 4 Western Illinois University Macomb,IL 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Mon" Feb. 6 Indiana UlPunlue U-Indianapolis Home Game 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Wed., Feb. 8 Sf. NoIbert CoIleBe Home Game 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Tues., Feb 14 UW-Green Bay Green Bay, WI 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Sat., Feb •• Northland ColleBe Home came 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Tues., Feb. 28 &amp; W'CA Playoffs TS.... TS....&#13;
Thurs .• Mar. 2&#13;
Mon., Mar. 6 &amp; N....'....District 14 Tournament TM TS....&#13;
Wed .• Mar. 8&#13;
TS....&#13;
Mon. - Sat .• N....'....National Tournament Kansas. City, MO&#13;
Mar. 13-18&#13;
•&#13;
WELCOME TO •••&#13;
BEER&#13;
35· - 12 oz. GLASS&#13;
.., .50 - PITCHER&#13;
WINE&#13;
35· - 5 OZ. GLASS&#13;
"'.00 - J.iI CARAFE&#13;
"'.90 _. RJLL CARAFE&#13;
SODA&#13;
20' - 9 OZ_.GLASS&#13;
30' - 12 OZ. GLASS&#13;
LOCATED ON THE GROUND LEVa OF THE Ut«lN&#13;
JUsT OFF THE MAIN ENmANCE •&#13;
Bews I&#13;
/sports 7 • • Your ice cream&#13;
is loaded with&#13;
chemicals&#13;
In the old days, when ice&#13;
ream was made of whole eggs,&#13;
~ilk and sugar, and laboriously&#13;
cranked in the old home freezer,&#13;
a serving of ice cream was an&#13;
occasional family treat, and&#13;
didn't do much harm.&#13;
Today, in this mass-producing,&#13;
synthetic age, it is quite another&#13;
matter entirely. Today, there is a&#13;
very good possibility that you are&#13;
treating your family to another&#13;
poison if you buy some cheap&#13;
super-market product.&#13;
Ice cream manufacturers are&#13;
not required by law to list the&#13;
additives used in the making of&#13;
ice cream. Consequently, today&#13;
the majority of ic(. -:reams are&#13;
synthetic from start to finish.&#13;
Laboratory analyses have shown&#13;
the following :&#13;
the commoner ingredients of&#13;
rubber cement.&#13;
6) Amyl Acetate: used for its&#13;
banana flavor. It is used as an oil&#13;
paint solvent.&#13;
7) Benzyl Acetate: used for its&#13;
strawberry flavor. It is a nitrate&#13;
solvent,&#13;
The next time you are tempted&#13;
by a luscious-looking sundae or&#13;
banana split or ice cream soda,&#13;
think of it as a mixture of antifreeze,&#13;
oil paint, paint remover,&#13;
nitrate solvent, leather cleaner,&#13;
and lice killer, and you may not&#13;
find it so appetizing.&#13;
- Courtesy of Friends of the&#13;
Chiwaukee Prairie Food Coop -&#13;
Appoint new assistant athletics director&#13;
UW-Parkside athletic director Wayne Dannehl&#13;
announced the appointment of Linda Draft as a&#13;
lecturer in physical education .. 'Id as assistant to&#13;
the athletic director.&#13;
volleyball player there, she has sinced coached&#13;
those sports and been especially active in Class B&#13;
women's softball in Michigan.&#13;
After graduation , she worked in private industry&#13;
with computerized administration before returning&#13;
to the classroom for graduate work at Michigan&#13;
State University. Draft received her M.S this year in&#13;
athletic administration and coaching.&#13;
Draft, a native of Grand Haven, MiL" ., will also&#13;
coach the women's volleyball team at CW-P this&#13;
fall and the women's softball squad next spring.&#13;
Draft received a bachelor of science in 1972 from&#13;
Hope College in Michigan with majors in physical&#13;
education and mathematics and a minor in&#13;
business. An outstanding basketball, softball and&#13;
"We're extreme( pleased to find someone of&#13;
Linda's caliber," Dannehl said . "We feel that she&#13;
has the perfect combination of education and&#13;
experience, just what we were looking for."&#13;
National fencing tourney slated here&#13;
UW-Parkside has seen selected&#13;
as the host school for the 1978&#13;
National Collegiate Athletic&#13;
Assn . (NCAA) fencing championship.&#13;
&#13;
The tournament, to be held&#13;
Thursday-Saturday, March 16-18,&#13;
1978, encompasses schools in all&#13;
three NCAA divisions and is the&#13;
only national collegiate fencing&#13;
championship in the country.&#13;
"It's an extremery fine tribute&#13;
to UW-Parkside and to our&#13;
coach, Loran Hein, that we have&#13;
been selected to host this&#13;
tournament," said Wayne Danneh&#13;
I, UW-Parkside Athletic&#13;
Director. ''The coaches' committee&#13;
made the recommendation&#13;
that Parkside be the site and this&#13;
is due in no small part to&#13;
coaches' awareness of the job&#13;
Loran does here and of his&#13;
success with fencing."&#13;
The NCAA fencing meet has&#13;
long been dominated by schools&#13;
from the East and Midwest, with&#13;
1977 host Notre Dame the latest&#13;
in the string of champions going&#13;
back to the tournament's&#13;
beginnings in 1941.&#13;
It will be the second major&#13;
collegiate championship to be&#13;
hosted by Parkside during the&#13;
1977-78 academic year. UW-P&#13;
will host the NAIA national&#13;
cross-country meet for the&#13;
second time on November 1~.&#13;
TUITION AND SEGREGATED FEES BY UW-CAMPUS&#13;
1977-78 - reprinted from UW-Memo, 15 Aug. 77&#13;
ACADEMIC FEE + TUITION SEGREGATED FEE TOTAL FEES AND TUITION&#13;
1) Diethyl Glucol: a cheap&#13;
chemical that is used as an&#13;
emulsifier instead of eggs. It is&#13;
identically the ·same chemical&#13;
used in anti-freeze and in paint&#13;
removers.&#13;
Resident Nonresident Student Controlled Resident Nonresident&#13;
2) Piperonal : used as a&#13;
substitute for vanilla. This is a&#13;
chemical used to kill lice.&#13;
3) Aldehyde C17: used to&#13;
flavOf cherry ice cream. It is an&#13;
intlammable liquid which is used&#13;
in anilene dyes, plastic and&#13;
rubber.&#13;
4) Ethyl Acetate: used to give&#13;
ice cream a pineapple flavor. It is&#13;
used as a cleaner for leather and&#13;
textiles, and its vapors have been&#13;
known to cause chronic lung,&#13;
liver, and heart damage.&#13;
Madison&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
Eau Claire&#13;
Green Bay&#13;
La Crosse&#13;
Oshkosh&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Platteville&#13;
River Falls&#13;
Stevens Point&#13;
Stout&#13;
Superior&#13;
Whitewater&#13;
Centers (All)&#13;
Undergrad.&#13;
631&#13;
631&#13;
581&#13;
581&#13;
581&#13;
581&#13;
581&#13;
581&#13;
581&#13;
581&#13;
581&#13;
581&#13;
581&#13;
558&#13;
Grad. Undergrad.&#13;
935 2,581&#13;
935 2,581&#13;
728 2,313&#13;
728 2,313&#13;
728 2,313&#13;
728 2,313&#13;
NIA 2,313&#13;
728 2,313&#13;
728 2,313&#13;
728 2,313&#13;
728 2,313&#13;
728 2,313&#13;
728 2,313&#13;
NIA 2,226&#13;
Grad. money for activities Undergrad.&#13;
3,169 103 734&#13;
3,169 117 748&#13;
2,426 128* 709&#13;
2,426 120 701&#13;
2,426 124* 705&#13;
2,426 142 723&#13;
NIA 116 697&#13;
2,426 144* 725&#13;
2,426 153* 734&#13;
2,426 127*(a) 708&#13;
2,426 121* 702&#13;
2,426 152 733&#13;
2,426 134* 715&#13;
NIA 46-88* 604-646&#13;
Grad.&#13;
1,038&#13;
1,052&#13;
856&#13;
848&#13;
852&#13;
870&#13;
N/A&#13;
872&#13;
881&#13;
855&#13;
849&#13;
880&#13;
862&#13;
NIA&#13;
Undergrad. Grad.&#13;
2,684&#13;
2,698&#13;
2,441&#13;
2,433&#13;
2,437&#13;
2,455&#13;
2,429&#13;
2,457&#13;
2,466&#13;
2,440&#13;
2,434&#13;
2,465&#13;
2,447&#13;
2,272-2,314&#13;
3,272&#13;
3,286&#13;
2,554&#13;
2,546&#13;
2,550&#13;
2,568&#13;
NA&#13;
2,570&#13;
2,579&#13;
2,553&#13;
2,547&#13;
2,578&#13;
2,560&#13;
NA&#13;
5) Butyraldehyde: used in nut&#13;
flavored ice cream. It is one of * There is an additional charge of $16-30 for Textbook Rental on these campuses;&#13;
on all other campuses books are purchased by students directly. (a) Rounded to nearest dollar.&#13;
Parkside Ra~gers basketball schedule&#13;
1977-78&#13;
Fri., Nov. 25&#13;
~t., Nov. 26&#13;
Wed ., Nov. 30&#13;
Sat., Dec. 3&#13;
Wed., Dec. 7&#13;
Sat., Dec. 10&#13;
Mon., Dec. 12&#13;
Thurs., Dec. 15&#13;
Wed., Dec. 28 &amp;&#13;
Thurs., Dec. 29&#13;
Tues., Jan. 3&#13;
Sat., Jan. 7&#13;
Mon., Jan. 9&#13;
~t., Jan. 14&#13;
Mon ., Jan . 16&#13;
Thurs., Jan. 19&#13;
Mon., Jan. 23&#13;
Wed., Jan. 25&#13;
Sat., Jan. 28&#13;
Wed., Feb.1&#13;
Sat., Feb. 4&#13;
Mon., Feb. 6&#13;
Wed., Feb. 8&#13;
Tues., Feb 14&#13;
Sat., Feb. 8&#13;
Tues., Feb. 28 &amp;&#13;
Thurs., Mar. 2&#13;
Mon., Mar. 6 &amp;&#13;
Wed., Mar. 8&#13;
Mon. - Sat.,&#13;
Mar. 13-18&#13;
Milton College&#13;
Wayne State University&#13;
St. Xavier College&#13;
Uw-Wh itewater&#13;
Utah State University&#13;
University of California-Irvine&#13;
California State Univ .-Fullerton&#13;
UW-Whitewater&#13;
Ranger Classic T oumament&#13;
[Carthage, UW-Superior, Pikeville, KY]&#13;
Uw.Platteville&#13;
Lamar University&#13;
McNeese State University&#13;
UW-Stevens Point&#13;
UW-LaCrosse&#13;
tJW~reen Bay&#13;
Central State University [OH]&#13;
Lakeland College&#13;
UW-Milwaukee&#13;
Eutem Illinois Univenity&#13;
Western Illinois University&#13;
Indiana U/Purdue U-lndianapolis&#13;
St. Norbert College&#13;
UW-Creen Bay&#13;
Northland College&#13;
WICA Playoffs&#13;
NA/A District 14 Tournament&#13;
NA/A N~tional Tournament&#13;
Home Game&#13;
Home Game&#13;
Chicago, IL&#13;
Whitewater, WI&#13;
Logan, UT&#13;
Irvine, CA&#13;
Fullerton, CA&#13;
Home Game&#13;
Home Game&#13;
Home Game&#13;
Beaumont, TX&#13;
Lake Charles, LA&#13;
Home Game&#13;
Lacrosse, WI&#13;
Home Game&#13;
Home Game&#13;
Sheboygan, WI&#13;
Home Game&#13;
Home Game&#13;
Macomb, IL&#13;
Home Game&#13;
Home Game&#13;
Green Bay, WI&#13;
Home Game&#13;
TBA&#13;
TBA&#13;
Kansas, City, MO&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
2:00 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
8:00 pm.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
TBA&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
TBA&#13;
TBA&#13;
TBA&#13;
WELCOME TO •••&#13;
UNION&#13;
SQUARE&#13;
BEER&#13;
35• - 12 oz. GLASS&#13;
'1.50 - PITCHER&#13;
WINE&#13;
35• - 5 OZ. GLASS&#13;
'1.00 - ½ CARAFE&#13;
'1 .90 -· AJLL CARAFE&#13;
SODA&#13;
20• - 9 OZ. GLASS&#13;
- 12 OZ. GLASS&#13;
LOCATED ON THE GROUND LEVEL OF THE UNON,&#13;
JUST OFF THE MAIN ENTRANCE &#13;
events&#13;
Wednesday, 5eptember 7&#13;
First Day of Prosram Changes in Main Place.&#13;
Thursday, september 8&#13;
Constitution Meeting 2:00 p.m. in WllC D-174, P.5.G.A. office.&#13;
Friday, september 9 -&#13;
bnger Meeting for everyone interested in helping the student&#13;
newspaper rise about the heap. 3:00 p.m. in WLLCD-174.&#13;
Last Day for payment of fees without penalty.&#13;
Open Registration Ends.&#13;
Saturday, september 10&#13;
Dance with Fever at 9:00 p.m. in Union Square. Parkside Activities&#13;
Board's first dance of the year. Admission is $1.00 for students and&#13;
$1.50 for guests. •&#13;
Sunday, September 11&#13;
Vet's Club Meeting free beer and Discussion of Current legislation,&#13;
Upcoming Dance, Pool Tournament, and Christmas Party. 4:00 p.rn.&#13;
in Union Square.&#13;
Monday, ~ptember 12&#13;
Late payment penalty of $20.00 in effect forlees and tuition.&#13;
Tuesday, september 13&#13;
Rosh Hashanah - Jewish New Year celebration.&#13;
Full Moon share it with a friend.&#13;
segregated Fees Commillee Meeting 3:00 p.m. in WLLCD-174.&#13;
Pre-med Club Meeting 7:30 p.m. in the Library Faculty-Staff Lounge.&#13;
Elizabeth Steffen, (Ob-gyn.) M.D. will speak about her experiences&#13;
aboard hospital ship HOPE (slide presentation). All interested&#13;
persons welcome.&#13;
Rosh Hashanah - Jewish New Year celebration.&#13;
Full Moon share it with a friend.&#13;
Wednesday, september 14&#13;
Rangers are Out for the latest in fresh and vibrant information, the&#13;
student newspaper with ideas but not enough writers. Available&#13;
throughout the campus in distribution boxes.&#13;
Coffeehouse Louise Dimiceli (Chicago) will sing in Union 104-106&#13;
from 2:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. Admission is Free! Wine will be served.&#13;
Talk- Discussion 7:30 p.m. Chi-Rio Center-campus ministry 3825-12&#13;
Street, across from Parkside's track on Highway "E". Rev. Richard J.&#13;
Schlenker, Ph. D. Topic: "Old-New Church?" "Our-Your Church?"&#13;
Friday, september 16&#13;
Film Fritz the Cat 8:00 p.m. in Union Cinema. Admission is $1.00.&#13;
Old fur trader&#13;
trails on display&#13;
An exhibit of color photographs tracing the routes of the 17th and&#13;
18th century fur traders who were the first European explorers of the&#13;
Great Lakes and the Mississippi Valley will be on display in the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside Communications Arts Callery&#13;
through September 1S.&#13;
The display, titled "The Fur Trade: Northern Border/Rivers South,"&#13;
consists of 28 photographs by Tom Oates of Webster College, St.&#13;
louis, who traced the routes of the traders through still-wild rivers&#13;
and forests to recapture the countryside photographically as the&#13;
traders first saw it.&#13;
Gallery hours for the show are 10:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Aug. 30 and&#13;
31 and Sept. 1; 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sept. 2; noon to 5 and 7 to 10&#13;
p.m. Sept. 6, 7, nand 14; and noon to 5 p.m. Sept. 8,12, and 15.&#13;
The exhibit is sponsored by the State Historical Society's Area&#13;
Research Center at Parkside and the Parkside Librarv-Learning&#13;
Center. After its run at Parkside, the show will go to other state&#13;
campuses with Area Research Centers and to galleries of the&#13;
Wisconsin Federation of Museums. Following -the traveling&#13;
exhibition, the show will be on permanent display at the Historical&#13;
Society's, fur trade complex at Prairie du Chien.&#13;
NEW L1BRARYILEARNINGCENTERHOURS&#13;
(september 6 - December 15, 1977)&#13;
Monday - Thursday&#13;
Friday&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Sunday&#13;
The Library/Learning Center will be&#13;
November 24.&#13;
7:45 a.m. - 12:00p.m.&#13;
7:45 a.m. - 5:00p.m.&#13;
8:30a.m. - 5:00p.m.&#13;
1:3Op.m. -12:00p.m.&#13;
closed on September 5 and&#13;
FEVER,one of the best rock groups in Wisconsin, will play for the first&#13;
dance of the year in Union Square at 9:00 p.m. on Saturday,&#13;
September 10. The dance is sponsored by the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board.&#13;
Philosophy Society&#13;
seeks members&#13;
The Parkside Philosophical Society is an organization in its second&#13;
year. last year it saw promising turn outs for its many lectures and&#13;
group discussions, they have hopes for an even better second year.&#13;
Chairperson Robert Hansen said that a meeting will be scheduled&#13;
soon to elect new officers and to discuss the coming year's activities.&#13;
Last year the Society offered several of todav's top philosophers&#13;
discussing a variety of topics ranging from the existence of Cod to&#13;
experimentation with children. All of these lectures were free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
When 'asked about the attendance last year Hansen remarked that&#13;
"although it was good it could have been better. Our publicity fell&#13;
through at times, also I feel that for too long the term philosophy has&#13;
been related to the term "high brow." People and students in general,&#13;
are scared off when they fiear the words "philosophical society".&#13;
Tbev think that even if they did attend they wouldn't understand&#13;
what was going on so they don't even try us out." What does on in&#13;
reality are discussions and lectures geared to what the Parks ide&#13;
community will find both interesting and understandable.&#13;
According to Hansen, the Society hopes to continue this kind of&#13;
service to Parkside in an effort to promote philosophical discussion at&#13;
Parkside. He feels that philosophy can play an active role in today's&#13;
society, as. a means to find answers to the many problems that face&#13;
people today. "The biggest problem that faces Parkside is its inability&#13;
to get student support for student groups. This may be a problem that&#13;
the society can solve," said Hansen. Hansen said the Society offers&#13;
only those lecturesor activities that the students show an interest in.&#13;
If you are interested at all, he said, watch the Ranger for the date and&#13;
time of the Parkside Philosophical Society's first meeting.&#13;
't's no secret: AAA WORLD WIDE&#13;
TRAVEL AGENCY&#13;
Ranger needs •&#13;
• • I Full Service&#13;
.' ' Travel .Ali!:eney&#13;
• Airline Tickert • Tours a • Cruue. • Rai{ • Hotel&#13;
• Cor Re.enotiQlu sports editor&#13;
p.o.b. foil film series&#13;
presents&#13;
"FRITZ THE CAT"&#13;
fr L, sept. 16 - 8:00 p.m&#13;
sun.,sept.18-7:3.op.m.&#13;
union cinema&#13;
! $1.00 !&#13;
classified&#13;
WANTED: Person to babysit for one ••&#13;
Monday, Wednesday and Friday 11:4&amp;-11:11,&#13;
Must be willing to use your plecl ..&#13;
at day care center. Cell COllect tor ......&#13;
728-8015.&#13;
0_ On Compu ..... ,_ ....&#13;
or Junior ---: Male or Female On ~&#13;
REPRESENTATIVE. Monthly Ml.". •&#13;
opportunity toeem eddltlonal COl..""' ..nl_ .. ··&#13;
Your activity will be limIted to IhI ,..:&#13;
Campus. Contact Budwelser---,&#13;
F.. lu,. Edllor - Asalgna featurt .....&#13;
and photograph assignment.. __ III&#13;
Editorial Board and makes dIoiIIofta "&#13;
guest editorials and etnel~"' .....&#13;
have both 01 the following ..,.. "-&#13;
Mondays 600 P.M. to 10m P.M.....&#13;
Tuesdays 700 A.M. to 2:00 P.M.&#13;
setectlon: by Editortal Board .......&#13;
letter of Intenllon to Philip L. ~&#13;
Immediately. Prior newspaoer exp ......&#13;
but not required.&#13;
Salary - $15.00 to $35.00 PI'''&#13;
Photog,.phers - Must pfOYtde own&#13;
equipment. Temporary dal1l:room until&#13;
Ranger darkroom is conalructtcl&#13;
planned. Ranger needs phot~&#13;
bad. No salary.&#13;
Selec1lon: by Philip L. Livingston,&#13;
call 553·2295 or come to room 210 In 1&#13;
Hall.&#13;
Cl... llied Ad Chafgea:&#13;
F,.: Stul;,lent $da. 20 wot'da or uncllr&#13;
coe-ume run. (25 centa cI'lIl8I&#13;
every additional 10 WOftIs or&#13;
$ '.50 = For each additional running ...&#13;
first time.&#13;
$1.00: Non-student ads, 20 wordI or4lftll!l.:i&#13;
per issue. (25 cents charge for f!1IfIf'&#13;
additional 10 words or undlf'.'&#13;
To place a classified ad phone 553-2lIIa"&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOUI&#13;
Come Today See 'IJun.&#13;
events&#13;
Wednesday, September 7&#13;
First Day of Program Changes in Main Place.&#13;
Thursday, September 8&#13;
Constitution Meeting 2:00 p.m. in WLLC D-174, P.S.C.A. office.&#13;
Friday, September 9&#13;
Ranger Meeting for everyone interested in helping the student&#13;
newspaper rise about the heap. 3:00 p.m. in WLLC D-174.&#13;
Last Day for payment of fees without penalty.&#13;
Open Registration Ends.&#13;
Saturday, September 10&#13;
Dance with fever at 9:00 p.m. in Union Square. Parkside Activities&#13;
Board's first dance of the year. Admission is $1.00 for students and&#13;
$1.50 for guests.&#13;
Sunday, September 11&#13;
Vet's Club Meeting free beer and Discussion of Current Legislation,&#13;
Upcoming Dance, Pool T-ournament, and Christmas Party. 4:00 p.m.&#13;
in Union Square.&#13;
Monday, September 12&#13;
Late payment penalty of $20.00 in effect for fees and tuition.&#13;
Tuesday, September 13&#13;
Rosh Hashanah - Jewish New Year celebration.&#13;
Full Moon share it with a friend.&#13;
Segregated Fees Committee Meeting 3:00 p.m. in WLLC D-174.&#13;
Pre-med Club Meeting 7:30 p.m. in the Library Faculty-Staff Lounge.&#13;
Elizabeth Steffen, (Ob-gyn.) M.0. will speak about her experiences&#13;
aboard hospital ship HOPE (slide presentation). All interested&#13;
persons welcome.&#13;
Rosh Hashanah - Jewish New Year celebration.&#13;
Full Moon share it with a friend.&#13;
Wednesday, September 14&#13;
Rangers are Out for the latest in fresh and vibrant information, the&#13;
student newspaper with ideas but not enough writers. Available&#13;
throughout the campus in distribution boxes.&#13;
Coffeehouse Louise Dimiceli (Chicago) will sing in Union 104-106&#13;
from 2:00 p.m . to 5:00 p.m. Admission is Free! Wine will be served.&#13;
Talk- Discussion 7:30 p.m. Chi-Rio Center-campus ministry 3825-12&#13;
Street, across from Parkside's track on Highway "E". Rev. Richard J.&#13;
Schlenker, Ph. D. Topic: "Old-New Church?" "Our-Your Church?"&#13;
Friday, September 16&#13;
Film Fritz the Cat 8:00 p.m. in Union Cinema. Admission is $1.00.&#13;
Old fur trader&#13;
trails on display&#13;
An exhibit of color photographs tracing the routes of the 17th and&#13;
18th century fur traders who were the first European explorers of the&#13;
Great Lakes and the Mississippi Valley will be on display in the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside Communications Arts Gallery&#13;
through September 15.&#13;
The display, titled "The Fur Trade: Northern Border/Rivers South,"&#13;
consists of 28 photographs by Tom Oates of Webster College, St.&#13;
Louis, who traced the routes of the traders through still-wild rivers&#13;
and forests to recapture the countryside photographically as the&#13;
traders first saw it.&#13;
Gallery hours for the show are 10:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Aug. 30 and&#13;
31 and Sept. 1; 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sep_t. 2; noon to 5 and 7 to 10&#13;
p.m. Sept. 6, 7, 13 and 14; and noon to 5 p.m. Sept. 8, 12, and 15.&#13;
The exhibit is sponsored by the State Historical Society's Area&#13;
Research Center at Parkside and the Parkside Library-Learning&#13;
Center. After its run at Parkside, the show will go to other state&#13;
campuses with Area Research Centers and to galleries of the&#13;
Wisconsin Federation of Museums. Following -the traveling&#13;
exhibition, the show will be on permanent display at the Historical&#13;
Society's fur trade complex at Prairie du Chien.&#13;
NEW LIBRARY /LEARNING CENTER HOURS&#13;
(September 6 - December 15, 1977)&#13;
Monday - Thursday 7:45 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.&#13;
Friday 7:45 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.&#13;
Saturday 8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.&#13;
Sunday 1:30p.m. - 12:00p.m .&#13;
The Library/Learning Center will be closed on September 5 and&#13;
November 24.&#13;
FEVER, o~e of the best rock groups in Wisconsin, will play for the first&#13;
dance of the year in Union Square at 9:00 p.m. on Saturday,&#13;
September 10. The dance is sponsored by the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board.&#13;
Philosophy Society&#13;
seeks members&#13;
The Parkside Philosophical Society is an organization in its second&#13;
year. Last year it saw promising turn outs for its many lectures and&#13;
group discussions, they have hopes for an even better second year.&#13;
Chairperson Robert Hansen said that a meeting will be scheduled&#13;
soon to elect new officers and to discuss the coming year's activities.&#13;
Last year the Society offered several of today's top philosophers&#13;
discussing a variety of topics ranging from the existence of Cod to&#13;
experimentation with children. All of these lectures were free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
When ·asked about the attendance last year Hansen remarked that&#13;
"although it was good it could have been better. Our publicity fell&#13;
through at times, also I feel that for too long the term philosophy has&#13;
been related to the term "high brow." People and students in general,&#13;
are scared off when they near the words "philosophical society".&#13;
Tbey think that even if they did attend they wouldn't understand&#13;
what was going on so they don't even try us out." What does on in&#13;
reality are discussions and lectures geared to what the Parkside&#13;
community will find both interesting and understandable.&#13;
According to Hansen, the Society hopes to continue this kind of&#13;
service to Parkside in an effort to promote philosophical discussion at&#13;
Parkside. He feels that philosophy can play an active role in today's&#13;
society, as a means to find answers to the many problems that face&#13;
people today. "The biggest problem that faces Parkside is its inability&#13;
to get student support for student groups. This may be a problem that&#13;
the society can solve," said Hansen. Hansen said the Society offers&#13;
only those lectures or activities that the students show an interest in .&#13;
If you are interested at all, he said, watch the Ranger for the date and&#13;
time of the Parkside Philosophical Society's first meeting.&#13;
It's no secret:&#13;
Ranger needs&#13;
a&#13;
sports editor&#13;
AAA WORLD WIDE&#13;
TRAVEI. AGENCY&#13;
• . Full Service&#13;
' Travel Agency&#13;
• Airline Ticket, • Tour,&#13;
• Cruil,e, • Rair • Hotel&#13;
• Car Re,en:ation,&#13;
3909-56th 654-0202&#13;
p.o.b. foll film series&#13;
presents&#13;
""FRITZ THE CAr··&#13;
fr i., sept. 16 - s:oo p.m&#13;
sun., sept.18-7:30p.m.&#13;
union cinema&#13;
! $1.00 !&#13;
8&#13;
classified&#13;
WANTED: Person to babysit !Of Olle year GIi&#13;
Monday, Wednesday and Friday 8:45-11 :11&#13;
Must be willing to use your place. Meet 1111&#13;
at day care center. Call collect !Of cs.tllle&#13;
728-8015.&#13;
BudwelHt' On Cempu1 Rep: Parkalcle 5op11&#13;
or Junior - Male or Female On CenlllUI&#13;
REPRESENTATIVE. Mor.thly talary +&#13;
opportunity to earn additional comm1aa1oiie.&#13;
Your activity will be limited to the Pll1llldt&#13;
Campus. Contact Budweiser 668-3e63.&#13;
FNture Editor - Assigns feature •lorlll&#13;
and photograph assignments. s.r.. on Editorial Board and makes declalone on guest editorials and emergenctee. Mull&#13;
have both of the following 1111111 Ille·&#13;
Mondays 6:00 P.M. to 10:00 P.M .• 1n11&#13;
Tuesdays 7:00 A.M. to 2:00 P.M.&#13;
Selection: by Editorial Board. Submit 1&#13;
letter of Intention to Phllip L. LMngaton,&#13;
Immediately. Prior newspaper exp, l'lllpM&#13;
but not required.&#13;
Salary - $15.00 to $35.00 per WIik&#13;
Photographera - Must prOYlde own~ equipment. Temporary darl&lt;room untll ,_&#13;
Ranger darl&lt;room Is constructed CUllllllr&#13;
planned. Ranger needs photog""'*9 llllf&#13;
bad. No salary.&#13;
Selection: by Philip L. Livingston, l:dllll&#13;
call 553-2295 or come to room 2110 In Tlllell&#13;
Hall.&#13;
Clu1llled Ad Cha,vee&#13;
Free: Student ads, 20 wotda or under•&#13;
one-time run. (25 cents chllgt hr&#13;
every additional 10 words or und«I&#13;
$ ·.so: For each addtttonat running alter 1111&#13;
first time.&#13;
S1.00: Non-student ads, 20 words or undlr&#13;
per issue. (25 cents charge for -,&#13;
additional 10 words or under.)&#13;
To place a classtlled ad phone 553-22115&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATI~&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
~-- quahly corrmerciol por18IS&#13;
1417 50th street · 658-8990 </text>
            </elementText>
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              <text>The Economics of a College Education&#13;
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              <text>mm&#13;
Mm Mm A " • ' .' ^m®rr ^1PVB;i- «#f|j&#13;
^^iHBBr ilifllfflW lliwk mZ3m ' JF vv&#13;
41&#13;
A#&#13;
H 1 liXWednesday,&#13;
August 30, 1977&#13;
Vol. 8, No. 1&#13;
/? /'/ if a man empties his purse into Qf&#13;
his head, no one can take it&#13;
from him.&#13;
;BenJamin Franklin&#13;
^mmmamrn&#13;
Special&#13;
Registration&#13;
Does it pay?&#13;
The Economics of a College Education&#13;
This article first appeared in the&#13;
Occupational Outlook Quarterly,&#13;
Summer of 1977.&#13;
by Neale Baxter&#13;
Prophets live in fear that their&#13;
forecasts will be remembered.&#13;
Although predictions are-sometimes&#13;
right, they are often wrong&#13;
and occasionally foolish. One&#13;
can spend an amusing hour on a&#13;
rainy day reading late 19th&#13;
century prophecies about the&#13;
20th century. One forecaster saw&#13;
a day coming when every&#13;
woman in America would work&#13;
as a telephone operator. The&#13;
reasoning behind the prediction&#13;
was flawless, given the rate of&#13;
growth of the telephone&#13;
industry, though it did not allow&#13;
for the invention of automatic&#13;
switching equipment. Another&#13;
forecaster looked into the future&#13;
and beheld New York City under&#13;
5 feet of horse manure. That&#13;
prediction too was well founded:&#13;
given the rate at which the&#13;
equine population was growing;&#13;
but the seer might have, done a&#13;
better job if he had seen a Ford&#13;
in his future. Not all prophecies&#13;
look so silly 25 years after they&#13;
are made, however. Consider this&#13;
one, made in 1949 by Seymour&#13;
Harris, "A large proportion of the&#13;
potential college students within&#13;
the next 20 years are doomed to&#13;
disappointment after graduation,&#13;
as the number of coveted&#13;
openings will be substantially&#13;
less than the numbers seeking&#13;
them" (The Market for College&#13;
Graduates).&#13;
Harris wasn't silly. He was&#13;
merely wrong. If the college&#13;
graduates of the 1950's and&#13;
1960's were disappointed, surveys&#13;
of their economic status,&#13;
job satisfaction, and general&#13;
well-being have failed to reveal&#13;
their chagrin.&#13;
Today's doomsayers may be&#13;
no better at seeing into the&#13;
future than was Harris. Predictions&#13;
of disappointment for&#13;
college graduates during this&#13;
decade and the next must not be&#13;
ignored, however. They are&#13;
based upon two important facts&#13;
and a reasonable hypothesis.&#13;
Fact 1: College has been a&#13;
profitable investment for most&#13;
graduates in the past. Fact 2;&#13;
Most students attend college&#13;
because it is a gateway to better&#13;
paying jobs, as well as for other&#13;
reasons. Hypothesis: Between&#13;
now and 1985, investments in&#13;
college will be less profitable,&#13;
and many college graduates will&#13;
not be able to enter well-paid&#13;
occupations that now employ&#13;
college graduates. The hypothesis&#13;
can be simply stated. To&#13;
explain it, however, we must&#13;
examine three related questions&#13;
in more detail. First, what effect&#13;
did a college education have on&#13;
incomes during most of this&#13;
century? Second, what changes&#13;
took place in the labor market&#13;
during the first half of this&#13;
decade? Third, how accurately&#13;
can we estimate what will&#13;
happen during the next decade?&#13;
Each of these questions leads to&#13;
further complications in its turn.&#13;
For example, college graduates&#13;
earn more money than high&#13;
school graduates. But why they&#13;
earn more, how much more, and&#13;
whether the amount earned&#13;
exceeded the amount spent on&#13;
their education are more&#13;
problematic topics, each of&#13;
which deserves further examination.&#13;
Why College&#13;
College graduates bring many&#13;
advantages to the labor market.&#13;
They are generally intelligent,&#13;
diligent, innovative, productive,&#13;
and flexible when faced with&#13;
changing duties. These attributes&#13;
are not necessarily the result of a&#13;
college education. However,&#13;
whether colleges help people&#13;
develop their ability or not,&#13;
employers associate the college&#13;
graduate with a preferred group&#13;
of workers, just as an angler&#13;
returns to a favorite pool when&#13;
fishing for trout. Trout might be&#13;
swimming elsewhere in the&#13;
stream, but the chances of&#13;
catching them at the pool are&#13;
greater.&#13;
Not everyone wants to catch&#13;
trout, of course, and no one&#13;
wants trout all the time. But&#13;
during most of this century,&#13;
more jobs have been offered to&#13;
college trained workers than&#13;
there were graduates available to&#13;
fili them. Employers therefore&#13;
have been willing to pay college&#13;
graduates substantially more&#13;
money than high school&#13;
graduates. Male college graduates&#13;
aged 25 and over earned an&#13;
average of $14,925 in 1968,&#13;
according to the U.S. Department&#13;
of Commerce, Bureau of&#13;
the Census; high school&#13;
graduates earned $9,793.&#13;
If employers were willing to&#13;
pay college graduates more,&#13;
students were also more willing&#13;
to go to college because of the&#13;
promise of higher earnings. A&#13;
College Placement Council&#13;
(CPC) study, College Graduates&#13;
anf/ Their Employers, based on a&#13;
survey conducted in 1971,&#13;
reports that high earnings were&#13;
an important consideration in&#13;
career choice for more than 50&#13;
percent of the male college&#13;
graduates working as accountants,&#13;
administrators, computer&#13;
personnel, sales representatives,&#13;
engineers, physicians, optometrists,&#13;
dentists, veterinarians,&#13;
and lawyers. Two-thirds of the&#13;
men surveyed, who started&#13;
college in 1961, worked in these&#13;
occupations.&#13;
College graduates not only&#13;
received higher pay in the late&#13;
1960's, they were also more&#13;
likely to be employed than high&#13;
school graduates. According to a&#13;
U.S. Department of Labor study,&#13;
22 percent of the white male&#13;
high school graduates aged 16 to&#13;
26 in 1968 experienced at least&#13;
one spell of unemployment&#13;
between 1966 and 1968. Only 6&#13;
percent of the college graduates&#13;
had experienced any unemployment.&#13;
The CPC survey already&#13;
mentioned found that only 2&#13;
percent of the freshman class of&#13;
1961 were unemployed and&#13;
looking for work in 1971. The 2&#13;
percent included those who did&#13;
not finish college.&#13;
College graduates have also&#13;
earned more than high school&#13;
graduates because they loss less&#13;
income as a result of illness and&#13;
injuries. College graduates more&#13;
often work in occupations that&#13;
have very low injury and illness&#13;
rates. They also tend to have&#13;
better sick pay and health&#13;
insurance benefits than does the&#13;
average worker.&#13;
How Much?&#13;
How much more money does&#13;
a college graduate earn during a&#13;
lifetime than a high school&#13;
graduate? $331,685, maybe. This&#13;
1972 estimate of the Census&#13;
Bureau is the most recent&#13;
available. It represents the&#13;
difference between the expected&#13;
earnings from age 18 to death for&#13;
a male college graduate&#13;
($710,569) and the earnings&#13;
expected for a high school&#13;
graduate ($478,874). Unfortunately,&#13;
the ringing precision of the&#13;
$331,685 difference drowns out&#13;
several qualifications. The most&#13;
important of these is that it&#13;
allows neither for inflation nor&#13;
increased productivity. As a&#13;
result of inflation, a given&#13;
amount of money will buy more&#13;
goods and services.&#13;
Estimates of lifetime earnings&#13;
can be made that do allow for&#13;
inflation and increased productivity.&#13;
These estimates assume a&#13;
constant rate of inflation or a&#13;
constant increase in productivity.&#13;
Depending on how much&#13;
one allows , for each of these&#13;
variables, the value of a college&#13;
education in 1972 to a 25-yearold&#13;
male could have been as&#13;
much as half a million dollars or&#13;
as little as 56 thousand dollars.&#13;
One additional qualification:&#13;
those figures are based on mean&#13;
incomes during 1972; changes in&#13;
the rate of unemployment for&#13;
college graduates relative to the&#13;
rate for high school graduates&#13;
also affect lifetime income.&#13;
How much more money does&#13;
cont. paae ?&#13;
education 2 Econ from p. | —&#13;
a college graduate make? Maybe&#13;
a little, maybe a lot.&#13;
Is the Return&#13;
Worth the Investment&#13;
Rates of return are simple&#13;
ways to speak of the value of a&#13;
college education. They are&#13;
similar to interest rates. If a $100&#13;
deposit in a bank yields $106&#13;
dollars at the end of a year, the&#13;
rate of return is 6 percent. If a&#13;
$10,000 education yields&#13;
$102,857.17 after 40 years, the&#13;
rate of return is also 6 percent.&#13;
foregone income — the money&#13;
that a student who chose not to&#13;
go to school would make&#13;
working. It is similar to the&#13;
money a farmer does not make&#13;
when a field lies fallow. Like the&#13;
farmer, the student hopes that&#13;
sacrificing earnings this year will&#13;
yield higher returns next year.&#13;
One can form a very rough&#13;
idea of the value of foregone&#13;
earnings from the average&#13;
annual income of the college age&#13;
population. This figure, however,&#13;
would overstate the amount of&#13;
Table 1: Tuition subsistence, student aid, and foregone income as&#13;
percentages of the cost of a college education.&#13;
1929- 1939- 1949-&#13;
Tuition and fees&#13;
Subsistence&#13;
Foregone income less subsistence&#13;
Student aid&#13;
30&#13;
23.0&#13;
58.7&#13;
20.4&#13;
-2.1&#13;
40&#13;
25.8&#13;
52.6&#13;
24.4&#13;
50&#13;
16.3&#13;
51.6&#13;
75.6&#13;
-2.9 -43.5&#13;
1959-&#13;
60&#13;
16.2&#13;
27.2&#13;
62.8&#13;
-6.2&#13;
1969-&#13;
70&#13;
18.4&#13;
24.3&#13;
67.1&#13;
-9.8&#13;
Source. Higher Education: Who Pays? Who Benefits? Who Should&#13;
kSr TheuC.f"eg!e Commission on Higher Education. New York'&#13;
McGraw Hill Book Co., 1973.&#13;
To calculate a rate of return, one&#13;
needs to know how much an&#13;
education costs, how much the&#13;
college educated earn compared&#13;
to those without a college&#13;
education, and how much those&#13;
future earnings are worth today.&#13;
The cost of an education is the&#13;
amount paid to the school for&#13;
tuition and fees, plus expenditures&#13;
for food, clothing, and&#13;
shelter (subsistence), plus the&#13;
value of the income a student&#13;
could have earned by working&#13;
(foregone income), minus any&#13;
assistance received as student&#13;
aid. The relative size of each&#13;
slice of this pie has changed&#13;
considerably during this century.&#13;
Table 1 provides estimates by the&#13;
Carnegie Commission on Higher&#13;
Education for each item. The&#13;
difference in the importance of&#13;
foregone income during the&#13;
depression years of 1939^0 and&#13;
the high employment years of&#13;
1949-50 is especially striking.&#13;
The actual cost of tuition,&#13;
fees, and subsistence can be&#13;
readily determined. In 1969-70&#13;
they cost $1,362 at public&#13;
universities and $2,919 at private&#13;
ones, according to the Office of&#13;
Education, U.S. Department of&#13;
Health, Education, and Welfare&#13;
(DHEW). Four-year colleges were&#13;
somewhat less expensive than&#13;
universities. These costs had&#13;
risen substantially by 1975-76&#13;
when public universities charged&#13;
$2,104 and nonpublic ones&#13;
charged $4,644. Two factors&#13;
make this increase less dramatic,&#13;
however. First, much of the&#13;
increase is due to inflation.&#13;
Second, the importance of the&#13;
cost of subsistence depends on&#13;
the individual. If a family is&#13;
paying to send children to&#13;
college and if those children&#13;
would be self-supporting were&#13;
they not in college, subsistence&#13;
is a real expense. But if an&#13;
individual is self-supporting,&#13;
subsistence is not a cost of&#13;
education since people must eat&#13;
even when they don't go to&#13;
school. Subsistence accounted&#13;
for almost two-thirds of the cost&#13;
of attending a State supported&#13;
university in 1975-76.&#13;
Current tuition and subsistence&#13;
costs would dent anyone's&#13;
budget. But, as table 1 shows,&#13;
the largest single expense is&#13;
income foregone, unless the&#13;
amount was adjusted for&#13;
unemployment and for the&#13;
number of weeks a student&#13;
actually attends school. The&#13;
income lost by students who do&#13;
not work during vacations&#13;
should not be charged against&#13;
their education. Elchanan Cohn&#13;
made these adjustments in his&#13;
Economics of Education and&#13;
estimated that foregone income&#13;
in 1968 amounted to $2,952.49.&#13;
A slightly higher figure would&#13;
probably be more accurate&#13;
because Cohn based his&#13;
estimates on a 25-week school&#13;
year.&#13;
Since tuition, room, and board&#13;
cost $1,245 at public universities&#13;
during 1968-69, according to the&#13;
Office of Education, foregone&#13;
income is by far the greatest&#13;
expense in obtaining an&#13;
education. But, like subsistence,&#13;
the importance of lost income&#13;
depends on the individual. It is a&#13;
very real expense for the student&#13;
who gives up a job to attend&#13;
college. And yet, as the Carnegie&#13;
Commission notes in Higher&#13;
Education: Who Pays, "For the&#13;
typical parent, the choice may&#13;
be between paying for college&#13;
costs, or having the son or&#13;
daughter become an independent&#13;
economic unit. Thus no&#13;
income to these parents is&#13;
foregone&#13;
Two further adjustments must&#13;
be made to the cost of attending&#13;
school before we can estimate&#13;
the rate of return. First, we must&#13;
deduct the cost of room and&#13;
board from the amount of&#13;
earnings foregone since these&#13;
expenses would also be incurred&#13;
by a self-supporting student. The&#13;
$1,245 charged at public&#13;
universities in 1968-69 included&#13;
$868 for room and board. A&#13;
student's foregone income at&#13;
such a school would, therefore&#13;
be about $2,100 rather than&#13;
$2,952.49. Second, we must&#13;
deduct the money that students&#13;
actually earn - the average&#13;
assistance received in the form&#13;
of scholarships and aid - from&#13;
the foregone income. Information&#13;
on the average amount of&#13;
aid received by a student in 1968&#13;
is not available, but in California&#13;
by a student in 1968 is not&#13;
available, but in California in&#13;
1971-72 the average was $410.&#13;
Assuming that the amount of aid&#13;
available in California was higher&#13;
than the national average and&#13;
that the amount available in&#13;
1971-72 was greater than the&#13;
amount available in 1968, the&#13;
cost of going" to a public&#13;
university in 1968 was somewhat&#13;
more than $1,700. The cost of a&#13;
private school was at least $1,000&#13;
higher.&#13;
We now have an estimate of&#13;
the cost of attending a university&#13;
for 1 year. The cost for each of&#13;
the 4 years would need to be&#13;
calculated in the same way.&#13;
Students who graduated after the&#13;
1968-69 academic year had a&#13;
cost of less than $6,800 since&#13;
their senior year was the most&#13;
expensive. If they graduated at&#13;
age 21, they would have been 25&#13;
in 1972, and their estimated&#13;
lifetime earnings are discussed in&#13;
the section "How Much?" To&#13;
determine the rate of return, it is&#13;
neccessary to pick an estimate&#13;
and establish what percentage of&#13;
$6,800 compounded annually for&#13;
a given number of years yields&#13;
that figure. A 21-year-old&#13;
graduate would work for 44 years&#13;
before reaching the usual&#13;
retirement age. Invested at 5&#13;
percent for 44 years, $6,800&#13;
yields $58,188; invested at 10&#13;
percent, $450,595; invested at 12&#13;
percent, $995,639. Several economists&#13;
have estimated the rate of&#13;
return for college students who&#13;
graduated before 1970 to be&#13;
done, but one needs a wide graduates, the lifetime earning&#13;
margin of error. of seventies' graduates may akn&#13;
The Big Bust be lower than the lifetime&#13;
Up to this point, we have been earnings of sixties' graduates if&#13;
discussing the value of a college seventies' graduates do earn less&#13;
education received before 1970. their rate of return for the cost of&#13;
We did so for a good reason. The college will be lower than the 10&#13;
college labor market in the early&#13;
1970's was like an overenthusiastic&#13;
celebrant on New Year's Day:&#13;
it was hurting.&#13;
What happened? Throughout&#13;
most of this century, more jobs&#13;
were available for college&#13;
graduates than there were&#13;
college graduates who wanted&#13;
them. In the 1970's, the opposite&#13;
has been true. College graduates&#13;
looking for work in the 1970's&#13;
were caught in a three-way&#13;
squeeze: more people were&#13;
graduating than in the 6Cs, a&#13;
larger percentage of the&#13;
graduates wanted to go to work&#13;
rather than continue their&#13;
schooling, and large numbers of&#13;
students who had attended&#13;
college in the 1960's completed&#13;
their postgraduate training. As a&#13;
result of the surplus, many&#13;
college graduates were hired at&#13;
salaries that did not keep pace&#13;
with inflation, some could find&#13;
no job at all, and others were&#13;
unable to find a job usually given&#13;
to college graduates.&#13;
Starting salaries are sensitive&#13;
to the general health of the&#13;
economy and to the supply of&#13;
22 2: gta,fing monthly salaries of college graduates in current&#13;
dollars and adjusted for inflation, 1967 and 1976.&#13;
1976 salary&#13;
adjusted&#13;
for Percent&#13;
inflation change in&#13;
since purchasing&#13;
power&#13;
-15.4&#13;
-5.0&#13;
Salary offered'&#13;
Major&#13;
Business&#13;
Accounting&#13;
Humanities and social&#13;
sciences&#13;
Chemical engineering&#13;
Civil engineering&#13;
Biological sciences&#13;
* Co I lege Placement Council, "Salary Survey: A&#13;
Beginning Offers, Final Report." June 1967, and&#13;
Study of 1975-76 Beginning Offers. Final Report,'&#13;
1967 1976 1967&#13;
613 872 518&#13;
637 1,028 605&#13;
589 804 478&#13;
733 1,279 760&#13;
706 1,108 659&#13;
N/A 810 482&#13;
-18.8&#13;
+ 3.6&#13;
-6.7&#13;
-11.3&#13;
Study of 1966-67&#13;
'Salary Survey: A&#13;
luly 1976.&#13;
between 10 and 12 percent. As&#13;
we shall see, however, those who&#13;
graduated after 1970 may receive&#13;
lower return.&#13;
Once we know the rate of&#13;
return, we can determine&#13;
whether or not college was a&#13;
prof jle investment for the&#13;
stuaei.t by comparing the rate of&#13;
return with the prevailing&#13;
interest rate. In simplest terms, if&#13;
the rate of return is higher than&#13;
the highest available interest&#13;
rate, college is a profitable&#13;
investment. This was the case&#13;
through most of this century.&#13;
For the past three highly&#13;
speculative pages, we have been&#13;
concerned with establishing the&#13;
rate of return for the graduating&#13;
class of 1969. It is well to point&#13;
out that the actual rate of return&#13;
cannot be determined for&#13;
another 50 years or more. The&#13;
class of '69 will not even reach&#13;
retirement age until 2011. And&#13;
many more years will pass before&#13;
the final pension and survivor&#13;
benefits - both are higher for&#13;
college graduates than for&#13;
nongraduates are paid. Projecting&#13;
the rate of return of 1969&#13;
college graduates is a little like&#13;
estimating how much water will&#13;
pass through the grand Canyon&#13;
in the next half century; it can be&#13;
college trained workers. Since&#13;
he supply of college graduates&#13;
jn the ear'y 1970's was greater&#13;
than the economy could absorb&#13;
the starting salaries of mosi&#13;
college graduates actually dechned&#13;
during this period when&#13;
adjusted for inflation, a fact&#13;
P°!nted out bv Richard Freeman&#13;
UTabbllee 2 shows thatA msetralcrtainng'&#13;
salaries in selected disciplines&#13;
weT? itween 1967 and&#13;
by as „ rt earningS declined oy as much as 18 percent ir,&#13;
contrast, real earnings of&#13;
^onsuPervis°cyproductioH workers&#13;
advanced by 8.6 percent&#13;
during this period.&#13;
Since the starting salaries&#13;
adjusted for inflation f0^&#13;
seventies' graduates have'been&#13;
'ower than those of sixdes&#13;
to 12 percent estimated for the&#13;
class of '69. Richard Freeman&#13;
estimates that the rate of return&#13;
for the class of '73 could be as&#13;
low as 7.5 percent, still a better&#13;
return than most savings banks,&#13;
but a lower return than that&#13;
offered by some investments.&#13;
Underemployment&#13;
Working for a relatively lower&#13;
salary than the one paid to the&#13;
previous years' graduates may be&#13;
disappointing. Not working at all&#13;
is worse. In October 1972, the&#13;
unemployment rate for recent&#13;
college graduates stood at 11,7&#13;
percent, according to the U.S.&#13;
Department of Labor, Bureau of&#13;
Labor Statistics (BLS); the rate&#13;
for high school graduates in the&#13;
same age group was 7.7*. A CPC&#13;
survey of 1972 graduates&#13;
conducted during the summer&#13;
and fall of that year discovered&#13;
an 18 percent unemployment&#13;
rate. An astonishing 21 percent&#13;
of the male arts and humanities&#13;
graduates had not even received&#13;
a job offer.&#13;
These extremely high unemployment&#13;
rates for recent&#13;
college graduates should not be&#13;
confused with the unemployment&#13;
rates for all college&#13;
graduates. In March 1972, the&#13;
unemployment rate for college&#13;
graduates was 3.1 percent,&#13;
according to BLS; the rate for&#13;
high school graduates was 5.6. In&#13;
March 1976, the college rate was&#13;
2.8 percent, less than half the&#13;
high school rate of 8.2 percent.&#13;
One might also note that by&#13;
November 1974 the unemployment&#13;
rate for liberal arts majors&#13;
in the class of '72 was almost the&#13;
same as the national average,&#13;
according to a survey Michael&#13;
Walsh describes in Change,&#13;
September 1975. The unemployment&#13;
rate in Walsh's sample was&#13;
6.4 percent. The national&#13;
average in November 1974 was&#13;
6.2.&#13;
The anger and despair caused&#13;
by unemployment can be&#13;
understood even by people who&#13;
have never had difficulty finding&#13;
work. Underemployment, working&#13;
in a job that does not make&#13;
full use of a person's education&#13;
and ability, exerts more subtle&#13;
pressure.&#13;
Underemployment is extremely&#13;
difficult to measure, in part&#13;
because many people feel&#13;
underutilized even though they&#13;
work at jobs usually held by&#13;
college graduates and receive a&#13;
salary higher than the national&#13;
average for college educated&#13;
workers. Walsh found that more&#13;
than 20 percent of the 1972&#13;
liberal arts graduates he&#13;
surveyed considered themselves&#13;
underemployed; however, half&#13;
Cont. Daae 3&#13;
sixties —&#13;
********••••••*++ZTT7] Cont- p°ge 3&#13;
Ranger is written and * **************&#13;
University of Wisconsin^ H&lt;?i by stud«*ts of the&#13;
responsible for its editorial r thcy arc so,cly&#13;
editorial policy and content.&#13;
Philip L. Livingston 4.53-2295&#13;
Thomas R. Cooper 5S3-?287&#13;
John Gabriel&#13;
Hanger Newsrape^ Unive;°Ly"w°r *"&#13;
* * * * * * * * r s h a - r 3 , 1 s : r n p a r k s i d e&#13;
*****************************&#13;
education&#13;
Occupational forecaster explains&#13;
statistical difficulties&#13;
3&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Ranger contacted Neale Baxter, staff writer for Occupational&#13;
Outlook Quarterly and author of The Economics of a College&#13;
Education. He spoke about his article.&#13;
Scarce College Unemployment figures&#13;
classVheVoZopt^8 une™P|oYment figures for ever'y graduating&#13;
class. The College Placement Council publishes an annual (listing of&#13;
fe funded'h 8°uvernment for co"ege graduates), but this&#13;
stirtino I d,yert'SeDrs who are main|v interested in competitive&#13;
has neithe/Th ^ tHat the DePartment has neither the time, money, or authorization to pololf Levaberoyr&#13;
graduating class in every college/university in the country.&#13;
covert point in the article is whenever you make a prediction in&#13;
H y W°n,t know the actual imPact 40 or 50&#13;
years. You simply do not know what will happen. There are just to&#13;
i™rZrreY S3id Baxter" Baxter went to explain this time&#13;
lag is due to the nature of most post college careers. Most graduates&#13;
will change jobs until they are satisfied or can no longer advance, but&#13;
this is not predictable. There are as many careers as there are people.&#13;
To measure the payoff of a particular college education you must&#13;
first find out how far that person advanced in a field that just might&#13;
not even be the field of the person's educational intention.&#13;
Some unpredictable variables&#13;
In using variable on the earnings figures Baxter explained that&#13;
speculated increases in averages in Gross National Product, infusion&#13;
of capital into the economy, energy costs, unemployment, and&#13;
women s participation in the workforce, can be compared with the&#13;
earnings to predict the future of an occupation.&#13;
"If you look back fifty years ago, there was a depression, wars, and&#13;
practically no industrial computer applications. No one could have&#13;
accurately predicted the impact of these developments on the labor&#13;
market. But for the most part our (Department of Labor) prediction&#13;
methods are very good for the training period of most occupations.&#13;
Once you get ten years away from that it becomes more difficult"&#13;
said Baxter.&#13;
Econ from p. 2 —&#13;
of those who felt underemployed&#13;
had jobs traditionally held by&#13;
college graduates and earned&#13;
more than $8,000 in 1974.&#13;
What's Past Is Prologue&#13;
When a cow finds a bale of&#13;
hay in the same place every&#13;
mornng, she's likely to expect it&#13;
to be there the next morning. If&#13;
the hay isn't there one day, she&#13;
might be puzzled. What will&#13;
happen tomorrow? Will there be&#13;
hay or not? The same question&#13;
confronts those who try to&#13;
estimate the value of a college&#13;
education. Were the low starting&#13;
salaries of the seventies a&#13;
temporary phenomenon or the&#13;
first sign of a lasting decline in&#13;
the profitability of a college&#13;
degree? To answer that question,&#13;
we must know how much college&#13;
will cost in the future, how many&#13;
students will graduate, and how&#13;
many jobs will be available for&#13;
the graduates.&#13;
The National Center for&#13;
Education Statistics, DHEW,&#13;
estimates that students in public&#13;
institutions of higher education&#13;
will pay about $200 per year&#13;
more for tuition, fees, room, and&#13;
board in 1984-85 than they had&#13;
to pay in 1974-75. The cost of a&#13;
private college or university&#13;
could rise $400. The average&#13;
expense to a student will&#13;
increase even more if less&#13;
scholarship money is available in&#13;
the future than was available&#13;
through the early seventies.&#13;
The National Center for&#13;
Education Statistics also estimates&#13;
that the number of&#13;
bachelors' degrees conferred will&#13;
rise from 944,000 in 1974-75 to&#13;
I,076,000 in 1984-85. A total of&#13;
II,328,000 bachelors' degree&#13;
may be awarded between 1975&#13;
and 1985. Not all college&#13;
graduates go to work , and not all&#13;
entrants to the labor market with&#13;
college degrees come right out&#13;
of school. But if past patterns of&#13;
entrance into the labor market&#13;
remain unchanged, about 10.9&#13;
million people with bachelors',&#13;
masters', doctoral, or first&#13;
professional degrees will start&#13;
looking for work between&#13;
1974-1985, according to estimates&#13;
by BLS. An additional 2.25&#13;
million people with college&#13;
diplomas will reenter the civilian&#13;
labor force. They include people&#13;
separating from the Armed&#13;
Forces and women returning to&#13;
the labor force after raising&#13;
children. A total of 13.1 million&#13;
college graduates will, therefore,&#13;
be reading the want ads and&#13;
sending out applications. During&#13;
this same period, BLS estimates&#13;
that only 12.1 million jobs&#13;
requiring a college degree will be&#13;
open.&#13;
What will the million&#13;
g r a d u a t e s w h o c a n n o t f i n&#13;
college level jobs do? The degree&#13;
holders are not likely to be&#13;
unemployed. They are more&#13;
likely to be underemployed, to&#13;
push young people without a&#13;
college degree out of jobs that&#13;
do not now require a college&#13;
degree. But although those with&#13;
a bachelor's degree will have a&#13;
clear advantage over those&#13;
without any degree, college&#13;
graduates will face considerable&#13;
competition in some occupations&#13;
from graduates of&#13;
community and junior colleges&#13;
and other postsecondary institutions.&#13;
In additon, although&#13;
college graduates may initially&#13;
be underemployed, one study&#13;
indicates that college graduates&#13;
stand a better chance of being&#13;
promoted than do nongraduates.&#13;
The period of underemployment&#13;
might thus be limited if a college&#13;
graduate was hired initially for a&#13;
noncollege position.&#13;
Caveat Counselor&#13;
One final possibility concerning&#13;
the projected surplus of&#13;
college graduates deserves&#13;
emphasis: some eggs do not&#13;
hatch. The projections discussed&#13;
in this article contain many&#13;
assumptions. The projections&#13;
will be wrong, one way or&#13;
another, unless each variable&#13;
behaves as it is supposed to — a s&#13;
it behaved in the past few years&#13;
— or unless any changes cancel&#13;
out each other.&#13;
Projections of the supply of&#13;
college educated workers will&#13;
prove to be too high if a smaller&#13;
cont. page 5&#13;
Wl\atevef~&#13;
Subjects&#13;
YoutG Carrying,&#13;
We've €jot&#13;
1% Books!&#13;
That's; our specialty! Of course we handle a lot of other supplies too&#13;
but textbooks are the main event. Whether you're into art or zooloqv&#13;
we re the guys who can help make sure you get the books you need no&#13;
matter what subjects you're carrying. '&#13;
UW Parkside&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
August, 1969, when Greenquist Holl stood alone on the prairie.&#13;
A Brief History of Parkside&#13;
Old "PU" is relatively young. Some of&#13;
those eastern schools have Parkside beat&#13;
by a couple of hundred years. Parkside&#13;
awarded its first bachelors degree in 1969.&#13;
Before that, Parkside was a combination of&#13;
the two UW-Centers in Racine and&#13;
Kenosha. The Racine Center is now the&#13;
Gateway Technical Institute and the&#13;
Kenosha Center is presently the Reuther&#13;
Alternative High School.&#13;
When Parkside was planned and&#13;
developed it was to be one of the four&#13;
original University of Wisconsin campuses,&#13;
UW-Milwaukee, UW-Madison, and&#13;
UW-Green Bay.&#13;
In October 1971, the state university&#13;
system members, Plateville, LaCrosse,&#13;
Superior, Oshkosh, andEauClaire, all were&#13;
swallowed in the UW-System under a bill&#13;
that became known as the merger law.&#13;
They dropped the State University&#13;
designation and became UW campuses.&#13;
This same piece of legislation gave&#13;
students control over the part of their&#13;
tuition known as segregated fees.&#13;
Segregated fees are used to fund the&#13;
student government, newspaper, entertainment&#13;
activities and guarantee loans&#13;
and debts of union buildings.&#13;
Parkside's first chancellor was Irvin G.&#13;
Wyllie. He oversaw the early development&#13;
of the educational program as well as all&#13;
major construction of the Parkside&#13;
Campus. At the accreditation of the school&#13;
by North Central. Wyllie penned a brief&#13;
history of the campus. Ranger reprints this&#13;
history courtesy of the Archives in the&#13;
Wyllie Library Learning Center.&#13;
Legislative Authorization&#13;
of New Campuses&#13;
In the early 1960's three considerations&#13;
sparked Wisconsin interest in new&#13;
campuses. The first was that some&#13;
campuses in the state — Madison,&#13;
Milwaukee, Whitewater, and Oshkosh —&#13;
were already overcrowded and beginning&#13;
to experience difficulties relating to size&#13;
and rapid growth. The second was that two&#13;
of the richest and fastest-growing parts of&#13;
the state (the Racine-Kenosha area in&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin, and the Appleton-&#13;
Green Bay area in the northeast) were&#13;
not being served by public degree-granting&#13;
universities. The third was that new&#13;
:ampuses promised to be publicly and&#13;
politically popular, as such campuses had&#13;
proved to be in California, New York, and&#13;
elsewhere. These thoughts and enthusiasms&#13;
were more widely shared by&#13;
Democrats than by Republicans, who were&#13;
wary of the fiscal costs that might be&#13;
involved. The legislature authorized new&#13;
campuses in 1965, with bipartisan support,&#13;
Put it fell to Republican administrations to&#13;
fund them (not gladly) between 1966 and&#13;
1971.&#13;
The 1965 legislative authorization was&#13;
limited, and silent or obscure on many&#13;
critical points (Chapter 259, Laws of 1965).&#13;
It did not provide for full four-year&#13;
institutions, but merely authorized two&#13;
"new 3rd or 3rd and 4th year institutions of&#13;
academic instruction" in northeastern and&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin. That provision&#13;
took cognizance of the presence of&#13;
freshman-sophomore Centers in those&#13;
areas, but said nothing about what the&#13;
relationship should be, if any, between the&#13;
Centers and the new 3rd and 4th year&#13;
institutions. The law set no date for the&#13;
opening of the new campuses, saying only&#13;
that they should be established "as soon as&#13;
is practicable." It vested their control in&#13;
the Regents of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin, and specified that courses of&#13;
study should be "consistent" with those of&#13;
other campuses of the University. It also&#13;
authorized the state Coordinating&#13;
Committee for Higher Education to&#13;
'formulate a plan and schedule for the&#13;
development and implementation of the&#13;
new institutions," and to approve their&#13;
educational programs. Various provisions&#13;
of the law got everybody into the act —&#13;
Regents, the Governor, and state Building&#13;
Commission, the legislature, the Coordinating&#13;
Committee for Higher Education, the&#13;
state architect, the state planning director,&#13;
and a site selection committee appointed&#13;
by the Governor. The authorizing&#13;
legislation provided no money, but said&#13;
that after the necessary preliminary&#13;
planning had been done the state Building&#13;
Commission could allocate from its own&#13;
funds "monies adequate for all purposes&#13;
which in its judgement are appropriate to&#13;
the planning of the new collegiate&#13;
institutions." With such a foggy mandate,&#13;
and with so many rival parties involved, it&#13;
is a miracle that any institution of any kind&#13;
ever materialized.&#13;
Site Selection and Acquisition&#13;
The 1965 authorizing legislation&#13;
provided for a site selection committee, to&#13;
be appointed by the Governor. The&#13;
committee was to consist of the state&#13;
architect (now the Director of Planning&#13;
and Construction at UW-Parkside), a&#13;
representative of the Regents, the state&#13;
planning director, and a representative of&#13;
the state Building Commission. The&#13;
committee was responsible for setting site&#13;
criteria, reviewing proposed alternative&#13;
sites, and making a recommendation to&#13;
the Governor, the Building Commission,&#13;
and the Coordinating Committee for&#13;
Higher Education. Governor Warren P.&#13;
Knowles named the committee on&#13;
September 6, 1965, and seven months&#13;
later, on April 14, 1966 the committee&#13;
made its final recommendations. The&#13;
dominant participant was Fred Harvey&#13;
Harrington, President of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin, who served as the Regents'&#13;
representative.&#13;
After setting criteria regarding site size,&#13;
topography, and the like, the committee&#13;
invited proposals from the communities of&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin. The understanding&#13;
was that a local unit of government&#13;
would be obliged to purchase the selected&#13;
site, convey it as a gift to the University,&#13;
and extend sewer and water lines to the&#13;
location at the expense of the local&#13;
community.&#13;
Kenosha and Racine Proposals Rejected&#13;
Of the several sites proposed, only three&#13;
received serious consideration, and all&#13;
three were rejected. The first was the vast,&#13;
abandoned Bong Air Force base near&#13;
Burlington, Wisconsin. It was ruled out on&#13;
grounds of topography (flat and&#13;
uninteresting) and remoteness from the&#13;
centers of population. Eighty percent of&#13;
the population of southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
is concentrated in a six-mile strip bounded&#13;
by Lake Michigan on the East and Highway&#13;
I-94 on the West. The Bong site was an&#13;
additional 20 miles west of Highway I-94.&#13;
The second proposed site was in&#13;
downtown Racine, immediately adjacent&#13;
to the Racine Center on the shore of Lake&#13;
Michigan. That site was rejected because it&#13;
was small, difficult of access, dependent&#13;
on lake fill for future expansion, and tied&#13;
in with other uncertain downtown Racine&#13;
redevelopment schemes. The third site, on **&#13;
the western edge of Kenosha, consisted of&#13;
an automobile graveyard and other&#13;
unattractive land lying immediately&#13;
adjacent to the existing Kenosha Center. A&#13;
member of the committee that proposed&#13;
that site recalls President Harrington's cold&#13;
and curt response to Kenosha's&#13;
enthusiastic presentation. "What else do&#13;
you have to show us?" he asked, leaving no&#13;
doubt that the proposal was completely&#13;
unacceptable. Since Kenosha had already&#13;
taken an option on the land, the blow hit&#13;
with extra force.&#13;
Committee Finds a Parkside&#13;
Having infuriated the cities of&#13;
Burlington, Racine, and Kenosha, the site&#13;
committee then proceeded on its own&#13;
initiative to select an attractive 700 acre&#13;
tract in northern Kenosha County&#13;
immediately adjacent to the beautiful 350&#13;
acre Petrifying Springs Park. The proposed&#13;
site was on almost-neutral ground&#13;
equidistant from the cities of Racine and&#13;
Kenosha, and readily accessible to&#13;
Burlington by car. It was also, despite its&#13;
rural character, in the middle of the&#13;
developing population corridor that&#13;
stretches from the Chicago metropolitan&#13;
area up to Milwaukee and beyond. In&#13;
retrospect virtually all parties agree that&#13;
the committee made an excellent choice,&#13;
but in 1966 the committee's action&#13;
inspired acrimonious charges and&#13;
countercharges, which aggravated the&#13;
longstanding hostilities among the&#13;
communities that the campus was&#13;
supposed to serve. By the time the legal&#13;
challenges were settled and the site&#13;
selection was finally ratified, everybody&#13;
was angry, and new campus enthusiasm&#13;
had waned both in Madison and in&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin.&#13;
The problem of acquiring and conveying&#13;
the site fell to Kenosha County. A to tal of&#13;
31 properties was involved, some of which&#13;
were acquired through negotiation, but&#13;
most of which went through condemnation&#13;
proceedings. The condemnation&#13;
actions, though necessary, did not endear&#13;
the County or the campus to those who&#13;
were displaced. The costs of the site,&#13;
which amounted to $2.1 million, and of&#13;
the sewer and water extensions, which&#13;
added another $1 million, were also a&#13;
source of grievance for Kenosha taxpayers.&#13;
Nevertheless, through campus, County,&#13;
and City cooperation the site was&#13;
acquired, serviced, and conveyed in the&#13;
course of the next two years.&#13;
Backlash&#13;
There were various backlash effects,&#13;
however. In Racine the Mayor and the&#13;
Council, together with the community&#13;
leaders who had proposed the lakeshore&#13;
site, perfected plans to sell the Racine&#13;
Center to the vocational-technical school,&#13;
well in advance of the availability of&#13;
replacement space at the new campus&#13;
location. This move, though explained in&#13;
terms of City financial problems and the&#13;
vocational-technical school's need for&#13;
space, was generally viewed as an act of&#13;
revenge. It was aimed at the University, at&#13;
the site selection committee, and at&#13;
Kenosha, the surprise victor in the site&#13;
struggle. Through various challenges and&#13;
delaying actons the UW-Parkside&#13;
administration succeeded in delaying&#13;
forced evacuation from Racine until July&#13;
1, 1972, and meantime secured state&#13;
funding for the necessary replacement&#13;
space.&#13;
In Kenosha the community outlay for&#13;
site and utilities brought a public demand&#13;
that Kenosha reclaim its Center facility&#13;
and use it to meet the school district's&#13;
need for a new high school.&#13;
campu s 5&#13;
Editor's File&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston, Editor&#13;
••••••* on working for the school paper&#13;
toppthl events (n0t offered this semester), putting&#13;
together a newspaper every week is a unique experience Stories are&#13;
just about everywhere. Ranger is trying to become more of a feature&#13;
newspaper. Why try to compete with the Journal-Times of Racine and&#13;
the Kenosha News (Ha ha!)? Smart publishers are aware of the limited&#13;
P^Uple,ninPrbt,n8H-tra|i8htAneWS^Pe°Ple 'ike ^ ^ ab°Ut °ther&#13;
people periodicals. Around Parkside, most people have&#13;
dace for'Tf mtereSti?8 backgrounds. Parkside is an excellent&#13;
place for a feature or.ented paper. Who knows, perhaps some people&#13;
in the surrounding communities might even mail in a $5 00&#13;
subscription check.&#13;
While features are sometimes easier to write, hard news is usually&#13;
more urgent and there fore more care must be taken to maintain an&#13;
accurate editorial posture. You really can't blow people out of the&#13;
water unless you have some hard facts organized in a somewhat&#13;
professional manner.&#13;
Ranger needs writers who understand this. It really makes little&#13;
difference how much experience one has. It doesn't make any&#13;
difference what you major is. Enthusiasm is our most valuable&#13;
resource. You can move enthusiasm around. Apathy stinks!&#13;
If you can take the time to write a story a week or can lend any&#13;
photographic skills to help the paper, please get in touch with me in&#13;
room 208, Tallent Hall or call 553-2295.&#13;
Ranger also needs production workers for layout and paste-up on&#13;
Monday nights and Tuesday mornings. If you learn these skills in&#13;
school, it will enable you to understand offset printing (a nice&#13;
addition to any resume).&#13;
The segregated fee part of student tuition supports the expenses of&#13;
the Ranger. The printing costs (over $550.00 each week) are&#13;
supported entirely by our advertising. The more advertising in each&#13;
issue, the thicker your Ranger i$. Advertising salespeople get 10% of&#13;
what they sell. Advertising in Ranger is fairly easy to sell. We have a&#13;
nice looking publication that is read by about 12,000 extremely&#13;
intelligent people who are trying to get ahead. Anyone interested in&#13;
selling advertising space in Ranger should contact John Gabriel, our&#13;
ad manager, at 553-2287 or come to room 294 in Tallent Hall.&#13;
Ranger can offer some fine leadership opportunities. Presently, the&#13;
Feature Editor and News Editor have not been selected yet for this&#13;
semester. This December a new Editor-in-Chief will be interviewed&#13;
and selected from applicants. I can only say being Editor of Ranger is&#13;
the best job I have ever had. It's fun, interesting, and dangerous (what&#13;
more could you ask for?).&#13;
Well, keep us in mind. If you care to do something worthwhile&#13;
during your education, Ranger can offer an exciting alternative. I&#13;
can't stress enough that we need more people. Students help pay for&#13;
this paper and it is up to students to make it respectable and&#13;
unpredictable.&#13;
next week: Dean Dearborn's Farewell Banquet&#13;
Econ from P 3&#13;
percentage of high school&#13;
graduates go to college during&#13;
the next 10 years than did so in&#13;
the last decade. We do not now&#13;
know if many young people will&#13;
decide not to go to college, but&#13;
we do know that entering&#13;
freshmen make decisions influenced&#13;
by what happens in the&#13;
job market. The single most&#13;
striking example of students'&#13;
reaction to the job market is the&#13;
sharp decline in the number of&#13;
women entering college who&#13;
plan careers as teachers. In 1966,&#13;
35.6 percent of the first-year&#13;
class did; in 1974, only 12.7&#13;
percent did. The fluctuation in&#13;
engineering enrollments also&#13;
indicates that some young&#13;
people will not go to college&#13;
unless they think a degree will&#13;
open employers' doors to them&#13;
since fewer students enroll in&#13;
engineering schools when unemployment&#13;
among engineers&#13;
rises. Prospective collegians&#13;
might also be deterred by the&#13;
rising cost of higher education,&#13;
further decreasing the actual&#13;
number of degrees conferred.&#13;
The estimates could also be&#13;
too low. Financial rewards are&#13;
not the only reason students&#13;
attend college. The rate of return&#13;
for a college education was only&#13;
5 percent in Norway in 1973,&#13;
according to the Carnegie&#13;
Commission, but this did not&#13;
discourage attendance. Also,&#13;
while the employment problems&#13;
of college graduates might&#13;
influence some students against&#13;
4-year schools, the employment&#13;
problems of high school&#13;
graduates might encourage other&#13;
students to spend 4 years&#13;
surrounded by ivied walls.&#13;
Furthermore, although the&#13;
relative salaries of college&#13;
graduates might decline, a&#13;
college degree will still be a&#13;
minimum qualification for&#13;
millions of jobs. Every humanities&#13;
graduate might not be hired&#13;
for a college level occupation,&#13;
but nongraduates won't even be&#13;
interviewed.&#13;
Projections of the demand for&#13;
college graduates contain even&#13;
more uncertainties. BLS projections&#13;
assume that the percent of&#13;
college graduates in clerical and&#13;
blue-collar occupations will&#13;
remain at 1974 levels through&#13;
1985 and that the proportion of&#13;
college graduates in other&#13;
occupations will increase as they&#13;
have in the past. The number of&#13;
job openings projected will,&#13;
therefore, be too low if new&#13;
technology makes better educated&#13;
workers necessary for certain&#13;
jobs. Such a change is highly&#13;
improbable, however. Projections&#13;
also assume that industries&#13;
will grow at a certain rate&#13;
relative to each other. More&#13;
openings will be available if&#13;
industries that employ many&#13;
college graduates — f inance, for&#13;
example — grow at a faster rate&#13;
than expected, even if the&#13;
economy as a whole does not&#13;
perform well. By the same token,&#13;
slow growth in a single industry&#13;
could make the outlook much&#13;
worse than expected, as was the&#13;
case with the poor performance&#13;
of the aerospace industry in the&#13;
1970's.&#13;
In order to make its&#13;
projections, BLS assumes that&#13;
the rate at which college&#13;
graduates enter the labor force&#13;
will remain unchanged. Sudden&#13;
changes in this rate therefore&#13;
affect the accuracy of the&#13;
projections. As already noted,&#13;
one problem during the early&#13;
seventies was that a larger&#13;
proportion of college students&#13;
entered the labor market upon&#13;
graduation than had done so in&#13;
the sixties. The percentage of&#13;
college educated women who&#13;
remain in the labor force or&#13;
reenter the labor force after a&#13;
few years of work in the home&#13;
might also change. The&#13;
projections assume that these&#13;
rates will increase, but any&#13;
change in the rate of increase&#13;
will affect the accuracy of the&#13;
projections.&#13;
cont. page 11&#13;
Business Department ranks first&#13;
Students Choose courses and majors by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
What courses to take and what major to&#13;
declare are two questions in the minds of&#13;
many freshmen and sophomores this Fall.&#13;
Last Spring, the Faculty Senate&#13;
attempted to reorganize the present&#13;
procedure for getting advice and&#13;
counseling as well as set definite deadlines&#13;
for declaring a major. The Faculty Senate&#13;
will be working on an academic advising&#13;
proposal in addition to a, breadth&#13;
requirement (required courses for&#13;
freshmen in a degree program) this Fall.&#13;
Ranger will keep you posted on&#13;
developments in these two important&#13;
areas in upcoming issues. ,&#13;
Planning your schedule&#13;
If you are attending Parkside for a&#13;
degree and don't want to waste time and&#13;
money, you have probably already sought&#13;
advice from counselors in Tallent Hall or&#13;
from professors. If you haven't you should,&#13;
especially if you have never wandered&#13;
through a registration at Parkside before.&#13;
At registration there are counselors and&#13;
professors sitting under signs proclaiming&#13;
their specialty. Don't hesitate to approach&#13;
them with any question. If you have a&#13;
problem registering it is probably because&#13;
you missed something they didn't. If you&#13;
need help — seek it!&#13;
The Ranger Popularity Polls&#13;
Now, if what everybody else does&#13;
interests your curiousity, you might be&#13;
interested in two lists Ranger compiled&#13;
using data from last Spring Semester.&#13;
List No. 1 is the total credit hours&#13;
students registered for last Spring after the&#13;
first two weeks of classes.&#13;
From looking at the numbers, it looks&#13;
like Parkside students enroll in a good&#13;
List No. 1&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Total Student Credit Hours&#13;
Spring 1977 Registration&#13;
1. Business Management 6448.5&#13;
2. Mathematics 4050.5&#13;
3. English 3458.5&#13;
4.Psychology 3227.5&#13;
5. Education 2554.5&#13;
6. Life Science 2503&#13;
7. Sociology 2365.5&#13;
8. Economics 2014.5&#13;
9. Chemistry ( ± under 2000 credits)&#13;
10. Physical Education&#13;
11. Music&#13;
12. Communication&#13;
13. History&#13;
14. Art&#13;
15. Political Science&#13;
16. Applied Science&#13;
17. Philosophy&#13;
18. Earth Science&#13;
19. Geography&#13;
20. Anthropology&#13;
21. Humanities&#13;
22. Physics&#13;
23. Engineering Technology&#13;
24. Labor Economics&#13;
25. German ( 4&#13;
26. Spanish&#13;
27. Theatre&#13;
28.French&#13;
29. Medical Technology&#13;
( 4&#13;
30. Science&#13;
31. Social Science ( |&#13;
31. Behavioral Science&#13;
| under 1000 credits)&#13;
under 500 credits)&#13;
under 200 credits)&#13;
under 100 credits)&#13;
number of Business courses. Math and&#13;
English courses are the next biggest&#13;
concentration, probably because of&#13;
requirements.&#13;
Psychology courses are fourth in&#13;
popularity. General Psychology and "pop"&#13;
courses like the Psychology of Drug Abuse&#13;
and other high enrollment classes make&#13;
Psychology an attractive science elective.&#13;
Education courses come in fifth. This is&#13;
an interesting division because although&#13;
students must take required courses for&#13;
teaching certification, there is no&#13;
Education major at Parkside as in many&#13;
other UW schools.&#13;
The rest of the top ten in List No. 1, Life&#13;
Science, Sociology, Economics, Chemistry,&#13;
and Physical Education (also not a major)&#13;
make up over half the total credit hours&#13;
enrolled by students. The rest of the 32&#13;
course areas taper down drastically from&#13;
the top.&#13;
It must be remembered that many of the&#13;
general headings only have a handful of&#13;
courses and it is not fair to compare the&#13;
popularity of these courses with, say, the&#13;
whole Education Division.&#13;
While it is not fair to compare all of the&#13;
course areas, it is obvious that Parkside&#13;
students are not all fine arts students.&#13;
List No. 2 is a list of all Parkside students&#13;
who declared a major as of the first two&#13;
weeks of classes in Spring semester.&#13;
Declaring a major is an official action by a&#13;
student that involves signing a special&#13;
form available at student records in Tallent&#13;
Hall and selecting an advisor.&#13;
Again the Business Management&#13;
Division leads the pack with an&#13;
overwhelming 677 students majoring in&#13;
the program. Second place is Psychology&#13;
with 181 students.&#13;
The top four most popular majors make&#13;
up one half of all Parkside students&#13;
declaring majors last Spring.&#13;
The real number one slot is not listed.&#13;
1,447 students at Spring registration said&#13;
they were undecided. Of this number 523&#13;
said Business was their area of interest.&#13;
List No. 2&#13;
Declared Majors Spring 1977 Registration&#13;
1. Business Management 677&#13;
2. Psychology 181&#13;
3. Sociology 129&#13;
4. Life Science 123&#13;
5. Music 96&#13;
6. Communication 89&#13;
7. English 84&#13;
8. Chemistry 79&#13;
9. Medical Technology 67&#13;
10. Mathematics 61&#13;
11. Art 59&#13;
12. Political Science 57&#13;
13. History 52&#13;
14. Economics 49&#13;
15. Geography 45&#13;
16. Earth Science 44&#13;
16. Engineering Science 44&#13;
17. Applied Science and Tech. 43&#13;
18. Applied Science 29&#13;
19. German 23&#13;
20. Physics 21&#13;
21. Spanish 20&#13;
22. Philosophy 19&#13;
23. Modern American Society 16&#13;
24.French 9&#13;
25. Comparative Modern&#13;
Industrial Societies 3&#13;
Librarians are available at the Information&#13;
Desk on Level One to assist you in using the&#13;
materials and resources of the Library/Learning&#13;
Center. If you need help, be sure to ask. In&#13;
addition there are more than 30 printed guides to&#13;
aid you. Some of these will enable you to find&#13;
your way around the building while others will&#13;
assist you in finding materials in a specific&#13;
subject area.&#13;
Library hours&#13;
The weekly hours of the Libary/Learning&#13;
Center are:&#13;
Sunday— 1:30 p.m.- midnight&#13;
Monday-Thursday— 7:45 a.m.- midnight&#13;
Friday— 7:45 a.m.- 5 p.m.&#13;
Saturday— 8:30 a.m.- 5 p.m.&#13;
During vacation and holiday periods,&#13;
hours vary and are posted at the entrance to&#13;
the complex.&#13;
UW-P Library/Learning Center&#13;
Warm welcome&#13;
to all students&#13;
The entire Library/Learning Center staff wishes&#13;
to express a warm welcome to all students, new&#13;
and returning!&#13;
The Library/Learning,Center offers each of you&#13;
a wide variety of services as well as an outstanding&#13;
collection of materials, both print and&#13;
non-print. The information on these two pages&#13;
lists only part of what is available to you as a&#13;
Parkside student. We hope that you will make&#13;
extensive use of the collection during the coming&#13;
year and that you will find it to be a valuable asset&#13;
in you academic work.&#13;
Even more than the facilities and materials, we&#13;
want to stress the human resources which are at&#13;
your disposal. The staff of professional librarians,&#13;
technologists and support personnel are all eager&#13;
to help you. As a group, and individually, we are&#13;
committed above all to service — service to you,&#13;
the Parkside students.&#13;
We wish you a successful and rewarding&#13;
academic year.&#13;
Joseph A. Boisse&#13;
Director of the Library/Learning Center&#13;
The Library/Learning Center contains a wide variety of&#13;
materials for class needs and recreational use. These include&#13;
books, periodicals, maps, government documents and nonprint&#13;
materials such as video-tapes, filmstrips, recor&#13;
cassettes and slide tape combinations. Most of these mate&#13;
als may be checked out for use at home.&#13;
committed to service • m&#13;
Abundant study space and pleasant surroundings can be found throughout the complex.&#13;
Interlibrary loan&#13;
Copy machine (5 cents per page)&#13;
Telephone&#13;
Typewriters&#13;
Calculators&#13;
Microformat equipment&#13;
Listening and viewing areas for nonprint&#13;
materials&#13;
Seminar rooms for small group study&#13;
Other services&#13;
and facilities:&#13;
Key phone&#13;
numbers&#13;
Information Desk 553-2360&#13;
Circulation&#13;
Print 553-2238&#13;
Non-Print 553-2282&#13;
Reserves 553-2282&#13;
Media Services 553-2567&#13;
Public Services 553-2356&#13;
Technical Services 553-2167&#13;
Archives 553-2411&#13;
Area Research Center 553-2411&#13;
LLC Director 553-2221&#13;
Paid advertisement&#13;
Most materials that circulate may be&#13;
checked out for two weeks. Instructors may&#13;
place items in heavy demand on reserve for&#13;
shorter periods. If an item is still needed at&#13;
the end of the check-out period, it may be&#13;
renewed for the same loan period as long as&#13;
no one has requested the item. Materials&#13;
must be renewed in person at the appropriate&#13;
check-out desk. To borrow materials you&#13;
will need to fill out a check-out card for each&#13;
item. These are located at the two check-out&#13;
desks. The Print Check-Out Desk is located&#13;
on Level One and the Non-print Check-Out&#13;
Desk on Level D-1. A valid I.D. card must be&#13;
presented each time material is checked out.&#13;
classes&#13;
Tech students&#13;
must follow schedule&#13;
At Parkside the Medical Technology program is highly structured.&#13;
The courses should be taken in sequence. Before going through&#13;
FurthermoreV°U ^ Ur8ed l° St°P ^ ^ Medical TechnQlogy table.&#13;
a. To register in certain medical technology courses, you would need&#13;
written permission from Professor S.P. Datta. These permission&#13;
slips are available at the medical technology tablefa.&#13;
If you plan to begin the final year of your program - clinical&#13;
internship - m June '78 or January '79, please get in toUch with&#13;
Professor S.P. Datta, Director Medical Technology program by&#13;
September 9th at the latest;&#13;
c. If you are a newcomer to UW-Parkside, come to an informal getogether&#13;
at 1:00 p.m. on Friday, September 9th, in room D-137 of&#13;
Oeenquist Hall.&#13;
Is teaching the&#13;
career for you? nv 4UA ix* * •&#13;
8 Film makin g course, others offered&#13;
by the Education Division&#13;
Interested in Teaching as a&#13;
possible career? Enroll in&#13;
Education 200 Field Experience&#13;
and Education 202 Methods of&#13;
Teaching and you will know by&#13;
the end of Fall Semester whether&#13;
teaching is the career for you. A&#13;
total of four credits is all that's&#13;
involved in helping you make&#13;
this vital decision.&#13;
Students from past semesters&#13;
have made the following&#13;
comments about Field Experience:&#13;
•The Education 200 course&#13;
helped me to decide&#13;
whether teaching was really&#13;
for me. It has been a meaningful&#13;
experience for me. I&#13;
would recommend this&#13;
course highly to anyone interested&#13;
in the education&#13;
field.&#13;
• Field Experience has given&#13;
me an excellent start in&#13;
teaching. I am now sure that&#13;
teaching is what I want to&#13;
do.&#13;
• I enjoyed my Field Experience&#13;
very much. I think its'&#13;
an excellent course and it&#13;
really helps acquaint prospective&#13;
teachers with all the&#13;
things a teacher does . . . I&#13;
got to do a variety of activities.&#13;
I h ated to see it end.&#13;
• She (the cooperating teacher)&#13;
was very encouraging.&#13;
She made this experience&#13;
more meaningful by allowing&#13;
me to work with a wide&#13;
variety of activities. She was&#13;
never critical or inhibiting&#13;
and added helpful comments&#13;
and gave me many&#13;
new ideas. She made the experience&#13;
a success for me.&#13;
Education 202 Methods of&#13;
Teaching is taken concurrently&#13;
with Field Experience. Mrs.&#13;
Diane Johnson, an experienced&#13;
elementary teacher and reading&#13;
specialist, is the instructor.&#13;
Methods of Teaching is designed&#13;
to provide the Field Experience&#13;
student with the basic skills&#13;
neccessary for teaching and&#13;
functioning in the classroom —&#13;
lesson planning, selection of&#13;
instructional materials, methods,&#13;
and classroom management.&#13;
Methods is an elective for art&#13;
and music majors.&#13;
Mrs. Johnson supervises approximately&#13;
half of the Field&#13;
Experience students. The remaining&#13;
Education 200 students are&#13;
supervised by Mrs. Lenore&#13;
Burckel who has experience&#13;
teaching at both the elementary&#13;
and secondary levels as well as at&#13;
the university level. Both&#13;
supervisors have experience&#13;
working in this program and thus&#13;
are able to relate to the concerns&#13;
of the Field Experience student&#13;
as well as those of the teacher&#13;
with whom the student works.&#13;
For information stop at the&#13;
Education table during registration&#13;
or contact Vicki Burch in&#13;
Greenquist 210. Students in Field&#13;
Experience must have at least&#13;
second semester Freshman&#13;
standing.&#13;
ganger&#13;
is looking for advertising&#13;
sales people for the fall&#13;
semester.&#13;
Contact John A.Gabriel,&#13;
Ranger office. Tallent Hall,&#13;
UW-Parkside, Kenosha, Wi.&#13;
53141, or call 553-2295&#13;
by Humanities Division&#13;
More film courses, an expanded introductory&#13;
humanities course, and the return of several&#13;
popular courses will make up the interdisciplinary&#13;
humanities curriculum this fall.&#13;
The courses, announced by Professor Peter Hoff,&#13;
Humanities Program Co-ordinator, include the&#13;
following:&#13;
Three film courses will be taught by Walter&#13;
Ulbricht: "Basic Film Making," "Introduction to&#13;
Film," and a special module course taught at\the&#13;
Golden Rondelle Theater: "Wisconsin Artists on&#13;
Film."&#13;
"Introduction to the Humanities" is now a&#13;
two-semester sequence. Professors Hoff and Dennis&#13;
Dean will each offer a section of the course this fall.&#13;
"Fiendish Heroes: Don Juan and Faust" is a&#13;
brand-new offering. Professor Hoff, who will teach&#13;
the course, says it will "explore the literature, music&#13;
drama, and art which has been inspired by those&#13;
two unusual and fascinating heroes — the 'great&#13;
lover' Don Juan and the adventuresome&#13;
philosopher Faust, who sold his soul to the Devil."&#13;
Parkside's new French professor, Evelyn Zepp,&#13;
will teach an English language section of "French&#13;
Civilization and Culture," in conjunction with her&#13;
French language version of the course.&#13;
"Death and Dying," a humanities course which&#13;
has attracted a great deal of student interest during&#13;
recent summer sessions, will return to the regular&#13;
academic year curriculum. Professor Wayne&#13;
Johnson will teach the course.&#13;
The film courses have traditionally attracted&#13;
Parkside students who wish to learn about one of&#13;
the twentieth century's most vital media of&#13;
communication and artistic expression. Ulbricht&#13;
will teach the development of American film in the&#13;
fall, European in the spring.&#13;
The expansion of "Introduction to the&#13;
Humanities" to six credits has long been urged by&#13;
students and faculty members who see the course&#13;
as a good beginning for students who wish to&#13;
become familiar with the interrelationships of&#13;
history, philosophy, music, painting, and other arts.&#13;
The Fiendish Heroes" course was designed with&#13;
the hundreds of students in mind who have already&#13;
taken Introduction to the Humanities; it is&#13;
however, open to all interested students.&#13;
According to Professor Hoff, the interdisciplinary&#13;
courses available in this fall's Humanities Program&#13;
represent "a good blend of, successful regular&#13;
offerings ev with ewxv&lt;c_itni.nmgg nneeww ccoouurrsseess.. "&#13;
Film Artists from Wisconsin: new course&#13;
A new course will be offered this semester&#13;
entitled Wisconsin Artists on Film. The eight week,&#13;
two credit module listed in the Humanities&#13;
discipline will feature such local figures as Don&#13;
Ameche, Ben Hecht, Frederic March, Spencer&#13;
Tracy, Irving Wallace, and Orson Welles.&#13;
"I believe this course represents the first&#13;
systematic inquiry of these talented Wisconsin Film&#13;
Artists," said Walt Ulbricht, the instructor of&#13;
Wisconsin Artists on Film. "We will explore the&#13;
significant Wisconsin heritage of each figure and&#13;
discuss the film career of each individual by&#13;
focusing on a representative film. Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin, for some unknown reason, has&#13;
produced a prolific number of outstanding film&#13;
actors, writers, and directors."&#13;
In an effort to increase community involvement&#13;
with the Wisconsin Artists on Film course, the&#13;
Golden Rondelle Theater of the Johnson Wax&#13;
Corporation will host the film screenings in Racine.&#13;
"It is our intention that a larger segment of&#13;
people may become interested in this course if the&#13;
instruction is held off campus," Ulbricht noted.&#13;
"We hope to draw the non-traditional student to&#13;
Wisconsin Artists on Film and introduce the student&#13;
to the educational opportunities at Parkside."&#13;
Wisconsin Artists on Film will be held on&#13;
Wednesday evenings, 7-9:30 p.m., October 5 -&#13;
November 30 at the Golden Rondelle.&#13;
Forthcoming films include:&#13;
October 5 The Front Page (1931)&#13;
Screenplay by Ben Hecht&#13;
Alexander's Ragtime Band (1938)&#13;
Starring Don Ameche&#13;
The Magnificent Amersons (1942)&#13;
Directed by Orson Welles&#13;
The Best Years of Our Lives (1946)&#13;
Starring Frederic March&#13;
November 2 Adam's Rib (1949)&#13;
Starring Spencer Tracy&#13;
November 9 Inherit the Wind (1960)&#13;
Starring Spencer Tracy and&#13;
Frederic March&#13;
November 16 Split Second (1953)&#13;
Screenplay by Irving Wallace&#13;
The Man (1969)&#13;
Based on a novel by Irving Wallace&#13;
October 12&#13;
October 19&#13;
October 26&#13;
November 30&#13;
Poli Sci course offered&#13;
by Meier aide&#13;
Politics on the local state and national levels will be the subject of&#13;
SCi6nCe C0UB" thiS fa" University o,&#13;
On Monday nights, James McCarville, an administrative aide to&#13;
Milwaukee Mayor Henry Meier, will teach "Politics in Wisconsin " a&#13;
course covering the state political scene, which will have several&#13;
state politicians as guest lecturers.&#13;
Tuesday nights Lynn Eley, UW-Extension professor, will teach&#13;
Local Public Policy Process," an examination of how public policy is&#13;
made in local governmental agencies&#13;
Wednesday nights, William Murin, associate professor of political&#13;
h W'" t6aCh "Bureaucratic Politics," an overview of&#13;
pohcy outUpru?sUCraCVOPerateSand h°W intema' P°litiCS affect Public&#13;
I n f a T a S t l r ^&#13;
German Department presents&#13;
drama, audiovisual classes&#13;
N Pepartment wil1 offer a new literature seminar under&#13;
h d * 1 nWry Drama' MWF 1:00 P-m- to 1:50 p m given&#13;
by Professor Eugene L. Norwood who has joined the German staff on&#13;
a fulltime basis. The prerequisites for this 3-credit course, for which&#13;
equivalent § °" mdividual basis' are German 204 or&#13;
44^90^TT n ^ermj*n' offered under No.&#13;
wJk T o P r 5 P m ' 8,ven bV Professor Harry A&#13;
bruck, Jhls 3'credlt course is an experimental one, aimed at the&#13;
rn don rC C?erma" conversation only and has no prerequisites&#13;
course) reP'aCe tHe 103/104 fu" yMr lntr°ductory German&#13;
Engineers to&#13;
be refreshed&#13;
Three non-credit evening&#13;
courses for engineers will be&#13;
offered by the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Extension this fall at&#13;
UW-Parkside.&#13;
Basic Engineering Refresher,&#13;
coordinated by Walter Feldt,&#13;
P.E., and associate professor of&#13;
Engineering Sciente at UWParkside,&#13;
will begin August 30,&#13;
7:30 p.m., and meet on 11&#13;
Tuesdays,&#13;
Concepts of Probability and&#13;
Statistics will be taught by&#13;
Gerald Szczepanski, Operations&#13;
Research and Production Manager&#13;
at S.C. Johnson and Son,&#13;
Racine, beginning September 7,&#13;
7:30 p.m., 8 Wednesdays.&#13;
Materials Requirements Planning&#13;
will also be instructed by&#13;
Mr. Szczepanski, beginning&#13;
November 2, 7:30 p.m., 6&#13;
Wednesdays.&#13;
Registration for these courses&#13;
should be made through&#13;
University Extension at UWParkside&#13;
a week before the class&#13;
is to begin.&#13;
A number of other courses for&#13;
engineers and technicians will be&#13;
offered through SEEN and ETN,&#13;
telecommunication networks.&#13;
For a complete listing contact&#13;
University Extension (phone&#13;
553-2312).&#13;
people&#13;
Mordecai Lee&#13;
State representative&#13;
teaches from experience&#13;
State Representative Mordecai Lee has been&#13;
appointed an adjunct professor of political science&#13;
1Q77 7A !,rS'tV °f Wisco™n-Parkside for the&#13;
1977-78 academic year. Lee was an assistant&#13;
professor of political science at UW-P before his&#13;
election from Milwaukee's West side in 1976,&#13;
Lee s appointment as adjunct professor carries no&#13;
salary. He is donating his services to,the university&#13;
Rep. Lee possesses an unusual background both&#13;
as an elected official and as a university teacher of&#13;
political science," said Prof. Samuel J. Pernacciaro&#13;
coordinator of the political science discipline. "He&#13;
can offer students a unique perspective by bridging&#13;
the gap between the classroom study of&#13;
government and the 'real world' of public affairs&#13;
Students should benefit greatly from his teaching at&#13;
UW-Parkside."&#13;
Mordecai Lee&#13;
Pernacciaro said Lee will present seminars on&#13;
such subjects as the legislative process, Wisconsin&#13;
s ate government and the electoral process. Lee&#13;
also is slated to be a frequent guest lecturer in a&#13;
three-credit - fall evening course, "Politics in&#13;
Wisconsin," which will meet Mondays from 6:30 to&#13;
7:15 p.m. and will be taught by James McCarville&#13;
an administrative assistant to Milwaukee Mayoi&#13;
Henry Meier. y&#13;
Lee is a native of Milwaukee and holds the Ph D&#13;
degree in government from Syracuse University He&#13;
has been a guest scholar at the Brookings&#13;
nstitution m Washington, DC., and served as&#13;
legislative assistant to Milwaukee Congressman&#13;
Henry Reuss.&#13;
Adult students&#13;
hove advantages&#13;
Stuart L. Rubner has been&#13;
named Director of Community&#13;
Student Services (CSS) at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
The CSS office was established&#13;
recently to serve prospective and&#13;
enrolled adult students. About&#13;
one-third of UW-P's enrollment&#13;
consists of students over 25 and&#13;
nearly half of all students attend&#13;
part-time. The CSS office works&#13;
with individuals in such areas as&#13;
career change and exploration,&#13;
problems of school and work and&#13;
family, and part-time educational&#13;
planning.&#13;
Rubner comes to UW-P from&#13;
Fairfield (Conn.) University,&#13;
where he has been a professor in&#13;
the Division of Counseling and&#13;
Community Services in the&#13;
Graduate School of Education.&#13;
He holds bachelor's and master's&#13;
degrees from UW-Stout and&#13;
earned the Ph.D. degree in&#13;
counseling and guidance from&#13;
UW-Madison.&#13;
While at Madison, he was&#13;
involved in a project directed at&#13;
guiding adults toward postsecondary&#13;
educational opportunities&#13;
in Wisconsin, and in&#13;
Connecticut he received several&#13;
grants for studies of continuing&#13;
an adult education. He also has&#13;
served as a consultant to the&#13;
Taunton, Mass., Chamber of&#13;
Commerce and to the city of&#13;
e ding, Conn., on continuing&#13;
education projects. He is&#13;
represented by articles in a&#13;
number of professional journals&#13;
and has lectured before&#13;
counseling and guidance groups&#13;
throughout the country.&#13;
What do adult students&#13;
returning to the classroom have&#13;
going for and against them? On&#13;
balance, there are considerably&#13;
more plusses than minuses for&#13;
most persons, according to&#13;
Rubner.&#13;
Whether returning to the&#13;
university after some years or&#13;
starting for the first time, adults&#13;
have the advantages of maturity,&#13;
experience and well-developed&#13;
problem-solving skills — essential&#13;
ingredients for performance&#13;
in higher education, Rubner said.&#13;
This is a particularly good time&#13;
for adults to go back to school,&#13;
Rubner said, since universities&#13;
today have become much more&#13;
sensitive to their special needs&#13;
and to adult educational&#13;
development.&#13;
The hurdles faced by adults&#13;
going back to school usually&#13;
revolve around academics,&#13;
careers, finances, family or&#13;
strictly personal problems,&#13;
Rubner said.&#13;
The important thing about&#13;
such hurdles, he added, is that&#13;
the individual and the university&#13;
work together to identify and&#13;
reduce any problem areas so that&#13;
the individual can get on with&#13;
Stuart Rubner&#13;
the job of pursuing an education.&#13;
Adult students' reasons for&#13;
going back to school are diverse,&#13;
he said, and it's important for&#13;
them to sit down with someone&#13;
knowledgeable about the university&#13;
and talk over reasons for&#13;
returning to school, their goals&#13;
and what they expect&#13;
encounter at the university&#13;
order to get a realistic&#13;
expectation of what continuing&#13;
higher education can mean for&#13;
them.&#13;
to&#13;
in&#13;
Hagarty heads&#13;
basic skills&#13;
program&#13;
Carole E. Hagarty has been&#13;
named Director of Educational&#13;
Program Support in the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
s Office of Educational&#13;
Services.&#13;
The program she will direct&#13;
provides assistance and information&#13;
to prospective and enrolled&#13;
students with potential for&#13;
college success, but who need&#13;
improvement in basic learningstudy&#13;
skills. The program&#13;
provides testing, diagnostic&#13;
assessment and tutorial and&#13;
small group instruction in study&#13;
skills, reading, writing, mathematics&#13;
and library use.&#13;
Students can use the service, a&#13;
part of Parkside's Collegiate&#13;
Carole Hagarty&#13;
Skills Program, based on&#13;
admissions requirements, placement&#13;
test results, referrals by&#13;
advisors or faculty members or&#13;
on their own initiative.&#13;
Hagarty has been a research&#13;
associate in the Racine Unified&#13;
School District with special&#13;
responsibilities for coordination&#13;
of the district's minimum&#13;
standards program.&#13;
She received her bachelor's&#13;
degree from Duquesne University,&#13;
Pittsburgh, a masters degree&#13;
in nursing education and a Ph. D.&#13;
degree in educational psychology&#13;
with emphasis on psychology&#13;
of learning, research design&#13;
and statistics from Marquette&#13;
University.&#13;
Management Majors&#13;
Important Meeting&#13;
Thursday Sept. 1, 7:00 PM&#13;
Classroom 0-107&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGEMENT&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
The Management Science Division is looking for students&#13;
to ass.st the Division and individual Faculty members with&#13;
clerical, course related and research activities. Students&#13;
should have good academic records. Days and hours are&#13;
flexible and can be arranged around your class schedule.&#13;
Preference will be given to students who qualify for&#13;
work-study assistance. Salary - 82.25 - 82.75 per hour.&#13;
Contact Mrs. Shelley&#13;
- 553-2243&#13;
or a Faculty member&#13;
9a is looking for writers, photographers and&#13;
editors for the fall semester.&#13;
Contact Phil Livingston or Tom Cooper,&#13;
Ranger office. Tallent Hall,&#13;
UW-Parkside, Kenosha, Wi.&#13;
53141, or call 553-2295&#13;
/&#13;
sports&#13;
Athletics adds staff coaches&#13;
Parkside's Physical Education&#13;
and Athletics program has added&#13;
two new staff members this year.&#13;
Susan Tobachnik, from the&#13;
University of Illinois-Champaign,&#13;
will coach women's basketball&#13;
and women's tennis as well as&#13;
coordinate the activities in the&#13;
Human Performance Laboratory.&#13;
Linda Draft, from Michigan&#13;
State, will coach women's&#13;
volleyball and women's track.&#13;
Golf, Basketball meetings slated&#13;
Two important meetings for prospective varsity&#13;
sports participants were announced by Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens for September.&#13;
The Varsity Golf meeting will be held in the P.E.&#13;
Building, September 6, at 4:00 P.M.&#13;
The Varsity Basketball meeting will also be in tl&#13;
P.E. Building on September 12, at 4:00 P.M.&#13;
Anyone interested but not able to attend shou&#13;
contact Coach Stephens at (414) 553-2317 or leave&#13;
message at (414) 553-2245.&#13;
Tlje Campus&#13;
Outf&#13;
Allen Fredricksen photograph&#13;
The Cross Country Course is&#13;
gaining national recognition and&#13;
is also the site of the NAIA&#13;
National Cross Country Championship&#13;
both this year and next&#13;
year.&#13;
5 Subject&#13;
Notebook&#13;
Reg. $4.00&#13;
NOW $2.98&#13;
season&#13;
the U.S. Track and Field&#13;
Federation's Women's Nationals,&#13;
Veteran's Nationals, Master's&#13;
Nationals, and the Men's&#13;
Mid-America Cross Country&#13;
Championships beginning at&#13;
10:00 a.m., Saturday, November&#13;
5.&#13;
Pencils, notebooks, pens, tape, erasers, you&#13;
name it we've got it. Everything you could&#13;
possibly need for getting through your college&#13;
- adventure. Just stop down at the bookstore to&#13;
check our vast supplies and put together your&#13;
own campus survival kit.&#13;
UW Parkside&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
Three track events open sports&#13;
Three big track events will&#13;
start Parkside's sports program&#13;
this Fall. All three events will be&#13;
run on UW-Parkside's National&#13;
Cross Country Course located off&#13;
Highway JR.&#13;
The U.S. Track and Field&#13;
Federation Midwest Collegiate&#13;
Cross Country Championships&#13;
will commence Saturday, September&#13;
24, at 12:00 noon&#13;
(women's 3 mile) and at 1:15&#13;
p.m. (men's 5 mile).&#13;
The 1977 Fall All Comers Cross&#13;
Country Meets on September&#13;
18, 24, October 9 and 23, will&#13;
begin at 1:00 p.m. Anyone&#13;
interested in these events should&#13;
contact Lucian Rosa at 553-2245&#13;
or 552-7869.&#13;
Parkside will also be the site of&#13;
news&#13;
Internship program&#13;
announces openinqs The - &gt; Public Service \Internship Program (PSIP) at&#13;
fu ^ A/; „ 6_ 'MT3irj at In the nast PCID the University of Wisconsin-Parkside has fall&#13;
semester openings for students who wish to earn&#13;
political science credits as interns in local, state or&#13;
national government agencies.&#13;
PSIP students get practical experience in working&#13;
in political campaigns, helping with legal services&#13;
for the poor, solving constituent problems for&#13;
legislators, assisting local administrators in&#13;
providing community services, working with&#13;
planning agencies and assisting local court&#13;
agencies. Students can earn from three to twelve&#13;
credits as interns.&#13;
Cavlord M ,Vear PSIP interns have worked f°r Sen.&#13;
Caylord Nelson, Cong. Les Aspin, the City of&#13;
Police n P°'iCe DePartment, Kenosha&#13;
Defend PA«ment' Racine CountV Public&#13;
Defenders Office, Racine County Planner&#13;
Wisconsin Department of Local Affairs and&#13;
Rarin rT?'' C°UntV JuVenile Court.&#13;
Rac ne Clerk of Courts, Kenosha County Juvenile&#13;
Court and other public and private agencies.&#13;
ersons interested in enrolling in the PSIP&#13;
program can pick up application forms in UW-P's&#13;
Classroom Bldg. Room 367 (or phone 553-2316).&#13;
Parkside cited by state study&#13;
11 Field Museum seeks&#13;
volunteers&#13;
The Field Museum of Natural History, in Chicago, Illinois, wants&#13;
volunteers who will give their time and skills to the departments of&#13;
anthropology, botany, geology, zoology, education, exhibition, and&#13;
public relations.&#13;
Opportunities range from research and manuscript editing to&#13;
specimen conservation, language translation, specimen-labeling,&#13;
fossil-sorting and preparation, photography, taxidermy, carpentry,&#13;
figure sculpting, maintenance and repair, and book restoration!&#13;
Volunteer efforts greatly enhance the quality of museum endeavors&#13;
in all areas. In return, the program offers a vehicle for personal&#13;
growth and continuing education.&#13;
Applicants must have a strong interest or background in natural&#13;
history and be willing to commit themselves to volunteering at least&#13;
one day per week. On-the-job training is provided by the various&#13;
departments. A formal training program for education department&#13;
volunteers starts September 21.&#13;
Qualified applicants should write or call Vicki Grigelaitis,&#13;
Volunteer Coordinator, Department of Education, Field Museum of&#13;
Natural History, Chicago, Illinois, (312) 922-9410, ext. 360.&#13;
A University of Wisconsin-Parkside project was&#13;
one of nine "outstanding management improvement&#13;
techniques" cited in a state study of&#13;
economy and productivity measures taken by&#13;
various state agencies and institutions during the&#13;
period of 1973-76.&#13;
The Department of Administration (DOA) report&#13;
cited Parkside's use of prairie grass rather than lawn&#13;
turf in landscaping as resulting in a saving of more&#13;
than $56,000 per year over the period studied since&#13;
prairie grass needs only occasional burning for&#13;
maintenance, but no mowing or watering,&#13;
The study showed productivity savings of $47&#13;
million by all state agencies over the period&#13;
studied.&#13;
The report suggested that similar landscaping&#13;
approaches should be considered for the&#13;
Department of Transportation's highway program&#13;
as well as at many state institutions, including other&#13;
campuses.&#13;
Prairie landscaping at UW-P is part of a larger&#13;
effort aimed at restoring much of the unwooded&#13;
portions of the 700-acre campus to the natural&#13;
prairie state which greeted the first settlers in the&#13;
Kenosha-Racine area. About 120 acres of the&#13;
campus have been seeded over the past couple of&#13;
years and are well on their way to restoration.&#13;
Eugene Gasiorkiewics, professor of life science,&#13;
and the UW-P Physical Plant office have&#13;
coordinated the efforts of Parkside staff on the&#13;
restoration project. Gasiorkiewicz also coordinates&#13;
activities and management of UW-P's 500 acres of&#13;
off-campus prairie holdings, which include the&#13;
well-known Chiwaukee Prairie along Lake Michigan&#13;
near the Illinois border, the Harris Tract in western&#13;
Kenosha County and Ranger Mac's Fen near&#13;
Burlington.&#13;
The campus prairie grasses include big and little&#13;
blue stem, Indian grass, side oats, switch grass and&#13;
canary grass.&#13;
In addition to serving as "classrooms by the&#13;
acres" for students and area residents, UW-P's&#13;
natural areas have been visited by prairie&#13;
management experts and scientists from the U.S.&#13;
and Canada.&#13;
Econ from p. 5&#13;
The cost of college, the supply&#13;
of college graduates available in&#13;
the next decade, and the&#13;
demand for them will determine&#13;
whether or not college is a good&#13;
financial investment. Although&#13;
we can make estimates for each&#13;
of these factors, to determine&#13;
what will happen to the salaries&#13;
of college educated workers over&#13;
the next 40 or 50 years is far more&#13;
difficult. If the supply exceeds&#13;
the demand (as seems likely in&#13;
the near future), salaries will not&#13;
increase as they did during the&#13;
first half of this century and&#13;
college will not be as profitable&#13;
an investment.&#13;
What Should a High School&#13;
Graduate Do&#13;
This analysis of the economics&#13;
of a college education attempts&#13;
to point out the complexity of&#13;
the question, "Is college a good&#13;
investment?" But even granting&#13;
the complexity, one cannot leap&#13;
from this question to the&#13;
question a student is most likely&#13;
to ask, "Is college good for me?"&#13;
To answer that question merely&#13;
in monetary terms requires a&#13;
careful review of the individual&#13;
student's finances. It is all very&#13;
well to say, for example, that&#13;
students x and y will enjoy a&#13;
higher rate of return if they&#13;
invest in real estate'than if they&#13;
invest in college; but, in&#13;
practice, parents are neither&#13;
willing nor able to present their&#13;
children with the lump sums that&#13;
such investments require. Nor do&#13;
students have in hand and&#13;
available for investment for&#13;
foregone earnings that bulk so&#13;
large in an analysis of the cost of&#13;
college. At the same time,&#13;
however, the financial return on&#13;
a college education is a&#13;
long-term investment. Although&#13;
the average earnings of a high&#13;
school graduate at every age, the&#13;
difference becomes much larger&#13;
only after middle age.&#13;
Not all the&#13;
occupations that pay well&#13;
11 Parkside Academic Calendar&#13;
w. 1977-78&#13;
SEMESTER 1 »&#13;
Faculty reports August 26,1977&#13;
11j Registration August 30 — Se ptember 2&#13;
&gt;5x : Instruction begins September 6&#13;
i Thanksgiving recess November 24-26&#13;
| Instruction ends December 15&#13;
: Final Examinations December 16-23&#13;
: Commencement December 18&#13;
i SEMESTER II&#13;
:x: ;• ; Registration January 10-13 w ; Instruction begins January 16&#13;
vK | Spring recess March 11-19&#13;
| Instruction ends May 12&#13;
; Final examinations May 13-20&#13;
i Commencement May 21&#13;
\ Faculty Contract&#13;
\ period ends May 25&#13;
j SUMMER SESSION&#13;
lj Instruction Begins June 19&#13;
\ Instruction ends August 12&#13;
require a college education, and&#13;
not all the occupations that&#13;
attract college graduates pay&#13;
well. Locomotive engineers,&#13;
electricians, and police officers&#13;
earn more than high school&#13;
teachers, librarians, and registered&#13;
nurses.&#13;
Finally, one must remember&#13;
that colleges are not banks; they&#13;
do not propose to make money&#13;
for investors. They do try to&#13;
enlarge a student's world: to add&#13;
new people, new pleasures, and&#13;
new ideas. Careful addition, in&#13;
short, enables us to determine&#13;
the cost of a college education;&#13;
but even the most accurate&#13;
estimates and projections of&#13;
salaries, fringe benefits, and&#13;
employment levels cannot reveal&#13;
its value.&#13;
Both the CPC report on&#13;
starting salaries and the Endicott&#13;
Report, published by Northwestern&#13;
University, can be&#13;
inspected in the office of Verna&#13;
Zimmerman, Placement Coordinator,&#13;
in Tallent Hall.&#13;
VA chief puts agency on alert status&#13;
Administrator of Veterans&#13;
Affairs Max Cleland has put his&#13;
agency on 'alert status to smooth&#13;
the transition to new procedures&#13;
in issuing millions of dollars&#13;
monthly in Gl Bill education&#13;
benefits checks to veterans.&#13;
In a conference call with&#13;
directors of 58 Veterans&#13;
Administration regional offices,&#13;
Cleland recently ordered a&#13;
review of all steps in the process&#13;
between registration and payment&#13;
of benefits to one million&#13;
Gl Bill students.&#13;
The VA directors were told to&#13;
augment campus manning to&#13;
assist schools in the certification&#13;
process. School administrators&#13;
have been asked by Cleland to&#13;
extend help to veterans in light&#13;
of the payments change. A&#13;
massive publicity campaign has&#13;
been aimed by the VA at the&#13;
veterans themselves in an&#13;
attempt to make all concerned&#13;
award of the new payment&#13;
procedures.&#13;
Cleland's nationwide effort&#13;
resulted from the decision by&#13;
Congress last year to end&#13;
educational payments at the&#13;
beginning of each month. The&#13;
law also ended automatic&#13;
advance payments of as much as&#13;
two month's benefits at the&#13;
beginning of a school term.&#13;
These must now be requested by&#13;
the student.&#13;
The monthly prepayments&#13;
resulted in overpayment of&#13;
benefits when some schools and&#13;
students failed to notify the VA&#13;
of student dropouts or nonattendance.&#13;
The last prepayment benefits&#13;
were paid in May. Continuing&#13;
students received allowances for&#13;
June on July 1st.&#13;
Cleland has now directed&#13;
attention to the fall enrollment&#13;
and new advance pay procedures.&#13;
Regional office directors&#13;
were told "to take every possible&#13;
step to assure that each veteranstudent&#13;
is aware of the new&#13;
payment procedures.&#13;
"I don't want a single veteran&#13;
to be surprised," Cleland said. "I&#13;
want this change to be&#13;
accomplished as smoothly as&#13;
was the end of the monthly&#13;
prepayments. I am confident&#13;
with maximum cooperation&#13;
between VA, school officials and&#13;
the veterans, we can make the&#13;
switch without undue hardship."&#13;
If a student requests advance&#13;
payment of the first month — o r&#13;
partial month — of attendance,&#13;
plus the following month and&#13;
the school agrees to process it,&#13;
the normal interval until the first&#13;
recurring VA check is received&#13;
will be 80-85 days.&#13;
Cleland urged students to&#13;
analyze what the change will&#13;
mean to their individual budgets&#13;
and to plan for any gap in their&#13;
benefit payments.&#13;
"Since advance payments for&#13;
the beginning of the next school&#13;
term are no longer automatic,&#13;
anyone wishing to apply for&#13;
them should do so as early as&#13;
possible," he said, "allowing for&#13;
a 30-day processing period."&#13;
Students who can't find&#13;
needed campus jobs should&#13;
inquire about VA's work-study&#13;
program, Cleland advised.&#13;
The VA chief urged students&#13;
having questions to contact their&#13;
veterans representative on campus&#13;
or the nearest VA regional&#13;
office.&#13;
events 12&#13;
Tuesday, August 30&#13;
Registration Begins in Wyllie Library Learning Center (Main Place)&#13;
for continuing students with this date on their registration packets&#13;
Bookstore Annex is Open enter through Library doors and go down&#13;
the stairs to D-2 level.&#13;
Wednesday, August 31&#13;
Registration in Wyllie Library Learning Center (Main Place) for&#13;
continuing students with this date on their registration packets.&#13;
Thursday, September 1&#13;
Open Registration 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. tor Part-time students enrolling&#13;
for 6 or less credits. Main Place.&#13;
Friday, September 2&#13;
Open Registration 1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m.to 8:00 p m&#13;
tor new students, transfers, and re-entry students. Main Place.&#13;
Saturday, September 3&#13;
Audit Registration 8:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. for audit students only in&#13;
Mam Place. -&#13;
Monday, September 5&#13;
Labor Day the University of Wisconsin-Parkside campus is closed all&#13;
day.&#13;
T uesday, Septem ber 6&#13;
Study Lists available in Classroom Building Concourse. These lists are&#13;
from the computer center and should contain all the classes&#13;
enroMed for FIRST DAY OF CLASSES of Fall Semester&#13;
i9//.Open Registration Resumes in Main Place for all students.&#13;
Wednesday, September 7&#13;
RANGER'S FIRST REGULAR ISSUE available in marked distribution&#13;
boxes throughout the campus. Free!&#13;
Drops and Adds - program changes begin in Main Place.&#13;
Thursday, September 8&#13;
Last day for payment of fees and tuition without penalty&#13;
Registration Ends&#13;
Events and Classified forms&#13;
at Tallent Hall 290&#13;
or call 553-2295&#13;
PAB presents&#13;
Folk music in the Union&#13;
Starting September 14, at 2:00 p.m., Parkside's Coffeehouse&#13;
' preS6nt folk musicians in Union conference rooms&#13;
104-106. The rooms are right off the main concourse overlooking the&#13;
bridge.&#13;
The Coffeehouse Committee is chaired by Paul Kucharski a&#13;
Sturtevant junior. The committee is part of the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board, the student organization that sponsors films, concerts&#13;
dances, and other union events.&#13;
In the past, the coffeehouse was produced in other locations&#13;
throughout the campus. The Whiteskellar was in the D-2 level of&#13;
Greenquist Hall. The area is now used for storage. The Student&#13;
Activities Building, that metal building next to Tallent Hall, used to&#13;
serve beer and food and was the site of films as well as several&#13;
successful folk festivals. The building now houses the Child Care&#13;
Center and Chiwaukee Prairie Food Co-op. Last semester, after the&#13;
Union opened, the committee used the cafeteria and Union Square&#13;
for their folk acts. Many felt these two last locations did not provide a&#13;
proper atmosphere for folk type music. Many performers found it&#13;
hard to play in front of stacks of beer cups in Union Square and in the&#13;
always empty cafeteria.&#13;
The new location in the Union conference rooms will feature good&#13;
lighting, a mobile stage, and hopefully, a place where students can&#13;
gather to listen to performers from the national coffeehouse circuit&#13;
Wine will be served to those with proper identification. No plans&#13;
were made to charge admission.&#13;
Coffeehouse Schedule&#13;
Union 104-106,2:00 to 4:00 p.m.&#13;
Sept. 14&#13;
Oct. 5&#13;
Oct. 12&#13;
Nov. 2&#13;
Dec. 7&#13;
Louise Dimiceli-Chicago&#13;
Claudia Schmidt-Green Bay area&#13;
Barry Drake-New York&#13;
Dick Pinney-Madison&#13;
Dave Parker-Kenosha&#13;
Watch Ranger for times and dates of the Fall Folk Festival sometime&#13;
in November.&#13;
Suck admission&#13;
Fall movie schedule&#13;
announced&#13;
Parkside's Film Committee has released the Fall schedule of&#13;
upcoming films shown at the Union Cinema in the Union building.&#13;
The Film Committee is part of the Parkside Activities Board and is&#13;
chaired by Doug Wright, a sophomore from Racine.&#13;
Admission is $1.00 for students with proper identification. Popcorn&#13;
and refreshments are sold inside.&#13;
FILM&#13;
Fritz the Cat&#13;
Fritz {he Cat&#13;
The Wild Bunch&#13;
Dirty Harry&#13;
Magnum Force&#13;
Magnum Force&#13;
Uptown Saturday Night&#13;
Uptown Saturday Night&#13;
Sahara&#13;
Caine Mutiny&#13;
African Queen&#13;
African Queen&#13;
What's Up Tiger Lilly&#13;
What's Up Tiger Lilly&#13;
My Little Chickadee&#13;
The Bank Dick&#13;
A Clockwork Orange&#13;
A Clockwork Orange&#13;
Day for Night&#13;
Day for Night&#13;
The Immigrants&#13;
The Immigrants&#13;
The Exorcist&#13;
The Exorcist&#13;
Dog Day Afternoon&#13;
Dog Day Afternoon&#13;
Mary Queen of Scotts&#13;
Mary Queen of Scotts&#13;
Anne of a Thousand Days&#13;
Anne of a Thousand Days&#13;
Date&#13;
Fri., Sept. 16&#13;
Sun., Sept. 18&#13;
Wed., Sept. 21&#13;
Thur., Sept. 22&#13;
Fri., Sept. 23&#13;
Sun., Sept. 25&#13;
Fri., Sept. 30&#13;
Sun., Oct. 2&#13;
Wed., Oct. 5&#13;
Thur., Oct. 6 .&#13;
Fri., Oct, 7&#13;
Sun., Oct. 9&#13;
Fri., Oct. 14&#13;
Sun., Oct. 16&#13;
Wed., Oct. 19&#13;
Thur., Nov. 2&#13;
Fri., Nov. 4&#13;
Sun., Nov. 6&#13;
Wed., Nov. 9&#13;
Thur., Nov. 10&#13;
Fri., Nov. 11&#13;
Sun., Nov. 13&#13;
Fri., Nov. 18&#13;
Sun., Nov. 20&#13;
Fri., Dec. 2&#13;
Sun., Dec. 4&#13;
Wed., Dec. 7&#13;
Thur., Dec. 8&#13;
Fri., Dec. 9&#13;
Sun., Dec. 11&#13;
Time&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
2:30 &amp; 7:30 p.m.&#13;
2:30&amp;7:30p.m.&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
2:30 &amp; 7:30 p.m.&#13;
2:30 &amp; 7:30 p.m.&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
7:30p.m.&#13;
2:30 &amp; 7:30 p.m.&#13;
2:30 &amp; 7:30 p.m.&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
2:30 &amp; 7:30 p.m.&#13;
2:30 &amp; 7:30 p.m.&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
7:30p.m.&#13;
8:00p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
2:30&amp;7:30 p.m.&#13;
2:30 &amp; 7:30 p.m.&#13;
8:00p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
Classified&#13;
Ranger positions&#13;
News Editor — Assigns news stories and&#13;
photograph assignments. Serves on&#13;
Editorial Board and makes decisions on&#13;
guest editorials and emergencies. Must&#13;
have one or both of the following times free'&#13;
Mondays 6:00 P.M. to 10:00 P.M., and/or&#13;
Tuesdays 700 A.M. to 2:00 P.M.&#13;
Selection: by Editorial Board. Submit a&#13;
letter of intention to Philip L. Livingston,&#13;
Editor, immediately. Prior newspaper exp.&#13;
helpful but not required.&#13;
Salary — $15.00 to $35.00 per week&#13;
Feature Editor — Assigns feature stories&#13;
and photograph assignments. Serves on&#13;
Editorial Board and makes decisions on&#13;
guest editorials and emergencies. Must&#13;
have both of the following times free-&#13;
Mondays 6:00 P.M. to 10:00 P.M., and&#13;
Tuesdays 7.00 A.M. to 200 P.M.&#13;
Selection: by Editorial Board. Submit a&#13;
letter of intention to Philip L. Livingston,&#13;
immediately. Prior newspaper exp. helpful&#13;
but not required.&#13;
Salary — $15.00 to $35.00 per week&#13;
Circulation Manager — Mails out Rangers&#13;
on Wednesday mornings or Tuesday nights.&#13;
Plans subscription campaigns. Coordinates&#13;
classified advertising. No salary.&#13;
Selection: by Philip L. Livingston, Editor,&#13;
call 553-2295 or come to room 290 in Tallent&#13;
Hall.&#13;
Photographers — Must provide own camera&#13;
equipment. Temporary darkroom until new&#13;
Ranger darkroom is constructed currently&#13;
planned. Ranger needs photographers real&#13;
bad. No salary.&#13;
Selection: by Philip L. Livingston, Editor,&#13;
call 553-2295 or come to room 290 In Tallent&#13;
Hall.&#13;
Classified Ad Charges&#13;
Free: Student ads, 20 words or under for&#13;
one-time run. (25 cents charge for&#13;
every additional 10 words or under.)&#13;
$ .50: For each additional running after the&#13;
first time.&#13;
$1.00: Non-student ads, 20 words or under&#13;
per issue. (25 cents charge for every&#13;
additional 10 words or under.)&#13;
To place a classified ad phone 553-2295.&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
Come Today See Yours&#13;
quality commercial printers&#13;
1417 50th street • 65 8-8990&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
Welcomes You to the First Dance&#13;
of the Year!&#13;
FEVER&#13;
SAT. SEPT. 10 9:00 P.M.&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
$1°" UW-P Students&#13;
sl50 Guests&#13;
p.a.b. presents&#13;
"FRITZ T HE CAT"&#13;
fri.,sept. 16- 8'00p.m&#13;
sun., sept.18-7:30p.m&#13;
union cinema&#13;
! $1.00 !</text>
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                <text>1977-08-30</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
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              <elementText elementTextId="66440">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>University committee forwards&#13;
breadth and academic advising plans&#13;
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              <text>er&#13;
Wednesday, May 11, 1977&#13;
Vol. 5, No. 29&#13;
The&#13;
lies&#13;
secret of educotion&#13;
in respecting the pupil.&#13;
Emerson&#13;
Dan Moehrke&#13;
gets around&#13;
Parkside&#13;
grapher on a tour of the&#13;
academic burtdmgs. leading th&#13;
way 10 hIS self-propelled batterypowered&#13;
chen The cherr has {"'O&#13;
speech, slow for maneuvering&#13;
and fast - about normal walking&#13;
speed - as well as forward and&#13;
reverse controls Before swucb109&#13;
to the mechamzed chair&#13;
about a year and a half ago, Don&#13;
has a standard chair and relied&#13;
on a 'pusher to gel from class to&#13;
clas'&gt; ThE' mechanized &lt;half, he&#13;
S3\S, has gl!¥(&gt;n htm much mor&#13;
fre-edom and mobility&#13;
Don emves on (ampul, bv cab&#13;
{photo one) and has high pratve&#13;
for the dnvees The cab&#13;
company alway" vends on of&#13;
two dnvers .....ho know ho ......to 11ft&#13;
me In and out of lh(l' cab and g...t&#13;
me Into the (hair \3\1\ Don,&#13;
pictured with driver Dorrumc&#13;
Pedtcone ThE'motorized &lt;hair 1\&#13;
stored at Parkude o vermgbt&#13;
while It&lt;. batten are recharged&#13;
Don hOI a tende-d chair for u e&#13;
at the family home at 7517 16th&#13;
eoo'io"." 00 pO,' J 7&#13;
University committee&#13;
by Philip l. livingston&#13;
It'll' umver ..rty cornrruttee met Id-,t wsdnesdev. May I), to draw the&#13;
,lgt'ndcl lor the May 17 faculty senate- meeting Both acadermr&#13;
poh{ It'.., t omnuttee proposals on bre-adth ami ar adermr advtstng&#13;
Wt'H' pI,\( pd on tht' agenda despltP pl..-vpnth hour protesg by Rusty&#13;
lulh'w..,kl, Prp..ldpnt. P&lt;uk~ldf' Studpnt Covprnmpnt ASSOCiation. and&#13;
K,lI1gt'r (wt' t~dllorral. pagt' .2).&#13;
I ht' two ..tudent orgdnllatlOO'&gt; &lt;omplalnt'd of tht' la('k of ..tudent&#13;
Input In Iht' propo dl ... c1&lt;' wt'll d'" tht&gt; ld&lt; k 01 timp to &lt;omnlunKatE' to&#13;
..,tudf'nt .. Iht· kpy l ~Ut&gt;~dnd dltNndtlve" to the rt&gt;vl\pd propo~als&#13;
UrHVpr'&gt;lty (ommlttl't' Illt'mbt'r .... Ddvld Bedch. dssociate professor&#13;
(II P...y( hology. DOI1.1I&lt;1Kummrngo." a~"o&lt; idte profpssor of ~ngllsh.&#13;
1,lrr',' Dtlt'!"&gt;( h. d","'Olldh' proft' ..,or ot ~conol1ll(" ( ommlttpe&#13;
(h,urmdn). ,lOci Mllh.wl M.trron. d .....,oUdtP prole .....or ot Chemlo;try&#13;
(t onlllHttf'f' VI&lt; tL( h&lt;lIrllldn), wPrt' prpwnl ott the mpptlOg Spp('tators&#13;
Ill&lt; ludf'd Hoh Hottmdn. In".,hnlc1n, Rondld \Inlwr, ds...l..,tdnt protessor&#13;
01 Bll'mf' .....M&lt;ll1dgt'nwl1t, l.mw ~hf'd, proh'..,..,or of Llrth)&lt; Il'nn' .• mel&#13;
\\'tlltt'r It'ldl, .l'o ...m ldtt-' prolt-· or 01 Inglllt't'flng (...P( ft'tetr\ 01 Iht'&#13;
I,H lilly)&#13;
Parks Ide is gettmg a head start&#13;
on Handicapped Awareness&#13;
Week, being observed nationally&#13;
from May 16 to 23, but May 9 to&#13;
1S on campus because of final&#13;
exams&#13;
The campus program, sponsored&#13;
by the Parksrde Health&#13;
Office and Societv's Assets. an&#13;
orgaruz anon designed to ard&#13;
persons With either phvsical or&#13;
psychological handicaps. will&#13;
Include an information booth&#13;
staffed by handicapped students&#13;
and a wheelchair basketball&#13;
game between members of&#13;
Society's Assets and past and&#13;
present members of the ParksIde&#13;
varsity team at 7:30 p m on May&#13;
19&#13;
To illustrate both the problems&#13;
and the potential of campus life&#13;
for one kind of handicapped&#13;
student - those (on lined to&#13;
wheelchairs - Donald Moehrke&#13;
of Kenosha, who has cerebral&#13;
palsy took a Campus ews&#13;
Ser v ice reporter and photoforwards&#13;
breadth andacademic&#13;
advising plans&#13;
Mt'mbN'" or the committee \..en' reluctant to dlscu., the h ..O&#13;
propO"'d\...111 dept h&#13;
Our r omnuttee ..houldn I ac t a a censor for th(&gt; senate .,ald&#13;
L.ur\ Duetvc h •&#13;
"1 hp..,t&gt;dpb.ut&gt;... \..'" have bei"'n hearll1g about ha...e ~ot to tilkt"&#13;
pldu' ...onw ...pndtp d( tlon ml~hl bE&gt; the be-\t way to do II. 'aid&#13;
Ml&lt; h.wl Mdrron&#13;
M,uron wa ...dl ...o dgdlO...t ...toPPlng the proposals 111 the Unll,ler lty&#13;
(Olllllllttt"t' until nt'M relll&#13;
'II \\1(-' clo nothing. nOlhll1g Will bE&gt; done by anybody, sdld Marron&#13;
1t'mbpr'" 01 the lommltttJ't" pxprpssed an awarene s that students&#13;
\'\ould nofbt" 10 &lt;la, ...p, dUring tht" faculty senate meeting on May 17&#13;
AI ...u on lht&gt; o;pnatp itl;pnda IS a new calendar proposal for equal&#13;
It'ngth "'Pllw ...lt&gt;r.., by movlOg them £&gt;aeh up a \-'\'eek. an annual&#13;
~rddtl&lt;ltlon (t·..,olutlon. tt"".HhlOg p'&lt;celleme awards. and a faculty&#13;
t omllllttt't' rt'orgdnl./dtlon propo'idl&#13;
lilt' I,ll tllt\ ...t-'fl&lt;1tpmt"t"tlng I.. opt'n to the publiC and Intere5ted&#13;
...tlldt'nh . ..,t,,11&lt;l{lmlnl ...tratof'&gt;. dS ....pll as faculty. are welcome&#13;
See editorial on page 2.&#13;
. .&#13;
Wednesday, May 11. 1977&#13;
Vol. 5 No. 29&#13;
er ()() The secret of education &lt;i)&lt;i)&#13;
lies in respecting the pupil.&#13;
Dan Moehrke&#13;
gets around&#13;
ParkSide&#13;
Park 1de is getting a head tart&#13;
on Handicapped wareness&#13;
Week, being ob erved national!&#13;
from a 16 to 23, but a 9 to&#13;
15 on campus because of final&#13;
exams&#13;
The campu program, ponsored&#13;
b the Parkside Health&#13;
Office and oc1et ' A t , an&#13;
organization designed to aid&#13;
persons with either phy ,cal or&#13;
ps chological handicap , will&#13;
include an information booth&#13;
staffed bv hand, apped studen&#13;
and a \, heelchair ba et ball&#13;
game bet "een members o&#13;
Soctet ' sets and pa t and&#13;
pre ent members of th Parkside&#13;
var 1t team at 7 30 p m. on Ma&#13;
19&#13;
To illustrate both the probl m&#13;
and the potential of campus life&#13;
for one kind o f handicapped&#13;
tudent - tho e tont,n d to&#13;
v,heelchair - · Donald Moehrke&#13;
of Kenosha, ho ha cerebral&#13;
pals, , too a Campu , e"&#13;
Ser ice reporter and photoEmerson&#13;
&#13;
University committee&#13;
forwards breadth and ,..&#13;
academic advising plans&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
I fw univPr,1ty t ommittee mf'l ld~t Wednt-&gt;sday, May 5, to draw the&#13;
.igt&gt;ndc1 tor tht&gt; May 17 faculty senatP meeting Both academic&#13;
pol1c 1t•, committee proposals on breadth and academic advising&#13;
wt&gt;rt• pl,H Pd on the agenda despite eleventh hour prote ts b Ru ty&#13;
I utl1•w,k1 , Pre,1dent , Pc1rk,ide Student Government Assoc1at1on , and&#13;
K&lt;1ngl'r (sPt' t&gt;ditorial , pdge )).&#13;
I ht&gt; two ,tudent orga111Lat1om &lt; omplainPd of the lack of ~tudent&#13;
input m tht• propmc1I, as wPII c1, thP lack oi time to &lt; 0111mu111cate to&#13;
,tuci(•nh tht&gt; kt&gt;y b,uP, c1nd c1ltt'rnc1tivP, to the rev1,Pd propmals.&#13;
Un1vPr,1ty c ommittt&gt;P membt&gt;r, , D,wid Bec1ch , c1ssoc1ate profes or&#13;
ot P,y&lt; hology, Oon.ild Kummings, a,~oc iatt' professor ot 1-nglish,&#13;
I .irry DLwh&lt; h, .t,,oc i.ttt• profpssor of lronomK~ ( &lt; omm1ttee&#13;
&lt; h,11 rn1&lt;1n). ,md Mich.tel Mc1rron, c1ssoudtt' proit&gt;,sor of Chemistr&#13;
l&lt; omm1ttPt' vie l'-l hc11rn1c1n). wnt' prt&gt;wnt &lt;1t the lllf't'ting . SJ)f'ctator,&#13;
11H lud t&gt;d Bob Hotfmdn, irt",hmc1n, Ronc1ld '&gt;mgt&gt;r, a~,1,tant protessor&#13;
ol Bu,11wss Mc1nc1gt&gt;mPnl, fdmt&gt;, '-;hl'c1, proh•"or ot Lirth Snt•ncP. dnd&#13;
\\'&lt;1lt1•r I Pldt , ''"m 1c1te proft'"or ol I ng111t•t•ring (,t'&lt; rPt&lt;lr\ ot tht'&#13;
1&lt;1&lt; ultvJ. -&#13;
'l.1t&gt;mber, 01 the ommttl " rt• r lu tant l ci, cu\ h h\&#13;
proJX&gt; di, in dt&gt;pth&#13;
Our comm11t P shouldn 't ac.t a a nor for th , nat ," 1d&#13;
L,trr\ Out&gt;h&lt; h&#13;
l ht&gt;w dt&gt;bc1te, \\t' hd, e b n heann • about ha •ot to k •&#13;
pl.ic t' ,onw wndte d&lt; t1on m1 •ht b th b q wa to do 11," a,d&#13;
Mu h,wl 1drron&#13;
,\1.irron "d ,11,o c1gc1m t topping th propo al in th univ r ,t&#13;
c omn11tteP unt,I next tdll&#13;
· It Wt' do nothing, nothing will bt&gt; done b an bod ," aid&#13;
\t•mbt-&gt;r, ot tht' t omm11tee e pre ed an awarene 5 that&#13;
would no( bt&gt; inc la w, dunn • the facult \ nate m tin • on 1a 17&#13;
Al,o on lhe Wndtt' agenda I a nt' cal ndar propo al for qual&#13;
l1•ngth wmP,ter, b mo mg them each up a \ , an annual&#13;
gr,1du,1t1on rt&gt;,olut1on. It'd&lt; hin • e cellem award , and a fa ult&#13;
&lt; omm1tt1't' reorgd111.fc1t1on propo\al&#13;
I ht&gt; l,H ult\ w11&lt;1tt' m~ting " OJ)f'n to the public and mt r t d&#13;
,tudPnh. ,1&lt;111 ddmin1,1rc11or . d well as tacult , are " lcome&#13;
See editorial on page 2. &#13;
leditorial&#13;
Why. faculty senate&#13;
should reiect APC· .&#13;
proposals&#13;
requirements (why, who knows, some bright&#13;
student might come up with a better idea)?&#13;
,Declaring a major is an important step that&#13;
should not be regulated by hastened taculty&#13;
members or administrators. At least the requirements&#13;
should take into account the needs of&#13;
students who not only pay for their education, but&#13;
make a choice of Parkside over some other university&#13;
in the area.&#13;
Parkside could have some serious enrollment&#13;
problems if word got around that we had some&#13;
really compl icated bureaucratic requirements.&#13;
Why shouldn't the final proposals be the absolute&#13;
best thought out plans for educating human&#13;
beings in all the land? Enrollment problems won't&#13;
be addressed by a rushed political compromise.&#13;
Ranger urges the faculty senate to consider the&#13;
students who don't know the first thing about the&#13;
proposals in front of them.' How will the requirements&#13;
affect transfer students? How will the final&#13;
requirement be explained to students? Could you&#13;
explain it?&#13;
This modern institution should be the epitomy&#13;
of public community education. We should be&#13;
developing modern ideas for growing acceptance&#13;
by the community. The long, dark creeping list of&#13;
requirements in the Pall timetable will weed out&#13;
enough students. ~&#13;
Ranger proposes putting off senate action on&#13;
the breadth 'and academic advising proposals&#13;
until Fall semester. Division chairmen would have&#13;
enough time to arrange divisional meetings of&#13;
students to discuss the impact and the necessity&#13;
of the requirements in their education.&#13;
If the proposals had adequate and significant&#13;
student input, the requirements would not look&#13;
like, they were drawn up by a bunch of aloof&#13;
faculty members who don't care what students&#13;
think!&#13;
Our Writers&#13;
Bob Hoftman, Chris Clausen, Michael Murphy&#13;
Cheryl Powalisz Jami LaMa.r Karen. Putman&#13;
Linda Lasco. Douglas Edenhauser, Phil Herm~nn&#13;
Ph&lt;:&gt;tollrapners&#13;
, Leanne Dillingham&#13;
, • Editor Philip L. Livingston 553.2295&#13;
Copy Ed~tor Bruce Wagner&#13;
News Editor John McKloskey&#13;
Feature Editor Mona Maillet&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Circulation Sue Marquardt&#13;
, &lt;.tenera,} Mana.ger Thomas R Coo er&#13;
Advertisin~ ,Manager John Gabriel 5Sr;.2:::·2287&#13;
AdvertiSing Sa.les '&#13;
- Ranger is written an.d edited b&#13;
&lt;c, ...... University of 'Wisconsin'Parkside ~:~u:hents of the ,&#13;
....... responsible for its editorial Ii deyare solely&#13;
______ po cyan -content.&#13;
The May 17 faculty senate meeting, will find&#13;
before it aproposal for a breadth requirement and,&#13;
an academic advising proposal.&#13;
The academic policies committee, which&#13;
forwarded the' proposals, held a few open&#13;
hearings to discuss the proposals along with their&#13;
regularly scheduled open meetings, but few&#13;
students showed up. There are also a few&#13;
student seats on the committees and subcommittees&#13;
but only two students served as&#13;
voting members and attended most of the&#13;
committee and subcommittee meetings.&#13;
Although the academic policies committee is&#13;
made up of some of the best professors on this&#13;
campus, Ranger strongly feels that little or no&#13;
student input went' into the proposals that could&#13;
soon affect nearly five thousand students at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
It is not very good planning (or is it?) to have all&#13;
the committee work (rewriting the proposals) take&#13;
place during the last few weeks of classes. Most&#13;
students were doing papers, projects, and&#13;
studying for exams even if they did feel strongly&#13;
about the proposals.&#13;
Both the student government president and&#13;
Ranger editor, aware of this situation, suggested&#13;
holding off action on the proposals untit Tall&#13;
semester. Students should have the chance to , .&#13;
have the time to understand the proposals that&#13;
could affect the requirements for their graduation&#13;
as well as when they would have to declare a&#13;
major and the selection of their advisor.&#13;
There should be a breadth requirement, but it&#13;
should be as easy to understand as the schools in&#13;
our area who compete for the same student&#13;
population. No one will be able to stop acaderntc&#13;
advising. It is probably the best way to advise&#13;
students with a shrinking budget. Why not let&#13;
students have a chance t? discuss their own&#13;
"&#13;
=I editorial&#13;
Why _ faculty senate&#13;
should reiect APC&#13;
proposals , ·&#13;
The May 17 faculty senate meeting will find&#13;
before it a-proposal for a breadth requirement and .&#13;
an academic advising proposal.&#13;
The academic policies committee, which&#13;
forwarded the· proposals, held a few open&#13;
hearings to discuss the proposals along with their&#13;
regularly scheduled open meetings, but few&#13;
students showed up. There are also a few&#13;
student seats on the committees and subcommittees&#13;
but only two students served as&#13;
voting members and attended most of the&#13;
committee and subcommittee meetings.&#13;
Although the academic policies committee is&#13;
made up of some of the best professors on this&#13;
campus, Ranger strongly feels that little or no&#13;
student input went' into the proposals that could&#13;
soon affect nearly five thousand students at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
It is not very good planning (or is it?) to have all&#13;
the committee work (rewriting the proposals) take&#13;
place during the last few weeks of classes. Most&#13;
students were doing papers, projects, and&#13;
studying for exams even if they did feel strongly&#13;
about the proposals.&#13;
Both the student government president and&#13;
Ranger editor, aware of this situation, suggested&#13;
holding off action on the proposals until fall&#13;
semester. Students should have the chance to r&#13;
have the time to understand the proposals that&#13;
could affect the requirements for their graduation&#13;
as well as when they would have to declare a&#13;
major and the selection of their advisor.&#13;
There should be a breadth requirement, but it&#13;
should be as easy to understand as the schools in&#13;
our area who compete for the same student&#13;
population. No one will be able to stop academ~c&#13;
advising. It is probably the best way to -advise&#13;
students with a shrinking budget. Why not let&#13;
stu9ents have a chance t9 discuss their own&#13;
requirements (why, who knows, some bright&#13;
student might come up with a better idea)?&#13;
_ Declaring a major is an important step that&#13;
should not be regulated by hastened faclJlty&#13;
members or administrators. At least the requirements&#13;
should take into account the needs of&#13;
students who not only pay for their education, but&#13;
make a choice of Parkside over some other university&#13;
i_n the area.&#13;
Parkside could have some serious enrollment&#13;
problems if word got around that we had some&#13;
really complicated bureaucratic requirements.&#13;
Why shouldn't the final proposals be the absolute&#13;
best thought out plans for educating human&#13;
beings in all the land? Enrollment problems won't&#13;
be addressed by a rushed political compromise.&#13;
Ranger urges the faculty senate to consider the&#13;
students who don't know the first thing about the&#13;
proposals in front of them. ' How wHI the requirements&#13;
affect transfer students? How will the final&#13;
requirement be explained to students? Could you&#13;
explain it?&#13;
T~is modern institution should be the epitomy&#13;
of public community education. We should be&#13;
developing modern ideas for growing acceptance&#13;
by the community. The long, dark creeping list of&#13;
requirements in the Pall timetable will weed out&#13;
enough students.&#13;
Ranger proposes putting off senate action on&#13;
the breadth -and academic advising proposals&#13;
until Fall semester. Division chairmen would have&#13;
enough time to arrange divisional meetings of&#13;
students to_ discuss the impact and the necessity&#13;
of the requirements in their education.&#13;
If the proposals had adequate and significant&#13;
student input, the requirements would not look&#13;
like, they were draw,n up by a bunch of aloof&#13;
faculty members who don't care what students&#13;
think!&#13;
Our Writers&#13;
Rob Hoffman, Chris Clausen, Michael Murphy&#13;
Cheryl Powalisz Jami LaMar Karen Putman&#13;
Linda Lasco, Douglas Edenhauser, Phil Herm~nn&#13;
Photographers&#13;
' Leanne Dillingham&#13;
. , Ed~tor Philip L. Livingston 553.2295 Copy Ed1tor Bruce Wagner&#13;
News Editor John McKloskey&#13;
Feature Editor Mona Maillet&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Circulation Sue Marquardt -ue~e.ral Manager Thomas R. Cooper 553-2&#13;
Advert1s1n~ _Manager John Gabriel 553-2287 287&#13;
Advertising Sates '&#13;
- Ranger is written and edit d b&#13;
--.__ ------ University&lt;?' Wisconsin-Park!ide ~!~udents of the , ---------- responsible for its editorial pol" thdey are solely ------ ..__ icy an content. &#13;
views:1&#13;
~=k.J'~~'-&#13;
FOR THE BEST RECORDS 'N KENOSHA&#13;
AT PRICES YOU'LL LIKE!&#13;
JAZZ ROCK SOUL&#13;
CONTEMPORARY&#13;
CLASSICAL&#13;
COME TO US AT&#13;
~~&#13;
626 Fifty-Sixth SI., Kmsha, Wis.&#13;
~.~ ~ .,;~'#S~r-~ ---------'&#13;
."&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
affect YOU!!!&#13;
by Rusty Tutlewski&#13;
Wa'uld you resent being required to secure the&#13;
signature of your assigned faculty advisor before&#13;
being allowed to register? Can you picture the lines&#13;
at registration? Though OUf school would be more&#13;
in line with other Universities where registration is a&#13;
much more time consuming process.&#13;
This is one of the requirements contained in the&#13;
new Academic Advising proposal that will come&#13;
before the Faculty Senate on May 17th for final&#13;
approval. If approved, the proposal is scheduled to&#13;
go into effect in September of 1978. This affects&#13;
YOU'&#13;
There are also provisions for the establishment of&#13;
a new Advising Office. Just what we need - MORE&#13;
BUREAUCRACY??'&#13;
There was a draft of an alternate proposal, which&#13;
did not require faculty signatures and provided for&#13;
the paperwork to be handled through an existing&#13;
office. It was brought before the Academic Policies&#13;
Committee by Philip Livingston, but was never even&#13;
opened for discussion because no committeeperson&#13;
would move to do so.&#13;
, '&#13;
p&#13;
-'&#13;
f&#13;
Is this the direction you want your school to go?&#13;
If not, don't wait until the policy is in effect to&#13;
complain. Speak up now while your voice can still&#13;
be heard. Get in touch with your Senator. Stop in at&#13;
the PSGA office WLLC 0193 or call 553-2244. Write&#13;
or call a Faculty Senate member. Whatever you do,&#13;
don't just sit there! This is your school. You should&#13;
have a voice in major legislation that will directly&#13;
effect you. Your opinions count more than you&#13;
think they do, but you've got to let them be known.&#13;
Your Student Government representatives are:&#13;
Rusty Tutlewski, President&#13;
Harvey Hedden, Vice President&#13;
Mary Braun, Senator&#13;
Dave Cramer, Senator&#13;
Robert Fought, Senator&#13;
Robert Hansen, Senator&#13;
Paula Miller, Senator&#13;
Francis Nwokike, Senator&#13;
Joseph Powers, Senator&#13;
Gigi Osborne, Senator&#13;
John Stewart, Senator&#13;
Terry Zuehlsdorf, Senator&#13;
Tim Zuehlsdorf, Senator&#13;
(~terbu'B&#13;
lourt&#13;
,.. &amp; I151AUlANl&#13;
Live Contmeporory music&#13;
Wed. thru Sot.&#13;
FRENCH PIZZA&#13;
ENCHILADAS&#13;
3/s1&#13;
15&#13;
NACHOS&#13;
sl5G ,Ial,&#13;
Wednesdays &amp; Thursdo.!,I o.ftet q:OO&#13;
632·6151&#13;
Spring Welt of 31 in Greenridge PIOIO&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
New proposals&#13;
a·ffect YOU!!!&#13;
by Rusty Tutlewski&#13;
Would you resent being required to secure the&#13;
signature of your assigned faculty advisor before&#13;
being allowed to register? Can you picture t he lines&#13;
at registration? Though our school woul_d be more&#13;
in line with other Universities where registration is a&#13;
much more time consuming process .&#13;
This is one of the requirements contained in the&#13;
new Academic Advising proposal that will come&#13;
before the Faculty Senate on May 17th for final&#13;
approval. If approved, the proposal is scheduled to&#13;
go into effect in September of 1978. This affects&#13;
YOU!&#13;
There are also p1ovisions for the establishment of&#13;
a new Advising Office. Just what we need - MORE&#13;
BUREAUCRACY???&#13;
Is this the direction you want your school to go?&#13;
If not, don't wait until the policy is in effect to&#13;
complain . Speak up now while your voice can still&#13;
be heard. Get in touch with your Senator. Stop in at&#13;
the PSGA office WLLC D193 or call 553-2244 Write&#13;
or call a Faculty Senate member. Whatever you do,&#13;
don't just sit there! This is your school. You should&#13;
have a voice in major legislation that will directly&#13;
effect you . Your opinions count more than you&#13;
think they do, but you've got to let them be known&#13;
Your Student Government representatives are:&#13;
Rusty Tutlewski, President&#13;
Harvey Hedden, Vice President&#13;
Mary Braun, Senator&#13;
Dave Cramer, Senator&#13;
Robert Fought, Senator&#13;
Robert Hansen, Senator&#13;
Paula Miller, Senator&#13;
Francis Nwokike, Senator&#13;
Joseph Powers, Senator&#13;
Gigi Osborne, Senator&#13;
John Stewart, Senator&#13;
• views&#13;
FOR THE BEST RECORDS IN KENOSHA&#13;
AT PRICES YOU'LL LIKE!&#13;
JAZZ ROCK SOUL&#13;
CONTEMPORARY&#13;
CLASSICAL&#13;
COME TO US AT&#13;
:J~&#13;
626 Fifty-Sixth St., Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
P\Ja &amp; USTAI.MANT&#13;
Live Contmeporory music&#13;
Wed. thru Sot.&#13;
FRE H PIZZA&#13;
ENCHILADAS&#13;
3/$1"&#13;
NACHOS&#13;
$150 plate&#13;
Wednesdoys &amp; Thursdoy ofter Q.OO&#13;
632 6151&#13;
There was a draft of an alternate proposal, which&#13;
did not require faculty signatures and provided for&#13;
the paperwork to be handled through an existing&#13;
office. It was brought before the Academic Policies&#13;
Committee by Ph ilip Livingston, but was never even&#13;
opened for discussion because no committeeperson&#13;
would move to do so.&#13;
Terry Zuehlsdorf, Senator&#13;
Tim Zuehlsdorf, Senator Spring West of 31 in Greenridge Plaxa&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. ::· ; : .. .:. ; : .. .. ... . ' ... : : ... ..&#13;
. . . .&#13;
CASH FOR TEXTBOOKS&#13;
YOU NO LONGER NEED&#13;
MAY ,13 thru 20&#13;
You get the same price on the 13th,&#13;
the 20th or any time in between&#13;
UW Parkside&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
Moaday - Th11rsday 9 a.a. - 7 p.•.&#13;
Friday 9 a.•. - 4 p.•.&#13;
Saturday 10 a.•. - 1 p.•. ,&#13;
.. ··' &#13;
Ranger banquet attacked&#13;
Editors Note: Disgruntled reporter, Bob Jambois,&#13;
felt the Ranger Banquet was a misuse of money by&#13;
the Editor. John Gabriel, Advertising Manager, has&#13;
replied to this charge on behalf of the Editorial&#13;
Board of the Ranger, Both stories follow.&#13;
by Bob Jambois&#13;
Its expenses are paid 'out of two accounts, the&#13;
Bursar's account, which is comprised exclusively of&#13;
advertising revenue, and the Segregated Fees&#13;
account, which is funded out of student tuitions (in&#13;
the 76-77 academic year Ranger received $7300 in&#13;
seg. fees money, in the 77-78 academic year Ranger&#13;
will receive $11,OOO).The money for the banquet is&#13;
coming out of the Bursar's account. The&#13;
relationship between these-two accounts is defined&#13;
tn the Budget Narrative provided by Ranger to the&#13;
Seg. Fees Committee.&#13;
"Ranger has sought to obtain enough advertising&#13;
to make every issue self-supporting in terms of&#13;
printing costs. Under this theory of management we&#13;
have been able to eliminate a long, outstanding&#13;
debt, AND ASSUME THE PAYMENT OF SOME&#13;
OTHER EXPENSES WHICH HAVE· PREVIOUSLY&#13;
BEENFUNDED THROUGH SEGREGATEDFEES."[p ,&#13;
2 of the Budget Narrative J&#13;
It is apparent from this passage that Segregated&#13;
Fees are used to supplement the advertising&#13;
revenue so that the Ranger can cover operating&#13;
expenses. It stands to reason that the more revenue&#13;
obtained from advertising, the less dependent&#13;
Ranger will be on Segregated Fees. However, that&#13;
analysis presumes that excess advertising revenue&#13;
will be retained for use in the next budget period. In&#13;
light of the manner in which the current budget&#13;
surplus is being thrown away, students have little&#13;
reason to hope that the Ranger will ever reduce its&#13;
reliance on the Student's pocketbook. .&#13;
But us students are all rich as hell anyway _&#13;
aren't we?&#13;
By the time you read this article the Parkside&#13;
Ranger staff will have spent roughly $550.00 on an&#13;
awards banquet in honor of themselves.&#13;
The average student might well wonder precisely&#13;
what the staff of this paper has accomplished that&#13;
would warrant such an expensive tribute. The&#13;
student might also like to know where the money&#13;
came from to pay for this dinner.&#13;
Being as I think the editorial content of this paper&#13;
is abysmal, I can't pretend to understand the&#13;
rationals behind a tribute to its staff. The editor of&#13;
the Ranger has acknowledged that the editorial&#13;
content of the paper is "not what it. should be"&#13;
however, he feels the banquet is justified in light of&#13;
the improvement in graphic design and the&#13;
solvency of the Bursar's account&gt;&#13;
The reasons behind it aside, the fact remains that&#13;
an awards banquet has been held on Saturday, May&#13;
7, and that it will cost around 550 dollars. So where&#13;
is the money com ing from?&#13;
The answer to that question is complicated, but&#13;
not so complicated as the convoluted explanations&#13;
of Philip Livingston, Editor and Tom Cooper, Gen.&#13;
Mgr., lead you to believe.&#13;
The Ranger is a student-subsidized corporation.&#13;
Free Plzzl.Dellvery&#13;
Club Highview&#13;
5035 60th St,eet&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
Altl ..... '1•• C~I.... , S~•• ~tfII,..... 11.8.. 1&#13;
0'111 4 , .•. to t •.•.&#13;
for News about&#13;
you and your&#13;
a,ctivities•••&#13;
Subscr~be Today&#13;
Call 634·3322 or&#13;
Write&#13;
------------------------ ...------&#13;
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I . I&#13;
I I&#13;
I Yes.I want to start receiving the Journal Times I&#13;
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I CITY STf\.TE ZIP I&#13;
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I PHONE P I&#13;
L----------------------- J&#13;
I&#13;
Banquet&#13;
congratulafes&#13;
unpaid staff&#13;
by John A. Gabriel, Advertising M~nager&#13;
In an article by Bob Jambois on this page of the&#13;
Ranger, he attacks-the Ranger for having a banquet&#13;
for the staff. In the article there are' some&#13;
inaccuracies which! believe should be cleared up&#13;
at this time. I hope that this will clear up some of&#13;
the .questions that are involved.&#13;
first off, the banquet is not being held by the&#13;
staff. The idea for it was originated by Phil Livingston,&#13;
the Editor, and Tom Cooper, the General&#13;
. Manager. The reasoning behind this is to&#13;
congratulate the unpaid staff for starting the Ranger&#13;
on the way to becoming a better paper. The staff&#13;
has put in many long hours to do this. This will not&#13;
be the last banquet (or party) and Ranger certainly&#13;
is not the first student organization to do so.&#13;
Secondly, Livingston has stated that although the&#13;
editorial content "is not what it should be", it has&#13;
represented a step in the right direction. The Ranger&#13;
has been turning from a political oriented paper to&#13;
a more student oriented paper. It has tried to&#13;
inform students of what is happening around the&#13;
campus and in the surrounding area. The banquet is&#13;
not being held because of "improvement in graphic&#13;
design and the solvency of the Bursar's account" as&#13;
stated by Mr. Jambois.&#13;
Another question has arisen about the cost of the&#13;
banquet and where the money is coming from.&#13;
First, the cost of the banquet is between $460 and&#13;
$550. The $550 stated by Mr. jambois is the&#13;
maximum. The actual cost will be determined by&#13;
the amount of people who attended the banquet on&#13;
May 7th. Where is the money coming from is the&#13;
second question here. It is coming from the Bursar's&#13;
account which has been raisep by advertising&#13;
revenue. THERE IS· NO STUDENT MONEY&#13;
INVOLVED! The Bursar's account is used to pay the&#13;
printing costs of the paper whereas the Seg-fees&#13;
money is used to pay the salaries of the editor's and&#13;
general manager. It also pays for the di,fferent&#13;
expenses of the paper such -as paper and office&#13;
supplies, telephones and other needed items. The '. t'&#13;
Seg-fees money is not being used to pay for the&#13;
banquet or anything else related to it. It is coming'&#13;
from the Bursar's account which, as stated before,&#13;
IS strictly and wholly raised by the advertising staff.&#13;
Seg-fee's money is not used to "supplement the&#13;
advertising revenue so that Ranger can cover&#13;
operating expenses" as Mr. Jambois has stated.&#13;
The Ranger did check with its advisors and Dave&#13;
Holle, administrative representative of Seg-fees on&#13;
the legality of the banquet and whether or 'not&#13;
Ranger could use the Bursars account to finance&#13;
the banquet. Ranger was told that it was legal and&#13;
I there was nothing wrong with this as long as we did&#13;
not use student money. Since student money is not&#13;
~eing used, you, the student, are not paying&#13;
money out of your pocket" to finilnce this banquet&#13;
and we realize that the student, are not "rich"&#13;
stnce we ourselves are student's and have to scrape&#13;
by lust Irke anyone else.&#13;
Enjo~ Porkside summec&#13;
c10sses&#13;
eDo.,y &amp; evening offerings&#13;
ePeo.ceful o.tmosphere&#13;
For info. co.lI 553-2241&#13;
. .&#13;
••&#13;
: . .&#13;
. .&#13;
. ,views ..&#13;
Ranger banquet attacked&#13;
Editors Note: Disgruntled reporter, Bob Jambois,&#13;
felt the Ranger Banquet was a misuse of money by&#13;
the Editor. John Gabriel, Advertising Manager, has&#13;
replied to this charge on behalf of the. Editorial&#13;
Board of the Ranger. Both stories follow.&#13;
by Bob Jambois&#13;
By the time you read this article the Parkside&#13;
Ranger staff will have spent roughly $550.00 on an&#13;
awards banquet in honor of themselves .&#13;
The average student might well wonder precisely&#13;
what the staff of this paper has accomplished that&#13;
would warrant such an expensive tribute. The&#13;
student might also like to know where the money&#13;
came from to pay for this dinner.&#13;
Being as I think the editorial content of this paper&#13;
is abysmal, I can't pretend to understand the&#13;
rationals behind a tribute to its staff. The editor of&#13;
the Ranger has acknowledged that the editorial&#13;
content of the paper is " not what it. should be"&#13;
however, he feels the banquet is justified in light of&#13;
the improvement in graphic design and the&#13;
solvency of the Bursar's accounC&#13;
The reasons behind it aside, the fact remains that&#13;
an awards banquet has been held on Saturday, May&#13;
7, and that it will cost around 550 dollars . So where&#13;
is the money coming from?&#13;
The answer to that question is complicated, but&#13;
not so complicated as the convoluted explanations&#13;
of Philip Livingston, Editor and Tom Cooper, Gen .&#13;
Mgr., lead you to believe.&#13;
The Ranger is a student-subsidized corporation .&#13;
Free Pizza ·_Delivery&#13;
Club Hlghvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
Its expenses are paid ·out of two accounts, the&#13;
Bursar's account, which is comprised exclusively of&#13;
advertising revenue, and the Segregated Fees&#13;
account, which is funded out of student tuitions (in&#13;
the 76-77 academic year Ranger received $7300 in&#13;
seg . fees money, in the 77-78 academic year Ranger&#13;
will receive $11 ,000). The money for the banquet is&#13;
coming out of the Bursar's account. The&#13;
relationship between these.two accounts is defined&#13;
in the Budget Narrative provided by Ranger to the&#13;
Seg. Fees Committee.&#13;
"Ranger has sought to obtain enough advertising&#13;
to make every issue self-supporting in terms of&#13;
printing costs. Under this theory of management we&#13;
have been able to eliminate a long, outstanding&#13;
debt, AND ASSUME THE PAYMENT OF SOME&#13;
OTHER EXPENSES WHICH HAVE · PREVIOUSLY&#13;
BEEN FUNDED THROUGH SEGREGATED FEES." [p.&#13;
2 of the Budget Narrative)&#13;
It is apparent from this passage that Segregated&#13;
Fees are used to supplement the advertising&#13;
revenue so that the Ranger can cover operating&#13;
expenses . It stands to reason that the more revenue&#13;
obtained from advertising, the less dependent&#13;
Ranger will be on Segregated Fees . However, that&#13;
analysis presumes that excess advertising revenue&#13;
will be retained for use in the next budget period. In&#13;
light of the manner in wh ich t he current budget&#13;
surplus is being thrown away, students have little&#13;
reason to hope that the Ranger will ever reduce its&#13;
reliance on the Student's pocketbook. ·&#13;
But us students are all rich as hell anyway -&#13;
are&#13;
~&#13;
n't we?&#13;
Altt ••,••• c~,, ... , s,,,~ttt1. 1,v1,11, , .. ,&#13;
OPEN 4 , .•. ft 1 •·•· j&#13;
It&#13;
the 1ol(fna11lntes . .&#13;
for News about&#13;
you and your&#13;
a,ctivities ...&#13;
Suhscr~he T~day&#13;
Call 634-3322 or&#13;
Write&#13;
------------------------------&#13;
Journal Times "" --------, I 212 4th Street I Racine,Wis. 53403 . I&#13;
I&#13;
Yes,I want to start receiving the Journal Times&#13;
NAME&#13;
ADDRESS _________________ __; A.PT. -------&#13;
CITY -----------STATE ZIP -------- ------&#13;
I&#13;
I·&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
PHONE_________ I P I&#13;
L--------------------------------------.. •&#13;
I&#13;
Banquet&#13;
congratulates&#13;
unpaid staff&#13;
by John A. Gabriel, Advertising M~nager&#13;
In an artic le by Bob Jambois on this page of the&#13;
Ranger, he attacks the Ranger for having a banquet&#13;
for the staff. In the article there are some&#13;
inaccuracies which I believe should be cleared up&#13;
at this time. I hope that this will clear up some of&#13;
the .questions that are involved .&#13;
First off, the banquet is not being held by the&#13;
staff. The idea for it was originated by Phil Livingston,&#13;
the Editor, and Tom Cooper, the General&#13;
. Manager. The reasoning behind this is to&#13;
congratulate the unpaid staff for starting the Ranger&#13;
on the way to becoming a better paper. The staff&#13;
has put in many long hours to do this . This will not&#13;
be the last banquet (or party) and Ranger certainly&#13;
is not the first student organization to do so.&#13;
Secondly, Livingston has stated that although the&#13;
editorial content " is not what it should be" , it has&#13;
represented a step in the right direction. The Ranger&#13;
has been turning from a political oriented paper to&#13;
a more student oriented paper. It has tried to&#13;
inform students of what is happening around the&#13;
campus and in the surrounding area. The banquet is&#13;
not being held becaust&gt; of " improvement in graphic&#13;
design and the solvency of the Bursar's account" as&#13;
stated by Mr. Jambois.&#13;
Another question has arisen about the cost of the&#13;
banquet and where the money is coming from .&#13;
First , the cost of the banquet is between $460 and&#13;
$550. The $550 stated by Mr. Jambois is the&#13;
maximum . The actual cost will be determined by&#13;
the amount of people who attended the banquet on&#13;
May 7th . Where is the money coming from is the&#13;
second question here . It is coming from the Bursar's&#13;
account whi ch has been raised by advertising&#13;
revenue. THERE IS · NO STUDENT MONEY&#13;
INVOLVED! The Bursar's account is used to pay the&#13;
printing costs of the paper whereas the Seg-fees&#13;
m oney is used to pay the salaries of the editor's and&#13;
general manager. It also pays for the di_fferent&#13;
expenses of the paper such as paper and office&#13;
suppl ies, telephones and other needed items . The ·&#13;
Seg-fees money is not being used to pay for the&#13;
banquet or anything else related to it . It is coming&#13;
from the Bursar's account which, as stated before&#13;
is strictly and wholly raised by the advertising staff'.&#13;
Seg-fee's money is not used to " supplement the&#13;
advertising revenue so that Ranger can cover&#13;
operating expenses" as Mr. Jambois has stated .&#13;
The Ranger did check with its advisors and Dave&#13;
Holle, administrative representative of Seg-fees on&#13;
the legality of the banquet and whether or 'not&#13;
Ranger could use the Bursars account to finan ce&#13;
the banquet Ranger was told that it was legal and&#13;
there was nothing wrong with this as long as we did&#13;
not use student money . Since student money is not&#13;
~eing used, you , the student, are not paying&#13;
money out of your pocket" to fin;ince this banquet&#13;
and we realize that the student , are not " rich "&#13;
,inn, we ourselves are student's and have to scrape&#13;
by just like anyone else .&#13;
il.Y/&#13;
-" Enjo_y Parkside summec&#13;
classes&#13;
•Do._y &amp; evening offerings&#13;
o.tmosphere •Peo.ceful&#13;
For info. co.II 553-2241&#13;
I' &#13;
uw-p&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Parks ide's grading system will&#13;
probably be changed to the same&#13;
system used at j,JW-Milwaukee,&#13;
possibly as early as next year.&#13;
According to a survey of&#13;
Parkside faculty by Secretary of&#13;
the Faculty Walter Feldt, 87.1%&#13;
of the respondents requested a&#13;
change in grading systems. The&#13;
Milwaukee system, which has&#13;
pluses and minuses (es., A- =&#13;
3.67 points, b+ = 3.33 points),&#13;
was preferred to the Madison&#13;
'8&#13;
,&#13;
Reward offered&#13;
for CDthieves&#13;
g'rading system to be changed&#13;
system (AS = 3.5 points,&#13;
Be = 2.5 points).&#13;
Only 12.9% of the faculty said&#13;
they prefer the Parkside system.&#13;
According to Feldt, the change&#13;
will not come quickly. "Although&#13;
the survey indicates a lot of&#13;
sentiment for a change, the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee&#13;
(for which the survey was&#13;
conducted) hasn't drafted a&#13;
.proposal yet," he said.&#13;
Feldt also cited certain&#13;
mechanical problems associated&#13;
with changing the grading&#13;
A reward fund has been set up&#13;
paying for information leading to&#13;
arrest and conviction of a person&#13;
or persons involved in re.cent&#13;
breakins and thefts from&#13;
automobiles in Parkside's parking&#13;
lots&#13;
Fifty dollars 'will be paid for&#13;
information and $25 will be paid&#13;
for apprehension, with the&#13;
balance paid on conviction.&#13;
Anyone having any information&#13;
regarding this matter should&#13;
contact the Parkside security&#13;
office.&#13;
Any persons interested in&#13;
contributing money to this&#13;
reward fund may contact Paul&#13;
Hines by leaving a message in&#13;
the Health office for Box 156, or&#13;
by leaving a message in Dr.&#13;
Chen's office in Greenquist 349,&#13;
or by calling him at home at&#13;
654·7964. You may also contact&#13;
Doug Edenhauser at 657-9198.&#13;
GRADING SYSTEM PREFERRED&#13;
First second Hurd&#13;
enoree enoree Choice&#13;
system, such as the change of&#13;
computer processing of grades to&#13;
accommodate the new system.&#13;
Feldt predicted that even if the&#13;
Faculty Senate approves the&#13;
proposal early next year, the new&#13;
grading policy would not take&#13;
effect until the following year&#13;
(1978-79) due to the mechanical&#13;
problems.&#13;
Parkslde&#13;
ParkSlde&#13;
Madison&#13;
Madison&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
newsI&#13;
Parking prices go up&#13;
MadlSOfl&#13;
RESPONDENTS RESPONDENTS&#13;
()=% wllhaame&#13;
Flrsl Chotce'&#13;
( 1= "&#13;
131'1 2)' 15(129)&#13;
1( 09).&#13;
24(20.1)&#13;
12&lt;10311&#13;
4( 3"IJ&#13;
56(4831&#13;
Milwaukee Madison&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
Parkslde&#13;
38(32 8)&#13;
returns ".&#13;
of&#13;
,.,&#13;
Mnf&#13;
(72.0'1&#13;
uw-p &amp; STATE (D's required&#13;
Parks Ide&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
Par1l.slde&#13;
Madison&#13;
Madison 63(~ 9)&#13;
Parks!de&#13;
East lot to be abandoned&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Beginning next January, the shuttle bus service to&#13;
the East and Tallent parking lots will be&#13;
discontinued, according to Parkside Security chief&#13;
Ronald Brinkmann.&#13;
"The East Lot will be abandoned after the fall&#13;
semester, and I'm not sure whether it will be left&#13;
alone or torn up," he said. Only one shuttle bus will&#13;
run this fall, and it will be discontinued when the&#13;
new Physical Education lot is completed. The&#13;
parking fee structure has also been changed, with&#13;
the introduction of a new green permit for evening&#13;
students&#13;
Brinkmann said the new higher perrrut prices are&#13;
due to the fact that segrated fees no longer help pay&#13;
for them The fall 1977 pnces WIll be&#13;
Part-time Full-time&#13;
Permit type students [7 + credits}&#13;
White $9/sem -$18/yr $15isem -S30/yr&#13;
Red S5/sem -$10yr $10/sem -$20/yr&#13;
Green $7/sem·$14/yr&#13;
The Green permit will be good In any lot after&#13;
430 pm., and IS for evenmg students, saId&#13;
Brinkmann, who added that the lots will still be free&#13;
lateran the everung, as posted at the lot entrances&#13;
Brmkmann said the new green permits should make&#13;
more white oerrnus available to daytime students&#13;
...............................................&#13;
P .A.B. Presents:&#13;
Sat. night: RIO &amp;&#13;
HEARTSTRINGS&#13;
Adm.: 2.00 - UW-P&#13;
2.50 - guests&#13;
Sun. afr.: GONG SHOW&#13;
&amp; LEGS CONTEST&#13;
Sun. night : Synod&#13;
Crossfire canceJ.J.ed&#13;
Adm. 2.50 UW-P 3.50 guests&#13;
{;;:;;c.~-SO BEE- BOP TO SOME ----:.:::::::::::::::&#13;
BEATLES MUSIC BY "THE BRITINS"&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
Enter&#13;
through&#13;
Union&#13;
-Square&#13;
EmRTAINMENT&#13;
IN THE&#13;
TENT&#13;
UW-P grading system to be changed&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Parkside's grading system will&#13;
probably be changed to the same&#13;
system used at UW-Milwaukee,&#13;
possibly as early as next year.&#13;
According to a survey of&#13;
Parkside faculty by Secretary of&#13;
the Faculty Walter Feldt, 87 .1 %&#13;
of the respondents requested a&#13;
change in grading systems. The&#13;
Milwaukee system, which has&#13;
pluses and minuses (e.g., A- =&#13;
3.67 points, b+ = 3.33 points),&#13;
was preferred to the Madison&#13;
system (AB = 3.5 points,&#13;
BC = 2.5 points).&#13;
Only 12.9% of the faculty said&#13;
they pref et the Parkside system.&#13;
According to Feldt, the change&#13;
will not come quickly. "Although&#13;
the survey indicates a lot of&#13;
sentiment for a change, the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee&#13;
(for which the survey was&#13;
conducted) hasn't drafted a&#13;
proposal yet," he said.&#13;
Feldt also cited certain&#13;
mechanical problems associated&#13;
with changing the grading&#13;
system, such as the change of&#13;
computer processing of grades to&#13;
accommodate the new system&#13;
Feldt predicted that even if the&#13;
Faculty Senate approves the&#13;
proposal early next year, the new&#13;
grading policy would not take&#13;
effect until the following year&#13;
(1978-79) due to the mechanical&#13;
problems .&#13;
GRADING SYSTEM PREFERRED&#13;
Forst Second Third&#13;
Choice Cho,ce ChO,ce&#13;
Parl&lt;sode Madison Milwaukee&#13;
Parkside Milwaukee Madison&#13;
Madison Parl&lt;sode Molwau ee&#13;
Madison Milwaukee Par1&lt;s1de&#13;
Milwaukee Par1&lt;s1de Madison&#13;
Milwaukee Madison Par1&lt;s1de&#13;
Parking prices go up&#13;
RESPONDENTS AESf'OHDENTS&#13;
( ) .z % with same&#13;
F rat Cll0tce •&#13;
13(11 2)&#13;
11 0 91.&#13;
2'(20 7)&#13;
12(10 311&#13;
~ 3 •11&#13;
56(.S 31&#13;
( )::%&#13;
15(129)&#13;
38C32 8)&#13;
118&#13;
retum1&#13;
ot&#13;
181&#13;
aent&#13;
(720%)&#13;
Revvard offered&#13;
for CB thieves&#13;
East lot to be abandoned&#13;
A reward fund has been set up&#13;
paying for information leading to&#13;
arrest and conviction of a person&#13;
or persons involved in re.cent&#13;
breakins and thefts from&#13;
automobiles in Parkside's parking&#13;
lots .&#13;
Fifty dollars ·will be paid for&#13;
information and $25 will be paid&#13;
for apprehension , with the&#13;
balance paid on conviction.&#13;
Anyone having any information&#13;
regarding this matter should&#13;
contact the Parkside security&#13;
office.&#13;
Any persons interested in&#13;
contributing money to this&#13;
reward fund may contact Paul&#13;
Hines by leaving a message in&#13;
the Health office for Box 156, or&#13;
by leaving a message in Dr.&#13;
Chen's office in Greenquist 349,&#13;
or by calling him at home at&#13;
654-7964. You may also contact&#13;
Doug Edenhauser at 657-9198.&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Beginning next January, the shuttle bus service to&#13;
the East and Tallent parking lots will be&#13;
discontinued, according to Parkside Security chief&#13;
Ronald Brinkmann .&#13;
"The East Lot will be abandoned after the fall&#13;
semester, and I'm not sure whether 1t will be left&#13;
alone or torn up," he said . Only one shuttle bus will&#13;
run this fall, and it will be discontinued when the&#13;
new Physical Education lot is completed The&#13;
parking fee structure has also been changed, with&#13;
the introduction of a new green permit for evening&#13;
students .&#13;
Permit type&#13;
White&#13;
Red&#13;
Green&#13;
h r permit prt s ar&#13;
no Ion r h Ip pa&#13;
\ ill b&#13;
Full~ime&#13;
[7 + credits]&#13;
S15/ m ·S r&#13;
10/ m .·S20/ r&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
P .A.B. Presents :&#13;
UW-P &amp; STATE ID's required&#13;
Sat. night: RIO &amp;&#13;
HEARTSTRINGS ·Adm.: 2.00 - UW-P&#13;
2.50 - guests&#13;
Sun. aft.: GONG SHOW&#13;
&amp; LEGS CONTEST&#13;
Sun. night : Synod&#13;
Crossfire cancelled&#13;
Adm. 2.50 UW-P 3.50 guests&#13;
Enter&#13;
through&#13;
Union&#13;
Square&#13;
ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
IN THE&#13;
TENT&#13;
~-------so BEE"-BOP TO SOME&#13;
BEATLES MUSIC BY ''THE BRITINS''&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... &#13;
$1.2' million&#13;
addition planned&#13;
for classroom bldg.&#13;
I&#13;
. ··········· .&#13;
. ..&#13;
-, . :&#13;
. .&#13;
- ::.&#13;
news \&#13;
1M: a beneficial science&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser Teachers in Kenosha are Carol Hammond and her&#13;
brother louie Hammond. In Racine the teachers are&#13;
louise and Neil Cook, Barbara French, and Richard&#13;
Pettibone. This is followed by two hours of&#13;
personal instruction and three two hour classes of&#13;
informational discussion. After these three classes a&#13;
person is an expert meditator and returns&#13;
periodically in order to check his meditation. Also&#13;
at these check-up sessions a meditator is able to&#13;
find out about the newest discoveries in developing&#13;
techniques.&#13;
Many businesses around the country have paid&#13;
for their employees to learn the TM technique&#13;
because tests conducted by the Academy of&#13;
Management Journal show that TM improves job&#13;
performance, increases job satisfaction, 'and&#13;
increasesproductivity.&#13;
Anyone interested in learning the science of&#13;
Transcendental Meditation can contact the&#13;
Kenosha World Plan Center at 652-2151 or&#13;
652-9793, or they can stop in at 5825-6th Avenue,&#13;
Room 403 in Kenosha, I.:&#13;
Planning is underway for an&#13;
addition to the Classroom&#13;
Building. 1.2 million dollars has&#13;
already been appropriated for&#13;
the addition, wbich is to be&#13;
called the Modern Industry&#13;
Building. James Galbraith, Director&#13;
of Planning and Construetion,&#13;
said he hopes an architect&#13;
will soon be chosen and the&#13;
design phase begun.&#13;
Contrary to popular belief, Transcendental&#13;
Meditation is not a philosophy and it is not a&#13;
religion. There are no idols to be worshipped and&#13;
there are no specific ideals to live for. What TM is,&#13;
is a science whose beneficial results have been&#13;
extensively researchedaround the world and have&#13;
been conclusively proven effective.&#13;
TM is at present available to people in all&#13;
non-communist countries, and at present is being&#13;
considered for teaching in the U.~.s.R.The primary&#13;
reason given up to now that TM has not been&#13;
taught in such countries is that the results of TM&#13;
causepeople to become more individualistic.&#13;
Thetechnique of TM requires no specific setting,&#13;
no special preparation, or no drastic change in life&#13;
style.&#13;
Classes in TM are held every two weeks in&#13;
Kenosha, with half of these at Parkside. The&#13;
complete learning process is started off with two&#13;
one hour introductory lectures which are followed&#13;
by a short personal interview with the teacher. ._IliiII__ IIIJIII!IIIIJIII!IM!lmI!ili1llli.~B:"&amp;¥m*~~*W1WWmlllJlll!llllJlll!llmHmjm·}mrmamnmrm-IIIJIII!IMIIIJIII!IIIIJIII!IIIIJIII!IMmlum.IllJlll!lOOimIllJlll!lIllJlll!lWWm·w· m'::m:.miwmmmm~-::wtW'~Jn!tP~g~1 '&#13;
From Ralph Bakshi, .... . .....,I&#13;
master of animation, comes an I&#13;
epic' fantasy in wondrous color. I&#13;
A vision of the world, 10 million years I&#13;
in the future, where Wizards rule the I&#13;
fI&#13;
earth. And the powers of magic prevail I&#13;
oVf~rtlhbeforic~s of teclhnology inthe I,::&#13;
Ina att e lor wor d supremacy. •&#13;
.0&#13;
I&#13;
M&#13;
'}i&#13;
I&#13;
:t:;::&#13;
N&#13;
I&#13;
Wi K&#13;
A&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
R&#13;
•&#13;
~I&#13;
Plannell by Wyllie&#13;
This project was orginally&#13;
conceived by the Wyllie&#13;
administration. The late Chancellor&#13;
Irving Wyllie, envisioned a&#13;
$5 million building and lobbied&#13;
hard for its approval but the&#13;
State Building Commission&#13;
reduced the project to $1.2&#13;
million. Plansfor a large seperate&#13;
building were then dropped and&#13;
an addition to the C1assroon&#13;
Building became a more feasible&#13;
approach, said Galbraith.&#13;
Last December a time&#13;
extension on the $1.2 million&#13;
,project was granted while&#13;
Parksideofficials reevaluated the&#13;
entire program as it related to&#13;
the long term mission of the&#13;
campus. Their new proposal now&#13;
sits in the hands of the&#13;
Department of Administration&#13;
awaiting approval.&#13;
Four large Labs&#13;
Present plans for the addition&#13;
include four major rooms. The&#13;
first and largest area will be -a&#13;
production lab. This lab will be&#13;
completely equipped with machinery&#13;
and space for mdepth&#13;
study of the entire production&#13;
process. The room will be&#13;
benetical to Applied Science and&#13;
Engineering Technology students,&#13;
giving them "hands on"&#13;
experience in research and&#13;
development, industrial electronics&#13;
and control systems&#13;
individua·1 mechanisms and&#13;
sub-assemblies,timing standards&#13;
and inspection techniques.&#13;
Businessstudents will usethe lab&#13;
for Management, Personnel,&#13;
Efficiency, and Marketing studies.&#13;
The second area, a multipurpose&#13;
lab, is designed to&#13;
accommodate several types of&#13;
laboratory instruction in one&#13;
room. Safety education and&#13;
quality control are among the&#13;
topics to be taught in this lab.&#13;
Graphics Lab&#13;
A graphics lab will also be&#13;
included in the Modern Industry&#13;
Building. Engineering Technology&#13;
students wi II uti Iize the&#13;
graphics lab for design work in&#13;
product processes and tool&#13;
operation. Business students&#13;
interested in packaging and&#13;
marketing design will also work&#13;
in this area.'&#13;
The final area in the new&#13;
complex is a case discussion&#13;
laboratory. This room contains&#13;
large tiered "horseshoe shaped"&#13;
lec.ture hall. The laboratory is&#13;
unique because it has direct&#13;
access to, the production lab.&#13;
Thus the instructor will be able&#13;
to bring machinery into the hall&#13;
for demonstrations during lecture.&#13;
This combination of lecture&#13;
~nd ,lab in one hall has many&#13;
pOSSibilities,said Calbraith&#13;
Tult&#13;
Po&#13;
\U&#13;
tion&#13;
'"&#13;
&lt;c.&#13;
i&lt;&#13;
""&#13;
blill&#13;
Th&#13;
till!&#13;
. .&#13;
. I&#13;
···· .&#13;
. . . . . .&#13;
news&#13;
TM: a beneficia I science&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
'&#13;
Contrary to popular belief, Transcendental&#13;
Meditation is not a philosophy and it is not a&#13;
religion. There are no idols to be worshipped and&#13;
there are no specific ideals to live for. \Vhat TM is,&#13;
is a science whose beneficial results have been&#13;
extensively researched around the world and have&#13;
been conclusively proven effective.&#13;
TM is at present available to people in all&#13;
non-&lt;:ommanist countries, and at present is being&#13;
considered for teaching in the U .S.S.R. The primary&#13;
reason given up to now that TM has not been&#13;
taught in such countries is that the results of TM&#13;
cause people to become more individualistic.&#13;
Teachers in Kenosha are Carol Hammond and her&#13;
brother Louie Hammond. In Racine the teachers are&#13;
Louise and Neil Cook, Barbara French, and Richard&#13;
Pettibone. This is followed by two hours of&#13;
personal instruction and three two hour classes of&#13;
informational discussion. After these three classes a&#13;
person is an expert meditator and returns&#13;
periodically in order to check his meditation. Also&#13;
at these check-up sessions a meditator is able to&#13;
find out about the newest discoveries in developing&#13;
techniques.&#13;
$1.2' million·&#13;
addition planned&#13;
for classroom bldg.&#13;
The technique of TM requires no specific setting,&#13;
no special preparation, or no drastic change in life&#13;
style.&#13;
Many businesses around the country have paid&#13;
for their employees to learn the TM technique&#13;
because tests conducted by the Academy of&#13;
Management Journal show that TM improves job&#13;
performance, increases job satisfaction, •and&#13;
increases productivity.&#13;
Anyone interested in learning the science of&#13;
Transcendental Meditation can contact the&#13;
Kenosha World Plan Center at 652-2151 or&#13;
652-9793, or they can stop in at 5825--6th Avenue,&#13;
Room 403 in Kenosha.&#13;
Planning is underway for an&#13;
addition to the Classroom&#13;
Building. 1.2 million dollars has&#13;
already b~n appropriated for&#13;
the addition, which is to be&#13;
called the Modern Industry&#13;
Building. James Galbraith, Director&#13;
of Planning and Construt_-&#13;
tion, said he hopes an architect&#13;
will soon be chosen and the&#13;
design phase begun.&#13;
Classes in TM are held every two weeks in&#13;
Kenosha, with half of these at Parkside. The&#13;
complete learning process is started off with two&#13;
one hour introductory lectures which are followed&#13;
by a short personal interview with the teacher.&#13;
A '&#13;
·~·§So_i_lf §}}·::Mffl!:~1~ili~SfuW:~*~.$~ili;~~~~:f'~~~Tu1.W~~;:.&amp;t:m~~A™?-:'1W%'l:;.%:~*.W~~~~tlw.W:ii:]~~Mmt~1i;*i~~:i:~:~~fil.~t- '&#13;
_ From Ralph Bakshi, - I&#13;
master of animation, comes an Ii&#13;
epic fantasy in vrondrous color. I ~ vision of the world, 10 million years f!&#13;
1n the future, where Wizards rule the I&#13;
earth. And the powers of magic prevail I&#13;
ov~r the fore es of technology in the i&#13;
final battle for world supremacy. I&#13;
I&#13;
STARTS FRIDAY&#13;
MON.-SAT. at 7,15 &amp; 9,15&#13;
A&#13;
SUNDAY AT 1:15, 3:15, 5:15, 7:15, 9:15&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
11&#13;
::::*&#13;
Planned by Wyllie&#13;
This project ~as orginally&#13;
conceived by the Wyllie&#13;
administration. The late Chancellor&#13;
Irving Wyllie, envisioned a&#13;
$5 million building and lobbied&#13;
hard for its approval but the&#13;
State Building Commission&#13;
reduced the project to $1 .2&#13;
million . Plans for a large seperate&#13;
building were then dropped and&#13;
an addition to the Classroon&#13;
Building became a more feasible&#13;
approach, said Galbraith.&#13;
Last December a time&#13;
extension on the $1.2 million&#13;
. project was granted while&#13;
Parkside officials reevaluated the&#13;
entire program as it related to&#13;
the long term mission of the&#13;
campus . Their new proposal now&#13;
sits in the hands of the&#13;
Department of Administration&#13;
awaiting approval.&#13;
Four Large labs&#13;
Present plans for the addition&#13;
include four major rooms. The&#13;
first and largest area will be a&#13;
production lab. This lab will be&#13;
completely equipped with machinery&#13;
and space for in.depth&#13;
study of the entire production&#13;
process . The room will be&#13;
benefical to Applied Science and&#13;
Engineering Technology students,&#13;
giving them " hands on"&#13;
experience in research and&#13;
development, industrial electronics&#13;
and control systems,&#13;
individual mechanisms and&#13;
sub-assemblies, timing standards&#13;
and inspection techniques.&#13;
Business students will use the lab&#13;
for Management, Personnel ,&#13;
Efficiency, and Marketing studies&#13;
&#13;
The second area, a multipurpose&#13;
lab, is designed to&#13;
accommodate several types of&#13;
laboratory instruction in one&#13;
room . Safety education and&#13;
quality control are among the&#13;
topics to be taught in this lab.&#13;
Graphics lab&#13;
A graphics lab will also be&#13;
included in the Modern Industry&#13;
Building. Engineering Technology&#13;
students wi ll util ize the&#13;
graphics lab for design work in&#13;
product processes and tool&#13;
operation . Business students&#13;
interested in packaging and&#13;
marketing design will also work&#13;
in this area.·&#13;
The final area in the new&#13;
complex is a case discussion&#13;
laboratory. This room contains&#13;
large tiered " horseshoe shaped"&#13;
lec_ture hall. The laboratory is&#13;
unique because it has direct&#13;
access to. the production lab.&#13;
Thus the instructor will be able&#13;
to bring machinery into the hall&#13;
for demonstrations during lecture.&#13;
This combination of lecture&#13;
and lab in one hall has many&#13;
possibilities, said Galbraith .&#13;
bl&#13;
tui&#13;
tio&#13;
rate&#13;
acco&#13;
t~ &#13;
news"&#13;
Math Club, Philisophical Society, Earih Science&#13;
Student clubs ask for more money&#13;
Tuition up. enrollment down&#13;
by john McKlos~ey&#13;
Three student organizations&#13;
are dissatisfied with the Student&#13;
Group segregated fees dollar&#13;
amounts which they are to&#13;
receive from the Student&#13;
Organizational Council" (SOC),&#13;
and have'appealed the preliminary&#13;
amounts set by the SOc.&#13;
The clubs that are appealing&#13;
are the Earth Science Club, the&#13;
Parkside Philosophical Society,&#13;
and the new Math Club. Each is&#13;
requesting additional operating&#13;
funds. In addition, the Debate&#13;
and Forensics Association is&#13;
requesting a loan allowance for&#13;
fund-raising projects which&#13;
would be repaid after the&#13;
projects' completion.&#13;
According to Kai C. Nail,&#13;
chairman of the SOc, the budget&#13;
levels will be finalized after the&#13;
SOCholds an appeals hearing on&#13;
Friday, May 13 at 2:30 p.rn. in&#13;
WLLC D173, and explained that&#13;
the money left over from the&#13;
allocations will be used as an&#13;
emergency ·fund for organizations,&#13;
and to fund new&#13;
organizations which are established&#13;
during the next year.&#13;
At present $15,605 of the&#13;
$20,000 available has been&#13;
allocated. The remainder will&#13;
also pay for student projects&#13;
such as the Student Interest&#13;
Survey turned in by each student&#13;
at registration.&#13;
Nail explained that he could&#13;
use a little help in setting up the&#13;
budgets. "Administrative support&#13;
is lacking. Jewel Echelbarger&#13;
used to compile all the budgets&#13;
and run them off for us, and&#13;
College Press Service&#13;
"&#13;
•&#13;
"&#13;
Population rises rapidly&#13;
(CPS) - The world's population&#13;
is continuing to grow at the&#13;
rate of 2.2 percent a year,&#13;
according to figures compiled by&#13;
the Environmental Fund. The&#13;
world's population is now 4.15&#13;
billion.&#13;
The population is growing&#13;
fastest in Africa, Asia, and Latin&#13;
America and a physician's&#13;
magazine observed that "because&#13;
of their continuing high&#13;
birth rates, the developing&#13;
countries of these three&#13;
continents have now reached the&#13;
point where 40 percent or more&#13;
of their national populations are&#13;
under 15 years of age."&#13;
GROUP SUPPORT REQUESTS FOR THE FISCAL YEAR Htn-78&#13;
1976-n ',n -78&#13;
Allcc.tion p,.Budget&#13;
$ 50000 $1,300.00&#13;
190.00 330.00&#13;
60 00 1,000 00&#13;
250.00 600.00&#13;
100.00 200.00&#13;
65 00 400.00&#13;
170.00 300,00&#13;
2-40.00 400.00&#13;
450.00 -0-&#13;
50.00 -0-&#13;
130.00 125.00&#13;
1.495.00 2,400.00&#13;
195.00 100.00&#13;
1,400.00 2,200.00&#13;
1.800.00 3.500.00&#13;
-0- -0-&#13;
·0- -0-&#13;
375.00 1,700.00&#13;
150.00 400.00&#13;
520.00 6.500.00&#13;
',n-7I "n·78&#13;
Request AUocetkN'l&#13;
$2,31900 $1.30000&#13;
47000 400 00&#13;
390 00 31000&#13;
225.00 22500&#13;
183.-40 185.00&#13;
1,400,00 50000&#13;
140,00 14000&#13;
657.80 650,00&#13;
2.068.00 ' .. 500 00&#13;
1.04500 500 00&#13;
60.00 eo 00&#13;
4,655.00 2,200 00&#13;
1.185.00 785 00&#13;
2,948_00 2,00000&#13;
2,944 00 2,950.00&#13;
1,965.00 600 00&#13;
4SO.OO 300.00&#13;
1,780.00 40000&#13;
1.31200 300,00&#13;
1,800 00 300.00&#13;
she'd send letters to all the&#13;
groups telhng them how much&#13;
they were to receive," he sard,&#13;
and mentioned that he Will ask&#13;
Tony Totero's office (Coordinator&#13;
of Student Programs) to help&#13;
take care of the paperwork&#13;
Union to be F~&#13;
all also sard that as of July 1,&#13;
the $150 charge to student&#13;
organizations for a night's use of&#13;
Umon Square WIll be dropped&#13;
ow the cost will be absorbed by&#13;
the Student L,fe budget instead&#13;
of the student organizations&#13;
"The old procedure was&#13;
drscouragmg the use of the&#13;
Union now more orgamzalions&#13;
will use It, and the Union&#13;
will sell more beer and&#13;
concessrons. so It worked out&#13;
pretty well for both sides." sard&#13;
Nail&#13;
would like to thank all of&#13;
our advertisers, subcribers&#13;
and readers for a good&#13;
semester!&#13;
See you in the fall!&#13;
Name ~l Orgllnization&#13;
Earth SCience Club&#13;
trte SCience Club&#13;
MinOrity Business Management CkJb&#13;
Parks Ide Society 01 PhYSICSStudents&#13;
Parks Ide Englrl{l@rmg Students Assoc.&#13;
Parkside Philosophical scc.erv&#13;
Parkslde Pre-Moo Club&#13;
Anthropology Club&#13;
Judo Club&#13;
Ragllme Adngers&#13;
ParkSlde ChrisHan FellowshIp&#13;
Debate and Forensics&#13;
Parxstce Assoc. 01 Wargamers&#13;
Parkside Vets Club&#13;
Concerned Students Coalition&#13;
Pereeroe Guitar Players Guild&#13;
Parxsfoe Math Club&#13;
Parks ide Drug Quarters&#13;
Porn Pom Squad&#13;
Parkaide Players&#13;
Totals: $7,125.00 $12.155.00 123,105.20 $15,105.00&#13;
A tuition increase at the University of Montana at Missoula may&#13;
result in a serious enrollment decline, a survey conducted by two&#13;
economics students discovered recently.&#13;
The survey was completed by 3,200 students, or about 40 percent&#13;
of the student population at UM. The results indicate that between&#13;
278and 742 students, non-resident as well as resident, will not return&#13;
to UM next fall because of the recent fee increase.&#13;
In February, the Montana Board of Regents approved a tuition&#13;
increese of $400 per year for non-residents and $36 per year for&#13;
residents.&#13;
•&#13;
le&#13;
Math Club, Philisophical Society • Ear-th Science&#13;
Student ell.lbs ask for more money&#13;
by John McKlosltey&#13;
Three student organizations&#13;
are dissatisfied with the Student&#13;
Group segregated fees dollar&#13;
amounts which they are to&#13;
receive from the Student&#13;
Organizational Council (SOC),&#13;
and have'appealed the preliminary&#13;
amounts set by the SOC.&#13;
The clubs that are appealing&#13;
are the Earth Science Club, the&#13;
Parkside Philosophical Society,&#13;
and the new Math Club. Each is&#13;
requesting additional operating&#13;
funds . In addition, the Debate&#13;
and Forensics Association is&#13;
requesting a loan allowance for&#13;
fund-raising projects which&#13;
would be repaid after the&#13;
projects' completion.&#13;
According to Kai C. Nall,&#13;
chairman of the SOC, the budget&#13;
levels will be finalized after the&#13;
SOC holds an appeals hearing on&#13;
Friday, May 1~ at 2:30 p.m . in&#13;
WLLC D173, and· explained that&#13;
the money left over from the&#13;
allocations will be used as an&#13;
emergency fund for organizations,&#13;
and to fund new&#13;
organizations which are established&#13;
during the next year.&#13;
At present $15,605 of the&#13;
$20,000 available has been&#13;
allocated. The remainder will&#13;
also pay for student projects&#13;
such as the Student Interest&#13;
Survey turned in by each student&#13;
at registration.&#13;
Nall explained that he could&#13;
use a little help in setting up the&#13;
budgets . "Administrative support&#13;
is lacking. Jewel Echelbarger&#13;
used to compile all the budgets&#13;
and run them off for us, and&#13;
Tuition up, enrollment down&#13;
College Press Service&#13;
A tuition increase at the University of Montana at Missoula may&#13;
result in a serious enrollment decline, a survey conducted by two&#13;
economics students discovered recently .&#13;
The survey was completed by 3,200 students, or about 40 percent&#13;
of the ~tudent population at UM. The results indicate that between&#13;
278 and 742 students , non-resident as well as resident, will not return&#13;
to UM next fall because of the recent fee increase .&#13;
In February , the Montana Board of Regents approved a tuition&#13;
increa~e of $400 per year for non-residents and $36 per year for&#13;
re~1dents .&#13;
Population rises rapidly&#13;
(CPS) - The world's population&#13;
is continuing to grow at the&#13;
rate of 2.2 percent a year,&#13;
according to figures compiled by&#13;
the Environmental Fund . The&#13;
world's population is now 4.15&#13;
billion .&#13;
The population is growing&#13;
fastest in Africa, Asia, and Latin&#13;
America and a physician' s&#13;
magazine observed that " because&#13;
of their continuing high&#13;
birth rates , the developing&#13;
countries of these three&#13;
continents have now reached the&#13;
point where 40 percent or more&#13;
of their national populations are&#13;
under 15 years of age."&#13;
GROUP SUPPORT REQUESTS FOR THE FISCAL YEAR 19n-7a&#13;
Name i:&gt;I Organlutlon&#13;
Earth Science Club&#13;
Lile Science Club&#13;
Minority Business Management Club&#13;
Parkside Soc,ely of Physics Students&#13;
Parkside Engineering Students Assoc.&#13;
Parkside Ph1 losoph1cal Society&#13;
Parkside Pre-Med Club&#13;
Anlhropology Club&#13;
Judo Club&#13;
Ragtime Rangers&#13;
Parkside Chrishan Fellowship&#13;
Debate and F orens1cs&#13;
Parkside Assoc. of Wargamers&#13;
Parkside Vets Club&#13;
Concerned Studenls Coalihon&#13;
Parkside Guitar Players Guild&#13;
Parkside Math Club&#13;
Parkside Drug Quarters&#13;
Porn Porn Squad&#13;
Parkside Players&#13;
Totals :&#13;
1976-n 19n.1a 111n-1a 111n-1a&#13;
Allocation P,.Budget Request Afloca1 on&#13;
$ 500 00 $1 .300 00 $2,319 00 $1 ,300 00&#13;
190 00 330 00 4 70 00 400 00&#13;
60 00 1 ,000 00 390 00 310 00&#13;
25000 600 00 22500 22500&#13;
100 00 200 00 183 40 185 00&#13;
65 00 400 00 1 ,400 00 500 00&#13;
17000 300 00 140.00 140 00&#13;
240.00 400 00 657 80 650 00&#13;
450 00 . Q. 2,068 00 1,500 00&#13;
50 00 ·O· 1 .045 00 500 00&#13;
13000 12500 6000 6000&#13;
1,495.00 2,400 00 4,655 00 2 200 00&#13;
195.00 100.00 1,185.00 78500&#13;
1,400 00 2,200.00 2,948 00 2,000 00&#13;
1,800 00 3,500.00 2,944 00 2,950 00&#13;
-0- ·O· 1,965.00 600 00&#13;
-0· ·0· 450 00 300 00&#13;
375.00 1,700.00 1,780 .00 400 00&#13;
150.00 400 00 1,312 00 300 .00&#13;
520 00 6,500 .00 1,800 00 300 00&#13;
$7, 125.00 $12,855.00 S23, 105.20 $15,1105.00&#13;
cone&#13;
pr tt&#13;
all&#13;
would like to thank all of&#13;
our advertisers, subcribers&#13;
and readers for a good&#13;
seniester!&#13;
See_ you in the fall!&#13;
1 041: / game • Mondays &amp; Fridays&#13;
9 a.m. to 10 a.m.&#13;
2541:/game - Wednesday,&#13;
Thursday, Friday&#13;
5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.&#13;
25 41:/ game - Saturdays&#13;
UNION REC -CENTER noon to 2:30 p.m.&#13;
Call 553-2695 for&#13;
FURTHER INFORMATION&#13;
- - ------:---- . ·---............ ---·~~- -... :.___ &#13;
I&#13;
.• ....&#13;
·".&#13;
t: ...·;;news&#13;
Racine, Kenosha symphonies&#13;
to perform at UW-p&#13;
The Kenosha and Racine Symphony&#13;
Orchestras will combine&#13;
in a 129-piece ensemble to&#13;
present the final program in&#13;
Parks ide's 1976-77 Accent on&#13;
Enrichment Series at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Saturday, May 14, in the Phy Ed&#13;
building gymnasium.&#13;
Antonia Brico will be guest&#13;
conductor and artist-in-residence&#13;
Eugene Fodor will be guest&#13;
soloist in a program consisting of&#13;
Rossini's Overture ro Semiramide,&#13;
Tchaikovsky's Symphony&#13;
No.5 in E minor, Op. 64, and&#13;
Khatchaturian's Coricerto for&#13;
Violin and Orchestra in D minor.&#13;
Concert&#13;
tickets are $5 and are a~ailable at&#13;
the Parkside Union information&#13;
Center, Sears in Kenosha and&#13;
Cook-Cere, Team Electronics,&#13;
Pulice Music and Schmitt Music&#13;
in Racine.&#13;
The concert will be the second&#13;
visit to campus tor Brico, .who&#13;
was a guest lecturer at Parkside&#13;
last spring. Internationallyknown&#13;
as a conductor, she also&#13;
will give the principal address at&#13;
Parks ide commencement exercises&#13;
on May 22.&#13;
Fodor, who is artist-inresidence&#13;
at Parkside this year,&#13;
came to international fame as&#13;
winner of the 1974 Tchaikovsky&#13;
competition in Moscow, the first&#13;
violinist from the Western world&#13;
to win the prestigious award. He&#13;
has recently completed recording&#13;
an album of Fritz Kreisler&#13;
compositions 'On the RCA Red&#13;
Label with his regular recital and&#13;
recording 'accompanist, pianist&#13;
Stephen Swedish, who also is an&#13;
artist-in-residence at Parkside.&#13;
Lighten&#13;
Put&#13;
•&#13;
'Professor Chen receives&#13;
for hormone reseaLch&#13;
$50,000.&#13;
The National Science Foundation&#13;
(NSF) has awarded a grant of&#13;
$50600 in continuing support of&#13;
res~arch by life science Prof.&#13;
Chong-maw Chen, a life scientist&#13;
investigating how hormones&#13;
influence growth and cell&#13;
division in higher plants,&#13;
especially such major food crops&#13;
as corn, wheat, rice and&#13;
potatoes.&#13;
Chen's previous research in,&#13;
this area has been. supported by&#13;
NSF grants of $34,000 in 1972&#13;
and $50,500 in 1974.&#13;
Scientists are paying increasing&#13;
attention to the advantages&#13;
of approaching problems in both&#13;
basic research and agriculture&#13;
through plant cell culture and&#13;
investigation of plant hormones,&#13;
Chen said.'&#13;
His particular research concern&#13;
in the currently funded,&#13;
project is attempting· to solve&#13;
problems of the mechanism of a&#13;
particular hormone, cytokinin, in&#13;
cell division and differentiation.&#13;
The hormone is known to&#13;
promote formation of flower and&#13;
fruit in plants and also influences&#13;
transport of nutrients through&#13;
plants and enhances their&#13;
resistance to both aging and&#13;
adverse environments.&#13;
,your lood for foil&#13;
some 'closs' in ,your&#13;
summer ot -Porkslde.&#13;
For -info. co.JI-5531.2241&#13;
Full Time&#13;
Summer Work&#13;
Dear Parkslde Student:&#13;
DATE: May 11,1977&#13;
,&#13;
We would like to take this opportunity to Introduce you to Heritage Hoose.&#13;
We are an authorized Distributor for an Internationally known manufacturer,&#13;
the West Bend Company. Each year we employ a limited number of&#13;
students from the' Wisconsin State University System to work through our&#13;
College. Program.&#13;
It Is my pleasure to Inform you that we Will be Interviewing Parkslde&#13;
Students this spring, for full-time summer work. If you are accepted for the&#13;
job, you will be working In your own home area. If qualified, you will receive&#13;
above average pay and aHaln some great work experience to add to your&#13;
resume upon graduation.&#13;
I will be Interviewing students this week to explain the details of the position&#13;
and answer any questions which you may have. If you are Interested In&#13;
being Interviewed for one of our positions please call 552.9669or 634-0762&#13;
right ROW!We will be Interviewing Parkslde students this Friday, May 13,&#13;
1977In our Racine Office.&#13;
RLF:ss&#13;
Very truly yours,&#13;
Richard L. Fannin, Jr.&#13;
-College Program Director"&#13;
employed by 'applving tissue&#13;
culture techniques, Chen said.&#13;
There is much- scientific interest&#13;
in obtaining high yield crops by&#13;
using somatic eel! hybridization,&#13;
he said. Investigation of the&#13;
mode of plant hormone action in&#13;
cell differentiation can provide a&#13;
better technological base for the&#13;
agriculture of the future, he&#13;
added. .&#13;
Chen is assisted in his work by&#13;
several student research assistants&#13;
who also are co-authors of&#13;
some of his publications on his&#13;
findings to date. Chen also has&#13;
given a number of guest lectures&#13;
on his work and next Thursday&#13;
\ '&#13;
May 12, will present a seminar&#13;
on his findings at the Mobile&#13;
Research Institute in New Jersey.&#13;
He has been elected to&#13;
membership in the American&#13;
Society of Biological Chemists&#13;
on the basis of his research&#13;
conducted at Parkside and is the&#13;
only UW System faculty member&#13;
not on the Madison staff who has&#13;
been invited to join the&#13;
prestigious group.&#13;
_ Chorig-mQw Chen&#13;
HOW TO TAKE&#13;
. THE FUN FLIGHT&#13;
tAu. .9" A&amp;OlJt 0lQ: Sf'EClAl.!!!! INTaoouCTlONS&#13;
~~ 9&amp;-'""W~, 91" dM f:;Z,;'? _C§r,!z;;,,?&#13;
16.. e-..l ..... .-. Z..II, ..... II ""'&#13;
....... Jl'1/112·3142&#13;
Kites. Senti •• and Training&#13;
learning how the hormone&#13;
achieves these effects is&#13;
important to the development of&#13;
plant tissue cultures, a much&#13;
faster method of hybridization'&#13;
than traditional pollenization&#13;
which also produces a wider&#13;
range of varieties, as well as cell&#13;
differentiation.&#13;
Many of the difficulties in&#13;
culturing economic plant tissues&#13;
on agar medium stem from insufficient&#13;
knowledge of the steps&#13;
which lead to embryogenesis&#13;
and organogenesis, the division&#13;
of a single cell to become an&#13;
embryo or an organ, he said.&#13;
Chen is studying cytokinin&#13;
mechanisms in terms of sites and&#13;
nature of hormone action, the&#13;
origin of the hormone in plant&#13;
tissues and its biosynthetic&#13;
pathway, and the enzymes&#13;
involved in the metabolism of&#13;
cytokinin plant hormones.&#13;
These problems are particularly&#13;
important for such food crops&#13;
as corn, wheat, rice and potatoes&#13;
where mutation and selection of&#13;
high yield. species could be&#13;
news&#13;
Racine, Kenosha symphonies&#13;
to perform at UW-P&#13;
The Kenosha and Racine Symphony&#13;
Orchestras will combine&#13;
in a 129-piece ensemble to&#13;
present the final program in&#13;
Parkside's 1976-77 Accent on&#13;
Enrichment Series at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Saturday, May 14, in the Phy Ed&#13;
building gymnasium.&#13;
Pulice Music and Schmitt Music&#13;
in Racine.&#13;
Professor Chen recei~es _$50,000.&#13;
The concert will be the second&#13;
visit to campus for Brico, .who&#13;
was a guest lecturer at Parkside&#13;
last spring . Internationallyknown&#13;
as a conductor, she also&#13;
will give the principal address at&#13;
Parkside commencement exercises&#13;
on May 22.&#13;
for hormone research·&#13;
Antonia Brico will be guest&#13;
conductor and artist-in-residence&#13;
Eugene Fodor will be guest&#13;
soloist in a program consisting of&#13;
Rossini's Overture .to Semiramide,&#13;
Tchaikovsky's Symphony&#13;
No. 5 in E minor, Op. 64, and&#13;
Khatchaturian's Concerto for&#13;
Violin and Orchestra in D minor.&#13;
Concert&#13;
tickets are $5 a~d are a~ailable at&#13;
the Parkside Union information&#13;
Center, Sears in Kenosha and&#13;
Cook-Gere, Team Electronics,&#13;
Fodor, who is artist-inresidence&#13;
at Parkside this year,&#13;
came to international fame as&#13;
winner of the 1974 Tchaikovsky&#13;
competition in Moscow, the first&#13;
violinist from the Western world&#13;
to win the prestigious award. He&#13;
has recently completed recording&#13;
an album of Fritz Kreisler&#13;
· compositions --on the RCA Red&#13;
Label with his regular recital and&#13;
recording ,accompanist, pianist&#13;
Stephen Swedish, who also is an&#13;
artist-in-residence at Parkside.&#13;
Lighten&#13;
Put&#13;
~our lood for foll&#13;
some 'closs' in ~our&#13;
summer ot -: Po,kside.&#13;
For ·info. coJI- · 55_3:.. 2241&#13;
The National Science Foundation&#13;
(NSF) has awarded a grant of&#13;
$50,600 in continuing support of&#13;
research by life science Prof.&#13;
Chong-maw Chen, a life scientist .&#13;
investigating how hormones&#13;
influence growth and cell&#13;
division in higher plants,&#13;
especially such major food crops&#13;
as corn, wheat, rice and&#13;
potatoes.&#13;
Chen's previous research in&#13;
this area has been supported by&#13;
NSF grants of $34,000 in 1972&#13;
and $50,500 in 1974.&#13;
Scientists are paying increasing&#13;
attention to the advantages&#13;
of approaching problems in both&#13;
basic research and agriculture&#13;
through plant cell culture and&#13;
investigation of plant hormones,&#13;
Chen said.&#13;
His particular research concern&#13;
in the currently funded&#13;
project is attempting · to solve&#13;
problems of the mechanism of a&#13;
particular hormone, cytokinin, in&#13;
cell division and differentiation.&#13;
The hormone is known to&#13;
promote formation of flower and&#13;
fruit in plants and also influences&#13;
transport of nutrients through&#13;
plants and enhances their&#13;
resistance to both aging and&#13;
;idverse environments .&#13;
Full)Time&#13;
Summer Work&#13;
DATE: May 11, 1977&#13;
Dear Parkside Student:&#13;
We would like to take this opportunity to introduce you to Heritage Hoose.&#13;
We are an authorized Distributor for an Internationally known manufacturer,&#13;
the West Bend Company. Each year we employ a limited number of&#13;
students from the Wisconsin State University System to work through our&#13;
College_ Program.&#13;
It Is my pleasure to Inform you that we wlll be Interviewing Parkside&#13;
Students this spring, for full-time summer work. If you are accepted for the&#13;
job, you will be working In your own home area. If qualified, you w.111 receive&#13;
above average pay and attain some great work experience to add to your&#13;
resume upon graduation.&#13;
I will be interviewing students this week to explain the details of the position&#13;
and answer any questions which you may have. If you are interested In&#13;
being Interviewed for one of our positions please call 552-9669 or 634-0762&#13;
right Aow! We will be Interviewing Parkside students this Friday, May 13,&#13;
1977 in our Racine Office.&#13;
RLF:ss&#13;
Very truly yours,&#13;
Richard L. Fannin, Jr.&#13;
-college Program Director · ·&#13;
_ Chong-mow Chen&#13;
Learning how the hormone&#13;
achieves these effects is&#13;
important to the development of&#13;
plant tissue cultures, a much&#13;
faster method of hyb'ridization'&#13;
than traditional pollenization&#13;
which also produces a wider&#13;
range of varieties, as well as cell&#13;
different'.iation.&#13;
Many of the difficulties in&#13;
culturing economic plant tissues&#13;
on agar medium stem from insufficient&#13;
knowledge of the steps&#13;
which lead to embryogenesis&#13;
and organogenesis, the divis'ion&#13;
of a single cell to become an&#13;
embryo or an organ, he said .&#13;
Chen is studying cytokinin&#13;
mechanisms in terms of sites and&#13;
nature of hormone action, the&#13;
origin of the hormone in plant&#13;
tissues and its biosynthetic&#13;
pathway, and the enzymes&#13;
involved in the metabolism of&#13;
cytokinin plant hormones.&#13;
These problems are particularly&#13;
important for such food crops&#13;
as corn, wheat, rice and potatoes&#13;
where mutation and selection of&#13;
high yield . species could be&#13;
employed by · applying tissue&#13;
culture techniques, Chen said.&#13;
There is much scientific interest&#13;
in obtaining high yield crops by&#13;
using somatic cell hybridization,&#13;
he sa.id . Investigation of the&#13;
mode of plant hormdne action in&#13;
cell differentiation can provide a&#13;
better technological base for the&#13;
agriculture of the future, he&#13;
added.&#13;
Chen is assisted in his work by&#13;
several student research assistants&#13;
who also are co-authors of&#13;
some of his publications on his&#13;
findings to date. Chen also has&#13;
given a number of guest lectures&#13;
on his work and next Thursday,&#13;
May 12, will present a se'minar&#13;
on his findings at the Mobile&#13;
Research Institute in New Jersey.&#13;
He has been elected to&#13;
membership in the American&#13;
Society of Biological Chemists&#13;
on the basis of his research&#13;
conducted at Parkside and is the&#13;
only UW System faculty member&#13;
not on the Madison staff who has&#13;
been invited to join the&#13;
prestigious group.&#13;
HOW TO TAKE&#13;
· THE FUN FLIGHT&#13;
CALL ~ AIOUT OUR SPKIAL !!!!_ INTIOOUCTIONS&#13;
~- .. . . - . ~ -,~ ..;,0 / [ )../ / ( ,e, . -: ~ - - .:::7)~,,,.n _ 7Jf/·l'n,td .V./,Lv? Y t:~;,,f' I 600 c ... ,1 holo,onl Zloo, lllloob ,oo9t ,., .. 112/172-3142&#13;
krtn, Service and Training &#13;
Canary explains&#13;
Comm. problems&#13;
~I&#13;
by Bob Hoffman&#13;
Speculations that the Communication departmentwas&#13;
in trouble arose again last week, perhaps&#13;
ready to be phased out, because of William&#13;
Jennings, Visiting Communications professor, who&#13;
didn't have his contract renewed. Ranger found out&#13;
that the facts were completely different.&#13;
RANGER interviewed Robert Canary, chairman of&#13;
the Humanities Division in which Communkation&#13;
is a discipline.&#13;
RANGER: How did the rumor originate that the&#13;
Communications department might be phased out?&#13;
CANARY: Some faculty and leaving professors&#13;
said communication was being phased out. After&#13;
the death of Wyllie (former Chancellor of Parkside)&#13;
there was a divisional reorganization and we are&#13;
trying to determine just where Communications&#13;
belongs. That's always a problem. If we put&#13;
Communi'cations ove-r in the Psychology&#13;
department I'm sure people like Weaver (a&#13;
Communication professor, most of whose classes&#13;
deal with speech) would feel anxious about being&#13;
judged by psychologists. On the other hand one of&#13;
th~ new professors we are bringing in next year will&#13;
be teaching Interpersonal Communication classes&#13;
and I'm sure she will feel uncomfortable being&#13;
judged by English professors.&#13;
RANGER: So you don't feel there's any attempt&#13;
by English professors to try to cripple the&#13;
Communication department because the English,&#13;
professors feel there's a threat to their positions&#13;
here at the University because of Communication&#13;
professors teaching 'English' classes, classes that&#13;
these English professors think should be in their&#13;
domain?&#13;
CANARY: No, I don't think so. The&#13;
Communication major has 'grown. The problem is in&#13;
the divisional structure, people coming up for&#13;
renewal and tenure are being judged by people in&#13;
other areas. That creates anxieties. But the problem&#13;
at the level of the tenuring procedure is built into&#13;
the structure.&#13;
- RANGER: What is going to happen to the&#13;
Communication department in coming years?&#13;
CANARY: An outside committee reviewed our&#13;
Communication department last year and came to&#13;
the conclusion that the University has a place for a&#13;
strong Communication department. They also&#13;
suggested that by the fall of 1977 we should have&#13;
two more full-time professors and two more ad-hoc&#13;
professors. This year when we asked for new&#13;
positions in the Humanities department four of the&#13;
five top priorities were in Communication. We did&#13;
get those four positions. So we did a lot better than&#13;
we had expected to do.&#13;
RANGER: Another criticism that has been leveled&#13;
against the Humanities professors is that opposition&#13;
to the breadth requirement is self-interest. The&#13;
Humanities professors want special courses that&#13;
they've dreamed up, that have never been taught&#13;
before and they want these courses to be part of the&#13;
breadth requirement. Furthermore, if they had their&#13;
way they would make these courses mandatory.&#13;
What's your response?&#13;
CANARY: I've talked to Dave Beach, (Behavioral&#13;
Science professor) and Paul Kleine (chairman of the&#13;
Education Department) and they agreed that this&#13;
report lacks any kind of adequate rationale. But the&#13;
assumption that the only alternative is mandatory&#13;
courses is false. Faculty in general don't like&#13;
teaching required courses. If they could they would&#13;
vote for something like this report.&#13;
RANGER:What really is your major complaint to&#13;
this report?&#13;
CANARY: Why should a student be asked to take&#13;
a general education program? Simple breadth is not&#13;
a sufficient rationale to require students to take a&#13;
course. I'd like to see coherence in what a student&#13;
takes. Miscellaneous sampling isn't anything you&#13;
could call a general education. There's no attempt&#13;
to add it up. There's no 'rationale for this program.&#13;
The only reason they give for this program is that&#13;
every major ought to have a crack at the students.&#13;
RANGER:What is your solution to the problem?&#13;
CANARY: They (the committee) gives you two&#13;
weeks to prepare an alternative.&#13;
RANGER: When they had about six months!&#13;
CANARY: Yeah, we should put it off for a year&#13;
and wait for the new vice-chancellor to come in.&#13;
One of the reasons he was brought in was that he&#13;
was a leader in building a new general education&#13;
program at the university he is presently at. So he&#13;
really knows what education is, 50 we should just&#13;
put the breadth requirement off for another year&#13;
and wait till the new vice-chancellor comes.&#13;
news'&#13;
Carrington to&#13;
research at&#13;
Northwestern&#13;
by Phil Hennann&#13;
Richard A. Carrington, as Associate Professor of&#13;
communications will be a VIsiting Scholar at&#13;
Northwestern University for the 1977-78 scbolasuc&#13;
year.&#13;
Carrington, who specializes in VOice and oral&#13;
interpretation at Parkside, will work With Northwestern&#13;
faculty in learning new methods of&#13;
teaching. Professor Carrangton will be a&#13;
representative of Parkside and Parknde's Center for&#13;
Teaching Excellence headed by Alan Shucard&#13;
Carrington told RANGER, "I will be learning the&#13;
lesac Method of training voice, which I hope to&#13;
apply to my teaching at Parkside."&#13;
Carrington will not be teaching any courses at&#13;
Parkside next year but will return the following&#13;
year.&#13;
Carrington explained, "It will give me a chance to&#13;
work with others in the field of communications&#13;
and improve myself. It Will be a great learning&#13;
experience."&#13;
Humor makes&#13;
lectures&#13;
more effective&#13;
(CPS) - Sick of that drone of a professor gotng&#13;
on and on about some boring POlOt~ Feel like&#13;
hearing a lecture for once that has some spark to It?&#13;
You're not the only one.&#13;
According to an ongoing study on humor at the&#13;
Uruversttv of Southern Cahforrua (USC), students&#13;
can score a whole grade POlOt higher If they are&#13;
subjected to funny lectures instead of convenuonal&#13;
ones&#13;
"Humor can mean the difference between an A&#13;
and a B, or a B and a C," reports Dr cott Fraser, an&#13;
organizer of the USC Quality Teachmg Effe ltv _&#13;
ness Program (QlI)&#13;
Now...in Union Square!&#13;
YOUR FAVORITE&#13;
WINE&#13;
By the Glass By the Carafe&#13;
~ 51.00&#13;
Full 51.90&#13;
WINE COOLER - '2.20 PITCHER&#13;
TRY IT ...YOIJ'LL LIKE IT&#13;
canary explains&#13;
Comm. problems&#13;
by Bob Hoffman&#13;
SpP.culations that the Communication department&#13;
was in trouble arose again last week, perhaps&#13;
ready to be phased out, because of William&#13;
Jennings, Visiting Communications professor, who&#13;
didn't have his contract renewed . R!rnger found out&#13;
that the facts were completely different.&#13;
RANGER interviewed Robert Canary, chairman of&#13;
the Humanities Division in which Communteation&#13;
is a discipline.&#13;
RANGER: How did the rumor originate that the&#13;
Communications department might be phased out?&#13;
CANARY: Some faculty and leaving professors&#13;
said communication was being phased out. After&#13;
the death of Wyllie (former Chancellor of Parkside)&#13;
there was a divisional reorganization and we are&#13;
trying to determine just where Communications&#13;
belongs . That's always a problem . If we put&#13;
Commun ·cations over in the Psychology&#13;
department I'm sure people like Weaver (a&#13;
Communication professor, most of whose classes&#13;
deal with speech) would feel anxious about being&#13;
judged by psychologists . On the other hand one of&#13;
th~ new professors we are bringing in next year will&#13;
be teaching Interpersonal CommunicatiOQ classes&#13;
and I'm sure she will feel uncomfortable being&#13;
judged by English professors.&#13;
RANGER : So you don't feel there's any attempt&#13;
by English professors to try to cripple the&#13;
Communication department because the English ,&#13;
professors feel there's a threat to their positions&#13;
here at the University because of Communication&#13;
professors teaching 'English' classes, classes that&#13;
these English professors think should be in their&#13;
domain?&#13;
CA ARY: No, don't think so . The&#13;
Communication major has grown. The problem is in&#13;
the divisional structure, people coming up for&#13;
renewal and tenure are being judged by people in&#13;
other areas. That creates anxieties. But the problem&#13;
at the level of the tenuring procedure is built into&#13;
the structure.&#13;
RANGER: What is going to happen to the&#13;
Communication department in coming years?&#13;
CANARY: An outside committee reviewed our&#13;
Communication department last year and came to&#13;
the conclusion that the University has a place for a&#13;
strong Communication department. They also&#13;
suggested that by the fall of 1977 we should have&#13;
two more full-time professors and two more ad-hoc&#13;
professors . This year when we asked for new&#13;
positions in the Humanities department four of the&#13;
five top priorities were in Communication. We did&#13;
get those four positions. So we did a lot better than&#13;
we had expected to do.&#13;
RANGER: Another criticism that has been leveled&#13;
against the Humanities professors is that opposition&#13;
to the breadth requirement is self-interest. The&#13;
Humanities professors want special courses that&#13;
they've dreamed up, that have never been taught&#13;
before and they want these courses to be part of the&#13;
breadth requirement. Furthermore, if they had their&#13;
way they would make these courses mandatory&#13;
What's your response?&#13;
CANARY: I've talked to Dave Beach, (Behavioral&#13;
Science professor) and Paul Kleine (chairman of the&#13;
Education Department) and they agreed that this&#13;
report lacks any kind of adequate rationale . But the&#13;
assumption that the only alternative is mandatory&#13;
courses is false . Faculty in general don't like&#13;
teaching required courses . If they could they would&#13;
vote for something like this report .&#13;
RANGER : What really is your major complaint to&#13;
this report?&#13;
CANARY: Why should a student be asked to take&#13;
a general education program? Simple breadth is not&#13;
a sufficient rationale to require students to take a&#13;
course . I'd like to see coherence in what a student&#13;
takes. Miscellaneous sampling isn't anything you&#13;
could call a general education. There's no attempt&#13;
to add it up. There's no •rationale for this program .&#13;
The only reason they give for this program is that&#13;
every major ought to have a crack at the students&#13;
RANGER: What is your solution to the problem?&#13;
CANARY: They (the committee) gives you two&#13;
weeks to prepare an alternative .&#13;
RANGER: When they had about six months!&#13;
CANARY: Yeah, we should put it off for a year&#13;
and wait for the new vic~hancellor to come in .&#13;
One of the reasons he was brought in was that he&#13;
was a leader in building a new general ed~cation&#13;
program at the university he is presently at. So he&#13;
really knows what education is, so we should 1ust&#13;
put the breadth requirement off for another year&#13;
and wait till the new vic~hancellor comes .&#13;
news&#13;
Carrington to&#13;
research at&#13;
Northwestern&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
Richard A Carrington, as A oc1ate Prof sor of&#13;
commun1cat1ons will be a Vi itin holar at&#13;
orthwestern Un, ers,t for th 1977-78 cholast1&#13;
year&#13;
Carrington, who pec1altze in voice and oral&#13;
interpretation at Parksid , will work with orthwestern&#13;
faculty in learning n w m thod of&#13;
teaching . Professor Carrington will b a&#13;
representative of Parkside and Park 1d ' nt r for&#13;
Teaching Excellence head d by Alan hucard.&#13;
Carrington told RA GER, " I will be I arning th&#13;
Lesac Method of training voice, which I hope to&#13;
apply to my teaching at Parks,d ,"&#13;
Carrington will not b teaching any cour at&#13;
Parkside next year but will return th followin&#13;
year&#13;
Carrington explained, " It will g1v me a chance to&#13;
work with others in the field of ommun1cat1on&#13;
and improve myself. It will b a great learning&#13;
experience "&#13;
Humor makes&#13;
lectures&#13;
more effective&#13;
(CPS) - Sick of that drone of a profe sor oin&#13;
on and on about som boring point1 F I 11 e&#13;
hearing a lecture for one that ha om par to 1tl&#13;
You're not the only on&#13;
According to an ongoing stud on humor at th&#13;
Uni ers1t of outh rn Caltfornia (U ), tud nt&#13;
can core a whol grad point h, her if th ar&#13;
ub1 cted to funn I ctur in t ad of onv ntional&#13;
Now ... in Union Square!&#13;
YOUR FAVORITE&#13;
WINE&#13;
By the Glass By the Carafe&#13;
½ • 1.00&#13;
Full' 1.90&#13;
WINE COOLER - '2.20 PITCHER&#13;
TRY IT ... YOlJ'LL LIKE IT&#13;
• !Bu1tqandy I.&#13;
------ ,, . &#13;
British&#13;
archeologist&#13;
Howard Carter&#13;
cleans King Tut's·&#13;
coffin&#13;
King rut visits the Field Museum&#13;
The entrance to&#13;
King Tut's tomb.&#13;
Exhibit draws&#13;
thousands&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
and&#13;
laurel Thompson&#13;
(Chicago) - The shining Treasures of&#13;
Tutankhamun, on loan to the Lr.S. from the&#13;
Egyptian government, ~re now within reach of&#13;
Parkside students.&#13;
The Chicago Field Museum is now displaying the&#13;
assortment of ancient Egyptian gold treasures, real&#13;
chariots, and fine alabaster and ivory. craft work&#13;
which drew hundreds of thousands of visitors in&#13;
Washington.&#13;
King Tutankhamun, (often shortened to Tut). was&#13;
mummified and entombed in 1325 Be and laid&#13;
untouched for 32 centuries until discovered by&#13;
British archaeologist Howard Carter in 1922. The&#13;
fantastic gold treasures which were found in the&#13;
boy-king's tomb are irreplaceable relics of ancient&#13;
Egypt.&#13;
While they were on display in Washington,&#13;
hundreds camped out overnight outside the&#13;
museum to be joined by thousands more in the&#13;
morning.&#13;
On the first day of Viewing which was limited to&#13;
museum members only, roughly 1000 persons per&#13;
hour vlt&gt;wed the exhibit under heavy guard _In order&#13;
to prevent long lines from forming, the Field&#13;
Museum gives the visitor a number and announces&#13;
when persons with that number can enter the&#13;
exhibit. Until the number is called, visitors are .free&#13;
to. visit the other displays at the museum.&#13;
The most impressive object in the exhibition is a&#13;
solid gold mask of the youthful King Tut (he was&#13;
crowned at age nine and died at 18), which is in&#13;
pertect condition. The Egyptians embedded polishPO&#13;
ob -,rdran and colored glas-, in the- golo 10 c olor&#13;
I&#13;
~&#13;
art&#13;
King Tut visits the Field Museum&#13;
The entrance to&#13;
King Tut's tomb.&#13;
British&#13;
archeologist&#13;
Howard Carter&#13;
cleans King Tut's ·&#13;
coffin&#13;
Exhibit draws&#13;
tho usands&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
and&#13;
laurel Thompson&#13;
(Chicago) - The shining Treasures of&#13;
Tutankhamun, on loan to the U.S. from the&#13;
Egyptian government, ~re now within reach of&#13;
Parkside students .&#13;
The Chicago Field Museum is now displaying the&#13;
assortment of ancient Egyptian gold treasures, real&#13;
chariots, anct fine alabaster and ivory. craft work&#13;
which drew hundreds of thousands of visitors in&#13;
Washington .&#13;
King Tutankhamun, (often shortened to Tut), was&#13;
mummified and entombed in 1325 BC and laid&#13;
untouched for 32 centuries until discovered by&#13;
British archaeologist Howard Carter in 1922. The&#13;
fantastic gold treasures which were found in the&#13;
boy-king's tomb are irreplaceable relics of ancient&#13;
Egypt.&#13;
While they were on display in Washington,&#13;
hundreds camped out overnight outside the&#13;
museum to be joined by thousands more in the&#13;
morning.&#13;
On the first day of viewing which was limited to&#13;
museum members only, roughly 1000 persons per&#13;
hour viewed the exhibit under heavy guard . In order&#13;
to prevent long lines from forming, the Field&#13;
Museum gives the visitor a n·umber and announces&#13;
when persons with that number can enter the&#13;
exhibit. Until the number is called, visitors are ,free&#13;
to. visit the other displays at the museum.&#13;
The most impressive object in the exhibition is a&#13;
solid gold mask of the youthful King Tut (he was&#13;
crowned at age nine and died at 18), which is· in&#13;
rwrtect condition. The l:gyptians embedded polishPd&#13;
ob\1d1an and colored glas~ in the gold to color &#13;
Professor&#13;
Omar Amln&#13;
teatures, so from this mask we know today&#13;
II what King Tut looked like.&#13;
tpl~ leaf, which is gold beaten bvhand into thin&#13;
s was finely hand-engraved with scenes from&#13;
s ~oronation, daily life, and funeral, and then&#13;
ned to chests and chairs.&#13;
lid blocks of alabaster gypsum were carved&#13;
vases, figurines, and animals. These alabaster&#13;
are a tribute to the craftsmen who spend&#13;
~tShS hollowing and smoothing the blocks and&#13;
#cling colored pastes to make the designs.&#13;
What makes King Tut's tomb more significant&#13;
.,nthose of other kings is that Tut's is the only one&#13;
ch had not been plundered by grave robbers,&#13;
centuries ago did manage to get inside the first&#13;
rooms but didn't find the most important&#13;
ber: the one in Wh1ChTut lay underneath rock&#13;
gold burial crypts weighing tons.&#13;
fhe reason later robbers didn't find the tomb was&#13;
that the entrance was covered by gravel from&#13;
subsequent tomb excavations.&#13;
1 t took archaeologist Carter years of work In the&#13;
tomb and in a field laboratory to photograph,&#13;
preserve and inventory the treasure and prepare It&#13;
for shipping from the Valley of the Kings, not far&#13;
from the Pyramids, to the Egyptian Museum In&#13;
Cairo. It had taken Carter six years to find the tomb&#13;
and ten years to empty it.&#13;
If you go to the Field Museum to visit the Tut&#13;
Treasures, come early in the day for a shorter wait,&#13;
advise museum officrals. Photography is prohibited&#13;
in the T ut exhibit area, and all handbags must be&#13;
checked at the entrance. Admission to the exhibit r&#13;
open until August 15, is free with admission to the&#13;
museum (students with ID, SOc, teachers free)&#13;
Field Museum, Roosevelt Road at Lakeshore Drive,&#13;
Chicago. Open rnon-thru-wed., 9-6, and Thurs, Fn.,&#13;
Sat. and Sunday, 9-9.&#13;
Tutankhamun lectures&#13;
presented today&#13;
Because of the mteeest In&#13;
Egypt generated by the curre-nt&#13;
exhrbmon of the Treasures of&#13;
Tutankhamun' at Chicago s r 1t"ld&#13;
Museum,llfe science Prof Omar&#13;
Arrun, a native of Egypt w,1I&#13;
present two background 1t"(-&#13;
tures, from noon to 1 p m and&#13;
to 8 p m on 1.\ ednesday 'lay&#13;
11, tn Classroom 107&#13;
The free pubhc programs wtll&#13;
be illustrated by AmlO·S color&#13;
sltdes&#13;
Amm will begin his presentation&#13;
With an overview of modern&#13;
Egypt Including such ancrent&#13;
Jackel-headed god, Anubis.&#13;
teatures, so from this ma_sk we know today&#13;
ti what King Tut looked like .&#13;
Gol~ leaf, which is gold beaten b~ hand into thin&#13;
ts, was finely ha_nd~ngraved with scenes from&#13;
·s coronation, daily life, and funeral, and then&#13;
ened to chests and chairs.&#13;
Solid blocks ?f alabaster _ gypsum were carved&#13;
10 vases, figurines , and animals . These alabaster&#13;
k are a tribute to the craftsmen who spend&#13;
-' ths hollowing and smoothing the blocks and&#13;
ting colored pastes to make the designs.&#13;
What makes King Tut's tomb more significant&#13;
n those of other kings is that Tut's is the only one&#13;
h had not been plundered by grave robbers,&#13;
c centuries ago did manage to get inside the first&#13;
rooms but didn't find the most important&#13;
ber: the one in which Tut lay underneath rock&#13;
gold burial crypts weighing tons.&#13;
'he reason later robbers didn't find the tomb was&#13;
Professor&#13;
Omar Amin&#13;
that the entrance was covered by gravel from&#13;
subsequent tomb excavations.&#13;
It took archaeologist Carter ears of wor in the&#13;
tomb and in a field laboratory to photograph,&#13;
preserve and inventory the treasure and prepare 1t&#13;
for shipping from the Valley of the mgs, not far&#13;
from the Pyramids, to the Egyptian Museum in&#13;
Cairo. It had taken Carter six years to find the tomb&#13;
and ten years to empty it.&#13;
If you go to the Field Museum to visit the Tut&#13;
Treasures, come early in the day for a shorter wa1 ,&#13;
advise museum officials . Photography 1s proh1b1ted&#13;
in the Tut exhibit area, and all handbags mu t be&#13;
checked at the entrance. Admission to thee h1b1t ,&#13;
open until August 15, is free with admission to the&#13;
museum (students with ID, S0c, teachers free)&#13;
Field Museum, Roosevelt Road at Lakeshore Drive,&#13;
Chicago. Open mon-thru-Wed ., 9-6, and Thurs , Fri •&#13;
Sat. and Sunday, 9-9.&#13;
Tutankhamun lect r&#13;
presented today&#13;
finely carved King Tut head.&#13;
t1on v.1th an overv,&#13;
Egypt mcludtn&#13;
Jackel-headed god, A nu bis. &#13;
Ilevents&#13;
Wednesday, May 11&#13;
Lecture: Background of 'Treasures of Tutankhamun'" by Omar Amin,&#13;
associate professor of life science, Parkside, at 12 noon and at&#13;
7 p.m. in Cl 107&#13;
Student Concertat3 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
lecture on Solid Waste Management by Robert Glebs, department of&#13;
natural resources, at? p.,......;nCl 105. Call 5ST-2312 for reservations.&#13;
Crime Prevention Clinic: "Home Security" by Martin Defatte, director&#13;
of the Racine police crime prevention unit, at 7 p.m. at the Golden&#13;
Rondelle, Racine. Call 554-2154 for tickets.&#13;
Friday, May 13&#13;
Last &lt;by of classes.&#13;
Satur&lt;by, May 14&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series: Combined Racine-Kenosha Symphon.-&#13;
ies, Antonia Brico, with guest soloist Eugene Fodor, at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
fieldhouse. Admission.&#13;
Monday, May 16&#13;
Finals Begin.&#13;
Tuesday,May 17&#13;
Faculty senate meeting at 3:30 p.m. in CL 0107.&#13;
Friday, May 20&#13;
Media Productions Workshop at 10 a.m. and at 2 p.m. in CA D155A.&#13;
Satur&lt;by, May 21&#13;
PAB Presents the END at the tent. Also May 22.&#13;
Sun&lt;by, May 2;2&#13;
Commencement at 2 p.m. in the Fieldhouse.&#13;
Saturday, June 4&#13;
Computer fair 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in Main Place&#13;
Art center to hold auction&#13;
The Ozaukee Art Center, a non-profit organization, will hold its 6th&#13;
Annual Art Auction Sunday, May 15, 1p.m., ~llhe Washington Street&#13;
Gymnasium, W63 N641 in downtown Cedarburg. Admission is;free&#13;
and bidding paddles will cost one dollar.&#13;
Among the 150 pieces received and catalogued at the center are&#13;
sculptures, ceramics, stitchery, watercolor and acrylic paintings,&#13;
which have been contributed by artists throughout Wisconsin.&#13;
Auctioneer Barb Stein, assistant curatorof the Milwau~ee Auction&#13;
Gallery, will start the bidding at 1 p.m. on May 15. Miss Stein will.get&#13;
a helping hand from TV news personalities; Clarice Tinsley, Fine arts&#13;
reporter for Channel 6, and Bunny Raasch, Fine Arts reporter for&#13;
Channel 12. They will be appearing as guest auctioneers for the&#13;
Ozaukee Art Centers major fund raising event.&#13;
.Pure Brewed&#13;
From Goers Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
•&#13;
Home&#13;
safety&#13;
discussed.&#13;
Learn how to protect your&#13;
home against burglary by&#13;
attending the free Home Securitv&#13;
Program at the Golden Rondelle&#13;
Theater on May 11 at 7:00 p.m.&#13;
Marty Defatte, Director of the&#13;
Crime Prevention Unit at the&#13;
Racine Police Department will&#13;
discuss ways for the homeowner&#13;
to protect his property from&#13;
being victimized by criminals.&#13;
For further information or&#13;
reservations contact the Golden&#13;
Rondelle at 554- 2154.&#13;
Canoe&#13;
trip&#13;
offered&#13;
The Colden Rondelle Theater,&#13;
beginning at 7:30 p.m. oro May&#13;
19, is offeringa free canoe program&#13;
which is open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
learning how-to plan a&#13;
successful canoe trip will be one&#13;
of the topics discussed by&#13;
Richard Eddy, Adult Program&#13;
Director for the YMCA. Planning&#13;
what to take and-where to go are&#13;
equally important on a canoe&#13;
trip. ;{rFor&#13;
further information and&#13;
reservations contact the Rondelle&#13;
at 554-2154.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
recipe&#13;
o~ the y~ar ,&#13;
RUSSIAN TEA&#13;
2 cups Tang&#13;
1 cup instant tea&#13;
, 2 pkg lemon-lime' Koolaid-unsweetened&#13;
1 cup sugar&#13;
1 tsp cinnamon&#13;
2 tsp ground cloves&#13;
Mix well; use boiling water;&#13;
VISAGE ORGANIZATION PRESENTS&#13;
A&#13;
POETRY ·PROSE&#13;
READING&#13;
uw·p Library 2nd. floor overlooking&#13;
the lounge Thursday, May 12th&#13;
7:30 p.m. FREE&#13;
INTERESTED IN READING&#13;
CONTACT JEFFREY J. SWENCKI&#13;
634-5305 or c/o RANGER&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside Campus Health Office held&#13;
its annual Blood Pressure Clinic, open to both students and stall and&#13;
the public, last Tuesday. Campus Nurse Edith Isenberg, shown&#13;
checking the blood pressure of Racine freshman Mary 10 Curly,&#13;
termed the turnout excellent from both campus and, community.&#13;
Nurse Isenberg points out that high blood pressure is commo",&#13;
affecting 15 to ·20 percent of adult Americans or some 23 million \&#13;
people. II is a leading cause of stroke, .heart disease and kidney \&#13;
disease. High' blood pressure usually causes no symptoms, so a&#13;
pressure check is the only way to determine whether you have it.&#13;
Treatment of high blood pressure reduces its dangers and in mast /&#13;
people it can be lowered and kept under control, Nurse Isenberg said.&#13;
UW-pfilmmakers to show works&#13;
,&#13;
by Michael Murphy&#13;
Once again, to the delight of&#13;
the Parkside population, enduring&#13;
young students of todav, and&#13;
prospective young filmmakers of&#13;
tommorrow, will be given the&#13;
opportunity to display their&#13;
talents on Wednesday, May ·11,&#13;
from 12:00 to 2:00 at Cl lOS.&#13;
The festival promises more&#13;
excitement, drama, comedy,&#13;
romance, smiles, giggles, sighs,&#13;
tears, and plain old two fisted&#13;
action that one person should be&#13;
allowed to experience in a&#13;
lifetime ...It is an event that, in the&#13;
words of one of last years&#13;
attendants, "was very, very 'nice&#13;
to watch."&#13;
Students of 'the Basic&#13;
Filmmaking course, as taught by&#13;
Walt Ulbricht, will preview films&#13;
representing a semester's output.&#13;
The films are categorized into&#13;
three' basic" topics: narrative,&#13;
documentary, and experimental,&#13;
but each is individual and&#13;
unique in approach. Appropriate&#13;
atmosphere will be provided&#13;
through the sale of popcorm, 5c&#13;
for regular and 10e for. buttered.&#13;
The program should not only&#13;
prove an invaluable escape from&#13;
the tedium of education, but&#13;
should provide further revelation&#13;
into the creative processes&#13;
culturing here at Parkside.&#13;
-.&#13;
Brico to conduct and speak&#13;
Worl.d-renowned conductor&#13;
Antonia Brico, who will be on&#13;
campus several days next week,&#13;
in her role as guest conductor of&#13;
the Accent on Enrichment&#13;
concert by the combined Racine&#13;
and Kenosha Symphony Orchestras&#13;
on May 14, will present&#13;
several programs for Parkside&#13;
music students on Friday, May&#13;
13. ,&#13;
Bnco will talk informally at a&#13;
\&#13;
coffee and kringle reception&#13;
sponsored by the student&#13;
chapter of Music Educators&#13;
National Conference at 9 a.rn. in&#13;
CA 0-118 and will speak at 10&#13;
a.m. at an assembly in the CA&#13;
Theater where music students&#13;
from area high schools also will&#13;
be guests. Atl p.m. she will·hold&#13;
a workshop for Parkside instrumental&#13;
and conducting students&#13;
in CA 0-118.&#13;
..~~~ • MUIOnOOM I&#13;
~ §OUND§ ~&#13;
~ RADIOS CB UNITS TAPE DECKS ~&#13;
" CUSTOM INSTALLATION IN YOUR CAR OR tRUCK 'IIIIIIIIIIIIfI&#13;
~ WORK GUARANTEED . ~"&#13;
~ ~ FOR FREE ESTIMATE CALL ~ ~&#13;
~ JOHN GABRIEL 553-2287 we;I&#13;
~~,.,&#13;
Wednesday, May 11&#13;
Lecture: Backgrou11d of 'Treasures of Tutankhamun"' by Omar Amin,&#13;
associate professor of life science, Parkside, at 12 noon and at&#13;
7 p.m. in CL 107&#13;
Student Concert at 3 p.m . in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
Lecture on Solid Waste Management by Robert Glebs, department of&#13;
natural resources, at7 p.~ . ;n CL 105. Call 553°2312 for reservations.&#13;
Crime Prevention Clinic: " Home Security" by Martin Defatte, director&#13;
of the Racine police crime prevention unit, at 7 p.m. at the Golden&#13;
Rondelle, Racine. Call 554-2154 for tickets.&#13;
Friday, May 13&#13;
Last day of classes.&#13;
Saturday, May 14&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series: Combined Racine-Kenosha Symphon.-&#13;
ies, Antonia Brico, with guest soloist Eugene Fodor, at 8 p.m . in the&#13;
fieldhouse . Admission .&#13;
Monday, May 16&#13;
Finals Begin.&#13;
Tuesday, May 17&#13;
Faculty Senate meeting at 3:30 p.m . in CL D107.&#13;
Friday, May 20&#13;
Media Productions Workshop at 10 a.m. and at 2 p.m. in CA D155A.&#13;
Saturday, May 21&#13;
PAB Presents the END at the tent. Also May 22.&#13;
Sunday, May 27&#13;
Commencement at 2 p.m . in the Fieldhouse.&#13;
Saturday, June 4&#13;
Computer Fair 9 o.m. to 5 p.m. in Main Place&#13;
Art center to hold auction&#13;
The Ozaukee Art Center, a non-profit organization, will hold its 6th&#13;
Annual Art Auction Sunday, May 15, 1 p.m., at the Washington Street&#13;
Gymnasium, W63 N641 in downtown Cedarburg. Admission is free&#13;
and bidding paddles will cost one dollar.&#13;
Among the 150 pieces received and catalogued at the center are&#13;
sculptures, ceramics, stitchery, watercolor and acrylic paintings,&#13;
which have been contributed by artists throughout · Wisconsin.&#13;
Auctioneer Barb Stein, assistant curator of the Milwaukee Auction&#13;
Gallery, will start the bidding at 1 p.m. on May 15. Miss Stein will get&#13;
a helping hand from TV news personalities; Clarice Tinsley, Fine arts&#13;
reporter for Channel 6, and Bunny Raasch, Fine Arts reporter for&#13;
Channel 12. They will be appearing as guest auctioneers for the&#13;
Ozaukee Art Centers major fund raising event.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
•&#13;
Home&#13;
safety&#13;
discussed .&#13;
· Learn how to protect your&#13;
home against burglary by&#13;
attending the free Home Security&#13;
Program at the Golden Rondelle&#13;
Theater on May 11 at 7:00 p.m .&#13;
Marty Defatte, Director of the&#13;
Crime Prevention Unit at the&#13;
Racine Police Department will&#13;
discuss ways for the homeowner&#13;
to protect his property from&#13;
being victimized by criminals.&#13;
For further information or&#13;
reservations conta~t the Golden&#13;
Rondelle at 554-2154.&#13;
Canoe&#13;
trip&#13;
offered&#13;
The Colden Rondelle Theater,&#13;
beginning at 7:30 p.m. o.n May&#13;
19, is offering a free canoe program&#13;
which is open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
Learning how-to plan a&#13;
successful canoe trip will be one&#13;
of the topics discussed by&#13;
Richard Eddy, Adult Program&#13;
Director for the YMCA. Planning&#13;
what to take and where to go are&#13;
equally important on a canoe&#13;
trip.&#13;
For further information and&#13;
reservations contact the Rondelle&#13;
at 554-2154.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
recipe&#13;
o~ the y~ar_&#13;
RUSSIAN TEA&#13;
2 cups Tang&#13;
1 cup instant tea&#13;
The University of Wisconsin.Parkside Campus Health Office held&#13;
its annual Blood Pressure Clinic, open to both students and staff and&#13;
the public, last Tuesday. Campus Nurse Edith Isenberg, shown&#13;
checking the blood pressure of Racine freshman Mary Jo Curty,&#13;
termed the turnout excellent from both campus and . community.&#13;
Nurse Isenberg points out that high blood press~re is common&#13;
affecting 15 to 20 percent of adult Americans or some 23 million\&#13;
people. It is a leading cause of stroke, heart disease and kidney&#13;
disease. High blood pressure usually causes no symptoms, so a&#13;
pressuie check is the only way to determine whether you have it.&#13;
Treatment of high blood pressure reduces its dangers and in most&#13;
people it can be lowered and kept under control, Nurse Isenberg said.&#13;
UW-P filmmakers to show works&#13;
by Michael Murphy&#13;
Once again, to the delight of&#13;
the Parkside population, enduring&#13;
young students of today, and&#13;
prospective young filmmakers of&#13;
tommorrow, will be given the&#13;
opportunity to display their&#13;
talents on Wednesday, May 11,&#13;
from 12:00 to 2:00 at CL 105.&#13;
The festival promises more&#13;
excitement, drama, comedy,&#13;
romance, smiles, giggles, sighs,&#13;
tears, and plain old two fisted&#13;
action that one person should be&#13;
allowed to experience in a&#13;
lifetime .. It is an event that, in the&#13;
words of one of last years&#13;
attendants, "was very, very 'nice&#13;
to watch ."&#13;
Students of the Basic&#13;
Filmmaking course, as taught by&#13;
Walt Ulbricht, will preview films&#13;
representing a semester's output.&#13;
The films are categorized into&#13;
three basic · topics: narrative,&#13;
documentary, and experimental,&#13;
but each is individual and&#13;
unique in approach . Appropriate&#13;
atmosphere will be provided&#13;
through the sale of popcorm, Sc&#13;
for regular and 10c for buttered.&#13;
The program should not only&#13;
prove an invaluable escape from&#13;
the tedium of education, but&#13;
should provide further revelation&#13;
into the creative processes&#13;
culturing here at Parkside.&#13;
· 2 pkg. lemon-lime Koolaid-unsweetened&#13;
1 cup sugar&#13;
On tap at Union Square 1 tsp cinnamon&#13;
2 tsp ground cloves&#13;
Mix well; use boiling water:&#13;
VISAGE ORGANIZATION PRESENTS&#13;
A&#13;
POETRY -PROSE&#13;
READING .&#13;
UW -P Library 2nd floor ov~rlooking'&#13;
the lounge Thursday, May 12th&#13;
7 :30 p.m. FREE&#13;
INTERESTED IN READING&#13;
CONTACT JEFFREY J. SWENCKI&#13;
634-5305 or c/o RANGER&#13;
Brico to conduct and speak&#13;
World-renowned conductor&#13;
Antonia Brico, who will be on&#13;
campus several days next week _&#13;
in her role as guest conductor of&#13;
the Accent on Enrichment&#13;
concert by the combined Racine&#13;
and Kenosha Symphony Orchestras&#13;
on May 14, will present&#13;
several programs for Parkside&#13;
music students on Friday, May&#13;
13.&#13;
Brico will talk informally at a&#13;
coffee and kringle reception&#13;
sponsored by the student&#13;
chapter of Music Educators&#13;
National Conference at 9 a.m. in&#13;
CA D-118 and will speak at 10&#13;
a.m. at an assembly in the CA&#13;
Theater where music students&#13;
from area high schools also will&#13;
be guests. At 1 p.m. she will-hold&#13;
a workshop for Parkside instrumental&#13;
and conducting students&#13;
in CA D-118.&#13;
,._~ ~6' I MUSDGIIM I ~ SOUl:DS ij&#13;
RADIOS CB UNITS TAPE DECKS&#13;
CUSTOM INSTALLATION IN YOUR CAR OR TRUCK&#13;
~ WORK GUARANTEED&#13;
~ ~ FOR FREE ESTIMATE CALL&#13;
~ .,/ ~ JOHN GABRIEL 553-2287&#13;
~ &#13;
Satire on comtemporary society&#13;
by Michael Murphy&#13;
When reviewing W;zar~s, I will avoid making&#13;
references to it's being a "cartoon", as such. Such a&#13;
label often invites an immediately negative&#13;
connotation.&#13;
Even employing the phrase "animated film"&#13;
arouses contextural suspicions. Often times a film&#13;
of this nature is dismissed as sophomoric, geared&#13;
primarily for dull minds or young hearts. Such films,&#13;
it would be said, offer little in redeeming value,&#13;
functioning purely for entertainment.&#13;
Such as attitude does a gross injustice to an&#13;
extremely important style of Filmic expression.&#13;
Film animation is an excessively broad category.&#13;
It ranges from the endowment of mobility to&#13;
otherwise inanimate objects, to a series of separate&#13;
pictures combined to simulate action, with many&#13;
subcategories throughout. In dismissing animation&#13;
you thereby eliminate several reputable forms of&#13;
cinematic art.&#13;
Animation also serves a function otherwise&#13;
unattainable in live action films. In no other&#13;
cinematic style can imagination be brought to its&#13;
fullest, unrestrictive capacity.&#13;
Only through animation can fantasy and dreams&#13;
be depicted in the light of which they exist for so&#13;
rnanv people. .&#13;
Wizards&#13;
Zip changed&#13;
Starting Sunday, May 1, 1',.7,&#13;
the zip code for Parkside will be&#13;
53141, replacing the old 53140.&#13;
Stationery and envelopes bearing&#13;
the old zip code will still go&#13;
to Parkside.&#13;
The DramatlcArts&#13;
.D&amp;partment is&#13;
holding a banquet&#13;
to honorall those&#13;
who worked on&#13;
this year's&#13;
productions.&#13;
Tickets are $3.00&#13;
per person' and&#13;
can be obtained&#13;
from any member&#13;
of the department.&#13;
The banquet will&#13;
be held on&#13;
Thursday,May 19.&#13;
Classlfleds&#13;
For Sale: $65 Frye boots. size 9. $40, $85&#13;
rabbit fur $40. 552-8696. ,&#13;
"JOB HUNTING SECRET 11:5"&#13;
"The interview is the only 'critical act in the&#13;
hiring process ... once you get your in.tel"liew.&#13;
your oext tactical objective is to convince the&#13;
recnnter that you are the person lor the job. To&#13;
do that. you have to get four ideas across to&#13;
him: that you are competent. that you are&#13;
rntelhqent that you are honest, and that you&#13;
are likable"&#13;
'From the book JOB HUNTING SECRETS &amp;&#13;
TACTICS by Kirby Stanat. who has hired over&#13;
8.000 people. Get the competitive edge you&#13;
'lead 111this economy before you graduate.&#13;
Available from the University Bookstore for&#13;
$495.&#13;
Typing. any kind. professionally and&#13;
etncreouv done. 50 cents/page. 657-6068.&#13;
Openings torstudent engineering al~S - the&#13;
ccs.ucos Involve the i{llplementalion of a preventive&#13;
rna.ntenance program and the establishment&#13;
01 an equtprnerrt inventory. Training&#13;
will be provrdeu but knowledge of heating and&#13;
ventuanou systems and an ability to read blue&#13;
prints would be helpful. Contact the parkside }&#13;
Pnvstcar Ptant Office at 553-2228 for an E&#13;
appounmeut. i&#13;
,&#13;
,~,~..,,&#13;
~&#13;
.- " "&#13;
This is not to say that live action films are&#13;
incapable of fantasy and imagination. but they are&#13;
limited to the capabilities of the real world&#13;
Animation, however. is boundless. Anything that&#13;
can be conceptualized can be portrayed through&#13;
pictures.&#13;
In this respect, Ralph Baksht's Wizards, could be&#13;
a major breakthrough in changing attitudes toward&#13;
animated films.&#13;
The film depicts earth millions of years in the&#13;
future. The world is governed by wizards.&#13;
representing the opposing forces of good and evil&#13;
and all humanoid life is divided into two major&#13;
categories, mutants and elves (with tarries thrown&#13;
in for good measure). Unlike conventional&#13;
fantasies, however, the film IS a satire on&#13;
contemporary society.&#13;
Whereas the forces of good use magic as their&#13;
primary weapon, the forces of evil employ science&#13;
and technology to defeat their enemy. SImilar&#13;
ironic contrast abounds throughout the movie&#13;
There are both subtle and direct references in&#13;
Nazism, Communism, monarchies, religion and&#13;
violence in general.&#13;
WiLards, in these and many other respects,&#13;
represents a highly mature and intellectual plateau&#13;
in animated films. The fun and fantasy IS ever&#13;
prevalent, but in no degree is there an attempt at&#13;
shadmg realism The horror of war and the&#13;
autbenuc ttv of death are constantly exoosed.&#13;
subverung traditional expectations urroundmg&#13;
Iantastes Bakshl even Incorporates hve a non&#13;
sequences to reinforce thiS Idea&#13;
The picture, VOId of theme. tan ~tand&#13;
d,sttng&lt;JlShed on the basis of artwork alone Each&#13;
frame IS manufactured With artistic dextentv The&#13;
eftect, when projected, IS a free flowlnS&#13;
compo Ilion of forms and colors, vI~ually&#13;
delighting and exciting&#13;
Unfortunately. wher the ftlm ll;ceh In baSIC&#13;
content It lacks 10 direction Bakshl, although&#13;
competent In basic structure, has no nse of&#13;
conuncuv of ecucn The reiallons hip bel~ n&#13;
sequences 15 questionable. With several sequenc s&#13;
beginning undeveloped and ending unr solved&#13;
This tends to lessenthe thematic Imp t of the film.&#13;
delivering confusion rather than rnessa e&#13;
\,V;lards 15 an expected money maker and&#13;
understandably so Unlike lIS x-rated predecessors,&#13;
Fru c the Cat and Heavy tretiic, WIzards IS&#13;
connderebtv toned down to appeal to a WIder&#13;
audience&#13;
With the success of \.Vilards, and an upcoming&#13;
project mvotvmg J R R rolk.en's trilogy, Lord Of&#13;
fhe RIn~", Baksht Will have amassed I~lur(l in the&#13;
field of arumauon&#13;
From .Ralph Bakshi,&#13;
master of animation, comes an&#13;
Iepic fantasy in wondrous color.&#13;
A vision of the world, 10million years&#13;
in the future, where Wizards rule the&#13;
earth. And the powers of magic prevail&#13;
over the forces of technology in the&#13;
final battle for world supremacy.&#13;
20TH CENTURY·FOX PRESENTS&#13;
A RALPH BAKSHI FILM&#13;
1'0 __&#13;
STARTS FRIDAY Color by De Luxe'&#13;
MON.-SAT. .1 7.15 &amp; 9.15 ~========'l&#13;
SUNDAY 01 1.15, 3.15. 5.15, 7.15, 9.15&#13;
':'.' '&#13;
..&#13;
Wizards shows&#13;
Satire on comtemporary society&#13;
by Michael Murphy&#13;
When reviewing Wizards, I will avoid making&#13;
references to it's being a Ncartoon", as such. Such a&#13;
label often invites an immediately negative&#13;
connotation.&#13;
Even employing the phrase "animated film"&#13;
arouses contextural suspicions. Often times a film&#13;
of this nature is dismissed as sophorporic, geared&#13;
primarily for dull minds or young hearts . Such films,&#13;
it would be said, offer little in redeeming value,&#13;
functioning purely for entertainment.&#13;
Such as attitude does a gross injustice to an&#13;
extremely important style of Filmic expression .&#13;
Film animation is an excessively broad category.&#13;
It ranges from the endowment of mobility to&#13;
otherwise inanimate objects, to a series of separate&#13;
pictures combined to simulate action, with many&#13;
subcategories throughout. In dismissing animation&#13;
you thereby eliminate several reputable forms of&#13;
cinematic art.&#13;
Animation also serves a function otherwise&#13;
unattainable in live action films. In no other&#13;
cinematic style can imagination be brought to its&#13;
fullest, unrestrictive capacity .&#13;
Only through a'nimation can fantasy and dreams&#13;
be depicted in the light of which they exist for so&#13;
many people. .&#13;
The DramaticArts&#13;
. Department is&#13;
holding a banq-uet&#13;
to honorall those&#13;
who worked on&#13;
this year's&#13;
producti~ns.&#13;
Tickets are $3.00&#13;
per person-and&#13;
can be obtained&#13;
from any member&#13;
of the department. 1&#13;
The banquet will&#13;
be held on&#13;
Thursday,May 19.&#13;
Zip changed&#13;
Starting Sunday, May 1, 1', 7,&#13;
the zip code for Parkside will be&#13;
53141, replacing the old 53140.&#13;
Stationery and envelopes bearing&#13;
the old zip code will still go&#13;
to Parkside.&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
For Sale : $65 Frye bools. size 9. $40. $85&#13;
rabb1I fur $40 . 552-8696.&#13;
"JOB HUNTING SECRET #5"&#13;
"The interview is the only ·critical act in the&#13;
hiring process ... once you get your interview,&#13;
your next tactical objective is to convince the&#13;
recruiter that you are the person for the job. To&#13;
do that. you have to get four ideas across to&#13;
him : that you are competent. that you are&#13;
1ntell1gent . that you are honest, and that you&#13;
are likable ...&#13;
From the book JOB HUNTING SECRETS &amp;&#13;
TACTICS by Kirby Stanat . who has hired over&#13;
8.000 people. Get the competitive edge you&#13;
·1eed 111 thi s economy before you graduate.&#13;
Available from the University Bookslore for&#13;
$4 95.&#13;
Typing . any kind. professionally and&#13;
eff1c1ently done. 50 cents/ page. 657-6068.&#13;
This is not to say that live action films are&#13;
incapable of fantasy and imagination, but the are&#13;
limited to the capabil1t1es of the real world&#13;
Animation, however, is boundless . Anything that&#13;
C"an be conceptualized can be portrayed through&#13;
pictures .&#13;
In this respect, Ralph Baksh1's Wizards, could be&#13;
a major breakthrough in changing attitudes toward&#13;
animated films .&#13;
The film depicts earth millions of ears m the&#13;
future. The world is governed by wizards,&#13;
representing the opposing forces of good and e 1I&#13;
and all humanoid life 1s di ided into two ma1or&#13;
categories, mutants and elves (with fames thrown&#13;
in for good measure). Unlike conventional&#13;
fantasies , however, the film 1s a satire on&#13;
contemporary society.&#13;
Whereas the forces of good use magic as their&#13;
primary weapon, the forces of evil emplo science&#13;
and technology to defeat their enemy Similar&#13;
ironic contrast abounds throughout the mo 1e&#13;
There are both subtle and direct references m&#13;
azism, Communism, monarchies, religion and&#13;
violence in general.&#13;
Wizards, in these and man other respects,&#13;
represents a highly mature and intellectual plateau&#13;
in animated films . The fun and fantas 1s ever&#13;
prevalent, but in no degree 1s there an attempt at&#13;
From .Ralph Bakshi,&#13;
master of animation, comes an&#13;
epic fantasy in wondrous color.&#13;
A vision of the world, 10 million years&#13;
in the future, where Wizards rule the&#13;
earth. And the powers of magic prevail&#13;
over the forces of technology in the&#13;
final battle for world supremacy.&#13;
20TH CENTURY-FOX PRES T&#13;
A RALPII BAKSHI FILM&#13;
PO&#13;
Color by De Luxe&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. . I .&#13;
.&#13;
. . .&#13;
Openings for student engineering aides - the&#13;
positions involve the 1.rnplementat1on of a preventive&#13;
maintenance program and the establishment&#13;
of an equipment inventory. Training&#13;
will be provided but knowledge of heating and&#13;
vent1lat1on systems and an ability to read blue&#13;
prints would be helpful. Contact the Parkside&#13;
Physical Plant Office at 553-2228 for an&#13;
appointment.&#13;
STARTS FRIDAY I l} MON.-SAT. at 7:15 &amp; 9:15&#13;
I&#13;
~&#13;
SUNDAY at 1,15, 3,15, 5,15, 7,15, 9,15 ~-----------~o ... .. ... ., -·~~· • I • * I' &#13;
,&#13;
I.&#13;
..&#13;
architecture&#13;
Art deco:A breath of fresh&#13;
is looking for writers, photographers&#13;
and editors for the' fall semester.&#13;
Contact Phil Livingston·or Tom Cooper,&#13;
Ranger office, University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141 or&#13;
call 553-2295&#13;
• air&#13;
Special to the Ranger&#13;
by Lou-Rugani&#13;
It isn't new now, and It wasn't new in the 30's either. in its heyday&#13;
Fifteen or twenty years ago it was so passe that a lot of it was covered&#13;
up, painted out. plastered over or, otherwise _obliterated into what&#13;
then passed for a more cautious form of sophistication. But now It'S&#13;
back almost as strong as before . if not in building style, check&#13;
numerous art-deco details in the student union bazaar, at least on&#13;
record album jackets, t-shirt designs, stage sets, video commercials,&#13;
jewelry, posters and other sneaky reprisals. Kenosha has one classic&#13;
example and that, in itself, is most unusual, Southport Beach House.&#13;
It's Art Deco, that jazzy compilation of geometric shapes and&#13;
colors that saysThirties louder than a whole book of printed words. It&#13;
was designed to pull minds out the the Depression doldrums;&#13;
something new, a breath of fresh air in art and architecture. This was&#13;
Modernity, a break with the past. It spoke vitality, agression,&#13;
optimism. yet was predictable and depended on symmetry for its&#13;
final effect. Loud colors were used effectively and tastefully. Yet, the&#13;
whole look was borrowed from the ancient Egyptians who used it in&#13;
the tombs of the Pyramids. .&#13;
Whole buildings went up in Art Deco style, New York's Chrysler&#13;
Building being the biggest. Other buildings were restrained on the&#13;
outside but pure "Jazz Age" acrossthe interior. That's what happened&#13;
at the Southport Beach House in Kenosha. The structure was finished&#13;
in 1940, right when Art Deco was fading from the scene. ~ith the&#13;
novelty gone, and the world erupting into war, the national fad in&#13;
building styles was a massive, monolithic, fortress-looking&#13;
architecture that is still unnamed. But at Southport, Kenosha got pure&#13;
Art Deco with inlaid chrome moldings, bas-relief stylized&#13;
plasterwork, recessed lighting tricks, striated colors. And over the&#13;
years, just about everything survived. Is it because when Art Deco&#13;
Died thirty years ago, a sense of appreciation for the interior at&#13;
Southport held fast among Parks Dept. employees all this time? Or&#13;
was the temptation to "modernize" strong but funds needed&#13;
elsewhere rather than cosmetic alterations to a public building that&#13;
served the purpose well as is?&#13;
Whatever, Southport Beach House stands today as the best&#13;
example of Art Deco between Chicago and Milwaukee. It's been&#13;
proposed asa city landmark for that reason. Also, at the moment, it's&#13;
"modern" and "in style."&#13;
Anyone interested in supporting the landmark proposal ior Southport&#13;
Beach House should voice their opinions to the Kenosha City Parks&#13;
Dept., or your alderman. -Editor&#13;
:&#13;
: :&#13;
..)~ . . .&#13;
• .•. . • : 17&#13;
• .~:: r,J&#13;
•••• to. ."&#13;
• : "i.:.:&#13;
. ....Childrens Books for $100&#13;
.&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
.•&#13;
Teachers Editions of Brand New Childrens Readers&#13;
COME IN WHILE THEY LASTII&#13;
UW-Parkside Bookstore&#13;
U W Parkside Bookstore Summer Hours:&#13;
~~--~~~~~'eAi'~REGISTRATION WEEK - JUNE 13-19 .....~~~~~~~~~~&#13;
Wed. - Thurs. 9:00 am - 8:00 pm&#13;
Sat. &amp; Sun. CLOSED&#13;
~~~~~~-.eA"~e,..r,FIRST WEEK OF CLASSES - JUNE 20-25 .....~~~~~~ ..~~~.~&#13;
8:00 pm Friday 9:00 am - 1:00 pm SaL &amp; Sun. _ CLOSED&#13;
~~~~~~~~ .. ~!".&lt;Ii REMAINDER OF SUMMER SESSION,.....!".&lt;Ii'&lt;!!~~~i'oe.""i~~~~!A'&#13;
Wed .. Thurs. - 9:00 am - 4:00 pm&#13;
Sat. - Sun. CLOSED&#13;
~~~~~~ INTERIM BETWEEN SUMMER SESSION &amp; START OF FALL TERM ~.~~~~~~~&#13;
Mon. - Thurs. - 9:00 am - 4:00 pm Friday 9:00'am - 1:00 pm&#13;
Mon. - Tue s, 9:00 am - 4:00 pm&#13;
Mon, - Thurs. 9:00 am&#13;
Mon. - Tues .. 9:00 am - 7:00 pm&#13;
Friday 9:00 am - 4:00 pm&#13;
Friday 9:00 am - 1:00 pm&#13;
Sat, Sun. CLOSED&#13;
JULY FOURTH HOLIDAY STORE HOURS WILL ADJUST TO UNIVERSITY CALENDAR&#13;
.&#13;
. ,&#13;
. . .&#13;
. . . ,&#13;
,&#13;
. ., .&#13;
-&#13;
, . . . .&#13;
=t:il:architecture&#13;
· ., Art deco: A breath of fresh • air&#13;
Special to the Ranger&#13;
by Lou·Rugani .&#13;
It isn't new now, and it wasn't new in the 30's eitrer, in its heyday .&#13;
fifteen or twenty years ago it was so passe that a lot of it was covered&#13;
up, painted out, plastered over or otherwise obliterated into what&#13;
then passed for a more cautious form of sophistication . But now it's&#13;
back almost as strong as before . . . if not in building style, check&#13;
numerous art-deco details in the student union bazaar, at least on&#13;
record album jackets, t-shirt designs, stage sets, video commercials,&#13;
jewelry, posters and other sneaky reprisals. Kenosha has one classic&#13;
example and that, in itself, is most unusual, Southport Beach House.&#13;
It's Art Deco, that jazzy compilation of geometric shapes and&#13;
colors that says Thirties louder than a whole book of printed words . It&#13;
was designed to pull minds out the the Depression doldrums;&#13;
something new, a breath of fresh air in art and architecture. This was&#13;
Modernity, a break with the past. It spoke vitality, agression,&#13;
optimism ... yet was predictable and depended on symmetry for its&#13;
final effect. Loud colors were used effectively and tastefully. Yet, the&#13;
whole look was borrowed from the ancient Egyptians who used it in&#13;
the tombs of the Pyramids. .&#13;
is looking for writers, photographers&#13;
and editors for the'· fall semester.&#13;
Contact Phil Livingston or Tom Cooper,&#13;
Ranger office, University of WisconsinWhole&#13;
buildings went up in Art Deco style, New York's Chrysler&#13;
Building being the biggest. Other buildings were restrained on the&#13;
outside but pure "Jazz Age" across the iAterior. That's what happened&#13;
at the Southport Beach House in Kenosha . The structure was finished&#13;
in 1940, right when Art Deco was fading from the scene. With the&#13;
novelty gone, and the world erupting into war, the national fad in&#13;
building styles was a massive, monolithic, fortress-looking&#13;
architecture that is still unnamed. But at Southport, Kenosha got pure&#13;
Art Deco with inlaid chrome moldings, bas-rel ief stylized&#13;
plasterwork, recessed lighting tricks, striated colors . And over the&#13;
years, just about everything survived. Is it because when Art Deco&#13;
Died thirty years ago, a sense of appreciation for the interior at&#13;
Southport held fast among Parks Dept. employees all this time? Or&#13;
was the temptation to " modernize" strong but funds needed&#13;
elsewhere rather than cosmetic alterations to a public building that&#13;
served the purpose well as is?&#13;
Whatever, Southport Beach House stands today as the best&#13;
example of Art Deco between Ch icago and M ilwaukee. It's been&#13;
proposed as a city landmark for that reason . Also, at the moment, it's&#13;
" modern" and " in style."&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141&#13;
call 553-2295 Anyone interested in supporting the landmark proposal for Southport&#13;
Beach House should voice their opinions to the Kenosha City Parks&#13;
Dept., or your alderman. - Editor&#13;
.• . . . • • • • : .&#13;
.&#13;
•&#13;
. .&#13;
.&#13;
• ... . .. .:- ; : . • ••• ~ ! ~&#13;
····· Childrens B0oks 'fOr $1 °&#13;
0&#13;
Teachers Editions of Brand New Childrens Readers&#13;
UW-Parkside Bookstore&#13;
Wed. - Thurs. 9:00 am - 8 :00 pm&#13;
Sat. &amp; Sun. CLOSED&#13;
~ ... FIRST WEEK OF CLASSES - JUNE 20-25-~ .... l"".Aio.~&#13;
Friday 9 :00 am - 1 :00 pm&#13;
REMAINDER OF SUMMER SESSION • ._~,__...~.~~-#~•~&#13;
- 7 :00 pm Wed. - Thurs. - 9:00 am - 4:00 pm&#13;
Sat. - Sun. CLOSED&#13;
INTERIM BETWEEN SUMMER SESSION &amp; START OF FALL TERM&#13;
.. . . . .&#13;
Friday 9 :00· am - l :00 pm &#13;
sports'll&#13;
Allen Fredricksen photographs&#13;
Gardner (top) fieldI a 1001. 1t.1I. Picll.r, lria. Fra.eo.r (I.ft) I.tl '0&#13;
of a fait Itall. Arnie Sehaieh (It.low) .ill.1 on.. I.. •••. ft.. .. rl ••• t&#13;
lakeland Collegemonday and head for Itate tOYrnelll.nt.t St... nl Point.&#13;
PSGA - Scholarship Fund Presents&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin -. Vice Chancellor o.c. Johnson&#13;
William Neibhur - Don Brinkman - Richard Manthy&#13;
(Director of Student life) (DIrector of Security} (Director of Food Services)&#13;
IN A&#13;
PIE THROWING CONTEST&#13;
/1&#13;
Students . Faculty&#13;
If you have a gripe or want&#13;
to get something off your&#13;
mind, now is the chance to do it!!!&#13;
PIES&#13;
'ro Students '2.00 Faculty&#13;
Su~., May 22 after the Gong Show outside the Student Union&#13;
sport&#13;
Allen Fredricksen photographs&#13;
Gardner (top) fields a loose ball. Picher, Bri Franco r (I ft) I tt go&#13;
of a fast ball. Arnie Schaich (below) misses on T R b&#13;
• e ngera at&#13;
Lakeland College monday and head for state tourne ent at St vans Point.&#13;
PSGA - Scholarship Fund Presents&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin ·. Vice Chancellor O.C. Johnson&#13;
William Neibhur - Do~ Brink~an · Ric~ard Manthy&#13;
(Director of Student Life) (Director of Security) (Director of Food Services)&#13;
IN A&#13;
PIE THROWING CONTEST&#13;
Students - Faculty&#13;
_If you have a gripe or want&#13;
to get something off your&#13;
mind, now is the chance to do it!!!&#13;
PIES&#13;
'1 °0 Students '2.00 Faculty&#13;
11&#13;
Su~., May 22 after the Gong Show outside the Student Union &#13;
'll,~pOrts&#13;
I&#13;
'&#13;
Title IX implementation&#13;
'&#13;
Dannehl: UW~P good place for women's sports&#13;
by Christopher Clausen&#13;
"I think that from the&#13;
begin.ning Parkside has been up&#13;
front in the institution of Title IX,&#13;
said athletic director Wayne&#13;
0annehl. "The athletic program&#13;
(at Parkside) gets most of its cash&#13;
from Seg Fee' s and from&#13;
basketball ! ' _&#13;
The women's sports program&#13;
receives approximately $13 per&#13;
year of Segregated Fee dollars&#13;
paid by students .&#13;
Title IX was born in 1972 after&#13;
Congress passed the Educational&#13;
Amendments Act. This was&#13;
designed to eliminate discrimination&#13;
i n the areas of&#13;
admissions, financial aids, campus&#13;
organizations, and sports .&#13;
The law is effective in both&#13;
public and private schools that&#13;
accept federal money . The rules&#13;
which supervise the workings of&#13;
Title IX were not written up by&#13;
HEW (Health, Education, and&#13;
Welfare) until 1973.&#13;
"The results has been an&#13;
increase in the women's sports&#13;
program ,in the. number of teams&#13;
and events women are participating&#13;
in. What we've done here&#13;
at Parkside, since I've been here,&#13;
is gone from 9 teams for men and&#13;
2 for women to 10 for each," said&#13;
Dannehl.&#13;
0annehl went on to say that&#13;
although the teams are not the&#13;
same in all cases, the sportsoffered&#13;
to· women does allow&#13;
women equal participation in&#13;
the field of sports. All the teams&#13;
are not separate, such as in.&#13;
fencing, but if more teams were&#13;
involved women would lose out&#13;
on the chance to compete by&#13;
being eliminated in the try outs.&#13;
Good Area for Competition&#13;
According to Dannehl, Parkside&#13;
is a good location for the&#13;
in5titution of Title IX. "We are&#13;
Anderson, Greene, Maxwell&#13;
fortunate to live in a&#13;
metropolitian area with plenty of&#13;
college teams within a 200 mile&#13;
radius," Dannehl said . "The&#13;
farthest that we have had to&#13;
travel is 150 miles to play. That&#13;
way we can play 22 games of&#13;
softball for $800-900 dollars,"&#13;
said Dannehl. Dannehl had hi~h ,&#13;
praise for the women athletes&#13;
here at Parkside. He notes that&#13;
the women have not had a lot of&#13;
competitive experience at the&#13;
high school level. Yet the girls&#13;
who do partake in sports are&#13;
good and filled with a highly&#13;
competitive spirit to do their&#13;
best.&#13;
A good example , says&#13;
Dannehl, is the track team. Due&#13;
to the constantly inclement&#13;
weather, the track team has been&#13;
forced to practice inside the gym&#13;
which is not suited to track&#13;
events such as hurdles and pole&#13;
vault. Yet Parkside has managed&#13;
to stay in the top five teams in&#13;
multi-team events that have&#13;
included teams from further&#13;
south that have had much better&#13;
weather to practice in. "That is&#13;
an especially great compliment&#13;
to our track team ," said DannehJ.&#13;
lack of participants and Coaches&#13;
Two major problems have&#13;
plagued Parkside' s womens&#13;
athletic program. One is the lack&#13;
of depth on the teams . The&#13;
teams may only have one person&#13;
per position or event and an&#13;
injury put a strain on the team .&#13;
}ielping .alleviate that situation&#13;
is the Parkside Women's&#13;
Club. They are encouraging more&#13;
women to come out for sports .&#13;
Their biggest success, according&#13;
to Dannehl, is the formation of a&#13;
good nucleus, to make next&#13;
year's softball team a full-fledged&#13;
varsity team .&#13;
The second problem is the&#13;
already tightly stretched coaching&#13;
staff. Many of the coaches&#13;
are not only teaching full course&#13;
loads but are taking on several&#13;
coaching jobs as well.&#13;
"It's been one problem we&#13;
have had since I've been here.&#13;
We have put into Central for&#13;
more women's coaches and they&#13;
have said fine, but get it out of&#13;
your present budget. Well, we've&#13;
absorbed as much as we can&#13;
tolerate," said Dannehl.&#13;
The greatest compliment&#13;
though has yet t9 be paid to&#13;
women's sports . . Dannehl says&#13;
that within the next decade,&#13;
women's athletics will amaze&#13;
people with their abilities and&#13;
performances they have come&#13;
up with . The future for womens&#13;
athletics is promising and with&#13;
the help of people like Wayne&#13;
Dannehl and the athletic staff, it&#13;
should be very proJTiising for the&#13;
participant as well as the fans .&#13;
Top Chicago basketball players to con,e to UW-P&#13;
Three top basketball players&#13;
from the Chicago Public League&#13;
will enroll at Parkside next fall ,&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens announced&#13;
today .&#13;
Reginald Anderson of Gage&#13;
Park High School, Walter Greene&#13;
of Crane Tech and Melv in&#13;
Maxwell of Harper will be&#13;
members of the 1977-78&#13;
_,mm::m1111n1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111n11111111111111111&#13;
DINO'S&#13;
1816 16th St. 3728 Douglas&#13;
Racine Racine&#13;
634-1991 639-7115&#13;
WE DELIVER&#13;
Open 4:00 p.m. till one hour after&#13;
WE . DON'T WANT . YOU&#13;
UNLESS ·&#13;
-YOU WANT TO REMAIN A STUDENT&#13;
-WORK 20 HOURS A WEEK&#13;
-AND EARN SOME MONEY&#13;
THEN&#13;
You may qualify for an internship&#13;
with&#13;
dVoithw,j.te&gt;Ln cM.utuaf ...Ci/,&#13;
Call: Don Brinlc&#13;
(Racine) 632-2731&#13;
Stop by: 1300 S. Greenbay Rd.&#13;
Call: Gene Soens&#13;
(Kenosha) 654-5316&#13;
Stop by: 2525 - 63rd St&#13;
UW-Parkside team that will be&#13;
bidding to become the first&#13;
Wisconsin cage unit to advance&#13;
to NAIA national tournament&#13;
competition four straight years .&#13;
Anderson, a 6-4, 175' lb. guard&#13;
who was coached at Gage Park&#13;
by Don Williams, is described by&#13;
Stephens and UW-P_ assistant&#13;
Rudy Collum as " a pure shooter&#13;
and scorer who has excel lent&#13;
all-round talent and is a fine&#13;
jumper." He averaged 29 points,&#13;
11 rebounds, six assists and 1.8&#13;
blocked sbots a game enroute to&#13;
third team all-city honors.&#13;
Greene, a 6-2, 170 lb. guard&#13;
who played at Crane under&#13;
Coach G.K. Smith, was lauded by&#13;
Stephens as " an outstanding&#13;
playmaking guard with fine&#13;
ball-handling skills and excellent&#13;
court sense." He averaged 20&#13;
points and eight assists a game&#13;
and was a second team all-city&#13;
pick and honorable mention&#13;
all-state.&#13;
Maxwell, a 6-7, 185 lb., strong&#13;
forward, was an all-city second&#13;
team pick from Harper for Coach&#13;
Bobby Ricks. He averaged 28&#13;
points and 14 rebounds a contest&#13;
Softball team busy;· record 8-7&#13;
Parkside' s women softball&#13;
team had one of ::heir· busiest&#13;
weeks last week as they&#13;
destroyed Oshkosh, split with&#13;
C:&#13;
crhere IS• diff ererice!!!&#13;
PREPARE FOR:&#13;
~-~~~&#13;
GMAT • GRE ,. OCAT&#13;
CPAT •VAT• SAT&#13;
Our broad range of programs provides an umbrella of testing&#13;
know-how that enables us to offer the best preparation&#13;
available, no matter which course is taken. Over 38 years&#13;
of experience and success. Small classes. Voluminous&#13;
home study materials. Courses that are constantly updated.&#13;
Permanent centers open days &amp; weekends all year.&#13;
Complete tape facilities for review of class lessons and for use of supplementary materials. Make-ups for missed les- sons at our centers.&#13;
ASK ABOUT OUR&#13;
COMPACT COURSES&#13;
CALL:&#13;
(608) 255-0575&#13;
1001 Rutledge St.,&#13;
Madison, Wis. 53703&#13;
CLASSES IN MADISON&#13;
AND MILWAUKEE&#13;
f.~~""' TEST PREPARATION&#13;
SPECIALISTS SINCE 193b&#13;
Centers i n Major U.S. Cities&#13;
and was also an all-state&#13;
honorable mention . Stephens&#13;
called him " a very strong and&#13;
physical player with great hustle&#13;
and determination who'll add&#13;
greatly to our rebounding&#13;
strength." _&#13;
" These players are three we&#13;
really wanted," Stephens said.&#13;
" They complement each other&#13;
very nicely and will fit well into&#13;
our system . We've again been&#13;
very fortunate to recruit some&#13;
more fine players out of&#13;
Chicago."&#13;
Rock Valley, and lost a single&#13;
game to Carthage.&#13;
In the Oshkosh doubleheader,&#13;
Parkside took advantage· of the&#13;
ten-run rule to beat Oshkosh,&#13;
21-3 and· 19-2.&#13;
Against Rock Valley, Parkside&#13;
lost the first game, 7-6 and took&#13;
the nightcap, 5-4 .&#13;
Carthage took another game&#13;
from the Rangers, 9-6.&#13;
Their record is now 8-7., with&#13;
Diane Secor having an ERA of&#13;
2.37 and Sue Vaselik still leading&#13;
in strikeouts with 10. Leading&#13;
hitter for the Rangers is. Ruth&#13;
Statema with a .515 average.&#13;
Team hitting is .383 .&#13;
...&#13;
CAMERA'S&#13;
AND&#13;
PHOTO&#13;
SUPPLIES&#13;
WICKS,.~c . DOWNTOWN RACINE&#13;
ACROSS FROM PENNY'S&#13;
()~ 30 ,ecu, U/1,~&#13;
~cu'#e·ci~'Jtwu&#13;
r~~&#13;
fir&#13;
,~, it1&#13;
1&#13;
~&#13;
1&#13;
ous&#13;
~, &#13;
rou are holding the last edition of Ranger&#13;
for Spring semester.&#13;
0", The staff hopes ,ou have a safe and&#13;
•&#13;
,o,ous summer.&#13;
Moehrke continued from page J . . ,&#13;
p&#13;
Ave., Kenosha. Exterior ramps&#13;
give him access to campus&#13;
buildings.&#13;
The glass-enclosed concourse&#13;
corridors "which link Parks ide's&#13;
academic buildings (photo two)&#13;
gives students in wheelchairs&#13;
easy access between buildings.&#13;
Don says he tries to plan his&#13;
classes and other campus&#13;
destinations to minimize distances&#13;
and travel time. A math&#13;
major, he's currently carrying ten&#13;
credits of work, an academic&#13;
load he feels is about right for&#13;
him. 'Maintaining that schedule&#13;
he could graduate in five years&#13;
without attending summer&#13;
school.&#13;
Don is an expert on the&#13;
campus' elevators (photo three).&#13;
Some, he points out, have rather&#13;
narrow doors which make&#13;
entering in the chair difficult. He&#13;
also has a problem in reaching&#13;
the control buttons for the top&#13;
floors in some of the buildings.&#13;
Dan's favorite elevator (photo&#13;
four) is in the new Parkside&#13;
Union, opened last fall, where&#13;
elevator controls are at wheelchair&#13;
level. Don also is expert on&#13;
campus lavatories: not all have&#13;
stalls with doors wide enough to&#13;
accommodate a wheelchair.&#13;
The Union also has the only&#13;
drinking fountains to which Don&#13;
has easy access (photo five).&#13;
•&#13;
~.&#13;
Built after new standards were&#13;
adopted for facilities for the&#13;
handicapped in public buildings,&#13;
the union incorporates a number&#13;
of special features that make life&#13;
easier for persons with limited&#13;
mobility.&#13;
Pin ball machines in the Union&#13;
recreation center (photo six) are&#13;
among Don's extra curricular&#13;
diversions. The Union bowling&#13;
alley hasone lane equipped with&#13;
a special hand grip bar which&#13;
allows the handicapped to bowl,&#13;
another feature Don enjoys. The&#13;
Union cinema theater also has&#13;
flat pads designed for wheelchairs.&#13;
The U,nion cafeteria&#13;
presents a problem because of&#13;
the difficulty of handling travs.:&#13;
but other campus food areas, a&#13;
burger shop in Main Place and a&#13;
fast food operation in the Union&#13;
where counter personnel serve&#13;
_food" work well for him. Vending&#13;
machines present an obstacle,&#13;
however; the coin slots are too&#13;
high to reach from the chair.&#13;
Don -finds most classrooms&#13;
easily accessible (photo seven)&#13;
and calls the attitude of his&#13;
classmates and teachers "really&#13;
wonderful. They don't see you as&#13;
a handicapped person. They just&#13;
seeyou as another student. They&#13;
are friendly and go out of their&#13;
way to help."&#13;
Don hopes to take some&#13;
chemistry courses to bolster his&#13;
math major, but doesn't foresee&#13;
a problem with the lab work&#13;
'involved. "I think I'll be able to&#13;
work something out. all the&#13;
faculty members I've had so far&#13;
have been very flexible and&#13;
helpful," he said.&#13;
A few large lecture halls which&#13;
are ramped do give' Don a&#13;
problem (photo eight) because&#13;
access to the lower seats are by&#13;
stairways, an)mpossible obstacle&#13;
to those in wheelchairs. "In&#13;
those rooms, Ihave to stay at the&#13;
back and sometimes it's hard to&#13;
see the blackboard," Don&#13;
commented.&#13;
The library, one of Den's&#13;
favorite study areas, has a gate&#13;
system of access sensitized to&#13;
detect library materials not&#13;
properly checked out. The&#13;
entrance (photo nine) poses no&#13;
problem. Don also finds he is&#13;
.able to get to most of the stacks&#13;
(photo ten) and if books are out&#13;
of reach, there are usually other&#13;
students around to provide an&#13;
assist. But getting out of the&#13;
library is another matter. The exit&#13;
gate, which contains controls of&#13;
the book-snitch detector, is too&#13;
narrow for the chair (photo&#13;
eleven). Don combined common&#13;
sense and ingenuity to get&#13;
around that one: he simply exits&#13;
through the entrance.&#13;
news 1'7&#13;
•&#13;
-&#13;
Don Meohrke tokes a bock seat in mast lecture halls,&#13;
Aid available&#13;
for the handicapped&#13;
by Mon. Maillet (.II~lble r~gardleli\ of mcom&#13;
brackt-t Al present. 225 Parksrde&#13;
stude-nt .. are re ervmg aids&#13;
AI,o ottered are dsegnosuc&#13;
counvebng. post-vecondarv educanon,&#13;
rectorenon care, and a&#13;
lob placement service&#13;
lor further tnformauon, contac&#13;
1 Ioveph O'Costa at TaUent&#13;
Hall 11",1 ndays after 10 am, or&#13;
dt hI'" on«.e at 1)200 washmgton&#13;
Avenue Raeme b3b 3392&#13;
Handicapped persons are able&#13;
to receive financial aid to cover&#13;
nnnon. books and supplies&#13;
Ac c or drng to r ehabrht at rcn&#13;
counvelor Joseph D'Costa, the&#13;
eligibility requirement IS that&#13;
one must have a mental or phvsn&#13;
al handrcap that Interferes with&#13;
opporturutres for employment&#13;
All handicapped students are&#13;
TRAIN FOR&#13;
SUMMER JOBS&#13;
BE A BARTENDER&#13;
Class -I week days or 2 weeks nights&#13;
Approved by the Stale of Wisconsin Educational Approval Board&#13;
SPECIAL FINANCIAL ARRANGEMENTS&#13;
PROFESSIONAL BARTENDER'S SCHOOL OF WISCONSI ,inc,&#13;
2040W, Wisconsin Avenue, (4H) 931~&#13;
Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53233&#13;
BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND!&#13;
,PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
announe ..&#13;
FINAL ·EXAM - BRAIN FOOD SPECIAL&#13;
FISHWICHES&#13;
25t&#13;
STARTING MONDAY, MAY 16&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
o,,,&#13;
p&#13;
You are holding tlte last edition of Ranger&#13;
for Spring semester.&#13;
The staff ltopes you It ave a safe and&#13;
• 1oyous summer.&#13;
Moeltrlce continued from page J&#13;
Ave., k_enosha. Exterior ramps&#13;
give him access to campus&#13;
buildings.&#13;
The glass-enclosed concourse&#13;
corridors which link Parkside's&#13;
academic buildings (photo two)&#13;
gives students in wheelchairs&#13;
easy access between buildings.&#13;
Don says he tries to plan his&#13;
classes and other campus&#13;
destinations to minimize distances&#13;
and travel time. A math&#13;
major, he's currently carrying ten&#13;
credits of work, an academic&#13;
load he feels is about right for&#13;
him. ·Maintaining that schedule&#13;
he could graduate in five years&#13;
without attend ing summer&#13;
school.&#13;
Don is an expert on the&#13;
campus' elevators (photo three).&#13;
Some, he points out, have rather&#13;
narrow doors which make&#13;
entering in the chair difficult. He&#13;
also has a problem in reaching&#13;
the control buttons for the top&#13;
floors in some of the buildings.&#13;
Don's favorite elevator (photo&#13;
four) is in the new Parkside&#13;
Union, opened last fall, where&#13;
elevator controls are at wheelchair&#13;
level. Don also is expert on&#13;
campus lavatories : not all have&#13;
stalls with doors wide enough to&#13;
accommodate a wheelchair.&#13;
The Union also has the only&#13;
drinking fountains to which Don&#13;
has easy access (photo five).&#13;
Built after new standards were&#13;
adopted for facilities for the&#13;
handicapped in public buildings,&#13;
the union incorporates a number&#13;
of special features that make life&#13;
easier for persons with limited&#13;
mobility.&#13;
Pin ball machines in the Union&#13;
recreation center (photo six) are&#13;
among Don's extra curricular&#13;
diversions. The Union bowling&#13;
alley has one lane equipped with&#13;
a special hand grip bar which&#13;
allows the handicapped to bowl,&#13;
another feature Don enjoys . The&#13;
Union cinema theater also has&#13;
flat pads designed for wheelchairs.&#13;
The Union cafeteria&#13;
presents a problem because of&#13;
the difficulty of handling trays,-&#13;
but other campus food areas, a&#13;
burger shop in Main Place and a&#13;
fast food operation in the Union&#13;
where counter personnel serve&#13;
foocf, work well for him. Vending&#13;
machines present an obstacle,&#13;
however; the coin slots are too&#13;
high to reach from the chair.&#13;
Don ' finds most classrooms&#13;
easily accessible (photo seven)&#13;
and calls the attitude of his&#13;
classmates and teachers "really&#13;
wonderful. They don't see you as&#13;
a handicapped person. They just&#13;
see you as another student. They&#13;
are friendly and go out of their&#13;
way to help."&#13;
Don hopes to take some&#13;
chemistry courses to bolster his&#13;
math major, but doesn't foresee&#13;
a problem with the lab work&#13;
'involved. "I think I'll be able to&#13;
work something out . all the&#13;
faculty members I've had so far&#13;
have been very flexible and&#13;
helpful," he said.&#13;
A few large lecture halls which&#13;
are ramped do give · Don a&#13;
problem (photo eight) because&#13;
access to the lower seats are by&#13;
stairways, an impossible obstacle&#13;
to those in wheelchairs. " In&#13;
those rooms, I have to stay at the&#13;
back and sometimes it's hard to&#13;
see the blackboard ," Don&#13;
commented .&#13;
The library, one of Don's&#13;
favorite study areas, has a gate&#13;
system of access sensitized to&#13;
detect library materials not&#13;
properly checked out. The&#13;
entrance (photo nine) poses no&#13;
problem. Don also finds he is&#13;
able to get to most of the stacks&#13;
(photo ten) and if books are out&#13;
of reach, there are usually other&#13;
students around to provide an&#13;
assist. But getting out of the&#13;
library is another matter. The exit&#13;
gate, which contains controls of&#13;
the book-snitch detector, is too&#13;
narrow for the chair (photo&#13;
eleven). Don combined common&#13;
sense and ingenuity to get&#13;
around that one : he simply exits&#13;
through the entrance.&#13;
BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND!&#13;
.PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
announces&#13;
Don Meohrke tokes a back seat in most lecture halls.&#13;
Aid available&#13;
for the handicapped&#13;
by Mon.i M.iillet&#13;
Handicapped per on are able&#13;
to receive financial aid to over&#13;
tu1t1on . books and upphes&#13;
A&lt;&lt; ord mg to rehabil I tat ,on&#13;
&lt; ounselor Jo eph D'Co ta . th&#13;
elig1bil1ty rt-qu1rement I that&#13;
one mu~t have a mental or ph •&#13;
1&lt; al hand1c ap that interfere with&#13;
opportunit1e~ for employment&#13;
All handicapped tudent are&#13;
TRAIN FOR&#13;
SUMMER JOBS&#13;
BE A BARTE DER&#13;
Class· 1 week days or 2 weeks nights&#13;
Approved by the State of Wisconsin Educational Approval 8 rd&#13;
SPECIAL FINANCIAL ARRANGEMENTS&#13;
PROFESSIONAL BARTENDER'S SCHOOL OF WISC() I , inc.&#13;
2040 W. Wisconsin Avenue, ( 414 ) 931--0055&#13;
Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53233&#13;
FINAL ·EXAM - BRAIN FOOD SPECIAL&#13;
FISHWICHES&#13;
2St&#13;
STARTING MONDAY, MAY 16&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM &#13;
David Holle, Budget Planner Outstanding Administrator of 1977 _&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home 01 the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich·&#13;
OPEN8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washill9toll/We. 6J4..237J&#13;
'yt Is revlnu'&#13;
Spell the word "university"&#13;
backwards, the Washington Post&#13;
noted in its Sunday magazine&#13;
section a week or so ago, and&#13;
you have "yt is revinu," Tuition&#13;
hrkes, rates increases, is anyone&#13;
surprised?&#13;
JIM DANDY&#13;
CANDY SALE&#13;
END-OF-THE-YEAR&#13;
CLOSEOUT&#13;
8[(;/\ USESUMM Eft ISJ UST A Rou N DTH [COR N 10:8&#13;
A NOW EWILLBEDLOSING TH ESW [[TSH OPPE&#13;
,&#13;
IJOWN ... t.:Aft EREDU(;INGALLOUR(:AN IJtANU&#13;
1\ (; T SIN OR D [BTO DISPOSEor A SM UC HH t&gt;'UUR&#13;
STnt:KASP·OSSI8U:. THE RESULT ... toU WIN!&#13;
COUNTER&#13;
O. Clayton Johnson, Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
Education Services, Aministrator of 1977.&#13;
Outstanding professors&#13;
recognized by Ranger&#13;
. by Mona Maillet&#13;
tour Parkside professors were&#13;
named "Outstanding Professors&#13;
ot the Year" at the 1st annual&#13;
RANGeR awards banquet last&#13;
SatuJday night. They are Morris&#13;
lir e b a ug h , Jerry Greenfield,&#13;
Andy McLean, -and Richard&#13;
Pomaz ai&#13;
ThE' criteria- for the awards&#13;
were: a deep interest In Parks ide&#13;
and Its activities; an interest in&#13;
the students and their problems;&#13;
contributions to the community&#13;
Morris Firebaugh, Professor ot&#13;
Physics, is involved in a review&#13;
of micro-eomputers with student&#13;
Luther Johnson and technician&#13;
William Stone for The Physics&#13;
t eecber.&#13;
This summer he will be&#13;
mvolved In a project to get a&#13;
voice-recognition system put in&#13;
the computer in an attempt to&#13;
rt&gt;ducf' the time and effort that&#13;
John Boyer, \ a computer&#13;
programmer analyst who is blind&#13;
and almost totally deaf, must&#13;
take in order to work with the&#13;
c omputer t uebauuh was also&#13;
crted tor hiS work wtth students&#13;
and tht-' commurutv.&#13;
Iprry Greenfield, Assistant&#13;
Prote-svor oi History, was cited&#13;
tor hr-, Interest and Involvement&#13;
In Parkvrde-, his concern for the&#13;
...( hoo!' -, future and his interest in&#13;
Iwlplng vtudents&#13;
Andy McLean, Assistant Protessor&#13;
01 Enghvh. was responsible&#13;
tor the recent Shakespeare&#13;
svmposrum. the Shakespeare on&#13;
f tim l estival, and the Sir Thomas&#13;
More quinc enrenrual festival He&#13;
wa ...one of the first members of&#13;
"the RANGLR Advisory Hoard and&#13;
he....provided hours of assistance&#13;
to RANCl:R and lus excellence III&#13;
In...m« tron&#13;
R« hard Pomaz al. Assistant"&#13;
Prote-vvor o! P...vc hology, assisted&#13;
With both blood drives this year.&#13;
He hel'i done- research on why&#13;
pe-ople- atte-nd Parksrde and.&#13;
-,ummer '&gt;( hool problems and&#13;
ha...de-monvtrated hiS aware-ness&#13;
of PMk -,1 f/(."'", problems by&#13;
-,howmg hr-, wrllmgnpss to help&#13;
-,olve the-m. He- .11...0 assisted&#13;
RAN'C~R With Its new de- -,rgn and&#13;
Ltvout In the begmrung of the&#13;
"I'IlH· ...tf'r&#13;
Outstanding administrators&#13;
Iht, Parkside Ranger announc~&#13;
p-; its awards for two outstanding&#13;
administrators. ThE' criteria for&#13;
tht-' awards were accessibility to&#13;
...tudf'nls and a demonstrated&#13;
honpsty and mutual respect in&#13;
ddministratlvP communication&#13;
In their art'd &gt;--Qfexpertise with&#13;
...tudf'nts I hp winners are O.&#13;
&lt;...Jdytonlohn~on, d,&gt;,.,l...tdll( lhdn.&#13;
{pllor tor {-'duf·atlonal ~ervices,&#13;
&lt;:IndDdve Holle, budget plannpr.&#13;
Hollp wa~ rited for hiS&#13;
PX( pptlonal patienrt:' and con-&#13;
(prn for thp wplfarp of students&#13;
elS th(l (han( f'llor\ representative&#13;
on thp ...tudent univprslty fee&#13;
cllloration f"ommlttep.&#13;
- - GENERALPUBLIC INVITEO-- I&#13;
.~ t}r4~~ ~~.&#13;
THE THIRD ANNUAL RECEPTION&#13;
for GRADUATING MINORITY STUDENTS&#13;
Friday, May 20, 1971&#13;
7:00 pm to 8:30 pm&#13;
/&#13;
David Holle, Budget Planner Outstanding Administrator of 1977&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Submarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN B A.M. TIL 10:30 P .M.&#13;
261S Washington /we. 634-2373&#13;
JIM DANDY&#13;
CANDY SALE&#13;
END-OF-THE- YEAR&#13;
CLOSEOUT&#13;
'&#13;
'yt Is revlnu'&#13;
Spell the word "university"&#13;
backwards, the Washington Post&#13;
noted in its Sunday magazine&#13;
section a week or so ago, and&#13;
you have "yt is revinu." Tuition&#13;
hikes, rates increases, is anyone&#13;
surprised?&#13;
@,wrtt @,qnppt&#13;
BECAUSESUMMERISJUSTAR OUN DTH ECORNER&#13;
A D'll'E'll' ILL BEDLOSING TH ES'll'EETSHOPPE&#13;
UO'II' .'ll'EA R EREDUCINGALLOURCAN UY AN U&#13;
I" LTSIN OR DERTODISPOSEOF ASMUC H O t·uu R&#13;
STOCKASP.OSSIBLE. T H E RESULT ... YOU 'll'IN!&#13;
~----- - ~&#13;
. O. Clayton Johnson, Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
Education Services, Aministrator of 1977&#13;
Outstanding professors&#13;
recognized by Ranger&#13;
by Mona Maillet&#13;
I-our Parkside professors were&#13;
nanwd "Outstanding Professors&#13;
of the Year" at the 1st annual&#13;
RANCl:.R awards banquet last&#13;
Satu_ljiay night . They are Morris&#13;
~ irebaugh, Jerry Greenfield,&#13;
Andy McLean , and Richard&#13;
PomaLal .&#13;
1 he criteria for the awards&#13;
were : a deep interest in Parkside&#13;
and its activities; an interest in&#13;
the students and their problems;&#13;
contributions to _the community.&#13;
Morris Firebaugh, ProfessOF ot&#13;
Physics, is involved in a review&#13;
of m icro-computers with student&#13;
Luther Johnson and technician&#13;
William Stone for The Physics&#13;
leacher.&#13;
This summer he will be&#13;
involved in a project to get a&#13;
voice-recognition system put in&#13;
the computer in an attempt to&#13;
reduce the time and effort that&#13;
John Boyer, ' a computer&#13;
programmer analyst who Is b lind&#13;
and almo~t totally deaf, must&#13;
take in order to work with the&#13;
&lt; omputer. I 1rebaugh was also&#13;
&lt; 1tt&gt;d tor h1~ work with students&#13;
,md the &lt; ommunity .&#13;
Jerry Greenfie ld , Assistan t&#13;
Pmte~,or oi H"tory, wa~ cited&#13;
tor h" Intere~t and involvement&#13;
111 Parkside, his concern for the&#13;
,&lt; hool 's future and hi~ interest in&#13;
helping students .&#13;
Andy Mllean, Assistant Protp~,or&#13;
ot 1:.ngli,h, wa~ responsible&#13;
tor the recent Shakespeare&#13;
,ympo,Ium, the Shakespeare on&#13;
I ilm IP~tival, and the Sir Thomas&#13;
More quincentennial festival. He&#13;
was one of the first members of&#13;
thP RANG LR Advi~o·ry Board and&#13;
ha, provided hours of assistance&#13;
to RANCl:. R and his excellence in&#13;
in,tru&lt; tIon .&#13;
K1&lt; hard PomaLal, Assistant"&#13;
Prott&gt;"or ot P,yt hology, assisted&#13;
with hoth b lood drive, this year.&#13;
HP hc1., done rewarch on why&#13;
1wople attend Parb1de and _&#13;
sumnwr "hool problem~ and&#13;
hc1, demomtrated his awareness&#13;
ot l'ctrk \l de', prob lems by&#13;
showing h" willingne~, to help&#13;
solvt· them . Ht· .d,o assisted&#13;
KAN.CIR with It, new dl",1gn and&#13;
l,1yout in the beginning ot thP&#13;
S!'lllPSlt'r&#13;
Outstanding administrators&#13;
I he Parkside Ranger announct&gt;,&#13;
its awards for two outstanding&#13;
administrators The criteria for&#13;
the awards were accessibility to&#13;
student~ and a demonstrated&#13;
hone,ty and mutual respect in&#13;
administrative communication&#13;
in their area -of expertise with&#13;
,tudents . I he win ners are O .&#13;
Uayton John~on , dsS1~ld11t L t1dll·&#13;
&lt; t&gt;llor tor educational ~ervices,&#13;
dnd Dave Holle, budget planner&#13;
HollP wa, rited for h is&#13;
f:'X&lt; Ppt1onal pat1enre and con-&#13;
&lt; Prn tor the weliare of students&#13;
,1~ tht&gt; &lt; hanc ellor\ representative&#13;
on thP ,tudent university fee&#13;
c1l locat1on committee .&#13;
•&#13;
-~~~­&#13;
THE THIRD ANNUAL RECEPTION&#13;
for GRADUATING MINORITY STUDENTS&#13;
Friday, May 20, 1977&#13;
7 :00 pm to 8:30 pm&#13;
U'i{/.:p~ Uuo. ~&#13;
SPONSORED BY&#13;
Parkside Minority Business Management Club&#13;
. ' .&#13;
••GENERAL PUBLIC INVITED•• &#13;
"Il"l' .••&#13;
Richard l- Pomazal, Assistant&#13;
Profe .....or of Psvcholcgv&#13;
people 'II&#13;
Andrew M. McLean, Avsociate&#13;
Protr ....'or of I nahvh&#13;
Morris W. Firebaugh, Prof ssor&#13;
01 PhY"ICli&#13;
Gerald Greenfield, Assistant&#13;
Prote-svor or HI ...tory&#13;
II1AIII PLACE HOTEL RlCIIE, IISCOISII&#13;
Po.rkside Jo.zz Combo&#13;
- In Concert&#13;
FRIDA Y &amp; SA TURDA Y&#13;
May 13th &amp; May 14th&#13;
1:00 pm to 10:J1 pm&#13;
Lighten your&#13;
Lood for Foil&#13;
Enjo~&#13;
the peoceful otmosphere of&#13;
Porkside summer closses.&#13;
Do~ end evening courses&#13;
let you go to school end&#13;
keep ~our summer job.&#13;
Interested? (011 553-2241&#13;
Andrew M . McLean, A,~oudte&#13;
Prolt•ssor of I ngll\h&#13;
Richard J. Pomazal, Assistant&#13;
Prof P, ,or of Psychology&#13;
M ni . Fir baugh Prof or&#13;
ot Ph\"(&#13;
Gerald Greenfield, A. s, tant&#13;
1-'rotessor ot Hl\tOry&#13;
Parkside Jazz Combo&#13;
- In Concert&#13;
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY&#13;
May 13th &amp; May 14th&#13;
7 :00 pm to 10:JJ pm&#13;
MAIN PLACE HOTEL RACINE, WISCONSIN&#13;
Lighten _your IJf/&#13;
Lood for Foll ~,,&#13;
Enjo~&#13;
the peoceful otmosphere of&#13;
Porkside summer classes.&#13;
Do~ ond evening courses&#13;
let ~~u go to school ond&#13;
keep ~our summer job ..&#13;
Interested? Coll 553-2241 &#13;
! £&#13;
'The Tent' at the The End is one of Parkside's only traditions.&#13;
The End&#13;
by Christopher Clausen&#13;
The last t.wo weeks has found Parks ide students&#13;
saturated with leaflets, posters and ads in the&#13;
RANGER proclaiming the coming of the annual&#13;
THE END. "What is THE END?" is the question that&#13;
creeps into everyone's mind.&#13;
"It's a weekend long celebration with lot's of&#13;
entertainment and fun. You get to see your friends&#13;
from school for the last time, and celebrate the end of school and the end of finals," said Parkside&#13;
Activities Board (PAB) President Ellen Kavanaugh.&#13;
The 50 member PAS handles just about everything&#13;
from publicity to suppervision of THE END. The&#13;
members form a committee which supervises&#13;
everything from the set up to the clean up. Physical&#13;
Plant helps out in the area of set up and clean up,&#13;
security is handled by Parkside Security, and&#13;
Auxilary Services serve liquor and food. PAB sells&#13;
the tickets to THE END and helps out in all the&#13;
areas.&#13;
Hiring of the official entertainment is handled by&#13;
the PAB advisors, Susan Wesley, program advisor,&#13;
and Tony Totero, coordinator of student&#13;
programming. The entertainment this year will&#13;
feature two country/rock bands, Rio and&#13;
Heartstrings on Saturday night, and two rock and&#13;
roll bands, Synod and the Britians (Who do a&#13;
chronology of Beatie music) on Sunday night. In&#13;
addition to all of this food, drink and top&#13;
entertainment, PAB is having a Gong show and a&#13;
legs contest (As the advertisements say) "For men&#13;
of all sexes", on Sunday. Kavanaugh said that the&#13;
students as well as faculty and staff are encouraged&#13;
to sign up in Union 209 for the contests. Parkside&#13;
The End: Saturday, May 21: 6pm to 1 am&#13;
Sunday, May 22: 12pm to 5pm&#13;
5:30pm to 1am is nearl&#13;
psychology majors say they expect a large turnout&#13;
for both events.&#13;
The cost is relatively cheap. Parkside students,&#13;
faculty and staff will pay $2.00 Saturday night and&#13;
$2.50 Sunday night. Guests will pay $2.50 Saturday&#13;
night and $3.50 Sunday night. Yet, despite all this,.&#13;
PAS does not make a profit, Kavanaugh points out.&#13;
Expensestotal over $4,000 and even with the 1000&#13;
students that show up for the two days, PAS ends&#13;
up paying for the party out of Segregated Fees&#13;
monies allotted to PAS at the beginning of this&#13;
semester. Alumnae and other UW system students&#13;
that come home to the Racine-Kenosha area often&#13;
attend THE END.&#13;
How did all this madness get started? It started in&#13;
1968, when then Assistant Chancellor for Student&#13;
Services, Allen Dearborn, decided that the then&#13;
Racine-Kenosha campuses that make up the then&#13;
UW-P entension should have something to draw&#13;
them together. Since there was no permanent&#13;
facility to hold this event, a tent was set up and THE&#13;
END was born.&#13;
The tent will be set up just west of the Union this&#13;
year. Entrance will be through the Union parking lot&#13;
into Union Square and then out the Union's exit&#13;
and into the tent.&#13;
A special attraction at this year's END is a&#13;
pie-throwing contest. The contest is being&#13;
sponsored by PSGA to raise money for a PSGA&#13;
contest. PSGA President Rusty Tutlewski said the&#13;
targets will be such prestigeous people as&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin and Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Clayton Johnson.&#13;
Still, PAB is hoping to get the best attraction yet:&#13;
YOU!&#13;
~&#13;
K L ...S&#13;
INDEPENDENT STUDY&#13;
An Opportunity for&#13;
Summer Study •••&#13;
Adviser to Students&#13;
Box S12&#13;
432 North Lake Street&#13;
Madison, Wi. 53706&#13;
Phone (608) 263·2055&#13;
KE.OSHA &amp; LOA.&#13;
SAVI.GS&#13;
5935 Seventh Avenue&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd&#13;
4235 S1nd Street&#13;
410 Brood Sf. loke Geneva&#13;
~&#13;
6224 ~22nd Avenue&#13;
Lowest Priced Records in Town&#13;
NOW IT'S&#13;
THEIR'&#13;
TURN=&#13;
il:;:::: ·)I the end ~-.. .. .... -: ... • ........ . /&#13;
'The Tent' at the The End is one · of Parkside's only traditions.&#13;
The End: Saturday, May 21: 6pm to 1 am&#13;
12pm to 5pm&#13;
5:30pm to 1 am The End is near!&#13;
by Christopher Clausen&#13;
The last two weeks has found Parkside students&#13;
saturated with leaflets, posters and ads in the&#13;
RANGER proclaiming t he coming of the annual&#13;
THE END. "What is THE END?" is the question that&#13;
creeps into everyone's mind.&#13;
" It's a weekend long celebration with lot's of&#13;
entertainment and fun. You get to see your friends&#13;
from school for the last time, and celebrate the end&#13;
of school and the end of finals," said Parkside&#13;
Activities Board (PAB) President Ellen Kavanaugh.&#13;
The 50 member PAB handles just about everything&#13;
from publicity to suppervision of THE END. The&#13;
members form a committee which supervises&#13;
everything from the set up to the clean up. Physical&#13;
Plant helps out in the area of set up and clean up,&#13;
security is handled by Parkside Security, and&#13;
Auxilary Services serve liquor and food. PAB sells&#13;
the tickets to THE END and helps out in all the&#13;
areas.&#13;
Hiring of the official entertainment is handled by&#13;
the PAB advisors, Susan Wesley, program advisor,&#13;
and Tony Totero, coordinator of student&#13;
programming. The entertainment this year will&#13;
feature two country/rock bands, Rio and&#13;
Heartstrings on Saturday night, and two rock and&#13;
roll bands, Synod and the Britians (Who do a&#13;
chronology of Beatie music) on Sunday night. In&#13;
addition to all of this food, drink and top&#13;
entertainment, PAB is having a Gong show and a&#13;
legs contest (As the advertisements say) "For men&#13;
of all sexes", on Sunday. Kavanaugh said that the&#13;
students as well as faculty and staff are encouraged&#13;
to sign up in Union 209 for the contests. Parkside&#13;
psychology ma1ors say they expect a large turnout&#13;
for both events .&#13;
The cost is relatively cheap . Parkside students,&#13;
faculty and staff will pay $2.00 Saturday night and&#13;
$2.50 Sunday night. Guests w ill pay $2.50 Saturday&#13;
night and $3.50 Sunday night. Yet, despite all this,&#13;
PAB does not make a profit, Kavanaugh points out .&#13;
Expenses total over $4,000 and even with the 1000&#13;
students that show up for the two days, PAB ends&#13;
up paying for the party out of Segregated Fees&#13;
monies allotted to PAB at the beginning of this&#13;
semester. Alumnae and other UW system students&#13;
that come home to the Racine':Kenosha area often&#13;
attend THE END.&#13;
How did all this madness get started? It started in&#13;
1968, when then Assistant Chancellor for Student&#13;
Services, Allen Dearborn, decided that the then&#13;
Racine-Kenosha campuses that make up the then&#13;
UW-P entension should have something to draw&#13;
them together. Since there was no permanent&#13;
facility to hold this event, a tent was set up and THE&#13;
END was born.&#13;
The tent will be set up just west of the Union this&#13;
year. Entrance will be through the Union parking lot&#13;
into Union Square and then out the Union's exit&#13;
and into the tent.&#13;
A special attraction at this year's END is a&#13;
pie-throwing contest. The contest is being&#13;
sponsored by PSGA to raise money for a PSGA&#13;
contest. PSGA President Rusty Tutlewski_ said the&#13;
targets will be such prestigeous people as&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin and Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Clayton Johnson .&#13;
Still, PAB is hoping to get the best attraction yet:&#13;
YOU!&#13;
INDEPENDENT STUDY&#13;
An Opportunity for&#13;
KENOSHA &amp; LOAN&#13;
SAYINGS&#13;
5935 Seventh Avenue&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
410 Brood St. - Loke Genevo&#13;
Summer Study ...&#13;
Adviser to Students&#13;
Box 512&#13;
432 North lake Street&#13;
Madison, Wi. 53706&#13;
Phone ( 608) 263-2055&#13;
Sunday, May 22:&#13;
6224 ,;.&#13;
~&#13;
22nd Avenue&#13;
Lowest Priced Records in Town&#13;
S,AJWWl </text>
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                <text>1977-05-11</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Breadth, academic advising proposals reach final stage&#13;
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              <text>Wednesday, May, 4, 1977&#13;
Vol. 5, No. 28&#13;
Survwa! 1\ not possrble If one&#13;
approaches hi, environment, the&#13;
..Of. tal drama, with a f!'\ed,&#13;
urn hangeable point of vtew -&#13;
thp witless repetitive response to&#13;
the unperceived&#13;
- Marshall Mcluhan&#13;
er&#13;
Breadth, academic advising&#13;
proposals re ch final stage&#13;
by Philip l.Livingston SCience, stated that there were three student seats on the subcommittee&#13;
but only one student, Jeannine Sipsma (past Ranger&#13;
Editoe-tn-Chref), attended the meettngs regularly (see editorial on&#13;
student Input, page 2).&#13;
Orlowski asked the committee what the problem was With the&#13;
present breadth requirement?&#13;
..Are people presently graduatmg from Parkside With some&#13;
deficiency in Breadth?" asked Orlowski&#13;
Both Professor Shea and Professor Wayne Johnson pointed out that&#13;
as protessronal educators, they were qualified to make some pohcv&#13;
regarding the student's educational breadth and that the present&#13;
system was not really a "breadth" requirement. per se&#13;
Michael Marron, Associate Professor of Chemistry, proposed an&#13;
alternative to the breadth requirement that would Incorporate the&#13;
"Milwaukee plan" with Parkside's industrial mission The committee&#13;
did not make a decision to accept and attach the alternative to their&#13;
own breadth requirement&#13;
The academic policies committee met last Wednesday, April 27, to&#13;
discuss the breadth requirement. A few students were on hand&#13;
mostly senators from PSGA.At Ranger publication both the breadth&#13;
proposal and the requirements for declaring a major have left the&#13;
academic policies committee and have been put on tile agenda of&#13;
the May 17 meeting of the faculty senate.&#13;
At the academic policies meeting discussion of the current breadth&#13;
proposal (see April 27 Ranger, page 1) before the committee&#13;
dominated the meeting.&#13;
Several students at the meeting spoke out against the breadth&#13;
proposal.&#13;
"Why didn't students have more input in the Breadth proposal?"&#13;
asked senior Joe Orlowski, former member of the Segregated&#13;
University Fee Allocations Committee.&#13;
Breadth Subcommittee Chairman, James Shea, Professor of Earth&#13;
Ranger talces a loolC&#13;
inside&#13;
Southport Beach House&#13;
photographs on pages 6&amp;7&#13;
•&#13;
¥&#13;
Handicapped Awareness Week&#13;
,&#13;
I will be observed at UW-P&#13;
by Mona Maillet Most parking spacesare only one car space wide,&#13;
and most handicapped people require more room&#13;
Th'e week of May 16-23 has been designated as to get out of their car When special spaces are&#13;
National Handicapped Awareness Week. Since this provided for handicapped people, there are only a&#13;
falls during finals week, Parkside will hold its ~ few of them, and often. ti~es, they are to:&gt;far away&#13;
observation during May 9-15. The purpose of the from the building. ThIS ~strue at Parkside, where&#13;
week is to "open doors that are closed and minds only two spacesare provided next to the Classr~om&#13;
that are unknowing" which is the slogan for the building, and the rest are In the Comm Arts, Union,&#13;
k&#13;
' and Tallent parking lots. "If all of the handicapped&#13;
wee. d&#13;
The Campus Health Office and Society's Assets, students c~me to ParksIde ~n the same ay and at&#13;
an organization that helps handicapped people the same ttme. theY,;-,oul~n t b~ able to park In the&#13;
with both physical and psychological problems, are Class~oom spaces, said ~lIzabeth Perry, a&#13;
co-sponsoring the week. Among the activities handicapped student at Parkside ..&#13;
planned are an information booth, manned by D?nald Moehrke, another handlCappe.dstudent,&#13;
handicapped students and members of Society's outlined some problems he.has at Parkside.&#13;
A t t and all questions and a "There are many areas In the school that are sse s 0 answer any , ...&#13;
h I h&#13;
. b k tb II game between members of virtually unaccessible to students In wheelchairs&#13;
w ee c arr as e a h . I h d bv stai d .&#13;
d&#13;
b of because t ey are main y reac e y stairs an In&#13;
Societv's Assets and past an present mem ers order to reach them, a handicapped person must&#13;
the Parkside basketball team on May 19. often times go outside and around the building to&#13;
Special problems get to a door in order to get to that area.&#13;
Handicapped people have problems that othedr "AI ...o the elevator buttons are too high for me to&#13;
d&#13;
t a an . , people don't have. Many oors are 00 n.arr w reach. Many of the elevators are too narrow for my&#13;
too hard to be opened, and when the Wind makes chair and elevators are the only way for me to go&#13;
opt'nlng doors difficult for other people. from Hoor to floor I also find that the library exits&#13;
handicapped people have a doubly hard nme.&#13;
are also too narrow for me "&#13;
Both Donald and Elizabeth agree that Parknde&#13;
has Its good POints "The concourse makes It faIrly&#13;
easy to get from class to class, and the restroorns&#13;
are also fairly accessible The attitudes of the&#13;
students are wonderful They don't see you as a&#13;
handicapped person. They Just see you as another&#13;
student They are friendly and will go out of their&#13;
way to help you."&#13;
Ed Hardman, a Parkside graduate and director of&#13;
case management for SOCiety'sAssets, explained&#13;
that there is more than one kind of handicap&#13;
"People generally think of people In wheelchairs as&#13;
the only hand-cap that exets. but there are others&#13;
When I was going to Parkside, I was also&#13;
undergoing chemotherapy treatment for cancer I&#13;
would frequently get sick In the middle of a class,&#13;
or pass out. People don't tnink of that as a&#13;
handicap, but it is."&#13;
Keep in mind the handicapped dunng May 9-15,&#13;
and remember that they, like anyone else, have&#13;
their own problems, but that WIth a little&#13;
cooperation from everyone, can be as productive as&#13;
non-handicapped people&#13;
1&#13;
re&#13;
coun.&#13;
ency&#13;
area&#13;
low.&#13;
ed.&#13;
Wednesday, May, 4, 1977&#13;
Vol. 5 No. 28&#13;
er&#13;
Breadth, academic advis·ng&#13;
proposals re ch final stage&#13;
by Philip l. Livingston Science, tated that there were three tudent eat&#13;
committee but onl one student, Jeannine S1psma&#13;
Ed1tor-in-&lt;::h1ef), attend d the meetings regular! (&#13;
student input, page 2)&#13;
on th ub-&#13;
(pa t Ran r The academic d,tonal on policies committee met last Wednesday, April 27, to&#13;
discuss the breadth requirement. A few students were on hand&#13;
mostly senators from PSGA. At Ranger publication both the breadth&#13;
proposal and the requirements for declaring a major have left the&#13;
academic policies committee and have been put on the agenda of&#13;
the May 17 meeting of the faculty senate.&#13;
Orlm.-.sk1 a ked the committee what the probl m wa with the&#13;
present breadth requirement?&#13;
" Are people present I graduating from Park id&#13;
deficienc in Breadth?" asked Orlow k1&#13;
1th om&#13;
At the academic policies meeting discussion of the current breadth&#13;
proposal (see April 27 Ranger, page 1) before the committee&#13;
dominated the meeting.&#13;
Both Professor Shea and Professor Wa ne John on point d out that&#13;
as professional educators, ttie were qualtf1ed to ma om polic&#13;
Several students at the meeting spoke out against the breadth&#13;
proposal.&#13;
r€'garding the tudent' educational breadth and that th pre nt&#13;
system was not reall a " breadth" requirement, per&#13;
"Why didn't students have more input in the Breadth proposal?"&#13;
asked senior Joe Orlowski, former member of the Segregated&#13;
Michael Marron, As oc1ate Profe sor of Chem, try, propo d an&#13;
alternative to the breadth requirement that would in orporat the&#13;
" Milwaukee plan with Parks1de's mdu trial mis ,on Th comm1tt&#13;
University Fee Allocations Committee. ·&#13;
Rreadth Subcommittee Chairman, James Shea, Professor of Earth&#13;
d,d not make a dee, 10n to dccept and attach the alt to th 1r&#13;
own breadth requirement.&#13;
Ranger takes a loolc&#13;
inside&#13;
Southport Beach House&#13;
photographs on page 6&amp;7&#13;
Handicapped Awareness Week&#13;
will be observed at UW-P&#13;
by Mona Maillet Mo t park mg spaces are only one car space wide,&#13;
and most handicapped people require more room&#13;
The week of May 16-23 has been designated as to get out of their car When special space are&#13;
National Handicapped Awareness Week . Since this provided for handicapped people, there are only a&#13;
falls during finals week, Parkside will hold its - few of them , and often times, they are too far away&#13;
observation during May 9-15 . The purpose of the from the building. This is true at Parkside, where&#13;
week is to "open doors that are closed and minds only two spaces are provided next to the Classr~om&#13;
that are unknowing " which is the slogan for the building, and the rest are m the Comm Arts, Union,&#13;
k ' and Tallent parking lots. "If all of the handicapped wee . h d d The Campus Health Office and Society's Assets, students came to Parkside ~n t e same a an at&#13;
an organization that helps handicapped people the same time, they ,;'ouldn t be able to park in the&#13;
with both physical and psychologi cal problems, are Classroom spaces, said ~ltzabeth Perry, a&#13;
· the week Among the activities handicapped student at ParRs1de. co-sponsoring · .&#13;
planned are an information booth, manned by Donald Moehrke, another hand1cappe_d student,&#13;
handicapped students and members of Society's outlined some problems he_ has at Parkside.&#13;
A t any and all questions and a "There are many areas in the school that are ssets o answer , . . .&#13;
wheelchair basketball game between members of virtually unaccess1bl: to students in wheelcha,_rs&#13;
d b of because they are mainly reached by stairs and in&#13;
'.:&gt;ociety's Assets and paSt an present mem ers order to reach them, a handicapped person must&#13;
the Parkside basketball team on May 19· often times go outside and around the building to&#13;
Special problems get to a door in ordN to get to that area.&#13;
H.1ndicapped people have problems that other "Abo, the elevator buttons are too high for me to&#13;
people don't have . Many doors are too narrow and rt&gt;arh . Many of the elevators are too narrow form&#13;
too hard to be opened, and when the wi nd makes chair, and ele ators are the only way for me to go&#13;
op1•n1ng doors difficult for o th er people , from ·floor to floor. I also find that the library exits&#13;
handi capped people have a doubly hard time . &#13;
=&#13;
(&#13;
··1······:: :.;:.::.e '.': d :...... :&#13;
1&#13;
.t .. oria1S&#13;
"Student input"&#13;
What is it and who cares?&#13;
It is no secret, this school is not famous for its&#13;
outspoken student actlvlsts. The last time&#13;
students congregated en masse in Main Place&#13;
was to watch streakers run naked across the 0-1&#13;
level floor. That was many years ago.&#13;
Since then, decisions made by faculty, staff,&#13;
and administration, for theqood of the Parkside&#13;
community, havealmost always suffered from a&#13;
lack of "student input."&#13;
Ultimate student input or control might be&#13;
telling the chancellor precisely what to do, or&#13;
more democratically, developing, planning, and&#13;
voting an idea or plan as members of every&#13;
university committee.&#13;
Recently, the academic policies committee&#13;
developed some additional requirements and&#13;
proceduresfor declaring a major and graduating.&#13;
After some of the committee's plans received&#13;
front page coveragein the Ranger three weeks in&#13;
a row, a few students (mostly from Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association) attended one'&#13;
of the meetings and asked the committee why&#13;
more student input was not actively sought.&#13;
Faculty members on the committee explained&#13;
that out of so many student seats on the&#13;
committee and subcommittees, only a ·few&#13;
students filled the seats and attended the&#13;
meetings regularly.&#13;
Possible definition No.1&#13;
Student input, to some people, means select&#13;
students holding membership on a committee&#13;
and attending its meetings.&#13;
Student government, elected by a small&#13;
percentageof the total student body once a year,&#13;
.appoints student members to almost every&#13;
committee affecting students on this campus.&#13;
Manyof the student seats remain vacant throughout&#13;
the year due to a lack of interest.&#13;
Is this system accurately representing&#13;
students?&#13;
Possible definition No.2&#13;
Some students feel they should be polled to&#13;
find out their opinions on important matters. The&#13;
majority of students do not vote on referendums.&#13;
So, perhaps, students feel everyone else is&#13;
doing a great job of speaking on their behalf.&#13;
Rangerdisagrees!&#13;
Perhaps, student involvement just takes too&#13;
much time. Maybegetting a job and good grades&#13;
from Parkside takes so much energy and effort,&#13;
being "represented" is just not as important.&#13;
Possible definition No.3&#13;
Student input at Parkside might be limited to&#13;
what takes place in the lavatories throughout the&#13;
school (taking into account the noticeable lack of&#13;
significant graffitti).&#13;
Our Writers&#13;
Bob Holfman, Chris Clausen, Michael Murphy&#13;
Fred Tenuta, Thomas Nolen, Karen Putman&#13;
Timothy ,J. Zuehlsdorl, Sob ,Jambois, ,Jami LaMar&#13;
Linda Lasco. Douglas Edenhauser, PhU Hermann,"'&#13;
Cheryl Powalisz&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Leanne DUlingham&#13;
Editor Philip L. Livingston· 553.2295&#13;
Art Director&#13;
Copy EOltor Bruce Wagner&#13;
News Editor ,John McKloskey&#13;
Feature Editor Mona Maillet&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
C.in'uJalion Sue Marquardt&#13;
.General Manager Thomas R. Cooper 553.2287&#13;
Advertising Manager ,John Gabriel 553.2287&#13;
Advertising Sales&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin.Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content.&#13;
.&#13;
I&#13;
. : d·t . I c ::':e 1 or1a s&#13;
/&#13;
''Student input''&#13;
What is it and who .cares?&#13;
It is no secret, this school is not famous for its&#13;
outspoken student activist~. The last time&#13;
students congregated en masse in Main Place&#13;
was to watch streakers run naked across the D-1&#13;
level floor. That was many years ago.&#13;
Since then , decisions made by faculty, staff,&#13;
and administration , for the _good of the Parkside&#13;
community, have almost always suffered from a&#13;
lack of "student input."&#13;
Ultimate student input or control might be&#13;
telling the chancellor precisely what to do, or&#13;
more democratically, developing, planning, and&#13;
voting an idea or plan as memhers of every&#13;
university committee.&#13;
Recently, the academic policies committee&#13;
developed some additional requirements and&#13;
procedures for declaring a major and graduating.&#13;
After some of the committee's plans received&#13;
front page coverage in the Ranger three weeks in&#13;
a row, a few students (mostly from Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association) attended one '&#13;
of the meetings and asked the committee why&#13;
more student input was not actively sought.&#13;
Faculty members on the committee explained&#13;
that out of so many student seats on the&#13;
committee and subcommittees, only a few&#13;
students filled the seats and attended the&#13;
meetings regularly.&#13;
Possible definition No. 1&#13;
Student input, to some people, means select&#13;
students holding membership on a committee&#13;
and attending its meetings.&#13;
Student government, elected by a small&#13;
percentage of the total student body once a year,&#13;
appoints student members to almost every&#13;
committee affecting students on this campus.&#13;
Many of the student seats remain vacant throughout&#13;
the year due to a lack of interest.&#13;
Is this system accurately representing&#13;
students?&#13;
Possible definition No. 2&#13;
Some students feel they should be polled to&#13;
find out their opinions on important matters. The&#13;
majority of students do not vote on referendums.&#13;
So, perhaps, students feel everyone else is&#13;
doing a great job of speaking on their behalf.&#13;
Ranger disagrees!&#13;
Perhaps, student involvement just takes too&#13;
much time. Maybe getting a job and good grades&#13;
from Parkside takes so much energy and effort,&#13;
being "represented" is just not as important.&#13;
Possible definition No. 3&#13;
Student input at Parkside might be limited to&#13;
what takes place in the lavatories throughout the&#13;
school (taking into account the noticeable lack of&#13;
significant graffitti).&#13;
Our Writers&#13;
Bob Hoffman, Chris Clausen, Michael Murphy&#13;
Fred Tenuta, Thomas Nolen, Karen Putman&#13;
Timothy J. Zuehlsdorf, Bob Jambois, Jami La.Mar /&#13;
Linda Lasco, Douglas Edenhauser, Phil Hermal\l\,&#13;
Cheryl Powalisz&#13;
Photograph~rs&#13;
Leanne Dillingham&#13;
Editor Philip L. Livingston 553-2295&#13;
At"t Director&#13;
Co{&gt;y Ea,tor Bruce Wagner&#13;
New Editor John McKloskey&#13;
Feature Editor Mona Maillet&#13;
Sport Editor&#13;
Circ\.lla,tion Sue Marquardt . &lt;..reneral Manager Thomas R. Cooper 553-2287&#13;
Advertising Manager John Gabriel 553-2287&#13;
Advertising Sales&#13;
Ranger is written artd edited by students of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy -and content. &#13;
gg8&#13;
Breadth proposa'&#13;
'po'itica' p'oy'&#13;
by Rusty Tutlewski&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
~&#13;
The purpose of the new "Breadth" requirement is&#13;
to guarantee insoiar as possible that every student&#13;
is at least minimally exposed to some basic set of&#13;
areas of knowledge, for the following reasons:&#13;
J. For cultural enrichment of the individual and to&#13;
In&lt;.ure that the culture of our society is effectively&#13;
pa~~ed on .&#13;
.2. To enrich the students context and perspective&#13;
within his/her area of specialization.&#13;
l. To avoid overspecialization and narrowness of&#13;
{'ducation content and approach.&#13;
-I. fa enhance and improve the student's ability&#13;
and desire to participate as a citizen in his/her&#13;
socuv.&#13;
s. To give the student a broader basis for choosing&#13;
a meier,&#13;
The concept of "Breadth" is an excellent one, but&#13;
I fail to see how the requirements live up to the&#13;
original purpose. Requiring each student to&#13;
complete at least six credits in each of the&#13;
"breadth" areas, which amount to each major&#13;
division with the exception of Education, as I see it&#13;
IS no more than a political ploy resulting in&#13;
guaranteed enrollment in each of the specified&#13;
areas. They would also substantially limit student&#13;
choice compared to the present requirements. I&#13;
might add that the requirements do not have the&#13;
approval of the administration or a concensis of the&#13;
taculity.&#13;
If you have any comments on this issue I urge&#13;
you to either stop in at the PSGA office (WLlC&#13;
D19 H, call 553-2244, or get in touch with your&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
senator and fill out one of our surveys on the&#13;
matter.&#13;
I would like to announce the following&#13;
appointments: Robert Fought to a Senate At-large&#13;
seat,' Philip Livingston and Robert Hoffman to&#13;
DIstinguished Award Committee, Rodney Ziolkowski&#13;
to Academic Program and Planning Review&#13;
Committee.&#13;
We also have openings on several interesting&#13;
committees and are looking for qualified&#13;
volunteers. If you are interested in participating,&#13;
please contact Rusty or Harvey in the PSGA office,&#13;
WLLC D193 or call 553-2244.&#13;
At the April 21, 1977 meeting, the PSGA Senate&#13;
passed the following resolution:&#13;
"Whereas Parkside Safety and Security has shown&#13;
good judgment in the use of force and weapons&#13;
here at Parkside, and&#13;
Whereas the possession and use of said weapons&#13;
are necessaryand useful to the proper performance&#13;
of Safety and Security's duties and responsibilities,&#13;
He it therefore resolved that the PSCA, Inc.&#13;
endorses the possession of firearms by Parkside&#13;
Safety and Security Police Officers."&#13;
I would also like to announce that Bookstore&#13;
Concern Forms are now available in all Division&#13;
offices, at the Information Desks, in the Bookstore,&#13;
and in the PSGA office. Any student with a&#13;
rom plaint or problem having to do With the&#13;
Bookstore is invited to fill out a form and turn it In&#13;
at the Secretary of the Faculity's office, GR 318 or&#13;
the PSGAoffice. I can assure you that all matters&#13;
will be dealt with promptly.&#13;
views I&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
Accent on Enrichment presents&#13;
THE COMBINED&#13;
KENOSHA 9 RACINE&#13;
SYMPHONIES&#13;
ANTONIA BRICO, conductor&#13;
EUGENE FODOR, violinist&#13;
8 pm Sat-May 14 Adm $5&#13;
PHY ED BLDG GYM&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
TICKETS AT, CAMPUS UNION INFO CENTER, SEARS&#13;
IN KENOSHA, COOK_GERE, TEAM ELECTRONICS,&#13;
SCHMITT MUSIC AND PULICE MUSIC IN RACINE&#13;
Next week is Ranger's&#13;
last issue&#13;
for Spring semester.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington #We. 634-2373&#13;
HOW TO TAKE&#13;
THE FUN , FLIGHT&#13;
_../,11''''''" _-rl" /,1, IJ (//..''''1 "//"Ii"f/&#13;
1'" (__ I ...... " I,"" ... It .....&#13;
I'M.. JIll'" UU&#13;
It.... , s.n... • ...4 , .........&#13;
~.-&#13;
MAKE $2,650 THIS SUMMER&#13;
SUMMER JOBS FOR COLLEGE STUDENTS&#13;
INTERVIEWS TO BE HELD ON CAMPUS&#13;
FOR AN APPOINTMENT&#13;
CALL 633-0847&#13;
grga CONTACT&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
Breadth proposal&#13;
'political ploy'&#13;
by Rusty Tutlewski&#13;
The purpose of the new "Breadth" requirement is&#13;
to guarantee insoiar as possible that every student&#13;
is at least minimally exposed to some basic set of&#13;
areas of knowledge, for the following reasons:&#13;
/. For cultural enrichment of the individual and to&#13;
,mure that the culture of our society is effectively&#13;
passed on .&#13;
.!. To enrich the students context and perspective&#13;
within his / her area of specialization .&#13;
!. 7o avoid overspecialization and narrowness of&#13;
Pducation content and approach.&#13;
.J . ro enhance and improve the student's ability&#13;
and desire to participate as a citizen in his/ her&#13;
\OCity.&#13;
5. To give the student a broader basis for choosing&#13;
a ma1or.&#13;
The concept of " Breadth" is an excellent one, but&#13;
I fail to see how the requirements live up to the&#13;
original purpose. Requiring each student to&#13;
complete at least six credits in ea&lt;:h of the&#13;
" breadth " areas, which amount to each major&#13;
divis ion with the exception of Educa-tion , as I see it&#13;
1s no more than a political ploy resulting in&#13;
guaranteed enrollment in each of the specified&#13;
arPas . They would also substantially limit student&#13;
t hoice compared to the present requirements . I&#13;
m ight add that the requirements do not have the&#13;
approval of the admi nistrat ion or a concensis of the&#13;
taculity .&#13;
If you have any comments on this issue I urge&#13;
you to either stop in at the PSGA office (WLLC&#13;
D1&lt;B). call 553-2244, or get in touch with your&#13;
enator and fill out one of our surveys on the&#13;
matter.&#13;
I would like to announce the following&#13;
appointments : Robert Fought to a Senate At-Large&#13;
eat, Philip Livingston and Robert Hoffman to&#13;
Di tmguished Award Committee, Rodney Ziolkowski&#13;
to Academic Program and Planning Review&#13;
Comm ittee .&#13;
We also have openings on several interesting&#13;
committees and are looking for qualified&#13;
volunteers. If you are interested in participating,&#13;
please contact Rusty or Harvey in the PSGA office,&#13;
WLLC 0193 or call 553-2244.&#13;
At the April 21 , 1977 meeting, the PSGA Senate&#13;
passed the following resolution :&#13;
" Whereas Parkside Safety and Security has shown&#13;
good judgment in the use of force and weapons&#13;
here at Parkside, and&#13;
Whereas the possession and use of said weapons&#13;
are necessary and useful to the proper performance&#13;
of Safety and Security's duties and responsibilitie ,&#13;
HP it therefore resolved that the PSGA, Inc&#13;
Pndorses the possession of firearms by Parkside&#13;
Safety and Security Police Officers ."&#13;
I would also like to announce that Bookstore&#13;
Concern Forms are now available m all Div1s1on&#13;
otf1ces, at the Information Desks, m the Bookstore,&#13;
and m the PSGA office. Any student with a&#13;
c omplamt or problem having to do with the&#13;
Hookstore is invited to fill out a form and turn 1t 1n&#13;
at the Secretary of the Faculit 's office, GR 318 or&#13;
the PSGA office. I can assure ou that all matters&#13;
will be dealt with promptly.&#13;
Next week is Ranger's LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
last issue&#13;
for Spring semester.&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
261 S Washington /we. 634-2373&#13;
If~,,\, .. /&#13;
• Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
Accent on Enrichment presents&#13;
DIE COMBINED&#13;
KENOSHA &amp; RACINE&#13;
SYMPHONIES&#13;
ANTONIA BRICO, conductor&#13;
EUGENE FODOR, viornist&#13;
8 pm Sat-May 14 Adm $5&#13;
PHY ED BLDG GYM&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
TICKETS AT: CAMPUS U ION INfO CE TE , SEARS&#13;
IN KENOSHA; COOK -GERE, TEA ELECTRC ICS,&#13;
SCH-IITT MJSIC AD PULICE SIC I RAC! E&#13;
HOW TO TAKE&#13;
THE FUN FLIGHT&#13;
-/1,,,,,,,, rl,, /,/, u ~" vt,/,,,y&#13;
1 ... C-•l k .tt•IINI UH, t .....&#13;
,-. ... 11t:UJ)l41&#13;
l(,,...s.,,., .••• ~,~&#13;
MAKE $2,650 THIS SUMMER&#13;
SUMMER JOBS FOR COLLEGE STUDENTS&#13;
INTERVIEWS TO BE HELD ON CAMPUS&#13;
FOR AN APPOINTMENT&#13;
CALL 633-0847 &#13;
• news&#13;
Canary says Comm. discipline will improve&#13;
majors, he said. "Next year will 'The Dramatic Arts option of occasionally while an adminsee&#13;
the addition of several new the Communication major will tstrator at Parkside, has authored&#13;
faculty. also be adding a full-time faculty texts in public speaking and&#13;
Alan and Rebecca Rubin will member yet to be selected. argumentation.&#13;
become Assistant Professors of The Rubins received their Although Communication will&#13;
Communication, leaving. similar Ph.D's from the University of rely less on part-time faculty next&#13;
posts at Georgia Southern Illinois, where they met and year, one new course should&#13;
College and the University of married each other. Both are prove especially interesting.&#13;
North Carolina at Greensboro. already published scholars with Norman Monson, Opinion Page&#13;
Bruce Weaver, currently a Visit- good teaching records, said Editor of the Journal Times in&#13;
ing Assistant Professor here, will Canary. Alan Rubin will be Racine, will teach a special class&#13;
become a regular faculty teaching theory and production on "The Press as a Molder of&#13;
member. And former- Parkside courses in the radio-TV area. Public Opinion."&#13;
Vice Chancellor and Acting Rebecca Rubin will be teaching Canary said that the division&#13;
Chancellor Otto Bauer has courses in organizational com- was especially pleased with the&#13;
tentatively agreed to return as a munication. commitment the Administration&#13;
Full Professor of Cornmunlce- Canary said Weaver has had shown to the Communication.&#13;
In the meantime, discipline already made his mark as a tion program in- supporting new&#13;
coordinator Carrington will be teacher here at Parkside. His faculty positions and in other&#13;
on leave as a Visiting scholar at special interests include the ways. "This is a very missionNorthwestern&#13;
University's Center rhetoric of contemporary social related program,'! he said, "and&#13;
for the Teaching Profession. movements. Bauer, who taught we hope to make it one of the&#13;
strongest majors at Parkside."&#13;
This has been a difficult year&#13;
for the Communication program&#13;
at Parkside, but next year&#13;
promises to be its best ever,&#13;
according to Humanities Division&#13;
Chairman Robert Canary.&#13;
This year sudden resignations&#13;
left Associate Professor Richard&#13;
Carrington and two visiting&#13;
faculty members to cover&#13;
courses and advising for one of&#13;
the campus's most popular&#13;
~&#13;
6224· 22nd Avenue&#13;
Lowest Priced Records in Town&#13;
~&#13;
MI CASA&#13;
"HAPPY HOUR COCKTAILS" TUES. - FAt. 4 P.M. - 6 P.M.&#13;
RESTAURANT -COCKTAILS&#13;
MEXICAN &amp; AMERICAN CUISINE&#13;
EXPANDED AMERICAN MENU&#13;
STEAKS - CHOPS - SEAFOOD&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
TUES. THRU FR!. l' :30 A.M. - 2. P.M.&#13;
DINNERS&#13;
TUE. THRU THURS. 5 - 10 P.M.&#13;
FRI &amp; SAT. 5 - 11:30 P.M.&#13;
SUN. 5 . 10 P.M.&#13;
"CLDSED ON MONDAYS"&#13;
PRIVATE PARTY FACILITIES&#13;
639·8084&#13;
3932 DOUGLAS AVE., RACINE (DOUGLAS AVE. &amp; 3 MILE RD. HWY. 32 SOUTHl&#13;
UNION REC • CENTER&#13;
Call 553-2695 for&#13;
FURTHER INFORMATION&#13;
/&#13;
Asked why economics classeswere not cancelled&#13;
for the day {Business classes were cancelled and&#13;
attendance in economics classes was sparse),&#13;
Singer said, "We left the tiecision up to the&#13;
Individual instructor. We did tell them that if they&#13;
thought the sessions would be beneficial to their&#13;
students, to let them attend," Singer said perhaps&#13;
he should contact all disciplines before the next&#13;
Management Day with the same request.&#13;
The success of Management Day also pleased&#13;
Chancellor Alan E. Guskin.&#13;
"Nobody knew what to expect the first time out.&#13;
The Weyerhaeuser people said they were very&#13;
Impressed with our students and facilities and&#13;
specificallv said they wished they could have spent&#13;
two days here. Visiting Professor, Robert Graham,&#13;
who developed the project and business&#13;
management senior, Dave Brandt deserve the credit&#13;
for the success," said Guskin.&#13;
"I was also very impressed with the management&#13;
style of the Weyerhaeuser staff. They combined the&#13;
sophisticated nature of their concerns with a&#13;
personable relaxed attitude. I have heard a lot of&#13;
good things about Weyerhaeuser and they certainly&#13;
worked together as a team during Management&#13;
day," said Cuskin.&#13;
J,I. Case Company. which sent two observers last&#13;
I hursdav. will sponsor a Management Day here in&#13;
the fall. The definite date has not yet been set.&#13;
Management Day termed success&#13;
by John R. McKloskey&#13;
Parkside's first Management Day last Thursday&#13;
was a great success, according to partic.ipants.&#13;
JamesPolcynski, Lecturer-Business Management,&#13;
estimated the turnout of students at about 550. "It&#13;
was an excellent turnout, fine student support for&#13;
Management Day", he said.&#13;
According to Polcynski and others. the ..&#13;
Weyerhaeuser executives who discussed business&#13;
practices and issues at Parkside thought highly of&#13;
the students here. "Every comment they made&#13;
indicated they were very impressed with Parkside&#13;
students, which makes we instructors feel good", he&#13;
said.&#13;
Larry Logan, Lecturer-BusinessManagement, said&#13;
Weyerhaeuser people told him "our students were&#13;
much more mature and had more to offer than&#13;
other campuses they have visited they've asked&#13;
to come back to Parkside in the future. This is good&#13;
news especially since lately the Parks ide&#13;
management program has had some negative&#13;
publicity", said Logan.&#13;
Ronald Singer, Assistant Professor-Business&#13;
Management, said students have told him that they&#13;
thought the sessionswere "very beneficial" Singer&#13;
said the students asked "many good questions" of&#13;
the visitors and "many stayed after the sessions to&#13;
talk to the executives one on one"&#13;
104&#13;
/game · Mondays &amp; 'Fridays&#13;
9 a.m. to 10 a.m.&#13;
254&#13;
/game&#13;
254&#13;
/game&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
noon to 2:30 p.m.&#13;
:•:.-:·:~:,. ~,e,-Fs ·'.• ... '. &amp;~ ,_yy.&#13;
/&#13;
Canary says Comm .. discipline will improve&#13;
This has been a difficult year&#13;
for the Communication program&#13;
at Parkside, but next year&#13;
promises to be its best ever,&#13;
according to Humanities Division&#13;
Chairman Robert Canary.&#13;
This year sudden resignations&#13;
left Associate Professor Richard&#13;
Carrington and two visiting&#13;
faculty members to cover&#13;
courses and advising for one of&#13;
the campus's most popular&#13;
6224 ~&#13;
~&#13;
22nd Avenue&#13;
Lowest Priced Records in Town&#13;
~AJWWl&#13;
eA.&#13;
Ml CASA&#13;
"HAPPY HOUR COCKTAILS" TUES. - FRI. 4 P.M. - 6 P.M.&#13;
RESTAURANT-COCKTAILS&#13;
MEXICAN &amp; AMERICAN CUISINE&#13;
EXPANDED AMERICAN MENU&#13;
STEAKS - CHOPS - SEAFOOD&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
TUES. THAU FRI. 11 :30 A.M . - 2. P.M.&#13;
DINNERS&#13;
TUE. THAU THURS. 5 - 10 P.M.&#13;
FRI &amp; SAT. 5 - 11 :30 P.M.&#13;
SUN. 5 - 10 P.M.&#13;
"CLOSED ON MONDAYS"&#13;
PRIVATE PARTY FACILITIES&#13;
639-8084&#13;
3932 DOUGLAS AVE., RACINE (DOUGLAS AVE. &amp; 3 MILE RD. HWY. 32 SOUTH)&#13;
majors, he said. Next year will&#13;
see the addition of several new&#13;
faculty.&#13;
Alan and Rebecca Rubin will&#13;
become Assistant Professors of&#13;
Communication, leaving simi lar&#13;
posts at Georgia Southern&#13;
College and the Univers"ity of&#13;
North Carolina at Greensboro.&#13;
Bruce Weaver, currently a Visiting&#13;
Assistant Professor here, will&#13;
become a regular faculty&#13;
member. And former· Parkside&#13;
Vice Chancellor and Acting&#13;
Chancellor Otto Bauer has&#13;
tentatively agreed to return as a&#13;
Full Professor of Communication.&#13;
In the meantime, discipline&#13;
coordinator Carrington will be&#13;
on leave as a Visiting scholar at&#13;
Northwestern University's Center&#13;
for the Teaching Profession.·&#13;
· The Dramatic Arts option of&#13;
the Communication major will&#13;
also be adding a full-time faculty&#13;
member yet to be selected.&#13;
occasionally while an administrator&#13;
at Parkside, has authored&#13;
texts in public speaking and&#13;
argumentation.&#13;
The Rubins received their&#13;
Ph.D's from the University of&#13;
Illinois, where they met and&#13;
married each other. Both are&#13;
already published scholars with&#13;
good teaching records, said&#13;
Canary. Alan Rubin will be&#13;
teaching theory and production&#13;
cou rses in the radio-TV area.&#13;
Rebecca Rubin will be teaching&#13;
courses in organizational communication.&#13;
&#13;
Although Communication will&#13;
rely less on part-time faculty next&#13;
year, one new course should&#13;
prove especially interesting.&#13;
Norman Monson, Opinion Page&#13;
Editor of the Journal Times in&#13;
Racine, will teach a special class&#13;
on "The Press as a Molder of&#13;
Public Opinion."&#13;
Canary said that the division&#13;
was especially pleased with the&#13;
commftment the Administration&#13;
had shown to the Communication&#13;
program in- supporting new&#13;
faculty positions and in other&#13;
ways . "This is a very missionrelated&#13;
program,'' he said, "and&#13;
we hope to make it one of the&#13;
strongest majors at Parkside."&#13;
Canary said Weaver has&#13;
already made his mark as a&#13;
teacher here at Parkside. His&#13;
special interests include the&#13;
rhetoric of contemporary social&#13;
movements. Bauer, who taught&#13;
Ma~agement Day termed success&#13;
by John R. McKloskey&#13;
Parkside's first Management Day last Thursday&#13;
was a great success, according to participants.&#13;
James Polcynski, Lecturer-Business Management,&#13;
estimated the turnout of students at about 550. " It&#13;
was an excellent turnout, fine student support for&#13;
Management Day" , he said.&#13;
According to Polcynski and others, the.&#13;
Weyerhaeuser executives who discussed business&#13;
practices and issues at Parkside thought highly of&#13;
the students here . " Every comment they made&#13;
indicated they were very impressed with Parkside&#13;
students, which makes we instructors feel good" , he&#13;
said .&#13;
Larry Logan, Lecturer-Business Management, said&#13;
Weyerhaeuser people told him "our students were&#13;
much more mature and had more to offer than&#13;
other campuses they have visited .. . they've asked&#13;
to come back to Parkside in the future . This is good&#13;
news especially since lately the Parkside&#13;
management program has had some negative&#13;
publicity" , said Logan .&#13;
Ronald Singer, Assistant Professor-Business&#13;
Management, said students have told him that they&#13;
thought the sessions were " very beneficial" . Singer&#13;
said the students asked "many good questions" of&#13;
the visitors and "many stayed after the sessions to&#13;
talk to the executives one on one ."&#13;
Asked why economics classes were not cancelled&#13;
for the day ( Business classes were cancelled and&#13;
attendance in economics classes was sparse),&#13;
Singer said, "We left the tfecision up to the&#13;
individual instructor. We did tell them that if they&#13;
thought the sessions would be beneficial to their&#13;
students, to let them attend," Singer said perhaps&#13;
he should contact all disciplines before the next&#13;
Management Day with the same request .&#13;
The success of Management Day also pleased&#13;
Chancellor Alan E. Guskin .&#13;
" Nobody knew what to expect the first time out.&#13;
The Weyerhaeuser people said they were very&#13;
impressed with our students and facilities and&#13;
~pecifica lly said they wished they could have spent&#13;
two days here. Visiting Professor, Robert Graham ,&#13;
who developed the project and business&#13;
management senior, Dave Brandt deserve the credit&#13;
for the success," said Guskin .&#13;
" I was also very impressed with the management&#13;
style of the Weyerhaeuser staff. They combined the&#13;
sophisticated nature of their concerns with a&#13;
personable relaxed attitude . I have heard a lot of&#13;
good things about Weyerhaeuser and they certainly&#13;
worked together as a team during Management&#13;
day," said Cuskin .&#13;
J,I. Case Cqmpany, which sent two observers last&#13;
lhursday, will sponsor a Management Day here in&#13;
the fall . The definite date has not yet been set.&#13;
104 /game&#13;
9&#13;
• Mondays &amp; Fridays&#13;
a.m. to 10 a.m.&#13;
254/game - Wednesday,&#13;
Thursday, Friday&#13;
5 :30 p.m. to 7 p.m.&#13;
254&#13;
/game - Saturdays&#13;
UNION REC -CENTER noon to 2:30 p.m.&#13;
Call 553-2695 for&#13;
FURTHER INFORMATION &#13;
I.·'·architecture&#13;
"&#13;
Southport Beach House might soon be-named an historical landmark&#13;
more on this in our next issue&#13;
Southport Beach House might soon be named an historical landmark&#13;
more on this in our ne:rt issue&#13;
tile&#13;
Cos&#13;
O~i·&#13;
Co&#13;
Ow &#13;
BUilding: Southport Beach House&#13;
Architect: Unknown (WPA!&#13;
Location: Southport Park Beach Kenosha I&#13;
Date completed: July 16, 1941&#13;
Cost: $17,718.17&#13;
Design: Art Deco&#13;
Cost 01 Event reservation (one night): $75.00 cleanup deposu $50.&#13;
Owner: Parks Deportment&#13;
Municipal Building&#13;
Kenosha. Wi~consin 53140&#13;
658-4811&#13;
photogrophs b~ Philip L. livingston&#13;
Building: Southport Beach Hou .. e&#13;
Architect: Unknown (WPAI&#13;
LocaHon: Southport Park Beach Kenosha&#13;
Date completed: July 16, 1941&#13;
Cost: SI 7,718.17&#13;
Design: Art Deco&#13;
Cost of Event reservation (one night): 875.00 cleanup deposit 850.&#13;
Owner: Parks Department&#13;
Municipal Building&#13;
Kenosha, Wiijconsin 53140&#13;
658-4811&#13;
photogrophs by Philip L. Livingston &#13;
BUSCH.&#13;
When you believe in what you're doing,&#13;
you just naturally do it better.&#13;
Yes.&#13;
You can be good at passing tests that are meaningless to you.&#13;
You can be good at selling encyclopedias that you know are inferior&#13;
Ultimately, you can even be good at a profession that you&#13;
donr really believe in.&#13;
You can be good. But for some people, being good just isn't&#13;
good enough.&#13;
For the people who brew Busch beer, it isn't&#13;
good enough. That's why, at Anheuser-Busch, we persist&#13;
in brewing Busch beer just one way- the natural way.&#13;
We frankly believe that's the best way to brew beer.&#13;
And when you believe in what you're doing,&#13;
you just naturally do it better.&#13;
Try a Busch.&#13;
We believe you'll agree.&#13;
.... .... . ~ .&#13;
. . . . .&#13;
~. .'. .&#13;
?&#13;
•&#13;
Yes.&#13;
You can be good at passing tests that are meaningl t y u.&#13;
You can be goqd at selling encyclopedia that you kn w ar im ri r&#13;
Ultimately, you can even be good at a prof es i n that y u&#13;
don't really believe in.&#13;
You can be good. But for some people, being g djt t ~ n't&#13;
good enough.&#13;
For the people who brew Busch beer, it isn't&#13;
good enough. That's why, at Anheus r-Busch, we r i t&#13;
in brewing Busch beer just one way-the natural \Vay.&#13;
We frankly believe that's the best way t br \Vb r&#13;
And when you believe in what you're doing,&#13;
you just naturally do it better.&#13;
Try a Busch.&#13;
We believe you'll agree.&#13;
BUSCH.&#13;
When you believe in what you're doing,&#13;
you just naturally do it better. &#13;
I:news Dance attendence&#13;
motivation studied&#13;
Barbara Wemmert&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston consequence of attending a&#13;
dance.&#13;
Good Time?&#13;
Most of the attenders truly&#13;
believed that going to a dance&#13;
would allow them to have a good&#13;
time and meet many new young&#13;
people. Non-attenders disagreed.&#13;
Inexpensive beer (compared&#13;
to other commercial establishments)&#13;
was also a motivational&#13;
factor for attending dances&#13;
according to the attenders, but&#13;
the non-attenders didn't seem to&#13;
be aware' of or care about the&#13;
inexpensive beer&#13;
Dances Boring?&#13;
Wemmert's study showed that&#13;
attenders did not find the dances&#13;
boring and liked the disco atmosphere&#13;
in Union Square. Nonattenders&#13;
not only found the&#13;
dances boring, but didn't like the&#13;
disco atmosphere or the bands&#13;
that played the music. Nonattenders&#13;
also did not like the&#13;
presence of 50 many security&#13;
guards at the dances.&#13;
An interesting finding of the&#13;
report took place In the&#13;
beginning of the project. In the&#13;
preliminary eliciting questionnaire&#13;
dancing, per se, was not&#13;
found to be an important&#13;
motivation to attend a dance.&#13;
Meeting new people, having a&#13;
good time, and drinking&#13;
inexpensive beer all came before&#13;
dancing. r&#13;
In addition to pointing out&#13;
motivations tor " attending&#13;
dances, Wemmert's findings also&#13;
suggests which factors may be&#13;
relevent In influencing motivation&#13;
to attend dances. Her study&#13;
was not complete at press time,&#13;
but when it is, it will be on two&#13;
hour reserve in the library under&#13;
Professor Pomazal, 320.&#13;
.Faculty senate reforms&#13;
•&#13;
committee structure&#13;
As a research project for Advanced&#13;
Social Psychology&#13;
(5-320), Barbara Wemmert attempted&#13;
to find out what&#13;
motivates students to attend&#13;
dances at Parkside.&#13;
Her representative sample&#13;
included those who attended&#13;
dances and those who did not&#13;
attend them.&#13;
Bad accousticst&#13;
.Recently Union Square underwent&#13;
some accoustical 'first aide'&#13;
to remedy the echo and muddy&#13;
sound of bands playing at&#13;
dances. Apparently, some students&#13;
haven't realized the&#13;
change in accoustics because&#13;
Wemmer!'s study showed that&#13;
attenders did not believe the&#13;
accoustics were bad, while nonattenders&#13;
cited putting up with&#13;
bad accoustics as a bad&#13;
more students.&#13;
The Student Financial Aids&#13;
Committee has been dissolved&#13;
and its functions transferred to&#13;
'the Academic Policies Committee&#13;
for academic policy matters&#13;
and the Academic Actions&#13;
Committee for- student requests&#13;
for exemption from curriculum&#13;
requirements.&#13;
The Senate also revised the&#13;
procedure by which emeritus&#13;
status is awarded to retiring&#13;
faculty members. The next&#13;
Senate meeting, the last of the&#13;
year, is scheduled for May 17.&#13;
by 'ohn McKloskey&#13;
The Faculty Senate has made&#13;
some changes in its committee&#13;
structure. Among the changes&#13;
made at the Senate's April&#13;
meeting:&#13;
The Student Awards Committee&#13;
and the Campus Ceremonies&#13;
Committee have been consolidated&#13;
(effective next year) into the&#13;
Awards and Ceremonies Committee.&#13;
The Student Recruitment&#13;
Committee has been pissolved&#13;
and will be reformed to include&#13;
f!7u d ~htC&#13;
BEAUTY SALON&#13;
"Elegant in a Any Language"&#13;
New Spring Styles!&#13;
Late Appointments Thurs. &amp; Fri.&#13;
21l7-22nd Ave Kenosha Wis. 654·3417&#13;
Reycycling paper&#13;
possible at Uw·p&#13;
Art loccese&#13;
non-i ntenders thought these&#13;
locations would be the best.&#13;
One major finding of laccese's&#13;
research is that attitudes and&#13;
morals 0) the individual&#13;
concerning paper recycling was&#13;
more of an influence than the&#13;
expectations of friends, colleagues,&#13;
divisional chairpeople,&#13;
etc.&#13;
Laccese's study also suggests&#13;
several campaign approaches&#13;
based on what the findings show&#13;
are important factors i:l making a&#13;
decision to recycle paper.&#13;
Persons interested in taking a&#13;
closer look at Leccese's findings&#13;
can find it on two hour reserve in&#13;
the library under Professor&#13;
Pomazal. 320.&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston Parkside, both intenders and&#13;
non-intenders already believed&#13;
saving a tree was important.&#13;
Apparently past campaigns,&#13;
advertisements and/or appeals&#13;
have been successful using such&#13;
pursuasion.&#13;
Laccese found that "being&#13;
considerate" was one of the&#13;
main factors of people who&#13;
would recycle paper. Among&#13;
non-intenders "being considerate"&#13;
was not an important belief.&#13;
In the surveys, the convertience&#13;
of placing recepticles for&#13;
optimum use seemed to indicare&#13;
the best location would be&#13;
divisional offices or near mail&#13;
boxes. (is that what they do with&#13;
their mail?) Both intenders and&#13;
~lerbu~&#13;
~ourt&#13;
PUa &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
live (ontmeporary music&#13;
Bass 8&lt; Piano&#13;
by Jimi and Jerry&#13;
Wed. thru Sat.&#13;
In research done for Advanced&#13;
Social Psychology (5-320), Art&#13;
Laccese, senior, found that&#13;
faculty and staff would probably&#13;
participate in a paper recycling&#13;
program if one were initiated at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Currently, office paper waste&#13;
is deposited in garbage cans that&#13;
are emptied into Parkside's&#13;
general refuse containers or&#13;
dumpsters..&#13;
Sa'l:ing a tree&#13;
At first glance, it might be&#13;
assumed the best approach to&#13;
convincing people to recycle&#13;
would be to stress saving paper&#13;
and trees is better than wasting&#13;
them. In the researc h at&#13;
ENCHILADAS&#13;
3/51&#13;
95&#13;
MACHOS&#13;
5150 plate&#13;
Wednesdo~s 8&lt; Thursd,,~ "Iter 9,00&#13;
632-6151&#13;
On Spring Wesl of 31 in Greenridge_ Plaza&#13;
~0Wi&#13;
JIM DANDY&#13;
CANDY SALE&#13;
WE DON'T WANT YOU&#13;
UNLESS&#13;
-YOU WANT TO REMAIN A STUDENT&#13;
-WORK 20 HOURS A WEEK&#13;
-AND EARN SOME MOIEY&#13;
THEN&#13;
You may qualify for an internship&#13;
with&#13;
dVO'l.thw£j.tnn dt1u.tu.a.f ..£4£&#13;
Call: Don Brink&#13;
(Racine) 632·213 J&#13;
Stop by: 1300 S. Greenbay Rd.&#13;
END-OF-THE-YEA~&#13;
CLOSEOUT&#13;
BECAUSESUMM Eft ISJUST AR OU NDTH [COR NED&#13;
A NOW EW ILL8EDLOSING TH ES....EETSH OPPE&#13;
LHJWN ..... E~R Eft EDU(:INGALUtU KCANUl' ANU&#13;
NUTSIN OR DERTODISPOSEOF A 8M UI.:H O.'OU R&#13;
,&#13;
STOCKASPOSSIBUL THE RESULT ..•YOU WIN!&#13;
COUNTER&#13;
Call: Gene Soens&#13;
(Kenosha) 654·5316&#13;
Stop by: 2525 - 63rd St.&#13;
· Faculty senate reforms&#13;
committee structure&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
The Faculty Senate has made&#13;
some changes in its committee&#13;
structure. Among the changes&#13;
made at the Senate's April&#13;
meeting:&#13;
The Student Awards Committee&#13;
and the Campus Ceremonies&#13;
Committee have been consolidated&#13;
(effective next year) into the&#13;
Awards and Ceremonies Committee.&#13;
&#13;
The Student Recruitment&#13;
Committee has been flissolved&#13;
and will be reformed to include&#13;
more students .&#13;
The Student Financial Aids&#13;
Committee has been dissolved&#13;
and its functions transferred to&#13;
'the Academic Policies Committee&#13;
for academic policy matters&#13;
and the Academic Actions&#13;
Committee for student requests&#13;
for exemption from curriculum&#13;
requirements .&#13;
The Senate also revised the&#13;
procedure by which emeritus&#13;
status is awarded to retiring&#13;
faculty members . The next&#13;
Senate meeting, the last of the&#13;
year, is scheduled for May 17.&#13;
fYwJ~htc&#13;
Borboro Wemmert&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
As a research project for Advanced&#13;
Social Psychology&#13;
(5-320), Barbara Wemmert attempted&#13;
to find out what&#13;
motivates students to attend&#13;
dances at Parkside .&#13;
Her representative sample&#13;
included those who attended&#13;
dances and those who did not&#13;
attend them.&#13;
Bad accoustics?&#13;
Recently Union Square underwent&#13;
some accoustical 'first aide'&#13;
to remedy the echo and muddy&#13;
sound of bands playing at&#13;
dances. Apparently, some students&#13;
haven't realized the&#13;
change in accoustics because&#13;
Wemmert's study showed that&#13;
attenders did not believe the&#13;
accoustics were bad, while nonattenders&#13;
cited putting up with&#13;
bad accoustics as a bad&#13;
Dance attendence&#13;
motivation studied&#13;
consequence of attending a&#13;
dance.&#13;
Good Time?&#13;
Most of the attenders truly&#13;
believed that going to a dance&#13;
would allow them to have a good&#13;
time and meet many new young&#13;
people . Non-attenders disagreed .&#13;
Inexpensive beer (compared&#13;
to other commercial establishments)&#13;
was also a motivational&#13;
factor for attending dances&#13;
according to the attenders, but&#13;
the non-attenders didn't seem to&#13;
be aware of or care about the&#13;
inexpensive beer.&#13;
Dances Boring?&#13;
Wemmert's study showed that&#13;
attenders did not find the dances&#13;
boring and liked the disco atmosphere&#13;
in Union Square. Nonattenders&#13;
not only found the&#13;
dances boring, but didn't like the&#13;
disco atmosphere or the bands&#13;
that played the music . Nonattenders&#13;
also did not like the&#13;
presence of so many security&#13;
guards at the dances .&#13;
An interesting finding of the&#13;
report took place in the&#13;
beginning of the project. In the&#13;
preliminary eliciting questionnaire&#13;
dancing, per se, was not&#13;
found to be an important&#13;
motivation to attend a dance.&#13;
Meeting new people, having a&#13;
good time, and drinking&#13;
inexpensive beer all came before&#13;
dancing .&#13;
In addition to pointing out&#13;
motivations for · attending&#13;
dances, Wemmert's findings also&#13;
suggests which factors may be&#13;
relevent in · influencing motivation&#13;
to attend dances . Her study&#13;
was not complete at press time,&#13;
but wnen it is, it will be on two&#13;
hour reserve in the library under&#13;
Professor Pomazal, 320.&#13;
BEAUTY SALON&#13;
' 'Elegant in a Any Language ' '&#13;
New Spring Styles!&#13;
Late Appointments Thurs. &amp; Fri.&#13;
Rey,cycling paper&#13;
possible at UW-P&#13;
2117-22nd Ave Kenosha Wis. 654-3417&#13;
PUI &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
Live Contmeporor_y music&#13;
Boss &amp; Piono&#13;
b_y Jimi ond Jerr_y&#13;
Wed. thru Sot.&#13;
ENCHILADAS&#13;
3/$195&#13;
NACHOS&#13;
$po plate&#13;
WednesdO!JS &amp; Thursday ofter 9:00&#13;
632-6151&#13;
On Spring West of 31 in Greenridge_ Plaza&#13;
............................&#13;
JIM DANDY&#13;
CANDY SALE&#13;
END-OF-THE-YEAR.&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
In research done for Advanced&#13;
Social Psychology (5-320), Art&#13;
Laccese, senior, found that&#13;
faculty and staff would probably&#13;
participate in a paper recycling&#13;
program if one were initiated at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Currently, office paper waste&#13;
is deposited in garbage cans that&#13;
are emptied into Parkside's&#13;
general refuse containers or&#13;
dumpsters . .&#13;
Sa~ing a tree&#13;
At fir.st glance, it might be&#13;
assumed the best approach to&#13;
convincing people to recycle&#13;
would be to stress saving paper&#13;
and trees is better than wasting&#13;
them . In the research at&#13;
CLOSEOUT It @lbe ~&#13;
@&gt;wtct @&gt;ltnppt&#13;
BECAUSESUMM ERISJUST AROU N DTH El:OR N ER&#13;
ANDWEWILLBEDLOSINGTHESWEETSHOPl'E&#13;
IJOWN. WE~REREDm:INGALLOURCANUY ANU&#13;
NUTSINORDERTODISPOSEO•'ASMUC..:HOHJUR&#13;
STOCKASPOSSUJ.LE, THE RESULT ... YOU 'WIN!&#13;
Parkside, both intenders and&#13;
non-intenders already believed&#13;
saving a tree was important.&#13;
Apparently past campaigns,&#13;
advertisements and/or appeals&#13;
have been successful using such&#13;
pursuasion .&#13;
Laccese found that "being&#13;
considerate" was one of the&#13;
main factors of people who&#13;
would recycle paper. Among&#13;
non-intenders " being considerate"&#13;
was not an important belief .&#13;
In the surveys, the convenience&#13;
of placing recepticles for&#13;
optimum use seemed to indicate&#13;
the best location would be&#13;
divisional offices or near mail&#13;
boxes . (is that what they do with&#13;
their mail?) Both intenders and&#13;
Art Loccese&#13;
non-intenders thought these&#13;
locations would be the best.&#13;
One major finding of Laccese's&#13;
research is that attitudes and&#13;
morals of the individual&#13;
concerning paper recycling was&#13;
more of an influence than the&#13;
expectations of friends, colleagues,&#13;
divisional chairpeople,&#13;
etc .&#13;
Laccese's study also suggests&#13;
several campaign approaches&#13;
based on what the findings show&#13;
are important factors iri making a&#13;
decision to recycle paper.&#13;
Persons interested in taking a&#13;
closer look at Laccese's findings&#13;
can find it on two hour reserve in&#13;
the library under Professor&#13;
Pomazal , 320.&#13;
WE DON'T WANT YOU&#13;
UNLESS&#13;
-YOU WANT TO REMAIN A STUDENT&#13;
-W-ORK 20 HOURS A WEEK&#13;
-AND EARN SOME MONEY&#13;
THEN&#13;
You may qualify for an internship&#13;
with&#13;
dVo'tthwe1,.fr'tn cMutuaf ..£ife&#13;
Call: Don Brin le&#13;
(Racine) 632-2731&#13;
Stop by: 1300 S. Greenbay Rd.&#13;
Call: Gene Soens&#13;
(Kenosha) 654-5316&#13;
Stop by: 2525 - 63rd St. &#13;
Education ensures your future.&#13;
Good luck, Parkside graduates.&#13;
- Johnson Wax&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
''-'~&#13;
111'11111 H!l1l IllH1I111"&#13;
1IIIIIIIIIIIII:iI:I::lI.IIlll111 .. ' .&#13;
1 I 1I111111'111111111I11111&#13;
"&#13;
,&#13;
(;Johnson&#13;
wax&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
Education e·nsures your future.&#13;
Good luck, Parkside graduates.&#13;
................................... ,, .. ,, ..&#13;
llll~lll~}////~ .(llilll~~~W4111\\l~ ~//J/I/I'"'. . . ... ... .. ...&#13;
- Johnson Wax&#13;
,:Johnson wax&#13;
Racine, Wis. &#13;
::;::::;;__ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil-------- ... --------~~=--~~--W&#13;
II news sports&#13;
Students soon able to declare minors&#13;
The Academic Program and&#13;
Planning Review committee in&#13;
their meeting on May 23 voted to&#13;
support the inception of "formal&#13;
minors:' at Parkside. Committee&#13;
members, acting on a program&#13;
suggestion submitted by Jack&#13;
Starrett (asst, Professor-Business),&#13;
were confronted with the&#13;
formal minor iSsu'e. The majority&#13;
of the meeting was spent&#13;
debating that issue.&#13;
A distinction was made&#13;
between certification, concentratian&#13;
in a major; and formal&#13;
minors. Certification, (i.e. Education),&#13;
is governed by the state in&#13;
conjunction with the University.&#13;
Concentration in a major, (i.e.&#13;
Business, where students can&#13;
have a concentration in&#13;
Management, Accounting, or&#13;
Information Systems), allows the&#13;
student specialization within&#13;
his/her field. A formal minor is&#13;
defined as "A set number of&#13;
credits in a discipline outside of&#13;
the major."&#13;
One of the advantages of&#13;
formal minors is that they are&#13;
printed on the student's&#13;
transcript. The APPR felt that&#13;
Parkside students with a minor&#13;
listed on their transcripts would&#13;
FOR THE BEST RECORDS IN KENOSHA&#13;
AT PRICES YOU'LL LIKE!&#13;
JAZZ ROCK SOUL&#13;
CONTEMPORARY&#13;
-CLASSICAL&#13;
COME TO US AT&#13;
626 Fifty-Sixth SI.,oKenosha, Wis.&#13;
:J~&#13;
~-~ ~-==~~~~&#13;
have a better chance on the job&#13;
market.&#13;
The APPR sent the "formal&#13;
minor" proposal to the Aca-.&#13;
demic Policies Committee to set&#13;
requirements for a minor.&#13;
Committee members recornmended&#13;
that the Academic&#13;
Policies Committee require a&#13;
minimum of 18 credits for a&#13;
formal minor.&#13;
Before formal minors can be&#13;
implemented they will have to&#13;
be approved by the UW central&#13;
committeelin Madison.&#13;
Netters beat UW-M&#13;
The men's tennis team broke&#13;
out of their losing streak to&#13;
overcome Northeastern Illinois&#13;
and UW-Milwaukee, 5-4 and 6-3&#13;
and then lost to UW-Whitewater,&#13;
5-4.&#13;
Against Northeastern, Parkside&#13;
lost the first two singles, but&#13;
came back to win three of the&#13;
last four singles and two of the&#13;
three doubles.&#13;
Soccer team&#13;
On the next day, Parks ide took&#13;
a commanding 2-0 lead in singles&#13;
only to see it dissolve. Parkside&#13;
then won four out of five&#13;
matches remaining in singles and&#13;
doubles to take the match.&#13;
The Warhawks proved their&#13;
strength was in the doubles as&#13;
the Rangers took four of six&#13;
singles but lost the meet on the&#13;
strength of the Whitewaterdoubles&#13;
pairings.&#13;
$oftballers&#13;
throttle ,&#13;
Madison ~&#13;
Parl&lt;.'side'ssoftball team came&#13;
out, of a weekend losing streak&#13;
with a bang Monday as- the&#13;
Rangers crushed the Madiso~&#13;
softball team in a doubleheader&#13;
27-1-and13-3. '&#13;
In the first game, Diane Secor&#13;
one-hit the Badgers while Sue&#13;
Vaselik had only two hits off her&#13;
pitching towin.&#13;
Hitting for the Rangers were&#13;
Dida Hunter, who hit two home&#13;
runs, Diana Kolovos one and&#13;
Vaselik two homers.&#13;
Hunter still leads&#13;
hitters, according to&#13;
statistics released by&#13;
Wayne Dannehl, with&#13;
average.&#13;
In tne pitching department,&#13;
Secor has a 2.25 ERA (earned run&#13;
average) and Vaselik leads in&#13;
strikeouts with 9.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
current&#13;
coach&#13;
a .580&#13;
Sendelbach named all NAIA&#13;
. uw-Parkside junior Steve&#13;
Sendelbach has been named to&#13;
the all-NAIA soccer team for the&#13;
second straight year.&#13;
The team, a 30-man squad,&#13;
includes the top NAIA players on&#13;
the National Soccer Coaches&#13;
/ Assn. of America (NSCAA) rating&#13;
board. It is the NAIA equivalent&#13;
of an all-America team.&#13;
Sendelbach, a junior from&#13;
Wauwatosa (Milwaukee Pius),&#13;
has twice been selected by his&#13;
teammates as the Rangers' most&#13;
valuable player. He's also twice&#13;
been named to the NAIA&#13;
all-district team and to the&#13;
NSCAA all-Midwest squad.&#13;
Free PizzI Delivery&#13;
Club Highview&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
All. 4.0.,,1 •• Chl,kl., S••• hlftl, R."oll, i..,&#13;
OPEII 4 •.•. lit •.•.&#13;
,&#13;
"He's one of the best stoppers&#13;
defensively that I've seen in the&#13;
Midwest," Parkside Coach Hal&#13;
,Henderson said. "What Steve&#13;
lacks in technical ability he&#13;
makes up for with his&#13;
aggressiveness and - ability to&#13;
tackle very well.&#13;
"He has that rare ability to&#13;
always get his head or feet on the&#13;
ball."&#13;
Sendelbach, who's lettered&#13;
three times at Parkside and will&#13;
close his collegiate career this&#13;
coming fall, had a tumor&#13;
removed from his spinal column&#13;
in 1974 and was told then that&#13;
he'd never play soccer again. But&#13;
he's gone - at full speed -&#13;
through two seasons since then&#13;
and rates, according to veteran&#13;
coach Henderson, as "one of the&#13;
finest I've ever coached."&#13;
=11-news sports ,.&#13;
Students soon able to declare minors&#13;
The Academic Program and&#13;
Planning Review committee in&#13;
their meeting on May 23 voted to&#13;
supp.ort the inception of "formal&#13;
minors" at Parkside. Committee&#13;
members, acting on a program&#13;
suggestion submitted by Jack&#13;
Starrett (asst, Professor-Business),&#13;
were confronted with the&#13;
formal minor issu'e. The majority&#13;
of the meeting was spent&#13;
debating that issue.&#13;
A distinction was made&#13;
between certification , concentration&#13;
in a major, and formal&#13;
minors. Certification, (i.e. Education),&#13;
is governed by the state in&#13;
conjunction with the University.&#13;
Concentration in a major, (i.e.&#13;
Business, where students can&#13;
have a concentration in&#13;
Management, Accounting, or&#13;
Information Systems), allows the&#13;
student specialization within&#13;
his/ her field . A formal minor is&#13;
defined as " A set number of&#13;
credits in a discipline outside of&#13;
the major."&#13;
One of the advantages of&#13;
formal minors is that they are&#13;
printed on the student' s&#13;
transcript. The APPR felt that&#13;
Parkside students with a minor&#13;
listed on their transcripts would&#13;
~ - ~&#13;
~- 0 N\(,i:J\C&#13;
~ ~ ~n\\\~,~~&#13;
Open 32,\ . ~\'!, 5 6363&#13;
have a better chance on the job&#13;
market.&#13;
The APPR sent the "formal&#13;
minor" proposal to the Academic&#13;
Policies Committee to set&#13;
requirements for a minor.&#13;
Committee members recommended&#13;
that the Academic&#13;
Policies Committee require a&#13;
minimum ot 18 credits for a&#13;
formal minor.&#13;
Before formal minors can be&#13;
implemented they will have to&#13;
be approved by the U .W . central&#13;
committe ·n Madison.&#13;
Netters beat UW-M&#13;
The men's tennis team broke&#13;
out of their losing streak to&#13;
overcome Northeastern Illinois&#13;
and UW-Milwaukee, 5-4 and 6-3&#13;
and then lost to UW-Whitewater,&#13;
5-4.&#13;
Against Northeastern, Parkside&#13;
lost the first two singles, but&#13;
came back to win three of the&#13;
las.t four singles and two of the&#13;
three doubles.&#13;
Socce·r team&#13;
On the next day, Parkside took&#13;
a commanding 2-0 lead in singles&#13;
only to see it dissolve. Parkside&#13;
then won four out of five&#13;
matches remaining in singles and&#13;
doubles to take the match.&#13;
The Warhawks proved their&#13;
- strength was in the doubles as&#13;
the Rangers took four of six&#13;
singles but lost the meet on the&#13;
strength of the Whitewater&#13;
dou~les pairings.&#13;
Softballers&#13;
throttle&#13;
Madison&#13;
Parl!side's softball team came&#13;
out of a weekend losing streak&#13;
with a bang Monday as- the&#13;
Rangers crushed the Madison&#13;
softball team in a doubleheader,&#13;
27-1 and 13-3.&#13;
In the first game, Diane Secor&#13;
one-hit the Badgers while Sue&#13;
Vaselik had only two hits off her&#13;
pitching to .win .&#13;
Hitting for the Rangers were&#13;
Dida Hunter, who hit two home&#13;
runs, Diana Kolovos one and&#13;
Vaselik two homers.&#13;
Hunter still leads Ranger&#13;
hitters, according to current&#13;
statistics released by coach&#13;
Wayne Dannehl, with a .580&#13;
average.&#13;
In the pitching department,&#13;
Secor has a 2.25 ERA (earned run&#13;
average) and Vaselik leads in&#13;
strikeouts with 9.&#13;
Mon. &amp; Fri. ~ N'°~\oe, •A,) 634'-&#13;
Noon tll 9 ~~(.~~&#13;
Sat. Noon ti/ 5 l".,.- Sendelbach named all NAIA .... MAG/C TRICKS - JOKES - NOVEL TIES&#13;
FOR THE BEST RECORDS IN KENOSHA&#13;
AT PRICES YOU'LL LIKE!&#13;
JAZZ ROCK $0UL&#13;
CONTEMPORARY&#13;
CLASSICAL&#13;
COME TO US AT&#13;
.. . UW-Parkside junior Steve&#13;
Sendelbach has been named to&#13;
the all-NAIA soccer team for the&#13;
second straight year.&#13;
The team, a 30-man squad,&#13;
includes the top NAIA players on&#13;
the National Soccer Coaches&#13;
Assn . of America (NSCAA) rating&#13;
board . It is the NAIA equivalent&#13;
of an all-America team.&#13;
Sendelbach, a junior from&#13;
Wauwatosa (Milwaukee Pius),&#13;
has twice been selected by his&#13;
teammates as th_e Rangers' most&#13;
valuable player. He's also twice&#13;
been named to the NAIA&#13;
all-district team and to the&#13;
NSCAA all-Midwest squad.&#13;
Free Pizza Deliiery&#13;
Club Highview&#13;
5035. 60th Street&#13;
1 Phone: 652-8737&#13;
Altt •,nierl11 Chlek11, SJ11hlffl, Rafloll, B11f&#13;
OPEN 4 J.•. to 1 •·•.&#13;
Now ... in Union Square! •&#13;
YOUR FAVORITE&#13;
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By the Glass By the Carafe&#13;
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Full $2.75&#13;
WINE COOLER - 83.00 PITCHER&#13;
TRY IT ... YOU'LL LIKE IT&#13;
" He's one of the best stoppers&#13;
defensively that I've seen in the&#13;
Midwest," Parkside Coach Hal&#13;
, Henderson said . "What Steve&#13;
lacks in technical ability he&#13;
makes up for with his&#13;
aggressiveness and - ability to&#13;
tackle very well. ·&#13;
" He has that rare ability to&#13;
always get his head or feet on the&#13;
ball."&#13;
Sendelbach, who's lettered&#13;
three times at Parkside and will&#13;
close his collegiate career this&#13;
coming fall , had a tumor&#13;
removed from his spinal column&#13;
in 1974 and was told then that&#13;
he'd never play soccer again . But&#13;
he's gone - at full speed -&#13;
through two seasons since then&#13;
and rates, according to veteran&#13;
coach Henderson, as " one of the&#13;
finest I've ever coached ."&#13;
, &#13;
eventst'l&#13;
Chamber musicians&#13;
The Pike River Musicians,&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin chamber&#13;
music group, will present a&#13;
spring weekend series of free&#13;
concerts. Featured soloists' are&#13;
Milwaukee soprano., Helen Ceci,&#13;
recent Wisconsin winner of the&#13;
American Federation of Music&#13;
Clubs competition, and mezzosoprano&#13;
Carol Irwin, professor of&#13;
music at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. The concerts&#13;
will include music of&#13;
Haydn, Schoenberg, and Souris.&#13;
Club&#13;
offers&#13;
scholarship&#13;
'"&#13;
he&#13;
lal&#13;
"&#13;
he&#13;
hi'&#13;
to&#13;
,&#13;
'to&#13;
1tho&#13;
ered&#13;
.,11&#13;
this&#13;
m.&#13;
urn'&#13;
th~ 'j&#13;
IIsil&#13;
h~&#13;
'ran&#13;
Iht&#13;
The Hoy Nature Club of&#13;
Racine and Kenosha is offering&#13;
two $75 scholarships for students&#13;
or faculty who are interested in&#13;
nature study for this summer.&#13;
The winners will have an&#13;
opportunity to go on four or five&#13;
camping trips to work on their&#13;
projects. For further information&#13;
call Mrs. William Rohan at&#13;
634-5245 ~fter 4 p.m.&#13;
Handicapped&#13;
benefit&#13;
slated&#13;
As part of National Handicapped&#13;
Awareness Week, Society's&#13;
Assets, Inc., a group of people&#13;
concerned with the handicapped,&#13;
will be sponsoring a&#13;
basketball game between some&#13;
of its members and past/present&#13;
basketball' team .members on&#13;
May 19, at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Parks ide Team members&#13;
include alumni Gary Cole,&#13;
Malcolm Mahone, and current&#13;
'team members Laurence Brown,&#13;
and Rade Dimitrijevic who will&#13;
be confined to a wheelchair,&#13;
The Assets team, according to&#13;
Society's Assets president Mike&#13;
Monfardini, will have the&#13;
mobility factor while Parkside&#13;
will be able to shoot better.&#13;
Club&#13;
activities&#13;
highlighted&#13;
Activities of three campus&#13;
groups are highlighted in&#13;
Library/Learning Center displays&#13;
this month.&#13;
The Earth Science Club is&#13;
exhibiting photographs and&#13;
specimens from field trips the&#13;
group made to Arkansas (April,&#13;
1976) and to Louisiana (january,&#13;
1977).&#13;
Other display cases are being&#13;
used by the Anthropology Club&#13;
to preview the King Tutkankhamen&#13;
Exhibit at Chicago's Field&#13;
Museum.&#13;
The group plans a field trip to&#13;
the exhibit on May 7th.&#13;
Costumes designed by Deborah&#13;
Bell for five productions of the&#13;
Dramatic Arts discipline during&#13;
its 4976-77 season are the focus&#13;
of the third display.&#13;
Other groups interested in&#13;
using these facilities may&#13;
contact Linda Prete in the L/LC.&#13;
On Friday, May 6th at 8 p.m.,&#13;
end season&#13;
the group will play by invitation&#13;
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
. Todd Nelson, 6548 3rd Avenue,&#13;
Kenosha. For this performance a&#13;
donation will be accepted.&#13;
The concert on Saturday, May&#13;
7th, at 7:30 p.m., will be given in&#13;
cooperation with' the Johnson&#13;
Foundation at its' conference&#13;
center, Wingspread. For this&#13;
concert, free and open to the&#13;
public, reservations should be&#13;
made no later than May 4 by&#13;
sending a postcard to Wingspread,&#13;
33 Four Mile Road,&#13;
Racine 53402.&#13;
Sunday's concert, also free&#13;
and open to the public,&#13;
celebrates Mothers' Day, May 8,&#13;
by playing works by Pergolesi&#13;
and Schoenberg. This concert is&#13;
at 2 p.m. and will take place at&#13;
Wisconsin Memerial Park, 13235&#13;
Capitol Drive, Milwaukee&#13;
Members of the Pike River&#13;
Musicians include, besides Ceci&#13;
and Irwin, Tim Bell, clarinet,&#13;
professor of music at Parkside,&#13;
JeanaOgren, Milwaukee pianist;&#13;
John Sherba and Timothy&#13;
Klabunde, violins; Consuela&#13;
Scribner and Anita Balge, violas;&#13;
Daniel McCollum, violoncello,&#13;
all from Milwaukee, where they&#13;
study with the Fine Arts Quartet,&#13;
and James Dean, contrabessist&#13;
and director of the Pike River&#13;
MUSICians.a faculty member of&#13;
the Humanities DIVISion at&#13;
Parksrde&#13;
With thts senes of concerts the&#13;
Pike River MUSICians, named&#13;
after the nver that runs through&#13;
Kenosha and Racine counties,&#13;
ends ItSthird seasonof mUSICfor&#13;
the home&#13;
_UIlll::JIII_ •• r&#13;
.'1III1I IM.. _&#13;
FREE DELIVER Y DINO'S&#13;
Member Parksfde 200&#13;
1816 16th St. 3728 Douglas National Varsity Club&#13;
Racine Racine&#13;
634-1991 639-7115&#13;
.0,&#13;
- '&#13;
'"&#13;
WE DELIVER 4437 - nnd Avenue Kenosha&#13;
Open 4:00 p.m, til! olle hour afler Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
taoerns close&#13;
I&#13;
Mtntion this OOl&#13;
Your challenge is to enter numbers in the empty boxes below so Ihat each&#13;
vertical column and horizontal row will add up to 100.&#13;
When there's a challenge,&#13;
quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope you have some fun with the challenge.&#13;
There's another challenge we'd like to offer you, too.&#13;
The Pabst challenge:&#13;
We welcome the chance to prove the quality of&#13;
our beer. We challenge you to taste and compare&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon to any other premium beer. You'll&#13;
like Pabst better. Blue Ribbon quality means the best&#13;
tasting beer you can get. Since 1844 it always has.&#13;
-&#13;
PABST. Since 1844. The quality has always come through.&#13;
eni,&#13;
r0n&#13;
in&#13;
rs&#13;
e&#13;
al&#13;
e&#13;
he&#13;
is&#13;
to&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
red&#13;
will&#13;
this&#13;
mor&#13;
mn&#13;
at&#13;
t&#13;
eo&#13;
an&#13;
·chamber musicians end season&#13;
The Pike River Musicians,&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin chamber&#13;
music group, will present a&#13;
spring weekend series of ,free&#13;
concerts . Featured soloists are&#13;
Milwaukee soprano-, Helen Ceci,&#13;
recent Wisconsin winner of the&#13;
American Federation of Music&#13;
Clubs competition, and mezzosoprano&#13;
Carol Irwin, professor of&#13;
music at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, The concerts&#13;
will include music of&#13;
Haydn, Schoenberg, and Souris.&#13;
Club&#13;
offers&#13;
scholarship&#13;
The Hoy Nature Club of&#13;
Racine and Kenosha is offering&#13;
two $75 scholarships for students&#13;
or faculty who are interested in&#13;
nature study for this summer.&#13;
The winners will have an&#13;
opportunity to go on four or five&#13;
camping trips to w.ork on their&#13;
projects. For further information&#13;
call Mrs. William Rohan at&#13;
634-5245 afte~ 4 p .m .&#13;
Handicapped&#13;
benefit&#13;
slated&#13;
As part of National Handicapped&#13;
Awareness Week, Society's&#13;
Assets, Inc., a group of people&#13;
concerned with the handicapped,&#13;
will be sponsoring a&#13;
basketball game between some&#13;
of its members and past/present&#13;
basketball team .members on&#13;
May 19, at 7:30 p .m .&#13;
Parkside Team members&#13;
include alumni Gary Cole,&#13;
Malcolm Mahone, and current&#13;
team members Laurence Brown,&#13;
and Rade Dimitrijevic who will&#13;
be confined to a wheelchair.&#13;
The Assets team, according to&#13;
Society's Assets president Mike&#13;
Monfardini, will have the&#13;
mobility factor while Parkside&#13;
will be able to shoot better.&#13;
Club&#13;
activities&#13;
highlighted&#13;
Activities of three campus&#13;
groups are highlighted in&#13;
Library/Learning Center displays&#13;
this month.&#13;
The Earth Science Club is&#13;
exhibiting photographs and&#13;
specimens from field trips the&#13;
group made to Arkansas {April,&#13;
1976) and to Louisiana {January,&#13;
1977).&#13;
Other display cases are being&#13;
used by the Anthropology Club&#13;
to preview the King Tutkankhamen&#13;
Exhibit at Chicago's Field&#13;
Museum .&#13;
The group plans a field trip to&#13;
the exhibit on May 7th .&#13;
Costumes designed by Deborah&#13;
Bell for five productions of the&#13;
Dramatic Arts discipline during&#13;
its 4976-77 season are the focus&#13;
of the third _qisplay.&#13;
Other groups interested in&#13;
using these facilities may&#13;
contact Linda Piele in the L/LC.&#13;
On Friday, May 6th at 8 p .m .,&#13;
the group will play by invitation&#13;
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
· Todd Nelson, 6548 3rd Avenue,&#13;
. Kenosha. For this performance a&#13;
donation will be accepted.&#13;
The concert on Saturday, May&#13;
7th, at 7:30 p.m ., will be given in&#13;
cooperation with · the Johnson&#13;
Foundation at its· conference&#13;
center, Wingspread. For this&#13;
concert, free and open to the&#13;
public, reservations should be&#13;
made no later than May 4 by&#13;
sending a postcard to Wingspread,&#13;
33 Four Mile Road,&#13;
Racine 53402.&#13;
Sunday's concert, also free&#13;
and open to the public,&#13;
celebrates Mothers' Day, May 8,&#13;
by playing works by Pergolesi&#13;
and Schoenberg. This concert is&#13;
at 2 p.m . and will take place at&#13;
Wisconsin Memorial Park, 13235&#13;
IIHIIIIIIHU::;u11H1NtltlllHIIIIIIIIIHIHIIIIIIIIIIIHHllllllftll&#13;
DINO'S&#13;
1816 16th St.&#13;
Racine&#13;
372R Douglas&#13;
Racine&#13;
634-1991 639-7115&#13;
Capitol Drive, Milwaukee&#13;
Members of the Pike River&#13;
Musicians include, beside Cec1&#13;
and Irwin, Tim Bell, clarinet,&#13;
professor of music at Parkside,&#13;
Jeana Ogren, Milwaukee pIanIst,&#13;
John Sherba and T1moth&#13;
Klabunde, v iol ins; Consuelo&#13;
Scribner and Anita Balge, violas;&#13;
Daniel McColl.um, violoncello,&#13;
all from M ilwaukee, where they&#13;
study with the Fine Arts Quartet,&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
M ember Parkside 200&#13;
National Va rsity Chili&#13;
and Jam Dean, contrabas I t&#13;
and d1r tor of th Pike R1 r&#13;
Mu icIan , a facult m m r of&#13;
the Humanit ie Di 1 ,on at&#13;
Par 1de.&#13;
With th, s ne of cone rt.s th&#13;
Pike Riv r Mu IcIan , named&#13;
after th river that runs through&#13;
Kenosha and Racine counties,&#13;
end its third eason of music for&#13;
the hom&#13;
WE DELIVER&#13;
Open 4:00 p.m. till one hour after&#13;
443 7 - 22nd A venue Keno ha&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654- 77&#13;
Your challenge is to enter numbers in the empty boxes below so that each&#13;
vertical column and horizontal row will add up to 100.&#13;
When there's a challenge, quality ma_kes the difference.&#13;
We hope you have some fun with the challenge.&#13;
There's another challenge we'd like to offer you, too.&#13;
The Pabst challenge:&#13;
We welcome the chance to prove the quality of&#13;
our beer. We challenge you to taste and compare&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon to any other premium beer. You'll&#13;
like Pabst better. Blue Ribbon quality means the best&#13;
tasting beer you can get. Since 1844 it always has.&#13;
PABST. Since 1844. The quality has always come through. t: 1911 PABSl BREWING COMPAN 'f M,1wau• - Wts Pt"lW,.l Ht•tqhlS Ill NP-.atl,, N J l~ A.ncJt"lt&gt;S c . 111 Pat&gt;s, C-.e-.,,9~&#13;
Mention this &#13;
Ilevents&#13;
Wednesday I May 4&#13;
Baseball game vs .. 5t. Norbert (2) at 1 p.o:. at the field.&#13;
PAS Coffeehouse presents Debbie Gorecki from 2 to 4 p.m . in Union&#13;
Square.&#13;
Student Concert at 3 p.rn. in CA 0118.&#13;
Softball game vs. Carthage {Z}at 4 p.m. at Pets.&#13;
Shakespeare on Film Series: Wirth's "Hamlet" {1960l in Cerman at 7&#13;
p.rn. at the Golden Rondelle, Racine. For free tickets call 554-2154.&#13;
Thursday, May 5&#13;
Minority Business Club Meeting presents Mr. George Stinson at 4p.m.&#13;
in Tallent 121.&#13;
Student Recital: Marita Soer, violin, and Steven Edwards, piano, at&#13;
8 p.rn. in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
Fri.day I May 6&#13;
Chemistry-life Science Seminar Series Lecture; "Functional Basis for&#13;
Evolutionary changes in Cytochrome C Structure" by Dr. E. Margoliash,&#13;
department of biochemistry and molecular biology, Northwestern&#13;
University, at 2 p.m. in CL 105.&#13;
Concert: Parkside Chorale, Carol Irwin, conductor. Works by Bach,&#13;
Gabrielli, Brahms and Hemberg, at 8 p.m. in,&#13;
the Comm Arts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Saturday I May 7&#13;
1st Annual Frisbee Tournament in the Union Rec Center. Call 2695 for&#13;
more information.&#13;
Disco-Jazz Dance from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Sponsored by the Minority&#13;
Business Club. Admission $1.00 in advance, $1.50 at the door. I.D.'s&#13;
required.&#13;
Sunday, May 8&#13;
Concert: Chamber Orchestra, David Schripserna, director, and Concert&#13;
Band, Craig Kirchhoff, director, at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Tuesday, May 10&#13;
Women in Management Class presents a video tape "Myth-MsManager"&#13;
at 4 p.m. in CI 111. Refreshments will be served. Sponsored&#13;
by the Center for Teaching Excellence.&#13;
Faculty Recital: Eden Varnng, violin, and Stephen Swedish, piano, at&#13;
8 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
2nd Semi-Annual Nickel Bag FREE Film Festival from 11 a.m. to Zp.m .&#13;
in CL 105.&#13;
Learning disabilities&#13;
explained&#13;
Identifying learning disabilities&#13;
in young children will be the&#13;
topic of a program at Parks ide&#13;
from 7:30 to 9:30 p.rn. on&#13;
Tuesday, May 10, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Featured speaker will be Carol&#13;
Mardell, assistant professor in&#13;
the department of. special&#13;
education at Northeastern Illinois&#13;
University and co-director&#13;
of its special education for&#13;
preschool children project as&#13;
well as the author of DIAL, a&#13;
screening instrument for identiFilm&#13;
presented&#13;
"Guernica," a film by Arrabal,&#13;
will be presented at Parkside at 7&#13;
p.m. on Thursday, May 5 in&#13;
Greenquist Hall Room 103 under&#13;
sponsorship of the campus&#13;
lecture and fine arts committee.&#13;
The free public program will&#13;
include an introduction by Prof.&#13;
Jose Ortega of the Spanish&#13;
faculty, who is a personal friend&#13;
of Arrabal and the author of&#13;
several articles on his work with&#13;
a book in progress on his theater.&#13;
KENOSHA. &amp; LOAN&#13;
SAYINGS&#13;
5935 Seventh Avenue&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
4235 52nd Street&#13;
410 Broad St. lake Geneva&#13;
fying learning problems in prekindergarten&#13;
children.&#13;
Her topic is "Conflict and&#13;
Consensus in the Early Identification&#13;
of Learning Disabilities."&#13;
Diane J. German, director of&#13;
the Parks ide Learning Disabilities&#13;
program which is sponsoring the&#13;
talk, said it is geared to parents;&#13;
early elementary, pre-school and&#13;
special.education teachers; and&#13;
pediatricians and other health&#13;
care personnel who work with&#13;
young children.&#13;
A LEGS&#13;
[open to&#13;
JOB HUNTING SECRET 1#4&#13;
"The hiring process is like sex. If you know&#13;
that someone 01 the opposite sex is&#13;
attracted to you, you are probably flattered&#13;
and have a warm feeling about that person.&#13;
A similar relationship is at work in the jOb&#13;
interview. "&#13;
From the book JOB HUI4TING SECRETS&#13;
AND TACTICS by Kirby Stanat, who has&#13;
hired over 8,000 people. Get the competitive&#13;
edge you need in this economy before you W' I . Ph 8 62 610 0&#13;
graduate. Available from the University I mot, W I 5 . . -&#13;
Bookstore for $4.95. ---------------~- -------- 'HII':'............&lt;&lt;9 .,. .,~&#13;
DANCE CONTEST .&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
For Sale: Gerbils. 25 cents each. Calt&#13;
633-8767 after 5:30 p.m.&#13;
Typing: will do at home. Call 654-8141.&#13;
Loo.king for a summer job? Want 10 hear&#13;
about one where you could earn $360? For"&#13;
an interview call 633-0847.&#13;
For sale: 1971 MG Midget, runs excellent,&#13;
very clean. Low mileage, 4 speed, AMIF~.&#13;
new radials, wire wheels, more.&#13;
633-1840.&#13;
Free: Two puppies, one male and one&#13;
tarnare. Black and white, 7 weeks old. Call&#13;
Beth. 632-6667;..&#13;
Help Wanted: Secretary-Treasurer for&#13;
PSGA. Paid position for work-etuov&#13;
student. Contact Rusty or Harvey, WLLC&#13;
0193, 553-2244.&#13;
Stereos, CB scanners, all at discount pricesfrom&#13;
Johnny's Radio. 554-6635.&#13;
Typing done by experienced typist. Just 5&#13;
minutes from Parkside. Call Sandy at&#13;
554-6211.&#13;
Earn $900/month this summer. Jo&#13;
interviews held Thursday, May 5 in un!o&#13;
270 at 1 p.m. and at 4 p.m. Attend eilhe&#13;
one. Be on....time,&#13;
. ~;"".=~='_.-';"Y~Y$_:::~~,.;::{@tl@f$iWmmw.@,i. PK%~m.~_m:%.1ti;'H@:t1~«w.omw;.,- ., A:'&lt;:''='~'_w.,"" , -'~ .&lt;-&gt;, - . - --, - ... -.. •&#13;
fi TRAIN FOR I SUMMER JOBS&#13;
BE A BARTENDER&#13;
Class -I week days or 2 weeks nights&#13;
Approved by the State of Wisconsin Educational Approval Board&#13;
SPECIAL FINANCIAL ARRANGEMENTS&#13;
PROFESSIONAL BARTENDER'S SCHOOL OF WISCONSIN, inc.&#13;
2040 W. Wisconsin Avenue, (414) 931-0055&#13;
Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53233&#13;
IiWlWlWlWlMMMMMi!!liIi!!liIi!!liIW!W!WlWlMMW!~W:W..*Wi::t#.&lt;:'t::m&#13;
ItEMEMBEIl MOM&#13;
~. ,,' , ~\\ ON l"lolh6r~'[lay.&#13;
'~r~J;/~~;t,~withf lowersfrom ".,.. 'W&gt;'&lt;~~-&#13;
90x &lt;Valley 9lo'tij,tj,&#13;
§'l.oweu of 9ine c.ROj.£j, &amp; Ca."-na.tionj.&#13;
Member of Floralax Int. World Wide Delivery&#13;
MAY 7th&#13;
IT Til liB&#13;
Sat.&#13;
Sun.&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
..&#13;
• ADMISSION $1.00 Advance&#13;
; - $1.50 AT THE DOOR&#13;
~ ,. .,111111,••• ~~~&#13;
8:00&#13;
CASHPRIZE&#13;
BEER &amp; MIXED DRINKS&#13;
u - WP &amp; Guests&#13;
HEARTSTRINGS&#13;
Sun. night: 'SYNOD&#13;
&amp;&#13;
CROSSFIRE&#13;
MAY 21 &amp; 22&#13;
PRICES: SAT. night: $2.00 U-WP&#13;
$2.50 Guests&#13;
SUN. -night: $2,50 - U-WP&#13;
$3.50 Guests&#13;
night:RIO &amp;&#13;
afternoon: A GONG &lt;0;: ~&#13;
SHOW'\\~&#13;
&amp; . \&#13;
CONTEST&#13;
males only)&#13;
uw.p A- st» TI': IV's rf'qu;rf&gt;d&#13;
Wednesday, May 4&#13;
Baseball game vs . St. Norbert (2) at 1 p .m . at the field .&#13;
PAB Coffeehouse presents Debbie Gorecki from 2 to 4 p.m . in Union&#13;
Square.&#13;
Student Concert at 3 p.m _ in CA D118.&#13;
Softball game vs. Carthage (2) at 4 p.m. at Pets .&#13;
Shakespeare on Film Series: Wirth's " Hamlet" (1960) in German at 7&#13;
p.m . at the Golden Rondelle, Racine . For free tickets call 554-2154.&#13;
Thursday, May 5&#13;
Minority Business Club Meeting presents Mr. George Stinson at 4p .m .&#13;
in Tallent 121.&#13;
Student Recital: Marita Soer, violin, and Steven Edwards, piano, at&#13;
8 p .m . in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
Fri.day, May 6&#13;
Chemistry-Life Science Seminar Series Lectute: " Functional Basis for&#13;
Evolutionary changes in Cytochrome C Structure" by Dr. E. Margoliash,&#13;
department of biochemistry and molecular biology, Northwestern&#13;
University, at 2 p.m . in CL 105.&#13;
Concert: Parkside Chorale, Carol Irwin, conductor. Works by Bach ,&#13;
Gabrielli, Brahms and Hemberg, at 8 p.m . in, the Comm Arts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Saturday, May 7&#13;
1st Annual Frisbee Tournament in the Union Rec Center. Call 2695 for&#13;
more information .&#13;
Disco-Jazz Dance from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Sponsored by the Minority&#13;
Business Club. Admission $1 .00 in advance, $1.50 at the door. I .D.'s&#13;
required .&#13;
Sunday, May 8&#13;
Concert: Chamber Orchestra, David Schripsema, director, and Concert&#13;
Band, Craig Kirchhoff, director, at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Tuesday, May 10&#13;
Women in Management Class presents a video tape "Myth-MsManager"&#13;
at 4 p.m. in Cl 111. Refreshments will be served. Sponsored&#13;
by the Center for Teaching Excellence.&#13;
Faculty Recital: Eden Vani-ng, violin, and Stephen Swedish, piano, at&#13;
8 p .m. in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
2nd Semi-Annual Nickel Bag FREE Film Festival from 11 a.m . to 2 p .m.&#13;
in CL 105 .&#13;
Learning disabilities&#13;
explained&#13;
Identifying learning disabilities&#13;
in young children will be the&#13;
topic of a program at Parkside&#13;
from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m . on&#13;
Tuesday, May 10, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Featured speaker will be Carol&#13;
Mardell, assistant professor in&#13;
the department of . special&#13;
education at Northeastern Illinois&#13;
University and co-director&#13;
of its special education for&#13;
preschool children project as&#13;
well as the author of DIAL, a&#13;
screening instrument for identifying&#13;
learning problefl1S in prekindergarten&#13;
children.&#13;
Her topic is "Conflict and&#13;
Consensus in the Early Identification&#13;
of Learning Disabilities."&#13;
Diane J. German, director of&#13;
the Parkside Learning Disabilities&#13;
program which is sponsoring the&#13;
talk, said it is geared to parents;&#13;
early elementary, pre-school and&#13;
special .education teachers; and&#13;
pediatricians and other health&#13;
care personnel who work with&#13;
young children.&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
For Sale : Gerbils. 25 cents each . Call&#13;
633-8767 after 5 :30 p.m.&#13;
Typing : will do at home. Call 654-8141 .&#13;
Loo.king for a summer job? Want lo hear&#13;
about one where you could earn $2560? For&#13;
an interview call 633-0847.&#13;
For Sale : 1971 MG Midget, runs excellent,&#13;
very clean. Low mileage, 4 speed, AM/FM .&#13;
new radials, wire wheels, more.&#13;
633-1840.&#13;
Free : Two puppies, one male and one&#13;
female. Black and white, 7 weeks old . Call&#13;
Beth , 632-6667.&#13;
Help Wanted: Secretary-Treasurer for&#13;
PSGA . Paid pos ition for work-study&#13;
student. Contact Rusty or Harvey, WLLC&#13;
0193, 553-2244.&#13;
Stereos, CB scanners, all at discount prices&#13;
from Johnny's Radio. 554-6635.&#13;
Typing done by experienced !ypist. Just 5&#13;
minutes from Parkside. Call Sandy at&#13;
554-6211 .&#13;
JOB HUNTING SECRET #4&#13;
"The hiring process is like sex. II you know&#13;
that someone of the opposite sex is&#13;
attracted to you, you are probably flattered&#13;
and have a warm feeling about that person.&#13;
A similar relationship is at work in the job&#13;
interview."&#13;
From the book JOB HUi&lt;fflNG SECRETS&#13;
AND TACTICS by Kirby Stanat, who has&#13;
hired over 8,000 people. Get the competitive&#13;
Earn $900/month this summer. Jo&#13;
interviews held Thursday, May 5 in Unio&#13;
270 at 1 p.m. and at 4 p.m. Attend either&#13;
one. Be on..,time:&#13;
1JX::.::-:=?:·:rw.*~::m.r.:tt§fo'y~:;.fw~&amp;1:=2.:!:n•=~t=:~=~::¥¼":k·:·§§:~~*1:*@*=™===t=::::~~~'b~\:.~mw...~~;~l*W..&amp;.~ffi~&amp;™:::t.1t~w.&#13;
M TRAIN FOR I s!~::~C:iER lt Class -1 week days or 2 \\'.eeks nights&#13;
w~&#13;
• Approved by t~e State of Wisconsin Educational Approval Board&#13;
• SPECIAL FINANCIAL ARRANGEMENTS&#13;
:'*·&#13;
PROFESSIONAL BARTENDER'S SCHOOL OF WISCONSIN, inc.&#13;
2040 W. Wisconsin Avenue, ( 414) 931-0055&#13;
Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53233&#13;
]lEMEMBEll MOM.&#13;
§'l.oWE.U of 9-inE. c:.f?oi.E.i. &amp; Ca~.nationi.&#13;
Member of Florafax Int. World Wide Delivery&#13;
edge you need in this economy before you W . I . p h 8 6 2 610 Q graduate. Available from the University I m O t , W I S . . - Bookstore for $4.95. .,._.,,,,_ ___________ - - - - - - - - - - - -----&#13;
. ,,,,11:1•••-..~ ,.,1&#13;
MAY 7th DANCE CONTEST&#13;
UNION SQUARE CASH PRIZE&#13;
..&#13;
•&#13;
8:00&#13;
ADMISSION $1.00 Advance BEER &amp; MIXED DRINKS&#13;
U - WP &amp; Guests&#13;
..&#13;
•&#13;
; 11.50 AT THE DOOR =&#13;
§&#13;
la.., •1111,111•• • ~ s -1&#13;
Film&#13;
presented IT THI EID " Guernica," a film by Arrabal,&#13;
will be presented at Parkside at 7&#13;
p.m . on Thursday, May 5 in&#13;
Greenquist Hall Room 103 under&#13;
sponsorship of the campus&#13;
lecture and fine arts committee.&#13;
The free public program will&#13;
include an introduction by Prof.&#13;
Jose Ortega of the Spanish&#13;
faculty, who is a personal friend&#13;
of Arrabal and the author of&#13;
several articles on his work with&#13;
a book in progress on his theater.&#13;
KENOSHA . &amp; LOAN&#13;
SAYINGS&#13;
5935 Seventh Avenue&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd .&#13;
4235 S2nd Street&#13;
410 Brood St. · Lake Geneva&#13;
Sat.&#13;
Sun.&#13;
Sun.&#13;
night: RIO &amp; HEARTSTRINGS&#13;
afternoon: A&#13;
SHOW&#13;
GONG -~_\,&#13;
~ ~&#13;
\~ 00&#13;
&amp; . \&#13;
A LEGS CONTEST&#13;
(opfn to males only)&#13;
night: 'SYNOD&#13;
&amp;&#13;
CRO.SSFIRE&#13;
MAY 21 &amp; 22&#13;
PRICES: SAT. night: s2.oo&#13;
s2.so&#13;
U-WP&#13;
Guests&#13;
U-WP&#13;
Guests&#13;
SUN. night: s2.50&#13;
s3_50&#13;
UW -P &amp; ."i1'ATE /V's rPquirPtl </text>
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              <text>Breadth proposal reaches policies committee&#13;
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              <text>\&#13;
Wednesday, April 27, 1977&#13;
Vol. 5, No. 27&#13;
er Survival ,.. not pos-able If one&#13;
approac hcv hi" environment. the&#13;
'&gt;0&lt; ral drama, wuh a Irxed&#13;
une h.lngpablp pomt of vrew -&#13;
lilt' wnh- .....repeutrve r(~SI)Qn'tE" to&#13;
ttu- unuerc orved&#13;
- Marshall McLuhan&#13;
Breadth proposal reaches&#13;
academic policies committee&#13;
by Philip l. Livingston&#13;
Last Wednesday, April 20, the academic policies&#13;
committe-e met to discuss the breadth requirement&#13;
proposal. A new rewritten report was submitted by&#13;
breadth committee chairman, james H. Shea,&#13;
Professor of Earth Science. The report contained&#13;
vorne rational torthe requirements.&#13;
Ihe proposal states:&#13;
Each student must complete at least six credits&#13;
In each 01 the six specified "breadth areas" The&#13;
"Breadth areas" are as follows:&#13;
1. Behavioral Science&#13;
2. Business Management, engineering Science and&#13;
Technology, computers, Mathematics&#13;
3. Fine Arts&#13;
4. Humanities&#13;
S. Natural Science&#13;
b. Social Science&#13;
Note 1. "'flJ(l('nt~ with a major requiring 80 or more&#13;
I&#13;
J&#13;
~&#13;
(rpdit\ are required to complete six credits in each&#13;
0/ thrpf' breadth areas and three credits in each of&#13;
two breadth oreas. Progrems to whose swdents&#13;
thl\ r uio appfie~ mu~r as/.. the Breadth&#13;
Subcommittee to so de~ignate.&#13;
Note 2. S/udenb majoring in a program&#13;
automatically meet the requiremenf for the&#13;
hrC'adrh area which includes that program.'&#13;
Nota J. A~ a genera/rule, any single course offered&#13;
by d program can only contribute toward meeting&#13;
the reqUirement of a single breadth area.&#13;
Note 4. Ihe education Division can petition to&#13;
ha\ (&gt; cour se , count toward fulfil/ing the&#13;
rf'Quirpment in relevant breadth areas. If the&#13;
i.ducetion Di\/~ion petitions to have one or more&#13;
of it~ cour~es count toward fulfilling the&#13;
requirement tn a given breadth area, the&#13;
coordinators of programs in that breadth area must&#13;
hf' notified and given an opportunity to speak to&#13;
thf' i.':&gt;!&gt;uc before actIOn is taken.&#13;
Ihi'l mean':&gt; that f.ducauon, unlike other&#13;
dJ\ 1'1100'1, can pelltton to have different courses&#13;
cOllnt In ddferent breadth areas Student seekmg&#13;
cC'rr"i&lt;'i,Hlon as teachers, hOlAever, cannot count&#13;
coorvcs taken to meet certtl,catlOn reqUIrements&#13;
to\'\ard meetmg the breadth requirement The&#13;
purpme of (hI' rule ;~ to Ifl~ure that sucb students,&#13;
no tovv than othef'&gt;, take courses from many&#13;
different breadth area~ and thus fuff'" the&#13;
ouroosev 01 the breadth reqUIrement&#13;
The acadern«, polrcres ccrnrnutee ....111decide on&#13;
whether to send It to the senate, In what form, at a&#13;
later date&#13;
Anyone Interested In rnvesttgattng the entire&#13;
report can do 0,0 at the Information desk ot the&#13;
IIbrar.,.&#13;
Today. WE"dnesday, Aprtl 27. the academiC&#13;
poliCIes committee will diSCUSS the controversial&#13;
academiC adVISing proposal (declaratIOn of malor&#13;
after 30 credits, faculty academiC counselmg. etc)&#13;
dnd the breadth proposal at 2·00 pm .. In GR-344A&#13;
Weyerhaeuser executives visit Parkside&#13;
related stories on pages 3 and 4&#13;
•&#13;
Players present 'Celebration'&#13;
more photographs on pages 6 &amp; 7&#13;
David Powell, Peter Hall, Terry Kehoss, Jody Jone~ Susan Wishon, Mary Jo Curty, Cindy Haberstadt, Fred Schoepke, Mark&#13;
Miller, Carol Knutson, and Donna Linde prepare for this weekend's 'Celebration'.&#13;
~I&#13;
er&#13;
Wednesday , April 27, 1977&#13;
Vol. 5, No. 27 tir\ t ,11 " not po ,,bit 11 om•&#13;
,1ppru,H he h" (•n 1ronm •n t, th,• &lt;i)~&#13;
,m tctl clrc1ma, with a ft l'CI,&#13;
un&lt; h,1n1,wc1bl&lt;• point ul t •w&#13;
tlw .-.1th•" repet1t1vc• rc•,pon, to I tht' unpnc c•1.PCI&#13;
Breadth proposal· reaches&#13;
academic policies committee&#13;
by Philip l. Livingston&#13;
Lc1,t Wednesday , April 20, the academic poli c ies&#13;
c omm1tt PP me t to disc uss the bre&lt;;!dth requ ireme nt&#13;
pro po,a l. A new re written re port wa s submitted by&#13;
breadth committee c hairman , James H . Shea,&#13;
Pro ie,~o r of Ea rth Sc ie nce . The report contai ned&#13;
\Onw rat io na l fo r'the requireme nts.&#13;
l ht&gt; p ropo~a l sta tes:&#13;
1:ac h ~tudent must compl ete at least six credits&#13;
1n Pac h ot the six specified "breadth a reas." The&#13;
"Hrt&gt;adt h a reas " a re as fo llows:&#13;
1. Behavioral Science&#13;
2. Business Management, engineering Science and&#13;
Technology , computers, Mathematics&#13;
J. Fine Arts&#13;
Humanities&#13;
Natural Science&#13;
Social Science&#13;
Note 1. '&gt;rud('nl\ with a ma1or requiring 80 or more&#13;
c r('c /it , are required to complete six credits in each&#13;
o / three breadth areas and three credit ,n each of&#13;
,..,.,o breadth areas. Programs to who e students&#13;
thh ruff' applies must as/.. the Breadt h&#13;
'iubcommitlee to o designate.&#13;
Note 2 . Studen ts ma1or, ng in a program&#13;
.iutomatic_al/y meet the reqwrement for the&#13;
brf'adth area which include that program:&#13;
Not 3. A~ a general rule. any single course offered&#13;
by a program can only contribute toward meeting&#13;
the reqwrement of a single breadth area.&#13;
Note 4. I he tducation Div1s1on can petition to&#13;
ha\ f' cour-f', count toward fulfilling the&#13;
rPqwrf'ment ,n relevant breadth areas. If the&#13;
lducat,on D1\1s.1on petitions to have one or more&#13;
at its cour es count toward fulfilftng the&#13;
rf'qwrement ,n a gn en breadth area, the&#13;
coord,nators of programs in that breadth area must&#13;
hf' not,i,ed and given an opportunity to pea/.. to&#13;
thf' ,,,ue before action is ta/..en .&#13;
I h,, meam that tiiucar,on. unlike oth r&#13;
c/1\1\/om . can pet111on to ha-.,, differ nt cour&#13;
count ,n different breadth ar as tudenl e ,ng&#13;
cf'rt,1,cat,on as teac:hNs, hov, e\er. cannot count&#13;
couf\e, ta/..en to mef't ~ertd, auon requ,r ment&#13;
ro"ard meeting the breadth reqwrement . The&#13;
purpo,e oi th,, rule i to ,mure that uch stud nt ,&#13;
no le,, than oth(•rs, ta e courses from man&#13;
d,tfNent breadth areas. and thu fulf1/I th&#13;
purpo e, 01 the breadth requ1rement .&#13;
The academic poltc1e, omm1tt e \\Ill dec1dt&gt; on&#13;
\'\hether to end tt to the&#13;
later date&#13;
An\one 1ntere~ted 1n in. ,t1i,:ating th&#13;
report can do ,o at the information d ,k&#13;
ltbrar&#13;
Today, \ edn ,day, April 27 , the a adpm1c&#13;
poltete, committee will d1 CU\ th controv r\lal&#13;
academic ad\ l\tng propo al (d larat1on of ma1or&#13;
aiter m credit • facult academ, oun elmg, etc )&#13;
and the breadth propo\al at 2 00 pm . tn R·J44A&#13;
Weyerhaeuser executives visit Parkside&#13;
related st ries on pages 3 and 4&#13;
Players present 'Celebration'&#13;
more photographs on pages 6 &amp; 7&#13;
David Powell, Peter Hall, Terry Kehoss, Jody Jone~ Susan Wishon, Mary Jo Curty, Cindy Haberstadt, Fred Schoepke, Mark&#13;
Miller, Carol Knutson , and Donna Linde prepare for this weekend's 'Celebration'.&#13;
• &#13;
Inews /&#13;
Parkside life science professor&#13;
Joseph Bal sano has been&#13;
awarded a $35,000 grant from&#13;
the National Science Foundation&#13;
to continue his studies of the&#13;
evolutionary biology of an&#13;
unusual species of small&#13;
unisexual fish in which all&#13;
offspring are female.&#13;
Balsano, who has been&#13;
studying various aspects of the&#13;
species, Poecilie formosa, since&#13;
the mid-1960's, points out that&#13;
the species is particularly&#13;
valuable for genetic research. It&#13;
is unusually useful for study 'of&#13;
endocrinology, 'genetics, blood&#13;
compatibility and tumor induction&#13;
because, it exhibits the&#13;
combinatlo- 01 all-fema'ieness&#13;
Inheritance .ilelv through th~&#13;
female and a clonal&#13;
population structure in which all&#13;
daughters are genetic reproductions&#13;
of their mothers.&#13;
The species also is useful in&#13;
the study of various mechanisms&#13;
that increase growth rates in fish&#13;
populations as well as the&#13;
influence of environmental&#13;
contaminants on growth and&#13;
reproduction in fishes. Both of&#13;
these areas have pote,ntial&#13;
significance for developing&#13;
commercial fisheries, Balsano&#13;
points out.&#13;
Poecefia formosa reproduces&#13;
Students react to&#13;
30 credit proposal&#13;
Balsano receives&#13;
unisexual grant&#13;
by mating with males of two&#13;
other species of Poecelia but the&#13;
males do not contribute to the&#13;
heredity of the offspring.&#13;
The aspects of the on-going&#13;
study which Balsano will pursue&#13;
under the current two-year NSF&#13;
grant include refining methods&#13;
of identification of specimens by&#13;
species, tissue transplantation&#13;
studies, protein variability problems,&#13;
and additional field&#13;
studies in the species' native&#13;
Mexican habitat.&#13;
Balsano said the tissue&#13;
transplantation studies have&#13;
significance because initial work&#13;
has indicated that transplantation&#13;
immunity in these fish&#13;
appears to be as hig~ly&#13;
developed as it is in mammals.&#13;
The transplantation approach is&#13;
used to determine the genetic&#13;
relationships among various&#13;
pedigrees of Poecefia formosa.&#13;
The protein studies will be&#13;
aimed at seeking an explanation&#13;
of a genetic abnormality,&#13;
tnplodv. common to Poecelia&#13;
formosa in which three geneticallv&#13;
distinct sets of chromosomes&#13;
occur in the same&#13;
organism. Normally, only two&#13;
sets of chromosomes occur in an&#13;
individual. The question under&#13;
study is: Where did the third set&#13;
come from?&#13;
In addition to Poecelia&#13;
specimens gathered In field&#13;
studies, Balsano's research uses a&#13;
breeding colony of more than&#13;
2,000 of the minnow-size (about&#13;
2 inches long) fish. They are&#13;
maintained at Parkside in 270&#13;
aquariums of 5 to 30 gallons&#13;
each plus 160 one gallon fish&#13;
bowls used to isolate specimens&#13;
used in transplant studies,&#13;
Balsano's previous work has&#13;
been conducted with Marquette&#13;
biology professor Ellen Rasch,&#13;
who will continue to collaborate&#13;
on the study. The research also is&#13;
being coordinated with work by&#13;
researchers at the Philadelphia&#13;
Academy .of Natural Sciences,&#13;
Rutgers University, Samford&#13;
University, lawrence University&#13;
and the University of Michigan&#13;
Museum of Zoology.&#13;
The proposal presented to the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee by&#13;
its Subcommittee on Academic&#13;
Advising requiring every student&#13;
to declare a major or major area&#13;
of interest upon the completion&#13;
of 30 credits has drawn a little&#13;
discussion from students and&#13;
faculty alike.&#13;
Others took a different view.&#13;
"This adds a little discipline that&#13;
some students need to get going&#13;
and get out of school in four&#13;
years," said Mary· Braun,&#13;
freshman, political science&#13;
major.&#13;
"In all intents and purposes it&#13;
helps to give the student an idea&#13;
of about where he is headed. I&#13;
think that some of the criticism&#13;
about it is really overdone.&#13;
People don't understand the full&#13;
impact of what it's about. It is&#13;
more of .a help than it is a&#13;
determent," said John Gabriel.&#13;
It was also mentioned&#13;
students, who wished to remain&#13;
anonymous, that the proposal&#13;
will cause "a bunch of wasted&#13;
paperwork, going through the&#13;
whole process of making sure&#13;
that everyone has declared their&#13;
major and then sending them&#13;
notices telling them that they&#13;
haven't declared yet." By&#13;
requiring that students declare a&#13;
major when they are unsure of&#13;
what they really want to do will&#13;
possibly force students to follow&#13;
a certain line of courses while&#13;
they are still trying to find&#13;
something that they're really&#13;
interested in, according to&#13;
students.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
.Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sand.ich&#13;
OPEN8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington /We. 634-2373&#13;
Parkside's archives has your roots&#13;
Necrology, a microfilm edition of 51 volumes of&#13;
selected newspaper obituaries of 24 500&#13;
Wisconsinites dating from 1846 to 1944· 'and&#13;
naturalization records from seve"'ral' area&#13;
municipalities.&#13;
Burckel pointed out that these sources provide a&#13;
rich lode for persons tracing immigrant ancestors.&#13;
The earliest of the census yield, in addition to&#13;
individual names and addresses, such information&#13;
as number of free white males in several broad age&#13;
categories, foreigners not naturalized, slaves and&#13;
"free colored persons" and deaf ..dumb, blind and&#13;
insane. By 1850, census takers added questions as&#13;
to literacy and numbers of paupers and convicts,&#13;
In 1860, individuals were required to give the&#13;
value of real estate owned as well as occupation or&#13;
trade, place of birth and whether parents were&#13;
foreign born.&#13;
Naturalization records of Racine County, dating&#13;
from the Wisconsin territorial period to the&#13;
post-World War II era, make it possible to trace the&#13;
history of immigrants and immigration in the area&#13;
Burckel said. '&#13;
, The center .also has a number of free brochures&#13;
outlining methods of genealogical research as well&#13;
as resources on the local,. state and national levels.&#13;
The publications available include a basic guide to&#13;
genealog~cal research which contains a family tree&#13;
chart which can be filled out by persons tracing&#13;
their ancestries.&#13;
Researchers ranging from scholarly historians to&#13;
family history buffs gain a rich new resource for&#13;
their inquiries and the Racine County Court House&#13;
gains needed storage space with the transfer of&#13;
nearly 500 volumes of tax rolls for the city of Racine&#13;
and county towns and villages to the Area Research&#13;
Center at the University of Wisconsjn-Parkside&#13;
Archives.&#13;
University Archivist Nicholas C. Burckel said he&#13;
believes the collection, dating from statehood in&#13;
1848 to 1961, is probably the onlv continuous run of&#13;
a single county's tax rolls available at any of the 13&#13;
centers operated as cooperative projects of the&#13;
State Historical Society and tour-year campuses of&#13;
the UW System. By law, the County Treasurer&#13;
retains the most recent 15 years of tax rolls.&#13;
The Research Center at Parkside has already&#13;
acquired all Kenosha County tax rolls prior to 1900'&#13;
and those for every fifth year since through 1955.&#13;
Burckel said tax records are of great value to&#13;
researchers interested in local history, family&#13;
history and genealogy as'well as those tracing the&#13;
history of individual buildings. Tax rolls often are&#13;
the on lv source of information about older&#13;
structures and are useful in tracing family estate&#13;
holdings, he said.&#13;
Other center resources available to researchers&#13;
include indexes to Wisconsin decennial censuses&#13;
from 1820 to 1880; the special census of 1890 and&#13;
the Wisconsin State Census of 1905; Wisconsin&#13;
Fine Rrts Division and Dramatic Brts Discipline&#13;
present&#13;
CELEBRATION&#13;
a musical fable&#13;
words by Tom Jones&#13;
music by Hafvey Schmidt&#13;
April 29, 30&#13;
8:00&#13;
Communicotion&#13;
ond&#13;
pm&#13;
Arts&#13;
mo'y 1&#13;
Theotre&#13;
$2.00 Students. Senior Citizens, UW-Parkside&#13;
Faculty and Stoff&#13;
$3.00 General Public&#13;
Tickets ore cvcucb!e ct&#13;
Union Informo.tlon Kiosk&#13;
REMINDS&#13;
YOU:&#13;
featuring: P.A.B.&#13;
OUT Writers&#13;
Bob Hoftman, Chris Clausen, Michael Murphy&#13;
. Fred Tenuta, Thomas Nolen. Karen Putm&#13;
T.'mothy J. Zuehtsdorf, Bob Jambois, Jami L:Mar&#13;
Linda Lasco. Douglas Edenhauser, Phil Hermann&#13;
Cheryl Powalisz '&#13;
Photograph,'''\-&#13;
Leanne Dillingham&#13;
E.dit&lt;&gt;rPhilip L. Livingston 5K~.2295&#13;
Art DU'e-ctor Jo.) -&#13;
Copy r::d~to! 8ruce Wagner&#13;
New s EdItor John McKloskey&#13;
Featur&lt;, Editor Mona Maillet&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Circulation Sue Marquardt&#13;
ucn\c'ra.l Mana..g(~rThomas R C&#13;
Advertisinl! Mana!!"r John Gab: I~"sper 553·:&lt;287&#13;
, Advertising Sal""s rre ;)·2287&#13;
Ranger is ~ritten and edit d b&#13;
University of Wisconsin Pa. ke'd y students of the&#13;
responsible for its e~it r. 51' e I~nd they are solely&#13;
orla po ICy and content,&#13;
SAT. NIGHT:&#13;
c::Rio &amp; d!ea.'Z.tj.hin9j.&#13;
SUN. NIGHT:&#13;
~ynod &amp; CWHfiu.&#13;
A SUNDAY&#13;
AFTERNOON SPECIAL:&#13;
A O{@NO SHOWI&#13;
,lnews&#13;
Students react to&#13;
30 credit proposal&#13;
The proposal presented to the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee by&#13;
its Subcommittee on Academic&#13;
Advising requiring every student&#13;
to declare a major or major area&#13;
of interest upon the completion&#13;
of 30 credits has drawn a little&#13;
discussion from students and&#13;
faculty alike.&#13;
Others took a different view.&#13;
"This adds a little discipline that&#13;
some students need to get going&#13;
and get out of school in four&#13;
years," said Mary • Braun,&#13;
freshman, political science&#13;
major.&#13;
"In all intents and purposes it&#13;
helps to give the student an idea&#13;
of about where he is headed. I&#13;
think that some of the criticism&#13;
about it is really overdone.&#13;
People don't understand the full&#13;
impact of what it's about. It is&#13;
more of a help than it is a&#13;
determent," said John Gabriel.&#13;
It was also mentioned&#13;
students, who wished to rema'in&#13;
anonymous, that the proposal&#13;
will cause "a bunch of wasted&#13;
paperwork, going through the&#13;
whole process of making sure&#13;
that everyone has declared their&#13;
major and then sending them&#13;
notices telling them that they&#13;
haven't declared yet." By&#13;
requiring that students declare a&#13;
major when they are unsure of&#13;
what they really want to do will&#13;
possibly force students to follow&#13;
a certain line of courses while&#13;
they are still trying to find&#13;
something that they're really&#13;
interested in, according to&#13;
students .&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
· Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington /1,/e. 634--2373&#13;
Fine Arts Division ond Dromotic Arts Discipline&#13;
present&#13;
CELEBRATION&#13;
o musicol foble&#13;
words by Tom Jones&#13;
music by Horvey Schmidt&#13;
April 2Q, 30&#13;
8:00&#13;
Communicotion&#13;
ond&#13;
pm&#13;
Arts&#13;
moy 1&#13;
Theotre&#13;
$2.00 Students, Senior Citizens, UW-Porkside&#13;
Foculty ond Stoff&#13;
$3.00 Generol Public&#13;
Tickets ore ovolloble ot&#13;
Union lnformotlon Kiosk&#13;
P.A.B. REMINDS&#13;
YOU:&#13;
Parkside life science professor&#13;
Joseph Balsano has been&#13;
awarded a $35,000 grant from&#13;
the National Science Foundation&#13;
to continue his studies of the&#13;
evolutionary biology of an&#13;
unusual species of small&#13;
unisexual fish in which all&#13;
offspring are female.&#13;
Balsano, who ha.s been&#13;
studying various aspects of the&#13;
species, Poecilia formosa, since&#13;
the mid-1%0's, points out that&#13;
the species is particularly&#13;
valuable for genetic research. It&#13;
is unusually useful for study ·of&#13;
endocrinology, ·genetics, blood&#13;
compatibility and tumor induction&#13;
because, it exhibits the&#13;
combinatio• 0.f all-femaleness&#13;
inheritancr )lely through th~&#13;
female 1 and a clonal&#13;
population structure in which all&#13;
daughters are genetic reproductions&#13;
of their mothers.&#13;
The species also is useful in&#13;
the study of various mechanisms&#13;
that increase growth rates in fish&#13;
populations as well as the&#13;
influence of environmental&#13;
contaminants on growth and&#13;
reproduction in fishes . Both of&#13;
these areas have pote,ntial&#13;
significance for developing&#13;
commercial fisheries, Balsano&#13;
points out.&#13;
Poecelia formosa reproduces&#13;
/&#13;
Balsano receives&#13;
unisexual grant&#13;
by mating with' males of two&#13;
other species of Poecelia but the&#13;
males do not contribute to the&#13;
heredity of the offspring.&#13;
The aspects of the on-going&#13;
study which Balsano will pursue&#13;
under the current two-year NSF&#13;
grant include refining methods&#13;
of identification of specimens by&#13;
species, tissue transplantation&#13;
studies, protein variability problems,&#13;
and additional field&#13;
studies in the species' native&#13;
Mexican habitat.&#13;
Balsano said the tissue&#13;
transplantation studies have&#13;
significance because initial work&#13;
has indicated that transplantation&#13;
immunity in these fish&#13;
appears to be as highly&#13;
developed as it is in mammals.&#13;
The transplantation approach is&#13;
used to determine the genetic&#13;
relationships among various&#13;
pedigrees of Poecelia formosa .&#13;
The protein studies will be&#13;
aimed at seeking an explanation&#13;
of a genetic abnormality,&#13;
triplody, common to Poecelia&#13;
formosa in which three genetically&#13;
distinct sets of chromosomes&#13;
occur in the same&#13;
organism. Normally, only two&#13;
sets of chromosomes occur in an&#13;
individual. The question under&#13;
study is: Where did the third set&#13;
come from?&#13;
In ad~ition to Poecelia&#13;
specimens gathered in field&#13;
studies, Balsano's research uses a&#13;
breeding colony of more than&#13;
2,000 of the minnow-size (about&#13;
2 inches long) fish. They are&#13;
maintained at Parkside in 270&#13;
aquariums of 5 to 30 gallons&#13;
each plus 160 one gallon fish&#13;
bowls used to isolate specimens&#13;
used in transplant studies.&#13;
Balsano's previous work has&#13;
beea conducted with Marquette&#13;
biology professor Ellen Rasch,&#13;
who will continue to collaborate&#13;
on the study. The research also is&#13;
being coordinated with work by&#13;
researchers at the Philadelphia&#13;
Academy of Natural Sciences,&#13;
Rutgers University, Samford&#13;
University, Lawrence University&#13;
and the University of Michigan&#13;
Museum of Zoology .&#13;
Parkside's archives has your roots&#13;
Researchers ranging from scholarly historians to&#13;
family history buffs gain a rich new resource for&#13;
their inquiries and the Racine County Court House&#13;
gains needed storage space with the transfer of&#13;
nearly 500 volumes of tax rolls for the city of Racine&#13;
and county towns and villages to the Area Research&#13;
Center at the University of Wiscons·n-Parkside&#13;
Archives.&#13;
Necrology, a microfilm edition of 51 volumes of&#13;
selec ted newspaper obituaries of 24,500&#13;
_Wisconsinites dating from 1846 to 1944· and&#13;
naturalization records from seve-ral ' area&#13;
municipalities.&#13;
Burckel pointed out that these sources provide a&#13;
rich lode for persons tracing immigrant ancestors.&#13;
The earliest of the census yield, in addition to&#13;
individual names and addresses, such information&#13;
as number of free white males in several broad age&#13;
categories, foreigners not naturalized, slaves and&#13;
"free colored persons" and deaf, dumb, blind and&#13;
insane. By 1850, census takers added questions as&#13;
to literacy and numbers of paupers and convicts.&#13;
University Archivist Nicholas C. Burckel said he&#13;
believes the collection, dating from statehood in&#13;
1848 to 1961, is probably the only continuous run of&#13;
a single county's tax rolls available at any of the 13&#13;
centers operated as cooperative projects of the&#13;
State Historical Society and four-year campuses of&#13;
the UW System . By law, the County Treasurer&#13;
retains the most recent 15 years of tax rolls.&#13;
The Research Center at Parkside has already&#13;
acquired all Kenosha County tax rolls prior to 1900&#13;
and those for every fifth year since through 1955.&#13;
Burckel said tax records are of great value to&#13;
researchers interested in local history, family&#13;
history and genealogy as-well as those tracing the&#13;
history of individual buildings . Tax rolls often are&#13;
the only source of information about older&#13;
structures and are useful in tracing family estate&#13;
holdings, he said.&#13;
Other center resources available to researchers&#13;
include indexes to Wisconsin decennial censuses&#13;
from 1820 to 1880; the special census of 1890 and&#13;
the Wisconsin State Census of 1905; Wisconsin&#13;
featuring:&#13;
In 1860, individuals were required to give the&#13;
value of real estate owned as well as occupation or&#13;
trade, place of birth and whether parents were&#13;
foreign born.&#13;
Naturalization records of Racine County, dating&#13;
from the Wisconsin territorial period to the&#13;
post-World War 11 era, make it possible to trace the&#13;
history of immigrants and immigration in the area&#13;
Burckel said. '&#13;
The center also has a number of free brochures&#13;
outlining methods of genealogical research as well&#13;
as resources on the local, state and national levels.&#13;
The publications available include a basic guide to&#13;
genealog1Cal research which contains a family tree&#13;
cha_rt which can be filled out by persons tracing&#13;
their ancestries .&#13;
SAT. NIGHT:&#13;
&amp; d-f ea tt~ttin9 ~&#13;
Our W rite rs&#13;
Bob Hoffman, Chris Clausen, Michael Murphy . Fred Tenuta, Thomas Nolen, Karen Pu&#13;
Timothy J. Zuehlsdorf, Bob Jambois Jam ~'raM&#13;
Linda Lasco, Douglas Edenhauser, Phil H~r:an:r&#13;
Cheryl Powalisz '&#13;
Photo~r&lt;'lph,• TII&#13;
'Ill&#13;
SUN. NIGHT:&#13;
~ynod &amp; Cto~~fiu "&#13;
Leanne Dillingham&#13;
A . 0 .Editor Philip L. Livingston 553 . .-.295 tt ,rector · ' "' '&#13;
Copy ~ditor Bruce Wagner&#13;
N 'Ws Ed1tor John McKloskey F\~,~ture Editor Mona Maillet&#13;
S ports Edito.-&#13;
IS COMING ...&#13;
MAY 21 &amp; 22&#13;
A SUNDAY&#13;
AFTERNOON SPECIAL:&#13;
t. . Circulati n Sue Marquardt enl;.'ra.l Mana.•sc, Thomas R C&#13;
Advcrt.1..,mg Mana.i;,'r John G b : 1 '!oper 5'l3-228 7 , Ad . a rie ... 53-2287 v~r 1sm,1; ~&lt; 1- !ot&#13;
Ranger is ~ritten and d·t d&#13;
University of Wisconsin-P~rk!id by stud~nts of the&#13;
responsible for its edito . 1 e 1&#13;
~nd they are solely na po icy and content. &#13;
Management interacts&#13;
with Parlcside students&#13;
r&#13;
Panticipants in Parkside's first "Management Day'·&#13;
included, from left, Business Management Prof.&#13;
Robert Graham, Chancellor Alan E.' Guskin,&#13;
Weyerhaeuser Vice President Gene C. Meyer, (related stories on page 4)&#13;
f!/iea ~htC&#13;
BEAUTY SALON&#13;
"Elegant in a A ny Language"&#13;
New Spring Styles!&#13;
Late Appointments Thurs. &amp; Fri.&#13;
2117-22nd Ave Kenosha Wis. 654-3417&#13;
Business Management senior David Brandt and&#13;
Robert R. Spitzer, industrial consultant and former&#13;
coordinator of the federal Food for Peace Program.&#13;
Dear University Community Member:&#13;
We need your help in improving the services offered for you by your campus. For&#13;
those of you who enjoy a relaxing moment in the Recreation Center or Union Square&#13;
we are asking you to participate in selecting what beers will be offered in the future.&#13;
Please stop and take a moment, or two, to complete the following questionnaire.&#13;
(Circle answers) Drop off your completed questionnaire at the Union Square Bar in&#13;
the Parkside Union between 10:00 a.m. and 10:30p.m., Mon. thru Thurs. (6:30 p.m,&#13;
on Fri.) Your time and concern is greatly appreciated and will be most helpful.&#13;
Thank you very much.&#13;
NAME· ~ _&#13;
J.D. No. _&#13;
1 Which of the following would you choose? (Select one) Budweiser Old Style Miller Schlitz&#13;
2. Which of the following is your preference? (Select one) Olympia Pabst Sll'ohs Hamms&#13;
3. If a superior quality beer was offered would you pay five cents (5 cents) more per glass? . Yes No&#13;
4. Which of the following superior beers would be your choice (Select one) Andeker : Michelob Special Export&#13;
•&#13;
5. Would you be interested in having a low calorie beer on campus? Yes No&#13;
6. Which low calorie beer would you prefer? Miller Ute Schlitz Light Olympia Gold&#13;
7. At thirty-five cents (35 cents) per glass which of the following would you buy? (Select one in each group) •&#13;
Schlitz&#13;
Andeker&#13;
or No Opinion&#13;
or No Opinion&#13;
or No Opinion&#13;
or No Opinion&#13;
or· No Opinion&#13;
or No Opinion&#13;
Group A. Pabst or&#13;
Group B. Michelob or&#13;
Group C. Budweiser or&#13;
. Group D. Old Style or&#13;
Group E. Blatz or&#13;
Group F. Schlitz or&#13;
Pabst&#13;
Strohs&#13;
Old Milwaukee&#13;
Old Style&#13;
Management $ie!i~htc interacts&#13;
with Parkside students BEA TY AL&#13;
''Elegant in a Any Language&#13;
Panticipants ew prin tyl in Parkside's first "Management Day'&#13;
included, from left, Business Management Prof.&#13;
Robert Graham, Chancellor Alan E. · Guskin,&#13;
Weyerhaeuser Vice President Gene C. Meyer,&#13;
Business Management senior David Brandt and&#13;
Robert R. Spitzer, industrial consultant and former&#13;
coordinator of the federal Food for Peace Program. Late Appointm nt Thur . ri.&#13;
( related stories on page 4) 2117-22nd Ave Keno ha . 654-3417&#13;
Dear University Community Member:&#13;
We need your help in improving the services offered for you by your campus. For&#13;
those of you who enjoy a relaxing moment in the Recreation Center or Union Square&#13;
we are asking you to participate in selecting what beers will be offered in the future.&#13;
Please stop and take a moment, or two, to complete the following questionnaire.&#13;
NAME ______ ______________ _____ _&#13;
1 Which of the following would you choose? (Select one) Budweiser&#13;
( Circle answers) Drop off your completed questionnaire at the Union Squar Bar in&#13;
the Parkside Union between 10:00 a.m. and 10:30p.m., Mon . thru Thur . (6:30 p.m.&#13;
on Fri.) Your time and concern is greatly appreciated and will be m t helpful.&#13;
Thank you very much.&#13;
I.D. No.---- ---------------------&#13;
Old Style Miller Schlitz&#13;
2. Which of the following is your preference? (Select one) Olympia Pabst Strohs Hamms&#13;
3. If a superior qualit}! beer was offered would you pay five cents (5 cents) more per glass? • Yes No&#13;
4. Which of the following superior beers would be your choice (Select one) Andeker · Michelob&#13;
5. Would you be interested in having a low calorie beer on campus? Yes No&#13;
6. Which low calorie beer would you prefer? Miller Lite Schlitz Light&#13;
7. At thirty-five cents (35 cents) per glass which of the following would you buy? (Select one in each group)&#13;
Group A. Pabst&#13;
Group B. Michelob&#13;
Group C. Budweiser&#13;
·Group D. Old Style&#13;
Group E. Blatz&#13;
Group F . Schlitz&#13;
or&#13;
or&#13;
or&#13;
or&#13;
or&#13;
or&#13;
Schlitz&#13;
Andeker&#13;
Pabst&#13;
Strohs&#13;
Old Milwaukee&#13;
Old Style&#13;
Special Export&#13;
Olympia Gold&#13;
or No Opinion&#13;
or No Opinion&#13;
or No Opinion&#13;
or No Opinion&#13;
or · No Opinion&#13;
or No Opinion &#13;
.&lt; ••&#13;
_news&#13;
',r .~..... ~~.~, .;.. ;&#13;
,,. . "&#13;
, ~", ',' .','.&#13;
"&#13;
Weyerhaeuser Veep war~s against government control&#13;
The vice president of one of the nation's largest&#13;
companies warned students and faculty at&#13;
Parkside's first "Management Day" Ihursdav that&#13;
"if the current trend in government control&#13;
continues, we will be confronted with pollution&#13;
requirement controls which exceed present&#13;
technological capabilities and require tremendous&#13;
infusions of capital."&#13;
Gene C. Meyer, vice president of Weyerhaeuser&#13;
Company, the largest wood products firm in the&#13;
country, said that "Wisconsin's forest products&#13;
industry has been in the forefront of environmental&#13;
control spending and is committed to a' cleaner&#13;
environment. But we are also businessmen who&#13;
must pay our employees, return dividends to our&#13;
stockholders, and reinvest in research and new&#13;
equipment and facilities. .&#13;
"However, industry needs tax relief to provide&#13;
capital to meet realistic - and J underline realistic&#13;
- environmental goals while providing the ne&#13;
productive capacity essential to avoid shortages&#13;
which push inflation, eliminate jobs and stall&#13;
economic recovery," Meyer said.&#13;
"Manufacturing processesare not clean or udv."&#13;
Meyer conceded. "But we should understand that&#13;
treatment of by-product wastes also pollutes and&#13;
consumes energy. Unfortunately, the nation still&#13;
approaches water pollution separately from air&#13;
pollution, separately from solid waste disposal, and&#13;
separately from energy problems, noise, odor" or&#13;
natural resources depletion."&#13;
Meyer was one of eight Weyerhaeuser executives&#13;
who conducted seminars in various management&#13;
areas for all juniors at Parkside. The "executive&#13;
teach-in" featuring major hational companies will·&#13;
be held once a semester here;&#13;
Meyer called for a rethinkink of state and&#13;
national environmental policies and regulations.&#13;
"Regulations should be based on realistic water&#13;
basin and airshed ambient standards, not on&#13;
, reducing point discharges to the illusory goal of&#13;
zero discharge without regard for the overall&#13;
economic, energy and environmental effect," he&#13;
said.&#13;
Wisconsin's economy and the health of state&#13;
forestry are {inked. Meyer said, pointing out that&#13;
the forest products industry provides 60,000, or 12&#13;
percent, of all manufacturing jobs in the state and&#13;
ranks third in the value of manufactured products.&#13;
"Our industry has known controversy, but (we)&#13;
have been the most sensitive and responsive of any&#13;
state industry to qualitative an-d quantitative&#13;
environmental concerns," Meyer claimed.&#13;
He said that Wisconsin has moved from a&#13;
position of timber scarcity to abundance since the&#13;
early 1900's through sound forest practices. but&#13;
•&#13;
NOW IN •.•&#13;
UNION"&#13;
SQUARE&#13;
PITCHER BEER&#13;
$150&#13;
PITCHER SODA&#13;
$120&#13;
warned that "another period of want" isless than 25&#13;
years away if foresters are not permitted by the&#13;
state to practice what he called "sound forest&#13;
management."&#13;
"In Wisconsin, forest practices have been on the&#13;
defensive and I'll give you an example," he said. "In&#13;
lanuarv. foresters and industry representatives&#13;
spoke out loud and strong against a proposal before&#13;
the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) board&#13;
which would severely restrict clear-cutting on state&#13;
and county forests. This proposal does not contain&#13;
sound, economic forest management practices, and&#13;
obviously was developed without consulting the&#13;
DNR's forestry staff. Today, that issue is being&#13;
voted on by the DNR board."&#13;
Meyer said "the vital first step in wise use" of&#13;
forest resources is increased funding to enable the&#13;
federal government to fulfill its responsibility to&#13;
make a complete forest inventory of all stat~ to&#13;
identify land suitable for forestry, including private -&#13;
property and marginal farm lands.&#13;
He also called for increased utilization by the&#13;
forestry industry of special state forest tax laws, as&#13;
well as government policy which encourages free&#13;
markets. accelerated industry research to make&#13;
forest products competitive and to 'advance&#13;
technology, and intensified public education&#13;
eff.orts by the forest products industry.&#13;
·Manogement Day&#13;
Parkside reaction to Management Day next issue&#13;
Managerial talent needed&#13;
to sol"veworld problems&#13;
Managerial talent is critical in&#13;
solving the world's problems,&#13;
Robert R. Spitzer told an&#13;
audience of business executives,&#13;
university faculty and students at&#13;
a "Management Day" luncheon&#13;
Thursday at Parkside.&#13;
, Spitzer served as coordinator&#13;
of th~ Food for Peace Program of&#13;
the U.5. Agency for International&#13;
Development (AID) in 1975-76&#13;
administering $).3 billion in food&#13;
programs which reached more&#13;
than 40 million people in 75&#13;
countries. Prior to that he was&#13;
.associated for almost 30 years&#13;
with Murphy Products Co., an&#13;
agricultural and food processing&#13;
firm in Burlington, resigning as&#13;
board chairman in 1975.&#13;
People with a business&#13;
background are a rare breed in&#13;
government, Spitzer said, noting&#13;
that during his service in&#13;
Washington he was the only one&#13;
of '12 top people in AID with a&#13;
background in agriculture despite&#13;
the fact that the agency&#13;
25· OFF during&#13;
Happy Hour&#13;
Fridays 3-6&#13;
- $1.00 Deposit on Pitchers&#13;
deals specifically with agricul-·&#13;
tural products and up-grading of&#13;
agriculture in underdeveloped&#13;
countries, ~&#13;
Government would be well&#13;
served at all levels if more multidisciplined&#13;
persons were involved&#13;
in spreading the message of&#13;
democracy and a free market&#13;
economy, he said.&#13;
"The price of democracv us&#13;
involvement, preferably of those&#13;
who have had education and&#13;
experience of life," Spitzer said.&#13;
Of the Food for PeaceProgram,&#13;
Spitzer pointed out that U.5.&#13;
efforts are good business for&#13;
America, citing factors including&#13;
developing markets in emerging&#13;
nations and U.S. reliance on&#13;
many of. them for strategic&#13;
materials.&#13;
Spitzer pointed out that the&#13;
u.s. has a long history of&#13;
providing food for a hungry&#13;
world dating back to post World&#13;
War I programs to aid Europe&#13;
and similar efforts under the&#13;
(~erbu'8&#13;
~ourt&#13;
PYa &amp; RESTAURANT '&#13;
live (ontmeporo.ry music&#13;
Bo.ss &amp; Piono&#13;
by Jimi o.nd Jerry&#13;
Wed, thru Sot.&#13;
ENCHILADAS&#13;
3/$195 \&#13;
NACHOS&#13;
$150 plale&#13;
, Wednesdo~s " Thursdo~ otter 9DO&#13;
632-6151&#13;
On Spring West of 31 in Greenridge&#13;
World War II Marshall' Plan.&#13;
Today, the Food for Peace&#13;
program supplies 60 percent of&#13;
all food aid given all the people&#13;
of the world, Spitzer said, The&#13;
stress of the program, he added,&#13;
is turning to, programs to&#13;
improve agriculture in underdeveloped&#13;
nations and food-forwork&#13;
programs in which persons&#13;
receive food in return for work&#13;
on public projects. Such&#13;
programs, he said, give recipients&#13;
the dignity of self-support.&#13;
All development starts with&#13;
agriculture, Spitzer said, pointing&#13;
out that the u.s. began as an&#13;
agricultural nation. Today, he&#13;
added, the U.S. exports $2J&#13;
billion in agricultural products in&#13;
excess of the $1.3 biilion&#13;
exported in Food for Peace&#13;
Programs.&#13;
Management, he reiterated,&#13;
has a major role in helping to&#13;
feed the world, He listed&#13;
education and research as&#13;
priority items in raising production&#13;
levels in y,nderdeveloped&#13;
countries and emphasized American&#13;
self-interest in support!ni&#13;
such endeavors.&#13;
"Hungry people are not&#13;
peaceful people," he said.&#13;
Of the "Management - Day"&#13;
program, Spitzer, a former&#13;
president of the Wisconsin&#13;
Manufacturers' Association,&#13;
commended participating Weyerhaeuser&#13;
Co, executives: "It's&#13;
good to see the flag of business&#13;
raised on a college campus," he&#13;
said. "Business has sometimes&#13;
neglected. its image and the&#13;
effort to tell the real story of&#13;
business is as important as the'&#13;
balance sheet."&#13;
. I&#13;
I&#13;
Weyerhaeuser Veep warns against government control&#13;
I&#13;
The vice president of one of the nation's largest&#13;
companies warned students and faculty at&#13;
Parkside's first "Management Day" Thu·rsday that&#13;
"if the current trend in government control&#13;
continues, we will be confronted with pollution&#13;
requirement controls which exceed present&#13;
technological capabilities and require tremendous&#13;
infusions of capital."&#13;
Gene C. Meyer, vice president of Weyerhaeuser&#13;
Company, the largest wood products firm in the&#13;
country, said that "Wisconsin's forest products&#13;
industry has been in the forefront of environmental&#13;
control spending and is committed to a cleaner&#13;
environment. But we are also businessmen who&#13;
must pay our employees, return dividends to our&#13;
stockholders, and reinvest in research and new&#13;
equipment and facilities. ·&#13;
"However, industry needs tax re.lief to provide&#13;
capital to meet realistic - and J underline realistic&#13;
- environmental goals while providing the new&#13;
productive capacity essential to avoid shortages&#13;
which push inflation, eliminate jobs and stall&#13;
economic recovery," Meyer said.&#13;
"Manufacturing processes are not clean or tidy,"&#13;
Meyer conceded. "But we should understand that&#13;
treatment of by-product wa5tes also pollutes and&#13;
consumes energy . Unfortunately, the nation sti II&#13;
approaches water pollution separately from air&#13;
NOW IN •••&#13;
UNION ·&#13;
SQUARE&#13;
PITCH ER BEER&#13;
$1so&#13;
PITCHER SODA&#13;
$120&#13;
254 OFF du~ing&#13;
Happy Hour&#13;
Fridays 3-6&#13;
$1 .00 Deposit on Pitchers&#13;
pollution, separately from solid waste disposal, and&#13;
separately from energy problems, noise, odor· or&#13;
natural resources depletion ."&#13;
Meyer was one of eight Weyerhaeuser executives&#13;
who conducted seminars in various management&#13;
areas for all juniors at Parkside. The "executive&#13;
teach-in" featuring major national companies will'&#13;
be held once a semester here;&#13;
warned that "another period of want" isless than 25&#13;
years away if foresters are not permitted by the&#13;
state to practice what he called "sound forest&#13;
management."&#13;
Meyer called for a rethinkin~- uf state and&#13;
national environmental policies and regulations.&#13;
"Regulations should be based on realistic water&#13;
basin and airshed ambient standards, not on&#13;
· reducing point discharg·es to the illusory goal of&#13;
zero discharge without regard for the overall&#13;
economic, energy and environmental effect," he&#13;
said .&#13;
"In Wisconsin, forest practices have been on the&#13;
defensive and I'll give you an example," he said. "In&#13;
Ja~uary, foresters and industry representatives&#13;
spoke out loud and strong against a proposal before&#13;
the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) board&#13;
which would severely restrict clear-&lt;:utting on state&#13;
and county forests. This proposal does not contain&#13;
sound, economic forest management practices, and&#13;
obviously was developed without consulting the&#13;
DNR's forestry staff. Today, that issue is ~eing&#13;
voted on by the DNR board."&#13;
Wisconsin's economy and the health of state&#13;
forestry are-linked, Meyer said, pointing out that&#13;
the forest pr~ducts industry provides 60,000, or 12&#13;
percent, of all manufacturing jobs in the state and&#13;
ranks third in the value of manufactured products.&#13;
Meyer said "the vital first step in wise use" of&#13;
forest ·resources is increased funding to enable the&#13;
federal government to fulfill its responsibility to&#13;
make a complete forest inventory of all stat~ to&#13;
identify land suitable for forestry, including private ·&#13;
property and marginal farm lands.&#13;
"Our industry has known controversy, but (we)&#13;
have been the most sensitive and responsive of any&#13;
state industry to qualitative alld quantitative&#13;
environmental concerns," Meyer claimed .&#13;
He said that Wisconsin has moved from a&#13;
position of timber scarcity to abundance since the&#13;
early 1900's through sound forest practices. but&#13;
He also called for increased utilization by the&#13;
forestry industry of special state forest tax laws, as&#13;
well as government policy which encourages free&#13;
markets, accelerated industry research to make&#13;
forest products competitive aod to 'advance&#13;
technology, and intensified public education&#13;
efforts by the forest products industry.&#13;
-Management Day&#13;
Parkside reaction to Management Day - next issue&#13;
Managerial talent needed&#13;
to sol·ve world probleffls&#13;
Managerial talent is critical in&#13;
solving the world's problems,&#13;
Robert R. Spitzer told an&#13;
audience of business executives,&#13;
university faculty and students at&#13;
a "Management Day" luncheon&#13;
Thursday at Parkside.&#13;
• Spitzer served as coordinator&#13;
of th; Food for Peace Program of&#13;
the U.S. Agency for International&#13;
De'-'.elopment (AID) in 1975-76&#13;
administering $).3 billion in food&#13;
programs which reached more&#13;
than 40 million people in 75&#13;
countries . Prior to that he was&#13;
associated for almost 30 years&#13;
with Murphy Products Co., an&#13;
agricultural and foQd processing&#13;
firm in Burlington, resigning as&#13;
board chairman in 1975.&#13;
People with a business&#13;
background are a rare breed in&#13;
government, Spitzer said, noting&#13;
that during his service in&#13;
Washington he was the only one&#13;
of 12 top people in AID with a&#13;
backgrou nd in agriculture despite&#13;
the fact that the agency&#13;
deals specifically with agricul- .&#13;
tural products and up-grading of&#13;
agriculture in under~eveloped&#13;
countries.&#13;
Government wo1.1ld be well&#13;
served at all levels if more multidisciplined&#13;
persons were involved&#13;
in spreading the message of&#13;
democracy and a free market&#13;
economy, he said .&#13;
"The price of democracy is&#13;
involvement, preferably of those&#13;
who have had education and&#13;
experience of life," Spitzer said.&#13;
Of the Food for Peace Program,&#13;
Spitzer pointed out that U.S.&#13;
efforts are good business for&#13;
America, c iting factors includi.ng&#13;
developing markets in emerging&#13;
nations and U .S. reliance on&#13;
many of . them for strategic&#13;
materials .&#13;
Spitzer pointed out that the&#13;
U.S. has a long history of&#13;
providing food for a hungry&#13;
world dating back to post World&#13;
War I programs to aid Europe&#13;
and similar efforts under the&#13;
PUB &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
Live Contm_eporory m usic&#13;
Boss &amp; Piono&#13;
TACOS&#13;
3/$150&#13;
by Jimi end Jerry&#13;
We,d. thru Sot.&#13;
ENCHILADAS&#13;
3/$195 '&#13;
NACHOS&#13;
$l5° plate&#13;
. Wednesdoys &amp; Thursdoy ofter 9:00&#13;
632-6151&#13;
On Spri ng West of 31 in Greenridge&#13;
World War II Marshal[ Plan .&#13;
Today, the Food for Peace&#13;
program supplies 60 percent of&#13;
all food aid given all the people&#13;
of the world, Spitzer said. The&#13;
stress of the program, he added,&#13;
is turning to, programs to&#13;
improve agriculture in underdeveloped&#13;
nations and food-forwork&#13;
programs in which persons&#13;
receive food in return for work&#13;
on public projects . Such&#13;
programs, he said, give recipients&#13;
the dignity of self-support.&#13;
All development starts with&#13;
agriculture, Spitzer said, poin~-&#13;
ing out that the U.S. began as an&#13;
agricultural nation . Todav., he&#13;
added , the U.S. exports $2~&#13;
billion in agricultural products in&#13;
excess of the $1.3 billion&#13;
exported in Food for Peace&#13;
Programs .&#13;
Management, he reiterated,&#13;
has a major role in helping to&#13;
feed the world. He listed&#13;
education and research as&#13;
priority items in raising production&#13;
levels in nderdeveloped&#13;
countries and e111phasized American&#13;
self-interest in supportini&#13;
such endeavors.&#13;
" Hun gry p eop le are not&#13;
peacefu l people," he said.&#13;
Of t he "Management - Day"&#13;
p rogram, Spitzer, a former&#13;
president of t h e W isconsin&#13;
Man ufacturers' Association ,&#13;
commended participati ng W eyerh&#13;
aeuser Co. executives: " It's&#13;
good to see t he flag of business&#13;
raised on a college campus," he&#13;
said . "Business has someti mes&#13;
neglected . its image and the&#13;
effort to tell the real story of&#13;
business is as important as the&#13;
balance sheet." &#13;
•&#13;
I~ ~~-------~-&#13;
•&#13;
It finally comes down to commitment.&#13;
When you don't like a course, it's hard to excel. The class gets&#13;
tedious. The texts get boring. The lectures get dreadful. Your work&#13;
suffers. And so do your grades.&#13;
Compare that with the courses you really believe in.&#13;
You care more. You try more. And without even noticing, you just&#13;
naturally do better.&#13;
It's true in school. It's true outside of school.&#13;
For example, we believe there's just one way to brew&#13;
Busch beer. The natural way. With natural ingredients.&#13;
Natural carbonation. Natural ageing.&#13;
We believe that's the best way to brew a beer.&#13;
And when you believe in what you're&#13;
doing, you just naturally do it better.&#13;
Taste a Busch and we think you'll agree.&#13;
. BUSCH~&#13;
'When you believe in what you're doing,&#13;
you just naturally do it better.&#13;
It finally comes down to con1n1itn1ent.&#13;
When you don't like a course, it's hard to excel. Th la get&#13;
tedious. The texts get boring. The lecture get dreadful. Yi ur , vork&#13;
suffers. And so do your grades.&#13;
Compare that with the cour e y u really belie, in.&#13;
You care more. You try more. And \\~thout e, en n n 1n , y u JU ~t&#13;
naturally do better.&#13;
It's true in school. It's true outside of ch 1.&#13;
For example, we believe there' just on , Yay to bre,,&#13;
Busch beer. The natural v\ ay. With natural ingr di nt .&#13;
Natural carbonation. Natural ageing.&#13;
We believe that's the best ,vay to bre,v a beer.&#13;
And when you believe in , , hat you're&#13;
doing, you just naturally do it better.&#13;
Tc1ste a Busch and we think you '11 agree.&#13;
· BUSCH. ·When you believe in what you're doing,&#13;
you just naturally do it better. &#13;
, •. , shows&#13;
Donna Linde, Chris Krizan, and Jody Jones strike a pose for the show.&#13;
Peter Hall, J.e. Bussard. and Donnal Linde rehearse for the show this weekend.&#13;
Mary Jo Curty, Ruth Adamczyk, Jody Jones a&#13;
Mark Badtke adds finishing touches to 'Celebration' set.&#13;
Mary Jo Curty, Ruth Adamczyk, Jody&#13;
Donna Linde, Chris Krizan, and Jody Jones strike a pose for the show.&#13;
Mark Badtke adds finishing touches to 'Celebration' set.&#13;
Peter Hall, J.C. Bussard, and Donna! Linde rehearse for the show this weekend. &#13;
PI,yell&#13;
"tI"m&#13;
'CelelJ"H,nI&#13;
"Celebration," a musical fable by Harvey-Schmidt and Tom Jones,&#13;
the creators of "The Fantasticks," will be presented by the Fine Arts&#13;
DIvision and the Dramatic Arts Discipline of the Parkside at 8 p.m&#13;
f-riday. Saturday and Sunday, April 29~30 and May 1, In the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater&#13;
The show, a celebration of spring and life and Jove, is being staged&#13;
as a spectacle of music, motion and mirrors by Director Rhoda-Cale&#13;
Pollack, who also choreographed the show.&#13;
"Celebration" has a cast of 18 - four principals and a 14-member&#13;
chorus 01 revelers - and rncludes 18 musical numbers and more than&#13;
90 costume changes Written in 1968, it opened in Schmidt and Jones'&#13;
workshop theater and ran for 109 performances on Broadway. like&#13;
'Tantasucks" it is non-traditional American musical comedy, It's&#13;
songs range from rock to Latin beat to sentimental love songs and&#13;
dance numbers trip from soft shoe to ballet to "Fred Astaire."&#13;
The cast Includes Mark L. Badtke, Rt. 2, Union Grove, as&#13;
Potemokm. Christopher W. Krizan, Racine, as Orphan; Mary Stankus,&#13;
Racine, as Angel; and Christopher A. Roland, Racine, as Mr. Rich&#13;
'The chorus of revelers includes Jonathan C. Bussard, Terry L&#13;
Kehoss, Carol Knudson, David Powell and F. Cilbert Schoepke, all of&#13;
Kenosha; Ruth l. Adamczyk, Mary lo Curty, Cindy Halberstadt, lodv&#13;
L. Jones, Marc William Miller and Susan Wishaw, all of Racine; Peter&#13;
L_Hall, Evansville; Donna Linda, Rt. 1, Kansasville; and Anthony D.&#13;
Warren, Milwaukee.&#13;
Members of the pit band are Catherine [ilk, Kenosha, and Cindy&#13;
Denman, Racine, pianists; Roger Daniels, Scott Preston and David&#13;
Lenz, all Racine, percussion; Eric Goodwin, Kenosha, bass; Kent&#13;
Perkins, Racine, guitar; and William Krurnberger, Franksville, electric&#13;
plano&#13;
The multi-level set features rotating back pillars which transform&#13;
from a city-scape to a garden to a mirrored mylar reflective setting. It&#13;
is the design of John H. Dickson of the theater staff, who also is&#13;
technical director and light designer.&#13;
Choral director is Carol Irwin of the mUSICfaculty and costume&#13;
designer is Deborah Hell of the theater staff.&#13;
Admisvion is $2 for students, senior citizens and Faculty and staff&#13;
members: $3 for others. Tickets are available at the Union&#13;
Inforrnat ion Center.&#13;
'b : ...&#13;
Mary Stankus strikes an angelic pose.&#13;
John Dickson, set designer, plays tricks with mirrors.&#13;
photographs boY Leanne Dillingham&#13;
dance.&#13;
,,,,,,,&#13;
/erlorm&#13;
'Ce/el,rafion'&#13;
"Celebration ," a musical fable by Harvey Schmidt and Tom Jones,&#13;
the creators ot ''The Fantast1cks," will be presented b the Fine Arts&#13;
D1v1s1on and the Dramatic Arts D, c1pline of the Parkside at 8 p.m.&#13;
1-riday, Saturday and Sunday, April 29-30 and May 1, in the&#13;
ommunication Arts Theater&#13;
The show, a celebration ot spring and life and love, ,s being staged&#13;
as a spectacle of music , motion and mirrors by Director Rhoda-Cale&#13;
Pollack, who also choreographed the show.&#13;
"Celebration" has a cast of 18 - four principals and a 14-member&#13;
choru~ ot revelers - and includes 18 musical numbers and more than&#13;
90 costume changes Written in 1968, it opened in Schmidt and Jone '&#13;
workshop theater and ran for 109 performances on Broadway Like&#13;
'T antast,ck ," it ,s non-traditional American musical comedy It's&#13;
songs range from rock to Latin beat to sentimental love songs and&#13;
dance numbers trip from soft shoe to ballet to " Fred Astaire "&#13;
The cast 111clude Mark L Badtke, Rt . 2, Union Cro e, as&#13;
Potempkin; Christopher W . Krizan , Racine, as Orphan; Mary Stankus,&#13;
Rc1 ci ne, as Angel; and Christopher A . Roland, Racine, as Mr Ri ch&#13;
'The chorus of revelers incluaes Jonathan C. Bussard, Terry L&#13;
Kehoss, Carol Knudson, David Powell and F. Gilbert Schoepke, all of&#13;
Kenosha; Ruth L. Adamczyk, Mary Jo Curty, Cindy Halberstadt, Jody&#13;
L. Jones , Marc William Miller and Susan Wishaw, all of Racine; Peter&#13;
L. Hall, Evansville; Donna Linda, Rt . 1, Kansasville; and Anthony D.&#13;
Warren, Milwaukee.&#13;
Members of the pit band are Catherine Jilk, Kenosha, and Cindy&#13;
Denman , Racine, pianists; Roger Daniels, Scott Preston and David&#13;
LenL , all Racine, percussion ; Eric Goodwin, Kenosha, bass; Kent&#13;
Perkins, Racine, guitar; and William Krumberger, Franksville, electric&#13;
piano.&#13;
The multi-level set features rotating back pillars which transform&#13;
from a city-scape to a garden to a mirrored mylar reflective setting. It&#13;
is the design of John H . Dickson of the theater staff, who also is&#13;
technical director and light designer.&#13;
Choral director Is Carol Irwin of the music faculty and costume&#13;
designer is Deborah Bell of the theater staff.&#13;
Admi ~,on is $2 for students, senior citizens and Faculty and staff&#13;
members ; $3 for others. Tickets are available at the Union&#13;
Information Center.&#13;
Mary Stankus strikes an angelic pose.&#13;
John Dickson, set designer, plays tricks with mirrors.&#13;
photogro.phs b.Y Leo.nne Dillingho.m &#13;
�----------------------------------------''''''-~-----.,.&#13;
Inews&#13;
Security recovers 'oot&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Last Thursday Parks ide Security&#13;
officers started knocking on&#13;
doors at Parks ide Village. Hours&#13;
later I they returned to Parkside&#13;
with $1700 worth of recovered&#13;
furniture.&#13;
According to Security Director&#13;
Ronald Brinkmann, Security first&#13;
consulted with the adrninistration&#13;
and then asked the furniture&#13;
to be returned with no questions&#13;
asked, "There will be no&#13;
prosecution, we're just interested&#13;
in getting the furniture back," he&#13;
said.&#13;
Brinkmann said he was glad to&#13;
get the furniture back because&#13;
the replacement cost would have&#13;
come out of students' tuition.&#13;
,&#13;
"We asked no questions and&#13;
took no names. We just don't&#13;
have the money to buy new&#13;
furniture."&#13;
Brinkmann said he is still&#13;
trying to find out who stole the&#13;
lellers which spell "Union&#13;
Square" at the square's entrance.&#13;
"It was a childish thing to&#13;
do ... those letters cost $22&#13;
apiece," he said. The replacement&#13;
of the letters will be left to&#13;
the Union. Union director&#13;
William Niebuhr was unavailable&#13;
for comment.&#13;
The sign in front of the&#13;
Physical Education Building has&#13;
been vandalized, either by a rock&#13;
or by someone putting his fist&#13;
through the sign. Brinkmann said&#13;
he doesn't know who did that,&#13;
What suds do you like?&#13;
what beer students want in the&#13;
Union at what price.&#13;
Johnson urges students to&#13;
complete the questionaire so&#13;
administrative decisions on the&#13;
matter may include the choices&#13;
of students. (See Bottom page 3)&#13;
A survey questionaire concerning&#13;
beer preferences in the&#13;
Union appears in this issue of&#13;
RANGER. The survey is an&#13;
attempt by Assistant Chancellor&#13;
O. Clayton Johnson to find out&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIYIT1ES BOARD IN ASSOCIATION WITH&#13;
FOLLETT PUBLISHING" CO.&#13;
PRESENTS A&#13;
WED.&#13;
APRIL 27&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
FREE LECTURE&#13;
by&#13;
UNION&#13;
CINEMA&#13;
THEATRE&#13;
'KIRBY W. STANAT&#13;
on&#13;
"Job HuntiJig Secrets&#13;
&amp; Tactics"&#13;
It QDlllt&#13;
~Wttt ~1tDPPt&#13;
r&#13;
Ranger banquet slated&#13;
RANGER will hold its first&#13;
awards banquet on May 7&#13;
according to Tom Cooper,&#13;
RANGER's General Manager,&#13;
"The purpose of the banquet is&#13;
to thank the staff for the long&#13;
hours of volunteer work that&#13;
they ha~e. contributed," said&#13;
Cooper.&#13;
The RANGER staff currently&#13;
consists of five salaried positions&#13;
and a couple of comm issioned&#13;
advertising sales people, and&#13;
rnenvvolunteers'. Cooper added&#13;
that most of the salaried.&#13;
personnel worked for about. SOc&#13;
an hour and that the banquet&#13;
. was a way that Phil&#13;
Livingston (Ranger editor) and I&#13;
could show our appreciation to&#13;
everyone."&#13;
The banquet will begin at 6:00&#13;
at the Driftwood Lounge, 8607&#13;
Highway 11, Sturtevant. -&#13;
Robert Ross, publisher of the&#13;
Iour nal-Frrnes and Howard&#13;
Brown publisher of the Kenosha&#13;
News will be the guest speakers.&#13;
Cooper also added that&#13;
"Awards, some serious and som~&#13;
decidedly non-serious will be&#13;
given out to deserving members&#13;
of the staff," Chancellor Guskin&#13;
and Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
, Educational Services, O. Clayton&#13;
Johnson will also attend.&#13;
The banquet is open to the&#13;
pub/it at ten dollars a plate If&#13;
you are interested in attending&#13;
the banquet, call Cooper at&#13;
553-2287 by April 29, 1977,&#13;
Parlcside students conduct&#13;
motivational research&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
M,III" 11"11" "in,.,'"It&#13;
Located&#13;
Just Off The Union Bazaar,&#13;
Ever wonder why students attend Parks ide&#13;
dances? What factors motivated Parkside students&#13;
to attend worship services this past Easter? Would&#13;
faculty and staff participate in a paper recycling&#13;
program? What factors will motivate students to&#13;
enroll in summer session?&#13;
These questions are being answered by&#13;
behavioral science students Barbara Wemmert,&#13;
1F===========================fl Jeff Sitz, Art Leceese, and Tad Ballantyne. Over _&#13;
·000 questionaires were used to answer the&#13;
questions in a class with the most prerequisites of&#13;
anv behavioral science class, Assistant Professor&#13;
Richard Pomazal's Advanced Social Psychology&#13;
(15-320)&#13;
The purpose of the projects is to involve&#13;
students in applied attitude theory research.&#13;
The students employed the statistical package&#13;
for social sciences, a program in the computer&#13;
center, with regular consultation with Mr. Marvin&#13;
Nagy, computer specialist.&#13;
Their research is based on a popular theoretical&#13;
model of behavioral intentions which states that a&#13;
person's rntentional behavior is determined by one&#13;
or more of three variables; personal attitudes&#13;
towards the act, social norms regarding the act,&#13;
and/or felt moral obligation.&#13;
The consideration of a felt moral obligation as a&#13;
variable is a special interest of Professor Pomazal&#13;
that he has utilized to explain altruism in&#13;
."Itu r"I""&#13;
.' 'ONLY&#13;
50' QUARTER LB.&#13;
on sale now..lor only&#13;
40 ~a quarter pound&#13;
motivations .to donate blood and in developing&#13;
theories of drug use motivation.&#13;
The students determined salient beliefs of their&#13;
subjects by means of open ended eliciting&#13;
fllJPstionaires~ The modal salient beliefs were then&#13;
used in a second closed format questionatre After&#13;
randomly circulating the second questionaire, the&#13;
answers were coded and keypunched by the&#13;
students.&#13;
1ht&gt; coded keypunched cards were fed into a&#13;
computer to obtain a multiple regression analysis&#13;
in the form of data sheets. The sheets were then&#13;
analyzed to produce the findings.&#13;
Pornazal is quick to point out. there is no&#13;
"perfect study" utilizing this behavioral intention&#13;
theorv. but with the help of computer applications&#13;
many more variables can be taken into account&#13;
than be- less sophisticated methods. '&#13;
A productive working exchange relationship&#13;
WIth thp students and staff was a necessary&#13;
objet trve In order to achieve the tvpe of technical&#13;
rnalysi~ that would hold up under scientific&#13;
scrutmy or the student's findings, according to&#13;
Pomaval.&#13;
"I enjoyed the fact that the students became&#13;
pPf',ondlly involved and Intensely interested in the&#13;
prot e-dur al research that produced their findings.&#13;
1herr e-nthuvtavm was stimulating and rewarding,"&#13;
card Pomaval&#13;
1\,IIlJ.!,P( \11,11/publi ...h the finding:. of these&#13;
('\(',/1( h pro/f'('" IrJ our next issue, Wednesday,&#13;
,\1,J~-l&#13;
Security recovers foot&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Last Thursday Parkside Security&#13;
officers started knocking on&#13;
doors at Parkside Village. Hours&#13;
later, they returned .to Parkside&#13;
with $1700 worth of recovered&#13;
furniture .&#13;
According to Security Director&#13;
Ronald Brinkmann, Security first&#13;
consulted with the administration&#13;
and then asked the furniture&#13;
to be returned with no questions&#13;
asked. "There wi II be no&#13;
prosecution, we're just interested&#13;
in getting the furniture back," he&#13;
said .&#13;
Brinkmann said he was glad to&#13;
get the furniture back because&#13;
the replacement cost would have&#13;
come out of students' tuition .&#13;
I&#13;
"We asked no questions and&#13;
took no names. We just don't&#13;
have . the money to buy new&#13;
furniture."&#13;
Brinkmann said he is still&#13;
trying to find out who stole the&#13;
letters which spell "Union&#13;
Square" at the square's entrance.&#13;
"It was a childish thing to&#13;
do .. . those letters cost $22&#13;
apiece," he said. The replacement&#13;
of the letters will be left to&#13;
the Union . Union director&#13;
William Niebuhr was unavai~ble&#13;
for comment.&#13;
The sign in front of the&#13;
Physical Education Building has&#13;
been vandalized, either by a rock&#13;
or by someone putting his fist&#13;
through the sign. Brinkmann said&#13;
he doesn't know who did that.&#13;
What suds do you like?·&#13;
A survey questionaire con- what beer students want in the&#13;
cerning beer preferences in the Union at what price.&#13;
Union appears in this issue of Johnson urges students_ to&#13;
RANGER. The survey is an complete the questionaire so&#13;
attempt by Assistant Chancellor administrative decisions on the&#13;
0 . Clayton Johnson to find out matter may include the choices&#13;
of students . (See Bottom page 3)&#13;
--&#13;
r&#13;
.Ranger banquet slated&#13;
RANGER will hold its first&#13;
awards banquet on May 7&#13;
according to Tom Cooper,&#13;
RANGER's General Manager.&#13;
"The purpose of the banquet is&#13;
to thank the staff for the long&#13;
hours of volunteer work that&#13;
they ha'!'e . contributed," said&#13;
Cooper.&#13;
The RANGER staff currently&#13;
consists of five salaried positions&#13;
and a couple of commissioned&#13;
advertising sales people, and&#13;
many . volunteers'. Cooper added&#13;
\&#13;
that most of the salaried&#13;
personnel worked for about . 50c&#13;
an hour and that the banquet&#13;
.. . was a way that Phil&#13;
Livingston (Ranger editor) and I&#13;
could show our appreciation to&#13;
everyone."&#13;
The banquet will begin at 6:00&#13;
at the Driftwood Lounge, 8607&#13;
Highway 11, Sturtevant. ·&#13;
Robert Ross, publisher of the&#13;
Journal-Times and Howard&#13;
Brown publisher of the Kenosha&#13;
News will be the guest speakers .&#13;
Cooper also added that&#13;
"Awards, some serious and som~&#13;
decidedly non-serious will be&#13;
given out to deserving members&#13;
of the staff." Chancellor Guskin&#13;
and Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
· Educational Services, 0. Clayton&#13;
Johnson will also attend.&#13;
The banquet is open to the&#13;
public at ten dollars a plate . If&#13;
you are interested in attending&#13;
the banquet, call Cooper at&#13;
553-2287 by April 29, 1977.&#13;
Parkside students conduct&#13;
motivational r.esearch&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
motivdtions .to donate blood and in developing&#13;
theories of drug use motivation .&#13;
Ever wonder why students attend Parkside&#13;
dances? What factors motivated Parkside students&#13;
to attend worship services this past Easter? Would&#13;
faculty and staff participate in a paper recycling&#13;
program? What factors will motivate students to&#13;
enroll in summer session?&#13;
The students determined salient beliefs of their&#13;
subjects by means of open ended eliciting&#13;
questionaires . The modal salient beliefs were then&#13;
used in a second closed format questionaire . After&#13;
randomly circulating the second questionaire, the&#13;
answers were coded and keypunched by the&#13;
students .&#13;
These questions are being answered by&#13;
behavioral science students Barbara Wemmert, FF=========================:::::ii Jeff Sitz, Art Leceese, and Tad Ballantyne. Over ·60() questionaires were used to answer the&#13;
l he coded keypunched cards were fed into a&#13;
computer to obtain a multiple regression analysis&#13;
in the form of data sheets . The sheets were then&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD IN ASSOCIATION WITH analyLed to produce the findings.&#13;
FOLLETT PUBLISHING- CO.&#13;
WED.&#13;
APRIL 27&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
PRESENTS A&#13;
FREE LECTURE&#13;
by&#13;
UNION&#13;
CINEMA&#13;
THEATRE&#13;
'KIRBY W. STANAT&#13;
on&#13;
''Job Huntirag Secrets&#13;
&amp; Tactics''&#13;
questions in a class with the most prerequisites of&#13;
a'ny behavioral science class, Assistant Professor&#13;
Richard Pomazal 's Advanced Social Psychology&#13;
(15-320)&#13;
The purpose of the proiects is to involve&#13;
students in applied attitude theory research.&#13;
The students employed the statistical package&#13;
for social sciences, a program in the computer&#13;
center, with regular consultation with Mr. Marvin&#13;
Nagy, computer specialist .&#13;
Their research is based on a popular theoretical&#13;
model of behavioral intentions which states that a&#13;
person's intentional behavior is determined by one&#13;
or more of three variables; personal attitudes&#13;
towards the act, social norms regarding the act,&#13;
and/ or felt moral obligation .&#13;
The consideration of a felt moral obligation as a&#13;
variable is a special interest of Professor Pomazal !_=============================~ that he has utilized to explain altruism in&#13;
Located&#13;
Just Off The Union Bazaar .&#13;
Moll,,r Nahlre 81ing1 . B,1/t&#13;
.t11 t11 rally///&#13;
•• -ONLY&#13;
50' QUARTER LB.&#13;
on sale now .. for only&#13;
40, a quarter pound&#13;
PomaLal is quick to point out . there is no&#13;
" perfect study" utiliLing this behavioral intention&#13;
theory. but with the help of computer applications&#13;
many more variables can be taken into account&#13;
than be les~ sophisticated methods.&#13;
A productive working exchange relationship&#13;
with thP ~tudents and staff was a necessary&#13;
objP&lt; t1w 111 order to achieve the typt&gt; of technical&#13;
analysi~ that would hold up under scientific&#13;
scrutiny ol thP student's findings, according to&#13;
Pom,11al.&#13;
··1 enjoyed the fact that the students became&#13;
pt&gt;r,onally involved dnd intt--nsely interested in the&#13;
pro&lt; Pdurdl rP,edrlh that produced their findings .&#13;
I hP1r Pnthu~1a~m was ,timulating and rewarding,"&#13;
,01d Pom,11.1I.&#13;
/\,rng1•r ...,,JI publi.\h the finding~ of these&#13;
r1•,c•.1rc h prow&lt; h in our next issue, Wednesday,&#13;
.'v1.i~ -l &#13;
/&#13;
Author blames multinational&#13;
corporations for economic ills&#13;
OWN YOUR OWN lOB:&#13;
Economic Democracy for working&#13;
Americans by Jeremy Rifkin&#13;
(A Bantam Bbok, March 1977,&#13;
softcover. 1.50) Review by Steve&#13;
'Lemken.&#13;
"Perhaps the sentiment comained in these pages&#13;
are not yet sufficiently fashionable to procure them&#13;
genera! favor; a long habit of not thinking a thing&#13;
wrong, gives it a superficial appearance of being&#13;
right, and raises at first a formidable outcry in&#13;
defense of custom. But the tumult soon subsides.&#13;
Time makes more converts than reason."&#13;
- Thomas Paine, COMMON SENSE, 1776&#13;
Jeremy Rifkin, author of Own Your Own Job,&#13;
paints a clear picture of the economic ills&#13;
criss-crossing this country and tosses the blame&#13;
squarely in the laps of the multinational&#13;
corporations, Armed with surprising results of a poll&#13;
conducted by the Peter, D. Hart Research&#13;
~Associates, Rifkin maps out a sound, coherent&#13;
economic proposal that would give the American&#13;
citizen a chance to participate in decisions&#13;
concerning the economy th~ same way the people&#13;
elect their political representatives.&#13;
This book, according to the author, is the first of&#13;
its kind advocating such a radical change in the&#13;
American economy. And if the results of the Hart&#13;
poll are even slightly indicative of the current mood&#13;
of the American worker, the majority of our elected&#13;
representatives, and their cohorts, namely big&#13;
business, had better heed their "bread and butter."&#13;
Mad as hell&#13;
Hart, one of the top five research organizations&#13;
in the country, was hired by the Peoples Business&#13;
Commission (PBC), to gauge the mood and feelings&#13;
of the country towards the economy, What startled,&#13;
yet confirmed Rifkin's and the PBC's conclusions,&#13;
was that the average discontented person is about&#13;
38-years-old, a skilled or un-skilled laborer, redneck,&#13;
blue collar and a hard hat, living on a&#13;
combined income of $11:000 or less per year for a&#13;
family of four. The feeling of these people could be&#13;
summed up with the infamous line from the movie&#13;
Network," t'rn madder than hell and I'm not&#13;
going to take it anymore."&#13;
Alternatives proposed&#13;
Rifkin calls for an economic democracy, which&#13;
he describes as "a system drawn from the tenets&#13;
•&#13;
espoused in our own Declaration of&#13;
Independence based on the simple, but&#13;
profound, maxim that the people are the best&#13;
judges of their own welfare." He argues that the&#13;
capitalist system, in which the workers are "rented"&#13;
by the corporate elite, will not continue to work for&#13;
long. And neither will a Soviet-type socialism,&#13;
where it is the government who "rents" the worker&#13;
In either system, the worker shares little In the&#13;
spoils.&#13;
Rifkin offers a viable alternative to the present&#13;
system, an alternative that is already being&#13;
practiced in many parts of the country. One of the&#13;
most :successful worker-run companies is the&#13;
Vermont Asbestos Group, in lowell, Vt. In 1976 the&#13;
employees were faced with the closing of the plant&#13;
by the GAF Corporation (one of Fortune's 500&#13;
leading industries.) The closing would have&#13;
wreaked economic havoc for the entire area.&#13;
Instead of sitting back, the employees and&#13;
townspeople raised the capital to take over the&#13;
operation, and within a year had repaved its loans,&#13;
turned a handsome profit, provided a dramatic pay&#13;
boost to its working members and installed&#13;
$250,000 worth of environmental protection&#13;
equipment.&#13;
Own Your Own lob is a book of vision, a source&#13;
of an alternative and hope. Rifkin is a strong&#13;
believer in the ideals of the people who broke their&#13;
yoke.from a similar type of economic, and political,&#13;
oppression. A believer in the visions of America's&#13;
Founding Fathers and Mothers, whose words are&#13;
only mimicked by politicians, whose actions would&#13;
be condemned by those wh&lt;5 control the&#13;
pursestrings of the country. Rifkin asks we look at&#13;
the substance of the ideas presented in his book,&#13;
not the labels, which may make them look foreign&#13;
or "too" radical.&#13;
Perhaps a thought from those beginnings of&#13;
America will help move-those who wish no change,&#13;
who want no change. Sam Adams put It quite&#13;
bluntly when he said, "If you love wealth better&#13;
than liberty, the tranquility of servitude better than&#13;
the animating contest of freedom, go home from us&#13;
in peace. Crouch down and lick the hands which&#13;
feed you. May your chains sit lightly UpORyou, and&#13;
may posterity forget that you were our&#13;
countrymen."&#13;
jobs I&#13;
Manpower, 'nc. optimistic&#13;
about summer employment&#13;
Manpower, Inc., the world's&#13;
largest temporary help firm,&#13;
expects to have jobs for more&#13;
than 25,()(X)students With office&#13;
work skills throughout the&#13;
country this summer, a substantial&#13;
increase over last summer,&#13;
according to Mitchell S&#13;
Fromstein, President of Manpower.&#13;
"Every year students add an&#13;
Important dimension to our&#13;
workforce, This year they'll play&#13;
an even bigger role because of&#13;
the optimistic job forecast&#13;
Manpower has received from&#13;
businessmen," Fromstein said&#13;
"Manpower offices are&#13;
amazed at the number of students&#13;
who come in, fill out their&#13;
applications, and don't even&#13;
mention that they can type, take&#13;
shorthand or operate a busmess&#13;
machine These are good skills&#13;
which we need," Frornstein said&#13;
The person who's a skilled&#13;
typist or office machine operator&#13;
can usually find a lob With&#13;
Manpower There are also some&#13;
opportunities that don't require&#13;
as much skrll, such as Inventory&#13;
takers, memtenance workers,&#13;
etc.&#13;
Besides typists, secretaries.&#13;
material handlers and some&#13;
techmcians. Manpower offers&#13;
positions as systems analysts and&#13;
keypunch operators Students&#13;
can find lobs as survey takers,&#13;
mtervrewers. sample distributors,&#13;
or they may help out at&#13;
convenuons, or work on&#13;
assembly hnes.&#13;
'\1""'/&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
_1II1U;.iIllIlHUlllDlUllnIllIIllIllIlIUIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIltIIlllI_I_IU_&#13;
DINO'S&#13;
1816 16th 51. 372/\ Dougles&#13;
Racine Raeine&#13;
634-1991 639-7115&#13;
WE DELIVER&#13;
Op e" 4:00 p.m. til! 0"" hour Ofll'r&#13;
tarern« close&#13;
UIIII.IIIII1I1I1I11I1II1I11II11.. _1 ._111 _&#13;
1O~Igame ..Mondays &amp; Fridays&#13;
9 a.m. to 10 a.m.&#13;
25~/game&#13;
UNION REC •&#13;
Call, 553·2695 for&#13;
Wednesday,&#13;
Thursday, Friday&#13;
5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.&#13;
Saturdays&#13;
•&#13;
25~/game&#13;
CENTER&#13;
FURTHER INFORMATION&#13;
•&#13;
.noon to 2:30 p.m.&#13;
I&#13;
Author blames multinational&#13;
corporations for economic ills&#13;
'- -&#13;
OWN YOUR OWN JOB:&#13;
Economic Democracy for Working&#13;
Americans by Jeremy Rifkin&#13;
(A Bantam Book, March 1977,&#13;
softcover, 1.50) Review by Steve&#13;
' Lemken .&#13;
"Perhaps the sentiment contained in these pages&#13;
are not yet sufficiently fashionable to procure them&#13;
general favor; a long habit of not thinking a thing&#13;
wrong, gives it a superficial appearance of being&#13;
right, and raises at first a formidable outcry in&#13;
defense of custom . But the tumult soon subsides .&#13;
Time makes more converts than reason. "&#13;
- Thomas Paine, COMMON SENSE, 1776&#13;
Jeremy Rifkin, author of Own Your Own Job,&#13;
paints a clear picture of the economic ills&#13;
criss-crossing this country and tosses the bJame&#13;
squarely in tlie laps of the multinational&#13;
corporations . Armed with surprising results of a poll&#13;
conducted by the Peter . D. Hart Research&#13;
_Associates, Rifkin maps out a sound, coherent&#13;
economic proposal that would give the American&#13;
citizen a chance to participate in decisions&#13;
concerning the economy the same way the people&#13;
elect their political representatives .&#13;
This book, according to the author, is the first of&#13;
its kind advocating such a radical change in the&#13;
American economy . And if the results of the Ha(t&#13;
poll are even slightly indi cative of the current mood&#13;
of the American worker, the majority of our elected&#13;
representatives, and their cohorts, namely big&#13;
business, had better heed their " bread and butter."&#13;
Mad as hell&#13;
Hart, one of the top five research organizations&#13;
in the country, was hired by the Peoples Business&#13;
Commission (PBC), to gauge the mood and feelings&#13;
of the country towards the economy . What startled,&#13;
yet confirmed Rifkin's and the PBC's conclusions,&#13;
was that the average discontented person is about&#13;
38-years-old , a skilled or un-skilled laborer, redneck,&#13;
blue collar and a hard hat, living on a&#13;
combined income of $11,000 or less per year for a&#13;
family of four. The feeling of these people could be&#13;
summed up with the infamous line from the movie&#13;
Network. " 1'm madder than hell and I'm not&#13;
going to take it anymore."&#13;
Alternatives proposed&#13;
Rifkin calls for an economic democracy, whi ch&#13;
he describes as " a sys tem drawn from the tenets&#13;
espoused in our own Declaration of&#13;
Independence based on the simple , but&#13;
profound, maxim that the people are the best&#13;
judges of their own welfare ." He argues that the&#13;
capitalist system, in which the workers are " rented"&#13;
by the corporate elite, will not continue to work for&#13;
long. And neither will a Soviet-type socialism,&#13;
where it is the government who " rents" the worker&#13;
In either system, the worker shares little in the&#13;
spoils .&#13;
Rifkin offers a viable alternative to the present&#13;
system, an alternative that is already being&#13;
practiced in many parts of the country . One of the&#13;
most · successful worker-run companies is the&#13;
Vermont Asbestos Group, in Lowell , Vt. In 1976 the&#13;
employees were faced with the closing of the plant&#13;
by the GAF Corporation (one of Fortune's 500&#13;
leading industries .) The closing would have&#13;
wreaked economic havoc for the entire area.&#13;
Instead of sitting back, the employees and&#13;
townspeople raised the capital to take over the&#13;
operation, and within a year had repayed ,ts loans,&#13;
turned a handsome profit, provided a dramatic pay&#13;
boost to its working members and installed&#13;
$250,000 ~orth of environmental protection&#13;
equipment.&#13;
Own Your Own Job is a book of vision , a source&#13;
of an alternative and hope. Rifkin is a strong&#13;
believer in the ideals of the people who broke their&#13;
yoke from a similar type of economic, and political ,&#13;
oppression . A believer in the visions of America's&#13;
Founding Fathe·rs and Mothers, whose words are&#13;
only mimicked by politicians, whose actions would&#13;
be condemned by those who control the&#13;
pursestrings of the country . Rifkin asks we look at&#13;
the substance of the ideas presented in his book,&#13;
not the labels , whi ch may make them look forei gn&#13;
or " too" radical.&#13;
Perhaps a thought from thme beginnings of&#13;
America will help move-those who wish no change,&#13;
who want no change . Sam Adams put It quite&#13;
bluntly when he said, " If you love wealth better&#13;
than liberty, the tranquility of servitude better than&#13;
the animating contest of freedom, go home from us&#13;
in peace. Crouch down and lick the hands which&#13;
feed you. May your chains sit lightly upon you, and&#13;
may posterity forget that you w ere our&#13;
countrymen."&#13;
obS=I&#13;
Manpower, Inc. optimistic&#13;
about summer employment&#13;
Manpower, Inc , the world's&#13;
largest temporary help firm ,&#13;
expects to have Jobs for more&#13;
than 25,000 students with office&#13;
work skills throughout the&#13;
country this summer, a substantial&#13;
increase over last summer,&#13;
according to Mitchell S&#13;
Fromstein, President of Manpower.&#13;
&#13;
'Every year students add an&#13;
important d1mens1on to our&#13;
workforce This year they'll pla&#13;
an even bigger role because of&#13;
the opt1m1stic 10b forecast&#13;
Manpower has received from&#13;
businessmen ," Fromstem said&#13;
" Manpower offices are&#13;
amazed at the number of students&#13;
who come in, fill out their&#13;
applications, and don't e en&#13;
mention that they can type , take&#13;
shorthand or op rat a bu in ss&#13;
machine. Th e ar good skills&#13;
which wen ed," Fromstein aid&#13;
Th person who' a ski II d&#13;
typist or otf,c machine op rator&#13;
can usually find a 10b with&#13;
Manpow r Th re are al o some&#13;
opportunItIe that don·t r quir&#13;
a much kill , u h as inv ntor&#13;
taker , maIntenanc work r ,&#13;
etc&#13;
B side typI t , er tan ,&#13;
material handlers and ome&#13;
technicians, Manpower offer&#13;
po ItIons a s terns anal sts and&#13;
keypunch operator Stud nt&#13;
can find 10b as surve tak rs ,&#13;
interviewers, ampl distributors,&#13;
or they may help out at&#13;
convention , or work on&#13;
as embl linPs&#13;
.,~ .... ,,,.,/&#13;
• Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
DINO'S·&#13;
1816 16th t. 372R OU la&#13;
Racine&#13;
634-1991&#13;
WE DELI R&#13;
Rae-in&#13;
63 -7115&#13;
Open 4:00 p.m. till one hour &lt;Jjt,•r&#13;
1 oci: / game •·Mondays &amp; Fridays&#13;
9 ·a.m. to 10 a.m.&#13;
UNION REC -CENTER&#13;
Call. 553-2695 for&#13;
FURTHER INFORMATION&#13;
25¢/game • Wednesday,&#13;
Thursday, Friday&#13;
5 :30 p.m. to 7 p.m.&#13;
25 ci:/ game - Saturdays&#13;
. a,oon to 2:30 p.m. &#13;
I'people&#13;
I&#13;
t ~&#13;
Administrator doubles as&#13;
racquetball instructor&#13;
by Br';lce Wagner&#13;
This reporter, while covering&#13;
the sports beat, went up to the&#13;
penthouse. That's right, the&#13;
Wyllie library Learning Center&#13;
penthouse. Here's the story&#13;
behind such a move.&#13;
One of the courses that the&#13;
physical education discipline&#13;
offered this semester 'was&#13;
racquetball, but couldn't find&#13;
someone within the discipline&#13;
who has the time to teach it. So&#13;
they went to one of the campus'&#13;
top players, assistant chancellor&#13;
for administration and fiscal&#13;
affairs Cary Goetz, whose office&#13;
is in, you guessed it, the LlC&#13;
penthouse.&#13;
-Goetz is in love with the sport&#13;
of racquetball and was more&#13;
than willing to teach the class&#13;
which is held on Friday mornings "&#13;
from 8 to 9:50 a.m.&#13;
The purpose of the class,&#13;
according to Goetz, is to provide&#13;
fundamentals and the right&#13;
attitude for playing the sport.&#13;
"My job is to get them to like the&#13;
sport so that after they've left the&#13;
course, I hope they would.&#13;
continue playing," states Coetz .&#13;
As to what problems this&#13;
causes for his job, he says that it&#13;
costs him a few hours on the&#13;
weekend but it's worth it to&#13;
Goetz.&#13;
His impression of the class is&#13;
good. Goetz is convinced that&#13;
the quality of the students here&#13;
at Parkside is topnotch. "I will&#13;
bend over backwards to see that&#13;
the class is competitive I'm&#13;
still a student of racquetball so I&#13;
too learn," said Goetz with&#13;
regard to how he teaches the&#13;
class. "My major problem is&#13;
directing traffic."&#13;
Racquetball, according to&#13;
Goetz, is easy to play. "1t's so&#13;
easy to improve. You don't need&#13;
to be a super jock to play the&#13;
game."&#13;
Students are interested in the&#13;
game. 32 students are currently&#13;
taking the course and it has been&#13;
pretty even between both the&#13;
men and the women in&#13;
competition, according to Goetz.&#13;
The only thing is, now, .he's&#13;
created a Frankenstein monster.&#13;
"Now, getting a court will be a&#13;
headache." says Goetz.&#13;
,.,k,li, A,fMH" ",,/ P""nll&#13;
SYNESTHESIA&#13;
"•• 1••• 1 1II •• le eOlleert hy Chick ... Alllle He,hert"&#13;
Thurs.~April 28th&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre&#13;
Adm: 51.50 UW-P Students&#13;
52.00 Others&#13;
Hey&#13;
Miller Lite on Tap&#13;
the Union and Rec. Center I&#13;
at&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
!&#13;
;&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
,&#13;
i&#13;
i -&#13;
Parkside! -&#13;
Lilt" Beer (rom Miller.&#13;
EnrylhinK you alway~ wanted&#13;
in a beer. And lese.&#13;
Di8t. by (:J.W'. _Ine. 3637-301h Ave, Keno8h.&#13;
iii ..:~\-.."' ~&#13;
~.~.&#13;
(L-R) Mark Nickel, John Makalandra,&#13;
Harvey Hedden plot to win a war.&#13;
Wargamers continue to attract players&#13;
by Christopher Clausen The games ar-e very complex others are rather&#13;
simple. Strategy and Tactics, a magazine put out by&#13;
a manufacturer of wargames of the same name,&#13;
recently surveyed its readers about wargames. They&#13;
received back and published opinions. A copy is&#13;
on one of the blackboards in the wargamers room,&#13;
also known as the warroom. The games range in&#13;
size from one foot square to one that is about 8 foot&#13;
by 7 foot&#13;
Risk, 1812, Kingmaker, Panzer leader, Dungeon&#13;
and Battle of the Bulge are just of the few names of&#13;
the wargames being played by the Parkside&#13;
Association of Wargamers (PAW) in Classroom 140.&#13;
But why is this post-Vietnam era would anyone&#13;
want to play games about war? "It's a form of&#13;
recreation much like chess," says President Mark&#13;
Mulkins.&#13;
PAW began over 5 years ago as something that&#13;
only met once a week in the bottom floor of the&#13;
library on Thursday nights. "It all started from a&#13;
small seed back in the fall of '72 when the former&#13;
chess club advisor started playing wargarnes," said&#13;
Mulkins, "from there it just grew." Final4t there&#13;
were enough' members to form a club in the spring&#13;
of 1973. The club membership is not a concrete The monthly mini-tournament costs $.25 and is&#13;
group. There are approximately 30 very active open to everyone and anyone: It's purpose is two&#13;
members and about 40 slightly active members. fold: 1) to give people the chance to experience&#13;
The club owns only one wargame. However, if wargaming and 2) to allow someone to win and let&#13;
you counted all the wargames owned by the everyone have a good time playing wargames.&#13;
members you would have about 200 games! These The future of wargamers is good according to&#13;
games are generally a combination of tactics, Mulkins with the club planning bigger and better&#13;
strategy, and luck. There are, of course, games that activities, organization of a college league, more&#13;
ere all of one or various combinations of the three- mini-tournaments, as well as clinics and&#13;
Playing time ranges from 1-20 hours. The average _conventions. So if you want to have a little&#13;
ttme is 2-3 hours. The cost also. varies, with the recreation stop in to the war room (Cl 140) or call&#13;
average range being 8-10 dollars. - 553-2013&#13;
In addition to all this the club puts out a&#13;
newsletter entitled Situation. "It's a basic&#13;
newsletter intended to inform, entertain and keep&#13;
wargamers up to date about wargames and the&#13;
monthly mini-tournament," said communications&#13;
officer Bruce wagner.&#13;
'Not much to do'&#13;
for chief iustice&#13;
by Terry ZuehIsdorf Carovl came to Parkside because of "the&#13;
excellent history department" and "the intimate&#13;
class situation". Both of these she considers highly&#13;
important in any school. She is the President of Law&#13;
Club, a member of the Parking Appeals Committee,&#13;
has danced with the Racine Dance Theater in&#13;
addition to her marriage and her study in ballet.&#13;
After she graduates this May she will attend a law&#13;
school in the fall.&#13;
In closing, when asked what she wanted to see&#13;
happen at Parkside, she said, "More Senate&#13;
organization and more student participation. I&#13;
would also like to see administrators here at&#13;
Parkside realize that they are here because of the&#13;
students and that students cannot run their&#13;
organizations as a full-time job, because of their&#13;
full-time job is &amp;oing to school." Finally, she hoped&#13;
that there would be a cut in the bureaucracy at&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Caroyl Williamson has been the Chief Justice of&#13;
the Student Court for almost a year, Williamson, a&#13;
senior from Racine, says that being Chief Justice&#13;
has been rather dull this year. ."A chief Justice&#13;
co-ordinates all the activities of the student court,&#13;
but this year there has not been too much to do."&#13;
Although there has not been many cases, Caroyl&#13;
has not been idle.'''With the help of Maureen Flynn&#13;
(Associate Justice), 1 have set up rules of evidence&#13;
and procedural guidelines that had been lacking&#13;
until now."&#13;
The Student Court takes care of academic&#13;
grievences, constitutional matters and new&#13;
disciplinary codes. When asked about what she&#13;
thought the relationship between the Senate and&#13;
the Court should be, she said, "Ideally, we should&#13;
know what the Senate is doing and still retain our&#13;
autonomy."&#13;
.=Suppo;lour&#13;
• AJoIQl"t.'liQr!l&#13;
FOR THE BEST RECORDS IN KENOSHA&#13;
AT PRICES YOU'LL LIKE!&#13;
JAZZ ROCK SOUL V&#13;
CONTEMPORARY (&#13;
CLASSICAL&#13;
COME TO US AT&#13;
-~~ p&#13;
626 Fifty-Sixth St., Kenosha, Wis. 1&#13;
r--_-=-~_~..j'-~-~.~~=g~-~~~~~&#13;
\&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
KENOSHA &amp; LOAN&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
5935 Seventh Avenue&#13;
7535 eershing Blvd.&#13;
4235 52nd Street&#13;
410 Brood St. Lake Geneva&#13;
:II people&#13;
I&#13;
Administrator doubles&#13;
' as&#13;
racquetball instructor&#13;
by Br~ce Wagner&#13;
This reporter, while covering&#13;
the sports beat, went up to the&#13;
penthouse. That's right, the&#13;
Wyllie Library Learning Center&#13;
penthouse. Here's the story&#13;
behind such a move.&#13;
One of the courses that the&#13;
physical education discipline&#13;
offered this semester ·was&#13;
racquetball, but couldn't find&#13;
someone witnin the discipline&#13;
who has the time to teach it. So&#13;
they went to one of the campus'&#13;
top players, assistant chancellor&#13;
for administration and fiscal&#13;
affairs Cary Goetz, whose office&#13;
is in, you guessed it, the LLC&#13;
penthouse.&#13;
Goetz is in love with the sport&#13;
of racquetball and was more&#13;
than willing to teach the class,&#13;
which is held on Friday mornings&#13;
from 8 to 9:50 a.m.&#13;
The purpose of the class,&#13;
according to Goetz, is to provide&#13;
fundamentals and the right&#13;
attitude for playing the sport.&#13;
" My job is to get them to like the&#13;
sport so that after they've left the&#13;
course, I hope they would.&#13;
continue playing," states Goetz .&#13;
As to what problems this&#13;
causes for his job, he says that it&#13;
costs him a few hours on the&#13;
weekend but it's worth it to&#13;
Goetz.&#13;
His impression of the class is&#13;
good. Goetz is convinced that&#13;
the quality of the students here&#13;
at Parkside is topnotch . " I will&#13;
bend over backwards to see that&#13;
the class is competitive I'm&#13;
still a student of racquetball so I&#13;
too learn," said Goetz with&#13;
regard to how he teaches the&#13;
class. "My major problem is&#13;
directing traffic."&#13;
Racquetball, according to&#13;
Goetz, is easy to play. "It's so&#13;
easy to improve. You don't need&#13;
to be a super jock to play the&#13;
game."&#13;
Students are interested in the&#13;
game. 32 students are currently&#13;
taking the course and it has been&#13;
pretty even between both the&#13;
men and the women in&#13;
competition, according to Goetz.&#13;
The only thing is, now, he's&#13;
created a Frankenstein monster.&#13;
"Now, getting a court will be a&#13;
headache." says Goetz.&#13;
P•1k1li1 A1lltlH11 Bo•ri P111111II&#13;
SYNESTHESIA 111 il111I m111le eoneert hy Chiek ind Anne Herhert"&#13;
Thurs.! April 28th&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre&#13;
Adm·: 51.50 UW-P Students&#13;
52 .00 Others&#13;
Hey Parkside! -&#13;
Miller Lite on Tap&#13;
at the Union and Rec. c'enter&#13;
Litt&gt; Beer from Miller.&#13;
t:verything you alwayw wanted&#13;
in a beer. And le11.&#13;
Oi81, by C.J.W. Inc. 3637-JOth Ave. Keno8ha&#13;
(l-R) Mark Nickel, John Makolondra, Paula Miller, Terry Zuehlsdorf, and&#13;
Harvey Hedden plot to win a war.&#13;
Wargamers continue to attract players&#13;
by Christopher Clausen&#13;
Risk, 1812, Kingmaker, Panzer Leader, Dungeon&#13;
and Battle of the Bulge are just of the few names of&#13;
the wargames being played by the Parkside&#13;
Association of Wargamers (PAW) in Classroom 140.&#13;
But why is this post-Vietnam era would anyone&#13;
want to play games about war? " It's a form of&#13;
recreation much like chess," says President Mark&#13;
Mulkins.&#13;
PAW began over 5 years ago as something that&#13;
only met once a week in the bottom floor of the&#13;
library on Thursday nights. " It all started from a&#13;
small seed back in the fall of '72 when the former&#13;
c_hess club advisor started playing wargames," said&#13;
Mulkins, "from there it just grew." Finally there&#13;
were enough· members to form a club in the spring&#13;
The games are very complex others are rather&#13;
simple. Strateg y and Tactics, a magaz ine put out by&#13;
a manufacturer of wargames of the same name,&#13;
recently surveyed its readers about wargames . They&#13;
received back and published opinions . A copy is&#13;
on one of the blackboards in the wargamers room ,&#13;
also known as the warroom . The games range in&#13;
size from one foot square to one that is about 8 foot&#13;
by 7 foot .&#13;
In addition to all this the club puts out a ·&#13;
newsletter entitled Situation . " It' s a basic&#13;
newsletter inte-nded to inform, entertain and keep&#13;
wargamers up to date about wargames and the&#13;
monthly mini-tournament," said communications&#13;
officer Bruce Wagoer&#13;
of 1973. The club membership is not a concrete The monthly mini-tournament costs $.25 and is&#13;
group. There are approximately 30 very active open to everyone and anyone: It's purpose is two&#13;
members and about 40 slightly active members. fold : 1) to give people the chance to experience&#13;
The club owns only one wargame . However, if wargaming and 2) to allow someone to win and let&#13;
you counted all the wargames owned by the everyone have a good time playing wargames .&#13;
members you would have about 200 games! These The future of wargamers is good according to&#13;
games are generally a combination of tactics, Mulkins with the club planning bigger and better&#13;
strategy, and luck. There are, of course, games that activities, organization of a college league, more&#13;
are all of one or various combinations of the three.- mini-tournaments, as well as clinics and&#13;
Playing time ranges from 1-20 hours . The average _ conventions. So il you want to have a little&#13;
time is 2-3 hours . The cost also. varies, with the recreation stop in to the warroom (CL 140) or call&#13;
average range being 8-10 dollars. - 553-2013 .&#13;
'Not much to do'&#13;
for. chief iustice&#13;
by Terry Zuehlsdorf&#13;
Caroyl Williamson has been the Chief Justice of&#13;
the Student Court for almost a year. Williamson, a&#13;
senior from Racine, says that being Chief Justice&#13;
has been rather dull this year .. "A chief Justice&#13;
co-ordinates all the activities of the student court,&#13;
but this year there has not been too much to do."&#13;
Although there has not been many cases, Caroyl&#13;
has not been idle.'"With the help of Maureen Flynn&#13;
(Associate Justice), I have set up rules of evidence&#13;
and procedural guidelines that had been lacking&#13;
until now."&#13;
The Student Court takes care of academic&#13;
grievences, constitutional matters and new&#13;
disciplinary codes. When asked about what she&#13;
thought the relationship between the Senate and&#13;
the Court should be, she said, " Ideally, we should&#13;
know what the Senate is doing and still retain our&#13;
autonomy."&#13;
Caroy.l came to Parkside because of "the&#13;
excellent history department" and "the intimate&#13;
class situation". Both of these she considers highly&#13;
important in any school . She is the President of Law&#13;
Club, a member of the Parking Appeals Committee,&#13;
has danced with the Racine Dance Theater in&#13;
addition to her marriage and her study in ballet.&#13;
After she graduates this May she will attend a law&#13;
school in the fall.&#13;
In closing, when asked what she wanted to see&#13;
happen at Parkside, she said, " More Senate&#13;
organization and more student participation . I&#13;
would also like to see administrators here at&#13;
Parkside realize that they are here because of the&#13;
students and that students cannot run their&#13;
organizations as a full-time job, because of th~ir&#13;
full-trme job is &amp;oing to school." Finally, she hoped&#13;
that there would be a cut in the bureaucracy at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
FOR THE BEST RECORDS IN KENOSHA&#13;
AT PRICES YOU'LL LIKE! ::Suppo;t-our&#13;
JAZZ ROCK SOUL&#13;
Cc;&gt;NTEMPORARY&#13;
CLASSICAL&#13;
COME TO US AT ·&#13;
626&#13;
~~ Fifty-Sixth St., Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
~ -&#13;
r----------.,~ ====--&#13;
• {\J.,..~tt.,.rs&#13;
KENOSHA &amp; LOAN&#13;
SAVINGS 5935 Seventh Avenue&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
410 Brood St. - Lake Geneva &#13;
Blood pressure&#13;
clinic planned&#13;
ByMona Maillet&#13;
On Tuesday, May 3, the&#13;
HealthOffice will be conducting&#13;
its Annual Blood Pressure Clinic.&#13;
It will be held from 9 a.m. to&#13;
6 p.m. in Union 104-106.&#13;
The actual testing will only&#13;
take a few minutes. Participants&#13;
then will be able to see a movie&#13;
of blood pressure.Punch will be&#13;
served. It is open to all students,&#13;
staff, faculty, and members of&#13;
the community.&#13;
Campus Health Officer Edith&#13;
Isenberg, RN., said that the&#13;
purpose of the clinic is to detect,&#13;
peoplewith high blood pressure.&#13;
People with unusually high&#13;
blood pressurewill be asked to&#13;
see their doctor as soon as&#13;
possible.&#13;
last year, over 600 people had&#13;
their blood pressure checked.&#13;
The success was due mainly to&#13;
the location, according to&#13;
Isenberg. "We had it in the&#13;
Alcoves (in the- library/Learning&#13;
Center) and it was great because&#13;
everyone saw it and stopped."&#13;
This year she is worried that the&#13;
location isn't as accessible to&#13;
students as the alcoves and&#13;
because of that, this year's clinic&#13;
won't be as successful.&#13;
High blood pressure is the&#13;
main cause of heart disease,&#13;
kidney disease, and stroke. An&#13;
estimated 23 million Americans,&#13;
or 1 out of every 10 adults, have&#13;
high blood pressure. It is very&#13;
hard to detect as it has no&#13;
symptoms and the only way to&#13;
accurately detect it is with a&#13;
blood pressuretest. If detected,&#13;
however, it can be controlled&#13;
and treated.&#13;
Be sure to stop by Union&#13;
104-106on Tuesday and have&#13;
your blood pressure tested. A&#13;
few minutes then is better than&#13;
possibly an early death or&#13;
permanent disability a few years&#13;
later.&#13;
Safety program&#13;
scheduled at&#13;
Golden Rondelle&#13;
Learn how to be a "victim" of&#13;
self protection by attending the&#13;
free Self-Protection and Personal&#13;
Safety Program at the Golden&#13;
Rondelle Theater on April 27 at&#13;
7:00 p.rn.&#13;
Marty Defatte, Director of the&#13;
Crime Prevention Unit at the&#13;
Racine Police Department will&#13;
discuss and demonstrate ways to&#13;
avoid potentially dangerous&#13;
situations in the home, at work,&#13;
on the street and in the car. If&#13;
you are victimized, Defatte will&#13;
talk about what actions you can&#13;
take to protect yourself from&#13;
further harm.&#13;
Free literature will be available&#13;
and Defatte will hold an informal&#13;
question and answer session&#13;
For further information and&#13;
reservations contact the Golden&#13;
Rondelle at 554-2154.&#13;
eventst"&#13;
Mouris shows award winning 'Frank Film' Friday&#13;
by Michael Murphy use of single frame animation Mouris was able to accord life to his&#13;
pictures on screen.&#13;
Each frame of film Involves countless numbers of pictures&#13;
combined in-thousands of distinct and separate collages The effect,&#13;
when projected, results In a near stimulatory overload of building and&#13;
changing images.&#13;
The images are fused through the use of a double soundtrack One&#13;
soundtrack is a flowing narrative, sectionalizing the film into specihc&#13;
periods of Mauris' life. The second soundtrack Involves individual&#13;
words specifically commenting on the images on the SCreen.&#13;
The film, therefore, is a total exercise of one's sensory faculties and&#13;
requires several screenings to fully appreciate it.&#13;
Parkside students will be given the opportunity to see Frank Film&#13;
and meet Mouris Friday, April 29 from 1 to 2:30 pm in Classroom&#13;
105 and on Friday evening at 7:00 p.m. at the Colden Rondelle&#13;
Theater in Racine.&#13;
In addition to Frank Film, two other Mourls ftlms, Coney and&#13;
Screentest,will be shown.&#13;
Coney has been described as va universal beach party In a poetry of&#13;
neon and motion," whereas Screenrest is a portrait of nine men's lives&#13;
in New York City during 1974.&#13;
These programs should make for not only an interesting and&#13;
entertaining evening, but should provide Insight Into the works of&#13;
contemporary, independent filmmakers&#13;
In 1974,the Academy Award for BestShort Film of the year was&#13;
presented to a 9 minute animated movie entitled Frank Film. The film&#13;
involves all of 11,592 separate colleges incorporated within an autobiographical&#13;
theme.&#13;
Frank Mauris, the film's creator, is a graphic artist turned&#13;
filmmaker His experience in art and his fascination for forms, colors,&#13;
and images combine in the formulation of this unique and visually&#13;
exciting film.&#13;
Frank Film details the progression of both his life and his&#13;
continually changing interests. Structurally, however, the film l's&#13;
unique among other biographies.&#13;
Mauris explains, in a short paper titled Animation and Other&#13;
Obsessions, that one of the most driving obsessions in his life was the&#13;
magazine. His fascination was not in magazines themselves, but in&#13;
the fantasy and wonder surrounding pictures.&#13;
He collected pictures, selectively, catagorizing hundreds in order&#13;
to fulfill his obsession, combining many into collages. Still, he was&#13;
unable to achieve, for his pictures, that senseof liveliness that was so&#13;
much a part of his own personality.&#13;
Then Mouris decided, in the making of his autobiography, that the&#13;
best way to represent the true essence of himself was through these&#13;
hundreds of images that held such a major part of his life.&#13;
The resulting product is a visual pageantry of images. Through the&#13;
Your challenge is to construct the mystery&#13;
word in the boxes below. Todo this you must&#13;
fill in the correct missing letter in each of the&#13;
words listed in the columns. Then transfer the&#13;
missing letters to the corresponding numbered&#13;
boxes, Keep an eraser handy-its not&#13;
as easy as it looks!&#13;
1. S_RAP&#13;
2. P--ACH&#13;
3._EECH&#13;
4. FAC_S 8. TRAI_&#13;
5. _OAST 9. QU_ TE&#13;
8. TEA....-S 10. BR_WN&#13;
7. B_ILS 11. --AILS&#13;
When there's a challenge,&#13;
quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope you have some fun with the challenge.&#13;
There's another challenge we'd like to offer you, too.&#13;
The Pabst challenge:&#13;
We welcome the chance to prove the quality of&#13;
our beer. We challenge you to taste and compare&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon to any other premium beer. You'll&#13;
like Pabst better. Blue Ribbon quality means the best&#13;
tasting beer you can get. Si nce 1844 it always has.&#13;
Blood pressure&#13;
clinic planned&#13;
By Mona Maillet&#13;
On Tuesday, May 3, the&#13;
Health Office will be conducting&#13;
its Annual Blood Pressure Clinic .&#13;
It will be held from 9 a.m . to&#13;
6 p.m . in Union 104-106.&#13;
The actual testing will only&#13;
take a few minutes. Participants&#13;
then will be able to see a movie&#13;
of blood pressure. Punch will be&#13;
served. It is open to all students,&#13;
staff, faculty, and members of&#13;
the community .&#13;
Campus Health Officer Edith&#13;
Isenberg, R.N ., said that the&#13;
purpose of the clinic is to detect,&#13;
people with high blood pressure.&#13;
People with unusually high&#13;
blood pressure will be asked to&#13;
see their doctor as soon as&#13;
possible.&#13;
Last year, over 600 people had&#13;
their blood pressure checked .&#13;
The success was due mainly to&#13;
the location, according to&#13;
Isenberg. "We had it in the&#13;
Alcoves (in the Library / Learning&#13;
Center) and it was great because&#13;
everyone saw it and stopped ."&#13;
This year she is worried that the&#13;
location isn't as accessible to&#13;
students as the alcoves and&#13;
because of that, this year's clinic&#13;
won't be as successful.&#13;
High blood pressure is the&#13;
main cause of heart disease,&#13;
kidney disease, and stroke. An&#13;
estimated 23 million Americans,&#13;
or 1 out of every 10 adults, have&#13;
high blood pressure. It is very&#13;
hard to detect as it has no&#13;
symptoms and the only way to&#13;
accurately detect it is with a&#13;
blood pressure test . If detected,&#13;
however, it can be controlled&#13;
and treated .&#13;
Be sure to stop by Union&#13;
104-106 on Tuesday and have&#13;
your blood pressure tested . A&#13;
few minutes then is better than&#13;
possibly an early death or&#13;
permanent disability a few years&#13;
later.&#13;
Safety program&#13;
scheduled at&#13;
Golden Rondelle&#13;
\ .&#13;
Learn how to be a " victim" of&#13;
self protection by attending the&#13;
free Self-Protection and Personal&#13;
Safety Program at t~e Golden&#13;
Rondelle Theater on April 27 at&#13;
7:00 p .m .&#13;
Marty Defatte, Director of the&#13;
Crime Prevention Unit at the&#13;
Racine Police Department will&#13;
discuss and demonstrate ways to&#13;
avoid potentialiy dangerous&#13;
situations in the home, at work,&#13;
on the street and in the car. If&#13;
you are victimized, Defatte will&#13;
talk about what actions you can&#13;
take to protect yourself from&#13;
further harm .&#13;
Free literature will be available&#13;
and Defatte will hold an informal&#13;
question and answer session .&#13;
For further information and&#13;
reservations contact the Golden&#13;
Rondelle at 554-2154 .&#13;
events'l'I&#13;
Mouris shows award winning 'Frank Film' Friday&#13;
by Michael Murphy&#13;
In 1974, the Academy Award for Best Short Film of the year was&#13;
presented to a 9 minute animated movie entitled Frank Film . The film&#13;
involves all of 11,592 separate colleges incorporated within an autobiographical&#13;
theme.&#13;
Frank Mouris, the film's creator, is a graphic artist turned&#13;
filmmaker. His experience in art and his fascination for forms colors&#13;
and images combine in the formulation of this unique and 'visual!;&#13;
exciting film.&#13;
Frank Film details the progression of both his life and his&#13;
continually changing interests. Structurally, however, the film i's&#13;
unique among other biographies.&#13;
Mouris explains, in a short paper titled Animation and Other&#13;
Obsessions, that one of the most driving obsessions in his life was the&#13;
magazine. His fascination was not in magazines themselves, but in&#13;
the f&lt;rntasy and wonder surrounding pictures .&#13;
He collected pictures, selectively, catagorizing hundreds in order&#13;
to fulfill his obsession, combining many into collages . Still, he was&#13;
unable to achieve, for his pictures, that sense of liveliness that was so&#13;
much a part of his own personality .&#13;
Then Mouris decided, in the making of his autobiography, that the&#13;
best way to represent the true essence of himself was through these&#13;
hundreds of images that held such a major part of his life.&#13;
The resulting product is a visual pageantry of images . Through the&#13;
Your challenge is to construct the mystery&#13;
word in the boxes below. To do this you must&#13;
fill in the correct missing letter in each of the&#13;
words listed in the columns. Then transfer the&#13;
use of single trame an1mat1on Mouris was abl to accord lit to h1&#13;
pictures on screen .&#13;
Each frame of film involves countless number of p1ctur&#13;
combined in· thousands of distinct and eparate collag s The eff t,&#13;
when pro1ected, results in a near stimulatory overload of building and&#13;
changing images&#13;
The images are fused through the use of a double soundtrack On&#13;
soundtrack is a flowing narrative, sectionalizing the film into spec1f1c&#13;
periods of Mouris' life The second soundtrack involve ind1v1dual&#13;
words specifically commenting on the image on the screen&#13;
The film, therefore, is a total exercise of one's sensory fa ult1e and&#13;
requires several screenings to fully appreciate 1t&#13;
Parkside students will be g1 en the opportunity to see Frank Film&#13;
and meet Mouris Friday, April 29 from 1 to 2 30 pm in Cla room&#13;
105 and on Friday evening at 7 00 p.m at the Gold n Rondelle&#13;
Theater in Racine .&#13;
In addition to Frank Film, two other Mourn film , Coney and&#13;
Screentest, will be shown .&#13;
Coney has been described as " a universal bea h part in a poetry of&#13;
neon and motion," whereas Screentest 1s a portrait of nine m n's live&#13;
in ew York City during 1974&#13;
These programs should make for not only an intere ting and&#13;
entertaining e ening, but should provide insight into th work of&#13;
contemporar , independent filmmaker&#13;
missing letters to the corresponding numbered&#13;
boxes. Keep an eraser handy-its not&#13;
as easy as it looks!&#13;
1. $ _ RAP&#13;
2. P_ACH&#13;
J __ EECH&#13;
4. FAC_ S&#13;
s._OAST&#13;
s. TE S&#13;
1. B _ ILS&#13;
s. TRAI_&#13;
9. QU_ TE&#13;
10. BR_ WN&#13;
11 . ILS&#13;
When there's a challenge, quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope you have some fun with the challenge.&#13;
There's another challenge we'd like to offer you, too.&#13;
The Pabst challenge:&#13;
We welcome the chance to prove the quality of&#13;
our beer. We challenge you to taste and compare&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon to any other premium beer. You'll&#13;
like Pabst better. Blue Ribbon quality means the best&#13;
tasting beer you can get. Since 1844 it always has.&#13;
PABST. Since 1844. The quality has always come through. , 1975 PABST BREWING COMPANY M ilwaukee Wis Peor ,a He ights Ii Newarlit N J LO~ Ange 1&#13;
H Ca1ol PAbSI Geotg,A&#13;
NOi Vi:183l]J pJO-.A.JeJSJ.w &#13;
T,,"l&#13;
\&#13;
Bio-rythm aut,hority t~ lecture here&#13;
of some aspects of biological&#13;
clocks with drugs, and new&#13;
programs have been designed to&#13;
"reset" the clock of the mammal.&#13;
These findings have had&#13;
measurable impact on time, life&#13;
and energy saving in industries&#13;
dependent upon shift work and&#13;
crossing time zones, Similar&#13;
applications of environmental&#13;
controls of bio-rhythms have had&#13;
major impact not only on' plant&#13;
and animal systems in agriculture&#13;
but also on organisms that&#13;
play a crucial role in sewage&#13;
disposal and environmental&#13;
pollution control.&#13;
On Friday, April 29, the series&#13;
will present a talk by Dr. H. P.&#13;
- Rusch, Director pf the Wisconsin&#13;
Clinical Cancer Center at&#13;
UW-Madison on "The Center:&#13;
What It's Doing and Where It's&#13;
Going" at 2 p.m. in Greenquist&#13;
Hall Room 101.&#13;
Scientists have found that all&#13;
higher plants and animals have a&#13;
biological clock which regulates&#13;
such daily activities as waking or&#13;
sleeping, flourishing or vegetating&#13;
and. living or' dying. New&#13;
understandings of the molecular&#13;
mechanisms that make the clock&#13;
"tick" have already led to control&#13;
"The Biological Clock: Its role&#13;
in Fast Living and Slow Aging"&#13;
will be the topic of a public&#13;
lecture by Dr. Charles F. Ehret,&#13;
"an authority on bio-rhythms and&#13;
a senior biologist in the Division&#13;
of Biological and Medical&#13;
Research at Argonne National&#13;
laboratory, at 7:30 p.m. on&#13;
Thursday,-ApriI28, at Parkside in&#13;
Greenquist Hall Room 103.&#13;
Dr. Ehret will.focus his talk, a&#13;
part of the Chemts trv-t.ite&#13;
Science Seminar Series, on the&#13;
role of the clock in the processes&#13;
of cancer and aging.&#13;
Wednesday, April 27&#13;
Transcendental Meditation lecture at 1 and at 7:30 p.m. in CI D 133.&#13;
Student Concert at 3 p.m. in CA D 118.&#13;
Men's Tennis meet vs. UW-Waukesha at 3 p.m. at the courts.&#13;
PAB Coffeehouse presents Clark Anderson Electric Blues Band from&#13;
7:30 to 9:30 p.m. in Union Square.&#13;
lecture: "Job Hunting Secrets and Tactics" by Kirby Stanat at 8 p.m.&#13;
in the Union Cinema. Sponsored by PAB and Follett Publishing&#13;
Company.&#13;
Thursday, April 28&#13;
lecture: "More or Less: The Caseof Choice" by Dr. Gerald Dworkin at&#13;
3:30 p.m. in CA 129 Sponsored by the Parkside Philosophical&#13;
Society.&#13;
Chemistry-Life Science Seminar Series lecture: "The Role of Body&#13;
Biorhythms in Cancer and Aging" by Dr. C. Ehret, Division of&#13;
Biological at Biomedical Research, Argonne National Laboratory,&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. in GR 103&#13;
lecture: "Consent and Experimentation with Children" by Dr. Gerald&#13;
Dworkin at 7:30 p.m. in CL 105. Sponsored bv-the Parkside Philosophical&#13;
Society.&#13;
Concert: Synethesia, a "visual music concert" by Chick and Anne&#13;
Herbert at 8 p.m. in the Union Cinema. Admission is $1.50 for&#13;
students and $200 for others. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Friday, April 29&#13;
Earth Science Club Colloquium: "Geology of Morocco" by Tom&#13;
Vogel, at 12 noon in GR 113. Coffee and donuts will be served.&#13;
Chemistry-Life Science- Seminar Series lecture: "The Wisconsin&#13;
Clinical Cancer Center: What It's Doing and Where It's Going" by&#13;
Dr. H.P. Rusch, Director of the Center, at 2 p.m. in GR-101,&#13;
life Science Club Annual Meeting: Talk by Dr. Surinder Datta on&#13;
"Program Changes in life Sciences for 1977" and election of new&#13;
officers after the life Science Seminar in GR 127 at 3:00 p.m. (after&#13;
the lecture.)&#13;
Men's Tennis meet vs. Carthage at 3 p.m. at the courts&#13;
Women's Softball game vs. Uw-Oshkosh .at 4 p.m. at Pets.&#13;
Musical: "Celebration" at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
Admission $1.00 for students and $2,00 for others. Also April 30&#13;
and May 1.&#13;
Tuesday, May 3&#13;
Lecture: "The Invasion of America" by Dr. Francis Jennings, director&#13;
of the Center for the History of the American Indian, at 3 p.m. in CL&#13;
107. Sponsored by the Anthropology Club.&#13;
Softball game vs . Rock Valley (2) at 4: 15 p.rn. at Pets.&#13;
Concert: Parkside Percussion Ensemble, Roger Daniels, director, at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
PAR wishes to remind everyone that the END is near!&#13;
Blood Pressure Clinic from 9 a.rn. to 6 p.m. in Union 104-106.&#13;
Conducted by The Health Office&#13;
Switchboard schedules fund •&#13;
raiser&#13;
callers release, guidance, coun-&#13;
"seling inforrnatiorr and agency&#13;
referrals to troubled area&#13;
residents, specifically the lowincome&#13;
and/or disadvantaged.&#13;
Proceeds will go towards the&#13;
payment of operating expenses&#13;
of Switchboard, a non-profit&#13;
telephone crisis intervention&#13;
helpli ne or hotline which&#13;
provides trained para-professional&#13;
telephone operators to receive&#13;
calls - from people in need of&#13;
help. The O'perators seek to offer&#13;
Switchboard, Kenosha's helpline,&#13;
is sponsoring its first annual&#13;
fundraising dance on Sunday,&#13;
May tst. The Dance is to be held&#13;
at Dad's Place on Highway 31&#13;
and 60th Street from 8:30 p.m . to&#13;
1:30 a.m. The entertainment will&#13;
feature two popular local groups,&#13;
Orphan and Head Band. Their&#13;
specialty is todevs contemporary&#13;
rock music sound. Tickets at&#13;
$2:00 per person are available&#13;
from: East Kenosha Records and&#13;
Tapes; Switchboard, p.o. Box&#13;
522, Kenosha, 53141; or at the&#13;
door that night at no additional&#13;
cost. For more information,&#13;
interested persons may call&#13;
Switchboard at 658-HElP.&#13;
•&#13;
trip&#13;
scheduled&#13;
Free Pizza Delifery&#13;
Club Highview&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
AIt, .,11•.,1•• Chi , S~I.hettl, Ru',II, 8.. 1&#13;
OPEN 4 ~ 1 1.11.&#13;
PAS is sponsoring a camping&#13;
trip to Kettle Moraine State Park&#13;
from Friday, April 29 to Sunday,&#13;
May 1. There is a $3.00 fee for&#13;
site and equipment. Sign up in&#13;
the Student Union Office, Union&#13;
209.&#13;
DANISH&#13;
Classlfieds BAKERY $250 .. Stuffing 1000 envelopes: HOMEWORK:&#13;
GUARANTEEDl COMPANIES NEED&#13;
YOU Details: $1. self-addressed. stamped&#13;
envelope: Mobile 42 199. 258 Atwood,&#13;
ctttsburqn. PA 15213. t;M~(!4~&#13;
- PHONE: 637-8895&#13;
Found: Class ring in the womens bathroom&#13;
en the 01 level of the Library Learning&#13;
Center. Stiver With red stone. Call Mona at&#13;
553-2295 or come to the RANGER office. banquet&#13;
planne~&#13;
1841 Douglo, Avenue&#13;
Roline. WiSlon,in 53402&#13;
I I&#13;
SUMMER JOBS IN YOUR FIELD: To&#13;
students in the human services area,&#13;
education and recreation. Extensive precamp&#13;
and in-service training and high level&#13;
01 responsibility Will provide experience In&#13;
child care. group work and outdoor&#13;
education In a primitive setting With urban&#13;
children. Find out why wecan say this camp&#13;
job IS different from any other. Write for&#13;
mtormatron and application: Trail Blazer&#13;
Camps. ;6 W 45th sr , New York , NY&#13;
10036. Please Include your phone number.&#13;
Wanted: Male student to share a furnished&#13;
deluxe apartment for the months of June:&#13;
July, August. Flat rate of $300.00 includes&#13;
all utruues except long distance calls, Must&#13;
be dependable, honest and able to furnish&#13;
references, No security deposit is required&#13;
but payments must be prompt; terms&#13;
negotiable, Contact: Prof. David E. Miller,&#13;
12502 at st Avenue. Kenosha, WI 53140.&#13;
Phone 694-4639.&#13;
The Spring Sports Nhletic&#13;
Banquet will be held on&#13;
Wednesday, May 11 at 6:30 p.m&#13;
in the Union.&#13;
For Sale: Ford Fairlane. 1969. 2 door&#13;
hard-top. Thrifty 302 v-a eutorceuc. Power&#13;
steering, One OWf1er,96,000 faithful miles&#13;
Aboul $295. 6819 3rd Ave,. Kenosha. Phone&#13;
652-1582&#13;
JOB HUNTING SECRET '3&#13;
"To succeed in campus job interviews, you&#13;
have to know where that recruiter is coming&#13;
from. The simple answer is that he is&#13;
coming from corporate headquarters. If,&#13;
lor example. you assume that because the&#13;
mtervrew is on campus the recruiter expects&#13;
you to look and act like a student. you're in&#13;
for a shock."&#13;
An Answer/question about job hunling&#13;
tonighl. April 27, at 800 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theatre.&#13;
•&#13;
IS&#13;
OLYMPIA BREWING COMMNY 0IJMPfA· st PAUL&#13;
Diot. by C.J. W. Inc.&#13;
3637 • 30th Avenue, Kenosha&#13;
Bio-rythlll authority to lecture here "The Biological Clock : Its role&#13;
Wednesday, April 27 in Fast Living and Slow Aging"&#13;
Transcendental Meditation Lecture at 1 and at 7:30 p .m . in Cl D 133. will be the topic of a public&#13;
Student Concert at 3 p.m . in CA D 118. lecture by Dr. Charles F. Ehret,&#13;
Men's Tennis meet vs. UW-Waukesha at 3 p .m . at the courts. an authority on bio-rhythms and&#13;
PAB Coffeehouse presents Clark Anderson Electric Blues Band horn a senior biologist in the Division&#13;
7:30 to 9:30 p.m . in Union Square. of Biological and Medical&#13;
Lecture: " Job Hunting Secrets and Tactics" by Kirby Stanat at 8 p .m . Research at Argonne National&#13;
in the Union Cinema. Sponsored by PAB and Follett Publishing Laboratory, at 7:30 p.m . on&#13;
Company. · Thursday, .April 28, at Parkside in&#13;
Thursday, April 28 Greenquist Hall Room 103.&#13;
Lecture: "More or Less: The Case of Choice" by Dr. Gerald Dworkin at&#13;
3:30 p .m . in CA 129. Sponsored by the Parkside Philosophical&#13;
Society&#13;
Chemistry-Life Science Seminar Series Lecture: " The ~ole of Body&#13;
Biorhythms in Cancer and Aging" by Dr. C. Ehret, Division of&#13;
Biological at Biomedical Research, Argonne National Laboratory,&#13;
at 7:30 p.m . in GR 103.&#13;
Dr. Ehret will .focus his talk, a&#13;
part of the Chemistry-life&#13;
Science Seminar Series, on the&#13;
role of the clock in the processes&#13;
of cancer and aging.&#13;
On Friday, April 29, the series&#13;
will present a talk by Dr. H. P.&#13;
~ Rusch, Director pf the Wisconsin&#13;
Clinical Cancer Center at&#13;
UW-Madison on " The Center:&#13;
What It's Doing and Where It's&#13;
Going" at 2 p.m . in Greenquist&#13;
Hall Room 101.&#13;
Scientists have found that all&#13;
higher plants and animals have a&#13;
biological clock which regulates&#13;
such daily activities as waking or&#13;
sleeping, flourishing or vegetating&#13;
and . living or , dying. New&#13;
understandings of the molecular&#13;
mechanisms that make the clock&#13;
"tick:' have already led to control&#13;
-&#13;
of some aspects of biological&#13;
clocks with drugs, and new&#13;
programs have been designed to&#13;
"reset" the clock of the mammal.&#13;
These findings have had&#13;
measurable impact on time, life&#13;
and energy saving in industries&#13;
dependent upon shift work and&#13;
crossing time zones. Similar&#13;
applid1tions of environmental&#13;
controls of bio-rhythms have had&#13;
major impact not only on· plant&#13;
and animal systems in agricultur€&#13;
but also on organisms that&#13;
play a crucial role in sewage&#13;
disposal and environmental&#13;
pollution control.&#13;
Lecture: "Consent and Experimentation with Children" by Dr. Gerald&#13;
Dworkin at 7:30 p.m . in CL 105. Sponsored by the Parkside Philosophical&#13;
Society . Switchboard schedules fund raiser&#13;
Concert: Synethesia, a " visual music concert" by Chick and Anne&#13;
Herbert at 8 p .m . in the Union Cinema. Admission is $1.50 for&#13;
students and $2.00 for others . Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Friday, April 29&#13;
Earth Science Club Colloquium: "Geology of Morocco" by Tom&#13;
Vogel, at 12 noon in GR 113. Coffee and donuts will be served.&#13;
Chemistry-Life Science- Seminar Series Lecture: "The Wisconsin&#13;
Clinical Cancer Center: What It's Doing and Where It's Going" by&#13;
Dr. H.P. -Rusch, Director of the Center, at 2 p.m . in GR -101.&#13;
Life Science Club Annual Meeting: Talk by Dr. Surinder Datta on&#13;
" Program Changes in Life Sciences for 1977" and election of new&#13;
officers after the Life Science Seminar in GR 127 at 3:00 p.m. (after&#13;
the lecture.)&#13;
Men's Tennis meet vs . Carthage at 3 p .m . at the courts.&#13;
Women's Softball game vs . UW-Oshkosh .at 4 p.m . at Pets.&#13;
Musical: "Celebration" at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
Admission $1.00 for students and $2.00 for others. Also April 30&#13;
and May 1.&#13;
Tuesday, May 3&#13;
Lecture: "The Invasion of America" by Dr. Francis Jennings, director&#13;
of the Center for the History of the American Indian, at 3 p.m . in CL&#13;
107. Sponsored by the Anthropology Club.&#13;
Softball game vs . Rock Valley (2) at 4: 15 p .m . at Pets.&#13;
Concert: Parkside Percussion Ensemble, Roger Daniels, director, at 8&#13;
p.m . in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
PAB wishes to remind everyone that the END is near!&#13;
Blood Pressure Clinic from 9 a.m . to 6 p.m . in Union 104-106.&#13;
Conducted by The Health Office.&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
Found : Class ring In the womens bathroom&#13;
en the 01 level of the Library Learning&#13;
Center Silver with red stone. Call Mona at&#13;
553-2295 or corne to the RANGER office.&#13;
Wanted: Male student to share a furnished&#13;
deluxe apartment for the months of June'.&#13;
July, August. Flat rate of $300 00 includes&#13;
all utIilties except long distance calls. Must&#13;
be dependable, honest and able to furnish&#13;
references. No security deposit is required&#13;
but payments must be prompt; terms&#13;
negotiable. Contact. Prof. David E. Miller,&#13;
12502 41 st Avenue, Kenosha, WI 53140.&#13;
Phone 694-4639.&#13;
$250 .. Stuffing 1000 envelopes: HOMEWORK&#13;
: GUARANTEED! COMPANIES NEED&#13;
YOU. Details : $1 , self-addressed, stamped&#13;
envelope : Mobile 42 199. 258 Atwood,&#13;
Pittsburgh, PA 15213.&#13;
SUMMER JOBS - IN YOUR FIELD: To&#13;
students In the human services area,&#13;
education and recreation. Extensive precamp&#13;
and in-service training and high level&#13;
of respons1bil1ty will provide experience In&#13;
child care. group work and outdoor&#13;
esucation in a primitive setting with urban&#13;
children. Find out why we can say this camp&#13;
10b Is different lrom any other. Write for&#13;
information and application : Trail Blazer&#13;
Camps. ~6 W 45th St . New York, NY&#13;
10036. Please include your phone number.&#13;
Switchboard, Kenosha's helpline,&#13;
is sponsoring its first annual&#13;
fundraising dance on Sunday,&#13;
May 1st. The Dance is to be held&#13;
at Dad's Place on Highway 31&#13;
and 60th Street from 8:30 p.m. to&#13;
1:30 a.m. The entertainment will&#13;
feature two popular local groups,&#13;
Orphan and Head Band. Their&#13;
specialty is today's contemporary&#13;
rock music sound . Tickets at&#13;
$2-00 per person are available&#13;
from : East Kenosha Records and&#13;
Tapes; Switchboard, P.O . Box&#13;
522, Kenosha, 53141; or at the&#13;
door that night at no additional&#13;
cost. For more information,&#13;
interested persons may call&#13;
Switchboard at 658-HELP.&#13;
• trip&#13;
scheduled&#13;
PAl3 is sponsoring a camping&#13;
trip to Kettle Moraine State Park&#13;
from Friday, April 29 to Sunday,&#13;
May 1 There is a $3.00 fee for&#13;
site and equipment. Sign up in&#13;
the Student Union Office, Union&#13;
209.&#13;
banquet&#13;
planned&#13;
The Spring Sports Nhletic&#13;
Banquet will be held on&#13;
Wednesday, May 11 at 6:30 p.m .&#13;
in the Union.&#13;
For Sale: Ford Fairlane, 1969. 2 door&#13;
hard-top Thrifty 302 V-8 automatic Power&#13;
steering One owner 96,000 faithful miles.&#13;
About $295 6819 3rd Ave , Kenosha. Phone&#13;
652- 1582. HEY PARKSIDE!!&#13;
JOB HUNTING SECRET #3&#13;
"To succeed In campus 10b interviews. you&#13;
have to know where that recruiter Is coming&#13;
from The simple answer is that he is&#13;
coming from corporate headquarters ... If,&#13;
for example, you assume that because the&#13;
interview is on campus the recruiter expects&#13;
you to look and act like a student, you're in&#13;
for a shock."&#13;
An Answer/question about job hunting&#13;
tonight. April 27, at 8:00 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Oly Draft is Here&#13;
OLYMPIA BREWING COMPANY OIYMPIA • St PAUL&#13;
Di1t. by C.J. W. Inc.&#13;
3637 • 30th A venue, Keno1ha&#13;
Proceeds will go towards the&#13;
payment of operating expenses&#13;
of Switchboard, a non-profit&#13;
telephone crisis intervention&#13;
helpline or hotline which&#13;
provides trained para-professional&#13;
telephone operators to receive&#13;
calls - from people in need of&#13;
help. The operators seek to offer&#13;
callers release, guidance, coun-&#13;
. seling informatiort and agency&#13;
referrals to troubled area&#13;
residents, specifical ly the lowincome&#13;
and/ or disadvantaged.&#13;
~~~&#13;
Free Pizza Delh,ery&#13;
Club Highview&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
Altt •,n,111119 Chlelc11, s,11h1tt1, Ratloll, Bttf&#13;
OPEN 4 t-•· to 1 •·•·&#13;
DANISH&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
1841 Douglas Avenue&#13;
Tired of $3°0 an hour?&#13;
• You can earn more&#13;
• Remain a full tim~ student&#13;
• Assist other students in managing&#13;
their finances&#13;
Call: Don Brinlc (Racine) 632-2731&#13;
or&#13;
Stop by: 1300 S. Greenbay Rd.&#13;
Call: Gene Soens&#13;
(Keno·sha) 654-5316&#13;
· Stop by: 2525 - 63rd St.&#13;
cNo'tthwe~tn,n dl/(utua.f Life&#13;
'' Cfl'z.e Quiet Company '' </text>
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