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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>Board wants money or property</text>
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              <text>Too fcw grad studies&#13;
Board wants money or property&#13;
by Mike Palecek&#13;
The Kenosha County Board&#13;
wants the state" to pay back the&#13;
$2.1 million that county residents&#13;
paid for the 700-acre Parkside&#13;
campus. Sup. Wayne Koessl, who&#13;
introduced the resolution on&#13;
October 7 and was accepted 24-2,&#13;
said the state has not lived up to&#13;
its commitments to the community.&#13;
Koessl also stated that&#13;
Parkside is used by all of&#13;
Southeast Wisconsin and all&#13;
citizens of the state should share&#13;
in the cost of the school.&#13;
Sup. Richard Lindgren and&#13;
Board Chairman Eric Olson&#13;
voted against the resolution,&#13;
expressing that the deal was long&#13;
ago over and done with.&#13;
In response to the County&#13;
Board's request to have area&#13;
legislators petition for the refund,&#13;
Rep. Russ Olson (R-Bassett) said&#13;
on Oct. 9, he "wished the Board&#13;
had seen the unfairness of the&#13;
situation 10 years ago instead of&#13;
enthusiastically endorsing" the&#13;
land purchase.&#13;
Olson noted he fought a lone&#13;
battle at the time the county&#13;
purchase and donation to the&#13;
state was proposed. Olson stated,&#13;
he was "unsympathetic" to the&#13;
current belated rpove to regain&#13;
the county's investment,&#13;
although he said he would join&#13;
with other area legislators in&#13;
seeking passage of a bill to grant&#13;
the refund.&#13;
He stated there was little hope&#13;
that the state would pay back the&#13;
$2.1 million. "If there was a&#13;
surplus of money available in the&#13;
state there might be some&#13;
chance," Olson said.&#13;
Olson noted that the state has&#13;
kept its end of the bargain by&#13;
Paper suffering financial problems&#13;
The student newspaper,&#13;
RANGER, is having financial&#13;
problems this semester. The&#13;
paper, independent of the&#13;
University, has been burdened&#13;
with a debt of $1700 to its printer,&#13;
Zion-Benton News, in Zion,&#13;
Illinois. The debt was incurred&#13;
over the past two years.&#13;
Ann Verstegen, RANGER&#13;
business manager, has indicated&#13;
that the debt to the printer is now&#13;
The Porkside&#13;
$2700, accumulated since&#13;
RANGER started printing this&#13;
semester, and that the paper has&#13;
made one $800 payment since the&#13;
semester began.&#13;
Jack Skarbalus, business&#13;
manager of the Zion-Benton&#13;
News, has told RANGER that&#13;
unless the paper is able to&#13;
produce a check for $312 every&#13;
week, beginning October 28, the&#13;
paper will not be printed.&#13;
Verstegen explained that&#13;
RANGER may not use its&#13;
segregated fee allotment or any&#13;
other University funds to pay&#13;
printing costs because the State&#13;
requires that the University&#13;
insure the notion of the constitutional&#13;
right to freedom of the&#13;
press, and, should University or&#13;
student money be used to pay&#13;
printing costs, bids for the&#13;
printing contract would have to&#13;
'H[ PABKSIPt RANGK IS A STUPiNI PUBIICAIION 01 THt UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN PARKSIDl&#13;
And so my watch sometimes&#13;
in time clicks;&#13;
the weary&#13;
and the wasted efforts,&#13;
welfare reasons for the fall&#13;
like leaves, man,&#13;
the colors, change&#13;
the weak go on to other seasons&#13;
the strong go along&#13;
"and I don't care if the sun don't shine...&#13;
It ain't mine."&#13;
photo by Mike Nepper&#13;
After the fall&#13;
we're all the same-it takes your time and&#13;
when you try&#13;
to help yourself&#13;
no self helps you...you know?&#13;
So she refused you.&#13;
You should make a life 6f it.&#13;
be sent out to State printers.&#13;
RANGER advisor, Don&#13;
Kopriva, director of Sports Information,&#13;
said that at one time&#13;
bids were sent out and the closest&#13;
bidder was at Port Washington,&#13;
north of Milwaukee. Copy would&#13;
have been about two weeks old by&#13;
the time the papers were&#13;
distributed to students.&#13;
RANGER must survive totally&#13;
on ad revenue to pay printing&#13;
costs. RANGER'S segregated fee&#13;
allotment is used for photo and&#13;
office supplies, some salaries,&#13;
phone bills, and the like.&#13;
Verstegen said that unless&#13;
more students help in ad sales&#13;
, a nd collection, and unless&#13;
RANGER can get prompt&#13;
payment from its advertisers, the&#13;
paper may have to fold.&#13;
Acting Editor Debra Friedell&#13;
asked that readers be patient&#13;
with the fact that there will be an&#13;
increasing number of ads in the&#13;
paper, making less room for&#13;
stories and photos. "It is a shame&#13;
that this semester's readers will&#13;
have to suffer because of poor&#13;
business management of the&#13;
paper in previous years," she&#13;
said. "It is important, though,&#13;
that we make ourselves financially&#13;
sound right away, if&#13;
Parkside is to continue to have a&#13;
student paper in the future. We&#13;
will need encouragement and&#13;
support from all students."&#13;
Verstegen asked that students&#13;
interested in selling ads see her&#13;
any morning during the week or&#13;
any time Friday. Students may&#13;
also call 553-2287 or 553-2295 for&#13;
further information.&#13;
developing a four-year university&#13;
campus here, and by spending&#13;
millions of dollars on buildings&#13;
and providing jobs for many area&#13;
residents.&#13;
Olson said he didn't think that&#13;
even Racine area legislators&#13;
would be sympathetic to the&#13;
reimbursement move, much less&#13;
a majority of the Assembly and&#13;
Senate.&#13;
UW-System Regent Edward&#13;
Hales, on WLIP "Events of the&#13;
Week" program on Oct. 12 said,&#13;
"The only thing I know about this&#13;
situation is what I read in the&#13;
newspaper, but I don't know what&#13;
can be done in a legal way, if&#13;
anything, and I'm really not&#13;
familiar with what commitments&#13;
were made to the Kenosha area&#13;
when the institution was&#13;
established. In terms of&#13;
developing a graduate program,&#13;
there will be some limited&#13;
graduate programming at&#13;
Parkside; as a matter of fact,&#13;
next semester the first graduate&#13;
program will be commenced at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
"If you talk about offering&#13;
graduate programming at the&#13;
magnitude that they do at&#13;
Madison or Milwaukee, I think&#13;
that's a very difficult question.&#13;
Madison and Milwaukee have the&#13;
resources; they have human&#13;
resources and the financial&#13;
resources in those institutions.&#13;
That really plays a very essential&#13;
part in graduate training.&#13;
"I think graduate training&#13;
certainly goes hand in hand with&#13;
an institution's research&#13;
capability because, in this&#13;
country, a graduate degree is&#13;
basically a research degree and&#13;
it would require a very large&#13;
restructuring for manpower and&#13;
a lot of other things before&#13;
Parkside could offer the kinds of&#13;
grad programs they offer in&#13;
Madison."&#13;
Hales added, "I don't mean to&#13;
imply there is no legal recourse&#13;
(for the Kenosha County Board&#13;
demand). I don't know, right&#13;
now, what recourse there is, if&#13;
any. Secondly, I haven't seen any&#13;
documentation that actually&#13;
guaranteed Parkside would have&#13;
the type of graduate programs&#13;
that Madison and Milwaukee&#13;
offer."&#13;
Magician-escape artist&#13;
will perform in CAT&#13;
Brian Kipp&#13;
September, 1975&#13;
"The Amazing Randi," the&#13;
magician-escape artist who&#13;
duplicates many of the feats of&#13;
the legendary Houdini will&#13;
perform on Wednesday, Oct. 15.&#13;
At 1:30 p.m. he will give a free&#13;
lecture on the magician's art and&#13;
at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts&#13;
Theater he will demonstrate the&#13;
feats of magic and escapes which&#13;
have brought him international&#13;
fame. Student admission is $1.50&#13;
General admission tickets for the&#13;
evening performance are $2.&#13;
Tickets are available at the Info.&#13;
Kiosk.&#13;
His show will include the act&#13;
which first brought him to the&#13;
attention of U.S. audiences:&#13;
wrapped in a straight jacket and&#13;
suspended from the ceiling by his&#13;
feet, he will free himself. He&#13;
performed the same escape in&#13;
New York City hanging 150 feet&#13;
above the street in a live TV&#13;
show.&#13;
He also will perform a trick&#13;
originated by Dunninger, the&#13;
great mentalist and friend of&#13;
Houdini: causing a radio to&#13;
disappear - while playing. "In&#13;
my estimation, Randi duplicates&#13;
Houdini's skill," Dunninger says.&#13;
He holds the world records for&#13;
survival in a sealed container&#13;
under water (over two hours) and&#13;
for remaining frozen in a block of&#13;
ice (44 minutes). On the 48th&#13;
anniversary of Houdini's death,&#13;
Randi duplicated the master's&#13;
Milk Can Escape, submerginig&#13;
himself in a water-filled can&#13;
locked by six padlocks and,&#13;
somehow, effecting an escape.'&#13;
A Canadian by birth, Randi got&#13;
his start after he was asked to&#13;
test a new jail's security. Locked&#13;
up, he soon walked out. Since his&#13;
first "jail break," he has&#13;
repeated the escape 28 times,&#13;
always with official blessing, in&#13;
jails from Tokyo to Copenhagen. &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGE R Wednesday, Oct. 1 5 , 1 9 7 5&#13;
PSGA salaries an&#13;
unwarranted expense&#13;
Now PSGA senators want salaries, at a cost) to&#13;
Parkside students of $5 per week, $3200 total for the&#13;
year. It would be a different story, perhaps, if PSGA djd&#13;
something for the students in return.&#13;
The proposal comes under the guise that travel expenses&#13;
to and from PSGA meetings and committee&#13;
meetings are costly. However, any student who joins in&#13;
any student organization suffers those same costs and.&#13;
none has cried for reimbursement.&#13;
PSGA committees met Sunday night. The 6:30 p.m.&#13;
meetings did not start until 7:10. The Business and&#13;
Finance Committee met for 15 minutes and the Elections&#13;
Committee met for 20 minutes. The Ways land&#13;
Means Committee has lacked quorum for the past two&#13;
weeks, therefore has conducted no business.&#13;
It is absurd to ask the students to pay salaries for fjhis.&#13;
Some senators feel that students have no right to&#13;
complain about their student government and that&#13;
senators have no obligation to responsibility to students&#13;
unless they are paid. In the words of Senator Bill F erko,&#13;
by paying salaries "students will have a right to complain,"&#13;
about student government.&#13;
We won't pay salaries to gain a right that we should&#13;
have freely.&#13;
It would be nice if P SGA, rather than wasting time on&#13;
their own self-centered interests, use time and talents to&#13;
discuss the problems in the student disciplinary&#13;
guidelines, or, mass transportation to the University, or,&#13;
affirmative action, or, problems of student&#13;
organizations, or, anything that might help students and&#13;
give some credibility to PSGA.&#13;
Rather than contemplate how much money senators&#13;
can take from the students, efforts would be better spent&#13;
on trying to get students to run for senator seats on&#13;
PSGA or on the segregated fee allocations committee.&#13;
The thought of paying this PSGA senate for the efforts&#13;
they put forth in their elected positions, is bad to the&#13;
point of being laughable.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In comment to the complaints&#13;
of Mr. Wright about the P.A.B., I&#13;
would first mention that I was a&#13;
veteran board member while at&#13;
Parkside and therefore understand&#13;
the situation.&#13;
Mr. Wright, your rhetoric is the&#13;
same incessant dribble that I&#13;
heard while a board member.&#13;
The minorities give lip service to&#13;
action for minority programming&#13;
but fail to join the P.A.B. to&#13;
WORK for quality entertainment&#13;
for their students. Some minority&#13;
programming is needed but all&#13;
programming must not be&#13;
directed to one self-interest group&#13;
or another. The ultimate goal of&#13;
the P.A.B. is to provide quality&#13;
entertainment for Parkside.&#13;
The P.A.B. serves a resplendent&#13;
comminity, therefore, the&#13;
community will dictate through&#13;
work the entertainment it&#13;
desires, and if the quality&#13;
remains high, the P.A.B. has&#13;
fulfilled their goal.&#13;
Eugene Cooper '71&#13;
"One drink is too many, a thousand's not enough," is a&#13;
saying used by many alcoholics. The notion is tha t an&#13;
alcoholic cannot stop drinking on will power alone, but&#13;
that the disease requires both physical a nd psychiatric&#13;
treatment after which the alcoholic, in most cases, does&#13;
not learn to control drinking, but learns not to ever drink&#13;
again.&#13;
Last week the Wisconsin State Medical Society and its&#13;
Women's Auxiliary sponsored a day-long program on&#13;
alcoholism. The thrust was on educating to facts and&#13;
destroying the myriad myths that surround the problem&#13;
of alc oholism.&#13;
Parkside is in a unique position in that Chancellor&#13;
Guskin has encouraged an intense University involvement&#13;
with the community, while at the same time&#13;
our mission, said the State, is to direct our various expertise&#13;
toward the modern industrial society. And, in&#13;
that society, there are hundreds of thousands of&#13;
alcoholics.&#13;
Parkside should be doing more than giving up its Phy&#13;
Ed Building for a day to the State Medical Society and&#13;
sending a few representatives to listen.&#13;
It is time for the University to lead, to learn, to&#13;
motivate and to educate itself a nd then others on this,&#13;
one of the most trying social problems we own.&#13;
It is time to st ep out of ou r offices and away from our&#13;
egos to take a sensitive and intelligent look a t the fact&#13;
that four of the six Americans who won the Nobel P rize&#13;
for literature were alcoholic, and countless other individuals&#13;
have no job save that obsession for just&#13;
another drink, and after that, another....&#13;
It is time for the employees of this University to do&#13;
more than be knowledgeable; it is essential that we&#13;
acquire and use knowledge that will benefit the modern&#13;
industrial s ociety.&#13;
We do not, by any means, advocate prohibition but&#13;
rather an open-minded understanding of the causes and&#13;
effects of alcoholism, not an idle understanding, rather&#13;
an active, involved and sensitive understanding that will&#13;
motivate the minds in this University to participate in&#13;
problem solving.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE&#13;
IxUJlitrGL:&#13;
The PARKSIDE RANGER is written and edited by the students of&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside and they are solely responsible,&#13;
for its editorial policy and content. Offices are located in D194 WLLC,&#13;
U.W. Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-2295, 553-2287.&#13;
Acting Editor: Debra Friedell&#13;
Feature Editor: Mike Palecek&#13;
Sports Director: Thom Aiello&#13;
Events Column: Judy Trudrung&#13;
Business Manager: Ann Verstegen&#13;
Ad make-up: Diane Werwie&#13;
Ad sales: Harry Dingfelder Donzell Holt Orin Taylor&#13;
Writers: Jeannine Sipsma, Steve Smith, Leigh Feifer,&#13;
Fred Johnson, Mick Anderson, Betsy Neu, Jim&#13;
Yorgan, Carol Arentz, Catherine Blise, Bruce Wagner,&#13;
Rita Nicholas, Kurt Larson&#13;
Photographers: Dave Daniels, A1 Fr edricksen Gordon Mcintosh&#13;
Fines issued to traffic violators&#13;
by David Wiercinski&#13;
"Stop sign running and failing&#13;
to walk on the left side of t he road&#13;
facing traffic, are the chief&#13;
Concerns of the Parkside police at&#13;
this time," according to police&#13;
officer William Carter of the&#13;
Safety and Security Office.&#13;
"I am afraid that someone at&#13;
Parkside will get hurt if&#13;
something is not done about this&#13;
problem immediately," Carter&#13;
said.&#13;
Currently, Carter said,&#13;
"students with a careless attitude&#13;
are running stop signs all around&#13;
the campus, caring little who&#13;
they might hit in the process."&#13;
Carter threatened increased&#13;
citations if this continues. The&#13;
police are presently giving out&#13;
verbal warnings to violators. If&#13;
problems persist fines up to $37&#13;
may be issued.&#13;
Carter said that every vehicle&#13;
operator approaching a stop sign&#13;
at an intersection is required to&#13;
stop.&#13;
All pedestrians are required to&#13;
walk on the left side of the highway.&#13;
&#13;
And finally, all bicyclists are&#13;
required to ride single file on all&#13;
roadways which have center&#13;
lines or lane lines indicated by &#13;
A_Erogresyvedisease&#13;
Baseball pro strikes-out&#13;
problem of alcoholism&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 15, 197 5 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
WITH THIS E0UP0N&#13;
by Mick Anderson&#13;
"I had no one to share my&#13;
feelings with. You had to impress&#13;
people, had to make people like&#13;
you. I had to be the center of&#13;
attention."&#13;
That is how former New York&#13;
Yankee pitcher Ryne Duren&#13;
described his despair to over 850&#13;
students and others interested in&#13;
alcohol addiction, on October 7, in&#13;
Parkside's Physical Education&#13;
Building.&#13;
He wasn't there as an aging&#13;
athlete explaining away a&#13;
shattered career. During the&#13;
mid-fifties he was the&#13;
unquestioned master of the&#13;
mound, the American League's&#13;
World Series wild card. He&#13;
played alongside such notables as&#13;
Mickey Mantle. In 1958 he was&#13;
credited with spiriting the World&#13;
Series away from the Braves;&#13;
making the Yankees the young&#13;
fan's wide-eyed dream.&#13;
Alcoholism is disease&#13;
On the fape of it, Ryne Duren&#13;
was every bit the success the&#13;
baseball cards said he was.&#13;
He was also suffering from the&#13;
progressive disease of&#13;
alcoholism.&#13;
Because of the ignorance of the&#13;
effects of ethyl alcohol, and&#13;
society's subtle message that&#13;
alcohol isn't a drug, Duren&#13;
washed out.&#13;
The conditions that caused&#13;
Duren's downfall still exist,&#13;
relatively unchallenged and&#13;
unchanged, he maintains.&#13;
"Society goes on...without ever&#13;
facing the fact that alcohol is a&#13;
drug," Duren said. "Society&#13;
continues to point its finger at the&#13;
drug abuser, never at the drug,&#13;
alcohol."&#13;
Duren sees alcohol as being&#13;
ingrained in our social system, as&#13;
a part of our values. Alcohol is&#13;
used as a tranquilizer, as a social&#13;
lubricant, a rite of passage into&#13;
manhood, and as a sexual&#13;
facilitator. And with this&#13;
unquestioned acceptance, the&#13;
naive ask of the alcoholic, "Why&#13;
can't you stop drinking?" Always&#13;
the moral judgment without&#13;
regard to the social seduction.&#13;
Myths surround use&#13;
Duren is amazed at how many&#13;
times he'll hear parents confronted&#13;
with an alcoholic child,&#13;
remark, "Thank God, I thought&#13;
he was on drugs."&#13;
Education, Duren believes, is&#13;
the answer to the problem of&#13;
chemical dependency. Even&#13;
those in a position to know often&#13;
don't. A state legislator in&#13;
Madison recently told Duren,&#13;
"My daddy told me there is&#13;
nothing worse than a reformed&#13;
drunk."&#13;
It's that kind of ignorance that&#13;
keeps alcohol-related hospital&#13;
admittance up around 55 percent&#13;
of the total. Being able to "hold&#13;
your liquor," turns out to be&#13;
nothing more than a myth about&#13;
manliness, too, as well as a&#13;
danger sign for those who can.&#13;
The young alcoholic can drink&#13;
more, and more efficiently, than&#13;
the social drinker. For the incipient&#13;
alcoholic, alcohol acts as&#13;
a stimulant.&#13;
John Kennedy once remarked,&#13;
"The great enemy of truth is very&#13;
often not the lie; deliberate,&#13;
contrived and dishonest, but the&#13;
myth—persistent, persuasive and&#13;
unrealistic."&#13;
As for Ryne Duren, he said he&#13;
was "hooked on the experience"&#13;
of drinking. "The total&#13;
motivating force from the time I&#13;
was 16 to 35 years old, was to get&#13;
my next fix, and I didn't know it."&#13;
Moralizing won't work&#13;
The next speaker was Bill&#13;
Hettler, a Stevens Point M.D.,&#13;
whose performance was an excellent&#13;
example of how not to&#13;
relate to young people. Speaking&#13;
on "Alcohol, The Adult (?)&#13;
Drug," his paternalistic attitude,&#13;
question-begging, and pious&#13;
moralism provided the comic&#13;
relief for the morning, unintended&#13;
though it was. As a group&#13;
of students became restless amid&#13;
his stridency, he was moved to&#13;
orate, "I'd like to ask you people&#13;
up there to just shut up." It was&#13;
clear that by this time he had lost&#13;
a good deal of his audience; his&#13;
desperate control trip failing to&#13;
take into account that this postWatergate&#13;
generation is hard to&#13;
crap.&#13;
Hettler's talk pointed up the&#13;
problem of the power elite trying&#13;
to indoctrinate young people with&#13;
established beliefs and values.&#13;
Even with the assembled group&#13;
of predominately "good" kids, it&#13;
became clear that they would&#13;
only listen to the factual, the&#13;
rational, and the personal experiences&#13;
of those who have&#13;
"done the program." The&#13;
hysteria was dissonancecreating.&#13;
Scare tactics and&#13;
paternalism just won't work any&#13;
more. Even more telling was the&#13;
response to the disruptive kids;&#13;
in essence: this is my reality,&#13;
hear it and accept it.&#13;
Alcoholic personality&#13;
The stage was set, and to use a&#13;
metaphor Ryne Duren might&#13;
appreciate, the next speaker&#13;
knocked it out of the ballpark.&#13;
Robert White, executive&#13;
director of the Kenosha Council&#13;
on Alcoholism, gave a short&#13;
presentation that was factual,&#13;
historical and personal. White, a&#13;
recovered alcoholic, touched&#13;
upon some psychological&#13;
characteristics of the alcoholic.&#13;
These include: an overwhelming&#13;
desire to belong, a low selfimage,&#13;
fearful response to social&#13;
situations, and readily accessible&#13;
storage of alcohol-all of which&#13;
feed into confusion and insecurity&#13;
of the alcoholic personality.&#13;
In 1973 ov er 26 bi llion dollars&#13;
was spent for alcohol consumption&#13;
in the United States.&#13;
Five years ago the Kenosha&#13;
DINO'S&#13;
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WINES&#13;
Council on Alcoholism did a&#13;
survey of its clients and found&#13;
that 92 percent started drinking&#13;
between the ages of 12 a nd 15,&#13;
White related.&#13;
Referring to alcohol education&#13;
efforts, White declared, "I think&#13;
we have to understand that kids&#13;
aren't as stupid as we think they&#13;
are."&#13;
White started drinking when he&#13;
was 14 years o ld, and facetiously&#13;
states that his high school class&#13;
voted him "most likely to&#13;
dissolve." While in the Navy an&#13;
officer became concerned about&#13;
White's drinking and suggested&#13;
that, when stateside, White&#13;
should seek out Alcoholics&#13;
Anonymous. "You drink as&#13;
though Hiram Walker wants the&#13;
bottles back," White remembers&#13;
him saying. White met this advice&#13;
with typical alcoholic denial&#13;
and began to drink in a more&#13;
surreptious manner. "Alcoholics&#13;
are the last people in the world to&#13;
know they are alcoholics," White&#13;
maintained.&#13;
"I didn't get cashiered out of a&#13;
ballpark but I was cashiered out&#13;
of a lot of other places, some that&#13;
you wouldn't get caught in,"&#13;
White added.&#13;
The event was sponsored by the&#13;
Wisconsin State Medical Society&#13;
and its Women's Auxiliary.&#13;
ANT NEW RELEASE,&#13;
$6.98 b.P 5 $7.98 TAPES&#13;
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DEALERS WANTED, full or part time.&#13;
Revolutionary new synthetic Amzoil&#13;
lubricant for cars, snowmobiles, motorcycles&#13;
&amp; trucks. We train. No experience&#13;
needed. Call Mike at 637-2726.&#13;
WILL THE GIRL who bought a painting&#13;
from me at the Oct. 5 art fair in Kenosha&#13;
please contact J, Vukos as soon as possible.&#13;
REPAIR WORK -- dishwashers, garbage&#13;
disposals, washers, dryers, etc. Call&#13;
evenings Al. Stendel 886-3865.&#13;
EARN UP TO $1800 a school year or more&#13;
posting educational literature on campus in&#13;
spare time. Send name, address, phone,&#13;
school and references to: Nationwide&#13;
College Marketing Services, Inc., P.O. Box&#13;
1384, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Call&#13;
(313)662 1770.&#13;
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4 T H E PARK SIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 1 5 , 1 9 7 5&#13;
Looks good on resume&#13;
Police chief in FBI school&#13;
*&#13;
REEQRDS&#13;
TAPES&#13;
554-3578&#13;
by Ann Verstegen&#13;
Police Officer William Carter&#13;
thinks it's just great. Not that his&#13;
boss, Ronald Brinkman, is gone,&#13;
but the course that Brinkman is&#13;
attending.&#13;
Brinkman, Director of Security&#13;
at Parkside, is attending a 12-&#13;
week National Police Academy&#13;
course given by the FBI in&#13;
Quantico, Virginia.&#13;
"It's a great course," Carter&#13;
said. "In police work, putting&#13;
that on your resume is just like a&#13;
college degree."&#13;
In Brinkman's absence,&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for Administration,&#13;
Erwin Zuehlke, is&#13;
heading the security operation.&#13;
Brinkman is on a leave of absence&#13;
while he attends the FBIpaid&#13;
course, and continues to&#13;
receive his Parkside salary.&#13;
Zuehlke says the course is not&#13;
training for an FBI agent but&#13;
rather, "a refresher course for&#13;
policemen." Communities,&#13;
counties and universities across&#13;
the country send officers to the&#13;
course for professional training.&#13;
Betty Bruens, training&#13;
technician at the FBI Milwaukee&#13;
office, explained that the FBI&#13;
Academy, located 40 miles south&#13;
of Washington, D.C. and site of&#13;
the National Academy, trains&#13;
officers in basic law enforcement,&#13;
functions and&#13;
problems. Five officers from&#13;
across Wisconsin are chosen to go&#13;
to the course four times a year.&#13;
Accreditation is given by the&#13;
University of Virginia.&#13;
"We try to pick out educated&#13;
people who plan a law enforcement&#13;
career. The idea is to&#13;
consistently update police&#13;
knowledge," Bruens said.&#13;
Courses are offered at the&#13;
National Academy in managerial&#13;
science, behavior science, law&#13;
education, community arts,&#13;
forensic science and law enforcement.&#13;
They are exposed to&#13;
everything from bombing,&#13;
firearm techniques to budgeting&#13;
and public relations.&#13;
"Theft is the biggest problem&#13;
Auditions held for&#13;
multi-media presentation&#13;
Auditions for Bertoldt Brecht's, The Elephant Calf will be held&#13;
Saturday, October 18 at 11 a.m. in media production's experimental&#13;
studio, CA D153. The auditions will be in the format of an improvisation,&#13;
free movement workshop. The production, to be directed&#13;
by student Joseph Molinaro, will be a multi-media presentation involving&#13;
acting, mime, music, video and photography. The Elephant&#13;
Calf is a portion of a larger work by Brecht entitled Man is Man. It is&#13;
an absurdist comedy which deals with the loss of personal identity and&#13;
the dehumanization of the individual by society. The play will be&#13;
presented to the public on December 5 and 6. People are needed for all&#13;
facets of the production.&#13;
Interested students may also reach Molinaro at 694-6020 or in CA 244.&#13;
Petitions for PSGA&#13;
offices still available&#13;
PIPES&#13;
LEATHER GBBBS&#13;
0NE SWEET&#13;
BREAM&#13;
5010 7TH AVENUE&#13;
KENQSHft&#13;
on this campus," Zuehlke said.&#13;
He hopes Brinkman will bring&#13;
back some new. answers to a&#13;
chronic problem. Zuehlke thinks&#13;
that negligent people are the&#13;
cause of the problem. He cited a&#13;
recent case where a woman's&#13;
purse was stolen from a table in&#13;
the library while she momentarily&#13;
went to the book stacks. "It&#13;
was tempting and someone took&#13;
it." Zuehlke would like to see&#13;
people become more aware of the&#13;
possibility of theft so they will be&#13;
more watchful.&#13;
The Parkside Security&#13;
Department has four guncarrying&#13;
police officers, four&#13;
security officers, and six parttime&#13;
student security officers.&#13;
According to Zuehlke, the&#13;
security force at Parkside is&#13;
geared to serve the campus. He&#13;
says they direct traffic, protect&#13;
buildings and give out tickets, but&#13;
also unlock doors, start cars,&#13;
rush people to the hospital, help&#13;
when keys are locked in carsjobs&#13;
that are seldom done by city&#13;
or county police.&#13;
"Our officers don't carry mace&#13;
or billy clubs and only fire their&#13;
weapons at the firing range, to&#13;
get in their required practice&#13;
time. I don't know of a time when&#13;
a weapon has been drawn,"&#13;
Zuehlke said.&#13;
The Security Department is on&#13;
duty 24 hours a day. If anyone has&#13;
an emergency call 2455.&#13;
Emergency phones are at the&#13;
East parking lot and at the&#13;
Athletic Field. A pay phone is on&#13;
the Tallent lot. Other parking lots&#13;
are close to campus buildings. A&#13;
recorder takes messages while&#13;
third shift guards make their&#13;
rounds, but calls will be followed&#13;
up&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc. elections will be&#13;
held Oct. 22-23. Eight seats are&#13;
open in the Senate and eight seats&#13;
are open in the Segregated Fees&#13;
Allocations Committee. Petitions&#13;
are available in the P.S.G.A Inc.&#13;
Office WLLC D-193.&#13;
Petitions must be filled out and&#13;
turned in by 5 p.m. Oct. 16, in&#13;
order to have the name appear on&#13;
the ballot. Write-in candidates&#13;
have to notify the Elections&#13;
Committee of their candidacy&#13;
prior to noon, Oct. 20. For further&#13;
information contact the P.S.G.A.&#13;
Inc. office WLLC D193.&#13;
HUieet 4§&gt;fjoppe&#13;
featuring:&#13;
a variety of your candy&#13;
and nut favorties sold&#13;
the old-fashioned way&#13;
SPECIAL OF THE&#13;
MONTH:&#13;
CANDY CORN&#13;
OPEN:&#13;
located on the concourse between the Library-Learning&#13;
Center &amp; Greenquist Hall&#13;
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Mon. thru Fri.&#13;
10 a.m. - 4 p.m. &#13;
PSGA discusses salary proposal&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 15, 197 5 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA) voted in&#13;
favor of a measure at last&#13;
Tuesday's meeting which states&#13;
that the vice-president and&#13;
senators shall be paid for services&#13;
rendered.&#13;
Boro Bosovich, senator, introduced-&#13;
the proposal, saying&#13;
that the vice-president and&#13;
senators should get paid because&#13;
they put forth a lot of time and&#13;
money being involved with&#13;
PSGA. He also mentioned that&#13;
these offices are paid positions at&#13;
other U.W. campuses.&#13;
Bosovich refused a friendly&#13;
amendment to his motion made&#13;
by William Ferko, which stated&#13;
that pay would become active for&#13;
! h t h ?&#13;
s e n a t o r s e l e c t e d&#13;
»n the October '75 elections.&#13;
lhere was discussion on the&#13;
question of who would be eligible&#13;
to receive such payment.&#13;
•uK*&#13;
aiu&#13;
Na11&#13;
' vice&#13;
"President, said&#13;
that there was a state law which&#13;
prohibited them from benefitting&#13;
financially from any rule or law&#13;
on which they had favorably&#13;
voted.&#13;
This discussion was ended with&#13;
the decision to look into laws&#13;
regarding such matters if and&#13;
when the motion was adopted.&#13;
The motion passed with a 4 to 3&#13;
margin.&#13;
Senators voting in favor of the&#13;
motion were: Boro Bosovich,&#13;
William Ferko, Jerry Ferch and&#13;
Albert Quinn. Those who voted&#13;
against it were: Ed Bielarczyk,&#13;
Robert Vlach and Terry Peck.&#13;
Senators Robert Turner, Vicky&#13;
Ui'bush, Avis Webber, and Robert&#13;
Gregory were absent.&#13;
Salaries will be determined by&#13;
the Business and Finance&#13;
Committee.&#13;
Other action at the meeting&#13;
included scheduling of public&#13;
hearings on the proposed&#13;
disciplinary guidelines for the&#13;
U.W. system.&#13;
Students will be able to voice&#13;
their opinions of these guidelines&#13;
on Oct. 22 and 23 from 6 a.m. to 8&#13;
a.m. in the LLC D174. Additional&#13;
hearings will be held at the same&#13;
location on Oct. 22from 10 a.m. to&#13;
12 noon and Oct. 23 from 2 p.m. to&#13;
4 p.m.&#13;
Salaries would cost $3200 yearly&#13;
by Mike Palecek&#13;
The PSGA Elections and&#13;
Business and Finance committees&#13;
met on Oct. 12, with only&#13;
the barest of membership to&#13;
make quorum. The Ways and&#13;
Means Committee postponed&#13;
their meeting for the second week&#13;
in a row, unable to make quorum.&#13;
A total of four senators came.&#13;
Of serious discussion were&#13;
plans for the upcoming PSGA and&#13;
Student Allocations Comm.&#13;
elections where, to date, only&#13;
three students have filed for the&#13;
16 positions. Elections will be&#13;
held on Oct. 22 and 23 from 9 a.m.&#13;
to 8 p .m.&#13;
The Elections Committee&#13;
adopted a plan in which a person&#13;
who does not file papers with&#13;
PSGA and obtains write-in votes,&#13;
must obtain 25 votes plus the&#13;
plurality of votes to win. The&#13;
student must also be eligible for&#13;
the position.&#13;
In other action, the Business&#13;
and Finance Committee brought&#13;
up a PSGA Senate suggestion to&#13;
pay senators $5 a week towards&#13;
expenses. The expenses would&#13;
primarily cover travel to and&#13;
from meetings. Bob Vlach, who&#13;
resigned as Business and&#13;
Finance chairperson at the&#13;
meeting, suggested it would be an&#13;
incentive to get more persons to&#13;
run for senator. Vlach said he&#13;
was resigning because he is not&#13;
going to run for senator later this&#13;
month.&#13;
Bill Ferko, the acting chairperson,&#13;
called the $5 "only a&#13;
mere pittance." Ed Bielarczyk&#13;
pointed out the amount would&#13;
total about $3200 for the school&#13;
year. Bielarczyk stated, "I don't&#13;
know if you can swing the&#13;
students on that." The $5&#13;
proposal is to come from Student&#13;
Segregated Fees.&#13;
Regarding the possibility of&#13;
giving salaries to senators, Jerry&#13;
Ferch raised the question, "Do&#13;
you think it will raise morale?"&#13;
.Ferko replied, "Then the&#13;
students will have a right to&#13;
complain." Vlack responded,&#13;
"They have a right to complain in&#13;
the first place." A senator then&#13;
commented, "But they don't."&#13;
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Statewide results show UW-P&#13;
energy cutbacks saved $&#13;
from January to June of this year nearly $22,000.&#13;
as compared to the same period "The energy crisis made&#13;
last year. everyone more aware of conAllen&#13;
said the most significant servation at the time," Allen&#13;
energy savings of 1973-74 were said, "but conservation should be&#13;
during the three winter months. a continuing thing. Efficiency&#13;
The dollar savings during that and economy shouldn't depend on&#13;
period alone, Allen said, was shortages and crisis."&#13;
Representatives to speak&#13;
to pre-law students&#13;
Pre-Law Day at UW-Madison students from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in&#13;
will be on Wednesday, October the Great Hall of the Memorial&#13;
22. Approximately 25 law schools Union.&#13;
will send representatives who For more information, students&#13;
will be available to talk to may call Barbara Larson at 553-&#13;
2452.&#13;
Parkside has apparently been&#13;
more successful than most institutions&#13;
meeting Gov.&#13;
Patrick J. Lucey's energy conservation&#13;
goals for all state&#13;
agencies, according to Physical&#13;
Plant Director, Roger C. Allen.&#13;
Allen said statewide results&#13;
from 1973-74, the first period of&#13;
the Governor's mandate, show&#13;
the following results:&#13;
Electrical use at Parkside&#13;
dropped 13.2 percent compared to&#13;
an 8.2 percent state average and&#13;
the Governor's goal of 10 percent;&#13;
&#13;
Automobile miles traveled by&#13;
employees dropped 6.6 percent&#13;
compared to a 4.4. percent state&#13;
average and the governor's goal&#13;
of 15 percent;&#13;
Steam generation was reduced&#13;
12 percent, the same as the state&#13;
average, compared to the goal of&#13;
15 percent.&#13;
Allen said cutbacks are continuing&#13;
to be encouraged in all&#13;
three areas, with significant&#13;
results apparent in the latest&#13;
state reports on steam&#13;
generation. In that category,&#13;
Parkside led all state insitutions&#13;
in cutting another 12 percent&#13;
worth of merchandise including tax&#13;
worth of merchandise&#13;
BUFFET R OOM&#13;
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Wednesday, Oct. 15, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Bonanza&#13;
Free with this coupon&#13;
a bottle of beer&#13;
with any steak dinner&#13;
3315 52 St., Kenosha&#13;
ITS NEW, ITS JUST FOR&#13;
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YOU BE TOO LAZY TO WORK&#13;
AN'TOOSTUPIDTO STEAL&#13;
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UGLY TO BEG'.!!&#13;
by Stephen Smith&#13;
The Financial Aids Committee&#13;
met for the second time this&#13;
semester to acquaint themselves&#13;
with the various financial aid&#13;
programs offered to students.&#13;
Jan Ocker, director of financial&#13;
aids, and Sue Johnson, his&#13;
assistant, presented to the&#13;
committee a brief description of&#13;
the major aid programs&#13;
available.&#13;
Chairperson Anna Marie&#13;
Williams said Parkside was the&#13;
only State school without a drop&#13;
policy, and the new policy doesn't&#13;
go into effect until January.&#13;
Williams said that without a&#13;
drop policy, students who receive&#13;
failing grades in their courses are&#13;
still eligible for aid; the application&#13;
for funds does not ask&#13;
for any academic or attendance&#13;
report of its aid recipients.&#13;
These are issues to be taken up&#13;
at future meetings, along with&#13;
question and answer periods for&#13;
students.&#13;
The next meeting will be held&#13;
Oct. 23, 1975 in room 210A of&#13;
Greenquist, at 9:30 a.m.&#13;
Recreation&#13;
show off&#13;
The Outdoor Ski and&#13;
Recreation Show, which was to&#13;
be held from 12 noon to 6 p.m. at&#13;
the Physical Education building&#13;
this Sunday, has been cancelled.&#13;
The main reason for the cancellation&#13;
was a lack of e xhibitors&#13;
for the show.&#13;
YOU TELL ME RIGHT NOW&#13;
YOU SLIMY MOOCH, WHERE'S&#13;
-—rXP\ THE BREAD FOR ALL&#13;
\ THESE THREADS?&#13;
PANTS&#13;
ARE and *6"&#13;
HERE COME&#13;
DA PAYOFF&#13;
EUROPEAN STYLE&#13;
PREWASHED DENIM JEANS JUST&#13;
Wisconsin's Finest B uffet&#13;
Lunch $2.00 11-2 p.m.&#13;
Dinner $ 2.95 4-7:30 p .m&#13;
Beverage and D essert&#13;
5732 6th Avenue • Kenosha, Wisconsin &#13;
8 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 15, 1975&#13;
Harriers place fifth,&#13;
r rederickson comes&#13;
bby vTThhoomAAiipelllln o&#13;
The Parkside cross-country&#13;
team placed a disappointing fifth&#13;
at last Saturday's Lakefront&#13;
Invitational in Chicago. Loyola&#13;
(of Chicago) won the 11-team&#13;
meet with 91 points, compared&#13;
with Parkside's 115. The leading&#13;
runner for the Rangers, once&#13;
again, was Ray Fredericksen,&#13;
who finished third overall.&#13;
Fredericksen was leading the&#13;
field until he took a wrong turn&#13;
and had to come back with about&#13;
600 yards to go.&#13;
Also competing for the Rangers&#13;
were Jeff DeMatthew, 8th place;&#13;
Mike Rivers, 29th; Greg Julich,&#13;
finishing 37th; Curt Spieker,&#13;
39th; and Jim DeVasquez, with a&#13;
40th place finish. Coach Vic&#13;
Godfrey said he had hoped for a&#13;
better fRLh by Parkside's&#13;
middle runners. "One person&#13;
could have made the difference,"&#13;
Godfrey said.&#13;
Godfrey said "everybody"&#13;
from Parkside was disappointed&#13;
with the results since the race&#13;
should have been "fairly easy to&#13;
win." Godfrey said the caliber of&#13;
the competition wasn't that&#13;
tough, and Loyola probably&#13;
didn't run as good as the last time&#13;
they beat the Rangers. Asked&#13;
whether the long lay-off Parkside&#13;
in third&#13;
had may have had an effect on his&#13;
runners, Godfrey said he was not&#13;
sure just how much that may&#13;
have affected his team, but said,&#13;
"We just weren't ready...I don't&#13;
think we were emotionally&#13;
ready."&#13;
This Saturday, at 11 a.m., the&#13;
Ranger runners will compete in&#13;
the Northern Illinois Invitational&#13;
in DeKalb, 111. There will be&#13;
about the same number of teams&#13;
entered as the last meet, but&#13;
"some will be tougher," according&#13;
to Godfrey, who is,&#13;
nonetheless, confident about his&#13;
team's chances, "I think we'll do&#13;
better."&#13;
Basketball passes on sale&#13;
APSCAn Hnl/Atn mnr n/&gt; .. .. s Season tickets for 1975-76&#13;
Parkside basketball go on sale&#13;
today, Wednesday, at the&#13;
Physical Education Building.&#13;
Reserved seats for the north&#13;
bleachers and unreserved seats&#13;
for the south bleachers are on&#13;
sale to students for $7.50 and&#13;
faculty and staff for $10.&#13;
Parkside will play an 11-game&#13;
home schedule in the regular&#13;
season. All games will start at&#13;
7:30 p.m. The Rangers' home&#13;
opener is Dec. 7 against Grand&#13;
Valley State College.&#13;
All single game tickets are&#13;
unreserved and may be purchased&#13;
in advance by students for&#13;
$1 and by faculty-staff for $1.50.&#13;
All tickets at the door will be $2,&#13;
(children 11 and under $1) Advance&#13;
single game tickets will be&#13;
sold at the Information Kiosk and&#13;
the Physical Education Bldg.&#13;
Students faculty and staff may&#13;
purchase two tickets for each I.D.&#13;
presented.&#13;
Booters in slump,&#13;
loose to Platteville&#13;
by Thom Aiello&#13;
It was a disappointing week for&#13;
the Parkside soccer team. The&#13;
booters were beaten 5-1 last&#13;
Wednesday by the University of&#13;
Illinois-Chicago Circle, in&#13;
Chicago, and then they dropped a&#13;
2-0 decision in a game at UWPlatteville&#13;
on Friday.&#13;
In the contest against Circle,&#13;
Parkside had 14 shots on goal, the&#13;
same as their opponents, but only&#13;
Mike Olesen could claim a goal&#13;
for the effort. Rico Savaglio&#13;
assisted on the score.&#13;
Friday's test against Platteville&#13;
was a bit more costly to&#13;
the Rangers. The • lo ss by&#13;
Parkside gave Platteville the&#13;
NAIA District 14 championship.&#13;
The Rangers suffered the shutout&#13;
despite keeping the ball in&#13;
their opponent's side of the field&#13;
for about 80 percent of the game.&#13;
Platteville scored both of their&#13;
Women loose&#13;
to Carroll&#13;
and Carthage&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
The Parkside women's&#13;
volleyball squad met two wellestablished&#13;
squads in Carroll and&#13;
Carthage last Wednesday, at the&#13;
Carthage fieldhouse.&#13;
Carroll played a consistent&#13;
game to beat Parkside 8-15, 9-15.&#13;
The second match with Carthage&#13;
found them a little erratic, as the&#13;
Rangers were shut out in the first&#13;
game, 0-15, and managed to&#13;
make the second and deciding&#13;
game close, 13-15.&#13;
The volleyball team will battle&#13;
the Milwaukee Area Technical&#13;
College at the PhyEd Building&#13;
Tuesday before taking on UWWhitewater&#13;
and Rock Valley&#13;
College at Whitewater, this&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
goals early in the first half.&#13;
The two losses give the&#13;
Rangers a three-game losing&#13;
streak and a 3-4-1 record for the&#13;
season. They have now allowed 15&#13;
goals in the eight games, while&#13;
scoring 13 themselves. The&#13;
Rangers will be looking for more&#13;
scoring and good defense when&#13;
they play at Marquette this&#13;
Saturday at 2 p.m. Then, next&#13;
Monday, Parkside fans can&#13;
watch their team, as they host&#13;
Eastern Illinois in a 2 p.m.&#13;
contest.&#13;
The home game schedule:&#13;
Friday, Dec. 7, Grand Valley&#13;
State College; Sat., Dec. 13, UWOshkosh;&#13;
Mon., Jan. 5, UWPlatteville;Wed.,&#13;
Jan. 7, UWWhitewater;&#13;
Sat., Jan. 17, St.&#13;
Francis College; Mon., Jan. 19,&#13;
Eastern Illinois; Sat., Jan. 31,&#13;
Wayne State; Tues., Feb. 13,'&#13;
Milton College; Fri., Feb. 13,'&#13;
Oakland University; Sat., Feb.&#13;
14, Northland College; Tues&#13;
Feb. 17, UW-Green Bay.&#13;
Tennis team&#13;
splits pair&#13;
by Carol Arentz&#13;
The Ranger tennis team beat&#13;
Whitewater 4-1, but lost to UWMilwaukee&#13;
3-2 in a triangular&#13;
meet held at Carthage last&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Parkside's two singles players,&#13;
Peggy Gordon and Iris Gericke,&#13;
won in both meets.&#13;
Number one doubles team,&#13;
Sandi Kingsfield and Kathy&#13;
Feichtner, won against&#13;
Whitewater, as did Jean Covelli&#13;
and Eileen Reilly at number two&#13;
doubles.&#13;
2&#13;
nd National&#13;
Greenbay Rd., Kenosha !&#13;
Free Pitcher of Pabst&#13;
with a family size pizza&#13;
With this coupon&#13;
Offer ends Oct. 22, 1975&#13;
Brat Stop&#13;
Highway 50 and 194&#13;
Friday and Saturday&#13;
Union&#13;
free admission Friday to&#13;
U.W. Parkside students with school I.D.&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
Film Series Presents:&#13;
mi&lt;: UKSTOK&#13;
T I I F&#13;
X1 )„&#13;
A X M A 1 ,&#13;
x P:\VYORK&#13;
OROTIC FIRM FFSTIVAR&#13;
October 16 - 7:30 C.A.T.&#13;
October 17 - 8:00 S.A.B.&#13;
October 19 - 7:30 S.A.B.&#13;
ID's required in S.A.B. Beer will be served in S.A.B.&#13;
PAPA BURGER&#13;
TEEN BURGER&#13;
MAMA BURGER&#13;
BABY BURGER&#13;
"OPEN YEAR ARO UND&#13;
CARRY-OUTS&#13;
CALL AHEAD -&#13;
YOUR ORDER&#13;
WILL BE READY&#13;
Tubs of Chicken -&#13;
Fish and Shrimp&#13;
12 MILE NORTH OF&#13;
MIDCITY THEATER&#13;
ON SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
552-8404&#13;
A &amp; W ROOT BEER D RIVE-IN&#13;
Sheridan Rd. (Hy. 32) North&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS &amp; ROCKWELL&#13;
CALCULATORS AT BRANT'S, R ACINE&#13;
Rockwell 61R ADVANCED TI-2550-4 FUNCTION&#13;
SLIDE ^&#13;
LE ELECTR0NIC plus MEMORY&#13;
CALCULATOR&#13;
16 Scientific functions PLUS 6&#13;
key memory. Large green 8&#13;
Digit display, common &amp;&#13;
natural log and antilog..Trig&#13;
and inverse trig, degreeradian&#13;
mode, recirocal, PI,&#13;
sum of s quares Etc. Complete&#13;
with rechargeable batteries,&#13;
charger and carrying&#13;
case...AT BRANDTS&#13;
TI-2550, hand-held fourfunction&#13;
plus full Memory&#13;
system and percent key.&#13;
Fixed or floating decimal, 8-&#13;
digit display and automatic&#13;
constant. A most versatile&#13;
calculator that operates on&#13;
rechargeable batteries or AC&#13;
adapter-charger (included).&#13;
W Mr&#13;
11 different models in T. I., 4 in Rockwell&#13;
BRING THIS AD WITH STUDENT I.D. and get a&#13;
student discount.&#13;
OPEN&#13;
THURSDAY&#13;
EVENINGS&#13;
MONUMENT SO., D OWNTOWN RACINE </text>
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              <text>Guskin outlines plans for&#13;
involvement in community&#13;
by Kurt Larson&#13;
Since coming to Parkside,&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin has&#13;
frequently spoken in favor of&#13;
increasing Parkside's involvement&#13;
with the community.&#13;
Until now, he has said relatively&#13;
little about how he intends to&#13;
accomplish this. In a recent&#13;
RANGER interview, Guskin&#13;
enthusiastically revealed some of&#13;
his hopes and ideas on this&#13;
subject.&#13;
"I think one critical function of&#13;
the University is to upgrade the&#13;
quality of life in the community."&#13;
he said. "I would like to see&#13;
Parkside become a cultural&#13;
center for people living in Racine&#13;
and Kenosha counties."&#13;
Part of Guskin's tentative plan&#13;
for achieving this goal is an increase&#13;
in the number of c ultural&#13;
events taking place at Parkside,&#13;
particularly on weekends. He&#13;
said he is considering making&#13;
Parkside's "magnificient"&#13;
facilities available to the local&#13;
"starving artist's" fairs. He also&#13;
mentioned the possibility of a socalled&#13;
"music circus" that would&#13;
consist of simultaneous performances&#13;
by numerous&#13;
university and local musical&#13;
groups. Guskin said he likes the&#13;
idea of inviting such prestigious&#13;
regional organizations as the&#13;
Milwaukee Repertory Theater&#13;
and the Chicago and Milwaukee&#13;
Symphonies to perform here.&#13;
Though he admits that such&#13;
performances would be expensive,&#13;
Guskin said that money&#13;
from ticket sales would pay for&#13;
"a large portion" of the cost.&#13;
Another possible means of&#13;
bolstering Parkside's community&#13;
relations that Guskin mentioned,&#13;
"going out and educating people&#13;
where they work." He said that&#13;
this has already been done&#13;
successfully with a "couple of&#13;
business courses," and that he&#13;
would like to see the program&#13;
expanded to include liberal arts&#13;
courses as well.&#13;
Eugene Norwood, Dean on the&#13;
School of Science and Society,&#13;
said that this has already been&#13;
done in the College with courses&#13;
in Industrial Psychology and&#13;
Advanced Chemistry, and will&#13;
probably be done again in the&#13;
future.&#13;
Guskin also said that he favors&#13;
rearranging courseschedules in a&#13;
way that will premit people who&#13;
work during the day to complete&#13;
a major by taking night courses&#13;
exclusively. Under the present&#13;
system, most courses are not&#13;
offered at night. This makes&#13;
pursuing an education extremely&#13;
difficult for students who are&#13;
unable to attend classes during&#13;
the day.&#13;
Work half complete on&#13;
new Union and greenhouse&#13;
by Mike Palecek&#13;
Progress reports on the Union,&#13;
a new Modern Industry building,&#13;
and several other ongoing&#13;
projects were given by Jim&#13;
Ga Ibraith, director of planning&#13;
and construction to the Campus&#13;
Planning Committee. In addition,&#13;
the committee advised the&#13;
chancellor to form a committee&#13;
to handle appeals in traffic and&#13;
parking violations on campus.&#13;
The Student Union, said&#13;
Ga Ibraith, is currently about 40&#13;
percent complete. The building&#13;
is scheduled to be totally enclosed&#13;
by December 1. If this is done,&#13;
and the building is heated&#13;
throughout the winter, the Union&#13;
should be completed by July,&#13;
1976.&#13;
The report states "while the&#13;
budget was slightly overtaxed at&#13;
the time bids were taken, we&#13;
have adjusted the funding by&#13;
delting a few more non-essential&#13;
excesses and are now in the&#13;
process of a dding back essential&#13;
items."&#13;
Ga Ibraith explained this by&#13;
saying, "We have an architect on&#13;
the project with a strong sense of&#13;
design, who pledged that his&#13;
additions would not go over the&#13;
budget." He went on to say that in&#13;
the bidding, these additions did&#13;
go over projected costs, and nonessential&#13;
items had to/ be&#13;
sacrificed.&#13;
Greenhouse complete in spring&#13;
The greenhouse, the other&#13;
structure being built on campus&#13;
at this time, has its first phase 55&#13;
percent completed, according to&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 22 THl PARKSIDE RANGER IS A SIUDENT PUBLICATION OE THE UNI VERSITY 0 1 WISCONSIN - PARKSIDE Vol. IV No. 8&#13;
Economic situation blamed for&#13;
Board's money demands&#13;
by Mike Palecek&#13;
The Kenosha County Board&#13;
asked the state to pay back the&#13;
$2.1 million that county residents&#13;
paid for the 700-acre Parkside&#13;
campus at their monthly meeting&#13;
October 7. Sup. Wayne Kossl, who&#13;
introduced the resolution, said&#13;
the state has not lived up to its&#13;
commitments to the community&#13;
and the whole state should share&#13;
in the cost of the land.&#13;
Assemblyman Russ Olson (RBassett)&#13;
called this move&#13;
"purely economic" and said "at&#13;
least on behalf of some of the&#13;
board members it was sincere. I&#13;
can't blame them for trying, but I&#13;
wish they would have tried about&#13;
10 years ago."&#13;
In 1967 Ols on introduced a bill&#13;
in the legislature to have the state&#13;
pay the land costs for Parkside.&#13;
At that time, Olson stated, the&#13;
county "wrote a blank check" in&#13;
bidding for the current site.&#13;
Olson stated, "I think the&#13;
county board was disappointed&#13;
that the University acted as&#13;
greedily as they did. I think they&#13;
would have been happier with a&#13;
different site. The Pet Springs&#13;
site was close to Kenosha, so the&#13;
County Board still had to stick&#13;
close to the bargain. The Board&#13;
didn't think we'd get involved so&#13;
deeply financially. No one ever&#13;
dreamed the University would&#13;
choose the site they did."&#13;
Olson added, "If the county&#13;
board had not spent money, the&#13;
University still would have been&#13;
COP starts research, will&#13;
J ni\ersity s future&#13;
continued on page 6&#13;
/erstegen&#13;
The Committee of P rincipals is&#13;
functioning.&#13;
Faculty can relax; attempts&#13;
are being made to dissuade any&#13;
feelings of paranoia.&#13;
But, at this time, student input&#13;
will be limited to survey samples.&#13;
Only one student sits on a COP&#13;
sub-committee.&#13;
Why "principals" rather that&#13;
"principles"? This is the&#13;
gathering of "university stars"&#13;
as one member put it. Four&#13;
senior administrators and six&#13;
members of the University'&#13;
Committee comprise the&#13;
"Principals."&#13;
The main vehicle for information&#13;
input will be surveys&#13;
and at least a half-dozen are&#13;
planned. Some may find numberous&#13;
surveys bothersome,&#13;
inconvenient and repetitive but&#13;
the committee feels there is no&#13;
other way to get the scope they&#13;
need to make their recomphoto&#13;
by Mike Nepper&#13;
Amazing Randi did another amazing thing. He got a standing&#13;
ovation last Wednesday night from an annreciative audience. Getting&#13;
out of a straitjacket, straining and redfaced, was great; the disappearing&#13;
radio, was fantastic; but Randi's most amazing feat was his&#13;
rapport with his audience. He almost charmed the pants off them.&#13;
Children's work featured&#13;
A display of art work by&#13;
children from Jamaica will be on&#13;
exhibit in the Comm Arts Gallery&#13;
through Oct. 27.&#13;
The show reveals the&#13;
close relationships between the&#13;
children's art and the physical&#13;
environment in which they live as&#13;
well as how the young child's&#13;
imagination deals with the&#13;
personal and cultural situation in&#13;
which he finds himself. Gallery&#13;
hours are 3 to 5 p.m. Mondays,&#13;
Wednesday and Fridays and 6 to&#13;
8 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays.&#13;
Enrollment drops as&#13;
Center suffers financially&#13;
built, with state money, at the&#13;
Pets site. The proponents were&#13;
hysterical and afraid to take that&#13;
risk." Olson reasoned that "when&#13;
the wheels of a bureaucracy are&#13;
in motion," as in the case of the&#13;
Parkside purchase, the money&#13;
usually comes. Olson also said&#13;
that the battle between the&#13;
University of Wisconsin and&#13;
Wisconsin State Colleges would&#13;
have encouraged UW to acquire&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
There were several other sites&#13;
proposed for Parkside. These&#13;
were the Kenosha two-year&#13;
campus (now Kenosha Alternative&#13;
High School), Racine's&#13;
two-year campus (now Gateway&#13;
Tech-Racine), and the abanmendations&#13;
for direction.&#13;
Surveys depend on the unbiased,&#13;
unthreatened responses&#13;
of those queried. Assurances&#13;
were given that faculty surveys&#13;
especially, would be done&#13;
anonymously and not be included&#13;
in personnel files.&#13;
Not all groups are recruiting&#13;
students but they may volunteer.&#13;
Chancellor Guskin, cochairman&#13;
of the Committee,&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
The Parkside Day Care Center&#13;
has financial problems which&#13;
arose with its move this year to&#13;
the University-owned Sublisky&#13;
House, the Chancellor's conference&#13;
house on Cty. Tk. E.&#13;
Financial problems seem to be&#13;
reaching the critical point. Gail&#13;
Navratil, director of the Center,&#13;
said, "If nothing comes our way&#13;
in the near future, we may face&#13;
closing."&#13;
The Center, which began in&#13;
1972 as a small operation occupying&#13;
the basement of&#13;
Parkside Baptist Church, grew&#13;
into a rather impressive&#13;
organization by 1974, when it was&#13;
located at the Kenosha Campus.&#13;
At t his point the enrollment was&#13;
117 children and it occupied&#13;
several large rooms, two of which&#13;
were converted into a nursery for&#13;
children under two years. The&#13;
Center was more heavily supported&#13;
by the University at this&#13;
time and the Center did not pay&#13;
rent, for janitors, or general&#13;
paper supplies.&#13;
The Kenosha Campus was&#13;
closed, and the Center was forced&#13;
to move by March 1975, and then,&#13;
it seems, the problems began. It&#13;
now rents the University-owned&#13;
Sublisky House. The rent comes&#13;
to $111 per month, which is a&#13;
small price for the size and&#13;
quality of t he home, but it's still&#13;
$111 more than they paid in&#13;
previous years.&#13;
The home is fine for the&#13;
average-sized family, but its&#13;
utility as a day care center&#13;
remains questionable. The house&#13;
is described by Navratil as&#13;
having a disquieting effect on the&#13;
children because of the lack of&#13;
space. Because of its size and&#13;
nature, different rooms of the&#13;
house are organized for&#13;
specialized activities and the&#13;
children are rotated from room to&#13;
room to participate in the various&#13;
activities.&#13;
Navratil is planning to divide&#13;
the house into three selfcontained&#13;
classrooms in order to&#13;
approximate the typical day care&#13;
center which usually occupies&#13;
one large room divided up into&#13;
specialized areas. She said the&#13;
typical set-up is better because it&#13;
gives children a Stronger sense of&#13;
security, saves the time of&#13;
rotating groups, and makes the&#13;
scheduling of activities more&#13;
flexible.&#13;
Because of its more limited&#13;
space, the Center is now licensed&#13;
for 35 children per hour, compared&#13;
to the 48 p er hour which&#13;
was allowed at the Kenosha&#13;
Campus. The enrollment has&#13;
dropped to 76 children this year&#13;
as compared to 117 during the&#13;
spring of 1974.&#13;
The Center found it necessary&#13;
to discontinue its nursery&#13;
operation and now accepts&#13;
children only between the ages of&#13;
2 and 7 years.&#13;
Financial problems have been&#13;
encountered because of the&#13;
unique nature of the service, said&#13;
Navratil. The Center caters to&#13;
students who only require the&#13;
continued on page &amp; &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 22, 1975&#13;
Faculty play politics&#13;
in ignoring students&#13;
The work groups of the Committee of Principals, even&#13;
at this early stage of formation, appear to have taken&#13;
respective political positions. .&#13;
For the faculty, the first step is to alienate the&#13;
students, then complain that students aren't interested&#13;
and won't respond. All six work groups have met at least&#13;
&gt;one time, and members say that student involvement in&#13;
the groups has been on the agenda. Yet, after all the&#13;
talking, the most that has been done is one letter from&#13;
one work group to PSGA asking for student names.&#13;
As of this writing, no student organizations, including&#13;
RANGER, have been contacted to help in the recruitment&#13;
process. Students who left their names on the&#13;
special interest forms at registration have not been&#13;
contacted either.&#13;
One chairperson didn't know students were to be involved;&#13;
another group, which has one student on it, has&#13;
indicated that they have no intention of recruiting more&#13;
than that one; and other group chairpersons spoke in&#13;
vague terms of sleepless nights spent in desperate,&#13;
earnest thought as to how to involve students. A&#13;
RANGER staff member gave his name as a volunteer to&#13;
two committees and hasn't heard a word from either.&#13;
RANGER was originally under the impression that&#13;
the Committee of Principals was important in that after&#13;
research and surveys, major decisions would be made&#13;
which would greatly effect the University's future. But&#13;
instead, it's another group comprised almost totally of&#13;
faculty, who figure that Merger Law 36.09 (5), "students&#13;
shall formulate and review policies affecting their&#13;
lives," is of no significance to our lives as students at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
For those groups which say over the telephone that&#13;
yes, students are welcome but none has been contacted,&#13;
and to those groups who pretend they have made&#13;
genuine efforts to recruit students, and to those who&#13;
suggest "we wait until we are together and organized"&#13;
before desiring students, RANGER suggests having low&#13;
expectations regarding student interest.&#13;
RANGER apologizes for its&#13;
sports headlines in last week's&#13;
paper where at one point we&#13;
wrote that our women's&#13;
volleyball squad was "loose" to&#13;
Carrol and Carthage Colleges,&#13;
and again, on the same page&#13;
wrote that the soccer team was&#13;
"loose" to Platteville. The word&#13;
"loose" has many meanings.&#13;
However, we intended none of&#13;
them. What us English majors&#13;
was trying to say was that both&#13;
teams had some bad luck and&#13;
lost.&#13;
Neither the soccer team nor the&#13;
volleyball are having particularly&#13;
successful season, but&#13;
that, by no means necessitates&#13;
either team being "loose" to the&#13;
opposing team in order to do&#13;
better. As we all know, there is&#13;
more to lose when we are loose.&#13;
RANGER would rather have&#13;
losing athletic teams than loose&#13;
losing teams.&#13;
Board action&#13;
is blackmail&#13;
The recent action of the Kenosha County Board&#13;
regarding the refund by the state of $2.1 million that&#13;
county residents have paid for our 700-acre Parks.de&#13;
campus is best described as a face-saving device by a&#13;
generation of politicians in need of a face-lift.&#13;
No binding legal contract was extracted from the&#13;
state with reference to the development and expansion&#13;
of Parkside programs. Because of this, it is clear that&#13;
the interests of Kenosha-area taxpayers were&#13;
sublimated, through sloppy negotiation, to the demands&#13;
of grandstanding statesmen and state bureaucrats with&#13;
edifice complexes.&#13;
Now, any case presented by Kenosha public officials,&#13;
necessarily rests on the argument of "good faith"&#13;
agreements between the county and the state.&#13;
RANGER believes that the nature of t he tenuous legal&#13;
claims of the Kenosha County Board leaves Parkside&#13;
open to a game of bureaucrats' blackmail; that is, the&#13;
state can withhold further expansion and development&#13;
of Parkside, awaiting disposition of Kenosha's claim.&#13;
Furthermore, the identification of the Parkside area&#13;
as that of a troublesome community, could serve to halt&#13;
needed expansion and development.&#13;
Kenosha politicians, you missed the boat once. Don't&#13;
put our University up for ransom.&#13;
Let our campus go.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I would like to convery my&#13;
sincerest appreciation for the&#13;
outstanding manner in which the&#13;
Ranger delivered our message&#13;
concerning club elections to the&#13;
student body in the Oct. 15 issue. I&#13;
am glad that you did not confuse&#13;
our election notice (which we&#13;
have only once a year) with a&#13;
notice about an organizational&#13;
meeting (which we have only&#13;
once a semester) or with a notice&#13;
about a gaming session (which&#13;
we have only five times a week).&#13;
It is nice to know that the Ranger&#13;
can be depended on to handle&#13;
such a difficult task on the few&#13;
occasions that we really need it.&#13;
It is instances such as these that&#13;
reveal that it is the truly great&#13;
journalistic prowess of the editor&#13;
and staff that makes the Ranger&#13;
what it is today. After all, it must&#13;
be tremendously difficult to read&#13;
an elections notice and then so&#13;
adeptly print "such-and such a&#13;
club will meet..."&#13;
Gratefully yours,&#13;
Mark Mulkins,&#13;
President, Parkside&#13;
Association of Wargamers&#13;
Editor's Note: Unfortunately,&#13;
the notice came in two days after&#13;
our deadline. In order for Ranger&#13;
to leave proper space,&#13;
organizations must meet the&#13;
Thursday deadline for event&#13;
notices. This deadline is stated at&#13;
the bottom of the EVENTS&#13;
column.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 22: Films in Skeliar from 11:30-12:30p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 22: Psychology Club meeting at 1:30 p.m. in WLLC&#13;
D174.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 22: Student concert at 3:30 p.m. in CAT.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 23: Bus trip to Chicago Ski Show. Meet at 4 p.m. at&#13;
Tallent Hall, bring $1 for bus.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 23: Lecture, "Women in the Third World Countries.&#13;
Africa, Latin America and China" at 8 p.m. at Carthage College. Free.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 23: Third World meeting at 2 p.m. in WLLC D174.&#13;
Elections will be held.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 24: "Fall Ball on the Belle" weekend in Louisville, Ky.&#13;
Info and sign-up at Student Life Office WLLC D197.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 24: Student recital, Jean Tashoff on piano at 7:30 in CAT&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 25: Cross country, Carthage Invitational Meet at&#13;
at 11 a.m.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 25: Soccer, Parkside vs. East Michigan at 2 p.m. at the&#13;
soccer field.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 25: Women's swimming, Parkside vs. UW-Milwaukee&#13;
at 2 p.m. in PE Bldg.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 26: Guest recital: Richard Piippo, cello Gertrude&#13;
Stillman, harpsichord; at 3:30 p.m. in CAT&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 28: Women's volleyball Parkside vs. UW-Waukesha at&#13;
4 p .m. in PE Bldg. '&#13;
All items lor the EVENTS column must be submitted to tne&#13;
RANGER office, WLLC D'194 on or before the Thursday prior o&#13;
publication&#13;
THE PARKSIDE&#13;
EEEEEE&#13;
The PARKSIDE RANGER is written and edited by the studen&#13;
for^ite^diter alnoH''&#13;
SC0I&#13;
\&#13;
Sin&#13;
-&#13;
Parkside th*y are solely respon;&#13;
U W Parkside K ^ h content&#13;
- Offices are located in D194 W1&#13;
, enosha, Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-2295, 553-;&#13;
Acting Editor: Debra Friedell&#13;
Feature Editor: Mike Palecek&#13;
Sports Director: Thom Aiello&#13;
Events Column: Judy Trudrung&#13;
Business Manager: Ann Verstegen&#13;
Ad make-up: Diane Werwie&#13;
W r ite ^&#13;
D i&#13;
n e&#13;
f e l &lt; » er D o n z e l l H o l t O r i n T a v l o r&#13;
Writers Jeanmne Sipsma, Steve Smith, Leigh Feifer&#13;
red Johnson. Mick Anderson, Betsy Neu Jim&#13;
Rit?rNi' hT' Catherine 81ise&gt; Bruce Wagner Rita Nicholas, Kurt Larson&#13;
Photographers: Dave Daniels, Al Fredricksen Gordon Mclntos &#13;
construction&#13;
separate building, to be projected&#13;
with additions to make it a $4.5&#13;
million complex (in 1975 dollars),&#13;
rhis facility could have additions&#13;
depending upon demands.&#13;
The second plan would call for&#13;
the $1.4 million to be spent for an&#13;
addition ot the current Classroom&#13;
Building, where the School of&#13;
Modern Industry is currently&#13;
housed.&#13;
The committee spoke&#13;
primarily in favor of the latter&#13;
plan, at this early discussion&#13;
atage, but noted that some&#13;
political overtones are in favor of&#13;
the first plan.&#13;
Plans for color teveision a&#13;
communication system hookup&#13;
with Milwaukee's Educational&#13;
Television Network were&#13;
described. A library Learning&#13;
Center hookup system to library&#13;
carrels will be bid on October 22&#13;
and the Milwaukee System&#13;
hookup will be constructed over&#13;
the summer of 1976.&#13;
There were also reports on the&#13;
exterior and interior sign&#13;
systems, with the problem of not&#13;
providing enough information to&#13;
the infrequent visitor to&#13;
Parkside, as well as discussions&#13;
on the proposed safety improvements&#13;
of the intersection of&#13;
Hwy. E and JR. Also mentioned&#13;
was the fact that funding for the&#13;
landscaping of the parking areas&#13;
was n ot approved by the State.&#13;
However, monies have been set&#13;
aside for the other projects.&#13;
p MOLBECK'S ^&#13;
GROCERY&#13;
Complete Line of Quality Groceries&#13;
Specializing in&#13;
^HEALTH F OODS-DIETETICS -IMPORTSy&#13;
LVjy 1304 Grange Ave Phone 633-7769&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
opened the meeting by reading&#13;
two-pages from comments made&#13;
by Harold Dennison, president of&#13;
Ohio State University, on&#13;
creative planning. Guskin's&#13;
implied challenge through quotes&#13;
from Dennison was "are we&#13;
going to take a Cook's tour and be&#13;
very precise or are we going to&#13;
have the nerve and courage to&#13;
take a Lewis and Clark expedition&#13;
and adventure into the&#13;
unknown?"&#13;
After the lengthy reading, Bill&#13;
Murin, associate professor of&#13;
Political Science and copchairman&#13;
of the Committee,&#13;
thanked Guskin for the opening&#13;
prayer and went on to business at&#13;
hand...reports from group&#13;
chairpeople.&#13;
Only three groups out of six had&#13;
met and presented reports of&#13;
their intentions, Instructional&#13;
Methods and Innovations Work&#13;
Group chaired by assistant prof,&#13;
of education Thersa Peck;&#13;
Student Population Group&#13;
chaired by director of career&#13;
planning, Jack Elmore; and&#13;
Program Development chaired&#13;
by Benjamen Greenebaum,&#13;
associate professor of physics.&#13;
In conjunction with a&#13;
professional research lab in&#13;
Madison, Elmore's Student&#13;
Population group plans to survey&#13;
attitudes both internally and&#13;
externally. They hope to find&#13;
whether assumptions now made&#13;
about students are correct and&#13;
through planning what groups the&#13;
University could recruit that are&#13;
not reached presently.&#13;
Peck's gorup, Instructional&#13;
Methods and Innovations Work&#13;
Group, will compile, through&#13;
surveys, information on teaching&#13;
methods, retraining programs,&#13;
computer applications and&#13;
capabilities and courses directed&#13;
to new target groups. One&#13;
committee member disliked the&#13;
word "innovative" and though it&#13;
might bias results from the start.&#13;
Weh faculty are surveyed on&#13;
their teaching methods it is hoped&#13;
that the word "innovation" or&#13;
innovative techniques will not be&#13;
found threatening by respondents.&#13;
&#13;
Greenbaum' s Program&#13;
Development Group will also be&#13;
surveying to find academic&#13;
ambitions and to develop new&#13;
ideas for programs and&#13;
curriculum. They will be looking&#13;
nationwide at traditional and&#13;
non-traditional model programs&#13;
to determine successful attempts&#13;
elsewhere. Some groups may&#13;
combine their surveys even&#13;
thought their questions may have&#13;
different thrust.&#13;
The COP will meet again in two&#13;
weeks.&#13;
In January, when the efforts of&#13;
COP culminate; when surveys&#13;
and information jell together into&#13;
the big picture, possibly we will&#13;
have a map down the yellowbrick&#13;
road, Parkside's Lewis and&#13;
Clark adventure.&#13;
."OR RENTTToorTuppeTTldrTdiTlTwaiT"&#13;
carpet, off street parking. Dual entrances.&#13;
No pets, older person or teacher. Call after&#13;
4.564 1803.&#13;
WANTED: roommate. Two bedroom&#13;
'PPer flat at 1935 56th Street, Kenosha. $62.5&#13;
mo. plus utilities. Fully furnished, larg-&#13;
&lt;itchen and living room, off street parking&#13;
Call Steve 652 1436 after 3 p.m. weekdays&#13;
Female roommate wanted to move in Nov.&#13;
1st. Located near campus. Rent is $95,&#13;
deposit $50. Two bedrooms, carpeted. More&#13;
information by calling 552-7054 after 5 p.m.&#13;
WITH THIS G0UP0N&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
REPAIR WORK -- dishwashers, garbage&#13;
disposals, washers, dryers, etc. Call&#13;
evenings Al. Stendel 886 3865. ANY NEW RELEASE,&#13;
Si.aB b.P S $7.98 TAPES&#13;
0NbY$4.29 0NbY$5.4G&#13;
ONE SWEET DREAM&#13;
5010 7TH AVENUE KENOSHA&#13;
EARN UP TO $1800 a school year or more&#13;
posting educational literature on campus in&#13;
spare time. Send name, address, phone,&#13;
school and references to: Nationwide&#13;
College Marketing Services, Inc., P.O. Box&#13;
1384, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Call&#13;
(313)662 1770.&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEAFOOD&#13;
CHOPS&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
LASAGANA&#13;
RAVIOLI&#13;
MOSTACCIOLI&#13;
GNOCCHI&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT DRINKS&#13;
WINES&#13;
Northside 3728 Do uglas&#13;
639-7115&#13;
Southside 1816-16th St.&#13;
634-1991&#13;
PICK UP OR&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS&#13;
DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME&#13;
©ORADO UWP Soccer Club Presents&#13;
GET DOWN&#13;
TONIGHT"&#13;
• Add ice to a mixing glass or jelly jar,&#13;
depending on your financial situation&#13;
• Pour in 2 oz. of Jose Cuervo Tequila.&#13;
• The juice from half a lime.&#13;
• 1 tbsp. of honey.&#13;
• Shake.&#13;
• Strain into a cocktail glass or&#13;
peanut butter jar, depending on your&#13;
financial situation.&#13;
SPEED&#13;
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• 7 Week Course&#13;
e Professional Instructors&#13;
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STUDENT-TEACHER&#13;
DISCOUNT&#13;
FOR AN&#13;
Saturday, October 25&#13;
9 p.m. - 1 a.m.&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
The building is located south of Tallent Hall&#13;
Tickets will be sold in advance for $1.00&#13;
and at the door for S1.50.&#13;
Tickets are available from Soccer Club members&#13;
or Coach Hal Henderson, and at the P.E. office&#13;
Open to the Public&#13;
Wisconsin I.D.'s Required FREE MINI-LESSON&#13;
r6aM 258-6630&#13;
IOSE CUERVO* TEQUILA. 80 PROOF.&#13;
IMPORTED AND Bi LED BY &lt;© 1975, HEUBLEIN, INC., HARTFORD. CONN. &#13;
4 TNF PflRKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct ??, 1975&#13;
Student Disciplinary&#13;
Guidelines&#13;
Report Of The&#13;
President of the Board&#13;
Resolution:&#13;
That, upon recommendation of&#13;
the Senior Vice President of the&#13;
UW System, the Board of&#13;
Regents approves a delay in the&#13;
final action on the Student&#13;
Disciplinary Guidelines under&#13;
the following time schedule and&#13;
assumptions:&#13;
1. Central Administration and&#13;
the Board of Regents will receive&#13;
further recommendations for&#13;
specific amendments to the draft&#13;
Guidelines stemming from the&#13;
testimony received at the public&#13;
hearing on June 20, 1975, with&#13;
such recommendations to be&#13;
submitted, in writing, on or&#13;
before November 1, 1975 t o the&#13;
Office of Academic Affairs, 1668&#13;
Van Hise Hall, University of&#13;
Wisconsin System, c-o Associate&#13;
Vice President Adolph Y.&#13;
Wilburn.&#13;
2. During the first semester,&#13;
1975-76, institutional student&#13;
governments, associations, or&#13;
other organizations interested in&#13;
the Guidelines will work with&#13;
campus administration and the&#13;
faculty in developing discussions&#13;
directed toward interpreting and&#13;
clarifying the meaning and&#13;
implications of the Guidelines.&#13;
3. Amendments received shall&#13;
be reviewed by Central Administration&#13;
and representatives&#13;
of the committee developing the&#13;
draft Guidelines, and that&#13;
recommendations for the incorporation&#13;
or other disposition&#13;
of amendments received shall be&#13;
prepared for the Regents, and&#13;
4. Final action by the Regents&#13;
on the Guidelines will be&#13;
scheduled for the January, 1976&#13;
meeting of th e Board of R egents,&#13;
with opportunity for discussion&#13;
provided at the time of final&#13;
action.&#13;
Unless an extension of time has&#13;
been requested and received&#13;
from Academic Affairs.&#13;
PROPOSED AMENDMENTS TO&#13;
THE UWS STUDENT&#13;
DISCIPLINARY PROCEDURES&#13;
THAT ARE RECOMMENDED&#13;
BY CENTRAL ADMINISTRATION&#13;
&#13;
17.02 DEFINITIONS&#13;
Sec. 17.02(4)&#13;
1. In line 24, after "misconduct,"&#13;
insert: written reprimand,&#13;
denial of particular University&#13;
privileges.&#13;
2. After line 25, i nsert as final&#13;
sentence in the paragraph: Each&#13;
campus is authorized to adopt a&#13;
more explicit listing of sa nctions&#13;
which are consistent with the&#13;
provisions of this section.&#13;
Comment: These suggestions&#13;
are prompted by our belief in the&#13;
fairness of a policy of&#13;
maximizing the explicitness of&#13;
sanction provisions.&#13;
Sec, 17.02(8)&#13;
This is amended to read as&#13;
follows (the new matter identified&#13;
by underlining).&#13;
"Academic response" means a&#13;
formal action which may be&#13;
taken by an instructor under Sec.&#13;
17.13(2) (c) in response to&#13;
'academic misconduct" as&#13;
defined by Sec. 17.06(2). It is to be&#13;
distinguished from "sanction" or&#13;
"disciplinary sanction" as&#13;
defined in Sec. 17.02(4). It is&#13;
limited to (1) reduction of grade&#13;
for the assignment or&#13;
examination in question to a&#13;
lower passing grade (if it is clear&#13;
that the academic misconduct&#13;
affected only a portion of the&#13;
assignment or examination and&#13;
the remainder constituted&#13;
passing work) or to a failure, and&#13;
(2) required performance of&#13;
additional work - for example to&#13;
resolve uncertainties over the&#13;
effect of the academic misconduct&#13;
on the assignment or&#13;
examination.&#13;
Comment:&#13;
1. The first part of the new&#13;
matter seeks by cross-references&#13;
to clarify the nature and role of&#13;
the "academic response" which&#13;
is a new concept and will be&#13;
puzzling without this additional&#13;
help.&#13;
2. The second part (in parenthesis)&#13;
makes explicit when a&#13;
reduction to a lower passing&#13;
grade is permissible.&#13;
3. The third part illustrates the&#13;
non-punitive nature of the "additional&#13;
work" requirement. (We&#13;
have been against using&#13;
academic grades and&#13;
requirements as punishment.)&#13;
17.06 OFFENSES DEFINED&#13;
Sec. 17.06(l)(c)&#13;
1. In examples 2 and 3, the&#13;
period at the end should be&#13;
changed to a comma, and the&#13;
following clause added: Under&#13;
circumstances where the student&#13;
knew or reasonably should have&#13;
known this would occur.&#13;
In Example 4, line 12: insert&#13;
"intentionally" before the word&#13;
"obstructed."&#13;
Comment: These changes&#13;
merely bring the language of t he&#13;
examples into conformity with&#13;
the language of the main text of&#13;
paragraph (c). »&#13;
2. In Example 5&#13;
line 15: insert "parts of" before&#13;
the word "Other." lines 16,17,18:&#13;
substitute "them" for "the&#13;
materials."&#13;
Comment: The change in line&#13;
15 makes clear that the&#13;
prohibition is not confined to&#13;
"pages."&#13;
The other change avoids the&#13;
possible reading that&#13;
"materials" in these lines excludes&#13;
books.&#13;
Sec. 17.06(l)(f)&#13;
Should read: For acts of&#13;
violating and provisions concerning&#13;
parking, traffic, I.D.&#13;
Cards, University keys, drugs,&#13;
smoking in unauthorized places,&#13;
carrying firearms, unauthorized&#13;
peddling, unauthorized use of&#13;
sound-amplifying equipment,&#13;
and other subjects covered by the&#13;
published University of&#13;
Wisconsin System Administrative&#13;
Code.&#13;
Comment: Insofar as possible&#13;
the student should be informed of&#13;
the precise acts which will&#13;
subject him to discipline. A mere&#13;
reference to the Administrative&#13;
Code is not enough. What is&#13;
needed is an accurate succinct&#13;
summary of the . Code&#13;
prohibitions. If that is not done,&#13;
then at least some notice of the&#13;
Code subject matter should be&#13;
conveyed.&#13;
Sec. 17.06(l)(g)&#13;
Should read: For making a&#13;
knowingly false statement, either&#13;
orally or in writing, to any&#13;
University employee or agent on&#13;
.a University-related matter.&#13;
Comment: This change avoids&#13;
punishment for (1) a statement&#13;
which is believed to be false but is&#13;
not actually false, and (2) a&#13;
statement that is not on a&#13;
University-related matter.&#13;
Sec. 17.06(2) (g)&#13;
Should read: Knowingly and&#13;
intentionally assisting another&#13;
student in any of the aboveincluding&#13;
assistance in an&#13;
arrangement whereby any work,&#13;
classroo m perf orm anc e,&#13;
examination or other activity is&#13;
submitted or performed by a&#13;
person other than the student&#13;
under whose name the work is&#13;
submitted or performed.&#13;
Comment: This reinstates the&#13;
"assisting" offense which seems&#13;
to have been inadvertently&#13;
dropped from the present Code on&#13;
academic dishonesty, and incorporates&#13;
the substitute performance&#13;
situation as one&#13;
example of s uch "assisting."&#13;
17.0 7 D I S C I P L I N A R Y&#13;
PROCEDURE&#13;
Sec. 17.06(3)&#13;
1. Substitute the following for&#13;
lines 17 and 18: (3) Informal&#13;
adjudication. To expedite the&#13;
handling of less serious cases, the&#13;
Chancellor may, after consultation&#13;
with the elected committee&#13;
which serves as the&#13;
faculty's executive arm, and with&#13;
the elected officers of the principal&#13;
student organization, adopt&#13;
the following informal system: If&#13;
the maximum penalty sought by&#13;
the investigating officer (whose&#13;
adjudicatory functions under this&#13;
paragraph may be discharged by&#13;
a tribunal authorized to do so by&#13;
campus regulations) does not&#13;
include suspension or expulsion,&#13;
the officer may;&#13;
2. In line 25, add after "and": of&#13;
the penalties that may possibly&#13;
be imposed,&#13;
3. At the end of this main&#13;
paragraph (p.8, line 3), add: The&#13;
final decision shall be communicated&#13;
to the student in&#13;
writing.&#13;
Comment: The substitute (1)&#13;
attempts to incorporate some&#13;
faculty and student input before a&#13;
less than full hearing procedures&#13;
is adopted for the less serious&#13;
cases; (2) recognizes the&#13;
possibility that a particular&#13;
campus may wish to have a&#13;
tribunal rather than the investigating&#13;
officer be the adjudicator;&#13;
(3) enhances the&#13;
notice and communication&#13;
aspects of the informal&#13;
procedure.&#13;
Sec. 17.07 (3 )(b)&#13;
For this subparagraph substitute&#13;
the following:&#13;
The student who is dissatisfied&#13;
with an informal adjudication&#13;
may within 10 days of receiving&#13;
notice of the decision take a&#13;
written appeal to the Chancellor,&#13;
who shall afford the student or his&#13;
representative, as well as the&#13;
other side, a chance to present&#13;
oral argument. The Chancellor's&#13;
decision shall be final. In cases&#13;
where the Chancellor believes a&#13;
testimonial hearing is necessary,&#13;
he may refer the case for hearing&#13;
either to the student conduct&#13;
hearing tribunal which shall&#13;
proceed in accordance with Sec.&#13;
17.09(4), or to such other hearing&#13;
body as may be established by&#13;
regulations promulgated by the&#13;
Chancellor after consultation&#13;
with appropriate students and&#13;
faculty; the decision of the&#13;
student hearing tribunal or the&#13;
hearing body shall be final,&#13;
notwithstanding the provisions of&#13;
Sec. 17.10 and 17.11. In such a&#13;
case, any sanctions imposed by&#13;
the tribunal or the hearing body&#13;
shall be less than suspension or&#13;
expulsion.&#13;
Comment: This change (1)&#13;
gives more detail on the nature of&#13;
the appeal to the Chancellor from&#13;
informal adjudications, and (2)&#13;
adds the possibility of the&#13;
Chancellor's referring the case&#13;
for full hearing. The latter is a&#13;
compromise between a system&#13;
which affords no full hearing at&#13;
either the trail or appeals level&#13;
and a system under which a&#13;
student can demand a full&#13;
hearing even in the less serious&#13;
case.&#13;
Sec. 17.07(5)&#13;
On page 9, the sentence&#13;
beginning line 3 and ending on&#13;
line 5 should be deleted.&#13;
Comment: We are opposed to&#13;
taking away credit for academic&#13;
work already completed, and for&#13;
an entire semester. Since the&#13;
diploma can be withheld pending&#13;
decision on the charges, the&#13;
would-be graduating senior can&#13;
have his right to the diploma&#13;
suspended for one or more&#13;
semesters thereafter-and this&#13;
would have sufficient punitive&#13;
effect.&#13;
17.08 STUDENT CONDUCT&#13;
HEARING TRIBUNAL, CAMPUS&#13;
OPTION&#13;
Sec. 17.08(1)&#13;
The first two lines of text&#13;
should read:&#13;
The Campus Student Conduct&#13;
Hearing Tribunal may be constituted&#13;
by the Chancellor, after&#13;
consultation with the elected&#13;
Committee which serves as the&#13;
faculty's executive arm, and with&#13;
the elected officers of the principal&#13;
student organization, in one&#13;
of two ways:&#13;
Comment: The change is to&#13;
insure input from faculty and&#13;
students on the Chancellor's&#13;
decision concerning the nature of&#13;
the Tribunal.&#13;
17.11 INTERMEDIATE APPEALS,&#13;
CAMPUS OPTION&#13;
Sec. 17.11&#13;
The first two lines of text&#13;
should read:&#13;
(1) The Chancellor of each&#13;
campus, is authorized but not&#13;
required by this section, after&#13;
consultation with the elected&#13;
Committee which serves as the&#13;
faculty's executive arm, and with&#13;
the elected officers of the principal&#13;
student organization, to&#13;
establish appellate tribunals.&#13;
Comment: This change is to&#13;
insure faculty and student input&#13;
on the Chancellor's decision&#13;
concerning tribunals for intermediate&#13;
appeals.&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN&#13;
SYSTEM&#13;
STUDENT DISCIPLINARY&#13;
PROCEDURES&#13;
CHAPTER UWS 17.&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN SYSTEM.&#13;
STUDENT DISCIPLINARY PROCEDURES&#13;
CHAPTER UWS 17.&#13;
17.01 POLICY STATEMENT. The Board of&#13;
Regents of the University of Wisconsin&#13;
System adopts the following policy on the&#13;
standards and procedures for student&#13;
discipline in the University System,&#13;
acknowledging both the need to preserve the&#13;
orderly processes of the University with&#13;
regard to its teaching, r esearch, and public&#13;
service missions, as well as the need to&#13;
observe the student's procedural and sub&#13;
stantive rights.&#13;
17 02 DEFINITIONS. (1) "Chancellor"&#13;
where used in the chapter shall mean the&#13;
chancellor or his designee.&#13;
(2) "Investigating officer" means in&#13;
vestigating officer or his designee.&#13;
(3) "Student," for the purposes of this&#13;
chapter, means any person who is registered&#13;
for study in a ny institution in t he University&#13;
for the current academic period. A person&#13;
shall be considered a student during any&#13;
period which follows the end of an academic&#13;
pe riod which the student has complet ed until&#13;
the last day for registra tion tor the next&#13;
paid for by PSGA&#13;
te en (14) calendar days have elapsed afte r&#13;
the commencement of cl asses for the next&#13;
succeeding academic period, whichever&#13;
occurs first.&#13;
(4) "Disciplinary sanction" or "sanction"'&#13;
shall mean any action affecting the status of&#13;
an individual as a student which is taken by&#13;
the University in response to student&#13;
misconduct. The term shall include&#13;
probation, resignation or leave for&#13;
misconduct, cutt off or revocation of student&#13;
financial aids, suspension or expulsion,&#13;
removal from the course with no grade&#13;
assigned in cases of academic misconduct,&#13;
and other less severe actions not&#13;
enumerated herein. Disciplinary sanctions&#13;
do not include academic responses as&#13;
de fined in sec. 17.02(8).&#13;
(5) "Probation" rpeans that the student is&#13;
permitted to remain enrolled in the&#13;
University only upon condition that he&#13;
comply with all University rules or&#13;
regulations or with other standards of&#13;
conduct which the student is directed to&#13;
observe for the duration of the period of the&#13;
probation and which may include loss of&#13;
student privilege s except those of attending&#13;
classes and writing examinations. Probation&#13;
may not exceed two semesters in duration&#13;
for any given misconduct, except that&#13;
violation of probationary conditions shall be&#13;
cause for extension of the probation for more&#13;
than two additional semesters or for&#13;
suspension or expulsion.&#13;
(6) "Suspension" means a temporary loss&#13;
of student status for a specified period of&#13;
time, not to exceed two years, with resultant&#13;
loss of all student rights and privileges. Upon&#13;
completion of suspension, the student shall&#13;
have the same standing to re-enroll as he&#13;
would have had if no suspension had been&#13;
imposed.&#13;
(7) "Expulsion" means termination of&#13;
student status with resultant loss of all&#13;
student rights and privileges.&#13;
(8) "Academic response" means formal&#13;
actions which may be taken by an instructor&#13;
in response to academic misconduct. Such&#13;
actions are limited to reduction of grade for&#13;
the assignment or examination in question&#13;
(to a lower passing grade or to a failure),&#13;
required performance of additional work, or&#13;
some combination thereof.&#13;
(9) "Instructor" for the purposes of this&#13;
chapter means the faculty member who has&#13;
responsibility for the overall conduct of a&#13;
course and ultimate responsibility for the&#13;
assignment of the grade for the course.&#13;
17.03 RIGHT TO PETITION FOR&#13;
READMISSION. A student who has been&#13;
expelled or suspended may petition for&#13;
readmission. The petition must be in writing&#13;
and directed to the chancellor of the campus&#13;
which initiated, the charges for which the&#13;
student was suspended or expelled. Such&#13;
petition may. not be filed before the expiration&#13;
of one year from the date of the final&#13;
determination in expt/lsion cases, or before&#13;
the expiration of one half of the suspension&#13;
period in suspension cases.&#13;
17.04 EFFECT OF DISCIPLINE WITHIN&#13;
THE UNIVERSITY SYSTEM. Suspension or&#13;
expulsion shall be syst emwide in effect. A&#13;
student who is s uspended or expelled from&#13;
one institution in the University of Wisconsin&#13;
System may not enroll in another institution&#13;
in the System unless the suspension has&#13;
expired by its own terms or one year has&#13;
elapsed after the student has been suspended&#13;
or expelled.&#13;
17.05 SYSTEMWIDE DISCIPLINARY&#13;
AUTHORITY. The chancellor and investigating&#13;
officer for the institution at&#13;
which a student was enrolled at the time that&#13;
acts in violation of this chapter were alleged&#13;
to have been committed by the student shall&#13;
have authority to institute disciplinary&#13;
proceedings against such student, notwithstanding&#13;
that the institution against&#13;
which the acts were alleged to have been&#13;
committed is not the same institution at&#13;
which the student was enrolled at the time of&#13;
the commission of such acts.&#13;
17.06 OFFENSES DEFINED. (1) The&#13;
University may discipline a student in&#13;
nonacademic matters in the following&#13;
situations. For the purposes of this section,&#13;
the term "intentional conduct" shall include&#13;
conduct which the student knew or&#13;
reasonably should have known would result&#13;
in occurrences prohibited by this section.&#13;
(a) For intentional conduct that seriously&#13;
damages or destroys University property or&#13;
attempts to seriously damage or destroy&#13;
University property.&#13;
(b) For intentional conduct which constitutes&#13;
a serious danger to the personal&#13;
safety of other members of the University&#13;
community. In order to illustrate the types of&#13;
conduct which this paragraph is designed to&#13;
cover, the following examples are set forth.&#13;
These examples are not meant to illustrate&#13;
the only situations or types of conduct in&#13;
tended to be covered.&#13;
1. A student would be in violation if h e&#13;
attacked or threw rocks or other objects at&#13;
law enforcement personnel whos e services&#13;
had been retained or called for to protect&#13;
membe rs of the University community or&#13;
University property, or if he incited others to&#13;
do so when he knew or reasonably should&#13;
have known that such conduct would result.&#13;
2. A student would be in violation if h e&#13;
sold or delivered a controlled substance as&#13;
de fined by the Wisconsin Uniform Controlled&#13;
Substances Act (ch. 161, Wis. Stats.) or if h e&#13;
possessed a controlled substance with intent&#13;
to sell or deliver. For the purposes of this&#13;
example, possession of amounts of controlled&#13;
substances larger than are likely to&#13;
be consumed by one individual in one week,&#13;
possession of several hypodermic needles or&#13;
other equipment commonly used for con&#13;
sumption of controlled substances, or&#13;
possession of a substantial quantity of bags&#13;
or other containers for repackaging, or other&#13;
.&#13;
c h e r&#13;
"icals commonly used for mixing with&#13;
controlled substances, would constitute&#13;
prima facie evidence that the student in&#13;
tended to sell or deliver the controlled&#13;
substance in his possession. For the purposes&#13;
of this section "delivery" shall be&#13;
defined as a delivery prohibited by ch. 161,&#13;
Wis. Stats.&#13;
3. A student would be in violation if h e&#13;
removed, tampered with, or otherwise&#13;
rendered useless University equipment or&#13;
property intended for use in preserving or&#13;
protecting the safety of members of the&#13;
University community such as fire exit&#13;
signs, extinguishers, alarms, or hoses, first&#13;
aid equipment, or emergency telephones, or&#13;
if h e obstructed or caused to be inoperable&#13;
fire escape routes such as stairwells or&#13;
elevators.&#13;
(c) For intentional c onduct that obstructs&#13;
or seriously impairs or attempts to obstruct&#13;
or seriously impair University-run or&#13;
University-authorized activities on any&#13;
campus, including activities either outdoors&#13;
or inside a classroom, office, lecture hall,&#13;
library, laboratory, theater, union,&#13;
residence hall, or other place where a&#13;
University-run or University-authorized &#13;
activity is carried on. The kind of intentional&#13;
conduct referred to is conduct which by itself&#13;
or in conjunction with the conduct of others&#13;
prevents the effective carrying on of the&#13;
activity—a result which the student knew or&#13;
reasonably should have known would occur.&#13;
In order to illustrate types of conduct which&#13;
this paragraph is designed to cover, the&#13;
following examples are set out. These&#13;
examples are not meant to illustrate the only&#13;
situations or types of conduct intended to be&#13;
covered.&#13;
1. A student would be in violation if he&#13;
participated in conduct which he knew or&#13;
should have known would prevent or block&#13;
physical entry to, or exit from, a University&#13;
building, corridor, or room to anyone apparently&#13;
entitled to enter or leave in connection&#13;
with a University-run or Universityauthorized&#13;
activity.&#13;
2. A student would be in violation if, in&#13;
attending a speech or program on campus&#13;
sponsored by or with permission of the&#13;
University, he engaged in shouted interruptions,&#13;
whistling, derisive laughter, or&#13;
other means which by itself or in conjunction&#13;
with the conduct of others prevented or&#13;
seriously interfered with a fair hearing of the&#13;
speech or program.&#13;
3. A student would be in violation if in a&#13;
classroom he used techniques similar to&#13;
those specified in the preceding paragraph,&#13;
or filibuster-type tactics or other tactics,&#13;
which by themselves or in conjunction with&#13;
the conduct of others, prevented or seriously&#13;
interfered with the carrying on of the&#13;
teaching and learning process.&#13;
4. A student would be in violation if he&#13;
obstructed a University official or employee&#13;
engaged in the lawful performance of his&#13;
duties.&#13;
5. A student would be in violation if he or&#13;
she removed pages from library books or&#13;
other materials or caused books or materials&#13;
to be unavailable for use by others by&#13;
removing the materials from their proper&#13;
place without proper authorization or by&#13;
hiding the materials in the library so that&#13;
they are not available in the usual manner to&#13;
persons wishing to use the materials.&#13;
(d) For conviction by a court of a crime, or&#13;
of violation of a municipal ordinance based&#13;
on a crime, if the crime or other offense (i)&#13;
involved the use of (or assistance to others in&#13;
the use of) force, disruption, or the seizure of&#13;
property under the control of the University,&#13;
(ii) was committed with intent to prevent&#13;
employees or students at the University&#13;
from engaging in their duties or pursuing&#13;
their studies, (iii) was of a serious nature,&#13;
and (iv) contributed to a substantial&#13;
disruption of the administration of the&#13;
University.&#13;
)e) For unauthorized possession of&#13;
University property or property of another&#13;
member of the University community.&#13;
(f) For acts which constitute a violation of&#13;
any provision of the University of Wisconsin&#13;
System Administrative Code.&#13;
For making a knowingly false statement,&#13;
either orally or in writing, to any university&#13;
employee or agent on a university-related&#13;
matter.&#13;
(2) The University may discipline a&#13;
student for academic dishonesty. Academic&#13;
dishonesty includes the following examples&#13;
as well as other closely similar conduct&#13;
aimed at making false representation with&#13;
respect to a student's academic performance.&#13;
&#13;
(a) Cheating on an examination;&#13;
(b) Collaborating with others in work to be&#13;
presented, contrary to the stated rules of the&#13;
course;&#13;
(c) Plagiarizing, including the submission&#13;
of others' ideas or papers (whether purchased,&#13;
borrowed or otherwise obtained) as&#13;
one's own;&#13;
(d) Stealing examination or course&#13;
materials;&#13;
(e) Falsifying records, or laboratory or&#13;
other data;&#13;
(f) Submitting if contrary to the rules of a&#13;
course, work previously presented in&#13;
another course;&#13;
(g) Participating in any arrangement&#13;
whereby any work, classroom performance,&#13;
examination or other activity is submitted or&#13;
performed by a person who is not the same&#13;
student under whose name the work is&#13;
submitted or performed.&#13;
17.07 DISCIPLINARY PROCEDURE. (1)&#13;
The chancellor of each institution shall&#13;
designate a person as "investigating officer"&#13;
who shall investigate cases of student&#13;
conduct alleged to be in violation of Sees.&#13;
17.06( 1) and 17.06(2) of this chapter. Where it&#13;
appears that a violation has occurred, the&#13;
investigating officer shall proceed in accordance&#13;
with the provisions of this chapter.&#13;
. (2) Formal adjudication. If the maximum&#13;
sanction sought by the investigating officer&#13;
includes suspension or expulsion, the&#13;
procedures in sec. 17.09 of this chapter shall&#13;
apply and the investigating officer shall&#13;
cause a statement of charges to be prepared&#13;
and served upon the student involved. The&#13;
statement of charges shall contain:&#13;
(a) A concise summary-giving dates,&#13;
time, place, and events--of the facts or&#13;
conduct on which the charge is based.&#13;
(b) A citation to and quotation from the&#13;
rule(s) alleged to have been violated.&#13;
(c) A statement of the maximum&#13;
penalty sought by the investigating officer.&#13;
(d) An explanation of the consequences&#13;
of failure to answer the statement of&#13;
charges.&#13;
(e) Statements as to whether the ad&#13;
ministrator will or will not be represented by&#13;
counsel and that the student may be&#13;
represented by a person of his choice, in&#13;
eluding legal counsel, at his own expense.&#13;
(f) A copy of this chapter.&#13;
(3) Informal adjudication. If the&#13;
maximum penalty sought by the in&#13;
vestigating officer does not include&#13;
suspension or expulsion, the investigating&#13;
officer may adjudicate the matter and&#13;
'mpose appropriate disciplinary sanctions&#13;
without reference to sec. 17.09 of this&#13;
chapter, except that if adjudication in this&#13;
manner would result in disqualifying the&#13;
student for financial aids, the procedures in&#13;
sec. 17.09 shall apply. In adjudications under&#13;
'his section, the student (i) may be&#13;
represented by a person of his choice, in-&#13;
.eluding legal counsel, at his own expense.&#13;
&lt;ii) shall be afforded written notice of the&#13;
offense with which he is charged and of the&#13;
facts or conduct on which that charge is&#13;
based and (iii) shall be afforded advance&#13;
written notice of and an opportunity for a&#13;
hearing at which the evidence against the&#13;
student shall be reviewed and at which the&#13;
student shall have an opportunity to present&#13;
evidence and argument, including a written&#13;
statement, to refute the charge. The&#13;
evidence reviewed at such a hearing shall be&#13;
summarized in writing and preserved by the&#13;
mvestigating officer as part of the student's&#13;
disciplinary file.&#13;
asSH,:&#13;
informal adiud.cation, or after a statement&#13;
of charges has been served but prior to a&#13;
hearing provided in accordance wi°h sec&#13;
sssress?*&#13;
Wi?h th1\&#13;
S. f deems appropria&#13;
te consistent&#13;
with the statement of charges; provided&#13;
however, the student may, within ten (10)&#13;
days a,,er receiving notice of the&#13;
imposition of such sanction, request a&#13;
hearing as provided by sec. 17.07 of this&#13;
cnapter.&#13;
limit' m°VhL&#13;
nKt&#13;
C°&#13;
n&#13;
l&#13;
ained in this chapter shall&#13;
stMHolt H administration and the&#13;
student during an investigation of alleged&#13;
misconduct, during informal adjudication,&#13;
or after a statement of charges has been&#13;
theul f&#13;
9&#13;
'&#13;
66 ,0 9 disciplinar&#13;
V sanction if&#13;
nL h ?. a9rees not t0 con,est 'he charges&#13;
IhLlf k n&#13;
° con,es,&#13;
"&#13;
)&#13;
-&#13;
Any such agreement&#13;
^„nL 1 r6dUCed t0 writin9 which&#13;
' ^hen signed by the student, shall conclude the&#13;
case.&#13;
(5) Whenever charges or appeals under&#13;
this chapter are pending, a student under&#13;
charges, unless temporarily suspended&#13;
pursuant to sec. 17.12 of this chapter, shall&#13;
continue to have the same rights and&#13;
privileges accorded other students&#13;
However, grades, records, transcripts, or&#13;
diplomas may be withheld pending final&#13;
determination of the charges; current&#13;
!.&#13;
ranSCrip,S may be issoed with the notation&#13;
Disciplinary Charges Pending" on the face&#13;
thereof.&#13;
(6) Service of notice or decisions. Each&#13;
student shall be responsible for maintaining&#13;
on file with the office specified by each in&#13;
stitution his current school and permanent&#13;
home addresses. Notification of these ad&#13;
dresses shall be in writing.&#13;
(a) For service of a statement of charges&#13;
under sec. 17.07 (2) and of actions taken&#13;
pursuant to sec. 17.09, copies shall be served&#13;
in person or by certified, return-receiptrequested&#13;
mail to both the student's campus&#13;
and permanent home address. Where service&#13;
is by mail, the date of mailing shall be&#13;
the date of service.&#13;
(b) For informal adjudications pursuant to&#13;
sec. 17.07(3), correspondence and notices&#13;
may be served in person or by mail to the&#13;
student's campus address. Where service is&#13;
by mail, the date of mailing shall be the date&#13;
of service.&#13;
17.08(1) STUDENT CONDUCT HEARING&#13;
TRIBUNAL: CAMPUS OPTION. The&#13;
Campus Student Conduct Hearing Tribunal&#13;
may be constituted in one of two manners:&#13;
(a) A hearing examiner appointed by the&#13;
chancellor upon the filing of charges under&#13;
sec. 17.07(2) asking suspension or expulsion.&#13;
The hearing examiner shall be appointed&#13;
from among qualified personnel of the&#13;
various state agencies or other qualified&#13;
residents of the state with experience in&#13;
conducting hearings. If an examiner is an&#13;
employee of a state agency other than the&#13;
University, his appointment must be approved&#13;
by the head of the agency by which he&#13;
is regularly employed, and the University&#13;
shall reimburse such agency for the salary&#13;
of the examiner and shall pay expenses&#13;
incidental to his duties for the University.&#13;
The examiner remains the employee of the&#13;
agency by which he is regularly employed.&#13;
The appointment of the hearing examiner&#13;
from other state agencies shall be in compliance&#13;
with sees. 1 .24 and 20.901, Wis. Stats,&#13;
(1971) If the examiner is not an employee of&#13;
a state agency other than the University,&#13;
appropriate arrangements for compensation&#13;
and reimbursement for expenses shall be&#13;
made by the chancellor; or&#13;
(b) A student Conduct Hearing Committee&#13;
established in accordance with the chancellor's&#13;
published regulations. The presiding&#13;
officer of the Committee shall be appointed&#13;
by the chancellor.&#13;
(2) Campus disciplinary procedures&#13;
promulgated by each campus chancellor,&#13;
after consultation with appropriate students&#13;
and faculty, pursuant to this chapter shall&#13;
provide for a campus Student Conduct&#13;
Hearing Tribunal either as constituted in&#13;
sec. 17.08(1) (a) or as in sec. 17.08(l)(b);&#13;
however, in the alternative, the chancellor&#13;
may provide in the campus disciplinary&#13;
procedures that, upon the filing of charges&#13;
under sec. 17.07(2) asking for suspension or&#13;
expulsion, the student shall be offered the&#13;
choiceof having his case heard by a tribunal&#13;
described by either 17.08(l)(a) or (b) above.&#13;
If such option is available, the student shall&#13;
be informed in writing of his right to choose&#13;
the type of tribunal at the time charges are&#13;
filed. At the time a request for a hearing is&#13;
made under sec. 17.09(1), the student shall&#13;
also notify the chancellor of his choice; in the&#13;
event timely notice is not received from the&#13;
student, the chancellor shall decide which&#13;
choice shall be used for- adjudication of the&#13;
case.&#13;
17.09 DISCIPLINE INVOLVING&#13;
SUSPENSION OR EXPULSION. (1) A&#13;
student charged in accordance with section&#13;
17.07(2) has ten (10) calendar days from the&#13;
day of service to request a hearing in accordance&#13;
with this section. The request for a&#13;
hearing shall be in writing directed to the&#13;
chancellor and shall also include an answer&#13;
to the statement of charges which shall&#13;
specifically admit, deny, or explain each of&#13;
the facts alleged in the statement of charges&#13;
unless the student is without knowledge in&#13;
which case he shall so state, such statement&#13;
being a denial. If an answer is filed which&#13;
doesnot specifically admit, deny, or explain&#13;
every allegation in the statement of charges,&#13;
those allegations which are not admitted,&#13;
denied, or explained shall be deemed denied.&#13;
An answer which denies some or all of the&#13;
allegations but which does not request a&#13;
hearing shall be construed as a r.equest for a&#13;
hearing.&#13;
(2) If the student does not file an answer to&#13;
the statement of charges in accordance with&#13;
sec. 17.09(1), the allegations ir. the statement&#13;
of charges shall be accepted as true and the&#13;
administration may proceed to expel,&#13;
suspend, or impose other punishment on the&#13;
student unless good cause to the contrary is&#13;
shown. The sanction imposed may not ex&#13;
ceed that specified in the statement of&#13;
charges. Notice of such action shall be&#13;
served on the student and become effective&#13;
upon service in accordance with section&#13;
17.07 ( 6).&#13;
(3) When a request for a hearing is made,&#13;
the case shall be referred by the chancellor&#13;
to the Student Conduct Hearing Tribunal&#13;
established in accordance with sec. 17.08 of&#13;
this chapter. Notice of referral to a Hearing&#13;
Tribunal shall be sent to the student. The&#13;
student shall also be notified of the name and&#13;
addressof the person who will present the&#13;
administration's case to the Tribunal.&#13;
(4) Hearing, procedure.&#13;
(a) In this section, "presiding officer"&#13;
fn!i m,tT„&#13;
,he hearir|9 examiner appointed&#13;
th» s. L &lt;' &gt; (a), or the presiding officer of&#13;
«Lki ? Conduct Hearing Committee,&#13;
established in sec. 17.08(l)(b). "Tribunalshall&#13;
mean the hearing examiner appointed&#13;
in sec. 17.08(1)(a) or the Student Conduct&#13;
17 08&#13;
r&lt;aHb)&#13;
:Ommi,tee es,ablished in sec&#13;
(b) Duties of the presiding officer.&#13;
'- Take custody of the case file and papers.&#13;
2. Schedule hearings in accordance with&#13;
these rules.&#13;
3. issue subpoenas and administer oaths.&#13;
Rule upon offers of proof and receive&#13;
relevant evidence.&#13;
5. Regulate the course of the hearing,&#13;
dispose of motions, procedural matters or&#13;
requests, and, if appropriate or necessary,&#13;
order the investigating officer to commence&#13;
disciplinary proceedings against students&#13;
who unreasonably obstruct or impair the&#13;
Tribunal's proceedings in its presence,&#13;
6. Schedule filing of briefs and proposed&#13;
findings by the student and the administration.&#13;
&#13;
7. Produce a summary of the evidence.&#13;
8. Take any other actions necessary to&#13;
conduct the hearing.&#13;
(c) Duties and powers of the Tribunal.&#13;
Individual members of the Tribunal:&#13;
1. May challenge any ruling by the&#13;
presiding officer and may, by majority vote,&#13;
overrule such ruling but such matters unless&#13;
otherwise convenient should be decided in&#13;
closed session.&#13;
2. Shall, by majority vote, render written&#13;
findings of fact, decision, and disciplinary&#13;
sanction which does not exceed that&#13;
specified by the statement of charges.&#13;
3. May examine witnesses.&#13;
(d) Evidence. Evidence having reasonable&#13;
probative value shall be admitted, but&#13;
irrelevant, immaterial and unduly&#13;
repetitious evidence shall be excluded. The&#13;
presiding officer and the Tribunal are not&#13;
bound by cmoon law or statutory rules of&#13;
evidence.&#13;
(e) Burden of Proof. The burden of proof&#13;
shall be on the administration to establish by&#13;
a preponderance of the credible evidence&#13;
that conduct violative of University rules&#13;
occurred.&#13;
(f) Issues: Prior Criminal Proceedings.&#13;
Where the basis of the charge is conduct for&#13;
which the student has been convicted in&#13;
criminal proceedings, the administration&#13;
may introduce a certified copy of the&#13;
judgment of the conviction. The judgment of&#13;
conviction shall constitute presumptive&#13;
evidence of the commission of those acts&#13;
alleged and proven in the criminal&#13;
proceedings.&#13;
(g) Record of the hearings. A record of the&#13;
testimony and a file of the exhibits shall be&#13;
made of all hearings conducted in accordance&#13;
with this section. Either party&#13;
may, at its own expense, have the record&#13;
transcribed.&#13;
(h) Procedural rights of the student. The&#13;
student shall have the right to confront and&#13;
cross examine witnesses against him, the&#13;
right to present evidence and to be heard on&#13;
his own behalf, the right to be represented by&#13;
counsel at his own expense, and the right to a&#13;
transcript of the proceedings at his own&#13;
expense.&#13;
(i) Public hearings. Hearings to receive&#13;
evidence or hear argument shall be public&#13;
unless the student whose case is being heard&#13;
requests a closed hearing or the Tribunal&#13;
determines in extraordinary circumstances&#13;
that it is necessary to hold a closed hearing,&#13;
pursuant to sec. 66.77 (3)(3), Wis. Stats., to&#13;
avoid unduly damaging the reputation of&#13;
innocent persons. A record shall be made of&#13;
the reasons for closing any hearing. The&#13;
deliberations of the Tribunal shall not be&#13;
public.&#13;
(j) Schedule of hearings. The presiding&#13;
officer shall schedule the hearing as expeditiously&#13;
as possible. The hearing shall be&#13;
held on the date scheduled, except for good&#13;
cause shown.&#13;
(k) Failure to proceed. Failure of a party&#13;
to proceed shall constitute default. The&#13;
Tribunal may either dismiss the charges, or&#13;
, upon a prima facie showing, find that the&#13;
student committed the conduct alleged.&#13;
(1) Decision.&#13;
1. The tribunal's decision shall be rendered&#13;
in writing within ten (10) calendar days after&#13;
the close of the hearing, or within ten (10)&#13;
calendar days after a written transcript is.&#13;
available if one of the parties requests a&#13;
transcript pursuant to sec. 17.09(4)(g), and&#13;
shall consist of a summary of the evidence,&#13;
findings of fact, decision, and specification&#13;
of the disciplinary sanction which does not&#13;
exceed the specified in the statement of&#13;
charges.&#13;
2. The Tribunal's decision shall be served&#13;
on the student in accordance with sec.&#13;
17.07(6) and on the chancellor's office.&#13;
3. The Tribunal's decision shall become&#13;
final ten(10) calendar days after service on&#13;
the student unless a timely appeal is filed&#13;
pursuant to sees. 17.10 or 17.11 of this&#13;
chapter.&#13;
17.10 APPEAL TO THE BOARD OF&#13;
REGENTS. (1) The student or ad&#13;
ministration may appeal on the record to the&#13;
Committee on Student Discipline of the&#13;
Board of Regents. Said appeal must be filed&#13;
within ten (10) calendar days of service upon&#13;
the party of the decision appealed from and&#13;
shall consist of written exceptions to the&#13;
decision's findings of fact, decision, or&#13;
disciplinary sanction.&#13;
(2) Upon receipt of the appeal and written&#13;
exceptions, the Secretary of the Board shall&#13;
transmit the written exceptions to the&#13;
chairman of the Committee and shall cause&#13;
the person with custody of the decision(s),&#13;
file, exhibits, and transcript or recording of&#13;
the hearing(s) to transmit them to the&#13;
chairman of the Committee.&#13;
(3) If exceptions are filed under sec.&#13;
17.10(1), the Committee shall afford the&#13;
parties an opportunity to file briefs and&#13;
present oral argument.&#13;
(4) The Committee shall render written&#13;
findings of fact, decision, and disciplinary&#13;
sanction which does not exceed that&#13;
specified by the statement of charges.&#13;
(5) The Committee's decision shall&#13;
become final upon service upon the student&#13;
in accordance with sec. 17.07(6).&#13;
(6) The Board of Regents reserves&#13;
jurisdiction to review, upon its own motion,&#13;
any disciplinary action against a student.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 22, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
17.11 INTERMEDIATE APPEALS:&#13;
.CAMPUS OPTION. (1) The chancellor of&#13;
each campus is authorized, but not required&#13;
by this section, to establish appellate&#13;
tribunals as part of the campus student&#13;
disciplinary procedure to hear appeals from&#13;
decisions rendered in accordance with sec.&#13;
17.09. Such tribunals may include review by&#13;
(i) an all student, student faculty, or all&#13;
faculty committee, and or (ii) review by the&#13;
chancellor.&#13;
(2) An appeal to an appellate tribunal&#13;
must be filed within ten (10) calendar days of&#13;
service upon the party of the decision ap&#13;
pealed from and shall consist of written&#13;
exceptions to the findings of fact, decision, or&#13;
disciplinary sanction.&#13;
(3) The parties shall have an opportunity&#13;
to file briefs and present oral argument.&#13;
Appeals shall be heard as soon as practicable&#13;
but no later than seven (7) calendar&#13;
days after the written exceptions are filed in&#13;
accordance with sec. 17.11(2)'.&#13;
(4) A record shall be made of appellate&#13;
tribunal proceedings.&#13;
(5) Appellate decisions shall be rendered&#13;
within five (5) calendar days of the hearing&#13;
and shall consist of a summary of the&#13;
evidence, written findings of fact, decision,&#13;
and disciplinary sanction which shall in no&#13;
event be more severe than the sanction&#13;
imposed by the Student Conduct Hearing&#13;
Tribunal.&#13;
(6) Appellate decisions shall become final&#13;
ten(lO) calendar days after service upon the&#13;
student in accordance with sec. 17.07(6)&#13;
unless a timely appeal is filed either under&#13;
this section, if further appeal is available, or&#13;
under sec. 17.10.&#13;
(7) The chancellor shall promulgate and&#13;
publish written appeal procedures which are&#13;
not inconsistent with this chapter.&#13;
(8) The student shall have the right at any&#13;
time to appeal to the Regents in accordance&#13;
with sec. 17,10. Intermediate appellate&#13;
proceedings shall be terminated, immediately&#13;
upon the appellate tribunal's&#13;
receipt of notice from the student that an&#13;
appeal to the Regents has been filed.&#13;
17.12 TEMPORARY SUSPENSION. (1) A&#13;
student may be temporarily suspended by&#13;
the investigating officer pending final action&#13;
on the charges against him if his continued&#13;
presence on campus would constitute a&#13;
potential for serious harm to himself or to&#13;
the safety of other members of the&#13;
University community or of University&#13;
property.&#13;
Except as otherwise provided in sec.&#13;
17.12(3), the student shall be afforded an&#13;
opportunity for a preliminary hearing prior&#13;
to imposition of the temporary suspension.&#13;
In order to illustrate the types of conduct&#13;
which warrant temporary suspension, the&#13;
following examples are set forth. These&#13;
examples are not meant to illustrate the only&#13;
situations or types of conduct intended to be&#13;
covered.&#13;
(a) A student who was arrested and&#13;
charged with possession of controlled substances&#13;
with intent to deliver was discovered&#13;
to have large quantities of LSD, heroin,&#13;
methamphetamines, or barbiturates in his&#13;
university dormitory room.&#13;
(b) A student who was arrested for&#13;
throwing a fire bomb into a University&#13;
classroom building.&#13;
(c) A student who assaulted another&#13;
student in the student union was arrested for&#13;
engaging in conduct regardless of human&#13;
life.&#13;
(d) A student whose behavior was judged&#13;
by a psychiatrist to be psychotic, posing a&#13;
threat to the safety of himself or others.&#13;
(2) Before a temporary suspension may be&#13;
imposed, the investigating officer shall&#13;
make an initial evaluation of the reliability&#13;
of the information received and make such&#13;
further investigation as circumstances&#13;
permit. If the investigating officer concludes&#13;
that the conduct alleged warrants temporary&#13;
suspension of the student, he shall&#13;
notify the student of his intention to temporarily&#13;
suspend him and, at the earliest&#13;
practicable opportunity, provide the student&#13;
with an opportunity to be heard.&#13;
(3) The investigating officer shall maintain&#13;
records of all attempts to notify the&#13;
student in accordance with sec. 17.12(2),&#13;
and, if all reasonable efforts to notify the&#13;
student are unsuccessful, the investigating&#13;
officer may impose the temporary&#13;
suspension without a preliminary hearing,&#13;
provided, however, attempts to notify the&#13;
student continue, and the student is afforded&#13;
a preliminary hearing at the earliest&#13;
practicable opportunity.&#13;
(4) Preliminary hearing.&#13;
(a) The preliminary hearing shall be held&#13;
as soon as practicable.&#13;
(b) At the hearing, the student shall be&#13;
given a statement of charges as required by&#13;
sec. 17.07(2) (a) and (b) and a summary of&#13;
the reason(s) for concluding that the alleged&#13;
conduct warrants temporary suspension.&#13;
(c) The issues shall be limited to con&#13;
sideration of the reliability of the evidence&#13;
against the student and whether the alleged&#13;
conduct warrants temporary suspension.&#13;
(d) The investigating officer's decision&#13;
may be rendered orally but shall be con&#13;
firmed in writing, as soon as practicable.&#13;
The decision must be supported by credible&#13;
evidence which is sufficient to indicate that&#13;
there is probably cause to believe that the&#13;
student engaged in the alleged conduct and&#13;
that such conduct warrants temporary&#13;
suspension.&#13;
(5) Appeal. The decision of the in&#13;
vestigating officer may be appealed in&#13;
writing to the chancellor who shall, as soon&#13;
as practicable, afford the student an opportunity&#13;
to be heard.&#13;
(6) Accelerated hearing. The hearing on&#13;
the charges as required by sec. 17.09 of this&#13;
chapter shall be commenced not later than&#13;
fifteen (15) calendar days after the im&#13;
p sition of the temporary suspension unless&#13;
the student requests a delay of the hearing&#13;
and continuation of the temporary&#13;
suspension until a later date.&#13;
17.13 PROCEDURES FOR ACADEMIC&#13;
MISCONDUCT. (1) The faculty and chancellor,&#13;
in consultation with appropriate&#13;
students, shall by written regulation&#13;
establish procedures for adjudicating&#13;
alleged violations of sec. 17.06(2). Such&#13;
regulations shall provide for an initial&#13;
conference and a hearing before an&#13;
Academic Misconduct Hearing Tribunal&#13;
whose procedures are not inconsistent with&#13;
the provisions of this section.&#13;
(2) Initial conference; student enrolled in&#13;
course.&#13;
(a) When the instructor for a course&#13;
believes that a student enrolled in that&#13;
course has committed acts in violation of&#13;
sec. 17.06(2), the instructor shall promptly&#13;
schedule an initial conference with the&#13;
student in accordance with this section. The&#13;
purpose of the conference shall be to review&#13;
the evidence against the student and to&#13;
review the evidence and argument&#13;
presented by the student in his or her defense&#13;
and to review the appropriateness of the&#13;
academic response and or disciplinary&#13;
sanction which may be imposed by the in&#13;
structor if, after the conference, he or she&#13;
believes that the student has violated sec.&#13;
17.06(2). The instructor and the student may&#13;
each be accompanied at the initial conference&#13;
by one person of their choice.&#13;
(b) Notice. Reasonably in advance of the&#13;
initial conference, the instructor shall inform&#13;
the student in writing of the alleged&#13;
offense and of the facts or conduct on which&#13;
that allegation is based. The student shall be&#13;
Informed of the date, time and place of the&#13;
initial conference. This notice shall be&#13;
served on the student in accordance with&#13;
sec. 17.07(6) (a) and shall be accompanied by&#13;
a copy of this chapter and a copy of the institution's&#13;
implementing regulations.&#13;
(c) Academic response or disciplinary&#13;
sanction imposed by the instrucotr. The&#13;
instructor may give the student a written&#13;
reprimand and-or remove the student from&#13;
the course; if the instructor believes that the&#13;
student should be considered for more&#13;
serious disciplinary sanctions, the instructor&#13;
may request the Investigating officer to&#13;
proceed in accordance with sec. 17.07. The&#13;
instructor may also impose an academic&#13;
response if the student's own academic&#13;
performance was affected by the academic&#13;
misconduct. An academic response may not&#13;
be imposed where the student's own&#13;
academic performance was not affected&#13;
such as in the following instances: (i) the&#13;
student assisted another student to engage in&#13;
academic dishonesty, or (ii) the student&#13;
tole copy of an examination and the theft&#13;
was discovered before the exam so that the&#13;
student did not take the exam. In such cases,&#13;
if the student is enrolled in the course, the&#13;
instructor may impose the disciplinary&#13;
sanctions permitted by this section or, if the&#13;
student is not enrolled in the course, refer&#13;
the matter to the investigating officer.&#13;
(d) Instructor's decision.&#13;
1. If, after the initial conference, the instructor&#13;
believes that the student has not&#13;
violated sec. 17.06(2), he or she shall so inform&#13;
the student in writing.&#13;
If the instructor believes that the&#13;
student has violated sec. 17.06(2), he or she&#13;
shall Inform the student of his or her decision&#13;
in writing with a copy to the investigating&#13;
officer; such decision shall be served in&#13;
accordance with sec. 17.07(6) (b) and shall&#13;
include (i) a full explanation of the facts on&#13;
which the instructor's conclusions were&#13;
based; (ii) specification of the disciplinary&#13;
sanction or academic response imposed;&#13;
)i'i) further action in the case, if any, which&#13;
the instructor has recommended to the investigating&#13;
officer; and (iv) notice that the&#13;
decision may be appealed to the Academic&#13;
Misconduct Hearing Tribunal.&#13;
(3) Offenses committed by a student not&#13;
enrolled in the course. When the instructor&#13;
for a course believes that acts which violated&#13;
sec. 17.06(2) have been committed by a&#13;
student not enrolled in the course he or she&#13;
shall refer the matter to the investigating&#13;
officer who shall proceed in accordance with&#13;
sec. 17.07.&#13;
(4) Appeal from the instructor's decision.&#13;
The instructor's decision may be appealed to&#13;
the Academic Misconduct Hearing Tribunal&#13;
either as to the issue of whether the student&#13;
did engage in conduct as alleged or as to the&#13;
disciplinary sanction. Appeals shall be in&#13;
writing and must be filed with the office or&#13;
person designated by the campus&#13;
regulations within ten (10) days of service of&#13;
the instructor's decision; while such appeal&#13;
is pending, the academic response and-or&#13;
disciplinary sanction shall be stayed and no&#13;
grade assigned for the course. If the student&#13;
does not file an appeal within ten days of&#13;
service of the instructor's decision, the instructor's&#13;
decision shall become final.&#13;
(5) Academic Misconduct Hearing&#13;
Tribunal.&#13;
(a) Membership. Tribunal membership&#13;
shall be determined in accordance with the&#13;
regulations adopted pursuant to sec.&#13;
17.13(1),&#13;
(b) Jurisdiction. The Tribunal shall hear&#13;
appeals under sec. 17.13(4) and such other&#13;
allegations of violation of sec. 17.06(2) as&#13;
may be brought before it by the investigating&#13;
officer.&#13;
(c) Procedures. Tribunal proceedings&#13;
shall be regulated by the same procedures&#13;
established by sec. 17.09 for Student Conduct&#13;
Hearing Tribunal, except that:&#13;
For cases where the sanction sought&#13;
does not include suspension or expulsion, the&#13;
chancellor's regulations may provide for&#13;
procedures which are less rigorous but&#13;
which provide at least that the student (i)&#13;
may be represented by a person of his or her&#13;
choice, including legal counsel, at his or her&#13;
own expense, (ii) shall be afforded written&#13;
notice of the offense with which he or she is&#13;
charged and of the facts or conduct on which&#13;
that charge is based, (iii) shall be afforded&#13;
advance written notice of and an opportunity&#13;
for a hearing at which the evidence against&#13;
the student shall be reviewed and at which&#13;
the,student shall have an opportunity to&#13;
present evidence and argument, including a&#13;
written statement, to refute the charge, and&#13;
(iv) shall be given a written decision which&#13;
shall include finding of fact and conclusions.&#13;
2. The sanction imposed by the Tribunal&#13;
may not exceed the sanction imposed by the&#13;
instructor unless the case is being heard in&#13;
accordance with sec. 17.13(6) (b), in which&#13;
event it shall not exceed the sanction&#13;
requested by the investigating officer;&#13;
further, the Tribunal may not modify the&#13;
academic response imposed by the in&#13;
structor unless the Tribunal finds that no&#13;
violation of sec. 17.06(2) occurred, in which&#13;
event the instructor shall eliminate any&#13;
academic response which was based on the&#13;
alleged academic misconduct.&#13;
(6) Role of the Investigating Officer with&#13;
regard to academic misconduct. The in&#13;
vestigating officer:&#13;
(a) Shall receive and maintain copies of&#13;
letters sent by instructors in accordance&#13;
with sec. 17.13(2)(d) 2.&#13;
(b) May proceed in accordance with sec.&#13;
17.07, including the filing of charges before&#13;
the Academic Misconduct Hearing Tribunal&#13;
asking for suspension or expulsion.&#13;
1. Where the student alleged to have&#13;
violated sec. 17.06(2) was not enrolled in the&#13;
course against which the offense was&#13;
committed.&#13;
2. Where the violation found by the instructor&#13;
was of such an aggravated nature&#13;
that disciplinary sanctions which could not&#13;
be imposed by the instructor appear to the&#13;
investigating officer to be warranted and not&#13;
more than sixty (6) days have elapsed from&#13;
the filing of the instructor's decision pursuant&#13;
to sec. 17.13(2)(d) 2.&#13;
3. Where there are multiple instances&#13;
shown of a student's academic misconduct&#13;
and not more than sixty (60) days have&#13;
elapsed from the filing of an instructor's&#13;
decision pursuant to sec. 17.13(2) (d) 2 on the&#13;
last instance.&#13;
paid for by PSGA &#13;
6 THE PARKSI DE R A NGER Wed nes day , O c t. 2 2 , 1 9 7 5&#13;
economics —&#13;
continued from p a ge 1&#13;
doned Bong Air Base at Hy. 142&#13;
and 75 in Kenosha County.&#13;
Olson pushed for the Bong site,&#13;
primarily because of the&#13;
disappointment of his constituents&#13;
that hundreds of persons&#13;
were displaced when the&#13;
land was condemned, and that&#13;
the area remained unused when&#13;
the air base was abandoned.&#13;
Olson stated that preliminary&#13;
work at the Bong site was&#13;
finished, there were some sewage&#13;
set-ups, highways, excavation,&#13;
and foundations laid. The already&#13;
state-owned land would not have&#13;
cost the taxpayers any additional&#13;
amount.&#13;
Jim Galbraith, director of&#13;
Planning and Construction at&#13;
Parkside, was in favor of th e Pet&#13;
Springs site. Galbraith spoke of&#13;
the sprawling metropolitan area&#13;
and the need for future lands&#13;
being set aside for an uncrowded&#13;
university. He gave the example&#13;
of the Madison Campus, which in&#13;
1904, a speaker told an astonished&#13;
audience, that enrollment would&#13;
reach 5,000 students. The current&#13;
enrollment is in the 30,000s.&#13;
Galbraith said that current&#13;
projections show that Parkside&#13;
may some day reach 25,000. "We&#13;
were planning a campus that&#13;
could reach that number. At the&#13;
time, growth was projected&#13;
greater than it now is expected,&#13;
but Parkside has still continued&#13;
to grow." Galbraith stated that&#13;
Parkside is the only campus in&#13;
the System which has gained&#13;
students every year in the last&#13;
three years.&#13;
The land west of Hy. JR is not&#13;
being used in an active way very&#13;
much, Galbraith said. It is being&#13;
used in a passive way by allowing&#13;
it to revert back to its original&#13;
state. Parkside has to be one of&#13;
the most beautiful campuses in&#13;
the state," Galbraith said. In the&#13;
future, Galbraith said he envisioned&#13;
the campus as a buffer&#13;
zone, and currently as a longterm&#13;
investment in the future and&#13;
the community.&#13;
Child Care Center&#13;
continued from p a ge 1&#13;
service for several hours only on&#13;
certain days, and this creates&#13;
problems in scheduling. The&#13;
business is sporatic, with some&#13;
hours of the day being filled to&#13;
maximum and some falling far&#13;
short of maximum enrollment.&#13;
The service was opened to the&#13;
general public this fall with the&#13;
hope of ge tting some full or parttime&#13;
users but it was hard to&#13;
schedule for full days when&#13;
certain hours were already&#13;
scheduled for the maximum&#13;
amount of children. Students are&#13;
being urged to schedule children&#13;
for four-hour blocks of time to&#13;
help alleviate the problem.&#13;
Navratil describes the Center&#13;
as a business whose first priority&#13;
is to break even. Right now, the&#13;
service is operating at a deficit,&#13;
with expenses for 1975 exceeding&#13;
income by $569. The Center lost&#13;
$180 last month alone.&#13;
Navratil said, "If we're going&#13;
to meet students' needs, we need&#13;
a consistent source of funding."&#13;
At the present time the Center&#13;
depends largely on the fees&#13;
charged for child care ($2.50 per&#13;
four-hour time block). Among&#13;
other things, this money is used&#13;
to pay for rent and the salaries of&#13;
workers. Personnel receive no&#13;
benefits and are reliant on&#13;
customers to pay fees on time in&#13;
order to draw their salaries.&#13;
The Center, which is listed as a&#13;
student organization, is eligible&#13;
to receive segregated fees which&#13;
amount to $1,700 th is year. Rent&#13;
alone comes to $1,332 per year,&#13;
and segregated fees may not be&#13;
used for this purpose. Navratil&#13;
stressed, though, that the Center&#13;
is very thankful for this allotment.&#13;
&#13;
At present, the Center is trying&#13;
small projects like last week's&#13;
bake sale in order to stay in&#13;
existence. Navratil says of the&#13;
Center, "I think we're providing&#13;
a very vital service and, without&#13;
it, some students wouldn't be able&#13;
to go to school."&#13;
12&#13;
nd National&#13;
Greenbay Rd., Kenosha&#13;
IMP®RT&#13;
N\@T@RSI&#13;
OF RACINE, INC.&#13;
B.M.W. - MERCEDES BENZ - SAAB&#13;
FIAT - SUBARU&#13;
1914 M ™&#13;
4 door sedan-front wheel&#13;
drive, radial tires, and radio.&#13;
Tops in economy, low in price&#13;
'2595&#13;
1970 SAAB 99E&#13;
It's what a car should be.&#13;
Fuel Injection, front wheel drive,&#13;
radial tires, and more. Great&#13;
commuter car!&#13;
*1895&#13;
TIM DARREY&#13;
5913 DOUGLAS AVENUE&#13;
RACINE. WISC. B3402&#13;
RACINE 639-9555&#13;
Free Pitcher of Pabst&#13;
with a family size pizza&#13;
With this coupon&#13;
Offer ends Oct. 29, 1975&#13;
Brat Stop&#13;
Highway 50 and 194&#13;
Friday and Saturday&#13;
Union&#13;
free admission Friday to&#13;
U.W. Parkside students with school l.D.&#13;
Free checking...Free checks*&#13;
No minimum balance&#13;
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE...EXTRA BANKING HOURS.&#13;
Our entire office including lobby and drive-in&#13;
Monday-Thursday 7:00-5:30&#13;
OPEN: Friday 7:00-8:00&#13;
Saturday 8:00-Noon&#13;
f t I At the intersectio n of Highways 11 and 31&#13;
I ZHeritmRank - Rleasant&#13;
C * S l "i i or c all for d etails.&#13;
6125 Durand Avenue • Racine, Wisconsin 53406 Phone 414-554-6500&#13;
MEMBER OF THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION&#13;
"HALLOWEEN SALE"&#13;
Oct. 23 thru 31&#13;
Party Costumes for all ages&#13;
wigs - hats 49c&#13;
- *1.49&#13;
1950's &amp; 60's clothing&#13;
Noise makers -- masks -- etc. 10 - 29c&#13;
Children's Costumes - - 39c&#13;
- 59c&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••A*&#13;
Handy Man's Corner&#13;
For Hard to Find items check this area&#13;
Electric Motors Sinks&#13;
T.V. Tubes Lighting Fixtures&#13;
Jeans — Books — Warm Clothing&#13;
GOODWILL B UDGET STORE&#13;
Elmwood Plaza - Racine&#13;
Hours: Daily 9-9, Sat. 9-6, Sun. 11-5&#13;
Parkside Activities Board invites you to the&#13;
BRECKENRIDGE COLORADO&#13;
WINTER SKI FESTIVAL&#13;
Jan. 2-11&#13;
^A.&#13;
Includes: • Round Trip Bus Fare ^ v.&#13;
• Lodging (4 to a room) ^&#13;
• Parties •&#13;
Lift Tickets&#13;
:5\&#13;
ma&#13;
jrii&#13;
'10 OFF if you sign up before October 24&#13;
One bus filled, less than forty seats available&#13;
Sign up in room D-197 WLLC&#13;
The best jobs come&#13;
toSnelling&amp;Snelling.&#13;
km J; m if&#13;
B\t'' ** H&#13;
[Ai22&#13;
&#13;
Your first job can be meaningful and your chances of finding the right job are better&#13;
at Snelling and Snelling. Because employers who are looking for people&#13;
who are look«,g for a challenge, come to us to find them.&#13;
Stop in or Call&#13;
PNAIIinm 0 II* ® Where New Futures Begin. . .\||P|||||||&#13;
A\||Q||||]f|&#13;
uimimmim&#13;
World's&#13;
2031 22nd Ave., Vi&#13;
Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
(414)552-7&#13;
Largest V Employment Service V&#13;
"&#13;
a Capri Plaza,&#13;
53140&#13;
350 &#13;
ANHEUSER-BUSCH. INC. » ST, LO UIS&#13;
d-«"&#13;
fr&#13;
°"&#13;
r&#13;
or&#13;
THE VVORUO&#13;
.HENOWNEE&#13;
BudweiserO ,%&amp; •:&#13;
"ACER^EEH ,.V V&#13;
Budweiset&#13;
BRANDT'S&#13;
OPEN&#13;
THURSDAY&#13;
EVENINGS&#13;
MONUMENT SO., D OWNTOWN RACINE&#13;
Harriers finish 3rd in&#13;
look to Carthage Inv.&#13;
Kv Thftm Al'alln&#13;
111.&#13;
by Thorn Aiello&#13;
In the tough Northern Illinois&#13;
Invitational held in DeKalb, 111.,&#13;
the Parkside cross-country team&#13;
finished third, with 94 points. The&#13;
meet, held last Saturday, was&#13;
won by North Central College&#13;
(111.), with 35 points. North&#13;
Central is the number one team&#13;
in the NCAA Division III. Second&#13;
place belonged to Northern&#13;
Illinois, with 43 points.&#13;
The top runner for the Rangers&#13;
was Ray Fredericksen, the&#13;
outstanding sophomore, with a&#13;
time of 26:24, which was good for&#13;
third place overall. The&#13;
remainder of Parkside's runners&#13;
were: Jeff DeMatthew, 19th&#13;
place; Curt Spieker, 22nd; Greg&#13;
Julich, 24th; Jim DeVasquez&#13;
26th; Mike Rivers, 30th; and Jim&#13;
Heiring, who finished 34th.&#13;
PnaoK VI/. n.jt . ,&#13;
aid, "I&#13;
Parkside soccer player Steve Sendelbach had his heart in the right&#13;
place as well as his head in the recent game against Marquette.&#13;
Soccer team ties&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Parkside played without four&#13;
starters against Marquette but&#13;
managed to play one of their&#13;
finest first halves defensively.&#13;
However, Parkside managed to&#13;
score one goal as they tied the&#13;
Warriors, 1-1, in Milwaukee.&#13;
Those four starters were&#13;
suspended following the Platteville&#13;
match for conduct unbecoming&#13;
a player, leaving the&#13;
Rangers with a limited bench.&#13;
This second tie of the season&#13;
puts Parkside at 34-2 and with&#13;
the preceding loss to Platteville,&#13;
may put the Rangers out of the&#13;
tournament picture.&#13;
didn't figure we could beat North&#13;
Central," and finishing third was&#13;
probably the Rangers' most&#13;
"realistic" hope, though Godfrey&#13;
wished his squad could have done&#13;
better point-wise. Godfrey&#13;
commented that the course was a&#13;
tough one for the Rangers,&#13;
saying, "We got hurt badly&#13;
because of the wind."&#13;
This Saturday the Ranger&#13;
runners will compete in the&#13;
Carthage Invitational, to be held&#13;
at Petrifying Springs at 11 a.m.&#13;
Of the meet, Godfrey said, "I&#13;
think we'll run better," Knowing&#13;
the course should work in&#13;
Parkside's favor, although&#13;
Godfrey said the meet will be the&#13;
largest and, probably, the&#13;
"strongest" of the year for&#13;
Parkside. There are currently 14&#13;
teams listed to participate, with&#13;
Western Michigan and Northwestern&#13;
the clear-cut favorites.&#13;
Also expected to run strong are&#13;
Luther College (Iowa) and&#13;
Stevens Point, who Parkside has&#13;
already beaten this year. Godfrey&#13;
said, "We certainly would&#13;
like to be in the top three, but&#13;
realistically, we'd like to be&#13;
among the top five."&#13;
Next Tuesday, Oct. 28, the&#13;
Rangers will run at Loras College&#13;
(3p.m.). Godfrey said, "Over the&#13;
years, Loras has been very&#13;
strong," but this year they are&#13;
"down." The only exception to&#13;
being "down" for Loras is Chuck&#13;
Korte, their top runner who has&#13;
been an All-American.&#13;
When you say Budweiser,you've said it all!&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 15, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
\&#13;
Gordon's Auto Parts,&#13;
DISCOUNT TO STUDiNTS&#13;
Phone 632-8841 1214 Lathrop Ave.&#13;
Phone 6 37-8882 1406 M ilw. Ave.&#13;
Distributed by E. F. Madrigrano 1831-55th Kenosha. t/VI&#13;
BICYCLE SALE&#13;
1 0% OFF ALL BIKES an d ALL BIKE&#13;
ACCESSORIES WITH THIS&#13;
VALUABLE COUPON!&#13;
TOWN &amp;&#13;
COUNTRY&#13;
BICYCLES&#13;
1647 Taylor Ave.&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
634-3009&#13;
OPEN&#13;
MON.-FRI. 10 a.m. - 8 p.m.&#13;
SAT. 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.&#13;
CLOSED SUNDAY&#13;
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS &amp; ROCKWELL&#13;
CALCULATORS AT BRANT'S, R ACINE&#13;
Rockwell 61R ADVANCED TI-25504 FUNCTION&#13;
SLIDE RULE ELECTRONIC PLUS MEMORY&#13;
CALCULATOR&#13;
W J4T&#13;
11 different models in T. I., 4 in Rockwell ...&#13;
BRING THIS AD WITH STUDENT I.D. and get a&#13;
student discount.&#13;
TI-2550, hand-held fourfunction&#13;
plus full Memory&#13;
system and percent key.&#13;
Fixed or floating decimal, 8-&#13;
digit display and automatic&#13;
constant. A most versatile&#13;
calculator that operates on&#13;
rechargeable batteries or AC&#13;
adapter-charger (included).&#13;
16 Scientific functions PLUS 6&#13;
key memory. I^arge green 8&#13;
Digit display, common &amp;&#13;
natural log and antilog..Trig&#13;
and inverse trig, degreeradian&#13;
mode, recirocal, PI,&#13;
sum of s quares Etc. Complete&#13;
with rechargeable batteries,&#13;
charger and carrying&#13;
case... AT BRANDTS &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RAN GER Wednesday, Oct. 2 2 , 1 9 7 5&#13;
Women show improvement&#13;
beating Carthage, Beloit, G.B.&#13;
by Thom Aiello&#13;
The Rangers women's tennis&#13;
team finished their dual meet&#13;
season on the up-beat by beating&#13;
Carthage, 4-1, and Beloit 5-0. The&#13;
match at Carthage was started&#13;
Wednesday, but it was stopped by&#13;
darkness with the Rangers&#13;
leading 3-0. The games were&#13;
completed at Carthage on&#13;
Thursday, with Parkside's&#13;
number one doubles team, Sandy&#13;
Kingsfield and Kathy Feichtner,&#13;
winning, and the number two&#13;
singles player, Iris Gericke,&#13;
losing.&#13;
Parkside continued its winning&#13;
ways last Saturday, beating UWGreen&#13;
Bay, 5-0, on home courts.&#13;
That win brought the Rangers&#13;
record to 5-5 on the year.&#13;
Swimmers suffer losses&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
The Ranger women's swimming&#13;
team was matched last&#13;
weekend against UW-Whitewater&#13;
and crosstown rival Carthage,&#13;
and placing third in the meet.&#13;
Outstanding for Parkside in&#13;
this meet were: Mary Beth&#13;
Leitch with a 3:03.8 time to place&#13;
third in the 200 individual&#13;
medley; Sheila Craig with second&#13;
place, 40.6 in the 50 yard&#13;
backstroke and second place,&#13;
1:29.9 in the 100 yard backstroke;&#13;
Sandi Craig with a third place,&#13;
46.7 in the 50 ya rd butterfly; and&#13;
Gail Olsen placed second in the&#13;
diving competition. The 200 yard&#13;
Volleyball team&#13;
playing inconsistant&#13;
by Thom Aiello&#13;
Parkside's women's volleyball&#13;
team continued its inconsistent&#13;
play last week, dropping its&#13;
season record to 0-7. Last&#13;
Tuesday the Rangers hosted&#13;
Milwaukee Area Technical&#13;
College, winning the first game&#13;
15-7, before losing 15-1 and 12-9. In&#13;
the last game the Rangers were&#13;
staging a comeback when the&#13;
time ran out. Each game must be&#13;
completed within eight minutes.&#13;
Last Saturday the volleyball&#13;
squad traveled to Whitewater,&#13;
only to fall to UW-Whitewater 15-&#13;
2 and 15-8. The Ranger women&#13;
also lost to Rock Valley Junior&#13;
College there, though the contests&#13;
were much closer. Parkside won&#13;
the first game, 15-10, before&#13;
dropping the next two by small&#13;
margins, 15-10 an d 15-11.&#13;
The Rangers play at UWMilwaukee,&#13;
with Carthage, this&#13;
Tuesday evening before taking on&#13;
UW-Oshkosh and UW-Eau Claire,&#13;
at Oshkosh this Saturday at 1&#13;
p.m. Next Tuesday, Oct. 28, the&#13;
Rangers play host to UWWaukesha,&#13;
starting at 7 p.m.&#13;
H E I L K M AN S&#13;
Old&#13;
/&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
|J From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at the Skellar&#13;
TAPES&#13;
LEATHER GBBDS&#13;
PIPES&#13;
0NE SWEET&#13;
BREAM&#13;
5010 7TH AVENUE&#13;
KEN05HA&#13;
Coach Judy Gotta said the&#13;
team did not look too good at the&#13;
season's start, but it showed a&#13;
"lot of improvement," and it did&#13;
a fine job as the season&#13;
progressed. Gotta added, "We&#13;
were hoping for a winning season&#13;
but, looking back, we had to play&#13;
UW-Milwaukee twice," and they&#13;
were a fairly tough obstacle to&#13;
get by.&#13;
free style relay team placed&#13;
third.&#13;
In last week's action, Parkside&#13;
made a much better showing&#13;
against Oshkosh and Lawrance&#13;
University in a double-dual meet&#13;
held at Oshkosh.&#13;
In the Oshkosh meet, Parkside&#13;
lost to UW-0 by a 93-22 score.&#13;
ASA schedules&#13;
study sessions&#13;
Sessions in exam preparation,&#13;
taking class notes, and writing&#13;
term papers will be sponsored by&#13;
the Adult Student Association in&#13;
conjunction with the Academic&#13;
Skills Program and the Library.&#13;
All interested persons are invited&#13;
to attend sessions and can sign up&#13;
at the counseling outpost in the&#13;
Gree nque st conco urse&#13;
Programs will be held in the&#13;
Academic Skills Area on the third&#13;
floor of the Library.&#13;
More information may be&#13;
obtained from counselor Connie&#13;
Cummings, 2225.&#13;
pays 51/2%&#13;
on passbook&#13;
Savings'-I&#13;
On-Campus Service. . .Room 235 Tallent Rail&#13;
Phone: 553-2150&#13;
Main Office: 1400 No. Newman Rd. Racine&#13;
Phone 634-6661&#13;
654-3578 </text>
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                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <text>University Committee against students, others on COP</text>
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              <text>University Committee against&#13;
students, others on COP&#13;
by Kurt Larson&#13;
PSGA President Lee Wagner&#13;
and Vice President Kai Nail&#13;
recently informed Chancellor&#13;
Alan Guskin that they wished to&#13;
become members of the Committee&#13;
of Principals(COP).&#13;
COP, which is co-chaired by&#13;
Guskin and William Murin,&#13;
Associate Professor of Political&#13;
Science and chairperson of the&#13;
University Committee, was&#13;
formed earlier this semester for&#13;
the purpose of undertaking a&#13;
review of the organizational&#13;
structure at Parkside. There are&#13;
currently no students sitting on&#13;
the Committee itself. Some&#13;
students, including " Nail, are&#13;
members of the so-called work&#13;
groups that furnish information&#13;
for COP, but the decision-making&#13;
body of COP is made up ex exclusively&#13;
of faculty members and&#13;
administrators. This has led&#13;
Wagner, Nail, and the other&#13;
students to become concerned&#13;
about the apparent lack of&#13;
student input into COP decisions.&#13;
In the latest University&#13;
Committee meeting, COP was a&#13;
major topic of discussion. The six&#13;
members of the university&#13;
committee, including chairperson&#13;
Murin, are also members&#13;
of COP. The majority of committee&#13;
members seemed to be&#13;
opposed to admitting Wagner and&#13;
Nail into COP. The main reason&#13;
for their reluctance to admit the&#13;
student leaders, was a fear that&#13;
such a move would cause other&#13;
groups that are currently not&#13;
represented in COP to seek&#13;
representation in the committee.&#13;
If this were to happen, there is a&#13;
possibility that the committee&#13;
would become too large and&#13;
cumbersome to act effectively.&#13;
As Arthur Larson, secretary of&#13;
the faculty put it, the committee&#13;
would have to include the entire&#13;
university" if Wagner and Nail&#13;
were admitted.&#13;
Another committee member&#13;
said that he could not see why&#13;
students are getting so upset&#13;
about this matter since anyone&#13;
may attend a COP meeting and&#13;
voice his or her opinion, and,&#13;
according to Murin, COP reaches&#13;
decisions by concensus, not by&#13;
formal voting. Murin added that&#13;
he thought Wagner and Nail were&#13;
probably after the mere "symbolism&#13;
of formal membership" in&#13;
COP.&#13;
Diplomatic problems discussed&#13;
by foreign service officer&#13;
un inursdav. Novemner fi. nc "Hminmot in &gt;&gt; A „&#13;
Fightin' Fred Harris is not just another star in Washington's constellation&#13;
of Democratic presidential hopefuls. The story of Harris'&#13;
speech, given in Milwaukee, is on page 5.&#13;
Photo by Al Fredricksen&#13;
un" inursday, NovemDer b,&#13;
Parkside will get a taste of&#13;
diplomacy. U.S. foreign service&#13;
officer James F. Relph, Jr. will&#13;
discuss diplomatic problems in&#13;
Classroom 105, f rom 10 to 11:15&#13;
a.m. The session is open to all.&#13;
Relph, 50, in diplomacy for 23&#13;
years, is at Beloit College this&#13;
year, on detail from Washington&#13;
as "diplomat in residence." He&#13;
has had difficult assignments,&#13;
economic as well as political, in&#13;
both Europe and Africa. In the&#13;
latter, for example, he has been&#13;
second in command at the embassies&#13;
in Tunisia and Chad. In&#13;
1969, he was one of very few&#13;
chosen to attend the National&#13;
War College. In 1973, he was&#13;
selected for two years' duty in&#13;
one of the State Department's&#13;
most important posts-senior&#13;
foreign service inspector.&#13;
Relph wants to get "an in-depth&#13;
feel for the attitudes of the people&#13;
of this important region of the&#13;
United States." He hopes to talk&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
Area artists invited&#13;
to participate in fair&#13;
Area artists and craftsmen are&#13;
being invited to participate in a&#13;
public Christmas Arts and Crafts&#13;
Fair at Parkside on Saturday,&#13;
Dec. 6. Sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board, the&#13;
fair will be held in Main Place,&#13;
from 10 a.m. to 5 p .m.&#13;
Persons wishing to exhibit at&#13;
the fair should register by&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 26, with the&#13;
PAB Office, WLLC D197.&#13;
Parkside students may exhibit&#13;
free; others will be charged $7.50&#13;
entry fee to offset costs. Items&#13;
offered for sale will be limited to&#13;
a top price of $50 per item.&#13;
Additional information and&#13;
registration forms can be obtained&#13;
by calling 553-2290 or 553-&#13;
2294.&#13;
Direction from Guskin is needed before&#13;
establishing affirmative action plan&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
On March 1, 1974 the late&#13;
Chancellor, Irvin Wyllie, appointed&#13;
Parkside's first Affirmative&#13;
Action Officer, Joe&#13;
Attwell. Now, a year and eight&#13;
months later, the exact direction&#13;
and amount of aggression by&#13;
which Parkside will pursue the&#13;
practical applications of affirmative&#13;
action depend on&#13;
Chancellor Guskin.&#13;
Although in his job description,&#13;
Attwell has "primary responsibility&#13;
for guiding and im-'&#13;
plementing Parkside's Affirmative&#13;
Action Program for&#13;
Lampoon editor to&#13;
talk on new humor&#13;
"The New Humor" is the topic&#13;
of a lecture by P.J. O'Rourke, an&#13;
executive editor of National&#13;
Lampoon magazine, to be&#13;
presented at 8 p.m. on Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 12, in the Comm&#13;
Arts Theater under sponsorship&#13;
of th e student Parkside Activities&#13;
Board.&#13;
Advance tickets for students&#13;
are $1.25 and are available at the&#13;
Information Kiosk. General&#13;
admission tickets are available&#13;
at Beautiful Day in Racine and&#13;
One Sweet Dream in Kenosha.&#13;
General admission and tickets at&#13;
the door will be $1.75.&#13;
O'Rourke joined the National&#13;
Lampoon staff and now is its&#13;
executive editor, combining&#13;
writing, editing and managerial&#13;
duties. With Doug Kenney, he&#13;
edited the highly successful&#13;
National Lampoon 1964 High&#13;
School Year Book, a parody of&#13;
such publications.&#13;
National Lampoon is the&#13;
world's most widely read humor&#13;
magazine with a circulation of&#13;
about one million. The five-yearold&#13;
publication has its roots in the&#13;
Harvard Lampoon, the campus&#13;
humor magazine that first went&#13;
national in its life-size parodies to&#13;
Time, Life, Playboy and&#13;
Cosmopolitan.&#13;
The magazine has won&#13;
eighteen design awards and the&#13;
Columbia University School of&#13;
Journalism's 1975 Magazine of&#13;
the Year Award for Visual Excellence.&#13;
Lampoon comedy&#13;
albums have been nominated for&#13;
two straight years for Grammy&#13;
Awards.&#13;
O'Rourke graduated from&#13;
Miami University (Ohio) and was&#13;
a Woodrow Wilson Fellow at John&#13;
Hopkins University. He worked&#13;
for underground newspapers,&#13;
wrote direct mail advertising and&#13;
public relations copy for Continental&#13;
Can Co. before joining&#13;
Lampoon.&#13;
women and minorities," Attwell&#13;
contends that he is not an enforcement&#13;
officer and that&#13;
Parkside has no official affirmative&#13;
action program with&#13;
either goals or timetables&#13;
anyway. Although the University&#13;
may be practicing affirmative&#13;
action in regulation with various&#13;
present state and federal laws&#13;
any plans are devised, at this&#13;
time, by administrators other&#13;
than Attwell such as the&#13;
academic Deans.&#13;
Cites reasons for no plan&#13;
There are many reasons for not&#13;
yet having any program Attwell&#13;
says. One is the hiring freeze of&#13;
last January due to economics,&#13;
which he feels stopped any&#13;
progress on drawing up specific&#13;
goals and timetables for those&#13;
goals. Also, Wyllie's death last&#13;
October, said Attwell, postponed&#13;
definate affirmative action&#13;
direction until a new chancellor&#13;
could be named and his views and&#13;
interest in affirmative action&#13;
deciphered. Attwell also complained&#13;
of lack of cooperation&#13;
from University officials between&#13;
-the time of the death of Wyllie&#13;
and the appointment of the new&#13;
Chancellor, Alan Guskin, in&#13;
September, as a reason that the&#13;
University remains without any&#13;
plan. If Parkside were to have&#13;
had -an affirmative action&#13;
program it would have needed&#13;
change because of new forms&#13;
required by the Labor Department&#13;
and the Equal Employment&#13;
Opportunity Commission. So,&#13;
"we're better off that we&#13;
waited," Attwell explained.&#13;
Employees blame Attwell&#13;
Some employees at Parkside,&#13;
however, blame Attwell himself&#13;
for the fact that the University&#13;
has no definate affirmative action&#13;
plan. "His job was to set up a&#13;
clear cut affirmative action&#13;
program and he hasn't done one&#13;
damn thing," were the words of&#13;
one female faculty member and&#13;
that view seems to be shared by&#13;
many, especially women in the&#13;
classified staff, clerks and&#13;
typists, etc. On the same hand,&#13;
some female and minority staff&#13;
members feel that the blame is&#13;
not solely Attwell's. They complain&#13;
of his lack of p olitical know&#13;
how in dealing with administrators,&#13;
and that he seems&#13;
to alienate the people he is&#13;
supposed to be responsive to.&#13;
Flasified information&#13;
Since March 1,1974 Attwell has&#13;
written a report which outlined&#13;
where exactly the University is&#13;
deficient in the numbers of employed&#13;
females and minorities, as&#13;
well as written "hundreds of&#13;
memos." In compiling statistics&#13;
for that October 1974 report&#13;
Attwell explained that he lacked&#13;
the needed cooperation in&#13;
gathering various departmental&#13;
employment figures and that&#13;
some of the information he&#13;
received was erroneous and&#13;
incomplete. He hinted that&#13;
certain groups of employees were&#13;
completely ignored so that the&#13;
picture of women and minorities&#13;
at Parkside would look better.&#13;
That, however, is&#13;
"unequivicoally denied" by&#13;
University administrators who&#13;
feel that Attwell is now, and has&#13;
been all along, getting all of the&#13;
information he has desired&#13;
rapidly.&#13;
Review hurt women&#13;
and minorities&#13;
Attwell is of the opinion that&#13;
traditional practices established&#13;
in hiring and promotion&#13;
procedures especially entrap&#13;
classified and service workers&#13;
with little chance for promotion.&#13;
The present picture with regards&#13;
to employment of women and&#13;
minorities is "disgusting" said&#13;
Attwell. "I worked with as much&#13;
force as I could and things didn't&#13;
move very fast. It's not that&#13;
people are blantantly against&#13;
affirmative action, but they just&#13;
don't want to be bothered by it."&#13;
He feels that any gains that were&#13;
made were lost in last spring's&#13;
review process. "There is no&#13;
basis for some of the termination&#13;
decisions that were made, particularly&#13;
with minorities," said&#13;
Attwell. Along the same line,&#13;
others agree, and point up the&#13;
levels at which females&#13;
especially were hired for the fall&#13;
semester. Most women hired&#13;
were lecturers. One, hired as an&#13;
ad-hoc last year, was hired as a&#13;
continued on page 3 &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Nov. 5, 1975&#13;
Organizations need&#13;
a new outlook&#13;
For many years there have been hostilities between&#13;
the members of the Parkside Activities Board and other&#13;
student organizations. Indeed, insofar as funding,&#13;
programming assistance, and general prestige, the&#13;
PAB has received ail the rewards, and other&#13;
organizations very little. With little or no support it is&#13;
difficult for organizations, as it is for individuals, to&#13;
survive, function, and contribute.&#13;
In the past, the Campus Concerns Committee funded&#13;
organizations in an extremely haphazard and&#13;
unequitable fashion. For example, while the Segregated&#13;
Fee Committee was budgeting student money for many&#13;
PAB members to attend numerous conferences, the&#13;
Campus Concerns Committee refused funding for even&#13;
one student to attend o ne conference relating to their&#13;
particular organization.&#13;
RANGER does not, however, wish to deal here with&#13;
the negative aspects of the past. Those will only continue&#13;
to demoralize all of us. Instead we urge the PAB to lower&#13;
defenses and egos and student organizations to work out&#13;
jealousy and envy so that they may all benefit from the&#13;
assistance that programmers can offer. In this s ame&#13;
light, we suggest programmers apply their expertise in&#13;
an outreach fashion rather than wait for organizations&#13;
to seek them out.&#13;
Also, bec ause the CCC disbanded in October, we encourage&#13;
the Dean of Stud ents Office in Tallent Hall, to&#13;
establish a new committee comprised basically of&#13;
students who have had experience in budgeting student&#13;
money. There is still money available to student&#13;
organizations. RANGER suggests that organizations&#13;
which feel they have been unfairly dealt, appeal for&#13;
further funding.&#13;
Most importantly, RANGER acclaims any&#13;
organization that is above the politics of jealousy, greed&#13;
and competition. The tension, strain, and frustration&#13;
that results, keeps us all from enjoying and sharing&#13;
knowledge that is ours when we belong to and contribute&#13;
as a student organization.&#13;
liBIArLLiJ&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It is quite evident to many of&#13;
the Black students on campus&#13;
here at U.W. Parkside that the&#13;
Whiteskellar is not geared&#13;
towards the needs of black&#13;
students.&#13;
There is a situation that exists&#13;
now in the Skellar that warrants&#13;
the immediate attention of the&#13;
Students the immediate attention&#13;
of the Student Activities Board,&#13;
and also this universities administration.&#13;
&#13;
This situation is one that entails&#13;
entertainment that black and&#13;
other minority students can&#13;
relate to.&#13;
Another problem that demands&#13;
the attention of this university is&#13;
the lack of black music on the&#13;
Whiteskellar's segregated juke&#13;
box.&#13;
It is quite clear that much of&#13;
the contemporary black music is&#13;
not on the juke box in the skellar.&#13;
It is time that the Student&#13;
Activities Board began to enact a&#13;
policy of treating all students&#13;
equally, when it comes to the&#13;
area of entertainment on the&#13;
Parkside campus.&#13;
Not that black students are&#13;
seeking special treatment, on the&#13;
contrary, we are seeking equal&#13;
representation when it comes ot&#13;
eh meager and inadequate social&#13;
life here at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Frederick H. Johnson&#13;
Junior&#13;
To the Editor :&#13;
Ms. Rafiah Sullivan's&#13;
statements in the RANGER of&#13;
October 29th maligned working&#13;
women in the United States; the&#13;
distortion of facts in the article&#13;
demands a reply. Ms. Sullivan&#13;
compared the roles of Arab&#13;
women and American women&#13;
and drew the conclusion that&#13;
"Arab women actually have&#13;
more rights than American&#13;
women". The right of Arab&#13;
women to forty days leave for&#13;
maternity is cited by Ms. Sullivan&#13;
as support for her hypotheses;&#13;
She fails to indicate that Title VII&#13;
of the Civil Rights of 1964&#13;
provides American statement&#13;
does not tell us, if Arab women&#13;
like their American counterparts&#13;
have the protection of Equal Pay&#13;
legislation. Neither does Ms.&#13;
Sullivan indicate the number of&#13;
Arab women working, nor the&#13;
type of jobs held. It would be&#13;
appreciated that prior to any&#13;
criticism of the role of American&#13;
working women Ms. Sullivan&#13;
check her facts.&#13;
Ben Lowenberg&#13;
Instructor&#13;
Labor Economics&#13;
"Whose fault is default?"&#13;
by Bill Robbins&#13;
It would be unnecessary for me to say that defaulting, or failing to&#13;
pay financial debts, is the current frightening fashion sweeping the&#13;
nation's economy further under the rug. But with the RANGER facing&#13;
the broom, and me swirling in the dusty path, the matter should not&#13;
risk obviation.&#13;
The issue has come home, hopefully, for just a visit, and we can now&#13;
meet the sinister Mr. Default in person. It's not a pleasant encounter:&#13;
Mr. Default has threatened us with bankruptcy. In the RANGER'S&#13;
case, failure to pay the financial debts resulting from past imprudent&#13;
handling of funds (funds are handled very prudently these days)&#13;
would mean halting publication.&#13;
My case is somewhat more complicated, but certainly just as unsettling.&#13;
The Veterans Administration has defaulted on me for three&#13;
months running. They owe me. I've managed to grapple successfully&#13;
with poverty for over two months, but my rent has finally overpowered&#13;
my pocketbook and soon it will be my turn to default.&#13;
Now that I've given the circumstances surrounding Mr. Default's&#13;
arrival, it would be fitting to come up with the reasons why he came,&#13;
who invited him.&#13;
But that would be too much for my feeble mentality to ascertain.&#13;
Incompetence is never easy to pin down due to its pervasiveness. The&#13;
RANGER publishers will say the RANGER is to blame for&#13;
failure to pay its bills, the RANGER will say, and justifiably, past&#13;
mistakes account for present miseries; the people who made those&#13;
mistakes are to blame.&#13;
My landlord will say I am to blame for not paying my rent; I will say&#13;
the V.A. is to blame for not paying me my well-deserved benefits, the&#13;
V.A. will say somebody lost my records-they don't know who-and&#13;
that's who's to blame.&#13;
So, invariably, some nameless misfit starts the ball rolling, and it&#13;
expands like the proverbial snowflake that started the avalanche, and&#13;
we're at the bottom of the mountain without our snowshoes.&#13;
It's useless to try and determine whose fault default is. The only&#13;
thing to do is alter the conditions under which it was spawned, if that's&#13;
possible.&#13;
As for the RANGER, we think it is possible.&#13;
As for the V.A. and countless other bureaucratic nightmares, I'd like&#13;
to quote Albert Shanker:&#13;
"The situation still stinks."&#13;
To the Editor :&#13;
Do get your words right!&#13;
Someone apparently got to you on&#13;
the difference between LOSE&#13;
AND LOOSE. Now will you&#13;
please check on the difference&#13;
between AFFECT and EFFECT!&#13;
It's bad enough to confuse these&#13;
words in an article, but in front&#13;
page headlines-ugh!&#13;
unsigned letter&#13;
Editor's Note: To whomever, or,&#13;
whoever (whatever) wrote the&#13;
letter:&#13;
You'll never know the effect it&#13;
had on me to open a paper and&#13;
see what I had done, right there&#13;
in a front page headline - ugh is&#13;
right. For awhile I had a fantasy&#13;
that no one would notice.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE&#13;
EfjJBGGG&#13;
The PARKSIDE RANGER is written and edited by the students of&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside and they are solely responsible&#13;
n w o i l i p o l i c y a n d c o n t e n t . O f f i c e s a r e l o c a t e d i n D 1 9 4 W L L C ,&#13;
•W. Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-2295, 553- 2287.&#13;
Acting Editor: Debra Friedell&#13;
Feature Editor: Mike Palecek&#13;
Sports Director: Thorn Ai ello&#13;
Events Column: Judy Trudrung&#13;
Business Manager: Ann Verstegen&#13;
Ad ma ke-up: Diane Werwie&#13;
Ad sa les: Harry Dingfelder Donzell Holt Orin Taylor&#13;
Writers: Jeannine Sipsma, Steve Smith, Leigh Feifer&#13;
Fred Johnson, Mick Anderson, Betsy Neu, Jim&#13;
v uT1 Arentz&#13;
' Cathei"ine Blise, Bruce Wagner,&#13;
Rita Nicholas, Kurt Larson&#13;
Photographers: Dave Daniels, A1 Fredr icksen Gordon Mcintosh &#13;
Affirmative action&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
visiting professor this year.&#13;
Another woman was hired as an&#13;
instructor. Three women were&#13;
hired as assistant professors, and&#13;
no women were given tenure last&#13;
year.&#13;
Although Attwell feels the&#13;
University is not up to par in&#13;
either its recruiting procedures&#13;
or employment practices, he says&#13;
he disagrees with any goals or&#13;
plans that others have brought to&#13;
him, or have been using for their&#13;
own departments or. divisions.&#13;
Chancellor Guskin has said and&#13;
reaffirmed on several occasions&#13;
his committment to affirmative&#13;
action. Whatever form that&#13;
committment will take should&#13;
soon become more clear. An&#13;
affirmative action plan is now&#13;
being devised, a rough draft&#13;
which Attwell hopes to have&#13;
complete by the end of November,&#13;
and ready for Guskin's&#13;
approval in December. As well as&#13;
an affirmative action plan with&#13;
goals and timetables, Guskin is&#13;
also planning an affirmative&#13;
action committee which is to be a&#13;
forum to discuss affirmative&#13;
action, do investigations, and&#13;
make recommendations.&#13;
The Department and Health&#13;
Education and Welfare has also&#13;
taken a sterner stand with&#13;
regards to federal reports. Under&#13;
the new format, the University&#13;
must file a work-force analysis, a&#13;
utilization analysis, and goals&#13;
and timetables which must be&#13;
specific and detailed action&#13;
oriented programs."&#13;
Since the review process last&#13;
spring, certain changes in the&#13;
University work-force have taken&#13;
place. Excluding ad hoc faculty,&#13;
there are 4.5 fewer positions held&#13;
by women or minorityies this&#13;
semester than there were last&#13;
year, and in the classified staff&#13;
area there are approximately&#13;
23.5 fewer positions held by&#13;
women or minorities this&#13;
semester than there were last&#13;
year. On the administrative&#13;
level, there are two full time&#13;
female executives, 1 black, and&#13;
three women on split appointment.&#13;
Administrative and&#13;
professional non-faculty positions&#13;
for women and minorities are&#13;
12.5 positions more this year than&#13;
in 1974. The total work-force is&#13;
smaller.&#13;
Attwell, regards this data as&#13;
unofficial, however.&#13;
Next week RANGER will take&#13;
a closer look at employment&#13;
figure comparisons between 1974-&#13;
75 as well as Chancellor Guskins&#13;
outlook for affirmative action in&#13;
Parkside's future.&#13;
Description indicates Attwell&#13;
coordinate, guide, implement&#13;
ThThe e followin following g lists: lists AAttwttwrQellU'c 's 4job «t, •• .&#13;
description as defined when he&#13;
was hired in 1974.&#13;
Primary responsibility for&#13;
guiding and implementing UWP's&#13;
Affirmative Action Program&#13;
for women and minorities.&#13;
Will coordinate UW-P's&#13;
compliance with all government&#13;
rules, regulations, and laws&#13;
regarding equal employment&#13;
opportunity and equal&#13;
educational opportunity.&#13;
Coordinate the dissemination&#13;
of information on government&#13;
rules and regulations regarding&#13;
equal employment opportunity&#13;
and Affirmative Action.&#13;
Responsibility for maintenance&#13;
of the affirmative action&#13;
monitoring system, including&#13;
data gathering, analysis and&#13;
reporting functions.&#13;
Responsibility for the review&#13;
and updating of the Affirmative&#13;
Action Program to assure&#13;
compliance and effectiveness.&#13;
Monitor the fulfillment of go als&#13;
and timetables in all Schools,&#13;
Colleges, and Divisions and&#13;
propose revisions of goals when&#13;
necessary.&#13;
Coordinate UW-P responses to&#13;
complaints of discrimination&#13;
filed with outside agencies.&#13;
Responsibility for initiating&#13;
review and revision of personnel&#13;
policies and procedures as affecting&#13;
women and minorities.&#13;
Coordinate the process of informing&#13;
all UW-P employees and&#13;
especially those responsible for&#13;
personnel decisions of the&#13;
requirements of UW-P's Affirmative&#13;
Action Program.&#13;
Propose programs for&#13;
recruitment and promotion to aid&#13;
Schools, Colleges, and Divisions&#13;
in meeting goals.&#13;
Coordinate the dissemination&#13;
of information on grievance&#13;
procedures to all employees.&#13;
Work with the UW-P Human&#13;
Rights Committee and other&#13;
appropriate campus committees.&#13;
Maintain liaison with offices&#13;
responsible for development and&#13;
use of c omputer-based employee&#13;
data file.&#13;
Initiate and participate in&#13;
regular salary equity reviews,&#13;
career ladder development and&#13;
implementation, promotion&#13;
reviews.&#13;
Some individuals complain that&#13;
it is useless to have an affirmative&#13;
action director which is&#13;
paid by and reports to the same&#13;
institution which he is to direct.&#13;
Attwell himself doesn't seem to&#13;
mind the set up, however, and&#13;
pointed out that although it had&#13;
been discussed, the UW-system&#13;
Central Administration prefers&#13;
each campus having its own&#13;
affirmative action officer&#13;
working with and reporting to&#13;
that campus' chancellor.&#13;
Counseling offered by Aids Office&#13;
During the period of N ovember&#13;
10-21, several budget counseling&#13;
session will be held in the&#13;
Classroom Building, Room D113,&#13;
DATE TIMES&#13;
Nov. 10 12:30-2:30p.m.&#13;
Nov. 11 1-3 p.m.&#13;
Nov. 12 7-9 p.m.&#13;
Nov. 13 2-4 p.m.&#13;
Nov. 14 2:30-4:30p.m.&#13;
Nov. 17 8:30-10:30 a.m.&#13;
Nov. 18 9-11 a.m.&#13;
Nov. 19 7-9 p.m.&#13;
Nov. 20 10-12 p.m.&#13;
Nov. 21 10:30-12:30p.m.&#13;
at various hours. These budget&#13;
counseling session are being&#13;
offered for those students who&#13;
have been awarded financial&#13;
assistance and to other students&#13;
interested in obtaining financial&#13;
aid.&#13;
The sessions will provide,&#13;
students with information pertaining&#13;
to the various types of&#13;
grants, student employment, and&#13;
loan programs that are currently&#13;
available for financing a college&#13;
education. Students will become&#13;
acquainted with the various&#13;
options for using financial aid&#13;
funds and the necessary&#13;
budgeting techniques to manage&#13;
their aid monies throughout the&#13;
academic year. Additional information&#13;
pertaining to the application&#13;
procedure, the award&#13;
process, parents' contribution,&#13;
summer savings, and student&#13;
resources will be given.&#13;
For additional information&#13;
concerning sessions, contact&#13;
Patrick Pierce, Financial Aids&#13;
Counselor, Tallent Hall, Room&#13;
107, ph one 553-2291.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 5, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Officer —&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
mostly in response to questions.&#13;
Other audiences have wanted to&#13;
know about such matters as&#13;
these: Is it hard to get into the&#13;
foreign service? Is the role of&#13;
women in the foreign service&#13;
changing? What are the obstacles&#13;
to economic and political&#13;
development in the Third World?&#13;
Isn't foreign aid just a weapon in&#13;
the cold war? Relph points out&#13;
that there are interesting differences,&#13;
for example, in the&#13;
development problems of North&#13;
and Central Africa. He also has&#13;
personal memories of D ulles and&#13;
Eden in the Suez crisis of 1956.&#13;
REPAIR WORK - dishwashers, garbage&#13;
disposals, washe rs, dryers, etc. Call&#13;
evenings Al, Stendel 886-3865.&#13;
EARN UP TO $1800 a school year or more&#13;
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Gordon's Auto Parts, i«.&#13;
DISCOUNT TO S TUDENTS&#13;
Phone 632-0841 1214 Lathrop Ave.&#13;
Phone 637-8882 1400 Milw. Ave.&#13;
Cantonese &amp; American&#13;
Fine Delicacies&#13;
Dine in or Carry Out&#13;
-CLOSED MONDAYSCHI&#13;
AM&#13;
RESTAURANT &amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
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—FREE PARKING—&#13;
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Student Help&#13;
Wanted&#13;
Good Hours&#13;
Good Time&#13;
Good Pay&#13;
Call 634-0762 for an&#13;
appointment for an&#13;
interview.&#13;
T HE UNI VERS I TY OF WI SCONSI N- PARKSI DE&#13;
Tf invites you to spend winter break... Jan. 2-9, 1976&#13;
0*&#13;
in the heart&#13;
of Waikiki&#13;
7 SUN F I L L ED FUN F I L L ED DAYS&#13;
complete '364 based on 3 sharing o room&#13;
e rs&#13;
: AMPUS TRAVEL CE NT ER&#13;
1&#13;
^ — a&#13;
-&#13;
Air7&#13;
nights lodging at the Deluxe Waikiki Holiday Inn&#13;
' Traditional Hawaiian Flower lei greeting upon arrival&#13;
' First day Hawaii orientation with full breakfast&#13;
UW Parkside tour representative through-out trip&#13;
1 G round transfers, baggage handling, gratuities and taxes&#13;
(an o.T.c. pro gram operated by Elkin tours)&#13;
For application form or further information, stop in at LLC D 197 or phone: 553- 2294 &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Nov. 5, 1975&#13;
Group to provide students&#13;
with drug information&#13;
hby v TDtoKro ^ ebra Friedell&#13;
The Parkside Drug Quarters, a&#13;
new student organization, exists&#13;
mainly to disseminate information&#13;
on drugs, including&#13;
alcohol, as well as make referrals&#13;
to students who feel that they, or&#13;
someone they know, has a drugrelated&#13;
problem.&#13;
The group, whose advisors are&#13;
counselor Cliff Johnson, and Rick&#13;
Pomazal, assistant professor of&#13;
psychology, will soon be&#13;
receiving hotline training from&#13;
members of Switchboard and the&#13;
Rush House. Formal training&#13;
includes a 24-hour course in&#13;
listening, empathy, sensitizing,&#13;
and role-playing.&#13;
Most members of PDQ are&#13;
either recovering chemical&#13;
addicts or someone in their&#13;
family is.&#13;
Johnson explained that the&#13;
Parkside group will act as a sort&#13;
of liason between Racine and&#13;
Kenosha, as well as outlying&#13;
areas, to make referrals for&#13;
inpatient or outpatient care,&#13;
programs for financial&#13;
assistance for rehabilitation, and&#13;
the like.&#13;
Johnson described a drug&#13;
problem as "a self-identified&#13;
problem with a mood-altering&#13;
chemical." All group members&#13;
emphasized that PDQ will not&#13;
patrol or seek students out; instead&#13;
individuals who would like&#13;
drug information are encouraged&#13;
to contact the PDQ office in&#13;
Tallent Hall or call them at 553-&#13;
2293.&#13;
Addiction treatment is only a&#13;
beginning to recovery, said a&#13;
PDQ member; therefore, they&#13;
hope in time to establish groups&#13;
in which individuals can talk and&#13;
provide support for each other.&#13;
"Often times," said Johnson,&#13;
"when an individual cleans-up&#13;
after using drugs in quantity for&#13;
an extended period, their selfesteem&#13;
is low, and responsibility&#13;
is heavy." Peer group support is&#13;
an important part of recovery&#13;
and abstinance.&#13;
One member described taking&#13;
uppers shortly after starting&#13;
school at Parkside. At the time,&#13;
she said, she was going through&#13;
divorce procedures so there was&#13;
much anxiety and tension.&#13;
Eventually, rather than controlling&#13;
the drug, the drug controlled&#13;
her and she took it for any&#13;
reason at all. "They made me&#13;
nauseous and sick, but that&#13;
wasn't enough to make me stop."&#13;
There are 10 million admitted&#13;
alcoholics in the United States,&#13;
and one million addicted to other&#13;
known drugs. "If you help one&#13;
person all year, that will make&#13;
the program worthwhile,"&#13;
Johnson commented. Alcoholism&#13;
is a growing disease among&#13;
young adults. Statistics show that&#13;
1 of 4 people will probably be&#13;
physically addicted to alcohol by&#13;
the age of 18.&#13;
Video humor an Aesop fable&#13;
by Mike Palecek&#13;
Most Parkside students can't&#13;
help but laughing at the antics of&#13;
the comedy on the television&#13;
screens at Main Place. But this&#13;
comedy is somehow different from&#13;
normal American comedy, where&#13;
someone hurt is considered to be&#13;
funny, but comedy PAB video&#13;
style, humanitaniarism humor.&#13;
At a tense, nervous set in&#13;
Parkside's Comm Arts Building&#13;
each program is created. All&#13;
attention is on, "quiet on the&#13;
set...stand by camera, audio,&#13;
talent...rolling black...three, two,&#13;
one, mike, cue talent...," and the&#13;
cameras roll. All eyes are on the&#13;
equipment controls as well as the&#13;
actors, to see if the take runs&#13;
smoothly. If it does, the director,&#13;
the crew, and the actors are&#13;
satisifed, that scene is done. If it&#13;
doesn't, the complete scene must&#13;
be retaped until success is&#13;
reached.&#13;
But there is much more to a&#13;
video program than just taping&#13;
scenes. Each program starts as&#13;
an idea. One member of the video&#13;
committee said, "We will just sit&#13;
together and start spitting ideas&#13;
out until we get some we like."&#13;
Then the idea must be developed,&#13;
which is called "scripting." The&#13;
script of diologue as well as&#13;
physical movements for the&#13;
scene are developed on paper.&#13;
"We go out and ask people who&#13;
look the part, and try to get them&#13;
on the show," said one video&#13;
director. "We are constantly&#13;
trying to get new faces, so we just&#13;
go up to people and ask them,&#13;
"You want do be a movie star?"&#13;
"A lot of people think we're nuts.&#13;
Bill Barke, the head writer, and Glen Christensen, technical&#13;
director, of the video committee, agonize over a script idea. "There is&#13;
a little ham in all of us."&#13;
You get a lot of reactions. A lot of&#13;
people say, "I can't do that."&#13;
Maybe they will blush and then&#13;
say yes or no. If they say no, you&#13;
ask them again. After playing a&#13;
part, they find out that they act.&#13;
They do it, I think, because&#13;
there's a little bit of h am in all of&#13;
us."&#13;
PAB video does basically three&#13;
types of programming. Humor is&#13;
the primary type of show the&#13;
committee produces. Glen&#13;
Christensen, co-director, stated&#13;
"when we do comedy, we're&#13;
talking to students with it. We're&#13;
trying to make this university&#13;
laugh, but also to reflect on life."&#13;
He compared the humor they&#13;
produce to an Aesop fable, a&#13;
funny story with a moral.&#13;
PAB video also makes tapes of&#13;
informative nature, of both&#13;
national and local significance.&#13;
The productions range from&#13;
historical retrospect of the JFK&#13;
assassination to the basketball&#13;
i! BRAT STOP&#13;
Thrusday and Friday&#13;
Union&#13;
Thursday only&#13;
Pitcher of Hammes&#13;
One Dollar&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Cimmeron Show Revue&#13;
Free Admission F riday with Parkside I.D.&#13;
court action of Parkside's&#13;
dribblers.&#13;
PAB offers advertising&#13;
promotion to University groups&#13;
as well. This service is provided&#13;
without cost in an attempt to&#13;
promote University activities to&#13;
the students and the community.&#13;
Main Place will be the setting&#13;
of many video showings. By&#13;
showing the tapes at Main Place,&#13;
the video committee attempts to&#13;
reach as many students as&#13;
possible. PAB video also&#13;
broadcasts over the Racine cable&#13;
station.&#13;
Christensen, who two years ago&#13;
started PAB video, described&#13;
television |pd what the video&#13;
group were trying to accomplish,&#13;
"We want people to be more&#13;
responsive to others. I'm not sure&#13;
our comedy makes things so&#13;
much better, but we have a basic&#13;
underlying belief that it does.&#13;
Maybe it forces us to see what we&#13;
don't want to see in life."&#13;
Free checking...Free checks*&#13;
No minimum balance&#13;
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE...EXTRA BANKING HOURS&#13;
Our entire office including lobby and drive-in&#13;
Monday-Thursday 7:00-5:30&#13;
OPEN: Friday ..7:00-8:00&#13;
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At the intersection of Highways&#13;
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6125 Durand Avenue • Racine, Wisconsin 53406 Phone 414-554-6500&#13;
MEMBER OF THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION&#13;
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The Players&#13;
of UW-Parkside&#13;
present—&#13;
W I L D&#13;
U F E&#13;
REFUGE&#13;
Communication Arts Theater&#13;
Adm: students $1; others $2&#13;
Tickets at Info Kiosk and&#13;
the door all seats reserved &#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 5, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
br»r We t„ 0v&#13;
„,ch cos»» »o much&#13;
ftqeinq P&#13;
r°&lt;*ue«-s 0&#13;
w.«findlnn0nl&#13;
THEWoj^&#13;
Ienownei&#13;
Budweiser'&#13;
1&gt;AGE«£eeh ' Parkside Activities Board announce an&#13;
Arts &amp; Crafts Fair&#13;
Saturday, December 6th&#13;
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.&#13;
Upper and Middle Main Place.&#13;
1. Free to UW-P students&#13;
2. Others must pay 7.50 registration&#13;
fee for their space&#13;
3. Entry Form must be turned into the&#13;
Programming office, D-197 WLLLC by&#13;
November 26.&#13;
Entry Form&#13;
Name — —&#13;
Address&#13;
Phone&#13;
Type of Exhibit&#13;
Make check payable to UW-Parkside&#13;
Distributed by E, F. Madrigrano 1831-55th Kenosha, Wl&#13;
Harris is candidate with evangelist instinct&#13;
bv Mick Andersen Ham,&#13;
v—7 by Mick Andersen&#13;
He'd be more believable as a&#13;
truck-stop hopping Teamster&#13;
politico than as the earnest&#13;
presidential aspirant he is. A&#13;
somewhat tardy heir to Estes&#13;
Kefauver's color-blind populism&#13;
his style calls to mind Will&#13;
Rogers and Oral Roberts. An&#13;
indefatigable campaigner, his&#13;
long-shot candidacy is being&#13;
taken evermore seriously by the&#13;
national news media. If this&#13;
portends a trickle before the&#13;
trend, he could prove to be the&#13;
greatest shot in the arm the&#13;
chatauqua tent industry has&#13;
received since William Jennings&#13;
Bryan.&#13;
Former Oklahoma senator&#13;
Fred Harris brought his&#13;
evangelical vision of economic&#13;
democracy and moral&#13;
restoration to Milwaukee's&#13;
Turner Hall last Thursday night.&#13;
The wildly enthusiastic&#13;
reception given by a standingroom-only&#13;
crowd of over five&#13;
hundred supporters and others&#13;
was a testament to the shared joy&#13;
of tr ue belief.&#13;
As a senator, Fred Harris was&#13;
of a more traditional mold. In a&#13;
town a lready rotten with liberal&#13;
Democratic "bright lights" he&#13;
was seemingly just another star&#13;
in Washington's constellation.&#13;
While in the Senate, Harris,&#13;
whose wife LaDonna is a&#13;
Comanche Indian, became one of&#13;
the leading champions of nativeAmerican&#13;
rights in Washington.&#13;
Harris was also an activist&#13;
member of the Kerner Commission&#13;
on Civil Disorders and&#13;
emphatically endorsed its&#13;
recommendations, much to the&#13;
consternation of the folks back&#13;
home.&#13;
Although he gained a solid&#13;
reputation as a progressive on&#13;
social and domestic issues, the&#13;
greening of Fred Harris was far&#13;
from complete. Slow to break&#13;
with the Johnson administration&#13;
on Vietnam, Harris supported the&#13;
heavy-handed candidacy of&#13;
Hubert Humphrey in 1968, and&#13;
nearly wound up being his running-mate.&#13;
Instead, the loyal&#13;
now&#13;
party&#13;
Harris was rewarded with the&#13;
chairpersonship the Democratic&#13;
^&#13;
10&#13;
f&#13;
naI c&#13;
°mmittee, his most&#13;
significant contribution being his&#13;
appointment 0f George&#13;
McGovern as head of the&#13;
famous committee&#13;
reform.&#13;
It wasn't until the announcement&#13;
of his first&#13;
presidential candidacy in 1971&#13;
that Harris articulated his "new&#13;
populism," a strategy seeking to&#13;
unite the working poor across&#13;
racial and ethnic lines. It was an&#13;
appeal ground more in economic&#13;
self-interest than the romantic&#13;
soicology 0f traditional&#13;
liberalism. But in a country still&#13;
preoccupied with the American&#13;
sponsored madness in Indochina,&#13;
a different drummer held&#13;
the stage and the vision became&#13;
obscured temporarily by a more&#13;
pressing political reality. Harris'&#13;
candidacy foundered on the hard&#13;
rocks of campaign finance barely&#13;
three months after it was launched.&#13;
&#13;
This time a better organized&#13;
campaign, with a clearer sense of&#13;
purpose and a more confident&#13;
candidate, has propelled Harris&#13;
into serious contention for the&#13;
loyalties of the Democratic left.&#13;
Even those who relegate Harris&#13;
far back among the competitors&#13;
agree he's the hottest property&#13;
around, an issue oriented spellbinder&#13;
amidst a crowd of holdovers&#13;
and has-beens.&#13;
Consider Harris' performance at&#13;
Turner Hall, an event&#13;
culminating a day of hard&#13;
campaigning in the Milwaukee&#13;
area.&#13;
He began by allowing how the&#13;
pre-speech standing ovation had&#13;
embarrassed him. After all, he&#13;
was just plain ol' Fred, and&#13;
surely the audience knew that the&#13;
pleasure of association was a&#13;
reciprocal one. The crowd&#13;
beamed back in collective selfconciousness.&#13;
&#13;
Declaring his opposition to the&#13;
"imperial presidency" Harris&#13;
remarked of those who had&#13;
dismissed his crusade as being&#13;
"too far ahead of t he time." "We&#13;
don't have to worry about being&#13;
ahead of the people. We have to&#13;
catch up with them."&#13;
From there, Harris articulated&#13;
a litany of issues he sees as vital&#13;
to the country, as well as integral&#13;
to the success of his campaign:&#13;
redistribution of income and&#13;
wealth, a meaningful effort to&#13;
establish alternative sources of&#13;
energy, and a hearty disdain for&#13;
President Ford's performance&#13;
thus far. Questioning the antibureaucratic&#13;
posture of the&#13;
Ford Administration Ford&#13;
himself was soon to be just blocks&#13;
away, warning of the perils of big&#13;
government at a posh Republican&#13;
fundraiser) he related that the&#13;
-number of employees in ten of the&#13;
eleven cabinet offices had risen&#13;
since Ford took office. Citing the&#13;
parity of s alaries between one of&#13;
the Administration's top&#13;
economic advisors and that of a&#13;
former gag-writing Ford&#13;
phrasemaker, Harris borrowed a&#13;
memorable line from fellow&#13;
Oklahoman, Will Rogers, "When&#13;
they make a joke its policy, and&#13;
when they make a policy its a&#13;
joke."&#13;
The crowd roared.&#13;
The evangelist instinct taking&#13;
hold, Harris sallied forth. He&#13;
assailed the fifteen oil companies&#13;
who paid eight times the tax to&#13;
foreign countries as they did to&#13;
our own, while the Ford Administration&#13;
proposes to finance&#13;
the freight of fuel consumption&#13;
from the labors of the average&#13;
working man. "By law we ought&#13;
to break up the oil companies. We&#13;
ought to get serious about&#13;
alternative energy sources,"&#13;
Harris declared.&#13;
Harris told of a recent conversation&#13;
with C.B.S.' Walter&#13;
Cronkite in which Cronkite observed&#13;
that in most campaigns&#13;
the issues tend to be forgotten as&#13;
a result of the mesmerizing&#13;
concern about the "nuts and&#13;
bolts" of campaigning. For&#13;
Harris "the strategy is the issue.&#13;
Whatever they ask me, I work the&#13;
issues in."&#13;
For this reason respected&#13;
Washington Post columnist&#13;
David Broder recently wrote that&#13;
for issue-oriented party activists&#13;
the Harris campaign had&#13;
significantly more appeal than&#13;
the others. For Harris this, and&#13;
the "Wallace question," provide&#13;
a suitable rationale for his&#13;
candidacy.&#13;
As Harris sees it, unlike the&#13;
more urbane appeal of other&#13;
liberal candidates, the populist&#13;
roots of his candidacy can bring&#13;
disaffected Wallaceites back into&#13;
the Democratic fold. Although&#13;
ceptable" negativist, Harris sees&#13;
in Wallace's constituency an&#13;
alienation founded in some very&#13;
legitimate complaints. "The&#13;
people know they're overtaxed,&#13;
that they're overcharged,"&#13;
Harris divined.&#13;
Noting that the Harris campaign&#13;
has qualified for matchinggrant&#13;
election subsidies Harris&#13;
asserted, "They can't out vote us&#13;
with money anymore." Invoking&#13;
a theme from the Mexican&#13;
Revolution - "You don't get&#13;
liberty by begging, you take it,"&#13;
Harris brought the crowd to a&#13;
foot-stomping climax.&#13;
"We'll not only win back the&#13;
White House, but we'll win back&#13;
our country, too" Harris&#13;
declared, exiting to another&#13;
"embarrassing" standing&#13;
ovation.&#13;
ANHEUSER-BUSCH. INC. • ST. LOUIS&#13;
Budweiser&#13;
ysfi tip&#13;
When you say Budweiser,you've said it all! &#13;
CONVERSATIONS&#13;
FROM WINGSPREAD&#13;
Recipient of&#13;
The GEORGE FOSTER PEABODY RADIO AWARD&#13;
for&#13;
Distinguished and Meritorious Public Service in Broadcasting'&#13;
Dial&#13;
Station Location&#13;
Racine WRJN AM-1400 6:(&#13;
Milwaukee WISN AM-1300 11:&lt;&#13;
WISN FM-97.3 6:1&#13;
Chicago WEFM FM-99.5 6:i&#13;
also on&#13;
The Wisconsin Educational Radio Network&#13;
Mondays at 7:00 p.m.&#13;
COMING TOPICS&#13;
The New Generation of G ermans&#13;
• Putting Art into Religion&#13;
THE JOHNSON FOUNDATION/RACINE, WISCONSIN&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Nov. 5, 1975&#13;
Men fourth in Mid-American&#13;
by Carol Arentz&#13;
Once again, Parkside hosted&#13;
the Mid-American championships&#13;
for men and the&#13;
national championships for&#13;
women; 517 runners attended the&#13;
seventh annual event.&#13;
The meet featured 10 different&#13;
races, and competitors were&#13;
either collegiate varsity teams,&#13;
or non-collegiate, sponsored by a&#13;
track club.&#13;
Parkside came in fourth in the&#13;
men's championship with 109&#13;
points. The meet was won by the&#13;
Chicago track club, who had 19&#13;
points. Thirteen teams competed.&#13;
A new track record of 29:22 fo r&#13;
six miles was set by Bruce&#13;
Fischer of Syracuse, who was&#13;
running for the Chicago club. The&#13;
old record, 29:30, was set by&#13;
Parkside's Lucien Rosa. Rosa,&#13;
running for the Parkside track&#13;
club (different from the varsity&#13;
team) came in second with a time&#13;
of 29:23.&#13;
Other Ranger finishers were:&#13;
Ray Frederickson, 13th; Jeff&#13;
DeMathew, 28th; Curt Spieker,&#13;
30th; Mike Rivers, 31st; Greg&#13;
Julich, 34th; and Jim Hiering,&#13;
44th; 130 runners participated in&#13;
the event.&#13;
"We ran our best meet this&#13;
year as a team," stated coach Vic&#13;
Godfrey. "We were beat by only&#13;
one collegiate team. The other&#13;
two were non-collegians."&#13;
The Ranger team will compete&#13;
in the district championship next&#13;
weekend at Eau Claire. The top&#13;
three teams in that meet will go&#13;
on to nationals in Salina, Kansas.&#13;
The women's nationals were&#13;
won by Cindy Bremser of the&#13;
Madison track club. She set a&#13;
three mile track record of 16:43 .&#13;
Parkside's only female entry,&#13;
Kim Merritt, placed third.&#13;
The 11-team event was won by&#13;
Iowa State with 44 po ints.&#13;
MOLBECK'S&#13;
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Spec ia liz ing in&#13;
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MEN—Shift Workers— COLLEGE STUDENTS A.M.-P.M. Relief&#13;
Women-Ideal hours. Help increase the family income-Buy those extras&#13;
• Compensation during the summer • Be home with your children&#13;
See how easy your hours could work in with our schedule. A good way to&#13;
beat the increase cost of living.&#13;
Despite road construction, road open to:&#13;
RACIN E BUS CO.&#13;
(Come in from South St.) 1822 South St. 639-7404&#13;
Swimmers&#13;
are last&#13;
by Thom Aiello&#13;
The season didn't get any&#13;
easier for the Parkside women's&#13;
swimming team, as they finished&#13;
last in the four-team meet at&#13;
Carthage last Friday.&#13;
UW-Stevens Point came in first&#13;
with 149 points, followed by UWMilwaukee&#13;
with 101 points.&#13;
Carthage College scored 100&#13;
points as they were just nipped&#13;
Kim Piper Merritt, A AU National Marathon Champion, placed third out for second place. Parkside&#13;
on Saturday in the Mid-American championships at Parkside. totaled 39 points in the&#13;
PHOTO BY A I FR EDRICKSEN quadrangular.&#13;
P.A.B. FILM SERIES PRESENTS:&#13;
Starring Jack Nicholson &amp; Fay Dunaway&#13;
November 7-8:00 p.m. S.A.B.&#13;
November 9-7:30 p.m. S.A.B.&#13;
Beer will be served ID's required&#13;
MCIASDE&#13;
Recipe #.00008&#13;
¥ ELLOW i lNOW&#13;
, JOSE CUERVO® TEQUILA. 80 PROOF.&#13;
IMPORTED AND BOTTLED BY © 1975, HEUBLEIN, INC., HARTFORD, CONN.&#13;
1. Fill a glass with nice, clean snow.&#13;
(White only, please.)&#13;
2. Add Cuervo Gold Especial.&#13;
3. See it turn yellow?&#13;
4. Put a straw in and drink.&#13;
5. If snow is unavailable, use crushed ice.&#13;
Or, forget the snow, and just put a straw&#13;
in the bottle. Or forget the straw and&#13;
just pour some Gold in a glass. Or just&#13;
have some water. Must we make ^&#13;
all these decisions for you? {SB &#13;
Rangers win&#13;
meet within meet&#13;
A "meet within a meet" was&#13;
held at the district cross-country&#13;
championships this past weekend&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
Called the "Wisconsin Independeant&#13;
Intercollegiate&#13;
Championship for Independant&#13;
Schools," it was between three&#13;
teams; Parkside, Marquette, and&#13;
UW-Milwaukee. The Rangers&#13;
won it with 23 points, followed by&#13;
Marquette with 46 and UWM; 59&#13;
points.&#13;
Ray Frederickson placed first&#13;
in the race, and six Ranger&#13;
runners placed in the top ten.&#13;
production and silver recovery. The black enterprise&#13;
program not only helps people who aren t&#13;
well off but also helps stabilize communities in&#13;
which Kodak can work and grow.&#13;
In short, it's simply good business. And&#13;
we're in business to make a profit. But in furthering&#13;
our business interests, we also further society's&#13;
interests.&#13;
After all, our business depends on society.&#13;
So we care what happens to it.&#13;
Bfl Kodak.&#13;
Wl More than a business.&#13;
Women win&#13;
one in tourney&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Parkside came close to winning&#13;
at least one match in the local&#13;
tournament against Stevens&#13;
Point, Oshkosh, and Milwaukee,&#13;
but experience seemed to tell the&#13;
story once again.&#13;
In matches played against&#13;
Stevens Point, the Rangers lost to&#13;
a highly talented Pointer team,&#13;
15-1, and 15-1. The UW-Oshkosh&#13;
games were a little closer but it&#13;
was too little to do anything as the&#13;
Rangers came up short, 154, 15-&#13;
10.&#13;
Against UW-Milwaukee, the&#13;
Rangers took the first game, 15-&#13;
10, but were overcome, 15-1,15-3&#13;
to lose the series, 2-1.&#13;
Heritage House&#13;
Student Help&#13;
Wanted&#13;
Good Hours&#13;
Good Time&#13;
Good Pay&#13;
Call 634-0762 for an&#13;
appointment for an&#13;
interview.&#13;
We asked the same question when we first&#13;
found ourselves in a position to make the world&#13;
a more livable place.&#13;
At Kodak, we started close to home. In&#13;
Rochester, New York. We cut river pollution with&#13;
one of the most efficient industrial waste wqter&#13;
treatment plants in the country. We cut air pollution&#13;
with scrubbers, adsorbers and electrostatic&#13;
precipitators. We helped set up a black enterprise&#13;
program in downtown Rochester.&#13;
Why?-Helping to combat water pollution not&#13;
only benefits society but us as well as we need&#13;
clean water to make film. Our combustible waste&#13;
disposal facility not only reduces air pollution&#13;
but also helps pay for itself in heat and steam&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 5, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
^&#13;
uaLnieet season ends for Harriers at 4-1 by Thorn Airello&#13;
The Parkside cross-country&#13;
team ended its dual meet season&#13;
with a 4-1 record by defeating&#13;
Loras College 24-33 last Tuesday.&#13;
Leading the way over the hilly&#13;
five-mile course in Iowa was&#13;
Loras' star Chuck Kortey, with a&#13;
Soccer team&#13;
handed loss&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
The Parkside soccer team was&#13;
handed a "deceptive" loss&#13;
Saturday at home by national&#13;
power Lewis University, 7-1.&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson said that&#13;
The Rangers played' well but&#13;
managed to make a few&#13;
mechanical errors and Lewis, led&#13;
by two Ail-Americans, was there&#13;
to put it in the net every time.&#13;
Henderson also said he "was&#13;
disappointed with the score but&#13;
not in the type of play. "At one&#13;
time the Rangers played even&#13;
with the perennial national power&#13;
for some forty minutes.&#13;
The Parkside goal came on a&#13;
pass from Stan Stadler to Dietch&#13;
Ismaili in the left corner.&#13;
time of 26:04. Sophomore Ray&#13;
Frederickson led Parkside with a&#13;
second place finish, with a time of&#13;
26:13.&#13;
Following Frederickson for the&#13;
Rangers were: Jim DeVasquez,&#13;
3rd; Curt Spieker, 5th; Jeff&#13;
DeMatthew, 6th; Mike Rivers,&#13;
8th; Greg Julich, 9th; Jim&#13;
Heiring, 12th; and A1 Halbur,&#13;
16th.&#13;
Coach Vic Godfrey said UW-La&#13;
Crosse should be the favorite, as&#13;
defending champions, in this&#13;
Saturday's NAIA District 14&#13;
Championships in Eau Claire (11&#13;
a.m.). UW-Stevens Point, 1-1&#13;
against Parkside this year,&#13;
seems to be the top challenger,&#13;
according to Godfrey, but he feels&#13;
the Rangers should make a&#13;
strong bid for at least the third&#13;
spot in the Championships. Only&#13;
the top three teams, and some&#13;
individuals, make it to the NAIA&#13;
National Championships, held in&#13;
Salina, Kansas, the following&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Godfrey said his team is in&#13;
good shape with the exception of&#13;
DeVasquez, who has a nagging&#13;
back injury but it is something he&#13;
''l ive s w i t h .''&#13;
Changing the worid&#13;
js a fine idea, but&#13;
where do you start? &#13;
8 THE PARKS IDE RANGER Wednesday, Nov. 5, 1975&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 5: Skellar, mini-lecture by August Wegner from&#13;
11:30-12:30 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 5: Psychology Club field trip to Southern Colony.&#13;
Meet at 12:30 p.m. at Tallent Hall parking lot shelter.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 5: Anthropology Club meeting at 7:30 p.m. in CL&#13;
324.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 5: Baha'i Club program, "Baha'i Principles of Child&#13;
Education" at 8 p.m. in LLC D174.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 7: Skellar auditions sign-up after 2:30 p.m. at Info Kiosk.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 7: Women's swimming, Parkside vs. UW-Oshkosh and&#13;
Carthage at 4 p. m. in PE Bldg.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 7: Play, "Perpetual Care" at 8 p.m. in CAT. Tickets are&#13;
$1 at Info Kiosk.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 7: Movie, "Chinatown" at 8 p.m. in SAB. Admission is $1.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 8: Soccer game, Parkside vs. UW-Madison at 2 p.m. at&#13;
the soccer field.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 8: Play, "Perpetual Care" at 8 p.m. in CAT. Tickets&#13;
are $1 at Info Kiosk.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 9: Multi-media presentation on ageing at 11:15 a.m. at&#13;
CHI-RHO Center, 3825 12th St. in Kenosha.&#13;
, Sunday, Nov. 9: Concert by Parkside Guitar Society at 3:30 p.m. in GR&#13;
103.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 9: Movie, "Chinatown" at 7:30 p.m. in SAB. Admission&#13;
is $1.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 9: Play, "Perpetual Care" at 8 p.m. in CAT. Tickets are&#13;
$1 at Info Kiosk.&#13;
Author describes play&#13;
Kubly play will open Friday&#13;
"Perpetual Care" is a play&#13;
about the generation gap amoung&#13;
the artists, and metaphorically&#13;
and more broadly, in society as a&#13;
whole.&#13;
Its setting is the Silas Savage&#13;
Colony for artists (painters, poets&#13;
and novelists, composers) in a&#13;
Vermont sun-dappled birch and&#13;
hemlock forest in which the&#13;
young Siegfried might have&#13;
hunted happily. A sign on a tree&#13;
announces the forest to be a&#13;
"Wild Life Refuge". The action of&#13;
the play is divided between&#13;
Muses' Haven, the combination&#13;
library-and-assembly room&#13;
which is the hub of colony life and&#13;
the twin studios known as Robert&#13;
and Clara Schumann.&#13;
Colonists are divided between&#13;
the older generation, headed by&#13;
Mathilda Sims, Colony director&#13;
and intimate friend of the late&#13;
founder, Silas Savage, and a&#13;
young generation whose life-andcreation&#13;
styles are vastly different.&#13;
The older artists are&#13;
purists whose concept of the&#13;
creative life is withdrawal into&#13;
serence forest tranquility to court&#13;
the muses. The younger artists&#13;
believe in involvement with one&#13;
another and with society; withdrawal&#13;
is not their bag. They find&#13;
their muses not in self-denial, but&#13;
in sex, alcohol and (after one of&#13;
them finds a patch of wild&#13;
marijuana growing in the woods)&#13;
pot. Communication between the&#13;
two groups is almost impossible&#13;
and the play is a comedy of&#13;
misunderstanding.&#13;
The lead characters, both of&#13;
Financial aids committee&#13;
will hold info, forum&#13;
The Parkside Financial Aids Committee and staff will hold an open&#13;
forum on Thursday, November 13, in D-174 of the Wyllie Library&#13;
Learning Center. Financial Aids Committee and staff will be available&#13;
to answer questions and students will be encouraged to make&#13;
recommendations and comment on Financial Aids. Individual cases&#13;
will not be discussed at this time.&#13;
IJ i&#13;
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On tap at the Skellar&#13;
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BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT DRINKS&#13;
WINES&#13;
whom find themselves in the&#13;
colony in unique and unorthodox&#13;
circumstances, are Gloria Magee&#13;
and Walter Kent. Gloria doesn't&#13;
belong there at all. She is a&#13;
stripper who was selected for the&#13;
American Legion Bicenteenial&#13;
celebrationas "Miss Nude&#13;
Vermont". Her appearance at a&#13;
Legion bash is raided and she&#13;
escapes, unclothed, into the&#13;
woods where she is rescued by&#13;
two young male colonists who&#13;
sneak her into their studios.&#13;
Walter Kent is an ex-New York&#13;
advertising man who is in flight&#13;
from the rat race and his divorce&#13;
from the daughter of the vice&#13;
president of the Panther Paw&#13;
Rubber Heel Company, the firm&#13;
in which he was employed. In&#13;
addition to being a refugee from&#13;
the establishment, he is also at&#13;
the moment a misogynist.&#13;
Gloria is passed off in the&#13;
Colony by her rescuers as a poet&#13;
named Adrien Parry and is&#13;
assigned, alont with Walter, into&#13;
the twin stodios of Robert and&#13;
Clara Schumann. The two plunge&#13;
into a battle of the sexes which is&#13;
really a resistance to their&#13;
growing love. Gloria has another&#13;
love affair, with Mathilda Sims, a&#13;
lonely old woman who recognizes&#13;
in her a "sister who has suffered."&#13;
&#13;
The culmination of Gloria's two&#13;
loves brings a happy ending to&#13;
311 Herbert Kubly&#13;
Parkside Activities Board Presents&#13;
a lecture by&#13;
P. J. O'ROURKE&#13;
EDITOR&#13;
Wed., November 12 8 p.m.&#13;
Comm. Arts Theatre&#13;
*1.25 UWP Students advance&#13;
*1.75 General and at the door&#13;
Tickets are sold at the Info Kioski and at the door&#13;
V )&#13;
pays 51/2%&#13;
on passb„&#13;
Savings!&#13;
On-Campus Service.. .Room 235 Tallent Rail&#13;
Phone: 553-2150&#13;
Main Office: 1400 No. Newman Rd. Racine&#13;
Phone 634-6661&#13;
ANY NEW RELEASE.&#13;
$6.98 b.PS $7.98 TAPES j&#13;
" " $ 5 , 4 0 1&#13;
ftr e stone Expert&#13;
, LUBE S OIL CHANGE&#13;
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0NE SWEET BREAM&#13;
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SQ1B 7Tti AVENUE KENQ5NA j&#13;
709 Wisconsin Ave.&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
Most&#13;
American&#13;
cars&#13;
Includes up to 5 quarts&#13;
of quality oil, an oil&#13;
filter and expert chassis&#13;
Thurs. 7:30 ' til 8:30 p.m. lubrication. Call for&#13;
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Phone 637-9591&#13;
Mon., Tues., Wed., Fri.&#13;
7-.30 a.m. "'til 6:00 p.m.&#13;
Sat. 'til 4:00 p.m. </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 4, issue 10, November 5, 1975</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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                <text>1975-11-05</text>
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              <text>senate next week&#13;
COP to see faculty&#13;
by Mike Palecek&#13;
"I'm convinced that if we sat in&#13;
this room and made all of the&#13;
decisions, no one would have&#13;
bitched once. Now that we're&#13;
going out of the committee for&#13;
ideas, we're being screamed at&#13;
by everybody," said Bill Murin&#13;
chairperson of the University&#13;
Committee about COP workgroups&#13;
and general University&#13;
reaction. Murin co-chairs COP&#13;
with Chancellor Guskin.&#13;
"I'm prepared to go to the&#13;
faculty senate and tell them that&#13;
if they don't want to reaffirm the&#13;
proposal, (creating COP), then&#13;
we'll drop the whole thing. I'm&#13;
tired of getting phone calls at 11&#13;
p.m. about COP," Murin said at&#13;
the latest University Committee&#13;
meeting last week.&#13;
The University Committee is&#13;
the executive committee for the&#13;
faculty and faculty senate and all&#13;
members sit on COP.&#13;
Also discussed at the Nov. 6&#13;
University Committee meeting&#13;
were: placement of faculty on the&#13;
faculty condification committee;&#13;
plans for future evaluation of&#13;
divisional chairpersons; information&#13;
on the UW-system&#13;
composite support indexes; and&#13;
ideas on teaching and student&#13;
awards.&#13;
The composite support index of&#13;
the UW-System was explained to&#13;
the committee. The index&#13;
measures allocations to each&#13;
Susan Wishaw and David&#13;
Schroeder appeared in the play,&#13;
"Perpetual Care" performed last&#13;
weekend by the Players of&#13;
Parkside. The play was about the&#13;
inhabitants of a New England&#13;
artists' colony. Review by amy&#13;
cundari on page 5. photo by Mike Nepper&#13;
UW-campus, Ron Gatterdam,&#13;
associate professor of&#13;
mathematics, •stated, "the&#13;
estimate of instructional support&#13;
has hurt us" in terms of dollars&#13;
that will be contributed towards&#13;
many of Parkside's services.&#13;
Parkside was only one of two of&#13;
the system's schools to show a&#13;
decline on the index. Gotterdam&#13;
pointed out that the index was an&#13;
inappropriate measure of a&#13;
college's financial status,&#13;
because some actions, such as&#13;
cutting upper level courses to&#13;
save money, actually raise the&#13;
index. He added that Parkside's&#13;
large number of part-time&#13;
students alter the level as well.&#13;
The University Committee&#13;
discussed evaluation of the administrative&#13;
functions of&#13;
divisional chairpersons for merit&#13;
recommendations and to give&#13;
chairpersons feedback. Tenative&#13;
evaluation will be broken down&#13;
into three areas: leadership,&#13;
interpersonal actions, and&#13;
management. Leadership will be&#13;
gaged by improvements in&#13;
divisional faculty and the&#13;
chairperson's encouragement of&#13;
faculty development. Interpersonal&#13;
action will be&#13;
measured by confidentiality and&#13;
providing adequate information&#13;
to the faculty. Management will&#13;
be evaluated by how well the&#13;
paperwork is done. Divisional&#13;
chairpersons still will have some&#13;
continued on page 8&#13;
Vol. IV NO. 11&#13;
Guskin says no recommendations or voting&#13;
on student, staff responsibilities&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
Last week P.S.G.A. vice&#13;
president Kai Nail addressed a&#13;
letter to Chancellor Guskin and&#13;
Associate Professor Bill Murin&#13;
who co-chair the Committee of&#13;
Principals. In that letter, Nail&#13;
stated that according to Merger&#13;
law faculty are responsible to&#13;
formulate policy regarding&#13;
academic and educational activities&#13;
and personnel matters,&#13;
while responsibility for formulating&#13;
policies governing&#13;
academic staff (i.e. library,&#13;
financial aids, counseling,&#13;
computer center, career planning&#13;
and placement, etc.) lie with&#13;
the academic staff, and, formulation&#13;
and review of policies&#13;
concerning student life, services&#13;
and interests lie with the&#13;
students.&#13;
The letter was prompted by the&#13;
fact that a number of COP workgroups&#13;
have discussed policies&#13;
regarding academic staff areas&#13;
of r esponsibility.&#13;
No recommendations about&#13;
academic staff&#13;
In an interview Guskin said, "I&#13;
don't know the reasons for workgroups&#13;
discussing the academic&#13;
staff responsibilities." Guskin&#13;
added that although it was&#13;
legitimate for work-groups to&#13;
discuss all areas of the University&#13;
he had no reason to believe&#13;
that COP would make any&#13;
recommendations to the faculty&#13;
senate for voting on matters that&#13;
were not clearly dealing with&#13;
faculty and academics.&#13;
"Recommendations regarding&#13;
Rep. questions legality&#13;
of discipline code&#13;
The new student disciplinary&#13;
code of the University Board of&#13;
Regents "violates legislative&#13;
intent, exceeds the principles of&#13;
administrative law, and raises&#13;
serious civil liberties issues,"&#13;
State Rep. David Clarenbach (DMadison)&#13;
said last Friday.&#13;
In a letter to the U.W. Regents&#13;
Board, Clarenbach raised his&#13;
objections which includes "legal&#13;
questions to the validity of the&#13;
rules, the procedures to be&#13;
followed in cases of student&#13;
misconduct and the techniques&#13;
employed in drafting clear and&#13;
unambiguous disciplinary&#13;
standards."&#13;
Clarenbach specified four&#13;
areas of the proposed code where&#13;
his objections lie. They are: the&#13;
definition of a disciplinary&#13;
sanction; the spectre of double&#13;
jeopardy for a disciplined&#13;
student; the procedures for&#13;
"informal adjudication"; and the&#13;
use of examples when specifying&#13;
the offenses with which a student&#13;
may be charged.&#13;
The Board of Regents are&#13;
slated to act on the proposed code&#13;
in January. The full text of&#13;
Clarenbach's letter to the&#13;
Regents is available in the&#13;
RANGER office, WLLC D 194.&#13;
counseling, and academic staff&#13;
won't come out," Guskin reaffirmed.&#13;
"The primary function of&#13;
COP and its work-groups is to&#13;
deal with academic priorities,&#13;
and the implications of educating&#13;
different types of students," he&#13;
said.&#13;
Guskin said that the work&#13;
groups will research instructional&#13;
methods, nature of&#13;
the students, nature of the region,&#13;
nature of the institution, etc.&#13;
"The University Committee will&#13;
make no recommendations about&#13;
the academic staff. The faculty&#13;
cannot set policy for the&#13;
academic staff. Merger gave the&#13;
faculty the primary responsibility&#13;
for educational matters,"&#13;
Guskin explained.&#13;
Guskin's interpretation of w hat&#13;
COP was about and what the&#13;
work-groups were to be doing&#13;
was shared by Murin. He said, "I&#13;
don't know what Nail is talking&#13;
. ab out," in his letter, but that "the&#13;
entire thrust of the COP&#13;
recommendations to the faculty&#13;
senate would be about&#13;
academics. What we are&#13;
researching is academic&#13;
organization, structure, and&#13;
priorities; we have no intention of&#13;
making recommendations about&#13;
Irwin Zuehlke's Office (Business&#13;
Affairs), Jewel Echelbarger's&#13;
shop (Dean of Students Office),&#13;
or other academic staff areas.&#13;
Some faculty left-out&#13;
Some faculty members feel&#13;
that they lack representation on&#13;
COP. Those individuals who&#13;
offered to work with groups and&#13;
were not selected and others&#13;
whose entire discipline is not&#13;
represented on any work-group,&#13;
worry openly. However, Guskin&#13;
pointed out that there will be&#13;
times when COP will attempt to&#13;
go totally public, to the entire&#13;
campus and community, for&#13;
input. At least two special&#13;
meetings will be held, Nov. 20 at&#13;
2:30 p.m. and Dec. 18 at 2 p.m.,&#13;
where individuals may meet with&#13;
at least two of the six workgroups&#13;
and argue, discuss, and&#13;
make recommendations. "We're&#13;
not playing a representational&#13;
game." Guskin emphasized. "It&#13;
•is an open process, but an open&#13;
process needs issues, and to be&#13;
sure that the issues are totally&#13;
clear, we will go totally public in&#13;
consultation." After the first&#13;
open meeting, the groups will go&#13;
back to study within work-groups&#13;
what was said at the openhearing,&#13;
and then again go out to&#13;
the public in December.&#13;
Building strength&#13;
Guskin said that one of the&#13;
purposes behind the concept of&#13;
COP is to build the strength of th e&#13;
faculty. As well, "I am trying to&#13;
help build the strength of the&#13;
various constituencies on this&#13;
campus. I would like to see the&#13;
faculty, the academic staff, and&#13;
the students, initiate programs,&#13;
gain vitality and potency," he&#13;
said. "My response will not be&#13;
political to any pressure," he&#13;
warned.&#13;
Guskin said that a strcager&#13;
student voice will be had in his&#13;
placing of students on various&#13;
committees where they have&#13;
previously not served. He also&#13;
explained that he expected a&#13;
stronger academic staff with the&#13;
basis in the newly organized&#13;
Academic Staff Committee,&#13;
chaired by lecturer Carol Saffioti.&#13;
&#13;
COP structure&#13;
COP is the faculty's University&#13;
Committee with the addition of&#13;
four administrators; Chancellor&#13;
Guskin, Vice-Chancellor Otto&#13;
Bauer, Dean Norwood of the&#13;
College of Science and Society,&#13;
and Dean Moy of the School of&#13;
Modern Industry. Under COP are&#13;
six work-groups: Institutional&#13;
Research, Priority Development,&#13;
Regional Research, Instructional&#13;
Methods, Program Development,&#13;
and Student Population.&#13;
The University Committee will&#13;
make recommendations to the&#13;
faculty senate for voting.&#13;
Although Chancellor Guskin has&#13;
veto power some feel that he has&#13;
suggested that he will rarely, if&#13;
ever, use it.&#13;
COP was given $10,000 with&#13;
which to work. The funds, according&#13;
to Gary Goetz, Director&#13;
of the budget, are part of a&#13;
$250,000 carry-over from last&#13;
year which the legislature&#13;
allowed the University to keep on&#13;
a one time basis. The funds were&#13;
accumulated as a result of the&#13;
hiring freeze last January and&#13;
would have normally been used&#13;
for hiring. &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Nov. 12, 1975&#13;
COP threatens,&#13;
attitudes and&#13;
structure poor&#13;
At this time in the University's history, through the&#13;
Committee ot Principals and their work-groups, we are&#13;
all taking a long and detailed look at what we've done in&#13;
the past ten years and what we want done and how to do&#13;
it in the future.&#13;
RANGER firmly believes that had COP worked to&#13;
gain trust in the beginning, had they explained the&#13;
concept to the public; taken control to any extent over&#13;
discussion in work-groups; clearly defined to the public&#13;
and the work-groups exactly what could be done and the&#13;
limits of power owned by the faculty senate; COP may&#13;
have been successful.&#13;
At present, however, attitudes towards COP are poor&#13;
at best in the opinion of students, faculty, and academic&#13;
staff who are not directly participating, as well as by&#13;
many members of work-groups themselves.&#13;
Unfortunately, it is a waste of space to be idealistic&#13;
and suppose that all groups could build trust when there&#13;
is no basis from past experience for that trust to be&#13;
built; it would be idealistic to pretend that this time the&#13;
faculty would refrain from trying to usurp the power&#13;
and authority as well as money and positions from the&#13;
academic staff, from other disciplines, divisions,&#13;
committees, etc.; it would be idealistic to want&#13;
cooperation rather than division, optimism rather than&#13;
negativism.&#13;
It is idealistic to hope for these, because some workgroup&#13;
members seized their positions feeling obliged to&#13;
critique other faculty, other disciplines, the academic&#13;
staff and their responsibilities, and the intellect of the&#13;
students. Surveys have been quickly drawn up which&#13;
appear to be pulling for certain responses, in workgroup&#13;
meetings students are asked how "uninformed"&#13;
other students are about various topics. It should be no&#13;
surprise to any of us that so many are left justifyably&#13;
apprehensive and threatened.&#13;
Defenses are up, and although RANGER is of the&#13;
opinion that the initial concept of COP is good, in order&#13;
for it to be successful, fair, honest, and complete, some&#13;
radical changes in attitude and structure will have to be&#13;
made. COP is representational and there are large&#13;
camps of people that are not represented. Governments&#13;
are political therefore voting in the faculty senate is&#13;
political. Free speech and open debate depend upon job&#13;
security therefore too many employees remain quiet.&#13;
Most importantly Chancellor Guskin must show that he&#13;
is in control and not the University Committee, or COP,&#13;
or the faculty senate or any other special interest group.&#13;
And for the rest of us, for all of us, it has long been&#13;
time to prove our integrity and trustworthiness; to&#13;
strengthen Parkside internally and with the community;&#13;
to be receptive to change; to initiate change; to&#13;
replace ideas with programs; inaction with involvement;&#13;
inhibition and laziness with resourcefulness.&#13;
&#13;
THE PARKSIDE&#13;
The PARKSIDE RANGER is written and edited by the students of&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside and they are solely responsible&#13;
for its editorial policy and content. Offices are located in D194 WLLC,&#13;
U.W. Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-2295, 55 3-2287.&#13;
| Acting Edit or: Debra Friedell&#13;
Feature Editor: Mike Pal ecek&#13;
Sports Director: Thorn Aiello&#13;
Events Column: Judy Tradrung&#13;
Business Manager: Ann Verstegen&#13;
Ad make-up:'D iane Werwie&#13;
Ad sal es: Harry Dingfelder Donzell Holt Orin Taylor&#13;
Writers: Jeannine Sipsma, Steve Smith, Leigh Feifer,&#13;
Fred Johnson, Mick. Anderson, Betsy Neu, Jim&#13;
Yorgan, Carol Arentz, Catherine Blise, Bruce Wagner,&#13;
Rita Nicholas, Kurt Larson&#13;
Photographers: Dave Daniels, A1 Fredrtcksen Gordon Mcintosh&#13;
itewEBe'&#13;
tfB UBB&#13;
GBEUGG&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I enjoyed your article in last&#13;
week's paper on P.A.B. Video.&#13;
The guys and gals with whom I&#13;
work on the productions really&#13;
carried on like the lovable nuts&#13;
they are when they read it.&#13;
Before your write-up, we were&#13;
treated like dirt. We still are, only&#13;
now we're abused by name.&#13;
Anyway, I would just like to&#13;
take this time to tell your readers&#13;
that the ink used to print the&#13;
article was made from&#13;
pulverized mango leaves, and by&#13;
cutting it out of the paper and&#13;
mailing it to the following address,&#13;
they can do their part to&#13;
save 5,000 starving monkeys in&#13;
Bolivia. Once again, thanx.&#13;
Monkey Chow&#13;
c-o Big Jose&#13;
32 Baptista Ruts&#13;
Muncie, Bolivia S.A.&#13;
Bill Barke&#13;
To the Ediotr:&#13;
As it has been explained to me&#13;
by Chancellor Guskin, I understand&#13;
that the final recommendations&#13;
of the COP will be&#13;
furthered to the Faculty Senate&#13;
for approval. That being the case,&#13;
P.S.G.A. would like to make&#13;
reference to Merger Law in&#13;
distinguishing between the&#13;
responsibilities of the faculty,&#13;
students, and the newly created&#13;
area of academic staff. The&#13;
responsibility for the formulation&#13;
and review of po licies concerning&#13;
student life, services and interests&#13;
(especially those supported&#13;
by 128 funds and Auxiliary&#13;
Services) lies with the students.&#13;
Also, the responsiblity for the&#13;
formulation of po licies governing&#13;
academic staff, lectures, and&#13;
visiting professors, lie with the&#13;
Academic Staff Advisory&#13;
Committee. The faculty are&#13;
responsible for academic and&#13;
educational activities and personnel&#13;
matters.&#13;
It is apparent from the outset,&#13;
that the COP, via it's work&#13;
groups, is dealing with the policy&#13;
development not just of faculty&#13;
related areas but of the whole&#13;
campus. The P.S.G.A. is strongly&#13;
against this action by the COP.&#13;
The areas concerning students,&#13;
academic staff, counseling, and&#13;
other areas are not the responsibility&#13;
of the faculty, when it&#13;
comes to policy development.&#13;
The P.S.G.A. is asking that your&#13;
work groups deal only with those&#13;
issues concerning academic and&#13;
educational activities and personnel&#13;
matters of the faculty. If&#13;
that is not appropriate we are&#13;
asking that when the COP&#13;
receives the recommendations&#13;
and data from the work groups&#13;
that you refer that information^&#13;
that is not of faculty responsibility,&#13;
to the appropriate areas&#13;
in the institution for their&#13;
respective disposition. The&#13;
P.S.G.A. feels thzt the Faculty&#13;
Senate should not be deciding the&#13;
direction of those areas of the&#13;
University that are not their&#13;
responsibility under Merger.&#13;
I would hope that the COP will&#13;
review this problem and act&#13;
promptly, and that we can keep&#13;
the areas of responsibility clear&#13;
so as to avoid any future conflicts.&#13;
&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Kai Christian Nail&#13;
Vice President, P.S.G.A.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The Academic Programs&#13;
Working Group was formed by&#13;
the Committee of Principals&#13;
(which consists of the University&#13;
Committee and the top administrators&#13;
of UW-P) to advise&#13;
them on Parkside's academic&#13;
programs. We are charged,&#13;
briefly, with making an outline of&#13;
what Parkside's academic&#13;
programs ought to be in the next&#13;
several years and five to ten&#13;
years from now. We are not&#13;
concerned with minor changes in&#13;
existing majors, important as&#13;
these may be, but with new options&#13;
for the students. At this&#13;
stage of our activity we are&#13;
looking for ideas that logically&#13;
follow from our present offerings&#13;
and also that imply a marked&#13;
change in the present structure of&#13;
the curriculum. We plan to find&#13;
out what ideas exist, to act as a&#13;
catalyst to spur development of&#13;
ideas, and to review the ideas as&#13;
they develop with a view towards&#13;
strengthening them. We also will&#13;
be reviewing the ideas which are&#13;
sufficiently advanced to be called&#13;
preliminary proposals with a&#13;
view towards making recommendations&#13;
to the COP about&#13;
relative priorities.&#13;
With regrets for having to send&#13;
around another request for information,&#13;
we would like to have&#13;
you answer in as much detail as&#13;
you can the attached questions.&#13;
We believe this information will&#13;
enable us to put our present offerings&#13;
into better perspective, to&#13;
discover what ideas you have and&#13;
at what stage of development&#13;
they are, and to put people with&#13;
similar thoughts in touch with&#13;
each other. Your help is crucial,&#13;
and we thank you for it in advance.&#13;
&#13;
We want to be kept informed of&#13;
changes or progress in your&#13;
ideas, and we will occasionally&#13;
request information from groups&#13;
or individuals. We also would like&#13;
very much to arrange meetings&#13;
with individuals, disciplines, or&#13;
groups who want to present or&#13;
amplify their ideas. Please send&#13;
your replies to Ben Greenebaum,&#13;
Greenquist Hall 327, ext. 2133.&#13;
In order to create a balanced&#13;
picture of the present state of&#13;
academic program planning at&#13;
Parkside, the Academic&#13;
Programs Working Group,&#13;
requests that you answer the&#13;
following questions as fully as&#13;
possible and return your answers&#13;
to Ben Greenebaum, Greenquist&#13;
Hall 327 ( ext. 2133) as promptly&#13;
as you can.&#13;
Ben Greenebaum&#13;
Describe fully the ideas you have been thinking about&#13;
for changes in the academic program. Please include&#13;
' .&#13;
ready to be P&#13;
u* forward as formal proposals, "blue&#13;
sky ideas, and anything in between. Please include as&#13;
well any additional problem areas in academic&#13;
programming in your area of interest for which you do&#13;
not have a solution. What do you see as major obstacles&#13;
to implementation of your ideas' &#13;
Wede nesdaay, y/ NOV. Nov. 112, 2/ 119t775 5 THI ME b PAR rAR KSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Academic staff will advise Chancellor&#13;
on policy; receiving some job security&#13;
by by Ann Ann VVerst erstege egen n ernnn nf 5n0,ioi!ct, ^ ~ ,. . *&#13;
"The Academic Staff have&#13;
been the least protected people of&#13;
the University," Carla Stoffel,&#13;
professional librarian and&#13;
Academic Staff Committee&#13;
member said.&#13;
"We have a certain autonomy&#13;
for the first time," according to&#13;
Carol Ann Scaffioti, chairperson&#13;
of the Academic Staff Committee,&#13;
speaking of the new&#13;
guidelines from the Regent's on&#13;
Academic Staff Rules that went&#13;
into effect on Nov. 1. "There was&#13;
no Academic Staff classification&#13;
before; at least now we are&#13;
codified."&#13;
John Tallman, University&#13;
counsel from Madison, explained&#13;
the new guidelines to the&#13;
Parkside Academic Staff&#13;
Committee on Nov. 3.&#13;
This is the first year that&#13;
academic staff has officially been&#13;
looked upon as a separate, functioning&#13;
body, Tallman said, "This&#13;
group of specialists sort of&#13;
arrived like Topsy; they had no&#13;
real home."&#13;
Faculty have always had the&#13;
protection of tenure; civil service&#13;
personnel the protection of&#13;
seniority, testing rank, and&#13;
commi ssion proc edur e.&#13;
Academic staff, whether their&#13;
field was teaching as a lecturer,&#13;
the library, computers, student&#13;
life, counseling, financial aids,&#13;
the learning center or the&#13;
physical plant, were and remain&#13;
the only university community&#13;
personnel hired on -a one-year&#13;
contract.&#13;
Dismissal and non-renewal are&#13;
two different things. But in the&#13;
past, in some cases, little notice&#13;
has been given academic staff&#13;
employees of their demise, and&#13;
reasons for the action were not&#13;
required.&#13;
The new rules that went into&#13;
effect Nov. 1, spell out&#13;
procedures of due process for the&#13;
academic staff. Under the rules&#13;
each Chancellor is to establish an&#13;
Academic Staff Committee "to&#13;
advise the administration on&#13;
policies and procedures." The&#13;
Parkside Academic Staff&#13;
Committee hopes to have their&#13;
policies and procedure recommendations&#13;
ready for Chancellor&#13;
Guskin by Jan. 1.&#13;
Included in the new Regent&#13;
rules is a new job classification&#13;
that might give some academic&#13;
staff members more job security.&#13;
Under Chapter 10, academic staff&#13;
may be either fixed term (as they&#13;
are now), probationary or indefinites.&#13;
Probationary appointments,&#13;
analoguous to tenure&#13;
track procedures for faculty,&#13;
would precede the granting of&#13;
indefinite appointments. Selected&#13;
members of the academic staff&#13;
authorized by the Chancellor&#13;
could be given probationary&#13;
academic staff appointments&#13;
leading to review and a decision&#13;
on an indefinite appointment.&#13;
Maximum probationary period&#13;
Affirmative action situation&#13;
shows some improvement&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
Joe Attwell, assistant to the&#13;
chancellor for affirmative action,&#13;
is presently devising a rough&#13;
draft of Parkside's affirmative&#13;
action plan. That plan will be&#13;
presented to Chancellor Alan&#13;
Guskin sometime in December&#13;
for his approval.&#13;
Guskin said last week that in&#13;
his philosophy of affirmative&#13;
action the responsibility rests on&#13;
the people that do the hiring and&#13;
they, in turn, will be held&#13;
responsible. "I have told every&#13;
senior administrator and the&#13;
academic Deans that I am totally&#13;
committed to affirmative action&#13;
and that they are responsible."&#13;
Guskin said that he views Attwell's&#13;
position as one of a dvising&#13;
the Chancellor, not as one to&#13;
enforce hiring procedures with&#13;
regards to affirmative action.&#13;
"State and federal laws and&#13;
regulations exist because people&#13;
have not shown a good faith effort&#13;
in hiring women and minorities,"&#13;
Guskin said.&#13;
He explained that at Parkside,&#13;
women and minorities must be&#13;
interviewed for open positions&#13;
unless there is an exceptional&#13;
reason as to why they could not&#13;
be interviewed. He added that he&#13;
believes the University should&#13;
hire the most competent individual&#13;
who applies for a job. "I&#13;
am convinced that there are&#13;
many competent women and&#13;
minorities. There are three black&#13;
faculty members, two are on the&#13;
tenure track and both are in the&#13;
division of education. I know&#13;
there are more to be found," he&#13;
said.&#13;
"The number of women faculty&#13;
members is very small, you can't&#13;
tell me there aren't competent&#13;
women," siad Guskin. He added&#13;
that his policy will be to increase&#13;
the number of minorities and&#13;
women in both the faculty and the&#13;
administration. "Unless we hire&#13;
considerable numbers as&#13;
positions open up, I'm going to be&#13;
very, very unhappy and other&#13;
things will then have to be done."&#13;
Guskin said that he felt the&#13;
educational environment must be&#13;
sensitive to those groups, and&#13;
although he would like to think&#13;
that white males are sensitive in&#13;
many ways, traditionally they&#13;
have excluded women and&#13;
minorities by practice.&#13;
"The issue is not, he said, the&#13;
affirmative action officer. "If&#13;
every one does their job, affirmative&#13;
action officers would&#13;
not be needed."&#13;
Percentage of women&#13;
is same&#13;
Recently a status analysis of&#13;
permanent staff was done. The&#13;
analysis showed that although&#13;
there was a decrease in the&#13;
numbers of women employed by&#13;
4.4, the percentage of women at&#13;
Parkside remained the same in&#13;
1974-75 as it is in 1975-76; 29.3&#13;
percent. Women were lost in&#13;
faculty positions as well as&#13;
classified staff, however,&#13;
positions were gained in&#13;
academic non-faculty areas.&#13;
Women and minorities continue&#13;
to cluster in the lower ranks&#13;
of each academic category. Of&#13;
the 35 new academic staff hires, 1&#13;
is a black male, 1 is a black&#13;
female and 11 are white females.&#13;
None of these new hires are in&#13;
high level positions: The black&#13;
male is a lecturer; the black&#13;
female is a counselor; four of t he&#13;
eleven females are assistant&#13;
professors, one of which is a&#13;
visiting; 1 is an instructor&#13;
(visiting); 3 are lecturers; 2 are&#13;
counselors; and 1 is a program&#13;
coordinator.&#13;
Of the 77 tenured teaching&#13;
faculty, 6 are women and 3 are&#13;
minority (2 Asian and 1&#13;
Hispanic). In 1975-76, 12 f aculty&#13;
were granted tenure and all were&#13;
white males. Fourteen males and&#13;
two white females were given&#13;
non-renewal notices. One female&#13;
resigned after the Humanities&#13;
Executive Committee voted nonrenewal&#13;
but before the decision&#13;
was approved further along the&#13;
chain.&#13;
Gains made insalary&#13;
differences&#13;
Gains have been made in&#13;
narrowing the difference between&#13;
the average salary for male&#13;
and female faculty members at&#13;
all ranks in 1974-75 after an equity&#13;
study was done last year. For&#13;
example, the average salary for&#13;
male and female professors&#13;
decreased in 1974-75 from $1865 to&#13;
$461 in 1975-76; for associate&#13;
professors from $1,108 to $202;&#13;
and for assistant professors from&#13;
$164 to +$20 in 1975-76.&#13;
Merit increases are not based&#13;
solely on rank, but also on the&#13;
amount of time an individual has&#13;
worked at Parkside, community&#13;
service, publishing, as well as&#13;
teaching capabilities.&#13;
Staff reductions due to budget&#13;
cuts affected classified staff&#13;
employment severely. Total&#13;
employment dropped from 191.9&#13;
in Oct. 1974 to 168.6 in Sept. 1975, a&#13;
loss of 23.3 positions. The number&#13;
of women employees decreased&#13;
by 10.3. Minority employment&#13;
decreased by 1.&#13;
r&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
•&#13;
i&#13;
•&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
•&#13;
i&#13;
ft&gt;&#13;
WITH THIS EBUP0N&#13;
ANY NEW RELEASE,&#13;
SB.88 b.PS 87.88 TAPES&#13;
0NLY$4.29 aNLY$5.40&#13;
ONE SW EET BREAM&#13;
5010 7TH AVENUE KENOSHA&#13;
should not exceed seven years for&#13;
a full time position.&#13;
An indefinite appointment is an&#13;
appointment with permanent&#13;
status and for an unlimited term&#13;
granted by the Chancellor to an&#13;
academic staff member.&#13;
John Tallman cautioned about&#13;
indefinite appointments, "You&#13;
just get one bite at the apple."&#13;
Just as those faculty working&#13;
toward tenure, if at the end of&#13;
seven years the academic staff&#13;
member is not given an indefinite&#13;
appointment, he or she is out of&#13;
the University.&#13;
Tallman also felt it would be&#13;
unwise to go overboard with&#13;
indefinite appointments because&#13;
a financial emergency could&#13;
override the appointment. He&#13;
implied that the more indefinite&#13;
appointments there were, the&#13;
more long term commitments the&#13;
University was bound to, the less&#13;
job security for each member in a&#13;
financial emergency.&#13;
The new rules covering&#13;
academic staff also include nonrenewal,&#13;
dismissal, hearing and&#13;
procedural guarantees, review,&#13;
complaint and grievance&#13;
procedures.&#13;
The Academic Staff Committee&#13;
will present guidelines to&#13;
Chancellor Guskin on the im;&#13;
plementation of the Regent's&#13;
rules for this campus.&#13;
Lampoon editor&#13;
here Wednesday&#13;
"The New Humor" is the topic&#13;
of a lecture by P.J. O'Rourke, an&#13;
executive editor of National&#13;
Lampoon magazine, to be&#13;
presented at 8 p.m. on Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 12, in the Comm&#13;
Arts Theater under sponsorship&#13;
of the student Parkside Activities&#13;
Board.&#13;
Advance tickets for students&#13;
are $1.25 and are available at the&#13;
Information Kiosk.&#13;
National Lampoon is the&#13;
world's most widely read humor&#13;
magazine with a circulation of&#13;
about one million. The five-yearold&#13;
publication has its roots in the&#13;
Harvard Lampoon, the campus&#13;
humor magazine that first went&#13;
national in its life-size parodies to&#13;
Time, Life, Playboy and&#13;
Cosmopolitan.&#13;
The magazine has won&#13;
eighteen design awards and the&#13;
Columbia University School of&#13;
Journalism's 1975 Magazine of&#13;
the Year Award for Visual Excellence.&#13;
Lampoon comedy&#13;
albums have been nominated for&#13;
two straight years for Grammy&#13;
Awards.&#13;
) BRAT STOP Hf. so &amp; 194&#13;
s Friday &amp; Saturday&#13;
ZAP&#13;
•&#13;
: Thursday&#13;
UNION&#13;
•&#13;
: Pitcher o f Hammes *1.00&#13;
I from 7 to 10 Thursday only!&#13;
• FREE ad mission Friday w ith UWP S tadont 1.0.&#13;
"FIZZ/&#13;
\&#13;
CTECH&#13;
We're just around&#13;
the corner&#13;
from Parkside&#13;
Birch Rd.&#13;
at&#13;
16th Ave.&#13;
551-7660&#13;
Try our College&#13;
Economy&#13;
Pizza &#13;
LIME PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Nov. 12, 1975&#13;
GCPGtUtfg&#13;
Vets counseling&#13;
at Outpost&#13;
The Veteran's Office will have&#13;
a student veteran manning the&#13;
Outpost in Greenquist Hall to&#13;
serve night students. Tom Olsen&#13;
will be available to discuss&#13;
veterans' benefits, and help with&#13;
referals for tutoring, counseling,&#13;
or other problems veterans may&#13;
have.&#13;
Olsen will be at the Outpost on&#13;
Mondays and Wednesdays from&#13;
4-5:30 p.m., on Tuesdays from 4-&#13;
7:30 p.m., and on Thursdays from&#13;
6:30-7:30 p.m.&#13;
During the day veterans may&#13;
contact either Ken Oberbrunner&#13;
Tallent Hall 115, o r Tim Jatczak&#13;
in Tallent Hall 104.&#13;
Teachers&#13;
recruited&#13;
for Australia&#13;
Four Australian states "will&#13;
again recruit teachers at&#13;
Parkside when a representative&#13;
of the Victoria Selection&#13;
Program, the recruitment&#13;
agency, visits the campus on&#13;
Dec. 6.&#13;
The only other recruitment&#13;
center in the state is UWMadison,&#13;
where representatives&#13;
will conduct interviews on Dec. 4&#13;
and 5.&#13;
Parkside Placement Director,&#13;
Jack Elmore, said both beginning&#13;
and experienced teachers are&#13;
being sought for the Australian&#13;
states of Victoria, Tasmania,&#13;
West Australia and Queensland.&#13;
He said the Dec. 6 session will&#13;
begin at 8:30 a.m. in Tallent Hall&#13;
with a two-hour orientation&#13;
session explaining the recruitment&#13;
program to be followed by&#13;
interviews with interested&#13;
candidates.&#13;
Elmore said persons selected&#13;
are expected to make a committment&#13;
to remain in Australia&#13;
for one-and-one-half to two years.&#13;
Elmore said that interested&#13;
candidates should contact his&#13;
office well in advance of the interview&#13;
date to arrange for filing&#13;
of references and transcripts.&#13;
Five Parkside graduates&#13;
presently are teaching in&#13;
Australia, Elmore said, and all of&#13;
them have returned positive&#13;
reports about the country and&#13;
their experiences there. They&#13;
were selected in interviews at&#13;
Parkside last spring and summer.&#13;
.. _ _&#13;
0BDB&#13;
Wisconsin's F inest B uffet&#13;
Lunch $ 2.00 11-2 p .m.&#13;
Dinner $ 2.95 4-7:30 p .m&#13;
Beverage a nd D essert&#13;
2005 L athrop Ave.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 12: Antro. club meeting at 7:30p.m. in CL324.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 12: Skellar, Latin Flamenco guitarist Gary Biel&#13;
from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 12: Student concert at 3:30 p.m. in the CAT. Sponsored&#13;
by the Music Dept.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 12: Lecture by National Lampoon Editor, P.J.&#13;
O'Rourke at 8 p.m. in the CAT. Tickets on sale at the Info Kiosk for&#13;
$1.25 in advance and will be $1.75 at the door.&#13;
friday, Nov. 14: Faculty music recital: Stephen Swedish, piano,&#13;
at 7:30p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 16:Mass at 11:15 a.m. at the CHI-RHO.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 16: Parkside Jazz Ensembles concert at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
CAT.&#13;
Monday, Nov. 17: PAB Film Festival, Humphrey Bogart in "African&#13;
Queen" and "Caine Mutiny" at 7:30 p.m. in the CAT. Admission is $1.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 18: PAB Film Festival, Humphrey Bogart in "African&#13;
Queen" and "Caine Mutiny" at 7:30 p.m. in the CAT. Admission is $1.&#13;
Workshop on majors and careers&#13;
The Counseling Office and the Career Planning and Placement&#13;
Office are jointly sponsoring a workshop for students who need help&#13;
choosing a major or making career plans.&#13;
The workshop, led by Counselor Abisola Gallagher and Barbara&#13;
Larson, will include career interest testing, discussion of c areer interests,&#13;
skills and goals, labor market information and a job information&#13;
search.&#13;
Students interested in participating should call 553-2225 to e nroll in&#13;
either of the two sections being offered: Section 1 - 11:30-12:30&#13;
Tuesdays (Nov. 18-Dec. 2)&#13;
Section II - 11:30-12:20, Wednesdays, (Nov. 19-Dec. 3)&#13;
Reps here for job placement&#13;
The following will have representatives on campus to interview&#13;
students for job placement. For further information contact the Office&#13;
of C areer Planning and Placement in Tallent Hall.&#13;
Frid., Nov. 14, 1975: Modine Mfg. Interviewing for Mechanical&#13;
Engineers.&#13;
Tues., Nov. 18,1975: Metropolitan Ins. Co., any major.&#13;
Dec. 2,3,4,5,1975: U.S. Marines...LLC Alcove 103&#13;
Sat., Dec. 6,1975: Victoria Teacher selection program. Will interview&#13;
teachers for the Australian states of Victoria, Queensland, West&#13;
Australia and Tasmania. Teacher and anyone who would be accompanying&#13;
them to Australia MUST attend the orientation session&#13;
beginning at 8:30 a.m. Sat., Dec. 6,1975. Teachers wishing to interview&#13;
must have transcipt(s( and placement file in Placement Office, 107&#13;
Tallent Hall, by December 1, 1975.&#13;
Thurs., Dec. 11, 1975: Peace Coprs-Vista...LLC Alcove 103&#13;
Parkside Activities Board Presents a lecture by&#13;
P. J. O'ROURKE&#13;
EDITOR&#13;
Tonight at 8 p.m.&#13;
Comm. Arts Theatre&#13;
*1.25 UWP Students Advance&#13;
$1.75 General and at the door&#13;
Tickets are sold at the Info Kioski and at the door&#13;
ESPRKES&#13;
Men's Fancy Print &amp; Solid&#13;
LONG SLEEVE SHIRTS&#13;
also Ladies' Famous Name Long Sleeve&#13;
WESTERN SHIRTS&#13;
Reg. $9-$18 Values Usually $5.99-$7.99&#13;
sale"™30% OFF&#13;
Reg. $10-$20 Values&#13;
Usually $5.99-$6.99&#13;
SALE $4.99&#13;
NOW ^&#13;
5723 6th AVE., KENOSHA&#13;
406 MAIN ST, RACINE &#13;
Consistently good technical achievements&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 12, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Play&#13;
the&#13;
At 8 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 7, the&#13;
curtain went up on Herbert&#13;
Kubly's "Perpetual Care." After&#13;
viewing the play I can only&#13;
assume that this was done&#13;
because of a sadistic quirk in&#13;
some member of the crew.&#13;
The cast, in this instance, was&#13;
faced with the task of c reating a&#13;
good comedy with the author's&#13;
shallow humor, dragging&#13;
dialogue, and ridiculous (not&#13;
comic) sexual intentions.&#13;
The supposed action was to&#13;
take place in a combination artist&#13;
is "Sudden Death" with acting&#13;
only perpetuating element&#13;
colony and "Wild Life" refugee, .. .. ' .&#13;
called the Silas Savage Colony!&#13;
The play was divided into three&#13;
acts, act one and act three again&#13;
divided into two scenes. After act&#13;
one, scene one, no one caredexcept&#13;
the cast. I sat in the third&#13;
row almost in front of Herbert&#13;
Kubly and at one point, at the end&#13;
of a ct one, he remarked, "These&#13;
young people are amateurs, but&#13;
they're doing rather well&#13;
tonight." Amateur or&#13;
professional, any cast that keeps&#13;
its exuberance and intensity in a&#13;
theatrically unworthy vehicle&#13;
like "Perpetual Care" is to be&#13;
commended. The play was more&#13;
like "Sudden Death" and they&#13;
were the only perpetuating&#13;
elements.&#13;
Aside from some interesting&#13;
body language by Jodi Jones&#13;
(Gloria Magee's essence) the&#13;
piece had no dramatic&#13;
movement. David C. Schroder's&#13;
Cedric Cuthbert and Art Dexter's&#13;
Joshna Whetstone were given a&#13;
depth of character by their&#13;
prospective actors' perfect for&#13;
Reorganizing internal structure&#13;
Modern Industrial Society&#13;
cannot embrace all&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
The Priorities Committee&#13;
Work-Group of COP met last&#13;
week and discussed such&#13;
problems with the University&#13;
structure as: divisional&#13;
budgeting dependent upon&#13;
student enrollment in the&#13;
division; cooperation between&#13;
divisions, disciplines, and the&#13;
College of Science and Society&#13;
with the School of Modern Industry;&#13;
opening of c ourses to 60&#13;
or more students in order to gain&#13;
student head-count in the&#13;
division; great numbers of introductory&#13;
courses; and where&#13;
the liberal arts fit into a&#13;
University with a modern industrial&#13;
society mission.&#13;
At the moment, however, the&#13;
PoliSci internships&#13;
Credit will become available&#13;
for internships in practical&#13;
politics, public administration,&#13;
and law starting next semester,&#13;
according to Samuel Pernacciaro,&#13;
internship coordinator&#13;
and visiting assistant professor of&#13;
political science:&#13;
Those wishing to enroll in will&#13;
have to apply for a particular&#13;
position in the Social Sciences&#13;
Division Offices, CL 367. Three to&#13;
twelve credits will be available&#13;
working for several positions in&#13;
and around the Parkside area.&#13;
Among those positions will be:&#13;
the Racine County public&#13;
defender's office; ombudsman&#13;
for Rep. Michael Farrell or Sen.&#13;
Henry Dorman; and in&#13;
Comgressman Les Aspin's office&#13;
as a case worker and research&#13;
assistant.&#13;
More information is available&#13;
through Pernacciaro at (553)&#13;
Ext. 2496, T allent Hall 272,&#13;
Heritage House&#13;
Student Help&#13;
Wanted&#13;
Good Hours&#13;
Good Time&#13;
Good Pay&#13;
Call 634-0762 for&#13;
appointment for an&#13;
interview.&#13;
an&#13;
work-group is undertaking the&#13;
task of developing a completely&#13;
new academic structure. No&#13;
specific plans are being&#13;
reviewed, though, as the group is&#13;
still "blue-skying."&#13;
Michael Marron, associate&#13;
professor of chemistry, spoke to&#13;
the problem of discouraging&#13;
experimentation in course offerings&#13;
when the University&#13;
funds on the basis of n umbers of&#13;
students. As well, he explained,&#13;
this forces disciplines and&#13;
divisions to compete. Wayne&#13;
Johnson, associate professor of&#13;
philosophy said that this type of&#13;
funding method forced faculty&#13;
into opening courses to such a&#13;
large number of students that it&#13;
effects the quality of courses and&#13;
the nature of course offerings.&#13;
Gerald Greenfield, assistant&#13;
professor of history, explained&#13;
that the faculty must recognize&#13;
that in defining Parkside's&#13;
modern industrial society&#13;
mission, it will not embrace&#13;
everyone, that some areas are&#13;
more important than others. He&#13;
suggested that the University&#13;
"narrow its range" and "sharpen&#13;
its focus" towards the modern&#13;
industrial society. Greenfield&#13;
suggested the University&#13;
distinguish what the demands of&#13;
a modern industrial society are,&#13;
and offer courses which meet&#13;
those demands, that the&#13;
University look at change within&#13;
that society, and offer courses&#13;
that help to understand that&#13;
change.&#13;
Despite the mission there must&#13;
be a minimal grounding in&#13;
liberal arts, the group agreed.&#13;
There must be a rigorous skills&#13;
program in math, the sciences,&#13;
etc. Where are the University's&#13;
priorities," Greenfield asked,&#13;
"when the tutoring program&#13;
must rely on volunteers to&#13;
exist?" How can the University&#13;
promote scholarly interchange&#13;
and research without writing,&#13;
how can the University relate&#13;
more broadly and better to the&#13;
community, were all topics of&#13;
discussion.&#13;
Finally, the group began the&#13;
task of taking a look at the faults&#13;
of the present academic sturcture&#13;
and organization and is&#13;
considering ways in which to&#13;
completely reorganize the&#13;
University internally.&#13;
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the licentious hungers ol their&#13;
appearances. Likewise, the rest&#13;
of t he cast performed very well.&#13;
The piece in total was too slow,&#13;
the remarks cheap, and the&#13;
inherent movement that one&#13;
expects in drama - non-existent.&#13;
The direction was merely&#13;
adequate. Ill use was made of a&#13;
well designed stage. Blocking&#13;
was poorly coordinated. It is a&#13;
shame the only consistently good&#13;
contribution made to Parkside is&#13;
in its technical achievements.&#13;
During one point in the play,&#13;
Walter Kent (Dave Duffeck)&#13;
says, "In love and marriage&#13;
writers have a bad track&#13;
record..." May we assume then&#13;
that Herbert Kubly is at the fore&#13;
of the sexual revolution?&#13;
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THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-PARK5IDE&#13;
invites you to spend winter break... Jan. 2-9, 1976&#13;
in the heart of Waikiki&#13;
7 SUN FILLED F U N F I L L E D DAYS&#13;
JO A complete&#13;
based on 3 sharing a room&#13;
• Round trip charter jet from Chicago to Honowlo via an overseas National Airways&#13;
180 seat DC-8&#13;
• 7 nights lodging at the Deluxe Waikiki Holiday Inn&#13;
'• Traditional Hawaiian Flower lei greeting upon arrival&#13;
• First day Hawaii orientation with full breakfast&#13;
• UW Parkside tour representative through out trrp&#13;
0 Ground transfers, baggage handling, gratuities and taxes&#13;
(an O.T.C. program operated by Elkin tours)&#13;
For application form or further information, stop in at LLC D-197 or phone: 553- 2294&#13;
Hurry...limited space available. Sign up today! &#13;
The Italian cook respects food. The spice&#13;
of a sauce, the fine texture of warm, fresh&#13;
bread, the consistancy of a melted cheesd&#13;
sauce. For him the reward is the pleasure&#13;
of those who enjoy his work. Experience&#13;
this pleasure.&#13;
6 T H E PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Nov . 1 2 , 1 9 75&#13;
From Nov. 12 to Dec. 31 t he Phy Ed Intramural Department will&#13;
offer a basketball free throw contest.&#13;
Each participant must attempt 200 baskets, no more than 20 per day.&#13;
For more information contact Loran Hein in the Phy Ed Building.&#13;
Intramural free throw&#13;
contest offered&#13;
Distributed by E. F. Madrigrano 1831-55th Kenosha. Wl&#13;
Harriers fifth in NAIA&#13;
will compete in AAU&#13;
by Thom Aiello&#13;
"Puzzled" and "stunned" are&#13;
just two of the words used by&#13;
cross-country coach Vic Godfrey&#13;
to express his disappointment in&#13;
his team's performance last&#13;
Saturday. Parkside, which had&#13;
hopes of finishing at least third,&#13;
placed fifth in the NAIA District&#13;
14 Championship, held in Eau&#13;
Claire. UW-La Crosse, led by a&#13;
first-place tie by brothers Jim&#13;
and Joe Hanson, won the meet as&#13;
expected.&#13;
Godfrey said there was "no&#13;
way to explain it right now, we&#13;
could run average and get eighty&#13;
points." As it was the Rangers&#13;
totalled 120 p oints, compared to&#13;
20 for La Crosse. Ray&#13;
Fredericksen once again was the&#13;
leading Ranger runner, but this&#13;
time he finished 24th.&#13;
The rules concerning this&#13;
Saturday's NAIA National&#13;
Championships, in Salina,&#13;
Kansas (11 a.m. starting time),&#13;
are fairly complex. But,&#13;
basically, the top three teams&#13;
from each district, plus the first&#13;
15 individuals, earn a bid. But,&#13;
also, any one member of a team&#13;
that ran in a district meet and&#13;
finished among the first 25 c an&#13;
compete in Salina, to assure&#13;
representation from various&#13;
schools. Fredericksen, then, will&#13;
compete in the Nationals. Godfrey&#13;
was happy for his blue-chip&#13;
runner, saying, "It was Ray's&#13;
first bad race of the year (last&#13;
week), and he deserves the&#13;
chance" to compete* again.&#13;
But it was hard for Godfrey to&#13;
forget about last week's loss.&#13;
"We ran so poor, it makes you&#13;
wonder," he said. Godfrey added&#13;
that "the weather, the team's&#13;
attitude, and the team's health&#13;
couldn't have been better" going&#13;
into the meet, and "that's what is&#13;
so hard to understand. It's just&#13;
like a nightmare. The team&#13;
feels very, very bad about it."&#13;
Although Godfrey did not know&#13;
what exactly went haywire, he&#13;
felt that perhaps the hills after&#13;
the first mile gave his runners&#13;
some problems, but that is "pure&#13;
speculation." The coaph stressed&#13;
the fact that "no single runner&#13;
hurt us." Godfrey said it would&#13;
have "taken about three runners"&#13;
doing much better, to finish&#13;
Table tennis experts&#13;
will hold clinic&#13;
The Phy Ed Intramural Department will offer a preliminary table&#13;
tennis clinic on Sat. Nov. 22 from 11-1 p.m. The clinic will be open to&#13;
individuals who wish to better techniques, as well as for those who&#13;
play for just enjoyment. Expert advice will be available.&#13;
out of f ifth.&#13;
Reflecting on the season as a&#13;
whole, Godfrey said his team&#13;
"did a fine job all year long," and&#13;
though there were a few disappointments&#13;
through the year,&#13;
there was "nothing major, until&#13;
now." But, Godfrey said the&#13;
squad really "progressed" from&#13;
the relatively unknown&#13;
youngsters at the season's start,&#13;
and he is "really optomistic"&#13;
about next year's team.&#13;
Godfrey described this year's&#13;
team as "probably the closest&#13;
team I've ever had," and said,&#13;
"They went down together, and&#13;
they will come back together."&#13;
As an example of his team's&#13;
"character," Godfrey said the&#13;
team decided on its own to extend&#13;
its season another week by&#13;
competing in this Saturday's&#13;
Wisconsin AAU 10,000 Meter&#13;
Championships in Milwaukee.&#13;
The runners will be competing as&#13;
the Parkside Track Club, with&#13;
former Parkside star Lucian&#13;
Rosa replacing Fredericksen for&#13;
the meet.&#13;
One final cross-country note:&#13;
Kim Merritt, who has been&#13;
bothered by a bad foot for the&#13;
past few weeks, will also be vying&#13;
for the top-spot this Saturday.&#13;
Merritt will be at Iowa State,&#13;
competing in the National&#13;
Women's Collegiate Championships.&#13;
Earlier in the season&#13;
Merritt captured the AAU&#13;
National Marathon crown, in a&#13;
race held in Central Park, New&#13;
York.&#13;
Soccer team beats&#13;
Madison in overtime&#13;
by Thom Aiello&#13;
The Parkside soccer team&#13;
ended its season on a good note by&#13;
beating UW-Madison at home&#13;
last Saturday. Frankie Liu&#13;
scored the game's only goal to&#13;
give the Rangers a 1-0 overtime&#13;
victory.&#13;
The win was Parkside's fourth,&#13;
against only one loss,' against&#13;
Madison. Last year the Rangers&#13;
were dealt a 2-1 setback by&#13;
Madison.&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson's booters&#13;
finished the season with a 5-8-2&#13;
record. One of the bright spots for&#13;
the squad was the fact that it&#13;
stayed close in many of the&#13;
losses, while playing a rugged&#13;
schedule, and the team had its&#13;
best year since Henderson&#13;
started as coach.&#13;
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Wednesday, Nov. 12, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Cagers strong on offense Cole, "market man 99&#13;
by Thom Aiello&#13;
Although the Ranger basketball&#13;
team officially started&#13;
practice on October 15th, and&#13;
they don't play their first game&#13;
until November 29th, head coach&#13;
Steve Stephens said, "The&#13;
coaches wish we had another two&#13;
or three weeks" to work on their&#13;
plays. Stephens said the work&#13;
could be used in "getting the&#13;
players to recognize everything&#13;
we do."&#13;
Since Stephens and his squad&#13;
do not have the extra time, the&#13;
coach is keeping his team hard at&#13;
work. "Practice has been going&#13;
pretty good. We covered quite a&#13;
few things," Stephens said&#13;
recently. He added that while his&#13;
club may be somewhat ahead&#13;
offensively, it is "a little behind&#13;
on defense."&#13;
Among the players Stephens&#13;
seems most satisfied with, are&#13;
Marshall Hill, Stevie King,&#13;
Leartha Scott, and Gary Cole.&#13;
Stephens said, "Hill's made&#13;
tremendous improvement" this&#13;
year, and he is "stronger" too.&#13;
King will be "pretty much my&#13;
quarterback this year," Stephens&#13;
said, and added that the guard&#13;
will be looked for in the&#13;
"leadership" department. And&#13;
leadership is exactly what the'&#13;
head coach likes about Cole in the&#13;
early practices. Stephens&#13;
believes Cole will again lead the&#13;
cagers this season, though he will&#13;
be the "marked man" of the&#13;
opponents.&#13;
Scott is "much better at this&#13;
time" than he was at a similar&#13;
point last season, Stephens said.&#13;
The flashy guard-forward will be&#13;
one of the key players to pick up&#13;
the slack when the rivals overplay&#13;
the Ail-American forward,&#13;
Cole.&#13;
Marvin Chones and Joe Foots&#13;
are two freshmen that Stephens&#13;
feels can play a lot this year, but&#13;
will also be fine players in the&#13;
future. Also expected to help the&#13;
Rangers this season are two&#13;
transfers from junior colleges,&#13;
Bernard Madison and Lawrence&#13;
Brown. Stephens called the 6'2"&#13;
Madison, from College of the&#13;
Desert (Calif.), "a very good&#13;
jumper, a good shooter." The&#13;
5'10" Brown last attended Lake&#13;
County Jr. College in Illinois.&#13;
The squad is down to 15 players&#13;
at present, and Stephens figures&#13;
to either keep that number or&#13;
possibly drop one more. Of those&#13;
players, 12 w ill probably suit up&#13;
for each game, with the others&#13;
practicing with the squad and&#13;
replacing any players that may&#13;
get injured.&#13;
Swimmers&#13;
break&#13;
records&#13;
by Bruce Wanger&#13;
The Parkside women's swim&#13;
team lost to Oshkosh, 101-26 b ut&#13;
several team records were either&#13;
established or broken. In other&#13;
action, the swimmers faced&#13;
against UWM, Carroll, and&#13;
Carthage, in a quadrangular&#13;
where they placed fourth.&#13;
Against Oshkosh, Mary Beth&#13;
Leitch, Liz Constantine, and Gail&#13;
Olsen broke records.&#13;
Leitch swam to new records&#13;
against Oshkosh in a second&#13;
place 200 ind. medley (2:21.32)&#13;
and a third place finish in the 50&#13;
fly (35.48). Constantine swam to&#13;
establish a record in the 100&#13;
butterfly, 1:38.52. Meanwhile,&#13;
Gail Olsen broke an established&#13;
record in the 100 freestyle with a&#13;
1:08.52.&#13;
In other highlights, Olsen&#13;
placed second in the required one&#13;
meter diving and first in the&#13;
optional one meter diving. Sheila&#13;
Craig placed second in the 50&#13;
backstroke.&#13;
In the Southern Region&#13;
Quadrangular, Parkside made&#13;
their highest accumulation of&#13;
points ever, 58.&#13;
Leitch placed second in the 100&#13;
back and 50 back, while Olsen&#13;
managed to place second in the&#13;
one meter diving, to sum up the&#13;
major accomplishments for the&#13;
Rangers Saturday.&#13;
The next action for the Rangers&#13;
will be at the WWIAC Championships&#13;
at Eau Claire.&#13;
Madison, last year's winner&#13;
along with La Crosse, are favored&#13;
to win as the Rangers, for the&#13;
first time in their history, are&#13;
eligible to enter this tournament.&#13;
According to Coach Barbara&#13;
Lawson, Parkside has at least&#13;
two top-notch entries in Mary&#13;
Beth Leitch in the 50 back and&#13;
Olsen, in diving.&#13;
Heritage House&#13;
Student Help&#13;
Wanted&#13;
Good Hours&#13;
Good Time&#13;
Good Pay&#13;
Call 634-0762 for an&#13;
appointment for an&#13;
interview.&#13;
8:30am-9:30pm&#13;
8:30 am-4:30 pm&#13;
6:00pm-9:30pm&#13;
Building hours Mon.-Thurs.&#13;
Fri. &amp; Sat.&#13;
Sundays&#13;
Gymnasiums&#13;
Same as the above building schedule with some exceptions. Athletic&#13;
teams practice daily from 3:30 to 6 p.m. Some physical education&#13;
classes meet in the gym, depending on weather. As a matter of policy,&#13;
we will always try to make one gym available for recreational play.&#13;
Pool Hours 11:30-1:30 pm&#13;
11:30-2:30 pm&#13;
6:30-9:00 pm&#13;
Mon.-Thurs.&#13;
Fri. &amp; Sat.&#13;
Mon. Tues. Wed. — Sunday evenings&#13;
Handball courts&#13;
Same as the above building schedule, except when classes in&#13;
raquetball or handball are in session. Call for reservations.&#13;
Weight-training room Same as the above building schedule.&#13;
Human performance lab Physical Fitness &amp; Mon. 12-1:15 pm&#13;
exercise prescription Wed. 11-2 pm&#13;
SPECIAL EVENTS:&#13;
Nov. 19 Fall Athletic Department Banquet • Evening&#13;
Nov. 22 Women's Swimming hosts the Ranger Relays 12 Noon&#13;
Nov. 26 Muscular Dystrophy Benefit - Scuba Divers&#13;
Underwater Marathon in pool 1:30 pm&#13;
Bonanza&#13;
Free with this coupon&#13;
a bottle of beer&#13;
with any steak dinner&#13;
3315 52 St., Kenosha&#13;
Team to face Concordia&#13;
by Thom Aiello&#13;
The Rangers' women,'s&#13;
volleyball team will try to improve&#13;
its poor record as it windsup&#13;
its first season of varsity&#13;
competition. This Saturday the&#13;
squad travels to Milwaukee to&#13;
tangle with Concordia College.&#13;
Starting time is 12 noon. Then&#13;
next Tuesday they play at UQWaukesha,&#13;
the one team&#13;
Parkside has beaten, to date, this&#13;
year. That game will start at 4&#13;
p.m.&#13;
'CONVERSATIONS F ROM WINGSPREAD'&#13;
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• Nov. 30 - Putting Art into Religion&#13;
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8 T H E PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Nov . 1 2 , 1 9 7 5&#13;
Cultural and tech. studies&#13;
is concern of work-group&#13;
by Mike Palecek " • —&#13;
In a brainstorming session on&#13;
November 3, the Academic&#13;
Programs work group of the&#13;
Committee of Principals&#13;
discussed many ideas in an attempt&#13;
to improve the academic&#13;
realm at Parkside.&#13;
Discussed were possible future&#13;
programs in minority and&#13;
women's studies; a cultural and&#13;
technological program modeled&#13;
after the program at UWMilwaukee;&#13;
a new program in&#13;
general requirements compiled&#13;
by Leon Applebaum, associate&#13;
dean of the College of Science and&#13;
Society; a plan for SMI programs&#13;
which would give liberal arts&#13;
students preparation for the&#13;
business world; and a board&#13;
major in humanities.&#13;
Receiving the most attention,&#13;
was the cultural and&#13;
technological studies introduced&#13;
by committee member, Richard&#13;
Stoffle, assistant professor of&#13;
anthropology^ Stoffle explained&#13;
the program was not a major, but&#13;
rather a teaching program that&#13;
doesn't stop with social science,&#13;
the sciences or business&#13;
management.&#13;
Stoffle stated "there is more&#13;
than reorganizing existing&#13;
programs into a nice package&#13;
that would be easy for everyone&#13;
to do." Committee member Peter&#13;
Hoff, assistant professor of&#13;
English agreed, saying, "a&#13;
rigidly built course situation will&#13;
often kill a student." He sited&#13;
Parkside's Intregrated Liberal&#13;
Studies program, modeled after&#13;
one on the Madison campus,&#13;
"always suffering (at Parkside)&#13;
from great attrition. There is&#13;
only one door in, and many doors&#13;
out."&#13;
Trying to find out how much&#13;
information students had on&#13;
various programs, student&#13;
member Jeanne Vedder was&#13;
asked how "uninformed"&#13;
students were. Her response was,&#13;
"Students around me start&#13;
studying something without&#13;
knowing the availability of what&#13;
is around."&#13;
"People are people, that's the&#13;
key thing," commented Joseph&#13;
Balsano, associate professor of&#13;
life science. "They have a sense&#13;
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of meaningfullness in their life.&#13;
Whether one* does become&#13;
educated through a series of&#13;
courses in the long run may be&#13;
more effective as a means of&#13;
Univ. Comm.&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
teaching and research responsibilities,&#13;
but their primary duty&#13;
will be to manage the division.&#13;
With much deliberation, the&#13;
University Committee appointed&#13;
a faculty member to the faculty&#13;
condification committee. The&#13;
codification Committee is&#13;
responsible for reviewing faculty&#13;
regulations, procedure, committee&#13;
structures and recommending&#13;
their findings to the&#13;
faculty senate.&#13;
The University Committee&#13;
expressed interest in equal&#13;
education. But the problem is&#13;
that students turn off all the dials,&#13;
like my wife, she's turned off by&#13;
numbers."&#13;
representation from each of the&#13;
divisions of the School of M odern&#13;
Industry and the College of&#13;
Science and Society. Murin asked&#13;
about putting a minority on the&#13;
committee. Michael Marron,&#13;
associate professor of chemistry&#13;
responded that there are only&#13;
three minority faculty on campus."&#13;
&#13;
Marron also brought up the&#13;
idea of having teaching awards&#13;
and student awards at Parkside.&#13;
The issue, rehashed from last&#13;
spring, received little discussion.&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
Free&#13;
REPAIR WOR K « dishwashers, garbage&#13;
disposals, washers, dryers, etc. Call&#13;
evenings Al. Stendel 886-3865.&#13;
EARN UP TO $1 8 00 a school year or more&#13;
posting educational literature on campus in&#13;
spare time. Send name, address, phone,&#13;
school and references to: Nationwide&#13;
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Hrouda, 633-9409 or 639-6958 - 1919 Taylor&#13;
Ave., Racine.&#13;
NEEDED: Female to share very nice furnished&#13;
apartment with first-year teacher.&#13;
Call 652-4889.&#13;
WANT ED: roommate. Two bedroom&#13;
ipper flat at 1935 56th Street, Kenosha. $62.5&#13;
mo. plus utilities. Fully furnished, larg.&#13;
&lt;itchen and living room, off-street parking&#13;
Call Steve 652-1436 after 3 p.m. weekdays&#13;
HOUSE FOR SALE: 2 good-sized bedrooms&#13;
8. living room, large kitchen-dining, garage.&#13;
Good condition. Mid-Twenties. (Also: appliances,&#13;
furniture for sale.) 633-1724&#13;
pvenings.&#13;
TIRES: 6.95 x 14, fair tread, no leaks, $5,&#13;
7.25x14, fair tread, slow leak, needs tube or&#13;
repair, FREE, call 552-9014 evenings.&#13;
ALBUMS : Return to Forever and&#13;
Mysterious Traveller, played once, $5 each&#13;
or offer. Call 552-9014 evenings.&#13;
FOR SALE: PORSCHE 1973 911-T, 5 speed&#13;
air, AM-FM, Stereo, Mint cond. SERIOUS&#13;
INQUIRERS ONLY phone: 694-0730.&#13;
For the best selection of Commercial and&#13;
Progressive Rock, Jazz, and dynamite&#13;
underground Imported Albums and Tapes.&#13;
Check out Chris Chapman in care of&#13;
Freeman's One Stop Record Mart. Call 657-&#13;
7212 Chapman guarantees LOW prices for all&#13;
new releases. Can you get to that? Dig itl&#13;
TYPING IN MY HOME. CONTACT NANCY&#13;
632-6018.&#13;
HELP WANTED, MALE OR FEMALE:&#13;
Address envelopes at home. $800 per month,&#13;
possible. Any age or location. See Ad under&#13;
Business Opportunities.&#13;
FOR SALE: 1974 Mustang II, Hatchback 280&#13;
V-6, 4-speed, mag wheels, Red with silver&#13;
interior, 28 mpg, 21,000 miles. Call 634-1121&#13;
after 4.&#13;
PREGN ANT? Need help? Call LifeRight...658-3681&#13;
for free confidential service.&#13;
FOR S ALE: RCA stereo reciever with pair&#13;
of speakers. Less than $50. Call 552-7113 after&#13;
6.&#13;
HELP W ANTED SALES: C ALL Heritage&#13;
House 634-0762.&#13;
Typing done in my home. Contact Ginny at&#13;
637 7796.&#13;
FOR SALE: FIAT 128, 4 door sedan, front&#13;
wheel drive, radial tires and radio also 1970&#13;
SAAB 99E fuel injection, front wheel drive,&#13;
radial tires:and more. Call: Tim Darrey, 639-&#13;
BUSINES S OPPOR TUNITIES&#13;
Address envelopes at home. $800 per month&#13;
possible. Offer-details, send 50 cents&#13;
(refundable) to Triple "S", 699-G43 Highway&#13;
138, Pinon Hills, Cal. 92372.&#13;
BIRTHD AY PARTY - for Democratic&#13;
Presidential candidate Fred Harris, Thurs.,&#13;
Nov. 13, 1975. Refreshments will be served.&#13;
For more information, call 657-9080.&#13;
FOR SALE: Nesco Counter top washer with&#13;
ringer at used price. Like new avocado dress&#13;
suitcase, both half price. Size 6, 8, 10&#13;
women's clothes very cheap. Misc. items.&#13;
Sat., Nov. 15. 694-7263.&#13;
ALBUMS: Return to Forever and&#13;
Mysterious Traveller, played once, $5 each&#13;
or offer.&#13;
G.A.Y. (God and Youth) can help you. Send&#13;
$1 and self addressed stamped envelope to&#13;
G.A.Y. Box 703. Somer, Wise. 53171&#13;
H&gt;toeet &amp;I)oppe&#13;
featuring:&#13;
a variety of your candy&#13;
and nut favorties sold&#13;
the old-fashioned way&#13;
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL&#13;
Foil Wrapped&#13;
Chocolates&#13;
OPEN;&#13;
Mon. thru Fri.&#13;
10 a.m. - 4 p.m.&#13;
located on the concourse between the Library-Learning&#13;
Center &amp; Greenquist Hall&#13;
May appear on T.V.&#13;
Swedish on tour will&#13;
present free concert&#13;
Pianist Stephen Swedish will&#13;
present a faculty recital at 7:30&#13;
p.m. on Friday, Nov. 14, in the&#13;
Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
His free public program will&#13;
include Bach's Toccata in E&#13;
Minor, - M ozart's Sonata in G&#13;
Major (K283)), Chopin's Scherzo&#13;
in B-flat Minor, three pieces from&#13;
Ravel's Miroirs Suite and Liszt's&#13;
Hungarian Rhapsody No. 6.&#13;
Swedish's performance&#13;
schedule this season includes&#13;
appearances with the Milwaukee&#13;
and San Diego Symphony Orchestras,&#13;
a solo recital at Lincoln&#13;
Center in New York and a series&#13;
of solo recitals on the West Coast.&#13;
He also is accompanying&#13;
Eugen Foder, the first violinist&#13;
from the Western world to win&#13;
the International Tchaikovsky&#13;
Competition in Moscow, on his&#13;
current U.S. concert our. The&#13;
tour will include appearances in&#13;
the Great Performers Series in&#13;
Philadelphia, the Kennedy&#13;
Center in Washington, D.C., and&#13;
Symphony Hall in Boston.&#13;
Fodor and Swedish are tentatively&#13;
booked for an appearance&#13;
on the Johnny Carson&#13;
show on Nov. 18.&#13;
Swedish has been a member of&#13;
the Parkside music faculty since&#13;
1973.&#13;
H E I L E M A N 'S&#13;
m&#13;
I&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at the Skellar&#13;
FREE DELIVER Y&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club me/&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
0M DE CHEfljft&#13;
HINGS TO DO&#13;
PARA MAN ANA.&#13;
1. Write an epic poem no shorter than&#13;
247 pages long using the following&#13;
5 words only: cactus, Gold, lime,&#13;
Sunrise, Agamemnon.&#13;
2. Read Milton's Paradise Lost. Explain&#13;
why you liked him better when he&#13;
was on TV.&#13;
3.'Translate a map of Mexico into English,&#13;
leaving out all the consonants.&#13;
4. Disregard all of the above, make a&#13;
pitcher of Cuervo Margaritas, and&#13;
invite all your friends over.&#13;
IMPORTED AND B&#13;
HARTFORD. CONN </text>
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              <text>Faculty petition for increased participation</text>
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              <text>orts motion cQpsu&#13;
Faculty petition for increased partici ti&#13;
Debra Friedell lClpa 10&#13;
., faculty at large' P"''''''''b ld&#13;
' -t"~ 1 eas hi&#13;
D faculty members and report significant findings of w ch a committment to the&#13;
;:;. \0 the Secretary of the the faculty at large to stimulate process was ~~ "they're not&#13;
lllfice last Thursday to faculty response and COn. saying that we re Ul8pproprjate,&#13;
~ portion of tbis Thur- tributions prior to the submiss but that we will have to do more&#13;
""". ""p roeeting with the of final reports. Ion of ....hat ....e're already doing." he&#13;
'if1(l \N • ti Als S81d .f(l1D81faculty mee mg. 0, the motion urges that .&#13;
.-. ,.queated that before ~OP COP to allow any faculty who&#13;
~ break down mto wish to participate in the work-&#13;
.....-lIICUISi~n groups with gro~S be allowed to do so; the&#13;
...... !acuity. staff. and motion supports BPeciflc efforts&#13;
..... lelIIsIativesession be be made to ensure that non.&#13;
l1li11 wIidI the first agenda academic staff and students have&#13;
~ ".-aJ discussion of input similar to that proposed by&#13;
: ..... appointment, taaks, the faculty in all matters where&#13;
....... and timing of the their needs. interests, and skills&#13;
..xr....llasuJ&gt;:COmmittees... are c~ncerned; and finally, that&#13;
"..... a motion was sub- specific charges given to the&#13;
.... 1117 !acuity members, it wor~-group. be made totally&#13;
...... pnimous support by public and made subject to a&#13;
(6 aD work-group chair- scheduled debate by the faculty.&#13;
and' Is slated to be&#13;
~:-::d\OthelulJ.faculty at the&#13;
,.. meetJng. Among other&#13;
.. lie motion requests that&#13;
• work.groups announce&#13;
...uac limes; urges work-&#13;
.... 10 make positive and&#13;
..... eff(rts to solicit con·&#13;
dIlIoua from all faculty&#13;
....... ; bold open hearings on&#13;
.,.eIIIe problems. programs.&#13;
.. t.Des; make an informal *' 10 maintain dialogue&#13;
.. Wfl'k-groups and the&#13;
starled tho moe . 1» 1i.I.-&#13;
the Merger Law WI 1f'lI to&#13;
.-us of responaibill l llO_e'6.&#13;
he told the .......&#13;
gro~ have the ri&amp;bl to&#13;
8Il)1hing. '\'hey IDa waDI to&#13;
cIIcuos lhnp tha • by law. the&#13;
IaaI1ty ..... te camoc act ."&#13;
lie and OOP~, BiD&#13;
Mario exp1alDed thaI I&#13;
Universily COG11Jllltee hid&#13;
Illf'ftd upon was ~ and&#13;
cbanle. in If lcademtc&#13;
faculty·senate. Guskin pnorities." O....e Bucb,&#13;
Budget committee&#13;
~ce£.~!ehasstudents, ot&#13;
formed a Budget Priorities diredly relIecls - ~ per,&#13;
Advisory Commillee charged needs U • Vital ty repreMn III rtpr&#13;
with the responsibility of flll"- 1ncIud1ng!belle • GIl!be noa-repre Died fl. lid I&#13;
mulating recommendations 10 CommiIl.eegI.... l: l..-.ber of Ule 'tp_ldalaft&#13;
him on major operating budget ~, to ''prOvIde thai cradaI G.-y la, DIrctGr of Ibo&#13;
priorities ~I, he said -.-e&#13;
A1thoUlih technically Guskin Guskin said ~I the COIIIIDlllee&#13;
does not have to include faculty, ..-ill mcIude. ~ ice CI&gt;aDceIIar&#13;
students, academic staff, or 0110 Bauer, AsslStanl Ch D·&#13;
classified staff on a committee ceIIors AlleD Deartlom IDd In;n&#13;
. Zoe e, Deon of the which makes budget recom- of lodem ~ _ DNa&#13;
mendations on those funds, he .~ of the of Sdle,..~&#13;
said that he feels, ·'faculty,:.oo oM ftIl. II will II&gt;-&#13;
meaningful role students and staff should play a&#13;
in lhe c1ude&#13;
eo c&#13;
I ~Ia::i~::':~&#13;
development of a budget that (;D1&lt;er lIy commllt&#13;
Tmhe p:kSideQ&#13;
(] rn[3m S- l~:n::~:"I~ l:IIrr eadem c tafl&#13;
'---;;:;-=~I I; and lwO """I!lben&#13;
~~~.!!:..~ _ ....!.,;~"",-,~~~~~~!.~_~~:..~~,,-- IS. \1U00l1 I'IJIUOllOH Of I,. UIHVIRYTT w.... V_"_'V_._'~' the r·_~ned ~I ~--'f.&#13;
Indianleader arrested&#13;
Law agents maximize harrassment&#13;
OI'I'ressfoo to 1973 la r d to&#13;
I» A.I I of the of pi&#13;
AliI" beldq rters&#13;
WIsblng14n, D.C Lo&#13;
., lllek Andersen&#13;
IIIlbe 1800'sthe federal&#13;
Initiated a policy of&#13;
-.aI of native Americans&#13;
.. ancestral homelands&#13;
... and bleak territories&#13;
lie contemporary white&#13;
.... greed. As the native&#13;
..... berame physically and&#13;
~ uprootedan ecological&#13;
,lragi)e and giving, was =:::. Last Friday the&#13;
'led Police Department&#13;
to ImprOvise on the time ::-ed system of people&#13;
JI'aehon, temporarily&#13;
-.. a gifted leader of&#13;
IIlht Americans, and a troubled&#13;
IIIcber 01the rest of society into&#13;
IocaI jaU ' Her .&#13;
~ POWless, program&#13;
tlomc.;) Of the American Indian&#13;
On Alcoholism and a&#13;
~ known leader of the&#13;
~ Indian Movement, was ""-I on a parking ticket .1 ahortly after appearing&#13;
... ~~ld at .the Milwaukee&#13;
IlttioullllCa! College in sup·&#13;
~Uve American cultural&#13;
~ and political action.&#13;
__ an Onieda Indian had&#13;
.... IIthe request of se~eral&#13;
~ orllanizations and was&#13;
01 alter he Was out of the&#13;
IIlost of the dispersing&#13;
PIrtlcipants.&#13;
~ Harrassmenl&#13;
owless this was but a&#13;
skirmish in a three year&#13;
baWe with law en-&#13;
~locaIandfederal, who&#13;
of non.-.stop sur~&#13;
8Ddharrassmenl. With&#13;
Committment to the pr"" ...&#13;
Before voting on the motion&#13;
Chancellor Guskin told OOP and&#13;
workgroup cbairpersons that the&#13;
"reaching out, which the motion&#13;
suggests, .is consistant with the&#13;
direction we've been trying to&#13;
follow. Because COP is critically&#13;
important to the entire in •&#13;
stitution, the motion reminds us&#13;
that we must reach-out at all&#13;
times." Guskin told the group&#13;
that he found the motion one in&#13;
law enforcement officials constantly&#13;
"dropping by" Powless'&#13;
office at the alcoholism center,&#13;
sowing contempt and fear during&#13;
the course of these&#13;
"fishing expeditions'!&#13;
one might be tempted to&#13;
speculate about the reason the&#13;
Milwaukee police department&#13;
went through the trouble of&#13;
discovering Powless' public&#13;
itinerary and dispatched a&#13;
plainclothesman to watch the&#13;
rally and assist in effecting the&#13;
arrest.&#13;
A person could wonder too. how&#13;
long the warrant sat in police&#13;
chief Harold Brier's desk drawer&#13;
hefore the time was seen as&#13;
opportune for maximizing. the&#13;
harrassment value of this rmnor&#13;
infraction.&#13;
Hours after the arrest was&#13;
made, powless stood before&#13;
municipal judge. Ted&#13;
Wedemeyer.Jr., and pled guilty&#13;
to the charges. Wedemeyer,&#13;
whose dispassionate fairness lI1&#13;
sentencing caused one powless&#13;
supporter to remark "I wish we&#13;
had judges like hun m South&#13;
Dakota" then allowed powless to&#13;
addre'; the court. Citing the&#13;
nearly three years of continual&#13;
surveillance by the F.B.I. and the&#13;
special squad of the Milwaukee&#13;
police department, powle~s&#13;
mirthfully queried as to why this&#13;
matter was called to his attention&#13;
after a public rally of supporters&#13;
and friends. If this. was not an&#13;
attempt to discredit hun ,,:h~&#13;
didn't the arresting officers vlSl&#13;
Powless at his home or office&#13;
since they so obviously knew&#13;
where he was? powless then lefl&#13;
Areas ofre.po1llJbWty&#13;
The cop meeting ended with the&#13;
same topic of discussiGll with&#13;
which il began, exactly whal type&#13;
of recornmendationa the gro~&#13;
could make to OOP _ COP to&#13;
the&#13;
the courtroom with bis wife, lwo&#13;
children, and ever the public&#13;
figure, a group of over thirt).&#13;
supporters.&#13;
Oul to gel Powl&#13;
Outside the courtroom a&#13;
prominenl Milwaukee lawyer.&#13;
with extensive knowledge of the&#13;
invidious nature of tho local&#13;
criminal justice B)'stem, related&#13;
to this reporter a story thaI&#13;
provides corrohorabon to the&#13;
charges Powless l"'eIed before&#13;
the bench. IIseems thaI l...hUe&#13;
back. a rather se!f-aggrandlzln&#13;
federal agenl had mentioned thai&#13;
his office had been "oul 10 el&#13;
Powless" for a number of mooths&#13;
and had been searching Powl •&#13;
luggage al airpOrl 1ernuna&#13;
without Powless' consenl. The&#13;
agent related further thai the&#13;
failure 10 find such mcrurunalmg&#13;
evidence was causing him and his&#13;
fellow agents considerable&#13;
frustration.&#13;
Less than an hour after his&#13;
release from custody, an uncowed&#13;
Powless vowed to fight GIl.&#13;
"I'll continue to speak out until&#13;
I'm too olc to walk, too old to&#13;
speak," he declared. .&#13;
Saying that the revelabons&#13;
made by the attorney were really&#13;
nothing thai he didn'l aJread)'&#13;
know powless, said he wenl to&#13;
. il ':nol because of the tickels. J8 , u&#13;
but because I was tall&lt;ing. .&#13;
Powless then gave a !rief&#13;
overview of a\mOStthree )'ears of&#13;
harrassment and inlimJdallon 1»'&#13;
federal law enforcemen willI the&#13;
cooperation, often zealous, of&#13;
local agencies. -""'- f&#13;
Powless traces the ......~J'&#13;
----.....&#13;
s&#13;
COD'&#13;
or supports motion ~&#13;
Faculty petition for increas d , oebra Friedell e&#13;
by faculty at large; purpose ideas&#13;
Eiel'en faculty members and report significant findings of&#13;
ned to the Secretary of the the faculty at large to stimulate&#13;
ty•sOffice last Thu_rsday to fa_cul~y response and cona&#13;
portion of this Thur- tr1butions prior to the sub ..... ;M:&#13;
COP meeting with the of final reports. ........,.on&#13;
5 formal faculty meeting. Also, the motion urges that&#13;
c~uested that before COP C?P to allow any faculty who&#13;
.groups break down ~to wish _to participate in the work-&#13;
.-1 (ti!cussi~n groups with gro~s be allowed to do so; the&#13;
-- faculty, staff, and motion supports specific efforts&#13;
~· a Jegislativ~ session be be made to ensure that nonill&#13;
which the first agenda academic staff and students have&#13;
be "general discussion of input similar to that proposed by&#13;
which a COmmittrnent to th&#13;
pro~ was shown, "they're not&#13;
saying that we're inappropriate&#13;
but that we will have to do mo '&#13;
of what we're already do" ,.&#13;
said. '&#13;
Areas of re ponsiblllty&#13;
The cop meeting ended with th&#13;
same topic of discussion with&#13;
which it began, eucUy what type&#13;
of recommendations the gro&#13;
could make to COP and COP to&#13;
a&#13;
(S'eltion, appointment, tasks, the faculty in all matters where&#13;
,-res and timing . of th~ their needs, interests, and skills&#13;
the faculty-senate Gus~'n - ti • IU prt . C&#13;
Budget ·committ&#13;
include student&#13;
I'' and its sub-committe~. are concerned; and finally, that&#13;
AJ well, a motion was sub- specific charges given to the&#13;
by 7 faculty members, it wor~-group _ be made totally&#13;
given unanimous support by public and made subject to a&#13;
COP an work-group chair- scheduled debate by the faculty.&#13;
~· and is slated to be&#13;
in,ented to the full faculty at the&#13;
ttzndaY meeting. Among other&#13;
tbe motion requests that&#13;
work-groups announce&#13;
ting times; urges workto&#13;
make positive and&#13;
live efforts to solicit conutlons&#13;
from all faculty&#13;
ambers; hold open hearings on&#13;
cific problems, programs,&#13;
tsrues; make an informal&#13;
rff rt to maintain dialogue&#13;
n work-groups and the&#13;
Committment to the process&#13;
Before voting on the motion&#13;
Chancellor Guskin told COP and&#13;
workgroup chairpersons that the&#13;
"reaching out, which the motion&#13;
suggests, .is consistant with the&#13;
direction we've been trying to&#13;
follow. Because COP is critically&#13;
important to the entire institution,&#13;
the motion reminds us&#13;
that we must reach-out at all&#13;
times." Guskin told the group&#13;
that he found the motion one in&#13;
Chancellor Alan Gu.skin has&#13;
formed a Budget Priorities&#13;
Advisory Committee charged&#13;
with the responsibility of formulating&#13;
recommendati to&#13;
him on major operating bu t&#13;
priorities.&#13;
Although technically G&#13;
does not have to include faculty,&#13;
students, academic staff, or&#13;
classified staff on a comml&#13;
which makes budget recommendations&#13;
on those funds,&#13;
said that he feels, "facul ,&#13;
students and staff ould play&#13;
meaningful role th&#13;
development of&#13;
--.,y, Nov .. 191 1975 l]JaJ IS A STUDlHT ,UIUU.TION&#13;
rn Of 11« UNIV8&#13;
rn&#13;
S,TT Of W8(0ti51111 , ....&#13;
l3 m&#13;
Indian leader arrested&#13;
Law agents maxim· ze h&#13;
by Mick Andersen&#13;
F.arly in the 1800's the federal&#13;
ent initiated a policy of&#13;
removal of native Americans&#13;
their ancestral homelands&#13;
en and bleak territories&#13;
the contemporary white&#13;
'a greed, As the native&#13;
became physically and&#13;
lly uprooted an ecological&#13;
e, fragile and giving, was&#13;
roy d. Last Friday the&#13;
ee Police Department&#13;
lo Improvise on the time&#13;
red ystem of people&#13;
Slruction, temporarily&#13;
a gifted leader of&#13;
Americans, and a troubled&#13;
locaof the rest of society into&#13;
ff I Jail. '&#13;
rb Powless, program&#13;
r or the American Indian&#13;
" on Alcoholism and a&#13;
nally known leader of the&#13;
can Indian Movement was&#13;
ant on a parking ticket&#13;
a ran shortly after appearing&#13;
Y held at the Milwaukee&#13;
Techn; al · r ~.,c College in supnative&#13;
American cultural&#13;
and political action.&#13;
' an 0nieda Indian had&#13;
n at th ' e request of several&#13;
organizations and was&#13;
after he was out of the&#13;
or rnost of the dispersing&#13;
s llarticipants.&#13;
laxhnizing Harrassment&#13;
r Powless this was but a&#13;
skirmish in a three year&#13;
battle with law ent,&#13;
local and federal who&#13;
es of non-stop ' surand&#13;
harrassment. With&#13;
law enforcement officials constantly&#13;
"dropping by" Powless'&#13;
office at the alcoholism center,&#13;
sowing contempt and fear during&#13;
the course of these&#13;
"fishing expeditions' :&#13;
one might be tempted to&#13;
speculate about the reason the&#13;
Milwaukee police department&#13;
went through the trouble of&#13;
discovering Powless' public&#13;
itinerary and dispatched a&#13;
plainclothesman to watch the&#13;
rally and assist in effecting the&#13;
arrest.&#13;
A person could wonder too, how&#13;
long the warrant sat in police&#13;
chief Harold Brier's desk drawer&#13;
before the time was seen as&#13;
opportune for maximizing the&#13;
harrassment value of this minor&#13;
infraction. Hours after the arrest was&#13;
made, Powless stood before&#13;
municipal judge, Ted&#13;
Wedemeyer Jr., and pied guilty&#13;
to the charges. Wedemeyer,&#13;
whose dispassionate fairness in&#13;
sentencing caused one Powless&#13;
supporter to remar~ "I. wish we&#13;
had judges like bun m South&#13;
Dakota " then allowed Powless to&#13;
addre~ the court. Citing the&#13;
nearly three years of continual&#13;
surveillance by the F .BJ. and the&#13;
special squad of the Milwaukee&#13;
police department, Powle~s&#13;
mirthfully queried as to why ~&#13;
matter was called to his attention&#13;
after a public rally of supporters&#13;
and friends. If this was not an&#13;
attempt to discredit _him ~h?'&#13;
didn't the arresting officers v~s1 t&#13;
Powless at his home or office&#13;
since they so obviously knew&#13;
where he was? Powless then left&#13;
the courtroom&#13;
children, and ev r&#13;
figure, a group&#13;
supporters. &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER WedneS4Yy. NoY. It. 1975&#13;
./&#13;
plants out the lact that cornmiuee&#13;
which have been&#13;
l'&lt;I'N!Sefltaliveha,"l! railed due to&#13;
selli hness among diUerent&#13;
&lt;OnSIiluencles&#13;
",.,... .... many reasons given&#13;
.. hy students caranol serve on&#13;
decl.sioo-making bodies ""thoul&#13;
any consicleration given 10 why&#13;
they should.&#13;
The laculty lails or refuses to&#13;
recogniU that students today are&#13;
capable as decision makers,&#13;
many be\Jl8\h.rust into the role at&#13;
an early age.&#13;
MClIIl students are '''l!ry aware&#13;
&lt;&gt;( the vano .. poIillcal changes.&#13;
even those the lacull)' employs 10&#13;
WUl over the new chancellor.&#13;
The I er students are excluded.&#13;
the more dillicull It will&#13;
be to b&lt;tdgethe gap. I can see the&#13;
lime when students will be&#13;
transferring to other institutions&#13;
more than they do now. U the&#13;
adnunislratioo cannol see It is&#13;
lldI-defeating to exclude those&#13;
)'Ou are supposed to be servlng; if&#13;
the laculty is so blind. antique.&#13;
and power conscious as 10&#13;
overlook lhe abundance 01 talent&#13;
Parkside students possess. and if&#13;
together they lorbid students 10&#13;
have thell' righlful say in the&#13;
d1rections and decl.sion ~&#13;
S1~=~:", told thaI they lack&#13;
'le to rYe on C'OI'J}o&#13;
• tradlUon lorbids II on&#13;
and laculty .. "enence&#13;
then I wonder if Parkside will&#13;
ever be more than a place where&#13;
people go to school.&#13;
Everyone is concerned about&#13;
developing relations with the two&#13;
committees. but with studenls&#13;
being alienated. this hardly&#13;
seems possible. U 5600 studenls&#13;
aren't capable 01 selling the&#13;
university, then I don't see how a&#13;
handlul or faculty an? administrators&#13;
can. Parkside IS&#13;
always seeking answers but&#13;
refuses to listen to the best&#13;
source. studenls. I think it is time&#13;
for the faculty to come out of&#13;
their shell and to slop pla~mg&#13;
games with students' education.&#13;
U we are here to learn. then let us&#13;
learn on all levels. U students&#13;
lack expertise. then it can be&#13;
allained by participating.&#13;
TraditiorlS are changing and all&#13;
faculty committees can be&#13;
changed. maybe for the better.&#13;
I hope that those members of&#13;
our faculty who wish to exclude&#13;
all but a privileged few can find it&#13;
in their hearts to relinquish a&#13;
small amount of their power to&#13;
not only students, but all excluded&#13;
groups .&#13;
Lee Wagner&#13;
President PSGA&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I&#13;
ish to refute Bill Barke's&#13;
WlS k' leller to the editor in last wee s&#13;
RANGER. Contrary to popular&#13;
belief there are no 5000 starvmg&#13;
monkeys in Bolivia. and there&#13;
exisls no agency with which to&#13;
aid them. As a mailer of fact. the&#13;
residenls of 32 Baptista RUIs.&#13;
Muncie. Bolivia S.A. happen to be&#13;
my parenls who are rather upset&#13;
d annoyed with all the articles&#13;
:eY've been receiving, While the&#13;
newsprint has been instrumental&#13;
, lining the kitty-boX. enough IS m .&#13;
enough! The cats are having a&#13;
difficult time as is trying to keep&#13;
up and they spend whole afternoons&#13;
squalling in th~ mess.&#13;
. Once again Mr. Barke has&#13;
demonstrated his insipidness and&#13;
insensitivity towards others-the&#13;
ass!&#13;
Glen A. Christensen&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
It .&#13;
tragially embarras was lit&#13;
perience to bave ,Sing&#13;
performances of ;;Wed&#13;
Care," November 7 8er~&#13;
UW-Parkside.1 am~ot and I,&#13;
the players. the set ....~&#13;
who assisted in ;.:;.oran&#13;
production possibl ~&#13;
. 1 lik e. I •&#13;
srmp Y I e to say that'('&#13;
utmost irnportan~e t~t~,tI&#13;
future more perpetual ~&#13;
taken in the selection /8l!&#13;
appropriate SUbjectm:tte"&#13;
seen by. the Racine'K"&#13;
commumty, This issue&#13;
given the highest Priori~&#13;
. the entire demise ofthe Y&#13;
ar~s at uw-P occurs. d '&#13;
critical time in p~&#13;
cultural development&#13;
Robert Kis&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In response to Mr , Ben&#13;
Lowenberg's letter to the editor&#13;
published on November 5. 1975. I&#13;
wish to clarify the intent of my&#13;
presentation on "Women of the&#13;
Third World." ·As the title indicates,&#13;
the discussion was&#13;
directed at the social. political.&#13;
and employment status of women&#13;
in developing countries. This. in&#13;
no way was intended to be a&#13;
comparison between American&#13;
working women and their Third&#13;
World counterparts. There was&#13;
certainly nothing presented to&#13;
"malign" American working&#13;
grade, We're sure that everyone&#13;
can agree. thaI \here are many&#13;
poSItive and negative factors&#13;
which contribute to \be grades&#13;
achie,"l!d by students.&#13;
So we suggest that students.&#13;
facult)' I and administration&#13;
consider the following grading&#13;
S) tern as an alternative to the&#13;
present grading S)'Slem.&#13;
I. For all reguired subjecls&#13;
declared in a major. a student&#13;
would ~ve a leller grade.&#13;
~. For all subjects determined&#13;
as general requirements or&#13;
decti"es. a student would receive&#13;
a pas.s-l ail grade.&#13;
3. All students would have the&#13;
pmil"le of cboosing between a&#13;
leiter grade or a pas.s-lail grade.&#13;
4 If a student is undecided as to&#13;
thaI me&#13;
produc&#13;
what major to declare. each&#13;
professor would be able to con·&#13;
vert a pass-fail grade into a leller&#13;
grade if necessary, once the&#13;
student has decided,&#13;
This of course means, that&#13;
professors must have a record of&#13;
scores to support any grades&#13;
given to students. wbether it is a&#13;
pass-fail grade or a letter grade.&#13;
This also suggesls that. if a&#13;
professor should for any reason&#13;
leave the university permanenUy.&#13;
he or she would be&#13;
required to leave with the ad.&#13;
ministration. a copy of all&#13;
recorded grades given to&#13;
studenls. This requirement would&#13;
enable the administration to&#13;
lefitmately convert grades at the&#13;
student's request. H a ~tudent&#13;
Applications are now being accepted for the position&#13;
of EDITOR.iN,CHIEF of the student newspaper.&#13;
PrMpec1lve candidates must be currently enrolled at&#13;
Parkslde lor a minimum of 8 credits. They should have&#13;
high school and-or college writlng experience and&#13;
pouess $Ome Interest In, and knowledge ot journalism&#13;
The position pays $SO per week lor the Spring Semester'&#13;
Inter ted persons should submit a resume detalli"g&#13;
relevant experience and a statement of broad goals and&#13;
directions for the newspaper to:&#13;
Don Kopriva. RANG E R Advisor&#13;
Tallent 288&#13;
Appllcallons should be entered by ~ p.m. Wednesday&#13;
Dec. 3. 1975. The RANGE R Advisory Board will revle";&#13;
quallflcatlons and schedule brlel personal Infervlews&#13;
with the leading candidates. Selection will be announced&#13;
lit IOliowl/l9 w&#13;
does plan to graduate from the&#13;
university that he enrolls into,'&#13;
this particular grading system&#13;
would not be jeopardizing. If a&#13;
student were to transfer from the&#13;
university to another school there&#13;
would be no complications. Passfail&#13;
grades could easily be converted&#13;
into letter grades or viceversa.&#13;
We are taking for granted.&#13;
that all grades are kept confidential.&#13;
So you see. with this type of&#13;
grading system. those students&#13;
who receive grades of low B. C or&#13;
D in one class. would no longer&#13;
worry about a grade ruining their&#13;
transcript.&#13;
The "A" student may also&#13;
benefit from this particular&#13;
grading system. Often a nonrequired&#13;
course may gift&#13;
"A" student some&#13;
They may chooseto&#13;
B or C letter grade willi I&#13;
grade.&#13;
WE would like to add&#13;
University of Wisconsinis&#13;
also exercising more&#13;
grading techniques,&#13;
If there are any studlDll&#13;
terested in suppo,tinI&#13;
alternative grading&#13;
who ju-e interested in&#13;
information, please lea"&#13;
name and telephonen&#13;
the Student Government&#13;
WLLC D 193,&#13;
THE PARKSIDE&#13;
[iJ(DGJI](]ru&#13;
thThUePARKSIDE RANGER is ~ritten and edited by the&#13;
e n' 'ty , for'ts IV~rsl. of-Wisconsin-Parkside and they are solely 91&#13;
U ~ pedito~ial policy and content. Offices are located in DI&#13;
.. ' arkside, Kenosha. Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-2295.&#13;
MUng EdItor: Debra FrledeU&#13;
Feature EdItor: MIke Palecek&#13;
Sporta DIrector: Thom Aiello&#13;
Events Colama: Jlllly TrIIII .&#13;
Buslu ... u&#13;
g&#13;
• A nmg •&#13;
Ad er. un Ve1'1ltegea _&#13;
Ad mat P:·Dlaae Werwte&#13;
WrI::·: Harry DiDgfelder Donzell Holt Orin Taylor&#13;
Fred : Jeaamtue Slp.ma. Steve Smith, Lelgb Feller,&#13;
y Jobusou, Mlck, AlldenoD, Betsy Neu, JiDI&#13;
Rlorta&#13;
gau•Carol Areatz. CatherlDe Bllse .Bnree W...... •&#13;
Nicholas K"~ La • '&#13;
Pbotog ,un, noa !oIC&#13;
rap~ers: Dave Damels. AI Fredricksen Gordon&#13;
2 p IDE GER n sday, Nov. 19, 1975&#13;
r by" p.m. Wednesday,&#13;
dvl ory Board will review&#13;
brl f P rsonal Interviews&#13;
1 Ion Ill be announced&#13;
then I wonder if Parkside will&#13;
ever be more than a place where&#13;
people go to school.&#13;
E\-eryone is concerned about&#13;
developing relations with the two&#13;
committees, but wi~ students&#13;
being alienated, this hardly&#13;
seems possible. If 5600 students&#13;
aren't capable of selling the&#13;
university, then I don't see how a&#13;
handful of faculty an~ a~-&#13;
ministrators can. Parkside is&#13;
always seeking answers but&#13;
refuses to listen to ~~ ~ st&#13;
source students. I think it is time&#13;
f th~ faculty to come out. of&#13;
their hell and to stop pla}'.mg&#13;
gam with students' education.&#13;
H we are here to learn, then let us&#13;
I m on all levels. If students&#13;
lack expertise, then ~t . can_ be&#13;
attained by participatmg.&#13;
Traditions are changing and all&#13;
faculty committees can be&#13;
changed, maybe for the better.&#13;
I hope that those members of&#13;
our faculty who wish to exclude&#13;
all but a privileged few can find it&#13;
in their hearts to relinquish a&#13;
small amount of their power to&#13;
not only students, but all excluded&#13;
groups. Lee Wagner&#13;
President PSGA&#13;
what major to declare, each&#13;
professor would be able to convert&#13;
a pass-fail grade into a letter&#13;
grade if necessary, once the&#13;
student has decided.&#13;
This of course means, that&#13;
professors must have a record of&#13;
scores to support any grades&#13;
given to students, whether it is a&#13;
pass-fail grade or a letter grade.&#13;
This also suggests that, if a&#13;
professor should for any reason&#13;
leave the university permanently,&#13;
he or she would be&#13;
required to leave with the administration,&#13;
a copy of all&#13;
recorded grades given to&#13;
students. This requirement would&#13;
enable the administration to&#13;
lefitmately convert grades, at the&#13;
student's request. If a student&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
. h to refute Bill Barke's&#13;
I wis '&#13;
letter to the editor in last week s&#13;
RANGER. Contrary to pop~ar&#13;
belief there are no 5000 starvmg&#13;
monkeys in Bolivia, and there&#13;
exists no agency with which to&#13;
aid them. As a matter of fact, the&#13;
'd nts of 32 Baptista Ruts, resi e .. ntobe&#13;
Muncie, Bohvia S.A. happe&#13;
my parents who are rather ~pset&#13;
and annoyed with all the a~ticles&#13;
they've been receiving. While the&#13;
newsprint has been instrumen~l&#13;
. lining the kitty-box, enough is&#13;
m . enough! The cats are havmg a&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
tragially embar It ~as Ill . rass1n perience to have . g tt&#13;
performances of ,;;w~ ~ Care," November 7 8&#13;
erp~t&#13;
UW-Parkside. 1 am~ot a?~ , 11&#13;
the players, the set C!it1~•&#13;
who assisted in , nor ant "' malr;h_. production possibl '""~&#13;
. 1 l'k e. I ll simp y i e to say th t . . u t t . , a It IS of&#13;
u mos importance that . \&#13;
difficult time as is trying to keep&#13;
and they spend whole af-&#13;
:noons squatting in th~ mess.&#13;
· Once again Mr. Barke has&#13;
demonstrated his insipidness and&#13;
insensitivity towards others-the&#13;
future more perpetua1 I!! \&#13;
taken in the selection f care ~&#13;
appropriate subject m:ttelVhat&#13;
seen by the Racine-I{ r to~&#13;
community. This issue hen~&#13;
given the highest pr1&#13;
·&#13;
0 .st oUld 1t . th t' ri y h.,._'&#13;
e en ire demise of the cir ""~&#13;
ass!&#13;
Glen A. Christensen&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In response to Mr. Ben&#13;
Lowenberg's letter to the editor&#13;
published on November 5, 1975, I&#13;
wish to clarify the intent of my&#13;
presentation on "Women of the&#13;
Third World." As the title indicates,&#13;
the discussion was&#13;
directed at the social, political,&#13;
and employment status of women&#13;
in developing countries. This, in&#13;
no way was intended to be a&#13;
comparison between American&#13;
working women and their Third&#13;
World counterparts. There was&#13;
certainly nothing presented to&#13;
"malign" American working&#13;
does plan to graduate from the&#13;
university that he enrolls into, '&#13;
this particular grading system&#13;
would not be jeopardizing. If a&#13;
student were to transfer from the&#13;
university to another school there&#13;
would be no complications. Passfail&#13;
grades could easily be converted&#13;
into letter grades or viceversa.&#13;
We are taking for granted,&#13;
that all grades are kept confidential.&#13;
&#13;
So you see, with this type of&#13;
grading system, those students&#13;
who receive grades of low B, C or&#13;
D in one class, would no longer&#13;
worry about a grade ruining their&#13;
transcript.&#13;
The "A" student may also&#13;
benefit from this particular&#13;
grading system. Often a nonTHE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
arts at UW-P occurs d -~&#13;
critical time in 'p 1g°*&#13;
cultural development. ar 51dt1&#13;
Robert Kis&#13;
women.&#13;
Since Mr. Lowenberg did&#13;
attend the conference an! 11&#13;
parently used the sc:&#13;
~ewspap~r as his only SOUrtt&#13;
information, his criticism lhoiii&#13;
no relationship to the ~&#13;
held at the symposiwn.&#13;
respectfully advised llr&#13;
Lowenberg to refer to 111&#13;
November 3, 1975 issue ci&#13;
"Kenosha News" for a - accurate and less inlerJr*&#13;
account of my statements,&#13;
Respectfully Y'll&#13;
Mrs. Rafiah A. &amp;Jh&#13;
Panel Member,SympcQam1&#13;
"Women of the Third World"&#13;
required course may gire&#13;
"A" student some probllll&#13;
They may choose to substili*&#13;
B or C letter grade with a J11&#13;
grade.&#13;
WE would like to add that&#13;
University of Wisconsin·•&#13;
is also exercising more reaht&#13;
grading techniques.&#13;
If there are any students t&#13;
terested in supporting&#13;
alternative grading systell&#13;
who tire interested in furll&#13;
information, please leave'&#13;
name and telephone numte&#13;
the Student Government 05:&#13;
WLLC D 193.&#13;
m £D rn I] lJ m&#13;
~~,&#13;
th The ~~IDE RANGER is written and edited by the~&#13;
f e _Univ~rSity of Wisconsin-Parkside and they are solely ~ u~ts edito~ial policy and content. Offices are located in Dl9t 55JI · -· Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-2295•&#13;
Acting Editor: Debra Frieden&#13;
Feature Editor: Mite Palecek&#13;
Sports D_irector: Thom Aiello&#13;
Events Column: Judy Trudnmg&#13;
::siness Manager: Ann Ventegen&#13;
make-up:·Dtane Wenvte&#13;
~::es: Harry Dingfelder Donzell Holt Orin Taylor&#13;
Fred rs: Jeannine Slpsma, Steve Smith, Leigh Feller,&#13;
Yor Johnson, Mick. Andenon, Betsy Neu, JiJ!l&#13;
Ritagan, Carol Arentz, Catherine Bllse; Bruce w.agner,&#13;
Phot Nicholas, Kurt Lanon clJ!tt'&#13;
ographers: Dave Daniels, Al Fredricksen Gordon rd &#13;
WedMsct.y. Nov. 1'. 1'75 THE PARKSIDE RA OER 3&#13;
lltional Lampoon Editor talks of&#13;
neW 'humor often based on fear&#13;
b TbODl Aiello&#13;
~ nee expects me to&#13;
'!II' .... ea duck suit," said&#13;
(111 ",t Ulto Executive Editor&#13;
J. 0'JlOUf~n magazine,&#13;
~~ igal"'tte and opened a&#13;
,11 Uti C Budweiser beer.&#13;
~ lecturing last Wedllistorianspeaks&#13;
on the&#13;
gave an elWl"ll*&#13;
eDlptinessof the "Dream"~~~I..&#13;
rlnll!l) pops 1 of tho&#13;
se&amp;r'!$ the )Dd.&#13;
tbeo lIS&#13;
child.O·~&#13;
mmd deddes to&#13;
do~ the _I.e f&#13;
parents expect. The eNId&#13;
to Itsell •• I'm ...... II&#13;
ass oft nat tune tbat&#13;
UP." )sO·~ •&#13;
Althougb ccmtantly d&gt;ar&gt;~&#13;
O'!loIr e&#13;
subjects as: •&#13;
function," 5eI. am&#13;
\1'e are ~ to • liberated&#13;
-t). tb I'fIanIs to&#13;
vie te&#13;
men are premtly .CCD!~ed&#13;
ta to jolte II&#13;
olfendln someoDe&#13;
also&#13;
becune popular&#13;
doesn t care 1«&#13;
O·R.... ke d.&#13;
them. I d ·1....,t&#13;
On onotber of&#13;
O'ROIrle said be did&#13;
L nette "Sque&gt; y" Fr mm&#13;
sbouId ha&gt; e .UDelI .t PresIdent&#13;
Gerald Ford Ford' head&#13;
"she ecuJdD't hi&#13;
there' O'R • t&#13;
Sociology discipline&#13;
career day program&#13;
by BID Robbins&#13;
AID'fic8 has paid a helluva&#13;
.... Ilt prosperity." "iat statement marked the&#13;
.. llldarticulated the them of&#13;
fIOfessor J. Joseph Huth-&#13;
..... ' Bicentennial lecture&#13;
"UIliDi!bedBusiness of the&#13;
...,., Revolution" held last&#13;
,... nightin lbe Corom. Arts&#13;
lloIlrt. _cher, whose collection&#13;
~ IllIes and achievements indIdes&#13;
Richars Professor of&#13;
lIIerican History at The&#13;
1liftnityof Delaware, a Ph.D.&#13;
.... flOOl Harvard, and Harris&#13;
IIr PresIdentCsmpaign Director&#13;
DeIwware, talked about the&#13;
..,mici.l ideology behind'&#13;
Amtrica's Bicentennial&#13;
"*lration."&#13;
Idill' see how anybody can&#13;
lilt ItOWldlbe United states&#13;
.. and say lbe system has&#13;
..ted so terribly well," said&#13;
1IIIIIDadler. As an example, he&#13;
lIIdtile me disappearnace of&#13;
Y , nlal celebrations funds&#13;
.,.'" lite city of Philadelphia. "Belrosultof outlay will be a "'1*ll in lbe back yard of&#13;
.,. Rlno's new $350,000 -," "IIachlIeShoppiDg Center&#13;
"\lin'. a lot to celebrate in&#13;
... 01 malerlaJ aims and&#13;
~" HUlbmacher said.&#13;
"'"' gol the highest medium&#13;
IlIIdanI 01 Uvingin lbe world."&#13;
.. be attributed lbis cultural&#13;
nesday night in Parkside's Cornm&#13;
Arts Theater, claims he and other&#13;
Lampoon editors are "real&#13;
normal." So, that is Why the&#13;
magazme once printed a COver&#13;
showing a gun pointed at a dog's&#13;
head and threatening to kill lbe&#13;
pooch if people did not buy lbe&#13;
affluence to "investing huge&#13;
amounts in instruments of&#13;
death."&#13;
One of the world's foremost&#13;
labor historians, Huthmacher&#13;
claimed that the weapons industries&#13;
operate on planned&#13;
obscelence schedules. "With&#13;
America as the world's largest&#13;
seller of armaments to other&#13;
countries, industries like G.M.&#13;
and Lockheed are assured of&#13;
employment. "&#13;
The Real Revolution&#13;
He espoused and explored the&#13;
gamut of current "progressive"&#13;
liberalistic ideas, commenting on&#13;
subjects ranging from socialized&#13;
medical facilities, a national&#13;
labor force, and the emptiness of&#13;
the "American Dream."&#13;
Huthmacher was especially&#13;
concerned with the "real&#13;
revolution," a societal, or&#13;
cultural revolulion which he said&#13;
slarted in the late 1950's and is liJl&#13;
being fought. He credits minority&#13;
groups, women. students and&#13;
other activists demanding social&#13;
and political reform, with&#13;
bringing about dramatic changes&#13;
over the last ten years. He also&#13;
credits himself. In 1970, Nixon's&#13;
invasion of Cambodia and the&#13;
Kent Slate tragedy succeeded in&#13;
radicalizing Huthmacher. "l&#13;
became a kind of revolutionist, I&#13;
gave up on being a liberal," he&#13;
declared.&#13;
The year he turned&#13;
"revolutionary fervor reached its&#13;
peak and began its decline. Hulb·&#13;
macher is well aware of that. He&#13;
issue?&#13;
The modestlY-dressed&#13;
O'Rourke, a graduate of Miami&#13;
(Ohio) University, began his talk&#13;
by saying he would nol have paid&#13;
lbe $1.25 advance tickel price to&#13;
hear him speak. Especially&#13;
O'Rourke, who has been with&#13;
asked, "Was this just a p3SSIDg&#13;
fad, a phenomenon thallelt a f....&#13;
marks On lhe periphery 01&#13;
American culture like long&#13;
hair?"&#13;
Atlbe beginning 01 his lecture,&#13;
Hutlnnacher set lbe mood by&#13;
piping swaying, soulful rendilions&#13;
of "Heaven Help Us All"&#13;
and "Abraham, Martin and&#13;
John" into the auditorium. He&#13;
played a Paul Simon song, too:&#13;
"An American Tune." Perhaps&#13;
lbe last few lines of that song&#13;
captures the altitude 01&#13;
American in the mid-70's and&#13;
partially answers Hulbmacher's&#13;
Questions as to whether or not the&#13;
notion of revolution in lhe late&#13;
60's has passed:&#13;
"Still, tomorrow's gonna be&#13;
another working day .&#13;
I'm trying to get some rest.&#13;
I'm just trying to gel some&#13;
rest. "&#13;
The sociology disdptine will be&#13;
offering a career day program on&#13;
Wed., Nov. at 1:30 p.m. in CL 219.&#13;
SOciology majors as well ...&#13;
olber interested students have&#13;
been invited to receh-e gen.... i&#13;
infonnation or advise IS to job&#13;
and career opportunities.&#13;
Barbara Larson, of the ear....&#13;
. 'ahonal&#13;
Januaf)·.&#13;
about the •&#13;
his t"Pl&lt;' for the&#13;
Humor" The T&#13;
also apote freel)'.&#13;
wmIs IIlaI once&#13;
Carlin an-esled at&#13;
SUmmerf est.&#13;
Insis1i.ng tba t&#13;
··besed on fflll':'lIle1O'1IIlC&#13;
ill ho&#13;
Powless----------~===_-&#13;
ee.tlllVetl from p .... 1&#13;
8Ioda, paternalistic and&#13;
lIresponslve to a degree&#13;
::::thY even in our&#13;
....._aUe capital, lbe B.I.A.&#13;
.... ellposedin a series of&#13;
~ by weU-knowncolumnist,&#13;
Anderson,as being more&#13;
~ .with anglo business&#13;
.... III and around lbe&#13;
~ti.ns than with the&#13;
~~d welfare of native&#13;
Plalotla delnoded, scrutinized&#13;
~~, lh~,,, Powless said of&#13;
...... , 'weve COme under in-&#13;
'Ille scrutiny by the Feds."&#13;
... ~ally funded A.I.M.&#13;
..,." am leaders have been&#13;
lutizect to lbe utmost." As&#13;
lIrt~t of this federal in-&#13;
"no, ce \VJthin an eighteen&#13;
!"Ilt periOd, four A.I.M.&#13;
lII;;a~~ve been defunded. The&#13;
.... ee·~ased American&#13;
,Council on Alcoholism has&#13;
lbe attention of lbe&#13;
F.B.I., H.E.W., and lbe National&#13;
Institute Alchol Abuse and&#13;
Alcoholism, who have. sent&#13;
represenlatives to audIt. and&#13;
monitor the project, accordmg to&#13;
Powless. powless has com~&#13;
under personal attack, accused 0&#13;
buying guns with agency money.&#13;
Although allegalions suchas&#13;
lbese have never been subslantiated,&#13;
this has prOVIded ~e&#13;
necessary public pretense or&#13;
investigations by the F.B.I., lbe&#13;
Justice Department, and lbe&#13;
Milwaukee Social Development&#13;
Commission. .&#13;
Currently, powless is faclJlll&#13;
federal and state charges&#13;
relating to his parlicipallon :::,lb~&#13;
1973 seige at Wounded Kn '.&#13;
. ted powless could receIVe conVlC , t 1'1 eally&#13;
years of irnprisionrnen. r "&#13;
believe I'm going to beat lbem,&#13;
. lains powless mam. . . t ballles&#13;
Should he wm his cour .&#13;
an urun- Powless still faces hostile&#13;
f dan often '&#13;
orme , .ty A leader&#13;
Milwaukee communt .&#13;
in the light against police&#13;
brutality and lbe resurgence of&#13;
nazism iocally. Powless' house&#13;
bas been fire-bom.bed and his eat&#13;
tires slashed and. of course, lhere&#13;
are crank phooe calls. ..,me&#13;
demanding that Indians, "g~&#13;
hack wh... e !be)' came from,&#13;
Powless noted wilb someUung&#13;
I lban total amusernenL More ':'ersome to Powless i.s the real&#13;
threat of bOdily harm. Refe~&#13;
t lbe number of native&#13;
..::nericans shot,. maimed .. or&#13;
even killed by wtules or ~&#13;
acting on behalf 'dol,,:"~:e:;:;&#13;
terests, powless S8J ,&#13;
'd feeling scm&lt; morDl.lllts&#13;
paranO! wired "&#13;
lbat maybe my eat IS .&#13;
Spreadlag hall-ed&#13;
The establishment response to&#13;
powless' charges ~en':"an::&#13;
curious D1IXed-bag .'&#13;
slow often unwilling, ,·a1idallon .&#13;
R"";nUy a lonner F.B.I. mformant,&#13;
nougins Durham, ha&#13;
National Lampoon Editor&#13;
new humor often based on&#13;
b ·'fhODl Aiello&#13;
&gt; . nee expects me to&#13;
audie d k suit " said&#13;
tin3 UC '&#13;
OU ke Executive Editor&#13;
01tour , . J 1 l,aillpoon magazine,&#13;
uona ·garette and opened a til8 Cl Budweiser beer.&#13;
of lecturing last Wed- ke,&#13;
nesday night in Parkside's Comm&#13;
Arts Theater, claims he and other&#13;
Lampoon editors are "real&#13;
norm~." So, that is why the&#13;
magazine once printed a cover&#13;
showing a gun pointed at a dog's&#13;
head and threatening to kill the&#13;
pooch if people did not buy the&#13;
issue?&#13;
The modestly-dre d&#13;
O'R~urke, a graduate of Uami&#13;
(Ohio) University, began his&#13;
by saying he would not ha\· paid&#13;
the $1.25 advance ticket price to&#13;
hear him speak. E peciall&gt;&#13;
O'Rourke, who has been "th&#13;
llistorian speaks on the&#13;
emptiness of the "Dream"~&#13;
by Bill Robbins&#13;
• rica bas paid a helluva ~ ·ty" ,tf fc.- prospen .&#13;
1 statement marked the&#13;
d articulated the them of&#13;
r or J. Joseph Huth-&#13;
' e r's Bicentennial lecture&#13;
!inished Business of the&#13;
·can Revolution" held last&#13;
. night in the Comm. Arts&#13;
Ire.&#13;
H:;thmacher, whose collection&#13;
ties and achievements inRichars&#13;
Professor of&#13;
rican History at The&#13;
·tv of Delaware, a Ph.D.&#13;
fr~ Harvard, and Harris&#13;
President Campaign Director&#13;
wware, talked about the&#13;
rficial ideology behind&#13;
erica's Bicentennial&#13;
ation."&#13;
I don't see how anybody can&#13;
around the United States&#13;
y and say the system has&#13;
ed so terribly well," said&#13;
cher. As an example, he&#13;
the ironic disappearnace of&#13;
lennia.1 celebrations funds&#13;
to the city of Philadelphia .&#13;
net result of outlay will be a&#13;
party in the back yard of&#13;
r Rizzo's new $350,000&#13;
"&#13;
ar Machine Shopping Center&#13;
e's a lot to celebrate in&#13;
of material aims and&#13;
lives," Huthmacher said.&#13;
got the highest medium&#13;
IWidan! of living in the world."&#13;
he attributed this cultural&#13;
affluence to "investing huge&#13;
amounts in instruments of&#13;
death."&#13;
One of the world's foremost&#13;
labor historians, Huthmacher&#13;
claimed that the weapons industries&#13;
operate on planned&#13;
obscelence schedules. "With&#13;
America as the world's largest&#13;
seller of armaments to other&#13;
countries, industries like G.M.&#13;
and Lockheed are assured of&#13;
employment.''&#13;
The Real Revolution&#13;
He espoused and explored the&#13;
gamut of current "progressive"&#13;
liberalistic ideas, commenting on&#13;
subjects ranging from socialized&#13;
medical facilities, a national&#13;
labor force, and the emptiness of&#13;
the "American Dream."&#13;
Huthmacher was especially&#13;
concerned with the "real&#13;
revolution, " a societal, or&#13;
cultural revolution which he said&#13;
started in the late 1950's and is till&#13;
being fought. He credits minority&#13;
groups, women. students and&#13;
other activists demanding social&#13;
and political reform, with&#13;
bringing about dramatic changes&#13;
over the last ten years. He also&#13;
credits himself. In 1970, Nixon's&#13;
invasion of Cambodia and the&#13;
Kent State tragedy succeeded in&#13;
radicalizing Huthmacher. "I&#13;
became a kind of revolutionist; I&#13;
gave up on being a liberal," he&#13;
declared.&#13;
The year he turned&#13;
"revolutionary fervor reached its&#13;
peak and began its decline. Huthmacher&#13;
is well aware of that. He&#13;
asked, "Was this just a pa&#13;
fad, a phenomenon that left f&#13;
marks on the periphery of&#13;
American culture Ii e Ion&#13;
hair?"&#13;
At the beginning of his lectur ,&#13;
Huthmacher set the mood b,&#13;
piping swaying, oulful renditions&#13;
of "Heaven Help Us All"&#13;
and ''Abraham, iartin nd&#13;
John" into the auditorium. H&#13;
played a Paul Simon&#13;
"An American Tune." P&#13;
the last few lines f that&#13;
captures the attitud&#13;
American in the mid-70 and&#13;
partially answers Huthmach '&#13;
questions as to heth not&#13;
notion of revolution in the late&#13;
60's has passed:&#13;
''Still, tomorr s gonna be&#13;
another working day.&#13;
I'm tr) ing to get m&#13;
I'm just l[1in to g me&#13;
rest."&#13;
Sociology&#13;
career da&#13;
edn 'f, o . 1 , J 7 T G&#13;
Powless-----------~=M~prd,1--=~~- &lt;lff11nutd from page 1&#13;
paternalistic and&#13;
flilonsive to a degree&#13;
worthy even in our&#13;
1 cratic capital, the B.I.A.&#13;
n exposed in a series of&#13;
by well-known columnist,&#13;
Anderson, as being more&#13;
d . with anglo business&#13;
ts in and around the&#13;
,rvat1ons than with the&#13;
e and welfare of native&#13;
rtcans.&#13;
Pt Jee defunded, scrutinized&#13;
1 ce, lhe,n," Powless said of&#13;
·, 'we ve come under inSCrutiny&#13;
by the Feds."&#13;
r:uy funded A.I.M.&#13;
linrr_i leaders have been&#13;
IZed to the utmost." As&#13;
IIJ&gt;shot of this federal inUience&#13;
~thin an eighteen&#13;
Period, four A.I.M.&#13;
au:ave been defunded. The&#13;
"-ee-~ased American&#13;
""Wlcil on Alcoholism has&#13;
d the attention of the&#13;
F.B.I., H.E.W., and the National&#13;
Institute Alchol Abuse and&#13;
Alcoholism, who have_ sent&#13;
representatives to audit_ and&#13;
monitor the project, according to&#13;
Powless. Powless has come&#13;
under personal attack, accused of&#13;
buying guns with agency money.&#13;
Although allegations suchas&#13;
these have never ~n substantiated&#13;
this has provided the&#13;
' te for necessary public pre nse&#13;
investigations by the F.B.I., the&#13;
Justice Department, and the&#13;
Milwaukee Social Development&#13;
Commission. . Currently, Powless is facing&#13;
federal and state _ch~rges&#13;
1 ting to his participation m the&#13;
~;7~ seige at Wounded Knee._ If&#13;
. ted Powless could receive&#13;
conv1c , . . t "I really&#13;
years of impr1S1onmen . "&#13;
believe I'm going to beat them,&#13;
Powless maintains. ttles&#13;
Should he win his court ba . an urun- Powless still faces .&#13;
1 often bosh e,&#13;
formed, an ·ty A leader&#13;
Milwaukee comrnuni · &#13;
Students' leave nest&#13;
keep the bird ·,&#13;
by MlI&lt;e Terry Thanksgiving. She ca1led&#13;
of her friends, who h ~&#13;
20 students that part~,Ule Il.&#13;
the program. ~ II&#13;
This year. she says&#13;
calling her to see if ~~"&#13;
students interesleq ~ ..&#13;
program. If over ~ Ii ~&#13;
register this year. Sc&#13;
says the food may be do&#13;
a group Thanksgiving::: rAny&#13;
student intere t~ •&#13;
having dinner with a I.~~"&#13;
Thanksgiving. or an...... '&#13;
interested in hosting a y&#13;
students; should co~&#13;
merling in Tallent R.lI&#13;
phone 553-2320. •....&#13;
4 THE PARKSID~ RA GER WIich"I~". Nov. 1f. 1mbon'OI' fl]JDs (rom 11:30-1:30 p.rn .&#13;
....... r. .d: steDar. Ij t1·30 p.rn, in WLLC&#13;
....... ,. .II: Psyc:!JololY Qubmee ng a .&#13;
174. val, !lIJoW\ng Humphrey Bogart in&#13;
....... ,. . d: rnm F~ M liD' "at 6·30 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
"African Queen" and "'!be ClilIe u Y .&#13;
Mmw' ...... Ia'~__.... lais. n. ••.• ~~..-......v Oub meeUng at 7:30 p.m. in CL&#13;
all .l"JuaY, Y. p. I'U\UI~&#13;
324. .' ell wsbiP full chapter&#13;
11Iw1da', ... 21: parbide QIrisliaD F 0&#13;
moetin8 at 7:30 p.m. in CA 124.. I Irwin MeZZOsoprano, Frida,. . n: Facully mUSICrecital: earo '&#13;
Stephen Sftdisb, pianOat7: 30 p.m, III the ?AT ..Free. Re\agys at&#13;
llInIay. .... tz: women's and men's swimJIlIIIll. RanIler&#13;
12 p.m. in the P.E. Bldg, . SAB S-_·nr&lt;&gt;&lt;l&#13;
llInIay. OY. tz: Dance frUIl8 p.m. to I a.m. III the . I""~'--&#13;
by the Par\.si~. ~ ~b':"'a concert at 3:30 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Y, O'V. W. rlII~ vru~&#13;
Free. (rom UW.MadisOO on "In- "-y. av. %4: Lecture, ~ter Lange and CIini aI 1mstruetional&#13;
Control of Heart RatA!: Research c cul&#13;
pllcaboos" at 1:30 p.m. in CL 107. SpOrlSOI"'d by Psychology Fa ty&#13;
and Psycholo«.Y Club.&#13;
Any students who are unable to&#13;
j&#13;
' their own families on&#13;
Oln d t&#13;
Thanksgiving Day, ue ~&#13;
distance, finailces t . etc. don t&#13;
have to miss out this year. ,ac·&#13;
cording to Shirley Schmer~.&#13;
Housing coordinator at par.kSlde.&#13;
Schmer&#13;
1ing says she. will .be&#13;
hilpPY to find a family With,Which&#13;
those students can enJoy a&#13;
Thanksgiving dinner.&#13;
Schmerling initiated the&#13;
program last year because&#13;
several students from New&#13;
Orleans were at Parkside.and I~, were unable to go home for&#13;
.p chamber symphony&#13;
will present concert&#13;
MOLBECK'S&#13;
GROCERY&#13;
Comp,.te Line of Qua'lity Grocer'..&#13;
Specializing in ."&#13;
HEALTH FOODS··DIETETICS··IMPORTS&#13;
Aspen Colo. FesIlvai Repertoire&#13;
Orehestra.&#13;
'!be ParUide crchestra's other&#13;
on-campus concerts this seaSOn&#13;
will be Feb. 15 when the soloist&#13;
will be faculty pianist StA!phen&#13;
swedish performing Beethoven'.&#13;
Plano Concerto No.2 and in mid·&#13;
May when they will share a&#13;
program with the Repertory&#13;
BaUet Company of Barrett&#13;
College.&#13;
Olber up&lt;oming appearances&#13;
for the crcheslra are Dec. 13.&#13;
when it will play with the&#13;
Milwaukee Choristers at Alverno&#13;
College. and Apil26. when it will&#13;
participate in dedication&#13;
ceremmIes for the Carthage&#13;
College Chapel with Carthage&#13;
faculty organist Mark Edwards&#13;
as soloist.&#13;
lint vloIinlIl with the Pike River&#13;
cans. the 'I'borbumlin and&#13;
'orlh Sbore SIring QuarIeIa and&#13;
the M.A . Trio. Last 1WIlIIIOI".&#13;
he parIlcipalA!d in the Fish Creek&#13;
MUSlC FlIlItivai.&#13;
In his lint year as cooducto&lt; of&#13;
the Parkslde Symphony.&#13;
npaema also cooducla the&#13;
ordlIstras at Mary D. Bradford&#13;
HJcb SCbool. Kenosha, and is&#13;
aIB,slanl conductor of the&#13;
K!IlOIIba SympbClIly. He is a&#13;
violinist with the Kenosha&#13;
Sympllony and the Pike River&#13;
Musicians.&#13;
He received b1s master of&#13;
music degree from Michigan&#13;
SlBtA! Umvemty and in 1973&#13;
received the diplcma of conoo~&#13;
from the Mcnarteum,&#13;
Sahburg. Austria. under Carl&#13;
Nelles. He has cooduclA!d in&#13;
Berlin, Rome, Florence and&#13;
Sahburg and has been guest&#13;
conductor of the Grand (Mich.)&#13;
Symphony, Michigan State&#13;
University Orchestra and the&#13;
lbe Parkslde Chamber&#13;
SYmIDllOlDY will ~I III fall&#13;
I NO p.m on SomdaY,&#13;
2S, Il1 the C&lt;mm Ar1I&#13;
.. thOllYld ~&#13;
aloductiaI and ccnc-t vioUnlst&#13;
Ithew F. 'a~ as I'IUl&#13;
1304 Grange Ave Phone 633-7769&#13;
Need Work,? Want a· Rewar;.dlng Job?&#13;
No Experience Needed - We Train You GOOD PAY&#13;
MEN-Shift Workers- COLLEGE STUDENTS A.M.~.M. blof&#13;
Women-Ideol hours, Help increose the fomily income-Suythose UIII&#13;
.au htln will perform the&#13;
olin Concerto 0. 5 in&#13;
lbt alIo will pre..,t&#13;
'a SIIIbur Slllfonia o. I&#13;
(K •• ,Cbarlu 'v.' Sympllony&#13;
o 3 and Slrav!Jllky'a SuIte o.&#13;
I '!be procram alIo will Include&#13;
HoImea' te for ar- by the&#13;
ParUIde Bra. Cbolr dlteclA!d by&#13;
.10M HomIt., 'auawn. active both as a&#13;
Ifat~ and perf~ artist In&#13;
area. Iludied at&#13;
Ql'thw tern UnJ erslly with&#13;
FAw'do FloreW and ~Uy is&#13;
working withAlan&#13;
H athutn ton. Re is conc:ertmaa~&#13;
of the Waulteaan&#13;
ymphony and the Liberty·&#13;
Fn:mont Concert Socl ty and is&#13;
• Compensation during the summer • Be home with yol children&#13;
See how eo.sy your hours could work. in with .OUf schedule. A good way II&#13;
beat the increase cost of living.&#13;
Despite road construction, road open to:&#13;
RACINE BUS CO.&#13;
(Come in from Soulh 51.) 1822 South St. 639·7404&#13;
T tile and fabric work&#13;
in theater display&#13;
throughout the u.s. during the&#13;
last 16 years and has had one and&#13;
two per-son shows. Her work is in&#13;
the pennanenl collections of&#13;
wasbingtort Ullh-ersity in St.&#13;
Louis. the l11inois SlatA!Museum,&#13;
Sprtngfield. and many privatA!&#13;
coUections. She is the author of a&#13;
number of arlIc1es on weaving in&#13;
both U.S and fcnign journals.&#13;
Regular gaUery hours are&#13;
Monda)'s, Wednesdays and&#13;
Fndays from 3 to 5 p.m. and&#13;
~)"S and Thursdays from 6&#13;
to 8 p.rn. The gallery will be&#13;
cl.-d ·ov. 27 and 2ll because of&#13;
the TlIanksgiving recess.&#13;
lion of ' Testilea and&#13;
Fabria from them 1l1lncIs&#13;
Unlv Iy" f tun.n&amp; work by&#13;
Prof .' omi T_ and four of&#13;
her 1J1ldualA! alod&lt;nl.S In art will&#13;
on dbpIay III the Cm&gt;-&#13;
munlcaUoa AJ1s Gallery from&#13;
."" 19 througb 5&#13;
vlngs and prlnled&#13;
emp1o)' a wide&#13;
V::~~~~~~~~ all have b nat10nally III JUch&#13;
Conlm1porary Q-afts of&#13;
m rleas, WiSCODSUl&#13;
l\ orth Western ~=~&#13;
od Finl Ann I&#13;
ti tic rt Olmpebllon.&#13;
ha .h,biled&#13;
Cantonese &amp; American&#13;
Fine Deficacies&#13;
[ FAMilY DINNERS I&#13;
Dine in or Carry Out&#13;
-C1OSID AYS&#13;
Rf~ U R T CO T H'~Mu.s&#13;
Ull '.r. 4 A.. • Ph. 564.1320&#13;
-filE! PARlCINGF.&#13;
Madrigrano 1831-55th&#13;
OY. 19, 1975&#13;
. . U: ~eDar,b&lt;Jn'Orfihmfrom ll:30-1:30P~· WILC&#13;
. U: Ps ·ch ogy Oub meeting at 1 :30 p.m. m&#13;
U• Film Festival showing Humphrey Bogart in&#13;
• • Caine ~tiny" at 6:30 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
$1. . · CL • U: AnthropOlogy Oub meeting at 7:30 p.m. m&#13;
: Par · e Otristian Fellowship full chapter&#13;
i: p.m. in CA 1%4. . 0&#13;
• !1: F culty m ·c recital: Carol Irwin, Mezzo sopran '&#13;
Ste1&gt;1M!n ~-url. at i:30 p.m. in the CAT. Free. n and men ·s swiJruning, Ranger Re}agys at&#13;
ture Peter Lan e from UW-Madison on "lnH&#13;
'art Rate: Research and Clinical ImCL&#13;
107. ponsored by Psychology Faculty&#13;
amber symphony&#13;
t concert&#13;
ork&#13;
Aspen Colo. Festival Repertoire&#13;
Orchestra.&#13;
The Parkside orchestra's other&#13;
on&lt;ampus concerts this season&#13;
will be Feb. 15 when the soloist&#13;
will be faculty pianist Stephen&#13;
edish performing Beethoven's&#13;
Piano Concerto No. 2 and in mid1ay&#13;
when they will share a&#13;
program with the Repertory&#13;
Ballet Company of Barrett&#13;
College.&#13;
Other up,&lt;:oming appearances&#13;
for the orchestra are Dec. 13,&#13;
when it will play with the&#13;
· waukee Choristers at Alverno&#13;
College, and AJril 26, when it will&#13;
participate in dedication&#13;
ceremonies for the Carthage&#13;
College Chapel with Carthage&#13;
faculty organist Mark Edwards&#13;
as soloist.&#13;
Students· leave nest&#13;
keep the bird ' '&#13;
by Mike Terry&#13;
Any students who are ~able to&#13;
'oin their own fam1hes on&#13;
i'banksgiving Day• due to&#13;
distance, finances, . etc. don't&#13;
have to miss out this year' . according&#13;
to Shirley Schroer~,&#13;
Housing coordinator at Parkside.&#13;
Schmerling says she will be&#13;
happy to find a family with _which&#13;
those students can enJ0 Y a&#13;
Thanksgiving dinner.&#13;
Schmerling initiated the&#13;
program last year because&#13;
several students from New&#13;
Orleans were at Parkside, and&#13;
were unable to go home for&#13;
Thanksgiving. She called&#13;
of her friends, who hoste(l Bevetai&#13;
20 students that Parti . _the 1$.&#13;
the program. ct~ted in&#13;
This year, she says&#13;
calling her to see if ~PeoPJe ~&#13;
students interested e ~ an,&#13;
program. If over 25 in !ht&#13;
register this year Sc 8~&#13;
says the food may be do hrner~&#13;
a group Thanksgiving ~ r,&#13;
Any student inter t r.&#13;
having dinner with a fes ~ ia&#13;
Thanksgiving, or an anuJy Cl&#13;
interested in hosting a Y f81!lily&#13;
students; should contastudeot,&#13;
lin . ct ~&#13;
mer g m Tallent Hall - phone 553-2320. , IU,&#13;
MOLBECK'S&#13;
GROCERY&#13;
Complete Line of Quality Groceries&#13;
Specializing in ·&#13;
HEAL TH FOODS--DIETETICS--IMP0Rn&#13;
1304 Gronge Ave Phone 633-7769&#13;
Need Work.? Want a · Rewar.ding Job?&#13;
No Experience Needed - We Train You GOOD PAY&#13;
MEN-Shift Workers- C~LLEGE STUDENTS A.M.-P.M. Rel!f&#13;
Women-Ideal hours. Help increase the family income-Buy those ex1rm&#13;
• Compensation during the summer • Be home with yoJ children&#13;
See how ea_sy your hours could work in with .our schedule. A good woy to&#13;
beot the increase cost of living.&#13;
Despite road construction, road open to:&#13;
RACINE BUS CO.&#13;
(Come in from South St.) 1822 South St. 639-7404&#13;
Distributed by E.&#13;
F. Madrigrano 1831-55th &#13;
w.dnesdlly. Nov. It. 1975THE PARKSIDE&#13;
ganization will be student dating&#13;
•&#13;
11 ::::::&#13;
have everything-looks, brains,&#13;
really sharp. But they were&#13;
down, in part, because they didn't&#13;
know how to meet new people."&#13;
Shirley and the students came up&#13;
with the idea for a fun dating&#13;
service.&#13;
"We want to help students get&#13;
involved with one another&#13;
socially, on a more personal&#13;
level. It's a social service for fun;&#13;
not to meet Mr. or Ms. Right,"&#13;
said Gail Havranek, president of&#13;
SEXES.&#13;
Right now SEXES is polling&#13;
students on what they want from&#13;
the new club. Answers from the&#13;
poll will be used to form a&#13;
questionnaire that will be&#13;
available after Thanksgiving.&#13;
The questionnaire is the key to&#13;
the club. It will include basic&#13;
physical preferences but also&#13;
values, goals and interests of&#13;
those applying. A computer will&#13;
not be used to match applicants.&#13;
"We will do an individualized&#13;
study of each person. We will be&#13;
I:::::: HI:: I:::&#13;
matching values, things With a&#13;
deeper meaning. It's 8 lot more&#13;
work but we feel it is needed"&#13;
Gail explained. '&#13;
Gail feels that moot people&#13;
applying will not need a da~&#13;
service but just want to expand&#13;
their horizons. Gail said, "It's&#13;
just fun people looking to meet&#13;
other fun people With new and&#13;
different ideas."&#13;
SEXES has been in contact&#13;
with 8 computerized dating&#13;
service at Indiana University.&#13;
They had 600 applicants in the&#13;
first week. Gail said, "Tbere&#13;
were no life-long love matches&#13;
but everyone enjoyed themselves&#13;
and they are looking forward to&#13;
the next semester."&#13;
This is the way SEXES will&#13;
work; one week men will get&#13;
three names of women and the&#13;
next week women will get three&#13;
names of men. Sometime during&#13;
the week the man or woman will&#13;
informa11y meet his or her three&#13;
selections. After meeting the&#13;
: ::: 57 : ::&#13;
From This Window&#13;
From this window .&#13;
'I1Je thick, black, serpentine-intertwining, up-outward extending&#13;
Umbs&#13;
Of winter-time trees&#13;
People the faded sky .&#13;
In a hastily-discarded disarray&#13;
Indifferently unleafed&#13;
'I1Jey mingle to mingle through thoroughly&#13;
Wondered about dimensions&#13;
And lean on the softly leaded&#13;
Night-time clouds that are&#13;
Uke shoulders for sad, aching bones&#13;
But later&#13;
'1brough shaded lamplight,&#13;
'I1Je lighter part of darkness framed,&#13;
Voluminous, delicate leaves of vined degree&#13;
Balance on breezes of cloudless thoughts&#13;
Of summer-time and&#13;
Wmdowless, dappled trees&#13;
~~~:.--~&#13;
I-.-LP&#13;
Cyndl Jensen&#13;
Gordon's Auto 'arts, ....&#13;
three, &lt;me II c:bc-. far a&#13;
netmd date. wtII be&#13;
b8vq dub I\ulcIiona, .........&#13;
~ meeliQp ... !be. t !&#13;
or tbo c:oapIe CIOIl go ........ ~&#13;
die.&#13;
Ad,aaa"clDd' __&#13;
~ wtII teI1 _ aad&#13;
GER'&#13;
ow&#13;
king&#13;
plicants&#13;
the&#13;
sition of&#13;
Editor&#13;
the&#13;
pring&#13;
Sellleste&#13;
DISCOUNT TO STUDENTS&#13;
Phone 632-8841&#13;
Phone 631-8882&#13;
1214 Lathrop Ave.&#13;
1400 Milw. Ave.&#13;
1657.5158 I&#13;
eEL&#13;
• AUTO&#13;
TRAVELhps&#13;
G'i\4TO&#13;
U~tEXICO&#13;
With vaca ion ime f app&#13;
to , l1exlco. Some of&#13;
coming back. Here re&#13;
hints.&#13;
I.A man on a burro alv 'llY&#13;
right of vay, unle h ap&#13;
a weaklin .&#13;
2. In local can nas pounn a ot&#13;
Cuervo dov rn a man' collar I n&#13;
thou ht to hUmt1IfOIIS&#13;
3. Fal1ing onto a n n&#13;
actual Cu rvo cacrus, can&#13;
a tick. proposiuon .&#13;
•Itt tou h to find h mUU'6~&#13;
roll In th 11 r to&#13;
be to bnn our 0 n,&#13;
the&#13;
to&#13;
Wedne~y. ov. H, 75 T PA 10£ A G&#13;
ganizati.on will he student dat_· __&#13;
have everything-looks, brains,&#13;
really sharp. But they were&#13;
down, in part, because they didn't&#13;
know how to meet new people."&#13;
Shirley and the students came up&#13;
with the idea for a fun dating&#13;
service.&#13;
"We want to help students get&#13;
involved with one another&#13;
sociidly, on a more personal&#13;
level. It's a social service for fun;&#13;
not to meet Mr. or Ms. Right,"&#13;
said Gail Havranek, president of&#13;
SEXES.&#13;
Right now SEXES is polling&#13;
students on what they want from&#13;
the new club. Answers from the&#13;
poll will be used to form a&#13;
questionnaire that will be&#13;
available after Thanksgiving.&#13;
The questionnaire is the key to&#13;
the chm. It will include basic&#13;
physical preferences but also&#13;
values, goals and interests of&#13;
those applying. A computer will&#13;
not be used to match applicants.&#13;
"We will do an individualized&#13;
study of each person. We will be&#13;
matching values, things ·th 8&#13;
deeper meaning. It's a lot more&#13;
work but we feel it is needed ., Gail explained.&#13;
Gail feels that m~ peopl&#13;
applying will not need a dat~&#13;
service but just want to expand&#13;
their horizons. Gail sa d, "It'&#13;
just fun people looking to meet&#13;
other fun people with ne and&#13;
different ideas."&#13;
SEXES has been in contact&#13;
with a computerized dating&#13;
service at Indiana University.&#13;
They had 600 applicants in the&#13;
first week. Gail said, "There&#13;
were no life-long love match&#13;
but everyone enjoyed them.selves&#13;
and they are looking fcrward to&#13;
the next semester."&#13;
This is the way SEXES will&#13;
work; one week men will get&#13;
three names of women and the&#13;
next week women will get ee&#13;
names of men. Sometime during&#13;
the week the man or woman will&#13;
informally meet his or her three&#13;
selections. After meeting th&#13;
•rn From This Window&#13;
From this window .&#13;
The thick, black, serpentine-intertwining, up-0utward extending&#13;
Limbs&#13;
Of winter-time trees&#13;
People the faded sky&#13;
In a hastily-discarded disarray&#13;
Indifferently unleafed&#13;
They mingle to mingle through thoroughly&#13;
Wondered about dimensions&#13;
And lean on the softly leaded&#13;
Night-time clouds that are&#13;
Like shoulders for sad, aching bones&#13;
But later&#13;
Through shaded lamplight,&#13;
The lighter part of darkness fraI?ed,&#13;
Voluminous, delicate leaves of vined degree&#13;
Balance on breezes of cloudless thoughts&#13;
Of summer-time and&#13;
Windowless, dappled trees&#13;
CyndiJensen&#13;
,.&#13;
Gordon's Auto Parts,'&#13;
TE DISCOUNT TO STUDENT$ I&#13;
Phone 632-8841 1214 Lathrop Ave.&#13;
,~ Phone 637-8882 1400 Milw. A e .&#13;
...&#13;
rthe&#13;
Po ition of&#13;
Editor&#13;
rthe&#13;
Pring&#13;
0&#13;
TRAvE&#13;
TO&#13;
E CO &#13;
Women set records,&#13;
look to Ranger relays&#13;
(1:20.36, a personal best), 50 fly contmued t? established&#13;
(32.51) and 200 indo medley new mark m the 100Oy .&#13;
. 855). Coach Barbara Lawson 1:32.61. Ilili&#13;
(2.4 . ltfi th N t was extremely pleased WI e . ex action for the&#13;
. g in the 200 individual will be as a co-ed 1.__&#13;
showm . d thi d """".&#13;
edl Y&#13;
as the new record slice ir annual Rang ~&#13;
m e, N' ~&#13;
. seconds off the old mark. me schools from Wi~&#13;
rune • RI" ....&#13;
Olson also established a new mois will send teams....&#13;
k&#13;
in the 50 free style with a meet, which ends the ~&#13;
mar .&#13;
30.47 timing. Constantine kept up swun season.&#13;
the breaking of old records as she&#13;
'THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wedne.y, Nov. 19, 1975&#13;
Phy Ed Bldg. schedule&#13;
8:30am-9:30pm&#13;
8:3Oam-43Opm.&#13;
s: pm-8:3Opm&#13;
bulJdlng odledule Wlth scree exceptions. Athletic&#13;
ms Prlcti Dy frml 3: 30 to 6 p.rn me pb}'S1cal education&#13;
IIn!be gym. depending on esther. As a malter of policy,&#13;
S lr) to one gym a,.,.ilable for recreational play.&#13;
1l:J6.1:3Opm&#13;
1l:J6.2:3Opm&#13;
6:J6.9:oo pm&#13;
bo&gt; bolld1ng odledule, ex.,.,,1 when cJa.sses in&#13;
I llarhandball rein on. can lor re.oervations.&#13;
.It room !be above bolld1ng sdledule.&#13;
perfOM'llllllCe lab PlIy cal Fitness &amp;. M.... I2-I: 15pm&#13;
erdse prescnpti... Wed.U-2pm&#13;
De\:l81Ilrneot Banquet Evening s:::~hoe !be Ranser Relays 12Noon&#13;
~ Benefil - SCuba DIvers&#13;
ralhon In pool I: 30 pm&#13;
run to first place finish,&#13;
.........ional m et may he at UW·p&#13;
weat he did last year."&#13;
Edinboro Slate (Pa.) went on to&#13;
capture the NAIA Championship.&#13;
AU tolled, 54 full teams participated&#13;
and 99 colleges were&#13;
represented.&#13;
Another Parkside hopeful was&#13;
junior Kim Merrill, who was&#13;
running in the Association of&#13;
Intercollegiate Athletics for&#13;
Women (AIAW) meet, held in&#13;
Ames, Iowa. But Merritt became&#13;
sick during the race and could not&#13;
finish.&#13;
On another front, the NAIA&#13;
coaches in Salina voted to hold&#13;
the National meet in Kenosha&#13;
next year, with Parkside and&#13;
Carthage being ClHlOSts. Next,&#13;
the NAIA Executive Committee&#13;
must agree to the coaches'&#13;
decision, after it sends a committee&#13;
to check""ut Kenosha as a&#13;
probable site. Godfrey feels&#13;
Kenosha has a "good chance" of&#13;
gaining the site. _&#13;
FInally, Parkside will hold its&#13;
"1st Annual Nordic Cross&#13;
Country Race" on November 30&#13;
1975. It costs $1 to enter, and th~&#13;
raee will cover 5 kilometers. For&#13;
more details on thWevent, check&#13;
next week's Ranger.&#13;
olleyball team too&#13;
ch for Ripon&#13;
bJ- ......&#13;
cb Orby volleyball&#13;
t.eam played on 0( 1IleIr meet so1id&#13;
01 !be year to overcome •&#13;
RIpoo am, 1-1&#13;
1M maldl sl&amp;Nd oft with a&#13;
Par win. I~. Ripon then&#13;
came ba lh a 1:.-4 win to tie&#13;
!be match .1 I game tid&gt;. The&#13;
third game lound th Ran«ers&#13;
and RIpon In.tie .1!he end of !be&#13;
mlnulo lime aUotmenI lor&#13;
called game on&#13;
Par • played this&#13;
women came back&#13;
ltob thegame&#13;
In ertime,&#13;
llyn.-&#13;
anqut&#13;
il honor&#13;
ath t&#13;
..... nlly ejected captain 0( the&#13;
Parkslde cross-country squad,&#13;
I\nWled 81 t out 0( about ~&#13;
runners last Satunlay' in the&#13;
Al • ·.U.... l Championships,&#13;
held In Salina. Kansas. Co.ch Vic&#13;
Godfrey ..... not too excited&#13;
about Fredericksen's finish,&#13;
saytng. "He's • better runner&#13;
than e1ghly-first. but be didn't do&#13;
• bod job, Just a lillie below&#13;
average for him though." Godlrey'&#13;
al50 menttcnec that even&#13;
though his lop nmner seemed to&#13;
hive been Olin a slump" lately.&#13;
Fredericksen slill finished&#13;
"about a hundred places over&#13;
bein greatly improved and&#13;
serving well. Carolyn Gilstedl,&#13;
Moos said. "helped with the solid&#13;
effort by !be Parkside learn&#13;
having come back from an injur;&#13;
which had held h..- out for a&#13;
month:·&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Parkside's women swim team&#13;
laced tenth in the WWIAC&#13;
~ampionshiPs. won by UWMadisOn,&#13;
g.thering twelve pomts&#13;
from two unusual sources.&#13;
Those sources were the 200&#13;
medley relay and 200 free style&#13;
relay, whose tenth place finishes&#13;
gained the Parkside pomts. In&#13;
gaining their fmish. the 200&#13;
medley relay team broke a team&#13;
record through the efforts of&#13;
MarY Beth Leitch, Sheila Craig,&#13;
Gail Olson, and Liz Constantine.&#13;
The new record is 2: 21.18. The&#13;
memberS of the free style team&#13;
were: Leitch, Olson, Constantine,&#13;
and Lynn Peterson.&#13;
Leilch broke more records at&#13;
the meet in the 100 back stroke&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Cou&#13;
","""~"''''''''&lt;o""&#13;
On tap at the Skellar&#13;
\ "- \\ \~ ~OR&#13;
RECORDS &amp; TUII&#13;
PIPES&#13;
PARAPHERNALU&#13;
LEATHER G.&#13;
JEWELRY&#13;
. WATBl&#13;
ElNE SWEET BErn&#13;
BREA&#13;
6131137TH A VENDE KENSI&#13;
66"-3678&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SE,RVICE&#13;
wishes everyone a Happy Thanksgiving&#13;
This Friday, Nov. 21&#13;
~URKEY GIVE-AWAY&#13;
Win a f '&#13;
rozen turkey to take home for&#13;
Thanks'" . d giVing inner. Both in the&#13;
Burger Shoppe and Buffet Room&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 26&#13;
-Ie'&#13;
TURKEY DINNER SPECIAL&#13;
Hand carved t k '&#13;
includin d u~ ey with all the trimmings&#13;
g resslng, potato vegetable and$1&#13;
cranb . •&#13;
erry sauce (~1.75 value)&#13;
WLLC BUFFET ROOM _ NE CORNER OF BLDG.&#13;
,_ __ K_ 1_oe __ 1 G_ E _ _ ed_n _sd-'--y_, _ov_. 1_9,_19-751 women set records, .&#13;
look to Ranger relays&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Parkside's women jWll1l team&#13;
placed tenth in the WWIAC&#13;
championships, won by ~Wfadison,&#13;
gathering twelve pomts&#13;
from two unusual sources.&#13;
Those sources were the 200&#13;
medley relay and 200 free style&#13;
el Whose tenth place finishes&#13;
·20 36 a personal best), 50 fly continued to establlshe&#13;
g2 5i) 'and 200 ind. medley new mark in the 100 : a~~ ." 55). Coach Barbara Lawson 1:32.61. Y Iii 1&#13;
(2.4B. ·•k th N t t·&#13;
was extremely pleased w1i.u e ex ac ion for th&#13;
h wing in the 200 individual will be as a co-ed tee&#13;
s edo 1 as the new record sliced third annual Ra atn ~ m ey, . nger Fie . e seconds off the old mark. Nme schools from w· . ~Ison also established a new Illinois will send te ISco¾Ji&#13;
mark in the 50 free style with a meet, which ends t~ I(,&#13;
30.47 timing. Constantine kept up swim season. I\'&#13;
r ay, . In&#13;
in gained the Parkside points.&#13;
gaining their finish, the 200&#13;
medley relay team broke a team&#13;
record through the efforts of&#13;
the breaking of old records as she&#13;
Ev ing&#13;
12 ·oon&#13;
1:30pm&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch, Sheila Cr~g,&#13;
Gail Olson, and Liz Constantine.&#13;
The new record is 2:21.18. The&#13;
members of the free style team&#13;
were: ~itch, Olson, Constantine,&#13;
and Lynn Peterson.&#13;
~itch bcoke more records at&#13;
the meet in the 100 back stroke&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
G, llllLI0,04 ,_U,,..,&#13;
1111 (0&#13;
., ...&#13;
On tap at the Skellar&#13;
ace finish,&#13;
at UW-P&#13;
eant too&#13;
a·pon&#13;
r atly improved and&#13;
ll. Carolyn Gilstedt,&#13;
·d, ' ped ~th the solid&#13;
b) the Par ·de team,&#13;
ba from an mjury&#13;
d held out for a&#13;
nat he did last year."&#13;
Edinboro State (Pa.) went on to&#13;
capture the NAIA Championship.&#13;
All tolled, 54 full teams participated&#13;
and 99 colleges were&#13;
represented.&#13;
Another Parkside hopeful was&#13;
junior Kim Merritt, who was&#13;
running in the Association of&#13;
Intercollegiate Athletics for&#13;
Women (AIAW) meet, held in&#13;
Ames, Iowa. But Merritt became&#13;
sick during the race and could not&#13;
finish.&#13;
On another front, the NAIA&#13;
coaches in Salina voted to hold&#13;
the National meet in Kenosha&#13;
next year, with Parkside and&#13;
Carthage being co-hosts. Next,&#13;
the 'AIA Executive Committee&#13;
must agree to the coaches'&#13;
decision, after it sends a committee&#13;
to check-out Kenosha as a&#13;
probable site. Godfrey feels&#13;
Kenosha has a "good chance" of&#13;
gaining the site.&#13;
Finally, Parkside will hold its&#13;
"1st Annual Nordic Cross&#13;
Country Race" on November 30&#13;
' 1975. It costs $1 to enter, and the&#13;
race will cover 5 kilometers. For&#13;
more details on this-event, check&#13;
next week's Ranger.&#13;
\, \ ~ w '"- \\ \\; FOR&#13;
REUORDS &amp; TAP~&#13;
PIPES&#13;
PARAPHERNALl.t&#13;
LEATHER GOOI&#13;
JEWELRY&#13;
WATER&#13;
BNE SWEET BEANl.tg&#13;
BREAM&#13;
&amp;B1B 7Tff -A \?ENDE RENEii&#13;
&amp;&amp;ll-3678&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SE,RVICE&#13;
wishes everyone a Happy Thanksgiving&#13;
This Friday, Nov. 21&#13;
TURKEY GIVE-AW A Y&#13;
w· f • in a rozen turkey to take home for&#13;
~hanksgiving dinner. Both in the&#13;
urger Shoppe and Buffet Room&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 26&#13;
TURKEY DINNER SPECIAL&#13;
Hand carved t k&#13;
....&#13;
· 1 d· ur ey with all the trimmings&#13;
inc u ing d . d&#13;
ressing, potato, vegetable an s1,&#13;
cranberry sauce Pl.75 value)&#13;
WLLC BUFFET ROOM - NE CORNER OF BLDG· &#13;
Swedish will giv . e recItal&#13;
with choral groups at&#13;
Hamilton College E Penn State,&#13;
Yale ha' ,astman and , sglvenan b&#13;
recitals in the east ur:: er of solo&#13;
and performed e~':., n~rthwest&#13;
Europe and As' nSlvely in&#13;
S&#13;
lao&#13;
wedish cam t&#13;
1973 after tea ':u 0 Parkside in&#13;
~niyersity, Io~a n~~t lnd.iana&#13;
sity and Te e Umver_&#13;
U&#13;
. xas Chr-I ti mversity H' rig Ian&#13;
schedule thi·· IS performance&#13;
s season . I&#13;
appearances with the Milme udes&#13;
and San Diego S waukee&#13;
chestras, a solo rec~p~onr Or·&#13;
Cenler in New York ~,,?In&#13;
of solo recitals on th aWnda serres e est Coast.&#13;
ana carol Irwin pnd&#13;
""'~n swedish will&#13;
facuIty recital at&#13;
~ 7:30 p.m. on Friday,&#13;
. .~ commUnicatIOn&#13;
ft III "~&#13;
~ihe parkside faculty&#13;
!.'"".,ier teaching for four&#13;
~ !;isenhow&lt;r College in&#13;
~ A graduate of Oberlin&#13;
IItY and a doctoral&#13;
at EaStman SChool of&#13;
~ she studied with&#13;
JlOanrright, she has&#13;
in oratorio and lieder&#13;
""EL MILOS&#13;
OIliIl'JeWeIs IIlb bladders destroyed&#13;
tJlllcleerlh pIIbed open a lantern&#13;
....Iidead doors&#13;
,.taasIy accounting&#13;
'" lbe cbange&#13;
.... gates&#13;
.-cmlnds&#13;
.....,mgestra&#13;
iI""" gone.&#13;
Doonan&#13;
NEVER .&#13;
1IiII: III ya later, '''laler.&#13;
...&#13;
IIlIYbe never.&#13;
!lIlIr Isever&#13;
lIIIrls gone&#13;
lIIIr lIlaD ever&#13;
becxImes never&#13;
"'Is evennore.&#13;
Doonan&#13;
"laD&#13;
lllIIertng Upon me and&#13;
lOW 01&#13;
IIIlUng pine needles&#13;
_ - other leaves pointing&#13;
dIneD day&#13;
IlaI edge light might&#13;
*"Idllky in line&#13;
II... W8Vin&#13;
-010 g&#13;
lIllains threatening&#13;
.. OI~g upon me and&#13;
-led candles&#13;
lOlling 88nlen greens&#13;
IIlenlories01 You&#13;
..u. . agll1ll.&#13;
~1Ily "aleb&#13;
-love You&#13;
..... Jeffrey j. "'encki 1975&#13;
.:: :&#13;
Healso is accom .&#13;
Eugene Fodor ~anymg violinisl&#13;
Tchaikovsky , ~er of the 1974&#13;
MOSCoW, on a U ~mpetition in&#13;
The recital .. concert lDur&#13;
elUde WiderstJrogram wi1l Ul&#13;
by Bach weum:: doch der SW1d~&#13;
Boddecker fo chis Ronzert b)'&#13;
rns, Adieu iore':; bso~gS b)' Brah,&#13;
Labelle D y chaikov· .. ·&#13;
Hin&#13;
ame sans M -, ,&#13;
demith Laud erei b)'&#13;
the C mino~ Mass amhy~ te frem&#13;
Trois Ballade d ozart, and by Deb s e Francois VWon&#13;
ussy.&#13;
The program is f&#13;
to the public. ree, and open&#13;
~·YPING, 30 cents er&#13;
c.opy. minor correP t" page, one carbon&#13;
Hrouda, 633.9409 or ~~ons. Call Dolores&#13;
Ave., Racine ·6958 . 1919 ToIlIylor&#13;
N.EEDED: Female to share v .&#13;
mshed apartmenl w'th' ery nIce lurCall&#13;
652.4889. 'flrst·year teacher.&#13;
WANTED: roommate T&#13;
'pper flat at 193556th Street, K;'o bedroon'&#13;
,:"0. plus utilities. Fully fur IS~ha. 562.5-&#13;
&lt;Itchen and living room n ed, larg.&#13;
Cali Steve 652-1436 afte; ~ff-sfreet parking&#13;
p.m. weete.dolllys&#13;
HOY.SE FOR SALE: 2 good·sized bedrooms&#13;
&amp; l,vlng r~":I' large kitchen·dining, garage.&#13;
G~ condition. Mid· Twenties. (Also' oIlIp_&#13;
pl,a~ces, furniture for sale.J 633'.1724&#13;
pvenmgs.&#13;
TIRES: 6.95 x 14, fair tread no&#13;
7.25x14, fair tread, slow leak' leaks, SS,&#13;
repair, FREE. call 552901.' n~s tube or - eye-flings.&#13;
Jl.LBUMS: Return to Fore-v&#13;
Mysferious Traveller, played once e~ an~&#13;
or offer. Call 552-9014 evenings. ' eoilic&#13;
F.OR SALE: PORSCHE 1973 911·T, 5 speed&#13;
:;,;' AM·FM, Stereo, MinI COnd. SERIOUS&#13;
QUIRERS ONLY phone: 69-4-0730.&#13;
P For th~ best selection of Commercloilil and&#13;
rogreSSIVe Rock, Jazz, and dynamite&#13;
~~~~~gr~Und Im~rted Albums and hpes.&#13;
uf Chr IS Chapman in care of&#13;
Freeman's One Stop Record Mart. Call 657&#13;
7212Chapman guarantees LOW prices for all&#13;
new releases. Can you gello Ihat? Dig it!&#13;
PREGN"'NT? ,.,&#13;
Right ...6.SI_36I1 kif'" e,ed help" Ca I t",r.&#13;
rH conIidoWI .. s.er.nc.&#13;
FOR SALE: RCA ''It'reO&#13;
of speak!1"S L~ tha rec-.r .... Pol r&#13;
6. n SSO Cal ill Ill) af,""&#13;
HElp W"'NTEO S&#13;
Houu 634-0161. ALES, CALL ...... I~&#13;
FOR SALE FIAT n... door&#13;
wh~ drive. radi.llir.:s and rad&#13;
MGM&#13;
froM&#13;
SAA8 99E fuel InjKloen,. f 10 also 1911&#13;
radial tires.nc:I more '". rona ~ or we. '1m . _I T,mo.l"T"*v. 6J't&#13;
8USINESS OPPORTUNITIES&#13;
Address envek&gt;pes al home&#13;
possible. Offer det.'ls SlOG Ptr"...,..&#13;
(refundable) to Tr'p'e "'$': :..~ ~ C:-"IS&#13;
138, Pinon Hills. Cal. mn H ,.&#13;
BIRTHDAY " .... TY ' for Dto'Ioocra&#13;
Presidential c:and,c;.le Freel Han- "'"'"&#13;
Nov. 13. 1975 RdreshtMflrs .. II 1MMnrM&#13;
For more InlormaflOO. c:a I 651"'*&#13;
FOR SALE' Nesc.o CO!Jr',.Iop ......&#13;
ri~lH"atUSedprH:e Llke_a~~&#13;
w,fcase, both ~tf proc:e $" iL t. •&#13;
women's dothes very ~ \01 '" ,...,.,&#13;
,Sat. Nov 1.5 ., .. 1161 s&#13;
ALBUMS Relurn 10 Fon"ltt .nelI&#13;
Mystef"lous Tr .....eUet. ptayed orce I~,&#13;
or offer&#13;
GAY IGod llrod You'''' &lt;An NIO Send&#13;
11 and self .tddreued "limped ..,.. to&#13;
GAY Box 70J Somer '" u llUl&#13;
on&#13;
On-Campus Service, . Room 235 Tall.nt Ha I&#13;
Phone 553-2150&#13;
Wednesdlly. Nov. It. 1975 THE r---- ~~~~=.:;:..;. 1)1&#13;
Main Office, 1400 No. Newman Rd Racm.&#13;
~ Phon. 634-6661&#13;
~~ *********"'JifJirjr~~***********;;:'*~*:;*i&#13;
******&#13;
.::., - (.11.. "' n." " pi - :&#13;
,... ",,11: Clilact ll,..in i&#13;
Talltll Z2I :&#13;
-- -... .'.rltter. ~J.ec. 3 1575 :&#13;
*** alias-Editor il CIIiet --* ******************************************&#13;
orthside 372&#13;
639-1115&#13;
Sou SIde 1816 16&#13;
63 1 91 .,&#13;
...&#13;
We're just around&#13;
the corner&#13;
from Par side&#13;
Birch Rd.&#13;
at&#13;
16th Ave.&#13;
55 -7&#13;
Make a deal with mom -&#13;
you'll buy the pizza on&#13;
Wednesday If she'll make&#13;
the turkey on Thursday&#13;
~~~D."~"""""""""'_""""""'."_''--1I:lr. i BRAT 5 OP 194 &amp; My 50 I&#13;
unnio~ ~&#13;
IPit of&#13;
New Legion Rock&#13;
Spectacu r F"'·.My&#13;
.... 1... '1.&#13;
I&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
. Dr. Bop i&#13;
UW, .hNII.1It I.;J&#13;
StIt&#13;
T c&#13;
n·&#13;
(be&#13;
boppr&#13;
e&#13;
~1ur t&#13;
a&#13;
oncI&#13;
old fashiioned&#13;
Cl • P&#13;
(f'\ ,jn Swedish will give recital&#13;
carol Irwin .a~d&#13;
rano Swedish will&#13;
ephen recital at&#13;
a facult~- on Frid~y,&#13;
817:30 ~mmunication&#13;
111 the&#13;
ter. Parkside faculty&#13;
the ching for four&#13;
after te:Wer College ~ ,t Eise1lh duate of Oberlin . A gra d 8 doctoral&#13;
tccY ~tman School . of&#13;
' at she studied with&#13;
re . ht she has soatwrig .' d lieder In oratorio an&#13;
. pertormed as soloist&#13;
A EL MILDS&#13;
r jewels !th bladders destroyed&#13;
earth&#13;
ed open a lantern&#13;
of dead doors .&#13;
ously accounting&#13;
the change&#13;
gates&#13;
ging minds&#13;
extra&#13;
gone.&#13;
Doonan&#13;
NEVER .&#13;
Talk to ya later,&#13;
Yeh, later,&#13;
maybe never.&#13;
Never is ever&#13;
uter is gone&#13;
uter than ever&#13;
becomes never&#13;
'rer is evermore.&#13;
Doonan&#13;
fall&#13;
thering upon me and&#13;
nuw of&#13;
lling pine needles&#13;
and other leaves pointing&#13;
ken day&#13;
t edge light might&#13;
lcli sky in line&#13;
led candles&#13;
rotting garden greens&#13;
ones of You&#13;
~ again-&#13;
' m&gt;" watch&#13;
d love You&#13;
... ieffrey j. swencki 1975 ,,...~-~.. -4&#13;
with choral groups at Penn State,&#13;
Hamilton College, Eastman and&#13;
Yale, has given a number of solo&#13;
recitals in the east and northwest&#13;
and performed extensively in&#13;
Europe and Asia.&#13;
Swedish came to Parkside in&#13;
1973 after teaching at Indiana&#13;
University, Iowa state University&#13;
and Texas Christian&#13;
University. His performance&#13;
schedule this season includes&#13;
appearances with the Milwaukee&#13;
and San Diego Symphony Orchestras,&#13;
a solo recital at Lincoln&#13;
Center in New York and a series&#13;
of solo recitals on the West Coast.&#13;
Healso is accompanying 'iolin&#13;
Eugene Fodor, winner of th 1974&#13;
Tchaikovsky Comp tition in&#13;
Moscow, on a U.S. t tour.&#13;
The recital pr ram will include&#13;
Widerstehe doch der Wld&#13;
by Bach, Weihnachts Ko rt by&#13;
Boddecker, four songs b)• Br&#13;
ms, Adieu forets by Tcha11rn~..,1r,,_,,&#13;
LaBelle Dame sans erci b)· Hindemith, Laudamus te f&#13;
the C minor Mass by 1 and&#13;
Trois Ballades de Francois Vlll&#13;
by Debl!S.5y.&#13;
The program is f~, and&#13;
to the public.&#13;
Classifieds·&#13;
Free REPAIR WORK ·- dishwashers, garbage TYPING N MY HOME co TACT CY disposals, washers, dryers, etc. Call 632 6018.&#13;
el(enings Al. Stendel 886-3865.&#13;
EARN UP TO S 1800 a school year or more Address HELP WANTED envel&lt;&gt;Pfl , MALE at horn. 011 FEMALE oer :&#13;
posting educational literature on campus In possible. Any ·~ or loca - SH Ad spare time. Send name, address. phone. Business OpPOrtun,t,es school and references to : Nationwide&#13;
College Marketing Services, Inc., P.O. Box&#13;
1384, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Call (.''1)61&gt;~ lPO.&#13;
Ave., Racine.&#13;
"YPING, 30 cents per page, one carbon&#13;
copy, minor corrections. Call Dolores PREGNANT? eed elp~ Ca I&#13;
Hrouda, 633-9409 or 639-6958 - 1919 Taylor Right .. 6SI 3611 tortrncon1ident&#13;
NEEOEO: Female to share very nice fur.&#13;
nished apartment with first.year teacher. Call 652-4889.&#13;
FOR SALE: RCA 61tteo reclevtt •&#13;
01 speakers Less twin '50. Call S52 711l 6.&#13;
HELP WANTED SALES CALL&#13;
House U. 0762.&#13;
WANTED : roommate. Two bedroon• Typ;ng done in my home COntact C ,pper flat at 1935 56th Street, KPnosha. S62.S 637 7796 mo. plus utilities. Fully furnished, l~rg&#13;
&lt;itchen and living room, oft-street parking&#13;
Call Steve 652-1436 alter 3 p.m. weekdays&#13;
HOUSE FOR SALE: 2 good-sized bedrooms&#13;
&amp; living room, large kitchen:dm1ng, ga~age.&#13;
Good condition. Mid-Twenties. (Also. ap&#13;
pliances, furniture for sale.) 633-1724&#13;
Pvenings.&#13;
TIRES: 6.95 x 14, fair tread, no leaks, SS,&#13;
7.25xl4, fair tread, slow leak, ne~s tube or&#13;
repair, FREE. call 552-9014 evenings.&#13;
ALBUMS : Return to Forever and&#13;
Mysterious Traveller, play~d once, S5 each&#13;
or offer. Call 552-9014 evenings.&#13;
FOR SALE : PORSCHE 1973 911 -T, 5 speed&#13;
air, AM-FM, Stereo, Mint cond. SERIOUS •&#13;
INQUIRERS ONLY phone 694-0730.&#13;
For the best selection of Commercial and&#13;
Progressive Rock, Jazz, and dynamiteunderground&#13;
Imported Albums -and Tapesi Check out Chris Chapman in care o&#13;
Freeman's One Stop Record Marl. Call 6571&#13;
7212 Chapman guarantees LOW p;ices _f~r al&#13;
new releases. Can you get to thal 019 ,1&#13;
i,1&gt;\)CATOJls)&#13;
( 0~&#13;
ll~DIT-\J~sl 1 /'JOL&#13;
pays u~70&#13;
on p~boo~ . 1, Savings.&#13;
- Room 2.35 Tall t H 'I • us Service .. · On-Camp Phone: 553-2150&#13;
'ewman Rd. R ci Main Office: l400' o. Phon 6.34- 1&#13;
• ******************** ***********************~;.~, If YDI are 1&#13;
1WAR1, WAN I l.j aaske&#13;
{alive and ready to go) •so tar ....&#13;
IE1e11,r10N:&#13;
Jt.,,,u,11 t1terl1nee. '111 Un,&#13;
•• •ittl •&#13;
1t,4,4 tytewrifter. ai,·as-Editor in Chief***~********** ~ ********* ************ *******&#13;
contact Do K in&#13;
Jalle t 228 ,..&#13;
by o c. 3 1975 •&#13;
** *&#13;
ake a deal&#13;
11 bu t&#13;
ith&#13;
BA TOP 19&#13;
.,, ur&#13;
orou&#13;
e.&#13;
ur d&#13;
H &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER w.dnnUy. HoY. 1'. 1975&#13;
cOP--------.:....----&#13;
..... .,....... '&#13;
dJauooloo I.DvolVUll!&#13;
ITOUJII o/lOuId seek&#13;
lIllv m.m _ .. ho are inoheel&#13;
In lh '"'s. He&#13;
lIlal ITOUJII be CtlIl&gt;-&#13;
~ .. I.D lheIt homework. and In&#13;
uv of M,&#13;
r peop~." Guakln&#13;
ddeel lhat I Unl r Iy&#13;
I woaId very canf\lUy&#13;
d "I_U",," 01 rec:otn-&#13;
~uc. ReccmmerdallGns&#13;
lIlel noI dearly deallnc with&#13;
Ia&lt;'W ties. he ~&#13;
wwId "ft"ocIlo olber&#13;
01 '- &lt;: Uan&#13;
The • III olIler Iopict of&#13;
d u 100, lalked aboul lbe&#13;
•• mor abOardtt prlenuUoa&#13;
loWard Beca of tile&#13;
!alloa bal ladhldual&#13;
Ia&lt;'Wty _mbara and dl.tdpu...,&#13;
\III' hlt'e .. be .. I&#13;
.1acuIty ... _eel&#13;
I lila)' wanI to teacb&#13;
IDd ....... lba1 nat to teacb&#13;
-. New nod. Daan of tile&#13;
of and Soc~&#13;
aJliiallMlCI, GIIIIda aald lIlel tile&#13;
aIrf\cuhIm tile .. ay II Is&#13;
boca. II .... doftlapod uncIor a&#13;
I y lam la .. hleh&#13;
dodllloaa ..... made by lhoae&#13;
or IadIviduals -"0 hlld tile&#13;
baJlllll:t of powr wIleD IPOdfIc&#13;
ACCOUNTING AND&#13;
FINANCE MAJORS&#13;
LET US HELP YOU TO&#13;
aECO E A CPA&#13;
g ~ ~o&#13;
CPA&#13;
REVIEW&#13;
....... 'W'O.lS 311 SOl I&#13;
414 71~7271&#13;
t... , a&#13;
1/3 OF USA&#13;
decisions wore being mado.&#13;
GusklD emphasized lbrougbolll&#13;
tile moeling thaI be sa ....the key&#13;
as being, ''!be balanCe betile&#13;
capabilities of the 1""u11yand&#13;
tile needs 01 tile students." As&#13;
well, be ocIdeelthaI the University&#13;
should be dJsljnctive enough to&#13;
....... In sludents lroIIl areaJ&#13;
oulalde 01 tile Rae:m.Keaosba&#13;
....&#13;
The IVO~ abo ~ the&#13;
nepllft and poaltlve paID" 01&#13;
addnaaiaI and eel·....... the&#13;
maID-slream of young&#13;
AlIlerl&lt;8m. wbiIe al the same&#13;
lllIle 10CIIIiDI 00 a sub4InaJD 01&#13;
lbal &amp;J'OUP IDd st.-lDI the&#13;
UIlI.... ty clearIJ tow.-ds a&#13;
IIIiaIiml orIealalloo, the modem&#13;
bIdlaaIrIa1 JOCietY.&#13;
............"'&#13;
.......&#13;
Bec:8_ Pwblde haa sucb a&#13;
tqb G'OIlmeaI of wbal is emsldend.&#13;
specla1 studeala," (i.e.&#13;
Iboae wbo aJrudy haft aD ua-&#13;
..&#13;
industrial society. 'The group&#13;
discussed the idea of offering a&#13;
series of core packages by which&#13;
students woufd fill general&#13;
degree requirements. It. was&#13;
thought that this t&#13;
would not Only I: r{&#13;
work more close!&#13;
would give stUd y bit&#13;
back ground in'~ a&#13;
dergraduate education. those&#13;
over 25, those not. seeking a&#13;
dogree, etc.) much debate was on&#13;
what those students want. some&#13;
suggested that those individuals&#13;
already have a career and go to&#13;
Parkside to add something that is&#13;
meaalnglul and worthwhile in&#13;
other areas of their lifestyle. Bill&#13;
May, Dean of the School of&#13;
Modem Industry said though,&#13;
that it was his experience that&#13;
students were broadening and upgrading&#13;
sIri11s direcUy relating to&#13;
their careers·&#13;
Norwood discussed the&#13;
possibilities 01 educating&#13;
students in ways other than&#13;
classroom leclure techniques.&#13;
Especially for the non-traditional&#13;
student. the University should be&#13;
seeking other academic&#13;
packages and ways to serve non- ANY NEW RE'-&#13;
degree seeking students. he said. . &amp;.:lEAIE&#13;
'!be group generallY agreed 8&amp; 88 b JI 5 8=7 88"&#13;
that the University direct itseH as I 8Mb;' 8 "."2 B I eHbY 8&#13;
to various means by which 1" &amp;&#13;
students could leam problem I SHE SWEET BREAM s&#13;
solving techniques in a modem I &amp;1!I11!1'TH A VEHnE KE&#13;
------------------- "BIIIICIIL ---&#13;
I TH PARKSIDE ANGER ednesdaY, Nov .. 19, 1975&#13;
&amp;emsolvhl&amp;&#13;
"de has such a&#13;
t of what is COD·&#13;
industrial society. The group&#13;
discussed the idea of offering a&#13;
series of core packages by which&#13;
students woula fill general&#13;
degree requirements. It_ was&#13;
dergraduate education, those&#13;
over 25, those not seeking a&#13;
degree, etc.) much debate was on&#13;
what those students want. Some&#13;
suggested that those individuals&#13;
already have a career and go to&#13;
Parkside to add something that is&#13;
meaningful and worthwhile in&#13;
other areas of their lifestyle. Bill&#13;
Moy, Dean of the School of&#13;
Modern Industry said though,&#13;
that it was his experience that I&#13;
students were broadening and up- I&#13;
grading skills directly relating tol I&#13;
their careers.&#13;
Norwood discussed the I&#13;
possibilities of educating I&#13;
students in ways other than I&#13;
classroom lecture techniques. I&#13;
Especially for the non-traditional I&#13;
student, the University should be I&#13;
seeking other academic I&#13;
packages and ways to serve non- I&#13;
degree seeking students, he said. I ANY NEW REbEASE&#13;
th&#13;
Thteth gruo~p generally agreed I 8 &amp; • 8 8 b. JI I!' 8 =7 8 B m.1 a e ruversity direct itself as I ~ I • r11&#13;
to various means by which 1 EJN-bY 62&amp;.28 EINbl 8&amp;&#13;
students could learn problem I EIN solving techniques in a modern I E SWEET BREAM •&#13;
! __ _!~~.!.:.~~!!."!~ KENB 8BII IICIEL ______ _ </text>
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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
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        <element elementId="97">
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            <elementText elementTextId="65365">
              <text>Volume 4, issue 13</text>
            </elementText>
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              <text>Students study in red to experience color</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="65376">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="89983">
              <text>Students stu~r ~ ..red to experience color&#13;
in her Introduction to Visual Arb to the event. 1be cLus went about&#13;
class, staged a study-in-red preparim!. Posters wen! made up&#13;
spectacle. The purpose: to en- heralding the coming of Red Day,&#13;
courage. people to, "take in new responsibiIllies wen delegated,&#13;
experiences in world and en- and school officials dealt with.&#13;
vironment." Ben Greenebaum of the PltyslCl&#13;
"We wanted people to accept Department, contributed bellum&#13;
the event for what it was, to let it for balloons. Wayne SaulkenlOl1,&#13;
happen and respond," explained a philosophy student and Howard&#13;
the YOWlgart instructor. "Color Jo_'s manager, donated ~&#13;
is relative, it depends on people gallons of ice cream. Saukerson&#13;
for interpretation. We were Red served ice cream cones to a&#13;
happening." surprisingly slrawberry-oriented&#13;
Brenlano and her students crowd. He was cleaned out in&#13;
achieved the effect of a painting minutes. Said Brentano,&#13;
displayed at an exhibition. They "Then's a lot 0( good people&#13;
were scrutinized and examined around hen who are willIng to&#13;
by a steady stream of onlookers cooperate."&#13;
wbo could liltle resist responding The "Red Day" idea was an&#13;
in some way. The sri en- OIlt,growlh of recent classroom&#13;
trepeneurs also succeeded in activity. Brentano's students&#13;
stimulating communication have been studying elements&#13;
among observers. making up z.&lt;l.imensjonalart, and&#13;
"U one person made a new they decided to expand the theme&#13;
acquaintance, it makes me and let the entire school in on the&#13;
happy," Breolano glowed. She acl&#13;
added, "It was even belter than I What next?&#13;
expected. U HMaybe we'll declare a Blue&#13;
Expectations had been high Day," suggested Brentano.&#13;
and enthusiastic for a week prior Bring your cameras.&#13;
Cagers open season&#13;
against Whitewater&#13;
Sludents gather in Main Place to experience a red day spectacle:&#13;
photo by Greg Hawkins&#13;
Parkside's Red Day festivities. flavored organ music, combined&#13;
The color Red was the object of to produce a dizzying jolt to the&#13;
Worship, and 20 or so subjects imagination.&#13;
performed, appropriate rituals. Viewing the apparent insanity,&#13;
A noonday crowd of gawking. one observer queried,&#13;
spectators milled around the ring What's this all aboul?"&#13;
of red-clad rejoicers, who sat on That's exactly what Patricia&#13;
the floor eating red food and Brentano, an exciting and&#13;
chanting 'Hail Red's: obviously refreshing new addition to the Art&#13;
enjoying themselves. Red cakes, Department, wanted people to&#13;
red candles, red masks and red say. Cordoned off from the crowd,&#13;
lights, enhanced by heavy, red- Brenlano,alongwiththestudents&#13;
md(jJ(]I]~m ~ ~6, 1'775 IS • ST\Il&gt;ffITI\IIIUUlI(lIi Of lHl lIIIl'IlII~" Of Wel:-. UIIloIlL Vot. IV No. 13&#13;
by BIU Robbins&#13;
I could have passed for an&#13;
t1romptu gathering of student&#13;
sts out for a little&#13;
c amusement. Ort an&#13;
llalIoween party where&#13;
a.guests arrive in basically&#13;
_costumes. .&#13;
couJd have been a lot of&#13;
but the source of much&#13;
llldermentlasl Wednesday at&#13;
Place happened to be&#13;
by Thom Aiello&#13;
The highly louted Parkside&#13;
baskethaD team will plunge into&#13;
action this Saturday, slarling a&#13;
week which will see the cagers&#13;
play four games. The Rangers&#13;
will travel to White...ater on&#13;
Saturday, tben to Northern&#13;
illinois next Monday night (7:30).&#13;
Next Wednesday the Rangers&#13;
will he at Western Michigan,&#13;
before playing Grand Valley&#13;
Slate next Friday in the first&#13;
home game of the season.&#13;
Street and Smith's magazine&#13;
rated Parkside third among&#13;
small college teams. Only&#13;
perennial NAIA powerhouse&#13;
Kentucky Slate and NCAA&#13;
Division two-champlon Old&#13;
Dominion of Virginia rated&#13;
higher than the Rangers, who&#13;
finisbed 24-9 last season.&#13;
Parkside head coacb Steve&#13;
Stephens said he was "very&#13;
pleased as far as the kids are&#13;
concerned," about the higb&#13;
rating. But, stepbens added, the&#13;
ratings will only "add fuel to the&#13;
fire" in making the Rangers a&#13;
"marked team this year. II&#13;
Stephens listed the probable&#13;
starling line-up for the UWWhitewater&#13;
opener as Malcolm&#13;
Mahone and Stevie King at the&#13;
guard spots, Bill Sobanskl at the&#13;
center position, and Leartha&#13;
cont.!'tUH on ~ ,&#13;
uskin eyes "glorious future" with attitude change&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
eellor Guskin opened the&#13;
meetingofthe faculty last&#13;
y by reconfirming his&#13;
that "a high quality&#13;
ty requires a strong&#13;
gOVernance."Guskin said&#13;
be is, "conunitted and it is&#13;
lIal that the faculty be&#13;
tied to that governance."&#13;
becoming chancellor in&#13;
.'---, Guskin said that the&#13;
that he has found most&#13;
g is the high quality of&#13;
faculty and the University&#13;
. He added that what has&#13;
ed him the most is "the&#13;
. of bickering, backbiting,&#13;
disrespect" between all of&#13;
various campus con-&#13;
.ncies and within those:&#13;
tueneies. With regards to&#13;
,Guskin who co-chairs said&#13;
be felt that Parksid; can&#13;
."a glorious future, but we&#13;
if we fight with each other&#13;
Ilersonalities and politics. If&#13;
pull together we have&#13;
ndous POtential. The only&#13;
that can stop us is ourThe&#13;
Community is sup-&#13;
, Central Administration&#13;
rtive. "&#13;
. said that there is no&#13;
in his mind as to the&#13;
bnent.of the UW system to&#13;
tution, "if we do our&#13;
and fulfill our special&#13;
." Guskin said that by his&#13;
interpretation of Parkside's&#13;
special mission to the modern&#13;
industrial society, the University&#13;
should not deal with just one&#13;
sector of society but integrate the&#13;
liberal arts and the working&#13;
community. He said that in as far&#13;
as programs, Parkside must&#13;
integrate a professional orientation,&#13;
a strong base in skill areas&#13;
with the liberal arts.&#13;
Guskin said that it was important&#13;
for the faculty to develop&#13;
in a consentual manner clear&#13;
academic priorities," or they will&#13;
be established by administrators.'&#13;
,&#13;
Bill Murin, co-chair of the&#13;
Committee of Principals and&#13;
chairperson of tbe University&#13;
Committee, stated tbat the&#13;
liming of COP was based on four&#13;
factors: the budget, personnel, a&#13;
new chancellor, and enthusiasm.&#13;
Murin said that the total institution&#13;
was responsible for the&#13;
tremendous budget cut made by&#13;
Central Administration last year,&#13;
$600,000.Murin said that the loss&#13;
to Parkside was third only to that&#13;
of the entire UW-Extension and&#13;
UW-Milwaukee. He explained&#13;
that tbe cuts made to those two&#13;
were based Qll a much larger&#13;
funding level.&#13;
Murin said that the time press&#13;
of COP was due to budget&#13;
deadlines and the uncertainty of&#13;
Parkside's next biennial budget.&#13;
He f.. ls that it is essential that&#13;
hiring for the open positions be&#13;
done hased on the program and&#13;
priority structures developed by&#13;
COP so that the University does&#13;
not fill the positions in the&#13;
traditional manner.&#13;
j "This year Parkside has a new&#13;
chancellor," Murin said, "and&#13;
next year he'll be only one of&#13;
lbirteen in the state. The System&#13;
treats him wen." Murin said.&#13;
Finally, Murin explained that&#13;
should COP and work-groups not&#13;
work under the strenuous&#13;
deadlines that they are, he feared&#13;
that the enthusiasm would die&#13;
oul&#13;
The faculty agreed to m.. t&#13;
within the next few ..... ks in&#13;
order to conduct informal workgroup&#13;
sessions. This will enable&#13;
individuals who are not in workgroups&#13;
to have input and further&#13;
understanding of exactly what&#13;
direction in discussion workgroups&#13;
are taking.&#13;
Faculty endorse petition&#13;
aimed at COP communication&#13;
by Debra FriedeU&#13;
In a special m.. ting held last&#13;
Thursday, the faculty voted in&#13;
favor of a motion directed at COP&#13;
(Committee of Principals)&#13;
which, among other things,&#13;
requests that all COP workgroups&#13;
announce m.. ting limes&#13;
and solicit faculty input; urges&#13;
work-groups to make positive&#13;
and creative efforts to solicit&#13;
contributions from all faculty&#13;
members; bold open hearings on&#13;
specific problems, programs,&#13;
and issues; make an informal&#13;
effort to maintain dialogue&#13;
betw.. n groups and the faculty at&#13;
large; propose ideas and report&#13;
significant findings of the faculty&#13;
at large to stimulate faculty&#13;
response and contributions prior&#13;
to submission of final reports.&#13;
Also, the motion urges that&#13;
COP allow faculty who wish to&#13;
participate in the work of the&#13;
work-groups, be allowed to do so;&#13;
the motion supports specific&#13;
efforts be made to ensure that&#13;
non-academic staff and students&#13;
have input similar to tbat&#13;
proposed for the faculty in aU&#13;
matters where their needs, interests,&#13;
and skills are concerned;&#13;
and finally, that specific charges&#13;
given to the work-groups be made&#13;
totally public and made subject&#13;
to a scheduled debate by the&#13;
faculty.&#13;
Faculty must be committed&#13;
John Harbeson, associate&#13;
professor of political science and&#13;
one of the author's of the motion&#13;
said that it was written to encourage&#13;
COP to "redirect itself&#13;
as a faculty process including the&#13;
faculty as a wbole." He stated&#13;
that because the responsibility of&#13;
implementing COP reCOlDmendations&#13;
which pass the&#13;
faculty senate rest on the faculty,&#13;
because the burdens and coosequences&#13;
of any academic&#13;
changes will be placed on the&#13;
faculty, "the faculty as a wbole&#13;
must be conunilied to what is&#13;
being done and work with the&#13;
work-groups as they go along,&#13;
rather than have it thrust upon US&#13;
in January." Harbeson stated&#13;
that because of past problems&#13;
with division within the faculty,&#13;
he felt that, "the task force&#13;
selection process was inap.-&#13;
propriate and intensified those&#13;
f.. lings." Harbeson said that in&#13;
light of tbose objectives and&#13;
concerns was the spirit in wbich&#13;
he offered the motion.&#13;
Speaking on the motion, Hank&#13;
Cole, associate professor of earthl&#13;
science, said that althougb he felt&#13;
Students studr in red to experience color . ~- -&#13;
~&#13;
~ ~- ~&#13;
; l in her Introduction to Visual Art., to the ev nt. Th n about&#13;
class, staged a study-in-red preparin . Po w mad up&#13;
Students gather in Main Place to experience a red day spectacle:&#13;
by Bill Robbins&#13;
It could have passed for an&#13;
mptu gathering of student&#13;
taoists out for a little&#13;
la'l'Hlli. m· c amusement. Or, an&#13;
ted Halloween party where&#13;
the guests arrive in basically&#13;
same costwnes.&#13;
could have been a lot of&#13;
but the source of much&#13;
rment last Wednesday at&#13;
Place happened to be&#13;
Parkside's Red Day festivities.&#13;
The color Red was the object of&#13;
worship, and 20 or so subjects&#13;
performed_ appropriate rituals.&#13;
A noonday crowd of gawking&#13;
spectators milled around the ring&#13;
of red-clad rejoicers, who sat on&#13;
the floor eating red food and&#13;
chanting 'Hail Red's, obviously&#13;
enjoying themselves. Red cakes,&#13;
red candles, red masks and red&#13;
li~ts, enhanced by heavy, redphoto&#13;
by Greg Hawkins&#13;
flavored organ music, combined&#13;
to produce a dizzying jolt to the&#13;
imagination.&#13;
Viewing the apparent insanity,&#13;
one observer queried,&#13;
What's this all about?"&#13;
That's exactly what Patricia&#13;
Brentano, an exciting and&#13;
refreshing new addition to the Art&#13;
Department, wanted people to&#13;
say.Cordoned off from the crowd,&#13;
Brentano, along with the students&#13;
l]lCiJ I] I]~ I] •&#13;
Y, Nov 26, 1975 rs .., STUOfNT ,u1u o1toti1 Of THI u,ovavrr Of wncOlfSIN P.dlll:II Vol , IV No. 1l&#13;
spectacle. The purpose: to en- herald.in the coming of Red Da ,&#13;
courag people to, " take in ne responsibilities ere d at.eel&#13;
experiences in world and en- and hool officials d It th.&#13;
vironment." Ben Greenebawn of th Ph&#13;
"We wanted people to accept Department, contributed h&#13;
the event for what it to let it for balloons. Wayn Sault&#13;
happen and respond, " explained a philosophy tu n and Ho&#13;
the yotmg art instructor. "Color Johnson' mana r, donated&#13;
is relative, it depends on people g ll or ce&#13;
for interpretation. We were Red ed ice c&#13;
happening.'' surprisingly tra rry-o ted&#13;
Brentano and her studen crowd. He cleaned out In&#13;
achieved the effect of a painting minute . Said Brentano&#13;
displayed at an exhibition. They "There's a lot of ood '&#13;
were scrutinized and examined around h ho are&#13;
by a steady stream of onloo ers&#13;
woo could little resist responding&#13;
in some way. The art entrepeneurs&#13;
also succeeded in&#13;
stimulating communication&#13;
among observers.&#13;
"H one person made a n&#13;
acquaintance, it makes me&#13;
happy," Brentano R}owed. She ac&#13;
added, "It was even better than I What next?&#13;
expected." 'Maybe e'll declare a Blue&#13;
Expectations had been high Day," suggested Brentano.&#13;
and enthusiastic for a week prior Bring ·our camera .&#13;
Cagers open season&#13;
against Whitewater&#13;
by Thom Aiello&#13;
The highl touted Par ·de&#13;
basketball team will plWlge into&#13;
action this Saturday, starting a&#13;
week which will see the cagers&#13;
play four games. The Rangers&#13;
will travel to White ater on&#13;
Saturday, then to Northern&#13;
Illinois next Monday night (7:30).&#13;
Next Wednesday the Rangers&#13;
will be at estern Michigan,&#13;
before playin Grand Valley&#13;
State next Friday in the first&#13;
oome game of the season.&#13;
Street and Smith's magazine&#13;
rated Parkside third amon&#13;
small college teams. Only&#13;
perennial AIA po erhouse&#13;
Kentucky State and 'CAA&#13;
Division t &lt;H:hampion Old&#13;
Dominion of Virginia rated&#13;
high than the Rang ho&#13;
fmished 24-9 last ea on.&#13;
Park ide head coach Ste e&#13;
Stephens said he "very&#13;
pleased far as the ki~&#13;
concerned," about the hl h&#13;
ra~. But, Step added, the&#13;
ra~ will only " add fuel to th&#13;
fl.re" in malting Ran a&#13;
' 'mar ed team this year.''&#13;
Stepbe listed the probabl&#13;
starting 1.i.ne,;up for UWWhi&#13;
a ter open&#13;
Mah e and Stevi at th&#13;
guard spots, Bill Sobanski at&#13;
center position, and Le&#13;
con! on- 1&#13;
uskin eyes ''glorious future'' with attitude change&#13;
by Debra Frieden&#13;
cellor Guskin opened the&#13;
I meeting of the faculty last&#13;
Y by reconfirming his&#13;
'tion that "a high quality&#13;
ersity requires a strong&#13;
ty governance.'' Guskin said&#13;
he is, "committed and it is&#13;
~al that the faculty be&#13;
tted to that governance."&#13;
ce becoming chancellor in&#13;
ember, Guskin said that the&#13;
that he has found most&#13;
aging is the high quality of&#13;
' faculty and the University&#13;
· He added that what has&#13;
aged him the most is "the&#13;
. of bickering, backbiting,&#13;
d1Srespect" between all of&#13;
various campus con-&#13;
_ncies and within those:&#13;
tuencies. With regards to&#13;
• Guskin who co-chairs said&#13;
he felt that Parksid; can&#13;
t _"a glo_rious future, but we&#13;
if we fight with each other&#13;
J)ersonalities and politics. If&#13;
Pull together we have&#13;
nd0us potential. The only&#13;
that can stop us is our-&#13;
. The Community is SUJr&#13;
e, Central Administration&#13;
rtive."&#13;
~ said that there is no 111 his mind as to the&#13;
tmentofthe UW system to&#13;
ln.,f ttution, "if we do our&#13;
and fulfill our special&#13;
·" Guskin said that by his&#13;
interpretation of Parkside's&#13;
special mission to the modern&#13;
industrial society, the University&#13;
should not deal with just one&#13;
sector of society but integrate the&#13;
liberal arts and the working&#13;
community. He said that in as far&#13;
as programs, Parkside must&#13;
integrate a professional orientation,&#13;
a strong base in skill areas&#13;
with the liberal arts.&#13;
Guskin said that it was important&#13;
for the faculty to develop&#13;
in a consentual manner clear&#13;
academic priorities," or they will&#13;
be established by administrators."&#13;
&#13;
Bill Murin, co-chair of the&#13;
Committee of Principals and&#13;
chairperson of the University&#13;
Committee, stated that the&#13;
timing of COP was based on four&#13;
factors: the budget, personnel, a&#13;
new chancellor, and enthusiasm.&#13;
Murin said that the total institution&#13;
was responsible for the&#13;
tremendous budget cut made by&#13;
Central Administration last year,&#13;
$600,000. Murin said that the loss&#13;
to Parkside was third only to that&#13;
of the entire UW-Extension and&#13;
UW-Milwaukee. He explained&#13;
that the cuts made to those two&#13;
were based Qil a much larger&#13;
funding level.&#13;
Murin said that the time press&#13;
of COP was due to budget&#13;
deadlines and the uncertainty of&#13;
Parkside's next biennial budget.&#13;
He feels that it is essential that&#13;
hiring for the open po.5itions be&#13;
done based on the program and&#13;
priority structures developed by&#13;
COP so that the University does&#13;
not fill the po.5itions in the&#13;
traditional manner.&#13;
"This year Parkside has a n&#13;
chancellor," Murin said, "and&#13;
next year he'll be only one of&#13;
thirteen in the state. The S tern&#13;
treats him well." Murin said.&#13;
Finally, Murin explained that&#13;
should COP and work-groups oot&#13;
work under the strenuou&#13;
deadlines that they are, he feared&#13;
that the enthusiasm would die&#13;
oul&#13;
The faculty reed to meet&#13;
F acuity endorse petition&#13;
ain1ed at COP coD11nunicatio&#13;
by Debra Fried ell&#13;
In a special meeting held last&#13;
Thursday, the faculty voted in&#13;
favor of a motion directed at COP&#13;
( Committee of Principals)&#13;
which, among other things,&#13;
requests that all COP workeroups&#13;
announce m~ting times&#13;
and solicit faculty mput; urges&#13;
work-groups to make positive&#13;
and creative efforts to solicit&#13;
contributions from all faculty&#13;
members; hold open bearings on&#13;
specific problems, programs,&#13;
and issues; make an informal&#13;
effort to maintain dialogue&#13;
between groups and the faculty at&#13;
large; propose ideas and report&#13;
significant findings of the faculty&#13;
at large to stimulate faculty&#13;
response and contributions pnor&#13;
to sulml.is.5ion of final reports.&#13;
Also, the motion urges that&#13;
COP allow faculty who wish to&#13;
participate in the&#13;
work-group , be&#13;
the motion support pecific&#13;
efforts be made to emure that&#13;
oo!Hlcademic d students&#13;
have input similar to that&#13;
proposed for the faculty in all&#13;
matters where their needs, interests,&#13;
and skills are concerned ;&#13;
and fmally, that specific charges&#13;
given to the work-groups be made&#13;
totally public and made subject&#13;
to a scheduled debate by the&#13;
faculty.&#13;
Faculty must be committed&#13;
John Harbeson, associate&#13;
professor of political science and&#13;
one of the author's of the motion&#13;
said that it was written to encourage&#13;
COP to "redirect itself&#13;
as a faculty proce~ including the&#13;
faculty as a whole." He stated&#13;
that because the responsibility of&#13;
implementing COP recomsequence&#13;
of an · academic&#13;
chan will be placed on the&#13;
faculty, " the f ulty as a oole&#13;
must be committed to hat&#13;
being done and work th the&#13;
wor -group as th · go alo ,&#13;
rather than have it thrus upon us&#13;
in January." Har n t.ated&#13;
that because of past problems&#13;
with division 'thin the faculty,&#13;
he felt that, .. the task. force&#13;
selection proce as inair&#13;
propriate and intemified tho&#13;
feelings." Harbeson said that in&#13;
light of too objectives and&#13;
concerns as the spirit in which&#13;
be offered the motion.&#13;
Speaking on the motion, Hank&#13;
Cole, associate prof r of earth&#13;
science, said that although he felt&#13;
Cont on p- J &#13;
name. Their president sta&#13;
"most of the people apPl ~&#13;
not n:ed a dating se!'Vi~&#13;
that its purpose is not ~&#13;
Mr. or Ms.Right." Be""-&#13;
know it they will turn 3rcI&#13;
lLC into a brothel.&#13;
I urge my fellow&#13;
fight the use of tuition~&#13;
orgamzed prostitut' u.. . .t 100&#13;
um~e~sl ~ facilities. b&#13;
participating in filling ,&#13;
questionnaires and by oat&#13;
ding that SEXES be&#13;
self-sufficient.&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed~Y. NOY.26. lt15 To the Editor:&#13;
'''This college Can Offer You&#13;
Alot More Than C\aSSrooffiS &amp;&#13;
Professors." student and taxyer&#13;
subsidized sex. The for-&#13;
:'tion of SEXES (Social En·&#13;
counter Xtraveganza Especially&#13;
for Singles) was no surprise to&#13;
me. Itis just one further exa":,ple&#13;
of how morally inept politiCIanS&#13;
and administrators use public&#13;
institutions to smother us w,th&#13;
moral corruptness. They attempt&#13;
W lower society'S standards to&#13;
justify their own inunorality.&#13;
The group on campus does little&#13;
to conceal the purpose of their&#13;
"service", as implied in their&#13;
Guidance. ( (ffI me. kids!) To&#13;
accept what any booking agent&#13;
sa}'S about his talent without firSt&#13;
auditing a performance is like&#13;
bu)'l/1ll a hoUSe without firSt&#13;
Jooking at it.&#13;
I b'!ar that some of our&#13;
professors are considering&#13;
jooning a labor union. All of my&#13;
We I've been a self-employed&#13;
person and the idea o(&#13;
profess&gt;onals making twenty and&#13;
thirty thousand a year for nine&#13;
months of teaching plus the usual&#13;
lnnge benefits. plus sabaticals&#13;
and special grants plus offices&#13;
WIth no overhead plus the divine&#13;
right to perpetuity called&#13;
.. tenure" which makes one&#13;
practically unfireable .. ' The idea&#13;
sort of appaJs me. What more do&#13;
they want ... no classeS?&#13;
To )'Ou undergraduates .. , Good&#13;
luck to you who are doing your&#13;
best and a case of acne to all&#13;
litter-bugs and those of you who&#13;
are wasting the taxpayers'&#13;
money by skipping classes and&#13;
igJl&lt;lring homework. Parkside.&#13;
IiR any University. bas some&#13;
lacult')' people who will ceally&#13;
worIr. overtime to help those who&#13;
are trying. And there are a few&#13;
who will nol even miss you if you&#13;
are absent from class. So it·s up&#13;
to eacb individual to burn the&#13;
dross and seek out the gold.&#13;
ARTHUR GRUHL&#13;
(Oass of '74)&#13;
so moch aboul IS phon)'&#13;
• \be System can&#13;
WIth onIl a SA&#13;
fA • ··full n&#13;
th \enure ben moot&#13;
woald..be wnl..., U1 his&#13;
In tho CUSlOdY of a&#13;
hooI ~ teacL ....&#13;
And I \be ~ ... Is if thaI .. tf&#13;
It wilen there are I'bDs&#13;
l&lt;rt!IIJ1'lted and other PIlDs&#13;
onl/&gt;eU' pr8) for \enure.&#13;
I b8d to on eatIlI"'"&#13;
a of I guess a&#13;
crop of btter-llup move lD&#13;
"'Or) .....,...... The Ubrary&#13;
.... .. uaual. brighl and&#13;
lmIi1&gt;e1Hko bul Pl8ce and&#13;
the C ceurse s , 1'.. seen&#13;
c*ner aIIo!)rs. Tbe ls1and&#13;
Place U-popuJated&#13;
People perdled there like buds&#13;
on a roe ~ b)' litter.&#13;
IIlore IS ., ...,. of stud ... t&#13;
C'Oll&lt;eJ'1\ dl Pl;GA couJd do&#13;
~ abou But I go...&#13;
thaI campus pride IS&#13;
100 monlal a project. Tbe&#13;
-10&lt;18 thai \be sale of&#13;
W'd&lt;'CI\SU1 bas to hire people lD&#13;
pollee lbe grounds after )'W !Dds,&#13;
hen lbere IS • ""*&#13;
receplacle&#13;
U1"'el")' corner. reall) makes me&#13;
wnlo letters.&#13;
fit': I~ "')WCku,, limon 15&#13;
&lt;OI'IIlDll along fine and those new&#13;
aar1m.. lots c:ertainly maR lor •&#13;
• fa- OCIID n ater and more: functional&#13;
C8JDIlUS- A5 I dro\.. an&gt;1I1d I&#13;
reealltd \be bi&amp; fuss we bad lD gel&#13;
\be pa.rk1ng lots undenno)·. I&#13;
remember haw Oouglls&#13;
!.aFoUetU d&lt;dared • healen-up&#13;
area of oaubb)' trees a "nature&#13;
cca'*' i antl wea··. What bas&#13;
ppened lD those acres SIDCe&#13;
...... ndiOllou.s • go)' can&#13;
..I and sIII1 be eJected Secretary&#13;
of lair&#13;
r I'ftId tb U1lrrost aboul&#13;
.."., of \be ners lbe At&gt;-&#13;
b,bes Boanl bas brought to&#13;
c:aJr1plS. I eoncratuJalo lbe 5.000&#13;
stDdonls ho bad lbe good sense&#13;
to I&gt;llt ltend lbe lecture by the&#13;
tor of Lampoon. And tben&#13;
there thaI lecture by • labor&#13;
hicb W1l$ an awful&#13;
nop. HaU of hIS audience&#13;
Ion him. be was so boring. I&#13;
thai those ho .. Ieet such&#13;
. w...1 noed some Parental&#13;
-&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I have been at Parkside since&#13;
the Fall of '74. have read every&#13;
issue of the RANGER. and have&#13;
not been sufficiently moved to&#13;
corrunent eiUler pro or con on the&#13;
substance of such; either on Ute&#13;
subject matter or the manner in&#13;
which it is written.&#13;
Now is the appointed time. I&#13;
would like to publicly commend&#13;
Mick Anderson for his timely&#13;
article on Herb Powless. a leader&#13;
of A.I.M.• and program Director&#13;
of the American Indian Council&#13;
on Alcoholism in Milwaukee.&#13;
With Thanksgiving quickly approaching.&#13;
and the Bicentennial&#13;
year almost upon us. it is well for&#13;
the dominant white culture. and&#13;
especially the population of an&#13;
academic institution. to be made&#13;
aware of the realities under&#13;
which Native Americans exist in&#13;
this country. particularly their&#13;
leaders.&#13;
Articles such as this have the'&#13;
potential for iliticing Farkside&#13;
students out of their lethargic&#13;
All letters to the editor must be typed and double&#13;
spaced betore they can be printed on the editorial page.&#13;
It IS the responsibility of the letter's author to type their&#13;
own letter. Thank you.&#13;
Appl ca Ions lire no being accepted for the position&#13;
of EDITOR I CHIEF 0 the student newspaper&#13;
Pr~pec1 c nd,da es must be currently enrolled ai&#13;
p r side for II minimum of S credits. They should have&#13;
III school IIndo« college riling experience and&#13;
Ipos:_s some Interes in. and nowtedge of journalism.&#13;
pas lion pays $.SO pef' wee for the Spring Semester.&#13;
Interested persons should submit a resume detailing&#13;
rlllevant experience and II statement 01 broad goals and&#13;
d,red'ons lor the newspaper to:&#13;
Don Kopriva. RANGE R Advisor&#13;
Talll!nt288&#13;
Appllcahons should be entered by ~ p.m. Wednesday&#13;
Dec. 3. 1975. The RANGER Adv.isory Board will revie"';&#13;
q Ilf clilions nd schedule brIef pef'sonal Interviews&#13;
ItII IlIIIdlng candld.1m, Selecllon will be announ ed&#13;
e 101lowlD&lt;,l w c&#13;
THE PARKSIDE&#13;
illw(]lli13ill&#13;
The P ARKSIDE RANG . 'IS 01 the University of W. ER IS written and edited by the stud~.ihlo&#13;
for ils editorial IiISCODSID-Parksideand they are solely ~:,-;,&#13;
U.W, Parksid ~ cy and content. Offices are located in Dl~.~~&#13;
e. enoaha. Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-2295. _.&#13;
ActlDg Editor: Debra Frieden /'&#13;
Featw'e EdItor: MIte Palecek ::u Dlre&lt;tor: Tbom Aieno&#13;
lila CoiamD: Judy TrIId&#13;
Basill... Maaa '1UIll Ad ger: Au VentegeD&#13;
Ad - .... p: DlaDe We""e&#13;
Writers. sale.: Harry DIn Ield J g er Donzell Holt Orin Tayior&#13;
Fred ;'ba,,=,,~iP.ma. Steve Smith, Lelgb FeUer.&#13;
Yorgaa. Carol AreDtCk ADdenon, Betsy Neu. Jim&#13;
Rita Nicholas Kart" CatberiDe BUse. Bruce WCOer•&#13;
Photog b' LanoD&#13;
rap en: Dave Daniels, AI Fredricksen Gordon l\!clnlDsII lin Equal Opportunity Employer.&#13;
2TH GE .W1ICIIM1iMY, . 2 , 1'7S&#13;
Guidance. ( aw me, kids!) To&#13;
accept hat any booking agent&#13;
about his talent without first&#13;
ting a performance is like&#13;
~ a house without first&#13;
· at it&#13;
r that some of our&#13;
ors are considering&#13;
a labor union. All of my&#13;
life I' been a self-employed&#13;
person and the idea of&#13;
prof onals making twenty and&#13;
thirt) thousand a year for nine&#13;
months of teaching plus the usual&#13;
fringe benefits, plus sabaticals&#13;
and l grants plus offices&#13;
th no o rhead plus the divine&#13;
r ht to perpetuity called&#13;
•tenure" which makes one&#13;
pra · cally unfireable ... The idea&#13;
of appals me. What more do&#13;
• want ... no classes?&#13;
To u uooergraduates ... Good&#13;
I to you ho are doing your&#13;
and a case cl acne to all&#13;
tter-bugs and those of you who&#13;
are astmg the taxpayers'&#13;
money by skipping classes and&#13;
ignoring homework. Parkside,&#13;
any University, has some&#13;
faculty people who will ceally&#13;
ort overtime to help those who&#13;
are trying. And there are a few&#13;
who will not even miss you if you&#13;
absent from class. So it's up&#13;
to each individual to burn the&#13;
&lt;ro and seek out the gold.&#13;
ARTiruR GRUHL&#13;
~ of 74)&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
"This College Can Offer You&#13;
Alot More Than Classrooms &amp;&#13;
Professors," student and taxpayer&#13;
subsidized sex. The formation&#13;
of SEXES ( Social Encounter&#13;
Xtraveganza Especially&#13;
for Singles) was no surprise to&#13;
me. It is j~ one further e~~ple&#13;
of how morally inept politic1~s&#13;
and administrators use pub~c&#13;
institutions to smother us with&#13;
moral corruptness. They attempt&#13;
to lower society's standards to&#13;
justify their own immorality.&#13;
The group on campus does little&#13;
to conceal the purpose of their&#13;
"service", as implied in their&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I have been at Parkside since&#13;
the Fall of '74, have read every&#13;
issue of the RANGER, and have&#13;
not been sufficiently moved to&#13;
comment either pro or con on the&#13;
substance of such; either on the&#13;
subject matter or the manner in&#13;
which it is written.&#13;
Now is the appointed time. I&#13;
would like to publicly commend&#13;
Mick Anderson for his timely&#13;
article on Herb Powless, a leader&#13;
of A.I.M., and program Director&#13;
of the American Indian Council&#13;
on Alcoholism in Milwaukee.&#13;
With Thanksgiving quickly approaching,&#13;
and the Bicentennial&#13;
year almost upon us, it is well for&#13;
the dominant white culture, and&#13;
especially the population of an&#13;
academic institution, to be made&#13;
aware of the realities under&#13;
which Native Americans exist in&#13;
this country, particularly their&#13;
leaders.&#13;
Articles such as this have the ·&#13;
poten~al for inticing Parkside&#13;
students out of their lethargic&#13;
name. Their president sta&#13;
"most of the people apP1 !ea&#13;
not need a dating 5ef"Vi ~ that its purpose is not ,ce."&#13;
Mr. or Ms.Right." ~ 14&#13;
know it they will turn {:;&#13;
ILC into a brothel.&#13;
I urge my fellow&#13;
fight the use of tuition S:--&#13;
organized prostitut· U.. . . ion&#13;
um~e~s1tr facilities, i..,&#13;
participating in filling "1&#13;
questionnaires and by GIit&#13;
ding that SEXEs be&#13;
self-sufficient. 111111ldali•&#13;
All letters to the editor must be typed and double&#13;
s~ced before they can be printed on the editorial page.&#13;
It is the responsibility of the letter's author to type their&#13;
own letter. Thank you.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE&#13;
l](DGJ[B~I]&#13;
the Thinrv~l~E ~G~R is written and edited by the studen~ rA&#13;
for its edito~ :1SCons111-Parkside and they are solely ~ U.W. Parkside~ cy and c~ntent. Offices are located in Dl!M "~&#13;
' enosha, W1SConsin 53140. Phones 553-2295, ~-&#13;
AcUag Editor: Debra Frieden · ,,,.&#13;
Feature Editor: Mike Palecek&#13;
~ Director: Thom Aiello&#13;
Ids Column: Judy Tl'lld Bum~sMana . l'IIDg&#13;
Ad &amp;er. Ana Verstegen ..... make-up:·otane Werwte ,_ sales· Harry Din&#13;
Writers: ·J Cfelder Donzell Holt Orin Taylor&#13;
Fred Jobne::w-::ipsma, Steve Smith, Leigh Feller,&#13;
Yeargan, Carol Aren;t · Anderson, Betsy Neu, Jim&#13;
Rita Nicholas Kurt zLa, Catherine Riise, Bruce Wagner,&#13;
Photogra b • rson&#13;
p en: Dave Daniels, Al Fredricksen Gordon McIntosh &#13;
.. Edilll':&#13;
IIiIe lIlO8l of the media at-&#13;
_iDthe last few weeks has&#13;
IIlIIod on a number of&#13;
IlIIIomls who would very much&#13;
... be Presiden~ one would be&#13;
_ d be or she was not aware&#13;
~ .. !ery real possibility that&#13;
CnId Ford may not be on the&#13;
~ side of the hallot less&#13;
a.. Y!8I' from now.&#13;
n. far the President t.as&#13;
IIIIdIIIgeneratea great deal oj&#13;
r )"D. even in his own&#13;
11II,. His campaign&#13;
lIJIDlJation is floundering.&#13;
..,. lIllU1dnot be surprised if&#13;
~ IaiIs 10 win the New&#13;
~bire and Florida&#13;
primaries next spring .&#13;
The man who has been causing&#13;
Ford these difficulties is the&#13;
Honorable Ronald Reagan,&#13;
former Governor of California.&#13;
While an undeclared candidate&#13;
Ronald Reagan attracted an&#13;
impressive grass-roots&#13;
organization, which stands ready&#13;
to spring into action.&#13;
The reasons should not be hard&#13;
to undersland. For while Ford&#13;
has lalked about solving the&#13;
nation's problems, Reagan has&#13;
done something about them while&#13;
Governor of California. He&#13;
reformed the welfare system,&#13;
increasing payments to the truly&#13;
needy, while saving the taxpayers&#13;
1 billion dollars. He&#13;
relume&lt;! 4 billion doJ]ar,. to the&#13;
people of California in tax relief.&#13;
He slopped the spiraling growth&#13;
in the number of stale employ .&#13;
We are in the process of f •&#13;
ming a slatewide committee to&#13;
help Reagan win the Wisconsin&#13;
Presidential Primary next&#13;
SJring. We need the help of&#13;
volunleers if we are to win. Your&#13;
willingness to help may mean the&#13;
difference between victory and&#13;
defeat If interested in be1p~&#13;
with the Reagan campaign,&#13;
please write:&#13;
Scolt Babler, Coordinator&#13;
Youth for Reagan&#13;
1323West Dayton 0 8&#13;
Madison, WI 53115&#13;
W~nesday, Nov. 26. 1975THE PARKSIOE RANGER]&#13;
me,heval c:rusad ure])&#13;
would ha, made Herr H1D&gt;mIler&#13;
proud as ed any&#13;
"ho cared to obstn ,j&#13;
btg men they are hen t&#13;
and proceed to beat ~&#13;
people lr) to ex"rdJ ..&#13;
fading ngh of assembly, f_&#13;
speech and assoctat OIl.&#13;
Unfortunately, wbat I tnessed&#13;
last n!gb t has Jl 11\ all&#13;
100 common C&gt;CCIIITel1Ce In&#13;
twlIlr) 0\'''' the last decade, as&#13;
right li'1Jlg g pIS 8Dd&#13;
attempt to repress C1\'ll&#13;
Rights that have been trampled&#13;
cv er ~. the paramilitary 01&#13;
the police WIth lei) no&#13;
regard f... the ·entual CCDsequences.&#13;
Confronted by last 's&#13;
preposterous mlnlhcalto I&#13;
must draw the f CCDelusion&#13;
questions: I, why U&#13;
tibzel1r}· becornin&amp; docDe lo cb&#13;
polic) , .. e. pollee a. pohce&#13;
superman (lones of ,'w lJber·&#13;
rnenscben I! SomeMw f miS$ed&#13;
the bwJd.up, the transformabon&#13;
frcrn man lo permaII.. 'l1on&#13;
used to menbon the unpor1alICe&#13;
of "respect of the Pi esidellcy"&#13;
and last night IMard the sa.trle&#13;
tJung about the MPD. pen.ap.&#13;
disrespect for such offices and&#13;
olllcers might not be a ..... idea.&#13;
Respect lIUISl be earned. Perhaps&#13;
power corntpls but let us forget&#13;
lordAcbons other soy.tJl&amp;. ' There&#13;
is no worse heres)' than that the&#13;
•&#13;
Jr.&#13;
letterS;;;;;;;;;;OO"Ii";;;;;:;.dfm=m "g.~,.=-=~-----_---.:.._--- ·tor· news spot and recalling Squaders.&#13;
"Ed! --~Sy,11-19-75,I read Durham's. past roles in federal&#13;
l1'edn""" Mick Andersen m cases against AIM members I The insanity of the unprovoked&#13;
_.... ~ by R ( 1 decid t t M ' attack and general overreacbon ••• k 'de RANGE vo. eCI e 0 go 0 ilwaukee and&#13;
(i·par S~iUed"law agents catch his act. I called my cousin of the MPD almost defies&#13;
12e).:nrassment,"by lines and we agreed to meet prior to description. After the above&#13;
. _.mil ,~ 1 ) th I tu U mentIOned ticket holder was """'ieSder (Herb powess e ec reo .pon my arrival, I d&#13;
M enied entry a MPD bullhorn ..... "Minutes later I saw saw ary Bircher types enter&#13;
~. FBI',nformer D.ouglas and go up to the third floor lee- announcer ordered US to leave.&#13;
~ lu Why? Because, babies he said&#13;
.. onChan.12 pluggmg for re. room. As I awaited my so! A sit down ensued ;;, front of&#13;
DfIt"" 111. john Birch Society cousin m the main lobby, I the doo.rs. Almost immedialel" a&#13;
H lecture at the War estimated the vanous police f J&#13;
-........t t man in ront being held by police fP"'",~~ presen were equal to or not&#13;
..,.".,1. called Durham "a greater in number than the wanted to know why he was&#13;
~ under arrest. Why indeed, Chief&#13;
FBI informant" who has hundred-odd people there to Brier? On cue, it seemed, the tac&#13;
If'I"IO the John Birch Society protest the Durham lecture. Squad bully boys started pushing&#13;
'III' circuit painting AIM When my cousin arnved we went forward-no doubt to "assist"&#13;
l&lt;l~ RIC A N IN D I A N up to the leclure only to find the their fellow "helpless" officer k) with the broad doors blocked by a man who bullies, just as people sitting&#13;
rJ cmJllllll1isrnand sub- refused to allow our entry down tried to get out of their way&#13;
..... Dllrbam is a former cop because tst, nobody gave a or stand up, the billy clubs&#13;
rtfI1J- disIJ1issed, afler fatally "donation" and after this started to swing and more than&#13;
..,118his eightmonth pregnant "donation" was offered 2, nobody sting beads and bodies. The&#13;
~"""was reputed to have had tickels. When one man in the sounds produced by those&#13;
rI/I ." under-world con- front produced a ticket he was weapons connecting with human&#13;
..." "Durham has also refused entry because 3, the skin and bone was sickening. It&#13;
::: a federal policy of "ticket ·.vas torn." Why was was the real, happening swiftly&#13;
~ and the use of paid peaceful entry forcefully denied and brutally, The over-reaction&#13;
....... UHeis now" using to citizens to a public county of the police was unwarranted&#13;
. w(l1l Bircher crowd- building? and disgraceful. One had to&#13;
:.:: attemPtingto discredit It's frustrating and frightening wonder if some hadn't gotlen&#13;
IIIitiJDIle social reform to see concerned people. refused their training at the 1968 Chicago&#13;
JIIlIIll!llls as being under the enlry to a public meeting m a police riots or if not maybe they&#13;
11IM_co 01 foreign powers public budding. It only adds to were in Iraining for future Sand&#13;
_ID tbe U.S."(all Andersen my subsequent deep fruslration Creeks, Wounded Knees ... My&#13;
..... 1 to see such unlawful refusals Lais.&#13;
lIIIr'reading this informative hacked up by all too eager bully- The police waded Into the&#13;
Itide by Andersen and then boy goon squads of cooly- tightly packed area as if it were&#13;
.... IJurbam highlighted by calculating, callous and sadistic Oinaha Beach and nailed away&#13;
Oa U IIllbeir opening 5 p.m. Ml1waukee Police Dept. tac with their clubs and feel as if&#13;
CQP-------&#13;
~"'OfYl~e,&#13;
Q)p was tbe "first really&#13;
lIIabvt thing done witb our&#13;
~" be felt that COP&#13;
lid ly bad been hurt. Cole&#13;
!bat ChancellorGuskin had&#13;
oat numerous memos en-&#13;
~_people to volunteer for&#13;
~- and yet many who&#13;
tIldtn ld were eXcluded, in-&#13;
~ complete disciplines.&#13;
... bave vesled inleresls.&#13;
a reality," Cole said and&#13;
Ilopte he heard indicated that&#13;
.... lelt Olltbecause they&#13;
~tspoken or had&#13;
of not working well&#13;
" ~fhets. Cole suggested that&#13;
~e a "really creative&#13;
, OUtspokenpeople and&#13;
~ are needed for their&#13;
,perspectives of the&#13;
y and of the world."&#13;
~ellpeclflc charges&#13;
Shea,professor of earth&#13;
science, spoke about problems&#13;
regarding work-group charges.&#13;
He requested that tasks be&#13;
specifically defined and Circulated&#13;
among the faculty.&#13;
Guskin however, told the faculty&#13;
that be' felt a group such as COP&#13;
must start out general. Guskin&#13;
said that organizationally he saw&#13;
COP and work-groups much like&#13;
a funnel over a period of t.une,&#13;
gradually becoming detailed,&#13;
focused, sharpened. He added&#13;
that there must be a "co.nstant&#13;
challenge" by those not directly&#13;
involved.&#13;
t deal of There was a grea&#13;
discussion over the portion of ththe&#13;
. d "that e motion which urge, . . . Is msure eonunittee of Prmclpa&#13;
that all members of the facul~&#13;
ishin·g to share in the work 0&#13;
w be abled to&#13;
lask force groups'd&#13;
,: felt that&#13;
do so." Some mdiVl U&#13;
including too many Individuals on&#13;
work-groUPSwould set the groups&#13;
back in their lime schedules as&#13;
well as making w... k-groups too&#13;
large. After the discusSJon ,~t&#13;
hack and forth, Gusltin said, thIS&#13;
chipping away at ea&lt;:h other IS&#13;
what I've been la1kIng about&#13;
These :;0 faculty (w... k-group&#13;
memberS) are nol f... eIgn people&#13;
to you. They're your colleagues.&#13;
You have offices next to&#13;
each other .&#13;
Shortly thereafter the mobon&#13;
was called for a vote and passed.&#13;
Another motion, submitted and&#13;
sponsored by Frank Lowenlba1,&#13;
associate professor ,of&#13;
mathematics, failed. That mobon&#13;
would have had COP rec0mmendations&#13;
voted on by the&#13;
faculty as a whole rather than the&#13;
faculty senate.&#13;
This D IlDed lake awal a de« ... ,ll:bll IT&#13;
bwIlu rl1le&lt;l of cetltnl Wb",.1SiL&#13;
Wedn sd Y, ov. 2 , 1 15 H P R S D G 3 Jetters,~ontinu~edfro::mpag~e2·~=-=~------_.:._ ___ _ ditor: news ~pot and recalling Squaders. ~esdaY, 11-19-75, I re~d Dw-ham s. past roles in federal&#13;
by Mick Andersen m cas~s agamst AIM members, I&#13;
,rticle kside RANGER ( vol. decide to go to Milwaukee and&#13;
~ -~~ entitled "law agents catch his act. I called my cousin&#13;
1 e tiarassment," by lines and we agreed to meet prior to&#13;
1 der (Herb Powless) the lecture. Upon my arrival 1&#13;
ted ~Minutes later I saw saw Mary Bircher types enter&#13;
~ FBI informer D~uglas and go up to the third floor lec-&#13;
!-,nl 00 Chan. 12 pluggmg_ for ture. r~m. As I awaited my&#13;
Ill, John Birch Society cou~m m the main lobby, 1&#13;
&amp; P. lecture at the War estimated the various police&#13;
~L h ,, called Dur am a&#13;
~ informant" who has&#13;
rto the John ~ir~h Society&#13;
circuit painting AIM&#13;
:RICAN INDIAN&#13;
VfE:'T) with the broad&#13;
rJ communism and subourham&#13;
is a former cop&#13;
tJ3S disffiissed, after fatally&#13;
his eight month pregnant&#13;
l!l(lwhowas reputed to have&#13;
, ,·e under-world conuons&#13;
•'Durham has also&#13;
, a federal policy of&#13;
!)Ping and the use of paid&#13;
imants. "He is now" using&#13;
woe-worn Bircher crowdr&#13;
of attempting to discredit&#13;
tllllate social reform&#13;
ts as being under the&#13;
ence of foreign powers&#13;
to the U.S." (all Andersen&#13;
).&#13;
Aittr reading this informative&#13;
by Andersen and then&#13;
Durham highlighted by&#13;
12 on their opening 5 p.m.&#13;
most of the media atin&#13;
the last few weeks has&#13;
d on a number of&#13;
ts who would very much&#13;
be President, one would be&#13;
if he or she was not aware&#13;
~ ry real possibility that&#13;
Ford may not be on the&#13;
lican side of the ballot less&#13;
a year from now.&#13;
far the President t.as&#13;
to generate a great deal of&#13;
· sm, even in his own&#13;
y. His campaign&#13;
nization is floundering.&#13;
would not be surprised if&#13;
lrd falls to win the New&#13;
psh re and Florida&#13;
present were equal to or not&#13;
greater in number than the&#13;
hundred-odd people there to&#13;
protest the Durham lecture.&#13;
When my cousin arrived we went&#13;
up to the lecture only to find the&#13;
doors blocked by a man who&#13;
refused to allow our entry&#13;
because 1st, nobody gave a&#13;
"donation" and after this&#13;
"do~tion" was offered 2, nobody&#13;
had tickets. When one man in the&#13;
front produced a ticket he was&#13;
refused entry because 3 the&#13;
"ticket ·.vas torn." Why' was&#13;
peaceful entry forcefully denied&#13;
to citizens to a public county&#13;
building?&#13;
It's frustrating and frightening&#13;
to see concerned people refused&#13;
entry to a public meeting in a&#13;
public building. It only adds to&#13;
my subsequent deep frustration&#13;
to see such wilawful refusals&#13;
backed up by all too eager bullyboy&#13;
goon squads of coolycalculating,&#13;
callous and sadistic&#13;
Milwaukee Police Dept. tac&#13;
primaries next spring.&#13;
The man who has been causing&#13;
Ford these difficulties is the&#13;
Honorable Ronald Reagan,&#13;
former Governor of California.&#13;
While an undeclared candidate&#13;
Ronald Reagan attracted an&#13;
impressive grass-roots&#13;
organization, which stands ready&#13;
to spring into action.&#13;
The reasons should not be hard&#13;
to understand. For while Ford&#13;
has talked about solving the&#13;
nation's problems, Reagan has&#13;
done something about them while&#13;
Governor of California. He&#13;
reformed the welfare system,&#13;
increasing payments to the truly&#13;
needy, while saving the taxpayers&#13;
1 billion dollars He&#13;
The insanity of th unp • ed&#13;
atta k d rm; c an general overre tion&#13;
of t~e _MPD almost defie&#13;
descr_1pt1on. After the abo .&#13;
me~honed ticket holder s&#13;
derued entry a 1PD bullhorn&#13;
announcer ordered us to le&#13;
Why? Because, babie he :d·&#13;
so! A sit down ensued ~ fr t of&#13;
the d?&lt;&gt;rs. Almost immediately a&#13;
man m front being held bv police&#13;
wanted to kno why he as&#13;
un~er arrest Why indeed, Chief&#13;
Brier? On cue, it seemed, the tac&#13;
Squad bully boys started pushing&#13;
forward-no doubt to " assist"&#13;
their fellow "helpless" officer&#13;
bullies, just as people sitti&#13;
down tried to get out of their ay&#13;
or stand up, the billy clubs&#13;
started to swing and more than&#13;
sting heads and bodie . Th&#13;
sounds produced by tho e&#13;
weapons connecting with human&#13;
skin and bone was sickening. It&#13;
was the real, happening swiftly&#13;
and brutally, The over-reaction&#13;
of the police was unwarranted&#13;
and disgraceful. One had to&#13;
wonder if some hadn't gotten&#13;
their training at the 1968 Chica o&#13;
police riots or if not maybe the)&#13;
were in training for future Sand&#13;
Creeks, Wounded Knees or &gt;&#13;
Lais.&#13;
The police waded into the&#13;
tightly packed area as if it ere&#13;
Oinaha Beach and flailed a ay&#13;
with their clubs and feet as if&#13;
returned 4 billion dollars to the&#13;
people of California in tax relief.&#13;
He stopped the spiraling growth&#13;
in the number of state em O)&#13;
We are in the proc of forming&#13;
a statewide committee to&#13;
help Reagan win th 'isco n&#13;
Presidential Primary n xt&#13;
spring. We need the h p of&#13;
volunteers if e are to . Your&#13;
willingness to help ma) m an th&#13;
difference between ,;ctocy nd&#13;
def ea l If interested in help·&#13;
with the Reagan camp I n,&#13;
please write:&#13;
Scott Bahler, Coordinator&#13;
Youth for Reagan&#13;
131.3 West DaytDn • ·o a&#13;
Madison, WI 53715&#13;
COP--------&#13;
•as the "first really&#13;
thing done with our&#13;
, um," he felt that COP&#13;
ty had been hurt. Cole&#13;
1 Chancellor Guskin had&#13;
0 nwnerous memos eng&#13;
people to volunteer for&#13;
OUps and yet many who&#13;
ed were excluded intng&#13;
complete disciplines.&#13;
have vested interests.&#13;
1 8 reality," Cole said and&#13;
he heard indicated that , were left out because they&#13;
. outspoken or had&#13;
liions of not working well&#13;
0 ers. Cole suggested that&#13;
"e a " rea 11 y creative ·&#13;
lJs outspoken people and&#13;
0 are needed for their&#13;
Perspectives of the&#13;
ty anc1 of the world."&#13;
e Jleeific charges&#13;
Shea, professor of earth&#13;
science, spoke about problems&#13;
regarding work-group charges.&#13;
He requested that tasks ~e&#13;
specifically defined and circulated&#13;
among the faculty.&#13;
Guskin, however, told the faculty&#13;
that he felt a group such as C~P&#13;
must start out general. Guskin&#13;
said that organizationally he ~w&#13;
COP and work-groups much like&#13;
a funnel over a period of t_irne,&#13;
gradually becoming detailed,&#13;
focused, sharpened. He added&#13;
that there must be a "conStant&#13;
challenge" by those not directly&#13;
involved.&#13;
There was a great deal of&#13;
discussion over the portion of the . d "that the motion which urge , . Committee of Principals msure&#13;
that all members of the faculty&#13;
wishing to share in the work of&#13;
task force groups be enabled t~&#13;
do so." Some individuals felt tha&#13;
H Stn1ct,. Jr. &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Weclnesday, Nov. 2', If7S Orctor dreams Union,buil4ingonschedul&#13;
"'" lrest lIlthe&#13;
~&#13;
•• Bazaa.r~&#13;
011 a smaIIeF scale to&#13;
~thetnwillabo&#13;
(,1." a camp1S&#13;
I'd a f 1&lt;lt UU.&#13;
lJl~~':~=~ ..... andI'OCIIDS L-3 ard will&#13;
....., I'OOml and offices.&#13;
.. ldr&gt;ision "....-uc&#13;
lIIld _ areas OIl (,2.&#13;
Uy.lbo olon a mass&#13;
of eeeerere, wood. t1.&lt;Incal&#13;
• ard_l~&#13;
D is ocbeGIkd to .. ..,.,~&#13;
br~l"'lbo~&#13;
&lt;all .. _led and work contlnu.&#13;
\he WUlIer.&#13;
1\ is IMllll&lt; to _ pourtd &lt;OD-&#13;
~ !loon ard nlli, wilb&#13;
bllS of """" ard &lt;tIDeD1&#13;
a \he f1oo&lt;s, wiIh&#13;
puddles 00 Ibt&#13;
Door aDd boards lor slair&#13;
ard boar'd1ng-up Ibt&#13;
'" no ClOt p OS&#13;
II strang.. bt&lt;8IlOt ClOt&#13;
to BaD • ·~boht ard bears&#13;
\I to look. ard in&#13;
J'O'r 1IIlIgJD'hm b') to&#13;
n' Ion Iht partiaUy-btgun&#13;
NOD t.br "li\'1nI n:KIID" of&#13;
~'s ~. studtn&#13;
A RANGER reporter, Jim Galbraith, Director of Planning and Constructio d&#13;
,i.", lb e beginnlngs 01the concourse which will connect the Union to the Clas ., sroom n, an a crew Bulldlng.I......&#13;
f.. 1nI&lt;1I0l1.&#13;
The onl)' "stal ch lrWay" b tw .&#13;
ances oflaUing in Ib e een L-2 and 1r3 . e30m ph' . . . WlDd?" is pem the parr II h ra y completed unfnn building. I'l\'III"&#13;
raps What tbls construction worker ",oode'"&#13;
~&#13;
photos by MikeNe# 1&#13;
H IDE A GE td scS. , OY. 26, 1975&#13;
ams Union, h~il4ing on schedn]&#13;
GER ~porter, Jim Galbraith, Director of Planning and Construction&#13;
giruu.og of the concourse which will connect the Union to th Clas ' and a crew forema, · e sroom Building.&#13;
nl} .. tai-. u1cmr.•~ "~ay" betw&#13;
f falling in the 30 m een L-~ and L-3 in the&#13;
.p.h, WIDd?"' partially completed ' b 'ld'na "Wh'tllf · 1s perhaps h . umon u1 h&gt;t,•&#13;
w at this construction worker wondersphotos&#13;
by Mike Ne# &#13;
Wedne*y, NoY. 26,1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
ladent faints&#13;
ofer flicks&#13;
by Fred Johnson&#13;
"&#13;
......&#13;
..... t,&#13;
om.&#13;
" ..... ,. ..: PA,8 De.Dre. .... 1Ie ," ~;QII1.. _-tlIIc al9 p.m. in\be SA.B Aelm!...... 11..25.&#13;
'l1llK1Cla,. • n: Inlerf&#13;
am, at IleIb Rl1IeJ 1anpIe. Ubra.r7&#13;
lP'" \be '!banbgI e.&#13;
TuesdaY. Dec. t: !Ie, : A&#13;
CAT. Aclmiss;m IS St.&#13;
..:sun.&#13;
.• : Psycbal"""&#13;
.... AJIIIII8I Parl&lt;slde Horror Film Festival was beld In the&#13;
O' IIIl " ..... day afternoon.&#13;
...., ~ was sponsored by the P AB Skellar Committee and&#13;
O' .... helped In making the horror filck extravaganza&#13;
.......... JOI Galbraith, Robert Gregory. and Paul Kucharski.&#13;
,......~ obtained the ghoulish films from the lower&#13;
O' .. Ibe Learning Center, and inclnded sucb catastrophic&#13;
..-:. get this you blood freaks, "Psycbo," along with&#13;
~ ,.. featuring too flendisb, frfgbteuIug Boris Karloff.&#13;
i¢. !be ageoda was the electrifying epic, "Tbe Bride of&#13;
*'&#13;
ed''' ........ wboby this time had not vomltted or fainted, also on&#13;
.,.. PbaOtom of the Opera."&#13;
_':. .. Ibe moviegoers who didn't go, a little insight as to wbat ."i.I...jaslsaY that it 1088 quite terrifying.&#13;
as Alfred Hitchcock special, had to do with a young man&#13;
.... ed, who Is sufferlng from an Identity crisis. He ~&#13;
.... """.... or something ilke that. I'm still trying to figure that&#13;
..,.y, the dude goes around his little quaint and rustle&#13;
... up people into litOe Iddy. biddy, pieces. Tony Perkins&#13;
...... sbow.&#13;
lI'rr-teastein, well if you've seen one you've seen them all.&#13;
• adlaIl of Boris Karlolf is quite convincing in his role as&#13;
"., .... else can growl ilke that?&#13;
'ftt IIrtde .f Frankenstein" has always been a favorite of mine.&#13;
....... balMIo Is something that probably took three years to&#13;
.... nors BoUywoodat Its best.&#13;
Ilw"'l\ePbaOtom of the Opera," well, Iguess you people are just&#13;
pIC ItlIIyeto wait until the Second Annual Parkside Horror Film&#13;
.... Ifolnted.. .&#13;
0cl7..,-," an·&#13;
Drivers not h&#13;
The Office at Safet~ an4 ......&#13;
Security has as ed that all Rd.&#13;
drivers taltr 0011"" tbat tb&lt;ft _&#13;
exisIs a fCU'- stop at&#13;
Classifieds t------~ITER R}' ELI \&#13;
~·YPIHG. )0 cents PIM'" ~ .. CMtIOrl&#13;
lOpy. millor correchons C.lt Do 04'~' I~W-IT-ti--T-ti-15-E-B-DPEl--t{--------------1 rlrOlJda, 613 91CR or 63t 69SI 1'1' t.."lOt&#13;
Ave, RaCine !OSD...·YUM I&#13;
I&#13;
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ANT HEW REbEAiE. I&#13;
8&amp;.88 b.P S 8'.88 TAPES'&#13;
1 BN\)T82l.28 BN\)T86.2l ,&#13;
I SNE SWEET BRUit' ,&#13;
I 6818nti 1\VENDE KE Ifi I&#13;
_______________________ ~ __ J&#13;
NEEDED Fem"le to ""'re very n&lt;e h"&#13;
nished apartment "",ttl f'r'St 'rt'¥ ~&#13;
Call 65148'9&#13;
For ItIe ~I ~echon of Commerc .,-oct&#13;
Progressive Rock. JaiL _ O'f'\llrrl 'f'&#13;
u"ctergrQlJ1lotmported Alburr'd ¥'O TNlft.&#13;
Check out Chris Ch.l~ n c......&#13;
Freeman's One Stop Record ~rl c. I 6S7&#13;
7111Chapman g~rant~ l.OWPf'oCiK for •&#13;
newrele.nn. Can youqet totfW;I' 0'9 .t'&#13;
Typing done in m., home- COftlkl Go.tWIy.. I&#13;
6317196 •&#13;
FOR SALE FIAT 121.• CIOOI' ~ fron'&#13;
wheel drive, r"d,al hres and r4lO00"lSO ""&#13;
5MB 99E I~ injection, fr(ll"ll wttHt 0""'.&#13;
r"dJaltirnandl'nOn!.call t ",o..fTey,6.Jf&#13;
.m&#13;
REPAIR WORK - d'-sIwlrasMn. ioWb.-9l'&#13;
disposal, ...... ashen. dr., ..n. etc C"II&#13;
evenings AI. Slendel .... J16S&#13;
FamilyPlanning&#13;
ffers free counsel SKI'S FOR SALE KasUe Sit··S w ttl Look&#13;
Nevada bind;ngS Good cond,t&gt;Ofll nClO cad&#13;
631-6232 counselors from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.&#13;
Monday through Friday. and&#13;
messages are taped at other&#13;
hours. Peak calling days have&#13;
proved to be Mondays, Tuesdays&#13;
and Wednesdays. About 40 FOR SAl.E 1'1\ F...' nt , MOoIft&#13;
radiO. radial tirn. front "..&#13;
percent of calls deal with con. milelt9f!'. easy on 9"-' UI.-:!' •• , ..&#13;
lraception. Mosl calls are from L;;::=~~~~~~~~=~====~-~==~----~~====~---.&#13;
yOlmg women, but male calls are&#13;
increasing. "We have been able&#13;
to help 99 percent of callers 10&#13;
date." according to coordinator&#13;
Arlyne Charlip.&#13;
The service is designed 10&#13;
make family planning in·&#13;
formation readily available to ali&#13;
. citizens of Wisconsin.&#13;
MInm many areas of the&#13;
... nowbeing received on&#13;
llIIIIree family planning&#13;
and refen'alline BOOFemale&#13;
"""th 2 bedroom _p.lrflTl«l 1oOk&gt;t"g&#13;
for roommate. ClIleve\'f'l9SW lUOor cN'I'S&#13;
652 l3n and INve ~ for t. ...... it'09&#13;
;&#13;
by&#13;
FRIENDS&#13;
DON'T LET&#13;
FRIENDS&#13;
DRIVE DRUNK.&#13;
For free information. write to:&#13;
DRUNK DRIVER, Bolt 2345&#13;
Rock,·iIle. Maryland 20852&#13;
Birch Rd.&#13;
at&#13;
16th Ave.&#13;
551-7660&#13;
Have a Happy&#13;
Thanks iving Distributed by E. F. Madrigrano 1831-55th Kenosha. WI&#13;
10dent faints&#13;
0ver flicks&#13;
by Fred Johnson&#13;
~ Annual Parkside Horror Film Festival was held 1n the&#13;
t Wednesday afternoon.&#13;
':uval was sponsored by the P AB Skellar Committee and&#13;
~ f who helped in making the horror flick extravaganza&#13;
irere Jill Galbraith, Robert Gregory, and Paul Kucharski.&#13;
codllll,lttee obtained the ghoulish films from the lower&#13;
~ of the Learning Center, and included such catastrophic&#13;
--a , now get this you blood freaks, "Psycho," along with&#13;
astein," featuring the fiendish, frightening Boris Karloff.&#13;
11 lbe agenda was the electrifying epic, "The Bride of&#13;
in."&#13;
,_ lbose who by this time had not vomitted or fainted, also on&#13;
'The Phantom of the Opera."&#13;
';e all the moviegoers who didn't go, a little insight as to what&#13;
..:-. Id me just say that it was quite terrifying.&#13;
-,.,do'' an Alfred Hitchcock special, had to do with a young man&#13;
~ed, who is suffering from an identity crisis. He ~&#13;
lliDIOtber, or something like that. I'm still trying to figure that&#13;
,,,_ MfW•Y, the dude goes around his little quaint and rustic&#13;
.-leamog up people into little iddy, biddy, pieces. Tony Perkins&#13;
st,le lbe show.&#13;
1., frallkenstein, well if you've seen one you've seen them all.&#13;
lilt 1cling of Boris Karloff is quite convincing in his role as&#13;
. Who else can growl like that?&#13;
Bride of Frankenstein" has always been a favorite of mine.&#13;
's hair-do is something that probably took three years to&#13;
• That's Hollywood at its best.&#13;
'·'Jbe Phantom of the Opera," well, I guess you people are just&#13;
have to wait until the Second Annual Parkside Horror Film&#13;
I fainted&#13;
Family Planning&#13;
offers free counsel&#13;
lnfcnnation and referral&#13;
deals with all aspects of&#13;
planning including&#13;
al family planning and&#13;
contraceptive methods;&#13;
· -----; infertility; male and&#13;
sterilization; pre-natal&#13;
, venereal disease diagnosis&#13;
treatment; laboratory&#13;
; gynecological exams;&#13;
rital and marital&#13;
. Local referrals are&#13;
in all cases.&#13;
Plioaes are answered by&#13;
counselors from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.&#13;
Monday through Friday, and&#13;
messages are taped at other&#13;
hours. Peale calling days have&#13;
proved to be Mondays, Tuesdays&#13;
and Wednesdays. About 40&#13;
percent of calls deal with contraception.&#13;
Most calls are from&#13;
young women, but male calls are&#13;
increasing. "We have been able&#13;
to help 99 percent of callers to&#13;
date," according to coordinator&#13;
Arlyne Charlip.&#13;
The service is designed to&#13;
make family planning information&#13;
readily available to all&#13;
citizens of Wisconsin.&#13;
FRIENDS&#13;
DON'TLET&#13;
FRIENDS&#13;
DRIVE DRUNK.&#13;
For free information, writt to: DRUNK DRIVER. Box 2345&#13;
Rockullc, Maryland 20852&#13;
l,,.., ..... ~&#13;
• l -...~ ; ";~&#13;
'PIZZA&#13;
WCH&#13;
Birch Rd.&#13;
at&#13;
16th Ave.&#13;
551-7660&#13;
Have a Happy&#13;
Thanks iving&#13;
Classified&#13;
REPAI R WORK - d ,st,,._,,_&#13;
disposal!, washers. dr_,tt,, e1C&#13;
evon,ngs At St-' • *5&#13;
SKI 'S FOR SALE&#13;
1&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
t&#13;
E&#13;
---------------------~--------~ &#13;
mers do well in relays&#13;
I( IDE RANGER WedMsUY, Nov. 26, 1975&#13;
I )n." r&#13;
of th • (lr h&#13;
lli h pr&#13;
ton -rt 10&#13;
full h u&#13;
und ) in&#13;
Comm rt&#13;
r&#13;
al r.&#13;
mal leam 01. Mar}' Beth Leitch.&#13;
Ul CQn1IantiDe, K..tb Krueg ....&#13;
IIId 8Gb Teod&gt;; and \he fifth&#13;
pia -.free style gnlOIjl of&#13;
Letch. G&amp;1I Oban. Tesch and&#13;
RidIIrd Kwas.&#13;
pIaonc lourtb Ul \he&#13;
compot1ban was \he dJ~ ~Iay&#13;
01. Oban and Jabn PleIltt'Yitch.&#13;
""Ibl haft placed tagb..-&#13;
had not PldkeVlt.cll fiJIed cuI hb&#13;
01. opaonal dI ~y,&#13;
lea hb \tw'd dlft.&#13;
'Tlw IMt SWUIl action for \be&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
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• ............................................. :&#13;
• ••••&#13;
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••&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
B TSTOP&#13;
I&#13;
. d . ., rl. at,&#13;
JJ and th Jet&#13;
h nk hin il&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
••&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
••&#13;
• Bop&#13;
th adlin r&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
r dmi ioo&#13;
rid } "ilh '.P. Iud 01 LD.&#13;
WcnJ.eI1'S swim team and next&#13;
action far \be men will be with the&#13;
Lawrence University swimmers,&#13;
Ih..-e, in a double-dual wbere&#13;
Ih..-e will be both men's and&#13;
wmnen's events rather than Ute&#13;
relays as was \he case last&#13;
saturday.&#13;
ft'NOf~FINE FOODS&#13;
" ~ &amp; COCKTAilS&#13;
Northside 3728 Douglas III&#13;
639·7115· '. .&#13;
Southside 1816·16th St.&#13;
634·1991&#13;
PICKUP OR ~&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS&#13;
DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME&#13;
B~nilnZil&#13;
Free with this coupon&#13;
a bottle of beer&#13;
with any steak dinner&#13;
3315 52 St., Kenosha&#13;
.1a tree falls in the forest&#13;
U:nd there's no one there,&#13;
who are you going to drink&#13;
your Cuervo with?&#13;
WED.•NOV. 26&#13;
PCOMING P ARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
EVENTS:&#13;
Annual TURKEY DANCE&#13;
Feoturing STILLWATER, 9 p.m. Student Activieties Bldg.&#13;
'1.25 UW-P students '1.50 UW-P guests and other UW·~ TUES.,t5EC. 2&#13;
WED., DEC. 3&#13;
THURS.. DEC. 4&#13;
FRI., DEC. 5&#13;
D~luxe tour of Pabst Brewery&#13;
Bus deports Tallent lot 12:30 p.m.&#13;
'2.00 sign up Info Kiosk&#13;
Movie, 2001: a space odyssey&#13;
7:30 p.m. Comm. Arts Theatre '1.00&#13;
Concert, Uncle Vinty&#13;
9 p.m. Student Activities Bldg: '1.50 UW-P studen's ad&#13;
'2.00 general and at door&#13;
SAT., DEC. 6&#13;
Arts &amp; Crafts Fair&#13;
10 o.m .. 5 p.m. cosn G SOON&#13;
P.A.B. Christ~s Dance&#13;
Tues., Dec. 23. 9 p.m. Student Activities Bldg·&#13;
'Proof of age required&#13;
•&#13;
Nof~ FINE FOODS 1)1 ~ &amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
.Northside 3728 Douglas •&#13;
639-7115&#13;
Southside 1816-16th St. ·&#13;
PIPING 6:.~}U9P9~R HOT FOODS&#13;
~&#13;
DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME&#13;
u~nanza&#13;
Free with this coupon&#13;
a bottle of beer&#13;
with any steak dinner&#13;
3315 52 St., Kenosha&#13;
11 in relays&#13;
J.&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
p&#13;
nt&#13;
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••• ••••••••••&#13;
's swim team and next&#13;
• action for the men will be with the&#13;
La ce University swimmers,&#13;
there., in a double-&lt;lual where&#13;
there will be both men's and&#13;
women's events rather than the&#13;
relays as was the case last&#13;
turday.&#13;
JOSE CUERVO" TEQUILA. 80 PROOF RD IM POl{TED AND BOTTLED BY~; 1975, HEUBLEIN , INC., HARTFO .&#13;
PCOMI G PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
~&#13;
...&#13;
---,&#13;
-&#13;
W£D .. NOV. 26&#13;
TUES., t5EC . 2&#13;
WED .. DEC. 3&#13;
THURS .. DEC. 4&#13;
FRI., DEC. 5&#13;
SAT., DEC. 6&#13;
ILG SOON&#13;
EVENTS:&#13;
Annual TURKEY DANCE&#13;
Featuring STILLWATER, 9 p.m. Student Activieties Bldg.&#13;
'1.25 UW.P students '1.50 UW.P guests and other UW-s&#13;
Movie, 2001: a space odyssey&#13;
7 :30 p.m. C;imm. Arts Theatre '1.00&#13;
Deluxe tour of Pabst Brewery&#13;
Bus departs Tallent Lot 12:30 p.m .&#13;
'2.00 sign up Info Kiosk&#13;
Concert, Uncle Vinty&#13;
9 p.m. Student Activities Bldg: '1 .50 UW-P&#13;
'2.00 general and at door&#13;
Arts &amp; Crafts Fair&#13;
10 a.m .. s p.m .&#13;
P .A.8. Christmas Dance T D · · Bldg,&#13;
ues., ec. 23, 9 p.m. Student Activities&#13;
hoof of age · required &#13;
PR, lack of SUpport&#13;
hurt sports programs&#13;
esJIl rallie&#13;
• winnIng&#13;
ak ,e .... Alello&#13;
b)'''' men'S volleyball&#13;
~'S ""ts season with a&#13;
., ~ ~ streak, after&#13;
~ season disasters.&#13;
~ ear~ch~ by Orby&#13;
JIII"Ii;oncordia College, rn&#13;
.-.b/lIl (IlNov.15. The scores&#13;
~ .. 1~7, and 1&gt;-1).&#13;
, .ll, esctay the women&#13;
~I TIl their first year of&#13;
"A ~tion by sweeping&#13;
.,n IUW.Waukesha, II&gt;-&#13;
",pIl'5~~andl&gt;-6. Leading&#13;
6l ~ Diana Kolovos ""'~d. .. (JlOIl'I1 eek's banquet&#13;
IIJIW&#13;
'fll II , rticipants 10 a&#13;
~ ~de, Karen Oster&#13;
",. Kolovos were named&#13;
..lI....,s&#13;
-&#13;
C8ptalJlS. .&#13;
Cagers&#13;
.... 1I'IIlI~1&#13;
_all-American Gary Cole&#13;
...~ .. Cole a 6'9" senior,&#13;
... uu. •&#13;
.. picked as one of 15 small&#13;
:. all-Americasby. Street&#13;
IISnitb. Despite naming the&#13;
.." Stephens said, "There&#13;
.. IIplayers that we are apt to&#13;
pIIying."&#13;
llI.lIIitewIller, led by three&#13;
.., and Gerald Coleman, a&#13;
rrr-rd.will "want very much&#13;
I IlIIt ua," said Stepbens. A&#13;
'Wry lIIIOtional" game is exIDdbJtbe&#13;
coach. Although "in&#13;
I Brat game, anything can&#13;
... according to Stephens,&#13;
.-II is confident that his&#13;
-'Ine rJ. majer injuries, "is&#13;
.,1IIICb Iware of what it takes&#13;
IlIiL •&#13;
lIrilorn Illinois should he&#13;
., tough" in its opener next&#13;
-..." alnce "we beat them&#13;
... year," Stephens said .&#13;
..... described Nl as "fast"&#13;
lIII"'ftrypbyslcal," and said the "1CbooI likesto "fast break&#13;
111I.·&#13;
..... aaldhis team has the&#13;
.., to apply full-court&#13;
,... 01\ defenseand run a lot&#13;
..... but the tactics will be&#13;
IIIIfted CIl1ywhen the situation&#13;
all far tIlem. The Rangers will&#13;
" to get much offensive&#13;
1Ilemen~ while playing its&#13;
-lrandof patient basketball.&#13;
-.. is confident that his&#13;
lIiIIn can hit the II&gt;-foot open&#13;
iot. wben necessary.&#13;
1be Parkside Activities Board&#13;
~g a bus ride to the&#13;
29th Whitewater game. For&#13;
llll, a ticket fer the game and&#13;
baa ride is included. The bus&#13;
Ioavefrom TaUent Hall at 6&#13;
.1Il. AnYOnewanting to take&#13;
-..nage of this offer can sign&#13;
~ the Information Ki,'sk. The&#13;
-II Wednesday, Nov. 26.&#13;
leARN NOW ABOUT THE&#13;
NEXT CPA EXAM&#13;
[If,®1::l&#13;
1I0IAHA.POlIS 317 54]-997 \&#13;
='EW MilWAUKEE 414 276.7211&#13;
by Thorn Aiello&#13;
As we move into the winter sports scene, Ithink it is important that&#13;
some comments be made on the recenUy completed faU sports&#13;
program. Manyof the fall sports appear to be fairly weak, though it is&#13;
hard to pornt a fmger at anyone in particular. This means there should&#13;
be a vigorous effort, by Parkside as a Whole, to strengthen its entire&#13;
program .&#13;
Just as Parkside's basketball program has weeded-out many of its&#13;
flaws, so that it is no longer necessary to have Cub Scout Troops invade&#13;
the gymnasium to make it look like a large crowd is present, SO&#13;
must some of the faU sports follow suit. The soccer team, though not&#13;
miraculous, enjoyed one of its best seasons this year. Why, then, were&#13;
there about fifty fans from Trinity and only a handfu1 or so frun&#13;
Parkside at one home game?&#13;
The switmning team couldn't come close to winning most of its&#13;
meets this year. Idon't blame that on poor coaching, or even on po..-&#13;
switmning. Ithink the lack of numbers is at fault. This must be improved,&#13;
if it is to survive with any amount of dignity.&#13;
Cross-country and women's tennis can be cited fer having respectably&#13;
good seasons. Even the women's volleyball squad put together a&#13;
string of victories in the latter half of its very first season of existence.&#13;
But these sports also suffer from a limited number of talented personel.&#13;
And, very litue fan support.&#13;
Ido not doubt. the efforts put forth by the coaches and participants&#13;
when preparing for and meeting the competition, and I do realize&#13;
there are severe limitations to the funds available for many of these&#13;
sports. But, it is my contention that Parkside is no longer a "new"&#13;
school' Parkside is old enough to turn-out better fall sports teams.&#13;
There are many fine i!ldividual performers at Parkside. Build&#13;
around them, Isay. There are some very good high school athletes to&#13;
this area. Talk to them, Isay.&#13;
In short, Ibelieve Parkside has much to offer in the sports werld, but&#13;
now it is time to start making tbese sports known. More c0mmunications&#13;
with the students, even the general public,. is ~ed. Get&#13;
the students interested, watching, or maybe even partiClpa~. This&#13;
time should not be spent by the program leaders SItting on their dufls,&#13;
thinking about all the "if onlies," while some pretty decent pr0spective&#13;
athletes may be walking-by right under their noses.&#13;
FUTURECPA'S Learn&#13;
Hnw tn prepare for the&#13;
CPA Exam Becker&#13;
etA Reyiew Course&#13;
Call Collect&#13;
INDIANAPOLIS 317 547-9971&#13;
MILWAUKEE A 14 276-7271 2005 lathrop A e_&#13;
900d&#13;
}Ood The spice&#13;
The Itatian cOQ~ respectS ot· ~'umJ. .fresh&#13;
the fille texture . or a sauce. . _ c of"a melted chns~&#13;
bread. the corlSEstan Y . d ,'s the pleasurt&#13;
h· the rewar sallce. For 1m _ his \\'ork. Experi~nce or those who enJOY&#13;
ti::a Capttl&#13;
lDiwh cRd.,&#13;
2129 LJ &lt;1fV'&#13;
2{E.no1-ha, u.&#13;
Wedne.y, NoY. 26. "75 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
I&#13;
"-&#13;
"&#13;
-, 7&#13;
, Dot •&#13;
/'&#13;
Pure BrewedCountry&#13;
FtomGod's •&#13;
On ta at th k II r&#13;
3 - 22nd -enu&#13;
" i con in Phon&#13;
K no h&#13;
65 -0&#13;
AMERICAN&#13;
STATE BANK ~!,'!B~&#13;
3928 - 60th t. Phon 658-2582&#13;
~ ~'O ~., An epic drama of .&#13;
&lt;?\..~ adventure and ex.....rvtmon&#13;
.s,.~,...,.,,,,,lt" "''''''''&lt;'t11!)1&lt;&#13;
20~~.., aspaceVU7~T&#13;
Tuesday Dec. 2&#13;
ed esdoy Dec 3&#13;
T~ Dec 4&#13;
Com ArsTeor&#13;
'1.00&#13;
J)l rallie fea •&#13;
winning&#13;
10&#13;
treak&#13;
PR, lack of support&#13;
hurt sports programs&#13;
1110111 Aiello&#13;
by men's volleyball 's WO "th ·ts season W1 a · ~g streak, after&#13;
I season disasters.&#13;
ear ~oach~ by Or~y&#13;
squad, cordia College, in&#13;
t,ea~~~ov. l5. The scores&#13;
15-7 and 15--0. • 15, d~Y the women&#13;
t :e~eir first year. of&#13;
petition by sweeping&#13;
c&lt;tTl t UW-Waukesha, 15-&#13;
s a d" ~ 15-9 and 15-6. Lea mg&#13;
' e Diana Kolovos wer&#13;
I 'II Dilstead.&#13;
CJrO &gt;t week's banquet&#13;
las articipants in fall ri: /arkside, Karen Oster&#13;
Kolovos were named l)iall8 .&#13;
,pd's captams.&#13;
Cagers&#13;
l!XI all-American Gary &lt;?&gt;le&#13;
Cole a 6'9" semor,&#13;
pidted a; one of 15 small&#13;
all-Americas by Street&#13;
th. Despite naming the&#13;
Stephens said, "There&#13;
players that we are apt to&#13;
y!ng."&#13;
-Whitewater, led by three&#13;
and Gerald Coleman, a&#13;
, will "want very much&#13;
t us," said Stephens. A&#13;
'fflJ emotional" game is exby&#13;
the coach. Although "in&#13;
game, anything can&#13;
" according to Stephens,&#13;
ch is confident that his&#13;
free of major injuries, "is&#13;
h aware of what it takes&#13;
Illinois Should be&#13;
ytough" in its opener next&#13;
Y, ince "we beat them&#13;
year," Stephens said.&#13;
described NI as "fast"&#13;
ery physical," and said the&#13;
school likes to "fast break&#13;
ns said his team has the&#13;
ly to apply full-court&#13;
on defen.5e and run a lot&#13;
, but the tactics will be&#13;
only when the situation&#13;
for them. The Rangers will&#13;
lo get much offensive&#13;
t, while playing its&#13;
brand of patient basketball.&#13;
is confident that his&#13;
can hit the 15--foot open&#13;
When necessary.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
ing a bus ride to the&#13;
Whitewater game. For&#13;
a ticket for the game and&#13;
ride is included. The bus&#13;
ve from Tallent Hall at 6&#13;
Anyone wanting to take&#13;
!age of this offer can sign&#13;
the Information Kil'sk. The&#13;
is Wednesday, Nov. 26.&#13;
LEARN Now ABOUT THE&#13;
NEXT CPA EXAM&#13;
~ ':l&#13;
REVIEW&#13;
by Thom Aiello&#13;
As we move into the winter sports scene I think .&#13;
1 . . ts b ' l 1S llllpOrtant that&#13;
some commen e made on the recently completed fall rts&#13;
program. Many of the fall sports ap=.,,. to be f · 1 .,,~i. th SIX! ·&#13;
ha dt · · .,....,. au-yw~ OU h1t1S&#13;
r ~ point a finger at anyone in particular. This means there should&#13;
be a vigorous effort, by Parkside as a whole, to strengthen its · program. entire&#13;
Just as Parkside's basketball program has weed....i -··t f · - fl th t ·t . 1 ~ manv o I&#13;
adwsi:o a 1 1~ no onger n~cessa1?' to have Cub Scout Tr~ inva&#13;
e e gymnasium to make 1t look like a large crowd is present so&#13;
must some of the fall sports follow suit. The soccer team, thou h 'not&#13;
miraculous, e?joyed one of its best seasons this year. Why, then, re&#13;
there about fifty fans from Trinity and only a handful or so from&#13;
Parkside at one home game?&#13;
The swimming team couldn't come close to winning most &lt;i i&#13;
meets this year. I don't blame that on poor coaching, or even on poor&#13;
swimming. I think the lack of numbers is at fault This must be improved,&#13;
if it is to survive with any amount of dignity.&#13;
Cross-country and women's tennis can be cited for having re&#13;
tably good seasons. Even the women's volleyball squad put together a&#13;
string of victories in the latter half of its very first season of existence.&#13;
But these sports also suffer from a limited number of talented pes--&#13;
sonel. And, very little fan support.&#13;
I do not doubt. the efforts put forth by the coaches and participa.n&#13;
when preparing for and meeting the competition, and I do realiz.e&#13;
there are severe limitations to the funds available for many of&#13;
sports. But, it is my contention that Parkside is no longer a '&#13;
school; Parkside is old enough to turn-out better fall sports team.,.&#13;
There are many fine individual performers at Parkside. Build&#13;
around them, I say. There are some very good high school athletes m&#13;
this area. Talk to them, I say.&#13;
In short, I believe Parkside has much to offer in the sp&lt;rts 1d but&#13;
now it is time to start malting these sports known .• ore e&lt;mmunications&#13;
with the students, even the general public, is needed. Get&#13;
the students interested, watching, or maybe even participating.&#13;
time should not be spent by the program leaders sitting on their duffs,&#13;
thinking about all the "if onlies," while some pretty decent JrOSPeCtive&#13;
athletes may be walking-by right under their noses.&#13;
FUTURE CPA'S Learn&#13;
How to prepare for the&#13;
CPA Exam Becker&#13;
e,A Review Course&#13;
Coll Collect&#13;
INDIANAPOLIS 317 547·9971&#13;
MILWAUKEE A 14 276-7271&#13;
0 8 I ES&#13;
Wisconsin's Fines Buie&#13;
Lunch 2.00 11-2 p.m.&#13;
Dinner 2.95 -7:30 p.m.&#13;
Beverage and Dessert&#13;
2005 Lathrop&#13;
9-ood&#13;
ood The pie The Italian cook respects .I . ·. ' h&#13;
h I. texture oj IHJm •&#13;
o(a sauce. t "· ~ne . ·u mt•lted ~hees&#13;
bread. the cons1sta11c) o.f d is the pleasure&#13;
sauce. For him '?'-' re~·ar rk £,:pen· ce or those who eflJOY }us l\'O •&#13;
tliis pleasure.&#13;
&amp;a Captii&#13;
2129 23i'Lch c:Rd.,&#13;
.!J(£no1-ha, 'l u.&#13;
• edn sd y, o . 26, A 7&#13;
n&#13;
FREE D Lil ER}&#13;
n an h n&#13;
'9:...8 -&#13;
5 y&#13;
2 7&#13;
C. 3&#13;
C . s .00 &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER w.dnesdilv, 1iIoV. 2',1975 ~ . . .&#13;
schedule, coach optImIstIc&#13;
i W&amp; for&#13;
ace tough&#13;
All-Americus. Otbtr strong,&#13;
UJ&gt;&lt;neoctd starters Include&#13;
0.. .,...r, Rich Sdlaumbtrl&#13;
ond RId: K&#13;
'lnnlfer SU&gt;d&lt;ats indDdt S&lt;ott&#13;
RUlIz. from e~ College,&#13;
riz • In ufxceptional"&#13;
r, and e GIasman.&#13;
.R.i,.... F who will be&#13;
zI ,...,...... Fresbman&#13;
po lbiltues art Bob&#13;
Gruner, an undefeated bigh&#13;
5CboOI cbamp from lAke Geneva,&#13;
Bob Epping, St. Jooepb's, and&#13;
Joim Gale, Tremper.&#13;
Althougb neee of his foot&#13;
national cbampS are rellJming,&#13;
coach Jim Koch is optimistic .&#13;
about \be season. "We have a 101&#13;
d potential 00 the team. Many of&#13;
the starters bave had experience."&#13;
One c:l. the fonner&#13;
chaIDps, Ken Marlin, is assistant&#13;
coach this year.&#13;
'The matmen have a tough&#13;
reputation to uphold. Parkside&#13;
was ranked second nationaDy&#13;
last year, and bas placed in the&#13;
top ten for the past three .rear~.&#13;
'The Rangers' biggest rival IS&#13;
UW_Wbitewater, who they,&#13;
compete against five limes this&#13;
season. They are also scheduled&#13;
against four other teams in the&#13;
top ten, Grand VaDey State&#13;
(Micb.), UW-LaCrosse,&#13;
Augsburg (Mihn.), and UWOshkosb.&#13;
Also on the schedule are some&#13;
NCAA teams, inclUding&#13;
Dame, Marquette titut&#13;
Nebraska-Omaha • N U. If&#13;
Michigan, and St' Clo;tlltra&#13;
(Minn.). ...&#13;
Upcoming meets inclUde&#13;
UW-Whitewater "w ..&#13;
In 'tali I" arh_&#13;
VI ona, and a dOUble-"&#13;
at Elmhurst, which also I~&#13;
North Park. Finals this ---&#13;
scheduled in March ~- III&#13;
borough, Pennsylvania. P4&#13;
"Our number one g08l&#13;
season is a high finisb," ..&#13;
men ted coach Koch ,,:::;&#13;
enough hard work, We~&#13;
able to do pretty well" • C race here Sunday&#13;
benefJ! for muscular dystropby&#13;
this Wednesday, ov. 26. 'The&#13;
scubo divers will be in the&#13;
Parkstde pooIlrom 1: ~: 30 p.m.&#13;
to raise mooey to combat MD.&#13;
The event is open to the public.&#13;
Further information can be&#13;
obtained by phoning 654-4434.&#13;
Loran Hein has announced&#13;
intramural basketball will&#13;
resume January 18. 1976. Games&#13;
will only be played on Sunday&#13;
t\.~. Team sigrHlp sheets&#13;
are located in the Phy Ed&#13;
BuDdiI1l hallway.&#13;
be awards far the top&#13;
" III .. ch of the&#13;
I e 'omen 19 and&#13;
under, a and llDder, ond :10 and&#13;
19 mel IIDder, a and&#13;
undor. 3!1 and uncIer, and 0' r 40&#13;
be awarded. The entry&#13;
Is 'I 00. AddttioDAI Inboo&#13;
obIained from&#13;
GocI'rey at the Phy Ed&#13;
llldIoilial.&#13;
SandY Craig in women's swimming&#13;
and to Kathy DeBsere,&#13;
Barbara Schwaiger and Amy&#13;
Werve in womenJs volleyball.&#13;
The fall sports coaches, Vic&#13;
GodfreyofCl'06ll-COuotry,Hal&#13;
Henderson of soccer, Barb&#13;
LaWSOll of women's S"Wimming,&#13;
Judy Gotta of women's tennis and&#13;
Orby Moss d women's volleyball,&#13;
introduced their squads and&#13;
award-winners and commented&#13;
00 their seasons.&#13;
---- I ----------- - - - - - - - - - - .-• •-.&#13;
:1 ~&#13;
II LOYU__ ' I&#13;
,I MALI~ (featu 0 Iotent l~e~&#13;
I&#13;
I wiTh The sha~ of things to come&#13;
in sl'llluy Skystroper jeans. The&#13;
II .,iew from the rlOl' is all new&#13;
'&#13;
I with "Y" "sign detailing_&#13;
Daubl. "V" bad!: yoke, "Y"&#13;
I&#13;
I lop bock pokh podlets a"Cf&#13;
"Y" facings on cut-in front .1 pockets aU high-lighted with&#13;
I&#13;
I controit stikhint, 2nd&#13;
lfiplHtitthed OI,Itside MomS.&#13;
II Pick thi's style or frat:"&#13;
I se...ero~ greot fashion looks&#13;
I from MALE'!) in woshouts&#13;
I Of cords at Gen.'s&#13;
I limited. G,ne's Limited&#13;
II&#13;
II&#13;
II&#13;
.,&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
OPEN SUNDAY&#13;
II&#13;
II&#13;
,I&#13;
II&#13;
1- o •&#13;
.......1 t honored at banquet&#13;
d 1M&#13;
aIIUTE&#13;
S¥1SIT&#13;
1 1 .&#13;
CGr:lIlanllDe. Mary Betb Leilcb,&#13;
GtII 0Ia0a and Lynn Petenco.&#13;
Women's T...... : JMn Coveill.&#13;
KMIlJ F~, Iris Gerldte,&#13;
~ Gordoo. SIIIdy Klngsfleld,&#13;
ElIeerl JlaUy, Jennifer Zilehlke.&#13;
Women's Volkyball: Ramona&#13;
C\Irio, CarUyn GilsIead, Diane&#13;
Kolovos, RIta Jones, Karen&#13;
0Ite', Lynn Sage ond Chris&#13;
SUsterldL&#13;
Cerllficates of participation&#13;
....., aWV'ded to SbeiIa and&#13;
has the 1*'9" with&#13;
knowho,,! - people who&#13;
reatly wont to tt.Ip&#13;
you dloose. Com' in&#13;
1tOW. W,'II mok •&#13;
you f .. 1 good&#13;
about yourself.&#13;
TliE BRAND NAME 10-1.'&#13;
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H-K CORPORATION. ATLANTA, GA.&#13;
~ ~ Limited Uenes .-------.-..-&#13;
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• AUTO • Uft • SNOWMOBllf . _os IHSlJRANa&#13;
6Dl Ayo. Konosho. Wosoonsin&#13;
llt &lt;!&amp;Ibe&#13;
~\uttt ~boppt&#13;
on •&#13;
OPl:N.&#13;
Mon. thru Fri.&#13;
10 o.m. - " p.m.&#13;
r~ ,he liloc.y-leornUlg&#13;
~ tonquist Hal&#13;
featuring:&#13;
a variety of your candy&#13;
and nut favarties said&#13;
the old·fashianed way&#13;
,'&gt;. \ t ff ¥&#13;
''\ \\ \~ FOR&#13;
RECORDS &amp; TAP&amp;'&#13;
- PIPES&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA&#13;
LEATHER GOODS&#13;
JEWELRY .1lII&#13;
WATER IJJII" SHE SWEET BEANBA"&#13;
. BREAM&#13;
5fJ1fJ 1TH A VENI1'E KENEJ!ifi~&#13;
&amp;5.11-3518&#13;
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL&#13;
Foil Wrapped&#13;
O1ocolates&#13;
PA SIDER GE . 26, 1'75&#13;
gh schedule, coach optimistic&#13;
cbaIDPS, Ken Martin. is assistant&#13;
coach this year.&#13;
NCAA teams, inclu . Dame, Marquett ding •&#13;
Nebraska-Omah e, U. tf&#13;
Michigan, and s:· Nortbtra&#13;
(Minn.). · Clo'-! ~&#13;
Gruner, an undefeated high&#13;
champ from Lake Geneva,&#13;
Bob Epping, St. Joseph's, and&#13;
Jom Gale, Tremper.&#13;
Al ugh none of his four&#13;
national cbamPS are returning,&#13;
ch Jun Koch is optimistic .&#13;
t the season. "We have a lot&#13;
d potential on the team. Many of&#13;
t tarters have had ex-&#13;
" One d the former&#13;
Sunday&#13;
1t for mu.scular dystrophy&#13;
esday, ov. 26. Toe&#13;
di\ rs will be in the&#13;
pool from 1: 30-o: 30 p.m.&#13;
to money to combat MD.&#13;
t is open to the public.&#13;
rth r information can be&#13;
ined b) phorung 654-4434.&#13;
Loran Hein has announced&#13;
ntramural basketball will&#13;
January 18, 1976. Games&#13;
~nl · be played on Sunday&#13;
..... ~;---. Team sigr~up sheets&#13;
located in the Phy Ed&#13;
~ hallway.&#13;
d at banquet&#13;
Craig in women's swimmmg&#13;
&#13;
~&#13;
and to Kathy DeBaere&#13;
Schwaiger and Am;&#13;
en e ID women's volleyball.&#13;
fall sports coaches, Vic&#13;
Godfrey of cross-cotmtry Hal&#13;
Henderson of soccer 'a b La , ar&#13;
wscn of women's · ·&#13;
Judy Gotta d cmen's~&#13;
~by d w&lt;a:nen's volleyball,&#13;
introduced their squads and&#13;
aW3I'd:wumers and commented&#13;
00 their SC8SOn.5.&#13;
I 657-5158 1&#13;
CEINC&#13;
e @lbt&#13;
\u d ~boppt&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
or"e&#13;
featuring:&#13;
of your candy&#13;
u favorties sold&#13;
old-fashioned • e way&#13;
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL&#13;
Foil Wrapped&#13;
010colates&#13;
OPE .&#13;
u Fri.&#13;
10 0 • 4 Pm.&#13;
ory-teorn g&#13;
The matmen have a tough&#13;
reputation to uphold. Parkside&#13;
was ranked second nationally&#13;
last year, and bas placed in the&#13;
top ten for the past three years.&#13;
The Rangers' biggest rival is&#13;
UW-Whitewater, who they -&#13;
compete against five times this&#13;
season. They are also scheduled&#13;
against four other teams in the&#13;
top ten, Grand Valley State&#13;
(Mich.), UW-LaCrosse,&#13;
Augsburg (Mihn.), and UWOshkosh.&#13;
&#13;
Also on the schedule are some&#13;
Upcoming meets .&#13;
UW-Whitewater ~elude&#13;
Invitational," and ad Warhatt&#13;
at Elmhurst, which a OUble&#13;
North Park. Finals th~~&#13;
scheduled in March 18 Year&#13;
borough, PennsyJva . at F.dia,&#13;
"Our . number 0:8· season 1S a high f~~ mented coach K , gh h OCh " enou ard work . I&#13;
able to do pretty ~: .. ~&#13;
-------- 1I - - - - - - - -------- -- --• -•&#13;
i' I&#13;
I&#13;
I J&#13;
LOYU 'tOUII M)OY! r ,' "'" . , ....... ,., .. , ,.,... I&#13;
I I with the shope of thi119s to -come 11&#13;
'1: :~:~;:. ::::.:~:~ : ,~&#13;
Double "V" bock yoke, "V" I&#13;
I I lop bock patch pockets and&#13;
I&#13;
I "V" loci119s on cut-in !rant J&#13;
II pockets all high~igh,ed with 1r contrast stitchi119, 2nd&#13;
triple-stitched outside seams.&#13;
I I Pick this style or from&#13;
I&#13;
I several great fashion looks&#13;
from M-'lf ·~ in washouts&#13;
I&#13;
I or cords ot Gene's&#13;
limited. Gene's limited&#13;
I I has the people with&#13;
I&#13;
I knowhow - people who&#13;
really want to help&#13;
11 ::. ch:..;· m:e m&#13;
. I I you IHI good&#13;
I I about yourself.&#13;
I OPEN SUNDAY&#13;
I&#13;
II&#13;
THE BRAND NAME '*'- •&#13;
DENOTES APPAREL MANUFACTURED&#13;
H-K CORPORATION, ATLANTA, GA . II&#13;
•• ·-. -Gen ' Limited&#13;
. .es -------------·&#13;
Villa Capri Plaza, Kenosha, Wis. 551-9945&#13;
'"- \\ \~ w FOR&#13;
RECORDS &amp; TAP&#13;
PIPES&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA&#13;
LEATHER GOO~&#13;
JEWELRY I&#13;
EJNE WATER SWEET BEA~B!&#13;
5 . BREAM&#13;
a1a ?Tff A VENDE K.ENSStiJ&#13;
&amp;6.11-3578 </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 4, issue 13, November 26, 1975</text>
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                <text>1975-11-26</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="65368">
                <text> Student publications</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="65369">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <text>Cagers walk on Whitewater, dump Illinois</text>
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              <text>Cagers walk _on.Whitewater, dump Illinois&#13;
TIle highly-rated Parks ide&#13;
flaJl8ers basketball team, led by&#13;
.... or Gary Cole, won its season&#13;
er at UW-Whitewater last&#13;
":rday night, 83-70. The&#13;
~ers were behind 2-0 early in&#13;
!be game, before taking a lead.&#13;
Iidl il never lost. Cole scored&#13;
~de'S first seven points, and&#13;
SleVieKingadded a bucket for a&#13;
~il-2Iead.&#13;
Tbe Rangers appeared to be too&#13;
JDDChfor the Warhawks in the&#13;
lhl half at Williams Gym, but&#13;
IbeD they had to hold-on during a&#13;
leCOJ¥i.half challenge by the&#13;
Artists will offer wares&#13;
at Christmas bazaar&#13;
MMethan 80 artists and craftsmen will offer their wares at a&#13;
QIrislmasartand crafts fair on Saturday, Dec. 6, at Parkside where&#13;
tile tri-level, glass-roofed Main' Place will be transformed into a&#13;
1IoIldaYbazaar from 10 a.rn. to 5 p.m.&#13;
'(beeventis sponsored by the student Parkside Activities Board and&#13;
II opento the public.&#13;
EJhibilors include 23 Parkside students as well as artists and&#13;
craftsmen'from Kenosha, Racine, Milwaukee, Madison and several&#13;
otIIer Wisconsincommunities, and Waukegan and Mt. Prospect, Ill.&#13;
'!bey range in age from high school students to senior citizens.&#13;
'1beir wares are equally varied: paintings and drawings, macrame,&#13;
pottery, jewelry including hand-crafted Indian pieces, photoWaphy,&#13;
scWptlU'e,dolls ranging from rag to cornhusk, fabrics, candles,&#13;
weaving,woodworking, yarn pictures, wreaths, leather work, enamel&#13;
ware, Christmas decorations and centerpieces, toys, chenille craft,&#13;
wood carvings, driftwood.... .&#13;
Nosingle item is Driced over $50.&#13;
byThorn Aiello Warhawks. The Rangers, behind&#13;
17points led by Cole and the fast.&#13;
break leadership of King, jurnped-out&#13;
to a 45-24 halftime lead&#13;
Leartha Scott opened the second&#13;
half with two haskets to give&#13;
Parkside its biggest lead of the&#13;
night, a 49-24 bulge.&#13;
Then it was Gerald Coleman's&#13;
time. The 6'7" UW-Whilewater&#13;
senior guard hit 10of 12Warhawk&#13;
buckets at one point while&#13;
totaling 24 points in the half.&#13;
Parkside coach Steve Stevens&#13;
said part of Coleman's spree was&#13;
due to the amount of lime the&#13;
Rangers rested Cole, who&#13;
covered Coleman earlier, in the&#13;
half. Stevens added, "He 'got hot&#13;
.... and he hit some long shots."&#13;
Coleman's game figures included.&#13;
29 points.&#13;
Perhaps the most pleasant&#13;
surprise for Parkside was freshman&#13;
guard Joe Foots. At one&#13;
juncture Foots hit three Parkside&#13;
shots in a row. He was 7-7&#13;
shooting from the field, and&#13;
finished with 15 points. Stevens&#13;
said Foots "couldn't do much&#13;
better for an opening game, as a&#13;
freshman,"&#13;
stevens said, "Generally, we&#13;
are quite pleased with the first&#13;
game, especially the first half."&#13;
The coach felt his squad "lost a&#13;
little of our intensity" in the&#13;
second half.&#13;
Cole ended the evening with 31&#13;
points, gelling some scoring help&#13;
from Foots and Bill Sobanski,&#13;
who finished with 13 points. Cole&#13;
also pulled-down 10 rebounds,&#13;
while Sobanski and senior guard&#13;
Malcolm Mahone grabbed 8&#13;
rebounds, and Foots came-up&#13;
with 7 more boards.&#13;
The win marked the second&#13;
straight by Parkside over UWWhitewater,&#13;
after the Warhawks&#13;
won the first five meetings&#13;
between the clubs. The teams will&#13;
cross paths again, on Jan. 7th,&#13;
with a game at Parkside.&#13;
More immediate though,&#13;
Parkside will travel to&#13;
Kalamazoo, Michigan to play&#13;
Vol. IV ---, He. 14&#13;
Western Michigan this Wednesday.&#13;
The game starts at 7:30&#13;
p.m. WMU promises to be a tough&#13;
foe lor the Rangers, as five of&#13;
their starters and two key&#13;
reserves return to a club that was&#13;
16-10 last season, The MidAmerican&#13;
Conference&#13;
representative ill headed by 6'9"&#13;
forward Paul Griffin, 6'3" forward&#13;
Jeff Tyson, and 6'8" Tom&#13;
Culler.&#13;
This Friday and Rangers play&#13;
their fourth game in seven days.&#13;
(they played Northern Illinois 00&#13;
Monday.) The game, starling at&#13;
7:30 p.m., will be Parkside's&#13;
home opener. Grand Valley State&#13;
College will he the opponent.&#13;
Next Tuesday (Dec. 9) the&#13;
Rangers hit the road again,&#13;
taking-on Sl Norbert College at&#13;
DePere, Wis. Game tUne is 7:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
The cagers beat orthern&#13;
Illinois on Monday night, 77-63.&#13;
Cole was high scorer with 24&#13;
points; Sobanski had 20; Scott, 9;&#13;
Foots. 8; King, 6; Mahone, tj and&#13;
Hill got 4 pointa. The Rangers&#13;
polled out to a big lead within the&#13;
lasl 10 minutes of play after a&#13;
close ~I lead at the half.&#13;
Play will tell of&#13;
individual in society&#13;
An Exnerlmental Production of&#13;
Bertoldt Brecht's The Elephant&#13;
Calf will be performed on&#13;
December 4th at 7 p.rn, and&#13;
December 5 at 12 noon in the&#13;
Media Productions studio, CAD155a.&#13;
The production involves the use&#13;
of film, music, sound effects,&#13;
pantomime, costumes and makeup&#13;
to express the hysterics of an&#13;
absurd dramatization.&#13;
The play is an a bsurd comedy&#13;
depicting the dehumanization&#13;
and depresonalization of an individual&#13;
by society. It is from a&#13;
larger work of Brecht's, A Man's&#13;
a Man.&#13;
The cast includes Kris Simpson&#13;
as Polly Baker; Michael Ward as&#13;
Galy Gay; Susan Zietz as Uriah&#13;
Shelley; Carrie Ward as Jesse&#13;
Mahoney; and the chorus consists&#13;
of David Schroder, Keith&#13;
Gayhart, Pete Banaszak, Ron&#13;
Ditter, Debra Donatt and Roger&#13;
Bull.&#13;
The production was designed&#13;
and dir-ected by Parkside&#13;
student, Joseph Molinaro WIth&#13;
artistic design by amy cundan.&#13;
The production runs approximately&#13;
Iorty-Ilve minutes&#13;
and there is no admission charge.&#13;
Supporters of American Indian Movement&#13;
gather for "National Day of Mourning"&#13;
"When the Indian has&#13;
forgotten the music of his&#13;
forefathers, when the&#13;
SOUndof the tom tom is no&#13;
more, when noisy jazz has&#13;
drowned the melody of the&#13;
flute, he will be a dead&#13;
Indian. When from him&#13;
has been taken, all that is&#13;
his, all that has come to&#13;
him from infinite sources,&#13;
he then, truly, will be a&#13;
dead Indian. His spirit will&#13;
be gone, and !hough he&#13;
walk !he crowded streets,&#13;
he Will, in truth, be-dead!"&#13;
by Standing Bear&#13;
lly Mick Andersen&#13;
~le. millions celebrated&#13;
ritualssglvlDgwith long standing&#13;
I servmg to replace long&#13;
~gotten .reasons, members of&#13;
!heirAmencan Indian Movement,&#13;
supporters and friends,&#13;
:thered together across the land&#13;
8Ildreaffirm the true meaning of,&#13;
. reestablish the place of&#13;
:::s Indian, in this holiday.&#13;
"hi use the benevolence with&#13;
•&#13;
fi ch nalive peoples greeted the&#13;
rsl h't I'!ci w 1 e settlers was&#13;
i prOCatedwith the destruction&#13;
~ :: death of Indians across the&#13;
001tinent, an onslaught equaled&#13;
a Yby WhItesociety's savagery&#13;
I ga'nst the land itself, and&#13;
I&#13;
i=:use Ihese injustices continue&#13;
'JI ~ y, refmed and often subtle,&#13;
I.I.!. has designated this day&#13;
not a day of thanks, but a celebrations of the holiday in&#13;
"National Day of Mourning." which spiritual sustenance is&#13;
The National Day of Mourning forgotten in the mad rush for&#13;
came into being in 1969after an digestive fortification speeches&#13;
A.I.M.protest at the city of and songs both preceeded the&#13;
Boston's re-inactment of the dinner and concluded the formal&#13;
Boston Tea Party, a protest proceedings of the evening.&#13;
designed to focus attention on the The lestivities began with the&#13;
native American and his par- National A.I.M. Song, which was&#13;
ticipation in the firsl lead by six Indian youths acThanksgiving,&#13;
turned into an companied by drum music. The&#13;
altercation in which several song itself was given at A.I.M. by&#13;
AJ.M. demonstrators were the elders of the Oglala Sioux, a&#13;
arrested. very spiritual people who take&#13;
This year the American Indian their traditions seriously. When&#13;
Council on Alcoholism in Raymond Yellowthunder was&#13;
Milwaukee hosted American murdered in Gordon, Nebraska,&#13;
Indian Movement members, it was recalled, white law entheir&#13;
families and friends, with a forcement and government&#13;
feast consisting of venison, agencies turned a deaf ear. It was&#13;
turkey, ham, wild rice, fried determined that Yellowthunder,&#13;
bread and many other foods, an old man, had been killed by&#13;
both indian and non-Indian in five racist white drunks. having&#13;
origin. Many had spent their day first been tortured. AI.I.M.&#13;
fasting in preparation for the mobilized its supporters, and&#13;
vening meal. Unlike typical after a series 01 confrontations&#13;
Powless will speak on&#13;
current A.I.M. issues&#13;
f the 1973 siege at Wounded Knee,&#13;
One of the leaders 0 So th Dakota Powless accuses . Ind· Movement and u· -&#13;
Ameflcan Ian tate and federal law enprogram&#13;
dir~etor of. the - ~rcement agents of constant&#13;
American Indl~n CouncIl on surveillance and harrassrnent&#13;
Alcoholism in MIlwaukee, H~rb since then. Powless traces the&#13;
Powless, will speak at parks~d: policy of intimidation by federal&#13;
next Wednesday, Dec. 10 at agents to the 1973 take-over by&#13;
p.m. in the Comm Arts Thea .or. A I M of the Bureau of Indian&#13;
powless' appearance IS~:;;' Mf~ir~ in Washington, D.C. as&#13;
sponsored b~ Third World an ewelL&#13;
Anthropology Club.. . "Indian people have always&#13;
Currently powless IS facmg had hope, faith, and this has&#13;
both state and fed~ral charges helped us endure," Powless has&#13;
relating to his parhclpahon 10 the said.&#13;
with local whites and law enlorcement&#13;
charges of assault&#13;
were finally brought against the&#13;
five. Because A.1.M. was the only&#13;
organization willing to risk&#13;
confrontation in the pursuit of&#13;
justice, the elders bestrowed this&#13;
song to A.I.M.&#13;
Following the song A.I.M.&#13;
leader Herb Powless traced the&#13;
origins and purpose of the&#13;
Choirs will present&#13;
Christmas concert&#13;
A holiday choral concert, which&#13;
will include an opportunity for&#13;
the audience to join with the&#13;
performers in familiar carols,&#13;
will be presented in the Comm&#13;
Arts Theater at3 p.rn, on Sunday,&#13;
Dec. 7.&#13;
The program will include&#13;
numbers by Parkside's chorus,&#13;
ehorale.rcharnber singers, men's&#13;
and women's choruses and the&#13;
combined choir under the&#13;
direction of Frank Mueller and&#13;
prelude, postlude and accompaniments&#13;
by the brass choir&#13;
directed by John Hemkes.&#13;
Following the concert.&#13;
Chancellor and Mrs. Alan E.&#13;
Guskin and UW-P music faculty&#13;
will host a reception for concertgoers&#13;
in Main Place, where the&#13;
Parkside recorder consort will&#13;
play under direction of Frances&#13;
Bedford.&#13;
The program will include C. P.&#13;
E. Bach's Heilig 1st Gott with&#13;
Mary Christensen, mezzo&#13;
alional Day of Mourning,&#13;
scoring the "ignorant&#13;
propaganda" non-Indian childr n&#13;
are taughl in the educational&#13;
system.&#13;
While there were over lour&#13;
million native peoples in this&#13;
country prior to white seWement&#13;
by 1925, the Indian population&#13;
hovered around two hundred&#13;
soprano, as soloist and Jeffrey&#13;
Honore as organist, and Charpentier's&#13;
in ativitatem Domini&#13;
Jesu Christi Cantlcum with&#13;
Janernarie Zierke and Peggy&#13;
Erickson as soprano soloists,&#13;
Chrislopher Roland as bas.&#13;
SOlOISt,accompanied by Paula&#13;
Novak and Linda Truax, flutists,&#13;
Mary Manulik, cellist, and&#13;
Mueller at the harpsichord.&#13;
The chamber singers will&#13;
presenta 16th century Magnificat&#13;
on German Christmas Carots,&#13;
with James Franklin as solo&#13;
chanter and the men's and&#13;
women's choruses will offer&#13;
groups of Alfred Burt carols. The&#13;
combined choirs will sing Flor&#13;
Peeters' Te Deum with Carol&#13;
King as organist.&#13;
The audience will be invited to&#13;
join in such lamiliar songs as 0&#13;
Come All Ye Faithful, Hark the&#13;
Herald Angels Sing, The First&#13;
Noel, Silent -ight,O Little Town&#13;
of Bethlehem, and Joy to the&#13;
World.&#13;
Cagers walk .on Whitewater, dump Illino · s&#13;
by Thom Aiello&#13;
'fhe highly-rated Parkside&#13;
Rallgers basketball tea!11t , led by&#13;
. r Gary Cole, won i s season&#13;
:::er at ~-Whitewater last&#13;
t rday night, 83-70. The&#13;
sau 'd2-0 1· Rangers were behin ear Y m&#13;
the game, before taking a lead .&#13;
•hich it never lost. Col~ scored&#13;
Parkside's first seven pomts, and&#13;
gevie King added a bucket for a&#13;
tuck 9-2 lead.&#13;
1be Rangers appeared to be too&#13;
much for the Warhawks in the&#13;
(irst half at Williams Gym, but&#13;
tbell they had to hold-on during a&#13;
set"Ond-half challenge by the&#13;
War~awks. The Rangers, behind&#13;
17 pomts led by Cole and the fastbreak&#13;
leadership of King, jumped-out&#13;
to a 45-24 halftime lead.&#13;
Leartha Scott opened the second&#13;
half with two baskets to give&#13;
Parkside its biggest lead of the&#13;
night, a 49-24 bulge.&#13;
Then it was Gerald Coleman's&#13;
time. The 6'7" UW-Whitewater&#13;
senior guard hit 10 of 12 Warhawk&#13;
buckets at one point while&#13;
totaling 24 points in the half.&#13;
Parkside coach Steve Stevens&#13;
said part of Coleman's spree was&#13;
due to the amount of time the&#13;
Rangers rested Cole, who&#13;
covered Coleman earlier, in the&#13;
Artists will offer wares&#13;
at Christmas bazaar&#13;
More than 80 artists and craftsmen will offer their wares at a&#13;
(l]ristmasartand crafts fair on Saturday, Dec. 6, at Parkside where&#13;
the tri-level, glass-roofed Main- Place will be transformed into a&#13;
holiday bazaar from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.&#13;
'lbe event is sponsored by the student Parkside Activities Board and&#13;
is open to the public.&#13;
Exhibitors include 23 Parkside students as well as artists and&#13;
craftsmen from Kenosha, Racine, Milwaukee, Madison and several&#13;
other Wisconsin communities, and Waukegan and Mt. Prospect, Ill.&#13;
'Ibey range in age from high school students to senior citizens.&#13;
Their wares are equally varied: paintings and drawings, macrame,&#13;
pottery, jewelry including hand-crafted Indian pieces, photography,&#13;
sculpture, dolls ranging from rag to cornhusk, fabrics, candles,&#13;
weaving, woodworking, yarn pictures, wreaths, leather work, enamel&#13;
ware, Christmas decorations and centerpieces, toys, chenille craft,&#13;
wood carvings, driftwood ....&#13;
No single item is oriced over $50.&#13;
half. Stevens added, "He ·got hot&#13;
.... and he hit some long shots."&#13;
Coleman's game figures included&#13;
29 points.&#13;
Perhaps the most pleasant&#13;
surprise for Parkside was freshman&#13;
guard Joe Foots. At one&#13;
juncture Foots hit three Parkside&#13;
shots in a row. He was 7-7&#13;
shooting from the field, and&#13;
finished with 15 points. Stevens&#13;
said Foots "couldn't do much&#13;
better for an opening game, as a&#13;
freshman."&#13;
Stevens said, "Generally, we&#13;
are quite pleased with the first&#13;
game, especially the first half."&#13;
The coach felt his squad "lost a&#13;
little of our intensity" in the&#13;
second half.&#13;
Cole ended the evening with 31&#13;
points, getting some scoring help&#13;
from Foots and Bill Sobanski,&#13;
who finished with 13 points. Cole&#13;
also pulled-&lt;lown 10 rebounds,&#13;
while Sobanski and senior guard&#13;
Malcolm Mahone grabbed 8&#13;
rebounds, and Foots came-up&#13;
with 7 more boards.&#13;
The win marked the second&#13;
straight by Parkside over UWWhitewater,&#13;
after the Warhawks&#13;
won the first five meetings&#13;
between the clubs. The teams will&#13;
cross paths again, on Jan. 7th,&#13;
with a game at Parkside.&#13;
More immediate though,&#13;
Parkside will travel to&#13;
Kalamazoo, Michigan to play&#13;
·~·I l]d(Dl]f](s_f] L ~ I Wtdnttsday, Dec. J, 197S HIE PUU!D{ U.NG(ll IS • STU0OH PIJIUCATIOlrl Of l)f( U~i'tfllSlfl o, 'fl'!S,( ~.. , ..... \10( VoJ IV No. 14&#13;
Western Michigan this Wednesday.&#13;
The game starts at 7:30&#13;
p.rn. WMU promises to be a tough&#13;
foe for the Rangers, as five of&#13;
their starters and two key&#13;
reserves return to a club that was&#13;
16-10 last se'ason. The MidAmerican&#13;
Conference&#13;
representative il$ headed by 6"9"&#13;
forward Paul Griffm, 6'3" forward&#13;
Jeff Tyson, and 6'8" Tom&#13;
Cutter.&#13;
This Friday and Rangers play&#13;
their fourth game in seven days.&#13;
( they played octhern Illinois on&#13;
Monday.) The game, starting at&#13;
7:30 p.m., will be Parkside's&#13;
home opener. Grand Valley State&#13;
College will be the opponent.&#13;
ext Tuesday (Dec. 9) the&#13;
Rangers hit the road again,&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Play will·tell of&#13;
individual in society&#13;
An Exoerimental Production of&#13;
Bertoldt Brecht's The Elephant&#13;
Calf will be performed on&#13;
December 4th at 7 p.m. and&#13;
December 5 at 12 noon in the&#13;
edia Productions studio, CADl55a.&#13;
&#13;
The production involve the u&#13;
of film, music, sound effects,&#13;
pantomime. costum~ and makeup&#13;
to express the hysterics of an&#13;
absurd dramatization.&#13;
The play is an ab urd comedy&#13;
depicting the d humanization&#13;
and depresonalization of n individual&#13;
by society. It is fr m a&#13;
larger work of Br cht's, A I n'&#13;
Supp~rters of American Indian Movement&#13;
gather for "National Day of Mourning"&#13;
"When the Indian has&#13;
forgotten the music of his&#13;
forefathers, when the&#13;
sound of the tomtom is no&#13;
more, when noisy jazz has&#13;
drowned the melody of the&#13;
flute, he will be a dead&#13;
Indian. When from him&#13;
has been taken, all that is&#13;
his, all that has come to&#13;
him from infinite sources,&#13;
he then, truly, wi II be a&#13;
dead Indian. His spirit will&#13;
be gone, and though he&#13;
Walk the crowded streets,&#13;
he Will, in truth, be-dead!"&#13;
by Standing Bear&#13;
by Mick Andersen&#13;
n:ile. ~illions celebrated&#13;
. ksgivmg with long standing&#13;
~tuals serving to replace long&#13;
orgotten reasons members of&#13;
lheAm · ' t1ie· encan Indian Movement,&#13;
tr supporters and friends,&#13;
:lhered together across the land&#13;
reaffirm the true meaning of ~d , th' reest~blish the place of&#13;
Be tngs Indian, in this holiday.&#13;
-~ause the benevolence with&#13;
f&#13;
. ch native peoples greeted the&#13;
trst h' rect w ite settlers was&#13;
Procated with the destruction&#13;
: _death of Indians across the&#13;
001 tinent, ~ onslaught equaled&#13;
Y_ by white society's savagery&#13;
~ 8t0st the land itself and J ,___::ause these injustices co~tinue&#13;
""ll8y f' A 1 · ' re Ined and often subtle,&#13;
· ,M. has designated this day&#13;
not a day of thanks, but a celebrations of the holiday in&#13;
"National Day of Mourning." which spiritual sustenance is&#13;
The National Day of Mourning forgotten in the mad rush for&#13;
came into being in 1969 after an digestive fortification speeches&#13;
A.I.M.protest at the city of and songs both preceeded the&#13;
Boston's re-inactment of the dinner and concluded the formal&#13;
Boston Tea Party, a protest proceedings of the evening.&#13;
designed to focus attention on the The festivities began with the&#13;
native American and his par- National A.I.M. Song, which was&#13;
ticipation in the first lead by six Indian youths acThanksgiving,&#13;
turned into an companied by drum music. The&#13;
altercation in which several song itself was given at A.I.M. by&#13;
A.I.M. demonstrators were the elders of the Oglala Sioux, a&#13;
arrested. very spiritual people who take&#13;
This year the American Indian their traditions seriously. When&#13;
Council on Alcoholism in Raymond Yellowthunder was&#13;
Milwaukee hosted American murdered in Gordon, Nebraska,&#13;
Indian Movement members, it was recalled, white law entheir&#13;
families and friends, with a forcement and government&#13;
feast consisting of venison, agencies turned a deaf ear. It was&#13;
turkey, ham, wild rice, fried determined that Yellowthunder,&#13;
bread and many other foods, an old man, had been killed by&#13;
both Indian and non-Indian in five racist white drunks, having&#13;
origin. Many had spent their day first been tortured. AI.l.!\1.&#13;
fasting in preparation for the mobilized its supporters, and&#13;
· I Unlike typical after a series of confrontations&#13;
vemng mea.&#13;
Powless will speak on&#13;
current A.I.M. issues&#13;
f the 1973 siege at Wounded Knee,&#13;
One of th~ leaders O South Dakota. Powless ace~&#13;
American In~an Movement ~~~ state and federal law enprogram&#13;
dir~ctor of .&#13;
1 dorcement agents of constant&#13;
American !ndi~n Counci on surveillance and harrassment&#13;
Alcoholism m Milwaukee, H~rb since then. Powless traces the&#13;
Powless, will speak at Parks:d: policy of intimidation by federal&#13;
next Wednesday, Dec. lO a agents to the 1973 take-over by&#13;
p.m. in the Comm Arts _Theat_er. A 1 M of the Bureau of Indian&#13;
Powless' appearance is i::g Aff;ir~ in Washington. D.C. as&#13;
sponsored bt Third World an e well.&#13;
Anthropology Club. . . "Indian people have always&#13;
Currently Powless is facmg had hope, faith, and this has&#13;
both state and fe_d~ral. ch~rg~s helped us endure," Powless has&#13;
relating to his partJc1pat10n m t e 'd Sal .&#13;
f rcement char&#13;
·ere finally brou ht again t th&#13;
five. Becau A.I. f. a the only&#13;
organization ·illing to ri k&#13;
c nfrontation in th pur uit of&#13;
justice. the elder bestro ed thi!&#13;
song to A.I.M.&#13;
Following the on A.I.M.&#13;
lead r Herb Powl trac d the&#13;
origins and purpo e of the&#13;
Choirs will pres nt&#13;
Christinas· concert&#13;
A holida · choral con rt. which&#13;
will include an pportunity for&#13;
the audience to join ith th&#13;
performers in familiar caro •&#13;
will be presented in th Comm&#13;
Arts Theater at3 p.m. on unday,&#13;
Dec. 7.&#13;
The program will include&#13;
nwnber by Par ide' ch ru ,&#13;
chorale,·chamber singer , men'&#13;
and women's choruse and th&#13;
combined choir under the&#13;
direction o[ Frank !'dueller and&#13;
prelude, postlude and accornpanim&#13;
nts b the brass choir&#13;
directed by John Hemkes.&#13;
Following the concert,&#13;
Chancellor and . lrs. Alan E.&#13;
Guskin and UW-P mu ic faculty&#13;
will ho t a reception for concertgoers&#13;
in fain Place, here the&#13;
Parkside recorder con ort ·11&#13;
play under direction of Frances&#13;
Bedford.&#13;
The program ·u includ C. P.&#13;
E. Bach' Helli 1st Gott with&#13;
ar · Chri ten en, m zzo&#13;
ro ,&#13;
lo&#13;
and&#13;
women' choru will offer&#13;
gr up of lfred Burt carols. The&#13;
combined cho rs ill · Flor&#13;
Peete ' Te Deum with Carol&#13;
King&#13;
Th invited to &#13;
2 THE PARKS IDE RANGER WecI .... y. Dec· 3. 1975&#13;
U,[:: 'L" "(f ..&#13;
tl!. tIT!.!&#13;
t 'lt~L;&#13;
moral,..&#13;
I 1m! In lbt voice 01 one&#13;
bas not bOlIlered to&#13;
ched&lt; the facts and who can be&#13;
roven wrong on every acp&#13;
lion is in no position to he a&#13;
cusa . f campus representahve 0&#13;
mocality. t&#13;
It IS indeed unfortunate tha a&#13;
few can be swayed by&#13;
trreSpllOsibie comment. To curb&#13;
any future ill.founded prattle, 1&#13;
..uJ state the formal purposes of&#13;
SEXES: I. To help students&#13;
become involved with o~e&#13;
another socially. 2. Build individuals&#13;
self-&lt;:onfidence m&#13;
meeting new acquaintances. 3.&#13;
Relieve apathatic atmosphere on&#13;
campus. 4. Expand greater enthusiasm&#13;
in cJassrooms.&#13;
Gail Havranek&#13;
Pres. of SEXES&#13;
Robert K "&#13;
w Ira caUy&#13;
be •••&#13;
play P.."....J&#13;
1 more cart&#13;
.... ... =011oflull&gt;re&#13;
oflbt&#13;
ram w II&#13;
). thaI&#13;
1 1 kind of pia).. are&#13;
pmIuced, Ibtn he should&#13;
I lDYo!"ed lJ\ lbt Parkside&#13;
PIa&gt;.... liOD and the&#13;
lad nt One-Acts being&#13;
de_erloped lor pmIucliOll this&#13;
and next semester •&#13;
n- OIl.... ct pla)'S ..uJ serve&#13;
• a RlDdeliDe lOSto whal pial'S&#13;
ill be pmIuced and who will&#13;
~ Ibtm. Wilbool the m-&#13;
'''tme&lt;ll of sllIdents in this&#13;
opportwllil to dlooIe and direct&#13;
plalS which will be "ewed 1»'&#13;
DIs and faculty, we canret&#13;
expect any improvement in the&#13;
area of theatrical production.&#13;
SlWents must show active interesl&#13;
in the Theatre program&#13;
bef.... the faculty will lei them&#13;
make lbe decision as to what&#13;
plays..uJ he produced.lf Mr. Kis&#13;
or anyone else is concerned about&#13;
Ibis issue then 1 suggest that they&#13;
atlend the general meeting of the&#13;
Parkside Players on Friday,&#13;
December 5 at 2:00 p.m, in the&#13;
Green Room of the Theatre (CA&#13;
0173).&#13;
Ron Ditter&#13;
President of Parkside Players&#13;
was r ponsible for&#13;
diSbaroenlftll of the allocatable&#13;
of socregaled fee.&#13;
led ..... Iier this is an&#13;
llee. bul there is&#13;
lor apporotmeol&#13;
IlR:ddEnt f PSGA&#13;
,....mphaslze the&#13;
of Ibt allocaliOflS&#13;
&lt;OIIlDUllee will&#13;
~:~aU nl funds. 1\ is&#13;
b to all DrRanualiODS&#13;
thai they be represented on this&#13;
committee or at least have input.&#13;
This committee Wi.ll also be&#13;
malting the allocation which will&#13;
determine all organizations&#13;
budgets for next year. If you are&#13;
cmcerned about wbere student&#13;
monies go, contact Lee Wagner&#13;
or K.ai Nall in W1LC 0193 or call&#13;
503-2244 immediately.&#13;
Lee Wagner&#13;
PSGA Pres.&#13;
the December 7th coffee can be&#13;
obtained by telepboning John&#13;
Landa al 652-5927.&#13;
Again thanks for your excellent&#13;
coverage - everycitizenneedsto&#13;
know what's going on, and how he&#13;
or .she caD help by rna";"" th .&#13;
VOices heard. ~'6 ell'&#13;
Yours cordially,&#13;
B. Bogart&#13;
Trevor. Wisconsin&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
We would liIte to thank Arhe '&#13;
UqllOr. The UYing Room Sav:ns&#13;
Uquors, Spencers B~wlin&#13;
WRKR radio, and all oth:;&#13;
Racine businesses who ..&#13;
tnbuled 10 help the Vet's ~~ .'&#13;
dance of NOVember 40&#13;
cess il Was. 22 the SUc~&#13;
Bill oU&#13;
Veterano;:: rT ...... '""'&#13;
All letters to the editor must be typed&#13;
spaced before they can be printed on the ed·:Od&#13;
It is the responsibility of the letter's author:oor1al&#13;
own letter. Thank you. tyPe&#13;
I&#13;
A&#13;
CORRECTION: The Chamber Symphony&#13;
pictured in RANGER last week, Nov. 26,Is&#13;
Schripsema and not Matthew Naughten. Naug&#13;
guest violinist.&#13;
Applications are now being accepted forthe&#13;
of EDITOR-IN-CHIEF of the student&#13;
Prospective candidates must be currently&#13;
Parkside fora minimum of 8 credits. They&#13;
high school and-or college writing exper&#13;
possesssome interest in. and knowledgeof I&#13;
The position pays $50 per week for the Spring&#13;
Interested persons should submit a resume&#13;
relevant experience and a statement of broad&#13;
directions for the newspaper to:&#13;
Don Kopriva. RANGER Advisor&#13;
Tallent 288&#13;
Appl ications should be entered by 4 p.m.&#13;
Dec. 3.1975. The RANGER Advisory BoardwiU&#13;
qualifications and schedule brief personalI&#13;
with the leading candidates. Seledion will be'&#13;
the following week. ..' .&#13;
- an Equal Opportunity'EmployerTHE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
mGJGJ(B(3[B&#13;
The PARKSlDE RANGER 'is written and edited by lbe&#13;
the Univ~rsity of Wisconsin-Parkside and they are solelYplll&#13;
for Its edItorial policy and content. Offices are loca~. ~&#13;
U.W. Parkside, .!&lt;enosha, Wisconsin 53140. phones--&#13;
Acllng Edt.... : Debra FriedeU&#13;
Fealure Editor: MIke Palecek&#13;
Sports Director: Thom Aiello&#13;
EwDla Colamn: Judy TradI'llDll&#13;
Baala ... Manager: Aan Ventegea&#13;
Ad make-up:' DIane Wenrle&#13;
Ad sale.: Harry D1nglelder Donzell Holt orin Taylor&#13;
Writers: Jeaaalne Sipsma. Steve SmIIb. Lelgb reller,&#13;
Fred .lobus.... M1ck. ADderaoa, Betsy NeG, JiJII&#13;
Yorgaa, Carol Areatz, CalberlDe BIIae, Brace w.,pd,&#13;
R1100Nicholas, Kart Laraon&#13;
I'ltolograpbers: Dave Oaalel., AI Fredrlc .... a GordO"&#13;
ed sdaY, Dec. 3, 1975&#13;
the facts and who can be&#13;
ch every ac- proven "rong on . . t be a tion is in no position o s&#13;
repr entative of campu&#13;
morality. th t It is indeed unfortunate a a&#13;
fe can be swayed bb&#13;
u-responsible comment. To cur&#13;
any future ill-founded prattle, ~ rill state the formal purposes 0&#13;
XES: 1. To help students&#13;
become involved wit~ o~e&#13;
ther socially. 2. Build ~-&#13;
div duals self-&lt;:onfidence m&#13;
meeting new acquaintances. 3.&#13;
Relieve apathatic atmosphere on&#13;
campus. 4• Expand greater en-&#13;
. asm in classrooms.&#13;
Gail Havranek&#13;
Pres. of SEXES&#13;
expect any improvement in the&#13;
a of theatrical production.&#13;
udents mu.5t show active intere&#13;
t in the Theatre program&#13;
before the faculty will let them&#13;
make the decision as to what&#13;
pla) will be produced. H Mr. Kis&#13;
or anyone else is concerned about&#13;
this issue then I suggest that they&#13;
attend the general meeting of the&#13;
Par · de Players on Friday,&#13;
December 5 at 2:00 p.m. in the&#13;
Green Room of'the Theatre (CA&#13;
Dli3).&#13;
Ron Ditter&#13;
President of Parkside Players&#13;
that they be represented on this&#13;
·ttee or at least have input.&#13;
This committee will also be&#13;
ing the allocation which will&#13;
determine all organizations&#13;
bu ets for next year. H you are&#13;
cerned about where student&#13;
m · go, contact Lee Wagner&#13;
or Kai. ·an in WLLC 0193 or call&#13;
553-2244 immediately.&#13;
Lee Wagner&#13;
PSGA Pres.&#13;
December 7th coffee can be&#13;
obta d by telephoning John&#13;
Landa at 652-5927.&#13;
Again thanks for your excellent&#13;
ccr.erage - every citizen needs to&#13;
o what's going on, and how he&#13;
or. e can help by making their&#13;
~I heard.&#13;
Yours cordially,&#13;
B. B&lt;&gt;gart&#13;
Tre or, Wisconsin&#13;
All letters to the editor must be typed&#13;
aced before they can be printed on the ed·:n~ ~f is the responsibility of the letter's author ~0&#13;
°;1a1&#13;
own letter. Thank you. YPe&#13;
CORRECTION: The Chamber Symphony c&#13;
pictured in RANGER last week, Nov. 26, is&#13;
Schripsema and not Matthew Naughten. Naughfll&#13;
guest violinist.&#13;
Applications are now being accepted for the&#13;
of EDITOR-IN-CHIEF of the student&#13;
Prospective candidates must be currently&#13;
Parkside for a minimum of 8 credits. They sh&#13;
_high school and-or college writing exper&#13;
possess some interest in, and knowledge of I&#13;
The position pays $50 per week for the Spring&#13;
Interested persons should submit a resume&#13;
relevant experience and a statement of broad g&#13;
directions for the newspaper to:&#13;
Don Kopriva, RANGER Advisor&#13;
Tallent 288&#13;
Applications should be entered by 4 p.m. W&#13;
Dec. 3, 1975. The RANGER Advisory Board will&#13;
qualifications and schedule brief personal i&#13;
with the leading candidates. Selection will bea&#13;
the following week.&#13;
- an Equal Opportunity Employer·&#13;
THE PARKSIDE&#13;
QLDrnCBl]I]&#13;
The PARKSIDE RANGER .is written and edited by the&#13;
the _University of Wisconsin-Parkside and they are 501~olfl&#13;
for its editorial policy and content. Offices are 1ocatedU&#13;
.W. Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-&#13;
Acting Editor: Debra Friedell&#13;
Feature Editor: Mike Palecek&#13;
Sports Director: Thom Aiello&#13;
Events Column: Judy Trudnmg&#13;
Business Manager: Ann Verstegen&#13;
Ad lllalte-up:·Dtane Werwie !or&#13;
Ad sales: Harry Dingfelder Donzell Holt Orin TaY&#13;
Writers: Jeannine Sipsma, Steve Smith, Leigh felfet',&#13;
Fred Johnson, Mick . Anderson, Betsy Neu, JIJII&#13;
Yorgan, Carol Arentz, Catherine Bllse, Bruce 1f.pet',&#13;
Rita Nicholas, Kurt Larson ~&#13;
Photographers: Dave D ckseD aordOI' &#13;
~.I.l~!:P'." . c04'Iln1uf'dless noted. In spite&#13;
....... d, P~iPS "giving and&#13;
• Ib&lt; ha main as values&#13;
\I "re '. f&#13;
!b"'iag Ito the world view 0&#13;
-"",,enta "A good .---- Americans .&#13;
.. live sh ring is what we&#13;
~."" of a hildren "/ ,....... teach the c . ..,1 to maintains, saying "that&#13;
"",JesS e're going to make&#13;
~onlY way: and sharing." The&#13;
J~bY giVIDI&#13;
·&#13;
t&#13;
to respect all , 'tuall Y th&#13;
"spll'l all men" was ano er&#13;
-. less theme. Powless&#13;
"_ill" Pow din t&#13;
III""""; resJll!Ct as -exten g 0&#13;
IlfS 1hiS, If Citing the numher&#13;
~18Ddltse . tri ed ~ nuted rivers and s,~1P-.~&#13;
tiP" powlesssaid, This kmd&#13;
~ haS got to stop. We have&#13;
tI IIiJ!g mother earth... The&#13;
,,~ will not listen. The&#13;
tIile.man Indian Movement&#13;
jIIlencan bring ahout this&#13;
IItb to to the non-Indian&#13;
,..reaess&#13;
........" f&#13;
"'~'dinll til the murder 0&#13;
~ Yellowthunder and of&#13;
native people, Powless&#13;
• ti that "The 9ay of IIIftd no ce . ly&#13;
JeckoIlingis upon white SOCle..&#13;
will no longer be able to k~&#13;
y,. 'cans " In spite of his IIIivt Amen .&#13;
cds Powless noted that ~.M~: quest for equal justice&#13;
lis taken its toll among Its&#13;
sapporters, forcin~ "many&#13;
JIIGPIe underground m our own&#13;
_try. They have called us,&#13;
erlmlnaIs which we know we&#13;
't ~use of our, beliefs." :'Iy Powless: faith in the&#13;
IIlure rests in the young people.&#13;
Saying young people have,&#13;
"fllltn the spirit" to resISt opJII08iOll&#13;
Powless declared that&#13;
"air chndren are learning .to&#13;
IlIDd up and fight" once agam.&#13;
Aller almost all had finished&#13;
1111 dinner Charles Weelock,&#13;
JlPrtlentlng the f1edgli~g&#13;
IIIIrID8 Eagle Survival School m&#13;
lnm Bay, ~ued With. the&#13;
tassion of native American&#13;
.. and alternatives to the&#13;
~t educational system. The&#13;
Idlool, which serves grades&#13;
- through twelve, is alreadY&#13;
lIIowIDg remarkable success, as&#13;
IlIdenced as Indians," Weelock&#13;
iIIeIIred, "that is why they come&#13;
IIlbeachool.There is a new pride&#13;
~ Indian, they want to&#13;
... about values." Citing the&#13;
IIIIolound enthusiasm of -these&#13;
hltminantly Menominee and&#13;
children for school in&#13;
of Soaring Eagle's shoe-&#13;
*IDe bui;lget, Weelock. said,&#13;
"IIIe Plessure is back on the&#13;
.... C&lt;BJUnunilyto provide&#13;
IIDelhtngfor them. They have&#13;
-lISe lor Indian hypocrites any&#13;
IllIe thanthey have for whites."&#13;
"'Illeinlerest in native peoples&#13;
lIIlong non-natives is what can&#13;
... us a special strength,"&#13;
IeeIock added.&#13;
'1lIe eveningdrew to a close as&#13;
'Iecond rendition of the National&#13;
A.IJI.Songwas sung and the&#13;
People drew sustenance from&#13;
Po.olesa' declaration, eloquent in&#13;
IIa aUnplicily and strength, that&#13;
~ people have always had&#13;
......, faith,and this has helped us&#13;
tlacb-e."&#13;
Existence of&#13;
God is topic&#13;
~ PhilOSophysymposium. on&#13;
'ue Existence of Gnd" will be&#13;
~onThursdaY, Dec. 4at4p.m.&#13;
C1. 0105. A pape~ will be&#13;
~led by Norman Geisler of&#13;
~Y. Evangelical Divinity&#13;
lliIl In Deerfield Illinois, he&#13;
II&gt;t take an alfumative stand on&#13;
AIr toPic. Responders will be&#13;
~ on SnYder and Wayne&#13;
~on Parkside associate&#13;
•·•..... cs of philosophy.&#13;
vents&#13;
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 3: Psychology Club meetihg at 1:30 p.m. in W1.LC 0174.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 3: "2001 A Space Odyssey" at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
CAT. Admission is $1.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 3: Student music recital at 3:30 p.m, in CAT. Free .&#13;
THURSDAY, DEC. 4: "2001 A Space Odyssey" at 7:30 p.m. in CAT. Admission is $1.&#13;
FRIDAY, DEC. 5: Women's and men's track and field meet at 6 p.m.&#13;
FRIDAY, DEC. 5: Basketball - UW-P vs Grand Valley State at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in the Phy Ed BUilding. Admission charged.&#13;
SATURDA¥, DEC. 6: Wrestling meet at noon in the Phy Ed Building.&#13;
SATURDAY, DEC. 6: Arts and crafts fair in Main Place from 10 a.m.&#13;
until 5 p.m,&#13;
SUNDAY, DEC. 7: Christmas Choral Concert at 3p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
MONDAY, DEC. 8: Roten Art Galleries sale of original prints in the&#13;
WLLC.&#13;
TUESDAY, DEC. 9: American Lecture by Michael Kammen on&#13;
"Impact of the Revolution on American Culture in the 19th and 20th&#13;
Centuries" in the CAT.&#13;
MONDAY, DEC. 8· FRIDAY, DEC. 12: Academic Planning Week.&#13;
Counseling Outpost, Greenquist Concourse; 9 a.m.-4 p.m., ~ p.m.&#13;
' TL---.obbles and he avai I&#13;
Wedne*y, Dec. 3, 1975THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
1)1&#13;
PICtt "" a.&#13;
PIP'"MOl Fooot. OElI'ltI_..O TOYOU.MOM;;;":::::;:&#13;
MOLBECKfS&#13;
GROCERY&#13;
Comp'ete LIne of Quollty Grocer'e.&#13;
Specializing In&#13;
HEALTHFOODS-·DlnmCS--IMPOITS&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
FOR ·SALE: Long green velvet dress With&#13;
bodice and long sleeves of lace. sue 11.12,&#13;
never worn. 654·7807.&#13;
~·YP'NG. JO cents per p,tge _ url)on&#13;
copy, minor cerrecuees C.1I OOIOUS&#13;
r-lrouda. 633-9409 or 639-6951 ltlt 1.ylDr&#13;
Ave .• Racine:&#13;
NEEDED: Female to shan Yft'y n;'U hlf'&#13;
nisned apartment witt! fi"IY"'M leKfter&#13;
Call 652-01889.&#13;
AKC CAIRN TERRIER PUPS. Like "Toto ..&#13;
in the "Wizard of Oz. NO shed, NO clip, eesv&#13;
care coat. Grand·sir~ No. 1 dog In the&#13;
country. Ready to go by Christmas, $150.&#13;
Julie, 633·0929.&#13;
FOR SALE -- 1970 VW Van, all set up fOf"&#13;
camping. A.sking $1,000. Phone 633·5812, ask&#13;
for Carl. Nightly except Wed.&#13;
For the best Seled&gt;on ('I Commerc"l and&#13;
Progressive Rock. JilZL .w'ICl dyNln'l e&#13;
underground Imported AlburTlS.oInd Tilpes..&#13;
Check out Chris Chapt'lMl'l mute 011&#13;
Freeman's One Slop RKOt'CI ~rl (All 451,&#13;
7'112Chapman guarantees LOW pncn fot ill&#13;
new rete.nes. Can yOU "et to ",-t') Oiv It'&#13;
FOR RENT: Cozy 2·bedroom upper ~la1 at&#13;
6537 . 341h Ave~ Availabl~ immediately.&#13;
Stove and refrigerator included. Call 65].&#13;
3411 or 654·7461. II&#13;
FOR SALE: 1967 Dodge cor~n.e1, must se Ii&#13;
New tires, good running condition, S350. Ca&#13;
657·3.411. d 1965&#13;
FOR SALE: Kelvinator gas range an .&#13;
Plymouth Sattelite, 2·OOor, 383, 4 speed. 633&#13;
1754.&#13;
Typing done in my !"101M!. ContKt G,,.,y at&#13;
637·7796.&#13;
Female with 2 bedf"oom .partm ....t Ioc*""ll&#13;
for roommate, Call eVftlings m·ll2Otw c1eyt.&#13;
REPAIR WORK --'dishwasherS~t~~r~:I~ 652·3322and I~ave meuage for L. Messing&#13;
disposal~, washers, dryers,&#13;
eveninljs AI. S1endel 886·3865.&#13;
SKI'S FOR SALE: Kastle ski's with look&#13;
Nevada bindings. Good condition. $100. Call&#13;
637·6232.&#13;
FOR SALE, 1911 F~I 121 , cioot Md.en.&#13;
radio, tadial tires. q-ont whee'I dr,,,:' low&#13;
mileage, easy on g.s 6J.t---C1S iltt ...&#13;
-&#13;
ARTS &amp;&#13;
Porkside Aetivnes Board&#13;
invites you to on&#13;
CRAFTS FAIR&#13;
So1unIoY. 0-.- 6&#13;
10 a.m. - S p.m.&#13;
Upporand--&#13;
Ov'" 80 Exhibitor&gt;&#13;
No one item fo 0"" '50.&#13;
~e elbe&#13;
~Wttt ~bOppt&#13;
a \/One&#13;
feoturong,&#13;
of your candy&#13;
and nut fovortle~ sold&#13;
the old-fashioned way&#13;
OiRlSTtMS SPKlAl&#13;
Foil Wropped&#13;
Chocolates&#13;
0 ....&#13;
located on&#13;
Recipe "456.'" R&#13;
THE&#13;
1AxcoFIZZ:&#13;
*&#13;
2 oz. jose Cuervo 'Tequila *&#13;
Juice from one lime (or 2 tbsp.) *&#13;
1tsp. sugar *&#13;
2 dashes orange bitters *&#13;
White of one egg *&#13;
A glass IS quite helpful too.&#13;
1Iwv '"&#13;
• p.m&#13;
~.I-~: ..... ,onton•• less noted. In spite&#13;
~d, ~=hips "giving and ., the ha ai·n as values 111 • " rem , . f&#13;
slJaflng 1 to the world view o .... ,12menta . s "A good ~ American·&#13;
oJti1·e h ring is what we&#13;
of s a ·1c1r " nng h the chi en.&#13;
t to teac . "th t fall maintains, saymg a&#13;
Jess e're going to make&#13;
thtonlY ~~Y; and sharing." The&#13;
tis by g,~f ty to respect all&#13;
piritua , men" was another&#13;
~s, all 1 ss theme. Powless ,_ ... ;Har pow e din t ~ . respect as exten g o&#13;
,ees thiS_ If Citing the number&#13;
the land itse_ ~rs and strip-mined&#13;
cf palluted riv id "This kind powlesssa , ~ge has got to stop. We have&#13;
al thlllg t mother earth... The&#13;
IO respec ill not listen. The&#13;
·1e man w t Iii . Indian Movemen&#13;
Allltncan bring about this&#13;
sttks to to the non-Indian&#13;
awareness&#13;
ll(tkl,"_ to the murder of&#13;
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 3: Psychology Club meeting at 1:30 p.m. in WLLC D174.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 3: "2001 A Space Odyssey" at 7:30 p.m. in th&#13;
CAT. Admission is $1.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 3: Student music recital at 3:30 p.m. in CAT • Free.&#13;
vents&#13;
THURSDAY, DEC. 4: "2001 A Space Odyssey" at 7:30 p.m. in CAT. Admission is $1.&#13;
FRIDAY, DEC. 5: Women's and men's track and field meet at 6 p.m.&#13;
FRIDAY, DEC. 5: Basketball - UW-P vs Grand Valley State at 7:&#13;
p.m. in the Phy Ed Building. Admission charged.&#13;
SATURDAY, DEC. 6: Wrestling meet at noon in the Phy Ed Buildin .&#13;
SATURDAY, DEC. 6: Arts and crafts fair in Main Place from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m.&#13;
SUNDAY, DEC. 7: Christmas Choral Concert at 3 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
MONDAY, DEC. 8: Roten Art Galleries sale of original prints in the&#13;
WLLC.&#13;
TUESDAY, DEC. 9: American Lecture by Michael Kammen on&#13;
"Impact of the Revolution on American Culture in the 19th and 20th&#13;
Centuries" in the CAT.&#13;
MONDAY, DEC. 8 - FRIDAY, DEC. 12: Academic Planning Week -&#13;
Counseling Outpost, Greenquist Concourse; 9 a.m.-4 p.m., &amp;.a p.m. · Ti,!'bbles and he availa 1 .&#13;
Allu~g Yellowthunder and of&#13;
RaYlDO"native people, Powless FOR SALE: Long green velvet dress with&#13;
olber ti that "The Gay of bodke and long sleeves of lace. Size 11 -12,&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
,erved no ce . ty never worn. 654-7807.&#13;
n...1.ftning 15" upon white soc1e .. nc,.a111uu AKC CAIRN TERRIER PUPS. Like " Toto" will 00 longer be able to kill in the "Wizard of Oz. NO Shed, NO clip, easy&#13;
Yoo . ans " In spite of his care coat. Grand-sire No. 1 dog In the bve AmerlC · country. Ready to go by Christmas, SlSO. 111 ds Powless noted that Julie. 633-0929. tw,ld wor al . ti e f&#13;
•!.M.'S quest for equ JUS ~ FOR SALE __ 1970 VW Van, all set up or&#13;
n. 1ts camping. Asking Sl,000. Phone 633-5812, ask ba5 taken its toll among for Carl. Nightly except Wed .&#13;
511pporters, forcin~ ''many&#13;
people underground m our own&#13;
coonlry. They have called us.&#13;
criminals which we know we&#13;
,1 be~a11Se of our, beliefs."&#13;
aren 'th · the Clearly Powless: fa1 m&#13;
future rests in the young people.&#13;
Saying young people _have,&#13;
FOR RENT: Cozy 2-bedroom upper ~lat at&#13;
6537 . 34th Ave, Available immediately.&#13;
Stove and refrigerator included. Call 657.&#13;
3411 or 654-7461.&#13;
FOR SALE : 1967 Dodge Coron_et, must sell&#13;
New tires, good running cond11ton, 5350. Ca ll&#13;
657-3411 . nd 1965 FOR SALE : Kelvinator gas range a .&#13;
Plymouth Sattelite, 2-door, 383, 4 speed. 633&#13;
1754.&#13;
REPAIR WORK .. dishwa;hers, garbagl~&#13;
disposah, washers, dryers, etc. Ca&#13;
evenin9s Al. Stendel 886-3865.&#13;
gotten the spirit" to res1St opp-ession&#13;
Powless declared that&#13;
"our children are learning . to&#13;
stand up and fight" OnCe agam. SKI'S FOR SALE : Kaslle ski's with Loo~&#13;
After almost all had finished Nevada bindings. Good condition. SlOO. Ca&#13;
' 'YPING, 30 Cffits per -· .,.,. C rbOn&#13;
, opy, m inor corrKti 0n$ C• I Oo orn rlrooda . 633 9•09 or 6J9 6951 tt f Ta,tar&#13;
Ave .• Rac ine.&#13;
NEEOEO Female to _,e ttv n&#13;
nished apartment f &lt;$ I v-..- Ca ll 652 489&#13;
Typing done ,n my - CO&lt;IIKI G&#13;
637-7796&#13;
1 k l~63:7~-6:23:2~----------------------=~&#13;
with dinner Charles Wee oc ,&#13;
Soaring representing Eagle Survival the fledgli~g School m - -------------------~~~u&#13;
clacusmon of native eric&#13;
JQUlh, and alternatives to the invites yoo to on&#13;
present educational system. The&#13;
(inen Bay, continuedAmwith. thane • . Parkside Activites Boord&#13;
tchool which serves grades F' -'JR&#13;
lffen through twelve, is already AR TS &amp; CRAFTS /:I&#13;
ilowing remarkable success, as Saturday, Decambe&lt; 6 ffidenced as Indians," Weelock&#13;
declared, "that is why they come 10 o.m. • 5 p.m.&#13;
lolbeschool.There is a new pride ,e.~~~ ~O~ Upper i:r,d tMdle 1/rJ&#13;
ii being Indian, they want to ~ • re'e&#13;
bow about values." Citing the ~~ Over 80 Exh ito.-s&#13;
lltW.found enthusiasm of ~these ~~ No one item fo&#13;
,eoominantly Menominee and&#13;
~ children for school in&#13;
'lite of Soaring Eagle's shoe-&#13;
*lng budget, Weelock said,&#13;
"The Pressure is back on the&#13;
Indian community to provide&#13;
Qnething for them. They have&#13;
DO use for Indian hypocrites any&#13;
IIIC.-ethan they have for whites."&#13;
''The interest in native peoples&#13;
llnong non-natives is what can&#13;
IIVe us a special strength,"&#13;
WetJock added.&#13;
The evening drew to a close as&#13;
11eeondrendition of the National&#13;
A.I.M.Song was sung and the&#13;
lleOple drew sustenance from&#13;
Powless• declaration, eloquent in&#13;
Its simplicity and strength, that&#13;
'Indian people have always had&#13;
hoi&gt;e, faith, and this has helped us&#13;
endure."&#13;
Existence of&#13;
God is topic ~ Phil?5ophy symposium on&#13;
Id Existence of God" will be&#13;
111 °nThursday,Dec.4at4p.m.&#13;
ct D105. A paper will be&#13;
~nled by Norman Geisler of&#13;
r:ty_ Evangelical Divinity&#13;
ltill I lll Deerfield Illinois, he&#13;
lake an affirmative stand on&#13;
Aa lopic. Responders will be&#13;
J ton Snyder and Wayne&#13;
~nson Parkside associate&#13;
4!Ssors of philosophy.&#13;
0&#13;
Ploce&#13;
1)1NO"&#13;
MO BECK'S&#13;
GROCERY&#13;
Complete Line of QuaUty Grocerle&#13;
Speclallzlng In&#13;
HEALTH FOODS--DIETETICSe&#13;
lbc&#13;
~lue t ~bopp&#13;
co &#13;
Dec 3. lf15 ._ .. ~~~~~ 4 THE PARKSIDE RA GER Wednesday, ....... ..., .....-&#13;
~n&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
•&#13;
.•&#13;
. .&#13;
. "&#13;
',.-&#13;
eft PAPER8MATE The perfect Christmas,gl&#13;
G£T YOUR OWN G;:g::&#13;
{~\ \&#13;
\ ., \ (&#13;
. (.&#13;
~"\~ 1~u:&#13;
~~.. WIT~Y pvRCHAS£&#13;
~&#13;
'o&#13;
~~~®':&#13;
,~ 2~----'&#13;
-~&#13;
. -D&#13;
While they las;tt~...........,~ .................... --.J&#13;
•&#13;
~.~:.....,.~., .-. . ., .&#13;
: ~.....'&#13;
~.&#13;
.&#13;
•&#13;
~'~II&#13;
Discount Sale -on:&#13;
Art Prints&#13;
Greeting Cards&#13;
Sales Posters and Novel'ty&#13;
Items&#13;
December 3 to December 24&#13;
u.&#13;
... . .&#13;
•&#13;
.&#13;
•&#13;
·tt PAPER8MATE T e perfect Christmas\g• L&#13;
GET YOllR owN&#13;
GIANT T·SHtRT&#13;
·scount Sale on:&#13;
Art Prints&#13;
Gre8ting Cards&#13;
ales Posters and No_velty&#13;
Items&#13;
December 3 to Decefflber 24&#13;
u.W &#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 3, 1975 THE PARK51DE RANGER 5&#13;
:&#13;
··· .. .&#13;
.- ....~ ~: i s :&#13;
&lt;;~.:&#13;
by LOmbardi.Ages 5-12. 52 cooking delights without using a&#13;
•&#13;
BAIlLY.Ages 3-6. Beautifully illustrated fantasy. Pub. at $4.25. CHILDREN'S&#13;
BUZZ.Ages4-8. Delightful story of Billie Bee and his desperate&#13;
beeS. Beautifu\color-illustrations. Pub. at $4.25.Sale $1. .&#13;
.11 DelIghtfulpoetic tale of King Pi and his daughter Princess&#13;
Io1e fl. '&#13;
HARDCOVER&#13;
by ErnestHemingway. Classic story of a fisherman's struggle for&#13;
BllefL&#13;
18Immortal favorites lovedby young and old alike. Pub. at $4.95.&#13;
BOOKS&#13;
PINKPAJAMAS.A cute children's story of a penguin who wants&#13;
.... guIN so he wears pink pajamas. Every page illustrated. Sale $1.&#13;
.... ~. An amusing story of animals in the woods, wishing that&#13;
pill!illustrated. Pub. at $4.25.Sale $1. •&#13;
.... lullabywith full color illustrations, and music. Pub. at $4.95.&#13;
rhyming story about three angels who try to satisfy the kids&#13;
..... Every page illustrated. Sale $1.' Originally published at '1.95 to '4.95&#13;
U. Beautiful rhyming story of the adventures of a doctor and his 2&#13;
Pub. at$4.25-,Sale $1.&#13;
Qoockett Johnson. Charming story of an emperor and his six&#13;
ted. Pub. at $3. Sale $1.&#13;
Adorable children's story. Every page color illustrated. Pub. at&#13;
~. Touchingstory about a family.of weeds that are temporarily&#13;
lbeprden. Pub. at $4.25.Sale $1 .&#13;
"tof5.l5. Sale priced at $1each, none higher.&#13;
Don't miss the&#13;
IIBook Remainder&#13;
Sale"&#13;
UND&#13;
POUND&#13;
POUND SALE&#13;
The Big IIRIPOFF"&#13;
We're selling Books by&#13;
the pound.&#13;
lb. -&#13;
kstore 'Hours 9:00 to 7:00&#13;
It, by 1,ombardi. Ages 5-12. 52 coo~g delights without using a 4&#13;
oBABLY. Ages~- Beautifully illustrated fantasy. Pub. at $4.25.&#13;
'1' BUZZ. Ages 4-8. Delightful story of Billie Bee and his desperate&#13;
olbel' l)ees. Beautiful color illustrations. Pub. at $4.25. Sale $1.&#13;
3-12. Delightful poetic tale of King Pi and his daughter Princess&#13;
-,. Sale $1.&#13;
by Ernest Hemingway. Classic story of a fisherman's struggle for&#13;
... Sale $1.&#13;
()ver70immOrtal favorites loved-by young and old alike. Pub. at $4.95.&#13;
im PINK PAJAMAS. A cute children's story of a penguin who wants&#13;
pengwnsso he wears pink pajamas. Every page illustrated. Sale $1.&#13;
Ages ~- An amusing story of animals in the woods, wishing that&#13;
page illustrated. Pub. at $4.25. Sale $1.&#13;
utiful lullaby with full color illustrations, and music. Pub. at $4.95.&#13;
Ad«able rhyming story about three angels who try to satisfy the kids&#13;
of snow. Every page illustrated. Sale $1.,&#13;
4-8. Beautiful rhyming story of the adventures of a doctor and his 2&#13;
led. Pub. at $4.25. Sale $1.&#13;
by Crockett Johnson. Charming story of an emperor and his six&#13;
Illustrated. Pub. at$3. Sale $1.&#13;
" . Adorable children's story. Every page color illustrated. Pub. at&#13;
.Ages~-Touching story about a family .of weeds that are temporarily&#13;
bf the garden. Pub. at$4.25. Sale $1 ·&#13;
"to $5.95. Sale priced at $1 each, none higher.&#13;
UND&#13;
POUND&#13;
POUND SALE I&#13;
-&#13;
CHILDREN'S&#13;
HARDCOVER&#13;
'BOOKS&#13;
Originally published at • 1.95 to '4.95&#13;
Don't miss the&#13;
11Book Remainder&#13;
Sale''&#13;
The Big "RIPOFF"&#13;
We're selling Books by&#13;
the pound.&#13;
BOOKS 39e lb.&#13;
okstore -HOurs 9:00 to 7:00 &#13;
• T E PARKS IDE RA GER WecI,-,y. OK. 3, 1975&#13;
boo . " in the" nle •&#13;
creates mood In&#13;
..mg and body lan~~~~~~ock&#13;
.... Darilal HaD .iD Raane. Jom TheY p y ost FM listeners are _" s....... than whal m .&#13;
Car e.""" 'I· in tor. At the same time&#13;
e come here tuned clasSical music, Wltll&#13;
iDa!lDIybecl- we e to see old theY lean on beginning and&#13;
~ .. ",.. tneod:S, he es- the 1812 Overture. an in-&#13;
..-1a they mel the grand piano piece as .&#13;
~::",:;.:::~......-: -'--~ four trod-.... in "Ladyl" DisaP- • I........ ucnon I of&#13;
a 0 lD tile Olicago· po1/1tingly, however, m~and&#13;
'til_1bo their music is taken secon .. ;eo....- I" back to (rom another group, and p~yed&#13;
lAta ID IteDoIha Com», secoJld.fiddle, not qmte to par.&#13;
.. ~ cInJmIM' Letting John PanOZZO go loose&#13;
• , lie said Twin .rums cymbals, and perwbal&#13;
poor ~0Il ~ one of tlle bigb1ights was..-. ofthe~.Nolonlydidheget&#13;
play ID ~ into what he was doing, but tlle&#13;
plac8 aDd aped to get IIId1eDCe did as well. Later on, he&#13;
......._"'." Twin he said, said, "Yoo got to really eona&#13;
m&gt;alJ aowd«! facility centrate and watch yourself&#13;
I Iectric:aI power because once Ibroke a finger by&#13;
band smashing my hand with my&#13;
crumstiet. ,t&#13;
Using theatrical gestures, eye&#13;
cootact and body language, styx&#13;
gave tlleir all to appeal to a&#13;
sparse 120G-person audience.&#13;
TheY would stand close to the&#13;
stage, look into the faces of the&#13;
group, mainly ctUlPrised of hIgh&#13;
school aged fans, and try to 1/1-&#13;
\'Olve them in the music.&#13;
"We really dOll't like playing to&#13;
• big groop. like at tlle Chicago&#13;
Amphitheater. It said bass&#13;
guitansl O1uck Panozzo. "What I&#13;
like to play for is a group around&#13;
3, , not too big, not too small."&#13;
All of styx felt let down by the&#13;
turnout.&#13;
"Itried my best, but I couldn't&#13;
58)' I played 100 percent," stated&#13;
John Panozzo. "It's mainly&#13;
because I bad an operation this&#13;
morning OIl my back and it hurts&#13;
to play real bard. But I did the&#13;
best I could."&#13;
...·-Brewed&#13;
From Goers Country.&#13;
~\JCATOllS&#13;
(&#13;
1) .)&#13;
1'\ • ~~ ~1t~DIT_U~\V .&#13;
pays 5V2%&#13;
on pa§§boo&#13;
Savi&#13;
On-Campus Service ... Room 2.35Toa..&#13;
Pho."&#13;
Main Office, 1400 No N- .. . . -wmQ. Rd.&#13;
Pho",&#13;
--&#13;
The Best Ham&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
in Town&#13;
•&#13;
!i14ITTY~S&#13;
Highway 31 and County Trunk E&#13;
On tap at the kellar&#13;
10%&#13;
count&#13;
ocut members only.&#13;
~ and D cord 0&#13;
ow s ore&#13;
GOOD&#13;
A&#13;
AS 10 G AS YOU&#13;
D PARISIDE&#13;
- - - ---a SAVE--------- DE ST\JOEHT ( TESY CARD&#13;
of cord is ftI' lad to a 10~&#13;
purchases mode ot&#13;
D SONS J&#13;
I.......&#13;
EUIS&#13;
56176 A •&#13;
•• ended to all UW-Porluide&#13;
S,!Udelrm and Foculty Only.&#13;
II&#13;
1••-- ••_-- _ _ _&#13;
GRADUA TE: GEIIOLOG1sT&#13;
GRADUATE: DlAJION'1OLoGrsT&#13;
r~t:g~&#13;
Chancellor and Mrs. AlaR E. Guskin&#13;
and&#13;
Parks ide Music&#13;
invite you and&#13;
to attend&#13;
a Holiday Choral Concert&#13;
by the&#13;
chorale, ch&#13;
orus, chamber singers and brass choir&#13;
. December 7 at 3 p.m.&#13;
In the Communication Arts Theater&#13;
and to a Reception 'In M . .&#13;
aln Place10llowing the concert.&#13;
The&#13;
cordially&#13;
Faculty&#13;
your family&#13;
t th&#13;
inood in&#13;
language&#13;
They play a lighter type of rock&#13;
than bat most FM listeners are&#13;
tuned in for. At the same time&#13;
they Jean on classical music, with&#13;
ntry.&#13;
u&#13;
--------- D&#13;
I)&#13;
10&#13;
0&#13;
I&#13;
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I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
,I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
1812 overture beginning and&#13;
~and piano piece as an inuction&#13;
in ••1,adyl" Disapintlngly,&#13;
however, most of&#13;
· music IS taken second-hand&#13;
another group, and played&#13;
nd-fiddle, not quite to par.&#13;
Letting John Panozzo go loose&#13;
on drumS, cymbals, and per-&#13;
. n, as one of the highlights&#13;
the cert. Not only did he get&#13;
the was doing, but the&#13;
did as ell. Later on, he&#13;
, "You got to really cone&#13;
ntr t and watch yourself&#13;
nee I broke a finger by&#13;
stnl'IShilti? m · hand with my&#13;
ck."&#13;
theatrical gestures, eye&#13;
and body language, Styx&#13;
th ir all to appeal to a&#13;
p r e 1200-person audience.&#13;
ld tand close to the&#13;
, l into the faces of the&#13;
, mainly ccmprised of high&#13;
ed fans, and try to inh&#13;
them in the music.&#13;
" ' really don't like playing to&#13;
· p, like at the Chicago&#13;
Amphitheater,•• said bass&#13;
· Oluck Panozzo. "What I&#13;
to play for is a group around&#13;
3, , l too big. not too small."&#13;
All or felt let down by the&#13;
ut.&#13;
" I tried my best, but I couldn't&#13;
• l pla~ed 100 percent," stated&#13;
John Panozzo · "It's main . 1 y&#13;
ut:ciiu_se I had an operation this&#13;
on my back and it hurts&#13;
to P Y real hard. But I did th&#13;
I could." e&#13;
The Best Ham&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
in Town&#13;
AlaR E. Guskin&#13;
and&#13;
. The Parkside Music&#13;
cordially invite Faculty&#13;
you and your family&#13;
to attend&#13;
a Holiday Ch oral Concert&#13;
chorale by the , chorus, cha . . mber Smgers and brass choir&#13;
December 7 in the C at 3 p.m.&#13;
ond to o ommunicatio A Reception . . n rts Theater&#13;
m Mom Pl . ace following the concert. &#13;
f,gJUen lose&#13;
swimmers beat Lawrence&#13;
byBruce Wagner ' second in that event. She also Pietkieviteh" R' h Ka&#13;
Placed d' 5, ic ws won&#13;
secon 10 the 100 the 200 fly: and the 400 free team&#13;
k&#13;
'de's women swim team backstroke f&#13;
rar 51 • 9 Tesch, Marheine, Wilbershide ended their season on a bad note ~ynn Petersen took Over for and Kwas. I&#13;
t tlie men started their season Gail Olson in. the one meter Second place finishers were&#13;
bU ood one as Lawrence beat diving competition and placed in Marheine in the 50 free' Mike&#13;
'" 'w~men,51·32, and lost to the the second spot. Lynn was third Hawley in the one meter' diving&#13;
:., 66-37, in a meet held at In the 50 free, and 100 fly. competitions' Krueger in the 200&#13;
~wrence. . In the men's competition, they back: and Hamm in the 200&#13;
the women's events, Sandi came through WIththeir first win breast stroke.&#13;
~ placed second in the 200 in two years, taking nine out of Next action will be in a home&#13;
rreeand 100 free: was third in the thirteen events and managing to meet with North Park this&#13;
.. free and was in-the seeo.oct place new records. Saturday and an away meet with&#13;
place 200 free relay team With Bob Tesch broke two records in NAJA power Chicago State next&#13;
JIafJ' Beth Leitch, Lynn the 1000 free and 500 free of 12:25 Wednesday.&#13;
PelefSOn and her sister Sheila.· .1 (1000 free) and 5:47.0 (500&#13;
g,eila ~Jsoplaced second in the free). '&#13;
III Intermediate Medley (which Other first places carne in the&#13;
wonby Leitch) and 400 free. '400 medley relay, comprised of&#13;
Q&gt;aig also placed in the 100 fiy. Keith Krueger, Bob Marheine,&#13;
fDcluding the 100 1M win, Rich Kwas, and Jinn Wilber-&#13;
(Aitcb also broke a record in the. shide; 200 free, swam by Rich&#13;
• rreewitha time of 29.9, placing Harnm; one meter diving. JOM&#13;
ook CO~OPCap&#13;
ffer savings&#13;
by Jeffrey J. Sweneki ) course number, All or most books&#13;
for the spring semester will be&#13;
listed. Members may exchange&#13;
books for books or buy and sell&#13;
them. The purpose of the exchange&#13;
is to bring together&#13;
students who need books other&#13;
students may have, and to save&#13;
them money on next semester's&#13;
books, Nail explained.&#13;
The price suggested by the&#13;
service will be between the&#13;
bookstore's buy back price and&#13;
the resale price. . Also&#13;
by using the exchange a student&#13;
need not sell anybook until after&#13;
ciasses end. A book may remain&#13;
on the list if it is not sold and the&#13;
student keeps possession of the&#13;
book until it is sold, said Nail.&#13;
Beginning Monday, December&#13;
\, therewill be a book exchange&#13;
up on the mid level of Main&#13;
according to student Kai&#13;
, coordinator. The hours will&#13;
from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m, and&#13;
4 p.m. to 7 p.m, It will run&#13;
W mid January.&#13;
Studentscan become members&#13;
the co-op by one of two t::' payment of $1, or by 1 one three hour shift at&#13;
table in Main Place. Only&#13;
may use the exchange.&#13;
A member wishing to exchange&#13;
fills out a card with his or&#13;
name and book title. This&#13;
is then filed under the&#13;
URBAN PLANNI.NG RECRUITING&#13;
Dr. Sanunis White, Associate Professor in the Deparinnent of&#13;
Urban Planning at UW-Milwaukee, will be at Parkside on&#13;
Friday, December 5, 1975 at the Career Planning &amp; Placement&#13;
..Qfflce, Pallett Hall from 2:00.3:30. He will be glad to meet with&#13;
any undergraduate seniors interested in hearing about an&#13;
liInovative program leading to a Master's Degree in Urban&#13;
Planning at UW-Mllwaukee. Undergraduate seniors can be&#13;
from any field of study.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 3, 1975THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
KENOSHA-PARK5IOf.AACIIE&#13;
BICENTENNIAL LECTURES&#13;
1Ittdui ~••• e.&#13;
"7k ~-u- ~e.tu •&#13;
CIUt • -;'uft ,,"tlt o?",{ •• eY' •••&#13;
7,30 p.m.&#13;
Communication Arts Theater&#13;
Univ",,;ty of WisconsirH'ori"ido&#13;
No permit is required for porting oft... 7 pm.&#13;
Free checking .••Free checks"&#13;
No minimum balance&#13;
FOR YOUR CO VE IENCE .•.EXTRA BANKING 80&#13;
Our entire office mc lud ing lobby and drive-in&#13;
Monday-Thursday 7: 1Xh&gt;: 30&#13;
Friday .. , 7:00"':00&#13;
Saturday. , 8:oo.Noon&#13;
R&#13;
OPE&#13;
6125 Durand Avenue • Racine, Wisconsin 53406 Phone 414-S5U500&#13;
MEMBER OF THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION&#13;
On the outside looking in ...&#13;
laggs itons from MAlE®! MAUCR'&#13;
1110"', "m inside out and MALE ®&#13;
-.. ',m tough, in pre-washed&#13;
denim witt! oVlr ...dged controst&#13;
fttrtad I"',rywhere on seams, on&#13;
P6Ck'h, on mar. seoms, -..on belt loops,&#13;
lIIld mar. seomsl Super fil. Pick this&#13;
sryle or from severol great fashion&#13;
loots from MAlf® in woshouts or&#13;
..... " G,.. •• lim;'", G,.. ·• ===--&#13;
U.itld has the people with&#13;
klIOwho. - people who&#13;
ftolly Wont to help you&#13;
thoo't. (orne in now.&#13;
W"II make you f'el&#13;
I gOOd about yourself,&#13;
I&#13;
THE BRAND NAME ~ ~&#13;
~NQTES APPAREL MANUFACTURED&#13;
ATLH-K CORPORATION,&#13;
ANTA, GA Limited&#13;
...&#13;
- Genes&#13;
Villa Capri Plaza, Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
---------------&#13;
551-9945&#13;
......&#13;
BUdweiser.&#13;
BEER DRINKER'S QUICK QUIZ&#13;
Just to kill :'I minute or two, whv don't you match your own&#13;
beer-dr ink ing habits and prr-Ierences a1o:.un.1 tho • of thl&#13;
Budweiser Bn-wmaster "'hill' you're taking thl U st , 11migbt&#13;
be a gOod idea to cover up the answe-rs With t (..'old can or tv.o&#13;
of the King uf Beers&#13;
1.When you do Use .1 ~I.,~ .... dn vou ,.1 tht' ht ....-r down&#13;
the- side? 0 Or do you pour it down tht' nllddlt' to it'l&#13;
a niC"{'h£&gt;~ldof foom') 0&#13;
2. How much foam do you Iik&lt;' on a ~1.1s..... of drau~ht&#13;
bwr" ·on~ at all 0 On" inch 0 On,' and .l hall to&#13;
two inch£&gt; 0&#13;
3. Do you IikC' to dnnk your l:&gt;N;'rIII hur,·&#13;
swallows'? 0 Something III !:x·t""'(&gt;t&gt;n'l 0&#13;
4. \\'hich do you like- best'}&#13;
Cannl'&lt;! bwr 0 BoWl'&lt;! bwr 0 Draught bo&gt;&lt;'T 0&#13;
5.\\'hich be-E'r is brt'woo by "exclusivE' l3&lt;'&lt;:'chwood Agemg&#13;
with natural carbonation to produCt' a beU('r t1ls1(' and&#13;
a smootl1t'r. morl' drinkable- b£&gt;.er'?"Budwe-Hwr 0 Somp&#13;
oth~r brond 0&#13;
6. ~'he-n you say ··Bud .....e-iser ... do you say it .&#13;
, ~ag~r1y" 0 loudly' 0 gladly' 0&#13;
dlq'~HJ"'l..)I·&#13;
&lt;'1.11: .,..ja'l'\!&gt;UI~ IIV 9&#13;
.,....011\·.......~la C&#13;
~'i.,)UI ~ 01 ~'t1 ~&#13;
• WI!OJ&#13;
JO pCdlje'4HCd4 H JOJ&#13;
dlPplW ,)41 Uv.op llj~IH&#13;
SH3MSNV&#13;
-- Distributed by E. F. Madrigrano 1831-55th Kenosha. WI&#13;
.1d..\ol ....pOa "IUQ &lt;;&#13;
pna ....11 ...\!&#13;
;:tuut ·w 'd~41 JO .\UV t'&#13;
~ Wednesday, Dec. 3, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Swimmers .heat Lawrence&#13;
by Bruce Wagner · second m that event. She also Pietkievitch's· Ri h K placed d · , c aws won&#13;
secon m the 100 the 200 fly; and the 400 free team&#13;
Parks1.de's women swim team backstroke. of Te h M h . w·l . sc , ar eme 1 bershide d their season on a bad note ~ynn Petersen took over for and Kwas. ' •&#13;
enrthe men started their season Gdi~ Olson i~. the one meter Second place finishers were&#13;
i-i ood one as Lawrence beat vmg competition and placed in Marheine in the 50 free; Mike&#13;
Clll aw~men, 51-32, and lost to the ~he second spot. Lynn was third Hawley in the one meter diving&#13;
rnen, 66-37, in a meet held at m the 50 free, and 100 fly. competitions· Krueger in the 200&#13;
Lawrence. . In the men's ~ompetition, they back; and Hamm in the 200&#13;
1 the women's events, Sandi &lt;:ame through with their first win breast stroke.&#13;
n g placed second in the 200 m. two years, taking nine out of Next action will be in a home&#13;
Cr and lOO free; was third in the thirteen events and managing to meet with North Park this&#13;
: free and was in . the seco~d place new records. Saturday and an away meet with&#13;
p1ace 200 free relay team with Bob Tesch broke two records in NAIA power Chicago State next&#13;
M y Beth Leitch, Lynn the 1000 free and 500 free of 12:25 Wednesday.&#13;
:~rson, and her sister S?eila.- .1 (1000 free) and 5:47.0 (500&#13;
gieila also placed second m !}1e free). ·&#13;
100 intermediate Medley (which Other first places came in the&#13;
was won by Leitch) and 400 free. · 400 medley relay, comprised of&#13;
Craig also placed in the 100 fly. Keith Krueger, Bob Marheine,&#13;
Including the 100 IM win, Rich Kwas, and Jim Wilberwtch&#13;
also broke a record in the shide; 200 free, swam by Rich&#13;
50(reewith a time of 29.9, placing Hamm; one meter diving. John&#13;
ook co-op can&#13;
£fer s·avings&#13;
by Jeffrey J. Swencki&#13;
KENOSHA..PARKSIDE-AACI&#13;
BICENTENNIAL LECTURES&#13;
11(,td,cd ~•-•e-i&#13;
'''/k,rl~~-&#13;
4#4 tk. 'flt~ 1••,uu,.tuc"&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
Communication Am Theater&#13;
University of Wisconsin--Poricside&#13;
D&#13;
No pennit is r~uir-ed for poricing ofter 7 p.m.&#13;
ber 9&#13;
Beginning Monday, December&#13;
1 there will be a book exchange&#13;
~ up on the mid level of Main&#13;
Place according to student Kai&#13;
all, coordinator. The hours will&#13;
be from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and&#13;
fmn 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. It will run&#13;
111til mid January.&#13;
1 course number. All or most books&#13;
for the spring semester will be&#13;
listed. Members may exchange&#13;
books for books or buy and sell&#13;
them. The purpose of the exchange&#13;
is to bring together&#13;
students who need books other&#13;
students may have, and to save&#13;
them money on next semester's&#13;
books, Nall explained.&#13;
Free checking ... Free checks·&#13;
No minimum balance&#13;
Students can become members&#13;
of the co--0p by one of two&#13;
methods, payment of $1, or by&#13;
w&lt;rlting one three hour shift at&#13;
tbe table in Main Place. Only&#13;
members may use the exchange.&#13;
A member wishing to exchange&#13;
fills out a card with his or&#13;
her name and book title. This&#13;
card is then filed under the&#13;
The price suggested by the&#13;
service will be between the&#13;
bookstore's buy back price and&#13;
the resale price. - Also&#13;
by using the exchange a student&#13;
need not sell anybook until after&#13;
classes end. A book may remain&#13;
on the list if it is not sold and the&#13;
student keeps possession of the&#13;
book until it is sold, said Nall.&#13;
URBAN PLANNI_NG RECRUITING&#13;
Dr. Sammis White, Associate Professor in the Department of&#13;
Urban Planning at UW-Milwaukee, will be at Parkside on&#13;
Friday, December 5, 1975 at the Career Planning &amp; Placement&#13;
Office, PallettHallfrom 2:00-3:30. He will be glad to meet with&#13;
any undergraduate seniors interested in hearing about an&#13;
innovative program leading to a Master's Degree in Urban&#13;
Planning at UW-Milwaukee. Undergraduate seniors can be&#13;
from any field of study.&#13;
On th. outside looking in ...&#13;
Roggs ftons from MALE°Rl! MALE (!i:&#13;
molc11 'em inside out and MALE @&#13;
molcts 'tm tough, in pre-washed&#13;
denim with over~dged contrast&#13;
thr•od everywhere on seams, on&#13;
P0&lt;kth, on more seams, .on belt loops,&#13;
ond more seams! Super fit . Pick this&#13;
style or from several great fashion&#13;
loolcs from MALE It. in washouts or&#13;
conjs at Gene's Limited. Gene's&#13;
limited hos the people with&#13;
knowhow - people who&#13;
rtolly wont lo help you&#13;
th00se · Come in now.&#13;
Wt'II make you feel&#13;
UOOd about yourself.&#13;
I THE BRANO NAME lt#ale •&#13;
I :NOTES APPAREL MANUFACTURED&#13;
ATLH-K CORPORATION. ANTA. GA Limited&#13;
FOR YOUR CO 'VENIE CE ... EXTRA BA KI GH&#13;
Our entire office including lobby and drh· -in&#13;
Monday-Thursday 7 :00-5: 30&#13;
OPE Friday . . . . . . . . . 7:00-8:00&#13;
Saturday ............ . 8:00-. oon&#13;
At 11\e ol H w•vs 11 nG JI&#13;
. .. ('3"&#13;
a141•1d,u ,.&#13;
,•Jt '1 " Ul" II&#13;
pnu ' . 11 '"&#13;
;!Ullj ,1• ',!,dljl JO \U~ t&#13;
l.j UI ('; Ol t,, t &lt;,&#13;
• WI J&#13;
JO pc 4 • . \jl(l: 4 l' !OJ&#13;
,•1pp1w dl.jl u 011 l4lf!H&#13;
R&#13;
... -Genes --------------- c---c Distributed by E. F. Madrigrano 1831-SSth Kenosha, WI&#13;
Villa Capri Plaza, Kenosha, Wis. 551-9945 &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday. Dec. 3. 1975&#13;
Boxing club teaches students&#13;
ways of controlled aggr~ssion&#13;
Tim Ramseier, a sophomore have been supplied to the boxers&#13;
English major, agreed with by the athletic department. ~&#13;
Pomaxal's theory calling the After a long workout on the&#13;
club, "one way to get rid of the light bag, members can proceed&#13;
everyday tensions and pent-up to work with the heavy bag, held&#13;
aggressioos." The Wednesday most times by either Pomazal or&#13;
sessioos (3-5 p.m.) seem to luIfill another member of the club.&#13;
that need. After that, members spar against&#13;
Entering one of these workouts each other, refereed by Pomazal,&#13;
is an en\I8htenin8 eJPl!rieDCeinto who stops the matches whenever&#13;
the world of basing. Members he sees something wrong in&#13;
work with pomazal in all aspects footwork or hand position. After&#13;
of the sport. pomazal is COIl- everyone has a chance to spar,&#13;
cerned with "getting the buies some members chanenge.&#13;
down," along with teacbing Pomazal.&#13;
respect for controlled aggressioo. Parkside's boxing team may&#13;
Although the club is not in- not be able to teach you&#13;
volved with any partlcipatioo everything you wanted to know&#13;
against other teams. it does about psychology and&#13;
expect to attend the tryouts for aggressioo, but it certainly can&#13;
the Golden Gloves Tournament in remove some of those built-up&#13;
Mnwaukee. To this end, the . tensions.&#13;
Physical Education staff, said ._--------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- ... Pomazal, "has given lots of PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
cooperation to us." The boxing&#13;
clubs members have various types of equipment to work wilb invites you to S-T-R-E-T-C- your food doll 'H&#13;
in and aroond the gym area. A&#13;
Ught punching bag is hung in the&#13;
weight room while a heavy bag&#13;
can be hung in the gym's third&#13;
section. Gloves and jump ropes&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
The human personality reacts&#13;
two buic drlves. thooe of sex&#13;
IIld aggressioo. according to&#13;
SIcJnUnd Freud. Freud. ca11ed by&#13;
many the "father" of modem&#13;
pey~, He would have&#13;
loved the Parkside Boxing Club's&#13;
approach to that sport of&#13;
1Ial1cufb. which is UDder the&#13;
dir.ction of advisor Ricbard&#13;
Pomaa1. an aaaiIlant prole..-&#13;
01 pa,dlolaCY.&#13;
What, you may uk. is a&#13;
peychologyprofeoaor doing with&#13;
a bos.InI club' Pomazal Is a&#13;
former Golden Gloves champ!oo&#13;
!roUI MUwaukee who, instead of&#13;
turnIn8 proleasiooalwhen he was&#13;
an undergraduate student, went&#13;
to .raduat school at the&#13;
Unlvero!ty of I1Iinol.s. Th.... he&#13;
ived his Ph. 0.. before&#13;
eornlng to Parksid. two years&#13;
o.&#13;
Curtng poma.al's graduat.&#13;
days, he tarled a boxing club as&#13;
a way of .UmJnaUng or working,&#13;
out a.... on. Pomazal f.lt&#13;
there waa a si.mllar inter t in&#13;
boxing her • hence the club,&#13;
wldrh Is In lis ond year.&#13;
r&#13;
Gordon's Auto 'Iris, Inc,&#13;
DISCOUNT TO STUDENTS&#13;
Phone 632-8841&#13;
Phone 631-8882&#13;
1214 Lathrop Ave.&#13;
1400 Milw. Ave.&#13;
We're just arou&#13;
the corner&#13;
from Parkside&#13;
Birch Rd&#13;
at&#13;
16th Ave&#13;
551-7660&#13;
Try our COllege&#13;
Econom&#13;
Pizza&#13;
SPECIAL THIS FRIDAY&#13;
and every Friday&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT&#13;
FISH 'N CHIP&#13;
WLLC BUFFET ROOM&#13;
Located on NE corner of build'&#13;
Free&#13;
Gifts! I&#13;
U(~I(~will be Brocdcostlnq&#13;
live from One Sweet Dream&#13;
on records.&#13;
topes, pipes,&#13;
jewelry, tapestries,&#13;
leather goods.&#13;
all lamps and more ...&#13;
OPEN&#13;
FREE&#13;
Hot Chocolate,&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Dec. 3, 197S&#13;
..,._ ........... g c uh teaches students&#13;
controlled aggression&#13;
have been supplied to the boxers&#13;
by the athletic department.&#13;
After a long workout on the&#13;
light bag, members can proceed&#13;
to work with the heavy bag, held&#13;
most times by either Pomazal or&#13;
another member of the club.&#13;
After that, members spar against&#13;
each other, refereed by Pomazal,&#13;
who stops the matches whenev~r&#13;
he sees something wrong m&#13;
footwork or hand position. After&#13;
everyone has a chance to spar,&#13;
some members challenge _&#13;
Pomazal.&#13;
Parltside's boxing team may&#13;
not be able to teach you&#13;
everything you wanted to know&#13;
about psychology and&#13;
aggression, but it certainly can&#13;
th Gol n GI ·es Tournament in remove some of those built-up&#13;
11 u ee. To this end, the · tensions.&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
crECH&#13;
We're just around&#13;
the corner&#13;
from Parkside&#13;
Birch Rd.&#13;
at&#13;
16th Ave.&#13;
551-7660&#13;
Try our College&#13;
Econom Pizza&#13;
Ph)&#13;
Pommal, l Education ·'h given taff, lots said of -----------~~~~~~~~~~~!"--~ PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE r t to . " The boxing&#13;
rnem rs have various&#13;
pment to ri with&#13;
and round the gym area. A&#13;
'wnr1&#13;
kiru,. light punching bag is hung in the&#13;
ht room hile a heavy bag&#13;
n be hung in th gym's third&#13;
t . GI · and jump ropes&#13;
Cordon' A to Parts,, .&#13;
DISCOUNT TO STUDENTS&#13;
one 32-8 214 athrop Ave.&#13;
P one 37- 882 40 ilw. Ave.&#13;
invites you to S-T-R-E-T-C-H your food dolla&#13;
SPECIAL THIS FRIDAY&#13;
and every Friday&#13;
• ° FISH 'N CHIP&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT&#13;
81.39&#13;
WLLC BUFFET ROOM&#13;
Located on NE corner of huildin&#13;
Free&#13;
Gifts!&#13;
UV.~li(~ will be Broadcasting&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
DEALS&#13;
EVERY&#13;
HOUR.!!&#13;
Live from One Sweet Dream&#13;
on records,&#13;
tapes, pipes,&#13;
jewelry, tapestries,&#13;
leather goods,&#13;
oil lamps, and more ...&#13;
OPEN&#13;
365 Days&#13;
a Year 1./t:.&#13;
FREE </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 4, issue 14, December 3, 1975</text>
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              <text>Experimental play is absurd, incomprehensible, successful</text>
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              <text>The Parkside&#13;
The Parkside RANGER&#13;
THf PARKSIDE RANGtR IS A STUOINT PUBIICATION Of THl UNIVERSITY 0( WISCONSIN - PARRSIDC vol. IV No. 15&#13;
Books once trashed&#13;
will now be used&#13;
Experimental play is absurd,&#13;
incomprehensible, successful&#13;
byBillRobbins&#13;
Absurdity assumed new and&#13;
extravagant porportions for&#13;
those who witnessed the "experimental&#13;
production" of&#13;
Bertrold Brecht's, The Elephant&#13;
Calf, performed last week in CAD155a.&#13;
The entire production,&#13;
from sound effects to staged&#13;
insanity, was created, organized,&#13;
and sponsored by Parkside&#13;
students. The students deserve&#13;
commendation: transforming the&#13;
Media Production Studio into a&#13;
convincing madhouse, complete&#13;
with an obsequious transvestite,&#13;
a referee banana tree, a buxom&#13;
Bronx prostitute, a psychotic&#13;
elephant calf...&#13;
Well, that takes a bit of doing.&#13;
If anybody desired a&#13;
reasonably rational explanation&#13;
to the lunacy surrounding them,&#13;
they got it in the opening 3rd line.&#13;
"Whoever can't immediately&#13;
understand the plot needn't fret,&#13;
it's incomprehensible."&#13;
That statement gave little&#13;
comfort however, to an all but&#13;
stupified audience. Clustered&#13;
intimately around the small,&#13;
platformed, stage the playgoers&#13;
found themselves sitting among&#13;
another kind of audience, one&#13;
written into the script. This,&#13;
"cast audience," continually&#13;
bufst into unexpected cries of&#13;
dissatisfaction, at first demanding&#13;
the play to begin, then&#13;
condemning it when it was over.&#13;
To complicate matters further, a&#13;
sprinkling of gaudily dressed,&#13;
"ladies of the evening," circulated&#13;
through the audience, at&#13;
times offering their wares to&#13;
Symphonic band will&#13;
present concert Th.&#13;
The 70-piece Parkside Symphonic&#13;
Band under the direction&#13;
of Robert Thomason will present&#13;
its fall concert at 7:30 p.m. on&#13;
Thursday, Dec. 11, in the Comm&#13;
Arts Theater. The program is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
The program will include&#13;
"Them Basses," a march by&#13;
G.H. Huffine; "Divertimento for&#13;
Band" by Vincent Persichetti;&#13;
"Overture and Caccia" by Gian&#13;
Carlo Menotti; "Second Suite in&#13;
F for Military Band" by Gustav&#13;
Hoist; "Colas Breugnon" by&#13;
Dmitri Kabaievsky; 'Manzoni&#13;
Requiem" by Guiseppe Verdi;&#13;
and "National Emblem," a&#13;
march by E.E.Bagley.&#13;
unsuspecting individuals.&#13;
Ostensibly, the overriding but&#13;
difficult to detect theme of the&#13;
play dealt with, "the loss of&#13;
personal identity and the&#13;
dehumanization of the individual."&#13;
If this helps: An&#13;
elephant calf is accused of&#13;
murdering its mother. Although&#13;
mama elephant strolls on stage,&#13;
obviously alive, Banana Tree&#13;
insists on proving that elephant&#13;
calf killed mama elephant. Bana&#13;
Tree cross-examines mama&#13;
elephant, who Banana Tree is&#13;
trying to prove has been murdered.&#13;
Elephant calf cuts off&#13;
Moon's hand, proving that he is&#13;
capable of m urder.&#13;
But...&#13;
It seems the play is a play&#13;
within a play. The characters go&#13;
to a stage offstage and discuss&#13;
the reaction of the cast audience&#13;
in the audience. And so on.&#13;
All in all, the production certainly&#13;
rates acclamation as an&#13;
unforgetable experience, if not a&#13;
lucid one. The performers were&#13;
powerful, eloquently protraying&#13;
Brecht's bizarre world of absurd&#13;
comedy. The set design, music,&#13;
and costumes were frightfully&#13;
effective. The problem is, the&#13;
play just didn't seem to make any&#13;
sense.&#13;
But, like Banana Tree says, "If&#13;
all you want to see is something&#13;
that makes sense, go to the&#13;
urinal."&#13;
by Mike Palecek&#13;
"They're throwing away&#13;
books," screamed an outraged&#13;
student over the phone last&#13;
Monday. "The bookstore is&#13;
throwing hundreds of books&#13;
away, and I thought you should&#13;
know."&#13;
It was true, literally hundreds&#13;
of books littered a red 'big mouth'&#13;
trash compactor near the&#13;
Classroom Building loading dock,&#13;
on December 1.&#13;
According to Paul Hoffman,&#13;
bookstore manager, these books&#13;
were unsellable, and&#13;
unrecyclable. Hoffman said he&#13;
tried selling them at a greatly&#13;
reduced price, tried to get&#13;
salvaging companies to take&#13;
them, and tried selling them to&#13;
the Follette Book Company and&#13;
several publishers and clearing&#13;
houses.&#13;
Hoffman sold $14,000 worth of&#13;
books to other publishers and&#13;
supply houses for $4,000, the most&#13;
he could get for the books. Some&#13;
$4,000 worth of books remained&#13;
unsold.&#13;
Hoffman then slashed prices on&#13;
books several times in the&#13;
University Bookstore in an attempt&#13;
to sell them. Currently, the&#13;
last of such sales is being held on&#13;
campus, with books reduced to 39&#13;
cents per pound.&#13;
Then, Hoffman contacted&#13;
salvaging companies to take the&#13;
books to be recycled. The Racine&#13;
Salvaging Company said they&#13;
couldn't take the books. "The&#13;
bindings won't recycle."&#13;
They stated it was possible to&#13;
recycle books by taking off the&#13;
bindings. This can only be done&#13;
by, "running them through a&#13;
table saw."&#13;
But the company wouldn't take&#13;
the books. They do not have the&#13;
manpower to do the job, and the&#13;
grade paper, a magazine glossy&#13;
stock of most of the books, is&#13;
unrecyclable. "Magazine paper&#13;
and carbon paper, just throw it&#13;
away," an official said.&#13;
"Sure, it can be chemically&#13;
broken down, but by the time the&#13;
glossy is eliminated, there's no&#13;
paper left," he said.&#13;
Hoffman said that such companies&#13;
as Goodwill Industries&#13;
aren't in the book business,&#13;
especially the college textbooks&#13;
business. After a phone call,&#13;
Goodwill was more than willing&#13;
to not only accept the books, but&#13;
to pick them up at Parkside.&#13;
Hoffman commented, "Well, I&#13;
am glad that somebody will be&#13;
able to use them. Besides it gets&#13;
them off my hands. You know, I&#13;
really hate to throw books away.&#13;
I really do. It's against every&#13;
principle we grew up with about&#13;
books."&#13;
Hoffman stated that his boss&#13;
told him that he had to get rid of&#13;
the books because they were&#13;
taking up needed storage space&#13;
that could be put to better use. He&#13;
said the books were all. old textbooks&#13;
that the previous manager&#13;
bought back from students and&#13;
couldn't resell because the books&#13;
were never used again for&#13;
courses. "It was just bad&#13;
business," he said, "but that's&#13;
one of the things that we don't try&#13;
to t alk about."&#13;
Photo by Mike Nepper&#13;
Hi 'I-f sJISpilifc &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday Dec. 10, 1975&#13;
byDebraFriedell&#13;
ChanceUor Guskin has served his first semester at Parkside.&#13;
Probably the best word to describe how we have received him. is&#13;
« K is a shame we wasted ourselves so often&#13;
contributing to an atmosphere of mistrust while he himself has been 5LJL7SSS!&#13;
1"' 1,88 vah,ed *&#13;
e taten*&#13;
em» -&#13;
Guskin is an idealist and too often we have mistaken his idealism for&#13;
naivete. He is an optimist and rather than try, we emerge ourselves in&#13;
negativism and a stubborn unwillingness to try anything different, as&#13;
it is easier that way and the chance for disappointment is less.&#13;
* 1&#13;
Gu&#13;
i&#13;
s&#13;
1^&#13;
n has Siven all constituencies added responsibilities&#13;
and control. Although we grabbed onto that cont rol quickly, we've&#13;
n ^ 8 P&#13;
°°&#13;
r attitude t0^ards others, a poor attitude about the&#13;
institution in general, and a poor att itude about the ideals and goals&#13;
which Guskin has s et for Parkside's future. Perhaps this directly&#13;
relates to our own poo r and negative self-co ncepts.&#13;
However, attitudes can chang e, and maybe the holiday break will&#13;
give us aU an opportunity to rejuvenat e spirit Our goa ls should be !&#13;
C^ J?&#13;
1 8&#13;
gamier towards meaningful coexistence;&#13;
mutual trust, respect and dedication; and a willingness to compromise.&#13;
&#13;
Attitude change is especially needed about student organization and&#13;
between student organizations.&#13;
Organizations need further financial and programming assistance.&#13;
TOey need support and encouragement in their struggle for existence.&#13;
This concern must come from all of us and it will have to be visible and&#13;
sincere.&#13;
^Finally, attitude change is needed about Parkside and a recognition&#13;
tiiat we ourselves are the Institution. We together are responsible for&#13;
its failures and its accomplishments, for its shame and guilt and for its&#13;
pride, we are responsible for its growth and whatever that growth has&#13;
brought and will yet bring.&#13;
Whether or not we will progress constructi vely depends upon a&#13;
constructive attitude.&#13;
And this is what we will have to work on.&#13;
Students contribute&#13;
to make paper&#13;
This is RANGER'S 15th and final issue for the&#13;
semester, and although the rumor that Parkside&#13;
students are uninvolved has floated in and out of our&#13;
offices during the past 15 weeks, we have not found that&#13;
to be true.&#13;
It has always been the dedication of many people that&#13;
has made RANGER possible and more students have&#13;
participated this semester than any other. While the&#13;
readers and writers are the foundation of any&#13;
newspaper, without the students who volunteered their&#13;
time in other ways, production would not have been&#13;
possible. Four times per week, RANGER needed a&#13;
student to drive to our printer in Zion and we always had&#13;
students who were willing. Students helped distribute&#13;
papers on campus, sold advertising during crucial&#13;
weeks, called information to our attention, and did&#13;
various types of work that had to be done in order to&#13;
produce a paper weekly.&#13;
RANGER encourages Parkside students to remain&#13;
interested in their newspaper as well as other campus&#13;
activities, projects, and committees.&#13;
It is because of the involvement of some, that concern&#13;
spreads, and change, where needed, can be made.&#13;
VE PEG&#13;
THE PARKSIDE GGlILjliLJ&#13;
r The PARKSIDE RANGER is written and edited by the students of&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside And they are solely responsible&#13;
for its editorial policy and content. Offices are located in D194 WLLC,&#13;
IJ.W. Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Phones 5 53-2295, 5 53-2287.&#13;
Acting Editor : Debra Friedell&#13;
Feature Editor: Mik e Palecek&#13;
Sports Director: Th orn Aiello&#13;
Events Column: Judy Tru drung&#13;
Business Manager: Ann Ver stegen&#13;
Ad make-up:'D iane Werwie&#13;
Ad sale s: Harry Dingfelder Donzell Holt Orin Taylor&#13;
Writers: Jeannine Sipsma, Steve Smith, Leigh Feifer,&#13;
Fred Johnson, Mick. Anderson, Betsy Neu, Jim&#13;
Yorgan, Carol Arentz, Catherine Blise, Bruce Wagner,&#13;
Rita Nichola s, Kurt Lar son&#13;
Photographers: Dave Daniels, A 1 Fredricksen Gordon Mcinto sh&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On December 1, approximately&#13;
3:45 p.m., an incident occurred&#13;
which is resulting in this complaint.&#13;
After playing raquetball,&#13;
we went to the Issue Room with&#13;
the intention of rese rving a court&#13;
for December 2. At that time, Jim&#13;
Eils was working. We asked to&#13;
see the sign up sheet for open&#13;
times; a seemingly reasonable&#13;
request, as we have done that&#13;
many times before. We were&#13;
refused. We th en explained that&#13;
because it was so late (less than&#13;
24 hours until the time we would&#13;
play) it would be easier to see the&#13;
open times. He again refused,&#13;
more nastily than before, saying&#13;
that the sheet did not belong at&#13;
the front counter. Since we&#13;
wanted to avoid a confrontation,&#13;
we then mentioned that the afternoon&#13;
was a feasible time. He&#13;
came back acidly with the&#13;
comment, "That wasn't so hard&#13;
now, was it?" He then picked up&#13;
the sign up sheet (under the front&#13;
counter), looked at it, threw it on&#13;
the back desk, and said that all&#13;
the times were filled. As he&#13;
picked up the sheet, however, it&#13;
was obvious to both of us that&#13;
there were many open times. We&#13;
later verified this through the&#13;
administrative offices.&#13;
Our concern, and the main&#13;
reason for this complaint, is that&#13;
both of us being Parkside&#13;
students, were refused a&#13;
privilege that we have a right to,&#13;
merely on the whims and temper&#13;
of one man. When we inquired&#13;
later, we were told that ours was&#13;
not a unique experience. We feel&#13;
that some positive action should&#13;
be taken, and a guarantee given&#13;
that something like this will not&#13;
happen again, either to ourselves&#13;
or to any other Parkside&#13;
students.&#13;
Thank you,&#13;
Ronald J. Bayer&#13;
1401 Meadowbrook Blvd.&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53405&#13;
Eric J. Weiss&#13;
3709 N. Wisconsin Ave.&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53402 &#13;
by Thorn Aiello&#13;
The Parkside basketball team&#13;
came out of its first week of&#13;
action a bit tired, but looking&#13;
good. The Rangers lost last&#13;
Wednesday evening to Western&#13;
Michigan, a powerful major&#13;
college, by a 77-74 margin. Then&#13;
on Friday night the Rangers&#13;
played their first home game of&#13;
the season, beating Grand Valley&#13;
State College, 68-59.&#13;
Against Western Michigan the&#13;
Rangers held a 39-37 half time&#13;
lead, and were leading 51-49 with&#13;
13:26 left in the contest. But then&#13;
the Mid-America Conference&#13;
favorites reeled off 10 points in a&#13;
row and staved-off Parkside the&#13;
rest of the way. Western, playing&#13;
on its home court in Kalamazoo,&#13;
increased its record to 2-0 w ith&#13;
the win.&#13;
The Rangers were&#13;
o u tre b o u n d e d, 37-33&#13;
in the contest, as Western&#13;
featured a tall front line. Tom&#13;
Cutter, 6-8 center, scored 21&#13;
• • • 3..P points for Western, and Jeff&#13;
Tyson added 16 points. Forward&#13;
Paul Griffin 6-9, was a key&#13;
rebounder for Western.&#13;
Parkside was hurt in the game&#13;
by Gary Cole being in foul trouble&#13;
for most of t he contest. With the&#13;
limited playing-time Cole scored&#13;
only 12 points. But the leadingscorer's&#13;
absence seemed to&#13;
awake Leartha Scott. The 6-4&#13;
flashy forward scored 31 points&#13;
after netting only 15 total in the&#13;
first two games.&#13;
The game against Grand&#13;
Valley State was Parkside's&#13;
fourth in seven days, and the&#13;
heavy schedule was evident in&#13;
the play of the Rangers. Although&#13;
the Rangers dominated the&#13;
boards with a 46-33 edge over the&#13;
Lakers rebounding, there were&#13;
many turnovers, as well as the&#13;
lack of Parkside's usual crisp&#13;
play. The Rangers shot only 39&#13;
percent, compared to 46 p ercent&#13;
in the previous three games.&#13;
In an effort to rest some of t he&#13;
regulars for later in the game,&#13;
Ranger coach Steve Stephens&#13;
used 10 players in the first half. In&#13;
Parkside's Leartha Scott, 31, rises above the Grand Valley crowd to&#13;
put one in the hoop for the Rangers.&#13;
Photo by Dave Daniels&#13;
the half, freshman forward&#13;
Marvin Chones got his first large&#13;
share of playing time and proved&#13;
to be the needed spark, as he&#13;
contributed 8 points. Chones&#13;
ended the evening hitting on 4 of 6&#13;
from the floor. Of Chones,&#13;
Stephens said he was "very&#13;
pleased with his performance."&#13;
Parkside led at the half, 32-27,&#13;
due largely by its fine defensive&#13;
play, which was showcased&#13;
throughout the night. Malcolm&#13;
Mahone, a senior guard, was one&#13;
of the players Stephens singledout&#13;
after the game for his "intensity"&#13;
and hustle on defense.&#13;
Stephens said his squad,&#13;
"sparked a little bit," at the start&#13;
of the second half when the&#13;
Rangersjumped out to a 38-29&#13;
advantage. But the Lakers&#13;
refused to roll over and play&#13;
dead, as they kept chopping at&#13;
the margin.&#13;
The Rangers, now 3-1, held onto&#13;
the lead though, scoring when it&#13;
was necessary. Cole, the sensational&#13;
6-9 forward, finished the&#13;
night with a game-high 19 points,&#13;
13 of those in the first half. Scott&#13;
added 16 points, Bill Sobanski had&#13;
8, Chones ended with 8, Mahone&#13;
scored 7, Joe Foots and Stevie&#13;
King had 4, and Marshall Hill&#13;
added 2. Cole grabbed 11&#13;
rebounds, while Sobanski pulleddown&#13;
8 and Foots had 6.&#13;
For Grnad Valley, 0-3, Don&#13;
Myles scored 18 points and&#13;
snarred 7 rebounds to lead his&#13;
club in both categories. Tony&#13;
Smith chipped-in with 16 points&#13;
and Sid Bruinsma added 13.&#13;
The Rangers play tonight,&#13;
Tuesday, at St. Norbert's Van&#13;
Dyke Gym. St. Norbert will be led&#13;
by a 7-foot center, as it tries to&#13;
gain revenge for the two defeats&#13;
the Rangers gave them last&#13;
season. Game time is 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Parkside returns home this&#13;
Saturday, at 7:30 p.m., against&#13;
UW-Oshkosh, who features a&#13;
"wing" player named Sims, who&#13;
Stephens described as, "a great&#13;
shooter, a super scorer."&#13;
Over Christmas break the&#13;
Rangers will be involved in one of&#13;
the tpp small college tournaments&#13;
in the country, the&#13;
Quincy College Tournament, in&#13;
Quincy, 111. The games, involving&#13;
three other to-notch schools, will&#13;
be played Dec. 26-28. The&#13;
powerful Rangers also play St.&#13;
Xavier College, UW-Platteville,&#13;
UW-White water, and the&#13;
University of Detroit in the first&#13;
few weeks of January.&#13;
Monday, Dec. 8 - Friday, Dec. 12: Academic Planning Week at the&#13;
Counseling Out-post, Greenquist concourse; 9 a.m. - 4 p.m., 6-8 p.m.&#13;
Timetables and help available.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 10: Christmas bake sale from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in&#13;
V Concourse by the Sweete Shoppe Sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Fellowship.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 10: Psychology Club business meeting at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
WLLC 174.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 10: Student Concert at 3:30 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 10: A.I.M. leader, Herb Powless will speak in the&#13;
CAT at 8 p.m.&#13;
Thursday, Dec. 11: Parkside Concert Band at 7:30 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Free.&#13;
Friday, Dec. 12: Psychology Club Christmas party at 3 p.m. at&#13;
Smitty's Tavern. Free beer for members, 75 cents for non-members.&#13;
Friday, Dec. 12: Fashion Showcase "75" and "76" at 7 p.m.&#13;
Friday, Dec. 12: Fashion Showcase "75" and "76" at 7 p.m. in the&#13;
CAT. Sponsored by the Third World Organization.&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 13: Basketball game, Parkside vs. U&amp;Oshkosh at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in the P.E. Bldg. Admission charge.&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
FOR SALE: Long green velvet dress with&#13;
bodice and long sleevUs of lace. Size 11-12,&#13;
never worn. 654-7807.&#13;
AKC CAIRN TERRIER PUPS. Like "Toto"&#13;
in the "Wizard of Oz. NO shed, NO clip, easy&#13;
care coat. Grand-sire No. 1 dog in the&#13;
country. Ready to go by Christmas, $150.&#13;
Julie, 633-0929.&#13;
FOR SALE -- 1970 VW Van, all set up for&#13;
camping. Asking $1,000. Phone 633-5812, ask&#13;
for Carl. Nightly except Wed.&#13;
Drummer and female guitarist seeking&#13;
versatile guitarist or pianist to form pop trio.&#13;
Call David Wentzell, 681-0707&#13;
WANTED: a used typewriter in good to&#13;
excellent condition. Call 694-8329 after 6 p.m.&#13;
FOR RENT: 2 leases in Parkside Village,&#13;
only $60 per month-furnished , utilities and&#13;
parking included; available anytime. 639-&#13;
5458 nights.&#13;
RIDERS WANTED: to LaCrosse area&#13;
Saturday A.M., 12-13-75, returning Monday,&#13;
12-15-75 call John Whyte at 654-5533.&#13;
FEMALE looking for roomate(s) with apt.&#13;
preferably in Kenosha are. Contact Sani at&#13;
554-5246.&#13;
TYPING, 30 cents per page, one carbon&#13;
copy, minor corrections. Call Dolores&#13;
Hrouda, 633-9409 or 639-6958 - 1919 Taylor&#13;
Ave., Racine.&#13;
FOR SALE: 196/ Dodge Coronet, must sell.&#13;
New tires, good running condition, $350. Call&#13;
657-3411.&#13;
FOR SALE: Kelvinator gas range and 1965&#13;
Plymouth Sattelite, 2-door, 383, 4 speed. 633-&#13;
1754.&#13;
Female with 2 bedroom apartment looklnc&#13;
is2 Sd ipCal1 evenin&#13;
gs 652-7120 or day:&#13;
652 3322 and leave message for L. Messing&#13;
SKI'S FOR SALE: Kastle ski's with Look&#13;
Nevada bindings. Good condition. $100. Call&#13;
637-6232.&#13;
For the be§t selection of Commercial and&#13;
Progressive Rock, Jazz, and dynamite&#13;
underground Imported Albums and Tapes.&#13;
Check out Chris Chapman in care of&#13;
Freeman's One Stop Record Mart. Call 657-&#13;
7212 Chapman guarantees LOW prices for all&#13;
new releases. Can you get to that? Dig it!&#13;
Typing done in my home. Contact Ginny at&#13;
637-7796.&#13;
Record i* 3-7&#13;
Wednesday Dec. 10, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Cagers beat Grand Valley, face UW-Oshkosh &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday Dec. 10, 1975&#13;
Parents learn of educational,&#13;
personal problems of LD child&#13;
Because their children are&#13;
having problems with grade&#13;
school work, about 20 parents&#13;
enrolled^ at Parkside this fall&#13;
They Have just completed a&#13;
special six-week course designed&#13;
to help them understand and cope&#13;
with the particular problems&#13;
their children face in trying to&#13;
realize their academic potential.&#13;
The course, Parents of&#13;
Children with Learning&#13;
Disabilities, was taught by Diane&#13;
German, director of the Learning&#13;
Disabilities program, and June&#13;
Reinert, faculty member in&#13;
Learning Disabilities.&#13;
German said the pilot course&#13;
had a two-fold purpose:&#13;
providing a service needed by the&#13;
parents and giving Parkside&#13;
students training as Learning&#13;
Disabilities teachers an opportunity&#13;
to observe and participate&#13;
in an Inservice program&#13;
for parents.&#13;
"The child who has been&#13;
Partners is program&#13;
for ex-offender&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
The federal government is&#13;
funding a Kenosha program of&#13;
exoffenders, Partners. According&#13;
to one of the program's coordinators,&#13;
Karen Seder, Partners&#13;
is modeled after similar&#13;
programs in other cities, the&#13;
most successful of which is&#13;
Denver.&#13;
Ex-offenders are paired with&#13;
community volunteers who have&#13;
something in common in as far as&#13;
interests and hobbies are concerned,&#13;
as well as age and sex.&#13;
Programs for the volunteer will&#13;
be given periodically, the first&#13;
beginning in January: The&#13;
purpose of these programs will be&#13;
to give the volunteer an understanding&#13;
of the judical system&#13;
and incarceration facilities so&#13;
that the volunteer will have some&#13;
knowledge as to the system the&#13;
Wrestlers&#13;
are 2nd&#13;
in tourney&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
The Parkside-sponsored&#13;
Wisconsin Intercollegiate&#13;
Tournament found wrestling&#13;
coach Jim Koch a, "little&#13;
disappointed," about the&#13;
Rangers' showing, but still found&#13;
two champs and an overall&#13;
second place finish, behind UWWhitewater.&#13;
&#13;
At 118 pounds, senior Rich&#13;
Schaumberg, who was 25-4 last&#13;
season and missed the NAIA&#13;
championships due to a late&#13;
season injury, won his first&#13;
championship of the season.&#13;
Both sophomore Dan O'Connell&#13;
and senior Rico Savaglio wormed&#13;
their way through the pack,&#13;
meeting each other in one of the&#13;
night's most exciting matches in&#13;
the 126 lb. finals. Savaglio, a&#13;
three-time WIT winner at 126,&#13;
was defeated in overtime by&#13;
O'Connell, 2-1.&#13;
Other placings for the Rangers&#13;
were: senior Joe Landers, who&#13;
was upset in the semifinals, but&#13;
came back to win the third place&#13;
championship at 134. Junior&#13;
college transfer Scott Hintz, at&#13;
142, and freshman John Gale, at&#13;
190, also won a third place. Gale&#13;
lost a close decision to the&#13;
defending champion in the semifinals.&#13;
&#13;
Senior Brad Freberg, at 177&#13;
lbs., was fourth, adding to the&#13;
final scoring for the second place&#13;
Rangers.&#13;
Koch cited a, "need for improvement,"&#13;
and that the&#13;
Rangers should be ready for&#13;
anyone as the season goes along.&#13;
ex-offender has had to deal with.&#13;
All ex-offenders will be on either&#13;
probation or parole from various&#13;
city and state institutions. They&#13;
too will volunteer to be part of the&#13;
program.&#13;
Sedar explained that in&#13;
Kenosha, 68 percent of those&#13;
sentenced to the city jail or&#13;
prisons, return, after having once&#13;
been released. She said that the&#13;
success in other cities is based on&#13;
volunteers who are not turned int&#13;
oprobation officers but are&#13;
friends with the ex-offender.&#13;
For more information contact&#13;
either Seder or Marc Colby at 657-&#13;
3142 or at 5825 6th Ave., Kenosha.&#13;
"PIZZA&#13;
TECH&#13;
diagnosed as having a Learning&#13;
Disability is a child who has&#13;
average or above average intelligence,&#13;
but is not achieving in&#13;
school because of either a perceptual&#13;
problem, language&#13;
problem, memory problem or&#13;
conceptual problem," German&#13;
said. "This child does have&#13;
adequate visual and auditory&#13;
acuity."&#13;
Symptoms of Learning&#13;
Disabilities may include poor&#13;
reading, writing, math and&#13;
language skills, as well as&#13;
problems in direction, spatial&#13;
orientation, and sequencing.&#13;
Because of these problems,&#13;
learning disabled children face&#13;
frequent frustration in school,&#13;
and this frustration can carry&#13;
over into behavior problems at&#13;
home, she said.&#13;
Eleanor Sill of Racine,&#13;
president of the Parents of&#13;
Children with Specific Learning&#13;
Disabilities and mother of a&#13;
junior high age LD child, called&#13;
the series "very worthwhile."&#13;
"You get a perspective which&#13;
helps you evaluate the progress&#13;
your child has made and also an&#13;
understanding of remediation&#13;
techniques (specialized teaching&#13;
methods designed for LD&#13;
children) that are used in the&#13;
continued on page 6&#13;
We're just around&#13;
the corner&#13;
from Parkside&#13;
Birch Rd.&#13;
at&#13;
16th Ave.&#13;
551-7660&#13;
Get your free Pizza&#13;
Tech Ice Scaper with&#13;
each 16" pizza you&#13;
pick up.&#13;
ge ©I lie&#13;
IMueet i§&gt;J)oppe&#13;
CLOSED DEC. 16 REOPENING JAN. 19&#13;
featuring:&#13;
a variety of your candy&#13;
and nut favorties sold&#13;
the old-fashioned way&#13;
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL&#13;
Foil Wrapped&#13;
Chocolates&#13;
OPEN:&#13;
Mon. thru Fri.&#13;
10 a.m. - 4 p.m.&#13;
located on the concourse between the Library-Learning&#13;
Center &amp; Greenquist Hall&#13;
H E I L EMAN'sj^&#13;
m Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at the Skellar&#13;
7"he Italian cook respects food. The spice&#13;
of a sauce, the fine texture of warm, fresh&#13;
bread, the consistancy of a melted cheese&#13;
sauce. For him the reward is the pleasure&#13;
of those who enjoy his work. Experience&#13;
this pleasure.&#13;
das. dxzfl&#13;
212g fBiLxc.fi cffd.,&#13;
B\Enoifa, &lt;Wul.&#13;
XL &#13;
Parkside's first masters&#13;
program is designed&#13;
Wednesday Dec. 10, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
by Mike Terry&#13;
The four major points of the&#13;
Master of Administrative&#13;
Aciences Program were&#13;
presented to Parkside students in&#13;
a meeting on December 1 in GR&#13;
103 by William Moy, Dean of th e&#13;
School of Modern Industry. The&#13;
points include the goal, the&#13;
specific objectives aimed at&#13;
achieving this goal, the&#13;
curriculum, and the admission&#13;
criteria. Approximately 40&#13;
students attended the meeting,&#13;
which was designed to present&#13;
the plans for the program and&#13;
then to answer questions during&#13;
the meeting. Moy said there was&#13;
a good deal of enthusiasm for the&#13;
-program's design.&#13;
The goal of the program is to&#13;
help functional specialists who&#13;
are operating at the entry or&#13;
lower-management levels in&#13;
business and industry prepare to&#13;
function more effectively at&#13;
middle and perhaps upper levels&#13;
of ma nagement, Moy s aid.&#13;
The specific objectives aimed&#13;
at achieving this goal are: to&#13;
develop a solid foundation in the&#13;
theoretical aspects of administration&#13;
and a comprehensive&#13;
understanding of&#13;
management processes as they&#13;
relate to working through and&#13;
with others in setting and&#13;
achieving organizational objectives.&#13;
To broaden the student's&#13;
understanding, from a&#13;
managerial point of view, of the&#13;
several primary functional areas&#13;
of business. To increase the&#13;
student's awareness of a firm's&#13;
obligations to external&#13;
organizations and their ability to&#13;
deal responsibly with these&#13;
obligations. To broaden each&#13;
student's knowledge by concentration&#13;
in a functional area&#13;
specialty.&#13;
The curriculum, initially, is&#13;
based upon offering one course a&#13;
semester, the entire program&#13;
equalling 6 courses offered over a&#13;
period of 3 years. The courses&#13;
and their tentative schedules&#13;
are: Organizational and Manpower&#13;
Development, being&#13;
taught by Robert Graham,&#13;
visiting Professor of Business&#13;
Management. This course will be&#13;
offered in the Fall of 1976.&#13;
Technological Considerations in&#13;
Product and Process Development&#13;
will be taught by Larry&#13;
Ar A*&#13;
i i * • i i Be a sporty J&#13;
j&#13;
join the J&#13;
*&#13;
Ranger staff J&#13;
j *&#13;
* * inext semester. J&#13;
* j&#13;
% I Ranger office&#13;
| *&#13;
Shirland, Assistant Professor of&#13;
Business Management. This&#13;
course is planned for the Spring&#13;
Semester of 19 77. The other four&#13;
courses are: Product Development&#13;
and Marketing&#13;
Management, slated for the Fall&#13;
of 1977; The Manager and the&#13;
External Environment, Spring of&#13;
1978; Financial Planning and&#13;
Control, Fall of 1978; and a&#13;
Functional Specialty Elective,&#13;
Spring of 1979. No instructors&#13;
have been hired for the last four&#13;
courses.&#13;
The admission criteria for the&#13;
Master's Program are: that the&#13;
student must have an undergraduate&#13;
degree in any field;&#13;
he or she must have an undergraduate&#13;
grade point average&#13;
of 3.0 or higher; the score on the&#13;
GMAT must be 500 or higher;&#13;
applicants failing to meet criteria&#13;
2 and 3, according to Moy, will be&#13;
considered for admission if t hey&#13;
present other evidence of ability&#13;
to do graduate work and the&#13;
likelihood of benefiting from the&#13;
graduate program.&#13;
Moy s aid the ideal teacher of&#13;
each course would be a president&#13;
of a compny with about 20 years&#13;
experience in the field. The instructor&#13;
of the course, of "course&#13;
coordinator," will oversee the&#13;
design of the course and the&#13;
delivery of the course. Moy added&#13;
that the course coordinators&#13;
would have, "budgets," that&#13;
would give them the ability to&#13;
bring in specialists for each individual&#13;
facet of the course. The&#13;
coordinators will be hired on the&#13;
basis of their experience and&#13;
their managerial qualifications.&#13;
Professors Graham and Shirland&#13;
had industrial experience, according&#13;
to Moy.&#13;
Before the program can be&#13;
instituted, the entire university&#13;
must be re-evaluated by the&#13;
North Central Accrediting&#13;
Association. This is slated for the&#13;
period from January 12th&#13;
through the 18th of 1976.&#13;
Moy said that the program,&#13;
which is comprised of about 20&#13;
hours of-work in the course each&#13;
week, is not intended to be&#13;
"easy." Initially, the courses will&#13;
only be offered at night. Daytime&#13;
courses may be offered in the&#13;
future if there is sufficient&#13;
demand, and if P arkside has the&#13;
resources to handle the daytime&#13;
schedule. Moy says the program,&#13;
which is comprised of six courses,&#13;
has five which are designed&#13;
to make a person a better&#13;
manager, and the other one to&#13;
help a person improve upon his or&#13;
her current position.&#13;
Asked if undergraduates who&#13;
have not graduated could sign up&#13;
for the program, Moy said "I do&#13;
not intend to have undergraduate&#13;
students in the graduate courses."&#13;
He added that possibly the&#13;
only exception would be if the&#13;
student was 3 or 6 credits away&#13;
from graduation. He said that&#13;
individual cases would have to be&#13;
worked out.&#13;
In a related development, Moy&#13;
said that the School of Modern&#13;
Industry has a long way to go&#13;
before completion. He said that it&#13;
is a, "long and cumbersome&#13;
process." The building was included&#13;
in the 1975-77 biennium of&#13;
the capital budget, and that&#13;
approval has been obtained by&#13;
Central Administration, The&#13;
Board of R egents, The Board of&#13;
Facilities Management, The&#13;
State Legislature, and The State&#13;
Building Commission. He added&#13;
that no architect has been hired&#13;
to design the building yet.&#13;
^ North view Buffet Room&#13;
Last Day Open , Dec. 19&#13;
Reopeningf Jan. 19&#13;
ATTENTION FACULTY &amp; S TAFF&#13;
DECEMBER 29 &amp; 30&#13;
Buffet Room will be open 11-1 for soup and sandwiches&#13;
due to Burger Shoppe kitchen repairs&#13;
Burger Shoppe&#13;
Regular Hours through Dec. 19&#13;
Dec. 22 &amp; 23 7:30 A.M. - 2 P.M.&#13;
Closed from Dec. 24 to Jan. 4;&#13;
Jan. 5-9 8:30 A.M. - 1:30 P.M.&#13;
Reopens regular hours on Jan. 12, 7:30 A.M. - 8 P.M. (2 P.M. Fridays)&#13;
VENDING MACHINES&#13;
Classroom Bldg. and Burger Shoppe area will be&#13;
serviced throughout the vacation period. .1&#13;
as&#13;
j * * * * * * * * *&#13;
WLLC D194&#13;
553-2295&#13;
FOR TEXTBOOKS&#13;
YOU NO LONGER NEED&#13;
Dec. 9 to Dec. 23&#13;
You get the same price on the 9th,&#13;
the 23rd or any time in between&#13;
U.W. Parkside Bookstore&#13;
Mon.-Thurs. 9:00 to 7:00&#13;
Fri. 9:00 to 5:00&#13;
Sat. 10:00 to 1:00 &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday Dec. 10, 1975&#13;
Financial aid programgets boost&#13;
The Board of Regents accepted&#13;
a total of $111,417 in gifts and&#13;
grants for the Parkside campus&#13;
last Friday, $13,008 in support of&#13;
research programs and $98,409&#13;
for student financial aid.&#13;
Research related funds include&#13;
$2,000 from the Commission on&#13;
Aging of Kenosha County in&#13;
support of a survey on needs of&#13;
the elderly in Kenosha County&#13;
under the direction of Simon Tai,&#13;
assistant professor of sociology;&#13;
$5,000 from Modine Manufacturing&#13;
Co. of Racine in support of&#13;
research and instruction in the&#13;
use of Parkside's scanning&#13;
electron microscope; and $6,008&#13;
from the National Aeronautics&#13;
and Space Administration&#13;
(NASA) in continuing support of&#13;
a study titled "Mars: Identification,&#13;
Distribution and&#13;
LD child&#13;
Signification of Volcanic Land&#13;
Forms" by Eugene I. Smith,&#13;
assistant professor of earth&#13;
science.&#13;
The latest grant brings total&#13;
NASA support of Smith's study,&#13;
initiated in 1973, to a total of&#13;
$13,472. The project is based on&#13;
analysis of photographs from the&#13;
Mariner 9 space probe and&#13;
focuses on identification of&#13;
Martian surface features. Smith,&#13;
who was involved in lunar and&#13;
planetary research before&#13;
coming to Parkside in 1972, said&#13;
Mars may provide the missing&#13;
link in the evolutionary sequence&#13;
from a small planet like the moon&#13;
to a large planet like Earth.&#13;
The Regents also accepted&#13;
$90,409 from the federal Office of&#13;
Education in support of the&#13;
college work-study program for&#13;
continued from page 4&#13;
schools," she said.&#13;
"For parents of children who&#13;
recently have been diagnosed as&#13;
learning disabled, I think the&#13;
course would have an absolutely&#13;
tremendous value, not only in&#13;
providing a great deal of information&#13;
but also in pointing out&#13;
that the parent is not alone with&#13;
his problem," she said.&#13;
Participation in the class by&#13;
Parkside students training to&#13;
teach LD children has included&#13;
both observation and an active&#13;
role in demonstrating to parents&#13;
the wide variety of diagnostic&#13;
tests used in identifying LD&#13;
children as well as specific&#13;
teaching techniques used to hlep&#13;
the LD child achieve potential.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of th e Submarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
2615 Washington Ave. 634-2373&#13;
&lt;f%|A|/)V» F'NE FOODS&#13;
|/|Ifyp &amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEAFOOD&#13;
CHOPS&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
Northside 3728 D ouglas ^&#13;
Southside 18 16-16th St .&#13;
PICK UP OR&#13;
LASAGANA&#13;
RAVIOLI&#13;
MOSTACCIOLI&#13;
GNOCCHI&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBUiRGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT DRINKS&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS&#13;
DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME&#13;
WINES&#13;
The Skellar&#13;
CLOSED FOR SE MESTER&#13;
Beginning D ec. 1 6 - Reupening Jan. 1 9&#13;
GOOD LUCK ON YOUR FINALS! HAPPY HOLIDAYS!&#13;
v~&#13;
HOURS:&#13;
10:00 a.m.\y&#13;
|10:30 p .m. '&#13;
IMon.-Thurs.&#13;
\&#13;
10:00 a.m.-&#13;
5-.00 p.m. located a t t he b ottom of t he s tairs&#13;
Fridays Where Greenquist Hall &amp; The L LC meet&#13;
the period through June 30&#13;
brining total federal support for&#13;
the student financial aid program&#13;
to a total of $270,936 for the fiscal&#13;
year.&#13;
In addition, $8,000 from the&#13;
Parkside "200" Club was acdepted&#13;
for athletic scholarships&#13;
or other scholarships. The group&#13;
has contributed over $56,000 in&#13;
support of Parkside athletics&#13;
since its formation in 1970.&#13;
AMERICAN&#13;
STATE BANK&#13;
rm&#13;
3928 - 6 0th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
i nmt-&#13;
&amp;g^$sTop&#13;
Daily 'til 9&#13;
Saturday 'til 5&#13;
Sunday 12 - 5&#13;
400 Main St., Racine&#13;
10% OFF&#13;
All Winter Boots&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 10 • Thursday, Dec. 11&#13;
WITH THIS COUPON AND I.D.&#13;
i&#13;
ANEW COLLECTION OF FRAME&#13;
BLOW-DPI AND CRAZY DIALOGUE&#13;
FROM LAUREL 6 HARDYX BEXT&#13;
PICTURE!... $9 95&#13;
^LORIOUX TRIP THROUGH&#13;
BEATLELAND-REPLETE W ITH PHOTOT&#13;
AND AX MUCH TRIVIA AX FITX N&#13;
AN OVERJIZED PAPERBACK..$(&gt;.95.&#13;
RACINE&#13;
3IZ (bTH XTREET&#13;
&lt;o3Z - 5195&#13;
ci^Grj-lia jjerrellV&#13;
bOOKJTOREI KENOXHA&#13;
WN" 59TH XTREET&#13;
t&gt;58-3652_ &#13;
For president&#13;
Senate buys parking sticker&#13;
Debra Friedell , ~&#13;
Wednesday Dec. 10, 1975 THE PARSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association voted&#13;
last Tuesday to purchase&#13;
P.S.G.A. President, Lee Wagner,&#13;
a reserved parking sticker.&#13;
The stickers are $80 a nd is a&#13;
portion of the money that was&#13;
given to P.S.G.A. from&#13;
segregated fee funds.&#13;
Ed Bielarczyk of the senate,&#13;
explained that Wagner is supposed&#13;
to receive a salary according&#13;
to the constitution, and&#13;
yet because state law prohibits it,&#13;
Wagner cannot receive that&#13;
salary because action on that&#13;
portion of the constitution came&#13;
while he was in office.&#13;
Bielarczyk also said that the&#13;
senate felt Wagner should&#13;
receive, "the same stature of&#13;
other administrators and high&#13;
ranking professors.'&#13;
State funds are not used in the&#13;
purchase of parking stickers for&#13;
University employees.&#13;
Bielarczyk said that hopefully&#13;
this purchase would encourage&#13;
other students to run for the&#13;
position of P .S.G.A president.&#13;
"The president is worth $80 per&#13;
semester," he said. "Most other&#13;
made the request for the motion.&#13;
In other business, the P.S.G.A&#13;
is in the process of approving&#13;
Wagner nominees to the committee&#13;
which will take the place&#13;
of the Campus Concersn Committee.&#13;
The senate has approved&#13;
5 students, Natasha Foling, Third&#13;
World; Rita Wimberly, Psych.&#13;
universities give their president a T&#13;
°1&#13;
m&#13;
°^&#13;
sen&#13;
'&#13;
Vets c*&#13;
ub 5 and&#13;
salary or their tuition is «aiH &lt;«. S°c Wagner of&#13;
P.S.G.A. No students have yet&#13;
been appointed who have sat on&#13;
previous Campus Concerns&#13;
Committees.&#13;
salary or their tuition is paid, or&#13;
they are given some type of&#13;
compensation," he said. Wagner&#13;
is required to make numerous&#13;
trips to Parkside in order to attend&#13;
various functions and&#13;
meetings, and these he's paid&#13;
from out of his own pocket,&#13;
Bielarczyk said.&#13;
The motion passed with 8 in&#13;
favor and one abstention. Wagner&#13;
Bonanza&#13;
Free with this coupon&#13;
a bottle off beer&#13;
with any steak dinner&#13;
3315 52 St., Kenosha&#13;
Powless will speak on&#13;
current A.I.M. issues&#13;
One of the leaders of the&#13;
American Indian Movement and&#13;
program director of the&#13;
American Indian Council on&#13;
Alcoholism in Milwaukee, Herb&#13;
Powless, will speak at Parkside&#13;
next Wednesday, Dec. 10 at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
Powless' appearance is being&#13;
sponsored by Third World and the&#13;
Anthropology Club.&#13;
Currently Powless is facing&#13;
both state and federal charges&#13;
relating to his participation in the&#13;
1973 siege at Wounded Knee,&#13;
South Dakota.&#13;
The B est Ham&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
in T own&#13;
SMITTT'S&#13;
Highway 31 and County Trunk E&#13;
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.V&#13;
4?&#13;
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&amp;&#13;
y ,c#&#13;
(Et|netma0 atfop at tlje largest art.&#13;
craft, garn $c frame slfop&#13;
between Htliuaukee $c (Mficagn&#13;
1000 - 60 Street&#13;
657-5212&#13;
Arts&#13;
Smfts&#13;
Free checking...Free checks*&#13;
No minimum balance&#13;
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE...EXTRA BANKING HOURS&#13;
Our entire office including lobby and drive-in&#13;
_ Monday-Thursday 7:00-5:30&#13;
OPEN: Friday 7:00-8:00&#13;
Saturday 8:00-Noon&#13;
Bjl At the intersection of Highways 11 and 31&#13;
T Heritage Batik - Tleasant&#13;
v—7 * Stop in or call for details.&#13;
6125 Durand Avenue • Racine, Wisconsin 534 06 Phone 414-554-6500&#13;
MEMBER OF THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION .&#13;
ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS&#13;
When you say Budweisen,you've said it all!&#13;
Distributed by E. F. Madrigrano 1831-55th Kenosha, Wl &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed nesd ay D e c . 1 0 , 1 9 7 5&#13;
o&#13;
o&#13;
The last season of l ove&#13;
came this morning&#13;
making me late for life.&#13;
Icicles,&#13;
hanging from my memories of you,&#13;
grow heavy with the passing of the night&#13;
The sun&#13;
no longer burns&#13;
but instead blinds.&#13;
My emotions, lacking their usual green leaves,&#13;
lay naked and bare.&#13;
Bent by the wind,&#13;
until I think I must break.&#13;
I wrap my heart&#13;
in many layers of appearance;&#13;
hoping this will keep it warm.&#13;
When it snows,&#13;
it does so within as well as without.&#13;
Whatever reason I had&#13;
now slumbers in some deep cave.&#13;
Blinded by the blizzard that rages within me,&#13;
I mistakenly burn my friends in the fireplace.&#13;
Thinking all the time:&#13;
this will keep me from freezing&#13;
any more than I already have.&#13;
. *&#13;
Graduation&#13;
Consumation&#13;
of&#13;
a&#13;
four&#13;
year&#13;
courtship&#13;
with&#13;
an&#13;
older&#13;
lover.&#13;
Heavy&#13;
breathing&#13;
upon&#13;
a&#13;
stage.&#13;
Tissue&#13;
thrust&#13;
into&#13;
nervous&#13;
flesh.&#13;
SKI EQUIPMENT&#13;
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MIKE'S SPORT SHOP&#13;
3034 Kentucky St.&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 554-8040&#13;
(Open Mon. to Fri. till 9)&#13;
Shuffling&#13;
along&#13;
without&#13;
a&#13;
winter&#13;
coat.&#13;
Weary,&#13;
afraid&#13;
of&#13;
falling&#13;
asleep.&#13;
Afraid it will last a lifetime.&#13;
Jack Cody&#13;
Uneasy&#13;
I can lie&#13;
in the light&#13;
that a candle doesn't make&#13;
and remember&#13;
the way your breath&#13;
slips quietly&#13;
while you sleep—&#13;
or how the contour&#13;
of you&#13;
fits easily&#13;
with the contour&#13;
of me—&#13;
and yet,&#13;
miss those things&#13;
because I'm missing you—&#13;
Michael Nepper&#13;
FOR YOUR COMPLETE&#13;
SKIING NEEDS VISIT&#13;
ewv™ * Hy so&#13;
Friday &amp; S aturday&#13;
Stillwater&#13;
Every Thursday Night&#13;
Union&#13;
Pitcher of Hamm's&#13;
*1.00 7 to 10 Thursdays only&#13;
Plan New Years Eve with&#13;
Purple People&#13;
Free Admission Fri. with UW-P Student I.D.&#13;
Add these words to your basic vocabulary&#13;
now, whether or not'you're planning a trip&#13;
to Mexico soon.&#13;
SPANISH&#13;
chocho&#13;
gargarizando&#13;
sacamuelas&#13;
bulla&#13;
manteca&#13;
pantufla&#13;
ENGLISH&#13;
childish old man&#13;
gargling&#13;
quack dentist&#13;
soft coal&#13;
lard&#13;
bedroom slipper&#13;
Here at Jose Cuervo, we believe&#13;
an informed consumer is an&#13;
informed consumer.&#13;
TEQUILA. 80 PROOF.&#13;
We Sell Instant F un!&#13;
1101 N . M ail St. Racine&#13;
633-5244&#13;
V&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
WISHES EVERYONE A HAPPY HOLIDAY SEASON&#13;
WITH A&#13;
HOLIDAY&#13;
DINNER SPECIAL&#13;
WON., DEC. 15&#13;
IN THE BUFFET ROOM&#13;
• SMOKED HAM . SWEET POTATO&#13;
• GREEN BEANS ALMONDINE&#13;
• SPICED CRABAPPLE&#13;
• ROLL &amp; BUTTER&#13;
*1.49&#13;
(*177 VALUE)&#13;
PLUS: A FREE CANDY CANE WITH EVERY PURCHASE&#13;
BURGER SHOPPE &amp; BUFFET ROOM </text>
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                <text>English</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="65402">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="65405">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Work-Groups propose university change</text>
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              <text>earhorn reminisces&#13;
by Bill Robbins&#13;
~en B. Dearborn, Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
t Services and Dean of Students,.has been a&#13;
f&lt;£COin the development of Parkside for&#13;
Iy 8 years. He came here at a time when&#13;
. was li~tle more tha? a fledgling,&#13;
hically-splil educational mstitution, and&#13;
t with him a-unique enthusiasm that was&#13;
lla1 in making Parkside a solid, studentted&#13;
university. Now, in the process of&#13;
g a new position in university relations&#13;
rn looksback on his colorful Parkside caree;&#13;
feels a pride concmitlant with a job well done.&#13;
"1IbeD' first got here, there was nothing but two&#13;
campuses-one in Kenosha, one in Racine" ._nbeJrs Dearborn. "My first task was to gi~e&#13;
a school identity."&#13;
QIIIbOrn. who emphasizes the importance of&#13;
e, approached that task with' customary&#13;
.. broUght in big-name entertainment: The&#13;
QIrisly Minstrels, Blood Sweat, &amp; Tears, the&#13;
NllIIllWllY production of Jesus Christ Superstar;&#13;
JGIm Denver, among others. Since Parkside&#13;
10appropriate entertainment facilities, or for&#13;
matter anyplace where students could&#13;
te socially, we held these events in the&#13;
Ib.... Hlgh School aduitorium.&#13;
"!IIolH&gt;12 entertainment is just one way to bring&#13;
together," Dearborn explains. "Other&#13;
of university life such as student govern&#13;
.... student newspaper, and general student&#13;
activities are just as important.&#13;
There are probably few people, if any, who are as&#13;
acquamted and involved with student and ad.&#13;
nurustrative operations as is Dearbo V' luaU ev ha rn. ir y&#13;
ery p se of student life is included in the&#13;
by~ntme realm of the Dean of Students' responsibilities.&#13;
Still, Dearborn bas maintained a&#13;
re~~tively low profile. He has his reasons.&#13;
, help a lot of people witbout their knowledge&#13;
That's my job. 'don't always have to take the bows:&#13;
My staff takes the credit-students take the credit,&#13;
That's the way it should be."&#13;
At 36, Dearborn tired of the business world and&#13;
returned to school to get a degree in counselling.&#13;
While attending Madison, working on his doctorate&#13;
he accepted a position as Dean of Students at ~&#13;
small college nearby. Later, as Assistant Dean of&#13;
Campus at Waukesha, he "came under the attention&#13;
of people here." .&#13;
"One of the reasons , was hired was to change&#13;
Parkside's image" says Dearborn '" think • • I • we&#13;
mslituted a lot of good changes."&#13;
Among the many good changes instituted by&#13;
Dearborn was on.campus beer. Greedy local tavern&#13;
owners sliffly resisted Dearborn's efforts to get&#13;
Parkside a bee: license. But Dearborn's persistenee,&#13;
along with his feel for diplomacy trought&#13;
beer to Parkside. '&#13;
When streaking became a popular student&#13;
pastime, Dearborn understood.&#13;
"I remember wben students planned to streak&#13;
C0fl1inOftl on page ..&#13;
The Parkside---- _&#13;
RANGE&#13;
Vol. I V No. 16 January 21,1976&#13;
•&#13;
Allen B. Dearborn, assJs1an1 chan.ceUor lar SlDcltnt Servlee., .....&#13;
reassigned .. usJslant ebueeDor far aa!venlty rdld ....&#13;
Reassignment&#13;
University 01 Wisconsin.&#13;
Parkside 0lanceUar Alan E.&#13;
Guskin recently anmlDlced the&#13;
reassignment of Assistant&#13;
Chancellor Allen B. Dearborn&#13;
fnIn the area 01student services&#13;
to university relations.&#13;
Guskin said lbe new posltion&#13;
was created lrom thai of the&#13;
Director 01 Developmenl; a post&#13;
which was discontinued last year.&#13;
The designetioo 01 assi5tant to&#13;
the O1ancellor added and&#13;
functions 01 the old job .. ere&#13;
l!Xl'Sfided.&#13;
Guskin said lhe tranlCer&#13;
reOects the hi&amp;h priority that&#13;
Parde Is plac~ on campus&#13;
outreach and interaction WIth&#13;
50Utheastern Wlscansin. He said&#13;
the reassignment1rilJ be phued&#13;
lM!r sevenl mootbJ, aIlolring&#13;
time lar a succeuor in student&#13;
services to be named,&#13;
In hJ.s ne capacIty, Dearborn&#13;
wiII ...... k .nih the Olanc or and&#13;
campus olliees d aling in&#13;
lDUversi relall. outr&#13;
llCUV;U •&#13;
Work-groups propose university change&#13;
., MIke Palecek also asked to participate in the&#13;
studies.&#13;
Since January 12, the Com·&#13;
millee has begun to hear final&#13;
reports. As of the 16th, reports&#13;
have been completed on student&#13;
popula tion, instructiona 1&#13;
methods and innovations, and&#13;
academic program &lt;l.evelopmen!.&#13;
Student Population&#13;
The student population report&#13;
stated, "if the institution changes&#13;
its general thrust, changes the&#13;
type of offerings, commillement&#13;
to certain types of activities, or if&#13;
there is a sociological change in&#13;
the next '5 years toward&#13;
education, all of these factors will&#13;
influence enrollment patterns at&#13;
Parkside.u&#13;
The report went on to say, uIt is&#13;
apparent from tbe data gathered&#13;
that at tbe presenl time women&#13;
between ages of 25 and 35are not&#13;
in attendance at the Universlty&#13;
propoi'lional to their male&#13;
counterParts or proportional to&#13;
the population in general. The&#13;
reason for this is varied. II may&#13;
have some sociological causality,&#13;
possibly the lack of infonnallon&#13;
or inlldequacy of day care at the&#13;
University."&#13;
'Further work group studies&#13;
showed that over 30 percent of&#13;
Parkside students do not plan to&#13;
011 shows Presidential preference&#13;
by TomPeters and&#13;
Jay Grassell&#13;
the. large field of canU"Y1nglor&#13;
their party's&#13;
bav°n, the average voter&#13;
foe trOUbledeciding who&#13;
r "hat ideals. A student&#13;
u:ndu~ted during&#13;
h lOdicated that most&#13;
ave at least some&#13;
Ibne e among candidates at&#13;
January 13th and 14th&#13;
~VeaIed that oniy 15&#13;
'~ the Parkside studenls&#13;
select a candidate&#13;
aI candidates ran th~&#13;
spectrum from the&#13;
an the left to the&#13;
-iority an the right, with&#13;
seeking a more&#13;
moderate position.&#13;
ot the 328 polled, 37 percent&#13;
said that they favored the&#13;
Democratic party, 23 percent&#13;
gave the nod to the Republicans&#13;
and 40 percent remained independents.&#13;
The percentage at Parkside&#13;
choosing the Republicans is&#13;
much higher than the national&#13;
average. The preference is lower&#13;
for independents, while about the&#13;
same for the Democrats as&#13;
compared to the national&#13;
average.&#13;
The resulls of the poD were&#13;
broken down by party&#13;
preference. Some candidates&#13;
appear out of their party column&#13;
due to party crossover in therr&#13;
favor.&#13;
Despite having repeatedly&#13;
announced that he does not intend&#13;
to run, Senator Ted KennedY,&#13;
wbo .will not appear on the&#13;
Wisconsin ballot, received the&#13;
highest vote from Democratic&#13;
voters. No single Democrat&#13;
received a clear m8/ldate from&#13;
the Parks ide electorate&#13;
In the' Republican column,&#13;
President Ford lead the way with&#13;
Ronald Reagan taking the next&#13;
largest percentage.&#13;
With independent voters, Ford&#13;
again predominated, foUowed by&#13;
Kennedy and Reagan. Wallace&#13;
and Harris ran next, with the rest&#13;
of the candidates lagging far&#13;
behind.&#13;
Generally, the juniors a~d&#13;
seniors were more Democratic&#13;
while a greater portion of the&#13;
COI'ltinved on page 5&#13;
ep.rn a degree, and many&#13;
students think that they are not&#13;
going to complete a degree at&#13;
Parkside. They also found that&#13;
most people were interested in&#13;
continuing their education In the&#13;
areas 01 children and adolescent&#13;
problems, community problems&#13;
and economic issue areas.&#13;
The work group also found that&#13;
Parkside does not draw on&#13;
significant numbers of students&#13;
fnIn outside of Racine and&#13;
Kenosha Counties. Milwaukee&#13;
County, the highest percentage&#13;
area of all outside areas, con\alns&#13;
only I percent 01 ParUlde's&#13;
enrollment. The .. ork group,&#13;
suggested that, ua different effort&#13;
is necessary if the numbers&#13;
and percentages from these&#13;
outlying areas is to be increued.&#13;
Greater institutional comnultment&#13;
and Involvem nt Is&#13;
~.11&#13;
The student population war&#13;
group allo disccl\'end thlt there&#13;
is I d abilily of more night&#13;
COIll'SeS, more c s scheduled&#13;
In ooe lhree-Ilour block, and&#13;
""'*&#13;
opporturutles far udents .. hU&#13;
goq 10school. tudents 1110I II&#13;
that there should be 10 lUJllon,&#13;
especially lar part-time students,&#13;
there should be a "mallie In the&#13;
attitude of the adminIstrltion&#13;
tD10ards SIlICer'eItyIn altltud to&#13;
1nrtrncIlooaaI Melllocll&#13;
d lIIIIovld ...&#13;
the telching Ind eneral&#13;
relatlons of the studenta and that&#13;
Parkslde should hi' more of I&#13;
"&lt;ollege atmosphere."&#13;
In the area 01 InstructJonal&#13;
Method and Innovationi ,&#13;
INDEPENDENTS&#13;
Ford&#13;
K...... cIy&#13;
Reapn&#13;
Wallace&#13;
HartIs&#13;
Jackson&#13;
Shriver&#13;
Carter&#13;
Humphrey&#13;
Rockefeller&#13;
Mnskle&#13;
lokGovena&#13;
camejo&#13;
Others&#13;
Uededcled&#13;
SU'VEY 'ESULTS&#13;
Bayh&#13;
Others&#13;
Undecided&#13;
REPllBUCANS&#13;
Ford&#13;
Reagan&#13;
Percy&#13;
Rockefeller&#13;
Wallace&#13;
Uodeclded&#13;
"pere t&#13;
3Iper t&#13;
I2per t&#13;
4perc t&#13;
%per&lt; 1&#13;
7per&lt; t&#13;
DEMOCRATS&#13;
ennecly&#13;
daU&#13;
nmphrey&#13;
!7 percenl&#13;
lIpere ... 1&#13;
11percent&#13;
7percenl&#13;
'perc t&#13;
'perc t&#13;
4perc .. 1&#13;
fperc t&#13;
3perc t&#13;
3perc t&#13;
%per&lt;aIt&#13;
%perc t&#13;
%perc t&#13;
Uper&lt; l&#13;
17per&lt; ... 1&#13;
13perc .. t&#13;
llperc ... t&#13;
8per&lt; .. t&#13;
7perceul&#13;
3per&lt; ... 1&#13;
3 percent&#13;
%perc t&#13;
%perc t&#13;
%perc t&#13;
lper&lt;eal&#13;
lperc ... t&#13;
lper&lt;eat&#13;
'perceat&#13;
!3 ent&#13;
oearborn reminisces&#13;
by Bill Robbins&#13;
~en B. Dearborn, Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
-t 5ervices and Dean of Students, has been a&#13;
t.al force in the development of Parkside for&#13;
:arty 8 years. He came here at a time when&#13;
Parkside was li~tle mor~ tha? a fledgling,&#13;
~phically:iplit ed~cational ~stitution, and&#13;
ht with him a unique enthusiasm that was&#13;
tial in making Parkside a solid, studentortented&#13;
university .. !'low_, in . the . process of&#13;
._IIIIIIllllll. g a new position m university relations&#13;
rn looks back on his colorful Parkside caree;&#13;
(eels a pride concmittant with a job well done.&#13;
•When I first got here, there was nothing but two&#13;
s.,ear camP~~ne in Kenosha, one in Racine "&#13;
,-nt,ers Dearborn. "My first task was to gi;e&#13;
...ients a school identity. "&#13;
l)elrbom, who emphasizes the importance of&#13;
~e, approached that task with· customary&#13;
...&#13;
"We brO ught m&#13;
. b' 1g-name te . en rtamment: The&#13;
Qlisty Minstrels, Blood Sweat, &amp; Tears, the&#13;
.a-a,oa&lt;1way production of Jesus Christ Superstar,'&#13;
John Denver, among others. Since Parkside&#13;
1111 no appropriate entertainment facilities, or for&#13;
matter anyplace where students could&#13;
CIIIIP"&amp;ate socially, we held these events in the&#13;
'l\'9lll)el' High School aduitorium.&#13;
"9)ow-biz entertainment is just one way to bring&#13;
llldentS together," Dearborn explains. "Other&#13;
..-:ts of university life such as student govem-&#13;
•i.e student newspaper, and general student&#13;
activities are just as important.&#13;
The~e are probably few people, if any, ho are as&#13;
ac_q~amt~ and involved with student and _&#13;
nurustrat1ve operations as is Dearborn. Virtuall&#13;
every _phase of student life is included m th~&#13;
b~~~me realm of the Dean of Students' respons1bili~1es.&#13;
Still, Dearborn has maintained a&#13;
relatively low profile. He has his "I h 1 reasons. e P a lot of people without their kno ledge&#13;
That's my job. I don't always have to take the bow .&#13;
My staff takes the credit-students take the credit .&#13;
That's the way it should be." ·&#13;
At 36, Dearborn tired of the business world and&#13;
re~ed to ~ool ~ get a degree in collll.5elling.&#13;
While attending Madison, working on his doctorate&#13;
he accepted a position as Dean of Students at ~&#13;
small college nearby. Later, as Assistant Dean of&#13;
Campus at Waukesha, he "crune under the attention&#13;
of people here." ·&#13;
"One of the reasons I was hired was to change Parkside's&#13;
• • image ,&#13;
" savs Dearborn .. 1 ... ,_._ ., • UWlll. we 1I1St1tuted a lot of good changes."&#13;
Among the many good changes instituted by&#13;
Dearborn was on-campus beer. Greedy local tavern&#13;
owner~ stiffly resisted Dearborn's efforts to get&#13;
~arks1de a bee~ li~. But Dearborn's pers1Stence,&#13;
along with hlS feel for diplomacy trought&#13;
beer to Parkside. '&#13;
wi:ien streaking became a popular student&#13;
pastime, Dearborn understood.&#13;
"I remember when students planned to streak&#13;
continued on pag~ 4&#13;
The Parkside!--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. IV No. 16 January 21, 1976&#13;
Reassignment&#13;
Work-groups propose university change&#13;
by Mike Palecek&#13;
~ the most important&#13;
of the Winter recess was&#13;
continuing work of the&#13;
of Principals. The&#13;
tee of Principals was&#13;
last semester by ChanAlan&#13;
Guskin to study where&#13;
is and where it should&#13;
Commi~es were set up to&#13;
regional research, inonal&#13;
research, program&#13;
•elopment, priority&#13;
lopment and student ·&#13;
ti~n. Faculty and adtion&#13;
were appointed to&#13;
s. Some students were&#13;
also asked to participate in the&#13;
studies.&#13;
Since January 12, the Committee&#13;
has begun to hear final&#13;
reports. As of the 16th, reports&#13;
have been completed on student&#13;
population, instructional&#13;
methods and innovations, and&#13;
academic program development.&#13;
Student Population&#13;
The student population report&#13;
stated, "if the institution changes&#13;
its general thrust, changes the&#13;
type of offerings, committement&#13;
to certain types of activities, or if&#13;
there is a sociological change in&#13;
the next 15 years toward&#13;
education, all of these factors will&#13;
influence enrollment patterns at&#13;
Parkside."&#13;
The report went on to say, 'It is&#13;
apparent from the data gathered&#13;
that at the present time&#13;
between ages of 25 and 3S are not&#13;
in attendance at the Un versity&#13;
proportional to their male&#13;
counterparts or proporti al to&#13;
the population in general. Th&#13;
reason for this is varied. It ma ·&#13;
have some sociological causality,&#13;
possibly the lack of information&#13;
or inadequacy of day care at the&#13;
University."&#13;
Further work group studies&#13;
showed that over 30 percent of&#13;
Parkside students do not plan to&#13;
oll shows Presidential preference&#13;
by Tom Peters and&#13;
Jay Grassell&#13;
~ the. large field of canti"Ying&#13;
for their party's&#13;
on th ha ' e average voter&#13;
fve trouble deciding who&#13;
or What ideals. A student&#13;
ati:n.du~ted during&#13;
le h indicated that most&#13;
ave at least some&#13;
U:,e among candidates at&#13;
January 13th and 14th reveal d t of e that only 15&#13;
't the Parkside students&#13;
ed s~ec~ a candidate.&#13;
t1ca1 ndidates ran the&#13;
spectrum from the&#13;
moderate position. Of the 328 polled, 37 percent&#13;
said that they favored the&#13;
Democratic party, 23 percent&#13;
gave the nod to the Republicans&#13;
and 40 percent remained independents.&#13;
&#13;
The percentage at Parkside&#13;
choosing the Republicans is&#13;
much higher than the national&#13;
average. The preference is lower&#13;
for independents, while about the&#13;
same for the Democrats as&#13;
compared to the national&#13;
average. The results of the poll were&#13;
announced that he does not intend&#13;
to run, Senator Ted Kennedy.&#13;
who will not appear on the&#13;
Wisconsin ballot received the&#13;
highest vote from Democratic&#13;
voters. No single Democrat&#13;
received a clear mandate from the Parkside electorate&#13;
In the' Republican column.&#13;
President Ford lead the way with&#13;
Ronald Reagan taking the next&#13;
largest percentage. With independent voters, Ford&#13;
again predominated. followed by&#13;
Kennedy and Reagan. Wallace&#13;
and Harris ran next, with the rest&#13;
of the candidates lagging far&#13;
behind.&#13;
Generally, the juniors a~d 0&#13;
seniors were more Democratic&#13;
SURVEY RfSUl TS&#13;
D&#13;
4&#13;
. on the left to the&#13;
lllaJonty on the right, with&#13;
broken down by party&#13;
preference. Some candidates&#13;
appear out of their party col~&#13;
due to party crossover in their&#13;
favor.&#13;
Despite having repeatedly&#13;
while a greater portion of the Ford&#13;
cont nued on -~ 5 ~-------------~;;;,;;;,;;;....._...:;:J~:!J Reagan&#13;
seeking a more &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER WednesdAy, "'0. 21, 1976 ··'101111lll1II11II1II1I1II1I1I1I1I11II1I11II1I1I1I1I1I1I1I1II1I1I1I1II1II111I1I1II1I1I1II1I1I1II1I1I1II11II-&#13;
.. ....iiii-iiii~ll.l.iiii.. --iiii-----IHlHtIH .....L1.. . S' ....!! DITOR.IN-CHlEF: Jeannine lpsma . Ii&#13;
1&#13;
_ If:.' ~WS AND MANAGING EDITOR: Michael Palecek ~&#13;
_ The ParKside FEATURE EDITOR: Bill Robbms ~&#13;
• ~ SPORTS EDITOR: Thom Aiello 5&#13;
! RAN G E R BUSINESS MANAGER: Cathy Brnak ~&#13;
~ ADVERTISING MANAGER: Gerald Ferch i&#13;
i PRODUCTION MANAGER: Bruce Wagner 5&#13;
!O EDITORIAL/OPI 10 VISAGE EDITOR: Jeff Swencki i&#13;
;: .... _ EVENTS COLUMN: Judy Trudrung i&#13;
I 1be PARKSIDE RA: GER 15 wntten and edited by the students of WRITERS' Mike Terry, Kurt Larson, Betsy Neu, Mick Anderson ~&#13;
l) of Parkslde and they are solely respollS1ble Fred John;"n, Jim Yorgan, Jerry Pate, Carol Arentz, Mike 01szyk 'Ii&#13;
~or,:ls torial ~ and eeeteot. Offices are located 10 0194 WLLC, PHOTOGRAPHERS: Mike Nepper, Dave Daniels i&#13;
Partslde. Kenosha. Vi lSCOI\SU1 S3l ~~ II~~::':" ~1::;I1::;;illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll:i11l1l1l1nlllllllllllllnllllllllllllllllllllllnnlllHlllllnlllllllllllllllllllllllllllJllRi&#13;
Administrators lack iob security&#13;
The I"rlher up the ladder you climb; the more unsure&#13;
the lootIDg. It seems unlalr that some 01 the most&#13;
crltlcel edrntnlstreters at Parkside have the least job&#13;
security,&#13;
senior lIdmlnlstrlltors such as those in the positions 01&#13;
vice chllncellor, lISSstanl\ to the chenceltor and deans,&#13;
have "lImited term lIppointments:' This means that&#13;
they serve at the pleasure of the chancellor and are&#13;
subled to terminlltion lit lIny time and lor any reason.&#13;
This gives the office of chancellor quite a bit of power.&#13;
Consider lIgain' "termination at any time and for any&#13;
reason," The Imagination runs wild with situations&#13;
where ermlnation may not be related in any way to job&#13;
performance. The possibilities are endless.&#13;
Criticism ot this situation In no way reflects upon&#13;
ndlvld 1Iis at Plir side but rather on the strudure and&#13;
practices 01 t University. It is rather doubHui that&#13;
Chancellor Alan Gus In would fire someone for tracking&#13;
SIlO on 0 hIS carpet. but that says nothing for future&#13;
chancellces. Top administrators could end UP running&#13;
around cleaning lIshtrays; anything to pacify the boss.&#13;
1115 wrong that those who are expeded to administrate&#13;
in a progressive innovative las~io~, shoul.d. be in such a&#13;
potentially humbling and restrictive posttlon.&#13;
In defense 01 the existing situation, one might say that&#13;
the university gains a sense ot flexibility by leaVing&#13;
administrative offices open for change In personnel.&#13;
When the university feels that It's time for a change,&#13;
they can simply throw out the old administrators and&#13;
replace them with bright new progressive ones. Or can&#13;
they? With such little job security, any administrator Is&#13;
more likely to exercise caution rather than initiative.&#13;
The direction of the school becomes heavily dependent&#13;
on the chancellor, with administrators doing what they&#13;
think the boss wants them to do rather than initiating&#13;
their own ideas.&#13;
It could be dangerous to have that much power in the&#13;
hands of one individual. If the chancellor is ethical,&#13;
anxious to aid In the development of the university and&#13;
willing to give others the authority and security they&#13;
need to best perform the duties of their office, then they&#13;
university will reflect this. If the opposite holds true,&#13;
then the universify stagnates and its employees have&#13;
wasted their talents working in an impossible situation.&#13;
~&#13;
Conspiracy against education&#13;
by Bi II Robbins&#13;
Is the Milwaukee Veterans Administration actively&#13;
engaged in a conspiracy to make veterans education&#13;
Illegal? Or could II be that the bureaucratic V.A. buf -&#13;
foon~ In Milwau ee are simply fulfilling their duties as&#13;
consistent !ncompetents?&#13;
If there are other veterans out there who are experiencing&#13;
severe difficulties in obtaining education&#13;
benefits, .1 ~trong.ly urge that you contact Congressman&#13;
Les »r: s office in Racine. You can appeal to&#13;
Par Side 5 veteran representatives, but that's a lot like&#13;
going through t~e chain-of-command In the army: no&#13;
matter ~w wllIIDg they are to assist you, they have to&#13;
or . WIthin the system. And any system having&#13;
anything to do with the army is bound to be about as&#13;
coherent as a Freudian analysis of the Pope's&#13;
theological development. Our best bet is to call Aspln's&#13;
off.,ce and tell them your situation. You can count on&#13;
~ul.ck and efficient handling of the Milwaukee lnactivlsts.&#13;
I think it would be interesting to find out just how&#13;
~~ny veterans are being victimized by V.A. Inef·&#13;
flciencv. If you consider yourself to be a working&#13;
definition in the class of student veteran financial-aid&#13;
casuaities, Ioffer you a chance to protest you problems.&#13;
Jot down your name and describe your plight on the&#13;
back of any 0.0·214, then bring it in to the Ranger office.&#13;
An attemptwtll.be made to print all responses.&#13;
?"e more thlnq: If you think you're being treated&#13;
fairly by the V.A., if you have no complaints, please tell&#13;
us your ~ecret. Ihear that If a veteran doesn't maintain&#13;
harmonious r:lations with the V.A ..r he is in danger of&#13;
being hurled IDtO Active Military Duty. In Angola.&#13;
Editor's notebook&#13;
RANGER features "76"&#13;
by Je_ Stpoma&#13;
tu&#13;
Assdeumingmtelligence on the part of students and assuming that&#13;
s nts do wish toha ..' ,&#13;
the third po 'bili'ty ve a VOice10 the affairs of the University, I think&#13;
SSI can be discounted&#13;
an:i'tr~~oes, tbough, seem to be a trem~ndous lack of mterst in PSGA&#13;
Many stu~:~:;t ~~:e problem stems from lack of·communication.&#13;
more do not kn on h ow what the call letters PSGA stand for; manY&#13;
located and ~w ~ a theU' representatives are or where the officeis&#13;
Granted, ~ere~~~:: knows about actions taken by the body.&#13;
and more of a stan. . n times that It has been a udo_nothing~t bodY&#13;
been tbe case Cow:;g Joke than anything else, but this has not always&#13;
with issues which n ary to popular belief, PSGA has been inVolved&#13;
throughout the U ;ot only effect Parkside students, but all students&#13;
asked for reco' . syste?" For example, last semester PSGA was&#13;
Guidelines of th::"{;~daltons on the new Student Disciplinary&#13;
student opinion, but . system. Open hearings were held to seek&#13;
munication, the stude~se of lack of mterest or lack of colll'&#13;
My contention is that d not respond.&#13;
knew what was go' students would show more mterest if they&#13;
RANGER will fea': on m PSGA. In order to better inform students,&#13;
officers of th .e a regular column called CONTACT in which&#13;
. e orgamzalton ill discussion m the senate w report major issues presently under&#13;
This column does not 'h&#13;
studentsbut, if noth· e~pe to bridge all gaps between pSGA and&#13;
the mention of PSG~ , at least you'll know why people groan at&#13;
and set about changU; o~,?aYbe YOU'llbecome outraged and disqusted&#13;
to bring PSGA and ~dmgs.No matter what the reaction, the goal IS&#13;
s ents mto CONTACT.&#13;
BUSTh"ESS BYLINE&#13;
ParUidifs Sdlool of , odern Industry IS becoming a thriving en·&#13;
lerpNe. '"th an 12 pen::enl lJl&lt;l'U,SI! in lleclared business majors&#13;
1973 N; of Fall, 197., :It perunt of the students who declared&#13;
maJCll'S.did '" 1ft ~.&#13;
-M!rom covenge of the Maste!"s Program, most of RANGER'S&#13;
c1uihn4lS'"th the busIness ..... ld came in the fonn of overdue bills&#13;
from ..... pnnter. II seems though, that many of our readers havean&#13;
Uureslm the bjed far oxceeduc such roncems as paying bills and&#13;
""lInd,. dledtboob. It is to these _Ie \bat we direct our new&#13;
column. B l:'i B\'WIo"E.&#13;
B\; B\'WIo"E will be 8 regular column written by David&#13;
Brandl, ness major and pl"!Sidenl &lt;X Pi Sigma Epsilon and Per·&#13;
I emenl Sociel)'. It auns to ro,w happenings m the school&#13;
01 . ,bn"' .... jrerds and programs sponsored by related clubs.&#13;
ItA! GER to keep up .,.,th the ~ inleresl in business&#13;
pnlCl'BSm Par de and keep students informed on current&#13;
Mi.lopmalta,&#13;
c;rCT&#13;
of PSGA, Parkslde lIdent Government&#13;
~=mpan.ed by groans m just about any&#13;
may be the result of bad pUblicity, lack of&#13;
and PSGA. or, maybe, because the&#13;
n&#13;
!le&lt;AD&lt;:etlOll rea11y a ....,1.... joke trith no 8Uthonty and liltl&#13;
student alIa , e&#13;
2 TH E PARKS I OE RA GE R Wednesda , Jan. 21, 197 6 mum umu 1t11111HR11tlfllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll1&#13;
111111IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIU11u1II&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jeannine Sipsma . i&#13;
NEWS AND MANAGING EDif?R: Michael Palecek ~ FEATURE EDITOR: Bill 8:obbms ~ SPORTS EDITOR: Thom Aiello §&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Cathy Brnak ~ ADVERTISING MANAGER: Gerald Ferch ~&#13;
PRODUCTION MANAGER: Bruce Wagner 5&#13;
L/OPI "10 T VISAGE EDITOR: Jeff Swencki i&#13;
EVENTS COLUMN: Judy Trudrung . § WRITERS: Mike TerrY, Kurt Larson, Betsy Neu, ~ck Anderson,i&#13;
Fred Johnson, Jim Yorgan, Jerry Pate, Carol Ar_entz, Mike Olszyk 5&#13;
- PHOTOGRAPHERS: Mike Nepper, Dave Daniels 5&#13;
11 1&#13;
~~;11:-:;11111111111111111111111111n111111111m:1n1111n11111111111mm111111mm11mmunn1&#13;
mtunnnn11111111111111111111111111m1i&#13;
lack iob security&#13;
in a progressive innovative fashion, should be in such a&#13;
potentially humbling and restrictive position.&#13;
In defense of the existing situation, one might say that&#13;
the university gains a sense of flexibility by leaving&#13;
administrative offices open for change in personnel.&#13;
When the university feels that it's time for a change,&#13;
they can simply throw out the old administrators and&#13;
replace them with bright new progressive ones. Or can&#13;
they? With such little job security, any administrator is&#13;
more likely to exercise caution rather than initiative.&#13;
The direction of the school becomes heavily dependent&#13;
on the chancellor, with administrators doing what they&#13;
think the boss wants them to do rather than initiating&#13;
their own ideas.&#13;
It could be dangerous to have that much power in the&#13;
hands of one individual. If the chancellor is ethical,&#13;
anxious to aid Jn the development of the university and&#13;
willing to give others the authority and security they&#13;
need to best perform the duties of their office, then they&#13;
university will reflect this. If the opposite holds true,&#13;
then the university stagnates and its employees have&#13;
wasted their talents working in an impossible situation.&#13;
Conspiracy against education&#13;
ho are exth~logical&#13;
development. Our best bet is to call Aspin's&#13;
office and tell them your situation. You can count on&#13;
~ui_ck and efficient handling of the Milwaukee inactiv1sts.&#13;
&#13;
I think it would be interesting to find out just how&#13;
~~ny veterans are being victimized by V.A. ineff1c1ency.&#13;
If you consider yourself to be a working&#13;
definition in the class of student veteran financial-aid&#13;
casualties, I offer you a chance to protest you problems.&#13;
Jot down your name and describe your plight on the&#13;
back of any D_D-214, then bring it in to the Ranger office.&#13;
An attempt will _be made to print all responses. ?"e more thing: If you think you're being treated&#13;
fairly by the V.A., if you have no complaints, please tell&#13;
us your ~ecret. I hear that if a veteran doesn't maintain&#13;
ha~mon1ous relations with the V.A.., he is in danger of&#13;
being hurled into Active Military Duty. In Angola.&#13;
Editor's notebook&#13;
a&#13;
ANGER features "76"&#13;
bec:omiru! a thriving enmajors&#13;
&#13;
stu1clerrts who declared&#13;
Assumin . t lli students dog~ t tence on ~e. part of students, and assuming that&#13;
the third po "bili?tyave a voi~ 10 the affairs of the University, I think&#13;
SS1 can be discounted&#13;
There does though to b · and I bell ' ' seem ea tremendous lack of interst in PSGA&#13;
Many stu~:::;t ~: :!e problem stems from lack of communication.&#13;
more do not kno on h ow _what the call letters PSGA stand for; many&#13;
located and alm w; 0 their representatives are or where the office is&#13;
Grante~ there~~~:: kn_ows abou~ actions taken by the body.&#13;
an&lt;1 more of a stan . . n times that it has been a "do-nothing'.' bodY&#13;
been the case C ~g Joke than anything else, but this has not always&#13;
with issues whi~n ary to popular belief, PSGA has been involved&#13;
throughout the u ;ot only effect Parkside students, but all students&#13;
asked for reco~ syste~- For example, last semester PSGA was&#13;
Guidelines of the U ;dations on the new Student DisciplinaI"Y&#13;
student opinion but · syStem. Open hearings were held to seek&#13;
munication, the' stude~:se of lack of interest or lack of comMy&#13;
contenti . d not respond on lS that t d · knew what was goin _s u ents would show more interest if they&#13;
RANGER will feat g on 10 PSGA. In order to better inform students,&#13;
officers of th ur:e a_ regular column called CONTACT in which . e orgamzatlOn ill disc~ion in the senate. w report major issues presently under&#13;
nus column does not h studentsbut, if nothing is:pe to bridge all gaps between PSGA and&#13;
the mention of PSGA e ' at least you'll know why people groan at&#13;
and set about chang~ 0~~aybe you'll become outraged and disqus~&#13;
to bring PSGA and tdmgs._No matter what the reaction, the goal lS&#13;
s ents mto CONTACT. &#13;
6IJ'Iree Women,"a play for, by, and about women, will be presented&#13;
SOdaY, Jan, 25, in the Comm. Arts Theater at 7:30 p.m. Players&#13;
.... Iell.re: Cynthia Baker Johnson, Sandy Upton, and Roberta&#13;
BU51~E55&#13;
B't-ll~E&#13;
Ph.D. candidate trom Michigan "'~E~x~e~c:::u~ti~v~e ~~mm~~li!:'!e~.'::ro:':m~&#13;
State Universily. Her interests there it must pass througb Dean&#13;
are in industrial and consumer Moy and Vice Chancellor Bau&#13;
buyer behavior. The second before the final decision is made&#13;
applicant Sushila Rao is a Ph. D. Although the new instructor .&#13;
candidate from Indiana not be chosen in time for th&#13;
University. Her interests lie in current semester, Busine&#13;
the quantitative aspects of Management Program Coor&#13;
marketing. A native of India, her dinator Larry Shirland feels the&#13;
GPA in the Doctoral program selection process should be&#13;
was a straight 4.0. The third completed before the spring&#13;
applicant, Donal A. Michie, is semester of '76.&#13;
also a Ph. D. candidate. He Any interested student is&#13;
recieved his BBA from Madison welcome to attend the applicants&#13;
and his MBA from Marquette, presentation to the faculty.&#13;
and is currently a lecturer at That's nothing unusual, but what&#13;
UWM in Marketing is is that some of the students will&#13;
Management. "'11 three ap- also be interviewers. The&#13;
plicants appear to be fully business department has invited&#13;
qualified, but if one of the three students from the schools&#13;
don't convince the faculty they're marketing fraternily, Pi Sigma&#13;
suited for the position the search Epsilon, to assist in the inwill&#13;
begin all over again. terviewing sessions. Although the&#13;
The Business Management students will not be allowed to&#13;
faculty will interview the ap- vote for their choice, they will&#13;
plicants and make a ~~~m- advise the faculty in its seleemendation&#13;
to the DIVISiOn tions. Since the business&#13;
department has never in the past&#13;
allowed students this opportunity,&#13;
it makes it another&#13;
first for the School of Modem&#13;
Industry.&#13;
byDave Brandt&#13;
1alweeksregistration mayor&#13;
lIllY not have been a pleasant&#13;
aperience for you, but one thing&#13;
ilfw sure, you didn't register for&#13;
/Ilf daytime marketing classes.&#13;
... do I know? Because once&#13;
• the business department&#13;
_ lIb4rt • full-time marketing&#13;
~. In fact they were&#13;
lIIIIplete1y out.&#13;
Since Richard Yanzito,&#13;
.uting lecturer left Parkside&#13;
IIltllellUlJlDlerof '75,the business&#13;
tpnnent has been depending&#13;
IIIeIy upon.d hoc's to teach their&#13;
IIIrteting classes. Although&#13;
an'. nothing wrong with ad&#13;
Ir.JOU may be happy to know&#13;
til a full-time marketing in-&#13;
*'clor Is about to he added to&#13;
"lacuIty. Three prospects will&#13;
IIIInterviewedfor the position&#13;
... January. They are Ellen&#13;
Banmer, Sushila Rao, and&#13;
IlInaid A. Mich'ie,&#13;
Ellen Hamner is a 26 year old&#13;
Play auditions&#13;
ADditionsfor The TIme of Your Life, the next major Parkside&#13;
"!reproduction will be held on January 26 and 'J:I. Try-outs will be&#13;
-1:30-1 p.m, and 7-9:30 p.m. AlI screenings will be in !he theatre,&#13;
-. the Mond.y night session, which will be held at CAD-l55A.&#13;
~~ ClIpiesof the script are on two-hour reserve in the Library-&#13;
-uang Center.&#13;
SMITTY'S&#13;
Highway 31 and County Trunk E&#13;
The Best Ham&#13;
San~wich&#13;
in Town~&#13;
Bicentennial&#13;
contelt&#13;
Six hundred dollars in prizes&#13;
will he awarded from the&#13;
Chancellors Fund in the Parkside&#13;
Bicentennial Contest. First prizes&#13;
of $75,second prizes of $25, and a&#13;
.thrid place honorable mention&#13;
will be given for poetry, essay,&#13;
short fiction and drama&#13;
photogr.phy, art, and movie'&#13;
slide, and video taping. '&#13;
Written entries are not to exceed&#13;
2500 words, and visual&#13;
presentations cannot be longer&#13;
!han 2Q minutes. Art and photo&#13;
entries do not have to be titled,&#13;
but must be accompanied by a&#13;
brief statement describing how&#13;
the entry relates to the contest&#13;
theme. Photos may be either&#13;
black and white or COlor, and&#13;
must be a minimum size of 8 hy 10&#13;
inches.&#13;
Judging will be done by a panel&#13;
of five judges from the university&#13;
and the community for the&#13;
written and visual areas. The&#13;
contest deadline is March 1, with&#13;
all entries submitted to the Archives&#13;
and Area Research Center&#13;
in D'J:I4 LLC. First place entries&#13;
will be sent to M.dison for&#13;
systemwide competition.&#13;
For further information,&#13;
contact Nick Burckel, university&#13;
archivist&#13;
BEARD &amp; MUSTACHE&#13;
TRIMMING&#13;
r•• n.'.r.' '00' 'or&#13;
,,,. M.', Ani... ,&#13;
FRANK &amp; lOU&#13;
Call 657-9810&#13;
Across from Brown National Bank&#13;
2227 63rd Street&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 21, 1976THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
PAB. Film Series Presents:&#13;
r---~- ..=..:..------...,&#13;
·IT CAN BE SAID, S1WLY&#13;
AND WITH ntANKS, THAT&#13;
IT IS AN ABSOWlILY&#13;
TtRRIFIC MOVlE~&#13;
THE THREE&#13;
MUSKETEERS&#13;
Thurs., Jan. 22 1:30 p.m. CAT.&#13;
7,30 p.m. CAT.&#13;
Fri.• Jon. 23 - L30 p.m. CAT.&#13;
8,00 p.m. S.A.8.&#13;
Sun., Jan. 25 - 7,30 p.m. S.A.8.'&#13;
Admission, '1.00 «Id', _eel&#13;
/'&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country •&#13;
On tap at the Skellar&#13;
On-C"mpus Servic, Room 235 T,,1I'nl 1-1,,1/&#13;
Phone 553·2150&#13;
1"m O{flce· 1400 o. cu'm"n Rd R"cme&#13;
Phon 6.34· 0061&#13;
"tbree Women," a play for, by, and about women, will be presented&#13;
WJday, Jan. 25, in the Comm. Arts Theater at 7:30 p.m. Players&#13;
from left are: Cynthia Baker Johnson, Sandy Upton, and Roberta&#13;
Bicentennial&#13;
contest&#13;
Six hundred dollars in prizes&#13;
will be awarded from the&#13;
Chancellors Fund in the Parkside&#13;
Bicentennial Contest. First prizes&#13;
of $75, second prizes of $25, and a&#13;
,thrid place honorable mention&#13;
will be given for poetry, essay,&#13;
short fiction and drama&#13;
photography, art, and movie'.&#13;
slide, and video taping.&#13;
Written entries are not to exceed&#13;
2500 words, and visual&#13;
presentations cannot be longer&#13;
than 20 minutes. Art and photo&#13;
entries do not have to be tilled,&#13;
but must be accompanied by a&#13;
brief statement describing ho&#13;
the entry relates to the contest&#13;
theme. Photos may be either&#13;
black and white or color and&#13;
must be a minimwn size of 8 b:&gt; 10&#13;
inches.&#13;
Judging will be done by a panel&#13;
of five judges from the university&#13;
and the community for the&#13;
written and visual areas. The&#13;
contest deadline is March 1, with&#13;
all entries submitted to the Archives&#13;
and Area Research Center&#13;
B U5 l~E55 ~Zli! ~tft :~~~=&#13;
I systemwide competition.&#13;
- co!:ct ~::~:ck~~=~~&#13;
by Dave Brandt&#13;
~'t-ll~E - Ph.D. candidate from Michigan&#13;
~archiVJS~·&#13;
Executive&#13;
t&#13;
l)mIDl&#13;
~ e. rom&#13;
Last weeks registration may or State University. Her interests there it must pass through Dean&#13;
may oot have been a pleasant are in industrial and consumer Moy and Vice Chancellor Bauer&#13;
aperience for you, but one thing buyer behavior. The second before the final decision is made.&#13;
isfoc Slll'e, you didn't register for applicant Sushila Rao is a Ph.D. Although the new in.5tructor ·&#13;
aiy daytime marketing classes. candidate from Indiana not be chosen in time for th&#13;
How do I know? Because once University. Her interests lie in current semester, Busine&#13;
again the business department the quantitative aspects of Management Program Coor&#13;
ns short a full-time marketing marketing. A native of India, her dinator Larry Shirland feels the&#13;
Instructor. In fact they were GPA in the Doctoral program selection process should be&#13;
ampletely out. was a straight 4.0. The third completed before the spring&#13;
Since Richard Yanzito, applicant, Donal A. Michie, is semester of '76·&#13;
marketing lecturer left Parkside also a Ph. D. candidate. He Any interested student is&#13;
lnlbesummer of '75, the business recieved his BBA from Madison welcome to attend the applicants&#13;
department has been depending and his MBA from Marquette, presentation to the faculty.&#13;
JDielyuponadhoc'sto teach their and is currently a lecturer at That's nothing unusual, but what&#13;
marketing classes. Although UWM in Marketing is is that some of the students will&#13;
Dlere's nothing wrong with ad Management. ,1.11 three ap- also be interviewers. The&#13;
t.,c's you may be happy to know plicants appear to be fully business department has invited&#13;
lbat a full-time marketing in- qualified, but if one of the three students from the schools&#13;
llructor is about to be added to don't convince the faculty they're marketing fraternity, Pi Sigma&#13;
Ille faculty. Three prospects will suited for the position the search Epsilon, to assist in the ininterviewed&#13;
for the position will begin all over again. terviewing sessions. Although the&#13;
airing January. They are Ellen The Business Management students will not be allowed to&#13;
Hamner, Sushila Rao, and faculty will interview the ap- vote for their choice, they will&#13;
i-wd A. Michie. plicants and make a :~~m- advise the faculty in its selecEllen&#13;
Hamner is a 26 year old mendation to the Divmon tions. Since the bu iness&#13;
Play auditions&#13;
Auditions for The Time of Your Life the next major Parkside&#13;
lbeatre production will b2 held on Janua;y 26 and Zl. Try-outs will be&#13;
11 l:30-4 p.m. and 7-9:30 p.m. All screenings will be in the theatre,&#13;
tlcept the Monday night session, which will be held at CA D-155A.&#13;
Pel"l1'lal ~pies of the script are on two-hour reserve in the Library·&#13;
I.taming Center.&#13;
The Be~t Ham&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
in Town~&#13;
SMITTY'S&#13;
Highway 31 and County Trunk E&#13;
department has never in the past&#13;
allowed students this opportunity,&#13;
it makes it another&#13;
first for the School of Modem&#13;
Industry.&#13;
BEARD &amp; MUSTACHE&#13;
TRIMMING&#13;
;J&#13;
The&#13;
natural&#13;
loolc for&#13;
the Male Animal&#13;
FRANK &amp; LOU&#13;
Call 657-9810&#13;
Across from Brown Notional Bon&#13;
2227 63rd Street&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 21, 1976 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
P.A.8. film&#13;
Thu s., n. 22 1:30 p.m. C .T.&#13;
7:30 p.m. C • .T.&#13;
Fri., Jo . 23 - l :30 p.m. C. . T.&#13;
8:00 p.m. S. .B.&#13;
Sun., Jo . 25 - 7 :30 p.m. S. .B.&#13;
Admission: s1.oo&#13;
On tap at th k liar&#13;
on&#13;
Ro 235 T, II I H&#13;
P on 553-21&#13;
Albums, lopes •.•&#13;
A great se ec ,on o albums. top s,&#13;
and case tes nclud1ng on ou sto ding&#13;
selection o lmpor ed Albums.&#13;
plus f rs end ova, ability o n w&#13;
re eases. All e Re ease l.P.'s ore&#13;
S 4.49 . ope.s S 5.40&#13;
G' Ce&#13;
aniqae gi.J=-Cs fOR eveRyon &#13;
THE PARKSIDE RA GER W.dI ... y, JAn. 21, 1976&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
Main Place," says Dearborn, smiling broadly "&#13;
ordered security police to be well away lrom'~&#13;
area, Iwas tempted to take of~my shoes allSd&#13;
roll up my pant-legs and d~ a little streaking m~1f,&#13;
but with my luck the Racine Journal Times"&#13;
have been right there to take a picture of me °eanUid&#13;
th fr t naae?" . you see that on e on page,,'&#13;
Perhaps it is this undemable Identifi~tion II'ith&#13;
young people tnat bas made Dearbor? so sUCCtssIQI&#13;
at Parkside. thIS reporter mtervlewed several&#13;
students and administrative people who have b..,.&#13;
involved with Dearborn. One word describes their&#13;
feelings toward hun: respect. And respect is 8t,&#13;
premium these days. Dearborn deserves everybit&#13;
of it.&#13;
Dearborn-------&#13;
In the area of treadth of&#13;
edg the group recomUJoWI&#13;
e, ired mended that students be requ .&#13;
to take I; to 18credits covenng&#13;
the physical umverse,&#13;
fire areas: I and behavior eullura bml8-0 r • the&#13;
inte.lIectual heritage, . 's&#13;
aesthetic world, and humamty&#13;
..... ld. ed the In depth of knowl ge,&#13;
&lt;ommillee Suggests that a&#13;
otudent take alleast 70 credits of&#13;
CXJUtS"S whidi count for a mal or,&#13;
double major. or set 01 sequences&#13;
d d). For the sake. of interdi&#13;
ciplinary educatIOn, a&#13;
nt should take at least one&#13;
cred&gt;l sequence outside of his&#13;
major area.&#13;
"bout 40 specific program&#13;
proposals ...ere also disC\lSSed&#13;
detailed by the AcadeWc&#13;
am De''elopment group.&#13;
The final (XlP work group&#13;
reporta will be given by January&#13;
n. ..btl&gt; there will be an all&#13;
lal:'l1 'meeting on the (XlP. The&#13;
~ will be at Grenquesl 101&#13;
lnlm 2:30 to ; p.m. the (XlP will&#13;
dIat'UsS thai meeting on Friday&#13;
JaDuar) %3lnlm 9 am. to I p.m.&#13;
in 363and continue in their&#13;
YOUNG ADULT&#13;
IGHT&#13;
relay&#13;
Ad ission $1.25&#13;
Skate Rental 50~&#13;
ED'S ROLLER RINK&#13;
6220 67~ St., IIl1os".&#13;
jut .H ..i.....' 31&#13;
IIQDClllZil&#13;
Free with this coupon&#13;
a bottle of beer&#13;
with any steak dinner&#13;
3315 52 s-.. Kenosha&#13;
AMERICAN&#13;
~STATE BANK&#13;
S8&#13;
CII:Il&#13;
3928 . 60th St. Phone 658·2&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
.-------- IIf you don't save 25*&#13;
Ion any food purcha&#13;
Iof SOq: or more at&#13;
Ithe Burger Shopp&#13;
'I by 2 :00 p.m. IFriday, January 2&#13;
ICOUPOD&#13;
I&#13;
1 But why eat 25¢ ,&#13;
Iwhen you can spenM&#13;
I&#13;
FOODVALUEOF THIS cOUP~&#13;
CELLULOSE FIBERS Roughage I~OO\SoSll'&#13;
I&#13;
CRUDE PROTEIN Crudeness 500%soSll&#13;
WATER Chlorine.065%SDSRSOSfl&#13;
l&#13;
ASH Dried Nicotine 1.57\"&lt;II&#13;
INK Indelible Dye 125%SI)o7 ,&#13;
I&#13;
LIGNIN Natural Jaundice CoiI1&#13;
00 RANGERSI • "".ge"ed 0"" Sluden' Req""emen' 250\sLJSIf&#13;
1&#13;
.I1!.·I .JL COMPLIMENTS OF PARKSIDE FOOD SSlvlCl&#13;
-------&#13;
I FOOt SERVICI&#13;
.....,....&#13;
• IN Sa ,&#13;
UPER RANGER&#13;
SPEC&#13;
•&#13;
IU I '1.1!maE&#13;
o 99+&#13;
lAY AFTEI E.m USlmALl&#13;
T1 y AT 11IE au m SHOPPE&#13;
, J n. 2 , 976&#13;
'f&#13;
ULT&#13;
T&#13;
n $1.25&#13;
e ntal 504&#13;
INK&#13;
,&#13;
Dearborn-------- continued from page 1 '&#13;
Main Place," says Dearborn, smiling broadly ,,&#13;
ordered security police to be well away from·thl&#13;
area. I was tempted to take of~ my shoes ansd SOckse&#13;
roll up my _Pant-legs and d~ a little streak_mg tnYSeU&#13;
but with my luck the Racine Journal Tunes w ,&#13;
have been right there to take a picture of me ~uld&#13;
you see that on the front page?'~ · an&#13;
Perhaps it is this undeniable identification llrith&#13;
young people that_has made ~arbor? so successful&#13;
at Parkside. Tlns reporter interviewed severai&#13;
students and administrative people who have been&#13;
involved with Dearborn. One word describes their&#13;
feelings toward him: respect. And respect is at 8&#13;
premium these days. Dearborn deserves every bit&#13;
of it.&#13;
BQDilllZcl&#13;
Free with this coupon&#13;
a bottle of beer&#13;
with any steak dinner&#13;
3315 52 St., Kenosha&#13;
3928 - 60th St.&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
1--------&#13;
1 If you don't save 25¢ I on any food purchase&#13;
I of so~ or more at&#13;
I the Burger Shoppe&#13;
·1 by 2 :00 p.m. I Friday, January 2&#13;
I you can&#13;
1Bat this&#13;
ICODpOD&#13;
I I But why eat 25¢ I when you can spend&#13;
I FOOD VALUE OF THIS couPO&#13;
CELLULOSE FIBERS I CRUDE PROTEIN&#13;
WATER I ASH&#13;
INK&#13;
I LIGNIN&#13;
IUUIIG£R I 1------------------------..J L COMPLIMENTS OF PARKSIDE rooo sERvia -------&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
\Nednesdny, January21&#13;
~el1er: Featuring Debbie Donal! from 1-2&#13;
(rOJIl 2-3 p.m. in GR-D201. p.rn. and Phil&#13;
•..-e: ..Defence of Skepticism." at 8:15 p.m, in CA&#13;
'"'j;breroftbe University of Arizona Philosoph De 125 by Prof.&#13;
011"'11: Milwaukee Sumphony Orchestra at 8 ypmPt&#13;
•&#13;
..,saIe at the Info Kiosk for $3.50. . . In the CAT.&#13;
Thursday, January 22&#13;
_: "'!be Three Muskaleers" at 1:30 p.m, and 7'30 .&#13;
,.,._ . p.m. lD the&#13;
Friday. January 23&#13;
JlIrit: "The Three Muskaleers" at 1:30 p.m. in the CAT&#13;
10 lbe SAB. and at 8&#13;
III Trip: To Milwaukee for UW-Parkside vs UW Mil&#13;
.... llbIIlgame. Tickets are,on sale at the Info Kiosk f $3- waukee&#13;
Hall t6 d returni or .50. Bus is Tallent a n.m, an returning at abooutll p&#13;
... : Beginsat 9 p.m. in the SAB. .m,&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
'&lt;el:end: At Rib Mountain February 6 7 8 Sig '" nupatlnfo&#13;
Poll _&#13;
contif'lUe.d. frOfTl ~ I&#13;
freshman and&#13;
favored the R sophomores&#13;
epublicans&#13;
Seventy-three pe .&#13;
responding to thl'Ce!ltof tho..,&#13;
- presenUy re,,;"-~ eto PO,~ are&#13;
• eo~1CU VOWl;:" this&#13;
again exceeding the '.&#13;
average. national&#13;
Two of the to lhr&#13;
getters of the ind.!.._~eneels vote&#13;
Re ubli -"'"~ were&#13;
p. cans. This may indicate&#13;
public awareness of recent&#13;
events. Last week the ational&#13;
Democratic Party decried that it&#13;
will n.ot accept delegates chosen&#13;
by WISCOnsin voters .&#13;
. lD an open&#13;
prunary. A lawsuit is pending&#13;
seeking to compel the state t~&#13;
requU'e . an affidavit of&#13;
Democratic affiliation from each&#13;
voter before allowing be or she to&#13;
vote tn the Demnerati .&#13;
It&#13;
. c prunary&#13;
IS expected that . . d many !D'&#13;
ependents will vote in the GOP&#13;
primary, possibly for President&#13;
Ford's . challenger Ronald&#13;
Reagan. In an anti-establishment&#13;
backlash.&#13;
Heavy support for such undeclared&#13;
personalities as Kennedy&#13;
and Percy indicates a&#13;
hidden number of undecided&#13;
voters who will be forced to&#13;
cha~ge their decision before&#13;
pulling a lever on April 6.&#13;
WednescS.y J&#13;
, .n. 21, 1976 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
W,'r, JUII.round the com r&#13;
from P.r IkI,&#13;
Birch Rd.&#13;
at&#13;
16th Ave.&#13;
551·7&#13;
Delicious Pizza&#13;
•• 4 •••&#13;
Savory Roast Beef •ell&#13;
A,ei Ill, et Pine T,dt Nortt.&#13;
FIRST DANCE OF THE S ESTER&#13;
• THE SOUlRlL SOU OS OF 1&amp;&#13;
~ CLOVER-.&#13;
• SATURDAY, JANUARY 24 9;00 P&#13;
SlUdent Activities Bldg.&#13;
Adm: '1.25 UW-e- •.....",. D Sh-'--t&lt; '1.50 Guest&#13;
.....&#13;
SAY IT ON A&#13;
SHIRT •••&#13;
A SPECIAL SHIRT&#13;
REG. '11.95&#13;
ZIPPER HOODED SWEAT $6.00&#13;
$4.00&#13;
$1.49&#13;
REG. '5.95&#13;
FOOTBALL JERSEY&#13;
sOLili&#13;
1D&#13;
COLORED T-SHIRT $1.99 FITS AND MISFITS T-SHIRT&#13;
LIMITED QUANTITIES, SIZES AIID CDLOIS&#13;
. YOUR NAME PRINTED FREE WITH PURCHASE OF ANY OF THE ABOVE SHIRTS&#13;
SALE RUNS JANUARY 19th thrv·JANUARY 30th ONLY&#13;
UW Parkside&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
" ••• ay - nuuay !u. -7 ....&#13;
Friday 9 a.•. - 4 •.•. sall~aJ II u. - 1 •.•.&#13;
·&#13;
·&#13;
·&#13;
:..". :.&#13;
.,..':&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
Wednesday, January21&#13;
t e11er: Featuring Debbie Donatt from 1-2&#13;
(l'Otn 2-3 p.m. in GR-D201. p.m. and Phil&#13;
nire: ••Defence ~f Sk~pticismt at 8:15 p.m. in CA 125 b&#13;
l,tbrer of the University of Arizona Philosophy De t Y Prof.&#13;
rt: ruwaukee Sumphony Orchestra at a p mp : · on sale at the Info Kiosk for $3.50. · · m the CAT.&#13;
Thursday, January 22&#13;
. •'The Three Muskateers" at 1:30 p.m. and 7·30 . · · p.m. in the&#13;
Friday, January 23&#13;
: "The Three Muskateers" at 1:30 p.m. in the CAT and at 8&#13;
the SAB,&#13;
Trip: To Milwaukee for UW-Parkside vs uw Mil · · - waukee&#13;
ngame. Tickets are,on sale at the Info Kiosk for $3 50 B .&#13;
Tallent Hall at 6 "&gt;.m. and returning at aboout 11 p m · · us 18&#13;
: Begins at 9 p.m. in the SAB. · ·&#13;
y Januaiy 26&#13;
tuns: For the play, "Time of Your Life" by William Sa&#13;
J:30-4 :00 p.m. in the CAT and 7:00-9:30 p.m. in the Fihn 8~~3:&#13;
Tuesday,January27&#13;
(115 : For the play, "Time of Your Life" by William Sa&#13;
1:30-4:00 p.m. in the CAT. royan&#13;
: Folk Singers Susan &amp; Richard Thomas at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
end: At Rib Mountain February 6, 7, 8. Sign up at Info&#13;
Poll--__&#13;
SAY IT 0&#13;
Birch Rd.&#13;
at&#13;
6th A&#13;
• IZIG&#13;
B g.&#13;
'I.SO G&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. . .&#13;
.&#13;
•&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
•&#13;
.&#13;
. . . . :·· . ..&#13;
. , . . • ... •&#13;
•••&#13;
I&#13;
REG. srn. 5&#13;
Z1&#13;
IPPER H OED E&#13;
REG. ss. 5&#13;
FOOTBALL ER EY 4.00&#13;
SOiiit COLORED T-SHIRT $1. 99 FITS AND ISF1ITS J- IRT 1.49&#13;
LIMITED QUANTITIES, SIZES AND COLO S&#13;
. YOUR NAME PRINTED FREE WITH PURCHASE OF A Y OF liHE BOVE SHIRT&#13;
SALE RUNS JANUARY 19th thru-JANUARY 30th ONLY&#13;
o day -&#13;
Friday 9 a. . - ••• &#13;
, THE PARKSIDE RANGER .... sday. ~n. 21. 197'&#13;
-n erfest se edule&#13;
In Greenquisl emieceJIllaa&#13;
dlr'C"' f.. tarinll WoIverIDo&#13;
Pl8tt Bon cfoeavro:s ~ open&#13;
Mi.... II.. sy.phony&#13;
....r. with Sw.dish&#13;
The Milwaukee symphony&#13;
(Jrehestra, acclaimed as one ?f&#13;
the nation's finest, will appear 10&#13;
cmcert with Stephen Swedish as&#13;
piano soloist at the U~versity o~&#13;
Wisconsin-Parks Ide sCorn&#13;
munication Arts Theater on&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 21, at 8 p.m.&#13;
under sponsorship of the student&#13;
Parkside Activities Board.&#13;
General admission tickets are&#13;
now on sale at Sears in Racine&#13;
and Kenosha and general admission&#13;
and Parkside student&#13;
tickets are available at the Information&#13;
Center in Main Place&#13;
of wyllle Library-Learning&#13;
Center. General admission is $5;&#13;
UW.p student admission $3.50.&#13;
Because of the limited number of&#13;
_ts 10 the theater and expected&#13;
demand, the Activities Board is&#13;
urgmg persons wishing to attend&#13;
III get their tickets prompUy.&#13;
Spe.tt! on&#13;
lob.rt L. Follett.&#13;
"Wisconsin in American&#13;
History: The La Follette&#13;
14acy" will be the topic of the&#13;
Ilut in the series of Bicentennial&#13;
Lecturu at the University of&#13;
WbcOnSin-Parkside at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
CIl MCIlday, Jan. 26, in the&#13;
Communication Art Theater.&#13;
1be sneaker will be Prof. David&#13;
P. 'lbe1en of the University of&#13;
•MissourI. who will focus 011 the&#13;
relationship between La&#13;
Folletle's reform ideas and&#13;
de,"loplng CU\SUIIler and citizen&#13;
presoure for accolllltabillty in&#13;
government and business.&#13;
The Bicentennial lecture&#13;
series, is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
Classlfleds&#13;
Y'P""iI done" my hOrne_ Contact Pam at ""'..&#13;
,t.,HTED. sa~ penonM'I. 10 pet"cent&#13;
p.....-. fkl6b1e hCll..Ir', pertect for&#13;
ts.. Con1Id rM R~ office In&#13;
oN\,.LC DlN or ceu SS3.12tS.&#13;
ypinO 0CII'IiIl 50 Urt'lS .. ""..... rate&#13;
Call J VlkhiN at ~1&#13;
Qd Q&#13;
ur&#13;
rap" n&#13;
Time-out for&#13;
redecorating I&#13;
I Steye fall off the&#13;
If?&#13;
r crunch ,,\~&#13;
Iller?&#13;
Give a u and find out.&#13;
tl S£I '11 10. 21&#13;
2Q.47 2200 Avenue&#13;
Vii a Capri Plaza&#13;
551-9488&#13;
•&#13;
a&#13;
Fr checking •••Free checks.'&#13;
o minimum balance&#13;
FOR' R vs U: 'E ...E. TR OKI G no RS&#13;
ur enliro- orric .. inc-ludinlt lobb) and drive-in&#13;
M -"Il1urmal' 7:~:30&#13;
PE l'ndIy ;:00-&amp;:00&#13;
- Hill·, oon&#13;
--" ........... J&#13;
Phone41~&#13;
CORPORATIO.&#13;
The Italian "- _.•• espects food. The spic.&#13;
of a sauce, the fine texture of warm, fr.,h&#13;
bread. the consistancy of a melted chee$f&#13;
sauce. For him the reward is the p/eaSllft&#13;
of those who enjoy his work. Expen'ence&#13;
this pleasure.&#13;
C!aA-a Capti&#13;
2129 !BLwh. cRd.,&#13;
.!J{E.no~h.a., CWu..&#13;
ft'NO'~FINE FOODS&#13;
" ~ &amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
Southside 1816-16th St.&#13;
Northside 3728 Douglas&#13;
639-7115&#13;
*&#13;
634·1991&#13;
PICKUP OR ~&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS ~&#13;
DELIVERED TOYOUR HOME&#13;
FREE DELIVER Y&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Ken&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654·0&#13;
TRIP INCLUDES: .&#13;
- Round trip tronsportotion vio oir condi&#13;
&amp; restroom equipped Greyhound Charter&#13;
- 7 nights lodging ot the OceanfrontHolidill&#13;
Inn "Surfside"&#13;
- Services of a tour escort throughoutplul&#13;
an on-sight agency representative&#13;
LIMITED SPACE • SIGN UP TODAYI&#13;
IICAMPUS TRAVEL CENTER&#13;
WLLC 0-197 553-2294&#13;
GE&#13;
che u e&#13;
Milwaukee symphony&#13;
ere with Swedish&#13;
The mwaukee Symphony&#13;
Orchestra, acclaimed as one ?f&#13;
the nation's finest. will appear m&#13;
coocert with Stephen Swedish as&#13;
piano soloist at th~ U~versity 0 :&#13;
isconsin-Parks1de s Com&#13;
munication Arts Theater on&#13;
'ednesdaY, Jan. 21, at 8 p.m.&#13;
er sponsorship of the student&#13;
Par de Activities Board.&#13;
era] admission tickets are&#13;
no sale at Sears in Racine&#13;
Keoosha and general ad-&#13;
. ·on and Parkside student&#13;
e are available at the Intion&#13;
Center in Main Place&#13;
yllie Library-Learning&#13;
r. General admission is $5;&#13;
.p tu nt admission $3.50.&#13;
Hee:au:;e of the limited number of&#13;
in the theater and expected&#13;
demand the ctM ties Board is&#13;
ns wishing to attend&#13;
tic ets promptly.&#13;
Classlfleds&#13;
shfft, rate ., 654-8031&#13;
1me-out for&#13;
C tingl&#13;
nch \&#13;
hmm r?&#13;
11 and fi d out. (i&#13;
checks·&#13;
H 'R&#13;
Yea. ant&#13;
The Italian .,_ . .• , i!spects food. The spice&#13;
of a sauce, the fine texture of warm, fresh&#13;
bread, the consistancy of a melted cheese&#13;
sauce. For him the reward is the pleasure&#13;
of those who enjoy his work. Experience&#13;
this pleasure.&#13;
c~a Cap,il&#13;
2129 !Bi'U!.h c::Rd.,&#13;
!J(Eno1-ha, &lt;Wli.&#13;
1)1NO:S FINE FOODS&#13;
&amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
Northside 3728 Douglas. 639-7115&#13;
Southside 1816-16th St.&#13;
634-1991&#13;
DELIVERED&#13;
PIPING&#13;
PICK&#13;
HOT&#13;
TO YOUR&#13;
UP&#13;
FOODS&#13;
OR&#13;
HOME&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
Notional Varsity Club&#13;
•&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Ken&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-07&#13;
OF WISCONSIN-PARKSIDE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
SPRING BREAK IN&#13;
DAYTONA&#13;
BEACH&#13;
APRIL 16-24&#13;
$ 145 ~ed on 4&#13;
to a room&#13;
• Round trip transportation via air condif&#13;
&amp; restroom equipped Greyhound Charter&#13;
• 7 nights lodging at the Oceanfront Hofi&#13;
Inn "Surfside"&#13;
a tour escort throughout p &#13;
!f-rts analysis .&#13;
A question of·eligibility&#13;
byThomAiello guard, an.d Lear~a Scott, the "Ka-ploosh!", to any dreams ot&#13;
lhe second time 10 less than flashy, hlgh-scorlOg forward, glory._&#13;
For the problem of ineligibil.ity have. both taken a week-long It should. also be noted that&#13;
.year ped-up for the Parkside interim course over vacation at eligibility problems are not&#13;
baS cr~pII team. Along with this UW-Whitewater. King returned limited solely to sports by any&#13;
baSke a many questions have to the line-up last Tuesday means. How many stud~nts have&#13;
probl~~ised. . against Detroit University. At the had to take various courses after&#13;
beeI1 questions that come to time of this wrItmg Scott's status failing to pass specialized&#13;
som~ediatelY are: Will the .was not certain but, chances are, "proficiency" tests? Or, how&#13;
JDind get to play again this he has returned to the starting many people have changed&#13;
piay~f so, ~ow? Is the problem squad by .now. Apparently, courses, majors, or even schools&#13;
If"" eligibility so unusual 10 enough credit hours were made- beca use they had failed in&#13;
Ii '", What can be done to up to keep both players on the meeting one set standard or&#13;
JPl~~uch circumstances in the court for the remainder of the another? The difference is that =~aYOI , And then there is the season. not many students are in the&#13;
question: "Thes~ guys The eligibility question is not so limelight the way athletes are.&#13;
here mainly to play unusual 10 sports. In fact,. It has The problems of athletes being&#13;
: tball, so why don't their been a thorn ID the SIde of academically ineligible to par-&#13;
~ s just pass them? coaches for years. Imagine, a ticipate in sports may be&#13;
Ie8Ther answers to the ·first team has. a chance to Chalk-up something that most every coach&#13;
~ions are rather simple. enough WIDsto become a strong will have to worry about at times,&#13;
qu~ King the fine play-making tournament contender, and then&#13;
SltVIe , one or more of its top players are&#13;
rul~d scholastically ineligible.&#13;
Matmen upset 10th ranked&#13;
and capture Carthage crown&#13;
PBrkside'swrestling team enjoyed a big weekend, knocking-&lt;lff&#13;
lGIb-ratedAugsburg College, 32.I1, at home last Friday, and then&#13;
capturingfirst place in Saturday's Carthage Invitational.&#13;
W'nmingFriday for the 14th·ranked Rangers were: Rick Kubiak,&#13;
DIveWagner,Doug Andrewski, John Gale, and Brad Freberg. There&#13;
Il!I'e also three forfeit wins.&#13;
In the nine team Invitational, winners were: Toby Forsythe, Dan&#13;
O'Coonell,Joe Landers, Bob Gruner, Wagner, and Andrewski.&#13;
hadtwo pins that day. Coach Jim Koch said his squad "looked&#13;
JIIUy good." but the true test will be this next week whenit wrestles&#13;
stiffer competition.. .&#13;
Wednesdaynight,7:30, the wrestlers host UW-oshkosh. Friday&#13;
JlIbI the squad goes to Northern Michigan, followed by a meet at&#13;
"dJ!gan Tech with SI. Cloud State on Saturday. Then, next Tuesday,&#13;
p.m., thegrapplers are at Carroll with Chicago State.&#13;
24thand 25th on 6@th St. Kenosha, WIsconsin&#13;
• •. •• - - - - - - - - -.-.-----.---. I&#13;
-------- I&#13;
One time Only ::&#13;
DOT SALE!!! '.&#13;
Pick From Our Dot Sale Specials :,:&#13;
Famous Brands - Lee - Levi's -&#13;
"dlubber - Sundowner _ Parkley - Etc. .'&#13;
,&#13;
- BELTS:,&#13;
, .&#13;
::&#13;
'.'.&#13;
"&#13;
'.'.&#13;
"&#13;
'.&#13;
::&#13;
'i '~.(jenes ~~~~.---.::&#13;
PS ... JEANS&#13;
Ridiculous. Prices&#13;
From&#13;
Pick the Price You Want to Pay,&#13;
Then look For the right color Dot.&#13;
It's Fun&#13;
Unbelievable Bargains&#13;
If you can beat our price, it's .yours free!&#13;
Come in JOf A "Free Jean Card"&#13;
Open Sundays&#13;
ilia tapri plaza kenos~a . 551·9945&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 21,1976 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
under present conditions. Bu.&#13;
there must be some solutions.&#13;
Parkside's basketball team has&#13;
come out of the last few "scares"&#13;
in relatively good shape. But it&#13;
should have served as a warning&#13;
to all involved.&#13;
Perbaps the players need to&#13;
take their school much more&#13;
seriously. Perhaps some of the&#13;
instructors should talk with the&#13;
student-athlete, making clear&#13;
cont,t'IUe&lt;I on ~ ••&#13;
"CONVERSATIONS FROM WINGSPREAD"&#13;
Peobody A-.l-WiMi"'l Radio Progroms&#13;
Sundays, 8:05 p.m,&#13;
January 25&#13;
February 1&#13;
February 8&#13;
WRJN - AM . 1400&#13;
Foreign News&#13;
The Theatre&#13;
Arms Control&#13;
Reporting&#13;
(tapes of previous programs avoik»ble at Wyllie Ltoming Ctnter 0-1 nSJ&#13;
~(edeemoble with the&#13;
purchase of any medium&#13;
or large size pizza at&#13;
Kenosha or Rocine Pjzzo&#13;
Hut.&#13;
Limit: 1 Pizzo Hut Budc u"'''1 per Pizzo. Offer expires&#13;
III Feb. 7, 1976 lII.iI~ --- ONE PIZZA HUT BUCK&#13;
BEER DRINKER'S QUICK QUIZ&#13;
Just to kill a rnmute or two. why don't you ITl3lChyour own&#13;
beer-dt-inkmg habits and preferences against lho~ of tho&#13;
Budweiser Brewrnaster \\'hllt' ~ou·n.:&gt; taking the {(·S!, II might&#13;
be a good idea to cover up thC' answers witb ,J cold can or (",0&#13;
of the K iog of Beers&#13;
1.when you do use a I(lass, do .\,()U ('a!'o(' IhC' Ot'C'r down&#13;
the side? 0 Or do you pour it do\\'Tl the IntddlC" to get&#13;
a niet&gt; head of foam? 0&#13;
2. How much foam do you lik(' on a ~bss of draught&#13;
1:&gt;&lt;&gt;er"None at all 0 On&lt;' I~ch 0 On&lt;' and :l half to&#13;
two inches o'&#13;
3.00 you likp to drink your ~r In littl(' sips? 0 BI~&#13;
swallows? 0 Sonwthin~ in bPtwwn? 0&#13;
4. vVhich do you Jikl?' ~Sl?&#13;
Canned be&lt;or 0 Bottled be&lt;or 0 Draught be&lt;or0&#13;
5.\Vhich bef'r is brewE"d by "f'xclusive Bf'f'chwood Agemg&#13;
with natural carbonation to produCf' a bet~r tastE' and&#13;
a smoolher. morC' drinkable beE'r?" BudweiSf"r 0 SomE'&#13;
~~~iii~ other brand 0&#13;
6. When you say "BUdwf'iser:' do you say it&#13;
. .. eagerly7 0 loudly" 0 gladly" 0&#13;
WI'OJ&#13;
)0 Pl!d4 ·...41l'~d4 I~ JO)&#13;
&lt;lIPJ·l1W d4J U ....op ly.:tIH r&#13;
SH3.\\SNV&#13;
~1~"lcJ,).l.)1'&#13;
.-IJI~ :-.I,)"'~UI· Ity ~ "''''Olll!''''' .&lt;118 C&#13;
~1.pUt (: 01 t:1&#13;
I 'Z ld'-l.l"'P"S .\IUO «;;&#13;
~pns".11 '-I!&#13;
BUdweiser. .:fulll '-I' ·.lS~4l )0 .\u\" to&#13;
L"G~" aH"· f&#13;
~ ~~,---~.. ;:...&#13;
~ ,f....A1.. ,,&lt;OJ H..J'" •&#13;
:4~UM' _/i~M«+ ~&#13;
- \'':..''",~-:.: .~_...':'~" ~&#13;
~rts analysis&#13;
_. A question of. eligibility by Thom Aie~lo guard, an_d Learti:ia Scott, the "Ka-ploosh ! ", to any dreams ot th second time m less than flashy, high-scoring forward, glory.&#13;
~o; ;e problem of ineligibil_ity ~ve_ both taken a wee~-long&#13;
aye ped-up for&#13;
It should- also be noted that&#13;
h8&#13;
the Parkside mterun course over vacation at eligibility problems are not&#13;
t,aSk&#13;
5 ~:u&#13;
many&#13;
team.&#13;
questions&#13;
Along with this UW-Whitewater. King returned limited solely to sports, by any&#13;
have to the line-up last Tuesday means. How many students have nroblern&#13;
r· raised. . ~gams&#13;
· t Det ·t U · ·t · . r01&#13;
tieell questions that come&#13;
•. ruversi y. At the had to take various courses after&#13;
?°m~ediately are&#13;
to time of this writmg Scott's status failing to pass specialized&#13;
~ers get&#13;
: Will the .was not certain but, chances are, "proficiency" tests? Or, how&#13;
pla)? If so, how?&#13;
to play again this he has returned to the starting many people have changed&#13;
yeai: · J'gibility so&#13;
Is the&#13;
unusual&#13;
proble~&#13;
m&#13;
squad by _now. Apparently, courses, majors, or even schools&#13;
of Ill~&#13;
enough credit hours were made- because they had failed in&#13;
spo~~uch&#13;
1 What&#13;
circumstances&#13;
can be done t~ up to keep both players on the meeting one set standard or&#13;
avoi ? And then there&#13;
in the court for the remainder of the another? The difference is that&#13;
is the season.&#13;
::i:~d question&#13;
not many students are in the&#13;
here mainly&#13;
: "These guys The eligibility question is not so limelight the way athletes are.&#13;
~etball,&#13;
to play unusual in sports. In fact, it has The problems of athletes being&#13;
so why don't their been a thorn in the side of a_c~demic~y&#13;
chers just pass&#13;
ineligible to par-&#13;
~h answers&#13;
them? coaches for years. Imagine, a hcipate m sports may be&#13;
~ions are&#13;
to the first team has a chance to chalk-up something that most every coach&#13;
que~ I{ing the fine&#13;
rather&#13;
play-making simple. enough wins to become a strong will have to worrv about at times, tournament contender, and then&#13;
Stevie ' one or more of its top players are&#13;
ruled scholastically ineligible.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 21 , 1976 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
under present conditions. But&#13;
there must be some solutions.&#13;
Parkside's basketball team has&#13;
come out of the last few "scares"&#13;
in relatively good shape. But it&#13;
should have served as a arning to all invol,;ed.&#13;
Perhaps the pla} rs need to&#13;
take their school much more&#13;
seriously. Perha some of th&#13;
instructo should talk with the&#13;
student-athlete, ma in cl r&#13;
cont~ on PIIO I&#13;
"CONVERSATIONS FROM WINGSPREAD"&#13;
Peabody Award- iming Radio Pr oms&#13;
Sundays, 8:05 p.m.&#13;
January 25&#13;
February 1&#13;
February 8&#13;
WRJN - AM - 1400&#13;
Foreign News Reporting&#13;
The Theatre&#13;
Arms Control&#13;
Center 0-lnS)&#13;
Matmen upJet 10th ranked&#13;
and capture Carthage crown&#13;
Parkside's wrestling team enjoyed a big weekend, knocking-off&#13;
!()th-rated Augsburg ~llege, 32-~l, at home las~ ~ iday, and then&#13;
Redeemable with the&#13;
purchase of any medium&#13;
or large size pino at&#13;
Kenosha or Racine Pizza&#13;
Hut.&#13;
Kenosha Piz:za Hut1&#13;
4608 75 St.&#13;
capturing first place m Saturday s Carthage Invitationa~. .&#13;
Winning Friday for the 14th-ranked Rangers were : Rick Kubiak,&#13;
Dave Wagner, Doug Andrewski, John Gale, and Brad Freberg. There&#13;
were also three forfeit wins.&#13;
In the nine team Invitational, winners were : Toby Forsythe, Dan&#13;
O'Connell Joe Landers, Bob Gruner, Wagner, and Andrewski.&#13;
Wagner h~d two pins that day. Coach Jim Koch said his squad ''looked&#13;
iretty good." but the true test will be this next week when i t wrestles&#13;
against stiffer competition. .&#13;
Wednesday night, -7:30, the wrestlers host UW-Oshkosh. Friday&#13;
night the squad goes to Northern Michigan, followed by a meet at&#13;
Michigan Tech with St. Cloud State on Saturday. Then, next Tuesday,&#13;
5:Jlp.m., the grapplers are at Carroll with Chicago State. ·&#13;
24th and 25th on 6@th St. Kenosha, W(sconsin&#13;
•• • - - - - - - - - - -----------. -· ----------- I&#13;
I&#13;
One time Only&#13;
DOT SALE!!!&#13;
I&#13;
••&#13;
•.&#13;
••&#13;
Pick From Our Dot •• Sale Specials 11&#13;
Famous Brands - Lee - Levi's - I Landlubber - Sundowner - Parkley - Etc. 11&#13;
I&#13;
- BELTS',&#13;
/ '• OPS ... JEANS&#13;
Ridiculous . Prices&#13;
From&#13;
Pick the Price You Want to Pay,&#13;
Then look For the right color Dot.&#13;
It's Fun&#13;
Unbelievable Bargains&#13;
If You can beat our price, it's yours free!&#13;
Come in Jor A "Free Jeon Cord"&#13;
Open Sundays&#13;
•.&#13;
••&#13;
'•&#13;
'• I.&#13;
I&#13;
-. (.)enc S ~~~~!:~----l . lo capri plaza kenosha . 551-9945&#13;
or large size pizza at&#13;
Kenosha or Racine Pizza&#13;
Hut.&#13;
Kenosha p·zw Hut1&#13;
4608 75 h St.&#13;
Racine Pino Hut:&#13;
3016 Douglas An.&#13;
1. \\'hPn vou do u. • , I , . do ·ou t' 1 • tlw bt r down&#13;
thP sid{•? O Or do you pour it down thP middl to&#13;
\ Ole'(' ht&gt;ad of ro.,m" O&#13;
2. How mul'h fo:im do you likP on gla. of drau ht&#13;
b(,pr'' • 'onP ·1t all O Ont• 1hch O OnP ind ,1 half to&#13;
two inch{ s 0&#13;
3.oo you hk&lt;' to dnnk your I r m littl&lt;'&#13;
·wallow '&gt; O ,' nwthmK m !wt &lt;&gt;&lt;•n ? 0&#13;
4. Which do you likt• bt&gt; t'&gt;&#13;
Cannt&gt;d lx&gt;E&gt;r O Bottled lwer O Draught lwc-r 0&#13;
5. W hich hen i br&lt;'v.C'CI h · "&lt;' du. i"P H('('chwood A •mg&#13;
with natural carhon:1t1on to produC't' a "tl(•r ta tp and&#13;
a mootht&gt;r. mort• drink,1hlr beer"'' Budwt&gt;isrr O ,' m,•&#13;
other brand 0&#13;
6. \\'hen you :;a:,· .. Bud"H' l~l'f.'' do _\OU -ay it&#13;
. .. eag&lt;&gt;rly: O loudly'&gt; O gladly'&gt; 0&#13;
,lf41 'JII I l.)I'&#13;
,IJ\. ,J,)v.,UI' II\' !l&#13;
,..-.0111•..-., i,a C&#13;
,,llj UI Z OJ t l ·i&#13;
Wl'Oj&#13;
JO p1• lf ,\l{l!''Jlf 1! lOJ P"H ' . JI ,,.&#13;
~UOf ,p ~d~cl4l JO \U\' t- ~1pp1w 41 u"'op 14:i•H 1· &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RA GER Wed... sU)'. MIn. 21. 1976&#13;
Cagers:&#13;
ort-llanded but stJ1l winning&#13;
Gl'ftll e.y 1S&#13;
yet." bul lbe) elll&#13;
If they eI oul aad&#13;
I the lead. U UWGB gets the&#13;
f.:.d 11will try to employ a zone&#13;
detense as it doeS nollike to "gel&#13;
out and' play a man~to-man."·&#13;
UWM is called "a very physical&#13;
team .. by Stephens. 1be coach&#13;
ad&lt;Ie&lt;i that, "everything they. do,&#13;
\bey do hard," includinl( fouling.&#13;
'!be PantherS are also "Very&#13;
rugged inside," Stephens said,&#13;
and he expects a lot of players to&#13;
malte strong contact. certainly&#13;
the next three loes are no College&#13;
«SI. Francis.&#13;
I' ape&amp;&lt;!« him,&#13;
ID W&gt;CIenIaod the&#13;
01. . Ie sporta&#13;
Per pl. Paruide&#13;
~=:: recesve anlsimproved 10 \ho\r&#13;
allons.&#13;
IlOl a deep, dark seer • thai&#13;
alblele • nOI jllSt al&#13;
ParUli~. atleDd eoIIe WIth \be&#13;
_In aroblllon of *oming&#13;
prof .... II abo ls no&#13;
I ODI a small per-&#13;
:&#13;
;:~~;~e~a1:lllIetes pro c........ '!balls go ...&#13;
sbouId nol&#13;
)Dst 1.0 gel him&#13;
l,reprdlesaol\be&#13;
a player lIlIli&amp;bt bring&#13;
Wb)' sbouId aD albl.u&#13;
a cIeInt Wlthoul working lD&#13;
---'&#13;
sdloOI for it and maybe someday&#13;
get a job with it aver another&#13;
pers&lt;ot who might have really&#13;
...ned, scholastically, for their&#13;
degree! Another part of why&#13;
,nslructors should require&#13;
pnething rJ. an alblete is purely&#13;
moral. A "free pass" is not&#13;
morally rlghl.&#13;
'!be hope is that everyone,&#13;
athletes and administration,&#13;
bave teamed from the most&#13;
recent eligibility problems. Any&#13;
possible precautions should be&#13;
taken to avoid another circumstance&#13;
such as this. The&#13;
Parbide basketball tearn is very&#13;
talented, and it tooks pretty good&#13;
for future years too. It can beat a&#13;
lot of opponents ...ilit can beat the&#13;
books.&#13;
Fence" defeat area schools&#13;
'I'1le _n'a f team at lIIin&lt;U-Ollcago arcte, 14-13, and&#13;
~u:.,.:::..:lu.at ""TechIaslSatunlay.1belencersalso&#13;
10 ID Canada I, 1&amp;-11, and Dlinois, 21&gt;-7.&#13;
'I'1le __ • leDClJlllsquad beat Winnipeg, &amp;-3, and blanked&#13;
~"'''''''''' ArM T College, 9-ll.&#13;
Gordon's Auto Parts,lne.&#13;
DISCOUNT TO STUDENTS&#13;
o e 632-8841&#13;
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