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              <text>Business search near end&#13;
</text>
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              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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              <text>lIr.&#13;
H~,&#13;
ill&#13;
II&#13;
"&#13;
lit&#13;
Ii&#13;
W~udCIY. Jo~ 16 1971&#13;
Vol. S. No 15&#13;
1111 I don't know the "oct function of my ()()&#13;
l)l) job. Its everchonging, V V er .4 H,.buhr. u"~ D.,..c:'Ot&#13;
JOI\ 18 Sea f.u ,",utlno&#13;
:t I 77&#13;
er I don'&#13;
"ob. Is&#13;
u&#13;
Business search near end&#13;
The search for a chairman of&#13;
the Management c,ence Division&#13;
at the University of&#13;
Wi consin-Parkside has been&#13;
narrowed to six candidate&#13;
Prof Ronald Singer, chairman&#13;
of the search and screen&#13;
committee which i conducti ng&#13;
a national search for a head of&#13;
~e UW-P business program, said&#13;
the finalists are&#13;
Stephen Robbin , 34, as oc1ate&#13;
profe or of Management and&#13;
former department chairman,&#13;
Concordia University (formerly&#13;
Sir G orge \.\iill1am mv r 1ty)&#13;
in Montr al, Ph D Un1ver~1ty 01&#13;
Arizona&#13;
Arthur Dud cha, 3b, as oc1ate&#13;
professor and program director&#13;
of lndu trial Relations in the&#13;
Division of , Business and&#13;
Management at The V\est&#13;
Virginia College of Graduate&#13;
Studies , Ph D Ohio State&#13;
University&#13;
George Goodell, 55, professor&#13;
and chairman of the Department&#13;
of Finance at lo\ola (Chicago)&#13;
University and former dean of&#13;
th1 \'alter Heller Coll of&#13;
l:iu~ine Adm1n1strauon, Roo -&#13;
Univ r It\. Ph D orth-&#13;
' J D 1aror&#13;
ot&#13;
ot&#13;
orth \ tern Un, er 1t&#13;
I Lambert. 40, director 01&#13;
the , la ter 01 Bu in dm1nt~-&#13;
trat1on program and a oc1at _&#13;
prole or ot Mar ting at the&#13;
Uni" r 1t of Florida, Ph D&#13;
Prof Happel runs for&#13;
Racine School Board&#13;
Security Chief discusses&#13;
campus police problems&#13;
on page 4&amp;5&#13;
page 7&#13;
Union bridge 'real slick'&#13;
I&#13;
b Chri Cla en&#13;
and lacul&#13;
le on th&#13;
and&#13;
of insulation Y.as lett out due to&#13;
an error in a r drav.mg of th&#13;
0111;inal .,r h·: c.'\ drawing ol&#13;
the bridge&#13;
Th error occured, . \urra\&#13;
said, wh n a structural engine r&#13;
trom th architectural l1rm in&#13;
charge , Peters . enton&#13;
so I te 01 \ad,~on, redr ,&#13;
the dra\,mg ot the bridge m&#13;
order to obtain prop r dearan&#13;
1n . ulat1on&#13;
contac ed&#13;
probl m&#13;
tion 0 &#13;
··1·;..·······&lt;&#13;
.~..;.~.: }-&#13;
"./ .:.:::&#13;
. .&#13;
. .&#13;
~ ;&#13;
Haasan, Racine junior&#13;
"f rhink the physical location and archirecrual&#13;
design of this campus enhances study ... putring it&#13;
simply, its beautiful."&#13;
,&#13;
a look around campus&#13;
photographs by Philip L. Livingston eyes&#13;
Peter l. Strutynski, Chairman. Segregated&#13;
University Fees Allocation Committee&#13;
"The Ranger's article 5112. of your tuition by&#13;
Bob Hoffman. Jan. 19 seems to be more of the&#13;
opinionated journalism whkh has been the rule&#13;
rather than the exception in the past. Perhaps the&#13;
campus newspaper no longer exists to report news,&#13;
but rather to act as a vehicle to voice the opinions&#13;
of those whom it chooses as the 'representatives of&#13;
the students'," - from his letter to the editor. See&#13;
letters to the editor on page 3.&#13;
•&#13;
louis Villareal, Racine&#13;
"1 have been out of school for 15 years and I am&#13;
coming back for one course, Intra. to Psych., and&#13;
the book, tore didn't have my textbook ,..&#13;
Joan Regnerv, kenosha Freshman&#13;
- "I think there is a good activities program here. The&#13;
movies are only a dol/ar, and a lot of good&#13;
entertainment can be seen in the Union. I think the&#13;
cafeteria should stay open later so people who have&#13;
late dasses have a chance to eat dinner."&#13;
Rusty Tutlewski, Vice-President, Concerned Student&#13;
Coalition, Allocation Committee member.&#13;
"/'m pleased with the opening of the Book Co-op.&#13;
We served more than 450 students. I would like to&#13;
see students use it more because there is more&#13;
money to be received from the sale of used books&#13;
and other students are able to purchase used text&#13;
bOOkS for less. We will also be open all semester&#13;
selling used books."&#13;
~~&#13;
Bob Hoffman, Chris Clausen, Mona Maillet,&#13;
Fred Tenuta, Thomas Nolen, Karen Putman,&#13;
Linda Lasco, Douglas Edenhauser, Michael Murphy,&#13;
Timothy J. Zuehlsdorf&#13;
~~~Phil1p L.Livtnsstcm ~&#13;
..i\.ll"I; lWl1.~iJ@1i@~&#13;
lI&lt;Oi!1i@~&lt;Illlr ~~.m)lJJlliw&#13;
hlIDllllf&amp;lllli[l!\m.m!iilllfTbomRB :a. Cooper ~&#13;
~ lII~1i@lfBruce wagner&#13;
W1i1llmll 1MJt1i@lfJohn:a. Mc:J[JORlrey&#13;
lJ'1Ml1i1IDl'@lii~il@l!'Jef:freyJ. 8weDcki&#13;
&amp;!lW@ri~~1i@~Jean Tenuta&#13;
!IIDW~1il1.~.m1il't_mill~iIl~Phil Hermann&#13;
©lI.w:1mli.m1i!@ID8ueJbrquardt&#13;
~1Jll@11l1._ lli!~iIlll'&#13;
.M_~WnilI&amp; liir8J-Ii&lt;ll~JohJlGabriel ~&#13;
..i\..m_~l1.~~~iIl~&#13;
R...., Is published weeekly by students of the Uni ... ity Of Wieconsln-Parkalde. Views&#13;
hentln are not IleCeIfariIY those Of anyone ..... Sub8cl1ptiona: 16.00 yr lor U.S.&#13;
.......... , $&#13;
~ of WIacoi ...... ".,. ....&#13;
bnoiIIM. 'M 7 • 531411&#13;
,&#13;
a look around campus&#13;
photograph b Philip L. L1ving&lt;,ton eyes&#13;
H asan, Racine junior&#13;
"/ think the physical locatton and archttectual&#13;
de ign of thi campu enhances study putring it&#13;
imply, it beautiful "&#13;
Peter L. Strutyn ki, Chairman, Segregated&#13;
Univer ity Fee Allocation Committee&#13;
he Ranger rttcle $112 of \!Our tuition b&#13;
Bob Hotfman, Jan 19 \ em to b more of the&#13;
op,n,onat d 1ournal1sm wh ich has been the rule&#13;
rath r than thee cept1on ,n the past. Perhap the&#13;
campus n wspap r no longer e I ts to report new ,&#13;
but rather to , ct a a v htcle to voice the opinion&#13;
ot tho~e ...,hom it choo e a the repre entat,-.es of&#13;
th \tudent ·:· - from his letter to the editor. See&#13;
I tt I') t lhe edit r on page .&#13;
Louis Villareal, Racine&#13;
"I have been out of school for 15 years and I am&#13;
coming back for one course. Intro to P ych., and&#13;
the boo/..\tore didn't have my te~tboo/.. ,.&#13;
Joan Regnery, Kenosha Freshman&#13;
·1 thin/... there 1s a good activ1t1es program here. The&#13;
mo ,e are only a dollar, and a lot of good&#13;
entertainment can be een in the Union I think the&#13;
cafeteria hould tay open later o people who have&#13;
late classes have a chance to eat dinner."&#13;
Tutlew ki, Vice.Pre ident, C ncerned Student&#13;
Coalition, Allocation C mmittee member.&#13;
I m plea ed with the opening of the Book Co-op.&#13;
We ser11ed more than 450 tudents. I .....,ould like to&#13;
ee tudent u e ,t more becau e there ts more&#13;
money to b r ce,ved from the ale of used books&#13;
and other studenh are able to purcha e used text&#13;
boof...s for le s. We wt/I also be open all emest,.,&#13;
e/1,ng u ed boo/.. . . "&#13;
Bob Hoffman, Chris Clausen, Mona Maillet&#13;
Fred Tenuta, Thomas Nolen, Karen Putman,&#13;
Linda Lasco, Douglas Edenhauser, Michael urphy,&#13;
Timothy J. Zuehlsdorf&#13;
lrPhllip L. Livingston ,f,,,.,e~(l,ftg,&#13;
l£iliiwgj4Jl!i!:~ 'nlomas :a. Cooper&#13;
~@ Bruce Wagner&#13;
X'John :a. McKloakey&#13;
~ Jeffrey J. 8wenckJ.&#13;
~l!.'Jean Tenuta&#13;
r Phil Kerman.n&#13;
Sue Marquardt&#13;
Ranger Is published WNekly by students of the Uni-.,ty of Wiaconsill-P..-ks,de. Views&#13;
hentln are not "--Sanly those of anyone else Subscnplt~ $5.00 yr for U.S.&#13;
it..,...N......,._&#13;
~ty of Wlaconai•PWU!de&#13;
Kenoeha, Wl~n 53140 &#13;
•&#13;
vie"".&#13;
'Se9 Fees draws criticism&#13;
•••.....•...•.•...........•................... ~&#13;
i Say you !&#13;
= ..: i salN It In 5&#13;
• • • •&#13;
! t-/f' i ••&#13;
••&#13;
• • ·&#13;
• -.•&#13;
! Support our i&#13;
• •&#13;
• d· i a vert,sers. =· ,••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••!••••,&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I was pleased with the&#13;
publicity that the Ranger has&#13;
given to the time and place of&#13;
Segregated Fees Allocations&#13;
Committee meetings. We have&#13;
had some difficulty in publicizjng&#13;
the meetings properly and&#13;
your feature article should help&#13;
attract spontaneous student&#13;
input.&#13;
First of all, the Segregated Fees&#13;
taken Out of Spring and Fall&#13;
semester tuitions are currently&#13;
S104 instead of $112 as listed in&#13;
the Ranger. This must be&#13;
compare with the fees charged at&#13;
other universities in the UW&#13;
System in order to make any&#13;
judgement about the figure. UWMadison,&#13;
with its extra large&#13;
student body, has only a $97&#13;
charge for Fall and 'Spring&#13;
semesters, while the range for&#13;
other schools in the UW System&#13;
is from $102 at Green Bay to&#13;
$153 for River Falls. The bulk of&#13;
the schools have been ranging&#13;
from $10-$0 above that of&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Secondly, the $322,450 figure&#13;
given as the "Union" request&#13;
includes $101,100 for paying this&#13;
year's installment on the debt&#13;
incurred in building the Student&#13;
Union as well as a $20,800&#13;
program budget for the Parkside&#13;
Advisory Board, leaving $201,650&#13;
for operation of the Union.&#13;
Finally, I wish to point out that&#13;
the Segregated Fees Allocation&#13;
Committee does not receive one&#13;
dime out of Seg Fees or anvwhere&#13;
else. We merely make&#13;
decisions on the allocation of&#13;
Segregated Fees monies to&#13;
various groups on campus,&#13;
ranging from the Shuttle Bus to&#13;
Student Health Services. In&#13;
trying to do a proper job, the&#13;
Committee started having meetings&#13;
in early December. We had&#13;
two meetings that the Ranger&#13;
attended and a workshop before&#13;
the Ranger started covering&#13;
meetings. The first meeting that&#13;
the Ranger attended was during&#13;
winter break when it was&#13;
impossible for many members to&#13;
attend. After that we have been&#13;
able to make steady progress&#13;
reviewing budgets and interviewing&#13;
requesting groups.&#13;
Joseph G. Orlowski&#13;
Segregated Fees&#13;
Allocations Committee&#13;
Member.&#13;
P.S. The photo of the committee&#13;
at the beginning of the article&#13;
was taken at a bowling party&#13;
paid for by the members. It is&#13;
significant to note that most&#13;
meetings of the committee have&#13;
better attendance.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Upon reading your cover story&#13;
of January 19, "$112. of your&#13;
tuition "I was shocked and&#13;
dismayed at the use of sensationalism&#13;
by your writers.&#13;
Though your story was factual; it&#13;
presented a series of half-truths&#13;
and superfluous 'facts which&#13;
implied some student organizations&#13;
and employees of the&#13;
Student Union were involved in&#13;
some underhanded activities.&#13;
To begin with, PSCA was requesting&#13;
$8000 out of a $500,000&#13;
budget, that comes to 1.6%. Did&#13;
you expect the Student Senate to&#13;
be run on $100 with the prices of&#13;
materials and services today?&#13;
Also, did you really think that&#13;
any elected official to Seg Fees is&#13;
any less bias than someone who&#13;
was appointed to his posifion by&#13;
PSGA? PSGA probably uses a&#13;
little criteria than the few&#13;
apathetic voters we get around&#13;
here.&#13;
Also how much do other&#13;
colleg~s pay In segregated fees?&#13;
From what I hear, even with our&#13;
new Student Union, it is still less&#13;
than other colleges in the UW&#13;
system.&#13;
Another thing, is it necessary&#13;
to know where Bill Niebuhr&#13;
spent his vacation? He earned his&#13;
vacation, would it have been&#13;
printed if he had spent his&#13;
vacation in Grand Rapids,&#13;
Michigan?&#13;
Then too, your so-called "reporter"&#13;
interviewed mostly one&#13;
person, Kai Nail. It appears to me&#13;
that the views expressed by Nail&#13;
are his own opinion,&#13;
In conclusion, as of January&#13;
20, the Ranger was asking for&#13;
$12,000 for their purposes; which&#13;
incidentally, is used to pay, yes,&#13;
pay those people who work on&#13;
this poor excuse of a paper.&#13;
Timothy I.Zuehlsdorf&#13;
RANGER is proud to announce&#13;
Mr. Timothy I. Zuehlsdorf has&#13;
decided to become a writer in an&#13;
effort to bring "this poor excuse&#13;
of a paper" up to his standards.&#13;
- Editor&#13;
Camera World is handing out savings&#13;
SOLIGOR&#13;
135mmf3.5&#13;
telephoto -&#13;
for Nikon&amp;Pentax&#13;
9O-230mm&#13;
zoom&#13;
for Pentax&amp;Minolta&#13;
$39.95&#13;
$134.95&#13;
C......er. Wortd Incorpor.ted 3212 W.shlngton Avenue R.ctne, Wisconsin 53403 phone 637-7428,637-7429&#13;
Dear Editor,&#13;
This In response to the article&#13;
, In last weeks issue of the Ranger&#13;
entitled "$112 of Your TUition "&#13;
1 feel there are some misconceptions&#13;
in the article that should be&#13;
clarified.&#13;
First: The statement "about&#13;
60% of the students at this&#13;
campus are over 25 II is incorrect&#13;
The reverse is true&#13;
Actually, 60% are under 25.&#13;
However, the majority of those&#13;
who are full time students and&#13;
supply the bulk of the segregated&#13;
fees budget are under 25 and&#13;
should be given prime emphasis&#13;
in the spending of this money.&#13;
In addition, I must point out&#13;
that very few programs are&#13;
aimed at specific audiences&#13;
Most programming is of such a&#13;
general nature that any student,&#13;
regardless of age, can enjoy the&#13;
fruits of his/her segregated fee&#13;
dollars&#13;
Another misunderstanding is&#13;
in the workings of the Parkstde&#13;
Activities Board. The students on&#13;
the Activities Board, not Bill&#13;
Niebuhr, decide which programs&#13;
are to be contracted, As far as&#13;
which programs bring in the&#13;
most revenue or break even,&#13;
varies from event to event. Some&#13;
dances break even; others do&#13;
not, the same applies for&#13;
concerts, films, etc The&#13;
financial "success" of events also&#13;
vary year by year It is Virtually&#13;
trnpossrble for any person to&#13;
make-an accurate prediction of&#13;
what will be "successful"&#13;
The Performing Arts and&#13;
Lecture budget In which the two&#13;
dance companies were mennoned&#13;
was a proposal for next year,&#13;
not a summary of last year The&#13;
reason we feel the need for&#13;
programs that do not make&#13;
money IS for the exposure of&#13;
these areas to students who may&#13;
not be familiar with them, Part of&#13;
the Activities Board function IS&#13;
the education of the student&#13;
body In areas to which they may&#13;
not have been exposed ThIS IS&#13;
why we feel the need for a wellrounded&#13;
program covering not&#13;
only the wants and needs of&#13;
students, but also encompassing&#13;
)ne of the reasons why they&#13;
attend college - the broadenmg&#13;
)f their world scope&#13;
Ellen Kavanaugh&#13;
President, Park,ide&#13;
Activities Board&#13;
Dear Sirs:&#13;
Ordmentv. It would seem that&#13;
the chairperson would act as the&#13;
spokesman for committee action&#13;
and disc-uss information about&#13;
the committee. However, It&#13;
seemsthat this is not the case if&#13;
my interpretation of Robert&#13;
HoHman s article rn the Jan 19&#13;
issue of Ranger IS correct Mr&#13;
Hoffman seems to put more&#13;
credence 10 the opinions of&#13;
certain members of the&#13;
committee and forgets that a&#13;
committee IS composed of a&#13;
number of members. each of&#13;
whom ha~ a separate opinion&#13;
There are 8 active members of&#13;
the committee and each has an&#13;
opinIon Just as valid as any&#13;
others. Iwould certainly not call&#13;
Mr Hoffman·s' article an&#13;
example of objective Journalism&#13;
The inception of a new editor&#13;
I&#13;
..'.··.&#13;
..&#13;
. .:&#13;
.&#13;
..,&#13;
.~.&#13;
for Ranger promised a new and&#13;
excit.ng outlook on campus, but&#13;
It seems that this IS wrong The&#13;
article seems to be more of the&#13;
opinionated Journalism wluch&#13;
has been the rule rather than the&#13;
excepuon In the past. Perhaps&#13;
the campus newspaper no longer&#13;
exists to report news, but rather&#13;
to act as a vehicle to voice the&#13;
opinions of those whom It&#13;
chooses as the "representatives&#13;
of the students "&#13;
Segregated Fees IS an&#13;
important subject and it is a&#13;
shame that the Ranger would use&#13;
the comrnrttee and Its actions in&#13;
such a sensationalized manner&#13;
As Chairman of the committee, I&#13;
was frankly dtsappomted With&#13;
the article and Its possible&#13;
Implications, One cannot right&#13;
the wrongs already done, but I&#13;
hope that the Ranger WIll&#13;
attempt to correct any mistaken&#13;
facts and will attempt to report&#13;
the real Issues that the&#13;
committee must address rather&#13;
than some far-fetched solutions&#13;
to problem that may not exist.&#13;
Peter l. Strutynski&#13;
Chairman, Segregated&#13;
University Fees&#13;
Allocations&#13;
Committee.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Robert Hoffman's artrcle on&#13;
the Seg Fees Committee was&#13;
written 10 a thougbt-provokmg&#13;
and somewhat entertamrng&#13;
manner It was perhaps&#13;
misplaced, however The writing&#13;
style, whtle possibly good 10 an&#13;
editorial, IS not suited for what&#13;
purports to be a news story&#13;
Mr Hoffman's Inference of&#13;
«noreen ty 10 the part of P GA&#13;
10 the appointment of committ e&#13;
members IS unfair True, PSGA&#13;
did appomt 7 of the 9 committee&#13;
members What Mr Hoffman&#13;
fails to POlOt out, although he&#13;
was aware of It, IS that the&#13;
appointments were made because&#13;
no one bothered to run for&#13;
these seats and that PSGA "&#13;
obhgated to nll these vacancies&#13;
as the corporate repre entauve&#13;
of the students&#13;
In a suuauon such as eXists at&#13;
Parksrde, where there IS only one&#13;
news outlet, the 'paper has a&#13;
speCial responsibility to tell the&#13;
whole tory 10 .a fair and&#13;
unbiased manner It is hoped&#13;
that future Issues Will take care&#13;
to keep that responSibility 10&#13;
mind&#13;
Very cordi~lIy yours,&#13;
Dani~ Nielsen&#13;
P.S.Congratulattons on your new&#13;
format It IS a very defmite&#13;
Improvement&#13;
Boc Hoftman coarne e fast week&#13;
01"' egrpgared tee» recer ed&#13;
mucP cnnctsm It eculd ha\ e&#13;
been \\-rllten bener dod t could&#13;
"a"e been edlred more carefully&#13;
'\e dre pretty busy around here&#13;
with so fe" people domg 0&#13;
much \-\te agam encourage all&#13;
interested students to jom us m&#13;
our effort to report student Ide&#13;
around this place ;n a fair and&#13;
unbIased manner - Editor&#13;
- views •&#13;
.... :&#13;
: .&#13;
. ·&#13;
. . . . . . :•&#13;
Seg Fees draws critiCism&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
f was pleased with the&#13;
publicity that the Ranger has&#13;
given to the time and place of&#13;
Segregated Fees Allocations&#13;
Committee meetings. We have&#13;
had some difficulty in pubhciz-&#13;
,ng the meetings properly and&#13;
your feature article should help&#13;
attract spontaneous student&#13;
input&#13;
First of all, the Segregated Fees&#13;
taken out of Spring and Fall&#13;
semester tuitions are currently&#13;
104 instead of $112 as listed in&#13;
the Ranger . This must be&#13;
compare with the fees charged at&#13;
other universities in the UW&#13;
System in order to make any&#13;
judgement about the figure . UWMadison,&#13;
with its extra large&#13;
student body, has only a $97&#13;
charge for Fall and Spring&#13;
semesters, while the range for&#13;
other schools in the UW System&#13;
1s from $102 at Green Bay to&#13;
$153 for River Falls. The bulk of&#13;
the schools have been ranging&#13;
from $10-$0 above that of&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Secondly, the $322,450 figure&#13;
given as the "Union" request&#13;
includes $101,100 for paying this&#13;
year' installment on the debt&#13;
incurred in building the Student&#13;
Union as well as a $20,800&#13;
program budget for the Parkside&#13;
Advisory Board, leaving $201,650&#13;
for operation of the Union&#13;
Finally, I wish to point out that&#13;
the Segregated Fees Allocation&#13;
Committee does not receive one&#13;
dime out of Seg Fees or anywhere&#13;
else. We merely make&#13;
decisions on the allocation of&#13;
Segregated Fees monies to&#13;
various groups on cam pus,&#13;
ranging from the Shuttle Bus to&#13;
Student Health Services In&#13;
trying to do a proper job, the&#13;
Committee started having meetmgs&#13;
in early December. We had&#13;
two meetings that the Ranger&#13;
attended and a wqrkshop before&#13;
the Ranger started covering&#13;
meetings . The first meeting that&#13;
the Ranger attended was during&#13;
winter break when it was&#13;
impossible for many members to&#13;
attend . After that we have been&#13;
able to make steady progress&#13;
reviewing budgets and interviewing&#13;
requesting groups&#13;
Joseph G. Orlowski&#13;
Segregated Fees&#13;
Allocations Committee&#13;
Member.&#13;
P.S. The photo of the committee&#13;
at the beginning of the article&#13;
was taken at a bowling party&#13;
paid for by the member It is&#13;
significant to note that most&#13;
meetings of the committee have&#13;
better attendance.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Upon reading your cover stor&#13;
of January 19, "$112. of your&#13;
tuIt1on " I was shocked and&#13;
dismayed at the use of sensat&#13;
iona Ii sm by your writers .&#13;
Though your story was factual; it&#13;
presented a series of half-truths&#13;
and superfluous · facts which&#13;
implied some student organizations&#13;
and employees of the&#13;
Student Union were involved in&#13;
some underhanded activities.&#13;
To begin with, PSGA was requesting&#13;
S8000 out of a $500,000&#13;
budget, that comes to 1.6% Did&#13;
you expect the Student Senate to&#13;
be run on S100 with the prices of&#13;
materials and services today?&#13;
Also, did you really think that&#13;
any elected official to Seg Fees is&#13;
any less bias than someone who&#13;
was appointed to his position by&#13;
PSGA7 PSGA probably uses a&#13;
little criteria than the few&#13;
apathetic voters we get around&#13;
here&#13;
Also, how much do other&#13;
colleges pay in segregated fees?&#13;
From what I hear, even with our&#13;
new Student Union, It is still less&#13;
than other colleges in the UW&#13;
system&#13;
Another thing, is It neces ary&#13;
to know where 8111 Niebuhr&#13;
spent his vacation? He earned his&#13;
vacation, would it have been&#13;
printed if he had spent his&#13;
vacation in Grand Rapids,&#13;
Michigan7&#13;
Then too, your so-called "reporter''&#13;
interviewed mostly one&#13;
person Kai all. It appears to me&#13;
that the views expressed by all&#13;
Camera World is handing out savings&#13;
SOLIGOR&#13;
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for Nikon&amp;Pentax $39.95&#13;
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zoom&#13;
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Camera World Incorporated 32t2 Washington Avenue Racine, Wisconsin 53403 phone 637-7428, 637-7429&#13;
Dear Editor,&#13;
This m re pon e to the article&#13;
, tn la!.t week I u of the Ranger&#13;
en tit I d ·s 112 of Your l u1t1on ."&#13;
I feel there are some m1sconc ptions&#13;
in the article that shovld be&#13;
clarified.&#13;
First. The statement "about&#13;
60% of the students at this&#13;
campus are over 25 " is incorrect&#13;
The reverse is true.&#13;
Actually, 60% are under 25 .&#13;
However, the major1t of those&#13;
who are full time students and&#13;
supply the bulk of the egregated&#13;
fees budget are under 25 and&#13;
should be given prime emphasi&#13;
in the spending of this money.&#13;
In addition, I must point out&#13;
that very few programs are&#13;
aimed at specific audience .&#13;
Most programming i of such a&#13;
general nature that any student,&#13;
regardless of age, can enjoy the&#13;
fruits of his er egr gated fe&#13;
dollar&#13;
Another misunderstanding ,s&#13;
in the workings ot the Parks,d&#13;
Activities Board. The tudents on&#13;
the Act1v1t1e Board, not 8111&#13;
iebuhr, decide which program&#13;
are to be contracted. A far as&#13;
which programs bring in the&#13;
most revenue or break e\en,&#13;
varie from event to even . Some&#13;
dances break even, other do&#13;
not, the ame ap lie for&#13;
concer , film , etc The&#13;
tmanc,al " ucce s" of e nt al o&#13;
\iary year by year It is v1rtuall&#13;
1mposs1 le for n p r on lo&#13;
make an accurate pr d1ct1on of&#13;
what will be "successful''&#13;
The Performing Art and&#13;
Lecture budget tn which the two&#13;
dance compani s "" re mentioned&#13;
v.as a proposal for ne. y ar,&#13;
not a umma · of la t ear The&#13;
reason \.e fe I th n d for.&#13;
program that do not ma&#13;
mon y , tor th po ur of&#13;
these areas to tud nts "ho ma&#13;
not be fam1l1ar with them Part of&#13;
the Act1 1t1e Board function 1&#13;
the education of the student&#13;
bod in area to which the ma&#13;
not have been expo eel Th, 1&#13;
,,hy w f el th need for a "" IIrounded&#13;
program co\ nn not&#13;
onl the v-.an and n ed of&#13;
,tudents, but also encomp&#13;
&gt;ne ol th r a on wh&#13;
ittend college - the bro d&#13;
&gt;f th tr ,,orld cop&#13;
Ellen Kav naugh&#13;
Pre id nt, Park ide&#13;
ctivitie Board&#13;
for Rang r prom, d a n nd&#13;
c1t1ng outlook on campu , but&#13;
,t s m that th1 1 •.won Th&#13;
art,cl s m to be more of the&#13;
opIn1ona ed 1ournalt\m wh, h&#13;
has be n th rule rath r than th&#13;
exc p ,on ,n th past P rhaps&#13;
the campu n w paper no longer&#13;
exists to report nev. , but rath r&#13;
to act as a v h1cle to voice the&#13;
opinion of thos whom it&#13;
choo a th " r pr ntatIves&#13;
of the studenH."&#13;
S gr gat d F e ts an&#13;
important subj ct and it I a&#13;
sham that th Rang r would use&#13;
th committee and 1t actions in&#13;
such a en at1onaftzed manner.&#13;
A Chairman of th omm1ttee, I&#13;
v.as frankly d1sappo1nted with&#13;
th art, I and ,t po 1ble&#13;
1mpltcat1on On cannot right&#13;
the wrongs air ad don , but I&#13;
hope that th Ran er w,11&#13;
attempt to correct any m, tak n&#13;
fact and will attempt to r port&#13;
th real I ue that th&#13;
committee mu t addre rather&#13;
than ~om far-f tched olution&#13;
to probl m, that ma not e I t&#13;
to&#13;
Peter L. Strut n ki&#13;
Chairman, S gregated&#13;
Universit ree&#13;
Allo ation&#13;
C mmiltee.&#13;
m that mind&#13;
el') cordial! urs,&#13;
Dani I iel en&#13;
P.S. Con ratul tion on&#13;
orm t It 1&#13;
lmpro\iem •nt &#13;
II&#13;
;;:/ j' ·····'.'.r .::-::.~ ....\ II''':''':'·:'' ·1·········&#13;
.......~: ::;:~.. .« ~~-»; ".' •.• ):&#13;
.."....' ..•... . . .. . . . .. . ....&#13;
two weeks to "pay the three&#13;
dollars, after this two week&#13;
period we send out a notice and&#13;
double the fine. If, after three&#13;
weeks, the student doesn't&#13;
respond, we go to the Kenosha&#13;
District Attorney's Office and&#13;
serve the student with a traffic&#13;
summons. This means that the&#13;
student must appear in court,&#13;
however. if the student pays us&#13;
one week before the court date,&#13;
he does not have to appear. We&#13;
have no quotas to fill, I would&#13;
not judge -mv officers on the&#13;
number of tickets they can write,&#13;
that would be silly. We will give&#13;
a ticket for flagrant violations of&#13;
Wisconsin State traffic laws and&#13;
that is all we are really&#13;
concerned with.&#13;
RANGER: How many pedestrian&#13;
injuries have occured?&#13;
BRINKMA~N: It is amazing to&#13;
me, but not one. You would&#13;
expect a school such as th is with&#13;
so much walking to buildings to&#13;
have a substantial amount of&#13;
injurv, but that is not the case.&#13;
RANGER: What about parking&#13;
facilities for handicapped students?&#13;
BRINKMANN: Right now they&#13;
aren't too good, but' in the future&#13;
we plan on building some more&#13;
space for them. The only way a&#13;
handicapped permit can be&#13;
obtained is if the person is in a&#13;
wheelchair and that leaves a lot&#13;
of disabilities out.&#13;
RANGER: What is the procedure&#13;
for hiring security officers?&#13;
BRINKMANN: Right now we&#13;
are at full staff, but when a&#13;
potential candidate applies, we&#13;
run a thorough background&#13;
check and then he is interviewed&#13;
by myself and a board that I have&#13;
set up. These recommendations&#13;
are the ones that. are used in&#13;
hiring. Security officers that are&#13;
part time must be students, that&#13;
way Iam fair to the university in&#13;
providing jobs for students.&#13;
RANGER: What happened to&#13;
the student who stabbed&#13;
assistant music professor Tim&#13;
Bell last year?&#13;
BRINKMANN: We apprehended&#13;
him five minutes after the&#13;
Incident and to the best of my&#13;
knowledge he IS sitting in the&#13;
Kenosha jail waiting for&#13;
prosecution&#13;
Students leave books and purses&#13;
just lying around out in the open&#13;
where they are easy pickings for&#13;
a thief. It only takes five minutes&#13;
for someone to grab the purse,&#13;
take out the valuables and then&#13;
throw the purse away. With so&#13;
many students on campus. it is&#13;
almost impossible to recognize a&#13;
theft, so students should guard&#13;
their belongings. A real danger&#13;
spot where ripoffs can occur is in&#13;
the bookstore; last year we had&#13;
one female non-studen-t who&#13;
would stop women at the door to&#13;
remind them that purses were&#13;
not allowed inside the store,&#13;
then the suspect would grab the&#13;
purse and run. Luckily we&#13;
apprehended her and solved four&#13;
or five different complaints.&#13;
Students have to take responsibility&#13;
for their property; they&#13;
shouldn't leave things out in the&#13;
open. If you are ripped off, we&#13;
are here twenty-four hours a day,&#13;
seven days a week. We cannot&#13;
help you if you won't let us, call&#13;
553-2455 for help.&#13;
Theft: biggest problem&#13;
by Phil Hermann the current security situation at&#13;
Parkside,&#13;
Editor's note: Ronald Brink- RANGER: What are "the main&#13;
mann is head of security on the security problems here at&#13;
Parkside Campus. He served Parkside?&#13;
twelve years in the Racine Police, BRINKMANN: The biggest proDepartment&#13;
as a patrolman, blem right now is theft, the total&#13;
detective, and aide to former disregard for other's personal&#13;
police chief Jenkins. In 1969, property. This is a problem that&#13;
Brinkmann went to Madison and all universities are facing and the&#13;
later worked with the Wisconsin fact that Parkside is such a wide&#13;
Council on Criminal Justice open campus doesn't help.&#13;
doing extensive work in planning RANGER: What do you mean&#13;
and organizing police depart- when you say "wide open"?&#13;
menls in southeastern wtscoa- BRINKMANN: It is a commuter&#13;
sin. school where people are always&#13;
Brinkmann was hired in 1971 coming and going and since we&#13;
by then chancellor Wyllie to don't check ID cards, anybody&#13;
serve as head of security on the can come in and walk around. I&#13;
Parkside campus. estimate that 90% of the thefts&#13;
Parkside's security force con- that occur out here are done by&#13;
sists of six full-time security non-students who just come in&#13;
officers, four full time police and steal. The theft problem is&#13;
officers and six security officers not at epidemic proportions, but&#13;
that are on call for such events as it is widespread.&#13;
basketball games, concerts and RANGER: Where do most&#13;
dances. thefts occur?&#13;
Ranger interviewed Brink- BRINKMANN: The library is&#13;
mann in an effort to pin down the easiest place to steal from.&#13;
RANGER: What about the&#13;
parking situation?&#13;
BRINKMANN: Parking is a&#13;
problem at the university but it is&#13;
getting much better. When the&#13;
university started adding on&#13;
buildings they forgot to provide&#13;
corresponding lots for the&#13;
students; this is why it is such a&#13;
long way from the lots to the&#13;
buildings. We at the security&#13;
department have taken steps to&#13;
make parking easier and&#13;
organized:&#13;
1) At the beginning of each&#13;
semester, officers will be&#13;
stationed at the entrances to the&#13;
lots and we will stop any car&#13;
without the proper sticker. This&#13;
will discourage improper parking&#13;
and save a lot of confusion for&#13;
both us and them.&#13;
2) If a student finds that he has&#13;
forgotten his permit all he or she&#13;
has to do is come to the security&#13;
office at the. back of Tallent Hall&#13;
and we will give them a&#13;
temporary permit at little or no&#13;
cost.&#13;
RANGER: What IS the department&#13;
policy on tickets?&#13;
BRINKMANN: We bend over&#13;
backwards at avoiding ticketing;&#13;
if a student gets a ticket, he has&#13;
OngOOg admissions Monthly tuition&#13;
SCHOOL&#13;
OeKoven· Foundetion 520·21st St. Bell's case:&#13;
No happy endln Admittilg age: 2 yr 6 mo thru 3 yr 9 mo&#13;
PHONE; 637-7892&#13;
The ReeM Montessori School admits students of any r-ace.&#13;
creed. cctor and nationel or ethnic origin. by Phil Hermann&#13;
Donald Keedle's journey of terror s&#13;
Vietnam and may end in Central State H&#13;
Waupun State Prison&#13;
Keedle, a former P.O.W. in Vietnam,&#13;
Timothy Bell, music professor at Parkside&#13;
and was apprehended by Parkside securi&#13;
Keedle was brought to court and t&#13;
determined that a psychiatric examinati&#13;
order to determine the sanity of the sus&#13;
recent hearing in Kenosha Court, Keedle&#13;
Indefinitely In Central State Hospital as lo&#13;
Assistant District Attorney of Kenosha, a&#13;
not gudty by reason of mental defect pie&#13;
had also attacked and stabbed his moth&#13;
same day as the Bell stabbing.&#13;
Ranger reached Bell at his home and a&#13;
his feelings on the case. "I am very reliev&#13;
Bell, "if the man IS sick, then a hospital&#13;
him the most good I feel a lot safer now&#13;
being put away." According to a reliabl&#13;
Keedle was suffering from delusions tha&#13;
sent by the CIA to assassinate certain p&#13;
the court seemed to accept the Insanity&#13;
little hesitation&#13;
After the stabbing, Keedle was imprison&#13;
Kenosha County Jail and then transf&#13;
Downey V.A. hospital for psychiatric c&#13;
after numerous court hearings here, he was&#13;
between Central State and Kenosha&#13;
Hospitals. For Keedlc the pain and sufferin&#13;
coming to an end under the care of phvs!&#13;
Bell, the road to recovery is just beginnin&#13;
really shook up after the incident and I am&#13;
getting back to normal. For a while, th&#13;
great lack of comm lin icauon between m&#13;
the DA's office and this upset me a great&#13;
Ranger had heard a rumor that Park&#13;
wished the charges against Keedle drop&#13;
Informed of the rumor, Bell stated, "If 1&#13;
out that thrs was true, I would leave the&#13;
Immediately"&#13;
There are no happy endings to a story&#13;
but It is said that time IS a great he&#13;
hopefully, Tim Bell and his family and&#13;
Keedle and his family, will have a lot 01&#13;
heal&#13;
ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS NOW&#13;
Introducing: French Pizza$1.50&#13;
EVERY MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY&#13;
SPAGHETTI FEAST .&#13;
$1.95&#13;
Includes: Salad, Italian Bread and a Free Glass of Wine.&#13;
Wed. - Thurs. 9:30 - 11:00 p.m. Security offers course&#13;
Bubble Up&#13;
Mixed Drinks 60'&#13;
~erbu'8&#13;
-,ourt&#13;
PUB &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
LARC. 101 APPLIED LARCENY O(O.Q) This course open to undergraduates,&#13;
graduates, and may be audited Without permission&#13;
PREReQUISITES' CARELESSNESS103, INDIFfERENCE 10&amp; (NOTE&#13;
3 Hrs of IGNORANCE S1b may be substituted)&#13;
TUITION' Vanes Dependent upon value of property you can afford&#13;
to relinquish.&#13;
11'-------- .. MUTINGTIMES: Hours arranged by instructor when the best&#13;
II • opporturutv exists.&#13;
WA NT ED INSTRUCTORS: Course taught by numerous professional and&#13;
amateur Instructors: Some have served lengthy fellowships at&#13;
accredited Institutions&#13;
Sales people for&#13;
Ranger Ads&#13;
On Spring, West of 31 in&#13;
Green Ridge Plazs&#13;
632-6151&#13;
RlGISlRA nON Students need not register for this course. Instructors&#13;
will contact you upon proof of completion of. prerequisites&#13;
Thl'i course IS designed to leave you With an unforgettable&#13;
pduc-atlonal expenence&#13;
P.s. CSO does not recommend this course to anyone. Please take&#13;
care of your property.&#13;
Come to WLLCD-173 in the library&#13;
learning center Monday's at 3:00 PM&#13;
or Call 553- 2287&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
STOP IN TODAY AT PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE.&#13;
YOU'LL LOVE THE UNIQUE. COMFORTABLE ATMOSPHERE&#13;
Theft: biggest problem&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
Editor's note: Ronald Brinkmann&#13;
is head of security on the&#13;
Parkside Campus. He served&#13;
twelve years in the Racine Police&#13;
Department as a patrolman,&#13;
detective, and aide to former&#13;
police chief Jenkins. In 1969,&#13;
Brinkmann went to Madison and&#13;
later worked with the Wisconsin&#13;
Council on Criminal Justice&#13;
doing extensive work in planning&#13;
and organizing police departments&#13;
in southeastern Wisconsin.&#13;
&#13;
Brinkmann was hired in 1971&#13;
by then chancellor Wyllie to&#13;
serve as head of security on the&#13;
Parkside campus.&#13;
Parkside's security force consists&#13;
of six full-time security&#13;
officers, four full time police&#13;
officers and six security officers&#13;
that are on call for such events as&#13;
basketball games, concerts and&#13;
dances.&#13;
Ranger interviewed Brinkmann&#13;
in an effort to pin down&#13;
Ongoing admissions&#13;
~ 4J&#13;
the current security situation at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
RANGER: What are the main&#13;
security problems here at&#13;
Parkside?&#13;
BRINKMANN: The biggest problem&#13;
right now is theft, the total&#13;
disregard for other's personal&#13;
property . This is a problem that&#13;
all universities are facing an"d the&#13;
fact that Parkside is such a wide&#13;
open campus doesn't help.&#13;
RANGER: What do you mean&#13;
when you say "wide open"?&#13;
BRINKMANN: It is a commuter&#13;
chool where people are always&#13;
coming and going and since we&#13;
don't check ID cards, anybody&#13;
can come in and walk around. I&#13;
estimate that 90% of the thefts&#13;
that occur out here are done by&#13;
non-5tudents who Just come in&#13;
and steal The theft problem is&#13;
not at epidemic proportions, but&#13;
1t 1s widespread .&#13;
RANGER: Where do most&#13;
thefts occur?&#13;
BRINKMANN: The library is&#13;
the easiest place to steal from .&#13;
Monthly tuition&#13;
RACINE. MONTESSORI SCHOOL&#13;
OeKoven · Foundetion 520-21st St.&#13;
Admrt:t.lg age: 2 yr 6 mo thru 3 yr 9 mo&#13;
PHONE: 637-7892&#13;
The Recine Montessori School admits students of any race,&#13;
creed. color and nat10nal or ethnic origr,.&#13;
AC~EPTING APPLICATIONS NOW&#13;
Introducing: French Pizza $1.50&#13;
I EVERY MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY I&#13;
SPAGHETTl FEAST ·&#13;
$1.95&#13;
Includes: Salad. Italian Bread a·nd a Free Glass of Wine.&#13;
Wed. · Thurs. 9 :30 - 11 :00 p.m.&#13;
Bubble Up&#13;
Mixed Drinks so•&#13;
On Spring, West of 31 in&#13;
Green Ridge Plaza&#13;
632-6151&#13;
~erbu's&#13;
,ourt&#13;
PUB &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
Students leave books and purses&#13;
just lying around out in the open&#13;
where they are easy pickings for&#13;
a thief. It only takes five minutes&#13;
for someone to grab the purse,&#13;
take out the valuables and then&#13;
throw the purse away . With so&#13;
many students on campw, it is&#13;
almost impossible to recognize a&#13;
theft, so students should guard&#13;
their belongings . A real danger&#13;
spot where ripoffs can occur is in&#13;
the bookstore, last year we had&#13;
one female non-student who&#13;
would stop women at the door to&#13;
remind them that purses were&#13;
not allowed inside the store,&#13;
then the suspect would grab the&#13;
purse and run . Luckily we&#13;
apprehended her and solved four&#13;
or five different complaints&#13;
Students have to take responsibility&#13;
for their property; they&#13;
shoulun't leave things out in the&#13;
open . If you are ripped off, we&#13;
are here twent -four hours a day,&#13;
seven days a week . We cannot&#13;
help you if you won't let us, call&#13;
553-2455 for help.&#13;
RANGER: What about the&#13;
parking situation?&#13;
BRINKMANN: Parking is a&#13;
problem at the university but it is&#13;
getting much better. When the&#13;
university started adding on&#13;
buildings they forgot to provide&#13;
corresponding lots for the&#13;
students; this is why it is such a&#13;
long way from the lots to the&#13;
buildings . We at the security&#13;
department have taken steps to&#13;
make parking easier and&#13;
organized·&#13;
1) At the beginning of each&#13;
semester, officers will be&#13;
stationed at the entrances to the&#13;
lots and we will stoQ any car&#13;
without the proper sticker. This&#13;
will discourage improper parking&#13;
and save a lot of confusion for&#13;
both us and them .&#13;
2) If a student finds that he has&#13;
forgotten his permit all he or she&#13;
has to do i come to the ecurity&#13;
office at the.back of Tallent Hall&#13;
and we will give them a&#13;
temporary permit at little or no&#13;
cost&#13;
RANGER: What 1s the department&#13;
policy on tickets?&#13;
BRINKMANN: We bend over&#13;
back ards at avoiding ticketing,&#13;
if a tudent gets a ticket, he has&#13;
two weeks to pay the three&#13;
dollar , after this two week&#13;
period we send out a notice and&#13;
double the fine. If, after three&#13;
weeks , the .student doesn't&#13;
respond, we go to the Kenosha&#13;
District Attorney's Office and&#13;
serve the student with a traffic&#13;
summons . This means that the&#13;
student must appear in court,&#13;
however, if the student pays us&#13;
one week before the court date,&#13;
he does not have to appear We&#13;
have no quotas to fill, I would&#13;
not judge my officers on the&#13;
number of tickets they can write,&#13;
that would be silly We will give&#13;
a ticket for flagrant v1olat1ons of&#13;
Wisconsin State traffic laws and&#13;
that Is all we are really&#13;
concerned with&#13;
RANGER : How many pedestri·&#13;
an injuries have occured7&#13;
BRINKMANN: It IS amazing to&#13;
me, but not one You would&#13;
expect as hool such as this with&#13;
so much walking to buildings to&#13;
have a substantial amount of&#13;
iniury, but that is not the case&#13;
RANGER: What about parking&#13;
facilities for handicapped students?&#13;
&#13;
BRINKMANN: Right now they&#13;
aren't too good, but in the future&#13;
we plan on building some more&#13;
space for them . The only way a&#13;
handicapped permit can be&#13;
obtained is if the person is in a&#13;
wheelchair and that leaves a lot&#13;
of disab11it1es out.&#13;
RANGER: What is the proce·&#13;
dure for hiring security officers?&#13;
BRINICMANN: Right now we&#13;
are at full staff, but when a&#13;
pot ntial candidate appl1 , we&#13;
run a thorough background&#13;
check and then he is interviewed&#13;
by myself and a board that I have&#13;
set up These recommendations&#13;
are the ones that are used in&#13;
hiring. Security officers that are&#13;
part time must be students, that&#13;
way I am fair to the university in&#13;
providing jobs for students&#13;
RANGER: What happened to&#13;
the student who stabbed&#13;
a istant music professor Tim&#13;
Bell last year?&#13;
BRINKMANN: We apprehended&#13;
him five minutes after the&#13;
incident and lo the best of my&#13;
knowledge he 1s sitting in the&#13;
Keno ha Jail waiting for&#13;
prosecution&#13;
Security offers course&#13;
LARC. 101 APPLIED LARCENY 0(0-0) Thi course op n to und rgraduate&#13;
, graduates, and may be audited without permIs 10n&#13;
PRFRl:QUI ITE CAREL[ S E S 103, I DIFFERF CE 1 ( OTE&#13;
3 Hr ot IGNORA lE 51b may be .. ub~t,tuted )&#13;
JUITIO ane Dependent upon value of propert you can afford&#13;
to relinqu, h.&#13;
MLH I G l lME:S Hour~ arranged by instructor when th be t&#13;
.----------------- ---------- opportunity ex,~t.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Sales people for&#13;
Ranger Ads&#13;
Come to WLLC D-1'73 in the library&#13;
learning center Monday's at 3:00 PM&#13;
or Call 553- 2287 ·&#13;
I STRUC. TORS Cour e taught b numerous profe 1onal and&#13;
a111&lt;1teur m~tructors Some hav served lengthy fello\ ship) at&#13;
atered1ted 1ri t1tut1on&#13;
RlCIS TRATIO!\J tudent need not reg, ter tor th1 course In. trurtor.,&#13;
will tontatt you upon proof of completion ot pr requI\1te,&#13;
Thi, lOUr&lt;,e I\ de 1gned to leave you with an untorgettable&#13;
Niu&lt; c1t1onal t•xpt•m•nt e&#13;
P.S. CSD does not recommend this course to anyone. Please take&#13;
care of your property .&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SCJUARE . THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
STOP IN TODAY AT PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE.&#13;
YOU"LL LOVE THE UNIQUE. COMFORTABLE A TMOSPHEAE&#13;
Bell's case:&#13;
No happy endin&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
Donald Keedle's Journey of terror st&#13;
Vietnam and may end in Central State H&#13;
Waupun late Prison&#13;
Keedle, a former P.O W in Vietnam,&#13;
Timothy B 11, mus, professor at Parkside&#13;
and was apprehended by Parkside secun&#13;
Keedle was brought to court and t&#13;
d termined that a psychiatric exammati&#13;
order to determine the sanity of the us&#13;
recent hearing in Keno ha Court, eedle&#13;
tnd finitely In C ntral tale Ho p1tal cl) Jo&#13;
Assistant D1 trict Attorney of Keno ha, a&#13;
not guilty by r a on of mental d fe t pie&#13;
had also attack d and stabbed his moth&#13;
same day as the Bell stabbing&#13;
Ranger reached Bell at his home and a&#13;
hi fe lings on the case " I am ve,y rehev&#13;
Bell, "1f the man 1s sick, then a hospital&#13;
him the most good I feel a !ot afer now&#13;
being put away " According to a reliabl&#13;
Keedle was uffering from de-lu ,on tha&#13;
nt by the CIA to as a sinat ertam p&#13;
th ourt eemed to a cept the msanit&#13;
little h 1tat1on&#13;
After th stabbing, Keedle wa impri on&#13;
K nosha ount Jail and then tran f&#13;
Downey A ho p1tal for p ychiatric&#13;
aft r numerou, court h ring here, he wa&#13;
b tw en ntral State and Kenosha&#13;
Ho p1tals . ~or l\eedl, tht: pain and suffenn&#13;
coming to an end und r the care of phy i&#13;
Bell, the road to re overy I just b ginnrn&#13;
really ~hook up after the mc1d nt and I am&#13;
getting back to normal. I or a while, th&#13;
gr at lack of communication b twe n m&#13;
the DA' office and th, up et me a great&#13;
Ranger had heard a rumor that Park&#13;
w1 hed the charges against Keedle drop&#13;
inform d of the rumor, Bell stated, "if I&#13;
out that th,s v as tru , I would I ave the&#13;
1mmed1ately "&#13;
There are no happy ending to a sto&#13;
but it 1s said that time 1s a great he&#13;
hop fully, Tim Bell and his family and&#13;
Keedle and hi famil , will have a lot ol&#13;
heal &#13;
ne~s&#13;
Leathernecks recruit leaders&#13;
puts mto his or her educauon the&#13;
V A will match It with two&#13;
dollars The veteran may&#13;
contribute SSO - S75 for twelve&#13;
consecutive months and end up&#13;
with a oossrbte S8,100 In&#13;
educational assistance to be&#13;
used over a ten vear period If&#13;
the veteran decides not to go on&#13;
to college, he/she will receive&#13;
his or her entire contribution&#13;
back&#13;
Interested students will have&#13;
another chance to Irnd out more&#13;
about the PLC later In the year&#13;
"hen the team will return&#13;
I asked Capt Rock what the&#13;
biggest problems are with the&#13;
mformanon tables on campus&#13;
He commented, 'Probably the&#13;
most common reaction from&#13;
students IS Ignorance of the&#13;
Manne Corps and Ignorance of&#13;
the program They assocrare us&#13;
as ROTC We're not ••&#13;
Some students also think of&#13;
the service as an optional career&#13;
If nothing else comes up These&#13;
people Will not make It In the&#13;
program The average successful&#13;
candidate will have a 2.S - 30&#13;
CPA, Will be a solid student, and&#13;
wlil probably be athlelic&#13;
.Apathv IS the bigg st block."&#13;
according to Rock&#13;
lJeutenants as ground level&#13;
management, since higher rankmg&#13;
officers relate more to high&#13;
management.&#13;
There are no women in the&#13;
PLC program since the Manne&#13;
Corps does not allow women In&#13;
the aviation field nor In a&#13;
combat ground role Women do&#13;
have an officer training program,&#13;
though&#13;
When I asked Captain Rock&#13;
how he personally felt about&#13;
having women in combat roles.&#13;
as the army and navy have&#13;
recently begun do 109, he replied,&#13;
"If they can hack It, fine,"&#13;
There have recently been a&#13;
greater number of reports of&#13;
racial Incuon in the Manne&#13;
Corps According to Captain&#13;
Rock there IS no stgrufrcant&#13;
difference between the racial&#13;
problems In the service and&#13;
those of civilian life. The Manne&#13;
Corps philosophy has always&#13;
been that all Marines are trained&#13;
as Marines. There IS no black or&#13;
white. just green&#13;
There IS also a new Veterans&#13;
Educational ASSistance Act to&#13;
replace the old one which&#13;
expired this past December 31&#13;
As of January 1, 1977, the new&#13;
VEA went Into effect. Thts means&#13;
that for every dollar the veteran&#13;
ten-week period between their&#13;
[unior and senior years. Upon&#13;
completion of the program they&#13;
are guaranteed a commission&#13;
with the option of selecting their&#13;
own MOS (Military Occupational&#13;
Specialty). Persons entering&#13;
the aviation and law fields&#13;
are guaranteed those fields&#13;
Most Marine Corps Officers&#13;
now come out of such programs&#13;
as PLC (Only about 6% come out&#13;
of the Naval Academy), In fact,&#13;
Captain Rock, of the selection&#13;
team, came out of the PlC from&#13;
the Urnversitv of Vermont in&#13;
1968. He has been in the Corps&#13;
for five years and considers the&#13;
Corps, "a good career in itself"&#13;
According to Captain Rock,&#13;
most candidates come out of the&#13;
liberal arts fields. This is due to&#13;
the fact that the liberal arts&#13;
degree is more general and&#13;
opens up a greater number of&#13;
possible fields which can be&#13;
taken advantage of both in the&#13;
military and civilian roles. As an&#13;
officer the active duty role gives&#13;
practical experience In management.&#13;
Most three year officers&#13;
leave the service after their&#13;
initial tour of duty for some&#13;
liberal arts field in civilian life&#13;
This leaves a need for new&#13;
people, especially for first&#13;
by Jeffrey J. Swencki&#13;
While meandering down the&#13;
concourse across from the&#13;
library last Wednesday and-,&#13;
Thursday you may have noticed&#13;
the scarlet and gold colors of the&#13;
United States Marine Corps&#13;
draped across a table lined with&#13;
various bits of mformation about&#13;
the Corps.&#13;
The men behind the tables&#13;
were members of an officer&#13;
selection team here to introduce&#13;
the Platoon Leaders Class (PLC)&#13;
to interested students.&#13;
The PLC is a program in which&#13;
a person may enroll, stay in&#13;
school, train during the summer,&#13;
graduate, and enter the Corps on&#13;
their Wa)j to becoming a second&#13;
lieutenant. The minimum enlistment&#13;
is three years and there are&#13;
three basic programs open:&#13;
ground-occupations varying&#13;
from infantry&#13;
to administration,&#13;
eit - aviation,&#13;
law - judicial.&#13;
Contrary to some people's&#13;
belief, the PLC program is not an&#13;
ROTC. PLC is off-campus,&#13;
freshmen and sophomores training&#13;
for six weeks during the two&#13;
summers. Juniors train for one&#13;
* **&#13;
Thousand of veterans With&#13;
dl'icharge. dates \vuhm the pa~t&#13;
10 years may quahtv for 4S&#13;
months trarmng entu.l menl&#13;
Ing under the CI Bill,&#13;
*' * *&#13;
FIBER STUDENTS !I!&#13;
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Wide variety af unique bulkies.&#13;
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relieV " ~d&#13;
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ain pel" a1id&#13;
anilY ~ ... h&#13;
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WEAVER'S ALLEY&#13;
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dl::~:: Ranger still&#13;
'~n m 1~I.:"d needs more&#13;
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t park lI.".d writers&#13;
dropP&lt;!r I n&#13;
I "if I' ~dphotographers&#13;
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SeleCflon&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Submarine&#13;
Sandwich'&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P,M,&#13;
2615 Washington/We. 6*,2J73&#13;
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needs more&#13;
writers&#13;
photographers&#13;
production&#13;
helpl&#13;
news&#13;
Leathernecks recruit leaders&#13;
by Jeffrey J. Swencki&#13;
While meandering down the&#13;
concour e a ro from the&#13;
library last Wedne da and&#13;
Thur day you ma', have noticed&#13;
the earl t and gold colors of the&#13;
Unit d State Marin Corp&#13;
drap d acros a table lined w,th&#13;
various b,t of information about&#13;
the Corps&#13;
The men b hind the table&#13;
were members of an officer&#13;
election team h re to introduce&#13;
th Platoon Leader Clas (PLC)&#13;
to int rested student&#13;
The PLC is a program in which&#13;
a per on ma enroll. stay in&#13;
chool. tram during the summer,&#13;
graduate, and enter the Corp on&#13;
th ir way to becoming a econd&#13;
lieutenant The minimum enl, tment&#13;
1s three years and there are&#13;
three basic program open.&#13;
ground-occupat1om ar~'ing&#13;
from infantry&#13;
to admin1strat1on,&#13;
air - aviation,&#13;
law - Judicial.&#13;
Contrary to ome people'&#13;
belief, the PLC program , not an&#13;
ROTC PLC , off-campu •&#13;
freshmen and sophomores training&#13;
for s,x weeks during the two&#13;
summer . Juniors train for one&#13;
Selet1ton&#13;
ten·w ek p nod b tween their&#13;
Junior and nior ear . Upon&#13;
compl t1on of th program the&#13;
are guaranteed a comm, s,on&#13;
with the option of selecting their&#13;
own O (Military Occupational&#13;
pecialt ). Per ons enterin&#13;
• the a 1at1on and la fields&#13;
are guaranteed tho e t, Id&#13;
Mo t Manne Corp Of 1cer&#13;
no come out of such program&#13;
as PL (Onl about 0% come out&#13;
of the 'aval Academ ·) In act,&#13;
Captain Rock, ol the election&#13;
t am, cam out of th PLC trom&#13;
the Un1ver~1t ot ermont in&#13;
1 b8 He ha been in the Corp&#13;
for fiv year and con 1der the&#13;
Corps, "a good career in 1tsel "&#13;
According to Captain Rock,&#13;
mo t candidate come out ol the&#13;
liberal art fields This I du to&#13;
the act that the liberal arts&#13;
d gree I more neral and&#13;
open up a greater numb r ot&#13;
po ,ble field wh, h can be&#13;
taken ad1;anta e of both in the&#13;
military and c, ,ltan roles A an&#13;
officer the active dut · role g1 e&#13;
practical expenenc in mana ement&#13;
Mo t three year officer&#13;
leave the erv1ce a ter their&#13;
m1t1al tour of dut for some&#13;
liberal arts field in civilian life&#13;
Th, leave a need for ne\4.&#13;
people, e pec,all • for irst&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Submarin&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A. . TIL 10:30 P .M.&#13;
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WEA YER'S ALLEY 12:3 to 6:00 o .-Fri.&#13;
345 Mai Sof\lfdo s b &#13;
1&#13;
sports : • 0°.&#13;
·/··········&#13;
: .&#13;
.~. . ~.&#13;
-, . ..&#13;
"." .&#13;
Rangers on road trip Wrestlers face&#13;
active week&#13;
situations.&#13;
The Rangers couldn't keep&#13;
things going offensively without&#13;
their leading scorer, Leartha&#13;
'Scott, as Scott picked his fourth&#13;
foul with more than 13 minutes&#13;
left to play.&#13;
Coach Stephens at that point&#13;
was forced to pull Scott , who&#13;
then had 20 points. Scott&#13;
returned seven m inures later and&#13;
got off only one shot on a&#13;
technical foul on Creen Bay's&#13;
Ron Ripley with 1:48 left.&#13;
The team opened the game&#13;
battling more fiercely than is&#13;
usually displayed by the team as&#13;
they held the Phoenix to 13 and&#13;
they scored twice that with a&#13;
controlling man-to-man defense.&#13;
But Creen Bay penetrated as the&#13;
first half came to a close and&#13;
narrowed the Parkside lead to&#13;
seven at 34-23.&#13;
by Jean Tenuta much as 13 at some points.&#13;
Perhaps most prevalent of&#13;
these conditions leading to the&#13;
collapse was an inability to&#13;
connect from the free throw lane&#13;
as less than eight minutes were&#13;
left and the Rangers holding a&#13;
53-45 lead.&#13;
"We did everything out there&#13;
but make free throws," said&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens. "We&#13;
outplayed them."&#13;
The second contributing cause&#13;
wasa no-point stall in the closing&#13;
minutes. The Rangers stalled&#13;
between the free throw line and&#13;
center court line as Green Bay&#13;
played a tight zone defense. ThE&gt;&#13;
team planned on a usual easy&#13;
bucket but never got one.&#13;
Parkside players also missed&#13;
several first shots in bonus&#13;
Parkside's basketball team will&#13;
clash with Wayne State Saturday&#13;
and UW-Green Bay Monday in&#13;
the third and fourth games of&#13;
their current five game road trip.&#13;
The team played Central State&#13;
last Monday and beat Wright&#13;
State Saturday, 69.f&gt;4.&#13;
The Rangers will be seeking&#13;
revenge on the Number One&#13;
ranked Phoenix, as they lost in&#13;
the last 11 seconds here, 61-59,&#13;
January 18.&#13;
Green Bay took their first lead&#13;
of the evening at 60-59 on a slop&#13;
shot by Jerry Blackwell with 11&#13;
remaining on the clock.&#13;
Three factors contributed to&#13;
the loss, as Parkside was unable&#13;
to hang on to a lead that was as&#13;
Gruner, with an overall record&#13;
of 15'{) beat his opponent from&#13;
Middle Tennessee, 6-0 in the&#13;
finals and Gale won on&#13;
disqualification to give him a&#13;
13-2 record overall.&#13;
Ron Zmuda was second at 167&#13;
losing to Ron Rabensdorf, 4-3, of&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
Most Competitive in the meet&#13;
was the 126 pound class, where&#13;
three possible national champions&#13;
competed. Dan O'Connell&#13;
of Parkside was third, losing toGary&#13;
Stoll, an All-American from&#13;
Anderson College on a referree's&#13;
decision.&#13;
"O'Connell has been wrestling&#13;
well for us this season," said&#13;
Coach Jim Koch. "He's better&#13;
than his 15-2 record indicates,&#13;
with his losses coming to&#13;
national champions. He could&#13;
have beaten the champion of the&#13;
meet in the finals."&#13;
by Thomas Nolen&#13;
The nationally fifth ranked&#13;
Ranger wrestling squad will be&#13;
active in two meets during the&#13;
coming week.&#13;
Parkside faces UW-LaCrosse&#13;
Friday in a dual meet here at 4&#13;
·p.m. and will participate in the&#13;
Grand Valley Double Dual&#13;
Saturday in Allendale, Michigan.&#13;
The Rangers were second in&#13;
the 17 team Anderson Invitational&#13;
Friday and Satyrday in&#13;
Anderson Indiana.&#13;
UW-Whitewater won the meet&#13;
with 671&#13;
/2; Parkside had 57V2 i&#13;
Ball State had 48 '/" followed by&#13;
Taylor University, 44'12 and&#13;
Middle-Tennessee, 44.&#13;
Parkside had two individual&#13;
champions, Bob Gruner and&#13;
John Cale at 150 and&#13;
heavyweight respectively.&#13;
Swimmers set records&#13;
with a time of 2: 16.8.&#13;
Nelson won the 200 free in&#13;
1:58.0and was second in the 500&#13;
free.&#13;
Wilbershide won the 200 fly in&#13;
2: 18.37 and was second in the&#13;
1000 free.&#13;
Rick Haas won the 200 breast&#13;
in 2:30.24 and was third in the&#13;
200 I.M.&#13;
Kwas added seconds in the 200&#13;
fly and 200 free to the Ranger&#13;
score.&#13;
Rick Lopes took thirds in the&#13;
500 free and 1000 free and&#13;
Mihran Gaghinjian was third in&#13;
the 00 free.&#13;
"I'm pleased with our&#13;
performances so far this season,"&#13;
said Coach Lawson. "We've&#13;
shown an increase in our&#13;
endurance and we're comin-g&#13;
along well."&#13;
by Jean Tenuta beat them," said Coach Lawson.&#13;
"We thought we'd have to win&#13;
the relay to win the meet before&#13;
we swam it, but we had already&#13;
had the meet won. We swam&#13;
very well in the relay and did win&#13;
that event also:"&#13;
Coach Lawson continued, "It&#13;
was a very competitive meet&#13;
with tenths of seconds spearating&#13;
the first and second place&#13;
finishers. This meet is probably&#13;
one of the most evenly matched&#13;
of the season."&#13;
jim Ferrarowon the 60 and 100&#13;
freestyle events with times of&#13;
28.29 and 49.5 respectively and&#13;
joined Kevin Nelson, Rich Kwas&#13;
and Bob Wilbershide to win the&#13;
relay in 3:30.1.&#13;
Keith Kruegar was also a&#13;
double winner, in both the 100&#13;
I.M. in 1:46.7 and the 200 back&#13;
The men's swim team hosts&#13;
UW-Milwaukee and Carthage&#13;
Saturday at 1 p.m. in the pool.&#13;
The team lost to Milwaukee&#13;
earlier in the season, but since&#13;
then, according to Coach Barb&#13;
lawson, Parkside has improved&#13;
and although they need more&#13;
depth, the Rangers should&#13;
provide good competition in&#13;
some of the races.&#13;
The swimmers beat the&#13;
University of Chicago in the&#13;
school's 20 yard pool 58-42 to up&#13;
the season record to 4-4.&#13;
The Rangers took seven&#13;
individual firsts breaking several&#13;
records and won the 400 free&#13;
relay to beat Chicago for the first&#13;
time ever.&#13;
"It was a nice surprise for us to&#13;
Contest slated&#13;
The Physical Education Department&#13;
is Sponsoring a&#13;
basketball free throw contest. It&#13;
started on January 17 and ends&#13;
on February 3. The contest is&#13;
being held on Tuesdays and&#13;
Thursdays from 11:00 a.m. to&#13;
1:00 p.m.&#13;
There are three categories in&#13;
which to shoot in: men, women,&#13;
and staff. Each person has 25&#13;
attempts per day and at the end&#13;
of the contest, the person with&#13;
the most free throws completed&#13;
will win a trophy.&#13;
reminder&#13;
- 2,30 p.m.&#13;
7,30 p.m.&#13;
--.2,30 p.m.&#13;
7,30 .m .&#13;
Thursday&#13;
Girls B-ball seeks win•&#13;
"H~~MA~S/&#13;
I&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
6.7 per game, which is not an&#13;
outstanding mark against a taller&#13;
opponent&#13;
Henderson also has blamed&#13;
some of the team's lack of&#13;
success on the problem of&#13;
getting ali of the players there for&#13;
the games.&#13;
In the loss to Concordia&#13;
College, their best scorer so far,&#13;
Frozene Lott, who is averaging&#13;
13 points a game, was out due to&#13;
illness Karen Oster, also a strong&#13;
offensive player with a 10 point&#13;
per game average, was also&#13;
unable to be there.&#13;
Besides Lott, Kolovos and&#13;
Oster, the team does not have&#13;
any other consistently good&#13;
scorers. "We haven't had&#13;
Jim Heiring, walk in 14:15.3. balanced scoring and many of&#13;
our drives have resulted in The team took the first through&#13;
The men's and women's track I . h CL"':- -missed shots," said Henderson fifth places in the wa k WIt • IUl:lo&#13;
teams opened their indoor season - Hansen second, John VanDen ' In addition to these factors,&#13;
with a meet at Racine Park High Brandt next, AI Halbur and Mike statistics from the free throw&#13;
School in which outstanding Rummelhardt. lane show that, according to&#13;
performances were turned in, Bill W d i th 880 Henderson, was the difference {n r- erve was seccn In e ;&#13;
according to Coach Bob Lawson. Bob Seidel and Neal Nlckknrs were the game.&#13;
Winners in the meet were Jeff fourth and fifth in the shot and The Rangers made three of 12&#13;
Sitz.fong jump at Zy l"and&lt;nyd. Pri . k d d I th in the game, seven misses of uv nero pte e up a secon 10 e&#13;
dash; Ranjith Perran, triple jump two mile run. which were the first shot in the&#13;
at 46' l03;'''i Pat Bums, shot put, Barb Zaiman for the womentook bonus situation.&#13;
51' 1": Bob Meekma... a transfer a first in the 440 in 62.3 and a Coach Henderson expects his&#13;
from Madison. pole vault, clearing second in the 60 yd. dash. Coach team complete for the tornor14",&#13;
Herb Degroot, 440 01'53.6', La wson expects er to h do we s U thi row's game and hopes that they&#13;
G P . 880' 2024 R will, at least, keep the team in&#13;
Fredricksen, mile ~n ary nem, ir01;J~:~.~;~~a~y_~&lt;ea:so:n~. in 4.28 ann ~~~~£~~~~~:~:...~~~~~!~!!!~~~~~~~~~~~!~~~~~ the game all of the way.&#13;
The team has been plagued&#13;
with several'problerns so far this&#13;
season, according to Coach Hal&#13;
Henderson.&#13;
Henderson describes his team&#13;
as "short, aggressive and having&#13;
a lack of rebounding," which has&#13;
hurt them, as other teams have&#13;
towered over them and in their&#13;
struggle to gain control of play,&#13;
they have picked up many fouls.&#13;
The team's top rebounder in&#13;
the previous three games had&#13;
been Kolovos, but her average is&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside's women's basketball&#13;
team will face Waukesha Tech in&#13;
their second home game of the&#13;
season Thursday at 8 p.rn.&#13;
The Rangers lost their last&#13;
outing against Concordia Junior&#13;
College, 38-25, January 18, in a&#13;
game preceeding the men's&#13;
contest with UW-Green Bay.&#13;
Dita Hunter led the team with&#13;
12 points and Diana Kolovos had&#13;
11.&#13;
~'~'.~"..,~. _.. .......&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
YOUNG ADULT&#13;
Track season opens NIGHT&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Admission $1.25&#13;
Skate Rental 50(&#13;
RED'S ROLLER RINK&#13;
622" 67th St., leao.h.·&#13;
i••t oH .it•••, 3J&#13;
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. . . : .&#13;
. . . . .&#13;
Rangers on road trip&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Park 1de' basketball team will&#13;
cla h with Wayne State Saturday&#13;
and UW-Green Bay Monday in&#13;
th third and fourth games of&#13;
their current five game road trip&#13;
The team played Central State&#13;
la t Monday and beat Wright&#13;
State Saturday, 69-64.&#13;
The Rangers will be seeking&#13;
revenge on the umber One&#13;
ranked Phoenix, as they lost in&#13;
th last 11 seconds here, 61-59,&#13;
January 18&#13;
Green Bay took their first lead&#13;
of th evening at 60-59 on a slop&#13;
shot by Jerry Blackwell with 11&#13;
remaining on the clock.&#13;
Three factors contributed to&#13;
the los , as Parkside was unable&#13;
to hang on to a lead that was as&#13;
much as 13 at some points.&#13;
Perhap most prevalent of&#13;
these conditions leading to the&#13;
collapse was an inability to&#13;
connect from the free throw lane&#13;
as less than eight minutes were&#13;
left and the Rangers holding a&#13;
53-45 lead.&#13;
"We did everything out there&#13;
but make free throws," said&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens "We&#13;
outplayed them "&#13;
The second contributing cause&#13;
was a no-point stall in the closing&#13;
minutes The Rangers stalled&#13;
between the free throw line and&#13;
center court line as Green Bay&#13;
played a tight zone defense. The&#13;
team planned on a usual easy&#13;
bucket but never got one.&#13;
Parkside players also missed&#13;
several first shots in bonus&#13;
s1tuat1ons&#13;
The Ranger couldn't keep&#13;
thing going offensively without&#13;
their leading scorer, Leartha&#13;
S ott, a Scott picked his fourth&#13;
foul with more than 13 minutes&#13;
left to play.&#13;
Coach Stephens at that point&#13;
was forced to pull cott , who&#13;
then had 20 points Scott&#13;
returned seven minutes later and&#13;
got off only one shot on a&#13;
technical foul on Green Bay·s&#13;
Ron Ripley with 1 48 left.&#13;
The team opened the game&#13;
battling more fiercely than 1s&#13;
usually displayed by the team as&#13;
they held the Phoenix to 13 and&#13;
they scored twice that with a&#13;
controlling man-to-man defense&#13;
But Green Bay penetrated as the&#13;
first half came to a close and&#13;
narrowed the Parkside lead to&#13;
seven at 34-23&#13;
Swimmers set records&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
The men' swim team hosts&#13;
UW-M1lwaukee and Carthage&#13;
aturday at 1 p m in the pool&#13;
The team lo t to Milwaukee&#13;
earlier in the eason, but since&#13;
then, according to Coach Barb&#13;
Law on, Parkside has improved&#13;
nd although th n ed more&#13;
d pth, the Rang r hould&#13;
prov1d good compet1t1on m&#13;
orne of the race&#13;
The swimmer beat the&#13;
Universit of Ch, ago in the&#13;
chool' 20 yard pool 58-42 to up&#13;
th season record to 4-4&#13;
Th Ranger took even&#13;
md1v1dual ftr t br akin everal&#13;
r cord and won the 400 tree&#13;
relay to beat Chicago for the first&#13;
time v r&#13;
"It wa a nice surprise for u to&#13;
beat th m," sa,d Coach Lawson .&#13;
··we thought we'd have to win&#13;
the relay to win the meet before&#13;
we swam 1t, but we had already&#13;
had the meet won. \ e swam&#13;
very well in the relay and did win&#13;
that event also ."&#13;
Coach Lawson continued, " It&#13;
wa a very competitive meet&#13;
with tenth of seconds spearating&#13;
th fir t and econd place&#13;
t1n1 hers This m et i prc,bably&#13;
one of he most evenly matched&#13;
of the eason ."&#13;
)Im Ferraro won the 60 and 100&#13;
freestyle vents with time of&#13;
28.29 and 49 5 resp ct1vely and&#13;
Joined Kevin elson, Rich Kwas&#13;
and Bob Wilb r hid to war, the&#13;
relay in 3 30.1.&#13;
Keith Kruegar was al o a&#13;
double winner, in both the 160&#13;
1.M rn 1 46.7 and the 200 back •&#13;
with a time of 2:16 8&#13;
el on won the 200 fr in&#13;
1. 513 0 and wa second in the 500&#13;
free .&#13;
Wilbersh1de won the 200 fly in&#13;
2: 18 37 and was econd in the&#13;
1000 free&#13;
Rick Haas won the 200 breast&#13;
in 2 30 24 and was third in the&#13;
200 IM&#13;
Kwas added econds in the 200&#13;
ti , and 200 fre to the Ran •er&#13;
cor&#13;
Rick Lope took thirds in the&#13;
500 free and 1000 fr and&#13;
Mahran Gaghin11an wa third 1n&#13;
the 60 free&#13;
"I'm pleased with our&#13;
performance o tar this sea on,"&#13;
aid Coach Lawson "We've&#13;
shown an increase in our&#13;
endurance and e·re comm&#13;
along well"&#13;
Girls I-ball seeks win •&#13;
b Jean Tenuta&#13;
Park 1de' women's ba ketball&#13;
team will face Wauke ha Tech in&#13;
their second home game of th&#13;
season Thur day at 8 p m&#13;
The Rangers lost their last&#13;
outing against Concordia Junior&#13;
Colleg , 38-25, January 18, in a&#13;
game pr ceeding the men's&#13;
contest with UW-Green Bay.&#13;
Dita Hunter I d the team with&#13;
12 poinu and Diana Kolovos had&#13;
11.&#13;
The t am ha been plagu d&#13;
with seve~al problems so far th1&#13;
s ason, according to Coach Hal&#13;
Henderson&#13;
Hender on de cribes his team&#13;
as "short, aggres 1ve and having&#13;
a lack of rebounding," which has&#13;
hurt them, a other teams have&#13;
tow red over them and in their&#13;
truggl to gain control of play,&#13;
they have picked up many fouls.&#13;
The team's top rebounder m&#13;
the previous three games had&#13;
been Kolovos, but her average 1s&#13;
Track season opens&#13;
Th men' nd Yoomen·s track&#13;
opened their indoor on&#13;
meet t Racine Park Hi&#13;
Jim Heiring, walk in 14:1 .3.&#13;
The team took the fir t thr ugh&#13;
fifth place in the alk Yoith _Chris&#13;
H n en e ond, John V nD n&#13;
Brandt next, Al H lbur and Mike&#13;
Rumm lhardt&#13;
perform nee were turned m, Bill Werve as ond m th&#13;
6.7 per game, which I not an&#13;
out tandmg mark against a taller&#13;
oppon nt&#13;
Hender on also ha blamed&#13;
ome of the team' lack of&#13;
succe s on the problem of&#13;
getting all of the player th re for&#13;
th game .&#13;
In the loss to Concordia&#13;
College, their be t corer so far,&#13;
Frozene Lott, who is averaging&#13;
13 point a game, wa out due to&#13;
1llnes Karen O ter, al o a strong&#13;
offensive player with a 10 point&#13;
per game average, was also&#13;
unable to be there.&#13;
Besides Lott, Kolovos and&#13;
Oster, the team does not have&#13;
any other consistently good&#13;
scor~rs "We haven t had&#13;
balanced coring and many of&#13;
our dnv have r ulted&#13;
m1&#13;
, In&#13;
ae ording to Coach Bob La on. Bob Seidel and Neal icklollS were&#13;
Winn r in the meet w re \ ff fourth and fifth in the h and O 12&#13;
l'b longJ·ump at 23• 1" and 60 ·d. p · · k d d . h m the game, even m1 ~es of ..., nem pie e up a s con m t e d h: R njith p rran, triple jump t\\O mile run. which "ere the fir t shot m the&#13;
at 46' 10¾"; Pat Bum , hot put, Barb Zaiman for the women took bonu. ifuation&#13;
51' l "; Bob Meekma , a transfer a first in the 440 in 62.3 and a Coach Hend r on expects hi&#13;
from Maruson, pole vault, clearing econd in the 60 yd. dash. Coach team complete for the tomor14'·,&#13;
Herb Degroot, 440 'm 53.6·, La wson h t d 11 this row's game and hope that they expects er o o we G Pri 880 · 2 02 4 R will, at least, keep the team in&#13;
sports&#13;
Wrestlers face&#13;
active week&#13;
by Thomas Nolen&#13;
The nationally fifth ranked&#13;
Ranger wrestling squad will be&#13;
active in two meets during the&#13;
coming week.&#13;
Parkside faces UW-LaCrosse&#13;
Friday m a dual meet here at 4&#13;
p.m and will participate m the&#13;
Grand Valley Double Dual&#13;
aturday in Allendale, M1ch1gan.&#13;
The Rangers were second in&#13;
the 17 team Anderson Invitational&#13;
Friday and Saturday in&#13;
Anderson Indiana&#13;
UW-Wh1t water won the meet&#13;
with 67 ½; Park 1de had 57 ½;&#13;
Ball State had 48 ½ followed by&#13;
Taylor University, 44½ and&#13;
Middle-Tennessee, 44.&#13;
Parkside had two ind1v1dual&#13;
champions, Bob Gruner and&#13;
John Gale at 150 and&#13;
heav weight respectively&#13;
Contest slated&#13;
The Physical Education Department&#13;
is ponsoring a&#13;
basketball fr thro" conte t It&#13;
t rted on January 17 and nd&#13;
o n february 3 The cont t 1\&#13;
being h Id on Tue days and&#13;
Thur da ~ from 1 I 00 a m to&#13;
1.00 pm&#13;
Th re ar three categori in&#13;
"h1ch to hoot m men, wom n,&#13;
and tall Each p r on ha 25&#13;
attempts per day and at the end&#13;
of th conte t, th p r on 1th&#13;
th most fr , thro" compl t d&#13;
will win a trophy.&#13;
/&#13;
Gruner, with an overall record&#13;
of 15-0 beat his opponent from&#13;
Middle Tennesi e, 6-0 in the&#13;
finals and Gale won on&#13;
disqualification to give him a&#13;
13-2 record overall&#13;
Ron Zmuda was second at 167&#13;
losing to Ron Rabensdorf, 4-3, of&#13;
Whitewater&#13;
Most Compet1t1ve in the meet&#13;
was the 126 pound class, where&#13;
three possible national champions&#13;
competed . Dan O'Connell&#13;
of Parkside was third, losing to&#13;
Gary Stoll, an All-American from&#13;
And rson College on a r ferree'&#13;
decision .&#13;
"O'Connell has been wrestling&#13;
well for us this season," said&#13;
Coach Jim Koch . "He's better&#13;
than h1 15-2 record indicates,&#13;
with hi losses oming to&#13;
national champions He- could&#13;
hav b aten th champion of the&#13;
m t in th finals "&#13;
Just a reminder&#13;
Wednesday - 2:30 p.m.&#13;
7130 p.m.&#13;
Thursday - 2:30 p.m.&#13;
7130 .m .&#13;
PureBre d I From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
YOUNG ADULT&#13;
NIGHT&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Admi • 10n $1.25&#13;
fi:&#13;
RED'S ROLLE I K&#13;
6220 671 St., le 01ha&#13;
i••t off lli1 war 31&#13;
ary em, m : . ; ay -.ea on.&#13;
Fredricksen, mile ru~n~in:::....4::.:·.:::28~ an::.:.:,;rl~ _ __,. ___ ______ _ ___ t __ h .... e __ g.,..a..,m=e.,..a.,..1.,..I "'o"'f :::th-:,e:-=w"".'a-:-y-·-==---:~-__,.;.--------,----::---:-'----~=----::--::-----:---~-:=-::-=-::--' &#13;
d&#13;
n&#13;
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1&#13;
a&#13;
Dean receives Fulbright&#13;
profs&#13;
by Robert Holfman He will be in Korea until June 30th, and will then&#13;
do some traveling around ASIa In Korea, he will be&#13;
The Fulbright Commission was established in in charge of three English classes with a total&#13;
1948,its aim being to allow foreign governments to enrollment of 85 people He will be teaching&#13;
pay-of! debts to the U.s. by paying the living and American Irterature with a two-fold intent, 1) an&#13;
traveling expenses of outstanding members in exchange of cultures and 2} furthering the spread of&#13;
different fields of study the English language&#13;
Dennis Dean, associate professor of English, is His benefit will be a further understanding of&#13;
one of only 1.000 Americans to receive the award Asian culture which will contribute to his teaching&#13;
this year. He is also the first professor from Parkside experience Next fall he will be teaching Asian&#13;
to receive a Fulbright scholarship. He will be literature here at Parkside.&#13;
leaving shortly for Quing [u, South Korea, and will "l'rn a tenured faculty member, I'm taking a leave&#13;
be the first American professor to establish of absence without salary or benefits and I plan to&#13;
residence in this city. resume teaching in the fall. I don't have any&#13;
This is not the first time Dean has received the mobility plans. My career intent is to develop&#13;
Fulbright scholarship. In 1973, while traveling in further my understanding of Asian culture. My wife&#13;
Asia he was awarded the Fulbright scholarship to and I have always been interested in Asia, and we&#13;
teach in Pakistan. Unfortunately by the time he expect to have a fun time," stated Dean, regarding&#13;
came back from his trip he was informed that the his reasons for accepting the scholarship.&#13;
scholarship had been awarded to the second place As to political matters, or expectations about&#13;
candidate. Professor Dean reapplied this time cultural and general things, Dean feels that that will&#13;
asking for South Korea. Early in the fall he was have to wait until he comes back from Korea. He is&#13;
informed that he had qualified. ~planning to send reports back to the Ranger from&#13;
South Korea.&#13;
,."'.:.:&#13;
. .&#13;
Professor Dennis aeen&#13;
Happel runs for Board&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
EDITOR'S NOTE:&#13;
A tenner econcmrc s teacher turned as,",I'ttant protes..or of&#13;
educ anon at Parksrde. MarVin Happel declared hIScandrdacv tor the&#13;
RaCInE'Umned School DI...tnct Board Iavt week&#13;
1he Ractne board ha.. been quite controversial and Happel In an&#13;
mtervtew with RAf'\.-GER. spoke of the need for new leaderchtp and&#13;
other tOPIC ...concerrung the Racine School Drstnc t and the election&#13;
Happel received tu-, Ph 0 trom onhwestern Umvervuv In SOCIal&#13;
-c renee educ auon and hi!&gt; M S from UVh\.~Il\\auk(·e In urban&#13;
edut auon. rome to Parkvrde 111197J&#13;
A ..tudent group supporttng Happe.... ettcrtv I.., bemu termed on&#13;
campu ... 11you Me uuerested contact leanrune Sro vrna at b32·234:-&#13;
lor mort' mtormauon&#13;
RANGER: First of all, as a student teachmg supervisor and professor&#13;
at Parkside, how do you view the current snuanon between the REA&#13;
and the School Board, WIth the teachers possiblv going to stnke thrs&#13;
Friday?&#13;
HAPPEl: It's like any dispute. where both srdes have usually, orne&#13;
fault But I thmk that It' the school board', lob to try to keep the&#13;
schools gOIOgand to consider all factors which mcludev tE'dchl'r&#13;
morale and employee morale _\'\'tth the bltternes; dnd the I.ack 01&#13;
compromise and ~o on that seemsto be going on now, tho:llthe only&#13;
senSIblethmg IS to submit It to some lorm of drbltratlon I preff:'f the&#13;
last best offer type ot arbitration but I ''would e\en accept the RlA'\&#13;
type of proposed arbitration If necessary&#13;
RANGER: How do you reatt to this d3 being d former Instructor at&#13;
Park H,gh School1 Would you say that thIS decr.ne In morale durmg&#13;
the past few years would Include your tenure at Parkl Is It due to the&#13;
members of the school board, If that's the cause1&#13;
HAPPEl:lls not a SImple thIng You can't totally lust lay It on to Just&#13;
one type-of thIng, there are several things happening there's been a&#13;
decline In enrollment, which demoralizes teachers, because there a&#13;
threat of layoffs hanging on therr heads But there'S bt':en a&#13;
consIstently growing faction on the board that almost seems to be&#13;
antHeacher and there doesn t seem to be strong leadership 10 any&#13;
way on the other side.&#13;
RANGER: Why are you running In this particular school board&#13;
electlon1&#13;
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HAPPEL:For one thmg, 1was asked But the biggest reason, I think, IS&#13;
that I've been gettIng increasingly dISgusted With the lack of, well,&#13;
the fact that the)' have constant strikes hanging over our head ISthe&#13;
sign of a deeper problem If It isn't the teachers, It'S the custodIans,&#13;
the secretaries, all of those seem to feel that they are beIng nlls"&#13;
treated I thmk that If thiS were In private industry, whenever a large&#13;
IOdustry or bUSiness gets IOto thiS kmd of trouble With theIr&#13;
employees, usually the only solution to the problem ISto have a mass&#13;
housecleanmg at the top and brrng in a whole new management team&#13;
and I feel that it's Just that kind of tIme, that there has to be some&#13;
sweeping changes to clear the air and set the school system where&#13;
kids can call and feel that they're gOing to go to school and parents&#13;
and community feel that they're lust not going to have a threat of a&#13;
strike, a threat of a strike isn't always going to be hanging over them&#13;
Cent.rs in M.;Or U.S. Cities&#13;
profs&#13;
Dean receives Fulbright&#13;
by Robert Hoffman&#13;
1h f ulbr1ght omnm ,on was tabl1 h d in&#13;
1q48, 1t a,m being to allow foreign overnm nt, to&#13;
pay off debts to th U S bv pa) ing the living dnd&#13;
traveling p n e of outstanding member 1n&#13;
d1tf r nt t1 Id ot tud&#13;
D nn, Dean, as,oc,ate profes or of Engh h. ,s&#13;
one of only 1,000 Americans to receive the award&#13;
th, y ar He ,s al o th first profes or from Park ide&#13;
to receive a Fulbright scholar hip He will be&#13;
lea ing shortly for Quing Ju, South Korea, and will&#13;
be the first American professor to establish&#13;
re 1dence in this city&#13;
This 1s not the first time Dean has received the&#13;
Fulbright scholarship In 1973, while traveling in&#13;
Asia he was awarded the Fulbright scholarship to&#13;
teach in Pakistan Unfortunately by the time he&#13;
came back from h,s trip he was informed that the&#13;
cholarsh,p had been awarded to the second place&#13;
candidate Professor Dean reapplied this time&#13;
a king for South Korea Early in the fall he was&#13;
informed that he had qualified&#13;
He v•, 111 be in Korea until Jun 30th, and \Ill hen&#13;
do some tra\ehng around 1a In Korea , h, 111 be&#13;
in ch.irg ot thre E:n h h las I h to al&#13;
enrollment ot 85 p ople H viii b&#13;
Amen an literature 1th a t o-fold&#13;
xchang of cultures and 2) turtherm&#13;
the lngl, h Ian •u.ig&#13;
H, benefit w,11 be a further una •r tanding of&#13;
Asian culture\\ h1ch will contr,but to h, tl•achin ,&#13;
e p rience 'ext tall he \.I. ,II b, teach in ,an&#13;
literature here at Parkside&#13;
"I'm a tenured facult member, I'm tak,n a I a"e&#13;
of absence v 1thout salary or benefits and I plan to&#13;
re ume teaching m the fall. I don t have anv&#13;
mobility plan My career intent , to d velop&#13;
further my understanding of Asian culture. My wife&#13;
and I have always been interested in Asia, and we&#13;
expect to have a fun time" stated Dean, regarding&#13;
h1 reasons for accepting the scholarship.&#13;
As to political matter , or expectation about&#13;
cultural and general things, Dean feels that that will&#13;
have to wait until he comes back from Korea He is&#13;
planning to send reports back to the Ranger from&#13;
South Korea.&#13;
"&#13;
:. '.&#13;
of&lt;, '°o ~~ Happel runs for Board&#13;
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OIJr broad range of programs provides an umbrella ol testIng&#13;
know-how that enables us to offer the bast preparation&#13;
ava,labla, 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. Complete tape facilities for review of class lessons and for use of supplementary materials Make-ups for missed lessons&#13;
at our centera.&#13;
ASK ABOUT OUR&#13;
COMPACT COURSES&#13;
CAU:&#13;
(608) 255-0575&#13;
1001 RutHHIQe St.,&#13;
Madison, Wis. 53703&#13;
CLASSES IN MADISON&#13;
AND MllWAUKU T[Sl l'tl(PAll&amp;Tl()N&#13;
'SPECl&amp;l/ST5 SINC( l'llb&#13;
Centers m M1tor U.S. C1t,es&#13;
I&#13;
b Bruce Wagner&#13;
EDITOR'S NOTE:&#13;
RA GER: \,Vh&#13;
electtonl&#13;
re vou running in th, part, ular chool board &#13;
:11:···········; ::. .:.&#13;
: e :&#13;
· .&#13;
·· ..&#13;
. . °0&#13;
•••• " •••• 0 ••&#13;
Wednesday, January 26&#13;
Meet Marv Happel candidate for Racine Unified School Board.&#13;
Union, rcorn 106 at 3:30 p.m. Refreshments served.&#13;
PAB Coffeehouse with Randy Rlce from 2 to 4 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cafeteria.&#13;
Movie: "The Rocky Horror Picture Show" at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Breast Self Examination Teach-In Hourly sessions beginning at 10 a.m.&#13;
and ending at 8 p.m. in Union 104. (No 1 p.m. or 5 p.m. sessions&#13;
will be held). -&#13;
Thursday, January 27&#13;
Free Throw contest from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the Phy Ed Bldg.&#13;
Movie; "The Rocky Horror Picture Show" at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Friday, January 28&#13;
Last Day to drop first 5-week module.&#13;
Roten Art Galleries Exhibit and Sale from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on the&#13;
Union Concourse Bridge.&#13;
Chemistry -l, ife Science Seminar Series: Dr. J. Cook on "Psychoactive&#13;
Drugs" at 2 p.m. in Gr-Dl11.&#13;
Folk Dance Festival: Ya-akoo Edin of Ball State University, Instructor.&#13;
Call University Extension (553-2312) for registration information.&#13;
Also Jan. 29 and 30.&#13;
ACU..r Local Billiards and Tennis Toumarrrent in the Union Rec.&#13;
Center. Also Jan. 29 and 30.&#13;
Wrestling Meet vs. UW-LaCrosse starting at 4 p.m. in the Phy Ed Bldg.&#13;
Movie: "The Sunshine Boys" at 8 p.m. in the Union Cinema. Admission&#13;
is $1.00.&#13;
Saturday, January 29&#13;
Last Day for full refund on textbooks."&#13;
Swimming Meet vs. UW-Milwaukee and Carthage starting at 1 p.m.&#13;
in the Phy Ed Bldg.&#13;
PAB Dance with Megan McDonough at 9 p.m. in Union Square.&#13;
Admission $2.50. Tickets are available at the Union Information&#13;
Center or at the door.&#13;
Sunday, January 30&#13;
Movie: "The Sunshine Boys" at 7:30 p.m. in the-Union Cinema. Admission&#13;
is $1.00.&#13;
Monday, January 31&#13;
RANGER staff meeting for all students interested in working on paper&#13;
asphotographers, writers, production workers, ad salesand lay-out.&#13;
WLLC0173, kiddy corner from Info Kiosk in MainJ'Iace. 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday,February 1&#13;
Free Throw contest from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the ftly Ed Bldg.&#13;
Events must be submitted to RANGER by the Wednesday before&#13;
publication. An events form will soon be available.&#13;
Blood drive meeting&#13;
Blood Drive Meeting of all interested persons to help plan Parkside's&#13;
Valentine Day Blood Drive in 0173 WLLC at 10 am, Friday, January&#13;
28th. A representative from the Milwaukee Blood Center will be there&#13;
for this important meeting.&#13;
For further information contact Campus Health Office, WLLC 0198,&#13;
or call Ext. 2366.&#13;
NOW to meet&#13;
The Racine Chapter of the'&#13;
National Organization for Women&#13;
(NOW) will hold a meeting&#13;
at the Unitarian Universalist&#13;
Church, 62S College Ave.,&#13;
Racine, January 31st at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Speakers to be featured are&#13;
Judy Goldsmith, state coordinator&#13;
of NOW; DeAnn Prior,&#13;
assistant state coordinator of&#13;
NOW; and Linda Marcussen,&#13;
Kenosha coordinator of NOW.&#13;
Artwork featured&#13;
An exhibition of small etchings and sculpture by Ian Frazer, head&#13;
at the printma~ing department at Middlesex Polytechnic in London,&#13;
England, and William Richmond, assistant professor of art at the&#13;
University of Evansville (Indiana), opened Monday, January 24, at the&#13;
Parkside Communication Art&lt;;Gallery.&#13;
On February 7, F"razer will be on campus to lecture on&#13;
"Printmaking in London," time and location to be announced.&#13;
Regular gallery hours are noon to 5 p.m. Mondays through&#13;
Thursdays and 7 to 10 p.m. Tuesdays and Wednesdays. This show&#13;
will continue through February 10.&#13;
..",.....&#13;
Free PIZZI Delivery&#13;
Club Hlghvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
AIM""11' C~I'''I,S~.,~tIII,...... 1.8H'&#13;
OPEII 4 ~.•. II1 •.•.&#13;
events&#13;
Horror films&#13;
to be shown&#13;
The University Extension will&#13;
offer a non-credit class entitled&#13;
"Haunted Screen: Classics of&#13;
Fantasy and Horror" starting&#13;
February 3. The course will be&#13;
held every Th.ursday from 7 to 10&#13;
p.m. in CL 105 and will be taught&#13;
by Walter Ulbricht, lecturer in&#13;
Humanities. There is a $12.00&#13;
fee.&#13;
THe films to be shown are as&#13;
follows:&#13;
·Feb. 3 "Trip to the Moon&#13;
( 1902)&#13;
Feb. 10 "Nosferatu" (1922);&#13;
"The Cabinet of Dr.&#13;
Caligari" (1922)&#13;
Feb. 17 "Metropolis" (1926)&#13;
Feb. 24 "Phantom of the&#13;
Opera" (1925)&#13;
Mar. 3 "Frankenstein" (1931)&#13;
Mar. 10 "King Kong" (1933)&#13;
For further information, you&#13;
can contact the University Extension&#13;
Service at 553-2312.&#13;
Top 100 "45" Soul Chart&#13;
Dl/r Price ON LY $100 Ea.&#13;
Complete line of latest lP Records and Tapes&#13;
"Costume Jewelry"&#13;
9'tuman'~ cReco'td c5h.op&#13;
1501 65th St.&#13;
We hove the&#13;
~IJY -Yrr&#13;
needs:&#13;
-photographers&#13;
-writers&#13;
-ad salespersons&#13;
come to 0173 in the library learning center classifieds mondays at 3:00 or call 553-2295/553-2287&#13;
Admission: '1.00&#13;
Volunteers Needed! Advocate for menially&#13;
retarded adults In group home selllngs.&#13;
Provide recreation and companionship.&#13;
Time and hours at volunteers convenience.&#13;
No special training necessary, just caring&#13;
and compassion. Contact Mr. Tim Hansen&#13;
m Kenosha, 654-6185 Or Darlene Plants in&#13;
Kenosha, 658-8056. Ask June Reinhart for&#13;
Specialized Field Experience credit details&#13;
PAS. Film Series Presents&#13;
WALTER&#13;
MATIHAU&#13;
GEORGE&#13;
Wanted: Part lime cocktail waitress. BURNS&#13;
Georgetown Pump, Racine. 554-7334 1-3&#13;
p.m., ruee-rnurs. Ask tor Dave Ferraro&#13;
SERVICES OFFERED: Typing services available&#13;
for balance of semester. Several type&#13;
slyles offered. Telephone: 6324101&#13;
between 8 a.m. - 4 p.m. Monday tnru Friday&#13;
or 632-1382 alter 5:30 p.m. or weekends.&#13;
Price: Depending on wol1l; Involved.&#13;
IpG!&#13;
FOR SALE: four piece sofa. Call 634-5305. BENJAMIN MGM G&#13;
after 6 p.m. R.lellSed Ihr ...&#13;
FILMS INCORPORATED UmfBd Arhsts&#13;
YOUNG LADY wearing powder blue pal1l;a&#13;
and needing assistance walking to her car (a&#13;
blue Chevy Nova) In north parking lot about&#13;
1:30 p.rn.. Jan. 13 - Interested party who&#13;
escorted you would very much like to see&#13;
you again. (RegretfUlly, I neglected to ask&#13;
your name.) Ple.ase call 652-2563 after 6&#13;
p.m. lor reply inlormalion. Anyone who&#13;
might know this gIrl, please relay this&#13;
message.&#13;
Friday, Jan. 28 . 8:00 P.M.&#13;
Sunday, Jan. 30 . 7:30 P.M.&#13;
UNION CINEMA THEATRE&#13;
Dropping out of schOOl? Would like to&#13;
procure white 101 parking permit. Phone&#13;
553-2244. Ask for Harvey.&#13;
FOR SALE: Bearcat101 scanner, all bands.&#13;
Slightly used, perfect shape. SUIl underwarranty,&#13;
with accesaortes. New, $350,00,&#13;
now iust $299.00. Call 5504--6635 aller 7.&#13;
~".·jI!··I··ii'·.··i~i··jI!"i·. ·..;O;.. i··.··ii·.·····..i..!!i..i!i··iI!··jf!..i!i·jf!··i!i· ,.;..;0;••.., .. ;0;••;0;••;0;••;0;•&#13;
..... •ff •••••• u.. 4' •••••••••• 4 :r. ff 4.!F. A' •• 4 •••:r"t.•.u~ ..~ ..~ ..:r.u:r..!1:.. ~ ..&#13;
r Sat. ADMISSIO~-&#13;
Jan 29 Advance&#13;
$200 Student&#13;
$250 General&#13;
at 9 p.m.&#13;
in $250 AT DOOR&#13;
UNION T il:kets&#13;
SQUARE available in&#13;
UNION INFO&#13;
CENTER&#13;
PAB PRESENTS&#13;
MEGAN McDONOUGH&#13;
. and MADA RUE , I&#13;
Happy Hour B to 9 P.M. Beer 254 -y&#13;
1·~€r ':O"""'1-.0:0: 0:0:.r :O: :o. ..- :o. :o: r r o:o;o .-. •.., ,..,.'" r '" .., .&#13;
• :At•• ~ ..7..,.. ~,."..,.!I'...,. ~~ ..~ ..,...~ ~~ ..~••~,.:r.'1: .,.. ;:.t:t,.x.W I -'&#13;
•&#13;
•• ••• •&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. . . . . . . .&#13;
. .&#13;
Wednesday, January 26&#13;
Meet Marv Happel candidate for Racine Unified School Board.&#13;
Union, room 106 at 3 30 pm Refreshments served. '&#13;
PAB Coffeehou e with Randy Ric~ from 2 to 4 p.m in the Union&#13;
Cafeteria&#13;
Movie: "The Rock', Horror Picture Show" at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema Admission $1 .00.&#13;
Brea t Self Examination Teach-In Hourly sessions beginning at 10 a m&#13;
and ending at 8 pm. in Union 104 ( o 1 pm or 5 p.m sessions&#13;
will be held).&#13;
Thursday, January 27&#13;
Free Throw contest from 11 a.m to 1 p.m. in the Phy Ed Bldg&#13;
Movie: "The Ro k Horror Picture Show" at 2:30 and 7 30 pm. ,n the&#13;
Union Cinema Admission S1 .00&#13;
Friday, January 28&#13;
last Day to drop first 5-week module.&#13;
Roten Art Galleries Exhibit and Sale from 10 am to 4 p.m. on t_he&#13;
Union Concourse Bridge.&#13;
Chemistry-life Science Seminar Series: Dr. J. Cook on "Psychoactive&#13;
Drugs" at 2 p.m in Gr-O111.&#13;
Folk Dance Fe stival: Ya-akoo Edin of Ball State University, Instructor.&#13;
Call University Extension (553-2312) for reg1strat1on information.&#13;
Also Jan. 29 and 30.&#13;
ACU-1 local B1ll1ards and Tennis Tournament in the Union Rec.&#13;
Center. Al o Jan 29 and 30&#13;
Wre tling Meet vs. UW-LaCrosse starting at 4 p.m. in the Phy Ed Bldg.&#13;
Movie : "The Sunshine Boys" at 8 p.m. in the Union Ctnema. Admision&#13;
i S1 .00.&#13;
Saturday, January 29&#13;
last Day for full refund on textbooks&#13;
Swimming Meet vs UW-Milwaukee and Carthage starting at 1 p.m.&#13;
in the Phy Ed Bldg&#13;
PAB Dance with Megan McDonough at 9 pm. in Union S.::iuare&#13;
Admi 10n $2 50 Tickets are available at the Union Information&#13;
enter or at th door&#13;
Sunday, January 30&#13;
Movie: "Th Sunshine Boys at 7:30 p.m . in the- Union Cinema. Adm1ss1on&#13;
is $1.00.&#13;
Monday, January 31&#13;
RA GER staff meeting for all students interested in working on paper&#13;
a photographers, writer , production workers, ad sales and lay-out&#13;
WLLC 0173, ktddy corner from Info Kiosk in Main Place. 3 30 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday, February 1&#13;
Fr e Throw cont st from 11 am to 1 p.m. in the R,y Ed Bldg.&#13;
Events must be submitted to RANGER by the Wednesday before&#13;
publicavon. n events form ~ill soon be available.&#13;
Blood drive meeting&#13;
Bio d Drive Meeting of all inter ted p r ons to h Ip plan Park ,d \&#13;
Val ntine Day Blood Drive 1n 0173 WLLC at 10 am, Frtday, January&#13;
28th. Ar pre entative from the Milwaukee Blood Center will be there&#13;
for this important meeting.&#13;
for further information contact Campus Health Office, WLLC 0198,&#13;
or call E t 23b6&#13;
NOW to meet&#13;
Th Ractn hapter of the&#13;
at,onal Organ1zat1on tor Women&#13;
(NOW) will hold a meeting&#13;
at th Unitarian Univer al,st&#13;
Church, 625 College Ave .•&#13;
Racin , January 31st at 7.30 p.m.&#13;
Sp ak r to be featured are&#13;
Judy Coldsmith, stat coordinator&#13;
of OW; D Ann Pnor,&#13;
assistant state coordinator of&#13;
OW; and Linda Marcus en,&#13;
Keno ha coordinator of OW&#13;
Artwork featured&#13;
An h1bit1on of mall etchings and culptur by Ian Fraz r, head&#13;
ot the printmaking department at Middlesex Polytechnic in London,&#13;
ngland, and W1ll1am Ri hmond, as I tant profe or of art at the&#13;
University of Evansville I Indiana), opened Monday, January 24, at the&#13;
Park ,de Communication Art~ Gallery&#13;
On February 7, razer w,11 be on campu to lecture on&#13;
"Printmaking in London," time and location to be announced&#13;
R gular gall ry hour are noon to 5 pm. Monday through&#13;
Thur day and 7 to 10 p.m. Tue day and W dn day Thi how&#13;
will continu through February 10&#13;
Horror films&#13;
to be shown&#13;
The University E tension will&#13;
offer a non-credit class entitled&#13;
"Haunted ere.en: Cla sics of&#13;
Fantasy and Horror" starting&#13;
February 3. The course w,11 be&#13;
held every Thursday from 7 to 10&#13;
p m in CL 105 and will be taught&#13;
by Walter Ulbricht, lecturer in&#13;
Humanities There is a $12.00&#13;
fee.&#13;
The film to be shown are as&#13;
follows:&#13;
Feb 3 "Trtp to the Moon&#13;
(1902)&#13;
Feb 10 "No feratu" (1922).&#13;
"The Cabinet of Dr&#13;
Caligari" (1922)&#13;
Feb. 17 "Metropolis" (1926)&#13;
Feb. 24 "Phantom of the&#13;
Opera" (1925)&#13;
Mar 3 "Frankenstein" (1931)&#13;
Mar. 10 "King Kong" (1933)&#13;
For further information, you&#13;
can contact the University Exten&#13;
ion Service at 553-2312&#13;
classifieds&#13;
Voluntwra Needed I Advocate for mentally&#13;
retarded adults trl group home setting~.&#13;
Provide recreation and compan1onsh1p.&#13;
iome and hOurs at volunteers convenience.&#13;
No special tra1n,ng necessary, just caring&#13;
and compassion Contact Mr. Tim Hansen&#13;
In Kenosha, 654-6185 or Darlene Plants In&#13;
Kenosha, 658-8056 Ask June Reinhart for&#13;
Specialized Field Experience credit details&#13;
Wantad: Part t me cocktail waitress&#13;
Georgetown Pump, Racine. 554-733-4 1-3&#13;
p m., T Thurs As for Dave Ferraro&#13;
SERVICES OFFERED: Typing servtceS avail&#13;
able for balance of semester. Severa type&#13;
styles offered. Telephone: 632-1101&#13;
between 8 a.m. - 4 p.m. Monday thru Friday&#13;
or 632-1382 after 5:30 p.m or weekends&#13;
Price: Depending on work involved.&#13;
FOR SALE: four piece sofa ca11 634-5305&#13;
alter&amp; p.m&#13;
YOUNG LADY wearing powder blue parka&#13;
and ~1ng assistance wal ong to her car (a&#13;
blue Chevy Nova) in north perking lot about&#13;
1 :30 p.m , J n 13 - Intere ted party who&#13;
8$COfled you ould very much like to -&#13;
you again (Regretfully, I neglected to as&#13;
your name.) PluH call 652-2563 after 6&#13;
p.m for reply ,nformatton. Anyone who&#13;
m,ght know th,s girl, please relay this&#13;
message&#13;
Dropp ng out of school? Would like to&#13;
procure white lot parking perm,t. Phone&#13;
!63-2244 Mk for Harvey&#13;
FOR SALE. Bearcal 101 canner, all bands&#13;
Slightly usad, parfect shape. Still under&#13;
warranty, with xcesaor,es New, $350.00,&#13;
now 1ust $299.00. Call 564-6635 after 7.&#13;
Sat.&#13;
Jan 29&#13;
at 9 p.m.&#13;
in&#13;
UNION&#13;
SQUARE&#13;
events&#13;
9't.E.E.ma.n '&#13;
~ c:RE.co'td ~hop.&#13;
1501 65th St.&#13;
We hove the&#13;
Top 100 "45" Soul Chart&#13;
Our Price ONLY $1 °&#13;
0 Ea.&#13;
Complete line of latest LP Records and Tapes&#13;
"Costume Jewelry"&#13;
~,&#13;
needs:&#13;
-photographers&#13;
-writers&#13;
-ad salespersons&#13;
come to D1 73 in the library learning center&#13;
mondays at 3:00 or coll 553-2295/553-2287&#13;
P .A.B. Film Series Presents&#13;
WALTER&#13;
MATTHAU&#13;
GEORGE BURNS&#13;
costarring RICHARD BENJAMIN MGM&#13;
ReleHNllttu&#13;
FILMS INCORPORATED Umted Artists&#13;
Friday, Jan. 28 - 8:00 P.M.&#13;
Sunday, Jan. 30 - 7 :30 P .M.&#13;
UNION CINEMA THEATRE&#13;
Admission: $1 .00&#13;
ADM ISSIO ~&#13;
A dvance&#13;
s2 00 Student&#13;
s 2 so General&#13;
s2 so AT DOOR&#13;
lkkets&#13;
available in&#13;
UNION INFO&#13;
CENTER </text>
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      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66218">
              <text>$112. of your tuition…&#13;
</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66219">
              <text>Volume 5, issue 14</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66220">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="90012">
              <text>er&#13;
Vol. 5 No. 14&#13;
/l /l Lord Ronald sa,d nothing, he flung hum 11 ()()&#13;
\.)I.) from the room, flung h,m I upon h,1 hO&lt; V V&#13;
and rOde madly off ,n au d•rectlona.&#13;
Stephen Butler LMCOCk 116 1'44&#13;
Wednesday, January 19, 1977&#13;
• •&#13;
St"~re~11ted Fees Committee quorum IL to R) l\.ai ,all. Da\t~ Holle . Rutol) Tutl"" .. ld. Oou,rlairt Edf'nhou .. f'r Kirl t,·0 1'ium. l'f'I«' ~1ru,,n"'ki.&#13;
by Robert Hoffman&#13;
$112 of your tuition goes to the segregated fees allocation committee. It&#13;
allocates over $500,000 to various student organizations.&#13;
Appointed by PSGA, the same organization that is requesting over&#13;
$8,000 of student monies? You got it.&#13;
The allocation committee is currently preparing the 19 7-78 budget.&#13;
Parkside is unique in that it is one of the few campuses that has students&#13;
controlling the segregated fees budget. The segregated fees is that Sl 12 of&#13;
your tuition.&#13;
Such a committee which is totally run by students must attract some&#13;
interest, right? Well if interest is gauged by turnout of committee&#13;
members, then the answer is no. Only three members showed up at the&#13;
first meeting, two short of a quorum. The next two meetings, while&#13;
achieving quorum, still failed to get all nine committee members to attend.&#13;
Now, wait, these are all elected representatives, right? Wrong, only two&#13;
members of the committee were elected, the rest were appointed by PSGA.&#13;
Now if you go to a movie here at Parkside, drink a beer down at the&#13;
union, go see the nurse, read the newspaper, participate in PSGA, or ha·,e&#13;
a child in the Child Care Center, then you are deeply affected by what wiJI&#13;
and will not happen at this year's allocation committee.&#13;
This article will briefly summarize: (1) the areas that are covered in the&#13;
Bookstore bungles?&#13;
Bob Blat'l and Clairf' Brobt&gt;n -.e-arrh in ,ain for rf'quirf'd lt'1l in 1he- book .. tort" annt,.&#13;
by Christopher Clausen&#13;
1 n the past the Parkside&#13;
Bookstore. has been the subject of&#13;
criticism from both students and&#13;
faculty. Charges of unjustified high&#13;
prices and sloppy management&#13;
have been leveled consistantly with&#13;
little done to probe these charges.&#13;
This semester less than 25% of&#13;
the books ordered have arrived as&#13;
of Thur~day. January 13th. In an&#13;
interview with Ranger. bookstore&#13;
manager Paul Hoffman commented&#13;
on some of these questions as&#13;
well as others:&#13;
RANGER: How do you determine&#13;
your prices?&#13;
HOFFMAN: For new books we&#13;
use the publishers suggested retail&#13;
price. For the used books we raise&#13;
the price by 25% from the p-rice we&#13;
paid for them to cover expenses and&#13;
make a profit.&#13;
RANGER: Who controls the&#13;
bookstore?&#13;
HOFFMAN: Follett Company. a&#13;
private leasing firm out of Chicago.&#13;
leases it from UW-Parkside.&#13;
RANGER: Who pays the salaries&#13;
of the booksrore employees?&#13;
HOFFMAN: All expenses are&#13;
paid out ,.r the money we take in.&#13;
The papc1 ,.-ork is done down in&#13;
Chicagv.&#13;
RANGER: How much does&#13;
Parkside collect for leasing the&#13;
bookstore out to Follett Company?&#13;
HOFFMAN: In the contract&#13;
Parkside is paid 5.1 % of all the&#13;
money taken in at the bookstore&#13;
before Follett Compan received&#13;
an) money.&#13;
RANGER: Ha the Book Co-op&#13;
cut into your busine s?&#13;
HOFFMAN: ot yet. At the&#13;
college I worked at before coming&#13;
to Park ide, the Co-op bookstore&#13;
was doing quite well. That college&#13;
11 a~ a commuter college al o and I&#13;
11a\ a little ~urpri~ed not to ee one&#13;
here.&#13;
RANGER: What is the reason (s)&#13;
behind the current lack of books&#13;
for this semester?&#13;
HOFFMAN: Well. we had several&#13;
late requests turned in by the&#13;
faculty and the weather has not&#13;
helped for deliveries either. There&#13;
are other reasons but they \\ill come&#13;
out later. &#13;
editorial.&#13;
Stuants silent&#13;
Committee appropriates monies&#13;
Our Segregated Fees Committee' is spending&#13;
about one hundred and twelve dollars of your&#13;
annual tuition money. If you don't know who they&#13;
are or what they are supposed to do with the&#13;
money, you are not alone.&#13;
Students at Parkside have never really cared&#13;
about this committee. We are one of the few&#13;
campuses that lets students do what they want with&#13;
the part of tuition that supports student organizations.&#13;
Last time there was an election to fill the&#13;
committee with elected students no one ran. This&#13;
left only two elected members on the committee.&#13;
Since this is a student government codified&#13;
committee, Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
filled the committee with appointees. But&#13;
very few people voted in the last P.S.G.A. election!&#13;
Thats okay too, because no one cares what student&#13;
government does anyway. So, when there isn't&#13;
enough interest among students to decide which&#13;
student organizations get how much money you&#13;
don't have to worry. Our student government will be&#13;
glad to do it. That is where they get their money.&#13;
After all the tuition is collected this year; there&#13;
will be about $500,000.00 of segregated fees. In the&#13;
old days administrators and faculty would decide&#13;
how much went to athletics, student life and&#13;
programming, newspaper, student government,&#13;
and all the student organizations on campus. In&#13;
modern times the students decide. Who .is more&#13;
biased? Theoretically, fhe students should have a&#13;
better idea of what they want. Who is on that&#13;
committee representing you? .&#13;
We do know Kai Nail is on the committee. He&#13;
represents the council of student organizations. He&#13;
is also President of the Concerned Student&#13;
Coalition which operates the food co-op, the book&#13;
'co-op, and the rumored to be alternative newspaper.&#13;
He does most of the talking and the committee has&#13;
almost unanimously passed all his motions.&#13;
All the members on the committee belong or&#13;
belonged to a student group that receives funds&#13;
from the committee. There are students on the&#13;
committee that will be voting on their own budgets&#13;
and cutting others. Will your favorite activity get&#13;
cut? Does it have a member on the committee?&#13;
Perhaps it just does not matter! Maybe you are&#13;
just supposed to go to classes and not care about&#13;
where the hundred dollars or so goes from your&#13;
tuition money. Maybe that is why there is student&#13;
government. They do the work and we give them the&#13;
money. Everything must be going alright, because&#13;
it sure is quiet.&#13;
Viall come on down!&#13;
Editorial transitions at the' RANGER occur every&#13;
year. It just happened again!&#13;
RANGER is six years old. During this time its size.&#13;
shape, and design have remained the same. It is time&#13;
for a change. Our mission is to report student life at&#13;
Parkside. We need twice as many writers as we&#13;
currently have to become a graphically modern weekly.&#13;
Complaints and hatred are cheap tools of change in&#13;
the same respect that talk is cheap. Change at the&#13;
RANGER means people with good ideas giving their&#13;
time to the organization and its mission.&#13;
Our core staff this semester represents most of the&#13;
hardest workers that produced last semester's paper.&#13;
Tom Cooper is the General Manager. He is in charge&#13;
of the business side of the paper as well as making sure&#13;
the office meets deadlines. He is in charge of everything&#13;
we can stick him with.&#13;
Bruce Wagner, our Copy Editor, is also the old man&#13;
of the Sea around Parkside. He knows everybody's&#13;
phone number and what their job was before Guskin&#13;
(B.G.).&#13;
John McKloskey, our young News Editor, is young&#13;
enough to require a work permit to make sure&#13;
. RANGER isn't in violation of child labor laws.&#13;
Jean Tenuta. Sports Editor, has brothers and&#13;
boyfriends throughout the sports spectrum. She is a&#13;
Med Tech student who takes all the "hard" courses in&#13;
the timetable.&#13;
Jeffrey J. Swencki. our poet in residence, is doubling&#13;
as our Feature Editor. He is the one who holds our&#13;
pages together.&#13;
Sue Marquardt is our Circulation chief. She will be&#13;
working very hard getting out the mail to the&#13;
subscribers who pay $5.00 for postage.&#13;
Controversial Phil Hermann will be our very own&#13;
Investigative Reporter. He and Chris Clausen are&#13;
working on the "hot" ones you'll see in future issues.&#13;
Bob Hoffman. writer of our cover story on the&#13;
Segregated Fees Committee. He worked very hard at&#13;
the Carter Headquarters in Racine 10 make sure&#13;
Carter Won. ..&#13;
Mona Maillet is in charge of our events page. She&#13;
also does everything she can at production lime.&#13;
Myself. I am a recruiter right now. I wanr'wnters.&#13;
and others who want 10 help LIS put out a beautiful well&#13;
written paper. We will tram everybody for everything.&#13;
Come on down or give us a vall. We need you!&#13;
Philip L. Livingston, Editor&#13;
Wednesday, January '9, '977&#13;
Bob Hoffman, Chris Clausen, Mona Maillet,&#13;
Fred Tenuta, Thomas Nolen.&#13;
~!~@ll'Phllip L. Livingston ~&#13;
,l,\\,ll'~)QI!ll'@©~@ll'&#13;
l!il@l!~@ll'©if ~@~lN\~&#13;
@@_li'~ wri!llID.i!l~@ll'ThomaS R. Cooper ~&#13;
©&lt;oJwr l!3ti~@ll'Bruce wagner&#13;
li'!@Wi"@l!il@l!~@ll'John R. McXlOllkey&#13;
ll'@i!l~1Illll'@l!3@l!il@li'Jeffrey J. Swencki&#13;
~JW@ll'~@l!ilti~@ll'Jean Tenuta&#13;
ltllilw@@~!~i!l~b}1!j)ID,@JW@ll'i&gt;@ll'PhilHermann&#13;
©!ll'©1Illni!l~!@lID.SueMarquardt&#13;
)2Jll'@@l1lll©~!@lID.wri!llID.i!l~@ll'&#13;
~').@l_ll'~!@!~ wri!l~&lt;l/ll' ~.~'\i'&#13;
,I,\\,@lw&lt;l/ll'~!@!lID.~~~@@&#13;
Ranger is published by students ot the University of Wisconsin-Porkside. Views herein ere not necessarily those of anyone else.&#13;
editorial&#13;
Students silent&#13;
Committee appropriates monies&#13;
Our Segregated Fees Committee, is spending&#13;
about one hundred and twelve dollars of you,r&#13;
annual tuition money. If you don't' know who they&#13;
are or what they are supposed to do with the&#13;
money, you are not alone.&#13;
Students at Parkside have never really cared&#13;
about this committee. We are one of the few&#13;
campuses that lets students do what they want with&#13;
the part of tuition that supports student organizations.&#13;
Last time there was an election to fill the&#13;
committee with elected students no one ran. This&#13;
left only two elected members on the committee.&#13;
Since this is a student government codified&#13;
committee, Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
filled the committee with appointees. But&#13;
very few people voted in the last P.S.G.A. election!&#13;
Thats okay too, because no one cares what student&#13;
government does anyway. So, when there isn't&#13;
enough interest among students to decide which&#13;
student organizations get how much money you&#13;
don't have to worry. Our student government will be&#13;
glad to do it. That is where they get their money.&#13;
After all the tuiti0n is collected this year., there&#13;
will be about $500,000.00 of segregated fees. In the&#13;
old days administrators and faculty would decipe&#13;
how much went to athletics, student life and&#13;
programming, newspaper, student government,&#13;
. and al I the student -organizations on campus. In&#13;
modern times the students decide. Who -is more&#13;
biased? Theoretically, the students should have a&#13;
better idea of what they want. Who is on that&#13;
committee representing you? ·&#13;
We do know Kai Nall is on the committee. He&#13;
represents the council of student organizations. He&#13;
is also President of the Concerned Student&#13;
Coalition which operates the food co-op, the book&#13;
·co-op, and the rumored to be alternative newspaper.&#13;
He does most of the talking and the committee has&#13;
almost unanimously passed all his motions.&#13;
All the members on the committee belong or&#13;
belonged to a student group that receives funds&#13;
from the committee. There are students on the&#13;
committee that will be voting on their own budgets&#13;
and cutting others. Will your favorite activity get&#13;
cut? Does it have a member on the committee?&#13;
Perhaps it just does not matter! Maybe you are&#13;
just supposed to go to classes and not care about&#13;
where the hundred dollars or so goes from your&#13;
tuition money. Maybe that is why there is student&#13;
government. They do the work and we give them the&#13;
money. Everything must be going alright, because&#13;
it sure is quiet.&#13;
Y'all co111e on do1Nnl&#13;
Editorial transitions at the RANGER occur every&#13;
year. It just happened again!&#13;
RANGER is six years old. During this time its size,&#13;
shape, and design have remained the same. It is time&#13;
for a change. Our mission is to report student life at&#13;
Parkside. We need twice as many writers as we&#13;
currently have to become a graphically modern weekly.&#13;
Complaints and hatred are cheap tools of change in&#13;
the same respect that talk is cheap. Change at the&#13;
RANGER means people with good ideas giving their&#13;
time to the organization and its mission.&#13;
Our core staff this semester represents most of the&#13;
hardest workers that produced last semester's paper.&#13;
Tom Cooper is the General Manager. He is in charge&#13;
of the business side of the paper as well as making sure&#13;
the office meets deadlines. He is in charge of everything&#13;
we can stick him with.&#13;
Bruce Wagner, our Copy Editor, is also the old man&#13;
of the Sea around Parkside. He knows everybody's&#13;
phone number and what their job was before Guskin&#13;
(B.G.).&#13;
John McKloskey, our young News Editor, is young&#13;
enough to require a work permit to make sure&#13;
· RANGER isn't in violation of child labor laws.&#13;
Jean Tenuta, Sports Editor, has brothers and&#13;
boyfriends throughout the sports spectrum. She is a&#13;
Med Tech student who takes all the "hard" courses in&#13;
the timetable.&#13;
Jeffrey J. Swencki, our poet in residence,is doubling&#13;
as our Feature Editor. He is the one who holds our&#13;
pages together.&#13;
Sue Marquardt is our Circulation chief. She will be&#13;
Wednesday, January 19, 1977&#13;
Bob Hoffman, Chris Clausen, Mona Maillet,&#13;
Fred Tenuta, Thomas Nolen.&#13;
working very hard getting out the mail to the&#13;
subscribers who pay $5.00 for postage.&#13;
Controversial Phil Hermann will be our very own&#13;
Investigative Reporter. He and Chris Clausen are&#13;
working on the "hot" ones you'll see in future issues.&#13;
Bob Hoffman, writer of our cover story on the&#13;
Segregated Fees Committee. He worked very hard at&#13;
the Carter Headquarters in l{acine to make sure&#13;
Carter Won. '&#13;
Mona Maillet is in charge of our events page. She&#13;
also docs everything sht: can at production time.&#13;
Myself. 1 am a recruiter right now . I want ' writers.&#13;
and others who want to help us put out a beautiful well&#13;
written paper. We will tra111 cvcryh&lt;idy for everything.&#13;
Come on down or give us a &lt;·all. We need you!&#13;
Philip L. Livingston, Editor&#13;
1£.F'(; JIDl'!.F@@i@;r&#13;
~l'l.i@FPhilip L. Livingston ~&#13;
~~l'!.'(;@)f' @if ~@'(r;~g&gt;lfil.~&#13;
®@llil.@g,~&#13;
~&#13;
Eir&amp;lli\lID.i@R'&#13;
~~~@FBruce&#13;
Thom.as&#13;
Wagner&#13;
R. Cooper ~&#13;
1ID'@w~ ~@l.l'!.i@g,John R. McKlOSk:ey&#13;
lr'@&amp;ir;w.E'® ~~l'l.~lf'Jeffrey J. Swencki&#13;
~~@Fir;~ ~~i@i:t&gt;Jean Tenuta&#13;
ltruw@~ir;l'l.~&amp;il'!.W® IB@~@g&gt;ir;@;r Phil Hermann&#13;
©l'iF@WJ.lllID.il'!.@lli\Sue Marquardt&#13;
~~WJ.©'(;l'l.@lli\ Eir&amp;lli\lID.~@;r&#13;
Mw@;ril'!.~l'!.~ Eir&amp;~@F ~~'W&#13;
1£.~w@;ril'l.~l'!.lli\~ ~IID.11@~&#13;
Ranger is published by students at the University of Wisconsin -Parkside . Views herein ore not necessarily those of anyone else . &#13;
On Spring, West of 31 in&#13;
Green Ridge Plaza&#13;
632-6151&#13;
Groups backed&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
I think it's horrible that. with all&#13;
the students attending Parkside,&#13;
only a small percentage" are&#13;
involved with student organizations&#13;
and extra-curricular activities. The&#13;
people who complain that Parkside&#13;
has nothing to offer are the same&#13;
people who run home as soon as&#13;
their classes are over. They&#13;
complain that nothing happens&#13;
dur-ing the weekends, but refuse to&#13;
come to the dances. movies,&#13;
concerts, and any other such&#13;
activities. They say that Parkside&#13;
has no places to go between classes,&#13;
but ignore the Union, the library,&#13;
and Main Place.&#13;
Student organizations are just&#13;
begging for members. Many are&#13;
forced to fold due to lack of&#13;
students. Some of the groups,&#13;
such as PSGA and Ranger, cannot&#13;
serve the students as well as they&#13;
are equipped to because of lack of&#13;
participation.&#13;
If the 'students of -this campus&#13;
would take a little time to become&#13;
involved. in student organizations,&#13;
they would find that Parkside has&#13;
more to offer than classes and&#13;
basketball games.&#13;
Ramona Maillet&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
In December I wrote a letter in&#13;
which Iregistered my disgust with&#13;
that of others about what we&#13;
considered an obscene article on&#13;
sex which appeared in a&#13;
supplc mc n t called the DEHANGER.&#13;
Curt Collins wrote a&#13;
letter in rebuttal ending his letter&#13;
with the words. "Don't stop,&#13;
RANGER!. just because some&#13;
traditionalist says one shouldn't&#13;
laugh at sex."&#13;
That's not what I said. Curt. My&#13;
objections were aimed at cheapening&#13;
and demeaning sex and they&#13;
still hold. I've listened to many&#13;
stories immersed in sex which I&#13;
found funny. Like the one where&#13;
some young friends of mine were&#13;
parked one dark night. They were&#13;
in the back seat of the car and&#13;
suddenly realized that the car was&#13;
rolling down hill. They had rocked&#13;
it loose from its moorings.&#13;
Ivie~s&#13;
This Semester ....&#13;
UNION&#13;
Gruhl rebuts rebuttal&#13;
by&#13;
Jeffrey J. Swenckl&#13;
. Jeanne Rudd is a junior majoring in Psychology and Political Science&#13;
intending to go into secondary education in those fields. She is from&#13;
Kenosha, married and has four children-lb. IS, J2. and 11 years of age.&#13;
Jeanne worked for two years as a student-to-student counselor in Tallent&#13;
H.all but quit due to the elimination of the student-to-student program&#13;
with the budget cut. She was requested to stay on as secretarial help but&#13;
found she hated being a secretary.&#13;
When questioned about her leaving her job she said, "I feel the&#13;
University has placed its priorities in bureaucratic paperwork and not in&#13;
the students, where it belongs."&#13;
How does Jeanne feel about the student body? "I think the students are&#13;
a fine bunch of people. They are extremely friendly. Ialso feel that it's a&#13;
shame so few students participate in the many. many extracurricular&#13;
activities offered. The many clubs and organizations a student can gel&#13;
involved in would provide experience beneficial after graduation.'&#13;
When asked what she likes and dislikes the most about Parks ide Jeanne&#13;
replied, "I like the opportunity it has given me to pursue higher education.&#13;
"Because of my family circumstances I would not be able to go to school out&#13;
of town.&#13;
"What I dislike the most is the apathy of the students, the politics of the&#13;
university establishment, and the food."&#13;
I finally asked Jeanne if being in school as a wife and mother has&#13;
influenced her outlook on her role as a woman. She commented, "I have&#13;
the educational institution. The only place where females predominate in&#13;
recognized the inequality between the treatment of males and females inll ..--------------------------'1 P.A.B. Film Series&#13;
this University is in the role of bureaucratic secretarial support. There are&#13;
so few women in other areas that it appears to be tokenism. It seems funny Presents&#13;
that with so many highly qualified females in this area, they are so poorly&#13;
represented at Parkside."&#13;
SQUARE&#13;
''''''.'''11 PITCHER BEER&#13;
PABST-BUD-OLD ST1LE -UTE-OL1&#13;
$1so (Plus *100 Pitch.r D.positl&#13;
STARTING HAPP1 HOUR THIS FRI&#13;
3:00 to 5:30 - CLOSINC THIS FRI. ONLY 6:00&#13;
Curt called me "a traditionalist:'&#13;
that suits me fine. On a fewoccasions&#13;
I've been called much&#13;
worse. where would we be without&#13;
traditions? .. Come to think of&#13;
it ... What are PARKSlDE's&#13;
traditions? I've asked about a score&#13;
of Parks ide people that question&#13;
and the way they stumble around&#13;
for an answer is really something.&#13;
I'lltry to find time to write a report&#13;
on that subject.&#13;
In the meantime. have a good&#13;
year. May each of you be lucky&#13;
enough to find at least one teacher&#13;
who will really turn you on and who&#13;
will miss you when you're absent&#13;
from class. Good luck!&#13;
Arthur Gruhl&#13;
Class of '74&#13;
R~NGER, he said that thc .&#13;
paper was about the only way the&#13;
student body had to find out about&#13;
what was going on upstairs. In this&#13;
I heartily agree. Sometimes&#13;
Parkside reminds me of being&#13;
something like a frigate with a&#13;
compliment of gold-braided administrators&#13;
sufficient to run an&#13;
aircraft carrier. These people, I've&#13;
been told, spend most of their time&#13;
at meetings where they don't really&#13;
change anything. Instead they&#13;
rearrange people and things and&#13;
review an-d rewrite goals and&#13;
policies. Nice work, if you can get&#13;
it! With a crew that size there is&#13;
bound to be some gold bricks the&#13;
most notorious which comes to&#13;
mind a "fuTI" professor with a B.A.&#13;
degree and tenure who teaches two&#13;
afternoons a week between his&#13;
moonlighting and who gets paid&#13;
around $25.000 a year for his time&#13;
and trouble. So keep on watching&#13;
'em and write on RANGER!&#13;
Wed., Jan. 26&#13;
Thurs., Jan. 27&#13;
2:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m.&#13;
2:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m.&#13;
UNION CINEMA THEATER&#13;
Admission $1.00&#13;
1977 Local ACUI Intercollegiate Tournament Program&#13;
~. \fit}&#13;
Introducing: French Pizza $1.50&#13;
.1 EVERY MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY&#13;
SPAGHETTI FEAST&#13;
$1.95&#13;
Includes: Salad, Italian Bread and a Free Glass of Wine.&#13;
- Thurs. 9:30 - 11:00 p.m.&#13;
Bubble Up&#13;
Mixed Drinks 60'&#13;
~erbu'8&#13;
~ourt&#13;
PUB &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
Wed.&#13;
Bowling - Jan 22 &amp; 23, 1977&#13;
Billiards Jan 28, 29 s 3D, 1977&#13;
Table. Tennis - Jan. 28, 29 &amp; 3D, 1977&#13;
Foosball - Feb. 4, 5 &amp; 6, 1977&#13;
Chess - Feb 4, 5 &amp; 6, 1977&#13;
Local tournament winners to represent Parkside at the ACUI&#13;
Regionals in Madison Wisc. Feb. 17-19, 1977.&#13;
Union Rec-Center for information or to enter.&#13;
Contact the&#13;
'100 fee/entry.&#13;
Toumament director: Randy Moog Phone: 553-2695&#13;
Groups backed&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
I think it's horrible that, with all&#13;
the students attending Parkside,&#13;
only a small percentage· are&#13;
involved with student organizations&#13;
and extra-curricular activities. The&#13;
people who complain that Parkside&#13;
has nothing to offer are the same&#13;
people who run home as soon as&#13;
their classes are over. They&#13;
complain that nothing happens&#13;
during the weekends, but refuse to&#13;
come to the dances, movies,&#13;
concerts, and any other such&#13;
activities. They say that Parkside&#13;
has no places to go between classes,&#13;
but ignore the Union, the library,&#13;
and Main Place.&#13;
Student organizations are just&#13;
begging for members. Many are&#13;
forced to fold due to lack of&#13;
students. Some of the groups,&#13;
such as PSGA and Ranger, cannot&#13;
serve the students as well as they&#13;
are equipped to because of lack of&#13;
participation.&#13;
If the students of. this campus&#13;
would take a little time to become&#13;
involved in student organizations,&#13;
they would find that Parkside has&#13;
more to offer than classes ai:td&#13;
basketball games.&#13;
Ramona Maillet&#13;
by&#13;
Jeffrey J. Swencld&#13;
Jeanne Rudd is a junior majoring in Psychology and Political Science&#13;
intending to go into secondary education in those fields. She is from&#13;
Kenosha, married and has four children-16, 15, 12, and 11 years of age.&#13;
Jeanne worked for two years as a student-to-student counselor in Tallent&#13;
Hall but quit due to the elimination of the student-to-student program&#13;
with the budget cut. She was requested to stay on as secretarial help but&#13;
found she hated being a secretary.&#13;
When questioned about her leaving her job she said, "l feel the&#13;
University has placed its priorities in bureaucratic paperwork and not in&#13;
the students, where it belongs."&#13;
How does Jeanne feel about the student body? "l think the students are&#13;
a fine bunch of people. They are extremely friendly. I also feel that it's a&#13;
shame so few students participate in the many, many extracurricular&#13;
activities offered. The many club~ and organizations a student can get&#13;
involved in would provide experience beneficial after graduation."&#13;
When asked what she likes and dislikes the most about Parkside Jeanne&#13;
replied, "I like the opportunity it has given me to pursue higher educatioR.&#13;
·Because of my fl!,mily circumstances l would not be able to go to school out&#13;
of town.&#13;
"What I dislike the most is the apathy of the students, the politics of the&#13;
university establishment, and the food."&#13;
l finally asked Jeanne if being in school as a wife and mother has&#13;
influenced her outlook on her role as a woman. She commented, "I have&#13;
recognized the inequality between the treatment of males and females in&#13;
the educational institution. The only place where females predominate in&#13;
this University is in the role of bureaucratic secretarial support. There are&#13;
so few women in other areas that it appears to be tokenism. It seems funny&#13;
that with so many highly qualified females in this area, they are so poorly&#13;
represented at Parkside."&#13;
Gruhl rebuts rebuttal&#13;
Curt called me "a traditionalist,"&#13;
that suits me fine. On a few -&#13;
occasions I've been called much&#13;
worse. Where would we be without&#13;
traditions? ... Come to think of&#13;
it . . . What are PARKSIDE's&#13;
traditions? I've asked about a score&#13;
of Parkside people that question&#13;
and the way they stumble around&#13;
for an answer is really something.&#13;
I'll try to find time to write a report&#13;
on that subject.&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
·1n December I wrote a letter in&#13;
which l registered my disgust with&#13;
that of others about what we&#13;
considered an obscene article on&#13;
sex which appeared in a&#13;
wpplem1:nt called the DERANGER.&#13;
Curt Collins wrote a&#13;
letter in rebuttal ending his letter&#13;
with the words, "Don't stop,&#13;
RANGER!, just because some&#13;
traditionalist says one shouldn't&#13;
laugh at sex."&#13;
That's not what I said, Curt. My&#13;
objections were aimed at cheape"ning&#13;
and demeaning sex and they&#13;
still hold. I've listened to many&#13;
stories immersed in sex which I&#13;
found funny. Like the one where&#13;
some young friends of mine were&#13;
parked one dark night. They were&#13;
in the back seat of the car and&#13;
suddenly realized that the car was&#13;
rolling down hill. They had rocked&#13;
it loose from its moorings.&#13;
R~NGER, he said that the .&#13;
paper was about the only way the&#13;
student body had to find out about&#13;
what was going on upstairs. In this&#13;
I heartily agree. Sometimes&#13;
Parkside reminds me of being&#13;
something like a frigate with a&#13;
compliment of gold-braided administrators&#13;
sufficient to run an&#13;
aircraft carrier. These people, I've&#13;
been told, spend most of their time&#13;
at meetings where they don't really&#13;
change anything. Instead they&#13;
rearrange people and things and&#13;
review arid rewrite goals and&#13;
policies. Nice work, if you can get&#13;
it! With a crew that size there is&#13;
bound to be some gold bricks the&#13;
most notorious which comes to&#13;
mind a "full" professor with a B.A.&#13;
degree and tenure who teaches two&#13;
afternoons a week between his&#13;
moonlighting and who gets paid&#13;
around $25.000 a year for his time&#13;
and trouble. So keep on watching&#13;
'em and write on RANGER!&#13;
Introducing: French Pizza $1.50&#13;
In the meantime, have a good&#13;
year. May each of you be lucky&#13;
enough to find at least one teacher&#13;
who will really turn you on and who&#13;
will miss you when you're absent&#13;
from class. Good luck!&#13;
Arthur Gruhl&#13;
Class of '74&#13;
This Semester ••• ,,&#13;
UNION&#13;
SQUARE&#13;
1111101/lllll&#13;
PITCHER BEER&#13;
PABST-BUD-OLD STYLE -UTE-OLY&#13;
$1 SO (Plus •1•0 Piteher Deposit)&#13;
STARTING HAPN HOUR THIS FRI&#13;
3:00 to S:30 - CLOSING THIS FRI. 0Nl1 6:00&#13;
P .A.B. Film Series&#13;
Presents&#13;
Wed., Jan. 26 - 2:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Thurs., Jan. 27 - 2:30 p.m. 7 :30 p .m.&#13;
UNION CINEMA THEATE&#13;
Admission $1.00&#13;
I .I EVERY MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY&#13;
SPAGHETTI FEAST&#13;
$1.95&#13;
Bowling - Jan. 22 &amp; 23, 1977 Foosball - r-eb. 4. 5 &amp; 6 . 1977&#13;
Chess - F-eb. 4. 5 &amp; 6. ,sn&#13;
Includes: Salad, Italian Bread and a Free Glass of Wine.&#13;
On&#13;
Wed. - Thurs. 9 :30 - 11 :00 p.m.&#13;
Bubble Up&#13;
Mixed Drinks so•&#13;
Spring, West of 31 in&#13;
Green Ridge Plaza&#13;
632-6151&#13;
~_Jerbu~&#13;
,ourt&#13;
PUB &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
Billiards Jan. 20. 29 &amp; 3o. 1977&#13;
Table . Tennis - Jan. 20. 29 &amp; 3o. 1977&#13;
Local tournament winners to represent Parkside at the ACUI&#13;
Regionals in Madison Wisc. Feb. 17-19, 1977. Contact the&#13;
Union Rec -Center for information or to enter. 51°0 fee/entry.&#13;
Tournament director: Randy Moog Phone: 553-2695 &#13;
Shuttle busses and athletics face cut?&#13;
budget and (2) what the committee has done with these budgets so far and&#13;
what members of the committee plan to do with these budgets.&#13;
UNION: the best place to start in this budget is with the union. After&#13;
all, they are asking for $322,450.&#13;
The basic question with the union is what members of the committee&#13;
feel should be done. Kai Nall, member of the committee, a former'&#13;
Vice-President of PSGA, and an unsuccessful candidate for President of&#13;
PSGA outlined to Ranger how he views the union budget.&#13;
Kai Nan's intent is two-fold. One is to get the union to become selfsufficient&#13;
so eventually they will not need any segregated fee dollars and so&#13;
student tuition can be reduced. Kai Nall feels that would be good for&#13;
everyone concerned. He says that the union wouldn't have to come to the&#13;
allocations committee to get money approved for concerts and movies and&#13;
other programs, they would be free to do anything they wanted to do.&#13;
Kai Nail's second intent is to change who the programing at the union is&#13;
geared to. Kai Nail says that about 600/0 of the students at this campus are&#13;
over 25 and that the programing should be directed at them rather than at&#13;
the 18 to 21 year olds. Kai Nall thinks that there must be much more&#13;
family programming since these 25 year olds usually are married and have&#13;
children. Nail said that one of his major blockades in changing&#13;
programming at the union is Bill Niebuhr, director of the union who is&#13;
paid $10,424 (600/. of his salary) out of segregated fees. Nail said. that he&#13;
has tried to talk to Niebuhr about changing the programming but that&#13;
Niebuhr has resisted any change. But how does Kai Nall think he can get&#13;
rid of Niebuhr? Kai Nall's resolution to request job descriptions from most&#13;
staff positions funded by the allocations committee, was passed&#13;
unanimously by the committee.&#13;
Kai Nall plans to just rewrite Bill Niebuhr's job description and if the&#13;
Chancellor goes along with the committee's new job description, then a&#13;
talent hunt for a new director of the union would begin.&#13;
. (Niebuhr was unavailable for a reply since he is currently vacationing&#13;
In Acapulco.)&#13;
As was mentioned before, this attempt by the committee to fire Niebuhr&#13;
relates to the question of what union programming should be.&#13;
Should the union try to get big name bands (such as America, one of the&#13;
groups being mentioned that Parkside may get this semester) and lose over&#13;
$2,{X)() of student monies? Or should the programming be geared to events&#13;
that make money (Ranger has been unable to find any events or&#13;
programming at the union that make money) or at least events that break&#13;
even. (Events that break even are usually movies.)&#13;
Kai Nall feels that the idea of trying to get big name entertainment is&#13;
just absurd, that it isn't worth the cost to the students.&#13;
Relating to the union programming is the Performing Arts and Lectur-es&#13;
con't from page 1&#13;
budget which is requesting $8,954. Looking at this budget, the choice of&#13;
what should or should not be done becomes clear. The performing arts and&#13;
lectures committee put on two jazz concerts last year with expenses of&#13;
$5,000 and received $4,500 of revenue. To Kai Nail something like that is&#13;
acceptable. What is not acceptable to Nail is examples like the fact that&#13;
the performing arts and lecture committee put on two dance performances&#13;
!'It a cost of $1.500 and only received $600 of revenue. NaIl thinks that a&#13;
Seltreltuted Fee~ (:huirman. I'ue Slrllll'llliki&#13;
program like that is not justifiable. Nail feels that ther~ were very few&#13;
students attending these dance performances and that students shouldn't&#13;
be asked to subsidize by $900 events that are attended by a majority of&#13;
non-students.&#13;
Pete Strutynski, chairman of the allocations committee and vicepresident&#13;
of the Parkside Activities Board, feels that for the sake of&#13;
"diversity" we should subsidize these events and others.Iike them.&#13;
Another question that the allocations committee will decide shortly is&#13;
whether they should allocate $7,400' this next year and for a succeding five&#13;
years in order to allow the union to borrow $40,CXXl to make further&#13;
improvements on the union? It is impossible at this point to determine&#13;
whether they will or will not approve this loan.&#13;
In summary about the union, whether you will see high class bands, or&#13;
see fine arts and lectures or dance repertories or just what kind of movies&#13;
Multi-cultural center&#13;
offers ethnic courses&#13;
The newly-organized Center for Multicultural Studies at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parks ide will offer three courses during the second semester,&#13;
and announced plans for six ethnic workshops during the 1977-78&#13;
academic year. .&#13;
The center is an interdisciplinary institute designed to foster knowledge,&#13;
understanding and appreciation of the various peoples and cultures that&#13;
have contributed to the development of the U.S. and of southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
It will use the skills of historians, demographers, political scientists,&#13;
sociologists, anthropologists, linguists, artists, musicians and community&#13;
representatives to study the ethnic life and culture of various national&#13;
groups in this area.&#13;
Initial course offerings will be "From Italy to Wisconsin: Origin of an&#13;
Ethnic Community" from 6:30 to 7:45 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays&#13;
beginning Jan. 18 "Roots: The Afro-American Experience" from 6:30 to&#13;
9:30 p.m. Wednesdays beginning Jan. 19; and a weekend ethnic workshop,&#13;
"The Polish Community in Southeastern Wisconsin," Friday evening,&#13;
March 4 and all day Saturday, March 5.&#13;
The two courses carry three academic credits and the workshop one&#13;
credit. "Roots" and the Polish workshop may be taken for graduate credit&#13;
under a consortia agreement with UW-Whitewater. Undergraduates may&#13;
register during regular Parkside registration, beginning Jan. 11 and&#13;
continuing during the first week of classes, and graduate students may&#13;
register through the University Extension Office at Parkside. -&#13;
"From Italy to Wisconsin" will include the history and culture of italy&#13;
during the 19th century, the motivation for the Italian immigration to&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parksfde 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
"The culture&#13;
America and the immigrants' adjustment to life in the United States and&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin. The instructor will be Ginevra Sfassciotti, a&#13;
Kenosha native and a Ph. D. candidate at the University of Rochester,&#13;
N.Y., where she has specialized in 19th century Italian history.&#13;
"Roots" is an interdisciplinary course in Black history and culture using&#13;
Alex Haley's widely acclaimed new book tracing his family's heritage from&#13;
West Africa to the slave culture of the American south to the present day.&#13;
The course also will incorporate the forthcoming television film based on&#13;
Haley's book and will include study of the land, people, history and culture&#13;
of Sub-Saharan Africa; the slave trade and slavery in the New World&#13;
colonies; Southern slavery in the 19th century: the anti-slavery movement&#13;
and the Civil War; Reconstruction and Black life after the Civil War; the&#13;
legal assault on discrimination; Black protest movements; and the Black&#13;
experience today.&#13;
The Polish workshop, which will be held at St. Bonaventure High&#13;
School, Sturtevant, will explore the history, traditions, culture, social&#13;
structure. art. music and present circumstances of the Polish community&#13;
in southe~stern Wisconsin. Ethnic sweet's will be served at the evening&#13;
session and an ethnic luncheon at the all-dey session.&#13;
During the 1977-78 year, the center plans to offer six similar workshops&#13;
focusing on Blacks, Latinos, Italians, Danes, Armenians and Germans.&#13;
With the support of more than a dozen ethnic organizations in the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities as well as the Racine and Kenosha&#13;
Unified School Districts, the center has applied to the U.S. Office of&#13;
.Education for a grant in support of the workshops as well as development&#13;
of curricular materials on various ethnic groups which would be available&#13;
to the schools.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
you will see, all of this will&#13;
of the committee meetings:&#13;
be Thursday at 3:30, ;"&#13;
WLLC D173.&#13;
ATHLETICS AND&#13;
decisi~!1 as yet. However&#13;
comm~ttee (to this reporter&#13;
these suggestions). Nail f&#13;
priority over the Interm&#13;
should be divided equally&#13;
Title IX is to get parity&#13;
this parity can be accomp&#13;
sports and women's spo&#13;
difference. Kai Nall men&#13;
TRANSPORTATION:&#13;
but there were interesti&#13;
general consenus that&#13;
Racine bus is asking for&#13;
works out tu over SI20&#13;
- Also under considera .&#13;
parking lot to be built&#13;
eliminating the shuttle&#13;
bus service. This would&#13;
In conclusion, the A&#13;
future weeks that affect&#13;
next meeting is Thursday&#13;
Uross-connt&#13;
crosses con t~&#13;
by'Chrls Clausen&#13;
Victor Godfrey. Parkside'&#13;
cross-country coach, is leaving t&#13;
coach in Bahrain.&#13;
Bahrain (pronounced Bir-rain) i&#13;
off the east coast of Saudi Arabia i&#13;
the western Persian Gulf. lnde&#13;
pendent from Britain since Janua&#13;
l , 1970, with a population on one&#13;
quarter million, its economy is&#13;
_ based on oil refining and aluminum&#13;
production.&#13;
Victor Godfrey is going to this&#13;
country along with seven othe&#13;
individuals to establish a national&#13;
athletic program.&#13;
Godfrey's job wiJl become&#13;
national nack coach coordinating&#13;
the Bahrainese school track&#13;
program.&#13;
To most people. moving to a tin&#13;
Arabian island to help establish&#13;
sport's program is something of&#13;
fairy tale. But to Victor Godfrey it'&#13;
just a new challenging job amon&#13;
others.&#13;
Godfrey spent 4 years with th&#13;
Peace Corps in the Far East. H&#13;
came to accept and understand a&#13;
culture and the&#13;
Shuttle husses and athletics {ace cut?&#13;
budget and (2) what the committee has done with these budgets so far and&#13;
what members of the committee plan to do with these budgets.&#13;
UNION: the best place to start in this budget is with the union. After&#13;
all, they are asking for $322,450.&#13;
The basic question with the union is what members of the committee&#13;
feel should be done. Kai Nall, member of the committee, a former ·&#13;
Vice-President of PSGA, and an unsuccessful candidate for President of&#13;
PSGA outlined to Ranger how he views the union budget.&#13;
Kai Nail's intent is two-fold. One is to get the union to become selfsufficient&#13;
so eventually they will not need any segregated fee dollars and so&#13;
student tuition can be reduced. Kai Nall feels that would be good for&#13;
everyone concerned. He says that the union wouldn't have to come to the&#13;
allocations committee to get money approved for concerts and movies and&#13;
other programs, they would be free to do anything they wanted to do.&#13;
Kai Nail's second intent is to change who the programing at the union is&#13;
geared to. Kai Nall says that about 60o/o of the students at this campus are&#13;
over 25 and that the programing should be directed at them rather than at&#13;
the 18 to 21 year olds. Kai Nall thinks that there must be much more&#13;
family programming since these 25 year olds usually are married and have&#13;
children. Nall said that one of his major blockades in changing&#13;
programming at the union is Bill Niebuhr, director of the union who is&#13;
paid $10,424 (60% of his salary) out of segregated fees. Nall said that he&#13;
has tried to talk to Niebuhr about changing the programming but that&#13;
Niebuhr has resisted any change. But how does Kai Nall think he can get&#13;
rid of Niebuhr? Kai Nail's resolution to request job descriptions from most&#13;
staff positions funded by the allocations committee, was passed&#13;
unanimously by the committee.&#13;
Kai Nall plans to just rewrite Bill Niebuhr's job description and if the&#13;
Chancellor goes along with the committee's new job description, then a&#13;
talen~ hunt f?r a new director of the union would begin.&#13;
(Niebuhr was unavailable for a reply since he is currently vacationing&#13;
in Acapulco.)&#13;
As was mentioned before, this attempt by the committee to fire Niebuhr&#13;
relates to the question of what union programming should be.&#13;
Should the union try to get big name bands (such as America, one of the&#13;
groups being mentioned that Parkside may get this semester) and lose over&#13;
$2,000 of student monies? Or should the programming be geared to events&#13;
that make money (Ranger has been unable to find any events or&#13;
programming at the union that make money) or at least events that break&#13;
even. (Events that break even are usually movies.)&#13;
Kai Nall feels that the idea of trying to get big name entertainment is&#13;
just absurd, that it isn't worth the cost to the students.&#13;
Relating to the union programming is the Performing Arts and Lectur-es&#13;
con 't from page 1&#13;
budget which is requesting $8,954. Looking at this budget, the choice of&#13;
what should or should not be done becomes clear. The performing arts and&#13;
lectures committee put on two jazz concerts last year with expenses of&#13;
$5,000 and received $4,500 of revenue. To Kai Nall something like that is&#13;
acceptable. What is not acceptable to Nall is examples like the fact that&#13;
the performing arts and lecture committee put on two dance performances&#13;
~t a cost of $1,500 and only received $600 of revenue. Nall think~ that a&#13;
Segregated Fee¥ Chairman , a,ere Strutyn" ki&#13;
program like that is not justifiable. Nall feels that there were very few&#13;
students attending these dance performances and that students shouldn't&#13;
be asked to subsidize by $900 events that are attended by a majority of&#13;
non-students.&#13;
Pete Strutynski, chairman of the allocations committee and vicepresident&#13;
of the Parkside Activities Board, feels that for the sake of&#13;
"diversity" we should subsidize these events and others like them.&#13;
Another question that the allocations committee will decide shortly is&#13;
whether they should allocate $7,400 this next year and for a succeding five&#13;
years in order to allow the union to borrow $40,000 to make further&#13;
improvements on the union? It is impossible at this point to determine&#13;
whether they will or will not approve this loan.&#13;
In summary abou~ the union, whether you will see high class bands, or&#13;
see fine arts and lectures or dance repertories or just what kind of movies&#13;
Multi-cultural center&#13;
offers ethnic · courses&#13;
The newly-organized Center for Multicultural Studies at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside will offer three courses during the second semester,&#13;
and announced plans for six ethnic workshops during the 1977-78&#13;
academic year.&#13;
The center is an interdisciplinary institute designed _to foster knowledge,&#13;
understanding and appreciation of the various peoples and cultures that&#13;
have contributed to the development of the U.S. and of southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
It will use the skills of historians, demographers, political scientists,&#13;
sociologists, anthropologists, linguists, artists, musicians and community&#13;
representatives to study the ethnic life and culture of various national&#13;
groups in this area.&#13;
Initial course offerings will be "From Italy to Wisconsin: Origin of an&#13;
Ethnic Community" from 6:30 to 7:45 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays&#13;
beginning Jan. 18 "I.foots: The Afro-American Experience" from 6:30 to&#13;
9:30 p.m. Wednesdays beginning Jan.19; and a weekend ethnic workshop,&#13;
"The Polish Community in Southeastern Wisconsin," Friday evening,&#13;
March 4 and all day Saturday, March 5.&#13;
The two courses carry three aca~emic credits and the workshop one&#13;
credit. "Roots" and the Polish workshop may be taken for graduate credit&#13;
under a consortia agreement with UW-Whitewater. Undergraduates may&#13;
register during regular Parkside registration, beginning Jan. 11 and&#13;
continuing during the first week of classes, and graduate students may&#13;
register through the University Extension Office at Parkside. ·&#13;
" From Italy to Wisconsin" will include the history and culture of Italy&#13;
during the 19th century, the mo•ivation for the Italian immigration to&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
M ember Parkside 200&#13;
National Va rsity Club&#13;
•&#13;
443 7 - 22nd A venue Kenosha&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
'&#13;
America and the immigrants' adj•.ist ment to life in the United States and&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin. The instructor will be Ginevra Sfassciotti, a&#13;
Kenosha native and a Ph. D. candidate at the University of Rochester,&#13;
N.Y., where she has specialized in 19th century Italian history.&#13;
"Roots" is an interdisciplinary course in Black history and culture using&#13;
Alex Haley's widely acclaimed new book tracing his family's heritage from&#13;
West Africa to the slave culture of the American south to the present day.&#13;
The course also will incorporate the forthcoming television film based on&#13;
Haley's book and will include study of the land, people, history and culture&#13;
of Sub-Saharan Africa; the slave trade and slavery in the New World&#13;
colonies; Southern slavery in the 19th century; the anti-slavery movement&#13;
and the Civil War; Reconstruction and Black life after the Civil War; the&#13;
legal assaµlt on discrimination; Black protest movements; and the Black&#13;
experience today.&#13;
The Polish workshop, which will be held at St. Bonaventure High&#13;
School, Sturtevant, will explore the history, traditions, culture, social&#13;
structure, art. music and present circumstances of the Polish community&#13;
in southeastern Wisconsin . Ethnic sweets will be served at the evening&#13;
~ession and an ethnic luncheon at the all-day session.&#13;
During the 1977-78 year, the center plans to offer six similar workshops&#13;
focusing on Blacks, Latinos, Italians, Danes, Armenians and Germ.ans.&#13;
With the support of more than a dozen ethnic organizations in the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities as well as the Racine and Kenosha&#13;
Unified School Districts, the center has applied to the U.S. Office of&#13;
· Education for a grant in support of the workshops as well as development&#13;
of curricular materials on various ethnic groups which would be available&#13;
to the schools.&#13;
On tap at Union Square - - --- -- .&#13;
you will set:, all of this Will&#13;
of the committee meetings&#13;
be Thursday at 3·30 . . ' Ill&#13;
WLLC D173.&#13;
ATHLETICS AND I&#13;
decisiop as yet. However&#13;
comm~ttee (to this reporter&#13;
. ~~,·' Kai Nall , acthr q •·&#13;
,.i.ti:lb&#13;
these suggestions). Nall feit'J;&gt;··&#13;
priority over the Intermuiif lids&#13;
should be divided equally ,,~/IO&#13;
Title IX is to get parity -~-- this parity can be accompiil _illt&#13;
sports · and women's spo dfl!. !he&#13;
difference. Kai Nall men · mll!I!&#13;
TRANSPORTATION: . ~&amp;d&#13;
but there were interes · ~&#13;
general consenus that the&#13;
Racine bus is asking for&#13;
works out to over $120&#13;
Also under considerati&#13;
parking lot to be built n&#13;
eliminating the shuttle b&#13;
bus service. This would&#13;
In conclusion, the All&#13;
future weeks that affect&#13;
next meeting is Thursday&#13;
by-Chris Clausen&#13;
Victor Godfrey, Parkside'&#13;
cross-country coach , is leaving t&#13;
coach in Bahrain.&#13;
Bahrain (pronounced Bir-rain) is&#13;
off the east coast of Saudi Arabia in&#13;
the western Persian Gulf. lnde&#13;
pendent from Britain since January&#13;
1, 1970, with a population on one&gt;&#13;
quarter million, its economy is&#13;
~ based on oil refining and aluminum&#13;
production.&#13;
Victor Godfrey is going to this&#13;
country along with seven othe&#13;
individuals to establish a national&#13;
athletic program.&#13;
Godfrey's job will becorn&#13;
national u;ack coach coordinating&#13;
the Bahrainese school track&#13;
program.&#13;
To most peoplt:, moving to a tin&#13;
Arabian island to help establish a&#13;
sport's program is something of a:&#13;
fairy tale. But to Victor Godfrey it'&#13;
just a new challenging job amon&#13;
others.&#13;
Godfrey spent 4 years with the&#13;
Peace Corps in the Far East. He&#13;
came to accept and understand a&#13;
well as appreciate the Moslem&#13;
culture and the people he said.&#13;
"The culture of Bahrain t, &#13;
_C_o_ur_se_s_o..:;..::ffi~e_re_d__ ,'Ine~s&#13;
;.\Vi]1 ided shortly by the committee. (Note, all&#13;
:tn~ bpen to the public.) The next meeting will&#13;
, ll) .room kitty corner from the info kiosk,&#13;
~RA15: the committee had made no 'e .&#13;
vtr; NaIl made several suggestions to the&#13;
l°tter ~med the committee would go alo~g with&#13;
)&#13;
I&#13;
t&#13;
i,,~ ~r (If the Se,:rejl;aled Fees Commhtee,&#13;
111fetbat the Athletics budget should not have&#13;
mllrludget. Nall feels that the Athletics budget&#13;
tallyrcen men and women. Since the intent of&#13;
ty bElen men and. women's sports, Kat feels that&#13;
mptidbylooking at the difference between men's&#13;
5pOJ'\Dd just reduce the men's budget by the&#13;
nentieda figure of over $10,000 .&#13;
•H: ::ommittee again did not make any decision&#13;
. roposals. Foremost among these was the&#13;
the~. bus may have to be cut. Currently the&#13;
'or bsidy of SII ,000. With only 90 riders that&#13;
dent.&#13;
. ' the shuttle bus. With the planning of a new&#13;
,0 the Phy. Ed. building, there was talk of&#13;
b tirely or just drastically reducing the shuttle&#13;
~d 'e a proposed $50,000 in segregated fees.&#13;
'DSCommittee will be deciding things in the&#13;
et ts and attendance is encouraged. The&#13;
lay aJoil room D173 actoss from the info kiosk.&#13;
ruoauh&#13;
I&#13;
Iry to coach&#13;
similar so there'll be no culture&#13;
shock for myself. For my family it&#13;
v;ill be a little ditlerent. The&#13;
children, who will attend Bahrain&#13;
) is public school rather than private&#13;
lin school. are young enough not to&#13;
notice too much of a change. My&#13;
wifeis lOOking forward to this with&#13;
much enthusiasm as I am."&#13;
Victor Godfrey was originally&#13;
Jm enthusiastic about the potential of&#13;
the UW-P area.&#13;
his "Of course the basic handicaps&#13;
towards recruiting, such as lack of&#13;
alumni and the fact that UW -P is a&#13;
ctlmmuter college. has hurt us&#13;
Oluch. I feel satisfied that we have&#13;
achieved the goal above and beyond&#13;
establishing. a cross-country program."&#13;
said Godfrey.&#13;
There is no need to worry about&#13;
the program falling apart,&#13;
according to Godfrey. because he is&#13;
conlident in Coach Bob Lawson-,&#13;
and When news of Godfrey's&#13;
Ilsignation became public. numerhe&#13;
~us informal telephone c~lIs&#13;
He .lllquired about the job opening.&#13;
as GOdfrey is sad at leaving&#13;
~JT1 Parkside and the potential of the&#13;
id, area. yet he is excited by the&#13;
bssibility' of working in Bahrain.&#13;
....&#13;
,'j&#13;
to&#13;
de&#13;
,ry&#13;
neis'&#13;
,e'&#13;
nal&#13;
m&#13;
,fig&#13;
ck&#13;
iny&#13;
,a&#13;
fa&#13;
It'S&#13;
,ng&#13;
Criminal justice&#13;
"Criminal Justice and the Constitution" will be the second course&#13;
offering in the developing criminal justice program here at Parkside. The&#13;
three-credit class will meet Wednesdays beginning tonight. January J9.&#13;
from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m.&#13;
The course is specifically designed to meet the professional needs of&#13;
criminal justice personnel and to provide interested students with a greater&#13;
understanding of tile origin. workings and problems of the criminal justice&#13;
system. It will include study of due process standards, search and seizure&#13;
guidelines. pica bargaining standards. interrogation and right to counsel&#13;
staudurdv. trial by jury. police regulations and prisoner rights.&#13;
The instructor will be John Kozlowicz, whose recent research has&#13;
focused on current trends of U.S. Supreme Court decisions in criminal law&#13;
and civil liberties cases. He also has been a National Endowment for the&#13;
Humanities fellow researching defendants' rights and the jury system.&#13;
Additional information on the course, the Parkside criminal justice&#13;
program and availability of leep funding for criminal justice professionals&#13;
is available from Cliff Johnson, academic counseling specialist in criminal&#13;
justice, who can be reached at 553-2575.&#13;
The current course offering continues a program begun last fall with a&#13;
course on "The Development of Stress Management Skills in Relation to&#13;
the Police Punctlon'tartended by 25 law enforcement personnel.&#13;
The courses are designed as the basis for a developing interdisciplinary&#13;
program in which students could complete a concentration in criminal&#13;
justice at Parkside within the sociology major.&#13;
.Regents approve&#13;
teaching projects&#13;
Two proposals submitted by University of Wisconsin-Parkside faculty&#13;
and staff members have been funded under the UW System&#13;
Undergraduate Teaching Improvement Grant program for 1977-78 .&#13;
Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs Donald K, Smith announced&#13;
at a Board of Regents meeting Dec. 16.&#13;
Donald Piele, mathematics, and Larry Wood, psychology, were awarded&#13;
a grant of $9,154 for a project aimed at improving and e.xpanding ~n&#13;
existing pilot course designed to teach general problem solving strategies&#13;
including organizing information, inference, trial and error, subgcals,&#13;
contradiction and working backward. Interactive computing will be used&#13;
to reinforce problem solving skills taught in class and instructional&#13;
materials will be developed to teach students use of problem solving&#13;
strategies in conjunction with computer programming to solve complex&#13;
problems. .&#13;
Carla Stoffie. assistant director of the Library-Learntng Center. and&#13;
Simon Karter, archivist, received funding of $8.485 for a project involving&#13;
preparation of concise workbook-guides to ~i?rary ~esearch skill~ and&#13;
basic bibliographic resources in English, polItical sCience and SOCiology&#13;
similar to a previously-developed workbook-guide in history. Faculty&#13;
consultants for the project will be Samuel Pernacciaro. assistant professor&#13;
of political science, James Gruber, assistant professor of sociology, and&#13;
Alan Shucard. associate professor of English, .,&#13;
The grants are designed to encourage dev~.topment of tnnovatlve&#13;
teaching in the U.W System.&#13;
Aspin crosses tracks&#13;
Congressman Les Aspin has&#13;
asked the Chicago &lt;J~ldNorthwestern&#13;
Railroad to improve the&#13;
condition of the grade crossing near&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The tracks intersect Highway A&#13;
just west of Highway .32.&#13;
In a letter to railroad president&#13;
James Wolfe. Aspin stated,&#13;
"Highway A is one of the major&#13;
traffic links connecting Kenosha&#13;
and Racine County students with&#13;
UW-Parksfde.'·&#13;
"In recent months the crossing&#13;
has deteriorated to a point where&#13;
vehicular traffic has to virtually&#13;
crawl across the tracks." continued&#13;
Aspin.&#13;
Aspin has received numerous&#13;
complaints about the condition of&#13;
the crossing. According to Aspin,&#13;
Wisconsin statutes make it the&#13;
responsihility of the railroad to&#13;
maintain ;!s track crossings.&#13;
Free Pizza Delivery&#13;
Club Highview&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652·8737&#13;
AI•• 4.11•.,11" Chi•••• , Sp.,hefti, R•• 'oll, B.. I&#13;
OPEN 4 p.•. ft 1 '.Ill.&#13;
Learning disabilities&#13;
Two courses of interest to teachers are among second seme ter&#13;
education offerings at Parkside.&#13;
They are "Teaching About the Third World" and "Inservice 10&#13;
Learning Disabilities for Classroom Teachers," both on Tuesdays&#13;
beginning Jan. 18 from 6:30 to 9:J5 p.m. Both are three-credit courses.&#13;
Designed for both prospective and practicing teachers, "Teaching&#13;
About the Third World" can be taken either for Parkside undergraduate&#13;
credit or Uw-whltewater graduate credit. Undergraduate registraunn 1\&#13;
during rhc week of January 11 and graduate registration is at the Ii,..,t&#13;
clu ......vcvvton:&#13;
Instructors for the course. which deals with Africa. Asia and La ••&#13;
. America. are Marvin Happel, assistant professor of edu aucn and a&#13;
specialist in multicultural education and social studies methods. and&#13;
Gerald Greenfield, assistant professor of history and a specialist in Latin&#13;
American and African area studies.&#13;
"Jn ..cn icc in Learning Disabilities" i..designed to provide the classroom&#13;
reacher wuh practical vkill .. in identifying children with learning&#13;
disabilities. remedial techniques for use in the classroom and techniques&#13;
for helping LD children develop compensatory measures for their deficit"&#13;
so they can continue to learn in the classroom situation.&#13;
The course. arranged with area special education depart ments which&#13;
will be working with students in the class to explain local diagnostic&#13;
procedures. will be taught by Diane 1. German. assistant professor of&#13;
education and director at the Learning Disabilities Program at Park ide.&#13;
Detailed rcgt ..truuon information IS available by calling the Intcrmauon&#13;
Center ill 55J-2345 .&#13;
'Flags of convenience'&#13;
Tankers keep sinking&#13;
by Carla Rapaport&#13;
(PNS)- Behind the recent rash&#13;
of oil tanker accidents in U.S.&#13;
waters lies a system of shipping&#13;
registration that has given the tiny&#13;
African nation of Liberia the&#13;
largest merchant fleet in the world&#13;
- and that may be a significant&#13;
cause of accidents at sea.&#13;
Liberia, along with Panama and&#13;
a few other small nations. flies a&#13;
"flag of convenience." Ship owners&#13;
from around the world register&#13;
fleets there to escape the taxes,&#13;
union wage scales and often- strict&#13;
regulations and inspections in their&#13;
home countries.&#13;
Three-quarters of the Liberian&#13;
ships are Greek or Americanowned.&#13;
And some of the best ships&#13;
in the world, including those of&#13;
almost every major U.S. oil&#13;
company ~are among them.&#13;
But according to recent statistics&#13;
from the Organization for&#13;
Economic Cooperation and Devel,&#13;
opment (OECD) - made up of&#13;
Japan. the U.S. and Western&#13;
Europe - ships flying flags of&#13;
convenience were lost at nearly four&#13;
times the rate of those from DECD&#13;
nations during the ten years prior&#13;
to 1973.&#13;
Investigators discovered that&#13;
while only 2S percent of the&#13;
ocean-going traffic in the Hong&#13;
Kong area in 1975 flew flags of&#13;
convenience. they accounted for 75&#13;
percent of all ships that sank or&#13;
seriously faltered,&#13;
Last February and March the&#13;
Hong Kong Marine Depanmcnt&#13;
unc""ered 106 cases of ilIe.. 1&#13;
recruitment and decided to begin&#13;
spot checks on seamen's ceniflcates&#13;
on ships berthing there.&#13;
One convicted ship-broker in&#13;
Hong Kong testified that he had&#13;
simply written in higher grades -&#13;
elevating one sailor from pumpman&#13;
to chief engineer. for example&#13;
- on Panamanian certificates. He&#13;
then photocopied them and sent&#13;
the copies to the Liberian&#13;
Maritime Administration in New&#13;
York for the equivalent liberian&#13;
certificates, which were in turn&#13;
used by sailors to get "genuine"&#13;
Panamanian licenses,&#13;
The Liberian government flatly&#13;
denied that it accepted Panaman·&#13;
ian seamen's licenses as a basis for&#13;
issuing Liberian licenses. But Hong&#13;
Kong government officials say such&#13;
exchanges have been routine for&#13;
years. an assessment that is&#13;
confirmed by international shipping&#13;
registration officials.&#13;
While Britain requires a rigorous&#13;
series of oral and written exams&#13;
taken after several years in traioing&#13;
school. Liberia gives a multiple&#13;
choice test. And in Taiwan. the&#13;
exam is heavily weighted with&#13;
political Questions.&#13;
Standards for promotion from&#13;
rank to rank and for officer&#13;
certification likewise vary widely.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington lWe. 634-2313&#13;
-&#13;
_IY UJ\eeided shortly by the committee. (Note, all 1&#13;
n_gs bpen to the public.) The next meeting will&#13;
' 1n room kitty comer from the info kiosk,&#13;
~RALS: the committee had made no V •&#13;
ever i Nall made several suggestions to the 0 tter eemed the committee would go along with&#13;
I&#13;
efE:re~aled Feew Committee.&#13;
fethat the Athletics budget should not have&#13;
uriudget. Nall feels that the Athletics budget&#13;
ally-ween men and women. Since the intent of&#13;
~ been men and .. women's sports, Kai feels that&#13;
mplitf by looking at the difference between men's&#13;
sponnd just reduce the men's budget by the&#13;
entied a figure of over $10,000.&#13;
N: ticommittee again did not make any decision&#13;
· roposals. Foremost among these was the&#13;
e ·ine bus may have to be cut. Currently the&#13;
or bsidy of $11,000. With only 90 riders that&#13;
pe dent.&#13;
tio the shuttle bus. With the planning of a new&#13;
ne lo the Phy·. Ed. building, there was talk of&#13;
us tirely or just drastically reducing the shuttle&#13;
Id •e a proposed $50,000 in segregated fees.&#13;
ms Committee will be deciding things in the&#13;
t dents and attendance is encouraged. The&#13;
· ay a30 in room D 173 across from the info kiosk.&#13;
r coach&#13;
e's&#13;
to&#13;
is&#13;
in&#13;
be-&#13;
~ ~JS&#13;
~er&#13;
hal&#13;
ry to coach&#13;
similar so there'll be no culture&#13;
shock for myself. For my family it&#13;
will be a little different. The&#13;
ch ildren, who will attend Bahrain&#13;
public school rather than private&#13;
school, are young enough not to&#13;
notice too much of a change. My&#13;
wife is looking forward to this with&#13;
much enthusiasm as I am."&#13;
· Victor Godfrey was originally&#13;
enthusiastic about the potential of&#13;
the UW -P area .&#13;
"Of course the basic handicaps&#13;
towards recruiting, such as lack of&#13;
alumni and the fact that UW-P is a&#13;
commuter college, has hurt us&#13;
me rnuch. I feel satisfied that we have&#13;
[ng achieved the goal above and beyond&#13;
ck establishing_ a cross-country program,"&#13;
said Godfrey.&#13;
ny There .is no need to worry about&#13;
the program falling apart,&#13;
according to Godfrey, because he is&#13;
confident in Coach Bob Lawson ,,&#13;
a&#13;
fa&#13;
ifs&#13;
ng and when news of Godfrey's&#13;
resignation became public, numer-&#13;
,he ?Us informal telephone ciills&#13;
1-{e .inquired about the job opening.&#13;
Godfrey is sad at leaving&#13;
Parkside and the potential of the&#13;
d. area, yet he is excited by the&#13;
b--t ssibility· of working in Bahrain. ~&#13;
_C_o_ur_se_s_o_ffi_e_re_d_ , s&amp; I = news ,&#13;
Criminal justice&#13;
"Criminal Justice and the Constitution" will be the second course&#13;
offering in the developing criminal justice program here at Parkside. The&#13;
three-credit class will meet Wednesdays beginning tonight, January 19,&#13;
from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m.&#13;
The course is specifically designed to meet the professional needs of&#13;
criminal justice personnel and to provide interested students with a greater&#13;
understanding of t•1e origin, workings and problems of the criminal justice&#13;
system. It will include study of due process standards, search and seizure&#13;
guicli:linc,. pica bargaining standard~. interrogation and right to counsel&#13;
~tanclard,. trial by jury. police regulation~ and prisoner rights.&#13;
The instructor will be John Kozlowicz, whose recent research has&#13;
focused on current frends ofU .S. Supreme Court decisions in criminal law&#13;
and civil liberties cases. He also has been a National Endowment for the&#13;
Humanities fellow researching defendants' rights and the jury system.&#13;
Additional information on the course, the Parkside criminal justice&#13;
program and availability of Jeep funding for criminal justice professionals&#13;
is available from Cliff Johnson, academic counseling specialist in criminal&#13;
justice, who can be reached at 553-2575.&#13;
The current course offering continues a program begun last fall with a&#13;
course on "The Development of Stress Management Skills in Relation to&#13;
the Police i::unction'' 'attended by 25 law enforcement personnel.&#13;
The courses are designed as the basis for a developing interdisciplinary&#13;
program in which students could complete a concentration in criminal&#13;
justice at Parkside within the sociology major .&#13;
. Regents approve&#13;
teaching projects&#13;
Two proposals submitted by University of Wisconsin-Parkside faculty&#13;
and staff members have been funded under the UW System&#13;
Undergraduate Teaching Improvement Grant program for 1977-78,&#13;
Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs Donald K. Smith announced&#13;
at a Board of Regents meeting Dec. 16.&#13;
Donald Piele, mathematics, and Larry Wood, psychology, were awarded&#13;
a grant of $9,154 for a project aimed at improving and e_xpanding ~n&#13;
existing pilot course designed to teach general problem solvmg strategies&#13;
including organizing information, inference, trial and error, subgoals,&#13;
contradiction and working backward. Interactive computing will be used&#13;
to reinforce problem solving skills taught in class and instructio~al&#13;
materials will be developed to teach students use of problem solving&#13;
strategies in conjunction with computer programming to solve complex&#13;
problems. .&#13;
Carla Stoffle, assistant director of the Library-Learning Center, and&#13;
Simon Karter, archivist, received funding of $8,485 for a project involving&#13;
preparation of concise workbook-guides to library ~esearch skill~ and&#13;
basic bibliographic resources in English, political science and sociology&#13;
similar to a previously-developed workbook-guide in history. Faculty&#13;
consultants for the project will be Samuel Pernacciaro, assista~t professor&#13;
of political science, James Gruber, assistant professor of soc1ology, and&#13;
Alan Shucard, associate professor of English.&#13;
The grants are designed to encourage deveJopment of innovative&#13;
teaching in the UW System.&#13;
Aspin crosses tracks&#13;
Congressman Les Aspin has&#13;
asked the Chicago a!1d Northwestern&#13;
Railroad to improve the&#13;
condition of the grade crossing near&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The tracks intersect Highway A&#13;
just west of Highway .32.&#13;
In a letter to railroad president&#13;
James Wolfe, Aspin stated,&#13;
"Highway A is one of the major&#13;
traffic links connecting Kenosha&#13;
and Racine County students with&#13;
UW -Parkside."&#13;
"In recent months the crossing&#13;
has deteriorated to a point where&#13;
vehicular traffic has to virtually&#13;
crawl across the tracks," continued&#13;
Aspin.&#13;
Aspin has received numerous&#13;
complaints about the condition of&#13;
the crossing. According to Aspin,&#13;
Wisconsin statutes make it the&#13;
responsibility of the railroad to&#13;
maintain ,is track crossings.&#13;
~&#13;
Free Pizza Delifery&#13;
Club ·Highview&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Pho'ne: 652-87;17&#13;
Alto ••Dttrl19 Chlck11, s,11h1tt1, Railoll, 8111&#13;
OPEN 4 t.•: to 1 •·•·&#13;
-&#13;
Learnin di abiliti&#13;
'Flags of conve ience'&#13;
ec nd m ter&#13;
a&#13;
and&#13;
tin&#13;
Tankers keep sinking&#13;
by Carla Rapaport&#13;
(PNS)-Behind the recent ra h&#13;
of oil tanker accident in U. .&#13;
waters lies a system of hipping&#13;
regi tration that has given the tin&#13;
African nation of Liberia the&#13;
largest merchant fleet in the world&#13;
- and that may be a ignificant&#13;
cause of accidents at ea.&#13;
Liberia, along with Panama and&#13;
a few other small nations, flies a&#13;
" flag of convenience." Ship owners&#13;
from around the world register&#13;
fleets there to escape the taxes,&#13;
union wage scales and often strict&#13;
regulations and inspections in their&#13;
home countries.&#13;
Three-quarters of the Liberian&#13;
ships are Greek or Americanowned.&#13;
And some of the be t ships&#13;
in the world, including tho e of&#13;
almost every major U.S. oil&#13;
company, are among them.&#13;
But according to recent statistics&#13;
from the Organization for&#13;
Economic Cooperation and Development&#13;
(OECD) - made up of&#13;
Japan, the U.S. and Western&#13;
Europe - ships flying flags of&#13;
convenience were lost at nearly four&#13;
times the rate of those from OECD&#13;
nations during the ten years prior&#13;
to 1973.&#13;
Investigators discovered that&#13;
while only 25 percent of the&#13;
ocean-going traffic in the Hong&#13;
Kong area in 1975 flew flags of&#13;
convenience, they accounted for 75&#13;
percent of all ships that sank or&#13;
sen u ly faltered .&#13;
Last cbru ry nd March the&#13;
Hong Kong Marine&#13;
un overed l&#13;
recruitment and d 1d&#13;
pot h k n earn n&#13;
on hip berthin there.&#13;
One c nvi t d hip-br&#13;
Hong Kong te tified that&#13;
simply written in higher gr de -&#13;
elevating one ailor fT m pumpman&#13;
to chief engineer, for example&#13;
- on Panamanian certificate . He&#13;
then photocopied them and sent&#13;
the copie to the Liberian&#13;
Maritime Admini !ration in New&#13;
York for the equivalent Liberian&#13;
certificate , which were in turn&#13;
u ed by ailors to get "genuine"&#13;
Panamanian license .&#13;
The Liberian g vernment flat!&#13;
denied that it accepted Panamanian&#13;
eamen' Ii en e a a b i for&#13;
i uin Liberian licen e . But H ng&#13;
Kong g vernment offici I y uch&#13;
exchange have been routine for&#13;
year , an a ment that i&#13;
c nfirmed by internation I hipping&#13;
regi trati n official .&#13;
While Britain require a ri orou&#13;
erie of oral and written exam&#13;
taken after everal years in training&#13;
school. Liberia give a multiple&#13;
choice te t. And in Taiwan, the&#13;
exam is heavily weighted with&#13;
political que tions.&#13;
Standards for promotion from&#13;
rank to rank and for officer&#13;
certification likewi e vary widely.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. Ill 10:30 P .M.&#13;
2615 Washington /We. 634-2373 &#13;
Visage&#13;
editor's note&#13;
jeff .... ,- j. Mwencki&#13;
The following haiku were written by the eighth grade&#13;
accelerated English class at Gilmore Junior High&#13;
School in Racine where I was student teaching this&#13;
past fall.&#13;
Reflections,&#13;
Reflections dazzle&#13;
Copying the countryside&#13;
In beautiful pools.&#13;
Susan Svaboda&#13;
Waterfalls falling&#13;
creating brilliant colors&#13;
when the sun shines through&#13;
Katie Lorence&#13;
1HHHHHHHHHHHHH-HHHHHHHMHHHHHHHHHH&#13;
a drop of dew, clinging to petals,&#13;
quietly drops,&#13;
heaven's tears.&#13;
Sheryl Ollvarsen&#13;
a crystal, white, fragil snowflake&#13;
drifts to the ground&#13;
silently weeping ....&#13;
Sheryl Olivarsen&#13;
thin silver moon&#13;
shines sleepily down to the&#13;
awakening earth ....&#13;
Sheryi Ollvarsen&#13;
Great grey elephants&#13;
Tremendous in strength and weight&#13;
Roam in huge herds&#13;
Sue Guentzel&#13;
Geese swiftly fly&#13;
over the snow covered farm&#13;
southbound for their home&#13;
Connie Lamberton&#13;
The ugly duckling&#13;
Waddling away from home&#13;
To become a swan&#13;
Monica Steinbach&#13;
Butterflies are grand&#13;
Silent, flying, beautiful&#13;
They flutter on air .:&#13;
Sue Guentzel&#13;
When wint'ry ways confound the time&#13;
and I, an l-stck-cota&#13;
compounded drawn-and-quarteredly,&#13;
my mind on you ...&#13;
I find no little comfort there&#13;
where warm before your fiery eyes our fears&#13;
would melt away ...&#13;
Fire and wine, apples, cheeses - Jesus! I'm:&#13;
alone tonight&#13;
good wood to burn&#13;
a book&#13;
but&#13;
me ...&#13;
no match/es.&#13;
Happilessly rememb'ring when -&#13;
before I saw your&#13;
Smg. u anty ... · , I .&#13;
aware of nothing&#13;
to be lost&#13;
you&#13;
were just&#13;
another snowflake falling on my soul&#13;
(Ohitscold! - I'm growing old ... )&#13;
but weren't we innocently clean?&#13;
like new-fallen&#13;
'fore the footprints&#13;
of our time&#13;
lost in love?&#13;
And now you remind me,&#13;
finally,&#13;
of teardrops in the snow.&#13;
Brian Kipp&#13;
i look to discover&#13;
the mind before my birth&#13;
where the dreams i dreamed&#13;
before the night and i&#13;
were fed by my mother's womb&#13;
and time but slept in fluid of growing pang&#13;
!&#13;
i look to discover&#13;
the mind before my birth&#13;
before there was a tomorrow to come&#13;
and yesterday was never more&#13;
and i was never more&#13;
tnen two dreams becoming one .'&#13;
and dreams made more reality&#13;
than a world of abstract fleshly wakenings&#13;
i look to discover&#13;
why day happened'somehow&#13;
without even a whispering good-bye&#13;
i watch as memory mist swallows years&#13;
into deja vu .&#13;
i look to discover&#13;
why born children smile&#13;
why only born children smile&#13;
Do only born children smile?&#13;
i run without a time to go&#13;
and though&#13;
i am in the where i was born&#13;
i look to discover&#13;
the when before my birth&#13;
c&#13;
"&#13;
41&#13;
.j&#13;
(,&#13;
jeffrey [. swencki&#13;
Visage&#13;
Reflections ,&#13;
Reflections dazzle&#13;
Copying the countryside&#13;
In beautiful pools.&#13;
Susan Svaboda&#13;
thin silver moon&#13;
shines sleepily down to the&#13;
awakening earth . ...&#13;
Sheryi 01 Iversen&#13;
The ugly duckling&#13;
Waddling away from home&#13;
To become a swan&#13;
editor's note&#13;
jeUrt-y j . Mwe n c k i&#13;
The following haiku were written by the eighth grade&#13;
al·celcrated English dass at Gilmore Junior High&#13;
St·hool in Racine where I was student teaching this&#13;
past ran.&#13;
a drop of dew, clinging to petals,&#13;
quietly drops,&#13;
heaven's tears.&#13;
Sheryl 01 Iversen&#13;
Great grey elephants&#13;
Tremendous in strength and weight&#13;
Roam in huge herds&#13;
Sue Guentzel&#13;
Monica Steinbach&#13;
When wint'ry ways confound the time&#13;
Butterflies are grand&#13;
Silent, flying, beautiful&#13;
They flutter on air.&#13;
Sue Guentzel&#13;
Waterfalls fa( ling&#13;
creating brilliant colors&#13;
when the sun shines thr(?ugh&#13;
Katie Lorence&#13;
a crystal, white, fragil snowflake&#13;
drifts to the ground&#13;
silently weeping . ...&#13;
Sheryl 01 Iversen&#13;
Geese swiftly fly&#13;
over the snow covered farm&#13;
southbound for their home&#13;
Connie Lamberton&#13;
and I, an i-sick-cold&#13;
compounded drawn-and-quarteredly,&#13;
my mind on you . . .&#13;
:n:=~~~~~n:::n~!l:::n:~l::!l:~~tl::fl::1l3.1"1 i look to discover&#13;
I find no little comfort there&#13;
where warm before your fiery eyes our fears&#13;
would melt away . ..&#13;
Fire and wine, apples, cheeses - Jesus! I'm:&#13;
alone tonight&#13;
good wood to burn&#13;
a book&#13;
but&#13;
me .. .&#13;
no match/ es.&#13;
Happilessly rememb'ring when -&#13;
before I saw your&#13;
Smg. . I I . u ar,ty ...&#13;
aware of nothing&#13;
to be lost&#13;
you&#13;
were just&#13;
another snowflake falling on my soul&#13;
(Ohitscold! - I'm growing old ... )&#13;
but weren't we innocently clean?&#13;
like new-fallen&#13;
'fore the footprints&#13;
of our time&#13;
lost in love?&#13;
And now you remind me,&#13;
finally,&#13;
of teardrops in the snow.&#13;
Brian Kipp&#13;
the mind before my birth&#13;
where the dreams i dreamed&#13;
before the night and i&#13;
were fed by my mother's womb&#13;
and time but slept in fluid of growing pang&#13;
i look to discover&#13;
the mind before my birth&#13;
before there was a tomorrow to come&#13;
and yesterday was never more&#13;
and i was never more&#13;
than two dreams becoming one .&#13;
and dreams made more reality&#13;
than a world of abstract fleshly wakenings&#13;
i look to discover&#13;
why day happened.somehow ..&#13;
without even a whispering good-bye&#13;
i watch _as memory mist swallows years&#13;
into deja vu .&#13;
i look to discover&#13;
why born children smile&#13;
why only born children smile&#13;
Do only born children smile?&#13;
i run without a time to go&#13;
and though&#13;
i am in the where i was born&#13;
i look to discover&#13;
the when before my birth&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki &#13;
iRa~gers&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
•&#13;
WIn six during break&#13;
weeks.&#13;
MONTANA STATE, December 11 :,sports The Rangers, blew an II point&#13;
lead in the second half. having&#13;
difficulty connecting at the free&#13;
throw line, and lost 75-65 to their&#13;
NCAA division 1 opponent.&#13;
Parks ide outrebounded Montana&#13;
State 48-46 and outshot them 41-39&#13;
but only made 9 of 19 from the free&#13;
throw line as Montana' State hit 21&#13;
of 3S for the victory.&#13;
Marshall Hill hauled down '3&#13;
Ranger season and career high of&#13;
20 rebounds and added 14 points.&#13;
Scott had IS points to lead the&#13;
Rangers.&#13;
UW-PLATEVILLE, December 14&#13;
....Scott hit 18 of 24 shots from the&#13;
floor as he scored his second&#13;
highest offensive output of his&#13;
career. 37 points. and Parkside won&#13;
76-66.&#13;
Scotty's hot shooting gave the&#13;
Rangers a 35·25 half time lead and&#13;
a 56 percent mark from the field to&#13;
Plateville's 41 percent in the&#13;
contest.&#13;
Ma~in Chones had 10 rebounds,&#13;
but the Rangers were outrebounded&#13;
41-36.&#13;
CARROLL COLLEGE, January 4&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
Carroll showed an inability to&#13;
contain a tall man, in our case Hill,&#13;
as Parks ide won 92-81, after a three&#13;
week break.&#13;
Hill was the difference in the&#13;
game. with 23 points and 20&#13;
rebounds and caused four of the&#13;
five Carroll starters to collect four&#13;
fouls.&#13;
Scott scored a usual total of 18&#13;
points and Stevie King hit 17. The&#13;
Rangers got an additional surprise&#13;
from Brown who came off the&#13;
bench and made several steals. to&#13;
wind up with 12 points.&#13;
Mike Hanke. senior forward.&#13;
who had been out since the&#13;
beginning of the season, returned&#13;
to action.&#13;
ST. XAVIER COLLEGE, January&#13;
8 at Parkside&#13;
Parkside broke their 28 .game&#13;
winning streak at home, losing&#13;
87-76. although Scott scored 3S&#13;
points.&#13;
Xavier, a shorter team than&#13;
Parkside with a 14-5 record. hit&#13;
repeatedly from outside even&#13;
though they were outrebounded&#13;
48-28.&#13;
Parks ide was behind 43·34 at&#13;
halftime and cut Xavier's lead to&#13;
60-58. but two jump shots and a&#13;
fast break layup later, and the&#13;
Rangers were behind 72-64 with six&#13;
minutes remaining; The Rangers&#13;
never got closer than four the rest&#13;
of the way.&#13;
Coach Stephens thought the&#13;
defense played very well, talking it&#13;
up to try and help out. He was&#13;
pleased with the way we "owned the&#13;
inside." and the play of freshmen&#13;
Lonnie Lewis and Lester&#13;
Thompson.&#13;
Scott scored 24 to lead the&#13;
Rangers. Marshall Hill added 12,&#13;
Joe Foots had 11 and Stevie King&#13;
had 10. Hill also had 10 rebounds.&#13;
Western was led by David Morgan,&#13;
who had 12 points and nine&#13;
rebounds.&#13;
UW-WHITEWATER, January 11&#13;
Parkside scored its second&#13;
victory over Whitewatef' this&#13;
season. 76-74 but it was not&#13;
impressive as the first was.&#13;
Scott scored two free throws with&#13;
two seconds left in the game for the&#13;
win and totaled 20 points in the&#13;
contest.&#13;
Parkside was behind 44-38 at the&#13;
half as Whitewater led in rebounding&#13;
30-19 and increased their lead&#13;
to 56-47 before Parks ide began&#13;
moving to tie the game at 60-60.&#13;
A Scott basket gave the Rangers&#13;
a 66-64 lead. which they maintained&#13;
until Steve Laird tied the&#13;
score at 74 with I :37 left.&#13;
INDIANA-PURDUE UNIVERSITY,&#13;
January 13&#13;
Although Indiana-Purdue has&#13;
had a good reputation this season.&#13;
they were blasted by the Rangers&#13;
77-61.&#13;
Scott turned in another exciting&#13;
performance. scoring every basket&#13;
in the first J 5 minutes of the second&#13;
half and finished the game with 20&#13;
points. Hill added 17 points to the&#13;
Parkside cause, keeping the&#13;
Rangers ahead most of the game.&#13;
Parkside's basketball squad.&#13;
although taking a three week rest&#13;
with no games and Rot participating&#13;
in a holiday tournament for the&#13;
first time in years. were busy during&#13;
the semester break.&#13;
The Rangers had a 8-4 record&#13;
going into action this past weekend.&#13;
with several unexpected events&#13;
occuring.&#13;
This is a summary of the action&#13;
the team saw since the end of last&#13;
semester:&#13;
ST. NORBERT COLLEGE, December&#13;
8 at Parkslde&#13;
The Rangers. returning home&#13;
from a three game road trip, were&#13;
glad to be home to bomb St.&#13;
Norbert, 106·65.&#13;
The team from De Pere was&#13;
dominated on the boards and&#13;
couldn't keep up with the Rangers'&#13;
shooting and were behind 47-27 at&#13;
the half.&#13;
Parkside increased their lead to&#13;
66-36 in the first six minutes of the&#13;
second half with sparkling steals&#13;
and dunks by Marvin Chones and&#13;
Leartha Scott, the top scorer with&#13;
25 points. Lawrence Brown an.;&#13;
Lester Thompson came off the&#13;
bench to aid the Ranger cause.&#13;
Even though it was a healthy&#13;
victory for the Rangers, the team&#13;
lost the services of their top reserve.&#13;
Rade Dimitrijevic in the last two&#13;
seconds of the game. Dimitrijevic&#13;
has been out since then after knee&#13;
'Surgery and will find out from his&#13;
doctor whether he will play in two&#13;
Speed, guards&#13;
beat Lawrence&#13;
by Jean Tenuta their biggest problem is a lack of&#13;
heigh t. The three tallest team&#13;
members are 5'9"; Rose Dorzweller,&#13;
Pat Munger and Sue&#13;
Kortendick. Munger was expected&#13;
to start, but is unable to play, due&#13;
to mononucleosis.&#13;
Center Kolovos, at 5'8", had&#13;
been playing against opponents&#13;
who have been two to six inches&#13;
taller than she.&#13;
"Our losses have come when we&#13;
have been dominated on the&#13;
boards," said Henderson. "Both&#13;
Carthage and Whitewater have&#13;
each had three girls who are six feet&#13;
or taller."&#13;
But Henderson thinks that the&#13;
squad's speed will keep the team&#13;
competitive with their opponents.&#13;
"We're an exciting team to&#13;
watch. We're quick and show&#13;
hustle; we caused Whitewater to&#13;
switch from their man to man&#13;
defense to a zone as we were scoring&#13;
layups repeatedly:' said Henderson.&#13;
The team's only senior is Nina&#13;
Hunter. Oster, LoU and Dorzweiler&#13;
are all sophomores. Freshmen 'also&#13;
include Sue Veselik, Carol Shinske,&#13;
Penny Siperly and Debbie Catlett,&#13;
aU of whom have seen action so far.&#13;
Aher the home opener against&#13;
Condordia Junior College prior to&#13;
the men's basketball game against&#13;
UW -Green Bay last night, the club&#13;
will take a break until January 27,&#13;
~hen they will face Waukesha Tech,&#13;
in another home game at 7 p.m.&#13;
Parkside's newly formed women's&#13;
basketball club played three&#13;
games over the semester break and&#13;
played their fourth last evening.&#13;
In the one win over Lawrence&#13;
College, and two losses to Carthage&#13;
and Whitewater. all on the road,&#13;
junior center Diana Kolvos has&#13;
been the team's most consistent&#13;
player, with help from sophomore&#13;
guard Frozene Lott on offense.&#13;
The squad defeated Lawrence&#13;
41·38 in their opening game in&#13;
which Lott scored 20 points and&#13;
Kclovos had 11.&#13;
A very -highly regarded Carthage&#13;
team completely dismantled the&#13;
Rangers 70-27, jumping out to a&#13;
J5-2 lead early in the game. Lott&#13;
was again leading scorer with 11&#13;
points followed by Kolovos' nine&#13;
points.&#13;
Last Friday, Parkside lost to&#13;
UW-Whitewater 61-45. Karen&#13;
Oster led in the offensive attack&#13;
with 10 points, trailed by Kolovos,&#13;
with eight and Lott with seven.&#13;
The team's strength so far lies in&#13;
their three guards; LoU, Oster and&#13;
Dita Hunter. according to Coach&#13;
Hall Henderson. "Of the teams&#13;
we've played so far and other teams&#13;
that I've seen, our guards could&#13;
hold a starting position on any of&#13;
them," he said.&#13;
Henderson's team is young, with&#13;
only one senior and one junior.&#13;
Besides being a first year squad,&#13;
~('.. 11 ~prinll~ r.... t.. " mort' point_.&#13;
Rangers&#13;
to meet Phoenix&#13;
by Fred Tenuta&#13;
• SEI'ESTl:R RATES&#13;
• S I NGl£ Fro1S FOR&#13;
/'EN &amp; IQ'£N&#13;
• ECXlNQ'1ICAL RATES&#13;
• rui, PHYSICAL&#13;
I-'EI1IERSH 1P&#13;
• COFFEE SHtY&#13;
• ON CITY BUS ROlITE&#13;
• OVER LOOKl NG&#13;
LAKE MIOlIGAN&#13;
Pnrk side' s basketball learn&#13;
played Uw-Green Bay last evening&#13;
to open the spring semester of play&#13;
10 a game that Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens expected to be a tough&#13;
one lor the Rangers.&#13;
"Green Bay has a tough zone&#13;
defense and are a complete team&#13;
with good depth." said Stephens.&#13;
Green Bay is led by NCAA/Division&#13;
2 top player. 6' J" Ron Ripley, who&#13;
has led them to a 14.1 record.&#13;
Saturday night. the Rangers&#13;
overwhelmed Western Illinois&#13;
University 88·54. increasing their&#13;
record to Q-4.&#13;
Parkside jumped out to a 6·0&#13;
lead. but the Leathernecks brought&#13;
it back to 6-4. It ",'as as clove as they&#13;
were to get all night.&#13;
I he Ru ngcr s continued to&#13;
maintain control in the second half.&#13;
he,ll;ng western's press ~'ith lo.ng&#13;
pavses , and their zone defense with&#13;
patience. They also worked hard on&#13;
their defense&#13;
For more&#13;
infonnatfon&#13;
col1-634-1994&#13;
~&#13;
I,&#13;
.'&#13;
,&#13;
,.,S:.: •&#13;
'.~'~~·,I•&#13;
" II' I&#13;
• .11&#13;
.,&#13;
Sendelhach,&#13;
Fanstino honored&#13;
725 Lake Avenue&#13;
Racine. Wisconsin&#13;
Steve Sendelbach, a defensive&#13;
player on the soccer squad has been&#13;
named :.l the National Soccer&#13;
Coaches .vvsociation All-Midwest&#13;
team.&#13;
It was the second year that&#13;
Sendelbach has been named to the&#13;
team. Steve is a junior from&#13;
Milwaukee Pius. and was all-NAIA&#13;
in 1975 and has been the most&#13;
valuable player and captain at&#13;
Parks ide for the past two seasons,&#13;
Tracy Faustino, from Racine St.&#13;
Catherine was named to the&#13;
WWIAC first team for small state&#13;
schools in volleyball. She is a freshman&#13;
and was Most Valuable on the&#13;
young Ranger team.&#13;
................FREE---..&#13;
SKATE RENTAL&#13;
WITH THIS AD AT ANY REGULAR SESSION&#13;
RED'S ROLLER RINK&#13;
6220 67th St., leno.h.&#13;
i••t off .;, ••• , 31&#13;
Trackmen named all district&#13;
were leRoy Jefferson in the 120-yd.&#13;
high hurdles. national champion&#13;
Jim Heiring in the six mile walk&#13;
and three field event performers.&#13;
Jeff Sitz (long jump), Pat Burns&#13;
(shot put) and Rick Hessefort&#13;
(hammer throw).&#13;
Five UW -Parkside trackmen&#13;
have been named to the NAJA alldistrict&#13;
track and field team&#13;
announced by the District 14&#13;
executive committee.&#13;
Chosen from Coach Bob&#13;
Lawson's team that place fifth in&#13;
last spring's NAJA national meet&#13;
iRa~gers • Will six during break&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside's basketball squad,&#13;
although taking a three week rest&#13;
with no games and Rot participating&#13;
in a holiday tournament for the&#13;
first time in years, were busy during&#13;
the semester break.&#13;
The Rangers had a 8-4 record&#13;
going into action this past weekend,&#13;
with several unexpected events&#13;
occuring.&#13;
This is a summary of the action&#13;
the team saw since the end of last&#13;
semester:&#13;
ST. NORBERT COLLEGE, December&#13;
8 at Parkside&#13;
The Rangers. returning home&#13;
from a three game r~ad trip, were&#13;
glad to be home to bomb St.&#13;
Norbert, 106-65.&#13;
The team from De Pere was&#13;
dominated on the boards and&#13;
couldn't keep up with the Rangers'&#13;
shooting and were behind 47-27 at&#13;
the half.&#13;
Parkside increased their lead to&#13;
66-36 in the first six minutes of the&#13;
second half with sparkling steals&#13;
and dunks by Marvin Chones and&#13;
Leartha Scott, the top scorer with&#13;
25 points. Lawrence Brown an\;&#13;
Lester Thompson came off the&#13;
bench to aid the Ranger cause.&#13;
Even though it was a healthy&#13;
victory for the Rangers, the team&#13;
lost the services of their top reserve,&#13;
Rade Dimitrijevic in the last two&#13;
seconds of the game. Dimitrijevic&#13;
has been out since then after knee&#13;
surgery and will find out from his&#13;
doctor whether he will play in two&#13;
weeks.&#13;
MONTANA STATE, December 11&#13;
The Rangers blew an 11 point&#13;
lead in the second half, having&#13;
difficulty connecting at the free&#13;
throw line , and lost 75-65 to their&#13;
NCAA division I opponent.&#13;
Parkside outrebounded Montana&#13;
State 48-46 and outshot them 41-39&#13;
but only made 9 of 19 from the free&#13;
throw line as Montana· State hit 21&#13;
of 35 for the victory.&#13;
Marshall Hill hauled down a&#13;
Ranger season and career high of&#13;
20 rebounds and added 14 points.&#13;
Scott had 15 points to lead the&#13;
Rangers.-&#13;
UW-PLATEVILLE, December 14&#13;
, Scott hit 18 of 24 shots from the&#13;
floor as he scored his second&#13;
highest offensive output of his&#13;
career, 37 points, and Parkside won&#13;
76-66.&#13;
Scotty's hot shooting gave the&#13;
Rangers a 35-25 half time lead and&#13;
a 56 percent mark from the field to&#13;
Plateville's 41 percent in the&#13;
contest.&#13;
Ma~in Chones had 10 rebounds,&#13;
but the Rangers were outrebounded&#13;
41-36.&#13;
CARROLL COLLEGE, January 4&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
Carroll showed an inability to&#13;
contain a tall man, in our case Hill,&#13;
as Parkside won 92-81, after a three&#13;
week break.&#13;
Hill was the difference in the&#13;
game, with 23 points and 20&#13;
rebounds and caused four of the&#13;
five Carroll starters to collect four&#13;
fouls.&#13;
Speed, guards&#13;
beat Lawrence&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside's newly formed women's&#13;
basketball club played three&#13;
games over the semester break and&#13;
played their fourth last evening.&#13;
In the one win over Lawrence&#13;
College, and two losses to Carthage&#13;
and Whitewater, all on the road,&#13;
junior center Diana Kotvcis has&#13;
been the team's most consistent&#13;
player, with help from sophomore&#13;
guard Frozene Lott on offense.&#13;
The squad defeated Lawrence&#13;
41-38 in their opening game in&#13;
which Lott scored 20 points and&#13;
Kolovos had 11.&#13;
A very highly regarded Carthage&#13;
team completely dismantled the&#13;
Rangers 70-27, jumping out to a&#13;
15-2 lead early in the game. Lott&#13;
was again leading scorer with 11&#13;
points followed by Kolovos' nine&#13;
points.&#13;
Last Friday, . Parkside lost to&#13;
UW -Whitewater 61-45. Karen&#13;
Oster led in the offensive attack&#13;
with 10 points, trailed by Kolovos,&#13;
with eight and Lott with seven.&#13;
The team's strength so far lies in&#13;
their three guards; Lott, Oster and&#13;
Dita Hunter, according to Coach&#13;
Hall Henderson. "Of the teams&#13;
we've played so far and other teams&#13;
that I've seen, our guards could&#13;
hold a starting position on any of&#13;
them," he said.&#13;
Henderson's team is young, with&#13;
only one senior and one junior.&#13;
Besides being a first year squad,&#13;
their biggest problem is a lack of&#13;
height. The three tallest team&#13;
members are 5'9"; Rose Dorzweiler,&#13;
Pat Munger and Sue&#13;
Kortendick. Munger was expected&#13;
to start, but is unable to play, due&#13;
to mononucleosis.&#13;
Center Kolovos, at 5'8", had&#13;
been playing against opponents&#13;
who have been two to six inches&#13;
taller than she.&#13;
"Our losses have come when we&#13;
have been dominated on the&#13;
boards," said Henderson. "Both&#13;
Carthage a_nd Whitewater have&#13;
each had three girls who are six feet&#13;
or taller."&#13;
But Henderson thinks that the&#13;
squad's speed will keep the team&#13;
competitive with their opponents.&#13;
"We're an exciting team to&#13;
watch. We're quick and show&#13;
hustle; we caused Whitewater to&#13;
switch from their man to man&#13;
defense to a zone as we were scoring&#13;
layups repeatedly;• said Henderson.&#13;
The team's only senior is Nina&#13;
Hunter. Oster, Lott and Dorzweiler&#13;
are all sophomores. Freshmen also&#13;
include Sue Veselik, Carol Shinske,&#13;
Penny Siperly and Debbie Catlett,&#13;
all of whom have seen action so far.&#13;
After the home opener against&#13;
Condordia Junior College prior to&#13;
the men's basketball game against&#13;
UW -Green Bay last night, the club&#13;
wiil take a break until January 27,&#13;
when they will face Waukesha Tech.&#13;
in another home game at 7 p.m.&#13;
Traukmen named all district&#13;
Five UW-Parkside trackmen&#13;
have been named to the NAIA alldistrict&#13;
track and field team&#13;
announced by the District 14&#13;
executive committee.&#13;
Chosen from Coach Bob&#13;
Lawson's team that place fifth in&#13;
last spring's NAIA national meet&#13;
were LeRoy Jefferson in the 120-yd.&#13;
high hurdles, national champion&#13;
Jim Heiring in the six mile walk&#13;
and three field event performers,&#13;
Jeff Sitz (long jump}, Pat Bums&#13;
(shot put) and Rick Hessefort&#13;
(hammer throw).&#13;
Scott scored a usual total of 18&#13;
points and Stevie King hit 17. The&#13;
Rangers got an additional surprise&#13;
from Brown who came off the&#13;
bench and made several steals, to&#13;
wind up with 12 points.&#13;
Mike Hanke, senior forward ,&#13;
who had been out since the&#13;
beginning of the season , returned&#13;
to action .&#13;
ST. XAVIER COLLEGE, January&#13;
8 at Parkside&#13;
Parkside broke their 28 _game&#13;
winning streak at home, losing&#13;
87-76, although Scott scored 35&#13;
points.&#13;
Xavier, a shorter team than&#13;
Parkside with a 14-5 record, hit&#13;
repeatedly from outside even&#13;
though they were outrebounded&#13;
48-28.&#13;
Parkside was behind 43-34 at&#13;
halftime and cut Xavier's lead to&#13;
60-58, but two jump shots and a&#13;
fast break layup later, and the&#13;
Rangers were behind 72-64 with six&#13;
minutes remaining, The Rangers&#13;
never got closer than four the rest&#13;
of the way.&#13;
Coach Stephens thought the&#13;
defense played very well, talking it&#13;
up to try and help out. He was&#13;
pleased with the way we "owned the&#13;
inside," and the play of freshmen&#13;
Lonnie Lewis and Lester&#13;
Thompson.&#13;
Scott scored 24 to lead the&#13;
Rangers. Marshall Hill added 12,&#13;
Joe Foots had 11 and Stevie King&#13;
had 10. Hill also had 10 rebounds.&#13;
Western was led by David Morgan,&#13;
who had 12 points and nine&#13;
rebounds.&#13;
UW-WHITEWATER, January 11&#13;
Pa rkside scored its second&#13;
victory over Whitewatef' this&#13;
season , 76-74 but it was not&#13;
impressive as the first was.&#13;
Scott scored two free throws with&#13;
two seconds left in the game for the&#13;
win and totaled 20 points in the&#13;
contest.&#13;
Parkside was behind 44-38 at the&#13;
half as Whitewater led in rebounding&#13;
30-19 and increased their lead&#13;
to 56-47 before Parkside began&#13;
moving to tie the game at 60-60.&#13;
A Scott basket gave the Rangers&#13;
a 66-64 lead, which they maintained&#13;
until Steve Laird tied the&#13;
score at 74 with 1 :37 left.&#13;
INDIANA-PURDUE UNIVERSITY,&#13;
January 13&#13;
Although Indiana-Purdue has&#13;
had a good reputation this season,&#13;
they were blasted by the Rangers&#13;
77-61.&#13;
Scott turned in another exciting&#13;
performance, scoring every basket&#13;
in the first 15 minutes of the second&#13;
half and finished the game with 20&#13;
points. Hill added 17 points to the&#13;
Parkside cause, keeping the&#13;
Rangers ahead most o( the game.&#13;
Seodelbach,&#13;
Faustino honored&#13;
Steve Sendelbach, a defensive&#13;
player on the soccer squad has been&#13;
named :,, the National Soccer&#13;
Coaches \ ,sociation All-Midwest&#13;
team.&#13;
It was the second year that&#13;
Sendelbach has been named to the&#13;
team. Steve is a junior from&#13;
Milwaukee Pius, and was all-NAIA&#13;
in 1975 and has been the most&#13;
valuable player and captain at&#13;
Parkside for the past two seasons.&#13;
Tracy Faustino, from Racine St.&#13;
Catherine was named to the&#13;
WWIAC first team for small state&#13;
schools in volleyball. She is a freshman&#13;
and was Most Valuable on the&#13;
young Ranger team.&#13;
Rangers&#13;
to meet Phoenix&#13;
by Fred Tenuta&#13;
Park ide's ba ketball team&#13;
played UW-Green Bay la t evening&#13;
to open the spring eme ter of play&#13;
in a game that oach te\:e&#13;
Stephens expected to b a tough&#13;
one for the Rangers.&#13;
"Green Bay ha a tough zone&#13;
defense and are a complete team&#13;
"·ith good depth," said Stephen .&#13;
Green Bay is led by CAA / Di ision&#13;
2 top player. 6' J" Ron Ripley. who&#13;
has led them to a 14-1 rec&lt;&gt;rd.&#13;
Saturday night. the Rangers&#13;
oven,hclmcd We tern lllinoi&#13;
University -54. increa ing their&#13;
record to 9-4.&#13;
Parkside jun1ped out to a 6-0&#13;
lead . but the Leatherne k brought&#13;
it back to 6-4. II" a a clo\e a the&#13;
were to get all night.&#13;
1 he Ranger~ continued to&#13;
maintain control in the ~econd half.&#13;
heating We,tcrn·, pre ~ith Io_ng&#13;
pa,,L~. and their rnnc delen~e \I Ith&#13;
patience. They al O \IOrked hard on&#13;
their deli:n~e&#13;
* Sc/1:STER RATES&#13;
* SINGLE RC01S F~&#13;
l"EN&amp;\&gt;01:N&#13;
* Ea:x-a-1ICAL RATES&#13;
* FLU. PHYS I CAL&#13;
t·1:1"BERSH IP * COFFEE 51-o&gt;&#13;
* ON CllY BUS ROUTE&#13;
* OVER LOO I NG&#13;
LAKE MIOilGAN&#13;
For more&#13;
information&#13;
cal 1-634-1994&#13;
FREE&#13;
SKATE RENTAL&#13;
WITH THIS AD AT ANY REGULAR SESSION&#13;
RED'S ROLLER RINK&#13;
6220 67th St., Kenosha&#13;
just off highway 31&#13;
. &#13;
SERVICES INCi!ODING&#13;
Check Coshing.&#13;
Ticket Soles,&#13;
Lost &amp; Found,&#13;
Generol Informotion,&#13;
Etc., Etc.. Etc.&#13;
ore now locoted in the&#13;
moin Boz oor of the&#13;
Union&#13;
Informotion only is still&#13;
ovolloble ot the Info.&#13;
KIOSK in fflotn Ploce of&#13;
the WLLC.&#13;
Stop by or&#13;
coli: 553-2345&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
HAND DIP YOUR OWN&#13;
ICE CREAM &amp; SHERBERT .35&#13;
CHOC., STRAW., PINEAPPLE&#13;
SUNDAES .55&#13;
DOUBLE DIP .25 EXTRA&#13;
NOWI •••UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
Sat.&#13;
Jan 29&#13;
at 9 p.m.&#13;
in&#13;
UNION&#13;
SQUARE&#13;
IEEiMINIi np&#13;
Breast-exam taught&#13;
A breast self-examination teachin&#13;
day will be held in Union 104 on&#13;
Wednesday, January 26.&#13;
These sessions will be held on&#13;
hourly basis, starting at 10 a.m.&#13;
and ending at 8 p.m., with the&#13;
exception of 1 or 5 p.m.&#13;
Breast cancer is the leading&#13;
cause of cancer-related deaths in&#13;
women. If detected in time, it can&#13;
be almost totally cured, with a&#13;
five-year survival rate of up to 84&#13;
per cent. The most effective way of&#13;
detecting it is by self-examination.&#13;
95 per cent of all cases are detected&#13;
in this manrier.&#13;
For. further information regarding&#13;
the clinic, contact Edith&#13;
Isenberg. campus nurse. in the&#13;
Health Office extension (553-)2366.&#13;
Master&#13;
class held&#13;
Prof. Stephen Swedish will&#13;
present a piano master class from 2&#13;
to 4:30 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 22&#13;
CA o.ns.&#13;
This is the first in a series of&#13;
master classes to be presented&#13;
during the semester by members of&#13;
the music faculty.&#13;
Music students from the&#13;
community as well as Parkside&#13;
students are invited to sit in on theclasses,&#13;
which are free.&#13;
WEDNESDAY,JANUARY 19&#13;
PAB Coffeehouse from 2 to 4 PM. Union Cafeteria&#13;
/ THURSDAY, JANUARY 20&#13;
Free Throw Contest from II AM to 1 PM, PhyEd. Bldg.&#13;
FRIDAY,.JANUARY 21 .&#13;
Last Day for payment of tuition and fees without penalty.&#13;
Math Colloquium: "Catastrophy Theory" with Prof. J, Robbin. 3:30 PM,&#13;
(L·J[)7.&#13;
Festival scheduled&#13;
Parkside and its Center for&#13;
Multicultural studies will sponsor a&#13;
Scandinavian-Italian Festival on&#13;
campus on Feb. 20.&#13;
All students, faculty and staff&#13;
interested in becoming involved in&#13;
planning for the event are invited to&#13;
attend an organizational meeting at&#13;
1:30 p.m, on Tuesday. Jan. 2S in&#13;
the Union. Room 207.&#13;
Aditional information is available&#13;
from Rita Tallent Picken or&#13;
Cynthia Gray.&#13;
***&#13;
ADMISSIO~&#13;
Advance&#13;
5200 Student&#13;
5250 General&#13;
5250 AT DOOR&#13;
Tickets&#13;
available in&#13;
UNION INFO&#13;
CENTER&#13;
SUNDAY,JANUARY 23&#13;
Vets Club Meeting 4 PM ..WLLC D-174.&#13;
MONDAY,JANUARY 24&#13;
Print and Sculpture Show CA Gallery. Noon to 5 PM. Mon-Thurs ..&#13;
Tues. &amp; Wed. 7 to II PM. Through February II.&#13;
TUESDAY, JANUARY 25&#13;
Free Throw Contest from II AM to I PM. PhyEd. Bldg.&#13;
Wrestling Carroll College at PhyEd. Bldg, 7 PM.&#13;
Keith Berger (mirner S PM. Comm. Arts Theater&#13;
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 26&#13;
Randy Rice PAS Cotleeh~)use from 2 to 4 PM. Un\on Cafeteria.&#13;
Movie "The Rocky Horror Picture Show" at 2:30 and 7:30 PM, Union&#13;
Theatre. $1. (also January 27)&#13;
Breast Self-Examination Teach-In by Wis. Div. American Cancer Society&#13;
and Campus Health Office. HOURLY SESSIONS 10. II AM, 2. 3. 4.&#13;
0.7. and 8 PM'. Union Room 104.&#13;
Events should be turned in to the Ranger by Noon on Wednesday before&#13;
next week's issue. A Form will soon be available.&#13;
Monday, January 24.1977&#13;
RANGER Stuffmeeting for all students interested in working on paper as&#13;
photographers. writers. production workers. ad sales. and lay-out. D-173.&#13;
kiddy corner from info Kiosk in Main Place. 3:00 P.M.&#13;
It was 14 years ago this month that the fabled North Shore Inter-urban&#13;
Line gave up in its rivalry with the superhighway ... gasoline and cars were&#13;
both cheap and plentiful then ... and the dark green trolleys rolled forever&#13;
to a halt. Most were later scrapped, but a few found their way to the East&#13;
Troy area, where a small electric railway still operates. On January 22 and&#13;
23 railfans will converge on the East Troy Railroad to observe North Shore&#13;
Days with special trains, movies and slides, locomotive 'rides ... and to&#13;
snap thousands of pictures. Trolley. Ho!&#13;
Library extends hours&#13;
The Parkside library-learning&#13;
center will be extending its hours&#13;
during this semester.&#13;
The LLC will be open until&#13;
midnight as a result of requests&#13;
from students. Center for Teaching&#13;
Excellence director Alan Shucard.&#13;
and the Library-Learning Center&#13;
Advisory Committee,&#13;
There was some problem with&#13;
funding costs of the extended&#13;
hours. Library-Learning Center&#13;
director Joseph Boisse stated that&#13;
he wrote to Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
Student Services and Academic&#13;
Outreach. Clayton Johnson.&#13;
with the problem.&#13;
Johnson responded that he would&#13;
fund . the experiment for one&#13;
semester. If the project is&#13;
successful. the hours will be&#13;
extended for an additional year.&#13;
Dupliuating needs envelopes&#13;
Richard Flahive. Duplicating&#13;
Centes Supervisor. urges all student&#13;
organizations and faculty/&#13;
staff to return empty inter-campus&#13;
mail envelopes to their area mail&#13;
pick-up points. It everyone would&#13;
clean out their desks and return&#13;
unused envelopes it would not be&#13;
necessary to order more,&#13;
Wrestlers duel Carroll&#13;
The Parkside wrestlers will face&#13;
UW -Oshkosh tonight at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
at Oshkosh after winning the&#13;
Carthage Invitational Saturday.&#13;
The team will travel to Anderson&#13;
Invitational at Anderson, Indiana&#13;
for day long competition on Friday&#13;
and Saturday, Next Tuesday, the&#13;
Rangers will take on Carroll&#13;
College at 6:30 p.m, in their home&#13;
dual meet opener.&#13;
If you have read Ihill rar you are ~'''lIrl enough 10 wrile for U8!&#13;
PENI&#13;
SERVICES&#13;
Check Cashing.&#13;
Ticket So.les.&#13;
Lost &amp; Found,&#13;
General Information,&#13;
Etc.. Etc.. Etc.&#13;
o.re now located in the&#13;
mo.in Bo.zo.o., of the&#13;
Union&#13;
lnfo,mo.tion only is still&#13;
o.vo.ilo.ble o.t the Info.&#13;
KIOSK in mo.in Plo.ce of&#13;
the WLLC.&#13;
Stop by o,&#13;
co.II: 553-2345&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
~&#13;
FOOD SERVICE&#13;
HAND DIP YOUR OWN&#13;
ICE CREAM &amp; SHERBERT .35&#13;
CHOC., STRAW., PINEAPPLE&#13;
SUNDAES .55&#13;
DOUBLE DIP .25 EXTRA&#13;
NOWI ..• UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
Breast exam taught&#13;
A breast self-examinatiop teachin&#13;
day will be held in Union 104 on&#13;
Wednesday, January 26.&#13;
These sessions will be held on&#13;
hourly basis, starting at 10 a.m.&#13;
and ending at 8 p.m., with the&#13;
exception of 1 or 5 p.m.&#13;
Breast cancer is the leading&#13;
cause of cancer-related deaths in&#13;
women. If detected in time, it can&#13;
be almost totally cured, with a&#13;
five-year survival rate of up to 84&#13;
per cent. The most effective way of&#13;
detecting it is by self-examination.&#13;
95 per cent of all cases are detected&#13;
in this manner.&#13;
For further information regarding&#13;
the clinic, contact Edith&#13;
Isenberg, campus nurse, in the&#13;
Health Office extension (553-)2366.&#13;
Master&#13;
ulass held&#13;
Prof. Stephen Swedish will&#13;
present a piano master class from 2&#13;
to 4:30 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 22i&#13;
CA D-118.&#13;
This is the first in a series of&#13;
master classes to be presented&#13;
during the semester by members of&#13;
the music faculty.&#13;
Music students from the&#13;
community as well as Parkside&#13;
students are invited to sit in on the&#13;
classes, which are free.&#13;
Festival sthednled&#13;
Parkside and its Cent.er for&#13;
Multicultural studies will sponsor a&#13;
Scandinavian-Italian Festival on&#13;
campus on Feb. 20.&#13;
All students, faculty and staff&#13;
interested in becoming involved in&#13;
planning for the event are invited to&#13;
attend an organizational meeting at&#13;
1:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 25 in&#13;
the Union, Room 207.&#13;
Aditional information is available&#13;
from Rita Tallent Picken or&#13;
Cynthia Gray.&#13;
Events cale*** ndars covering the&#13;
spring semester are now available&#13;
at the Main Desk/Information&#13;
Center in the Union.&#13;
t.••z•.:a:.••;a;,••.,t;••;t..••;e;•~.t:•~ "'§ .. ,JA,•,:••~ .. ~··~"':IA'',f;:,••,J;, ':!: =ic :1: ~n11.,• ... ,;a.. ~··~··~··~··~o:,;,••:,;.••:,;, .. l'!.,~ .. :r. •• !7..,~ •• ~ •• ~ .. ~ •• :;: •• ~ .............. , .•. ,,:.:.," .............. , .•. ff ••• ,, ............................ ~. ..,:..,, .................... , ............. , .............. ..&#13;
Sat.&#13;
Jan 29&#13;
at 9 p.m.&#13;
in&#13;
UNION&#13;
SQUARE&#13;
PAB PRESENTS&#13;
MEGAN McDONOUGH&#13;
' and MADA RUE&#13;
ADMISSIO~&#13;
Advance&#13;
5 2° 0 Student&#13;
52 50 General&#13;
52 50 AT DOOR&#13;
Tickets&#13;
available in&#13;
UNION INFO&#13;
CENTER&#13;
·••:s;••;s:••:,;•-:.;••:a;••:,;,.:a;••:a:••:a:••li''it:'':.t.:''iti'':.,;11:.,;n:,;••;s:••:.,.:n:.,.:n:.,.;n:s;••;s:••:,;n:s;••:.t.:••;t;••:,;••:s;,.;s;••;r;n~11;,;nifi••ifi••; .,,?.,,?.,,~,,!r.,•!P.t,!P.u?.•!?.••?.••·•· .. ·•·••!v.••·•· .. ~•t!v.H:;!•,~••~••~tt~•t?.11!'r.••~u21•!i:••~tt?.u!'r.w?.1,-:r.•,:V.••~••·•·••·•·tt~&#13;
WEDNESDAY,JANUARY 19&#13;
PAB Coffeehouse from 2 to 4 PM. Union Cafeteria&#13;
.,,, THURSDAY,JANUARY 20&#13;
Free Throw Contest from 11 AM to I PM. PhyEd. Bldg.&#13;
FRIDAY,JANUARY 21&#13;
Last Day for payment of tuition a~d fees without penalty.&#13;
Math Colloquium: "Catastrophy Theory .. with Prof. J. RobQin. 3:30 PM.&#13;
CL-107.&#13;
SUNDAY,JANUARY 23&#13;
Vets Club Meeting 4 PM. WLLC D-174.&#13;
MONDAY, JANUARY 24&#13;
Print and Sculpture Show CA Gallery. Noon to 5 PM. Mon-Thurs ..&#13;
Tues. &amp; Wed. 7 to 11 PM . Through February 11.&#13;
TUESDAY, JANUARY 25&#13;
Free Throw Contest from 11 AM to I PM. PhyEd. Bldg.&#13;
Wrestling Carroll College at PhyEd. Bldg. 7 PM.&#13;
Keith Berger (mime) 8 PM. Comm. Arts Theater&#13;
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 26&#13;
Randy Rice PAB Coffeeh;&gt;use from 2 to 4 PM . Un\on Cafeteria.&#13;
Movie "The Rocky Horror Picture Show .. at 2:30 and 7:30 PM, Union&#13;
Theatre. $1. (also January 27)&#13;
Breast Self-Examination Teach-In by Wis. Div. American Cancer Society&#13;
and Campus Health Office. HOURLY SESSIONS 10. 11 AM. 2. 3. 4.&#13;
o. 7. and 8 PM. Union Room 104.&#13;
Events should be turned in to the Ranger by Noon on Wednesday before&#13;
next week's issue. A Form will soon be available.&#13;
Monday. January 24. 1977&#13;
!-&lt;ANGER Staff meeting for all students interested in working on paper as&#13;
photographers. writer~. production workers. ad sales, and lay-out. D-173.&#13;
kictdy corner from info Kiosk in Main Place. 3:00 P.M.&#13;
It was 14 years ago this month that the fabled North Shore Inter-urban&#13;
Line gave up in Its rivalry with the superhighway . .. gasoline and cars were&#13;
both cheap and plentiful then . . . and the dark green trolleys rolled forever&#13;
to a halt. Most were later scrapped, but a few found their way to the East&#13;
Troy area, where a small electric railway still operates. On January 22 and&#13;
23 rallfans will converge on the East Troy Railroad to observe North Shore&#13;
Days with special trains, movies and slides, locomotive rides . . . and to&#13;
snap thousands of pictures. Trolley_ Ho!&#13;
Library extends hours&#13;
The Parkside library-learning&#13;
center will be extending its hours&#13;
during this semester.&#13;
The LLC will be open until&#13;
midnight as a result of requests&#13;
from students, Center for Teaching&#13;
Excellence director Alan Shucard,&#13;
and the Library-Learning Center&#13;
Advisory Committee.&#13;
There was some problem with&#13;
funding costs of the extended&#13;
hours. Library-Learning Center&#13;
director Joseph Boisse stated that&#13;
he wrote to Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
Student Services and Academic&#13;
Outreach, Clayton Johnson,&#13;
with the problem.&#13;
Johnson responded that he would&#13;
fund . the experiment for one&#13;
semester. If the project is&#13;
successful, the hours will be&#13;
extended for an additional year.&#13;
Duplicating needs envelopes&#13;
Richard Flahive, Duplicating&#13;
Cente~ Supervisor, urges all student&#13;
organizations and faculty/&#13;
staff to return empty inter-campus&#13;
mail envelopes to their area mail&#13;
pick-up points. It everyone would&#13;
clean out their desks and return&#13;
unused envelopes it would not be&#13;
nece sary to order more.&#13;
Wrestlers duel Carroll&#13;
The Parkside wrestlers will face&#13;
UW-Oshkosh tonight at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
at Oshkosh after winning the&#13;
Carthage Invitational Saturday.&#13;
The team will travel to Anderson&#13;
Invitational at Anderson, Indiana&#13;
for day long competition on Friday&#13;
and Saturday. Next Tuesday, the&#13;
Rangers will take on Carroll&#13;
College at 6:30 p.m. in their home&#13;
dual meet opener.&#13;
If you have read thi8 rar you arf' 1m1ttrt f'nou@:h 10 writt" for u8!&#13;
,I </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>THE PARKSIDE RANGER December ., 197' 3&#13;
i IJY The Parkside ~r·r.R. ANGER&#13;
---EDITOR IAL/OPINION&#13;
Beauty pageants seek virginity&#13;
Women despair, for if you've ever been pregnant or&#13;
married you'll never be a beauty queen, or more appropriafely,&#13;
"princess." A woman's worth, defined&#13;
simply in terms of beauty and poise, is somehow&#13;
lessened with the loss of her virginity, or so imply the&#13;
rules of those pageants which are held to chose "our&#13;
ideal."&#13;
A press release announ-ces requirements for the Miss&#13;
Kenosha Scholarship Pageant (new name for beauty&#13;
pageant): " ...qualifications are simple: Young ledles&#13;
must be at least 17 and not over 28 on Sept. I, 1977. They&#13;
must be high school graduates by that time, and never&#13;
been married or pregrant (sic)."&#13;
It later mentions, "Judging will be based on the same&#13;
values used in the Miss America and Miss Wisconsin&#13;
Programs." It doesn't take long to figure out that one of&#13;
those values is virginity; that which is officially lost in&#13;
the public's eyes upon marriage or pregnancy.&#13;
Though it's required that women entrants have never&#13;
been pregnant or married, the release plays down the&#13;
necessity of a talent: t r ••• entrants do not necessarily&#13;
have to be a trained talent in any specific field ... Four&#13;
girls who felt they only possessed a medicore (sic)&#13;
talent became Miss Kenosha."&#13;
Though much of what is objectionable about these&#13;
beauty-scholarship pageants is embedded in the&#13;
tradition of the program and society, the requirement&#13;
concerning pregnancies, according to Miss Kenosha&#13;
officials, is a new national pageant rule. Though the&#13;
image of the "ideal" woman being a virgin is old, the&#13;
rule relating to this value was just made last year.&#13;
One may question how pagear.t officials intend to&#13;
Thanks, Jeannine&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Thanks! Thanks for your time.&#13;
Thanks for your services. Thanks&#13;
for contending with all. the shit&#13;
youput up with. Thanks for doing&#13;
a fantastic job even though there&#13;
were the more difficult times.&#13;
Thanks for staying out here till&#13;
the wee hours of the morning&#13;
laying out the most extraordinsry&#13;
paper. Thanks to us&#13;
for keeping you company while&#13;
you were out here laying out the&#13;
wonderous paper till the wee&#13;
hours of the morning. Thanks for&#13;
being you through thick and thin.&#13;
Weall like your typewriters and&#13;
you. Good luck to you wherever&#13;
you end up in this world full of&#13;
foo!! And most of all Jeannine,&#13;
thanks for the memories!!!&#13;
Farewell beloved,&#13;
TOID,Sue, Mona, Bip.,&#13;
Cathy, Chris, F hi lip,&#13;
John, Bob, and Doug.&#13;
P.S. Bill wants you to get a&#13;
haircut. Tom says thanks for the&#13;
desk, job, and headaches. Mona&#13;
says thanks for teaching her&#13;
everything she didn't want to&#13;
know. Sue says thanks for&#13;
nothing! Cathy says thanks for&#13;
knocking before you enter. Chris&#13;
wants to thank you for the pain in&#13;
the neckantl the help in getting rid&#13;
of the pain. John says thank you&#13;
for putting up with the old lady&#13;
who keeps calling and saying the&#13;
neighborhood dogs are "out to get&#13;
her." Phil is going to watch for&#13;
your name in national&#13;
newsmagazines and says you had&#13;
better amount to sometfiing&#13;
professionally or he's going to&#13;
deny he ever thought you were&#13;
the best editor Ranger ever had.&#13;
see you around!!!!!!!!&#13;
Ranger backed&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am writing this letter In&#13;
response to a previous letter&#13;
printed in the Ranger's&#13;
December I copy. It was written&#13;
bY a person named Arthur Gruhl,&#13;
and in it he cut down a lot of&#13;
things about the Ranger which I&#13;
would like to refute.&#13;
One of the first things GruhI&#13;
complained about was the&#13;
DeRanger supplement of which&#13;
he, said j'Debasing h.uman&#13;
sexuality is neither sabre or&#13;
entertaining." I cannot understand&#13;
how someone can get so&#13;
upset about a simple parody. It&#13;
was obvious that this article ,,:as&#13;
a humorous response to the senes&#13;
continued on pg. A&#13;
police entrants with regard to the marriage and&#13;
pregnancy rules, well so do some of the officials. The&#13;
application for the Miss Kenosha Pageant doesn't even&#13;
ask the appropriate questions. A representative of the&#13;
pageant indicated that they do not check up on the girls&#13;
with regard to these requirements, and questioned,&#13;
"How do you prove something like that?" He mentioned&#13;
that these were national rules which the Kenosha&#13;
pageant had to assume in order to get their franchise,&#13;
and related some displeasure with them.&#13;
According to this official, there are no pageant rules&#13;
concerning violations of the law; one may have a record&#13;
a mile long. He related an interesting story of how&#13;
several years ago a nearby town had a pageant entrant&#13;
who was a known prostitute. She came in third runnerup.&#13;
Regardless of such situations and beauty-scholarship&#13;
pageants are still meant for the "pure" and "innocent"&#13;
as evidenced by the rules. It's a search for the Ideal&#13;
woman and virginity (at least the outward signs) is still&#13;
part of that ideal.&#13;
At best this attitude is antiquated; at worst it's lmmoral.&#13;
To judge a woman married or not by whether or&#13;
not her hymen is intact, is degrading and represents a&#13;
double-standard in judgement between the sexes. When&#13;
marriage and pregnancy, whether it's legitimate or not,&#13;
is considered to spoil a woman so that she can no longer&#13;
be considered ideal, then one must look more closely at&#13;
one's values.&#13;
If anyone is in doubt about a woman's virginity not&#13;
effecting her personal worthiness, just ask your mother.&#13;
Why do some people think&#13;
Bud.is sortof special?&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make A difference.)&#13;
When yo~sayBudweiser., you'v!.~J!~.~J..&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER December a, 1976 3&#13;
l w The Parkside ..-y.,, ..&#13;
RANGER&#13;
EDITORIAL/OPI IO&#13;
Beauty pageants seek virginity&#13;
Women despair, for if you've ever been pregnant or&#13;
married you'll never be a beauty queen, or more appropriately,&#13;
"princess." A woman's worth, defined&#13;
simply in terms of beauty and pois~ is somehow&#13;
lessened with the loss of her virginity, or so imply the&#13;
rules of those pageants which are held to chose "our&#13;
ideal."&#13;
A press release announ-ces requirements for the Miss&#13;
Kenosha Scholarship Pageant (new name for beauty&#13;
pageant): " ... qualifications are simple: Young ladies·&#13;
must be at least 17 and not over 28 on Sept. l, 1977. They&#13;
must be high school graduates by that time, and never&#13;
been married or pregrant (sic)."&#13;
It later mentions, "Judging will be based on the same&#13;
values used in the Miss America and Miss Wisconsin&#13;
Programs." It doesn't take long to figure out that one of&#13;
those values is virginity; that which is officially lost in&#13;
the public's eyes upon marriage or pregnancy.&#13;
Though it's required that women entrants have never&#13;
been pregnant or married, the release plays down the&#13;
necessity of a ta lent:" ... entrants do not necessarily&#13;
have to be a trained talent in any specific field ... Four&#13;
girls who felt they only possessed a medicore (sic)&#13;
talent became Miss Kenosha."&#13;
Though much of what is objectionable about these&#13;
beauty-scholarship pageants is embedded in the&#13;
tradition of the program and society, the requirement&#13;
concerning pregnancies, according to Miss Kenosha&#13;
officials, is a new national pageant rule. Though the&#13;
image of the "ideal" woman being a virgin is old, the&#13;
rule relating to this value was just made last year.&#13;
One may question how pagear.t officlals intend to&#13;
Thanks, Jeannine&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Thanks! Thanks for your time.&#13;
Thanks for your services. Thanks&#13;
for contending with all tl)e shit&#13;
you put up with. Thanks for doing&#13;
a fantastic job even though there&#13;
were the more difficult times.&#13;
Thanks for staying out here till&#13;
the wee hours of the morning&#13;
laying out the most extraordinary&#13;
paper. Thanks to us&#13;
for keeping you company while&#13;
you were out here laying out the&#13;
wonderous paper till the wee&#13;
hours of the morning. Thanks for&#13;
being you through thick and thin.&#13;
. We ail like your typewriters and&#13;
you. Good luck to you wherever&#13;
you end up in this world full of&#13;
fun!! And most of all Jeannine,&#13;
thanks for the memories! ! !&#13;
Farewell beloved,&#13;
Tom, Sue, Mona, Bill,&#13;
Cathy, Chris, F hilip,&#13;
John, Bob, and Doug.&#13;
P.S. Bill wants you to get a&#13;
haircut. Tom says thanks for the&#13;
desk, job, and headaches. Mona&#13;
says thanks for teaching her&#13;
everything she didn't want to&#13;
know. Sue says thanks for&#13;
nothing! Cathy says thanks for&#13;
knocking before you enter. Chris&#13;
wants to thank you for the pain in&#13;
the neck and the help in getting rid&#13;
of the pain. John says thank you&#13;
for putting up with the ol_d lady&#13;
who keeps calling and saymg the&#13;
neighborhood dogs are "out to get&#13;
her." Phil is going to watch for&#13;
your name in national&#13;
newsmagazines and says you had&#13;
better amount to something&#13;
professionally or he's going to&#13;
deny he ever thought you were&#13;
the best editor Ranger ever had.&#13;
und l 111 II II See you aro ........&#13;
Ranger backed&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am writing this letter in&#13;
response to a previous letter&#13;
printed in the Ranger's&#13;
December 1 copy. It was written&#13;
by a person named Arthur Gruhl,&#13;
and in it he cut down a lot of&#13;
things about the Ranger which I&#13;
would like to refute.&#13;
One of the first things Gruhl&#13;
complained about was ~he&#13;
DeRanger supplement of which&#13;
he said, "Debasing ~uman&#13;
sexuality is neither satrre or&#13;
entertaining." I cannot understand&#13;
how someone can get so&#13;
upset about a simple parody. It&#13;
was obvious that this article ~as&#13;
a humorous response to the series&#13;
continued on P9 ~&#13;
police entrants with regard to the mafrlage and&#13;
pregnancy rules, well so do some of the officials. The&#13;
application for the Miss Kenosha Pageant doesn't even&#13;
ask the appropriate questions. A representative of the&#13;
pageant indicated that they do not check up on the girls&#13;
with r~ard to these requirements, and questioned,&#13;
"How do you prove something like that?" He mentioned&#13;
that these were national rules which the Kenosha&#13;
pageant had to assume in order to get their franchise,&#13;
and related some displeasure with them.&#13;
According to this official, there are no pageant rules&#13;
concerning violations of the law; one may have a record&#13;
a mile long. He related. an interesting story of how&#13;
several years ago a nearby town had a pageant entrant&#13;
who was a known prostitute. She came in third runnerup.&#13;
Regardless of such situations and beauty-scholarship&#13;
pageants are still meant for the "pure" and "innocent"&#13;
as evidenced by the rules. It's a search for the Ideal&#13;
woman and virginity (at least the outward signs) Is still&#13;
part of that ideal.&#13;
At best this attitude ·s antiquated; at worst It's immoral.&#13;
To judge a woman married or not by whether or&#13;
not her hymen is intact, is degrading and represents a&#13;
double-standard in judgement between the sexes. When&#13;
marriage and pregnancy, whether it's legitimate or not,&#13;
is considered to spoil a woman so that she can no longer&#13;
be considered ideal, then one must look more closely at&#13;
one's values.&#13;
If anyone is in doubt about a woman's virginity not&#13;
effecting her personal worthiness, just ask your mother.&#13;
Why do so1ne people think&#13;
Bud. is sort _of special?&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make a difference.)&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER December ., 1976&#13;
EDITORIAL·OPINION Ranger backed----&#13;
To the new editor: ferior.&#13;
Then GruhI said the P8I1&#13;
moved me to "take Up that my pen"&#13;
He said we shouldn't crltlcize ..:..&#13;
administration , H...-~_..1.I.........., ~ if&#13;
you skip classes ando« dOll't do&#13;
your homework." Thls IIIade It&#13;
sound like the whole Parkaide&#13;
student body, inclUding m1leif&#13;
are a bunch of h00ky1lla '&#13;
idiots, and I resent lhla ~&#13;
much! ._,&#13;
Next came the sentence, "U the&#13;
Creator intended that students&#13;
were to run the school He would&#13;
have made them first." To lIlla&#13;
all. I can say is, we're reaJJy&#13;
sorry, but we received a bad&#13;
draw, and we're doing as mUCb&#13;
as we can to fix it.&#13;
In mine and everyone else's&#13;
opinion that I talked to the&#13;
Ranger, with the De~nger&#13;
supplement, was the best&#13;
publication to come out of&#13;
Parkside yet, and we are looking&#13;
forward, to more. Don't stop,&#13;
Ranger, just because some&#13;
traditionalist says that one&#13;
shouldn't laugh at sex .•&#13;
CurtColUns&#13;
students know about&#13;
discrepencies in the administration;&#13;
if it didn't do this,&#13;
especially in ·reference to the&#13;
administration, no one would&#13;
know about them other than the&#13;
people dlrecUy involved with the&#13;
troublesome areas. What percentage&#13;
of the student body has&#13;
as good an overall view of the&#13;
Parkside situation as the Ranger&#13;
staff? Avery small percentage, if&#13;
any.&#13;
I must admit that some of&#13;
Gruhl's suggestions for articles&#13;
were good, but on the other hand,&#13;
be said that those students that&#13;
gripe have yet to serve on a PTA.&#13;
Realistically, how many students&#13;
have served on a'PTA?&#13;
Then he said that students&#13;
should not criticize people who&#13;
have more training in these areas&#13;
than they do. What are the&#13;
students supposed to do, sit back&#13;
and tolerate inferior actions? If&#13;
the students don't complain, no&#13;
one will, and these inferior&#13;
situations will go on being inferior,&#13;
without the administration&#13;
even knowing that they are incontinued&#13;
from pg. J&#13;
published in the Ranger dealing&#13;
with sexual education. But the&#13;
DeRanger did not just mock out&#13;
that article, it mocked out&#13;
everything about the Ranger, from&#13;
its logo all the way to the sports&#13;
news.&#13;
So it was not just decided to&#13;
make fun of sex in one article, but&#13;
the article was written along the&#13;
lines of the rest of the DeRanger,&#13;
IDOCkIngevery part of the paper,&#13;
thereby including the sexual&#13;
education articles automatically.&#13;
If this paper enraged GruhI as&#13;
much as his letter implied,&#13;
imagine his temper after watching&#13;
Monty Python!&#13;
Also, Gruhl mentioned that the&#13;
paper is constanUy "bitching"&#13;
about the administration. To this,&#13;
I say, "great," because the&#13;
Ranger Is the voice of the student&#13;
population--if it doesn't say&#13;
anything about the things that&#13;
are wrong with Parkside, who&#13;
will?&#13;
No individual student has any&#13;
real influence, but the Ranger&#13;
does. Also, the Ranger lets the&#13;
DON'T PANIC!&#13;
by 11 ... S/pIIaa&#13;
". .. the Jut ..... 01. !be oemester and the Jut Issue 01. wblch rn be&#13;
edItIIr. Sou_ laid me tbat as a Jut gesture I sbouId write about&#13;
"'1 I think 01!be paper 01" !be IICbool, but tbat's a IlWe hard to sum&#13;
.. at tbIa oartlcuIar time.&#13;
Ha'riD&amp; worked on the Rang... fOl" 31&gt; years and knowing the d1f-&#13;
IIcu1lIe8 IUCb IIIwlwment can briDg (I.e. I'm in my 5th year of&#13;
CGIIeIe) rm ItiII....bIe to e..-s the great benellts 01WOI"king in a&#13;
IlDdeal OI1lanbation. It'.the dIf(........,., belwetllliving oomething and&#13;
readiDll a boat about _ eIae doing it&#13;
11Ioagh a HW edit« has not yet been cbooen, I'd like to make a few&#13;
CGIIIIDeJlls to hIm-ber. I hope you'll find that this Is IIlllI'e than a&#13;
ne..... per, more than you expected it to be. And when 01" if you're&#13;
contronted with tbat revelaUon: DON'T PANIC.&#13;
Students and deadIInea; people and OI1lanizaUon; ideals and out:&#13;
_ don't always come togelber as one mlght bope. But there's&#13;
nothlnR like facing the ehallenge of what seems to be an impossible&#13;
aituaUon and pu1ling through It There Is saUsfaclioo in putting one&#13;
guts into aomethiDg and knowing there was nothing more that could&#13;
be clone; !be body could go no further.&#13;
U PUWnc !be paper togelber seems easy, then there's something&#13;
wrong. Once one level 01 competancy Is reached, one should con-&#13;
Unually strive to reach a higher level rather than becoming seWed in&#13;
the comfort of wwking with the minimal expenditure of effort. Unforlunalely&#13;
an orderly positive progression like this doesn't usually&#13;
take place, at leas! not over long periods of time, and that is something&#13;
with 'Whichone must contend.&#13;
One last thing: you can't do It alone. Ranger is people, very speciaJ&#13;
people who sacrifice lime and sometimes body and soul to put out the&#13;
student newspaper. To those speciaJ people I want to extend ODefinal&#13;
and eternal thank you.&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
t&#13;
III&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
TYPING DONE efficiently ana t pnIIfeosslonel1y In my home. RellSOflllble I ratllS. 6S1-606ll&#13;
FOR SALE; Grey, wtllfe. and orange per-I sian rug 6'1l"x]'A" S35O. m-9394 "He.-.5 p.m .&#13;
WILL 00 any kind of typing at reasonable t rates. For inftlrmation. Call 652·3313.&#13;
FOR SALE: Marantz 2015rKelver, jen~f&#13;
=el Aspeakers, 1year old. \300. Phone 631-'&#13;
MEDICAL SCHOOL In Mexico accepting I Americanstudents Pr.ctlce inttut US. WHO&#13;
listed. HEW lIPPl"oved. " year coune. loans&#13;
available, f'Or December appolnlment inl&#13;
your .r••.call 2''-''96-4200.&#13;
FOR ,SAl.E 1%1 VW Bug. S300 CilII 633-1754I everllngs&#13;
BEER CANS make great Christmas gifts t Big selection of curn!"t flat tops and con~&#13;
~~lIal$Otl'ade_ 731516'h Ave, Kenosha t&#13;
TWO BeDROOM apartment, completely t furnished, utillti~ ~Id by landlord. Closeto&#13;
public tranSpol'".falion. Available Dec. 15 I CaU 652147.&#13;
'.ANTe.O Par' Tlnw ~r.lary for StUder.t&#13;
(&gt;rOl/P to hovrs a w..-. at S2 -50 a,.. hour I~fbeoroWOf'II; Study see KI,,",o In WllC&#13;
o It'] CIt" call Ul 12" t .ANT.O; P.,-t time c,..lld cara work.,.&#13;
.... Ing WI'" IIN"'I," IIlJeI 1311 In group I...,. home S3 00 per tloUr one yM;- ell._&#13;
t .·....lane. dftlred In c,..lId car. work or ,ed 'laid Phone 6J6.1SI3&#13;
.ANTED Female 20 yurs or older to share Ia"nas~'emlf «...\t, p,rnp,.ef.,.ably Jr Sr Phone "" t N•• D rlOe from IOU", side of Milwaukee&#13;
t W, I My f'Or '" DO Call 762·6233 162·6131 Aw. fW Carol&#13;
IWill 00 al\y kind of typitIV at a rNsonable&#13;
rat. Call.". socnanvtlme after.5 pm t ••NEFIT fWMeI lamar. TtIlJrS Dec. 9.'&#13;
f 1 ~,..,·s Alibi 100WaShington "".,.., Racine ,.1 tM beer you can drinll for" $3, •&#13;
ITY"IHG Manuscrlpls. Themes. l!n&#13;
vftDpn Corrn,ponOence. Term Papers. etc&#13;
ITwv I~ Ityl" offered Acc\lr ...:,!, guar·&#13;
..... 4«1 50 ctflh stiNt minImum&#13;
cOl'l'lPliCaltd GII1l1ilneogotlable Ptlone m • ""C2 after .5 0 m&#13;
Headline corrected&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 8, 1976&#13;
EDITORIAL-OPI1 ION&#13;
To the new editor:&#13;
DON'T PANIC !&#13;
by Jeau.u.Jne Slpsma&#13;
Classifieds f&#13;
f&#13;
~&#13;
I WANT 0 1 P•M Tim Secretary to,- Stl&gt;dtr.t&#13;
Clroup O IIOun a Wffk al '2.50 an hour .&#13;
'&#13;
I be on Of' Study SN KIYoko In WLLC&#13;
D 19J or ca SS3 :n..i t WANT D: PaM I me child care workPr I - Ing w t fuvenlln es U-17 In grovp&#13;
r... - UCO per hour. One ywa: exlfflCe&#13;
d red child care work or I re1411ed I eld PhOne 636-3513.&#13;
WANT D : F.ma 20 ye rs or old r to share I en rtmenl PnttrlblY Jr Sr PhOne "'&#13;
• ltt • pm t N D rlcM rom ICU! sl&lt;H Of MIiwaukee&#13;
m pay !Of' as Call 762 6133 7626231 I or Carol&#13;
I WILL dO any Incl ot typlno 11 a reasonable&#13;
ra t Call 4SA,5002 nvt me aner 5 p m.&#13;
f e N FIT tor Mel Lamar, Thurs. OK. 9 al&#13;
7 r s Al bl Washington Ave, Rae ne. • f AH I e beer YoU can orln ror Sl. •&#13;
I TYPING anuscrlpts, ThemH, @n&#13;
COrrespondence. Term Papers, e c.&#13;
'&#13;
Two type styles ottered Accuracy guarffd.&#13;
50 cents llleet m mum&#13;
com lcat..i oetall negol able PhOne 632-&#13;
, I altt5Dm&#13;
TYPING OONE efficlently ano t&#13;
profHSionally in my home. Reasonable t&#13;
rates. 657 6068&#13;
FOR SALE : Grey, white, and oranoe Per- f&#13;
s an l'U9 6'1"&gt;&lt;3'4". $350. 552-939, after 5 p.m.&#13;
WI LL DO any l&lt;ind ot typing at reasonable t&#13;
rates. For ,ntormalion. Call 652-3373.&#13;
FOR SALE: Marantz 2015 rKeiver, }ensefl f&#13;
=el• speakers. l year old , $300. Phone 63-' t&#13;
MEDICAL SCHOOL In Mn:lco accepting'&#13;
American students. Practice in the US, WHO'&#13;
listed, HEW awroved. • year course, loans&#13;
available, for OKember app0inlment inl&#13;
your arH, call 219 ,996-•200. ,&#13;
FOR SALE 1967 VW Bug . $300 Call 633 -175' t&#13;
evenings .&#13;
BEER CANS make great Christmas gifts f&#13;
Big selection ot current flat lops and con~&#13;
fops WIii also trade. 731S 16th Ave. Kenosha t&#13;
6576068&#13;
TWO BEDROOM apartment , completely f&#13;
,.,rnlshea, ulllilies paid by landlord. Close to&#13;
pUbl c 1ransp0rtati0&lt;1 . Available DK . 15 t&#13;
Call 652 ,W•.&#13;
'&#13;
Ranger hacke~-----&#13;
continued from pg. 3&#13;
published in the Ranger dealing&#13;
with sexual education. But the&#13;
DeRanger did not just mock out&#13;
that article, it mocked out&#13;
everything about the Ranger, from&#13;
its logo all the way to the sports&#13;
news.&#13;
So it was not just decided to&#13;
make fun of sex in one article, but&#13;
the article was written along the&#13;
lines of the rest of the DeRanger,&#13;
1T1ocking every part of the paper,&#13;
thereby including the sexual&#13;
education articles automatically.&#13;
H this paper enraged Gruhl as&#13;
much as his letter implied,&#13;
imagine his temper after watching&#13;
Monty Python!&#13;
Also, Gruhl mentioned that the&#13;
paper is constantly " bitching"&#13;
about the administration. To this,&#13;
I say, "great," because the&#13;
Ranger is the voice of the student&#13;
population--if it doesn't say&#13;
anything about the things that&#13;
are wrong with Parkside, who&#13;
will?&#13;
No individual student has any&#13;
real influence, but the Ranger&#13;
does. Also, the Ranger lets the&#13;
students know about&#13;
discrepencies in the a&lt;:1-&#13;
ministration; if it didn't do this,&#13;
especially in reference to the&#13;
administration, no one would&#13;
know about them other than the&#13;
people directly involved with the&#13;
troublesome areas. What percentage&#13;
of the student body has&#13;
as good an overall view of the&#13;
Parkside situation as the Ranger&#13;
staff? A very small percentage, if&#13;
any.&#13;
I must admit that some of&#13;
Gruhl's suggestions for articles&#13;
were good, but on the other hand,&#13;
he said that those students that&#13;
gripe have yet to serve on a PTA.&#13;
Realistically, how many students&#13;
have served on a PTA?&#13;
Then he said that students&#13;
should not criticize people who&#13;
have more training in these areas&#13;
than they do. What are the&#13;
students supposed to do, sit back&#13;
and tolerate inferior actions? If&#13;
the students don't complain, no&#13;
one will, and these inferior&#13;
situations will go on being inferior,&#13;
without the administration&#13;
even knowing that they are inferior.&#13;
Then Gruhl said the part tha&#13;
moved me to "take up my t . pen,,&#13;
He said we shouldn't criticize th&#13;
admin~tration, " ... especially ;&#13;
you skip classes and-or don't d&#13;
your homework." This Inad .0&#13;
und lik th e It&#13;
so e e whole Parksid&#13;
student body, including myselfe&#13;
~-e a bunch of hooky-playing&#13;
idiots, and I resent this v&#13;
much! ery&#13;
Next c~e the sentence, "If the&#13;
Creator intended that students&#13;
were to run the school He would&#13;
have made them first." To this&#13;
all I can say is, we're reaU '&#13;
sorry, but we received a ba~&#13;
draw, and we're doing as much&#13;
as we can to fix it.&#13;
In mine and everyone else's&#13;
opinion that I talked to the&#13;
Ranger, with the DeR~nger&#13;
supplement, was the best&#13;
publication to come out of&#13;
Parkside yet, and we are looking&#13;
forward to more. Don't stop&#13;
Ranger, just because som~&#13;
traditionalist says that one&#13;
shouldn't laugh at sex ..&#13;
Curt Collins&#13;
Headline corrected&#13;
Break schedules&#13;
11Ieschedules for the Union and Bookstore during semester !reak&#13;
will be:&#13;
COFFEE SHOPPE: CLOSED Dec. 24, Dec. 31&#13;
OPEN 9a.m.-2 p.m.&#13;
OPEN Dec. 16-237:36-2&#13;
CLOSED Dec. 24&#13;
REOPENS Jan. 17, 1977&#13;
CLOSED Dec. 15&#13;
OPENS Jan. 17, 1977&#13;
q,oSED Dec. 23&#13;
OPENS Jan. 17, 1977&#13;
CLOSED Dec. 24:Dec. 31&#13;
OPEN Dec. 27-30 3p.m.-9 p.m.&#13;
Jan. 3-7, 16-143-9 p.m.&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM:&#13;
UNION SQUARE GRILL:&#13;
UNION SQUARE:&#13;
REC CENTER:&#13;
BOOKSTORE: Dec. 24 !lol p.m.&#13;
CLOSED Dec. 25-Jan. 2&#13;
Jan. 3-6 !l-4 p.m.&#13;
CLOSED .Jan. 7.Q&#13;
Jan. 10 !l-4:30&#13;
Jan. 11-14 s-a&#13;
Jan. 15 s-i&#13;
All Union and food service hours will resume reguJar hours Jan. 17,&#13;
1977.&#13;
11M' Parllslde R.~ver is wriften and lIdit"&#13;
.,. .... studenh of the Unh'orsity of&#13;
Wllconlln.Parllside who .r. solely&#13;
...... Mlbl. for its IIdltorl.. policy and&#13;
1:°0'.... Opinion, ell pressed .re not&#13;
necessarily 'epreHntative of those hald by&#13;
the ,"'denh.. facul.y or adminis'ration 01&#13;
P... llsi.... Editorial and 8usino" 553·1211;&#13;
Nnnroom 553·2ns.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Decem ....... 19765&#13;
" ........ J.~ .•&#13;
Movie, "Play It Again, Sam," pla)'ll aI2:30and 7:30 p.m. In tbe UnIon&#13;
Cinema. AdmissIon is $1.&#13;
Basketball game, UW-P vs Sl N..-berl College, al 7:30 p.m. In the&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg. Tickets are $1 f..- studenla In advance al the Ido&#13;
Kiosk and $2 f..- aU al the door.&#13;
TbundaJ,~.'&#13;
Movie, "Take the Money and Run," plays aI2:30 and 7:30 p.m. In the&#13;
Union Cinema. Admisalon is $1.&#13;
Colloqulm, "The Emotive Theory of Ethics," given by Nick SmIth,&#13;
UW-P Assl Prof. of PhUosophy al7 p.m, InGR 101.&#13;
Accent on Enrichment SerIes presents Roberta Peters ala p.m. In the&#13;
CAT.&#13;
The Life Science Club will hold a general meeting. A movle and&#13;
refreshments will be shown.&#13;
FrtdIly, ~. 1. Coffeehouse, featuring George Kldera and DennIs Peyton, from 2 to 4&#13;
p.m. In the Union Cafeteria.&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2to 4 p.m. In Unilln 7J1I.&#13;
Movie, "Sleeper," pla)'ll al7 and a:45 p.m. In the Unilln Cinema. Admission&#13;
is $1.&#13;
Studio productions of Samuel Beckett's "Endgame" and "Acl Wlthoul&#13;
Words" presented aU p.m. InCA D155A~d1o B. Free.&#13;
Salarday,~.U&#13;
Studio productions of Samuel Becltett's "Endgame" and "Act WIthouI&#13;
Words" presented at a p.m. InCA D155A-SludioB. Free.&#13;
SuDdaJ.~.1% .&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from Ito 6 p.m. InCL 140.&#13;
Concert, Parkslde Chorale perf&lt;rms Handel's "Messiah" aI3:30 p.m.&#13;
In the CAT.&#13;
Movie, "Sleeper," plays at 7:30 p.m. In the Union anema. MmIMim&#13;
is $1.&#13;
Studio productions of Samuel Beckett's "Endgame" and "Acl Without&#13;
Words" presented ala p.m. InCAD155A~d1o B. Free.&#13;
TbundaJ.~.Z3&#13;
Christmas Dance, featuring "Suds," at.p.m. In Unilln Square.&#13;
Advising week begins&#13;
Advising week starts today,&#13;
December 8 and will run through&#13;
the 14th (nollnc1udlng Saturday&#13;
and Sunday).&#13;
Students who are unaware of&#13;
who their advisor is may find oul&#13;
at one of the following Inf..-&#13;
mation slations: 1) Greenqulsl&#13;
Hall • main level conunons area,&#13;
2) WlLC-next to the library, and&#13;
3) WlLC - D level by the Informallon&#13;
Kiosk. Informallon&#13;
concerning advisor's office houri&#13;
will be made available.&#13;
Students who have questions&#13;
may speak to counseJors who will&#13;
be located at the station In MaIn&#13;
Place by the library enlrance&#13;
between the hours of 10a.m. and&#13;
a p.m. Monday through Thursday,&#13;
and between 10 a.m. and&#13;
4:30 p.m. on Friday.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jell""ln_ Sipsma&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Cathy Brnall&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Tom CClOfMIr&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR: Bruce Wilgner&#13;
DEPARTMENTS:&#13;
Administration·Policies: John McKloskey&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debbie Bner&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Jell" Tenutll&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS: jeffrey l. ,wenckl. 81118.rlle&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Julie Lange&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR:&#13;
CIRCULATION: Sue Marquardt&#13;
. STAFF: Wendy Miller, Terri Gayhart. Robert Hoffman. ChriS Clausen, Thomas No.......&#13;
Diane Carlson, Douglas Edenh."s.r, Mary Kay Ohmer, Larry Donnelly. Ph,l Hermann.&#13;
Ramona Maillet. Bob Jambols. Beverly Pella, Linda KnUdtson. Karin LaFwrlH. Judy&#13;
Trudrung. SC~" Reinhard, Philip L. Livingston. De6bie "'arpe&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: P.J. Anollna, Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Camera World&#13;
Fuji ST605&#13;
~ ....~.&#13;
----,;,...~_. ---J&#13;
$155.00&#13;
Camera World Incorporated&#13;
3212 Washington Avenue&#13;
Racine. Wisconsin 53403&#13;
Telephone 637~7428. 637~7429&#13;
For the photographer or enthusiast&#13;
. Cibachrome . Fuji film&#13;
. Unicolor .Omega&#13;
·Uford .Cooler fresh&#13;
.Edwal film&#13;
.Durst&#13;
Nikkormat FT·2 with SOrnm F2 lens $279.95&#13;
Olympus&#13;
OM·1&#13;
Canon&#13;
AE;,...·1:........,..&#13;
$289.95&#13;
AE·1&#13;
Flash&#13;
Winder&#13;
$294.95&#13;
$49.95&#13;
$89.95&#13;
Break schedules&#13;
The schedules for the Union and Bookstore during semester break&#13;
will be:&#13;
COFFEE SHOPPE: CLOSED Dec. 24, Dec. 31&#13;
OPEN 9a.m.-2 p.m.&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM:&#13;
UNION SQUARE GRIIL:&#13;
UNION SQUARE:&#13;
REC' CENTER:&#13;
BOOKSTORE:&#13;
OPEN Dec. 16-23 7:30-2&#13;
CLOSED Dec. 24&#13;
REOPENS Jan. 17, 1977&#13;
CLOSED Dec. 15&#13;
OPENS Jan. 17, 1977&#13;
CJ,.OSED Dec. 23&#13;
OPENS Jan. 17, 1977&#13;
CLOSED Dec. 24, Dec. 31&#13;
OPEN Dec. 27-30 3p.m.-9 p.m.&#13;
Jan. 3-7, 10-14 3-9 p.m.&#13;
Dec. 24 9-1 p.m.&#13;
CLOSED Dec. 25-Jan. 2&#13;
Jan. ~ 9-4 p.m.&#13;
CLOSED .Tan. 7-9&#13;
Jan. 10 9-4:30&#13;
Jan. 11-14 9-8&#13;
Jan. 15 9-1&#13;
All Union and food service hours will resume regular hours Jan. 17,&#13;
1977.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jeannine Sipsm11&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Cathy Brn11k&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Tom Cooper&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR: Bruce Wagner&#13;
DEPARTMENTS:&#13;
Administration-Policies: John McKloskey&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debbie B11uer&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Jun Tenuta&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS: jellrey 1- swencki, Bill Barke&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Julie L11nge&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR:&#13;
CIRCULATION: Sue M11rquardt&#13;
•&#13;
The P11rkslde Raflger is written and edited&#13;
by the students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin·P•rksid• who •r• sol•ly&#13;
responsible for its editorl11I policy and&#13;
coci••"t Opinions express•d are not&#13;
ntcesurily represent11tive of those held by&#13;
the students, faculty or 11dministr11tion of&#13;
Parkside. Editori11I 11nd Business 553-2217;&#13;
Newsroom 553-2295.&#13;
. . STAFF: Wendy Miller, Terri Gayhart, Robert Hollman, Chris Clausen, Thom•• No1eti,&#13;
Diane Carlson, Douglas Edenhauser, Mary Kay Ohmer, Larry Donnelly, Phil Herm11nn, .&#13;
Ramona Maillet, Bob Jambois, Beverly Pella, Lind• Knudtson, K11rin LaFourier, Judy&#13;
Trudrung, Scott Reinhard, Philip L. Livingston, Dellbie 91111rpe&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: P.J. Auolina, Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Camera World&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER December I, 1976 5&#13;
Wednesday, Dec.8&#13;
Movie, "Play It Again, Sam," plays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission is $1.&#13;
Basketball game, UW-P vs St. Norbert College, at 7:30 p.m. in th&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg. Tickets are $1 for students in advance at the Info&#13;
Kiosk and $2 for all at the door.&#13;
Thursday, Dec. 9&#13;
Movie, "Take the Money and Run,'' plays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Admission is $1.&#13;
Colloquim, "The Emotive Theory of Ethics," given by ·1ck Smlth,&#13;
UW- P Asst. Prof. of Philosophy at 7 p:m. in GR 101.&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series presents Roberta Peters at 8 p.m. ln th&#13;
CAT.&#13;
The Life Science Club will hold a general meeting. A movie and&#13;
refreshments will be shown.&#13;
Friday, Dec.10&#13;
Coffeehouse, featuring George Kidera and Dennis Peyton, from 2 to 4&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cafeteria.&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4 p.m. in Union 'JJ1'/.&#13;
Movie, "Sleeper," plays at 7 and 8:45 p.m. in the Union Cinema. Admission&#13;
is $1.&#13;
Studio productions of Samuel Beckett's "Endgame" and "Act Without&#13;
Words" presented at 8 p.m. in CA Dl55A-Studio B. Free..&#13;
. Saturday, Dec.11&#13;
Studio productions of Samuel Beckett's "Endgame" and "Act Without&#13;
Words" presented at 8 p.m. in CA Dl55A-Studio B. Free.&#13;
Sunday, Dec.1% •&#13;
Wargamers Chm meets from 1 to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Concert, Parkside Chorale performs Handel's "Messlah" at 3:30 p.m.&#13;
in the CAT.&#13;
Movie, "Sleeper," plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema. Admission&#13;
is $1.&#13;
Studio productions of Samuel Beckett's "Endgame" and "Act Without&#13;
Words" presented at 8 p.m. in CA D155A-Studio B. Free.&#13;
Thursday, Dec. Z3&#13;
Christmas Dance, featuring ''Suds," at 9 p.m. in Union Square.&#13;
Advising week begins&#13;
Advising week starts today,&#13;
December 8 and will run through&#13;
the 14th (not including Saturday&#13;
and Sunday).&#13;
Students who are unaware of&#13;
who their advisor is may find out&#13;
at one of the following information&#13;
stations: 1) Greenquist&#13;
Hall - main level commons area,&#13;
2) WI.LC - next to the library, and&#13;
3) WLLC - D level by the Information&#13;
Kiosk. Information&#13;
concerning advisor's office hours&#13;
will be made available.&#13;
Students who have qu lions&#13;
may speak to counselor who will&#13;
be located at the station in Main&#13;
Place by the library entrance&#13;
between the hours of 10 a.m. and&#13;
8 p.m. Monday through Thursday,&#13;
and between 10 a.m. and&#13;
4:30 p.m. on Friday.&#13;
Camera World lncorporat d&#13;
3212 Washmgton A11 nu&#13;
Racine Wisconsin 53403&#13;
Telephone 637- 7428. 637- 7429&#13;
For the photographer or enthusiast&#13;
· Cibachrome&#13;
· Unicolor&#13;
· llford&#13;
·Edwal&#13;
·Durst&#13;
·Fujifilm&#13;
·Omega&#13;
· Cooler fresh&#13;
film&#13;
Nikkormat FT·2 with 50mm F2 lens S279.95&#13;
Olympus&#13;
OM·1&#13;
$289.95 Canon&#13;
AE·1&#13;
AE·1&#13;
Flash&#13;
Winder&#13;
$294.95&#13;
$49.95&#13;
$89.95&#13;
PA SIDE RANGER DKemIMr I, 1976&#13;
......... kbend ..&#13;
AIIDJa IiJI IIld pure capper.&#13;
IlId • lIDkI ... ,..&#13;
'GftlberiwnID&amp;d _~ low. bu no nrmth.&#13;
WIaler __ In.&#13;
.oodIdill .......&#13;
a...... tr-. 11II_ ill wbIte&#13;
rIIbl11la MIll .-mi.&#13;
eW8 Hymn&#13;
I1aor cI [).IM&#13;
cI LIke ,.DIe.&#13;
wi ...... weeki)' ........i.P.I.4..M. '"&#13;
ADd .w- II far me.&#13;
oulaU ...... ,......ma&#13;
""" 10 brInI 0111 daIed .......&#13;
.. prGUd lO daIm Ibe Ulle&#13;
l1lr p.,bIde ~. Newt.&#13;
IJaIlIIftrII 10 .-y rx-&#13;
Fnm dII.. 10 -llInC _.&#13;
.. fGa8bI wIlb enry dilclpllne&#13;
ADd _ I' ~ b,. l1lr 1m\.&#13;
III..,. [).lM&#13;
Y... w\1Illncl ... dI1n&amp; 11110.&#13;
... proad lO daIm l1lr UlIl!&#13;
Of till PwUIcM flaaI1r Hen&#13;
1Iln, a 1Iar)'. wrlw II, don't ~ law.&#13;
Y..,. c!Md'p', nmnday mom.&#13;
a poem, or prl*; Van. where', my Dicks?&#13;
Y lbe ... lIMN have .... lIlm.&#13;
'hm and swmckl. pul thaI bottle down!&#13;
1M UNoo 10 l1lr boo ....&#13;
Get y__ In 1_1&#13;
Get beck lO work I&#13;
ParUIde Rq.......&#13;
jeffrey). nrl!Slcld&#13;
- 'lei", III. '311.15 $34000&#13;
5 tEAl L ITO IUUIn!&#13;
e-nlS&#13;
~I&#13;
12:00 p.m .... ,OO p.m.&#13;
EVERY NIGHT TIL SEVEN&#13;
fw your Chistrnos Shopping conven ience.&#13;
(414) 657·7858&#13;
Completely Committed to&#13;
• • •&#13;
•&#13;
fh.&lt; ~--..&#13;
&lt;. ~ "'fk.....&lt;l&lt; J(~ "u.c~-&lt; d"7-.&#13;
0/- IQ.&lt;./O.C4 '" &lt;~. fk.,.J _&#13;
/O?q 1'~&#13;
!l ~ k.,,, l '''1&#13;
+- +-Iv J,C.L • ...::1 "7 ~~&#13;
j ...a._'J d~ o-&gt;L ~ d~&#13;
4~-£7.~~~ tf'"£4.. J-U~.I.-&lt;'&#13;
tlIhtlr!r~&#13;
The wonder of Stevie'&#13;
EDITOR'S NOTE, Benjamin Braun ts the aulbor&#13;
of our review of Spirilla_I week. He now conttaues&#13;
his review commenting on Stevie Wonder.&#13;
. by Benjamin Braun&#13;
The musical genius of Maurice White (of Earlb,&#13;
Wind and Fire) and Stevie Wonder have surfaced&#13;
again. In lbese two songwriters-composers we have&#13;
probably !he most innovative spiritual and&#13;
catalystic music loday. Certainly their rhythm and&#13;
blues success is widely accepted.&#13;
Stevie Wonder waited two years before releasing&#13;
his latesl double album set (his firsl double LP)&#13;
entiUed Songs In Tbe Key Of Ufe. The album set is&#13;
truly as advertised, a collectors Item. Wonder is in&#13;
many people's estimation. lbe greatest songwriterccmposer&#13;
alive loday.&#13;
Stevie musically mvites you to enter his world of a&#13;
magical. mystical. and melodical maze of majors&#13;
and minors. His notes are soft, soolhing. hea~ at&#13;
tIJiles. but always impressionably message laden.&#13;
This leads us into his lyrics. His devotion toward&#13;
carrying a message to tbe people is displayed. He&#13;
teaches. preaches, socially comments and spreads&#13;
"love mentalism" as he calls It.&#13;
"Songs ... is only a conglamerate of lboughts in&#13;
my SUbconsciOUS !hat my maker decided to give me&#13;
\he strenglh. the love +-love • hate equals. love&#13;
eno:gy, making it possible to bring to my, conscious&#13;
an Idea," he says.&#13;
Among !1Ie 21 songs featured. Wonder brings us&#13;
the beau~ "As" wilb lbe always soulful and&#13;
~ sound of friend Herbie Hancock.&#13;
0Iber beautiful songs are "Anolber Star" featuring&#13;
~e .Benson and Bobbi Humphrey; "Summer&#13;
Soft "WIth RoMie Foster on keyboards; "Black&#13;
Man. ?De of. the more Important songs of lbe&#13;
~ IS a bnef leason in history about Am .&#13;
manednIts first ~ A.ned enea II"""'" pioneers. Brown men. white&#13;
~ ow men. red men. black men are all&#13;
. for conlfibuling meaningfully to lbe&#13;
nation. Ills hard driving and soulful&#13;
You may wan tto get up on Ibis one a.nd shak In this short space GAo._ In Tb e.&#13;
be introduced........ e Key Of Ufe can only&#13;
this ls hard to ~~~ll:a~:~~ckag~ like&#13;
2songs 011 each side (to be played at 33 ~ct;,:~tures&#13;
a pleasa.nt - -. Che ck It out.· ) IS also&#13;
III this world of edi ..&#13;
predlclabl unpr clability comes two&#13;
wIlbout ~ records: .They are predictably good&#13;
varlallons repetitious. monotonous or simp!&#13;
&lt;II a theme as som ~ y&#13;
into once !hey know the ha e groups ~ to faUWonder&#13;
and Maurice ~ite ve ~ gbeoodlhing. Stevie&#13;
with each album. ma . ge .lter and belter&#13;
~. TheY've got a~~~o~ lbeir key to&#13;
........ ating themselves to lakin e own and are&#13;
not lIODe 1Iefore. g music. Where it has&#13;
like to express our ,deepest ap-&#13;
~ editor, Jeannine Sipsrna. It has&#13;
wNch we are thankful. but for her&#13;
.... _~, all the Ranger we say, "Thanks.&#13;
'LAyouT CREW:&#13;
~&#13;
Cooper, jeffrey j. swenck!, Bill Barke •&#13;
STAFF: Calhy ey, Debbie Bauer, Sue Marquardt.&#13;
Bruce Wagner. Jo ~rt Hoffman Chris Clausen. MarY&#13;
Wendy Miller. Terri II Hermann, Ramona Maillet. Judy&#13;
Kay Ohmar. !?1IDL.~, Ilebbie Sharpe, et aI.&#13;
Trudrung, philip -.&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 8, 1976&#13;
e.&#13;
per,&#13;
nnth.&#13;
•&#13;
in le&#13;
sirfn .&#13;
I Rltac&#13;
w Hymn&#13;
rps Humn")&#13;
11 111 Re2. 1399.95&#13;
$340° 0&#13;
ITEO WARRANTY!&#13;
en sunday&#13;
12 :00 p.m .-4:00 p.fn.&#13;
GHT TIL SEVE&#13;
as Sh ping convenience.&#13;
'&#13;
1't4,a(Je&#13;
.11~&#13;
11~ ..&#13;
~ c,vt...,l.4n-7'1-&#13;
L ~ ~.,....._ e._ Jc..μ -.J:a~,&lt;&#13;
cj.. J~d )1C:~? lu.Jdcr&#13;
.&#13;
/o-,'1 1-~ .&#13;
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+- +-Iv ~~ AA,&lt;,-,.......&#13;
fcJ-~d~~ - d~&#13;
4-- ;_ ~ ~ ~ ~d {j~~ J--LJle,1.-&lt;&#13;
~c;cr~&#13;
The wonder of Stevie&#13;
EDITOR'S NOTE: Benjamin Braun is the author&#13;
of our review of Spirit last week. He now continues&#13;
bis review commenting on Stevie Wonder.&#13;
by Benjamin Braun&#13;
The musical genius of Maurice White ( of Earth,&#13;
Wind and Fire) and Stevie Wonder have surfaced&#13;
again. In these two songwriters~omposers we have&#13;
probably the most innovative spiritual and&#13;
catalystic music today. Certainly their rhythm and&#13;
blues success is widely accepted.&#13;
stevie Wonder waited two years before releasing&#13;
his latest double album set (his first double LP)&#13;
entitled Songs In The Key Of Life. The album set is&#13;
truly as advertised, a collectors item. Wonder is in&#13;
many people's estimation, the greatest songwritercomposer&#13;
alive today.&#13;
stevie musically invites you to enter his world of a&#13;
magical, mystical, and melodical maze of majors&#13;
and minors. His notes are soft, soothing, healing at&#13;
tiines, but always impressionably message laden.&#13;
This leads us into his lyrics. His devotion toward&#13;
carrying a message to the people is displayed. He&#13;
teaches, preaches, socially comments and spreads&#13;
"love mentalism" as he calls it.&#13;
"Songs ... is only a conglamerate of thoughts in&#13;
my subconscious that my maker decided to give me&#13;
the strength, the love + love - hate equals love&#13;
energy, making it possible to bring to my conscious&#13;
an idea," he says.&#13;
#'&#13;
Among the 21 songs featured, Wonder brings us&#13;
the beau~ul "As" with the always soulful and&#13;
synchronized sound of friend Herbie Hancock&#13;
Other beautiful songs are "Another Star" featuring&#13;
George Benson and Bobbi Humphrey· "Summer&#13;
Soft",,with Ronnie Foster on keyboar'ds; "Bl~ck&#13;
Man, ?ne of . the more important songs of the&#13;
alb~, ~ a brief lesson in history about America&#13;
and its first so-called pioneers. Brown men, white&#13;
men, ~ellow men, red men, black men are all&#13;
r~gnized_ for contributing meaningfully to the&#13;
nation. It lS hard driving and soulful.&#13;
you may want to get up on this one and shake In&#13;
this short space Songs In The Key Of Llf ·nl&#13;
be introd ced . e can o y&#13;
. . u · A musical and lyrical package like&#13;
th15 lS hard to find. His collector's 45 which f tur&#13;
2 songs on each side ( to be played at 33 RPM~ ts&#13;
a pleasant surprise. Check it out - is a so&#13;
In this world of unpredictabilit&#13;
predictable records Th Y. comes two&#13;
without bein : . ey are predictably good&#13;
variations on\ r:etitious, monotonous ..__.or simply&#13;
into once they kno::heas :;me groups s~em to fall&#13;
Wonder and Maurice ~-teve a good thmg. Stevie&#13;
with each albwn k. 1 . get better and better&#13;
success They· 've 'gomta mg mnovation their key to&#13;
. : a sound all th ·&#13;
dedicating themselves to tak' e~ own and are&#13;
not gone before. mg music, where it has&#13;
Ra er Staff like to express our ,deepest ap-&#13;
We of the ng cJlg editor Jeannine Sipsma. It has&#13;
preicatio~ a~~l~;r:i;ral&lt; which w~ are thankful, but for her&#13;
not been er -~'"'n all the Ranger we say " Thanks,&#13;
friendship and understa•=•t '&#13;
, Mal"&#13;
·LAl'OOT CREW:&#13;
k Th' Cooper, jeffrey j. swencki, Bill Barke,&#13;
STAFF: Cathy Brn~, M ey, Debbie Bauer, Sue Marquardt,&#13;
Bruce Wagner, Jo_ GaY _obert Hoffman, Chris Cla~en, Mary&#13;
Wendy Miller, Terr\enui111l Hermann, Ramona Maillet, Judy&#13;
Kay Ohmar, f~anL uviR • Debbie Sharpe, et al.&#13;
Trudrung, PhiliP .&#13;
E&#13;
A&#13;
t&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
o elpl"ess our .deepest ap-&#13;
:or, Jeannine Sipsma. It has&#13;
we are thankful, but for her&#13;
Ie Ranger we say I "Thanks,&#13;
r, Jeffrey J. swenclri, Bill Barke,&#13;
lebbie Bauer, Sue Marquardt,&#13;
. Hoffman, Chris Clausen, Mary&#13;
rmann, Ramona Maillet, Judy&#13;
bie Sharpe, et al. ...&#13;
~:t r "',-&lt;'To-&lt;'J,J..&#13;
Endgame,&#13;
Act Without Words&#13;
to be staged&#13;
by Norman McPbee&#13;
Dramatic Arts Faculty&#13;
The final stage in chess, when only a f.... pieces&#13;
remain on the board and male is near, is called&#13;
"endgame." In Samuel Beckett's play, EMp_,&#13;
there are only four people remaining. The scene is a&#13;
room somewhere afler a horrendous cataslrophic&#13;
disaster, the time is zero; the dress is llmeless.&#13;
Outside the setling there are lifeless Ianda and&#13;
motionless waterS.&#13;
One of the characters, Hamm (Athony Warrenlls&#13;
blind and paralyzed, a sardonic tyTant who rules his&#13;
comatose confines from a wheel-ehalr lhrone. Oov&#13;
(Robert JiIk) is attached to Hamm in a vque and&#13;
shadowy son-slave relationship. agg (Marc&#13;
Miller) and NeU (Susan Wisba .. ) are Hamm'. aged&#13;
parents who are representative of the past that has&#13;
now become garbage. They chatter 1dI0ticaUy and&#13;
sentimentalize their trival memories while&#13;
vegetating in ash bins.&#13;
Thus, Endgame depicts the ...".q down of aU&#13;
mechanism until it stops; perhaps r.... ...,lInI the&#13;
lose of hope and faith .. hen man is cut off frm&gt; hIa&#13;
religious, metaphysical, and tranocendental roota,&#13;
.. ben aU his actions become aenae\esI. ablurd and&#13;
useless.&#13;
samuel Beckett wrote Endgame ID11157,foIIo:tal&#13;
abDosl immediately OIl the heels of hIa fInt IIJCo&#13;
cessful dramatic effort WailiDll for GodoL BollI&#13;
plays were written during the heiIhl of the lbeaIre&#13;
movement which was defined as "Theatre of the&#13;
Absurd."&#13;
In the production with EndgIme is a compenlon&#13;
piece, Act WIth""t Words. Man Is Dung 01110the&#13;
stage of life, at first obeying the caU of a nlmber of&#13;
impulses, a,ld then being drawn 10 the purIIIIt of&#13;
illusory impu1ses, and finally achieving peace only&#13;
when he refuses material salisfacli.... c1a~1ed&#13;
before him.&#13;
The absurdisl movement was at once criticized&#13;
as sheer nonsense and praised as .- and oa~&#13;
standing theatrical innOVation. Some twenty years&#13;
laler and in retrospect, the plays, especially 1bOIIe of&#13;
Mr. Beckett, have achieved wide recognitloD and&#13;
acclaim. The years have testlfIed 10 the durability&#13;
of his worl&lt; and in their ability to be wIderstood.&#13;
Appearing as the person or. mankind In Ad&#13;
Without Words is Oleryl Po.. alisz.&#13;
The plays are being presented by the FIne .Arts&#13;
Division and Dramatic Arts Discipline. 1be)' will be&#13;
slaged in the UW-Parl&lt;side Communication Arts&#13;
Building, Room Dl55A - Studio B. Performances are&#13;
scheduled ;&lt;•• ()ece!!lber 10, 11 and 12 at a p.m.&#13;
There will be no admlsaiOll charge and palrOllS are&#13;
advised thai sealing will be strictly limited.&#13;
TIt II" ID&#13;
I up earl7.&#13;
EIrIleo' than '*-&#13;
I opea my window 8lld the eoId&#13;
In, I me&#13;
BREA'I1IE'&#13;
11lea1 cJo. my window 8lld bold III)'&#13;
the neat air -.&#13;
IM1L I" •&#13;
•&#13;
.-t1Ite -.no&#13;
au-. as the)&#13;
N1ln1othe~&#13;
a.tcnlmlas_&#13;
ralbatloll donn't&#13;
play ba..... " with&#13;
her lJlouIhtaboth&#13;
hardly IlMw the&#13;
butU- who •&#13;
the diItrauCbt paID of&#13;
lnoe",Uvlly hera&#13;
d10g no ~ aeftI ..&#13;
trulbbut_&#13;
me a break.&#13;
III now the u-&#13;
I had the slCn&#13;
I b t&#13;
a live yard penal&#13;
deIa 01 pmel&#13;
lime now 1M8D1 ~ IlttIe 10 t lariMl Dl81rtn&#13;
ho know ch other&#13;
but0Ile ,&#13;
I can't 18y l~ d1dle&#13;
andltdonn't nttochanpspedeaand Ie&#13;
If tt donn t ha 10&#13;
I hope that to whom thlg~ldlIwt.Pd&#13;
lake It In Uw t&#13;
bruce ..... r...&#13;
11·1.. 71&#13;
to a bo mad IIW&#13;
A AYTI LUll&#13;
In addIUOII to ....... t ... ,""110 • .- ...&#13;
aenIWuIn'e but not fbUhed commItmenl 10 a _ of caa_lIIty Iq"", __&#13;
eftort 8lld baw aIlooe avorace acMemIc&#13;
oIdI1I are weImme lD app/&#13;
For fw1bet information and applinl ......&#13;
ParbIdt' V_ for Action. Uol of WIl~.""',*Ie, Room. Tal1elll HaD, K«lGIba. WI I ..... 1IWD7 •&#13;
from •• a.m. unliI 5 pm til&#13;
express our ,deepest apr,&#13;
Jeannine Sipsma. It has&#13;
we are thankful, but for her&#13;
e Ranger we say, "Thanks,&#13;
, jeffrey j. swencki, Bill Barke,&#13;
bbie Bauer, Sue Marquardt,&#13;
, Hoffman, Chris Clausen, Mary&#13;
nnann, Ramona Maillet, Judy&#13;
bie Sharpe, et al.&#13;
~1 r ~ ,-&lt;.?U'.,,1..,(.&#13;
Endgaine,&#13;
Act Without Words&#13;
to he staged&#13;
by orman McPbee&#13;
Dramatic Arts Faculty&#13;
The final stage ,in chess, when onlv a f&#13;
remain on the board and mate is ~ar, f lled&#13;
"endgame." In Samuel Beckett's pla), Endpm&#13;
there are only four people remainin . The n&#13;
room somewhere after a horrendous catastrop&#13;
disaster, the time is zero; the dress is tim .&#13;
Outside the setting there are lifel land and&#13;
motionless waters.&#13;
One of the character , Hamm ( Athony arr n ·&#13;
blind and paralyzed, a sardonic tyrant ho rul h.&#13;
comatose confines from a wheekhair throne. Cl&#13;
(Robert Jilk ) is attached to Hamm in vague nd&#13;
shadowy son-slave relationship. 'a ( arc&#13;
Miller) and ell (Susan Wisha ) ar Hamm's ed&#13;
parents who are representative of th past th&#13;
now become garbage. They chatter idioti Uy nd&#13;
sentimentalize their trh'al mern le&#13;
vegetating in ash bins.&#13;
Thus, Endgame depicts the running do of all&#13;
mechanism until it stops; perhaps rep tin&#13;
lose of hope and faith when man is cut off from&#13;
religious, metaphysical, and transcendental roo .&#13;
when all his actions become sensel absurd and&#13;
useless.&#13;
Samuel Beckett wrote Endgame in 1957, follo ..&#13;
ahnost immediately on the heels of h first ccessful&#13;
dramatic effort Waiting for Godo Both&#13;
plays were written during the height of the theatre&#13;
movement which was defined as "Theatre of the&#13;
Absurd."&#13;
In the oroduction with Endgame is a companion&#13;
piece, Act Without Word . an is flung on th&#13;
stage of life, at first obeying the call of a number of&#13;
impulses, and then being drawn to the pur t of&#13;
illusory impulses, and finally ach eving pe e onl&#13;
when he refuses material satisfactions da&#13;
before him.&#13;
The absurdist movement was at once crlticized&#13;
as sheer nonsen,e and praised as n and outstanding&#13;
theatrical innovation. Some enty&#13;
later and in retrospect, the pla) , especially th of&#13;
Mr. Beckett, have achieved "de recognition _and&#13;
acclaim. The years have testified to the durability&#13;
of his work and in their abilil)' to be ~erstood.&#13;
Appearing as the person or. mankind n t&#13;
Without Words is Oieryl Powalisz.&#13;
The plays are being presented by th Fine Arts&#13;
Division and Dramatic Arts Discipline They be&#13;
staged in the UW-Parkside Communi tion Arts&#13;
Building, Room 0155A -Studio B. Performan are&#13;
scheduled i,..- December 10, 11 and 12 at 8 pm.&#13;
There will be no a~ion char~e an~ ~trons are&#13;
advised that seating will be strictly limited.&#13;
,&#13;
TH PAA SID ,1&#13;
•&#13;
-Jr&#13;
Par ide' Y r ct10&#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER December •• 1976&#13;
Disciplines reviewed&#13;
IICOIId wouJd IDdude a study of&#13;
eIf_ of aoda1 iDslItulions ..,on&#13;
Indlvlduala. In 0Cber words, a&#13;
IIIDdal weUare" emphasis.&#13;
Aec:llrdIni 16 the committee,&#13;
they ..... eat Inveslillallng the&#13;
Iat.... of the approacbes, with&#13;
lOme concern that Parllalde&#13;
mtebt baYe lime problem of-&#13;
&amp;rinI IIICb a majar without a&#13;
ScbooI of Soda! Work.&#13;
'I1le lhIrd option of criminal&#13;
juIlIce, wouJd Involve workin&amp;&#13;
wIlh UW-Mllwaukee. 'I1le current&#13;
ItIIdent Intereot In a related night&#13;
COlIne, encourqed the comm1tteeaoawwbal.&#13;
'I1le APPR wu&#13;
_ned that the eoune now&#13;
oIfered milbt not predlct the&#13;
amoant of lnIereat that a lull&#13;
oplIon wou1d draw.&#13;
A MCOlId concern II wbether&#13;
the Recenta wouJd allow IIICb a&#13;
JII'OtII'8Dl to develop cClllllderinll&#13;
lheIr c8llllon aplnat prollflraUOII&#13;
of erlmIna1 JlIIllce pi011 anw.&#13;
e-muieaU.&#13;
In looklnl at lbe com-&#13;
DUIlcalion report of the APPR,&#13;
the committee hu IUbetantIa11y&#13;
~ the concerns of both&#13;
studer:ts and faculty.&#13;
Its \If8S done with sociololYanlhropololY,&#13;
coosuItants were&#13;
broUlJbt In to look at the communications&#13;
discipline. Tbe&#13;
coosuItanls reported that the&#13;
faculty needs to sbarpIy Iocwl on&#13;
a \Imlted area or nwnber of areas&#13;
clolIe to the core of communications.&#13;
The committee had reeeive&#13;
several SUIIeslions from the&#13;
consultants about what the foci&#13;
sIlouid be. 1bIs drew a sui&gt;-&#13;
stantlal 8IDOIIIlt of 0a1l from&#13;
faculty, especially one consultant's&#13;
s~lg .. tlon tbat the&#13;
communicatiOllS discipline focus&#13;
011 a rhetoric and public address&#13;
type major.&#13;
Aec:llrdIni to the report, the&#13;
Investigation of the commlllllcaUons&#13;
offerinlls revealed&#13;
that the dioclpllne has been 160&#13;
pneral. It suggested that the&#13;
commlllllcaUOIISdiscipline follow&#13;
a more multidisciplinary approach,&#13;
including courses from&#13;
many areas, IIICb as aodal&#13;
sciences, phllolOpby, and&#13;
education.&#13;
FREE DELIVER Y&#13;
M ",I&gt;.. Parksld. 200&#13;
Nauooal Va.. ity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
PAPERBACK&#13;
EXCHANGE 551-8020&#13;
HOURS:11-7 Dally&#13;
10-5:30 Sat.&#13;
• CURRENT BESTSELLERS 10% OFF&#13;
• SNOOPY STOCKING STUFFERS&#13;
• WE SELL OR TRAOE&#13;
• 10.000 SEPERATE COVERS&#13;
• USEO BOOKS AT BARGAIN PRICES&#13;
1'8' North 22nd, Kenosha&#13;
~ three options currently&#13;
offered were also discussed&#13;
within the report. It was found&#13;
that organizalional communication&#13;
option could forr.' .a&#13;
basis for a strongly humanistic&#13;
major. with theory and practice&#13;
of speech, group interactions,&#13;
interpretation and use of&#13;
language, etc,&#13;
Ilwas suggested that the public&#13;
information option be narrowed&#13;
and get some assIatance from&#13;
UWM in certain areas, because&#13;
the staff cannot be expected to&#13;
cover so many of the areas within&#13;
the public informaUon option.&#13;
Its for the dramatic arts option&#13;
(oow a major within the fine arts&#13;
division), the APPR suggested&#13;
oot intending to be a professional&#13;
theatre preparation. It also&#13;
suggested that they use the&#13;
resources of other disciplines.&#13;
It was recommended that a&#13;
subcommittee should be formed&#13;
to do the work of curriculum and&#13;
recruiting, since Dr. Richard&#13;
CarrIngton is the only full-lime&#13;
staff member in the communication&#13;
discipline currently.&#13;
The suggested that the communications&#13;
major overall is&#13;
drawing enough student credithours&#13;
to warrant a hlrlng of three&#13;
to four new faculty in the communication&#13;
discipline and one in&#13;
dramatic arts.&#13;
APPR meeting&#13;
At the committee's meeting&#13;
last Thursday night, the involved&#13;
disciplines got together with the&#13;
committee and presented their&#13;
response to the reports.&#13;
The communication discipline,&#13;
with a few quibbles, were the&#13;
happiest, although they got the&#13;
least scrutiny of the two groups.&#13;
Dr. David Beach, chairperson&#13;
of the behaviorial science&#13;
division was unsalisfied, due to&#13;
the fact that the committee did&#13;
oot go back into the current offerings&#13;
of soc-anthro and analyze&#13;
them. He wanted the committee&#13;
to be specific about the problems&#13;
facing the discipline, and instead,&#13;
according to Beach, they got&#13;
sidetracked and worked on the&#13;
new curriculums.&#13;
"It's no 'secret that sociololY&#13;
had a bad reputaUon on campus.&#13;
I am fearful of the between-lhelines,&#13;
personal feelings, and&#13;
motives whieb have fixed&#13;
posIUOIlS"said Beacb.&#13;
These reports will now go to the&#13;
Faculty Senate for lurtber approval.&#13;
1m Local ACUllnlercollegiate Tournament Program&#13;
~ \fitJ&#13;
... 1111 - Jan. 22 &amp; 23. 1977&#13;
lllIin JIIII. 28, 28 &amp; 30. 1977&#13;
T*. l Is- JIIII. 28. 29 &amp; 30. 1977&#13;
It&#13;
Faosball - Feb. 4. 5 &amp; 6. 1977&#13;
CIIess - Feb. 4. 5 &amp; 6. 1977&#13;
Lo~ tolr!"8ment. winners to represent Parkside at the ACUI&#13;
ReglOnals10 MadISOnWI8C.. Feb. 17-19. 1977. Contact the&#13;
Union Rec-Canter for information or to enter. "100 fee/entry.&#13;
TOln18lll8nt dinIctor; Randy Moog Phone; 553-2695&#13;
by Laura Ruffolo&#13;
Being,interviewed this week is Katie Seydewitz, a fres1mlan who II&#13;
planning a major in art. She is aIso planning to specialize In art bI8lGry&#13;
because this is her intended career. _&#13;
Katie lives at Parkside Village and finds that living on ber own lor&#13;
the first lime is quite a different experience. "I enjoy living at tile&#13;
Vl11agebecause it is conveniently located near the school. AIso,livq&#13;
at the Village has helped me. to gain new insigbts into many dlffereat&#13;
types of people.&#13;
"At first, Ifound that my privacy was greatly reduced. There ...&#13;
no door I could close and say 'everyone keep out!' Now I lind lIIat&#13;
living with other people in such close quarters, has helped me to&#13;
emphathize with their feelings and that compromise is alwayslhe best&#13;
solution to any problem that may arise."&#13;
Katie has also found that the majority of people she has met at&#13;
Parkside are friendly, open and always wi11lngto help, if they can.&#13;
Katie is originally from Milwaukee where she attended Nicolet&#13;
High School. On the weekends, she usually goes home. On some&#13;
weekends Katie works as a hostess at a Chinese Restaurant, "POrt&#13;
China." On the weekends that she doesn't work, Katie usually will go&#13;
to various discoteques because she enjoys both disco music and&#13;
dancing.&#13;
Her plans for the future? "I will probably attend UW-Milwaullee&#13;
because of my financial situation. Iam possibly going to skip a year of&#13;
school and work in order to become more fmancially independent.&#13;
Whether or not Ireturn to Parkside wiII not change what Parkslde bu&#13;
meant to me: one of lbe best experiences of my 1IIethat has helped me&#13;
grow emotionally and has added another facet to me as a person."&#13;
Vaccinations&#13;
Liule pain reported&#13;
by MODS Maillet According to Isenberg, only a&#13;
few people passed out after&#13;
. having the shot, but there were 110&#13;
serious reactions to the sIlot.&#13;
Regarding the possibility 01&#13;
persons in the 18-24 age group&#13;
requiring another shot, Nurse&#13;
Isenberg said that she is awaitlD8&#13;
word from the Y.enosha Hea1tb&#13;
Department.&#13;
There is a wailing period 01at&#13;
least 4 weeks before the lJllCOIIli&#13;
sIlot can be given, so if the Hea1tb&#13;
Department decides that a&#13;
second shot is necessary, the ,&#13;
eligible people will be contacted&#13;
by mail or through the RanIOI'&#13;
regarding the lime and place 01&#13;
the clinic.&#13;
-&#13;
Campus Health Nurse Edith&#13;
Isenberg was very pleased with&#13;
the'results of last Wednesday'S&#13;
swine fiu innoculatlons. A total of&#13;
626 people, most of tbem&#13;
stUdents, received the vaccination.&#13;
Isenberg expressed gratitude&#13;
toward the City of Kenosha&#13;
Health Department who belped&#13;
carry out the program, volunteers&#13;
who helped things run&#13;
smoothly, and the State Health&#13;
Department who provided the&#13;
vlre.cine, lbe innoculating&#13;
eqwpment, and a technician to&#13;
administer the shots.&#13;
Most of the people received the&#13;
monovalent vaccine. This vaccine&#13;
is given to healthy persons&#13;
between the ages of 18-59 and&#13;
protects only.against swine (New&#13;
Jersey) flu. People 60 or older or&#13;
~icaUy iII persons receiVed&#13;
the blv~ent vaccine which gives&#13;
protection against swine flu and&#13;
Victoria flu.&#13;
M~t o~ the people who got the&#13;
vacemation reported afterwards&#13;
~t they felt little pain in the&#13;
1IUIOCuiatedann. •&#13;
An essay contest 'perspectives&#13;
for the Third Century' is beinll&#13;
Sponsored by the United Slates&#13;
Citizens' Congress which will&#13;
award casb prizes totaling&#13;
• $10,000.&#13;
Interested students and fa~&#13;
may contact the Center f«&#13;
Teaching EXl'ellence, CA235, f«&#13;
lurtber information.&#13;
Contest&#13;
1 THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 8, 1976&#13;
Disciplines reviewed&#13;
con trom pg I&#13;
hether&#13;
unlcatioo&#13;
In lookln at the commwtlcation&#13;
report of th APPR.&#13;
the commltte has ubstantially&#13;
ported th concerns of both&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
studer;ts and faculty.&#13;
As was done with sociologyanthropology,&#13;
consultants were&#13;
lrought in to look at the communications&#13;
discipline. The&#13;
consultants reported that the&#13;
faculty needs to sharply focus on&#13;
a limited area or number of areas&#13;
close to the core of communications.&#13;
The committee had receive&lt;·&#13;
several suggestions from the&#13;
consultants about what the foci&#13;
should be. This drew a substantial&#13;
amount of flak from&#13;
faculty, especially one consultant's&#13;
siiggestion that the&#13;
communications discipline focus&#13;
on a rhetoric and public address&#13;
type major.&#13;
According to the report, the&#13;
investigation of the communications&#13;
offerings revealed&#13;
that the discipline has been too&#13;
general. It suggested that the&#13;
communications discipline follow&#13;
a more multidisciplinary a~&#13;
proach, including courses from&#13;
many areas, such as social&#13;
sciences, philosophy, and&#13;
education. •&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
Mention this od!&#13;
PAPERBACK&#13;
EXCHANGE 551-8020&#13;
HOU 1RS: 11-7 Daily&#13;
10-5:30 Sat.&#13;
• CURRENT BESTSELLERS 10% OFF&#13;
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• WE SELL OR TRADE&#13;
• 10,000 SEPERATE COVERS&#13;
• USED BOOKS AT BARGAIN PRICES&#13;
1585 North 22nd, Kenosha&#13;
The three options currently&#13;
offered were also discussed&#13;
within the report. It was found&#13;
that organizational communication&#13;
option could fo~ a&#13;
basis for a strongly humanistic&#13;
major, with theory and practice&#13;
of speech, group interactions,&#13;
interpretation and use of&#13;
language, etc.&#13;
It was suggested that the public&#13;
information option be narrowed&#13;
and get some assistance from&#13;
UWM in certain areas, because&#13;
the staff cannot be expected to&#13;
cover so many of the areas within&#13;
the public information option.&#13;
As for the dramatic arts option&#13;
(now a major within the fine arts&#13;
division), the APPR suggested&#13;
not intending to be a professional&#13;
theatre preparation. It also&#13;
suggested that they use the&#13;
resources of other disciplines.&#13;
It was recommended that a&#13;
subcornmittee should be formed&#13;
to do the work of curriculum and&#13;
recruiting, since Dr. Richard&#13;
Carrington is the only full-time&#13;
staff member in the communication&#13;
discipline currently.&#13;
The suggested that the communications&#13;
major overall is&#13;
drawing enough student credithours&#13;
to warrant a hiring of three&#13;
to four new faculty in the communication&#13;
discipline and one in&#13;
~amatic arts.&#13;
APPR meeting&#13;
At the cornmittee's meeting&#13;
last Thursday night, the involved&#13;
disciplines got together with the&#13;
committee and presented their&#13;
response to the reports.&#13;
The communication discipline,&#13;
with a few quibbles, were the&#13;
happiest, although they got the&#13;
least scrutiny of the two groups.&#13;
Dr. David Beach, chairperson&#13;
of the behaviorial science&#13;
division was unsatisfied, due to&#13;
the fact that the committee did&#13;
not go back into the current offerings&#13;
of soc-anthro and analyze&#13;
them. He wanted the committee&#13;
to be specific about the problems&#13;
facing the discipline, and instead,&#13;
according to Beach, they got&#13;
sidetracked and worked on the&#13;
new curriculums.&#13;
"It's no ·secret that sociology&#13;
had a bad reputation on campus.&#13;
I am fearful of the between-thelines,&#13;
personal feelings, and&#13;
motives which have fixed&#13;
positions" said Beach.&#13;
These reports will now go to the&#13;
Faculty Senate for further approval.&#13;
1977 Local ACUI Intercollegiate Tournament Program&#13;
,: GID \fill&#13;
Bowling - J n 22 &amp; 23, 1977&#13;
Billiards J 20. 2s &amp; 30, 1977&#13;
Table Tennis - Jan. 20. 29 &amp; 3o. 1977&#13;
a&#13;
11&#13;
Foosball - fi!b. 4. 5 &amp; 6. 1sn&#13;
Chess - Feb . 4. 5 &amp; 6. 1977&#13;
Local tournament winners to represent Parkside at the ACUI&#13;
Regionals ·n Madison Wisc. . Feb. 17-19, 1977. Contact the&#13;
Un on Rec -C enter for information or to enter. S') 00 fee/entry.&#13;
A ndy Moog Phone : 553-2695&#13;
by Laura Ruffolo&#13;
Being interviewed this week is Katie Seydewitz, a freshman who Is&#13;
planning a major in art. She is a_lso planning to specialize in art history&#13;
because this is her intended career.&#13;
Katie lives at Parkside Village and finds that living on her own f1r&#13;
the first time is quite a different experience. "I enjoy living at the&#13;
Village because it is conveniently located near the school. Also, living&#13;
at the Village has helped me to gain new insights into many different&#13;
types of people.&#13;
"At first, I found that my privacy was greatly reduced. There was&#13;
no door I could close and say 'everyone keep out!' Now I find that&#13;
living with other people in such close quarters, has helped me to&#13;
emphathize with their feelings and that compromise is always the best&#13;
solution to any problem that may arise."&#13;
Katie has also found that the majority of people she has met at&#13;
Parkside are friendly, open and always willing to help, if they can.&#13;
Katie is originally from Milwaukee where she attended Nicolet&#13;
High School. On the weekends, she usually goes home. On some&#13;
weekends Katie works as a hostess at a Chinese Restaurant, "Port&#13;
China.'' On the weekends that she doesn't work, Katie usually will go&#13;
to various discoteques because she enjoys both disco music and&#13;
dancing.&#13;
Her plans for the future? "I will probably attend UW-Milwaukee&#13;
because of my financial situation. I am possibly going to skip a year of&#13;
school and work in order to become more financially independent.&#13;
Whether or not I return to Parkside will not change what Parkside has&#13;
meant to me: one of the best experiences of my life that has helped me&#13;
grow emotionally and has added another facet to me as a person."&#13;
Vaccinations&#13;
Little pain reported&#13;
by Mona Maillet&#13;
-&#13;
Campus Health Nurse Edith&#13;
Isenberg was very pleased with&#13;
the ·results of last Wednesday's&#13;
swine flu innoculations. A total of&#13;
626 people, most of them&#13;
students, received the vaccination.&#13;
Isenberg expressed gratitude&#13;
toward the aty of Kenosha&#13;
Health Department who helped&#13;
carry out the program, volunteers&#13;
who helped things rwi&#13;
smoothly, and the State Health&#13;
Department who provided the&#13;
vac_cine, the innoculating&#13;
eqwpment, and a technician to&#13;
administer the shots.&#13;
Most of the people received the&#13;
monovalent vaccine. This vaccine&#13;
is given to healthy persons&#13;
between the ages of 18-59 and&#13;
protects only-against swine (New&#13;
Jersey) flu. People 60 or older or&#13;
chro~ically ill persons received&#13;
the b1v~ent vaccine which gives&#13;
protection against swine flu and&#13;
Victoria flu.&#13;
M~st o~ the people who got the&#13;
vaccination reported afterwards&#13;
~at they felt little pain in the&#13;
1nnoculated arm.&#13;
According to Isenberg, only a&#13;
few people passed out after&#13;
. having the shot, but there were no&#13;
serious reactions to the shot.&#13;
Regarding the possibility of&#13;
persons in the 18-24 age group&#13;
requiring another shot, Nurse&#13;
Isenberg said that she is awaiting&#13;
word from the Kenosha Health&#13;
Department.&#13;
There is a waiting period of at&#13;
least 4 weeks before the secon&lt;i&#13;
shot can be given, so if the Health&#13;
Department decides that a&#13;
second shot is necessary, the&#13;
eligible people will be contacted&#13;
by mail or through the Ranger&#13;
regarding the time and place of&#13;
the clinic.&#13;
Contest&#13;
An essay contest 'Perspecti~es&#13;
for the Third Century' is being&#13;
sponsored by the United Stat~&#13;
atizens' Congress which ~&#13;
award cash prizes totahng&#13;
• $10,000.&#13;
Interested students and facultY&#13;
may contact the Center for&#13;
Teaching Exc.-ellence, CA 235, for&#13;
further information.&#13;
Part III: Students' questions answered&#13;
I&#13;
Orgasm techniques outlined&#13;
by Beverly Noble Pella&#13;
Edltor'l nole: Ms. Pella Is a c088Belor at Planned Parealbood In&#13;
J{ePIba. Her preseat series Is In relpoBle 10 qUeslloBl IUljmllled by&#13;
PaJ'bIde BludenlB.&#13;
QaelIiOll: Another student wrote in several questions about orgasm,&#13;
both for the male and female. His first question was "What can be&#13;
done til prevent premature ejaculation?"&#13;
_er: Premature ejaculation can be treated in many ways. II&#13;
usually Is a conditioning process and ther are bfokJeIB written on this,&#13;
BUCh as "Vou Can Last Longer". The most common and easy to learn&#13;
teebn!que is called the "squeeze technique". Either partner can do&#13;
tblB. -&#13;
Wbenthe male feels close to climax. a person can use their thumb&#13;
IDd first two fingers to apply pressure on the penis, which will cause&#13;
!hemale to lose a high percentage of his erection. The thumb is placed&#13;
just below the upside down "V" shaped space at the coronal edge of&#13;
!he penis. The two fingers are placed on the other side, one above the&#13;
coronal ridge and one below. Vou may need to use your other hand to&#13;
msintain pressure on these fingers. Hold this for about 10 seconds, or&#13;
as long as needed, pressing inward.&#13;
Question: The other questions were about the female's orgasm, how&#13;
it CIDhe acheived or helped along, and what role the clitoris plays:&#13;
Answer: There has been a lot of disagreement about how a woman&#13;
achieves an orgasm. Most women have very liltle feeling inside the&#13;
vaginl!, 'and only at the outer one-third; so the length of the man's&#13;
penis makes no difference. Most women do need stimulation of the&#13;
• clitoris in order to come to an orgasm. This is nearly impossible&#13;
from just plain in and out vaginal-penile intercourse.&#13;
Vouasked about "riding high", and yes, many women say that this&#13;
is more stimulating. It puts the penis at an angle which might cause&#13;
more stimulation of the clitoris. Most partners uS!!their fingers (his or&#13;
hers) to stimulate the clitoris. Some women find that heing on top of&#13;
the male provides more stimulation of the clitoris (probably because&#13;
they can control the angle of insertion).&#13;
Orgasm can be very complicated. As I have said in the past, it is&#13;
both a physical and psychological response. A woman who cannot&#13;
acheive orgasm may have a physical problem, but that is rarely the&#13;
case. She should consult with her doctor about this.&#13;
Voumight want to try reading some of the newer books out, such as&#13;
Joy of Sex, or Helen Singer Kaplan's New Sex Therapy •.Vou might&#13;
also want to seek sexual counseling.&#13;
Sex counseling doesn't guarantee results, and only works if both of&#13;
Senate discusses&#13;
basic skills&#13;
by Christopher Clausen raised broad and deeply fell&#13;
concerns among the faculty. We&#13;
recommend at least part and&#13;
perhaps all of the speaking skills&#13;
component be postponed."&#13;
As far as overall goals the&#13;
Faculty Senate fell strongly they&#13;
should emphasize" that the&#13;
specific skills outlined under the&#13;
goals to be met with the program&#13;
are meant to be illustrative and&#13;
that a student may demonstrate&#13;
the required level of competence&#13;
without demonstrating every&#13;
skill listed."&#13;
On mathematic and writing&#13;
skills, the faculty seemed to be in&#13;
agreement with what the report&#13;
said but fell the report may have&#13;
gon~ into too much detail.&#13;
Testing in relation to&#13;
evaluation would be left to the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee&#13;
for further study with any final&#13;
.approval of these tests being left&#13;
to the Senate.&#13;
Wed. _ Thurs. 9:30 - 11 :00 p.rn.&#13;
Bubble Up&#13;
Mixed Drinks 60'&#13;
-.~}erbu'8&#13;
'in ~ourt&#13;
-,.. &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
On Spring. West of 31&#13;
Green Ridge Plaza&#13;
632-6.151&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER December I, 197' ,&#13;
you are wanting a change.&#13;
In talking to many ;.omen,l've found that the wumen who have the&#13;
hardest time having orgasms or enjoying _. a1lIo have very negative&#13;
attitudes about their bodies, masturbation, and _ In general. They&#13;
may not want lhese attitudes, but have been ralaed with them and they&#13;
are either hard to shake or they may not want 10 shake them. They of&#13;
course have the right to bold these attitudes about _, but will&#13;
probably have a difficult lime making any changes in their sex llves if&#13;
they do not like what they are doing.&#13;
If you decide to go the counseling route,,be sure to asIl questions of&#13;
the counselor. Find out what they can offer you, what it will cost, and&#13;
what they expect of you. There are not sex therapy clinics in the area,&#13;
but their are many counselors who can deal with these problems.&#13;
Experts say that 90 percent of sexual problems can be treated with&#13;
education about sex.&#13;
Junior summary&#13;
proposed&#13;
by Douglas Edenhauser&#13;
The December 1 Student&#13;
Government Senate meeting&#13;
produced quite a few appointments,&#13;
but not much else.&#13;
The main purpose of the meeting&#13;
was 10 let tJie newly appointed&#13;
senators get a feel for their&#13;
positions. Also 10 let the newly&#13;
organized Senate committees get&#13;
to work.&#13;
A motion was passed .by the&#13;
Senate endorsing a policy&#13;
whereby each student receives a&#13;
junior summary automatically&#13;
from the Student Records Office&#13;
upon completion of 90 credits.&#13;
President Kiyoko Bowden will&#13;
actively seek to foster this&#13;
change in policy with the appropriate&#13;
administrator.&#13;
The reason for this act was that&#13;
many students are forced to&#13;
attend an additional semester&#13;
because they did not request their&#13;
senior summaries in order to&#13;
make corrections or obtain&#13;
waivers for graduation&#13;
requirements. The present&#13;
system of obtaining senior&#13;
summaries is to go down to&#13;
Tallent Hall and fill out a card,&#13;
have it signed by your adviser&#13;
and then wait for a few weeks for&#13;
it to arrive. The proposed system&#13;
would not require students to&#13;
submit a request.&#13;
Union&#13;
hoard&#13;
meets&#13;
by Braee "..--&#13;
General cbc18Ion about the&#13;
Union, the JllII'Pl* of the Union&#13;
Operalion Board, and its&#13;
authority took up 11IOII of lime&#13;
during the first meeting of the&#13;
newly formed Union Operstlng&#13;
Board.&#13;
The board, decimated by a rash&#13;
of reslgnallOlll, had four studenlB&#13;
and two faculty«aff present to&#13;
consider the Union problems.&#13;
Elected as chairperson was&#13;
Richard Folsom. who felt that the&#13;
job of the UOB wu 10 consider&#13;
current problems as well as&#13;
general philo.ophl!,.-poUc~ s,&#13;
committee did not decide&#13;
anything at all, at the meeting&#13;
according 10 Folsom, who also&#13;
felt that the board should stick to&#13;
parliamentary procedure, which&#13;
would make decision makeing&#13;
easier.&#13;
He felt tha t there were certain&#13;
problems that could be solved&#13;
without knowing much about the&#13;
next year's budget, which seems&#13;
to he Union Director William&#13;
Niebuhr's first priority.&#13;
These proWems, a~rding to&#13;
Folsom, are tbe name of the&#13;
building, the dining room hours,&#13;
the costs of using certain&#13;
facilities in the Union.&#13;
The next meeting of the UOB&#13;
will be this Thursday at 10 a.m. in&#13;
Union 104. Students, faculty, and&#13;
staff with concerns regarding the&#13;
Union are asked to attend.&#13;
F,e/hman G&#13;
10 h&#13;
MAIL TO Women In SCience Dept 01 Zoology&#13;
•&#13;
The UnIVerSity 01 Wlsconsln-MoIwau ...e.e I PO Bo~ 413 Milwaukee W,!&gt; 53201 loam'----; ladd"" •&#13;
Ipho", •&#13;
ICOllege or •&#13;
unlvefslly '- .&#13;
are you good at&#13;
solving problems?&#13;
are you curious?&#13;
are you creative?&#13;
The Women In Scl8llCe Career Conference&#13;
IS a chance to meet successful v..ornen In&#13;
sceoceaod englneenng ,find out what they&#13;
do. how they combine a career wrth mamage&#13;
and a family. how lhey are making It In allmaie'&#13;
fields Come and explore career&#13;
possibilities for you In scerce or EngI1€JerIl'9&#13;
WOMEN IN SCIENCE&#13;
CAREER CONFERENCE&#13;
March 18-19, 1977&#13;
mail coupon for more info&#13;
or CALL 963 - 5918&#13;
UWM WOMEN'S SlUOIES OFACE&#13;
Sponsored by Tte UrllverSlly 01 WisconSIn - Milwaukee&#13;
under a glanl trom the National Sc.ence Foundation&#13;
part III: Students' questions answered&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER December I, 1976 9&#13;
Union&#13;
hoard&#13;
nteets&#13;
Orgasm techniques outlined&#13;
by Beverly Noble Pella&#13;
Editor's note: Ms. Pella is a counselor at Planned Parenthood in&#13;
genosba. Her present series is in response to questions sub.mitted by&#13;
PaJ'kSide students.&#13;
Question: Another student wro~ in _several questions about orgasm,&#13;
both for the male and female. His f1rst question was "What can be&#13;
done tb prevent premature ejaculation?"&#13;
AnSwer: Premature ejaculation can be treated in many ways. It&#13;
usually is a conditioning proce~ and ther are booklets written on this,&#13;
such as "You Can Last Longer". The most common and easy to learn&#13;
technique is called the "squeeze technique". Either partner can do&#13;
this.&#13;
When the male feels close to climax, a person can use their thumb&#13;
and first two fingers to apply pressure on the penis, which will cause&#13;
the male to lose a high percentage of his erection. The thumb is placed&#13;
just below the upside down "V" shaped space at the coronal edge of&#13;
the penis. The two fingers are placed on the other side, one above the&#13;
coronal ridge and one below. You may need to use your other hand to&#13;
maintain pressure on these fingers. Hold this for about 10 seconds, or&#13;
as long as needed, pressing inward.&#13;
Question: The other questions were about the female's orgasm, how&#13;
it can be acheived or helped along, and what role the clitoris plays. ·&#13;
Answer: There has been a lot of disagreement about how a woman&#13;
achieves an orgasm. Most women have very little feeling inside the&#13;
vag~, 'and only at the outer one-third; so the length of the man's&#13;
penis makes no difference. Most women do need stimulation Qf the&#13;
• c;litoris in order to come to an orgasm. This is nearly impossible&#13;
from just plain in and out vaginal-penile intercourse.&#13;
You asked about "riding high", and yes, many women say that this&#13;
is more stimulating. It puts the penis at an angle which might cause&#13;
more stimulation of the clitoris. Most partners USE; their fingers (_rjs or&#13;
hers) to stimulate the clitoris. Some women find that being on top of&#13;
the male provides more stimulation of the clitoris (probably because&#13;
they can control the angle of insertion).&#13;
Orgasm can be very complicated. As I have said in the past, it is&#13;
both a physical and psychological response. A woman who cannot&#13;
acheive orgasm may have a physical problem, but that is rarely the&#13;
case. She should consult with her doctor about this.&#13;
You might want to try reading some of the newer books out, such as&#13;
Joy of Sex, or Helen Singer Kaplan's New Sex Therapy •. You might&#13;
also want to seek sexual counseling.&#13;
Sex counseling doesn't guarantee results, and only works if both of&#13;
Senate discusses&#13;
basic skills&#13;
by Christopher Clausen&#13;
The Faculty Senate has just&#13;
completed its November meeting&#13;
and a lengthy discussion of the&#13;
Basic Skills Program Report&#13;
from the Academic Policies&#13;
Committee. The Senate discussed&#13;
the report in two successive&#13;
Tuesday meetings held&#13;
November 16 and 23.&#13;
The 31 page document was&#13;
issued one and one half weeks&#13;
previous to the Senate meeting to&#13;
allow all members of the faculty&#13;
to read the report and respond.&#13;
The first meeting on November&#13;
16 was taken up by extensive&#13;
discussion on the goals and&#13;
speaking skills sections as they&#13;
pertain to usage and style.&#13;
Specifically the Senate felt ...&#13;
"The problem of establishing&#13;
appropriate standards when&#13;
coupled with the difficulties of&#13;
evaluation, (i.e. as they relate to&#13;
minority linguistic cultures) has&#13;
raised broad and deeply felt&#13;
concerns among the faculty. We&#13;
recommend at least part and&#13;
perhaps all of the speaking skills&#13;
component be postponed."&#13;
As far as overall goals the&#13;
Faculty Senate felt strongly they&#13;
should emphasize" that the&#13;
specific skills outlined under the&#13;
goals to be met with the program&#13;
are meant to be illustrative and&#13;
that a student may demonstrate&#13;
the required lev~l of competence&#13;
without demonstrating every&#13;
skill listed."&#13;
On mathematic and writing&#13;
skills, the faculty seemed to be in&#13;
agreement with what the report&#13;
said but felt the report may have ' . gone into too much detail.&#13;
Testing in relation to&#13;
evaluation would be left to the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee&#13;
for further study with any final&#13;
. approval of these tests being left&#13;
to the Senate.&#13;
Introducing: French Pizza ffi1-50&#13;
EVERY MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY]&#13;
SPAGHETTI FEAST&#13;
$1.95 . w·&#13;
Bread ancf a Free Glass of ine.&#13;
Includes: Salad, Italian&#13;
W d - Thurs. 9:30 - 11 :OO p.m. e .&#13;
Mixed&#13;
Bubble Up&#13;
Drinks 60$&#13;
On Spring, West of 31 'in&#13;
Green Ridge Plaza&#13;
632-6151&#13;
~}erbu's&#13;
,ourt&#13;
PUB &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
you are wanting a change.&#13;
In talking to many women, I've found that the women who have the&#13;
hardest time having orgasms or enjoying sex, also have very negative&#13;
attitudes about their bodies, masturbation, and sex in general. They&#13;
may not want these attitudes, but have been raised with them and they&#13;
are either hard to shake or they may not want to shake them. They of&#13;
course have the right to hold these attitudes about sex, but will&#13;
probably have a difficult time making any changes in their sex lives if&#13;
they do not like what they are doing.&#13;
If you decide to go the counseling route,,be sure to ask questions of&#13;
the counselor. Find out what they can offer you, what it will cost, and&#13;
what they expect of you. There are not sex therapy clinics in the area,&#13;
but their are many counselors who can deal with these problems.&#13;
Experts say that 90 percent of sexual problems can be treated with&#13;
education about sex.&#13;
Junior summary&#13;
proposed&#13;
by Douglas Edenhauser&#13;
The December 1 Student&#13;
Government Senate meeting&#13;
produced quite a few appointments,&#13;
but not much else.&#13;
The main purpose of the meeting&#13;
was to let the newly appointed&#13;
senators get a feel for their&#13;
positions. Also to let the newly&#13;
organized Senate committees get&#13;
to work.&#13;
A motion was passed by the&#13;
Senate endorsing a policy&#13;
whereby each student receives a&#13;
junior summary automatically&#13;
from the Student Records Office&#13;
upon completion of 90 credits.&#13;
President Kiyoko Bowden will&#13;
actively seek to foster this&#13;
change in policy with the appropriate&#13;
administrator.&#13;
The reason for this act was that&#13;
many students are forced to&#13;
attend an additional semester&#13;
because they did not request their&#13;
senior summaries in order to&#13;
make corrections or obtain&#13;
waivers for graduation&#13;
requirements. The present&#13;
system of obtaining senior&#13;
summaries is to go down to&#13;
Tallent Hall and fill out a card,&#13;
have it signed by your adviser&#13;
and then wait for a few weeks for&#13;
it to arrive. The proposed system&#13;
would not require students to&#13;
submit a request.&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
General discussion about the&#13;
Union, the purpose of the Union&#13;
Operation Board, and its&#13;
authority took 1_.1P most of time&#13;
during the first meeting of the&#13;
newly formed Union Operating&#13;
Board.&#13;
The board, decimated by a rash&#13;
of resignations, had four students&#13;
and two faculty~taff present to&#13;
consider the Union problems.&#13;
Elected as chairperson was&#13;
Richard Folsom, who felt that the&#13;
job of the UOB was to consider&#13;
current problems as well a&#13;
general philosophi_es-policies.&#13;
committee did not decide&#13;
anything at all , at the meeting&#13;
according to Folsom, who a&#13;
felt that the board should tick to&#13;
parliam ntary procedure, wl)ich&#13;
would make d cision make·&#13;
easier.&#13;
He felt that there were certain&#13;
problems that could be solved&#13;
without knowin much about th&#13;
next year s budget, which eems&#13;
to be Union Director William&#13;
Niebuhr's fir t priority.&#13;
The e problems, accordin to&#13;
Folsom , are the name of the&#13;
building, the dining room hours,&#13;
the costs of using certain&#13;
facilities in the Union .&#13;
The next meeting of the UOB&#13;
will be this Thursday at 10 a .m . in&#13;
Union 104. Students. faculty, and&#13;
staff with concerns regardin the&#13;
Union are asked to attend.&#13;
are you good at&#13;
solving problems?&#13;
MA IL TO w omen 1n Science Oepl ot ZOOIOg) I The University of W is.c.ons,n- M , 'Nau-.ee I PO Box 413 Mil w au•ee w,s 53201&#13;
I I l na:e I&#13;
1-~ I&#13;
lphone-------&#13;
l ~~m I university --- ---------ti• ~------&#13;
are you curious?&#13;
are you creative?&#13;
The 01 en n Sc, 1Ce Car r Conference&#13;
IS a chance 10 meet Successful .. .-..rn&lt;:i,n tn&#13;
saence and eng1n rin --.f1 d out t&#13;
do. h they com ,ne a career 1th mam&#13;
and a family, how they are m ,n 11 1n 11-&#13;
m ie f ,elds Come and e plore career&#13;
p0ss1b1I ties for you 1n scierc or .on,-,.no.-:iir&#13;
WOMEN IN SCIENCE&#13;
CAREER CONFERENCE&#13;
March 18-19, 1977&#13;
Free LOOg ng Ava, able&#13;
maii coupon for more info&#13;
or CALL 963 - 5918&#13;
UW M WOMEN'S STUDIES OFACE&#13;
SpQnsored b~ The Uni v r s,t o f ,scons,n - , .... au ee&#13;
unoe, a granl trom lhe a t ,onal Sc. enc Foundation&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
This committee sets up the various ceremonies that occur&#13;
traditiooally at Parkside; the Dec. and May Commencement&#13;
ceremonies minimal, just be a are examples. Qualifications are uWW'w.&lt;&#13;
stuAdceandt.emic planning and Program Review CoIJlJlll1tte e ... o~ ~tu. dent&#13;
This is the Son of COP. Its duties are to re-:lew the prlonties of&#13;
Parkside and the various programs that Parksi~ offers to .students&#13;
and the ouUying communities. The seat that is open is ex offiCIO.There&#13;
is only one voting student on the committee and he has already been&#13;
appointed however the ex officio student is free to discUSS and actively&#13;
participate in every other way. This is also one of the .mo~t&#13;
. rtant conunittees at Parkside and full student represenlallon IS&#13;
~ to our interests. Qualifications are full-time sludent and&#13;
preferably advanced standing. .&#13;
Student court Association Justices. . . 2 openmgs&#13;
AppeIate Court Chief Justice and 2 Associate AppellaU: Justices.&#13;
10 THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 8. 1976&#13;
Contact&#13;
eoncratulallons are estended to the following students on their&#13;
oppaInlmellta by Student Govenment:&#13;
Grea Andere88 ., .Allocations Committee Seat No. 7&#13;
RIck FoIaom President's designee to the Union Operating Board&#13;
Harvey Hedden President's designee to the Student &lt;Xganlzational&#13;
CoundI Kiyoko Bowden . Allocations Committee Seat No.8&#13;
Joseph Orlowski Allocations Committee Seat No.4&#13;
Commit ... except President's&#13;
G.... AnlIeftgg Alternate to aU United COWlCUCommittees,&#13;
Senate Ways and Means Committee&#13;
O1airperson Senate Student Services Committee&#13;
RHIpa-&#13;
It Ia with deep regret that Studenl Government accepted the&#13;
resl8natlons of Laura Bruno from the Senate Hwnanities Divisional&#13;
t, Glen Chrls1enaen lrom the Union Operating Board and&#13;
Allocations CommIttee Seat 3, Kiyolto Bowden from the Affirmative&#13;
lion Advbory Committee and Marty Andersen from the Af·&#13;
IIrmabv Acllon Ad~ C&lt;lIDIllittee.&#13;
OIl d.p" S&amp;udeatGovet'llllleDt&#13;
QIrrlculum and Prollram Committee .2 full-time students&#13;
'Ibis commillee deals with review of departmental and divisional&#13;
currlcuIums and needs input from students to make laculty and admln151nUon&#13;
sensitive to student interests in the various programs&#13;
that Ire developed an-or modlfled lor tIlelf educations. QualIfications&#13;
are lu1I-lime tudenl and advanced standing (juniors or seniors.)&#13;
adernic ctIonsCommiltee . one student (full-time)&#13;
'Ibis conunittee is one 01 the most important 10 students at Parkside.&#13;
It'l dull involve the granting 01 waivers to students who cannot lor&#13;
ous reasons complete certain requirements necessary lor their&#13;
Iduallons. It is the Court of Last Resorts lor seniors who depending&#13;
011the leuons and decisions of the committee may be forced to allend&#13;
an additionallelllOSter in order to graduate. Qualifications are Iulllime&#13;
student and advanced standing (juniors or seniors). Student&#13;
members vole as lull members. Sbident input is crucial.&#13;
Campus Ceremonies Committee .,. . 2 sbidents&#13;
Academic&#13;
by CbrIsll&gt;pber Clausen&#13;
On Monday, November 29, the&#13;
academic Policy Committee met&#13;
in an inlormal session with&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Clayton&#13;
Johnson to discuss Academic&#13;
Program Advising. Assistant&#13;
Chancellor Johnson briefly explained&#13;
to the committee the&#13;
extent of reorganization implemented&#13;
in Student Servic es.&#13;
Johnson explained to tbe&#13;
members of the committee that&#13;
current enrollment at UW-P is&#13;
expected to diminish in the&#13;
Jello eating "sickening .,&#13;
On Monday, November 29, the Parkside Drug&#13;
~ apon3Orlld a JeUo eating contest. It toolt&#13;
pIac:e at 12 p.m. in Main Place by the Coffee 9top.&#13;
The conteslloolt same lime to set up, mainiy due to&#13;
a lack of participants. Finally after about 15&#13;
minules of conninI, coaxing and ~, nine&#13;
conlulanla volWlleKed. There were 8 guys, induding&#13;
the de~ champion Pat Polcin, and 1&#13;
girl&#13;
AUthe contestants had to do was to devour 2\2&#13;
pounds of JeUo each wllhout the use of their&#13;
bands. Each person was provided with a knife to cut&#13;
up the Jello beforehand and a bib. A lew of the&#13;
entrants "warmed up" by rwutIng in place and&#13;
breathing deeply. Then they all knelt on the Door in&#13;
anll lion of thestarl. At tile word "Gol" the:&#13;
dove in and began to chew, slurp, swaUow, and&#13;
burp. Polcin amused the crowd when he used his&#13;
teeth to nip his plate out 01 the way in order to' get at&#13;
some Jello that was under it.&#13;
The winner was Arthur Pollock, who set a new&#13;
record lime of 2:16. Polcin was second with a time&#13;
of 2:48.5, and Jason Holm finished third at 3:46.&#13;
Each was awarded a T-5hirl from the Bookstore.&#13;
When asked bow it felt to win, PoUock replied,&#13;
"Sickening." Most of the participants agreed with&#13;
him.&#13;
The contest was previously run during Winterfest&#13;
last year. According to Polcin, it was run earlier&#13;
this year because last year's third place finisher&#13;
was leaving for the Air Force on the foUowing&#13;
Wednesday. PDQ sponsored the event mainly for&#13;
tile fun ofit, but also to publicize its name.&#13;
by Moaa MalIIet&#13;
...ANV I AS~U~ YOU&#13;
WI~8lJ{ MONP~ WlU-'&#13;
Nor ~ rOKGOIf~N!&#13;
advising&#13;
coming years. This is coupled&#13;
with the fact that UW-P in past&#13;
years has lost on the average 50&#13;
percent of its students within 2&#13;
semesters (19 percent of the loss&#13;
has been from the married adult&#13;
student population). Johnson&#13;
cited figures showing that over 1-&#13;
3 of the student population is over&#13;
the age 01 23.&#13;
In outlining the actual&#13;
framework of Student Services&#13;
Johnson noted that at the present&#13;
lime there is no one to adequately&#13;
counsel sludents academicly.&#13;
Johnson told the committee&#13;
that Utree choices faced UW-P as&#13;
to how academic counseling&#13;
should be handled.&#13;
1) Add items to present staff&#13;
could be made to handle counseling.&#13;
This, Johnson noted would&#13;
raise costs, something in which&#13;
UW-P already leads the entire&#13;
UW,gystem.&#13;
Business&#13;
course&#13;
offered&#13;
Spring semester' '77&#13;
business management ~&#13;
will be offering a new&#13;
entitled "Women ~&#13;
Management... The courae 11\1&#13;
focus on issues pertalDlnc&#13;
women in business, and ..:&#13;
business should relate to ~&#13;
The course is open to botb _&#13;
and w~men ~nd ~ be taught III&#13;
a semmar discussion fOl1llat..,&#13;
Asst. Prof. Francine Hall. It will&#13;
be- offered under buaiaeal&#13;
management "Special TClIlIca"&#13;
490.&#13;
explained&#13;
2) Counseling could be dane ..,&#13;
present slaff as they 1riU do&#13;
during Advising Week (Dec ...&#13;
14). This Johnson noted woaId&#13;
stretch present stall em.....,.&#13;
thin.&#13;
3) The third plan, wblcb II&#13;
favored by most, would be to&#13;
involve faculty in advising.&#13;
Jolmson said this would bald&#13;
down costs and serve U\ provicIe&#13;
students with knowledgeable&#13;
advisors.&#13;
Some members of the c0mmittee&#13;
expressed feeUnga tbat&#13;
the faculty would want felIII'&#13;
classes or commillee(s) In on!lI'&#13;
to handle advising. In any cue&#13;
the Faculty Senate would bmllo&#13;
approve this before the facuIl1&#13;
could do anything.&#13;
The committee took no lICIIaa&#13;
due to the fact several membIn&#13;
of the committee failed to lIbow&#13;
up resulting in a lQss of quorm.&#13;
U.O.B-. --&#13;
continUed from pg. 1&#13;
BILL NIEBUHR: The person who said that bas the wrong SOurcell.&#13;
There was sludent input in the name. Just because we don't ClIMIl1t&#13;
PSGA doesn't mean we have no student input. As for outside groups&#13;
we have a long list of outside groups.that have used the Union slnceila&#13;
opening. Naming it the Parkside Student Union is going to have a&#13;
negative effect of making outside people and aU non-students to feel&#13;
reluclant to use the union.&#13;
Rick also made charges oil what Niebuhr is trying to do with tile&#13;
Union Operating Board.&#13;
RICK FOLSOM: We're not going to let Bill Niebu1lf run the U.O.B.&#13;
~e wants to have the meetings turned into forwns for apeciflc&#13;
disc~.';SlOnsof the budget and limiting the meetings to one topic I&#13;
weeK. We can't do that, we're behind schedule as it is and we have to&#13;
start solving problems.'&#13;
BILL NIEBUIJR: We can't just have the Board making decIsI ....&#13;
without having the hackground to make the decision. I'm willin8 to&#13;
have. the Board solve -little annoying problems at the start oIlbe&#13;
meet~. but to deal with complicated issues they need roore thaD I&#13;
superfiCIal knowledge. First I want to acquaint the U.O.B. witb&#13;
knowledge of tlie budget. We are a profit making inslltution and&#13;
students have to realize this. They must be aware of the 1imItalions01&#13;
thebudget when they make recommendations. As for disctlSsinll one&#13;
toPiC .. week that is far more desirable than just having 30 second&#13;
discUSSIons on complicated matters.&#13;
RANGER: Hasn't the U.a.B. gottenofftoa badslart?&#13;
BILL NIEBUHR: There are minor problems: I'm not to worried.&#13;
Once they realize what the Board is there for and what they can do&#13;
:d can't do, and once they .. dersland the' Union things will get&#13;
tter. . '&#13;
10 THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 8, 1976 Business&#13;
course Contact weekly by student government&#13;
This committee sets up the various ceremonies that o~&#13;
ks.de th Dec and May Commencemen&#13;
traditionally at Par 1 ; e . . : · · 1 1·ust be a&#13;
ceremonies are examples. Qualifications are nuruma,&#13;
student. . ·tte one student&#13;
Academic Planning and Program Review Comnu e . . . . ..&#13;
-.:ft · the Son of COP. Its duties are to review the priorities of&#13;
.u= 15 kside off rs to students Parkside and the various programs that Par . e ..&#13;
th ti . mmunities The seat that is open 15 ex officio. There&#13;
and e ou yrng co . he h alr d been&#13;
offered&#13;
is only one voting student on the commit~ and ~ ea Y&#13;
Allocations Commlttee Seat ·o. 8 appointed however the ex officio student is free to discuss and ac-&#13;
. Allocations Committee Seat. To.4 tively participate in every other way. This is also one of the _mo~t&#13;
S~ring semester · •n the&#13;
business management discipllzie&#13;
will be offering a new COQrae&#13;
entitled "Women In&#13;
Management." The course 1ril1&#13;
focus o~ issu~ pertaining to&#13;
women m business, and °bolr&#13;
business should relate to "Olnen&#13;
The course is open to both -&#13;
and w~men ~nd ~ be taught In&#13;
a seminar discussion fonnat by&#13;
Asst. Prof. Francine Hall. It 1rill&#13;
be. offered under busineaa&#13;
management "Special Topics"&#13;
490.&#13;
ll United Council Committees&#13;
important committees at Parkside and full student ~epresentabon JS&#13;
necessary to our interests. Qualifications are full-tJIDe student and&#13;
Jello eating&#13;
preferably advanced standing. .&#13;
Student Court....Association Justices . . .. . . ... . . . ...... · · 2 op~s&#13;
Appelate Court .... Chief Justice and 2 Associate Appella~ Justices.&#13;
Acadeinic&#13;
by Christtlpher Clausen&#13;
On Monday, November 29, the&#13;
academic Policy Committee met&#13;
in an informal session with&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Clayton&#13;
Johnson to disc~ Academic&#13;
Program Advising. Assistant&#13;
Chancellor Johnson briefly explained&#13;
to the committee the&#13;
extent of reorganization implemented&#13;
in Student Services.&#13;
Joh·nson explained to the&#13;
members of the committee that&#13;
current enrollment at UW-P is&#13;
expected to diminish in the&#13;
'sickening'&#13;
dove in and began to chew, slurp, swallow, and&#13;
burp. Polcin amused the crowd when he used his&#13;
teeth to flip his plate out of the way in order to. get at&#13;
some Jello that was under it.&#13;
The winner was Arthur Pollock, who set a new&#13;
record time of 2: 16. Polcin was second with a time&#13;
of 2:48.5, and Jason Holm finished third at 3:46.&#13;
Each was awarded a T-shirt from the Bookstore.&#13;
When asked how it felt to win, Pollock replied,&#13;
" Sickening." Most of the participants agreed with&#13;
him.&#13;
The contest was previously run during Winterfest&#13;
last year. According to Polcin, it was run·earlier&#13;
this year because last year's third place finisher&#13;
was leaving for the Air Force on the following&#13;
Wednesday. PDQ sponsored the event mainly for&#13;
the fun of it, but also to publicize its name.&#13;
... AN'7 I ASSU~ You&#13;
Wl~~UR MONl7Al-£ WIU-,&#13;
Nor E'~ f0KG01'f~N !&#13;
WA1:rn&#13;
advising&#13;
coming years. This is coupled&#13;
with the fact that UW-P in past&#13;
years has lost on the average 50&#13;
percent of its students within 2&#13;
semesters ( 19 percent of the loss&#13;
has been from the married adult&#13;
student population). Johnson&#13;
cited figures showing that over 1-&#13;
3 of the student population is over&#13;
the age of 23.&#13;
In outlining the actual&#13;
· framework of Student Services&#13;
Johnson noted that at the present&#13;
time there is no one to adequately&#13;
counsel students academicly.&#13;
Johnson told the committee&#13;
that three choices faced UW-P as&#13;
to how academic counseling&#13;
should be handled.&#13;
l) Add items to present staff&#13;
could be made to handle counseling.&#13;
This, Johnson noted would&#13;
raise costs, something in which&#13;
UW-P already leads the entire&#13;
UW-system.&#13;
explained&#13;
2) Counseling could be done by&#13;
present staff as they will do&#13;
during Advising Week (Dec. ~&#13;
14). ~s Johnson noted would&#13;
stretch present staff extreme}&#13;
thin.&#13;
3) The third plan, which Is&#13;
favored by most, would be to&#13;
involve faculty in advising.&#13;
Johnson said this would hold&#13;
down costs and serve to provide&#13;
students with knowledgeable&#13;
advisors.&#13;
Some members of the committee&#13;
expressed feelings that&#13;
the faculty would want fewer&#13;
classes or committee(s) in order&#13;
to handle advising. In any case&#13;
the Faculty Senate would have to&#13;
approve this before the faculty&#13;
could do anything.&#13;
The committee took no acticm&#13;
due to the fact several members&#13;
of the committee failed to show&#13;
up resulting in a lQss of quonn.&#13;
U.O.B-. --&#13;
conti nued from pg. 1&#13;
BILL NIEBUHR: The person who said that has the wrong sources.&#13;
There was student input in the name. Just because we don't consult&#13;
PSGA doesn't mean we have no student input. As for outside groups&#13;
we have a long list of outside groups that have used the Union since its&#13;
opening. Naming it the Parkside Student Union is going to have a&#13;
negative effect of making outside people and all non-students to feel&#13;
reluctant to use the union.&#13;
Rick also made charges on what Niebuhr is trying to do with the&#13;
Union Operating Board.&#13;
RICK FOLSOM: We're not going to let Bill Niebuhr run the U.O.B.&#13;
He wants to have the meetings turned into forums for specific&#13;
discu.ssi.ons of the budget and limiting the meetings to one topic a&#13;
week. We can't do that, we're behind schedule as it is and we have to&#13;
start solving problems.'&#13;
BILL NIEBUHR: We can't just have the Board making decisions&#13;
without having the background to make the decision. I'm willing to&#13;
have. the Board solve ' little annoying problems at the start of the&#13;
meet~g- but to deal with complicated issues they need more t~ a&#13;
superficial knowledge. First I want to acquaint the U .O.B. with&#13;
knowledge of the budget. We are a profit making institution and&#13;
students have to realize this. They must be aware of the limitations of&#13;
the_budget when they make recommendations. As for discussing one&#13;
~pie a_week that is far more desirable than just having 30 second&#13;
discUSS1ons on complicated matters.&#13;
RANGER: Hasn't the U.O.B. gotten off to a bad start?&#13;
BILL NIEBl!ffR: There are minor problems : I'm not to worried.&#13;
Once th~y realize what the Board is there for, and what they can do&#13;
and can t do, and once they'9nderstand the Union things will get&#13;
better. '&#13;
Parkslde Chamber Singers under the direction of&#13;
AssOciate Professor Frank F. Mueller performed&#13;
Medieval and Renaissance Christmas music (L to R&#13;
/rOIIt) Kendra Lojeski, Karen Putman, Janet&#13;
Gaoger, Barb Boness, Roberta Johnsen, Cindy&#13;
Blood&#13;
drive (&#13;
successful \'-----&#13;
by Mona MaIllet&#13;
Parkslde's first blood drive&#13;
went off quite well, according to&#13;
III director, Dr. Richard J.&#13;
POIDazal, and coordina tor,&#13;
campus Health Nurse Edith&#13;
llenberg. In all, 40 appointments&#13;
__ made and 39 pints of blood&#13;
lIlII'e donated.&#13;
!leDberg felt that one of the&#13;
IIIll8t important aspects of the&#13;
*lve was that "people have a&#13;
cbIIIce to help other people."&#13;
She Mid that she was really&#13;
pleased by the student interest in&#13;
the drive, not only by the donors,&#13;
Wt also by students who wanted&#13;
to help with the drive. She also&#13;
said that there Is always a great&#13;
oeed for blood and that she hopes&#13;
that blood drives become a&#13;
tradition at Parkside.&#13;
Pomazal said; "I was par-&#13;
Ucularly impressed by the&#13;
students desire to give blood for&#13;
no return payment."&#13;
In addition to directing the&#13;
drive, Pomazal did research on&#13;
donor reactions. After donating,&#13;
each person was asked to fill out&#13;
a reaction questionnaire and&#13;
personality test.&#13;
The results of the survey&#13;
showed' that both males and&#13;
females felt quite energetic and&#13;
felt little or no pain. The personality&#13;
tests revealed that&#13;
donors tend to be high in self&#13;
esteem and are less likely to be&#13;
hypochondriacs.&#13;
The next Parkside blood' drive&#13;
Is appropriately slated for&#13;
Valentine's Day, February 14.&#13;
Pomazal and Isenberg hope to&#13;
run that one on a larger scale&#13;
than the initial venture.&#13;
If anyone would like to help&#13;
with the drive, they can contact&#13;
the Health Service Office at 553-&#13;
2366.&#13;
Play&#13;
to he&#13;
presented&#13;
•&#13;
(me December 10, 11, and 12&#13;
Samual Beckett·s play Endgame&#13;
will be presented in Studio B of&#13;
the Comm-Arts Building.&#13;
Halberstadt. (rear) Chris Roland, Marke Badtlte.&#13;
TIm Thompson, Ron Bayer. Sleven Edwards. and&#13;
Jeff Honore', last Sunday. Last Friday, the&#13;
Parkslde Concert Band also held a Christmas&#13;
Concert.&#13;
.--------,&#13;
Team wins&#13;
Gruner controls mats&#13;
by Thomas Nolen and&#13;
Jean Tenuta&#13;
Wisconsin Inter cotleg late&#13;
Championships here Saturday.&#13;
In the Warhawk meet ahead of .&#13;
ttie Rangers, Whitewater and&#13;
Marquette, top finishers in last&#13;
Saturday's meet. will again be&#13;
there. along with Northern&#13;
Michigan.&#13;
The Parkside wreStling team&#13;
will participate against some&#13;
more tough competition this&#13;
weekend in the Warhawk Invitational&#13;
at Whitewater&#13;
Saturday, after winni1lg the contInued on pv. 12&#13;
Fr.. Pizza Delivery&#13;
Club Hlghvlew&#13;
5035 60th Str•• t&#13;
Phon.: 652.. 737&#13;
....... '1•• C , I , ...&#13;
OPE , •.•.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Decem ..... I, "76 11&#13;
Feminist bank.&#13;
credit union formed&#13;
by Helaine Lasky&#13;
In the beginning there were men's banks. Men's banks begat a&#13;
measured amount of sex discrimination when it came to women doing&#13;
business there. Sex discrimination begst the FlI'St Women's Bank in&#13;
New York, and the Colorado Feminist Fed .. al Credit Union ~CFFCU)&#13;
in Denver.&#13;
Feminist businesses are a recent development. The First Women's&#13;
Bank opened in October 1975. There are 23 women and four men&#13;
working at the bank and the board of directors boasts an all female&#13;
cast.&#13;
A spokeswoman at the bank reported that many of First Women's&#13;
depositors have esperienced discrimination at other banking tnstitutions.&#13;
In one case. a couple was involved in a divorce action and&#13;
held separate accounts at different banks. The husband's lawy... was&#13;
able to obtain information about his wife's account when in fact, that&#13;
¥ormation should have been confidential. she said.&#13;
Similar incidents led to the establishment of. a feminist cndIt union&#13;
in Denver. The CFFCU began working for fed... al auth~t1on mo re&#13;
than a year ago. and received their federal charter in May. The cndIt&#13;
union finally opened its doors August 5.&#13;
"I thmk women across the country are realizing that bucks in the&#13;
hand are better than bras burned" said Jackie St. Joan. president of&#13;
the credit union earli ... this year. The credit union is one of. 13 which&#13;
have been established across the country smce the founding of. the&#13;
Detroit Feminist Fed ... al Credit Union (DFFCU) in 1m.The DFFCU&#13;
is serving as a model for the credit union in Denver.&#13;
Donna Good. a member of the credit union, sees it as a place of last&#13;
resort. "Women don't come to us after bad &lt;\l!als,lbey come to us after&#13;
no deals at all." said Good. Awoman who is 35 and unmarried stands a&#13;
poor chance of obtaining credit, and as a result, the cndIt union is&#13;
seen asa way out for such women who appl, for loans.&#13;
There are few basic differences between "establi.shment" banking&#13;
institutions and the feminist effort., Importantly. howev.... many&#13;
"establishment" banks rapid repayment of. loans by charging a&#13;
Women's Bank and lbe CFFCU do not penalize for early repayment.&#13;
The CFFCU is tagged "The Common Woman's Alternative" and&#13;
its name derives from a feminist poem by Judy Grahn: "I swear It to&#13;
you -I swear it on my common woman's head • The common woman is&#13;
as common as a loaf of bread - and will rise - and will become strong -I .&#13;
swear it to you.n&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
STUDENTSpecial an waleri&gt;eds_ mollr ess, heater. 1_. $89"&#13;
CHRISTMAS GIFT SPKlAl&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
lJe C!E)(be&#13;
&amp;1uttt &amp;boppt&#13;
HAPPY HOLIDAYS! feoturin~&#13;
Only 95'1hlIIf polRl&#13;
a variety of your candy&#13;
and nut favor ties sold&#13;
the old·fashioned way&#13;
B.IDeiI&#13;
the&#13;
generation&#13;
gap!&#13;
SOME IHJGE MIXI&#13;
10 o.m . .c pm&#13;
LOCATED IN UNION BIZARRE&#13;
Parkside Chamber Singers under the direction of&#13;
Associate Professor Frank F. Mueller performed&#13;
Medieval and Renaissance Christmas music ( L to R&#13;
front) Kendra Lojeski, Karen Putman, Janet&#13;
Ganger, Barb Boness, Roberta Johnsen, Cindy&#13;
Halberstadt, (rear) Chris Roland, Marke Badtke,&#13;
Tim Thompson, Ron Bayer, Steven Edwards, and&#13;
Jeff Honore', last Sunday. Last Friday, the&#13;
Parkside Concert Band also held a Christmas&#13;
Concert.&#13;
Blood&#13;
drive (&#13;
successful \ _)&#13;
by Mona Maillet&#13;
Parkside's first blood drive&#13;
went off quite well, according to&#13;
its director, Dr. Richard J.&#13;
Pomazal, and coordinator,&#13;
Campus Health Nurse Edith&#13;
Isenberg. In all, 40 appointments&#13;
were made and 39 pints of blood&#13;
were donated.&#13;
Isenberg felt that one of the&#13;
most important aspects of the&#13;
drive was that "people have a&#13;
chance to help other people."&#13;
She said that she was really&#13;
pleased by the student interest in&#13;
the drive, not only by the donors,&#13;
but also by students who wanted&#13;
to help with the drive. She also&#13;
said that there is always a great&#13;
need for blood and that she hopes&#13;
that blood drives become a&#13;
tradition at Parkside.&#13;
Pomazal said, "I was particularly&#13;
impressed by the&#13;
students desire to give blood for&#13;
no return payment."&#13;
In addition to directing the&#13;
drive, Pomazal did research on&#13;
donor reactions. After donating,&#13;
each person was asked to fill out&#13;
a reaction questionnaire and&#13;
personality test.&#13;
The results of the survey&#13;
showed that both males and&#13;
females felt quite energetic and&#13;
felt little or no pain. The personality&#13;
tests revealed that&#13;
donors tend to be high in self&#13;
esteem and are less likely to be&#13;
hypochondriacs.&#13;
The next Parkside blood· drive&#13;
is appropriately slated for&#13;
Valentine's Day, February 14.&#13;
Pomazal and Isenberg hope to&#13;
run that one on a larger scale&#13;
than the initial venture.&#13;
If anyone would like to help&#13;
with the drive, they can contact&#13;
the Health Service Office at 553-&#13;
2366.&#13;
Play&#13;
to he&#13;
presented&#13;
One December 10, 11, and 12&#13;
Samual Beckett's play Endgame&#13;
will be presented in Studio B of&#13;
the Comm-Arts Building.&#13;
-------~&#13;
Team wins&#13;
Gruner controls mats&#13;
by Thomas Nolen and&#13;
Jean Tenuta&#13;
The Parkside wrestling team&#13;
will participate against some&#13;
more tough competition this&#13;
weekend in the Warhawk Invitational&#13;
at Whitewater&#13;
Saturday, after winnfflg the&#13;
Wisconsin Intercollt:gic1 te&#13;
Championships here Saturday.&#13;
In the Warhawk meet ahead of·&#13;
the Rangers, Whitewater and&#13;
Marquette, top finishers in last&#13;
Saturday's meet, will again be&#13;
there, along with Northern&#13;
Michigan.&#13;
continued on pg. 12&#13;
Free Pizza Delwery&#13;
Club Hlghvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
A• ••.,••• c~1,b1, s,,,~ettt. Ru1t11, '"'&#13;
OPEN 4 •·•· II 1 1.a.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER December I, 197' 11&#13;
F entinist hank.&#13;
credi union f ornte&#13;
byHelain La J'&#13;
In the beginning th m n' ban&#13;
measured amount of discrimina ·on ·h 1t c&#13;
business there. x discrimination t th F t&#13;
'ew York, and the Colorado Femin' Fed 1 Cr 1t Union&#13;
in Denv r.&#13;
Femini t busin - are a recent de\· opm t. Th&#13;
Bank opened in October 1975. There are 23 worn&#13;
working at the bank and the board of direct boa&#13;
cast.&#13;
A spokeswoman at the ban reported that many of irsl Worn '&#13;
depositors have experienced discrimination at other bankl institutions.&#13;
In one case, a couple ·a in-.-olv din a di\•or ion and&#13;
held eparate accounts at different ban . The husband' la 'Y&#13;
able to obtain information about h 'fe's count h inf cl, t&#13;
~ onnation should have been confidential, sh id. .&#13;
Similar incidents led to the establishment of a femin t credit wtl&#13;
in Denver. The CFFCU began orking for federal authorization more&#13;
than a year ago, and received their federal charter in y. The credit&#13;
union finally opened its doors August 5.&#13;
"I think women aero the country are realWn that b&#13;
hand are better than bras burned" said Jackie St. Joan, p t of&#13;
the credit union earlier this year. The credit union is one of 13 hlch&#13;
have been established across the country sin th found' th&#13;
Detroit Feminist Federal Credit Union (DFFCU) in 1973. The OF CU&#13;
is serving as amodelfor the credit union in Dem; r.&#13;
Donna Good, a member of the credit union, it pla of&#13;
resort. ''Women don'tcometousaft.er bad ®als, they come to u ft&#13;
no deals at all." said Good. A woman who is 35 and wunarl'.ied tands&#13;
poor chance of obtaining credit, and as a r ult, the credit union&#13;
seen as a way out for such women who appl for loans.&#13;
There are few basic differences between "establishm nt" ban&#13;
institutions and the feminist effort., ImportanUy, howev , many&#13;
"establishment" banks rapid repayment of loans by char ing a&#13;
Women's Bank and the CFFCU do not penalize for early repayment.&#13;
The CFFCU is tagged "The Common Woman' Altemativ "and&#13;
its name derives from a feminist poem by Judy Grahn: "I r It to&#13;
you - I swear it on my common woman's head -The common&#13;
as common as a loaf of bread - and will rise - and ill becom tro&#13;
swear it to you."&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
S531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
STUDENT Special on woterbeds-&lt;ap mo treu, heater, lin , $89"&#13;
CHRISTMAS GIFT SPECIAL&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
!)e @lbt&#13;
6tued ~boppe&#13;
HAPPY HOLIDAYS! f oturin~&#13;
10 am. - 4 pm&#13;
o vorety of your candy&#13;
and nut fovorties old&#13;
the old-fashioned way&#13;
BRIDGi&#13;
the&#13;
generation&#13;
gap!&#13;
SOME BRIDGE MIX!&#13;
Only 95• /half pound&#13;
LOCATED IN UNION BIZARRE&#13;
12 THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 8. 1976&#13;
Gruner-,.-.,..-...l..l.-.---&#13;
"Anybody collid leke Ibla&#13;
meet," uId Coed! Jim KodI.&#13;
, orlbenI Web'San bad alllrOJC&#13;
1eaJD and aIaDIl with !be olben,&#13;
lben sbouId be IQIDe ~&#13;
cmJP8tiliCla."&#13;
ParUIde tDla11ed 14 points in&#13;
tile ..... meet, followed II)' OWWblle&#13;
.. ter with 78 and&#13;
IIa'quelle with 1I\lI. WhItewater&#13;
_ fawred for tile team lIl1e,&#13;
wIImInIl !be meet Iut y_.&#13;
FN'leeD teama fnm around !be&#13;
Ilate ... entered.&#13;
''11IIa was rather a atIrrinIl&#13;
adM.8lDlllt for us lo win a&#13;
t.ournamenl 01suell caUber," aaId&#13;
KodI. "It's me 01 !be bUll&#13;
vic:llJriea fer ParUIde."&#13;
0tIler team ecorea Included&#13;
OW.Qabkoab, 33'&gt;0, UW·&#13;
P\etlevUle, 28'&gt;0; OW-Slevens&#13;
PotDl, 23; OW·La CnJaae, 22'&gt;0;&#13;
CamlII, 18'0; OW-Ml1waukee, 8&#13;
and Gateway, 1.&#13;
0lIlalandinIl individual in lbe&#13;
meet was 1\anIl" Bob Gnmer,&#13;
acJMvinll !be moat pins in !be&#13;
leul amollnl of Ume; five&#13;
mbulea, _en aeeonda. II wu&#13;
!be flrallime a Parkllde wrestler&#13;
baa been named Olltatandlng&#13;
IndIvldllalin !be flve year bIslory&#13;
01 !be tournament&#13;
GI'IIIleI"pinned Pele Hartzhlem&#13;
01 OW-WhItewater in 2:41lo win&#13;
!be champlonablp al 150 pOllnda.&#13;
The Ranger bad traUed&#13;
WhItewater by 11 polnla golDl&#13;
lnlo !be lInaIa cmtnIl !be evening&#13;
.-Ian, but came back lo take aU&#13;
five cbampionsblp matcbes,&#13;
wtaIe !be Warbawks lost tbeir&#13;
matches.&#13;
Parkslde champions, in additlon&#13;
to Gruner were Dan&#13;
O'Connell beallng Fred T0wnsend&#13;
of WhItewater, 11-1at 126;&#13;
Scoll Hintz over Kevin Morin of&#13;
Marqlletle, ~2 at 134; Bl!!&#13;
Lynch ~ Bob Waldon&#13;
01 carroll 111-8at 167; and John&#13;
Gale wInninIl over Marquette's&#13;
Dan Hennam, 7", at 198.&#13;
RllIl Zmuda was tbird at 177&#13;
and IlouIl AndrewsId finished&#13;
fOllrlb at 167 for !be Rangers.&#13;
"I was pleued to win Ibis&#13;
tournament," stated Koch. HOur&#13;
champions displayed great individual&#13;
alre~, but I feel&#13;
-.-at olb.-s 'CIIII do better tban&#13;
!bey did."&#13;
Parkslde bad won Ibis tournament&#13;
fer lbe second lime in lbe&#13;
past three years.&#13;
ThIa season lbe Rangers bave&#13;
three all district performers&#13;
returning from last year, including&#13;
junior o'Connell from&#13;
Mazomanie; sopbomore Gruner&#13;
fnm Genoa City; and sophomore&#13;
Gate, a graduale of Kenosha&#13;
Tremper.&#13;
Gruner placed fourlb in lbe&#13;
nallonal NAIA meet and became&#13;
Parkside's fifth all-American&#13;
w1lb a ~11}.1 record. Gale was&#13;
One of the Mld.est's&#13;
Most Complete&#13;
SPORTING GOODS&#13;
DEALERS&#13;
",." " FREEhttl.,&#13;
TVlIlNQIl&#13;
ll!FJlm~~~!:~~rFl&#13;
1fTN AVENUE AT UND STREET&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN S]14.&#13;
the winning est fresbman in&#13;
Ranger history at 244-1.&#13;
In addition to Hintz, Andrewski,&#13;
Lynch and Zmuda,&#13;
others on the squad are Dean&#13;
Quam, Tony Apostoll and Tony&#13;
UiCoursi .. e, 118; Jesse Mac&#13;
Dougal, 134, Cliff Smith,&#13;
142; Rick Kubiak and Lee&#13;
Shifere, 158; Mike Huettl,&#13;
167; and Mike Gtasman and&#13;
Greg Graziano, heavyweight.&#13;
UlBCII Koch will add five more&#13;
strong wrestlers lo his squad&#13;
alter lllristmas, who will be&#13;
available next semester. They&#13;
are Dave Wagner, steve Ui&#13;
Count, John Weller, Terry&#13;
Rysewyk, and Rick Uinger.&#13;
Basketball loses&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkslde's basketball squad&#13;
returns from a three game road&#13;
trip lo play St. Norbert here&#13;
tonight at 7:30 p.m, but will leave&#13;
again for games Saturday at&#13;
Montana state and Tuesday at&#13;
OW-Platteville.&#13;
The Rangers faced three tough&#13;
competitors, Texas-EI Paso, New&#13;
Mexico and Nebraska-Qrnaha.&#13;
Although they had a height&#13;
advantage, Parkside was outrun&#13;
and outrebounded, 57-53 by the&#13;
Texans. El Paso led 42-27 at the&#13;
half.&#13;
The Rangers also had folli&#13;
troubles as leading socr&#13;
Leartha Scott left the Il8IIIe ,,:&#13;
10'k minutes of lime rem'!n!&#13;
stevie King, Joe Foots ~.&#13;
Lonnie Lewis were also ~&#13;
out. Four other players picked&#13;
three follis each. lip&#13;
Ron Jones of UTEP was 1be&#13;
game's leading scorer w1lb 21.&#13;
Scott was high for Parkside W\lb&#13;
15 points..&#13;
The team l06t Iaal Thuraday&#13;
to UTEP, 92-li6.&#13;
The Miners look a 2O-C lead&#13;
early in the first half and&#13;
Parkside never came claIe to&#13;
.getting back in the game.&#13;
Varsity swim team started&#13;
Thirteen men bave reported lo&#13;
practices for UW-Parkside's first&#13;
men's varsity Swimming Team,&#13;
according to Coach Barbara&#13;
UiWSOD.The men's swimming&#13;
program has lunclloned under&#13;
Uiwson since the pool was builtin&#13;
19'13, but it operated on a college&#13;
club level.&#13;
"We e:q&gt;ectlo do welllbis year,&#13;
better than most first-year&#13;
teams, It said Lawson.• "Our&#13;
schedule includes many of the&#13;
schools we swam against last&#13;
year while achieving a 6-8 record.&#13;
The men are working harder than&#13;
ever in hopes of beating the rest."&#13;
Upperclass team members&#13;
woo swam on the previous clubs&#13;
include junior Co-captains Rich&#13;
Kwas and Dennis Steeves&#13;
(Racine Case); and sophomores&#13;
Keith Krueger (Racine Horllck),&#13;
Mark Flynn (Racine Park), Rick&#13;
Lopes (Wilmot) and Kevin&#13;
Nelson (Kenosha Tremper).&#13;
Newcomers include senior&#13;
Steve Poniatowski (Racine Park)&#13;
and fresbmen Jim Ferraro and&#13;
Don Ling (Kenosha Bradford),&#13;
Rick Haas (Racine Horllck), Bob&#13;
WUbershide and Mike Nelsen&#13;
(Racine Case) and Mihran&#13;
Gaghlnjian (Erevan, Armenia).&#13;
Paced by Ferraro, who&#13;
received a special award for&#13;
breaking the most school records&#13;
while at Bradford, the freestyle&#13;
SJrinla and relay will be handled&#13;
by Kwas, Wilbershide, and either&#13;
1\&#13;
1\&#13;
1\&#13;
,/&#13;
ADVISING WEEK&#13;
NEEDS YOUI&#13;
December 8-14th&#13;
Information available at:&#13;
1. Library Circulation Desk&#13;
2. IlIfonnation Kiosk LLC D-Ievel&#13;
3. Main Level Concourse Greenquist&#13;
Nelson, Flynn or Lopes. Haas and&#13;
Nelson will be added to the 200,&#13;
while Lopes and Wilbershide take&#13;
over the 500 and 1000 evenls.&#13;
Ling and Nelsen will also see&#13;
action in the 50 and lOll, but&#13;
Gaghlnjian should be a tough&#13;
condender in the 50 when he gels&#13;
in shape after having played this&#13;
fall on UW-P's district championship&#13;
soccer team. He also&#13;
played water polo for five years&#13;
on Armenia's national team.&#13;
In the specialties, there are a&#13;
lot of multi-talensls: Krueger in&#13;
the Inidividual Medley (1M)&#13;
backstroke, and butterfly;&#13;
Sleeves in the 1M, back and&#13;
breast; Haas in the breast, fly or&#13;
1M; Kwas and Ferraro as&#13;
possiblilities in the 1Mor fly; and&#13;
Nelson in the breast.&#13;
The diving events will be&#13;
covered by Herb DeGroot or&#13;
Bryan SpalIa (Racine Park), Don&#13;
or Gary Zsk (Kenosha Bradford)&#13;
or Bob Fritz (Racine Horlick)&#13;
who will join the team second&#13;
semester.&#13;
"Coming off their coed learn&#13;
finish of ninth place in the&#13;
Parkside Ranger Relays on&#13;
November 19,the men's team is&#13;
really high," Coach Uiwson said.&#13;
HThere were many personal&#13;
records set, and sometimes&#13;
achieved that were only tenths&#13;
away from personal records.&#13;
lithe men are at a peak in&#13;
motivation--something they&#13;
PE hours&#13;
announced&#13;
The Physical Education&#13;
Department has released hours&#13;
the Phy. Ed. building will be open&#13;
for the months of December and&#13;
January.&#13;
,Regular hours are 8:30 a,m.-&#13;
9:30p.m. Monday thru Thursday,&#13;
8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Friday and&#13;
Saturday and 6-9:30 p.m. on&#13;
Sundays. The pool will be&#13;
available from II a.m.-l p.m.&#13;
Monday thru Saturday and 6;,»-9&#13;
p.m. Sunday thru Wednesaay.&#13;
Exceptions will he made for&#13;
needed after two months of&#13;
practices to get the macbine ill&#13;
gear for the first home meet CIIl&#13;
December 2 against UW.&#13;
Milwaukee, George WUllllllls&#13;
and Illinois Institute of&#13;
Technology, all three of wbIcb&#13;
bave heaten the Rangers 10 the&#13;
past." Highlighting the flrsl&#13;
semester is a new meet, tile&#13;
"Hawk Relays" at llT where tile&#13;
Rangers sbould surprise !IOIIIIl ol&#13;
their traditional foes.&#13;
In January the team will meet&#13;
cross-town rival Carlbage, III&#13;
event looked forward to by blIIIl&#13;
swimmers and coaches. '\'be&#13;
team will be working toward tile&#13;
llT Invitational ChampkllllIdp&#13;
Meet-a meet for no~onfel:_'e&#13;
affiliated schools-to be beId III&#13;
February. This is another fInI.&#13;
year meet and will feature e'ftIlIa&#13;
normaIly reserved for the NAJA&#13;
Championship Meet.&#13;
During the entire season,&#13;
several individuals will be tryq&#13;
lo qualify for the NAIA National&#13;
Swimming and Diving· Chsmpionships&#13;
to be held at Soutbwell&#13;
Minnesola in March. Parbide&#13;
will be able to send men fw tile&#13;
first lime now because of tile&#13;
change to varsity status.&#13;
The publlc is invited lo all bome&#13;
meets which are held in&#13;
Parkside's eight-lane pool 10 \be&#13;
Physical Education BuUdlng.&#13;
There is no admission charge.&#13;
Physical Education classes and&#13;
athletic teams using the&#13;
faci1il1es.&#13;
The building will be ctoeed&#13;
December 8 and 19for gradusliGD&#13;
ceremonies. During the periocI of&#13;
December 2G-23,The bul1dlnllwill&#13;
be open from 8:30 a.m.-4:30 pJIL&#13;
it will be between the 28 lbrU Ibe&#13;
30. The building will close f.&#13;
Christmas between the 24 and f1&#13;
and for New Year's December 31&#13;
thru January 4, when regular&#13;
building hours will resume.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmari ..e&#13;
Sa ... wich&#13;
OPEN8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington /We, 6M-2i7J&#13;
12 THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 8, 1976&#13;
Grune:r-,on!-nuedfr-ompg.-11 ----&#13;
'Anybody could take this&#13;
meet,'' said Coach Jim Koch.&#13;
" orthem Michigan had a strong&#13;
team and along with the others,&#13;
there should be some interesting&#13;
competition."&#13;
Parkside totalled 84 points in&#13;
the state meet, followed by UWWhite&#13;
ater with 78 and&#13;
Marquette with 69'h. Whitewater&#13;
was favored for the team title,&#13;
wiMlng the meet last year.&#13;
Fourteen teams from around the&#13;
state were entered.&#13;
''This was rather a stirring&#13;
achievement for us to win a&#13;
tournament of such caliber," said&#13;
Koch. "It's one of the biggest&#13;
victorie for Park.side."&#13;
into the finals during the evening&#13;
ses.gon, but came back to take all&#13;
five championship matches,&#13;
while the Warhawks lost their&#13;
matches.&#13;
Park.side champions, in addition&#13;
to Gruner were Dan&#13;
O'Connell beating Fred Townsend&#13;
of Whitewater, 8-1 at 126;&#13;
Scott Hintz over Kevin Morin of&#13;
Marquette, 5-2 at 134; BJ!!&#13;
Lynch demolishing Bob Waldon&#13;
of Carroll 18-6 at 167; and John&#13;
Gale winning over Marquette's&#13;
Dan Hennann, 7-6, at 198.&#13;
Ron Zmuda was third at 177&#13;
and Doug Andrewski finished&#13;
fourth at 167 for the Rangers.&#13;
the winningest freshman in&#13;
Ranger history at 24-5-1.&#13;
In addition to Hintz, Andrewski,&#13;
Lynch and Zmuda,&#13;
others on the squad are Dean&#13;
Quam, Tony Apostoli and Tony&#13;
LaCoursiere, 118; Jesse Mac&#13;
Doμgal,_ 134 , Cliff Smith,&#13;
142; Rick Kubiak and Lee&#13;
Shifere, 158; Mike Huettl,&#13;
167; and Mike Glasman and&#13;
Greg Graziano, heavyweight.&#13;
U&gt;ach Koch will add five more&#13;
strong wrestlers to his squad&#13;
after Christmas, who will be&#13;
available next semester. They&#13;
are Dave Wagner, steve La&#13;
Count, John Welter, Terry&#13;
Rysewyk, and Rick Langer.&#13;
Basketball loses&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside's basketball squad&#13;
returns from a three game road&#13;
trip to play St. Norbert here&#13;
tonight at 7: 30 p.m. but will leave&#13;
again for games Saturday at&#13;
Montana state and Tuesday at&#13;
UW-Platteville. .&#13;
The Rangers faced three tough&#13;
competitors, Texas-El Paso, New&#13;
Mexico and Nebraska-Omaha.&#13;
Although they had a height&#13;
advantage, Parkside was outrwi&#13;
and outrebounded, 57-53 by the&#13;
Texans. El Paso led 42-27 at the&#13;
half.&#13;
The Rangers also had foul&#13;
troubles as leading socrer&#13;
Leartha Scott left the game With&#13;
10½ _minu~s of time remaining&#13;
stev1e King, · Joe Foots Ind&#13;
Lonnie Lewis were also fouled&#13;
out. Four other players picked&#13;
three fouls each. Up&#13;
Ron Jones of UTEP was the&#13;
game's leading scorer With 24&#13;
Scott was high for Parkside With&#13;
15 points..&#13;
The team lost last Thursday&#13;
to UTEP, 92-56.&#13;
The Miners took a 20-6 lead&#13;
early in the first half and&#13;
Parkside never came close to&#13;
getting back in the game.&#13;
Other team scores included&#13;
UW-Oshko h, 33¼, UWPlatl&#13;
ville, 28½; UW-Stevens&#13;
int. 23; UW-La Crosse, 22½:&#13;
Carroll, 18 ; UW-Milwaukee, 6&#13;
d Gateway, 1.&#13;
Outstanding individual Ul the&#13;
meet as Ranger Bob Gruner,&#13;
"I was pleased to win this&#13;
tournament," stated Koch. "Our&#13;
champions displayed great individual&#13;
strength, but I feel&#13;
several others-can do better than&#13;
they did."&#13;
Parkside had won this tournament&#13;
for the second time in the&#13;
past three years.&#13;
Varsity swim team , started&#13;
hi vin the mo t pins in the&#13;
I a t mount of Ume: five&#13;
minute , ven seconds. It was&#13;
th Ur t Um a Parkside wrestler&#13;
n nam d outstanding&#13;
lnchvidual in th five year history&#13;
th tournamenl&#13;
Grun pinned Pete Hartzhiem&#13;
of UW-Whitewater in 2:41 to win&#13;
th championship at 150 pounds.&#13;
The Ranger had trailed&#13;
Whit water by U points going&#13;
This season the Rangers have&#13;
three all district performers&#13;
returning from last year, including&#13;
junior O'Connell from&#13;
Mazomanie; sophomore Gruner&#13;
from Genoa City; and sophomore&#13;
Gale, a graduate of Kenosha&#13;
Tremper.&#13;
Gruner placed fourth in the&#13;
national NAIA meet and became&#13;
Parkside's fifth all-American&#13;
with a 23-10..1 record. Gale was&#13;
One of the Midwest's&#13;
Most Complete&#13;
SPORTING GOODS&#13;
DEALERS&#13;
Plllllf ,I FREE htM111&#13;
ffllffi1N°11&#13;
~&#13;
Thirteen men have reported to&#13;
practices for UW-Parkside's first&#13;
men's varsity Swimming Team,&#13;
according to Coach Barbara&#13;
Lawson. The men's swimming&#13;
program has functioned under&#13;
Lawson since the pool was built in&#13;
1973, but it operated on a college&#13;
club level.&#13;
"We expectto do well this year,&#13;
better than most first-year&#13;
teams," said Lawson . • "Our&#13;
schedule includes many of the&#13;
schools we swam against last&#13;
year while achieving a 6-8 record.&#13;
The men are working harder than&#13;
ever in hopes of beating the rest.''&#13;
Upperclass team members&#13;
wtio swam on the previous clubs&#13;
include junior Co-captains Rich&#13;
Kwas and Dennis Steeves&#13;
( Racine Case); and sophomores&#13;
Keith Krueger (Racine Horlick),&#13;
Mark Flynn (Racine Park), Rick&#13;
Lopes {Wilmot) and Kevin&#13;
Nelson (Kenosha Tremper).&#13;
Newcomers include senior&#13;
Steve Poniatowski {Racine Park)&#13;
and freshmen Jim Ferraro and&#13;
Don Ling (Kenosha Bradford),&#13;
Rick Haas {Racine Horlick), Bob&#13;
Wtlbershide and Mike Nelsen&#13;
(Racine Case) and Mihran&#13;
Gaghinjian (Erevan, Armenia).&#13;
Paced by Ferraro, who&#13;
received a special award for&#13;
breaking the most school records&#13;
while at Bradford, the freestyle&#13;
sprints and rel_ay will be handled&#13;
by Kwas, Wilbershide, and either&#13;
ADVISING WEEK&#13;
NEEDS YOUI&#13;
Dece111ber I-14th&#13;
Information available at:&#13;
1. Library Circulation Desk&#13;
2. Information Kiosk LLC D-level&#13;
3. Main Level Concourse Greenquist&#13;
Nelson, Flynn or Lopes. Haas and&#13;
Nelson will be added to the 200,&#13;
while Lopes and Wilbershide take&#13;
over the 500 and 1000 events.&#13;
Ling and Nelsen will also see&#13;
action in the 50 and 100, but&#13;
Gaghinjian should be a tough&#13;
condender in the 50 when he gets&#13;
in shape after having played this&#13;
fall on UW-P's district championship&#13;
soccer team. He also&#13;
played water polo for five years&#13;
on Armenia's national team.&#13;
In the specialties, there are a&#13;
lot of multi-talensts: Krueger in&#13;
the Inidividual Medley (IM)&#13;
backstroke, and butterfly;&#13;
steeves in the Thf, back and&#13;
breast; Haas in the breast, fly or&#13;
IM; Kwas and Ferraro as&#13;
possiblilities in the IM or fly; and&#13;
Nelson in the breast.&#13;
The diving events will be&#13;
covered by Herb DeGroot or&#13;
Bryan Spalla ( Racine Park), Don&#13;
or Gary Zak (Kenosha Bradford)&#13;
or Bob Fritz (Racine Horlick)&#13;
who will join the team second&#13;
semester.&#13;
"Coming off their coed team&#13;
finish of ninth place in the&#13;
Parkside Ranger Relays on&#13;
November 19, the men's team is&#13;
really high," Coach Lawson said.&#13;
"There were many personal&#13;
records set, and sometimes&#13;
achieved that were only tenths&#13;
away from personal records.&#13;
"The men are at a peak in&#13;
motivation--something they&#13;
needed after two months of&#13;
practices to get the machine in&#13;
gear for the first home meet on&#13;
December 2 against UWMilwaukee,&#13;
George Williams&#13;
and Illinois Institute of&#13;
Technology, all three of which&#13;
have beaten the Rangers in the&#13;
past." Highlighting the first&#13;
semester is a new meet, the&#13;
"Hawk Relays" at IIT where the&#13;
Rangers should surprise some of&#13;
their traditional foes.&#13;
In January the team will meet&#13;
cross-town rival Carthage, an&#13;
event looked forward to by both&#13;
swimmers and coaches. The&#13;
team will be working toward the&#13;
IIT Invitational Championship&#13;
Meet-a meet for non-conference&#13;
affiliated schools-to be held in&#13;
February. This is another firstyear&#13;
meet and will feature eventa&#13;
normally reserved for the NAIA&#13;
Championship Meet.&#13;
During the entire season,&#13;
several individuals will be trying&#13;
to qualify for the NAIA National&#13;
Swimming and Diving · Championships&#13;
to be held at Southwest&#13;
Minnesota in March. Parkside&#13;
will be able to send men for the&#13;
first time now because of the&#13;
change to varsity status.&#13;
The public is invited to all home&#13;
meets which are held in&#13;
Parkside's eight-lane pool in the&#13;
Physical Education Building.&#13;
There is no admission charge.&#13;
PE hours&#13;
announced&#13;
The Physical Education&#13;
Department has released hours&#13;
the Phy. Ed. building will be open&#13;
for the months of December and&#13;
January.&#13;
Regular hours are 8:30 a.m.-&#13;
9:30p.m. Monday thru Thursday,&#13;
8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Friday and&#13;
Saturday and 6-9:30 p.m. on&#13;
Sundays. The pool will be&#13;
available from 11 a.m.-1 p.m.&#13;
Monday thru Saturday and s.ao-9&#13;
p.m. Sunday thru Wednesaay.&#13;
Exceptions will be made for&#13;
Physical Education classes and&#13;
athletic teams using the&#13;
facilities.&#13;
The building will be closed&#13;
December 8 and 19 for graduation&#13;
ceremonies. During the period of&#13;
December 20.23, The building will&#13;
be open from 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.ro.&#13;
it will be between the 28 thrU the&#13;
30. The building will close for&#13;
Christmas between the 24 and 'll&#13;
and for New Year's December 31&#13;
thru January 4, when regular&#13;
building hours will resume.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Submarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 p .M.&#13;
2615 Washington /IMe. 634-2373</text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>TheParkside,--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No. 12 Wednesday, December 1, 1976&#13;
Student, Spanish Center head&#13;
by Wendy Miller&#13;
What do Parkside students do besides attend&#13;
classes? Daniel Ramirez, in addition to carrying 12&#13;
credits this semester is the Executive Interim&#13;
Director of The Spanish Center for Racine,&#13;
Kenosha, and Walworth counties plus the director of&#13;
the Drug and Alcohol Abuse program in Racine and&#13;
Kenosha counties. Daniel became the Interim&#13;
Director on October .21, the day after the former&#13;
director was relieved of his responsibilities. He was&#13;
chosen at a board meeting on OCtober 20.&#13;
Daniel said, "I knew about the meeting and that&#13;
the directorship was in question, but I did not know&#13;
that I was being considered. I had classes at that&#13;
time, so I did not attend."&#13;
Daniel's classes include Crime and Juvenile&#13;
Delinquency, Psychology of Personality, General&#13;
Psychology, and an independent study course in&#13;
education. For his independent study course he&#13;
works " ... with Latino kids which were dropouts&#13;
from high school that I plugged into the Walden III&#13;
program and keep tabs on."&#13;
He needs nine more credits to graduate. Daniel&#13;
remarked, "I hope to graduate next semester with a&#13;
degree in Sociology. I've managed to accumulate a&#13;
pretiy decent grade average up to this semester. I&#13;
believe, if I'm not mistaken it's 3.36. I'm a graduate&#13;
of The Union Grove Prison Farm, coming right&#13;
from the prison farm to Parkside." That was on&#13;
June 5, 1972.&#13;
In August of' 1973, The Spanish Center, in conjunction&#13;
with The Mental Health Assn. spent $1,300&#13;
to train Daniel in Drug and Alcohol counseling.&#13;
After five months, he was successfully evaluated.&#13;
That was the beginning of the Spanish Center's&#13;
Drug and Alcohol Abuse program.&#13;
Prior to April of 1975 the program worked out of&#13;
the Mental Health Assn.'s building. Since then the&#13;
office has been at the Spanish Center in Racine.&#13;
"That was a hectic situation," he said in reference&#13;
to the move in April of '75. "Before I had direction&#13;
and supervision from people who were experienced&#13;
in those areas. I then had to assume all the&#13;
responsibility myself."&#13;
In1976, the Drug and Alcohol Abuse program was&#13;
given $41,500 and branched out to Kenosha county.&#13;
Daniel then became the official director. "Before, I&#13;
didn't nave anyone tu direct, except me, ··com.&#13;
mented Daniel. This year the program has a full&#13;
time counselor in Kenosha, Juan Mendiola and a&#13;
counselor working thirty hours a week in Racine,&#13;
Jose Laborda. Daniel is also a part time counselor&#13;
and Ruby Guardiola is the secretary.&#13;
"The reason we have grown, I feel, is because we&#13;
have provided the services that were obviously&#13;
needed in the community." The Spanish Center&#13;
employs about 16 people for the three counties.&#13;
Daniel said; "It also utilizes volunteers in the&#13;
community, students from the Youth Employment&#13;
program, and adults from the Win program. The&#13;
Win program primarily deals with people on&#13;
welfare. They're trying to develop jobs for them,&#13;
trying to get people off the welfare roles. We also&#13;
get people from the Urban League and OJT, on the&#13;
job training. II •&#13;
The main component of the Spanish Center is the&#13;
Man Power program which is funded through&#13;
CETA, &lt;I ••• which is just like the Win program.".&#13;
The second largest component is the Drug and&#13;
Alcohol Abuse program. Another component is the&#13;
Outreach program which provides transportation,&#13;
translations, court interpretation and information,&#13;
and referral for all social necessities, including&#13;
legal needs of clients.&#13;
"We serve as a liason person for people who&#13;
either don't know their rights or those who are&#13;
unfamiliar with the social and welfare systems&#13;
requirement mechanisms," Daniel explained.&#13;
Daniel has been extremely busy since taking the&#13;
directorship in October. It was an unusual situation&#13;
in which to be placed and one that he had thought&#13;
would be temporary, however he said, "There is&#13;
bope that the position will be filled by the beginning&#13;
of next year and I intend to throw my hat into the&#13;
ring."&#13;
Since taking the position as Interim Executive&#13;
Director, he has found that "There are a tremendous&#13;
amount of things that need to be done in the&#13;
community. Agencies and individuals are coming&#13;
up and offering their support and assistance and&#13;
asking for support and assistance. There are a&#13;
tremendous amount of people wbo have ideas on&#13;
what the Spanish Center should be doing and they&#13;
are surprised to see that their ideas are usually in&#13;
tune with my desires."&#13;
Daruel Ramirez&#13;
Art fair slated&#13;
Ninety exhibitors including 19&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
students will display their wares&#13;
at tbe second annual holiday Arts&#13;
and Crafts Fair to be held at&#13;
Parkside from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.&#13;
on Saturday, Dec. 4.&#13;
The fair, sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board, will&#13;
be located on all three levels of&#13;
Main Place. It will be free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Exhibitors are limited to a&#13;
maximum price of $SO for anyone&#13;
item. Tbe Burger Shoppe adjoining&#13;
lower level Main Place&#13;
will be open throughout the fair.&#13;
llems being offered include&#13;
ceramics, jewelry, enameled&#13;
sterling, candles, needlework,&#13;
dolls, acrylics, macrame, metal&#13;
sculpture, toys, clay crafts, oil&#13;
painting, pottery, handwoven&#13;
rugs, stained glass, stationery,&#13;
coin and spoon jewetry. watercolors,&#13;
decoupage, leathercrafts,&#13;
batik, dough art, dried Dower&#13;
arrangements. lapidary, prints,&#13;
rosemaling, natwa wall plaques,&#13;
fabrics and weaving.&#13;
Flu&#13;
today&#13;
• •&#13;
»sccinetum&#13;
A swine Ou vaccine clinic is&#13;
scheduled at Parkside from 10&#13;
a.m. to 6 p.m. on Wednesday,&#13;
Dec. I, in the Greenquisl Hall&#13;
Concourse.&#13;
The free clinic is open to&#13;
Parkside studenta, faculty and&#13;
staff and membel1l of their&#13;
families. The vaccine will not be&#13;
administered to anyone under 18.&#13;
The clinic will be spoIlJOI'ed by&#13;
the Campus Health Service in&#13;
cooperation With the Kenosha&#13;
City Health Department.&#13;
Both monovalent and bivalent&#13;
vaccine will be available.&#13;
PYA&#13;
breaks tradition&#13;
by Mary Ohmer&#13;
Parkside's Year for Action, PYA, Is giving&#13;
students practical experlence in the aocIal and&#13;
behavioral sciences. Itis a new internship program&#13;
at Parkside which differs significantly from the&#13;
traditional approaches to academic learning. It&#13;
offers a learning experience for the studenta, and&#13;
while the students are working and learning, the&#13;
Racine, Kenosha, and Walworth counties are&#13;
benefitting from their work.&#13;
Joyce Fite Hamlin, director of the prOtlram, says&#13;
that through this program students are placed with&#13;
a community service agency in either of the three&#13;
counties. The student will work with the agency for&#13;
a full year, receiving 30 academic credit.!.&#13;
"I see this as a great cbance for the student to&#13;
grow," says Ms. Hamlin. "It Is an opportunity to&#13;
actually apply the theories learned in the classroom&#13;
to problems in the community."&#13;
Twenty-nine students and ten agencies take part&#13;
in this project. Now in us first year it will receive&#13;
funding from Action, a federal agency, for three&#13;
years. In the future PYA may include different&#13;
agencies than it does now, and It Is hoped thallt will&#13;
attract more student volunteers.&#13;
The agencies now participating in the program&#13;
are COordinated Oilld Care, Innovative Youth&#13;
Services, Kenosha Partners, Inc., Radne's&#13;
Northside Redevelopment, Racine County Planning&#13;
Council, Racine County Public Defenders OffIce,&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin Housing Corporation in&#13;
Burlington, Tri-County Library Council, and Ibe&#13;
Urban League of Racine.&#13;
The students are full-time workers at these&#13;
agencies and are required to keep journals of their&#13;
(OnI,m"ed on PO 1&#13;
. YA' elude left to&#13;
Students participating m P ~ b 11'Pau11De&#13;
right, standing, Tom Moore, June. c e , Lavin,&#13;
Moffat, Krista Wiles, Carol Dawsod·~"&lt;:~Neu&#13;
Rutb Rudawski, Jim Ortiz, Sue He, MCCoY'&#13;
Ann Switzer, Steve Klinkhammer, :ree':md pai&#13;
Glen Christiansen, Mary Kapre ~ bt ByrOD&#13;
Carravetta and, kneellDg, left to g,&#13;
Merrick, Jean Thomson, Shal'Oll KraDIIeoberg,&#13;
Kent Cairo, Marla Hoffman, Esther Bartscher,&#13;
CbrlsllDe Meyer, and Joyce Fite HamJln, Director.&#13;
Interns not present wben the pboto was laken are&#13;
Uoda Adams, Faye Jackson, David Johnson,&#13;
Marsba Laws, Arlene MartIn, and LInda Mertens.&#13;
The Parkside--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No. 12 Wednesday, December 1, 1976&#13;
Student, Spanish Center head&#13;
by Wendy Miller&#13;
What do Parkside students do besides attend&#13;
classes? Daniel Ramirez, in addition to carrying 12&#13;
credits this semester is the Executive Interim&#13;
Director of The Spanish Center for Racine&#13;
Kenosha, and Walworth counties plus the director of&#13;
the Drug and Alcohol Abuse program in Racine and&#13;
Kenosha counties. Daniel became the Interim&#13;
Director on October .21, the day after the former&#13;
director was relieved of his responsibilities. He was&#13;
chosen at a board meeting on October 20.&#13;
Daniel said, "I knew about the meeting and that&#13;
the directorship was in question, but I did not know&#13;
that I was being considered. I had classes at that&#13;
time, so I did not attend."&#13;
Daniel's classes include Crime and Juvenile&#13;
Delinquency, Psychology of Personality, General&#13;
Psychology, and an independent study course in&#13;
education. For his independent study course he&#13;
works " ... with Latino kids which were dropouts&#13;
from high school that I plugged into the Walden III&#13;
program and keep tabs on."&#13;
He needs nine more credits to graduate. Daniel&#13;
remarked, "I hope to graduate next semester with a&#13;
degree in Sociology. I've managed to accumulate a&#13;
pretty decent grade average up to this semester. I&#13;
believe, if I'm not mistaken it's 3.36. I'm a graduate&#13;
of The Union Grove Prison Farm, coming right&#13;
from the prison farm to Parkside." That was on&#13;
June 5, 1972.&#13;
In August of 1973, The Spanish Center, in conjunction&#13;
with The Mental Health Assn. spent $1,300&#13;
to train Daniel in Drug and Alcohol counseling.&#13;
After five months, he was successfully evaluated.&#13;
That was the beginning of the Spanish Center's&#13;
Drug and Alcohol Abuse program.&#13;
Prior to April of 1975 the program worked out of&#13;
the Mental Health Assn. 's building. Since then the&#13;
office has been at the Spanish Center in Racine.&#13;
"That was a hectic situation," he said in reference&#13;
to the move in April of '75. "Before I had direction&#13;
and supervision from people who were experienced&#13;
in those areas. I then had to assume all the&#13;
responsibility myself.''&#13;
In 1976, the Drug and Alcohol Abuse program was&#13;
given $41,500 and branched out to Kenosha county.&#13;
Daniel then became the official director. "Before, I&#13;
didn t nave anyone to direct, except me, ··commented&#13;
Daniel. This year the program has a full&#13;
time counselor in Kenosha, Juan Mendiola and a&#13;
counselor working thirty hours a week in Racine,&#13;
Jose Laborda. Daniel is also a part time counselor&#13;
and Ruby Guardiola is the secretary.&#13;
"The reason we have grown, I feel, is because we&#13;
have provided the services that were obviously&#13;
needed in the community." The Spanish Center&#13;
employs about 16 people for the three counties.&#13;
Daniel said; "It also utilizes volunteers in the&#13;
community, students from the Youth Employment&#13;
program, and adults from the Win program. The&#13;
Win program primarily deals with people on&#13;
welfare. They're trying to develop jobs for them,&#13;
trying to get people off the welfare roles. We also&#13;
get people from the Urban League a1_1d OJT, on the&#13;
job training."&#13;
The main component of the Spanish Center is the&#13;
Man Power program which is funded through&#13;
CETA, " ... which is just like the Win program.".&#13;
The second largest component is the Drug and&#13;
Alcohol Abuse program. Another component is the&#13;
Outreach program which provides transportation,&#13;
translations, court interpretation and information,&#13;
and referral for all social necessities, including&#13;
legal needs of clients.&#13;
"We serve as a liason person for people who&#13;
either don't know their rights or those who are&#13;
unfamiliar with the social and welfare systems&#13;
requirement mechanisms," Daniel explained.&#13;
Daniel has been extremely busy since taking the&#13;
directorship in October. It was an unusual situation&#13;
in which to be placed and one that he had thought&#13;
would be temporary, however he said, "There is&#13;
hope that the position will be filled by the beginning&#13;
of next year and I intend to throw my hat into the&#13;
ring."&#13;
Since taking the position as Interim Executive&#13;
Director, he has found that "There are a tremendous&#13;
amount of things that need to be done in the&#13;
community. Agencies and individuals are coming&#13;
up and offering their support and assistance and&#13;
asking for support and assistance. There are a&#13;
tremendous amount of people who have ideas on&#13;
what the Spanish Center should be doing and they&#13;
are surprised to see that their ideas are usually in&#13;
~ne with my desires."&#13;
Dan tel Ramirez&#13;
Art fair slated • rinety exhibitors including 19&#13;
University of Wisco~in-Parkside&#13;
students will display their wares&#13;
at the second annual holiday Arts&#13;
and Crafts Fair to be held at&#13;
Parkside from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.&#13;
on Saturday, Dec. 4.&#13;
arrangem ts, lapidary, p n ,&#13;
rosemallng, na all plaqu •&#13;
The fair, sponsored b} the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board, will&#13;
be located on all three levels of&#13;
Main Place. It will be free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Exhibitors are limited to a&#13;
maximum price of $50 for any ooe&#13;
item. The Burger Shoppe djoining&#13;
lower level Main Place&#13;
will be open throughout the fair.&#13;
Items being offered includ.-&#13;
ceramics, jewelry, enameled&#13;
sterling, candles, needlework,&#13;
dolls, acrylics, macrame, metal&#13;
sculpture, toys, clay crafts, oil&#13;
painting, pottery, hand oven&#13;
rugs, stained glass, stationery,&#13;
coin and spoon jewelry, water·&#13;
colors, decoupage, leathercrafts,&#13;
batik, dough art, dried flo er&#13;
fabric and .,..,.,,..,, ...&#13;
Flu&#13;
today&#13;
• • vaccination&#13;
A me flu vacc&#13;
scheduled nt Par d&#13;
PYA&#13;
breaks tradi ion&#13;
by aryOhmer&#13;
t&#13;
. YA · elude left to&#13;
Students participating m P m ' uline&#13;
right standing Tom Moore, June Mitchell, p~vin&#13;
Moff~t, Krista' Wiles, Carol Danis, _ Mary Neu'&#13;
R th R da ki Jim Ortiz Sue Hodel, Gary ' u u ws , • 0 en McCoy&#13;
Ann Switzer, Steve Klinkhammer, liore and Pat . M ry Kapre an,&#13;
Merrick, Jean Thomson, Sharon Krankenberg,&#13;
Kent Cairo, Marla Hoffman, Esther Burtscher,&#13;
Christine Meyer, and Joyce Fite Hamlin, Director.&#13;
Interns not present when the photo was taken are&#13;
Linda Adams, Faye Jackson, David Johnson,&#13;
Marsha Laws, Arlene Martin, and Linda Mertens.&#13;
Services, Kenosha Partners, Inc., Racine'&#13;
Northside Redevelopment, Raclne County Pl nuig&#13;
Council, Racine County Public Defeoo r Office.&#13;
Southeastern isconsin Housing Corporation in&#13;
Burlington, Tri-County Library Council, and th&#13;
Urban League of Racine.&#13;
The students are full-time wo kers at the&#13;
agencies arid are required to ke"? jow-nals of their&#13;
COIi! nuf'llon PO 1&#13;
Glen Christiansen, a ·ght Byron&#13;
Carravetta and, kneeling, left to n ' &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1. 1976&#13;
---EDITOR IAL/OPINION&#13;
Lucy's basic skills testing commended&#13;
by Mlck Andersen&#13;
areas of curriculum need attention, how to improve classroom instruction&#13;
and how to best allocate the resources at their disposal."&#13;
Lucey is also correct in trying to reestablish the state superintendent's&#13;
office as responsible for overseeing the promotion of uniformity and&#13;
quality of evluation and instruction.&#13;
There is a measure of truth too, to his critics' charge that such&#13;
comparison's between school districts are unfair. It would be unfair&#13;
for basic skills testing to degenerate into a blaming match, where&#13;
school administrators quake when their districts fall below the 50&#13;
percent or "average" mark. Clearly other factors, such as parents'&#13;
educational level, social class, and economic standing, interact withl&#13;
the district educational structure to yield, at best, an indirect measure&#13;
of academic achievement.&#13;
Governor Lucey's recent proposal to implement basic skills testing&#13;
for all 4th, 8th, and 12thgraders should be commended as a major step&#13;
by the state towards reestab1ishing itself as \he most effective&#13;
guarantor of educational excellence. 'lbe proposal could also have the&#13;
eftect 01 warding off increasing federal Intrusion In the operation of&#13;
local school districts.&#13;
However, the Governor's initiative m....t be seen only as a hopeful&#13;
half-&lt;ltep where clearly a full one is needed.&#13;
A Baslc Need&#13;
What ma .... educational sense can also make good politics. In a&#13;
Milwaukee Joumal editortal a few days ago it was noted that,&#13;
"historically and legally (education is) a state responsibility." Lucey&#13;
can claim, with justification, his program reflects a majority opinion&#13;
in the United States, an opinion based on the uneasy feeling that&#13;
decllnlng national test scores over the last ten years are indicative of&#13;
an over...ll decline in the quality of education. A current Gallup poll&#13;
shows fully two-thirds of the American people support the establishment&#13;
of standardt2ed exams as a requisite for receiving a diploma.&#13;
The decline in the national test scores of high school seniors is an&#13;
often cited effect of basic skills deficiency. Universities and colleges&#13;
the nation over have been grappling with ways to improve the quality&#13;
of education in the face of such fundamental deficits. Given a fixed&#13;
amount for expenditure, institutions of higher learning have two&#13;
alternatives to achieve educational quality, either the implementation&#13;
or a compensatory basic skills program, or the raising of admission&#13;
standards.&#13;
These rather bleak options are not without cost to the community&#13;
erther-high admission standards mean fewer having the opportunity&#13;
to receive a college education, while refusal to fund expensive compensatory&#13;
programming denies to others the right to a higher level of&#13;
education.&#13;
Arguements beside poinl&#13;
Both Lucey and his critics miss a crucial point however: tI!~&#13;
question is not whether the comparisons are fair, it goes beyond that,&#13;
to whether or not they are appropriate.&#13;
Evaluation by norm level is a tricky business; witness the overall&#13;
decline in national norms over the past decade and half. Traditionally&#13;
the business of education has not been realistically self-evaluative.&#13;
Content to drift along until public pressure forces change, the&#13;
educational bureaucracy has forgone the structural changes needed to&#13;
bring about consistent efforts at upgrading performance. Mter all,&#13;
norm levels only measure typical, generalized performance; they are&#13;
not reflective of potential nor specific skills.&#13;
A better method&#13;
A far wiser method, I believe, would be for the state to hegin&#13;
developing criterion reference testing (what skills are essential for&#13;
the high school graduate to perform) and targeting the specific&#13;
deficiencies present in every district, to be corrected in say, five&#13;
years.&#13;
Criterion referenced testing differs from norm testing in this fundamental&#13;
respect: norm levels give rank percentile in a generalized&#13;
subject (ie: Johnny scores in the 78th percentile in math). However,&#13;
norm levels do not evaluate specific skills (at what level can Johnny&#13;
calculate fractions, decimals, word problems, etc). Criterion&#13;
reference testing facilitates the pinpointing of skill deficiency.&#13;
Criterion testing, unlike norm levels, are constrained but .liot condemned&#13;
by current state-wide levels of performance. It WOUldallow&#13;
educators and administrators a more indepth analysis of deficiency at&#13;
the district level than is presently proposed, while realizing Lucey's&#13;
basic concern for the biggest educational bang for the taxpayer's&#13;
buck.&#13;
While the possibility of unfair comparison of school districts&#13;
remains; the problem of defensive reaction to testing by insecure&#13;
school authorities can be substantially lessened. Administrators can&#13;
rightly point out that, to date, skill proficiency has been only indirectly&#13;
related to high school graduation. With criterion reference testing the&#13;
Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction would have at its disposal&#13;
the hest information with which to generate consistently higher levels&#13;
of performance.&#13;
Lucey's Proposal&#13;
The Lucey proposal calls for the uniform testing of three grade&#13;
levels in reading, mathematics, science, and social studies. It is&#13;
assumed that these tests would be typical of most basic skills&#13;
examinations. a standardized objective test designed to measure&#13;
mastery of essential skills. From these test results, Lucey believes&#13;
norms would he developed to allow comparisons hetween school&#13;
districts.&#13;
What's the cost? About twice that of current testing programs, for a&#13;
tota1 of $285,000.This is a fraction of the $1.47billion spent each year in&#13;
Wisconsin for elementary and secondary public schooling.&#13;
The gains from such a program are numerous. The uniform composition,&#13;
duplication, administration, and compilation of the test data&#13;
will make comparison and generalization of data across district lines&#13;
more feasible. Currenily this information is not readily available as&#13;
the wide variety of testing programs make standardization difficult.&#13;
Lucey is correct when he stated, "It is a small price to pay to help&#13;
teachers, administrators, and school board members decide what&#13;
~~ANGER&#13;
T1l4 ".rUille ........ 1. ~ ....... 1IIKftU"1., ,......-. •• 1•• of tNM ..... by&#13;
.., ................ U"lventfy .. ... .~. t.e"",, ....... ".b...........&#13;
• "c••,lll.".'."" ~.. ... •• Ial, Par1l.~ ......... 1 ... 1..1... , 'U-2211;&#13;
,................ ltI ....... ...Icy -&#13;
N..-w- W42t$.&#13;
e •••••• 0.1111_. alllH'."" ••• -'&#13;
IOITotI·IN.CMII'. J-'M .....&#13;
IUII.,U MAttAO'.' e.-y .......&#13;
AOV•• TI"". MA.....O.. T_ c....,.&#13;
..1., C~D'''.TotI· erwc. W..-.&#13;
OI .... TM,,,TS&#13;
a-.*"".......~ .. ".... McK...uy&#13;
'IATU.' lOtTO_&#13;
,NItTI IDITO.&#13;
V,IAOI 10ITO.,&#13;
l... ' ......&#13;
........, I. ---,.-eIlI. 111I ..,..&#13;
co ..., IDITOa J..........&#13;
"MOTO • Ot TOa&#13;
elaCU"A""&#13;
IT"" • ..,." Mil.." TefTl ...--&#13;
.ay""".• ..." H... "' .... ChrIS Cia",", 'homn hv.etl",&#13;
0.... C.,..... ~ .............. M.ky Ka, 011",_. Larry ~Y ..... 11H.............&#13;
....... Mall ....... J.M ....... ......,., ~ ... L1.... KJI.cItMft., Karl .. UFCMIIl'iltr. Judy ,"'*....Ie............. 1lttlI..., L. Ll"........ DebIM 5"-,""&#13;
Gruhl: DeRanger vulgar&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Congratulations! The article&#13;
tiiled "Birth Control Balled Up"&#13;
which was printed in the&#13;
November 17 issue of your erotic&#13;
DeRANGER supplement hit an&#13;
all-time low for vulgarity. It was&#13;
the diarrhea of a polluted mind&#13;
wbose owner should be in the&#13;
custody of a psychiatrist and not&#13;
pounding a typewriter. Debasing&#13;
human sexuality is neither satire&#13;
or entertaining.&#13;
What's the big idea? Are you&#13;
trying to find out how much&#13;
pornographic garbage you can&#13;
dish out to your readers? You&#13;
have freedom of the press and&#13;
don't know how to use it. Obviously&#13;
there are some&#13;
sophomoric smart alees running&#13;
RANGER who don't know the&#13;
difference between good taste&#13;
and bad.&#13;
Now that you've provoked me&#13;
into writing, hear this! Why don't&#13;
you campus politicians do less&#13;
bitching and report more about&#13;
the good things that are happening&#13;
at Parkside?&#13;
Suggestions: Profiles about&#13;
some distinguished faculty&#13;
people ... about the projects&#13;
supported by grants which are&#13;
going on ... and about the accomplishments&#13;
of students who&#13;
are doing interesling things inside&#13;
and out of school. Surely&#13;
there must be more going on at&#13;
Parkside than what happens in&#13;
the Phy Ed building.&#13;
Another suggestion: Stop&#13;
harping about "The Ad·&#13;
ministration " and what those&#13;
people do and don't do for you.&#13;
I've seen the facilities in the new&#13;
Union building and realize what a&#13;
rough time you have out there&#13;
and you even have to pay for the&#13;
food and drinks' in the cafeteria.&#13;
continued on IXI· 3&#13;
Fire fighting students thanked&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On Friday, November 19, 1976&#13;
at approximately 3:10 p.m., the&#13;
campus experienced a grass fire&#13;
west of the Union parking lot on&#13;
the outer loop road. The fire&#13;
caused a minimum amount of&#13;
damage only because of the ef•&#13;
forts of the students of this&#13;
campus who assisted in contrulling&#13;
the fire until the Somers&#13;
Fire Department arrived.&#13;
I do not know who these&#13;
students were, however, the&#13;
C~mpus Security Department&#13;
WISheSto thank each and every&#13;
one of them for the assistance&#13;
that they gave and also the&#13;
Physical Plant employees who&#13;
were on the scene.&#13;
I have received nothing but&#13;
compliments from the Somers&#13;
Fire Department and' how surprised&#13;
they were that the fire was&#13;
fairly well under control when&#13;
they arrived at the scene.&#13;
Again, to all of those whO&#13;
assisted, a hearty "Thank You"&#13;
for a job well done.&#13;
SincerelY,&#13;
R.D. Brinkmann, Director&#13;
Campus Security Department&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 1976 i Jr.. The Parkside&#13;
""'/&#13;
RANGER&#13;
--EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
Lucy's basic skills testing commended&#13;
by Mick Andersen&#13;
Governor Lucey's recent proposal to implement basic skills testing&#13;
for all 4th, 8th, and 12th graders should be commended as a major step&#13;
by th tate towards reestablishing itself as µte most effective&#13;
guarantor of educational excellence. The proposal could also have the&#13;
effect of warding off increasing federal intnwon in the operation of&#13;
l l hool districts.&#13;
However, the Governor's initiative must be seen only as a hopeful&#13;
half~ p wh re clearly a full one is needed.&#13;
A Basic Need&#13;
What makes educational sense can also make good politics. In a&#13;
Milwaukee Journal editorial a few days ago it was noted that,&#13;
• historically and legally {education is) a state responsibility." Lucey&#13;
n claun, with justification, his program reflects a majority opinion&#13;
in the United States, an opinion based on the uneasy feeling that&#13;
declin national test scores over the last ten years are indicative of&#13;
an over-all decline in the quality of education. A current Gallup poll&#13;
fully twerthirds of the American people support the establishm&#13;
nt of tandardized exams as a requisite for receiving a diploma.&#13;
Th d line in the national test cores of high school seniors is an&#13;
t n ·ted ffect of basic skills deficiency. Universities and colleges&#13;
th tion over have been grappling with ways to improve the quality&#13;
u ation in th face of such fundamental deficits. Given a fixed&#13;
run unt for expenditure, institutions of higher learning have two&#13;
tern ti to achieve educational quality, either the implementation&#13;
compensatory ba ic skills program, or the raising of admission&#13;
ndards.&#13;
Th r ther bleak options are not without cost to the community&#13;
th -high admi ion tandards mean fewer having the opportunity&#13;
to re Iv a college education, while refusal to fund expensive commatory&#13;
pr ramming denie to others the right to a higher level of&#13;
u ation.&#13;
Lucey's Proposal&#13;
The Lucey proposal calls for the uniform testing of three grade&#13;
l els in reading, mathematics, science, and social studies. It is&#13;
that th tests would be typical of most basic skills&#13;
aminations - a standardized objective test designed to measure&#13;
mastery of essential kills. From these test results, Lucey believes&#13;
norms would be developed to allow comparisons between school&#13;
di tricts.&#13;
What' the cost? About twice that of current testing programs, for a&#13;
total of 285,000. This is a fraction of the $1.47 billion spent each year in&#13;
W1scon n for elementary and secondary public schooling.&#13;
The galns from such a program are numerous. The uniform compo&#13;
tion, duplication, administration, and compilation of the test data&#13;
ill make comparison and generalization of data across district lines&#13;
m feasible. Currently this information is not readily available as&#13;
th wid variety of testing programs make standardization difficult.&#13;
Lu y is correct when he stated, "It is a small price to pay to help&#13;
ch , administrators. and school board members decide what&#13;
areas of curriculum need attention, how to improve classroom instruction&#13;
and how to best allocate the resources at their disposal."&#13;
Lucey is :Uso correct in trying to ~eestablish the ~tate sup~rinte~dent's&#13;
office as responsible for overseeing the promotion of unifornuty and&#13;
quality of evluation and instruction.&#13;
There is a measure of truth too, to his critics' charge that such&#13;
comparison's between school districts are unfair. It would be unfair&#13;
for basic skills testing to degenerate into a blaming match, where&#13;
school administrators quake when their districts fall below the 50&#13;
percent or "average" mark. Clearly other factors, such as parents'&#13;
educational level, social class, and economic standing, interact with1&#13;
the district educational structure to yield, at best, an indirect measure&#13;
of academic achievement.&#13;
Arguements beside point&#13;
Both Lucey and his critics miss a crucial point however: th~&#13;
question is not whether the comparisons are fair, it goes beyond that,&#13;
to whether or not they are appropriate.&#13;
Evaluation by norm level is a tricky business; witness the overall&#13;
decline in national norms over the past decade and half. Traditionally&#13;
the business of education has not been realistically self-evaluative.&#13;
Content to drift along until public pressure forces change, the&#13;
educational bureaucracy has forgone the structural changes needed to&#13;
bring about consistent efforts at upgrading performance. After all,&#13;
norm levels only measure typical, generalized performance; they are&#13;
not reflective of potential nor specific skills·.&#13;
A better method&#13;
A far wiser method, I believe, would be for the state to begin&#13;
developing criterion reference testing (what skills are essential for&#13;
the high school graduate to perform) and targeting the specific&#13;
deficiencies present in every district, to be corrected in say, five&#13;
years.&#13;
Criterion referenced testing differs from norm testing in this fundamental&#13;
respect: norm levels give rank percentile in a generalized&#13;
subject (ie: Johnny scores in the 78th percentile in math). However,&#13;
norm levels do not evaluate specific skills (at what level can Johnny&#13;
calculate fractions, decimals, word problems, etc). Criterion&#13;
reference testing facilitates the pinpointing of skill deficiency.&#13;
Criterion testing, unlike norm levels, are constrained but uot condemned&#13;
by current state-wide levels of performance. It womd allow&#13;
educators and administrators a more indepth analysis of deficiency at&#13;
the district level than is presently proposed, while realizing Lucey's&#13;
basic concern for the biggest educational bang for the taxpayer's&#13;
buck.&#13;
While the possibility of unfair comparison of school districts&#13;
remains; the problem of defensive reaction to testing by insecure&#13;
school authorities can be substantially lessened. Acimlnistrators can&#13;
rightly point out that, to date, skill proficiency has been only indirectly&#13;
related to high school graduation. With criterion reference testing the&#13;
Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction would have at its disposal&#13;
the best information with which to generate consistently higher levels&#13;
of performance.&#13;
I Gruhl: DeRanger vulgar&#13;
)10 To the Editor: have freedom of the press and&#13;
don't know how to use it. Obviously&#13;
there are some&#13;
sophomoric smart alecs running&#13;
RANGER who don't know the&#13;
difference between good taste&#13;
and bad.&#13;
going on ... and about the accomplishments&#13;
of students who&#13;
are doing interesting things inside&#13;
and out of school. Surely&#13;
there must be more going on at&#13;
Parkside than what happens in&#13;
the PhyEd building.&#13;
-&#13;
~,, w The Parkside&#13;
..&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Congratulations! The article&#13;
titled "Birth Control Balled Up"&#13;
which was printed in the&#13;
November 17 issue of your erotic&#13;
DeRANGER supplement hit an&#13;
all-time low for vulgarity. It was&#13;
the diarrhea of a polluted mind&#13;
whose owner should be in the&#13;
custody of a psychiatrist and not&#13;
pounding a typewriter. Debasing&#13;
human sexuality is neither satire&#13;
or entertaining.&#13;
Now that you've provoked me&#13;
into writing, hear this! Why don't&#13;
you campus politicians do less&#13;
bitching and report more about&#13;
the good things that are happening&#13;
at Parkside?&#13;
Another suggestion: Stop&#13;
harping about "The Ad·&#13;
ministration" and what those&#13;
people do and don't do for you.&#13;
I've seen the facilities in the new&#13;
Union building and realize what a&#13;
rough time you have out there&#13;
and you even have to pay for the&#13;
food and drinks in the cafeteria.&#13;
IDITD• IN CMIEi' J aH • s.-1&#13;
8USIIIIU MJUtAOl•l Caltly 8tM&#13;
A0\/1.TISIIIO MAIIAGI• T-C- Nl!WS coo•otNATO• a,vce w,- 0 PA.T"'IINU&#13;
•- trat--k J- "'lcKIMlley&#13;
l'IATU!III IOITO• a...le ••- Sl•O!IITS IOITO• JM~ T-,a&#13;
M&lt;-.sarity ,...,.. • ....,.tive of tllose held by "'- ,_11. faulty ..- .clmlni1lraliCN1 of&#13;
,.,..,,... Ed,tor,al alld a.,,,,..n SU-22*7;&#13;
N1tW1,_ "34ltS.&#13;
tSAO OITO!IIS -., I ••ffl&lt;ll , BUI Bartie&#13;
COP'Y IOITO• J 1.•-&#13;
"HOTO IEDITO•&#13;
Cl•CUI.ATION s .. IIAl•-rd1&#13;
naFF&#13;
What's the big idea? Are you&#13;
trying to find out how much&#13;
pornographic garbage you can&#13;
dish out to your readers? You&#13;
Suggestions: Profiles about&#13;
some distinguished faculty&#13;
people . . . about the projects&#13;
supported by grants which are continued on pg. 3&#13;
Fire fighting students thanked&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On Friday, November 19, 1976&#13;
at approximately 3:10 p.m., the&#13;
campus experienced a grass fire&#13;
west of the Union parking lot on&#13;
the outer loop road. The fire&#13;
caused a minimum amount of&#13;
damage only because of the efforts&#13;
of the students of this&#13;
campus who assisted in controlling&#13;
the fire until the Somers&#13;
Fire Department arrived.&#13;
I do not know who these&#13;
students were, however, the&#13;
Campus Security Department&#13;
wishes to thank each and every&#13;
one of them for the assistance&#13;
that they gave and also the&#13;
Physical Plant employees who&#13;
were on the scene.&#13;
I have received nothing but&#13;
compliments from the Somers&#13;
Fire Department and· how sur·&#13;
prised they were that the fire was&#13;
fairly well under control when&#13;
they arrived at the scene.&#13;
Again, to all of those who&#13;
assisted, a hearty "Thank You"&#13;
for a job well done.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
R.D. Brinlanann, Director&#13;
Campus Security Department &#13;
Wedoesday, Dec. 1&#13;
Wargamers Club registration for mini-tournament featuring the&#13;
Game of Austerlitz in CL 140.&#13;
Swine Flu Clinic from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. in the Greenquist concourse.&#13;
Both monovalent and bivalent vaccines will be available.&#13;
Thursday, Dec. Z&#13;
Wargamers Club hosts mini-tournament featuring the Game of Austerlitz&#13;
in CL 140.&#13;
Meeting, Society 01 Physics Students at4 p.m. in Gr. 230.&#13;
Friday, Dec. 3&#13;
Debate and Forensics Association meets at 12 p.m. in WLLC 295 and&#13;
1:30 p.m. in CA 233.&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2to 4p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Union Coffeehouse presents Dave Parker from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cafeteria.&#13;
Movie, "Lucky Lady," plays at 7and 9:15 p.m, in the Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $1.&#13;
Concert, Parkside Concert Band performs at8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Saturday, Dec .•&#13;
Arts and Crafts Fair from 10a.m.to 4 p.m. in Main Place.&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 5&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Concert, Parkside Chamber Singers present Medieval and&#13;
Renaissance Christmas Music at 3: 30 in the CAT.&#13;
Movie, "Lucky Lady," plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $1.&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 7&#13;
Concert, Parkside Percussion Ensemble performs at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
CAT.&#13;
Wedoesday, Dec. 8&#13;
Business Department Informational Coffee Hour at 2:30 p.m. in CL&#13;
111.&#13;
Mars study gets grant&#13;
The Board of Regents has&#13;
accepted a grant of $7,800 from&#13;
the National Aeronautics and&#13;
Space Administration (NASA) in&#13;
continuing support of a study&#13;
tilled "Mars: Identification,&#13;
Distribution and Signification of&#13;
Volcanic Land Forms" by&#13;
Studentsthankedcontinued&#13;
trom pg. 2&#13;
Who has the water-bed cone&#13;
essions&#13;
Nevertheless, the fact remains&#13;
that those who are inclined to&#13;
gripe the most have yet to serve&#13;
an apprenticeship in a PI'A, In&#13;
my opinion they have a heck of a&#13;
lot to learn before becoming&#13;
eligible to act or talk like a&#13;
Regent.&#13;
It ill behooves you to criticize&#13;
people who have a lot more&#13;
training and experience to draw&#13;
from than you do .... especially if&#13;
you skip classes and-or don't do&#13;
your homework. If the Creator&#13;
intended that students were to&#13;
run the school He would have&#13;
made them first.&#13;
Your time to do so will come&#13;
soon enough. And in the meantime,&#13;
Good luck! ... and keep&#13;
your paper clean!&#13;
ARTHUR GRUHL&#13;
Class of '72&#13;
Eugene 1. Smith, associate&#13;
prolessor of earth science at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The grant brings total NASA&#13;
support of Smith's study,&#13;
initiated in 1973, to $21,171. The&#13;
project is based on analysis of&#13;
photographs from the Mariner 9&#13;
. and 10 space probes and locuses&#13;
on identification of planetary&#13;
surface features.&#13;
Smith said he expects&#13;
photographs from the Viking&#13;
Mars landing to be made&#13;
available to him for study in May.&#13;
Before joining the Parkside&#13;
laculty in 1972, Smith was involved&#13;
in lunar and planetary&#13;
research at the University of New&#13;
Mexico.&#13;
The Regents also accepted $388&#13;
from various donors for the&#13;
Parkside scholarship fund and&#13;
$34.75 lor the Parkside Library.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1. 1976 3&#13;
Classified&#13;
WANTED: P"rl Time Secretary for StUdent&#13;
Group. 10 hours II weft; at $'1 50 lin hOUr&#13;
MUSI be on Work Study. See KIYtlko In WLLC&#13;
0193 or call 5532244&#13;
TYPING DONE elflden,'y .nd&#13;
professionally in my home R:enOf~ble&#13;
rates 651-6061&#13;
WANTED: Part time child care worker&#13;
working with ivveniles aVes lJ·11 in group&#13;
foster home. SJOO per hour. One year exeerreece&#13;
desired In child care work or&#13;
related tleld. Phone 6J6-J.saJ.&#13;
FOR SALE: Grey. wI'Ilte. and orange Per&#13;
sian rug 6·... xJ·.... $350. 552-9J9.1 after Sp_m.&#13;
WILe. 00 any kind of typing at nUoNible&#13;
retes For intMmatJon C." 4523313&#13;
WANTED: Female20years or older to Share&#13;
an apartment. Preferably Jr. Sr. PI\one 694·&#13;
6185 after 6 p.m.&#13;
FOR SALE: Mar.nt, 2015 recer ...er, Jim""&#13;
model" speakers. 1year old S3OO. Phone 63'&#13;
.m&#13;
NEED ride from south side of Milwaukee&#13;
Will pay for '&gt;7 gas. Call 162·6233 162_6231:&#13;
Ask for Carol.&#13;
MEOICAL SCHOOL in MexicO .cceptlng&#13;
Amef"lcan students Pr.ctlce I" .... US. WHO&#13;
listed. HEW approved • .I v.. r COUfM. I~ns&#13;
a.... Il.ble, tM Oecembt't'" ~Intmen' ''I&#13;
yo.tr .re •• calf 219.996-.200.&#13;
WILL do any kind of typing at a r.. sonable&#13;
rete. CaU 65-'·5002 anytime after 5 p.m.&#13;
il8~rr&#13;
Parkside's Year for Action&#13;
A lEW WAY TO LEARI AID SERVE:&#13;
A chance to develop yourself by serving a one-year internship&#13;
in a local community service or action project on a full-time&#13;
basis while receiving intensive in-service training, faculty&#13;
advice and support, 30 units of academic credit, and a subsistence&#13;
living income.&#13;
Several openings lor internships in community agencies will&#13;
be available starling January, 1977.Applications are required,&#13;
and inunediate response is necessary to have applications&#13;
considered.&#13;
In addition to present Parkside students, people who have&#13;
begun but not linished college elsewhere, are over 18, have&#13;
genuine commitment to a year of community improvement&#13;
effort and have above average academic ability or usable&#13;
skills are welcome to apply.&#13;
For further information and applications, write, pbone or visit&#13;
Parkside's Year for Action, University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Room 286, Tallent Hall, Kenosha, WI 53140. Phooe 553-2337,&#13;
from 8:30 a.m. until 5 p.m. weekdays.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. l&#13;
Wargamers Club registration for mini-tournament featuring the&#13;
Game of Austerlitz in CL 140.&#13;
Swine Flu Clinic from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. in the Greenquist concourse.&#13;
Both monovalent and bivalent vaccines will be available.&#13;
Thursday, Dec. 2&#13;
Wargamers Club hosts mini-tournament featuring the Game of Austerlitz&#13;
in CL 140.&#13;
Meeting, Society of Physics Students at 4 p.m. in Gr. 230.&#13;
Friday, Dec. 3&#13;
Debate and Forensics Association meets at 12 p.m. in WLLC 295 and&#13;
1:30 p.m. in CA 233.&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4 p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Union Coffeehouse presents Dave Parker from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cafeteria.&#13;
Movie, "Lucky Lady," playsat 7 and 9:15 p.m. in the Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $1.&#13;
Concert, Parkside Concert Band performs at 8 p.ni. in the CAT.&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 4&#13;
Arts and Crafts Fair from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Main Place.&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 5&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1 to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Concert, Parkside Chamber Singers present Medieval and&#13;
Renaissance Christmas Music at 3:30 in the CAT.&#13;
Movie, "Lucky Lady," plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $1.&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 7&#13;
Concert, Parkside Percussion Ensemble performs at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
CAT.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 8&#13;
Business Department Informational Coffee Hour at 2:30 p.m. in CL&#13;
111.&#13;
Mars study gets grant&#13;
The Board of Regents has&#13;
accepted a grant of $7,800 from&#13;
the National Aeronautics and&#13;
Space Administration (NASA) in&#13;
continuing support of a study&#13;
titled "Mars: Identification,&#13;
Distribution and Signification of&#13;
Volcanic Land Forms" by&#13;
Students thtJ,nkedcontinued&#13;
from pg. 2&#13;
Who has the water-bed cone&#13;
essions&#13;
Nevertheless, the fact remains&#13;
that those who are inclined to&#13;
gripe the most have yet to serve&#13;
an apprenticeship in a PTA, In&#13;
my opinion they have a heck of a&#13;
lot to learn before becoming&#13;
eligible to act or talk like a&#13;
Regent.&#13;
It ill behooves you to criticize&#13;
people who have a lot more&#13;
training and experience to draw&#13;
from than you do .... especially if&#13;
you skip classes and-or don't do&#13;
your homework. If the Creator&#13;
intended that students were to&#13;
run the school He would have&#13;
made them first.&#13;
Your time to do so will come&#13;
soon enough. And in the meantime,&#13;
Good luck! ... and keep&#13;
your paper clean!&#13;
ARTHUR GRUHL&#13;
Class of '72&#13;
Eugene I. Smith, associate&#13;
professor of earth science at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The grant brings total NASA&#13;
support of Smith's study,&#13;
initiated in 1973, to $21,171. The&#13;
project is based on analysis of&#13;
photographs from the Mariner 9&#13;
· and 10 space probes and focuses&#13;
on identification of planetary&#13;
surface features.&#13;
Smith said he expects&#13;
photographs from the Viking&#13;
Mars landing to be made&#13;
available to him for study in May.&#13;
Before joining the Parkside&#13;
faculty in 1972, Smith was involved&#13;
in lunar and planetary&#13;
research at the University of New&#13;
Mexico.&#13;
The Regents also accepted $388&#13;
from various donors for the&#13;
Parkside scholarship fund and&#13;
$34.75 for the Parkside Library.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 1976 3&#13;
Classified WANTED : Part Time Secretary for Student&#13;
Group. 10 hours a week at S2.50 an hour&#13;
Must be on Work Study See Kiyoko in WLLC&#13;
o 193 or call 553-224'&#13;
WANTED : Part time child care worker&#13;
working w ith jweniles ages 13 17 ,n group&#13;
foster home. SJ 00 per hour One yur ex,&#13;
perience desired in child care work or&#13;
related field Phone 636-358.J&#13;
WANTED : Female20 years or older to share&#13;
an apartment. Preferably Jr. Sr. Phone 694 -&#13;
6185 after 6 p. m.&#13;
NEED ride from south sld~ of Milwaukee.&#13;
Will pay for 'i&gt; gas. Call 762-6233 762-6231 . Ask for Carol.&#13;
WILL do any kind of typing at a reasonable&#13;
rate. Call ~ -5002 anytime after 5 p.m.&#13;
TYPING DONE efllclen1tv enll&#13;
professionally ,n my home. Reasoneble&#13;
rates. 657 6068.&#13;
FOR SALE: Grey, while, end orange Pers,an&#13;
r119 6' 8" x3'4", S350. 552 -939• after Sp m&#13;
WILi: DO any kind 01 typing at reasonable&#13;
rates For ,ntormation. Call 652 3373.&#13;
FOR SALE: Marantz 2015 receiver, Jensen&#13;
model • speakers, 1 year old . ~ Phone 634&#13;
8655 .&#13;
MEDICAL SCHOOL in Mexico ecc1tptir,v&#13;
American students. Proctice In the VS, WHO&#13;
listed, HEW approved, • year course, loans&#13;
availabfe, tor December eppolntme,nt in&#13;
yovr .,, .. , call 219,996-4200.&#13;
Parkside's Year for Action&#13;
A NEW WAY TO LEARN AND SERVE:&#13;
A chance to develop yourself by serving a one-year internship&#13;
in a local community service or action project on a full-time&#13;
basis while receiving intensive in-service training, faculty&#13;
advice and support, 30 units of academic credit, and a subsistence&#13;
living income.&#13;
Several openings for internships in community agencies will&#13;
be available starting January, 1977. Applications are required,&#13;
and immediate response is necessary to have applications&#13;
considered.&#13;
In addition to present Parkside students, people who have&#13;
begun but not finished college elsewhere, are over 18, have&#13;
genuine commitment to a year of community improvement&#13;
effort and have above average academic ability or usable&#13;
skills are welcome to apply.&#13;
For further information and applications, write, phone or visit&#13;
Parkside's Year for Action, University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Room 286, Tallent Hall, Kenosha, WI 53140. Phone 553-2337,&#13;
from 8:30 a.m. until 5 p.m. weekdays. &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 1976&#13;
Dear Yang,&#13;
Well, I heard through the grapevine&#13;
they've locked you up again.&#13;
I tried 10 visit you in that&#13;
psych. ward but they wouldn't let me in.&#13;
Yang, you know you can't go around these days&#13;
Just being yourself!&#13;
Take my advice; if you wanllo get out&#13;
Impersonale somebody else!&#13;
Love,&#13;
Ying&#13;
P.S. I'am sorry you didn't receive&#13;
the gift I sent through the mail.&#13;
[ wrapped It with tender loving care.&#13;
It .... SO Iragile-I wrote on all six&#13;
sides: KIss This End. It got censored.&#13;
So ['II rewrap and send again.&#13;
love,&#13;
Ying&#13;
P.A.B. Film Series&#13;
Presents:&#13;
WClCYLADY&#13;
/..'-=-5-&#13;
Starring: Llza Mlnnelli&#13;
Gene Hackman&#13;
Burt Reynolds&#13;
Friday, Dec. 3 ·7:00 p.m.&#13;
9:45 p.m.&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 5 . 7:30 p.m.&#13;
PLUS ON FRIDA Y&#13;
A SNEAK PREVIEW OF&#13;
THE ROCKY HORROR&#13;
PICTURE SHOW&#13;
Darkness into light.&#13;
The shadows of dawn at night.&#13;
Walking with tall men, and loving any lady.&#13;
Or trying 10 find one that might.&#13;
Very early in the morning, awaking in&#13;
darkness.&#13;
Alone&#13;
Choose your favorite color. in a wide&#13;
selection of black.&#13;
Are they the colors you lack?&#13;
Or were the colors never there?&#13;
Is it true, the rumor lurking amist&#13;
your friends?&#13;
I wonder who will take amiss,&#13;
or who you may offend.&#13;
I think I was a passing smile.&#13;
The light of the night.&#13;
But with everything I've said and done,&#13;
and know all that I've heard.&#13;
I often sit and wonder about the&#13;
dark side of the twenty-third.&#13;
Dennis John Peylon&#13;
dream No. 2&#13;
crisp old leaves pinned to wall&#13;
crumble dripping to wine tasting of You&#13;
and we walk&#13;
in shadow of sleepless dream&#13;
with running river night&#13;
speaking silence&#13;
snow on wind mind sky&#13;
flakes to silence words of we&#13;
and we laugh&#13;
in spiral memory day&#13;
within imagination love root&#13;
soiling stillness&#13;
jeffrey [. swenck!&#13;
rainy autumn equinox&#13;
pink flamingoes &amp; apple trees&#13;
the green bay packers&#13;
&amp; Your memory&#13;
vampire days &amp; two years&#13;
weeping&#13;
in the sand&#13;
jeffrey j, swencki&#13;
:::::::::::::~:::::~:.;::::.::::;:::~~::~:::;:~~:~:~::~:::~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~~:~:~~~:~~~~~~~:~:~~1:~:~:~:~~~~t~~~:1:~:~:~:~:~~:~:~:~:~:~:~;~:~:;:~:~:~:~:~:~:~!~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:::~:~:~:~:~:~:::~:~~~~~:~:~~::~~~:~~~~~:~~~~~~::~::~~:~:~:~:1:~:;:~:~:1:~:::~:~:~:;:~:;:;~~~&#13;
0'&#13;
SPECIAL RING PROMOTION&#13;
By Josten's&#13;
Date: &lt;VVed.,&#13;
Time: 10-2 5-7&#13;
Place: eNext to the J3ookj.to'te&#13;
in the c4£coue&#13;
* 5 Week Shipment * 5% Discount&#13;
* $1000 Deposit&#13;
Spirit eview&#13;
b,:1B&#13;
......&#13;
The musical g' urilt White (of Earth,&#13;
Wind &amp; FIre) aJMI W-.ler have surfaced&#13;
agam'. In these two~mposers we have&#13;
probably the ndl atill!: spiritual, and&#13;
catalysitic music IiII Ce....inly their rhythm&#13;
and blues success is Y e&lt;:epted.&#13;
Maruice While (iea4""ftiter, composer) of&#13;
Earth, Wind,&amp; FlI&lt;' etIlrt, e~titled SPIRIT&#13;
could be their beSl ' Their last, That's&#13;
THE WAYOF 11IEfI~ Vltna gold record and&#13;
was a Grammy Awa ) SPIRIT features&#13;
their hard driving AM~ .. ay", Like so many&#13;
of E, W, &amp; F songs, are treated or used&#13;
very precussively, .crIg&#13;
"'t slops or beats.&#13;
This is one of th8f ~rs (listen to the&#13;
Emotioos new alblJll, n) . E, W, &amp; F Play,,"&#13;
behind them 10 th\S II .&#13;
E W &amp; F \ntroduo'n01llerhit bound cut .&#13;
, , if g.. In&#13;
"Saturday Nile," re u IDe gOOdgek\own&#13;
guitar and bass work OlDdance to this .. is t er Iunk be one.&#13;
"On Your Fa:=.". as '" Y . at tyPe of'&#13;
song. "Blyou IS{e8tllt~n1Y IDslrumenlal&#13;
on the album. It', a e g, jazzy rock .&#13;
strumental, typically ~ after a somew~~;&#13;
thematic E, W,&amp; F CO features Mauri&#13;
White's virtuoSO~uld on the Kalirnba. ce&#13;
No E, W, &amp; F al ~1l1 ~ COIDpletewitho&#13;
some magical8D~~ lrn~ about lOve u~&#13;
peace, "Burnin' -- I tion" ("Multan&#13;
Y&#13;
OU will fmd peace ilI'e aU the t. lply&#13;
in IIne") Probably the most ;tlti~nd mUsiCal .&#13;
song on the album th "Earth WIsound&#13;
Fire" The lyrics ~ i' ""'temPlat;'; nd, &amp;&#13;
music' is definilely v....~ling. g and the&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 1976&#13;
Starring: Liza Minnelli&#13;
Gene Hackman&#13;
Burt Reynolds&#13;
rlday, Dec. 3 - 7:00 p.m.&#13;
9:45 p.m.&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 5 - 7:30 p.m.&#13;
PLUS ON FRIDAY&#13;
A SNEAK PREVIEW OF&#13;
THE OCKY HORROR&#13;
PICTURE SHOW&#13;
Darkness into light.&#13;
The shadows of dawn at night.&#13;
Walking with tall men, and loving any lady.&#13;
Or trying to find one that might.&#13;
Very early in the morning, awaking in&#13;
darkness.&#13;
Alone&#13;
Choose your favorite color, in a wide&#13;
selection of black.&#13;
Are they the colors you lack?&#13;
Or were the colors never there?&#13;
Is it true, the rumor lurking ainist&#13;
your friends?&#13;
I wonder who will take amiss,&#13;
or who you may offend.&#13;
I think I was a passing smile.&#13;
The light of the night.&#13;
But with everything I've said and done,&#13;
and know all that I've heard.&#13;
I often sit and wonder about the&#13;
dark side of the twenty-third.&#13;
Dennis John Peyton&#13;
dreamNo.2&#13;
crisp old leaves pinned to wall&#13;
crumble dripping to wine tasting of You&#13;
and we walk&#13;
in shadow of sleepless dream&#13;
with running river night&#13;
speaking silence&#13;
snow on wind mind sky&#13;
flakes to silence words of we&#13;
and we laugh&#13;
in spiral memory day&#13;
within imagination love root&#13;
softing stillness&#13;
Jeffrey j. swencld&#13;
rainy autumn equinox&#13;
pink flamingoes &amp; apple trees&#13;
the green bay packers&#13;
&amp; Your memory&#13;
vampire days &amp; two years&#13;
weeping&#13;
in the sand&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
SPECIAL RING PROMOTION&#13;
5&#13;
By Josten's&#13;
Date: &lt;Wed.,&#13;
Time: 10-2 5-7&#13;
Place: dVext to the !Book~totte&#13;
in the dffcoue&#13;
eek Shipment * 5% Discount&#13;
$10 Deposit&#13;
Spirit eview &#13;
•&#13;
nneui&#13;
lID&#13;
!White (of Earth,&#13;
ler have surfaced&#13;
~mposerswe have&#13;
e, spiritual, and&#13;
linly their rhythm&#13;
cepted.&#13;
nter, composer) of&#13;
rt, entitled SPIRIT&#13;
Their last, That's&#13;
n • gold record and&#13;
) SPIRIT features&#13;
fay". Like so many&#13;
re treated or used&#13;
..t stops or beats.&#13;
krs (listen to the&#13;
S. E, W, &amp; F plays,&#13;
r hit bound cut in&#13;
ne good get-down&#13;
dance to this one.&#13;
nky beat type of&#13;
, only instrumental&#13;
ng, jazzy rock inafter&#13;
a somewhat&#13;
1 features Maurice&#13;
n the Kalimba,&#13;
complete without&#13;
•ds about love and&#13;
I8tioo" ("Multiply&#13;
, all the time").&#13;
.nd musical sound&#13;
"Earth, Wind, &amp;&#13;
en&gt;plating and the&#13;
ting.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 19765&#13;
haiku&#13;
mind meanders on&#13;
lumberjack logs of rapid&#13;
swirliog&#13;
river Gone&#13;
Must tbe day's journey&#13;
take tbe whole darn day. Must life&#13;
leave life&#13;
jeffrey j. sweockl&#13;
behind,&#13;
Must cancer crush the body, decompose the&#13;
gut,&#13;
deform a woman's breast, and must&#13;
Our Being&#13;
at a moment's notice&#13;
un-Earth its grasping roots ....&#13;
must&#13;
dying never stop?&#13;
Is it foolish trying to hold on to something&#13;
thats not there?&#13;
Daniel Trevino Ramirez&#13;
Like butterflies, somelimes humans attempt&#13;
landings&#13;
on flowers that don't exist yet.&#13;
And we shed tears which crocodiles&#13;
don't understand the meaning of, but&#13;
newborn babies do, and kittens too. No bubble gum&#13;
by Larry Donnelly&#13;
Some record companies seem to be belter than&#13;
others in choosing unique, groundbreaking groups.&#13;
All record companies have to give new talent a try,&#13;
but A&amp;M records sign up more verstile groups and&#13;
has more foresight than most platter producers.&#13;
Just a limited look at their pool of musical genius&#13;
should leave you convinced of this: Peter Frarnpton,&#13;
Cat Stevens, Rick Wakeman, Supertramp, Joan&#13;
Baez, Brothers Johnson, Nils Lofgren, Shawn&#13;
Phillips, Arrnaggedon, East Head and Gray Wright&#13;
when he was with Spooky Tooth. I'll admit that&#13;
A&amp;M also has the kings of bubble gum. The Carpenters&#13;
and Captain &amp; Tennille are under contract&#13;
but the rest of A&amp;M's troup are much more&#13;
sugarless.&#13;
Frampton, Stevens, and Baez are already&#13;
superstars but there are just as many (if not more)&#13;
talented figures who stay in the non-commercial&#13;
background, Lofgren, Phillips, Gallagher, and Lyle&#13;
are these artists, as well as Gino Vannelli.&#13;
GIST OF THE GEMINI, A&amp;M SP-4596&#13;
Vannelli may be even less familiar than Lofgren,&#13;
or Phillips but the talent is there. From the striking&#13;
cover to the striking music you wonder, "Where has&#13;
this man been?" With his brother Joe and his band,&#13;
Gino has come up with some very mellow and&#13;
thought provoking music.&#13;
The vocals from Gino could be coming from the&#13;
likes of Frank Sinatra or any good, male nightclub&#13;
entertainer. Yet, his vocals blend perfectly with the&#13;
music, which reminds me of Gary Wright (little&#13;
guitar, mainly keyboard). The lyrics are moving,&#13;
driving, and meaningful. The arrangement is also&#13;
in good standing while the music escapes nicely&#13;
away from the usual commercial clatter.&#13;
Side one contains alternating light, moving, quick&#13;
tempo songs with a couple of mellow romantic cuts.&#13;
"Love of My Life", "Omens of Love", "Fly into the&#13;
.................................................................... :&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
: ArrENT/ON BUSINEU MAJORSI :&#13;
• •&#13;
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i Sponsored by PI SIGMA EPSILON i&#13;
• •&#13;
~ .&#13;
destruction of no one&#13;
a grain of Gone&#13;
remains&#13;
like voice on&#13;
the wind&#13;
touching lis'ning&#13;
mind song&#13;
singing mutely&#13;
Visage&#13;
passing always&#13;
all ways&#13;
passing always&#13;
through me&#13;
jeffrey j. swenckt&#13;
autumn evening frost&#13;
kaleidoscope darkness in&#13;
a breath of night song&#13;
hare wooded pathway&#13;
leading east of autumn day&#13;
nightly ghost of we&#13;
heavy scent of leaves. .&#13;
autumn carpet laid thick WIth&#13;
lime passing to Gone&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
So when Ispeak of love, don't laugh.&#13;
Be content to know the rain will one day&#13;
wipe out every trace we've left&#13;
upon the sand.&#13;
DaoJeI Trevino Ramirez&#13;
Night" are the personal favorites.&#13;
Side two is a concept side called "The War Suite."&#13;
Instrumentals provide good mood, giving the&#13;
listener the impact of the march, the energy, the&#13;
grief, and the sorrow of baltle. The lyrics are&#13;
slirrring and stay contained in your memory well&#13;
after the rcord is through spinning.&#13;
Gino Vannelli is an artist who will prohably never&#13;
get the recognition he deserves, but iI's always nice&#13;
to know there are the Vannellis and Phillips&#13;
around to provide music that has something more&#13;
to say other than, "Take the money and nul," or,&#13;
"shake your booty"!&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
T-SHIRT SHOP ALL TRANSFERS 50% OFF WITH THIS&#13;
COUPON THRU 12/15&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From Goers Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
m~~t. I : ROO·M CL-lll ~&#13;
:r~1~. D&#13;
I&#13;
S '" .1- II . _ . ~ .~ .If Faculty and students Will preview the spring&#13;
• view&#13;
mposers we have&#13;
, spiritual, and&#13;
inly their rhythm&#13;
epted.&#13;
·ter, composer) of&#13;
t, entitled SPIRIT&#13;
Their last, That's&#13;
a gold record and&#13;
SPIRIT features&#13;
ay". Like so many&#13;
e treated or used&#13;
rt stops or beats.&#13;
s (listen to the&#13;
. E, W, &amp; F plays_&#13;
hit bound cut in&#13;
e good get-&lt;lown&#13;
dance to this one.&#13;
Inky beat type of'&#13;
! only instrumental&#13;
ng, jazzy rock inafter&#13;
a somewhat&#13;
1 features Maurice ·&#13;
n the Kalimba.&#13;
complete without&#13;
:1ds about love and&#13;
liation" ( "Multiply&#13;
i all the time").&#13;
ind musical sound&#13;
"Earth, Wind, &amp;&#13;
.emplating and the&#13;
ting.&#13;
THE PARKStDE RANGER December 1, 1976 5&#13;
haiku&#13;
mind meanders on ,&#13;
lumberjack logs of rapid&#13;
swirling&#13;
river Gone&#13;
Must the day's journey&#13;
take the whole darn day. Must life&#13;
jeffrey j. swenckl&#13;
behind,&#13;
leave life&#13;
Must cancer crush the body, decompose the&#13;
gut, 9-3-76&#13;
deform a woman's breast and must&#13;
Our Being '&#13;
must&#13;
at a moment's notice&#13;
un-Earth its grasping roots ....&#13;
Is it foolish trying to hold on to something&#13;
thats not there?&#13;
dying never stop? Like butterflies, sometimes humans attempt&#13;
landings&#13;
Daniel Trevino Ramirez on flowers that don't exist yet.&#13;
No bubble gum&#13;
And we shed tears which crocodiles&#13;
don't understand the meaning of, but&#13;
newborn babies do, and kittens too.&#13;
So when I speak of love, don't laugh.&#13;
Be content to know the rain will one day&#13;
wipe out every trace we've left&#13;
upon the sand.&#13;
by Larry Donnelly Daniel Trevino Ramirez&#13;
Some record companies seem to be better than&#13;
others in choosing unique, groundbreaking groups.&#13;
All record companies have to give new talent a try,&#13;
but A&amp;M records sign up more verstile groups and&#13;
has more foresight than most platter producers. Night" are the personal favorites.&#13;
Side two is a concept side called "The War Suite."&#13;
Just a limited look at their pool of musical genius&#13;
should leave you convinced of this: Peter Frampton,&#13;
Cat Stevens, Rick Wakeman, Supertramp, Joan&#13;
Baez, Brothers Johnson, Nils Lofgren, Shawn&#13;
Phillips, Armaggedon, East Head and Gray Wright&#13;
when he was with Spooky Tooth. I'll admit that&#13;
A&amp;M also has the kings of bubble gum. The Carpenters&#13;
and Captain &amp; Tennille are under contract&#13;
but the rest of A&amp;M's troup are much more&#13;
sugarless.&#13;
Instrumentals provide good mood, giving the&#13;
listener the impact of the march, the energy, the&#13;
grief, and the sorrow of battle. The lyrics are&#13;
stirrring and stay contained in your memory well&#13;
after the rcord is through spinning.&#13;
Gino Vannelli is an artist who will probably never&#13;
get the recognition he deserves. but it's always nice&#13;
to know there are the annellis and Phillips&#13;
around to provide music that has something more&#13;
to say other than, ' 'Take the money and run," or,&#13;
" shake your booty"!&#13;
Frampton, Stevens, and Baez are already&#13;
superstars but there are just as many (if not more )&#13;
talented figures who stay in the non-commercial&#13;
background. Lofgren, Phillips, Gallagher, and Lyle&#13;
are these artists, as well as Gino Vannelli. PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
GIST OF THE GEMINI, A&amp;M SP-4596 THE MINI-MALL&#13;
Vannelli may be even less familiar than Lofgren,&#13;
or Phillips but the talent is there. From the striking&#13;
cover to the striking music you wonder, ' 'Where has&#13;
this man been?" With his brother Joe and his band,&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
T-SHIRT SHOP ALL TRANSFERS SO°'o OFF WITH THIS&#13;
COUPON THRU 12/15&#13;
Gino has come up with some very mellow and&#13;
thought provoking music. H~_~IA' ~ / The vocals from Gino could be coming from the&#13;
likes of Frank Sinatra or any good, male nightclub&#13;
entertainer. Yet, his vocals blend perfectly with the&#13;
music, which reminds me of Gary Wright (little&#13;
guitar, mainly keyboard). The lyrics are moving,&#13;
driving, and meaningful. The arrangement is also&#13;
in good standing while the music escapes nicely&#13;
away from the usual commercial clatter.&#13;
Side one contains alternating light, moving, quick&#13;
tempo songs with a couple of mellow romantic cuts.&#13;
"Love of My Life", "Omens of Love " , "Fly into the&#13;
• Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
destruction of no one&#13;
a grain of Gone&#13;
remains&#13;
like voice on&#13;
the wind&#13;
touching lis'ning&#13;
mind song&#13;
singing mutely&#13;
Visage&#13;
passing always&#13;
all ways&#13;
passing always&#13;
through me&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
autumn evening frost&#13;
kaleidoscope darkness in&#13;
a breath of night song&#13;
bare wooded pathway&#13;
leading east of autumn day&#13;
nightly ghost of we&#13;
heavy scent of leaves&#13;
autumn carpet laid thick with&#13;
time passing to Gone&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
• ····································································: • • •&#13;
: ArrENTION BUS/NE$$ MAJOR$/ :&#13;
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• •••••• • • • • • . • /iiilS. 1111*•• . •• • • • • • • ~W-N~\ • • -~•y •&#13;
• • • • • • • • • • • • • •&#13;
• • liiilllllMMl.111111111. ••- • • • • • 111111.iMIN!I!'-' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • L::,.~;..::::-~:...z::..£..:::::,,.~::.....~::::....~-=~..:;...-.L-.=~___;-..._.,._~ •&#13;
• • • • • • i . Sponsored by Pl SIGMA EPSILON i&#13;
• • ~ ................................................................... . &#13;
, THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1. 1976&#13;
ormone&#13;
•&#13;
contreceptioe&#13;
questioned&#13;
•&#13;
EdlI... •• Dole: MI. PeIJII Is a eoIIIIIe1or al PWmed PareDlbood ID&#13;
........ ller 1ft... 1 serle. Is IDre.po_ '" qD.. tIoDioubmlUed by&#13;
PDrUlcIo ...... 11.&#13;
by Beverly oble PeIJII&#13;
u..: Aboul a y.... and a half ago J readaboul an IUD thai was&#13;
auppoeed to work by releam. a hormone. 'Ibis device was supposed to&#13;
be available IOJtIl!tIme this year. Is this device available? U so. how&#13;
JDfe and elfecllve is II?&#13;
Alao, can a woman ~ an IUD _ a vaginal douche?&#13;
AIlIwer: The IUD you are aakIng about is not tecmically an IUD&#13;
(intr ... lertne device). The Federal Drug AdmlnisIration has ruled&#13;
lhla way beca_ It doe. not work the same .. ay as other IUDs. 'Ibis&#13;
device is etIec1lve bee.... of the hormone in II, and once the honnone&#13;
.... off, the device 1.-.a great deal of IIIetIec1lveness.&#13;
The rwne for lhla new contraceptive is "Progesllaerl". It is in the&#13;
shape of the letter "T" and contalns a tiny amount of bonnone, which&#13;
is a tiny fraction of whal you talte with birth control pills. The device is&#13;
new and hard '" find. DocI«s in other stales are using II more than&#13;
docIon here in WI$C&lt;lnSInarea at this stage in time.&#13;
There is MM concern about the lnaertIon of the device being a little&#13;
mora dlfJIcuIl (for the ""tlenl) than other JUDs. Alao. this device has&#13;
10 be replaced every year, un1IItemost IUDs. The f.... is that many&#13;
""llanta won'l setlheae replaced in time and are more likely 10 set&#13;
prepan!. Ilwlll require apedaI foUow-upby the doctor to malte sure&#13;
the ""tlenl returna every y.....&#13;
Planned Parenthood in WIaconsln is not yetlnserllng the device and&#13;
I know of no local docIon who are using II yel. I would suggest you&#13;
checIt with nearby docten and espedally with the toll free hoUine for&#13;
Iamily plannlng Information, 1ll»-24208822. '&#13;
Women IIIInC JUDs can uoe vaginal douches, but there is a lot 01&#13;
conlroveray about the need lor douching anyway. Douching upoell the&#13;
natural PII balance, which taltea care of infections and cleansing the&#13;
VI ina naturally. Weadvlae ""tlenla who douche to do so infrequently,&#13;
and to not \IDe douchea which are perfumed. Douching with a vinegar&#13;
and water mIzture is Jusl as etIec1lve as store-bought concoclIons and&#13;
it's cheaper. ConauJt with YOID' doctor or give us a call for information&#13;
on douching.&#13;
P. Women using dlsphragms sbould not douch within four hours&#13;
.tter inleTCoune.&#13;
u,sss&#13;
Ft.. PIZZI Delivery&#13;
Club Hlghvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phones 652.. 737&#13;
........... C S, nI•• 8M' 0... 4, t •.•.&#13;
:&#13;
WATCH US!!&#13;
Admiral&#13;
1r (ciao. ....... ) l00"Jr. Sohd s ....&#13;
... ·w.,color TV&#13;
IId.a. •• Itywlh, •&#13;
....,. erwo tuper o.,.nd",,* Pre&lt;&#13;
-. L ttwwBlft;.. zPlc.&#13;
t.n w. ~ ,-tryIed&#13;
MocW llCall.&#13;
SUPER SALE PRICED AT••.&#13;
Opera star to appear&#13;
Metropolitan Opera star&#13;
Roberta Peters will appear in&#13;
concert at Parkside on Thursday,&#13;
Dec. 9, at '8 p.m. in the Comrnunication&#13;
Arts Theater. The&#13;
program is part 01 Parkside's&#13;
Accent in Enrichment series.&#13;
A limited numbers 01 tickets&#13;
($7) are available at the Campus&#13;
Infonnation Center, Sears in&#13;
Kenosha and Cook-Gere and&#13;
Team Electronics in Racine.&#13;
Peters, a coloratura soprano,&#13;
made her Metropolitan Opera&#13;
debut in 1950 and since has&#13;
starred in:rl different roles at the&#13;
Metropolitan and has appeared&#13;
in the great opera houses of the&#13;
world. This season, she again is&#13;
making a tour of North America&#13;
and Europe in addition to her&#13;
appearances with the Met.&#13;
In 1972, lollowing a 15 minute&#13;
standing ovation at the Bolshoi,&#13;
she was awarded the coveted&#13;
Bolshoi Medal, the first&#13;
American-born artist to receive&#13;
the prestigious Russian Award.&#13;
Although associated in the&#13;
public mind principally with the&#13;
great classical and romantic&#13;
heroines of opera, she created the&#13;
leading role in Gi&#13;
Menotti's "The Last Sa~~&#13;
the Metropolitan production&#13;
has had works dedicated to&#13;
by such other contern&#13;
writers as Aram Klta.:'&#13;
Paul Creston and Roy HarTial~&#13;
1973.she sang the world p&#13;
of a new work by Darius&#13;
In Carnegie Hall.&#13;
She has recorded&#13;
complete operas for RCA&#13;
(Deutsche GrammPPhon)&#13;
has made more televialon&#13;
pearances than any other&#13;
star in history.&#13;
Phy. Ed. parking lot approve&#13;
Regents of the University 01&#13;
Wisconsin System approved&#13;
construction of a new 4O()..car&#13;
parking lot near the Physical&#13;
Education Building at Parkside.&#13;
The lot originally was&#13;
reconunended in a 1974 Slate&#13;
Building Commission Study&#13;
which included two other close-in&#13;
parking lots already constructed.&#13;
It is expected to ease traffic&#13;
snarls which have developed&#13;
when major public events such as&#13;
concerts, basketball games and&#13;
similar attractions are held in the&#13;
PIIy. Ed. IDdg. as well as provide&#13;
moe. converJent parking for&#13;
conunutlng students and staff&#13;
members, according to James&#13;
Galbraith, director of planning&#13;
and construction at Parkside .&#13;
Galbraith said addition of the&#13;
,&#13;
new lot also is expected to cut&#13;
over...ll costs 01 operating the&#13;
transportation system on campus&#13;
since fewer shuttle busses are&#13;
expected to be needed to carry&#13;
commuters Irom out-lying&#13;
parking areas.&#13;
Access to the lot will be&#13;
Kenosha County Hwy.&#13;
Construction Is expected to&#13;
during 1977.&#13;
Advising week schedul&#13;
Advising week will be held&#13;
December 8, 9, 10, 13, and 14.&#13;
There will be three information&#13;
stations throughout the main&#13;
campus at which students may&#13;
obtain information concerning&#13;
their faculty advisor, discipline,&#13;
and available office hours.&#13;
These stations will be located&#13;
at: I) Main level Greenquist Hall&#13;
in the conunons area. 2) W1J.C&#13;
Film of Nazi&#13;
occupation to show&#13;
Originally compiled from&#13;
sources ranging from wartime&#13;
newsreel and propaganda films&#13;
to interviews with survivors of&#13;
the occupation, the film was&#13;
intended for showing on French&#13;
television. On its completion,&#13;
however I the government&#13;
decided that the French public&#13;
was "not yet mature enough" to&#13;
see the film on TV.&#13;
When the film eventually was&#13;
shown in French movie theaters&#13;
i~caused ne~r-riots among&#13;
Viewers who sought to preserve&#13;
Smith's work is titled "Conunon&#13;
Barnyard Animals: The Cow."&#13;
SmIth also is represented by a&#13;
color intalio, "A Bend of the&#13;
Bow," in Colorprint U.S.A., a&#13;
national print exhibition sponsored&#13;
by the Texas Tech&#13;
~ ~'-",&#13;
~ccent on Enrichment presents&#13;
ROBERTA PETERS&#13;
coloratura soprano&#13;
8 P.M. DEC.9 ADM. $7'&#13;
COMM ARTS THEATER&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
~ickets at Campus Info. Center&#13;
D-Ievel at the information&#13;
and 3) WILC JIlliin'1evelln&#13;
library.&#13;
Counselors. and acllng&#13;
visors for undecided stWlIiIlal&#13;
will also be available to .&#13;
requiring their assistance.&#13;
will be stationed directly&#13;
the main entrance to the&#13;
The limes of their avau.,*~&#13;
will be posted at their stall.&#13;
the national legend of resislanle&#13;
to the Nazis which the film&#13;
largely rebuts. It subsequently&#13;
has been shown in theaters&#13;
throughout the western world to&#13;
high critical acclaim both as an&#13;
historical and a cultural&#13;
document.&#13;
An English narration voic..&#13;
over translation is provided, but&#13;
is dubbed to finish so that the&#13;
original French can also be&#13;
heard, a technique that has been&#13;
praised as particularly effectlve&#13;
in scenes featuring interviews.&#13;
University Department 01 Art, in&#13;
the Departmental Gallel')'&#13;
through Dec. 17.&#13;
Math&#13;
lecture&#13;
slated&#13;
"The Sorrow arxl the Pity,"&#13;
Marcel Ophuls' documentary&#13;
lilm on France during the Nazi&#13;
occupation, will have a free&#13;
public screening at Parkside at I&#13;
p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 2, in&#13;
Classroom Bldg 105.&#13;
The four·hQUT film, which&#13;
documents the collahoratlon of&#13;
tr- the French with their Gennan&#13;
.. captors and probes the moral&#13;
'&#13;
dilemma of an occupied. nation, is&#13;
. •• sponsored by the campus lecture&#13;
and fine arts conunittee and the&#13;
, history discipline.&#13;
Art prof. displays work&#13;
A print by Parkside art&#13;
professor Moishe SmIth Is included&#13;
in the Brooklyn Musewn's&#13;
current invitational show" "30&#13;
Years of American Printmaking,"&#13;
which incorporates the&#13;
20th National Prlnl Eshibitlon.&#13;
Prof. Walter Gautschi, a staff&#13;
member at both the University 01&#13;
Wisconsin Mathemalics&#13;
Research Center in Madison and&#13;
the Purdue University&#13;
mathematics and computer&#13;
science department, will give 8&#13;
free public lecture at UWParkside&#13;
at 3:30 p.m. on Friday,&#13;
Dec. 3 in Classroom Bldg. RoOlll&#13;
107.&#13;
His topic will be "Preventive&#13;
Computation-Avoiding Recursive&#13;
Calculations.' ,&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 1976&#13;
orrnone&#13;
• contraceptive&#13;
questioned&#13;
A&#13;
bJ Be~ rly. ble Pella&#13;
diaphragms should not douch within four hours&#13;
frH Pim Delwery&#13;
Club Hlghvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-1737&#13;
,...,.ra,I11 C~l1b1, Sp19~tftl, R1flell, Bttf&#13;
OPEN 4 p.•. let•·•·&#13;
WATCH US!!&#13;
Opera star to appear&#13;
Metropolitan Opera star&#13;
Roberta Peters will appear in&#13;
concert at Parkside on Thursday,&#13;
Dec. 9, at 8 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. The&#13;
program is part of Parkside's&#13;
Accent in Enrichment series.&#13;
A limited mnnbers of tickets&#13;
($7) are available at the Campus&#13;
Information Center, Sears in&#13;
Kenosha and Cook-Gere and&#13;
Team Electronics in Racine.&#13;
Peters, a coloratura soprano,&#13;
made her Metropolitan Opera&#13;
debut in 1950 and since has&#13;
starred in 37 different roles at the&#13;
Metropolitan and has appeared&#13;
in the great opera hou_ses of the&#13;
world. This season, she again is&#13;
making a tour of North America&#13;
and Europe in addition to her&#13;
appearances with the Met.&#13;
In 1972, following a 15 minute&#13;
standing ovation at the Bolshoi,&#13;
she was awarded the coveted&#13;
Bolshoi Medal, the first&#13;
American-born artist to receive&#13;
the prestigious Russian Award.&#13;
Although associated in the&#13;
public mind principally with the&#13;
great classical and romantic&#13;
heroines of opera, she created the&#13;
leading role in Gi&#13;
Menotti's "The Last Saan-ca&#13;
vage•• the Metropolitan production&#13;
has had works dedicated to ~&#13;
by such other contem ~ writers as Aram Khac?~&#13;
Paul Creston and Roy Harns.&#13;
1973, she sang the world prenu Ir&#13;
of a new work by Dariu., Milh~&#13;
in Carnegie Hall. -~&#13;
She has recorded lllla&#13;
complete operas for RCA and Ii&#13;
(Deutsche Grammpphon) Ille&#13;
has made more television&#13;
pearances than any other 0:&#13;
star in history. a&#13;
Phy. Ed. parking lot approved&#13;
Regents of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin System approved&#13;
construction of a new 400-&lt;!ar&#13;
parking lot near the Physical&#13;
Education Building at Parkside.&#13;
new lot also is expected to cut&#13;
over-all costs of operating the&#13;
transportation system on campus&#13;
since fewer shuttle busses are&#13;
expected to be needed to carry&#13;
commuters from out-lying&#13;
parking areas.&#13;
Access to the lot will be fl'lln&#13;
Kenosha County Hwy. J.ft&#13;
Construction is expected to ~&#13;
during 1977.&#13;
The lot originally was&#13;
recommended in a 1974 State&#13;
Building Commission Study&#13;
which included two other close-in&#13;
parking lots already constructed. Advising week scheduled&#13;
It is expected to ease traffic&#13;
snarls which have developed&#13;
when major public events such as&#13;
concerts, basketball games and&#13;
similar attractions are held in the&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg. as well as provide&#13;
moce convenient parking for&#13;
commuting students and staff&#13;
members, according to James&#13;
Galbraith, director of planning&#13;
and construction at Parkside.&#13;
Galbraith said addition of the&#13;
Advising week will be held&#13;
December 8, 9, 10, 13, and 14.&#13;
There will be three information&#13;
stations throughout the main&#13;
campus at which students may&#13;
obtain information concerning&#13;
their faculty advisor, discipline,&#13;
and available office hours.&#13;
These stations will be located&#13;
at: 1) Main level Greenquist Hall&#13;
in the commons area, 2) WLLC&#13;
Filin of Nazi&#13;
occupation to show&#13;
"The Sorrow and the Pity,"&#13;
Marcel Ophuls' documentary&#13;
film on France during the Nazi&#13;
occupation, will have a free&#13;
public screening at Parkside at 1&#13;
p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 2, in&#13;
Classroom Bldg 105.&#13;
Originally compiled from&#13;
sources ranging from wartime&#13;
newsreel and propaganda films&#13;
to interviews with survivors of&#13;
the occupation, the film was&#13;
intended for showing on French&#13;
television. On its completion,&#13;
however, the government&#13;
decided that the French public&#13;
was "not yet mature enough" to&#13;
see the film on TV.&#13;
D-level at the Information Kialk&#13;
and 3) WLLC main ·1evel in th;&#13;
library.&#13;
Counselors, and acting ad,&#13;
visors for undecided students,&#13;
will also be available to aiiycme&#13;
requiring their assistance, and&#13;
will be stationed directly west of&#13;
the main entrance to the library.&#13;
The times of their availability&#13;
will be oosted at their statioo.&#13;
the national legend of resistance .,,&#13;
to the Nazis which the film&#13;
largely rebuts. It subsequently&#13;
has been shown in theaters&#13;
throughout the western world to&#13;
high critical acclaim both as an&#13;
historical and a cultural&#13;
document.&#13;
.. ,.&#13;
The four-hour film, which&#13;
documents the collaboration of&#13;
the French with their German&#13;
captors and probes the moral&#13;
dilemma of an occupied nation, is&#13;
sponsored by the campus lecture&#13;
and fine arts committee and the&#13;
When the film eventually was&#13;
shown in French movie theaters&#13;
i~ caused near-riots amon~&#13;
vtewers who sought to preserve&#13;
An English narration voiceover&#13;
translation is provided, but&#13;
is dubbed to finish so that the&#13;
original French can also be&#13;
heard, a technique that has been&#13;
praised as particularly effective I in scenes featuring interviews history discipline.&#13;
Art prof. displays work&#13;
.. Admiral l 9ai111&#13;
$ave&#13;
$5995&#13;
Reg. s399_95&#13;
$340°0&#13;
5 YEA LI ITED WARRANTY!&#13;
SUPER SALE PRICED AT ...&#13;
A print by Parkside art&#13;
professor Moishe Smith is included&#13;
in the Brooklyn Museum's&#13;
" current invitational show. "30&#13;
Years of American Printmaking,"&#13;
which incorporates the&#13;
20th National Print Exhibition.&#13;
Smith's work is titled "Common&#13;
Barnyard Animals: The Cow."&#13;
Smith also is represented by a&#13;
color intalio, "A Bend of the&#13;
Bow," in Colorprint U.S.A., a&#13;
national print exhibition sponsored&#13;
by the Texas Tech&#13;
University Department of Art, in&#13;
the Departmental Gallery&#13;
through Dec. 17.&#13;
Math&#13;
lecture&#13;
slated&#13;
Prof. Walter Gautschi, a staff&#13;
member at both the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Mathematics&#13;
Research Center in Madison and&#13;
the Purdue University&#13;
mathematics and computer&#13;
science department, will give a&#13;
free public lecture at UWParkside&#13;
at 3:30 p.m. on Friday,&#13;
Dec. 3 in Classroom Bldg. Room&#13;
107.&#13;
His topic will be "Preventive&#13;
Computation-Avoiding Recursive&#13;
Calculations." &#13;
? PYA&#13;
• continu~ from 1)9. 1&#13;
faculty advisor and the PYA director. In addition,&#13;
they are assigned readings and are given assignments&#13;
that relate to the kind of work they do at their&#13;
agency. 'They also have classroom sesssions during&#13;
which all student involved in the program are&#13;
present.&#13;
I was invited to attend one of the classes this week&#13;
and I enjoyed the experience. After a short&#13;
discussion and an assignment in problem solving,&#13;
one of the students was asked to tell the class about&#13;
an experience she had had within the program.&#13;
Marla Hoffman, who works at Innovative Youth&#13;
Services in Racine, ahd just spent 11 days at a&#13;
therapeutic community for drug addicts. It is a&#13;
place that many addicts consider their "last&#13;
chance," and some are there because the courts&#13;
have ordered them to be there.&#13;
by Debbie Sharpe&#13;
A senior at Parkside, Mike Fieramosca was randomly selected for&#13;
this week's interview. His major is psychology, and classes this&#13;
semester include a Group Dynamics course and a Social&#13;
Disorganization class.&#13;
Mike is an employee of American Motors, first shift, and therefore&#13;
has to limit his classes to those offered at night. Previous to his employment&#13;
at American Motors, Mike attended Parkside as a full-time&#13;
student. As he says, "I kinda grew up with the school."&#13;
Photography occupies a large percentage of Mike's lime. He has&#13;
established a small studio for himself, and his business appears to be&#13;
growing. Also occupying his time is snowmobiling. As I interviewed&#13;
Mike, he said he was expecting his new snowmobile to arrive the&#13;
f&lt;ilowingday. He plans on joining a snowmobile club and riding the&#13;
. up North.&#13;
Travelis also important to Mike. "I like to travel," he said. "Me and&#13;
friend of mine did our bicentennial salute .... we went out East."&#13;
. visited Washington D.C., Valley Forge, Martha's Vineyards and&#13;
er historical sights.&#13;
Mikehas both likes and dislikes about Parkside. On the positive side&#13;
stated, "I like the commuter aspect. It's convenient and you can&#13;
. carry on an outside job."&#13;
What he doesn't like is the structure of Union Square. As Mike exined,&#13;
"The Union Square could be a really nice area, but the&#13;
acoustics are so bad. It's like being in a basement. The walls are all&#13;
cement and the floor is cement. It don't like cement."&#13;
Mike also commented on the lighting of the Union building by&#13;
saying, "I can't undersland who the hell built this school that didn't&#13;
have any knowledge of lighting. You go in there and it's all florescent&#13;
lights ... it drives me nuts. That's suppose to be a lounge, a place to&#13;
relax. You don't have florescent lights there, they're so cold and&#13;
sterile."&#13;
One-last change Mike would like to see is diversification of leisure&#13;
activities available at Parkside. Mike feels the activities aren't geared&#13;
to what he or a lot of other students would like to do.&#13;
Band presents concert&#13;
The Parkside Concert Band&#13;
conducted by Craig Kirchhoff&#13;
will present its first concert of the&#13;
season at8 p.m, on Friday, Dec.&#13;
3, in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater. The program is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Kircn.'off, in his first year&#13;
Parkside, also is assistant&#13;
director of bands at UWMilwaukee.&#13;
He previously taught&#13;
at UW -Madison where he&#13;
received his graduate degrees.&#13;
Introducing: French Pizza$1.50&#13;
EVERY MONDAY &amp;TUESDAY I&#13;
SPAGHETII FEAST&#13;
$1.95&#13;
Includes: Salad, Italian Bread and a Free Glass of Wine.&#13;
Wed. _ Thurs. 9:30 - 11:00 p.m.&#13;
Bubble Up&#13;
Mixed Drinks 60'&#13;
~;erbuis&#13;
~ourt&#13;
PUB &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
On Spring, West of 31 in&#13;
Green Ridge Plaza&#13;
632-6151&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 19767&#13;
Classical honors proposed&#13;
by Bruce Wagner added. onto their diploma. "eum&#13;
laude." Translated from Latin,&#13;
this means "with praise."&#13;
A person getting higher than 3.5&#13;
or 3.75 would receive a magna&#13;
cum Jauoe added or a summa&#13;
cum laude depending on what hisher&#13;
final GPA was.&#13;
These are classical only in the&#13;
sense that they use Latin phrases&#13;
upon the diploma.&#13;
Saffioti told the committee that&#13;
such a proposal had come before&#13;
the Faculty Senate in 1970 but&#13;
failed because of its conflict with&#13;
the Parkside catalogue.&#13;
According to the 1975-77&#13;
catalogue, there is no such&#13;
program on the Parkside campus&#13;
currently. The only section that&#13;
comes close, states that excepuonai&#13;
students may lake&#13;
advantage of accelerated&#13;
schedules, thus enabling them to&#13;
graduate earlier than the other&#13;
students.&#13;
There seemed to be a general&#13;
feeling among the few committee&#13;
members presentlhat there was&#13;
a need for more information&#13;
about the general honors&#13;
program and what types of public&#13;
recognition can be given to&#13;
students.&#13;
Once the fact-finding occurs,&#13;
the Academic PoliciesComrnittee&#13;
will take this up at a future&#13;
meeting.&#13;
There is interest in reshaping&#13;
the format of the diploma given&#13;
to graduating seniors, according&#13;
to a report given to the Academic&#13;
Policies Committee at its beief&#13;
meeting last Tuesday.&#13;
This reshaping would include&#13;
adding honors for students&#13;
surpassing a certain grade point&#13;
average (GPA). According to&#13;
Carol-Lee Saffioti, assistant&#13;
professor of English, this might&#13;
include what is now known as&#13;
•'classical tt honors.&#13;
"Classical" honors is where&#13;
students getting above a certain&#13;
GPA, such as 3.25, would have&#13;
Not only did Marla observe, she particlpated in&#13;
the activities there. "You have to get involved," she&#13;
said, and as she told her story it was clear that the&#13;
rest of the class would like to have become involved&#13;
in similar kinds of experiences related to their filed&#13;
placements.&#13;
This program mean a calendar year of full-time&#13;
commitment and the student is not allowed to work&#13;
or lake other classes while participating in PYA.&#13;
However, they receive an allowance to cover their&#13;
living expenses during the year. Many students&#13;
receive financial aid in addition to their small&#13;
allowance.&#13;
One thing that PYA needs is more interested&#13;
students. Those students who are interested in&#13;
becoming a part of the program starting In January&#13;
may contact Ms. Hamlin at Tallent Hall, Room 286.&#13;
What the others are saging.&#13;
~~~we've already&#13;
~~~~\vtCf/ .~ demonstrated.&#13;
~':Ij"'~ o&#13;
·~e fI • Better engine protection. • Increased&#13;
\.~*b~-~. fuel economy .• Better high-temperature&#13;
~~ ftl"1"s$l'"S~&#13;
performance. • Fast sub-zero starts f1;.trf: t~f"·.JP&#13;
HllfOt,-sl '..# .-,''''&#13;
• Less oil consumption. • A cleaner en- ~t...~...~~&#13;
~~; gine. • 25.000-mile oil change&#13;
C....... A .. 1I0IL AMS/OIL VB PETROLEUM LUBRICANT"&#13;
•• 8IOIL ,..... ..... .. 25.000 .....&#13;
p-&#13;
_tID • ..,- (1J tID+3OCJI'F&#13;
or one,....,&#13;
Lubratton Raf'l9tl CMnpF ...... '&#13;
QUdat60n (-I. ....IKOatty Incr .... ln 84 ,- 12.500 ....... hour by API 'eM, ...&#13;
we. (mg. wt. lea 100 Ibe for 1 hr&#13;
Wrn .. ..,.&#13;
.Q~~~&#13;
byf .. x...,) 1 t "'*8''''''&#13;
FMdttyCil ~&#13;
-~&#13;
SoIid_&#13;
voiallMy t-;' 01 ..... por.tlon @ ~&#13;
2ft, '~~7 tor 22 hrs )&#13;
,.,.&#13;
erankc.ue ,-,"petltura (meMUrad&#13;
during ttandaro running NQuencel&#13;
F\eafl point ..&#13;
-~ .-&#13;
-&#13;
Engine&#13;
Engine crank at 250 RPM&#13;
crank a12SO RPM •&#13;
0 ~&#13;
O"f 22""'_ 12 AlM'Ieconda 270 __ 70"-_ ~1[--.&#13;
·SubfeC11O usual tMnUfectunng lOIei.c.&#13;
Too good to be true? No. Because thousands of AMS/OIL users have&#13;
already experienced lhese extraordinary performance features AMS/OIL&#13;
was first to commerCially market an SAE 10W-40 synthetiC engine 011 to&#13;
meet API C1asslficaflon SE. which means AMS/OIL can be used In any&#13;
car. So while the new synthehc lubricants you see today were stili In the&#13;
test lab, AMS/OILwas In the crankcases of cars and trucks lust like yours&#13;
And when you're sahsfled, that's the final test of a lubricant&#13;
Reteil . Wholesale See your AMS/OIL dealer today!&#13;
DEALERS WANTED Mike Villers (414)-637-~&#13;
Direct Dealerships A .....ilable.&#13;
Call For Appointment. 2600 West High ~~&lt;,&#13;
No Territory Restrtctionsl&#13;
No F ranch isesl Racine, Wisc. S3404&#13;
No large Inventory or&#13;
Investment Necessery. lhe qulelleader In sgnlbellc lubrlcalloa&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 1976 7&#13;
Classical honors proposed&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
There is interest in reshaping&#13;
the format of the diploma given&#13;
to graduating seniors, according&#13;
to a report given to the Academic&#13;
Policies Committee at its brief&#13;
meeting last Tuesday.&#13;
This reshaping would include&#13;
adding honors for students&#13;
surpassing a certain grade point&#13;
average (GPA). According to&#13;
Carol-Lee Saffioti, assistant&#13;
professor of English, this might&#13;
include what is now known as&#13;
"classical" honors.&#13;
"Classical" honors is where&#13;
students getting above a certain&#13;
GPA, such as 3.25, would have&#13;
added onto th£,ir diploma, "cum&#13;
laude." Translated from Latin,&#13;
this means "with praise."&#13;
A person getting higher than 3.5&#13;
or 3.75 would receive a magna&#13;
cum la11ile added or a s1Jmm11&#13;
cwn laude depending on what hisher&#13;
final GPA was.&#13;
These are classical only in the&#13;
sense that they use Latin phrases&#13;
upon the diploma.&#13;
Saffioti told the committee that&#13;
such a proposal had come before&#13;
the Faculty Senate in 1970 but&#13;
failed because of its conflict with&#13;
the Parkside catalogue.&#13;
According to the 1975-77&#13;
catalogue, there is no such&#13;
program on the Parkside campus&#13;
1.:urrenUy. Th onl eel on that&#13;
comes clo , tates tilat exceptional&#13;
tudent ma) take&#13;
advantage of accelerated&#13;
schedule , thus enablin tilem to&#13;
graduate earlier than the otiler&#13;
student .&#13;
There med to a eneral&#13;
feeling among the fe committe&#13;
members pre nt that ther wa&#13;
a need for more information&#13;
about the general honor&#13;
program and what types of public&#13;
recognition can be given to&#13;
students.&#13;
Once tile fact-finding occurs,&#13;
the Academic Policies Committee&#13;
will take this up at a futur&#13;
meeting.&#13;
? PYA&#13;
f continued from pg 1 Not only did Marla observe, she participated in&#13;
the activities there. "You have to get involv d," sh&#13;
said, and as she told her story it cl r that u,&#13;
rest of the class ould like to have become involved&#13;
in similar kinds of experiences related to their filed&#13;
placements.&#13;
by Debbie Sharpe&#13;
A senior at Parkside, Mike Fieramosca was randomly selected for&#13;
this week's interview. His major is psychology, and classes this&#13;
semester include a Group Dynamics course and a Social&#13;
Disorganization class.&#13;
Mike is an employee of American Motors, first shift, and therefore&#13;
has to limit his classes to those offered at night. Previous to his employment&#13;
at American Motors, Mike attended Parkside as a full-time&#13;
student. As he says, "I kinda grew up with the school."&#13;
Photography occupies a large percentage of Mike's time. He has&#13;
established a small studio for himself, and his business appears to be&#13;
growing. Also occupying his time is snowmobiling. As I interviewed&#13;
Mike, he said he was expecting his new snowmobile to arrive the&#13;
following day. He plans on joining a snowmobile club and riding the&#13;
trails up North.&#13;
Travel is also important to Mike. "I like to travel," he said. "Me and&#13;
friend of mine did our bicentennial salute .... we went out East."&#13;
Mike visited Washington D.C., Valley Forge, Martha's Vineyards and&#13;
Uler historical sights.&#13;
Mike has both likes and dislikes about Parkside. On the positive side&#13;
stated, "I like the commuter aspect. It's convenient and you can&#13;
still carry on an outside job."&#13;
What he doesn't like is the structure of Union Square. As Mike explained,&#13;
"The Union Square could be a really nice area, but the&#13;
acoustics are so bad. It's like being in a basement. The walls are all&#13;
cement and the floor is cement. It don't like cement."&#13;
Mike also commented on the lighting of the Union building by&#13;
saying, "I can't understand who the hell built this school that didn't&#13;
have any knowledge of lighting. You go in there and it's all florescent&#13;
lights ... it drives me nuts. That's suppose to be a lounge, a place to&#13;
relax. You don't have florescent lights there, they're so cold and&#13;
sterile.''&#13;
One last change Mike would like to see is diversification of leisure&#13;
activities available at Parkside. Mike feels the activities aren't geared&#13;
to what he or a lot of other students would like to do.&#13;
Band presents concert&#13;
The Parkside Concert Band&#13;
conducted by Craig Kirchhoff&#13;
will present its first concert of the&#13;
season at 8 p.m. on Friday, Dec.&#13;
3, in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater. The program is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Kirch1 'Off, in his first year&#13;
Parkside, also is assistam&#13;
director of bands at UWMilwaukee.&#13;
He previously taught&#13;
at UW-Madison where he&#13;
received his graduate degrees.&#13;
Introducing: French Pizza $1.50&#13;
EVERY MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY&#13;
SPAGHETTI FEAST&#13;
$1.95&#13;
lndudes: Salad. Italian Bread and a Free Glass of Wine.&#13;
Wed. - Thurs. 9 :30 - 11 :00 p.m.&#13;
Bubble Up&#13;
Mixed Drinks 60*&#13;
On Spring, West of 31 in&#13;
Green Ridge Plaza&#13;
632-6151&#13;
~erbu's&#13;
,ourt&#13;
PU1 &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
faculty advisor and the PYA director. In addition,&#13;
they are assigned readings and are given assignments&#13;
that relate to the kind of work they do at their&#13;
agency. They also have classroom sesssions during&#13;
which all student involved in the program are&#13;
present.&#13;
I was invited to attend one of the classes this week&#13;
and I enjoyed the experience. After a short&#13;
discussion and an assignment in problem solving,&#13;
one of the students was asked to tell the class about&#13;
an experience she had had within the program.&#13;
Marla Hoffman, who works at Innovative Youth&#13;
Services in Racine, ahd just spent 11 days at a&#13;
therapeutic community for drug addicts. It is a&#13;
place that many addicts consider their "last&#13;
chance," and some are there because the courts&#13;
have ordered them to be there.&#13;
This program mean a calendar year of full-tim&#13;
commitment and the student is not allo d to work&#13;
or take otiler clas.ses while participat" in PY A.&#13;
However, they receive an allowance to cover th ir&#13;
living expen es during the year. ~any tud ts&#13;
receive financial aid in addition to their small&#13;
allowance.&#13;
One thing that PY A needs is more intere ted&#13;
students. Those students who are inte ted in&#13;
becoming a part of the program tarti in January&#13;
may contact Ms. Hamlin at Tallent Hall, Room&#13;
What the others are saging~&#13;
'f¼ ~we've already&#13;
~ t;iit''~ demonstrated.&#13;
-c...,.,,.c:J\\'-f! ,;{I e Better engine protection. e Increased&#13;
~\.'O ~-- tfl' fuel economy. • Better high-temperature ~- .,,..w"'~~ .. ~ f•'" ,.,,,. . .JiJ .,\tit:-' ~ -,4'&#13;
l ~"\.O"" \ ~ ~ ... ,&#13;
~i'(&#13;
performance. • Fast sub-zero starts.&#13;
• Less oil consumption. • A cleaner engine.&#13;
• 25,000-mile oil change&#13;
AMS/OIL VS PETROLEUM LUBRICANTLubrication&#13;
Range&#13;
Oxidation (~,. vllCOSlty Iner- n &amp;4&#13;
hour by API tN1J&#13;
w-(mg. wuoaa 800 Iba tOf 1 hr&#13;
by Falex tN1)&#13;
Fluldlty@~&#13;
Volat,hty 1•1. of evaporation 300°F&#13;
for 22 hrs l&#13;
CrankcaN temperature (~rad&#13;
during standaro running aequence)&#13;
Fluh point&#13;
Engine crank at 250 RPM O ~&#13;
Engtne crank at 250 RPM O ~&#13;
AMIJOIL , .. _.. .... I 11P 1tw-4'&#13;
1 1 mllligram,&#13;
Solldlfled&#13;
21%&#13;
12AMP~ TOAMPS--&#13;
22 AMI'S-- 270 AMP Secorldl&#13;
•subfe(:t to usual manufactur no 10le&lt;ancaa&#13;
Change AMS/ Oil&#13;
at 25,000 mll•&#13;
Of one )"Mf.&#13;
C 1191 FIiter at&#13;
12.500 mu.a.&#13;
Too good to be true? No Because thousands of AMS/OIL users a e&#13;
already experienced these extraordinary performance features AMS/Oil&#13;
was ftrst to commercially market an SAE 10W-40 synt e ,c engine 011 to&#13;
meet API Class1f1cat1on SE. which means AMS/Oil can be used in an&#13;
car So while the new synthetic lubricants you see oday were still in the&#13;
test lab. AMS/OIL was In the crankcases o cars and trucks 1ust h e yours&#13;
And when you're sat1sf1ed, that's the ,nal test of a lubricant&#13;
Retail · Wholesale See your AMS/Oil dealer today!&#13;
~~~~~1~!i:~~Ja~,?. Mike Villers . (414).:t,37-2~726 ·-·-&lt;&#13;
Call For Appointment. 2600 West High • , No Territory Restrictions!&#13;
No Franchises! Racine, Wisc. 53404&#13;
No Large Inventory or&#13;
Investment Necessary. the quiet leader In sgnthetlc lubrication &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER December I, 1976&#13;
Rangers win two&#13;
Basketball season opens&#13;
byJ .... T.aula points in Saturday's contest.&#13;
Rade Dimitrijevic's outstanding&#13;
aggressive play in the&#13;
forward spot, helped put Larry&#13;
Halverson, laCrosse's second&#13;
highest scorer, out of the game on&#13;
fouls. Halverson totalled four&#13;
fouls by the hall mark.&#13;
In addition to Scott's offensive&#13;
performance, Steve King and&#13;
Marshall Hill added 14 points&#13;
each in the Indian massacre and&#13;
Dimilrijevic had II.&#13;
Stephens also noted King's&#13;
running game on offense and Joe&#13;
Foots' guarding of Mark Murphy&#13;
against the Warhawks.&#13;
The scoring of the remainder of&#13;
the Parkside starting team was&#13;
quite even, as Chones had 15, and&#13;
King and Hill each added 14.&#13;
"I was pleased with our performances&#13;
this weekend. It said&#13;
Coach Stephens. "We played&#13;
beller than Ithought we might in&#13;
the opening of the season. We&#13;
were quite convincing."&#13;
Coach Stephens emphasized&#13;
Parkside's strong team play&#13;
from both the starters and&#13;
reserves, combine1r with the&#13;
shooting of Leartha Scott, led the&#13;
Rangers to victories over UWLaCrosse,&#13;
96-74,Friday and UWWhitewater,&#13;
103-77, Saturday, in&#13;
the season openers here.&#13;
Scott banged in 31 points,&#13;
hitting 15 of 30 shots against&#13;
LaCrosse and, although taking&#13;
fewer shots, making 12 of 23,&#13;
scored 30 points against&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens used his&#13;
bench freely both nights&#13;
without any adverse effects.&#13;
Against LaCrosse, it was&#13;
reserve guard Laurence Brown&#13;
who began Parkside's spurt at 13-&#13;
13 and built up a six point lead.&#13;
Lonnie Lewis, a freshman,&#13;
scored nine Friday and 12&#13;
Saturday on spectacular high&#13;
leaping, left-handed jump shots.&#13;
Lewis sc&lt;red the 100th and 10lst&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,OOO-mlle oil change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60'F. pour point)&#13;
• Saves 011 RICK BENTSON&#13;
YOU'AMS/OIL dee", 639-4067&#13;
the sense of team spirit the&#13;
Rangers showed. "Our bench&#13;
came in and really did a good job,&#13;
in addition to the play of our&#13;
starters. Ican't single out anyone&#13;
that didn't playa good game for&#13;
us. "&#13;
Each team showed dominating&#13;
spurts, but Whitewater could&#13;
never bring the game with within&#13;
reach, coming within 17 points.&#13;
'The wins increase Parkside's&#13;
home winning streak to 26.&#13;
Whitewater was the last team to&#13;
defeat the Rangers here, winning&#13;
89-82 in the season opener here in&#13;
1974.&#13;
The Rangers left yesterday for&#13;
a three game road trip, playing&#13;
the University of Texas-EI Paso&#13;
last night. The team will play;he&#13;
University of New Mexico&#13;
Saturday and the University of&#13;
Nebraska-Qrnaha Monday. They&#13;
will return home December 8 to&#13;
play St, Norbert.&#13;
photo by P.J. Azzollnll&#13;
__ J&#13;
Ranger relays held&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside hosted the fourth&#13;
annual Ranger Relays November&#13;
19, in which the Rangers placed&#13;
ninth of 10 teams.&#13;
UW-Whitewater won the meet&#13;
with 85 points, followed by UWMilwaukee&#13;
with 78. Carthage was&#13;
third with 75.&#13;
Both men and women competed&#13;
in the meet, which consisted&#13;
of relay events, with men&#13;
and women alternating.&#13;
Parkside was fifth in the 450&#13;
butterfly relay with a time of&#13;
5:33.914 by Judy Iverson, Bob&#13;
·&#13;
+ ,------------------&#13;
AMHEUS[R·8USCH, 11K .. ST lOUIS&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
:&#13;
!&#13;
•&#13;
:&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
: When you&#13;
•&#13;
say Budweiser., youve said it all!&#13;
~-----E. F.Ma*igraoo-----_---J&#13;
Wilburshide, Gail Olson and Rick&#13;
Kwas.&#13;
The Rangers also scored&#13;
several sixth places. Keith&#13;
Krueger, Iverson, Rick Haas and&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch had a lime of&#13;
8:58.859 in the 700 Individual&#13;
Medley. Krueger, Leitch, Dennis&#13;
Sleeves and Sue Von Behren&#13;
swam the 450 back in 5:21.292, a&#13;
lime 50 seconds faster than the&#13;
Parksidc time in last year's&#13;
meet.- Olson and Bryan Spalla&#13;
were sixth in the diving events&#13;
with 331.50 points.&#13;
Krueger, Olson, Jim Ferraro&#13;
and Sally Francis teamed up for&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
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•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
a seventh in the 400 medley and&#13;
an eighth in the 200 free was&#13;
swum by Leitch, Kwas, Ferraro&#13;
and Iverson.&#13;
•'There were some super&#13;
performances by the individuals,&#13;
said Coach Barbara Lawson.&#13;
"We had some surprises in some&#13;
of the relays. but generaDy&#13;
placed about where I had figured.&#13;
We were pleased to earn more&#13;
points than we did in last year',&#13;
Meet."&#13;
This was the last meet of !be&#13;
year for the women's team and&#13;
the first meet for the men In !be&#13;
first season as a varsity team.&#13;
Godfrey resigns&#13;
UW-Parkside athletic director&#13;
Wayne Dannehl announced that&#13;
cross-country coach Vic Godfrey&#13;
has resigned, effective Dec. 31.&#13;
Godfrey, 36, has been at&#13;
Parkside since 1969 and has&#13;
served as cross-country coach,&#13;
assistant men's and head&#13;
women's track coach and&#13;
coordinator of club sports.&#13;
He will become Coordinator of&#13;
the School Sports Program and&#13;
coach the national track and field&#13;
team in the Middle Eastern&#13;
nation of Bahrain.&#13;
"I regret losing a man of Vic's&#13;
caliber," Dannehl said. "He's&#13;
been at Parkside almost since the&#13;
beginning of the university and&#13;
has been an integral figure in the&#13;
growth and development of our&#13;
program. We wish him well in his&#13;
new position. H&#13;
Godfrey has been head crosscountry&#13;
coach at Parkside since&#13;
1972.His teams have qualified for&#13;
the NAIA national meet three&#13;
limes, finishing seventh in 1973,&#13;
15th in 1974,and 26th in the meet&#13;
here last week. His dual meet&#13;
'ecord was 36-18-1. With tracll:&#13;
coach Bob Lawson, be developed&#13;
two all-American and eight alldistrict&#13;
runners.&#13;
In track, his distance runners&#13;
have been most successful, with&#13;
Lucian Rosa and Dennis Biel&#13;
earning all-Amertca honors&#13;
among the men and Kim Merrill&#13;
winning a national marathea&#13;
championship and numerous&#13;
other honors for the women.&#13;
Merritt fourth&#13;
Kim Merritt ran fourth in the&#13;
National Collegiate Cross&#13;
Country Championship at,&#13;
Madison November 13.&#13;
She ran the three miles in&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home 01 the Submarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEtI 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington 1rIe. 634-2373&#13;
16:43, 14 seconds behind winner,&#13;
Julie Brown of California, but&#13;
only two seconds behind the&#13;
second place finisher.&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 1976&#13;
Rangers win two&#13;
Basketball season opens&#13;
b · Jean Tenu&amp;a&#13;
1de's trong team play&#13;
from both the tarters and&#13;
re rve , comb ne - with the&#13;
ting of Leartha Scott, led the&#13;
Ran to \ictories over UWLa&#13;
, 96-74, Frida) and UWter,&#13;
103-77, Saturday, in&#13;
a n openers here.&#13;
ott ban ed In 31 points,&#13;
hitting 15 of 30 shots against&#13;
Cr and, although taking&#13;
r shots, making 12 of 23,&#13;
cor d 30 point against&#13;
t ter.&#13;
ch Steve Stephens used his&#13;
b nch fre ly both nights&#13;
ithout any adverse effects.&#13;
A ain t Lacrosse, it was&#13;
r rve rd Laurence Brown&#13;
who began Parkside's purl at 13-&#13;
13 and built up a ix point lead.&#13;
points in Saturday's contest.&#13;
Rade Dimitrijevic's outstanding&#13;
aggressive play in the&#13;
forward spot, helped put Larry&#13;
Halverson, LaCrosse's second&#13;
highest scorer, out of the game on&#13;
fouls. Halverson totalled four&#13;
fouls by the half mark.&#13;
In addition to Scott's offensive&#13;
performance, Steve King and&#13;
Marshall Hill added 14 points&#13;
each in the Indian massacre and&#13;
Dimitrijevic had 11.&#13;
Stephens also noted King's&#13;
running game on offense and Joe&#13;
Foots' guarding of Mark Murphy&#13;
against the Warhawks.&#13;
Toe scoring of the remainder of&#13;
the Parkside starting team was&#13;
quite even, as Chones had 15, and&#13;
King and Hill each added 14.&#13;
the sense of team spirit the&#13;
Rangers showed. "Our bench&#13;
came in and really did a good job,&#13;
in addition to the play of our&#13;
starters. I can't single out anyone&#13;
that didn't play a good game for&#13;
us.',&#13;
Each team showed dominating&#13;
spurts, but Whitewater could&#13;
never bring the game with within&#13;
reach, coming within 17 points.&#13;
The wins increase Parkside's&#13;
home winning streak to 26.&#13;
Whitewater was the last team to&#13;
defeat the Rangers here, winning&#13;
89-82 in the season opener here in&#13;
1974.&#13;
Toe Rangers left yesterday for&#13;
a three game road trip, playing&#13;
the University of Texas-El Paso&#13;
last night. The team will play-the&#13;
University of New Mexico&#13;
Saturday and the University of&#13;
Nebraska-Omaha Monday. They&#13;
will return home December 8 to&#13;
play St. Norbert.&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
j&#13;
\&#13;
photo by P.J. Azzollna&#13;
---&#13;
Lonni Le i , a fre.mman,&#13;
scor d nine Friday and 12&#13;
turd y on spec&amp;acular high&#13;
I ping, left-handed jump shots.&#13;
Lewi red the 100th and 101st&#13;
"I was pleased with our performances&#13;
this weekend," said&#13;
Coach Stephens. "We played&#13;
better than I thought we might in&#13;
the opening of the season. We&#13;
were quite convincing."&#13;
Coach Stephens emphasized&#13;
Ranger rel;J_ys held&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,000-mlle oil change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60°F. pour point)&#13;
• saves 011 RICK BENTSON&#13;
your AMS/OIL dealer 639-4067&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside hosted the fourth&#13;
annual Ranger Relays November&#13;
19, in which the Rangers placed&#13;
ninth of 10 teams.&#13;
UW-Whitewater won the meet&#13;
with 85 points, followed by UWMilwaukee&#13;
with 78. Carthage was&#13;
third with 75.&#13;
Both men and women competed&#13;
in the meet, which consisted&#13;
of relay events, with men&#13;
and women alternating.&#13;
Parkside was fifth in the 450&#13;
butterfly relay with a time of&#13;
5:33.914 by Judy Iverson, Bob&#13;
tr--------------------,&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
:&#13;
•&#13;
••&#13;
•&#13;
:&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
:&#13;
• When you say Budweiser,youve said it all! ---------E. F. Madrigrano--------J&#13;
:&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
Wilburshide, G&amp;il Olson and Rick&#13;
Kwas.&#13;
The Rangers also scored&#13;
several sixth places. Keith&#13;
Krueger, Iverson, Rick Haas and&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch had a time of&#13;
8:58.859 in the 700 Individual&#13;
Medley. Krueger, Leitch, Dennis&#13;
steeves and Sue Von Behren&#13;
swam the 450 back in 5:21.292, a&#13;
time 50 seconds faster than the&#13;
Parkside time in last year's&#13;
meet.- Olson and Bryan Spalla&#13;
were sixth in the diving events&#13;
with 331.50 points.&#13;
Krueger, Olson, Jim Ferraro&#13;
and Sally Francis teamed up for&#13;
a seventh in the 400 medley and&#13;
an eighth in U1e 200 free was&#13;
swum by Leitch, Kwas, Ferraro&#13;
f'nd Iverson.&#13;
"There were some super&#13;
performances by the individuals,&#13;
said Coach Barbara Lawson.&#13;
"We had some surprises in some&#13;
of the relays. but generally&#13;
placed about where I had figured.&#13;
We were pleased to earn more&#13;
points than we did in last year's&#13;
Meet."&#13;
This was the last meet of the&#13;
year for the women's team and&#13;
the first meet for the men in the&#13;
first season as a varsity team.&#13;
Godfrey resigns&#13;
UW-Parkside athletic director&#13;
Wayne Dannehl announced that&#13;
cross-country coach Vic Godfrey&#13;
has resigned, effective Dec. 31.&#13;
Godfrey, 36, has been at&#13;
Parkside since 1969 and has&#13;
served as cross-country coach,&#13;
assistant men's and head&#13;
women's track coach and&#13;
coordinator of club sports .&#13;
He will become Coordinator of&#13;
the School Sports Program and&#13;
coach the national track and field&#13;
team in the Middle Eastern&#13;
nation of Bahrain.&#13;
"I regret losing a man of Vic's&#13;
caliber," Dannehl said. "He's&#13;
been at Parkside almost since the&#13;
beginning of the university and&#13;
has been an integral figure in the&#13;
growth and development of our&#13;
program. We wish him well in his&#13;
new position."&#13;
Godfrey has been head crosscountry&#13;
coach at Parkside since&#13;
1972. His teams have qualified for&#13;
the NAIA national meet three&#13;
times, finishing seventh in 1973,&#13;
15th in 1974, and 26th in the meet&#13;
here last week. His dual meet&#13;
-ecord was 36-18-1. With track&#13;
coach Bob Lawson, he developed&#13;
two all-American and eight all·&#13;
district runners .&#13;
In track, his distance runners&#13;
have been most successful, with&#13;
Lucian Rosa and Dennis Biel&#13;
earning all-America honors&#13;
among the men and Kim Merritt&#13;
winning a national marathon&#13;
championship and numerous&#13;
other honors for the women .&#13;
Merritt fourth&#13;
Kim Merritt ran fourth in the&#13;
National Collegiate Cross&#13;
Country Championship at,&#13;
Madison November 13.&#13;
She ran thP. three miles in&#13;
16:43, 14 seconds behind winner,&#13;
Julie Brown of California, but&#13;
only two seconds behind the&#13;
second place finisher .&#13;
LEE s·AUSAOE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Submarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPE11 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P .M .&#13;
2615 Washington /we. 634-2373 </text>
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              <text>Bradford inadequate&#13;
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              <text>TheParkside!-------&#13;
RANGER • Vol. V. No. 11 Wednesday, November 24, 1976&#13;
Parkside students react&#13;
Bradford&#13;
by Bob Hoffman&#13;
A group of Parkside students is currently attemPting&#13;
to replace Bradford High School, which&#13;
has been charged with being below minirnwn&#13;
educational standards, has unoffically been&#13;
described as a 'fire trap' and is inadequate to&#13;
students needs, with a new high school.&#13;
Last week Ranger sat down with Ron Parker,&#13;
chairman of the Student Conunittee for a new high&#13;
school, to discuss just what the situation is&#13;
surrounding Bradford.&#13;
First he gave the history of Bradford and of&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Bradford is divided into two main Parts: (1) the&#13;
annex, which was builtin 1890and (2) the main part&#13;
of the building which was built in 1925.&#13;
Bradford is built in the inner city of Kenosha on&#13;
3.8 acres of land with no room for expansion. The&#13;
National Education Association recommends that a&#13;
high school have 30 acres for the maximum amount&#13;
of students it holds and 1 additional acre for each&#13;
additional 100 students.&#13;
The debate about a new school has been going on&#13;
for over 50 years 'and it was in 1966 that&#13;
opened its doors. The decision to build Tremper was&#13;
mainly the result ot Bradford being put on splitshift.&#13;
Now ten years after Tremper opened up are&#13;
lhIngs any better? Parker says no. Bradford is&#13;
overcrowded, falling apart and Tremper is vastly&#13;
overcrowded.&#13;
Bradford was built for 1,800students; it now holds&#13;
1,896.Tremper was built for 2,100it now holds 2,730.&#13;
But as Parker says, the question is not only overcrowding&#13;
but also adequate facilities, and the safety&#13;
of the buildings.&#13;
The annex is unsafe. According to Parker, it has&#13;
inadequate&#13;
been unofficially stated by the Fire Department,&#13;
that if tbere was a fire in the annex the building&#13;
would be completely destroyed in a matter of&#13;
seconds.&#13;
Parker said in 1923 the fire chief indicated&#13;
if a new building was built he would condemn the&#13;
annex.&#13;
Students in the annex have been hit by falling&#13;
pieces of plaster. When it rains students are well&#13;
aware of it because it rains inside the annex.&#13;
The facilities are inadequate according to Parker.&#13;
There are no outdoor athletic facilities, students in&#13;
physical education play in the street and run around&#13;
the school. The science department has one lab that&#13;
is not fully adequate. The music department has one&#13;
room that is shared by both the choir and the orchestra,&#13;
and the band practices on the stage,&#13;
thereby robbing drama classes of their facilities.&#13;
Parker also said that the art department has no&#13;
place for students to paint except the halls and since&#13;
there is no adequate ventilation the fumes become&#13;
quite noxious and you also know quite quickly if a&#13;
science experiment didn't turn out well.&#13;
ITall this is true, (the Ranger was able to confirm&#13;
all of these conditions) then why has nothing been&#13;
done? Parker asserts it's not because of a&#13;
disagreement of the condition of Bradford but&#13;
because of the nature of the people of Kenosha. The&#13;
people of Kenosha, Parker says, are very conservative&#13;
and are quite concerned aoout the&#13;
possibility of a tax increase. Six referendums have&#13;
been defeated by big margins, referendums that&#13;
would of have given the school board approval to&#13;
build a new high school.&#13;
So the big question is.will Kenosha's taxes go up if&#13;
a new high school is built? Parker says no. The&#13;
reason {or this is that Kenosha's debt service is&#13;
tontinuN on pg. 7&#13;
Teaching positions&#13;
allocated&#13;
by John McKioskey&#13;
The new position authorizations for the 1977.78.academic year,&#13;
released this week by Chancellor Alan Guskin, mclude .four new&#13;
positions in the Communications discipline, tbe job descnptions of&#13;
which have yet to be decided, and fe,ur new positions in .the&#13;
Management SCience Division which will be put on hold until a&#13;
chairperson is hired for the division.&#13;
According to a statement released by Guskin along with his&#13;
recommendations Guskin does not approve of the present lob&#13;
descriptions for the four new communications instructors. "I am&#13;
doing this because of the APPR (Academic Planning and Program&#13;
Review Conunittee) and consultant recommendations tha~, ~&#13;
program needs to be focused, rather than all things to all people, said&#13;
G~kinsaid that he will work with Acting Vice ~ancellor John&#13;
Campbell to determine the exact nature of the.new (lOSltiO~.&#13;
The four new Management Science positiOns, mclu~ two accounting&#13;
instructors, will be placed on hold pending appomtment of a&#13;
divisional chairperson. h deoartAccording&#13;
jo Humanities chairma~ .Robert Canary, w ose. .~-&#13;
ment received a total of five new positions (~,e ~our Comm":,,,~tiOl1S&#13;
positions Ius a visiting German instructor), Given the limitation on&#13;
'\ think th~ position allocations were reasonable and fair.&#13;
resources . . . thing it wanted But the new That doesn't mean the diviston got every . . . ti' " . 'ty . mnutted to Communlca ons. positions show that the umversi IS co ., t tallin 241&gt;&#13;
Below are the 1977-78Parkside position author1Z8l1ons, 0 g&#13;
full-time positions:&#13;
posmON AUTIlORIZATlONS&#13;
Behavioral Science Division&#13;
New authorizations .' nd E nomic Development)&#13;
Anthropology _ Cultural (Migration a co&#13;
ifi Ii ld to be negotiated Psychology - spec IC e. Multi.National Corporations&#13;
Sociology ',Industrial SoCIOlogyand&#13;
confinued on pg. 3&#13;
Charges dropped&#13;
by Douglas Edenhauser&#13;
The Student Government&#13;
meeting last Wednesday night&#13;
provided a great amount of&#13;
confusion for those who came to&#13;
watch senator Mary Arnold's&#13;
impeachment trial.&#13;
Though Arnold wished the trial&#13;
to take- place in open session, a&#13;
motion intrnduced by President&#13;
Protempore Dan Nielsen and&#13;
passed by the senate was made to&#13;
close the proceedings.&#13;
Nielsen indicated that Robert's&#13;
Rules of Order (parliamentary&#13;
procedure) required that such a&#13;
trial be held in executive session.&#13;
In rebuttal to areuments that&#13;
this would be in violation of&#13;
WisconsinJs Open Meetings Law I&#13;
Nielsen replied that according to&#13;
definitions within this law, "We&#13;
(Student Government) are not a&#13;
governmental body."&#13;
After a short recess Nielsen&#13;
introduced a motion to hold the&#13;
trial in open session which was&#13;
passed unanimously by the&#13;
senate.&#13;
Less than an hour after the&#13;
start of tbe trial, alter a few&#13;
questions and a litUe discussion&#13;
for the most part between Dan&#13;
Nielsen, speaking for the Senate,&#13;
and Kat NaD, speaking on behalf&#13;
0( Mary Arnold, the charges were&#13;
dropped, in the best interests of&#13;
the senate.&#13;
A motion was then made by&#13;
Nielsen requesting Arnold's&#13;
resignation. The motion failed.&#13;
According to some students,&#13;
the feeling was that this matter&#13;
should not have taken up so much&#13;
0( the Senate's time.&#13;
PLATO teaches&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
"It doesn't sound like Star&#13;
Trek," said Dr. Donald Bitzer of&#13;
the University of Illinois.&#13;
Bitzer was referring to the&#13;
voice capability of the PLATO&#13;
computer based educational&#13;
system, which was brought to&#13;
Parks ide last Friday for&#13;
demonstration before approximately&#13;
150 students,&#13;
faculty, and staff.&#13;
According to Bitzer, computerhased&#13;
education (CBE) is where&#13;
"human and computer get&#13;
together and if either one learns&#13;
something, that's CBE."&#13;
The tenninaJ that was brought&#13;
to Parkside is part of the fourth&#13;
system-variation on the original&#13;
PLATO computer which served&#13;
just the Illinois campus. But with&#13;
each improvement on the&#13;
system, it has been built up to the&#13;
point wbere a single channel can&#13;
connect tbe system with 1,000&#13;
users at one time.&#13;
It is possible for studentsfaculty&#13;
using the system have&#13;
access to approximately 16,000&#13;
hours of lesson materials with&#13;
more and more being created all&#13;
over the world each week.&#13;
A typical PLATO terminal&#13;
contains the following: a&#13;
typewriter keyse!, which transmits&#13;
the request or data to the&#13;
computer, and a plasma display&#13;
which can simultaneously show&#13;
computer-generated graphic&#13;
information and computerselected&#13;
photographic color&#13;
slides to the user, plus a speaker&#13;
for voice-audio playbacks.&#13;
NAJA ChampiolUlhiptl were run at Parkaide laot weekend. [see otory page 81&#13;
The Parkside-------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
• Vol. V. No.&#13;
Parkside students react&#13;
Bradford&#13;
by Bob Hoffman&#13;
A group of Parkside students is currently attempting&#13;
to replace Bradford High School, which&#13;
has been charged with being below minimwn&#13;
educational standards, has unoffically been&#13;
described as a 'fire trap' and is inadequate to&#13;
students needs, with a new high school.&#13;
Last week Ranger sat down with Ron Parker,&#13;
chairman of the Student Committee for a new high&#13;
school, to discuss just what the situation is&#13;
surrounding Bradford.&#13;
First he gave the history of Bradford and of&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Bradford is divided into two main parts: (1) the&#13;
annex, which was built in 1890 and (2) the main part&#13;
of the building which was built in 1925.&#13;
Bradford is built in the inner city of Kenosha on&#13;
3.6 acres of land with no room for expansion. The&#13;
National Education Association recommends that a&#13;
high school have 30 acres for the maximlJ!ll amount&#13;
of students it holds and 1 additional acre for each&#13;
additional 100 students.&#13;
The debate about a new school has been going on&#13;
for over 50 years and it was in 1966 that&#13;
opened its doors. The decision to build Tremper was&#13;
mainly the result of Bradford being put on splitshift.&#13;
&#13;
Now ten years after Tremper opened up are&#13;
things any better? Parker says no. Bradford is&#13;
overcrowded, falling apart and Tremper is vastly&#13;
overcrowded.&#13;
Bradford was built for 1,800 students; it now holds&#13;
1,895. Tremper was built for 2,100 it now holds 2,730.&#13;
But as Parker says, the question is not only overcrowding&#13;
but also adequate facilities, and the safety&#13;
of the buildings.&#13;
The annex is unsafe. According to Parker, it has&#13;
11 Wednesday, November 24, 1976&#13;
inadequate&#13;
been unofficially stated by the Fire Department,&#13;
that if there was a fire in the annex the building&#13;
would be completely destroyed in a matter of&#13;
seconds.&#13;
Parker said in 1923 the fire chief indicated&#13;
if a new building was built he would condemn the&#13;
annex.&#13;
students in the annex have been hit by falling&#13;
pieces of plaster. When it rains students are well&#13;
aware of it because it rains inside the annex.&#13;
The facilities are inadequate according to Parker.&#13;
There are no outdoor athletic facilities, students in&#13;
physical education play in the street and run around&#13;
the school. The science department has one lab that&#13;
is not fully adequate. The music department has one&#13;
room that is shared by both the choir and the orchestra,&#13;
and the band practices on the stage,&#13;
thereby robbing drama classes of their facilities.&#13;
Parker also said that the art department has no&#13;
place for students to paint except the halls and since&#13;
there is no adequate ventilation the fumes become&#13;
quite noxious and you also know quite quickly if a&#13;
science experiment didn't turn out well.&#13;
If all this is true, ( the Ranger was able to confirm&#13;
all of these conditions) then why has nothing been&#13;
done? Parker asserts it's not because of a&#13;
disagreement of the condition of Bradford but&#13;
because of the nature of the people of Kenosha. The&#13;
people of Keuosha, Parker says, are very conservative&#13;
and are quite concerned abOut the&#13;
possibility of a tax increase. Six referendums have&#13;
been defeated by big margins, referendums that&#13;
would of have given the school board approval to&#13;
build a new high school.&#13;
So the big question is will Kenosha's taxes go up if&#13;
a new high school is built? Parker says no. The&#13;
reason for this is that Kenosha's debt service is&#13;
coot,nued on pg 7&#13;
Teaching positions&#13;
allocated&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
The new position authorizations for the 197?-78_ academic year,&#13;
released this week by Chancellor Alan Guskin, include _fo~ new&#13;
positions in the Communications discipline, the job d~~pti_ons of&#13;
which have yet to be decided, and fc ur new positions in . the&#13;
Management &amp;ience Division which will be put on hold until a&#13;
chairperson is hired for the division. . .&#13;
According to a statement released by Guskin along with ?is&#13;
recommendations Guskin does not approve of the present Job&#13;
descriptions for the four new communications instructors. "I am&#13;
doing this because of the APPR (Academic Planning and Program&#13;
Review Committee) and consultant recommendations tha!, o~&#13;
program needs to be focused, rather than all things to all people, said&#13;
Guskin. . v· Ch en John G kin "d th t he will work with Acting ice anc or us sm a ·ti&#13;
Campbell to determine the exact nature of ~e_new J&gt;:OSi o~. two ac&#13;
The four new Management Science pOS1tions, inclu~ •&#13;
counting instructors, will be placed on hold pending appointment of a&#13;
divisional chairperson. h d tAccording&#13;
to Humanities chairman Robert Canary' w ose . ep_ar&#13;
ment received a total of five new_ positions (~.~~our ~i.:~:0~ 0~~&#13;
positions plus a visiting German instructor), iven bl d f . I think the position allocations were reasona e an arr. resources erythin ·t anted But the new That doesn't mean the division got ev g i w · . ti ,, . ·ty · committed to Commumca ons. positions show that the Umversi 15• • • • t tallin 24¼&#13;
Below are the 1977-78 Parkside position authorizations, o g&#13;
full-time positions:&#13;
POSfflON AUTHORIZATIONS&#13;
Behavioral Science Division&#13;
New authorizations . . d E mic Development) Anthropology - Cultural (Migration an cono&#13;
if. r· Id to be negotiated Psychology - spec ic ie M lti N tional Corporations Sociology • Industrial Sociology and u • a&#13;
continued on pg 3&#13;
Charges dropped&#13;
by Douglas Edenhau er&#13;
The Student Government&#13;
meeting last Wednesday night&#13;
provided a great amount of&#13;
confusion for those who came to&#13;
watch Senator Mary Arnold's&#13;
impeachment trial.&#13;
Though Arnold wished the trial&#13;
to talce- place in open session, a&#13;
motion introduced by President&#13;
Protempore Dan Nielsen and&#13;
passed by the Senate was made to&#13;
close the proceedings.&#13;
Nielsen indicated that Robert's&#13;
Rules of Order ( parliamentary&#13;
procedure) required that such a&#13;
trial be held in executive session.&#13;
In rebuttal to arlZUillents that&#13;
this would be in violation of&#13;
Wisconsin's Open Meetings Law,&#13;
Nielsen replied that according to&#13;
definitions within this law, "We&#13;
(Student Government) are not a&#13;
governmental body."&#13;
After a short recess , 'iel n&#13;
introduced a motfon to hold th&#13;
trial in open ·on which wa&#13;
pa ed unanimously by the&#13;
Senate.&#13;
Less than an hour af r th&#13;
start of the tr al, after a few&#13;
questions and a little d" ion&#13;
for the most part between Dan&#13;
Nielsen, speaking for the Senat ,&#13;
and Kai all, peaking on behalf&#13;
of Mary Arnold, the charge re&#13;
dropped, in the best interests or&#13;
the Senate.&#13;
A motion wa then made by&#13;
Niel en reque ting Arnold'&#13;
resignation. The motion failed,&#13;
According to some tuden ,&#13;
the feeling was that this matter&#13;
should not have taken up so much&#13;
of the Senate' time.&#13;
PLATO teaches&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
"It doesn't sound like Star&#13;
Trek," said Dr. Donald Bitzer or&#13;
the University of Illinois.&#13;
Bitzer was referring to the&#13;
voice capability of the PLATO&#13;
computer based educational&#13;
system, which was brought to&#13;
Parkside last Friday for&#13;
demonstration before approximately&#13;
150 students,&#13;
faculty, and staff.&#13;
According to Bitzer, computerbased&#13;
education (CBE) is where&#13;
"human and computer get&#13;
together and if either one learns&#13;
something, that's CBE."&#13;
The terminal that was brought&#13;
to Parkside is part of the fourth&#13;
system-variation on the original&#13;
PLATO computer which rved&#13;
just the Illinois campus. But rtth&#13;
each improvement on the&#13;
system, it ha been built up to the&#13;
point where a ingle channel can&#13;
connect the system ith 1,000&#13;
users at one ti.me.&#13;
It is possible for tudentsfaculty&#13;
using the ystem have&#13;
access to approximately 16,000&#13;
hours of lesson materials with&#13;
more and mor being er ated all&#13;
over the world each ee .&#13;
A typical PLATO terminal&#13;
contains the follo in : a&#13;
typewriter key t ·hich transmits&#13;
the reque t or data to the&#13;
computer, and a plasma d' pla ·&#13;
which can imultaneously show&#13;
computer-gen rated graphic&#13;
information and computerselected&#13;
photographic color&#13;
slides to the us r, plus k r&#13;
for voice-audio pl yb ck .&#13;
contm on pg :, &#13;
2 THE PARKSIOE RANGER November 24. 1976&#13;
~'RAi'II:;E~&#13;
---EDITOR IAL/OPINION&#13;
\&#13;
POLITICAL FORUM&#13;
'Crouse effect' influenced elections&#13;
by IlAlben J.... m....&#13;
A pbenomellOD wblcb I sbBII call !be Crouse effect Influenced Ibis&#13;
,...'. eIedIoc1. 'IbIa Influence cosl both Foreland Carter voles. These&#13;
_ didn't go III McCartb.J or Maddcm. or any oUIer C8Dd1d8te-lbey&#13;
aImpIy alllyed home.&#13;
To retreab your momory. 'I1motby Crouae wrote 11le Do,. .. lbe&#13;
.. an aa:ount 01 cMDP"lgn Journallam tbat w.. thorougb1y studied&#13;
.., vlrluaIIy any reporter do\mlng .. y degree of compeleocy. CerlalnIy&#13;
1IU .. book II DOtaoIeIy responaIIlIe for ''Dew joumaIlam."&#13;
Howev ... It beal ricuIalea the reapollldblHlieII, !be conceMlS. and the&#13;
form 01 "new joornaJIam." Hence. my cbrialeIlIng It the Crouae effect.&#13;
10 bla ,"",",,1Iy .-ring cbrooIde 01 lbo pn!lIII cowrlng the 1972&#13;
prealdentlal ....mpetgn. Crouse both detIoed !be gOllia and metbods of&#13;
modem reportIag wblle polnllng out !be aborlcomIoga oIlbo okktyle&#13;
reporlIDg.&#13;
At _ lime covering • campaign conalaled 01 tr.vellng wilb a&#13;
........,.... ..-clIng bandoula pc ovlded by the candldate·s pn!lIII&#13;
IIlfttary. and fU1llll"formula storl." wilb lbo editor back home. A&#13;
formu1a alory conlained • sborl deacrlpUon 01 !be C8Dd1date·s • .,.&#13;
lIv\lIs for !be day. bla location, !be nlllllber 01 people tbat came to see&#13;
b!m, and !be wea!ber. No elforl _ made to IlIlcover unsavory&#13;
",,_Ign pnctic:ea, and !be candidate w. laken prell)' much for bla&#13;
word. eedIesa to .y. 1IU provided for ralber ~Idal reporlIDg.&#13;
'IbIa all becan to cbange wilb lbo rise and eJection of Jobo F. KenneelY&#13;
(accordlog III Crouael. Bv 19110. presldenUal ""mpalgn coverage&#13;
~'t cbanged mucb from wbatlt bad been In the 3O·s.40·... and 50's&#13;
(lbouib planes b.d replaced trains).&#13;
Bowus. lbere _ • MW Ireed of joumaUst around, collegeeducated.&#13;
CDI.f1dellt.and comfortable wilb abstract concepts. The&#13;
advent of lids new breed bappened to colndde wilb a new president&#13;
9Iict toempllalhlze wilb Ibis sort 01 Joumalisl. At the same time. Ted&#13;
sc.ren.n's book TIle MUlq 01. PresIdent, bad just been released, bit&#13;
lbo best seIler's Uat and aIIIyed lbere for 52 weeks.&#13;
The "new breed" of journalists. lbe David Broders. Ben Bradlees.&#13;
Bob ovaks, weren't satisfied wllb formula .torIes. They analy-red&#13;
poUllca, poUtidanll, and institutions. and In so doing. revolutionized&#13;
!be poIIlIca1 news AmerIcans were reading. Not overnigbt, but slowly,&#13;
~Iy. lbo manner In wblcb news was ga!bered and Interpreted was&#13;
cbangIng.&#13;
'IbIa In-&lt;leplb. analytical reporting whicb perbap. approached Its&#13;
zenllb In !be 1976 election coverage doesn't necessarily tip the elecloraI&#13;
scaJea llMard any one candidate. Indeed, its effect can't be&#13;
o&#13;
mea~~ruy~d. •&#13;
Roughly 55percent of the nation 's eligible voters trekked to the polls&#13;
on November 2. Apathy was at an all time high-in fact even the&#13;
meager turnout exceeded the forecasts of most pollsters. Considering&#13;
it wa. an extremely close election. and lbe wealber was remarkably&#13;
good across lbe country. !be question to be raised is: Why did 45&#13;
percent of the electorate stay bome?&#13;
In 1m wilb McGovern projected to lose by anywbere between 20&#13;
and 30 percent (he lost by 23 percent). 55.6 percent of those eligible to&#13;
vote cast their ballot on Nov. 7. In 1968. 60.6 percent of lbose eligible&#13;
voted. In 1960 it was 64 percent.&#13;
-In eacb election year the press coverage was better, the analysis&#13;
more pragmatic, lbe candidates more eXposed. lbe voter turnout less.&#13;
The most common ellPlanation for voter disinterest blames the&#13;
candidates (neilber candidate is of sufficient sta~ Le. lbey're bolb&#13;
"just pollUcans").&#13;
'IbIa pre-&lt;lUJlp0se8 blatant charcter deficiencies existent In current&#13;
candidates butnol In previous presidentJalaspirants. Carter and Ford&#13;
certainly bave lbeir share of faults. Some people undoubtedly would&#13;
ascribe to one man or !be olber even more !ban bla .bare of defeclB.&#13;
But I don·t beUeve that eilber man is obviously leSs perfect !banthose&#13;
who've come before him. Compare Jimmy Carter to McGovern.&#13;
Humphrey. Johnson. or Kennedy - Jerry Ford to Nixon or Qoldwater.&#13;
AU of these men frequently evaded lbe lasues. occasionally changed&#13;
tbeir minds. even made a mistake once In a wbile.&#13;
The difference Ues In lbe fact that earlier candidates were not as&#13;
lborougbly exposed by the press as were Carter and Ford.&#13;
Eisenbower. It wa. rumored by lbe White House press corpe. never&#13;
read anytblng but Zane Grey we.terns. Kennedy frequently charmed&#13;
bla way lbrough press conferences - avoiding answer. to tough&#13;
questions. Many reporter. bad good reason to believe Johnson was not&#13;
entirely In touch wllb reaUty In lbe last year of his term In office. Yet&#13;
lbese doubts. discoverle •• were not mentioned mucb less explained by&#13;
the media.&#13;
This i. not..to say lbat joum'lists are wrong In dwelling on !be&#13;
candidates' sbortcomings, or eX81.linlng lbe meretricious aspects of a&#13;
campaign. It is wrong tbougb. to submit a man to Ibis lborough an&#13;
examination and then expect him to fare as well In a comparison to&#13;
lbose less rigorously Investigated. .&#13;
Perhap.lbe price we pay for accurate.lborougb, news reporting is a&#13;
disillusioned. even cynical electorate. But I lbink lbe benefits lIIat&#13;
accrue from such reporting (In lbeform of a more alert, aware, better&#13;
Informed voter), outweigh lbe cost •.&#13;
'Rules' for editorial writing listed&#13;
by PbIl Her1IWID&#13;
Writing an editorial can be fun; If you follow certain rules lIIat olber&#13;
newapapers use. like the Racine Journal. The Olicago TrIbune and !be&#13;
ew York nmes. not to mention !be SboreIine \.eader. People who&#13;
write editorials are usually seIf-rigbleolll. InteUectual assbole. wbo&#13;
read • lot. Parkside students, now you too. can write editorials for&#13;
!un and profit; If you follow these simple rules:&#13;
1) PICK A BfG NAME: Use as a subject, some big name; poUticians&#13;
sucbas Mayor Daley. Jimmy Carter or Jerry Forel are good material.&#13;
These are names lIIat are all so well known lIIat people will read your&#13;
stuff and enjoy It no matter wbatyou say.&#13;
2) DO 'TUSE FACTS: Facts only make people IlIlcomfortable, use&#13;
nmor,lnnuendoand Ubelto pul you r point across. Most of the people&#13;
who read your sluff won't know wbat!be hell you're talking about -&#13;
anyway, so wby bore them.&#13;
3) AVOIDSEXUAL TOPiCS: Wbat.would your motb .... and falb ....&#13;
say If you wrote a dirty editorial for your newspaper' keep it clean&#13;
kids' "&#13;
4) USE BIG WORDS: Y011 can easily impress your friends wllb a&#13;
few lour syllable words and your parents wIIllhank God lIIat you got&#13;
your POllllacrws without saying DUty tbIngs like "sbIt" and "damn."&#13;
U It works for Howard ColIell, it can work lor you.&#13;
51 NEVER, AT ANY TIME. ADMIT TIiAT YOU ARE WRONG!:&#13;
'IbIa Is !be most Important rule for an editorial writer, I mean, If&#13;
you're wrong who can you trust. Politicians. teacbers. cbancellors and&#13;
parenlB get .... y with it, wby can't your? You couJd screw up a&#13;
triWant career.&#13;
I) CRI11C1ZE: obody wants to read a non&lt;ritlcal editorial; they&#13;
Ire bortng as beU.QiUdze rel1glon. politic •• leacbers. scbooJsnr even&#13;
your ne!lbhor'. sexual habits. anylldng! 'IbIa will immediately show&#13;
people lbey-abouIdn'tlalk to you because you're pessimisllc.&#13;
7) PICK SAFE SUBJECI'S: Talk about all tho. ., In," oil! lIS lIIat&#13;
Merv and JobnIIy la1k .bout. PolItics, sez, religion, stay away from&#13;
lbIngs like baIIn&amp; ...... you have .t 1easl one black friend you can&#13;
paIDllo and say, "Hell, _ 01 my best friends are ..... "&#13;
II. TAKE IT. WHILE YOU CAN GET IT: Once you aIIIrt writing&#13;
U- _Is 01 .Hdoom you wlllloee most 01 your friends, so enjoy it&#13;
..... you can. U __ offen you. job on !be Ranger or K-Town&#13;
News. take the money and run. be bappy.&#13;
Well, folks.lbat just about cover. it; If you follow lbese .imple rules&#13;
~ou will not .tray from the straigbt and narrow palb of editorial&#13;
Journalism. U you don·t feel Uke getting your rocks off writing, try&#13;
.tudent government, lbese rule. apply there as well.&#13;
Black's firing fought&#13;
To lbe Editor:&#13;
I don't know bow many&#13;
.tudents realize lbat Barriet&#13;
Barker, a former Secretary has&#13;
been fired. You may read'lbis&#13;
and lbink that is not somelblng&#13;
?'It of.the onIInary, but I think It&#13;
IS. 'Ibis case is being fougbt by a&#13;
~ber of people, including lbe&#13;
World Organization whose&#13;
faculty advisor is Mr. Att":ell We&#13;
want the .tudents here 10 k~ow&#13;
what·. going on and get involved&#13;
So many .tudents wouldn't hav~&#13;
time unW it happened to lbem&#13;
By !be way. Miss Barker just&#13;
,&#13;
happens to be a black WOm81l.&#13;
You see, we are trying to&#13;
pressure lbe minorities we have.&#13;
The Third World as an&#13;
organization would appreciate it&#13;
very much if you would inform&#13;
the students and .taff that do not&#13;
read lbe Ranger. If anybody&#13;
wants to get Involved, lbey can&#13;
get in toucb wilb lbe Third World&#13;
or lbey can inquire at lbe information&#13;
Kiosk on the 0.1 level&#13;
outside lbe library.&#13;
CorneUu. Gordon&#13;
Member of the&#13;
Third World Organization&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 2.4, 1976&#13;
--EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
0 TIC L FORUM&#13;
'Crouse effect' influenced elections •&#13;
by Robert J. J mbo&#13;
non hich I shall call the Crouse effect influenced this&#13;
on. 1bis influence cost both Ford and Carter votes. These&#13;
didn't o to cCarthy or addox, or any other candidate - they&#13;
y yed home.&#13;
To ~ ur memory, 'nmothy Q-ouse wrote 'Ibe Boys on the&#13;
.N',,unt of campaign journalism that was thoroughly studied&#13;
by virtuall n reporter claiming any degree of competency. Ceron&#13;
book not solely responsible for "ne journalism."&#13;
H , t culates the responsibilities, the concerns, and the&#13;
form of "ne journalism." Hence, my christening it the Crouse effect.&#13;
In frequenUy ring ehronlcle of the pres., covering the 1972&#13;
~aKJ11:ntial campaign, Crouse both defined the goals and met.hom of&#13;
reporting while pointing out the shortcomings of the old~le&#13;
reporting. t time covering a campaign conmted of traveling with a&#13;
cai~late, ding handouts provided by the candidate's press&#13;
tary, and filing ''formula stories" with the editor back home. A&#13;
formula contained a short description of the candidate's acti&#13;
for the da)', his location, the number of people that came to see&#13;
him and the ther. ·o effort was made to uncover WlS8Vory&#13;
\,ilj,,..,.16n practi , and the candidate was taken pretty much for his&#13;
ord. Nflll!dle!IS to say, this provided for rather superficial reporting.&#13;
This all began to change with the rise and election of John F. Kennedy&#13;
(according to Crouse). Bv 1960, presidential campaign coverage&#13;
hadn't chaoSed much from what it had been in the 30's, 40's, and 50's&#13;
(thou h planes had replaced trains).&#13;
H er, thett was a new lreed of journalist around, collegeucated,&#13;
confident, and comfortable with abstract concepts. The&#13;
ad ent of this new breed happened to coincide with a new president&#13;
qui to emphathlze with this sort of journalist. At the same time, Ted&#13;
rensen's book The Mating of a President, had just been released. hit&#13;
the t seller's list and stayed there for 52 weeks.&#13;
"new breed" of journalists, the David Broders, Ben Bradlees,&#13;
Bob •ov ks. weren't satisfied with formula stories. They analyzed&#13;
po , politicians, and institutions, and in so doing, revolutionized&#13;
the political news Americans were reading. Not overnight, but slowly,&#13;
ly: the manner in which news was gathered and interpreted was&#13;
This -&lt;iepth, analytical reporting which perhaps approached its&#13;
th in the 1976 election coverage doesn't necessarily tip the electoral&#13;
l toward any one candidate. Indeed. its effect can't be&#13;
measured--Only surmised.&#13;
Roughly 55 percent of the nation's eligible voters trekked to the polls&#13;
on November 2. Apathy was at an all time high-in fact even the&#13;
meager turnout exceeded the forecasts of most pollsters. Considering&#13;
it was an extremely close election, and the weather was remarkably&#13;
good across the country, the question to be raised is: Why did 45&#13;
percent of the electorate stay home?&#13;
In 197? with McGovern projected to lose by anywhere between 20&#13;
and 30 percent (he lost by 23 percent), 55.6 percent of those eligible to&#13;
vote cast their ballot on Nov. 7. In 1968, 60.6 percent of those eligible&#13;
voted. In 1960 it was 64 percent.&#13;
In each election year the press coverage was better, the analysis&#13;
more pragmatic, the candidates more exposed, the voter turnout less.&#13;
The most common explanation for voter disinterest blames the&#13;
candidates (neither candidate is of sufficient stature i.e. they're both&#13;
"just pollticans").&#13;
This pre~poses blatant charcter deficiencies existent in current&#13;
candidates but not in previous presidential aspirants. Carter and Ford&#13;
certainly have their share of faults. Some people undoubtedly would&#13;
ascribe to one man or the other even more than his share of defects.&#13;
But I don't believe that either man is obviously less perfect than those&#13;
who've come before him. Compare Jimmy Carter to McGovern,&#13;
Humphrey, Johnson, or Kennedy - Jerry Ford to Nixon or Goldwater.&#13;
All of these men frequently evaded the issues, occasionally changed&#13;
their minds, even made a mistake once in a while.&#13;
The difference lies in the fact that earlier candidates were not as&#13;
thoroughly exposed by the press as were Carter and Ford.&#13;
Eisenhower, it was rumored by the White House press corps, never&#13;
read anything but Zane Grey westerns. Kennedy frequently charmed&#13;
his way through press conferences - avoiding answers to tough&#13;
questions. Many reporters had good reason to believe Johnson was not&#13;
entirely in touch with reality in the last year of his term in office. Yet&#13;
these doubts, discoveries, were not mentioned much less explained by&#13;
the media.&#13;
This is not. to say that journ.,.lists are wrong in dwelling on the&#13;
candidates' shortcomings, or exai.lining the meretricious aspects of a&#13;
campaign. It is wrong though, to submit a man to this thorough an&#13;
examination and then expect him to fare as well in a comparison to&#13;
those less rigorously investigated.&#13;
Perhaps the price we pay for accurate, thorough, news reporting is a&#13;
disillusioned, even cynical electorate. But I think the benefits that&#13;
accrue from such reporting ( in the form of a more alert, aware, better&#13;
informed voter), outweigh the costs.&#13;
'Rules' for edi!orial writing listed&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
ditorial can be fun; if you follow certain rules that other&#13;
• like th Racine Journal, The Cllicago Tribune and the&#13;
, no to mention the Shoreline Leader. People who&#13;
usually self.;ighteous, intellectual assholes who&#13;
de udents, n you too, can write editorials for&#13;
p it; lf you follow these simple rules:&#13;
A BIG ' !E: U a a ubject, some big name; politicians&#13;
Jor Daley, Jimmy Carter or Jerry Ford are good material.&#13;
re that are all so ell known that people will read your&#13;
enjoy it no matter hat you say.&#13;
2) 00 'TU FACTS: Facts only make people lmcomfortable use&#13;
lnll1Uer1do nd ll l to put your point across. Most of the pe~ple&#13;
r d our uff l kn at the hell you're talking about - , hy re them.&#13;
3) VOID EXUAL TOPICS: What.would your mothers and fathers&#13;
! } rro dirty editorial for your ne spaper; keep it clean,&#13;
OROS: You can sily impre your friends with a&#13;
. and your parents will thank God that you got&#13;
thout ying nasty things like " shit" and "damn."&#13;
rd Co it can or for you.&#13;
lY TIME, ADMIT TIIAT YOU ARE WRONG!:&#13;
Important rul for an editorial writer, I mean, if&#13;
oc you trust. Politicians, teachers, chancellors and&#13;
Y th i , y can't your? You could screw up a&#13;
News, take the money and run, be happy.&#13;
Well_, folks, that just about covers it; if you follow these simple rules&#13;
~ou ~ not stray from the straight and narrow path of editorial&#13;
Journalism. If you don't feel like getting your rocks off writing, try&#13;
student government, these rules apply there as well.&#13;
Black's firing fought&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I don't know how many&#13;
students realize that Harriet&#13;
Barker' a former Secretary ha&#13;
be r· ' s en ~ed. You ma}' read this&#13;
and think that is not something&#13;
~ut of_the ordinary, but I think it&#13;
lS. ThlS case is being fought by a&#13;
n~ber of people, including the&#13;
Third World Organization whose&#13;
faculty advisor is Mr. Att~ell We&#13;
want, the _students here to k~ow&#13;
what s gomg on and get involved&#13;
~ many students wouldn't ha · time til . ve&#13;
un it happened to th By th em.&#13;
e way, Miss Barker just&#13;
happens to be a black woman.&#13;
You see, we are trying to&#13;
pressure the minorities we have.&#13;
The Third World as an&#13;
organization would appreciate it&#13;
very much if you would inform&#13;
the students and staff that do not&#13;
read the Ranger. If anybody&#13;
wan_ts to get involved, they can&#13;
get m touch with the Third World&#13;
or they can inquire at the Information&#13;
Kiosk on the D-1 level&#13;
outside the library.&#13;
Cornelius Gordon&#13;
Member of the&#13;
Third World Organization &#13;
Benefits&#13;
raised&#13;
On october 15,Congress passed&#13;
a new veterans education bill.&#13;
SolD" of the main points of in-&#13;
""",st to eligible veterans and&#13;
dependents are ltsted below: •&#13;
I. An 8 percent increase in&#13;
IIICllIlbIy benefits for veterans&#13;
and dependents was made effective&#13;
OCtober I, 1978.&#13;
2. MaJdmwn entitlement for&#13;
veterans and dependents was&#13;
iJIcJ'eUed from 36 to 45 months.&#13;
'Ibis increase is not limited to&#13;
pursuit of a stanjlard undergraduate&#13;
college degree as&#13;
was the previous 9 month ex-&#13;
..,tion.,&#13;
, .&#13;
3. There bas been no extention&#13;
of Ibe delimiting date.&#13;
'4. G.I. Bill benefits in their&#13;
present form will be e1iminated&#13;
fer Ibose persons entering service&#13;
after December 31, 1976. A&#13;
WIWltary, contribUtory program&#13;
Involving matching funds will be&#13;
substituted. The government will&#13;
contribute $2.00 for every dollar&#13;
peld into Ibe fund _by the serv1ceperson.&#13;
If you have any questions on&#13;
the above, contact Tim Jatczak in&#13;
Tallent Hall, room 115 or call 553-&#13;
2444.&#13;
S1~:11£ECONOMYIS6ETTlN6WORSE.&#13;
WHAT DO&#13;
YOU Pl-AN&#13;
~~TOOO&#13;
ABOUT IT?&#13;
"&#13;
THE P~RKSIDE RANGER&#13;
Position ellocetions-;__=,",",~"~l---- Education Dlvlalon&#13;
New authorizatiollB&#13;
Mathematics and Science Education (converted fnm B~ and&#13;
Elementary Education Methods continuing authoriution)&#13;
Physical Education (authorization to be withheld pending dlscussion&#13;
of appropraite type of position and funding source)&#13;
Humaalties Division&#13;
New authorizatiollB&#13;
Communication - Media&#13;
Comniunication - Basic Speech Communication&#13;
Communication - Public Address and Business and ProfellSional&#13;
Communication&#13;
Communication - Interpersonal and Public Communication (two of&#13;
these positions to be lenure track, including one senior, and two&#13;
visiting or one year appointments)&#13;
(Note: APPR recommends a specially l'flIIStituled.recruiting commillee&#13;
for the Communication positions)&#13;
German (visiting or one year appointment)&#13;
Science Division&#13;
New authorizatiollB&#13;
Industrial and Environmental Hygiene (placed OIl bold, pending&#13;
Regent approval for implementation - the position will be ullUzed for&#13;
1977-78, to support a Lecturer in Mathematics, with specific reference&#13;
to introductory and basic sIti1\s courses and coordination;&#13;
Mathematics - Stallslics&#13;
Medical Technology (specific pattern for fI1ling this position to be&#13;
discussed with Med Tech Administrative Committee)&#13;
Physics - Solid Slate, APplied Quantum Optics&#13;
Soctal Science Dlvislou&#13;
New anthorizatiollB&#13;
Economics - Public Finance, Urban, Regional, Principlw&#13;
Economics - Managerial, Public Utilities, Transponauon, Principles&#13;
History- Description to be specified&#13;
Political Science - Local Government Education, Public Policy (50&#13;
percent UW-Extension - annual appointment)&#13;
FIne Arts Dlvtslon&#13;
New authorizatiollB&#13;
Dramatic Arts&#13;
Management Science Division&#13;
New authorizatiollS&#13;
Accounting&#13;
LOVE AND COMPASHUN.&#13;
WHEN AWM PRES'bEN1;&#13;
AH'LL GET&#13;
MOREF~'5&#13;
'N' f'I6URE8.&#13;
'/&#13;
BUlj U,I;!(;SIRYuu&#13;
ARE&#13;
P\ti.51DENT.&#13;
'"&#13;
r-----------------;;;~~~~;;R~~·---l&#13;
I WISHES EVERYONE A HRPPY THANKSGIVING I&#13;
WITH A I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
--j&#13;
TURKEY&#13;
DINNER&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 24&#13;
ROAST TOm TURKEY WITH ALL THE&#13;
TRimmiNGS INCLUDIN~ SAVORY&#13;
DRESSING, WHIPPED POTATOES,&#13;
VEGETABLE, CRANBERRY SAUCE AND&#13;
YOUR CHOICE OF FRESH PumPKIN&#13;
OR APPLE PiE ••••••••.•••••• ••••••••••••·&#13;
A REGULAR ~2.95 VALUE&#13;
ONLY ~1.7Q&#13;
November :u. 1976 3&#13;
Accounting&#13;
~titative&#13;
Quantitative&#13;
(1bese four positiona placed on hold, poIICIq Dppainlment of D&#13;
chalrpenon)&#13;
MMagement.-PenIonneI (50 percent position - joint ~lment wtlb&#13;
Labor Economics- description to be specified)&#13;
ubor Ec_ DIvIaIa.&#13;
New ... th__ tIo..&#13;
ubor Economics and Business Manqement (50 permnl p*tIon _&#13;
joint appointment witb B..u- fUugement • de8crIpIIon IIIbe&#13;
speciIIed)&#13;
EnciDeerUlc Sde..,e DIYtalo.&#13;
New DUth__ tIo.&#13;
Mechanical and MDnufDcturing Engineering TeCMOICIIY&#13;
~ ~ The Part&lt;sidB ~&#13;
RANGER&#13;
,...P,..-.... ........ .,............... ......... Ny .... u..............&#13;
.,. .... to........... -- .. ............................. Wi"c... ".· ... 'I1"... ... .,. Ie.et,. "ar1I~ ................ ~.."&#13;
,............. til .-..riM -. c ....... 0.1.1.... ...,.•..•• r.-... --....- IOtTOR-I .. -eHI.": ......... ~&#13;
aUSINns MAN.OI:U e.tlily IIruIl&#13;
ADYEtYIS" .. MAM••••. T.. c...,.&#13;
MIWS ~OI".TO«' arwa w.....&#13;
OE""aTMENTS,&#13;
... 11Iistr ........ "-Mc .... J-. Mete ......&#13;
F"EAYUR. EOtTOII. ~ .......&#13;
S~.TS lEDITOt• .,I ... T.....&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS •...,.,. I...-cIIl .........&#13;
CO'",. EDITOR, J ..... u-.r&#13;
"MOTO EDITOR, v .. TMM~&#13;
C'aCULAnON IM~ ......&#13;
STAFF: WftMIy Md_. T.....i 0 • .,..... .................. CJwM c........ ~ ..........&#13;
0.11,.. C.,IMft, OWII., IE............ _,.., Kay 0ttMft". Larrr ~, J&#13;
Ram-. Madlwt... J.M ........ ltM1" ,...... L. .... K......... K.,. uP...... ..,.&#13;
TnMlrunt. ken ....... rd. ","I, l L,vi",.,... ~ IN ..... I-&#13;
•&#13;
Ft. PIZZI '''If&#13;
Club Hlghvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone. 652.. 737&#13;
..... lilWI.. C S, , ....... ..,&#13;
ON•• ' I •.•.&#13;
'Tear after year, semester&#13;
I after semester, the&#13;
CollegeMaster from&#13;
Fideli~ Union Life ha&#13;
been tile most accepted,&#13;
most popular plan on&#13;
campuses all over America.&#13;
Find out why.&#13;
Call the Fidelity UniOD&#13;
CoU~eMaster&#13;
Field Associate&#13;
•m your area:&#13;
Unda Truax 552-9131&#13;
Tom Cotner 632-4758&#13;
Benefits&#13;
raised&#13;
On October 15, Congress passed&#13;
new veterans education bill.&#13;
~me of the main points of interest&#13;
to eligible veterans and&#13;
dependents are listed below:&#13;
1_ An 8 percent increase in&#13;
monthly benefits for veterans&#13;
and dependents was made effective&#13;
October 1, 1976.&#13;
2. Maximwn entitlement for&#13;
veterans and dependents was&#13;
inere&amp;sed from 36 to 45 months.&#13;
1bis increase is not limited to&#13;
pursuit of a stanpard undergraduate&#13;
college degree as&#13;
was the previous 9 month ex-&#13;
·~tion.,&#13;
3. There has been no extention&#13;
of the delimiting date.&#13;
4. G.I. Bill benefits in their&#13;
p-esent form will be eliminated&#13;
foc those persons entering service&#13;
after December 31, 1976. A&#13;
voluntary, contributory program&#13;
involving matching funds will be&#13;
substituted. 'The government will&#13;
contribute $2.00 for every dollar&#13;
paid into the fund by the serviceperson.&#13;
&#13;
H you have any questions on&#13;
the above, contact Tim J atczak in&#13;
Tallent Hall, room 115 or call 553-&#13;
2444.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 2-', 1976 3&#13;
Education&#13;
Position&#13;
Division&#13;
allocations-canl_-,-,ompg-1 ----&#13;
New authorizations&#13;
Mathematics and Science Education ( converted from Bilingual and&#13;
El~entary Education Methods continuing authorization)&#13;
Physical Education (authorization to be withheld pending discussion&#13;
of appropraite type of position and funding source)&#13;
Humanities Division&#13;
New authorizations&#13;
Communication - Media&#13;
Communication - Basic Speech Communication&#13;
Communication - Public Address and Business and Professional&#13;
Communication&#13;
Communication - Interpersonal and Public Communication (two of&#13;
these positions to be tenure track, including one senior, and two&#13;
visiting or one year appointments)&#13;
(Note: APPR recommends a specially ('()QStituted-recruiting committee&#13;
for the Communication positions)&#13;
German (visiting or one year appointment)&#13;
Science Division&#13;
New authorizations&#13;
Industrial and Environmental Hygiene (placed on hold, pending&#13;
Regent approval for implementation - the position will be utilized far&#13;
1977-78, to support a Lecturer in Mathematics, with specific reference&#13;
to introductol'y and basic skills courses and coordination;&#13;
Mathematics - Statistics&#13;
Medical Technology (specific pattern for filling this position to be&#13;
discussed with Med Tech Administrative Committee)&#13;
Physics - Solid State, Applied Quantum Optics&#13;
Social Science Division&#13;
New authorizations&#13;
Economics - Public Finance, Urban, Regional, Principlw&#13;
Economics - Managerial, Public Utilities, Transpori.auon, Principles&#13;
History- Description to be specified&#13;
Political Science - Local Government Education, Public Policy (50&#13;
percent UW-Extension - annual appointment)&#13;
Fine Arts Divtston&#13;
New authorizations&#13;
Dramatic Arts&#13;
Management Science Division&#13;
New authorizations&#13;
Accounting&#13;
l-OVE AND COMPASHUN .. WHEN AH'M PRES'DENl; AH'LL GET, MORE FAC S&#13;
'N' f'ISURE.8.&#13;
/&#13;
Accounting&#13;
Quantitabve&#13;
Quantitative&#13;
( These four positions placed on hold pending appointment of a&#13;
chairperson)&#13;
Management-Personnel ( 50 percent position - joint appointment with&#13;
Labor Economics- description to be specified)&#13;
Labor Economics Dlv oo&#13;
. e authorlzatio&#13;
Labor Economics and Busin Management (50 percent po tion -&#13;
joint appointment with Bllml Managem t - desaiplion to be&#13;
specified)&#13;
Engineering Science DlvWon&#13;
Ne authorizatiom&#13;
Mechanical and Manufacturing Eng neerln Technol&#13;
! IT/ The Parkside&#13;
~rr ..&#13;
RANGER&#13;
TIM,..,..,_·-II w,-tn.t, aM ... -&#13;
Wucefts•ft&#13;
lty ltle .,...,.... - - u enlty .. · l"•rlr.11de w • ar• 1elely&#13;
,_. e fw ts e411twial Cy a!HI&#13;
c •• , •• , o,," •• , •••r••••• .,. ...,&#13;
--· ,, ,,__., .... -...... "" -&#13;
,..,,.,._ ·-· fec:wlty - -lfllotr•- .. l•twlal - _._., SU ntl r&#13;
tEOITOlt,IN,CHIIF: JHflfl SI-a&#13;
IUSINtESS MANAGEltS Ca!lly lni&amp;k&#13;
AOVEltTISING .MANAGElt '-• C- IIEWS COOltOINATOlt : lrvce w ..... OE,.AltTMENTS :&#13;
• Adfflo ,stra,_,-.i cies J-.Mcltleney&#13;
FEATUltE EOITOlt: -· la ..... Sl'OltTS EOITOlt JHII T a&#13;
.. _w.2m&#13;
VISAGE EOITOltS 1.ttro I, sw..,c;k I II la •&#13;
COPY EOITOlt• Jlll,e Laa ..&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR• VU T mpClltCULATION&#13;
Sue Mar~ret N&#13;
STAFF• w_, lier, Terri Oayt,art. R- Heftma CM. c, ........ TIM .....&#13;
o,1ne&#13;
Ramona&#13;
car1-.&#13;
Mallltt&#13;
0oltt • Ede , . Mary ltay Otlmer. Larry °""" y, "11 I Herma&#13;
, loll Jambols, •• r1y P , L Ilda lt1u,111 Karlll LaF__,., JNy&#13;
Trvdrunt, Scott R · ard, P II L L ntstot1, o.11111 Sharpe&#13;
A •&#13;
FrH Pizza Dehery&#13;
Club Hlghvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
111 C~l1b1, S••1~tltl. Rlfltll, IHI&#13;
OPEN 4 •·•· II 1 a.a.&#13;
'-learafter~ear._ n1 ter&#13;
Iaftersen1 ter th&#13;
College a ter f ron1&#13;
Fidelit) nion ifi ha&#13;
been the n10 t accept mo t popular plan on . campu all o,er m nca.&#13;
Find out, h . ~&#13;
Call the idelit) College1 a ter&#13;
Field ociate a&#13;
m ) our area:&#13;
• n1on&#13;
Linda Truax 552-9131&#13;
Tom Cotner 632-4 758 &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 24, 1976&#13;
Part I&#13;
Students' sex questions answere~.&#13;
Edh«', N.: MI. p.u. II a c_1« at PIaDDed PweDlIIood III&#13;
KeIMIIIa. Her pre_I aerie, II la fft1lO- lDqaeallolll nbmllled by&#13;
ParbIde ..... ta.&#13;
by Beverly Noble p.u.&#13;
Orpsm was lbe maiD ...... of concern for one husband who&#13;
ieaponded to my last article. lle&lt;ause he asked several questions I&#13;
wouJdllb to dbc:usa, I will answer lbese in next week's Ranger; along&#13;
with a question on a new "IUD". Here are questions received from two&#13;
olber people.&#13;
Qanu.: "It's long bee.. held, in male chauvenlsl dreles, that a&#13;
woman Is solely responslble for gelling pregnant (barring rape).Does&#13;
not !be recent Supreme Court decision, allowing women to have&#13;
abortlons wllb&lt;lut !be consent of their husbands, reinlotce this altitude?&#13;
The rationale for both is that women should have control (and&#13;
presumably, (esponsIblIlty) over lbeir own bodies."&#13;
MY ANSWER: f believe lbere are major differences' ,tween these&#13;
t.Ma. If !be rationale Is that women should have control and couldn't&#13;
responsIbl1Ity over lbeIr own bodies, then these same people must&#13;
__ that malesshouJd NOT or CAN NOT. That is, that they have&#13;
U- uncontroUable urges and that lbey don't use condoms because&#13;
"It doesn't feel good" with them on. It doesn't matter whether or not&#13;
the """",n feels good wltIl the method she is using. And of course no&#13;
woman has lhnse same uncontrollable urges! Heaven forbid we m1gbt&#13;
hav a lot of n}'lJlllh&lt;xlrunning around!&#13;
ThIs altitude places a very large burden on the woman. After all, she&#13;
Is the one who gels pregnant (Ignoring !be fact that men &lt;an he held to&#13;
peyq c:bIId support and may be asked to pay for an abortion or&#13;
delivery &lt;barges).&#13;
Isee the Supreme Court decision as a rlab!' not a resnonsibillty. It&#13;
ys that when a man has that uncontroUable urge, and the woman&#13;
rou\dn'l control her urge either, and gol pregnanl; that she has the&#13;
Ji&amp;bl, not the responsIbillty, to control her own body. It may be a&#13;
responsible decision, and she may choose to involve her husband or&#13;
~er.&#13;
Instead of placing the burden upon her, we have allowed her to&#13;
chooee who shall bear the burden. ThIs Is a choice she might nol have&#13;
hen deddlng whelber or nolto use birth cootrol.&#13;
Perhaps U- same male chauvinist circles felt that since they&#13;
don't wanllo use birth control themselves, they had beller offer the&#13;
WlIlIlllna way out, without being able to control them.&#13;
Fortunately, there are a 101of men who don't hold this sl1Iyattitude&#13;
towards using contraception. These same men would probably want to&#13;
be a part of the decision related to abortion, but would probably not&#13;
feel that she sould be forced to gel their consent.&#13;
Qanliell: "I wanl to 10 on the pill, bul I don'l wanl to go to my&#13;
doctor because I) he', my molber's doctor, 100, and 2) be's a good&#13;
neighbor of ours. Can I go to some cUnic for an examination and to get&#13;
the pill and be sure no one will know? How much does it cost to go on&#13;
the pill?"&#13;
Answ~r: Both Planned Parenthood of Kenosha and Family Planning&#13;
of Racine provide confidential medicallreatmeI't for birth control (as&#13;
do many private doctors). At both clinics, lOur records ~ confidential&#13;
and no one &lt;an even be told if you've ever been there WIthout&#13;
your consent. .&#13;
Both cUnics are staffed by local MD's and family planning nurse&#13;
practitioners, as well as R.N.s, Social Workers, and ot~r staff.&#13;
The fees are based on abl1lly to pay and no one IS ever refused&#13;
services because of a lack of lunds. For a student making less than $50&#13;
a week, it would be approximately $2 for the complete gynecological&#13;
check-up, $2 for the Pap smear ' test for cervical cancer, and $1 for&#13;
each. package of pills.&#13;
ADdfurtbennore: "Is it true that after you've been on the pill, it's&#13;
harder and more dangerous to become pregnant when you want to?&#13;
Does the pill harm your body? How does it 'fool' your hody into&#13;
thinking it's pregnant?"&#13;
Answer: Many doctors recommend that after going off.the pill, you&#13;
should wait until you've had Ihree normal periods before you try to get&#13;
pregnant. The main concern is withhan increased chance of&#13;
miscarriage. Your uterus may not be ready for a pregnancy so soon&#13;
after laking the pill.&#13;
As for problems in conceiving, it's difficult to say, because for m st&#13;
women, we don't know what their fertillty was like before going on the&#13;
pill. I've seen statistics saying that one out of every len married&#13;
couples will be unable to conceive. Another percent will have dilficulties&#13;
in trying to conceive .. (This is not irelated' to any past usage&#13;
of birth control).&#13;
You can't say a woman has fertility problems because of the pill&#13;
unless you know for sure she had no fertility problems before being on&#13;
the pill. Pregnancy and. normal delivery also increase your chances&#13;
of being infertile.&#13;
There are always some risks involved in using any birth control'&#13;
methods. It seems that the more effective the method is, the more&#13;
risks there are with it. The less effective methods carry a higher risk&#13;
of pregnancy. Itis imporlant to study all the methods and weigh these&#13;
factors against how badly you do not want to become pregnant. At both&#13;
clinic you would see a demonstration of all methods where ri,*s and&#13;
side effects are discussed hefore you decide.&#13;
The hormone level, when you are on the pill, is similar to when you&#13;
are pregn:mt and it is believ~ that this prevents you from producing&#13;
an egg. ItIS this pregnancy-like hormohe level that also may give you&#13;
some of the symptoms of pregnancy when you first slart on the birth&#13;
control pill. •&#13;
The Ranger Box Is stl1l at the Informallon Kiosk in lower Main&#13;
Place, You may leave quesllons anonymously or signed,&#13;
Why do some people think&#13;
Budis sort of special?&#13;
Go ahead and find out why'&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make a di1Ference.)&#13;
-&#13;
Internships&#13;
open&#13;
The Public Service Inlernshi&#13;
Program (PSIP) at Parkside ~&#13;
spring semester openings for&#13;
stud:nts who. wish to _earn&#13;
political science credit as interns&#13;
In local, state and national&#13;
. governmental agencies.&#13;
PSIP is a separate program&#13;
from Parkside's University Year&#13;
for Action program, a new&#13;
federally. fun?ed internship&#13;
program In which 30 University&#13;
ot' Wisconsin-Parkside students&#13;
MIl "';1m "'&lt;;ademic credit while&#13;
interning WIth community anti.&#13;
poverty agencies during the 1976-&#13;
77 academic year.&#13;
\'SIP was begun the 1976spring&#13;
. semester and already 55 students&#13;
hav~ participated in Ihe&#13;
program.&#13;
PSIP students have worked for&#13;
Senator Nelson, Rep. Lea Aspin&#13;
the City of Kenosha, Racin~&#13;
Police Department, Kenoshs&#13;
Police Departmenl, Racine&#13;
County Planner, Racine County&#13;
Public Defenders Office, Racine&#13;
County Juvenile County, Racine&#13;
Clerk of Courts, and many other&#13;
public and private agencies.&#13;
Three students will Intern&#13;
during the semester in&#13;
Washington, D.C., in Congress,&#13;
the State Department and with&#13;
the Ralph Nader public irterest&#13;
research group.&#13;
Students may enroll for three to&#13;
twelve credits for their internship&#13;
work.&#13;
person's interested in PSIP&#13;
internships can contact Dr.&#13;
Pernacciaro at Greenquist 313or&#13;
they can pick up an application&#13;
form L~Classroom 367.They can&#13;
call for further information aboul&#13;
the program at 553-2316,&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,OOO-mlle 011change)&#13;
: ~ases SUb-zero starts (-60'F. pour point)&#13;
aves 011 RICK BENTSON&#13;
your AMSIOIL dee/er -639-4067&#13;
When you say Budweiser., you've said it alII&#13;
A.~HEUSH1:'BUSCH. INC • 5T lOUIS&#13;
E.F. lIalkigrano&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 2-4, 1976&#13;
Part I&#13;
Students: sex questions answere~&#13;
Internships&#13;
open&#13;
ote: . Pella is a coamelor at Plauned Parenthood in&#13;
ha. Her present rte is in re poase to questions submitted by&#13;
had uta.&#13;
by Beverly oble Pella&#13;
the pill and be sure no one will know? How much does it cost to go on&#13;
the pill?" . . Answer: Both Planned Parenthood of Kenosha and Family Planning&#13;
of Racine provide confidential medical tr_e~tmePt for birth control ( as&#13;
do many private doctors). At both clinics, 1our records ar~ confidential&#13;
and no one can even be told if you've ever been there wtthout&#13;
your co~nt. . . Both clinics are staffed by local MD's and family planrung nurse&#13;
practitioners, as well as R.N .s, Social Workers, and ot~r staff.&#13;
The fees are based on ability to pay and no one lS ever refused&#13;
services because of a lack of funds. For a student making less than $50&#13;
a week, it would be approximately $2 for the complete gynecological&#13;
check-up, $2 for the Pap Smear· test for cervical cancer, and $1 for&#13;
each package of pills.&#13;
And furthermore: "Is it true that after you've been on the pill, it's&#13;
harder and more dangerous to become pregnant when you want to?&#13;
Does the pill harm your body? How does it 'fool' your body into&#13;
thinking it's pregnant?"&#13;
Answer: Many doctors recommend that after going off the pill, you&#13;
should wait until you've had three normal periods before you try to get&#13;
pregnant. The main concern is wiU1han increased chance of&#13;
miscarriage. Your uterus may not be ready for a pregnancy so soon&#13;
after taking the pill.&#13;
As for problems in conceiving, it's difficult to say, because for m st&#13;
women, we don't know what their fertility was like before going on the&#13;
pill. I've seen statistics saying that one out of every ten married&#13;
couples will be unable to conceive. Another percent will have difficulties&#13;
in trying to conceive .. (This is not 1related1 to any past usage&#13;
of birth control).&#13;
You can't say a woman has fertility problems because of the pill&#13;
unless you know for sure she had no fertility problems before being on&#13;
the pill. Pregnancy and a normal delivery also increase your chances&#13;
of being infertile.&#13;
There are always some risks involved in using any birth control&#13;
methods. It seems that the more effective the method is, the more&#13;
risks there are with it. The less effective methods carry a higher risk&#13;
of pregnancy. It is important to study all the methods and weigh these&#13;
factors against how badly you do not want to become pregnant. At both&#13;
clinic you would see a demonstration of all methods where risks and&#13;
side effects are discussed before you decide.&#13;
The hormone level, when you are on the pill, is similar to when you&#13;
are pregn~t ~ it is believ~ that this prevents you from producing&#13;
an egg. It is this pregnancy-like hormone level that also may give you&#13;
some of the symptoms of pregnancy when you first start on the birth&#13;
control pill.&#13;
The Public Service Internshi&#13;
Program (PSIP) at Parkside hap . s&#13;
spring semester openings f&#13;
stu_d_ents _who . wish to _ea~&#13;
!&gt;°litical science credit as interns&#13;
m local, state and national&#13;
governmental agencies.&#13;
PSIP is ? separate program&#13;
from Parkside's University Yea&#13;
for Action program, a ne;&#13;
federally_ fun~ed internship&#13;
progr~m m_ which 30 University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside students&#13;
~ill ~rn a~demic credit while&#13;
mternmg with community antipoverty&#13;
agencies during the 19'76-&#13;
77 academic year.&#13;
l'SIP was begun the 1976 spring&#13;
semester and already 55 students&#13;
have participated in the&#13;
program.&#13;
PSIP students have worked for&#13;
Senator Nelson, Rep. Les Aspin&#13;
the City of Kenosha, Racin~&#13;
Police Department, Kenosha&#13;
Police Department, Racine&#13;
Coun_ty Planner, Racine County&#13;
Public Defenders Office, Racine&#13;
County Juvenile County, Racine&#13;
Clerk of Courts, and many other&#13;
public and private agencies.&#13;
Three students will intern&#13;
during the semester in&#13;
Washington, D.C., in Congress,&#13;
the State Department and with&#13;
the Ralph Nader public irterest&#13;
research group.&#13;
Students may enroll for three to&#13;
twelve credits for their internship&#13;
work.&#13;
The Ranger Box is still at the Information Kiosk in lower Main&#13;
Place. You may leave questions anonymously or signed. ~==~--~-----------_;_ _ _,:_ Why do sonie people think&#13;
Person's interested in PSIP&#13;
internships can contact Dr.&#13;
Pernacciaro at Greenquist 313 or&#13;
they can pick up an application&#13;
form L'l Classroom 367. They can&#13;
call for further information about&#13;
the program at 553-2316.&#13;
Bud. is sort of special?&#13;
o d n find out why!&#13;
(Br ·in beer right d&#13;
m k diffi en .)&#13;
en ou ay Budweiser, you've said it all! A HEUSER-BUSCH I ·c • ST l OUIS&#13;
E.F. Madrigrano&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,000-mile oil change)&#13;
: :ases sub-zero starts (-60°F. pour point)&#13;
aves 011 RICK BENTSON&#13;
your AMS/ O/L dealer 639_4067 &#13;
Foreign students&#13;
sample U.S.&#13;
by Debbie Sharpe&#13;
A comparatively new group of four students have,&#13;
f... the past four months, sampled the living' and&#13;
cultural styles of American living.&#13;
'!bey are Singurlaug Lovdahl, Birgttta Tunestarn,&#13;
Anette Sclunidt and Erich Heinback, foreign exchalIlle&#13;
students visiting the United States for a one&#13;
year stay. t\/lette and Erich represent Germany;&#13;
Birgitta, Sweden and Sigurlaug's homeland is&#13;
Iceland.&#13;
staying with "host families," these exchange&#13;
students all undertake volunteer-type jobs within&#13;
the surrounding community and attend one or two&#13;
c\aSSeSat Parsside. The only learning difficulties&#13;
they have encountered are the natural difficulties of&#13;
fully adapting to a different language in the understanding&#13;
of some terms referred to by their&#13;
II'lfessors or those in text. Aside from this, all four&#13;
exchange students agree their classes pose no&#13;
special problems for them, and believe our college&#13;
system in the United States to be less demanding&#13;
and a degree easier than those in their homelands.&#13;
1be experience of being an exchange student has,&#13;
in most respects, been positive. It is because of&#13;
these feelings that the exchange students wish for&#13;
others to become involved in similar programs. "I&#13;
wish everybody could go for a year to another&#13;
coontry," Birgitta explained.&#13;
'!be organization which sponsors theno is the&#13;
International Christian Youth Exchange. Along&#13;
with the obvious benefits of being a foreign exchange&#13;
student are the anticipated sacrifices an&#13;
individoal must make. "Money is a weak point in&#13;
the exchange program," Erich confided, since the&#13;
exchange students are given a $10.00 alotment per&#13;
week to live on. Their shelter and food costs are&#13;
assumed by their host families, yet the $10.00 figure&#13;
doesn't allow any careless spending.&#13;
Transportation for the exchange students also&#13;
creates a problem. They must primarily rely upon&#13;
their "host families" for privileges to borrow the&#13;
family car. "We are very dependent on other&#13;
people," Birgitta pointed out. They are eager to see&#13;
m.... of Parkside and the surrounding community,&#13;
bit have had little opportunity due to the lack of&#13;
transportation.&#13;
VIsiting the United States during a presidential&#13;
election year, I asked the group their reaction to the&#13;
campaign and tbe proceedings. Erich responded,&#13;
"When I saw the first nominations of tne&#13;
Republicans, Icompared it with Ocloberfest." They&#13;
didn't feel the candidates were as knowledgeable as&#13;
compared to politicians in their own countries. The&#13;
group felt in their countries, "campaigns are much&#13;
harder and intellectual."&#13;
Lonliness for home and family enters their minds&#13;
periodically, but Sigurlaug says, "It's something I&#13;
have to fight. I feel like I've started something&#13;
creative inside myself, that I can't just stop now."&#13;
The group implied that at first, the novelty of being&#13;
a student from a different country attracted people&#13;
to theno, but quickly the novelty wears off. Most all&#13;
agreed they have made some lasting friendships&#13;
here, which will probably not be forgotten when&#13;
they return home in July, yet people's attitudes&#13;
haven't been as enthusiastic as they had expected.&#13;
I approached the group with the question if&#13;
America was what they had expected. Most agreed&#13;
it was not. It was a disappointment to theno to see&#13;
the degree of materialism and very competitive&#13;
attitude most American's displayed and were&#13;
surprised to find America was more pollution&#13;
ridden than they had expected.&#13;
Given the opportunity to do it all over again, all&#13;
four students agreed they would not pick the United&#13;
States as their choice of a country to visit. As&#13;
Birgitta stated, "I think America is a very interesting&#13;
country, but I wouldn't like to live here."&#13;
In concluding our conversation Iasked if they felt&#13;
this experience had helped them to appreciate&#13;
different cultures and different perspectives. They&#13;
agreed that it had, but Birgitta added, "I don't think&#13;
we're going to change so much from our actually&#13;
being here. Ithink it's when we're going back."&#13;
They felt this experience has made them&#13;
"stronger," and that the real value 'of this trip&#13;
would present itself when they could use these&#13;
experiences back in their own countries.&#13;
Birgitta, Sigurlaug, Anette and Erich welcome&#13;
anyone interested in knowing more about the International&#13;
Christian Youth Exdlange to contact&#13;
theno at the following address: Birgitta Tunestarn,&#13;
I.C.Y.E., 1927 Linden Avenue, Racine, Wisconsin.&#13;
Phone: 637-9651.&#13;
Space allocations suggested&#13;
located in Tallent Hall.&#13;
Tallent Hall will be changed&#13;
into Parkside's outreach&#13;
building, with all activities&#13;
directly connected with the&#13;
community being placed in that&#13;
building, according to the Vogt&#13;
report.&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Various recommendations for&#13;
space allocations have been·&#13;
made by David Vogt,&#13;
director of informational&#13;
analysis and registration, to the&#13;
campus planning committee,&#13;
which received copies of the plan&#13;
last week.&#13;
Those recommendations included&#13;
the following:&#13;
'lbe newly organized Student&#13;
Development operation will be&#13;
moving to the area which now&#13;
includes the Ranger, PSGA, and&#13;
formerly housed Student LifePAS,&#13;
and Student Organizations,&#13;
the food service operation in the&#13;
Nocth Buffet room, on the DI&#13;
level of the Wyllie Library&#13;
learning Center (WLLC).&#13;
The aforementioned student&#13;
organizations will be moved to&#13;
where the current vending and&#13;
seating for the coffee shoppe is in&#13;
lower Main Place.&#13;
As for the newly organized&#13;
divisions of Behaviorial Science&#13;
ahd Fine Aris, they have been&#13;
moved to vacant secretarial&#13;
areas on the south side of tl)e&#13;
8eeOnd floor of the Classroom&#13;
Building and the north side of the&#13;
second floor of Communication&#13;
Arts, respectively. '&#13;
The important thing about this&#13;
report, however, is that it&#13;
provides almost complete&#13;
abandonment of Tallent Hall,&#13;
with admissions financial aids,&#13;
- business servi~es, university&#13;
extension, and the two centers for&#13;
Computers and Multicultural&#13;
Studies being the only offices&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 2., 1976 5&#13;
Classified&#13;
WANTED, Par' Time SKrelary fOI" Studenl&#13;
Group 10 hours a ~ al "2 50 an hOur&#13;
MU!oI be on Work Slucly See Kiyoko in WLLC&#13;
o 19'3 or call S53 n ....&#13;
I". PONTIAC 5".INO J IOMCI Mt&gt;talUc&#13;
Slut'. red buCk"". RaUy ~s AM F",....&#13;
FM sl...-eo •• Track $21'S U. 017.&#13;
TYPING DONE .U,c'Hllly and&#13;
Pl"otft$.onally '1'1 my hOm.. RHsen.abI.&#13;
ralet. 6516061&#13;
WANTED' Par' lime child car. workef'&#13;
working with jweoiles 89n 1117 '1'1 9roup&#13;
foslef' home SlOO per hour One year ell&#13;
perlence desired in chiid ure _k or&#13;
relaled field P!'IoM'6J6-uaJ&#13;
FO. SALE Gr.y. w'I'!,le. ..-d ora"'9f: Pe1'&#13;
s..n rug •••.• It )..... U50 1S2nt4 a'* S&#13;
pm&#13;
WILL DO any k,nd of 1J1)int at r....... bL*&#13;
raIn 'For ,nfofmallOn Call 65233'1&#13;
WANTED. Female 20years or alGer to share&#13;
an apartme1tt Pril'fffably sr _Sr Phone " ..&#13;
6115 alter 6 p.m&#13;
NEED ride from SOlJtl'l 50« of '-',!waukN&#13;
Will play tor ." gas Call 76262JJl Ask lor&#13;
Carol&#13;
FO. SALE Mara"ll 2015 receiver. J."Mfl&#13;
mocMl4Is.pHken 1yurold IJOO PhOne~&#13;
""&#13;
10%&#13;
Courtesy Discount&#13;
issued to&#13;
.Permanent&#13;
students ond&#13;
discount with&#13;
foculty&#13;
coupon&#13;
members only.&#13;
ond 10 cord ON&#13;
All merchandise in our store.&#13;
GOOD FOR AS LONG AS YOU&#13;
A"END PARISI DE ~--------·aIP ANDSAVE---------,I&#13;
I UW-PARKSlDE STUDENT COURTm CARD I I The bearer of this cord is entitled to a 10% I&#13;
I Courtesy Discount on 011 purchases mode ot I&#13;
I VENTURA AND SONS JEWElERS I&#13;
I 56176th Ave. Kenosha I&#13;
I I&#13;
I The courtesy is extended to 011 UW-PorXside I I Students and Faculty Only. I&#13;
I Bearer I&#13;
I&#13;
l&#13;
No. valid if no' signed. Bearer must show PorItside 10 WI'h I&#13;
.his wd foir Trade Items ucepted I&#13;
-------------------------~ GRADUATE GEMOLOGIST&#13;
GRADUATE DIAMONTOLOGlST&#13;
~~gg~&#13;
leMsM's ~ CAft'.&#13;
5617 - 6tll A.....&#13;
Foreign students&#13;
sample U.S.&#13;
by Debbie Sharpe&#13;
A comparatively new group of four students have,&#13;
for the past four months, sampled the living and&#13;
cultural styles of American living.&#13;
They are Singurlaug Lovdahl, Bq-gitta Tunestam,&#13;
Anette Schmidt cllld Erich Heinback, foreign exchange&#13;
students visiting the United States for a one&#13;
year stay. Anette and Erich represent Germany~&#13;
Birgitta, Sweden and Sigurlaug's homeland is&#13;
Iceland.&#13;
Staying with "host families," these exchange&#13;
students all undertake volunteer-type jobs within&#13;
the surrounding community and attend one or two&#13;
classes at ParKS~de. The only learning difficulties&#13;
they have encountered are the natural difficulties of&#13;
fully adapting to a different language in the understanding&#13;
of some terms referred to by their&#13;
professors or those in text. Aside from this, all four&#13;
exchange students agree their classes pose no&#13;
special problems for them, and believe our college&#13;
system in the United States to be less demanding&#13;
and a degree easier than those in their homelands.&#13;
The experience of being an exchange student has,&#13;
in most respects, been positive. It is because of&#13;
these feelings that the exchange students wish for&#13;
others to become involved in similar programs. "I&#13;
wish everybody could go for a year to another&#13;
country," Birgitta explained.&#13;
election year, I asked the group their reaction to the&#13;
campaign and the proceedings. Erich responded,&#13;
"When I saw the first nominations of tne&#13;
Republicans, I compared it with Octoberfest." They&#13;
didn't feel the candidates were as knowledgeable as&#13;
compared to politicians in their own countries. The&#13;
group felt in their countries, "campaigns are much&#13;
harder and intellectual. II&#13;
Lonliness for home and family enters their minds&#13;
periodically, but Sigurlaug says, "It's something I&#13;
have to fight. I feel like I've started something&#13;
creative inside myself, that I can't just stop now."&#13;
The group implied that at first, the novelty of being&#13;
a student from a different country attracted people&#13;
to them, but quickly the novelty wears off. Most all&#13;
agreed they have made some lasting friendships&#13;
here, which will probably not be forgotten when&#13;
they return home in July, yet people's attitudes&#13;
haven't been as enthusiastic as they had expected.&#13;
I approached the group with the question if&#13;
America was what they had expected. Most agreed&#13;
it was not. It was a disappointment to them to see&#13;
the degree of materialism and very competitive&#13;
attitude most American's displayed and were&#13;
surprised to find America was more pollution&#13;
ridden than they had expected.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 2-', 1976 5&#13;
Classified WANTED . P.rl T me Seuetar,, for StuOffl&#13;
Group 10 hours • wee!&lt; at '2 50 n hOur&#13;
MustbeonWor .Study SeeK O LC&#13;
o 193 or call SS3 72.U&#13;
WANTED Parl I me Child car• wor ff&#13;
wort&lt; ng .,.,, ruvfflill!S 119,n ll 17 n group&#13;
mrer IM&gt;me SJ 00 Pff hOUr One Hr ex&#13;
per ence dl!S rNI In ch Id ure - or ref•tNI t,•fd p,- 6l6 3583&#13;
WANTED. Female 20 years or older to sh•re&#13;
an aparlmenl Preter•bly Jr Sr Pt,one u 6115 after 6 p m&#13;
NEED nde from sou h ,_ Of I a tt&#13;
,11 play tor , 11as o I 762 62331 As for&#13;
Carol.&#13;
TYPING DONE elflc Pnlly&#13;
protnsion.nv my t,orne RN,-,.11&gt;I&#13;
ra1es 6576068&#13;
rlln For&#13;
FOIi SALE: Marantz 20U reu Yff, J&#13;
model 4 Pff = I r OICI , Phone 634&#13;
am&#13;
10%&#13;
Courtesy Discount&#13;
issued to students and faculty members only.&#13;
Permanen! discount with coupon and ID cord ON&#13;
AU merchandise in our store.&#13;
GOOD FOR AS LONG AS YOU&#13;
AnEND PARKSIDE&#13;
The organization which sponsors them is the&#13;
International Christian Youth Exchange. Along&#13;
with the obvious benefits of being a foreign exchange&#13;
student are the anticipated sacrifices an&#13;
individual must make. "Money is a weak point in&#13;
the exchange program," Erich confided, since the&#13;
exchange students are given a $10.00 alotment per&#13;
week to live on. Their shelter and food costs are&#13;
assumed by their host families, yet the $10.00figure&#13;
doesn't allow any careless spending.&#13;
Given the opportunity to do it all over again, all&#13;
four students agreed they would not pick the United&#13;
States as their choice of a country to visit. As&#13;
Birgitta stated, "I think America is a very interesting&#13;
country, but I wouldn't like to live here." --------·cup AND SAve---------, I&#13;
In concluding our conversation I asked if they felt&#13;
this experience had helped them to appreciate&#13;
different cultures and different perspectives. They&#13;
agreed that it had, but Birgitta added, "I don't think&#13;
we're going to change so much from our actually&#13;
being here. I think it's when we're going back."&#13;
I&#13;
,·&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE STUDENT COURTESY CARD I&#13;
They felt this experience has made ti_lem&#13;
"stronger," and that the real value ·of this trip&#13;
would present itself when they could use these&#13;
experiences back in their own countries.&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
The bearer of this cord is entitled to a 10&#13;
Courtesy Discount on all purchases made at&#13;
VENTURA AND SONS JEWELERS&#13;
5617 6th Ave. Keno ha&#13;
The courtesy is extended to all UW..Parksid&#13;
Students and Faculty Only.&#13;
I Bearer ________________ _&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Transportation for the exchange students also&#13;
creates a problem. They must primarily rely upon&#13;
their "host families" for privileges to borrow the&#13;
family car. "We are very dependent on other&#13;
people," Birgitta pointed out. They are eager to see&#13;
more of Parkside and the surrounding community,&#13;
but have had little opportunity due to the lack of&#13;
transportation.&#13;
Visiting the United States during a presidential&#13;
Birgitta, Sigurlaug, Anette and Erich welcome&#13;
anyone interested in knowing more about the International&#13;
Christian Youth Ex~ange to contact&#13;
them at the following address: Birgitta Tunestam,&#13;
I.C.Y.E., 1927 Linden Avenue, Racine, Wisconsin.&#13;
Phone: 637-9651. l&#13;
l Not valid if not signed. Beorer mu.st sh f&gt;onuie 10 th I&#13;
this cord Foir Trode Items llcepted I&#13;
-------------------------~&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Space allocations suggested&#13;
GRADUATE GEMOLOGIST&#13;
GRADUATE DIAMONTOLOGIST&#13;
Y~c.s~&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Various recommendations for&#13;
space allocations have been&#13;
made by David Vogt,&#13;
director of informational&#13;
analysis and registration, to the&#13;
campus planning committee,&#13;
which received copies of the plan&#13;
last week.&#13;
Those recommendations included&#13;
the following:&#13;
The newly organized Student&#13;
Development operation will be&#13;
moving to the area which now&#13;
includes the Ranger, PSGA, and&#13;
formerly housed Student LifePAB,&#13;
and Student Organizations,&#13;
the food service operation in the&#13;
North Buffet room, on the D1&#13;
level of the Wyllie Library&#13;
Learning Center (WLLC).&#13;
The aforementioned student&#13;
organizations will be moved to&#13;
where the current vending and&#13;
seating for the coffee shoppe is in&#13;
lower Main Place.&#13;
As for the newly organized&#13;
divisions of Behaviorial Science&#13;
and Fine Arts, they have been&#13;
moved to vacant secretarial&#13;
areas on the south side of the&#13;
second floor of the Classroom&#13;
Building and the north side of the&#13;
second floor of Communication&#13;
Arts, respectively.&#13;
The important thing about this&#13;
report, however, is that it&#13;
provides almost complete&#13;
abandonment of Tallent Hall,&#13;
with admissions, financial aids,&#13;
business services, university&#13;
extension, and the two centers for&#13;
Computers and Multicultural&#13;
Studies being the only offices&#13;
located in Tallent Hall.&#13;
Tallent Hall will be changed&#13;
into Parkside's outreach&#13;
building, with all activities&#13;
directly connected with the&#13;
community being placed in that&#13;
building, according to the Vogt&#13;
report. Phone 658-2S2S&#13;
,no,ho·, Oioaol&gt;d C It&lt;&#13;
5617 • 6th Avenot&#13;
SPECIAL RING PROMATION&#13;
By Josten's&#13;
Date: Wed., December 1st&#13;
Time:&#13;
Place:&#13;
10 - 2 5 - 7&#13;
Next to the Bookstore&#13;
in the Al'?ove&#13;
*5 Week Ship~ent * 5% Discount&#13;
* 810°0 Deposit · &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 24. 1976&#13;
.,&#13;
Exhibit 1&#13;
displayed&#13;
Contact&#13;
weekly by student ~overnment&#13;
by KiyaIlo BowdeD&#13;
'!be ParIadcIe Student Government AssocIation ill proud to announce&#13;
tile lIPPOintment ~ Harvey Hedden as VIce-President and the election&#13;
of DaDlel Nle" sa President fro.ternpcJre of the Senate. VicePresIdent&#13;
Hedden wII1 fUlthe vacancy created by the resignation of&#13;
Robert Vlach. PresIdent fro.ternpcJre Nle1Ien wII1 fill the vacancy&#13;
a-eated wben !be former Prolempore, Robert Foght, didn't run for&#13;
reelection. •&#13;
DIRoDlIDaed pertodleall _&#13;
A five page Us! of pertodleall which are to be clscontinaed by the&#13;
Ubr8ry Is available for Inapeclion at the Student Government office&#13;
(WI,LC 0113) and at the Infonnation Kloak In MaIn Place.&#13;
U you find on !be llal, a periodical that you woa1d like to see continaecl,&#13;
contact Student Government, a student representative on the&#13;
Ubrary and LearnIng Center Committee (Pat Heckel, Francis&#13;
Nwotike, Unda Knudtaon) or go to the Ubrary wbere the fonnal Us! ill&#13;
Ir8pt and aprea your preference to Donnan H. SmIth or call his&#13;
extension 2187.&#13;
It Is Important that studenla ezpress legitimate concern to the&#13;
Ubrary. '!be student representatives to the Ubrary and LearnIng&#13;
Center CommIttee are to be commended for their vigilance.&#13;
WATCH USI&#13;
East Kenosha Records and Tapes&#13;
5707-6th Ave. Downtown Kenosha&#13;
Introducing: French Pizza$1.50&#13;
I EYERY IHIIDAY &amp;TUESDAY&#13;
SPAGHETII FEAST&#13;
$1.95&#13;
Includes: Sslad, Itaian Bread and a Free Glass of Wine.&#13;
Wed. - ThIrs. 9:30 - 11:00 p.m.&#13;
Bubble Up&#13;
Mixed Drinks 60'&#13;
~erbu'8&#13;
~urt&#13;
PUa &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
On spmg. West of 31 OJ&#13;
Green Rdge Plaza&#13;
632-6151&#13;
~IJY ~rr&#13;
Parkside's Year for Action&#13;
A lEI In TO LEAII AID SERVE:&#13;
A f'bance to develop yourself by serving a one-year Internship&#13;
In a Ioca1 community service ... action project on a full-time&#13;
bBsIa while receiving intensive ilHervice training, faculty&#13;
advice and support, 30 units of ac;ademlc credit, and a subsistence&#13;
living Inc&lt;me.&#13;
Several openings f... internships In community agencies wII1&#13;
be availabieslarUng January, 1977. Applications are required,&#13;
and immediate response ill necessary to have applications&#13;
considered.&#13;
In addition to present Parkslde studenla, people who have&#13;
begun but not finished college eiaewhere, are over 18, have&#13;
genuine commitment to a year of community Improvement&#13;
eft..-t and have above average academic ability or usable&#13;
sIdlIa are welcome to apply.&#13;
For farlber information and appUcations, write, phone ... visit&#13;
Parkslde'. Year f... Action, University of WIsconsIn.Parkside&#13;
Room 288, Tallent Hall, Kenoeba, WI 53140. Phone 563-2337:&#13;
fnm 8::10 a.m. unl11 5 p.m. weekdays.&#13;
Openlngs InStalleat Government&#13;
There are sll11many openings In Student Govermnent. If any of the&#13;
committees Interest you and you would like to serve as a student&#13;
representative, please contact K1yoko Bowden, President or a senator.&#13;
as soon as possible.&#13;
CurrIculum and Program CommIttee , . , .. .' 1 full-time student&#13;
Academic Actions CommIttee ' , full-lime students&#13;
Campus Ceremonies Committee .. ' , , ' , : .- 2 students&#13;
Book store CommIttee ' . . . . . . . . . . , :, , .1student&#13;
Academic Planning and Program Review Committee ' . , 2 full-time&#13;
students&#13;
Allocations Comniittee , .' .. ,.,., ,.,.,.,.4 students&#13;
Student Court-Associate Justices ,.. .. 2 students&#13;
Appellate Court-Chlef Justice .. , ' . '.. .., 1 student&#13;
Appellate Court-Assoclate Justices " .. 2 students&#13;
Student appointments&#13;
Congratulations are extended to the following students on their&#13;
appointments: '&#13;
Harvey Hedden .. , . , , Teaching Improvements Grants Committee&#13;
Sue Balewski Teaching Improvements Grants Committee&#13;
Barb Bulgereit , , Teaching Awards Committee&#13;
Sue ShemanskI . , - , Athletic Board&#13;
Tom Fulmer , . , . , . , Athletic Board&#13;
Rusty Tuliewskl. , . , , . , ' . ,Allocations Commlttee-Seat NO.6&#13;
Randalilraun .General Breadth Sub-Commlttee of Academic Policies&#13;
CommIttee&#13;
BI11 Young , , .Assoeiate Justice of the Student Court&#13;
Carayl Williamson, . . , , ChIef Justice of the Student Court&#13;
Maureen Flynn. .,.,. .,.AssocIate Justice of the Student Court&#13;
Pat Heckel , '.' , Treasurer of P.S.G.A.&#13;
TIm Huck .. , Academic Actions Committee&#13;
Robert Black Academic Planning and Program Review CommIttee&#13;
All students are invited to participate In Student Govenunent: these&#13;
students have chosen to. If you would like to join the growing Ust of&#13;
Student Govermnent members, please contact Student Govermnent at&#13;
WLLC 0193 or Call 553-224(&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
The walk-through "10&#13;
house" which ill located In ~&#13;
Place contains a BlcenlenniaI&#13;
exhibit tracing the history Of&#13;
Wisconsin's Stockbridge-M\Ulsee&#13;
Indians-somelimes called the&#13;
"Last of the Mohicans."&#13;
The 14-panel exhibit, on dlsplar&#13;
through Dec. 7, uses narrative&#13;
photographs, maps, artwork and&#13;
other artifacts to trace 376 Ye&amp;ra&#13;
of Stockbrldge-Mensee history&#13;
from the tribe's origins along the&#13;
Hudson River In New York'to Ita&#13;
present-day life In Shawano&#13;
County on land elltab11shed as the&#13;
Stockbrldge-Munsee Reser.&#13;
vatlon:&#13;
The tribe was nearly wiped out&#13;
during the French and Indlan&#13;
Wars In 1757, a struggle&#13;
recounted In James Fenimol'l!&#13;
Cooper's famous novel "The Laat&#13;
of the Mohicans." Renmants 01&#13;
the tribe fled west and setlied In&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
The touring exhibit was&#13;
prepared by the Stockbri~ge.&#13;
Munsee Historical Society with&#13;
grants from the Sons of the&#13;
American Revolution and the&#13;
Wisconsin American RevoluliOll&#13;
Bicentennial COmmission.&#13;
It is sponsored by the UW.P&#13;
Bi e en tennial .c0mmillee,&#13;
Kenosha County American&#13;
Revolution Bicentennial Com.&#13;
mission, Racine County Blcen.&#13;
tennlal Liaison CommIttee and&#13;
Wisconsin Bicentennial Com.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. mission. 24&#13;
Turkey Dance, featuring "Heartstring," at 9 p.m. In the Union&#13;
Square. AdmIssion Is $1 for UW-P students and $1.50 for others.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 26&#13;
Cable TV program "An Inside Look" hosted by UW-P Prof. Paul&#13;
Kleine at 7 p.m. on Chnnnel 8.&#13;
Baskethall game, UW-P vs. UW-Whltewater, at 7:30 p.m. In the Phy.&#13;
Ed. Bldg. Tickets In advance are $lfor UW-P students and $1.50&#13;
for others on sale at the Info Kiosk and at the door for $2:&#13;
for all. Season passes for all sports are available at the&#13;
Athletics office for $7.50 for UW-P students and $10 for all others.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 27 .&#13;
Basketball game, UW-P vs. UW- WhItewater, at 7:30 In the Phy. Ed.&#13;
Bldg. Tickets In advance are $1 for UW-P students and $1.50&#13;
for others on sale at the Info Kiosk and at the door for $2.&#13;
Course offered&#13;
The Campus Security&#13;
Deparlmentls again offering the&#13;
National Safety - Council's&#13;
Defensive Driving Course for&#13;
those employees or students who&#13;
comtemplate driving State.&#13;
owned vehicles. The Defensive&#13;
Driving Course has been a prerequisite&#13;
for any Individual&#13;
operating State-owned vehicles&#13;
since December, 1970.&#13;
The course ill six hours in&#13;
duration, however, In order to get&#13;
the greatest participation, the&#13;
course will be presented In two,&#13;
three hour sessions on Wed.&#13;
nesday, December I, 1976 and&#13;
Thursday, December 2, 1976.&#13;
It Is requested that all faculty,&#13;
staff or students who plan on&#13;
attending notify Officer William&#13;
Carter or Officer Donald Groset,&#13;
Campus Security Department,&#13;
Room 188, Tallent Hall, E,q. 2455&#13;
as soon as possible.&#13;
1977 Local ACUllntercoliegiate- Tournament Program&#13;
~ .~ ~ ~.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 28&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from Ito 6 p.m. In CL 140.&#13;
Faculty Recital, TImothy Bell on clarinet, and Carol Bell on piano&#13;
at 3:30 p.m. In the CAT.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 30&#13;
Colloqulm, "Moral Freedo~ and Moral ReSPC;nsIbility," given by&#13;
Aaron Snyder; UWP AssocIate Prof. of Phllosophy at 7 p.m. In GR&#13;
101.&#13;
Bowling - Jan. 22 &amp; 23, 197.7 •&#13;
Billiards Jan. 28. 29 &amp; 30, 1977&#13;
Table Tennis - Jan. 28, 29 &amp; 30, 1977&#13;
Foosball- Feb. 4, 5 &amp; 6, 1977&#13;
Chess - Feb. 4. 5 &amp; 6, 1977&#13;
Local toumament winners to represent P k'&#13;
Regionalsin Madison Wise Feb 17-19 a&#13;
1&#13;
r&#13;
9&#13;
s&#13;
7&#13;
1d7&#13;
at e.&#13;
c&#13;
the ACU&#13;
h&#13;
'&#13;
U· R C .... , . ontaet t e ",on ee- enter for Information or to enter "" 00 f / t&#13;
- . ~I eeenry.&#13;
TOlrnamant director: Rand M '&#13;
Y Dog 'Phone: 553~2695&#13;
•&#13;
,,,&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 24, 1976&#13;
Contact&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
by Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
The Parkside Student Government Association is proud to announce&#13;
the appoinbnent of Harvey Hedden as Vice-President and the election&#13;
of Daniel Nielsen as President Pr&lt;rtempore of the Senate. VicePresident&#13;
Hedden will fill the vacancy created by the resignation of&#13;
Robert Vlach. President Pro--tempore Nielsen will fill the vacancy&#13;
created when the former Protempore, Robert Foght, didn't run for&#13;
reelection. •&#13;
Discontinued periodicals&#13;
A five page list of periodicals which are to be discontinued by the&#13;
Library is available for inspection at the Student Government office&#13;
(WU£ 0193) and at the Information Kiosk in Main Place.&#13;
U you find on the list, a periodical that you would like to see continued,&#13;
contact Student Government, a student reiresentative on the&#13;
Library and Learning Center Committee (Pat Heckel, Francis&#13;
Nwoltike, Linda Knudtson) or go to the Library where the formal list is&#13;
kept and express your preference to Donnan H. Smith or call his&#13;
extension 2167.&#13;
It is important that students express legitimate concern to the&#13;
Ubrary. The student representatives to the Library and wrning&#13;
Center Corruruttee are to be commended for their vigilance.&#13;
WATCH USI&#13;
East Kenosha Records and Tapes&#13;
5707-6th Ave. Downtown Kenosha&#13;
Introducing: French Pizza $1.50&#13;
EVERY MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY&#13;
SPAGHETTI FEAST&#13;
$1.95&#13;
Includes: Salad, Italian Bread and a Free Glass of W ine.&#13;
Wed. ~ Thurs. 9 :30 - 11 :00 p.m.&#13;
Bubble Up&#13;
Mixed Drinks so•&#13;
On Spmg, West of 31 in&#13;
Green Ridge Plaza&#13;
632-6151&#13;
~erbu~&#13;
~urt&#13;
PUB &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
~,&#13;
Parkside's Year for Action&#13;
A NEW WAY TO LEARI AND SERVE:&#13;
A fPBnce to develop yourself by serving a one-year internship&#13;
in a local community service or action project on a full-time&#13;
ba • while receiving intensive in-service training, faculty&#13;
advice and support, 30 units of academic credit, and a subsistence&#13;
living income.&#13;
veral openings for internships in community agencies will&#13;
be avallable_starting January, 1m. Applications are required,&#13;
and lnuned1ate response is necessary to have applications&#13;
considered.&#13;
In ddition to present Parkside students, people who have&#13;
begun . but not finished college elsewhere, are over 18 have , g mune commitment to a year of community improvement&#13;
effort and have above average academic ability or usable&#13;
skills are welcome to apply.&#13;
For further information and applications, write, phone or visit&#13;
Parkslde's Year for Action, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Room 286, Tallent Hall, Kenosha, WI 53140. Phone 553-2337:&#13;
from 8:30 a.m. until 5 p.m. weekdays.&#13;
Openings in Student Government&#13;
There are still many openings in Student Government. If any of the&#13;
committees interest you and you would like to serve as a student&#13;
representative, please contact Kiyoko Bowden, President or a senator&#13;
as soon as possible.&#13;
Curriculum and Program Committee .. .. . .. .. _. . . .. 1 full-time student&#13;
Academic Actions Committee .. . . . .... .. .. . . .. ..... full-time students&#13;
Campus Ceremonies Committee ..... . .... .. ....... . ... . .. . 2 students&#13;
Book store Committee . . . ... . . .. .. . . . . . . .. . .. ......... . .. .. . l student&#13;
Academic Planning and Program Review Committee ... . . . 2 full-time&#13;
students&#13;
Allocations Committee . . .. . . .. .. . . .. . . . . . . ... . . ... . . ... . . .4 students&#13;
Student Court-Associate Justices .... . . .. ......... . .. . . . .. . 2 students&#13;
Appellate Court-Chief Justice ... ..... . . . . .... . .. ... . ........ 1 student&#13;
Appellate Court-Associate Justices ...... . . ... . ...... . .. ... 2 students&#13;
Student appointments&#13;
Congratulations are extended to the following students on their&#13;
appoinbnents:&#13;
Harvey Hedden . . . .. ..... Teaching Improvements Grants Committee&#13;
Sue Balewski .. .. . ...... . Teaching Improvements Grants Committee&#13;
Barb Butgereit . .. . .... .. ... .. . ... ..... . Teaching Awards Committee&#13;
Sue Shemanski .. . ..... . ..... . ..... .- ...... .. . .. ....... Athletic Board&#13;
Tom Fulmer .. ... . . ...... . .. . .... . . .. .... ........ . . .. . Athletic Board&#13;
Rusty Tutlewski . . . ...... .... . . . . . .. Allocations Committee-Seat No. 6&#13;
Randal Braun . General Breadth Sub-Committee of Academic Policies&#13;
Committee&#13;
Bill Young .... .. . . . .. .......... Associate Justice of the Student Court&#13;
Caroyl Williamson ..... .. . . . .. . . .. .. Chief Justice of the Student Court&#13;
Maureen Flynn .. .. . .. . .... ... . Associate Justice of the Student Court&#13;
Pat Heckel . .. .. . . . . .. ... . ..... . ... . ... . .. . .... Treasurer of P.S.G.A.&#13;
Tim Huck .... . . . .. . . ... . . . . . ..... . . . . . Academic Actions Committee&#13;
Robert Black . . . Academic Planning and Program Review Committee&#13;
All students are invited to participate in Student Government: these&#13;
students have chosen to. If you would like to join the growing list of&#13;
Student Government members, please contact Student Government at&#13;
WU£ D193 or Call 553-2244·_&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 24&#13;
Turkey Dance, featuring "Heartstring," at 9 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Square. Admission is $1 for UW-P students and $1.50 for others.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 26&#13;
Cable TV program "An Inside Look" hosted by UW-P Prof. Paul&#13;
Kleine at 7 p.m. on Channel 8.&#13;
Basketball game, UW-P vs. OW-Whitewater, at 7:30 p.m. in the Phy.&#13;
Ed. Bldg. Tickets in advance are $1 for UW-P students and $1.50&#13;
for others on sale at the Info Kiosk and at the door for $2:&#13;
for all. Season passes for all sports are available at the&#13;
Athletics office for $7 .50 for UW-P students and $10 for all others.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 27&#13;
Basketball game, UW-P vs. UW- Whitewater, at 7:30 in the Phy. Ed.&#13;
Bldg. Tickets in advance are $1 for UW-P students and $1.50&#13;
for others on sale at the Info Kiosk and at the door for $2.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 28&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1 to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Faculty Recital, Timothy Bell on clarinet, and Carol Bell on piano&#13;
at 3:30 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 30&#13;
&lt;;olloquim, "Moral Freedo~ and Moral Responsibility," given by&#13;
Aaron Snyder, UWP Associate Prof. of Philosophy at 7 p.m. in GR&#13;
101.&#13;
~ (j)&#13;
Bowling - Jan. 22 &amp; 23, 1977 Foosball -&#13;
Exhibit&#13;
displayed&#13;
The walk-through "lo&#13;
house" which is located in M:&#13;
Place contains a Bicentennia)&#13;
exhibit tracing the history of&#13;
Wisconsin's Stockbridge-Munsee&#13;
Indians-sometimes called th&#13;
"Last of the Mohicans." e&#13;
The 14-panel exhibit, on display&#13;
through Dec. 7, uses narrative&#13;
photographs, map.s, artwork anci&#13;
other artifacts to trace 376 Years&#13;
of Stockbridge-Munsee history&#13;
from the tribe's origins along the&#13;
Hudson River in New York to its&#13;
present-day life in Shawano&#13;
County on land e$tablished as the&#13;
Stockbridge-Munsee Reser.&#13;
vation.&#13;
The tribe was nearly wiped out&#13;
during the French and Indian&#13;
Wars in 1757, a struggle&#13;
recounted in James Fenimore&#13;
Cooper's famous novel "The Last&#13;
of the Mohicans." Remnants of&#13;
the tribe fled west and settled In&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
The touring exhibit was&#13;
prepared by the StockbridgeMunsee&#13;
Historical Society with&#13;
grants from the Sons of the&#13;
American Revolution and the&#13;
Wisconsin American Revolution&#13;
Bicentennial Commission.&#13;
It is sponsored by the UW-P&#13;
Bicentennial Committee,&#13;
Kenosha County American&#13;
Revolution Bicentennial Commission,&#13;
Racine County Bicentennial&#13;
Liaison Committee and&#13;
Wisconsin Bicentennial Commission.&#13;
&#13;
Course offered&#13;
The Campus Security&#13;
Department is again offering the&#13;
National Safety Council's&#13;
Defensive Driving Course for&#13;
those employees or students wlw&#13;
comtemplate driving Stateowned&#13;
vehicles. The Defensive&#13;
Driving Course has been a prerequisite&#13;
for any individual&#13;
operating State-owned vehicles&#13;
since December, 1970.&#13;
The course is six hours in&#13;
duration, however, in order to get&#13;
the greatest participation, the&#13;
course will be presented in two,&#13;
three hour sessions on Wednesday,&#13;
December 1, 1976 and&#13;
Thursday, December 2, 1976.&#13;
It is requested that all faculty,&#13;
staff or students who plan on&#13;
attending notify Officer William&#13;
Carter or Officer Donald Grosek,&#13;
Campus Security Department,&#13;
Room 188, Tallent Hall, Ext. 2455&#13;
as soon as possible.&#13;
I&#13;
Feb. 4, 5 &amp; 6, 1977&#13;
Billiards Jan. 28, 29 &amp; 30, 1977 Chess - Feb. 4, 5 &amp; 6, 1977&#13;
Table Ten11is - Jan. 28, 29 &amp; 30, 1977&#13;
Tournament director:&#13;
Local tournament winners to represent p k .d&#13;
Regionals in Madison Wisc Feb 17-19 a{g~7e · ate the AC~I&#13;
Union Rec-Center for info~mation . ' . ..,. ooonf tacit t e or to enter. - , ee entry.&#13;
Randy Moog Phone : 553-2695 &#13;
Brad 'ford~'~f1"""';;;-;;;;;;;-;;;f..m..;-;--.f~-&#13;
beCOmingsmaller and smaller each year and that if&#13;
a neW high school is built it will be financed by&#13;
refinaJ1Cing the debt and stretching the debt&#13;
payments over say len or fifteen years.&#13;
However asParker reluctantly admitted, if a new&#13;
high school is not built, there will probal1.ly be a lax&#13;
cut; and laxes will not raise (if the new high school&#13;
is built) only if Kenosha does not raise its expenditures&#13;
on say roads or sewers.&#13;
Another question is with enri1lment declining why&#13;
notwalt ten years and then Tremper and Bradford&#13;
will be able to handle the amount of'students that&#13;
will be then enrolled in school. Ron says that this&#13;
viewiscomrnonly held but it is not substantiated by&#13;
lbe facts.&#13;
Parker says that the facts are as follows: (I) for&#13;
lbe first lime in years first grade enrolbnent has&#13;
gone up in Kenosha and the Assistant Superintendent&#13;
of SChools for Kenosha says that he foresees&#13;
no decline in enrollment, and in fact sees an increase&#13;
in enrolbnent, (2) the question is not only&#13;
enroUment, more importantly the question is the&#13;
quality of education.&#13;
This last point raises a very interesting statistic.&#13;
The average gra&lt;Je point of Bradford students is&#13;
better than the average grade point average of&#13;
students at Tremper. Why is this so? Ron Parker&#13;
says for two reasons: (I) under adverse conditions&#13;
people hand together and (2) because leachers lack&#13;
adequate facilities they may expect less of a student&#13;
at Bradford than they do of a student at Tremper.&#13;
In conclusion we asked Parker two final&#13;
questions: (I) what will happen if the new high&#13;
school is not buill and (2) what will happen if the&#13;
new high school is built?&#13;
"For every month Kenosha waits in building a&#13;
new high school the costs go up thirty thousand&#13;
dollars. If the new IJigh school is not built students&#13;
may have to go on split shifts; educational quality&#13;
will suffer; there might be a fire- in the annex&#13;
with loss of life in the hundreds," said Parker.&#13;
"If a new high school is built laxes will not go up;&#13;
students will not go on split shifts and educational&#13;
quality will rise," he added.&#13;
What can the individual student at Parkside do if&#13;
he or she agrees with Parker? "Well in the spring&#13;
there will be a referendwn on the ballot, the best&#13;
thing the people at Parkside can do is to vote yes on&#13;
the referendwn," he said.&#13;
PLA TO-'~f1"U"f-..m"'f---&#13;
The displayed the touchsensitive&#13;
capablllties of the&#13;
terminal. Bitzer put picture on&#13;
the screen of elementary items,&#13;
suchas an apple;an elephant and&#13;
many others. He touched the&#13;
screen and a magnetic disk&#13;
played back what had been&#13;
touched. ,&#13;
Bitzer also brought along a&#13;
synthesizer with sound which&#13;
played "The Entertainer"&#13;
Fodor&#13;
to teach&#13;
Violinist Eugene Fodor, artistiJH'esidence&#13;
at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-ParkSide, will leach&#13;
biB second set of master classes&#13;
at the eampus on Saturday, Nov.&#13;
28, and Saturday and Sunday,&#13;
Dec. 18 and 19. Registration as a&#13;
participant or auditor can be&#13;
made hy contacting Cindy Gray&#13;
at 553-2488.&#13;
Fodor and Parkside faculty&#13;
pianist Stephen Swedish, who&#13;
bave Just returned from a concert&#13;
tour of Japan, appeared last&#13;
Friday (Nov. 19) on the Johnny&#13;
CarsonTonight Show, where they&#13;
bave heen frequent guests.&#13;
During hi. campus slay, Fodor&#13;
also will present the first in a&#13;
series of tl\ree Young Persons'&#13;
Concerts, at 10:30 a.m. on&#13;
Friday, Nov. 26, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
Other concerts in the series are&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 26, when&#13;
saxophonist Tim Bell of the&#13;
music faculty will perform with&#13;
lbe award-winning Parkside Jazz&#13;
Ensemble, and Saturday, April&#13;
16, wben Prof. Swedish will play.&#13;
Tickets are. $1 per concert for&#13;
students and $2 for adults and are&#13;
available by writing Young&#13;
Persons" Concert Series at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Fodor, 26, winner of the 1974&#13;
Tchaikowsky Competition in&#13;
Moscow and the 1972 International&#13;
Paganini Competition&#13;
in Italy, also is featured in the&#13;
COVersolry of the current issue of&#13;
Accent, a magazine for young&#13;
mUsicians.&#13;
- The disks may contain 4,096&#13;
different, audio messages at a&#13;
rate of apprOximately one per&#13;
every .3 of a second.&#13;
Bitzer stated that it is possible&#13;
to have a terminal in every home&#13;
by 1980, providing that people -&#13;
can - afford the cost, which is&#13;
approximately that of a color&#13;
te1evision. It (PLATO) could&#13;
provide world-wide communications&#13;
for millions, he&#13;
stated.&#13;
Currently, PLATO is being&#13;
used at 26 universities, several&#13;
penal institutions, government&#13;
agencies, and. in business and&#13;
induslry.&#13;
PLATO has had programs&#13;
written for it in a variety of areas&#13;
on all educational levels, in&#13;
eluding biology, in which Bitzer&#13;
demonstrated a program&#13;
simulating the genetic behavior&#13;
of fruitflies.&#13;
(&#13;
I&#13;
I.&#13;
Fishin~ &amp; Firin~ Lines&#13;
Hunting safety&#13;
critical&#13;
by Scott Reinhard&#13;
Picture yourse!! duck hunting on a small pond. The morning is foggy&#13;
and rainy. Visihility is poor. SUddenly you see a diver duck only t"':ee&#13;
feet above the water flying directly in front of you. You qwckly raise&#13;
your gun and fire only to be met with the screams of a hunter m a blind&#13;
directly across from you. . .&#13;
• Picture yourself again. This lime it's opening day of deer hunting.&#13;
You're tense and excited with anticipation. To your left you he~&#13;
something coming towards you. It's getting closer and closer. Now '~&#13;
I fifty feet away thrashing in the brush. You see It moving a&#13;
quickly shoulder your rifle and fire. You directly run to the brush and&#13;
find you 've shot your partner. .,&#13;
So d like FairY tales? Hardly! These situations and many more&#13;
un verv vear Hunting in WlSCOllSlDIS now in full bloom.&#13;
E:'~s,::~,: ~n e.timaied ~ thousand hunters were to enter&#13;
s ., oods and harvest approximately 125,000 deer. Every WlSconsm s W handlins&#13;
a1ties occur through careless gun - ....&#13;
year casu k b ter safety course three years ago I was taught five&#13;
When I too '~iliU:;esthat go with hunting and the safe use of fire&#13;
basic responsi confi"~ on P9. 8&#13;
arms.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
.Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN8 U1. TIL 10:38 P.M.&#13;
2615 W.. hi ..... /We. 6~2i7J&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 24, 1976 7&#13;
Plays scheduled&#13;
On December 10, 11, and 12,&#13;
Samuel Beckett's play Endgame&#13;
will be presented in Studio B of&#13;
the Corom-Arts Building. The&#13;
east for this production is: Anthony&#13;
Warren as Hamm, Robert&#13;
Jilk as Clove, Sue Wishau as Nell,&#13;
and Marc Miller as Nagg. Act&#13;
Without Words bas a cast of one.&#13;
This will be played by Oleryl&#13;
Powa1isz.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
Hom Goers Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
FRIDAYS 3-6&#13;
). "l.-~•&#13;
r&#13;
,.,tjll~~ ,,'\o.t ..~...&#13;
,t""1iI ~ \&#13;
IN THE REC CENTER , UNION SQUARE&#13;
Brad f Q rd~continued~frompg--:--- .1 - / -&#13;
becoming smaller anu smcl!er each year and that if&#13;
a new high school is built it will be financed by&#13;
refinancing the debt and stretching the debt&#13;
better than the average grade point average of&#13;
students at Tremper. Why is this so? Ron Parker&#13;
says for two reasons: (1) under adverse conditions&#13;
people band together and (2) because teachers lack&#13;
adequate facilities they may expect less of a student&#13;
at Bradford than they do of a student at Tremper.&#13;
, payments over say ten or fifteen years.&#13;
However as Parker reluctantly admitted, if a new&#13;
high school is not built, there will probably be a tax&#13;
cut; and taxes will not raise (if the new high school&#13;
is built) only if Kenosha does not raise its expenditures&#13;
on say roads or sewers.&#13;
Another question is with enrillment declining why&#13;
not wait ten years and then Tremper and Bradford&#13;
will be able to handle the amount of·students that&#13;
will be then enrolled in school. Ron says that this&#13;
view is commonly held but it is not substantiated by&#13;
the facts.&#13;
In conclusion we asked Parker two final&#13;
questions: (1) what will happen if the new high&#13;
school is not built and (2) what will happen if the&#13;
new high school is built?&#13;
"For every month Kenosha waits in building a&#13;
new high school the costs go up thirty thousand&#13;
dollars. If the new tiigh school is not built students&#13;
may have to go on split shifts; educational quality&#13;
will suffer; there might be a fire in the annex&#13;
with loss of life in the hundreds," said Parker. Parker says that the facts are as follows: (1) for&#13;
the first time in years first grade enrollment has&#13;
gone up in Kenosha and the Assistant Superintendent&#13;
of Schools for Kenosha says that he foresees&#13;
no decline in enrollment, and in fact sees an increase&#13;
in enrollment, (2) the question is not only&#13;
enrollment, more importantly the question is the&#13;
quality of education.&#13;
"If a new high school is built taxes will not go up;&#13;
students will not go on split shifts and educational&#13;
quality will rise," he added.&#13;
What can the individual student at Parkside do if&#13;
he or she agrees with Parker? "Well in the spring&#13;
there will be a referendum on the ballot, the best&#13;
thing the people at Parkside can do is to vote yes on&#13;
This the referendum," he said. last point raises a very interesting statistic.&#13;
Tue average grade point of Bradford students is&#13;
p LA ,TO-contlnued-frompg .l __ _&#13;
The displayed the touchsensitive&#13;
capabilities df the&#13;
terminal. Bitzer put picture on&#13;
the screen of elementary items,&#13;
such as an apple, an elephant and&#13;
many others. He touched the&#13;
screen and a magnetic disk&#13;
played back what had been&#13;
touched.&#13;
Bitzer also brought alo~g a&#13;
synthesizer with sound which&#13;
played "The Entertainer" ,&#13;
Fodor '.&#13;
to teach&#13;
Violinist Eugene Fodor, artistin-residence&#13;
at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, will teach&#13;
his second set of master classes&#13;
at the campus on Saturday, fiov.&#13;
28, and Saturday and Sunday,&#13;
Dec. 18 and 19. Registration as a&#13;
participant or auditor can . be&#13;
made by contacting Cindy Gray&#13;
at 553-2488.&#13;
Fodor and Parkside faeulty&#13;
pianist Stephen Swedish, who&#13;
have just returned from a concert&#13;
tour of Japan, appeared last&#13;
Friday (Nov. 19) on the Johnny&#13;
Carson Tonight Show, where they&#13;
have been frequent guests.&#13;
During hi:s campus stay, Fodor&#13;
also will present the first · in a&#13;
series of ttiree Young Persons'&#13;
Concerts, at 10:30 a.m. on&#13;
Friday, Nov. 26, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
Other concerts in the series are&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 26, when&#13;
saxophonist Tim Bell of the&#13;
music faculty will perform with&#13;
the award-winning Parkside Jazz&#13;
Ensemble, and Saturday, April&#13;
16, when Prof. Swedish will play.&#13;
Tickets are . $1 per concert for&#13;
students and $2 for adults and are&#13;
available by writing Young&#13;
Persons' Concert Series at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Fodor, 26, winner of the 1974&#13;
Tchaikowsky Competition in&#13;
Moscow and the 1972 International&#13;
Paganini Competition ·&#13;
in Italy, also is featured in the&#13;
cover sotry of the current issue of&#13;
Accent, a magazine for young&#13;
musicians.&#13;
- The disks may contain 4,096&#13;
different, audio messages at a&#13;
rate of approximately one per&#13;
every .3 of a second.&#13;
Bitzer stated that it is possible&#13;
to have a terminal in every home&#13;
by 1980, providing that people -&#13;
can - afford the cost, which is&#13;
approximately that of a color&#13;
television. It (PLATO) could&#13;
provide world-wide communications&#13;
for millions, he&#13;
(&#13;
I&#13;
\.&#13;
stated.&#13;
Currently, PLATO is being&#13;
used at 26 universities, several&#13;
penal institutions, government&#13;
agencies, and in business and&#13;
industry.&#13;
PLATO has had programs&#13;
written for it in a variety of areas&#13;
on all educational levels, in&#13;
eluding biology, in which Bitzer&#13;
demonstrated a program&#13;
simulating the genetic behavior&#13;
of fruitflies.&#13;
Fishing &amp; Firing Lines&#13;
Hunting safety&#13;
critical&#13;
by Scott Reinhard&#13;
Picture yourseJ.f duck hunting on a small pond. The morning is foggy&#13;
and rainy. Visibility is poor. ~udde~y you see a diver duck _only tm:ee&#13;
feet above the water flying drrectly m front of you. You qw~kly ra.ise&#13;
your gun and fire only to be met with the screams of a hunter m a blind&#13;
directly across from you. . , Picture yourself again. This time it's opening day of deer huntmg.&#13;
You're tense and excited with anticipation. To your left you h~~r&#13;
something coming towards you. It's getting closer and c!oser. ~ow its&#13;
1 fif feet away thrashing in the brush. You see it movmg and&#13;
~~i~kly ~boulder your rifle and fire. You directly run to the brush and&#13;
find you've shot your partner. Sound like Fairy tales? Hardly! These situa?~ns and: many ~ore&#13;
erv vear Hunting in Wisconsm 1s now m full bloom.&#13;
grues~: o~cur :; ~stimated ~ thousand hunters were to enter&#13;
~st a_~ ayoods and harvest approximately 125,000 deer. Every Wisconsin s w h dling alties occur through careless gun an . . year casu k b ter safety course three years ago I was taught five&#13;
When I too ~bil~ti~es that go with hunting and the safe use of fire basic respons1 1 continued on pg 8&#13;
arms.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP,&#13;
· · Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sand11ich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P..M.&#13;
2615 Washington /we. 634-2373&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 24, 1976 7&#13;
Plays scheduled&#13;
On December 10, 11, and 12,&#13;
Samuel Beckett's play Endgame&#13;
will be presented in Studio B of&#13;
the Comm-Arts Building. The&#13;
cast for this production is: Anthony&#13;
Warren as Hamm, Robert&#13;
Jilk as Clove, Sue Wishau as Nell,&#13;
and Marc Miller as Nagg. Act&#13;
Without Words has a cast of one.&#13;
This will be played by Cheryl&#13;
Powalisz.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
FIIDAYS 3-6&#13;
I ·I&#13;
BEER .... .,,,,, . ,t&#13;
\~ .. .&#13;
~&#13;
IN THE REC CENTER &amp; UNION SQUARE&#13;
OPTICAL&#13;
BOUTIQUE&#13;
552-7610&#13;
4425 Taylor&#13;
only ten minutes from Kenosha &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 24, 1976&#13;
NAIA run on home turf&#13;
by Tboma. No.... and&#13;
.Ie. Teauta&#13;
Edinboro . won the learn&#13;
championship with 56 points as&#13;
Foley's teammates Henry&#13;
Wmger and Jeff Foster finished&#13;
fifth and sixth respectively.&#13;
Adams Stale (Colo.) was second&#13;
with 103 points, and the district&#13;
winner from the November 13&#13;
meet at Parkside, UW-I.aCrosse,&#13;
was third with 184. .&#13;
Kebiro kept the individual title&#13;
at Eastern New Mexico for the&#13;
third straight year. Mike Boit,&#13;
another Kenyan, won the title for&#13;
the school in 1974and 1975.&#13;
tenth at 24:44, respectively.&#13;
Also representing Wisconsin in&#13;
the meet were the UW-Stevens&#13;
Point Pointers, who finished&#13;
ninth and the Rangers, who were&#13;
26th.Forty-none full teams and 44&#13;
partial teams were represented&#13;
in the meet.&#13;
John Kebiro, a native of Kenya&#13;
and a student at Eastern New&#13;
Mexico, ran to a counre record ~f&#13;
24 minutes, 21 seconds to outdi.stance&#13;
Kevin Foley of Edinboro&#13;
(Pa.) Slale in the 21st Annual&#13;
ational Athletic Intercollegiate&#13;
Cross Country Championship&#13;
Saturday at the Parkside course.&#13;
Kebiro is the NAIA&#13;
steeplechase record holder at&#13;
3000 meters and set a first mile&#13;
poce of four minutes and 49&#13;
seconds. Approximately 408&#13;
runners started the race and out&#13;
of the 376 that finished, only&#13;
Foley kept close for the five mile&#13;
race,&#13;
Other team scores were fourth&#13;
place Indiana University (Pa.),&#13;
211; Oklahoma Christian, 220;&#13;
Lewis University (Ill.) 261t;&#13;
Malone College (Ohio), 297; Fort&#13;
Hays State (Kan.) 323; UWStevens&#13;
Point, 359; and Central&#13;
Washington State, 377. Parkside&#13;
totalled 637.&#13;
The top 2S individual runners&#13;
will receive all-American honors&#13;
including Desmond O'Connor,&#13;
La Crosse recorded the highest&#13;
finish in the school's history&#13;
behind the perfonnances of twin&#13;
brothers, Jim and Joe Hanson, as.&#13;
they finisbed fourth in 24:36 and&#13;
Rangers debut&#13;
season at-home&#13;
Parkslde's basketball team&#13;
will make their 1976-77 season&#13;
debut against UW-I.aCrosse&#13;
Friday night and will face UWWhitewater&#13;
Saturday night, both&#13;
in the Physical Education&#13;
Building, beginning at 7:30.&#13;
The team will be gunning for its&#13;
third straight NAtA District 14&#13;
title and trip to the NAtA national&#13;
tournament, a feat never before&#13;
accomplished by a Wisconsin&#13;
college. The Rangers have&#13;
finished 24-7and 24-9the past two&#13;
seasons.&#13;
The team has eight returning&#13;
lellermen, including Leartha&#13;
Scott and Stevie King both&#13;
starters from last year. Scott, a 6-&#13;
4 senior forward was the Rangers&#13;
No.2 scorer last season at 20.7.&#13;
King, a 6-0 junior guard, is a slick&#13;
ball handler and very quick.&#13;
Also returning and probably&#13;
starling in the weekend&#13;
contest are Marshall Hill at the&#13;
post, Joe Foots in the backcourt&#13;
and Mike Hanke at the front line.&#13;
other lettermen who should see&#13;
action are senior forward Rade&#13;
Dimitrijevi IJeVlC,sop omore forward h&#13;
PARAPH ER NALIA SQUARE Marvin Chones, and senior guard&#13;
Laurence Brown.&#13;
THE MINI-MALL Newcomers will include center&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE Lester Thompson, guard Jim STEP AHEAD OF CHRISTMAS. LIQUIDATION OF All POTTERY AND Hanke and forward Lonnie&#13;
MACRAME GET A FREE POT WITH COUPON, QUANTITIES LIMITED! Lewis.&#13;
~ ~&#13;
What the others are saging" I&#13;
~ ~we've alreadg /&#13;
~~~.o. demonstrated. I&#13;
'\: fb\~e"",~ • Better engine protection. • Increased I&#13;
~~. ~':/ fuel economy .• Better high-temperature&#13;
,.- s !&#13;
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.... • Coss oil consumption ., cleaner en- I ~ "'I gine. • 25,OOO-mile oil change&#13;
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houtbyAP' .... , ... ,.... "'2.500 m.....&#13;
--("'0" Io88lOOlbtI tor 1 tw&#13;
by, ........ 1 ,1 milMgrwns ""_.... '. -0- Vo&amp;Iiflllty .' 01 e'It.po,.tlOn @ 3OO"f -- --&#13;
o &lt;~.&#13;
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Too good to be true? No. Because thousands of AMS/OIL users have&#13;
already experienced these extraordinary performance feafures AMS/OIL&#13;
was t"st to commerCially market an SAE lOW·40 synthetiC engine 011 to&#13;
meet API ClaSSIfication SE. which means AMS/OIL can be used In any&#13;
Car So while the new synthehc lubricants you see today were stili In the&#13;
test lab. AMS/OIL was In the crankcases of cars and trucks lustltke you IS&#13;
And when you're satisfied. thaI's the final test of a lubncant&#13;
Retail· Wholesale See your AMS/OIL dealer todayl&#13;
DEALERS WANTED Mike Villers (414)-637-2726 Direct Ouler1h,ps Available.&#13;
c.el For Appolntmenl&#13;
No r.rr,tory ReStrICllons'&#13;
No F'8I'ICh Sl'sl Racine, Wise. 53404&#13;
2600 West High ~9&#13;
No L.,~ Inven10rv or&#13;
Invn1" __'" "'~SSOllrv. lhe quael leader In synlhelk lubrlcallon&#13;
-&#13;
Angelo State, third; Garry&#13;
Henry, Pembroke State (N.C.),&#13;
seventh; Steve Littleton,&#13;
University of Pittsburgh&#13;
(Johnstown), eighth; and Tony&#13;
Luttrell, Spring Arbor, (Mich.),&#13;
ninth. .&#13;
The top finisher for the&#13;
Rangers was Ray Fredericksen,&#13;
who was 30th. His coach, Vic&#13;
Godfrey, thought he did an&#13;
uexceptional job. tl&#13;
other Parkside runners were&#13;
Jeff Miller, 131; Gary Priem, 143;&#13;
Mike Rivers. 146; Greg Julich,&#13;
187; Jim Heiring, 212; and Lee&#13;
Allinger, 214.&#13;
Coach Gndfrey was pleased by&#13;
how well the meet went, stating,&#13;
"The meet went perfectly; the&#13;
weather was great as well as the&#13;
awards banquet, with no&#13;
hangups. It was perhaps the best&#13;
championship meet ever held"&#13;
Coach Godfrey noted the f~t&#13;
44 finishers broke the cOUrse&#13;
record.&#13;
The coach bad anticipated his&#13;
team to place seven or eight&#13;
places higher but felt On the&#13;
whole, the team bad a gOOd&#13;
season.&#13;
"We'll only be losing one senior&#13;
for next year's team, so Ithink&#13;
for the next couple of years "e&#13;
should finish in the top ten in'thi.!&#13;
meet." "&#13;
The team had a 5-1 dual meet&#13;
record, tying the best Parkside&#13;
season record, and were the third&#13;
place finishers in Distr:ict 14,this&#13;
season.&#13;
Treat every gun as If It were loaded: "I didn't know it was loaded "&#13;
is the poorest excuse to the worst type of tragedy. The majority 'of&#13;
hunting accidents occur within ones own hunting party. This means&#13;
that the majority of these tragedies involve relatives and close&#13;
friends. Always open the actions of a gun and check it.&#13;
Always point the gun In a safe direction. The muzzle of a gun should&#13;
never be pointed at any person including yourself. Preferably the&#13;
muzzle should be pointed down so that if it should accidently&#13;
discharge it will only hit the ground.&#13;
Be absolutely certain of a target before shooting and know wile....lbe&#13;
bullet will stop. Always fully identify game before shooting at it. Do&#13;
not only shoot at a sound, or patch of color, or any object unW it i.!In&#13;
full view. Know if the bullet is going to stop in the hillside or travel&#13;
miles and stop in a populated area.&#13;
Just recently Bong Public Hunting Grounds were closed to target&#13;
shooting due to an incident which involved two men target shooling.&#13;
With no regards to trajectory these men set their target on a hilltop.&#13;
The bullets were hitling a farm house two miles away.&#13;
Practice courtesy and self control. Courtesy should be employed&#13;
when hunting on another man's land. Respect should be given to&#13;
property and livestock. Remember the impression he receives of you&#13;
reflects on all hunters.&#13;
Self control should be practiced at all times. The hunter is under a&#13;
lot of stress whe'n he focuses his attention on obtaining game. Every&#13;
snapping twig, rustling leaf, or movement out of the corner of your eye&#13;
adds to it. The hunter should be under full control of every action he&#13;
makes.&#13;
Obey the laws. Anti-hunters are ready to devour our sport at any&#13;
moment, and the amount of violations are in their favor. What you do&#13;
now can determine if there will be a next time to do it. Sportsmen can&#13;
do something to stop the outbreak of violations.&#13;
If a person violates-get his back. tag number, car or boat license&#13;
number. Get the best description possible of the individual and how he&#13;
isdressed; approximate age, height, weight, and build are important.&#13;
Mark the spot or spots the hunter stood while shooting. Observe&#13;
closely the hunter's action after the violation. You are urged to carry a&#13;
notebook and pencil and jot down this information at once. Get this&#13;
information to the nearest conservation warden rapidly. The county&#13;
sheriff can get in touch with the warden. Then leave your name, ad.&#13;
dress and phone number so the warden can get in touch with you for.&#13;
further information if necessary.&#13;
featuring:&#13;
a variety of your condy&#13;
and nut fovorties sold&#13;
the old-fashioned way&#13;
BRIDGI&#13;
the&#13;
generation&#13;
gap!&#13;
BUY YOUR PARENTS&#13;
SOME BRIOGE MIX!&#13;
Only 95'/ha~ pound&#13;
10 o.m. 4 pm&#13;
LOCATED IN UNION BIZARRE&#13;
s THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 24, 1976&#13;
NAIA run on honte turf&#13;
by 'lboma olan and&#13;
Jean Tenuta&#13;
John Kebiro, a native of Kenya&#13;
and a student at Eastern New&#13;
exico. ran to a course record of&#13;
24 minute , 21 seconds to outdistance&#13;
Kevin Foley of Edinboro&#13;
( Pa.) State in the 21st Annual&#13;
tional Athletic Intercollegiate&#13;
Cro Country Championship&#13;
turday at the Parkside course.&#13;
K biro is the NAIA&#13;
pl chase record holder at&#13;
m ter and set a first mile&#13;
pa £ four minutes and 49&#13;
conds. Approximately 408&#13;
runn tarted the race and out&#13;
the 376 that finished, only&#13;
Fol y k pt close for the five mile&#13;
r&#13;
Edinboro . won the team&#13;
championship with 56 points as&#13;
Foley's teammates Henry&#13;
Winger and Jeff Foster finished&#13;
fifth and sixth respectively.&#13;
Adams State (Colo.) was second&#13;
with 103 points, and the district&#13;
winner from the November 13&#13;
meet at Parkside, UW-LaCrosse,&#13;
was third with 184. .&#13;
Kebiro kept the individual title&#13;
at Eastern New Mexico for the&#13;
third straight year. Mike Boit,&#13;
another Kenyan, won the title for&#13;
the school in 1974 and 1975.&#13;
La Crosse recorded the highest&#13;
finish in the school's history&#13;
behind the performances of twin&#13;
brothers, Jim and Joe Hanson, ~s&#13;
they fini~ed fourth in 24: 36 and&#13;
tenth at 24:44, respectively.&#13;
Also representing Wisconsin in&#13;
the meet were the UW-Stevens&#13;
Point Pointers, who finished&#13;
ninth and the Rangers, who were&#13;
26th. Forty-none full teams and 44&#13;
partial teams were represented&#13;
in the meet.&#13;
Other team scores were fourth&#13;
place Indiana University (Pa.),&#13;
211; Oklahoma Christian, 220;&#13;
Lewis University (Ill.) 26&amp;;&#13;
Malone College (Ohio), 297; Fort&#13;
Hays State (Kan.) 323; UWStevens&#13;
Point, 359; and Central&#13;
Washington State, 377. Parkside&#13;
totalled 637.&#13;
The top 25 individual runners&#13;
will receive all-American honors&#13;
including Desmond O'Connor,&#13;
Rangers debut&#13;
season at home&#13;
Parks1de's basketball team&#13;
ill make their 1976-77 season&#13;
debut against UW-LaCrosse&#13;
rlday night and will face UWWh.it&#13;
water Saturday night, both&#13;
n th Physical Education&#13;
Building, beginning at 7:30.&#13;
Th team will be guMing for its&#13;
third traight NAIA District 14&#13;
UU and trip to the NAIA national&#13;
tournament, a feat never before&#13;
accomplished by a Wisconsin&#13;
college . The Rangers have&#13;
finished 24-7 and 24-9 the past two&#13;
seasons.&#13;
The team has eight returning&#13;
lettermen, including Leartha&#13;
Scott and Stevie King both&#13;
starters from last year. Scott, a 6-&#13;
4 senior forward was the Rangers&#13;
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No. 2 scorer last season at 20.7.&#13;
King, a 6-0 junior guard, is a slick&#13;
ball handler and very quick.&#13;
Also returning and probably&#13;
starting in the weekend&#13;
contest are Marshall Hill at the&#13;
post, Joe Foots in the backcourt&#13;
and Mike Hanke at the front line.&#13;
Other lettermen who should see&#13;
action are senior forward Rade&#13;
Dimitrijevic, sophomore forward&#13;
Marvin Chones, and senior guard&#13;
Laurence Brown. .&#13;
Newcomers will include center&#13;
Lester Thompson, guard Jim&#13;
Hanke and forward Lonnie&#13;
Lewis.&#13;
What the others are saging. \&#13;
~ ~we've already I&#13;
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Angelo State, third; Garry&#13;
Henry, Pembroke State (N.C.),&#13;
seventh; Steve Littleton,&#13;
University of Pittsburgh&#13;
(Johnstown), eighth; and Tony&#13;
Luttrell, Spring Arbor, (Mich.),&#13;
ninth. .&#13;
The top finisher for the&#13;
Rangers was Ray Fredericksen,&#13;
who was 30th. His coach, Vic&#13;
Godfrey. thought he did an&#13;
"exceptional job."&#13;
Other Parkside runners were&#13;
Jeff Miller, 131; Gary Priem, 143;&#13;
Mike Rivers, 146; Greg Julich,&#13;
187; Jim Heiring, 212; and Lee&#13;
Allinger, 214.&#13;
Coach Godfrey was pleased by&#13;
how well the meet went, stating,&#13;
"The meet went perfectly; the&#13;
weather was great as well as the&#13;
awards banquet, with&#13;
no hangups. It was perhaps the be t&#13;
championship meet ever held~.&#13;
Coach Godfrey noted the fir~t&#13;
44 finishers broke the course&#13;
record.&#13;
The coach had anticipated his&#13;
team to place seven or eight&#13;
places higher but felt on the&#13;
whole, the team had a gooct&#13;
season.&#13;
"We'll only be losing one senior&#13;
for next year's team, so I think&#13;
for the next couple of years we&#13;
should finish in the top ten in1&#13;
this&#13;
meet." ·&#13;
The team had a 6-1 dual meet&#13;
record, tying the best Parkside&#13;
season record, and were the third&#13;
place finishers in District 14, this&#13;
season.&#13;
Sa/ety-con-,inue-dfro-mpg- .7-. ---&#13;
Treat every gun as if it were loaded: "I didn't lmow it was loaded"&#13;
is the poorest excuse to the worst type of tragedy. The majority 'of&#13;
hunting accidents occur within ones own hunting party. This means&#13;
that the majority of these tragedies involve relatives and close&#13;
friends. Always open the actions of a gun and check it.&#13;
Always point the gun in a safe direction. The muzzle of a gun should&#13;
never be pointed at any person including yourself. Preferably the&#13;
muzzle should be pointed down so that if it should accidently&#13;
discharge it will only hit the ground.&#13;
Be absolutely certain of a target before shooting and know where the&#13;
bullet will stop. Always fully identify game before shooting at it. Do&#13;
not only shoot at a sound, or patch of color, or any object until it is in&#13;
full view. Know if the bullet is going to stop in the hillside or travel&#13;
miles and stop in a populated area.&#13;
Just recently Bong Public Hunting Grounds were closed to target&#13;
shooting due to an incident which involved two men target shooting.&#13;
With no regards to trajectory these men set their target on a hill~.&#13;
The bullets were hitting a farm house two miles away.&#13;
Practice courtesy and self control. Courtesy should be employed&#13;
when hunting on another man's land. Respect should be given to&#13;
property and livestock. Remember the impression he receives of you&#13;
reflects on all hunters.&#13;
Self control-should be practiced at all times. The hunter is under a&#13;
lot of stress whe'n he focuses his attention on obtaining game. Every&#13;
snapping twig, rustlL,g leaf, or movement out of the corner of your eye&#13;
adds to it. The hunter should be under full control of every action he&#13;
makes.&#13;
Obey the laws. Anti-hunters are ready to devour our sport at any&#13;
moment, and the amount of violations are in their favor. What you do&#13;
now can determine if there will be a next time to do it. Sportsmen can&#13;
do something to stop the outbreak of violations.&#13;
If a person violates-get his back. tag number, car or boat license&#13;
number. Get the best descripµon possible of the individual and how he&#13;
is dressed; approximate age, height, weight, and build are important.&#13;
Mark the spot or spots the hunter stood while shooting. Observe&#13;
closely the hunter's action after the violation. You are urged to carry a&#13;
notebook and pencil and jot down this information at once. Get this&#13;
information to the nearest conservation warden rapidly. The county&#13;
sheriff can get in touch with the warden. Then leave your name, address&#13;
and phone number so the warden can get in touch with you for ,&#13;
further infoqnation if necessary.&#13;
!Je c9lbe&#13;
~1uttt c&amp;boppt&#13;
10 o.m. 4 pm&#13;
featuring:&#13;
a variety of your candy&#13;
and nut favorties sold&#13;
' the old-fashioned way&#13;
BRIDGI&#13;
the&#13;
generation&#13;
gap!&#13;
BUY YOUR PARENTS&#13;
SOME BRIDGE MIX!&#13;
Only 95• /half pound&#13;
LOCATED IN UNION BIZARRE </text>
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                <text>1976-11-24</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>LLC video tapes illegal&#13;
</text>
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              <text>LLC video tapes illegal&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
As many as 70 percent of the&#13;
Library Center's video tapes are&#13;
in villation of copyright laws,&#13;
according to Joseph Boisse,&#13;
director of the Center.&#13;
The approximate 300 tapes&#13;
eonsist mostly of reproduced&#13;
television shows, although there&#13;
are some which.were copied. from&#13;
films rented by Parkside ( a&#13;
practice discontinued a couple of&#13;
years ago). said Carla Stoffle,&#13;
assistant director of the LLC.&#13;
Stolfie remarked tha t the&#13;
illegality was noticed when&#13;
Boissetook over as director of the&#13;
merged Library and Learning&#13;
Center last summer.&#13;
The video tapes were originally&#13;
the property Of the former&#13;
Joseph Bolsse&#13;
Learning Center which was&#13;
directed by Beecham Robinson.&#13;
now special consultant-associate&#13;
professor of education.&#13;
When questioned about the&#13;
tapes, Robinson said, "We don't&#13;
have any illegal tapes on the&#13;
shelves - not to myknowledga."&#13;
He said that when video tapes&#13;
such as these were made, they&#13;
Beecham Robinson&#13;
were usually only held for up to a&#13;
semester's length of time.&#13;
Though Boisse contended that&#13;
the tapes were illegal when they&#13;
were made," Robinson said that&#13;
there was confusion at the time&#13;
concerning what was legal to&#13;
copy and that recent copyright&#13;
legislation is probably what&#13;
would make those sort of holdings&#13;
The Pari&lt;side ilI&#13;
_&#13;
eg&#13;
_&#13;
al&#13;
. _&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No. 10 Wednesday, November 17, 1976&#13;
"If there had been some&#13;
question if they (video tapes of&#13;
television programs in general)&#13;
were legal, there would have&#13;
been law suits; but there&#13;
weren't," he said.&#13;
Boisse, who indicated that&#13;
under new legislation he would be&#13;
held legally responsible for any&#13;
villations of copyright laws occurring&#13;
under his administration,&#13;
said that he received a directive&#13;
from Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Clayton Johnson requirtng that&#13;
all materials be kept in accordance&#13;
with copyright laws.&#13;
Campus administration had been&#13;
contacted upon discovery of the&#13;
violations.&#13;
Presently, measures are being&#13;
taken to correct tile situation&#13;
which Stoffle said should be&#13;
rectified by the end of this school&#13;
year. "Were trying to get back&#13;
on-the right course," she added.&#13;
Response to a memo sept to the&#13;
faculty should show which tapes&#13;
are used most regularly for&#13;
classes and then efforts will be&#13;
made to purchase or obtain&#13;
permission to use those tapes.&#13;
The rest will be erased, said&#13;
Stoffle.&#13;
The cost for one half hour of a&#13;
television show is approlllmat.ely&#13;
$350 while the price of fllma is&#13;
higher, said Boisse. He guessed&#13;
that only a small percentage of&#13;
the lLC tapes were moderat.ely&#13;
or heavily used. "We wUl&#13;
probnbl)' be able to obtain these&#13;
one way or another. II&#13;
Although he couldn't estimate&#13;
the amount of money which&#13;
woold be required he said that "it&#13;
would be a sizeable sum."&#13;
The funds to purchase the tapes&#13;
would come from budget balance&#13;
monies; •those funds which are&#13;
left over from Parkside's original&#13;
budget. Boisse plans to request&#13;
purchases of items separately as&#13;
they determine what tapes will be&#13;
needed rather then asking for one&#13;
lump sum.&#13;
When questioned as to what&#13;
chance the LLC had of obtaining&#13;
the needed funds, Boisse said,&#13;
"In past years the LLC has been&#13;
very successful in getting budget&#13;
balance money for special&#13;
projects. The past and present&#13;
administrations have been very&#13;
supportive of the lLC:' Though&#13;
he added that this doesn't mean&#13;
there will be no problems.&#13;
Safety of art labs questioned&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Being a Parkside art major&#13;
could be bazardous to your&#13;
health.&#13;
Among concerns of the Campus&#13;
Planning Committee at their&#13;
meeting last Friday was lbe&#13;
safety of art labs in the Communication&#13;
Arts building and the&#13;
erection of the lower for the&#13;
closed circuit T.V. distribution&#13;
"lIystem.&#13;
Mary Arnold, Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association senator,&#13;
represented the PSGA, stating&#13;
that the veQtilation of the 3-D lab&#13;
(CA 0137) is poor for the type of&#13;
fiberglass work that is currently&#13;
taking place there. Ervin&#13;
Zuelhke. assistant chancellor for&#13;
administration, reported that&#13;
students were not using the&#13;
welding room for their welding,&#13;
and mentioned the removal of&#13;
glass doors in the ceramics firing ~&#13;
area.&#13;
If OSHA were to hear of these&#13;
problems, we would almost have&#13;
to close two art labs (on the D-I&#13;
floor of the Comm. Arts&#13;
building). stated Zuelhke. OSHA&#13;
(The Occupational Safety and&#13;
Health Administration) sets and&#13;
administrates building safety'&#13;
standards.&#13;
The committee decided to&#13;
admonish the fine arts division to&#13;
start a safety committee 10 'Work&#13;
on the problems existing in the&#13;
art labs. Several members of the&#13;
comnrittee. Franklin Lowenthal&#13;
New ·V.P. chosen&#13;
by Douglas' Edenh~user&#13;
The Student Government&#13;
Senate elected a new vicepresident&#13;
at the meeting held&#13;
Wednesday 'November 10.&#13;
Harvey Hedden was sworn in to&#13;
the office that was left vacant by&#13;
the resignation' of Bob Vlach.&#13;
Before the official swearing in,&#13;
Hedden had to resigrf from his&#13;
position as associate justice due&#13;
to a possible conflict of interest.&#13;
He mentioned that he- plans to&#13;
begin helping President Kiyoko&#13;
Bowden with the overload of&#13;
administrative work that exists.&#13;
Hedden was with the Senate prior&#13;
to his election as a senator from&#13;
October 1973 to october 1975.&#13;
The office of president&#13;
pretempore was also filled at the&#13;
meeting. Senator Dan Nielsen&#13;
was elected by thesenate to the&#13;
office by a vote of 7 to 3 over&#13;
Senator Mary Arnold.&#13;
After his election Nielsen made&#13;
a number of proposals that were&#13;
all passed for alterations in the&#13;
structure and proceedings of the&#13;
Senate. .&#13;
One of the structural changes&#13;
that wok place was the realigning&#13;
of the present corrunittee system&#13;
into 4 committees that will now&#13;
do the work of 9 previous ones.&#13;
The standing committees of the&#13;
Senate will now consist of the&#13;
Institutional Policies Committee,&#13;
the Student Services Committee,&#13;
the Ways and Means Committee.&#13;
and the Student Organizational&#13;
Council.&#13;
The reason given for this&#13;
realignment was that there were&#13;
almost as many committees as&#13;
there were senators, leaving no&#13;
one to be on these committees.&#13;
The following appointments&#13;
were made at the meeting:&#13;
William Young to the Associate&#13;
Justice of the Student Court,&#13;
and chairperson of science&#13;
division, James Galbraith,&#13;
director of planning and construction&#13;
and Zuehlke, offered&#13;
their services.&#13;
The lower that was supposed to&#13;
be erected east of the buildings is&#13;
still in the drawing stage, according&#13;
to Galbraith, and&#13;
probably won't be finished until&#13;
the beginning of the next school&#13;
year or possibly not until 1978.&#13;
Committee member&#13;
Chelvadurai Manogaran,&#13;
associate professor of geography,&#13;
was' concerned about the money&#13;
that had been allocated for the&#13;
installation of meterologieal&#13;
instruments, which were purchased&#13;
at a cost of $25,000.&#13;
The money that had been set&#13;
Timothy Huck to lbe Acadermc&#13;
Actions Committee, Maureen&#13;
Flynn as an Associate Justice of&#13;
the Student Court, Caroyl&#13;
Williamson as Chief Justice of the&#13;
Student Court, Pat Heckel as&#13;
treasurer of PSGA, and Robert&#13;
Black to the Academic Planning&#13;
and Program Review Committee.&#13;
A motion was passed by the&#13;
Senate to request permanent use&#13;
of the old Sweete Shoppe as a&#13;
Student Government out-post.&#13;
This was done in an effort to&#13;
acquaint the students better with&#13;
the PSGA.&#13;
The report of the special investigative&#13;
committee to look&#13;
into the impeachment of Senator&#13;
Mary Arnold suggested that the&#13;
Senate try her as soon as possible&#13;
to get the matter out of the way&#13;
and also to provide her with a&#13;
speedy and fair trail.&#13;
aside from the original classroom&#13;
building moneys, according to&#13;
Zuelhke, is in the process of being&#13;
set aside by Central Administration&#13;
for other things. So&#13;
he suggested to the committee&#13;
that they spend it on some of the&#13;
installation necessities, before&#13;
central Administration spends it&#13;
on something else.&#13;
several requests wert made to&#13;
the committee for space on the&#13;
campus, among 'them were&#13;
requests for education learning&#13;
lbas, University Year for Action&#13;
office space, placement of audiovisual&#13;
equipment steeage, and&#13;
W1LC remodeling. These were&#13;
all referred to a special subcommittee.&#13;
INSIDE:&#13;
hapins&#13;
reviewed (pg.&#13;
LLC video&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
tapes illegal&#13;
As many as 70 percent of the&#13;
Library Center's video tapes are&#13;
in villation of copyright laws,&#13;
according to Joseph Boisse,&#13;
director of the Center.&#13;
The approximate 300 tapes&#13;
consist mostly of reproduced&#13;
television shows, although there&#13;
are some which.were copied from&#13;
films rented by Parkside ( a&#13;
practice discontinued a couple of&#13;
years ago), said Carla Stoffle,&#13;
assistant director of the LLC.&#13;
Stoffle remarked that the&#13;
illegality was noticed when&#13;
Boisse took over as director of the&#13;
merged Library and Learning&#13;
Center last summer.&#13;
The video tapes were originally&#13;
the property of the former&#13;
Joseph Boisse&#13;
Learning Center which was&#13;
directed by Beecham Robinson,&#13;
now special consultant-associate&#13;
professor of education.&#13;
When questioned about the&#13;
tapes, Robinson said, "We don't&#13;
have any illegal tapes on the&#13;
shelves - not to my'knowledge. "&#13;
He said that when video tapes&#13;
such as these were made, they&#13;
Beecham Robinson&#13;
were usually only held for up to a&#13;
semester's length of time.&#13;
Though Boisse contended that&#13;
the tapes were illegal when they&#13;
were made, Robinson said that&#13;
there was con.fusion at the time&#13;
concerning what was legal to&#13;
copy and that recent copyright&#13;
le·gislation is probably what&#13;
would make those sort of holdings&#13;
The Parkside----ill-eg_al ____ _&#13;
. '&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No. 10 Wednesday, November 17, 1976&#13;
" If there had been same&#13;
question if they ( video tapes of&#13;
television programs in general)&#13;
were legal. there would have&#13;
been law suits; but there&#13;
weren't," he said.&#13;
Boisse, who indicated that&#13;
under new legislation he would be&#13;
held legally responsible for any&#13;
villations of cop}Tight laws occurring&#13;
under his administration,&#13;
said that he received a directive&#13;
from Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Clayton Johnson requiring that&#13;
all materials be kept in accordance&#13;
with copyright laws.&#13;
Campus administration had been&#13;
contacted upon discovery of the&#13;
violations.&#13;
· Presently, measures are being&#13;
taken to correct the situation&#13;
which Stoffle said should t,e&#13;
rectified by the end of this school&#13;
year. "We're trying to get back&#13;
on -the ri6ht course," she added.&#13;
Response to a memo setit to the&#13;
facult. should show which tapes&#13;
are used most regularly for&#13;
classes and then efforts will be&#13;
made to purchase or obtain&#13;
permission to use those tapes.&#13;
The rest will be erased, said&#13;
Stoffle.&#13;
The cost for one hall hour of a&#13;
television show is approximately&#13;
$350 while the prire of films is&#13;
higher, said Boi. . He guessed&#13;
that only a smaU percentage of&#13;
the LLC tapes were mod rately&#13;
or heavil used. ·•we will&#13;
prob.lb!;,- be able to obtain the&#13;
one way or another.''&#13;
Although he couldn't estimate&#13;
the amount of money wh ch&#13;
would be required h said that "it&#13;
would be a sizeable um."&#13;
The funds to purchase th tapes&#13;
would come from budget balance&#13;
monies; . those funds which are&#13;
left over from Parkside' or ginal&#13;
budget. Boisse plans to request&#13;
purchase of item eparately a&#13;
they determine what tap will be&#13;
needed rather then asking for one&#13;
lump um.&#13;
When questioned as to what&#13;
chance the LLC had of obtaining&#13;
the needed .Cunds, Boi said,&#13;
" In past year the LLC has b n&#13;
very successful in getting budget&#13;
balance money for sp cial&#13;
projects. The past and pr nt&#13;
administrations have been very&#13;
supportive of the LLC." Though&#13;
he added that this doe n't m an&#13;
there will be no problem .&#13;
Safety of art labs questione_d&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Being a Parkside art major&#13;
could be hazardous to your&#13;
health.&#13;
Among concerns of the Campus&#13;
Planning Committee at their&#13;
meeting last Friday was the&#13;
safety of art labs in the Communication&#13;
Arts building and the&#13;
' ~rection of the tower for the&#13;
closed cir'cuit T.V. distribution&#13;
1.ystem.&#13;
Mary Arnold, Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association senator,&#13;
represented the PSGA, stating&#13;
that the vel)tilation of the 3-D lab&#13;
( CA D1 'J 7/ is poor for the type of&#13;
fiberglass work that is currently&#13;
taking place there . Ervin&#13;
Zuelhke, assistant chancellor for&#13;
administration, reported that&#13;
students were not using the&#13;
welding room for their welding,&#13;
and mentioned the removal of&#13;
glass doors in the ceramics firing ·&#13;
area.&#13;
If OSHA were to hear of these&#13;
problems, we would almost have&#13;
to close two art labs \ on the D-1&#13;
floor of the Comm. Arts&#13;
building), stated Zuelhke. OSHA&#13;
(The Occupational Safety and&#13;
Health Administration) sets and&#13;
administrates building safety·&#13;
standards.&#13;
The committee decided to&#13;
admonish the fine arts division to&#13;
start a safety committee to work&#13;
on the problems existii;ig in the&#13;
art labs. Several members of the&#13;
conuuitke, Franklin Lowenthal&#13;
New ·v.P. chosen&#13;
by Douglas-Edenh~user&#13;
The Student Government&#13;
Senate elected a new vicepresident&#13;
at the meeting held&#13;
Wednesday 'November 10.&#13;
Harvey Hedden was sworn in to&#13;
the office that was left vacant by&#13;
the resignation · of Bob Vlacq.&#13;
Before the official swearing in,&#13;
Hedden had to resign from his&#13;
position as associate justice due&#13;
to a possible conflict of interest.&#13;
He mentioned that he plans to&#13;
begin helping President Kiyoko&#13;
Bowclen with the overload of&#13;
administrative ~ork that exists.&#13;
Hedden was with the Senate prior&#13;
to his election as a senator from&#13;
October 1973 to October 1975.&#13;
The office of president&#13;
pretempore was also filled at the&#13;
meeting. Senator Dan Ni~lsen&#13;
was elected by the ·Senate to the&#13;
office by a vote of 7 to 3 over&#13;
Senator Mary Arnold.&#13;
After his election Nielsen made&#13;
a number of proposals that were&#13;
all passed for alterations in the&#13;
structure and proceedings of the&#13;
Senate . One of the structural changes&#13;
that took place was the realigning&#13;
of the present committee system&#13;
into 4 committees that will now&#13;
do the work of 9 previous ones.&#13;
The stand1ng committees of the&#13;
Senate will now consist of the&#13;
Institutional Policies Committee,&#13;
the Student Services Committee,&#13;
the Ways and Means Committee,&#13;
and the Student Organizational&#13;
Council.&#13;
The reason given for this&#13;
realignment was that there were&#13;
almost as many committees as&#13;
there were senators, leaving no&#13;
one to be on these committees.&#13;
The following appointments&#13;
were made at the meeting:&#13;
William Young to the Associate&#13;
Justice of the Student Court,&#13;
and chairperson of science&#13;
division, James Galbraith,&#13;
director of planning and construction&#13;
and Zuehlke, offered&#13;
their services.&#13;
The tower that was supposed to&#13;
be erected east of the buildings is&#13;
still in the drawing stage, according&#13;
to Galbraith, and&#13;
probably won't be finished until&#13;
the beginning of the next school&#13;
year or possibly not until 1978.&#13;
Committee member&#13;
Chelvadurai Manogaran,&#13;
associate professor of geography,&#13;
was· concerned about the money&#13;
that had been allocated for the&#13;
installation of meterological&#13;
instruments, which were purchased&#13;
at a cost of $25,000.&#13;
The money that had been set&#13;
Timothy Huck to the Academic&#13;
Actions Committee. Maureen&#13;
Flynn as an Associate Justice of&#13;
the Student Court, Caroyl&#13;
Williamson as Chief Justice of the&#13;
Student Court, Pat Heckel as&#13;
treasurer of PSGA, and Robert&#13;
Black to the Academic Planning&#13;
and Program Review Committee.&#13;
-&#13;
A motion was passej by the&#13;
Senate to request permanent use&#13;
of the old Sweete Shoppe as a&#13;
Student Government out-post.&#13;
This was done in an effort to&#13;
acquaint the students better with&#13;
the PSGA.&#13;
The report of the special investigative&#13;
committee to look&#13;
into the impeachment of Senator&#13;
Mary Arnold suggested that the&#13;
Senate try her as soon as possible&#13;
to get the matter out of the way&#13;
and also to pro\;de her with a&#13;
speedy and fair trail.&#13;
aside from the original classroom&#13;
building moneys, according to&#13;
Zuelhke, is in the process of being&#13;
set aside by Central Administration&#13;
for other things. So&#13;
he suggested to the committee&#13;
that they spend it on some of the&#13;
installation necessities, before&#13;
central Administration spends it&#13;
on something else.&#13;
INSIDE:&#13;
Several requests were made to&#13;
the committee for space on the&#13;
campus, among ' them were&#13;
requests for education learni&#13;
!bas, University Year for Action&#13;
office space, placement of audiovisual&#13;
equipment torage, and&#13;
WI.LC remodelin . Th w re&#13;
all referred to a pecial ubcommittee.&#13;
&#13;
hapins reviewed (p Y.&#13;
; &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER No_bet" 17. 1976&#13;
•&#13;
_--EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
J&#13;
Liberation: a sense of dignity&#13;
llbrratloo. to '5tt at lJ~rl). rt:l~ij~'...r :n.."\" ;r ..rt 13 ~CJrll.lil~ y,hu!&#13;
the WOrMn's movement IS all about ,,"u: uwre ..... :llt'U.ln ...'l""'~:.&#13;
It adepthofCOftS("lousnessm ...~bl:tourrYo y,t·ln.-f. !~&lt;Ihll'. I JUt'raUu:&#13;
meamlO me a sense of dlgJ'ul) It means cornbtruruz u hea'thv pcrnor.&#13;
of self-.steem and confIdence an h.andhn~ c:U~ sI1UitUOf. You ~lJTlpl~&#13;
don t start mto any venltue with iI dt"feoaust altlllktt'. \'ohler!I ulIllk&#13;
untnowUl8ly, many women do&#13;
I am not a missiooar)' ('alh~ for every Youman to torceablv Jom Uh'&#13;
u.te of Woman's Liberation. Sunpl~' I want t;'\ ery woman 10&#13;
recog,uze possable options 3\'8llable to them flatoff;" IS mureo than 01•.&#13;
r. )'OU can partake of In lire Wtt an' :lut l 'lIIIN ...~1 t1f 100percer.1&#13;
housewife', 100 percent secretar} or )00 p&lt;&gt;rCPIIIlHlIther Rather \H'&#13;
should combine and expand oor ~pt' of mtt"re!'ol U In\'olve Cl~naan\&#13;
are as possible. What 1thmk \\l)men'~ Llb-'r"'lillfl IS trYing to teaeJ:&#13;
US lS to reall1e plt.enQal. r~CO);!.!'IIlt· allerrwtI\ 's .,II,l dl~l'O\"l'r wltlur'&#13;
.:u..rselv the II~J~ oUlit"ts of dL,I.t~ ti'~:-"l I-"'.'~'"''&#13;
It's like sa ing you're twenty-one year after year. You're not, and&#13;
h&#13;
y .. ar comes a little bit more .learnmx. 1110fl' exwith&#13;
ea,' ne·.}e ... So i the case wtth liberation Liber(l,llOil prepares us for" perlenees. is III(; different type of "growing up" SltlWotlon. ~IJ wutr.an shouhl II&lt;:jVt' t::&#13;
rmd herself desperately trying to fit into a mold someone else has&#13;
created for ner. . . I am not a "manhater." Connotatively, that IS the image .many&#13;
ople pt'rceive a feminist to be I am not obnoxiousl- overbearing ur&#13;
:e-sighted ...but I am a ferrlllHst. Stereutypmg has .affel'ted ttl!'&#13;
woman's movement, just as It has any other SOl'I~1 IIW\'elf.lr::t&#13;
Women's Liberation should not be par-alled with these rnlsconceptlOfl:'.&#13;
~ a fen:lini~t I believe I have Ideas and \'Il'WpOIi,ls "IJnh~ of I'Xpression.&#13;
All I expect is to be treated with th~ :ialllC illgnlty an.d worth&#13;
any person should be allowed. 1 don·t want .to be labeled ~lth selfimposing&#13;
limitations. I believ~ in myself. Clod tn my ('apablhtle~, allel :&#13;
think Women's Liberation believes In thiS, too. WHlIlen's 1.1ber~tlOflh&#13;
a hEalthy UI\}t;"ation towards these id('al~ .&#13;
POLITICAL FO,RUM&#13;
Daley losing power&#13;
by Phil HermaDD&#13;
Whal happell8lO a city and stale when a major political figure starls&#13;
10 slip' O1lcago and illinois will be finding that oul in the near future.&#13;
Mayor Richard Daley Is on his way out as head of the Democratic&#13;
party in Illinois. He will still he around, of course, but his power will be&#13;
50 decreased, It will not mean much&#13;
Wby Is Daley losing power'&#13;
I) The last presidential election Daley turned out the Democratic&#13;
vole for Jimmy UIrler, m the city of Chicago, but carter still lost in&#13;
Illinois; lhls means Jimmy owes Daley nothinR.&#13;
Whal carler will do, however,ls bypass Daley and work with Adlai&#13;
~enson, Jr. and Alan Dixon, two suPerstars in tile Illinois&#13;
Democratic party. So Daley will be effectively left out of the national&#13;
scene.&#13;
2) James Thompson slaughtered Daley's boy, Micheal Howlett, in&#13;
the race lor governor. Thompson, a Republican, destroyed Howlett in&#13;
the oty 01 OUcaRo and massacred him downstate. Howlett has&#13;
perennially been the strongesl 01 Daley's proteges and, in fact,&#13;
Howletl's link with the Mayor cost hun the election.&#13;
People outside 01 Chicago are sick of Daley and sick of it being&#13;
I&#13;
)LJ&#13;
Cafeteria outlaws&#13;
r e market&#13;
To EcIltor&#13;
P I acne with yo..- lett« 01&#13;
onmber 1D regarding Ihe&#13;
prlcee and pot\IODS In the _&#13;
cafderia&#13;
Ilhink however lhal you ahould&#13;
",,01'" before labelling lhls&#13;
lullon a. a laUure 01&#13;
capllaIIam .. Our c:afeletla Is,in&#13;
Jact. a prime n,mpJe of Slale&#13;
SociaIIam in pt1ICIice. III .....&#13;
tracl wllh lbe university&#13;
specifically oullaw. the key&#13;
cancepI of Jrcc enlerprbe and&#13;
c:unpWtion. U a lr.., market&#13;
exisIed al Parkside, alternative&#13;
food services would arise to m..,t&#13;
yo..- demands for better and&#13;
cr-per food. 'Their motive: to&#13;
make profit.&#13;
Ulllk!r capitalism, the boycotl&#13;
you auggf:lled _ be successful&#13;
If URi... Sqlllll'e c:onlinued&#13;
10 rip people off, II would go&#13;
bnIlrr&#13;
Jay GrasseD&#13;
Senior Life Sde"""&#13;
Illinois, Chicago instead of l'hlcago, Illinois. The city isn't as important&#13;
anymore since people are moving out of it to find the security&#13;
of the suburbs. Thompson has been quoted as saying, "I wiU work with&#13;
the Mayor as much as possible," but don't bet on it.&#13;
3) "Da city dat works" isn't; Chicago has one of the highest levels of&#13;
poverty in the country, If you don't believe this take a trip to either&#13;
south or north Chicago, Chicago also is in the top thr.., for lJlurder and&#13;
crime, right up there with New York and Detroit. Chicago's&#13;
educational system is so screwed up that the teachers go out on strike&#13;
just to break up the monotony, -&#13;
4) Daley is too old! The people of Illinois are sick of his face; the&#13;
trend is to younger men such as Dixon, Percy and Thompson. This will&#13;
be Daley's last term in office,&#13;
Chicago will be a lot better off when Daley is gone, and the sooner&#13;
the better. He has out-lived his usefulness as a Mayor with his oldfashioned&#13;
tactics. "The city that works" isn't working as well as Daley&#13;
would have the people believe and in the last election the specters of&#13;
the poor, unemployed, under-educated and the dead were saying,&#13;
"Why doesn't it work for us?" Sometime in the very near future,&#13;
Richard J. Daley will knock on a door and be told "Sorry Mayor, this&#13;
is a cloSed meeting."&#13;
! IW' The Parkside-·------ ~rr". RANGER&#13;
T1te P.rksHh A." .... is wrm.ft liltd edited '&#13;
by . .,.. stulMftt, ., t1M Un'"."l''' neu55i1rily repre'ent.tive of thon "eld by&#13;
WlicoftSln-P.rIl:Side Who .,.1 the students. '.culty or administration of&#13;
.... Mibl. tor ue SOlely P.rkside. Editoria' lind ausine55 55)·2217;&#13;
cootenf Opi". its editoriil' polley and Newsroom S53·2295.&#13;
101'1 e.pressed .re not&#13;
EOITOR_~"'_C~IEF: JNnnine $ipsm.&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGERS: e.... ., .rnalt&#13;
AOYEIlTl$INQ MANAGER· Tom C&#13;
•&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR, .r~u w •• ::-r&#13;
EP .... TMENTS:&#13;
AdMiltistr.t"'''oUc5et: John McKloske.,&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: ~ ,&#13;
&lt;;PORTS EDITOR: J.a .. T "'.&#13;
IlSAG£ £DITORS· ietfr· .&#13;
COPY EDIT.R'· .V I. swe..Cliu. Bill Bark. , Julie La..,e&#13;
-HOTO £DITOR: V... ThomplOn&#13;
CIRCULATION; Sue M.rqu.rdt&#13;
STAFF; WenclVMiller. Terri Gayhart R ~Iafte Carlson. Douglas Edenh • obert Hoffman. ChriS Clausen, Thomas Nolen',&#13;
1:amona Maillet, Bob JamboISau:&#13;
er• ~arv Kay Ohmer. Larry Donnelly. Phil Herma ..n.&#13;
rrudl"u.... Snln Reinhard. Philip ~V~_V. Pella. linda Knucttson. Karin LaFourier. Judy&#13;
. 'Vlneston. Debbie Sharpe&#13;
-&#13;
GIVE BLOOD Make appl,' with&#13;
Qunpus Nurse for Nov, 22&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 17, 1976&#13;
t,lf'RANGER&#13;
--EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Liberation : a sense of dignity&#13;
a&#13;
It's like saying you're twenty-one year after year. You're not, and&#13;
th h ear Conl,.s· a little bit more l('arnmg . 111ur(' 1•x - w1 ea: ne·. · Y • . S · the case with hberatior, I.1b('rc1l!1•;; prepar.:;; u;; for,;&#13;
~riences o ts _ . different type of "growmg up " s1tuat10n. !\v w&lt;1 1:.c1r, :,lwuld have t:.&#13;
find herself desperately trymg tu ht into a mold someone l'lse ha~&#13;
c-reated for tier. . . I am not a "manhater." Connotatively, that 1s the unage many&#13;
0 le perceive a feminist tn he I am not obr,ox10usl~ owrbt'Hnng 11r&#13;
pe p · hted but I am a fen11r11st. ~terevtypmg hc1s affected th,· one-s1g ... . woman's movement, just as 1t has an.1 other socia t mowrnrr:t&#13;
Women ·s Ube ration should not be para lied w 1th thesP n11~concept1011~&#13;
As a femini!:t I believe I have ideas and \'lt'Wpo11,ts v.urth~ of t'\·&#13;
presswn . All I expect is to be treated with the :.ame Jignity and worth&#13;
an\' person should be allowed . T don 't want to be lc1beled with st'!f1m.posing&#13;
llIDitations. I believe in myself. and m my .-apab1ht1es. and :&#13;
thmk Women's Liberation believes m this, too . W1J111t&gt;n s l.,berat1011 h&#13;
a htalthy 111vt:··ation toward~ these ideal~&#13;
TICAL PO.RUM&#13;
losing power&#13;
b) Phil Hermann&#13;
tlaw&#13;
free market&#13;
0&#13;
JayGrassell&#13;
orUfe ience&#13;
I&#13;
Illinois, Chicago instead of Chicago, Illinois. The city isn't as important&#13;
anymore since people are moving out of it to find the security&#13;
of the suburbs. Thompson has been quoted as saying, "I will work with&#13;
the Mayor as much as possible," but don't bet on it.&#13;
3) " Da city dat works" isn't; Chicago has one of the highest levels of&#13;
poverty in the country. If you don't believe this take a trip to either&#13;
south or north Chicago. Chicago also is in the top three for murder and&#13;
crime, right up there with New York and Detroit. Chicago's&#13;
educational system is so screwed up that the teachers go out on strike&#13;
just to break up the monotony.&#13;
4) Daley is too old! The people of Illinois are sick of his face; the&#13;
trend is to younger rnen such as Dixon, Percy and Thompson. This will&#13;
be Daley's last term in office.&#13;
Chicago will be a lot better off when Daley is gone, and the sooner&#13;
the better. He has out-lived his usefulness as a Mayor with his oldfashioned&#13;
tactics. "The city that works" isn't working as well as Daley&#13;
would have the people believe and in the last election the specters of&#13;
the poor, unemployed, under-educated and the dead were saying,&#13;
' 'Why doesn't it work for us?" Sometime in the very near future,&#13;
Richard J. Daley will knock on a door and be told "Sorry Mayor, this&#13;
is a closed meeting."&#13;
1 W The Parksid~&#13;
~" ..&#13;
RANGER The PArks,de RAnger is written And .elite&lt;!&#13;
by the shKltnts of the University of&#13;
;:,scons,n-P•rlu_ide who •re solely&#13;
co lpOns,bfe for ,ts e&lt;litoriAI policy And&#13;
•tent . Optn1ons @xpressed •re not&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Junnine Sipsma&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGERS : CA!lty BrnAk&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER · Tom C&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR : Br~ce W ooper DEPARTMENTS Agner&#13;
Adm,n,stnt,on-Policles : John McKtoskey&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR Debbie BAuer&#13;
necessuily representAtive of those held by&#13;
the students, f.culty or administrAtion of&#13;
PArkside. EditoriAI and Business 553-2217;&#13;
Newsroom 553-2295.&#13;
\PORTS EDITOR ; Jun Tt(IUtA&#13;
~:,s:.;~;IOTOITRORS . 1effrey j . swencki, Bill Buke : Julte L11n1e&#13;
OHOTO EDITOR , VAR Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION Sue MArqu.rdt&#13;
STAFF : Wendy Miller. Terri Gayhart . :,11ne Carlson. Dougliis Edenhaus M , Robert Hoffman, Chris Clausen, Thomas Nolen,&#13;
~amonii Ma,ttet. Bob Jambois 8 er, ary Kay Ohmer, Larry Donnelly, Phil Hermann,&#13;
frudrun9, Scott Reinhard, Phili ~verly Pella, Linda Knudtson, Karin LaFourier, Judy&#13;
P . L,v,ngston, Debbie Sharpe&#13;
GIVE BLOOD Make appt. with&#13;
Campus Nurse for Nov. 22&#13;
... &#13;
Part II: student government Survey&#13;
Students respond&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
ONOCTOBER 25th, RANGER ASKED PARK3IDE STUDENTS AT&#13;
RANDOM, WHAT THEY THOUGHT OF' THEIR STUDENT&#13;
GOVERNMENT THIS YEAR. HER!.: ARE SOME OF THE&#13;
RESPONSES:&#13;
"It doesn't affect me at all, I know that we have one but it hasn't&#13;
showed me anything yet" Dente Conti- So\..&gt;,more&#13;
"I don't know anything about it" - Kim Hass- Sophrnore&#13;
"I thi~ it is better ~en la~t years, Kai xau was aiways fighting. This&#13;
year It seems taat Kiyckc IS at least trying to accomplish something.&#13;
But it really doesn't affect me personally" - Jill Geor;ge- Sophmore&#13;
"It doesn't rela~ to me at all,! don't have the tune to care" -Jerry&#13;
Jacobsen - Jumor&#13;
'" don't see much evidence of what it is doing. The elections went&#13;
badly but' don't know if it is because of PSGA or student apathy."&#13;
Bob Hoffman- Freshman.&#13;
"We are understaffed there is too much work and not enough people&#13;
helping." That is the problem with PSGA according to its president,&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden. "The people who are in student government right&#13;
now are doing a tremendous job trying to keep up with all the work,"&#13;
said Bowden. "The ones that had to resign are also to be corrunended&#13;
because they had other responsibiliti-es that were more important,&#13;
jobs and their academics."&#13;
To put things in proper personal perspective, Kiyoko said&#13;
Parkside student government is important 1Il Il~Y life, out not tne most&#13;
important; my son and studies come first. If , felt that PSGA was&#13;
hurting either of these' would resign too."&#13;
When asked why students had run for the offices even though they&#13;
THOUGH THEY KNEW OF. THE WORKLOAi), Kiyoko stated,&#13;
"PSGA is not a high school government, the workload is much heavier&#13;
then any of us expected. If more students got involved the workload for&#13;
all of US would greatly be decreased. We are the oniy representatives&#13;
ofthe students that is recognized by the administration 'Jere.&#13;
Why do students know so littie about their student ~wernment.?&#13;
"Siudents have the sallie responsibilities as we do, jobs and their&#13;
studies; this limits their time and some may not be ahle to get as involved&#13;
as they might want." Kiyoko continued, "We do a lot for&#13;
students, even though they might not realize it. My administration has&#13;
been concerned mainly with improving the counseling services and&#13;
improving financial aid. Even if they don't realize it, we are working&#13;
for them all the time."&#13;
What about the recent Senate elections? "We hope that the new&#13;
senators can help greatly with the workload. Because of the&#13;
~gnations and other matters, we have been working up to this point&#13;
with about 30percent of the senate. These new people combining with&#13;
the other senators should improve the situation. Two percent of the&#13;
student population voting is actually higher than usual for fall elections.&#13;
If the students don't take an active part, the the burden falls on&#13;
me to appoint people whom,' feel can do the job," Bowden said.&#13;
To sum it all up Kiyoko said, "We need the help of all&#13;
Parkside students because there is a lot of important work that needs&#13;
doing and it may not get done if we don't get more help. The people&#13;
who are in PSGA now are doing all they can, and they wi! continue&#13;
working hard, because if we don't, who will?"&#13;
Art exhibited&#13;
An exhibition titled "Indian&#13;
Folk Painting from Mexico,"&#13;
collected by John Marlow, an&#13;
Illinois State University art&#13;
lecturer, will be on view through&#13;
Novem ber 23 in the Communication&#13;
Arts Gallery at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The pieces are prime examples,&#13;
according to Marlow, of&#13;
hoth the style and character of&#13;
work being produced by Indians&#13;
who live in or near the central&#13;
valley of Mexico.&#13;
Gallery hours at Parkside are&#13;
noon to 5 p.rn, Mondays through&#13;
Thursdays and Tuesday and&#13;
Wednesday evenings from 7 to 10.&#13;
asked&#13;
answered rarely&#13;
-------.-. I&#13;
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THE PARKSIDE RANGER Novem&amp;er 17, 19763&#13;
Wedneoday, Nov. 17&#13;
Movie, "Brewster McCloud," plays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. In Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission is $1.00.&#13;
PSGA Senate meeting, 8:30 p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Thursdav, Nov. 18&#13;
Poetry workshop held by Janet Beeler at 4 p.m. in WLLC 0 174.&#13;
Poetry reading given by Janet Beeler at 8 p.m. in the 2nd floor of the&#13;
library.&#13;
Uncle Vinty Show at 9 p.m, in Union Square. Admission is $1.50 for&#13;
students and 52 for others.&#13;
Open demonstration of PLATO, the most complex computer system in&#13;
the world, by the inventory and a team of experts from the&#13;
University of Illinois, from 2 to 3: 15p.m. in Gr 103.&#13;
Friday, Nov, 19&#13;
DEbate and Forensics Association meets at 12 noon in WLLC 295 and&#13;
1:30 p.m. in CA 233.&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Ufe Science seminar, "Electromagnetism, Man and the Enviornment,"&#13;
held by Dr. J .H. Battocletti from the M~ical Center of&#13;
Wisconsin at 2 p.m. in GR 0127.&#13;
Coed swirruning meet, 4th Annual RangerRelays, held at 4 p.m. in the&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Movie, "Day of the Locust," plays at 7 and 9:45 p.m. in Union Cinema,&#13;
Admission is $1.&#13;
Cable TV program "An Inside Look" hosted by UW-P Pro!. Paul&#13;
Kleine at 7 p.m. on Channel 8.&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series: Second City Review satirical theater&#13;
plays at 8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 20&#13;
Men's cross country ~AIA National Championships held at 11 a.m. at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Dance, featuring "Sass" from 8:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. in Union Square&#13;
Tickets sold by Vet's Club for 51.50 in advance in the WILC concourse&#13;
and $2 at the door.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 21&#13;
WargamersClub meets from Ito 6p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Concert, Parkside Chorale presents An American sampler at 3:30&#13;
p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Vets Club meets at 4 p.m. in WLLC 0174.&#13;
Movie, "Day of the Locust," plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Amdission is $1.&#13;
Monday, Nov, 22&#13;
Blood donation drive held from 10a.m. to 2 p.m. in the Bloodmobile in&#13;
the Union Loop Drive. Please make an appointment with the Health&#13;
Service in wu,c 0198 or call 553-2366.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 23&#13;
Concert, Parkside Jazz Ensemble plays at8 p.rn. in the CAT.&#13;
Meeting, Student Organization Council at 4 p.m, in room 0-174, WILC&#13;
(next to the Information Kiosk). All organizations are asked to send&#13;
a representative.&#13;
All events must be submitted to the Ranger, WILe 0194, before&#13;
Wednesday of the week before publication.&#13;
Second City to appear&#13;
Second City, an improvisational&#13;
theater troupe, will&#13;
appear at Parkside at 8 p.rn, on&#13;
Friday, Nov. 19, in the Cornmunication&#13;
Arts Theater. The&#13;
program is a part of Parkside's&#13;
Accent on Enrichment series.&#13;
The show is a return&#13;
engagement for Second City's&#13;
touring company, which&#13;
played on campus last March.&#13;
Admission is $4. A limited&#13;
number of tickets are available&#13;
at the Campus Information&#13;
Center.&#13;
The company. which traces its&#13;
roots back to 1951,has been the&#13;
spawning ground of such talents&#13;
as Elaine May, Mike Nicols,&#13;
Barbara Harris, Shelley Berman.&#13;
David Steinberg, Alan Arion,&#13;
Joan Rivers. Hobert Klein and&#13;
Aver)' Schreiber ano Jack Burns.&#13;
The performers wr Ite their own&#13;
satirical sketches. a series of&#13;
interrelated skits which provide&#13;
social commentary on such&#13;
diverse subjects as politics, sex,&#13;
movies. great books. money and&#13;
psychology. The company&#13;
maintains its 0\\&lt;11 school and&#13;
workshop.&#13;
".&#13;
C"zy QUIIN'(I":,&#13;
. .' , "&#13;
I.'0.° 1&#13;
i .&#13;
)&#13;
Need ride from south side of Milwaukee. Will&#13;
pay for' 1 of gas Call 76'2 6'231 Ask for Carol.&#13;
1914 PONTfAC SPRING a.sceeo Metallic&#13;
Blue. red buckets. Rally wheels AMFM,&#13;
FM stereo, a.r-ec« S'2W5 634-0876&#13;
by&#13;
Philip L. Livingston&#13;
in the&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
Typing done efficiently and professiOnally in&#13;
my home. Reasonable rates 6576068&#13;
FOR SALE Grey, white. and orange per&#13;
sian rug 6'8'· x )'4", S350_ 55'29394 atter 5&#13;
pm&#13;
WILL 00 any kind of typing at reasonable&#13;
rates. For information ceu 65'2,)373.&#13;
FOR SALE· ~arantl 1015 receiver, Jensen&#13;
model;1 speakers, 1 year old_ S300. Phone 63,J&#13;
"&#13;
;&#13;
Part II: student government survey&#13;
Students respond&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
ON OCTOBER 25th, RANGER ASKED PARK'.JIDE STUDENTS AT&#13;
RANDOM, WHAT IBEY THOUGHT OF 'ffiEIR STUDENT&#13;
GOVERNMENT THIS YEAR. HEHL ARE SOME OF THE&#13;
RESPONSES:&#13;
"It doesn't affect me at all, I know tlrnt we h2ve one but it hasn't&#13;
showed me anything yet" Dente Conti- So1-limore&#13;
"I don't know anythlng about it" - Kim Hass- S?phmore&#13;
"I thi_nk it is better ~en la~t years, Kai Nall ·;v;::,; always fighting. This&#13;
year it seems tllat Kiyoko is at least trying to a,~complish something.&#13;
But it really doesn't affect me personally'' - Jill G eocge- Sophmore&#13;
"It doesn't relate to me at all, I don't have the tu.ie to care'' -Jerry&#13;
Jacobsen - Junior&#13;
"I don't see much evidence of what it is doing. The elections went&#13;
badly but I don't know if it is because of PSGA or student apathy."&#13;
Bob Hoffman- Freshman.&#13;
"We are understaffed there is too much work and not enough people&#13;
helping." That is the problem with PSGA according to its president,&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden. "The people who are in student government right&#13;
now are doincl a tremendous job trying to keep up with all the work,"&#13;
said Bowden. "The ones that had to resign are also to be commended&#13;
because they had other responsibilities that were more important,&#13;
jobs and their academics."&#13;
To put things in proper personal perspective, Kiyoko said&#13;
Parkside student government is im,1,1orumt u11r:.y life, o•Jt not tne most&#13;
impot.tant; my son and studies come first. If I felt that PSGA was&#13;
hurting either of these I would resign too."&#13;
When asked why students had run for the offices even though they&#13;
THOUGP. '!:'HEY KNEW OF. THE WORKLOAn, Kiyoko stated,&#13;
"PSGA is not a high school government, the worklo,:d is much heavier&#13;
then any of us expected. If more students got involved the workload for&#13;
all of us would greatly be decreased. We are the oni~· representatives&#13;
of the students that is recognized by the administratior. liere.&#13;
Why do students know so little about their student ~wernment?&#13;
··Stuoents have U1e same responsibilities as we th), jobs and their&#13;
studies; this limits their time and some may not be able to get as involved&#13;
as they might want." Kiyoko continued, "We do a lot for&#13;
students, even though they might not realize it. My administration has&#13;
been concerned mainly with improving the counseling services and&#13;
improving financial aid. Even if they don't realize it, we are working&#13;
for them all the time."&#13;
~~~~~~~~&#13;
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THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 17, 1976 3&#13;
Wedn day,. 'ov. 17&#13;
Movie, ··Brewster McCloud," plays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Cinema Admission is $1.00.&#13;
PSGA Senate meeting, 8:30 p.m. m Union 207.&#13;
Thursdav,, ov.18&#13;
Poetry workshop held by Janet Beeler at 4 p.m. in WLLC D 174.&#13;
Poetry reading given by Janet Beeler at 8 p.m. in the 2nd floor of the&#13;
library.&#13;
Uncle Vinty Show at 9 p.m. in Union Square. Admission is $1.50 for&#13;
students and $2 for others.&#13;
Open demonstration of PLATO, the most complex computer ystem in&#13;
the world, by the inventory and a team of experts from the&#13;
University of Illinois, from 2 to 3: 15 p.m in Gr 103.&#13;
Friday,. ov.19&#13;
Debate and Forensics Association meets at 12 noon in WLLC 295 and&#13;
1:30 p.m. in CA 233.&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4 p,m. in Union 207.&#13;
Life Science seminar, "Electromagnetism, Man and the Env10rnment,"&#13;
held by Dr. J.H. Battocletti from the Medical Center of&#13;
Wisconsin at 2 p.m. m GR D127.&#13;
Coed swimming meet. 4th Annual Ranger.Relays, held at 4 p.m. in the&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
~tovie. ··Day of the Locust." plays at 7 and 9:45 p.m. in Union Cin ma.&#13;
Admission is 1.&#13;
Cable T\' program "An Inside Look" ho ted by W-P Prof. Paul&#13;
Kleine at 7 p.m. on Channel 8.&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series: Second City Review satirical theat r&#13;
plays at 8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
aturday, ·o\. 20&#13;
Men's cro country "AIA. ·at1onal Champion hips held at 11 a.m. t&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Dance. featuring "Sa s · from 8:30 p.m. to 1 a .m. in Union ·quare&#13;
Tickets sold by Vet's Club for $1.50 in advance m the WILC concourse&#13;
and $2 at the door.&#13;
Sunday,, ·ov. 21&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1 to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Concert. Parkside Chorale presents An American Sampler at 3:30&#13;
p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Vets Club meets at 4 p.m. in WLLC D174.&#13;
Movie, "Day of the Locust," plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Umon Cinema.&#13;
Amdission is $1.&#13;
~tonday, Noi·. 22&#13;
Blood donation drive held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the Bloodmobile in&#13;
the Union Loop Drive. Please make an appoinbnent with the Health&#13;
Service in WLLC D198 or call 553-2366.&#13;
·Tue day, Nov. 23&#13;
Concert, Parkside Jazz Ensemble plays at 8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Meeting, Student Organization Council at 4 p.m. in room D-174, WLI.C&#13;
( next to the Information Kiosk). All organizations are a ked to end&#13;
a representative.&#13;
All events must be submitted to the Ranger, WLLC D194, before&#13;
Wednesday of the week before publication.&#13;
What about the recent Senate elections? "We hope that the new&#13;
senators can help greatly with the workload. Because of the&#13;
r~ignations and other matters, we have been working up to this point&#13;
with about 30 percent of the senate. These new people combining with&#13;
the other senators should improve the situation. Two percent of the&#13;
student popula~on voting is actually higher than usual for fall elections.&#13;
If the students don't take an active part, the the burden falls on&#13;
me to appoint people whom, I feel can do the job," Bowden said.&#13;
To sum it all up Kiyoko said, "We need the help of all&#13;
Parkside students because there is a lot of important work that needs&#13;
doing and it may not get done if we don't get more help. The people&#13;
who are in PSGA now are doing all they can, and they wil continue&#13;
working hard, because if we don't, who will?"&#13;
Second City to appear&#13;
Second City, an im- Admission 1s 4. A limited&#13;
number of ticket are available&#13;
at the Campus Information&#13;
Center.&#13;
Art exhibited&#13;
provisational theater troupe. will&#13;
appear at Parkside at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Friday, Tov. 19, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. The&#13;
program is a part of Parkside's&#13;
Accent on Enrichment series.&#13;
The company. which trace its&#13;
root back to 1951, ha been the&#13;
pawning round of uch talents&#13;
as Elaine , fay . tike • "icols,&#13;
Barbara Harns, helley Berman,&#13;
Da\·id Steinb rg. Ian Arkin,&#13;
Joan R1\·ers, Robert Klein and&#13;
An exhibition titled "Indian&#13;
Folk Painting from Mexico,"&#13;
collected by John Marlow, an&#13;
IlJinois State University art&#13;
lecturer, will be on view through&#13;
November 23 in the Communication&#13;
Arts Gallery at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The pieces are prime examples,&#13;
according to Marlow, of&#13;
both the style and character of&#13;
work being produced by Indians&#13;
who live in or near the central&#13;
valley of Mexico.&#13;
.c Need ride from south side of MIiwaukee Will&#13;
pay for 1 , of gas. Call 762 6231 Ask for Carol&#13;
1974 PONTIAC SPRING 3 speed Metalbc&#13;
Blue. red buckets. Rally wheels AM FM,&#13;
FM slereo. 8 Track S2195 634 0876&#13;
Typing done effic iently and J)rofessionally n&#13;
my home Reasonable rates 657 6068&#13;
FOR SALE Grey. white. and orange Per&#13;
s,an ru0 6'8" x J'4'" S350 552 9394 after 5&#13;
Pm&#13;
WILL DO any kind of typ,ng al reasonable&#13;
rates For information Call 652,3373&#13;
FOR SALE arantz 2015 receiver. Jensen&#13;
::';~del 4 speakers. 1 year old 5300. Phone 634&#13;
Gallery hours at Parkside are&#13;
noon to 5 p.m. Mondays thro~gh&#13;
Thursdays and Tuesday and&#13;
Wednesday evenings from 7 to 10.&#13;
The show is a return&#13;
engagement for Second City's&#13;
touring company, which&#13;
played on campus last '.\1arch.&#13;
,,-&#13;
t:,azy Q11e1lion,.&#13;
) ' . J.&#13;
asked&#13;
answered rarely , 1fud1nf pul,/ie,Hon&#13;
by&#13;
Philip L. Livingston&#13;
in the&#13;
BOOKSTORE &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 17. 1976&#13;
Hedden,&#13;
new V.P.&#13;
The ParU1de SlUdelII Governmenl Association&#13;
... a new vice pl'eSidenl. Harvey V. Hedden.&#13;
A buIlnoss IDlIII8gemenl and political science&#13;
majar. Hedden Ia a 10"""" ..... tor.&#13;
He Is cunenl1y a member 01the segregated Fees&#13;
Allocation comnlillee. lite student organization&#13;
cound1, the ParUicie Association 01 Wargamers,&#13;
lhe Parbicle Debate and Forerwics Association.&#13;
and uoodate Justice on the student court and a&#13;
IlJI'IMr member 01 the ParUide Ranger editorial&#13;
stall.&#13;
Hedden Is concerned with \lie factionalism that&#13;
currenUy occurs. ()urtng his terwre with \lie PSGA&#13;
nate, he had. In hls knowledge, "a pretty good&#13;
re&lt;onl 01 ~ this problem. When I chaired&#13;
..-qs IU assistant president pro tempore), I&#13;
had no complaints."&#13;
The new Vice President saw no "Inherent"&#13;
problems WIth Rett!ng the goals and objectives of&#13;
• the current PSGA Senate accomplished. With the&#13;
merger law implemented, he saw that PSGA, once&#13;
these factions were split up would have little&#13;
problem getting things done at Parkside.&#13;
He also stated that he was interested in running&#13;
.he meetings not running the people involved in&#13;
those meetings.&#13;
19n Local ICUI Intercollegiate Tournament Program&#13;
r ~ \fit}&#13;
B1w1i &amp; - Jan 22 s 23. 1977&#13;
Blllin Jan 28, 29 s 30. 1977&#13;
T*. l lis - Jan' 28. 29 s 30. 1977&#13;
Foosball - Feb 4, 5 &amp; 6, 1977&#13;
Chess - Feb, 4, 5 &amp; 6, 1977&#13;
Local tournament winners to represent Parkside at the ACUI&#13;
ReglOnalsIn Madison Wise. Feb, 17-19, 1977. Contact the&#13;
UnIOn Ree-Center for information or to enter. "100 fee/entry.&#13;
Toumement dreCtOr; Randy Moog Phone: 553-2695&#13;
Why do some people think&#13;
Bud.is sort of special?&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make a difference.)&#13;
--&#13;
When you say Budweiser., you've said it all;&#13;
c ""ISO-IUSCII. nle.• IT. Lo:.S&#13;
Seminar on&#13;
work featured&#13;
A seminar on "Work&#13;
satisf action_Dissatisfaction' ,&#13;
featuring a panel of labor and&#13;
industry representatives and an&#13;
industrial chaplain will be held at&#13;
Parkside on Thursday, Nov. 18,&#13;
from 1:30 to 4 p.m. in Classroom&#13;
Bldg. Room D-IJI.&#13;
The seminar is sponsored by&#13;
Parkside, the Wisconsin&#13;
Humanities Council and the&#13;
Kenosha Christian Youth Council&#13;
Bicentennial Committee.&#13;
Representatives of labor, industry&#13;
and area service clubs are&#13;
expected to attend.&#13;
Panelists will be the Rev.&#13;
Rodney Brown, industrial&#13;
chaplain at the R.J. Reynolds&#13;
Company, Winston-salem, N.C'&#13;
Rich Hol1ander, producti~~&#13;
worker and member of U A W&#13;
Local 180 at the J.1. Case Co'&#13;
.. Elige Johnson .. labor relatio~&#13;
director at American Motors&#13;
Corp.; Frances Froh, plant&#13;
manager at Jockey International;&#13;
and John Woodzick&#13;
second shift ~supervisor ai&#13;
MacWhyte Co. Prof. Walter&#13;
Graf!in will act as moderator and&#13;
Prof. Francine Hall, a specialist&#13;
in labor relations, will serve as&#13;
resource person.&#13;
Thi' arrangements committee&#13;
for the seminar includes Graffin&#13;
Riltli and Arthur Milholland oi&#13;
Jockey International.&#13;
Communicalion,&#13;
soc/anthro&#13;
review completed&#13;
by Chris Clausen&#13;
The Academic Planning and&#13;
Program Review Committee&#13;
• (APPR) has just finished its&#13;
review of the communications&#13;
and sociology-anthropology&#13;
majors. They have met with both&#13;
the faculty and some students of&#13;
both majors and will soon be&#13;
presenting recommendations on&#13;
each.&#13;
The committee has had to&#13;
schedule both of these reviews in&#13;
close overlapping succession of&#13;
one another in order to finish&#13;
them DY November 15 and&#13;
advise the administration on the&#13;
filling the 24 new faculty&#13;
positions.&#13;
Throughout the meetings with&#13;
the faculty, the committee&#13;
through chairman David Baron~&#13;
(associate professor in&#13;
psychology), expressed that they&#13;
were not only looking for the&#13;
negative aspects in the 2 majors,&#13;
but also the positiye.&#13;
The committee began its&#13;
reviews with communications.&#13;
They reviewed the consultants&#13;
reports and then met with&#13;
various faculty members on&#13;
November I. On Wednesday they&#13;
met with randomly selected&#13;
students with communications&#13;
majors.&#13;
The communications faculty&#13;
explained the general thrust of&#13;
the discipline as well as their&#13;
heavy emphasis on special&#13;
communications skills. The&#13;
committee qJestioned the&#13;
communications faculty on the&#13;
diffusion within the discipline as&#13;
well as job opportunities for&#13;
graduates.&#13;
The. faculty responded to the&#13;
question of diffusion withi&#13;
. 1 In&#13;
commUnications that the plan&#13;
for communications that is tn&#13;
~e current UW-P catalogue had&#13;
been . Written before present '&#13;
fjlculty had been at UW-P The&#13;
comm arts faculty offered no&#13;
suggestions as to how or what&#13;
they would change.&#13;
Randomly selected Comln Arts&#13;
m.::I~or!'lmpt i" a ~!os~ !'n~t'!ti;'--b&#13;
WIth Committee members Larry&#13;
Duetsch (associate professoreconomics)&#13;
and chairman David&#13;
Barone (assistant professorpsychology)&#13;
on Wednesday.&#13;
November ~3to respond to the&#13;
communications faculty. The&#13;
students response will be ineluded&#13;
in the final report.&#13;
The faculty of the soc-anlhro&#13;
listened while APPR Committee&#13;
member Teresa Peck (assistant&#13;
professor-education) listed&#13;
complaints voiced by soc-anlllro&#13;
majors expressed in a closed&#13;
meeting with Peck, and Peter&#13;
Hoff (associate professor -&#13;
English.&#13;
The complaints centered on the&#13;
fact that the students felt a need&#13;
. for more academic counseling by&#13;
the discipline faculty. The&#13;
students also felt that the&#13;
discipline sbould give a degree in&#13;
social work rather than a degree&#13;
in Sociology.&#13;
Tbe soc - anthro faculty&#13;
responded by stating they hoped&#13;
to do exactly that. They, like&#13;
comm arts faculty, would like to&#13;
re-write the catalogue as it&#13;
pertains to soc-anthro.&#13;
The new ca talogue plan of socanthro&#13;
would offer 3 concentrations:&#13;
I. Criminal justice&#13;
in consortum with UWMilwaukee&#13;
for a transfer to UWM&#13;
until UW-P can establish a&#13;
degree in Criminal Justice. 2.&#13;
Applied anthropology, a contemporary&#13;
approach to the socanthro&#13;
discipline. and 3. Life&#13;
cycle developement, which has&#13;
yet to be outlined by the socanthro&#13;
faculty.&#13;
The faculty expressed concem&#13;
over the need to establish a social&#13;
worker e degree at UW-P, but&#13;
stated they could not due to the&#13;
lack of faculty. The faculty had&#13;
requested a new faculty position&#13;
to help institute a social worker&#13;
degree but had been turned down&#13;
by the Committee of Principles&#13;
(C.O.P.). The consultants report&#13;
and Soc-Anthro had made no&#13;
mention of this. The faculty will&#13;
submit an extensive course&#13;
reconstruction for the 77·78&#13;
catalogue. They would also hope&#13;
to fill several vacancies before&#13;
the '77 academic year begins.&#13;
The faculty of both disciplines&#13;
will have time to respond before&#13;
the APPR commillee.subrnits its&#13;
report to the administration.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 17, 1976&#13;
Redden,&#13;
new V.P.&#13;
byBru agner&#13;
·th the factionalism that&#13;
his tenure ·th the PSGA&#13;
no ledg , "a pretty good&#13;
problem. Wh n I chaired&#13;
id nt pro tempore), I&#13;
\\ no 'inherent"&#13;
nd objectives of&#13;
• the current PSGA Senate accomplished. With the&#13;
merger law implemented, he saw that PSGA, once&#13;
th e factions were split up would have little&#13;
problem getting things done at Parkside.&#13;
He also stated that he was interested in running&#13;
U1e m.:etings not running the people involved m&#13;
those meetings.&#13;
-&#13;
Bowling - J 22 &amp; 23. 1911 Foosball - F-eb. 4 . 5 &amp; 6. 1977&#13;
Billiards Chess - F-eb. 4. 5 &amp; 6. 1977 J 20. 29 s 3o. 1977&#13;
Table Tennis - Jan. ·2e. 29 &amp; 3o. 1977&#13;
Local tournament winners to represent Parkside at the ACUI&#13;
Regionals ·n Madison Wisc. Feb. 17-19, 1977. Contact the&#13;
Union Rec-Center for information or to enter. 51°0 fee/entry.&#13;
To n director: Randy Moog Phone: 553-2695&#13;
Why do sonte people think&#13;
Bud. is sort of special?&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make a difference.)&#13;
When you say Budweiser., you've said it all!&#13;
11"N£USU-IUSCH, I .. C. • ST. LOUIS&#13;
Seminar on&#13;
work featured&#13;
A seminar on "Work Company, Winston-Salem, N.C.;&#13;
Rich Hollander, production&#13;
worker and member of UAW&#13;
Local 180 at the J.I. Case Co·&#13;
Sa tisf action-Dissatisfaction''&#13;
featuring a panel of labor and&#13;
industry representatives and an&#13;
industrial chaplain will be held at&#13;
Parkside on Thwsday, Nov. 18,&#13;
from 1 : 30 to 4 p .m. in Classroom&#13;
Bldg. Room D-111.&#13;
The seminar is sponsored by&#13;
Parkside, the Wisconsin&#13;
Humanities Council and the&#13;
Kenosha Christian Youth Council&#13;
Bicentennial Committee.&#13;
Representatives of labor, industry&#13;
and area service clubs are&#13;
expected to attend.&#13;
Panelists will be the Rev.&#13;
Rodney Brown, industrial&#13;
chaplain at the R.J. Reynolds&#13;
. Elige Johnson, . labor relatio~~&#13;
director at American Motors&#13;
Corp.; Frances Froh, plant&#13;
manager at Jockey International;&#13;
and John Woodzick&#13;
second shift supervisor at&#13;
MacWhyte Co. Prof. Walter&#13;
Graffin will act as moderator and&#13;
Prof. Francine Hall, a specialist&#13;
in labor relations, will serve as&#13;
resource person.&#13;
The arrangements committee&#13;
for the seminar includes Graffin&#13;
Rikli and Arthw Milholland of&#13;
Jockey International.&#13;
Comm uni cation,&#13;
soc/anthro&#13;
review completed&#13;
by Chris Clausen&#13;
The Academic Planning and&#13;
Program Review Committee&#13;
• (APPR) has just finished its&#13;
review of the communications&#13;
and sociology-anthropology&#13;
majors. They have met with both&#13;
the faculty and some students of&#13;
both majors and will soon be&#13;
presenting recommendations on&#13;
each.&#13;
The committee has had to&#13;
schedule both of these reviews in&#13;
close overlapping succession of&#13;
one another in order to finish&#13;
them 6y November 15 and&#13;
advise the administration on the&#13;
filling the 24 new faculty&#13;
positions.&#13;
Throughout the meetings with&#13;
the faculty, the committee&#13;
through chairman David Baron;&#13;
( associate professor in&#13;
psychology), expressed that they&#13;
were not only looking for the&#13;
negative aspects in the 2 majors,&#13;
but also the positive.&#13;
The committee began its&#13;
reviews with communications.&#13;
They reviewed the consultants&#13;
reports and then met with&#13;
various faculty members on&#13;
November 1. On Wednesday they&#13;
met with randomly selected&#13;
students with communications&#13;
majors.&#13;
The communications faculty&#13;
explained the general thrust of&#13;
the discipline as well as their&#13;
heavy emphasis on special&#13;
communications skills. The&#13;
committee qJestioned the&#13;
communications faculty on the&#13;
diffusion within the discipline as&#13;
well as job opportunities for&#13;
graduates.&#13;
The. faculty responded to the&#13;
question of diffusion within&#13;
communications that the plan&#13;
for communications that is in&#13;
the current UW-P catalogue had&#13;
been written before pr;sent&#13;
faculty had been at UW-P The&#13;
comm arts faculty offered no&#13;
suggestions as to how or what&#13;
they would change.&#13;
~domly selected Comm Arts&#13;
rn;i10r&lt;: mpt in " &lt;&gt;ln.,.o.,-1 • .&#13;
with Comntittee- ~~~~;;~c~;~&#13;
Duetsc? ( associate professoreconom1cs)&#13;
and chairman David&#13;
Barone ( assistant professorpsychology)&#13;
on Wednesday.&#13;
November 3 to respond to the&#13;
communications faculty. The&#13;
students response will be incl\lded&#13;
in the final report.&#13;
The faculty of the soc-anthro&#13;
listened while APPR committee&#13;
member Teresa Peck ( assistant&#13;
professor-education) listed&#13;
complaints voiced by soc-anU.-o&#13;
majors expressed in a closed&#13;
meeting with Peck, and Peter&#13;
Hoff (associate professor -&#13;
English.&#13;
The complaints centered on the&#13;
fact that the students felt a need&#13;
for more academic counseling by&#13;
the discipline faculty. The&#13;
students also felt that the&#13;
discipline should give a degree in&#13;
social work rather than a degree&#13;
in Sociology.&#13;
The soc - anthro faculty&#13;
responded by stating they hoped&#13;
to do exactly that. They, like&#13;
comm arts faculty, would like to&#13;
re-write the catalogue as it&#13;
pertains to soc-anthro.&#13;
The new catalogue plan of socanthro&#13;
would offer 3 concentrations:&#13;
1. Criminal justice&#13;
in consortum with UWMilwaukee&#13;
for a transfer to UWM&#13;
until UW-P can establish a&#13;
degree in Criminal Justice. 2.&#13;
Applied afithropology, a contemporary&#13;
approach to the socanthro&#13;
discipline. and 3. Life&#13;
cycle developement, which has&#13;
yet to be outlined by the socanthro&#13;
faculty.&#13;
The faculty expressed concern&#13;
over the need to establish a social&#13;
worker degree at UW-P, but&#13;
stated they could not due to the&#13;
lack of faculty. The faculty had&#13;
requested a new faculty position&#13;
to help institute a social worker&#13;
degree but had been turned down&#13;
by the Committee of Principles&#13;
(C.O.P.). The consultants report&#13;
and Soc-Anthro had made no&#13;
mention of this. The faculty will&#13;
submit an extensive course&#13;
reconstruction for the 77-78&#13;
catalogue. They would also hope&#13;
to fill several vacancies before&#13;
the '77 academic year begins.&#13;
The faculty of both disciplines&#13;
will have time to respond before&#13;
the APPR committee submits its&#13;
report to the administration. &#13;
Methods laid out&#13;
Birth control&#13;
balled up&#13;
The staff members at the DeRanger have been&#13;
asked for equal time for the articles that have been&#13;
printed about Plant Parenthood. So here are "Some&#13;
Methods of Birth c:ontrol that the Noble One missed.&#13;
\. Chastity belts - Chastity belts could be sold at&#13;
reduced rate for students under the age of 19 and&#13;
over the age of 6.&#13;
2.Tie it in a knot. No explanation necessary.&#13;
3. Use Elmer's Glue All as a douche. (Better yet,&#13;
super Glue)&#13;
4. Castration. ,&#13;
5. Make sure one of you is dead.&#13;
6. Leaving your clothes on.&#13;
7. Keeping a thick quilt or lead shielding between&#13;
the two bodies.&#13;
8.Do it with a partner of the same sex.&#13;
9. Attempt intercourse only while exceeding the&#13;
speed limit driving down 1-94the wrong way.&#13;
,&#13;
I 9161 'li J&amp;qwaAON~3~NY~aa 3a1S)l~Yd 3H~&#13;
A number of students atrempt , various&#13;
('ontrnl method« "lJl!~f'..t'f"d h" nf"RttntJf"r.&#13;
birth&#13;
SPECIALLY FOR WOMEN&#13;
\. Only go out with abortionists.&#13;
2. Before going on a date, put a broken popbottle in&#13;
your private parts.&#13;
SPECIALLY FOR MEN&#13;
\. Put your balls in a baggie and ziploc it.&#13;
2. At the last minute, replace penis with large toe.&#13;
EPILOGUE&#13;
These methods are tired and true and guaranteed&#13;
to prevent impregnation. For further information,&#13;
call 632-0091anytime for advice.&#13;
However, some of these methods are considered&#13;
illegal by your local authorities and the FBI. Now&#13;
that we have a president committed to legal&#13;
"shacking up" and just general screwing around,&#13;
the. federal laws will soon change.&#13;
Lost student&#13;
found&#13;
by SheidoD Duagbone&#13;
A fonner Parkside student who has been mIsslng&#13;
since 1973was found today by the campus security&#13;
force purely by mistake.&#13;
. A spokesman for the security force said a division&#13;
involved in a combination parking ticket raid and&#13;
search for a pair of tbe Chancellor's office ad·&#13;
~enturers were combing the woods just south of&#13;
Main Place when one of them stumbled upon a man&#13;
,lothed in bucksin rags sitting in front of a crude&#13;
shelter.&#13;
Alter sharp questioning the officers discovered&#13;
that they hlld found Mr. William Bunion, who was&#13;
last seen 3 years ago just before setting off on foot&#13;
from Greenquist Hall to his car which was located&#13;
in the East Parking Lot.&#13;
Mr. Bunion plans to return to Parkside after he is&#13;
over the shock of re-entering society. When asked&#13;
by this reporter if he will every again park his car in&#13;
the East Parking Lot, Mr. Bunion replied "What is a&#13;
car?"&#13;
It was learned later by this reporter that Mr.&#13;
Bunion was refused admission to the school because&#13;
of his inability to remember what a car is. No one&#13;
was available for comment.&#13;
TheParkside-------------&#13;
DeRANGER&#13;
Vol. V No. 2 Wedne.d,,~. 'io\ember 17. 1976&#13;
UJJZP tastes Saga tragedy&#13;
brutal enterprise, Champoop&#13;
explained, "Well, we were going&#13;
to keep it hushed until next&#13;
semester when a proposed cutback&#13;
in financial aid is to occur.&#13;
in which case the surprise would&#13;
definitely be in our favor. Look, if&#13;
you have time I'll explain the&#13;
whole thing. Sit down and have&#13;
one of our 250 pounders with&#13;
cheese."&#13;
Butch Br inernan, of the&#13;
security force, who led the raid,&#13;
reported that four men and a&#13;
woman were arrested following a&#13;
brief scuffle in the cold storage&#13;
and outer offices over what appeared&#13;
to be a piece of evidence&#13;
but was later confirmed as a pork&#13;
chop. The four men were identified&#13;
as Sydney Dowd, 38, Buddy&#13;
Niechowicz, 26, and Earl "JayBob"&#13;
Rivers, 50 all cafeteria&#13;
cooks, and Rudy Sump, 29; a hair&#13;
stylist from Racine. The woman,&#13;
Eve Skwatlow, 32, was an admitted&#13;
voyeur from Waukegan,&#13;
Illinois.&#13;
Brineman explained that his&#13;
department's actions were based&#13;
purely on suspicion after ..one of&#13;
-e his men, while eating in the&#13;
[" cafeteria, discovered a 1974&#13;
.' Tremper High School class ring&#13;
in his Ranger Burger, while an&#13;
~ anonymous chancellor reported&#13;
;' finding a contact lens on his&#13;
~ chicken sandwich. "Other than&#13;
those two incidents, nothing has&#13;
been reported, which seems&#13;
odd," Brineman said. ..But you&#13;
by Fraiser Stetsonevski&#13;
In a dramatic early morning.&#13;
raid on the Saga Food Service's&#13;
cold storage unit last Friday, the&#13;
Campus Security Police and&#13;
several vigilante PSGA members&#13;
found the gruesome remains of'&#13;
six fonner Parkside drop-outs&#13;
suspended from the ceiling in&#13;
positions which suggest their&#13;
ultimate fate as processed food.&#13;
Though an intense investigation&#13;
for tacts to support&#13;
that conclusion is still underway,&#13;
Peter Champoop, a cafeteria&#13;
worker whose job is to prepare&#13;
cold-cuts and hot sandwiches&#13;
confessed that he was aware of&#13;
tbe atrocity but refused to accept&#13;
full credit for its inception: "I&#13;
wish I had dreamed this up," he&#13;
stated. "We may never have a&#13;
shortage again!"&#13;
When asked why he never&#13;
came forward to expose the&#13;
USDA in8peclor Clyde B~gllie.... review8 the inud~-'&#13;
qu~te eondition8 or the SOIliOcold 810r"lIe&#13;
umt,&#13;
know these college kids. They'd&#13;
eat just about anything."&#13;
A sense of loss and helpless&#13;
anger has pervaded the school&#13;
since the atrocity was&#13;
discovered. :1/ one expected that&#13;
euch an outrage could be cornmitted&#13;
at this quiet, rural !n·&#13;
stitution. "Things just won't be&#13;
the same," reflected Larry&#13;
Flank, a sophomore. "It looks&#13;
like I'll have to go back to&#13;
bringing a bag lunch."&#13;
The PSG A members who&#13;
participated in the raid as the&#13;
arche-typal hysterical mob whichs&#13;
had nearly taken the law into&#13;
their own hands, seemed stunned&#13;
at the fate of their fellow'&#13;
students.&#13;
said senator Jim Lobomeire,&#13;
19, "We could have at least held&#13;
off on the raid until those poor&#13;
guys had been marinated or&#13;
rolled in breadcrwnbs. Anything&#13;
but this! Hell, I knew a few of&#13;
them personally and I can tell&#13;
you with a straight face that not&#13;
less than three of tbem wanted to&#13;
go as deep-fried crullers."&#13;
Another senator, Jean Rabbid,&#13;
sadly remarked, "It's all such a&#13;
waste! Imean, they haven't even&#13;
passed inspection yet!"&#13;
Following the notification of&#13;
relatives, funerals for the&#13;
deceased will be held at their&#13;
respective churches, their times&#13;
yet to be announced, with a wake&#13;
afterwards for the entire group in&#13;
the Union cafeteria.&#13;
Duo&#13;
vanished&#13;
by Jerimiah Johnson&#13;
Two Parkside students have&#13;
been reported missing since last&#13;
Friday afternoon after making a&#13;
seemingly harmless bet with&#13;
several fellow students as to&#13;
whether or not they would be able&#13;
to locate the Chancellor's office.&#13;
Reported as missing to the&#13;
Kenosha police were Richard&#13;
Magellan, 21, of Racine, and&#13;
Robert Polo, 20, of Kenosha. Both&#13;
are history majors at Parkside.&#13;
A friend of the pair said that he&#13;
and another companion were&#13;
silting 10 the Union with the two&#13;
last Friday when Magellan began&#13;
boasting that he was not afraid to&#13;
try to locate the office regardless&#13;
of the rwnors about barricades&#13;
and guard dogs.&#13;
After some preparation. the&#13;
duo set out on their trek equipped&#13;
with a tent, nashllght, sterno&#13;
stove, ropes, and other survival&#13;
equipment, and have not been&#13;
seen nor heard from since. The&#13;
Chancellor was not available for&#13;
comment.&#13;
Wargamers&#13;
cited&#13;
by Adolph PatloD&#13;
Campus Security Police&#13;
searched for six Parkside&#13;
students missing since mid·&#13;
semester after dropping their&#13;
classes Campus Pollee&#13;
discovered on saturday a homemade&#13;
bomb shelter. three&#13;
nuclear warheads, an inunense&#13;
arsenal of ground combat&#13;
equipment, and a World War n&#13;
half.track in the 0-2 level of&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
After an initial investigation,&#13;
the P.arkside Wargamers were&#13;
ci ted by the Kenosha Fire&#13;
Department for neglecting Fire&#13;
safety Regulations, and blocking&#13;
fire lanes .&#13;
The Wargamers were also&#13;
given citations fOl' malicious&#13;
destruction of' private property&#13;
after they dug forty-nine trenches&#13;
on the east campus lawn and&#13;
barb-wired the Library ~&#13;
center.&#13;
Methods laid out&#13;
Birth control&#13;
balled up&#13;
The staff members at the DeRanger have been&#13;
asked for equal time for the articles that have been&#13;
printed about Plant Parenthood. So here are "Some&#13;
Methods of Birth Control that the Noble One missed.&#13;
l. Chastity belts - Chastity belts could be sold at&#13;
reduced rate for students under the age of 19 and&#13;
over the age of 6.&#13;
l 9L6l 'LL .1aqwaA0N H3~N'tHao 3O1S&gt;CH'td 3H.l&#13;
Lost student&#13;
found&#13;
by Sb ldoo Dungbors&#13;
A former Parkside student who has been missing&#13;
since 1973 was found today by the campus ecurity&#13;
force purely by mistake.&#13;
• A spokesman for the ecurity force said a division&#13;
involved in a combination parking ticket raid and&#13;
2. Tie it in a knot. No explanation necessary.&#13;
3. Use Elmer's Glue All as a douche. ( Better yet,&#13;
Super Glue)&#13;
A number of students attempt _ ,:ariou!o,&#13;
c·ontrnl methorl" .. .,~~t&gt;-ted h, Jl.-Rnnuf&gt;r.&#13;
birth&#13;
search for a pair of the Chancellor's office adventurers&#13;
were combing the woods just outh of&#13;
~fain Place when one of them stumbled upon a man&#13;
xlothed in bucksin rags sitting in front of a crude&#13;
shelter.&#13;
After sharp questioning the officers discovered&#13;
Lliat they h~d found tr. William Bunion, who wa&#13;
last seen 3 years ago just before setting off on foot&#13;
from Greenquist Hall to his car which was located&#13;
in the East Parking Lot.&#13;
4. Castration.&#13;
5. Make sure one of you is dead.&#13;
6. Leaving your clothes on.&#13;
SPECIALLY FOR WOMEN&#13;
1. Only go c,ut with abortionists.&#13;
7. Keeping a thick quilt or lead shielding between&#13;
the two bodies.&#13;
8. Do it with a partner of the same sex.&#13;
!I. Attempt intercourse only while exceeding the&#13;
speed limit driving down 1-94 the wrong way.&#13;
2. Before going on a date, put a broken popbottle in&#13;
your private parts.&#13;
SPECIALLY FOR MEN&#13;
1. Put your balls ma baggie and ziploc it.&#13;
2. At the last minute, replace penis with large toe.&#13;
EPILOGUE&#13;
Mr. Bunion plans to return to Parkside after h is&#13;
over the shock of re-entering society. \\'hen asked&#13;
by this reporter if he will every again park his car In&#13;
the East Parking Lot, Mr. Bunion replied "What i a&#13;
car?"&#13;
These methods are tired and true and guaranteed&#13;
to prevent impregnation. For further information,&#13;
call 632-0091 anytime for advice.&#13;
It was learned later by this reporter that tr.&#13;
However, some of these methods are considered&#13;
illegal by your local authorities and the FBI. ~ow&#13;
that we have a president committed to legal&#13;
·'shacking up" and just general screwing around,&#13;
the_ federal laws will soon change.&#13;
Bunion was refused admission to the school becau&#13;
of his inability to remember what a car i . No one&#13;
was available for comment.&#13;
The Parkside------------&#13;
DeR ANGER&#13;
Vol. \" ~o. 2 \\edne .. da~. ~OH~mber 17. 1976&#13;
UW-P tastes Saga tragedy&#13;
by Fraiser Stetsonevski&#13;
In a dramatic early morning.&#13;
raid on the Saga Food Service's&#13;
cold storage unit last Friday, the&#13;
Campus Security Police and&#13;
several vigilante PSGA members&#13;
found the gruesome remains of&#13;
six former Parkside drop-outs&#13;
suspended from the ceiling in&#13;
positions which suggest their&#13;
ultimate fate as processed food.&#13;
Though an intense investigation&#13;
tor tacts to support&#13;
that conclusion is still underway,&#13;
Peter Champoop, a cafeteria&#13;
worker whose job is to prepare&#13;
cold-cuts and hot sandwiches&#13;
confessed that he was aware of&#13;
the atrocity but refused to accept&#13;
full credit for its inception." "I&#13;
wish I had dreamed this up,'' he&#13;
stated. "We may never have a&#13;
shortage again!"&#13;
When asked why he never&#13;
came forward to expose the&#13;
USDA inspector Clyde Buggers reviews the inttd~ - ·&#13;
quate conditions of the Saga cold storage untt.&#13;
brutal enterprise, Champoop&#13;
·E'xplained. ··Well, we were going&#13;
to keep it hushed until next&#13;
semester when a proposed cutback&#13;
in financial aid is to occur,&#13;
in which case the surprise would&#13;
rlefinitely be in our favor. Look, if&#13;
you have time l'il explain the&#13;
whole thing. Sit down and have&#13;
one of our 250 pounders with&#13;
cheese."&#13;
Butch Brineman, of the&#13;
Security force, who led the raid,&#13;
reported that four men and a&#13;
woman were arrested following a&#13;
brief scuffle in the cold storage&#13;
and outer offices over what appeared&#13;
to be a piece of evidence&#13;
but was later confirmed as a pork&#13;
chop. The four men were identified&#13;
as Sydney Dowd, 38, Buddy&#13;
Niechowicz, 26, and Earl '"JayBob"&#13;
Rivers, 50 all cafeteria&#13;
cooks, and Rudy Sump, W, a hair&#13;
stylist from Racine. The woman,&#13;
Eve Skwatlow, 32, was an admitted&#13;
voyeur from Waukegan,&#13;
Illinois.&#13;
Brineman explained that his&#13;
department's actions were based&#13;
purely on suspicion after ..one of&#13;
his men, while eating in the&#13;
cafeteria, discovered a · 1974&#13;
Tremper High School class ring&#13;
in his Ranger Burger, while an&#13;
_ anonymous chancellor reported&#13;
finding a contact lens on his&#13;
;!. chicken sandwich. "Other than . those two incidents, nothing has&#13;
been reported, which seems&#13;
odJ," Brineman said. ··But you&#13;
know these college kids. The_ "d&#13;
eat just about anything."&#13;
A sense of lo.:s and help! s.&#13;
anger has pervaded the chool&#13;
since the atrocity wa ..&#13;
discovered .. • enc C!-.-pected that&#13;
~uch an outrage could be &lt;'Ommitted&#13;
at this quiet, rural institution.&#13;
"Things just won't be&#13;
the same," reflected Larry&#13;
Flank. a sophomore. ··It looks&#13;
like 1"11 have to go back to&#13;
bringing a bag lunch."&#13;
The PSGA members who&#13;
participated in the raid as the&#13;
arche-typal hysterical mob which~&#13;
had nearly taken the law into&#13;
their own hands, seemed stunned&#13;
at the fate of their fellow·&#13;
students.&#13;
Said Senator Jim Lobomeire,&#13;
19, • We could have at least held&#13;
off on the raid until those poor&#13;
guys had been marinated or&#13;
rolled in breadcrumbs. Anythmg .&#13;
but this! Hell, I knew a few of&#13;
them personally and I can tell&#13;
you with a straight face that not&#13;
less than three of them wanted to&#13;
go as deep-fried crullers."&#13;
Another senator, Jean Rabbid,&#13;
sadly remarked, "It's all such a&#13;
waste'. I mean, they haven't even&#13;
passed inspection yet!''&#13;
Following the notification of&#13;
relatives. funerals for the&#13;
deceased will be held at their&#13;
respective churches. their times&#13;
yet to be announced, with a wake&#13;
afterwards for the entire group in&#13;
the Union Cafeteria.&#13;
Duo&#13;
vanished&#13;
by Jcrimi h John on&#13;
Two Parkside tud nts have&#13;
been r ported mi Ing since last&#13;
Friday afternoon after ma ing a&#13;
seemin 1) harmle b t with&#13;
s \'era! fellow tudents as to&#13;
~hether or not they would be able&#13;
to locate the Chancellor's offic .&#13;
Reported as missing to th&#13;
Kenosha police wer Richard&#13;
Magellan, !!l, of Racine, and&#13;
Robert Polo, 20, of Kenosha. Both&#13;
are hi tory majors at Parkside.&#13;
A friend of the pair said that he&#13;
and another comparuon w r&#13;
situn m the nion with th two&#13;
last Friday when 1ag II n began&#13;
boast1 that h was not afraid to&#13;
try to locate th office re ardl&#13;
of the rumor ab ut bamcad&#13;
and uard do .&#13;
After some pr paration, th&#13;
duo s t out on their tr k equipped&#13;
·ith a tent, fla blight, sterno&#13;
stove, rope , and oth r urviv 1&#13;
equipm nt, nd have not b n&#13;
seen nor h ard from sine • Th&#13;
Chane llor ·a not vallabl for&#13;
comm nt.&#13;
Wargamers&#13;
cited&#13;
by Adolph Patton&#13;
Campus Security Polic&#13;
·earched for six Parksid&#13;
tudents m1 "tng inc m dsemester&#13;
fter dropping their&#13;
clas e ampu. Police&#13;
di covered on Saturda) a homemade&#13;
bomb shelter. three&#13;
nuclear warheads, an immen&#13;
arsenal of ground combat&#13;
equipment, and a World War n&#13;
half-track in the D-2 level of&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
After an initial investigation,&#13;
the P.arkside Wargamers were&#13;
cited by the Kenosha Fire&#13;
Department for neglecting Fire&#13;
Safety Regulations, and blocking&#13;
fire lanes.&#13;
The Wargamers were also&#13;
given citations fol' malicious&#13;
destruction of' private property&#13;
after they dug forty-nine trenches&#13;
on the east campus lawn and&#13;
barb-wired the Library Learning&#13;
Center. &#13;
ft61 ·u JaqW8AON il39NYila&lt;J 301S&gt;lilYd 3H1. z&#13;
UW-Pcirkside&#13;
DeRANGER'&#13;
- EDITORIAL-OPINION -&#13;
Sex scandal finally climaxes&#13;
1-&#13;
•&#13;
i&#13;
;&#13;
••&#13;
~&#13;
J.Carter&#13;
Peaceful student&#13;
compromise sought&#13;
by Lester P. Madlock n,Jr.&#13;
What we need in this country more than a five-cent whore or cigar. is&#13;
a liltle law and order. The way that crime is handled in our cities is&#13;
disgusting and shocking. They expect decent, God-fearing, taxpaymg,&#13;
hard-working, child-loving, poorly educated and highly&#13;
emotional people like you and me, to turn in our guns, tanks bazookas,&#13;
sub-machine guns. rifles, anti-aircraft and nuclear weapons, so that&#13;
criminals can rule the world.&#13;
yO\&gt;know, my father used to say, "Just let one of them creeps&#13;
come Into my house, and I'll blow his brains clear across the street",&#13;
that made me feel safe. l'iow all of those mambv, pamby, conunie,&#13;
faggot, dope-addict, and liberal senators in congress, want to take our&#13;
prectousguns, tanks, bazookas, etc., away from us. I say, "go to hell";&#13;
I don't give up any guns of mine to no police. the}' are as crooked as the&#13;
rrooks&#13;
What we do need III this country is good old capital punishment, like&#13;
'In the old days. U somebody killed someone else, lhen they just strung&#13;
them up or shot them on sight. Oh God!, how lloog for those days.&#13;
In mj opinion, all rapists and murderers should have their ey~ put&#13;
out by a hot poker, slowly and painlully, then they should be boiled in'&#13;
t'()1tar and placed in a block of ice, to cool them off, then put out in the&#13;
middle of the street where they can be smashed to pieces, just like&#13;
some beautllullittle squirrel or skunk. This is the ooly way to protect&#13;
decent, god-fearmg, tax-paying, bard working, child-molesting,&#13;
poorly~ucated and highly-emotional people such as you and me.&#13;
Crtnunals must be made to pay, dearly, for their acts of lust. Why&#13;
can't they be like most of us decent, god-fearing, tax-eheating, childmolestmg.&#13;
poorly educated, and highly emotional people and just go&#13;
jerk off in some dirty movie house; no, they go out and hurl somebody.&#13;
Dope peddlers should be hung by the ears and forced to drink a&#13;
pilon a drano, and then put into a rubber room. This would solve the .&#13;
dope problem In this country, you 'betcha'. Don't send those kids to a&#13;
hallway house, send lbem back 10 their decent, hypocritical, taxcheating,&#13;
chll&lt;knolesting, poorly educated and highly emotional&#13;
.. rents; ibIS WIll straighten them out.&#13;
Once you stop the rapISts and the murderers and the dope peddlers,&#13;
this country will be safe for us decent, hypocritical, tax-cheating.&#13;
hlld·mole ling, poorly.educated, liquor-drinking, and highly&#13;
cmbllonal people such as you and me. But remember, pray for your&#13;
enem,-., love your neighbor, and love your God.&#13;
~~DITOR IN CHIEF: "Boss" J. Zipper&#13;
,PUTUM EATER: Gene-Tenlative&#13;
VAGUE EDIBLES: jock swisher, Pill Barfly&#13;
COPIOUS ANTEATER: Juicy Lung&#13;
PHOBIA AND GORE: Vun Tun Sun&#13;
CURLY RAnON: Soup Or Quarts&#13;
-:rUFF' Bill Barke. Phil Hermann, Jeff Litrenla S M&#13;
-"thy Brnak, Phil Livingston, Tom Cooper Bruce 'w ue arquart,&#13;
&gt;oH .. o .. i &lt;:;w~n~k; • agner&#13;
The DeRanger should not be ,.Iltll&#13;
seriously I don't care what you think Of' UV'·&#13;
You folio';'" me? Don't give me that! If'S .11'&#13;
jake. and if you can't see ftillt, you·..., ~&#13;
snet In your. ears. or your brain w'S sh· ...'"f&#13;
off the last tome yOU got a hait.CuI. YOU 90 I&#13;
now? HUh? Well. do y.? Answer me!!&#13;
'"en .nd The Parksi"de DeRange, is wwtl tIM&#13;
adited by $ever. I distu~bed students 01 t&#13;
UnIversity Wisconsin. Parkside whOc.nllO&#13;
be held responsible tor anyfhlng mYc" lets&#13;
its editorial poUc:.,.or content .&#13;
b)' J Carter&#13;
Sex in the high echelons of the Parkside administration d'oes not&#13;
surprise us. The headlines on.a rela~ed inci.dent have become. a blur.&#13;
Their persistence as sensational journalism has worn Uno, and&#13;
repercussions found in the form of Miss Elizabeth Ray's book: The&#13;
Washington Fringe Benefits, have been brief and pathetic, Even in the&#13;
Midwest, long known as.the "elastic in the shorts under the Bible&#13;
Belt", promiscuity in high office b~ely turns a head or sends a&#13;
frustrated school boy to the lavatory.&#13;
When Barbara Noggers, a typist for the humanities department,&#13;
confessed to simultaneous affairs with English professor, Lyle "Slow&#13;
Bob" Angstfot; economics professor, Roland Teemer; communications&#13;
lecturer; Pus Vlednegorkiewicz; German 'professor,&#13;
Juan Mirales; Dr. Baskedd Tucci of the chemistry department;&#13;
Chester Lambuster, advisor for Student Debits .with PAB; Joan&#13;
Hemungga, a typist for the foreign language division; and Manfred&#13;
Nevell, a shuttle bus driver, no. one really cared.&#13;
Her pamphlet, entitled, Parkside Overtime, dida booming busiIless&#13;
in the bookstore for three hours last October, then felt a terrninal cutback&#13;
in sales. The pamphlet was taken off the shelves last week.&#13;
The Deftanger takes a dim view of the entire affair. not only for iis&#13;
pitiful attempt at sensationalism, or Miss Nogger-s questioQable&#13;
judgement in the revelation of it which destroyed the stainless&#13;
reputations of several prestigious academians, but for the shameless&#13;
pride she displays in the matter.&#13;
We feel the investigation in her affairs was incomplete. Questions&#13;
arise which need answering. Even the pamphlet was short of facts.&#13;
For instance: How was Professor Teemer ? Did he use a con..&#13;
traceptive, and what did he say afterward? Was Dr. Tucci's war&#13;
wound a hindrance or did it cause new heart-stopping sensations that&#13;
broughton mulitple climaxes. Is Juan Mirlaes really a kinky fe~?&#13;
Does he really do those things to your navel? And how? How does&#13;
Professor Angslfot manage with only that one arm of his? Whatls his&#13;
favorite position, and could you please describe those "strange"&#13;
undergarments he wears?&#13;
These and other questions must be answered. Perhaps the whole&#13;
shabby controversy can then come to final and blissfully ecstatic&#13;
climax.&#13;
··&#13;
·•=&#13;
---&#13;
Lester P. Madlock n. Jr.&#13;
•&#13;
9l6l 'l.l ,aqwaf.0N ~3!&gt;N\t~ao 3O1S&gt;t~Vd 3Hl. l&#13;
UW-Pcirkside&#13;
De RANGER· - EDITORIAL-O~INION&#13;
Sex scandal finally clim~xes&#13;
• .. ,,.&#13;
~&#13;
J.Carter&#13;
Peaceful student&#13;
compromise sought&#13;
by Le st r P. ad lock II, Jr.&#13;
,,.&#13;
by JCa,ter&#13;
Sex in the high echelons of the Parkside administration &lt;foes not&#13;
surprise us.-The headlines on a related incident have become a blur.&#13;
Their persistence as sensational journalism has worn thin, and&#13;
repercussions found in the form of Miss. Elizabeth-~y's book, The&#13;
Washington Fringe Benefits, have been brief and pathetic. Even in the&#13;
Midwest, long known as the " elastic in the shorts under the Bible&#13;
Belt", promiscuity in high office barely turns a head or sends a&#13;
frustrated school boy to the lavatory.&#13;
When Barbara Noggers, a typist for the humanities department,&#13;
confessed to simultaneous affairs with English professor, Lyle "Slow&#13;
Bob" Angstfot; economics professor, Roland Teemer; communications&#13;
lecturer; Pus Vlednegorkiewicz; German professor,&#13;
Juan Mirales; Dr. Baskedd Tucci of the chemistry department;&#13;
Chester Lambuster, advi~or for Student Debits ,with PAB; Joan&#13;
Hemungga, a typist for the foreign language division; and Manfred&#13;
Nevell, a shuttle bus driver, no_ o!'}e really cared.&#13;
Her pamphlet, entitled, Parkside Overtime, did.a booming busiriess&#13;
in the bookstore for three hours last October, then felt a terminal cutback&#13;
in sales. The pamphlet was taken off the shelves last week.&#13;
The DeRanger takes a dim view of the entire affair, not only for its&#13;
pitiful attempt at sensationalism, or Miss Nogger1s question.able&#13;
judgement in the revelation of it which destroyed the stainless&#13;
reputations of several prestigious academians, but for the shameless&#13;
pride she displays iri the matter.&#13;
We feel the investigation in her affairs was incomplete. Questions&#13;
arise which need answering. Even the pamphlet was short of facts.&#13;
For instance: How was Professor Teemer? Did he use a contraceptive,&#13;
and what did he say afterward? Was Dr. Tucci's war&#13;
wound a hindrance or did it cause new heart-stopping sensations that&#13;
brought-On mulitple climaxes. Is Juan Mirlaes really a kinky fetishist?&#13;
Does he really do those things to your navel? And how? How does&#13;
Professor Angstfot manage with only that one arm of his? What is his&#13;
favorite position, and could you please describe those "strange"&#13;
undergarments he wears?&#13;
· These and other questions must be~answered. Perhaps the whole&#13;
shabby controversy can then come to final and blissfully ecstatic&#13;
climax.&#13;
Lester P. Madlock II, Jr.&#13;
'!-:OITOR rN CHIEF : "Boss" J. Zipper&#13;
iPUTUM EATER: Gene-Tentative The DeRanger should not be ta~en&#13;
se.riously . I don't care what you think or say.&#13;
You follow me? Don't give me that! lt's all a&#13;
ioke, and if you can't see th1at, you've go;&#13;
snot in your_ ears, or your b~ain was sha:tit off the last time you got a ha1t-cut. Yo~?&#13;
now? Huh? Well, do ya? Answer me .·&#13;
VAGUE ED1Bl.ES: _jock swisher, Pill Barfly&#13;
COPIOUS ANTEATER: Juicy Lung&#13;
PHOBIA AND GORE: Vun Tun Sun&#13;
CURLY RATION: Soup Or Quarts&#13;
'&gt;' fUFF : Bill Barke, Phil Hermann Jeff L"tr ta ::athy Brnak, Phil Livingston Tom 'eoo· P 18 en ' Sue Marquart, . • er, ruce Wagner 10 fro" 1 ~'.V~!1~ki .&#13;
The Parkside DeR anger is written a"d&#13;
e.dited by several distutbed students of th~&#13;
University Wisconsin . Parkside who c~~::s&#13;
be held responsible for anything muc&#13;
its editoria.l polic.y or content.&#13;
I &#13;
Poet to read&#13;
by Ludwig von Scbeutz&#13;
poet Bunyon McPheeters will present a workshop and reading at&#13;
Parkside on Wednesday, December 29 from 3-3:18 p.m. in the Wyllie&#13;
Ubrary·Learnmg Center Room D-I07. The event is free and open to&#13;
the general puIrlic who are between the ages of twenty-seven and&#13;
forty-three and will admit to ever ha~ing had scaly. patches on their&#13;
abdomens. .&#13;
McPheeters, most widely known for this tobacco juice stained beard&#13;
and bloodshot eyes, will preface his reading with a creative workshop,&#13;
which WIllinclude push-ups, squat thrusts, a game of tag, an S&amp;M&#13;
encounter session, and a slide presentation dealing with the x-rays of&#13;
Rod McKuen's throat and his subsequent genital disorder.&#13;
For his reading, McPheeters will deal with some of his most recent&#13;
workas well as his earliest, choosing selections from The Sad Enema&#13;
11956),Song of the Whaling Pygmy (1959). Love Never Forgets a Long&#13;
Dislanee Call Collect( 1966), and An Eviction Notice From God (1972).&#13;
An effervescent and willy speaker, McPheeters has met with great&#13;
success at the colleges and girls' reformatories he has visited. Though&#13;
he frequently forgets to bring his selected readings on his tours, he has&#13;
always managed to captivate his audiences with tasteless stories&#13;
about the women he has known, and the religious leaders he 'would liketo&#13;
see dead. or his infantile routine in which he dresses as a streetwalker&#13;
and taunts members of his audience into coming onstage and&#13;
smear his knees an~ shoulders with aftershave lotion.&#13;
Anyone interested in more information on the McPheeters reading&#13;
can contact Steve Lannsky of the Physical Plant at extension 0030.&#13;
it. While we were at it, we came&#13;
(and how!) across the following&#13;
clipping protruding from my&#13;
drawers:&#13;
WASHINGTON, D&amp;C&#13;
(Associated Phress) - TheSecretary&#13;
of Labor announced&#13;
today that three new positions-in&#13;
Community Action, Affirmative&#13;
Action, and .Slide-bolt Action-&#13;
. were being-budgeted for the next&#13;
three consecutive trimester&#13;
periods. Al cumers (preferably&#13;
E.Z.· has&#13;
male) are welcome to apply.&#13;
Whatever skills applicants&#13;
possess will be analyzed according&#13;
to the following criteria:&#13;
1) Ability to erect the appropriate&#13;
office spac.e&#13;
(preferably in 15 minutes);'&#13;
2) Discharge orders, without&#13;
regress, even if it means egg in&#13;
the face;&#13;
3) The guts to back-off from&#13;
stiff resistance. In other words, to&#13;
recognize when the backbone of&#13;
your office staff has gone limp;&#13;
4) The determination 10 boldly&#13;
thrust into new parameters;&#13;
bango timel&#13;
Dear Ranger:&#13;
Allow me to express my&#13;
latitude in having head the&#13;
supreme pleasure of reading a&#13;
'ver'y Noble PeUarticie. My&#13;
friend Rubin Jacov and' I had a&#13;
bang-o: lime skimming through&#13;
e fl6l 'll J8qWaA0N J86ultHaeJ 30IS)lHYd 3H.L&#13;
Catalog&#13;
adds major •&#13;
problem&#13;
read&#13;
Parkside's next catalog is&#13;
expected to contain the following&#13;
new major:&#13;
students who have a problem&#13;
with deciding what major concentration&#13;
they wish to seek at&#13;
Parkside may wish U&gt; seek an&#13;
undecided major.&#13;
Requirements for this major&#13;
will be 120 credits, with no more&#13;
than three classes in each&#13;
discipline. Students will be&#13;
required to take at least 20&#13;
credits of independent study and&#13;
physical education courses to&#13;
supply them with enough breadth&#13;
and basic skills.&#13;
Students must also declare&#13;
their interest at least seven&#13;
semesters before they attend&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
';amt&#13;
Poet Hunyon McPheeters will&#13;
on December- 29th in WLLC&#13;
5) The foresight to abort the&#13;
mission should preventive&#13;
precautions suffer undue&#13;
leakage, causing excessive buildup;&#13;
and&#13;
6) To keep cool .. never squirm&#13;
while in action.&#13;
These positions will be open to&#13;
all Civil, Service examinees&#13;
scoring above a certain&#13;
minimum, with minor revisions&#13;
of the automatic point award&#13;
system made such that specific&#13;
disabilities won't be good for&#13;
shit! ,&#13;
Rubin and I thought -your&#13;
readers might enjoy this little&#13;
bureaucratic P.R. emission.&#13;
What-a thrill it would be if a&#13;
Parkside grad were selected. to&#13;
fill just one of these openingsplush&#13;
office and all! This seems&#13;
unlikely, for it's usually the case&#13;
that a position of such potency is&#13;
filled. with someone from a more&#13;
established institution, like&#13;
Havhard. Tsk. Parkside students&#13;
get all the hard knocks.&#13;
Yours in levity,&#13;
E.Z. Cwnmings.&#13;
May Rain Corps re-founded&#13;
ist Mate: Say, sweety! You rang?&#13;
J.P.J.: How many times must Itell you, sir, that I&#13;
am your captain, oot-your sweety!?! Really. you&#13;
do take your title too seriously!&#13;
1st Mate: Well, at least. sornebody's serious here!&#13;
Join the navy and see the world, my ass! Ididn't&#13;
think it meant painting an atlas on the ship's&#13;
deck.&#13;
J.P.J.: Bitch, bitch, bitch! What'd ya expect, a free&#13;
college education? Now, I called you here to&#13;
discuss those roudy men in the masts. They have&#13;
much too much time on ·their hands.&#13;
1st. Mate: Nice alliteration, sir, and yes, I know.&#13;
They've been using the National Ensi&amp;" for target&#13;
practice again.&#13;
J.P.J.: What!? Those sharpshooters have been&#13;
taking pot shots at our flag? !&#13;
1st Mate: No, sir,-notthe flag. The new ensign from&#13;
Philly. He's been complaining that his braid is&#13;
becoming [raid from their musket ~ire.&#13;
J.P.J.: Nice alliteration. But that's what) mean!&#13;
Those leather heads ...&#13;
1st Mate: Leather necks, sir.&#13;
J.P.J.: What? Oh, yeh, leather necks. They have&#13;
too much time on their hands. What can we do?&#13;
1st Mate: Maybe if they were organized. into. a&#13;
fighting group it would help.&#13;
J.P ..I. How would that help?&#13;
/ 1st Mate: Well, sir, we could teach them how to peel&#13;
_ spuds and mop the floor.&#13;
J.P.J.: Swab the deck.&#13;
'st Mate: I'll get right on it, sir.&#13;
Cunt. un fJH/;!" Ii&#13;
Btson-tenuial MiD;utes&#13;
a one act play&#13;
by&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
Dateline, November 9-10,1775&#13;
Two hundred and one yMrs ago a little known but&#13;
in-famous event took place somewhere east 01&#13;
Obscene, Wisconsin, which was' to be lost in the&#13;
anals of history. It went something like this.&#13;
Act I., Scene INovember&#13;
9,1775&#13;
John Paul Jones is approached. by his FirstMate&#13;
...&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
room D-107.&#13;
Raw lust loathed&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I think something should be&#13;
done about the raw sex that goes&#13;
on down the Main Street of&#13;
Parkside. It is utterly disgusting&#13;
to be walking along and seeing on&#13;
everyone of those couches at&#13;
least two people in reclining&#13;
positions, It's very embarrassing&#13;
for people like me to cast my eyes&#13;
upon this outrageous activity. On&#13;
top of all that, I blush easily. It is&#13;
also very contagious. First one&#13;
couch is filled with intimate&#13;
lovers and then pretty soon all the&#13;
couches are full of the deadly&#13;
lust. I strongly believe that&#13;
something should be done about&#13;
this abhorring situauon. There&#13;
are never any couches open when&#13;
it comes around to my turn with&#13;
my leverfor the day' I feel I have&#13;
just as much right to the couches&#13;
as the others who fill them day&#13;
after day and hour after hour!&#13;
t.uve and Kisses,&#13;
Susie Cream Cheese&#13;
r-ont. 011 pn~f" 8&#13;
The Movie Scene&#13;
by Angel Ramier ea&#13;
For the next month an a half, the film industry will be excreting its&#13;
holiday blockbusters onto big silver screens around the country.&#13;
Squeezed from the bowels of motion picture companies' largest&#13;
budgets, most prestigious directors, and biggest stars, they will splash&#13;
across billboards, T.V. screens, magazine and newspaper features,&#13;
and filmed "coming attractions" in competitive, dazzling and&#13;
sometimes tasteless publicity campaigns.&#13;
Saved [or those last weeks before the deadline for 1976Academy&#13;
Award consideration they are the efforts of canny studio heads who&#13;
are out to grab a percentage of movie goers' Christmas bonus checks.&#13;
In some cases, an over-blown blockbuster manages to barely pass&#13;
wind. and a studio may have to work like hyper banshees to get out of&#13;
the red by next Christmas.&#13;
Here is a run-down of the holiday fare for those with discriminating&#13;
tastes:&#13;
Cough at the Devil- A handsome. wordly circus clown throws up on a&#13;
young girl at a childrens' hospital and is disgraced. He goes to Africa,&#13;
where he finds work as a tap dancer's understudy in a traveling Zulu&#13;
repertory company. After falling in love with a gazelle, he rents an&#13;
abandoned gravel plant and sets up a business manufacturing&#13;
quicksand.&#13;
Overacted by Andy Griffith and Connie Stevens, the film stumbles&#13;
through a predictable script. At least the gazelle had a nice tush.&#13;
The Last Lug Wrench - Despite George C. Scott's sensitive, commanding&#13;
performance as an almost totally paralyzed plumber, this&#13;
film wanders between themes of lonely lasciviousness and dental&#13;
hygiene.&#13;
The story concerns Buford Davis (Stott), a plwnber incapacitated&#13;
from the neck down due to a childhood accident. Though fully capable&#13;
at his job - he fixes toilets and drain pipes by holding tools in his mouth&#13;
- he must face a shattering dilemma. He needs false teeth.&#13;
The film climaxes when Davis, head-strong and persistant, is on his&#13;
back making a delicate adjustment under a garbage disposal, a plyer&#13;
• in his gums, when he gets a runny nose. Whining and squirming, Scott&#13;
manages to convey the rough persistence of a despera te man, with&#13;
insightful determination, against a world gone limp.&#13;
Never a Dull.Hemorrhage • The world goes topsy-turvy in this mad&#13;
farce about a crack emergency room team in a Nel! York hospital.&#13;
Though the plot has some familiar overtones, th~ breakneck pace and&#13;
superb acting, most notably Ernest Borgnine as a wacky, profane&#13;
orderly, and Ed McMahon as "Bump" the sadistic nurse, stand by&#13;
themselves.&#13;
Though the movie may be almost nauseatingly bloodthirsty in parts&#13;
f Director Richard Lester was actually able U&gt; get several fresh c0rpses&#13;
to use in his train wreck and university bombing scenes), it is a&#13;
delight to watch, and will most certainly be a memorable distraction&#13;
during the holiday season.&#13;
Poet to read&#13;
by Ludwig von Scheutz&#13;
Poet Bunyon McPheeters will present a workshop and reading at&#13;
Parkside on W_ednesday, December 29 from 3-3:18 p.m. in the Wyllie&#13;
Library-Learning Center Room D-107. The event is free and open to&#13;
the general p~li_c who ~re between the ages of twenty-seven and&#13;
fortY,-three and will admit to ever having had scaly patches on their&#13;
abdomens. ·&#13;
McPheeters, most widely known for this tobacco juice stained beard&#13;
and bloodshot eyes, will preface his reading with a creative workshop&#13;
which will include push-ups, squat thrusts, a game of tag an S&amp;M&#13;
encounter session, and a slide presentation dealing with th~ x-rays of&#13;
Rod McKuen's throat and his subsequent genital disorder.&#13;
For his reading, McPheeters will deal with some of his most recent&#13;
work as well as his earliest, choosing selections from The Sad Enema&#13;
( 1956), Song of the Whaling Pygmy ( 1959). Love Never Forgets a Long&#13;
Distance Call Collect ( 1966), and An Eviction Notice From God ( 1972).&#13;
t 9L6l 'Ll JaqWiMON Ja6ue~aa 301S&gt;t~'ld 3H.l&#13;
Catalog&#13;
adds • maJor&#13;
problem&#13;
Parkside's next catalog is&#13;
expected to contain the following&#13;
new major:&#13;
Students who have a problem&#13;
with deciding what major concentration&#13;
they wish to s k at&#13;
Parkside may wish to seek an&#13;
undecided major.&#13;
Requirements for this major&#13;
will be 120 credits, with no more&#13;
than three classes in each&#13;
discipline. Students will be&#13;
required t.o take at lea t 20&#13;
credits of independent study and&#13;
physical education cour s to&#13;
supply them with enough breadth&#13;
and basic skills.&#13;
An effervescent and witty speaker, McPheeters has met with great&#13;
success at the colleges and girls' reformatories he has visited. Though&#13;
he frequently forgets to bring his selected readings on his tours, he has&#13;
always managed to captivate his alldiences with tasteless stories&#13;
about the women he has known, and the religious leaders he would liketo&#13;
see dead, or his infantile routine in which he dresses as a streetwalker&#13;
and taunts members of his audience into coming onstage and&#13;
smear his knees an~ shoulders with aftershave lotion.&#13;
Anyone interested in more information on the McPheeters reading&#13;
can contact Steve Lannsky of the Physical Plant at extension 0030.&#13;
Poet Bun_ on Mc Pheeteri,, ~ ill read 'ot Pork~ide&#13;
on Decembt&gt;r 29th m WLLC room D-107.&#13;
Students must also declar&#13;
their interest at least seven&#13;
semesters before they attend&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
E.Z. has&#13;
bango time!&#13;
DPar Ranger:&#13;
Allow me to express my&#13;
latitude in having head the&#13;
supreme pleasure of reading a&#13;
·ver'y Noble Pellarticle. My&#13;
friend Rubin Jacov and I had a&#13;
bang--0 ! time skimming through&#13;
it. While we were at it, we came&#13;
( and how!) across the following&#13;
clipping protruding from my&#13;
drawers:&#13;
WASHINGTON , D&amp;C&#13;
( Associated Phress) - The&#13;
Secretary of Labor announced&#13;
today that three new positions-in&#13;
Community Action, Affirmative&#13;
Action, and Slide-bolt Acuon-&#13;
. were being budgeted for the next&#13;
three consecutive trimester&#13;
periods. Al cumers ( preferably&#13;
male) are welcome to apply.&#13;
Whatever skills applicants&#13;
possess will be analyzed according&#13;
to the following criteria:&#13;
1) Ability to erect the appropriate&#13;
office spac.e&#13;
(preferably in 15 minutes);&#13;
2) Discharge orders, without&#13;
regress, even if it means egg in&#13;
the face;&#13;
3) The guts to back-off from&#13;
stiff resistance. In other words, to&#13;
recognize when the backbone of&#13;
your office staff has gone limp;&#13;
4) The determination lo boldly&#13;
thrust into new parameters;&#13;
5) The foresight to abort the&#13;
mission should preventive&#13;
precautions suffer undue&#13;
leakage, causing excessive buildup;&#13;
and&#13;
6 J To keep cool - never squirm&#13;
while in action.&#13;
These positions will be open to&#13;
all Civil Service examinees&#13;
scoring above a certain&#13;
mirumum, with minor revisions&#13;
of the automatic point award&#13;
system made such that specific&#13;
disabilities won't be good for&#13;
shit!&#13;
Rubin and I thought your&#13;
readers might enjoy this little&#13;
bureaucratic P.R. emission.&#13;
What -a thrill it would be if a&#13;
Parkside grad were selected to&#13;
fill just one of these openingsplush&#13;
office and all! This seems&#13;
unlikely, for it's usually the case&#13;
that a position of such potency is&#13;
filled with someone from a more&#13;
established institution, like&#13;
Havhard. Tsk. Parkside students&#13;
get all the hard knocks.&#13;
Yours in levity.&#13;
E.Z. Cummings.&#13;
May Rain Corps re-founded&#13;
Bison-tenuial Minutes&#13;
a one act play&#13;
by&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
Dateline, November 9-10, 1775&#13;
Two hundred and one years ago a little known but&#13;
in-famous event took place somewhere east of&#13;
Obscene, Wisconsin, which was·to be lost in the&#13;
anals of history. It went something like this.&#13;
Act I., Scene I.&#13;
November 9, 1775&#13;
John Paul Jones is approached, by his First&#13;
Mate ...&#13;
1st Mate: Say, sweety! You rang?&#13;
J.P.J.: How many times must I tell you, sir, that I&#13;
am your captain, nof your sweety ! ? ! Really, you&#13;
do take your title too seriously!&#13;
1st Mate : Well, at least somebody's serious here !&#13;
Join the navy and see the world, my ass! I didn't&#13;
tl'Jnk it meant painting an atlas on the ship's&#13;
deck.&#13;
J.P.J.: Bitch, bitch, bitch! What'd ya expect, a free&#13;
college education? Now, I called you here to&#13;
discuss those roudy men in the masts. They have&#13;
much too much time on ·their hands.&#13;
1st. Mate: Nice alliteration, sir, and yes, I know.&#13;
They've_ been using the National Ensign for target&#13;
practice again.&#13;
J. p .J.: What!? Those sharpshooters have been&#13;
taking pot shots at our flag?!&#13;
1st Mate : No, sir, not the flag. The new ensign from&#13;
Philly. He's been complaining that his braid is&#13;
becoming £raid from their musket fire.&#13;
J .P .J.: Nice alliteration. But that's what _I mean!&#13;
Those leather heads ...&#13;
1st Mate: Leather necks, sir.&#13;
J.P.J.: What? Oh, yeh, leathe: necks. They have&#13;
too much time on their hands. What can we do?&#13;
1st Mate: Maybe if they were organized into a&#13;
fighting group it would. help.&#13;
J.P .. J. Ho" would that help?&#13;
1 1st Mate: Well, sir, we could teach them how to peel&#13;
spuds and mop the floor.&#13;
J.P.J.: Swab the deck.&#13;
1st Mate: I'll get right on it, sir.&#13;
Conl. on pu~t· K&#13;
Raw lust loathed&#13;
•&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
·1 think something should be&#13;
done about the raw sex that goes&#13;
on down the Main Street of&#13;
Parkside. It is utterly disgusting&#13;
to be walking along and seeing on&#13;
everyone of those couches at&#13;
least two people in reclining&#13;
positio:is. It's very embarrassing&#13;
for people like me to cast my eyes&#13;
upon this outrageous activity. On&#13;
top of all that, I blush easily. It is&#13;
also very contagious. First one&#13;
couch is filled with intimate&#13;
lovers and then pretty soon all the&#13;
couches are full of the deadly&#13;
lust. I strongly believe th t&#13;
sc,mething should be done about&#13;
this abhorring ituation. Th re&#13;
are never any couches open when&#13;
it comes around to my turn with&#13;
my iover for the day! I feel I ha,.. •&#13;
just a,; much right to the couch -&#13;
as the others who fill them day&#13;
after day and hour after hour!&#13;
1,ove and Ki es,&#13;
Susie Cream Cheese&#13;
........ OIi pUJ!I' H&#13;
The Movie Scene&#13;
by Angel Ramiern&#13;
For the next month an a half, the film industry \rill bee cretin its&#13;
holiday blockbusters onto big sil\'er screens around the coun~·.&#13;
Squeezed fr_om the bowels of motion picture comparue ' larg st&#13;
budgets, most prestigious directors, and biggest stars, they ~ill splash&#13;
across billboards, T.V. screens, magazine and newspaper featur ,&#13;
and filmed ··conung attractions" 10 competitive, dazzlin nd&#13;
sometimes tasteless publicity campaigns.&#13;
Sa\'ed for those last weeks before the de-adline for 1976 Academy&#13;
Award consideration they are the efforts of canny tudio h a who&#13;
are out to grab a percentage of movie goers' Chri tmas bonus chi&#13;
In some cases, an over-blown blockbuster manages to bar ly pa&#13;
wind. and a studio may have to work like hyp r ban hee to t out of&#13;
the red by next Christmas.&#13;
Here is a run-0own of the holiday fare for tho e with discriminating&#13;
tastes:&#13;
Cough at the Dc,·il - A hand ome. wordly circus clown throws up on a&#13;
young girl at a childrens' hospital and is di raced, H o to Africa,&#13;
where he finds work as a tap dancer's understudy in a traveling Zulu&#13;
repertory compan)'. After falling in love with a gazelle, he rents an&#13;
abandoned gravel plant and ets up a bu ine manufacturin&#13;
quicksand.&#13;
Overacted by Andy Griffith and Connie Stevens, the film stumbl&#13;
through a predictable script. At least the gazelle had a nice tush.&#13;
The La,;t Lug Wrenrh - Despite George C. Scott's ensitive, commanding&#13;
performance as an almost totally paralyzed plumber, this&#13;
film wanders between themes of lonely lasciviousn and dental&#13;
hygiene.&#13;
The story concerns Buford Davis (Scott), a plumber incapacitated&#13;
from the neck down due to a childhood accident. Though fully capable&#13;
at his job - he fixes toilets and drain pipes by holding tools in his mouth&#13;
- he must face a shattering dilemma. He needs false teeth.&#13;
The film climaxes when Davis, head-strong and persistant, is on his&#13;
back making a delicate adjustment under a garbage disposal, a plyer&#13;
• in his gums, when he gets a runny nose. Whining and squirming, Scott&#13;
manages to convey the rough persistence of a desperate man, with&#13;
insightful determination, against a world gone limp.&#13;
Never a Dull Hemorrhage - The world goes topsy-turvy in this mad&#13;
farce about a crack emergency room team in a Ne'! York hospital.&#13;
Though the plot has some familiar overtones, th~ breakneck pace and&#13;
superb acting, most notably Ernest Borgnine as a wacky, profane&#13;
orderly, and Ed McMahon as "Bump" the sadistic nurse, stand b&#13;
themselves.&#13;
Though the movie may be almost nauseatingly bloodthirsty in parts&#13;
t Director Richard Lester was actually able to get several fresh corpses&#13;
to use in his train \\&gt;Teck and university bombing scenes), it is a&#13;
delight to watch, and will most certainly be a memorable distraction&#13;
during the holiday season. &#13;
fl61 'll ~aqW"AONH30NVH&amp;(J 30IS&gt;lHVd 3H.1 ~&#13;
Doctor: Rain? Not today.&#13;
S.N.: No Marines. You know, arrah ..,forget it.&#13;
SceneY.&#13;
Sam returns to Tu.JVTavern on crutches.&#13;
could see a nice tanKardof ale about oow! Ah, Tun&#13;
Tavern! I'll just bop in here and quaff a quick&#13;
one. Hunun, nice alliteration! (to Bartender)&#13;
Bartend, I'll have a pint or ale, please. Say, yo~&#13;
haven't seen any Marines around here, have you.&#13;
Bortend: Nah, it ain't gonna rain. Here's your brew&#13;
bud.&#13;
S.N.: Nice alliteration, but ,I said Marines, not may&#13;
rain.&#13;
Bortend: Who, what?&#13;
S.N.: You know, Arrah arrah, gung ho.... oh, hell!&#13;
Jobn Wayne!&#13;
Bortend: Oh, Marines! Nah, just a few good men&#13;
who want to fight. They're all around.&#13;
S.N.: How can you tell? It-looks pretty peaceful.&#13;
Bortend: Try God save the you-koow-who.&#13;
S.N.: Who, John Wayne? _&#13;
Bartend: No, nerd, the king! You must be an officer!&#13;
S.N.:{;()DSAYE THE KING!!! AHH!!! HELP!!!&#13;
. Sceue iV.&#13;
S.N.: Thanks, doc. You sure I won't get /3bies,&#13;
tetanus, or-get wierd during the full moon. Those&#13;
are pretty nasty bites!&#13;
Doctor: No, you're okay. You'd best stay away from&#13;
wild dog packs. They can be real ~ean.&#13;
S.N.: They were Marines.&#13;
Doctor: Rain? Not today. .&#13;
S.N.: No Marines. You know, arrah ...forget It.&#13;
Scene IV.&#13;
S.N.: Thanks, doc. You sure I won't get rabies,&#13;
tetanus, or get wierdduring the full moon? Those&#13;
are pretty nasty bites!&#13;
Doctor: No, you're okay. You'd best stay away from&#13;
wild dog packs. They can be real mean.&#13;
S.N: They were Marine.s.&#13;
rUlit. (ruIn flair ':'&#13;
J.P.J.: Not you. the Marines!&#13;
lSI Mate: It's not going to rain, sir.&#13;
.t P.J.: Not may r$in! Marine!&#13;
1st Mate: Who, what?&#13;
J.P:J.: You know, arrah arrah, gung ho, take the&#13;
hill! Guard the embassy, first to ftght, Semper&#13;
Fidelis, Halls of Montazuma, Shores of Tripoli!&#13;
lSI Mate: Who, what?&#13;
J.P.J.: John Wayne!!!&#13;
lSI Mate: Dh, Marines! I'll get someone on it right&#13;
away.&#13;
Seenen.&#13;
First Mate meets with Samual Nickolas.&#13;
lSI Mate: ...so that's our problem. We want you to&#13;
organl2e them into a fighting force.&#13;
S.N.: But why me? I know nothing of naval ,&#13;
pr·'. ~..res. Besides, my hair's too short.&#13;
1st: Mate: Perfect!&#13;
S.N.: What's in it for me, anyway?&#13;
lSI Mate: Marine Captain's bars. .&#13;
S.N.: I could dig being a captain '8nd. ~g my&#13;
own pub but why'd you say It may ram.&#13;
1st Mate: Not may rain! Marine! You know, arrah&#13;
arrah, gung bo, take the hill! Guard the embassy,&#13;
first to fight, Semper Fidelis, Halls of Montazuma,&#13;
Shores of Tripoli!&#13;
S.N.: Who, what?&#13;
1st Mate: John Wayne!&#13;
S.N.: Oh,Marines! l'UseewhatI can dig up.&#13;
Scene ill. November 10,1775&#13;
Sam is walking the streets of Philadelphia&#13;
.. arching out a few good men who want to fi£ht.&#13;
S. .: (to selfl I've been humping these streets for&#13;
hours. Where are the Marines when you need&#13;
them~ I'll bet they're all out at the bars. Yeh, I&#13;
S.N.: (to bartender) Thanks, pal! Why didn't YllQ&#13;
warn me? '&#13;
Bortend: I lost five bucks on the Army-Navy 88Ille&#13;
last week. Army won!&#13;
S.N.: (to patrons) All right, you few good men who&#13;
want to fight, who'll be the first 10 sign up and&#13;
help initiate the greatest fighting force in history.&#13;
Who will defend to the death life'"l.iberty and&#13;
pursuit of happiness? Who will begin thl\!ong .&#13;
of proud patriots who will win wars, buy bonds,&#13;
and be always faithful to freedom? Who wanta lb&#13;
annihilate the antagonists ot America?&#13;
Group: Do we get a free college education too?&#13;
S.N.: (to Bartend) What went wrong?&#13;
Bortend: Nice alliteration, bad recruiting. Watch&#13;
.this. FREE ALE TD AL4MARINES!!!&#13;
S.N.: AHH!!! HELP!!!&#13;
Bortend: How's that?&#13;
S.N.: Gr~t, thanks! Hey, what's your name and&#13;
who the Hell are all these men?&#13;
Bortend: I'm Robert Mullens and this is the Continental&#13;
Congress.&#13;
S.N.: Well, Bob, you're now Captain Mullens, the&#13;
first Marine Corps recruiter.&#13;
Bortend: Oh? And I take it you are Captain Samual&#13;
Nickolas, the first Marine Corps Commandant?&#13;
S.N.: Yeh, painfully correct! (to man at the bar)&#13;
Private, could you please remove your boot from&#13;
my throat?&#13;
And that's the way it was, two-hundred~and-oDe&#13;
years ago last week!&#13;
r-unt. Fr-om puge 7&#13;
Johns iibed&#13;
,&#13;
Dear People:&#13;
You know, I get kind of mad&#13;
whenever I go to the john and&#13;
\,have to sit in those damn white,&#13;
sterile, naked stalls. You may not&#13;
know this but in this whole&#13;
stinking building, the only place a&#13;
guy can get any rest and peace is&#13;
in the can. I see to it that I put in&#13;
three or four hours every day.&#13;
It's great, and personally, I like&#13;
the old johns in Greenquist rather&#13;
than some of those bowls they've&#13;
got in the newer ones that are six&#13;
feet off the ground. You know&#13;
what I mean. I come away from&#13;
dangling on those things with a&#13;
.. crease right where the sur. don't&#13;
~ shine .&#13;
.; ----------------, ;i PREVENTS I&#13;
~I PABpresents Wednesday, NOVembe:17 (as usual)&#13;
I Free Lecture: sponsered by Pre-Law Club: "Fixing tickets" Art or I Craft&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Anyway, I was just wonde~&#13;
who I could see about getting a&#13;
couple posters hung up. You&#13;
know, an Alice Cooper or the&#13;
Stones, or Bowie. I don't knO\ll&#13;
what the girls would. want. Wen,&#13;
how ahout it? Hey, and maybe&#13;
some magazines or comic books,&#13;
or a six-pack! Maybe somebody&#13;
could install an eight-track, you&#13;
know?&#13;
Think it over. Hey, and call me.&#13;
I've got a water bed you might be&#13;
interested in using.&#13;
Yours,&#13;
Arthur Bunpbuccer&#13;
ll're tler&#13;
crippled&#13;
Judd GutzbUl!t grapples Elmer Hassen&#13;
oeiology professor in a 13-0 march.&#13;
to the mat, pinning the&#13;
Thursday t November 18&#13;
by world-wide travellers (Parkside Shuttle ~ Wrestlers open season Travel Lecture:&#13;
Drivers)&#13;
PAB Presents: "The-we-advertise-in-toilets-movie" Down The Drain I&#13;
at 7 p.m. at Union _&#13;
I I&#13;
. Friday, Novemher 19 I&#13;
IConcert: featuring the one, the only, fantastic ......... PAB does il Iagain! . I&#13;
Pre·Thanksgiving Turkety Shoot: Contestants must supply weapons.I&#13;
I Parkside faculty supplies turkeys.&#13;
I _ Saturday, November 20 I&#13;
IOutdoor Track Meet: UW-Parkside Streakers v. Petrifying Springs I&#13;
IPark County Sheri~ at 4:00. I&#13;
I Sunday, Novemher21 I&#13;
Parkside Physical Plant Rummage Sale: 12.to 6 p.m. Items for sale I&#13;
IInclude one slightly used Union Bldg., Classroom Bldg., slightly&#13;
~~~--------------j&#13;
by Huty Cosell januned a size lwelve set of gal! deats into my&#13;
face. "&#13;
Cutting a triple-threat swath into the fans in&#13;
record time, the wrestlers were able to find most of&#13;
the faculty members in the stands and drag them&#13;
down to the mats where they held grudge matches.&#13;
Despite an unfair advantage on the part of the&#13;
wrestlers· eight on one - the lans seemed receptive&#13;
to the polished new look of the Ranger team. "II was&#13;
really im!X'essive," remarked junior Amy Rancum.&#13;
"Just watching all those straining, sweating bodies,&#13;
lllrashing and undulating; hard flesh and knotted&#13;
muscle struggling in grim, brutish animal strength.&#13;
II was beautiful!"&#13;
Final ta1lies showed Bill Lockahaw, a Parkside&#13;
senior, leading in points with eleven pins againsl&#13;
five English instructors, three Physics professors,&#13;
lwo librarians, and a Psychology professor. Harold&#13;
Leeth was second in reaching the points with eight&#13;
pins. He confined himsIef to faculty members of the&#13;
ecooomics departments.&#13;
Despite the criticism Lungfekker received on his&#13;
team's new "techniques" following the game, he&#13;
trushed it off with typical Whimsy. "Some punk&#13;
redneck is always sticking his face out When&#13;
something new like this comes along. I've got a&#13;
winning team and that's all that counts."&#13;
If Coach Amo Lunglekker's enthusiasm is any&#13;
indication, Parkside wrest11ng fans can e:q&gt;ect a&#13;
.... ason they'll never forget" from the UW-P&#13;
grappling SOIJ8d ''This team has something&#13;
apodal," Lungfetker exclaimed during a break in&#13;
practice last Thunday. "I've been waiting to coach&#13;
a crack squad like this since the war."&#13;
After watching the sixteen hour practice, and&#13;
FrIday night's _/lOOn match against Carthage,&#13;
it is doubtful if anyone could refnte Lungfekker's&#13;
conunent.&#13;
Having scrapped their usual lightweight togs for&#13;
shoulder pads, hmberjack boots, chain mall, and&#13;
crash helmets, the Ranger team stormed into the&#13;
Carthage Fieldhouse like a troop of psychopathic&#13;
sunural, brandJ.shlng riot clubs. Within a moment&#13;
they had savapiy attacked the opposing team, who&#13;
had been caught In III1SUSpeClingsurprise, and&#13;
beaten them 5O... less.&#13;
After loading the UIlCOOlICious Carthaginians into&#13;
a waiting van which immediately left for Butte,&#13;
Montana, the Parkslde grapplers formed an imposlnIJ&#13;
dragnet artlUnd the East bleachers and&#13;
pressed In on the crowd. As one fan, John Ortbbcn,&#13;
21,e&lt;&gt;mmented: "I thought it was a jote untII one of&#13;
lhoe6 apes said. 'Suck 011this, pinko worm; and&#13;
Team loses again&#13;
by P.J. Sampson&#13;
had the same problem since&#13;
sununer workouts began last&#13;
July. II gets pretty frustratinll&#13;
drawing diagrams for an empty&#13;
room." The Rangers will face •&#13;
UW-Eau Claire in their next&#13;
game here at the yet un'&#13;
discovered Ranger stadIUm.&#13;
"&#13;
The Ranger football team lost&#13;
ita 8th straight game on a forfeit&#13;
last Saturday, this time to uwWhitewater.&#13;
When asked Why the team&#13;
refused to show up at the games,&#13;
C~ch Coeb.-e2th r~plicd, "We'~'e&#13;
9t6l 'll .taqwaAON ~39NV~acJ 30lS&gt;t~Vd 3Hl. l&gt;&#13;
Doctor: Rain? Not today.&#13;
rnnt. (null pK~f" 7&#13;
J.P.J.: • ·ot you, the Marines!&#13;
1 t 1ate : It's not going to rain, sir.&#13;
.1 P • .:.: • ·ot may rain! Marine!&#13;
l t Mate: Who, what?&#13;
could see a nice ianKardof ale about now! Ah, Tun&#13;
Tavern! I'll just bop in here and quaff a quick&#13;
one. Hwnm, nice alliteration! (to Bartender)&#13;
Bartend, I'll have a pint or ale, please. Say, yo~&#13;
haven't seen any Marines around here, have you.&#13;
s.N.: No Marines. You know, arrah ... forget it.&#13;
SceneV.&#13;
Sam returns to Tu,Jl"Tavern on crutches.&#13;
S.N.: (to bartender) Thanks, pal! Why didn't you&#13;
J.P:J.: You know, arrah arrah, gung ho, take the&#13;
hill! Guard the embassy, first to fight, Semper&#13;
Fidelis, Halls of Montazwna, Shores of Tripoli!&#13;
1st Mate: Who, what?&#13;
Bartend: Nah, it ain't gonna rain. Here's your brew&#13;
bud.&#13;
S.N.: Nice alliteration, but ,I said Marines, not may&#13;
rain.&#13;
warn me? ·&#13;
Bartend: I lost five bucks on the Army-Navy game&#13;
last week. Army won!&#13;
s.N.: (to patrons) All right, you few good men who&#13;
want to fight, who'll be the first to sign up and&#13;
help initiate the greatest fighting force in history?&#13;
Who will defend to the death life"liberty and the&#13;
pursuit of happiness? Who will begin the long line&#13;
of proud patriots who will win wars, buy bonds,&#13;
and be always faithful to freedom? Who wants to&#13;
annihilate the antagonists of America?&#13;
J.P.J.: John Wayne!!! Bartend: Who, what?&#13;
1st Mate: Oh, Marines! I'll get someone on it right S.N.: You know, Arrah arrah, gung ho .... oh, hell!&#13;
away.&#13;
Scene Il.&#13;
First Mate meets with Samual Nickolas.&#13;
John Wayne!&#13;
Bartend: Oh, Marines! Nah, just a few good men&#13;
who want to fight. They're all around.&#13;
1st Mate: ... so that's our problem. We want you to&#13;
organize them into a fighting force.&#13;
s.N.: But why me? I know nothing of naval ,&#13;
pr-"~ ~ .. res. Besides, my hair s too short.&#13;
S.N.: How can you tell? It looks pretty peaceful.&#13;
Bartend: Try God save the you-know-who.&#13;
S.N.: Who, John Wayne? _ Group: Do we get a free college education too?&#13;
s.N.: (to Bartend) What went wrong?&#13;
Bartend: No, nerd, the king! You must be an of1&#13;
t: Mate: Perfect!&#13;
' · What's in it for me, anyway?&#13;
ficer!&#13;
S.N.:-GOD SAVE THE KING!!! AHH! ! ! HELP!!! • SC.t'Ut! i\r'.&#13;
Bartend: Nice alliteration, bad recruiting. Watch&#13;
, this. FREE ALE TO ALL&#13;
1 1 MARINES! ! !&#13;
·~ Mate: Marine Captain's bars. .&#13;
s. ·.: I could dig being a captain and owmng my&#13;
own pub, but why'd you say it may rain?&#13;
1 t fate: Not may rain! Marine! You know, arrah&#13;
rrah, ng ho, take the hill! Guard the embassy,&#13;
fir t to fight, Semper Fidelis, Halls of Mont&#13;
zuma , Shores of Tripoli!&#13;
s.N.: Thanks, doc. You sure I won't get /abies,&#13;
tetanus, or-get wierd during the full moon . Those&#13;
are pretty nasty bites!&#13;
S.N.: AHH!!! HELP!!!&#13;
Bartend:. How's that?&#13;
s.N.: Great, thanks! Hey, what's your name and&#13;
who the Hell are all these men? ,&#13;
s .. ·.: Who, what?&#13;
1 t Mate : John Wayne!&#13;
.• '.: Oh.Marine·.! I'll see what I can dig up.&#13;
eene 111. oYember 10, 1775&#13;
Doctor: No, you're okay. You'd best stay away from&#13;
wild dog packs. They can be real mean.&#13;
S.N.: They were Marines.&#13;
Doctor : Rain? Not today.&#13;
S.N.: No Marines. You know, arrah ... forget it.&#13;
Scene IV .&#13;
Bartend: I'm Robert Mullens and this is the Continental&#13;
CQngress.&#13;
s.N.: Well, Bob, you're now Captain Mullens, the&#13;
first Marine Corps recruiter.&#13;
m i walking the streets of Philadelphia&#13;
arching out a few good men who want~ fight.&#13;
s .• ·.: (to self) I've been hwnping these streets for&#13;
hour . Wher are the Marines when you need&#13;
them? I'll bet they're all out at the bars. Yeh, I&#13;
S.N.: Thanks, doc. You sure I won't get rabies,&#13;
tetanus, or get wierd,during the full moon? Those&#13;
are pretty nasty bites!&#13;
Doctor: No, you're okay. You'd best stay away from&#13;
wild dog packs. They can be real mean.&#13;
S.N : They were Marines.&#13;
Bartend: Oh? And I take it you are Captain Samual&#13;
Nickolas, the first Marine Corps Commandant?&#13;
s.N.: Yeh, painfully correct! (to man at the bar)&#13;
Private, could you please remove your boot from&#13;
my throat?&#13;
And that's the way it was, two-hundred-and-one&#13;
years ago last week!&#13;
t·ont. from pu!!e 7&#13;
Johns iibed&#13;
Dear People:&#13;
You know, I get kind of mad&#13;
whenever I go to the john and&#13;
have to sit in those damn white,&#13;
sterile, naked stalls. You may not&#13;
know this but in this whole&#13;
stinking building, the only place a&#13;
guy can get any rest and peace is&#13;
in the can. I see to it that I put in&#13;
three or four hours every day.&#13;
It's great, and personally, I like&#13;
the old johns in Greenquist rather&#13;
than some of those bowls they've&#13;
got in the newer ones that are six&#13;
feet off the ground. You know&#13;
what I mean. I come away from&#13;
dangling on those things with a&#13;
~ crease right where the sun don't&#13;
t shine.&#13;
Anyway, I was just wondering&#13;
who I could see about getting a&#13;
·couple posters hung up. You&#13;
Jcnow, ah Alice Cooper or the&#13;
Stones, or Bowie. I don't know&#13;
what the girls would. want. Well,&#13;
how about it? Hey, and maybe&#13;
some magazines or comic books,&#13;
or a six-pack ! Maybe somebody&#13;
could install an eight-track, you&#13;
know?&#13;
Think it over. Hey, and call me.&#13;
I've got a water bed you might be&#13;
interested in using.&#13;
Yours,&#13;
Arthur Bunphuccer&#13;
-" ~~..-..~~~~~~~~...-.~~~~, !! PREVENTS I 0&#13;
e f :: Wednes_day, November 17 I&#13;
re tier Judd Gutzbust grapple · Elmer Hassen to the mat. pinning the&#13;
t·rippl d oC'iolog} proft- . or in a 13-0 match. '&#13;
t&#13;
;~~ r:::;!:. ~ponsereci ·b~- P;~-~~ -ci~i/ ;,Fi,tl~g .ii~k~::.~ ~~~a~; I&#13;
Craft&#13;
Wrestlers open season&#13;
by Hanky Cos~ll&#13;
If Coach Arno Lungfekker's enthusiasm is any&#13;
ndication, Parkside wrestling fans can expect a&#13;
ason they'll never forget" from the UW-P&#13;
grappling 5411ad. "This team has something&#13;
cial," Lu.ngfekker exclaimed during a break in&#13;
practice la t Thursday. "I've been waiting to coach&#13;
a crack squad like this since the war."&#13;
After atching the sixteen hour practice, and&#13;
Friday night's pre-season match against Carthage,&#13;
it doubtful if anyone could refute Lungfekker's&#13;
comm nt.&#13;
Having scrapped their usual lightweight togs for&#13;
shoulder pads, lumberjack boots, chain mail, and&#13;
crash helmets, the Ranger team stormed into the&#13;
rth e Fieldhouse like a troop of psychopathic&#13;
samurai, brandishing riot clubs. Within a moment&#13;
they had savagely attacked the opposing team, who&#13;
had been caught In unsuspecting surprise, and&#13;
beaten them senseless.&#13;
After lo ding the unconscious Carthaginians into&#13;
a waiting van which immediately left for Butte,&#13;
ontana, the Parkside grapplers formed an imposing&#13;
dragnet around the East bleachers and&#13;
pre in on the crowd . one fan, John Orthbon,&#13;
21 , comm nted: " I thought it was a joke until one of&#13;
th pes id, •suck on this, pinko worm; and&#13;
jammed a size twelve set of gulf _cleats into my&#13;
face."&#13;
Cutting a triple-threat swath into the fans in&#13;
record time, the wrestlers were able to find most of&#13;
the faculty members in the stands and drag them&#13;
down to the mats where they held grudge matches.&#13;
Despite an unfair advantage on the part of the&#13;
wrestlers • eight on one • the fans seemed receptive&#13;
to the polished new look of the Ranger team. "It was&#13;
really impressive," remarked junior Amy Rancum.&#13;
"Just watching all those straining, sweating bodies,&#13;
thrashing and undulating; hard flesh and knotted&#13;
muscle struggling in grim, brutish animal strength.&#13;
It was beautiful!"&#13;
Final tallies showed Biff Lockshaw, a Parkside&#13;
senior, leading in points with eleven pins against&#13;
five English instructors, three Physics professors,&#13;
two librarians, and a Psychology professor. Harold&#13;
Leeth was second in reaching the points with eight&#13;
pins. He confined himslef to faculty members of the&#13;
economics departments.&#13;
Despite the criticism Lungfekker received on his&#13;
team's new "techniques" following the game, he&#13;
brushed it off with typical whimsy. "Some punk&#13;
redneck is always sticking his face out when&#13;
something new like this comes along. I've got a&#13;
winning team and that's all that counts."&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
Thursday, November 18&#13;
Travel Lecture: by world-wide travellers ( Parkside&#13;
Drivers)&#13;
PAB Presents: "The-we-advertise-in-toilets-movie" Down The Drain f&#13;
at 7 p.m. at Union -&#13;
t Friday, November 19 I Concert: featuring the one, the only, fantastic ......... PAB does it&#13;
t again! · t Pre-Thanksgiving Turkety Shoot: Contestants must supply weapons.,&#13;
f Parkside faculty supplies turkeys.&#13;
t . Saturday, November 20 I f Outdoor Track Meet: UW-Parkside Streakers v. Petrifying Springs l I Park County Sheri~ at 4:00. f&#13;
f Sunday, November 21 f ~arkside Phys~cal Plant Rummage Sale: 12. to 6 p.m. Items fo'. sale t f mclude one slightly used Union Bldg., Classroom Bldg., slightly&#13;
l damaged. - j ~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~&#13;
Team loses again&#13;
by P .J. Sampson&#13;
The Ranger football team lost&#13;
its 8th straight game on a forfeit&#13;
last Saturday, this time to UWWhitewater.&#13;
&#13;
When asked why the team&#13;
refused to show up at the games,&#13;
Co:::ch Coc!b:e::!th r~plic1, "We've&#13;
had the same problem si.m::e&#13;
summer workouts began I~st&#13;
July. It gets pretty frustrating&#13;
drawing diagrams for an empty&#13;
room." The Rangers will face&#13;
UW-Eau Claire in their next&#13;
game t un· here at the ye&#13;
discovered Ranger Stadium. &#13;
1fIhJ, /ke ~ ?&#13;
by Wendy Miller&#13;
SyedMohamed Sheerazie is in his second semester at Parkside. He&#13;
IS Iranian by descent "and every other issue you can think of"&#13;
dthough he was born and bred in Madras, India. He someday hopes t"&#13;
o to Iran and "see what the future holds in store for me there, if the&#13;
.S. doesn't get me first. I mean, when I finish my degree, if the&#13;
icture of the United States is still as rosey as had been true before I&#13;
arne here, and still is to a certain extent, then I might consider setling&#13;
here." .&#13;
He came to Parkside because "the University of Wisconsin system&#13;
s supposed to be one of the best in the country and having a relative&#13;
re in Kenosha, who is my dad's younger brother, makes things a&#13;
ittle easier because when you come from so far away· it's good.to have&#13;
eone who can help you break into a western setting. There is so&#13;
uch of a different lifestyle."&#13;
"As far as my adjusting to this lifestyle, I'm easy going and get&#13;
alongwith people so it's been relatively easy." He definitely knows a&#13;
lot of people and has made quite a few friends here. During the half&#13;
bour in which we talked in upper Main Place at least five people&#13;
s~ped and talked for awhile with him. Syed had "an eastern upbringing&#13;
with a western touch, which is a compliment to my parents."&#13;
Syedreceived a Bachelor degree in India in commerce. He is now&#13;
taking prerequisite courses so he can start on a Masters in business,&#13;
pref.... bly at the UW system. Speaking in relation to Parkside he said.&#13;
"The Business division is not as bad as people believe it to be. It's all&#13;
up towhat people can get out of it ; isn't it?"&#13;
As far as his feelings on Americans in general, "I think they are a&#13;
wonderfulbunch of people but they have to make sacrifices because of&#13;
'heir lifElStyle.If they would stop expecting too much of people and&#13;
accept them for what they are, then this mirage that everyone is&#13;
trying to rip everyone off would disappear. With more trust there&#13;
wouldbe so much more happiness around. I know that sounds trite but&#13;
it's true ...1f you remember that, you shouldn't have too many&#13;
","oblemswherever you go. It's up to you what you make of yourself.&#13;
I " what people make of you."&#13;
As far as the need for shrewdness and suspicion in business&#13;
v,alings, he said that common sense is really what you need.&#13;
"yed lives at Parkside Village and is doing very well here. although&#13;
c Jay" that his grades are nothins to write home about.&#13;
Economic institute&#13;
announced&#13;
The establishment of' a&#13;
Parkside economic research and&#13;
education institute was anlIOuncedat&#13;
a luncheon of about 50&#13;
business and labor leaders at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The Parkside economic institute&#13;
is being aided by an initial&#13;
grant of $\000from the Wisconsin&#13;
State Council on Economic&#13;
Education, which co-sponsored&#13;
the luncheon with Parkside.&#13;
William J, Hill, executive&#13;
director of the Wisconsin Council,&#13;
•nnounred the grant to Parkside&#13;
and explained the various activities&#13;
of his organization.&#13;
Parkside economics professor,&#13;
Richard Keehn, will- coordinate&#13;
the institute's activities and said&#13;
they will consist of two major&#13;
thrusts:&#13;
... economic education to aid&#13;
understanding of the market&#13;
economy offered in schools.&#13;
companies and adult outreach&#13;
Classes.&#13;
... cconom!c rese3!"ch and&#13;
reporting directly related to the&#13;
local economy .&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home 01 the Submarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN B A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615W••hington"'e. 6~2J7J&#13;
,&#13;
THEPARKSIDE RANGER November 17. 1976 9&#13;
New major examined&#13;
by John McKloske)&#13;
An expression of student interest&#13;
would help the humanities&#13;
division decide to establish an&#13;
interdisciplinary humanities&#13;
major, according to Peter Hoff, a&#13;
member of the faculty committee&#13;
looking into the matter&#13;
"The humanities major would&#13;
be good for a student in education&#13;
wishing to broaden his&#13;
education," said Hoff, an&#13;
associa te professor of English,&#13;
but" ...the climate is not good for&#13;
developing such a major,&#13;
because of Board of Regents&#13;
resists the creation of new&#13;
majors in order to avoid&#13;
duplication."&#13;
Hoff said that UW-Madison now&#13;
offers a humanities major, but he&#13;
felt a Parkside humanities major&#13;
would not duplicate it because the&#13;
Madison major consists&#13;
primarily of study of the classics.&#13;
Hoff also cited the number of&#13;
approval levels which the&#13;
proposal would have to go&#13;
through before the Regents even&#13;
saw it, saying the major would&#13;
have to be approved by the&#13;
humanities division itself, then&#13;
the Academic Planning and&#13;
Program Review Committee, the&#13;
Faculty senate, and Chancellor&#13;
Guskin.&#13;
According to humanities&#13;
Service&#13;
hours&#13;
extended&#13;
Parkside student services&#13;
offices in Tallent Hall will be&#13;
open until 8 p.m. Monday&#13;
through Thursday beginning&#13;
Nov.8.&#13;
A student services spokesman&#13;
said the extended hours are to&#13;
accommodate the increasing&#13;
numbers of adults and others&#13;
employed during the day who are&#13;
interested in pursuing university&#13;
studies.&#13;
Evening services, available to&#13;
continuing Parkside students as&#13;
well as prospective students,&#13;
include information on admissions&#13;
procedures, financial&#13;
aids, career development,&#13;
counseling and academic advising.&#13;
The late hours will not be in&#13;
effect on holidays or evenings&#13;
preceding holidays.&#13;
diVISIOn chairman Dr. Robert&#13;
Canary, ·'the proposal isn't really&#13;
ready to go forward yet... It is a&#13;
good idea, it IS sornethtng the&#13;
division wants." Canary said he&#13;
thought the major was "a year or&#13;
more down the road."&#13;
Hoff estimated that "WIth the&#13;
number of .pprov.l levels the&#13;
proposal has to go through, I'd&#13;
say It will be 2 or 3 years before&#13;
we can offer It," but saId th.t&#13;
favorable response to. proposed&#13;
questionnaire on the subject&#13;
would help the committee make&#13;
up its mind.&#13;
Retreat planned&#13;
The Chi-Rho Center is sponsoring&#13;
a retreat on Saturday,&#13;
December 4th.&#13;
The campus ministers, Fr.&#13;
Wayne and Sr. Collette, encourage&#13;
students to make&#13;
1~5t:1vations t)' December 1. Th:.s&#13;
retreat will be to "take. personal&#13;
inventory; to get in touch with&#13;
yourself; and to queslioo, reflect,&#13;
and to recognize,"&#13;
CaD 55U626 for further information.&#13;
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10 om • pm&#13;
LOCATED IN UNION BIZARRE&#13;
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photo b~ \\ t&gt;ttd~ \1 illt&gt;r&#13;
'1fl'4- /lu ~7&#13;
by Wendy Miller&#13;
Syed Mohamed Sheerazie is in his second semester at Parkside. He&#13;
,s Iranian by descent "and every other issue you can think of' ·&#13;
. .tlthough he was born and ~red in Madras, India. He someday hopes tci&#13;
o to Iran and "see what the future holds in store for me there, if the&#13;
U.S. doesn't get me first. I mean, when I finish my degree, if the&#13;
picture of the United States is still as rosey as had been true before I&#13;
crune here, and still is to a certain extent, then I might consider settling&#13;
here."&#13;
He came to Parkside because "the University of Wisconsin system&#13;
ts supposed to be one of the best in the country and having a relative&#13;
here in Kenosha, who is my dad's younger brother, makes things a&#13;
little easier because when you come from so far away· it's good to have&#13;
someone who can help you break into a western setting. There is so&#13;
much of a different lifestyle."&#13;
"As far as my adjusting to this lifestyle, I'm easy going and get&#13;
llong with people so it's been relatively easy." He definitely knows a&#13;
lot of people and has made quite a few friends here. During the half&#13;
hour in which we talked in upper Main Place at least five peoplP&#13;
stopped and talked for awhile with him. Syed had "an eastern upbringing&#13;
with a western touch, which is a compliment to my parents."&#13;
Syed received a Bachelor degree in India in commerce. He is now&#13;
taking prerequisite courses so he can start on a Masters in business,&#13;
preferably at the UW system. Speaking in relation to Parkside he said.&#13;
''The Business division is not as bad as people believe it to be. It's all&#13;
up to what people can get out of it; isn't it?"&#13;
As far as his feelings on Americans in general, "I think they are a&#13;
wonderful bunch of people but they have to make sacrifices because of&#13;
'heir lifestyle. If they would stop expecting too much of people and&#13;
accept them for what they are, then this mirage that everyone is&#13;
trying to rip everyone off would disappear. With more trust there&#13;
would be so much more happiness around. I know that sounds trite but&#13;
it's true ... If you remember that, you shouldn't have too many&#13;
11roblems wherever you go. It's up to you what you make of yourself.&#13;
r ,' what people make of you."&#13;
As far as the need for shrewdness and suspicion in business&#13;
"·!alings, he said that common sense is really what you need.&#13;
''yed lives at Parkside Village and is doing very well here. although&#13;
c: .iay!l that his grades are nothin~ to write home about.&#13;
Economic institute&#13;
announced&#13;
The establishment of a&#13;
Parkside economic research and&#13;
education institute was announced&#13;
at a luncheon of about 50&#13;
business and labor leaders at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The Parkside economic institute&#13;
is being aided by an initial&#13;
grant of $1000 from the Wisconsin&#13;
State Council on Economic&#13;
Education, which co-sponsored&#13;
the luncheon with Parkside.&#13;
William J. Hill, executive&#13;
director of the Wisconsin Council,&#13;
;innouneed the grant to Parkside&#13;
and explained the various activities&#13;
of his organization.&#13;
Parkside ~conomics professor,&#13;
Richard Keehn, will- coordinate&#13;
the institute's activities and said&#13;
they will consist of two major&#13;
thrusts:&#13;
... economic education to aid&#13;
understanding of the market&#13;
economy offered in schools,&#13;
companies and adult outreach&#13;
classes.&#13;
... economic research and&#13;
reporting directly related to the&#13;
local economy.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SH~P&#13;
Home of the Submarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P .M.&#13;
261 S Washington lwe. 634-2373&#13;
THE ,PARKSIDE RANGER November 17, 1976 9&#13;
New inajor examined&#13;
by John l\lcKlo ke}&#13;
An expression of student interest&#13;
would help the humanities&#13;
division decide to establish an&#13;
interdisciplinary humanities&#13;
major, according to Peter Hoff, a&#13;
member of the faculty committee&#13;
looking into the matter.&#13;
"The humanities major would&#13;
be good for a student in education&#13;
wishing to broaden his&#13;
education ," said Hoff, an&#13;
associate professor of English,&#13;
but " ... the climate is not good for&#13;
developing such a major,&#13;
because of Board of Regents&#13;
i"E:si:,;ts the creation of nt&gt;"&#13;
m.!jors in order to avoid&#13;
duplication."&#13;
Hoff said that UW-Madison now&#13;
offers a humanities major, but he&#13;
felt a Parkside humanities major&#13;
would not duplicate it because the&#13;
Madison major consists&#13;
primarily of study of the classics.&#13;
Hoff also cited the number of&#13;
approval levels which the&#13;
proposal would have to go&#13;
through before the Regents e\·en&#13;
saw it, saying the major would&#13;
have to be approved by the&#13;
humanities division itself, then&#13;
the Academic Planning and&#13;
Program Review Committee, the&#13;
Faculty Senate. and Chancellor&#13;
Guskin.&#13;
According to humanities&#13;
Service&#13;
hours&#13;
extended&#13;
Parkside student services&#13;
offices in Tallent Hall will be&#13;
open until 8 p.m. Monday&#13;
through Thursday beginning&#13;
Nov. 8.&#13;
A student services spokesman&#13;
said the extended hours are to&#13;
accommodate the increasing&#13;
numbers of adults and others&#13;
employed during the day who are&#13;
interested in pursmng wtiversity&#13;
studies.&#13;
Evening services, available to&#13;
continuing Parkside students as&#13;
well as prospective students,&#13;
include information on admissions&#13;
procedures, financial&#13;
aids, career development.&#13;
counseling and academic advising.&#13;
&#13;
The late hours will not be in&#13;
effect on holidays or evenings&#13;
preceding holidays.&#13;
division chairman Dr. Robert&#13;
Canary. " the proposal isn't really&#13;
ready to go forward yet ... 1t is a&#13;
good idea. it is somelhil)&amp; th&#13;
di,·ision wants." Canary said he&#13;
thought the major was " a year or&#13;
more down the road."&#13;
Hoff estimated that "with the&#13;
number of&#13;
proposal ha&#13;
Retreat planned&#13;
The Chi-Rho Center is sponsoring&#13;
a retreat on Saturday,&#13;
December 4th.&#13;
The campus ministers, Fr.&#13;
Wayne and Sr. Collette, encourage&#13;
students to make&#13;
1 t:it:1 ·dtiuns by Dt"t:t&gt;mtcr ! . This&#13;
r treat will be to " t.ak •&#13;
inventory; to g t in tou h with&#13;
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and to recognize."&#13;
Call 552-8626 for furth information.&#13;
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Te ephooe 034-2301 &#13;
On Friday November 5, ~e moon .rose on an e~e~g of fun and&#13;
music with Tom Chapin. Neither looking nor sounding like his Irother&#13;
Harry, Tom proved to the .half-filled Parkside Cinema that he is a&#13;
Chapin of his own. His music IS warm, hvely~ and speaks of J&gt;ersonal&#13;
experiences. He encouraged the audience to join in smging with him&#13;
saying, "My theory of a concert is that you guys do part of the work."&#13;
At one point, during a song entitled Oh What A Day!, the audience was&#13;
beating on popcorn boxes and jingling keys in time with the mUSic.&#13;
Many times he would stop in the rruddle of a song to explain why he&#13;
wrote that song.&#13;
Chapin was the host of the children's television show Make A Wiab&#13;
which went off the air this year after 5 seasons. He said that "Broth":&#13;
Harry writes the songs for Make A Wish and I change them." Each&#13;
year the show was fiimed on location in a different part of the world.&#13;
During the third year, when the show was located in Greece, Tom&#13;
began to' write songs to wile away the time in between takes. He has&#13;
been writing songs ever since. Many of these songs are featured on his&#13;
first album which is entitled "Life Is Like That (Fantasy Records).&#13;
Refering to his album he said, "From Make A Wish to Fantasy.&#13;
Sounds like a Disney character."&#13;
Accompanying himself on Bertha, his 6 string guitar, Tom sang a&#13;
few songs from his album and from Make A Wish. During one song&#13;
called Shadow he surprised the audience by playing a kazoo along with&#13;
his guitar. It was a toss-up as to who was enjoying themselves more;&#13;
the audience or Tom. Several times when the audience was singing&#13;
along, he would stop singing and playing and would just listen, During&#13;
one such song he said, HI like this cause Idon't do nothin'." Tomended&#13;
the concert by singing the theme song from Make A Wish and All My&#13;
Life's a Circle, "the Chapin anthem."&#13;
After the concert he commented on the enthusiasm of the audience&#13;
saying, "If the audience is witli you, you can do anyihing." He added&#13;
that he prefers doing concerts to television because "with TV you&#13;
perform for machines and with concerts you perform for people."&#13;
Tom Chapin proved that, with talent and enthusiasm, you C3I) do&#13;
anything. He is a very talented musician, which was proved at the&#13;
concert, and he'Ugo as far as his ambitions take him.&#13;
1 VISAGE&#13;
Tom:&#13;
•&#13;
,•&#13;
•&#13;
1&#13;
J&#13;
!&#13;
1.&#13;
Tom Chapin&#13;
SSSSSSSS&lt;SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS'ES_"'''SSSS&#13;
Ft.. Pizza DeIh."&#13;
Club Hlghvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
.... """1' C~""I,S~••~tftI.RlfltI', ••• ,&#13;
O'IM 4 ~.•. 111 •.•.&#13;
4f University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
"Ins YOU TO SPEND&#13;
SEMESTER BREAK&#13;
JAI. &amp;-13, 1911&#13;
a Chapin&#13;
of-his own&#13;
by Mona Maillet&#13;
Musical history&#13;
by Mona Maillet&#13;
Harry Chapin was born in 1942, a year after the&#13;
Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor. Tom Chapin was&#13;
born two years later, in 1944. Their father was a&#13;
former jazz drummer for big bands like Woody&#13;
Herman and Tommy Dorsey. Even as children&#13;
Harry. and Tom were getting into music. Harry&#13;
started playing trumpet and Tom belonged to a&#13;
boy's choir. Harry later tookup the guitar because&#13;
"girls liked guitar players beller."&#13;
Harry began to perform throughout his college&#13;
years. He started a group called the Chapin&#13;
Brothers with Tom and younger brother Steve in&#13;
1964. The group was going well, but the Vietnam&#13;
War situation was such that Tom and Steve went to&#13;
college in order not to go to Vietnam. Harry then&#13;
went into the documentary film business. He&#13;
started by packing film crates and eventually&#13;
worked his way up to all phases of cinema:&#13;
One movie that he wrote, directed and edited called&#13;
"Le ' gendary Champions" was nominated for an&#13;
Academy Award in 1969. .&#13;
Tom, in the meantime, had found a new medium&#13;
and a new audience. In 1971 he became the host of&#13;
the children's television show Make A Wish, which&#13;
was on the air for five seasons. Each year the show&#13;
as filmed on location in a different are area of the&#13;
world, and during the third year of filming he began&#13;
to write songs. After the show ended, he went on the&#13;
concert circuit and also released his first album.&#13;
Introducing: French Pizza $1.50&#13;
I EVERY MONDAY &amp;TUESDAY&#13;
SPAGHETTI FEAST&#13;
$1.95&#13;
Includes: Salad, Italian Bread and a Free Glass of Wine.&#13;
Wed. - Thurs. 9:30 - 11:00&#13;
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~erbu'8&#13;
'ourt·&#13;
PUB &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
p.rn,&#13;
On Spring, West of 31 In&#13;
Green Ridge Plaza&#13;
632-6151 '&#13;
VISAGE&#13;
•&#13;
I.&#13;
II&#13;
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!&#13;
A&#13;
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Tom hapin&#13;
Free Pizza Delwery&#13;
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5035 60th Street ~&#13;
Phone: 652- 737 i&#13;
A 1 •••1111a,111 C le 1 , s.,,~tffl. R1fl n., 8111 2&#13;
OPEN 4 •·•· 1 •·•· ~~ ~&#13;
,Jf University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
es OU TO SP 0&#13;
SE ESTER BREAK&#13;
JAN. 6-13, 1977&#13;
t,,,, ~ ... ~9c~,..&#13;
Tom: , .&#13;
a Chapin&#13;
of-his own&#13;
by Mona Maillet&#13;
On Friday November 5, the moon _rose on an evening of run and&#13;
usic with Tom Chapin. Neither lookmg nor sounding like his brother&#13;
:arry, Tom proved to the _ha_lf-filled P~rkside Cinema that he is a&#13;
Chapin of his own. His music is wari:n, hvely'. ~n~ sp~ak~ of personal&#13;
experiences. He encouraged the audience to 10m m smgmg with him&#13;
saying, "My the?ry of a conce:t is that you guys d~ part of ~e work."&#13;
At one point durmg a song entitled Oh What A Day., the audience was&#13;
beating on ~pcorn boxes and jingl~ng keys in time with the music.&#13;
Many times he would stop in the rruddle of a song to explain why he&#13;
wrote that song.&#13;
Chapin was the host of the children's television sho~ Make A Wish,&#13;
which went off the air this year after 5 seasons. He said that "Brother&#13;
Harry writes the songs for Make ~ "'.ish ru:1d I change them." Each&#13;
year the show was filmed on location m a different part of the world.&#13;
During the third year, when the show was located in Greece, Tom&#13;
began to· write songs to wile away the time in between takes. He has&#13;
been writing songs ever since. Many of these songs are featured on his&#13;
first album which is entitled "Life Is Ll.ke That (Fantasy Records).&#13;
Refering to his album he said, "From Mal{e A Wish to Fantas,.&#13;
Sounds like a Disney character."&#13;
Accompanying himself on Bertha, his 6 string guitar, Tom sang a&#13;
few songs from his album and from Make A Wish. During one song&#13;
called Shadow he surprised the audience by playing a kazoo along with&#13;
his guitar. It was a toss-up as to who was enjoying themselves more;&#13;
the audience or Tom. Several times when the audience was singing&#13;
along, he would stop singing and playing and would just listen. During&#13;
one such song he said, "I like this cause I don't do nothin'." Tom ended&#13;
the concert by singing the theme song from Make A Wish and All My&#13;
Llfe's a Circle, "the Chapin anthem."&#13;
After the concert he commented on the enthusiasm of the audience&#13;
saying, "If the audience is with you, you can do anything." He added&#13;
that he prefers doing concerts to television because "with TV you&#13;
perform for machines and with concerts you perform for people."&#13;
Tom Chapin proved that, with talent and enthusiasm, you can do&#13;
anything. He is a very talented musician, which was proved at the&#13;
concert, and he'll go as far as his ambitions take him.&#13;
Musical history&#13;
by Mona Maillet&#13;
Harry Chapin was born in 1942, a year after the&#13;
Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor. Tom Chapin was&#13;
born two years later, in 1944. Their father was a&#13;
former jazz drummer for big bands like Woody&#13;
Herman and Tommy Dorsey. Even as children&#13;
Harry and Tom were getting into music. Harry&#13;
started playing trumpet and Tom belonged to a&#13;
boy's choir. Harry later tookup the guitar because&#13;
"girls liked guitar players better."&#13;
Harry began to perform throughout his college&#13;
years. He started a group called the Chapin&#13;
Brothers with Tom and younger brother Steve in&#13;
1964. The group was going well, but the Vietnam&#13;
War situation was such that Tom and Steve went to&#13;
college in order not to go to Vietnam. Harry then&#13;
went into the documentary film business. He&#13;
started by packing film crates and eventually&#13;
worked his way up to all phases of cinema.&#13;
One movie that he wrote, directed and edited called&#13;
"Legendary Champions" was ~ominated for an&#13;
Academy Award in 1969.&#13;
Tom, in the meantime, had found a new medium&#13;
and a new audience. In 1971 he became the host of&#13;
the children's tele,vision show Make A Wish, which&#13;
was on the air for five seasons. Each year the show&#13;
as filmed on location in a different are area of t.'te&#13;
world, and during the third year of filming he began&#13;
to write songs. After the show ended, he went on the&#13;
concert circuit and also released his first album.&#13;
Introducing: French Pizza $1.50&#13;
EVERY MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY&#13;
SPAGHETTI FEAST&#13;
$1.95&#13;
lndudes: Salad, Italian Bread and a Free Glass of Wine&#13;
Wed. - Thurs. 9 :30 - 11 :00 p.m.&#13;
Bubble Up&#13;
Mixed Drinks 60'&#13;
On Spring, West of 31 in&#13;
Green Ridge Plaza&#13;
632-6151 ,&#13;
~erbu's&#13;
~ourt ·&#13;
PUB &amp; RESTAURANT &#13;
storyteller&#13;
of note&#13;
Harry:&#13;
by Mona Maillet&#13;
a&#13;
On ThW"sday November 11, the spot!;vh+ shined&#13;
on America's top story leller, Harry Chapin. He and&#13;
his guitar were warmly received by the sell-out&#13;
crowd of about3,tOO people, the largest group ever&#13;
to be assembled in the field house. He said that he&#13;
felt a little nervous without his back-up group, so he&#13;
introduced the members as if they were slanding on&#13;
stage with him.&#13;
Chapin proved that you don't need a back-up&#13;
group to sing well. During WOLD, a. song about a&#13;
lonely morning disc jockey, he improvised:' ~ parts&#13;
of the missing instruments. He also drove the crowd&#13;
wild when he substituted the line "I am tile morning&#13;
DJ at WRKR. Playing all the hils for you,'&#13;
wherever the hell you are" for the first chorus.&#13;
For a few other songs tha t required extra vocal&#13;
paris he either got tho audience to sing the lines or&#13;
he coaxed a few volunteers from the crowd to help&#13;
him out. Many times he asked the audience to sing&#13;
the chorus from a song or to say a line from the&#13;
song. It was a beautiful example of entertaineraudience&#13;
interaction. .&#13;
Afler WOLD, he introduced "the Cal's in the&#13;
Cradle kid," his son Josh, "the superstar of the&#13;
family." He explained that ever since he wrote&#13;
Cal's in the Cradle, (his wife Sandy wrote the poem&#13;
the song is based on) he brings one of his children on&#13;
tour with him. He said he also goes home a lot more&#13;
than he used to because "I don't want to be Uncle&#13;
Daddy."&#13;
Josh danced to the next three songs. After the&#13;
third song Chapin remarked, "never perform with a&#13;
kid; he'll upstage you every time." Josh swayed&#13;
back and forth to his father's music, oblivious to the&#13;
crowd, creating his own world. After Josh finished&#13;
dancing, he hugged his father before leaving the&#13;
stage. Later he fell asleep at the side of the stage,&#13;
and for the rest of.the night, he received adoring&#13;
looks from his father.&#13;
He then sang his "first country and western"&#13;
song, 30,000Pounds Of Bananas which he feels is his&#13;
most perverted song. He said that he originally&#13;
wrote it for Johnny cash to sing, "But he was too&#13;
damn busy with his Amoco Gas, so I had to do it&#13;
myself." He had the audience singing "30,000&#13;
pounds of bananas" every time that line came up.&#13;
At the end of the song, he had them singing it in&#13;
harmony, with him directing.&#13;
He had a break about halfway through the concert&#13;
where people couldask him questions about himself&#13;
and his family ..Some of the questions asked were&#13;
about his favorite song, which is a toss-up between&#13;
Sniper and A Better Place to Be. It lakes him&#13;
anywhere from 1 hour to 6 months to write a song.&#13;
His wife's name is Sandy and they have 5 children.&#13;
He is involved with several charities, including&#13;
World Hunger Year of which he is the founder, and&#13;
he does several benefits. His wife is presently&#13;
working for her Ph. D. at Columbia University.&#13;
To begin the second half of the concert, he had 4&#13;
people singing 0 Holy Night as a back-up to a song&#13;
about a tailor who wants to be a singer, Mr. Taimer,&#13;
The voices blended with his very well and it's easy to&#13;
see why he is such a popular singer. He ended the&#13;
concert by singing Cat's In The Cradle with the&#13;
audience singing the chorus. He even split the&#13;
audience into male and female chorus as a contest,&#13;
picking one person as a judge of quality and&#13;
quantity. According to the judge, the male chorus&#13;
won on both accounts.&#13;
Chapin received a standing ovation at the end and&#13;
decided to do Taxi. He got about ten people to sing&#13;
"Big John's" high part, and he asked the audience&#13;
to say the tWOspoken lines of the song. He also&#13;
received a slanding ovation for that. He left the&#13;
stage, but was called back by the crowd. He did one&#13;
encore, All My Ufe's A Circle, which he wrote for&#13;
his brother Tom for his TV shOW Make A Wish,&#13;
which has since become the "Chapin anthem." He&#13;
encouraged the audience to sing the chorus with&#13;
him 81)dby the end of the song, the crowd was on ils&#13;
feet, singing and clapping.&#13;
Chapin's warm, husky voice has the ability to&#13;
transpOl t you to the scene of the song. His songs&#13;
have an emotional appeal that is rare in songs&#13;
today. They have a moral to them that seems to&#13;
apply to everyone and they are also very enjoyable&#13;
to hear. Chapin said that he writes his songs from&#13;
personal experiences and he tries to make them as&#13;
realistic as possible without making them sound&#13;
like lectures. By making himself the bad guy or the&#13;
poor soul, he attracts a lot m?re listen~~s than by&#13;
saying "Thou shalt not do thiS or tbat .&#13;
Harry Chapin is the perfect entertamer. He mleracts&#13;
with his audience and he enJOYs himself&#13;
during his concerts, which helps the audience. enjoy&#13;
the concert. He has rightfully earn"!! the title of&#13;
"Mark Twain of the 70's."&#13;
,&#13;
Harry Chapin and son Josh&#13;
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694-2_&#13;
Harry: a&#13;
by Mona Maillet&#13;
On Thursday November 11, the spotJiph+ shined&#13;
on America's top story teller, Harry Chapin. He and&#13;
his guitar were warmly received by the sell-out&#13;
crowd of about 3,100 people, the largest group ever&#13;
to be assembled in the field house. He said that he&#13;
felt a little nervous without his back-up group, so he&#13;
introduced the members as if they were standing on&#13;
stage with him.&#13;
Chapin proved that you don't need a back-up&#13;
group to sing well. During WOLD, a song about a&#13;
lonely morning disc jockey, he improvised '· ~ parts&#13;
of the missing instruments. He also drove the crowd&#13;
wild when he substitutP.d the line "I am the morning&#13;
DJ at WRKR. Playing all the hits for you, ·&#13;
wherever the hGll you are" for the first chorus.&#13;
For a few other songs that required extra vocal&#13;
parts he either got the audience to sing the lines or&#13;
he coaxed a few volunteers from the crowd to help&#13;
him out. Many times he asked the audience to sing&#13;
the chorus from a song or to say a line from the&#13;
song. It was a beautiful example of entertaineraudience&#13;
interaction. ·&#13;
After WOW, he introduc~d "the Cat's in the&#13;
Cradle kid," his son Josh, "the superstar of the&#13;
family." He explained that ever since he wrote&#13;
Cat's in the Cradle, (his wife Sandy wrote the poem&#13;
the song is based on) he brings one of his children on&#13;
tour with him. He said he also goes home a lot more&#13;
than he used to because "I don't want to be Uncle&#13;
Daddy."&#13;
Josh danced to the next three songs. After the&#13;
third song Chapin remarked, "never perform with a&#13;
kid; he'll upstage you every time." Josh swayed&#13;
back and forth to his father's music, oblivious to the&#13;
crowd, creating his own world. After Josh finished&#13;
dancing, he hugged his father before leaving the&#13;
stage. Later he fell asleep at the side of the stage,&#13;
and for the rest of, the night, he received adoring&#13;
looks from his father.&#13;
He then sang his "first country and western"&#13;
song, 30,000 Pounds Of Bananas which he feels is his&#13;
most perverted song. He said that he originally&#13;
wrote it for Johnny Cash to sing, "But he was too&#13;
damn busy with his Amoco Gas, so I had to do it&#13;
myself." He had the audience singing "30,000&#13;
pounds of bananas" every time that line came up.&#13;
At the end of the song, he had them singing it in&#13;
harmony, with him directing.&#13;
He had a break about halfway through the concert&#13;
where people could.ask him questions about himself&#13;
and his family. Some of the questions asked were&#13;
about his favorite song, which is a toss-up between&#13;
Sniper and A Better Place to Be. It takes him&#13;
anywhere from 1 hour to 6 months to write a song.&#13;
His wife's name is Sandy and they have 5 children.&#13;
He is involved with several charities, including&#13;
World Hunger Year of which he is the founder, and&#13;
he does several benefits. His wife is presently&#13;
working for her Ph. D. at Columbia University.&#13;
To begin the second half of the concert, he had 4&#13;
people singing O Holy Night as a back-up to a song&#13;
about a tailor who wants to be a singer, Mr. Taimer,&#13;
The voices blended with his very well and it's easy to&#13;
see why he is such a popular singer. He ended the&#13;
concert by singing Cat's In The Cradle with the&#13;
audience smgmg the chorus. He even split the&#13;
audience into male and female chorus as a contest,&#13;
picking one person as a judge of quality and&#13;
quantity. According to the judge, the male chorus&#13;
won on both accounts.&#13;
Chapin received a standing ovation at the end and&#13;
decided to do Taxi. He got about ten people to sing&#13;
"Big John's" high part, and he asked the audience&#13;
to say the two spoken lines of the song. He also&#13;
received a standing ovation for that. He left the&#13;
stage, but was called back by the crowd. He did one&#13;
encore, All My Life's A Circle, which he wrote for&#13;
his brother Tom for his TV show Make A Wish,&#13;
which has since become the "Chapin anthem." He&#13;
encouraged the audience to sing the chorus with&#13;
him and by the end of the song, the crowd was on its&#13;
feet, singing and clapping.&#13;
Chapin's warm, husky voice has the ability to&#13;
transpm t you to the scene of the song. His songs&#13;
have an emotional appeal that is rare in songs&#13;
today. They have a moral to them that seems to&#13;
apply to everyone and they are also very enjoyable&#13;
to hear. Chapin said that he writes his songs from&#13;
personal experiences and he tries to make them as&#13;
realistic as possible without making them sound&#13;
like lectures. By making himself the bad guy or the&#13;
poor soul, he attracts· a lot m?re listen~~s than by&#13;
saying "Thou shalt not do this or that: .&#13;
Harry Chapin is the perfect enter~mer. ~e interacts&#13;
with his audience and he enJoys himself&#13;
during his concerts, which helps the audience_ enjoy&#13;
the concert. He has rightfully earned the title of&#13;
"Mark Twain of the 70's."&#13;
storyteller&#13;
of note&#13;
Harry Chapin and on Joi,,h&#13;
- PARAPHERNALIA SCJUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
STOP IN TODAY AT PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE,&#13;
YOU'LL LOVE THE UNIQUE COMFORTABLE ATMOSPHERE&#13;
,.,.~&#13;
~ . _ ,\ 443 7 - 22nd A venue Kenosha,&#13;
~ ' .,. Wisconsin Phone 654-0774 , ... , ... ,. . . § · Mention this od!&#13;
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I&#13;
FRIDAY 3-6&#13;
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BEER&#13;
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IN THE REC CENTER &amp; UNION SQUARE&#13;
VISAGE 2&#13;
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• This Coupon i =&#13;
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• items Ii ted below. •&#13;
• Good thru ·ovember •&#13;
• on! •! One Coupon a&#13;
• per cu tomer per •&#13;
• purchase. Happy •&#13;
• Holidays. Remember. •&#13;
• we never clo e. •&#13;
~ ........• ,&#13;
Hey. scholars, look at&#13;
these 1ft selections.&#13;
Everything for Mind &amp;&#13;
Bodr is right here at&#13;
h-vo stores your&#13;
stores with atmosphere.&#13;
• Records &amp; Tape . ALL new&#13;
relea ei; tad.ed floor to&#13;
ceiling'&#13;
• Import album,. we·re the&#13;
one . tore m town that&#13;
ca rrie fore1 n re lea. e • pecial ordeu. Hard-to- t&#13;
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uarant ed on de&#13;
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00\\'. 'TO\' •.&#13;
5010. en h .-h nu&#13;
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191 O e\enl\ Fifth Strn t&#13;
694-2404 &#13;
12 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 17. 1976&#13;
18=)Soccer season ends&#13;
em team&#13;
finishes 12th&#13;
..,.....h_lII&#13;
UW·WbItewater was the site 01&#13;
tile WW1AC Championship ••&#13;
.... re the women'. awIm Ieam&#13;
IInIsbed 12lII, as UW-Madlaon&#13;
carnpIdeIy ckmlnaled the meet&#13;
and _ with III polnts by tbeir&#13;
lllh pJa&lt;oe IInI*s In the 2llO&#13;
medJey relay and 400 l&lt;ft relay&#13;
Iaot FrIday and In the 2llO free&#13;
relay Saturday. The leam beet&#13;
RIwr Falla by a lentb 01 a ...,.,nd&#13;
In the 2llO free&#13;
ecordlng to Coach Barb&#13;
LaWlOll. the hiKbUaht was the 50&#13;
I I here Gall Obon, uu&#13;
cII. Judy 1_ and SaD)&#13;
~'l'andI aD t leMOn highs.&#13;
aIIo her personal&#13;
rwconIs In tbe 50 and 100 breast&#13;
and 110 I franCIs toolt seven&#13;
IleC'lndI 011 01 hor time in the 500&#13;
I and Improved on her leg 01&#13;
the rela .. ny &lt;any came&#13;
throqh IlllCI01' presaure for us&#13;
and.lmproved where we .tood In&#13;
the rela :' said LaWlOll&#13;
The Ieam 1riU c«npete lor the&#13;
time lhla Ie""" In tbe&#13;
Fourth AllIIUaI Raapr Relays&#13;
IIda Saturday. 1IlaIIIInI up with&#13;
the 1IlIlII'. ...... DiYinl comtIlioD&#13;
wlO be8In at 4 p.m. and&#13;
IWlnImIDI at 5 p.m. Ten teams.&#13;
IIlcbJdlnl CarroU. carthage, U 01&#13;
Odc:a&amp;o. Lake Forest, Lawrence,&#13;
Ski&#13;
•&#13;
racIng&#13;
organized&#13;
en. Country sit! Instructor&#13;
c Godfrey orpniJlng a group&#13;
01 cross country sit! racers.&#13;
Any ODe Intereted In this type&#13;
01 raetng abouId conlllct Godfrey&#13;
at ~~ or PE 131 al their&#13;
,1 coavenlence&#13;
George Williams, Valpariso, UWMilwaukee&#13;
and UW-Whitewater&#13;
will participate in tbe meet.&#13;
The men swimmers began&#13;
competitlGn with an intersquad&#13;
meet whore tbe Green team beet&#13;
the White. 41-31.&#13;
AU records were broken at the&#13;
varsity level. Best early _&#13;
performances were turned in by&#13;
Bob Wtlburlhire in the 50 free,&#13;
JIm Ferraro in the 2llOIndividual&#13;
Medley and Riclt Kwas in the 100&#13;
l&lt;ft. .&#13;
Pa.rk3i~·s ,~_" , team, the&#13;
NAJA District 14 soccer champion&#13;
ended their season Saturday&#13;
,losing to Sl. John Univ ersity,&#13;
4-3 tn the first round of playoffs&#13;
at CoUegh'ille, Minnesota.&#13;
The Johnnies scored two goals&#13;
in the lirst 17 minutes 01 the&#13;
contest, but tile Rangers came&#13;
back and tied the score- in the&#13;
next two minutes.&#13;
St. John scored another two&#13;
half way through the second half.&#13;
With a few minutes remaining.&#13;
Steve Sendelbach scored the linal&#13;
point 01 the game on a penalty&#13;
kick.&#13;
Wom~n's basketball&#13;
club planned&#13;
by JeaD Tenulll&#13;
,&#13;
The Athletic Department has&#13;
8IIIIOlIDCCd thaI It will begin a&#13;
women's basketball club this&#13;
year.&#13;
The schedule is limited to 10&#13;
games beginning in January,&#13;
with practice starting Monday.&#13;
December 13 at 4 p.m. The club&#13;
will compete against other clubs&#13;
as well as varsity teams. and&#13;
some contest will he held prior to&#13;
the men's varsity Basketball&#13;
games.&#13;
Participants on the club are&#13;
'expected to carry 12 credits&#13;
during the spring semester as&#13;
tlus year's club will build the&#13;
foundabon lor the 1977-78 school&#13;
year, when women's basketball&#13;
will become a luU-fledged varsity&#13;
sport.&#13;
A staff member will be&#13;
assigned to coordinate the club&#13;
activities tlus year and eventually&#13;
ISSlgD a -head women's&#13;
basketball coach for next year.&#13;
Women interested in participating&#13;
should sign up with&#13;
Orby Moss, Assistant Athl.!'tic&#13;
Director in the Physical&#13;
Education Building during&#13;
. 'ovemher and should also report&#13;
IJW-P loses&#13;
to Carthage&#13;
The Ranger vaI1eyball team&#13;
ended their ...... as Carthage&#13;
the dwnploaslup game of&#13;
I.cousln Women'. Inlen:oll&lt;eclale&#13;
tb1etic Conference&#13;
coli e tournament Ia t&#13;
tw1Iay. aDd qaalified lor the&#13;
Sma1I College Tournament&#13;
turday In •·apen ..llle.&#13;
Carthaile beot the Rangers n&#13;
the one! round and faced&#13;
CarroU. the • 0 .1 seeded team.&#13;
whom lhe) beal I~, I~S&#13;
Par beet UW upenorln the&#13;
IIrst round .ttlle tourney at UWCartha&#13;
e had '-en seeded&#13;
Rd. Wb tewater tIt1rd and&#13;
P rlt ide lo~rth Platte.ille.&#13;
Rl r Falls .upeTlor and Stout&#13;
unoeeded&#13;
The team finished their dual&#13;
t th a 7-13 recwd&#13;
o mber • The Rangers&#13;
deleated OIicago Slate Is.:;, l1-/S&#13;
and 1~11 but lost to Lewis&#13;
Uruversily 1~9,~IS, &amp;-IS.&#13;
on December 13 to gymnasium,&#13;
prepared to play.&#13;
Those interested should also&#13;
watch the Ranger for more inlormation&#13;
and the completed&#13;
schedule. One may participate on&#13;
the club team as well as in their&#13;
cities' recreation departments&#13;
program.&#13;
NAJA to&#13;
be hosted&#13;
Parkside's cross country squad&#13;
qualified for the NAlA National&#13;
OIampionships to be run on their&#13;
home course Saturday at 11 a.m .&#13;
The Rangers finished third in&#13;
the District 14 meet at Parkside&#13;
last Saturday. which was won by&#13;
UW-LaCrosse, with 34 points&#13;
UW-&amp;evens Point was second&#13;
with 4S and Parkside had 78.&#13;
laCrosse and Stevens Point,&#13;
finishing 1-2 in the WSUC meet&#13;
were expected to repeat their&#13;
I97S 1-2 district linish again, but&#13;
the competition was for third&#13;
place which Parkside, Platteville&#13;
and Eau Claire were to battle for.&#13;
The Rangers were way ahead of&#13;
both, as Platteville had 95 and&#13;
Eau Claire had 98. The top three&#13;
teams and top 15 individuals&#13;
qualified for the nationals.&#13;
Jim Hanson was the meet&#13;
winner in 25 minutes, 25.6&#13;
seconds, followed by Joe Hanson.&#13;
both 01 UW-La Crosse. Shawn&#13;
Flanigan of UW-Platteville was&#13;
third, Dan Buniman 01 UWStevens&#13;
Point, fourth and&#13;
Parkside's Ray Fredericksen&#13;
was fifth~.!!~&#13;
• Saves gas (up 1025%) e Saves _ar&#13;
e Saves maintenance (25,OOO-mlle oil change)&#13;
e E_ sub-zero starts (-6O"F.pour polnlt&#13;
• S_ 011 RICK BENTSON&#13;
roo" A~S/OIL _la, 639-4067&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From Goers Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
Both 01 the first two Ranger&#13;
oa1s were scored by Deech&#13;
fsmiall on assists by MIke&#13;
Boyagjian. .&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson CIted two&#13;
reasons for the outcome 01 the&#13;
match.&#13;
"They were faster than we&#13;
were and scored three goals by&#13;
outrwming us," he said, contin&#13;
. g "they did not have a wn, . IK' k&#13;
great deal of skill, playmg a 1C&#13;
and run' type of game. Th&lt;;y&#13;
seldom controlled and did&#13;
anything with the ball and we&#13;
were not prepared for this kind of&#13;
game. 1 think we played the&#13;
better game."&#13;
Statistics for the match were&#13;
close as SI. John had 13 shots to&#13;
Park'side's 12. "It's unhelieveable&#13;
to have as much&#13;
scoring as occurred with so few&#13;
attempts," said Henderson. 51.&#13;
John had 12 corner kicks to&#13;
Parkside's 10 and Parkside had&#13;
three saves to St. John's two.&#13;
Coach Henderson also noted&#13;
other conditions affecting the&#13;
outcome of the match.&#13;
"We had a nice sunny 40&#13;
degree day, but neither team&#13;
played especiaUy well on the field&#13;
that was rough and bumpy,&#13;
something we're not used to. The&#13;
officiating, though was as good as&#13;
I've ever seen," said Henderson.&#13;
"I was extremely pleaaect&#13;
the way the team fought ba I1j&#13;
even when we were do"" by "'-&#13;
goals. We just didn't t&#13;
enough goals during the ~ ...&#13;
The Rangers end their .&#13;
ever season with a 7-78 bot&#13;
and will have 10 01 the 11 .::::&#13;
back, hopefully, for next y .&#13;
squad. ....1&#13;
Ten members 01 llie' Rang&#13;
were named to the All NA~&#13;
District 14 team out of the&#13;
honored for their perl~&#13;
during the season.&#13;
Qualifying for the first&#13;
were Sendelbach, Mike o~&#13;
Chris Carter and Kri. Serafin&#13;
delense and Boyajian and ~&#13;
Campbell on offense.&#13;
Cited for honorable 1lle01lla&#13;
were Bernie Heiner, goalie;NlaI&#13;
Power and Jack Landweh _&#13;
defense and Ismiali on oIf-.&#13;
Henderson was also honored.&#13;
the four team disbict's "CGocb.&#13;
the Year."&#13;
Parkside compieted i!J the firII&#13;
round 01 the playolf8 lor .-&#13;
second time in three yean. Tho,&#13;
lost to 51. John l-ll In 19'1l&#13;
SI. John, upping their recont_&#13;
13-1-3 advances to the ana IIJII&#13;
either Nov. 17 or ?ll agaiIlot.-&#13;
minois winner, probably IaVOhl&#13;
and three-time NAJA cbq&#13;
Quincy College.&#13;
~ee'$OPTICAL Sang .. BOUTIQUE&#13;
t::::(Ji~ ,. 552-7610&#13;
44;25 Taylor&#13;
only ten minutes from Kenosha&#13;
- Student Discount&#13;
Largest selection of&#13;
fashionable frames iff&#13;
southeastern Wisconstn&#13;
-:- Lenses duplicated&#13;
- Physician . .&#13;
prescriptions filled&#13;
50 % off 2nd pair&#13;
n THE PARKSIDE RANGER ovember l7, 1976&#13;
ki&#13;
8&#13;
or&#13;
• ing&#13;
team&#13;
12th Park.,ioc's · • 1 team, the&#13;
'AIA District 14 occer cham·&#13;
pion ended then season Satur·&#13;
day, losing to St. John Uni, ersity,&#13;
4-3, in the first round ,:if playoffs&#13;
at Collegeville, Minnesota.&#13;
The Johnnies scored two goals&#13;
in the first 17 minute,- of the&#13;
conte t but the Rangers cam~&#13;
back ~d Hect the score in the&#13;
next two minutes.&#13;
St. John scored another two&#13;
half way through the secon~ h_alf.&#13;
tth a few minutP:; remammg,&#13;
Steve Sendelbach scored the final&#13;
point of the game on a penalty&#13;
kick.&#13;
olllen 's basketball&#13;
c uh planned&#13;
,&#13;
Departm nt has&#13;
that 1t ill begin a&#13;
basketball club this&#13;
hedule is limited to 10&#13;
mes beginning in January,&#13;
th practice starting Monday,&#13;
mber 13 at ~ p.m. The club&#13;
rill compete against other clubs&#13;
ell as varsity teams, and&#13;
cont twill be held prior to&#13;
varsity Basketball&#13;
m . Participants on the club are&#13;
cted to carry 12 credits&#13;
durin the rin semester as&#13;
y r' club will build the&#13;
foundation for the 19i7-78 school&#13;
., • hen omen's basketball&#13;
~ becom a full-fledged varsity&#13;
on December 13 to gymnasium,&#13;
prepared to play.&#13;
Those interested should also&#13;
watch the Ranger for more information&#13;
and the completed&#13;
schedule. One may participate on&#13;
the club team as well as in their&#13;
cities' recreation departments&#13;
program. •&#13;
NAIA to&#13;
be hosted&#13;
Parkside's cross country squad&#13;
qualified for the NAIA National&#13;
Championships to be run on their&#13;
home course Saturday at 11 a.m .&#13;
anized&#13;
The Rangers finished third in&#13;
the District 14 meet at Parkside&#13;
last Saturday, which was won by&#13;
UW-LaCrosse, with 34 points&#13;
UW-Stevens Point was second&#13;
with 45 and Parkside had 78.&#13;
ucatton Building during&#13;
her and ould lso report&#13;
oses&#13;
hage&#13;
e 15-5, 11-!5&#13;
LaCrosse and Stevens Point,&#13;
finishing 1-2 in the WSUC meet&#13;
were expected to repeat their&#13;
1975 1-2 district finish again, but&#13;
the competition was for third&#13;
place which Parkside, Platteville&#13;
and Eau Claire were to battle for.&#13;
The Rangers were way ahead of&#13;
both as Platteville had 95 and&#13;
Eau Claire had 98. The top three&#13;
teams and top 15 individuals&#13;
qualified for the nationals.&#13;
Jim Hanson was the meet&#13;
winner in 25 minutes, 25.6&#13;
seconds, followed by Joe Hanson,&#13;
both of UW-La Crosse. Shawn&#13;
Flanigan of UW-Platteville was&#13;
third, Dan Buniman of UWtevens&#13;
Point, fourth and&#13;
Parkside's Ray Fredericksen&#13;
was fifth.&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,000-mile oil change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60°F. pour point)&#13;
• saves oil RICK BENTSON&#13;
rAMSI OI d 639-4067&#13;
Both of the first two Ranger&#13;
oals were scored by De~ch f smiali on assists by Mike&#13;
Boyagjian. . Coach Hal Henderson cited two&#13;
reasons for the outcome of the&#13;
match.&#13;
"They were faster than we&#13;
ere and scored three goals by w .d outrunning us," he sat , continuing,&#13;
"they did n~t ha;e. a&#13;
great deal of skill, playmg a Kick&#13;
and run' type of game. Th~y&#13;
seldom controlled and did&#13;
anything with the ball and we&#13;
were not prepared for this kind of&#13;
game. I think we played the&#13;
better game."&#13;
Statistics for the match were&#13;
close, 88 St. John had 13 shots to&#13;
Parkside's 12. "It's unbelieveable&#13;
to have as much&#13;
scoring as occurred with so few&#13;
attempts," said Hender~on. St.&#13;
John had 12 corner kicks to&#13;
Parkside's 10 and Parkside had&#13;
three saves to St. John's two.&#13;
Coach Henderson also noted&#13;
other conditions affecting the&#13;
outcome of the match.&#13;
"We had a nice sunny 40&#13;
degree day, but neither team&#13;
played especially well on the fi~ld&#13;
that was rougn and bumpy,&#13;
something we're not used to. The&#13;
officiating, though was as good as&#13;
I've ever seen," said Henderson.&#13;
"I was extremely plea5e11&#13;
the way the team fought ba ~&#13;
even when we were doWn by&#13;
goals. We just didn't t&#13;
enough goals during the ~c&#13;
The Rangers end their 0d&#13;
ever season with a 7.78&#13;
and will have 10 of the 11 s reCOrt&#13;
back, hopefully, for next~&#13;
squad. rs&#13;
Ten members of the Rang were named to the All ~Al!&#13;
District 14 team out of the&#13;
honored for their perforrna 11&#13;
during the season.&#13;
Qualifying for the first&#13;
were Sendelbach, Mike 01&#13;
Chris Carter and Kriz Serafin&#13;
defense and Boyajian and Eat&#13;
Campbell on offense.&#13;
Citeq f~r honorable menli&#13;
were Berme Hefner, goalie; ·&#13;
Power and Jack Landweh&#13;
defense and Isrniali on offenst&#13;
Henderson was also honored&#13;
the four team district's "Coach or&#13;
the Year."&#13;
Parkside completed in the f&#13;
round of the playoffs for&#13;
second time in three years. Thtr&#13;
lost to St. John 1-0 in 1974.&#13;
St. John, upping their record&#13;
13-1-3 advances to the area final&#13;
either Nov. 17 or 20 against&#13;
Illinois winner, probably favor&#13;
and three-time NAIA ~&#13;
Quincy College.&#13;
H""i"":7"LJ\.!_A'2/&#13;
• · Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
Sanbee'S ~~~~~'uE . t:,t) ,,, 552-7610&#13;
4425 Taylor only ten minutes from Kenosha&#13;
- Student Discount&#13;
Largest selection of&#13;
fashionable frames it'!&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
- Lenses duplicated&#13;
Physician&#13;
prescriptions filled&#13;
50 % off 2nd pair </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 5, issue 10, November 17, 1976</text>
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                <text>1976-11-17</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="66155">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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                <text>Includes an issue of the satirical paper, "The Parkside DeRanger".</text>
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              <text>Bowden requests impeachment&#13;
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              <text>TheParkside,----- _&#13;
•&#13;
RANGER •&#13;
Vol. V. No.9 Wednesday, November 10, 1976&#13;
Bowden requests impeachment&#13;
by DouglasEdenhauser&#13;
At the November 3 Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
(PSGA) meeting. President&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden threatened to&#13;
bring criminal charges against&#13;
senatOr Mary Arnold for the theft&#13;
of the original copy of the PSGA&#13;
newsletter if those materials&#13;
were not returned during the&#13;
meeting .:&#13;
The materials were returned ..&#13;
However, Bowden did request&#13;
impeachment proceedings under&#13;
the following charges: (1) Obstruction&#13;
of presidential duteis,&#13;
(2) Use of senate authority to&#13;
obtain the materials, (3) The&#13;
actual theft, and (4) False information&#13;
as to the whereabouts&#13;
of those materials. A special&#13;
investigative' committee was&#13;
appointed to follow up on this&#13;
matter.&#13;
A resolution was passed stating&#13;
that each senator distribute 50&#13;
copies of the PSGA Newsletter&#13;
twice monthly in an effort to&#13;
better acquaint the students with&#13;
their senators. President Bowden&#13;
mentioned that she has received&#13;
several complaints from senators&#13;
and students concerning the&#13;
anonymity oftne senate.&#13;
The following students were&#13;
appointed to various commitlees.&#13;
Niki Di Paolo to the Student&#13;
Recruitment and Admissions&#13;
Committee, Sue Schmanski to the&#13;
Athletic Board, Tom Fulmer to&#13;
the Athletic Board, Baril'&#13;
Butgereit to the. Teaching&#13;
Awards Committee, Sue&#13;
Balewski and Harvey Hedden to&#13;
the Teaching Improvements&#13;
Grants Committee, and Rusty&#13;
Tutlewski to the Allocations&#13;
Committee .&#13;
The Elections Subcommittee&#13;
announced the results of the&#13;
runoff election held Friday,&#13;
October 28. Rick Folsom defeated&#13;
Carol Bohn and Joan Fuetterer&#13;
for the remaining undeclared&#13;
.seat.&#13;
Blood drive planned&#13;
Campus Nurse, Edith Isenberg, is urging students&#13;
to make appointments now for Parkside's first&#13;
blooddrive. As coordinator, Nurse Isenberg and her&#13;
staff of students in Wu.c 0-194 will try and make&#13;
sure there is a steady supply of students ready to&#13;
donate blood from 10 a.m, to 2 p.m. Monday,&#13;
November 22 in the Union's parking lot driveway .&#13;
The blood drive's director might be a surprise to&#13;
most students around Parkside. Dr. Richard J.&#13;
Pomazal, Assistant Professor of Psychology, is&#13;
better kJlown for his popular psychology of drug&#13;
abuse courses. Blood drives are nothii\g new to Dr.&#13;
Pomazal. He has heen involved in so many he has&#13;
lost count.&#13;
"You meet a lot of friendly poeple when you&#13;
donate blood,", says Pomazal, "I was the first&#13;
person to sign up for this driv..e.."&#13;
Dr. Pomazal also has a professional interest in&#13;
why people donate blood. His' doctoral thesis at the&#13;
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign was&#13;
~&#13;
.-...~.'.&#13;
--t dO........--~I&#13;
._'/- .&#13;
_.~~..~.. ,,~;:;.,~&#13;
• I.,. • ~~ ,"~, •• {i"..... . '.# ..&#13;
-""''''' , . "'Wi .. -~. - •• 'it;·.... II I.. :. ... #. ' .••&#13;
; ; '" -- -. '.. '.--", .- -; .&#13;
'... ,1. If - - .... - .&#13;
,. . .. '.. .- ..&#13;
I ...• ,'#1, -&#13;
.11/I ,', •. ~ '.• \ .. "A ;.. -..... .....- J, . .' 'q. .. • ." , J • f&#13;
"II ;'~ .... _.4r ......&#13;
"'.4ll .. " _.' " .• ' •• ., ... .....&#13;
Doctor Richard J., Pomazal and Camp~s Nurse, .&#13;
~ Ed'th Isenberg R.N. prepare for Parkside's first&#13;
1 tion should be to help people rather than get&#13;
-&#13;
blood drIve. According to Dr. Pomazal, ... the mollva m on Monda November 22in the&#13;
something in return." Donators may give blood from 10a.m, to.2 p. '. y,&#13;
.Union Parking lot Driveway.&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
-&#13;
about altruism or why people help one another. Dr.&#13;
Pomazal's theory, the subject of his recent article in .&#13;
the Journal of Personality and Social Psycbology,&#13;
, briefly asserts that donors and non-donors both&#13;
believe in the same positive consequences of giving&#13;
hlood. What they disagree on is. the negative coosequences;&#13;
non-donors fear pain, fainting, and&#13;
.exhaustion. Donors who have given blood rarely&#13;
have negative feelings.&#13;
"I am interested in why people 'donate blood and&#13;
why they feel good about it afterward. I am against&#13;
giving free beer and other gimmicks designed to&#13;
entice donors." says Pomazal, and about&#13;
Parkside's first drive, "the motivation should be to&#13;
_ help people rather than get something in return."&#13;
Dr. Pomazal also envisions periodic blood drives at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The Milwaukee Blood center is providing the&#13;
bloodmobile. The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. and the Vets Club are cosponsoring&#13;
the event.&#13;
8l00DofUVE&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
I&#13;
Joseph Attwell&#13;
Accusation&#13;
called false&#13;
by Jobn McKloskey&#13;
A single source within the Affirmative Action Advisory Committee,&#13;
who asked not to be identified, accused Affirmative Action Officer&#13;
Joseph J. Attwell of "dragging his feet as hard as he can, because&#13;
when the plan is finished, he's out of a Job." Attwell responded, "I&#13;
don't care who it is, they are liars ...they don't know a damn thing&#13;
about it."&#13;
"I have done what 1was hired to do insofar as I have been allowed to&#13;
do," said Attweli, who last February submitted to Olancellor Guskin&#13;
what he called a complete Affirmative Action plan for hiring of female&#13;
and minority employees. Guskin replied in a letter dated May 13that&#13;
the document Attweli submitted was not really a plan. Attwell replied&#13;
to Guskin in a letter dated May 17, quoting UW System Senior VicePresident&#13;
Donald Percy as giving four elements "basic to the&#13;
adequacy of any (Affirmative Action) program." Those four essential&#13;
elements, as outlined by Attwell, are: A. The Work Force Analysis. B.&#13;
The Availability and Utilization Analysis. C. The Goals and&#13;
Timetables. D. A description of actions taken to implement the&#13;
program.&#13;
As far as this reporter can determine, Attwell's February report&#13;
incloded all the above except the timelables, and it also includes&#13;
sections entitled "The Legal Authority for Afrirmative Action" and&#13;
"Workforce Deficiencies at UW·Parkside."&#13;
In the same letter of response to Guskin, Attwell charged that&#13;
Guskin had been slow to institute Affirmative Action. To quote from&#13;
Attwell's letter:&#13;
Nothing In affirmative acllon of .ay practical .lplfIcaace wu&#13;
accomplished la 1973or 1974.Hiring. lew Blacks .Dd .. y.... ".t leut&#13;
there are some," does not constitute affirm.dve acdoR.&#13;
In 1974,as well.s 1975,1 made every pos.lble effort to achieve lOme&#13;
semblaace of affirmative action, bnt 99 perceat of employment .Dd&#13;
affirmative action matters were accompllabed .. Ithout any dl.cullioa&#13;
with me. What admlnlstr.lors wanled 10 do, they did and 1 wa. 1101&#13;
allowed to be lavolved. It Is beginning 10 .ppear th.t • alml1ar&#13;
situation exists now.&#13;
The Plan submitted In February, 1978sbould have beea dIacuaaed&#13;
with me and your senior staff with a view 10 setting firm bIrfng g.... 1D&#13;
the IIgbl of lbe non-existence of .ftIrmatlve actloa. Direct maad.teI&#13;
should have heen gtvee as to blrlag procedures wltb as little .... le of&#13;
time and paper as possible ...&#13;
...I must point out that over. perIod 01 2 years, I have received&#13;
practically no cooperatloa aad very lillie of the pertlaeat information&#13;
whicb 1needed and requested. I received more rbelorlc than aaythlng&#13;
else ...&#13;
Attwell said in an interview that he received no co-operation at aU&#13;
from the Wyllie or Bauer administrations, and that the current administration&#13;
has been more co-operative, He stressed that the reason&#13;
he released the above letter was not to attack or criticize Guskin, but&#13;
to refute the "Ioot-dragging" charge.&#13;
Carole Vopat, chairperson of the Affirmative Action Commiltee,&#13;
was originally unavailable for comment on'the charges, but requested&#13;
that this reporter attend last Thursday's committee meeting, at .. hich&#13;
committee memhers in attendance supported Attwell. Vopat labeled&#13;
the accusations "patently false. Joe has been very helpful and has&#13;
come to every meeting. Joe has not obstructed or hindered us in any&#13;
way." Glenn Doston, a committee member, said that "Attwell has&#13;
agreed to serve and assist all our subconunittees."&#13;
Regardless of whether anyone has been stalling Affirmative Action,&#13;
the formulation of the plan is now progressing rapidly.&#13;
The Affirmative Action Committee has set up a lime schedule by&#13;
which its work on the plan will be completely finished on December 11,&#13;
1976.&#13;
The committee will be meeting almost every Thursday and some&#13;
Saturdays, until then, and has appointed sul&gt;-committees to cover the&#13;
areas of recruiting; monitoring; promotion, retention and tenure; and&#13;
goals and timetables. .&#13;
The only question at this point is how long it will take the administration&#13;
to approve the plan when the committee is finished with&#13;
it.&#13;
The Parkside--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No. 9 Wednesday, November 10, 1976&#13;
•&#13;
Bowden requests impeachment&#13;
by Douglas_Edenhauser&#13;
At the November 3 Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
(PSGA) meeting_ President&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden threatened to&#13;
bring criminal charges against&#13;
Senator Mary Arnold for the theft&#13;
of the original copy of the PSGA&#13;
newsletter if those materials&#13;
were not returned during the&#13;
meeting. ·&#13;
actual theft, and ( 4) 1''alse information&#13;
as to the whereabouts&#13;
of those materials. A special&#13;
investigative · committee was&#13;
appointed to follow up on this&#13;
matter.&#13;
Recruitment and Admissions&#13;
Committee, Sue Schmanski to the&#13;
Athletic Board, Tom Fulmer to&#13;
the Athletic Board, Barir&#13;
Butgereit to the . Teaching&#13;
Awards Committee, Sue&#13;
Balewski and Harvey Hedden to&#13;
the Teaching Improvements&#13;
Grants Committee, and Rusty&#13;
Tutlewski to the Allocations&#13;
Committee.&#13;
The materials were returned.,&#13;
However, Bowden did request&#13;
impeachment proceedings under&#13;
the following charges: (1) Obstruction&#13;
of presidential dute1s,&#13;
(2) Use of Senate authority to&#13;
obtain the materials, (3) The&#13;
A resolution was passed stating&#13;
that each senator distribute 50&#13;
copies of the PSGA Newsletter&#13;
twice monthly in an effort to&#13;
better acquaint the students with&#13;
their senators. President Bowden&#13;
mentioned that she has received&#13;
several complaints from senators&#13;
and students concerning the&#13;
anonymity ofthe Senate.&#13;
The Elections Subcommittee&#13;
announced the results of the&#13;
runoff el~ction held Friday,&#13;
October 28. Rick Folsom defeated&#13;
Carol Bohn and Joan Fuetterer&#13;
for the remaining undeclared&#13;
,seat.&#13;
The following students were&#13;
appointed to various committees.&#13;
Niki Di Paolo to the Student&#13;
BlOod drive planned&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Campus Nurse, Edith Isenberg, is urging students&#13;
to make appointments now for Parkside's first&#13;
blood drive. As coordinator, Nurse Isenberg and her&#13;
staff of students in WLLC D-194 will try and make&#13;
sure there is a steady supply of students ready to&#13;
donate blood from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday,&#13;
November 22 in the Union's parking lot driveway.&#13;
The blood drive's director might be a surprise to&#13;
most students around Parkside. Dr. Richard J.&#13;
Pomazal, Assistant Professor of Psychology, is&#13;
better known for his popular psychology of drug&#13;
abuse courses. Blood drives are nothing new to Dr.&#13;
Pomazal. He has been involved in so many he has&#13;
lost count.&#13;
"You meet a lot of friendly poeple when you&#13;
donate blood,". says Pomazal, "I was .the first&#13;
person to sign up for this driv.e."&#13;
Dr. Pomazal also has a professional interest in&#13;
why people donate blood. His doctoral thesis at the&#13;
Universlty of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign was&#13;
about altruism or why people help one another. Dr.&#13;
Pomazal's theory, the subject of his recent article in&#13;
the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology,&#13;
, briefly asserts that donors and non-donors both&#13;
believe in the same positive consequences of giving&#13;
blood. What they disagree on is the negative consequences;&#13;
non-donors fear pain, fainting, and&#13;
. exhaustion. Donors who have given blood rarely&#13;
have negative feelings.&#13;
"I am interested in why people ·donate blood and&#13;
why they feel good about it afterward. I am against&#13;
giving free beer and other gimmicks designed to&#13;
entice donors," says Pomazal, and about&#13;
Parkside's first drive, "the motivation should be to&#13;
_ help people rather than get something in return."&#13;
Dr. Pomazal also envisions periodic blood drives at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The Milwaukee Blood Center is providing the&#13;
bloodmobile. The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. and the Vets Club are cosponsoring&#13;
the event.&#13;
8U&gt;OOl&gt;R.JVE&#13;
., .&#13;
•&#13;
. -· · · Edith Isenberg R.N. prepare for Parkside's first&#13;
Doctor Richard J. Pomazal and Campus Nurse, . ti h ld be to help people rather than get&#13;
blood drive. According to Dr. Pomazal, " ... the mohva on s ou on Monda November 22in the&#13;
something in return." Donato rs may give blood from 10 a.m. to .&#13;
2 p.m. . Y'&#13;
_ Union Parking lot Driveway.&#13;
Accusation&#13;
called false&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
A single source within the Affirmative Action Advisory Committee,&#13;
who asked not to be identified, accused Affirmative Action Officer&#13;
Joseph J. Attwell of "dragging his feet as hard as he can, because&#13;
when the plan is finished, he's out of a job." Attwell responded, "I&#13;
don't care who it is, they are liars ... they don't know a damn thing&#13;
about it."&#13;
"I have done what I was hired to do insofar as I have been allowed to&#13;
do," said Attwell, who last February submitted to Chancellor Guskin&#13;
what he called a complete Affirmative Action plan for hiring of female&#13;
and minority employees. Guskin replied in a letter dated May 13 that&#13;
the document Attwell submitted was not really a plan. Attwell replied&#13;
to Guskin in a letter dated May 17, quoting UW System Senior VicePresident&#13;
Donald Percy as giving four elements "basic to the&#13;
adequacy of any (Affirmative Action) program." Those four essential&#13;
elements, as outlined by Attwell, are: A. The Work Force Analysis. B.&#13;
The Availability and Utilization Analysis. C. The Goals and&#13;
Timetables. D. A description of actions taken to implement the&#13;
program.&#13;
As far- as this reporter can determine, Attwell's February report&#13;
included all the above except the timetables, and it also includes&#13;
sections entitled "The Legal Authority for Afrirmative Action" and&#13;
"Workforce Deficiencies at UW-Parkside."&#13;
In the same letter of response to Guskin, Attwell charged that&#13;
Guskin had been slow to institute Affirmative Action. To quote from&#13;
Attwell's letter:&#13;
Nothing lo afflrmative action of any practical slgn.fflcance wa&#13;
accomplished in 1973 or 1974. Hiring a few Blac and aylng ' at lea t&#13;
there are some," does not constitute affirmative action.&#13;
In 1974, as well as 1975, I made every pos Ible effort to chleve om&#13;
semblance of affirmative action, but 99 percent of employment and&#13;
affirmative action matters were accomplished with ut any di u Ion&#13;
with me. What administrators wanted to do, they did and I a n t&#13;
allowed to be Involved. It l beginning to appear that a similar&#13;
situation exists now.&#13;
The Plan submitted lo February, 1976 should have be n di u ed&#13;
with me and your senior staff with a view to tting firm hlrlng als lo&#13;
the light of the non-existence of affirmative action. Dlr ct manda&#13;
should have been given as to hiring procedures with a little wa te of&#13;
time and paper as pos Ible ...&#13;
... I must point out that over a period of 2 year , I have rec ved&#13;
practically no cooperation and very little of the pertinent lnform.ati n&#13;
which I needed and reque ted. I received more rhetoric than anything&#13;
else ...&#13;
Attwell said in an interview that he received no co-operation at all&#13;
from the Wyllie or Bauer administrations, and that the current dministration&#13;
has been more co-operative, He stressed that the rea n&#13;
he released the above letter was not to attack or criticize Guskin, but&#13;
to refute the "foot-dragging" charge.&#13;
Carole Vopat, chairperson of the Affirmative Action Committee,&#13;
was originally unavailable for comment on the charges, but requ ted&#13;
that this reporter attend last Thursday's committee meeting, at which&#13;
committee members in attendance supported Attwell. Vopat labeled&#13;
the accusations "patently false. Joe has been very helpful and ha&#13;
come to every meeting. Joe has not obstructed or hindered us in any&#13;
way." Glenn Doston, a committee member, said that "Attwell has&#13;
agreed to serve and assist all our subcommittees."&#13;
Regardless of whether anyone has been stalling Affirmative Action,&#13;
the formulation of the plan is now progressing rapidly.&#13;
The Affirmative Action Committee has set up a time schedule by&#13;
which its work on the plan will be completely finished on December 11,&#13;
1976.&#13;
The committee will be meeting almost every Thursday and some&#13;
Saturdays, until then, and has appointed sub-committees to cover the&#13;
areas of recruiting; monitoring; promotion, retention and tenure; and&#13;
goals and timetables.&#13;
The only question at this point is how long it will take the administration&#13;
to approve the plan when the committee is finished with&#13;
it. &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 10, 1976&#13;
•&#13;
i&#13;
~I¥/ The Parkside ~".. /[ RANGER&#13;
---EDITOR IAL/OPINION&#13;
POLITICAL FORUM.&#13;
Ford thanked'&#13;
\&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
Well, the election is over and Jerry Ford is a loser for the first&#13;
election in his life. The American people didn't say thanks in their _&#13;
vote, but they can still say thanks hy remembering what he did for&#13;
them. True, he was clumsy, and didn't always appear too bright, but&#13;
when you compare him to a monster like Nixon, Jerry Ford comes out&#13;
like a "white Knight" who rode in to save the country. When you&#13;
compare the attitude of the country at the time of his appearance with&#13;
the attitude now, you have to think he did something right.&#13;
When Richard Nixon resigned, this country was wallowing in misery&#13;
and despair. Then Ford appeared, a likeable, honest man with a flair&#13;
for comedy. He did what any decent God-fearing man would have done&#13;
in pardonirig Nixon. I intensely dislike the man, but 1would have felt&#13;
asham'ed if the destruction would have continued. Can you imagine&#13;
what this country would have went through if impeachment&#13;
proceedings would have gone all the way? Watergate is a period of&#13;
time that we have survived, Ford did the right thing in buying it away.&#13;
Watergate was not the only thing that had morale down: we had also&#13;
just been evicted from Vietnam and pride was at an all time low. Our&#13;
allies overseas were disgusted and the Russians were given valuable&#13;
propaganda material, but here again Ford stepped in: The Cam- -&#13;
, bodians tried him out and he passed with flying colors; so if the&#13;
Mayeguez was mainly a publicity stunt, it is nice to know that the&#13;
Russians aren't the only ones with a hold on that market. It returned&#13;
some pride to the American people, and any amount was helpful at the&#13;
time.&#13;
Another aspect of this man, was his wife. Betty Ford was the first&#13;
REAL first lady since Jackie Kennedy. She was intelligent, funny and&#13;
most of all, candid and honest. 1 don't mean to say that Pat Nixon&#13;
wasn't, but one can onlv take. so much phoniness. And add to that the&#13;
intense personal tragedy that the Fords went through, it is amazing&#13;
that they held up.&#13;
'Ithink the American people are a lot better off for knowing 'Jerry&#13;
Ford: he was there when we needed him. A lot of us did not agree with&#13;
him politically, but personally Ithought he was a fine, decent and&#13;
, honest man. And just maybe on the day that Jimmy Carter is sworn in&#13;
as the new president, the people well stepback and say, ','Thanks a hell&#13;
of a lot, Jerry." He deserves it.&#13;
,&#13;
Union membership&#13;
angers (lllumnis&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
When Iwas a student at UW·P I&#13;
was told by high administration&#13;
authority that the hundreds Iwas&#13;
forking over to build the new&#13;
union would buy me membership&#13;
in It as an allumnis. Now I'm&#13;
expected to glow with gratitude&#13;
and delight as I'm told that this&#13;
membership is for one year only, ~&#13;
, suppose I'm overstepping l!!e&#13;
hounds of propriety in mentioning&#13;
that the time a student&#13;
spends at the union in four years&#13;
of, fulltime undergrad study Can&#13;
hardly be approached in duration&#13;
and convenience in even ten&#13;
.years by allumni whose 0pportunities&#13;
to try are so&#13;
• I&#13;
restricted in comparison.&#13;
Well whoever is responsible for&#13;
this has sent the allunmi a&#13;
message loud and clear:&#13;
"Thanks a lot suckers!" Well&#13;
then I've got a message for you&#13;
too pal, whoever you might be:&#13;
"Don't urinate down my back&#13;
and tell me its raining." •&#13;
May 1 never be so stupid as to&#13;
contribute a penny to or lift a&#13;
finger for those at your school&#13;
whose face-slaping policies might&#13;
be furthered, by my doing so. And&#13;
may they never be so foolish as to&#13;
ask.&#13;
James D. Smith Jr,&#13;
Class of '75&#13;
Food 'is overpriced&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Itused to be that the best place&#13;
to have lunch, or supper,&#13;
whatever, was down in the Union&#13;
Square. For $1.25 you could get a&#13;
good sized hamburger or rib&#13;
steak with a large helping of&#13;
giant french fries with a pickle, a&#13;
slice of tomatoe and lettuce to top&#13;
it all off.&#13;
Not bad considering the&#13;
outrageous, ridiculous, over-&#13;
-priced food in the new cafeteria.&#13;
The cold sandwiches are the&#13;
worst buy of all- $.60 for a slice of&#13;
salami and cheese between two&#13;
pieces of unusually stale bread.&#13;
No, maybe the $.30 donut is the&#13;
worst buy, or maybe the large&#13;
cup of coffee. Well, anyone who&#13;
buys anything there knows what&#13;
I'm talking ahout.&#13;
1 realized that a boycott may&#13;
seem a little impractical, and&#13;
perhaps unrealistic considering&#13;
. the amount of people who are&#13;
dependent on Saga Food Service,&#13;
so I was W'!l!ing a personal&#13;
campaign urgIrig people to eat at&#13;
the Union Square (located on the&#13;
0.1 level of'tbe Student Union).&#13;
,But alas, something has&#13;
happened. The rib steaks have&#13;
gotten smaller and are tougher to&#13;
eat. The quantity of french fries&#13;
now served has greatly&#13;
diminished, even the lettuce&#13;
looks undernourished, and now&#13;
we are even served on paper&#13;
plates.&#13;
Wha~ are they (Saga Foods)&#13;
doing to us students?!! Is this&#13;
another bureaucratic "we can't&#13;
do anything about it" situation? I&#13;
. mean you just cannot buy a cup of&#13;
coffee and a donut in the&#13;
morning without losing threequarters&#13;
of your dollar or more.&#13;
The students could eat better&#13;
for a lot less if we had the time&#13;
and inclination to drive out&#13;
somewhere to eat.&#13;
But coming and, going becomes&#13;
awkward and can be very timely,&#13;
So we students chose to eat pn&#13;
campus, paying exorbitant fees&#13;
to stay fed. It shouldn't be&#13;
allowed but it happens here and&#13;
probably at a lot of other places.&#13;
It's nothing new. I'm sure&#13;
we've all seen our capitalistic&#13;
system at its best. Nevertheless,&#13;
Iurge students to bring their own&#13;
lunches, or when feasible, to eat&#13;
elsewhere.&#13;
P.M.&#13;
Name withheld&#13;
Upon request&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Je.nnine Sipsma&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Cathy Brnak&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Tom Cooper&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR: Bruce Wagner&#13;
DEPARTMENTS:&#13;
Administriltlon-Poltcies: John McKloskey ,&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debbie Bauer&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Jeiln Tenuta&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS: jeffrey [. swencki, Bill Barke&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Julie Lange&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: Van Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION: Sue Marqu.rdt&#13;
STAFF: Wendy Miller, Terri Gayhart, Robert Hoffman, Chris (Iausen Phil Hermann&#13;
Ra~onil Maill~t, Bob .J~mbois, Lindil Knudtson, Karin La Fourher, JUdy'TrUdrUng, Scott&#13;
R"nhard, Philip L. LIVingston, Oebbie Sharpe&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: P.J. Auolina, Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Tile Parkslde Ran .. r is .rin-n and edited&#13;
by ttle stud ants of tha Unlvenlty of&#13;
Wisconsln_Parkside wllo are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
co~..... Opinion, e.pressed are not&#13;
necessarily representative of those held by&#13;
the stUdents, faculty or administration of&#13;
Parhide. Editorial and Business 553-2217;'&#13;
Newsroom 553-2295.&#13;
(&#13;
~*&#13;
~&#13;
•&#13;
•~&#13;
II&#13;
*&#13;
/1&#13;
II&#13;
1&#13;
,&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 10, 1976&#13;
~ IJ!/ The Parkside&#13;
~,,.. /t&#13;
· R~NGER&#13;
---EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
POLITICAL . FO.RUM.&#13;
Ford thanked&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
Well, the election is over and Jerry Ford is a loser for the first&#13;
election in his life. The American people didn't say thanks in their&#13;
vote, but they can still say thanks by remembering what he did for&#13;
them. True, he was clumsy, and didn't always appear too bright, but&#13;
when you compare him to a monster like Nixon, Jerry Ford comes out&#13;
like a "white Knight" who rode in to save the country. When you&#13;
compare the attitude of the country at the time of his appearance with&#13;
the attitude now, you have to think he did something right.&#13;
When Richard Nixon resigned, this country was wallowing in misery&#13;
and despair. Then Ford appeared, a likeable, honest man with a flair&#13;
for comedy. He dld what any decent God-fearing man would have done&#13;
in pardoning Nixon. I intensely cijslike the man, but I would have felt&#13;
asham'ed if the destruction would have continued. Can you imagine&#13;
what this country would have went through if impeachment&#13;
proceedings would have gone all the way? Watergate is a period of&#13;
time that we have survived, Ford did the right thing in buying it away.&#13;
Watergate was not the only thing that had morale down; we had also&#13;
just been evicted from Vietnam and pride was at an all time low. Our&#13;
Union membership&#13;
angers allumnis&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
When I was a student at UW-P I&#13;
was told by high administration&#13;
authority that the hundreds I was&#13;
forking over to build the new&#13;
union would buy me membership&#13;
in it as an allumnis. Now I'm&#13;
expected to glow with gratitude&#13;
and delight as I'm told that .this&#13;
membership is for one year only. ·&#13;
I suppose I'm overstepping the&#13;
bounds of propriety in mentioning&#13;
that the time a student ·&#13;
spends at the union in four years&#13;
of fulltime undergrad study can&#13;
hardly be approached in duration&#13;
and convenience in even ten&#13;
.years by allumni whose opportunities&#13;
to try are so&#13;
,&#13;
restricted in comparison.&#13;
Well whoever is responsible for&#13;
this has sent the allumni a&#13;
message loud and clear:&#13;
"Thanks a lot suckers!" Well&#13;
then I've got a message for you&#13;
too pal, whoever you might be:&#13;
"Don't urinate down my back&#13;
and tell me its raining." •&#13;
May I never be so stupid as to&#13;
contribute a penny to or lift a&#13;
finger for those at your school&#13;
whose face-slaping policies might&#13;
be furthered by my doing so. And&#13;
may they never be so foolish as to&#13;
ask.&#13;
James D. Smith Jrr&#13;
Class of '75&#13;
allies overseas were disgusted and the Russians were given valuable&#13;
propaganda material, but here again Ford stepped in.' The Carn-&#13;
. bodia'ns tried him out and he passed with flying CE&gt;lors; so if the&#13;
Mayeguez was mainly a publicity stunt, it is nice to know that the&#13;
Russians aren't the only ones with a hold on that market. It returned&#13;
some pride to the American people, and any amount was helpful at the&#13;
time.&#13;
Another aspect of this man, was his wife. Betty Ford was the first&#13;
REAL first lady sirice Jackie Kennedy. She was intelligent, funny and&#13;
most of all, candid and honest. I don't mean to say that Pat Nixon&#13;
wasn't, but one can Qnlv take. so much ohoniness. And add to that the&#13;
intense personal tragedy that the Fords went through, it is amazing&#13;
that they held up.&#13;
'1 think the American people are a lot better off for knowing 0&#13;
Jerry&#13;
Ford; he was there when we needed him. A lot of us did not agree with&#13;
him politically, but personally I thought he was a fine, decent and&#13;
, honest man. And just maybe on the day that Jimmy Carter is sworn in&#13;
as the new president, the people well step,back and say, '.'Thanks a hell&#13;
of a lot, Jerry. " He deserves it.&#13;
Food is overpriced&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It used to be that the best place&#13;
to have lunch, or supper,&#13;
whatever, was down in the Union&#13;
Square. For $1.25 you could get a&#13;
good sized hamburger or rib&#13;
steak with a large helping of&#13;
giant french fries with a pickle, a&#13;
slice of tornatoe and lettuce to top&#13;
it all off.&#13;
Not bad considering the&#13;
outrageous, ridiculous, over-&#13;
.priced food in the new cafeteria.&#13;
The cold sandwiches are the&#13;
worst buy of all - $.60 for a slice of&#13;
salami and cheese between two&#13;
pieces of unusually stale bread.&#13;
No, maybe the $.30 donut is the&#13;
worst buy, or maybe the large&#13;
cup of coffee. Well, anyone who&#13;
buys anything there knows what&#13;
I'm talking about.&#13;
I realized that a boycott may&#13;
seem a little impractical, and&#13;
perhaps unrealistic considering&#13;
, the amount of people who are&#13;
dependent on Saga Food Service,&#13;
so I was w~ing a personal&#13;
campaign urgirig people to eat at&#13;
the Union Square (located on the&#13;
D-1 level of' the Student Union).&#13;
. But alas, something has&#13;
happened. The rib steaks have&#13;
gotten smaller and are tougher to&#13;
eat. The quantity of french fries&#13;
now served has greatly&#13;
diminished, even the lettuce&#13;
looks undernourished, and now&#13;
we are even served on paper&#13;
plates.&#13;
What are they (Saga Foods)&#13;
doing to us students? ! ! Is this&#13;
another bureaucratic "we can't&#13;
do anything about it" situation? I&#13;
· mean you just cannot buy a cup of&#13;
coffee and a donut in the&#13;
morning without losing threequarters&#13;
of your dollar or more.&#13;
The students could eat better&#13;
for a lot less if we had the time&#13;
and inclination to drive out&#13;
somewhere to eat.&#13;
But corning and.going becomes&#13;
awkward and can be very timely,&#13;
So we students chose to eat pn&#13;
campus, paying exorbitant- fees&#13;
to stay fed. It shouldn't be&#13;
allowed but it happens here and&#13;
probably at a lot of other places.&#13;
It's nothing new. I'm sure&#13;
we've all seen our capitalistic&#13;
system at its best. Nevertheless,&#13;
I urge students to bring their own&#13;
lunches, or when feasible, to eat&#13;
elsewhere .&#13;
P.M.&#13;
Name withheld&#13;
Upon request&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Cathy Brnak&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Tom Cooper&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR: Bruce Wagner&#13;
DEPARTMENTS:&#13;
Administration-Policies: John McKloskey '&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debbie Bauer&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is written and edited&#13;
by the students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin.Park,ide who are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
cot,••"t Opinions e,c:pressed are not&#13;
necessarily representative of those held by&#13;
the students, faculty or administration of&#13;
Parkside. Editorial and Business SSJ-2217; ·&#13;
Newsroom SSJ-2295.&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Jean Tenuta&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS: jeffrey j. swencki, Bill Barke&#13;
COPY EDITOR : Julie Lange&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: Van Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION: Sue Marquardt&#13;
STAFF: Wendy Miller, Terr_i Ga_yhart, Robert Hoffman, Chris Clausen, Phil Hermann,&#13;
Ramona Ma11_1~t, Bob _J~mbo1s, Linda Knudtson, Karin La Fourier, Judy Trudrung, Scott Reinhard, Ph1hp L . L1v1ngston, Debbie Sharpe&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS : P.J. Anolina, Philip L. Livingston&#13;
I &#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 10. 1'76 3&#13;
~&#13;
Part 1: Student government survey&#13;
'Senators express opinions&#13;
by Chris Clauseo . Senator Meyer said. "People come here and then go home leaving&#13;
the school and their involvement with it behind. At other schools the&#13;
school is the major part of student life. Here, well, it isn't." The&#13;
adult population cannot relate the PSGA and student life in general.&#13;
They don't look to Uw-P to provide anything but an education and&#13;
possibly a degree. Outside of that they aren't involved," she said.&#13;
"Kiyoko Bowden bas put in a tremendous effort in PSGA, but she&#13;
and the Senate can't be expected to do everything," said Senator&#13;
Meyer. "Kiyoko has done a good job as president but she hasn't has&#13;
the time to get the promises she made fulfilled," said Foght. "The lack&#13;
of participation has slowed things down and the necessary positions&#13;
haven't been filled." -&#13;
Foght continued. "Consequently Kiyoko has had to create executive&#13;
committees to get things done. I trust Kiyoko but don't like executive&#13;
conunittees especially when they overlap with committees that the&#13;
Senate has set up."&#13;
"There are bad feelings between some members of the Senate and&#13;
Kiyoko over the setting up of executive committees parallel to the&#13;
Senate but sbe almost had to due to a lack of student participation. All&#13;
and all I think she does an excellent job while carrying 17 credits,"&#13;
said Foght.&#13;
Recently student government has been plagued by a series of&#13;
resignations and a lack of turn out to fill those vacancies. Last week; in&#13;
separate interviews, Senators Mary Arnold, Chris Meyer, and former&#13;
Senator Robert Foght gave Jheir views on student government in&#13;
general student apathy, and President Bowden's administration&#13;
"Student government is a necessary function of any university to&#13;
protect student's rights," said former President Protempors Robert&#13;
Foght. "It's our responsibility to handle the problems students have&#13;
with Parkside and its administrators," he said.&#13;
"When a student gets screwed bv the Parkside Administration, he&#13;
feels like he's all alone and can't Iight back," Senator Mary Arnold&#13;
stated. "When he joins with others he has the power to.get things&#13;
changed. That's what PSGA is all about," the Senator said.&#13;
Senator Arnold continued,l'PSGA has the knowledge of how to fight&#13;
the administration and with the power of a united student body they&#13;
can. Even if just one student has a problem we're the best way to help&#13;
him solve their problems with the administration."&#13;
"Student apathy at UW-P is high, but it is not as bad as it is in the&#13;
rest of the nation. Student governments all over the country are&#13;
closing," stated Foght.&#13;
Music festival this week&#13;
Contemporary music will be&#13;
the f""al point of a festival at&#13;
Parkside November 10 through&#13;
, 13. Visiting artists will be the&#13;
Blackearth Percussion Group&#13;
and visiting composer will be&#13;
Prof. Martin Farren of&#13;
Massachusettes Institute of&#13;
Technology. The festival is part&#13;
of Parkside's Accent on Enrichment&#13;
series.&#13;
,.Festival highlights include:&#13;
- A free public concert by the&#13;
Parkside Contemporary Players&#13;
featuring premiere performances&#13;
of. two works by&#13;
Farren at 8 p.m. on Friday, Nov"&#13;
12, in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater;&#13;
-A concert by the B1ackearth&#13;
Percussion Group, including a&#13;
work composed for the group by&#13;
Farren, at ,8 p.m. on Saturday,&#13;
November 13, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. Tickets&#13;
for the Blackearth concert are&#13;
$1.50 for students and $2 for&#13;
others and are on sale at the&#13;
Campus Information Center,&#13;
Sears in Kenosha, Cook-Gere in&#13;
Racine and Team Electronics in&#13;
Elmwood Plaza;&#13;
-Master classes and workshops&#13;
November 10 through 12 by&#13;
Farren and Blackearth, all free&#13;
and open to the public, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Bldg. room&#13;
lOS.&#13;
The repertoire of the&#13;
Blackearth Percussion' group&#13;
draws on new music from around&#13;
the world as well as works by&#13;
members of the groupand those&#13;
written expressly for them by a&#13;
number of contemporary composers&#13;
including Farren. They&#13;
are the only full-time profess&#13;
ional percussion group in the U.S.&#13;
The Parkside Contemporary&#13;
Players directed by August&#13;
Wegner, himself the composer of&#13;
a number of published contemporary&#13;
works, will give the&#13;
premiere performance of&#13;
Farren's "Magnum Haereditatis&#13;
Mysterium" for ten musicians,&#13;
commissioned by the Parkside&#13;
. Lecture and Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
The concert also will&#13;
premiere Farren's "Eden Among&#13;
Us" for computer, realized at the&#13;
Experimental to1usic Studio at&#13;
MIT. Also programmed are&#13;
Farren's "Music for Clarinet and&#13;
Piano" and "da," a Farren work.&#13;
for eight hands at one piano, as&#13;
well as several works by other&#13;
composers.&#13;
Their program at Parkside will&#13;
Include "Musica Tridentina"&#13;
written for the group by Farren&#13;
and "Bob's Plain Bobs, to composed&#13;
for them by Robert Morris,&#13;
as well as works by Lou Harrison,&#13;
Richard Hoffman, Bowers,&#13;
James Tenny and William&#13;
Russell.&#13;
Farren discussing music&#13;
theory from 8 a.m. to noon on&#13;
Nov_ 10, his music and experiences&#13;
as a composer at 3 p.m.&#13;
on Nov. 11, and new music and its&#13;
notation from 8 a.m, to noon on&#13;
Nov. 12:&#13;
I Onc 'Sweet.&#13;
IDrealO'&#13;
~.!~~ ·&#13;
~"~-~:.-.&#13;
!~\#t~.-,,-,~ \'l,!&#13;
•.t I _.&#13;
.~. r !f~.&#13;
• " ' ........ "1:- •&#13;
• ~::Y'..:;..,..,. •&#13;
=&#13;
This Coupon is&#13;
= I&#13;
• worth 50c on all •&#13;
• items listed below .•&#13;
• Good thru November.&#13;
• only! One Coupon •&#13;
• per customer per •&#13;
.• purchase. Happy •&#13;
• Holidays. Remember .•&#13;
• we never close. •&#13;
,.._...••,&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
~IO Seventh Avenue&#13;
654·3578&#13;
WEST&#13;
3910 Seventy Fifth Street&#13;
694·2404&#13;
,&#13;
....&#13;
eXhlblt and Sale&#13;
of&#13;
• Oriental Art&#13;
A bl~Fla,lf oj OnginaL&#13;
gapanej(J,) Chi I'leje,&#13;
Jnd,ta 11) Trhetan&#13;
atld J{epalcje ArtNov.&#13;
15&#13;
10 a.m. - 5p.m.&#13;
Next to Bookstore&#13;
~at'e::&#13;
Time.:&#13;
~ta.ce::&#13;
COUft~J oj William Sh1rleJ FineAr~~J11C-&#13;
~ox 1)71) mihv. ;WjjC~.~?ZOl&#13;
,&#13;
-&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 10, 1976 3&#13;
Part 1: Student government survey&#13;
Senators express opinions&#13;
by Chris Clausen Senator Meyer said. "People come here and then go home leaving one&#13;
·sweet Recently student government has been plagued by a series of&#13;
resignations and a lack of turn out to fill those vacancies. Last week, in&#13;
separate interviews, Senators Mary Arnold, Chris Meyer, and former&#13;
Senator Robert Foght gave ,.their views on student government in&#13;
general student apathy, a~d President Bowden's administratiop.&#13;
"Student government is a necessary function of any university to&#13;
pro~ect student's rights," said former President Protempore Robert&#13;
Foght. "It's our responsibility to handle the problems students have&#13;
with Parkside and its administrators," he said.&#13;
"When a student gets screwed bv the Parkside Administration, he&#13;
feels like he's all alone and can't f1ght back," Senator Mary Arnold&#13;
stated. "When he joins with others he has the power to . get things&#13;
changed. Th~t's what PSGA is all about," the Senator said.&#13;
Senator Arnold continued, "PSGA has the knowledge of how to fight&#13;
the administration and with the power of a united student body they&#13;
can. Even if just one student has a problem we're the best way to help&#13;
him solve their problems with the administration."&#13;
"Student apathy at UW-P is high, but it is not as bad as it is in the&#13;
rest of the nation. Student governments all over the country are&#13;
closing," stated Foght.&#13;
the school and their involvement with it behind. At other schools the&#13;
school is the major part of student life. Here, well, it isn't." The&#13;
adult population cannot relate the PSGA and student life in general.&#13;
They don't look to UW-P to provide anything but an education and&#13;
possibly a degree. Outside of that they aren't involved," she said.&#13;
"Kiyoko Bowden has put in a tremendous effort in PSGA, but she&#13;
and the Senate can't be expected to do everything," said Senator&#13;
Meyer. "Kiyoko has done a good job as president but she hasn't has&#13;
the time to get the promises she made fulfilled," said Foght. "The lack&#13;
of participation has slowed things down and the necessary positions&#13;
haven't been filled."&#13;
Foght continued. "Consequently Kiyoko has had to create executive&#13;
committees to get things done. I trust Kiyoko but don't like executive&#13;
committees especially when they overlap with committees that the&#13;
Senate has set up."&#13;
"There are bad feelings between some members of the Senate and&#13;
Kiyoko over the setting up of executive committees parallel to the&#13;
Senate but she almost had to due to a lack of student participation. All&#13;
and all I think she does an excellent job while carrying 17 credits,"&#13;
said Foght.&#13;
I&#13;
Dream&#13;
,.!!~&#13;
• ,,~-c,. - •&#13;
Music festival this-week&#13;
• f; t.L~- ,,,':" ' • • i~'. 'I' •&#13;
• . I • • I •• , •&#13;
. . ·,. '..( ..... .&#13;
~- -•&#13;
Contemporary music will be&#13;
the focal point of a festival at&#13;
Parkside November 10 through&#13;
13. Visiting artists will be the&#13;
Blackearth Percussion Group&#13;
and visiting composer will be&#13;
Prof. Martin Farren of&#13;
Massachusettes Institute of&#13;
Technology. The festival is part&#13;
of Parkside's Accent on Enrichment&#13;
series.&#13;
, Festival highlights include:&#13;
- A free public concert by the&#13;
Parkside Contemporary Players&#13;
featuring premiere performances&#13;
of . two works by&#13;
Farren at 8 p.m. on Friday, Nov.&#13;
12, in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater;&#13;
-A concert by the Blackearth&#13;
Percussion Group, includine: a&#13;
,,,.&#13;
work composed for the group by&#13;
Farren, at 8 p.m. on Saturday,&#13;
November 13, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. Tickets&#13;
for the Blackearth concert are&#13;
$1.50 for students and $2 for&#13;
others and are on sale at the&#13;
Campus Information Center,&#13;
Sears in Kenosha, Cook-Gere in&#13;
Racine and Team Electronics in&#13;
Elmwood Plaza;&#13;
-Master classes and workshops&#13;
November 10 through 12 by&#13;
Farren and Blackearth, all free&#13;
and open to the public, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Bldg. room&#13;
105.&#13;
The repertoire of the&#13;
Blackearth Percussion· group&#13;
draws on new music from around&#13;
the world as well as works by&#13;
members of the group· and those&#13;
written expressly for them by a&#13;
number of contemporary composers&#13;
including Farren. They&#13;
are the only full-time profess&#13;
ional percussion group in the u .S.&#13;
The Parkside Contemporary&#13;
Players dir_ected by August&#13;
Wegner, himself the composer of&#13;
a number of published contemporary&#13;
works, will give the&#13;
premiere performance of&#13;
Farren's "Magnum Haereditatis&#13;
Mysterium" for ten musicians,&#13;
commissioned by the Parkside&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
The concert also will&#13;
premiere Farren's "Eden Among&#13;
Us" for computer, realized at the&#13;
Experimental ~usic Studio at&#13;
MIT. Also programmed are&#13;
Farren's "Music for Clarinet and&#13;
Piano" and "da," a Farren work&#13;
for eight hands at one piano, as&#13;
well as several works by other&#13;
composers.&#13;
Their program at Parkside will&#13;
mclude " Musica Tridentina"&#13;
written for the group by Farren&#13;
and "Bob's Plain Bobs," composed&#13;
for them by Robert Morris,&#13;
as well as works by Lou Harrison,&#13;
Richard Hoffman, Bowers,&#13;
James Tenny and William&#13;
Russell.&#13;
Farren discussing music&#13;
theory from 8 a.m. to noon on&#13;
Nov. 10, his music and experiences&#13;
as a composer at 3 p.m.&#13;
on Nov. 11, and new music and its&#13;
notation from 8 a.m. to noon on&#13;
Nov. 12:&#13;
• ~ ~ 11 - · - - •&#13;
• a Thi Coupon is • a • worth 50c on all a • items listed below. a&#13;
a Good thru November a&#13;
a only! One Coupon a&#13;
a per customer per a&#13;
· a purchase. Happy •&#13;
• Holidays. Remember. •&#13;
a we never close. • I, ..•....•• ,&#13;
0O\.\'NTOWN&#13;
5010 e,enth Avenue&#13;
654-3578&#13;
WEST&#13;
3910 event Fifth Street&#13;
694-2404&#13;
Gxh1b1t and Sa le&#13;
of&#13;
• Oriental Art&#13;
A bt~pla __ y ~f Original&#13;
gapaneJe) Chi neje,&#13;
and,1a n, Trhetan&#13;
ar1cl J{epaleJe Art-&#13;
.D a-re:: Nov. 15&#13;
Zime.:: 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.&#13;
} lace:: Next to Bookstore&#13;
Court~ ':f W'illiam Skirley Hne Art-~ Jric,&#13;
box 1;71, m1lw Wijc .. _5:,2.01 &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 10, 1976.&#13;
Prof. to speak on&#13;
computer map~&#13;
One of two University of Illinois&#13;
professors responsible for a&#13;
beeak-through in use of computer&#13;
computation in higher&#13;
mathematics, Prof. Wolfgang&#13;
Haken, will speak in the&#13;
mathematics lecture series at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin·Parkside&#13;
at 4 p.m, on Thursday, Nov. 11,in&#13;
Classroom Bldg. Room 107,'&#13;
For more than a century,&#13;
mathematicians puzzled over the&#13;
conjecture of a London graduate&#13;
student, the so-called four-color&#13;
conjecture which states that no&#13;
more than four colors are needed&#13;
to shade any map so that no two&#13;
adjoining countries are the same&#13;
color.&#13;
The-expertence of map-makers&#13;
throughout the years have&#13;
supported the four-color theory,&#13;
but mathematicians have never&#13;
beenable to prove it for all cases.&#13;
Last year, Haken and his&#13;
colleague Kenneth Appel finally&#13;
provided the conjecture accurate&#13;
with the aid of a computer. Proof&#13;
of the conjecture has heen hailed&#13;
as a major breakthrough in the&#13;
use of computers to solve fundamental&#13;
questions in higher&#13;
mathematics. Prior to the work&#13;
by Haken and Appel, 'many&#13;
mathematicians had relegated&#13;
computers to tedious, rote tasks&#13;
such as tracking space craft, .&#13;
which involve no new principals.&#13;
To establish proof of the conjecture,&#13;
Haken and Appel con,&#13;
verted the different possible&#13;
maps into a series of dots and&#13;
lines each containing at least one&#13;
of the 1,936 possible basic forms&#13;
they had identified. They thenfed&#13;
the forms into a computer, which&#13;
reported 1,200 hours later that&#13;
each of the forms-could indeed be&#13;
made with only four colors. At&#13;
that point, the four color conjecture&#13;
turned form theory to&#13;
fact, and was announced by&#13;
Haken and Appel in September's&#13;
American Mathematics Society&#13;
"Bulletin."&#13;
Haken's talk will be preceeded&#13;
by a coffee at 3:30 p.m. in&#13;
Classroom Bldg. Room Ill.&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
All j-on-one Yo! price with this coupon at T-shirt Shop&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington lINe, 6S4-237S&#13;
FREE DELIVER Y&#13;
. I&#13;
Member Parksfde 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd A venue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
dfofiday&#13;
9ai't&#13;
eNoiJembe't 1:3 q 14&#13;
.cA1.emo'tla[ d-/a[f&#13;
. SAT., NOV. 13 9 A.M. _. 6 P.M.&#13;
SUN., NOV. 14 11 A.M. - 6 P.M.&#13;
ADMISSION:50~&#13;
: : : :&#13;
A~.l·~·~&#13;
1U~~~'-7&#13;
Editor's note: "Who Are You?" will be a regUlar column in which&#13;
students.selected at random will be Interviewed to find O\lt their in·&#13;
terests, background, etc. These are the people we pass by in the balls&#13;
every day, sit next to in class, ride with on the shuttle bus, but&#13;
sometimes never have the opportunity to meet.&#13;
Being interviewed this week is Jim Holt, a Programmer Analyst in&#13;
the Computer Systems Department at Walker )'danufacturing in&#13;
Racine. .&#13;
Two evenings a week Jim attends night courses here at Parkside.&#13;
Currently, his classes include an algebra class and an English course&#13;
in science fiction writing.&#13;
Dressed neatly in suit and tie, Jim exptained that in working full&#13;
time at Walker's he found it time consuming to rush home and change&#13;
clothes. "This summer I made a point three times during the summer&#13;
school to make sure I hurried home and put on some jeans." Now he&#13;
finds, that even in the relaxed dressing styles displayed at Parkside&#13;
that what he is wearing is "inconsequential."&#13;
Parkside offers Jim useful learning experiences, and also a relaxing&#13;
social atmosphere. He enjoys Parkside not only. because of his subjects,&#13;
but also because of the people. "I like to meet people and I don't&#13;
find myself, that often, going out to singles bars and attempting to&#13;
meet people over a screeching band. As much as I love the music, ~&#13;
justfeel that's a difficult way to getto know someone."&#13;
.Jim's reflections of the student body are that they represent a&#13;
"variety of inputs and different perspectives." He finds the people at&#13;
Parkside and their attitudes 'to be very "positive."&#13;
In midterm of our conversation, it was discovered that it was Jim's&#13;
birthday. In asking Jim if he had any regrets about becoming 28, Jim&#13;
stated, "I enjoy my age, mostly hecause of the time I've had to 'enjoy&#13;
experiences and then relate to them. Those experiences help reflect&#13;
future decisions."&#13;
Jim enjoys music, and has attended some of Parkside's musical&#13;
presentations. He enjoys piano, and has played from the age of four.&#13;
Other interests are divided among physical fitness and cooking. Jim&#13;
frequently walks to work, not only to keep active.but to appreciate the&#13;
scenery. As far as cooking is concerned, Jim finds it enjoyable to have&#13;
a group of friends over for dinner, each guest contributing to the&#13;
dinner by helping in the preparation of the meal. "As long as the time&#13;
is there it's fun, just as long as you're not rushed," he said. -&#13;
Jim has been attending Parkside for three years and is majoring in&#13;
husiness management. When asked if he had any complaints about&#13;
Parkside he disclosed one: only that he wished he had more time to&#13;
spend here.&#13;
.• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,OOO-mile 011change)&#13;
• Eases SUb-zero starts (-60·F~ pour point)&#13;
&lt;$pon~o'l.£d by Ju.nio, &lt;Women'~ Clu.b 0{ cRa.dne • Saves 011 RICK BENTSON&#13;
:' : :: yourAMS/OILd •• ter , .639-4067&#13;
==============~~::::;;;;;'::::;;;;;.~~_-=~~~~__1&#13;
-,&#13;
by Debbie Sharpe&#13;
Poet Janet Beeler will present&#13;
a workshop and reading, both&#13;
open and free to the. public, at&#13;
Parkside on Thursday, Nov. 18.&#13;
The workshop will be held from&#13;
4 to 5. p.m. in Wyllie LibraryLearning&#13;
Center Room 0-174,&#13;
just off lower level Main Place&#13;
and the reading will be in the&#13;
Library Overlook Lounge on level&#13;
LaFollette&#13;
• •&#13;
raps mInIDg&#13;
•&#13;
cornparues&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Major mining companies have&#13;
heen using shady tactics to gain&#13;
land in northern Wisconsin,&#13;
according to Douglas La Follette,&#13;
Wisconsin's secretary of state&#13;
anda former Parkside professor&#13;
of chemistry, who spoke to&#13;
students on behalf of Parkside's&#13;
earth science club. ,&#13;
He cited examples of Forest&#13;
Cuunty and Rusk County, where&#13;
Kennecott Ming and Exxon have&#13;
heen leasing and purchasing land&#13;
for mining.&#13;
LaFollette called for a&#13;
moratorium on consumption of&#13;
these materials. He felt that&#13;
there is little' need for copper&#13;
currently and that the people in&#13;
those 14 counties :should have&#13;
waited before committing their&#13;
land. The legislatures on both the&#13;
state and federal levels have&#13;
done Ifttle to control these big&#13;
companies. President Ford had&#13;
vetoed two strip-mining bills, the&#13;
last of which Laf'ollette. called&#13;
compromised but somewhat&#13;
. effective.&#13;
LaFollette stated that the&#13;
people should get more money&#13;
out of the mining projects.&#13;
Currently, mining projects mean&#13;
approximately $5 million in&#13;
revenue to the state and the local&#13;
governments. Unfortunately, any&#13;
employment possibilities are&#13;
minimal since little job openings&#13;
are filled with local people.&#13;
. The local governments are&#13;
heing manhandled by companies&#13;
like Kennecott and Exxon by&#13;
asking that lease details be kept&#13;
secret, according to LaFollette.&#13;
The Department of· Natural&#13;
Resources and the State Lands&#13;
Cummission have been victims of&#13;
this in the past, according to the&#13;
Secretary of State, until recently&#13;
when LaFollette disclosed the&#13;
terms of an agreement being&#13;
considered by the commission .&#13;
He stated that the destruction&#13;
of the environment up north can&#13;
he halted. The people can cut&#13;
down on consumption of&#13;
materials, such as copper.&#13;
Recycling can be used to make&#13;
those old toasters come alive,&#13;
since a lot of the wire can be&#13;
remelted to a usable form.&#13;
two at 8 p.m.&#13;
Beeler's recent work has been&#13;
published in American Poetry&#13;
Review, Anteus and Esqurie. She&#13;
currently is translating women's&#13;
poetry of the medieval period in&#13;
France and Provence.&#13;
Additional information on the&#13;
series is available from Carol Lee&#13;
Saffioti or Carole Vopat, both of&#13;
the Parkside Enlllish faculty.&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 10, 1976 .&#13;
Prof. to Speak on&#13;
computer map~&#13;
One of two University of Illinois&#13;
professors responsible for a&#13;
break-through in use of computer&#13;
computation in higher&#13;
mathematics, Prof. Wolfgang&#13;
Haken, will speak in the&#13;
mathematics lecture series at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
at 4 p.m. on Thursday, Nov. 11, in&#13;
Classroom Bldg. Room 107.&#13;
For more than a century,&#13;
mathematicians puzzled over the&#13;
conjecture of a London graduate&#13;
student, the so-called four-color&#13;
conjecture which states that no&#13;
more than four colors are needed&#13;
to shade any map so that no two&#13;
adjoining countries are the same&#13;
color.&#13;
The·experience of map-makers&#13;
throughout the years have·&#13;
supported the four-co1or theory,&#13;
but mathematicians have never&#13;
been·able to prove it for all cases.&#13;
Last year, Haken and his&#13;
colleague Kenneth Appel finally&#13;
provided the conjecture accurate&#13;
with the aid of a computer. Proof&#13;
of the conjecture has been hailed&#13;
as a major breakthrough in the&#13;
use of computers to solve fundamental&#13;
questions in higher&#13;
mathematics. Prior to the work&#13;
by Haken and Appel, ·many&#13;
mathematicians had relegated&#13;
computers to tedious, rote tasks&#13;
such as tracking space craft,&#13;
which involve no new principals.&#13;
To establish proof of the conjecture,&#13;
Haken and Appel converted&#13;
the different possible&#13;
maps into a series of dots and&#13;
lines each containing at least one&#13;
of the 1,936 possible basic forms&#13;
they had identified. They then·fed&#13;
the forms into a computer, which&#13;
reported 1,200 hours later that&#13;
each of the forms could indeed be&#13;
made with only four colors. At&#13;
that point, the four color conjecture&#13;
turned form theory to&#13;
fact, and was announced by&#13;
Haken and Appel in September's&#13;
American Mathematics Society&#13;
"Bulletin."&#13;
Haken's talk will be preceeded&#13;
by a coffee at 3:30 p.m. in&#13;
Classroom Bldg. Room 111.&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SCJUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
All iron-ons ½ price with this coupon at T-shirt Shop&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN B A.M. TIL 10:30 P .M.&#13;
2615 Washington /we. 634-2373&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
. '&#13;
M ember Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
• 443~ - 22~d Avenue Kenosha ,&#13;
'~~ / W1scons1n Phone 6_54-0774&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
d-fofiday&#13;
9ai't&#13;
cNovembe't 13 q 14&#13;
-o11.emo'tiaf d-f a[{&#13;
'&#13;
SAT., NOV. 13&#13;
SUN., NOV. 14&#13;
9 A.M. . 6 P.M.&#13;
11 A.M. - 6 P.M.&#13;
ADMISSION: soc&#13;
&lt;Wome n 1&#13;
:1.&#13;
1(1'6 ,i,ie ~'"m?&#13;
Editor's note: ''Who Are You?" will be a regular column in which&#13;
students selected at random will be interviewed to find 01,1t their interests,&#13;
background, etc. These are the people we pass by in the halls&#13;
every day, sit next to in class, ride with on the shuttle bus, but&#13;
sometimes never have the opportunity to meet.&#13;
by Debbie Sharpe&#13;
Being interviewed this week is Jim Holt, a Programmer Analyst in&#13;
the Computer Systems Department at Walker Manufacturing in&#13;
Racine. _&#13;
Two evenings a week Jim attends night courses here at Parkside.&#13;
Currently, his classes include an algebra class and an English course&#13;
in science fiction writing.&#13;
I&gt;ressed neatly in suit and tie, Jim explained that in working full&#13;
time at Walker's he found it time consuming to rush home and change&#13;
clothes. "This summer I made a point three times during the sw:nmer&#13;
school to make sure I hurried home and put on some jeans." Now he&#13;
finds, that even in the relaxed dressing styles displayed at Parkside&#13;
that what he is wearing is " inconsequential."&#13;
Parkside offers Jim useful learning experiences, and also a relaxing&#13;
social atmosphere. He enjoys Parkside not only.because of his subjects,&#13;
but also because of the people. " I like to meet people and I don't&#13;
find myself, that often, going out to singles bars and attempting to&#13;
meet people over a screeching band. As much as I love the music, I&#13;
justfeel that's a difficult way to get to know someone."&#13;
..Jim's reflections of the student body are that they represent a&#13;
"variety of inputs and different perspectives." He finds the people at&#13;
Parkside and their attitudes to be very "positive."&#13;
In midterm of our conversation, it was discovered that it was Jim's&#13;
birthday. In asking Jim if he had any regrets about becoming 28, Jim&#13;
stated, "I enjoy my age, mostly because of the time I've had to enjoy&#13;
experiences and then relate to them. Those experiences help reflect&#13;
future decisions."&#13;
Jim enjoys music, and has attended some of Parkside's musical&#13;
presentations. He enjoys piano, and has played from the age of four.&#13;
Other interests are divided among physical fitness and cooking. Jim&#13;
frequently walks to work, not only to keep active; but to appreciate the&#13;
scenery. As far as cooking is concerned, Jim finds it enjoyable to have&#13;
a group of friends over for dinner, each guest contributing to the&#13;
dinner by helping in the preparation of the meal. "As long ~s the time&#13;
is there it's fun, just as long as you're not rushed," he said.&#13;
Jim has been attending Parkside for three years and is majoring in&#13;
business management. When asked if he had any complaints about&#13;
Parkside he disclosed one: only that he wished he had more time to&#13;
spend here.&#13;
LaFollette&#13;
• • raps m1n1ng&#13;
• companies&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Major mining companies have&#13;
been using shady tactics to gain&#13;
land in northern Wisconsin,&#13;
according to Douglas La Follette,&#13;
Wisconsin's secretary of state&#13;
and a former Parkside professor&#13;
· of chemistry, who spoke to&#13;
students on behalf of Parkside's&#13;
earth science club . .&#13;
He cited examples of Forest&#13;
County and Rus~ County, where&#13;
Kennecott Ming and Exxon have&#13;
been leasing and purchasing land&#13;
for mining.&#13;
LaFollette called for a&#13;
moratorium on consumption of&#13;
these materfals: He felt that&#13;
there is little · need for copper&#13;
currently and that the people in&#13;
those I4 counties should have&#13;
waited before committing their&#13;
land. The legislatures ori both the&#13;
state and federal levels have&#13;
done lfttle to control these big&#13;
companies. President Ford had&#13;
vetoed two strip-mining bills, the&#13;
last of which LaFollette called&#13;
compromised but somewhat&#13;
effective.&#13;
LaFollette stated that the&#13;
people should get more money&#13;
out of the mining projects.&#13;
Currently, mining projects mean&#13;
approximately $5 million in •&#13;
revenue to the state and the local&#13;
governments. Unfortunately, any&#13;
employment possibilities are&#13;
minimal since little job openings&#13;
are filled with local people.&#13;
The local governments are&#13;
being manhandled by companies&#13;
like Kennecott and Exxon by&#13;
asking that lease details be kept&#13;
secret, according to LaFollette.&#13;
The Department of . Natural&#13;
Resources and the State Lands&#13;
Commission have been victims of&#13;
this in.the past, according to the&#13;
Secretary of State, until recently&#13;
when LaFollette disclosed the&#13;
terms of an agreement being&#13;
considered by the commission.&#13;
He stated that the destruction&#13;
of the environment up north can&#13;
be halted. The people can cut&#13;
down on consumption of&#13;
materials, such as copper.&#13;
Recycling can be used to make&#13;
those old toaster~ come alive,&#13;
since a lot of the wire can be&#13;
remelted to a usable form.&#13;
Poet to read&#13;
:I .. '•&#13;
f&#13;
Poet Janet Beeler will present&#13;
a workshop and reading, both&#13;
open and free to the public, at&#13;
Parkside on Thursday, Nov. 18.&#13;
The workshop will be held from&#13;
4 to 5_ p.m. in Wyllie LibraryLearning&#13;
Center Room D-174,&#13;
just off lower level Main Place&#13;
and the reading will be in th;&#13;
Library Overlook 1',ounge on level&#13;
· two at 8 p.m.&#13;
Beeler's recent work has been&#13;
published in American Poetry&#13;
Review, Anteus and Esqurie. She&#13;
currently is translating women's&#13;
poetry of the medieval period in&#13;
France and Provence.&#13;
Additional information on the&#13;
series is available from Carol Lee&#13;
Saffioti or Carole Vopat, both of&#13;
the Parkside English faculty.&#13;
· •Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,000-mile oil ch~nge)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60°F. pour point)&#13;
• saves oil RICK BENTSON&#13;
your AMS/OIL dealer . -639-4067 &#13;
Vaccinations scheduled&#13;
J'he Campus Health Office has received word'&#13;
from the Racine and Kenosha Health Departments&#13;
that the swine flu vaccine for the general public&#13;
(age 18 and over) will he available at the following&#13;
clinics:&#13;
RACINE COUNTY· Sunday, November 14, 10&#13;
a.m-s p.m.&#13;
Dr. John Bryant Center&#13;
Gateway Technical Institute&#13;
Ml. Pleasant Town Hall&#13;
Humble Park&#13;
Goodland School&#13;
Labor Center •&#13;
Caledonia Town Hall East&#13;
County Highway Building&#13;
Masonic Temple&#13;
Veterans' Memorial Building&#13;
KENOSHA COUNTY· Monday, November 15, _&#13;
Sunday, November 21&#13;
-------- I I&#13;
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I I&#13;
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L__ ~---.-J&#13;
Monday, November 15 12 Noon-ll·p.m. Paddock&#13;
Lake (Christ American Lutheran Church), Local 72&#13;
(Kenosha) &amp; Pleasant Prairie Town Hall. Monday,&#13;
November 15, 10 a.m-s p.m., Somers Town Hall.&#13;
Tuesday, November 1612Noon-s p.m. Twin Lakes&#13;
(St. John's Catholic Church) Local 72, Pleasant&#13;
Prairie &amp; Somers.&#13;
Wednesday, November 17, 12 Noon-a p.m., Twin&#13;
Lake's, Paddock Lake, Sl. Mary's Lutheran Church&#13;
(Kenosha) and Pleasant Prairie.&#13;
Thursday, November 18,12 Noon-a p.m., Local 72,&#13;
Pleasant Prairie &amp; Sl. Mary's Lutheran Church.&#13;
Friday, November 19 12 Noon-a p.m., Paddock&#13;
Lake, Local 72, Sl. Mary's Lutheran Church &amp;&#13;
Pleasant Prairie.&#13;
Sunday., November 21, 12 Noon - 5 p.m., Twin&#13;
Lakes, Local 72, Somers &amp; Pleasant Pr'air-io&#13;
At this time it has not been determined whether&#13;
Parkside will be provided with the swine flu vaccine&#13;
for a campus clinic.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 10&#13;
Martin Farren discusses music theory from 8 a.m. to 12 noon in CA&#13;
105.&#13;
Movie, "The Passenger," plays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m, in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission is $1.00.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 11&#13;
Movie, "Hearts of the West," plays at 2:30 to 7:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission is $1.00.&#13;
Martin Farren discusses his music and experiences as a composer at 3&#13;
p.m. in CA-105.&#13;
Lecture, "On the Four Color Problem," by Professor W. Haken,&#13;
University of Illinois Dept. of Mathematic; at4 p.m. in CL 107.&#13;
Concert, Harry Chapin performs at 8 p.m. in the Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Tickets in advance are $3.00for students, $4.00 for others at the Info&#13;
Kiosk, and will be $5.00 at the door.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 12&#13;
Martin Farren discusses new music and its notation from 8 a.m. to 12&#13;
noon in CA 105.&#13;
Debate and Forensics Association meets at 12in WLLC 295and I: 30in&#13;
CA 233.&#13;
Ufe Science seminar, "The Behavior of Cranes." by George Archibald,&#13;
Director of Research and Propagation, International Crane&#13;
Foundation, from 2to 4 p.m. in CL 105.&#13;
Movie, "Heart of the West," plays at 7 and 9:15 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission is is $1.00.&#13;
Telecable program, "An Inside Look" is hosted by Prof. Paul Kleine&#13;
at 7 p.m. on Channel 8.&#13;
Parkside Contemporary Players perform at 8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 13&#13;
Men's cross country NAIA District 14 Championship at 11 a.m. at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Concert, Blackearth Percussion Group performs at8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Tickets at $1.50 for students and $2.00 for others at the Info Kiosk.&#13;
. Sunday, Nov. 14&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from I to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Multi-media slide show, "Pilgrimage to Valley Forge," begins at 3&#13;
p.m, in the Union Cinema. Admission is $1.00for students and senior&#13;
citizens, $2.00for others. Sponsored by the Parkside Law Club.&#13;
Concert, Parkside Orchestra performs at3:30 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Movie, "Hearts of the West," plays at 7: 30p.m, in the Union Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $1.00. _&#13;
All events must be submitted to the Ranger before Wednesday of the&#13;
. week before publication.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 10, 19765&#13;
Applications now&#13;
being accepted for&#13;
Ranger Editor for&#13;
Spring Semester&#13;
RESUMES MUST BE TURNED IN TO&#13;
DON KOPRIVA,&#13;
288 Tallent Hall by Nov. 11th&#13;
• Salaried position demanding at least 2O.X) hours a week&#13;
• Experience in journalism necessary&#13;
• Applicants will be advised of interview time and ploce&#13;
HOURS:&#13;
Monday - Thursday 9 . 5&#13;
Friday 9 - 8&#13;
Saturday 9 - 1&#13;
Student Discount&#13;
Largest Selection of&#13;
Fashionable Frames&#13;
in South Eastern&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
Lenses Duplicated&#13;
Ph,ysician Prescriptions&#13;
Filled&#13;
50 % Off 2nd Pair!&#13;
CARE TO LEARN&#13;
THE FACTS OF LIFE?&#13;
so:nbeG'S&#13;
OPTICAL&#13;
BOUTIQUE&#13;
552-7610&#13;
4425 TAYLOR&#13;
Onl'y Ten minutes From Kenosha!!&#13;
Typing done efficiently and professionally in&#13;
my home. Reasonable rates. 657-6068.&#13;
FOR SALE: Grey, white, and orange Persian&#13;
rug. 6'8" x 3'4". 5350. 552-9391 after 5&#13;
p.m.&#13;
WILL DO any kind of typing at reasonable&#13;
rates. For information. call 652·3)73.&#13;
Classified&#13;
Need ride from south side of Milwaukee. Will&#13;
pay for '/2 of gas. Call 762-6231. Ask for Carol.&#13;
WANTED: A female Siamese Kitten between&#13;
5 . 9 weeks old. Would be assured of having&#13;
an excellent home, with tors 01 love, care,&#13;
and attention. Please call 637·1521. Wanted&#13;
as soon as possible.&#13;
1974 PONTIAC SPRING a-speed Metallic&#13;
Blue, red bu-ckefs, Rally wheels, AM·FM,&#13;
FM stereo, 8-Track $2195. 634-0876.&#13;
On Spring, West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge Plozo&#13;
632-6151&#13;
FOR SALE: Marantz 2015 receiver, Jensen&#13;
model 4 speakers, 1 year old, S3OO.Phone 634·&#13;
8655.&#13;
mos. s TUES.&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
HQ5&#13;
~erbll'l!&#13;
~urt&#13;
PUa &amp; •• 'TAUIl&#13;
Specifically, Northwestern Mutual Life.&#13;
A Quiet Company representative will be on campus Wed.. Nov. 17th&#13;
to interview men and women interested in learning about the&#13;
NML life underwriting career.&#13;
We're big ~ world's largest company specializing in individual life&#13;
insurance, and among the nation's 40 largest corporations.&#13;
We're solid - $8 billion of assets; $31.6 billion of life insurance&#13;
in force, and 119 'Y~&lt;HS of experience.&#13;
We're growing - $4.6 billion of sales last year.&#13;
Arrange an interview at your placement office. Persons interested&#13;
in individuality and compensation commensurate with&#13;
productivity are especially welcomed.&#13;
We also have an Internship Program that lets you earn&#13;
while you learn. •&#13;
The Quiet Company&#13;
NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL LIFE· MIlW4l)Kff ~&#13;
SUNDAY 0&#13;
All YOU \~~&#13;
WANT c...y..~ FEAST&#13;
&lt;:."'\~~~,,\\' INCLUDES sotoo, ltolton&#13;
C&#13;
~\..\' \\~O Breoo ond 0 FREE qASS c.,y..'\ \\ ",\\',0 OF WINE&#13;
-&#13;
•&#13;
Vaccinations scheduled&#13;
J'he Campus Health Office has received word'&#13;
from the Racine and Kenosha Health Departments&#13;
that the swine flu vaccine for the general public&#13;
(age 18 and over) will be available at the following&#13;
clinics:&#13;
Monday, November 15 12 Noon-8 p.m. Paddock&#13;
Lake ( Christ American Lutheran Church), Local 72&#13;
(Kenosha) &amp; Pleasant Prairie Town Hall. Monday,&#13;
November 15, 10 a.m.~ p.m., Somers Town Hall.&#13;
Tuesday, November 1612 Noon-8 p.m. Twin Lakes&#13;
(St. John's Catholic Church) Local 72, Pleasant&#13;
Prairie &amp; Somers.&#13;
RACINE COUNTY - Sunday, November 14, 10&#13;
a.mAi p.m.&#13;
Dr. John Bryant Center&#13;
Gateway Technical Institute&#13;
Mt. Pleasant Town Hall&#13;
Humble Park&#13;
Goodland School&#13;
Labor Center .&#13;
Caledonia Town Hall East&#13;
County Highway Building&#13;
Masonic Temple&#13;
Wednesday, November 17, 12 Noon-8 p.m., Twin&#13;
Lakes, Paddock Lake, St. Mary's Lutheran Church&#13;
(Kenosha) and Pleasant Prairie.&#13;
Thursday, November 18, 12 Noon-8 p.m., Local 72,&#13;
Pleasant Prairie &amp; St. Mary's Lutheran Church.&#13;
Friday, November 19 12 Noon-8 p.m., Paddock&#13;
Lake, Local 72, St. Mary's Lutheran Church &amp;&#13;
Pleasant Prairie.&#13;
Veterans' Memorial Building .&#13;
Sunday, November 21, 12 Noon - 5 p.m., Twin&#13;
Lakes, Local 72, Somers &amp; Pleasant PrairiP&#13;
KENOSHA COUNTY - Monday, November 15, -&#13;
Sunday, November 21&#13;
At this time it has not been determined whether&#13;
Parkside will be provided with the swine flu vaccine&#13;
~~~~~~~~&#13;
for a campus clinic.&#13;
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L~~~~-----~~&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. IO&#13;
Martin Farren discusses music theory from 8 a.m. to 12 noon in CA&#13;
105.&#13;
Movie, "The Passenger," plays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission is $1.00.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 11&#13;
Movie, " Hearts of the West," plays a t 2:30 to 7:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission is $1.00.&#13;
Martin Farren discusses his music and experiences as a composer at 3&#13;
p.m. in CA- 105.&#13;
Lecture, "On the Four Color Problem," by Professor W. Haken,&#13;
University of Illinois Dept. of Mathematics at 4 p.m. in CL 107.&#13;
Concert, Harry Chapin performs at 8 p.m. in the Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Tickets in advance are $3.00 for students, $4.00 for others at the Info&#13;
Kiosk, and will be $5.00 at the door.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 12&#13;
Martin Farren discusses new music and its notation from 8 a.m. to 12&#13;
noon in CA 105.&#13;
Debate and Forensics Association meets at 12 in WLLC 295 and 1: 30 in&#13;
CA 233.&#13;
Life Science seminar, " The Behavior of Cranes," by George Archibald,&#13;
Director of Research and Propagation, International Crane&#13;
Foundation, from 2 to 4 p.m. in CL 105.&#13;
Movie, "Heart of the West," plays at 7 and 9: 15 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission is is $1.00.&#13;
Telecable program, "An Inside Look" is hosted by Prof. Paul Kleine&#13;
at 7 p.m. on Channel 8.&#13;
Parkside Contemporary Players perform at 8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 13&#13;
Men's cross country NAIA District 14 Championship at 11 a.m. at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Concert, Blackearth Percussion Group performs at 8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Tickets at $1.50 for students and $2.00 for others at the Info Kiosk.&#13;
· Sunday, Nov.14&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1 to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Multi-media slide show, " Pilgrimage to Valley Forge," begins at 3&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema. Admission is $1.00 for students and senior&#13;
citizens, $2.00 for others. Sponsored by the Park~ide Law Club.&#13;
Concert, Parkside Orchestra performs at 3: 30 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Movie, "Hearts of the West," plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $1.00. _&#13;
All events must be submitted to the Ranger before Wednesday of the&#13;
week before publication.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 10, 1976 S&#13;
Applications now&#13;
being accepted for&#13;
Ranger Editor for&#13;
Spring Semester&#13;
RESUMES MUST BE TURNED IN TO&#13;
DON KOPRIVA,&#13;
288 Tallent Hall by Nov. 11th&#13;
• Salaried position demanding at least 20-~ hours a week&#13;
• Experience in journalism necessary&#13;
• Applicants will be advised of interview time and place&#13;
S&lt;Jflbee'S&#13;
HOURS:&#13;
OPTICAL&#13;
BOUTIQUE&#13;
552-7610&#13;
Monday - Thursday 9 - 5&#13;
Friday 9 - 8&#13;
Saturday 9 - 1&#13;
Student Discount&#13;
Larqest Selection of&#13;
Fashionable Frames&#13;
in South Eostern&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
Le0ses Duplicated&#13;
Ph_ysicion Prescriptions&#13;
Filled&#13;
50 % Off 2nd Poid&#13;
•&#13;
4425 TAYLOR&#13;
Only Ten ffiinutes From Kenosho!!&#13;
Classified Need ride from south side of Milwaukee. Will&#13;
pay for 11, of gas. Call 762-6231 . Ask for Carol.&#13;
Typing done efficiently and professionally in&#13;
m y home. Reasonable rates. 657 -6068.&#13;
FOR SALE : Gr ey, w hite, and orange Persian&#13;
rug. 6'8" x 3'A" . S350. 552-9394 after 5&#13;
p.m .&#13;
1&#13;
CARE TO LEARN&#13;
WANTED: A femal&#13;
THE FACTS OF LIFE? e Siamese l&lt;itten between&#13;
5 . 9 weeks old. Would be assured of having&#13;
an excellent home, w ith loJs of love, car e,&#13;
and attention. Please call 637-1521. Wanted&#13;
as soon as possible.&#13;
WI LL 00 any k ind of typing at reasonable&#13;
rates. For information. call 652-3373.&#13;
1974 PONTIAC SPRING 3-speed Metallic&#13;
Blue, red bu-ckets, Rally wheels, AM-FM,&#13;
FM stereo, 8-Track S2195. 634-0876.&#13;
FOR SALE : Marantz 20'15 receiver, Jensen&#13;
model 4 speakers, 1 year old, S300. Phone 634-&#13;
8655.&#13;
SUNDAY 0&#13;
moN. &amp; TUES.&#13;
SPAGHETTI ALL YOU \~'°&#13;
WANT ~~~ FEAST i1.QS&#13;
C.""'~"J ~~ INCLUDES: Solod. ltolion&#13;
C~\:..\°' . ,,.')Jo 8,eod ond o FREE qASS&#13;
c'&lt;' '\ \\ fr'.~ ._o OF WINE ....&#13;
On Spring, West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge Plo.zo.&#13;
632-6151&#13;
~;erbu'&amp;&#13;
,ourt&#13;
,ua &amp; RESTAURA&#13;
Specifically, orthwestern Mutual Life.&#13;
A Q uiet Company repre entativc&gt; will be on campus Wed., Nov, 17th&#13;
to interview men and women intere ted in learning about the&#13;
ML life underwriting career.&#13;
W e're big - world's la1ge t company specializing in indi idual life&#13;
insurance, and among the nation's 40 large t corporation .&#13;
W e're solid - $8 b ill ion of assets; 31.6 bi ll ion of life in urance&#13;
in iorce. and 119 years of e perience.&#13;
We're gro\ving - $4.6 bi ll ion of sales last year.&#13;
1 Arrange an i~terview at our rlacemen t office. Persons intere ted&#13;
in individuality and compensation commensurate wi th&#13;
productivity are especially w elcomed.&#13;
W e also have an Internship Program that lets you earn&#13;
while you learn. • The Quiet Company NO RTHWESTER MUTUAL UH · Mil WAUKEE ~ &#13;
I&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November io, 1976&#13;
-,&#13;
Free PI. Delivery&#13;
Club Highview&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652·8737&#13;
Alit ..... .,1•• C.I.It••• Sp••• IIII. " .... 11. 8."&#13;
OPEII.4 p.•. to I •.•..&#13;
Moon Ught&#13;
BoWling&#13;
Saturdays, 8-11 p.m.&#13;
in the&#13;
Union Recreation, Center&#13;
STOP DOWN OR&#13;
CALL 553-2695 FOR&#13;
RESERVATIONS&#13;
.,------------------. • ANHEUSER· BUSCH, INC • ST. lOUIS :&#13;
· .' •· •/. • •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
: :&#13;
: :&#13;
1 •&#13;
• •&#13;
•&#13;
·&#13;
•&#13;
:&#13;
: :&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
: :' /&#13;
!L _W_h_e_R_Y_O_' u__s'a_y_Budweiser., yoqile said it all! -:.&#13;
- E. F. Madrigrano--;~--~':"-'----J •&#13;
j&#13;
'Last Friday evening Tom Chapin proved to a half filled Parkside&#13;
Union Cinema that he is a Chapin of his own. Due to the time and day&#13;
of the concert the Visage reviewers were unable to submitt their&#13;
review of Tom prior to the Ranger copy deadline. A review of Tom will . , ,&#13;
appear along with one on his brother Harry next week. .&#13;
•&#13;
pnoto by Van Thompson&#13;
~I&#13;
by Bill Barke&#13;
Ever since my pet rock died last week after mysteriously falling into&#13;
a cement mixer (1 refuse to even consider suicide), 1 have grown&#13;
,bitter and sullen over rocks in general. I have not spoken to one since,&#13;
and when my overly publicized affair with a nearby stone quarry&#13;
came to an end, leaving me emotionally exhausted, 1 could not help&#13;
but wonder how an unreasonably intelligent person like myself&#13;
became caught in the frenzy of the pet rock phenomenon. More horrid&#13;
is the notion that in the future, people may choose even more exotic&#13;
pieces of matter to smother with adulation.&#13;
In fact, the ultimate object of this perverted lust may have already&#13;
been introduced. Last month, an arnibitous farmer in Minnesota he&#13;
was the owner of the perfect cow pie. Found -in his barn, and kept&#13;
preserved in his Frigidaire, it supposedly has divine powers. When&#13;
standing near this crusty lump, the farmer states that he falls into a&#13;
stupor, sees strange visions of flea markets and crop dusting, then&#13;
passes out. Word went out about the farmer's story, and a f"!:tiJizer&#13;
company picked it up as an ad campaign' gimmick. The advertisers, to&#13;
bring up sales, offered a free Holy Heap, as it was coined, to any&#13;
customer buying a ten pound bag of fertilizer.&#13;
Last week, the farmer began offering tours, and selling miniatures&#13;
on key chains to attract the curious. They came in droves. A movie&#13;
company is now making a documentary on the object, hoping to&#13;
simulate its origin. A broadway musical based on a new popular song&#13;
entitled "1 Love What You're Dung to Me" is in the works.&#13;
Anything can be expected now. A line of jewelry, children's toys, .&#13;
and underwear will appear, as well as a chain of restaurants with&#13;
special dishes for discriminating tastes. Scandal will undoubtedly&#13;
erupt bringing a lawsuit to bear over the rights to the field, the Cow,&#13;
grass, and the feed. Science will probably spend mi11ions to retard&#13;
decay in the rectal artifact (and find a cure for constipation in the&#13;
bargain).&#13;
The cow will receive a Nobel Prize and go on a world tour, and of'&#13;
course, wben it is least expected, a jealous bedwetter from Kansas&#13;
City will assasinate the Heap. Sadly mourned, it will'lay in state in a&#13;
bed of pete moss before being buried in the lower forty, wrapped in a&#13;
baggie.&#13;
The farmer will write his memoirs, which will probably be&#13;
serialized in this column.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ..:- __ "&#13;
,.&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 10, 1976&#13;
PENI&#13;
Free Pina Delivery&#13;
Cluh Highview&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
Altt •,n,.,, •• Chltkll, s,11htftl, RHloll, ... ,&#13;
OPEN 4 •·•· to 1 1.11·.&#13;
Moon Ught&#13;
Bowling&#13;
Saturdays, 8-11 p.m.&#13;
in the&#13;
Union Recreation . Center&#13;
STOP DOWN OR&#13;
CALL 553-2695 FOR&#13;
RESERVATIONS&#13;
II&#13;
photo by Van Thompson&#13;
·Last Friday evening Tom Chapin proved to a haµ filled Parkside&#13;
Union Cinema that he is a Chapin of his own. Due to the time and day&#13;
of the concert the Visage reviewers were unable to submitt their&#13;
review of Tom prior to the Ranger copy deadline. A review of Tom will - , appear along with one on his brother Harry next week.&#13;
·······································~g&#13;
... i]lDQm~~i.~§-(B~ ~ ~ ~' .............................. . • ,..r.11 , ••• •7r•. _,. ••• ,.,.,. ... - ••• ,. by Bill Barke&#13;
Ever since my pet rock died last week after mysteriously falling into&#13;
a cement mixer (I refuse to even consider suicide), I have grown&#13;
.bitter and sullen over rocks in general. I have not spoken to one since,&#13;
and when my overly publicized affair with a nearby stone quarry&#13;
came to an end, leaving me emotionally exhausted, I could not help&#13;
but wonder how an unreasonably intelligent person like myself&#13;
became caught in the frenzy of the pet rock phenomenon. More horrid&#13;
is the notion that in the future, people may choose even more exotic&#13;
pieces of matter to smother with adulation.&#13;
In fact, the ultimate object of this perverted lust may have already&#13;
been introduced. Last month, an amibitous farmer in Minnesota he&#13;
was the owner of the perfect cow pie. Found in his barn, and kept&#13;
preserved in his Frigidaire, it supposedly has divine powers. When&#13;
standing near this crusty lump, the farmer states that he falls into a&#13;
stupor, sees strange visions of flea markets and crop dusting, then&#13;
passes ciut. Word went out about the farmer's story, and a fe,tilizer&#13;
company picked it up as an ad campaign· gimmick. The advertisers, to&#13;
bring up sales, offered a free Holy Heap, as it was coined, to any&#13;
customer buying a ten pound bag of fertilizer.&#13;
Last week, the farmer began offering tours, and selling miniatures&#13;
on key chains to attract the curious. They came in droves. A movie&#13;
company is now making a documentary on the object, hoping to&#13;
simulate its origin. A broadway musical based on a new popular song&#13;
entitled "I Love What You're Dung to Me" is in the works.&#13;
Anything can be expected now. A line of jewelry, children's toys, .&#13;
and underwear will appear, as well as a chain of restaurants with&#13;
special dishes for discriminating tastes. Scandal will undoubtedly&#13;
erupt bringing a lawsuit to bear over the rights to the field, the cow,&#13;
grass, and the feed. Science will probably spend millions to retard&#13;
decay in the rectal artifact ( and find a cure for constipation in the&#13;
bargain).&#13;
The cow will receive a Nobel Prize and go on a world tour, and of&#13;
course, when it is least expected, a jealous bedwetter from Kansas&#13;
City will assasinate the Heap. Sadly mourned, it will'lay in state in a&#13;
bed of pete moss before being buried in the lower forty, wrapped in a&#13;
baggie.&#13;
The farmer will write his memoirs, which will probably be&#13;
serialized in this column.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country .&#13;
. On tap at Union Square &#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 10. 19767&#13;
Unwanted pregnancy discussed&#13;
,&#13;
Editor's Dote: Ms. Pella is a ceunselor at Planned Parenthood in&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
by Beverly Noble Pella&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,OOO-mlle 011c~ange)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-50·F. pour .pOint)&#13;
• Saves oil RICK BENTSON&#13;
your AMS/OIL doolor 639-4067&#13;
Competition&#13;
traceptive")&#13;
Are certain positions better for preventing pregnancy? -No, but&#13;
certain positions might be better for encouraging pregnancy, such as&#13;
when the penis is inside the vagina.&#13;
.can you get pregnant if you don't have an orgasm? Yes. Orgasms&#13;
are irrelevant to conception.&#13;
Can you get pregnant the first time you have sex? YES.&#13;
Two weeks from now, Iwould like to use this column to answer your&#13;
questions about sex, birth control, Planned Parenthood, or anything&#13;
rela ted to thes e.&#13;
Students may write questions on a piece of paper and deposit them&#13;
in the Ranger box sitting on the desk at the Information KiDsk located&#13;
• in the lower level of Main Place. Anonymity is assured.&#13;
The Educational Communications&#13;
Board of Wisconsin&#13;
is sponsoring a radio drama&#13;
script writing competition this&#13;
winter .&#13;
Cash awards of $200, '100 and&#13;
$50, which have been provided by&#13;
the Corporation for Public&#13;
Broadcasting, will be granted for&#13;
the top three haH-hour dramas&#13;
submitted by Wisconsin&#13;
residents.&#13;
Scripts must be submitted to&#13;
ECB by January 31, 1977.&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
STARTING MONDAY, NOV. 15&#13;
lje (@llae &lt;lrnffee. 1Kriugle&#13;
.Aula iJagtl mabIe&#13;
Featuring&#13;
FRESH HOT KRINGLE &amp; ASSORTED BAGELS&#13;
MAIN CONCOURSE· CLASSROOM BLDG 7:30 . 10:30 A.M.&#13;
DEEP FRIED' MUSHROOMS&#13;
EAT 'EM AS A SNACK OR WITH YOUR MEAL&#13;
FANTASTICIII&#13;
65~&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM &amp; UNION SQUARE&#13;
NOVEMBER 11 • 20&#13;
fffwcial g;~ on. enWte fftod/&#13;
Records,&#13;
Cossettes,&#13;
8-'rrocks,&#13;
Lowest Prices&#13;
in&#13;
RACINE&#13;
.4ICC(/&#13;
1'·.4Ic&#13;
l'~.4Ic&#13;
A1f~",&#13;
•&#13;
STEREO'S F0R aorns AND CAR!&#13;
Hours;&#13;
10 to Q dculy 10 to ,5:30 Sot&#13;
11 to 5 Sunday&#13;
Greenrldge Ploza&#13;
Spong St. &amp; N~umQn Rd&#13;
West of Highwo.y 31&#13;
Telephone 634-2301&#13;
REmEmBERI&#13;
Sound So.vings o.t&#13;
SOUND GALLERY!&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 10, 1976 7&#13;
Unwanted pregnancy discussed Competition&#13;
Editor's note: Ms. Pella is a counselor at Planned Parenthood in&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
by Beverly Noble Pella&#13;
In past articles I have discussed female orgasm. There ~ another&#13;
problem that females, and males deal with very often, and that is the&#13;
myths that surround possible pregnancy.&#13;
So far this year I have seen over 400 women for pregnancy testing,&#13;
and more than 90 percent of them did not want to be.pregnant. Most of&#13;
them were not using any method of contraception. Some were using&#13;
very poor methods. A few were using good methods of birth control,&#13;
but some had misused them. ,&#13;
What are the reasons for this obvious denial of the facts of life? They&#13;
are numero~d varied. Here are some examples:&#13;
1) It won't happen to me. NO COMMENT.&#13;
2) We didn't do it very often (or only once).&#13;
· Answer: Russian Roulette.&#13;
3) He always pulled out in time.&#13;
Answer: Useless. Withdrawal is based on the idea that if the male&#13;
doesn't ejaculate inside the woman, she can't get pregnant. Problem:&#13;
every male has secretions that come out prior to ejaculation and these&#13;
secretions contain sperm, and in fact may contain a higher concentration&#13;
of sperm. Withdrawal is usually too late.&#13;
4) We only did it during my safe time.&#13;
Answer: The rhythm method is a lot more than just guesswork. It&#13;
takes six to twelve months of record keeping, following specific instructions&#13;
to figure out your rhythm method. And even if properly&#13;
done, our bodies are not always so predictable.Some people may even&#13;
produce an egg during menstruation. It is not common, but people&#13;
have gotten pregnant during their period.Some people might produce&#13;
an egg twice during once cycle. Sperm can live up to 3 days so you&#13;
could have intercourse one ~Y and get pregnant two days later.&#13;
Unfortunately our cycles are also easily affected by such things as&#13;
illness, travelU1g and stress. .&#13;
5) I didn't think I could get birth control withol!t my parents finding&#13;
out.&#13;
Answer: You can. The services of Planned Parenthood are very&#13;
confidential, and so,are those of many private doctors.&#13;
6) We didn't plan it, it just happened.&#13;
Answer: That is a complete denial of your self as a human being&#13;
with sexual desires and needs. It is a fact that mqst single women have&#13;
been having intercouse .for three months or more before they seek&#13;
contraception. That "happening" has been planned in your head for a&#13;
long time. While you might not have known exactly when it would&#13;
happen, it is irresponsible to say you didn't even know that it might.&#13;
Which is going to hurt you more in the long run? Saying that you&#13;
~ant to be sexually active and want to be responsible for your actions?&#13;
Or denying your sexuality and eventually getting pregnant? Seems to&#13;
me that the first choice shows a lot more maturity and caring for one's&#13;
self as well as the other oeoole involved.&#13;
7) I knew that if I got pregnant I could get an abortion.&#13;
Answer: Maybe you can get an abortion, both safely and legally, but&#13;
no one is going to give you one for free. They cost anywhere from $150&#13;
to $450 or more. And why on earth would you want to put yourself&#13;
through a surgical procedure. involving anesthesia, when it could&#13;
have prevented with a lot less expense? .&#13;
Every method of birth control available is safer than a pregnancy 1s&#13;
to your body. That shoots down the old argument that you didn't want&#13;
to use the pill because of the risks, and besides, there are other effective&#13;
methods available to you.&#13;
8) But I douched right after it. , .&#13;
Answer: Douching is not a method of birth control. If anything,&#13;
douching pushes the sperm upwards and gets them there faster.&#13;
9) (in tears) But we didn't really do it, he just came outside of me.&#13;
Answer: Those little sperm are very good sw~ers, and if they are&#13;
put near the vaginal opening, they may swim on in.&#13;
10) I thought it would be OK, I only missed one pill.&#13;
Answer: If you miss a pill for more than 24 hours, your hormone&#13;
level coUld drop low enough for you to release an egg, and you could&#13;
get pregnant. .&#13;
And here are some of the frequently asked questions about&#13;
pregnancy:&#13;
What are the most effective methods of birth control?&#13;
No. 1 abstinence (not having intercours~)&#13;
No. 2. steruization (male vasectomy, female -tubal ligation)&#13;
No. 3 oral contraception (the pill) ,,&#13;
No. 4 the IUD (intra-ut&lt;'rine device)&#13;
No. 5 the diaphragm (with a contracepti:ve cream) .&#13;
No. 6 condoms ( when used with foam, almost as good as the pill)&#13;
No. 7 rhythm, foam, creams, jellie (must be labeled "con-&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,000-mile oil c~ange)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60°F. pour .pomt)&#13;
• saves oil RICK BENTSON&#13;
your AMS/OIL dealer 639-4067&#13;
traceptive'')&#13;
, The Educational ComAre&#13;
certain positions better for preventing pregnancy? -No, but&#13;
certain positions might be better for encouraging pregnancy, such as&#13;
when the penis is inside the vagina .&#13;
munications Board of Wisconsin&#13;
is sponsoring a radio drama&#13;
script writing competition this&#13;
winter. ·Can you get pregnant if you don't have an orgasm? Yes. Orgasms&#13;
are irrelevant to conception.&#13;
Can you get pregnant the first time you have sex? YES.&#13;
Two weeks from now, I would like to use this column to answer your&#13;
questions about sex, birth control, Planned Parenthood, or anything&#13;
related to these .&#13;
Students may write questions on a piece of paper and deposit them&#13;
in the Ranger box sitting on the desk at the Information Kiosk located&#13;
in the lower level of Main Place. Anonymity is assured.&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
Cash awards of $200, $100 and&#13;
$50, which have been provided by&#13;
the Corporation for Public&#13;
Broadcasting, will be granted for&#13;
the top three half-hour dramas&#13;
submitted by Wisconsin&#13;
residents.&#13;
Scripts must be submitted to&#13;
ECB by January 31, 1977.&#13;
STARTING MONDAY, NOV. 15&#13;
ft ®lht QLnfftt, 1Kringlt&#13;
l\nh iBagtl Wable&#13;
Featuring&#13;
FRESH HOT KRINGLE &amp; ASSORTED BAGELS&#13;
MAIN CONCOURSE - CLASSROOM BLDG 7 :30 - 10:30 A.M .&#13;
DEEP FRIED-MUSHROOMS&#13;
EAT 'EM AS A SNACK OR WITH YOUR MEAL&#13;
FANTASTICIII&#13;
65~&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM &amp; UNION SQUARE&#13;
NOVEMBER 11 - 20&#13;
f7/wcial [!/J~ ~ ~ fJJ/od.l&#13;
•&#13;
R.ecords,&#13;
Cossettes,&#13;
8-~:T rocks,&#13;
Lowest Prices&#13;
in&#13;
RACINE - .&#13;
A1ee&lt;, ,-~Ale&#13;
''"Ate&#13;
Al~AI,&#13;
STEREO'S FOR HOmE AND CARI&#13;
REmEmBER!&#13;
Sound Sovings ot&#13;
SOUND GALLERY!&#13;
Hours·&#13;
10 to Q da,ly 10 to 5 ,30 Sat.&#13;
11 to 5 SuAdoy&#13;
Greenridge Plozo&#13;
Sp,,ng St &amp; eumo" Rd&#13;
West of H,ghwoy 31&#13;
Telephone 634-230 l &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 10, 1976&#13;
-"i •&#13;
).Soccer 'team WIns&#13;
.._.--------&#13;
/&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
tfeLEADER~&#13;
DOWNTOWN/KENOSHA - for men a~d&#13;
ELMWOOD PLAZA/RACINE - for men&#13;
women&#13;
1\&#13;
1\&#13;
~&#13;
'\&#13;
,/,&#13;
/&#13;
~&#13;
'j&#13;
~&#13;
'I&#13;
'/&#13;
One of the Mi •• est's&#13;
Most Complete.&#13;
SPORTING' GOODS&#13;
DEALERS&#13;
",,,,, II FREE ""11l1&#13;
niilNf}I1,&#13;
~ [}arID!F1ir§ !:~~'fj'~rFl&#13;
14TH. AVENUE AT 62ND. STREET&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN 53140&#13;
WiN ..... The&#13;
Album of Your&#13;
Choice.&#13;
liP&#13;
Have You Turned Us&#13;
on Lately?&#13;
by Jean Tenula .&#13;
Parkside will meet Minnesota's&#13;
representative in the National&#13;
Association of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics regional tournament&#13;
over the weekend, after they won&#13;
the . District 14 Championships&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
The Rangers beat UWPlatteville,&#13;
4-0. Platteville had&#13;
gotten past Lakeland Friday in&#13;
the 'first round.&#13;
"We totally dominated the&#13;
game. I can't say enough about&#13;
the team's performance. They&#13;
knew wbat they had to do and&#13;
were just outstanding," said&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson.&#13;
Parkside outshot Platteville 38-'&#13;
6 and Platteville made only two&#13;
shots in the whole first half. The&#13;
score could have been more&#13;
lopsided with the- efforts of&#13;
Platteville's goalie, Jeff Dybdahl,&#13;
who had 20 saves.&#13;
Andy Gutierrez started the&#13;
match off with a corner kick to&#13;
\ score at 1:09 mark. He was&#13;
assisted by Jack Landwehr.&#13;
Niall .Power also scored on a&#13;
corner kick, with ,3 'pass from&#13;
Mike Boyajian, .&#13;
Deech Ismaili scored&#13;
Parkside's last two goals with&#13;
assists from Earl' Campbell and&#13;
Boyajiam.&#13;
Parkside dropped a 1-0 match&#13;
to Lake Forest CQllege&#13;
November 2; which brings thei;&#13;
record to. 7-&amp;-2.This is the most&#13;
wins by a Parkside squad and the&#13;
first lime Parkside had finished&#13;
over the .500 mark in the regular&#13;
season.&#13;
"&#13;
Runners to host championships&#13;
by Jean Tenula&#13;
Parkside will host the NAJA&#13;
District 14 Championships at 11&#13;
a.m. Saturday.&#13;
Parkside was also the site of&#13;
the eighth annual U.S. Track and&#13;
Field Federation Men's MidAmerican&#13;
and Women's National&#13;
Cross Country Championships&#13;
over the weekend.&#13;
. Over 600 runners participated&#13;
in 10 different races, including&#13;
the women's national, which was&#13;
won by UW-Madison's A team&#13;
with 17 points. Kim Merrill&#13;
finished second in the race with&#13;
Peg Neppel of Iowa Slate winning&#13;
in 16:39.9 for the three miles.&#13;
Brenda Webb of Wright Slate was&#13;
third.&#13;
The men's. Mid-American was&#13;
won by Illinois with 30 points.&#13;
Chicago Track Club, who finished&#13;
second with 45, has won the meet&#13;
for the past seven times .&#13;
Parkside's A team was third with&#13;
55 points and Parkside's 3 team.&#13;
Letters awarded&#13;
Parkside _Golf Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens has named seven letterwinners&#13;
for the 1976 season.&#13;
Winning letters are as follows:&#13;
juniors Steve Christensen of&#13;
Racine (Park) and Mark&#13;
Kuyawa of Kenosha (Tremper);&#13;
sophomore Ray Zuzinec of&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper); and fresh,&#13;
men Gary Paskiewicz of Kenosba&#13;
(Bradford), Rick Pedersen of&#13;
. Racine (Park), Tim Rouse of&#13;
South Milwaukee (Hamilton).&#13;
Parkside finished sixth in the&#13;
recent NAIA District 14 golf&#13;
tournament, There will be no&#13;
spring golf season at UW-P. in&#13;
. 1977 since most state schools&#13;
have switched to the fall&#13;
schedule.&#13;
Women's volleyball&#13;
enters championships&#13;
the PaJety!&#13;
GEORGE'S BAR&#13;
FEATURING. TRIP&#13;
2319 - 63rd St.&#13;
8:30 p.m , - 12:30 pvm , SAT., NOV. 13th&#13;
The Ranger women's&#13;
volleyball team will enter&#13;
tournament competition at the&#13;
WWIAC Championships Friday&#13;
and Saturday.&#13;
Parkside defeated Illinois&#13;
Wesleyan last Friday 15-9, 15-6&#13;
from&#13;
-&#13;
and lost to North Central 6-15, 16-&#13;
14"and 7-15 in the double dual.&#13;
The Rangers met Illinois State&#13;
and Northern Illinois at DeKalb,&#13;
'Illinois Saturday and hosted&#13;
Chicago State, Lewis and Carthage&#13;
Tuesday evening. .&#13;
over&#13;
,&#13;
to&#13;
was sixth with 148.&#13;
Bruce Fischer of the Chicago&#13;
Track Club won the meet in 25&#13;
minutes, 20.2 seconds, followed&#13;
by Gary Mumaw of Illinois. -&#13;
Races were also run for boys i8&#13;
and under, 15 and under, and 12&#13;
and under; for girls 10 and under&#13;
and 11 to 13; National Vets, men&#13;
and women; and Men's National&#13;
Masters. Chuck Bradley of the&#13;
Kenosha Lakeshore Olympians&#13;
won the National Vets in 16:16.9&#13;
for the three miles.&#13;
Swim team&#13;
to·compete&#13;
The women's swim team will&#13;
compete in the WWJAC Championships&#13;
at UW-Whitewater&#13;
Friday at 2 p.m, and Saturday at&#13;
10 a.m.&#13;
The Rangers will be led by&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch, who set two&#13;
new school records and won two&#13;
firsts in the team's last dual meet&#13;
against Whitewater last Friday.&#13;
Parkside lost to' the visiting&#13;
. Warhawks, 86-28.&#13;
Leitch took firsts in the '100&#13;
back with a record-breaking time&#13;
of 1: 16.37and the 50 back in 34.869&#13;
seconds to set the new record.&#13;
,&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 10, 1976&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
~ .&#13;
j · Soccer learn wins -- by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside will meet Minnesota's&#13;
representative in the National&#13;
Association of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics regional tournament&#13;
over the weekend, after they won&#13;
the District 14 Championships&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
· The Rangers beat UWPlatteville,&#13;
4-0. Platteville had&#13;
gotten past Lakeland Friday in&#13;
the ·first round.&#13;
"We totally dominated the&#13;
game. I can't say enough ;ibout&#13;
the team's performance. They&#13;
knew what they had to do and&#13;
were just outstanding," said&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson.&#13;
Parkside outshot Platteville 38-'&#13;
6 and Platteville made only two&#13;
shots in the whole first half. · The&#13;
score could have been mor.e&#13;
lopsided with the- efforts of&#13;
Platteville's goalie, Jeff Dybdahl,&#13;
who had 20 saves.&#13;
Andy Gutierrez started the&#13;
match off with a corner kick to&#13;
score at 1:09 mark. He was&#13;
assisted by J~ck u~dwehr.&#13;
Niall Power also scored on a&#13;
corner kick, with a pass from&#13;
Mike Boy_ajian. · '&#13;
Deech Ismaili scored&#13;
Parkside's last two goals with&#13;
assists from Earl Campbell and&#13;
Boyajiam.&#13;
Parkside dropped a 1-0 match&#13;
to Lake Forest Cqlleg_e,&#13;
November 2; which brings their&#13;
record to 7-6-2. This is the most&#13;
wins by a Parkside squad and the&#13;
first time Parkside had finished&#13;
over the .500 mark in the regular&#13;
season.&#13;
.......... ... , .. , .... ~. ,,. . .,,, .. Runners to host cha1npionships&#13;
tieLEADER~&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside will host the NAIA&#13;
District 14 Championships at 11&#13;
a.m. Saturday.&#13;
Parkside was also the site of&#13;
the eighth annual U.S. Track and&#13;
Field Federation Men's MidAmerican&#13;
and Women's National&#13;
Cross Country Championships&#13;
DOWNTOWN/KENOSHA - for men a~d women over the weekend.&#13;
won by UW-Madison's A team&#13;
with 17 points. Kim Merritt&#13;
finished second in the race with&#13;
Peg Neppel of Iowa State winning&#13;
in 16:39.9 for the three miles.&#13;
Brenda Webb of Wright State was&#13;
third.&#13;
was sixth with 148.&#13;
Bruce Fischer of the Chicago&#13;
Track Club won the meet in 25&#13;
minutes, 20.2 seconds, followed&#13;
by Gary Mumaw of Illinois. .&#13;
ELMWOOD PLAZA/RACINE - for men Over 600 runners participated -----------------------.J in 10 different races, including th_e women's national, which was&#13;
The men's. Mid-American was&#13;
won by Illinois with 30 points.&#13;
Chicago Track Club, who finished&#13;
second with 45, has won the meet&#13;
for the past seven times.&#13;
Parkside'sA team was third with&#13;
55 points and Parkside's 3 team&#13;
Races were also run for boys 18&#13;
and under, 15 and under, and 12&#13;
and under; for girls 10 and under&#13;
and 11 to 13; National Vets, men&#13;
and women; and Men's National&#13;
Masters. Chuck Bradley of the&#13;
Kenosha Lakeshore Olympians&#13;
won the National Vets in 16 :'16.9&#13;
for the three miles.&#13;
One of the Midwest's&#13;
Most Complete.&#13;
SPORTING· GOODS&#13;
DEALERS&#13;
Pl,111f ol FREE P•rkl111&#13;
fftllWtln·&#13;
~f}aml$1ir§ ~~\M,r~~&#13;
WIN ..... The&#13;
Album of Your&#13;
Choice.&#13;
95.&#13;
llP&#13;
Have You Turned Us&#13;
on Lately?&#13;
Letters awarded&#13;
Parkside Golf Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens has named seven letterwinners&#13;
for the 1976 season.&#13;
Winning letters are as follows:&#13;
juniors Steve Christensen of&#13;
Racine (Park) and Mark&#13;
Kuyawa of Kenosha (Tremper);&#13;
sophomore Ray Zuzinec of&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper) ; and freshmen&#13;
Gary Paskiewicz of Kenosha&#13;
(Bradford), Rick Pedersen of&#13;
Racine (Park), Tim Rouse of&#13;
South Milwaukee (Hamilton).&#13;
Parkside finished sixth in the&#13;
recent NAIA District 14 golf&#13;
tourname:1t. There will be no&#13;
spring golf season at UW-P. in&#13;
1977 since most state schools&#13;
have switched to the fall&#13;
schedule.&#13;
Women's volleyball&#13;
·enters championships&#13;
The Ranger women's&#13;
volleyball team will enter&#13;
tournament competition at the&#13;
WWIAC Championships Friday&#13;
and Saturday.&#13;
Parkside defeated Illinois&#13;
Wesleyan last Friday 15-9, 15-6&#13;
and lost to North Central 6-15, 16-&#13;
14,. and 7-15 in the double dual.&#13;
The Rangers met Illinois State&#13;
and Northern Illinois at DeKalb,&#13;
· Illinois Saturday and hosted&#13;
Chicago State, Lewis and Carthage&#13;
Tuesday evening.&#13;
Swim team&#13;
to compete&#13;
The women's swim team will&#13;
compete in the WWIAC Championships&#13;
at UW-Whitewater&#13;
Friday at 2 p.m. and Saturday at&#13;
10 a .m.&#13;
The Rangers will be led by&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch, who set two&#13;
new school retords and won two&#13;
firsts in the team's last dual meet&#13;
against Whitewater last Friday.&#13;
Parkside lost to the visiting&#13;
Warhawks, 86-28.&#13;
Leitch took firsts in the 100&#13;
back with a record-breaking time&#13;
of 1: 16.37 and the 50 back in 34.869&#13;
seconds to set the new record.&#13;
. ~&#13;
~e-w cat 1 . . --~· llt-o~~~&#13;
'&#13;
o11 over to the Pai-ty !&#13;
GEORGE'S BAR&#13;
FEATURING TRIP&#13;
2319 - 63rd St.&#13;
8:30 p.m. - 12:30 p .. m. SAT., NOV. 13th </text>
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              <text>i·.S&#13;
Parks ide planner interviewed&#13;
by Phil Livingston&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No.9 Wednesday, November 3, 1976&#13;
...-.-.._ .._.--..-.-....-._ ..-.._.-..-....-..._-..-..-..-....-...-.....-...-&#13;
"Our firsl goal was 10 respect Ihe natural beauty 01 the site and to&#13;
reflect exisling lopography and ecology. In order 10 UmIt encroachment&#13;
on natural environment auto parkiDg was placed on the&#13;
perimeter of the site with a simple bus system bringing students 8Dd&#13;
faculty to lhe main campus. We placed the parking areas on the less&#13;
desirable land aud kepi much of the center of the campus ill Its natural&#13;
state with mJnimum movement connections between bufldtugs. The&#13;
original idea was to keep the original grass, the wild weeds, and the&#13;
trees undisturbed, and, I hope the campus wUl continue to maintain&#13;
this philosophy. 1\ is so unusual to come 10 a campus and see the laD&#13;
grass rather than to see so much manicured lawn." -Gyo Obata&#13;
mounled aud costumed perf ... •&#13;
mance at Parkside on Wed·&#13;
nesday, Nov. 3 al 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Communication Arls Thealer.&#13;
Tickets for the show, pari of the&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series,&#13;
are $5 and are available at the&#13;
Campus Information Center in&#13;
Wyllie Library-Learning Center,&#13;
Sears in Kenosha, Cook-Gere in&#13;
Racine and Team Electronics in&#13;
Elmwood Plaza. Parkside&#13;
studenl tickets are available on&#13;
campus only.&#13;
Preceeding lheir public per.&#13;
formance the company will be on&#13;
campus Tuesday, Nov. 2,&#13;
presenting a seminar and&#13;
demonstration from 10to 11 a.m.&#13;
for dramatic arts students and&#13;
conllnued on po. 6&#13;
Gyo Obata is the principal in charge of design for the internationally&#13;
famous architectural firm of Hellmuth, Obata, and.Kassabaum of St.&#13;
Louis. Obata drew the master plan for this campus and supervised the&#13;
construction of the Wyllie Library Learning Center and Greequist HaD&#13;
before the state of Wisconsin ruled out of state architects could not&#13;
continue working on Wisconsin buildings.&#13;
Obata drew master plans and-or campus buildings for Duke,&#13;
Stanford, Cornell, Missouri, Southern Illinois University, Washington&#13;
University (where he is an affiliate professor of architecture) and ~&#13;
g. currently the University of Riyad in Saudi Arabia, one of the largest&#13;
" university projects in the world. RANGER interviewed Gyo Obata&#13;
~ shortly after his address at the Wyllie Library Learning Center&#13;
u' Dedication on Sunday, October 24.&#13;
rdifferently&#13;
if you had your way. I think they basically tried to follow&#13;
wbat we set out to do.&#13;
RANGER: In your address at tbe dedication you brought up the&#13;
parking lois. What is your opinion of the development of the Comm.&#13;
Arts and Union lots close to the buildings as an invasion to your&#13;
original plan?&#13;
OBATA: What happened was the legislature passed a ruling stating&#13;
they didn't want out of state architects to continue to work on&#13;
Wisconsin buildings. Originally, you know, the University and also the&#13;
Engineering Department of the state wanted us to continue working as&#13;
master planner so we would be used as a consultant, but they (the&#13;
state) didn't want us 10 do that so, that's what happened. I knew that&#13;
conlinued on pg 1&#13;
Dancers to perform&#13;
The Utah Repertory Dance&#13;
Theater, a 12 member&#13;
professional modern dance&#13;
company, will present a fullyCareer&#13;
needs projected&#13;
~ 'RANGER: What do you think of our new Student Union?&#13;
§' OBATA: I really don't want to make any comments on the other&#13;
if buildings because, first of all, I haven't really studied the building that&#13;
Gyo Obala carefully.&#13;
RANGER: But as you drove up and saw the Union did you think it fit&#13;
in with the general campus design?&#13;
OBATA: I think they tried to use the same kind of malo rials and bave&#13;
fairly open kind of spaces. AS an architect you always would do things&#13;
TheParkside,---------:.-&#13;
by Barbara Larson&#13;
Career Couselor&#13;
The U. S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, predicts&#13;
that the employment growth through the 1980's will continue to be&#13;
more rapid in industries that produce services than in industries that&#13;
produce goods. Presently about 54 million workers are in service&#13;
producing industries, while around 30 million are in goods producing&#13;
industries.&#13;
The following is a breakdown of the estimated employment growth&#13;
for service producing industries through the middle 1980's: government&#13;
(federal, state and local) 34 percent, trade (wholesale and&#13;
retail) 22 percent, transportation and public utilities 11 percent,&#13;
services and miscellaneous (including health services, maintenance,&#13;
repair, advertising, domestic help and business services) 51 percent.&#13;
The breakdown· for growth in goods producing industries:&#13;
manufacturing 12percent, contract construction 25percent, mining 18&#13;
percent, agriculture " minus 35 percent.&#13;
Changes are projected in the overall occupational structure&#13;
as in growth by industries. Through the mid 1980's there ,,:ill be a&#13;
continuation of the growth in white collar and service OCCUpatIOnsbut.&#13;
a slower that average increase in blue collar occupations.&#13;
Professional and. technical workers are projected to grow ahout 30&#13;
percent between 1974and 1985. The only occupational rate higher is&#13;
clerical with a 33 percent projected growth rate. The manager and&#13;
administrator group has ahout a 22 percent projected growth rate.&#13;
Open meeting law&#13;
interpreted&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
An interpretation of Wisconsin's revised open meetings law has been&#13;
circulated to all faculty and staff members by Secretary of the&#13;
Faculty Walter Feld. This law applies to all governmental bodies meluding&#13;
those at Parkside.&#13;
The open meetings law provides among other things, that unless the&#13;
members of a committee specifically vote in favor of closing a&#13;
meeting, the meeting must be held in the open session, unIe~ it concerns&#13;
certain personnel matters.In addition, any closed meeting must •&#13;
begin in open session; the vote to go into closed s~ion must '?"&#13;
recorded by name; and the business to be undertaken in closed sess~on&#13;
must be announced by the chairperson before the closed session&#13;
hegins. .&#13;
The law appears to be quite strict-and penalties range to $300 for&#13;
each violation-but a serious loophole exists in the penalty section. To&#13;
find the loophole, one must carefully read the language of the penalty&#13;
section:&#13;
...No memb" of a governmental body is liable under this subchapter&#13;
if he or she-nuikes or votes in favor of a motion to prevent the violation&#13;
from occurring, or if,before the violation occurs, his or her votes on aU&#13;
relevant motions were inconsistent with all those circumstances&#13;
which cause the violation ...&#13;
With careful study, one can see that unscrupulous public officials&#13;
continued on pg. 1&#13;
/&#13;
Because government and business will continue to need management&#13;
specialists, the demand for salaried managers is likely to continue to&#13;
increase rapidly as in the past. The trend toward larger business is&#13;
expected to continue, limiting the number of firms as well as limiting&#13;
the number of self-employed managers.&#13;
The operative group, including factory workers and vehicle drivers,&#13;
is expected to grow only 9 percent by 1985.The number of laborers&#13;
needed is also expected to grow about 9 percent during tbat period.&#13;
;rhe actual projected number of workers needed between 1974and&#13;
1985 breakdown as foDows: clerical workers- 16million plus, service&#13;
continued on 00 6&#13;
Inside:&#13;
Dizzie excites crowd page 5&#13;
Parkside planner interviewed&#13;
· by Phil Livingston&#13;
Gyo Oba ta is the principal in charge of design for the internationally&#13;
famous architectural firm of Hellmuth, Obata, and.Kassabaum of St.&#13;
Louis. Obata drew the master plan for this campus and supervised the&#13;
construction of the Wyllie Library Learning Center and Greequist Hall&#13;
before the state of Wisconsin ruled out of state architects could not&#13;
continue working on Wisconsin buildings.&#13;
Obata drew master plans and-or campus buildings for Duke,&#13;
Stanford, Cornell, Missouri, Southern Illinois University, Washington&#13;
-g University (where he is an affiliate professor of architecture) and&#13;
~ currently the University of Riyad in Saudi Arabia, one of the largest&#13;
!l university projects in the world. RANGER interviewed Gyo Obata&#13;
~ shortly after his address at the Wyllie Library Learning Center&#13;
.;· Dedication on Sunday, October 24. r&#13;
~ ·RANGER: What do you think of our new Student Union?&#13;
~- OBATA: I really don't want to make any comments on the other&#13;
g buildings because, first of all, I haven't really studied the building that&#13;
carefully.&#13;
RANGER: But as you drove up and saw the Unioq did you think it fit&#13;
in with the general campus design?&#13;
OBATA: I think they tried to use the same kind of materials and have&#13;
fairly open kind of spaces. As an architect you always would do things&#13;
The Parkside------~&#13;
Vol. V. No. 9 Wednesday, November 3, 1976&#13;
.............. ~ ....... ··-·-·---· ...... -·-·---·~--........ --~ ............... "Our first goal was to respect the natural beauty of the site and to&#13;
reflect existing topography and ecology. In order to limit encroachment&#13;
on natural environment auto parking was placed on the&#13;
perimeter of the site with a simple bus system bringing students and&#13;
faculty to the main campus. We placed the park.Ing areas on the les&#13;
desirable land and kept much of the center of the campus In its natural&#13;
state with minimum movement connections between buildings. The&#13;
original idea was to keep the original grass, the wild weeds, and the&#13;
trees undisturbed, and, I hope the campus will continue to maintain&#13;
this philosophy. It is so unusual to come to a campus and see the tall&#13;
grass rather than to see so much manicured lawn." -Gyo Obata&#13;
differently if you had your way. I think they basically tried to follow&#13;
what we set out to do.&#13;
RANGER: In your address at the dedication you brought up the&#13;
parking lots. What is your opinion of the development of the Comm.&#13;
Arts and Union lots close to the buildings as an invasion to your&#13;
original plan?&#13;
OBATA: What happened was the legislature passed a ruling stating&#13;
they didn't want out of state architects to continue to work on&#13;
Wisconsin buildings. Originally, you know, the University and also the&#13;
Engineering Deparbnent of the state wanted us to continue working as&#13;
master planner so we would be used as a consultant, but they (the&#13;
state) didn't want us to do that so, that's what happened. I knew that continued on pg 7&#13;
Dancers to perfor1n&#13;
The Utah Repertory Dance&#13;
Theater, a 12 member&#13;
professional modern dance&#13;
company' will present a fullymounted&#13;
and costumed performance&#13;
at Parkside on Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 3 at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Career needs projected Tickets for the show, part of the&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series,&#13;
are $5 and are available at the&#13;
Campus Information Center in&#13;
Wyllie Library-Learning Center,&#13;
Sears in Kenosha, Cook-Gere in&#13;
Racine and Team Electronics in&#13;
Elmwood Plaza. Parkside&#13;
student tickets are available on&#13;
campus only.&#13;
by Barbara Larson&#13;
Career Couselor&#13;
The U. S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, predicts&#13;
that the employment growth through the 1980's will continue to be&#13;
more rapid in industries that produce services than in industries that&#13;
produce goods. Presently about 54 million workers are in service&#13;
producing industries, while around 30 million are in goods producing&#13;
inrlustries.&#13;
The following is a breakdown of the estimated employment growth&#13;
for service producing industries through the middle 1980's: government&#13;
(federal, state and local) 34 percent, trade (wholesale and&#13;
retail) 22 percent, transportation and public utilities 11 percent,&#13;
services and miscellaneous (including health services, maintenance,&#13;
repair, advertising, domestic help and business seiwices) 51 percent.&#13;
The breakdown -for growth in goods producing industries:&#13;
manufacturing 12percent, contract construction 25 percent, mining 18&#13;
percent, agriculture minus 35 percent.&#13;
Changes are projected in the overall occupational s~ructure&#13;
as in growth by industries. Through the mid 198~'s there "'.1ll be a&#13;
continuation of the growth in white collar and service occupations but.&#13;
a siower that average increase in blue collar occupations. Professional and technical workers are projected to grow about 30&#13;
percent between 1974 and 1985. The only occupational rate higher is&#13;
clerical with a 33 percent projected growth rate. The manager and&#13;
administrator group has about a 22 percent projected growth rate.&#13;
Open 1neeting law&#13;
interpreted&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
An interpretation of Wisconsin's revised open meetings law ha_s been&#13;
circulated to all faculty and staff members by Secretary ~f ~e&#13;
Faculty Walter Feld. This law applies to all governmental bodies mcluding&#13;
those at Parkside.&#13;
The open meetings law provides among other things, that unle~s the&#13;
members of a committee specifically vote in favor of closmg a&#13;
meeting, the meeting must be held in the open session, unle~ it concerns&#13;
certain personnel mattElJ'S. In addition, any closed meeting must&#13;
begin in open session; the vote to go into closed s~ssion must ~e&#13;
recorded by name; and the business to be undertaken m closed sess~on&#13;
must be announced by the chairperson before the closed session&#13;
begins. ·&#13;
The law appears to be quite strict-and penalties range to ~300 for&#13;
each violation- but a serious loophole exists in the penalty section. To&#13;
find the loophole, one must carefully read the language of the penalty&#13;
section:&#13;
... No memb" of a governmental body is liable under this sub~hapter&#13;
if he or she-makes or votes in favor of a motion to prevent the vmlation&#13;
from occurring, or if, before the violation occurs, his or h~r votes on all&#13;
relevant motions were inconsistent with all those circumstances&#13;
which cause the violation ...&#13;
With careful study, one can see that unscrupulous public officials continued on pg. 7&#13;
/&#13;
Because government and business will continue to need management&#13;
specialists, the demand for salaried managers is likely to continue to&#13;
increase rapidly as in the past. The trend toward larger business is&#13;
expected to continue, limiting the number of firms as well as limiting&#13;
the number of self-employed managers.&#13;
The operative group, including factory workers and vehicle drivers,&#13;
is expected to grow only 9 percent by 1985. The number of laborers&#13;
needed is also expected to grow about 9 percent during that period.&#13;
J'he actual projected number of workers needed between 1974 and&#13;
1985 breakdown as follows: clerical workers - 16 million plus, service continued on oa 6&#13;
Inside:&#13;
Preceeding their public performance&#13;
the company will be on&#13;
campus Tuesday, Nov. 2,&#13;
presenting a seminar and&#13;
demonstration from 10 to 11 a .m.&#13;
for dramatic arts students and continued on pg 6&#13;
Dizzie exciies crowd page 5 &#13;
/&#13;
-,&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 3,1976 \&#13;
i '1lY the Parkside ~".. RANGER· -&#13;
---EDITOR IAL/OPIN'ION&#13;
Guidelines cause double jeopardy , ,I&#13;
• by Kiyoko Bowden wishes and even demand that a student live where the university&#13;
says, ie. Mandatory Dorm Residency, which still exists at several UW&#13;
system campuses. .'&#13;
I'm not arguing that the Guidelines should only be imposed at dorm&#13;
campuses, ,although it is possible to see some vague, albeit highly&#13;
questionable rationale for "in loco parentis" at them. There are many&#13;
young students who are away frpm home for the first time. Oddly&#13;
enough that is about the same argument used four-hundred years&#13;
ago; and presumablyignores a higher level of sophistication among&#13;
"young'! people now. If these same "young" people, most of whom are&#13;
18 years or older, can vote, sign contracts and marry, then by wbat&#13;
right does the university presume to tell them where they may live and&#13;
how they may act?&#13;
Most of the infractions in the personal misconduct portion of the&#13;
Guidelines deal with inappropriate dorm resident's behavior. We have&#13;
no dorms at Parkside.&#13;
Parkside is not the place to practice "in loco parentis." The Regents&#13;
bear 'substantial blame for requiring that in order to comply with the&#13;
Guidelines-which are now law-Parkside must adopt a philosopby of&#13;
guardianship which is totally incompatible with tbe vast bulk of its&#13;
student population. .&#13;
Ican see no easy way out of our predicament. The-Guidelines'. implementation&#13;
procedures willsoon be completed. Since the civil courts&#13;
tend to examine constitutional rights cases, more often than not, for&#13;
flaws in the procedural due process portion; and most of the blatant&#13;
technical loop-holes will be plugged by the implementation procedures&#13;
now being structured here at Parkside, it may be a long time and a&#13;
costly court battle before we can bope that our substantive Constitutional&#13;
rights as student-citizens will be realized.&#13;
My reasoning that it will be long time before a test case of the&#13;
Constitutional question is, in part, precisely because it will involve a&#13;
costly court battle. We, who have very limited funds, can ill afford to&#13;
pay for the legal counsel that might gain us our rights.&#13;
There may be a little hope amid my prophesies of doom. We can&#13;
hope, for instance, that no one will misbehave. More realistically, we&#13;
can actively seek to bring pressure to bear on the State Legislature,&#13;
thereby removing students from the University's jurisdiction.&#13;
Ultimately, it may only be through legislative action that we may&#13;
• effectively become adults in the eyes of the law. .&#13;
The problem of the Student Disciplinary Guidelines will &lt;not be&#13;
solved with the completion of the implementation procedures. No&#13;
amount of procedural due process will remedy the basic flaw of the&#13;
Guidelines; that bel!Jg the unwarranted imposition of the University in&#13;
an area which it should and must not interfere.&#13;
Civil courts have been establisbed to handle personal misconduct.&#13;
The sanctions are clearly delimited and defined. Yet students,&#13;
whether 18 or 58, are set apart from the rest of society as a group of&#13;
children whose personal conduct must be monitored and for wborn&#13;
special punishments must be meted out.&#13;
We have no promise that civil action won't occur simultaneously&#13;
with University action in the event of an infraction of a University&#13;
personal misconduct. rule. Yet, the Regents, Central Administration&#13;
and our own University administrators argue that no "double&#13;
jeopardy" exists, either potentially or actually. They are most emphatically&#13;
wrong. A test case could argue for tbe interpretation that&#13;
the University and the civil courts, both state funded agencies, were&#13;
indeed capable of subjecting students to two-level, simultaneous&#13;
judgement and punishment. It could also be argued that students&#13;
neither need nor want "special citizen" status. .&#13;
We are not children nor are we mentally retarded. We can and must&#13;
accept responsibility for our actions and face the consequences for&#13;
those actions. I, for one, resent "special treatment." The relevant&#13;
example of the special stalus of women brings forward the reminder&#13;
that "special citizen" classifications can very easily, and frequently&#13;
do, degenerate into "non-citizen" classifications.&#13;
Historically, the concept of "in loco parentis" has its antecedents in&#13;
medieval Europe, where the academic community sought to protect&#13;
and nurture students. Itwas very often necessary for very young boys&#13;
to be sent quite a distance from home to receive education. These&#13;
, children fell under the protection of the local academic community,&#13;
who effectively became their local guardians.&#13;
The concept has carried down through the years as the rationale for&#13;
severe corporal punishment and losses of Adult privileges, so long as&#13;
the individual remained a student and thus under the protective&#13;
jurisdlction of the school. This continues to the present, wben the&#13;
university can demand that a student behave as the university&#13;
POLITICAL FORUM&#13;
by Phil Hermann say, so what? The constitution also says that when people aren't happy&#13;
WIththe government they have the Tight and the duty to change it.&#13;
2) If you don't vote, you have no right to bitch. Bullshit, freedom of&#13;
speech is also in the constitution! It is up to the political parties to&#13;
make me want to vote by offering choices that are acceptable to me.&#13;
Until they do, I'm not voting and I'll keep bitching.&#13;
3) Your vote means as much asanybody's! Bullshit a state like&#13;
. .. '&#13;
,WISCOnS\n only has a fourth of the electoral votes of a state like&#13;
California! Carter or Ford could have won California New York&#13;
.Illinois and about ten other states and would have won 'the election:&#13;
This means that tbfi'ly-seven states wouldn't have had a say.&#13;
Local elections are also ridiculous. If most of the people don't vote&#13;
how can democracy be.attained? Why don't they vote in these crucial&#13;
local election? Becuase they don't know who is running. They don't&#13;
have the time to study all the candidates and all the issues. Most&#13;
working people work fifty-hours a week and have to support families&#13;
and property.&#13;
Politicians such as Les Aspin and Bill Proxmire understand that&#13;
apathy and ignorance are a major part of any election. Aspin and&#13;
Proxmire always come out with at least one news headliQe a month&#13;
just to make sure people know their names. Do you think that if Les&#13;
Aspin was seriously hurting the military, he would still be in office?&#13;
Low voter tarn-out explained&#13;
In 1976voters were expected to stay away from the polls in record&#13;
numbers. Why? Let's examine their other choices'&#13;
1) They could have voted for Gene 'McCarthy, but he was only on.the&#13;
ballot in twenty-nine states (New York not included) and nobody likes&#13;
to vote for somebody who has no chance of winning. McCarthy has&#13;
already called this "the most unconstitutional presidential election&#13;
in history."&#13;
2) They could have voted for Lester Maddox or Gus Hall. Both were&#13;
the extremist candidates and got their share of the lunatic and-or&#13;
fanatic vote.&#13;
3) They 'could have voted for Jimmy Carter, who had smiled them&#13;
and vagued them to death.&#13;
4) They could have voted for Gerald Ford, the incumbent, who at&#13;
'best is a robot-like. 'Republican team player.&#13;
5) They could have written in somebody else,'s name and gotten&#13;
laughs from tbe news media. These five choices were not very appealing&#13;
to almost sixty percent of the American people.&#13;
The choice that over half the country made was not to vote at all and&#13;
who could blame them? If you didn't like either regular candidate you&#13;
had very little choice in alternatives. What is wrong with not voting?&#13;
1) You shouldn't mtsuse your cOjlstllullonal right to vote. To that I&#13;
EDITOR-tN-CHIEF: Junnlne SlpSma&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGERS: C.thy 8mall, JUdy Truclrunt ( ••••. )&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Tom CooPer ~&#13;
. NEWS COORDINATOR: Bruce Wagner&#13;
DEPARTMENTS;&#13;
.' Administration-PoUcees, John McKloslley&#13;
.. SMI, OilY. Brandt&#13;
.. Stvcten' 9tOUps &amp; speallen; ....&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debbie Bauer -&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR; Jean Tenuta \&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS: jeffrey ·1.swen~lIi, Bill Barile&#13;
COpy EDITOR: Julie Lan,e&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: Van Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION: Sue Marquardt&#13;
STAFF: Wendy Miller. Terri Gao/hart, RolMlrt Hoffman, Chris Claunn. Brleltet Penlllowltl;l,&#13;
Larry Donn.elly, Phil Hermann, Ramona Maillet, Allen Brown, Carol Arentl, John Oyerman,&#13;
80b Jamboll. Beyerly Pella. Behy Nev, Linda Knudtson. Karin La Fourier JUdy TrUdrun,&#13;
Scott Reinhard, Philip L. L,Jyln,s'on, Debbie Sharpe '.&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS, P.J. AUolin •• PhlllpL.LlylnSiston #&#13;
AD SALESPERSONS; Joe LUda, Rick Flasch&#13;
Tbe Parkslde Raneer is written .nd edited&#13;
by the stUdents of tile Unlyenlty 01&#13;
Wisconsin·Parllside who are solely&#13;
respollsibl. for its flIltwlal policy and&#13;
(OVt_"t .Opinlons expr •• sed are no'&#13;
necessarily representatiye of 'hose "eld by&#13;
the sludents, faculty or administra'ion of&#13;
Parhide. Editorial and Buslne .. 553·2217;&#13;
Newsroom 553-2"5.&#13;
/&#13;
2 THE p ARKSIDE RANGER November 3, 1976&#13;
i JJY the Parksid ' ~".. RANGER - - ... • j&#13;
---EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
Guidelines cause double jeopardy • I&#13;
by Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
The problem of the Student Disciplinary Guidelines will_~ot be&#13;
solved with the completion of the implementation procedures. No&#13;
amount of procedural due process will remedy the basic flaw of the&#13;
Guidelines; that being the unwarranted imposition of the University in&#13;
an area which it should and must not interfere.&#13;
Civil courts have been established to handle personal misconduct.&#13;
The sanctions are clearly delimited and defined. Yet students,&#13;
whether 18 or 58, are set apart from the rest of society as a group of&#13;
children whose personal conduct must be monitored and for whom&#13;
special punishments must be meted out.&#13;
We have no promise that civil action won't occur simultaneously&#13;
with University action in the event of an infraction of a University&#13;
personal misconduct. rule. Yet1 the Regents, Central Administration&#13;
and our own University administrators argue that no "double&#13;
jeopardy" exists, either potentially or actually. They are most emphatically&#13;
wrong. A test case could argue for the interpretation that&#13;
the University and the civil courts, both state funded agencies, were&#13;
indeed capable of subjecting students to two-level, simultaneous&#13;
judgement and punishment. It could also be argued that students&#13;
neither need nor want "special citizen" status. ·&#13;
We are not children nor are we mentally retarded. We can and must&#13;
accept responsibility for our actions and face the consequences for&#13;
those actions. I, for one, resent "special treatment." The relevant&#13;
example of the special status of women brings forward the reminder&#13;
that "special citizen" classifications can very easily, and frequently&#13;
do, degenerate into "non-citizen" classifications.&#13;
Historically, the concept of "in loco parentis" has its antecedents in&#13;
m~eval Europe, where the academic community sought to protect&#13;
and nurture students. It was very often necessary for very young boys&#13;
to be sent quite a distance from home to receive education. These&#13;
children fell under the protection of the local academic community,&#13;
who effectively became their local guardians.&#13;
The concept has carried down through the years as the rationale for&#13;
severe corporal punishment and losses of Adult privileges, so long as&#13;
the individual remained a student and thus under the protective&#13;
jurisdiction of the school. This continues to the present, when the&#13;
university can demand that a student behave as the university&#13;
-&#13;
POLITICAL&#13;
Low voter turn-oui explain~d&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
In 1976 voters were expected to stay away from the polls in record&#13;
numbers. Why? Let's examine their other choices;&#13;
1) They could have voted for Gene McCarthy, but he was only on-the&#13;
ballot in twenty-nine states (New York not included) and nobody likes&#13;
to vote for somebody who has no chance of winning. McCarthy has&#13;
already called this "the most unconstitutional presidential election&#13;
in history."&#13;
2) They could have voted for Lester Maddox or Gus Hall. Both were&#13;
the extremist candidates and got their share of the lunatic and-or&#13;
fanatic vote.&#13;
3) They could have voted for Jimmy Carter, who had smiled them&#13;
and vagued them to death.&#13;
4) They could have voted for Gerald Ford, the incumbent, who at&#13;
best is a robot-like, 'Republican team player.&#13;
5) They could have written in somebody else,'s name and gotten&#13;
laughs from the news media. These five choices were not very appealing&#13;
to almost sixty percent of the American people. .&#13;
The choice that over half the country made was not to vote at alland&#13;
who could blame them? If you didn_'t like either regular candidate you&#13;
had very little choice in alternatives. What is wrong with not voting?&#13;
1) You shol!1d~'t misuse your COJ1stitutional right to vote. To that I&#13;
wishes and even demand that a student live where the university&#13;
says, ie. Mandatory Dorm Residency, which still exists at several UW&#13;
system campuses. · • .&#13;
I'm not arguing that the Guidelines should only be imposed at dorm&#13;
campuses, .although "it is possible to see some vague, albeit highly&#13;
questionable rationale for "in loco parentis" at them. There are many&#13;
young students who are away fr.om home for the first time. Oddly&#13;
enough that is about the same argument used four-hundred years&#13;
ago; and presumably 'ignores a higher level of sophistication among&#13;
"young" people now. If these same "young" people, most of whom are&#13;
18 years or older, can vote, sign contracts and ma,rry, then by what&#13;
right does the university presume to tell them where they may live and&#13;
how they may act?&#13;
Most of _the infriictions· in the personal misconduct portion of the&#13;
Guidelines deal with inappropriate dorm resident's behavior. We have&#13;
no dorms at Parkside.&#13;
Parkside is not the place to practice "in loco parentis." The Regents&#13;
bear'substantial blame for requiring that in order to comply with the&#13;
Guidelines-which are now law-Parkside must adopt a philosophy of&#13;
guardianship which is totally incompatible with the vast bulk of its&#13;
student population.&#13;
I can see no easy way out of our predicament. The-Guidelines'. implementation&#13;
procedures will.soon be completed. Since the civil courts&#13;
tend to examine constitutional rights cases, more often than not, for&#13;
flaws in the procedural due process portion; and most of the blatant&#13;
technical loop-holes will be plugged by the implementation procedures&#13;
now being structured here at Parkside, it may be a long time and a&#13;
costly court battle before we can hope that our substantive Constitutional&#13;
rights as student-citizens will be realized.&#13;
My reasoning that it will be long time before a test case of the&#13;
Constitutional question is, in part, precisely because it will involve a&#13;
costly court battle. We, who have very limited funds, can ill afford to&#13;
pay f~r the legal counsel that might gain us our rights.&#13;
There may be a little hope amid my prophesies of doom. We can&#13;
hope, for instance, that no one will misbehave. More realistically, we&#13;
can actively seek to bring pressure to bear on the State Legislature,&#13;
thereby removing students from the University's jurisdiction.&#13;
Ultimately, it may only be through legislative action that we may&#13;
' effectively become adults in the eyes of the law. ·&#13;
FORUM&#13;
~Y, so what? The constitution also says that when people aren't happy&#13;
with the government they have the right and the duty to change it.&#13;
2) If you don't vote, you have no right to bitch. Bullshit freedom of&#13;
speech is also in the constitution! It is up to the politic;l parties to&#13;
make me want to vote by offering choices that are acceptable to me.&#13;
Until they do, I'm not voting and I'll keep bitching.&#13;
3) Your vote means as much as anybody's! Ifollshit a state like&#13;
, Wiscoils~n only has a fourth of the electoral votes of a state like&#13;
California! Carter or Ford could have won California New York&#13;
.Illinois and about ten other states and would have won 'the election'.&#13;
This means that thirty-seven states wouldn't have had a say.&#13;
Local elections are also r~diculous. If most of the people don't vote,&#13;
how can democracy be attained? Why don't they vote in these crucial&#13;
local electi~n? Becuase they don't know who is runnin~. They don't&#13;
have. the tune to stu~y all the candidates and all the issues. Most&#13;
working people work fifty-hours a week and have to support families&#13;
and property.&#13;
Politicians such as Les Aspin and Bill Proxmire understand that&#13;
apathy_ and ignorance are a major part of any election. Aspin and&#13;
:roxm1re always come out with at least one news headliQe a month&#13;
Just_to make s~e people know their names. Do you think that if Les&#13;
Aspm was seriously hurting the military, he would still be in office?&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jeannine ~ipsma&#13;
The Parkside Ranier is written and edited&#13;
by the students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside who are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorl'al policy and&#13;
coo••"• .Opinions expressed are not&#13;
necessarily representative of those held by&#13;
the students, faculty or administration of&#13;
Parkside. Editorial and Business SSl-2217;&#13;
Newsroom SS3-229S.&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGERS: Catlly Brnak, Judy Trudruni (asst.) , · ADVERTISING MANAGER: Tom Cooper -&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR: Bruce Wainer&#13;
DEPARTMENTS:&#13;
.. Administration-Policies: John McKloskey .. SMI: Dave Brandt&#13;
.. Student group• &amp; speakers:&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debbie Bauer&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Jean Tenuta \&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS: ielfrey -j. swencki, Bill Barke&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Julie Lanie&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: Van Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION : Sue Marquardt&#13;
STAFF : Wendy Miller, Terri Ga-.'hart, Robert Hollman, Chri• ClauHn, Bricl9et Penzkowski.&#13;
Larry Donn_elly, Phil Hermann, Ramona Maillet, Allen Brown, Carol Arentz, John Overman,&#13;
Bob Jambo,s, Bev':r!y Pell:'•. Betsy Neu, Linda Knudtson, Karin La Fourier, Judy Trudruni, Scott Reinhard, Phohp L. L1v1n1ston, Debbie Sharpe&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS : P.J. Auolina, Philip L. Livingston #&#13;
AD SALESPERSONS: Joe Landa, Rick FIHch&#13;
) ' &#13;
\&#13;
'-----&#13;
Accounting in sad shape&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
• My purpose in writing this&#13;
letter is to appeal to the administration&#13;
of Parkside to begin&#13;
a serious search for additional&#13;
accounting instructors. I never&#13;
believed tbe sad shape the accounting,&#13;
department was in until&#13;
recently.&#13;
A few days ago I visited the&#13;
Business Management office to&#13;
declare my specialty package in&#13;
accounting, At this time I also&#13;
requested that I be assigned an&#13;
advisor who was an accounting&#13;
. instructor. I was informed that&#13;
this would be- impossible. A&#13;
secretary told me that there were&#13;
only two accounting instructors,&#13;
Larry Logan and Claude Renshaw,&#13;
who were available to&#13;
counsel accounting students and&#13;
they have their hands' full .&#13;
The number of advisors is soon&#13;
to be reduced to one since Mr.&#13;
Renshaw is leaving Parkside&#13;
nexl semester. Itis impossible to&#13;
. expect Mr. Logan to handle all&#13;
Haiku wanted&#13;
Dear Readers,&#13;
As a special feature during&#13;
December VISAGE would like to&#13;
publish a haiku page. If you are a&#13;
writer of this poetry form, please&#13;
the accounting students at&#13;
ParksideStill,&#13;
many of us need an adl'isor&#13;
who is a specialist in the&#13;
accounting field. While my&#13;
present advisor is quite willing to&#13;
help me, wben it comes to&#13;
specific questions that I have&#13;
about the accounting field he&#13;
can't always provide me with the&#13;
answers I need.&#13;
I am now a junior and these last&#13;
two years of college are the time&#13;
when I most need advice about&#13;
my future career. I feel that&#13;
Parkside does have an obligation&#13;
to provide every student with the&#13;
guidance they need.&#13;
So please, Parks ide administration&#13;
and Chancellor&#13;
Guskin, start tbe wheels in&#13;
motion and do something about'&#13;
this predicament. Somewhere,&#13;
someplace, there must be ~ few&#13;
jobless accounting instructors&#13;
just waiting to be found!&#13;
A Very Concerned Student&#13;
send in your writings. We are still&#13;
located in WLLC-D194.&#13;
Love &amp; Shalom&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
Co-VISAGE Editor&#13;
- •• _ .. ' ...n ..... " 'n~------------------ _&#13;
TIlE PARKSIDE RANGER November a, JJ'lI 3&#13;
Bowden corrects Guskin&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
I would like to correct a&#13;
statement made by Chancellor&#13;
Guskin at the Open Meeting on&#13;
Oct. 21. He said in response to a&#13;
question about the naming of the&#13;
Union that I, Kiyoko Bowden, had&#13;
been consulted about the name&#13;
and that I had agreed to naming&#13;
the Union, the Parkside Union.&#13;
.. This was absolutely wrong.&#13;
It was agreed this summer&#13;
after conversations with Chancellor&#13;
Guskin about the Union&#13;
name that the Union Operating&#13;
Board would review the Union's&#13;
name. I at no time agreed&#13;
unilaterally as. President of&#13;
Student Government to name the&#13;
Union anything. I felt at that lime&#13;
and I still do now, that the Union&#13;
Operating Board was the only&#13;
body which could deal with the&#13;
issue. However, recently the&#13;
Senate voted unamimously to&#13;
name the Union, the Parkside&#13;
Student Union. In thIllght of the&#13;
Senate's action, I am as&#13;
President even more convinced&#13;
that the Union Operating Board&#13;
should convene at once to decide&#13;
among many other things the&#13;
final, official name of the Student&#13;
Union.&#13;
If the Senate perceives student&#13;
. concern over the name to be SOt&#13;
pressing that they would take&#13;
action, then it is urgent that the&#13;
UOB address itself to this&#13;
question.&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
President Student Government&#13;
Hermann apologizes&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
1 have wrillen this letter as a&#13;
public apology to Peter Canmejo&#13;
and the Socialist Party. 1 plead&#13;
ignorance to their campaign&#13;
platform and 1have only myselfto&#13;
blame. 1 am sure Mr. Camejo&#13;
and his supporters are working&#13;
very hard against our unjust&#13;
election system and they should&#13;
00- commended. 1 am guilty of&#13;
bias in neglecting candidates&#13;
other than Ford and Carter.&#13;
Hopefully this will change.&#13;
Phil Hermann&#13;
'Valley Forge' sponsored&#13;
The Law Club will sponsor a&#13;
multi-media slide presentajion,&#13;
"Pilgrimage to Valley Forge" on&#13;
Sunday, November 14 at 3 p.m.&#13;
The program depicts a bicentennial&#13;
wagon train as it journeys&#13;
to Pennsylvania.&#13;
The hour and a half presentation&#13;
will be held in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission is $2 for&#13;
adults, $1 for Parkside Students&#13;
and senior citizens, 50 cents for&#13;
children under 12.&#13;
For ticketinforrnation, call 553-&#13;
2244, or 553-2345.&#13;
Recruiting&#13;
• progressmg&#13;
by Bruce W..... er&#13;
Management ScIence Division&#13;
Chairperson Ron Singer is enthused&#13;
about the response for the&#13;
positions In the various areas of&#13;
business management and also&#13;
with the number of llpplicants for&#13;
the chairperson opening.&#13;
The search and screen commillee&#13;
has received 1~20 applicants,&#13;
and are in the process&#13;
of checking out their references&#13;
through telephone contact.&#13;
However, Singer "was a little&#13;
pessimistic about the recruiting&#13;
process. He felt that although&#13;
they've received several applications,&#13;
the university must&#13;
sell themselves to the candidate&#13;
to the school.&#13;
As for the interviews by&#13;
students, faculty, and administration,&#13;
Singer stated that&#13;
these should take place sometime&#13;
in December, once the top candidates&#13;
have been screened.&#13;
There will be ads placed in&#13;
major journals for each pf the&#13;
specialty areas next week which&#13;
Singer hoped would be bringing&#13;
more applications. He slated that&#13;
the chairperson should be&#13;
selected by the lime the second&#13;
semester starts.&#13;
Singer also stated that the&#13;
accounting positions he had&#13;
hoped to have filled by the second&#13;
semester. will probably not be&#13;
filled. He said that this was due to&#13;
the problem that faculty felt they&#13;
owed something to the school that&#13;
hired them first and most of the&#13;
lime. They will stay with that&#13;
school until the end of the&#13;
semester. "&#13;
\&#13;
Accounting in sad shape&#13;
To the Editor: the accounting students at&#13;
Parkside,&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 3, 1976 3&#13;
Bowden corrects Guskin&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
I would like to correct a&#13;
statement made by Chancellor&#13;
Guskin at the Open Meeting on&#13;
Oct. 21. He said in response to a&#13;
question about the naming of the&#13;
Union that I, Kiyoko Bowden, had&#13;
been consulted about the name&#13;
and that I had agreed to naming&#13;
the Union, the Parkside Union.&#13;
Recruiting&#13;
• progressmg&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Management Science Division&#13;
Chairperson Ron Singer is enthused&#13;
about the response for the&#13;
positions in the various areas of&#13;
business management and also&#13;
with the number of l'lpplicants for&#13;
the chairperson opening. My purpose in writing this&#13;
letter is to appeal to the administration&#13;
of Parkside to begin&#13;
a serious search for additional&#13;
accounting instructors. I never&#13;
believed the sad shape the accounting_department&#13;
was in until&#13;
recently.&#13;
Still, many of us need an advisor&#13;
who is a specialist in the&#13;
accounting field. While my&#13;
pr1:;sent advisor is quite willing to&#13;
help me, when it comes to&#13;
specific questions that I have&#13;
about the accounting field he&#13;
can't always provide me with the&#13;
answers I need.&#13;
' This was absolutely wrong.&#13;
Operating Board was the only&#13;
body which could deal with the&#13;
issue. However, recently the&#13;
Senate voted unamimously to&#13;
name the Union, the Parkside&#13;
Student Union. In the light of the&#13;
Senate's action, I am as&#13;
President even more convinced&#13;
that the Union Operating Board&#13;
should convene at once to decide&#13;
among many other things the&#13;
final, official name of the Student&#13;
Union.&#13;
The search and screen committee&#13;
has received 13-20 applicants,&#13;
and are in the process&#13;
of checking out their references&#13;
through telephone contact.&#13;
A few days ago I visited the&#13;
Business Management office to&#13;
declare my specialty package in&#13;
accounting. At this time I also&#13;
requested that I be assigned an&#13;
advisor who was an accounting&#13;
· instructor. I was informed that&#13;
this would be· impossible. A&#13;
secretary told me that there were&#13;
only two accounting instructors,&#13;
Larry Logan and Claude Renshaw,&#13;
who were available to&#13;
counsel accounting students and&#13;
they have their hands' full .&#13;
The number of advisors is soon&#13;
to be reduced to one since Mr.&#13;
Renshaw is leaving Parkside&#13;
next semester. It is impossible to&#13;
expect Mr. !.ogan to hanrlle all&#13;
I am now a junior and these last&#13;
two years of college are the time&#13;
when I most need advice about&#13;
my future career. I feel tbat&#13;
Parkside does have an obligation&#13;
to provide every student with the&#13;
guidance they need.&#13;
So please, Parkside administration&#13;
and Chancellor&#13;
Guskin, start the wheels in&#13;
motion and do -something about·&#13;
this predicament. Somewhere,&#13;
someplace, there must be ii few&#13;
jobless accounting instructors&#13;
just waiting to be found!&#13;
A Very Concerned Student&#13;
Haiku wanted&#13;
Dear Readers,&#13;
As a special feature during&#13;
December VISAGE would like to&#13;
publish a haiku page. If you are a&#13;
writer of this poetry form, please&#13;
send in your writings. We are still&#13;
located in WLLC-D194.&#13;
Love &amp; Shalom&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
Co-VISAGE Editor&#13;
HOURS:&#13;
It was agreed this summer&#13;
after conversations with Chancellor&#13;
Guskin about the Union&#13;
name that the Union Operating&#13;
Board would review the Union's&#13;
name. I at no time agreed&#13;
unilaterally as President of&#13;
Student Government to name the&#13;
Union anything. I felt at that time&#13;
~d I still do now, that the Union&#13;
If the Senate perceives student&#13;
concern over the name to be so&#13;
pressing that they would take&#13;
action, then it is urgent that the&#13;
UOB address itself to this&#13;
question.&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
President Student Government&#13;
Hermann apologizes&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I have written this letter as a&#13;
public apology to Peter Canmejo&#13;
and the Socialist Party. I plead&#13;
ignorance to their campaign&#13;
platform and I have only myself&#13;
to blame. I am sure.Mr. Camejo&#13;
and his supporters are working&#13;
very hard against our unjust&#13;
election system and they should&#13;
be commended. I am guilty of&#13;
bias in neglecting candidates&#13;
other than Ford and Carter.&#13;
Hopefully this will change.&#13;
PhilHermaM&#13;
'Valley Forge' sponsored&#13;
The Law Club will sponsor a&#13;
multi-media slide presentapon,&#13;
"Pilgrimage to Valley Forge" on&#13;
Sunday, November 14 at 3 p.m.&#13;
The program depicts a bicentennial&#13;
wagon train as it journeys&#13;
to Pennsylvania.&#13;
The hour and a half presentalion&#13;
will be heid in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission is $2 for&#13;
adults, $1 for Parkside Students&#13;
and senior citizens, 50 cents for&#13;
children under 12.&#13;
For ticket information, call 553-&#13;
2244, or 553-2345.&#13;
However, Slnger •was a little&#13;
pessimistic about the recruiting&#13;
process. He felt that although&#13;
they've received several applications,&#13;
the university must&#13;
sell themselves to the candidate&#13;
to the school.&#13;
As for the interviews by&#13;
students, faculty, and administration,&#13;
Singer stated that&#13;
these should take place sometime&#13;
in December, once the top candidates&#13;
have been screened.&#13;
There will be ads placed in&#13;
major journals for each .of the&#13;
specialty areas next week which&#13;
Singer hoped would be bringing&#13;
more applications. He stated that&#13;
the chairperson should be&#13;
selected by the time the second&#13;
setnester starts.&#13;
Singer also stated that the&#13;
accounting positions he had&#13;
hoped to have filled by the second&#13;
semester will probably not be&#13;
filled. He said that this was due to&#13;
the problem that faculty felt they&#13;
owed something to the school that&#13;
hired them first and most of the&#13;
time. They will stay with that&#13;
school until the end of the&#13;
semester."&#13;
bee'S . -901'&#13;
Monday - Thursday 9 - 5&#13;
Friday 9 - 8&#13;
- Student Discount&#13;
OPTICAL .&#13;
BOUTIQUE&#13;
552-7610&#13;
Saturday 9 -&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
Lorgest Selection&#13;
of Foshionoble&#13;
Fromes in South ·Eastern Wisconsin&#13;
Le rises&#13;
Duplico~ed&#13;
Ph_ysicion&#13;
Prescriptions&#13;
Filled&#13;
4425 · TAYLOR&#13;
Ten minutes&#13;
Kenosho!!&#13;
Onl.Y&#13;
From &#13;
4 THE P ARKSIDE RANGER November 3, 1976&#13;
David Vogt&#13;
~ tmerMy~~~.p8f1uIide&#13;
Filta&#13;
AcaplIlco&#13;
Semester Break&#13;
January &amp;-13, 1971&#13;
$339 COMPLETE&#13;
Triple occupancy&#13;
LIMITED SPACE -&#13;
MAKE YOUR&#13;
RESERVATIONS, NOW!&#13;
• For application forms or&#13;
additional information contact:&#13;
Parkside Union Office&#13;
553·2200&#13;
Information Analyst&#13;
studies. adult students&#13;
by Pbilip L. Livingston&#13;
Last August Parkside's Information Analyst,&#13;
David Vogt, released phase one of the three phased&#13;
Adult Student Study. The purpose of the study was&#13;
to find out more about the "non-traditional" or,&#13;
adult student who is over the age of 25.&#13;
This special information, specifically, the class,&#13;
. sex, race, marital status, major, and credit hour&#13;
load of adult students is obtained by writing a&#13;
program to extract these bits of data from the main&#13;
data base in the Computer Center.&#13;
David Vogt is quick to note that it's difficult. to&#13;
draw conclusions or make long term&#13;
generalizations on two years of data. Vogt's&#13;
-g. eighteen statement examination of the report's&#13;
~ tables is brief and direct. There are no big surprises&#13;
~ but we do know for a fact that 31 percent of our&#13;
~ students are over 25, and they are more likely to be&#13;
ii' enrolled in social science, Spanish, education,&#13;
r applied science and technology, business&#13;
~. management, and labor economics. ,.&#13;
lQ The phase one report also shows that the rn.a1.0rity&#13;
~&#13;
of the non-traditional students were majoring in&#13;
psychology, economics, geography, history,&#13;
. political science, sociology, German" Spanish,&#13;
applied science and technology, business&#13;
management, and labor economics:&#13;
Although this study is somewhat of apriority, ,&#13;
Vogt's office also has to complete state forms&#13;
regarding enrollment by semester. The other two&#13;
phases of the adult study will have to be squeezed&#13;
into the periods when demand for computer time is&#13;
low.&#13;
Phase two will dwell on attendance specifically&#13;
time-day patterns and course popularity. Phase&#13;
three is a questionaire that will be drawn up to try to&#13;
get the information not gathered by phases one and&#13;
two and will be designed to try and answer&#13;
questions synthesized from the earlier phases.&#13;
Vogt's office also bas other data pertaining to&#13;
area population curves that generally point to the&#13;
importance of understanding more about the future&#13;
growth of Parkside with regard to the type of&#13;
students most likely to attend classes.&#13;
MONEY&#13;
HUNGRY?-&#13;
Kenosha County Advocates&#13;
For Youth&#13;
Needs Students or Student&#13;
Organizations to Sell&#13;
Raffle Tickets on Campus!&#13;
KEEP 25% OF&#13;
SALES'I&#13;
Call 658-4911 for details&#13;
Last Saturday,. October 30;&#13;
members of the Foreign Student'&#13;
Club toured the Southern Center&#13;
for tbe Developmentally&#13;
Disabled (formerly Sonthern&#13;
Colony).&#13;
Members of tbe Foreign&#13;
Student Club from left to right&#13;
are: Sam Kaman; Natrebi,&#13;
Kenya, Mike Montessantos;&#13;
Athens, Greece, Conststino&#13;
Caloniatis; Panama, Panama&#13;
City, Alsane Hutchings; Tehran,&#13;
Iran, Francis' G.C, Nwokike;&#13;
Nigeria, West Africa, Harry&#13;
Gilbert, Volunteer Coordinator&#13;
for the Center, and Eugenia&#13;
Malaki-Hanseo; Athens, Greece.&#13;
Concerts scheduled&#13;
Parkside will present a series&#13;
of three Young Persons' Concerts&#13;
during the 1976-77academic year"&#13;
University spokesmen said the&#13;
series is designed for young&#13;
persons and their parents and&#13;
music students and their&#13;
teachers,&#13;
The series, nominally priced,&#13;
will begin ·with a program by&#13;
violinist Eugene Fodor, artist-inresidence&#13;
at Parkside, with&#13;
pianist Stephen Swedish,&#13;
associate professor of music, at&#13;
10:30a.m. on Nov. 26 ( the Friday&#13;
during the Thanksgiving school&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,OOO-mile oil change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60°F. pour point)&#13;
• Saves 011 RICK "BENTSON'&#13;
your AMSIOIL dea/.r 639-4067&#13;
recess).&#13;
Timothy Bell, assistant professor&#13;
of music, will present the second&#13;
concert with the award-winning&#13;
Parkside Jazz Ensemble I, of&#13;
which he is the director, at 2 p.rn.&#13;
on Saturday, Feb. 26, and pianist&#13;
Swedish, a concert artist in his&#13;
own right with performance&#13;
credits throughout the United&#13;
States and in Europe, will present&#13;
the final program at 2 p.m. on&#13;
Saturday, April 16.&#13;
All performances will be in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Tickets are $1 per .eoncert for&#13;
students; $2 per concert for&#13;
adults, tax included, and can be&#13;
obtained by writing Young'&#13;
Persons Concert Series,&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
Kenosha. WI" 53140.&#13;
Tickets can be purchased for the&#13;
entire series or for individual&#13;
programs. Additional concert&#13;
information can be obtained by&#13;
calling 553-2~.&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 3, 1976&#13;
t/1' l.kwefsily~-~~.pF&#13;
t !ta -Acapnlco&#13;
David Vogt&#13;
Semester Break&#13;
January 6-13, 1977&#13;
$339 COMPLETE&#13;
Triple occupancy&#13;
LIMITED SPACE - MAKE YOUR&#13;
RESERVATIONS, NOW! • For application forms or&#13;
additional 1nformat10n contact:&#13;
Parkside Union Office&#13;
553-2200&#13;
MONEY&#13;
HUNGRY?-&#13;
Kenosha County Advocates&#13;
For Youth&#13;
Needs Students or· Student&#13;
Organizations to Sell&#13;
Raffl_e Tickets on Campus!&#13;
KEEP 25% OF&#13;
SALES-I&#13;
Call 658-4911 for details&#13;
Information Analyst&#13;
studies .. adult stu·dent·s&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Last August Parksidf s Information Analyst,&#13;
David Vogt, released phase one of the three phased&#13;
Adult Student Study. The purpose of the study was&#13;
to find out more about the "non-traditional" or,&#13;
adult student who is over the age of 25.&#13;
This special information, specifically, the class,&#13;
· sex; race, marital status, major, and credit hour&#13;
load of adult students is obtained by writing a&#13;
program to extract these bits of data from the main&#13;
data base in the Computer Center.&#13;
of the non-traditional students were majoring in&#13;
psychology, economics, geography, history,&#13;
political science, sociology, German, · Spanish,&#13;
applied science and technology, business&#13;
management, and labor economics:&#13;
Although this study is somewhat of a priority,&#13;
Vogt's office also has to complete state forms '&#13;
regarding enrollment by semester. The other two&#13;
phases of the adult study will have to be squeezed&#13;
into the periods when demand for computer time is&#13;
low.&#13;
David Vogt is quick to note that it's difficult, to&#13;
draw conclusions or make long term&#13;
generalizations on two years of data. Vogt's&#13;
-g. eighteen statement examination of the report's&#13;
~ tables is brief and direct. There are no big surprises&#13;
~ but we do know for a fact that 31 percent of our&#13;
~ students are over 25, and they are more likely to be&#13;
.;· enrolled in social science, Spanish, education,&#13;
,- applied science and technology, business&#13;
~ management, and labor economics. 5·&#13;
Phase two will dwell on attendance specifically&#13;
time-day patterns and course popularity. Phase&#13;
three is a questionaire that will be drawn up to try to&#13;
get the information not gathered by phases one and&#13;
two . and will be designed to try and answer&#13;
questions synthesized from the earlier phases.&#13;
Vogt's office also has other data pertaining to&#13;
area population curves that generally point to the&#13;
importance of understanding more about the future&#13;
growth of Parkside with regard to the type of&#13;
students most likely to attend classes.&#13;
~ TI1e phase onG rcpcrt also sho\vs that the rna1ority&#13;
d&#13;
:,&#13;
Last Saturday, October 30;&#13;
-members of the Foreign Student&#13;
Club toured the Southern Center&#13;
for the Developmentally&#13;
Disabled (formerly Southern&#13;
Colony).&#13;
Members of the Foreign&#13;
Student Club from left to right&#13;
are: Sam Kamau; NairoJ,i,&#13;
Kenya, Mike Montessantos;&#13;
Athens, Greece, Constatino&#13;
Caloniatis; Panama, Panama&#13;
City, Afsane Hutchings; Tehran,&#13;
Iran, Francis· G.C. Nwokike;&#13;
Nigeria, West Africa, Harry&#13;
Gilbert, Volunteer Coordinator&#13;
for the Center, and Eugenia&#13;
Malaki-Hansen; Athens, Greece.&#13;
Concerts scheduled - Parkside will present a series&#13;
of three Young Persons" Concerts&#13;
during the 1976-77 academic year.&#13;
University spokesmen said the&#13;
series is d~signed for young&#13;
persons and their parents and&#13;
music students and their&#13;
teachers.&#13;
The series, nominally priced,&#13;
will begin ·with a program by&#13;
violinist Eugene Fodor, artist-inresidence&#13;
at Parkside, with&#13;
pianist Stephen Swedish,&#13;
associate professor of music, at&#13;
10:30a.m. on Nov. 26 ( the Friday&#13;
during the Thanksgiving school&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
your AMS/OIL dealer&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,000-mile oil change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60°F. -pour point)&#13;
• saves 011 RICK BENTSON,&#13;
639-4067&#13;
recess).&#13;
Timothy Bell, assistant professor&#13;
of music, will present the second&#13;
concert with the award-winning&#13;
Parkside Jazz Ensemble I, of&#13;
which he is the director, at 2 p.m.&#13;
on Saturday, Feb. 26, and pianist&#13;
Swedish, a concert artist in his&#13;
own right with performance&#13;
credits throughout the United&#13;
States and in Europe, will pre&amp;ent&#13;
the final program at 2 p.m. on&#13;
Saturday~ April 16.&#13;
All performances will be in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Tickets are $1 per .concert for&#13;
students; $2 per concert for&#13;
adults, tax included, and can be&#13;
obtained by writing Young&#13;
Persons Concert Series,&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
Kenosha WI. 53140.&#13;
Tickets can be purchased for the&#13;
entire series or for individual&#13;
programs. Additional concert&#13;
information can be obtained by&#13;
calling 553-2i88. &#13;
0:0"£0:' 0 Ie&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November S, 1171 5&#13;
Dizzy excites crowd&#13;
A Bit of Warmth&#13;
Wendy MlUer-8eptember 23rd&#13;
It&#13;
• Salaried position demanding at least 20~ hours a week&#13;
• Experience in journalism necessary&#13;
• Applic':1nts will be advised of interview time and place&#13;
by Wendy MlUer&#13;
Tuesday night, October 26th, Dizzy Gillespie shared his music and&#13;
himself with the many people who gathered to see him here at&#13;
Parkside. Dizzy, one of the main me.n responsible for Bebop music.&#13;
seems to be a natural comedian. He had the audience laughing many&#13;
times, sometimes -by just rolling his eyes. The person next to me&#13;
remarked, "Sure does have a good.time; doesn't he?" He does. That is&#13;
why it is so easy for the audience to have a good time. He began the&#13;
evening somewhat humorously, but very sincerely, "We're all&#13;
branches of one tree, leaves of one branch, and fruit there of."&#13;
He shared the stage well with his band, which consisted of bassistBenjamin&#13;
Franklin Brown, drummer-Mickey Raker, and guitaristRodney&#13;
Jones. Rodney has only been with the band for five months. He&#13;
IS twenty years old and very impressive. In a piece entiUe Ole' he had&#13;
the audience transfixed. -Dizzyalso seemed to enjoy it but Dizzy seems&#13;
to enjoy everything.&#13;
Dizzy's solos were definitely distinctive. They came from deep&#13;
within himself and reached out to this spellbound audience. WhUe&#13;
packing after the concert he said, "It is up to the artist to penetrate&#13;
and be something to the people out there. It's your duty and if you don't&#13;
get to them, you are derelict in your duty, and I don't want to be&#13;
in my duty." He was speaking in reference to his part in tbe Bahai&#13;
faith.&#13;
Dizzy incorporates Mrican, Cuban, and Oriental styles into his&#13;
music. But that's not all that makes it so unique. He plays an upswept&#13;
trumpet that enables him to hear more of what he is playing. He has&#13;
been playing it that way for about twenty years, since his conventional&#13;
horn was bent at a party. .&#13;
At one point during the conceri he hall the audience singing. During&#13;
another tune he had people clapping alternately to his playing. During&#13;
a fast blues tune, entitled The Champ, he did some scat singing, sort of&#13;
jumbled almost nonsensical words that movewith the music. The&#13;
audience responded favorably to his vocals. When he asked if he&#13;
should do Sail Peanuts, he was greeted with enthusiastic en.&#13;
couragements from the crowd. Salt Peanuts is obviously one of his&#13;
more famous vocal tunes. The audience was also enthused when he&#13;
announced what they were going to do , A Night in Tunesia, which is&#13;
practically a classic. They did a tune, Land of the Living Dead, from&#13;
one of their recent albums, Bahia. He said that the album is, "an&#13;
album destined to become the 'greatest secrets in show business". I&#13;
doubt it. If you were there, you know why. If you weren't there, you&#13;
. can buy the album and hear part of what you missed.&#13;
Dizzy turned fifty-eight on October twenty-first. On October twentysixth,&#13;
he and his band left Parkside and headed for Tuscon. I don't&#13;
know how he stays so young. Maybe it's the way he lives. He does live&#13;
and his music always Will,&#13;
I was a pebble tumbling through&#13;
cloudy darkness,&#13;
You were the sun, warming me&#13;
through the cool waters.&#13;
Leading me with your rays,&#13;
together we danced to the rhythm&#13;
of the waves.&#13;
You've got it now&#13;
She's got it,. he's got it&#13;
We've aU got it&#13;
It's in the music&#13;
Can you feel it?&#13;
Let it take you&#13;
Teach you&#13;
Make you&#13;
Can you feel it?&#13;
Believe it&#13;
And if you loose it&#13;
Find it soon&#13;
Find it, keep it&#13;
Lose itt use it&#13;
It's in the music.&#13;
Call Don Kopriva for further detail. 553.2404&#13;
Every Wednesday, Thursday and Friday during the noon hours in Union Square. and on a TV Monitor in&#13;
Main Placs, the PAS. Video Committee will show the&#13;
.0&#13;
Without a warning, rain drops&#13;
dappled the waters surface&#13;
The rhythm had been broken&#13;
You reached out for me,&#13;
but I could not see,&#13;
I've lost you to the horizon.&#13;
Kathy Andersen&#13;
Applications now&#13;
being accepted for&#13;
Ranger Editor for&#13;
Spring Semester&#13;
RESUMES MUST BE TURNED IN TO&#13;
DON KOPRIVA,&#13;
288 Tallent Hall by Nov. 11th&#13;
"&#13;
o&#13;
o&#13;
and&#13;
Dizzy excites. crowd&#13;
by Wendy Miller&#13;
Tuesday night, October 26th, Dizzy Gillespie shared his music and&#13;
himself with the many people who gathered to see him here at&#13;
Parkside. Dizzy, one of the main men responsible for 1*bop music,&#13;
see.ms to be a natural comedian. He had the audience laughing many&#13;
times, sometimes ,by just rolling his eyes. The person next to me&#13;
remarked, "Sure does have a good time; doesn't he?" He does. That is&#13;
· why it is so easy for the audience to have a good time. He began the&#13;
evening somewhat humorously, but very sincerely, "We're all&#13;
branches of one tree, leaves of one branch, and fruit there of."&#13;
He shared the stage well with his band, which consisted of bassistBenjamin&#13;
Franklin Brown, drummer-Mickey Roker, and guitaristRodney&#13;
Jones. Rodney has only been with the band for five months. He&#13;
ls twenty years old and very impressive. In a piece entitle Ole' he had&#13;
the audience transfixed. Dizzy also seemed to enjoy it but Dizzy seems&#13;
to enjoy everything.&#13;
Dizzy's solos were definitely distinctive. They came from deep&#13;
within himself and reached out to this spellbound audience. While&#13;
packing after the concert he said, "It is up to the artist to penetrate&#13;
and be something to the people out there. It's your duty and if you don't&#13;
get to them, you are derelict in your duty, and I don't want to be&#13;
in my duty." He was speaking il_l reference to his part in the Bahai&#13;
faith.&#13;
Dizzy incorporates African, Cuban, and Oriental styles into his&#13;
music. But that's not all that makes it so unique. He plays an upswept&#13;
trumpet that enables him to hear more of what he is playing. He has&#13;
been playing it that way for about twenty years, since his conventional&#13;
horn was bent at a party. ·&#13;
At one point during the concert he had the audience singing. During&#13;
another tune he had people clapping alternately to his playing. During&#13;
a fast blues tune, entitled The Chall!P, he did some scat singin_g, sort of&#13;
jumbled almost nonsensical words that move ·with the music. The&#13;
audience responded favorably to his vocals. When he asked if he&#13;
should do Salt Peanuts, he was greeted with enthusiastic encouragements&#13;
from the crowd. Salt Peanuts is obviously one of his&#13;
more famous vocal tunes. The audience was also enthused when he&#13;
announcedwhatthey were going to do , A Night in Tunesia, which is&#13;
practically a classic. They did a tune, Land of the Living Dead, from&#13;
one of their recent albums, Bahia. He said that the album is, "an&#13;
album destined to become the ·greatest secrets in show business". I&#13;
doubt it. If you were there, you know why. if you weren't there, you&#13;
, can buy the album and hear part of what you missed.&#13;
Dizzy turned fifty-eight on October twenty-first. On October twentysixth,&#13;
he and his band left Parkside and headed for Tuscon. I don't&#13;
know how he stays so young. Maybe it's the way he lives. He does live&#13;
and his music always will,&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 3, 1976 5&#13;
-11'4atje&#13;
A Bit of Warmth&#13;
I was a pebble tumbling through&#13;
cloudy darkness,&#13;
You were the sun, warming me&#13;
through the cool waters.&#13;
Leading me with your rays,&#13;
together we danced to the rhythm&#13;
of the waves.&#13;
Without a warning, rain drops&#13;
dappled the waters surface&#13;
The rhythm had been broken&#13;
You reached out for me,&#13;
but I could not see,&#13;
I've lost you to the horizon.&#13;
Kathy Andersen&#13;
Wendy Miller-8eptember 23rd&#13;
It&#13;
You've got it now&#13;
She's got it, he's got it&#13;
We've all got it&#13;
It's in the music&#13;
Can you feel it?&#13;
Let it take you&#13;
Teach you&#13;
Make you&#13;
Can you feel it?&#13;
Believe it&#13;
And if you loose it&#13;
Find it soon&#13;
Find it, keep it&#13;
Lose it, use it&#13;
It's in the music .&#13;
Applications now&#13;
being accepted for&#13;
Ranger Editor foi&#13;
Spring Semester&#13;
RESUMES MUST BE TURNED IN TO&#13;
DON KOPRIVA,&#13;
288 Tallent Hall by ov. 11th&#13;
• Salaried position demanding at least 20-30 hours a week&#13;
• Experience in journalism necessary&#13;
• Applicants will be advised of interview time and place&#13;
Call Don Kopriva for further details 553-2404&#13;
Thursday and Friday during the noon hours in Union Square. and&#13;
Main Place. the P.A.B. Video Committee will show the&#13;
" .0&#13;
0&#13;
0 &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November~3, 1976&#13;
Career------&#13;
-continued from pg. 1&#13;
workers. 11million, professional and teclmical workers· 9 mI11ion,&#13;
operatives - 6million, managers and admimistrators - 5 million, crafts&#13;
and kindred workers - 5 million, salesworkers- 3 million, non-farm&#13;
, laborers -1 million, farm workerll -less than 1million,&#13;
Workers with education will be in greater demand than workers&#13;
without education because in general jobs will 'continue to become&#13;
more complex and employment gr~ in areas. requiring the most&#13;
education will continue to have the higbest growth rate,&#13;
The National Education Association reports that the numher of&#13;
people graduating from college with teaching certification exceeds the&#13;
number of available teaching jobs by 90,950,Of the potential teachers&#13;
graduating in 1974, 47,9 percent are employed 85' teachers: Twelve&#13;
years ago this percentage was 74,4,&#13;
Areas in education where the field is least crowded are&#13;
mathematics, natural and physical sciences, distributive education,&#13;
industrial arts and agriculture, The most competitive areas are :&#13;
social studies, physical and health education, art and foreign&#13;
Ie C!&amp;lbt&#13;
*l&gt;tue et B&gt;b Oppt&#13;
featuring:&#13;
a variety of your candy&#13;
and nut favorties said&#13;
the old-fashioned way&#13;
'Periodicals&#13;
cancelled&#13;
Mon. thru Fri.&#13;
10 c.m. - .4 p.m.&#13;
toccred in Union Btzcrre&#13;
language, Labor Market Analysts from Wisconsin Job Service Offices&#13;
in Racine and Kenosha were contacted for information about the local&#13;
job markets, "&#13;
Paul P'\lIshorn from the Racine Job Service stated that presently&#13;
Racine has one of the highest unemployment rates for a major&#13;
manufacturing city, He said that industrial engineers, accountants,&#13;
computer programmers, insurance salespeople and clerical workers&#13;
are in the greatest demand' in Racine County, while liberal arts&#13;
majors, social workers and teachers are the most difficult&#13;
'professionals to place, Penshorn noted that accountants with a great&#13;
deal of experience were having trouble finding jobs because employers&#13;
are seeking accountants with 1 to 2'h years of experience who&#13;
can be hired for less money,&#13;
Ken Neil, the Kenosha Job Service Labor Market Analyst, stated&#13;
that students majoring in generalliheral arts subjects were as likely&#13;
to find a job with one major as with another since employers hiring&#13;
them in trainee positions were looking for personal characteristics&#13;
such as good attitudes, general intelligence, adaptability and evidence&#13;
of initiative rather than a specific major or an exceptionally high'&#13;
grade point average,&#13;
According to Neil, the single most important faelor to a liberal arts&#13;
graduate in finding a job is the selection of an occupational goal, Neil&#13;
finds in Kenosha that business majors are among the easiest college&#13;
graduates to place in jobs especially those with concentrations in&#13;
accounting or computers '&#13;
The information in this article represents only a small proportion of&#13;
material available in employment trends, Projection breakdowns for&#13;
some specific jobs-are given in the bulletin board display on the first&#13;
floor of Classroom Building, The Career Resource Center in 107&#13;
Tallent Hall contains more data on this subject including information&#13;
estimating the employment needs of e~ch state,&#13;
by Unda Knudtson&#13;
Due to the rising cost of&#13;
-periodical subscriptions, a&#13;
limited budget, and plans by&#13;
Library administrators to revise&#13;
their lists of periodicals to meet&#13;
current needs at Parkside ,&#13;
several periodical subscriptions&#13;
are slated to be cancelled from&#13;
Parkside's collection,&#13;
A list of these periodiCll1s is&#13;
being sent to all faculty members&#13;
for final review, Two copies of the&#13;
list will also be available to&#13;
students for review, Once copy&#13;
Why' do some people think&#13;
Bud..is sort of special?&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make a difference.)&#13;
When you say Budweiser ..,'you've said it all!&#13;
~ ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC .• ST. LOUIS&#13;
E.F.. Madrigrano&#13;
will be available for inspection at&#13;
the lnfonnation Desk and the&#13;
other copy will be posted on the&#13;
bulletin board just inside the&#13;
Library doors, I&#13;
This list is the result of the&#13;
coordination of previous faculty&#13;
input by the Library. It was&#13;
designed to insure that&#13;
, periodicals supplemental to&#13;
Parkside courses as well as some&#13;
other top periodicals in the&#13;
adademic fields if interest to&#13;
Parkside students would not be&#13;
cancelled,&#13;
Special&#13;
course&#13;
, Y&#13;
offered&#13;
,&#13;
A special course for parents of&#13;
children wi th learning&#13;
disabilities ,will 'be offered&#13;
Parkside on Tuesdays from 7: 30&#13;
to 9:30 p.rn. beginning Nov. 2 and&#13;
continuing through Dec, 7 in&#13;
Classroom Bldg, Room 31L&#13;
Registrations will be taken at&#13;
the first class meeting, Fees are&#13;
$36,25 for those laking the course&#13;
for one credit; $25 for those attentling&#13;
in a no-credit audit basis,&#13;
-, Diane German, director of&#13;
Parkside's learning disabilities&#13;
program said that the course is&#13;
designed to help parents ,of&#13;
children with learning&#13;
disabilities understand and cope&#13;
with the particular problems&#13;
'their children Iaee in trying to&#13;
realize their academic potential.&#13;
Discussions will center arouod&#13;
characteristics, behavior,&#13;
diagnosis and remediation of&#13;
children wi th learning&#13;
disabilities,&#13;
German will be the principal&#13;
instructor for the classes,&#13;
assisted 'by students training for&#13;
learning disabilities certification,&#13;
"June Reinert, instructor in&#13;
learning disabilities, will lead a&#13;
special session on behavioral&#13;
problems of learning tlisabled&#13;
children,&#13;
Additional information on the&#13;
program is available from&#13;
Parkside's Education Division&#13;
.Office,&#13;
Dancers-----&#13;
~ontlnued from pg. 1&#13;
, others from 2 to 3 p.m, They will&#13;
hold a demonstration and improvisational&#13;
session for area&#13;
high school students, Both&#13;
programs will be held in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater,&#13;
Information is available from the&#13;
Parkside Admissions Office,&#13;
The Utah Dance Theater,&#13;
fonned in 1966with a grant from&#13;
the Rockefeller Foundation and&#13;
, the cooperation of the University&#13;
of Utah, is dedic~ted to the&#13;
modern idiom in dance which&#13;
developed as a reaction to the&#13;
more confining movement of&#13;
classical ballet. Along with jazz,&#13;
modern dance is considered one&#13;
of two original American performing&#13;
art forms,&#13;
The company has a repertory&#13;
of 33 works by 17 choreographers&#13;
spanning the entire' range of&#13;
modern dance styles from&#13;
classics of modern dance to&#13;
experimental works including&#13;
jazz. drama, movement and&#13;
humor,&#13;
Their 'Parkside program will&#13;
include three major production&#13;
numbers, separated by two in-,&#13;
termissions: Jose Limon's&#13;
classic "There is a Time," first&#13;
choreographed in 1957for his own&#13;
company, Lynne Wimmer's "My&#13;
Brother's Keeper," a dance&#13;
based on John Steinbeck's Of&#13;
Mice and Men, and contemporary&#13;
choreographer Lar&#13;
Lubovitch's "Session."&#13;
Remaining programs this&#13;
semester in the Accent on&#13;
Enrichment Series are Chicago's&#13;
Second City improvisational&#13;
theater company on Nov, 19 and&#13;
coloratura soprano Roberta&#13;
Peters on Dec, 9,&#13;
,Accent on Enrichment&#13;
presents&#13;
UTAH REPERTORY&#13;
DANCE THEATER&#13;
III . mpresSlve ••• one of the best disciplined&#13;
troupes in the country." '&#13;
-- Clive Barnes. New York Times&#13;
Sp.rn. TONIGHT&#13;
COMM ARTS THEA:TER&#13;
Tickets at the door&#13;
$4.50 UW-P students.$5 Others&#13;
•&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November-: 3, 1976&#13;
Career------ continued from pg. 1&#13;
workers - 11 million, professional and technical workers - 9 million,&#13;
operatives - 6 million, managers and admimistrators - 5 million, crafts&#13;
and kindred ~orkers - 5 million, salesworkers- 3 million, non-farm&#13;
laborers -1 million, farm workers -less than 1 million.&#13;
Workers with education will be in greater demand than workers&#13;
without education because in general jobs will ·continue to become&#13;
more complex and employment gro\ith in areas requiring the most&#13;
education will continue to have the highest growth rate.&#13;
The ·National Education Association reports that the number of&#13;
people graduating from college with teaching certification exceeds the&#13;
number of available teaching jobs by 90,950. Of the potential teachers&#13;
graduating in 1974, 47 .9 percent are employed as teachers: Twelve&#13;
years ago this percentage was 74.4.&#13;
Areas in education where the field is least crowded are&#13;
mathematics, natural and physical sciences, distributive education,&#13;
industrial arts and agriculture. The most competitive areas are :&#13;
social studies, physical and health education, art and · foreign&#13;
featuring:_&#13;
a variety of your candy&#13;
and nut fovorties sold&#13;
the old-fashioned way&#13;
OPEN :&#13;
Mon. thru Fri.&#13;
10 o.m. - .C p.m.&#13;
Loco.ted in Union Sizo.rre&#13;
language. Labor Market Analysts from Wisconsin Job Service Offices&#13;
in Racine and Kenosha were contacted for information about the local&#13;
job markets. . ·&#13;
Paul P~nshorn from the Racine Job Service stated that presently&#13;
Raci:_ne has one of the highest unemployment rates for a major&#13;
manufacturing city. He said that industrial engineers, accountants,&#13;
computer programmers, insurance salespeople and clerical wo::-kc:rs&#13;
are in the greatest demand· in Racine County, while liberal arts&#13;
majors, social workers and teachers . are the most difficult&#13;
professionals to place. Penshorn noted that accountants with a great&#13;
deal of experience were having trouble finding jobs because employers&#13;
are seeking accountants with 1 to 2½ years of experience who&#13;
can be hired for less money.&#13;
.l{en Neil, the Kenosha Job Service Labor Market Analyst, stated&#13;
that students majoring in general liberal arts subjects were as likely&#13;
to find a job with one major as with another since employers hiring&#13;
them in trainee positions were looking for personal characteristics&#13;
such as good attitudes, general intelligence, adaptability and evidence&#13;
of initiative rather than a specific major or an exceptiqnally high.&#13;
grade point average.&#13;
According to Neil, the single most important factor to a liberal arts&#13;
graduate in finding a job is the selection of an occupational goal. Neil&#13;
finds in Kenosha that business majors are among the easiest college&#13;
graduates to place in jobs especially those with concentrations in&#13;
accounting or computers .&#13;
The information in this article represents orJy a small proportion of&#13;
material available in employment trends. Projection breakdowns for&#13;
some specific jobs are given in the bulletin board display on the first&#13;
floor of Classroom Building. The Career Resource Center in 107&#13;
Tallent Hall contains more data on this subject including information&#13;
estimating the employment needs of each state.&#13;
· Periodicals&#13;
cancelled·&#13;
by Unda Knudtson&#13;
Due to the rising cost of&#13;
-periodical subscriptions, a&#13;
limited budget, and plans by&#13;
Library administrators to revise&#13;
their lists of periodicals to meet&#13;
current needs at Par.kside,&#13;
several periodical subscription,s&#13;
are slated to be cancelled from&#13;
Parkside 's collection.&#13;
A list of these periodicals is&#13;
being sent to all faculty members&#13;
for final review. Two copies of the&#13;
list will also be available to&#13;
students for review. Once copy&#13;
will be available for inspection at&#13;
the Information Desk and the&#13;
other copy wili be posteq on the&#13;
bulletin board just inside the&#13;
Library doors.&#13;
This list is the result of the&#13;
coordination of previous faculty&#13;
input by the Library. It was&#13;
designed to insure that&#13;
. periodicals supplemental to&#13;
Parkside courses as well as some&#13;
other top periodicals in the&#13;
adademic fields if interest to&#13;
Parkside students would not be&#13;
cancelled.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
Special&#13;
course • I&#13;
offered&#13;
A special course for parents of&#13;
children with learning&#13;
disabilities .will 'be offered&#13;
Parkside on Tuesdays from 7: 30&#13;
to 9:30 p.m. beginning Nov. 2 and&#13;
continuing through Dec. 7 in&#13;
Classroom Bldg. Room 311.&#13;
Registrations will be taken at&#13;
the first class meeting. Fee~ are&#13;
$36.25 for those taking the course&#13;
for one credit; $25 for" those attending&#13;
in a no-credit audit basis.&#13;
Diane German, director of&#13;
Parkside's learning disabilities ·&#13;
program said that the course is&#13;
designed to help parents ·of&#13;
children with learning&#13;
disabilities understand and cope&#13;
with the particular problems&#13;
their children face in trying to&#13;
realize their academic potential.&#13;
Discussions will center around&#13;
charact eristics, behavior,&#13;
diagnosis and remediation of&#13;
children with learning&#13;
disabilities.&#13;
German will be the principal&#13;
instructor for the classes,&#13;
assisted 'by students training for&#13;
learning disabilities certification.&#13;
June Reinert, instructor in&#13;
learning disabilities, will lead a&#13;
special session on behavioral&#13;
problems of learning disabled&#13;
children.&#13;
Additional information on the&#13;
program is available from&#13;
Parkside's Education Division&#13;
Office.&#13;
-&#13;
Why do some people think&#13;
Bude is sort of special?&#13;
Dancers---- cont inued from pg. 1&#13;
others from 2 to 3 p.m. They will&#13;
hold a demonstration and improvisational&#13;
session for area&#13;
high school students. Both&#13;
programs will be held in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Information is available from the&#13;
Parkside Admissions Office.&#13;
modern dance styles from&#13;
classics of modern dance to&#13;
experimental works including&#13;
jazz, drama, movement and&#13;
humor.&#13;
·-&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make a difference.)&#13;
~&#13;
When you say Budweiser®, you've said it all. ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS&#13;
E.F '1adrigrano&#13;
The Utah Dance Theater,&#13;
formed in 1966 with a grant from&#13;
the Rockefeller Foundation and&#13;
. the cooperation of the University&#13;
of Utah, is dedic£ted to the&#13;
modern idiom in dance which&#13;
developed as a reaction to the&#13;
more confining movement of&#13;
classical ballet. Along with jazz,&#13;
modern dance is considered one&#13;
of two original American performing&#13;
art forms.&#13;
The company has a repertory&#13;
of 33 works by 17 choreographers&#13;
spanning the entire· range of&#13;
Their ·Parkside program will&#13;
include three major production&#13;
numbers, separated by two in- ·&#13;
termissions: Jose Limon's&#13;
classic "There is a Time," first&#13;
choreographed in 1957 for his own&#13;
company, Lynne Wimmer's "My&#13;
Brother's Keeper," a dance&#13;
based on John Steinbeck's Of&#13;
Mice and Men, and contemporary&#13;
choreographer Lar&#13;
Lubovitch's "Session."&#13;
Rema ining programs this&#13;
semester in the Accent on&#13;
Enrichment Series are Chicago's&#13;
Second City improvisational&#13;
theater company on Nov. 19 and&#13;
coloratura soprano Roberta&#13;
Peters on Dec. 9.&#13;
-Accent on 'Enrichment&#13;
presents&#13;
UTAH REPERTORY&#13;
DANCE TREATER&#13;
11 lmpressive •• • one o f the ·bes~ d i sc i p li ned&#13;
t roupes in t h~ coun t ry.11&#13;
-- Clive Ba rnes , New York T imes&#13;
8p.m. TONIGHT ·&#13;
COMM ARTS THEA:TER&#13;
Tickets at the door&#13;
$4.50 UW-P students,$5 Others &#13;
Worksheets&#13;
available&#13;
C a r e erE x p lor a t ion&#13;
Worksheets are now available in&#13;
the Career Resource Center for&#13;
students who 1wish to examine&#13;
their career interests, values,&#13;
preferred life styles, personality,&#13;
life goals, strengths and&#13;
weaknesses, in order to establish&#13;
career goals.&#13;
No appointment is necessary.&#13;
Interested students can pick up&#13;
Unit-I of the Career Exploration&#13;
Packet at 107 Tallent Hall or at&#13;
the Career Information Table on.&#13;
Tuesdays in the LLC. Concourse&#13;
between 9:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m.&#13;
-------- I I&#13;
I I&#13;
I&#13;
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I&#13;
t t&#13;
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t&#13;
V&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I I&#13;
I I&#13;
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I&#13;
I I&#13;
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I&#13;
, t&#13;
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,&#13;
I I&#13;
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I ~ t&#13;
,&#13;
T&#13;
I&#13;
t I&#13;
t ,&#13;
I t&#13;
I&#13;
S&#13;
,&#13;
I t&#13;
t t&#13;
L ~ t I&#13;
,&#13;
WANTED: A female Siamese kitten between&#13;
S. \I weeks old. Would be assured of having&#13;
an excellent home. with lots of love, care,&#13;
and attention. Please call 6:)7·1521. Wanted&#13;
ee.soce as possible.&#13;
Nt'e(l ride from south side of Milwaukee. Will&#13;
Pay for '12 of gas. Call 762·6231- Ask for Carol.&#13;
'"4 PONTIAC SPRING a-eeeee Metallic&#13;
Blue, red buckets. Rally wheels, AM-FM,&#13;
FM stereo. a-Track 52195. 634·G876.&#13;
WILL 00 any kind of typing at reasonable&#13;
rates. For information. call 652-3373.&#13;
WANTED; Sports writer for RANGER that&#13;
is lalented, gOOd in grammar, and most of all&#13;
~pendable. See Jean Tenuta In the&#13;
RANGER office, WLLC 0194.&#13;
YAN. E. THOMPSON Free Lance&#13;
Photography, Weddings and candid perIralts.&#13;
Phone 652-8862.&#13;
FOR SALE; Portable Stereo with Garrard&#13;
turnf&amp;ble. Asking SSG. Call 634·5305 after&#13;
sa:SJICOlI ""&#13;
11IE PARKSIDE RANGER No... mber S, 1m 7&#13;
Parkside. plllnne~'----------;---&#13;
continued from pg. 1&#13;
gradually there would be an intrusion on this. I wanted to keep it&#13;
always natural because so many campuses look like manicured lawns.&#13;
This is very important. This prairie is a very delicate ecology. You&#13;
know these grasses and weeds that grow here are really very&#13;
beautiful. .&#13;
RANGER: Do you feel your work and program at Lake County&#13;
Community College in Grayslake, lllinois is much more in line with&#13;
what happened here after it became apparent this campus stopped&#13;
growing in student population and new buildings?&#13;
OBATA: No, I think (Parkside) was designed so it couid be a five&#13;
thousand student campus or it could potentially be a 20,000 student&#13;
campus. Lake County was a bit smaller program. Its not as ambitious&#13;
a program. That's more a junior college type of program where&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 3&#13;
Concert, Barry Drake, at 2:30 in Union Square.&#13;
PSGA Senate Meeting 8 p.m, in Union 104.&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series: the Utah Repertory Dance Theater at 8&#13;
p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 4&#13;
Society of Physics Students meets at 2: 30p.m. in GR 230.&#13;
Movie, "~ASH," plays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Union Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $l.&#13;
Magic Visage Organization presents its first Poetry-Prose Reading 8 ~ -,&#13;
p.m. in the 2nd floor Overlook Lounge, UW-P Library. No admission&#13;
charge.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 5&#13;
Debate and Forensics Association meets at 12p.m. in WLLC 295and at&#13;
1:30 p.m. in CA 233. Everybody is welcome. For further information&#13;
contact Harvey Hedden or Diane Carlson, MWF, 10 a.m. to ip.m. in&#13;
WLLC 295.&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Women's swimming, UW-P vs. UW- Whitewater, at 4p.m. in the Phy.&#13;
Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Concert, Tom Chapin performs at 8 p.m. in the Union Theatre. Admission&#13;
is $2.50 for students, $3 for others.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 6&#13;
Men's cross country meet, the USTFF Mid-America Championships,&#13;
at 10 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. at Parkside.&#13;
Soccer Club Dance begins at9 p.rn. in Union Square.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 7&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1to 6p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Movie, "MASH," plays at 7:30p.m. in the Union Theatre. Admission is&#13;
$1.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 9 .&#13;
Movie, "The Passenger," plays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Theatre. Admission is $l.&#13;
Women's volleyball, UW-P, Chicago State, Lewis College, and Carthage&#13;
College competing at 6 p.m. in the Phy. Ed. Bldg:&#13;
Faculty Recital: Carol Irwin, mezzo soprano, and William Robinson,&#13;
piano at 8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
All events must be submitted to Ranger before Wednesday of the week&#13;
before publication.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Submarine&#13;
Sandllich&#13;
OPEN8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 WashingtonAle. 6M-2i7S&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%)' • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,ooo-mlle 011change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60"F. pour point)&#13;
• Saves 011 RACINE&#13;
yo~rAMSIOILdea~r YELLOW 'PAGES&#13;
I&#13;
Parkside could eventually have graduate schools. This • much deeper&#13;
facilities. That comes with supply and demand really, I think we are&#13;
still ill a kind of depressed period as far as construction but that's&#13;
because there has been an over supply of buildings.&#13;
RANGER: Are you so insulated in running such a big firm that you&#13;
cannot achieve artistic satisfaction in architecture and are you content?&#13;
OBATA: I have structured IllY office in such a way that I actually&#13;
design my buildings. That's very important to me or Iwon't have an&#13;
office. You are never content. You always want to improve on what&#13;
you do.&#13;
I&lt; video tape of Obata's address and the WLLC dedication ceremony&#13;
should be in the non-print area of the library this week.&#13;
Opentneeting---&#13;
continued from pg. 1&#13;
could indeed hold an illegal meeting without being penalized. Al, an&#13;
example, each member of a five-member committee could make a&#13;
motion to continue a meeting in open session (a total of five motions).&#13;
and then vote against each of the five notions. In this way each of the&#13;
members has satisfied the requirement that he-she "make a motion to&#13;
prevent the violation from occurring," but now the members could&#13;
vote to go into closed session. They are all open for prosecution, but&#13;
there is no provison for penalizing them.&#13;
This reporter consulted the Attorney General's office for an opinion&#13;
of this interpretation. According to Robert S. Vergeront of the office,&#13;
"I don't think anybody is going to do something like that.,.it is&#13;
assumed that public officials are honest."&#13;
"They (the committee members) could be prosecuted and they&#13;
could raise that defense, but the making of tbe motion and the vote&#13;
would have to be in 'good faith' ." according to Vergeront, who added&#13;
that he thought an article of this type would only serve to show officials&#13;
how to get around the 18w. "I don't think people should be digging&#13;
around looking for possible loopholes," he said. \&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
Stop Inl&#13;
shed e new Life on shoppng I&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
, From GocI's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
•&#13;
Professional Football Games&#13;
Shown On The&#13;
NEW&#13;
7 Foot Advent&#13;
Screen&#13;
Union Square&#13;
Sundays, noon - 6 p.m.&#13;
BEGINS NoY~7th&#13;
BEER, POCORN TOO!&#13;
Worksheets&#13;
available&#13;
Car·eer Exploration&#13;
Worksheets are now available in&#13;
the Career Resource Center for&#13;
students who , wish to examine&#13;
their career interests, values,&#13;
preferred life styles, personality,&#13;
life goals, strengths and&#13;
weaknesses, in order to establish&#13;
career goals,&#13;
No appointment is necessary,&#13;
Interested students can pick up&#13;
Unit -1 of the Career Exploration&#13;
Packet at 107 Tallent Hall or at&#13;
the Career Information Table on,&#13;
Tuesdays in the LLC_ Concourse&#13;
between 9:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m.&#13;
.r------7&#13;
t t&#13;
t E t f . t&#13;
t t ·t t&#13;
t t&#13;
, V t : . :&#13;
t t&#13;
, E t t t&#13;
t r&#13;
t ~ t&#13;
, N , t t&#13;
t t&#13;
t t&#13;
, T -&#13;
, t . t&#13;
t t&#13;
t t&#13;
t s t t t&#13;
t t&#13;
t t&#13;
WANTED: A female Siamese kitten betwe'en&#13;
5 • 9 weeks old. Would be assured of having&#13;
an excellent home, with lots of love, care,&#13;
and attention. Please call 637-1521 . Wanted&#13;
as soon as possible.&#13;
Need ride from south side of Milwaukee. Will&#13;
Pay for 11, of gas. Call 762-6231 . Ask for Carol.&#13;
1974 PONTIAC SPRING 3-speed Metallic&#13;
Blue, red buckets, Rally wheels, AM-FM,&#13;
FM stereo, 8-Track $2195. 634-0876.&#13;
WILL DO any kind of typing at reasonable&#13;
rates. For information. call 652-3373.&#13;
WANTED: Sports writer for RANGER that&#13;
is talented, good in grammar, and most of all&#13;
dependable. See Jean Tenuta in the&#13;
RANGER office, WLLC D194.&#13;
VAN . E. THOMPSON Free Lance&#13;
PhotQQraphy, weddings and candid portraits.&#13;
Phone 652-8862.&#13;
FOR SALE : Portable Stereo with Garrard&#13;
turntable. Asking sso. Cail 634-5305 after&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 3, 1976 7&#13;
Parkside. planne-P------- continued from pg. 1&#13;
gradually there would be an intrusion on this. I wanted to keep it&#13;
always natural because so many campuses look like manicured lawns.&#13;
This is very important. This prairie is a very delicate ecology. You&#13;
know these grasses and weeds that grow here are really very&#13;
beautiful.&#13;
RANGER: Do you feel your wqrk and program at Lake County&#13;
Community College in Grayslake, Illinois is much more in line with&#13;
what happened here after it became apparent this campus stopped&#13;
growing in student population and new buildings?&#13;
OBATA: No, I think (Parkside) was designed so it could be a five&#13;
thousand student campus or it could potentially be a 20,000 student&#13;
campus. Lake County was a bit smaller program. Its not as ambitious&#13;
a program. That's more a junior college type of program where&#13;
Wednesday,Nov.3&#13;
Concert, Barry Drake, at 2:30 in Union Square.&#13;
PSGA Senate Meeting 8 p.m. in Union 104.&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series: the Utah Repertory Dance Theater at 8&#13;
p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 4&#13;
Society of Physics Students meets at 2: 30 p.m. in GR 230.&#13;
Movie, "¥ASH," plays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Union ~eatre.&#13;
Admission is $1. ·&#13;
M~ic Visa~~ Organizatio_n presents its first Poetry-Prose Reading 8&#13;
p.m. in the 2nd floor Overlook Lounge, UW-P Library. No admission&#13;
charge.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 5&#13;
Debate and Forensics Association meets at 12 p.m. in WLLC 295 and at&#13;
1:30 p.m. in CA 233. Everybody is welcome. For further information&#13;
contact Harvey Hedden or Diane Carlson, MWF, 10 a.m. to i p.m. in&#13;
WLLC 295.&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4 p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Women's swimming, UW-P vs. UW- Whitewater, at 4 p.m. in the Phy.&#13;
Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Concert, Tom Chapin performs at 8 p.m. in the Union T~atre. Admission&#13;
is $2.50 for students, $3 for others.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 6&#13;
Men's cross country meet, the USTFF Mid-America Championships,&#13;
at 10 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. at Parkside.&#13;
Soccer Club Dance begins at 9 p.m. in Union Square.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 7&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1 to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Movie, "MASH," plays at 7:30p.m. in the Union Theatre. Admission is&#13;
$1.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 9 .&#13;
Movie, "The Passenger," plays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
Women's volleyball, UW-P, Chicago State, Lewis College, and Carthage&#13;
College competing at 6 p.m. in the Phy. Ed. Bldg~&#13;
Faculty Recital: Carol Irwin, mezzo soprano, and William Robinson,&#13;
piano at 8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
All events must be submitted to Ranger before Wednesday of the week&#13;
before publication.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Submarine&#13;
Sand11ich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington /We. 634-2373&#13;
• saves gas (up to 25%) ' • Saves wear&#13;
• saves maintenance (25,000-mile oil change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60of. pour point)&#13;
• saves oil RACINE&#13;
yo~rAMSIOILdea~er , YELLOW ' PAGES&#13;
•&#13;
Parkside could eventually have graduate schools. This ll much deeper&#13;
facilities. That comes with supply and demand really, I think we are&#13;
still ii'\ a kind of depressed period as far as construction but that's&#13;
because there has been an over supply of buildings.&#13;
RANGER: Are you so insulated in running such a big firm that you&#13;
cannot achieve artistic satisfaction in architecture and are you content?&#13;
&#13;
OBATA: I have structured ll}Y office in such a way that I actually&#13;
design my buildings. That's very important to me or I won't have an&#13;
office. You are never content. You always want to improve on what&#13;
you do.&#13;
Ir. video tape of Obata's address and the WLLC dedication ceremony&#13;
should be in the non-print area of the library this week. ·&#13;
Open tneeting---&#13;
continued from pg 1&#13;
could indeed hold an illegal meeting without being penalized. N. an&#13;
example, each mt.mber of a five-member corrunittee could make a&#13;
motion to continue a meeting in open session (a total of five motions).&#13;
and then vote against each of the five notions. In this way each of the&#13;
members has satisfied the requirement that he-she "make a motion to&#13;
prevent the violation from occurring," but now the members could&#13;
vote to go into closed session. They are all open for prosecution, but&#13;
there is no provison for penalizing them.&#13;
This reporter consulted the Attorney General's office for an opinion&#13;
of this inierpretation. According to Robert S, Vergeront of the office,&#13;
"I don't think anybody is going to do something like that . ..it is&#13;
assumed that public officials are honest."&#13;
"They (the committee members) could be prosecuted and they&#13;
could raise that defense, but the making of the motion and the vote&#13;
would have to be in 'good faith'," according to Vergeront, who added&#13;
that he thought an article of this type would only serve to show officials&#13;
how to get around the law. " I don't think people should be digging&#13;
around looking for possible loopholes," he said.&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SCJUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
Stop 111 I&#13;
shed e new Life on shoppngl&#13;
.,H777~MA °'~/&#13;
• Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
Professional Football Games&#13;
Shown· On The&#13;
NEW&#13;
7 Foot Advent&#13;
Screen&#13;
Union Square&#13;
Sundays, noon - 6 p.m.&#13;
BEGINS Nov.· 7th&#13;
BEER, POCORN TOO! &#13;
8 THE PARKSlDE RANGER November 3, 1976&#13;
One sweet Dream&#13;
~!~~&#13;
·=I!t~~ / ,,'.II&#13;
• I'· ·1: .• .~ ~I• • 1:tt.'I -, • .~-- .&#13;
• •&#13;
• This Coupon is •&#13;
• worth 50c on all •&#13;
• items listed below. •&#13;
• Good thru October •&#13;
• only! One Coupon •&#13;
• per customer per .•&#13;
• purchase. Happy •&#13;
• Holidays. Remember, •&#13;
• we never close. •&#13;
~ ••••• IIII!••• '&#13;
Hey, scholars, look at&#13;
these gift selections.&#13;
Everything for Mind BBody&#13;
is right here at&#13;
two stores .. ', your&#13;
stores with atmosphere.&#13;
• Recorda • Tapn. ALL new&#13;
releases stacked floor to&#13;
ceiling!&#13;
• Import albums. We're the&#13;
one store in town the t&#13;
carries foreign releases.&#13;
• Special order •. He rd-to-get&#13;
records and tapes with&#13;
guaranteed one day&#13;
delivery.&#13;
• 'ewelry. Hand crafted &amp;:&#13;
beautiful for style conscious&#13;
guys and gals.&#13;
• Tapntries. Mobiles. Incense&#13;
burners. Stash&#13;
boxes.&#13;
• Jncense. Sticks and cones&#13;
to tickle your nose.&#13;
• Pictures. Decoupage. Wall&#13;
hangings. Artists: Escher.&#13;
Pitre, Roger Dean,&#13;
Rosamond.&#13;
• UplinK to create any&#13;
atmosphere.&#13;
• Leather Goods. WalletsPouches&#13;
- Purses - BeltsHe&#13;
Is &amp;. accessories in&#13;
abundance, Beautifully&#13;
, handcrafted.&#13;
• Paraphernalia - Pipes,&#13;
Papers. Smoking Accessories.&#13;
Party necessities&#13;
from around the world.&#13;
• Waterbeds. We're&#13;
everything in were-beds.&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
SOW Seventh Avenue&#13;
654·3578&#13;
WEST&#13;
3910 Seventy Fifth Street&#13;
694·2404&#13;
Par~side hosts&#13;
championships&#13;
by Thomas Nolen&#13;
Parkside will be the site of the&#13;
USTFF Mid·America Championships&#13;
in which over. 500&#13;
runners will compete in ten&#13;
different races.&#13;
Included in this meet are the&#13;
Women's championships. Kim&#13;
Merritt, who was second in world&#13;
competition last October, place&#13;
third in this meet last year.&#13;
The Ra~er squad finished&#13;
their dual meet season with a :;':1&#13;
recoN! with wins over Marquette&#13;
and Loras over tbe weekend. This&#13;
is the fifth straight season that&#13;
Parkside had had only one dual&#13;
loss in cross country.&#13;
Ray Fredericksen led the&#13;
finishers with a time of 25&#13;
minutes. 44.2 seconds tbe second&#13;
fastest time ever on the Parkside&#13;
course.&#13;
Gary Priem was next with a&#13;
. second place at 26 minutes. 14&#13;
seconds. .&#13;
Parkside totalled 19 over&#13;
Marquette's 42 and 16over Loras'&#13;
46 Marquette's Dan Malloy was&#13;
th~Op Warrior in third and Dave&#13;
Smith was first for the Duhawks&#13;
in sixth place.&#13;
Other Parkside runners&#13;
were Jeff Miller, fourth; Mike&#13;
Rivers, fifth; Lee Allinger,&#13;
eighth; Greg Julien, ninth; Jim&#13;
Heiring, 11th; Bill Werve, 13th .&#13;
and John VanDen Brandt, 16th.&#13;
.On Spring, West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge Plaza.&#13;
632-6151&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Soccer team&#13;
hosts meets&#13;
by Jean Tenuta it out of the net. The ball slipped&#13;
from his hands and an opposing&#13;
player was standing there, ready&#13;
to kick the ball in.&#13;
Parkside's lone goal was&#13;
scored by Chris Carter on a cross&#13;
from Mike Boyajian. Carter was&#13;
running full speed. then dove to&#13;
hit the ball "like a shot" into the&#13;
net, according to Henderwon,&#13;
"Western Michigan's goalie&#13;
was unbelieveilble.He-was an AllAmerican&#13;
last year and he showed&#13;
us why," said Henderson. "We&#13;
made 23 shots on goal and he&#13;
made 18 saves."&#13;
Western Michigan's coach was&#13;
impressed with Ranger steve&#13;
Sendelbach, stating: "he's the&#13;
finest I've seen all year."&#13;
"Our defense was super. Last&#13;
year, in a game like this, we&#13;
would have found some way to&#13;
lose, but we at least kept on the&#13;
same level and I think it's&#13;
significant that we can play&#13;
, under a pressure situation this&#13;
way." said Henderson. "I'm very&#13;
optimistic for the remaining&#13;
matches of the season."&#13;
Parkside's soccer squad hosts&#13;
UW-Plateville. Lakeland and Mt.&#13;
Scenario Friday and Saturday.&#13;
Tentative pairings for the&#13;
tourney are the No. 2 seeded&#13;
Rangers and No. 3 Platteville,&#13;
and Lakeland. No. 4 seeded vs.&#13;
NO.1 seeded Mt. Scenario. One of .&#13;
the matches will be at 1 p.m, the&#13;
other at 3 p.m.&#13;
Mt. Scenario has a season&#13;
record of 8-3-1. Parkside 6-5-2.&#13;
Platteville. 3-7and Lakeland, 2-l;.&#13;
Lasttime out, the Rangers tied&#13;
Western Michigan 1-1 Saturday .&#13;
"We played a super game,"&#13;
said Coach Hal Henderson. "It's&#13;
as good as we've played all year.&#13;
We shouldn't have tied."&#13;
Western Michigan got lucky&#13;
and happened to be in the right&#13;
place at the right time in the first&#13;
half. Parkside's goalkeeper,&#13;
Bernie Hefner, who, according to&#13;
Henderson. played just a super&#13;
game, had trouble intne rainwith&#13;
the wet ball when trying to throw&#13;
werbu'b&#13;
'ourt&#13;
_&amp;RISTA\lRA&#13;
After traveling to Whitewater a&#13;
week ago, Parkside's women's&#13;
swim team will host the&#13;
Warhawks this Friday at 4 p.m.&#13;
in their last dual meet.&#13;
Whitewater defeated the&#13;
Rangers 94-18, but there were&#13;
still highlights for the squad to&#13;
enjoy.&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch. turning in&#13;
her usual leading performance,&#13;
took two seconds in the 50 free&#13;
and 50back, and a-third in the 100&#13;
back.&#13;
But the Rangers had more than&#13;
that to feel good about as they&#13;
saw their teammate Lili Crnich&#13;
cut 4.2 seconds off of her best&#13;
time in the 100 breast, 4.55&#13;
. seconds off of her part in the 200&#13;
.. free relay and 3.5seconds in the no&#13;
free. She was third in the 100&#13;
breast.&#13;
"I was very pleased and excited&#13;
about her outstanding&#13;
improvement," said Coach Barb&#13;
Lawson.&#13;
_Judy Iverson added to the list&#13;
of good things about the meet,&#13;
taking two seconds in the 200 free&#13;
and 50 breast and a fourth in the&#13;
100 free.&#13;
Gail Olson had three thirds in&#13;
the 50, 100. and 500 free events&#13;
Sally Francis also had a third&#13;
in '.he 200 iree, a fourth in the 50&#13;
Volleyb.all&#13;
team loses&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
The women's volleyball team&#13;
travels to Deerfield, Illinois&#13;
Friday to play Trinity College in&#13;
a 7 p.m. match.&#13;
Parkside was originally sup--&#13;
posed to play UW-Stout and uw·&#13;
Eau Claire Friday and Saturday,&#13;
but .it was decided to drop the&#13;
meets since the team will be&#13;
traveling to Menomonee the next&#13;
Friday and Saturday anyway, for&#13;
the WWIAC Tournament.&#13;
The Rangers will also host&#13;
Carthage, Lewis University and&#13;
Chicago State next Tuesday,&#13;
Carthage will play Lewis and&#13;
Parkide will play Chicago State&#13;
at 6 p.m.&#13;
Last Saturday, the' Rangers&#13;
went to Milwaukee to battle&#13;
UWM's Panthers, but lost 15-9,&#13;
15-10. Parkside had defeated&#13;
UWM in their desson opener, 15-&#13;
11; 17-15. •&#13;
On October 26, the squad&#13;
bombed Marquette for the Iirst&#13;
time ever 15-6, 15-4 but then lost&#13;
io a very strong Carroll team 14-&#13;
16,12-15 and 3-15in a double dual&#13;
at Carroll.&#13;
"We've improved as the season&#13;
had moved along," Moss said. "I&#13;
credit this to hustle and desire on&#13;
the part of the team. They believe&#13;
they're capable of playing with&#13;
anyone and though they're short&#13;
and young, they are scrappy&#13;
and quick."&#13;
Season ends&#13;
by Jean Tennta&#13;
SUNDAY mos. &amp; TUES.&#13;
ALL YOU \~&lt;? SPAGHETTI&#13;
WANT \Sy..~ FEAST $1.Q5&#13;
Co,,' ~ \ I'~ INCLUDES Salad. Italian C~\'\' \\.-,0 Bread and a fREE GLASS (,y..'\ \\ '(o.~ ,0 Of WINE....&#13;
WiN ..... The ,&#13;
Album of Your&#13;
Ch'oice.&#13;
Free PIZZI tellve:y'&#13;
Club Hlghview&#13;
5035 60th Street·&#13;
Phone: 652·8737&#13;
AIt,.,0 •.,1". C~I.k,.,S.e.~IfII,lefl,lI, 8,.,&#13;
O'EN 4 •.•. It I •.•.&#13;
liP&#13;
breast and a fifh in the 100 free.&#13;
The Hangers were last out of&#13;
. five teams in a meet at Carthage&#13;
last Saturday.&#13;
. Host team Carthage and UW·&#13;
Eau Claire tied for first, Carroll&#13;
was third followed by UW-River&#13;
Falls.&#13;
In addition 19 three individual&#13;
school records set by Leitch. the&#13;
200 free relay also set a team&#13;
record at 2;00.7 with Olson,&#13;
Iverson, Francis and Leitch&#13;
swimming the event.&#13;
"Our second place in the relay&#13;
was a good way to end the meet,"&#13;
said Lawson.&#13;
Leitch crone in fourth in the&#13;
three events she set records for.&#13;
In the 50 free, her time was 29.06,&#13;
in .the 50 back. 35.2 and in the 100&#13;
hack, I: 16.9.&#13;
Olson placed sixth twice in the&#13;
5Qbreast and 100free and tenth in&#13;
the 50 free. Iverson was seventh&#13;
in the 200 free, eighth in the 100&#13;
breast and tenth in the 100 free.&#13;
Francis picked up two eighths in&#13;
the 200 free and 500 free and&#13;
Crnich was ninth in the 50 breast.&#13;
"It was a good meet, generally,&#13;
but the officiating was poor,"&#13;
according to Coach Lawson.&#13;
"Whistles were used instead of&#13;
pistols for starting the races and&#13;
close finishes were decided upon&#13;
. only one officials' judgement."&#13;
r. "'s;,c:s....&#13;
Have You'Turned Us&#13;
on Lately?&#13;
r&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 3, 1976&#13;
one sweet Dream&#13;
Hey, scholars, look at&#13;
these gift selections.&#13;
Everything for Mind &amp;&#13;
Body is right here at&#13;
two stores . . ·. your&#13;
stores with atmosphere.&#13;
• Records &amp; Tapes. ALL new&#13;
releases stacked floor to&#13;
ceiling!&#13;
• Import albWD8. We're the one store in town that&#13;
carries foreign releases.&#13;
• Special orders. Hard-to-get&#13;
records and tapes with&#13;
guaranteed one day&#13;
delivery.&#13;
• Jewelry. Hand crafted &amp;&#13;
beautiful for style conscious&#13;
guys and gals.&#13;
• Tapestries. Mobiles. Incense&#13;
burners. Stash&#13;
boxes.&#13;
• Incense. Sticks and cones to tickle your nose.&#13;
•Pictures.Decoupage. Wall&#13;
hangings. Artists: Escher,&#13;
Pitre, Roger Dean,&#13;
Rosamond.&#13;
• Lighting to create any&#13;
atmosphere.&#13;
• Leather Goods. Wallets -&#13;
Pouches - Purses - Belts -&#13;
Ha ts &amp; accessories in&#13;
abundance. Beautifully&#13;
handcrafted.&#13;
• Paraphernalia - Pipes.&#13;
Papers. Smoking Accessories.&#13;
Party necessities&#13;
from around the world.&#13;
• Waterbeds. We're&#13;
everything in Waterbeds.&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
50to Seventh Avenue&#13;
654-3578&#13;
WEST&#13;
3910 Seventy Fifth Street&#13;
694-2404&#13;
Parkside hosts&#13;
championships·&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
1.&#13;
--, ,,&#13;
j -· ··-___,..&#13;
Volleyh.all&#13;
team loses&#13;
by Thomas Nolen&#13;
Parkside will be the site of the&#13;
USTFF Mid-America Championships&#13;
in which over. 500&#13;
runners will compete in ten&#13;
different races.&#13;
Soccer team&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
The women's volleyball team&#13;
travels to Deerfield, Illinois&#13;
Friday to play Trinity College in&#13;
a 7 p.m. match.&#13;
Included in this meet are the&#13;
Women's Championships. Kim&#13;
Merritt, who was se·cond in worJd&#13;
competition last October, place&#13;
third in this meet last year.&#13;
hosts meets Parkside was originally sup--&#13;
posed to play UW-Stout apd UWEau&#13;
Claire Friday and Saturday,&#13;
but jt was decided to drop the&#13;
meets since the team will be&#13;
traveling to Menomonee the next&#13;
Friday and Saturday anyway, for&#13;
the WWIAC Tournament.&#13;
The Ranger squad finished&#13;
their dual meet season with a ~l&#13;
record with wins over Marquette&#13;
and Loras over the weekend. This&#13;
is the fifth straight season that&#13;
Parkside had had only one dual&#13;
loss in cross country.&#13;
Ray Fredericksen led the&#13;
finishers with a time of 25&#13;
minutes, 44.2 seconds the second&#13;
fastest time ever on the Parkside&#13;
course.&#13;
Gary Priem was next with a&#13;
· second place at 26 minutes, 14&#13;
seconds. ·&#13;
Parkside totalled 19 over&#13;
Marquette's 42 and 16 over Loras'&#13;
46 Marquette's Dan Malloy was&#13;
the top Warrior in third and Dave&#13;
Smith was first for the Duhawks&#13;
in sixth place.&#13;
Other Park~ic!~ runners&#13;
were Jeff Miller, fourth ; Mike&#13;
Rivers, fifth; Lee Allinger,&#13;
eighth; Greg Julich, ninth; Jim&#13;
Heiring, 11th; Bill Werve, 13th&#13;
and John Van Den Brandt, 15th.&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside's soccer squad hosts&#13;
UW-Plateville, Lakeland and Mt.&#13;
Scenario friday and Saturday.&#13;
Tentative pairings for the&#13;
tourney are the No. 2 seeded&#13;
Rangers and No. 3 Platteville,&#13;
and Lakeland, No. 4 seeded vs.&#13;
No. 1 seeded Mt. Scenario. One of&#13;
the matches will be at 1 p.m. the&#13;
other at 3 p.m.&#13;
Mt. Scenario has a season&#13;
record of 8-3-1, Parkside 6-5-2,&#13;
Platteville, 3-7 and Lakeland, 2-6.&#13;
Last.time out, the Rangers tied&#13;
Western Michigan 1-1 Saturday.&#13;
"We played a super game,"&#13;
said Coach Hal Henderson. "lt's&#13;
as good as we've played all year.&#13;
We shouldn't have tied."&#13;
Western Michi_gan got lucky&#13;
and happened to be in the right&#13;
place at the right time in the first&#13;
half. Parkside's goalkeeper,&#13;
Bernie Hefner, who, according to&#13;
Henderson, played just a super&#13;
game, had trouble in tne rainwith&#13;
the wet ball when trying to throw&#13;
SUNDAY moN. &amp; TUES.&#13;
ALL YOU \~~ SPAGHETTI&#13;
WANT ,':5~~ FEAST Jl.QS&#13;
~~ \ \ Q~ INCLUDES: Salod. Italian&#13;
C&#13;
\'l.\C~\,,;.. .__o \\·'),O Bread and a FREE GLASS&#13;
l' \\ ~,,. OF WINE ....&#13;
On Spring. West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge Plaza .&#13;
632-6151-&#13;
~erbu's&#13;
,OUTt&#13;
PUa &amp; RIST.AURA&#13;
WIN ..... The \&#13;
Album of Your&#13;
Ch'Oice.&#13;
·95&#13;
IIP I&#13;
Have You ·Turned Us&#13;
on Lately?&#13;
it out of the net. The ball slipped&#13;
from his hands. and an opposing&#13;
player was standing there, ready&#13;
to kick the ball in.&#13;
Parkside's lone goal was&#13;
scored by Chris Carter on a cross&#13;
from Mike Boyajian. Carter was&#13;
running full speed, then dove to&#13;
hit the ball "like a shot" into the&#13;
net, according to Henderwon.&#13;
"Western Michi~an's goalie&#13;
was unbelieveable.He-was an AllAnierican&#13;
last year and he showed&#13;
us why," said Henderson. "We&#13;
made 23 shots on goal and he&#13;
made 18 saves."&#13;
Western Michigan's coach was&#13;
impressed with Ranger Steve&#13;
Sendelbach, stating: "he's the&#13;
finest rve seen all year.,,&#13;
"Our defense was super. Last&#13;
year, in a game like this, we&#13;
would have found some way to&#13;
lose, but we at least kept on the&#13;
same level and I think it;s·&#13;
significant that we can play&#13;
. under a pressure situation this&#13;
way." said Henderson. "I'm very&#13;
optimistic for the remaining&#13;
matches of the season."&#13;
The Rangers will also host&#13;
Carthage, Lewis University and&#13;
Chicago State next Tuesday,&#13;
Carthage will play Lewis and&#13;
Parkide will play Chicago State&#13;
at 6 p.m.&#13;
Last Saturday; the· Rangers&#13;
went to Milwaukee to battle&#13;
UWM's Panthers, but lost 15-9,&#13;
15-10. Parkside had defeated&#13;
UWM in their desson opener, 15-&#13;
11; 17-15. -&#13;
On October 26, the squad&#13;
bombed Marquette for the fi.i·st&#13;
time ever 15-6, 15-4 but ~en lost&#13;
io a very strong Carroll team 14-&#13;
16, 12-15 and 3-15 in a double dual&#13;
at Carroll.&#13;
"We've improved as the season&#13;
had moved along," Moss said. "I&#13;
credit this to hustle and desire on&#13;
the part of the team. They believe&#13;
· they're capable of playing with&#13;
anyone and though they're short&#13;
and young, they are scrappy&#13;
and quick."&#13;
Season ends&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
After traveling to Whitewater a&#13;
week ago, Parkside's women's&#13;
swim team wrn host the&#13;
Warhawks this Friday at 4 p.m.&#13;
in their last dual meet.&#13;
Whitewater defeated the&#13;
Rangers 94-18, but there were&#13;
still highlights for the squad to&#13;
enjoy.&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch, turning in&#13;
her usual leading performance,&#13;
took two seconds in the 50 free&#13;
and 50 back, and a-third in the 100&#13;
back.&#13;
But the Rangers had more than&#13;
that to feel good about as they&#13;
saw their teammate Lili Crnich&#13;
cut 4.2 seconds off of her best&#13;
time in the 100 breast, 4.55&#13;
. seconds off of her part in the 200&#13;
free relay and 3.5 seconds in thP. no&#13;
free. She was third in the 100&#13;
breast.&#13;
"I was very pleased and excited&#13;
about her outstanding&#13;
improvement," said Coach Barb&#13;
Lawson.&#13;
Judy Iverson added to the list&#13;
of good things about the meet,&#13;
taking two seconds in the 200 free&#13;
and 50 breast and a fourth in the&#13;
100 free.&#13;
Gail Olson had three thirds in&#13;
the 50, 100, and 500 free events&#13;
Sally Francis also had a third&#13;
int.he 200 free, a foutth in the 50&#13;
breast and a fifh in the 100 free.&#13;
The Hangers were last out of&#13;
· five teams in a meet at Carthage&#13;
last Saturday.&#13;
· Host team Carthage and UWE.au&#13;
Claire tied for first, Carroll&#13;
was third followed by UW-River&#13;
Falls.&#13;
In addition t9 three individual&#13;
school records set py Leitch, the&#13;
200 free relay also . set a team&#13;
record at 2:00.7 with Olson,&#13;
Iverson, Francis and Leitch&#13;
swimming the event.&#13;
"Our second place in the relay&#13;
was a good way to end the meet,"&#13;
said Lawson.&#13;
Leitch crone in fourth in the&#13;
three events she set record!; for.&#13;
In the 50 free, her time was 29.06,&#13;
in .the 50 back, 35.2 and in the 100&#13;
back, 1: 16.9.&#13;
Olson placed sixth twice in the&#13;
5Q breast and 100 free and tenth in&#13;
the 50 free. Iverson was seventh&#13;
in the 200 free, eighth in the 100&#13;
breast and tenth in the 100 free.&#13;
Francis picked up two eighths in&#13;
the 200 free and 500 free a.nd&#13;
Crnich was n.i.nU1 in the 50 breast.&#13;
''It was a good meet, generally,&#13;
but the officiating .was poor,"&#13;
according to Coach Lawson.&#13;
"Whistles were used instead of&#13;
pistols for starting the races and&#13;
close finishes were decided upon&#13;
only one officials' judgement."&#13;
Free Pizza D·ellve:yCl&#13;
ub Highview&#13;
5035 60th Street ·&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
Altt ••hvttl19 Chlek11, s,11httt1, ~avloll, 8111&#13;
OPEN 4 t-•· to 1 •·•· </text>
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              <text>Guskin meets students&#13;
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              <text>Volume 5, issue 8</text>
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              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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              <text>------~------------------t&#13;
~/f:.e_&amp;e-------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
- Vol. V. No. 8 Wednesday. Odober 27, 1976&#13;
Guskin meets, students&#13;
by Mona Maillet.&#13;
On Thursday, October 21,&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin held his&#13;
first open meeting of the year&#13;
with students., He was pleased&#13;
with the turnout of ahout 15&#13;
people, saying that a similar&#13;
meeting during the summer&#13;
attracted only one persori and that&#13;
,anything ahove that was an&#13;
improvement.&#13;
The first question brought up&#13;
was .regarding the communication&#13;
discipline. Guskin&#13;
was asked when' the discipline&#13;
would hire new permanent&#13;
professors. (Dr. Richard&#13;
Carrington is the only one at&#13;
present.) He replied that&#13;
November 15 is the deadline for,&#13;
position allocations for the fall&#13;
1977 semester.&#13;
Most colleges. would do this&#13;
during the spring semester and&#13;
by doing this earlier. Parkside&#13;
would not only get a hetter choice&#13;
of applicants, but would also have&#13;
them well prepared for t!:ie fall&#13;
- semester, he Said.&#13;
Guskin also expressed great&#13;
hopes for the 'business program.&#13;
He stated that the keyto building&#13;
. the program is the hirij'lg ~f a new&#13;
chairman.&#13;
He said that Parkside is&#13;
especially for.tunate in that it is a&#13;
relatively new institution and&#13;
that the chairman will be able to&#13;
build up the program as he sees&#13;
fit without having traditions of&#13;
the university restrict him.&#13;
. He added that Parkside needs a&#13;
first rate business program to&#13;
properly .serve the community&#13;
and a good chairman would be&#13;
able to fulfill this need.&#13;
Kai Nail, a student; asked&#13;
about the naming of the Union.&#13;
Guskin replied that after consulting&#13;
with Kiyoko Bowden,&#13;
president of the PSGA, and a few&#13;
of the people involved with the&#13;
Union, the name Parkside 'Union&#13;
was agreed upon. He said that&#13;
traditionally unions are named&#13;
after the campuses, and added&#13;
that there is no union within the&#13;
UW system named the Student&#13;
Union.&#13;
Guskin was then' asked his&#13;
feelings on student involvement&#13;
in their education.-He replied that&#13;
he strongly feels that students&#13;
'should get involved in the&#13;
university'. Every studentorienled&#13;
committee has at least,&#13;
one student on it. He stated that&#13;
-&#13;
student government assists him&#13;
m making decisions on studentrelated&#13;
matters.&#13;
Regarding having students&#13;
visit him Guskin said, "If a&#13;
student 'A'ants to see me, I won't&#13;
say no to a student."&#13;
He also expressed regrets at&#13;
lack of student participation in&#13;
student government. This is not a&#13;
problem restricted to commuter&#13;
colleges as even non-commuter&#13;
colleges have a voter turnout of&#13;
about 10 percent, he said.&#13;
A student asked Guskin about&#13;
the ability to govern through&#13;
increasing committees. Guskin&#13;
answered that he consults&#13;
committees, not governs through&#13;
them. He feels that as an aftermath&#13;
of Watergate, people&#13;
don't trust one another as much,&#13;
and through committees, they try&#13;
to influence each other.&#13;
In regard to people in administrative&#13;
positions, he said,&#13;
"People assume that people in&#13;
authority are SOB's trying to&#13;
manipulate the hell out of&#13;
everyhody." He feels that this is&#13;
a poor opinion to have and that by&#13;
proper interaction between&#13;
administration and students this&#13;
..I&#13;
:;&#13;
~ ......~&#13;
f&#13;
:&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin&#13;
Counseling services&#13;
&lt;ontinued on pg. 6 reorganized&#13;
Turnout one of poorest Development will handle the&#13;
student population from 18 to 24&#13;
years old. The office of&#13;
Community Student Services will&#13;
handle tbe 25 year and older&#13;
students.&#13;
. Jolmson pointed out that as the&#13;
groups would have different&#13;
needs and problems, the offices&#13;
will be divided to better flll those&#13;
differing needs. The offices will,&#13;
of course, have some overlapping&#13;
features.&#13;
Johnson hopes the counseling&#13;
services will be totally changed&#13;
within three months. "We are&#13;
going to have to help Parkside&#13;
students get ready for the&#13;
future," said Johnson. "We are&#13;
going to have to help !pe UW-P&#13;
communities, Racine and&#13;
Kenosha, get ready for the&#13;
changes of tbe future. To do this&#13;
successfully, we have to belp the&#13;
students maximize their lives&#13;
through efficient humane&#13;
counseling.'&#13;
by Chris ClauseD&#13;
On OCtober 18 Student Services&#13;
started a reorganization program&#13;
to improve counseling services to&#13;
UW-P students.&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
Academic Support and Student&#13;
Services, Clay Johnson explained&#13;
the reorganization, llPreviously&#13;
students had to go lrom box A to&#13;
B to C. With the reorganization,&#13;
students should be able to go to&#13;
one counselor for most of his or&#13;
her counseling needs.&#13;
"The concept is for the counselor&#13;
to get to know the student&#13;
completely and the problems&#13;
faced by the student, thus&#13;
enabling him to help solve their&#13;
problems.&#13;
"The counselors will he able to&#13;
belp in all areas Yel keep active&#13;
in their specialties."&#13;
The reorganization will divide&#13;
the counseling services into two&#13;
parts. The office of Student&#13;
Elections seat •&#13;
SIX&#13;
by Bruce WagDer Joan Fuetterer each receiving 13&#13;
votes. The elections committee&#13;
will decide the fate of the three&#13;
since there are no formal&#13;
procedures regarding such an&#13;
occurance.&#13;
In the business management&#13;
divisfon, Paula Lowecke was the&#13;
only candidate.&#13;
Write-ins will comprise the rest&#13;
of the 'divisional seats with Dan&#13;
Nielsen in labor economics;&#13;
Laura Bruno in humanities, and&#13;
Terrence Zuehlsdorf in .science.&#13;
The social science, applied&#13;
science, and allocations seats had&#13;
no declared candidates, 'and will&#13;
temporaruy remain vacant.&#13;
PSGA also had three amenoments&#13;
to the -eonstitution on the&#13;
election hallot. The first amendment&#13;
providing for a constitutional&#13;
referendum to amend&#13;
the PSGA constitution, or to&#13;
request an advisory referendum&#13;
passed, 65 to 12.&#13;
The' second amendment,&#13;
providing for an appellate court&#13;
within the judical branch of&#13;
. PSGA passed, 57 to 19.&#13;
The third amendment regarding&#13;
the date of elections, also&#13;
passed by a count of 57 to 19.&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association held&#13;
their fall elections this week, with&#13;
. six seats in the Senate and seats&#13;
in the segregated fees allocation&#13;
committee being filled.&#13;
The election turnout was one of&#13;
the Poorest ever at Parkside with&#13;
approximately 2 percent of the&#13;
student bndy voting.&#13;
The only race was for the two&#13;
undeclared divisional seats&#13;
, where Gigi Osborne was the only&#13;
clear winner with a three way tie&#13;
for the other seat between&#13;
Richard Folsom, Carol Bohn, and&#13;
Committees created&#13;
by Jobn McKioskey • committee to handle this."&#13;
How long, then, will It be before&#13;
the committee will bI' able to&#13;
function? According to MIchael&#13;
Marron, a member of the&#13;
University. Committee (which&#13;
now has the responsibility of&#13;
'appointing the Academic Action&#13;
Committee members), the&#13;
University Committee will act&#13;
"very rapidly, I expect ...within a •&#13;
few wceks at the latest."&#13;
Marron said that because of&#13;
the University committee's fixed&#13;
agenda the appointments were&#13;
not made at Its October 20&#13;
meeting, but the matter will be&#13;
taken up at the next meeting.&#13;
"There are students waiting for&#13;
action on waiver requests, 80 we&#13;
want to act as expeditiously as&#13;
possible," he said.&#13;
The new committee replaces ,a&#13;
handful of other committees..ovlth&#13;
similar functions, some of which&#13;
were dissolved wben the College&#13;
of Science and SocIety and the&#13;
School of Modern Industry&#13;
contlnU4icl on PSI. ,&#13;
At its October meeting held on&#13;
Tuesday, October 19, the&#13;
Parkside Faculty Senate gave&#13;
final approval to the creation of&#13;
two new cominittees.&#13;
The first committee created&#13;
was the Academic Actions&#13;
Cominittee, which will receive&#13;
and act on student appeals for&#13;
special academic consideration.·&#13;
At this time there are a number&#13;
of students awaiting. the&#13;
organization of this committee&#13;
because they wish to appeal&#13;
academic actions, and before the&#13;
Senate took action there was no&#13;
committee to receive their appeals.&#13;
•&#13;
According to Leon Applebaum,&#13;
who is the person to whom&#13;
students first take their requests,&#13;
"about half a dozen students are&#13;
waiting right now" appeals of&#13;
actions that Ap1llehaum refused&#13;
to grant. He added: "I don't know&#13;
what will happen when the word&#13;
gets out that there is now a&#13;
Kenosha artist George Pollard peses wltb his por- took place throughout lbe UDiversll)fincluding a plano&#13;
trait of the late Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie whlcb be recital by formal artist-in-residence Carmen VIla wbo&#13;
presented to Parkslde at Sunday's formal dedication of stann,ed the andlence with ber rendltlons of Mozart,&#13;
lbe Wyllie Ubrary-Learulag Center and OpeD HODse. Debussey, Uszt and Gershwin.&#13;
Several performaDces, dlsplnys, .and demonstratioDs l ~.......ii •&#13;
Guskin meets. students&#13;
by Mona Maillet .&#13;
On Thursday, October 21&#13;
· Chancellor Alan Guskin held hi~&#13;
first open meeting of the year&#13;
with students. · He was pleas~&#13;
with the turnout of about 15&#13;
people, saying that a similar&#13;
. meeting during the summer&#13;
attracted only one persori and that&#13;
. anything above that was an&#13;
improvement.&#13;
The first question brought up&#13;
was .regarding the communication&#13;
discipline. Guskin&#13;
was asked when · the discipline&#13;
would hire new permanent&#13;
professors. (Dr. Richard&#13;
Carrington is the only one at&#13;
present.) He replied that&#13;
November 15 is the deadline forposition&#13;
allocations for the fall&#13;
1977 semester.&#13;
Most colleges. would do this&#13;
during the spring semester and&#13;
by doing this earlier. Parkside&#13;
would not only get a better choice&#13;
,of-applicants, but would also have&#13;
them well prepared for the fall&#13;
semester, he said.&#13;
Guskin- also expressed great&#13;
hopes for the ·business program.&#13;
He· stated that the key ·to building&#13;
- the program is the hiriJ'}g (?f a new&#13;
chairman.&#13;
He said that Parkside is&#13;
especially fottunate in that it is a&#13;
relatively new institution and&#13;
that the chairman will be able to&#13;
build up the program as he sees&#13;
fit without having traditions of&#13;
the university restrict him.&#13;
- He added that Parkside needs a&#13;
first rate business program to&#13;
properly ,serve the community&#13;
and a good chairman would be&#13;
able to fulfill this need.&#13;
Kai Nall, a studenG asked&#13;
about the naming of the· Union.&#13;
Guskin replied that after consulting&#13;
with Kiyoko Bowden,&#13;
president of the PSGA, and a few&#13;
of the people involved with the&#13;
Union, the name Parkside Union&#13;
was agreed upon. He said that&#13;
traditionally unions are named&#13;
after the campuses, and added&#13;
that there is no union within the&#13;
UW system named the Student&#13;
Union.&#13;
Guskin was then · asked his&#13;
feelings on student involvement&#13;
in their education. He replied that&#13;
he strongly feels that students&#13;
should get involved in the&#13;
university. Every student-&#13;
~riented committee has at least&#13;
one student on it. He stated that&#13;
Turnout one of poorest&#13;
Elections seai&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association held&#13;
their fall elections this week, with&#13;
-six seats in the Senate and seats&#13;
in the segregated fees allocation&#13;
committee being filled.&#13;
The election turnout was one of&#13;
the poorest ever at Parkside with&#13;
approxim1;1tely 2 percent of the&#13;
student body voting.&#13;
The only race was for the two&#13;
undeclared divisional seats&#13;
. where Gigi Osborne was the only&#13;
clear winner with a three way tie&#13;
for the other seat between&#13;
Richard FoJ:;om, Carol Bohn, and&#13;
Joan Fuetterer each receiving 13&#13;
votes. The elections committee&#13;
will decide the fate of the three&#13;
since there are no formal&#13;
procedures regarding such an&#13;
occurance.&#13;
In the business management&#13;
division, Paula Lowecke was the&#13;
only candidate.&#13;
Write-ins will comprise the rest&#13;
of the divisional seats with Dan&#13;
Nielsen in labor economics;&#13;
Laura Bruno in hwnanities, and&#13;
"Terrence Zuehlsdorf in .science.&#13;
The social science, applied&#13;
science, and allocations seats h,ad&#13;
no declared candidates, and will&#13;
- student government assists him&#13;
in making decisions on studentrelated&#13;
matters.&#13;
Regarding having students&#13;
visit hlnl Guskin said, "If a&#13;
student \\rants to see me-, I won't&#13;
say no to a student."&#13;
He also expressed regrets at&#13;
lack of student participation in&#13;
student government. This is not a&#13;
problem restricted to commuter&#13;
colleges as even non-commuter&#13;
colleges have a voter turnout of&#13;
about 10 percent, he said.&#13;
A student asked Guskin about&#13;
the ability to govj:.!rn through&#13;
increasing committees. Guskin&#13;
answered that he consults&#13;
committees, not governs through&#13;
them. He feels that as an aftermath&#13;
of Watergate, people&#13;
don't trust one another as much,&#13;
and through committees, they try&#13;
to influence each other.&#13;
In regard to people in administrative&#13;
positions, he said,&#13;
"People assume that people in&#13;
authority are SOB's trying to&#13;
manipulate the hell out of&#13;
everybody." He feels that this is&#13;
a poor opinion to have and that by&#13;
proper interaction between&#13;
administration and students this&#13;
continued on pg, 6&#13;
• SIX&#13;
temporaruy remain vacant.&#13;
PSGA also had three amenaments&#13;
to the -constitution on the&#13;
election ballot. The first amendment&#13;
providing for a constitutional&#13;
referendum to amend&#13;
the PSGA constitution, or to&#13;
req\lest an advisory _referendum&#13;
passed, 65 to 12.&#13;
The second amendment,&#13;
providing for an appellate court&#13;
within the judical branch of&#13;
. PSGA passed, 57 to 19.&#13;
The third amendment regarding&#13;
the date of elections, also&#13;
passed by a count of 57 to 19.&#13;
Kenosha artist George Pollard poses with his por- took place throughout the University including a piano&#13;
trait of the late Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie whi_ch he recital by formal artist-in-residence Carmen Vila who&#13;
presented to Parkside at Sunday's formal dedication of stunn_ed the audience with her renditions of Mozart,&#13;
the Wyllie Llbrary-Learning Center and Open House. Debussey, Ll~zt and Gershwin.&#13;
Several performances, displays, .and demonstrations&#13;
ir,: ParksidP----------&#13;
R ANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No. 8 Wednesday, October 27, 1976&#13;
Chancellor Alon Guskin&#13;
Counseling services&#13;
reorganized&#13;
by Chris Clausen&#13;
On October 18 Student Services&#13;
started a reorganization program&#13;
to improve counseling services to&#13;
UW-P students.&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
Academic Support and Student&#13;
Services, Clay Johnson explained&#13;
the reorganization, !'Previously&#13;
students had to go kom box A to&#13;
B to C. With the reorganization,&#13;
students should be able to go to&#13;
one counselor for most of his or&#13;
her counseling needs.&#13;
"The concept is for the counselor&#13;
to get to know the student&#13;
completely and the problems&#13;
faced by the student, thus&#13;
enabling him to help solve their&#13;
problems.&#13;
"The counselors will be able to&#13;
help in all areas yet- keep active&#13;
in their specialties."&#13;
The reorganization will divide&#13;
the counseling services into two&#13;
parts. The office of Student&#13;
Development will handle the&#13;
student population from 18 to 24&#13;
years old. The office of&#13;
Community Student Services will&#13;
handle the 25 year and older&#13;
students.&#13;
. Johnson pointed out that as the&#13;
groups would have different&#13;
needs and problems, the offices&#13;
will be divided to better fill thos~&#13;
differing needs. The offices will,&#13;
of course, have some overlapping&#13;
features.&#13;
Johnson hopes the counseling&#13;
services will be totally changed&#13;
within three months. "We are&#13;
going to have to help Parkside&#13;
students get ready for the&#13;
future," said Johnson. "We are&#13;
going to have to help tpe UW-P&#13;
communities, Racine and&#13;
Kenosha, get ready for the&#13;
changes of the future. To do this&#13;
successfully, we have to help the&#13;
students maximize their lives&#13;
through efficient humane&#13;
counseling."&#13;
Coininittees created&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
At its October meeting held on&#13;
Tuesday, October 19, the&#13;
Parkside Faculty Senate gave&#13;
final approval to the creation of&#13;
two new committees.&#13;
The first committee created&#13;
was the Academic Actions&#13;
Committee, which will receive&#13;
and act on student appeals for&#13;
special academic consideration.&#13;
At this time there are a number&#13;
of students awaiting _ the&#13;
organization of this committee&#13;
because they wish to appeal&#13;
academic actions, and before the&#13;
Senate took action there was no&#13;
committee to receive their appeals.&#13;
'&#13;
According to Leon Applebaum,&#13;
who is the person to whom&#13;
students first take their requests,&#13;
"about half a dozen students are&#13;
waiting right now" appeals of&#13;
actions that Aplllebaum refused&#13;
to grant. He added: "I don't know&#13;
what will happen when the word&#13;
gets out that there is now a&#13;
c."Ommittee to handle this."&#13;
How long, then, will it be before&#13;
the committee will be able to&#13;
function? According to Michael&#13;
Marron, a member of the&#13;
University_ Committee (which&#13;
now has the responsibility of&#13;
appointing the Academic Action&#13;
Committee members), the&#13;
University Committee will act&#13;
"very rapidly, I expect... within a&#13;
few weeks at the latest."&#13;
Marron said that because of&#13;
the University committee's fixed&#13;
agenda the appointments were&#13;
not made at its October 20&#13;
meeting, but the matter will be&#13;
taken up at the next meeting.&#13;
"There are students waiting for&#13;
action on waiver requests, so we&#13;
want to act as expeditiously as&#13;
possible," he said.&#13;
The new committee replaces a&#13;
handful of other committees ..with&#13;
similar functions, some of which&#13;
were dissolved when the College&#13;
of Science and Society and the&#13;
School of Modern Industry&#13;
continued on pg. 6 &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27. 1976&#13;
POLITICAL FORUM&#13;
Camejo endorsed&#13;
by Carol Burke&#13;
.Edltor's Note: Ms. Burke is the chalrpersou of the Milwaukee Young&#13;
Socialist AlUance.&#13;
10 the September ~ Political Forum, Phil Hermann critiqued&#13;
presidential candidates Ford, Carter. Maddox, and McCarthy. Her,&#13;
lJUII)II neglected to mention the only campaign that I believe offers a&#13;
real positive alternative to voters in 1976·, the Socialist Workers&#13;
campaign of Peter camejo forpresident and Willie Mae Reid for vicepresident.&#13;
.&#13;
For a start, compare the!e background facts about Camejo and Reid&#13;
with the records of any of the candidates mentioned in Hermann's&#13;
article: Peter Camejo, 35, has been a member of the Socialist Workers&#13;
party since 1959.Active in the student movements of the 1960's, he was,&#13;
leading defender of the Cuban revolution and a 1eader of the massive&#13;
movement against the Vietnam War. Camejo actively supports the&#13;
desegregation struggle and participated in the May 17, 1975march,&#13;
sponsored by the NAACP, against racist attacks on school busing in&#13;
Boston. He has campaigned against layoffs and cutbacks across the'&#13;
country and joined the AFL-CIO march (or jobs in Washington, D.C.,&#13;
on April 26, 1975.He had campaigned for the right of every woman to&#13;
choose abortion and in support of the Equal Rights Amendment.&#13;
•Camejo, fluent in Spanish, is the first U.S. citizen of Latin American&#13;
descent to be a candidate for president of the United states.&#13;
On Willie Mae Reid: When Reid rim for mayor of Chicago on the&#13;
Socialist Workers ticket in early 1975, she was the fir.:;t candidate for&#13;
mayor under any party label other than Democrat or Republican to&#13;
obtain ballot status there since the 1930's. Reid, 36, grew up in Memphis,&#13;
Tennessee,wh~re she participated in civil rights struggles that&#13;
ended the segregated seating of Blacks on city buses. After moving to&#13;
Chicago, she helped organize the Illinois Women's Abortion Coalition,&#13;
a group fighting for women's right to choose abortion. A member of&#13;
the NAACP. Reid is campaigning in support of school desegregation&#13;
and the right of Black students to use busing to achieve equal&#13;
education.&#13;
-&#13;
Vote against Dems&#13;
by Ja~ Grassell&#13;
Myths abound in any electoral campaign, for such is the stuff of&#13;
politics. This year, the most pervasive and hence pathetic is the myth&#13;
that a vote for Carter and the Democrats is a vote for "change."&#13;
Change from what? Fact is that Wisconsin has:&#13;
Democratic State Senate&#13;
Democratic State Assembly&#13;
Democratic Governor&#13;
Democratic Congressional delegation .&#13;
Democratic Senators.&#13;
The Democrats have had control of Congress for 40 of the past 44&#13;
years. Every excess, loophole and inequity instituted in our lifetimes&#13;
has been passed by Democrats.&#13;
A vote fQl'the ruling Democratic majority represents not a vote for&#13;
"change" but a continuation and even an intensification of the present&#13;
trends: an inept foreign policy, a devalued and Inflated currency and&#13;
an ever increasing governmental intrusion into our lives and&#13;
livelihoods.&#13;
When you vote on November 2nd, vote for genuine change.&#13;
WU1IamPetrie for Congress&#13;
Stan York for the Senate&#13;
i IJY TheP~ . ~".. .. RANGER&#13;
necnurlly~""'.'Iv. of tboM tile'"by&#13;
the students. facutty or administration Of&#13;
P.nt.tIIe. Editorla' a"" B.. lnnrsn·U17 J&#13;
Newsroom SD-t2tS.&#13;
TM hrk ........... ls w,m.n ancllcllted&#13;
. by the ttucIetIts of 1M Unlv .... ny Of&#13;
: wl,c ... iln-P.rk,ld. who ar. ,.Ioly&#13;
...... MIM. tor "' MftwI.1 ...llcy .nd&#13;
coo'.n'. Opinion, .xpr .... d or. no'&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIIlF: .... nnlne Sip.....&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGERS: Cotlly BnlOk&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Tom CooPer&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR: .ruce WlIMf'&#13;
DEPARTMENtS:&#13;
.. A...,lnlstrotien-rotic,": Jolin McKloskey&#13;
.. SMI: Dove Brandl&#13;
.. StvdOnt ...... p'. sttNken:&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debbi. Bauer&#13;
_ SPORTS EDITOR: Je.n T... u'a&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS: jeffrey I_ ,wencki. Bill Barke&#13;
COpy IM)ITOR: Jull. Lan ..&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: Van Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION: Sue Marquard' ~&#13;
.. STAFF: Wendy Miller. Terri Gayhart. Robert Hoffman, Chris Clausen. Thomas Nolen,&#13;
Diane Carlson. Douglas Edenhauser. Mary Kay Ohmer, Larry DonneilY. Phil Hermann,&#13;
Ramona Maillel, Bob Jembois, Beverly Pella, Linda Knudtson, Karin LaFourler. JUdy&#13;
'!'rudrUng, scon Reinhar.d. Philip L. Livingston.&#13;
AD SALESPERSONS, Joe Landa, Rick Flasch&#13;
~.If:.The Parkside&#13;
~&#13;
.RANGER&#13;
, .&#13;
Dear Students:&#13;
It seems hard for us to call&#13;
Parkside our alma mater. That&#13;
term is saved for prestigious&#13;
institutions like Princeton, or&#13;
Oxford, or Yale. Yet Parkside is&#13;
or soon will be our alma mater. If&#13;
we are not to be embarrassed by&#13;
our alma mater, what it stands&#13;
for, what it is, and what it will be,&#13;
we, you and I must participate in&#13;
its development.&#13;
Unlike Oxford or Princeton,&#13;
Parkside has no traditions. There&#13;
is no set chatacter that one can&#13;
automatically associate with&#13;
UW-P. We ean and must have&#13;
some idea about what Parkside&#13;
will become. Perhaps pari of the&#13;
problem lies in our lack of&#13;
tradition and our lack of a clear&#13;
picture of what Parkside will be&#13;
ten years from now.&#13;
One possible solution requires&#13;
that ~ryone sit quietly back&#13;
and let the decisions be made for&#13;
. us. You see that everywhere now.&#13;
"I'm onl)' here fot' four years"-&#13;
syndrome. Parkside is no different&#13;
from any place else in the&#13;
country. People are ·sltting&#13;
passively waiting for someone to&#13;
do something, for them or to&#13;
them.&#13;
Get .uP and care.&#13;
It's not enough to react to&#13;
things. Sometimes self-respect or&#13;
self interest require that people&#13;
initiate. If you tolerate rhetoric&#13;
about the evils of passivity, then&#13;
your .right to outrage and indignation&#13;
have already been cOopted.&#13;
The clHlptor and the cooptee&#13;
were one and the same&#13;
--EDITOR IAL/OPINION&#13;
lI&#13;
\&#13;
'--- '&#13;
The ·Socialist Workers Party candidates are calling for "A am of&#13;
Rights for Working People." This campaign platform proposes the&#13;
following basic rights: I.) The right to a job; 2.) The right to an&#13;
adequate income protected against inflation; 3.) Right to a free&#13;
education; 4.) Right to free medical care; 5.) Right to a secure&#13;
retirement; 6.) Right of oppressed national minorities to control their&#13;
own affairs; 7.) Right to know the truth ahout and decide the political&#13;
policies that affect our-lives; 8.) Right to know the truth about and&#13;
decide economic. and-social policies. _&#13;
A society that puts human needs ahove profits could implement this&#13;
program. Neither the Democratic or 'Republican party can advance&#13;
the interests of workingpecpte and the oppressed in American society,&#13;
Both parties serve the interests of the .cqrporate and financial barons&#13;
"who wield the power in America today. We can defeat the serious&#13;
attacks on our rights and living standards only through our own united&#13;
action, independent of the Democrats and Republicans.&#13;
The Socialist Workers Party candidates urge the formation of a&#13;
labor party based on the immense power of the trade unions as a way&#13;
t6 defend and advance the interests of working people and all the&#13;
oppressed in the political arena.&#13;
Camejo and-Reid are campaigning for a new society - a socialist&#13;
society where industry and science will be put at the service of the vast&#13;
majority to improve their lives. Wars, racism, the oppression of&#13;
women, and all other forms of human degradation will no longer exist.&#13;
The Socialist Workers campaign believes this is a realistic goal- and a&#13;
necessary one if humanity is to survive.&#13;
Camejo and Reid will be on the ballot on November 2, along with&#13;
Robert SChwarz, SWP candidate for U,S. Senate from Wisconsin.&#13;
People who support the ideas of the SocialistWorkers campaign can&#13;
get involved, not only by voting November 2, but by working with the&#13;
Socialist Workers Party and the Young Socialist Alliance, a national&#13;
organization based on the high schools and college campuses which&#13;
supports the Camejo, Reid campaign. We can be. and need to beactive&#13;
365days a year to advance the struggle for socialism.'&#13;
Room for everybody&#13;
person. YOU.&#13;
ITyou want to set a tradition at&#13;
Parkside that could easily be&#13;
instituted, why not start with a&#13;
tradition of strong, active student&#13;
government. It couid start with&#13;
your participation. /&#13;
There is room for anyone and&#13;
everyone. People with just a little&#13;
time can· help as well as those&#13;
with a lot. Each of us has been hit&#13;
by Parkside's failings. We can do&#13;
something about them. I'm&#13;
issuing a plea on behalf of those&#13;
students who c""e to Parkside&#13;
after you and I have been long&#13;
gone. Do something now that&#13;
should have been done for you&#13;
• before you came. Set a tradition&#13;
of strong, active student&#13;
government.&#13;
'The old line about involvement&#13;
in politics applies here at&#13;
Parkside as much as in state or&#13;
local government.&#13;
Almost all universitY committees&#13;
have student&#13;
representatives in their structure.&#13;
Not even half have studentrepresentatives&#13;
sitting on them.&#13;
'No one wants the work. One&#13;
student cannot moniter the activities&#13;
of all the committees.&#13;
Even is one student could be&#13;
found who wanted to, h.... he&#13;
wouldn't be a slUdent for long&#13;
(there isa lot of wqrk to be done.)&#13;
And it's fairly obvious that one&#13;
student does not a university&#13;
make. One student cannot&#13;
possibly know about all the pointof-view,&#13;
needs and interests of a&#13;
student population as diverse as&#13;
Parkside's.&#13;
•&#13;
Please help us. Contact your&#13;
student government. There's&#13;
room for everybody.&#13;
-, Sincerely,&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
President-Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Donations&#13;
requested&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
.Chi-Rho Center, Campus&#13;
Ministry at Parkside, wishes to&#13;
call to your atiention a special&#13;
need of someone whose work has&#13;
come to mean a lot to many&#13;
people in the Racine area.&#13;
Louise Hunter is the founder&#13;
and director of theLoui.re Hunter&#13;
Love and Charity Club in Racine.&#13;
She has served her conununity&#13;
. wen through the Love and&#13;
Charity Club.&#13;
She serves poor people in the&#13;
RAcine area who for various&#13;
reasons are not able to receive&#13;
assistance from the other social&#13;
agencies. She sells clothes,&#13;
household items, and appliances .&#13;
for a few cents to a few dollars io&#13;
people who couid otherwise not&#13;
afford them. She.Often gives food .&#13;
and used merchandise to people&#13;
wbo have no money.&#13;
Louise Hunter and her husband&#13;
and family of 18 children have a&#13;
special need right now. Last&#13;
February their borne burned and&#13;
one of their children died in the&#13;
fire. The Welfare'Department&#13;
obtained temporary housing for&#13;
the Hunter family, but as of this&#13;
fall the Hunter family has. been&#13;
told that they must secure other&#13;
housing.&#13;
continued on po. 3&#13;
J&#13;
·::,;:_•· ..... _...... . .... - ·-·-&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE R'ANGER October 27, 197.6&#13;
POLITICAL FORUM&#13;
i · Jr.. The Parksid ~&#13;
. RANGER&#13;
--EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
Camejo endorsed&#13;
byCarol Burke&#13;
.Editor's Note: Ms. Burke is the chairperson of the Milwaukee Young&#13;
Socialist Alliance.&#13;
The So'cialist Workers Party candidates are calling for "A Bill of&#13;
Rights for Working People." This campaign platform proposes the&#13;
following basic rights: 1.) The right to a job; 2.) The rtght to an&#13;
adequate income protected against inflation; 3.) Right to a free&#13;
education; 4.) Right to free medical care; 5.) Right to a secure&#13;
retirement; 6.) Right of oppressed national minorities to control their&#13;
own affairs; 7.) Right to know the truth about and decide the political&#13;
policies that affect our ,li\'.es; 8.) Right to know the truth about and&#13;
decide economic, anctsocial policies.&#13;
In the September ~ Political Forum, Phil Hermann critiqued&#13;
presidential candidates Ford, Carter, Maddox, and McCarthy. Hermru;m&#13;
neglected to mention the only campaign that I believe offers a&#13;
real positive alternative to voters in 1976 · - the Socialist Workers&#13;
campaign of Peter Camejo for"president and Willie Mae Reid for vicepresident.&#13;
·&#13;
For a start, compare the~e background facts about Camejo and Reid&#13;
with the records of any of the candidates men_tioned in Hermann's&#13;
article: Peter Camejo, 35, has been a member of the Socialist Workers&#13;
party since 1959. Active in the student movements of the 1960's, he was,&#13;
leading defender of the Cuban revolution and a leader of the massive&#13;
movement against the Vietnam War. Camejo actively supports the&#13;
desegregation struggle and participated in the May 17, 1975 march-,&#13;
sponsored by the NAACP, against racist attacks on school busing in&#13;
Boston. He has campaigned against layoffs and cutbacks across the '&#13;
country and joined the AFL-CIO march {or jobs in Washington, D.C.,&#13;
on April 26, 1975. He had campaigned for. the right of every woman to&#13;
choose abortion and in support of the Equal Rights Amendment.&#13;
A society that puts human needs above profits cou!d implement this&#13;
program. Neither the Democratic or Republican party can advance&#13;
the interests of working people and the oppressed in American society.&#13;
Both parties serve the interests of the cqrporate and financial barons&#13;
who wield the power in America today. We can defeat the serious&#13;
attacks on our rights and living standards only through our own united&#13;
action, independent of the Democrats and Republicans.&#13;
The Socialist Workers Party candidates urge the formation of a&#13;
labor party based on the immense power of the trade unions as a way&#13;
to defend and advance the interests of working people and all the&#13;
oppressed in the political arena.&#13;
• Camejo, fluent in Spanish, is the first U.S. citizen of Latin American&#13;
descent to be a candidate for president of the United States.&#13;
Camejo and Eeid are campaigning for a new society- a socialist&#13;
society where industry and science will be put at the service of the vast&#13;
majority to improve their lives. Wars, racism, the oppression of&#13;
women, and all other forms of human degradation will no longer exist.&#13;
The Socialist Workers campaign believes this is a realistic goal - and a&#13;
necessary one if humanity is to survive.&#13;
•&#13;
On Willie Mae Reid: When Reid ran for mayor of Chicago on the&#13;
Socialist Workers ticket in early 1975, she was the fir~t candidate for&#13;
mayor under any party label other than Democrat or Republican to&#13;
obtain ballot status there since the 1930's. Reid, 36, grew up in Memphis,&#13;
Tennessee, wh~re she participated in civil rights struggles that&#13;
ended the segregated seating of Blacks on city buses. After moving to&#13;
Chicago, she helped organize the Illinois Women's Abortion Coalition,&#13;
a group fighting for women's right to choose abortion. A member of&#13;
the NAACP. Reid is campaigning in support of school desegregation&#13;
and the right of Black students to use busing to achieve equal&#13;
education.&#13;
Camejo and Reid will be on the ballot on November 2, along with&#13;
Robert Schwarz, SWP candidate for U.S. Senate from Wisconsin.&#13;
People who support the ideas of the Socialist.Workers campaign can&#13;
get involved, not only by voting November 2, but by working with the&#13;
Socialist Workers Party and the Young Socialist Alliance, a national&#13;
organization based on the high schools and college campuses which&#13;
supports the Camejo - Reid campaign. We can be .- and qeed to beactive&#13;
365 days a year to advance the struggle for socialism.&#13;
Vote against Dents&#13;
by Jay'Grassell&#13;
Myths abound in any electoral campaign, for such is the stuff of&#13;
politics. This year, the most pervasive and hence pathetic is the myth&#13;
that a vote for Carter and the Democrats is a vote for "change."&#13;
Change from what? Fact is that Wisconsin has:&#13;
Democratic State Senate&#13;
Democratic State Assembly&#13;
Democratic Governor&#13;
Democratic Congressional delegation ·&#13;
Democratic Senators.&#13;
The Democrats have had control of Congress for 40 of the past· 44&#13;
years. Every excess, loophole and inequity instituted in our lifetimes&#13;
has been passed by Democrats.&#13;
A vote fQr the ruling Democratic majority represents not a vote for&#13;
"change" but a continuation and even an intensification of the present&#13;
trends: an inept foreign policy, a devalued and inflated currency and&#13;
an ever increasing governmental intrusion into our lives and&#13;
livelihoods.&#13;
When you vote on November 2nd, vote for genuine change.&#13;
William Petrie for Congress&#13;
Stan York for the Senate&#13;
~ If:. The Parkside . ~ ~ ' .&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Th• Parkside Rang..- is written and edited&#13;
· by the students of the Unlvtrslty of&#13;
: Wl1coniln-Park1ide who are solely&#13;
rHponslltl• tor Its editorial policy and&#13;
content. Opinions exprened are not&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: JHnnlne Slpsma&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGERS: Catlly ernak&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Tom Cooper&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR: Bruce Wigner&#13;
DEPARTMENTS:&#13;
.. Administration-Policies: John McKloskey .. SMI: Dave Brandt&#13;
.. Student groups &amp; speakers:&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR : Debbie Bauer&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Jean Te11uta&#13;
necessarily repreHntatlve of those held by&#13;
the 1tvclenfl, faculty or administration of&#13;
Parkside. Editorial and 8u1inHr S53-2217;&#13;
Newsroom S53-22'S.&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS : jellrey j. swencki, Bill Barke&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Julie Lange&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: Van Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION: Sue Marquardt - .. STAFF : Wendy Miller, Terri Gayhart. Robert Hollman, Chris Clausen, Thomas Nolen,&#13;
Diane Carlson, Douglas Edenhauser, Mary Kay Ohmer, Larry Donneily, Phil Hermann,&#13;
Ramona Maillet, Bob Jambois, Beverly Pella, Linda Knudtson, Karin LaFourier, Judy&#13;
"!'rudrung, Scott Reinhar.d, Philip L. Livingston.&#13;
AD SALESPERSONS : Joe Landa, Rick Flasch&#13;
I&#13;
\&#13;
Room for everybody&#13;
Dear Students:&#13;
It seems hard for us to call&#13;
Parkside our alma mater. That&#13;
term is saved for prestigious&#13;
institutions like Princeton, or&#13;
Oxford, or Yale. Yet Parkside is&#13;
or soon will be our alma mater. If&#13;
we are not to be embarrassed by&#13;
our alma mater, what it stands&#13;
for, what it is, arid what it will be,&#13;
we, you and I must participate in&#13;
its development.&#13;
Unlike Oxford or Princeton,&#13;
Parkside has no traditions. There&#13;
is no set character that one can&#13;
autDmatically associate with&#13;
UW-P. We ean and must have&#13;
some idea about what Parkside&#13;
will become. Perhaps part of -the&#13;
problem lies in our lack of&#13;
tradition and our lack of a clear&#13;
picture of what Parkside will be&#13;
ten years from now.&#13;
One possible solution requires&#13;
that ewryone sit quietly back&#13;
and let the decisions be made for&#13;
. us. You see that everywhere now.&#13;
"I'm only here for four years"-&#13;
syndrome. Parkside is no different&#13;
from any place else in the&#13;
country. People are sitting&#13;
passively waiting for someone to&#13;
do something for them or to&#13;
them.&#13;
Get _up and care.&#13;
It's not enough to react to&#13;
things. Sometimes self-respect or&#13;
self interest require that people&#13;
initiate. If you tolerate rhetoric&#13;
about the evils of passivity, then&#13;
your .right to outrage and indignation&#13;
have already been coopted.&#13;
The c~ptor and the cooptee&#13;
were one and the same&#13;
person. YOU.&#13;
If you want to set a tradition at&#13;
Parkside that could easily be&#13;
instituted, why not start with a&#13;
tradition of strong, active student&#13;
government. It could start with&#13;
your participation.&#13;
There is room for anyone and&#13;
everyone. People with just a little&#13;
time can· help as well as those&#13;
with a lot. Each of us has been hit&#13;
by Parkside's failings. We can do&#13;
something about them. I'm&#13;
issuing a plea on behalf of those .&#13;
students who Ciffie to Parkside&#13;
after you and I have been long&#13;
·gone. Do something now that&#13;
should have been done for you&#13;
• before you came. Set a tradition&#13;
of strong, active student&#13;
government.&#13;
The old line about involvement&#13;
in politics applies here at&#13;
Parkside as much as in state or&#13;
local government. ·&#13;
Alrhost all university committees&#13;
have student&#13;
representatives in their structure.&#13;
Not even half have studentrepresentatives&#13;
sitting on them.&#13;
No one wants the work. One&#13;
student cannot moniter the activities&#13;
of all the committees.&#13;
Even is one student could be&#13;
found who wanted to, he-she&#13;
wouldn't be a student for long&#13;
( there is a lot of work to be done.)&#13;
And it's fairly obvious that one&#13;
student does not a university&#13;
make. One student cannot&#13;
possibly know about all the pointof-view,&#13;
needs and interests of a&#13;
student population as diverse as&#13;
Parkside's.&#13;
Please help us. Contact your&#13;
student government. There's&#13;
room for everybody.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
President-Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Donations&#13;
requested&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Chi~Rho Center, Campus·&#13;
Ministry at Parkside, wishes to&#13;
call to your attention a special&#13;
need of someone whose work has&#13;
come to mean a lot to many&#13;
people in the Racine area.&#13;
Louise Hunter is the founder&#13;
and director of the Louise Hunter&#13;
Love and Charity Club in Racine.&#13;
She has served her community&#13;
· wen through the Love and&#13;
Charity Club.&#13;
She serves poor people in the&#13;
Racine area who for various&#13;
reasons are not able to receive&#13;
assistance from the other social&#13;
agencies. She sells clothes,&#13;
household items, and appliances&#13;
for a few cents to a few dollars to&#13;
people who could otherwise not&#13;
afford them. She.often gives food&#13;
and used merchandise to people&#13;
who have no money.&#13;
Louise Hunter and her husband&#13;
and family of 18 children have a&#13;
special need right now. Last&#13;
February their home burned and&#13;
one of their children died in the&#13;
fire. The Welfare Department&#13;
obtained temporary housing for&#13;
the Hunter family, but as of this&#13;
fall the Hunter family has been&#13;
told that they must secure other&#13;
housing.&#13;
continued on pg . 3 &#13;
pastors at Carthage to organize&#13;
and participate in an attempt to&#13;
raise funds through donations, in&#13;
the hope of providing a down&#13;
payment for a home for the&#13;
. Hunter family.&#13;
We have entered into an informal&#13;
agreement with the&#13;
Racine Housing Authority&#13;
whereby if. we can raise approximately&#13;
$2500 for a down&#13;
payment they will guarantee a&#13;
mortgage for the purchase of a&#13;
. home.&#13;
We are' reporting a very&#13;
unusual need in the life of a very&#13;
unusual family. We believe that&#13;
Mrs. Hunter has used her talents&#13;
Livingston's opinion&#13;
illogi~al drivel&#13;
Letters con.'t&#13;
Donations,-------- continued from pg. 7&#13;
'They are not able to secure&#13;
financing for the purchase of&#13;
another home, and the possibility&#13;
of renting a home for that size&#13;
family is out of the question. Mr.&#13;
" Hunter works at American&#13;
Motors and has an income&#13;
adequate for many household&#13;
. needs, but their prospects for&#13;
making their Own arrangements&#13;
to buy a home seem to be nonexistent.&#13;
Louise Hunter called Chi-Rho&#13;
Center in August and asked for&#13;
help. After a series of conversations&#13;
with _ the Racine&#13;
Housing Authority, we have&#13;
decided to join the· campus&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I'll not comment on the bulk of&#13;
Philip Livingston's article other&#13;
than to say it was illogical driveL&#13;
Livingston mis-stated the facts&#13;
every time he referred to Carter&#13;
and I wish to set the record&#13;
straight.&#13;
First, Jimmy Carter is not&#13;
. worth five million dollars. As of&#13;
June 1976Carter's net worth was&#13;
Commentaries&#13;
not significant&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It is our opinion that the glittering&#13;
generalities that plague&#13;
the commentaries on Carter and&#13;
Ford are of too little significance&#13;
to be included in the Ranger.&#13;
'They could, for the most part, be&#13;
the same editorial with the&#13;
names reversed eg., "This man&#13;
eight hundred and ten tIiousand&#13;
dollars. Second, Jimmy Carter&#13;
does not quote God. He quotes the&#13;
Bible. He's a "born again"&#13;
Christian - same as Jerry Ford.&#13;
These are the only' facts&#13;
Livingston relied on on writing&#13;
his rather unfortunate piece, the&#13;
'resi of the article being character&#13;
assassination by innuendo .&#13;
Bob Jambois&#13;
•&#13;
of humble thought is intelligent&#13;
enough to use good advice."&#13;
'There is alreadY enough&#13;
bulIshit around to pretty well&#13;
cover all the great glittering&#13;
generalities. It's too bad all there&#13;
is to offer is Ford &amp; Carter, or&#13;
peanuts and clumsiness.&#13;
John Georgeson&#13;
Ed Randle&#13;
First reading&#13;
Nov.4&#13;
'TheMagic Visage Organization&#13;
will present its first open poetryprose&#13;
reading of the year on&#13;
'Thursday, November 4 in the&#13;
Overlook Lounge ottbe Parkside&#13;
Library. 'The reading will begin&#13;
at 8 p.m. and will 'conclude at&#13;
.approximately 10 p.m.&#13;
The reading will feature&#13;
Parkside students and faculty&#13;
reading their own creative&#13;
writings. Interested writers may&#13;
sign up for the reading with&#13;
. Jeffrey J. Swencki, Magic Visage&#13;
Coordinator, through the Ranger&#13;
Office, WLLC-D194.&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
e Saves maintenance (25,OOO-m1leoil change)&#13;
e Eases su~-zero starts (-60'F. pour point)&#13;
- eSavesoll Mike Villers&#13;
your AidS/OIL deeler 63 7 - 2 7 26&#13;
Magic Visage is also in the&#13;
process of publishing an anthology&#13;
of Parkside student and&#13;
faculty poetry, prose,&#13;
photography, and art work. Many&#13;
of the contributors to the anthology&#13;
have taken part in past&#13;
readings .&#13;
Future.readings are now being&#13;
planned. On November 18 Janet&#13;
Beeler will be the guest poet and&#13;
will conduct an afternoon&#13;
seminar. For more information&#13;
contact Jeffrey in the Ranger&#13;
Office or call 553-2295or 634-5305.&#13;
and resources to the ·best of her&#13;
ability to help the poor people of&#13;
her community. We believe that&#13;
the community should respond to&#13;
this need of the Hunter family,&#13;
and we appeal to you to consider&#13;
making a contribution.&#13;
Contributions can be maile or&#13;
brought to the Chi-Rho Censer,&#13;
382512 St. Checks should be made&#13;
out to the Louise Hunter Housing&#13;
Fund. The deadline for contributions&#13;
is November 7. 'Thank&#13;
you for this consideration and&#13;
your response.&#13;
Fr. Wayne&#13;
Campus Minister&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
P.S.G.A.&#13;
appoints&#13;
students&#13;
by Douglas Edeahauser&#13;
Three people were nomina ted&#13;
to committees at last week's&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association's Senate meeting.&#13;
Pat Heckle aOd Tad Ballantine&#13;
were appointed to the Budget&#13;
Priorities Committee and Art&#13;
Pollack was appointed to the&#13;
Vice-Chancellor's Search and&#13;
Screen ·committee.&#13;
'TheHealth Services committee&#13;
reported that there is a project&#13;
underway at getting Parkside to&#13;
record books for blind students.&#13;
'There was also a motion passed&#13;
to relocate the health office to&#13;
provide easier access for the&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER OCtober 27. 1976 3&#13;
students. There was discussion to WisconsIA and diIcuased a state&#13;
star! working with handicapped work-study program in which a&#13;
students to possibly open up the resolution was passed in opbowling&#13;
lanes for wheelchairs. position of the propollel! program.&#13;
A. motion was passed to UW-Stout was unanimously&#13;
examine the air quality in the art approved membership to the&#13;
department. If nothing is done by United Counell. Segregated Fees&#13;
Dec. I, this matter will be Budget Planning Conference will&#13;
discussed with OSHA. be held Nov. 5 in MadIson and a&#13;
A president's resolution was Legal Service Conference will be&#13;
passed that heartily endorses the held in MIlwaukee November 6.&#13;
creation of a veterinary school in In the president's report,&#13;
the U.W. system. President Kiyoko Bowden mentioned that&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden pointed out that Parkside leads the way in&#13;
there presently is no such school establishing an academic&#13;
in a highly agricultural state. grievance procedure and a&#13;
United Council held a meeting humane financial aids appeal&#13;
last weekend in Superior, procedure.&#13;
We're not&#13;
just another&#13;
rocker .&#13;
Album rock from&#13;
6 p.m. 'til 1 a.m,&#13;
every night on ..&#13;
•&#13;
• • • •&#13;
·WUPPm9S&#13;
WIIPPm9S&#13;
WUPPm9S&#13;
Why do some people think&#13;
Bud.is sort of special?&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make A difference.)&#13;
.- •. "'••..,.....'.J'&#13;
•&#13;
,&#13;
I ...&#13;
•&#13;
When you say Budweiser., you've said it all!&#13;
."HEUS("'USClt INC.• st. lOUIS&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27, 1976 3&#13;
Letters con.'t&#13;
Donations-·--'--------&#13;
students. There was discussion to&#13;
start working with handicapped&#13;
students to possibly open up the&#13;
bowling lanes for wheelchairs.&#13;
A motion was passed to&#13;
examine the air quality in the art&#13;
department. If nothing is done by&#13;
Dec. 1, this matter will be&#13;
discussed wil~ OSHA .&#13;
Wisconsin and discussed a state&#13;
work-study program in which a&#13;
resolution was passed in opposition&#13;
of the proposed program.&#13;
UW-Stout was unanimously&#13;
approved membership to the&#13;
United Council. Segregated Fees&#13;
Budget Planning Conference will&#13;
be held Nov. 5 in Madison and a&#13;
Legal Service Conference will be&#13;
held in Milwaukee November 6.&#13;
continued from pg. 1&#13;
They are not able to secure&#13;
financing for the .purchase of&#13;
another home, and the possibility&#13;
of renting a home for that size&#13;
family is out of the question. Mr.&#13;
Hunter works at American&#13;
Motors and has an income&#13;
adequate for many household&#13;
· needs, but their prospects for&#13;
making their own arrangements&#13;
to buy a home seem to be nonexistent.&#13;
&#13;
Louise Hunter called. Chi-Rho&#13;
Center in August and asked for&#13;
help. After a series cif conversations&#13;
with the Racine&#13;
Housing Authority, we have&#13;
decided to join the - campus&#13;
pastors at Carthage to organize&#13;
and participate in an attempt to&#13;
raise funds through donations, in&#13;
the hope of providing a down&#13;
payment for a home for the&#13;
Hunter family.&#13;
We have entered into an informal&#13;
agreement with the&#13;
Racine Housing Authority&#13;
whereby if. we can raise approximately&#13;
$2500 for a down&#13;
payment they will guarantee a&#13;
mortgage for the purchase of a&#13;
home.&#13;
We are · reporting a very&#13;
unusual need in the life of a very&#13;
unusual family. We believe that&#13;
Mrs. Hunter has used her talents&#13;
Livingston's o·pinion&#13;
illogical drivel&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I'll not comment on the bulk of&#13;
Philip Livingston's article other&#13;
than to say it was illogical drivel.&#13;
Livingston mis-stated the facts&#13;
everytime he referred to Carter&#13;
and I wish to set the record&#13;
straight.&#13;
First, Jimmy Carter is not&#13;
. worth five million dollars. As of&#13;
June 1976 Carter's net worth was&#13;
eight hundred and ten thousand&#13;
dollars. Second, Jimmy Carter&#13;
does not quote God. He quotes the&#13;
Bible. He's a "born again"&#13;
Christian - same as Jerry Ford.&#13;
These are the only facts&#13;
Livingston relied on on writing&#13;
his rather unfortunate piece, the&#13;
rest of the article being character&#13;
assassination by innuendo.&#13;
Bob Jambois&#13;
Commentaries&#13;
not significant&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It is our opinion that the glittering&#13;
generalities that plague&#13;
the commentaries on C.arter and&#13;
Ford are of too little significance&#13;
to be included in the Ranger.&#13;
They could, for the most part, be&#13;
the same editorial with the&#13;
names reversed eg., "This man&#13;
of humble thought is intelligent&#13;
enough to use good advice."&#13;
There is already enough&#13;
bullshit around to pretty well&#13;
cover all the great glittering&#13;
generalities. It's too bad all there&#13;
is to offer is Ford &amp; (',arter, or&#13;
peanuts and clwnsiness.&#13;
John Georgeson&#13;
Ed Randle&#13;
First reading&#13;
Nov.4&#13;
The Magic Visage Organization&#13;
will present its first open poetryprose&#13;
reading of the year on&#13;
Thursday, November 4 in the&#13;
Overlook Lounge of. the Parkside&#13;
Library. The reading will begin&#13;
at 8 p.m. and will ·conclude at&#13;
approximately 10 p.m.&#13;
The reading will feature&#13;
Parkside students and faculty&#13;
reading their own creative&#13;
writings. Intereste.,d writers may&#13;
sign up for the reading with&#13;
· Jeffrey J. Swencki, Magic Visage&#13;
Coordinator, through the Ranger&#13;
Office, WLLC-D194.&#13;
Magic Visage is also in the&#13;
process of publishing an anthology&#13;
of Parkside student and&#13;
faculty poetry, prose,&#13;
photography, and art work. Many&#13;
of the contributors to the anthology&#13;
have taken part in past&#13;
readings.&#13;
Future.readin~ are now being&#13;
planned. On November 18 Janet&#13;
Beeler will be the guest poet and&#13;
will conduct an afternoon&#13;
seminar. For more information&#13;
contact Jeffrey in the Ranger&#13;
Office or call 553-2295 or 634-5305.&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Sa~es ~ear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,000-mtle oll change)&#13;
• Eases su~-zero starts (-6~°F. pour point)&#13;
. • Saves oil Mike Villers&#13;
your AMS/OIL dealer 6 3 7 _ 2 7 2 6&#13;
and resources to the best of her&#13;
ability to help the poor people of&#13;
her community. We believe that&#13;
the community should respond to&#13;
this need of the Hunter family,&#13;
and we appeal to you to consider&#13;
making a contribution.&#13;
Contrihutionc; can be maile or&#13;
brought to the Chi-Rho cemt:r,&#13;
3825 12 St. Checks should be made&#13;
out to the Louise Hunter Housing&#13;
Fund. The deadline for contributions-is&#13;
November 7. Thank&#13;
you for this consideration and&#13;
your response.&#13;
Fr. Wayne&#13;
Campus Minister&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
P.S.G.A.&#13;
appoints&#13;
students&#13;
by Douglas Edenhauser&#13;
Three people were nominated&#13;
to committees at last week's&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association's Senate meeting.&#13;
Pat Heckle and Tad Ballantine&#13;
were appointed to the Budget&#13;
Priorities Committee and Art&#13;
Pollack was appointed to the&#13;
Vice-Chancellor's Search and&#13;
Screen-committee.&#13;
The Health Services committee&#13;
reported that there is a project&#13;
qnderway at getting Parkside to&#13;
record books for blind students.&#13;
There was also a motion passed&#13;
to relocate the health office to&#13;
provide easier access for the&#13;
A president's resolution was&#13;
passed that heartily endorses the&#13;
creation of a veterinary school in&#13;
the U.W. system. President&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden pointed out that&#13;
there presently is no such school&#13;
in a highly agricultural state.&#13;
United Council held a meeting&#13;
last weekend in Superior,&#13;
In the president's report,&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden mentioned that&#13;
Parkside leads the way in&#13;
establishing an academic&#13;
grievance procedure and a&#13;
humane financial aids appeal&#13;
procedure.&#13;
We're not&#13;
....&#13;
just another&#13;
rocker ...... .&#13;
Album rock from&#13;
6 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
every night on . . •&#13;
• • • •&#13;
WUP-ffll95&#13;
WUPffll95&#13;
WUPffll95 -&#13;
Why do sonie people think ·&#13;
Bud. is sort of special?&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make a difference.)&#13;
•&#13;
When you say Budweiser., you've said it all!&#13;
ANHEUSEII-IUSCM, INC. • ST. LOUIS &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27, 1976&#13;
•&#13;
One sweet Dream&#13;
~.~!~&#13;
=Il~ . ~-n =&#13;
.It!_ ~ '. •&#13;
• This Coupon is • • •&#13;
• worth 50c on all •&#13;
• items listed below. •&#13;
• Good thru October •&#13;
• only! One Coupon .•&#13;
• per customer per' •&#13;
• purchase. Happy •&#13;
• Holidays. Remember, •&#13;
• we never close, •&#13;
~ ........•,&#13;
Hey, sohotcrs, look at'&#13;
these gift selections:&#13;
Everything for Mind &amp;&#13;
BodY is right here at&#13;
two stores ... your&#13;
storeswith atmosphere,&#13;
• Recorda a Tapes. ALL new&#13;
releases stacked floor to&#13;
ceiling!&#13;
• Import albums. We're the.&#13;
one store in town that&#13;
carries foreign releases.&#13;
• Spedal orden. Hard-to-get .&#13;
records and tapes with&#13;
guaranteed one day .&#13;
· delivery.&#13;
• Jewelry. Hand crafted lit&#13;
beautiful for style conscious&#13;
guys and gals ..&#13;
• Tapestries. Mobiles. Incense&#13;
burners. Stash&#13;
boxes.&#13;
• Incense. Sticks and cones&#13;
to tickle your nOS8.&#13;
• Pi.cturel. Decoupage. Wall&#13;
hangings. Artists: Escher.&#13;
Pitre. Roger Dean.&#13;
Rosamond.&#13;
• UptiDI to create any&#13;
atmosphere.&#13;
• Leather Gooda. WalletsPouches&#13;
- Purses - BeltsHats&#13;
&amp;; accessories in&#13;
abundance. Beautifully&#13;
handcrafted.&#13;
• Paraphernalia - Pipes.&#13;
Papers. Smoking Accessories.&#13;
Party necessities&#13;
, from around the world ..&#13;
• Waterbeds. We're&#13;
everything in Waterbeds.&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
-" 5010 Seventh Avenue'&#13;
654-3578&#13;
WEST&#13;
3910 Seventy Fifth Street&#13;
694,2404&#13;
EVENTS .'&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 31&#13;
'Wargamers Club meets from Ito 6 p.m, in CL 140.&#13;
Concert, Midnight Musical Madness, midnight (12 a.m.) in the CAT,&#13;
Group S~Ilport Committee meets at I p.m. in WLLC D174, The&#13;
meeting will be for the purposes or establishing guidelines, priorities&#13;
and preliminary budgets for student organization funding, All student&#13;
organization presidents and students are invited,&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 2 .&#13;
Singer; Barry Drake, performs from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Square, .&#13;
Wargamers Club'meets from 6to tnp.m. in CL 140,&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 27&#13;
Movie, "TheBirds," 2:30 and 7:30 p.m, in the- CinemaTheatre.Ad"&#13;
mission is $1. .&#13;
Parkside Art Association meets at 5 p.m, in Main Place,&#13;
/ Thursday, Oct, 28&#13;
Movie, "Psycho," 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Cinema Theatre. Admission&#13;
is $1. .&#13;
Accounting cfub meets at 4:30p,m,in CL325.&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 6 to 10p,m. in CL 140, ,&#13;
Faculty Recital: Eden Vaning, violin; Stephen Swedish, piano, at 8&#13;
p.rn. in the CAT.&#13;
..&#13;
Please submit all events to the Ranger before Wednesday of the week&#13;
hefore publication.' .,&#13;
Friday, Oct. 29&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4p,m. in Union 207.&#13;
•&#13;
Saturday, Oct, 30&#13;
Foreign Student Club members meet .at 11:0!1 p.m, in the Union&#13;
Bazaar, This is a picnic and hospitality visit to the residents of&#13;
Southern Wisconsin Colony in Union Grove. The bus returns to the&#13;
campus at about 5 p.m.&#13;
Mens cross country meet, UW-P, Carthage, Loras, and Marquette-at&#13;
12 p.m, at Parkside,&#13;
'Soccer, UW-P vs, Western Michigan, at 2p.m, at the SOCCerfield,&#13;
Women's swimming meet, UW-P, Carthage, UW-River Falls, and UWEau&#13;
Claire, at 11 a.m, at Carthage. .&#13;
Garage sale&#13;
Switchboard is holding its First&#13;
Annual Halloween Garage Sale&#13;
.October 30th, Saturday, 11a.m, to&#13;
4p,m. .&#13;
The)' are asking fot contributions&#13;
of time and articles to&#13;
he sold at the sale, Contributions&#13;
should he brought to the Switchboard&#13;
center by October 28.&#13;
For more information on how&#13;
to make contributions, call&#13;
Switchboard: 65ll-help.&#13;
Join the Ford Bandwagon!&#13;
HELP HIM LEAD US TO A&#13;
REPUBLICAN 'VICTORY&#13;
NOVEMBER 2nd&#13;
· BECAUSE:&#13;
.'&#13;
HE CAN MAKE AMERICA A STRONG,&#13;
PROUD AMERICA&#13;
HE NEEDS YOUR SUPPORT TO FINISH'&#13;
A JOB WELL BEGUN&#13;
HE- WANTS TO KEEP AMERICA&#13;
STRONG AND AT PEACE&#13;
HE WANTS TO BUILD A ~AIRER TAX&#13;
STRUCTURE&#13;
•&#13;
HE WANTS TO INSURE JOBS&#13;
FOR EVERY WORKER •&#13;
HE WANTS TO BEAT INFLATION&#13;
f&#13;
~&#13;
HE WANTS A FREEDOM FOR AMERICA&#13;
THAT WILL ALLOW EQUALITY&#13;
TO ALL AMERICANS&#13;
•&#13;
FORD HAS A REALISTIC&#13;
RESPONSIBLE APPROACH,&#13;
re GOVERNMENT&#13;
GIVE HIM :YOUR VOTE! . .&#13;
~Ht PRESIDENT FORO EOMMmEE. JAMES A BAKER. III. CHAI~MAN, ROYSTON C HUGHES, TREASURER ~~&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27, 1976&#13;
one&#13;
sweet&#13;
Dream&#13;
'!!g&#13;
I / . I . --: JI I&#13;
. . -. • ll ~ ,n • llrl . . '-· ·: =&#13;
• •&#13;
• This Coupon is •&#13;
• worth 50c on all •&#13;
• items listed below. •&#13;
• Good thru October •&#13;
• only! One Coupon . •&#13;
• per customer per · •&#13;
• purchase. Happy •&#13;
• Holidays. Remember, •&#13;
• we never close. •&#13;
~ ........• ,&#13;
Hey, scho~ars, look at ·&#13;
these gift selections.&#13;
Everything for Mind &amp;&#13;
Body is right here at&#13;
two stores . . . your&#13;
stores ·with atmosphere.&#13;
• Records &amp; Tapes. ALL new releases stacked floor to&#13;
ceiling!&#13;
• Import albums. We're the. one store in town that&#13;
carries foreign releases. • Special orders. Hard-to-get&#13;
records and tapes with ·&#13;
guaranteed one day&#13;
delivery.&#13;
• Jewelry. Hand crafted &amp;&#13;
beautiful for style conscious&#13;
guys and gals . .&#13;
• Tapestries. ~obiles. In- cense burners. Stash&#13;
boxes.&#13;
• Incense. Sticks and cones to tickle your nose.&#13;
• Pictures. Decoupage. Wall&#13;
hangings. Artists: Escher,&#13;
Pitre, Roger Dean,&#13;
Rosamond.&#13;
• lighting to create any&#13;
atmosphere. .&#13;
• Leather Goods. Wallets- Pouches-Purses-BeltsHa&#13;
ts &amp; accessories in&#13;
abundance. Beautifully&#13;
handcrafted.&#13;
• Paraphernalia - Pipes.&#13;
Papers. Smoking Accessories.&#13;
Party necessities&#13;
from around the world.&#13;
• Waterbeds. We're&#13;
everything in Waterbeds.&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
' 5010 Seventp Avenue '&#13;
654-357B&#13;
WEST&#13;
391 0 Seventy Fifth Street&#13;
694 -2404&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. ?7&#13;
Movie, "The 'Birds," 2: 30 and 7: 30 p.m. in the Cinema . 'I:heatre. AdSunday,&#13;
Oct. 31&#13;
'Wargamers Club meets from 1 to 6 p.m. in CL-140.&#13;
mission is $1. • Concert, Midnight Musical Madness, midnight (12 a.m.) in the CAT.&#13;
Group Support Committee meets at 1 p.m: in WLLC D174. The&#13;
meeting will be for the purposes of establishing guidelines, P.riorities&#13;
and preliminary budgets·for student organization funding. NI student&#13;
organization presidents and students are invited.&#13;
Parkside Art Association meets at 5 p.m. in Main Place~&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 28&#13;
Movie, "Psycho," 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Cinema Theatre. Admission&#13;
is $1. .&#13;
Accounting Club meets at 4:30 p.m. in CL 325.&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 6 to 10 p.m. in CL 140 ..&#13;
Faculty Recital: Eden Vaning, violin; Stephen Swedish, pi~no, at 8&#13;
p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 29&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4 p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
. Saturday, Oct. 30&#13;
•&#13;
Foreign Student Club members .meet at 11:00 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Bazaar. This is a picnic ·and hospitality visit to the residents of&#13;
Southern Wisconsin Colony in Union Grove. The bus returns to the&#13;
campus at about 5 p.m. ·&#13;
Mens cross country meet, UW-P, Carthage, Loras, and Marquette,,at&#13;
12 p.m. at Parkside.&#13;
'Soccer,_ UW-P vs. Western Michigan, at 2p.m. at the soccer field.&#13;
Women's swimming meet, UW-P, Carthage, UW-River Falls, and UWEau&#13;
Claire, at 11 a.m. at Carthage.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 2 .&#13;
Singer; Barry Drake, performs from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Square.&#13;
Wargamers Club·m~ets from 6 to 10 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Please submit all events to the Ranger before Wednesday of the week&#13;
before publication. · ·&#13;
•&#13;
Garage sal~ ,_&#13;
Switchboard is holding its First&#13;
Annual Halloween Garage Sale&#13;
October 30th, Saturday, 11 a.m. to&#13;
4 p.m.&#13;
They are asking for contributions&#13;
of time and articles to&#13;
be sold at the sale. Contributions&#13;
should be brought to the Switchboard&#13;
Center by October 28.&#13;
For more information on how&#13;
to make contributions, call&#13;
Switchboard: 651J.help.&#13;
. .&#13;
..&#13;
•&#13;
Jointhe Ford Bandwagon! . .&#13;
HELP HIM LEAD US TO ·A&#13;
REP-UBLICAN ·v1CTORY&#13;
NOVEMBER 2nd 4&#13;
HE&#13;
HE&#13;
HEHE&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
HE.&#13;
HE&#13;
f&#13;
BECAUSE:&#13;
CAN MAKE AMERICA A STRONG,&#13;
PROUD AMERICA&#13;
NEEDS YOUR SUPPORT TO FINISH ·&#13;
A JOB WELL BEGUN&#13;
WANTS TO KEEP AMERICA&#13;
STRONG AND AT PEACE&#13;
WANTS TO BUILD A FAIRER TAX&#13;
STRUCTURE&#13;
WANTS TO INSURE JOBS&#13;
FO~ EVERY WORKER&#13;
WANTS TO BEAT tNFLATION&#13;
·HE ~ WANTS A FREEDOM FOR AMERICA&#13;
THAT WILL ALLOW EQUALITY&#13;
TO ALL AMERICANS&#13;
FORD HAS A REAllSTIC&#13;
RESPONSIBLE APPROACH -&#13;
JO GOVERNMENT&#13;
GIVE .HIM ~YOUR VOTE!&#13;
-&#13;
.-&#13;
~HL PRESIDENT FORD EOMMITTEE. JAMES A BAKER.Ill. CHAIRMAN. ROYSTON C HUGHES. TREASURER&#13;
(&#13;
, &#13;
- .&#13;
Contact&#13;
weekly by. student go.vernment&#13;
by Klyoko Bowden&#13;
Student Appointments&#13;
Congratulations are extended to the following students on their&#13;
appointments :&#13;
Tad Ballantyne ...Budget Priorities Conunittee&#13;
Pat Hechel...Budget Priorities Conunittee&#13;
Art Pollock ...Vice-chancellor's Search and Screen Conunittee&#13;
Openings for Interested Students&#13;
Student Court...3 positions as Associate Justices&#13;
Appellate Court...Chief Justice and 2 Associate Appellate Justices&#13;
Senate ...3 At-Large Seats and 3 Divisional Seats&#13;
Senate Ways and Means Commitlee any 'interested student&#13;
Senate Student Services Conunittee any interested student&#13;
Execut1ve Implementation Conunitlee ...any interested student&#13;
Executive Legal Service Committee ...any interested student&#13;
Academic Actions (University) Committee ...2 positions&#13;
Curriculum and Program (University) Conunittee ...2 full-time&#13;
students&#13;
Academic Plarining and Program Review ..;(UIiiversity) Committee&#13;
...2 students .&#13;
Teaching Awards (UIiiversity) Conunittee ...l student&#13;
Bookstore (University) Committee ...2 students&#13;
Anyone who is interested in participating in Student Gov~rnment,&#13;
please contact the P.S.G.A., Inc. office, either by stopping down at&#13;
WLLC0193 or calling 553-2244.There is a place for anyone, and a need&#13;
for everyone.&#13;
~-.-:_----~&#13;
.: Cla~sifieds :'&#13;
I ..,&#13;
t&#13;
HOUSe fl'arents·Coul'tselor Couple . $10,000 I&#13;
annual salarv. paid family health rns.. tree&#13;
rOOm e, board. 2 wks. paid vecencn. 6:3(1&#13;
'&#13;
P.m. -11 p.m. free time. Requlrements:.One I&#13;
Parentmust hllvt! at least Bachelor's d~ree.&#13;
, ~o Childre'l.. Contact: Racine RUnaWay"&#13;
nc.. 1331 Center st.. Racine. WI~ .. 632·0A2A t 8.~daily. , •&#13;
WANTED: Sports writer for RANGER that t&#13;
'&#13;
I'talented. gOOd ingram mar, and most of all'&#13;
dePendllble. 5ee Jean Tenuta in the&#13;
, RANGER offIce, WLLC G194. ,&#13;
~A.N. E .. THOMPSON Free Lance&#13;
, ~tDgraphy. weddings and candid por.'&#13;
trait!!. Phone 652.8862.&#13;
'In .. P~NTI~C SPRING 3·speed Metallic t&#13;
'&#13;
Blue, red buckets. Rally wheels, AM·FM, ,&#13;
FM stereo. 8·Track $2195. 634·0876.&#13;
, WILL DO any kind of typing at reasonable t&#13;
,&#13;
rllll!'S. For information. call 652·3373.&#13;
NEEDED FEMALE COMPANION to Share'&#13;
, el(penses to Denver, Colo. on November 2.,&#13;
Call 632·027 for mor~ information evenings.&#13;
'&#13;
FOR SALE: Portable Stereo wl1h G~rrard I&#13;
turntable. Asking .$50. Call 634-5305 after&#13;
, Runoff eleelion,· between Richard ,&#13;
I&#13;
Folaom' Carol Bohn' and Jpan&#13;
FueUerer Fri. 0e1.29 9:30AM-5:30PM t&#13;
-------- . .&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27. 1976 5&#13;
Musical madness Sunday&#13;
.. "Midnight Musical Madness,"&#13;
a Halloween program promising&#13;
"famous last performances of&#13;
unknown masterpieces in the&#13;
music literature," will be&#13;
presented ~y a group of&#13;
University of Wisconsin·Parkside&#13;
. music faculty members at 8 p.m.&#13;
on Sunday, Oct. 31 in the&#13;
Parkside Union Theater.&#13;
The participants explain the&#13;
discrepancy between the&#13;
program title and the time of the&#13;
performance by saying that it is&#13;
scheduled for the conveIiience of&#13;
those who turn into pumpkins at&#13;
midnight. The event is free ·and&#13;
open to the public and costumes&#13;
and-or disguises are encouraged.&#13;
Music faculty members involved&#13;
in the endeavor are Carol&#13;
Bell, pianist, Tim Bell,&#13;
saxophone and clarinet, Rodger&#13;
Daniels, percussion, Carol Irwin,&#13;
soprano, David Schripsema,&#13;
violin, Eden Vaning, violin, and&#13;
August Wegner, piano.&#13;
Model&#13;
U.N.&#13;
planned&#13;
The political science discipline&#13;
will be sponsoring,a delegation of&#13;
students to go to tbe Third Annual&#13;
Regional Model United Nations&#13;
on April 14-15, 1977 at Carleton&#13;
College in Northfield, Minnesota.&#13;
. The model United Nations are&#13;
designed to impart to the particular&#13;
participant. both a greater&#13;
knowledge of the functioning of&#13;
the UIiited Nations and an expanded&#13;
perspective of International&#13;
issues.&#13;
A delegation's first duty is to&#13;
determine which nation it will&#13;
represent and then study that&#13;
nation's foreign policy as well as&#13;
rationale for that policy. At the&#13;
conference i!'self, members of&#13;
the delegation will present and&#13;
defend their nation's position&#13;
before committees convened to&#13;
discuss issues and proposals and&#13;
then take resolutions decided by&#13;
the conunittees to the floor of the&#13;
Model General Assembly.&#13;
Interested students may&#13;
contact Dr. Samuel Pernacciaro&#13;
Greenquist 313 or CL 367.&#13;
Tickets at Info Center&#13;
.. They promise such esoteric&#13;
pr?gram fare as clarinet polkas,&#13;
Flight of the Bumblebee for&#13;
accompanied marimba. The&#13;
Pineapple Rag of Scott. Joplin,&#13;
and other musical ghoulishness.&#13;
'arkside Actiyitie. Board Film Series&#13;
pre.ent •&#13;
TWO HITCHCOCKCLASSICS&#13;
THE " PS)S~P .&#13;
~IR~ ,8j~~&#13;
Wednesday Thursday&#13;
Oct. 27 Oct. 28&#13;
2:30 &amp; 7:30 p.m. 2:30 &amp; 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre Union Cinema Theatre&#13;
$1.~ $1.~&#13;
Resignations and General Distress&#13;
It was with deep regret that the resignations of Vice-President&#13;
Robe:t Vlach and Senator David Harris were accepted at the Oct. 14,&#13;
meetmg of the P.S.G.A. Senate, Student Government cannot afford to&#13;
'lose two such hard working individuals.&#13;
The resignation of Acting Secretary Linda Knudtson and ~ator&#13;
Rohert Tremonte were also accepted.&#13;
It is partieularily difficult at a commuter campus such as Parkside&#13;
to getstudents to pa.rticipate in Student Government or any student&#13;
'. organ~ti~n. The. benefits are almost exclusively related to having&#13;
pride m doing a thankless job well. Regardless of criticism, which is&#13;
frequent, student government members are demonstrating initiative&#13;
resoursefW:ness. and perserverance, and will con-tinue to do so even&#13;
though their numbers diminish periodically. -'&#13;
Consider joining Student Go~ernment only if you are prepared to&#13;
work hard, spend time you ~a.n.III afford, and receive satisfaction from&#13;
the knowldege that responsibility IS a learned quality, just 8S calculus&#13;
and computer language are learned abilities. Consider joining Student&#13;
Government because it is important to Parksice and strangely enough&#13;
to you. •&#13;
No one will fault y?u: ~or huilding a resume for future job-hunting.&#13;
Ext:~-&lt;;:urrlc~ar activities are Important factors in· an employer's&#13;
decision to hire one prospective employee over another. Those activiti~s&#13;
coupled with ~ respectable grade point average imply that&#13;
here IS someone who WIllpush a little harder, who will take that extra&#13;
step, and perhaps accomplish a little more, Respectable grade point&#13;
averages are a dirne-a dozen; respdnsibility and initiative are far less&#13;
connnaon. •&#13;
No one can afford the time, but some manage to find a few extra&#13;
hours a week to work at something important.&#13;
Consider joining Student Government, not for the compliments and&#13;
prestige you'll gain; because there are damned few compliments and&#13;
less prestige. Consider joining Student Government because it's&#13;
important, and it needs you.&#13;
Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin's&#13;
album station&#13;
Album rock from&#13;
6 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
every night on . . . .&#13;
•&#13;
liP&#13;
.The quiet llader in synthetic lubricatilll&#13;
·"':r~~&#13;
~rMike Villers&#13;
Questions· Yau&#13;
Ask .Yourself:&#13;
1 Would You Like To Increase Gas&#13;
Mileage By 10% To 25% * And&#13;
Save $10.00 Every 1000 Miles?&#13;
[ IYES [ J NO&#13;
• overall average % increase&#13;
2 Would you Rather Change 011&#13;
Every 25,000 Miles/Once A Year&#13;
And Increase Engine Life?&#13;
[ IYES [ ) NO&#13;
3 Would you like To Eliminate&#13;
Towing And Service Expense&#13;
This Winter When Your Car&#13;
Won't Start Due To cold, Sluggish&#13;
Oil? . [I YES [ ) NO&#13;
If your answer Is YES to any of the&#13;
above questions, you should be&#13;
using SYNTHETIC AMS/OIL!&#13;
If,,., " ,.""&#13;
637·2726&#13;
Should'&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27, 1976 5&#13;
Contact M1lsical madness Sunday&#13;
weekly by.student government&#13;
by Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
Resignations and General Distress&#13;
It was with deep regret that the resignations of Vice-President&#13;
Robert Vlach and Senator David Harris were accepted at the Oct 14&#13;
meeting of the P.S.G.A. Senate, Student Government cannot afford t~&#13;
'lose two such hard working individuals.&#13;
The resignation of Acting Secretary Llnda Knudtson and Se;ator&#13;
Robert Tremonte were also accepted.&#13;
It is particularily difficult at a commuter campus such as Parkside&#13;
to get_ stu?ents to pa:tic~pate in Student Government or any student&#13;
. or?an~ti~n. The. benefits are ahnost exclusively related to having&#13;
pride m doing a thankless job well. Regardless of criticism, which is&#13;
frequent, student government members are dem&lt;?nstrating initiative,&#13;
resoursef'":"ess, and perserverance, and will continue to do so even&#13;
though their numbers diminish periodically. -'&#13;
Consider joining. Student Go~ernment only if you are prepared to&#13;
work hard, spend time you can 111 afford, and receive satisfaction f&#13;
the knowldege that responsibility is a learned quality, just as calcul~~m&#13;
and computer language are learned abilities. Consider joining Student&#13;
Government because it is important to Parksice and strangely enough&#13;
to you. '&#13;
No one~ fault Y?~ !or building a resume for future job-hunting.&#13;
Ext:~-curr1c~ar acnv1t1es are important factors in - an employer's&#13;
dec1S1on to hire one prospective employee over another. Those activiti~s&#13;
coupled with ~ respectable grade point average imply that&#13;
here lS someone who will push a little harder, who will take tbat extra&#13;
step, and perhaps accomplish a little more. Respectable grade point&#13;
averages are a dime-a dozen; responsibility and initiative are far less&#13;
common.&#13;
No one can afford the time, but some manage to find a few extra&#13;
hours a week to work at something important.&#13;
Consider joining Student Government, not for the compliments and&#13;
prestige you'll gain; because there are damned few compliments and&#13;
less prestige. Consider joining Student Government because it's&#13;
important, and it needs you.&#13;
Student Appointments&#13;
Congratulations are extended to the following students on their&#13;
appointments:&#13;
Tad Ballantyne ... Budget Priorities Committee&#13;
Pat Hechel...Budget Priorities Committee&#13;
Art Pollock ... Vice-Chancellor's Search and Screen Committee&#13;
Openings for Interested Students&#13;
Student Court ... 3 positions as Associate Justices&#13;
Appellate Court...Chief Justice and 2 Associate Appellate Justices&#13;
Senate ... 3 At-Large Seats and 3 Divisional Seats&#13;
Senate Ways and Means Conunittee ... any interested student&#13;
Senate Student Services Committee ... any interested student&#13;
Execut1ve Implementation Committee ... any interested student&#13;
Executive Legal Service Committee ... any interested student&#13;
Academic Actions (University) Committee ... 2 positions&#13;
Curriculum and Progtam (University) Committee ... 2 full-time&#13;
students ·&#13;
Academic Planning and Program Review .. ;(University) Committee&#13;
... 2 students ·&#13;
Teaching Awards (University) Committee .. .! student&#13;
Bookstore (University) Committee ... 2 students&#13;
Anyone who is interested in participating in Student Government,&#13;
please contact Ute P.S.G.A., Inc. office, either by stopping down at&#13;
WLLC Dl93 or calling 553-2244. There is a place for anyone, and a need&#13;
for everyone.&#13;
' "Midnight Musical Madness,"&#13;
a Halloween program promising&#13;
''famous last performances of&#13;
unknown masterpieces in the&#13;
music literature," will be&#13;
presented t&gt;Y a group of&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
music faculty members at 8 p.m.&#13;
on Sunday, Oct. 31 in the&#13;
Parkside Union Theater.&#13;
_ The participants explain the&#13;
discrepancy between the&#13;
program title and the time of the&#13;
performance by saying that it is&#13;
scheduled for the convenience of&#13;
those who turn into pumpkiru; at&#13;
midnight. The event is free and&#13;
open to the public and costumes&#13;
and-or disguises are encouraged.&#13;
Music faculty members involved&#13;
in the endeavor are Carol&#13;
Bell, pianist, Tim Bell,&#13;
saxophone and clarinet, Rodger&#13;
Daniels, percussion, Carol Irwin,&#13;
soprano, David Schripsema,&#13;
violin, Eden Vaning, violin, and&#13;
August Wegner, piano.&#13;
Model&#13;
U.N.&#13;
planned&#13;
The political science discipline&#13;
will be sponsoring a delegation of&#13;
students to go to the Third Annual&#13;
Regional Model United Nations&#13;
on April 14-15, 1977 at Carleton&#13;
College in Northfield, Minnesota.&#13;
The model United Nations are&#13;
designed to impart to the particular&#13;
participant both a greater&#13;
knowledge of the functioning of&#13;
the United Nations and an expanded&#13;
perspective of international&#13;
issues.&#13;
A delegation's first duty is to&#13;
determine which nation it will&#13;
represent ~d then study that&#13;
nation's foreign policy as well as&#13;
rationale for that policy. At the&#13;
conference it-self, members of&#13;
the delegation will present and&#13;
defend their nation's position&#13;
before committees convened to&#13;
discuss issues and proposals and&#13;
then take resolutions decided by&#13;
the committees to the floor of the&#13;
Model General Assembly.&#13;
Interested students may&#13;
contact Dr. Samuel Pernacdaro&#13;
Greenquist 313 or CL 367.&#13;
PA&amp; PREol:NTS ~~~ wmR forfii.6.W'NshON Ml\K.E AMr -&#13;
: Cla~sifieds l&#13;
t . . t - t House Parents-Counselor Couple . $10,000 t annual salary, paid family health ins., free&#13;
room &amp; board. 2 wks. paid vacation, 6:30&#13;
l P-m. · 11 p.m. free time. Requirements c One t ' Parent must hall\! at least Bachelor's degree. t 'lo Childreri. Contact : Rac ine Runaway, t 'nc., 1331 Center St., Racine, Wis .. 632-0424 f 8-5 daily. •&#13;
WANTED: Sports writer for RANGER that t t "talented, good in grammar, and most of all t&#13;
dependable. S-ee Jean Tenuta in the t RANGER office, WLLC 0194. t ~AN. E . . THOMPSON Free Lance t holography, weddings and candid por- t traits. Phone 652-8862.&#13;
t 1974 P~NTl1'C SPRING 3-speed Metallic t&#13;
'&#13;
Blue, red buckets, Rally wheels, AM-FM , t FM stereo, 8-Track S2195. 634-0876.&#13;
t WILL DO any kind of typing al reasonable t t rates. For Information. call 652-3373.&#13;
NEEDED FEMALE COMPANION to share'&#13;
l expenses to Denver, Colo. on November 2. ' f Call 632-4727 for morl information eve~lngs.&#13;
,.. t FOR SALE : Portable Stereo w ith Garrard t turntable. Asking $50. Call 634-5305 after&#13;
t Runoff elections" between Richard t&#13;
l Foloom' Carol Bohn' and Jpan&#13;
TOM CHAPIN&#13;
,&#13;
-Fuetterer ~ ____ Fri. Oci.29 9:30AM~&#13;
-5:30PM&#13;
_&#13;
l '-----------T-ick .. et .. s,.o_,t -'".;.fo~Ce_,n.;.ter ________ _,J&#13;
They promise such esoteric&#13;
pr?gram fare as clarinet polkas,&#13;
F1ight of the Bumblebee for&#13;
accompanied marimba, The&#13;
Pineapple Rag of Scott Joplin,&#13;
and other musical ghoulishness.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board Film Series&#13;
presents&#13;
TWO HITCHCOCK CLASSICS&#13;
THE~ ,llf/8/III/IIJ ... PS-~O .&#13;
~IR!J!~ .aJ;r~()b&#13;
Wednesday Thursday&#13;
Oct. 27 Oct. 28&#13;
2:30 &amp; 7:30 p.m. 2:30 &amp; 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre Union Cinema Theatre&#13;
• I&#13;
$1.00 $1.00&#13;
Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin's&#13;
album station&#13;
Album rock from&#13;
6 ·p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
every night on • • • •&#13;
• IIP&#13;
637-2726&#13;
Should&#13;
1 Would You Like To Increase Gas&#13;
Mileage By 10% To 25%* And&#13;
Save S10.00 Every 1000 Miles?&#13;
[ ] YES [ ] NO • overall average % increase&#13;
2 Would you Rather Change OH&#13;
Every 25,000 Miles/Once A Year&#13;
And lncrea~e Engine life?&#13;
[ ) YES [ ) NO&#13;
3 Would you like To Eliminate&#13;
Towing And Service Expense&#13;
This Winter When Your Car&#13;
Won't Start Due To cold, Sluggish&#13;
Oil? · [ ] YES [ ] NO&#13;
If your answer is YES to any of the&#13;
above questions, you should be&#13;
using SYNTHETIC AMS/OIL !&#13;
If', ,,,,,, lo ,,,,,,,, &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27, 1976&#13;
,EarthScience:&#13;
varied,Interests .&#13;
by Debbie Sbarpe'" camping gear and equipment has heen obtained by&#13;
the club,leaving smaller expenses for the sludentto&#13;
The process of' learning may appear rigidly assume. Last year's trip brought students to&#13;
structured and rather impersonal at limes, but that Arkansas and Missouri, and this year they plan a&#13;
is only one dimension. The field of earth science trip to Florida, commencing over the Christmas&#13;
involves several varied learning experiences. .break.&#13;
Earth science 'involves a substantial radious of Speakers from different areas of the country talk&#13;
interests. Geological and environmental sludies frequently withgrciups of earth science students.&#13;
intertwine with the fields of geology, meteorology Also, a yearly "Field Conference," consisting of&#13;
air and water pollution, weather observation, approximately 100 to 200 students from Parkside&#13;
mineralogy, planetary, geology and several more. and surrounding campuse .. gather (this year at&#13;
First-band learning experiences are gained by a Oshkosh) to discuss mutual areas of interest conseries&#13;
of field trips comprising of one major trip cerning the sludy of earth science: ,&#13;
.conducted annually, and sequeled with several The prospect of employment is also validly&#13;
shorter trips throughout the semester. Preparation considered. Many students seek and profitably find&#13;
for these trips naturally requires a background interesting and meaningful employment opknowledge&#13;
supplied from a text, but the field of portunities within the field of earth science,&#13;
earth science depends heavily upon self-observation Professor Shea explains, "I' think many sludents&#13;
and personal involvement just as well as the text. simply don't realize the opportunities that can grow&#13;
The "Earth Science Club," as well as earth out of education. In fact, there are many inscience&#13;
sludents or other interested participants teresting opportunities within the earth science&#13;
finance their trips from activities such as raffles in program. »,&#13;
approaching the administration for grants. Basic&#13;
, .&#13;
Guskin--------&#13;
continued from pg. 1&#13;
feeling can he reduced.&#13;
• Regarding to future meetings&#13;
of this type, he said that he would&#13;
like to have them on a regular&#13;
basis, possibly every other week.&#13;
As long as sludents are interested&#13;
and attend, "nobody and no topic&#13;
is forbidden," said Guskin.&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden inquired. about&#13;
policies regarding the tape&#13;
recording of classes by sludents&#13;
She said that at other campuses&#13;
this is an issue of great importance.&#13;
Guskin said that it is up&#13;
to the faculty memher in charge&#13;
of that particular class to decide&#13;
what goes on in their class.&#13;
The Chancellor and sludents&#13;
PARAPHERNALIAsOUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
Stop in!&#13;
shed a new Ufe on shopping!&#13;
~~~MA~-S=-' -,&#13;
! I I . Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
..&#13;
UW-"P.kside Activities Board and WRKR&#13;
present&#13;
HARRY CHAPIN&#13;
in Concert&#13;
Thursday; "ovember 11&#13;
8 p.m.&#13;
Parkside Fieldhouse&#13;
Admission - $3.00 Parkside, Students advance&#13;
$4.00 General Advance&#13;
$5.00 At door&#13;
Tickets Available at Info Center __&#13;
concluded the meeting in a group&#13;
decision after 2% hours. The&#13;
Chancellor mentioned he was late&#13;
for another meeting in progress&#13;
next door. Generally pleased with&#13;
the student turnout Guskin said&#13;
he was looking forward to the&#13;
next Chancellor-sludent meeting.&#13;
Committees&#13;
continued from es. 1&#13;
merged last year.&#13;
The other' committee created&#13;
by the Senate was the Committee&#13;
on Research and Creative Activity&#13;
(CORACO), which replaces&#13;
the old Faculty Fund Board. The&#13;
new committee will dole out&#13;
institutional funds to faculty&#13;
members for research they are&#13;
carrying out, and will also be&#13;
charged with raising some funds&#13;
on its own. The chairman will be&#13;
appointed by the Chancellor, and&#13;
according to Faculty Senate&#13;
chairman Michel Marron, will&#13;
serve in a capacity "like that of&#13;
an assistant to the .p,ancellor."&#13;
The chairman will be&#13;
responsible for handling information&#13;
about funding opportunities&#13;
and for assisting&#13;
faculty in obtaining outside&#13;
financial support for research&#13;
and creative activity.&#13;
Semester Break&#13;
January &amp;-13, -1977&#13;
$339 COMPLETE&#13;
Triple occupancy&#13;
LIMITED SPACE -&#13;
- MAKE YOUR&#13;
RESERVATIONS, NOWI&#13;
• For application forms 011&#13;
additional information contact:&#13;
Pe-kside Union Office'&#13;
553-2200&#13;
Editor's note: "Who Are Vou?" will be a regular column In whleh&#13;
students selected at random will be interviewed to find onl lbelr in-&#13;
,teresls, background; ele. These are tbe people we pass by in the haDs&#13;
every day, sit next to In class, ride with on the shuttle hus, bul&#13;
sometimes never have lhe opportunity to meet.&#13;
.&#13;
by Wendy Miller&#13;
Mary Jo Curty was randomly selected for this week's interview&#13;
from the Parkside student population'. When first approached, she was&#13;
reading, but not engrossed in a book entitled Deviant Behavior for her&#13;
social disorganization class. Sbe willingly put it aside to teD Ranger a&#13;
few things about herself.&#13;
She is an 18 year old freshman here and a Racine St. Catherioes&#13;
graduate. When asked how Parkside compared to her high school, she&#13;
responded. "There is so much more to do and so much more to take&#13;
here; and there are no OWlS running around."&#13;
According to Mary Jo, "Parkside is sort of a self-sufficient place."&#13;
She recalled days at St. Cat's, leaving the school illegally 10 go to the&#13;
nearby bakery or a park. "All that is right here. Parkside is so pretty&#13;
in the fall... it's a school with a view," she said;&#13;
"I'm a person who is thrilled with the idea that someone can come&#13;
here and sleep in the halls. I just woke up from a nap; it w"as great."&#13;
Marv Jo was sitting in the second floor of the union. "I'like the trees&#13;
around here," she said' referring to the trees inside the bUilding.&#13;
Mary Jo is on the Parkside Activity Board's film committee.&#13;
Vesterday she and two other committee memhers dressed up like the&#13;
Marx Brothers lo advertise the movie, Animal Crackers. She still has&#13;
bruises from the escapade. They took bundles of animal crackers and&#13;
"ran around throwing them at people all over the school.&#13;
We even went up to see Guskie, but he wasn't in. Someone must have&#13;
warned. him."&#13;
For' the past week the fibn committee has been making origami&#13;
(folded paper) 'birds to advertise their next presentation, Alfred&#13;
Hilehcock's The Birds. The films are shown in the Union Cinema&#13;
Theatre. "For a dollar it's good. We have to pull publicity stunts&#13;
because not everyone knows about the theatre yet," she said.&#13;
Mary Jo had planned on majoring in communications 'but she was&#13;
told at registration that she would not be able to do that at Parkside, "I&#13;
really wanted to major in it. I heard they dropped some teachers and&#13;
everything." She hopes that she will someday be able to major in&#13;
communications at Parkside. "I'm really upset about it. All the :way&#13;
through my senior year at St. Catherines 1 planned on coming here to&#13;
major in Communications."&#13;
She'also enjoys sewing and does it for extra money. She made the&#13;
coat that she was wearing during the interview, "I'm just starting to&#13;
get together my own business. My sisters are my advertisers because&#13;
they wear ..my things."&#13;
Mary Jo said, "I'm disorganized in everything but sewing. That's&#13;
why nook Social Disorganization; it sounded like my kind of course.&#13;
What 1like aJ&gt;outthis school is that it's not totally organized."&#13;
Editor's note: According to Chancellor Alan Guskln, Parkslde still&#13;
halil.a comm1tnif'atiH~ major, which will also be retained in the future.&#13;
J&#13;
•&#13;
,. ""&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the' Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Wathillgtoll lINe. 6M-2t7J&#13;
•&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27, 1976&#13;
. Earth Science:&#13;
varied , interests · _ ~ . ~ . by Debbie Sharpe&#13;
The process of · learning may appear rigidly&#13;
structured and rather impersonal at times, but tha!&#13;
is only one dimension. The field of earth science&#13;
involves several varied learning experiences.&#13;
Earth science ·involves a substa!ltial radious of&#13;
interests. Geological and environmental studies&#13;
intertwine with the fields of geology, meteorologY,&#13;
air and water pollution, weather observation,&#13;
mineralogy, planetary, geology and several more.&#13;
First-hand learning experiences are gained by a&#13;
series of field trips comprising of one major trip&#13;
· conducted annually, and sequeled with several&#13;
shorter trips throughout the semester. Preparation&#13;
for these trips naturally requires a background&#13;
knowledge supplied from a text, but the field of&#13;
earth science depends heavily upon self-observation&#13;
and personal involvement just as well as the text.&#13;
The "Earth Science Club," as well as earth&#13;
science students or other interested participants&#13;
finance their trips from activities such as raffles in&#13;
approaching the admir.istration for grants. Basic&#13;
camping gear and eqmpment has been obtamed by&#13;
the club, leaving smaller expenses for the student to&#13;
assume. Last year's trip brought stu~ents to&#13;
Arkansas and Missouri, and this year they plan a&#13;
trip to Florida, commencing over the Christmas&#13;
·break.&#13;
Speakers from different areas of thE: country talk&#13;
frequently with ·groups of earth science students.&#13;
Also, a yearly "Field Conference," consisting of&#13;
approximately 100 to 200 students from Parkside&#13;
and surrounding campuses- gather (this year at&#13;
Oshkosh) to discuss mutual areas of interest concerning&#13;
the study of earth science:&#13;
The prospect of employment is also validly&#13;
considered. Many students seek and profitably find&#13;
interesting and meaningful emplqyment opportunities&#13;
within the field of earth science,&#13;
Professor Shea explains, "I" think many students&#13;
simply don't realize the opportunities that can gtow&#13;
out of education. In fact, there are many interesting&#13;
opportunities within the earth science&#13;
program. "·&#13;
Gu skin----.------&#13;
continued from pg. 1&#13;
feeling can be reduced.&#13;
· Regarding to future meetings&#13;
of this type, he said that he would&#13;
like to have them on a regular&#13;
basis, possibly every other week.&#13;
As long as students are interested&#13;
and attend, "nobody and no topic&#13;
is forbidden," said Guskin.&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden inquired. about&#13;
policies regarding the tape&#13;
recording of classes by students&#13;
She said that at other campuses&#13;
this is an issue of great importance.&#13;
Guskin said that it is up&#13;
to the faculty member in charge&#13;
of that particular class to decide&#13;
what goes on in their class.&#13;
The Chancellor and students&#13;
PARAPHERNALfA -SCJUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
Stop in!&#13;
shed a new Life on shopping!&#13;
~ ~~Mi~-f , '&#13;
1 · Pure Brewed&#13;
From .God's Cou~ry.&#13;
On tap at Union Squijre&#13;
G&#13;
UW.:Parkside Activities Board and WRKR&#13;
present I&#13;
I&#13;
HARRY CHAPIN&#13;
in Concert&#13;
Thursday, ~~vember 11&#13;
8 p.m. _&#13;
Parkside Fieldhouse&#13;
Admission - $3.00 Parkside _ Students advance&#13;
$4.00 General Advance&#13;
$5.00 At door&#13;
Tickets Available at Info Center _.r&#13;
concluded the meeting in a group&#13;
decision after 2½ hours. The&#13;
Chancellor mentioned he was late&#13;
for another meeting in progress&#13;
next door. Generally pleas~d with&#13;
the student turnout Guskin said&#13;
he was looking forward to the&#13;
next Chancellor-student meeting.&#13;
-Committees&#13;
cpntlnued from pg. 1&#13;
merged last year.&#13;
The other· committee created •&#13;
by the Senate was the Committee&#13;
on Research and Creative Activity&#13;
(CORACO), which replaces&#13;
the old Faculty Fund Board. The&#13;
new committee will dole out&#13;
institutional funds to faculty&#13;
members for research they are&#13;
carrying out, and will also be&#13;
charged with raising some funds&#13;
on its own. The chairman will be&#13;
appointed by the Chancellor, and _&#13;
according to Faculty Senate&#13;
chairman Michel Marron, will&#13;
serve in a capacity "like that of&#13;
an assistant to the Chancellor."&#13;
The chairman will be&#13;
responsible for handling information&#13;
about funding opportunities&#13;
and for assisting&#13;
faculty in obtaining outside&#13;
financial support for research&#13;
and creative activity.&#13;
. ~, Universlty_o!, W'.5"onsin-Parkside&#13;
~ -&#13;
Fl~ta&#13;
Acapulco ·&#13;
Semester Break&#13;
January 6-13,-_ 1977&#13;
$339 COMPLETE&#13;
Triple occupancy&#13;
LIMITED SPACE - -· MAKE YOUR&#13;
RESERVATIONS, NOW! • For application forms or&#13;
additional information contact:&#13;
Parkside tlnion Office&#13;
553-2200&#13;
photo by Wendy Miller··&#13;
Editor's note: "Who Are You?" will be a regular column in which&#13;
students selected at, random will be interviewed to find out their interests,&#13;
background, etc. These are the people we pass by in the halls&#13;
every day, sit next to in class, ride with on the shuttle bus, but&#13;
sometimes never have the opportunity to meet. . by Wendy Miller&#13;
Mary Jo Curty was randomly selected for this week's interview&#13;
from the Parkside student population·. When first approached, she was&#13;
reading, but not engrossed in a book entitled Deviant Behavior for her&#13;
social disorganization class. She willingly put it aside to tell Ranger a&#13;
few things about herself.&#13;
She is an 18 year old freshman here and a Racine St. Catherines&#13;
graduate. When asked how Parkside compared to her high school, she&#13;
responded. "There is so much more to do and so much more to take&#13;
here; and there are no nuns running around."&#13;
According to Mary Jo, "Parkside is sort of a self-sufficient place."&#13;
She recalled days at St. Cat's, leaving the school illegally t-0 go to the&#13;
nearby bakery or a park. "All that is right here. P~rkside is so pretty&#13;
in the fall ... it's a school with a view," she said;&#13;
"I'm a person who is thrilled with the idea that someone can come&#13;
here and sleep in the halls. I just woke up from a nap; it w"as great."&#13;
Marv Jo was sitting in the second floor of the union. "I"like the trees&#13;
around here," she said ' referring to the trees inside the _ building.&#13;
Mary Jo is on the Parkside Activity Board's film committee.&#13;
Yesterday she and two other committee members dressed up like the&#13;
Marx Brothers to advertise the movie, Animal Crackers. She still has&#13;
bruises from the escapade. They took bundles of animal crackers and&#13;
"ran around throwing them at people all over the school.&#13;
We even went up to see Guskie, but he wasn't in. Someone must have&#13;
warned him.''&#13;
For the past week the film committee has been making origami&#13;
(folded paper) birds to advertise their next presentation, Alfred&#13;
Hitchcock's The Birds. The films are shown in the Union Cinema&#13;
Theatre. "For a dollar it's good. We have to pull publicity stunts&#13;
because not everyone knows about the theatre yet," she said .&#13;
. Mary Jo had planned on majoring in communications but she was&#13;
told at registration that she would not be able to do that at Parkside. "I&#13;
really wanted to major in it. I heard they dropped some teachers and&#13;
everything." She hopes that she will someday be able to major in&#13;
communications at Parkside. "I'm really upset about it. All the way&#13;
thro~gh my senior year at St. Catherines I planned on coming here to&#13;
major in Communications."&#13;
She·also enjoys sewing and does it for extra money. She made the&#13;
coat that she was wearing during the interview, "I'm just starting to&#13;
get together my own business. My sisters are my advertise.rs because&#13;
they wear ,.my things."&#13;
Mary Jo said, "I'm disorganized in everything but sewing. That's&#13;
why r took Social Disorganization; it l'jOUnded like my kind of course.&#13;
What I like about this school is that it's not totally organized."&#13;
Editor's note: According to Chancellor Alan Guskin, Parkside still&#13;
ha-. a comm1tnication major, which will also be retained in the future.&#13;
.. LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P .M.&#13;
2615 Washington ltle. 634-23·73 &#13;
Vets:a unique group&#13;
by Debbie Bauer . . .&#13;
. , IS also in the planning stage, as is a fund raising pool&#13;
tournament open to all students .&#13;
Schultz and Tom Olson, vice president of the cl~,&#13;
are actively campaigning for veteran's rights.&#13;
Olson IS president of Wisconsin Association of&#13;
Concerned Veteran's Organizations (WACVO) and&#13;
Schultz is secretary. WACVO beld their annual&#13;
conv~tion in Kenosha last spring, hosted by the&#13;
Parkside Vets Club. Schultz is also State Cordinator&#13;
for the National Association of Concerned Veterans&#13;
(NACV).&#13;
Schultz estimates that there are 508 veterans at&#13;
Parkside. Fourty-three are paid members Of the&#13;
.club. "Five percent membership is considered&#13;
g0oc:I,and we are well over that," he explained. "We&#13;
are in a lot better position than we have ever been."&#13;
He hopes to have 100paid members by the end of the&#13;
school year.&#13;
Vet's Club meets every other Sunday in WLLC&#13;
0174, across from the Information Kiosk.&#13;
. Veterans are that unique group of people who&#13;
have endu:ed an experience they often consider&#13;
unbearable. They wait impatiently for it to end&#13;
then when it's finally over, they want to get together&#13;
and talk about the good and riot so good old days&#13;
The Vets are a diverse ,group from varied&#13;
backgrounds, often with little ihCOmmonother than&#13;
their military service. But they usually agree on one&#13;
point: be",~ a Ve~beats being in the military.&#13;
Parkside s Vet s Club is one of the most active&#13;
orgamzanons on campus. According to Ron Schultz&#13;
president, 60 percent of the activities are-of a sociai&#13;
nature and 40 percent are service oriente.d. Last&#13;
spring, they cleaned up Pike's Creek and sponsored&#13;
a walk-run to raise funds for the Special Olympics.&#13;
Beer drinking, informal parties, and foothall&#13;
games form the bulk of the club's social activities.&#13;
They will hold a dance on November 20 in Union&#13;
Square. A pool tournament for Vet's Club members&#13;
Ron Shultz Pholo by Allen Bauer&#13;
by Linda Knudtson and Karin LaFournler&#13;
Dear Complaint DePartment,&#13;
I have a complaint about the math discipline at Parkside. I feel that&#13;
this semester I have been stuck with a professor who I feel is ineompetant&#13;
for a class that I need. There are other math professors&#13;
here who have the background to teach the class, so who decides which&#13;
classes are taught by which professors and how can students have a&#13;
say in this process?&#13;
No Choice (Note: this letter has been edited for content.)&#13;
u&#13;
-0&#13;
m&#13;
p&#13;
I&#13;
a&#13;
•&#13;
1&#13;
n&#13;
t&#13;
ANSWER: We 'Went to discuss this problem with Science Division&#13;
Chairperson, Frank Lowenthal, and with discipline coordinator&#13;
Timothy Fosswn, who is coordinating the teaching schedule for the&#13;
spring semester. According to these men, the math professors put in&#13;
requests for the classes they would like to teach. Using this information,&#13;
all classes are then assigned by the coordinating professor&#13;
(currently Mr. Fossum) as he sees fit.&#13;
The math discipline tries to be as flexible as possible with the&#13;
schedules. U a student feels that he-she has an incompelant professor&#13;
(in any department, not just math),ile-she may file either a formal or&#13;
an informal complaint. An informal complaint is a written statement&#13;
to the divisional chairperson. After talking with the student submitting&#13;
the complaint, the.chairperson tries to straighten out any problems&#13;
with the professor involved. (at no time will the name of the student&#13;
filing the complaint be released to the professor who is the object of&#13;
the complaint.)&#13;
A formal complaint is filed with the Chancellor in writing. We&#13;
suggest that any student who has a valid complaint about one of bisher&#13;
professors file an informal complaint first. (However we feel that&#13;
for most problems, the student should go directly to the professor that&#13;
is involvee anll try to straighten out the problem( s) with him-her.)&#13;
P.S. to No Choice: We have additional information that might be of&#13;
interest to you. Please get in contact with us. - The Editors&#13;
• Note on Spanlsb&#13;
We have received word from Sylvie Debevec Henning, Coordinator&#13;
of the Modern Language Program, that -this fall she has received&#13;
numerous complaints from students that no Spanish conversation and&#13;
composition Course was offered. Ms. Henning would like all students to&#13;
know that this problem has been remedied. Next semester Spanish&#13;
315-Compositlon and Conversation will be taught by Professor Ortega Dept. on Tuesday a!,d Thursday from 3:30-4:45..&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27. 1976 7&#13;
Applications now&#13;
being accepted for&#13;
Ranger Editor for&#13;
Spring Semester&#13;
RESUMESMUST BE TUum IN TO&#13;
DON KOPRIVA,&#13;
288 Tallent Hall by ItoV. 11th&#13;
• Salaried posilion demonding 01 loosl 20-30 hours a WHIt&#13;
• Experience in jOt.mOlism necessary&#13;
• Applicants will be advised of interview time and place&#13;
Call Don Kopriva for further details 553.2404&#13;
FREE DELIVER Y&#13;
Member Parkstde 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd A venue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
Mention Ihis ad I&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25.00G-mlle 011change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-6O"F. pour point)&#13;
• Saves 011 Mike Villers&#13;
637-2726 your AlIAS/OIL dea/eT&#13;
We're not&#13;
just another&#13;
rocker .&#13;
Album rock from&#13;
6 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
every night on .. • • • •&#13;
WUPMl95&#13;
WUPMl95&#13;
WUPMl95 .&#13;
•&#13;
Ve~s: a unique group&#13;
by Debbie Bauer · is also in the planning stage, as is a fund raising pool&#13;
· Veterans are that unique group of people who&#13;
have endured an experience they often consider&#13;
unbearable. They wait impatiently for it t.o end&#13;
then when it's finally over, they want t.o get togethe;&#13;
and talk about the good and riot so good old days.&#13;
The Vets are a diverse _group from varied&#13;
backgrounds, often with little ih common other than&#13;
their military service. But they usually agree on one&#13;
point: being a Vet beats being in the military.&#13;
t.ournament open t.o all students.&#13;
Schultz and Tom Olson, vice president of the club&#13;
are ac~ively 7ampaigning for veteran's rights'.&#13;
Olson is president of Wisconsin Association of&#13;
Concerned Veteran's Organizations·(WACVO) and&#13;
Schultz is secretary. WACVO held their annual&#13;
conve?tion in Kenosha last spring, hosted by the&#13;
Parkside Vets Club. Schultz is also State Cordinator&#13;
for the National Association of Concerned Veterans&#13;
Parkside's Vet's Club is one of the most active&#13;
org~izations on campus. According to Ron Schultz&#13;
president, 60 percent of the activities are-of a sociai&#13;
nature and 40 percent are service oriented. Last&#13;
spring, they cleaned up Pike's Creek and sponsored&#13;
a walk-run t.o raise funds for the Spe"cial Olympics.&#13;
Beer drinking, informal parties, and football&#13;
games form the bulk of the club's social activities.&#13;
They will hold a dance on November 20 in Union&#13;
Square. A pool t.ournruw~nt for Vet's Club members&#13;
(NACV). .&#13;
Schultz estimates that there are 508 veterans at&#13;
Parkside. Fourty-three are paid members of the&#13;
· club. "Five percent membership is considered&#13;
go~, and we are well over that," he explained. "We&#13;
are m a lot better position than we have ever been."&#13;
He hopes t.o have 100 paid members by the end of the&#13;
school year.&#13;
u&#13;
-0&#13;
m&#13;
p&#13;
I&#13;
a&#13;
•&#13;
I&#13;
D&#13;
t&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Vet's Club meets every other Sunday in WLLC&#13;
D174, across from the lnf&lt;'rmation Kiosk.&#13;
Ron Shultz Photo by Allen Bauer&#13;
by Llnda Knudtson and Karin LaFournier&#13;
Dear Complaint Department,&#13;
I have a complaint about the math discipline at Parkside. I feel that&#13;
this semester I have been stuck with a professor who I feel is incompetant&#13;
for a class that I need. There are other math professors&#13;
here who have the background t.o teach the class, so who decides which&#13;
classes are taught by which prpfessors and how can students have a&#13;
say in this process?&#13;
No Choice (Note: this letter has been edited for content.)&#13;
ANSWER: We went t.o discuss this problem with Science Division&#13;
Chairperson, Frank Lowenthal, and with discipline coordinator&#13;
Timothy Fosswn, who is coordinating the teaching schedule for the&#13;
spring semester. According t.o these men, the math professors put in&#13;
requests for the classes they would like t.o teach. Using this information,&#13;
all classes are then assigned by the coordinating professor&#13;
(currently Mr. Fossum) as he sees fit.&#13;
The math discipline tries to be as flexible as possible with the&#13;
schedules. If a student feels that he-she has an incompetant professor&#13;
(in any department, not just math), ile-she may file either a formal or&#13;
an informal complaint. An informal complaint is a written statement&#13;
to the divisional chairperson. After talking with the student submitting&#13;
the complaint, the chairperson tries t.o straighten out any problems&#13;
with the professor involved. ( at no time will the name of the student&#13;
filing the complaint be released to the professor who is the object of&#13;
the complaint.)&#13;
A formal complaint is filed with the Chancellor in writing. We&#13;
suggest that any student who has a valid complaint about one of hisher&#13;
professors file an informal complaint first. (However we feel that&#13;
for most problems, the student should go directly t.o the professor that&#13;
is involvee and try t.o straighten out the problem( s) with him-her.)&#13;
P.S. t.o No Choice: We have additional information that might be of&#13;
interest t.o you. Please get in contact with us. -The Editors&#13;
• Note on Spanish&#13;
We have received word from Sylvie Debevec Itenning, Coordinator&#13;
of the Modern Language Program, that -this fall she has received&#13;
numerous complaints from students that no Spanish conversation and&#13;
composition course was offered. Ms. Henning would like all students to&#13;
know that this problem has been remedied. Next semester Spanish&#13;
315-Composition and Conversation will be taught by Professor Ortega&#13;
on Tuesday aJld Thursday from 3:30-4:45.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27, 1976 7&#13;
Applications now&#13;
being accepted tor&#13;
Ranger Editor for&#13;
Spring Semester&#13;
RESUMES MUST BE TURNED IN TO&#13;
DON KOPRIVA,&#13;
288 Tallent Hall by Nov. 11th&#13;
• Salaried position demanding at least 20-ll hours a week&#13;
• Experience in journalism necessary&#13;
• Applicants will be advised of interview time and place&#13;
Call Don Kopriva for further details 553-2404&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Oub&#13;
•&#13;
443 7 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
Mention this odl&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,000-mlle oll change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60°F. pour point)&#13;
• Saves 011 Mike Villers&#13;
your AMS/ OIL dealer&#13;
.637-2726&#13;
~ "II&#13;
We're not&#13;
just another&#13;
•&#13;
rocker ........&#13;
Album rock from&#13;
6 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
every night on . . • • • •&#13;
WUP_ffll95&#13;
WUPffll95&#13;
WUPffll95&#13;
Ii,. ~ &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RA"'GER October 27, 1976-) --~&#13;
(&#13;
I&#13;
\ Netiers close season&#13;
•&#13;
round, the No. I doubles pair of'&#13;
Mary Ann Carins .and Jennifer'&#13;
Zuehlke· dropped to a team from&#13;
Oshkosh 7-5, 6-1. In No.2, Kathy&#13;
Feitchner and Pat Munger lost to&#13;
UW-Milwaukee's .Kellough_&#13;
Pataini, 6-2, 6-3, in the quar.&#13;
terfinal consolations. _ .&#13;
In the first consolation match&#13;
an No.3 singles, Jeanine Hunter&#13;
lost to Peg Gruenge of UW·&#13;
Whitewater, 6-0, 6-1. Marge.&#13;
Balasz was defeated in the&#13;
second round of consolation to&#13;
Carthage's Jan Daly; 6-1~6-0.&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Swimmers .Iose two .meets The women's tennis team&#13;
concluded their season with a&#13;
ninth place finish in the WWIAC&#13;
Championships at UW-La Crosse&#13;
Saturday. .&#13;
The host won the meet easily&#13;
with·60 points and UW-El\u Claire&#13;
and UW.stevens Point tied tor&#13;
second with 28. The Rangers&#13;
scored one point.&#13;
The highest finishers for the&#13;
Rangers were the doubles teams.&#13;
After the quarterfinal consolation&#13;
swam in the 200medley relay, the&#13;
first time this event lias been&#13;
swum by the Rangers this&#13;
season.&#13;
UWe're in better spirits and&#13;
have tried our hardest," said&#13;
Coach Barb Lawson. "After a&#13;
couple of weeks of hard work,&#13;
we'll be stronger next week."&#13;
Friday, the team lost ta UWMilwaukee,&#13;
IlJO.11.&#13;
"Nothing went right for us,"&#13;
said Lawson. The highest finishes&#13;
were a second In the'IOO back bY&#13;
Latch and a third in the 100 tree&#13;
bY Gail Olsen.&#13;
by'Jean Tenuta 1:06.73, finishing second against&#13;
Carroll and third against&#13;
Oshkosh. She took a first against&#13;
Oshkosh' and second against&#13;
Carroll in the lOO'back and a first&#13;
against Carroll and third against&#13;
Oshkosh in the 50 b1lfterfly.&#13;
Judy Iverson scored a first&#13;
agalilst Carroll and third against&#13;
Oshkosh in the 50 free, seconds in&#13;
the }DO breast and third In the 50&#13;
back.&#13;
Sally Francis scored thirds in&#13;
the 50 free and the 500 free. Lili&#13;
CrnIch also bad thirds in both. the&#13;
200 free and 50 breast. Four also&#13;
Parkside's women's swimming&#13;
squad will participate in two&#13;
meets this week. This afternoon&#13;
they travel to UW-Whitewater for&#13;
a 6 p.m. meet and will meet .&#13;
Carthage, UW-River Falls and&#13;
UW-Eau Claire in Kenosha&#13;
Saturday, at 10 a.m.&#13;
The Rangers dropped both ends&#13;
of a double dual meet last Saturdar,&#13;
losing to Oshkosh, 112-&#13;
15 and to' Carroll, 85-24.&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch set an~ther&#13;
school record In th~ 100 free at.&#13;
Housing workshop&#13;
Church.&#13;
Topics to be discussed include.&#13;
housing purchases, programs' for&#13;
low income famflies and&#13;
'veteran's housing programs.&#13;
The Urban League Operation of&#13;
Kenosha is·sponsoring a housing&#13;
workshop entitled "Housing in&#13;
Kenosha" on October 28 from 7 to&#13;
9:30 p.m, at the Second Baptist Soccer team-play'S W~stern Michigan&#13;
'.. Free Plm Delivery&#13;
C:,I~bHighvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street /.&#13;
Phone: 65~-8737&#13;
All. ~.n••rl•• Chi•••• , S,••hlfli, R.... ,!, 8H'&#13;
. OPEN 4 , ••• to t .....&#13;
Hendl,rson thought that this was&#13;
a record for a Ranger in a season.&#13;
Parkside's soccer team hosts Mike Boyaji;m, who has also&#13;
Western Michigan Saturday at 2 -seored quite well for the Rangers&#13;
p.m, in the soccer bowl, in wbat this season, added two goals -and&#13;
. Coach Hal Henderson expects to two assists to his season total. .&#13;
be a "very even game." Desch Ismsili gained two goals&#13;
"Weslern Michigan has fpced - arid one assist, Andy Gutierrez&#13;
three of the same teams that' we and J:ack Landwelir each had a&#13;
have and have done about the goal, Mihran Ganghinjian scored&#13;
same as we bave against them. one goal and had two assists, and&#13;
We're hoping our having the Chris Carter and Mike Olesen&#13;
home field will be enough of an added one asslst each.&#13;
advantage to put us ahead," said . The squad's record is 6-5-1,&#13;
Henderson. which ties the highest number of&#13;
• The Rangers are hoping, wins for a Parkside team and this&#13;
though, that the Western&#13;
Michigan team will be similar to&#13;
the Eastern Michigan team they&#13;
routed 10-0 at yItSiJanti.&#13;
"We totally dominated the&#13;
game. We out shot them 37-3 and&#13;
it was 6-0 at the half. It was unfortunate&#13;
that we didn't have&#13;
enough substitutes to give others&#13;
a chance to get considerable .&#13;
playing experience. I was just&#13;
shuffling players around, putting&#13;
them in different positions and&#13;
. we were trying not to run up the&#13;
score."&#13;
Earl Campbell, the team's .&#13;
leading scorer increased his&#13;
margin above other Rangers with&#13;
three 'goals lind two assists,&#13;
bringing his season total to eight&#13;
goals and eight assists. Coach&#13;
is also the first time a Parkside&#13;
tesm has had a record over .500&#13;
during a season in over five&#13;
years.&#13;
The team stili expects to win&#13;
· approximately ten games, while&#13;
finishing over break-even mark.&#13;
Henderson is stili cautious and is&#13;
taking Iris season goals one step&#13;
at a time.&#13;
"We've been getting better. ~;::::::::::~==========:::::::::::::. each game," said Henderson.&#13;
"Our strong schedule in the early The quiet leader in synthetic iubrication&#13;
part of the season got us used to&#13;
pressure situations and we're&#13;
better able to handle them now."&#13;
~. Mike Villers&#13;
.Questions You&#13;
Ask Yourself:&#13;
~&#13;
1 Would You Like To Increase Gas&#13;
Mileage By 10% To 25%* And&#13;
Save $10.00 Every 1000 Miles?&#13;
[ IYES [ INO .&#13;
• overall average % increase&#13;
.2 Would you Rather Change Oil&#13;
. Every 25,000 Miles/Once A Year&#13;
And Increase Engine life?&#13;
[ IYES [ INO&#13;
....3·Would· you. like' To Eliminate&#13;
Towing And' Service Expense&#13;
This Winter When Your Car&#13;
Won't Start Due To cold, Sluggish&#13;
. Oil? [ IYES t INO .&#13;
If your answer is YES to any of the&#13;
abOve questions, you should be&#13;
using SYNTHETIC AMS/OIL !&#13;
If,- H"" ItJ ,U."&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Runners finish fifth 637-2726&#13;
Parkside's runners face Should&#13;
Carthage, Loras, and Marquette&#13;
in the first of their last four home&#13;
meets of the season. The meet&#13;
will begin at 12 noon.&#13;
. The Rangers finished fifth in&#13;
the 20 leam Carthage Invitational&#13;
last Saturday, as Ray&#13;
Fredericksen was' second out of&#13;
the 250 plus competitors in the&#13;
.meet.&#13;
Luther of Iowa won overall&#13;
with 76 points. The UW:&#13;
•Milwaukee Track Club was next&#13;
with 100, UW.stevens Point, 115;&#13;
. Carthage,.123; and Parkside had&#13;
141.&#13;
Jim Drews won the meet,&#13;
representing the UWM Track&#13;
Club, with a time of 24minutes, 51&#13;
seconds. Fredericksen was right ~&#13;
on his heels, finishing only three -&#13;
seconds later. The top seven&#13;
· runners came in within 15&#13;
seconds of each other.&#13;
Egyptian history scheduled'&#13;
A personal perspective of 5,000&#13;
years. of Egyptian history,&#13;
culture and arts, will be reviewed&#13;
in a course taught by Omar&#13;
Amin, associate prof~ of life&#13;
science, who lived in Egwt for 25&#13;
years. From the historical&#13;
review, he will lead into modern&#13;
'Egwt, with· its economic and&#13;
political burdens and contributions.&#13;
Amin recommends this short&#13;
non-credit. course for mid-east&#13;
students, prospective visitors, or&#13;
interested individuals. He will&#13;
use his slide collection to&#13;
illustrate the lectures.&#13;
The class, sponsored bY the&#13;
, .&#13;
University of Wisconsin.&#13;
E;idension, will meet .on four&#13;
Tuesdays, beginning November 2&#13;
at 7:30 p.m., at Parkslde in the&#13;
Classroom Building. Contact.&#13;
University Extension for&#13;
registration information, phone&#13;
553-2312. -&#13;
•&#13;
Performing Frido.y &amp; So.tvrdo.y , r&#13;
SUNDAY TRIAD&#13;
WANT&#13;
ALL YOU S~v..\- ' *'~&#13;
c.,"\~'\ ~~.&#13;
Cy\&#13;
\~C~\.': ~o\\.~o FEAST&#13;
,\ ". . INCLUDES. Solod. Ilollon . \\ 9'&#13;
Breod ond 0 FREE CLASS&#13;
OF WiNE....&#13;
~lerbll'b·&#13;
~urt -&#13;
~&amp;.ISTAUR&#13;
mo«. &amp; TUES.&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
$1.95&#13;
On Spring, West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge Plo.zo. •&#13;
632-6151&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27, 1976&#13;
(&#13;
I&#13;
"\&#13;
j \ ---~&#13;
Swimmers ·lose twO .meets&#13;
byJean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside's women's swimming&#13;
squad will participate in two&#13;
meets this week. This afternoon&#13;
they travel to UW-Whitewater for&#13;
a 6 p.m. meet and will meet -&#13;
Carthage, UW-River Falls and&#13;
UW-Eau Claire in Kenosha&#13;
Saturday, at 10 a.m.&#13;
The Rangers dropped both ends&#13;
of a double dual meet last Saturdar,&#13;
losing to Oshkosh, 112-&#13;
15 and. to 'Carroll, 85-24.&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch set another&#13;
school record in th~ 100 free at .&#13;
1:06.73, finishing second asainsi&#13;
Carroll and third against&#13;
Oshkosh. She took a first against&#13;
Oshkosh · and second against&#13;
Carroll in the l(M&gt;'back and a first&#13;
against Carroll and third against&#13;
Oshkosh in the· 50 butterfly.&#13;
Judy Iver.son scored a first·&#13;
against Carroll and third against&#13;
Oshkosh in the 50 free, seconds in&#13;
the 100 breast and third in the 50&#13;
back.&#13;
Sally Francis scored thirds in&#13;
the 50 free and the 500 free. Lili&#13;
Crnich also had thirds in both. the&#13;
200 free and 50 breast. Four also&#13;
swam in the 200 medley relay, the&#13;
first time this event lias been&#13;
swum by th_e Rangers this&#13;
season.&#13;
"We're in better spirits and&#13;
have tried our hardest," said&#13;
Coach Barb Lawson. "After a&#13;
couple of weeks of hard work,&#13;
we'll be stronger next week."&#13;
Friday, the team lost to UWMilwaukee,&#13;
100-11.&#13;
"Nothing went right for us,"&#13;
said Lawson. The highest finishes&#13;
were a secona in the ·100 back by&#13;
Leitch and a third in the 1()0 free&#13;
by Gail Olsen.&#13;
Soccer team~ playij W ~stern Michigan&#13;
by Jean Tenuta Henderson thought that this was&#13;
a record for a Ranger in a season.&#13;
Parkside's soccer team hosts Mike Boyajian, who has also&#13;
Western Michigan Saturday at 2 scored quite well for the Rangers&#13;
p.m. in the soccer bowl, in what this season, added two goals and&#13;
· Coach Hal Henderson expects to two assists to his season total.&#13;
be a "very even game." Desch Ismaili gained two goals&#13;
"Western Michigan has f,.aced - and one assist, Andy Gutierrez&#13;
three of the same teams thaf we and ~ack 4ndwelir each had a&#13;
have and have done about the goal, Mihran Ganghinjian scored&#13;
same as we have against them. one goal and had two assists, and&#13;
We're hoping our having the Chris Carter and Mike Olesen&#13;
home field will be enough of an added one assist each.&#13;
advantage to put us ahead," said · The squad's record is 6-5-1,&#13;
Henderson. . which ties the highest number of&#13;
The Rangers are hoping, wins for a Parkside team and this&#13;
though, that the Western&#13;
Michigan team will be similar to&#13;
the Eastern Michigan team they&#13;
is also the first tigle a Parkside&#13;
team has had a record over .500&#13;
during a season in over five&#13;
years.&#13;
The team still expects to win&#13;
approximately ten games, while&#13;
finishing over break-even mark.&#13;
Henderson is still cautious and is&#13;
taking his season goals one step&#13;
at a time.&#13;
"We've been getting better&#13;
each game," said Henderson.&#13;
"Our strong schedule in the early&#13;
part of the season got us used to&#13;
pressure situations and we're&#13;
better able to handle them now."&#13;
routed 10-0 at Ypsilanti.&#13;
"We totally dominated the&#13;
game. We out shot them 37-3 and&#13;
it was 6-0 at the half. It was unfortunate&#13;
that we didn't have&#13;
enough substitutes to give others&#13;
Runners finish fifth&#13;
a chance to get considerable .&#13;
playing experience. I was just&#13;
shuffling players around, putting&#13;
them in different positions and&#13;
we were trying not to run up the&#13;
score."&#13;
Earl Campbell, the team's .&#13;
leading scorel' increased his&#13;
margin above other Rangers with&#13;
three goals and two assists,&#13;
bringing his season total to eight&#13;
goals and eight assists. Coach&#13;
Parkside's runners face , Milwaukee Track Club was next&#13;
Carthage, Loras, and Marquette with 100, UW-Stevens Point, 115;&#13;
in the first of their last four home · Carthage,_ 123; and Parkside had&#13;
meets of the season. The meet 141.&#13;
will begin at 12 noon. Jim Drews won the meet,&#13;
. The Rangers finished fifth in representing the UWM Track&#13;
the 20 team Carthage Invitational Club, with a time of 24 minutes, 51&#13;
last Saturday, as Ray seconds. Frederic~n was right&#13;
Fredericksen was second out of on his heels, finishing only three&#13;
the 250 plus competitors in the seconds later. The top seven&#13;
meet. -runners came in within 15&#13;
Luther of Iowa ~on overall seconds of each other.&#13;
with 76 points. The uw.:-&#13;
Egypti_an history ~cheduled&#13;
A personal perspective of 5,000&#13;
years of Egyptian history,&#13;
culture and arts, will be reviewed&#13;
in a course taught by Omar&#13;
Amin, associate professor of life&#13;
science, who lived in Egypt for 25&#13;
years. From the historical&#13;
review, he will lead into modern&#13;
Egypt, with · its economic and&#13;
political - burdens and contributions.&#13;
&#13;
Amin recommends this sho.rt&#13;
non-credit, course for mid-east&#13;
students, prospective visitors, or&#13;
interested individuals. He will&#13;
use his slide collection · to&#13;
illustrate the lectures.&#13;
The class, sponsored by the &gt; •&#13;
University of WisconsinE]dension,&#13;
will meet on four&#13;
Tuesdays, beginning November 2&#13;
at 7:30 p.m., at Parkside in the&#13;
Classroom Building. Contact&#13;
Uni,versity Extension for ·&#13;
registration information, phone&#13;
553-2312. -&#13;
. '&#13;
Netters -close se.ason·&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
The women's tennis team&#13;
concluded their season with a&#13;
ninth place finish. in the WWIAC&#13;
Championships at UW-La Crosse&#13;
Saturday. .&#13;
The host won the meet easily&#13;
with'60points and UW-E~u Claire&#13;
and UW-Stevens Point tied ,for&#13;
second with 28. The Rangers&#13;
scored. one point.&#13;
The highest finishers for the&#13;
Rangers were the doubles teams.&#13;
After the quarterfinal consolation&#13;
round, the No. 1 doubles pair of&#13;
Mary Ann Carins .and Jennifer'&#13;
Zuehlke dropped to a team from&#13;
Oshkosh 7-5, 6-1. In No. 2, Kathy&#13;
Feitchner and Pat Munger lost to&#13;
UW-Milwauke~'s . KelloughPataini,&#13;
6-2, 6-3, in the quar_.&#13;
t.erfinal consolations. .&#13;
In the first consolation match&#13;
an No. 3 singles, Jeanine Hunter&#13;
lost to Peg Gruenge of UW-&#13;
- Whitewater, 6-0, 6-1. Marge.&#13;
Balasz was defeated in the&#13;
second round of consolation to&#13;
Carthage's Jan Daly, 6-1,_ 6-0.&#13;
Housing workshop ..&#13;
The Urban League Operation of&#13;
Kenosha is-sponsoring a housing&#13;
workshop entitled "Housing in&#13;
Kenosha" on October 28 from 7 to&#13;
9:30 p.in. at the Second Baptist . .&#13;
Church.&#13;
_ Topics to be discussed include&#13;
housing purchases, programs' for&#13;
low income families and&#13;
Veteran's housing programs.&#13;
• Free Pizza Delivery :.-&#13;
Club Highvi~w&#13;
5035 60th Street . Phone: 65i-8737&#13;
./&#13;
Alt, •,n.,,,., ch11k11, s,11htfll, 11.a,1~, , .. ,&#13;
OPEN 4 •·•· to 1 1.11.&#13;
The quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
1 Mike Villers 637 -2726&#13;
· Questions You Should&#13;
Ask Yourself:&#13;
1 Would You Like To Increase Gas&#13;
Mileage By 10% To 25%·* And&#13;
Save $10.00 Every 1000 Miles?&#13;
[ ] YES f ] NO · • overall average % increase&#13;
2 Would you Rather Change Oil&#13;
- Every 25,000 Miles/Once A Yea-r&#13;
And Increase Engine Life?&#13;
( ] YES [ ) NO&#13;
_ 3·Would. you like· To Eliminate&#13;
Towing And · Service Expense&#13;
This Winter When Your Car&#13;
Won't Start Due To cold, Sluggish&#13;
. Oil? [ ] YES [ · ] NO&#13;
If your answer is YES to any of the&#13;
above questions, you should be&#13;
using SYNTHETIC AMS/OIL!&#13;
/f,- Nm, lo 1/,1ng1 ...&#13;
Performing Fridoy &amp; Sotu-rdoy&#13;
SUNDAY TRIAD· Join the Ford Bandwagon!&#13;
All YOU , '-.l\,~&#13;
WANT c._\\~,,~, - moN. &amp; TUES.&#13;
~ ~-;)~' ~ - SPAGHETTI&#13;
(;'¥.--\_~ ,,1'1 ~I&lt;- FEAST Jl.95 c,'f\'x \\ '?,.~ ..,_o INCLUDES: Salod. _Italian&#13;
Bread and a FREE GLASS&#13;
OF WINE....&#13;
On Spring, West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge Plozo -&#13;
632-6151-&#13;
~erbu's·&#13;
,ourt - PUa &amp; RIST.AUR&#13;
. We All Have Th~ Privi~ege&#13;
To -v·o1EDon't&#13;
Waste-It&#13;
on PEANUTS- ~ THE J?lESttNT FORD C~E£'-.JAMES A BAKER III CHAIRMAN ROVSTON C HUGHES TREASUR€R </text>
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&#13;
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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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        <name>chancellor alan guskin</name>
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              <text>Four Resign Senate&#13;
</text>
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              <text>Veep quits.&#13;
Four....resign Senate&#13;
by Douglas Edenbauser&#13;
Tbe Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association, .Inc ,&#13;
will hold its fall elections on \&#13;
October 20and 21from 9 a.m. to 8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
There were four resignations&#13;
accepted by the 'Senate at its&#13;
October 14th meeting.&#13;
Resignations were received from&#13;
Senators Bob Tremonte and Dave&#13;
- Harris, Secretary Linda' Knudtson&#13;
and Vice President Bob&#13;
Vlach. Lack of time was given as&#13;
a major reason for these&#13;
resignations.&#13;
There was some discussion as&#13;
to whether the new vice&#13;
president was to be appointed by&#13;
the president or the president pro&#13;
tempore was to take over. This&#13;
"matter will be reviewed by the&#13;
Ways and Means committee.&#13;
A· question' was brought up&#13;
concerning the review of the&#13;
. name of the Parkside Student&#13;
Union. President Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
said that the Union Operating&#13;
Board is in charge of handling&#13;
these matters and that the reason&#13;
the U.O.B. isn't doing anything is&#13;
that the present members aren't&#13;
attending the meetings.&#13;
She said that the Senate should&#13;
bring up a motion to work with&#13;
the U.O.B. and other student&#13;
organizations in a concerted&#13;
effort to solve this matter.&#13;
A motion was passed. Kiyoko&#13;
Bowden mentioned that since the&#13;
students hold rights to the&#13;
building they should have the&#13;
right to name it what they w;nt.&#13;
She also mentioned that this&#13;
'action could possibly be a&#13;
precendent setting manuever.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No. 7 Wednesday, October 20, 1976&#13;
Program places 29&#13;
Parkside's Year for Action, a&#13;
new program which offers&#13;
students academic credit for an&#13;
intensive year of internship in&#13;
community social service&#13;
agencies, has placed 29 students&#13;
with 11 agencies in Racine,&#13;
Kenosha and Walworth Counties&#13;
during its first semester of&#13;
operation, according to PYA.&#13;
director Joyce Fite Hamlin.&#13;
The project combines concepts&#13;
of volunteerism and experiential&#13;
learning in an effort to best utilize&#13;
the resources of the community&#13;
and the University to solve some&#13;
of the problems of the poor,&#13;
Hamlin said.&#13;
It provides an opportunity for&#13;
students to apply theory and&#13;
methods they learn in the&#13;
Their internships consist of one&#13;
calendar year of community&#13;
service and related training with&#13;
close supervision and directton&#13;
provided by both tbeir on-site&#13;
agency supervisers and faculty&#13;
advisors.&#13;
They will receive 30 academic&#13;
credi ts from Parkside&#13;
satisfactory completion of their&#13;
work assignments and specified&#13;
academic assignments.&#13;
The program is supported by&#13;
an initial grant of $96,500 from&#13;
Action, the federal agency which&#13;
administers domestic volunteer&#13;
service programs, and supplemental&#13;
funds including space&#13;
and equipment from Parkside, as&#13;
well as agency funding and&#13;
federal work-study funds.&#13;
~&#13;
Joyce Fite Hamlin&#13;
classroom to real life problemsolving&#13;
situations, she added.&#13;
PYA students receive subsistence&#13;
living allowances while&#13;
they participate in the program.&#13;
Over 300 people attended a dinner at Parkside last the Educator." Prof. Merrill D. Peterson of the&#13;
Sunday night recreating "An Evening at Mon- University of Virginia, the school which Jefferson&#13;
ticello." This initiated a week-long Bicentennial founded and whose campus he designed, will speak&#13;
. Jefferson Festival which explores the third at 8 p.m. Thursday on "The Revolutionary Mind of&#13;
president's diverse contributions to American life. Thomas Jefferson." The Festival is sponsored by&#13;
In this picture, costumed waitresses wait as carvers the Parkside Bicentennial Committee, the Kenosha&#13;
slice the Virginia ham, one of two entrees and eight County American Revolution Bicentennial Comcourses&#13;
in the dinner. The Festival continues mission, the Hacine County Bicentennial Uasion&#13;
tonight with a free lecture at 8 p.m. by Prof. Mark Committee and the Wisconsin American Revolution&#13;
M. Krug of the University of Chicago on "Jefferson Bicentennial Committee.&#13;
An all-campus open bouse, incorporatiDg lbe lonna! dedlcatJoa 01&#13;
the Irvin G. WyUle Library-Learnfng Center and the flnt pnbllc Ioun&#13;
of Parkside Union, Is planned for Sunday, October 24. AD campus&#13;
buildings wlll be open with a variety of performances, dlsplayo, and&#13;
demonstrations planned.&#13;
Tbe dedication wlll feature unvel1log of a portrait of the late&#13;
cbancellor painted by Kenosba arttst George Pollard and a recital by&#13;
Carmen Vila (pictured above), the Spanlsb pianist who was&#13;
Parkside's first artist-in-residence Open bouse boon are 1%:30 to 5:30&#13;
p.m. with the dedication set for 1:30 p.m. In Main Place.&#13;
Flu shots possible&#13;
at Perkside&#13;
by Wendy Miller&#13;
Edith Isenberg, campus nurse,&#13;
stated that there is a possibility&#13;
that the Swine Flu vaccine will be&#13;
available here at Parkside. She&#13;
stressed the importance of&#13;
staying informed as the vaccines&#13;
are being given on short notice. .&#13;
Students are welcome to stop at&#13;
the health office in WLLC 0.198&#13;
and discuss the vaccine with&#13;
either Dr. Micbael Bode or Mrs.&#13;
Isenberg.&#13;
Swine Flu, the influenza that&#13;
threatens to cause a world-wide&#13;
epidemic this year, is becoming a&#13;
dangerously controversial issue.&#13;
The virus was first isolnted in&#13;
pigs, thus the term Swine Flu.&#13;
Experts believe that Swinc Flu&#13;
might be more dangerous than&#13;
ordinary flu. It caused an out-&#13;
-break of several hundred cases in&#13;
Fort Dix, New Jersey early this&#13;
year. Before that there had not&#13;
been outbreaks of the virus since&#13;
the 1920's.&#13;
With most Americans being&#13;
susceptible to Swine Flu, there is&#13;
a strong possibility of an&#13;
epidemic in the U.S. this winter"&#13;
With this in mind, federal, state,&#13;
and local governments are&#13;
working together on the biggest&#13;
vaccination program in U.S.&#13;
history. Other flue shots will not&#13;
be any protection against Swine&#13;
Flue.&#13;
The vaccine is made from dead&#13;
flu virus; so it is supposedly&#13;
causes antibodies to be produced&#13;
without causing the flu. Side&#13;
effects from the vaccine may be&#13;
fever and soreness during the&#13;
first day or two after vaccination.&#13;
A bad reaction may occur in&#13;
peJ:SODSallergic to eggs as !be&#13;
vaccine is cultured in eggs. These&#13;
people should consult a doctor&#13;
before taking the vaccine.&#13;
There was much hesitation&#13;
about distributing the vaccine.&#13;
Some reasons for the hesitation&#13;
were: doubt by some experts that&#13;
an epidemic would occur, public&#13;
confusion over where the shots&#13;
would be available, and disputes&#13;
between physicians over who&#13;
should or shouldn't be given the&#13;
vaccine and whether it should be&#13;
given at all.&#13;
Last week three elderly people&#13;
died in Allegheny Co., Penn. after&#13;
receiving their flu vaccine, The&#13;
program was halted throughout&#13;
the country when news of the&#13;
~onl nVl!d on pq ~&#13;
Guskin to meet students&#13;
average student's complaints&#13;
are.&#13;
She also feels that Guskln has&#13;
gotten some bad press lately. She&#13;
said that he really is eager to&#13;
respond to student's needs; and&#13;
this in only possible if students&#13;
become interested enough to&#13;
participate in the decisionmaking&#13;
process.&#13;
Bowden strongly encourages a&#13;
strong student turnout at the first&#13;
meeting SO that Guskln will he&#13;
encouraged to hold further&#13;
meetings. Hopefully she says,&#13;
students will drop in if only for a&#13;
half hour.&#13;
by Robert Hoffman&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin will&#13;
hold his first open meeting of this&#13;
year Thursday, October 21, from&#13;
2to 4 p.m.&#13;
According to Kiyoko Bowden,&#13;
president of student government,&#13;
this meeting is open to all&#13;
students and Guskin would like to&#13;
have these meetings conducted in&#13;
a very informal manner. _&#13;
Bowden feels students have&#13;
received an erroneous impression&#13;
of Guskin; the students&#13;
don't know what Guskin is trying&#13;
to do and Guskin does not have a&#13;
general feeling of what the&#13;
There was a judicial amend.&#13;
.mentlo Article 3 section 5 of the&#13;
constitution saying that the court&#13;
of appeals. shall consist of two&#13;
student justices and one chief&#13;
justice. This was a change by&#13;
taking away two administrative&#13;
justices and adding two student&#13;
justices, thus turning the court.&#13;
solely over to the students.&#13;
There was also an - election&#13;
amendment changing the date of&#13;
the 'spring ejections from the&#13;
third week in April to the second&#13;
week in March. I&#13;
The Legal Services Advisory&#13;
Committee proposed the forming&#13;
of four new subcommittees.&#13;
These committees are the&#13;
Legal Services Subcommittee,&#13;
the Disciplinary Guidelines&#13;
Subcommittee, tbe Research and&#13;
Review Sub-committee, and the&#13;
Publicity Subcommittee. The&#13;
student Organizational Council&#13;
brought up the motion that the&#13;
room WLLC 0195 be used by&#13;
The Parkside,-----...-.;.;,·oo;.",;,""".:..:.:."'''::.::.:." pg ,&#13;
/&#13;
Veep quits&#13;
Four_resign Senate&#13;
by Douglas Edenhauser&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association, Inc.&#13;
will hoJd its fall elections on 1&#13;
October 20 and 21 from 9 a .m. to 8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
There were four resignations&#13;
accepted by the Senate at its&#13;
October 14th meeting.&#13;
Resignations were received from&#13;
Senators Bob Tremonte and Dave&#13;
- Harris, Secretary Linda' Knudtson&#13;
and Vice President Bob&#13;
Vlach. Lack of time was given as&#13;
a major reason for these&#13;
resignations.&#13;
There was some discussion as&#13;
to whether the new vice&#13;
president was to be appointed by&#13;
the president or the president pro&#13;
tempore was to take over. This&#13;
·,matter will be-reviewed by the&#13;
Ways and Means committee.&#13;
A question was brought up&#13;
concerning the review of the&#13;
name of the Parkside Student&#13;
Union. President Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
said that the Union Qperating&#13;
Board is in charge of handling&#13;
these matters and that the reason&#13;
the U.O.B. isn't doing anything is&#13;
that the present members aren't&#13;
attending the meetings.&#13;
She said that the Senate should&#13;
bring up a motion to work with&#13;
the U.O.B. and other student&#13;
organizations in a concerted&#13;
effort to solve this matter.&#13;
A motion was passed. Kiyoko&#13;
Bowden mentioned that since the&#13;
students hold rights to the&#13;
building they should have the&#13;
right to name it what they wint.&#13;
She also mentioned that this&#13;
, action could possibly be a&#13;
precendent setting manuever.&#13;
There was a judicial amend-&#13;
-ment to Article 3 section 5 of the&#13;
constitution saying that the court&#13;
of appeals shall consist of two&#13;
student justices and one chief&#13;
justice. This \vas a change by&#13;
taking away two administrative&#13;
justices and adding two student&#13;
justices, thus turning the court.&#13;
solely over to the students.&#13;
There was also an - election&#13;
amendment changing the date of&#13;
the ·spring elections from the&#13;
third week in April to the second&#13;
wee){ in March.&#13;
The. Legal Services Advisory&#13;
Committee proposed the forming&#13;
of four new subcommittees.&#13;
These committees are the&#13;
Legal Services Subcommittee,&#13;
the Disciplinary Guidelines&#13;
Subcommittee, the Research and&#13;
Review Sub-committee, and the&#13;
Publicity Subcommittee. The&#13;
Student Organizational Council&#13;
brought up the motion that the&#13;
room WLLC D195 be used by The Parkside------·con-t,nue-d on-pg. 4&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No. 7 Wednesday, October 20, 1976&#13;
Program places 29&#13;
Parkside's Year for Action, a&#13;
new program which offers&#13;
students academic credit for an&#13;
intensive year of internship in&#13;
community social service&#13;
agencies, has placeo 29 students&#13;
with 11 agencies in Racine,&#13;
Kenosha and Walworth Counties&#13;
during its first semester of&#13;
operation, according to PY A .&#13;
director Joyce Fite Hamlin.&#13;
The project combines concepts&#13;
of volunteerism and experiei:itial&#13;
learning in an effort to best ~tilize&#13;
the resources of the community&#13;
and the University to solve some&#13;
of the problems of the poor,&#13;
Hamlin said.&#13;
It provides an opportunity for&#13;
students to apply theory and&#13;
methods they learn in the&#13;
Joyce Fite Hamlin&#13;
classroom to real life problemsolving&#13;
situations, she added.&#13;
PYA :students receive subsistence&#13;
living allowances while&#13;
they participate in the program.&#13;
Their internships consist of one&#13;
calendar year of community&#13;
service and related training with&#13;
close supervision and direction&#13;
provided by both their on-site&#13;
agency supervisers and faculty&#13;
advisors.&#13;
They will receive 30 academic&#13;
credits from Parkside&#13;
satisfactory completion of their&#13;
work assignments and specified&#13;
academic assignments.&#13;
The program is supported by&#13;
an initial grant of $96,500 from&#13;
Action, the federal agency which&#13;
administers domestic volunteer&#13;
service programs, and supplemental&#13;
funds including space&#13;
and equipment from Parkside, as&#13;
well as agency funding and&#13;
federal work-study funds.&#13;
Over 300 people attended a dinner at Parkside last the Educator." Prof. Merrill D. Peterson of the&#13;
Sunday night recreating "An Evening at Mon- University of Virginia, the scho_ol which Jefferson&#13;
ticello." !his initiated a week-long Bicentennial founded and whose campus he designed, will speak&#13;
. Jefferson Festival which explores the third at 8 p.m. Thursday on "The Revolutionary Mind of&#13;
president's diverse contributions to American life. Thomas Jefferson." The Festival is sponsored by&#13;
In this picture, costumed waitresses wait as carvers the Parkside Bicentennial Committee, the Kenosha&#13;
slice the Virginia ham, one of two entrees and eight County American Revolution Bicentennial Comcourses&#13;
in the dinner. The Festival continues mission, the Racine County Bicentennial Liasion&#13;
tonight with a free lecture at 8 p.m. by Prof. Mark Corrupittee and the Wisconsin American Revolution&#13;
M. Krug of the University of Chicago on "Jefferson Bicentennial Committee.&#13;
An all-campus open house, incorporating the formal dedication of&#13;
the Irvin G. Wyllie Library-Learning Center and the first public tours&#13;
of Parkside Union, Is planned for Sunday, October 24. All campus&#13;
buildings will be open with a variety of performances, displays, and&#13;
demonstrations planned.&#13;
The dedication will feature unveiling of a portrait of the late&#13;
chancellor painted by Kenosha artist George Pollard and a recital by&#13;
Carmen Vila (pictured above), the Spanish pianist who wa&#13;
Parkside's first artist-in-residence Open house hours are 12:30 to 5:30&#13;
p.m. with the dedication set for 1: 30 p.m. in Main Place.&#13;
Flu shots possible&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
by Wendy Miller&#13;
Edith Isenberg, campus nurse,&#13;
stated that there is a possibility&#13;
that the Swine Flu vaccine will be&#13;
available here at Parkside. She&#13;
stressed the importance of&#13;
staying informed as the vaccines&#13;
are being given on short notice.&#13;
Students are welcome to stop at&#13;
the health office in WLLC D-198&#13;
and discuss the vaccine with&#13;
either Dr. Michael Bode or Mrs.&#13;
Isenberg.&#13;
Swine Flu, the influenza that&#13;
threatens to cause a world-wide&#13;
epidemic this year, is becoming a&#13;
dangerously controversial issue.&#13;
The virus was first isolated in&#13;
pigs, thus the term Swine Flu.&#13;
Experts believe that Swine Flu&#13;
might be more dangerous than&#13;
ordinary flu. It caused an out-&#13;
-break of several hundred cases in&#13;
Fort Dix, New Jersey early this&#13;
year. Before that there had not&#13;
been outbreaks of the virus ince&#13;
the 1920' .&#13;
With most Americans bei&#13;
susceptible to Swine Flu, there i&#13;
a strong possibilit ' of an&#13;
epidemic in the U.S. this winter.&#13;
With this in mind, federal , stat ,&#13;
and local governments are&#13;
working together on the biggest&#13;
vaccination program in U.S.&#13;
history. Other flue shots will not&#13;
be any protection against Swine&#13;
Flue.&#13;
The vaccine is made from dead&#13;
flu virus; so it is supposedly&#13;
causes antibodies to be produced&#13;
without causing the flu. Side&#13;
effects from the vaccine may be&#13;
fever and soreness during the&#13;
first day or two after vaccination.&#13;
A bad reaction may occur in&#13;
persons allergic to eggs as the&#13;
vaccine is cultured in egg . These&#13;
people should con ult a doctor&#13;
before taking the vaccine.&#13;
There was much hesitation&#13;
about distributing the vaccine.&#13;
Some reasons for the hesitation&#13;
were: doubt by some experts that&#13;
an epidemic would occur, public&#13;
confusion over where the shots&#13;
would be available, and di put&#13;
between physician over who&#13;
should or houldn't be given the&#13;
vaccm and wheth r it should b&#13;
giv n at all.&#13;
Last w k thre eld rly people&#13;
died m All h ny Co ., Penn. af r&#13;
re 1ving th ir flu vac'"ine. The&#13;
pro ram was halted throu hout&#13;
the countr • wh n n w of the cont nu d on pg 4&#13;
Guskin to meet students&#13;
by Robert Hoffman&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin will&#13;
hold his first open meeting of this&#13;
year Thursday, October 21, from&#13;
2 to 4 p.m.&#13;
According to Kiyoko Bowden,&#13;
pres1dent of student government,&#13;
this meeting is open to all&#13;
students and Guskin would like to&#13;
have these meetings conducted in&#13;
a very informal manner. ,&#13;
Bowden feels students have&#13;
, received an erroneous impressioo&#13;
of Guskin; the students&#13;
don't know what Guskin is trying&#13;
to do and Guskin does not have a&#13;
general feeling of what the&#13;
• I&#13;
average student's complaints&#13;
are .&#13;
She also feels that Guskin has&#13;
gotten some bad press lately. She&#13;
said that he really is eager to&#13;
respond to student's needs; and&#13;
this in only possible if students&#13;
become interested enough to&#13;
participate in the decisionmaking&#13;
process.&#13;
Bowden strongly encourages a&#13;
strong student turnout at the first&#13;
meeting so that Guskin will be&#13;
encouraged to hold further&#13;
meetings. Hopefully she says,&#13;
students will drop in if only for a&#13;
half hour. &#13;
2 THE p'ARKSIDE RANGER October 20, 1976 I , '&#13;
iIf:.T~ Parkside '&#13;
~&#13;
RANGER&#13;
---EDITOR IAL/OPINION . '&#13;
\&#13;
Senate shows lack 0-£&#13;
\&#13;
support&#13;
The student Senate demonstrated a lack of concern&#13;
and support for their membership in accepting the&#13;
resignation of Vice President Robert Vlach last Thursday&#13;
night. •&#13;
Discussion of the motion to accept the resignation&#13;
consisted of the procedures whereby he would be&#13;
replaced rather than the resignation itself. Though&#13;
discussion of this action' occurred to some extent&#13;
previous to the formal meeting, nollody bothered to&#13;
question why Vlach was resigning of- persuade him to&#13;
reconsider dur lnq the meeting itself.&#13;
No one commended or acknowledged the time and&#13;
effort he had put in as vice president, though this could&#13;
have been done out of simple courtesy. .&#13;
As the Senatemonotonically spokeof the procedure by&#13;
which Vlach would be replaced, one was reminded of a&#13;
deathbed scene where the relatives sat around and&#13;
discussed how they were going to conduct the funeral&#13;
and divide the estate.&#13;
Sincethe resignation of (former) Senator Rusty Smith&#13;
Tutlewski was voted down by the Senate in a previous&#13;
meeting, the quick acceptance of Vlach's resignation&#13;
can only betaken to show a lack of support.&#13;
Before the meeting Vlach stated his reason for&#13;
resigning as being a lackof time to perform the duties of&#13;
,&#13;
I&#13;
,&#13;
Robert Vlach&#13;
POLITICAL&#13;
America deserves Ford&#13;
by Pbilip L. Livingston&#13;
It is still very cute and fashionable to intelligently discuss how&#13;
stupid President Ford is. The jokes about his clumsiness and the ,&#13;
mistakes he has made with regard to eastern Europe are beginning&#13;
not to offer any new information, We do know that Ford is not a genius,&#13;
Do we deserve a genius? Have we ever had one in the presidency?&#13;
On tbe other hand do we want someone who has had designs on the&#13;
position for three years? Nixon had a great deal of ambition. Carter&#13;
has demonstrated a particularly keen awareness of his media image&#13;
obviously sharpened by the amount of time he has spent working on&#13;
his objective. Imaintain Ford is just about right for America. He is not&#13;
an unemployed college graduate or a factory worker but he never just&#13;
decided to "get" the power. He's got it now and he had it when he&#13;
successfully executed the Mayaguez affair,&#13;
This man of humble tbought is intelligent enough to use good advice.&#13;
He has a serious realistic sober attitude towards his power and&#13;
ascension to the presidency, He has a conscious Christian conviction&#13;
but he does not quote God directly as does the peanut farmer.&#13;
So if you feel Ford does not represent you because of his Republican&#13;
affiliation or his years in Congress bow do feel about a cunning peanut&#13;
farmer who's worth is five million dollars. How humble and&#13;
Iepresentative is a man who is worth that much and who has wanted to&#13;
be president since he left the governor's office in Georgia? '&#13;
Now, if you feel you can accurately reflect "the times" by insisting&#13;
•&#13;
the office. This is the most typical reason for resigning&#13;
or refusing to accept a posf in any student organization.'&#13;
-Most involved students don't really have the time to&#13;
spend working in these groups; but they do it anyway if&#13;
it's something they consider worthwhile and rewarding.&#13;
Mutual support and a sense of accomplishment are a&#13;
must if one is going to devote time to a group like student&#13;
government, and last Thursday's meeting' was&#13;
defiriately not very inspiring. Aside from Vlach's&#13;
resignation', three others were accepted with' little&#13;
qtestion or comment from the Senate.&#13;
How rewarding it must be to break youI' behind for&#13;
student government only to fil)d upon your resignation&#13;
just how little you wel:!1appreciated. If there was any&#13;
opposition or even.concern over Vlach's resignation, it&#13;
was not apparent at the meeting, the one place where it&#13;
might have done some good. This along with the absence&#13;
of recognition for time spent and services rendered&#13;
would tend to strengthen one's contention that indeed&#13;
he-she did not have the time to devote to such an&#13;
organization.&#13;
Ranger would like to take this opportunity to commend&#13;
Vlach and all other students Involved in Parkside&#13;
organizations· for contributing to a needy cause and&#13;
realiZing the benefits of such a worthwhile' experience.&#13;
FORUM&#13;
there 1S not a choice remember the perspective of Rev. Jesse Jackson&#13;
from Chicago. Rev. Jackson says he has never felt he was being&#13;
sufficiently represented. He has seen blacks around him who have&#13;
never been given the responsible positions in the necessary sequence -&#13;
to even be competitive in powerful capital intensive -campaigns. He '&#13;
has sat in a chair at the Democratic National Convention and wanched&#13;
a room full of thousands of people forget Barbara Jordan's&#13;
magnetism and dynamism at nomination time because, "we just&#13;
aren't ready for a black woman president yet."&#13;
Rev. Jackson say; he has always been chosing the less of two evils&#13;
but he votes anyway because if he stays home no one will know what&#13;
he wants. Itis his privilege and he exercises itas a citizen should. He is&#13;
supporting Carter.&#13;
If you can be sold the humble peanut approach to our nation's&#13;
problems you can be sold most anything and we are in trouble. How&#13;
dangerous is each candidate as far as what we know about his&#13;
motivations and beliefs? Are you content enought to vote for Proxmire&#13;
and Aspin like everyone else'pulling dowp the Democratic party lever.&#13;
President Ford is the qnly conservative balance in a sea of Democrats&#13;
spending our money on "Needy" programs. Your taxes will rise no&#13;
matter wbo gets elected but bow much higher will they go with Carter&#13;
fulfilling all his campaign promises.&#13;
President Ford clearly has more practical experience in running&#13;
this country than Carter and until we can convihce people like Jerry&#13;
Brown or Ralph Nader they can win, Iam voting for President Ford.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Junnine Sipsma&#13;
,USINESS MANAGERS: Cathy .ruk. Judy Trudrunt Cassf.!&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Tom Coope.r&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR, Bruce Wainer&#13;
DEPARTMENTS: i&#13;
.. Administration·Policies: John McKloskey&#13;
.. SMI, One Branett&#13;
.. Student groups &amp; speakers:&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debbie Bauer&#13;
SPORTS" EDITOR, Jean Tenuta&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS, jeffrey j. ,wencki, Bill .arke&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Julie Lanle&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: Van Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION, Sue Marquardt&#13;
STAFF: Wendy Miller. Terri Gayhart, Robert Hoftman, Chris Clausen. Thomas Nolen,&#13;
Diane Carlson, Douglas Edenhauser, Mary Kay Ohmer. Larry Donnelly, Phil Hermann,.&#13;
Ramona Maillet. Bob Jambois. Beverly Pella, Linda Knudtson, Karin La Fourier. Judy&#13;
Trudrung, Scott Reinhard, Philip L. Livingston.&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: P.J, Anolina, Ricky Coop.r, R,ck Flasch&#13;
AD SAl:ESPERSONS, Joe Landa, Rick Fla,ch&#13;
\&#13;
The Park'ide Ran",er is written and edited&#13;
by' the stueents of the University at&#13;
Wisconsin.Parkside who are solely&#13;
responsible ter its editorial policy and&#13;
C...t!..... 9 Opinions ell pressed are not&#13;
nece'loSanly rt&gt;presentatlve 01 tho!ioeheld by&#13;
the litudents. facully o,adminiurat,on of&#13;
Parkside. Edilorial and Business 553-2281;&#13;
Newsroc.m 5SJ·l)9S.&#13;
I&#13;
,&#13;
I&#13;
J •&#13;
2 THE P,ARKSIDE RANGER October 20, 1976 ,&#13;
I&#13;
i Jr.. T~ Parksid&#13;
..-y RANGER&#13;
---EDITORIAL/OPINION . '&#13;
Senate shows _lack o-f -,support&#13;
Robert Vlach&#13;
I&#13;
.The student Senate demonstrated a lack of concern&#13;
and support for their membership in accepting the&#13;
resignation of Vice President Rob,ert Vlach last Thursday&#13;
night.&#13;
Discussion of the motion to accept the resignation&#13;
consisted of the procedures whereby he would be&#13;
replaced rather than the resignation itself. Though&#13;
discussion of this action occurred to some extent&#13;
previous to the formal meeting, notfody bothered to&#13;
question why Vlach was resigning of- pers.uade him to&#13;
reconsider during the meeting itself.&#13;
No one commended or ac_knowledged the time and&#13;
effort he had put in as vice president, though this could&#13;
have been done out of simple courtesy.&#13;
As the Senate monotonically spoke of the procedure by&#13;
which Vlach would be replaced, one was reminded of a&#13;
deathbed scene where the relatives sat around and&#13;
discussed how they were going to conduct the funeral&#13;
and divide the estate.&#13;
Since the resignation of (former) Senator Rusty Smith&#13;
Tutlewski was voted down by the Senate in a previous&#13;
meeting, the quick acceptance of Vlach's resignation&#13;
can only be taken to show a lack of support.&#13;
Before the meeting Vlach stated his reason for&#13;
resigning as being a lack of time to perform the duties of&#13;
POLITICAL&#13;
the office. This is the most typical r'eason for resigning&#13;
or refusing to accept a posf in any student organization.'&#13;
Most involved students don't really have the time to&#13;
spend working in these groups; but they do it anyway if&#13;
it's something they consider worthwhile and r ewarding.&#13;
Mutual support ctnd a sense of accomplishment are a&#13;
must if one is going to devote time to a group like student&#13;
government, and last Thursday's meeting · was&#13;
definately not very inspirjng. Aside from Vlach's&#13;
resignation, three others were accepted with little&#13;
q"uestion or comment from the Senate.&#13;
How rewarding it must t;&gt;e to break your, behind for&#13;
student government only to fipd upon your resignation&#13;
just how little you werg appreciated. If there was any&#13;
opposition or even concern over Vlach's resignation, it&#13;
was not apparent at the meeting, the one place where it&#13;
might have done some good. This along with the absence&#13;
of recognition for time spent and services rendered&#13;
would tend to strengthen one's contention that indeed&#13;
he-she did not have the time to devote to such an&#13;
organization.&#13;
Ranger would like to take this opportunity to commend&#13;
Vlach and all other students involved in Parkside&#13;
organizations · for contributing to a needy cause and&#13;
realizing the benefits of such a worthwhile experience.&#13;
FORUM&#13;
America deserves Ford&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
It is still very cute and fashionable to intelligently discuss how&#13;
stupid President Ford is. The jokes about his clumsiness and the&#13;
mistakes he has made with regard to eastern Europe are beginning&#13;
not to offer any new information. We do know that Ford is not a genius.&#13;
Do we deserve a genius? Have we ever had one in the presidency?&#13;
On the other hand do we want someone who has had designs on the&#13;
position for three years? Nixon had a grea~ deal of ambition. Carter&#13;
has demonstrated a particularly keen awareness of his media image&#13;
obviously sharpened by the amount of time he has spent working on&#13;
his objective. I maintain Ford is just about right for America. He is not&#13;
an unemployed college graduate or a factory worker but he never just&#13;
decided to "get',. the power. He's got it now and he had it when he&#13;
successfully executed the Mayaguez affair.&#13;
This man of humble thought is intelligent enough to use good advice.&#13;
He has a serious realistic sober attitude towards his power and&#13;
ascension to the presidency. He has a conscious Christian conviction&#13;
but he does not quote God directly as does the peanut farmer.&#13;
So if you feel Ford does not represent you because of his Republican&#13;
affiliation or his years in Congress how do feel about a cunning peanut&#13;
farmer who's worth is five million dollars. How humble and&#13;
representative is a man who is worth that much and who has wanted to&#13;
be president since he left the governor's office in Georgia? ·&#13;
Now, _if you feel you can accurately reflect "the times" by insisting&#13;
1&#13;
there 'is not a choice remember the pe_rspective of Rev. Jesse Jackson&#13;
from Chicago. Rev. Jackson says he has never felt he was being&#13;
sufficiently represented. He has seen blacks around-him who havenever&#13;
been given the responsible positions in the necessary sequence&#13;
to even be comp1;titive in powerful capital intensive -campaigns. He&#13;
has sat in a chair at the Democratic National Convention and wanched&#13;
a room full of thousands of people forget Barbara Jordan's&#13;
magnetism and dynamism at nomination time because, "we just&#13;
aren't ready for a black woman president yet."&#13;
Rev. Jackson says he has always been chosing the less of two evils&#13;
but he votes anyway because if he stays home no one will know what&#13;
he wants. It is his privilege and he exercises it as a citizen should. He is&#13;
supporting Carter.&#13;
If you can be sold the humble peanut approach to our nation's&#13;
problems you can be sold most anything and we are in trouble. How&#13;
dangerous is each candidate as far as what we know about his&#13;
motivations and beliefs? Are you content enought to vote for Proxmire&#13;
and Aspin like everyone else·pulling dowp the Democratic party lever.&#13;
President Ford is the qnly conservative balance in a sea of Democrats&#13;
spending our money on "Needy" programs. Your taxes will rise no&#13;
matter who gets elected but how much higher will they go with Carter&#13;
fulfilling all his campaign promises.&#13;
President Ford clearly has more practical experience in running&#13;
this country than Carter and until we can convince people like Jerry&#13;
Brown or Ralph Nader they can·win, I am voting for President Ford.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF : Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
I&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is written and edited&#13;
by the students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin. Parkside who are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
Cfl~•·"• Opinions e,cpressed are no1&#13;
necessarily r•presentat,ve of those held by&#13;
the stuclenh, faculty or1 adm imstrat,on of&#13;
Parkside. Editorial and Business SSJ-1287 i&#13;
Newsroc,m SSJ-22'15 .&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGERS: Cathy Brnak, Judy Trudrung (asst.)&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER : Tom Cooper&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR: Bruce Wagner&#13;
DEPARTMENTS:&#13;
.. Administration-Policies: John McKloskey&#13;
. SMI: Dave Brandt&#13;
.. Student groups &amp; speakers :&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR : Debbie Bauer&#13;
SPORTS- EDITOR: Jun Tenuta&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS: jeffrey j . swencki, Bill Barke&#13;
COPY EDITOR : Julie Lange&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR : Van Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION : Sue Marquardt&#13;
STAFF : Wendy M i ller, Terri Gayhart, Robert Hoffman, Chris Clausen, Thomas Nolen,&#13;
Diane Carlson, Douglas Edenhauser, Mary Kay Ohmer, Larry Donnelly, Phil Hermann,.&#13;
Ramona Maillet, Bob Jambois, Beverly Pella , Linda Knudtson, Karin LaFourier, Judy&#13;
Trudrung, Scott Reinhard, Phi lip L. Livingston.&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS : P.J . Auolina, Ricky Cooper, Rock Flasch&#13;
AD SALESPERSONS : Joe Landa, Rock Flasch&#13;
1&#13;
\&#13;
,, &#13;
,&#13;
Jefferson&#13;
.saluted&#13;
The multiple talents of&#13;
America's third president,&#13;
Thomas Jefferson, will be saluted&#13;
in a series of three Bicentennial&#13;
J~fferson lectures Tuesday&#13;
through Thursday ( Oct. 19&#13;
through 21) at 8 p.m. on the&#13;
Parkside Union Concourse level.&#13;
The lectures are 'free and open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
The series began Tuesday (Oct.&#13;
19) with a lecture on "Architecture&#13;
of the Jeffersonian&#13;
. Period" by Prof, Norman K.&#13;
Risjord of UW-Madison and&#13;
Spring Green Architect James&#13;
Pfefferkown, who trained in the&#13;
Frank Lloyd Wright School of&#13;
Architecture.&#13;
Risjord is the author of tbree&#13;
books on American History, the \&#13;
most recent entitled "Forging of&#13;
the American Republic, 1766-&#13;
1815."He is the recipient of a&#13;
number of awards including a&#13;
Kiekhofer Distinguished&#13;
Teaching Award, a Fulbright&#13;
Fellowship and a British&#13;
Petroleum Fellowship,&#13;
• On Oct. 20, Prof. Mark M. Krug&#13;
of the University of Chicago will&#13;
lecture on "Jefferson the&#13;
Educator." Krug is professor: of&#13;
education in history and the&#13;
social sciences and director of the&#13;
Charles Schwartz Citizenship&#13;
Project at Chicago. He is&#13;
chairman of the Organization of&#13;
American Historians' committee&#13;
on history in schools and colleges&#13;
On Oct. 21 Merrill D. Peterson,&#13;
Thomas Jefferson Foundation&#13;
Professor at the University of&#13;
Virginia, will, speak on "The&#13;
Revolutionary Mind of Thomas&#13;
Jefferson. Peterson is the author&#13;
of four books on Jefferson,&#13;
. .&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER OCtober 20. 19763&#13;
EVENTS~\&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 23&#13;
Mens cross country meet, the Carthage Invitational at 11 a.m, at&#13;
Carthage College.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 24&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from I to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Movie, "Animal Crackers," plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $1.&#13;
. _ Tuesday, Oct. 26&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 6 to 10p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Accent on Enrichment concert featuring Dizzy Gillespie at 8 p.m, in&#13;
the CAT.&#13;
"Please submit all events to the Ranger before Wednesday of the week&#13;
before publication. SPECIAL&#13;
GUESTAPPEARANCE&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT. 23&#13;
9 PM Union Square ~~~~&#13;
Adm. $2.00 UW·P Students&#13;
$2.50 UW·P Students at Door&#13;
$3.00 General Admission&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 20&#13;
PSGA Fall, Election polls are open from 9 a.m, to 8p.m.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 21&#13;
PSGA Fall Election polls are open from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.&#13;
Counting of ballots at8:30 p.m. in a room to be announced.&#13;
All students, candidates, and public are welcome.&#13;
. Thursday, Oct. 21&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 6 to 10p.m. in CL 140.'&#13;
Friday, Oct. 22&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4 p.m, in Union 207.&#13;
Women's swimming meet Uw-P v..s.UW- Milwaukee at 4 p.m. in the&#13;
Phy. Ed. !lldg.&#13;
Movie, "Animal Crackers" plays at 7 and 9 p.m. in the Cinema&#13;
Th-atre. Admission is $1. " ----------------t :.Classified :&#13;
I&#13;
1914 PONTIAC SPRINT a-sceec Metallic NEEDED FEMALE COMPANION 10 Share'&#13;
Blue, red ovckets. Rally wneets. AM·FM. exoenses 10 Denver. Colo. on November 2. t FM stereo, 8 Track, $2195. 634-0876. (&lt;1116324721for more information evenings t&#13;
SAAB 1970 Front wheel drive, a.sceec. FOR SALE: Portable steree wiltl ceo-ere&#13;
I&#13;
Radials, 8-Track. Air &amp; more,;First $800,632· rcmteete. Asking SSO.cen 63" SJOSafter j&#13;
3476. Racine. pm ,&#13;
t (8'S BRAND NEW. Warranty included. t&#13;
Cobra 21's $oj 17.00 Ray Bougneit 551·7402. "WANT TO LEARN PIANO' (Cheap rail'S' J&#13;
I&#13;
6&gt; WClnlto teach lap dilncmg" ceu (312) 662 I&#13;
WILL DO ilIny kind Of typing at reasonaple 6546" SheIla Jetlr,ese 2501 N Jackson&#13;
I&#13;
rates. For informatio" call 652-3313 W&lt;tvkeg&lt;trl. Ill. 60085 (312) 6616S46 J&#13;
---------------~&#13;
ID'S REQUIRED TICKETS AT INfO KIDSl&lt;&#13;
Planning committee meets&#13;
by Christopher Clausen&#13;
Tuesday, October 12, the new&#13;
Academic Planning and&#13;
Program Review Committee&#13;
(A.P.P.R.C.) held its first&#13;
meeting. The A.P.P.R.C. has&#13;
been designated with two&#13;
responsibilities. It has the initial&#13;
responsibility carried over from&#13;
the Academic Planning Committee&#13;
of reviewing program&#13;
quality, student demand and&#13;
program costs. In addition, the&#13;
committee will also decide how 24&#13;
faculty posjtions are to be divided&#13;
among the different programs at&#13;
Parkside. '&#13;
, The committee is up against&#13;
several problems though. The&#13;
start of the committee was&#13;
delayed when the Codification&#13;
Committee, an eight member&#13;
committee whose task is to&#13;
review faculty regulations,&#13;
procedures, and committee&#13;
structures, fought with the&#13;
University Committee on how&#13;
and what the A.P.P.R.C. should&#13;
review.&#13;
• The Facufty Senate ended by&#13;
bolding elections for the committee&#13;
in early October. The&#13;
elected members are Teresa&#13;
Peck (assistant professor of&#13;
, education), Peter Hoff (assistant&#13;
professor of Enghsh) and&#13;
William Moy (professor of industrial&#13;
engineering): '&#13;
Vice Cbancellor John Campbell .&#13;
will be representative of administration&#13;
and in his position of&#13;
vice chancellor he· will be&#13;
responsible for implementing&#13;
any program or action deemed&#13;
necessary by the conunittee.&#13;
The first meeting was supposed&#13;
to outline the duties and goals of&#13;
the committee and elect a&#13;
chairman. The election of the&#13;
chairman was postponed due to&#13;
the a bsence of two faculty&#13;
members, Peter Hoff and Larry&#13;
Doetsch, and- the absence of the&#13;
student members. The committee&#13;
was unanimous in the&#13;
opinion that a chairman sbould&#13;
not be elected until the entire&#13;
committee could have their input.&#13;
The committee will have until&#13;
November 2 to finish their report&#13;
and turn it into Vice Chancellor,&#13;
John Campbell. The administration&#13;
will implement the&#13;
committee's suggestions in mid··&#13;
November.&#13;
Chancellor Allan Guskin is also&#13;
on the committee. In cases of his&#13;
absence he will be represented by&#13;
Ben Greenebaum (associate&#13;
professor of physics).&#13;
Greenebaum will also he committee&#13;
coordinator.&#13;
The committee will be&#13;
reviewing art, economics, iife&#13;
sciences, philosophy and&#13;
psychology. :rhey will also&#13;
examine the basic skills and&#13;
breadth programs, division&#13;
objectives and any other&#13;
academic programs the Chancellor&#13;
deems necessary for&#13;
review. The A.P.P.R.C. will, in&#13;
addition, finish reviewing reports&#13;
on the sociology-anthropology&#13;
discipline and the communication&#13;
arts program.&#13;
NOW AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU.&#13;
PG ~.mltO&#13;
............_ _100 .. ..- ..&#13;
~-==r..:=.&#13;
~(C....col.()lIl• F,o", W"I\e' B'ol&#13;
.. w.......' COt"mumell.0ns Com~"y 0&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,OOO-mlleoil change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60"F. pour point);&#13;
• Saves 011 Mike Villers&#13;
yoUf AMSIOIL doa/of 63 7 - 2 7 2 6&#13;
JI........ .......&#13;
•&#13;
I&#13;
Jefferson&#13;
.saluted&#13;
The multiple talents of&#13;
America's third president,&#13;
Thomas Jefferson, will be saluted&#13;
in a· series of three Bicentennial&#13;
J~fferson lectures Tuesday&#13;
through Thursday ( Oct. 19&#13;
through 21) at 8 p.m. on the&#13;
Parkside Union Concourse level.&#13;
The lectures are 'free and open to&#13;
the ·public.&#13;
The series began Tuesday ( Oct.&#13;
19) with a lecture on "Ar~&#13;
chitecture of the Jeffersonian&#13;
·Period" by Prof. Norman K.&#13;
Risjord of UW-Madison and&#13;
Spring Green Architect James&#13;
Pfefferkown, who trained in the&#13;
Frank Lloyd Wright School of&#13;
Architecture.&#13;
Risjord is the author of three&#13;
books on American History, the \&#13;
most recent entitled " Forging of&#13;
the American Republic, 1760-&#13;
1815." He is the recipient of a&#13;
number of awards including a&#13;
Kiekhofer Distinguished&#13;
Teaching Awarq., a Fulbright&#13;
Fellowship and a British&#13;
Petroleum Fellowship.&#13;
· On Oct. 20, Prof. Mark M. Krug&#13;
of the University of Chicago will&#13;
lecture on "Jefferson the&#13;
Educator." Krug is professor of&#13;
education in history and the&#13;
social sciences and director of the&#13;
Charles Schwartz Citizenship&#13;
Project at Chicago. He is&#13;
chairman of the Organization of&#13;
American Historians' committee&#13;
on history in schools and colleges&#13;
On Oct. 21 Merrill D. Peterson,&#13;
Thomas Jefferson Foundation&#13;
Professor at the University of&#13;
Virginia, will, speak on "The&#13;
Revolutionary Mind of Thomas&#13;
Jefferson. Peterson is the author&#13;
of four books on Jefferson.&#13;
EVENTS7&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 23&#13;
Mens cross country meet, the Carthage Invitational at 11 a.m. at&#13;
Carthage College.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 24&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1 to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Movie, "Animal Crackers," plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $1.&#13;
· - Tuesday, Oct. 26&#13;
War gamers Club meets from 6 to 10 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Accent on Enrichment concert featuring Dizzy Gillespie at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the CAT. ·&#13;
-Please submit all events to the Ranger before Wednesday of the week&#13;
before publication.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 20&#13;
PSGA Fall-Election polls are open from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 21&#13;
'.PSGA Fall Election polls are open from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.&#13;
Counting of ballots at8:30 p.m. in a room to be announced.&#13;
All students, candidates, and public are welcome.&#13;
, Thursday, Oct. 21&#13;
Wargamers Club m~ets from 6 to 10 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 22&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4 p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Women's swimming meet UW-P v_s. UW- Milwaukee at 4 p.m. in the&#13;
Phy. Ed. J3ldg.&#13;
Movie, "Animal Crackers" plays at 7 and 9 p.m. in the Cinema&#13;
Thi:.af:r~. Admission is $1.&#13;
,----------------,&#13;
: . Classifi~d :&#13;
f 1974 PONTIAC SPRINT 3-speed Metallic&#13;
Blue. red -buckets, Rally wt,,eels, AM-FM, t FM stereo, 8-Track, S219S. 634-0876.&#13;
SAAB 1970 Front wheel drive, 4-Sp~ed, t Rad ials, 8-Track, Air &amp; more F irst S800, 632-&#13;
3476, Racine.&#13;
NEEDED FEMALE COMPANION lo Share t expenses to Denver, Colo. on November 2.&#13;
Call 632·4727 for more information evenings. '&#13;
FOR SALE : Portable Stereo w ith Garrara&#13;
turntable. Asking S50. Call 634 5305 alter j p.m . l&#13;
t CB'S BRAND NEW. Warranty included. t Cobra 21 's $117.00 Ray Bougneil 551 -7402. "'WANT TO LEARN PIANO? (Cheap rates!) t Want to tuch tap danc ing ? Call (312) 662 A WILL DO any kind of typing at reasona!)le 6546." Shei la Jeffroe5t 2S01 N Jackson. I&#13;
A rates . For information call 652-3373. Waukegan. Ill 60085 (312) 662 6546 j ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---~&#13;
~l~ing committee meets&#13;
, by Christopher Clausen&#13;
Tuesday, October 12, the new&#13;
Academic Planning and&#13;
Program Review Committee&#13;
(A.P.P.R.C.) held its first&#13;
meeting. The A.P.P.R.C. has&#13;
been designated with two&#13;
responsibilities. It has the initial&#13;
responsibility carried over from&#13;
the Academic Planning Committee&#13;
of reviewing program&#13;
quality, student demand and&#13;
program costs. In addition, the&#13;
committee will also decide how 24&#13;
faculty positions are to be divided&#13;
among the different programs at&#13;
Parkside. 1&#13;
The committee is up against&#13;
several problems though. The&#13;
start of the committee was&#13;
delayed when the Codification&#13;
Committee, an eight member&#13;
committee whose task is to&#13;
review faculty regulations,&#13;
procedures, and committee&#13;
structures, fought with the&#13;
University Committee on how&#13;
and what the A.P.P.R.C. should&#13;
review.&#13;
The Facufty Senate -ended by&#13;
holding elections for the committee&#13;
in early October. The&#13;
elected members are Teresa&#13;
Peck ( assistant professor of&#13;
education), Peter Hoff (assistant&#13;
professor of English) and&#13;
William Moy ( professor of industrial&#13;
engineering): ,&#13;
Vice Chancellor John Campbell ·&#13;
will be representative of administration&#13;
and in his position of&#13;
vice chancellor he will be&#13;
responsible for implementing&#13;
any program or action deemed&#13;
necessary by the committee.&#13;
The first meeting was supposed&#13;
to outline the duties and goals of&#13;
the committee and elect a&#13;
chai~n. The election of the&#13;
chairman was postponed due to&#13;
the absence of two faculty&#13;
members, Peter Hoff and Larry&#13;
Duetsch, and- the absence of the&#13;
student members. The committee&#13;
was unanimous in the&#13;
opinion that a chairman should&#13;
not be elected until the entire&#13;
committee could have their input.&#13;
&#13;
The committee will have until&#13;
November 2 to finish their report&#13;
and turn it into Vice Chancellor&#13;
John Campbell. The administration&#13;
will implement the&#13;
committee's suggestions in midNovember.&#13;
&#13;
Chancellor Allan Guskin is also&#13;
on the committee. In cases of his&#13;
absence he will be represented by&#13;
Ben Greenebaum ( associate&#13;
professor of physics).&#13;
Greenebaum will also be committee&#13;
coordinator.&#13;
The committee will be&#13;
reviewing art, economics, iife&#13;
sciences, philosophy and&#13;
psychology. :fhey will also&#13;
examine the basic skills and&#13;
breadth programs, division&#13;
objectives and any other&#13;
academic programs the Chancell&#13;
or deems necessary for&#13;
review. The A.P.P.R.C. will, in&#13;
addition, finish reviewing reports&#13;
on the sociology-anthropology&#13;
discipline and the communication&#13;
arts program.&#13;
• Saves gas ( up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,000-mile oil change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60°F. pour point) ""&#13;
• Saves oil Mike Villers&#13;
your AMS/OIL dealer 6 3 7 -2 7 2 6&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 20, 1976 3&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
GUEST APPEARANCE&#13;
SATURDAY,OCT.23&#13;
9 PM Union Square&#13;
Adm. $2.00 UW-P Students&#13;
., $2.50 UW-P Students at Door&#13;
$3.00 General Admission&#13;
ID'S REQUIRED TICKETS AT INFO KIOSK&#13;
PG.--SIIICISDO&#13;
NOW AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU . &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 20, 1976&#13;
shows a decline .in the number of&#13;
Wisconsin families who intend to&#13;
get the shots. The poll indicated&#13;
that about 42 percent of the&#13;
-families planned on receiving the&#13;
shots compared with 56 percent&#13;
in July. The number of families&#13;
undecided increased from 30&#13;
percent in July to 41 percent in&#13;
September. Those deciding not to&#13;
get the shots also increased frg,lll&#13;
14 percent in July to 17 percent in&#13;
September. '&#13;
\&#13;
Flu-----&#13;
coot,nued from pg. 1&#13;
deaths was released. Investigators&#13;
have reported that&#13;
the deaths were not related to the&#13;
vaccine. The distribution of the&#13;
vaccine is now resuming&#13;
throughout the country.&#13;
A survey taken in September&#13;
--mJmm JUNIOR TALK ·1',&#13;
'&#13;
A jump ahead.&#13;
Tune this in. Jumpsuit ,with colorful serape-jke ;&#13;
acry~c striping. Marching along in pink. green&#13;
or blue cotton/polyester Iinocloth, 5-13 -&#13;
'USE WARDS CHARG.ALL CREblT&#13;
Who suits you?, We do.&#13;
3600 ~2nd Street&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
Phone 658-4331&#13;
I ,&#13;
,PSGA meeting-----&#13;
continued Irom pg. 1&#13;
year it is hoped that the Student&#13;
Court will' be hearing petitions&#13;
from the students on academic&#13;
greivances. 4&#13;
She also said that many&#13;
complaints have been received&#13;
about the Bookstore. Efforts are&#13;
being made to help, but are not&#13;
expected to be successful immediately.&#13;
Problems with the&#13;
Bookstore and Financial Aids are&#13;
being mentioned repeatedly as&#13;
near future. By Nov 15 of this&#13;
reasons for students withdrawing&#13;
from Parkside.&#13;
Beginning next semester the&#13;
Library will be open on an ex-:&#13;
perimental basis Sunday Itn'O:Jgh&#13;
Thursday until midnight. This&#13;
was agreed upon by the director&#13;
of the Library on October 14 after&#13;
discussions with Alan Schucard,&#13;
director of the Center for&#13;
Teaching Excellence.&#13;
,There was a motion brought up&#13;
to accept the nomination of&#13;
Harvey Hedden as an associate&#13;
justice. The motion was passed.&#13;
student organizations._ This&#13;
motion was passed.&#13;
The Student Services Committee&#13;
mentioned their toy drive&#13;
next week and that all the drop&#13;
boxes are ready to be moved to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
In the presidents report,&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden said that the&#13;
Student Court will be writing the&#13;
rules and standards of evidence&#13;
for academic grievances in the&#13;
Ibsen's Ghosts find freedom&#13;
"Ghosts," a realistic drama by&#13;
the Norwegian playwright&#13;
Henrik Ibsen _w!ll be the .first&#13;
offering of the 1976-77 theater&#13;
season at Parkside, playing at 8&#13;
p.m. on Oct. 22, 23 and 24 ill the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Admission is $1 for students and&#13;
senior citizens; $2 for others.&#13;
Tickets are available at the door&#13;
or at the Parkside information&#13;
Center in Main Place.&#13;
Rhoda-Gale Pollack, who&#13;
joiped the faculty last month as&#13;
associate professor of dramatic&#13;
arts, said she chose the vehicle as&#13;
a classic drama which still has&#13;
parallels to contemporary&#13;
society. One of the play's themes,&#13;
she noted, is that of a woman&#13;
trying to find and define her&#13;
freedom and to give freedom to&#13;
her son, although her efforts in&#13;
that are doomed.&#13;
Members of the cast are Mary&#13;
Stankus of· Racine as Mrs.&#13;
Alving, the widowed mother; J elf&#13;
Kiehlbauch of Racine as 'Oswald,&#13;
The quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Mike Villers 637-2726&#13;
~If' lilli' " ,1M."&#13;
Performing Fridoy &amp; So~urdoy&#13;
TRIAD&#13;
mos. &amp; TUES.&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
FEAST HQ5&#13;
INCLUDES·S"I"d. It"li"n&#13;
6,e"d ond o fREE GLAS&#13;
'Of WiNE.... •&#13;
~.eeTblJ'8&#13;
~UTt&#13;
_ &amp; RISTAURA&#13;
On Spring, West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge PloZQ&#13;
632-6151&#13;
her artist son; Nancy Cecilia&#13;
Rivest of Kenosha. as Regina,&#13;
Mrs. Alving's ward; Robert Jilk&#13;
of Kenosha .as Engstrand,&#13;
Regina's father and Charles D.&#13;
Rivest, Kenosha, as- Pastor&#13;
Manders, Mrs. Alving's spiritual&#13;
and business mentor.&#13;
Stankus, a former Miss Racine,&#13;
comes to the dramatic role from&#13;
the female musical comedy lead&#13;
in "How to Succeed in Business&#13;
Without Really Trying,"&#13;
produced at Parkside "Iast&#13;
summer. Jilk also appeared in&#13;
"How to Succeed." Kiehlbauch&#13;
wa last seen on the Parkside&#13;
stage in the spring production,&#13;
"The Time of Your Life," and the&#13;
Rivests -were in last year's&#13;
"Spoon River."&#13;
Thomas Reinert will do scenic&#13;
design, John H. Dickson will do&#13;
lighting design and Deborah Bell&#13;
will design the period costumes:&#13;
Pollack reveived her BFA&#13;
degree in drama from Carnegie--&#13;
Mellon University, the M.A. from&#13;
San Francisco Stale University&#13;
and Ph. D. from Stanford&#13;
University. She has been on the&#13;
theater staffs of the University of&#13;
Calfornia at Berkeley, Mills&#13;
College and San Francisco sfate&#13;
College. Her principal interests&#13;
are direction and costume&#13;
design. Shecurrehtlyis writing a&#13;
book on ten innovative women -,&#13;
playwrights and their plays.&#13;
_Other productions planned for&#13;
the 1976-77 season include a&#13;
Studio B. production yet to be&#13;
selected directed by Norman&#13;
McPhlee of the Racine Theater&#13;
Guild on Dec. 10, 11 and 12, a&#13;
children's production directed by&#13;
Dickson in February -and a&#13;
musical in late April.&#13;
,&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 20, 1976&#13;
Flu--&#13;
continued from pg. 1&#13;
deaths was released. Investigators&#13;
have reported that&#13;
the deaths were not related to the&#13;
vaccine. The distribution of the&#13;
vaccine is now resuming&#13;
throughout the country.&#13;
A survey taken .in September&#13;
shows a decline -in the number of&#13;
Wisconsin families who intend to&#13;
get the shots. The poll indicated&#13;
that about 42 percent of the&#13;
-families planned on receiyin_g the&#13;
shots compared with 56 percent&#13;
in July. The number of families&#13;
undecided increased from 30&#13;
percent in July to 41 percent in&#13;
September. Those deciding not to&#13;
get the shots also increased fr~Ol&#13;
14 percent in July to 17 percent in&#13;
September. '&#13;
-&#13;
~ _________&#13;
JUNIORTALK ~1 · ...___._&#13;
•&#13;
A junip ahead.&#13;
Tune this in. Jumpsuit with colorful serape-like&#13;
acrylic striping. Marching along in pink, green&#13;
or blue cotton/polyester linocloth. 5-13&#13;
I&#13;
USE WARDS CHARG-ALL CREDIT&#13;
Who suits you?, We do.&#13;
3600 ~2nd Street&#13;
KENOSHA .&#13;
Phone 658-4331&#13;
I&#13;
~PSGA meeting------ continued from pg . 1&#13;
student organizations. This&#13;
motion was passed.&#13;
The Student Services Committee&#13;
mentioned their toy drive&#13;
next week and that all the drop&#13;
boxes are ready to be moved to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
In the pr-esidents report,&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden said that the&#13;
Student Court will be writing the&#13;
rules and standards of evidence&#13;
for academic grievances in the&#13;
year it is hoped that the Student&#13;
Court will ' J:&gt;e hearing petitions&#13;
from the students on academic&#13;
greivances.&#13;
She also said that many&#13;
compl~ints have been received&#13;
about the Bookstore. Efforts are&#13;
being made to help, but are not&#13;
expected to be successful immediately.&#13;
Problems with the&#13;
Bookstore and Financial Aids are&#13;
being mentioned repeatedly as&#13;
near future. By Nov 15 of this&#13;
r;asons for stude.nts withdrawing&#13;
from Parkside.&#13;
Beginning next semester the&#13;
Library will be open on an ex-·&#13;
perimental basis Sunday tln·o-agh&#13;
Thursday until midnight. This&#13;
was agreed upon by the director&#13;
of the Library on October 14 after&#13;
discussions with Alan Schucar~,&#13;
director of the Center for&#13;
Teaching Excellence.&#13;
.There was a motion brought up&#13;
to accept the nomination of&#13;
Harvey Hedden as an associate&#13;
justice. The motion was passed.&#13;
Nancy Rivest, Jeff l&lt;iehlbauch, and Mary Stankus in GHOSTS.&#13;
Ibsen's Ghosts find freedolll&#13;
"Ghosts," a realistic drama by&#13;
the Norwegian playwright&#13;
Henrik Ibsen _will be the .first&#13;
offering of the · 1976-77 theater&#13;
season at Parkside, playing a·t 8&#13;
p.m. on Oct. 22, 23 and 24 in, the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Admission is $1 for students and&#13;
senior citizens; $2 for others.&#13;
Tickets are available at the door&#13;
or at the Parkside information&#13;
Center in Main Place.&#13;
Rhoda-Gale Pollack, who&#13;
joiped the faculty last month as&#13;
associate professor of dramatic&#13;
arts, said she chose the vehicle as&#13;
a classic drama which still has&#13;
parallels to contemporary&#13;
society. One of the play's themes,&#13;
she noted, is that of a woman&#13;
trying to find and define her&#13;
freedom and to give freedom to&#13;
her son, although her efforts in&#13;
that are doomed.&#13;
Members of the cast ar~ Mary&#13;
Stankus of~ Racine as Mrs.&#13;
Alving, the widowed mother; Jeff&#13;
Kiehlbauch of Racine as Oswald,&#13;
The quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
· ~&#13;
Mike Villers 637 -2726 -lf1 lim1 lo 1/,ang,&#13;
.&#13;
Performing Friday &amp; Sa~urday&#13;
On Spring, West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge- Plaza&#13;
632-6151&#13;
.TRIAD&#13;
moN. &amp; TUES.&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
FEAST Sl.Q5&#13;
INCLUDES: Solod. ltolion 1&#13;
B,eod ond o FREE GLASS&#13;
·oF WINE.... ,&#13;
~erbu's&#13;
,ourt&#13;
PUa &amp; REST/AURA&#13;
her artist son; Nancy Cecilia&#13;
Rivest of Kenosha as Regina,&#13;
Mrs. Alving's ward; Robert Jilk&#13;
of Kenosha as Engstrand,&#13;
Regina's father and Charles D.&#13;
Rivest, Kenosha, as Pastor&#13;
Manders, Mrs. Alving's spiritual&#13;
and business mentor.&#13;
Stankus, a former Miss Racine,&#13;
comes to the dramatic role from&#13;
the female musical comedy lead&#13;
in "How to Succeed in Business&#13;
Without Really Trying,"&#13;
produced at Parkside 'last&#13;
summer. Jilk also appeared in&#13;
"How to Succeed." Kiehlbauch&#13;
wa last seen on the Parkside&#13;
stage in the spring production,&#13;
"The Time of Your Life," and the&#13;
Rivests were in last year's&#13;
"Spoon River."&#13;
Thomas Reinert will do scenic&#13;
design, John H. Dickson will do&#13;
lighting design and Deborah Bell&#13;
will design the period costumes:&#13;
Pollack reveived her BF A&#13;
degree in drama from CarnegieMellon&#13;
University, the M.A. from&#13;
San Francisco State University&#13;
and Ph. D. from Stanford&#13;
University. She has been on the&#13;
theater staffs of the University of&#13;
Calfornia at Berkeley, Mills&#13;
College and San Francisco State&#13;
College. Her principal interests&#13;
are direction and costume&#13;
design. Shecurrentlyis writing a&#13;
book on ten innovative women&#13;
playwrights and their plays.&#13;
_Other productions planned for&#13;
the 1976-77 season include a&#13;
Studio B production yet to be&#13;
selected directed by Norman&#13;
McPhfee of the Racine Theater&#13;
Guild on Dec. 10, 11 and 12, a&#13;
children's production directed by&#13;
Dickson in February and a&#13;
musical in late April. &#13;
Barke talks Bizarre&#13;
by Sue Marquardt or William Barke&#13;
Response&#13;
received&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government' Association announced&#13;
that voter registration is ,&#13;
getting a "better than expected"&#13;
response with all the postcards&#13;
for Kenosha gone.&#13;
Dan Nielsen, Ways and Means&#13;
Committee chairperson, is in&#13;
charge 'of the voter registration&#13;
drive, which is an effort to&#13;
achieve a high voter turnout for&#13;
this November's elections.&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
tJovernment Association is&#13;
sponsoring a toy drive for the&#13;
Parkside Child Care Center.&#13;
This toy drive will begin on&#13;
October 18 and continue through&#13;
October 22.&#13;
Semester Break.&#13;
JanuarY 6-13, 1977&#13;
$339 COMPLETE&#13;
Triple occupancy&#13;
LIMITED SPACE -&#13;
MAKE YOUR&#13;
RESERVATIONS, NOWI&#13;
• Foe. application forms or&#13;
additional information contact:&#13;
Parkside Union Office&#13;
553-2200&#13;
measures five by seven feet, installed in Union&#13;
Square. Campus Bizarre would be shown Wed.&#13;
nesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays during the late&#13;
morning and early afternoon hours.&#13;
"This is probably our .biggest project to date,"&#13;
Barke remarked. "That would include the old P.U.&#13;
Revue of a year and a half ago which actually had&#13;
the same comedy format as Bizarre." Seven P.U.&#13;
Revues were produced and have found an occasional&#13;
ouUef on the Video Committee's m~nitor&#13;
which for two years has been a sometime fixture in&#13;
the Main Concourse and now in the Union.&#13;
Barke stated: "The whole concept of producing a&#13;
show like this is basically for the experience of&#13;
working in this kind of creative atmosphere.&#13;
television- which incorporates sight and sound.&#13;
Television production really allows these students&#13;
into a field which has so many possibilities for artistic&#13;
efforts. I hope it will succeed as both art and&#13;
entertainment here at Parkside. Now where's my&#13;
beer?" ...&#13;
Barke then went into a big schpeel about each of&#13;
the Bizarre bits. He told me about such 'bits as&#13;
Death Guar.d, Flute of Doom, American Outdoorsman,&#13;
Public Execution, The Charlie Manson&#13;
Show, and many" many more. Then he put his beer&#13;
and popcorn in a plastic bag) whirled it over his&#13;
head like David against Goliath, and screamed like&#13;
a chicken. Contsary to popular belief, Barke,&#13;
Litrenta, and Tremonte are not insane; they're just&#13;
not playing with a full deck.&#13;
Several hours .after beginning this interview, it&#13;
ended as it had begun: with a few slurred words&#13;
here and tl)er,!!, a half a page of notes. Barke,&#13;
preparing to return to his film-making made one&#13;
last remark: "Well, sure, I'll have another beer.You&#13;
buying?"&#13;
f&#13;
.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 20. 19765&#13;
Bruce Wagner, a writer and performer for the campus Bizarre,&#13;
gives his best angle.&#13;
==============================&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Mike Villers -&#13;
8&#13;
Dealer 637-2726 ~=============================f&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Submarine&#13;
. Sandwich_&#13;
- OPEN8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington /We. 614-2371&#13;
"What we hope to accomplish on the Campus&#13;
Bizarre 'is... to.. uh.. to see that.i.uh .. Where was I?&#13;
Oh, yeah. Well, sure, I'll have a beer. You buying?"&#13;
It could have been worse. I could have been&#13;
talking to two or all three 'of the oroducers of the&#13;
Campus Bizarre T.V. Show. Luckily only one was&#13;
available for this interview- Bill Barke. The others&#13;
Jeff Litrenta and Bob Tremonte could not bl! found:&#13;
Barke was noticeably upset at this. "They knew&#13;
about this thing. They just thought it'd be funny to&#13;
leave me holding the bag. No offense," he said.&#13;
Dressed in army fatigues several sizes too large,&#13;
with clusters of foilage stuck conspicuously into&#13;
button holes and zippers, Barke had been relaxing&#13;
when I arrived. I questioned him about the odd&#13;
costume and learned that he and several other video&#13;
members were' in the midst of making a short&#13;
comedy film for the show, which will be aired&#13;
weekly at Parkside beginning in early November. I&#13;
asked about the nature of the comedy film,&#13;
"I guess it's funny, That's all I can say at the&#13;
moment except that I'd like to have some popcorn&#13;
with my beer," said Barke.&#13;
All seriousness aside, Barke talked about Campus&#13;
Bizarre which he helped develop for PAB Video&#13;
with Litrenta and Trenionte, that also involves the&#13;
efforts of a score of students who work as writers,&#13;
crew, and talent each week.&#13;
Barke said, "A preview of Campus Bizarre was&#13;
shown at the beginning of the semester and got a&#13;
pretty good response so we've decided to do a series&#13;
of half-hour shows. Until November we'll be stockpiling&#13;
our taped bits and at that time they will be&#13;
edited into five or six shows."&#13;
When the show is ready to be aired, PAB hopes to&#13;
have the 'Union's Advent T.V. screen, which ~=-~-~_---::========: Dedication, Open House Sunday&#13;
.&#13;
.~ ~he University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
~ , cordially invites you&#13;
to attend the dedication of the&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie Library·Learning Center&#13;
. on Sunday, October 24, 1976,&#13;
from'l:30·2:30 p.m. in Main Place.&#13;
Wyllie. Library·Learning Center&#13;
Unveiling of the Irvin G_ Wyllie portrait&#13;
Racital by Carmen Vila, Spanish pianist&#13;
and Parkside's first artist-in-residence&#13;
Remarks by Gvo Obata, principal&#13;
designer. Hellmuth, Obara &amp; Kassabaum&#13;
of St. Louis, designers of the&#13;
Wyllie Library-Learning Center&#13;
Remarks by and presentation to Merle Curti,&#13;
Emeritus Professor of History,&#13;
UW·Madison -&#13;
Chancellor Alan E. Guskin, presiding&#13;
Reception and campus open house following,&#13;
featuring demonstrations and displays by&#13;
facu Ity and students, and tours of all&#13;
campus buildings, including the new&#13;
Parks ide Union, until 5:30 p.rn.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
There will be something }or&#13;
everyone Sunday afternoon,&#13;
Oct. 24, when the public is invited&#13;
to. attend an a1I-Campus&#13;
Open House and formal&#13;
dedication of tbe Irvin G. Wyllie&#13;
Library-Learning Center ,&#13;
Planners hope that students and&#13;
staff will use the occasion to&#13;
show the campus to their&#13;
families and friends.&#13;
The dedication of the&#13;
magnificent Wyllie LibraryLearning&#13;
Center, named for&#13;
Parkside's founding chancellor,&#13;
will be the focus of the af·&#13;
ternoon's activities. The&#13;
dedication program will be held&#13;
in the WylHe Library-Learntng&#13;
Center's spectacular Main&#13;
Place beginning at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
The Open House, itself, will be&#13;
held from 12:30 to 5:S0 and will&#13;
feature many displays,&#13;
demonstrations and perIormances&#13;
in all the Parkside&#13;
buildings, including the exciting&#13;
new $3.7 million Parkside Union&#13;
opened just last month.&#13;
The dedication program will&#13;
feature the unveiling of a&#13;
portrait of the late chancellor&#13;
done by Kenosha artist George&#13;
Pollard, as well as: *&#13;
a recital by Carmen Vila,&#13;
Spanish concert pianist who&#13;
was Parkside's first artist-inresidence&#13;
from 1968, when UW·&#13;
P-assumed control of the twoyear&#13;
Centers in Kenosha and&#13;
Racine and acquired its first&#13;
students, IIntil 1973. *&#13;
remarks by Gyo Obata,&#13;
internationally known architect&#13;
and principal in charge of&#13;
design for the St. Louis firm of&#13;
Hellmuth, Obata and&#13;
Kassabaum, architects of the&#13;
Wyllie Library-Learning Center&#13;
and designers' of the campus&#13;
master development plan.&#13;
*&#13;
remarks by Merle Curti,&#13;
distinguished ~merican&#13;
historian and Professor&#13;
Emeritus at UW-Madison, with&#13;
whom Chancellor Wyllie&#13;
studied as a graduate student&#13;
and later worked as a faculty&#13;
colleague at Madison. Prof.&#13;
Curti also will he presented a&#13;
special award for his generous&#13;
contributions to the Parkside&#13;
-library.&#13;
A reception will follow the&#13;
dedication program at approximately&#13;
2:30 p.m.&#13;
Doors will open to all campus&#13;
buildings at 12:30, one hour&#13;
before the dedication program.&#13;
Most activities in all the&#13;
academic buildings will begin&#13;
after the Wyllie dedication&#13;
program, with the exception of&#13;
the new campus Union which is&#13;
expected to be the recipient of&#13;
the majority of the visitors who&#13;
arrive before- the 1:3Gdedication&#13;
program.&#13;
All facilities in the 70,000&#13;
square foot union will be open&#13;
and in operation from 12:30 to&#13;
5: 30, including movies in the&#13;
400-seat cinema theater,&#13;
refreshments in the large dining&#13;
room whose glass walls&#13;
overlook beautiful Petrifying&#13;
Springs park, Union Square, tbe&#13;
entertainment center of tbe&#13;
union, the recreation-game&#13;
area and bowling alleys and the&#13;
Union Bazaar, a spacious mall&#13;
rising three stories to a skylighted&#13;
roof which is the heart of&#13;
the building.&#13;
Visitors may park in the&#13;
Union lot, adjacent to the new&#13;
building on the north end of tbe&#13;
campus, in the Conununication&#13;
Arts lot adjacent to the theater&#13;
on"the west side of the campus,&#13;
or in the Tallent Hall lot on the&#13;
east side of Wood Rd. (30th&#13;
Ave.) from which shuWe buses&#13;
will be running.&#13;
Visitors will receive a map of&#13;
the buildings and a schedule of&#13;
activities as they enter tbe&#13;
buildings. Each building will&#13;
have a television monitor and&#13;
guides to further describe the&#13;
facilities and activiUes.&#13;
Among the other activities at&#13;
Parkside Sunday will be: *&#13;
a special performance by&#13;
the Parkside Baroque Ensemble&#13;
at 3: 15 in Greenquist&#13;
Hall room 103. *&#13;
a "Jefferson Sampler,"&#13;
featuring highlight. from&#13;
Thomas Jefferson's life and&#13;
contributions by costumed&#13;
Parkside students at approximately&#13;
3 p.rn. *&#13;
a series of experiments and&#13;
demonstrations of equipment&#13;
by the science, engineering and&#13;
behavioral science faculty and&#13;
computer center, including&#13;
audience participation in&#13;
computer games and&#13;
psychological experirnents. *&#13;
a number of exhibitions in&#13;
the theater gallery and library,&#13;
including a set display on the&#13;
theater stage. *&#13;
live art and music activities&#13;
in Fine Arts classrooms. *&#13;
movies&#13;
*&#13;
self-guiding tours of the&#13;
physical education building and&#13;
faciltties, . highlighted by the&#13;
first public scrimmage of the&#13;
1976-77 Parkside varsity&#13;
basketball team at 4:30.&#13;
Sunday will mark Parkside's&#13;
fourth Open House since the&#13;
campus opened in Fall of 1969&#13;
with its first two buildings,&#13;
Greenquist and Tallent Halla.&#13;
With a break from the&#13;
weatherman, several thousand&#13;
are expected this time. Those&#13;
with questions should call 55S2233&#13;
for more informaUon.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 20, 1976 5&#13;
Barke talks Bizarre&#13;
by Sue Marquardt or William Barke&#13;
"What_ we hope to accomplish on f:he Campus&#13;
Bizarre is ... to .. uh .. to see that...uh .. Where was I?&#13;
Oh, yeah. Well, sure, I'll have a beer. You buying?"&#13;
It could have been worse. I could have been&#13;
talking to two or all three -of the oroducers of the&#13;
Campus Bizarre T.V. Show. Luckily only one was&#13;
available for this interview- Bill Barke. The oth~rs,&#13;
Jeff Litrenta and Bob Tremonte could not be found.&#13;
Barke was noticeably upset at this. "They knew&#13;
about this thing. They just thought it'd be funny to&#13;
leave me holding the bag. No offense," he said.&#13;
measures five by seven feet, installed in Union&#13;
Square. Campus Bizarre would be shown Wednesdays,&#13;
Thursdays, and Fridays during the late&#13;
morning and early afternoon hours.&#13;
"This is probably our . biggest project to date,"&#13;
Barke remarked. "That would include the old P.U.&#13;
Revue of a year and a half ago which actually had&#13;
the same comedy format as Bizarre." Seven P.U.&#13;
Revues were produced and have found an occasional&#13;
outlet on the Video Committee's monitor&#13;
which for two years has been a sometime fixture ~&#13;
the Main Concourse and now in the Union.&#13;
Dressed in army fatigues several sizes too large,&#13;
with clusters of foilage stuck conspicuously into&#13;
button holes and zippers, Barke had been relaxing&#13;
when I arrived. I questioned him about the odd&#13;
costume and learned that he and several other video&#13;
members were' in the midst of making a short&#13;
comedy film for the show, which will be aired&#13;
weekly at Parkside beginning in early November. I&#13;
asked about the nature of the comedy film.&#13;
Barke stated: "The whole concept of producing a&#13;
show like this is basically for the experience of&#13;
working in this kind of creative atmospheretelevision-&#13;
which incorporates sight and sound.&#13;
Television production really allows these students&#13;
into a field which has so many possibilities for artistic&#13;
efforts. I hope it will succeed as both art and&#13;
entertainment here at Parkside. Now where's my&#13;
beer?"&#13;
Bruce Wagner, a writer and performer for the Campus Bizarre,&#13;
gives his best angle.&#13;
============================== the quiet l~ader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
"I guess it's funny. That's all I can say at the&#13;
moment except that I'd like to have some popcorn&#13;
with my beer," said Barke.&#13;
Barke then went into a big schpeel about each of&#13;
the Bizarre bits. He told me about such bits as&#13;
Death Guard, Flute of Doom, American Outdoorsman,&#13;
Public Execution, The Charlie Manson&#13;
Show, and many, many more. Then he put his beer&#13;
and popcorn in a plastic bag, whirled it over his&#13;
head like David against Goliath, and screamed like&#13;
a chicken. Cont.ary to popular belief, Barke,&#13;
Litrenta, and Tremonte are not insane; they're just&#13;
not playing with a full deck.&#13;
~&#13;
All seriousness aside, Barke talked about Campu~&#13;
Bizarre which he helped develop for PAB Video&#13;
with Litrenta and Tr-enionte, 'that also involves the&#13;
efforts of a score of students who work as writers,&#13;
crew, and talent each week.&#13;
Mike Villers-Dealer 637-2726&#13;
~============================~&#13;
LEE SAUSACE SHOP&#13;
Barke said, "A preview of Campus Bizarre was&#13;
shown at the beginning of the semester and got a&#13;
pretty good response so we've decided to do a series&#13;
of half-hour ~hows. Until November we'll be stockpiling&#13;
our taped bits and at that time they will be&#13;
edited into five or six shows."&#13;
When the show is ready to be aired, PAB hopes to&#13;
have the Union'!l Advent T.V. screen, which&#13;
Several hours -after beginning this interview, it&#13;
emled as it had begun: with a few slurred words&#13;
here and tqere, a half a page of notes. Barke,&#13;
preparing to return to his film-making made one&#13;
last remark: "Well, sure, I'll have another beer .You&#13;
buying?"&#13;
Home of the Suhmar ne&#13;
. Sandwich_&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P .M.&#13;
2615 Washington Ave. 634-2373&#13;
Response&#13;
received&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government' Association announced&#13;
that voter registration is&#13;
getting a "better than expected"&#13;
response with all the postcards&#13;
for Kenosha gone.&#13;
Dan Nielsen, Ways and Means&#13;
Committee chairperson, is in&#13;
charge of the voter registration&#13;
drive, which is an effort to&#13;
achieve a high voter turnout for&#13;
this November's elections.&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association is&#13;
sponsoring a toy drive for the&#13;
Parkside Child Care Center.&#13;
This toy drive will begin on&#13;
October 18 and continue through&#13;
October 22.&#13;
i,,/f' University _o:, Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
-~ Ft~·sta&#13;
Acapulc~&#13;
Semester -Break&#13;
January 6-13, 1977&#13;
$339 COMPLETE&#13;
Triple occupancy&#13;
LIMITED SPACE -&#13;
MAKE YOUR&#13;
RESERVATIONS, NOW! • For, application forms or&#13;
additional information contact:&#13;
Parkside Union Office&#13;
553-2200&#13;
, f&#13;
Dedication, Open House Sunday&#13;
There will be something for&#13;
everyone Sunday afternoon,&#13;
Oct. 24, when the public is invited&#13;
to attend an all-Campus&#13;
Open House and formal&#13;
dedication of the Irvin G. Wyllie&#13;
Library-Learning Center.&#13;
Planners hope that students and&#13;
staff will use the occasion to&#13;
show the campus to their&#13;
families and friends.&#13;
The dedication of the&#13;
rnagnificent Wyllie LibraryLearning&#13;
Center, named for&#13;
Parkside's founding chancellor,&#13;
will be the focus of the afternoon's&#13;
activities. The&#13;
dedication program will be held&#13;
in the Wyllie Llbrary-Learnin~&#13;
Center's spectacular Main&#13;
Place beginning at 1 :30 p.m.&#13;
The Open House, itself, will be&#13;
held from 12:30 to 5:30 and will&#13;
feature many displays,&#13;
demonstrations a11d perform~nces&#13;
in all the Parkside&#13;
building!;, including the exciting&#13;
new $3.7 million Parkside Union&#13;
opened just last month. •&#13;
The dedication program will&#13;
feature the unveiling of a&#13;
portrait of the late chancellor&#13;
done by Kenosha artist George&#13;
Pollard, as well as: * a recital by Carmen Vila,&#13;
Spanish concert pianist who&#13;
was Parkside's first artist-inresidence&#13;
from 19613, when DWP&#13;
- assumed control of the twoyear&#13;
Centers in Kenosha and&#13;
Racine and acquired its first&#13;
students, \jntil 1973. * remarks by Gyo Obata,&#13;
internationally known architect&#13;
and principal in charge of&#13;
design for the St. Louis firm of&#13;
Hellmuth, Obat,? and&#13;
Kassabaum, architects of the&#13;
Wyllie Library-Learning Center&#13;
and designers of the campus&#13;
master development plan. * remarks by Merle Curti,&#13;
distinguished ~merican&#13;
historian and Professor&#13;
Emeritus at UW-Madison, with&#13;
whom Chancellor Wyllie&#13;
studied as a graduate student&#13;
and later worked as a faculty&#13;
colleague at Madison. Prof.&#13;
Curti also will be presented a&#13;
special award for his generous&#13;
contributions to the Parkside&#13;
library.&#13;
A reception will follow the&#13;
dedication program at approximately&#13;
2:30 p.m.&#13;
Doors will open to all campus&#13;
buildings at 12:30, one hour&#13;
before the dedication program.&#13;
Most activities in all the&#13;
academic buildings will begin&#13;
after the Wyllie dedication&#13;
program, with the exception of&#13;
the new campus Union which is&#13;
expected to be the recipient of&#13;
the majority of the visitors who&#13;
arrive before the 1: 30&#13;
I&#13;
dedication program.&#13;
All facilities in the 70,000&#13;
square foot union will be open&#13;
and in operation from 12:30 to&#13;
5:30, including movies in the&#13;
400-seat cinema theater,&#13;
refreshments in the large dining&#13;
room whose glass walls&#13;
overlook beautiful Petrifying&#13;
Springs park, Union Square, the&#13;
entertainment center of the&#13;
union, the recreation-game&#13;
area and bowling alleys and the&#13;
Union Bazaar, a spacious mall&#13;
rising three stories to a skylighted&#13;
roof which is the heart of&#13;
the building.&#13;
Visitors may park in the&#13;
Union lot, adjacent to the new&#13;
building on the north end of the&#13;
campus, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Jot adjacent to the theater&#13;
on the west side of the campus,&#13;
or in the Tallent Hall lot on the&#13;
-!~~he University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
, , . cordially invites you&#13;
to attend the dedication of the&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie Library-Leaming Center&#13;
. on SundayJ October 24, 1976,&#13;
from 1 :30-2:30 p.m. in Main Place,&#13;
Wyllie Library-Learning Center&#13;
Unveiling of the Irvin G. Wyllie portrait&#13;
Recital by Carmen Vila, Spanish pianist&#13;
and Parkside's first artist-in-residence&#13;
Remarks by Gyo Obata, principal&#13;
designer, Hellmuth, Obata &amp; Kassabaum&#13;
of St. Louis, designers of the&#13;
Wyllie Library-Learning Center&#13;
Remarks by and presentation to Merle Curti,&#13;
Emeritus Professor of H isfory,&#13;
UW-Madison&#13;
Chancellor Alan E. Guskin, presiding&#13;
Reception and campus open house following,&#13;
featuring demonstrations and displays by&#13;
faculty and students, and tours of all&#13;
campus buildings, including the new&#13;
Parkside Union, until 5:30 p.m.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
east side of Wood Rd. (30th&#13;
Ave.) from which shuttle buses&#13;
will be running.&#13;
Visitors will receive a map of&#13;
the buildings and a schedule of&#13;
activities as they enter th&#13;
buildings. Each building will&#13;
have a television monitor and&#13;
guides to furth r describe th&#13;
facilities and activities.&#13;
Among the other activitie at&#13;
Parkside Sunday will be: * a special performance by&#13;
the Parkside Baroque Ensemble&#13;
at 3:15 in Gr enquist&#13;
Hall room 103. * a "Jefferson Sampler,"&#13;
featurin , highlights from&#13;
Thomas J ffer ·on's life and&#13;
contribution by co turned&#13;
Park ide stude~ts at approximately&#13;
3 p.m. * a series of experiments and&#13;
demonstration of equipment&#13;
b the sci.ence, engineering and&#13;
behavioral cience faculty and&#13;
computer center, including&#13;
audience participation in&#13;
computer games nd&#13;
psychological e,xperiments. * a number of exhibitions in&#13;
the theater gallery and library,&#13;
including a set display on th&#13;
theater stage. * live art and music activities&#13;
in Fine Arts classrooms. * movies * self-guiding tours of the&#13;
physical education building and&#13;
facilities, _ highlighted by the&#13;
first public scrimmage of the&#13;
1976-77 Parkside varsity&#13;
basketball team at 4:30.&#13;
Sunday will mark Parkside's&#13;
fourth Open House since the&#13;
campus opened in Fall of 1969&#13;
with its first two buildings,&#13;
Greenquist and Tallent Halls.&#13;
With a break from the&#13;
weatherman, several thousand&#13;
are expected this time. Those&#13;
with questions should call 553-&#13;
2233 for more information. &#13;
\&#13;
The Fine Arts Division and&#13;
Dramatic Arts Present&#13;
GHOSTS&#13;
by Henrik Ibsen&#13;
-HE P"KKj'O&amp; RANGER October 20,1976 ,&#13;
Contact&#13;
,&#13;
weekly by studen, government&#13;
by Kiyoko Bowden the Student Court to hear the complaint. Roughlysthe procedure will&#13;
go as follows.&#13;
1. The student contacts the instructor of the course about the grade&#13;
to make sure that a simple error of grade transfer hasn't occurred.&#13;
2. If the conversation with the instructor proved unsuccessful, the&#13;
student must then, contact the chairperson of the division about the&#13;
grade. '&#13;
3. If that fails the student should see the Vice-Chancellor - Dean of&#13;
Faculty about the grade. ,&#13;
4. If that fails, the student may file a formal petition to the Student&#13;
Court at the P.S.G.A., Inc. offices, WLLC .DI93, and the Court will ~&#13;
.convene within ten days to hear the petition. The instructor Will be&#13;
requested to be present at the hearing to present his-her case, as will&#13;
the student. '- .&#13;
5. The student should 6e prepared to offer evidence and documentation&#13;
to support his-her claim. "&#13;
6. The Student Court will rule on the petition and send a recommendation&#13;
and request to the Chancellor. If the Court rules that the&#13;
student did notreceive the grade earned, the Court will request that&#13;
the Chancellor forward the Retition to the Faculty Riilhts and&#13;
Responsibility Committee. /&#13;
7. The Faculty Rights and Responsibility Committee will be the&#13;
court of last resorts. _ ...&#13;
The academic grievance procedure 'lip to now has been that the&#13;
. student went to the instructor, then the divisional chairperson and&#13;
then to the Dean of the Appropriate school, and then went.home with&#13;
the same grade as he-she walked in to c6mplain about. The new&#13;
procedure may appear to be a bit formidable, but there is atleast a_&#13;
chance that the student complaint will get a formal hearing.&#13;
If any student needs help in filing a petition a member of tbe Legal'&#13;
Service Executive Advisory Coramittee will be available ,to aid them.&#13;
Guidelines on the rules of evidence and standards will be written by&#13;
the Student Court in the near future. When they are completed there&#13;
will be more Information coming to you from P.S.G.A. . ,&#13;
As slight digression, I would like to remind students that there are&#13;
still several positions as associate :i!!stices of the Student Court open. If&#13;
anyone is interested, contact Kiyoko Bowden, president of student&#13;
government or Caroyl Williamson Chief Justice of the Student Court at&#13;
WLLC DI93 or call 553-2244. I&#13;
, Student appointments&#13;
Congratulations are extended to the following students on their&#13;
appointments by the Senate:&#13;
Leslie Burns .. , ' , . ' , .. , , 'Financial Aids Committee&#13;
Arline Martin, , , .. , , .. , .Financial Aids Committee&#13;
Chris Meyer .. ' , .. , .. .United Council-Education Comnuttee&#13;
Pat Heckel, , ' ,. , .. , United Council-Director's Committee&#13;
Daniel Nielsen .. ' . ' . , .. United Council-Legislative Affairs Committee&#13;
Openings in Student Government&#13;
Any student interested in serving on the following committees&#13;
please contact Kiyoko Bowden immediately:&#13;
Academic Planning and Program Review , , 2 openings&#13;
Athletic Board, , , , .-:., . ' , &lt;0. ,2 openings&#13;
Curriculum and Program Committee ... 2 openings (full-lime students&#13;
only)&#13;
Teaching Awards Committee .. , , .. , , ..&#13;
Campus Ceremonies Committee .. , .. , .&#13;
Bookstore Committee ~ ~ ' .&#13;
Student services status report&#13;
Student services in all their vast array at Parkside are under review&#13;
by student government. If you have a complaint, please come to us.&#13;
We need to know ww.t if anything is f,,!ling to work properly in serving&#13;
the students. Complain. We are listening. We are prepared to follow&#13;
- through on your complaint.&#13;
The status report on student services is waiting for you to fill in the&#13;
details. ."&#13;
Ar-ademie gr-ievance procedure implementation&#13;
Al'lwdlllg to the P,SJ;,A .. Inc, Constitution, Arti'cle III, The Student&#13;
- Court has the responsibility of hearing petitions from students&#13;
reuardmg an academic grievance. An academic grievance is a&#13;
complamt b~ a student that he-she didn't receive the grade that he-she&#13;
earned. ,&#13;
I[ "iii h.. o,,,,.,hle hv 'l;ov 1•. 1976for s\Udents to file a petition with&#13;
Sp.rn. Oct.22-23-24&#13;
COMM ARTS THEATER&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
Adm. $1 students and senior citizens,&#13;
. $2 others. Tickets at the door&#13;
and the Main Place Info. Kiosk&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
. '..'&#13;
)&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
The,quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
~&#13;
Mike Villers 637-2726&#13;
11', Ii"" hJ ""Rg,&#13;
"ear after year, semester.&#13;
I after semester, the&#13;
CollegeMaster"from&#13;
Fidelity Union Life has,&#13;
been the most accepted,&#13;
most popular plan on&#13;
campuses all over America,&#13;
Find out why.&#13;
Call the Fidelity Union'&#13;
CollegeMaster@&#13;
Field Associate&#13;
•&#13;
II] your area:&#13;
,&#13;
Linda Truax ~52-9131&#13;
Tom Cotner 632-4758&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
, RLM SERIES PRESENTS _&#13;
ANIMAL CRACKERS&#13;
FRI.. OCT.22 7:00 &amp; 9:00 P.M.;&#13;
Adm. $1.00&#13;
, .. lopening&#13;
.. 1 opening&#13;
_... 2 openings&#13;
/&#13;
)&#13;
Interviews&#13;
to 'be held&#13;
)&#13;
CDlleg~Jylaster@&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
The Parkside Career Planning&#13;
and Placement Office has announced&#13;
their mterviewing&#13;
schedule for the next few weeks.&#13;
The U.S. Marine Corps Officer&#13;
Selection Program will be in the&#13;
WLLC Alcove near the former&#13;
Sweet Shoppe on October 18to 2L&#13;
Students in computer science&#13;
can.talk to representatives from&#13;
Northwestern 'Mutual Life on&#13;
October 28. . "-&#13;
The UW-Madison School of&#13;
Pharmacy will be in WLLC D-174&#13;
to talk to interested students on&#13;
October 29. '\ '&#13;
Drake University's school of&#13;
business administration will have&#13;
representatives on .campus on&#13;
November 2 from 9 a.m. -12 noon&#13;
in the WLLC Alcove 103.&#13;
Racine will be recruiting on&#13;
November 4 and 9 with Modine&#13;
Manufacturing seeking' ac- • . ,&#13;
countants and design engineers&#13;
on the 4th and J.I. case looking&#13;
fO\' auditors on 9th.&#13;
Xerox will be on campus on the&#13;
17th, seeking sales personnel.&#13;
Also on the 17th, Northwestern&#13;
Mutual 'Life will be- recruiting&#13;
underwriters.&#13;
The Career Planning and&#13;
Placement Office asks that you&#13;
have a complete file with them&#13;
before signing up in their office&#13;
'rallent 107 for these interviews.&#13;
·Stamp Show 'OCl. 23-24&#13;
KECOPE:X '76&#13;
_GATEW~Y nkHNICAL INST.&#13;
3530 30th Ave. Kenosha'&#13;
SATURDAY,OCT. 23 - 10 A.M.te • P.M.&#13;
SUIDAV, OCT. 24 - 10 A.M. te 4 P.M.&#13;
'00 PHILATELIC DISPLAYS&#13;
• 5 . C • 12 Dealers '&#13;
ounmc. a,d .,. USPS Special Cancellation&#13;
• USPS POST OFFICE • Cacheted Envelopes&#13;
FREE ADMISSION&#13;
.Concert&#13;
planned .'&#13;
The Pike River Musicians&#13;
(PRM), the Kenosha-Racine&#13;
chamber music group now&#13;
beginning its third season, will be&#13;
holding their'second fan concert&#13;
featuring Milwaukee soprano,&#13;
Helen Ceci. ;.&#13;
The concert will be held on I&#13;
Sunday, (Oct. 31st) at 3 p.m. at&#13;
the home of Dr. and Mrs. J.N .&#13;
Shanberge &lt;,957East Wye Lane,&#13;
Milwaukee) and will be open to&#13;
the public. Refreshments will be&#13;
{ierved and a donation accepted.&#13;
Reservations are not necessary.&#13;
The Milwaukee concert 'marks&#13;
the first time the group plays&#13;
outside the Kenosha-Racine area.&#13;
The program will include J.S.&#13;
Bach:s Cantata No. 2p9, "Non sa&#13;
che sia dolore," for soprano, solo&#13;
. violin ,and flute, strings and&#13;
continuo. Besides Soprano Ceci,&#13;
the cantata will use Eden Vaning,&#13;
newly-appointed violin II'rofessor&#13;
at the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
.Parkside ; Barbara Suetholz,&#13;
Rat" 'ne teacher of flute; and LoTS ..&#13;
Toeppner, Milwaukee harpsichordist.&#13;
. _&#13;
The major work of the concert&#13;
will be Arnold Schoenberg's&#13;
string sextet, HVerklaerte&#13;
Nacht" (Transfigured Night) .&#13;
(&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre&#13;
SUN." OCT. 24, 7:30 P.M.&#13;
•&#13;
)&#13;
-HE P~RK.,i06- RANGER October 20, 1976&#13;
Contact weekly by student government&#13;
Interviews&#13;
to be held&#13;
by Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
Academic grie,·ance procedure implementation&#13;
An·ordmg to the P.S,G.A., lnc. Constitution, Arti'cle III, The Student&#13;
~ &lt; ·ourt has the responsibility of hearing petitions from students&#13;
re}.!ardmg an aeademic grievance. An a.cademic grievance is a&#13;
, ·ompiaint b~ a student that he-she didn't receive the grade that he-she&#13;
1°arned. ,&#13;
.&#13;
It\\ ill ])P no-.s1hle h,· ",ov 15~ 1976 for s\udents to file a petition with&#13;
Toe Fine Arts Division and&#13;
Dramatic Arts Present&#13;
GHOSTS ·&#13;
by Henrik Ibsen&#13;
8p.m . . Oct.22-23-24&#13;
COMM ARTS THEATER&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
Adm. $1 srudents and senior citizens,&#13;
-$2 others. Tickets at the door&#13;
and the Main Place Info. Kiosk&#13;
"II~,;.,,-,/&#13;
• Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
'&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
The quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Mike&#13;
~ Villers 637 -2726&#13;
, /1'1 lime lo 1/,ang,&#13;
,rear after year, semester&#13;
I after semester, the&#13;
CollegeMaster~ from&#13;
Fidelit)' Union Life has . been the most accept~ most popular plan on ·&#13;
campuses all over America.&#13;
Find out why.&#13;
Call the Fidelity Union,&#13;
CollegeMaster®&#13;
Field Associate&#13;
•&#13;
1~ your area:&#13;
tinda Truax 552-9131&#13;
Tom Cotner 632.-4758&#13;
/&#13;
Colleg~lylaster ·&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
the Student Court to hear the complaint. Roughly ,-the procedure will&#13;
go as follows.&#13;
1. The student contacts the instructor of the course about the grade&#13;
to make sure that a simple error of grade transfer hasn't occurred.&#13;
2. If the conversation with the instructor proved unsuccessful, the&#13;
student must then contact the chairperson of the division about the&#13;
grad~. - , 3. If that fails the student should see the Vice-Chancellor - L&gt;ean of&#13;
Faculty about the grade. , 4. If that fails, the student may file a formal petition to the Student&#13;
Court at the P.S.G.A., Inc. offices, WLLC ,D193, and the Court will .,J.&#13;
,convene within ten day.s to hear the petition. The instructor will be&#13;
requested to be present at the hearing to present his-her case, as will&#13;
the student. ' ,&#13;
5. The student should be prepared to offer evidence and documentation&#13;
to support his-her claim. .&#13;
6. The, Student Court will rule on the petition and send a recommendation&#13;
and request to the Chancellor. If the Court rules that the&#13;
student did not receive the grade earned, the Court will request that&#13;
the Chancellor forward the Retition to the Faculty Rights and&#13;
Responsibility Committee. I&#13;
7. The Faculty Rights and Responsibility Committee will be the&#13;
court of last resorts. _ -.&#13;
The academic grievance procedure up to now has been that the&#13;
· student went to the instructor, then the divisional chairperson and&#13;
then to the Dean of the Appropriate school, and then went home with&#13;
the same grade as he-she walked in to complain about. The new&#13;
procedure may appear to be a bit formidable, but there is at_least a ,&#13;
chance that the student complaint will get a formal hearing.&#13;
If any student needs help in filing a petition a member of tlle Legal '&#13;
Service Executive Advisory Committee will be available ,to aid them.&#13;
Guidelines on the rules of evidence and standards will be written by&#13;
the Student Court in the near future. When they are completed there&#13;
will be more information coming to you from P.S.G.A '&#13;
As slight digression, I would like to remind students that there are&#13;
still several positions as associate justices of the Student Court open. If&#13;
anyone is interested, contact Kiyoko Bowden, president of student&#13;
government or Caroyl Williamson Chief Justice of the Student Court at&#13;
WLLC D193 or call 553-2244.&#13;
Student appointments&#13;
by ijruce Wagner&#13;
The Parkside Career Planning&#13;
and Placement Office has announced&#13;
their interviewing&#13;
schedule for the next few weeks.&#13;
The U.S. Marin.e Corps Officer&#13;
Selection Program will be in the&#13;
WLLC Alcove near ~e former&#13;
Sweet Shoppe on October 18 to 2L&#13;
Students in computer science&#13;
can.talk to representatives from&#13;
Northwestern Mutual Life on&#13;
October 28. ·&#13;
The UW-Madison School of&#13;
Pharmacy will be in WLLC D-174&#13;
to talk to interested students on&#13;
October 29. '&#13;
Drake University's school of&#13;
business administration will have&#13;
represen!3tives on ,campus on&#13;
November 2 from 9 a.m. -12 noon&#13;
in the WLLC Alcove 103.&#13;
Racine will be recruiting on&#13;
November 4 and 9 with Modine&#13;
Manufact~ring seeking · accountants&#13;
and design engineers&#13;
on the 4th and J.I. case looking&#13;
for auditors on 9th.&#13;
Xerox will be on ca:i;npus on the&#13;
17th, seeking sales personnel.&#13;
Also on the 1'7th, Northwestern&#13;
Mutual · Life will be recruiting&#13;
underwriters.&#13;
The Career Planning and&#13;
Placement Office asks that you&#13;
have a complete file with them&#13;
before signing up in their office&#13;
Tallent 107 for these interviews.&#13;
Congratulations are extended to the following students on their&#13;
appointments by the Senate: Concert&#13;
Leslie Burns .. . .. . . ... .. .. . .. ...... . .... . .'Financial Aids Committee , ,)&#13;
Arline Martin ... . . . ... .. . .. ... . . . . . .. ... . . Financial Aids Committee - l d&#13;
Chris Meyer . . . . .. .. . .. .. . . . . . . United Council-Education Comrruttee p 8 n n e&#13;
Pat Heckel . . . ...... . .. . . . . . . .. United Council-Director's Committee&#13;
Daniel Nielsen .. . . . .. .. United Council-Legislative Affairs Committee&#13;
Openings in Student Government&#13;
Any student interested in serving on the following committees&#13;
please contact Kiyoko Bowden immediately:&#13;
Academic Planning and Program Review .. . .. .. . ..... . . 2 openings&#13;
Athletic Board ..... : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 openings&#13;
Curriculum and Program Committee .. . 2 openings ( full-time students&#13;
only)&#13;
Teaching Awards Committee .. . .. . .. . .. ... . . . . . .... .... . .. . 1 opening&#13;
Campus Ceremonies Committee . .. .. . . . .. .. .. .. . ... . .. . .. .. 1 opening&#13;
Bookstore Committee .... ...... ~ .. . . . . .. , . . .. . . ... . . . . . .... 2 openings&#13;
Student services status report&#13;
Student services in all their vast array at Parkside are under review&#13;
by student government. If you have a complaint, please come to us.&#13;
We need to know what if anything is f3!Iing to work properly in serving&#13;
the students. Complain. We are listeI)ing. We are prepared to follow&#13;
- through on your complaint.&#13;
The status report on student services is waiting for you to fill in' the&#13;
details. , ·&#13;
.. -&#13;
-Stamp Show OCT. 23-24&#13;
KECOPEX '76&#13;
GATEW~Y TECHNICAL INST.&#13;
3530 30th Ave. Kenosha&#13;
SATU,RDAY, OCT. 2l - 10 A.M •. 'to 8 P.M.&#13;
SUIDAY, OCT. 24 - 10 A.M. to 4 P.M.&#13;
100 PHILATELIC DISPLAYS&#13;
• S . C d • 1 2 Dealers , ouve,nu. ar . 1 USPS Special Cancellation&#13;
• USPS POST OFFICE • Cacheted Envelopes&#13;
FREE ADMISSION&#13;
The Pike River Musicians&#13;
( PRM ), the Kenosha-Racine&#13;
chamber music group now&#13;
beginning its third season, will be&#13;
holding their'second fall concert&#13;
featuring Milwaukee soprano,&#13;
Helen Ceci.&#13;
The concert will be held on&#13;
Sunday, (Oct. 31st) at 3 p.m. at&#13;
the home of Dr. and Mrs. J .N.&#13;
Shanberge (957 East Wye Lane,&#13;
Milwaukee) and will be open to&#13;
the public. Refreshments will be&#13;
served and a donation accepted.&#13;
Reservations are not necessary.&#13;
The Milwaukee concert ·marks&#13;
the first time the group plays&#13;
outsidE!the Kenosha-Racine area.&#13;
The program will include J.S.&#13;
Bach'.s Cantata No. 2p9, "Non sa&#13;
che s1a dolore,'' for soprano, solo&#13;
. violin and flute, strings and&#13;
continuo. Besides Soprano Ceci,&#13;
the cantata will use Eden Vaning,&#13;
newly-appointed violin 1'fofessor&#13;
at the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
_ Parkside ; Barbara Suethoiz,&#13;
Ra• ;_ne teacher of flute; and LoTs&#13;
Toeppner, Milwaukee harp-&#13;
. sichordist. ·&#13;
The ll}ajor work of the concert&#13;
will be Arnold Schoenberg's&#13;
string sextet, "Verklaerte&#13;
Nacht" (Transfigured Night) .&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD 1 , FILM SERIES PRESENTS -&#13;
.ANIM.AL CRACKERS&#13;
FRI., OCT.22 7:00 &amp; 9:00 P.M.; SUN.,. OCT. 24, 7:30 P.M.&#13;
Adm. $1 .00 Union Cinema Theatre &#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
THE PARKS IDE RANGER OCtober 20. 19767&#13;
Women's volleyball&#13;
goes north&#13;
Parkside's women's volleyball&#13;
team faces two opponents in the&#13;
coming weekend.&#13;
Friday, the team will travel to&#13;
Sheboygan to play Lakeland&#13;
College at 10 a.m. and Saturday,&#13;
they will oppose UW-8tvens Point&#13;
at Stevens Point.&#13;
The team hosted five teams;&#13;
L1W·Oshkosh, Carthage, UW.&#13;
j •&#13;
Whitewater, Ripon and Loyola;&#13;
in the Parkside Invitational last&#13;
Saturday. The Rangers played&#13;
-off for third place against UW·&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
Parkside lost a double match at&#13;
UW·Whitewater October 12,&#13;
losing first to Whitewater 15-11,&#13;
15-7 and then to Carroll College.&#13;
15-3, 1:Hi.&#13;
Marquette forfeits soccer game&#13;
by Fr",d Tenuta&#13;
The Ranger soccer team&#13;
scored a l-ll forfeit victory over&#13;
Marquette University Saturday&#13;
at the soccer bowl.&#13;
The forfeit was taken by&#13;
Marquette Coach Joe }lorn as a&#13;
result of the ejection of two&#13;
Warriors with 17:57 in the&#13;
game. The first was ejected for&#13;
deliberately tripping a Ranger,&#13;
and the second was ejected for&#13;
protesting the call too strongly.&#13;
The question of whether the&#13;
second player had, in fact,&#13;
protested, and a feeling that&#13;
Marquette_was being cheated by&#13;
lbe referees caused Born to pull&#13;
his team off the field.&#13;
At this point, Parkside was&#13;
leading 3-2. Earl Campbell and&#13;
Rafii Kambiz had 'scored first&#13;
!'ralf goals for the Rangers. Mike&#13;
Boyajian added the third early in&#13;
the second half. I •&#13;
Up until that point, the Rangers&#13;
had been in total control, but the ,&#13;
loss of all NAIA player Steve&#13;
Sendelbach, due to a broken nose,&#13;
necessitated a change in the&#13;
defense. The opening a.three&#13;
goal lead also meant to Coach Hal&#13;
Henderson that "we were content&#13;
and tha t the game would take&#13;
care of itself."&#13;
The Warriors then placed&#13;
pressure on the Ranger defense.&#13;
Their first big opportunity was&#13;
missed when a shot rolled past&#13;
Parkside goalkeeper Dan&#13;
Brieschke and hit the goal post.&#13;
No Marquette forwards were in&#13;
position for a rebound and the&#13;
lead was sage.&#13;
Shortly thereafter, Marquette&#13;
.Swim records set . ,&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
I&#13;
e&#13;
,&#13;
e&#13;
t&#13;
Records in the first place&#13;
finishes of the 200free relay team&#13;
and the 100 free fell, put the&#13;
Parkside women's swim team 1st&#13;
to Carthage 87-37 Saturday atternoon.&#13;
In the relay, the record was set&#13;
at 2:03. 109 with Mary Beth&#13;
Leitch, Sally Francis, Gail Olson&#13;
and JUdy Iverson swimming the&#13;
event. Iverson is a new member&#13;
of the team.&#13;
Olson was the record breaker&#13;
in the 100free, with a lime of 1:07.&#13;
302.She was also second in the 500&#13;
free , only two seconds off the&#13;
record and second 'in the 50&#13;
breast.&#13;
Leitch scored a first in the 50&#13;
butterfly and seconds in the 100&#13;
I,&#13;
n&#13;
t&#13;
"o&#13;
e&#13;
I.&#13;
'.&#13;
,&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
s&#13;
s&#13;
,.&#13;
a ,&#13;
o&#13;
d&#13;
i,&#13;
,&#13;
..&#13;
Parkside golfers finished sixth&#13;
in the 10 team NAIA District&#13;
Tournament October 11 and 12 in&#13;
UiCrosse.&#13;
Eau Claire topped the state&#13;
schools with a score of 752 to&#13;
qualify for the National Tournament&#13;
to be held in the spring.&#13;
Eau Claire's Tim Bauer tied with&#13;
Lee Rolquist of Superior for&#13;
medalist, then Bauer won the&#13;
plaYoff.&#13;
Other team scores were&#13;
s&#13;
,.&#13;
1&#13;
S&#13;
e&#13;
I.&#13;
back and 50 free.&#13;
In Iverson's first performance&#13;
for the Rangers, she picked up&#13;
second places in the 200 free and.&#13;
the 50 back and a third in the 100&#13;
breast.&#13;
A second and two fourths were&#13;
gained by Francis iii the IOUfree, ~&#13;
and 50 free and the 500 free,&#13;
respectively.&#13;
Lili Crnich improved a personal&#13;
record in the 200 free, bettering&#13;
her time by 20 seconds in a&#13;
fourth place finish. She also&#13;
scored a fifth in the 100 breast&#13;
and a sixth in the 50 free.&#13;
The squad, coached by Barb&#13;
Lawson, will host Uw-Milwaukee&#13;
Friday at 4 p.m. and will travel to&#13;
UW-Oshkosh to meet the Titans&#13;
and Carroll College Saturday at&#13;
11 a.m,&#13;
Whitewater, 762; La Crosse, 763;&#13;
Oshkosh, 764, Superior, 774;&#13;
Parkside, 7$; Platteville, 798;&#13;
River Falls, 801; Stevens Point,&#13;
822 and Stout, 830.&#13;
Parkside was- in fourth place&#13;
after the first round, with Ray&#13;
Zuzinec leading the team,&#13;
shooting a 75.&#13;
The final individual scores for&#13;
the Rangers were Ri,ck Pedersen,&#13;
155; Tim Rouse, 156; Mark&#13;
Kuyawa, 158; Gary Paskiewicz,&#13;
158and Zuzinec, 159.&#13;
.your AMS/OIL dealer ~&#13;
got on the scoreboard as Werner&#13;
Petrovich scored from out in&#13;
front. Hayden Knight added a&#13;
Warrior goal later. Henderson&#13;
said both goals were&#13;
"Lackadaisical defensive .&#13;
mistakes."&#13;
Though the game was a forfeit,&#13;
all statistics will count. In goal.&#13;
keeping, Brieschke had five&#13;
saves and Marquette's John&#13;
Nelson had 14.&#13;
The win raises the Rangers&#13;
record to 5-5.1. Marquette drops&#13;
to 4-4. This win was important to&#13;
Henderson and the Rangers as&#13;
they want to stay above .500,&#13;
preferably winning four of the&#13;
next six. They will travel to&#13;
Eastern Michigan University in&#13;
Ypsilanti next Saturday.&#13;
tfcLEADER~&#13;
DOWNTOWN IKINOSHA - for men and women&#13;
Bmwood Plaza/Racine • for men&#13;
Season ends&#13;
by Jean Tenuta'&#13;
The women's tennis season will&#13;
come to a close this Saturday,&#13;
after the squad travels to La&#13;
Crosse to play other state schools&#13;
in the Wisconsin Women's Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletic Conference&#13;
Championships.&#13;
In their last dual meet of the&#13;
season, Parkside was shutout by&#13;
Carthage. Friday afternoon.&#13;
In singles, Marge Balszes lost&#13;
to Cindy Waklas 1Hl, 6-3, Janin eHunter&#13;
fell to Jan Dalwyn 1Hl,6-2&#13;
and Judy Kingsfield was beaten&#13;
by. Becky Miller 6-1. 6-3.&#13;
.~---------------~&#13;
•&#13;
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:&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
• When •&#13;
you say Budweiser, youve said it all!&#13;
• L------E. F.Madrigrano----------'&#13;
Golfers sixth&#13;
• Saves gas (u~ to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,OOO-mlle 011c~angtl,)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60°F. pour POint)&#13;
• Saves 011 Mike Villers&#13;
637-2726&#13;
:&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
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i&#13;
i&#13;
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•&#13;
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e&#13;
e&#13;
t&#13;
',&#13;
0&#13;
s&#13;
0&#13;
s&#13;
e&#13;
' j&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 20, 1976 7&#13;
Wonien 's volleyball&#13;
goes north&#13;
Parkside's women's volleyball&#13;
team faces two opponents in the&#13;
coming weekend.&#13;
Whitewater, Ripon and Loyola;&#13;
in the Parks1dz Invitational last&#13;
Saturday. The Rangers played&#13;
Marquette forfeits soccer game&#13;
Friday, the team will travel to&#13;
Sheboygan to play Lakeland&#13;
College at 10 a.m. and Saturday,&#13;
they will oppose UW-Stvens Point&#13;
at Stevens Point.&#13;
-off for third place against UWWhitewater.&#13;
&#13;
Parkside lost a double match at&#13;
UW-Wh1tewater October 12,&#13;
losing first to Whitewater 15-11, ,&#13;
15-7 and then to Carroll College,&#13;
15-3, 1~.&#13;
by Fr1:d Tenuta&#13;
The Ranger soccer team&#13;
• scored a 1-0 forfeit victory over&#13;
Marquette University Saturday&#13;
at the soccer bowl.&#13;
The forfeit was taken by&#13;
Marquette Coach Joe )3orn as a&#13;
rPsult of the ejection of two&#13;
Warriors with 17: 57 in the&#13;
game. The first was ejected for&#13;
deliberately tripping a Ranger,&#13;
and the second was ejected for&#13;
protesting the call too strongl~.&#13;
The question of whether the&#13;
second player had, in fact,&#13;
protested, and a feeling that&#13;
Marquette~was being cheated by&#13;
the referees caused Born to pull&#13;
his team off the field.&#13;
. At this point, Parkside was&#13;
leading 3-2. Earl Campbell and&#13;
Rafii Kambiz had scored first&#13;
l'lalf goals for the Rangers. Mike&#13;
Boyajian added the third early in&#13;
the second half. ·&#13;
Up until that point, the Rangers&#13;
had been in total control, but the&#13;
loss of all NAIA player Steve&#13;
Sendelbach, due to_a broken nose,&#13;
necessitated a change in the&#13;
defense. The opening a. three&#13;
goal lead also meant to Coach Hal&#13;
Hende;·son that "we were content&#13;
and that the game would take&#13;
care of itself."&#13;
The Warriors then placed&#13;
pressure on the Ranger defense.&#13;
Their first big opportunity was&#13;
missed when a shot rolled past&#13;
Parkside goalkeeper Dan&#13;
Brieschke and hit the goal post.&#13;
No Marquette forwards were in&#13;
position for a rebound and the&#13;
lead was sage. ·&#13;
Shortly thereafter, Marquette&#13;
· Swint records set I&#13;
by Jean Tenuta back and 50 free.&#13;
In lverson's first performance&#13;
Records in the first place for the Rangers, she picked up&#13;
finishes of the 200 free relay team second places in the 200 free and _&#13;
and the 100 free fell, put the the 50 back and a third in the 100&#13;
Parkside women's swim team 1st breast.&#13;
to Carthage 87-37 Saturday af- A second and two fourths were&#13;
ternoon. gained by Fnrncis iu the 100 free,&#13;
In the relay, the record was set and 50 free and the 500 free,&#13;
at 2:03. 109 with Mary Beth respectively.&#13;
Leitch, Sally Francis, Gail Olson Lili Crnich improved a perand&#13;
Judy Iverson swimming the sonal record in the 200 free, betevent.&#13;
Iverson is a new member tering her time by 20 seconds in a&#13;
of the team. fourth place finish. She also&#13;
Olson was the record breaker scored a fifth in the 100 breast&#13;
in the 100 free, with a time uf 1 : 07. and a sixth in the 50 free.&#13;
302. She was also second in the 500 • The squad, coached by Barb&#13;
freP, or:!y two seconds off the Lawson, will host UW-Milwaukee&#13;
record and second 'in the 50 Friday at 4 p.m. and will travel to&#13;
breast. UW-Oshkosh to meet the Titans&#13;
Leitch scored a first in the 50 and Carroll College Saturday at&#13;
butterfly and seconds in the 100 11 a.m.&#13;
Golfers siXth . -&#13;
V&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside golfers finished sixth&#13;
, in the 10 team NAIA District&#13;
Tournament October 11 and 12 in&#13;
LaCrosse.&#13;
Eau Claire topped the state&#13;
schools with a score of 752 to&#13;
qualify for the National Tournament&#13;
to be held in the spring.&#13;
Eau Claire's Tim Bauer tied with&#13;
Lee Rolquist of Superior for&#13;
medalist, then Bauer won the&#13;
playoff.&#13;
Other team scores were&#13;
Whitewater, 762; La Crosse, 763;&#13;
Oshkosh, 764;- Superior, 774;&#13;
Parkside, 71l?i; Platteville, 798;&#13;
River Falls, 801; Stevens Point,&#13;
822 and Stout, 830.&#13;
Parkside was- in fourth place&#13;
after the first round, with Ray&#13;
Zuzinec leading the team,&#13;
shooting a 75.&#13;
The final individual scores for&#13;
the Rangers were R\ck Pedersen,&#13;
155; Tim Rouse, 156; Mark&#13;
Kuyawa, 158; Gary Paskiewicz,&#13;
158 and Zuzinec, 159.&#13;
• Saves gas (u~ to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,000-mile oil c~angtt)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60°F- pour point)&#13;
• Saves oil Mike Ville rs&#13;
your AMS/OIL dealer . 637-2726&#13;
got on the scoreboard as Werner&#13;
Petrovich scored from out in&#13;
front. Hayden Knight added a&#13;
Warrior goal later. Henderson&#13;
said both goals were&#13;
"Lackadaisical defensive .&#13;
mistakes."&#13;
Though the game was a forfeit,&#13;
all statistics will count. In goalkeeping,&#13;
Brieschke had five&#13;
saves and Marquette's John&#13;
Nelson had 14.&#13;
The win raises the Rangers&#13;
record to 5-5-1. Marquette drops&#13;
to 4-4. This win was important to&#13;
Henderson and the Rangers as&#13;
they want to stay above .500,&#13;
preferably winning four of the&#13;
11ext six. They will travel to&#13;
Eastern Michigan University in&#13;
Ypsilanti next Saturday.&#13;
Season ends&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
The women's tennis season will&#13;
come to a close this Saturday,&#13;
after the squad travels to La&#13;
Crosse to play other state schools&#13;
in the Wisconsin Women's Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletic Conference&#13;
Championships.&#13;
In their last dual meet of the&#13;
season, Parkside was shutout by&#13;
Carthage_ Friday afternoon.&#13;
In singles, Marge Bals:ies lost&#13;
to Cindy Waklas 6-0, 6-3, JanineHunter&#13;
fell to Jan Dalwyn 6-0, 6-2&#13;
and Judy Kingsfield was beaten&#13;
by_ Becky Miller 6-1, 6-3.&#13;
The team hosted five teams;&#13;
uW-Oshkosh, Carthage, UWtlfeLEADER~&#13;
&#13;
DOWNTOWN/ KENOSHA - for men and women&#13;
Elmwood Plaza/Racine - for men&#13;
Ric-Center&#13;
Straight Pool&#13;
Tournament&#13;
*4 Eat,y&#13;
Oet. 28th &amp; 29th&#13;
E1ftr 11 ~, Rte-Ctlttr or&#13;
Call SS3-269S for&#13;
l•for•1tio11&#13;
•--------------,----------,&#13;
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t When you say Budweiser.,youve said it all! •&#13;
• L---~---E. F. Madrigrano-------•&#13;
• &#13;
,&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 20, 1976&#13;
.:&#13;
, , .&#13;
Basketball season opens (&#13;
Parkside Basketball Coach Steve Stephens has 20&#13;
candidates--eight of them returning letterwinnersvying&#13;
for spots on the 1976-77edition of the Rangers as&#13;
practice opened last Friday.' , - .&#13;
stephens expects to cut down to 12 to 15 players by&#13;
the time the season opens Nov. 26 here against UWVV1ritewater.&#13;
.&#13;
Parkside will be gunning for its third straight NAJA&#13;
Distriel 14 title and trip to the NAJA national tournament,&#13;
a feat never before accomplished by a&#13;
Wisconsin college. The Rangers have finished 24-1and&#13;
24-9the last two seasons.&#13;
Th~ biggest hole on the team that Stephens will have&#13;
to fill is Gary Cole's spot. 'l:he two-lime all-American&#13;
led the Rangers in scoring three of four years and is&#13;
Parkside's all-lime top career scorer and rebounder.&#13;
Also gone are two other mainstays, guard Malcolm&#13;
Mahone and center Bill Sobanski.&#13;
Two starters have returned in Leartha Scott and&#13;
Stevie King. Scott, a 6-4 senior forward, is an exciting&#13;
player with a super shot and appears a candidate for&#13;
all-America honors this time. He was the Rangers' No.&#13;
2 scorer last season at 20.7. King, a 6-0 junior gurad, is&#13;
a slick ball handler who will be the Rangers' floor&#13;
general. Quickness is his forte.&#13;
Also back are three others who saw a great, deal .of&#13;
action and a lot of playing time, Marshall Hill, Joe&#13;
Foots and Mike Hanke. Hill, a 6-10 senior center, will&#13;
be secure at the post while Foots, a 6-4sophomore who&#13;
was the third guard last season and started geven '.&#13;
games, will probably join King in the backsourt. &lt;, /~&#13;
Hanke, a G-4 senior, is the Rangers' "garbage" player ""--",,," ~ ~ ..&#13;
and is-a good bet to join Scott and Hill in the frontline - - - - - - - - ---- - - - - -- ---- - - - - -- ------- - - - - --&#13;
.Ot?e~.le~rmen include 6-7 senior forw~rd Rad~ ~;~r:t~;~;~;;&#13;
Dimitrijevic, &amp;-6 sophomore forward Marvm Chones -&#13;
and 5-10 senior guard Laurence Brown. All will be ~&#13;
bidding for starting spots and in any case would be ~&#13;
baluable, and essential, as reserves. . 63 7 2 7I") 6&#13;
Top newcomers are 6-10center Lester Thompson, 6-3 Mike Villers - Dealer - ~&#13;
guard Jim Hanke, 6-8 forward Lonnie Lewis and &amp;-7 ~~..-.rW¥¥¥wtlIV~&#13;
forward Mike Mathews. Only Mathews, a transfer&#13;
eligible at mid-year, is not a freshman.&#13;
. '&#13;
11:30a.m, Parkside placed fourth&#13;
in the meet last year.&#13;
"With our past performances, I&#13;
feel we are good enough," said&#13;
Coach Godfrey, "to finish in the&#13;
top three at Carthage."&#13;
With Parkside hosting several&#13;
of the national championships,&#13;
Kenosha County has been&#13;
proclaimed the "Cross Country&#13;
Capitol of the U.S." by the&#13;
Kenosha County Board of&#13;
Supervisors.&#13;
Cross country finishes' third&#13;
Free Pizza DeliveryClub&#13;
Hlghview&#13;
5035 60ih, Streef&#13;
by Thomas Nolen Phone: 652-8737&#13;
and Jean Tenuta&#13;
The Carthage Invilational on&#13;
Saturday is next for Parkside's&#13;
cross country team, who finished&#13;
third in the Huskie Invitational at&#13;
De Kalb, Illinois last Saturday.&#13;
The favored host team, Northern&#13;
illinois, won the meet with&#13;
31 points, followed by Bradley&#13;
with 58. Parkside had 65, UWOshkosh,&#13;
91; UW-Platleville, 93;&#13;
and Northeastern Illinois had 188,&#13;
e- As usual, Ray Fredericksen&#13;
led the (as Coach Vic Godfrey put&#13;
it) "team effort", finishing sixth&#13;
with a- time of 31:42 011 the six&#13;
mile course. Gary Priem was&#13;
eighth, Mike Rivers, 15th; Jeff&#13;
Miller, 16th; and Lee Allinger,&#13;
21st.&#13;
., Greg Julich and Jim Heiring&#13;
also ran in the meet, finishing&#13;
27th and 31st. respectively.&#13;
The Carthage meet will be run&#13;
at Petrifying Springs Park at&#13;
Fishing &amp; Firing Lines&#13;
hy Scott Reinhard&#13;
Seeing that this is an election year I decided to go out and seek the&#13;
outdoor sportsmen's candidate. With quill and scroll in hand I jotted&#13;
down numerous topics concerning unanswered, controversial issues&#13;
of hunting and fishing. In my opinion these topics were of dire imporlance&#13;
as these sports were part of the basics in our American&#13;
heritage.&#13;
Upon completion of this list I quickly drove down to my .local&#13;
campaign headquarters of both Republican and Democratic candidates&#13;
only to be met with strange looks and shrugged shoulders, It&#13;
seems our men of speeches didn't leave me with much of a guideline as&#13;
far as this article is concerned.&#13;
A ray of hope still shown through though 'as the candidates did lake a&#13;
stand on the anti-gun controversy'. The Democratic stand slates that&#13;
Jimmy Carter is for gun registeration. Carter goes on to say that he is&#13;
going to make the "Saturday night special" ~egal to buy, sell or&#13;
possess.&#13;
As usual the Democratic stand was unelear, Gun registration has'&#13;
been in effeel for a number of years so obviously Carter agrees with&#13;
~ the Ford administration here.&#13;
"Saturday night special" is quite' a label, but by quizzing a&#13;
Democratic represenlative I decoded its meaning in Carter terms.&gt;&#13;
Remember this meaning was given to me by the Democratic rep. A&#13;
"Saturday night special" is a hand gun in the price range of $25,Itis&#13;
usually homemade making it unsafe to fire. Since it is easily acquired&#13;
and cheaply priced it is the cause of many murders thus originated its&#13;
name.&#13;
Well, I hate to break this new to "Carter The Crusader," but&#13;
someone beat him to making this law also. That is of course if this is&#13;
really what Carter means by "Saturday night special'tr but if he&#13;
means handguns in general it's a whole new ball game. Company&#13;
manufactured handguns are legally bartered. ..&#13;
No one before has made a law slating that it is illegal for people who,&#13;
have spent hundreds and sometimes even thousands of dollars on&#13;
handgun collectionsto continue this hobqy, No one before has made a'&#13;
law slating that it is illegal to own a handgun as a means of protection.&#13;
No one before has made it a crime to own guns in America, thus&#13;
allowing only criminals to own guns. In fael no'one before has made a&#13;
law showing that the Constitution of the United Slates of America was&#13;
wrong in the right to bear arms .&#13;
. You may not hunt with handguns but here the "do;;m,o law" goes&#13;
I~\O~ff~t, If handguns are restricted rifles and shotguns are soon to&#13;
follow, When this happens we will be on the same level as the Communist&#13;
nations wher power no longer lies in the people but the people&#13;
lie in the hands of the government. If this is what Carter means he&#13;
should go back to the Georgian sticks and play with his peanuts. I only&#13;
wish Jimmy Carter would once tell us what he means.&#13;
President Ford has gone through assassination attempts in which&#13;
handgul:s were employed, yet he still believes there should be no antigun&#13;
legislation. Itlakes a strong man to do this. President Ford took a&#13;
part in the initiation of National Hunting and Fishiug Day dedicated to&#13;
the outdoor sportsman. President Ford has just recently signed a bill&#13;
that will double the.acreage of America's herilage then President&#13;
Ford is definitely the sportsmen's candidate.&#13;
\&#13;
Alt••• 0•• ,1•• Chl.k•• , S••• hefll, R''''II, 8 •• ,&#13;
OPEN 4 ..... ~ 1 .....&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
Stop in!&#13;
shed a new Ufe on shopping!&#13;
c&#13;
c&#13;
3&#13;
G~t the great new taste&#13;
In mocha, coconut,&#13;
banana or&#13;
strawberry.&#13;
1&#13;
,The Portable Party:&#13;
30 PROOF AND READY ro GO·&#13;
, ,&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 20, 1976&#13;
- I •&#13;
Basketball seas~n opens&#13;
Parkside Basketball Coach Steve Stephens has 20&#13;
candidates-eight of them returning letterwinnersvying&#13;
for spots on the 1976-77 edition of the Rangers as&#13;
practice opened last Friday. · ' -&#13;
Stephens expects to cut down to 12 tQ 15 players by&#13;
the time the season opens Nov. 26 here against UWWhitewater.&#13;
&#13;
all-America honors this time. He was the Rangers' No.&#13;
2 scorer last season at 20.7. King, a 6-0 junior gurad, is&#13;
a slick ball handler who will be the Rangers' floor&#13;
general. Quickness_is his forte.&#13;
Parkside will be gunning for its third straight NAIA&#13;
District 14 title and trip to the NAIA national tournament,&#13;
a feat never before accomplished by a&#13;
Wisconsin college. The Rangers have finished 24-7 and&#13;
24-9 the last two seasons.&#13;
Also back are three others who saw a great deal of&#13;
action and a lot of playing time, Marshall Hill, Joe&#13;
Foots and Mike Hanke. Hill, a 6-10 senior center, will&#13;
be secure at the post while Foots, a 6-4 sophomore who&#13;
was the third guard last season and started geven&#13;
gam~, will probably join King in the backsourt. ' ~ ..... · ~ ~ -&#13;
Hanke, a 6-4 senior, is the Rangers' "garbage" player · ~ --&#13;
Th; biggest hole on the team that Stephens will have&#13;
to fill is Gary Cole's spot. The two-time all-American&#13;
led the Rangers in scoring three of four years and is&#13;
Parkside's all-time top career scorer and reboun~er.&#13;
and&#13;
other&#13;
is-a good&#13;
lettermen&#13;
bet to&#13;
include&#13;
join Scott&#13;
6-7&#13;
and&#13;
senior&#13;
Hill in&#13;
forward&#13;
the frontline&#13;
Rade&#13;
.&#13;
r-the--q~iet&#13;
____ - - - - -~&#13;
leaper in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Dimitrijevit, 6-6 sophomore forward Marvin Cl10nes&#13;
and&#13;
bidding&#13;
5-10&#13;
for&#13;
senior&#13;
starting&#13;
guard&#13;
spots&#13;
Laurence&#13;
and in&#13;
Brown.&#13;
any case&#13;
All&#13;
would&#13;
will be&#13;
be ~&#13;
~&#13;
, Also gone are two other mainstays, guard Malcolm&#13;
Mahone and center Bill Sobanski.&#13;
baluable, and essential, as reserves. 6 3 7 2 7 ".J 6&#13;
Topnewcomersare6-10centerLesterThompson,6-3 Mike Villers - Dealer - ~ Two star~s have returned in Leartha Scott and&#13;
Stevie King. Scott, a 6-4 senior forward, is an exciting&#13;
player with a super shot and appears a candidate for&#13;
guard Jim Hanke, 6-8 forwatd Lonnie Lewis and 6-7&#13;
forward Mike Mathews. Only Mathews, a transfer&#13;
eligible at mid-year, is not a freshman.&#13;
Cross country finishes· third&#13;
by Thomas Nolen&#13;
and Jean Tenuta&#13;
The Carthage Invitational on&#13;
Saturday is next for Parkside's ·&#13;
cross country team, who finished&#13;
third in the Huskie Invitational at&#13;
De Kalb, Illinois last Saturday.&#13;
The favored host team, Northern&#13;
Illinois, won the meet with&#13;
31 points, followed by Bradley&#13;
with 58. Parkside had 65, UWOshkosh,&#13;
91; UW-Platteville," 93;&#13;
and Northeastern Illinois had 188.&#13;
As usual, Ray Fredericksen&#13;
led the ( as Coach Vic Godfrey put&#13;
it) "team effort", finishing sixth&#13;
with a time cf 31: 42 on the six&#13;
mile course. Gary Priem was&#13;
eighth, _Mike Rivers, 15th; Jeff&#13;
Miller, 16th; and Lee Allinger,&#13;
21st.&#13;
. , Greg Julich and Jim Heiring&#13;
also ran in the meet, finishing&#13;
27th and 31st. resoectively.&#13;
The Carthage meet will be run&#13;
at Petrifying Springs Park at&#13;
Fishing &amp; Firing Lines ,._ by Scott Reinhard&#13;
Seeing that this is an election year I decided to go out and seek the&#13;
outdoor sportsmen's candidate. With quill and scroll in hand I jotted&#13;
down numerous topics concerning unanswered, controversial issues&#13;
of hunting and fishing. In my opinion these topics were of dire importance&#13;
as these sports were part of the basics in our American&#13;
heritage.&#13;
Upon completion of this list I quickly drove down to my .local&#13;
campaign headquarters of both Republican and Democratic candidates&#13;
only to be met with strange looks and shrugged shoulders. It&#13;
seems our men of speeches didn't leave !Ile with much of a guideline as&#13;
far as this article is concerned.&#13;
A ray of hope still shown through though 'as the candidates did take a&#13;
stand on the anti-gun controversy". The Democratic stand states that&#13;
Jimmy Carter is for gun registeration. Carter goes on to· say that he is&#13;
going to make the "Saturday night special" ~egal to buy, sell or&#13;
possess.&#13;
As usual the Democratic stand was unelear. Gun registration has·&#13;
been · in effect for a number of years so obviously Carter agree-s with&#13;
.,,, the Ford administration here.&#13;
"Saturday night special" is quite · a label, but by quizzing a&#13;
Democratic representative I decoded its meaning in Carter terms. ~&#13;
Remember this meaning was given to me by the Democratic rep. A&#13;
"Saturday night special" is a hand gun in the price range of $25. It is&#13;
usually homemade making it unsafe to fire. Since it is easily acquired&#13;
and cheaply priced it is the cause of many murders thus originated its&#13;
name.&#13;
Well, I hate to break this new to "Carter The Crusader.," but&#13;
someone beat him to making this law also. That is of course if this is&#13;
really what Carter means by "Saturday night special"~ but if he&#13;
means handguns in general it's a whole new ball game. Company&#13;
manufactured handguns are legally bartered.&#13;
.....&#13;
11: 30 a .m. Parkside placed fourth&#13;
in the meet last year.&#13;
"With our past performances, I&#13;
feel we ar~ good enough," said&#13;
Coach Godfrey, " to finish in the&#13;
top three at Carthage."&#13;
With Parkside hosting several&#13;
of the national championships,&#13;
Kenosha County has been&#13;
proclaimed the "Cross Country&#13;
Capitol of the U.S." by the&#13;
Kenosha County Board of&#13;
Supervisors.&#13;
C:&#13;
C:&#13;
0&#13;
u&#13;
0&#13;
2&#13;
Cl.&#13;
Free Pizza Delivery -&#13;
Club Highvlew&#13;
5035 60th, Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
Alto ••Dvttl19 Chlekt1, s,11htffi, R1vi1II, Bttf&#13;
OPEN 4 •·•· ~ 1 •·•·&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6 TH AVENUE&#13;
Stop in!&#13;
shed a new Life on shopping !&#13;
G~t the ~reat new taste&#13;
zn mocna, coconut, ,. . banana or&#13;
·•tt ::::i'.;-:;;J;&amp;-,;;,1 strawberry.&#13;
No one before has made a law stating that it is illegal for people who&#13;
have spent hundreds and sometimes even thousands of dollars on&#13;
handgun collections_to continue this hob~y. No one before has made a -&#13;
law stating that it is illegal to own a handgun as a means of protection.&#13;
No one before has made it a crime to own guns in America, thus&#13;
allowing only criminals to own guns. In fact no-one before has made a&#13;
~aw showing that the Constitution of the United States of America was&#13;
wrong in the right to bear arms .&#13;
-Th'! Portable Party:&#13;
. You may not hunt with handguns but here the "do~ino law" goes&#13;
mto effect, If handguns are restricted rifles and shotguns are soon to&#13;
follow. When this happens we will be on the same ievel as the Com-&#13;
,_ munist nations wher power no longer lies in the people but the people&#13;
lie in the hands of the government. If this is what Carter means he&#13;
should go back to the Georgian sticks and play with his peanuts. I only&#13;
wish Jimmy Carter would once tell us what he means.&#13;
President Ford has gone through assassination attempts in which&#13;
handgufu; were employed, yet he still believes there should be no antigun&#13;
legislation. It takes a strong man to do this. President Ford took a&#13;
part in the initiation of National Hunting and Fishing Day dedicated to&#13;
the outdoor sportsman. President Ford has just recently signed a bill&#13;
that will double the acreage of America's heritage then President&#13;
Ford is definitely the sportsmen's candidate.&#13;
30PROOF AND READY 1V GO ·&#13;
, . </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 5, issue 7, October 20, 1976</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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                <text>Student publications</text>
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&#13;
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              <elementText elementTextId="66091">
                <text>1976-10-20</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="66094">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="47">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66095">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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